Custer County Republican. (Broken Bow, Neb.) 1882-1921, June 07, 1900, Image 2

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COSTER CQDNTY REPUBLICAN
D. M. AMSimnilY , Vublliber.
BBOKEN BOW , NEBRASKA.
THE NEWS IN BHIEP.
Venezuela IB rejoicing over the cap
ture of Hernandez.
A fresh outbreak of bubonic plague
In reported nt Alexandria.
Another death , due to bubonic
plague , has occurred at Smyrna , Tur
key.
key.Hall
Hall to the depth of three Inches
fell In the northwestern suburbs of
Chicago.
The Boer envoys will visit Omaha
inatc packages of less than a quiiiicr
of a barrel.
The republicans of Kansas will not
open their speaking campaign until
September 1.
Some French bankers have offered
to advance ? 10,000,000 to the Venezue
lan government.
Army officers In Havana Indignant
ly deny the charges that they arc liv
ing extravngently.
Mrs. Elizabeth Doming Duer King ,
who was formerly a leader In New
York society , Is dead at the ago of 89
years.
The senate committee on finance au
thorized a favorable report on the
housn bill amending the law concern
ing the taxation on beer BO as to elim-
.lune Sth.
A statement of 'the treasury bal
ances in the general fund , exclusive
of Ihe $150,000.000 gold leservc in the
division of redemption on the KOth ,
bhows : Available cash balances , ? 11C-
185,179 ; gold , ? G8,855,7GI.
At Springfield , III. , considerable cpn-
stcrnatlon was created at tnc state
house by Secretary of State Roue dls.
charging nineteen clorkn and Jan.tore.
None of those discharged alfected to
know the reason for the wholesale
cleaning out , and Secretary Rose was
equally non-communicative , only say
ing that the scrviccn of BO many were
no longer needed.
Postmaster General bmlth , has re
ceived a report from the director of
posts of the Phllipplric Islands under
date of April 14 , In V.ilch he states
that with > all expenses paid tltaro will
bo a profit of over $10,000 for the
eleven months from May 1 , 1899. This ,
he says , makes absolutely certain the
continuance of the act vice until Juno
without a deficit.
iho San Juan , Porto Rico , school
term will' close on June 27 , and' 'tho
long three months' vacation will begin.
The educational department lias ac
complished much during the last year ,
although It is still at loggerheads with
some natives who do not take to the
American educational system. Ameri
can method * ; , text books , in both lan
guages , and teachers have been Intro
duced.
Admiral Dewcy has arranged to
leave Washington on June 5 for a trip
that will carry him as far as Grand
Rapids , Mich. It Is a purely social
trip , in response to invitations issued
some months ago by tne citizens of
three western rltles which Admiral
Dewey had accepted before the an
nouncement of his candidacy for the
presidency. The trip has no political
( significance.
The attending physicians now cor
rect the imprcss'lbn that Mrs. XJlad-
Ht.one Is paralyzed. They say there has
been no seizure and that her state hi ,
merely the result of extreme weakness.
A. H. ( Shanghai ) Pierce , the cattle
king , and H. H. Klrkpatrlck , of Sher
man , Texas , have sold to Milton H.
Smith , president of the Louisville &
Nashville railroad , 10,000 acres of land
fronting on West Galveston bay.
Secretary Hay has received a cable
gram from Consul ' /.me at Smyrna
saying that the plague has made its
appearance at that port.
Col. John H. Stevens , the first white
settler in Minneapolis , Is dead. He
went to Minnesota and took up n farm
overlooking St. Anthony Falls , In 1819.
At PhllllpH , Wls. . the Flambeau Pa
per Company's mills were destroyed by
fire , entailing a loss of 00,000.
Attorney General Smith has begun
proceedings in the .district court at
Omaha to dissolve the Ice trust of that
city. An order was issued directing
the trust to show cause why an In
junction should not be granted.
The Choctow tribal authorities , who
attempted to collect the tribal tax
from non-citizens ut Stcrrct , 1. T. , en
countered rcalstance.
Uolirke Cochrane of New York has
made u donation of $500 to the work
of the Tuskegee normal and Industrial
institute at Ttiskogee , Ala.
Some cases of yellow fever have ap
peared In Havana.
At a meeting held In iiangor. Me. ,
the Eastern Lumber Manufacturers'
Association voted to curtail production
ut least 80 per cent in July and Au
gust , and to reduce prices somewhat
from the fcchcdule adopted early In
the spring.
The Cleveland Leader says that
Mark Hanna will not be chairman of
the new national committee.
Passengers on a sleeping car of the
Missouri Pacific train which left Kan
sas City were held up and robbed be
tween Falls City , Neb. , and Stella by
one highwayman.
J. B. Showalter was renomlnatcd
for congress by the republicans In the
Twenty-first district of Pennsylvania.
Kansas wants 20.00P men to help
save her enormous wheat ciop. State
Grain Inspector McKenzlo hays the
state will harvest 85,000,000 bushels
and that the harvesting will begin in
eouthcrn Kansas by June 12.
Burglars blew open tna safe at the
Clark Exchange at Sturgeon , Mo , , and
secured fS.OOO in currency and escaped ,
leaving no clue.
Fifteen laborers In a foundry at
Juehkarath , Germany , were deluged
with , liquid hot Iron , faeven-dled and
the survivors were horribly burned.
Superintendent David Grlfllths of the
Republic Iron and Steel company's
plant , Springfield , III. , received word
from the company stating that owing
to shortage in orders and a geneial
slump in iron , the works at that place
would be enclosed entirely June 1 , anil
would remain closc'd for nn indefinite
. . .
time.
CLOSE D1 INALDO
American Bullet Boliovul to Have Reach
ed Filipino Lcadr ,
HIS HORSE COYEHED WITH BLOOD
MujnrMiirchwith Dfliicliinciil of Tlilrtj-
Tlilnl Itcu'lincnt , O Tlul rn IiiMirccnt
I'urty After n I.IIIIK I'ursnlt Through
th Kiiln.
VIGAN , Luzon , via Manila , June 3.
Major March , with his detachment
of the Thirty-third regiment , over
took what Is believed to have been
Agulnaldo's party on May 19 at La
Gat , about 100 miles northeast of VI-
Kan. The Americans killed or wound
ed an olllccr , supposed to bo Agul-
naldo , whose body was removed by
his followers. Aguinaldo had 100
men , Major March 125.
The American commander reached
Laboagan , whither Aguinaldo had
made his headquarters since March G ,
on May 7. Aguinaldo had fled seven
hours before , leaving all the beaten
trails and traveling through the for
est , along the beds of streams. To
ward evening , May 19 , Major March
struck Agulnaldo's outpost about a
mile outside of La Gat , killing four
Filipinos and capturing two. From
the latter he learned that AgulnaWo
had camped there for the night , al
though cxhausto'l and half starved.
Major March's men enteicd La Gat
on the run. They saw the Insurgents
scattering into the bushes or over the
plateau. A thousand yards beyond
the town , on the mountain side , the
figures of twenty-five Filipinos , dress
ed In white , with their leader on a
gray horse , were silhouetted against
the sunset. The Americans fired a vol
ley and saw the olllcer drop from his
horse. Ills followers fled , carrying
the body.
The Americans , on reaching the
spot , caught the horse , which was
richly saddled. Blood from a badly
wounded man was on the animal and
on the ground. The saddle bags con
tained Agulnaldo's diary and some
private papers , including proclama
tions. One of these was addressed :
"To the Civilized Nations. " It pro
tested against the American occupa
tion of the Philippines. There worn
also found copies of Senator Bever-
idgc'H speech , translated Into Sprfnish ,
and entitled "Tho Deathknoll of the
Filipino People. "
Major March , believing that the Fil
ipinos had taken to n river which is
a tributary to the Chlco , followed It
for two days , i caching Tiao , where he
learned that a party of Filipinos had
descended the river May 20 on a raft ,
with the body of a dead or wounded
man upon a litter , covered with palm
leaves. .
There Major March reviewed hla
command , shoeless and exhausted , and
picked out twenty-four of the fresh
est men , with whom he beat the sur
rounding country for six days longer ,
but without finding any trace of the
insurgents. The Americans pushed
on and arrived at Aparri May 29.
The officer shot was either Agnl-
naldo or his adjutant , and as the horse
was richly caparisoned it is a fair
presumption that It was Aguinaldo.
DEARTH OF PRETORIA NEWS.
UOIICCIIMUK of Opinion that the Hocm Will
Surrender.
LONDON , June 4. 4 n. m. There is
no direct news from Pretoria of later
date than Thursday evening. General
French's cavalry were then nt Irene ,
eight miles south of Pretoria , and firing
was heard there. Lord Roberts' mes
sage about secondary operations else
where and the situation at Johannes
burg , dated at Orange Grove , a farm
four miles northeast of Johannesburg ,
show that on Saturday at 9:10 : p. m.
ho was twenty-Jive miles from Preto
ria.
The correspondents with Lord Rob
erts have not got through a line .about
the operations after the occupation of
Johannesburg. Official messages con
tinue to come through , but press tele
grams , arc held up , probably to avoid
their giving even a hint as to what may
be the pending operations. From the
other side and their followers through
Lourcnzo Marquez comes a mass of
statements , some contradictory , others
obviously Improbable , but all purportIng -
Ing to be facts.
Muring Arli'Hlim U > | | K.
pmttllE , S. D. , June -J.-S. A. Coch
rane , L-tatc engineer of Irrigation , has
returned from bully county , where he
located sites for two artesian wells In
Pearl township. It is expected to have
the \\clls flowing before winter. An
other well Is being sunk 'u Sully coun
ty on the ranch of C. D. Banton , east
of Onlda , and the wells Just located
will make four for the county. The
well sunk last year on the King ranch ,
near Onida , has i > mnnstrated that the
artesian flow can 'JH ' secured In that
county in sections wiu-rc the different
Rpological sun : K h .vc demonstrated
by theory that b.ich wells could not be
hit-tired.
( Mill I'lIX lH IIIH4IIU.
NEW YOP.K. June -1. Delia May
Fox , the well known actress , was com
mitted by Justice MaAdam In the supreme -
promo court today to the Insane asy
lum at Wave Ciest , Astoria , L , I. , on
the petition of her brother , Wlllla.n
H. Fox , and on the evidence of Drs.
Austin Flint , jr. , and Edward D. Fish
er , which showed that Ehc is laboring
under delusions.
Ulfhluc Strllcu in KIUIIMH.
GALENA , Kan. , June 3. What ic
represented to be the rlckest jack strike
ever made is reported from one of the
piopertlcs of the Combination Xtnc
Mining company's properties. At a
depth of sixty-two feet drillers on the
Sadie Bell shaft ran into 25 per cent
Jack and are said to have gone through
ten feet solid
Nrvly I'IIIHT * n re
Niw YutUC , June 4. Governor
KooHovclt has signed the Neely extra
dition papers and they were forwarded
to Washington tonight.
INDh'S DEPLORABLE CONDITION ,
J.oiiU Klnimli Mntc < Slut oiiicnt of
Sri'iii'i In inKlMnd' Orprmli'iiry.
BOMBAY. Juno 3. Louis Klopach
of Now York , publisher of the Chris
tian Herald , who arrived here May
14 and Htnrtocl at oiuo on a tour of
the famlna rtrir-kcn < ; i itrlclH , hnsi re
turned , after tra\fllnfT through the
moat pcvcrcly cm It tun portion1) of the
Bombay presidency. Including Gujer-
rat and Baro'da. ' lie makes the fol
lowing statement regarding his obser
vations :
"Uverywherc I met the most'shock
ing and i evoking scenes. The famine
camps have boon swept by cholera and
Kinullpox. Fugitives , scattering in all
directions and stricken In light , were
found dying In the fit-Ids and roadsldo
ditches. The numbers at one relief
station were Iwroahlng at the rate of
10.000 per day.
"At Godhera there were 3,000
deaths from cholera within four days ,
and at Dohad 2,500 In the sumo period.
The hospital death rate at Godhera
and Dohad was 90 per cent. The con
dition of the stricken simply beggars
description. Air and water were im
pregnated with nn Intolerable stench
of corpse ? . At Ahmedabad the death
rate in the poor house was 10 per
cent. Every day I saw now patients
placed face to face with corpses. In
every fourth cot there was a corpse.
"The thermometer- 115 in the
shade. Millions of flics hovered
around the uncleaned dysentery pa
tients. I visited the smallpox and
choleni wards at Vlragam. All the
patients were lying on the ground ,
there being no cots. Otherwise their
condition was fair.
"I can fully verify the reports that
the vultures , dogs and jackals are de
vouring the dead. Dogs have been
Eecn running about with children's
limbs in their jaws.
"The government Is doing Its best ,
but the native onlclals are hopelessly
and heartlessly Inefficient. Between
the famine , the plague and the chol
era the condition of Bombay presi
dency Is now worse than It has been
at any previous period in the nine
teenth century. Whole families have
been blotted out. The spirit of the
people has been broken and there may
be something still worse to co mo
when the monsoon breaks. "
MARCH TOJGATES OF PEKIN.
Armed Ilodlcn of Seven NulloiiKV1I1 De
mand Admlmlon to the City.
TIEN TSIN , June 4. A special train
started for Pekln this afternoon with
the following lorces :
Americans , seven officers and fifty-
six men.
British , thrco officers and seventy-
two men.
Italians , three officers and thirty-
nine men.
French , three officers and seventy-
two men.
Russian , foijr officers and seventy-
one men.
Japanese , two officers nnd twenty-
four men.
The foreign contingent also took
with It five quick-firing guns.
It Is rumored that foreign troops will
be opposed at the first gate of the Chi
nese capital , outside the wall.
Promotions In the volunteer army :
All of the Thirty-first lnfantr > Ma
jor Lloyd M. Brett , to be lieutenant
colonel ; Captain C. P. Stivers , to be
major ; First Lieutenant Benjamin
Stark , jr. . to be captain ; Second Lieu
tenant Wllford Twyman , to be first
lieutenant ; also Sergeant D. W.
Strong , company A , Thirty-flfth infan
try , to be second lieutenant.
ST. LOUIS SUNDAY RECORD ,
Dynamite KvploMon Stop * Car I.luo mid
K11U IljHliinilcr.
ST. LOUIS , Mo. , June 4. A riot of
n-all proportions , during the progress
tjf which a boy was fatally shot and n
Ijiinmlte explosion marred what would
have otherwise have been an unevent
ful Sabbath. As a car on the lower
Giove line of the St. Louis Transit
company was passing the corner of
Twenty-eighth and Calhoun streets a
crowd ot strike sympathizers began
throwing rocks at It. An unknown man
leaned from one of the windows of
the car nnd fired a shot from a revolver
ver toward the unruly crowd. The bul
let sped over the heads of the mob and
found lodgment In the breast of Peler
Frank , a 16-year-old boy who was sit
ting in the doorway of his father's
house , an Interested spectator of the
demonstration. A detachment of police
dispersed the rioters and carried young
Frank to the city hospital. The physi
cians say that the wound will prove
fatal.
Kruger Near the llorder.
LOURENZO MARQUEZ , June 3.
Saturday , President Kruger was still nt
Machadodorp , about half way between
Pretoria nnd the Portuguese frontier ,
on the railroad between the Transvaal
capital and Delagoa bay. Boer com
mands totaling about 10,000 men held
Thursday all the position and hills
around Pretoria. Another largo com
mand was nt Bronkhurst's spruit , about
fifty miles from Pretoria , on the rail
road leading to Dclagoa bay.
It en r IIoyn at Cleveland.
CLEVELAND , O. , Juno 4. The Boer
envoys arrived hero nt 11 o'clock to
night from Buffalo. They were met at
the Until by a big reception committee
and delegation of citizens on foot and
in carriages and headed by a bai-j
passed through the principal downtown
streets. Tomopviw evening the en
voys will nddresa a mass meeting at
the Gray's armory.
I'utal Wreck at I.inm.
LIMA , O. , June 3. This afternoon
about 3 o'clock as an eastbound freight
train on the Lake Erie & Western
road was miming at full speed , about
eighteen miles this side of Stindusky
City , the tires came off of one of the
driving wheels , ditching the engine
and piling about twenty cars on top
of It. Fireman Enoch Bowsher am !
Head Brakeman J. W. Purtell , who
were , in the engine , wore crushed to
death , and Engineer Hurry Bell hat !
a leg broken and was Feriously hurt
Internally. The men killed and En
glnecr Bell live here.
HOLD PRBTOHIA
Sicgo of the Capital of the Trauavaal ,
However , in Progress ,
THE PEACE COMMITTEE OVERRULED
( lincnil llotlm nml rnlloucra 1'rulmhly
Determined to right On Notliln
l''nim I.oril KoljcrlR fur it < lny Con
flicting ItfiiinrlK of tlio 8 million Arc
JIciiiil ut Jotiiunrc ; > M.trijiiuz.
LONDON , June 2. Lord Roberta
continues silent regarding Pretoria.
Lourcnzo Maiquez , wheie all the
news from the Boer side is rehandled ,
fables that corniumlcatlon with Pre
toria Is now suspended.
Some messages by courier have
/cached Lourenzo Marqucz , but none
of Ii tor date than Wednesday. These
assert that the burghers are In a state
of panic and that Pretoria is bin&
controlled by a vigilance committee.
Lourcnzo Manjuez again scnus the
report that President Kniger has been
ciipturcd.
The news blank gives rise to a sus
picion that a citizens' committee a ;
Pretoria may not have been able to
carry out its plans for securing the
peaceful entry of Lord Roberts and
sparing the city the horrois of a siege.
A piece party appeared to be In the
ascendant nnd as soon as President
Kruger and his cabinet left Pretoria to
organize a new capital the citizens'
committee persuaded the commandants
of the forts to withdraw some of the
troops from therdofcnses , perhaps with
the view of keeping order In the town.
If messengers were sent to the Brit
ish or the British , being two hours'
march from Pretoria on Wednesday ,
entered it at any time prior to Friday
noon , Lord Roberts would certainly
have telegraphed this fact. Hence It
looks as though there was a Boer force
between Pretoria and Johannesburg.
These soldiers , trekking back toward
Pretoria , some of them fresh from the
fight with General Hamilton , would
have brought a new element into the
situation and probably have overruled
the peace committee , taking the direc
tion of affairs out of their hands. If
this has happened the British.may , as
the tfally Chronicle says , see some
"hard fighting" beiore the British flag
flics over Pretoria , for If the Boers
Held only three forts standing close
together on the hills south of the town
they would be In a position to stand a
siege.
The Boers , according to a special dis
patch from Lourenao Marquez , have
re-entered the northeastern territory
of the Free State and are engaged with
the British near Ventersburg and Har-
rismlth.
It Is reported from Amsterdam that
the best rooms at one of the principal
hotels there have been engaged for
President Kruger's occupancy from
June 25.
The Times has the following from
Lourenzo Marquez , dated June 1 :
"Reports of the most conflicting
character are current here , due to the
activity of the Boer agents. While one
section declares that President Kruger
has returned to Pretoria for the pur
pose of arranging terms of surrender ,
another asserts that the British have
been repulsed outside of Pretoria.
Nothing autnentic is known here re-
Kardlng Mr. Kruger's whereabouts or
the situation In the Transvaal. "
I
flNDS TO FIGHT THE PLAGUE.
Men of Sun FriinclKCit Start Out
to Collect Money.
SAN FRANCISCO , June 2. In or
der to set at rest all reports that
there is further danger from the bu
bonic plague and to protect their
business interests the merchants of
this city have decided to raise $50,000 ,
which is to be expended in purifying
the Chinese quarter. At a meeting
this afternoon $30,000 was subscribed
and n committee appointed to increase
the amount to $50,000. More money
will be raised if it Is necessary , as
the business men are in earnest and
announce their purpose of prosecut
ing the work of cleansing to such
on extent that no one can say the
Blightest trace of plague remains.
'I lie TriiHl Amendment Defeated.
WASHINGTON , June 2. The house
of representatives today , after a lively
debate extending over two days , de
feated the joint lesolntion proposing a
constitutional amendment empowering
congress to regulate trusts. It requires
a two-thirds vote under the constitu
tion to adopt an amendment to the
constitution. The vote stood : Ayes ,
151 ; nays , 131. The affirmative vote ,
therefore , was thirty-eight short of the
requisite two-thirds , 192.
Five democrats , Campbell of Mon
tana , Naphen of Massachuretts , Scud-
dcr of New York , SIbley of Pennsylva
nia and Thayer of Massachusetts , and
one sllverltc , Newlands of Nevada ,
vtoed with the republicans for the resolution
elution and two republicans. Loud of
California and McCall of Massachu-
eetts , with the democrats. These were
the only breaks from party lines. The
populists voted solidly against the res
olution.
( rrinnn Sugar T nut's AVorlt.
MADGEBURG , Prussia. Juno 2. As
the German Sugar trust starts opera
tions today the refineries have with
drawn all their offers from the mar
kets. There v.ill bo no further sales
for twelve days , then the trust will
fix the prices for homo trade.
Hurt ! nnd Smith Miule Mrl
WASHINGTON. JWTIS 2 The prcsl-
dent today appointed Colonel Luther
H. Hare of the Thirty-third volunteer
Infantry ( captain Seventh cavalry )
nnd Oiiur.'el J. H. Smith of the Sev-
cntcenth infantry , to be brigadier gen
erals of volunteers , in recognition of
their distinguished services in the
campaign in the Philippines. This ac
tion fills the only vacancies in the
volunteer brigadier rank. They were
kept open in order to permit the pres
ident to bestow the appointments upon
specially deserving officers in the
field.
S. 11. II. CLARK PASSES AWAY.
AVell KIUMTII Itiillroml Man Die * nt Aslio-
\llle , North Carollnn.
OMAHA , June 2. S. H. H. Clark , a
director of the Missouri Pacific Rail
road company , Its former vice presi
dent and general manager , first vice
president of the Texas & Pacific nnd
the International & Great Northern ,
and formerly president and general
manager of the Union Pacific , died
yesterday at Ashevllle , N. C. Mr.
Clark had been ailing for several
years and since the reorganization of
the Union Pacific road had remained
In retirement at his residence at St.
Louis. He was advised to go to Ashc-
vllle early in the spring , but his rela
tives and friends felt that the end
was near. He passed away in the
presence of his wife and son. Mr.
Clark was In his C8th year.
Mr. Clark had been in poor health
for more than a dozen years , but had
kept actively at work until about
three years ago , During the Union
Pacific receivership he was directed
by Judge Henry Clay Caldwell to take
a vacation and for several months he
was at rest. Ho soon resumed the
active direction of the affairs of the
road as chief of the receivers and
kept steadily in the harness until the
receivership was terminated in the
Hale under foreclosure In November ,
1898. Since that time he has been
connected with the other roads of the
Gould system , but has not been ablj
to do a great deal of work.
BILL LliMUS PECK'S POWER.
IteprcscntntUu ILnvy Propones rian for
Avciuntlng for Money.
WASHINGTON , June 2. Represen
tative Levy of New York today intio-
duced the following bill in the house :
"That on and after the passage of
this act the power vested in the com
missioner general of the United States
to the Paris exposition of 1900 to em
ploy experts and other necessary offi
cers or clerks and to disburse appro
priations Incident to the participation
of the United States in said exposition
Is hereby transferred to the secretary
of state , who shall make such appont-
ments and disburse such money as may
be now or hereafter appropriated.
"The commissioner general for the
United States to the Paris exposition
of 1900 is hereby directed to render a
monthly report to the secretary or
state of the number of employes , their
occupation and salaries. That the re
port authorized under the act of June
30 , 1899 , giving the results of the expo
sition , shall be prepared under the di
rection of the secretary of state. "
DISFRANCHISING THE NEGRO.
Semite Committee MUcly to Investigate
Conditions In thu South.
WASHINGTON , June 2 The senate
committee on privileges and elections
today had under consideration Senator
Prltchard's resolution declaring exclu
sion from the privilege of the franchise
because of race to be unconstitutional.
The committee decided to recommend
the adoption of a substitute directing
the committee to investigate whether
such exclusion Is antagonistic to the
constitution. The substitute passed
the committee by a party vote and if it
is agreed to by the senate the investi
gation will be undertaken by the com
mittee.
Hunk JColiliern Arrested.
CHICAGO , June 2. Three men , said
to be known to the police all over thq
United States and Canada as expert
safe blowers , were arrested in their
apartments at Ogden avenue and Ash
land boulevard today , after a hard
struggle. The men under arrest are
Frank Dwycr , alias Rntledge , of On
tario , Canada , wno has served time at
Canon City , Colo. , for safe robbery ;
Thomon Jens and Fred Harris. The
nu'ii arc wanted for the alleged rob
bery of two banks at Aurora , a town
near Toronto , Canada , where they aie
said to have secured J900 , and several
thousand dollars worth of mining
stock.
Mexico'K Capital Feurs
CITY OF MEXICO , June 2. The
president of the republic , at the In
stance of the board of health ; has au
thorized additions to the general sani
tary code of Mexico , with a view tr
prevent the introduction of the bubonic
plague. Any vessels carrying persona
who are plague-stricken or any vessel
that in the last ten days has touched
at a port where plague exists is to go
Into quarantine off Vera Cruz if approaching
preaching the gulf ports , or off Acapulco -
pulco If approaching the Pacific coast
The quarantine Is to continue up td
ten days and all wearing apparel and
effects arc to be disinfected.
Koliertu H Che.venno Hoy.
CHEYENNE , Wyo. , June 2. Car-
tain Charles B. Roberts of the Thirty-
fifth volunteer infantry , who , with two
of his men , is reported to have been
captured by the Filipinos near San
Miguel do Mayo , was reared in Chcy.
enne. He is a son of Lieutenant Col
onel Cyrus S. Robertc. He was grad
uated from the Cheyenne High school
In 1891 and was appointed to West
Point in 1894 and was graduated with
high honors two years ago.
ClirlHt'imn Mnrderi-d Dally.
LONDON , Juno 2. The Pekln cor
respondent of the Times , telegraphing
Wednesday , says : "The damage to the
railroad is estimated at 30,000. The
government supports rather than condemns
domns the 'Boxers. ' Not one has been
arrested yet. No foreigner has been
seriously injured , though murders of
native Christians are reported dally
from the country. "
IH IlrDrgnnlrliiK Mllltla.
FRANKFORT , Ky. . June 2. Gover
nor Bcckham this afternoon issued an
order mustering out ten companies of
the state guard. All except two of
them are located In mountain towns
and were among those mustered into
service during the political excitement
just before and immediately following
the state election last fall. It is un
derstood that a number of other com
panies are also to be disbanded , as
the governor holds that the various
regiments now have double their quota
of companies in them.
Senator Uonr > Odd Motions.
Senator Hoar , In beginning a speech ,
has n little series of motions which
lie unconsciously never fulls to go
through. First his hand goes to hla
throat nml tic , then he pulls down his
waistcoat , then he fingers his watch
chain , shakes his cuffs loose , clears his
throat and begins.
Adnn Adams Treat of Denver , Colo. ,
Is probably the oldest Mason In the
world , having joined the order In
February , 1823. Mr. Treat Is now In
his 103d year and Is still In vigorous
health.
If you don't feel w.11 today you can bo
made to feel better by making your blood
better. Hood's Sarsnparllla Is the great
pure blood maker. That Is how It cures
that tired feeling , pimples , Bores , salt
rheum , scrofula nnd catarrh. Get a bottlo-
of tlila great medicine nnd begin taking It
nt once nnd sec how quickly It will bring-
year blood up to the Good Health point ,
HoosS's § ® as&j9airSJ § i
Is America's Grcatcot Blood Medicine.
Wood pulp paper is used in military
clothing.
Enginrs say that a 100-foot wide
canal , 12 10 15 feet deep , between
Lake Superior and Grand Forks , N.
D. , is an egineering possibility.
Arthur Rehan , brother of Miss Ada.
Rehan nnd Mrs. Oliver Doud1 Byron ,
riled in Brooklyn , N. Y. , aged 38. He
had managed many of Augustm Daly's
road companies.
A Vienna editor who went to the
last Paris exposition in a fiacre has
reached the present show in an auto
mobile and promises to visit the next
one in a flying machine.
Lompoc , in Santa Barbara county ,
California , grows mustard for the
whole nation. In that region 2,000 ' <
acres are cultivated to the seed , the j >
industry employing about 200 farmers.
At San Francisco , Cal. , Federal
Judge Morrow issued an injunction
preventing the federal and local health
authorities from discriminating
against the Chinese in the matter of
precautions against the bubonic
plague.
Mrs. Capron , widow of the Rough
Rider captain who was killed in Cuba ,
will sail for the Philippines in May
to do Red Cross work. Since the
death of her husband she has Inter
ested herself In the welfare of dis
charged soldiers , securing employment
for many or them.
The German torpedo flotilla is now
proceeding slowly down the nnine , and
will arrive at Rotterdam June 0.
of Kedleston , telegraphs that good rain
has fallen In Mysore , and that scat
tered showers have fallen elsewheie.
There are now 5,730,000 persons In re
ceipt of relief.
Milk Ticket * anil Microbe * .
Health Commissioner "VYIlkie of Oshkosh -
kosh has the courage of his convic
tions. Convinced that disease is
spread by milk tickets , he has consid
erably restricted their use by Issuing
an order requiring all dealers to use
a ticket only once. After that it is to
be safely destroyed.
SUulH'd nn lit ) Pnnciit.
Congressman John M. Allen of Mis
sissippi , though he served as a lad in
the Confederate army , did not allow
the war to interrupt his studies en
tirely. He was just out of school and
carried everywhere a pocket Latin dic
tionary , practicing Latin composition
by every camp fire. Afterward he en
tered Cumberland university.
CAiinini : .
We are the Nebraska selling agents
for the Union Carbide Co. , manufac
turers of Cakhim Carbide for making
Acetylene Oas. Order your supplies
from us. Pacific Storage and Ware
house Co. , 912-91-1 Jones St. , Omaha ,
Neb.
StufCll
Tlic Wonder
of the Age
No Dolling No Cooking
It Stiffens the Goods
It Whitens the Goods
It polishes the Goods
It makes all garments fresh and crlip
u nbtn tiist bought new.
Try o Sample Pockasto
You'll like It If you try It.
You'll buy It If you try It.
You'll uo It It you try It.
Try It
Bold t > y all Grocer * .
and wrltq for list of premiums v e offtr
free fur them.
Roofer
The favorite
summer
drink
W.N.U. OMAHA. No. 33 1900