THE FRONTIER. . fULUHlb EVERT THURSDAY By ... iBfUHHUyUHWllOH yintlLU -> NEBRASKA. NEBRASKA. McKinley ladies. of Edgar have 'formed a club. The Leora Lane dramatic company ■tranded at Pierce. i -i - Perry 8elden, editor, of the Blair Pilot, died last week after a long Ml* Beta Q. H. Brainard hna been selected as nnperiateodent of the public school* of Beatrice. Prof. Bealer, superintendent of the Beatrice schools, died last week of ty phoid fever. The dreaded gray wolves are still doing damage to the ranchmen along ' Banningwateb The bank of Fllley which recently aaapended, wea reopened under most favorable drou instances. The Hitchcock osooty lair . will be ; held at Culbertson October 1, 2 and 1> . There will be good races and liberal premiums. j Adolph Kanufran Of Loup •C Welle as. postmistress James Ha?err ■man has been commissioned postmas ter st Hudson, Neb ' R. Schilling's drng store In Liaeblp eras'destroyed by fire st an early hour in the morning. The., fire was con fined to the drug store which was one. * Ctthe largest in the elty. *, * Xround Broken flow the hogs are dy " > ing from a discuss heretofore unknown nnd which is fatal. No remedy will cure or even check it and it seems des tined to almost anlhilute some hards ■'« The total enroilmcnt of the Fremont1 achools is 1,648, a email increase over last year. There are 183 students la. the High school, a larger number than ’ have ever been in attendance before. . J. C. Bellas fiarnWf^Mar Lexington, fine 92 acres of Ape broom corn.1 Hood" jndges think that.h« will have over 461 tons of first-oluss brush, and thia is worth 160 « ton. Quito a profitably The. election in Beatrice to vole to pnrehase the Nebraska National ‘bank building was defeated three to ons - A light vote was polled, only about 000 in afi. and -ld to onaaidev the advisability of opining a iijj Wow department, since it is claimed the teachers are hampered in th* prea wet condition to toch an extent that #• aanoot reeaive the attention that in aknolntely accessary George Ashford of Ppslrie Center, wound up s spree st Kearhey last week by taking a dose of strychnine with suicidal intent Emetics were admin*, istered in time to save his life, how ever, and he will here an opportunity to try it again. Wagoner and Kelley, the two men captured at Schuyler, and who are ac cused of blowing a depot safe at Yutan and taking money therefrom, were brought before Police Judge Ellsworth St Wahoa The eoasplnint charged them with burglary. . ,, The railroad basinets at North Platte is tbs largest this fall that It baa been lor years. Thursday nineteen freight trains were bandied on the third die trlct with a mileage of 3,397 miles. The officials at the superintendent's, office say that this was tbebiggret day within the recqUection of 'the present force sod some of them can remumber back fourteen years.u" • f, It is reported that Col Cody ihtenda th ose hie large ranch at North > Platts' in the future as a cattle feeding plant:: Thousands of tons of Alfalfa are raised annually on this ranch; and with 'im mense crop of corn raised on the trri* 'gated lands in,close proximity, it lebet Ueved thet awh a venture Would pi^ove. very profitable to that community, la. creating a good h. me market for corn. , 4 youug man claiming to hail frqm tfiaaonri who will give a? other name than “Paupaus," has spent a i“ the county jail at Tecuinseh. 'The' au thorities considered hita a ’dangerous' character to be at large. As he was ’hot altogether pleased, with the. Jail at ■an abiding place, be atiempted to es cape by prying the loOk off the' htiter door'with'a big iron'1 'stove pokteh i " He woeunsuccessful. ■ vy,- ■ - •,w.;, 1 ‘ Wayne Bepublioan: Frank Johnson •hipped a oar load of spring ehoa.tf; recently which averaged 40Q pounds, apiece." The above la from tl^e Wake:, field Republican and aa. the party re-' lerred to it a YVaynecouuty farmer, it demonstrates one of two things, either that our- county oan 1 beat the, world .raising swine,or elae Dixon county bps an editor that puts it'all "over the boys When it comes to telling a whopper.' The indebtedness of Henry Hoetfel her, the defaulting treasurer of Web ster toWnship and the .village of Dodge 1 in Dodge county, to thecounty is about, S3,OOP, which amount will have to be' paid by his bondsmen.' tie has hot been seen since Saturday, at which time be gave .a check. 10 -the county treasurer on account of (aura collected It now appears that he had 06 money la the Dodge bhhk'dn which the Check Wee drawn; *»• - ' ’• Will 8. Conrad of Hastings was badly bitten by a email pet dog. Conrad awoke from an afternoon nap and find ing the dog asleep with ita bead on bia, ^arm, took it by the neck with one hand and shaking it, commenced to bark in imitation of another canin'e. The dog, awakened suddenly, supposed there wss a fight on and grabbed his, master by the nose and upper lip, In a second he let loose but Conrad’s doss and lip were bitten through. ’ '■'" Riley MeCampbell. a firm baud Who had attended the fair at Wahbo, while dn hie way home about 8 o’clock. When 'Within one mile of hie borne,, passed a covered wagon that waa moving west,, . and ‘felt, a blow on the head,, struck. by sotpe missile from the wagon, causing, unconsciousness. ' He 'was 'found in Frank Usury’s' vacant ■ barn,- having been unconscious for forty-night hours His coat apfi vfit were gone, and, hie .pockets turned inside out . -4 * 1 ;*! * ’.*? t f'bMirH? i*?ui z.-i54 W Mranta were, drawn last if eek' }>f ^the,State auditor'for' the pay' 'of1 ‘the guards iindfor cpinp expenses of'the late encampment of'jjheXebraska Na tional guard! Theri' Were tWo vouch ers drawn1 of ts.abas.vand - $2,834. is l respectively, making a total of gi,034,40, This does opt include transportation bills, which will come in later; nor doeelt include one-half the gay1 Of the guards, which. Will have to be made up 1 by a legislative appropriation this win? ’ {. • i,;, j t ^ lt: 'Mlea Theresa.Trapy of Omaha, om o| the Logan wrack’ victims, halt com .menced, suit in the district' court against the Northwestern railroad to recover 820,066 for' injuries' alleged to have been caused by that ■ catastrophe. In her petition she recites that she was a passenger on the -usfortunste train and received is .figured her fee |urU>i ioh It and die er mind >to be affected, resulting in lose of mem ory and nervous prostration, by reason •Of which she la unhbla to pursue' her' evocation at tesshev. ■ ' The bonda of John' Dalton, of Bee I and H; J. Oswald of Seward,-who wore appointed. Livestock agents by Cover nor Holcomb, have been filed in the i governor’s office and their, commissions Issued. The Jftw provide* for four •statf Agent*, of whom three, including Bute Veterinarian Anderson; have been Appointed; There la some danger of spldnie fever—Tea** fever—in Sioux county, up near the Wyoming line, hut the auapecte, about forty heed, are aovr eafely querautined andit ,'ia, expected they will pot,contribute to any . that* rial danger throughput ;the state The Stanton Picket eayas. Cholera ia raging in different pafta of the county among hoga and seems to be more gen eral than at any previoue visitation; Inmaay instances nearly the entire herd, has succumbed to the disease. Different parties In and about Stanton are among the losers. Among ttiia number are James' Me Kinsey, W. 1). Whalen, C. Trent and Fred Shults. W. W- Yodng la meeting with heavy loasea at his farm, and M. Thompson lost over #00 head. A number1 'of farmer* tof Humbug precinct are also losers but wo can't give their n« ■' \'or the extent of their losses- '' ' ;• - . < . t The largest hydraulic ram. ip th« United States la to be exhibited at the irrigation fair at North Platte. Thii machine. will prove one of the meet im portent factors in irrigation wbenevei the fall of water is sufficient to product the necessary pressure. ' A mad bull on the streete of Stroma burg caused a small circua for somt time The animal was driven in from -the country by a local live stock bnyei and beeame obstreperous shortly aftei he struck the city limits He chased a number of citizens within doors, tossed an inquisitive boy a distance of twenty feet and made things generally inter ssting before he waa Anally subdued. ■ -!!1—- ■ " THJSBECORD BROKEN. i '• - - l THB FASTESf.MILE EVER MADB i ' BY^HORSE. i « — Hiilrr Fmm Id Two and Ahatf—Bm< Made In the Face of a Still North 'Wind —The Animal Paced by a Banner, Who Bad Hard Work Keeping Cp—The , Tima by Quartan. ' ' ...ir < (./;<•: .*4. if , • ‘ '.V'Wtii* ’ Wondtrfal Work d( Ontrf.; POKTLAHD, lid, Sept. 30. — Job* B. Gentry yesterday, at Rigby park, | paced the fastest mile ever made in barneaa, and placed 'the world's rec ord at a:oo%. ", The day was cold and light porih westerly winds ward bidwing up the atretch when Jobe B. Gentry,'with W. & An drawn on the sulky, appeared >to go against, hie, record of. 3:01%, made on September 8, this year, at, Glenn’s Falla, N. Y. The famous paper; scored once or twice with the rnrnnei ; Who was to pace him. and then' went ep the stretch on what was to be the fastest mile ever-done by n horse j ■; barneea The1 runner was at the pacef'S throat as they made* the dtit turn oaths stretch.. Gentry went steadily . and with apparent ease, thg runner bar* Ing hard work keeping his’ position, i The Judges caught the quarter miles! j.3l*Jt, and the second'quarter was, mads in .30%, making the half mile in ' 59%. The riinner, by the use of the - Whip, was keeping up at • Gentry’s f wheel, -but was -making.hard.work of i it. The third quarter, was made in .30%, making the three-quarters in 1:30%. ' AS thsy'turned inld the hOme stretch and caught the' wind, in the; .teeth, the crowd yelled wildly.; , ,, , , , The pacer made a great spurt, opq- . atderlng that he had the wind in ills teeth, add made the most remarkable quarter of the heat :30%, making,the, mile in, s:00%, lust one second leas, than the former best record first ra&de by Robert J. at TerreHaute in Ih96, and equalled this year by Gentry,'*. ! - . When Starter Culberson aqpqupced the time the crowd broke throughtho fence and crowded out on the track and,around the pacer, cheering, wild ,ly. It is belietved that had Gen try not had to contend with the. wind,he. would hare made the pills in two minutes easily. u fyi --h*-!. ...;.T ■.-rtvfji Van horn on silver ,li-M:iE , . ,'..*•)•;(! j r 11 Hi* Missouri Coafraaimu . Address*; ■ . j ■ Xos-rtnliH Bryan Clok Kassas Citt, Mo., Sept. 2C.—Coq yressman R. T. Van Horn spoke be fore a large audience last efCning upon the silver question. The meeting was under the auspices of then Non Partisan Bryan , Silver club. Uis speech, was entirely . non-partisan apd a carefully prepared exposition of the principles of the bimetallists. -He did ,BOt say for whom-he. was going to vote snd did not give any advice to the audience w He said'that'William McKinley waa nominated by the free silver lie pub licans “Why,” he asked, “did they, nominate him? , Because they sup poseO*'tbat' he stood upon the Ohio platform adopted ' by the convention which presented hisuame as a candi date for the nomination.” ,He thep read from the reports'of that conven- ’ lion to show that its platform' Was a .broad declaration. in> favor of both gold and silver. John Sherman pre sided over this convention, and Col. ' Van Horn Said that this' was for the' I purpose of showing the* people that the friends of MeKiplqy; were united i favor of free silver. He said therh was such’is McKinley sentiment in the free ail Ver states that the gold men became alarmed, and that they then began to spring favor ite sons in a vain attempt to beat Mc Kinley . He said 'that when they failed In this they put up a eoheme up m the nominee. and ,hy. .a. conspir acy put him upon a gold platform. It wasn’t as trong a gold platform as I the Republican esntpaiga orators make out. he said, is Mat it declared for bimetallism.“lyhep the other na tions get ready to‘let ut' have it.” while the campaign speakers are de . nonneing bimetallism altogether ,■ , Finally he csmtidown to a personal explanation of his own position at the present time. ’’I im myself in' a . rather peculiar position as a Repub-.' lli-aa just: now," ha said. “1 .was., elected as the Congressman from,this district Upon a free Silver platform, and upon every stbtnp in the district I pledged the people that l would sups ‘'port, this platform. Now,, the time I for the expiration of that pledge does , not. expire until the 4th bf next March and how. according to these gold men, an I to keep my pledge to the people who elected me, and ne a good Re publican?” ‘ ••*'• * . .a. i. ,,. lit 11,„,11 i ~, ,, i;■}, , v GLADSTONE OPPOSED o ... i. ■ . . .. i ' (|« Leaden tlalnatmiiHli**, , llq»—Other t'lpiiy Colarltn _,,j , London, Sept, 26,—TheTurki>h etp-, bassy here he* telegraphed .V^r Gnd, ,stone's speech, deliver*! at'UyerpoaV verbatiris to the porte. " .? The Times mji of the speech lam ‘ editorial: Ws cannot approve of hla advise of a rupture of diplomatic,re lations which would leave the Sultan free for further vengeance on ’he' Armenians, while to threaten cueroiou. "while shrinking from war seem* both S dangerous and a cowardly policy " The editorials iu the other m imin'* paper* are rather colorless The Lib*-' .era! erirane-lavish praise upon it,; while the Conservative papers follow ‘the Times' line of criticism. The >Standard (t otiServative) say-: ' ■ A (Treater responsibility rested: upon a a atemnan than that (ipoo, Lord Salta bury. Happily X(r. Gladstone apoears ■to ahare that conviction. *' -i! ‘ Y • ' -——-- v ■ Lens and SMbpoos at Hewten . Newton. Kau., Sept. 26. -The Ape* ond debate of ^he aeries of six be tween Chester 1, Li>n; and Jerry Simpson, rival candidates for Con* press, was held iu the rink here yes terday afternoon. Simpson answered the questions put by Loup at Hutchin son, which he would not answer at tbat'pince. In doing so be stated that under free coinage he believed that silver would appreciate in value to 61.20 per ounce, and circulate on a1 parity with gold. He also deolared in favor of absolu te free trade. The de bate was very spirited, and was lis tened to by i,000 peopia. .Cinder provost guard.' ' '• - 'tSfc Toll Martial law XitablliM at lat# . villa Lxadtuau. CoL, Sept. 26.—Under the latest orders of tieneral Brooks of the state militia this town was to-dtf placed under the control of a . provost guard or military police force with Captain W. A. Smith, ex-warden of the penitentiary, as provost marshal. If the strike leaders now held in jail should be released under bonds by Judge Severs, General Brooks will have them rearrested under military law. Writs of habeas corpus will then be secured and if Qenersl Brooks ft h mi Id iffnnm tnoK he ml 11 ha cited for contempt of court end the governor’* right to piece the eommdn ity under military rule Will' be fe viewed in court. The ceee 1* likely to reef h.the supreme .pourt on ,n writ of error. Correspondent Mitchell of the Usu rer Times I* in thb guard house, where he bee been since Weduesdey night At thet time he attended e meeting of cltiseus ist whfch Adjutant General Modes wss'present When the meet ing i wee celled to order nil reportern end correspondent# were requested to withdrew. Mitchell alone remained. Mitchell was arredted end pieced in' the guerd house, tie hadmailed the proceedings of the secret meeting tp nis paper before ,he was arrested One hundred miners from Joplin, Mo. , sre expected here to-dev. They l have been engaged- to work in• the Marian, Smell .Hopes end Emmett mines, of the' Smell Hopes Company, of which' 8. W; Medd lemanager. The Emmett has been working right along with a smsll fqrce pf qom-unioe, men. The other two minps named will be started up at' once under "a" strong | guard."' 'M'li? to,! , . ,, • < Yesterday morning fifteen men fired, at long range on the pickets et the Little Johnny mine.' A squad of men '• wae-sent out to. search ' for the men who made the assault,. but they had disappeared. No one was injured. ’ OKLAHOMA'S GROWTH. O'1 , Mil; :|'nc;--ir.|it w j rn,, ,(■, IS dovaraor Keafroir If aha*. Htr in—) Beport— Gratifying.Bhowlac. ' , Washixotoh, SepU 26.—Governor Aenfrow, of Qkiahome, bee filed with the Secretary .oUte ^grlgr, ^n nnal report for the year ending June 30, 1896. The report''begins wiyh the declaration tbit "the development of 1 the territory in the .year past has been equal, to, if not. greeter, then that qt other portions of the United States. Nowhere has the year, past been more’marked' for material pro gress. The acreage of iend in cultiva tion hds steadily increased, end hat very nearly reached the proper ratio o’, farm land to pasture. The prospect fo> crops is good end the ante-be.'lum declaration, ’cotton is king,’ seems' applicable to Oklahoma. Oklahoma will shortly rank- among the Cotton states of the Union. Unless the pres ent indications fail, the present cot ton crop of Oklahoma will be by far the greatest ever gathered, end 1 pre dict for the coming year one at gen uine prosperity.” Oklahoma’s population is shown to have Increased froni 218,626 In 1694 tc 275,587 in . 1896. The . most ‘ populous county is Woods, with 20.806. The. .various Indiaq reservations contain n' . population of li.SOO. 'iyM The taxable property of the terri tory for,1396 was assessed at 824,816, • 711, Logan, county .leading, with an assessed valuation of 83,730,518, and t> county bringing op the rear with onlv 8453.076. i:, .. , WANTED TO LYNCrf HIM. The Marrow Baespe of a Be form Mm '»•>•< i' Geadnate.) ■> i) , ’ > Fort ..Scott; Kan., Sept * 26 —A Mapleton, ,K*u.v. north west-of thi ; city, yesterday afternoon, a Populis pica ip came near merging into a, mol , bine bee,' when Henry Stnith, a younj man 20'years old, who was recentl; Released from the state'reform schooi • was taken to that town, bound ham and foot, charged with attempting t ntsault Mra Elisabeth Britton, age< tt.. Wife of Or.' L.' E. H'rittod, a' prom ' int-ntend Well-to-dO physician livini pear the town. , . :/< I*uclir® E- ft. Fqote of Kansas Citj was speaking to several hundred Pop bliets at a polltteal meeting there, am When they heard of theasaaultthreat of i.vnchiug became so aerious that tb justice deputized a constable am turned the prisoner over to him. Will »' Winchester rifle aed a pistol he .pro tectcd h e mpn until heoyuld load hin '» * buggy and bring him to this city where he was committed to jail with out bond. " ■>’ • i -it:? ' ... n., i ACT QF A JEALOUS WOMAN llruM Conway, Aged 18. Kilt HtIMlI and HnRlHinl Chicago, Sept. JO.—HsrryM. Con* wny. Si years of age, was shot and in- < santly killed last evening by hia wife, Urace Clark Conway, who was t <>ujy 18 years old.. The Conways hare | beep living in Chicagq about three months, he coining from Lyons, la., and the home of his wife before mar riage being at Rockford, 111. The o nnle bad frequent, quarrels over the attentions paid by Conway to a young woman in Sterling, Neb., and it was. ■luring one of these quarrels that the woman killed her husband She shot' herself through, the heart, immediate ly after. . . , , •i Carlldn’s Campaign plans. VVashinotos, Sept. ,36 — Secretary Carlisi j has returned to the city after a few peeks’ absence at Buzzard’s Ray, where he Was the guest of the 'President' He has concluded to speak three or four times «n Kentucky. Myrtle dinette Back Homs. Frbdonia, Kan., .Sept 36.— Misa Myrtle tlillette of the .Lindell hotel, SL , Louis, Tucker anioide notoriety, aqd who bas for some time been lost to her'friends and thoroughly searched for the past few days - in Chicago, ar rived at her father’s home hare yes terday in a weak condition. Ike Wes a Friend of she room. Lomov, Sept 36.—Bessie Bell wood, music hell singer, is dead from syn scope. In England she was worshiped by the working-classes. She novel failed to lend, her aasiatanee and vpiof In Ikf Interest of the poor. THE GRAND OLD HAN. HE : URGES. THAT - ENGLAND TAKE ACTION IN TURKEY. fli ltklfH Address it t Blf SeTeranee of All Dlplomotle Relation. With the Porte Called For—Ambwaa dan at Conetantlaople Declared Vlrto alljr Only Allies of the 8altaa. j. • * ‘ <**■’ • -'^vr OMiton ‘til* tfosseirtw. » -' • Liverpool, Mpt 85.—■•Great Hum* bars of people uMiobled early this morning in the vicinity of Henglbr’e cireaa to hear the addresa which Mr. Gladstone hadannounced his .wiillpg Beaa to make before the meeting oalled by the Reform club to protest ■(fs|hst the" recent masifcres of Ar menians at Constantinople and else where'in Turkey. The doors were opened at 10 o’clock and an hour later the auditorium was .packed. ■ v; .The first resolution, proposed by a 'Conservative and seconded by a Lib eral.'read: '‘'That this meeting de sires'to'ex pread its indignation and abhorrence of the cruel treatment to which Armenians are being subjected by their Turkish rulers and of the massacres which have recently oc curred at Constantinople, which are a disgrace to the civilization of the . nineteenth' century." It was adopted by acclamation. When Mr. Gladstone arose to speak he. moved ,tbe following resolution whtch was received with remarkable enthusiasm: “That this meeting trusts that Her Majesty's ministers 'realizing to the fullest extent the terrible condition in iWhich -their fellow Christians are placed, will do everything possible to obtain for them full security end protection, and this meeting assures Her Majesty’s ministers that they may rely upon the cordial support of the citizens of Liverpool iu whatever Steps they may feel it necessary to take tor that purpose." Mr. Gladstone declared his adhesion to the principles contained in the res olutions, and said he came here *not claiming any authority except that of a citizen of Liverpool.” Mr. Gladstone then said: "I doubt If it is an exaggeration to say that it 'was in the sultan’s palace and there only ..that the inspiration has been supplied and the policy devised of the whole series of massacres. When the sultan carries massacres into his own capital under the eyes of the ambas sadors, he appears to have gained the very acme of what it is possible for him to da lint the weakness of diplomacy, I trust, is about to bo strengthened by the echo of this na tion’s voice." Mr. Gladstone then alluded to the supineness of the ambassadors of the powers at Constantinople and said: “I believe that the continued presence of the ambassadors at Constantinople has operated as a distinot countenance to the sultan, who is thus their recog nized ally. But, while urging the government to aet, it does not follow that even for the sake of the great ob ject in view Great Britain should transplant Enrope into a state of war. On the other hand, however, I deny that England must abandon her own right to independent judgment and allow herself to be domineered by the other powers" In closing, Mr. Gladstone said: "We have a just title to threaten Turkey with coercion that does not in itself mean war, and I think that the first step should be the recall of our am bassador. And it should be followed by the dismissal of the Turkish am bassador from London. Such a course is frequent and would not give the right of complaint to anybody. When diplomatic relations are suspended Engtand should Inform the sultan that she would consider the means of en forcing her just and humane demands I do not believe that Europe will make war to insure the :< continuance of maasapres more terrible than ever recorded in the dismal, deplorable history of human crime.” Mr.. Gladstone spoke for about twenty minutes. He was In good voice and did not seem fatigued when he had' finished. Copies of the resolutions adopted Will be forwarded to the cabinet ministers. ELHfUDGE BLUNT DEAD. A Mofewr •! Kansas Intimately asso ciated with John Urowa. Chicago, Sept. 35 — Elbridge G. Blunt, who was intimately associated with John Brown in conducting the "underground railway" in Kansas and was also an active scout in the civil war is dead. He was one of the eaily settlers of Knnsa-. having gone there in the spring of 1B55. With his broth er, Jatne- G. Blunt, he was active in the civil war. Ha nerved as a scout under his brother. His minute knowl edge of the country and the character of the men whom he was opposing made his services especially valuable. - Since 1868 he had lived in Chicago. SUIT ON A NOVEL CLAUSE. Bow a Taatato* looarod tha Abstlasaea of Hla San Francisco, Sept. So. — When Charles Crocker died several years a go he loft 490 SI.'jOO hoods in trust for George Crocker. If during fifteen years succeeding the testator’s demise George Crocker should abstain from intoxicants five years the bonds were to go to him unqualifiedly, but if flf I teen years should expire without the ! performance of the condition, then to . other heirs desiguated. Suit has just ; been brought to terminate tiie trust ; on the allegation that George Crocker : was a teetotlar from September 2? Is61, to September 22, 1S9H. DONGOLA BOMBARDED. | Forts and Earthworks Rendered Useless i ; to Dervishes. ! ; Cairo, Sept. 25.—The Abonkla re 1 turned to Dungola yesterday upon the . instructions of Sir Herbert Kitchener, , ana began bombarding the forts and ; earthworks. Fire was kept up upon them until the forts were dismantled and the earthworks were rendered comparatively useless Therefore, even should the dervishes succeed in reoccupying the place, they will find very little to protect them against the < fire of the A agio-Egyptian forces. MARTIAL LAW SUPREME. Omni Brooks Kolos Lead Tills With a Biros Hood. LliDyn.Lt, Cola, Sept. 2a—Except that the eiril offiaers ere for the time beinir allowed to exercise their conetl tational prerogatives, provided they do not interfere with General BroOUf ' more men is, military rale is quprema to-dey in Leadville. The soldiers will make unset* disarm all but pfficera of the law, hold prisoners subject to tha commanding- officer, and search honsea without other, warrant than tte order of the general. j, The military court of inquiry, to ia .quire into the circumstances of tha .destruction of the Coronado mine and the low,of life, convened this forenoon v and will endeavor to establish tha identity of the men engaged in tha riqt for the benefit of the civil author.■ ities. Its session will he-secret'> " The following officers and members of the miners' union are in jail under strong guard, being held for the mnlr der of fireman O’Keefe;, Peter Turn* - t bull, vice president; E. D.,.Dewar, sec retary; George Haudv, William O'Brien, Patrick Kennedy, J. V. Doyle, Joseph Otis, John Ahern, Gomer Rich ards, Ernest Nicholas, Engeii'e'--Can non. Cornelius Shea, Michael Weible, Gns Johnson and Xnll ni.n.nn . - ■ ■ members of the executive committee.: including President Ambnrn. are still at large, and search is being made for them. The charge against Edward Boyce, president of the WeSteihFed--: erat ion of Miners, is “Inciting a riot,,r and is based on a speech be made' here to the miners a couple of weeks ago. Tin arrests have caused consterna tion amoug the atrikers, and it is be lieved have greatly weakened their..,.: cause There was to have been a meeting.' of the Miners’ union at the city hall last evening, and General Brooks sent a squad wich a Gatling gun to the hall with instruciions.to prevent the meet ing. The gun was later returned to-' battery headquarters, the union meet ing haying' been held at an early hour, and being in session nhTV ten'minutea. BROKEN UP BY YALE BOYS. Hr. Bryan Unable to gpesk at Mn Haven Because of College Cheers, i . Nxw Havbn, Conn., Sept. 25_When . Mr. Bryan appeared on the greon here this afternoon to speak to several thousand people, fiOO or more Yalo students broke out into their full col lege cheer, beginning with the .frog chorus of: “Aristophanes," followings, with three-long Yales, nine rahBr.anct "Yale and McKinley." Again and again did they break forth and it was impossible far the., nominee to speak. After order was restored, Mr. Jfi’yan ' started to speak, but whenever he tried to make a point the Yale stu dents resumed their longcheer, finish ing with “McKinley” as a climax. Upon one occasion while Mr. Bryan * was trying to obtain quiet, a band do ing escort duty to a military parade on the ground nearby, burst forth \ with music. Mr. Bryan threw up his , hands and refused to continue. i DONCOLA CAPTURED. The British Expedition Completes Its Work With Little Trouble. Dokgola, Sept. 25. — The Anglo* Egyptian forces are in full possession, of Dongula and the Soudan expedition proper has been brought to s success ful close The advance upon Dongola- : was begun at 5 o’clock yesterday > morning. The gunboats covered the left flank and the cavalry and came] corps the right flank. Wherever par ties of the Dervishes were sighted , . they were pursued by cavalry and many of the fugitives were killed,. The gunboats shelled every detach- - meat of hostile* that came wlthla' range of their gnna All the principal Dervish chiefs, with the exception of Wad Bishare,, < have surrendered, and the opposition to the Egyptian power in this seCtWiif^' has completely collapsed Only flee British soldiers were wohnded. ■ -- .■; . ■ ••- .. THREEDEATHS FORASLA** Two Negruus Woro Kill ad and a Third [ Ljnohad Aarose From Maw Ortauaa. Nxw O1U.XAM8, Sept. 25.—Last night in Gretna, acroae the river from here, : James Hawkins, colored, clapped a 6-year-old white child on the street -, Officer Miller swore out a warrant for his arrest, and in attempting to cap ture him about midnght the officer fired at random into a crowd of ne groes, killing. Alexander and Arthur* Green, the former an old, inoffensive colored man. Hawkins was later lodged In the orems jail, and this morning at 2 o’clock a mob broke down the- door, took him to the river bank and hanged him to a big tree and than, threw the body into the river. Haw kins pleaded for mercy and asked that he be given two minutes to pray, •.: St. Joseph, Mo , Kept 36. —A simp!* . funeral occurred at Ashland cemeter/ yesterday afternoon, when the re mains of Mrs. Anna Fowler, the woman who was murdered by her husband In this eity last Friday, were laid to rest. The father of the dead woman, who came to St. Joseph from, bis home in Iowa to look after the burial of his daughter was the only mourner in attendance. England Will Not Get Tjaao. ! Paris, Sept. 35.—There is good au thority for the statement that, in faee of the certainty that it would be re fused, England bas abandoned her demand upon France for the extraai tibn of P. J. Tynan, the alleged “No. 1.” whom Scotland Yard officers hsye charged-with concocting a dynamty consniracv. : Grain Broker KU1< Hlmselt { Chicago, Sept. 25. —Frank H. John son, fear twenty-five years prominebt on the board of trade, killed. himself in Lincoln park by shooting himself through the head. He had become de spondent because of heavy losses O* the board. Alabama Populist Kominntloaa j Birmingham, Ala., Sept. 35.—Tbs Popul!st convention of the Fourth dis trict, in session at Calero, unanimous ly nominated VV. F. Aldrich, EepotK Mean, for Congress, on a platform de claring for free ailver. ■ -v, “ ‘ ' V JR -