El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. Fifteenth Year, No. 173, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 23, 1895 Page: 3 of 8
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a 1 Faso Daily Times, Tuesday, July 23,1895
FROM YESTERDAY’S EVENING TIMES.
ION.
Circumstantial Evidence
Against Holmes,
A BLOOD-STAINED ROPE.
The Eoiice Believe'.They Save Made a
Most Important Disoovery of the Manner
In Whloh Holmes Ellled^Hls Victims.
Chicago, July 22.—The search
for the body of the missing Williams
girl was resumed at the “castle” of
H. H. Holmes, the suspected mur-
derer today, and in a noosed rope
stained dark about the knot the
police think they have made an
important discovery. These dark
spots, the police immediately con-
cluded were blood stains. The
length of the rope is such that there
were plaited loops attached to the
wall up stairs of Holme’s secret
dumb waiter shaft. A body hang-
ing from the noose would just clear
the floor at the shaft. This coin-
cidence convinced the detectives
that Holmes’ alleged, victims h§d
been pushed through up stairs ac-
cross to the dumb waiter and there
strangled to death in the shaft be-
low.
AFTER THE INDIANS.
Denver, July 22.—A special to
the Times from Cheyenne, Wyo.,
says: Governor Richards received
advices today that some forty young
Bannock bucks are in the vicinity
of Hams Fork station, on the Ore-
gon Short Line, in the Uintah
country. The Indians have a big
horse herd with them and are in-
ducing the Utes to visit them osten-
sibly to trade horses. There are no
squaws with the band and it is be-
lieved their real object is to have
the sun dance if the Utes join them.
Their movements will be closely
watched and they will not be per-
mitted to commit any depredations.
Another special says: “Colonel
Foote, of the Wyoming National
Guards, has ordered Fred Hesse,
Jr. Captain ol Company A., Lara-
mie. to assembly his company, to
determine how many can bqsent
out against the Indians, and prepare
to move when ordered. Company
A. is a crack militia company of the
state.”
Pocatello, Ido., July 22.—B'rom
present indications a conflict be
tween the settlers of Jackson Hole
county, Northeastern Idaho and
In Our Great Grandfather’s Time,
big bulky pills were in
general use. Like the
“blunderbuss” of
that decade they
were big and clum-
sy, but ineffec-
tive. In this cent-
ury of enlight-
enment, we have
Dr. Pierce’9
Pleasant Pel-
lets, which
cure all liver,
stomach and
bowel derange-
ments in the
most effective
way.
Assist Nature
a little now and then, with a gentle,
cleansing laxative, thereby removing of-
fending matter from the stomach and
bowels, toning up and invigorating the
liver and quickening its tardy action,
and you thereby remove the cause of a
multitude of distressing diseases, such as
headaches, indigestion, or dyspepsia,
biliousness, pimples, blotches, eruptions,
boils, constipation, piles,' fistulas and
maladies too numerous to mention.
If people would pay more attention to
properly regulating the action of their
bowels, they would have less fre-
quent occasion to call for their doctor’s
services to subdue attacks of dangerous
diseases.
fact that once used, they are always in
favor. Their secondary effect is to keep
the bowels open and regular, not to fur-
ther constipate, as is the case with other
pills. Hence, their great popularity,
with sufferers from habitual constipation,
piles and indigestion.
A free sample of the “ Pellets,” (4 to 7
doses) on trial, is mailed to any address,
post-paid, on receipt of name and address
on postal card.
Address, World’s Dispensary Medi-
cal Association, Buffalo* 4L. V.
Northwestern Wyoming Indians is
not ended. Today some wanderers
arrived on the reservation but are
far from being in a peaceful frame
of mind, for in the wagon they
brought the bodies of four dead
bucks. It has been given out all
along that only one Indian was
killed. One of the bucks said they
were only coining to the reservation
to get more ammunition and were
going back to kill white men.
Agent Peters will request the
Seventh infantry from Fort Russell
at Cheyenne or the Eighth cavalry
from Boise at once, unless the In-
dians return quietly to their homes.
J. C. Houtb, a ranchman of Soda
Springs, says the police told him
that the Indians killed a white man
and his wife and child. The set-
tlers rallied and killed six Indians.
MGR. SATOLLI TO VISIT SANTA FB.
Denver, July, 22.—A special to
the Times from Washington says:
“It is .not yet definitely decided
whether Mgr. Satolli, the papal del-
egate, will go to Santa Fe on the
occasion of the investiture of Arch-
bishop Chapelle in September next,
but the trip {.will be made if other
engagements permit. Mgr. Satolli,
has expressed himself as very anx-
ious to go, not only because he
would like to participate in the
ceremony but because he wants to
see the Rocky Mountain country
and would like the opportunity the
trip would afford to study the con-
dition of his church in that region,
lie has engagements for New York
and St. Paul which may interfere
with the Santa Fe trip.
PRINCETON STUDENTS SAFE.
Cheyenne, Wyo., July 22.—Gov.
Richards is certain that no harm has
befallen the students from Prince-
ton University. The fight between
Indians occurred July 4 in the
Jackson Hole region directly south
of the Yellowstone National Park,
and July 5th the Princeton stu-
dents were at Lander, 100 miles
from the scene of the trouble. The
expedition proceeded slowly up
Big Wind River towards the north-
west in search of specimens and to
examine the geological formations
west of St. Washakie.
A LONG BICYCLE RIDE.
St. Louis, July 22.—At three
o’clock this morning John M.
Trendley, of East St. Louis, started
from the Union station of this city
to ride to Denver on a bicycle and
establish a record between St. Louis
and that city. He was accompanied
by J. Winstanley, who will ride as
far as Topeka. Trendley expects to
make the trip in ten days, arriving
at Denver August 1.
ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-EIGHT
DROWNED.
Genoa, July 22.—By a collision
yesterday at the entrance of gulf of
Genoa between Italian steamers
Ortegia and Maria, the latter was
sunk and 148 persons drowned.
STRIKE FOR HIGHER WAGES.
Cleveland, July 22.—Four hun-
dred employes of the Lake Shore
foundry struck today for the resto-
ration of wages paid previous to the
reduction two years ago.
MINE AFIRE.
Camp, California, July 22.—Fire
broke out in the interior of the
Utica mine last night and is still
raging today. The mine is being
flooded. Loss will probably be
$100,000 or more.
FOR HIGHER WAGES.
Glenwood, Wis., Jqly 22.—Five
hundred employes in the Glenwood
Manufacturing Co’s plant struck for
increase in wages and regular pay
today.
DEFENDER THE FASTEST.
Highlands, N. J., July 22.—De-
fender easily beat the Vigilant in
today’s yacht race.
BERKSHIRE PEOPLE.
The Spiritual and Intellectual Force* Are
Strong Among Them.
And this region, so favored by na-
ture, owes much of its character and in-
terest tqrits history as well Settled lat-
er than the seaeoast, the western part
of the state was in its beginnings made
np of more varied elements than the
eastern. Prom the valley of the Connect-
icut colonists pushed through the moun-
tain gaps into that of the Housatonic;
the hills attracted settlers from the flat
and sandy lands of Cape Cod, while the
Dutch from New York have left in
name and character their impress upon
the Berkshire people of today. Spiritual
and intellectual forces were largely
prominent in the laying of its founda-
tions, and such forces have contributed
and continued their influences ever
since.
Missionary zeal, represented by such
names as Eliot and Sargeant, founded
Stockbridge. Jonathan Edwards here
spent the years which represented the
prime and fullness of his powers.
Ephraim Williams, the fighter in the
French and Indian war, dying on the
battlefield, left his fortune to plant and
endow the college which bears his name.
Mark Hopkins, Berkshire born and
bred, another Arnold of Rugby, set his
stamp upon a whole generation;
throughout its history soldiers, saints
and scholars have both represented and
impressed its life. The reasonings of
Jonathim Edwards, which for good and
evil havo had so great an influence np-
*on theological thought, found their most-
powerful expression in his treatise on
the will, which was written while he
lived in Stockbridge. Lenox hoard the
last public utterances of Channing; his
successor, Orville Dewey, bom 100 years
ago (1794) at Sheffield, long made that
place his home, and there, too, were
bom the two Barnards, one tho presi-
dent of Columbia college, the other the
soldier scholar of our civil war. Oliver
Wendell Holmes lived for years at
Pittsfiold. Catharine Maria Sedgwick
drew around her at Stockbridge and
* Lenox a distinguished circle of the best
literary society of our own country and
many cultivated wanderers from the old
world. Fanny Kemblo here made for
years her home. Longfellow, Lowell,
Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Beecher,
' G. P. R. James, George William Cur-
tis, Matthew Arnold and others lingered
amoug and loved the beauty of these
hills, where plain living and high think-
ing have found noble expression in the
past and where here and there they
still survive, spite of the inflowing tide
of wealth and luxury that floods the
Berkshire of today.—Arthur Lawrence
in Ceutury.
Trees That Die When Men Live Near Them.
Tlio deaths of nearly all the pine
trees in Asbury Park give rise to an in-
teresting question as to whether or not
it is true that this tree is so wild by na-
ture that it will not enduro domestica-
tion. It is the breed of pine that grows
in the sand close to the seashore of
which this seems to be true. Asbury
Park is built upon a former sea beach
extending three miles inland to the edge
of the great forest that reaches from Ea-
tontown, back of Long Branch, to Cape
May. This forest is called “The Pines,”
becaus<| of the preponderance of pine
trees in it, the other trees that are plen-
tiful there being mainly oaks of four
varieties, with a few magnolias, tulips,
sassafras and hickory trees and hollies
and laurels.
The pines still flourish iu the woods
behind Asbury Park, but iu the town a
large fraction of tho few that remain
aro sickly and dying. Thousands have
died and been cut clown since the tree
embowered town was built iu tho woods
a quarter of a ceutury ago. The vil-
lagers say they die because it kills them
to have human beings walk beside them.
They say that even in tho forest the
pines that stand beside the footpaths are
the first to die. Others credit their de-
struction in tho village to the shaking
of tho earth by the heavy trolley cars
and steam railway trains, and still oth-
ers declare that manuring, watering
and topsoiling the sandy ground is what
has done the damage. The truth is yet
to be determined, but certain it is that
they are dying fast, and that already
Asbury Park has lost most of its noblest
ornaments.—New York Sun.
LINES ON A
G?t££K
INN.
Gather popple*, gather •untax.
Bind a wreath for fulthful Phjrtox
Popples, for ho gave us sleep,
fimilax from his Delphian ateep.
Buy his wino we could not quaff,
Praise his saladbiul pilaf.
Whisper he Would better please
Were his beds quite Irse from—
—Good Words.
A MAN’S LAUGH NEVER CHANGES.
None teats eo htab, none works so
well, as Dr. Price's Craam Baking
Powder. _
The Strength of the Republic.
Tho fiscal report of United States
Commissioner of Education William T.
Harris reveals an increase for the past
year of over 450,000 school children.
This is 0110 of the best signs of the
times. A republic which can boast such
a recruited enlistment to its grand army
of 15,530,968 public pupils need not
worry because it has a standing army of
only 25,000.—Philadelphia Record.
Silver K night* of America.
Senator Stewart of Nevada is said to
bo the president of a secret organization
recently formed for political purposes.
It is called the Order of the Supreme
Temple, Silver Knights of America, and
its general offices are iu Washington. As
the name indicates, the purpose of the
society is to advance the cause of free
coinage of silver.
How tho Fact Wa* Illustrated by aa In-
cident In Chicago.
If the Bertillion system of identifica-
tion had a phonographic record of the
laughs of criminals it would probably
bo as near perfect as an identification
system can be. The fact that man comes
into the world wailing has been regard-
ed as a sort of prophecy of the truth
that as a rule the sorrows of life out-
number the joys when all the returns
are in, but an optimist might see an
opposite significance in Ihe fact that a
man’s laugh remains the same through
all tho changing years. When tho cares
of manhood succeed to the happy go
lncky days of boyhood, this laugh of his
may he called into use, as it were, very
little, but when it is put into operation
it is the same old laugh, and every boy-
hood frien.d would know it instantly.
An old soldier who fought through
the war with Fred Hartwick, who drives
a mail collector’s wagon on the North
Side, happened to be in Chicago for a
week not long since. He heard that Mr.
Hartwick was on its postmaster’s staff
and went to the federal building to find
him. Ho took his station at a point past
which all the carriers filed to report- for
duty, and as Hartwick came along some
one pointed him out.
Without disclosing his own identity
the veteran approached and began ask-
ing Hartwick if he remembered various
incidents in the history of tlnftr regi-
ment during tho war. Of course he did
and very soon fell into conversation, or-
ganizing a kind of campfire meeting
between themselves. One member of
the regiment was in business in New
Orleans, another was in a bank down
in tho state, several were farming, one
was the local manager for one of the
big commercial agencies in one of the
large cities, and so on.
Several times Hartwick asked his old
companion at arms his name, but the
latter only smiled and went on with the
conversation. Finally, when it became
necessary for them to separate, as Hart-
wick was obliged to go out on his ran,
the man laughed outright as he said:
“Well, Fred, I never thought you’d
forget me after what wo went through
together. ’ ’
“The minute he laughed,” said Mr.
Hartwick, iu relating the incident, “I
knew just who he was and all about
him, but I hadn’t seen him for 30 years,
and ho had changed so I couldu’t-have
told him from Adam. His langli had
grown older, too, of course, but it was
the same old laugh.”—Chicago Trib-
une.
The Tyranny of Etiquette.
It is impossible to read even the least-
dogmatic books on etiquette without be-
ing oppressed with tho conviction that
a heavy and binding addition has been
made to the code of morals in tho by-
laws which have to do with visiting
cards, invitations, conventional phrases
and other minor but vigorous formulas.
It has been reiterated by writers on these
subjects that not a single rule of eti-
quette is arbitrary, but that all prove
their reason in the very nature of things,
and that those who disregard them sim-
ply show their own lack of insight and
incapacity to appreciate genuine refine-
ment.
While this is all very well for society
people pure and simple or those who
have other definite and absorbing work
in life compliance with all the thousand
and one trifling points of etiquette is an
utter impossibility. The question then
becomes, Shall such persons bo excluded
from society or be allowed to enter it on
their own terms? Society might be so
conducted as to make of it a charming
and delightful recreation instead of a
tyrannical business, and those who seo
this clearly can do much toward making
it 60.—Philadelphia Press.
No series have to be need in we'ghirg
biscuit made from Dr. Price’s Baking
Powder save the delicate y regulated
ones of the palate.
Rebuked by Hannibal Hamlin.
Mr. Hamlin was a true gentleman.
Punctilious himself in the observance of
all the requirements of gentlemanly in-
tercourse, he was equally exacting of
every courtesy duo him from others. He
permitted no man to bo rude to him or
to assume the attitudoof a superior. On
one occasion ouo of the able men and
leaders of the senate, distinguished for
a self conscious, lordly air in his deport-
ment, in the chauge of seats which oc-
curs once in two years in tho senate
chamber had gained a seat by the side
of Mr. Hamlin and began at once to
practice upon him those little exactions
and annoyances which he had been ac-
customed to impose upon others. After
a few days of yielding to these encroach-
ments Mr. Hamlin turned and in a tone
that did not require repetition, said,
* ‘ Sir, if you expect to be treated like a
gentleman, you must prove yourself
one. ’ ’ There was never occasion after'
ward to repeat the admonition.—Henry
L. Dawes iu Ceutury.
COLERIDGE.
Indolence Capablo of Kwergies Character-
istic of His Whole Appearance.
The antivivisectionists sometimes hor-
rify us by describing the poison which
paralyzes all the active powers of the
body while leaving the sensibilities un-
touched. Coleridge offers a study of that
kind to psychologists. His will, no
doubt, was congenitally feeble. “Indo-
lence capablo of energies, ” as he says in
a remarkable passage of early self por-
traiture, was characteristic of his whole
appearance. He could absorb enormous
masses of reading and write or speak
with amazing fluency, but the energy
could not be co-ordinated .or concentrat-
ed. It flowed hither and thither spon-
taneously along the channels dictated
by the dominant feeling of the moment.
As psychologists phrase it, I14 had lost
his power of “inhibition.” He could
not suppress or restrain his emotions.
Ho valued metaphysical research, as he
says iu his pathetic ode, because
Haply by abtruso research to steal
From my own nature all the natural man
was his “sole resource, his only plan.”
He could distract his mind from one
pursuit by another, but could not force
his energies to couverge upon a single or
distant aim. Painful emotions were
evaded, instead of being met face to
face. When he heard suddenly at Malta
of John Wordsworth’s death lie tried to
stagger out of a public room and before
he reached the door fell to the floor in a
convulsive hysteric fit, and was ill for
a fortnight. He then declared that he
was unable to open any letters lest they
should bring news of the death of one
of his children.
The intensity of his feelings paralyzed
instead of stimulated his powers.
“Vexations and preyings upon tho spir-
it,” he says, “pluck out the wing feath-
ers of the mind. ” Ho is like a criminal
upon the wheel, held down, not by
chains, but by impotence of will, feel-
ing every blow with singular intensity,
but only capable of meeting it by shut-
ting his eyes as long as possible or try-
ing to distract liis mind by puzzling
over the problems most remote from
practical application. —National Re-
view.
Never aeoep. any “apology” for Dr.
Prlee’s Cream Baking Powder, or “just
as good” of plausible dealers; there ii
none half so^good.
The Messenger Boy to Make Time.
About 100 messenger boys employed
by a telegraph company in Baltimore
will be equipped with bicycles for the
more rapid transmission of message de-
livery. This is the second city to adopt
the system, Washington being the first
—American Cyclist.
FAMOUS FOLK WHO RIDE.
Members of the Chinese legation in
Washington, who are enthusiastic bicy-
clists, aro obliged to use women’s wheels.
Lady Jemie’s articles on the new wo-
man have had an unexpected result. Her
husband, Sir Frauois Jenne, president
of the probate and divorce court, has
taken to a bicycle.
Count Tolstoi, although 67 years old,
is an enthusiastic bicyclist and has join-
ed,, the Moscow Cycling club, which
numbers among its members many local-
ly famous “scorchers.”
With English women, who are ex-
tremely fond of cycling, it has become a
fad to have wheels quite out of tho ordi-
nary. Lady Dudley has a white enamel-
ed wheel, with handles of beautiful
ivory.
Queen Margharita of Italy is an ex-
pert rider of the fascinating wheel, and
recently tlio cycle club of Milan present-
id her with a gold wheel, which is prob-
ibly the most beautiful and valuablo
t/clc ever .made.
ENGLISH ELECTIONS.
London, July 22.—At three this
afternoon the following was the re-
sult of the election: Conservatives
27S; Unionists 52: total 350; Liber-
als 111; McCavtbytes 53: Parnell-ites
7; Labor 2; total 173.
Fort Worth, Tex., July 18.—The
building of the Texas and Pacific to
Denison is likely to prove of more
importance than appears 011 the
surface. At Denison connections
will be made with the new Denison
and Northern, which is now under
contract from Dougherty, I. T., via
the coal mines, Lehigh and Mc-
Alester to Denison. This will
make a competing line with the
Missouri, Kansas and Texas for all
the coal output of the territory
mines going to Texas. The mines
being owned by the Gould people,
the Texas and Pacific no doubt will
haul a large part of their business.
The coal mines will then also have
another outlet to Kansas by the wajr
of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa
Fe, which will have a strong com-
petitor for the north bound busi-
ness.
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El Paso International Daily Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. Fifteenth Year, No. 173, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 23, 1895, newspaper, July 23, 1895; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth541477/m1/3/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Library Consortium.