The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 18, 1896, Image 6

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    THE NEWS,
Articles of incorporation of the Omaha
and 8t, Louis Railroad Company, with a
capital stock of #2502000, have been filed
with the of State, in Jefferson,
Mo. The company will build and operate
a railroad from Pattonsburg, Mo,, to Coun-
cil Bluffs, Ia., a distance of 144 miles Pp.
member of one of the largest
Honolulu, and Minister
of Finance late monarchy, left
San New Yi
Eatsern capitalists in refunding the
Secretary
C, Jones, a
banking-houses
under
in
the
Francisco for rk to interest
Hawal-
I'wo per-
sd in a © at
fan government's indebtednesa
gons were killed and two
Pittsburg.
made to he
An unsuccess!
attempt
Id up the Washington and Ci
nati express of the C. & 0. Road,
tonville, W. Va, Ex -Strod
Larry Cummings shot hi
od to shoot his daughte
Seattle, Wash, M
to be {ataliy wot
after a brief
Chililes
sweetheart,
ra, Cumn
jomas White
quarrel at
the, O.,
his
killed hir
Frank Wesley,
in Kirkpatrick,
New.
t#d
‘ria: in
Greenfield, Ind,
the glass works,
while there,
Ottawa,
from
parade,
Herman Kecks was sentenced by Judge
Batler, of the United Phila-
deiphis, to one year's imprisonment and a
two hundred dollar fine for smuggling dia-
mounds, ~—Confederate Memorial Day was
celebrated (n Staunton, Va
which they were “viewing a cireus
tat as " "
States Court in
in the Isle of Wight county, Va, Rev. RE.
EB. Trent was acquitted on the charge of set
ting fire to his church, ~The twenty-ninth
annual meeting of the West Virginia Medi-
cal Society was held in Wheeling, -——An un
known man left a valise filled with dynamite
in a Chicago saloon,——One hundred and
righty cans of dynamite exploded near Lilly,
Pa., killing one man and severely injuring
gix others, Commencement exercises was
held at York Collegiate Institute ——The
sommencement exercises were conciudad at
Roanoke College, in Salem, Va The
bondholders’ purchasing committee has
bought the Jacksonville, Louisville and St
Louis Road for $250,000,
BUTTER MAKING IN A MINUTE
4 Bwedish Process That May Revolutionize the
Easiness.
Butter making in one minafte, with great
soonomy and many valuable safeguards
from disease as compared with the old -fash-
ioned churning system, is described by
United States Consul O'Neill, at Stockholm,
in a report to the State Department,
This butter is made by a simple ‘machine,
known as the radiator, invented by a Swed-
ish Engineer and deseribed and illustrated
by the Consul, It makes the butter directly
from sterilized milk. The machine hax been
in use several months, creating a sensation
among dairymen and promises to revolution.
ze butter-muking.
SESSION AT ANEND.
Senate and House Adjourned
Sine Die.
FEW MEMBERS PRESENT.
An Absence of the Bustie and Dis~
That
the Closing Day of Con~
order Usually Mark
gress Resolutions
of Thanks.
f the fix session
than the
sited the White House
wi there were a
iny
i LR excell
who ¥
his work was mere
is thronged
matter
now, walling
Aonstitnant
onsituenss
iy remains for me to declare the first sess
f the Fifty-fourth Congress adjourned with-
out day.
The gavel descended with a whaek at the
iast word and the session was over,
House of Representatives,
There was not more than Ofty members
on the floor of the House when it met at 11
'k forthe final segalon of the first ses.
sion ‘of the Fifiy-fourth Congress. The
reading of the journal consumed half an
hour,
On motion of Mr. Dingley, a resolution
was adopted for the appointment of a com-
mittee of three members to join a similar
committee from the Senate to wait upon
the President and inform him that Congress
"was ready to adjourn and ascertain if he
bad any further communleation to make
The speaker appointed Mr. Dingley, Mr.
Cannon and Mr. Bayers,
Mr. Turner, on behalf of the minority, of
fered the following resolution:
“ Resoleed, That the thanks of this House
ara doe and are hereby tendered to Hon
Thomas B. Reed, Speaker of the House of
lepresentatives, for the ability, efficiency
and striet impartiality with which he has dis-
charged the arduous responsible duties of
Lis office during the present session of Con
grees,”
The presentation of the resolution was
greeted with a round of applause,
Mr. Wheeler (Democrat, of Alabama) sn-
joyed the distinction of pasaing the last bill,
which was one to pension Barah M. Spyker,
the widow of a captain in an Alabama vol-
unteer company which took part in one of
the Indian wars
At d4o'clock the Bpeaker arose, ‘Gentle
men of the House of Representatives,” said
he, “before announcing those words which
sloge the session 1 desires to offer to the
o elo
House my grateful recognition of its
ness. The thanks of the House of Represen-
tatives is always a high honor, but {8s especi
the
more
ully so at the end of a session where
Speaker has been forced to BAY
the
no"
times, perhaps than in history of any
other Congress,
“While thanking you for your kindness to
the the
conduct of the public business. Ordinarily a
majority of two and a half to one-—a
ity of 160
ord
men
me, I must copgratulate House on
major.
means disorganization, faction
and dis In this House a
fifty
hundred and
of both parties have behaved with
and {tf
with the other branches
crument, with
the steadiness of veterans, our eorL-
wtions of the prov
different 1dens, hans prevented
serving the country as we might
us from
have done, we at least have behaved witl
f 1d eredit
TRITNEEA |
FIFTY-FOURTH CONGRESS.
HOUBE
144th Dav. -Th 180 gave its final
provai t ‘onierence ‘pouris on
vpale nmen
ag
the naval
inary ely
r snd sectarian
of Columbia bli
aud the
lay in
wonsideratd
sontested el
DE ress
t of the
REOWNED CHILD
hie gs UTAn
in each hand and
into the stream,
The children at first
idish glee, but the
liberately little
water and held her there
seroam and struggle as the
regarded
ting with « mother de.
soused Emma under
Charies began te
He sgoveead.-
ed in getting loose from her and ran to
shore shouting for help. Before anybody
could reach the scons Mrs. Kock had
disappeared under the muddy water,
bodies were soon recovered, but life was ox-
tinet in each, Mrs Kock was the wife of a
bricklayer. She has been subject to fits of
mental aberration, and is supposed to have
been in one of these when she committed the
deed
tried to do the same with him
also
RR — cmu—
SELLING HUMAN EARS,
Great Alarm in Orete, and Fears of Massacres, as
in Armenia
The London Times has a despatch from
Canea, Island of Crete, which says that
great alarm continues among the Christians
there, They assert that only the presence of
foreign warships has saved them from a
general massacre, 1 he principal source of
fear to them are the Turkish soldiers, who
are the pame as those who gained notoriety
at Zeitoun at the time of the Armenian mas
sacre, They are selling watches and jowel.
ry, which they openly state they tock rem
Armenians, It is asserted also that haman
ears with ear-rings in them are being sold.
“There Is every probability,” says the
“Times’ ” correspondent, “thal in the event
of distarbances, the soldiers wou'd join the
Mohammedan mob, The losurgent chiefs at
Askypho declare that the Tarka lost 200 men
at Vamos and the Christians 33 men,"
WORK OF GONGRESS
00D MEASURES DEFEATED
| Important Minor Bills Passed-Fill-
ed Cheese Heavily Taxed—-Ac~
tivity In Foreign Affairs Com~
mittee Began With the
Venezuelan Scare.
song the inevit
Boeventy
ypriated for
out the stipul ns of the Bering Sea
| sen! fisheries treaty with Great Britian
to defray
expenses of negotiating a conveat.on to
Another resolution passed was
| the
| locate the boundary line between Alaska and
| British America
| One incident of the excitement which at-
| tended the crisis of the Venezuelan boun-
dary dispute was the quick adoption by both
tiie Senate and House of Senator Hill's prop-
okition to repeal the law forbidding ex-Con-
federates who relinquished commissions in
the United States army or navy fo be again
appointed to the service.
The dairy interests of the country pre
vailed upon Congress to enact the most ime
portant measure for their protection since
the olemargarine jaw, the “filled cheese”
bill, which regulates the manufacture and
sale of adulterated cheese and imposes heavy
penalties for deceptions,
Boome of the most important bills prepared
by the committee were not given & hearing
in either house or passed but one house, and
will be on the calendar for consideration
during the short session if thelr supporters
are able to secure time for them. Among
the most important of these are: The Lodge-
MeCall bill for an education al test of immi-
grants, with the Corliss amendment to pre
vent the invasion of Canadian day laborers;
the Phillips industrial commission bill, the
Curtis bill to lessen the number of crimes for
which the death penalty oan be imposed by
United States courts, the bankruptey bill and
the Pickler pension bill, all of which were
passed by the House
A second Important moasure was that
which extended for five years from the 2d of
March last, the limit withia which the
United States may bring sults to annul pat-
rail
to all
ents to lands heretofore granted under
tities
such lands held by bona fide purchasers,
road grants, but confirmed the
Another important law enacted late in the
session was that for the relief of the
on the Northern Pacific indemnity lands,
settiors
ey —
OUTLOOK FOR COTTON CROP,
po ——
The Average for the Country is Reported wr
The consolidated return of cotton crop re
Division of the De
for June
ACTOREH
ports to the Statistical
partment of Agriculture who
YH Lhe
Btate percentages of as compared
with last year to be ns §
Virginia, 107; N
Carolina, 111
OWE
rth 117: Bouth
ilabnma, 112
Texas, 116
Indian Terri
Caroli
114 A
uisinng, 10;
nn,
Georgia,
114: lx
Arkansas, 130: Tent
Mississippl,
(onpee 128
tory, 161; Missouri, 188; Oklahoma, 194.
zr 1.1
The general average is being
1L.TIES
aA AKIN
thelr home in Greenpoint, N. Y., while j
ing with ap oid rifie,
By an explosion of dynamite on the Penn.
jaborer was killed and «is
others were fatally injured.
The home of Mm. Elizabeth Bossler, aged
70, east of Leesport, Berks county, Pa, was
burned. Mrs Bossler is missing, and jt is
supposed she perished in the Names,
Three buildings in Brooklyn, owned by
Howard & McDermott, leather manufactur.
ers, were burned: loss, #150000. Five bun
dred persons are thrown out of empioy-
ment
During a circus parade at Ottawa, Kan, a
baloony crowded with people gave way, pre-
cipiteting 50 or 60 people 30 feet in the crowd:
ed sidewalk. Over 20 were injured, several
probably fatally.
While two men were whitewashing he
top of an elovator shaft in Bethlehem, Pa,
the seaffold opon which they stood ecilapsed
and one man was instantly killed, the other
was fatally injured,
M. J. Atkinson, of Clear Lake: Vernon
Galt, of Albert Lee, Mian. and Roy C. Sos
ser, of Northwood, were drowned at Nora
Springs, Ia. They were all pupils of the
Nora Springs Seminary.
A visitor to the Saenverfest from Clneln-
nati wae probably fatally injured in a trolley
ear collision at Pittsburg. Four other pas.
pengerf were slightly injured and a worl.
mas who was in the car that was struck was
seriously injured.
James Pruett and another man were play-
ing cards in a box car at Amity, Ind. Their
wives discovered them and looked them in
ibe oar. Pruett fired a revolver through the
side of the ear, thinking the locking-in was
ihe work of men. The bullet struck bis
wife, inflicting w» probable fatal injury.
one railroad
A TORNADO'S FURY
{
|
Wyeth City, Ala, Utterly
|
Wiped Out.
TWO PERSONS WERE KILLED
| A Score
Limbs
or More Suffered Broken
Whole Families Made
Homeless By the Storm's
Fury
Heavily Dam
Farm Proparty
ied,
Perhaps e
{ the storm, |
killed itright,
Hghtning. The
neariy all of
public treasury uF
for rede
1 ir
ing the seve
assumed
withdrawals of gol rom tl Treasury
during the
date the
while
and
fing that
counted to $50 187.215,
i 950.538.
“These withdrawals and shipments began
| on a large scale in June, 1592, and contin.
ued with short periods of intermission until
the closs of the fiscal year 1883, On Decem-
ber 81, 1882 the free gold in the Treasury
amounted to $121,166 662 28, and on the 28th
of February it had fallen to @108 884 2IR IL
The reserve fund would have fallen below
$100,000,00 before March 1, 1893, if my pred.
ecegsor in office had not effected arrange
ments in January and Febraary by which
the sum of about $8,260,000 ia gold was pro-
duced from certain bankers in New York in
exchange for United State bonds and other
wise”
The secretary's paper is very voluminous
it reviews the entire history of the gold
withdrawals, and the bond issues, and bris-
ties with statistical figures that would be of
little interest exoepting to financiers or po-
litieal soonomists, and concludes as follows:
“Ip relation to that part of resolution
which directs the committee to investigate
and report “what effect the bond sales had
on the credit and business of the people of
the United States.’ I have the honor to say
that, in my opinion, the sales were neces
gary for the preservation of the credit of the
government and the seourity of the business
interests of the people, and that they, in fact,
accomplished thes results. It Is not posst-
ble to state in this communication all the
facts upon which this opinion is based, but
it may be sald in general, that the effect of
each sale was to restore confidence for the
time being, at least, in the power and pure
pose of the government to maintain its own
credit, to preserve the parity of cur coins
and the valine of our currency, and to check
the return of our securities ia large amounts
from other countries fur sale in the markets
hore.”
.