Newspaper Page Text
Indian Spirits Carried Him Home.
A Mount Lebanon, N. Y. corrospond-
«ot of the Hartford Times, writes:
“Granville Sproat, 79 years of age,
■who had been a member of the Shaker
Society at Mount Lebanon for over 20
Tears, died on the 3rd, Inst, at the
bouse of the Canaan family at 1.20
o’clock p. m. He had a large circle of
friends outside, having been a promi¬
nent men as a school-teacher, magis¬
trate and preacher. He taught the
first public school In Chicago. He was,
*Jso. for some twelve years, a self-
sacrificing missionary among the wild
Indians of the West and was dearly
beloved by them. When dying, while
sitting in bis chair, the room was filled
with Indian spirits who had come to
ewcort. him home and welcome him to
their ‘Happy Hunting Grounds’ beyond
the sphere of their cruel friends—the
pale-faced enemy of their race. He
understood several Indian dialects. The
Indians were devotedly attached to
bim and were often with him. They
held communion together, like Jesus
with Moses and Elias. Granville was
no ordinary man. His brethren ana
sisters will miss him extremely, but
fee will be a minister of good to thorn
in their piritual meetings.”
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MAKING C00D COFFEE.
New York Hotels Have a Man Especially
For That Purpose.
If there is one particular branch of
the culinary art in which the average
housewife prides herself, It is her abili¬
ty to make good coffee. As far as com¬
pounding the favorite breakfast bever¬
age Is concerned, she nine times out of
ten does not delude herself, but ask
any man who is the least bJA of a boa
viveur and he will tell you that not
one woman in a hundred can make aft-
ter-dinner coffee that is fit to drink.
The coffee that is set before him at the
family table is as different from the
clear, brown-black stimulating liquid
that is served in the clubs, restaurants
and big hotels as is water from wine.
He wonders why/this should be, but
were he to pay a visit to the precincts
sacred to the stewards of onr large
hotels, and there learn just how much
time, care and money is devoted to the
preparation of this one concomitant of
a well-served dinner, his respect for
the housewife’s efforts would probably
increase, while his enjoyment of the
post-prandial nectar would doubtless
be augmented.
One of the most important officials
in every large hotel and restaurant in
the city is known as the ‘‘coffee man.”
His sole duty consists in buying, blend¬
ing and making the gallons of coffee
that are consumed daily by the guests.
He is very apt to have pronounced
ideas regarding blends and mixtures,
but his fad par excellence is the partic¬
ular kind of coffee pot or urn to bo
used in concocting the beverage.
The views of the Waldorf coffee man
differ from those of the superintendent
of the Imperial; at the Fifth Avenue
another blend and another mode of
compounding are adopted, while at the
Arena the method of coffee making is
peculiarly their own. At the Waldorf
the biend favored for breakfast coffee
is two-thirds of a pound of Mocha to
onc-third of Java. The Waldorf cof¬
fee man does not favor coffee that is
finely ground, soaks it in cold water
for a full hour before it is put in tho
latge sieves of the countless huge sil¬
ver urns of the establishment. For
breakfast he uses about one pound of
coffee to five quarts of water; this is
poured through the sieve and strainers,
which are arranged in the urns in the
regulation French coffee-pot fashion,
four times. The result is a clear, am¬
ber-colored liquid of excellent flavor
and strength.
For the after-dinner coffee he pre¬
fers a blend that Is composed of rather
more Java than Mocha, and but four
parts of water are allowed to the
pound. The process of making is the
same.
At the Arena coffee is made on the
tables in Viennese coffee pots, by what
is known as the steaming process.
There the mixture consists of equal
parts Of Mocha and Java. About one
ounce is allowed to each individual pot..
xhe pots themselves are qnaint-look-
ing affairs of hammered brass, porce-
lain lined, and with glass tops. Un-
derneath is swung.a small spirit lamp.
In the body of the pot is placed a suf-
ficient quantity of cold water, while
the allotted ounce of Mocha and Java
is put, perfectly dry, and very finely
ground, in the glass top. When the
water boils the steam slowly ascends
through a tube, and as it permeates
the dry coffee, drop by drop the pure
coffee essence falls into a receiver, with
the result that a perfectly pure, full-
flavored coffee of the richest strength
is obtained. This process is also used
by f many ^ of the quaint restaurants af-
f( cted the foreign element, but the
coffee used is the strong black blend
popularly known as Turkish.
At both the Imperial and the Fifth
Avenue the Mocha and Java mixture
is favored, but at these hotels both
French and Viennese pots are tabooed,
and the old-fashioned method of
straining the coffee through a flannel
bag prevails.—New York Times.
How Berliners "Spruce Up.”
The men of Berlin have nn odd habit
of brushing and combing their hair
and whiskers in public. In the rest¬
aurants and cafes men pull out their
implements and “spruce up” while
waiting for their orders to be filled.
They do not take the trouble to leave
the table, either. In the foyers of the
Berlin theatres there are many mir-
rors. Theoretically they are placed
there for the convenience of ladies. As
a matter of fact the men are the prin
cipal users. Five minutes before the
curtain goes up a man may he seen
standing before every mirror indus¬
triously using brush and comb. One
minute before the curtain rises all
hands place brush and comb back in
their pockets, and with a well-groomed
appearance and self-satisfied smile
they march down to their seats.—New
York Commercial Advertiser.
M.
MASTER WORKMAN WAS WILLING,
HOWEVER, TO BE RETIRED.
NEW YORK MAN HIS SUCCESSOR.
Son tuition Sprung In the Gonturnl Amoemblv
of Kiiitrhts of Labor in Session all
Louisville, Ky.
James It. Sovereign, who has been
general master workman of the
Knights of Labor for the past four
years or more and who, before and
during that time, has been one of the
ablest champions of the order audits
doctrines, was relieved of his office
Friday afternoon by the general
assembly, ill session in Louisville, Ky.
Under ordinary conditions Air. Sov¬
ereign’s term of office would not ex¬
pire until the next meeting. This,
however, it is said, makes no differ¬
ence with the order whose general
officers during a meeting are always
in the hands of the assembly and can
be chosed and deposed at the will Sover¬ of
the majority. Along with Mr.
eign there were three other officers re¬
tired because of this special election,
viz: T. B. McGuire, general worthy
foreman, of Amsterdam, N. Y.; Daniel
Brown, of Montana, and H. B. Mar¬
tin, of Minnesota, members of the ex¬
ecutive committee.
Henry A. Hicks, of New York dis¬
trict 253. New York city, was chosen
to fill Mr. Sovereign’s place, and I.
D. Chamberlain, of Pueblo, Col., was
selected as general worthy foreman.
Senators Field Fi'zpatrick, of Mon¬
treal, and Henry Bostock, of Assem¬
bly 300, glassworkers, were chosen as
the two members of the' executive
board, the third member being Andrew
D. Best.
This very decided change in the
corps of general officers of the Knights
of Labgr will cause considerable aston¬
ishment in labor circles throughput
the country, Save to those who were
on the “inside,” so to speak, for the
past three months there was absolutely
nothing of this known. It is said,
though the change was sudden and
totally unlooked for, was done with
the amicable consent of all. In some
quarters it is hinted that it had been
prearranged. good authority
It is learned on that
it was with Mr. Sovereign’s hearty
approval that he steps down and out.
It is, likewise, with the appreciation,
and in fact, Jove of his brethren of the
order that this is done, The same
holds good with the other officers who
were relieved. Air. Sovereign stated
that ho wished retirement. He want¬
ed rest from the labor which the office
entailed upon him.
Henry A. Hicks, the general master
workman-elect, was seen after tire
meeting. He said that he did not in¬
tend to outline the future policy of the
order under his administration for
several days yet. He expressed
the highest admiration for his
predecessor, saying that he thought
him one of the greatest • exponents of
the age of the prime idea represented
by the Knights of Labor.
I. D. Chamberlain, the worthy fore¬
man-elect, is a newspaper man.
All the business transacted at Fri¬
day’s meeting went through in the
most amicable manner possible.
The afternoon session was princi¬
pally taken up with the delivery of
Air. Sovereign’s annual address.
Air. Sovereign prefaced his speech
with the statement that the opening of
this regular session of the general as-
eembly presents to the world the “same
undismayed membership through
whoso fortitude and courage the spirit
of progress combats greed and avarice
and defies the cant and hypocrisy of
the age.” triumph
He then dwelt briefly on the
of the principles of the order, saying
that it had survived the crimes of its
traitors, and prospered in spite of the
contumely of its enemies. The order,
he said, was today stronger in mem¬
bership, stronger in character and
stronger in the hearts of the people
than it was a year ago. He recom¬
mended that this session confine its
deliberations largely to the work of
organization, and to this end plans
should be put in operation which will
insure the service of the largest possi¬
ble number of experienced and efficient
organizers in isolated and unorganized
fields.
LINCOLN SUCCEEDS PULLMAN.
He Will Have Cliar|;e of tlio Great. I*»l-
ace Car Company.
A meeting of the directors of the
Pullman Palace Car company was held
at Chicago Thursday. Robert T.
Lincoln was elected a director.
The most important action taken
was the appointment of an executive
committee, consisting, of Charles E.
Hulbert, of New York, and Alarshall
Field and Itojiert. T. Lincoln, of Chi¬
cago, who will have charge of the
general affairs of the company. Rob¬
ert T. Lincoln was elected chairman
of this committee.
The action of the directors, how-
pv®r, practically makes Air. Lincoln
president of the company.
CATTLE CAN ENTER CUBA.
No Import or Ofhor Duties Will Be
Charged Therefor.
A Washington dispatch says: Vice
Consul Springer has sent to the s+ate
department the governor general’s de¬
cree permitting from the 10th instant
the importation of all horned cattle
into the island of Cuba free of duties.
The decree will remain in force until
January 10th next. The actual im¬
portation of cattle at this time ia 1,000
head per week.
mbs. sack confesses.
m
tih« IVIld Mow Thorn Murdered fiuldcn-
(uippe mid lllspoSeil onhidy.
There was an extraordinary turn of
affairs Wednesday in the Thorn
murder trial at Long Island City,
Mrs. Augusta Nack, who was indict-
ed together with her erstwhile para¬
mour, Martin Thorn, ,for the murder
of her former lover, William Gulden-
mippe, for whom she deserted her
legal husband, appeared in the role of
a state’s witness against Thorn, to
the consternation of the latter’s lav.-
yers. recited in dramatio
The woman a
mauuer the story of the assassination
of Guldensuppe by Thom, the dis-
membermeut of the body, the pait all
that she played in the tragedy and
relative incidents before and after the
murder. Her story created the most
intense sensation, and now the great
murder • mystery of the year is no
longer a mystery, as one of the per-
sons most interested has made clear
what the court and all the evidence
summoned would probably not have
d °The “iartlin^annonncement had confessed made
Tuesday that Mrs. Nack
tbe murder of William Guldensuppe
and implicated Martin ihorn was con-
tinned Wednesday morning when
court assembled by Judge August A.
Weller, who is assisting District At-
torney Young in the prosecution. stand
When placed on the witness
Mrs. Nack said tbnt she and Gulden-
snppe left New York between 9 and
10 o’clock the morning of June 25th,
and after they had crossed the ferry
they boarded a trolley car which left
them at the Woodside cottage.
“I b ud the key to the house, she
said, “and I opened the front door. I
told Guldensuppe to enter and exam¬
ine' the house while I went into the
yard. I went up stairs and I heard a.
shot. Martin Ihorn came running.
down and when he met me he said:
“I ve shot him; b® is dead.
“ He was very excited, and I was
half dead, said the self confessed mur-
der ess, breathlessly.
“ What did von do then?” asked
Judge Weller.
“He asked me to go home and oome
bock at 5 o’clock. when,I c#mo haok-
that evening Ihorn had eveiything
packed in bundles. He handed me a
bundle which he said contained Gul-
densuppe’s clothes, and he took an¬
other bundle which was wrapped up
in gray-colored paper. He said that
it was Guldensuppe s head and that it
was done up iu pla-ster of plans. He
took the trolley-car and went over to
New York on a ferryboat. While cros-,
sing the river Thorn dropped his bun-
die overboard.”
Mrs. Nack stated that she carried
her bundle home and burned it.
Tho next day they went back to
the cottage and found the other bun-
dies still there. Whea leaving, Thorn
carried one of the 1 bundles with him,
and they again crossed the ferry, when
Thorn threw his bundle overboard, as
on the day before,
CONSTABLE KILLS PREACHER.
ofTcei-.Suspected Mis vietim w»i n Block-
ad» Kminer.
A Columbia, S. C.,. special says: It
was supposed that when state consta-
hies were withdrawn, “except in the
rural districts,” there would be no-
more homicideR by liquor detectives,
but Wednesday night J. H. Turner,
for many years a Baptist preacher and
recently one of the- most prominent
business men iu his- county, lies dead
with a bullet through bis jugular vein,
The shooting was done by State
Constable W. H. Newbold, a Texan,
who has done government service iu
that state and Mexico, and was eim
ployed by Governor Tillman.
Turner was a delegate tc the ‘ ’good.
roads” convention which met at Co-
lumbia Thursday, and was driving to
Spartanburg to take a Columbia train,
When at Cedar Gro.ve church two men.
called to him. to-halt. Before he could
rein in his hors®, two shots were fired,
and he fell mortally wounded.
Newbold' went to Spartanburg, and:
his lawyer, fearing violence, got him.
a private conveyance and started him.
out of town. He- has not been heard
of since.
It is supposed Turner was taken, for-
a blockade runner.
Newbold's lawyer telegraphed that
the detective held a pistol in each hand:
and they were accidentally discharged.
“H is a great pity ” said Governor
Ellerb«. I would not have given. .New-
bold for the rest of the constable
gang.”
BONDS AS SECURITY.
Steerctary Gag* Will Sign Over N tfno Thftna.-
saiul of Them.
A Washington dispatch says; See-
retarv Gage has received from the Na-
timial City bank of New York $9,600,-
COO in United States bonds as security
for a part of the Union Pacific pur-
ehase money t? be deposited with it
and other New York banks with a view
to preventing a contraction of the cir¬
culation by reason of the withdrawal
by tha reorganization committee of
the amount of their bid for the Union
Pacific road
Th. «*. o( W. ,13,645,250
bonds in the Union Pacific sinking
fund will entail upon Secretory Gage
considerable labor.
DUTIES SUSPENDED.
Mexican Ships Can Enter American Porta
Ftote of Charge:
A Washington special says: Presi-
dent McKinley issued a proclamation
Friday afternoon suspending the col-
lection of discriminating duties
the Mexican shipping upon satisfactory
proof that no discrimination is
ticed against American ships by
Mexican government in the ports,
that country,
; STEIN AU, O’QUINN AND SIMON
! ARE JAItED AT ATLANTA.
v
C=5 DC cn: Q m cm GZ3 CT3 m
j uetectlvei and Police officers Claim to
Have Conclusive Evidence Againat
tlie Three Saloon Men.
l An Atlanta iftl sa . Loui9
p
Steinau, Walter O’Quinn und Julius
Simon are now charged directly with
tll0 mur ,j er 0 f Patrolman J. T. Pon-
der, who was killed in Steinau’® place
on Monday night.
Warrants were sworn out for them
Wednesday morning before Justice
Fout(J) b Detective Looney, charging
tbem witb rnurder. Until this
was done the men were held on suspi-
cion and no direct charge had been
made against them,
Much additional evidence has been
secured by the detective department,
All immense amount of work was-
done Tuesday night by the officers oil
j be case and before midnight new and
1JU >st valuable information had been)
secnrec p
Slowly and with) much difficulty the
officers worked on their original
theory, gradually securing evidence
that gave it additional strength.
The evidence is ciirenmstancial so
font the officers claim that the
most startling disclosures are yet to
ytime. The coroner's investigation
vrliicl, was to have been held Wednes-
Jav was postponed,
This was surprise the first, and when
all b(> , ;r later warrants were sworn out
against Stemau, O’Quinn. and Simon,
tib;e second surprise was sprung,
A highly was" sensational piece of evi-
(lenee found against O’Quinn by
the detectives. A man has been found
by the detectives who swears he was
y le sa i 00 u 0 f 8imon when the shoot-
mg was done in the place of Steinau.
jj 9 says he started towards the rear of
the saloon and that a man ran into his
arms. This man came from the roar
0 f the saloon, and was running towards
This man, the witness says, was
Walter O’Quinn. He says he asked
O’Quinn what was the matter, and ho
<-»oh, they are shooting: like h—11
j n there.”
This witness says he has known
O’Quinn for years, and is positive
that he came from therear of the sa-
] oon j n sn ch a way as to make it ap:
peaT ttaat be had j nst rnn in from the
^Uey iui therear of the-saloon.
The detective departmental now un-
doubtedly playing a deep game with
tha attorneys representing Stemau,
O’Quinn and Simon.
Habeas corpus proceedings had been
begun and as the men were- only held
on suspicion the writs taken, oat would
probably have had some fume. Now
that warran t s have been sworn out,
makings definite charge of murder,
aD entirely different aspect iis put on
the case.
Captain W. P. Manly* chief of po-
|(j, e . made the following sta/iemeufc for
publication: killed
believe Walter O'Quram
Ponder, and that Louis Steinau and
Julius. Simon were accessories to the
crime- before and after the fact. This,
j believe, we will be able to prove.
My men are hard at work mod are rap-
idly clearing up the mystery belief surround- is based
j ng th® tragedy. My
tfo® facts now in. my possession. ”
on
The three negroes, Charles Shrop-
shire, Charles Strickland and Dave
Croekett, who were- acre*,bed on sus-
pie-ion of being connected with the
murder, seems to have been lost sight
0 f » the battle over the- three white
men. No warrants have been sworn
ouit against them and no ase has made-
^ ®ff or t to have them released,
j a j e Wyly, a well-toiown young man.
about town, who was arrested Tuesday
on suspicion of knowing something of
the murder, says- he- will be able to-
prove an alibi,
Reman<2fe<il fe«> Jail.
Late Wednesday afternoon Steinan,
O’Quinn and Simoe were remanded to.
h FuIton coun , ty j ai! b y an order
f rom Judge T Lump km, oi the superioa-
court.
BOLD MEDAL FOR GEORGIA.
Her Agricultural X>i»i»lay at IS'asluvlll^
Wia* » JPrize,
* A gold medal has been awarded the
eta cultural } e of Georgia display made for the at the genera! leupeesee agrc-
Centennial.
rhe governor lias received notifiea-
tion of this fact from the exposition
authorities, accompanied by an order
upon a Nashville jeweler for said gold
medal, which will be .delivered to the
state upon payment of price of the
saule '
void medals, such as are awarded
state of Georgia can get just as line a
xuedal as she is williag to pay for,
PRESIDENTIAL APPOINTMENTS.
Charles Kendrick, of Louisiana, is Consul
Gerieriil Monterey.
The president, Wednesday, mad®
the following appointments:
Charles W. Kendrick, of Louisiana,
to be consul-general of * 'the, U^tod
States at Monterey, Mex.
Archibald A. Young, surveyor of
customs for the port of Indianapolis.
John H. Dawson, special examiner
of drugs, medicines and chemicals in
the district of Ban Francisco.
Tr
INDIANS LYNCHED.
Tboy Were I Charged With Murder K
Spicer Family.
A apeciul from Bismarck, N. D. a
Alexander Paul Holytrack Coudot, and Indian Philip half jA
full blooded Indians, the first thH
was sentenced to death for
der of six members of the SpicH juslH
ily last Fobrnary and had courtH
granted a new trial by the ai£
the latter two self-confessed
ries in the murder, were takeifl eomH
the county jail in Emmons
day night and lynched. appiS
The lynching had been carrifflH
coolly planned and was
without a break in the program. V
Williamsport, where the hufl
took place, iB about forty mileo^
Bismarck and off the railroad.
news of the hanging was received! m|H
day afternoon when a mounted
seuger arrived and announced thaitiM
three men had been lynched.
The sheriff of the county,
Shier, was in Bismarck at the time tho
hanging occurred. The men had been
in the custody of Deputy Sheriff Tom
Kelly, and they were taken from
control by a mob and hanged to a
windlass several hundred yards from
the jail, where their bodies were left)
swinging to the breezes during tha
day. about forty
There were men con¬
cerned in the lynching. They rodei
into Williamport on horseback Inters CjH
night and tethered their horses a
distance from the city, that
might deed secure done. them The again jail in whidj^^B after J
was
prisoners tial stone were structure. confined is a sub^Hp fll
RECEIVER NOT NEEDED:
Swvttliiwi'n Home B. &' USakes Satis-
factory Showing:, *
The application for receiver made
by Alabama stockholders- in> the South¬
ern Home Building and 1 Loan associa¬
tion' of Atlanta was denied Saturday
by Judge Pardee in the'csmrt of ap¬
peals. granted No¬
The restraining order
vember 10th, was, at the same time,
dissolved.
The showing made by the associa¬
tion’s attorneys convinced! the court
there was not sufficient ground for a
receivership. There was no. proof that
the company is insolvent, On the
other hand, the company presented notfonly
affidavits showing they were
perfectly solvent! but had a- ihrge sum
in the treasury. The Southern Home
Building and Loan Associati-an count
tho decision a great victory:
The plaintiff’s attorneys failed sig¬
nally to. prove the company was insol¬
vent. Their main charge was mis-.
management, This, Judge PardaH
!. vijlc no grounds fomreceivershiM
but for injunction. If the-
tion had brought forth sufficient Wi-
denoe 1 showing that the assoesation is
insolvent, the result might have been
different. Another ground; for the
ruling was that there were iso judg-
meats- involved in this caseugginst the
company.
MUST HAUL IJIJUOR.
Important Hscision Rendered,3n “Oriari-
invL Package” Case at Atlanta.
Th© Southern Railway Company
will be- compelled to haulith® goods of
Bluthenal & Bickart, the Atlanta whis-
ky. dealers, into South Carolina.
Judges Pardee and Newman, of
handed' United States down court decision at Atlanta, ia Gjfl
a
menu dispensary case Saturday morfll
ing; enjoining the Southern, from
fusing to haul such goods, in future..
The decision is an important one in
that tbie original package- law is in¬
volved-. and The wines judges iu bottles, decided paean tUBjj^
nor© lots^B
hexes and shipped in carload
under Ijvadmissible, the laws and of South should! Carolina,e^B be hiuniBB
by any railroad.
The case has attracted consider a W
attention throughout: th© south, Ly
th® decision will largely affect the
i f Atlanta goods in,South CarolinflH
the- future.
HAYTI BORROWS LARGE SUM
mar Minister to Titofr E»wntry Re*
Conclusion of a Loam o-f S4,000jJ| tj
The United States minister
reports from Port ait Prince tM
Baytian government has ooncl ,ded
loan for $4,000,000, through Lazarc
Brothers, New York,, at 9 per cent,.t<
be delivered immediately; the papei
enrreney to be dtestroyeil, thefraotiona
silver and copper coin to be recoinec
in the mints ofi the-United States,
BARTLEY At HEAVY DEFAULTE
Ex-State Treaeurce-jr of Nebraska. Mi
Way With *870,000.
The expert who has been engager th|
for several mouths , in examining
books and accounts Nebraska, of ex-StfJe has Treitfij sub
uror Bartley, of legislative iij
mitted his report to the
vestignJing coanmittee showing Bari
ley’s shortage to be $870,000. hal
Th© amount of the defalcation
been, variously estimated at from $700 ll
000 to $1,000,000. Hart’l. y is now
the, ty-year-sentence Douglas county in the jail penitentiary. under a. tweij I
Ail appeal has been taken to the si|
p;reme court and argument, on moth
tor a new trial will scton be made.
RAISED TOBACCO DUTY.
Appraiser Wnkemw. Eats Lerire Ficar
on Havana Weed.
United States Appraiser Wakens:
at New York completed the examin
tion of an invoice of Havana tobac
Friday which was entered at that pc
a few days ago, amounting to 4|
bales.
He raised the duty from 35 cents
$1.50 per pound, making,U’i incred
of $10,500.