The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, October 06, 1899, Image 2

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    M'COOK TRIBUNE.
F. M. KIMMILI , , r
McCOOK , NEBRASKA
BRIEF TELEGRAMS.
John Carson , a farmer aged C5 , of
Newton Falls , Ohio , was stung to death
by bees.
Indictments were returned against
twelve Kansas City retail druggists for
selling liquor illegally.
The plant of the American tin plato
company at Atlanta , Ind. , was .ilnioit
totally destroyed by fire.
Cincinnati street railways employes
have presented demands for 20 cents
per hour , ten hours per day.
At Iluntington , W. Va. , the large
Dingess coal mine , which has been
idle for two years , will be resumed.
Section four of the Twenty-ninth ,
infantry , left Fort McPherson , Atlanta ,
for San Francisco , with five'officers
and 225 men.
Archbishop Chapellc of New Orleans
has received notice from the DODO of
his appointment as apostolic delegate
for the Philippines.
A cablegram from General Otis an
nounces the death September 15 at
Hong Kong of Robert M. Lee , com
pany F , Twentieth Kansas.
Rudyard Kipling , who is now in
London , intends to visit Australia , and
will possibly stay for a short time in
South Africa while en route.
William Bonny , who accompanied
Henry M. Stanley , the African explcr-
er in 1887 , in the expedition for the
relief of Emin Pasha , ia dead.
Since June 4 , 563 couples from Chica
go and 200 couples from other cities
have secured marriage licenses from
the county clerk at St. Joseph , Mich.
The stock of gold coin in the New
York sub-treasury Is now $127,000,090.
This is said to be larger than any pre
vious holding of gold in thirty years.
Surgeon General Wyman of the ma
rine hospital service was notified of a
suspected case of yellow fever at Mi
ami , Fla. . The case has been isolated.
The United States collier Alexander ,
which called from Norfolk , August 30.
for Manila , with a full cargo of coal
for the naval station there , arrived
on the 2Gth.
John Lawyer , jr. , and Ed Jones of
Charleston , 111. , got into a quarrel ,
in which Jones was slashed In the neck
with a pocket knife and died in less
than five minutes.
Governor Stone of Pennsylvania has
appointed J. Hay Brown of Lancaster
to the vacancy on the supreme court
bench created by the death of Judge
Henry W. Williams of Wcllsboro , last
winter.
Commandant General Joubcrt reck
ons on 18,000 Transvaal troops , 16,000
from the Orange Free State , 8,000 from
Cape Colony , 2,000 from Natal Jin * !
6,000 Hollanders , Germans and other
volunteers.
A revolution broke out at Catamar-
cia against the local government of
that province. The government re-
pstablished order after a fight , during
which seven were killed and twelve
were wounded.
Tom Tuptoam , a saroon-Ireeper , is
in jail charged with murder , and
Charles L. Wessler , a cigar manufac
turer at Ogden , Utah , is dead at his
residence as a result of a quarrel over
borrowed money.
Naval experts say that the govern
ment will have to spend several mil
lion dollars in refitting for active serv
ice the vessels which comnrised Ad
miral Dewey's fleet when it destroyed
Spain's naval rower in the far east.
The commissioner of Indian affairs
is preparing instructions in accordance
with a final order issued by Secretary
Hitchcock directing the payment out
of the Choctaw funds of $75,000 to
liquidate the tribal indebtedness.
The postmaster general has issued
an order extending the postage rates
of the United States to Porto Rico.
Under the order , United States post
age stamps shall be valid for postage
* * - . In either direction , as well as those
now used in Porto Rico.
Consul Ayme reports to the state de
partment from Guadaloupe tnat th *
loss of property from the recent trop
ical hurrican amounts to at least $5-
000.000. Forty deaths and over 200
seriously wounded are reported from
various parts of the island.
I-I. F. Kendall of Cambridge , Mass. ,
and C. E. Eastman , of Saginaw. Mich. ,
capitalists , are reported as lost from
near Nipigon. several days ago. They
were without the necessaries of lif *
and anxiety is felt for them. Eight
Indians are searching the bush.
Representaive Tawney of Minnesota
saw the president and invited him ,
while on his western trip , to make
short stops at LaCrosse. Wis. . and Wi-
nona , Minn. The visits will be ar
ranged for if it can be done without
too serious clashing with dates already
made.
Leonard B. Imbcden , president of the
Planters' bank of Kansas City , a "wild
cat" concern suppressed by the state
officials several months ago , was found
guilty in the criminal court of forging
a draft for $15,000 with which he hoped
to get a false credit for his bank , and
was sentenced to ten years in the peni
tentiary.
News reached Victoria. B. C. , by the
Cottage City that a relief expedition
has been sent by the mounted police
to the Mackenzie river , where great
suffering is said to prevail. The last
arrival from the Mackenzie river was
an Australian named Edwardson , who ,
after losing his supplies , was a week
without frod.
The Paris Figaro says that Max
Regis the notorious Jew-baiter and
former mayor of Algiers , who recently
barricaded himself and a number of
companions in his villa there , in
emulation of the example of Jules
Guerin , after hiding in tne suburbs of
Algiers , embarked for Alicante , Spam. G
At Manhattan , Kas. , Colonel S. A.
Sawyer , a well known financier and
stockman , died at his home of gan
grene. < .
General Brooke , at Havana , has not
ified the War department of the death
inst. of Ser-
at Mantanzas on the 21st ,
eeant John Lynch of company G , Second
end cavalry , from an unknown cause. to
\7odtl Shift His Difficulties Into the
Field of Diplomacy ,
SOKE SORT Of RECOGNITION
Ho 'Wishes to Semi Civilian Govern
mental CoimulHHlon to Discuss Situa
tion Writes n Jetter to the President
of the llppubllc" Otis Willing to Cor-
rcHiiond With III in an General of the
Insurgents.
MANILA , . Oct. 2. Auguinaldo's
third attempt to shift the difficulties
into the field or diplomacy is a repe
tition of the other one or two , wi.a
an impossible endeavor to obtain some
sort of recognition of his so-called
government.
The Filipino envoys had an hour's
conference , with General Otis this
morning. They brought from Augui-
naldo a message that he desired peace
and wished to send a civilian gov
ernmental commission to discuss the
situation. General Otis replied that it
was impossible for him to recognize
Aguinaldo's government in that way.
They presented a letter from Agui-
naldo as "president of the republic , "
which was largely a repetition o his
recent appeals ror recognition. General
Otis informed them that while he was
willing to correspond with Aguinaido
as general of the insurgent forces ne
must positively ueclinc to recognize
him as president of the civil govern
ment. Another conference will be held
tomorrow.
The Filipinos will remain two or
three days. Their niovements are unre
stricted , but they" are under the con
stant chaperonage of Captain John
son of the Sixteenth infantry. Today
they visited the hospitals and distrib
uted money among the wounded Filipinos
pines , after which they made calls and
received visitors at their hotel.
Natives in their Sunday clothing
thronged tne plaza in front of the ho
tel all day stretching their necks to
ward the window for a glimpse cf the
showy uniforms of the envoys. The
assemblage finally increased to 1,000
people. When the envoys emerged
for an afternoon drive the natives re
moved their hats deferentially , and a
crowd in vehicles or on foot followed
the carriage tnrough the streets.
"We desire peace , but peace with
independence and honor , " said Gen
eral Alejandrino today , while convers
ing with a representative of the Asso
ciated Press. He impresses one as dig
nified and impassionate and as a Keen
man of the world. He was educated
in Europe and designed the remarka
ble entrenchments from Manila to
Tarac. While reticent regarding his
mission , his conversation throws an
interesting light on the Filipino view
of the American attitude.
"How long can the Filipino army
and people stand 60,000 American
troops ? " asked the representative or
the Associated Press.
"Fighting in our way we can 'main
tain a state of war and the necessity
of a large army of occupation indefin
itely. You Americans are holding a
few miles around Manila , a narrow
line of railroad to Angeles and a cir
cle of country around San Fernando.
But you are ignorant of the resources
of Luzon. We hold the immense rich ,
productive northern country , from
which to draw. Our people contrib
ute the money ana food which main
tain our army and this is done at a
minimum of cost.
"It is an interesting question what
the cost to the American people is of
maintaining the American troops in
the Philippines. We do not , of course ,
know the amount , but it must be ex
cessive. We perceive what an Amer
ican soldier requires in this climate.
On the other hand a Filipino exists
with a handful of rice and a pair of
linen trousers. We do not have to pay
our soldiers and can practically hold
UP their wages as long as we desire.
Even without our present supply of
arms and ammunition we could keep
your army occupied for years.
"With an expense that grows daily
how long will your people stand it ?
The Filipino people do not wish to
continue the fighting. We have no
army contractors. We have no busi
ness" men making profits from thi
maintenance o four army ; there is
nothing in it for us , nor are the sala
ries large enough to keep us fighting
for money and position. "
A CONFLICT APPEARS NEAR.
ti
Tuesday Named as the Day for Dcclara- i
tion of War.
LONDON , Oct. 2. The Berlin corre
spondent of the Daily News says : Ad
vices from The Hague say : Dr. Leyda
has named Tuesday as the day for a
formal declaration of war by the Boers.
There is an unconfirmed rumor in cir
culation here that Queen Victoria has
written Queen Wilhelmina of the
Netherlands , deploring the turn events
have taken in South Africa and assur
ing the Dutch monarch that she has
gone to the utmost limits of her con
stitutional rights in her efforts to se
cure peace. r
JOHANNESBURG.Oct. 2. The com
manding orders are completed and the
burghers are ready for the field. A
large body passed through the town
yesterday afternoon. Business has
virtually ceased. The merchants have
finished barricading their premises and
the proprietors of the drinking saloons
expect to receive a notification to close
their establishments tomorrow.
Transports Sail for Manila.
SAN FRANCISCO , Oct. 2. The re
maining companies of the Thirty-sec
end regiment sailed touay for Manila
on the transports Glenogle and
Charles Nelson. Companies A , E. F ,
, K , L and M and the regimental
band , unaer command of Colonel
Louis A. Craig , went on the Glenogle ,
and Companies C andD , under com
mand of Major Charles E. Cabell ,
went on the Nelson. The Glenogle
and the Nelson are of about the same
speed , fourteen knots. They will
touch at Honolulu and are expected
reach Manila together.
WILL APPEAL TO M'KINLEY.
Story that Imprisoned Miners Arc IJolnj-
Subjectcd to Punishment * .
DENVER , Oct. 2. A special to the
News from Anaconda , Mont. , says :
President Boyce of the Western
Federation of Miners will immediate
ly appeal to President MciCinley in
behalf of the imprisoned Coeur
d'Alene miners \Vardner. .
For the last eight days , it is alleged ,
all the prisoners have been kept on a
bread and water diet and for trivial
violations of prison rules have been
punished by being obliged to stand
for eight hours immovable in the hot
sun. For refusing to work the straw
has been taken from their bunks and
they have been compelled to sleep on
the bare boards. No tobacco is per
mitted and no visitors arc allowed to
speak to the prisoners.
It is alleged that under tnese un
usual punishments the prisoners arc
rapidly breaking down in health and
some , under the sun ordeal , have be
come crazed. These men have been
imprisoned five months without trial
and in the meantime two sessions
of the district court have been held.
Senator Carter will be asked to use
his influence with the War depart
ment immediately.
NORTH DAKOTANS AT HOME.
One Continuous Ovation From the Time
They Cross I ho Stale Line.
FARGO , N. D. , Oct. 2. The North
Dakota volunteers reached ther na
tive state yesterday after an absence
of seventeen months , one year of
which was spent in the Philippines.
The troops , in two special trains ,
reached the state line from San Fran
cisco early yesterday morning , and
from Dickinson , the home of Com
pany 1C , to Fargo , the home of Com
pany B , every town along the line
yelled itself hoarse in honor of the
troops.
Great crowds weknmed them at
Bismarck. Jamestown and vralley
City. All companies stopped and
dined at Jamestown at 3 o'clock.
Fargo was reached at 8 o'clock to
night and 10,000 people and dozens of
steam whistles and bc > 3 and salutes
of artillery by the Lisbon battery
made the occasion unparalleled in
North Dakota.
YELLOW FEVER INCREASES.
Forty-Eight Xew Cases at New York
Found and Reported.
WASHINGTON , D. C. , Oct. 2. There
were forty-eight new cases of yellow
fever and two deaths at Key West to
day according to tonight's marine hos
pital service advices. Passed Assistant
Surgeon Smith wired that the condi
tions at the detention camp at Dry
Tortugas remain good and that he
has notified the Key West authorities
that after this week the camp will be
closed. The camp , which is for the
benefit of refugees from Key West ,
will have been in operation four weeks ,
and the authorities believe with thi"
week adequate opportunity will have
been given the Key West people to
leave. The official dispatches show
that the temperature at New Orleans
last night ana today recorded 57 de-
jrees and report a heavy frcst at Hat-
tiesburg , Miss. , and in Northern Loui-
siana. Miami reports no new cases or
suspects.
BEWEY NEEDS REST BADLY.
Functions of Last Week Prove Almost
Too Much for HU Strength.
NEW YORK , Oct. 2. The functions-
and the receptions that have figured so
prominently in the daily life of Ad
miral Dewey since his arrival off
Saudjr Hook last Tuesday morning
have proven almost too much for his
strength. The admiral has been under
such a perpetual physical and nervous
strain that he is now almost exhausted.
Saturday's ceremonies were the moat
taxing on his strength of any that he
has yet had to undergo , and he appear
ed today looking , pale and worn. De
spite the fact that he retired early Sat
urday evening and enjoyed a gooi
night's rest , the admiral yesterday was
too fatigued to do more than remain
in his room the greater part of the
time and rest quietly.
ISurkctt III ,
LINCOLN , Neb. , Oct. 2. Congress
man S. J. Burkett is seriously ill at
his 1 residence in this city. He was
taken 1t sick last Thursday , and on yes- I
1t
terday t the announcement was made T
that t he would be compelled to can
cel some speaking engagements he a
had made , and it was also stated that is
1t
the illness was from an attack of ap
pendicitis. ] Dr. E. L. Holyoke , the
physician ] in attendance , said today a
that tne condition of the patient was fic
critical , but hopeful , and that it did fisi
not indicate the necessity for an op siti
eration. Tonight the patient's condi ti
tion is reported to be about the same in
as during the day.
irtt
( nrmaiiy Wants Kor.r.
CHICAGO , 111. , Oct. 2. Bartholomae ttA
Kost , the Austrian , who is accused of A
the murder of his fiance , Mary Vodica , vi
at Bremen , Germany , that he might tld
return to Vienna , Austria , to marry his tlvi
present wife , Anna Schimera , lert here vi
today , in charge of two detectives , on revi
his way back to Germany , to answer vi
to the charge of murder. The woman a ]
ror whom he is alleged to have done
murder did not accompany him.
lo
Sails .
Squadron Friday.
WASHINGTON , Oct. 2. Admiral ei
Sampson telegraphed Secretary Long cam
that the North Atlantic squadron will m
sail on the 5th inst. for Hampton 1.1 :
Roads , where the change in the com- oc
mander-in-chief will take place and ar
the winter maneuvers be mapped out. di
Don't Ilke Girl Students.
MIDDLETOWN , Conn. , Oct. 2. The
agitation that has waged at Wesleyan cc
university relative to co-education has PI
had the effect of reducing the fresh ar
man cless to seven women this year , sh ;
whereas there were twenty-five last of
year , which was the largest in the his er
tory of the college. This year's fresh be
man class will number 101 , which is tri
triW
but few less than the entering class triMi
last year. The students as a body are Mi .
opposed to co-education and the de ov
crease of women students is very grat is
ifying to them. iset :
'TWAS ALL FOR DEWEY/
Most Maprplflcent Marine Spoctac'o Cv
fie en in ua American I'ort.
NEW YORK , Sept. 30. No Romar
conqueror returned from his triumph of
barbaric splendor , no victorious king
coining home from a successful war
ever received such a magnificent ova
tion as overwhelmed Admiral Dewej
yesterday as he stood on the bridge of
the Olympia at the head of a mag
nificent fleet ci thunderers of the deep
followed by a thousand vessels of
peace , each tiered anti coated black
with people , and sailed over the brigh
waters of the upper bay and up the
broad pathway of the sun-lit rivei
whose banks were gay with million
of flags and dreamers dancing in the
wind.
The sky was blue , the water rippled
under the fresh wind that held flag0
out straight and jaunty , and the
wharves and piers , and rocky heights
and grassy l.nolls were black with
frantic , enthusiastic people wh.
strived weakly to make their shout
heard above the perfect bedlam of toot
ing whistles rhat accompanied the ad
miral ashore ana afloat.
As the tomb of General Grant on
Riverside drive was reached the llecr
paid its tribute to the memory of the
great warrior with a national salute of
twenty-one rearing guns. The fleet
then anchored and reviewed the al
most endless procession of craft thai
steamed past , all so ouroened with
Humanity that they looked as if they
would turn over before they got back
to their piers.
Toward the end , the parade became
disorganized , and it took nours for
the heterogeneous flotilla to get by.
Darkness at last brought relief to the
tired admiral , who had stood on the
bridge for six hours bowing his ac
knowledgments to the stentorian ex
pressions of homage.
New York has never witnessed be
fore anything approaching this won
derful , remarkaolc demonstration. The
Columbian naval paraae , the declica
tion of Grant's tomb and the recep
tion of the North Atlantic squadron
last fall all pale before this gigantic-
ovation to the sailor , who in a single
morning destroyed an enemy's fleet
without the ICES of a man or a ship.
It is not beyona the mark to say that
3,000,000 people viewed the pageant
from ashore and that 250,000 were
afloat.
LOOKS VERY WARLIKE.
Situation in the Transiaiil Appears to Ho
Mora Critiritl Than 1'Jver.
LONDON , Sept. 30. ( New York
World Cablegram. ) I obtained last
night from a high ministerial source
the following authentic facts concerning -
ing yesterday's fatettil meeting of the
British cabinet. When the ministers
assembled they were already in possession -
session of a draft of Chamberlain's
proposed ultimatum to the Boer repub
lic. Tire terms 01 me settlement laid
down were :
1. The substitution of the articles of
the Pretoria convention of 1881 , for
those of the London contention of 1881 ,
J ;
respecting the Boer republic's relations
with foreign powers. This substitu
tion means the abolition of all rights
on the part of the public to deal with
foreign powers and would amply recall
Dr. i eyds as Boer commissioner in
Europe.
2. The abolition of all legislation re
specting aliens adopted by the republic
since 1881. This would remove all dis
abilities placed by successive Boer
ordinances on the outlanders. J
3. Tne granting of municipal auto
nomy to the Rand. This would give
control of all local affairs such as ,
pclics , sanitation , and so forth , to the
district mainly inhabited by the outlander -
lander population. It is the revival
of a scheme of home rule for the Rand ,
suggested by Chamberlain to Kruger
after the Jamieson raid and contempt
uously refused by Kruger.
4. ihe removal of all religious disa-
jilities. At present Catholics and Jews
ire disabled from holding many offices ,
even the most important kind.
5. The disarmament of the two great
forts which command Johannesburg.
GOSSIP NAMES IWEiKLEJQflN.
Dlay He AiJjioinJtd Governor of the b
1'iiilipl'iiie.- ; . n
CHICAGO , Sept. 30. A dispatch nw
to ! the Record from Washington says : w
The apparently reliable information P'
that the president is about to appoint frt
civil governor for the Philippines irD
already causing gossip as to who irra
the man may be. ra
The name of George D. Meiklejohn , tc
assistant ; secretary of war. is most C
frequently mentioned. He has * the w
confidence of the president and has "
shewn Himself to possess adniinistracc
tive abi.ity of high order in his Avork .
the War department. J
\j\
jtl
May Vijit N
le
WASHINGTON , D. C. , Sept. CO. leh
While tne official itinerary of President
fit
McKinley ] is being made up with a
.
* ! \
view of visitation to several points in
the northwest decided upon , he has not
definitely < stated that he would not
I'isit Nebraska. There are several
routes by which the president can still
visit Nebraska and meet his other
ippointrncnts.
Yellow i'cvc-r Spreading. fr
WASHINGTON , Sept. 30. The yellow -
'
low fever dispatches to Surgeon Gen- .
n
2ral Wyman tonight report three new
:
ases at New Orleaus and five persons
low ill of the fever at Centerville ,
.liss. The first frost of the season
jccurrcd at Meridian , Miss. , last night m
md at Hansborough , Miss. , Wednes- in
lay nigiit. It is earlier than usual. of
ar
Cattle Raider * Held. pc
CHEYENNE , Wyo. , Sept. 30. Maa- chm
ige. * Gleason of the Warren Live stock , m ,
oinrcvny received word today that the iil
rehminary hearing of the persons
irrested lor raiding the company's
heep iu Logan county , killing sixty
the animals , and beating the herdDe
, i-as resulted in the accused being
lound over to tne district court for
rial. Th'e men are Hunter Smith , Q (
Villiam Regdan , Charles and Prentice no
.IcEndaffer. One of the men is the 00
iwner of a large herd of cattle , one i t
the foreman for a large cattle outOf
and the otht-r tvc arc employes. dr <
AT PAMC
American Forces in Luzon Get the Better
of Insurgent Troops.
THE ENEMY AGAIN PUT TO ROUTE
Wheeler , AVlicaton and JM-x-Arthur In
Charge of the Troops KiiKagcd Few
Louies on the American Side J'repa-
rution for Other Forward Movements.
MANILA , Sept. 29. The movement
against Porac , about eight miles from
Bacolor , in Pampanga province , which
began at daybreak this morning , io
conducted personally by General Mac-
Arthur. General Wheeler , with the
Ninth regiment and a battery , was ad
vancing by two roads , while General
Wheaton , commanding the Twelfth
and Seventeenth regiments , is moving
to block the insurgents from retreat
ing to the north. The Thirty-sixth
regiment accompanies General Mac-
Arthur.
General MacArthur entered Pora :
after an hour's fighting. The Ameri
can loss was slight and the insurgent
loss is not known. The enemy fie-1
northward. When the Americans en
tered the town they found it prac
tically desortcd.
The attacking party moved on Ponu :
in two columns. The Ninth infantry ,
with two guns from Santa Rita , was
commanded by General Wheeler , and
the Thirty-sixth infantry , under
Colonel Bell , with one gun , accom
panied General MacArthur from San
Antonio. Both columns struck the
town at 9 o'clock and opened a brisk
fire , which was replied to by the
enemy for half an hour. Then the in
surgents fled and the Americans
marched over their trenches and took
possession of the place. Just before
the fight Smith's command , at Angeles ,
made a demonstration by firing artil
lery Jin the railroad track
Liscum reported one casualty and
Bell reported four of his comman-1
wounded. The artillery did not have
any men injured.
CONQUERING BEAR IS DEAD.
Gi'i7.7.1 pd Sioux lirave Steps From Motor
Car to Happy limiting CrniuuN.
OMAHA , Sept. 29. Conquering Bear ,
ihe grizzled warrior of the Ogallala
Sioux , is dead. The old brave fell a
victim to the onward march of civiliza
tion and lost his life because he was
unaccustomed to the ways of the city.
He was riding down town from the
Exposition grouds in company with
another member of his tribe about : :
o'clock. At Nineteenth and Cuming
street the other inciian alighted from
the car without letting the old man
know it. As soon as Conquering Beat-
saw that his companion had left the
car he stepped off and as the car was
at full speed he was hurled in a heap
on the stone pavement and never
made a motion of life afterward.
The ambulance was called frcm the
exposition and the body removed. A
physician did all in his power to revive -
vive the Indian , but his olforts were in
vin. There were no bad wounds on
his person and no indication that his
m
skull had been fractured. The doctor
gave it as his opinion that he canie
to his death from a shock to his bran.
His heart action was good , but no
seemed unable to breathe. Fifteen
minutes after he was brought to the
hospital he was pronounced dead. P
"WELCOME HOME' ' IN FIRE.
So
and lUiiiiiitiHtioiii in Xow
York Hitrlior a flrtaf IVaturo.
NEW YORK , Sept. 29. The appearance al
alCi
pearance of New York harbor last Ci
night could be compared to a circle
>
of intense light with the war ships :
off Tompkinsville ar the hub from
which the brilliancy radiated. The
bay has never before had as brilliant ar
or picturesque a display of continu
ous illumination as that seen last
light , nor has the interest manifested
by ; the chore dwellers been more of
manifest.
Beginning at the Brooklyn bridge ,
with its string of white electric lights
punctuated ' at intervals witli red anu
green-colored cue signal lamps , the
immensely brilliant motto , "Welcome
Dewey , " was suspended as it were in
midair. Looking from the bridge
toward the Jersey coast similar signs
od ! be distinctly read on the gate C
way of the railroads that are bringing
Lhosands to swell the paen of wel- 01
L-ome to the returning warrior.
Further down the bay on the Brook ra
lyn side was the same fiery "Wel
come" and also on Staten island. At Cc
the portal to the city shone out in
letters of the brightest light the same
learty greeting , "Welcome Home. "
lanked by immense illuminated Jht
\.mer' .1 flags that could be seen for
miles.
in
WOOD AND COMRADES DEAD. laOi
Oi
Jeport Reaches Manilla of Fate of Cap
turfed Gunboat's Crew.
MANILA , Sept. 29. It is reported
'rom a person just arrived from Tur- ; °
il
lac that Naval Cadet Wood , who was , .o
charge of the gunboat recently
aptured and destroyed by the insur etc
gents in the Orani river , on the north- a
vest side of Manila bay , where she a
vas patrolling , and five of the enlisted is
nen composing the crew were killed
the fight previous to the destruction
co
the vessel. The four other men
to
ind the captured cannon , a one- , -
„
lounder , a rapid-fire gun , a Colt ma- „
ihine gun , and a Nordenfeldt 25-
h
nillimeter : gun , were conveyed to '
aalac.
an
al
HUNDREDS Of LIVES LOST. oi
letalls of Flood Disaster's In India IJc-
clnnlng to Come In. as
CALCUTTA , Sept. 29. Lieutenant
i
Jovernor Sir John Woodburn an- of
ounced to the council yesterday that le
lives were lost through the "floods
a c
Darjeeling , capital of the district cy ,
that name , in addition to those
rowned on the plains.
* i
1
"There Is an industry in this coun
try , " says the Jasper ( Fla. ) News ,
"that but little IB known about. It
is the alligator hide business. During
the season from June 1 to September
1 O. A. Worley , of this place , bought
757 hides , for which ho paid the Hum
of 4G7. Doubtless our most timid
citizen never thought that 757 'gators
could bo found in this lovely county's
creek , swamps and mudholes In the
short space of three months' times. "
Some people are like circus bills ;
i very little money causes them to br
stuck up.
"A Gentle Wind
of Western Birth"
Tells no sweeter story to humanity than
the announcement that the health-giver
and health-bringcr , Hood's Sarsaparilla ,
tells of the birlh of an era of good health.
It is the one reliable specific for the cure
of all blood stomach and liver troubles.
It is said that some of the sheep
farms in Australia are as large aa
the whole of England.
Pon't Go IJro | { 5 ' .Then Ynii Hot ,
Fend for mv imalualile iv.stein. Goo. II.
Ulchinoml , liS Dearborn St. . CU cago.
It is not necessary to hang up a
code of homelaws in the aoimc where-
love is dwelling.
Are Ton Uslntr Alton's Foot-Kaao ?
It is the osily cure for Swollen.
Smarting , Burning , Sweating Feet.
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's
Foot-Ease , a powder to be shaken into
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoo
Stores , 2nc. Sample sent FREE. Ad
dress Allen S. Olmstcd. LeRoy , N. Y.
All human love is the reduction of
the divine in the life of the upward-
looking man.
SllSbuj'snew upright piano. Schmol-
Jer & Mueller , 1313 Farnam St. , Omaha.
Denmark claims that there ia not a
single person in her domain who can
not read and write.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
If there is one thing on which the
housewife prides herself , it is that of
having her laundering done nicely , so
that the wearing apparul may be the
adnjiration of all. The washing is a
small matter , any one almost can do
that . , but to have the linens present
that flexible and glossy appearance
after being ironed requires a flue qual
ity of starch.
Ask your grocer for a coupon book
which will enable you to get the first
two packages of this new starch "Red
Cross" trademark brand , also two of
the children's Shakespeare pictures
painted in twelve beautiful colors as
natural as life , or the Twentieth Cen
tury Girl Calendar , all absolutely free.
This is one of the grandest offers
ever made to introduce "Red Cross"
laundry starch , J. C. Hubinger's latest
invention.
His satanicai majesty always de
mands more than his duo.
Plso's Cure for Consumption is the bosi
of nil cough cures. George \ V.Lotz ,
I'abucher , La. , Aujjubt 5 > G , Ib'Jo.
Truth printed on the page is not so
potent as truth produced in person.
FITS ' Permanent lyrnrwi. Sconce ornrrrotsner < iaf rr
llrct tHy'a ti-t < of lr. Kline's Grrut Nerve Uestorer.
5nil for FiiKK 8JJ.OO trial J.ottl'j artl n-aiw.
Ua. 11. II. KUE , Ltd. , 931 ArchHt. , I'lilladvlphla , Pa.
Of the 40,000 inhabitants of Jerus-
ilem , 28,000 are Jews.
'nred Afl T Kojieatfd Failures With Others
I win inform addicted to Morphine , laudanum
l > ! um. < ucalnc. of iie\er-fi'lii ! harmless , linmc-
re. JIr > . M. H. Haldwln. lto U1V. Chicago. III.
Pride goes oefore a fall and ignor-
ince before a fenderless tro.ley car.
SellingI'atents. .
During the past week 29 per cent
f the inventors who had patents is
sued to them succeed-
in selling either the
whole ar part of their
inventions. Amongst
the 120 prominent
firms who bought
patents the past week 1
were the following :
Gale Manufacturing
'o. , Albion. Mich.
Ajnx Manufacturing Co. , Cleveland ,
hio.
Fruit. Flowers and Vegetable Evapo-
atiag Co. , of New Jersey.
Liquid Air Power and Automobile
'o. , of West Virginia.
Union Boiler Tubs Cleaner Co.Pitts-
lurg , Pa.
Ideal Buckle Manufacturing Co. , New
taven. ; Conn.
Electric Scale Co. . Kittery , Me.
Parties desiring to introduce or sell
nventions should address Sues & Co. ,
awyers and solicitors. Bee building ,
Jniaha , Neb. , for free literature.
By virtue of his office , the Lord
layer of London is admiral of the
ort of London , guager of wine .and
and of other articles , measurer of
oals. grain , salt and fruit , and in-
pector of butter , hops , soap , cheese ,
tc. He is governor of four hospitals ,
trustee of St. Paul's cathedral and
magistrate "in several places. " He
also coroner. The distribution of
ivery cloth is a curious survival. The
ourt of aldermen sends every year
the Lord Chancellor , the lord chief
ustice and some ten other officials ,
ational and municipal , four and a
alf yards each of the best black cloth ,
'he town clerk has six yards of green
nd six of black cloth , and tne priacl-
clerk at the Guildhall four yards
each.
WSlliarn Kissam Vandexbilt , who
now become the head of the Van-
erbiit family , will be fifty years old
December. He is essentially a man
the world ; has owned a racing sta
, defended the America's cup , driven
coach-and-four and cruised in
almost -4
very sea in his own steam yacht , 4J
he estimate of his present fortune J
aries from § 75,000,000 to $90,000,000.