The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 22, 1892, Image 2

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    Political, Sain
Republicans of the Fifth Missouri
ssional district decided not to fuse
the People’s party, but nominated
re Weaver wing of the Democratic State
ention of Colorado adjourned after
ing authorized the State Central Com-
ge to nominate a State ticket.
Congressman John Kean, Jr., was
ated for Governor by the Republicans
wv: Jersey: :
Conneticut Democratic State conven-
minated J. G. Morris for’ Governor.
New Jersey Democratic State conven-
inated George T. Werts, of Cam-
or Governor on first ballot.
Massachusetts. Republican State con
mn nominated for Governor William
Haile, of Springfield.
E ELECTION IN MAIne.—The Republi-
tality in Maine is 12,668. The Re
icans have elected 111 Representatives,
the Democrats 34, with 8 districts to
from. The last House consisted of 110
blicans and 41 Democrats,
South Dakota Prohibition State Con-
on nominated A. B. Alexander for
nor. :
Capital. Labor nnd Industrial,
strike at the Juniata mill of Shoen-
ger, Speer & Co., Pittsburg, has been de-
off, and the men made a stampede
deir oldjobs. About one-half of those
remained on strike were disappointed.
m declares that the Amalgamated
tion will not be recognized by them
n. The firm was perfectly satisfied to
back all their old men, whose positions
vacant, except the leaders of the
Kittanning, Pa., Iron Company sign-
scale of the Amalgamated Associa-
and will start up at once. When run-
full the mill employs 300 men.
Three hund ed @nd fifty coal miners in
‘Wheeling district are on a strike fora
ore correct adjustment in the wage system
easurement of coal. One hundred
rers of the Wheeling electric street car
are also on a sirike against the ten-hour
The Greensburg, (Pa) Glass Works, own-
by Kuhn, Bros., shut down throwing 300
and boys out of employment.
isasters: Accidents and Fatalities.
Irs. Margaret Sheehan was burned to
th at Stockton, Cal, She dropped a lamp
d there was an explosion.
Quet's river, Wash., Mr. Harris, * wife
two children werein a canoe which
zed. The husband was thrown on the
insensible while the wife and children
ere drowned,
nu Mitchell, near Clinton, [11., had a deep
id pit. His son, Ernest, Walter Eli and
ry Edwards, while loading a wagon,
suddenly covered by a siide of clay and
Eli was smothered, Mitchell tried to
cate Eli, when a second fall buried him
3. Edwards happened to fall against a
on wheil, which kept him from being
shed. He was taken out alive. The
‘others were dead when dug out.
ead-end collision occurred two miles
Marshalltown, Iowa, on the Chicago
Northwestern road between two freight
ns. Engineers Ashton and Howes and
ercan Sinbaugh were killed instantly,
emmigrant was also killed. Fireman
Fusing escaped death by jumping, but was
y injured. Several other persons were
ured, but not seriously.
i Miscellaneous.
he will of George William Curtis was
red for probate. It directs that all of his
ate be given absolutely to his wife.
Congressional Nomination
General William Draper, of Ho
\& nominated im Drie licans in
Eleventh and Samuel A. |
{ in the Eighth JM;
The Democrats ‘of the First Ohio district
have nominated for Congress Hon, R. B.
Bowler. The Second Ohio district Demo-
crats nominated Charles Theodore Grave.
The Democrats of the Fifteenth Ohio
Congressional district nominated Milton
Turner, of Guernsey county, tor Congress.
R. E. Tarpiu has been nominated for
Congress in the Lirmingham, Ala: district.
Democrats of tha Fifth Iowa district
nominated Hon. Jobn T. Hamilton for
Congress.
At the Republican Congressional conven-
tion at Fort Worth, Tex.. A. J. Rosenthal
‘was nominated for the Tenth district, C. C.
Drake for the Eighth District and A. G. Ma-
loy, of El Paso, for the Thirteenth district.
Captain Martin Bel, of Kokomo, was
nominated for Congress in the Ninth Indi-
ana district by the Deniocrats.
Congressman C. A. Bergen has been de.
feated for renomination fn the First New
York district, Henry C. Loudenslager hay-
ing won the Republican nomination.
: Crops.
The following is issued by the Depart
ment of Agriculture at Washington:
The September average of conditions of
winter and spring wheats as harvested ‘is
85.3. The August average of spring wheat
was 87.3 and the July condition of winter
wheat was 89.6. « September condition of
corn, 79.5. The statistician of the Depart-
ment of Agriculture reponse decline in the
September condition of corn to 79.5@82.5 in
August. The change is light in the sur-
plus corn States except in Kansas; present
condition is 79 in Obie, 75 in Indiana, 70 in
Illinois, 76 in Iowa, 82 in Missouri, 70 in
Kansas and 76 in Nebraska. In other States
the average of condition is everywhere
higher than the National average except in
Michigan and Wisconsin. In comparison
with September reports of the ten past years
only three were lower 70.1 in 1890, 72.3 in
1887, 76.6 in 1886. The present figures are
between five and six points bélow the aver-
age of ten previous years, The crop is well
grown and maturing rapidly, without frost
as yet in the Eastern States. In the Middle
States drought has injured corn, especially
in New Jersey and. Pennsylvania; reducing
condition five points in each, while in New
York it is only depressed from 80 1079. In
Delaware last planted corn has been injur-
ted. In Maryland and Virginia drought also
caused a serious reduction, while from
South Carolina areund to Texas high con-
dition is well maintained. no figures falling
to 90, except those of Florida and Missis-
sippi. Rains in most of this region have in-
terfered with cultivation, and in some dis-
tricts rotting of the ears is reported.
——
EEYOND OUR BORDERS,
The harvest in the west of Ireland, which
recently promised to be abundant, has been
completely spoiled by incessant rain. ' Po!
tatoes are blighted, the crops are. rotting in
the fields and great distress is inevitable.
Dr. Mainzer, of Carlsruhe, and a guide
named Deugg were killed a few days ago by
falling over a precepice of the Zugspitze in
the eastern Alps. ; ;
Johann Schwed, a boy attending the acad-
emy at Tarnapot, Austria, when leaving
theschool the other day, drew a revolver
and shot Prof. Felix Glowacki, killing him
instantly, and turning the weapon upon
himself blew out his own brains.
In consequence of the outbreak of cholera
in New York, all Columbian vorts will be
closed against vessels hereafter sailing from
that city. a
OPEN SEASON FOR GAME 1892-93
Valuable Information for Hunters and
Sportsmen. ?
. -guerpuy
00
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‘disease will be speedily overcome.”
_ that the disease had gotieninto New York
released and proceedad to her pier.
But No Fears of an Epidemic. Another
Plague Vessel Arrives From
~. Hamburg.
The New York City Board of Health offic.
ially announced Wednesday afternoon five
deaths from J era in that city,
us follows: y aasilay ell
CHARLES McEVOY, September 6,
at 879 Tenth avenue. oe
MRS. SOPHIA WIGMAN. died
+10, at 68 Eleventh avenue.
WILLIAM WIGMAN, husband of Sophia
died at the same address the following
September
day. Eng
MINNIE LEVINGER, a child, died Septem-
ber 11, at 411 East Forty-sixth street.’
CARLOTTA BECK, aged 30, died Sept.
12,, at 464 Second avenue. 3
McEvoy is the man whose death from
cholera was announced, September 8, but
afterward denied.
All these cases were originally reported to
the Health Department as suspected cholera,
and have been under the investigation of
the physicians connected with the depart
ment... Prof. Herman Biggs, who is in
charge ofthe Division of Pathology and
Bacteriology of the Health Department,
has been at work making bacteriological ex
amination of the intestinal fluids taken
from the bodies of the suspected cases,
Prof. Biggs reported to the Health De-
partraent the result of the examination,
and announced unbhesitatingly that the
cases were Asiastic cholera beyond any
doubt.
On being informed that there was
cholera in New York Gig Dr. Jenkins ex-
pressed great surprise. esays that it has
certainly not been taken through Quaran-
tine, :° , 5
n
h
u
h
: AN EPIDEMIC XOT FEARED, on
Medical Commissioner of the ‘Heath Board
Dr. Bryant said: +I d> not think the dis-
ease will become epidemic.’ This: he says,
is almost assured from the fact that no
suspicious cases have occurred since yester-
day. “Thereseems tob- but little danger,”
said Dr. Byrant. “so far, and the public
need not be alarmed. Every Brosaution has
been taken by the Board of Health to com-
bat and crush the disease wherever it may
appear, z 5
Dr. Edson, of the Bureau of Contagious
Diseases, was also of the opinion that there
will be no cholera epidemic in New York.
“I think its spread will be less than the
iyphus fever,” said he. “As to where the
cholera came from, that is the question that
we are trying to solve. It isin the city and
it must have come from some outside
source. It must have passed some quaran-
tine. TI think that before 24 hours we will
have run down the direction from which
the disease came, There may be cases of
sporadic cholera in the city, but I think the
b
The Chamber reported that Treasurer J.
Pierpont Morgan had secured. $92,230 in
Subscriptions to the quarantine emergency.
un
At Washington, Surgeon General Wyman,
in speaking of the outbreak of cholera in
New: York City, which resulted in five
deaths; said that he was not iat all surprised
City, but he does not feel arlarmed over the
situation, as the cases were scattered and
there was no indication of its spreading. |
A STEAMERS IN QUARANTINE. y
In the fleet at quarantine are the liners
La Champange, Alaska, Aller, Belgianland,
Maasdam and the Didsm, It+is hoped to
find all well onthe first three, and to send /
them up the bay. The freighter Aldlf, from
Hamburg, will be qetaived several days for
obseryation as will also the Italian Plata,
from Naples with immigrants, one of the
morning's newcomers, A transfer steamer
has been ordered down to take ‘the cabin
passengers 0. La Champagne to the city.
be steamer will be detained at quarantine.
The North German Lloyd steamer Aller,
which arrived in quarantine Monday, was
Ci
HOPE RETURNS TO HAMBURS.
At Hamburg there have been 698 fresh
cases Thursday, 29 move than the preced-
ing day, 206 deaths, three more than the
day before, 331 burials, 18 more than the
day before. In the cholera hospitals and
barracks the number of patients has fallen
t0 1,309. the lowest number of the last 16
days. Two-thirdsof the patients are women
and children. The men now stricken, the
physicians say, are those who have had lit-
tle constitution to resist the disease. Many
of them have been hard drinkers and others
have been weakened by privation 80 as to
become easily infected. Among people of
normal health and habits the plague is be-
lieved to be at an end, :
The municipal staff of physicians are now
more than adequate, principally because
+»
b
d
FIVE DEATHS ARE ANNOUNCED | {fies inn
Lipson, Judel......\.. 8
H
Vessel.
fort for from
from
days’
will have to be unloa
Dr. Jenkins will not
Jock.
.terof the
by
ton Friday morning.
has ha
about t
ing immigration.
Spaulding said that pro
t
action on the part of |
Janke.
The four sent to
were:
Feingalk, May
Bass, Chaya
Handtleck T.ea.
Grossmann, Sussel....
ALL WELL ON THE Q A
aboal
Dr. Nash was left
fumigation and disintecti ;
ships Dr. Walser reported: :
Heligoland—Supplied with : bi-chloride
and ordered disinfection of forecastle and
washing of clothing.
Motavia—All is well:
One cage of
-} are considered the beston the: cholerasub-
re
Scandia-~All is well. Disinfec!
washing continued.
Normannis—Baggage removed an!
Rugia—Vessel thorou
infected: One consumptive patient on board
too weak to A 2 a 3 #
The cabin passengers on |
hire are éxtremly
supplied with ev
ed and there is
to 400
fected under the direction of Dr.
“Wyoming—All well. a
‘board the
© well satisfied.
erything that is
every facility for’ com-
persons. ]
HE
ghly cleaned and dis-
e New
The transfer of the steerage : passengers of
ned until Sa
Dobified by Sur
the Normannia from Hoffméin Island to
Camp Low, which was to have been made
Friday, was post
Dr. Jenkins was
eral Hamilton that the supplies h
layed on account of th
taining them by railroad.
trirday, as.
eon Gen-.
been de-
e impossibility of ob-
The Normannia
erself may come (o upper quarantine and
unload her
ave to do the
quarantine,
cargo lighters.
The crew will
0 t work, for stevedores sent
New York would be subject to several
The Wieland’s cargo
ded in the same way.
allow her to go to her
IMMIGRATION STOPPED.
Quit
THE ATLANTIC STEAMSHIP COMPANIES . WiLL.
CARRYING EMIGRANTS UNTIL
' "ALL DANGER IS PAST. . *
The statement from the Atlantic Steam.
them, reached
e required.
| Notes of the Cholera.
Forty-five new cases’ of cho
the effect of * quiet
e issuing of a procia
ship companies of the number ‘and ‘charac.’
[ passengers now on the way tothe
United States, with their assurance {
fhe smmigrant jitaflie will be permitted:
; e
at no
easury at Wa-hing-.
this
1
determination
ing
mat
Assistant
plera
the talk
ion snspend-.
Secretary
>bably - no further
¢ department would
5
were re-
ported in Paris Tuesday and 25 deaths.
The captain of the steamer Maas from
Hamburg die from chol
Two cases of «cholera and one ¢
been reported at Zwindrecht, in
land, within 10 miles of Rotterda
In consequence of
cholera in Stettin,
Was ap
has escaped with ro few
the river water. It is believed
fection was brought by. Hamburg “steamers:
in the water ballust. whi
| by them before loadin
The cholera has not/spread in
Holand, but occasionally death {
disease are reported at different localities,
era at Hamburg.
leath haw
uth Hol.
the appearance
a sanitary commission
inted to eximine the water of the
Oder. The river was found to be
contaminated and several
say they cannot underst
of
t thoroughly
' commissioners |
and how the city
while using
that the ine
cases,
ch was discharged
at Stettin,
part of
an
8 / As tha
So far as is known England is clear of the.
holera.
Thirteen new
to
special cholera commission. '
cases and two * deaths are
reported at Havre, © = 3
The German Government is appoint a |’ “Th
Fifty-eight cases are under trestment at
the Moabite hospital, Berlin.
Between Septemer 6 and 11 there ‘were
2,355 deaths from cholera in Teheran,
The city of Havana has
quarantined
against all vessels from the United States.
Six stowaways from ra cholera-infectea
street in Antwerp were landed on. Wednes-
day at Dover from the
bound for New York.
steamer ‘Apollo,
There is a marked decrease in the number
u
eat
of new cholera cases in Russia. In 8t. Peters-
on Wednesday 55 new cases and 17
¢ were reported, a decrease of six cases
and an increase of two deaths, éodipared
with Tuesday’s returns.
A QUARANTINE CAMP AT WARREN, 0.
The Ohio State Board of Health decided
Gast.
to erect a cholera cam
inspectors at the State boundary on all lines
of railroads entering the Stafe © from
E The lake ports
guarded.
at Warren and
will
likewise
lace
the
be
PENNSYLVANIA QUARANTINE. — Secretary
Lee, of the State Board of
Health,
an-
be
ing unless they have been rece
| cleanse them at once.
the living and sleeping rooms and their
Or water.)
with the carbolic acid solution mentioned
and avoid excesses and unnecessary ex-
"the proclamation reads, should
The instructions given below =re those is-
sued by the New York board of health, and
ject that have been sent out. :
' Healthy persous ‘‘edtch” cholera by tak-
ing into their systems through the mouth,
asin their. food or drink, or from their
hands, knives, forks, plates, tumblers, eloth-
ing, ete, tl rms of the disease, which
ps Fadi in ot ing the discharges from
the stomach” and’
with eholera. =
wels of those sick
Thorough cooking «destroys }
germs; therefore: Don’t eat re
articles of any kind. not even milk.
Dor’t eat or drink to
di: a favor an attac
Don’t drink nnboiled water. ¥
Don't eat or drink articles unless they
ve been thoroughly and recently cooked
boiled. and she more recent and hotter
ey are the safer. Ww a
Don't employ utensilsin eating or drink-
{ ntly put in
boiling water; the more recent the sater.
Don’t eat or handle food or drink with un-
washed hands, or receive it from the un-
washed hands of others. © + © wt
Don’t use the hands for any purpose when
tailed with cholera discharges; thoroughly
Personal cleanliness, and cleanliness for
contenis.’and thorough ventilation should
be rigidly “enforced. A
sinks, croton faucets, ce g
avoided and when present should be refer
red to the health board at once and remedied.
he successful treatment and the | preven- | Tm
tion of the spread of this disease demand
that its earliest manifestations be promptly -
recognized and treated; therefore: = "1!
Don’ y f for bowel complaint,
‘but go d send for nearest physician
atonce. ' Send for your family physician;
send to a dispensary or hospital; send to the
health department; send to the nearest
police station for medical aid. :
Don’t wait, but send at one RR
If taken ill in the street, seek the nearest
drug store, dispensary, hospital or police
ie tion and demand prompt medical atten-
n. aaa aid
Don’t ' permit vomit or diarrheal dis-
charges to come in contact with food, drink
, clothing. These discharges should be
eceived in proper vessels and kept covered
‘until mov under competent directions.
Pour hot water on them, nut a strong solu-
tion of carbolic acid in them (not less than
one part of acid to twenty of hot soap-suds
“Don’t wear, handle or useand articles of
clothing or furniture that are soiled with
‘cholera discharges. Pour boiling hot water
on them or put them into it, and serub them
above, and promptly request the health
board to remove them. ?
. Don’t be frightened; bué do be ‘cautious,
posures of every kind. |
NO CAUSE FOR FEAR.
x
New York: Hcalth Authofitiés Publish
a Letter to the People, Showing
‘What Is Being Done forthe
~~ Public Safety.
After a conference with President Wil,
son, of the Board of Health: Department,
and President Porter, of the Department of
Charities and Correction, on the outbreak
of cholera in New York, Mayor Grant ve
out the following: = © go :
<0owd oo 7 “MAYOR'S OFFICE, Sept. 15.
“To the Public:
‘The dreaded. . cholera has appeared. in.
this city, and the Health Department has so
far shown ite abllug : ore he disesse
romptly. 1 th Department and the
D patmont Sharifies and Corresti ,
een prepared
with dpctors and nurses, all equipped and.
ready to receive and isolate each case as it
is discovered; that physicians are closely
watching the thickly populated tenement
«hstricts; that Federal and state authorities
have established quarantine stations for
those coming from abroad; that the Cham-
ber of Commerce is taking active measures
to lend assistance: that no energy or needed
expenditire will be wanting. and that ex-*
cessive fear on the part of public is not
justified. ‘Lhe Mayor ealls for confidence
in all these p:ovisions to care for the public
weal. “The record of the past in stamping
out typhus and other infectious diseases,
justify faith
in the ability of the Health Department to
check cholera. Cholera, it says, is neither
infectous or contagious within the common
meaning of the words, wor is it, jn the
language of the eminent authorities, as
dangerous as. diseases that are constanti
in our midst. The public will" be intelli-
gently advised as to the progress of the di-
seage. The paper closes: Sih
“Rest assured that all will be done by
the authorities to meet every emergeney,
and with the confidence of the public and
lars, ete.,'shouid be |i
The striking Homestea
were greatly agitated when it w
ed that Attorney John F. Cox
the Carnegie Company his bo
ty, which consisted of the Ma
at the corner of Fourth avenue
street, which has been vaca
L five frame dwelling oust
avenue; 121n City Far,
thao
" The houses in Cf 1
by strikers, and t
houses for its new men, the pr
pants will be compelled to vs
‘Sted Hords compl
oe and others have been
for goods obtained by strike
been entirely overlooked.
tion of the Carnegie Compa
Homestead property will save
from going intoa dec
delight by men who €
vested there. The families of
-ed from company houses som
fonnd shelter in Mr. Cox's houses.
: ation also sv
je & mill and a
ed man, had return
the mill. I
an. His olas
turned to work some time ago. Job
’s desertion is regarded as the
py yét dealt the strikers,
_. The new mill hands came out as
their meals and a stroll Shrough
but. were not interfered i
General Greenland has decided to
reduce the military force at Ho:
taking a few men from each comp.
time, ut preserving the batal
on ya Ts
~ Joseph Kibler, a striki
Beveq his mind by den
negie Company, the militia
in 5, Shares ing fieh He 3 s
‘he Pittsbu and jury retu
first true Bills found in rd of ti
stead cases. They are against Tho
en and Edward Burke for unlawful
bly, The ei are charged by J.
with unlawfully mbling Aug
the Carnegie Steal J0.’8 ctl pa
Evan Patten, whose homeis'in
phia, died in the Homestead works
phoid fever. i 5
John P, Bush died from injuries
at Homestead on Sunday, September 4,
was a fireman at the Carnegie mills and
in the boiler house when a st
and he was scalded. He was
e. : fh :
The First Woman Prisoner as
the Strike. The Fifteenth
5 iment Ordered H
‘ Homestead was made lively f
night by five arrests, one being a wi
Mrs. Annie Watson, ‘who How enj
distinction of being the first woman ar
as a result of the strike. The
‘names are Jesse. Lantzs Ot
John McFarland’and Afc
‘are charged with havi
union men, : : Shi
"After arresting the men, Officers G
Rakestraw and David
and Iron Poli
officers scabs and black sheep,
placed the woman under arrest,
and their prisoner were af
Major Crawford, acting
went to the spot with a
gave the officers and their pris
cort to provost headquarters
became Mrs: Watson's guarantee,
was allowed to return 10 her hom.
Shortly after this arrest
straw and Smith were placed
by two burough constables for be:
and disorderly. The -officers ‘res
were surrounded by a large crow
Crawford again went to the rescue.
Major demanded the release of the
which was refused, The Major then
his revolver and at its po;
two officers and esc rted. them to hi
ters. Members of the Advisory Bo
they are going to make it. hot f
straw and Smith on charges o
aud being drunk and cisorder,
Jacob urer was arrested
' at non-union men and was
had in his ion an u
volver, ohn Prive. narged Ww
ed riot, was also arrested; :
WITHDRAWING THE TROOPS!
Adjutant General W. W. land yi
ed Homestead Saturday, and afer a co
tation with Sheriff. McCleary and Gener
ithdraw the Hiftee;
nounces that quarantine officers will
stationed at the following points, to inspect
trains entering the State: ilaston, on. the
Central Railroad of New Jersey; Morrisville, .
on the Pennsylvania Railroad, opposite
Trenton. N. J.; Yardley, just above ou the
Reading Railroad; Waverly, on the Lehigh
Valley; at State Line near Cumberland, Md.,
on the Baltimore and Ohio; and at State
Line, Susquehanna county, on the rie
and Delaware and Lackawanna and West-
ern roads. Dr. J. 8, Hackney, of Uniontown,
is already at work, inspecting trains for im-
migrants supposed to be destined for the
coke regions.
nearly all cases are treated at hospitals. Fif-
teen army surgeons, who have worked at
Hamburg for the last two weeks, left for
. their garrisons, and more are expected to
leave. The fugitives continue to return,
and scores of shops, which had been closed,
there aid in enforcing. sanitary regulation,
the cholera will be mastered, health restor-
ed, and peace, good order and happiness
nna, Ill, was visited by quite a severe
shock at 2 0’'lock Tuesday afternoon.
Windows and dishes were rattled precepti-
09(L
maintained.”
I ‘ure
11 PO
I
M1190
“08 *90(T
ted inorder to avoid a rearra
ment of the camp. The teuts of ‘the R
teenth were struck Monday morning
the Regiment. left Homestead:
teenth nas been in service at Homes :
days. During that time there was on On
fatality among the troops; that’ bei hs
accidental shooting of Pri )
It is the general opinion
Guard of Pennsylvania officers
stead that the Sixteenth will be s
some day this week.
The Rev. K. C. Hays, chaplain ¢
teenth Regiment, preached in th
day morning on ‘‘Th
Power of Money” and in
ing on The Seifis
HUGH ROSS FORFEITS BAT
Hugh Ross, the Homestead strike
aot appear din. the Crimin,
Pittsburg on’ Saturday
03 ¢T “300 | 03 T 3deg
1 YOIB]AL
*e] "00
03 01 "AON | 03 1 ‘1dag
03 0% "190
a1 "00(
C3] 1 "AON
have begun advertising for trade.
THE NORMANNIA’S CABIN PASSENGERS RE-
LEASED. ,
The majority of the passengers of the
Normannia embarked on the Cepheus Fri-
day morning for New York, and. started
from Fire Island at 8:40 o'clock. The steam-
er ran aground in the inlet off Oak Island
and remained there until the afternoon,
when the boat was floated, and the passen-
gers landed safely at the Hamburg ine
pier in Hoboken. About 100 of the passen- 5 Hn
gers came by rail, having landed at Baby- | The Cholera Evidently Under Control
Yor tof th Wd RT in the Metropolis. @ ]
art of the passengers arrived at Lon : aaa: : :
Island City by tg id Babylon and nr Hah heonis bulletin was fssned by the
ceded at once to their homes. No cases or supsécted cases of cholera have ap:
oD DIaGH 3 last bulletin. No
: « case
ANOTHER PEST SHIP, Ds fan jot y sinon, the last b tember, 15
: i pr
deaths from cholera since Tue:
3 S Number of deaths between September and
THE BOHEMIA ARRIVES 'AT QUARANTINE WITH
CHOLERA CABES ON BOARD—ELEVEN DEATHS
tember 17, five, .
There is good reason to believe that the
DURING THE VOYAGE.
There was much relief at Quarantine
diagnosis of the attending physicians was
Tueorrect in She case of Fewer Callahan, of
A 3 . 81 t Forty-seventh street, who die
when the Bohemie, the last immigrant 9: £43 ast it : aie os
ship coming from Hamburg, reported only September 10; suspected of cholera, “and the
11 deaths aboard during the vovage. Her
surgeon attributes them to inflammation of
death is, therefore, in the bureau of vital
statistics, given as ‘from diarrhoea exhaus-
tion.’ Le
the stomach and bowels, but Dr. Walser, : }
who inspected the ship, "believes that the In the suspected case of Mary Con
disease was unquestionably cholera. Four
of the passengers were removed as patients
Five members of the notorious Dalton
z of train robbers, including Bob, Grant
Amy Dalton, were captured at Deming,
, by a posse under Deputy Marshall’
Williams, of Paris, Tex. Two others
€ robbers were killed and three escap-
The rewardsfor the gang aggregate
LIVESSAVED BY CHOLERA SCARES
Largs Decrease in Deaths asthe Result
: of a General Cleaning Up at Pittsburg.
It paysto keep the city'clean whether
‘there isa cholera scourge knocking at the
municipal doors or not. This is proven by
the latest bulletins issued by the Pittsburg
Bureau of Health. It shows that for the'|’
week ending September 10 the death rate of
the city was 18.85 per 1,000 inhabitants per
annum, on an estimated population of 255,-:
000. Thisis a considerable drop from the
figures of the previous week, during which
the cholera scare caused a cleansing of the
city to be inaugurated. That week the rate
was 23 per 1,000 inhabitants per annum.
Last week there were only 90 deaths, the :
previous week 113. > urt ordered h il
~The mortality jamong infants under 2 | Charles Schmitt of Homes
years of age was last week only 34 against | © °° the bondsman for the um of $360;
afotal of 63 during the week before. Ty- : : h . X
phoid fever caused 5 deaths last week and WORSE THAN CHOLERA,
8 the previous week. There were ten
deaths from contagious or infectious dis-
eases last week, of which diphtheria caused
6, whooping cough 8, and diphtheritic
croup 1. ; : i
If the death ‘rate was sb reduced’ ‘by the
cleaning up of streets, back yardsand the
homes of the people in one week it would
seem not ‘expecting too mich to reduce it
one-half by carrying on the cleansing pro:
cess to a finish and keeping it there. That
is what the Pittsburg city officials declare to
be their intention.
301
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n P. Johnson, of Minneapolis, the NO NEW CASES IN NEW YORK
cycle rider, made a quarter of a mile
a flying start at Independence, Iowa,
2-5 seconds, which beats the world’s
made by Zimmerman. Johnson
forall the records up to one mile,
Sanitary,
to the prevalence in Anna, Ill, of
ia the local Board of Health has
the public schools and prohibited the
1g of Sabbath schools.
‘cases of smallpox were discovered at
‘Castle, Pa, in the family of David
rietor of the Wilder House.
"DAY QUARANTINE IN CANADA.—The
t has taken further steps to
gainst the introduction of cholera
country. A proclamation was is-
ordering that a quarantine of 20 days
ved for vessels arriving at any port
Be !
Crime and Penalties,
McKenzie, aged 18, confessed in
k that he was guilty of the death
‘Quill, aged 15, whose body was
t the bottom of an air shaft last
McKenzie pushed the boy down the
a quarrel. He says the ghost
‘paqrgoad
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= 4 Esntucky Community Suffering
an Epidemic of Fiux.
Reports received from. Garner, Ky
that'flux is raging th :
tent, Twelve deaths occurred'durir
past few days, and others are h urly
pected. Physicians seem unable to ¢o
with the disease. The: viotims are sei
with horrible pains in t
sequent purging and vomi
tinue until death, which
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016179
now at the reception hospital; Bacteriolo
to Swinburne Island by Dr. Byron.
gists Briggs and Dunham have reported to
‘the board that they have failed to find the
The Bohemia sailed “from Hamburg on
September 3 with ten cabin, 664 steerage
spirillum of Asiatic cholera.
aSSenger and a crew of 72 men. That da
Karan
-399301d jou
on THE CRISIS PASSED.
ietzler, 25 years old, became il
SECRETARY FOSTER SAYS THE CHOLERA IS WELL
. She died after 3 days’ illness. .On the 4th UNDER CONTROL. :
her child was taken ill and died on Thurs. | At Loon Lake, NN. X., the President. re
day, the last day that the ship was out, | ceived a dispatch from Secretary Foster, o
All the patients died after an illness of | the Treasury Department, saying that the |
from one to five days. All but two of them
crisis in the cholera situation was passed |
were children under.8 years. . Of the four | 204d that the disease was well under con-
patients removed to Swinburne Island one | trol.
of them was stricken on Wednesday, two.
‘on Thursday and one Friday morning be-
fore Dr. Byron vyisited the steamship.
Thirty-seven of the sick recovered at sea.
Dr. Walser was informed by the Bohemia’s
surgeon that the ship, ike the Scandia, bad
been disinfected abroad with carbolic acid.
Dr. Walser said that he had no confidence
in the efficacy of carboli¢ acid to destroy
cholera germs. The cabin passengers
the Bohemia are Fritz Trott.
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ich usually
from three to five days, In so
screams of patients can be heard
mile. i
200 DEATHS IN HAMBURG,
THE PLAGUE CONTINUES AND THE CEMETERIES |
ARE CROWED WITH MOURNERS. + - >
There have been | 668 fresh cases of
cholera in this c ty and 200 deaths, or 23 :
fewer than Saturday. In the hospitals and
cholera barracks there are 3,031 patients.
The cemet:ries were growded Sunday with
mourners for the dead.’ All the churches.
were filled. The theaters had fair houses |
to-night and the variety shows are paying
their way. Prince Bismarck has written to
# Beveral Counties in Kentucky have local
laws which modify this general law.
The LeagueRecord,
The following table shows the standing of
the various base ball clubs:
! Post- Per
. Won. Lost.. poned. Cent.
Cleveland...... wanv1Burasss 04
Mother and Child Murdered.
. The 8-year-old son of John VanMeter of
the village of Idaho, O., awoke to find him-" |
self alone in the house, , After waiting an.
‘hour for the return of his father and mother
‘and the baby, he started to goto hisgrand- | ,
father’s, a mileaway. Ina short time he ori muro of Suniel city.»
came upon the mutilated and dead bodies of | , + i : 1h
bis mother and the baby. Van Meter is |,
ig $ i > x dg tn vy A
Sixty Yours in Puke
At San Francisco, Sidney (Bell,
pad, who. acquired notoriety ‘throug
‘sensational trial resulting 1 his con
ow saenmnes
on
Frederick
Krennecke, Mrs. Bertha Krennecke, Charlies /
Hartung, Mrs. Horten Hesse and family, | {he Senate expressing Ms sympathy ‘with
abi shat rh ispction o ta | tenet people of tract. 1
r. Wa Frei Se ST OVER IN RUESI
Bohemia Sires toi list of the dead; 7 % eb le
gaan
i
Philadelphia... .
New York