State Library H v wnt of advertising pat- r ;;5S ve command tJi po; al'trity of !t. rn H-l -tt wins? ESTABLISHED OT I. 1S6S. W 4 HICKORY, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1893. KD1SBER 39. ri ML I 111 I ml fir" Li: THAT GOLU 3IYSKLF. 'i ,y ( ' . t V ' ( t-.v... I. : n; ;f ' .: I-1 ' Ii.'' ' L - 3.' : 1, ? 1:'- ' 1 I. ' ;-r ..; i 1 v. I a T . )-.. 1:.. i;i . ' tii.-'t ; ii: , ! 11' i 1 ( onfeion to Chltf Drommond j. the 31 int Thief Insane? ;f t amount of bullion stolen h :m was $1:5-1,003,40. Of this -was found secreted in the v r l"ft and 7,000 more was dig . at bis home in Darby, outside ;;ii;i. ;'''. .-, u wis in the custody of ;vt Service detectives, but is , ree rated. Bosby shell thinks , but little probability of Coch-.-s prosecuted. "lie "will end - in an asylum,'' the superin : h i Id "for I think, and Chief i nil concurs with me, that his - unbalanced." '.-' , 1 i uinmond described the man-" . hirli lie secured a confession rhntn : "J told him I wanted hip me catch theT' thief," the ; tv i( e chief said, ".and he said Pio iT. He was very nervous, ; avntly not at all frightenedby ;!i-;i.-ant position, and I let him wit t hue to confess. Finally .th hi4 hands down on my , with his head bowed, said : . that gold myself." ..ling. Chief Druinmond said : ;'!an"-d that the government ; !u hiui lor his long service at '.:. Over and over again he 1 the assertion that he had ;!Sioi of 'dollars for the treas iiu cut, and it was due him Mumld have some share of the ;.ry profit. He trembled every .-poke of gold, and every mentis- word seemed to- fascinate SENATOR MATT KANS03I, hi s;iid la took the first bar be-' (;n it bad fallen- down on the floor, v he had to pick it up. The temp-' '(!'!! w.ms too much for him, and he ("mkd it out. The next day he melt ed. -( lit it td.lrmself at the mint by express, juid paid his own messenger for it in gold coin, lie did not reinem bcr just what year he did this, but he thought it was shortly after the barred door inside the vault had been sealed in 1SST. 1 went with him to his home in iM.rhy. and on. the way he expressed v luigua.tion that 1 wanted back all the gold he had raken. He told me it would he very unjust to rob him, in v. -; i i 1 1 ! r ; ! s ii ( i r I y x 1 0, 000 had been sp-ut in iuiproving his real estate,. He s;Ju he 'loved gold and was happy when he handled it. lie thought the gove'nuent was persecuting him and that it had never treated him fairly. At U a-t halt h dozen times he went all owr the story of how he caught John Negus robbing the mint twenty-five years ago, and had thereby done a public .service for which no credit had bteu given him. "He tiid not hesitate at all to tell me how he had shoved the twenty gold h;irs through the ventilator shaft, but ho lor a while the question as to the location, of the ten bars which he had carried outside the Mint. AVhat was left, he aid, he had hid in the gar ret of his house, and it was there I .found it buried away in a closet, the tioor of which was concealed in the wall. At first I only got one gold bar and s,ooo in $10 gold pieces, but after awhile he pointed out the hiding place of the rest of the $7,000 and the cruc; hies into which ho had smelted the na tal. When he got these for me he promised -to make a complete restitu tion. "1 think there is no question but the gold will come out whole. AVhiie .Corhran is not w holy a criminal, he i not altogether kleptomaniac.". My idea i that his passion for the actual pos s ssion of gold, coupled with his strange oislike for the government, has 1111 balanced his mind to some degree." Cochran is Jtv-three i vears of age. and has been a trusted employee of the i! oit for f - . He re- .-Med at r a suburb a the city. hi a mansion somewhat old-fashioned He: employes two men for hi - stable -d grounds, and his horses, of which he owns six, are said to be the finest in t '' ulege. -nr. CcH-hr t as one of the l-'adiug men in Darby. He is an active Jiiendxer' of the P byterian church 1 a liberal supporter of the church u'orK.. Ot late he has been much in- torestetl in the Salvation Arm v. which ha been conducting an. retire cam- liign at Mount Moriali. p In eahlden Views of the Political DU tarbanceain NortU Carolina. Residents and non-residents of the "Tar Heen state are watching with unusual interest a fight which is now in progress in the United States sen ate on which very probablv depends a senatorship from Isorth Carolina. Mr. Ilansom, who represents the East ern district of Xorth Carolina is seek ing a re-election. He is one of the old est (in point of service) and most inllu entia.1 members of the senate. He has come out boldlv for unconditional re al, notwithstanding the fact that lis successor must soon be chosen. His colleague, Mr. Vance, is fighting the administration with all the vigor, and it may be said virulence, that he can command. Among those who will contest for he position now occupied by Ransom s ex-Governor Jarvis, of Pitt coil;! . said to be one of the stronge-t men '.; the state. He has the hearty co-opor- ation of Governor Carr. and it is un- 1 de.stood, too, that Mr. Vance is a r tv to the combination to defeat 1 olleague. Mr. Jarvis was lieutenant governor under Mr. Vance, succeiMlb'' dm in the governorshi'i) when tl i rentleman came to the Um'ted States enate. In addition to these there are other strong forces which will com bine in the attempt to defeat Mr. Ran som. Colonel A. M. Waddell, of Wilming ton, will probably shy his castor into the senatorial arena. Himself as well as Jarvis were candidates against Ran som five years ago and he defeated them both. Mr. "Waddell is said to be especially aggrieved this time because Mr. Ransom has overridden his recoil? - nendations in Wilmington. Preliminary' to this fight which will oe wagea is tne anacR uy Air. yance on the nomination of Kope El!"-, the amous ''original Cleveland man" of North Carolina, whom Mr. Cleveland las named as collector of internal rev?- 11 ue. ltansom lavors ins continuation. Aance has given it out that he will be defeated, and the result is watched iere with the greatest interest. It is thought to be the d 'isive blow in the fight for the senatorship. Hut here comes the strange part o " the .whole story. I bave it on unim peachable testimony that Mr." Thomas Settle, the single republican member from North Carolina, has undertaken the contract to mass the solid repub"" can vote of the senate cr ;,)st Elir.Vs corfirmation. Marion Hutler, the leader of the jK)pulists in North Carolina, has been here all the wenk attempting, to get the iopul:st members of thfe senate to take the same action. .With those democratic senators that Mr. Vance can control, it is hoped to prevent the confirmation. It is very evident that these two leaders of the populists - and republi cans of North Carolina regards the confirmation of Elias as a very good thing for the democratic party, eLse they would not be found working t-o hard to prevent it. If this unho y alliance can succeed in unhorsing Elias, then they, will try their ha nl on Colonel Simmons, "v hose nomina tion has been thus far held up by re quest of Mr. Vance. It resolves itself simply into a question- of this combination's ability to deliver the goods. Ransom is a tower of strength in the senate. He has been a member of that body for the p; twenty-three yeas. and no man stands higher with his colleagues. He avoids a fight as long as tioWible, but when aroused he is' a very 'dangerous man ; to tackle, as the junior senator from New York can truthfully testify. Mr. Vance indorsed his cousin fo the -position that Eh'as has leon nauied. K:i'ht; nT f iho men -lers of the North Carolina delegation, whose districts come under the juris diction of thej collector, settknl on Elias. This is thought to be the tnie inwardness of the whole fight. The light on Elias the first lick at Ransom's returning to his seat in the senate. Well infonneU jMHtple here sav that this will be the decisive blow. If'nsom wins here he will win a'l Ix)uisville is to present something uuuer ine sun an auction sale of field-trial nnl liirfinv Antn T Adams, a well-known insurance jib iue muovaior. STATE NEWS. VWill N. Herljen will soon liave hU new North Carolina novel ready for the press. It abounds in thrilling in cidents and is sure to meet with a fa vorable reception. Andrew Peeler, a prosperous fanner residing near Beam's Mill,' in Cleve land county, is suffering from a mental trouble. His mind has been deranged by a. prosecution for (as is claimed) a return of taxable property to the as sessor. His neighbors say the prose cution is malicious. In the not altogether general deal going on in changing Postmasters Col. R. A. Deal, the able but timid and witty editor of the Wilkesboro Chron icle has had the Wilkesboro post:". tership dealt .out to him. Now, if Hickory but had a deal. But er, er. Oh what's the use talking about it? Columbia State: The fact that the cotton crop is going to be very short in the South is beginning tp penetrate the hard heads of the. bears, and from this time forward prices will be fixed by facts and not by guesses. It will not be long before cotton will bring 9 cents in New York, and at that figure even a short crop, made, as ' this,, has been with great economy, will be fair ly remunerative. The out look for our farmers is not a gloomy one. A pleasant incident following the recent examination of the law students by the Supreme court was the presen tation of a beautiful gold-headed cane to Judge A. C. Avery, athis rooms at Mrs. Moseley's yesterday afternoon, by his law class which is the first to ap ply for license to practice from the Trinity College Law School, of which he is Dean. The presentation was made by Mr. Fred A. Green; for the class. . This is a beautiful token of their esteem and appreciation for his instruction and zealous work prepar ing them for the law. The entire class received their license yesterday. Paleigh News-Observer-Chroniele. Train Robbers Killed. Joseph. Mo., Sept. r.LOI'KD WITH A XliGItO. St. Joseph. Mo., Sept, 25. The Council Bluffs road foiled an attempt t l rob one of its passenger trains, billed ivro of the bandits and captured tl ee others at Franc's, one and one-half-miles from this city, last night. The dead are Hugo En gel and Fred Kohler. The names of. those captured : re N. A. Huvst, Charles Fredericks c id Willia n Carter. The officials of railroad had be. n notified that a robbery h"d been planned and notified the police. When the train ai rived here a dummy train was made up and sixteen police officers under the command of the Clue? of Police were put on board. When the dummy reached a point two miles north of St. Joseph j en g! peer's attention was arrested b" a ligbtod lantern moving to and fro between the rails. He obeyed the signal. Six masked men su. bounded the engine. One mounted the engine, and present'ng a revolver at. the engin; :r and fireman, held them in subject while the other five hast -- .ed to rob the er ress car. They or derel the messenger to open the dtor, which he did at once. Three of the bi'itdits entered, the car. leaving two outside to keep guaid. The police men guarding the train were distrib uted in va ious cars, a majority being concealed in" the express car. As soon as the three bandits entered the door the police ordered them to surrender. The roblers were taken completely by surprise, but oiened fire at once upon the police. The police returned the fue, and a general fusiladefollwetl. About twenty five shots wer? fired on .oth sides. When the smoke cleared a war the lifeless bodies of Kohlerund ingle were found lying on the floor of the car. Both were shot through the head. Frederick, the third robber was f " ptured uninjured. No officers were hurt. While the fight was g6ingon in the car, the police on the outside suc eeeded in capturing two men on the watch,' but the' men on the engine escaped.- A detail of officers were put on. their tr.ek and will proljably.be captured. The ln.di's f Kohler and Engl and the three prisoners were b ought back to the city. Frederick, Hurst and Carter wen? 'placed in jaiL All the robbers lived here. A.Mmionalre'Daurhlfr Wed AnEltTator boy. St. Paul, September 22. It has leen learned that the nineteen-year-old daughter of Millionaire Eugene MehF had eloped with and married James Robinson, colored. Eugene Mehl was until last week pro prietor of the Ryan Hotel, the largest piece of property in the northwest and worth alone nearly 2,(.CHX. Uobin sou was employed a elevator boy in the hotel. Jennie Mehl, who eloped, has been missing from the hotel since friday. Eugene Mehl, the wayward girl's fa ther, has lived in St. Paul for some years. He owns several large pieces ot business property here and is reputed to be worth from jS3,00o,000 to $1,000. 000. His daughter Jennie has always moved in the best society and was con sidered the belle of the city. When Robinson was elevator boy Miss Jennie would recreate frequently by riding up and down in the elevator. Robiusn, after hiding with his wife, whom he married Saturday in Minne apolis, came over toSt..Paullast night, Eugene Mehl sold the Ryan hotel last week for 1,500,000, and, at first think ing little of his daughter's absence over night' left for Chicago with the greater part of his family the next morning, leaving word for Jennie to remain here until he came home. The ceremony which bound the fair young white girl to colored James Rob inson, who is himself less than twenty years old, was performed Saturday af ternoon by Rev. James Hickman.' "I married the pair Saturday after noon,"1 said Mr. Hickman tonignt "at the house of Wilson, a laboring mar. Miss Mehl said she loved Robinson and she produced a marriage license. I knew that if I did not marry them some one else would, and as it is my busi ness, I did it. I took care to see5, that evervthing was perfectly regular and legal." Mr. Hickman is a colored Babtist preacher who spent thirty-two years as a slave. He says in the last five years he has married 100 couples of -which the brides were white. The marriage was witnessed by two colored men. Miss Mehl has had many admirers in the best circles in St. Paul, and several proposals, of marriage which she refused, "I married Mr. Robinson because I lo c-d him," said the girl, "and I eloped because I knew my parents would not enuit me to marry him. I would lave been willing tcobey them in any thing else but I knew that I could not be happy with any one but James for my husband. I know what I have done arid am doing, and have no regret to . press." The affair has can sed the most profound sensation in St. Paul. rilNSlON IIOI-1-. It Wilt Now IT.MAJe a Kotl or Ilooer a It Slum J J be WAsiii5iiToy, pt. 3. Pension-' Commissioner Loehren lias submitted his annual rejiort to the Secretary of the Interior, Hon. Hoke Smith. The number of pensioners on the rolls are $0S,012, a net increase during the past year of bO.044. During the year 41.715 claims for in crease of- pensions, and Ul,&K) claims for additional jensions, under the act of June 27. l-?00, wero allowed. In the same time 115,221 claims for iciisious." mihI for increase were reject ed. Claims pending July 7, nuta- Mr 71,1 50. The amount of money; paid for pensions during the year wait 150, 740,407,11. Estimates for 10 amount to 102. 0:11,570. Referring to the revocation of the order regulating specific disabilities, under .the act of June 27, lM'K), the Commissioner states that by provisi ons of the order the act itself was be- ing set aside and disregard!. A cord ing ly a board of revision was organized to examine cases under the act and cull out such as had no legal basis. The Commissioner concludes thus:- "I recogni.e to the fullest extent that my sole duty- is to execute and admin ister the laws as thevare enacted and' fairly and honestly interpreted." ol. iiitKCKixr.iixiirs demukkkr. W President i Too Pnii.AiKLi'HiA. Sept. 28 'ashington corresindent - The of the Press says Representative Kripps, of along the line.; Washington Cor:v-1 Pennsylvania was informed by Secry- londent, Atlanta Journal. Durham' Fire. At 4:45 Saturday afternoon fire broke out in Swift & Co's. tobacco factory at Durham, extending quickly to Bur ton's prize house. Both were wholly consumetl. Two cottages were serious ly dama-red bv the fire. Total loss not I less than $35,000. tan. Thurlr at the White House yesterday, th?.t t!i- President hereafter would make all "Appointments wholy on recommendation of head of depart menis. The reason given for the President's change of plan is that he bat no time now to bother with Ap pointments, being too busy with legis lative matters. Lost Warship. New Yokk, Sept. 2:$. First Officer Newman, of the Prince Wilhelm 1., which brought news of the foundering of the Haytian warship Pet ion and t lie reported ioss or eiglity souls, in cluding many diplomats, was seen this morning aboard tne steamer wnieii is lying at Woodward stores, South Brooklyn. He gave further important particulars which precludes a doubt of the catastrophe... He likened the, sor row occationed to that caused in En gland by the loss of the Victoria. "There were sixty on board, not eighty,? he said. "Just as we were leaving Port an Prince, the warship Dessalines, the sister ship to the Alex audre Petition, returned from the scene of the catastrophe, whither idie had'proeeeded when the first news was received, brought by a half-crazed Bel gian sailor, the only survivor and white roan aboard the sunken war ship. The Dessalines cruised about several days in the viefnity of where the Pet ion went down. Not a ves ti;re of wreckage could be found. The sea had swallowed the ship up and the suction had drawn down prohabbly all who had attempted, to escape a watery grave by flinging themselves in the sea. When the vessel lurched be fore plunging bow first to the bottom he was flung wide of the maelstrom cre ated by the foundering. The Case ln-Whilt Mls Pollard Sues Di rected to lie Stt for Trial. Washington, Sept. 21. The de murrer tiled by Col. W. C. P. Breckin ridge to the suit of Miss Madeline Pollard against him for $50,OUO dam ages for breach of promise of marriage and seduction was argued in the Dis trict court to-day before Judge Cox by Mr. Enoch - Tot ten. on lxdialf of Con-' gressman Breckinridge, and by Jerome Wilson and Cakkron Carlisle for Mis3 Pollard. 0 Mr. Totten claimed that there could be but one contract of marriage, and therefore one promise was all that was necessary to allege. Hence, in setting out more than one in the same declar ation, the plaintiff made it faulty and bad in substance. The court over ruled the demurrer and directed the case to be set for trial on its merits. The condition of the docket is such that it is not expeted the case will be reached for two vears. To I3e Amliasador Va Alen. New York, Sopt. 22. The apijoint- ment of Hon. Jas. J. Van Alen as Am bassador to Italy has stirred a bij sen sation, but he has ability enough and certainly enough to hold his owr. Mr. Van Alen succeeds Hon. Wil liam Porter of Philadelphia, who, nucn, iiius ieeu nuseu loiueYin- bajTsadorship. The diplomat is a son of the late Gen. Van Alen, an old New Yorker, who made a large fortune through real estate transactions. Mr. Van Alen is 47 years old and a widow- er, lie married tne eldest daugnter of William Astor. He is worth 12.- 000,000, having by his business tact In creased his inheritance from his fath er of 4,000,000 by 200 rer cent. IIU villa of Wakehurt, at Newport, is in closed by a f 10,000 stone wall, and he entertains lavishly - there from June 15 to September 15, when he goes to Europe, where lie spends the winter with his children and in entertaining. He maintains a large establishment in London, where he receives manv dis tinguished guests. In iM-rsonal appearance Mr. an Alen bears a striking resemblaiic to the Prince of Wide. It has long been rumored that he would be sent to Italy because of his liberal contribu tion to the Cleveland campaign fund, but Mr.. Whitney, v .1 I hU contribution, p denied tliit the promise was .male to Van Alen or any other person by him in behalf of Mr. Cleveland. While Mr. Van AUn never lias been engaged actively in buines. he is eonsUUred a grxxl business, man, of which the Ixt t vaence s Lis rapH- Iv increasing fortune. He entertafn lavishly, but is not a pend.irt. A SUght DUz at Illowlnj Cock. An attempt was made the night of the 21st inst, to burn the Kelly-Cath cart cottages. The fire started in a closet; but hi was put out before much damage was done. Several are under arrest as 'suspect., negroes Mora Sep JmIimi Park. Chicago, September 22.- Last even ing a tremendous wicd and rain terra ktruck Jackson Park drenched nearly every one of the 100,000 or more spec tators who stayed for the illumination, broke in portions of the roofs of the manufacturer s -building and the art gallery, blew off a section of the mov able sidewalk roof and damaged a num ber of Try Taloable exliibiu.