Punxsutawney Spirit, 1893-10-11 |
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With Plenty of Wind. ■Hbfottllr 11 isfta ivlJJtK 11, lOWO. (DRIHK fll CH SrEElnn Sir 51L jto a* Evidence Bat Against Warden Broekaway. Millions of Copies Beinj Distributed by Senators* ' w, - ' t The English Boat Easily Defeated by the Yankee Cutter. VALKYRIE LEFT 3 MILES lant. Who Kept the Lend to the Finish — It Was a Great Race, Was Soon Overtaken by the Vlgt- thc Lead for a Short Distance, But Same Time, and the Valkyrie Took Both Boats Crossed tbe Line at the -Poor d6g ! Ho is losing i. wearing oat. They no longer . pant*. pantaloons and trouaen. pearing. Yours are in and see the extra colors to suit soy coat. .. want to pay? t wear the old F=F?IO That's no object in these times. . W The goods will suit and the prices, too, ones longer. OUR FALL STOCK IS COMIN&, - And we have some great surprises in suits and overcoats, hoys' and children's clothing and overcoat*; a beautiful line for least money. In Jersey and Lord Fontleroy suits we are out of sight, both for quality, quantity and low prices. ' The finest underwear in the market; flannel ami percale aufl white shirts, gloves and neckwear in great variety, hosiery, eto. jHats.Hats 1 We lead with all the late style hats. Boots, rubber and leather shops. Oar shoes every style and price. We can save you money on rubber goods a* the were bought before the advance in prices of rubber goods. Trucks, satchels, umbrellas, rubber coats and macintoshes, all grades an<Jf prices, lumberman's gums. FURNISHING GC^ODS. Two passengers who are on the sick list with symptoms of cholera and two suspects have been removed to Swinburne island.The doctors on the ship said that they were satisfied that none of the deaths were due to cbolera. Dr. Sanborn reported to Dr. Jenkins, who made a personal examination of the vessel. He found her to be in excellent condition and the passengers to be a clean looking lot, considerably above the average of immigrants who come to this port. He decided to hold the ship as a precautionary measure for investigation.Wbilhelm Scbnutt, 15 years of age, a. steerage passenger, was taken ill on the 3d. The doctors diagnosed bis ctise as erysipelas of tbe foot and leg. Ho died Oct. 7. All of those who died, except the last, were buried at sea. On 8Uth Augusta Thomas, from Sollngen, a first-cabin passenger, 30 years of age, whs was accompanied by her brother, became quite seasick, and ate something which did not agree with tier. She began to vomit and died immediately. Her brother stated her family is subject to heart disease, and this is given as the cause of death. A11 the steerage passengers were quarantined at Hamburg five days in accordanoe with the regulations. The ship sailed on ttie 24th. When one day out Catharine Lutbge, a cabin passenger, 47 years of age, was taken sick and died. Her brother-inlaw, who accompanied her, said that sea sickness and her woak condition-caused heir death. The second case was Ida Stubbe, S> child one year ol age, belonging to a family from Mecklenburg and a passenger in tbe steerage. On Sep. 27 she was tuken with diarrhoea and vomiting and died on the 28th. Dr. Hoffman diagnosed the cose as one of cholera infantum. The family to which tbe child belonged consisted of Gottfreld and Alwene Stubbe, father and mother of the child, a brother Charles, and Bertha Scheel. On the 80th the latter became ill with diarrhoea and vomiting. She was isolated in the hospital. She died Oct. 5. Manager Boas said that the ooupauy had this morning sent down blankets and provisions to Hoffman Island and that the work of removing the passengers was undertaken at once. New York, Oct. 0.—At the: office of tbe Hamburg-American Packet company, It was said this morning that no new cases of sickness bad been reported on the steamship Russia, which arrived at Quarantine from Hamburg, and is inspected of having cholera on board. Barred to HoBiisa Island. ftunndi ft*m the Roads Trans- IS UtK A van IKBAltBR? f --CLAYTON NORTH. /he ORIGINAL AND POPULAR ONE PRICi CLOTHIER, JPTTJSTJgZ&TJ T A.' GReftT • OPENING 3P* ./% CHILDREN'S GOATS TO-DAY ! OF AND IADIES' HELD UP A TUOIiLEY CAB. mystery. Dr. Olney is 89 years old, and was connected with an electrical company in Brooklyn. Miss White is the daughter of a man of some prominence in New York Dr. Olney's body was foand yesterday, and on ugly looking wound behind the ear indicates death through some other agency than drowning. Tbe case is shrouded in Miss White was subsequently found in the water clinging to an overturned boat. She said she hod seen Dr. 01neyr struggling in the water and had gone to his assistance in the boat. She tried to pull him in the boat, but tbe effort resulted only in capsizing it. Dr. Olney was drowned, and Miss White saved herself by clinging to the bottom of the boat. Dr. Charles T. ,01ney, of Brooklyn, left the cottage of Mrs Bliss, the materialistic medium, at Onset Bay late Saturday afternoon and went direct to the Point, fol lowed by Miss Gussle White, a young woman of New York. Connected Peculiar CI) With Dr. Olney's Death....,p _ New York, Oct. 9.—A special from Buzzard's Bay, Mass., says: Many of the mora recent speeches h not yet appeared in pamphlet form tboi they will soon be scattered throughout country. similar number has been printed of keynote speech of Mr. Voorhees early in the debate. The number printed ot other speeches is about as follows: Mr. Allison, 20,000; Mr. Sherman, 75,00<l; Mr. Vance, 12,000; Mr. Faulkner, 20,000; Mr. Hill, 20,000; Mr- Hoar, 10,000. At the government printing office, an edition of 80,000 has been run off and at It is impossible to approxmiate even the number of copies ot the speech of Mr. Daniel that have been put in circulation, for the reason that it has been copied by the Populists and reprinted from tbeir private press and ciroulated in exceedingly large numbers for dlstrlbutioathronghoat Virginia in the campaign. Mr. Cameron sends a personal letter to every person asking him for a copy of hi* speech and is receiving hundreds dally from farmers and working men. Mr. Wolcott, of Colorado issued 00,000 copies of his speech as there is a heavy demand for it from the west. circulating himself and which is expected to approach close to the 100,000 mark. Next to this will probably be the speech of Mr. Cameron, of Fenn., which he ia Other speeches, when it comes to general circulation have been printed in pamphlet form in far greater quantities. The largest issue of any o:ie speech was that of Mr. Vest, of Missouri, against repeal, which ran up to 100,000 and is being used largely by tlio Pliolpulists in tbeir campaigns.The greatest individual demand baa been made for the speeches of Senators Sherman, AUision and Mills on the repeal lid* of the question, and of Senators Daniel, of Virginia, and Cameron, of Pennsylvania, in advocacy of ailver. By individual demand is meant the requests of people who apply for single copies for their own reading.Tbe most expensive spcech was thai of Mr. Daniel, of Virginia, the government printing office charging him $18 a thou»r and for it. This was due to its length. Senator Sherman's cost $10 a thousand; Mr. Allison's $12. Tbe averazo spaech in length, like that of Mr. Voorhees, cost $10 a thousand, these figures being the actual cost of printing. The complete list of senators who h«n contributed to the literature of the day on the. silver question in the shape of speeches issued as pamphlets Is as follows: Allen, Allison, Bate, Berry, Blackburn, Butler, Cattery, Camden, CanJeron, Chandler, Coke, Cullom, Daniel, Dolph, Dubois, Faulkner, Gallinger, George, Gordon, Gray, Hahsbrough, Harris, Hlogins, Hill, Hoar, Jones; of Arkansas; Llndsey, Mills, McMillan, Mitchell, of Oregon; Morgan (ii), }*!ilmer, Pasco, PefLr (8), Perkins, Piatt, Power, Pugh, Sherman, Shoup, Stewart (8), Teller, Turpie, %%nce,. Vest, Voorhees, Walthall, Washburn, Wolcott and White, of California. Of these speeches 20 have been against repeal and 24 for it. Other speeches have been made, however, which do not figure in this list. bod footed the bill (or the circulation of his own speech in the first instance. Washington Oct. 0.—Nearly half • million copies of speeches on the si Wat question have been distributed or are being distributed throughout the country at the expense of individual senators. The cost of this distribution would be a serioua item if each senator footed his own bill, but the custom among them Is to saltscribe for each other's speeches. It frequently happens, however, among the mora liberal senators that by the time • senator has gone the rounds of all the speeches delivered on a particular question, it is about ns'e.xpensive for him as if be Spcprih as Campaign Themselves—Populists Using On the Cost Falls on the Senators It» an Kxpenslve Undertaking, saA ONE BURGLAR SHOT. Carlkton, Minn., Oct. 9. —Threeburg- Threeburgglars blew the vault doors of the Carleton county bonk at midnight. They wen fired upon by a policeman and one of them Later one of the burglars who broke Into the bank woe caught with burglar tools and candle* on hi* person. was wounded but they escaped. Vigilantes are after them. A heavy steel safe saved the money of the bank intact. County Bank Safe. Attempt to Blow Open No arrest* have been made. The highwaymen did not know that the conductors turn in their money after each trip, and as the cars do a large Sunday business the robbers expected to make a heavy haul. A lady and child, the only other passengers, were not molested. Des Moines, la., Oct. 9.—At 10 o'clock last night three masked men stopped the Ingersoll avenue electric car in Lonely Hollow, near West Thirtieth street, cut the trolley rope, leaving the car in darkness, and robbed the motorman, Adolph Nelson, and conductor Thomas Hickey, securing four dollars in silver and their watches. They also took u watch from a male pas senger, but the latter hid his pocket book. man and a Passenger. Three Masked Men Bob the Motor* Elmiba, N. Y., Oct. 9.—The Elmira reformatory investigation committee continued its inquiry at the reformatory at 0 a. ni. The committee deems the most important testimony yet adduoed to be the statement of Superintendent Broekaway under oath on Saturday that the board of managers did not designate the punishment in vogue as they are required by law to do. Mr. Bichard J. Murray, who was employed as overseer in the printing department from March until June this year, testified: "My attention was first called to the disciplinary measures used in the prison one day in Mar when a young man named Murray was paddled. Later I took him into the printing department. Soon ufter he was reported for talking and taken to tbe bathroom, and when be returned I did not know him. His left eye w»s swollen and black and blue. There was a spot under his arm the size of an orange. There was a lump on bis forehead, an#the skin was cut. ' The cut was about three inches on the cheek. Then I was away for three weeks and when I came back I inquired for Murray. He was then in tbe hospital, but tbe next day was taken out and burled. Murray was about 18 years old, and his home was in Boston." Here Judge Gilbert asked the Witness what Murray said when he came back from the bathroom. Mr. Stanch field ob jected. After discussion between counsel the witness continued: "When he returned I asked him where he had been. He said every time he received a talking report he was sent to the bath room. He said he received the ridge on his face during a spanking. When he turned nis head he was sbrack in the face. "I saw a young fellow named O'Laughliu in tbe yard doing military duty who I thought should have been in the hospital. A month interveEed between the time Murray was taken to the bath room and tbe time he died." On cross- examination to questions proposed by Mr. Stanchfleld witness testified. "It was not my duty to notify any ooe of Murray's condition and I did not do so. There is a rule forbidding overseers qr monitors from conversing with prisoners, but I broke this rule several times. "I was discharged for giving tobacco to inmates in violation of the rules. The man to whom I gave the tobacco was taken to a solitary cell when it was found on bim. It was a monitor's duty to notify the superior officer of the illness of convicts. I saw Murry talking with Dr. Wey, the president of the board of managers, a week before he was taken to the bath room./ Murray had a cut on the cheek about threequarters of an inch long. "I have seen other prisoners on the way from the bath room after treatment with their faces cut and bruised to return to work. I remember a man who was taken from a cell next to mine one night about 9 o'clock by the night watchman to the guard house. "The next day he was given a course of paddling treatment in the bathroom, which confined him to his cell bed two or three weeks, and then came to be photographed, in which department I worked. He was bruised in tfte small of tbe back, and his back was broken ont. I received four blows with the paddle on my naked back and two over the head as I turned during the punishmont. My back was black and blue for a week or ten days. 1 The back of a man named O'Brien came up to be photographed. I noticed that his back was very much broken up from paddling. I was reduced to the convict grade twice for fighting." Ctiief Clerk Heppe then produced the recood regarding the punishment administered to yonng Murray, showing he had been to the bathroom four times; was admitted to the hospital March 30, and died then on June 10 last. The caoae of death was given as influenza-pneumonia. At this point Commissioner Craig said that officer* of the institution would be excluded during the testimony of Inmates. Judge Gilbert said the prosecution wished to show by the witness that Mr. Brockway had performed punishments which he denied. The witness then continued: i „ "When I was working about the solitary I noticed a man chained to his cell door for over ten flays. These cells wtrs in a filthy condition. I saw Mr. Brockway fell a prisoner in the yard and fall on him. He struck this prisoner with a cane which I think he obtained from Mr. Mo- Keloy. I saw tbe latter strike a prisoner on the head with a cane in the presence of Mr. Brockway. The latter told McKeloy to shoot the prisoner, when he gave up) a clay pipe which wan the cause of the trouble. I put on a dozen dark doors on cells. They were portable and could be movad to any cell. ) Brutality Told to the Committee. the Paddle—Other Cases of Alleged Prisoners Said to Have Been Shame* ftiily Pounded And Bruised With Discipline Lax In Oar Prisons. Toronto, Ont., Oct. 9.—Rev. Charles Cook, Baptist minister of London, England, has visited the principal prisons at the United States and is now voting the prison* of Canada. He found discipline lax In the American prisons. In Slag Sing he saw one prisoner reading the daBy paper*, while another was making hhnMf a cup ot tea on a gas stove In hisoeU. Vr. Cook thinks the Canadian prison* a goldea mean between English severity and Anesr icon laxity. . , MDody invited to Inspect. c> ' t Jerset City, N. J., Oct. 0.—The minister* of the various ohurchee of this city have decided to form a moral reform Moiety the object of whioh is to purify politics. Notice was read from every pulpit Sunday requesting the congregation to choose three delegates to represent the church At the meeting to be held at the Second Ifeeabyterian church. Bar. John ,L. Snodder, in reading the notice to the Congregation nt the Taoernaole, supplemented it with t\a outKuo of the plan to be adopted to uet candidates pledged for the repeal of the race track laws and to influence the .voters. Purifying Politics. N*w ItocBgxK, Virtriol Tb rower Held. —If TN out afford to b« aonoywl by lick mum,"' ■v>: FUNXBUTAWNBY, Cunningham St Son, - WindowBlock,ook1||mligm*QB#m Utmte, Vigilant turned. th» M«md | At 13:80 the Vigilant was showing how good a bout she was to windward. She had a . good lead then and seemed to be gaining more and mere all the time, principally through her thrash to windwaid. Th* Vigilant turnad flrtt (take at 1:07:- l:llll4. At 1:46 It wm rattmated that tha Vigilant was a mil* and a hall la tb« lead, and ihe waa going through the water with alno8t attamar appad. At the yachts were on port tack. Wind 24 miles an hour and increasing. The Vigilant in the lead. At 12 o'clock the Vigilant had gained considerably, and it was then seen that she would pass the Valkyrie to leeftard if •be continued to maintain her speed. At 12:03 thh yachts were abreast of each other. The Vigiant to the windward. The wind at this hour had increased to 10 miles. At 11:50 it had increased to 33 miles an hour. She had main-sail up, and ran up a small club-top-sail ns tlie breeze was fresh from the southwest and it looked like.still more wind later. The two yachts arrived at the Sandy Hook light-ship, shortly after 10 o'clock, the Valkyrie in tow of the Palver. The ocean as at the time of the other races was alive with excursion [craft of all descriptions loaded with jolly parties. New Yoiik, Oct. 9.—The second race between the English cutter Valkyrie and the American yacht Vigilant was sailed under altogether favorable conditions. The weather was delightful and the wind all that could be desired. Ten minutes later there was a change of mind on the English yacht and the topsail was taken down and her largest clubtop-suil substituted. as it seemed. 'Ihe Valkyrie drew ahead of the Vigilant almost immediately after crossing the line. In ten minutes she was four lengths ahead but as the Vigilant was a trifle further to windward, tlie advantage was not as great They tore through the water at a lively rate as the breeze was strong from south, southeast. The Valkyrie carr.ed an intermediate jib-top-sail while the Vigilant had up a baby-jib-top-sail. The other sails were the same on both boats. Both boats approached the lino on the ■tarboard tack with sheets close-hauled. They ran up jib-toy-sails immediately after crossing the line. Both boats were side by side when the gun sounded. The Vigilant headed up and put her nosa over about a quarter of a length ahead of the Valkyrie, the Vigilant crossing at 11:25:10 and the Valkyrie at 11:25:15. The Vigilant arrived With all lower sails set. She rau up her club-top-sail, and dropping ber tug, okimmed along merrily, tacking and tilling and trying her sails before the start. On her were C. Oliver Iselin, Captain Hanson, Captain Terry, Nat Herreshoff, August Belmont, William Butler Duncan, Herbert Leeds, E. D. Willard, Newberry D. Thorae and Charles Kerr, the brother-inlaw of I.ord Dunraven. Tha May, with the cup committee on board, anchored east-southeast of the lightship at 11 a. m. The Valkyrie dropped her tug at the light-ship and cruised around for an hour before the start. On her were Lord Dunraven, Lord Wolvertou, one of Lord Dunraven's daughters in a blue yachting suit, trimmed with yellow at the neck. She was the first lady to sail on a yacht in an international race in thiB country. She seemed to be perfectly at home on the deck and when there was any unusual activity she stood in tbe companion way. Others on the British yacht were Captain Cranfleld, Designer Watson, sail-m aker Katsey, and Archibald Rogers. is B >\ ■ vl *'.; ™ #, » nHB^nu^HP,;. :gj 7k.-- 'ig''' liaS3SilK^^m' ' his pants, or bis pants are i isaf 'ook as nice as the coat. Cc ne We hare all shade* ot t ( E3: 'hat do vov So <lprx' Si is ' % SHROUDED IN MYSTERY. '
Object Description
Title | Punxsutawney Spirit, 1893-10-11 |
Volume | XXI |
Issue | 20 |
Subject | Jefferson County -- Newspapers; Punxsutawney Spirit -- Newspapers; Indiana University of Pennsylvania -- Newspapers: |
Description | An archive of the Punxsutawney Spirit weekly newspaper (-1911) from Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Smith & Wilson; Spirit Pub. Co. |
Date | 1893-10-11 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Jefferson County (Pa.); Punxsutawney (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | ps_18931011_vol_XXI_issue_20 |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Relation | Property of The Punxsutawney Spirit. Use of the microfilm Courtesy of the Indiana University of Pennsylvania Special Collections & University Archives. |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For further information contact mengle@cust.usachoice.net or call 814-265-8245 . |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Contributing Institution | Mengle Memorial Library |
Description
Title | Punxsutawney Spirit, 1893-10-11 |
Volume | XXI |
Issue | 20 |
Subject | Jefferson County -- Newspapers; Punxsutawney Spirit -- Newspapers; Indiana University of Pennsylvania -- Newspapers: |
Description | An archive of the Punxsutawney Spirit weekly newspaper (-1911) from Jefferson County, Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Smith & Wilson; Spirit Pub. Co. |
Date | 1893-10-11 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Jefferson County (Pa.); Punxsutawney (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | ps_18931011_001.tif |
Digital Specifications | Archival image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from 35mm microfilm at 300 dpi using a Nextscan Eclipse film scanner. The original file size was 2778.1 kilobytes. |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Relation | Property of The Punxsutawney Spirit. Use of the microfilm Courtesy of the Indiana University of Pennsylvania Special Collections & University Archives. |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For further information contact mengle@cust.usachoice.net or call 814-265-8245 . |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Contributing Institution | Mengle Memorial Library |
Full Text |
With Plenty of Wind. ■Hbfottllr 11 isfta ivlJJtK 11, lOWO. (DRIHK fll CH SrEElnn Sir 51L jto a* Evidence Bat Against Warden Broekaway. Millions of Copies Beinj Distributed by Senators* ' w, - ' t The English Boat Easily Defeated by the Yankee Cutter. VALKYRIE LEFT 3 MILES lant. Who Kept the Lend to the Finish — It Was a Great Race, Was Soon Overtaken by the Vlgt- thc Lead for a Short Distance, But Same Time, and the Valkyrie Took Both Boats Crossed tbe Line at the -Poor d6g ! Ho is losing i. wearing oat. They no longer . pant*. pantaloons and trouaen. pearing. Yours are in and see the extra colors to suit soy coat. .. want to pay? t wear the old F=F?IO That's no object in these times. . W The goods will suit and the prices, too, ones longer. OUR FALL STOCK IS COMIN&, - And we have some great surprises in suits and overcoats, hoys' and children's clothing and overcoat*; a beautiful line for least money. In Jersey and Lord Fontleroy suits we are out of sight, both for quality, quantity and low prices. ' The finest underwear in the market; flannel ami percale aufl white shirts, gloves and neckwear in great variety, hosiery, eto. jHats.Hats 1 We lead with all the late style hats. Boots, rubber and leather shops. Oar shoes every style and price. We can save you money on rubber goods a* the were bought before the advance in prices of rubber goods. Trucks, satchels, umbrellas, rubber coats and macintoshes, all grades an |
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