The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, August 30, 1895, Image 2

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    'COOK TRIBUNE ,
- F. M. KISIMELL , Publisher.
8ic000g , NLrBR'IfiKA..x
.x
If this scheme to tow canal boats by
electricity does away with canal boat
drivers , whence will come our future
Presidents ?
The king of Corea has called upon
an American to run his kingdom for
him. Can it be possible also that Queen
Victoria has cast the eye of hope upon
Richard Croker ?
In celebrating the German victory
over France Buddy Hohenzollern proposes -
poses to ignore entirely the services of
Blsmarck. In other words , the tin
soldier proposes to boycott the old war
horse.
Blsmarck is an old man , and it Is
a cynical commentary upon his life that
he gives In saying that through all the
years that he has lived he has not
experienced more than twenty-four
hours' happiness.
The United States navy has too many
officers and too few enlisted men. Nearly -
ly every class of cadets that is graduated -
ed from the naval academy at Annapolis -
lis provides a supply of young officers
In excess of the available vacancies ,
and in spite of the most skillful maneil-
vering some of the cadets in each class
fail to secure commissions and are discharged -
charged , although well qualified for the
service. The surplus of officers is one
of the legacies of the civil war , during
the course of which several classes of
unusual size were rushed through the
naval academy in order to meet the
necessities of the times.
The new administration of Great
Britain has very much the aspect of a
nice little family party. In it are a
father and a soh , Mr. Chamberlain and
Austen Chamberlain ; a father-in-law
and a son-in-law , Lord Salisbury and
Lord Selborne ; two brothers , Arthur
and Gerald Balfour ; an uncle and two
nephews , Lord Salisbury and the
Messrs. Balfour ; and two brothers-in-
law , Lord George Hamilton and Lord
Lansdowne ; and , when the cabinet
meets the clerk of the house of commons -
mons , they will find him to be the husband -
band of Lord Salisbury's niece.-Bos-
ton Herald.
A Michigan dispatch says : "A new
species of grip has appeared in Shia-
wassee county , locally known as
"Trilby. " Its symptoms and varied accompaniments -
companiments are severe pain in one or
both sides , sore throat , headache , high
temperature , and difficulty in breathing.
It is no respecter of persons , but seizes
old and young , prostrating them usually
within a fen moments from the first indications -
dications of illness. There are 500 cases
of "Trilby" in Owosso , and similar re-
podts come from Bancroft , Morris ,
Perry , and other parts of the country.
As yet , however , no deaths have been
reported.o This all comes from Du
Maurier's hypnotized maiden having
posed in her bare feet and left off her
I stockings in some of the recent Trilby
dances.
That retribution for unscrupulous
dealings is sometimes visited upon the
wrongdoer speedily and from an unexpected -
expected quarter is illustrated in an incident -
cident given in the "Missionary Review -
view , " and taken from a native paper.
"A milkman at a fair made 50 rupees
by selling milk which was largely Wa-
ter. Grateful for his prosperity , he
made an offering to the shrine and set
about washing away his sins by bathing -
ing in the river , though it does not appear -
pear that he reckoned the adulteration
of milk among them. He laid aside his
garments , in which were the 50 rupees ,
and proceeded to his bath , when a monkey -
key seized the garment and climbed to
the topmost branch of a tree overhanging -
ing the water. To the horror of the
bather he saw the beast take out the
-silver pieces and drop them , one by
one , into the swift-flowing stream.
There was nothing to be done but to
bear his loss , ; but mindful of how the
money was obtained the man piously
exclaimed to the river , 'Mother Gunga
has claimed her own : "
Edward Eggleston originated the
Christian Endeavor Society in his popular -
ular story , "The Hoosier Schoolmaster -
ter , " which he wrote in 1S72 in a small
bous' : in Schermerhorn street , Brook-
lyn. It is in this fiction also that may
be found "The Church of the Good
Licks. " In 1S77 , when Mr. Eggleston
became the pastor of the Lee Avenue
Congregational Church ( now the Lee
Avenue Theater ) , he organized for the
3'oung people a Society of Christian Endeavor -
deavor , in imitation of the one in his
book. The weekly meetings in the
church drew together such a company
of bright young men and women as that
town never witnessed in similar gatherings -
erings before or since. All the professions -
fessions were represented ; and the object -
ject was chiefly social culture. It was
from the success of this small company
In making one evening in the week
agreeable and profitable that the great
gathering in Boston has come to pass.
A Kansas man and his wife spent a
rtune in suing each other for divorce.
After they had gotten rid of all their
money they concluded to live happily
together in poverty. This is a new
demonstration of the theory that the
way to get any satisfaction out of
wealth is to spend It.
" , . In the present Salisbury ministry
1 blood tells , or title does , for nearly all
of them belong to the titled classes ; r
but so does education count , for nine
. - the members are graduates of Oa of
fold and three from Cambridge. i
0
a , ,
OVER THE STATE.
Chase county's fair is fixed for Octo-
her 11 , 12 and 13.
Yoiu : has a brass band , composed entirely -
tirely of new women.
CASs county will make a showing of
big apples at the state fait.
Mns. W. B. DAvI ? , a highly esteemed
lady of Beatrice , died last week.
I LINCOLN is taking steps to keep out
the circus during the week of the county -
ty fair.
Tiii : Broken Bow hank of Commerce ,
closed since May 31 , has reopened for
business.
C. 0. SABIN , a prominent young lawyer -
yer of Schuyler , died last week of
typhoid fever.
Mr. McLaughlin , living near La
Platte , is building a corn crib ninety
feet long and eight wide.
A FUfSAS county farmer , 76 years
old , has planted and cultivated sixty
acres of corn this year.
TIIIEVES burglarized the store of J.
Ritterbush of Nelson and carried away
several articles of value.
Two MULES and three horses were
killed by lightning on the farm of
Joshua Garn in Gagc county.
Buffalo county will have an exhibit
of grain at the state fair that is expected -
pected to be worth going miles to see.
Time Beatrice street railway property
has changed hands and a thorough
overhauling and improvement will fol-
low.
low.A
A STONE twenty-two feet long , three
and one-halfhfeet wide and two feet
thick was quarried near Wymore last
week.
TILE Farmers State bank and the
Bank of Plainview have consolidated
and the former will hereafter do all the
business.
TIIE dwelling house of Supervisor A.
Snyder , who lives about a quarter of a
mile west of Elm Creek , was struck by
lightning and burned. Loss about
$2,000.
TILE new maps of Nebraska ordered
by the State Board of Transportation
will show all the irrigation ditches
completed as well as 'those under con-
struction.
. WILI. H. RYAS of Jackson has been
appointed receiver of the Citizens State
bank at South Sioux City , which bank
was closed by BankExaminer Cowdery
on the 5th inst.
On the farm of Mart Ballou , half a
mile north of Ashland , fifty acres of
wheat that was almost abandoned was
threshed and yielded 1,000 bushels of
the best quality.
Buy home-made goods and build up
home industries , is a good policy : Far-
rell's Fire Extinguisher , made by Farrell -
rell S. Co. , Omaha , Morse-Coe boots and
shoes for men , women and children.
TIIE dead body of Frank Kreng , a
Bohemian , was found alongside the
Union Pacific track , about two miles
from Lincoln. He is supposed to have
committed suicide with a 3S-caliber revolver -
volver found'in his hand.
TIIE good people of Jamestown were
so deeply shocked over the action of a
contractor in pushing work on the new
school house on Sunday that the directors -
tors were compelled to interfere.
CHnis BUnKE was found dead on CutOff -
Off island , near Elkhorn , the coroner's
jury finding his demise due to neglect
and starvation. He leaves a wife and
thirteen children in the old country.
J. 11. LAiucix , a wholesale liquor
dealer at Chadron , assaulted City Marshal -
shal Charles Morrisey in front of his
place of business , using the but end of
a heavy revolver and iniltcting a severe
wound.
ilaggic and Ellen Gaffey of Nebraska
City were buried in the same grave the
other day. One died from typhoid
fever and the other was killed by falling -
ing into a well while getting her dying
sister a pitcher of water.
The Bank of Commnerce of Broken
Bow , which suspended about three
months ago and went into the hands of
a receiver , hascompletedarrangements
to reopen. The stockholders received
an order from the state banking board
to that effect.
SUIT for $10,000 damages has been
brought by County Attorney Freese of
Antelope county , Nebraska , against C.
J. O'Conor , proprietor of the Homer
State bank , and Sheriff Kelley of Dakota -
kota City. Four years ago , when Freese
was cashier of the homer bank , it was
robbed of 1,600 and he was suspected.
lie resigned , and moving to Antelope
county was nominated by the populists
for county attorney. The missing
money was found in a well at his former -
er residence during his canvass. He
was arrested and during his hearing a
telegram arrived announcing his clee-
tion. The case against him was dropped -
ped , but he still claims to have been
greatly injured and demands damages.
NOTICE is hereby given thatthehear-
ings in the matter o the adjudication
of the rights of the water claimed ,
prior to April 4 , 1S95 , within the watershed - i
shed of the Republican river in Nebraska -
braska , will be held , for the several
counties included therein , by an officer
of the state board of irrigation at 9
o'clock in the forenoon at the places f
and upon the dates indicated as fol-
lows. For Chase county. September 2 ,
at office of county clerk , Imperial. For r
Hayes and Hitchcock counties , September - '
ber 4 , at office of county clerk , Culberti i
son. For Dundy county , September 7 ,
at office of county clerk , Benkelman. ,
For Frontier , Red Willow and Furnas t
counties , September 9. at office of W.
H. Filing , Cambridge. For Franklin
county , September 10 , at office of county -
ty clerk , Bloomington.
Thomas Davis , an employe on the
Barrett ranch , near Wisner , was kicked
by a horse , sustaining injuries from c
w hich he died.
GEORGE ANDERSON of Furnas county s
thinks he has raised the biggest turnip
on earth. It is thirty inches in cir- v
mmference and weighs eleven pounds. t
TIIE contract for erecting the new
school house at Newcastle was awarded
to Anderson .C Suecker , local men , for
the sum of $2,280. ,
As THE result of being thrown from a t
wagon. a boy named Latenslanter , of p
Elkhorn , had his le ; broken in two t
places , necessitating amputation of the
imb.
IT has been discovered that' the man ,
killed in Murdock by McDonald is the
obber who' took his supper time same h
vening at Mr. Granger's in Ashland , d :
and then in the night robbed Granter h
$65. Granger went to llureock and ! l o
dentified the dead thief , and also some a
f the money. , h
.
a
I
The Waters of Nebraska.
The State Board of irrigation has
formulated the following ; rules for the
guidance of citizens or companies interested -
ested in water rights in this state :
First-The adjudication of the rights
claimed to the use of the public waters
of the. state for irrigation and other
useful purposes as provided by the irrigation -
rigation law approved April 4 , 1805 ,
shall be conducted by watersheds of
the state as defined by the state engineer -
gineer and secretary of this board.
Second-The first adjudications of
the rights of claimants shall be conducted -
ducted for the purpose of determining
the validity of claims , the land and territory -
ritory covered in the case of irrigation
canals , the date when works must be
completed in the case of uncompleted
canals and the time within which the
water claimed must be applied to the
beneficial use for which it is appropriated -
ated ;
Third-Such adjudication within any
watershed of the state shall be preceded -
ed by hearings to be held in each
county comprising such watershed
wherein notices of appropriation were
recorded previously to April 4 , 1995 ,
provided that the hearings for two or
more counties may be held at the same
time and place if the secretary of this
board deems expedient.
Fourth-Said hearings shall be held
for the purpose of receiving testimony
offered by parties in interest in support
of rights claimed , and shall be presided
over by the secretary , assistant secretary -
tary Qr one of the under secretaries of
this board , who shall keep a complete
record of the proceedings thereof.
Fifth-All evidence , whether oral erin
in the form of depositions , shall be submitted -
mitted in typewritten form. If oral , it
shall be taken down and transcribed at
the expense of the claimant offering
the same.
Sixth-The number of witnesses upon
any one point may be limited by the
officer conducting the hearing , provided
that in the case of controversy an equal
number shall be heard upon both sides.
Seventh-Claimants may appear in
person or by attorney , but appearance
must be made on the day or days spec-
fled for the hearing for the county
within which the claim is located.
Eighth-Claimants bating filed with
the secretary of this board , ten days
previous to date of first hearing announced -
nounced , claim affidavits in the form
prescribed , and entitled "Claim for the
Waters of the State of Nebraska. " need
not appear at said hearings unless they
wish to offer additional testimony in
support of their claims.
Ninth-I'oints of law made by claimants -
ants or their attorneys , together with
the authorities cited in support of the
same , must be submitted in typewritten -
ten form.
Tenth-The record in the case of
each claim shall consist of :
I. The original notice filed with
county clerk.
2. A claim affidavit , signed and yen-
fled.
3. Additional testimony offered at
hearing in support of claim.
4. Points of law and authorities cited
in support of same , submitted in writ-
ing.
5. Decision of secretary , which decision -
cision will be reviewed by the board
only upon exceptions taken at the time
of hearing and determination.
. Eleventh-The secretary of this
board shall mail to the postoflice address -
dress of each claimant of record , at
least ten days before the date of the
first hearing announced , a copy of this
resolution , together with a notice of
the dates and places of hearings to be
held within the water shed to be ad'
judicated.
The Royal Arcanum.
The Executive Board of the Royal
Arcanum of Omaha , South Omaha and
Council Bluffs have jointly arranged
for the establishment of Royal Arca-
num headquarters at the Nebraska
State fair , to be held in Omaha in Sep-
tember. It is their wish and desire
that every member of the Royal Arca-
num who visits the fair , together with
their family and friends , will call at
the headquarters and make himself
known. It is proposed to extend a
"Royal" welcome to all. Special committees -
mittees have been appointed , whose
duty and pleasure it will be to furnish
information to visiting brethren , and
in every possible way contribute to
their comfort and enjoyment. It is
proposed also to do some secret work ,
providing a sufficient number of visit-
rng brethren are present.
Foxwell Family in Luck.
Many of the residents of PTattsmoutl ,
are more than interested in the announcement -
nouncement that William Foxwell , t
whose family resides there , had won
1
his title to the famous Harris-Hartley
estate in Cornwall , England. The mann
1
n question was one of the claimants to
the vast estates. Mr. Foxwell went to r
England last November to look after
the Foxwell interests. Ile has just forwarded - j
warded the following cablegram to his
amily : "We have won. "
The estate is valued at over $2,000-
000 and Foxwell's income from
i
ents will amount to fully $30,000 per i
'ear. When Mr. Foxwell went to Lng-
and he got the depositions of several
old residents in the vicinity of Racine ,
vis , as to his identity and the deposi-
ions were a great aid in winning his s
ase.
t
Double Work for Justice Brown. t'
WASHINGTON , Aug. 23. - Justice C
Brown has been assigned to the Sixth t
ircuit to fill the vacancy occasioned t
by the death of the late Justice Jackv
On. Until the vacancy on the su
preme bench is filled , Justice Brown
'ill also look after his present circuit ,
he Second.
lie Got the Burglar.
Murdock dispatch : At 3 o'clock this
c
morning Harry V. McDonald , a drugti
ist , was awakened by aburglartrying o
in his house.
o get Investigation a
roved the fact that a man was trying tie
o gain an entrance through a north f
window to their bed room. Mr. McDonald -
Donald asked who was , there , but re-
eived no answer and fired through the
window. No further disturbance was h
eard and the family remained up until a
ylight and then retired for a few
°
ours' sleep. At 7 they awoke and
eked out and discovered the body of j $ v
man lying in the yard , supposed to
we received the bullet of McDonald.CC
' ' .i. _ ' _ -
. . _ 4 - .
. .
.
DEBS AND HONARD TALK ,
VIE S OF THE A IFRI CdN RAILWAY
UNION OFFICER
DO NOT THINK THE SAME.
( toward Declare That the Order Is beat )
-The Still Imprisoned 1'resldent
Molds That the Organization Will
Soon Be Stronger Than Ever
-Their I'laus for tho'
Future. s
CInCAGo , Aug.George W. IIow-
ard , vice president of the American
'Railway union. ( luring the great strike
last year , who was sent to jail by
United States Judge Woods for eon-
tempt of court in violating injunctions
preventing the order from interfering
with trains during the strike , was released -
leased yesterday from the Joliet jail
and came here at once. Regarding
the future of the order , he said : "The
American Railway union is a thing of
the past. The efforts to reorganize
it , I am sure , will never succeedd.
Every railroad official has received
notice from some of the
other railroad organizations that he
will allow the : American Railway union
to raise its head with peril. Only last
week a railroad man at Joliet was discharged -
charged because it was rumored that
he had belonged to the American Railway -
way union. In regard to the order of
Master Workman Sovereign of the
Knights of Labor , which requests laboring -
boring men to refuse bank notes in
payment of obligations , I think it is
the sheerest nonsense , the worst kind
of bombast , and ninety per cent of the
working people of the country will
look upon it in that light. The people
need money in any shape and I predict
that the order will be ignored. "
Delis was visited by his wife and sis-
ter. He declares that he has much
work to do answering letters and looking -
ing after the order. He says : "What
we intend to do is to build up the
American Eaivay union and make it
the strongest organization in the
country. There are SSO,000 railroad
men in the country , and I know that
seven-eighths of them are with us.
But they do not speak their minds , attend -
tend meetings or join the union for
fear of the blacklist. The General
Managers' association has declared
that no man who took part in the
strike or who joins our union can work
in this country and it passes
the blacklist arouni , although
there are a few laws against conspiracy -
spiracy , which , it seems , are intended
only for labor unions , not managers'
unions. We are going to get around
the blacklist simply by having a secret
union. There will lie no public meet-
ings. No one will know who joins it
and the man who denounces it to the
company's agents may be a director.
By January 1 we will have agencies in
all the principal cities of the union.
Burns will work in Chicago. Good-
win is going to Winona. and from
there he will work to the \Vest. Keller -
ler twill establish ] headquarters at
Alin : eapolis , w1L eh is his home.
Rogers is going to Puebio , Col. , Rogan
to Ogden , Utah , ahud Elliott will work
in the East. It is a gigantic task , but
with the help f our friends we will
succeed. Each district supervisor will
have a lot of assistants who will go to
the homes of the men who desre to
join and there enlist them in the
union. It is the only way to overcome -
come the system of espionage under
which we constantly work. As soon
as 1 get out I will go to Terre Haute
and I expect it will take me a month
or more to straighten up affairs in the
business office of the union. About
Janua.y 1 1 will start on a tour of the
connLry , speaking and organizing
unions , with the ultimate object of
unifying and harmonizing all labor
unions. "
A WIDESPREAD RAIN.
Criday Night's Storm Covered the Entirt
West-Wiclhita s Qucer Experience.
CHICAGO , Aug. 2i.-Reports of Friday
night's rain show that it extended
over a wide area. Though it had its
origin in this part of the country , it
extended its cooling influences allover
the southwestern section of the country -
try , even the allcccUi deserts of New
Uexico and a coiner of Arizoia were
sprinkled more liberally than fornear
y a quarter of a century. Colorado , ;
iebraska , the Dakotas. a section of
dontan. . that has been blustering since
flay , and even two-thirds of the state
of Kansas received the grateful downI I 1
pour. I t
In Wichita , Kan. , there was a thunder -
der storm , but not a drop of rain fell.
This is common in parts of California f
sad in the mountains of Idaho , but it
s the first time that Kansas has ever
lad such an experience.
The hotel Engineer Denies Blame.
ANToNIo , Col. , Aug. 23.-Elmer Lee Ii
Cher , engineer of the Gumry hotel at t
Denver , arrested here last night , says f
hat the boiler explosion which killed a
f
venty-two people was not due to any 1
arelessness on his part. He claims
hat before leaving the hotel he banked
he fire and made sure that the boiler
as two-thirds full of water. He left
Denver , he says , because he feared s
personal violence. s
C
A Minister Confesses Ills Fall.
p
DES MOINES , Iowa , Aug. 26.-The
Rev. Mr. Dana has confessed that the
barges of the Shostrum girl were
ue and resigned from the pastorate
f the Wesley Methodist church and p
lso his membership in the church en- p
rely. He trill leave here at once and
k
orever. ti
New Officers for Indians. C
HAItTSIIORNE , I. T. , Aug. 26.-Wilson
ass been elected treasurer , Dukes
uditor and Jacob Jackson secretary b
t the nation. There are only five ,
p
otes difference between Vincent and ;
oebuck for attorney general. The
until and legislature are mixed. i fi
f
x"
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-
TRADE REVIEW. '
Rusitiess Shrlnks a Little on'Account of
Ml ] summer Dullness.
NEW Yoiu , Aug. 26.-R. G. Dun , C
Co.'s weekly review of trade says :
The volume of business shrinks , as is
natural in August , and the shrinkage
seems rather larger than usual , because -
cause transactions in July were somewhat -
what inflated for that month. Some
industries are doing more than ever
before in August , and the prospect for
fall trade is good in others , although
much depends on the crops , and the
outcome is less clear than the speculators -
tors on either side are disposed to ad-
mit. Industrial troubles have not entirely -
tirely ceased , but ( luring the past week
have become much less threatening.
The price of wheat has fallen 3 %
cents during the week , recovering a
fraction on Thursday , in spite of all
efforts to hold back supplies from
farms and to encourage buying.
Wheat ought to go abroad freely at
present prices , but Atlantic exports ,
flour included , have been only 1,352-
60" bushels for the week , against
2,69.4 , 704 last year , and for four weeks
only 4,345,632 bushels , against 10,037-
447 last year.
Impressive stories of short crops
abroad have little weight in the presence -
ence of such a record , and the abstention -
tion of foreign purchases proves more
effective than the withholding of
wheat by western farmers. Naturally -
ally the fifty-seven cent wheat of the
Pacific coast still goes forward freely
in place of the Atlantic supplies.
Corn has also declined four and one-
half cents , while pork and lard , with
accustomed inconsistency , rise a shade
as corn declines.
GETTING MONOTONOUS ,
flmcricui and English Consuls v'irtuat
Prisoners in China.
Loxuo . 26.-A dispatch
: ; , Aug. - special -
patch from Shanghai 'says that the
nhcmnbers of the commission which recently -
cently left Fee Chow for Cheng-T'n in
order to investigate the recent massacre -
cre of missionaries there , are virtually
prisoners , and that Commander Newell
of the United States cruiser Detroit
has gone to Cheng-Tu to consult with
Mr. J. C. Hixon , the United States consul -
sul at Fco Chow , who is the leading
member of the commission , about the
landing of marines for his protection
and for the protection of other members -
bers of the commission.
Another dispatch from Shanghai
says that many Chinese converts were
butchered when the American mission
outside of Fee Chow was attacked.
The dispatch adds that the Chinese
officials are jubilant at time defeat of
the efforts of the American and BritC
ish consuls to obtain an open inquiry
into the massacres. It is also said
that the delay is giving the Chinese
time to prepare a defense for the pris-
iners.
Methodists in Politics.
CLEVELAND , Ohio , Aug. 26.-An im I e
portant circular signed by every presiding -
siding elder cif the Methodist Episcopal
church iii Ohio has been sent to the i
members of that denomination
'
throughout thestate.Itcallsforunited
political action on the part of all
Methodists in an effort to elect to the
next legislature as many umetnbers as
possible who will fight the saloons. s
n
women lanuiag for Office.
S tir LAKE , Utah , Aug. 26.-The S
Salt Lake county Republican convenb
ton has nominated five candidates for , '
the state senate and ten candidates for I t
timehouse of representatives. Among
the nominees were Mrs. Lillie ll. Par-
dee for time senate and Mrs. E. B.
Yels for the house of representatives. i
1
Safe .Makers Consolidate.
PnOVIDENCE , 11. I. , Aug. 26. 'The i i s
Mosler Safe company of llauiilton , C
Ohio , the MOsler Safe and Lock company -
pany of Cincinnati , and the Corliss L
Safe company of this city have been U
consolidated under the name of the
Mosler Safe company of New Fork f t.
: with a capital stock of $1,000,000. I ti
ISr
For time Battle Celebration.
LEXINGTON , Mo. , Aug. ? 6.-A meetb ,
ing of the citizens , arranging for the ' c
celebration of the thirty-fourth anniversary -
niversary of the battle of Lexington , 1 o
to be held here September 2 , met in o
the court house last night. Chairman
Plattenbu rg has appointed committees
on arrangements.
.1
lie Will Touch time Button. ' t
ATLATA , Ga. , Aug. 2C.-It has beeL ' h
arranged that President Cleveland will
touch the button at Gray Gables on L
September IS and set in motion the
machinery of and unfurl the flags of (
the Cotton States International expo-
Rion buildings.
fill Not Bun for Governor.
r.
JErFEItSON CITY , Mo , Aug. 26.-In a tt
etter to Mr. 11' . 11. Wilkinson of AlI I I
enburg. Mo. , State Auditor J. M. 1. d
Seibert says that he will not be a can- i
didate for the Democratic nonnayon I t'
or governor in 1596 , but that he will
be a candidate for renomination for i Ef
.uditor. t u
Terrlic ltainfill in Iowa.
Sioux CITY , Iowa , Aug. 26.-There j :
as been a terrific rainfall in North1i
western Iowa daring the last twentyj
our hours. At Onaway 7 % Inches by is
government guage and at Catstana a 't
oot is reported to have fallen. Great
amage has been done to crops. H
Rain in Several States. h
KANSAS CITY , Mo. , Aug. 26.-Light
hovers are reported from North and w
outh Dakota , Dodge City , Kan. , El Co
Paso , Texas , Montana , Omaha , Neb. , i
hicago , and Springfield , Mo. Daven- i La .
I.
ort , Iowa , received a flood soaking
sin of more than three inches.
.
.h
J. Kier IIardie .trrives.
NEw YORK , Aug. 2o.-J. Kieriardie , o
resident of the Independent Labor ( 'a
arty of Great Britain , and well ja
gown by his socialistic speeches in
e last parliament , arrived on the w'
ampania yesterday for a lecture tour.Co
( , a
h
Formed a Republic.
Cu
PRILADELPIIIA , Aug. 26.-News has T h
e en received in this city that a con- z
eIete
Iete government has been formed by 1t I
he Cuban at 0
insurgents Najasa by a
) nference of the delegates from all . is
ye of the provinceson the island. j 1.
1.
. ,
t
. - iEi ! ; . Ii
HALTED BY ROBBERS.
The Union I'aclllc Atlu ; + tic Express IIeld : ,
Up Near ltrady I41and. ,
03.ulA , Neb. , August " 22.-At 1:03 : V
o'clock yesterday morning the eastbound -
bound Atlantic express on the Union
Buttermill : hill ;
Pacific was held up at
about two miles this side of Brady'
Island , where the sand hills terminato' '
at the Union Pacific track. The cx- <
ress car was damaged by y dy namfte , '
and $100 was taken from a small safe.
On the east side of these sand hills a.
wagon road comes in from the north ,
angling westward. Here is a level
stretch of road and was the scene of n.
bold train robbery. Two men boarded
the train at Brady , going forward over
the tender after the train was in motion - '
tion , and with revolvers drawn they
held up the fireman and engineer , corn- '
pelling time latter , at the point of a re- 3 i '
volver , to go back to the baggage car , ; ,
open the door and let them in , which
he did by informing the baggage man f , jd
that they were held up and that the- I Ia
robber had a sun at his head. Upon i
getting into the car the expressman I ' ;
was compelled to open the smaller safe. a
He could not open the larger one , and i
the robbers proceeded to blow the top ,
of it out with dynamite. In the meantime -
time the fireman managed to to give '
the robbers the slip , and goingforward 3
he uncoupled the engine from the train i4
and made the run to Gothenburg to
secure a posse of men to help capture
the bandits. In a short time twenty r'
volunteers were enroute to the scene of 1
the robbery , but before they arrived
the men had disappeared.
'rhe bandits wore black slouch hats ,
withh black silk handkerchiefs for
noels. ' [ 'hey were about fire fret yen
in height and would weight 150 pounds f
each. 'T'hey were roughly dressed and .
tuned their voices to disguise the tore. '
They rode horses and evidently came
in from the hills. The windows were
all blown out of the baggage car by i
the explosion of the dynamite and it
seems that the bandits were experts in
using the explosive. l
"Vhen the dynamite explodel the ' -
passengers were considerably excited , I 1 '
but were not molested.
The section foreman \'rornan has ,
seen men around the place of the robbery -
bery for several days and has a good
description of them.
Superintendent W. L. Parke and
Cheriff Miller of North Platte went to i f
I
the scene of the robber y in a special
car , with a posse of men. Early iit the
morning men were seutoutfrom North I
Platte and Brady and every effort is I
being made to capture the robbers before -
fore they get out of the country. f Ii
Superintendent Sutherland of Omaha '
i
went out on No. 7 , and will take charge '
the situation. r r
1 1
The Country's National Banks. l , I '
WASHINGTON , Aug. 22.-Tile 3.715
national banks of the country , under
1
call of the comptroller of the currency
of the 11th ult. , show : Loans and dis- . I
ounts , $2,001,17..559 , against a $1,97G + - i
04,315 3lar 7 ; gold coin. $11T,4G,5377 ,
s against $123,2.3S,436 : total resourses ,
3 .170,3'OT , as against s ,3,410,00,1J1 : ; Il
uIividral deposits , $1,736,022,006 , as
gainst $1,600,961. . ' 09.
.1 ,
Geld Itc , ervo Saved .tg : + in. I
WASHINGTON , Aug. 22.-Time gold
yndicate yesterday preventedd the I
gold reserve from falling below the ' '
iU0.UU0.0U0 mark , by depositing '
2.U00.000 in hold in exchange for m
rreenbueks. The syndicate has so far
oluntarily ( lepositcd $5,000,000 in gold m
o save the reserve. I '
CGNDENSED DISPATCHES. ' i"I'
I'
Lawvers have already begun fiDght- 1'
ng over fees in the Mora claim case. " '
Minister Dcnby haseabled thatthere +
no more danger to missionaries in , I
iina. , l '
Postmaster IIarmston of Vernal , , 1 = i ,
'fah , has been arrested for being ; 3 ; ! .
U0 shy in his accounts.
The attorney general's cffice has I
inert up the question of punishing /
e whites who stirri d up the Jack- + '
n 5 Hole strife.
t' ,
The battle of Lexington , Mo. , will
e celebrated September 1 by a barbe-
ue.
ue.Gottlieb Starches and his son are E I
cked up at Macon , Mo. . on a charge ,
f assaulting an 11-year-old girl. i
George S. Montgomery , a wealthy
member of the Salvation army of Oak- ,
and , Cal. , is organizing an expediition , !
ego to Japan to Christianize the in-
abitants.
I
ICE STOCK AND I'RODUc1:1i.tnlt ETs i
f
I r
uetationa from New Tart ; , Chicago , SG i
Louis , Omaha and El'ewhere. '
OMA1lA
utter-Creamery separator. . 14 i' IO ,
u tter-1 air to good country. 1 : 14
_ rs-Fresh. . . . . . . . . io 44 to = : '
ones-California , per 1b „ , , 14'v : I ; + }
cgs-Live. per 1b. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ i i ; 6z
pring Chickens , pcr lb. . . . . . . . U ' ; 10
moos-Choice ) lessinas. . . . . 4 0 + 4r 6 2.i . k
pnlc--per bbl. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . " ff1 , 2 " 5
antes-Floridas , per box. . . . 3 :0 lL 4 oU , '
otatoe-New . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2i by ' ' 0
titer melons-per dozen. . . . . . . 2 : / fir i coo 'r ' /
Bans-Navy , hand-picked , bu 210 6 , ( . : 0 i
a y-tipland , per tot : . . . . . . . . . . 6 OU 7 ( Y !
niors-1'er bu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ( r0 ay 0 I f
I
liecse-Neb. , C la. , full cream 10 ( 11
iieapples-per doz. 1 7 ; r. 2 ' 5 t
omato's-per4-basketcrate. 50 75 i %
o s-lixctt packing. . . . . . . . . . 45 , Ir - /
os-Heavy weights. 4 Ir 4.4 ; u
eeves-stockers and feeders 121 , c. 3 40 =
Let steers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 ; o C , 4 * 5 . . , '
ul1 . . . . . . . . . ice It2r- ;
ags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 IU ( G : 00 .
.Ives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . L'o0 Qf.42i
. 1(0 ( ( ! : 3 3) ' ' tj '
. 50 1 , : i ? ;
een-Lambs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : : eo s 4 : o 11
eep-Choice native , . . . . . . 2 0 4y s : ; .
CIIICAGu. t
heat-No 2. spring. . . . . . . . . . . c. d
rn-Per bu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : s n !
aIer bu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t:0 t0's- ' , - t
r. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 9v ( ( ! im '
- . . . . (1f,10 . l'
ogPackers and mixed. . . . . 4 40t u 5 3 , ' ! '
ttle-Xative steers. . . . . . . . . . . 4 . S. ; r 5 PO r
eep-Latnb. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ( , 5'15 a f
eep-Natives. . . . _ . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 50 L 3 a7 '
NEII YOla :
heat No. " red Winter. . . . . . . 68 + ti , : .
rn \ o. 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 44
t. . c.- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' ( (
I. ' . ; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 _ uI . . ( , ( f
re. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . V 5(4 GS V DJ 4.
eT. LOlili ,
neat-No = red , casu. . . . . . . . . 14 (
rn-Ferbu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : ti 'ry
is-Per ou . . . . . . ] 9 115
ce-liscd pain , . . . . . . . . , 4 2 ; , 4 : S r
ttie-Heft steer- . . . . . . , . . . . . . 4 2.5 ; , 4 ; ' 0 1
eet-fixed natives. . . . . . . . . ' 'L ; i'I co
robs. . . . . . . ' 3 OU 4t0
' i
rA a cii : ,
ieu-yo. "l = ard . . . . . . . . . . . . . E.1 . . 6y G3 = 1
. . . . . ! 9 '
'tie-stockers and feeuer , . - : a 4 tro i l
opslx'u itctr. . . . . . . . . . 4 : + 0 e 4 6i dC
cep-9aatcas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 iU ry 3 W
f,1