Loup City Northwestern VOLUME XXVIII LOUP CITY NEBRASKA, THURSDAY , SEPTEMBER 15, 1910. NUMBER 45. OF It WEEK'S EVENTS Latest News of Interest Boued Down for the Busy Kan. ■-S*r-. Pi%cfc ^■6 tomW tfcr au»: iran.atir m* fat** a' tin- ■ «sot*vsUss nsigrts* a: »t l*»al TV iura»f taroatai tb» ob j*-e we a aismn i-t'mt in -*» *w>i< • eaai wrtM t> «-> ►«*•.» tutu* j ■’asi. S—» - ■ *-* n:;; otstiarst a* •Sss** £»*. aart*rasi»sl asm th* -»<■—ft* « rwt- (i.fej* •"ta» iMcaitr *«int fw is* rw- fur • -.u»cr*-M *■ «• H. -tc-two *J<*# «tt* jots’ ■ 1"4» ’-s--sb:» i .*•» tearr»* rots-f • Pfc. i £-'*s»<- „wt- «*r> Jt a( Ui4> r «jff tVp outsail pstti aae .atun tiV Traclios soaps** »•*:>*•»- • '«* arm,.. a-, id SI FarKia^oss lu ■ «•»»'» F JUbr. ns«‘ isnoadM* of 'V i-. \au«ew Vet td HtSitf -a*. ’•» J a «g»r at is* SMH4. *wo*»f*t Umwtmtwm an*. at Tool Vir eas* «r _po|#>'i« »- Has #prsocn. la '-Era J ttiassex. m-ZMtt a«*bT «< **»»'' tern «f nrac . Warv r a sat —r -c-.i rf».ai-- aw «•• uas S-aiaa*., £i -d to*y irj&irrt. ' at iiia •—* : . a F - - 4IK •• a stn&» er. wtn<9tn Wwrmwer inn ta-tjaacA I <*o**ii Jr at Vo* lurk. ar-ot — t. tut r< *«m* pa rsifiwily 'tot : t»- nutalorai *(•*» s *1 rltj. dots *r«r topra. list V iksw sa*d at f astffio* «s a ic.pjy ataittp an*1 •« '?■•* • t astarfc 1- Srssrtorj* a*~d * ? -«»■ ■« laataob • alt aS " &*atl ’ wand i in Mast flmoae tin'ifti MP» 'UJt <'hatry a'Jarh a: a **-■ seaa* fa Un-no* * Sutarrit. a— *r»« -La « »;•••***•*' f B» S*T Ikmaa* tr • trot* «'’i- c -m «( MHaasan a dsn ) '» atta UtClUL MSI ;*-d m ti»a for t2"C Hr — xaktor «w S. C. Coot fi>* ft ftftftr «f 1 l» 1 The iasnrp**»;.» ^nlftl ■ sail. jcw E*v«i . as i*oni;i.~e s jt 'nftCTW' Oskt on'aOt *u de (MMi f» a tnnodMft joarvirj T— »p*t »♦">• fysrftog rer !» fti-r »«sat-c aad t*«> escaped. after hrr ftarC -^1 dSscooeret: il. a pie: t* *t- -ail* of a piaster bear <*» —c raft it»c purs hu of the F«U»ftiSir a stors;- te-aaa :-tm— ~ i o'ftft to tfer 'a «s r—gm-ss at fit. Paul the ;3*n»ted * reoatstiun ftr a ia place o' K; * arc H:ur* -to <~k»- --to tke roamutt*— •e the ' -Jtarroe The —a»— gx«aa so* Hjars' sdies^c rj»t Cal—tun tikis »ram -rp» Twenty-mne live* were km in Lake Ml ti(U whet. the Pere Marquette's car t-rry V > sank froc. unknown «au»e r* miie» off Sheboygan. Win I* -s declared one of the worst ffl» nae disasters in the history of Lake Midden navigation The boat was valued at and the cargo, which included Sr loaded cars, es Mmau-c to be wortk SIM *«• Thirty three men mere saved How be was Turned down-* by prominent HIiboj* Central officials v tjejs he sough: o roovlnce them tha be canid show bow the road could aw $3t'0M> a month in car repairs tw related in Judge Itruggemeyer's '■oerr at Chicago by Fred C. Peck, formerly an employee of the Oster oui Manufacturing company ' h .in tWrt) a remarkable mile at • rarter Oak i seconds F F L.-die- head o: U« Shore Ki-< -r>« ivsjd i operaiing in New ■ ■ — • »a> oi hd murdered in the kuafce* near Red Hank N J The gnbrn ar1- in find a ctase to hi* J-Li' *-r -hr. K k (ir.-h i a! ao V1 ■ ~ .--..r* - -ros . aa~ escaped aran; • a; Sal- i-ak. City. and is MPPMmM in > oh rn was in n< w 1 » . • where h- *x;*-<-is to sail f t*r hie ha Sve countrj V’* York and Philadelphia phys :i.vr-.-'ec :• s -nas are - i- a —ad* with rattle-snake rmom. • i- ■ t- : - s...u - .' - t c »r.* :kL*'-etl ra* '-horse, ono the rt- it Cai-t Sims Frown. delib --ommPted scicidt near Pitts t -- i‘ - said wiser it was forced c -raw at old farm wagon PrvMOT-h- Taft r- eiveu a t» legram Paii^mik ranjki. Mrs W J. IXima! and her three d.-gfciers—Mark , ag.-d 'ight: Ethel, it*d three, and a baby, aged one— wert drowned ir the Licking river, near Cincinnati i.tact Hand” repr-sentat:ves from N- w Turk eftt are accused of the m-_rd»-r of Anhur Rovolino and his si* rhiidrec in Pallaro. Italy. The four years war between organ (ie lanor and Buck s Stove and Range eompocy mute the plant -■ Uiiii.': >tt *: • course of S-c *- in :h> ailmis^'ntion • ‘ .l«*par-n.-*:.t of *he interior. and * - :arat ion that h- should no long er bf retained in tha! oflre, air con tain-*: in a resolution adopted by five r.ei.:e>rf of rfc* BaUlng-r Pmrhot in eating cojuufttee. These five, 'oar Ik-mncrat? and one Republican, i— n that their rote is binding upon th* comxui'tee as a whole. This, how ever 1‘ disputed *»» the other three tnecibers of the committee. who at tended the meeting at Minneapolis. Ho i.Bg a Bible in his right hand and declaring the jury must choose e-'vet the booh of God and the “blistered tongue of perjury of Charles .V White and Si.iaey and Otis Yar wrxnet.“ Attorn- Patrick H. Oliun i'H coadaie the bank- at '"hieago '• -are Lee CCNeill Browne. lietuocra' tnarr - s--eier at Sprineteld from a prtsca celt I*r W*rar HatneM. a nephew of “De rfl Anne” Hat acid, the nefarious T' -sdis" wa- shot and hilled by a six -e» year-old hoy ranted Blankenship tew miles from WharnciiSe. \Y. Va. The rmertirw Ieaornt« in state oaoatiM nominated a s-.s-e ticket hewden k« Sins VI® £ HaMwir fot eor-rnor The pla torn, de i*res in '»•« of an ggt I hiioa of th fre* hat and reductVq® of many of the tariff rates a that law. Vpoa the conclusion o:' State - At •arm > Uaymixs losing addre-s? the case of Lee O Nei: Browne ,i Chicago, cha-u-d with hrihery in -ocnertioii with 'he election at Willucu lairime: to the Cntlci States senate was giv er. u the Birr Forty-four thousand Illinois coal ni aers win resume work at once aft*! ar. i-ienews of niore than five months, as a result of an agreement reached h-’oee* the officials of the mine workers and the Illinois Coal oper atorv wvoriuiat at Chicago. PTac neatly every demand of the men has been granted An espkmkm of fuel oil and the en suing fire aboard the United States dreadnought battleship North Dako ta cam *he live* of three men and •now Injuries to nine others, ta bbing rhH I iestdnw Orin G Mur | FOUND LIFELESS IN BURLINGTON SLEEPER AT ALLIANCE. HAPPENINGS OVER THE STATE *Nt ia Going on Here and Thare That is of Interest te the Read ers Throughout Nebraska and Vicinity. Alliance—X K. Griggs. a ■well known attorney. writer and lecturer of Lincoln. and one of the old settlers o: this part of Nebraska, died of hear: failure in his berth in a sleeper on the Burlington passenger at.Alliance Sun day n omine while on bis way to the northwest to prosecute some railroad cases rlt was sixty-five years of age He took a berth at Lincoln and asked the porter to call him at Alliance. When the porter stepped into the sleeper to awaken him he found h.m dead. It is not known what time of the nigh: be died .Mr. Griegs had been affected for year? wi':. hear: trouble. For some time his health has no: been good and he has been able to get birr little re lief as his physician simply diagnosed the tase as one of heart failure. Germans Wart Personal Liberty. Grand Island.— At a meeting of the L.ederkranz. the oldest German society in this place, its president. Theodore Jessen. *as instructed to call a meet- ‘ ing of all Geriuan assoc, at ions, includ ing churches, lodges and social organ izations. for the purpose of organizing a general German- society to co-oper ate with tne state bund, the latter in tarn with the national organization organized for The purpose of preserv- ■ teg persona! liberty. Will Visit Old Home. Beatrice. — Miss Nan Asplnwall. known as “the lariat gtrl ” who left 1 San Francisco Wednesday for New York on horseback, is a Gag“ county young lady. She resided anc attend ed school at Liberty- for many years and her relatives live there at the present, and she will visit her old home while on her journey east. V, -. ■ :— Kearney Elevator Bums. Kean y Neb.—Fire broke out 1* the elevator belonging to the Updike i Grain company and before any assist-1 ■nee could reach the scene the build ing and all is contents were doomed. The fire department was blocked by a long freight train standing across the crossing and this, with the good headway, made it impossible to save anything Street Cars Stop Running. Nebraska City. Neb—Because of lac?, of patronage, the street cars have ceased to be operated and the aged mules have been turned out to pas ture The line has not paid for maay years. Serious Loss by the Storm. Omaha. Neb.—The storm which completely destroyed the studio of J. L. Wallace Sunday night wrought a loss of about KkWd and destroyed several articles of furniture that can- j cot be replaced Lowers the Levy. Bea*rJce. Xeh»— The levy adopted by the board of equalization this year Is for eleven mills, raising a total of $122,197. This is a decrease of half a mill over last \-ea-. Bodge county is Titk>u; bonded in debtedues* Toe Bea'rioe brick plant has closed QO* r lor the season. The Elks at Fair-burr are erecting a hoc - for that order. The Fairbury Commercial club has i taken steps to organize a permanea1 Chautauqua association. 'Volf ChTouss: was instantly killed while attempting to run an elevator it & departmert s:ort ai luncoln. An old registered letter, containing $1®. lost it the pos;office a: FTemon: eleven years ago was found by Post- • master Swanson while rcimn-.ag.ng un der an old desk recently. Ben Casper, lit toe near Brock, had a twenty-two acre field of oats which •threshed out l.Sb* bushels, or nearly Se bushels per ac-e. The shocks were so thick in the field that the separ ator could not pass between them. Plans for extensively advertising the fai festival to he held at Hastings October 10 to 1J have been completed. The feature o* Friday of the festival will be a parade of the schclars and students of the rural and city schools the college and business college. Severn’, persons were injured nt Bruning Saturday craning at the close of the first annua) Voiksfest. when the flag tower, on wl ich a number of ; boys and men had climbed to obtain ' » better view, became overbalanced and fell to the ground. William H. I.yon. n young carpenter who had been working on the new elevator nt North Bend. Ml fifty feet to the ground, suffering n compound fracture of the hip. a fracture of the elbow, and internal Injuries. Lyon fell while walkirg across n row o? j aew beams. John Motley, u old rwaident of Table Rock, is dead. The harvest tnhiiee held at Hildreth last week was a big scccess. Edward L Beach'-?y. a prominent old resident of Lincoln, is dead. Plattsmonth will have a baseball tournament some time this month. Jacob Prey, living near Xayberry. fell into a wall and was badly hurt. Work is progressing on the new Carnegie library building at Alliance Prank McMahon has been elected secretary of the Beatrice Commercial dab. The carnival being held at Wymote is well patronized and will be a finan cial success. The Scandinavian anti-saloon league of Nebraska held it* annual state con vention at Srromsbcrg. The date for the Hasting^ fall fes tival. agricultural and stock show will be October li* to 15. inclustve. A mile stretch of model road is be ing constructed at Central City, con necting the town with the cemetery. Mont Hunter, a former Beatrice young man. died August 24 a* the home of his mother in Los Anseie?. CaL Pr. Barr, a veterinary surgeon of York, had a narrow escape from drowning in a cloudburst near that place Monday. A graEi'e shaft to cost about S2.GM is to '»e erected in a Fremont ceme tery to commemorate the services 01 deceased members of the Fremoal volunteer fire department. Podge county officials were given a keen disappointment when the an nouncement of the census returns for Podge coun'y came, showing its popu lation to 4>e only 22.145. The German club at Lincoln is mak ing elaborate preparations to celebrate October 6. in commemoration of the landing of the firs; German immi grants in this country, in K>Mb Gus Byers, postmaster at Havelock, won the prize at the Labor Pay pic nic at Lincoln for wearing more union made clothing than any other person. Mr. Hyers was proud of this distinction, although he had several cicse competitors for the honor. The mail received on Labor Pay at Lincoln was the largest since Christ mas times. The letter carriers re ported for duty &; 5 a. m_ in order to make their deliveries so that they could take part in the Labor Day parade. Many of them failed to com plete their routes in time to take part, although about forty of them man aged to join the parade before it was over. v Father Emmanuel Hartig. for s«m« fifty years pastor of the St. Bene dict’s Catholic- church at Nebraska City, died in Atchison, Kan. He was born in Bavaria. Germany. May 1. 1SS0. He received his education in Munich, and later entered St. Vincent college. Westmoreland county. Penn sylvania. He was ordained in Leav enworth. Kan.. September 1. 1S60. At the clewing session of the eighth annua! c Invention of the association of Nebraska rural letter carriers at the Temple Monday afternoon reso lutions were adopted favoring rural parcels post and postal savings bank. Vice President R. B. Reed of Colum bus was elevated to the presidency, and the retiring president. J. H. Tal bot of Table Rock, and the secretary. C. A. Morton of Cheney, were elected delegates to the national association, which meets in Little Rock. Lincoln was selected as the next Timer inf place. Peputy Labor Commissioner Van pin. who has just returned from the annual convention of the Intern?' -nal Association of Bureau of Labor Off clals and Factory Inspectors st Hen dersonville. S. C.. reports that he suc ceeded in inducing the convection to decide upon Lincoln as the place of holding the 1S11 convention. Thomas J. Brown of Cherry county, who was sentenced to a term m the penitentiary, has appealed to the su preme court. He was charged with stealing seven cows valued at *21#, the property of Thontas Byron. Brown was charm'd with the theft of seven cows and he was sentenced to one year in the penitentiary tor each cow TVave Rowden. commandant of the soldiers' home at Milford, has turned into the state treasury over $W0. the proceeds of the sale of some porkers which he raised at the home He got the market price. IS a hundred weight. Former Chancellor of the T'eiversity E. R. Andrews, who has been travei ing through Europe and parts of Asia is expected to arrive in Lincoln some time in October. Vnitorm difficulties which arose last year ;n the military department of the university will be obliterated this >oar. l.*st year one of the military organisations which had been hand tug the drill uniforms got into dst 3cu!ty with a local clothing firm, causing much trouble. This year tbs j order* tor the uniforms will be taken by the organisation and all student! win have to order their uniform! through thla firm The department has a contract with an rnrtnru firm or supplying the cadets with eulta MEN ?\BINET _ g**.•£«.—1 tKKr XOT in idle yearning For the aoccaa that are gr«fc»; lesieroiy fcjk’fe no rKurr-IiK. Acd lilf'f «5»»m Is torjii on; Flom-ir-*: cs with joy or sorrow Toward tt« dark SBtuhosxd »?*— Ewr onward to tbe morrow That csa-ta.' eternity. —C- Howard. The Hot Bo*. "We all know the discomfiture of & delayed traits caused by a “ho; hex.” A few 'grains of sand out of place, causing the friction and heat, make all the trouble. And so it is in the house hold. We are prepared to combat the larger annoyances, but "the little briars that catch and fret" find us un awares. The smallest grain of im patience or ill temper will follow and spoil a whole day. Let us be careful to keep weli oiled with cheerfulness and good temper, especially during these trying days of hot weather when even sweet dispositions seem easily soured. Seasonable Dishes for Breakfast. Use large green peppers of uniform size and regular shape. Wash them and cut in halves crosswise. Remove the seeds and the white membrane end cook in boiling water ten minutes. Drain upside down and in each half. Sprinkle a tew buttered crumbs mixed w~»th chopped ham. moistened with cream in each Break an ess care fully in each pepper, season with salt and pepper and bake until the white is set. Serve with buttered toast for a breakfast dish. Corn Cake. Take a cupful of fine Indian corn meal and two cupfuls of flour. add one teaspoonful of salt and two teaspoon fuls of baking powder sifted weiL Add the well beaten yolks of three eggs. Beat slowly into this two cupfuls of milk and lastly add the stiffly beaten whites. Bake in a shallow square and j break the cake instead of cutting in Graham Muffins. T ake one and one-half cupfuls of graham flour, one-half cupful of white flour, one-quarter of a cup*-.; of stiga cne-half teaspoonful of salt and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, well sifted with the flour. Add to this two well beaten eggs and one capful of milk. Bake in hot gem pans twenty - five minutes. Thin slices of bread dipped in egg and fried on both sides In butter, served with minced ham and cheese sprinkled ever them and put into the oven to melt the cheese is a nice dish for breakfast. fHT us thee today endeavor To enX*y life's present sun. r or in* past is pas; rorever And idottos rosy not come; 1st; us dc the loving duties That await us on the wav And behold the myriad beauties That abound in life today . C- Howard. Some Dishes for the Vegetarian. Those who are strictly vegetarian to thetr tastes leave out all dishes made of eggs In their dietaries. Vegetables and cream soups hare been discussed so often that this ume 1 will treat of other things. Savory Potato Pie. Peel and parboil a quart of potatoes, slice and put them in a deep pie dish with salt, pepper and two small onions, sliced; a tahiespoonful of tapioca which has been soaked foe- an hour, a half a pint of water and a tablespoon ful of butter. Half a cupful of celery or a dash of celery salt Is an addition to the pie. Cover it with pastry and bake half an hour in a moderate oven. Egg and Tomato Pudding. Cook six eggs in the shell until hard, cut each into eighths, lay them in a well-buttered podding dish, pour over them two cupfuls a: stewed tomatoes, thickened with a tablespoonful ot hoar rubbed tu two tablespoonfuls of butter, season with pepper and salt and a tea spoonful of otioa juice. Cover the top with buttered c rum os and brown is the oven. Savory Macaroni Boil halt a pound of maearon. until tender in boiling salted water, drain and arrange tn a shallow vegetable kish. rtave reedy two or three hard cooked eggs, cat the white* in strips and add to tae n nearer i Prepare a cupful of white sauce by cooking to gether a tablespoon;u! each of four and butter (salt a « pepper to taste*; when bubbling rdd a cupful ot rich milk Into this when thick and smooth add a quarter of a cupful of grated cheese, take from the fire sad pour over the macaroni. Put the yolks of the eggs through a ncer as a garnish over the top. Fruit with gelatine is well liked and makes a change that is agreeable Xaxt In Importance to fruits for the hot weather diet is the vegetable. Main salads of vegetables are most wholesome and appetising, a slice of tomato or a leaf of lettuce with an oil dressing is a food and a medicine. Aa exeetleot HwiUim hr soaps ♦>-— may always ha ready, to rice water. Itoata the rteo. aetttag the water away to cool. It will thicken sad wbea added to a cream or puree ft will re quire no other thickening. E WHO is oa of tbe SJtsaui ecgt: to bo safer St Bspiring the cabbages. “ -Mark Tamis. Salads tor Summer Festivities. There never has been a salad which Is such a general favorite as the chicken. A hen is best for salad if a capon is not obtainable. Draw as for roasting, wash the inside carefully and scrub the skin with a vegetable brush, using a spoonful of soda to a quart of warm water. The skin of a chicken needs careful cleansing. Put the chicken into a kettle of boiling water, back down, cover and cook slowly is© that the water just moves i until tender, but not so long that the flesh drops from the bones, as then it has lost its flavor in the broth Let it cool in the broth to absorb as much as it will. Free the meat from the skin and gristle and cut in half-inch cubes. Marinate with French fi-ess ing. a half cupful to four cups of chicken, and stand on ice one hour. When ready to serve, add a eupfhl of tender celery crisped in cold water, dried in a towel and cut in pieces the size of the chicken cubes, and & cup ful of finely shredded cabbage. With this mix one cupful of good dressing, either boiled or mayonnaise. Garnish the salad with water lilies made of hard-cooked eggs. Curled celery may also be used as an effective garnish. Cut it in inch or in inch and a half strips and shred nearly to the center from each end. Put into water which has been made slightly acid with lemon juice or vine gar. and it will curl. Tse around the edg“ of the salad, in with the green of the lettuce—it makes a very pretty garnish. When a large quantity of salad is to be made, veal carefully cooked may be added to the salad to eke out the chicken, and the result will deceive the elect Sweet Bread and Cucumber Salad. When the cucumbers come from the market put into cold water to re move the blood. Parboil fid minutes in acidulated water and remove the pipes and membrane. Cut in half-inch cubes, mix with equal p*nts of diced cucumber, season with salt and pep per and chill. Serve with a sour cream dressing, using sour cream sea soned to taste with onion juice, salt and pepper and a little vinegar or lemon juice. Make nests of lettuce and garnish with radish roses. F WE sit down at »t of sun And count the things that we have done. One *a-dmyirjr act. one worvl That eased the heart of him who heard. One glance meet hind. That fell like sunshine where it went. Then we may count the day well spent. Bat if through aE the Erelong day We've eased no heart by yea or nay; If through tt al! We've done no thing that we ran trace. That brought sunshine to a face. No act. most small. That helped some soul and nothing r-wt. Then count that day as worse than lost. Appetizing Celery. That celery is a well-known nerve tonic is demonstrated In the patent medicines found on our market that contain celery. It is also a valuable food and often rather expensive, as so many housewives discard the ccarse green stalks and all the green leaves. Every sound bit of celery is valuable, the outside stalks contain all the nerve stimulants in an even greater proportion than do the tender white ones in the center of the bunch The coarser parts are good stewed and served In n white sauce, which at the same time builds up wasted tisane and supplies nerve power. When one has a little celery, but not enough for a dish, try cooking It with cabbage. It will be found that the cabbage par takes of the Savor of the celery. The leaves and coarse stalks may be used In vegetable soup* for flavor. A few celery leavee and coarse stalks added to stewed onions give the latter a most agreeable flavor, and make onions acceptable to many peo ple who dislike them cooked alone. In combination with vegetables, fruits ftsh and meats, celery has a valuable place. As a flavoring for a cream soup It Is a general favorite. Here is a way of serving celery which is not common: Parboil (cel ery cut in three-inch pieces* until soft. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, dtp in a fritter batter and fry in deep fan Serve very hot. with tomato sauce. Un for Dry arena. When you have some slices of bread that yoa don't know what to do with try this. Pour hot milk ever the bread. Beat one egg. add a table spoonful of hoar and enough milk to make a hatter Drain the breed and dip In the batter, then fry a nice brown in a tittle hat fat. Airy Pea. "He's the seme eld hlewhead U used to be. tael he— -Tea. he's aa windy as *epfcyr - BULLION IS STOLEN BURGLARS GET AWAY WITH 850.000 WORTH. LEAOIS SUBSTITUTED INSTEAD Boxes on Be ig Opened at Assay Office Reveai Perpetration of Roboery. Seattle. Wash—Gold bullion valued At $57.0**-. pan of a consignment o! 8170.000 from the Washington-Aiaska b»Ek of Fairbanks. to the Deiter-Hor ton National bank of Seattle on the steamship Humboldt was stolen in transit. Lead was substituted in the strong box that contained it. Discorery of the theft was an roared Sunday. The stolen gold weighed 250 pounds When it left Fairbanks on a Yukon river steamer for Dawson and White Horse, the gold was contained :n three wooden boxes and was in the care of the Alas, ka Pacific Express company When the boxes were opened by the Cana dian custom officers a; Dawson the gold bars were found to be as stated in the express company's papers. The boxes w*-re opened again at the United States assay office in Seattle Friday noon and the theft was dis covered. One cdbtained pigs of lead instead of gold The seals of the boxes were intact, when they reached the assay office and it was evident that the robbery bad been committed on board ship. The gold was insured against loss by the express company The boxes were at the assay office Thursday morning and remained there until the agents of the consig nee arrived next day to check up the ingots. It is supposed that the gold was stolen on the Yukon steamer, be tween Dawson and White Horse or on the steamer Humboldt between Skag way and Seattle. The gold was in the purser's cabin. It is not customary on gold shipments to take elaborate precautions against robbery. Detectives working on the case say they have no cine. The robbery was much like one four years ago. in which $k?.0»X* consigned to Seattle by the Washington-Alaska bank of Fair banks over the Y ukon river-Skagway route was stolen from a wooden strong box. lead being substituted. That theft was committed by Bobby Miller, night watchman on a Tan ana river steamer, which was carrying the gold from Fairbanks to the Yukon steamer that was to convey it tc White Horse. Miller concealed the gold in his state room, got it back to Fairbanks and secreted it so well that after his arrest on suspicion, the owners of th« bullion were glad to make terms with. He was promised a short prison sen tence if he returned the gold and he produced $50.00$. alleging that the other $19,000 had been stolen from ^him. Pageant Ends the Congress. Montreal. Quebec — A religious P&genat as rich in devotional emotion as in sacred imagery, and as orderly in behavior as tt was deverse in na tionality and huge in size, closed Sun day the twenty-first International Eucharistic congress, held this year for the first time in the Dominion ol Canada. Visitors from the United States were especially impressed with the magnitude, splendor and rev erence of the procession, which inarched four miles through the city streets. 100.000 strong. To Mouai Royal, above the city. ROOSEVELT GETS HOME. Says He Enjoyed Every Minute of His Journey. Oyster Bay. X. Y.—After as ab sence of three weeks Colonel Roose velt is home again. weary from his | westera trip, but well satisfied wi*h [ the result. He enjoyed every minute of it. he said. The colonel reached New York at I lb o'clock Sunday moraine from Pittsburg His first orders were that ; no one should be permitted to invadt | the privacy o: Sagamore Hill, and for ' the day he relapsed into the comforts and seclusion of his family life. Mon day he will plunge into an accumulat i ed mass of correspondence Dias Unlocks the Door. Mexico City.—With a silver key President Porfirio Idas unlocked the new home of the Young Men's Christ ian association, the dedication ot which was the chief feature of the day's centennial proyrata The build in* is a five-story stone structure, oc rapping a corner of a block and ex tending half a Mock on both streets Accompanied by the members of the cabinet, high Mexican officials and visitors, the chief executive passed through the building and inaugurated each department To Vote on ReSubmlssion. Oklahoma City. Ohla.—Governor Haskell announced that he will call tor an election to be held November $ for the resu Emission to the people if the prohibition ordinance of the constitution and to submit the tattiat ed wonsan suffrage amendment. Millionaire KIMe Ml. los Angeles. Cal.—William Olive* Radford, son of William H. Radford, n millionaire mining man of Sam Francisco, committed suicide here by taking ev mide of potassium.