The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, September 09, 1892, Image 2

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    AFTER
JACK FROST STEPS IN AD
TAKES A HAND.
' COLD WEATHER D HEf YOilK ,
All ITcars of the Entry of tlio Dread
Scourge Dissipated Interest Now Ab
sorbed In V hat to Do With the Pas
sengers on the FUgue Ships
Latest Cholera Figures
I'rom the Old World.
NEW YORK , Sept. 7 To-day was
brighter , frostier and every way more
bracing1 than any day since the first
cholera ship appeared. This evidence
that the weather is aiding the
authorities in combatting the invading
scourge has sent New York's spirits
up , though it is reported that a. few
more cases of sickness have been dis
covered at quarantine.
The main question , outside of actual
combat with the scourge , seems to be
the disposition to be made of the Nor-
mannia's many saloon passengers , in
whose favor the tide of popular sympa
thy now appears to be turning , The
passengers have petitioned the people
of New \ork to take some action which
will deliver them from their floating
prison , and there seems to be little
doubt that their prayers will be an
swered , zts the secretary of the navy
has indiiectly offered the use of the
naval reserve training ship New Hamp
shire and of the proving grounds at
Scndy Hook , and the Ilambui'g-Ameri-
can steamship company is negotiating
for one of the Sound steamers.
There is no truth in the stories of
panic among the detained passengers ,
in spite of reports to the contrary.
Late last night Captain Hebich report
ed that passengers were all very well
and enjoying themselves as much as
poj-bible under the circumstances. In
fact there was a hop on board the ves
sel and the sound of merry music was
wafted across the bay to the watchers
who patrolled the witters.
The steamer Wyoming , which ar
rived ut quarantine at ! > :3U : last riight ,
was boarded. She had 278 cabin and
303 steerage passengers aboard.
Among the latter the doctor found
during his inspection fifty Russians.
The immigrants are liable to be de
tained some time. .
*
The Western Union steamer left
here at 9 a m. to-day to lay a cable to
Swinburne island , which will be con-
nected'with the doctors.
The City of New York arrived at
quarantine this morning , but will be
detained five days in all probability.
Secretary Seguine went to the lower
quarantine witn a large number 01
tents and bedding to provide extra ac
commodations on Hoffman and Swin
burne islands. He will endeavor
to make an accurate list
of all cases of cholera and
deaths that have occurred thus far
on the ships and islands.
Xo Fears in llerlin.
BEKLIN , Sept. 8. Dr. Guttman , at a
meeting of the sanitary commission
yesterday , announced that there was
not the slightest ground for fear of an
epidemic in this city. Cholerine was
steadily diminishing and only ten
suspicious cases were taken to the
hospitals during Monday night and
the forenoon of yesterday.
The newspapers of this city make
grave charges against the Hamburg-
American steamship company in re
gard to allowing its vessels to go to
New York Avith cases of cholera on
board. The company refuses to talk
about the matter.
The Hamburger Fremdenblatt main
tains that 4,600 persons have died from
cholera in Hamburg within the past
fortnight.
Olliclal Cholera Figures in I'aris.
PARIS , Sept S The prefect of po
lice has begun to issue daily cholera
bulletins. The first , issued this
morning , gives figures for Mon
day and Tuesday. According to these
eighty-nine new cases of cholera and
forty-seven deaths occurred that day
in Paris and its suburbs. Yesterday
forty-one new cases and twenty-six
deaths were reported in the city and
nine new cases and sixteen deaths in
the suburbs.
Vessels Held at the Breakwater.
LEWES , Del. , Sept 8. Three more
steamers were detained at the federal
quarantine at the Delaware Break
water this morning. They are the Ill
inois , which arrived from Antwerp
late last night with a large number of
passengers ; the freighter Kate Faw-
cett from Hamburg , August 18 , and
the steamer Kate from Carthagena ,
Aucmsf 10.
Stcamships Obeying the Circular.
LONDON , Sept 3. Consul General
New said yesterday that he had re
ceived assurances from all the steam
ship companies that they would com
ply with the terms of President Harri
son's circular. He also declared that
he had found that it was not true that
the Hamburg-American line pro
visioned its ships at Hamburg.
Twelve Choleraic Deaths in London.
LONDON , Sept e. In the weekly
mortality returns the registrar gener
al , after giving the death rate of Lon
don as sixteen per 1,000 , states that
twelve deaths were due to cholera , or
choleraic diarrhoea. The wife of a
farmer living at "Whaley Bridge is re
ported to have died last night from
Asiatic cholera.
Over 700 Xow Cases in Hamburg.
HAMBURG , Sept S . Seven hundred
and two new cases of cholera occurred
in this city yesterday. The deaths
numbered 333. Compared with the
last official figures , these returns show
an increase of twenty-eight new cases
and an increase of sixty-nine deaths.
Austria Taking Stern Precautions.
LONDON , Sept. 8. The Times'Vienna
correspondent says : "Tho govern
ment has decreed that all traveler *
from Russia , Germany and France be
treated as suspected of carrying cho )
era infection while they remain IF
Austrian territory.
IV , rtD R SOON AVENGED.
An JnilU-.na Jklau Shot Dead The Auafiin
' JSntlncd by a Woman.
PAYNE , InclM Sept 8. Shortly after
midnight Richard Wright and his
daughter were awakened by a shout
a short distance from their home , and
recognizing the voice as that of
Wright's son-in-law , Dole Judah , the old
men started to the fence , when a shot
was fire by Judah. Wright ran into
the house , secured an axe and started
toward Judah , when a terrible scuffle
ensued. The old man was shot three
times , once in the head and twice in
the neck.
During the struggle and while Judah
was on Wright the old man called for
his daughter to knock Judah off with
the axe. Just as Judah shot the last
time she struck him a terrible blow on
the back of the head , killing him in
stantly. Wright died soon afterward.
Judah was in Blooming-ton last
night and was drinking. He had had
trouble with his wife In the afternoon ,
and it is supposed he went to the
fatherinlaw's with the intention of
killing the old man and his wife , but
the latter was not there. Wright was
Gl years and Judah 50 years old.
KANSAS ALLIANCE CALL.
The Farmers to Hold Their Convention
Just After the Flection.
TOPEKA , Kan. , Sept 8 The call was
issued this morning for the fifth an
nual convention of the Kansas state
Alliance at Emporia , November 10 ,
within two days after the general elec
tion.
tion.President
President Biddle in his address states
that the coming convention will be the
most important yet held An attempt
will be made at the meeting to infuse
new life into the order. Within the
past two years interest in the business
features of the Alliance have declined
as the interest in politics has increased.
Good Rains in Missouri.
COLUMBIA , Mo.Sept 8. The weather
crop bulletin for the past week says
that the serious drouth in the state ,
which had begun to affect corn and
endanger the preparations for fall
sowing , was broken by a general rain
Sunday. Correspondents generally
agree that this rain is the last needed
by late corn and , barring an early
frost , insures at least a fair crop.
Plowing and seeding can now be
prosecuted vigorously and advan
tageously.
Worried Over West India Banks.
NEW YOUK , Sept 8. West India
merchants in this city are very much
excited over the rumored suspension
of the Martinique banks. No one be
lieves that the banks have failed. The
great hurricane of a few months ago
was followed by a disastrous fire and
all the crops are ruined. Hence there
is nothing to draw against , and , it is
arjued , the banks have simply decided
to make no more bills of exchange.
The U. F. Wants More Time.
OMAUA , Neb. , Sept 8. The forth
coming annual report of the govern
ment directors of the Union Pacific
railway w" I contain a recommenda
tion , not directly , but by inference ,
that the L mted States should extend
the cred'1 of the company when the
first mortgage bonds become due in
July next , ten months hence.
NEWS IN A NUTSHELL.
The 1J ehring sea arbitration confer
ence will be held in Paris.
The fire engine manufacturers of the
United States and Canada have formed
a trust
Mrs. Elizabeth Underbill , aged 66
and a Quakeress , committed suicide at
New York.
It is not unlikely that the G. A. R.
encampment of lf/)3 ) will be held at
Indianapolis.
Ignatius Donnelly claims that Min
nesota will go to the People's party by
30,000 plurality.
A much needed rain has saved the
Missouri corn crop and guaranteed the
wheat acreage of next year.
Three thousand old soldiers and
their families are attending the Fifth
Kansas veterans' reunion at Abilene.
More trouble is expected from the
miners at Coal Creek , Term. , and
troops are being hurried to the front.
It is probable that the Chinese will
neglect to register and resist deporta
tion on constitutional grounds on May
5 next
The compositors on the Daily Press
of Chattanooga have struck because
of the employment of a non-union
pressman.
The temperature in Austria and
Alpine Europe dropped from 90 to 38
degrees in forty-eight hours. Snow
and ice impede traffic.
Joseph Harper has been re-elected
treasurer , N. Cummins steward and
Mrs. IL Elias matron of the insane
asylum at Nevada , Mo.
The senate committee on Indian af
fairs will make a tour of the reserva
tions to study the general condition
and needs of the Indians. >
Recorder Smythe of New York in
structed the grand jury to inquire in to
cases of reporters boarding quaran
tined vessels contrary to aw.
N. C. Bagley of San Antonio , Tex. ,
was kept in aMexican jail three weeks
for seizing some corn he had sold a
Mexican , who refused to pay for it
A young man named McStallings efFort
Fort Smith , Ark. , has been arrested ,
charged with the murder of Mrs. Dr.
Haynes at Denison , Tex. , last spring.
The swindler who has been travel
ing over the country in the guise of
O'Connell , the Mississippi valley
freight agent , has been arrested at
Detroit.
Merritt A. Harger , assistant super
intendent of a Denver mission was shot
fatally by the father of Mamie Presser ,
to whom he was engaged and whom
he had ruined.
Colonel T. Agenton Hogg's country
place , Cecil manor , near Port Deposit ,
Md. , said to be the finest residence in
the state , was destroyed by ilre Mon
day night Loss 8100,000. *
Charles D. Lewis , a manjac
Louis , shot' his sister-in-law.
wife in the thigh , tried "t&- _
baby , but'missed it , and thei pfciW If ft
own brains out. The women . ' williiot' . , .
f. - IflMf * / > - fc.i Jt
The death of the venerable poet ,
Whittier , Avill be widely mourned ,
for he had endeared himself by his
verse and his gentle life to a great
er number of people thnn any other
American poet , with the possible
exception of Longfellow. Though
not a great poet , Whittier's muse
had a grace and delicacy , a tender
ness and sweetness , that charmed
the enr and touched the heart as
few others can. He did not reach
the loftier heights of song , but all
that he did hud its prompting in
an earuest purpose.
Mr. Whittier's pen was a potent
force in the anti-slavery period ,
and it is perhaps not too much to
say of him that no other man not
even Garrison or Wendell Phillips
exerted n greater influence upon
the public mind or did more to
mold popular sentiment. His
poems were read where the ring
ing editorials of Garrison and the
splendid orations of Phillips did'
not reach , and the } * produced an
impression which the others could
not make. Much of this work lost
its interest with the passing away
of the conditions that evoked it ,
but the fame of the poet does not
rest wholly upon his lyrics of free
dom.
dom.Whittier's
Whittier's life was of ideal gen
tleness and we recall no more
beautiful character in all literature.
He loved humanity and his talents
were employed for its improve
ments and elevation. He set an
example of gracious and gentle
living which all men would do wel
to imitate and died with an unques
tioning faith in an immortal life
beyond the grave. Bee.
THE decision of the president to
establish a quarantine of twentj
days on all vessels from infectec
ports is understood to be the besi
substitute that his powers enable
him to give the country withoul
delay , for absolute non-intercourse
with cholera stricken communities.
If a strict quarantine was al ]
that the president wished to estab
lish , ten days would doubtless be
as good as twenty. But the inten
tion is to put a summary stop
to immigration from foreign ports
whence the germs of the disease
might be conveyed uiid a quaran
tine of twenty days would accom
plish that end , for the reason thai
the loss of time and money to the
ships engaged in the passengei
business through such a regula
tion will be prohibitive. We may
rest assured that the order of the
president will stop the immigra
tion from such ports at once.
Most of the passenger compan
ies have already decided to ship
no second class or steerage passen
gers from any European port to
this country. Now , if the Canad
ian government will follow suit , it
is possible that we may escape a
visitation this fall. Journal.
"WE are handicapped , " says the
veteran leader of the Boston dem
ocracy , "by the general prosperity
of the country. " It is startling ,
but it is true that the politics of
the United States has come to that
pass that no one , not a republican ,
dares to pray for the prosperity of
the country because of its dampen
ing effect on the voice of the cal
amity hawkers and the republican
is the only fellow who dares to let
himself loose and hurrah for pros
perity when it comes , if it happens
to be a presidential year. Jour
nal.
SECRETARY PIUSK says that on
his recent visit to Wisconsin he
did not meet a single former re
publican who is not now a republi
can. There has not been a time
in many years when there was less
reason for a republican to with
hold his support from his party ,
nor has there been a campaign in
recent years in which such impor
tant issues -\\ere involved. Any
man who has ever been a republi
can should consider it a privilege
to support Harrison and Reid and
the vital principles which they re
present in this contest.
THE fair becomes better and
bigger with each new day. The
attendance is phenomenal , and the
entertainment provided both on the
grounds and in the city is undoubt
edly better than in any previous
lyear. Good weather through the
[ week will add another to the list
< pt remarkable successes recorded
jby the fairs of. the Nebraska state
[ board of agriculture. Journal.
*
jT
Burlington Excursions.
Eastern cities and
I Burlington pleasure resorts are
best reached by the
BURLINGTON ROUTK.
The improved train
service in effect , brings Omaha within
forty hours and Denver within Ofty-throe
hours of New York , Boston or Phila
delphia. The numerous conventions to
be held in New York , Saratoga , Detroit
and other eastern cities during the com
ing summer , to which reduced rates
will apply , offer splendid opportunities
of visiting the east at an almost nomi
nal cost. The local agent of the B. &
M. Pi. R. will be glad to give you fur
ther information.
Colorado's Cool fietraats.
During the "tourists' season" from
July until September , the Burlington
Route has on sale round trip tickets at
very reduced rates , to the principal
resorts of Colorado.
To Denver , Colorado Springs , Manitou -
tou , Pueblo and Estes Park , ( the most
attractive spot in the whole state ) , par
ticularly low rates are in force.
July and August are the best months
in which to visit Colorado's unrivalled
resorts , to all of which the Burlinton ,
with its connections offers unequalled
service.
The local agent will be glad to give
you any desired information.
Grand Commander Dilworth , of the
Nebraska G. A. 11. , has announced the
"Burlington" as the official route to
the annual reunion to be held at Wash
ington , D. C. , September 0 th. The
official train composed of Pullman
sleeping , tourist and chair cars will
leave Omaha on the evening of Sep
tember lth at S P. M. , running spe
cial to Washington via the B. & 0.
from Chicago. Sleeping cars will be
considerably less than regular rates.
One fare for the round trip. This will
afford the public a cheap and enjoyable
trip to witness the greatest G. A. R.
reunion ever held in this country.
The Evans house , Hot Springs , S.
D. , is now open for the reception of
guests. This magnificent hotel erected
at a cost of $150,000 is built of pink
sand stone , is five stories high , has
steam heat , electric lights and all mod
ern conveniences and is so arranged
that there are no inside rooms. Its
completion places Hot Springs on a par
with any similar resort in the country.
The Burlington route places at the dis
posal of the public a sanitarium and
health resort second to no other. Low
round trip rates to Ilofc Springs and
Deadwood.
CbBdren Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
MALARIA GERMS
Fill the Air and Poison the Drinking
V/ater.
Each season of the year has its spec
ial liability to disease. The months of
August , September and October always
bring with them more or less malaria ,
according to the locality. Malaria is
due to a little organism which is gener
ated in water , producing millions of
spores , or eggs , with which the water is
filled. People drinking such water
liave malaria. Or , again , if such water
dries up under ground , the spores are
, eft to dry , and they are carried from
place to place by the wind , which are
inhaled by the people , causing malaria.
Every one is liable to have malaria at
this season of the year. Malaria does
not always produce a distinct chill and
sweating , but far oftener manifests it
self by the following symptoms : Slight
chilliness and flashes of heat , furred
; ongue and loss of appetite , continuous
dull headache and slceplessn ess , bilious
ness and dyspepsia.
For malaria in all its forms there is
no remedy the equal of Pe-ru-na. This
remedy cleanses the system of the mal
arial poison and arouses each function
of the b"dy to a healthy action. No
matter how many failures one may have
lad to get relief from other remedies ,
Pe-ru-na promptly restores the system
o health. The beneficial effects of
his remedy are felt at once , although it
may have to be continued some time to
id the system of the malarial poison.
For sale at most drug-stores , each
) ottle accompanied by complete direc
tions for use. Any one desiring further
write The Pe-ru-na
er particulars : - -
Drng 'Manufacturing'Company , Colum
bus , Ohio , for , the Family Physician
No. 1. Sent free to any address.
" - - - M # " - \ . . -l.-l'aL < , i i
S. M. COCHRAN * CO. ,
ARE AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED
Union PressfDrills and
One Horse Hoe Drills ,
WAGONS AND BUGGIES.
ALSO KEEP REPAIRS FOR ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY.
Alisolutely Rust Proof tinware
Their prices on all goods are as low as the
lowest possible.
S. M. COCHRAN & CO. ,
West DemilBou Street , . . . . HI c CO OK , NEBlt.lSK.4.
A. KALSTE DT ,
McCOOK , NEB.
G. BULLAED & CO.
-loj-
B.ED CEDAR AND OAK POSTS. . n
BiTU. JF. WARRRN , Manager.
Market.
FRESH AND SALT
MEATS , .
, . h
BACON ' BOLOGNA.
/ , " CHICKENS > ' > , . , ,
TURKEYS &c.-&c
F. S. WILCOX& CO. , Props.
Notary Public. Justice of the Peace ,
REAL- : ESTATE ,
LOANS AND INSURANCE.
Nebraska Farm Lands to Exchange for Eastern Property.
Collections a Specialty.
IMTcOoors : ,
SAVE MONEY !
-ON ALL KINDS OF-
Fruit , Forest and Shade Trees
. "
J lT'And all kinds of small fruits. I will guarantee v. to \ save - - yon I
30c. on every dollar's worth you buy , from'agents' prices . -Call and
see me before buying , elsewhere. x
r
L. A7
A7At
At The Racket Store.
ttfeu. *