V r'" S. -mHa S&fc-, THE FRONTIER. g' : PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY By Tn Frovtiih Pbikttso Oo. in,' O’NEILL, NEBRASKA. OVER THE STATE. Th* Teeumseh poultry show occurs November 38, 29 and 30. A woman’s relief corps has been or ganized st Newman Grove. Senator Allen will leave for Wash ington the latter part of the month. Abchbishoi> Ireland lectured in Omaha last week to a large audience on “American Citizenship.” During a murder trial in Lincoln one of the jurors became suddenly insane. The panel had to be discharged. Mamie Wilson, a young woman of Omaha, died last week as the result of nn abortion produced by herself. There were several ties on the small er offices in Omaha. The candidates will have to shake dice for the pot, PiCAtti., the little daughter of George Brown of Arcadia, wasseverely scalded in a pan of hot water, and little hope ia entertained for her recovery. The executive committee of the Be atrice Industrial league have begun taking subscriptions to raise 83,800 to secure the location of the King Press Drill company. In the federal court at Lincoln the jury acquitted Banker Nichols of Litch field of the charge of passing counter feit money. The conrt adjourned un til January. An epidemic of whooping cough has been raging in Ord for some time, which ha* greatly reduced the attend* ance at school, twenty-seven being ab sent from one room. An officer of the United States secret service was in Lincoln for several days trying to find some of the 91 bills which have been raised to tens It is ;r said he found several. Edoab Howard, editor of the Papill . ion Times, a member of the lower house of the Nebraska legislature, has tendered his resignation, having been eleeted county judge of Sarpy county. Adjutant General Barry has in augurated a move intended to secure p... for the Nebraska National Guard the improved Springfield rifles, now being replaced in the army by the Krag-Jor ' gensea arm. In a freight wreck on the Missouri Pacific railway near Conners, Kaa, M. M. DeWitt of Omaha, who was beating his way, was killed. The body was | taken to Kansas City and his wife noti fied of his death. Tnn governor has denied the appli ! v nations for pardon of Convicts D. & . Tuttle, sentenced from Pawnee for as aault; William Thompson, sent from Dawson for rape, and Peter Peterson, 4/4 Mnt from Johnson for Incest pp • Tine State university’s new building, > the library, will be formally opened at - • the time of the annual meeting of the board of regents, December 10, The building has been accepted and will be v;,f occupied during the next week. Fred Schboedeh, the veteran miller of Cedar Creek, Cass county, has turned his stock of goods and the mill over to , creditors. The liabilities will aggre fiate about 910,000, while the assets ; , will fall considerably short of that sum. \t • Between 4 and 5 o'clock in the morn i • fag the Gosper county court house was ■*; totally destroyed by fire. The records 4 are in the vaults and safes and It is . generally believed that they are not ■ damaged. • The insurance amounted to 94.500. K. R. Vandecar, an Omaha insur ance man, attempted to jump from a oar at Loup' City before the platform 5 i; was reached. *He missed his footing and fell, his right hand being caught ; * under the wheels and horibly mangled, / the fingers torn off and only the thumb left. "It is sf *t.ed that a few citizens cor railed about fifty wolves on a sand-bar \ fa the PUvtte river recently, and at 4-, tomptedto hold them there until the ' Jane rise, which it is hoped would drown them." The above fable was issued b^Nnt Smalls of the Fremont Herald. ; . Tar 7-year-old daughter of John 1 Walker, who' lives abont two miles aouth of VoCoolc, was drowned in the Meeker irrigation ditch. The water * was turned off and the body recovered. This is the second fatality since the ditch was put in operation. .7.- - John A. Swanson, a saloon keeper of 4 f Oakland, was called from his bed by an unknown man, who knocked at his - window and told him hia saloon was oa '4' Its As Swanson started to his place P of business, a maaked man entered the bonae and held up Mrs. Swanaon for a purse, which contained 930. Probably never before in the history of Saunders county have there been v f aneh great extremes in the crops as this fP , yesr. Some farmers have practically jt.4 nothing, while in other localities the %. crop is enormous Alex Vallier re ' eantly husked out six seres of corn on - tba Aust Smith place that turned out ■;?v Motj.t M'UAT, ft 13-yeor-old girl, was •mated iu South Sioux City for horse stealing. It was learned »t the trial that she had been taken ill, and wish* fair to go to her mother who was 100 asiles away, she took a horse from a stable and rode it the entire distance, being almost dead when she arrived there. She was discharged. At Nebraska City Tom Maher, a well known character, shot and probably fatally wounded Miss Maude Feasler. The shooting occurred in the Leidigh block, at a dance, which was being arisen by Will Trimble Maher had been drinking heavily, and enraged at tbeaighi of Maude Fessler preparing ts go home under the escort of another fellow he shot her twice. The woman wrill probably die. The State Banking board has author* taed the Bank of WiUonville to proceed tinder section 35 of the new banking law and close up its business, under bond of 833,000, The Steele Citv bank, which recently went into voluntary liquidation, has bean granted the same privilege. ., f Tiurr-srvKX thousand gallons of ciderhavs been hauled on the Indian •enervation by the. way of Lyons to bo •eld to the Indians In anticipation of the coming payment of 830,000. The jmysoent has been postponed until Jan* vary i, and the hard cider traffic among the reservation boot-leggers will now «r'.' bo a trifle alow tor a while. ’ - i ‘ Hr. : ... v -A',' • ■' , • to ,'»j* ... v SisS-Sr' A-iA'KAA^lr Thanksgiving In Kebnitau Governor Holcomb has issued the fol lowing1: In harmony with a custom as old as our government and conforming to tho proclamation of tho president of tiie United States, I, Silas A. Ilolcomb, gov ernor of the state of Nebraska, by vir tue of the authority in me vested by law, do hereby designate and set apart Thursday, the 28th day of November, A. I)., 18D5, as a day of solemn and pub lic thanksgiving to Almighty God for Ills blessings to us as a people, a state and a nation, and I earnestly request that on that day all manner of secular work may be laid aside and our people assemble together in the usual places of public worship, and in their homes, and in such manner as may be approved by their conscience, render thanks to our Heavenly Father for the manifold blessings enjoyed under the beneficent influences of the enlightened Christian civilization of the present day. The people of Nebraska have indeed great reason to feel a deep sense of gratitude to the Giver of all good. In the midst of universal depression in the business world the people of Nebraska have enjoyed a fair degree of prosperi ty during the year now drawing to a close. Providence has again smiled on our fair land, blessing the toil of the husbandman with crops sufficient to meet ordinary wants, and peace and contentment prevail through the land. Let us also on this day remember tho poor and unfortunate among us, not by prayers atone, but by acts of charity and benevolence manifested in such substantial manner as will make the re cipients thereof most happy and con tented. In testimony whereof I have here unto subscribed my name and caused to be affixed the great seal of the state of Nebraska. Done at Lincoln, the capital of the state, tills !)th day of November, in the year of our Lord, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Ninety-five; of the state, the Twenty-ninth, and of the inde pendence of the United States, the One Hundred and Twentieth. (Seal). Silas A. Holcomb. By the governor. J. A. Pipkb,. Secretary of State, Murder*<1 by An Unknown Man. A Wilsonville, Neb., dispatch to the Omaha Bee says: Albert Majors of De vizes. eight miles south of here, came to town this morning and told a tale of a coolly planned and executed murder that occurred at that place at about sunrise in the morning. The facts in the case, as related, are these: Last evening a roan unknown in the neighborhood of Devizes called at the home of John Nelson and inquired for Albert Applegate, saying he was an old friend of his and that he had known him on the rango in Colorado. He Stayed with Nelson over night, but did not give his name. In the morning early ho started for the field near by, where Applegate was husking corn. The supposition of those who found the body are that the murderer sneaked upon his victim in a draw which ran very near where he was husking and commenced firing when he had reached shooting distance. Applegate, after the first shot, is supposed to have de cided to clinch the man and started for him, pulling liis coat as he ran. Four shots were fired, but that one struck him—the fatal shot—just as he reached the murderer is known from the fact that his face was burned with powder. The shot struck him just above the cheek bone, causing instant death. No one knows who the murderer was or the cause for the crime, hut he is supposed to he a man with whom Ap plegate had had trouble while living in Colorado, lie told Majors last summer that ho had caused the separation of a man and his wife in Colorado, and the husbund had sworn to follow him and kill him if it took twenty years. The man who committed the deed is prob ably the one who had vowed ven geance. He has never been seen since the murder was committed. Applegate is well known here as a sober, industri ous man. All State Fair Bills Paid. The board of managers of the statv board of agriculture, at a meeting held in Omaha, completed checking up ac counts of the late state fair and after the last of the bills had been paid found a good four figure balance on the right side of the cash book. All the members of the board expressed them selves as well pleased with the result and as confident that tho fair next year will be lurger and a still greater suc cess. Chairman Dinsmore and Secretary Furnas were appointed delegates to at tend the meeting of the western and eastern fair associations and the Amer ican Shorthorn Breeders' annual con vention in Chicago^ S. C. Basset was delegated to prepare an exhaustive article on sugar beet cultivation to be read before the annual meeting of the state fuir board in Lincoln next Janu ary. During the annual meeting of the bonrd, the annual corn show, which promises to exceed all previous shows Of the kind, and the anuual meeting of the State Farmers’ institute will also be held in Lincoln. Another Cun for Trouble. Lincoln dispatch: There la a new cause for disagreement between War den Leidigh of the penitentiary and the state board of public lands and buildings. The new cause of disagree ment between these contending par ties arises from the reported sale by the warden of some of the hogs, a car load, which were raised ou tho peni tentiary grounds and arc tho properly of the state. The members of the board says, that this selling of state property by the head of a state insti tution without tho consent of the board is without precedent, and in direct violation of the rule which governs such matters. The board is supposed to be responsible for all pur chases and sales of property, and it says it is supposed that the members shall know of such transactions. Dowry Mast Pay. Judge Shiras today, says a Lincoln dispatch, rendered his decision in the case wherein Albert Watkins, as re ceiver for the Ponca National bank, sought to have a transfer of stock by G-. W. £ Dorsey to Prank Dorsey set aside. The receiver alleged that Frank Dorsey was insolvent'and the transfer just before the failure of the bank was to protect G. IV. E. Dorsey from liabil- | ity to assessment. The court set aside ! the transfer, and the judgment recites that (J. IV. K Dorsey must pav the as 1 sessmenta, which amount to 100 per I cent . 3 ..1 -H' >’ . 1 t> ' -V I- **,■•{■ NOT FOR MR. WHITNEY. THE EI-SECBETAHY EOT A CANDI DATE FOB THE fEESUT. TALKS ON THE MATTER. Positive Declaration Made and Friend* Asked Not to Consider His Kamo In Connection With the Democratic Nomination — Private Sea sons Urged — Campbell of Ohio Talks. New Your, Nov. 18.—Ex-Sccretary TV. C. Whitney was seen at the horse show and askpd about being- a presi dential possibility last night. He was thoughtful for a moment and then said: “I wish it understood that I am not a candidate for the nomination at present aod will not be. My friends know iny desires on this subject and will act accordingly. No man, I be lieve, can truthfully say he wonld-not like to bo President. It is an honor to represent a nation which cannot be too highly esteemed. I will not sav that 1 would not bo pleased if I were Presi dent, but I will not allow myself to be made a candidate under any consider ation. I do not want office of anv kind." J ■\wottung would induce you to change your opinion?” “Absolutely nothing. My mind is made up on this point, and "i do not know of anything that can change it?” “Your friends have used your name as a possible candidate.” “Yes, it has been mentioned with others; tiut I hope that my name will be dropped and not be mentioned in any way in connection with the pres idency. I prefer to remain in private life, and those who know me are aware of the reasons. ” In an interview, ex-Governor Camp bell of Ohio declared positively his belief that President Cleveland had no iesire whatever for a third term and lid not deem it even necessary to deny that he was a candidate or would be anderany circumstances. TQ RIVAL THE DUKE. Millionaire Brewer Bosch of at. Look Will Have » Grand Display St. Louis, Mo., Nov. IB.—Million sire Brewer Adolphus Busch proposes to eclipse the Marlborough wedding in New York at the marriage of his daughter to Count Paul Von Goutard of Hagen, Westphalia, Germany, on December 10. The wedding will be eelebrated In the Church of tne Messiah, Dr. John Snyder officiating. The en tire fourth floor of the Southern hotel has been engaged for the reception, which is to follow. Aside from this the entire St. Nicholas hotel has been engaged for the entertainment-of guests from out of town. It is the in tention of the Busch family to make the wedding a social event such as St. Louis never had before. After the ■hureh ceremony all will repair to the Southern where the reception, dance snd wedding feast will be given. The groom comes from one of the most prominent German families. He is in charge of the immense iron plant af his uncle. The wealth of his fam ily is fabulous. The family estate is located at Hagen, Westphalia. The groom and his brother, who will act is his best man, will arrive in St Louis e- ly in December, There will be over 1,000 guests at the wedding imd the reception following. Besides guests from Chicago, New York and ill over the United States there will be a party from Europe. DETECTIVES ARRESTED. The Bombers of • Chicago Agency Bold for Killing rmnk White. Chicago, Nov. 18.—At the inquest an the body of Frank White, brother at the alleged leader of a band of house thieves, who was killed by private* detectives, nine members af the Berry Detective agency, includ ing the superintendent, were arrested by the police. It was shown that the buggy in which the Whites were rid ing at the time was at a standstill, when three of the detectives fired on the occupants. Two of the detectives have acknowledged having fired shots. White was struck twice in the head, twice in the chest and once through the back. ratal names in uetroie. Detroit, Mich., Nov. 18.—Fire broke out about 3:30 o’clock this morning? in the factory of the Improved Match Company und three lives were lost. The factory had been working night and day and thirty hands were em ployed when the fire started, probably from friction An C • -Honored Man Dead. Fayette, Mo.. Nov. 18.—B. M. Mc Crary, judge pf the Eastern district of the county court, died at his home I here at that beans are vegetables. “ Senor Moreno was found guilty of libeling Baron Fava, the itaiian am bassador, and given a jail sentence. -It is said that President Cleveland has decided to appoint Judge Rufus Peckham of New York to the Supremo court vacancy. I