Newspaper Page Text
COLUMBUS CHRONICLE.
VOL. TV.
Wiffl 0151 QUAY
Senate Committee Renders Adverse
Report to the Pennsylvanian.
® 10TE STOOD FIVE TO FOUR.
power of Appointment Not to be Kx
crcimt Unless Vacancy Occurred
in th<* Recess of the Legisla
ture—Minority Report.
The reports of the committee on
privileges and elections in the case
ofM. S. Quay, who claims a seat in
the United States senate on the
strength of an appointment from the
governor of Pennsylvania, were pre
sented in the senate Tuesday. The
majority report opposing the seating
of Mr. Quay was signed by Senators
Caffery, Pettus, Turley, Harris and
Burrows, the last named the only re
publican signing it. The minority re
port bears the signatures of Senators
Hoar, Chandler, Prichard and Mc-
Comas. all republicans, and advocate
giving the seat to Mr. Quay.
After discussing the circumstances
at length under which the case was
framed, the majority announces its
conclusions as follows:
“We think that the framers of the
constitution never contemplated 'or
intended to provide for a case where
a state, by its own deliberate act,
should deprive its legislature of the
power to fill an entire term at its be
ginning. In our opinion, they never
intended to give the executive of a
state the power to fill an entire term
by original appointment, unless, pos
sibly, in case where the legislature
had chosen and the person elected
had refused to accept or died before
qualification. In other words, ,we
conclude that the power of appoint
ment was not to be exercised unless
the vacancy occurred in the recess of
the legislature and was occasioned
by some casualty like death or resig
nation.”
The minority report takes the op
posite view. Quoting section 3, arti
cle!, of the constitution, the minor
ity says: ‘‘The failure of the gov
ernor to call the legislature together
to elect a senator does not deprive
the governor of the power of appoint
ment.”
SEW RAILROAD IN ALABAMA.
(ommiMion Granted by Secretary of
State to Open Book* of Subscription.
A commission was issued Tuesday
by the secretary of state at Montgom
frytoJ. M. Falkner, of Montgomery,
•nd J. H. Ringgold and D. W. Hines,
ol Louisville, to open books of sub
scription to the North Alabama Rail
road company. This road is proposed
built from a point on the Louis
ville A- Nashville, near Phelans, in
county, extending in a
southerly direction so as to pass near
Bremen, then through Walker conn
ed into Jefferson, to some point
cr connection with the Birmingham
cral railroad, between Boyles and
cssemer, a distance of about seven
ty-tive miles. Also three miles of
Iracs from Brookwood in a northerly
action. The capital stock of the
Wrnpany is jjt^JO, ooo.
■•'ates Withdraws From Crenshaw.
Jecer *l Oates has withdrawn from
senat orial race in Crenshaw coun-
COncen trate his efforts in
er counties. He reached this de
ic,° n tw ° or three days ago, and so
the party managers there.
e eaves the contest in that
Ggy Senator Morgan and
J°^ ns b° n ’ an d each will
t- s w\ V? ° rOU3 cam P ai 8 n during
j n^ nK, ' nta WiU Not Withdraw
tfiQeoH 1 in gham, internal rev
thit},. * eCtor for A^a bama, states
* nOt wit hdraw fr°m the
M’r/ * ° c^airrna nship of the re-
U-j a 1 u XeCative coi nmittee of Ala-
Wir,. an i *i bUyS is in ie race t°
tilth e Btay in un '
Th e r , <h T awfor Morgan.
li t l ISts of Choctaw county
mar y ' n which a vote
le ° w °r, »nj o^k Can^’^a^eB f° r state
• can didate who re-
i b ! ° r Senate? w Cf ie votes cast
Ot be orBar 8 an ’ 8 re-election
lted states senate,
THE NEWS EPITOMIZED.
Wiuhlnston Iteinn.
A delegation of Puerto Ricans appeared
before Secretary Root to urge measures for
the relief of the people of the island.
The Senate bill increasing the powers of
the Director of the Census was passed,
with a proviso that the printing miist be
done by the Public Printer.
Renresehtative James 8. Sherman, of
New York, has declined to accept the sec
cretaryship of the United States Senate.
Postmasters have been notified that the
postage on letters to the Philippines has
been reduced to two cents.
In the Senate Mr. Pettigrev’s Philippine
resolution was tabled and '.n amendment
to the resolution of Senator Hoar, calling
on the President to furnish copies of the
instructions to the Peace Commissioners,
was defeated. The vote oil the latter was
41 to 20.
The War Department reports that ex
ports from the port of floilO during the
months of March and Armli
1899, ttggrated $549,88V-.j
The House Committee on the Judiciary
fixed February 13 as t je date for a general
hearing upon the proposed constitutional
amendment granting woman suffrage.
Representative Loud, of California, has
reintroduced, in modified form, his bill in
reference to second-class matter.
Under a now ruling by the Secretary of
War, officers and enlisted men may wear
the badges of their military societies and
their medals of honor on occasions of cere
mony. Insignia buttons are still hatred-.
Negotiations with other Countries for
reciprocity treaties have been suspended
by the administration because of the pros
pect that thoso already negotiated will not
bo ratified by Congress.
Our Adopted Islf*uds.
General MacArthur’s troops are pursuing
many small bands, killing numbers of the
Filipinos and securing guns.
General Otis at Manila reassured n dele i
gation of Filipinos who feared the Vnited
States woujd force the friars on the people.
Nine Americans are believed to be pris
oners of Pijlllpplne insurgents in Tayubas
province.»
The tofAl customs receipts at the port of
Havana xCuba, for the vear ended Decem
ber 31, f '9, was $14,072,114.79.
Rara<<| Salsado, the Cuban patriot and
the first Mayor of Santiago de Cuba under
American rule, is dead.
The American forces occupied Magal
lanes, Arovince of Cavite, P. 1., capturing
twenvlinsurgents, including a colonel.
General Ludlow is making an attempt
to stow the practice of begging, which is
assuring large proportions in Havana,
Cuba*
A Mttalion of the Nineteenth Infantry
routdi the Sudlon rebels in the Cebu
P. I. Considerable ammuni
tion was captured. Four Americans were
wounded.
Governor-General Wood at Havana has
issued an order appointing a commission
of three to study and report upon the prob
lem of taxation throughout Cuba.
Domestic.
The Evening Post, of Louisville, Ky., has
a sensational article declaring that trea
son and revolution are in progress. It says
that 100,000 men would go to Frankfort If
the situation was understood,
John H. Cook, a well-known, undertaker
of Baltimore, Md., was married to Miss
Ruby Becker, In pursuance of the dying
wish of Cook’s first wife, who died several
days ago. Miss Becker had nursed her
during an illness lasting several years.
Albert Learned, formerly acting City
Auditor of Pittsfield, Mass., was sentenced
to serve one year in jail, having been found
guilty on a charge of forgery.
Edward Moore, an employe of the Hills
boro Coal Company, mistook his wife,Rose
C. Moore, for a burglar, at their home in
Hillsboro, 111., and killed her.
The Supreme Court of Delaware has
ruled that woman lawyers cannot practice
before It on account of a Constitutional
prohibition.
Attorney-General Knowlton, of Massa
chusetts, formally suggests that confine
ment for life supplant the death penalty
for murder in the State in the cases of
women and minors under the age of eight
een.
The training ship Dixie left Norfolk, Ya.,
for San Juan, Puerto Rico, whence she will
go to the Mediterranean for a cruise. She
has nearly four hundred landsmen 1 on
board, and the object of the cruise is to
train them for service on men-of-war. All
these men are American citizens.
The hamlet of Zeeland, Mich., with a
population of 700, has raised $6OO by popu
lar subscription for Red Cross work among
the Boers.
Joseph New, an artilleryman at Fort
Monroe, was murdered in Phoebus, Ya., as
a result of a row. After an early evening
row had been quelled New and his com
panions had a quarrel at the Indiana
House. When they left the place some one
•red from the house and New fell dead.
The lowa Legislature met iu joint ses
sion and re-elected James H. Gear to tue
United States Senate.
Jacob Crumbling, whose home is not far
from York, Penn., was fatally Injured by
an explosion of dynamite. He put the
fuse in the stove to thaw. It exploded,
blew off one of his arms, wrecked his home
and set Are to ;it. Crumbling Lad been
blasting rocks.
Mrs, George Sabal was beheaded at Vir
den, 111., by a passenger train. She had
just arrived from Germany, and was met
by her busband and a number of friends
at the train. Husband and wife had not
seen each other for ten years.
Felix Morris, the well-known actor, died
In New York City from pneumonia, after a
week’s illness.
N. K. Goss, a merchant of Edenburg,
Ohio, was murdered by robbers. Goss
owned a general store. The robbers, three
In number, escaped.
Foreign.
The Russian ironclad Poltava, of 10,960
tons, ran ashore near Libau, on the Baltic.
The Poltava was built at St. Petersburg in
1894 at a cost of 85,490,000.
A vote of confidence in the French Gov
ernment was passed by the Chamber of
Deputies by a vote of 329 to 74 The vote was
ennn Interpellation of
attitude toward the strikers ot St. Etienne.
The Right Hon. Joseph Chamberlain, in a
speech at Birmingham, said tha ‘
had a great deal to learn from America and
unless she learned it quickly she was bourn,
to fall behind in commerce.
Tidal waves higher than have been
known for a long time have swept along
the Chilean coast, doing considerable dam
general Hector MacDonald, who wil l
succeed General Wauchope co “^ and
the Highland Brigade in South Africa, ar
rived at Cape Tow® India.
COLUMBUS, GA., SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 1900.
ERIE CANAL WREGKEBB.
Thirteen Men Accused of Destroying
State Propertyi
MURDERS LAIDTO CONSPIRATORS
The Canal Feeder at Forestport, N. Y.,
Blown Dp to Give Men Employment
—Detectives Investigate and Unearth
a ItcMiarkable Conspiracy Evidence
Collected is of a Most Positive Nature.
Albany, N. Y. (Special).—Practically all
the civil power of the State has been used
to detect; pursue and indict a remarkable
band Of Conspirators and lawbreakers Who
hive just been brought to book in Oneida
County.
The conspiracy consisted in blowing up
the bank of the Forestport feeder of the
Erib Canal Ln order that the community
should prosper In consequence eg the work
of repairs. The community was aware of
what was going on, but the character of
the men engaged in the enterprise was
sdeh that they were afraid te tell the au
thorities;
In the codrse of the investigation several
mysterious disappearances have developed
into murders, and the trails of some of the
offenders have led detectives ail over the
Urited States.
As a result of a systematic effort by the
Public Works Department, Attorney-
General Davies, District Attorney Timothy
Curtim Jr., of Oneida County, and Emer
son Willis, his assistant, thirteen persons
have been Implicated in the series of out
rages, and eight have been arrested and
are under indictment.
The persons arrested are William Clark,
Walter Bsfynor, Richard Monohan, John
Conley, John Fordett, John Root, Frank
SCENE OF GENERAL BULLER S OPERATIONS FOR THE RELIEF OF LADYSMITH-
Murray and Blank Rudolph. Murray and
Rudolph have been released on bail. All
the others are in jail in Utica.
The first break on the Forestport feeder
occurred on July 21, 1897, the second on
September 18, 1898, and the third in the
summer of 1899. The breaks all occurred
in practically the same place, where the
feeder runs along a hillside, a heavy bank
of earth supported by piles forming the
canal.
Word reached Colonel Partridge last
summer that a man in Buffalo had told a
strange story about the canal having been
blown up in 1897 and 1898 for the purpose
of bringing money into the town of Forest
port. The cost of repairs was practically
all profit for the town. Every man who
owned a horse and wagon found employ
ment. The lumbermen sold piling. The
saloon and boarding house keepers reaped
a golden harvest from the money left there
by the laborers, who cashed their pay
checks every day and spent all their money
at night.
Mr. Partridge consulted with Attorney-
General Davies, who advised him to follow
the matter up, and the story was being In
vestigated when the Forestport feeder
went up for the third time. Incidentally,
it may be remarked that the total cost of
repairing these three breaks amounted to
$129,545.
Colonel Partridge employed detectives
who wont to Forestport to live. In time
the detectives wove a net of incriminating
evidence about practically ail the persbns
who were engaged in the conspiracy.
They located and identified the men who
used dynamite on the canal banks. They
got evidence of the first meeting at which
this novel method of enriching a com
munity originated. They discovered the
men who carried the subscription paper
about the town, raising the fund for the
dynamiters. Presently they got one of the
conspirators in their clutcchs, and he
promptly turned State’s evidence.
Every time they caught a new prisoner
he promptly offered to turn State’s evi
dence. In a short time the District Attqj
ney was in possession of moreevldencethan
he needed. If he had adopted the policy
the conspirators mapped out for him ho
would Rave been long on evidence and
short on conviction.
Attorney-General Davies said that the
evidence against the band was of the mort
positive character. He did not think one
of them could escape. Under the law the
maximum penalty for each offence is seven
years’ imprisonment and <3lOOO fine.
The enormity of the crime is increased
by the fact that the Forestport feeder pro
vides the larger portiop of the water supply
for the city of Rome. In consequence of
the break in the canal last summer,
Rome, during the period of drought, was
practically without water, and the engines
of the Fire Department had to be used to
pump each day’s supply from the Erie
Canal into the reservoir. If a big fire had
occurred in certain sections of the city/
Rome would probably have been utterly
destroyed.
RELIEF FOR PUERTO RICOi
Th« Time For the Foreclosure of Mort
gages Extended For Six Month*.
Washington, D. C. (Special).—Secretary
Root has issued an order extending the
time for the foreclosure of mortgages on
property in Puerto Rico six months, on the
condition, however, that such extension
shall not apply it contrary to legislation
enacted by Congress in the interval. The
time for the payment of mortgages under
the previous orders of the War Department
expired Friday.
THREE BANK ROBBERIES.
About $lO,OOO in Cash Stolen in
Raids in Indiana.
Sharp Fight Between CltitertS and Rob
bers; But the Latter Escaped ou
a Hand Car;
Ixdianabolts, Ind. (Special).—Bank rota-’
bers have made an unusual record in this
State. Three country banks were forced,
the safes blown open and booty secured to
the aggregate amount of about $lO,OOO Jn
one night. The scene of one of the robber
ies was enlivened by a fight between citizens
find th® fobbers, in which one policeman
was wounded and one of the robbers shdt,
bow dangerously is not known, as lie was
taken away by his companions.
Ths Commercial Bank at Silver Lake,
Kosciusko County, was broken Into at 1.30
o'clock. It required two charges of dyna
mite to force the sate. The first explosion
was heard by Night Watchman Burt, who
wakened William Price and they went to
ward the bank. The second explosion oc
curred before they reached the building
and a moment later they were mot by five
men, whom they commanded to halt.
The robbers opened fire upon them and
some thirty shots were exchanged, Price
having bls han'd and arm Wounded and
the hopes id each crushed and splintered.
One of the robbers was seen to stagger
and heard to exclaim that he was shot,
but a companion supported him and he
was carried to the Big Four tracks, where
the party boarded a band car. By this
time several citizens had appeared on the
scene and fifty shots were fired at the es
caping thieves.
The robbers went to North Manchester
on the handcar and there boarded a Wabash
freight train, but left it at Columbia City
and took to the woods, When last seen at
daybreak two of them were supporting the
wounded man, who seemed to be very
weak. The bank contained something
over $6OOO, and the robbers secured all the
money except about $3O In smati Snansre.
About the same hour the bank at Elletts
ville, Monroe County, was forced open and
the vault door blown open with a charge of
dynamite. The explosion aroused the
citizens, but before they could reach the
scene the robbers had left the bank and
boarded a handcar on the Monon Railroad
and made their escape. The loss of the
baxjk is between $l5OO and $2OOO. The
bank belongs to Edmond Palmer, of Chi
cago.
The bank at Akron was also robbed
about the same time apd the same methods
weye employed as at tho other banks, the
robbers using dynamite and escaping on
a bandcar before effective pursuit could be
organized. The reports differ as to amount
secured, but it is known that the loss will
reach $lOOO.
KILLS HIS ENTIRE FAMILY.
Martin Bergen, Boston’s Catcher, a Mur
derer and Suicide.
Nobth Brookfield, Mass. (Special).—
Martin Bergen, one of tho best-known ball
players in the country and one of the Bos
ton’s Club’s catchers last season, killed bis
wife and two children with an axe and then
cut his own throat with u razor, at his
kome, in the eastern portion of North
Brookfield.
He caught for the Boston Club last year,
playing with the nine up to the closo of
the season. At times during tho summer
his action in disappearing from the team
without notifying Manager Selee or the
other players resulted in considerable fric
tion.
Once he went to his home in North Brook
field and refused to play, alleging that he
had not been treated well by somo of bls
fellow-players and bls manager.
After much persuasion Bergen was in
duced to return and join his club. Ho was
five feet ten inches in height and weighed
170 pounds.
Bergen at times had been subject to
fits of melancholy and bad been the sub
ject of comment among hIG friends. This
was noticeably the case last October, when
he showed signs oi insanity.
ENTOMBED MINER KEPT DIARY.
Chalk Marks Showed That He Lived
Three Days on OU From Lamp.
Pottsville, Penn. (Special).—The body
of William Galloway, Are boss o< the Kaska
William Mine of the Dodson Coal Com
pany, who was entombed on December 18,
was recovered a few days ago.
While he lived Galloway kept a diary on
sheet iron with a piece ot chalk, and sub
sisted on the oil in his lamp until it was
exhausted.
Galloway wrote on a plank on the side
of the chute on which the fall occurred
the following words:
"Lam in the chute No. 11X- William
Galloway.
Before the body was found those words
were discovered written on sheet iron o>
a brattice door. They wore addressed to
his wife:
"I think lam gone. Goodby, Janie. Be
good boys, Guy and Willie. I don’t think
you will see your father any more. I think
this is Wednesday.”
It is believed he lived but three days.
His body lay prostrate in the chute.
Severe Defeat For Filipinos,
First Lieutenant Mcßae with a company
of the Third Infantry has severely defeated
General Hlzon and the remnant ot Ufi com
mand near Jljbalaoat. P. L
(In Afro-American Newspapers
1898-1901, no.&L —)
the Roberts report.
Majority Declares the Utah Man Should
Not Be Seated.
The reports of the special com
mittee of investigation in the case of
Brigham H. Roberts, of Utah, was
presented to the house Saturday. The
minority report, signed by Chairman
Taylor and six of his assistants, is a
voluminous document, and is accom
panied by a summary of the law and
facta. It gives the details of the
hearing, the ample opportunities af
forded to Mr. Roberts to present hit
case, his refusal to testify, and the
unanimous finding of the facts here
tofore published. It proceeds:
“The committee is unanimous in
its belief that Mr. Boberts ought not
to remain a member of the house of
representatives. A majority are of
the opinion that he ought not to re
main a member; that the house has
the right to exclude him. A minority
are of the opinion that the proper
course of procedure is to permit him
to be sworn in and then expel him by
a two-thirds vote under the constitu
tional provision providing for expul
sion.”
TO SEAT ALDRICH.
Decision of House Committee on the
Fourth Alabama District Contest.
The house committee on election
No. 1 divided on party lines Satur
day and by a vote of 6 to 2 decided
to recommend the seating of Wm,
F. Aldrich, republican, who contests
the seat now held by Gaston A. Rob
bins, democrat, for the Fourth con
gressional district of Alabama. It is
the first decision in a contested case
at the present session of congress.
The contest was based on alleged in
timidation and racial prejudices,
growing out of appeals for whits su
premacy.
A minority report will be made in
behalf of Mr. Robbins.
CUBAN RECEIPTS
From AU Sources for the Past Year Ex
ceeded $15,000,000.
The war department gave out the
statement Saturday that the total
receipts for the entire island of Cuba
for the month of December were $l,-
733,211.
The total receipts for the entire
island for the calendar year ending
December 31, 1899, by items were:
Customs, $14,072,114; internal rev
enue, $757,283; postal receipts from
July 1, 1899, to December 81, 1899,
94,514; miscellaneous receipts from
July 1, 1899, to December 31, 1899,
$293,581; total receipts, $15,217,-
497.42.
SULLIVAN ISLAND
To be Ceded to the United Slates for a
, Government Pest.
The lower house of the South Caro
lina legislature has deeided to cede
to the government Sullivan’s Island,
near Charleston for a United States
government post. The building of
the state capitol, which was stopped
by the civil war, will probably be
completed at a cost of $250,000 A
monument to cost $lO,OOO will be
erected on Chickamauga battlefield.
To Prevent Lynching;.
Representative White, of North
Carolina, the colored representative
in the house, Saturday reported a bill
for "the protection of all citizens of
the United States against mob vio
lence,” etc. It provides that all per
sons shall be protected from being
murdered, tortured or burned to death
by mobs known as "lynching bees,”
whether spontaneous or premeditated
and all parties participating, aiding
or abetting in such affairs are made
guilty of treason against the United
States government and subject to
prosecution in the United State*
courts.
Pension Appropriation Bill Passed.
The pension appropriation bill,
carrying $145,245,250, was passed by
the house Friday. A rider was put
in the bill, by unanimous consent,
empowering the commissioner in hit
discretion to withhold the fees of at
torneys of record in pension caset
where he was satisfied that the at
torneys nad not prepared their caset
under their personal supervision.
John Ruskin Dead.
John Ruskin, the great author,
died in London Saturday of influenza,
aged 81 years.
DEFEATS 3JO INSURGENTS.
Two Americans Wounded and Ten Rebels
Slain.
A cable dispatch from Manila says:
Two companies of the of the Forty
sixth infantry, under Major Johnson,
and three companies of the Thirty
eighth infantry, commanded by Maj.
Muit, defeated 800 insurgents at
Taal, province of Batangas, Saturday,
taking the town. The United States
gunboat Marietta also shelled the
place.
The insurgents had four cannon,
two of which were captured. Two
Americans were wounded, and ten
dead insurgents were found on the
field.
The plague statistics now show a
total of fourteen cases and eleven
deaths.
GEORGIA BLOOD FLOWS.
Two Negroes Killed and Two While Men
Mortally Wounded.
Two negroes shot to death and two
white men desperately wounded was
the result of an attempt to arrest a
negro murderer in Macon, Ga., Mon
day.
J. H. Butler, colored, is the man
who did the most of the shooting and
who was himself shot to death. His
victims were Armstead Bryant, col
ored, shot through the heart and in
stantly killed; B. Stelman, white,
shot through the stomach and will
probably die, and John Reed, white,
shot in the neck and is in a preca
rious condition.
Butler threatened to kill a negro
woman, and when Policeman Pearce
attempted to arrest him, began to
shoot. The negro ran up the street,
pistol in hand, shooting at everything
in sight. When Butler fall five po
licemen and fifteen citizens were
shooting at him. It is said that two
years ago he killed two negroes at
Pine Cure, Ga.
ANOTHER KENTUCKY TRAGEDY,
One Man Killed and Another Mortally
Wounded.
A fight occurred near Franklin,
Ky., Monday, in which a peace
maker, who attempted to part the
belligerents, was killed, and one of
the participants was wounded. James
Ellegood, while intoxicated, passed a
residence where a lady was sick,
whistling and making a great noise.
Orris Smith, who was sitting up with
the patient, came out and asked him
to keep quiet. Ellegood is said to
have started after Smith with a knife.
Richard Heaton, a neighbor, in en
deavoring to part the men was
stabbed in the groin by Eliegood and
died. Ellegood was struck on the
head with a stone by Smith and, it is
said, he can live but a few hours.
Smith escaped uninjured.
Shipping Business Increasing.
As showing the movement of com
modities through the New Orleans
port for Europe, it may be stated
that eight steamers cleared Monday,
the combined cargoes consisting in
part of 824,000 bushels of grain, 82,-
825 bales of cotton, 87,000 sacks of
oil cake and cotton seed meal, 5,000
barrels of cotton seed oil, 225,000
oak staves, 140,000 pieces of lumber
and 198 logs. The export of grain
was the largest on record for any one
day.
Will Move Mississippi Penitentiary.
The Mississippi senate has passed
the bill removing the penitentiary
from Jackson and locating the prison
buildings on the state farms. It is
the general belief that the legislature
will locate the new million dollar
state house on the penitentiary site,
which is in the heart of the' residence
district.
Steamer Stranded.
A private cablegram from Captain
Newberry, at Nassau, received at
Mobile, announces that the schooner
B. W. Morse, 440. tons, which left
Jacksonville, Fla., about January 6
for San Juan, P. R., was abandoned
at sea, waterlogged. Two men were
lost.
Alabamian Commissioned In British Army
W. H. Bingham, of Montgomery,
hes received notice of his appoint
ment as lieutenant in the Canadian
volunteer service, with orders to re
port at Ottawa ready to leave for
SoutU AWca.
NO. 26.