i J if f 1 "P -r, s - - httsmouth journal waanas bbbsb BBBBBBaaBBaBBi C W. kllCKMAW. PnMUber. rLATTSMOUTH, EBUASKA. r The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Part. CONGRESSIONAL. A biix reported tn the aenate on the 6th Vi facilitate the enforcement of the prrwet im Xntrrllm and eeutrart-labor hwi Taw con ultr ast diplomatic appropriation bill wan also reported.... In le house bill were passed to admit New Mexico and Arlsnna to statehood; appropriating IVJ.OUO for a pnlnttal for a monu Bent to Cien. V. T. Sherman, the JeglaletiTe appropriation bill and Mr. Hatch aaul-optlon bill. A concurrent resolulaon for the final ad journment of congress on Monday, July 4, at X o'clock, was referred. OM the 7th the aenate wm tbe diplomatic and consular appropriation bill tn the bouse bill waa panned appropriating 115,000 for the establishment of weather bureau stations on Middle and Thunder Bay Island, la Lake Huron, The urgent aaaOdency bill was all -passed. June 18 was act apart for tbe delivery of eulogistic addresaeai to the memory of the late Senator Wilson, of Maryland. Tm pension deflcteacw bill waa laid feefote the aenate on the ath ea4 referred to the com mit u-e on appropriation. A bill was Intro duced appropriating S150.000 for a branch home for volunteer disabled soldiers and sailors at or near Beatrice, Neb In the bouae the agricul tural appropriation MU was paswed. lit the senate on tbe 9th the urgent -deficiency bill appropriating ever I7,ono,000 for the pres ent fiscal year was passed. Two of thtfrcneral appropriation bill the legislative anad agri cultural and the two bflht for the admission of New Mexico and Arizona as states were re ceived from- the hoime. Adjourned to tbe 13th. ....In the house bills were punned permitting poor persons to sue in the United States courts upon affidavits, and authorizing the courts to .appoint counsel; defining the crimes of murder In tbe first and second degree and manslaugh ter in places and on waters under the exclusive Jurisdiction of the United States, and modify ing the revised statutes so as to dispense with proof of loyalty during the war of the rebellion as a prerequisite to beiiur Testored or admitted to the pension roll. There was .no Sfstdan of tbe senate on the 10th.... In the house the -day was spent In the consideration of unimportant measures and tie evening session was devoted to the consid eration of private pension bills. Adjourned to the 13th. DOMESTIC. Thk levee protecting the Hunt drain age district below Warsaw. I1L, broke, flooding thousands of acres of rich farming lands and eamsing great de struction to property. " " " " A cxouDBusT betweejti Harold and Blunt, S. D., flooded, a large section of the country, doAhg great damage, and Mrs. K. MyFoote and three children were drained. THErwrxHes of five dead babies were under a sidewalk at Twenty- street and Armour avenue, Chicago. . Johx C. Brows, of Saginaw, Mich., one of the most extensive logging con tractors in the northwest, failed for 8115,000 and nominal assets of 590,000. The United States will exhibit in lata government building at the world's fair spec interna of the various imple - amenta nsed by the army since 1770. Charles Lie, the Dubuque la.) boy cvuvicbed of murder or complicity in the killing of a street ear driver, was sentenced to twenty years in the peni tentiary. Aftek a shut-down of nearly three months the Spreckles sugar refineries at Philadelphia resumed operations, nearly 1.000 men going to work. Edward McMillan, who killed his wife February 20, 1891, was hanged at "Wilkesbarre, Pa. A company with a capital of 510,000, 00 was organized in New York to build a fleet of whaleback vessels to compete for ocean carrying freight. A relic of the recent war between cattlemen and rustlers was found in the shape of four human bodies swing ing to the limb of a tree near Buffalo, Wyo. The bodies had evidently been hanging for weeks. Austin Porter was hanged by a mob near Grayson, Ky., for killing his wife. Br carelessness in turning water into an empty boiler at a tile works south of Idaville, Ind., four men were blown to pieces. In the United States the visible sup ply of grain on the 6th was: Wheat, 27,910,000 bushels; corn, 4,478,000 bush els; oats, 3,Sti9,000 bushels; rye, 450, 000 bushels; barley, 411.000 bushels. Josiah Lawton sailed from Boston in his 12-foot canvas boat for a trip across the ocean. An alligator 9 or 10 feet long was seen floundering around on the bank of the Wabash river near Andrews, Ind. Gov. Pattison, of Pennsylvania, has issued a proclamation to the state at larg-e for relief to the Oil City and Titus Tille sufferers. William Kaxeker (colored), who as saulted the 11-year daughter of Joseph II. II am at Apalachicola, Fla., was strung up by a mob. President Harrison has approved the act granting a pension to ex-Senator George W. Jones, of Iowa. A clovdrcrst at Zwingle, la., swept away nearly the entire village, only one house being left. Much live stock was drowned. Fire destroyed the mammoth sewer pipe works of Robinson Bros, at Akron, O. Loss, $100,000. Fire destroyed the malt house and elevator of Macklem & Slater at Niag ara Falls, N. Y., the loss being $100,000. Four members of the fire department were injured, two fatally. A rainstorm flooded Oberlin, O., do ing great damage to property. Three men were killed in a freight train wreck on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway at Hartford, Wis. Bob Ford. Jesse James' slayer, was shot and killed at Creeae, Col., by Dep uty Sheriff Kelly. Leon Diox, of Boston, has an electri cal invention that does away with the trolleys on electric cars. Toor, McGowan fc Co., wholesale grocers at Memphis, Tenn., failed for $121,000. The town of Old Windham, Conn., celebrated the two hundredth anniver sary of its birth. Nathan John, a farmer, was killed by hailstones, while plowing in his field near Canton, Miss. Bert Coberlt and Frank Mowberry, red 11 d 13 years, fell under tt" - - . . ldsaBawiWwaw- f n-annWBsV Second ocuza of New York. , J sinews of war Charles HiU. (colored), who assault ed Miss Starr, was hanged by a snob in the county courthouse yard at IVducah, Ky. Ttirkk negro men and a woman were killed by lightning on a plantation 10 miles from Canton, lenn., aunuj m storm. Fred Wetht, accused by the neigh bors of abusing his wife, was flogged by Pavilion (S. Y.) citiaens and taken to the river and ducked. A ci-ocdwi-hst flooded the business portion of Belmont, 111-, and consider able property was swept away. The Cornell freshmen crew defeated the Columbia freshmen in a 2-mile raee at Ithaca. N. Y., by six lengths. The time was 10 minutes 56 seconds for Cor nell and tl minutes 24 seconds for Co lumbia. Tore Cook (colored) was hanged in the jail at Bastrop, Tex., for the out rage and murder of Miss Ida Moore, a young white woman. CxTJERNSEr-OriBORNE, for twenty years in the employ of Edward A Morrison & Son, dry-goods merchants in New York, was found to be a defaulter to the extent of $20,000. I the United States the business failures during the seven days ended on the 10th numbered 192, against 207 the preceding week and 224 for the corre sponding week last year. Two cars were wrecked on the new Chattahoochee electric line near Atlan ta, Ga., and three men were killed and two fatally injured. At the leading clearing houses in the United States the exchanges during the week ended on the 10th aggregated $1, 183,4S7,730, against $1,019,465,873 the previous week. The increase as com pared with the corresponding week of 1891 was 16.6. The aggregate volume of trade, in spite of all obstacles, was said to be 7 per cent, greater throughout the coun try than a year ago. The thermometer marked 93 degrees in the shade at Kansas City, Mo., and three persons were fatally sunstruck. Jack Bliss, the king of the rustlers, was killed near Arland, Wyo., by Depu ty Sheriff Irey and a posse. Up to the 10th sixty-five dead bodies had been taken from the ruins at Titus ville, Pa., caused by fire and flood, and more were missing. . Fire destroyed Woods, Jenks & Co.'s planing mill at Cleveland, O., the loss being $250,000. The acreage of winter wheat, based on returns of the department of agri culture in Washington, is 99.9 per cent, of the acual area of last year. A tornado at Moscow, Pa , destroyed many buildings mere and in tne sur rounding country, but no lives were lost. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. The people's party of Iowa held their state convention in Des Moines and elected national delegates. The plat form favors a graduated income tax, postal savings banfes, and asserts that land is the heritage of all the people and that the government should own and operate railroads. Ex-Secretary Blaine left Washing ton for Boston en route to Bar Harbor. The republicans carried Oregon by majorities ranging from 3,000 to 6,000 on the state ticket, and control both branches of the legislature. Hermann and Ellis (reps.) were elected congress men. The tenth republican national con vention convened at Minneapolis on the 7th. J. Sloat Fassett. of New York, was elected temporary chairman, and the various committees were appointed. The Virginia prohibitionists in con vention at Lynchburg elected delegates to the national convention in Cincinnati and adopted resolutions favoring the suppression by law of the manufacture or traffic in intoxicating liquors. Maj. Etarts S. Ewino, a retired army officer, widely known in military circles, died at his home in Winter set, la. The following congressional nomina tions were made: Illinois, Seventh dis trict, H. M. Gilbert (people's party). Missouri, Seventh district, John T. Hurd (dera.) renominated. Kansas, Second district, H. L. Moore (dem.). Maine. Fourth district, D. A. Powers (dem.). Judge Frank L. Gibson, of the su perior court, of Milwaukee county, died suddenly in his library in Milwaukee, aged 46 years. George F. Green, who invented the first self-binder, first electric street car and first pneumatic shutler for photog raphers, died at Kalamazoo, Mich., aged 60 years. The Georgia prohibitionists met in convention at Atlanta and decided to put a state ticket in the field, but left the question of its make-up to the state executive committee. The delegates from the Fifth (Atlanta) district nom inated Sam Small for congress. In convention at Bangor the Maine democrats nominated Charles F. John son, of Waterville, for governor. The platform advocates changes in the pro hibitory law so as to permit hotels and drug stores to sell liquors and recommends the nomination of Cleve land for president. The democracy of Mississippi in con vention at Jackson elected un instructed delegates to the national onvention. The platform favors tariff reform and denounces reciprocity. The democrats of Alabama in state convention at Montgomery split into two factions and the bolters nominated Reuben A. Kolb (alliance) for governor. The regulars postponed making a nom ination. Texas democrats in convention at Lampasas adopted a platform demand ing a tariff for revenue only and free silver, and opposing national banks as banks of issue. The national delegates chosen were uninstructed. The democratic state convention held in Baltimore, Md., did not instruct the delegates elected to the national con vention. Nothing was done by the national republican convention at Minneapolis on the 8th except to form a permanent organization and to adopt the report of the committee on rules and order of I asv McHinlev. of Ckx. waa W exacted to - quits littrxllj. William Henry Harrison died in Washington, aged 104 years. 6 months and 29 days, lie claimed to have en Joyed an acquaintance with George Washington. At the republican national conven tion in Minneapolis on the 9th a test vote on the adoption of the committee ou credentials indicated a majority of the delegates in favor of Harrison. The platform was reported and adopted. Pablo Perea, a noted Mexican exile, died in Phoenix. A. T., aged 01 years. Fifty years ago he was one of the most prominent and active men in Mexican politics. The noted Osage chief tn-Tsa-VVah-Tah-In-Kah died at Pawhuska, Kan., of Bright's disease. He was just clos ing his second term as principal chief of the Obage nation. Sidnet Dillon, financier and rail road magnate, died at his residence in New York, aged 79 years. The regular Alabama democratic convention in session at Montgomery renominated Thomas G. Jones for gov ernor, five supreme court judges and a candidate for attorney general. In the Seventh Ohio district the dem ocrats nominated James D. Richardson, for congress, and in the Fifth Kansas district the people's party nominated John Davis. At the republican national conven tion in Minneapolis on the afternoon of the 10th Benjamin Harrison was re nominated for president of the United States on the first ballot, the vote being: Harrison, 685; McKinley, 182; Blaine, 181; Reed, 4; Lincoln, 1. White law Reid, of New York, was nominated for vice president by acclamation, after which the convention adjourned sine die. FOREIGN. During a severe storm a house in the Styrian Alps was destroved by light ning and eight persons were killed. Advices from San Domingo say that the report has been confirmed that Sa mana bay, in the western part of the terminus of the Sanchez Lavaga rail way, Dominican republic, has been ceded to the United States. Dispatches from Berlin confirm the recent rumors of the death in the in terior of Africa of Emin Pasha. The floods in the valley of the Dan ube were increasing alarmingly. The inhabitants of Vienna had been of ficially notified that there was danger of an inundation. Seven bandits who were captured near Orizaba, Mex., were executed. Three persons were killed and a dozen injured by a collision on the Mid land railway near Ilkley, England. The government troops at the canton of Orizaba, in tbe state of Vera Cruz, Mex., had an encounter with a band of marauders and killed seventeen of them. The eruption of Mount Vesuvius was hourly increasing in violence, and lava was pouring out of the crater in im mense volumes like a river of molten metaL A cablegram from London says that the original portrait of Pocahontas, painted in 1612, has been secured for exhibition at tbe world's fair. Herb Gunjher, a master dyer at Weissenfels, Germany, murdered his three children to spite his wife, with whom he had quarreled. An explosion in a coal pit near Mies bach, Switzerland, killed sixteen, miners. The rebels of Matto G rosso, Brazil, had a seven days battle with govern ment troops and utterly defeated them. One thousand men of the government's army and all their chief officers were killed upon the battlefield and a large number were wounded. LATER. John Gilson, secretary of the Judson iron works, was held up on the Barke ley train at B street station in Oakland, Cal., by two men and robbed of $16,000 in cash. The whole business portion of Roche port, Mo., was burned. The fifty-fourth body was found at Oil City, Pa. This completed that city's dead, all of the missing having been found or accounted for. Charles Rea and Will Haden were killed by lightning at Paris, Ky. Charles Daniels, a mine captain, and Charles Dungelson, a laborer, were killed by striking miners at Marquette, Mich. Thomas Cross, of Ottawa, Ont., com mitted suicide by deliberately holding his head under water. The Crescent paper mill at Hartford City, Ind., owned by Fort Wayne cap italists, was destroyed by fire, the loss being 190,000. A hailstorm disastrous to crops and fruit visited Nebraska, in the vicinity of Doniphan. Great excitement prevailed at Guth rie, O. T., occasioned by two criminal assaults by negroes upon white wom en. One of the fiends was captured and shot to death. Mexican troops killed six brigands and captured twenty-two in a battle near Orizaba. Thieves broke open the safe in the office of the Bedeau Lumber Company at Genese, Ark., and secured $51,100 in in cash. Col. L. L. Polk, president of the Na tional Farmers' Alliance, died in Wash ington, aged 55 years. A ship laden with supplies for the starving Russians, from the circles of King's Daughters, sailed front New York. George Whitstone, of Cass county, Tex., killed his two small children with a hatchet and then shot himself. Fire destroyed the People's theater at Denver, Col., the loss being $100,000. Sixty-two cadets were graduated at West Point, N. Y. In the National league the percentages of the baseball clubs for the week ended on the 11 th were: Boston, .739; Brook lyn, .659; Cincinnati, .574; Chicago, .556; Philadelphia, .522; Cleveland, .500; New York, .489; PitUburgn, .479; Louis ville, .444; Washington-1432; EL Loais, .340; Baltimore, .207. r he percentages in clubs of the r rn let were: Columbus, .7 auLs, XZZ; Cia saa City, J ledo "; r!r rolis. .421, 457? To-i , THEIR PltLNCIPLES. Tbm Platform Adopted by the Re publican Convention Its Deelaratloais on Protsetloo, Illmetal Uain, Klst-tlona, Opposition to Truata, and on Many Toplca of m Miscel laneous Katnjaa, MrsiCEAroi.is, Minn., June lOt Followln Is the complete text of the platform adopted by the committee for auumiasion to the convention: The representative of the republicans of the United States assembled in Ker.eral conven tion on the shores of the Mississippi river, th everlasting bond of an Indestructi ble republic, whose moat glorious chapter of history Is the record of the republican party, congratulate their coun trymen on the majestic march of the nation under the banners Inscribed with ths principles of our platform of 1MH8, vindicated by victory at the polls and prosperity in our fields, workshops aad mines, and make, the following declaration Si principles: Ye reatllrm ths American doctrine of protec tion. We call attention to its growth abroad. Ws maintain that the prosperous condition of our country is largely d us to Ute wise revenue legislation of the republican congress. We believe that all articles which cannot be produced in the United States, except luxuries, should be admitted free of duty, and that on all Imports coming in competition with the prod ucts of American labor there should be levied an ties equal to the difference between wages abroad and at home. We assert that the prices of manufactured articles of general consumption have been re-d-iced under the operations of ths tariff act of lf. We denounce the efforts of the democratic majority of the house of repreentativea to de stroy our tariff law by piecemeal, as is mani fested by their attacks upon wool, lead and lead ores, the chief products of a number of states, and we ask the people for their judgment there on. XVt point to the success of the republican policy of reciprocity, under which our export trade has vastly increased, and new and en larged market) have been opened for the prod ucts of our farms and workshops. We remind the people of the bitter opposition of the demo, cratic purty to tltis practical business meas ure, and claim that, executed by a republic an administration, our present laws will event ually give us control of the trade of the world. The American people, from tradition and in terest, favor bimetallism, and the republican partv demands the use of both gold and silver as standard money, with such restric tions and under such provisions, tc be determined by legislation, as will secure iho maintenance of the parity ol values of the two metals, so that the purchas ing and debt-pay ins power of the dollar, whether of silver, gold or paper, shall be at all times equal. The interests of the producers of the country, its farmers and its workinfrmen, de mand that every dollar, paper or coin, issued by the government shall be as good as an; other. We commend the wise and patriotic steps al ready taken by our government to secure an international conference to adopt such meas ures as will insure a parity of value between gold and silver for use as money throughout the world. We demand that every citizen of th United States shall be allowed to cast one free and unrestricted ballot in all public elections, and that such ballot Shall be counted and returned as cast: thai such laws shall be enacted and en forced as will secure to every citizen, be h rich or poor, native or foreign born, white oi black, this sovereign right guaranteed by th constitution. The free and honest populai ballot, the just and equal represents tioz of all the people, as well as their jusl and equal protection under the laws, art the foundation of our republican institutions and the party will never relax its efforts until the integrity of the ballot and the purity ol elections shall be fully guaranteed and protectee In everv state. We denounce the continued inhuman outragei perpetrated upon American citizens for polltioa! reasons in certain southern states of the union We favor the extension of our foreign com merce, the restoration of our merchant marin by home-built 5 hips and the creation of a navy for the protection of ur national interests and tne honor of our Bug; the maintenance of tht most friendly relations with -all foreign powers entangling alliances with none; and the protec tion of the rights of our fishermen. We reaffirm our approval of the Monroe doc trine and believe in the achievement of tin manifest destiny of the republic in its broad- We favor the enactment of more "stringenl laws and relations for the restriction of crimi nal, pauper and contract immigration. We favor efficient legislation by congress U protect the life and limb of employes of trans portation companies engaged in carrying on in ter-state commerce, and recommend legisla tion by the respective states that will protect employes enga?ed in state commerce, in miu iner and in manufacturing. The republican party has always been th champion of the oppressed and recognizes th dignity of manhood, irrespective of faith, eolol or nationality; it sympathizes with the cause ol home rule in Ireland, and protests against th prosecution of the Jews in Kcssia. The ultimate reliance ef free popular govern ment is tbe intelligence of the people and th maintenance of freedom among men. We there fore declare anew our devotion to liberty ol thought and conscience, of speech and press, and approve all agencies and instrumentalitiei which contribute to the education of the chil dren oi the land, but while Insisting upon th fullest measure of religious liberty we are op posed to any union of church and state. We reaffirm our opposition declared in the re publican platform of 1888 to all combinations ol capital, organized in trusts or otherwise, to con trol arbitrarily the conditio of trade among our citizens. We heartily indorse the action al ready taken upon this subject and ask for suet further legislation as may be required tc remedy any defects in existing laws and to ren der their enforcement more complete and el- We approve the policy of extending to towns, villages and rural communities the advantage! ef the free delivery service now enjoyed by th larger cities of the country, and reaffirm th declaration contained in the republican plat form of 1888, pledging tbe reduction of lettei postage to one cent at the earliest possibU moment consistent with the maintenance of tht post office department and the highest class ol postal service. Civil Service We commend the spirit and evidence of reform in the civil service and the wise and consistent enforcement by the repub lican party of the laws regulating the same. Nicaragua Canal The construction of the Nicaragua canal is of the highest importance to the American people, but as a measure of na tional defense and to build up and maintain American commerce it should be controlled by the United States government. Territories We favor the admission of the remaining territories at the earliest practicable date, having due regard to the interests of the people of the territories and of the United States. Ail the federal officers appointed for J the territories should be selected from bona j fide residents thereof and the right of self-1 government should be accorded as far as prao-1 ticable. I Arid Lands We favor cession, subject to the ' homestead laws, of the arid public lands to tbe i states and territories in which they lie. undei such congressional restrictions as to disposi tion, reclamation and occupancy by settlers aa will secure the maximum benefits to the people. The Columbian Exposition The World's Co lumbian exposition is a great national under taking, and congress should promptly enact such reasonable legislation in aid thereof aa will insure a discharging of tbe expense and ob ligation incident thereto, and the attainment of results commensurate with the dignity and progress of the nation. Intemperance We sympathize with all wise and legitimate efforts to lessen and prevent the evils of in teaope ranee and promote morality. Pensions Ever mindful of the services and sacrifices of the men who saved the life of the nation, we pledge anew te the veteran soldiers ef the republic a watchful care and recognition f their just claims upon a grateful people. Harrison's Administration We commead the able, patriotic and thoroughly American ad ministration of President Harrison. Under 11 the country has enjoyed remarkable prosperity : and the dignity and honor of the nation, at hoaae and abroad, have been faithfully maintained, I and we offer the record of pledges kept as a SiWMMftlW Ql ItUUUUi )ICI1U1UWHVC J MOT - BATTLED WITH MARAUDERS. Troops Have aa Tm mmtmr Kill Seventeen Bandits. Crrr of Mexico, June 10. Informa tion has been received here that ths government troops' at th canton of Orizaba, in the state of Vera Cruz, had an encounter with the band of marauders which . attacked and sacked the hacienda at Toculla on Hay 83. It ia stated that seventeen ci Cm bandits were killed and a trtber fc; j irecL Hone of the gor rnmsct trr "7s trrs wounded. The troop ara r the remainder of - . PRESIDENT POLK DEAD. Tae Well-Known Alltaiiee Leader I'aaars Awy In Washington aud la Hurled In Kalelccb, X. C. r- Washington, June IS. Col. L. I Polk, president of the Farmers' Alli ance, died at Garfield hospital Satur day. The death of 1-resident Polk smashes the carefully laid plans of the alliance. They were to nominate him for president at the Omaha con vention July 4, according to Dunning; editor of the third party organ. The ticket will now in all probability bo Weaver and Watson, the former from Iowa and the latter from Georgia. Ralkigii, X. C, June 13. The tram bearing the body of President Polk did not arrive here until S o'clock Sunday afternoon. It was met at the depot by hundred of people. The procession was formed aud the body was escorted tothej'irst Uaptist church, of which Mr. Polk was a communicant. Ky 4 o'clock the church was packed, the au dience numbering1 at least 1,000. After the services, which were very impres sive, the remains were escorted to Oak wood cemetery, where they were in terred. Lcontdas Polk was born in Anson county. N. C, in April, 1837, was broupht up on a farm. He .was elected to -the lower house of the North Carolina general assem bly in 1800; entered the confederate army In lb61 and served with dis tinction dnrlng the war. He was again elected LF.OXIDA8 POLK, to the North Carolina general assembly In IM and soon after was elected as a delegate to the constitutional convention of North Curoli na. In 1877 he was appointed c-ommixsion-er of agriculture. He began the publica tion of the Progressive Farmer in 1886 and commenced organizing farmers' clubs in his state. In 1887 he joined the Farmers' Alliance and was elected secretary of the Farmers' Alliance of North Carolina at its first organization, which position he con tinued to hold until his death. He was elected first vice president of the Na tional Farmers' Alliance Co-Ope rat ive union of America in 1687 and was re-elected in 188. At the national convention held at St. Louis December 3, 1889, he was elected president of the National Farmers' AlHance Industrial union, which office he filled up to the time of his death, CAN'T TOUCH THE TRUSTS. Judges Say Congress and the Legislatures Mast Keep Hands OAT. Cixcinnati, June IS. Mr. II. L. Greene, of the whisky trust, was be fore Judtres Jackson and RioUtv of the United States circuit court, Saturday to answer for refusing to give bond to ap pear in Boston to respond to an indict ment found against him in that city for violation of the United States anti trust law. The court claimed, on read ing the indictments, that none of the counts constituted a violation of any law of the United States. Mr. Greene was accordingly released from the re quirement to give a bond. Upon the return of District Attorney John W. Herron to the city the govern ment will ask for bench warrants to remove all the indicted persons to Itos ton. This will be resisted if necessary by habeas corpus proceedings. Judge Jackson gave as the grounds of his de cision, or rather in a general review of the anti-trust law, an opinion that, aside from the futility of the indict ment of Mr. Greene, the application of the law in this case would be to apply an ex post facto law inasmuch as the trust was formed before the law was enacted. The trust seemed, moreover, to him not to be a monopoly, for it did not prevent other similar trusts being formed, and congress had no right to forbid business combinations for mutuaf profit. The judge held, in ef fect, that neither congress nor the states has any power to regulate trusts. NEW WORLD'S FAIR BILL. Substitute Prepared by the Bub-Committee of tbe Hoaae. Washixgtox, June 13. A sub-committee of the world's fair committee of the house has prepared a substitute bill for that now before the committee, providing for government aid to the exposition. The substitute pro-' poses that 10,000,000 silver sou venir half dollars be recoined from the unfturrent subsidiary silver coins now in the treasury to aid in defraying the cost of completing the work at Chi cago. The sum of $600,000 is appropri ated to reimburse the treasury for loss on such recoinage. Out of the net amount received into the treasury of the exposition the government is to re ceive thereof such proportion as this appropriation bears to the whole amount expended. Provision is made for the preparation of 50,000 bronze medals and necessary dies therefor, with appropriate devices commemorative of the 400th anniversary of the discovery of America, and for 50, 000 vellum impressions and diplomas, the medals and diplomas to be awarded to exhibitors at the exposition. The bill will be laid before the full com nittee next week. Thx hose used in sprinkling the plazas of Paris is a queer contrivance. It consists of lengths of iron pipe, each length mounted at the end on short axles having two small wheels and the lengths joined together by short pieces of flexible hose. The value of the words "not trans ferable," usually printed upon season tickets, has been tested in an English court and it has been decided to be un impeachable. - A TVXtGT in a Massachusetts divorce court has laid down the law thay when a woman obtains a divorce she si 11 not DEATH OF ElvN PASHA. Noted Kxplerer Maid Hmwm rmnm a Victim to Smallpox i,. IlKiti.t, June 9. The TaB-ealt w,n firms the recent rumors of the o,n jra the interior of Africa of Emin Piw.)ia. If it is true that Einln is dead the na. ural supposition is that ho has fallen a victim to Mnull-pox, from which report in April stitU'tl he was suffering. The birth mid early life of Emin l'aha are Shrouded in mystery. He haa been called Ir. iSchnltzer, and it is said he was tMirn In either I'ruaslaor Auhtrlan Slleaia about I8.1M or 1K4U. A couple of years ago an assurance was given tat be wan bora March 8, IX Kt, atOpx-in. I'ruaaian Silesia. Ilia father died when the boy waa quite young, but hla mother Is still living. According to this report, young Scbnitzer graduated from the gyninualntn at Neisse, went to the University of llresluu and to Klngslerg to study medicine, afterward Studying at 1'aris and Vienna. He also de Voted much time to natural sciences, ornithology especially. Wandering east ward, he became tbe cotnpunion of lsmacl Fasha In his joumeya to Treblzund, Krzroom, Constantinople, Janina, In Kplrus. He learned French, Kngllsh, Italian, several Hlavlo dialects, and Turkish. Arabic and I'er eian. In iF76 he took service with Virypt and remained with Gordon until that leader's death. He was appointed governor of tho Kgyptian equatorial provinces with the title of bey. He established himself In the Albert Nyanza and for three years noth ing waa heard from him. He was known to be surrounded by hostile tribes, and Stanley was sent to learn what had become of him. The history of Stanley's march to the rescue Is fresh In the minds of all. April 10, IKW, Kmin decided to accompany Stanley to tbe coast and a atart was made. They marched up the valley of the Semllkl river, crossing at Awatnba, through Usonora and to tbe Victoria Nyanza. Mpwapws was reached NoveinU-r 11, and llagamcyo on the east count of Africa oppo site the island of Zanzibar Ueceniber i, where , during a banquet In honor of the vafe return of the traveler, Kmin was seriously hurt by fall ing from the second story of the hmise In which he was quartered. Upon his recovery Kmin went to Cairo, where he wrote the story of his African experiences. It was an interesting narrative, with mueb more In it, however, tc touch the sympathies of the naturalist than of the student of natural history or of political conditions. Emin found his element in the wilds, and hsv lngc-mcrgcdfrom it he was seized with aronsura Ing desire to return. The atmonphi reof Europe had no attraction for him. Having written his book he felt that he had paid all be owed to civ ilization. He returned to the Interior late In the spring of 1KKJ. Tho people were frlad to have him buck with them, apparently, for tbe first reports from him after his return were that he had regained his control and restored order. The reports seemed conclusive evidence that Kmin was content to remain away from civiliza tion, and that by letting him ulons explorers would do him a service that he would appreciate most highly. The reluctance with which Kmin left Central Africa Is to many unexplaluable, but still it is not difficult to understrnd. His troops hud mar ried In the land and refused to leave It. He had Immense herds of cattle and flocks of sheep and lived like a nabob. His stock of ivory, which he could not take with him to tbe coast, would, if the road to the north were ever opened, brlr.g him vast wealth. What more could be desired 1 In a letter written at Wudclal 1n lb hn tald: "I will never return with Stanley. I have passed twelve years of my life here and have won tbe trust and confidence of the people. I taught them useful trades and have aroused in them a desire to advance In civilization. True, the work of yeara has lately been undone in a measure, but lta Influence canuot be wholly lost" MANY IN r&ED ' Dlatresa In the ou Keg-Ion Hui . Families Will Need Asslatanee eral Months The List of Mead O Kvery Day. xiturvjli.k, ra., June v. wnue tne loss of life here i probably not much if any larger than that at Oil City, the damage done to property is ten times greater. The devastated area is near ly 3 miles in length and 4 or 5 blocks in width for most of the dis: tance, including the tracks and sidings of the different lines of railroad. The severest loss, however, is in the de struction of the - refineries - and manu facturing plants where so many of the survivors earned a livelihood. It is this loss of permanent work for months to come that will fall heavily upon the working class, and which will necessarily put them on the list of those requiring re lief. The relief committee is now ful ly organized and is doing effective work. Clothing and supplies are dis tributed to all in need, and as these were forthcoming immediately there has been but little if any physical suf fering. BOB FORD KILLED. Deputy Sheriff Kelly Nhoots Him In Ills Own ftaloon. Cbeede, Col., June 9. Bob Ford, the slayer of Jesse James, was shot and killed by Deputy Sheriff Kelly in Ford's dance hall Wednesday afternoon. Kelly and Ford had a quarrel in Pueblo in February last arfd ill-feeling has ex isted between the two men since. Wednesday afternoon Kelly was stand ing fh the doorway of Ford's dance hall when an unknown man waa seen to hand him a double-barrel shot gun, after which Kelly stepped inside the hall and called "Dob." Ford, who was about 5 feet away, turned around, at the same time reaching for his hip pocket. Kelly raised his gun and fired a load of buckshot full m Ford's neck and severed the windpipe and jugular vein, and be died instantly. Kelly gave himself up and refuses to talk. Disastrous Wreck of a Freight Train oa the Milwaukee A St. Paul Bond. Milwaukee, June 9. A freight train on the northern division of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul railway was wrecked at Hartford, Wis., 87 milea north of here Tuesday evening. Three men were killed. They were: R. J. FahL engineer; George Hood, fire man; James Roach, brake man. The first two lived in this city. Eoacli was a resident of Madison. At the time of the accident the train was running on a culvert which had settled, owing to a flood caused by a cloud burst. The train broke through tbe culvert and plunged into the river. The dead are under the. wreck. Hundreds of Houses Horned. St. Petersburg, June 0. At Pot cuinki, in the government of Xijni Novgorod. Russia, a fire broke out and destroyed 310 houses, causing much misery. Many of the occupants of the houses lost everything they possessed and are dependent upon charity for their food. New Treaty Pending-. Paris, June 9. The Paris Temps says that among the questions pending between France and tbe United States is a fresh commercial treaty making concessions in regard U froaen me as end live cattle