The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, December 30, 1904, Image 2

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VOTE OF STATES
OFFICIAL CANVASS OF NATIONAL
ELECTION RETURNS
TEDDYS PLURALITY 2547573
Total Vcte Shows a Decreace of 4G0
078 Compared With Four Years Ago
Parker Carried 13 States Bryan
17 McKinley 23 Roosevelt 32
CHICAGO Tli e official canvass of
the votes cast November 8 for presi
dents electors was completed Thurs
day when the result was announced
in Minnesota North Dakota and
Wa ington The Associated Press
is therefore able to present the first
table giving the official vote of all
the forty five states The total vote
is 150849G against 13908574 in
1000 a decrease of 4G0078
The ballots were divided as follows
Itoosevelt Hep 7G27632
Parker Dem 5080054
Debs Soc 391587
Swallow Pro 2G0303
Watson Pop 114637
Corregan Soc Labor 33453
IlOiComb continental labor 830
Rosavelt received over all 1746
7GS and over Parker 2547578 In
1900 McKinley bad 4G704G more than
all the other candidates and S599S4
more than Bryan The vote for
Roosevelt was 409822 more than for
McKinley while that for Parker was
1277772 less than that for Bryan
McKinley polled more votes than
Roosevelt in Alabama Georgia Ken
tucky Louisiana Maine Maryland
Mississippi New Hampslrre North
Carolina South Carolina Tennessee
Texas and Virginia Roosevelt got
more than McKinley in the other
thirteen states
Parker received more than Bryan
In Delaware Georgia Mississippi
New Jersey New York Rhode Island
South Carolina and West Virginia
while Bryan got more than Parker in
the remaining thirty seven states
The republicans made gains over
their vote in 1900 in thirty two states
find the official figures show losses in
thirteen The total gains of the re-
publicans were 732048 and the total
losses 312249 making the net gain
419799
The democrats polled more votes in
eght states than in 1900 but less in
thirty seven Their total gains were
80792 and the total losses 1291491
oet loss 1260699
Roosevelt carried thirty two states
ngatnst twenty eight for McKinley
find has 33G sectoral votes under the
apportionment of 1900 McKinley
had 292 under the apportionment of
1890 there having been an addition of
twenty nine by the last apportion
ment
Parker carried thirteen states
against seventeen by Bryan and has
340 electoral votes Bryan had 155
under the apportionment in force in
1900
Watson received his largest vote in
Georgia the total vote of that star
being 22G64 with 20508 in Nebraska
being nearly one third of his agre
gate 114G37 Barker polled 50218 in
1900
The prohibition vote in 1900 was
208791 in November 260303 a gain
of 51512
JAPS LOSE MOUND
Russian Reports Say 203 Meter Hiil Is
Again in Their Possession
ST PETERSBURG General Kuro
patkin has telegraphed to the general
Btaff that he has received a report
from Chinese sources to the effect
that the Russians have recaptured
203 Meter hill at Port Arthur with
Ujje guns mounted by the Japanese
Kuropatkins dispatch which is
dateFDec 51 also reports further
reconnoissance of boti the Russians
pud Japanese but says they were not
productive of important results
The weather at the front is sunny
and the thermometer registers 14 de
grees fahrenheit
The war office has no additional In
formation regarding General Kuropat
tdns report that the Russians have
recaptured 203 Meter hill but the offi
cials consider it certain that the
would not have sent
the report unless it came through ex
ceptionally reliable channels
MORE DENVER MEN IN JAIL
Deputy Sheriff Among Those Adjudg
ed Guilty of Contempt
DENVER The supreme court ad
judged Leonard Rogers William G
Adams Louis Hamburg and Thomas
Kinsley guilty of contempt for con
duct in the second precinct of the
Seventh ward in this city at the re
cent election in violation of the courts
injunctive order Each was given a
jail sentence and a fine
The court announced that the evi
dence showed that Rogers Adams and
Hamburg had prevented the appoint
ment of a republican clerk and Kins
ley had ejected the supreme court
watcher from the polls Rogers is a
deputy sheriff and was a candidate on
the democratic ticket for the state
senate Kinsley is a prize fighter
Needed Money Is In Sight
COLUMBUS O The executive
committee of the American Antl
Baloon league closed Its meeting here
featerday after laying plans to extend
ihe organization into districts which
nave not heretofore been penetrated
ft was announced that the league now
lias in sight sufficient funds to carry
out all Its plans for the coming year
John G Wooley of Chicago was pres
nt and submitted a proposition to
consolidate all the temperance papers
ol the country which was takeu under
idvlsesxeat
INSISTS ON A CHANGE
The President Committed to Railrcad
Legislation
WASHINGTON Pres r t Roose
vothsqussed with several callers the
proposed legislation regarding the
question of railroad freight rebates
and the question of empowering the
interstate commerce commission with
authority to adjust freight rates
where found to be excessive Among
those who talked with the president
were Secretary Morton and E P
Bacon chairman of the executive
committee of the interstate commerce
commisson
The president is anxious that legis
lation in the interest of shippers be
enacted at the earliest poss ble date
and the matter has been considered
by him with many of his recent call
ers It was stated by one of the
presidents callers that Attorney Gen
eral Moody now was engaged in the
preparation of a bill which substan
tially would embody the views of the
administration on the question and
that the measure would be presented
to congress probably soon after the
holiday recess The president has
announced that the bill he is wiling
to support must be fair to both the
railroads and the people He believes
that the initial steps toward the de
sired legislation should be taken at
the present session of congress and
if possible that the legislation pro
posed should be crystalized into law
at this time
Senator Heyburn of Idaho had an
extended talk with the president on
the subject of federal charters for
corporations doing an interstate com
merce business The senator indi
cated his intention to introduce in
the senate after the holiday recess a
measure providing for the incorpora
tion under United States laws of all
corporations The bill as prepared
by Senator Heyburn will provide that
corporations now in existence must
take out federal charters and that
such corporations as may be organ
ized thereafter shall incorporate under
federal laws All such corporations
will be under the supervision of the
department of commerce and labor
through the bureau of corporations
The bill has not been matured thor
oughly yet but Senator Heyburn
hopes to have it ready for introduc
tion immediately after the holidays
ISLAND STILL IN NEBRASKA
Meanderings of Old Muddy Cannot
Take It Away
WASHINGTON The supreme court
of the United States decided the boun
dary case between the states of Mis
souri and Nebraska in favor of the
state of Nebraska The case involved
the question as to whether a change
of the course of the Missouri river
had the effect of changing land which
had theretofore been on the west side
of the river to the east side of the
river from the jurisdiction of Ne
braska to the jurisdiction of Missouri
but the court held that it did not The
opinion was by Justice Harlan hold
ing that the boundary must remain in
the middle of the old channel as be
fore the change
The tract of land that caused the
controversy is known as McKissicks
island lying between Nemaha county
Nebraska and Atchison county Mis
souri The controversy originated in
1867 Previous to that year the is
land was regarded as indisputably in
Nebraska The river at that point was
in the shape of an ox yoke and on
the night of July 5 of that year the
water broke across the land lying in
one of the bends thus throwing the
land on the east instead of the west
side of the river The claim was
made by the Nebraska authorities that
this was made by the digging of a
ditch
In his opinion Justice Harlan ex
pressed his opinion admitting that con
gress had not intended by its act ad
mitting Missouri into the union to
change the established rule and make
the varying channels of the Missouri
river the western boundary of that
state
Missouri he added does not dis
pute the fact that when Nebraska was
admitted into the union the body of
land described in the present record
as McKissicks island or Island pre
cinct was in Nebraska It is equally
clear that these lands did not cease
to be within the limits of Nebraska
by reason of the subject avulsion
The final decree is postponed pre
pared for thirty days to allow the Mis
ouri and Nebraska authorities to
agree as to the location of the center
of the old channel
Aftr the Beef Combine
KANSAS CITY Herbert Knox
Smith acting commissioner of corpo
rations of the department of com
merce and labor has written to a
number of Kansas City meat dealers
for additional testimony regarding the
operations of the local packers who
arc members of the alleged beef com
bine A representative of the depart
ment was ncre recently gathering sta
tistics from the local butchers
Nebraska Pension Biils
WASHINGTON Every member of
the Nebraska delegation has intro
duced many pension bills durng the
congress which will close March 4
with satisfactory results The few
bills which have passed this month
were some of the holdovers introduced
last winter It is safe to predict that
none of the pension bills introduced
this month will pass houses
this session and in that case every
bill introduced this session must be
reintroduced next winter Possibly a
very meritorious bill -may succeed
FOR REGULATION
CONGRESS SHOULD CONTROL IN
TERSTATE COMMERCE
SO SAYS GARFIELDS REPORT
AMges that the Bureaus of the Com
rr issioncr of Corporations Furnish
Mjns by Which People Engaged
in Interstate Business Can Be Con
trolled
X SHINGTON The first annual
t of the commissioner of corpora-
is was submitted to congress
by Commissioner Garfield He
says no satisfactory reform is to be
expected under the state system of
ration that the federal govern
ment s at its command sufficient
powei o remedy existing conditions
in its control of interstate commerce
He therefore suggests that congress
consider the advisability of enacting a
law for the legislative regulation of
interstate and foreign commerce un
der a license of franchise which in
general should provide as follows
The granting of a federal franchise
or license to engage in interstate com
merce
The imposition of all necessary re
quirements as to corporate organiza
tion and management as a condition
of the retention of such franchises or
license
The prohibition of all corporations
and corporate agencies from engag
ing in interstate and foreign com
merce without such federal franchise
or license
The full protection of the grantees
of such franchise or license who obey
the laws applicable thereto
The right to refuse or withdraw
such franchise or license in case of
violation of law with appropriate right
of judicial appeal to prevent abuse of
power by the administrative officers
Commissioner Garfield says the
bureau under the direction of the sec
retary of commerce and labor affords
the appropriate machinery for the ad
ministration of such a law
COST OF WARS TO NATIONS
Resolution in House Calling for In
formation
WASHINGTON Representative
Bartholdt Mo in accordance with
the action of the international peace
congress at Boston requesting him to
introduce a resolution in congress
calling for certain statistics relative
to the cost of wars introduced a con
current resolution instructing the sec
retary Ox commerce and labor to col
lect and compile statistics on the cost
of Avars in all countries from 1800
down to the present time the amount
paid for pensions and other allow
ances to soldiers and sailors engaged
in such wars the amount paid to hos
pitals and retreats for disabled sol
diers and sailors the amount of prop
erty destroyed in such wars by land
and sea the additional cost of main
taining armies and navies in time of
peace to each nation during that
period an approximate estimate of
the indirect expenses and damages by
such wars to the health and prosper
ity of each nation resulting from such
wars and the number of killed wound
ed and disabled on each side during
such wars The resolution provides
tnat the statstics be printed and dis
tributed under the direction of con
gress in this and other countries as
preliminary to an international peace
congress to be held in Washington or
The Hague July 6 1906
HEALTH OF TROOPS EXCELLENT
Encouraging Tleport From General
in Philippines
WASHINGTON Brigadier General
i anaall commanding the department
of Luzon Philippine islands in his
annual report to the war department
says that the general health of the
troops is excellent the disappearance
of cholera having removed one of the
greatest sources of anxiety The im
proved health conditions are said to
be due to the construction of new
posts the absence of hard field ser
vice the drinking of distilled water
and enforced abstinence from native
fruits and uncooked vegetables It is
recommended that continuous service
in the Philippines be limited to two
years in order to avert nervous break
down which is said to be quite com
mon among the white troops in the
islands
Wants Better Examinations
WASHINGTON Announcement
was made at the state department
Thursday that the government has for
the second time called upon Venezuela
to explain the arbitraiy expulsion
from that country of A F Jaurette
a newspaper man at Caracas The
first explanation offered by President
Castro was altogether unsatisfactory
England Annexes Islands
SYDNEY N S W Two British
warships have sailed for the Tonga
islands with the purpose it is an
nounced of annexing them
Mrs Powell Not Guilty
WAYNE Neb District court is in
session this week Judge Boyd pre
siding The case of the State vs
Mrs Kemp Powell in which the de
fendant is charged with an attempt to
murder her husband by shooting him
with a revolver at their home four
teen miles southwest of Wayne about
five months ago Inflicting a danger
ous wound was heard Mr Powell
was taken to tbe hospital at Omaha
where under medical aid he recovered
Mrs Powell was acquitted
lOlC
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Authors Who Were Productive After
Three Score and Ten
The tall handsome myriad minded
Goethe wrought at his tasks till he
was nearly S3 years old He produced
the first part of his masterpiece
Faust at 57 says the Saturday
Evening Post the second part when
80 years old and wrote some of his
nivst beautiful poems at 75 Six of our
foremost American poets and all but
one in quantity as well as in quality
of verse Bryant Whittier Longfel
low Loweli Holmes and Emerson
lived to ages varying from 75 to 85
and were productive to the last Br
Holmes wrote in his eiyhty fifth year
that time does not threaten the old
man so often with the scythe as wita
the sandbag yet he wrote brilliant
Terse for special occasions almost to
the end
Theodore Mommsen the historian
a man of almost insignificant stature
and emaciated frame manifested in
his eighty sixth and last year the en
ergy of a man in middle life
The earl of Dundonald though he
was always in hot water and his whole
life was a series of quarrels though
he performed some of the most dare
devil feats recorded in the history ot
naval warfare winning many brilliant
victories against enormous odds lived
to 85 and wrote his history of the
liberation of Peru Chile and Brazil
and The Autobiography of a Sea
man two most vigorous lucid and
dashing works under the stress of in
tense physical pain in the last three
years of his life
Sir Charles James Napier the hero
of Scinde was 60 before he held any
great command He fought and won
great battles governed successfully
great provinces and achieved a great
jT
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An ocean hotel built in the style of
the Spanish galleons of the fifteenth
century is one of the latest additions
planned for the City of Venice a new
resort that has been opened on the
California coast and both in appear
ance and intention it will be unique
The high square stern and bulging
bow the tapering masts with their
quaint and clumsy sails the decks
and outward appointments all will be
faithful reproductions of the ships
that first crossed the Atlantic and
discovered America Inside the ves
sel will be fitted up with all the luxu
rious appointments of a modern Atlan
tic liner
She is to be called the Cabrillo in
honor of the discoverer of the Pacific
and it will be a strange case of the i
CLD MEN OF FAMOUS NAME
The Cabrillo as She Will Appear When Completed
Old World come back to revisit the
new when she lies out in the bay
under full sail She is 1S2 feet long
with a beam of fifty feet and on her
construction alone 50000 is being
spent The furnishing and interior
equipments will bring the total cost
up to three times that sum She will
cot be called upon to make any ven
turesome voyages however for she
is to rest on piles 300 feet from the
shore To board her visitors will
walk along the wide pleasure pier
that already has been built and from
it a wide gangway with handrails on
both sides will lead to her main deck
This will be given up to a large and
handsomely furnished saloon a spa
cious dining room and suites of apart
ments provided with every conveni
ence that can be found in a hotel on
name long after that period of life had
passed when according to an antique
morality not quite exploded it be
hooves a man to lay aside the things
of the present life and to prepare his
soul for the next
He Knew the Train
A traveler went into a Union ave
nue barber shop one morning to
get a shine and decided to inquire
about his train Say he said ad
dressing the negro bootblack what
time does the Missouri Pacific leave
for St Louis this morning
Yoh mean the one that makes the
daj light run queried the negro
Yes thats the one said the man
It ah the train that connecs wif the
J one irum Leavenswuth aint it ask
ed the bootblack as he brushed away
Yes Runs fru Wahnsbugh
Yes An Jeffahson City Yes
Ah knows the train yoh means all
right Stans on the secon er thud
track doan it I think it does
Changes engines Les see Wha
do that train change engines I
dont know came from the man
What I want to know is its leaving
time Ah knows jes what yoh wants
an Ah knows jes xactly what train
yah means Well when does it
leave Oh yes when do it leave
Ahs suah Ah doan know bout that
boss was the negros reply Kansas
City Times
Kaffirs Object to Chinese
A sidelight on Chinese immigration
or importation into South Africa is
cast by the following remark in the
South African Press Bulletin Quar
rels and fights with drawn knives be
tween Kaffirs and Chinese are of al
most daily occurrence in Market
square Johannesburg
shore Here also will be the kitchen
I a chefs home far different from the
galley that any old Spanish ship
knew A grand staircase will lead
down to the lower decks where a
large number of bedrooms arranged
like cabins will be provided There
will be more cabins on the upper deck
and an attractive drawing room for
ladies while promenades will be laid
out on the forecastle the deck house
and the poop deck Provision will be
made for dancing and pleasure parties
and for concerts and theatrical enter
tainments
To keep up the illusion of old Spain
among it all the manager of the Ca
brillo with all his assistants cabin
boys and waiters will be dressed in
full Spanish uniform glittering with
gilt and epaulets
WHY HE DOESNT REFORM
Old Solomon Finds He Is Worth More
in the Jug
You may talk about the philosophy
of Socrates or Tom Watson or any
other of the wise men of the world
but there is an old colored man down
in my state who has them all beaten
to a fare-you-well said Thomas P
Scott of Rome Ga according to the
Washington Post Old Solomon his
name is Solomon is always in
troubie Solomon I said why dont
j you try to do better Youre a likely
sort of man and you could live well if
you could only behave yourself and
keep a steady job instead of drinking
bad whisky and keeping yourself be
hind the bars half the time
Goodness me boss replied Solo
mon T makes more money doing this
way Now jou see its like this When
I works hard I makes 8 a month and
my board and when I gets arrested
the magistrate says to me that it will
be 10 or thirty days Now according
to that how kin I afford to work for
S a month when Im worth 2 more a
month in the jug
To Teach Deaf Mute Boys
Very heartily welcomed the Broth
ers of St Gabriels institute famous
for their success in the education of
deaf mute boys has settled at Bea
consfield House near Plymouth Eng
land on their expulsion from France
under the associations law They are
about to commence there the educa
tion of the deaf mute boys irrespective
of creed
Smallpox in France
In 1903 smallpox occurred in fift
departments of France out of seventy
seven from which
returns
were re
ceived
FIRST ORGAN SET UP IN THIS COUNTRY
Brattle Organ Oldest in America St Johns Episcopal Church Portsmouth N H
The first organ brought to America
hi at Portsmouth in the Episcopal
chapel on State street
It is the old Brattle organ so called
made by John Preston of York Eng
land in 1709 or 1710 and first set up
In the house of Thomas Brattle Cam
bridge Mass he having imported it
At the time of importation great
prejudice existed against the use of
musical instruments in religious ser
vices Nevertheless the organ ws
later installed in Kings chapel Bos
ton and there was used until 175G
It was then sold to St Pauls church
of Newburyport
Rev Dr Burroughs bought the
organ for 450 in IS36 and placed it
in the chapel at Portsmouth where
still remains
In December 1901 it was taken
apart and sent to
Boston to be exhib
ited at the
historical
musical instru
ment show
which
opened Jan n
1902 in Horticultural haT Before it
returned it was put in thorough
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