The Norfolk weekly news-journal. (Norfolk, Neb.) 1900-19??, February 01, 1901, Page 4, Image 4

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61
Landis Stirs Up a Hornets Nest
in the House
AQ11ICJULTUKAL BILL PASSED
Ailitllltinnl Aipriti till Ion r MtllK It
Votiil fur rurmiin
lleport on Aim Hill IlinontMil In
tltu Sctmlu
WnMiluglon Inn 21 -Senator De
pew o Nt v York yesterday delivered
Jit the senate ii chararlerlMleally forc
ible niul eloquent address In support
of tln shipping hill Tho address
which occupied nut nil hour was In
tlu iiattuo of mi appeal for the up
building of the American tneicluint
iiiirliu hy tin granting of suwhllcs hi
provided for In I ho pcuillii measure
Ills discussion of tlio problems or
transportation which now confront
American innnnfneturers and Ainer
lean farmers was notably Interesting
nml enecllvo The peroration In which
he uracil that the Auierlcnn flag bo
restored to the mastheads of the
freight carrying ships of the Hulled
KtateH was a brilliant pleee of oratory
mid elicited cordial applause from Mon
ti tors on the Hour and the crowds In
the galleries Kittle prowess was
made with the Indian appropriation
bill The last hour of the Henate day
was consumed In the passage of pri
vate pension blllls
limine Ill Natal lllll
Washington Ian 20 Tho house yes
terday adopted the conference report
upon the army reorganization bill The
contest over It was brief Hull chair
man of the military affairs committee
preventing prolonged debate The do
Late was chlelly notable for a short ex
change between Kleharilsou the minor
ity leader and May ilem Va a inein
bur of the conference committee who
reproached the Democratic leader for
not making a light for a temporary
iiriny when the bill was originally be
fore the house The naval appropria
tion bill was dually passed and also 77
private pension bills
SATURDAY
Washington Ian 128 A variety of
subjects Including appropriation bills
the war revenue reduction ship sub
tddy bill mid to some extent the Phil
ippine question will claim the atten
tion of the senate this week Today
Towne will speak on the problems In
volved In the government of the Phil
ippines There Is somewhat more than
usual Interest In this speech because
not only of Townes reputation as an
orator and the fact that it will be his
only speech In the senate on a political
Kiibject but because of lncreised In
terest In the Philippine question
nrmiscd by the presidents request of
the senate for early legislation on this
subject
Senator Aldrlch has given notice that
be will ask the senate to take up the
war revenue bill early In the week
Jf there Is an opportunity the sub
sidy bill will be taken up
The week In the house Is likely to
lie monopolized by appropriation bills
Seven of the II general appropriation
bills have already passed the house
namely The executive legislative
and Judiciary pension military acad
emy Indian naval river and harbor
nml District of Columbia bills Three
others the postotllce agriculture and
fortlticatlons bills have been reported
to the house and the remaining four
the army consular and diplomatic
sundry civil and general deficiency
re still in the committees having
them in charge The three reported
to the house and the consular and dip
lomatic which Is practically com
pleted probably will be disposed of
dining the week
MONDAY
Washington Jan 2 The senate
turned lrotn the grind of appropriation
yesterday to listen to u speech which
partook of the character of an oration
from Senator Towne Minn In advo
cacy of his resolution for u cessation
of hostilities In the Philippines The
galleries public and pnvaU were
crowded to overllowlng Mr Townes
style of delivery was clear and forci
ble Although restricted by manu
script he had tho subject well in hand
nml rolled out tho tine periods with a
fervor that sent them echoing through
the chamber The r peoch abounded In
apostrophes to liberty and patriotism
and scathing arraignment of the pol
icy by which tho Filipinos were being
annihilated At one time an out
burst of applause from the galleries
led to n vigorous warning from the
presiding olllcer ngaliibt demonstra
tions of approval or dissent As tho or
ator closed his brilliant peroration
there was another outburst of ap
plause despite the warnings of the
chnlr Immediately following Mr
Townes speech the credentials of his
successor Mr Clapp Minn wero
presented and after being sworn In
the new senntor took his seat and Mr
Towne retired Tho rest of the day
was devoted to the Indian appropria
tion bill the discussion turning on Ir
rigation and little progress being made
Home lrocvtdliigi
Washington Jan 20 The major por
tion of the day lu the house was occu
pied In the transaction of District of
Columbia business The bill to revise
and codify the postal laws which has
been under consideration at Intervals
for ten days was finally passed Its
friends succeeded in coutlnlng the
measure strictly to the purpose for
which It was framed a codification
and revision of existing laws All at
tempts to amend it lu any vital par
ticular faded The most Interesting
feature of the day was un attempt to
secure u vote upou tho senate bill to
appoint a commission to consider and
adjudicate the claims of United Minion
clllneim against Spain nrltiliig out of
tlu war with Spain which UiIh govern
ment assumed by section 7 of t lir
Instructlons to report buck n hill to
confer piirltdlctlun lu these rases upon
the com t of claims Mr lliuigcu of
Mail Ituu of a Cable Car
New York Jan 31 Hipping up Lex
Ingtou avenue at breakneck seed hiht
THE NORFOLK NEWS FHIDAY FEBRUARY 1 UM1
0
l
IP
the committee on war claims secured SITUATION
consideration of a substitute for the
bill drawn hi accordance with tho In
structions of the house ami then ap
pealed to the house to vote down the
substitute and pass the senate bill
There was some Intimation of sharp
practice over this mode of procedure
lint the mutter was nettled temporarily
by postponing consideration of the hill
until next Monday
TUESDAY
Washington Ian IV- Senator I rye
gave notice In the senate yesterday
that he Intended to keep the shipping
bill to the I rout even against nppio
print Ion bills not yielding to them
without a vote of the senate It indi
cated a disposition on the pail of the
Henate leaders to force to an early Is
mm the iiicsllon whether the shipping
bill Is going to pass at this session
Senator Turner Wash spoke lu se
vere arraignment of the hill declaring
It to be a lawless piratical raid upon
the public treasury In the Interest of
a few private beneficiaries and com
mitting the government to expendi
tures aggregating 270000000 He
fore the session closed the committee
ainendinents were Informally agreed
to
s
The Indian appropriation bill was
passed early hi the day
Agrlrultuial lllll In llminn
Washington Ian HO The house
spent the day upon the agricultural
appropriation bill Corliss Mich made
a vigorous onslaught on the bureau of
animal Industry In the agricultural de
partment but his argument raised a
host of defenders and his effort to
reduce the appropriation for the bu
reau was overwhelmingly defeated
the reorganization of the sclentllle
iiiit ikiinu r in Tiiiiti iikii in i
amendment providing that no money
should be paid to the college In Utah
until the secretary of agriculture was
treaty of Paris Tin1 house lit tin1 lust
session recommitted a similar lilll with Commission Denies That
morality Runs Riot
IS IMPROVING
HrniM ItnpiMt f Hi lift
ti Omni i mid Urjnfi IhiiiiimII
ntti lixllutloi fur llio Intrrniiitnt nf
Hid if llxtra Srntltin
Washington Ian iiil The president
yesteiday transmitted to the senate a
report of the secretary of war Inclos
ing the report of the Tuft Philippine
commission In his message of trims-
dial the president says that the re
port Includes not only the report of the
commission but Its net of legislation
and other Important Information re
lating to the conditions and Immediate
wants of the Philippine Islands
Concluding the president says I
earnestly recommend legislation under
which the government of the Islands
may have assistance In their peaceful
Industrial development lu the direc
tions Indicated by the secretary of
war
Secretary Hoots letter of transmittal
Is dated laniiary 21 addressed to the
president and Is In part as follows
I beg leave to supplement my an
nual report of November 10 1100 by
transmitting a report made by tho
Philippine commission on that date
hut only recently received at the war
department At the same time I wish
to call attention to some conditions ex
isting lu the Philippine Islands which
Indicate that tho development of that
country along the lines or peaceful In
dustrial progress requires the exercise
of powers of civil government not vest
ed In tills department or lu you as
military commander but requiring a
grant of authority from the congress
The commission gives a gratifying
count of the progress made In the pad
1 41 1 I 41 1
11 that portion of the b II relating to
I mil subsidence of guerrilla warfare
I Information received subesquent to the
te of the report conllrms the favor
on point of order raised
a
by Malion Pa
The earlier portion of the session
was enlivened by a sequel to the ex
change between Klynn O T and
Stephens Tex Monday when the lie
was almost passed
Stephens again denied andTlynn
ngaln reiterated his charges in con
nection with the passage of the 1111
to ratify the Kiowa and Comanche
agreement passed at the last session
WEDNESDAY
Washington Jan III The anti-polygamy
crusade which resluteil In drlv
lugM r ltoberls Uaths representative
out of the house at the last session
had an echo In the house yesterday
during the consideration of the agricul
tural appropriation bill When the sec
tion making the appropriations for ag
ricultural colleges of the several states
was reached La mils I ml offered an
able anticipations of the commission
A personal letter received by nie from
Judge Taft dated December 11 1D0D
says
Since writing you about 1000 In
surgents in 1 locos Norte have surren
dered and 10000 persons who were not
well affected towards us in laiiay
have taken the oath of allegiance I
have already received two papers from
native priests eighteen In number and
1 am told that there will be a great
many other papers signed by a groat
many more native priests tendering
their allegiance to the United States J
and promising fidelity without mental
reserve The native priests are those
who have held out longest In favor of
the Insurgents am against the
leans and 1 deem this action as of
great Importance The army is hitting
small but hard knocks against the in
surgents everywhere Since the elec
tion there has been a great falling on
In the activity of the Insurgents In ag
gressiveness Passage of Spooner bill
satistled that no tustee or teacher present session greauy neecien ro se
ll the institution practiced irolyguiny rIrp ust rosut flom Proving
tlons
The amendment came as a complete
surprise King who succeeded Kob
erts tried In vain to head It oft with
The report that Immorality run riot
lu Manila Is denied by the commission
a point of order and then Inveighed The relations of the friars to thepooplo
nro Uu1 t length Their abuso
against It as simply an aftermath of
the ltoberts crusade He insisted that nniv is nmniuou nnr wieir uis
polygamy was a thing of the past
Inndls replied by alleging that two
of the professors of the Utah agricul
tural college were polyganiists and that
one of the trustees had seven wives
ami 07 children Upon this showing
the house adopted the amendment
whereupon King retaliated by offering
an amendment providing that none of
thenioneysliouldgoto agricultural col
leges In nny stnte whose Instructors
or trustees were eagagaed In lynching
or been guilty of adultery He after
ward modllled It so as to apply only
to the agricultural college of Indiana
It was overwhelmingly defeated Sub
sequently when the bill was reported
plncement advocated by the commis
sion
FAVORS THE SPOONER BILL
lrllliluos Urgu IiKlalutlon for Icrniaucut
Form of iovcTiiineiit
Manila Jan 121 The executive com
mittee of the federal party has tiled a
petition requesting the Philippine com
mission to urge upon President Mc
Klnley that the passage of the Spooner
bill by congress Is an urgent neces
sity as the progress of the archipelago
demands an authority which can leg
islate and control the Incorporation of
concerns regulnte mining claims dis
pose of public lands and perform other
functions not vested In either the mill-
to tho house tho fandls amendment
was stricken out by n vote of ill to 10 1 t llQ L jtioi
The friends of the farmer were -much
I tf fftt
rt ia ti
much In evidence during the lay and tlp
cutlve authorities
oners state that the time
irfiiiikitil jtn tr rt n iti tn nnf
CHt1llHllIuent oC wUlth wlII wln
against an iiggresslve opposition led
the lllBHrrectlon
pr favorIB
by Malion Pa voted into the bill nn htIm0
whUo nt the 8Une lt wH CB
additional appropriation of 50000 for
farmers bulletins
There was also considerable discus
sion of the Irrigation of arid lauds in
connection with the paragraph provid
ing for an Investigation of that subject
The bill was passed
IoliiC In the Upper Iluuto
Washington Jan 111 The shipping
bill was kept to the front In the bcu
ato throughout the day No apprecia
ble progress was made most of tho
time being occupied by Turley Tenn
and Jones Ark In speeches oppos
ing the bill and severely arraigning Its
courage the native gpveniment in the
Philippines under American
I elgnty Therefore they urge thnt the
Spooner bill which empowers Presi
dent McKlnloy In Ills discretion to
declare tho Insurrection ended and to
establish n civil government bo
passed by tho present congress
The members of tho commission
while desirous that n full quota of
troops shall continue here has recom
amended passage of the Spooner bill
Muy Cull mi Extra Sestlon
Washington Jan Ii0 The brief
Aiiiiiitinli tliiii Iti 4 It n nmeaii crr st 41i r
alleged favoritism Jones declared It president sent to the senate yesterday
should be entitled n bill to permit n urging lmmedlnto legislation In the
select coterie of ship owners to loot terest of tho Philippines caused
the United States treasury After eral surprlso among the senators aud
the speeches the formal reading of the speculation on the probabilities of an
bill was completed but the extra sesslou of congress Immediately
lion or amendments was not entered after March 3 Senators gouorully
upon Karly lu tho day an unsuccess
ful effort was made to secure
huve received they say no Intimation
from tho white house thnt nn extra
ment to tho conference report on the session would be desirable but they
army reorganization bill The creden
tlals of Nelson Minn and McMillan
Mich were presented
unite In saying no Philippines lcglsla
tion Is possible during the remuiuder of
tho present term
The Spooner bill vesting all power of
the government In Philippine archipel
ago in the president Is the only Philip
night a runaway cable car caught up Pmes general bill It Is belloved that
with two other cars und pushed them I whenever an earnest effort is made to
ahead iu a mad
run that lasted for 20 secure legislation bearing on this sub-
blocks before tho cars were under con
trol And then It wus found that four
persons were hurt seriously and n
score slightly All three cars were
crowded with the rush from downtown
and windows wero crashed lu plat
forms wrecked and the passengers
tossed wildly about
ject much time will be required Some
senntors also express thp opinion that
legislation may be necessary iu the
Cuban situation and whllo there are
differences of opinion all agreo that tr
such uctlon would become necessary It
would be Imposslblo to secure it at this
sosslou
READY FOR MRS NATION
Arli Clljr Sit I mm KecpnM
liiC lrt irH lor llio Aauil
ArkaiiMis City Kan Jan Yes
terday a repoit that Mrs Carrie Nation
would he In this city about the mid
dle of this week was circulated and
Immediately the Joint keepers began
making preparations to prevent her
from destroying their property Bar
rlcades that can be put lu place at n
moments notice have been con
structed anil sentries will be placed
about town to give warning of her ap
proach Some members of the local
Womens thrlstlnn Temperance union
wrote Mrs Nation whrn she was con
fined In the Wichita Jail urging hor
to come to hls elty and carry on hor
work and she promised to come
This Is the home of Itev 11 IT
Moore who last fall was candldnto
on the prohibition ticket for secretary
of state It Is said that he will as
sist Mrs Nation In her work hero
MEDAL FOR MRS NATION
lann Sluln Tniiitriiiliio Union Qtilcikljr
SiiliMrlbc n I I i 1 for That Iurpoia
AiltlrcNtrii tlin Con volition
Topekit Jan 10 The Kansas Stato
Temperance union which Is holding
Its annual convention here yesterday
subscribed over 100 to purchase n
gold medal for Mrs Nation Mrs
Hutchinson prcsldenf of the state W
C T U was made chairman of a com
mittee to design and purchase tho
medal
The fund was started by Colonel C
B Cook who after a stirring speech
donated I0 to help purchase n gold
medal for the bravest womnn In Kon
sas Mrs Nation
The suggestion was taken up with
n cheer and the money was quickly
raised Mrs II Hoffman who last
week aided Mrs Nation In the Enter
prise raid was the second person to
subscribe to the fund
When Mrs Nation heard what had
been done she cried n little nml then
began to scold those who hnd plnnncd
the surprise She said she would take
tlio money and turn lt over to the fund
to aid her work but she would lmvo
no medal Later Mrs Nation respond
ed to an Invitation to address tho con
vention and her remarks were vigor
ously applauded Yesterday when Mrs
Nation called on him County Attorney
Nichols had told her that he believed
In resubmission and she said that be
fore he pushed resubmission on tho
people she would throw her hatchet
at his head
Mrs Nation said she would remnln
in Topeka until every one of the 120
saloons are closed
1 will petition the governor every
day the said I will see tho legis
lature I will talk and talk and talk
I will uo all the Inlluencc I can and
If this does not suftlec well thcro
nre other means
Mrs Nation called upon the sheriff
the city attorney and the probata
Judge and urged each to enforce tho
law against saloons
SENDS REASSURING REPORT
War Dopttrtineiit IIcui h From Cone nil
lt o In Howard to liuliuii Frm iis
Washington Jan at The war de
partment has received the following
telegram from Brigadier General
Kitzliugli Lee commanding the De
partment of the Missouri in regard
to the Indian troubles
OniitUu Jan 28 Adjutant General War
Deportment Washington Lieutenant Dix
on comnmnillni troop A KluhtU cavalry
Henrietta I T reports no violence by In
dians and no excitement at Iloldcnvlllo aud
rufuuln people not leaving ttiolr homes
ro anywhere without fear Cliltto Ilirjo
Crazy Snake wus arrested yesterday with
out dlltlcnlty by Deputy Johnson and now
held at Henrietta Dixon Instructed to
five necennary protection to provent de
struction of rlahvnys or bridges So fui
no acta of violence vciitled
Lin Hi headier General
GET MAXIMUM SENTENCE
Judge Ailmlnliturs Iull Done of Juatle
to Jenulo HoMchlutori Murderers
Pnterson N J Jan 30 Walter O
MeAllhter William A Death aud An
drew J Campbell who were found
guilty of murder In the second degree
for the killing of Jennie Iiosschietcr
on Oct 38 1000 by the admlnlstra
tion of chloral and subsequent as
Miult together with George J Kerr
who pleaded non vult contendre to n
churge of assault were brought luto
court of oyer and terminer here for
sentence by Judge Dixon McAllster
Campbell nml Death were each sent
enced to U0 years Imprisonment at
hard labor Tho sentences of all the
men are the full termR of Imprison
ment which the law provides
Light Shine Iu Creitou Again
Creston In Jan HO
ell and the Creston
company have ndjusted their differ
ences and the reign of darkness that
has existed in this city slnco Jan 1
when tho council ordered the lights
shut off will cense and the illumina
tion be Installed In a very short time
The council had to give In to tho light
ing company on a five year contract
but the company agrees to submit to
arbitration at any time If tho service
Is not satisfactory Under the old con
tract tho city paid 100 per light for
18 arcs while under tho new contract
the company glvos the city 23 nrcs
aud three Incandescent lights for S20
r nn mJ
DESPICABLE COURSE OF PETTI
I GREW OBSTRUCTIONIST
Una I out lip Itrnprrt of Tluifc Who
Oner Honored III lit Supported In
IMIII it He Not Scheme
to Delral
Washimtion Jon 2 Senntor Petti
grew of South Dakota has developed
Into such an out and out obstructionist
that few people remember the time
that he occupied a position of lnllueuce
and power among his colleagues lu the
United States senate With the change
lu sentiment there has come u complete
transformation In the man and all of
those previously concealed Idiosyncra
sies of character which have made lilui
so obnoxious to both sides of the sen
ate chamber because of the vlrulenco
of his language have been revealed
lie Is consuming the closing days of a
most ignominious career in the United
States as a leaderof a cllipia of ob
structionists which may go down In
history yet as having compelled tho
most deliberative legislative body on
earth to place a limit upou debate
On the army reorganization bill be
fore the limit vote was taken nml
which so signally sustained the ad
ministration and carried Into effect the
will of the people as expressed at tho
polls last November Senator lettl
grew easily took first rank as tho most
bitter of the radical filibusters He
has permitted himself to bo Interview
ed repeatedly In order to assure the
public that his opposition Is largely di
rected against the shipping bill to de
feat which he was quite willing to
oppose all other measures however
pressing that preceded It Senator
lettlgrew has freely Indulged lu state
ments ImpiigAing the motives of tiio
friends of the shipping bill and his
bitterest invectives and choicest epi
thets have been directed against the
owners of the swift ships under the
American ling In the transatlantic
trade while he has not heittntod to
charge ngniust his colleague Senator
Hnnnn the basest motives fo his sup
port of the measure as prosi nted lor
passage by the senate commerce com
mittee
A curious thing has come to light in
this connection however which will
have no effect upon Senator Pettlgrew
or his position upon the shipping bill
but lt will have a widespread effect
upon the public mind when the fact is
known It Is this Ten and a half
years ago there was before the United
States senate a shipping bill which
provided compensation for swift steam
ships carrying the mails approximating
lu amount precisely the sum now pro
vided iu the pending bill and against
which nil of the pent up virulence nml
viciousness of the senator have been
freely poured forth Strangely enough
nt that time and with the same ability
then as now to learn the real facts in
the matter Senntor lettlgrew voted
for the passage of that measure with
the result that lt passed the senate
Since thnt time a line of sNps has
come Into existence and after several
years of operation at n vast annual
loss has demonstrated the wisdom of
Senator Pettlgrews vote of ten and a
half years ago by proving the Insufll
ciency of the amount provided In the
bill as lt passed the house the compen
sation in which was reduced In amount
one third from that for which Senator
Pettlgrew voted on July 12 1800 But
Senator Pettlgrew has undergone a
great chnnge meanwhile and the things
he used to see through Republican eyes
as justifiable he now sees through Pop
ullstlc eyes as unjustttlablo The con
ditions have not changed They re
mnln the same and they happen to
justify the wisdom of Senator Pettl
grews position upon public mntters at
n time long past uufortunntely when
he commanded the respect and esteem
of his associates and of the country at
large
And so It comes to pass that Senator
Pettlgrew Is performing the role of an
obstructionist and the bitterest oppo
nent of a measure because of a provi
sion in lt in 1001 that when iu a simi
lar measure in 1800 commanded his
support and his vote There Is no ex
planation needed regarding the provi
sions of the measure in question be
yond the one thnt tho judgment of Sen
ntor Pettlgrew ns shown by his vote
in 1S90 has been continued by the
events that hnve succeeded lt during
tho deende that has since elapsed
The city nJ tnere is nothing that Senator Tot
Qus und Electric tlgrew can carry with him Into his en-
Daatli or llilllara M Senter
St Louis Jan 30 William M Ben
ter president of the St Louis Cotton
exchange died last night at the Mis
souri llaptlst sanitarium of u compli
cation of diseases Incident to old ago
Mr Senter was 70 years old
Voen Kutrriuhed at Cult Into
Carnarvon Juu 30 It Is understood
that the Boers are entrenched at Cal
vlnla which serves us their base The
district affords them plentiful supplies
of tooi and remounts
rorcen retirement rroui public life more
vividly thnn the picture of himself as
he was In 1890 right on most public
matters as compared with himself as
ho disappears from public view not
only wrong on almost all public mat
ters but displaying his perverted and
distorted mind In a manner to call
forth the execration of almost all of his
colleagues upon each side of the senate
chamber
Possibly the shipping bill a measure
destined to give the United States that
position upon the seus to which It Is en
titled and has long required both for
defensive nud for economic rensons re
quired the opposition of Pettlgrew In
order to command the careful consid
eration of n majority of congress and
In order that at this most opportune
time It could be enacted Into law Be
that ns It may Pettlgrews opposition
has succeeded in solidifying tho Re
publicans aud a number of broad
minded Democrats In favor of the bill
presaging n result most pleasing to all
friends of tho measure and most prom
ising us to the future welfare and de
fensive strength of the nation
J B Acbm
CO
VERDI IS DEAD
Cinmlnent Italian Compnnr Pae Away
at 111 Homo In llllun Itrlof
Hkotrh of till Career
Rome Jan 2d V special dispatch
to the Patrlti from Milan announces
thnt Oulseppu Verdi the composor Is
dead
Giuseppe Verdi was unquestionably
the greatest operatic composer of Ida
qiuskitk vsiiri
time nud lu the Italian school of direct
harmony he was never even ap
proached Mnscngni Is now tho only
man who bids fair In time to reach
the high plane upon which the dead
maestro stood alone for so many years
Verdi was born In Rancoln In tho
duchy of Parma lu 1810 His father
was an Innkeeper
Ho had lived In retirement since the
production of Fallstaff his last op
era nt Paris In 1S91 When ho pre
sented himself for admission to the
conservatory nt Milan ho wns refused
because In the opinion of the director
ho had no aptitude whatever for
music In 1S3S Verdi wont to Milan
nml then became a conductor Ills
first opera was produced in 18S0 nt tho
Scala Its title wns Oberto Conte dl
San Bonifacio Ills first important
success was Nabucco In his later
operas Veidl hhowed a decided Wag
nerian Influence
Verdis best known operas nre Neb
uehadnezar Krnnnl Attila
Macbeth Riggnletto II Trovn
tore La Travlatn Otollo Gio
vanni dArco Aida and Una Bnllo
In Maschera Perhaps his most pop
ular composition II Trovatore
Verdi was very wealthy at the time of
Ids denth
Slep on a Mutch Cullies Fire
Cheboygan Mich Jan 2S Glovers
big dry goods store was sot on Are
by one of the women clerks who acci
dentally stepped on a match some one
had dropped on the floor It was near
n pile of cotton batting The stock
valued nt nbout 10000 wns nil de
stroyed by lire or water Kramers
tailoring and clothing stock next door
wns dntnnged nbout 25000 Tho
Fair on the other side was damaged
10000 to 20000
Mlno Worker Adjourn
Indianapolis Jan 31 The national
convention of the United Mine Work
ers of America which has been In ses
sion since Jan 21 came to a close
yesterday Delegates to the joint con
ference with the operators to be held
in Columbus 500 strong left for that
city by a special train The day was
devoted to revising the constitution
and several Important changes were
made
Pity
and
Beauty
The most beautiful thing in
the world is the baby all
dimples and joy The most
pitiful thing is that same baby
thin and in pain And the
mother does not know that a
ittlc fat rriakes all the differ
ncc
Dimples and joy have gone
ml left hollows and fear the
t that was comfort and
- Icr and curve all but pity
ul love is gone
The little one gets no fat
mi her food There is
ing wrong it is either her food
r food mill She has had no
1 for weeks is living on what
he had stored in that plump
ttle body of hers and that is
one She is starving for fat
c is death bequick
Scotts Emulsion of Cod
Oil is the
fat she can
im it will save her
Cr genuine has this picture on
fV V
ii lant no other
Ifypuhave net tried it semi
Jf re sample its agreeuble
taste will surprise you
SCOTT BOWNE
Chemists
409 Pearl St N Y
BOo and SlOO
all druggists
IjKi