The Loay City North western A W. BIKLOUH. Publisher couf city, - ^ NfM^Mu m INI POINTS EVENT* OF THE DAY HELD TO A FEW UME& MTS EVERTS BOILED DOWN r»i w«i'. Pwluxi. Foreign and Other ini* ' jt*~t I etc rest inf to thi General Reader. firac'nr UicUrlk usourtd that ramp* ~s tpcalist toar ia Vo»ember, rtTV'-npli he atU! kpra to h. aide to authe cetera! pruerrxxira ijwechd* totec n**r-a set-*. A tlROrwos aUM‘ k on Curixflaa lawn vex made at the acaoai «*• ferrare of the l'»iiar_as rharch here. Ret. CMffr R Reyft at * Loul*. eharactenss-d it ax a laeaacr to the cwnaxry aad to the canoe. and ax b m aot the latent >oa #? the ear dcyaitare! to ahaadoa F net lira Mow**, la. a* as army post u »a» xfionxar-f si thr aar hpxriiarti. Aa too* aa It eaa hr arrasaed a tail r*«l awt at ratalr> v»3 he »ctt u> stair. tola thr pnwa Ue the remaacsbtex tvT Rrprc ■nulaT.tr Reads!!, Dr E A Stealer vex aiowstW jxraioa aarseoa a: Ortaaa. tit* Dr D A lafforr. re «s«ard K(Ot £ Brett aad Venue « Pe» both of Llarata. Veb. here here sppoisMd srteatiBr tsmuatu is the AsrVmitors! department. The rm(Sorer* liability aad *«r» bu«. eampcsmthsa ronsUxaeM practically decided to recommend the eaartmen' of a la« prot idtsc for the laouraart of employe* of taterctate nilnedt nuts tajary by aretdent by rvmtdr.se the resd* to make pay me*t> for aay tajury tnflbtm: No hwd.sr teas oax takes, hut It vs* admitted That the rtwawtioem a ere osxa.muasly farorable to the Ifttz.t Xl T-^CtuC N J-. to 4H#rtw rr is* *1^1 tnuit. A fT t j> 08 18 M«*HCO m feat'll it 18 fc&|«e4 8000 to rfU*8 mtdMv L M*4r.u till he ltzucu firt* 4 |iir ihfrni of Mexico Not. ft. M* i. «l £®88ffedu8 fxrtljr burnc* 8®4 t r ■ *.4 5 Vi>e ie*r. of A1A iiort A PiikM. 8ftt4 felony-four, iifcaf "t Jr idtftl. tt fctf 81 C’trttrf, YermofeX AI W lililfeC* r8 the <>|4l. >08 U lltlt ifer 88* * ? **l •BIX XS*e8ti» 8 lutl® *ttfl heller etrotfk. f® 80 *48re*# *t CfeicggD Secretory l^jfcisrr au*4 he f8Tore4 8 fty#Lrw Of htstftc ai* it® (mi 1*1.o* IduffW WflfrMI *U feed. • 3184 the oest vrfefcftl of the L’&i-tf Al8tei hy 4* IS#ffl*T8l# of TfejOfe®* P Gore of Uklihv oho w*i 18 Lo* Abi*V», s®.«4 his chcoro tor ]«fer.4esii * * * tt uudfut wii>i Nellie 4 Jicuti at4 Wo a# A*. Pool, hoc® U L •^*•**1* NeV. hfttt bee® ap pntnti il wktuk us. atu is (he stn< tit - re driiirtarti Import* of mereand dry psh at the part of New York for the ant mdsce October 21 were »a‘s*d at |iU*OJT. A «strart providing for ecotiga steal csr* t* wjiup all its nuns Use tram* was >Jfs«f by the llusots Central islinsd rtmysijr. Two import act lews*. Kiu K an*, ts the prweim* of Kimag-Si. atd S ac. capital of Sheaal province. bate faB M mbs the hands of the rooluflon Isu The Sttjeth sauliervary of the bat tle of Falls Uaf, Vs, is which Col marl E D Hewer, persoesl friend of Ustwl* *s4 (armor seastor from Ore pas. last his ills, was celebrated sear the Istthdrlt CumtumaiT r Non s objects to W. 3 Bryss i attempt to brn* progress lee rrpshik-aas Into line is support of the Armorraxtc ticket^ The I'biued States Steel Kirpora ths'i tM step la the legal battle with the sntrfsaes'. for its • alst mts wttl he uhts Jdasday. lKem her A A famous old sfik ' portrait of Georg* Ytaafetagtoa. the gift of Fraace to New York city, which baa hear a the dtp hall tor many years. Is split naa sad It is feared it cannot The tnt»c«a2srsul flight of Ad* hor C y R-drm whir:, was te-rus St New York, wifi red at Piadtss BiUhrr* Lair Horde*. premier of CsssAs aas sgan elect* A to the house of cinanmssii as oat of the mem ber* (or HaJtfaa am glad lor (ha opportunity to ksfhrrat of Terrs Haute, led, as ■hr was handed the papers which her the pritOes* ta rhaage the appHlatim sv-.wui sr ta ’be I cited asd feet, and was crushed to death. Tee proclamation signed by Presi dent Taft October 24. declaring the neutrality of the I'nited States in the war bt-tw«*n Turkey and Italy, was i«*»ed at Washington. * .. . * •_ . J » J* uwuwo 1U States will apprai-e and classify im ports according to a standard plan devised by Assistant Secretary Curtis of the treasury department. The German and French govern j incuts have communicated to the I powers the first part of the Moroccan j agreement having to do with the po sition of finance in Morocco. John R. Walsh di--d at Chicago nine 1 days after bis parole from prison. Her Anna Howard Shaw was re elected presid< nt of the national I woman's suffrage association. All railroads are forbidden by the ! interstate commerce commission to I cancel rate contracts with other roads I when such action will result in a j raiae of freight rates. The Archduke Karl Franz Joseph j and Princess Neita, of Parma, were marr.i-d in the castle at Schwarzau, lower Acsria, in the presence of the emperor and the king oi Saxony. A prl>oners’ strike developed In Sing Sing prison when 156 convicts in the knitting shop refused to con tinue work, declaring themselves dis : satisfied with cxi.-ting conditions. No spirit of unfriendliness to the j Cnited Stales influenced the verdict I of the Canadian t>eop]e at tne recent election, declared Robert L. Borden, premier of Canada, when he reacned I New York. Conditional appropriations aggregat ing tC35 la L&mphear, while out nut ting with a crowd of young people near Elmwood, fell and broke her right arm. Burglars invaded Broken Bow Mon day night, and got away with numer ous valuables and a small amount of cash. The German Lutherans at Moore ; field have bought ground and will | erect a new church building this fail and winter. Oscar Leut. an old resident of Wa hoo, died Wednesday, after lying un conscious for two weeks following a stroke of paralysis. Frank Potter of Kansas, lost a leg by the accidental discharge of a shot gun when his auto overturned on a hunting trip near Anthony. Kas. At a railway bond election held Sat urday. Tekamah voted $10,000 bonds to aid in the construction of the Om aha. Sioux City & Northwestern rail road. Walter Hopewell of Tekamah. had a narrow escape when the auto he was driving. With four friends, went into a ditch at a street car crossing at Omaha. If the wishes and ambitions of some of Beatrice's public spirited citizens are realized, that place will have a real, sure ’nough “Coney Island" next summer. Ben Brown, a strikebreaker employ ed at the Union Pacific shops at Oma ha, wgs found dead on his cot at the shops. His death is attributed to nat ural causes. After being without a minister for : several weeks, the Methodist congre- 1 gation at Howe has secured the ser- j vices of the Rev. Chenoweth from Uni- i versify Place. Chase Emerson, who held up 8 res- j taurant at Lincoln Wednesday, and ; was caotured a few minutes later, has been placed under $1,500 bond to await ! preliminary trial. The German Day celebration at Lin- j coin. Wednesday and Thursday, was ; a marked success in' very particular, j and it is more than probable it will ; become an annual event. Sunday evening a number of farm- j ers who were in York attending I church, had overcoats and robes stol j en from their rigs while they were at . worship and no trace of the thief has I yet been found. Gage county’s permanent road fund j may be augmented by $10,000 if the j efforts of the county attorney to com- | pel the estate of the late William I Scully to pay that sum on inheritance I tax are successful. Sixty automobiles, decorated with j every variety of American flowers, 1 forming the main body of the German day floral parade at Iancoln Wednes- I day, passed through four m^les of j streets banked on each side with large j crowds. The stockholders of the Pickrell Farmers' Elevator company met in an nual session Monday and elected offi cers. The manager made a very flat tering report, showing that over 150. 000 bushels of grain had been handled during the past six months at a profit of $2,100. A dividend of 20 per cent was declared. Will Pierson, a rural mail carrier at Sterling, had a very narrow escape Friday morning. He was crossing the bottom land which was badly flooded by the recent rain and in trying to cross a culvert which was covered with water, in some way missed it and was swept down the current at a rapid rate. Mr. Pierson fell from the cart he was driving in, but by unusual presence of mind saved his life. Otto R. Marks has been appointed postmaster at Winslow. Dodge county. Neb., vice W. E. Kaufman, resigned. Joe Parker, a 151-year-old Hastings boy. fell from a moving train at Te kamah and lost a foot just above the ankle. The other foot was so badly mangled that he may lose it. While picking apples Saturday after noon. L. C. W. Murray of Plattsmouth had the misfortune to have a large ap ple fall, striking him In the eye in such a way that it rendered him al most totally blind in that eye. Several stores at Aurora were vis ited by burglars Sunday night, and good hauls made at each place. The veterans of the Franco-Prussian war held a big celebration at Clatonia. which was attended by several hun dred old soldiers who carried a mus ket under the German flag. There Is a movement being inaug urated In Kenesaw to secure the con solidation of all the churches of that village into one, with one pastor. The plan suggested calls for the erection of one very large church at an outlay Of $20,000, with one pastor at $5,000 salary. The first session of the congress of Nebraska method ism will be held In lJncoln on October 25 and 26. under the leadership of Bishop John L. Nuel sen of Omaha. The purpose of this congress is to consider and discuss some of the vital questions now con fronting the churches and other relig ious bodies of this state. Ed. Kelley, while threshing on the farm of John C. Rauths. near Manley, was caught in a fly wheel on top of the aaparator and whirled around in the air several times and thrown to the gretand. Hla arm was broken In three pieces and the flesh lacerated. *' TUNIC JN PEKING MANCHUS FEAR FOR THEIR LIVES AND ARE ESCAPING. APPEAL MADE TO FOREIGNERS Officials are Seeking Asylums for Their Wives snd Families in Interest of Safety. Peking.—The situation in Peking is becoming woir-e. A veritable panic prevails among the Manchus and the Manchu women are adopting Chinese dress. Some of them are attempting to make their feet appear small by peculiarly constructed shoes. The trains that are leaving the capital for the most part are drawn by two engines, so heavily are they loaded, the people sitting on top of their househould belongings. Officials are seeking asylum for their wives and children among the foreigners. Prior to the revolution the newspa pers frequently cried out against the presence of foreign soldiers but the natives are now fleeing to them for shelter. One report fixes Monday night for the outbreak, hut me presence of 15,000 Manchu troops, against 3,000 Chinese, ensures the safety of the capital for the present. The only danger seems to be from a sudden attack against the throne or against the officials, which might j precipitate the threatened massacre ! by the Manchus. Race feeling is be- j coming intensified. The price of pro-! visions is stHl rising and many for-\ signers are entering the legation I quarter. The legation guards are preparing for emergencies. The Americans have sand bags piled on the corner wall, which Is now under a strong guard. Picturesque move ments of the Manchu troops through : the city gates occur silently after j night to prevent excitement among : the population. Rumors are current ^hat the em peror has been spirited away and that j Prince Chlng, who is too old for flight. I has committed suicide. There are many such stories. They may or may not be true. The American legation j has Issued orders, that the women and children living along the Peking- ■ Hankow railway and also in the cour.- j try is the west of the line shall pro ceed as soon as possible to the coast. JOSEPH PULITZER IS DEAD Proprietor of New York World Ex- ( pi res of Paralysis of Heart. Charleston, S. C.—Joseph Pulitzer, proprietor of the New York World and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, died at 1:40 o'clock Sunday aboard his yacht, the liberty, in Charleston harbor. The immediate cause of Mr. Pulitzer's , death was heart failure. He had been in ill health for several days but un- j til a few hours before the end none J of those around him suspected the ! gravity of his condition. lie was i born in 1847 REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CALL. Convention Will Be Composed of 1,064 Delegates. Washington.—The call for the re publican national convention to be is sued by the national committee when it meets in Washington December 12 tqill provide for 1.064 delegates to be increased to 1.072. if Arizona and New Mexico become states before the con vention is held. The inreease from *980 delegates, which comprised, the Chicago convention of 190S, is the re sult of the reapportionment by con gress. Madero Will Take office. Torreon, Mex.—Due to the request of Francisco 1. Madero, president elect, the bull tight was eliminated from the program of festivities ar ranged in hi« honor. He will be in augurated Nov. 5 or 6. * Ten Degrees Below Zero. Dillon. Mont.—U nusually cold weather for this season of the year is reported from Big Hole basin in the southwestern part of the state. Ther mometers at Wisdom, Mont., register ed 10 degrees below zero Saturday. Tariff Board’s Report. ■Washington.—The tariff' board’s much discussed report on the woolen industry is to be transmitted to con gress upon the opening of the next session in December and the board's report on cotton v.ili follow probably before January 1. Indict Insurance Men. St. Louis.—The federal grand jury voted indictments against certain of ficers and former officers of the Con tinental Assurance and the interna tional Fire insurance company. May Wed Man in Jail. Newark, 1$ .J.—Miss Florence Brom ley, the "woman in the MacFarland case," is coming from Philadelphia. It was said, to marry Allison MacFar land, who is in jail in this city await ing trial oir a charge of murdering his wife. Roosevelt is Silent. New York. — Theodore Roosevelt flatly declined to make any comment on the steel trust suit. He greeicc Interviewers smilingly, but gave no answer to their Questions. Mr. Bryan Talks to Educators. Minneapolis, Minn.—The Minnesota educational association which open ed its forty-ninth annual convention in Minneapolis, beard Hon. William J. Bryan of Nebraska lecture on the "Making of a Man.” The lecture re ceived much favorable comment. Woman la Acquitted. Marion, 111.—Brs. Pearl Momin, who has been on trisl here for- kill ing her husband, Daniel Mornln, ion. mer police chief at Herrin, was ac quitted by Jury on third ballot. FMSjMMT Began Life’s Battle Handicapped by Fate. Early Struggles of Dr. Anna Shaw. Head of the Suffrage Association, Who Won Success Against Many Discouragements. Boston, Mass.—One of the ablest leaders connected with the woman suffrage movement In the United States Is Dr. Anna Shaw, president of the National Suffrage association She started for Albion college, in Mich, tgaa, with just $18 in her pocket She had earned that $18 by teaching school at $1 a week, and after she bad earned It she bad to wait one year for the dog tax to be collected to get her pay. Dr. Shaw was born In England, like those other pioneers of the suffrage movement, the Blackwells. But her parents took her into Michigan 52 years ago, when she was eight, having stopped four years In Massachusetts on the way. They traveled days and days in an old-fashioned prairie schooner to reach their destination. Then they lived in a log cabin. The cabin was papered with spare copies of Horace Greeley's paper, and Anna learned to read from the paper on the walls, beginning with the big letters in the advertisements and progressing to the editorials. When she got that far she could read almost anything, much to her father's disgust. Miss Shaw spent four years in col lege and another four in the theolog ical and medical schools of Boston university. Her people were deeply opposed to the whole plan and told her they could do nothing whatever to heip her. During that eight years she had only $31 that she did not earn. She lived in an attic without any fire—in a Boston winter. She studied in bed to keep warm, her breatf^mak ing frosty clouds upon the air. She had not food enough to satisfy bugger. She had not clothes enough to "keep warm. Her stockings showed through holes in her shoes. She supported hei self throughout the entire course by preaching and lecturing. But so many places did not pa^ her anything that she could average only $3.50 a week. Cue day she was sitting on the stairs. She bad sat down because she fcit too weak to get to the top. A woman whom she knew slightly came along and asked her why she was sit* ting on the stairs. When she found out she went away and borrowed $91 from another woman and gave it to Miss Shaw with the proviso that she was never to know from whom it came. That was the onl? help she had through her course. She repaid the money after she was graduated and never knew who lent it But about this time she acquired the warm friendship of Mrs. Persia Addy, a widow. During the final year of her course Mrs. Addy took her into her home, and though the student paid the same board she had been paying, she had for it the comforts of a good home and the 'devoted care of Mrs. Addy. Mrs. Addy had planned to go to Europe and take Miss Shaw with her as soon as the latter should have finished her course. She died just be; fore commencement, but in her will left Miss Shaw $1,500 for the specified purpose of taking a European trip. When she was planning this journey Mrs. Addy’B father said to her: "Now, you will spend that money and it will be gone forever. Instead or cash, let me give you two bonds worth $1,500 Then I will keep the bonds for security and lend you $1,500 on them. When you get to work you can repay me as convenient, and when it is all paid the bonds will be yours again.” She did this, and having acquired a certain sentiment about the matter, has done the same ever since. Sbq has left the bonds on deposit and let the Interest accumulate, and they have paid the actual traveling ex penses of her three trips to Europe. Miss Shsw took the m'edicai course because during her theological course she did missionary work in Boston. She found, to use her own words, that she "bad nothing the people wanted.” They did not want either her theology or her gospel. They wanted heip in their material lives. She took the med ical course in order that she might give them free medical treatment. It was as a missionary doctor and preacher in the slums of Boston that Miss Shaw became convinced that there were certain defects in an all male government which called for po litical power In the hands of women. She bad always believed In woman suffrage. Now she decided to work for It. She began to speak for the Massachusetts Suffrage association and from that grew her national work. Mixing Concrete. For mixing concrete there has been Invented a spade with long oval holes la the blade, through which the finer cement will Sow and give the surface a floor finish. a sERtoerar error. Many a case of kidney disease haa proven fatal because the symptoms ■were not recognized. If you suffer with backache or bladder irregulari i *i— .. .1 •M' vice of Mrs. H. S. Woods, 619 11th St., Aurora. Nebr. Says Mrs. Woods: “I was in a criti cal condition. . My feet and ankles were so swollen with dropsy, I could not wear mv sho#>s Fnnr teen weeks prior to taking Doan’s Kidney Pills, I was confined to bed practically helpless. They made mo feel like a new woman and soon I was doing my work the same as ever." “When Your Back Is Lame, Re member the Name—DOAN’S.” 50c a box at all stores. Foster-Milbum Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. A Jolt to Romance. ’’Hubby, you have a lock of my hair, haven’t you?” “Next my heart.” “See if you can match it in some puffs when you go downtown." |. - Overdoing (t. “This is the fourth season I have met you at this watering-place. Miss Brown, and every time you appear ter. ! years younger!”—Fliegende Blaetter. l>r. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and invig orate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar coated tiny granules. In this world one must be a little ■ too kind to be kind enough.—Mart ! vanv. I — -- Chest Pains and Sloan’s Liniment is an ex 1 eellent remedy for chest and throat affections. It quickly relieves congestion and in flammation. A few drops j in water used as a gargle is antiseptic andfiealing. Here’s Proof ;f§ “ I have used Sloan's Liniment for » years aad can testify to its tscnoerful efficiency. 1 have used it for sore throat, |P croup, lame back and rheumatism and I in every case it fave instant relief.” k j 1 REBECCA JANE ISAACS, i l*ucy, Kentuckv. SLOANS I is excellent for sprains and bruises. It stops the pain at once and reduces swell - ing very quickly. j i Sold by all dealers. Price, 25c., SOc., $1.00 Sloan's Treatise on the HYirse sent free. Address ; < Dr. ' ' «=T T. M. K. Ville did =: this at Mercedes, in 1_ the lower Gulf Coast - Country of Texas and Louisiana. Jan. i8tll tasi ne piamea u acres 10 corn, no got 240 bushels, which sold for $1 a bushel. The whole cost of rais ing came to $33, leaving a net profit of £207. June 1 st he planted a SECOND crop and got 240 bushels This crop cost $39. leaving him a net profit ot $201. From ihe 2 crops he cleared $408—not bad for 6 acres; and he can grow a crop of fall potatoes on the same land and market them before Christmas. This is not unusual in the Gulf Coast Country of Texas and Louisiana Three crops a year is making money jnst 3 times as fast as you are. and the Gnlf Coast farmer saves more of what he makes than the northern farmer, because lie has none of the northern fanner's heavy winter expense s. Better Look Into This! The pleasure of a trip to the Gulf Coast Country, via the Frisco Lines, is well worth the little cost of going. On the first and 3rd Tuesdays of each month, round trip fares, via Frisco Lines, are GREATLY REDUCED to any point in the Gulf Coast Country of Texas and Louisiana. The Frisco Lines operate splendid, electric lighted, all steel trains, daily from Chicago, St. Louis. Kansas City. Birmingham and New Orleans.^ Every day these trains carry through carsWid on excursion days also carry tourist sleepers through to the Gulf Coast Country. 3 Splendid Books Free! They describe this wonderful country from one end to the other; give examples and personal statements by*men who have gone there and made good. Scores of fine pictures. Write for your free copies today, while you think of it I will also send you information about fare from your home town and give you complete schedule, etc. all free. A. HILTON Geaeral Pasieafcr Altai 1537 Frisco Bldg. St. Laaia TYPEWRITERS ALL MAKES Lamest stock, lowest prices. Bemingtone 114 Smith Premiers IIS. Chiceeo V. Underwood pN L- CL Smirh NO. Monarch Nil. Hammond IIS. Fox lia Full Guarantee. Send for Catalog A a. r. SWANSON CO.. UU Famam St, Omaha. Noh