I Loup City Northwestern VOLUME XXVI_LOUP CITY, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY , NOVEMBER H>. 1908 NUMbEK 2 SUMMARY OF NEWS CONDENSATION OF THE MOST IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS. BOTH ST HOME AND SBB8AD General, Political. Religious. Sporting. Foreign and Other Events Re corded Here and There. _ Political. The Kings county (X. Y.) repub lican commiteemen have endorsed Chairman Timothy Woodruff to suc ceed Senator Platt. Secretary Metcalf of the navy has resigned and has been succeeded by his assistant. Truman Newberry. Senator Burkett of Nebraska, who arrived at Washington after a visit with President-elect Taft, says tariff is certain 10 be revised and rates lowered. The appointment of Colonel George H. Torney as surgeon general of the army to succeed Surgeon General K. M. O'Aeilley. was announced by the secretary of war. Colonel Torney is nowr in charge of the general hospital at San Francisco. John Motley Morebead, a republican, who was elected to congress in a North Carolina dictrict. regrets his success. Five hundred farmers, members of the grange, visited the president. The tariff revisers discussed ditties on imported wines and liquors. Three Kansans were elected gover nors of as many states in the election —Herbert S. Hadley in Missouri; W. F. Stubbs in Kansas, and James H. Brady in Idaho. Seventy days were required to get a second Ruef jury. There are sixty more indictments upon which to try the man. Time is money, and San Francisco is spending a good deal on Ruef. Democratic members of the house ways and means committee seek to have the tariff on barytes raised. Allegations are made that the death of former Senator Carmack was the result of a deliberate plot to assas sinate him. General. Francis J. Heney, prosecutor in the San Francisco graft trials, was shot in ihe court room by .Morriii. Haas,-a. venireman, who had been rejectea from former Ruef jury because he was an ex-convict. Heney will probably recover. Colonel Duncan B. Cooper and his son, Robin Cooper, were indicted joint ly on the charge of murdering ex Senator Carmack of Tennessee. The former sheriff is charged with being accessory before the fact. The presidential commission inquir ing into agricultural conditions is in vestigating farm life in Tennessee. Emperor of China is reported dead, and the Dowager empress, Tsi Ann, is said to be dying in Peking. Great secrecy is maintained as to actual con ditions because of the hostility to the Manchu dynasty. Three hundred and sixty miners are believed to have lost their lives in the wrecking of the workings at Hamm. Westphalia, Germany. A Chicago physician who examined Miss Mae Otis, who is charged with plotting to kill her mother, says she is sane. A Taxicab in New York was de stroyed by explosion of an infernal machine left in it by a woman. Park theater in Brooklyn was totally destroyed by fire within an hour after the audience had left the house. Vice President-elect Sherman and other leading political men of the na tion were at Hot Springs for a con ference with President-elect Taft. Both liberals and conservatives are confident of success in the Cuban elec tion. Venezuela has completed prepara tions for the threatened blockade of her seaports by Holland. The government will carry the Standard oil case to the supreme court. Assistant Forester VV. L. Hall says a lumber famine is coming in the near future. Over three hundred perished in a mine explosion in Germany. Charles Pool of Johnson county is said to be slated foi speaker of the lower house of the Nebraska assembly. Ex-Sheriff John D. Sharpe has been arrested in Nashville charged with be ing accessory to the murder of former Senator Carmack. Postmaster General Meyer in his report on the postal finances advocates rural parcels post to help pay for this service. An explosion of a glazing mill near Kansas City caused the injury of a number of passengers in a Kansas City Southern train standing near. The question of war or peace in the Balkans is said to depend upon the tenor of the note to be issued by Austria. The delegates from the Flint Glass Workers' association were excluded by the American Federation of Labor at Denver after a lively debate. President Gompers of the American Federation of Labor delivered his an nual report to the convention at Den ver. The Reichstag gave Emperor Will iam severe censure in the course of a ’y debate on interpellations with respect to the published interview’ of the em peror in England. The Methodist committee on foreign missions has decided to ask the con ference to raise $1,500,000 next year. The federal court of appeals has de cided that the American Tobacco com pany is a combination in restraint of trade. Returns from the Nebraska election indicate the republicans have certain ly elected Kinkaid to congress in the Sixth district. The United States court of appeals at New York refused to admit Charles W. Morse to bail pending application for a new trial. There is a possibility that Hep burne has. after all, been elected to congress from Iowa. The vote is very close and there will be a recount. By running av.-ay of a freight train on the Union Pacific west of Cheyenne there was a collision, in which nine men were killed and three seriously injured. Three of the victims were Chinese. The United States circuit court of appeals overruled the petition for a rehearing in the case of the govern ment againsl the Standard Oil com pany. The case will be taken to the United States supreme court. Secretary Root will probably be elected ’ United States senator to suc ceed Thomas C. Piatt. Victorien Sardou dean of French dramatists, died in Paris Sunday. He was 77 years old. Unofficial returns indicate that Mr. Bryan's majority in Nebraska will be 4,500. Railroads of the west which were forced by the legislature of the west ern states to accept a reduction of 2 cents per mile for passenger fares are again uniting to make 2 cents the minimum as well as the maximum af ter January 1. Governor Sheldon of Nebraska is seriously considering camng an extra session of the legislature to pass a county option bill after having sent messages to members of the present legislature asking their position on the subject. Washington. The formal opening of the army war college was signalized by an import ant address by Secretary Root, popul arly known as “the father” of the in stitution. On account of the limited capacity of the lecture hall in which the exercises were held, the attend ance was limited. “Secretary Taft's religious faith is purely his own private concern, and not a matter for general discussion and political discrimination.” says President Roosevelt in a letter to J. C Martin of Dayton, O., in which he answers numerous correspondent?. The president says he deferred the ptibtteetion of the letter until now to avoid any agitation likely to influence the election. Important recommendations for im proving Mare Island strait and for the approaches thereto are contained in the report of the board of engineer officers of the army and navy and an estimate is made of $1,767,000 for the work, this amount to include a seif containing and self-propelling dredge whicli will require about $15,000 per year to maintain. What may be the final chapter in the story of the fight against racing in the District of Columbia is record ed in the dismissal by the district court of appeals of the appeal of Wil liam Davis, the New York bookmaker, convicted in the spring of 1906 of set ting up a gaming table by making books at the P.enning race course. Al though sentenced to serve two hours in the district jail it is unlikely that Davis will be brought here to carry out the sentence, as bookman-ing ap parently is a sport of the past in the district. The tariff commission have com menced on their work of revision. Foreign. The German Reichstag, after . further exciting debate concerning the interview with Kaiser Wilhelm in a London paper, refused to adopt a formal address to the emperor calling his attention to the possible effect of his utterances on foreign relations >'f the empire. —The burial of Victonen Sardou was accomplished at Paris with general public mourning. A man selected by lot to kill King Manuel of Portugal committed suicide instead. Calcutta, India, is terrorized by an outbreak of political crimes. Personal. William D. Cornish, second vice president of the Union Pacific railroad, died suddenly in Chicgo. William Hayward, secretary of the national republican committee, was given a rousing welcome home at Nebraska City, Neb., on his return from Chicago. Indication^ from Washington are that Mr. Cannon will be re-elected speaker without much opposition. Crawford Kennedy of Albion. Neb., who traveled 18,000 miles with Taft special train distributing buttons and tracts, has returned home. Judge Taft and Chairman Hitch cock went over the work of the cam paign. Mr. Hitchcock stated that no promises or pledges had been made in exchange for personal services or contributions. The postmaster general announced that the president has decided to re move George M. Stewart, postmaster of Seattle, Wash., as the result of an investigation of charges that he so licited campaign contributions. Colonel Ludlow, commandant at Fort Hamilton, denies stories that of ficers’ quarters at the post have been the scene of orgies. Federal officials emphatically deny the report that a lake ha= been found under the proposed site of the Gatun locks of the Panama canal. REAL RULER IS DEAD TSZE HSI AN. DOWAGER EMPRESS OF JAPAN, PASSES AWAY. - Date of Death Given Out as Two O'clock Sunday, but is Eelieved to Have Occurred Earlier. Peking—Tsze Hsi An. the dowager empress of China, the autocratic head of the government which she directed without successful interference since 1801, and without protest since 1881, died at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon. The announcement of the dowager empress' death was- official and fol lowed closely upon the announcement that Kuang Hsu. the emperor, had died Saturday at 5 o'clock in the after noon. but it is believed the deaths oe- j curred a considerable time before that set down in the official statements. An official edict issued at 7 o'clock placed on the throne Prince Pu Yi, the 3-year-old son of Prince Chun* the regent of the empire, in accordance j with a promise given by the dowager empress soon after the marriage of Prince Chun in 1903. An edict is sued cn Friday made Pu Yi heir pre sumptive. The foreign legations were notified by the foreign board of the death of the emperor and the succession of Prince Pu Yi. Troops have been in j readiness for several days to quell any disorders that might ar’se on the death of Kuang Hsu. and the possi bility of uprisings was made greater because of the fact that the death of the dowager empress was known to be close at hand. Two divisions of troops have been held in reserve and these are now stationed in various quarters of the city. Twenty gen darmes were dispatched to guard the approaches to the legations, but ttp to the present the duties of the forces have been slight. It was announced that the legation guard was ordered out at "the special call of the lega tions on account of the emperor’s death." Prince Chun, the regent, has ordered the viceroys and governors to take pre cautions for the continuation of the administration of the provinces as heretofore, and he has ordered a hun dred days of mourning. The court will go into mourning for three years. OUTCOME IN NEBRASKA. Democrats Get Two State Officers Governor and Railway Commissioner. ! The democrats will have the two 1 principal offices of the new state ad ministration, while the republicans get the six other offices of the new re gime. Complete election returns from all hut Richardson county show that the democrats have elected Shallenberger for governor by a plurality of fi.(i