The Nebraska advertiser. (Nemaha City, Neb.) 18??-1909, July 16, 1897, Image 2

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    THE NEBRASKA ADVERTISER
VT. VT. HANDKHH, I'nlilUhar.
NEMAHA.
NEBRASKA.
V4tA4..4.A4.AX4.AXAJ.a.J.AXJ.XJ.
JULY J 897.
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THE WORLD AT LAUGH.
Summary of tho Dally Nowu.
"WASHINGTON NOTKS.
Phkhidknt MoKini.kv mid party re
turned to Washington on tho th from
Canton, O. Tho president waw ovi
dcntly fatigued from IiIh journey and
miJVcrcd from tin hen L
Tim navy department wantH tho
president to lly IiIh personal (lag over
the white house, to denote his pre.se neo
in Washington, instead of tho Ameri
can lltlg.
This treasury department has issued
n eirenlar warning people of a danger
ous counterfeit of the SJ silver certifi
cate, series of 18".)0, which recently hiw
been placed in circnlation. The new
counterfeit bears cheek letter "B." It
consists of two pieces of paper which
Hpllt easily. The note has an oily fool
ing, because of the soft paper. Tho
portraits of Fulton and Morse, are very
faint.
Sknatoh Ihham 0. Haiuuh. of Ten
nessee, died at Washington on tho 8th, ,
.... C
in his 80th year.
Tin: war department has made the.
annual allotments of money to provide
arms and equipments for the militia in
tho various states. Kansaa receiver
88,020.1'J; Missouri, 8H,U1.-H; Okla
homa, S'J,87!i.0!i. Tho total appropria
tion made for tho wholo country was
8100,000.
l'ltoinr.NT McICini.kv has pardoned
Robert. M. Allen, sentenced to five i
years in the Missouri penitentiary for ,
mall robbery.
Mil. Dinoi.ky has announced that tho
conference committeo would give no i
hearing to anyone on the tnriff bill.
Those Interested in article, affected by
tho bill may, however, submit any In
formation they may wish to have con
Hidered in writing.
Tine commissioner of pensions has
before him the eases of about 100 veter
ans dismissed from the pension office
during tho bust administration and who
Keek reinstatement. They are being
carofully considered, and where possi
ble and circumstances warrant it rein
statement will be made.
Tin: ollleial announcement has been
mado at Washington thatW. tS. F.dens,
of Illinois, will be appointed commissioner-general
of immigration to suc
ceed Herman Stump, of Maryland.
Tin: order of President Cleveland re
ducing the number of pension ageneies
from 18 to nine will, it is said, bo soon
revoked by President MeKinley.
Tin: government's . I uly report gives
the percentages of condition of lead
ing crops as follows: Winter wheat,
81. 'J; spring wheat, 01. '2; corn, blM;
oats, 87.T; tobacco, 78.5. The average
condition of corn in Missouri is 02; in
Kansas, 00; in Nebraska, 8'J; in Texas,
101.
CJKNKKA1. NICWS.
"Wii.mam Dimtv, a linotype operator
employed in the comioslng room of tho
Philadelphia Inquirer, set in six days
the enormous amount of 100,!!00 ems of
nonpareil type, ills average per hour
was 0,1112 ems.
Six suicides in New York city on tho
10th were due directly to the heat.
A minkk named Samuel Hrowit and
his wife were both burned to death In
bed at Pittsburgh, Pa., through a lire
caused by a lamp explosion.
A 8i'i:ciAi. from .lellieo, Tenn., said
that there was great destitution among
tho miners in that region, many of
them having largo families and not
knowing where tho next meal was
coming from. Some of tho men have
had little work for nearly two years,
and, as a consequence, they have noth
ing laid up for a rainy day.
At a freedmen's picnic near Ilaydeu,
I. T., Will Nave, Lillian Stewart and
a Kansas negro, whoso name is be
lieved to be Condor, were killed by
Paul Elliott, a negro rulllan, who cs
cuped., Thomas II. Mmtmrr was shot and
killed by ,Iaeob F. Harris at Lexing
ton, Ky., tho other day. Harris found
Mrs. Harris sitting on Merritt's lap in
Grat.'s park and tho pair kissing one
unothcr.
Mils. S. A. Kkii.ns died of a broken
heart at Marion, Ind. Her fbur chil
dren had recently died of dysentery.
Louis Wai.ti:ii8, a wealthy young
ranchman of Kendall county, Tex., at
tended a dunce- lit Engel's store. While
(lnncinghis foot slipped unci ho struck
his heud against a board. His neck
was broken and ho died instantly.
Swimming parties and trips to China
town were said to bo proving very
uttraotivo to the Christian Endonvorera
ut San Francisco.
Akhonait MoEwen made a balloon
ascension at Hoiiton Harbor, Mich., on
the 10th and when 600 feet in the air
his balloon collapsed, his parachute
failed to work and he came down on a
house top. He was probably fatally
injured.
Tim swell jockey club at I'aris has
blackballed (Jeorge (loiild's brothur-ln-law,
Comic de Castollano. There were
188 votes cast against him. Two would
have been enough.
Ciiaiu.kh II. Si'KINokii, a commercial
traveler, was killed at Dallas, Tex., by
.lames A. Wright, a contractor, who
alleged that Springer had alienated
the airections of Mrs. Wright.
On unlocking his combined meatshop
and grocery the other morning Onstav
Stalb, of Tomkinsvllle, L. I., saw a
man packing articles. At Staib's ap-
proach the thief stepped into a large
refrigerator. Staib locked him in and
notified the police. It was a hot day,
and after the man had been in a small
cell for an hour he asked to be put back
in the ice box.
Johkimi Wihhhiiaimch was arrested the
other day at New York charged with
bringing homo food, oooking and eat
ing it himself and leaving his wife and
two-year-old child to starve.
I'iiii.i.ii' TAsni.ijr, a Dane conviqted
by the United States court of killing
John Handurs, a United States soldier,
at llttachita, a year ago, was hanged
at Tucson, Ariz., on the 0th. He made
jocular remarks, danced a jig and then
said, "Lot'ergo, Gallagher."
Whim: a gang of workmen were ex
cavating on the line of street railway
at Lexington, Ky., one of them struck
I what appeared to be a piece of pipe,
but which proved to be a 01-pound
dynamite cartridge. A fearful explo
sion followed, and lire of the six no
grocs in the gang were blown to atoms.
Tiikiik were live deaths and 'JO or
more prostrations in the two Kansas
Citya on the 0th. In HU Louis the
death lint reached ten; Chicago re
ported 1ft deaths and ten onsrs critical.
Six died from the heat at Cincinnati;
three at Lafayette, Ind.; seren at New
lork; two at Indianapolis, Ind., bo
Hlde ,re CT ,' l,ro,tr'ltion
JISVM uIImmuiI fill nl Wk (! flBLAtl llf AWlk
con.sidorod fatal. Fatal cases were
also reported from other cities.
Somh time ago Attlcus Thompson, a
1 negro, attempted to outrage a white
' woman at Forest, Miss., but was frus
trated in his designs. He eluded ar
rest until the 0th, when he was cap
tured by a mob of unknown men and
! shot to death.
Tnre bodies of a mnn and woman, ap
' parently dying, lying side by side on
a raft of lops moored to the shore near
I the village of California, was found a
I few miles above Cincinnati. Near the
raft the dead body of an infant was
I taken from the water. The man and
, woman were alive but unable to speak.
1 Both their wrists were cut and bleed
ing and other wounds indicated an at
tempt at suicide.
At Cincinnati on the 8th there were
two fatal eases of sunstroke and Louis
ville, Ky., reported one death and
many prostrations. Nine children
died suddonly at New York through
the heat. Two deaths also occurred at
Indianapolis.
At Darlington, Ok., the seat of the
agency of the Cheyenne and Avapahoe
Indians, over !f,000 red men and women
were reported in secret council and
people near them fear trouble. On
July 1 a law was passed by the late
legislature prohibiting polygamy
among the Indians and an outbreak
may occur over the enforcement of tho
now law.
Fm:i) Hoyai., the professional high
diver, dived from a car on tho Ferris
wheel at Chicago the other night after
It had reached a height of 125 feet.
He miscalculated tho distance and in
turning Into the not used In breaking
the fall struck on his hips. Physicians
summoned stated that he had received
a severe concussion of the spine and it
was feared he might not recover.
Mits. Jam: (.Skokcik, of Hot Springs,
Ark., became partially demented,
caused by tho extreme hot weather on
tho 7th, und jumped Into a well !J0 feet
deep, but was rescued by neighbors.
The reason she gate for the act was
that she wanted to keep cool.
A I'liKioiir train on the Pittsburgh &
Lake Erie railway was derailed at
Falston, Pa,, and ten cars were precip
itated Into the Eric river. Forty
tramps were on the train and one dead
and three Injured were taken out and
six others were reported missing.
Font deaths from the heat took place
at Chicago on the (1th.
Tiikiii: were five fatalities from the
heat at Cincinnati on the 0th.
John Scott Omvku, a deputy sheriff
from Los Angeles, Cal., was hold by
the Coney Island, N. Y., police court
on the charge of abducting lfi-yonr-old
Stella Robb, of Brooklyn, and was put
In the prison van to go to jail. When
the door of the van was opened lie tot
tered to the entrance and oil. lie had
tried to puncture his hcurt with a
scarf pin. He will recover.
Tin: intense heat at Chicago on tho
8th caused four deaths und 'Xi prostra
tions, four of tho latter be lig serious
und probubly futul. Six mCle prison
ers in tho Hridewoll went ir sane also
from tho hot weather and wove sent to
the asylum.
l)n. L. A. limtGKit, one of tic most
prominent Kansas City, Mo., physi
cians, was shot on tho Sth Vy John
Sohlogel, u grocer. Ho lived only 15
minutes nfterwards. Sehlege' said
that lie killed Dr. Merger beeai"o tho
latter had committed u rupo oi Mrs.
Sohlogel, but tho story of acrli'iinul
assault upon Mrs. Sehlogol v?k dis
credited by friends of tho dead mnu.
Fiiank Wa M.Kit, the "Flvlng Dutch
man," won the 100-mllo bicycle race at
Manhattan Bench, N. Y., on the 10th,
but was disqualified by the referee on
account of being illegally paced in tho
concluding lap and the race and tho
purse of 8.r)0 went to the second man,
Thomas A. Barnaby, of lloston. Tho
century was run In 4 hours, fil minutes
and 0 seconds.
Tin: Christian Endeavorers at San
Francisco have chosen Nashville,
Tenn., as tho place of meeting in ISO4?.
r,....1.... t 4,. 1... t n.. I .1 ...... C...
1000. The selection of the convention
city for 1800 was not made.
A tksi:mi:nt house in Providence, U.
I., was blown to pieces and burned by
an explosion of gasoline the other
evening and two children were fatally
injured. I
J "-"
Two men near Laeintn, N. M.. took
anold woman, whom thevthouirhthad
bewitched a belle of the neighborhood,
and fastened a lasso to her and then
started their horses and she was
dragged to death and horribly man-
gled.
Finn destroyed part of the Viles fc
Kobbins' packing establishment at Chi
cago the other night. Loss, 800,000.
Ai.itr.itr M. WiNi:inti:.VNi:it wa.s ar
rested at Iteatrice, Neb., on the 10th on
the charge of having brutally beaten
his 17-year-old stepdaughter with a
buggy whip and otherwise ill-treated
the girl. At midnight a mob of 100
masked men entered the jail, took
Winebrcnner out und, after stripping
him and giving him a severe horse
whipping, coated him with tar and
feathers and sent him back to jail.
Nomina particularly new marked
the beginning of the miners' strike on
the 11th. At the meeting of the United
Labor league at Pittsburgh, Pa., f out
of 72 labor organisations were repre
Hontcd. Resolutions were adopted
pledging financial support to the
strikers.
Ci;nti'.iu"kit dimes in large numbers
are being circulated In St. Louis.
MlH.iTu.MK Lakhkn tried to commit
suicide at Omaha, Neb., on tho 8th by
tearing open the arteries of her left
wrist with a hairpin. She was uncon
scious when found from tho lss of
blood, and only prompt action on the
part of those who discovered hor saved
lior life. "I wanted to go to Heaven,
and that is why I did it," she said. Tho
nuthoritieseannot understand her cas.
Tin: drought which has prevailed
around Jackson, Tenn., for two months
still continued on the 8th. Tho gar
dons were burned up and ruined and
unless it rains very soon the corn crop
will be a failure. Tho cotton crop waa
reported failing daily.
DiMttNO a severe storm the house of
S. E, North, near Larmore, N. I)., was
struck by lightning and North, his
wife and three-year-old child were
killed. The only member of the fam
ily that escaped was a 15-months-old
child.
Tun gold mining convention at Den
ver, Col., selected Salt Lake City for
holding the next meeting. A minority
roport on the 0th declaring for the free
coinage of silver at sixteen to one waa
laid on the table.
ADDITIONAL IIISI'ATCIIKS.
Edwin J. IlKisand his wife took re
fuge under a tree near Delhi, N. Y.,
from a shower and were struck dead
by lightning.
Hy reason of the breaking of the con
necting rod attached to the governor,
the 10-ton lly wheel of a pair of Corliss
compound engines went to pieces and
wrecked tho plant and building of the
street railway company at Tacoma,
Wash. It meant a stoppaire of tho
lines operated perhaps a week and no
electric light.
Tin: Santa Fe Railroad Co. has put
in 1,000 new cars to help tke care of
Oklahoma's wheat and many towns
can hardly get enough ears to remove
the crop. It was estimated the crop
yield will not fall less than 80,000,000
bushels.
Tiikiik was a wreck on the Frisco
railroad at Lindeuwood, near St. Louis,
which smashed in tho front end of a
locomotive, completely demolished a
caboose, broke two cars into kindling
wood and scattered tho wreckage for a
distance of IU)0 feet along the track.
Only u brakeinan was slightly injured.
The wreck was caused by the train
breaking in two.
Tin: government statistician reports
the potato acreage this year S. per
cent, less than last year, and the eon
,. , : " ' . . ,
dition of tho crop 8.. b, against 00 a
year ago.
Tkk usual celebrations in commemo
ration of the buttle of the lloyne took
place in Ireland on the Pith. At Bel
fast '20,000 orangeiuen inarched in pro
cession. Everything passed oil' in an
orderly fashion.
A dispatch from Denmark on thu
12th said that an express from Bel
singor ran into a passenger train and
wrecked eight carriages, killing 10
persons and injuring 00 others, most of
the victims being of the artisan class.
An Indian mimed Tiger Cat eloped
with the wife of a chief at Fort Lnu
derdnle, Flu., were followed by the
wholo tribe und caught. They were
afterwards sentenced to be fed to alli
gators and the sentence was carried
out.
Tin: senate tpok up the deficiency
appropriation bill on the l'Jth and dis
cussed Union I'aciflc railway u flairs.
A resolution was agreed to directing
the secretary of stato to secure from
our representatives abroad full Infor
mation us to the operation of postal
telegraphs, telephones and postal
savingn banks. The house met and Im
mediately adjourned out of respect to
the memory of Senutor Jlurris.
SLUMMING PARTIES.
A. Tour of Chinatown Made by tho Chrla
Hun llncloiiwirer.
San Fiiancisco, July 10. Slumming
parties through Chinatown are being
organized and are proving a source of
peculiar attraction to tho Christian
Endeavorers. Yesterday seems to have
almost touched the high water mark
of religious fervor, but It Is predicted
that by Sunday a wave of even greater
excitement will sweep orer the city.
WlUUll, union iiuru, euriiest wuniia uu-
Ilflil .1 . 1. 1 1 1 !.. I...
1""M"1 the practical results of tho
convention will bo surprising when tho
f11 c.ord is written. e;stUr.lity'8
proceedings and the Incidents of tho
Kit convention , hbvo fully demon-
htrutcd the fact tha, never before in
tnc history ot tins organization of phe-
1 n. 1,.. ,..,. ,f !4u ....,.,,..1
' ' k" " " "' '"V "
featherings been crowned with such
success, li lias required mo enoris oi
a big squad of police to keep peoplo
away from tho monster halls In which
the meetings are being held. For
more than an hour before tho time
sot for the opening of the serv
ices in the evening the streets
near Woodward's and Mechanics'
pavilion were literally packed
with men, women and children, eager
for admission, and almost before sun
down the buildings capable of accom
modating 20,000 were so crowded that
the fire authorities positively refused
to admit any more of tho endeavorers
or their friends. It is to the credit of
the police that admirable order was
maintained, and no casualty marred
the enthusiastic religious demonstra
tions. Thousands of people from tho
east poured into town yostorday, and
it Is estimated that not less than Hfi.OOO
visitors have already arrived, although
several trains are still delayed. Tho
arrangements for the convention mado '
by General Secretary Uaer, aided by
the local committees, are admirable,
and everyone is pleased.
JAPAN'S PROTEST.
Secretary SIiermiin'H Xoto Aliout
the
Ilimiilliin Inlands Not Accupted.
Washington, July 10. Japan's atti
tude toward the annexation of Hawaii
will bo more fully made known to tho
state department soon. Tho note
written by Secretary Sherman in an
swer to the Japanese protest against
annexation has not been accepted by
the Tokio government as a refutation
of the claims, and the reply which Mr.
Torn Hoshi, the Japanese minister
here, will send to the secretary of stato
will express tho dissatisfaction with
which the contentions of the United
States are viewed. No inkling con
cerning the arguments advanced to
counteract Mr. Sherman's representa
tions will be given at the Japanese
legation, where Mr. Hoshi continues
to assure those who inquire about tho
position of his government that Japan
has no designs on the Hawaiian islands.
Granting this, there is no doubt that
Japan will not allow tho islands to be
come part of the United States in ac
cordance with the provisions of tho
treaty now before the senate without
! a struggle a purely diplomatic strug- j
gle, in all probability, but one that
will be full of spice and perhaps some '
display of feeling. Tho situation be- '
tween the Tokio and Washington gov- i
! ernments has not improved, and tho
(iiuerences over me question at issuo
, may lead to a sensational rupture.
TRADE REPORT.
Only
il SI ()(IC I'll 111 Vlltllllll) of IttlslllCHH
no
cililHi; of tho i:.i'CHKlvo Heat.
Nkw Yokk, July 10. Uradstreot's re
port says:
Tliero Is only a moderate volume or trade
throughout tho country, tho more noteworthy
changes being a checked demand west and
northwest, duo to tho excessive heat, and to
storms, continued favorable reports us to tha
1 cereal and other crop prospects and diturbnnca
In industrlnlllucs, duo to the strike of about
, l'JO.000 bituminous coal miners Tho reluctanco
of "West Virginia operatives to Join in tha
strike complicates tho situation.
Tho prospects of nn early settlement of tha
tariff has strengthened tho widespread feeling
i of hopefulness that tho autumn will bring a re
vival of consumptive demand. Orders for
clothing, shoos and hardwaro for fall delivery
nro already nioro frequent at Baltimore, C'hl
, cago and Qinalia. Tho movement of dry
i goods Is cheeked by midsummer stock
I taking, but retail business In seasonable
I lines lias been stimulated by mldsum
I mer weather Tliero Is no improve
ment in demand for cotton or woolen goods,
but tho latter are higher, based on 'tho cost of
1 wool. Prices show an advance of oue-llflh of
one per cent, during June, and mark tho begin-
i ningorutum in tho outward How of tho tide
I ot prices, which continued from January 1 to
June I.
Tliero aio 'Jl.'i business failures reported
throughout tho (Jutted States this week, com
pared with --o last week, U1U in tho week last
year, i..'!) two years ago, USD threo years ago,
and as eompaied with 308 In tho first week of
July. 1HUJ.
INTRUDERS MUST GO.
A T.lst of Those to Ho Evicted from tho
CIhtoI.to Nation Sent to Indian Agent
Wisdom.
Washington, July 10 A list of
intruders, containing the heads of
families who are to bo removed from
tho Cherokee nation on tho demand of
the authorities of that tribe, has
been sent to Indian Agent Wisdom,
of the Union agency at Muskogee,
I. T. Tho agent is directed that
great euro bo exercised in tho
removal to prevent undue harshness
and to work tho least hardship
possible. Tho agent is directed to per
sonally supervise tho evictions and to
turn over to the designated otlicer of
the Cherokee nation tho improvements
from which intruders aro ejected, call
ing on tho Cherokee authorities to ap
point representatives to assist him. A
troop of cavalry will bo detailed to
bupport the government iu tho work.
SHE SPANKED FOR THE FAMILY.
The StrntiKor'n Kind OfTer AVuh In
dlKiiantly ItefiiMcd.
People never net encouragement for doiiif
the Good Samaritan act it the interests ot
tlie public, as the man decided who otTcrcd
to assist a distracted woman and ameliorate
the suirciiiiBS of a lot of people on a su
burban car.
The hoy who howls was in evidence, tho
curled darliiiK of his only own mother and
the terror of everybody else, and he had
kept the car in a state of wild excitement
and exhausted the patience of everybody, in
cluding his doting parent.
"Oil, if your father were only here!" she
had said for the fiftieth time, as she tried
vainly to tcftrain the howling terror.
At that he stopped howling long enough
to heat the air with his small shins, and the
woman on the other side of him remarked
audibly that a cage was the proper place for
savages like him.
"Johnny, dear," asked his mother, "won't
you ho a good hoy?"
Koars and kicks from Master Johnny.
"Oh, I wish your father were here to gives
you a good trouncing this very minute!" she
wailed, as she struggled with him.
Then it was that the philanthropist of the
company asserted himself. He had becn.
trying in vain to read his morning paper ever
since he started from home.
"Allow me, madam," he said, blandly. "I
nm afather myself, and I will he happy to
chastise your cherub in behalf of his absent
parent."
"Oh, no, you won't, not if I know it!"
said Johnny's mother, rising in her wrath
like a tigress. "There ain't that man living:
dare lay a finger on that hoy his own fa
ther or any other ugly catamount who
tliinks he Knows it all," and she shut off
debate by going into the next car and tak
ing the Bwcct infant with her. Chicago
Tnncs-llerald.
How It In Done.
"Up against it again!" gloomily remarked
the man who pronounces "athletic" in four
syllables.
"How's that?" asked the woman who
wears white gloves with black stitching.
"Thought 1 had a sure thing the other
day, and was thrown as usual. Was in a
bicycle stoic when a young fellow came in
to buy a cyclometer. Said his had given out
after ho had ridden "GO miles. Was trying:
for a season's iccoid, and hated to begin,
over again. Salesman said he could fix it
Took new cyclometer, fixed it on wheel, up
ended the tiling in the stoic and began to
turn. Keeled off 500 miles in no time
Thought I saw my graft. Went to guy I
know and bet him I could ride more milcsi
in a week than he could. It was to be de
cided by our cyclometeis. Bought new cy
clometer, went up in the attic and began to
turn. Stiuck a hot box at the two hundred,
und eighty-seventh mile and stuck fast
Never happened to a cyclometer before
Just my luck." liull'alo Exptess.
runtlienintles.
There arc people who tell us the distance
old Mother Eaith is from the stars, count
ing miles upon miles into millions, as tlie
distance from Neptune to Mais. The way
they throw iigiucs is awful, on the size of
the little sun spot, and how long it would
take to walk iound it if it wasn't so dcuced
ly hot. They measure the depth of the
ocean, and the distance ncioss it as wcll
get the weight in the air of a meteor, and
locate the right spot where they fell. But
astronomers and mathematicians all con
fess that they :an't get uist light the milcs
gone over by papa, when lie "totes" the cross
kid in the night. N. Y. Woild.
How to (Keep Well:
Tho Practical Exporlenco of a
St. Louis Family.
"I have used Hood's Sarsaparilla in my
family for several years and by its use
warded off sickness, lhavo four children,
and they aro all healthy and none of them
have ever had any serious sickness. We
keep ourselves well by the uso of Ilood's
Sarsapanlla " Mas F. II. Soi.i.nu, SSoO
St. Louis Avenue, St. Louis, Missouri
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Tho One Truo Wood Purifier. $1. six for $5.
Hood's Pills cure sick headache. 25c.
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V?cetcrn "Wheel "Works
CATAL9GVE FREE
Tho host lted Kopo ltoof-
lllu'lui lr.rmi.U.,riiiitiulnall
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