The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, June 08, 1900, Image 2

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    M'COOK TKIBUNE.
F. M. KIUBCBIX , Publisher.
McCOOK , - - NEBRASKA
BRIFE TELEGRAMS.
receipts to bills for goods delivered at
the fort and then retaining the money
with which he should have paid tbo
bills.
At San Francisco , Cal. , the bubonic
plague situation remains unchanged.
No new cases had been reported and
none are known to exist In the city or
state.
At Joliet , 111. , nearly a thousand men
men were thrown out of work by the
converter and billet miiis of the Illi
nois Steel company being closed indef
initely
The Peninsula bank at Williams-
burg , Va. , was entered by robbers , the
safe blown open , and abuuc $10,000 in
money taken. There is no clue to the
robbers.
At Syracuse , N. Y. , Mrs. Louise Foster -
ter was murdered oy Ernest Hecht. He
chloroformed her and then attempted
to take his own life. He confessed
the crime.
Edward Carver shot and killed Wil
liam Patterson in a political quarrel at
the Republican primary at Florence ,
Ind. Carver , who was a candidate for
sheriff , nas fled to Kentucky.
The Kentucky democratic state ex
ecutive committee has recommended
that Columbus , O. , be Hciected as the
location for the democratic national
headquarters for the campaign of 1900.
Eight hundred and fifty fortune
hunters sailed for Cape Nome from
Portland , Ore. , on the steamers George
W. Elder and Nome City. Many appli
cations for passage were turned away.
The national congress of Mexico has
just passed a bill approved by Presi
dent Diaz changing the name of the
gulf port of Topolobampo , on the Pa
cific coast of Meico , to Port Stillwell.
The engine attached to the west
bound fast mail train on the Lake
Shore road went into a ditch at West-
field , N. Y. , and Engineer Reagan and
his fireman , William Leighbody , were
killed.
President McKinley has received the
following cablegram , dated Manzanillo ,
Cuba , May 24 : "The city council ap
plauds the noble course taxen by your
government in hoisting rne Cuban flag
at Pris. "
Commissioner Wilson of the internal
revenue bureau has held that bank
checks issued by clerks of United
States and state courts by direction or
authority of the court , are exempt from
taxation.
An outbreak of smallpox near luan-
kato , Kas. , has caused the mayor to
order all public meetings discontin
ued. This includes the high school
commencement exercises and Memorial
day program.
At Durban , South Africa , an extraordinary -
ordinary Issue of the Gazette alihouncr
es the existence of a fatal case of the
bubonic plague in Durcmn. The vie-
tim is an East Indian. The local au-
thorities are strictly enforcing precau
tion.
Notwithstanding the government op
position the second reading of tha bill
to enable women to be elected alder
men and councilors in the new oor-
ough councils was carried in the Brit
ish house of commons by a vote of
248 to 129.
At Bismarck , N. D. , ira O. Jenkins ,
27 years of age , was found guilty by
a jury of murder in tne first degree
and the death penalty was fixed. Jen-
kins' crime was the murder of Augusta
Stork , a farm laborer who worked for
Jenkins" father.
It is understood the president has de
cided to appoint as a member of the
industrial commission to succeede M.
D. Ratchford , resigned , Charles
Leitchman of "Massachusetts formerly
general secretary-treasurer of the
Knights of Labor
The division of customs and insular
affairs of the War department has
made a statement of the. total collec
tions in Cuba during the month of
April. The customs , internal revenue
and postal receipts and miscellaneous
collections , amount to § 1,370,387.
The Hamburg , Germany , department
of commerce has just Issued some in
teresting statistics in connection with "
the German coal famine , whifa shows
that Germany imported last year 3-
426,215 tons of coal : During the ITtSl
four months of this year 826,150 tins
were imported into the country , and in
the month of April alone the importa
tions "had risen to the considerable fig
ure of 65,893 tons.
The house committee on the Louis
iana purchase exposition to be held
at St. Louis in 1903 , voted to report
the exposition bill without recom
mendation , favorable or unfavorable.
The bill pledges the government ap
propriation of ? 5,000,000 , and allows
the government a proportionate share
of the proceeds of the enterprise.
Sig. Giuseppe del Puente , the widely
known baritone , died suddenly at his
home in Philadeplhia of appoplexy.
He was 60 years old.
The vault of the Bank of Dover ,
Minn. , was blown open by burglars
and ? 4,500 taken. The burglars es
caped.
Mrs. William E. Gladstone is very
low at Hawarden. All the members or
the family have been called there.
The meeting of the Society oS. the
Potomac at Fredericksburg , Va. , ended I
in a banquet Senator W. J. Sewell ,
of New Jersey , was elected president „
and Washington City was selected as
the next place of meeting.
The military affairs committee of the
senate has concluded consideration of
tne military academy appropriation r
bill.
e
Simon Welch , a miserly farmer living
near Bismarck , N. D. , was found murd
ered at his home. The house nad been
robbed.
General Wade , who was directed to
proceed to the northeastean Cheyenne
Indian agency at Tongue River , Mon
tana , and investigate the reports that
the Indians had the Mesyiah craze and
intended to rise against the whites ,
has telegraphed the adjutant general
that he could find no reason to antici
pate trouble.
American Bullet Believed to Have Beach
ed Filipino Leader.
HIS HORSE COVERED WITH BLOOD
Blajor Marchwith Detachment of Thirty-
Third Regiment , Overtaken Insurgent
Tarty After n Long Pursuit Through
the Rain.
VIGAN , Luzon , via Manila , June 3.
Major March , with his detachment
of the Thirty-third regiment , over
took what is believed to have been
Aguinaldo's party on May 19 at La
Gat , about 100 miles northeast of VI-
gan. The Americans killed or wound
ed an officer , supposed to be Agui
naldo , whose body was removed by
his followers. Aguinaldo had 100
men , Major March 125.
The American commander reached
.
Laboagan , whither Aguinaldo had
made h'is headquarters since March 6 ,
on May 7. Aguinaldo had fled seven
hours before , leaving all the beaten
trails and traveling through the for
est , along the beds of streams. To
ward evening , May 19 , Major March
struck Aguinaldo's outpost about a
mile outside of La Gat , killing four
Filipinos and capturing two. From
the latter he learned that Aguinaldo
had camped there for the night , al
though exhausted and half starved.
Major March's men entered La Gat
on the run. They saw the Insurgents
scattering Into the bushes or over the
.plateau. A thousand yards beyond
the town , on the mountain side , the
figures of twenty-five Filipinos , dressed -
* ed in white , with their leader on a
gray horse , were silhouetted against
the sunset. The Americans fired a vol
ley and saw the officer drop from his
horse. His followers fled , carrying
the body.
The Americans , on reaching the
spot , cauglt the horse , which was
richly saddled. Blood from a badly
wounded man was on the animal and
on the ground. The saddle bags contained -
tained Aguinaldo's diary and some
private papers , including proclama
tions. One of these was addressed :
"To the Civilized Nations. " It pro
tested against the American occupa
tion of the Philippines. There were
also found copies of Senator Bever-
idge's speech , translated into Spanish ,
nd entitled "The Deathknell of the
Filipino People. "
Major March , believing that the Fil
ipinos i had taken to a river which is
a tributary to the Chlco , followed it
for two days , reaching Tiao , where he
learned that a party of Filipinos had
descended the river May 20 on a raft ,
with the body of a dead or wounded
man upon a litter , covered with palm
leaves.
1c There Major March reviewed his
command , shoeless and exhausted , and
picked out twenty-four of the freshest
|
est men , with whom he beat the sur
rounding country for six days longer ,
but without finding any trace of the
insurgents. The Americans pushed
on and arrived at Aparri May 29.
The officer shot was either Agui
naldo or his adjutant , and as the horse
was richly caparisoned it is a fair
presumption that it was Aguinaldo.
DEARTH OP PRETORIA NEWS.
Concensus of Opinion that the Boers \Vill
Surrender.
LONDON , June 4. 4 a. m. There is
no direct news from Pretoria of later
date than Thursday evening. General
French's cavalry were then at Irene ,
eight miles south of Pretoria , and firing
was heard there. Lord Roberts' mes-
bage about secondary operations else-
Vliere and the situation at Johannes
burg , dated at Orange Grove , a farm
four miles northeast of Johannesburg ,
show that on Saturday at 9:30 : p. m.
he was twenty-five miles from Preto
ria.
ria.The
The correspondents with Lord Rob
erts have not got through a line about
the opera lions after the occupation of
Johannesburg. Official messages con
tinue to come through , but press tele
grams arc held up , probably to avoid
helr giving even a hint as to what may
be the pending operations. From the
other side and their followers through
"Loiirenzo Marquez comes a mass of
statements , some contradictory , others
obviously improbable , but all purport
ing to be facts.
Boring Artesian Wells.
PIERRE , S. p. , June 4. S. A. Coch-
rane , slate engineer of irrigation , has
returned from bully county , where he
located sites for two artesian wells in
Pearl township. It is expected to have
the wells flowing before winter. An
other well is being sunk in Sully coun
ty on the ranch of C. D. Banton , east
of Onida , and the wells just located
will make four for the county. The
well sunk last year on the King ranch ,
near Onida , has demonstrated that the
artesian flow can be secured in that
county in sections where the different
geological surras have demonstrated
by theory that such wells could not be
secured.
Delia Fox is Insune.
NEW YORK , June 4. Delia May
Fox , the well known actress , was com
mitted by Justice McAdam in the su
preme court today to the insane asy
lum at Wave Crest , Astoria , L. I. , on
the petition of her brother , William
H. Fox , and on the evidence of Drs.
,
Austin Flint , jr. , and Edward D. Fish
er , which showed that she is laboring
under delusions.
Rich Zinc Strike in Kansas.
GALENA , Kan. , June 3. What is
represented to be the rickest jack strike
ever made is reported from one of the
properties of the Combination Zinc
T
Mining company's properties. At a
depth of sixty-two feet drillers on the
Sadie Bell shaft ran into 25 per cent
jack and are said to have gone through
ten feet solid.
Ncely I * : pcrs are Signed.
NEW YorlK , June 4. Governor
,
Roosevelt has signed the Neely extra
dition papers and they weie forwarded
to Washington tonight/
INDIA'S DEPLORABLE CONDITION.
Louis Klopsch Makes Statement of
Scenes In England's Dependency.
BOMBAY , June 3. Louis Klopsch
of New York , publisher of the Chris
tian Herald , who arrived here May
34 and started at once on a tour of
the famine stricken districts , has re
turned , after traveling through the
most severely , smitten portions of the
Bombay presidency , Including Gujer-
rat and Barolda. He makes the fol
lowing statement regarding his obser
vations :
"Everywhere I met the most shock
ing and revolting scenes. The famine
camps have been swept by cholera and
smallpox. Fugitives , scattering in all
directions and stricken in flight , were
found dying in the fields and roadside
ditches. The numbers at one relief
station were increasing at the rate of
10,000 per day.
"At Godhera there were 3,000
deaths from cholera within four days ,
and at Dohad 2,500 in the same period.
The hospital death rate at Godhera
and Dohad was 90 per cent. The con
dition of the stricken simply beggars
description. Air and water were im
pregnated with an intolerable stench
of corpses. At Ahmedabad the deolh
rate In the poor house was 10 per
cent. Every day I saw new patients
placed face to face with corpses. In
every fourth cot there was a corpse.
"The thermometer read 115 in the
shade. Millions of flies hovered
around the uncleaned dysentery pa-
tients. I visited the smallpox and
cholera wards at Viragam. All the
patients were lying on the ground ,
there being no cots. Otherwise their
condition was fair.
"I can fully verify the reports that
the vultures , dogs and jackals are de
vouring the dead. Dogs have been
seen running about with children's
limbs in their jaws.
"The government is doing its best ,
but the native oiriclals are hopelessly
and heartlessly inefficient. Between
the famine , the plague and the chol
era the condition of Bombay presi
dency is now worse than it has been
at any previous period in the nine
teenth century. Whole families have
been blotted out. The spirit of the
people has been broken and there may
be ' something still worse to come
when the monsoon breaks. "
MARCH TO GATES OP PEKIN.
Ariuicd Bodies of Seven. Nations Will De
mand Admission to the City.
TIEN TSIN , June 4. A special train
started for Pekin this afternoon with
the following forces :
Americans , seven officers and fifty-
six men.
British , three officers and seventy-
two men !
Italians , three officers and thirty-
nine men.
French , three officers and seventy-
two men.
Russian , four officers and seventy-
one men.
Japanese , two officers and twenty-
four men.
The foreign contingent also took
with it five quick-firing guns.
It is rumored that foreign troops will
be opposed at the first gate of the Chi
nese capital , outside the wall.
Promotions in the volunteer army :
All of the Thirty-first infantry Ma
jor Lloyd M. Brett , to be lieutenant
colonel ; Captain C. P. Stivers , to be
major ; First Lieutenant Benjamin
Stark , jr , . to be captain ; Second Lieutenant -
tenant Wilford Twyman , to be first
lieutenant ; also Sergeant D. W.
Stiong , company A , Thirty-fifth infan-
try , to be second lieutenant.
ST. LOUIS SUNDAY RECORD.
Dynamite Explosion Stops Car Line and
Kills Bystander.
ST. LOUIS , Mo. , June 4. A riot of
mall proportions , during the progress
of. Afhich a boy was fatally shot and a
dynamite explosion marred what would
have otherwise have been an unevent
ful Sabbath. As a car on the lower
Grove line of the St. Louis Transit
company was passing the corner of
Twenty-eighth and Calhoun streets a
crowd of strike sympathizers began
throwing rocks at it. An unknown man
leaned from one of the windows of
the car and fired a shot from a revol-
ver toward the unruly crowd. The bill-
let sped over the heads of the mob and
found lodgment in the breast of Peter
Frank , a 16-year-old boy who was sit
ting in the doorway of his father's
house , an interested spectator of the
demonstration. A detachment of police
dispersed the rioters and carried young
Frank to the city hospital. The physi
cians say that the wound will prove
fatal.
Kruger Jfe.ir the Border.
LOUREN20 MARQUEZ , June 3.
Saturday , President ivruger was still at
Machadodorp , about half way between
Pretoria and the Portuguese frontier ,
on the railroad between the Transvaal
capital and Delagoa bay. Boer com
mands totaling about'10,000 men held
Thursday all the position and hills
around Pretoria. Another large com
mand was at Bronkhurst's spruit , about
fifty miles from Pretoria , on the rail
road leading to Delagoa bay.
Hoc r E ivoys at Cleveland.
CLEVELAND , O. , June 4. The Boer
envoys arrived here at 11 o'clock to
night from Buffalo. They were met at
the train by a big reception committee
and delegation of citizens on foot and
in carriages and headed by a baud
passed through the principal downtown
streets. Tomorrow evening the en
voys will address a mass meeting at
the Gray's armory.
Fatal Wreck at Lima.
LIMA , O. , June 3. This afternoon
about 3 o'clock as an-eastbound freight
train on the Lake Erie & Western
road was running at full speed , about r
eighteen miles this side of Sandusky
City , the tires came off of one of the
driving wheels , ditching the engine
and piling about twenty cars on top e *
of it. Fireman Enoch Bowsher and
c
Head Brakeman J. W. Purtell , who
were in the engine , were crushed to
death , and Engineer Harry Bell had vIs
a leg broken and was seriously hurt
internally. The men killed arid En- s'
gineer Bell live here.
Congress Will Ask Paris Commissioner
for Monthly Eeport.
SECRETARY KAY TO CE CUSTODIAN
Dlabanemotits and Appropriations for
Uncle Sam's Foreign Exhibit to Be
Doubly Protected.
WASHINGTON , June 2. Represent
tative Levy of New York today intro
duced the following bill in the house :
'That on and after the passage of
this act the power vested in the com
missioner general of the United States
to the Paris exposition of 1900 to em
ploy experts and other necessary offlt
cers or clerks and to disburse approt
prlatlons incident to the participation
of the United States in said exposition
is hereby transferred to the secretary
of state , who shall make such appont-
ments and disburse such money as may
be now or hereafter appropriated.
'The commissioner general for the
United States to the Paris exposition
of 1900 is hereby directed to render a
monthly report to the secretary of
state of the number of employes , their
occupation and salaries. That the re
port authorized under the act of June
30 , 1899 , giving the results of the expo
sition , shall be prepared under the di
rection of the secretary of state. "
S. H. H. CLARK PASSES AWAY.
Well Known Railroad Man Dies at Ahe-
vlllr , North Carolina.
OMAHA , June 2. S. H. H. Clark , a
director of the Missouri Pacific Rail
road company , its former vice presl
dent and general manager , first vice
president of the Texas & Pacific and
the International & Great Northern ,
and formerly president and general
manager of the Union Pacific , died
yesterday at Asheville , N. C. Mr.
Clark had been ailii for several
years and since the reorganization of
the Union Pacific road had remained
In retirement at his residence at St.
Louis. j He was advised to go to Ashe
ville early In the spring , but his rela
tives and friends felt that the end
was near. He passsd away in the
presence of his wife and son. Mr.
Clark was In his 68th year.
Batik Robbers Arrested.
CHICAGO , June 2. Three men , said
to be known to the police all over the
United States and Canada as expert
safe blowers , were arrested in their
apartments at Ogden avenue and Ash
land boulevard today , after a hard
struggle. The men under arrest are
Frank Dwyer , alias Rutledge , of On
tario , Canada , wno has served time at
Canon City , Colo. , for safe robbery ;
Thomas Jens and Fred Harris. The
men are wanted for the alleged rob-
bery of two banks at Aurora , a town
near Toronto , Canada , where they are
said to have secured § 900 , and several
thousand dollars worth of mining
stock.
Hfcxlco's Ciipltnl Fears 1'lngue.
CITY OF MEXICO , June 2. The
president of the republic , at the in
stance of the board of health , has au
thorized additions to the general sani
tary code of Mexico , with a view to
,
prevent the introduction of the bubonic
plague. Any vessels carrying persons
who are plague-stricken or any vessel
that in the last ten days has touched
at a port where plague exists is to go
into quarantine off Vera Cruz if approaching
preaching the gulf ports , or off Acapulco -
pulco if approaching the Pacific coast.
The quarantine is to continue up to
ten days and all wearing apparel and
effects are to be disinfected.
Revenue Stamp Fraud.
NEW YORK , June 2. Behind the ar
rest of three young men in Brooklyn ,
the police believe is a revenue stamp
swindle of proportions. The men are
George and Charles Morgan and Wil
liam Brower. They were arrested as
suspicious characters , and in a fur
nished room which they recently rent
ed was found a large number of can t
celed and uncanceled revenue stamps
ranging in denomination from 10 cents t
to $10. The detectives asserted that
some of the stamps had been freed of
the cancellation mark.
Is Reorganizing : Militia.
FRANKFORT , Ky. , June 2. Gover
nor Beckham this afternoon issued an
order mustering out ten companies of
the state guard. All except two of
them are located in mountain towns
and were among those mustered into
service during the political excitement
just before and immediately following
the state election last fall. It is un
derstood that a number of other com
panies are also to be disbanded , as
the governor holds that the various
regiments now have double their quota
of companies in them.
Christians Murdered Daily.
LONDON , June 2. The Pekin cor
respondent of the Times , telegraphing
Wednesday , says : "The damage to the
railroad is estimated at 30,000. The
government supports rather than con
demns the 'Boxers. ' Not one has been
arrested yet. No foreigner has been
seriously injured , though murders of
native Christians are reported daily
from the country. " fl
a
German Sugar Trust's Work. it
MADGEBURG , Prussia , June 2. As fi
the German Sugar trust starts operaei
tions today the refineries have withci
drawn all their offers from the mara
kets. There will be no further sales t
for twelve days , then the trust will t
fix the prices for home trade. ii
Hare antl Smith illade Brlsadier-j.
WASHINGTON , June 2. The presi S.
dent today appointed Colonel Luther
H. Hare of the Thirty-third voranteer
infantry ( captain Seventh cavalry ) in
and Colonel J. H. Smith of the Sev
enteenth infantry , to be brigadier gen
erals of volunteers , in recognition of
their distinguished services in the
campaign in the Philippines. This ac
tion fills the only vacancies in the
volunteer brigadier rank. They were
kept open in order to permit the pres
ident to bestow the appointments upon
specially deserving officers in the
field ll
MUST fIGHT FOR THE PLACE.
British Troop * Not let In Pretoria , a
Has IJccn Announced.
LONDON , June 1. The following
dispatch from Lord Roberts has been
received at the War ifllce here :
"JOHANNESBURG , May 31. 2 P
m. Her majesty's forces are now in
possession of Johannesburg and the
j British flag floats over the government
, buildings. i "
The War office has from Lord Rob
erts a dispatch dated Germlston , May
30 , 9 p. m. , saying : The brunt of the
fighting * yesterday fell upon Ian Ham-
received for the sale of tickets. Fred
already II mentioned , to work around to
the t west of Johannesburg in support
of French's cavalry , which was di
rected to go north near the road lead
ing J to Pretoria. I have not heard
from French yet , but Hamilton , in a
report which has just reached me ,
states that about 1 o'clock in the aft
ernoon he found his way blocked by
the t enemy , strongly posted on some
kopjes and ridges three miles south-
of the Rand. They have two heavy
guns and several field guns and pom
poms. Hamilton forthwith attacked.
The right was led by the Gordons ,
who after capturing one extremity of
the ridge wheeled around and worked
along it until after dark , clearing it
of the enemy , who fought most ob- ;
stinately. The One Hundred and
Fourth led on the ether flank and ;
would not be denied. The chief share !
in the action , as in the casualties ,
fell to the Gordons , whose gallant ad
vance excited the admiration of all. ,
Lord Cecil Manners , son of the duke
of Rutland , and wiio is acting as a
newspaper correspondent , was among
the prisoners captured by the Boers
during Lord Roberts' advance May 29.
SMALLPOX ON BOARD MEADE.
Reaon tor Otis' Delay In Landing is
Telegraphed to Washington.
WASHINGTON , June 1. The War
department received notice from General - >
eral Shatter today of the arrival atj
San Francisco of General Otis and the ;
existence of smallpox aboard the
(
transport Mcade , which accounts for'
the failure of General Otis to land1
promptly upon his arrival in San' ;
Francisco. General Shafter's dispatch ,
which is dated yesterday , is as follows - '
lows :
"General Otis arrived this evening'-
in good health. On account of several ;
cases of smallpox on board he will' '
not be able to land for several days.j
He will take first train east after !
landing. "
General Otis will probably come direct - ;
rect to Washington , and will go thence ;
to Rochester , N. Y. , in season to be :
present at the demonstration which is.
being arranged in his honor by the
citizens of that place for June 15. The'
general will be given an extended1
leave of absence by the War tlepart-i
ment and w-hen he has thoroughly re
cuperated from the prostrating labors
of his position in the Philippines he
will , it is said , be assigned to the com
mand of the Department of tha Lakes ,
with headquarters at Chicago.
ANOTHER ST. LOUIS TRAGEDY.
Cnion Ulan Shoots n Policeman and Is
Killed by an Officer.
ST. LOUIS , June 1. Albert Koenig ,
a union man , emptied the-contents of
a shotgun into the body of Police Offi
cer Crane and was himself instantly
killed i by a bullet from the revolver of
Officer Baher on Broadway , near the
Southern electric power house late to
night.
From the meagre information re
ceived by Inspector Lally at the Four
Courts at midnight it seems that Koe-
nig was walking back and forth in
front ; of the power house with a shotgun -
gun on his shoulder , declaring that he
was a union man and defying the tran
sit and its non-union
company - em-
ployes. Officer Crane approached him
and asked him to take his shotgun
home. Koenig replied in vehement
terms < , and when the officer grappled
with him in an effort to disarm him
the man brought the weapon to his
shoulder and , aiming it at Crane ,
pulling the trigger. The officer sank
to the ground unconscious.
Maher was near by and running up
to < Koenig demanded his surrender.
Koenig made a threatening movement
and Maher shot him. Crane is at the
Alexian Brothers' hospital dying.
SENATE AIDS ST. LOUIS FAIR.
Effort to Cut Dovrn Five Million Dollar
Appropriation Fails.
WASHINGTON , June 1 At the con
clusion of a session lasting eight hours
the senate this evening passed the sun
dry civil appropriation bill , which has
been under consideration for nearly a
week. The amendment providing for
an appropriation of § 5,000,000 for the
Louisiana purchase exposition to be
held in St. Louis in 1903 was contin
ued In the bill. An effort was made
by Senator Morgan to reduce the
amount to be appropriated to $3,000-
000 , but it was unsuccessful.
Is Left In Statn Quo.
WASHINGTON , June 1 The senate
committee on privileges and elections
has reached an agreement with the
friends of Senator v lark of Montana to
allow the senator's case to rest where
is , with the understanding that no
further steps shall be taken to have
either Mr. Clark's or Mr. Maginnis'
credentials referred to the committee ,
and : that no further action shall be
taken on the resolution of the commit
tee concerning Senator Clark'a orig
inal election.
Taylor Confirms the Report.
INDIANAPOLIS , Ind. , June 1. W.
. Taylor , who is at Martinsville to
day , confirmed the report that a war
rant had been issued for his arrest
connection with the Goebel murder.
Mr. Taylor said he received private
advice to this effect early today. He
refused to speak in detail concerning
the affair further than to state that
the latest developments will have no
effect on his future plans.
He will come to this city from Mar-
tinsburg tomonow. It is believed
that an attempt will be insde to serve
the warrant in this city.
tn
< ' H
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throat and begins. V Li
his year and is still
health.
Better Blood
Better Health
If you don't feel wall today you can be
made to feel better by matins your blood
better. Hood's Sarsnparllla Is the great
pure blood maker. That Is bow It cures
that tired feeling , pimples , > , saw
rheum , Bcrofula and catarrh. Get a bottle
and begin taking It
of this great medicine
at once and see how quickly It will bring
your blood up to the Good Health point.
Hood's SaFsaparHIm
Is America's Greatest Blood Medicine.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 M M |
Wood pulp paper is used in military-
clothing.
Enginrs say that a 100-foot wide
canal , 12 to 15 feet deep , between
Lake Superior and Grand Forks , N. y
D. , Is an egineering possibility. V
Arthur Rehan , brother of Miss Ada
Rchan and Mrs. Oliver Doud Byron ,
died in Brooklyn , N. Y. , aged 38. He
had managed many of Augustm Daly's
road companies.
A Vienna editor who went to the
last Paris exposition in a fiacre has
reached the present show in an auto
mobile and promises to visit the next
one in a flying machine.
Lompoc , in Santa Barbara county ,
California , grows mustard for the
whole nation. In that region 2,000
acres are cultivated to the seed , the
industry employing about 200 farmers.
At San Francisco , CaL , Federal
Judge Morrow issued an injunction
preventing the fedcral and local health
authorities from discriminating
against the Chinese in the matter of
precautions against the bubonic
plague.
Mrs. Capron , widow of the Rough
Rider captain who wns killed in Cuba ,
will sail for the Philippines in May
to do Red Cross work. Since the
death of her husband she has inter
ested herself in the welfare of dis
charged soldiers , securing employment
for many or them.
The German torpedo flotilla is now
proceeding slowly down the itnine , and
will arrive at Rotterdam June 9.
of Kedleston , telegraphs that good rain
has fallen in Mysore , and that scat
tered showers have fallen elsewhere.
There are now 5,730,000 persons in re
ceipt of relief.
Itlilk Tickets and Microbe * .
Health Commissioner Wilkie of Oshkosh -
kosh has the courage of his convic
tions. Convinced that disease is
spread by milk tickets , he has consid
erably restricted their use by issuing
an order requiring all dealers to use
a ticket only once. After that it is to
be safely destroyed.
Studied n n lie Foutrtit.
Congressman John M. Allen of Mis
sissippi , , though he served as a lad in
the , Confederate army , did not allow
the . war to interrupt his studies en
tirely. He was just out of school and
carried everywhere a pocket Latin dic
tionary , practicing Latin composition
by every camp fire. Afterward he en
tered Cumberland university.
UTT CARBIDE.
We are the Nebraska selling agents
for the Union Carbide Co. , manufac
turers of Calcium Carbide for making
Acetylene Gas. Order your supplies
from us. Pacific Storage and Ware
house Co. , 912-914 Jones St. , Omaha ,
Stircl
Tfie WonUer r
or tbo Age
No Boiling No Cooking
It Stiffens the Goods
It Whitens the Goods
It polishes the Goods
all garments fresh and crlso
* * when first bought new.
Try a Sample Package
YouMJ llk It If you try it. _ j _ .
You'll buy It If you try It.
You'll utfe It If you try It.
Hold by all Grocerm.
Save'Mabels
HIRES
Kootbeer
ThefaTorite
summer
drink
W. N. U.-OMAHA.
No. 23-1900