The Hennessey Democrat. (Hennessey, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, June 22, 1894 Page: 2 of 4
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CONGRESS
WORK RESUMED
MINE HORROR.
COMMITTED SU.nDE
NEWS OF THE WEEK, at ti,.-,..
W<>rkllleU
Glen noel Bv Telograph and Mall
RFPORTED PLOT.
Killed
uliwlon
FMm&sey Democrat
sirkt
111' 1(4* II. I'
r tin
i tin
if till' -U.UU'' uun t
ylvania. has given an impetus t
till kinds of business ami the situatl
hopeful than at nnv time f
I ■iiicri'Miu
III- I.If*
IIINOloN. .1111
lilting fi
i ruble illness ami dt'i"
iolent
Siptonis, i noma- M. Ikryn
preventative
listriet in eongre
tailed tin
I.ti 11<■ t through his hi
VUNt
rrible .least. r, involving jfreut
f lifu, Is reported from Karwin
KiiII details have not reached 1"
that at least 2
rs have U'cn killed
\ ii explosion t1 m ilc plaee at lOoVl
rhurnday night in a pit
I'raii/.iska mines at the phi
tioned and resulted in t li« death of 1
miners. The first
f other expl
Irons of ti
latter lielng in the Johapness pit
ighty miners were killed
party of ten per
led into one of the pits at
k yesterday inorniinf. also |h
ished. The ventilator shaft
of the pits were destroyed, and the lirt
spread in all directions. Fourt
bodies have all
listiuet expl
The galleries of the mines are still
I it is believed that tin
f the bodies will In
During the 104 wars in which tin
r..li< e s-i.l Il.it. I M«. owrcil
>1 I'lol In IIIoh I |> I tic Nit I Ion
\Y \himn<• ton. June 1- An unarehist
up tin- public buildings
Washington has I discovered by tin
district pi lice The leader of the an
II. J. J axon, a half-breed
who has for vears
ly identilied with tin
liist
lieen located in the Times buildin
that city
ks past a house at l'.'-l V
in this city, when
lings of the anarehists h
pith. Atlunti
plaee for tin
itual
fented. A ritual for tin
I lodge Deirri
adopted
haler bark
\Hell was wreeked off Atk
■ idles west of Alaska All tin
ml strike in this
rk to-duy
(L WtESNER. Publisher
Y OKLAHOMA
phl-«i> *1. am' i'oiitmal
liv the adviee of his physicl
lent rievelaiid
CURRENT COMWFNI
hesa|H'ake bay
k killing
\t the time In
in his h
lit PV.-.i Ma-
li Itra fash
tantlv
itli tin
1 lux ri
husettsavi
f petith
ihle part of tin1 'dty, his wife lielng
i hi i-ii in "
heM. has been watched by the l. mporarily absent in Plu'ladelphit
I hi- Masters, lb -had been ill for a long turn
Ixitli as doctor and professor, m Iced It yvas his ill health that
Kpiscopalian minister, has tilin to resign h
reported t
attended tin
foi mailt
The formal:
lie had
mr ii
illliin upon the president for Infor
plat. ,1 ri
tin' nfopos.Ml iui|H
I of s ^ ^
As execution was i -nod recently for
the sale of practically the entire yil
luge of Linn, a manufacturing ad.litloq
to Sioux City, la., under a mortal
rhere are extensive impro
factories, etc., which are all
by the mortgage.
I'ATKH of the free eoimi
rer are ahout ready to abai
idea of resurrecting the mutter
jn'ss this session. They a
weakening in their faith, but^
rer quest ion aside.
Siik.hiff Met a i KS. of Dixon county
Neb. has burned the homes of sipint
lers on an island in the Missouri rivei
opposite Vermillion,
ing tin* people away.
•f the island has be
tween the two states.
1>.. ufte
i dispute
driv
"shif
Willi.k digging a trench through a
cellar that had been excavated and
then tilled up by the Hood «'f IHSO, at
lohnstowii. I'a . workmen crcarthed
i parlor car that was lost from the ill
fated day express at < onnemaugh. It
S believed that further search would
unearth IhmHcs of persons lost on thai
train.
Isaac Hanks, a miser aged 70 years
charged with having caused the deatl1
tif his wife by denying her sufficient
food, has been found guilty by the
Jury in Salem. N V. A recommenda
lion of mercy uecoiupanied the verdict
ind the offender, who is said to Ih
worth more than f70jnm>, was let off or
ri fine of 91,0(10 and Costs.
Mini J k.n nik Mayo, a belle of Middle
sc\\ Vt.. was secretly married a few
lays ago to Thomas Strong, of Castle
tmvn. Vt.. a negro hotel porter. by tin
pastor of the African Methodist Kpis
•opal church bust summer Miss May
in.I. her mother went to Saratoga an
the two met at Congress hall. Sara
toga. Miss Mayo is •„' years of age.
Tiik work of a year is represente I ir
a new map of this country, Canada
Mexico and a part of the West Indies
hcing issued by the general land oflieo
The map is deemed the most completf
vet issued, and over 14.000 copies wil'
Ih' distributed. It shows the extent o
public surveys, Indian, military am
forest reservations, railroads, canali
md all private liiml claims.
A pkriTioN Iwaring 00,000 names anc
representing many religions has beer
prepared for presentation to tin* Chi
cago board of education, recommend
ing that reading l ooks. consisting o
.electionsfrom the wn red Scriptures ii
use in the schools of Toronto, Can.
with the approval of both the Catholh
ind Protestant churches, or similar sc
lections, he put in use in the puhli'
schools without delay.
Washington Is discussing with in
tcrest the rumor of the engagemen
lietwecn Mrs. Nellie l J rant Sartorli
ind Henry Kyd Douglas, adjutant-gen
pral of the state of Maryland. Mrs
Snrtorla, liefore leaving the city b
join Mrs. (Smut in New York, denied
that there was any truth in the i
|s rt. but since her departure one
her intimate friends has stated that
;i letter rcccntlv received from I
the engagement is admitted.
kkki.i. presented
s in the senate recently
asking that the tax oi|
whisky In* not increased in the | tending
tariff bill
( act. Thomas on the llth still held
the Sulvadorian refugees aboard the
Pennington at bn bihertad. Tin- stat.
departnicut was waiting f-«r the organ,
ization of some form of government
there before taking action on the de
maud for the surrender of the refugees
jrsth'K Col Killl)UK, oJ
Knghind. died on the Mth.
T. 1(111 ni I V. I'owm III.Y ex-general
master workman of the Knights of
bill Mir, has issued for private circulu
lion among the members of the onlcr
u statement containing the inside his
tory of the movement which compelled
his voluntary retirement It forms ii
pamphlet of thirty-four pages, ami is a
review of the circumstances leading u;i
to the events of last fall, which IlliVi
'ntoustothe Knights of (r"xx
i-uiH.r. i
Tiik Coxey bill for good
non-interest hearing bonds which Sen
ator I'cfTer introduced in the senate
Inc. been introduced in the house by
Representative lieary, of California
An amendment has been added to make
it compulsory for every state, territory
county and township to give work b
every unemployed person in its limit
at si. M> a day for common labor ane
&l..r,0 for labor with a team, eight hour
public iii
lildii
igs in
Washington the
leader b.
a Fre*n
eh Canadian. « ho
for years
has
ih'cii
closely iilentifle'il
with the
Chie
.•ago a
narehists No 111
rests ha v.
• y.-t
bi n 1
iiiidt* uml the |mi-
lice reflis.
1' to 1
reveal
thcir full informa-
Norm m
Cl.AIIH
, and a woman
named Jc
mile
Si ley 1
look refuge under
ii tree in 1
11 1 liiiinler-t
orui ut bvons. la .
on the 1
7th.
The \
vomaii Was killed
and the
man
fit ta 11,
y Injured by a bolt
I.f light 11 i
Tin: Anelna
• line
steamer Kthlopia.
day.
befoi
the
Sknatoii I/i
vestigating committee on the loth am1
told them that he had bought sugai
sttN'k for spc culatlon and would do s
again.
Rs«Conobrmmam Thomas Batwi o
Pennsylvania, eomiuitted suiciih* a'
Washington on the Pith. |ies|Mindcney
caused by consumption, was the cause
I'a Mimmi b w ii m \ m WALT!!
Piiki.I'h died on the 17th, at Tea Neck
N J., from typhoid fever, followed h\
meningitis.
Tiik revolution in Co re a lias assumed
a serious aspect. The number of rebeh
is said to be over on.noo, and they liavi
been drilled in modern style. The gov
eminent troops have been routed in
two encounters on May 10. losimr
killed This defeat couipb'Udy demor
ali/.ed the government forces.
Com. Kasiiy. S. N .dh'd at Wash
ington on the lHth, aged 7." .
Tiik senate sugar trust investigntin<
committee has decided by a vote of I t«
to reipicst the vice president to cer
tlfv the refusal of II. ti. Ilavcineycr am
.1 lv Scarles, president and treasurer
respectively, of the American Kcliniii"
Co., to the district attorney.
Mlscl i.i.ANhOl H
Tiik deputy city collect..
An old woman who owned half ar
acre of ground at Ncnaglt, county oi
Tlpperary, Ireland, died recently with
nit leaving a relative or specifying ni
heir. Soon after thirty men fought
with scythes and pitchforks aroum
her hut. Kventually they broke dowr
the door, upset the body and beat eael
itlier with the candles which had stois.
iround the body When the flght wai
ended two men lay dead at the door
step and live others were too scriousl}
wounded to walk from the scene of tin
conflict.
Tiik Cosmopolis Colonlwition assocla
tlon, a voluntary organization of laboi
anions, has signed a contract with tin
band of Sunshine Co . of i hiea:ro. foi
2,500 acres of land near Merced, Cal.
which will support los families, win
will have houses and live on a street ie
form of a circle, the area within ti
have public buildings and park. A
square plat of 300 acres is to be tin
communal pasturage and vegetable
garden Outside of this Hpuirc will 1m
ioil farms of nineteen ami a half acre*
each devoted to fruit culture.
Tiik reigning sen-at ion in Paris
France, is Mis*. Arniotis. who is knowi
as the fcmulc Saudow ller feats o-
strength are wonderful, ller strengtl
Is the result of a careful attention ti
hygienic laws. When she appears oi
tiie stage any person in the auilieuce if
at liberty to put her strength to tin
test in any way that lie may choose
She lifted an upright piano from tin
orchestra and threw it into the ring
Then carried two men seated astride i
barrel with one hand, a feat which slu
executed with ease and grace.
Tiik telephone system now iu vogu
in France is to be introduced in ti
country by a syndicate of Philadclpl
capitalists, who have purchased thf
American patent rights from the Freiu'
inventor. If the expectations of thf
purchasers are realized the system wi
revolutionize one branch of the tel
phone business iu the I'nited State
The prime object of the incorporator*
is to introduce the French syste
hotels, apartment house*, nuintry
denees and railroad service. It is hoped
that the use of the new tcleplu
enable many of the large railrt
panics to do away altogether with
their private telegraph service
Ri'oksk Ukiimain. I'nited States con-
sul at Heme. Switzerland, has sent the
department of state an account of
the workings of a commission
for the unemployed, created by law.
A committee of seven, made up of rep-
resentatives of labor unions, employers
and the tnunicipul government, under-
takes to provide employment for sub-
scribers out of work, or to maintain
them when awaiting employment.
>f bonis
William I
fishing in the reservoir met a tragi.
death, lie had gone out on a bridge
and had on a pair of rubber booth
reaching to his hips, lie slipped from
the bridge in the deep water, and the
heavy rubber boots tilling with water
lie sunk like a rock.
Till: entire family of Felix Troughlier.
living just over the Kentucky line.
miles from Clarksville. Tenn., has been
poisoned by drinking water from thcii i'|,n
well in which, in some mysterious man- | s,n''
ner, poison had been placed. It was Hth.
feared all would die. i tally am. uve s« .,
Kiiasti s Wiman was found guilty ol M,,s I K. Mii.i
in the second degree at New , inerehant o
hit'll left New York June fo
Scotland, had a colllsloi
rs. ller water-tight bulk:
in sinking.
National Prison congress
at St. Paul, Minn., on the 10th
President llrinkcrhofY made the state
nicut that the record of criminals
I rowing greater, lie read facts
figures which startled even those
familiar with the work of prison re-
form The attendance was large, fully
•j.'.o ladles and gentlemen occupying
seats as delegates
An attempt wa-. made to assassinate
Premier Crispi. of Italy, on the 10th.
lie was unhurt ami the woulel-lie us-
An ofllcer at Indianapolis, Ind., be-
came engaged in an altercation with
a man and attempted to arrest him.
Another man struck the policcmaii in
the face and the nllicer shot him down.
A crowd gathcre'd round the ofllcer and
an attempt was made to lynch him. but
he was rescued by a platoon of poller
The rioters number
Kvery policeman in tin-
to the station.
(In the Indian appropriation bill, at
the last, moment, the house gave to
the homesteaders In the* Cherokee out-
let the right to prove up their claims-
in fourteen months. The amendment
provides that on all lands opene'd t«
settlement on September 10 last, set
tiers shall be granted the right to ob-
tain a tax title b\ paying the price f..i
their lands provided for in the presi-
dent's proclamation. This gives the
settlers who are able to take advan-
tage of it their lands nearly four years
sooner than they could otherwise have
aeipiired them.
Tiik treasury officials have informa
tion that the law of August 1KH0, in-
to the sale of oleoinargerine. Is beinn
i violated by dealers in all parts of the
j country. Tlu-se violations consist prin
I cipally in selling oleomargarine at re-
I tail in packages not properly marked
and branded, nnd in offering it for sale
after it had lieen removed from the
j original stamped packages. Steps
impound
It is the latest fiendish device of the an-
archists and cxploeles from the heat of
the sun, throwing out a deadly poison-
ous vapir. No arrests have yet been
made and the police refuse to reveal
their full Information and have sought
to keep the story from the papers.
Knowledge of the plot became, how-
ever, too generally known to prevent a
leak.
Sergeant-at-Arms Itright of the sen-
tlie first to receive any infor-
mation. The vice president was then
I: also the night watch at the
- j eapitol, and the speaker of the house,
s j Secretary Carlisle was told of a plot
il against the treasury department, and
e j the president was also informed of tin-
situation. With the police
steadily on the cast* for w
not enough information ba
tallied upon which certainty <>f eonvi. -
tioii could be assured, uiul for this
reason the arrests have been postponed t
day after day.
The information which De Master*
brought was that Jnxon had expected j
to find no difficulty in organizing a
strong association of anarchists lu re, ;
and it was also expended that anarch- j
1sts would flock in here from all direc-
tions with the opening of spring.
Shortly after this Serge'ant-at-Ami-
e I Pl ight received a letter which was of
hi. | such an earnest nature warning him of
ftlle'd j a plot to blow up the eapitol and i.tlu i
I public buildings that lie decided to
investigate. It was one of hun-
dreds of letters that he had n
celved, but the earnestness manifested
by the writer caused him to make
an investigation, lie consulted with
Maj. Moore, superintendent of the di
triet police, and the nut heir of the let- j
ter was met per agreement. and preived
to be the ex-preaeher, De Masters, who
had been taken in by the anarchists.
De Masters was put under pay. and in-
structed to attend all the meetings,
lie did so. and made daily reports to
the chief of police.
F.veil with tin- knowledge that the
facts were to be published, the police
refused to give out the information
in their possession as to the extent of
the plot or the names of the men who
were associated with Jaxon. It i^
n'ttlcd that eight men met regularly
at l'.e.'l Vermont avenue, but whether
this comprised all those in the plot
could not be learned. Jaxon will l>.-
ri-iiic inhered as chief lieutenant to
Louis IJeil in 1 lie half-br
congres
pu ta tii
vcr, vigorous debater and an expert
the complexities of the metal sclied-
..f tariff bills. About eighteen
nths ago he was induced to take a
I the world and when he
returned last July itapiM'urcd that he
luul improved very much. The gain
tv.i« but temporary, however, and lie
iiiffered greatly from tits of depression
•oii-eipient upon the mutations of
lis disease which was consumption.
Mr. Payne was one of the best known
•cpuhlicnn politicians in Pennsylvania
ind was on the ways and means com-
nittee in the last congress, lie de-
dined to run again for this congress on
account of ill-health, and had : Ine-c
occn out of active politics, lb be-
onged to the branch of the party of
which Senator Quay is the head.
Mr. Payne was born in Allegheny.
Pa., just fifty-eight years ago Tliurs-
trklng ! day last. _
I ' TO RESTORE PAY.
there have li
plosions in them. The last
March. Ish.'i, when 105men
The mines are* in two set
an annual output of 7>h>
of the coal Is consumed
the shafts arc provided
modern vcntilutn
•re killed.
Hons. Most di
Vienna. All
it ti the most tli
I safety appli- be
ances, including double uoors. con-
necting the working shafts with the
air shafts, and oil lumps of the Mussel-
ler system. The Frnn/.iska shaft is
280 meters deep and
sages with the John
is 333 meters deep.
es shaft, which
\ llniuinil I" ll«- MiiiIi- l'|i"ii Si-ii-ri
fur a Hi-nl urn linn of Wiiri-h.
CiiH-Aiio. June is. It is said one ex-
occted result of the convention of the
American Hallway union, now holding
in this city, will be the demand in the
near future for a restoration of pay on
several roads running into Chicago. I state
l'lie convention has under mlviseMiient
several plans for a ineeliation and ad
justincnt of grievances and after tin
adoption of one it will be put almost 0 per ci
iminediatedy to practical use.
The local unions, composed of em-
ployes of the Cleveland. Cincinnati. St.
bonis \ Chicago railway, and those of
the Chicago \- Kastcrn Illinois road, on
both of which the men have had their
wages reduced during the present
year, have been holding daily meet-
with a view to concerted action. Tin-
men arc thoroughly organized on both
|ines. having grown better acipuiinteel
lfiring the convention and have no
louht of their ability to secure their
leinand for a return to the wage scale
•f 1 so:i without the necessity of strik-
MISSOURI'S STATE DEBT.
tlie large plants in this city
irork after bmg idle-
, the CarlNin Iron Steel
rks; Oliver's Twenty-sixth
Howe. Itrown At Co. The lat-
has been shut down for two years
\ started up in full, giving cinploy-
„t to 500 men. The Dla.-k Dia
el works will also begin operations
, week, and the Kdgar riiompsoii
ill start as soon as a .suffi-
cient supply of coal shall be received.
The tube works will start up
a - manv of the strikers have exprcssea ^
a willingness to return whenever the
firm should be ready. It is safe t> su\
that the end of the strike affects 50.000
people.
WHAT rill. STItIKI- COST.
pltthiu linil. I'a-. June iu. A well in-
formed authority in the coal business
estimates that the coal strike in this
district has cost the miners in wage
iking it for granted that
output of the region had
been retained. In proportion to the
general output this district mined
about one-sixth of the coal dug in
the urea affected by the strike. With
a reasonable proportion between the
price's paid in this and other districts,
the loss in wages alone, says the same
authority, would be over jmo.oo.i.ooo.
Kstimutlng the guin of the miners by
the settlement of the strike to be 1"
cents a ton over former priees.it will
take them one and one-half ye'urs to
make up by increase of earnings for
the time they have lost.
MANY mkn ukti'iin IN Ollio.
Col.rMill's, O., June !'• betters and
i!T bill was tiikcn up In the '
ii Mr Dolph spoko :i' lenSfv
.I The wool MhnduleooeuplM
I.f the S.-Iintc all ili.v Ku rt
creil was voted down 'I'hf
II bill l
It It i Icing Kitplilly i'ulil OIT uiul V III Soon
in- l-:*tliiuiilMln-il.
Jkkfkhson City, Mo.. June 10. State:
Treasurer Lon. V. Stephens will for-
ward to the American Dxehange na-
tional bank, of New York City, the
in a few days, his telegrams to-day to the national head-
heck for 83ts.iMio to take up PlOi,000 C. i quarters of the I'nited Mine Workers
er cent. Hannibal A St. Joseph re- show that the sentiment in favor of
icwal bonds, and g|H0,000of the state sustaining the national <.flicei- is grow-
nt. funding bonds, due July 1, Ing rapidly. It is believed at lieu.l-
lieck for epiarters that at lea t two-thirds of the
nual in- 'miners of Ohio rcsiiined work this
lie state j morning, although no information had
been received on which to base au esti-
Stophons. mute of the exact number. President
the liUh completed the «
larflT tiill all amendments
bill passed I
•red upon the
IS'.U. lie will also forward a «
about fM30,000 to meet semi-ai
Lcrcst due July 1 next, on t
Cl«.'bt.
• «)n April I last said Treasurer
the
•*l forwu
tional hank, of New York, my .
i/i pay tf |M-r cent. IwuidK of the >
e; this
ivill make
Irll '
our It per cent, delit
within the last six months. The
only requires the extlnjrulshme
000 of our dcht nnnually.
1 next MOO,000 moro of our
hondH niiituie. ii lid there will
money in the sinklmx fund
When that iiiuuiiiit i- ,a
iliui; hut fV.M.OOOO |
them off ii
I I here will
During the entire convention the
evenings of the delegates have been oc-
cupied. in many cases, w ith the work
of orgnnization which, stiinulated by
the presence of so many leaders in thi-
city, is proe-e'e-duig with unexpected
rapidity.
CONDITION OF PEACHES.
ii little hard
Tliey
rally
by the ofllcials to punish
iolatiou of this act that tlu\\ I
glit it
believed
Till: lleckert iwn express on the New
York. Susipiehantia A Western railroad
ran into and demolished an clectrk
stivet car at Patcrsem, N J . on the
f the passengers were fa
seriously injured.
ifc of a leading
f beadville. Col., and hci
ii were probably fatally in
Two hundred Coxey lies captured a J jurcd by being thr
freight train ut IHg Springs, Col They
we're overtaken by deputies and arrest
eel and taken to Omaha. Neh.
Di n's review of tiade for the week
ended the l.Mh said that woolen milb
were closing, having scarcely anv or
ders. Wheat was a fraction higher
forgery :
baiikuu-nt iu
is no truth in the published statcinei
| that lie had decided to enter suit f-
SI TI.000.000 against the Pacific luinde
railroads, hut had employed Attorm
cents per month due
eiut of work for two wee
to beneflt« ranging fri
Subscriber
ks i<
At New York boot and shoe simp-
were stopped, but shipments from
10 per cent, lnrger for June |
thus far than last year.
'Incinnnti the striking carpenters,
decisive vote, have declared off i
the strike which has paralyzed the
building trades here for live weeks
i won of MOO strikers stopped a train
the Youngwood branch of the Peiin
sylvania road at the point of guns ami
•ed the engineer to take the train
k to Striekler mines, the startiny
pdnt. They then partially ilestroyci'
the llcchi and Youngwood bridge
after which they attacked a part\ of
non-union workmen, badly beatinp
t \% *. ..f them
A ill it'1. Aziz, has been otlicially pro
clulincd sultan of Morocco.
An explosion took place in tin
l-'runzlska mine ut Karwin. Austria,
eadalng tho deaths of 130 miner®. Thli
was followed by four other explosion-
in which eighty more miners wen
killed and a rescue party of ten men
which dccemlcd into one of the pit-
also perishill. The ventilator shaft-
orf several of the pits were destroyed
and the fire sprcael in all directions
The galleries of the mines are still on
tire and it is believed that the major
Itv of tin* bodies of the victims will In
consumed.
Ti s boats, containing '.'*>o Montana
Coxeyites, arrived in lllsniarck from
Helena, Mont., recently, having trav
ele-d by the Missouri river. The cit\
refused to provide food and the men
thre'iitencd to leave their lsmts and
make their way over railroads.
It was reportenl In Wall street that
the national banks will in the near fu
ture furnish all golel for export The
last gold furnished by the banks wa-
during tin- month of April
A provision of the Indian appropria
tion bill prohibits ull Indian children
from attending any school more than
40 miles from their reservation until
they have gone to the school provided
for them at home four years. This
provision. If it is enacted into a law,
will have the effect of reducing the
number of Indians sent away to east
crn schools and very materially in-
creasing their home education.
A i-'ihk occurreel in an abattoir at
Jersey City, N. J., and V'>oo live sheep
and lambs were cremated, boss, some
where about Ssoo.ooo; insurance, about
ine-third. Seven hundred men art-
thrown oat of employment ny tin- lire
As tiii: enel of the fiscal year is only
a few days distant, treasury ofllcials
able to giv
eli for the purpose of handling the
bvn news from
stated that the death
from the plague av
Tiik powder mill
mile from Plnttcvi
more than oo kegs of p
the other evening. Tin
just left the premises
Canto
China
•ate in that cit v
i'd -00 per day.
f Laflin a Hand I
e. W is . containing
Ull ii a
Wvo.. n
i Kino
rhoi
vliile
ork
ing in a Held by soldiers who mistooli |
him for an antelope. The ball passed j
through his body near his heart and he j
was in a critical condition.
Cu \/.kl with grief at the death of hi? j
wife. James I I orshay. --f New York,
shot ami killed his son. Walter, aged 1
p.'. and then ended his own life with a 1
bullet In his brain.
all the anarchists had fled.
EX-MINISTER PHELPS DEAD.
IIIh lli-iil Ii M iml'iiiM-if rrlmoril) li> Tjpolil
levee, I olloiveil liy ^leniiiKllU.
New Yoniv. June is. -Kx-Minister
| William W alter Phelps died shortly be-
fore U ei'elock Sunday morning at his
home at Tea Neck. N. J. lie had been
ill a long time. andi[uite recently went
south in the hope his condition would
| be improved, lb-derived but little ben-
i-flt from Ids southern trip, and but a
short time ago was sei prostrated that
his physician ordered absolute ipiiet.
| Iiradually he grew weaker, and for the
past few days hisdeath has been looked
for at almost any moment. 11 is physi-
| ians paid their last visit at 1" I ". Satur-
| day night lie died a few hours later,
I surrounded by his wife and daughter
I iml his two sons, John J and Shetliehl.
The exact nature of Mr. Phelps1 ail-
ment was never deflniti-ly stated, but
i his illiii-ss was primarily from typhoid
S fever, which was followed by inenln-
! iritis and other coinplieations. lb- was
I not naturally of a robust constitution
i and he inherited pulmonary troubles.
I The end was calm, as though he was
! falling into a slumber. Mrs Phelps is
i prostrated, the result of her long watel"
I by her husband's bedside.
PFiEMIER CRISPI FIRED AT.
\n AhmmmhIii tlitlti-4 ii llf*|n-rute KfTort t«
Kill tin- Italian Ktuli-nimn.
Komi-:. June IH. Premier Crispi wnf
driving from his residence to the chain
her of ib-put ies in a close carriage Satur-
day. when a man loitering • n the side
walk put his hand into
win r
Apple* i'roiiilnlm;.
Washington. June is. The report
of the statistician of the department ol
agriculture for June says that a glance
at the per centages of condition ol
Iicachcs on June l is suflleient to show
how disastrous the season has been
thus far. The returns at this date
relate principally to bloom in tin
more northern districts, and where
conelitions are high it would lie tor,
I early to form an opinion as to crop re-
I suits. As fruit does not recover from
1 a low condition early in its history. Hi-
nt her products do, it is safe to const rin
the extremely low figures into a practl-
^ cal failure of the crop.
The condition for l*'.'l in the state-
I producing the commercial crop, as coni-
ith 1
uiul just us fust as they 111:1
them up. We understand time
and money Is a little si-arce in some port
tin- t'niteil States, hut not so in Mfssour
sourt is all rftrht. and we will have, al
July bonds are paid <>IT. a halanee In the
ury that will Justify tho payment to the scnooi
<• iiil.lreii in Aiii-'iist or aliout tsuu ilkl. (inr llseal
ai/ent wrote me recently that In the event we
did not have money enough to take in the ti per
i-i-nl bonds due July I. they would frlnilly take
them In and earrv for ih at 84 1^-r eent. inter-
est until such time as we are read.- to cancel
them. Missouri's r.-piil itfon a • a silver state-
hasn't hurt her perceptibly in New N ork, as far
chanife na- j Mcllrnle is of the opinion that all c\-
,.,.,,l III.,.,. In III., Mil .sillou llt'1,1 will
-. which ma- « ., , f
resume operations prior to tin-close "t
the present week
Reports from jsiints along the Cleve-
land. boralnc \ Wheeling road this
morning show that work was resuincil
at only two mines on the entire road:
the'se we-re at Kock Hill.
In the Massllbin district not a man
went to work, the miners having de-
cided in mass meeting no{ to abide by
tin- Columbus agree'ini-nt. They will
Mis- holdout fori:, cents different in I over
'rl1"' the rate paid in the Hocking district
i-hool f'"* which they struck last I'.-briiary.
WILL MOVE THE TOWN.
i* I'rcnlileiit of tin- North l-Tnlil Company
Milken a l.lherul OITer.
North Knih. <>k.. June p.i. This
irning Jacob (luthrie. president of
i- North Kii id Town Co.. issued the
lint 1-option hill In
An adjournment was
com pie I iie: i ho bill.
PASSENGERS
lakei
'cllK-ll withoi
STILL WONDER
I-VH Wlull lllgh'M \Vlf
I to Say.
ho evident ly had not
glit i
be for
i* going In
thu
They
to the "lodgi
lodg
the line
WHAT DUN SAYS
a litth
idary of the condition knov
ifortable." They appeared
o, with gray beards. They
idfuleif the other persons i
crowded car. nnd had not impart
one another epiite all the inforn
they had in store.
I'm not u millionaire*," sai
taller one call him Mr High "n
The smaller man call him Mr.
-thought for about fifteen sc.
which is a long pause in a con
sponded: "No. you'i
The Coal Striken lliiil Ot
lliiKlin-nn Fill lured show i
Nbw York, June 111. 1
Co.'s Week I v Ueview of Ti
eitIn-
i b"
rolled ahead a Ik
block.
vice of their i.'enei
and I here is little room
will then hogfn to ah:
ellipse before supplies
■ the authority and ad- j„j|, witli N.
id dollars' w orth
in Mr. Short, for
of fuel will emilde all
Tho
par
for this year, as
18113, 10i; lH'.ll. 1
is-.l, l.r>. Mary I
Virginia, istiii.
lH'.i.i. S-.'; lS'll. 7.
Michigan. Is'.i.l,
18113
Ne
■ ,b>
suspeudiiii; produc
pin iron weekly June I was toi
|-.ll.7:i] April I. and I7I.0.V a year hi
reduction of -JKno-J Ions in unsold si
cutes a iiunntity nearly double the,
been taken for consumption.
At New York boot and shoe s
shipments from the .
|H-r
put lar
Tile di
13; 1801,
AN ABBATTOIR BURNS.
l ire In Jersey City W herein ft.OOO Head ol
Sheep Are Cremated Alive.
.If.lisi.v City, N. J.. June Is. The old
hilt extensive abbattoir of the Central
Stock A Transit Co., in IlarsltnusCove.
just south of ravonia avenue and the
Kric grain elevator, was totally de
stroyed by fire Saturday evening, the
total loss reaching almost ^l,ooo.000.
built on piles, the structure of tw«
stories was entirely of wood, but the
machinery for the various ntilitation
piers was* costly, while the amount ot
stock, including dressed beef, mutton
and upward of :>,000 live sheep and
lambs, went to swell the lo
ujralnst I'M.1171 last year, and Atlantic
only 1HH.IHH1 hushels. airaiiist !,J-;:i.0H7
ir. Cotton h is yielded a fraction, and
n t of acreaire l.v the I 'lnanclalChronicle
is decidedly more favorable than a year
' business is narrow, it is comparative-
r.mi losses hy failure, for the liabilities
I in failures for the lirst week of June
of which *I7iUIH were of
ti.s;.1 .-ill of tradfuir con-
He liahility
only
I'ting of tin- citi/cns of
is I called nnd tin- f:
ght may be ended.
CYCLONE SWEPT.
•uper
Kill
lone which wi
. but compar
•ritory. It w
• citi- "That's w." chipped i
fined want of something better to say.
I,nhl*, Yes. si. continued Mr. High,
lenu ing Ids voice, though no one in ti
;,,„th had lost a word of his previous ee
inous I sation. Yes. sir. I've got ten
sand dollars' worth of books and :
j wife and a nice flat, but I'm not :i
1 iona ire. Short. I'm not a millio
in The, come up there, though, in
I aires do, and they say to me:
•he ||jgh. what a beautiful place you
lis. The luriMci
ported Iu failure- ii
of which ♦VI ii> o.r> v
- of trailing
failures this week I
triu. airalnsi thirty
.511.71*1.
inunufacturlnu and |
is. The inimher of j
n 23.' in the United
terrible
tively si
about mi rods wide and :. mile
length. Everything in its path was
swept from the earth A log 14
feet in length and 1" inches in diame-
ter was picked up and carried a
f HO rods. The barns, sheds,
d implement - of I) W. Woody
were completely demolished and 10
rods of wire fence was swept clear.
Unfits Woody and his horse in a slu-.I
were picked tip and
ml hi
en by the smiling |
and High ga/.e'd into
ing, their chins re t i
dista
ill.I say if she could see
William now'.' What could
eiv. Short, what will she sa
luetor put his head in
feet
Ncit In
A BASE FABRICATION
id d;i
Mi -
,-iftcrn
I street to the
i.tlici
••lit in dim <
•ok i
olver, took quick
bed into tin-
hen lifted
at the pre
Lambert, a prom
•oinpany, insisted i
,vhich |
of
SENSATION IN ST.
LOUIS
-stlKUte tli
shot as nearly to pieces as it is possible |
lobe and live. He. his brother and
iiu<'t her persi n undertook to hold up
the Cherokee money on the roail be- ,
twi-en Tahleepuili and l''ort liibson last
Sunday evening. The Cherokee guards |
got onto the plot and went in advance
of the money. In the tight that en-
sued one of t he guards was killed and
Cook shot in numerous places, lb- anil
his friends crossed the" Arkansas near
here yesterday morning and marshals
from here went in pursuit. Cook was
too badly hurt to escape uml was left
by his friends to fall into the hands of ;
tho law He is a leader in the famous
band of horse thieves and desperadoes |
flint Iuih be'cn terrorizing this and the \
Seminole nations the past several
months.
Cnuwoo, June 'jo. The American j
Uaihvay union defeated the proposition
to admit negroes to the organization
yesterday by a vote of 113 to I".'. The
discussion of the question continued
for two days, President Debs meeting
defeat in his tight against the estab-
lishment of the color line in the now
constitution of the order.
Nkiiiiaska ClI'Y, Neb , June "o The
temporary injunction in the llonaciim-
Corlu'tt case yestenlav was made per-
uninjured nnd
iage wilh the in-
would-be assas-
pie attracted by tin
report
id lie would undoubtedly
beaten to death had it not
prompt arrival of the
which
People
tin
been
NEW RECORD RY CONGRESS.
llnly I 11;lit,v-IIve ruldlc uml Kluhteen I'rl
villi' It.IN mi lur riiHM'.l.
W .vsillxiiTON, June 17. t'p to to-ela>
only eighty-live public measures liavi
been enacted into law and the private
laws are limited to the unpreccdent
odly small number of eighteen.
The whole number of bills introduced
In the house is T.I.Vt far below the av-
erage. Of these l.osd have been report
I'd also far below the usual nuinbei
nt this date. The falling otV .-f bill-
reports. etc . has been one of the main
causes of the recent wholesale re.In.
tion of force in the government print
ing office, •
A. O. U. W. OFFICERS
Fall of ii eiriiml stand.
Pi:tmv. Ok., June H. An accident
occurred here yesterday in which ji
little daughter of Hon. A. < . l'ottci
was fatally injured and many were
slightly wounded. While the l'onc;
Cyclone's, an Indian baseball team ol
tin- Otoe tribe, and the Famous nine o!
Perry were playing a match game at
Jerome park, the grand stand, on
were seated several hundred
gave way and the crowd was
to the ground. The Itttie gir.
was crushed and mangled so baellj
that she will die.
Noted l.nnilio-iipe l'nlntcr I lend.
Mot n i Vi kmiv. N. Y.. Jane 18.—
William Hart, a noted landscape paint
or, who for many years has been promi
nent in the art world, died at his resi-
dence on Chester Hill, this city, yester-
day. Mr. Hart, was born seventy-
two years ago in Scotland^
coming to America in his youth, ' ^1rHM
(iriiinl .lur> Hi-i|«ii-hI«'i
,Mulliiii|iliy Kelli-f l-'uiid.
Sr. bot is. June Id.- A sensation
was created at last night's me-eting of
tlu' city council by the adoption of a
resolution asking the grand j my to in-
vestigate the Mullanphy relief fund of
this city. The resolutions stated that a
published report, signed by J. II. Cham-
bers. expert accountant, and authenti-
cated by the board of managers of the
Mullanjiliy relief fund, contains prima
facie evidence that there has been
priations of the revi
during the past five ;
controlled by the In
id its real value
nil misnppro-
• >f that board
The property
' appr
The So Culled I'lol to lltoii I |> I he Ciipilol
I, So Iti-Kiirdeil lo WaHlilnvton.
Wasiiinoion. June lo. Kvery police,
secret service and treasury official here j
regards as a pure fabrication the story
published iti the Post yesterday that a
grave anarchist conspiracy had been j
unearthed. Ilonorc Jackson nfTe.-ts in-
dignation that his mime should have
been used in connection with tiie
story. Jackson's landlady is indignant
that she should have been brought
into the fiction by having the street
and number of her house give, and
she does not scruple to say that .lack-
son wrote the article himself. he
Masters, upon whose statements the
article is supposed to be based, is re-
garib'd by Chief Ha/en. of tin-secret
irrie'd through | ,j0(,r. railed *
i-I again about ] (((ol. s,lort jm(l Mi,rh ,iy tl|).
r received aii_\ j KI|j(| jn - School str
two dignified old gent lemon
stumbled to the door, slu
selves together as they stn
cross-walk, nnd passed out o
And the question uppcrm
minds of all I In- other puss.
> that
ght:
What did she
"What did the Ki
<l.i
Sr. boi'is. June Hi. The board of
arbitration appointed t<> adjust differ-
ences between the Mobile A Ohio Rail-
road Co. and the conductors, firemen,
trainmen find switchmen of said com-
pany, rcniU'reel a decision re'eommcmi-
eduction of I per eent. for a
if four months from June 1.
hicli the wages existing
1, lSOf, shall be restored
as beastly hungry.1
\ l.ilii-riil OITi-r
where' lie entered the tra«l« • . |une 1, H04. shall be restore,
of carriage painting. It was while pur- | an(1 ,,mtinued ind.-fi
suing this vocation ut Albany llit, K thereafter unless sixty days' mi
cut
Mo
They had
111.. June
i hard
Ycs-
e for
villi
s VN 1'KAMT-I •
I'liiMi'n >lr. Itlccs
June IS. -The f >1
, _ -ly accurate cs-
to thirty .-.•Ills | 'I- ,liiv. ill," t .,,|unl t|mat,. „ til,' lift rosults ,,( ti,,, tr.-;is
there In pur,'l.u>,lnu (Knvcr to our dol llry., (,lvr„ti„„s („r ,i„. your, fp to
lar hen1. Hie t;>th |hl NMlBtl •ffrogtta MSI,.
Mm. Kl-i'l l >Kit. I. member ,,f n sui Wl.Til. ami the.11-.I.... -. .ne.,i- - . „ I
eille eluh (,ririi!li/e,I ^ix in,filths n|TO ill 3.17. lellvll,j u ilelleit f.,1 III, ,'l, \, ,i
the rear ro.nn of n Mil,.011 ut Ne V,,rU ""'I " l">" molillis „( -1 ■■
one ilnv I11t. lv ivus foun.1 lylnif u| ,n Tiik failures l„r the weeh elide,1.1.111,
tho II,xir of tier home .lylnff from the 1', >vere U83 In the l liite,! Stules. upiliisl
effect, of enrlKille nelil the menus of 1 313 hist year, nnd 10 ill fminilu. iitfuinsi
Bvtoide aipreeil upon when theelul, was 31 lust year
orfflMlixcl. The same nielli. after hear i ^1
ing what Mrs. Knjipener hail iloni, | lietw,
Mrs. Moriiii ilrunii earbolie aeitl, 'lyinu
the next morning- Hugh Donahue
other member of il*- club, arrive- i at
Jlellevue hospital alnnit the time Mrs.
Moran did and dieel ten uiinutes before*
hhe did- He had taken carbolic acid.
Tin* next morning. Tom Connor, un
other member of the club, was found dor temporary nberrati.
running uliout in Madison street, neai >ug to sunstroke. Ilermi
Twenty-hi* venth He was taken to the his mother - throat and attempted f
insuue paviiiuu at Ilellevue. I eide. He will r
if u collision in the sea of
the Greek bark F.gyptu
the Russian steamship Maroussiu has
been received, lloth vessels sank.
Four of the crew of the Kgyptus and
twenty-two of the crew of the Marous
sia, including all the ofllcers. were
drowned.
In Streutor, 111., while lalioring 1111
>f mind ow-
llichter cut
cope once more
mob of angry but hysterical women,
but they dispersed it without firing a
shot and without injury to anyone.
The deputy sheriffs and deputy United
States marshals also had an exciting
time, having had an encounter with a
party of strikers, during wliioh from
lift v to one hundred shots were lirc.l
Fftce-n strikers *. re captured
Ki.i.swoiu 11. Kan.. June A cloud
burst, accompanied by hall and high
wind, struck this place yesterday, ami
I the water on the main streets was
from two to four feet deep tilling cel-
lars and undermining buildings. K
\V. bong's two-story brick grocery col-
lapsed from end to end. loss,
U. llbi'iil's two-storv brick meat mar-
ket also fell; loss frt.OOO.
Empohia, Kan.. June -ii. The suit
tiled by Mrs. T It. Plumb, against Ma-
jor Calvin llooel, lu r husband's old-
: time friend and partner has been with-
drawn.
•.I: Mast.-
s; fore
M. \Y:
\V. have bet
man. bonis b. Troy. Illin.
Joseph II. Rlggs, Kansas;
Tate. Nebraska: recorder
ket; receiver, John J Acker;
examiner, Dr. W. c. llicharelso
John Milne. Ontario; watchm;
ticiger. Michigan; trustees. C.
Katsenstein,California} ll I 8easi n
Dakota; A. II. Vermllye, N.-w Jersc
10i0 I n 1111 l.v Mu««ai ri
5, June 18. -Advi.
, Shanghai s:iy that the whole fa
; guide
n. II. F
The \ lee
lly of the
Nanking, h:
by member
iu revenge
Hunan is i
l.iu Kan Yih, ••:
iiassacred in llunnt
Kolahwei soeietj
- viceroy's ilraatii
that conspiracy
re disturbed stat,
that Mr. Harts art work challenge
attention in the painting of bits .«•
landscape on the panels of the oh:
llroadway stages then being built al
Albany.
DenuM-rntlc Silver Conference.
Omaiia, Neb.. June is.—r. J. Smith
secretary of the arrangement commit-
tee for the democratic silver confer
i-nce to be held in Omaha next Thurs-
day stated yesterday that Congressman
would be in attendance at the confer-
ence. At the evening session Mr.
bryan will speak, his subject being:
••\Ve favor the immediate restoration
of the free and unlimited coinage ol
silver witltout waiting for the aid
consent of any other nation on earth."
C.ov stone. >>f Missouri, has lieen in-
vited. and a reply is expected from hltn
I shortly. ______
Three Men Kllli-il hy l.tchtiiliiir
Mf.nominkk. Mich., June l-v Light-
ning struck the house of John Ander-
son Saturday afternoon, killing l'cter
RoamnMen, Peter Orenon and Nehi
Itcrkstrom and Injuring Swan Swanson
and Swan llerkstremi The men were
raising the h
tice sITafl bi- give
siring a change
The decision^ha
ept'cd'by
rtl/tliioiioiiH noil ( hovnskl.
Ilosrox. June 1 *. . At the boston
theater last night Hob I it/simnions.
champion middle-weight of the world
and challenger of Jim Corbett, turned
an almost certain defeat into victory.
Had not the police interfered it was
ten to one that he would have finished
,loe fhoynski in n punch. As it was
the match was declared a draw, but no
one present will over claim that fhoyn-
ski was a foeman worthy to combat the
ty de- lanky Australia
die
• until t liev ;
. Me A uber
1 that if they
„e ith im,',
' to stay lien
id h<
tho
f which Ik
enjoyed the
the ram i
euth.
I Mt III l.v IVolllltliil III* >
j Thursday, a man na
1 fatally wounded his
I liiehllc.
e ini|;r>it uiul Inc ('rlipl.
Romk. June l-v -l'rime Minister Cris-
ii. whose life was attempted yester*
lay by an anarchist named Paolo boga,
uis reccive.l congratulatory telegrams
rum Prince Hismarck and ChauceUor
Coxey'* mil Introduced.
Washington. June pi.—1The Coxey
bill for good roads and non-interest-
bearing bonds which Senator Pi-tYer
introduced in the senate, has been in-
troduced in the house by Representa-
tive i i.-arv. of California. It was done bv
request and does not signify that Mr.
(ieary entertains the foM-y theories. An
amendment has been added to make it
compulsory for every stale, territory,
county and township to give work to
every unemployed person in its limits
at «1..V> a day' for common labor and j
S i. Mi for labor with a team, eight hours
a day.
Silver Conference.
Washington. June Hi. The results ,
of the steps taken by the Mexican gov-
ernment to ascertain the sentiment of
the silver using nations of the world
toward a conference on that subject at
the city of Mcxieo are being watched
with interest at Washington. Should a
sufficient number of these nations
indicate their willingness to send dele-
gates to u conference one will be held.
I'eru and the Argentine foil federation
have already signified a willingness to
participate in a conference, but the
I'nited States has not yet indicated iu
I attitude on the subject.
I
cheering, howling
battle, the like
A Teiiin Minister lilMii|tpriir«.
Dxictok, Tex., June 10. — Elder
Charles baker, pa-tor of the Christian!
church here, left last Thursday morn-
ing for Tioga, on business, promising|
to be back on the afternoon of the
same (lav. lb- has never been seen in
heard of since, lie was married three
weeks ago to Miss Corrie Dunbar, a ^
member of his church.
Four llorwe* I turned.
Ciiippkwa Fai.i.s,Wis., June 10.- Fire
early this morning destroyed the livery
i ]H*t iib-int ly) — "
•"in. ' " i'lobkins
look like a fortu
wning, Kino \f
S'.'O.'I
No Cholera In ll
IIAMIUmi. June P.i.
report circulated by
that cholera had find-
burg, an otlicial deel:
been i
Ni v
of choleri
Itev. llr. Pita ti
Yoick. June l1.-
•, 80,000,
In rcpl*y to ti
a news agent
en out at llai
ration has bei
only ha. {lo-
ll e-re this yen
h
Verdict for Hood's
•• 1 was in the army I years, was wouinled
and e.iiitraet«'d sciatica and rhe-uinatism.
Have- sufTcn-d ever alnce nnd lost tfie
, ol III \ left le Hill side I lllllrtt
lav that • >t all tho medicine* 1 have over
tnod Hood's Barsaparilln Is tho best, it.
I do not sav
r.1 tin
II. Paxton '
neglecting
j the marriage of CongroKsma
j breckinridge and Mrs. Wing
Fined.
bev Dr. John
fine «if 810 for
i certificate of
Hood'
that it will raiai 1 f el *
g Sarsa-
T. 11. bai xiihus, i
( Hood's Piiis
pnrilla
Cures
1V%V%
Ni bra-d, I
digest tun, hi I iuiiHiiesH
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Weesner, R. The Hennessey Democrat. (Hennessey, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 39, Ed. 1 Friday, June 22, 1894, newspaper, June 22, 1894; Hennessey, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc108847/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.