The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 17, 1892, Page 2

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(ree a are mee ane es eee SENTENCED. Judge Beatty, of Boise, Idaho, Sen- tences Strikers. ! { i { AN APPEAL TO BE TAKEN. | ——— | The Sensational Death of Two Girls In| Nebraska Turns Out to Be a Double Suicide—Byrnes, of New York, Has Little Faith in an Anarchist Story. | | | | | Borst, Idaho, Aug. 12.—The names of the striking miners held and their terms of imprisonment under Judge Beatt: decision yesterday are as _ follows ‘Thomas Eaton, John Fitzgerald, Dan Harrington, Hugi McGee, John Nichol- | son, Gus Peterson and Thomas Whalen, each six months; P. Robinson, seven months, and Joseph VPaynton, eight months. It is understood an appeal will be taken and that an application for a writ of habeas corpus will imme- diately be made to Justice Field. Judge Leatty, in rendering his decis- ion, passed upon several interesting points. He said that the question of | diverse citizenship could have been raised in the original proceedings. It | had not been so raised and the restrain- ing order had been issued. ‘The order | partook of the nature of a criminal statute, violations of which were tried by the federal courts with- out regard to the citizenship of par- ties. On question of service the court said that it was not essential that cach party should be served. It was only necessary that they should know that an injunction had been issued. Neither was it necessary that the parties should have been named in the restraining or- der, that order having been issued against the miners’ union, their aiders and abettors. Judge Beatty stated that labor or- ganizations were entirely lawful in the abstract, but that the lawful character of particular organizations must be measured by its acts and not by its by- laws and constitution. The acts of the Cour d'Alene miners’ unions showed that they were of an unlaw- ful character. A strict interpretation of the law would render ,each member liable for the acts of organiza- tions. The judge concluded: ‘There is no doubt that under this well defined principle of law I could hold all the defendants who are members of the union. I will not, however, apply that rule, but will endeavor to determine the connection of each of these re- spondents with occurrences at the Frisco and Gem on July 11.” A Double Suicide. Fairmount, Neb., Aug. 12.—It now appears that Misses Bertha and Lizzie Shultz, who fell from a buggy, Wednes- day, and fell dead a short time after- wards in their home, were not killed by the fall, but committed suicide. County Attorney Sloan came here from Geneva yesterday and began a quiet investigation. He visited eve drug store in town, but each propri tor emphatically denied having sold the girls poison, He then began a search of the druggists’ registers. On that of Woodruff was found the following en- try: “B 2 Shultz (for H. S$.) st ch- nine, one-c and mice.” The bottle containing the poison was found in the Shultz yard. The label was scratched off. Physicians estimate that the bottle contained enough poison to kill men, An effort will now be made to find some canse for suicidwy but the investi- gators are wholly in the dark archists and Frick. Aug. 12.—Superintendent Byrnes said this morning that he knew nothing regarding the subject matter of the report from Pittsburgh that an anarchist named Aaron S m had left the city a couple of days ago with the avowed intention of killing H.C. Frick, the manager of the Carnegie company. He had not scen the Austrian vice consul nor heard from him concern- ing any, plot to kill Mr. Frick. He added that no information had come to him from any source regarding the man Aaron Stamm. He placeslittle faith in the story that sucha person has gone to Pittsburgh to kill Mr. Frick. @AILED FOR LIFE. Arrival of King at Tenn.—The Aveng! Nasnvitis, Teun., Aug. we ‘ol. H. Clay King, the Memphis murderer, ar- rived here in charge of Sheriff McLen- don and was at once conveyed to the state prison, where he was quickly fitted out in a convict suit. He was accompanied by his wife and daughter, who were greatly affected. King as- sumed a defiant attitude and to Sheriff McLendon he said he would see Gov. Buchanan in —— before he would ask him for a pardon. Soon after spiriting the prisoner away from Memphis Sheriff McLendon was informed by wire that four men, armed with Winchesters, would over- take him at McKenzie, Tenn., and hang King. He immediately changed his route and came to Nashville via Norton- ville, Ky. At McKenzie the avengers overtook the train on which King was supposed to be, but he was not there and they returned to Memphis. Three Sleeping Men Drowned. Montreat, Aug. 12.—Atanearly hour an accident occurred in the Lachine eanal by which three men lost their lives. The tug Paul was moored in the eanal and during the night a leak oc- curred in some unaccountable manner and the tug sunk. Four men were asleep in their berths and three of them were drowned, the fourth making his escape. No Republican Ticket in Georgia. ATLANTA, Ga, Aug. 12—The repub- licans of Georgia met here in state con- vention, Col. R. D. Lock, of Macon, president. These electors at large for the Harrison ticket were named: J. W. Lyons and C. W. Arnold. A resolu- ~ tion was adopted setting forth that it ywas inexpedient to nommate a ticket. California reports a very short prune | ing’s ship LIZZIE BORDEN Charged With the Murder of Her Father} d Stepmother. } fry Mass., Aug. ezic Borden is under arrest th murdering her father a mother last Thursday ke } Accompanied by her sist m she was brought into the et court room abor presun to at t t before, all behind locked | When iss Lizzie returned} third inquir imental wree ducted to the matron’s room. The in- vestigation was adjourned about 4 o’cloe District Attorney Knowlton ther officers went to the marshal’s and and zed ing Lizzie 1 her step-| od terms | *t. it is said th st suspe she of the crime is t mother have not for sever she refuse with Mrs. Money 1 the trouble. Lizzie and her te The years old, i haughty and domineering with the will of hes father and bound to contest for her rights. She is of a repellant dispo- sition, and after an unsuccessful passage with her father would become sulky and refuse to speak to’him for days at a time. She moved in the best of society in Fall River and was a lia of the on g¢ been father had seve on these matte woman, who is 32 ral iscussions Congregational chureh and isa brilliant conversationalist. She eee she ought to entertain as others did. Her father’s constant refusal to allow her to entertain lavishly angered her. Since the murders all these things have been brought up against her and her tinal the arrest is of the matter. outcome whole Aparchy on the Congo. Brusseis, Aug. 12.—The Independ- ence Belge says that twenty agents of the Katanga company have been killed or captured by Arabs on the Upper Congo river. The steamer Beernart, which was taking gocds up the river, was seized ard the facto- ries closed. The Arabs north- west of Nyangwe have gone down the Lualaba river and captured the station at Ribari killing the white empl there. The stations the upper Lomassi have also. been nyed. ne Arabs a nley Falls and Isangi, who have hitherto been loya are hostility. The Congo state jes e sending reinforcements to various threa points a fire at New Ledford, Mass. No. li was launched at on the 11th Cardinal Gibbons has been in New Hampshire, where he received ion Twelfth inated A. J for congress. The mz works at S tosignt Cruiser Lor- 1, Boston, many Indi You, a locomotive 1 republi ns nomn- ger of the Jeff. abenville, O., 1 n > seale. In the Chickasaw ek blood, defeated Harris, half breed, by NM majority. Thomas Divine is char, poisoning the fish in. the Je rsonville, Ind. William Lacy was burned to death in the calaboose at Burnett, Tex., which it was supposed he had set on fird There isa huge slump in the postal business of New Orleans, caused by the collapse of the lot company. A convention of rabbis will be heldat New York in October to take action garding the cireumvision of conve Ilog meat afflietcd with trichir been discovered in the Ci of Mes It was shipped fror i ing house. Templer, vice president of the in Co., of Hutchinson, Kan., s drowned at Cheney, Kan., while batt Editor Medill, of the Chicago Trib- une, is after the world’s f. directors asharp stick because of uganee. The omission of an item of $5,009 in| the sundry civil bi postmas- ters’ accounts, em} the post | office department. William CC. Cobbs, a stretched his head through the bri at Hopkins He was instantly killed. Equestrian statues of Gen. Houston and Gen. Albert Sydney John- ston will be placed in the state capitol grounds at Austin, Tex. A woman left a baby with John Car- lin, a printer, recently in a Brooklyn park “just fora few moments.” She never returned and Carlin has the baby. Reeruiting for the army will no lon- ger be tolerated as a mere “snap” for commissi out as he w ioned officers. The latter will be required to consider it serious busi- ness, An Indian village was destroyed by fire on Queen Charlotte island, B.C. It was started by Christianized Indians, who objected to the heathen burying of the dead on poles. The official count of the Choctaw vote gives Jones, the progressive candidate for principal chief. a © majority and gives the progressives 14 out of 20 representatives in the national council. There are 1.500 places in the gift of the people, authorized to be filled by Indians at the various agencies through- out the country, at a total expense to the government of $257,940. Bishop Ryan, of Alton, Ill, has ob- tained writs of ejectment against Father Kuhlman, of Mitchell, recently deposed. Considerable hard feeling has been stirred up in Catholie circles over the matter. While workmen were engaged in} placing a six-inch gas line-for the Sai- ammoniac Co., forty-five miles from Montpelier, Ind., the line burst, killing Olie Olson instantly and ares injur- ing Adam Hawk. AREKESTED. | a standstill, | road commissioner, James H. A HERD STAMPEDED. Maddened Cattle Plunge Over a Clif-Aw- | fal Death of Two Cowboys Under the) Mound of Beef. Gorse Crry, Idaho, Au 12.—Hun | prospectors caused the loss of 360 head of fine cattl 1 the death of two cow- boys near I} xck Butte. The pectors, who 2 under tempted to capture a anc arrest, h had str 1 fr l gave the men an into the herd. ubandoning stead of now fresh meat, > herd be prospectors, i their hunt for out the calf. and a stampede resulted. an toward the brink of a precipitous eliff and the cowboys who had them in urge tried to head them off. The cat- tried to cut me excited | n tinued to m: Yasson and Dan in getting in front Hancock, sue ed of the herd, and by ingattempted to bring the but they we storm the bellowing tide, and the avored to get out of the v for and the men rode their lives Their horses were not s however, and their horrified comy ions saw them swept off the cliff as the maddened animals, unable to rushed over the edge of the preeipi ‘There were over 709 cattle in the her but only 361 were foreed off the cliff. They fell ninety-seven feet, and all save one of them were either killed outright or mortally in- jured. The lone steer that escaped was not even scratched, the carcasses of the cattle that first went over forming a writhing cushion that broke its fall. The bodies of the two cowboys were found under the mass of cattle. They were dreadfully mangled, and their horses, too, were dead &nd_ by crushed. The remaining cowbo all the wounded cattle. The e are now being skinned In many cases bones have been forced through the hides of the animals, depriv them of their commercial value. The Indians in the locality are feasting on the mound of beef, and it is said that thou- sands of buzzards and vultures have gathe tragedy George Ma ‘dat the scene of this peculiar The eattle were owned by Cc CL ASS CITIES. esting Meeting at Moberly, Mo. — Subjects Touched Upon. SHIRD An Inter Mo. According | previous arrangements representative men from meny of the third-class cities met inconvention, in Odd to discuss points of int: to cities of that class. called the lows’ hall, per Mayor convention to ord rsdale and ex- and City Cle tield, Mo. this city session of of this spe the di cussic the w of the state, and adequate and pertinent m ‘ting defi- ciencies, ete. ‘I issions were deeply inte resting: The omentof t-class thi cities length i impor erning th as in and financial third cl cussed s matte y franchises was 2 Phursday's Basel NATIONAL L¥ Louisvil Louisvi Chie: uw incinnati, sw York— : Brooklyn, 3 Philadelph 4S; Bos- ton, + Baltimore—Ba 3: Washington, 6. STANDING z CLUBS Per. Won. Low. cent. Clev and. ww 7 Boston , tt ) Philade! : 4 ) New Y = 1 9 Broo! =* H it Pittsbu wz 10 Baltimore 13 lo Cincinnati Ww 12 Chicago a iM Washi y “ Louisy # a St Lo 6 Ww Knights Templar Officers. Denver, Col., Aug. 12.—The ing is the list of officers chosen by the triennial conclave Knights Templar: Grand mast Judge Hugh McCurdy, of Michigan; deputy grand master, W. Larue Thom: of Kentucky; grand generalissimo. Reuben H. Lioyd, of California: general H. B. Stoddard, Texas: grand senior warden, Moulton, of Illinois: grand junior war- den, Rev. H. W. Rugg, of Rhode Island; grand treasurer, H. Wales Lines, of Connecticut; grand reeorder, W. B. Isaacs, of Virginia. Boston was chosen for the next triennial conclave. follow- Two Negro Murderers Hanged. Hovston, Tex., Aug. F2.—Henry Me- Ghee, colored, aged was hanged here this morning for the murder of Officer George Fenn while resisting ar- rest on the night of March 14, 1891. He neither admitted nor denied his guilt. Littte Rock, Ark, Aug. 12.—James Dodson, colored, who killed his mis- tress in St Francis county in 1890, wa hanged to-day at Devall’s Bluffs He protested his innocence to the last. Iowa populists refused democratic fusion and put the following ticket in the field: Secretary of state, E. H. Gillette of Des Moines, formerly a greenback member of congress and Gen, Weaver's partner in the newspa- per business: auditor of state, A. J. Blakely of Newton: treasurer, Justin Wells of Eldora; attorney general, Charles Mackenize of Des Moines; rail- Burnett ofIndianola, The Brotherhood of Locomotive En- gineers will engage in no boycott egainst Carnegie materials & The cattle! were thoroughly frightened and con- | shooting and yell-| 2 unable tc! en-| Theli brink of the eliff was dangerously near, | t} ody enough, | stop, | ining | plained briefly the Ce for which | d captain | of | orge H. | THE COW. | WISDOM OF There Are Occasions When Her Intel- | ligence Is Really Remarkable. | “It is i ais ted | expens cow ¢ mn ¢ me loc the e | of slugs i inhabitants kept d them to forege other half. } ings of no av ycow in th full ps a he: y could not go th Thad to knoe the fer to let th ht L added a Jog chain a and sat up in comy rreled gun to w An old brindled she-} |up and surveyed the house abed. Then she the gate and again surveyed the house. Next she went to work on the bolt with her tongue. In five minutes she had it drawn and started to + She looked surprised to find herself still on the outside. Half a dozen of her com- panfons came up and surveyed the new The brindle bre a horn in trying tolift the gate off its hinges. They appeared to hold a council of ; then an old spotted gourmand in- ‘rted 2 horn under the chain, lifted it r the post and the whole drove nd so nig sure we were shook come ov marched inside. I gave it up and took the gate off its hinges. I now raise all vegetables at the market. THE EARTH'S: ATMOSPHERE. It Extends Muc er Than only Supposed. One would hardly think of looking to for information about the height of the carth’s atmosphere. Yet it isin just that way that evidence has rece muy bee ‘nobtained that the atmos- igher than Is Com- the moon has een assumed. sof lunar e eclebrated ipses n observatory of 1, have shown the: Lord t the received from the moon, the is only ho several m: of the earth re the » moon. seen by ents the We are 5 sentations in wh ed to pic- th the rep- Accordingly, 1 time one so slight © sound, inste manner to | rather a tir ather mor not bag would on of th che sound is, the _ of thesz1 met ¢ who, wit for the fi fully « who and v People ordinarily look upon the mole as a sluggish and har: spending its life in groping under ground. As usual, idea isa mistakaa one. The reality the most ferocious active of animals. Imag fied to the size of a tiger havea more terrible beast than the world has yet see Though with de fective powers of vision and the ineapable of following its pr: it would be agile springing this way and that as it went along, leaping with lightaing quickness upon any cre: ature which it met, rend- ing it to pieces in a moment, d i the yet warm and bleeding flesh and in stantly seeking with hung for a fresh victim. leis in : by sight, One of London’s Oid Ceremonies. annual ceremony of the trial ‘observed at the has just been British mint. The pyx i and the term is t the chest at the mint in w mens of the coinage are preserved. The trial by weight and assay of the gold and silver coin of the United Kingdom prior to its issue is made by a jury of goldsmiths nominated for the purpose by the lord chancellor. On the ocea- sion the test included 4,297 sample sov- ereigns and £420 in silver, representing @ total coinage of $25,000,000. less creature, | blindly | the popular | nd meee | ne it magni- | 1 you would | refore | beyond conception, | I AM AT we 'O THE FRONT LEBRATED- ky Fi DRILLS. Road Wagons, Phetuns, &c. NEW Fikim? NEW GOODS? Having pure! ased the stock of goods known as the Grange store consisting of GRUGE itis & DRY GOODS, { desire to say to my many friends that I have re- plenished the stock and fitted up the store room in shape and I would be glad call and see me. PORDUCE OF ALL Toil. laranter my prices on store in the city. “. We. PAUTION.- Beware of dentors cub- z shocs Without W. 1. Dong!ns anne andthe price stamped on bottom, ir pone ntand hon enters and general merchants wher for n through are worthle gotage Ireee to have all my old friends KINDS WANTED. goods to be as iow es any Call and see me PETTtyYsSs W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE carn, # sewed shoe that will not rip 3 tne Calf, » flexible, more comfortable, ¢, stylish ‘other siiog ever sold, at the price. hoes costing from $4 to $5. 00 Shoe made with two completo Uthe outside edge (as shown in cut), of Cheap welt shoes sold at the », having onl, ne sole sewed nv strip of leather on the edge, and When once $ many they will never ripor loosen from the upper. 99 vet Dongola, the same high, rd of merit. I have cLOrys Mass. soto in your place send direct t W. L. Douglas, Brockt ARONETURES FOR SALE, PANCY SHRED, IXNQU nh CONCKLIN, ikE OF; LaGRIPPE sires * by using JONNSON'S CHILL AND FEVER TONIC, Coe bo: tle GUARANTEED to cure LA GRIPPE Fever, Collis and Fever. and all MONEY REFCSDED. 200 000" sold fase sear. Ui ified entorsements from not forsale by your rrggist if ead brea on receipt of perbottic. Lite TARE MO SUBSTITUTE. seuuson Tol Toule €0., 133 Clark St., Chicago, “IVE CURE. On Dh, New York. 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