rwimwm HWI ,'By'iytn' u",'i,i4fiim f?T 'v ,'Yf'm' ykrr "1V"t',r,J,35'rv': "i f ' . ft K THE NEBRASKA ADVERTISER i i p - iV. W. HANDKlt, I'ublUhftr. , ' .NEMAHA, NI3MIASKA. TOPICS OF THE DAY. I'nllt llnlil tlii. Itr-rmrd. Mine. Pntli Iiiih for sonic time held tlic record for tliu lurgost mini that litis been earned In n year by a woman. Her hlghcRt total for 12 months U X 70,000. Wlu-rn CJI'ivim (Siiinn I''om. The clove Kiipply of tlie world V. produced in the iHlandH of Zanzibar and I'emba, which coiiHtitntu the principal producing territory of the Hultunulc. Truvnllmr Ipnn of IlWImp Jfinliop MeCabe, of the Methodist Episcopal church, proves from actual figures that the average t reveling ex penses of each bishop for a year are only $4G3. t Mio-rlml Mnr Ttinn 7 Vniirn. Mr. and Mrs. Klishn Ilrown, who live half a mile from Hngorstown, Ind liave bt--n married over 70 years, and arc still comparatively hearty. They tire the parents of 11 children, six ol whom arc mill alive. rrmr V iip of Knr-t PriMliin'p. The amount of lumber now used it (5,000,000,000 cubic feet for making piv er, while three times that amount, oi 16,000,000,000, is burned In stoves, lire places and furnaces, and the use ol wood in fences and for railroad ties in increasing. The forest products annually consumed in the United States arc cstimuted to be worth $1,000,000,000, nearly twice the value of the output of the mines, quarries, petroleum wells and other mineral products of the country, Tli- Kxuct A'vn of I'urto It leu. A- bulletin has lately been issued by the war department on the census of l'orto Kico, showing a population of 053,243 for that Island, which with the dependent inlands of Micquc, Culebra, Mona and Muertos, has an arcn of 3.C0C square miles. There aru but two cities in Porto Kico with a population exceeding 25,000, namely San Juan, with 32,042 inhabitants, and l'once, with 27,952. The urban pop ulation is 21.4 per cent, of the total number of inhabitants of the island. ICnnrmnii. IlHllnii(l IMmlni'im. An Idea of the enormous extent of the- railroad business Is to be gained from the report of tho Interstate Commerce commission for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1890. It states that the number of people employed "by the railroads of tho United States Is 923,024, an increase for the year of G4,4G8. The last census gave the num ber of persons in gainful occupations at 22,000,000, and this would mean that about one person in each 2t is dependent, for support directly upon the railroads. WIiimIki; lit n TrnuiPtiilnnit Clit.t. The statement of casualties in South Africa issued by the Tiritisli war ofllcc shows the tremendous cost at which the English armies have reached their present position In the' Transvaal war. The total losses ex clusive of the sick pud wounded have been 29,700, of which 21,057 were hilled in action. Those who died of wounds numbered 080; missing and prisoners, 2,089; died of disease, '1,337; invalided home, 19,277. The total loss of ef fective men is nearly 57,000, not count ing Vclensed prisoners. IiturointnttM of IS.'ly Iuto. The approach of a new century has brought forth much discussion of chronology and has served to call at tention to tho inaccuracies of early dates. 1 1 Arbuthnot, for instance, who has made a lifetime study of thorn, asserts that little credence can bo attached to any dates in England before the sixteenth century, while all the early documents of Euro pa nre regarded as unreliable down to the end of the twelfth century, when the Vatican records first begin to wear an nppearance of genuineness. S'nlrrtlnir I'nmnui Amttrlo iiih. About half the men who have been invited to act as judges in the selec tion of namcB of Americans who are entitled to the distinction of having their portraits hung: In the Hall of Varna of tho New York university hnvo already said they will serve. Among them nre the presidents of Harvard, Yale, the University of Michigan and Northwestern univer sity, Chief Justice Fuller, Grover Cleveland, Theodore Roosevelt, Charles Dudley Warner, Edward Everett Ilalu and Dr. Moses Colt Tyler. Wrltlnc u Wonmii'M II l,i. Abraham G. Dixon, an old boolc worm of Omahn, is now nt work writ ing whnt he terms a woman's Dibits. ' fti this work, which he has almost completed, the author plnces woman np nn equal footing with man. In speaking of 1i1b new Bible, Mr. Dixon nays: "What tho so-called civilized nations need is n woman's Uiblo, one that represents her as she is in tho eyes of God, and not n,s the insignifi cant sorf, not as the secondary ele ment of humanity she is pictured to bo by the orthodox creed." MET "WITH DEFEAT. Allied Forces Driven Back from the Attack on Tion Tsln. With 7.000 Troop tint Fiiriilcimr. Worn Ovcitm ht'liiH U liy n Glilinn Army of ISO,- OOII A linn lean- Ijtml (Ivor MO Klilvri, liiiiiudlui; Col. I.Imiuiu. Washington, July 17. The nnvy de partment has received olllelal con firmation from Admiral Homey of the reverse of the allied forces at Tien Tsln on the morning of the 13th. The dispatch is dated Che Eoo, July 10, and says: "Reported that allied forces at tacked native city on morning of the 13th. Russians were on the right, with Ninth Infantry and marines on the left. Losses allied forces large: Russians, 100, Including artillery col onel; Americans, over 30; Hritish, over 40; Japan, 53, including colonel; French, 25. Col. Lisouni, Ninth in fantry, killed; also Capt. Davis, mu rine corps. Capt. I-cmley, Lieuts. Hit ler and Leonards wounded. At seven in the evening allied attack on native city was repulsed with great loss. Returns yet incomplete; details not yet confirmed" The defeat of the allied forces at Tien Tsln seems to place that town in desperate straits, and if retreat to Tnku is necessitated, observers con sider that it will be likely to decide the policy of wavering viceroys. Tho departure of Admiral Seymour from Tieu Tsin, and the movement of war ships toward Shau-lIni-Kuan, on the gulf of Liaotunn, arc taken to Indi cate that HiIb route may be adopted for an advance on l'ekln, which is dis tant 170 miles from Shan-llai-Kuan. AIIIpiI Tr..op Niunltarml 7.000. Tien Tsin, July 13 (Friday), via Cho Foo, July 15, and Shanghai, July 10. At two o'clock this (Friday) after noon 7,000 of the allied troops were attempting to storm the walls of the city. The attack, began at daylight. Its success is doubtful. The Chinese on the walls are estimated conserva tively nt 20,000. They are pouring a terrific hnil of artillery, rifle and' ma chine gun fire upon the attackers. The American, Japanese, British and French troops nre attacking from the west and the Russians from the east. I.l-rnm h IIr Ofllr Washington, July 17. Col. Emerson II. Llscum, of the Ninth infantry, who was killed at Tien Tsin, was one of the most gallant of the old civil war veterans still in the service. He was from Vermont. hlnncHixr Occurred .Tnlr (I or 7. Washington, July 17. Without ex ception the foreign representatives in Washington accepted as practically certnin thnt the foreign legations and ministers at Pekin had been wiped out. The conclusion is based on the accumulating unofficial data that the slaughter occurred about July 6 or 7. Even among the high Chinese officials hope has been about given up. Siilnliln ICuthr Thn On truer Berlin, July 17. The correspondent here of the Associated press has re ceived private information from Lon don that a letter wan received there from Lady Claude Macdonald (wife of the British ambassador at Pekin), written when the situation was grow ing threatening, baying that all the ladies of the legation had supplied themselves with poison. EXCITED AT WASHINGTON. Navfft from Otilnn Itou.fx it Spirit of Klorco liiillRimtlon uiul i HmiiiuiiiI for Vunci'uiiru. Washington, July 17. A degree of excitement, reminiscent of the days of the Spanish wnr, prevailed at the state, war ,and navy departments Monday. Early In the day came Ad miral Hemey's dispatch conveying the ill tidings from Tien Tsin, and for the time this obscured the Pekin situ ation. The Ninth infantry is one of the crnck regiments ot'the world, and the terrible story of tho fatality in its ranks aroused a spirit of fierce in dignation and a demand for vengeance among the officers of the army and navy hero that could not be re pressed. Coiiiitrfltltnr Nllvnr Alnnrr In Mnulln. Manila, June 10. (Correspond ence.) The large circulation of silver money in the Philippines litis made nn opportunity for counterfeiters, and there is evidence of one or more "gangs" in Manila and the provinces who manufacture spurious coins. The counterfeiters make Mexican dollars from a baser nnd cheaper metal, the American nickel is counterfeited nnd tlie urown : mils nave been suc cessfully imitated. AiMrcH to Dnmonritiln Clnlx. New York-, .Inly 17. W. R. Ilchrst, president of the National Association of Democratic clubs, has issued an ad dress to the clubs, in which he calls on them to "publicly rnt.-y the nomi nation of W. .1. Bryan for president and Adlai E, Stevenson for vice presi dent and prepare to defend the re public against tlie corrupt and cor rupting spirit of imperialism." Tlie address arraigns the republican party bitterly for its attitude toward "im perialism" nnd trusts. DEATHS IN A CLOUDBURST. riflrnii I.lvn Kin.ri to Hnvo Hnmi I.oit l tllelU.ll, TrX -t't t'llllin l)UIHl(i'A 1'ropiTlv ot Miiiio. Coleman, Tex., July 17. Fifteen lives arc known to have been lost In a cloudburst here yesterday.- Ten bodies have been recovered but only two were identified. It is feured that many more lives were lost in the valley below Coleman. The cloud burst, which followed three days' un precedented rainfall, caused FordV creek to burst its banks and rush tluough Coleman, a village of less than 1,000 inhabitants. Bewildered citizens, roused from their slumbers, rushed into the streets and were swept away. Many were saved by catching hold of pieces of timber and navigating them into eddies formed by the swift current, where they were drawn ashore. I. ino, 'tVx , Struck l- it (Svclom. St. Louis, July 17. A special to the Republic from Austin, Tex., says: After several hours of Incessant rain a cyclone struck Hie town of Llano, 200 miles north of here, Sunday night about 7:35 o'clock. The storm came from the sen and was wholly unex pected. It demolished a number of buildings and a large number of peo ple were Injured, a few of them se riously. CROKER'S COUNSEL. Tha Tn ill iimtijr Chlftf Ailvldcil HHakrt In tho Cn in pn Inn to 14)1 ut Out th Lkhiuii- lnir Utiunro of Younn Mou. New York, July 17. The executive committee of the Tammany hall met In the Wigwam last night, Richard Crokcr presiding, and took action rel ative to indorsing the democratic national ticket. The general commit tee of 0,000 members will meet July 23, when resolutions will be ndopted and the ticket ratified. Mr. Croker, peaking at the meeting last night, advised all speakers in this campaign to show the interests of tho young men as opposed to the administra tion of MelCinley. Eighty per cent, of the people of the country, he said, were governed by 20 per cent. He pointed out that the chances of the young mun for advancement in life were becoming less and less. TEN THOUSAND MORE TROOPS. That Miiiit from iho United tutc Will 1J lliirrlnil to Clilnn Mcltliilny to Uv 'turn to Wii hliictoo. Washington, July 17. The cabinet council lasted for some time and the situation in China was discussed yes terday. There is reason to believe that 8,000 or 10,000 troops will be got together as rapidly as possible and hurried to China. Some of these prob ably will be taken from Cuba. If the situation requires more men con gress will have to be called together to provide for them. IUcKiiiIxv lititttMii to Wit4tiicrtiiri. Washington, July 17. Word was received at the white house Monday afternoon to the effect thnt President McKinley would arrive here some time Tuesday, probably in the after noon. MiMY Di-nrlm In l'liuilno DU'rlniH. London, July 17. The governor of Bombay telegraphs to the secretary of .state for India that there were 9,928 cases of cholera in the famine districts during tlie week ended July 7, of which 0,474 were fatal, and that in the native states there were 9,526 cases, of which 5.S92 wens fatal. The total number of deaths on the relief works was 5,870, which was 3.9 per 1,000. There has been a good rainfall in Surat, Khandersh and the western part of the Deecan and rain has be gun in parts of North Gujcrnt, where the numbers demanding relief is con tinuing to increase. Wuklnir thn lltwt of It. Prescott, Ariz., July 17. A large number of business men whose plnces were burned out on Sat urday night opened up yesterday in temporary quarters. A more cheerful view pervades the town than on Sun day and a large number of losers have stated that they would rebuild at once. The town will be built up in a more substantial manner than before. IimiIhIoii hy thn Interior llnpn tmoiit. Washington, July 17. Tn a decision announced yesterdny tho Interior de partment holds that this Curtis act docs not relieve non-citizens purchas ing town lots within the Indian nn-' tious In the Indian territory from paying the permit tnx or license fee imposed by the tribal authorities. Threw u l.lirhrcil Mutnh nt l'li.p Oklahoma City, Ok., July 17. The 12-year-okl daughter of J. M. MeCor miek was perhaps fatally burned while playing near her home. A small boy throw a lighted match up on her and her clothing was nearly all burned on" her back before her screams attracted help. .Mr Ciillil Di'iiHii.' Ih OII1..H. Waslrington, July 17. Curtis Guild, of Boston, who was tendered the ap point nient of first iihslstant post master general to succeed Perry S Heath, has declined to accept the of flee. AS AN ACT OF MERCY. Report from Tien Tsin Says Sey mour Killed His Wounded. Ilnlnc Iliird 1'rtiiMCil ly tho Clilnrsr, llo Could NiI.oiiBTl3irry Ihii 1)1 iiblfd unci Would Not l.ntTUMlil llo Tori II roil. New York, July 17. A special to the Journal from Tien Tsin, dated July 8, via Shanghni, July 15, says: We are fighting hordes of Chinese day and night, but nre unable to beat them oil'. They nre approaching closer to the foreign settlement after each battle. No quarter is givcu or asked on either side. Ineffectual attempts have been mnde to conccnl the horrible fact that Admiral Seymour was compelled to shoot his own wounded during the recent disastrous retreat ot the Pekin relief expedition. All the wounded and prisoners who fell into the hands of the Chinese were frightfully tor tured. The bodies of two marines who were captured by the Chinese were recovered. The bodies had been cut to pieces. First the eyes had been hacked out; then the cheeks, arms nnd legs cut off, until death ended the sufferings of the poor fel lows. When Admiral Seymour in his re treat found himself so hard pressed that he was unable longer to carry his wounded with him, he asked them: "Which do you prefer, to be left to the mercies of the Chinese or to be shot by your own commander?" As Admiral Seymour put the question the tears were streaming down his cheeks. "We prefer death to tor ture! Shoot us now, thnt we may die like men!" was the piteous re sponse of the helpless men. A firing squad was told off, and while the allied force stopped and bent ofT with gun fire the Chinese horde that surrounded it, inside its lines nn act of mercy was performed as the firing squad carried out its orders. A few merciful volleys from the rifles in the hands of friends and the harassed expedition was relieved of its burden of wounded, the fanat ical Chinorie horde was cheated of victims for its torture and the suf ferings nnd fears of the unfortunates were brought to nn end in nn honor able death under their own flag. SERIOUS DROUGHT BROKEN. Iunu, nli iihvh Hud M snourl VMtml by Cop iiuh MiowxrH, Which Itroiiifhi Killof to ritiiunrs Who Uiul Corn Crop.. Kansas City, Mo., July 17. Good rains were reported Monday in nearly all of the western corn belt, and the weather forecaster said conditions were favorable everywhere for more showers. The biggest rainfall re ported was at Baker, in uorthenstern Kansas, over two inches. Practically all of Nebraska, so far as heard from, received heavy rains much heavier than in Kansas and Missouri is thoroughly soaked. The rain has come too late to make a bmnper crop of corn in Kansas. The crop in nil the country west of Emporin has been damaged, and some conservative observers think that from a third to a half a crop is all that may be looked for in that part of the state. But in the eastern third 'of the state, where about half the corn area is situated, the corn has not been damaged at all. COMING TO AMERICA. Citpn Town Dtupttch Sv Irlxh-AioitIcihir Aru Amnionic lo llrlnu' 111, UOO ISoorH to Tliw I omitri. Cnpe Town, July 17. When the war in South Africa is over 10,000 Boers, chiefly naturalized citizens of the Transvnal, will emigrate to the United States. Irish-Americans nre arrang ing the preliminaries for this move ment. The latest Machadodorp ad vices state that President Kruger will refuse to surrender until his sup plies are exhausted. Th Corn In Sluh' In N'-b-u'Wn, Omahn, Neb., July 17. With the bounteous rains of the past 48 hours throughout Nebraskn, Elkhorn roll- ' way headquarters give out an esti mate of aoo.000,000 bushels of corn In sight for this year. The same road also furnishes these figures for the past four years: Yield for 1899 was 224,373,000 bushels; in 1898 it was 158, 754,000; in 1S97, 211,208,000, and in 1890, the banner your, 29S,000,000. Ai'O lir Hun on Soo'ct 0iI,h. Kansas City, Kim., July 17. Roman Catholics in the Kansas City (Kan.) diocese, which includes about all of eastern Kansas, will not be allowed to nfflliate with the lodges of the Modern Woodmen of America or the Maccabees, according to a decision of lishop Kink, head of the diocese. He also ordered that all who were mem bers of those lodges should withdraw Immediately. If Will 11m Ycrkoi. Louisville, Ky., July 17. The repub lican stnte convention will meet here Tuesday. E.v-hiout. Gov. Mfirshnll will preside. John W. Yerkes will be nominated for governor by nceliuun'- tion. PmiaiaS JP&BBQdi are overcome by Lydfa -Pisskham's VogetaEsto Compound Fifty thousand happy women testify to this in grateful loiters tsjf Mrs Pin!tham FJIoMstruatSon Ss a severe strain on a vso Mian's vitality Bf ttf is painful sonnGtSsing 3s wrong which Lydia E. Pinkiiam's Vegetable Compound r will promptly set right? if excessive or irrc&stSar writo to Mrs Pinkham, Lynn;, Mass, for advice Evidence abounds tisat Mrs Pinkham's advico and medicine have . for many years itaen helpinrf V women to ho strong,, No otiaor advice is so un varyingly accurate;, no other medicisvo has such si record of euro MURPHY WAS MUCH PUZZLED. U Mb. ii uk eU to Give Satisfactory An- Hvrura to the (lucatlona, IIovrwYcr. One of the New York enumerators called on an old Irishman who had his name, Mur phy, chalked upon his door, lie wa3 very much perplexed, although he had been in the country long enough to go through everal censuses. " 'The cinsis?' " he exclaimed suspicious ly. "Phwat is ut?" I to'.d him that it was a record of tlie tribo of Murphys in the United States that was being prepared for the government, where it he was greatly flattered, and wanted to tell me his family history as far back as ho knew it. His memory, however, was defec tive, especially as to dates. "The year uv me burrth?" he repeated, scratching his head. "Sure an' I don t know at all, at all." Then, after reflecting awhile he brightened up and Kiid: "Sure, an' it wur. the year the crops failed in Ireiand." . "Was it in '37?" 1 supgested, at a ven- L ture. He looked to be about 00. "Faith an' it was that very year," he re plied, and I let it go at that. . He had forgotten, too, the year of his ar-, rival in America; "but 1 renumber that Hor ace Greeley was runnin' for prisident at the toime," he said. A practical joke should be handled as. cautiously as a double barreled gun. Atch ison uloue. Genuine careers Little Liver Pills.. Must Boar Signaturo of Seo Pac-Slmlle Wrapper Below. A' Very oiuall nnd oh oasy to talto as gugas. FOR HEADACHE. FOR Dizziness. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOB TORPID LIVER. F03 rjfJHSTIPATIQN. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION .Price 25 cents .imiwu imnvuiur Minuifiiar. ssxjrKsrsr" CURE SICK HEADACHE. SK3KX0WOG XiimMOl Tunnl.fllrtrv Dnblf .linanllH Oflrl . SPnnmnnnliln tlinrrull'hlV taudllt. . i(HTwolvo U'uctwrs, MJ0 Dtudoutn. cheap lioanl, : snu mu iinoit uoramcrei.il loiii-bo iiuiiuiub ' '" A,ntrlca, Uraduiiiuroaill y s euro situations. ' ' rlto at once for linndiom (U-iuko Illustrated i BinioKue Tree. AU.ll. I.. Kl 4'Njui.j .. rreuuent uem Uirjr liuslnms uolleco, yuincy, in. WWIWWf? EnKllyninilnbr AcontH.plth nrsfljr.KoilliiKliniltiuiit Iuy Mclnnt. I'l-UMTlplUm i'ropa ration, euro Biurinteeil. Outfit frri) Now pun ii 1 tlplles motltB l) ton. Wilto Up), K. I'ri "crlptlon I'liyr- iiiLioiiit iinnii'4i it' ."v. 33sm?HCT!5 llllHfS WIIHIr AIL tLSt I All ft. Dost Cough Syrup. Tawlcs Good. I In tlnin. Sold lir dniimlntn. TO7EvniTOdrKir3r "! .fckiVPi pmpPpdppppMp-p-ppapppppi i, I jm. m p,ip w m?ju UAm tiia feSKS ITTI F pals. mtliSsf EZ2S& flit UBOKfl mm y WMor -