The Noble Picayune. (Noble, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 9, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 13, 1895 Page: 1 of 8
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VOL. 1.
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NOBLE, CLKYEYKLAXD COUNTY, O. T., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13. 189.").
NO (.)
t
SHOTS IN A CHURCH.
INDIANA LAWMAKERS JIS-
GRACE THEMSELVES.
ONE MEMBER WILL PROBABLY DIE.
. Many Injured and Much Ktat« Property
Destroyed— I'lstols and <iul>* All
Around—1 lm Trouble Was All on
Account of a Hill to Supplant
a Demurr.itlr Oillcnholdor
by u llcpuhllcau.
Indianapolis, Ind., March 13.—The
legislature broke up in a wild riot
last night in which almost every
member participated. Revolvers
were drawn ami many persons were
seriously injured, Adams of Park
county, perhaps fatally.
For fully twenty minutes the state
. house was filled with a howling,
surging- mob. Men who had been |
friends and sat side by side during
the session became deadly enemies
and made every effort to injure each
other. Mvron King, Governor Mat-
thews' private secretary, was locked
in the elevator and a big burly man
guarded the door and refused to
allow him to leave. The police final-
ly drove the man away and the secre-
tary was released. When he arrived
at the door of the house at 11:55 he
found it locked. lie had an im-
portant message from the governor,
V and a great deal depended upon its
delivery to the speaker of the house
before lti o'clock.
The heavy oak doors were unable to
stand the pressure brought to bear
upon them, and they were forced
open. King, who was in front, was
forced right into the crowd of Re-
publicans, who were bent on keeping
him from reaching the speaker.
With one accord the men began
striking at each other, and the secre-
tary waa in great danger of being
killed.
"Kill him! Kill him!" cried a hun-
dred voices at once. Revolvers were
nourished in the air, but as fast as
one was drawn the man holding it
was knocked down. The heavy
chairs were torn from the lloorby the
mob and desks were broken to pieces.
Doors leading to other rooms were
shattered by persons in the corridors
trying to effect an entrance to the
% chamber. The police were powerless
to check the mob, which seemed bent
on destroying everything in the room.
At 11:57 King with his clothing
torn almost froin his body and his
face bleeding was pushed by main
strength through the crowd and
thrown heavily against the speaker's
^ desk, lie still held Governor Mat-
thews' veto in his hand, but it never
reached the speaker.
Just as King was about to placo it
in his hand Speaker Adams kicked
and beat back the crowd and in a
voice which could be heard above
the terrible din, cried: "The house
has adjourned; the house has ad-
journed."
This raised a great cry from the
crowd and everybody mail'! a rush
toward the speaker. The veto was
torn from King's hand by a man who
dashed out of the crowd with it and
made good his escape.
This practically ended the riot.
Several small fights occurred, but the
pol e ■ and oth rs finally succeeded in
driving them from the chamber. No
less than two dozen persons were
i hurt No arrests were made.
The trouble originated over the bill
to supplant Custodian Griffin, a Demo-
crat, with a Republican. Tne gov-
ernor has three days in which to
consider all measures. The bill was
delivered to the governor three nights
ago. It was his scheme to hold it to
the last minute, an-1 then the legis-
lature could not pa-'S it over his v to
as its statute adjournment would
take place at 12 o'clock.
The governor's secretary started
with the bill with ten minutes' t ime.
The Republicans attempted bv force
to prevent his reaching the legisla-
tive halls with the bill in time.
A RACE WAR LIKELY.
Kxcitciuuut at Union ville. Mo., Over tho
billing of ai Todd.
Untonville, Mo., March 12.—The
excitement attending the shooting
^ of AI Todd, the colored man, by City
Marshal Clark, has abated and a de-
plorable state of affairs exists.
Parties unknown with strong preju-
dices against the colored raco
have sent notices to all
the colored men, ordering
^ them to quit the town. The letters
are adorned by a skull and cross
bones, and the one in possession of
your correspondent reads as follows:
* You will please move out of town
by April 1. This is fair warning.
Tell Jim ISradfields to get out of
town. By order of committee." This
was directed to a m irried man. It
was sent to the single men, but gave
them less time to get out of town.
Prosecuting Attornev Lee T. Robin-
son has issued a manifesto and tlie
'Chances are the would-be white-caps
will be prosecuted to the full extent
of the law^
Professor C. A. Colyar of the Inter-
national exposition of Atlanta is in
Washington consulting with Dr. Day
of the geological survey regarding
the interior department exhib.t at
Alanta. I)r. Day assured Secretary
Smith that the exhibit of the depart-
ment would be rayidl/ pushed for-
ward.
1 \n Omaha 1'rleftt tin I I xcoiu 111 iinieated
I ole« I iglit During a Mat**.
Omaha, Neb., March 13. — During
I the early morning mass at St. Paul's
Roman Catholic church today a party
of Poles, formerly members of the
| congregation, but ousted by Bishop
i Scannell, entered and attempted to
take possession.
Father Karrainski, who was saying
mass, resisted, ami one of tho invad-
ing parties opened tire.
Father Karminski at once drew a
revolver and fired into the attacking
party. After a long fusilade the in-
vaders withdrew, leaving the follow-
ing wounded in the church*
F. Dargacsewski, shot through both
log-.
John Kozicaka, shot through the
knee.
Joseph lnda. one of the priest's sup-
porters, stabbed and beaten over the
head.
I The police were at once summoned
and after a hard fight they took pos-
! session of the church.
Sev ral people wo *e arrested,among
them Father Karminski, ami they are
now in jail.
I The trouble was the outgrowth of
I dissensions which liavj torn tho
church for two years.
SHOT DOWN BY NEW ORLEANS
LEVEE STRIKERS.
WINCHESTERS AND REVOLVERS USED
The I'lirnT of a llrltl h \«a*p| Among
TIionh Wounded ami International
Complication* Are Threatened —
1 he I olice Are l*owerles« and
the Militia Are I'uder
Arms — IttotcrN Armed.
Nf.w Orleans, La., March 13.—Tho
levee front from Louisiana avenue to
Mandcville street was in the hands of
an armed mob all day and the police,
with their scattered numbers, were
powerless and unable to cope with
the armed strikers.
Seven negroes were killed in tho
TO RIDE OVER THE PAILS.
An Mertrle Cable System Proposed for
Daring Visitor* to Niagara.
Lockpobt, N. Y., March 13. — Attor- (
ney George \V. Pound, one of the i
directors of the Ariel Tramway com-
pany, has sent to Albany a bill author-
izing his company to erect a tower
and landing place on the State
Reservation park, and a similar one
has been obtained with reference to
Queen Victoria park from the Can- ,
adian government. The company
proposes to carry tourists across the j
Niagara river over tho brink of tho ;
cataract and thirty feet above the
waters. _ _
I orgi'd l ost Office .Money Order*.
Loris.AVA, Mo., March 13.—Deputy
United States Marshal Charles Quarfe
of St. Louis, arrested W. R. Todd, j
leading man of the F. K. Spooner
Dramatic company, at the Windsor
hotel and left with his prisoner for
Hannibal, where he will appear be-
fore the United States commissioner.
Todd la charged with having forged
the names t several postofttee money
orders at Nevada, Mo., on January 30.
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL DE-
FENDS THE LAW.
PROPOSALS
American War Ships at Colon.
Washington, March 13. — Cable-
early morning, while eight others j grams received at the navy depart-
RODBED BY EMPLOYES.
l hn Kansas City llectrie light ( on>-
pany Is Out 9M.OOO.
! Kansas Crrv, Mo., March 13. — An
examination of the books of the Kan-
sas City Electric Light company has
developed the fact that the company
has been systimatically robbed of
several thousand dollars during the
past few years. The exact amount
cannot be told until an expert, who
is now at work on the books, makes
his report, but it is said to already
approximate $0,000.
i A. J. Coulter, who has been book-
keeper for the company since lHSO, is
accused with being the embezzler,
lb? has not been actually arrested,
but is under surveillance of the
American Surety company, which is
on his bond.
Coulter is a captain in tho Third
regiment and is well known in social
circles. He is unmarried, and roomed
at 1100 Troost avenue. He was known
as a '"high roller" and was much in
evidence on every public occasion.
His father is a Baptist minister ami
lives in Junction City, Kan.
AT WORK AT HICHER WAGES.
Sixtuen Thousan I of I wmitjr- I wo thous-
and l'ennsy ivunia .Miners llnppjr.
Pittsburg, Pa , March 13.—With tho
capitulation of the river mine oper-
ators to the demands of their men for
sixty-nine cents per ton, 8,000 miners
went back to work to-day, and in tho
rush of a resumption of work 2,000
men from the railway mines were
also set to work. Besides this, there
are 0,(K)() men at work at the sixtv-
nine cnt rate in railroad mines, ac-
i cording to the iigures of the miners'
officials.
Thus 10,000 men out of n total of
22 000 in the district are now at
work at the sixty-nine c nt rate, an I
the minors claim that the battle is
won, for the remaining operators can-
I not afford to keep their mines closed
and let trade go to competitors.
DOLLAR A DAY MEN NOW.
Missouri legislature's Seventy Day's
Liin t I xplre*—Much Yet to i e Do ie.
1 Jefferson City, Mo., March 13.—
Tho "halo" surrounding the position
of members of the Thirty-eighth gen-
eral assembly was dissipated to-dav.
Hereafter members can draw but SI
per day for their services to the state,
and this disagreeable fact strikes
them most forcibly, and the interest
of many of them lap-.es. It will be
difficult to keep a quorum pr sent
much longer, although the date of
adjournment cannot yet be fixed.
The house has been in session sev-
enty days and the general contingent
appropriation bill is still pending.
Up to date the legislature has cost
the state 3140,000, which, considering
the amount of work transacted, is a
tidy sum of money.
BANK OFFICERS ARRESTED
llrookfield, Mo., Men Accused of Re-
ceiving Deposits Unlaw fully.
Brookfikld, Mo., March 13.—The
officers of the Bank of Brookfield,
which closed its doors earlv in Jan-
uary, were arrested last night on a
state warrant, sworn out by six of
the depositors, but gave bond imme-
diately and were rele ased.
The officers of the b nk are John
Ford cashier, J. R. Huffaker presi*
1 dent. J. W. Huffaker director and L.
W. huffaker, bookkeeper. Th y are
charged with receiving d posits when
they knew the bank was in a failing
condition. The preliminary trial is
for Fridav.
were wounded, two fatally, as a re-
sult of the attacks which have been
made upon the negroes.
Among those who were wounded by
the .shots fired on the levee was Pur-
ser Bain of the British steamship En-
gineer. The captain of the vessel
threatens to make the shooting of
Jlain an international affair.
The white men are completely in
control of things and have declared
that no negro shall appear on the
levee front. As a result of this, all
work on the levee is practically at a
standstill, while not a negro can be
seen among tlit? shipping.
The time of the shooting seemed to
have been fixed for the hour just pre-
ceding the beginning of the working
da}'. It seems to have been totally
unexpected, for the negroes were
upon the levee in large numbers.
The blacks evidently believed that
there was a sufficient police force on
the river front to protect them.
Earl}* this morning tho police in
the Sixth precinct were notified that
ti terrible riot was in progress in
front of Jackson's square. Officers
were hurri d to the scene but had
barely started when Sergeant Rich-
aril Walsh, in command of the pre-
cinct, heard a volley of shots from
the direction of the levee in front of
the station. The morning was ex-
ceptionally foggy, but ho rushed to
the scene. Among the freight cars
on the levee, between Philip and
First streets, he found a crowd "of
negroes, surrounding a negro who
liad been shot in the mouth. The
body was taken to the station. Those
who were about declare that he was
crossing the levee when a mob ap-
peared and 11 red a volley into them,
killing him instantly.
When the negro's body was re-
moved the sergeant and a squad of
officers went up the levee and
found a mob of 250 men armed with
Winchester rifles and other guns.
They marched along the levee up to
Eighth street and then back on
TMioupitoulas street to Jackson and
then dispersed, according to what
seemed a prepared plan, all negroes
having disappeared. They were ac-
costed by Sergeant Walsh, who recog-
nized most of them. Among the lead-
ers was a man from down town named
Walter Owens.
While this was going on, a bloody
riot occurred in the vicinity of the
French market on the levee, at tho
landing of the Harrison line of steam-
ships, opposite Jackson's square. In
the fog which prevailed a mob of 100
armed men got through the guards
of the police and opene l tire on the
negroes who were at work. They
1! d in terror, some jumping into the
river. Those who ran across the
levee in the direction of the square
were subjected to a deadly volley
from doorways, windows, galleries
and street, while those of the whites tornev.
who were not armed with revolvers . T
picked up stones, clubs and other im- j
provised weapons and attacked the j
negroes.
The fleeing negroesdid not see any- j
body fall, but they knew from the i
yells and crys that some of their
comrades had been hit. Later it was
ascertained that four negroes had
been killed outright and a number
had been wounded, several fatally.
Two other negroes jumped into the
river and were fired upon and un-
doubtedly killed.
For many minutes the firing con-
tinued on the river front and tho
police seeine 1 powerless to mak * any
move against the murderers, though
a much larger force was there than
ment anounee the arrival of the Alert
at Panama from San Jose and the
Raleigh at Colon from Trinidad. So
the United States now has four war
ships on the Colombian coast, making
a formidable fleet combined.
Kansas eformatory Hirers Chosen
Hutchinson, Kan., March 13.—Tho
board oi' reformatory managers in .ses-
sion hero has elected Senator John
Armstrong chairman, .James M.
Humphrey secretary and Captain F.
H. Hatch of Arkansas City superin-
tendent. The members expect to
have the reformatory ready for pris-
oners by July 1.
Insurance .Men Favore I.
Jefferson City, Mo., March 13 —
After a hard fight on the floor of the
senate this forenoon the committee
on criminal jurisprudence succ *ed -d
in having an amendment to the anti-
trust an i pool laws adopte I, -xetoot-
ing the board of underwriters of St
Louis and Kansas Citv from the
operations of the anti-trc*4 *
Justice Over Strict.
Pemiiixa, N. I)., March 13.—James
j Young and George Clark, charged by
one Harris with having robbed him
of S3 in cash and a brass watch on the
| street, have been sent to the peniten-
tiary for life.
NEWS IN BRIEF.
Armenians are preparingau address
to Mr. Gladstone.
Cesar Cantu the Italian historian, is
dead, aged 91 years.
At Chicago James Temple, tho
veteran abolitionist, died aged 70.
Negotiations for a federation of
New Foundland and Canada are in
progress.
"Rugs are not carpets" is the gist
of a decision on a custom duty case.by
the supreme court.
Mrs. E. (i. Murphy, an unfortunate
woman, made two ineffectual at-
tempts at suicide at Topcka.
The steamship Umbria brought for
the account of the bond syndicate
£280,000 in gold Mouday.
Four hundrc I temporary mail weigh-
ers are being appointed throughout
Missouri Iowa and other Western
states.
Governor Altgeld of Illinois, par-
doned Dr. Willis B. Cauble upon rep-
resentation that he had been con-
victed through A. r. A. influence.
A petition is in circulation for Arch-
bishop lvain to deliver the bacca-
laureate oration at tho state uni-
versity of Missouri th is year.
A decree of divorce was gran toil
Dr. J. W. C. Wil lough by, ex-president
of Washington college, Tennessee.
His wife was intimate with a divinity
student.
Father Noonan has sued Father
O'Gara in Will countv, Illinois, for
slander and assault and battery; also
Archb.shop Feehan for depriving him
of his life support.
The Barbers' National association
is in session in Pittsburg. About
fifty delegates representing all sec-
tions of the country are present.
Captain J. B. Allen known among
G. A. R. men in Marshall county,
Kansas, as "Pap Allen," died at his
home, four miles south of Irving,
Kan. He was one of the pioneer set-
tlers of Marshall county.
In the pocket in the coat of
Alphonse Vallaire, arrested in New
York for passing forged checks, was
found a letter from United States
Senator Vest pleading for the man,
as the son of a leading St. Louis at]J
Judge Miller of the Washington po-
lice court has decided that the I'nited
States has no jurisdiction over Man-
uel del Almagro, interpreter of the
Argentina legation, accused of hav-
ing embezzled S3,000 of the legation's
funds.
Mrs. Frank Edinger of Elbert, Col.,
being threatened with a lawsuit bv a
neighbor with whom she had quar-
reled, took a dose of strychnine and
also gave a dose to her 7-year-old son.
The mother died, but the boy will re-
cover.
.John Zaye. an old fisherman, who
lived three miles from Nashville was
killed by Allen Albrook, a 19-year-old
boy. who made his escape from the
that of yesterdav. Not until every j Ten re see Industrial school,
negro had fled from the river front
siici the white men desist.
The entire police force was called
to the leveefand Governor Foster was
telegraphed to while the militia were
ordered to keep themselves in readi-
ness.
Members of the mob soon began
drinking and became uglier each
moment.
Among the general merchants the
riot was discussed and while the kill-
ing of the negroes was condemned it
was conceded g -ncrallv that the ship
agents were largely responsible for
the trouble by br nging negro screw
men to take the places of the homo
men.
l tilted States Troops Asked For.
Washington, March 13.—Applica-
tion has been made for United States
troops for the riotous uprising in
Louisiana. The attorney general has
taken the matter under advisement
and has conferred with the war de-
partment, but it is not known what
course will
PEACE
Independence of Curew an I Monetary
Indemnity Agreed I'pon.
London,March 13.—A dispatch from
Pekiu says that the Chine o govern-
ment, through tho United States
ministers, Messrs. Den by and Dun,
j have already agreed upon the points
I in the peace conference regarding tho
independence of Corea, the concession
of territory and money indemnity,
the amount to be agree I upon by the
I envoys. It is expected the agreement
will be signed at an early date.
« liiliese Again Hunted.
! London, March 13. —A Shanghai
dispatch says that a Chinese force of
7,000 men. supported by thirty guns,
was attack • I by the Japanese at
Donshotal on Saturday last The at-
tack was successful, and in two hours
; the Chinese fled toward Chin Chow,
losing 400 men. The Japanese loss
was ten killed. After burning Don-
Washington, March 13 When the 8h0ta| for strategic reasons, the .Jap-
supreme court met to-day Attorney j unese recrossed tho Liao.
neral Olney began his argument on >
ARGUES BEFORi: THE SUPRENE COURT
a an I \1iihuMvp Argument I'e Holds
lliat Hie Objections l.alsed l y tlie
I'laiotifT* Have No sf Hiding; Under
tlie Constitution and Are
.Merely Trillin; I ©eli leal I-
ties Without Merit.
behalf of the government for tin
validity of the income tax The court
room inside the bar was crowded and
there was no time when the limited
capacity of the room was sutlicicnt to
accommodate the audience.
Mr. Olney began by saving that
the chief interest of the government
in the litigation was limited to the
constitutional questions which the
several plaintiffs held to be involved.
lie believed that many of them were j shut off the air supply to tho mine, iu
MANY SUFFOCATED.
l-'irst ICeports of the Sultana .Mine Hon
ror I onllrmed.
W in nt pro, Manitoba, March 13.—
The shaft house at the famous Sul-
tana gold mine, fourteen miles from
Rat portage caught lire early yester-
day afternoon, and before the flames
were discovered they completely en-
veloped the building. This,of course,
simply perfunctory—taken by way of
precaution. No time, he declared,
should be spent ill discussing tho
averments that the income tax law-
was an invasion of vested rights or
took property without due process of
law. The propositions were pure
generalities and if there was nothing
in them it was because they compre-
hended others which wee the only
which were working twenty or twen-
ty-five miners. Shortly after ■£
o'clock the tire was extinguished iu
the shaft and the men descended it
rnd found six men on the first level
apparently all suffocated. They de-
scended to the lower level and found
three more, but th'se men were in
better condition than tho others
and efforts were begun to
real subjects of probable discussion. r.liso niein. The first raised was
"Again, Mr. Olney went on, "slip- ( suffering badly, but was revived after
pose it to be tru that the income tax ft sjlor* time. The fourth man. John
law undertakes to ascertain tin- in- Lagier, was very low when he arrived
come of citizens by methods which | ut the surface and died shortly after-
are not only disagreeable but are in
fringements of person i' rights. The
consequence is not t. he law is
void, but that the ho nop need
.inquisitorial methods i "e-
sorted to. The like eo.. . .
apply to the objection that the law is
to be pronounced void because it
takes the agencies and instrumentali-
ties of the governments of the several
states. It has not yet been definitely
adjudicated, and it is by no nutans
adinitt 'd that the income of state and
municipal securities is not taxable by
the I'nited States when assessed as
part of the total income by the others.
If I am right in these observations,
the constitutional emit ption of tho
plaintiff's simmers down to tw o points.
One is that the income t.i\ is a direct
tax and must be imposed according
to the rule of apportionment, and the
other is based upon the alleged viola-
tion of the constitution with regard
to uniformity."
Mr. Olney declared that whether
an income tax was what the const itu-
tion described as a ''direct'' tax w <s a
question as completely concluded by
repeate 1 adjudications as any qu *s-
tiou coul 1 be. It was not a direct
tax within tho meaning of the con-
stitution, unless that the concurring
judgments of this court had all been | iug
erroneous. No land tax was aimed | session
at or attempted by the statute—there
was no lien on land for payment—
and the whole scope and tenor of the
statutes showed the contemplat-d
subject of taxation to be personal
property and nothing else.
wards. The others were in a critical
condition when brought to the sur-
face, but all recovered except Dolph
Kricson. Eight men in all were
rescued.
DOCKERY'S FIGURES.
Makes a Comparison f Congressional
A pproprlatlons.
Washington, March 13.—Represent-
ative Dockery of Missouri, a in ember
of tho committee on appropriations,
makes public a statement containing
a comparison of appropriations by tho
Fifty-first, Fifty-second and Fifty-
third congresses. It shows, says Mr.
Dockery, that the appropriations of
the Fifty-first congre-s were SI.035,•
0-0,100; of the Fifty-second, $I.O')7,-
107..YI7, and of the Fifty-third, $1)00,-
338,091.
"In other words, this congress, tho
Fifty-third, has reduced the appropri-
ations under those of the Fifty-first
congress 351,418 and below those
of the last congress $311,7113,850."
' Mr. Dockery also asserts that for
! the first time in a long series of years
j the regular annual appropriations
which come within the supervision of
' congress are smaller at the conelud-
session than at the first regular
THE MARKETS.
Kansas city, Mo, M irch 13 :
Itecoints of wheat Gears a year ° j
Cirs Sales: No. 2 hird wheat, fill i<* No.
3 hard. <• No 4 hari, ic rejected, liio
No. 2 roil. 3 oari 5i«o No. J roJ W 2c; !
No 1 r<-1 5li\ rejeoto'l I'.ic
Receipts of cora o cars ayeara o, 12 oars, j
Sales: No. ti mixed c ra - cir.s 41 2c, 1 car, |
11-40 cars Ho No 1 m xe I, 4 > jo No 4 j
ml od. Wo No 3 wlilte, 2 cars 13*0 tear, 1
41 He 1 car 1 v No white. 1 > jo
i.eccipts of oats 4 cars a year a o. 13 cars 1
Sale^ No. - inixe 1 o.its, 3 cars -De No I
oats, -7 e: No. 4, ~7o. No - white oats, 31c |
No 3 white oats, .we
Rye—Firm No v.'o No 3, 50c. Flax-
seed Dull 11.31 Bran -Firm 67•'r.90 per |
cwt H ieUed. Corn chop -Dull 7." ^s>o per cwt |
sac
celpt3
Timothy. fancy.
cars Market weal:.
M choice. 8''S oj;
|.y<£Y5j clover, mixed,
7 "> • fancy prairie SH-H.VJ choice. *7$
7.5 . No I, tJ.i.ft5J. No 2, $L5'Jf£5..>J packing
hay, 4 5).
t'lilcacfo Itoanl of Trails.
CnioACJO. March 13— Tho follo.vlnr tibt9
chows tho ran 0 of prices t >c actio f iturjt
cn the board -f tra lo to- lav
Mar
Al-
brooiv surrendered to the police.
Assistant Postmaster Gaylor has
collected some statistiets with regard
to dead letters in the New York post-
office. He finds that in a quarter an
average of 57.000 dead letters s -nt
by correspondents in the United
States accumulated in the New York
postoffice.
A meeting of a strong syndicate of
Western Michigan lumber men is
being held in Muskegon to plan for
some gigantic lumber operations, the
first step of which will be the pur-
chase of several thousand acres of
pine lands on Georgian Hay, Ont. the
logs to be towed to Mu->kegon for
sawing.
In accordance with a resolution
adopted by the Colorado senate Sena-
tors Fulton Armstrong and Carley
were appointed a committee to in-
vestigate the charge of blacklisting
by the railroad companies of mem-
bers of the American Railway union
and others who participated in tiie
trike last
March I-
Wheat Mi hi
mav
July
Co UN— M.u;
' oat 1 Mob
?d 8;
pork— Meh It 3)
Ma. II 01
J ulv 11 *2
| Laud— Mih o
t 1.0'St
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Mar
11.
y • w. •
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1 fc II M 10? • 11 02
09-) (186 I 08 Hi
61 I 0 01 I .' 0 I I 6 G '
1 IhIi (oninilHtionor < urllch
St. JosKi'ii, Mo., March 13.—II. M.
Garlich of this city, one of the mem-
bers of tho board of ilsh commission-
ers, has sent in his resignation to
Governor Stone. Mr. Garlich and
Colonel Crisp havo been at logger
heads for some time an I the resigna-
tion is the oute-'ino of the d i Here nee s
which exist between them.
I ho White OaM Mm.' orror.
San Antonio, M Mirch 13.—
When the stage iei't V eiics yes-
terday it was eerta t m m had
lost their lives, the onl '<• -capirtg
being one who was close to ! .ie month
of the shaft when the lire broke out
Already six bodies have been •—"o*•
er'jd.
> Prominent Mismntri:in l)<>ail.
Ciiim.icotiik. Mo., March 13. — Dr.
John II. Klli-, for forty years a resi-
dent and prominent physic an here,
died at Dead wood, S. I). Dr. Ellis
was prominent as a Union man during
the Civil war, was paymaster in tho
army, state senator from this district
and in 1870 was the L: be ral Repub-
lican candidate for conn r< ;s and came
near defeating Hon. I. C. Parker, now
United States d .strict judge at Fort
Smith, Ark. Dr. Kllis removed 11 few
years ago to Dead wood and died at
the residence of his adopted daughter.
Mrs. John R. Wilson, who was one of
the woman commissioners of the
world's fair in 1S'. 3.
< oiifcKMnti III* Shortage.
Kansas Crrv, Kan., March 1,1.—P.
VY. Service, treasurer of school dis-
trict No. 0, in Wyandotte township,
has confessed to being short in his
accounts $4,090. VJ, and has turned
over property and securities to
make good the amour.t.
Itnhher* Carry OPT the Safe.
j Gutixkie. Ok., March 13. — At Striner-
1 town robbers entered the store kept
1 by M. Potinda and loading the safe on
a pair of trucks, secured at the depot, I will have to hang.
hauled it Several miles into the coon- j Kx-rrcl,!.,.! . urri.o.,
try and blew It open with dynamite. I .
They secured about $150. Indianapolis, Ind., March 11. -kx-
President Harrison, after a week of
Harry Hayward i onvlctcd.
Minneapolis, Minn.. March 9. The
jury in the Hayward murder 'ase re-
turned a verdict of guilty of murder
in the first degree. Sentence was
postponed until next Monday. He
('hickataw Legislator MurdarecL
Dknison, Texas, March 13. —Amos
! Caney, a member of the Chickasaw
j legislature, was shot and killed by
; Will.am Jennings, as the result of a
' feud. •
illness that threatened at one time to
' take a dangerous turn, is rapidly re-
covering and will be able to be out ia
a few days.
| Colorado legislature has passed an
1 iu ti- foreign 11 ag law.
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McCready, E. D. The Noble Picayune. (Noble, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 9, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 13, 1895, newspaper, March 13, 1895; Noble, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc108910/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.