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The Times Herald from Port Huron, Michigan • 1

Publication:
The Times Heraldi
Location:
Port Huron, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i i Ycfa Haie AsyIMtj: to Sen And tVr i Wjf 1 CW 0ry find customer If aJvtriimnf TBS TDISS.I rn Wjr rW THE TIMES Has Four Ttaani Sutritsrs -IS- CLAIR COUNT. TOL. 2L NO. 6,553. PORT HURON.

MICH. TUESDAY. JUNE 27, 1893. PRICE 2 CENTS. INDEX FOR TODAY.

THE PORT HURON DAILY TIMES. More ANARCHISTS PARDONED. A 1 1 I 5 i Fielden, Schwab and Neebe Are Liberated was not fair, I don't care to discuss this feature of the case any further, because it is not necessary. I am convinced that it is my duty to act in this case for the reasons already given and therefore grant an absolute pardon to Samuel Fielden, Oscar Neebe and I Michael Schwab, this 2t5th day of June, 1WL Chicago, June 27. The pardoned anarchists, Oacar Neebe, Samuel Filden and Mitchael Shaoab, were astir early this morning, drinking in the fresh air and sun-shice.

Their coming home was very quiet and touching. No demonstration is to be made. On Thursday and Friday a small party of local anarchists will accompany them to the Fair. The general fueling here is not in accord withthe governor's action. WJ's Fair Acciflent 1 5 i I Tickets for tale at all Drug Stores and A.

Q. Mackey's Ticket Office. 115. 00 Per Week for Loss of Tim. fi, 500 for One Hand or One Foot.

i 13,000 for Death or Loss of One Hand and One Foot, or Two Han da or Two Feet, S. Price, S1.00 for Seip Days. IELLK1I I tlll Insrrcf New Parasols and Umbrellas. New low! priced Underwear. rmklik4 o'clock each Afternoon Zxcin Scttoats.

L. A. SHERMAN, Editor and Manager. TH I DAILY TIMES Te nr. of ubcriptlon.

IflcJudinr Th Satcrdat Tinea: By carrier or mail, to-OU a jrar, wcta a tnonih. or 12 cenu a week. At the office of pubccaUon, 45 ceou a mootfl. Blnfrie copiea I cent. fcaV-nrUay'i edition, I ceuta.

THI WEEKLY TIMES A paper of 68 col omul, for country, and (renentl circulation. Published Thursdays. Tern of iu inscription: One Iriiar a year.MDt by mall to csy aadreM In the Cnivea biatt or Canada. 1 Advance. Addreaa, THE TIMES, PoaT HckOw, Mich.

It fc Granft! It Was Dazzling WHITE GOOD HEW Nothing Like It I (WHAT? Why. the; opening at the i These Goods were all bought under the market price. See them, they are cheap. 11 7 LiH HU Great Sale of Summer Specialties in Shoes I So the crowds upon crowds of Ladies and Gentlemen exclaimed as they passed through the Great Bee Hive Bazaar, Saturday Eye'g. i U.

Ballentinol One prominent, enterprising', pushing business resident cf the city said, after passing through thej establishment from top to bottom: "Good; heavens, 1 had no idea there was such a large, elegant and attractive stcre in this city. It is really wonderful. A credit, not only to the proprietors, but to the city. If the citliens of Port Huron do not patronize thb establishment liberally, then they cannot appreciate push, enterprise and pluck, so necessary to build up a city. They ought to come here In droves and I believe they will." One young fellow sang out: "Oh, Boys, ain't this1 a A young lady responded: "It's too nice? for anything An elderly lady exclaimed: "Did you ever; see anything like it In your I am simply paralyzed!" A Tenth warder remarked out loud; 1 "Well, by crackey, thb is the loadstone which will 'i -ilT I i compass 1 and from all came the exclamation: Oh, Oh, Isn't this beautiful! Who would hav4 believed it! Why this is delightful! IV Hat a beautiful store What beautiful Speeds! How iastefnlly arranged and how cheap ivery thing is" So said thousands who went through the Bee Hive em WASH GOO for LawyersBankers.

THE MONARCH PORT Bl'BON. Escolxengo. Th 1 Hotel Ian. ivionarcn dll Pare One. Anarchista Pardoned, i The Cowboy Race.

MiaceUaneooa Telegrams. Page Two. Secret Societies. i St Clair County. Eastern Michigan.

Page Three. The Victoria Disaster. Geoeral Telegraphic News. Doings of Whales. Page Four.

Editorial Canadian Page Fle. The Pioneer Society. Myroa Facinated. Former Port Huron Lady Insane. Sparring Exhibition, Killed at the Tunnel.

Bob McMnllen Dead. Forepangh's Circus. Marine News. City News. Personal and Society News.

Other City News. Page Six. The Sarnia Wheelmen. The Diphtheria Scourge. Around the City Hall.

Voice of the People. Amusement Notee. Local Items. Personal Mention. Other Local News.

Page Sctcd. In the Sawdnst Arena. Thirteen Superstitions. Page Eight. Michigan News by Telegraph.

The Granite State. Canadian News. One of the Racing! Cowboys Reaches Chicago. RATTLESNAKE PETE CLAIMS FRAUD Chicago, June 27. -j-John Berry, leader of the cowboy race, reached Buffalo' Bill's camp at the World's Fair at 5:25 this morning.

He wa ninch exhausted and was carried to a bed. i His horse was comparatively fresh amd began eating at once. Berry made the ride from Dekalb in seven hounC The race will sot be decided at once. A board of stewards will probably be appointed to settle the case. Jobbery and schemes are charged by Rattlesnake Pete, who says that Berry helped himself over the road by means of a spring wagon and side bar buggies, midwinter Exposition.

Sax Fkakcisco, June 27. Herr R. Conley, manager of the German exhibit at the World's Fair, and Leopold Dendt, architect, met the California committee and discussed arrangements relative to a midwinter fair here. It was decided that the name shall be "California's Mid-Winter Exposition." A building will be erected to cost $500,000 and the opening will take place Jan. 1st, 189 4.

JL Railway Wreck. Chicago, June 27. A Big Four passenger train was wrecked at Eighty-first street this morning. The engine jumped the track and was followed by the baggage car. W.

T. Pearl, engineer; Willim Ellis, fireman Charles G. Manvy, of Benton, and Benjamin Sapping, of Indiana, passengers, were injured. Receiver Appointed. Seattle, June 27.

The application of Thomas Earle and Angus Mackintosh for the appointment of a receiver for the Seattle, Lake shore Eastern lroad was granted by Judge Hanford, of the United States circuit court, today. Thomas Reeves, of Tacoma, was appointed. Tnree Thousand liners Discharged. Ishpemixg, June 27. The Cliff shaft and Cleveland mines, employing eleven hundred men, will be closed next Friday, owing to the inability of the company to sell ore already mined.

Thies thousand miners have been discharged in the past thirty days. Epworth League. Cleveland, June 27. Officers and delegates are beginning to arrive for the Epworth League conference which begins a four days session here, Thursday. Ten thousand people are expected.

Gov. McKinley will be present and deliver the address welcome. of Chlcaxo Wheat 9IarkeU Chicago, June 27. Wheat quiet and lower. July sold down to 65 jjc, but reached to 66c.

September sold 70 to 70 A Hidden Purpose. Tailor If any one calls cm me, say I will be back in an hour. Clerk Very well, air. Shall I tell them where you have goner i Tailor My gracious no. I'm going out to buy me a ready made suit.

Clothier and Furnisher. I COWBOY I Attractive I draw from all points of the All are welcome at I Coiii. 1 i 1 Mil! Gprtte. BY G0TER50B ALTGELD'S CLEMEf CY Tbey Were Sentenced to Be Hanged YTith i the Other FItc, But Their Sentence Wa I Commoted to Imprisonment the Night Before They Were to Be Executed. SPRixGriELP, Jnne 27.The governor has pardoned the anarchists, Fielden, Neebe and Schwab.

Michael Schwab and Samuel Fielden were convicted of murder in the Chicago anarchist cases and finally sentenced to Co hanged with Albert U. Parsons, Louis Lingg. August Spies, Adolph Fischer and George Engel, on Nov. 11, 1867. They had taken part in the Hay-tnarket massacre of May 5, 186, but had their sentenced commuted to life imprisonment by the governor of Illinois on the evening of Nov.

10, the night before the day set for their execution. Neebe had been convicted of a lower gTade of crime and was given a 15-year sentence by the jury. Ever since they were sent to prison there has been a movement on foot to secure their release, and at one time it was reported that Governor Fifer was on i the verge of making the order releasing Schwab and Fielden, or at least reducing their sentences. I This never came about. Schwab was a German and Fielden an Englishman.

Their senttnees were commuted from the death penalty because it was shown that they had not been so bloodthirsty in their attack as he Other advocates of the anarchist propaganda, GOVERNOR ALTGELD'S STATEMENT His Reasons For Pardoning the Imprls-: oned Anarchists, Springfield, June 27. Governor Altgeld's statement accompanying his pardon of the imprisoned; anarchists contains 17,000 words. The governor reviews the history of the Haymarket meeting on May 4, 1886, in detail and says the basis of the appeal for pardon was the petition signed by several thousand merchants bankers, judges, lawyers and other prominent citizens of Chicago which, assuming the prisoners to be guilty, stated the belief that the prisoners nave been punished enough, but a number iof them who have examined the case more carefully base their appeal on entirely different grounds and assert: First That the jury which tried the case was a packed jury selected to convict. 1 Second That I according to the law as laid down by the supreme court both prior to aiid again since the trial of this case, the jurors according to their own answers, were notcompetent jurors and the trial was therefore not a legal trial. Third That the defendants were not proven to tie guilty of the crime charged in the indictment.

i Fourth That! as to the defendant Neebe the State's attorney had declared at the close; of the evidence that there was no ca4 against him and yet he has been kept in prison all these years. Fifth That the trial judge was either bo prejudicjed against the defendants or else so determined to win the applause of a certain class in the community that he could not and did not grant a fair trial. I The governor's statement sustains the five specified points in the' appeal referred to aid says that the facts tend to show that the bomb i was thrown as an act of personal revenge and that the prosecution never i discovered who threw it. I Speakingj of Judge Gary he says: "It is further (L-harged with much bitterness by those who speak for the prisoners that the record of the case Bhows that the judge conducted the trial with malicious ferocity and forced eight men to be tried, together; that in cross-examining the state's i witnesses he confined counsel for the defense to the specific points touched on by the state, while in the cross-examination of the defendants! witnesses he permitted the state's attorneys: to go into all manner of subjects entirely foreign to the matters on whjich the witnesses were examined in also that every ruling throughout the long trial on any contested point was in favor of the state and. further, that page after page of the record contains insinuating remarks of the judge, made in the hearing of the jury and with the evident intent of bringing the jury to his way of thinking; that these speeches, coming from the court were much more damaging than any: speeches from the state's attorney could possibly have been; that) the state's attorney often took his cue from the judge's remarks; that the judge's magazine article recently published although written nearly six years after the trial is full of venom; that, pretending to simply review his case, he had to drag into his articles lejtter wntten by an excited woman to a newspaper after the trial was over, and which therefore had nothing whatever to do with the case and was put into the article simply to create a prejudice against the woman, as well as against the dead and living; and that njot content with this, he in the same article makes an insinuating attack on jone of the lawyers for the defense tot for anything done at the trial, but; because more than a year after ibe trial when some of the defendants had I been hanged, he ventured to express a few kind, if erroneous, sentiments: over the graves of his dead whom he at least believed to be innocent, jit is urged that such a subserviency is without a parallel in all history; that even Jeffries in England contented himself with hanging his victims and did not stop to berate them after they were dead.

i These charges of a personal character and while they seem to be sustained by the record of the trial and the papers before and tend to show that the trial Bazaar on Saturday. evening. Jl .1 Now we want the good people to understand that they 'can see this this; large, pretty, attractive place every day during the week and every Saturday and Monday These are the wheels FRESH FROM THE WIRE, Items of Interest Condensed For the Harried Reader. i It is understood that Rear Admiral Markham of the British Mediterranean Bqnadron and the officers of the Camper-down will be court articled upon their return to London for the Victoria disaster. Elmer E.

Morse, cashier of the National Fire Insurance company at San Francisco, was knocked oft a yacht by a boom and drowned. Edward II. Todd, a prominent citizen of Quincy, and a member of the firm of F. M. Miller Company, builders of coaches and omnibuses, committed suicide by shooting himself.

No cause can be assigned for the act. President Diaz of Mexico will visit Europe this summer, going by way of Chicago and New York. Green goods men, claiming to be government agents, swindled old soldiers at Huntington, W. by getting them to organize a lodge and informing them that the treasury desired to cash their pension checks in greenbacks so as to retain the gold in the treasury. Many of the victims assigned their checks and received bright new greenbacks which proved to be worthless.

But Ball. At Chicago Chicago, Brooklyn, 4. At Cleveland Cleveland, 1 Washing ton, 4. At St. Louis St Louis, Baltimore, 5.

At Pittsburg Pittsburg, Philadel phia, 13. At Louisville Louisville, Boston, 5. i At Cincinnati Cincinnati, New York, Cultivating the Mnse. Poet I have here some verses I would like to Submit. They are not perfect, I admit.

Perhaps they want fire. Editor You are quite right, sir. Fire is o-Vint. thov tratt Hut. th wjuxtAVtAlcPt'J Will do just as well.

lexas Mixings. I Why? 1A young' woman sent to a newspaper a poem entitled "I Him bnule" and sent was much displeased when the editor it back with a line saying that she would probably succeed if she showed him Tmorn Tit-Bitl fibsotutefy Pure i A ere of tartar bating powder. Hitrriest 8taU Government F(xxi Report. ROYAL BAKING POWDER 100 wau Street H. T.

CONSULTATION Is a wise proceeding. A council of war has sometimes saved an army. Consultation will show you how your home may be made most attractive and the expense likewise. It won't take much deliberation, though to convince you that the beet way is to look at our stock furniture and make your selections from our PARLOR. BEDROOM and DINING ROOM SUITES i Handsomer furniture can't be produced.

Better made and more dur- able goods are not manufactured. Lower prices cannot be found. In our line we have the largest stock of fine bedroom suites that can be found in the city. A call solicited. James Howard, Opposite Citj Open House.

UsMiSsfnv it davahji, i "i.r evening during the entire season, and buy what you want at Business Men and Health Seekers. Light, Durable, Strong, Handsome, and at Reasonable Prices. 1893 at our present reduced price, which is $100, is And tnis offer is good only to June 15. Como and secure one while we are ablo offer this special price, BEARD, GOODWILLIE 3X and 314 Huron Ave Ictver prices than ever before. DPP 01 DU Chen J.

A. Daisi A Ij fcdl teMtl ftbrarfMnWE faff in as A CHANCE OF I A LIFE TIME I ForaL FiTst-Class Hotel, For Sale or'Rent, In a thriving town of people on the Sand Beach division; of the F. P. M. A Livery i stock In connection that can be purchased.

This hotel has made a fortune for the present owner In the last few years. It Is now doing a first-class business. For further particulars apply at "TOTJTE. il Ktx imUl oa any pretti gooda ibaa thaw at Wi WASTELL'S DSTJtJ STORE. XlaTt jxm eaea those exquisite Perfume Caeea, Freach and.

German ForoeiivLa, tiled wita wita the Sweetest Fertumea. ELEQAJJT TOILST C15I3. ELEQA2ST TZSTUME CABUL Imported Ferfamery of Buaeroai Tarktlse, LaTen'ex "Water, Florida Wr, Fzc'sMte Toilet Boepa, Tails 6ta in Amber, Ivory, Oxiiiied EUtmc, Eie. DOST HES BESTNa OUS GOOX5S. E.

PERG UAL'S, HReaX Estate WiiilalAjr wSAJBTIIlf.iTi iDHUGrCrlBTj.

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About The Times Herald Archive

Pages Available:
1,160,253
Years Available:
1872-2024