The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 24, 1902, Image 2

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    POPE DISPLEASED
HEAD OF CATHOLIC CHURCH FA
VORS REMOVAL OF FRIARS.
THE DEMANDS ARE REASONABLE
Pontiff i« Intensely Displeased with
Action of Commission of Cardinals
—To Treat with Judge Taft Person
ally—As to Future Negotiations.
LONDON, July 19.—The Rome cor
respondent of the Dally Chronicle says
the pope is intensely displeased at the
way in chlch the commission of car
dinals has conducted the negotiations
with Judge Tatf in the matter of the
friars in the Philippines.
‘‘I learn from an authoritative
source," says the correspondent, “that
besides annulling the proceedure of
the commission of cardinals the pope
has summarily dissolved It, express
ing his views that the American de
mands were reasonable and signifying
his readiness to treat with Judge Taft
petsonally." ,
ROME, July 19.—The following note
from the Vatican was presented to
Governor Taft last night:
"I hasten to acknowledge the receipt
of the letter by which you kindly com
municated to me the cablegram from
Secretary Root, answering my note
of July 9, which explained the counter
project of the Vatican for the regula
tion of religious affairs in the Philip
pines. While thanking you for this
important communication, I am hap
py to assure you that the holy see
has learned with the liveliest satisfac
tion the high consideration in which
Mr. Root and the government of the
United States holds ihe fitness of the
measures, which the Vatican inde
pendently of the solution of any
economic question designed taking to
ameliorate the religious situation In
the archipelago and to co-operate in
the pacification of the people under
American sovereignty. The measures
are indicated in iny memorandum of
Juno 21, and by letter of July 9. These
declarations of Mr. Root do honor tc
the deep political wisdom of the gov
ernment of the United States, which
knows how to appreciate the happy
lufluence of the holy see for the relig
ious and civil elevation of the people,
especially Catholics.
“With equal satisfaction the pontiff
has taken into account the assurances
of Secretary Root that the American
authorities in the Philippines and at
Washington will put. forth all possi
ble efforts to maintain the good un
derstanding happily established with
tile authorities of the Catholic church.
On his part the pontiff will not fall
to give the apostolic delegation soon
to be sent to the Philippines the most
precise Instructions according to my
former notes.
“The lines for future negotiations.
Indicated In the notes having been
accepted by Secretary Root, the rep
resentative of the Vatican in the archi
pelago wil lenter into relations with
the authorities in the Philippines on
the four points Indicated by Mr. Root
at the end of his cablegram.
“The holy see does not doubt that
mutual confidence combined with the
action of the American government
will readily produce a happy solution
of the pending questions, auguring for
that now country an era of peace and
true progross.
"It is my agreeable duty in ending
this letter to be able to render homage
to the very great courtesy and high
capacity with which you have filled
the delicate mission which the gov
ernment and president of the United
States delegated to you. Willingly l
add that the favorable result of the
negotiations must be attributed in
very large part to your high personal
qualities.
"While flattering myself that this
first success will be a guarantee of the
happy issue of ulterior negotiations
iu Manila, 1 have the honor to be,
etc., RAMPOLIA.”
Governor Taft was informed last
night that the pope had fixed July 21
for his farewell audience. Governor
Taft will start Saturday for Vallom
brosa, near Florence, where he will
stay with his family until Monday,
when he will return for his audience
with the pope.
Fight a Fatal Duel.
WICHITA. Kan., July 19.—Dr. H.
G. Greenland and Ben Bearman fought
a duel in a saloon at Okarche, O. T.,
after midnight this morning. Dr.
Greenland was shot through the heart
and died instantly. Bearman was
shot in the head, but not fatally.
King Finally Fixes Date.
LONDON, July 19.—An official no
tification was issued yesterday morn
ing that by the king's command the
coronation of King Edward and Queen
Alexandra will take place August 9.
Rehearsals of the processions from
Buckingham palace to Westminster
abbey took place yesterday morning
and the officials of the various state
departments concerned in the abbey
ceremony are again busy with prep
arations for the coming crowning.
BALFOUR IS IN THE CHAIR.
New Premier Presides at the First
Meeting of the New Cabinet.
LONDON, July 18.—The premier,
A. J. Balfour, presided in the foreign
office st the first cabinet meeting of
the new administration.
The colonial secretary, Joseph
Chamberlain, was sufficiently recov
ered from the effects of the cab acci
dent to be able to attend. He was
pole, but otherwise showed no signs
of his injuries.
The meeting o' the cabinet gave
fresh impetus to the reconstruction
reports. The most interesting of
these for America is the suggestion
that the duke of Marlborough will
succeed Lord Curzon of Kendleston
as viceroy of India, but there is not
the least possibility of any such ap
pointment.
It apears very doubtful if Lord Cur
zon will come home before the ex
piration of his term of office. As a
matter of fact, there is no appoint
ment which could be offered him, ex
cept the foreign office, which would
be a promotion from the viceroyalty
of India, and there is no indication
that Lord I-ansdowne has any inten
tion of retiring.
DREAM OF CECIL RHODES.
Before Many Years Opening Up of
Dark Continent by Rail.
WASHINGTON, July 18.—Before
many years the world may be aston
ished to find that the long fostered
dream of the late Cecil Rhodes for
the oenlng up of the Dark Continent
has become a reality, and that a con
secutive line of steel rails will
stretch from Cairo to Cape Town.
The state department made public to
day an Interesting report on railroad
development in Africa from United
States Consul Kavendal, at Beirut,
bearing date of May 10. The consul
says that by an agreement signed at
Brussels the previous month by Rob
ert Williams with the king of the
Belgians the German route was aban
doned and the railway from Cairo to
the cape is to be carried through the
Congo Free State to the upper wat
ers of the Nile. From Stanley Falls
on the upper Congo a railroad Is to
be built to Mahagl on Lake Albert
Nyanza, and this connection will sup
ply the missing link between the cape
and Egyptian railways.
CROMWELL CONFERS WITH HAY.
Discusses Panama Canal Question
While on a Visit.
WASHINGTON, July 18.—Mr. Crom
well, of counsel of the Panama Canal
company, had an Interview with Sec
retary Hay today respecting the isth
mian canal project. Mr. Cromwell
will sail Saturday for Paris, where he
will be in position to render any de
sired assistance to Attorney General
Knox and Mr. Russell in reference to
the settlement of the title to the Pan
ama canal.
Save the general statement that the
negotiations between the United
States and Colombia are progressing
satisfactorily, neither party at today's
conference had any statement to make
as to what took place.
Mr. Corea and Mr. Calve, represent
ing Nicaragua and Costa Rica, had
long interviews with Secretary Hay
on the canal question. They have not
abandoned hope that the choice of a
route will yet revert to Nicaragua.
TO REBUILD THE CAMPANILE.
Offers of Money, Some from America,
for the Purpose Received.
VENICE, Italy, July 18.—Offers of
money to aid in rebuilding the cam
panile continue to be received from
abroad, including offers from Ameri
ca. but there is a disposition to make
its reconstruction a purely national
affair and to rebuild the structure
exactly as it was prior to the collapse
without foreign assistance. The cost
is estimated at 6,000,000 lire.
The bronze gate of the Logetta of
San SoVino was found beneath the
debris, twisted and with one of the
lions broken. There is hope that the
pictures by Tintoretto and others
may be saved.
Three-fourths of the piazza of San
Marco is covered with debris and
traffic is completely stopped.
Wood Defers Visit.
WASHINGTON, July 18.—General
Wood has decided to defer his visit to
the president at Oyster Bay until early
next week in order to complete certain
work assigned him hv the secretary of
war in connection with the radical
changes ordered in the uniforms of the
army.
Root to Sail for Europe.
WASHINGTON, July 18.—Secretary
Hoot will sail for Europe July 24 on
La Savoie. He had contemplated sail
ing August 2 and had engaged pass
age for that date, but received an
invitation from General Horace Por
ter, United States ambassador to
France, to sail with him on the Sa
voie on the earlier date and has ac
cepted. Secretary Root, as noyr ar
ranged, expects to return to the Uni
ted States about the 6th of August
WORK ONCE MORE
STRIKING FREIGHT HANDLERS
TAKE THEIR OLD PLACES.
ACTIVITY ACAIN IS THE ORDER
Immense Quantities of Freight Rush
ed Out by the Wholesale Merchants
—Estimated Cost of the Strike is
Ten Million Dollars.
CHICAGO, July 17.—Renewed activ
ity on the part of Chicago business
men followed the settlement of the
freight handlers’ and teamsters’ strike
yesterday and at the close of business
hours thousands of tons of freight
had been sent to and from the various
freight depots. Every one of the 24,
000 who could obtain employment had
returned to work by 2 o’clock ia the
afternoon. The strike, it is estimated,
cost the business men of Chicago $10,
000,000 and in order to guard against
a contingency in the future they are
preparing to inaugurate an eduea
Xonal campaign in opposition to the
sympathetic strike.
a ue lauuz unions win uc usiveu 10
forego the use of this impotent
weapon. Business interests which
suffered during the strike will join in
pledging themselves, it is said, not to
sign union agreements which do not
guard them against these strikes.
On the other hand the labor unions
are fighting to secure the right to ab
rogate agreements for the purpose of
ordering sympathetic strikes.
The freight handlers blame the na
tional officers of the teamsters for the
loss of the strike. They declare that
the strike show's the necessity for in
corporating in all agreements a re
servation which will permit strikes.
Credit for the settlement rests with
the state board of arbitration. It was
the adoption of the suggestion of that
board which led to the action of the
freight handlers’ union in declaring1
the struggle with the railroads at an
end.
At the same time it Is probable that'
even had the state board not made its
suggestions, the fight would have been
practically over today, as the major
ity of the freight handlers had re
turned to work beore the mass meet
ing at which the strike was called
off officially had convened. It W’as a
knowledge of this fact that had much
to do with the action taken by the:
union. However, the proposition made
by the state board of arbitration en
abled the freight handlers to retire1
gracefully from the field.
MEET DEATH IN UTAH MINE.
Powder Magazine Explodes at the
Twelve-Hundred-Foot Level.
PARK CITY. Utah, July 17.—Two.
powder magazines at the 1,200-foot
level of the Daly-West mine exploded}
about 1 o'clock this morning, causing'
a loss of life that at present cannot
be estimated nor even guessed at.
At 4 o'clock twenty-seven men had'
been taken out of the mine dead and
several others had been recovered in
a half-dazen condition. These were
all brought out through the Ontario
mine shaft, which is a mile distant
from tlie Daly-West, in which the ex
plosion occurred. The 1,200-foot lev-'
cl of the Daly-West corresponds to,
and is connected by tunnel with the1
COO-foot level of the Ontario.
In the Daly-West between 100 and
150 men were at work. In the On
tario were nearly 100, it is believed.
PARK CITY, Utah, July 17.—Thir
ty-five miners were killed in the Daly
West and Ontario mines—twenty-nine
in the Daly-West and six in the.On
tario. The disaster was the result of
an explosion occasioned by John
Burgy, a miner, going into one of the
magazines of the Daly-West with a
lighted candle. His act cost him his
life and the lives of many other min
ers beside. His body was blown to
atoms. All the other victims are rec
ognizable, their laces being easily
identified by relatives and friends.
vviiiarvjr rnuc
PEORIA. 111., July 17j—The price of
whisky advanced 1 cent this morning
on the Peoria board of trade. That
brings the price up to $1.31 per gal
Ion on a basis of finished goods.
Cholerr. in Philippines.
MANILA. July 17.—Cholera is still
spreading in the provinces. The pro
vincial totals are 14,507 cases and
10,937 deaths. Manila averages forty
cases daily.
General Smith Guilty.
WASHINGTON. July 17.—Secre
tary Root brought from Oyster Bay
the findings in the case of General
Jacob H. Smith, tried by court-martial
at Manila on account of orders issued
to Major Waller. General Smith was
found guilty of the charges by the
court and sentenced to be admonish
ed by the reviewing authority. The
president has so admonished General
Smith, and retired him under the law
age of 62.
LAKE OKOBOJI.
On the Milwaukee Railway.
For a short or long vacation this
beautiful laJke offers a most econo
mical, yet delightful outing.
Quickly and easily reached from
Omaha via the Milwaukee Railway,
altitude almost 2,000 feet, air always
cool and invigorating. A beautiful,
clear deep lake with high shores pic
turesquely timbered with hardwood
trees. Excellent fishing, boating and
bathing. Moderate priced but good
hotels. This is a list of advantages
not to be equaled. Full information
cheerfully furnished at the Milwaukee
Railway City office, 1504 Farnam
street. F. A. NASH,
Gen. Western Agent.
Blackberry Crop.
All things considered, says Country
Life in America, the blackberry has
been our most profitable bush fruit.
It is a heavy cropper, a fairly reliable
yielder, easily picked, continues many
years in profitable fruitfulness, and
generally is in good demand. Its dis
advantages are softness for long-dis
tance shipment, a slight tendency to
scald, and a season of fruiting that
brings it into direct competition with
peaches. However, this real disadvan
tage of season often becomes a decided
advantage during a short peach crop,
which often occurs. It then has the
market to itself without a dangerous
competitor.
The Record of a Marrying Parson.
The sixth annual reunion of the
Rev. W. L. Meese Matrimonial asso
ciation was held in Noel’s Grove
near LaGrange, Ind., on June 18. The
members of this association arfe the
hundreds of couples married by Mr.
Meese. The latter keeps an accur
ate record of the couples he unites,
and he claims no other preacher can
show an equal number. Of all his
marriages it is said that no one has
ever been divorced.
For a Finger Nail, $200.
Franz Muller, a Viennese artist,
was very proud of his beautiful nails,
which were the envy of many ac
quaintances. One of thes was so con
sumed with jealousy that he broke one
of the beautiful nails, whereupon the
bereaved artist sued him for damages.
A jury has just awarded him 1,000
crowns, about $200 of American
money.
Algernon Sartorls as a Soldier.
Algernon Sartorls, a grandson of
General l)lys3es S. Grant. Is to enter
the army. Young Sartorls Is 28 years
old, a fine, strapping, athletic fellow.
He Is ambitious to serve in the foreign
branch of the army. He was educated
at Oxford university. During the
Spanish war he served on the staff of
General Fftzhugh Lee as a captain of
volunteers.
AUDITORIUM STOCK CONTEST.
Number of Tickets Sold and Interest
in It Increasing Every Day.
Interest in the Auditorium Stock
Contest, which was opened in Omaha
July 1, has increased steadily every
day since that time and the project
promises to be a great success in ev
ery way. The plan adopted for dispos
ing of a sufficient amount of the com
mon stock of the Omaha Auditorium
Company to complete and furnish
what will be the largest and handsom
est building of its kind in the north
west, is very simple. The common
stock has been divided into shares of
twenty-five cents each, and with each
share the purchaser is given two
guesses, one on a special prize and one
on a list of 1,001 prizes.
The capital prize of $5,000 in gold,
contributed by the Defiance Starch
Co. of Omaha, Neb., and 1,000 other
prizes, ranging in value from $2.50 up
to $3,500, contributed by the business
men of Omaha, will be awarded im
mediately after the election next No
vember, but the contest for them has
already opened, and will close Octo
ber 28, or as much sooner as the
shares of stock are sold. The capital
prize will be awarded to the person
guessing closest to the total ‘vote
which will be cast for governor of
New York, November 4, 1902, and the
other prizes to the 1,000 persons mak
ing the next closest guesses. The total
vote at the last five elections was:
1891, 1,165,085; 1894, 1,275,671; 1896,
1,434,046; 1898, 1,359,190; 1900, 1,556,
520.
There will be seven more special
cash prizes, to be awarded the first and
fifteenth of each month until Novem
ber, and persons buying tickets now
have one guess with each share of
stock on them as well as on the other
prizes. Each special prize will be in
cash, and not less than $50 nor more
than $500. The prize, divided into
small bills and “change will be di
vided and put into two sacks without
being counted, and the person gues
sing nearest the amount in the larger
sack will be given the contents of both
sacks. The contest is not confined to
residents of Omaha or limited to any
number of tickets. Anyone desiring
further information or tickets should
address Omaha Auditorium Co.,
Omaha, Nebraska.
Big Demand for Jockeys.
So many of the ablest and most
skillful American jockeys are now rid
ing in England and upon the Eu
ropean continent that the demand for
competent lads in the saddle is now
more urgent in this country than at
any time since Longfellow and Harry
Bassett met in their memorable series
of contests.
Uncle Sam’s Exact Population.
The total population of the United
States on June 1, 1900, as given by
the final results of the twelfth cen
sus, is 84.233.0G9. The Chinese,
British and Russian empires are the
only countries which have a greater
number of inhabitants. They also
have a greater area.
State Without a Head.
For seven hours one day recently
the state of New York was without an
executive head, Governor Odell and
Senator Ellsworth, president pro tern.,
being in the west. Lieutenant Gov
ernor Woodruff in Europe and Speaker
Nixon in Ohio.
When Vt comes to cutting remarks
the tongue has the sword beat a
block.
Grasshoppers as Admission Tickets.
The residents of Ephraim, Utah,
the agricultural section of San Pete
county, where the crops last year
were completely ruined by grasshop
pers, have adopted a novel method
of exterminating the pest, which is
again threatening the crops. A se
ries of entertainments have been ar
ranged, the admission to which is
one-half bushel of grasshoppers. At
the first entertainment—a dance—
seventy-five half bushels 01 grass
hoppers were presented to the ticket
man at the door. After the dance
the “hoppers” furnished fuel for a
bonfire to properly top off the occa
sion.
Variety Show on Shipboard.
Arrangements are reported to have
been made for the introduction of
vaudeville entertainments on some of
the ocean liners. The scheme will
be given a trial on the steamer St.
Paul’s next trip out of New York.
The entertainments will be furnished
entirely by male talent, according to
present plans.
Never doum a girl's veracity when
she says she can’t sing. It's ten to
one she can’t.
In one respect the little birds are
lucky. iheir grandmothers never
spoil them.
What Might Have Been.
Sonoma, Mich., July 21st.—Mr. De
los Hutchins of this place says: "If
I could have had Dodd’s Kidney Pills
25 years ago I would not now be crip
pled as I am.”
Mr. Hutchins *pent from 1861 to
1864 in the swamps of Louisiana as
a northern soldier and with the re
sult that he contracted Rheumatism
which gave him much pain till Mr.
Fred Parker, the local druggist, ad
vised him to try Dodd’s Kidney Pills.
The first two boxes did not seem
to help him very much, but Mr. Park
er, knowing that Dodd’s Kidney Pills
would eventually cure him, pressed
Mr. Hutchins to continue and by the
time four boxes were used the short,
sharp, shooting pains which had tor
tured his back, hip, and legs were
entirely gone. Mr. Hutchins says:
“I can not tell you how much better
I am feeling. If it were not for the
way my hands, feet, and knees are
drawn out of shape I would be about
as good as ever." .. _
The man who likes to hear himself
talk is usually the only one who cares
to hear him.
8100 Reward 8100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn tha', there is at least one dreaded disease
that sc'.encu has been able to cure in all its
stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu
tional disease, requires a constitutional treat
ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up the constitution and
assisting nature in doing its work. The pro
prietors have so much faith in its curative
powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for
any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of
Testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a
Sold by druggists 75e.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Liberty consists of letting your wife
do as you please.
Shetland Ponies.
Real Shetland ponies, says Country
Life in America, are scarcer than
most persons imagine. At last ac
counts there were only a couple of
thousand, roughly speaking, on their
native isles, and they are rapidly be
ing exported or spoiled by the admix
ture of other and larger breeds. There
are comparatively few pure Shetlands
in this country and many of the ponies
offered for sale by dealers as such are
really half-breeds or Iceland ponies.
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME,
Notre Dame, Indiana.
We call the attention of our reader*
to the advertisement of Notre Dame
University, one of the great educa
tional institutions of the West, wbi£h
appears in another column of this pa
per. Those of our readers who may
have occasion to look up a college for
their sons during the coming year
would do well to correspond with the
President, who will send them a cata
logue free of charge, as well as all
particulars regarding terms, courses
of studies, etc.
There is a thorough preparatory
school in connection with the Univer
sity, in which students of all grades
will have every opportunity of pre
paring themselves for higher studies.
The Commercial Course intended for
young men preparing for business,
may be finished in one or two years,
according to the ability of the student.
ST. EDWARD’S HALL, for boys un
der thirteen, is an unique department
of the institution. The higher courses
are thorough in every respect, and
students will find every opportunity
of perfecting themselves in any line
of work they may choose to select.
Thoroughness in class work, exact
ness in the care of students, and de
votion to the best interests of all, are
the distinguishing characteristics of
Notre Dame University.
Fifty-eight years of active work In
the cause of education have made this
institution famous all over the coun
try.
Fire insurance solicitors should be
lightning talkers.
GREATLY REDUCED RATES
Via
WABASH RAILROAD.
New York and Return.
Atlantic City and Return.
From Chicago .$18.00
From Omaha .$36.95
Tickets on sale July 17 and 31;
August 7 and 14.
Stop-over privileges allowed at De
troit and Niagara Falls.
Special rates on sale daily to all
summer resorts. Stopovers allowed
on all tickets at Detroit and Niagara
Falls. Ask your nearest ticket agent
to route you via the Wabash railroad.
For rates, lake trips, and all informa
tion, call at Wabash New City Ticket
Office, 1601 Farnam St., or address
Harry E. Moores, Genl. Agt., Passen
ger Dept., Omaha, Neb.
A well-bred person is one who
doesn’t boast about it.
IRONING A SHIRT WAIST.
' Not infrequently a young woman
finds It necessary to launder a shirt
waist at home for some emergency,
when the laundryman or the home ser
vant cannot do it. Hence these direc
tions for ironing the waist: To iron
summer shirt waists so that they will
look like new it is needful to have
them starched evenly with Defiance
starch, then made perfectly smooth
and rolled tight in a damp cloth, to be
laid away two or three hours. When ^
ironing have a bowl of water and a
clean piece of muslin beside the iron
ing board. Have your iron hot, but
not sufficiently so to scorch, and abso
lutely clean. Begin by ironing the
back, then the front, sides and the
sleeves, followed by the neckband and
the cuffs. When wrinkles appear ap
ply the damp cloth and remove them.
Always iron from the top of the waist
to the bottom. If there are plaits in
the front iron them downward, after
first raising each cne with a blunt
knife, and with the edge of the iron
follow every line of stitching to give it
distinctness. After the shirt waist is
ironed it should be well aired by the
firo or in the sun before it is folded
and put away, says the Philadelphia
Inquirer.
BROWINBLL HALL.
A well equipped school for girls. Graduates of Vassar college, Radcliff college, <
the Woman's college of Baltimore, the university of Nebraska, and the university
of Chicago, included in the corps of instructors for 1902-03. Music, art and tho
modern languages taught by women of extended residence in European capitals
under the instruction of the best masters. Gives good, general education and pre
§ares for any college open to women. Principal’s certificate admits to college.
pe-cial attention to the development of individuality and also the development of
a sense of social responsibility. Thoroughness insisted upon as essential to char
acter building. Out-door sports and a lar re, new sunny gymnasium equipped with
Swedish apparatus. Physical training daily under the direction of a professional
Instructor. Happy home life. Terms moderate. Send for catalogue. Address,
Miss Macrae, Principal, Omaha
THERE'S NO USE ARGUING
Defiance Starch is the very best Starch made,
h’s a fact
Hundreds will testify to It
Try once yourself.
We guarantee satisfaction or money bark.
You can’t lose.
Defiance Starch Is absolutely free from chemicals.
It makes the clothes look beautiful and will not rot them.
Get it of your grocer.
16 ounces for 10 cents—one-third more than
you get of any other brand..
THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO.,
OMAHA,.NIB..