rrT-r rr 0 ftfiy VOL. III. LINCOLN, NEB., THUKSDAY, OCT. 29, 1891. NO 20. r r ) NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. "KxpiBATiOHfi: A the eastect and cheapest eua of Dotftyins; ubwribere ot tbe data oftheirexpirationi wo will mark this notice with blue or red pencil. on the date at which their rutKoriptinn expire. We will (end the paper two weeks after -ipiratkn. If not ro Dewed ttf that lime It will be discontinued. POETKY. For the Farmers' Alluscb. The Fanners Are Coining. TuBe Campbells are Comido.1 O what if this army that's marching' aloof. That steps to the music of freedom's own songf Ti the farmers and laborers from river to ea. Wko have broken their shackles and dared to be free. Chorus O the farmers are coming get out of the way. The farmers are ooiring and coming to stay; Their watch wold is right And for freedom the) fight. The farmers are coming and coming to stay. 0 ye who sink down 'neath a burden of care And a weight of oppression tco heavy to bear, TakeoouMge, look upward and oalra every fear. Far the farmers are coming and rescue Is near. CHomrs Toe hosts of oppression may threaten and sneer, But deep ( their hearts they are trembling witL fear, For the eeund of resistance o'erspreads all the world, And the farmora are coming with banners unfurled. Choupb Old time politicians your days are at hand, No more thall your perfidy ruin the land; The farmers are rousing to labor's appeal, And soon the lull weight of their vengeance you'll feel. Cuorub- They each hold a ballot unt.-ammelled and free No mortgage on that and there never shall be; And boldly they'll cast it for freedom and right, Till every oppression shall vanish from eight. -A. L. K. Jay Gould's Modest Wants. My wants are few; I soorn to be A querulous refiner; I only want America And a mortgage deed of China; And if kind fate threw Europe in , And Africa and Asia, And a few islands of the sea, I'd ask no other treasure. Give me but these they are enough To suit my humble notion And I'll give up to other men All land beneath the ocean ; I Those vast untitled, ungathered Holds, So fertile and prolific, That untrod acreage of soil The bed oi the Pacific). I only want to own the earth, . i Asa regulate and man it; My wants are all contracted down To Just one little planet. A desert tent was good enough For Abraham and Sarah, And I'd give all my fellow-men A bouse-lot In Sahara! Adair Co. Farmer. NEBEASKA NOTES. Several stores at Biainard were burglar ized. Likewise at North Bend. Considerable bogus coin, (5 and f 10 gold pieces, are in. circulation at Fairbury. James Cbalfant, one of the pioneer set tlers of Cass county, is dead, aged 81 years. Frank King, a bright young man of Schuyler, has been sent to the Lincoln in sane asylum as a result of over study. Fifty-one bushels of silver chaff wheat to the acre was recently threshed by H. E. lJankoniu, twelve miles north of Grant. The residence and contents of Deputy Sheriff Stephen Bull, four miles from Beatrice, was destroyed by fire. Loss, 2,0U0. Frank Hawley, conductor on a Lincoln electric street car, was horribly crushed between two cars. He was picked up for dead but may recever. The grocery store of F. G. Asch of Stan ton has been closed on a chattel mortgage. His liabilities will exceed his assets by something like $2,000. Mrs. Corey, living near Claramont Sta tion, was killed by having her head blown from her body by the explosion of a gaso line stove while cooking dinner for her family. Henry Muller, a German harnesRmaker of Columbus, is lying very low with lock jaw. F.very muscle in his body, except those of the throat and heart, is strongly contracted. Lulu Thompson, the 17-year-old daugh ter of a farmer living near Wilcox, was kicked in the head by a horse and her skill was crushed so badly that she died the same evening. J. Sterling Morton, General Isaac Coe and Robert Payne were appointed dele gates from Nebraska City to attend the national mining congress to be held at Denver Nov. 18 to 20. Steam from an engine cylinder badly scalded Z. K. Moon and Joseph Becker of Schuyler, but they will recover. They were removing a cap from the cylinder when the accident occurred. A skeleton, supposed to be that of a boy about 14 years of age, was found on a sand bar near Bellevue by a duck hunter. There Was no flesh on the bones save the skin and nothing which could be identified. A letter from H. N. Davey, who was one of the representatives who accompany the Nebraska advertising train, conveys the information that fully 100,0j0 people have visited the train since it left Nebraska. Sheriff Phelan at Brayton captured a man, supposed to be the murderer of the Bald wiiis, at Fontanelle, Washington county, October 1. The prisoner ap arenlly answers the description of Arthur D. Sloan. I. N. Berry of West Blue township, Fill more county, from ten acres of land raised this year 245 bushels of flax seed, an aver age of twenty-four and one-half bushels per acre. Ten bushels of seed was sown for this crop. A 2-year-old child of B. J. Tripp, living two miles west of Gibbon, was run over by a passenger train and killed. The child had just left its father a moment before and wandered on the track and wasstruck bv the pilot and thrown several feet to one side. POST'S JPESIS It Rises Nov to Denounce His Crime and Prove3 His Guilt. The Sworn and Documentary Proofi That the Charges are True. At Last the Woman who was Wronged as a Girl Emerges from the Silence. S'lie Turns and Confound the Liars and Defenders of Nebraska's Chant piea Whlted Sepulchre. Of 44 Who Protested Against the Exposure of Post, 27 Either Were Not There at the Time or Were Babies. Leon, la., Oct. 27. Special The Lincoln Journal has been received here and the allegations of that sheet that A. M. Post did not promise to marry the woman he seduced has created great in dignation. Because of these attacks the friends of this woman have consented and advised that names be made public. This woman is the wife of Robert J. Critchiield, editor of the Weldon, De catur county. Hornet. Her maiden name was M. A. Jordan, and she was the daughter of John Jordan, for years county treasurer of Decatur couuty, and one of the best known Masons in south ern Iowa. Mrs. Critchfield was asked to-day if she desired to make a statement. "I had hoped," said she, "to be kept out of this affair, but now as it has been claimed by some friendsof Mr. Post that he did not promise to marry me, and by others that ho acted to shield a third party, who was the father of my child, there is nothing left for me but to tell the whole truth. It is true that A. M. Post is the father of the child, and his parentage became possible only by the solemn promise of marriage. I was then but 10 years old ana only 17 when the boy was born. It is true that he deeded to ina fortv acres ot land that 1 after wards sold for $150, and g.ive money ai.d notes amounting to $160." Here is MRS. CIUTCHriEI.u'S AFFIDAVIT. Weldon. Ia.. Oct. 2fl. 1891.-1. Mrs. M. A CritcbQeid, formerly Miss M. A. Jordan, do gtate aud swear that A. M. Post did eeduce nietu Leon, Decatur county, la., in tbe fall ol 17 1, and that inure was Dorn to me a Ooy on August I'i, 1872, who was afterwards adopted by ueorge McDonald aud Is now liv inu at Kellerton. la. My mother was a widow. my father having died. Father was a Master MHeon ana inougui id sate loauow metoao in ci iiiBany witn a Mason, as ne, A. M. Post, often told him he would take the beet care of his dauvhter. A. M. Post was arrested and brought before the grand jury two different tunes. His property was attained and be was suspended from tbe Masonic lodice i have Binve lived in Decatur county aud taught bchooi part ot tne time in ninggoid county, i now live aud have foreigot years lived In Weldon, twelve mlies north of Leon, where I have been engaged In public school work six years back. If any one doubts the child's being big. as I understand he denies, they have only to look upon his face to satisfy themselves, as no one that ever saw ibeui both doubted the relationship claimed. 1 otimmuuicated with iur son, now a young man, recently. He wrote me to and out hli rather 8 andress that tie mignt ask ror money to pay his way through college, he being tuny acquainted witn tne facts that a. j Psi Is his father. Mbs. M. A. Critchfield. Formerly Miss M. A. Jordan. Subscribed aid sworn to before me this 26th uay of October, IBM, at Weldon, Decatur county, Iowa. Job T. Lank. Notary Public The foregoing statement was written personally by Mrs. Critchiield. She is the editorial writer on her husband's paper. For the Farmers' Alliance. The Ghost of Dead Sin. In years long past, the Tears of my youth I committed a Bin 'gainst right aud truth, A sin ot so deep and heinous die, I would lain conceal it from mortal eye; So 1 dug a grave while night dews wept, In the midnight hours wniie otners slept, Afar from tbe haunte of h -nest men, In the darksome woods ot oblivion; there buried my sin as I hoped for aye, Mot knowing sin sleeps, buicanuot die. I retraced my steps and once again Mingled with true aud loraimuu. Mingled as equal with men whom I Was unworthy tbeir shoe strings to untie. Fortune emiied, and 1 seemed to be A favored chi d of prosperity. Wealth and honor were mine, and fame Seemefl about to crown my honored name. Men applauded and called me good And 1 alinosi torgwt the grave in tho wood. When lo, one night e'en as I slept Sale and secure, a wierd thing crept Hut of the grave in the silent wood In to my room, and there it stood. (jaunt and ghastly, and green with mold. And it taid to the world, ' Beholal Behold!'' And lo. 1 tell from my honored piuce beep in the mire of dire disgrace. And the gbost, from which 1 would gladly flee, mis on my pillow and laughs with glee. A. L. C. A. M. Post and his friends siy that he (Post) was not arrested. Let the follow ing tell the story: HECOHO OF POST'S ARREST. State of Iowa, Decatur County: I, K.J. Sankiy, ago 18 years, a resident of Leon, la., gtate that 1 was sheriff- of llwatur county, la., from the 1st of auuary, 1870, to 1874. That us sheriff of eaid county on the Uilhdayof ipril, IH',3, I received and served a warruut, State of Iowa. vs. A. M. Pest for tbecrime of seduction. That on tho 13th day of April, 1872 1 received an original notice andaiBoan attachment in the case of Arti mlcia Jordan, guardian of M. A. Jordan, vs. A. M. Post; and I served original notice per sonally aud levied on all the property of de fendant 1 could find and also attached his law partner. John W. Warren, as garnishee, aud took bis sworn answer. Signed. B. J. 9 VNKEY. Subscribed and sworn to by E. .1. Sankey, Oct. 20, 1891. E.W.CURRY, Notary public. TITE HOOUS RESOLUTIONS. The State Journal published a set of resolutions purporting to come from Grand River lodge No 78, A. F. and A. M., in which A. M. Post is lauded to the skies. The facts are these: There was no lodge meeting on the 21st day of October, 1891. Second degree was to be conferred, but no officers were pieseut to open the lodge, only nine member! being there. N. P. Bullock t e-tilied that the resolutions were uountmously adopted at a meeting of Grand River Indue No. 78. This is false and the records show that no meeting was held and when Bullock attac hed the seal of the lodge to the bogus resolutions he knew and ail Masons kuow lie overstepped his authority and used the high office to further his ends. C. VV. Beck, Master Mnson of Gra.id River lodge, says when Secretary Bullock attached the seal of the lodge to the sei of resolutions exonerating feat, he usur ped his authority; further-there was no mating held. W. P. Moore, Master Mason, says there was no meeting held. Ed. K. I'll man, Matter Mason, said 'hire whs no meeting on tbe night in question. Mr. Pitman said Secretary Bullock had no right to send out the sesolutions as coming Iron a Masonic lodge. It was a nio&! damnable proceeding. SEEKS REINSTATEMENT. The record of tho Masonic lodge will show the suspension of A. M. Po-t on the charge of seducing a Master Mason's daughter. After Post left for Cape Verde islands he began in 13S than one year to seek re instatement. It has been stated that Post never sought reinstatement but once. This is false. Post asked to be reinstated at every regular meeting after perhaps a lapse of one year as at that time Masonic rules allowed applications for reinstate ment to come up at every regular met ting. Law has since been changed. Finally he returned. One night, when only nine members were present, Post's reinstatement took place. That was tbe night of October 24, is?6, four years and six months after he was suspended. He did not remain here long after that, and was demitted on January 23, 1877. If Post will give permission to have the records printed the World Herald need say no more. They will tell their own story. If Post is innocent tho rec ords will show it, and old men here who were Masons when Post was a boy stand awed at Post's perfidy in denying the' charge. THEY DIDN'T KNOW HIM. On October 24 the Lincoln Journal published an article intended to clear Post of these charges. Tnis was signed by John VV. Harvey, J. E. Brooks, M. F. Stookey, VV. II. Albaugh, Francis Varga, Stephen Varga, L. P.Seigler, T. S Arnold, I. N Clark. Sam Farquhar, G. P. Wharton, F. D. Close, VV. C. Chan dler, Stockton Watsabaugh, VV. K. Woods, II. VV. McConn, C. P. Finley, J. VV. Bowman, J. Carnlion, VV. II. Jenk ins. Z. II. Hawkins, VV. J. Sullivan, J. Hoffman, VV. A. Boone, J. R. Bashaw, VV. A. Boone, Dr. A. Brown, VV. C. Wheeler. G. Gibson. J. It. Harvey, VV. P. Clark, U. C. VanWerden, Samuel Farrey, James Granstaff, G. E. and C. E. Hurst, W. A. Alexander, A. J. Allen, It. L. Parrish, C. VV. Hoffman. G. VV. Lefollett, George T. Young. J. A. Cas ter. T. H. Seheuck. Now to the facts: Whon Post was a resident of Leon and when he left here in 1877, none of tbe following named parties who signed the above list lived here, the? having moved here since he left for Nebraska. They are: Brooks, Stookey, Albaugh, Wharton, Stockton, Watsalkugh, Woods, McConn. Haw kins, Boone, Wheeler, Van Werden, Granstaff, Alexander. Parrish, Lefollett, Young, Schenck and Allen. Dr Brown, who signed the petition has resided here but three years. At tho time Post was suspended from tho Masonic ledge Will A. Brown was a baby. That was twen ty years ago, and he is now 23, and he signed. Next in the infant list conies W. P, Clark, who was also a baby at the time the trouble occurred. George E. Hurt bad not seen half a dozen sunny Decatur coxnty summers whon Post was in trouble. Next on the infantile list comes Stephen Varga, who wasn't old enough to feed himself. Caster was on ly a boy, and C. E. Hurst ditto. These infante declared that Post was their former fellow citizen and friend, and that he steod well here and in thia vicinity. The list endorsing A. M. Post is composed of forty-four signa tures. Of this number twenty never knew Post and moved to Leon after be had taken Greeley's advice and gone west, and seven of them were children at the time of Post's residonce there. This leaves seventeen who kewhim. Several of these told the writer that when they signed tho communication they did so to please Lay ton, the brother-in-law of Post, not because they be lieved Post innocent of the charge. Others have expressed a wish that their name? had not been attached to the article. Last week S. A. Gates and N. P. Bul lock visited Weldon, and the former called on Mrs. Critchiield, in behalf of Mr. Post and the republican party, and asked her to dictate a reply smoothing over the facts. She was undecided what to say, and he asked her to think it over and commuuicate with him thd next day. She did think it over, and the more she thought the more indig nant she became. Her reply to Mr. Gates was a justly indignant refusal to be a party to his whitewashing of Post They will not dare to impeach her or her character after this. E. O. Metcalf. Ad Infant Prodigy. Trenton, N. J., Oct. 27. There ia a remarkable boy in the New Jersey re form school at Jamesburg, who has been a ward of the state because he is not safe to be at large. He is only 6 years old, but has the mannerism and maturity of a young man of 20 and the moustache of a man much oider. He is called by the medical men who have ex amined him a precocious baby and a wonder in more ways than one, His name is Herman Hotter. He stands over four feet in his stocking feet, and can hit from the shoulder with the force of a sledge. A test of his lifting powers shows that he can move a barrel of flour and lift easily a 200-pound weight. His parents are poor and have found it impossible to control him. The bov is not only the admiration ot his compan ions but the terror of the neighborhood. tie can tnrash any boy m Trenton, and he occasionally amuses himself bv clean ing out a boisterous crowd. The par ents were forced to appeal to Juace viuuuiuu. w iiiit will in suujecuou, Knsai Wheat Badly Damaged. ATcmsoNY.Oct. 27. E. O. Armsby, cashier of the Kansas Trust and Pack ing company, who returned from the western part of the state, said the un threshed wheat in that section is dam aged from 25 to 50 per cent, on account of wet weather and poor shocking, The grain has already commenced to arr xv and many stacks are green. A gooi deal of wheat still remains in the shock. This is ruined. The farmers are busily engaged in threshing crops, but will not get" through before the first of the year. The acreage of wheat put in mis ran win not De as large as last fall. Minea Nnld. Oi;rtv, Colo., Oct. 27. The sale of the Paymaster and the American Girl groups of mines near here in the Red mountain district was consummated. The properties were sold to James Hop kins of St. Louis, president of the American Nettie company. The con sideration was $300,000. Albany, N. Y., Oct. 27. The conrt of appeals handed down a decision af firming the judgment of the lower courts in favor of the heirs of the Til den will caje. BIG STORMJN OHIO. Tbe Town or Conncaut Tadlj Wrecked by a Cyclone. THE DEPOT DEMOLISHED. factories IntM and Hnuu-t Faroofod. Mach Damaa Rrpartad Dona Ika Sblpplac-FIa Kitla In Mlaaeaota Freight Wrack. CoyEtrr. O., Oct 27. A cyclon struck this town at 0 o'clock p. m., de etror'it; thirty houses and causing a los of JlOO.OOO. The Butler tub factory was completely wrecked, causing a loss of f..0,000 more. The Lake Shore rail way depot was demolished and the wreckage strewn along the track for half a mile, rendering them impassable. The telegraph wires of the Wester n Union company and Nickel Plate and Lake Shore roads are down for miles. Many of the handsomest residents in the town were nnroofed and otherwise dam aged. A remarkable feature of tbe storm is that bo far as known no lives wereloBt. Very little rain accompan ied the cyclone. The 6torm came off Lake Erie from the northwest. The wind first struck a building north of the Lake Shore depot, tearing it to pieces. It then nn roofed the depot, sweeping southeastly and cutting a awartti from three to five hundred feet wide. The tornado demolished tho Record Manufacturing company's building and Pond'a plan ing mill. Crossing the tracks of the Nickel Plate the tornado blew over the telegraph poles and wrecked a wooden warehouse and a number of dwellings. As it reached the east end of town it rose from the ground and did no more damage. The streets and yards arpfull of wreckage, but no one was at all in jured. At Clernlaml. Cleveland, O., Oct. 27. A furious storm raged throughout northern Ohio and along the lower part of Lake Erie and much damago to shipping is re ported. At this point the wind blew tnirty to foity miles per hour and the harbor was crowded with vessels which put in for safety. Several are reported lost, but owing to lack of telegraphic communication definite news is hard to obtain. No wires are working between this city and Buffalo. Boiler Explosion. Louisville, Ky., Oct. 27. A boiler in the Louisville electric light works exploded, fatally injuring William Adams, fireman, and wrecking the building. Fragments of the boiler were hurled across the alley into the rear of Kaufman & Btruss' dry goods store, firing the building. Three clerks, two of them yonng women, were slightly injured by flj-ing debris. The store, a four-story building, was gutted and the account books of the firm de stroyed. An adjoining store was slightly damaged. The total loss is es timated at $350,000; fully insured. Five Killed in a Freight Wreck. Thorsen Station, Minn., Oct. 27. An extra freight on the Soo road ran into the regular west bound freight here at 9:30 p. m., completely telescoping the caboose of the latter. Five persons were killed and seven seriously injured. The dead are O. E, Holmes, traveling salesman of St Paul, Fred Renn, Con rad Prince, Basil Lyle and John Coffin, all of ilonticello. Minn. The conductor and engineer are under arrest. PRAIRIE FIRES IN OKLAHOMA. Many Thousand Dollars' Worth of Prop erty l)etroyed A Ride for Llfo. Guthrie. Oct. 27. Prairie fires raged all night southwest of here, burning up many thonsand dollars' worth of hay, grain, and agricultural implements. It" is also believed that a number of houses have been destroyed. A hack from Chandler caught. fire and it was a drive for life for fifteen miles. The driver was terribly burned. nig Fire at Marshalltown. Marshalltown, Ia., Oct. 27. Firo which originated in tho pork packing establishment of Brittain & Co. through the explosion of a lamp, destroyed the entire plant, with the exception of the cooling house, which contained the car casses of 1,000 hogs. Five hundred live hogs were burned up. The loss is about iiHJ.oOO, fully covered by insurance, he flames spread to sheds and stables t the Driving Park association, causing t loss of about $5,000. DIRECT'S GREAT RACE Fastest Three Beats Ever Made to Defeat Hal Pointer. Columria, Tenn., Oct. 27. The new kite-shaped track of the Columbia driv ing park was the scene of the three fast est heats over made in a race. The great match race between Direct and Hal Pointer drew a crowd of nearly six thousand people, and the beting was lively on the native horse, Hal Pointer. Tl.u race was for a purse of $:J,000, best three in five. Both horses were cheered when they came out. The superiority of Direct was clearly shown. He would take the lead and hold it all the way around. Hal Pointer was pushed to the utmost extent, but whenever the great gelding came uncomfortably close Starr tapped Direct lightly, the re sponse would be immediate and the little black stallion would draw away. Direct won the first heat by a length, the second by half a length with Point er off his feet, and the third by a length. Time: 2:09, 2:08, 2:(bj. Assignment. Cincinnati, Oct. 27. Timothy E. McNamara, the real estate man of Wig gin's block, made an assignment to J. H. Bromwell. The assets are $23,000, and the liabilities $t;9.000. Foreclosure ; of mortgages and inability to dispose of real estate is the cause of the assign ment. Silk Robbery. Sioux Falls, S. D., Oct. 27. The dry goods house of M. F. Prouty & Co. was entered by burglars about 2 a. m. and $1,500 worth of silks token. WOMEN A3 VOTERS. Illinois Womea Take Their Case tm the State Saprema Court. Ciiicaoo, Oct 87. The supreme court of Illinois will be asked to taks np the question of the right of women to vote for school officers at the next election. Byatn, Weinshenk and Herschl pre pared a mandamus to enforce th right ofwomsn to vote. Mrs. Ahretis ap pearing as complainant In order to facilitate matters. Attorney Boyle, rf the board of election commissioners, in behalf of the members, waived the right to a hearing in the lower court, and tbe papers in the case were taken to Ottawa. Andrew J. Herschl wired the supreme court, notifying that body of the case and the urgent necessity for an imme diate hearing. If the case is not decided before the day of election the polls wilW ds tne scene ot uncomfortable encount ers between the lady voters and the judges of election, and will afterwards be productive of innumerable suits. Attorney Herschl said: "I represent Mrs. Ahrens. and I am positive I am right in the matter. The supreme court cannot but reverse the decision of the board of election commissioners. The application to the supreme court is in the shape of a petition for a mandamus to compel the board to place the names of women, who possess the same quali fications as men, on the registry list" CIVIL WAR EEC0EDS. Twenty-One Volumes Issued Paring the Last Fiscal Year Federal. Supreme Court. Washington, Oct. 27. The war rec ords board, in its annual report to the secretary of war, says that during the last fiscal year twenty-one books were printed and distributed and four more put in type and partially indexed. These volumes contain the reports of the Mine run campaign of the Armv of the Potomac, the operations on the At lantic coast in 18G;!. the Chickamuugua campaign, the Chattanooga, llossville and Ktioxvillo campaigns, including the battles of Missionary Ridge and Look out Mountain and tho siege of Knox- ville, with the operations of all the armies down to and including the Wil derness campaign in Virginia and the operations in tlie Shenandoah Vailey, Maryland and Pennsylvania up to Aug ust, 1804. The volumes relating to the TranstnineisBippi region have been com pleted to includo June 30, 1801, and those relating to the Atlantic seacoast to November 90 of the same year. The present outlook is such as to warrant the board in promising that the vol umes covering the military operations of the year will be put in type dur ing tbe present fiscal year. Supreme Court base. Washington, Oct. 27. In the su preme court of the United States, the government moved to advance argu ment in a number of cases. Among them were the following: The United States against the Western Union Tele graph company and the Union Pacific Kaiiroad company, the question at issue being whether or not tbe government should pay for messages presented to the Western Union company by the Union Pacific railroad, over which lines they came, the Union Pacific, as a sub sidized railroad, being obliged to carry telegraphic messages for the United States free. The case of the United States agalnBt William Wilson, postmaster at Chad ron, Neb., in which the contention is made that a postmaster whose office has been assigned to the third class is en titled to the pay of the office after the assignment, but before he has been com missioned by the president. FIGHTING THE BIG FAIR. Labor t'nlonl to Ask Congress to Make No Further Appropriations. Chicago, Oct. 27. A local paper says that hostility to the world's fair man agement has been revived in some of the trades unions of the city and that it is now proposed to carry the war to the house of representatives and defeat if possible any further appropriation. At the last meeting of the Carpenters' council a committee was appointed to confer with the other trade and labor organizations of the city to get the movement under way at once. The matter will be brought up before every labor organization in the city. It is also intended to ask the co-operation of labor organizations throughout the United States to exert their influence with their representatives in congress to prevent any additional appropriations for the world's fair. The reason given for all this is that the local managers of the fair discrimi nate against members of trade and labor unions in employing men to work at the fair grounds. Anniversary of Catholicism in Minnesota. St. Paul, Oct. 27.-Archbishop Ire land has addressed a letter to the clergy of the diocese of St. Paul, calling atten tion to the significance of Nov. 1 in the history of the Catholic church in Minne sota. On that date the first little chapel in the territory was blessed by Rev. Lucien Oaultier. The archbishop recommends that the fiftieth annivesary of the establishment of Catholicism in the state be celebrated in each parish on tbe date named with all possible spendor. Adjourned Court for Harvest. Jamestown, N. D., Oct. 27. The term of court of Foster county was ad journed sine die by Judge Rose for the reason that to call a jury would take many fanners from the fields aud wit nesses from the threshing crews. The necessities of farm work appears greater to the judge than holding a term of court. It is likely that an adjournment will also be had in Griggs county fjr the same reason. Deserted His Foreign Wife. Kansas City, Oct. ;7. While in Paris in IH James R. Stearns, a New York broker, married the Countess Elvira Monthilory, one of the most aristocratic members of the French nobility. On their return to New York they lived happily for a while, but Stearns soon tired of his foreign wife and finally deserted her. Yesterday morning she received a decree of divorce for this cause in Judge Stover's court with permission to resume her maiden name. OF DRESS One hundred pieces of Fall and Winter weight Dress Goods will be slaughtered No samples sent out this week. Send in your order mentioning the color wanted SPECIAL LOT N" Fifty Dieces Fancv Plaid and Striped Dress Flannels. fflish Serees. Henri ettas, Scotch Boucle Hot a Piece In tti3 cloth and Cheyiots. Lot worm less than All at one price. LOT U 2. Fifty pieces best 46 inch French Henrietta, English Whip-cords, the newBedford cords, 54 in. Scotch flannels in all the New Plaids. All to be run this week at one price. A. BL m 0 S1?;Li:GDM5C!!!!g! WILLREMAININROME Mgr. O'Brien Saya Pope Leo Will Not Go Unless Driven Away. A STEAMER SUNK AT SEA. British Tesseti Collide andOnaCoei to ilia Bottom A Kambar of Lives Lost Starring Kassiaa Peas Dts Capture m Train. Montreal, Que., Oct. 27. Mgr. O'Brien, domestic prelate to the pope. who carried the beretta to Cardinal Taschereau in 1887, and who ia at pre sent here, eaid: "The talk about the pope leaving Rome, I believe, ia all imaginary. I do not think the pope has even for an instant thought if it. The pope did not win his position by arms. It was handed down to him since the days of St. Peter. Pope Leo XIII. asserted often that Pius IX. declared that it was impossible for him to accept tbe posi tion the Italian government had created for him in Rome and these were sokmn words. "Rome has belonged to the nones since the fall of the German empire.and 2,00(i years gives them a prescriptive ana legal rigut watch no revolution can npset. Till the Italian government forces the pope out he will never go. Of course if they were to storm the Vatican he might be obliged to flee. It is likely that the Italian government will resort to force, judging from the men aces of the revolutionists. They have already declared the Vatican to be gov ernment property, ana nave made tne pope a subject of the government and amenable to all Italian laws. "Things may last for another twenty- one years. The present government, I neiteve, nas- no intention ot driving things to extremes. Italians are not al lowed to speak or hold public meetings in defense of the pope. Italy has de clared that King Humbert's right to Rome is in tangible, but the pope thinks otherwise. He considers his rights over the Italian city as sacred." The Hark Went Dowd. London, Oct. 27. A disastrous col lision between the steamer Boston and the bark Charlwood off the Eddvstone rocks, occurred about 4 a. m., when it was intensely dark and the wind blow ing a strong gale. The people on the bark hardly had a glimpse of tbe Boston before the collision, and as the steamer struck them the bark began to sink al most at the same instant. The Charl wood was almost cut in two. Captain Hiscocks, of the ill-fated vessel, stood on the poop and as coolly as if on a summer sea gave orders for the lowering o( the lifeboat. The boat was lowered, the seamen obeying as bravely as their cap tain ordered. The women and apprent ice boys entered the boat which was about to put off, when the bark gave a sudden lurch and foundered. Th davits struck the life . boat and MM GOODS. I. B n- from SO to 7Sct. All thes3 Goods have been cut (ro $1.00 to $150. -L.U made it capsize, and the womea and boys were thrown into the angry sea. Their shrieks were heard for sev eral moments, nntil most of them wera wept oat of sight under the waves. A seaman named Jones seized the daugh ter of the captain, aged 13 years. She was the darling of the crew. Jonea held her across a plank nntil the boats, which had instantly pnt off from the Boston, came to the rescue. A schooner named the Albion happened to be pass ing. Her crew heard the shrieks of tho drowning women, and hastened to give assistance. They rescue eeven. Two of the survivors, battered and exhausted, were taken to the hospital at Falmouth. Tbe pilot had left the Charlwood only, an hour previous, wishing captain and crew a prosperous voyage. The Bale of the Shillalah. Dublin, Oct. 27. Dillon and O'Brien arrived here and were received by an enthusiastic crowd. The Parnellites followed the crowd, hooting and threat ening. When they reached the assem bly rooms a row began, which only ended by the police charging and dis persing the mob. The town is fnll of adherents of either faction, armed with, shillalahs, and a serious fight is likely to occur at any moment. Starring Peasant Capture a Train. St. Petersburg, Oct 27. Owing to the famine robberies of unheard of bold ness are becoming frequent. On Thurs day night last, near Roster, 'on tbe Moscow-Caucasus railway, a band of starving peasants pursued and captured a freight train. Troops from the for tress went in pursuit and overtook the robbers, who will be summarily dealt with. . Paris, Oct. 27. It has just transpired that General Boulanger was terribly addicted to the morphine habit. The most dramatic incidents of his life were passed while under the influence of morphic injections. It is also ascer tained that the general's mistress, Mine. Bonnemain, was, as well, a victim of the drug. Spanish Town. Inundated. , Madrid, Oct. 27. Floods continue to do great damage throughout Spain. The villages of Gaul Chos and Arce, near Grenada, are completely inundated. Great distress exists. The Teutonic Lowers the Beeord. London, Oct. 27. The steamship Teutonic, ot the White Star line, from New York, Oct. 21, for Liverpool, has arrived at Queenstown, beating the rec ord. Her time was 5 days, 21 bra. and. 8 min. . Baron Wlssman Resigns. Berlin, Oct. 27. The National Zel tung says that Baron Wisstnan has re rigned owing to disputes with Baron Soden, the civil governor of German East Africr. Police Fire Upon Cltliens. Buenos Ares, Oct. 27. During the progress of a riot at Cordova and Tua csma the police fired into the crowd and killed and wounded a large number of rioters. ' Floods la England Subsiding. Londos, Oct. 27. The floods in En gland are slowly subsiding. . . 4 , OC