sms:: -fitSA-v iK""- -a i-r '-r THJ-ii wfc- " a T -JFTV 2. "F ' J ,. j-ys, , f.- ; :ti ' .- - .!' v -.-. rs... - v - " J . fa ?- - i . .- : rs r?' I" ' t IV K- r it .. t . It -, : ... !. li? b :s. . f .. -..- fj-v A. V -. 'BfWBmMVBIBTBWrrBrBUm'MffBWnBBnin-' I "JiMMi - - jr-,JM:?ri 2-- - YOBr,Wtfe to SOBMWkat StrOB minded, km she. Ltttlejaear He CttmtK Jmnd r ty coui mbus journal ca tke racing eutemobtlo a thiag to tke MaWhaslsa .aa ea a tke oysters .sever etrfke for shorter kours or y--. it ia te be booed Miser Munroe to have kis place 1 tke ailaes for aim to so keck to. tke Reiriie.it .wko decided loer was coatrakead of a deadly JJostoa doe'sk- .. . -v. . taotal of aasnghal appeare to is mack figure hi kis owe as a Mlad an at a schat- . A womaa wko is careless eeaagh to .amend fit for sflk kese is wire to ke Wide caretal akowt 'ffektag oat tke . -Are a cafiaspaadeat of tke New fork Herald. Very few of 'em left in New .York, we've aoticed. It fa aot likely tkat weddiag Jor- oa frelgkt traias will becoate fad. Tkere is ao nnaaace a freight traia. v w. s. . . . . ' Iejirer" asks why tke word "goo is aet ia tke latest dictionary. It will ke foaad ia tke aext oae. at all .create. It .has appeared ia prist. U "m. tkere a sum with soul so dead ever to kis friend kath said. aim komeward wend his way: ,-wkat was the scoreto-day?" aew disease of tke antonobil is teckaically known -as motor .patkki eerebralis. It is caased by the vmratioaibas of the aatomobilieaslssi THE FLEET WO GOES ON ITS LONG VOYAGE TO THE FAR EAST. IK SKIPS II THE SftJAOMI Cruisers and md Dsatreysrs To ed Later at Likan ky Twelve CROKSTADT Tke Baltic fleet sail ed Saaday for tke far east. Tke Tea sels of tke feet aire tke battleships Soararoff, Vice Admiral Rojesvensky's Sftsskip; tke Navaria. Sissoi, Valiky, Borodlao, Alexander III. Orel Oles sad tke Osliabla, Rear Admiral Voel kersam's aagship; the cruisers Ad miral Nakhimof , Dmitri Donskoi. An rora aad the Almaz, Rear Admiral Ea aaist's fasship, aad several torpedo beats aad torpedo boat destroyers. The fleet will merelv touch at Li baa, wkere it will be joined by twelve transports, colliers aad supply ships, already waiting there, aad will thea proceed direct to the orient The sceae oa the departure of the fleet was an imposing one. At dawa the first anchor was hoisted on the swift 'cruiser Aurora, which, accompa nied by two torpedo boats, slipped out of the harbor. The town was awak ened by the booming of the guns of the forts as the Aurora sped towards Libau ia advance of the main squad ron. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon, the time set for the departure of the re mainder of the fleeet. the imperial yacht, with the emperor, Grand Duke AGAIN MtO C IIMStt LEAOUEr .ammmmmmmmmmmmVOlRv JamamBaFfet - naaanaaaamnnsr h saaaaaaaaaaaS sr MBaaaaaaaaaa r ammmmmmmmaaess - j . aaaaaaaaaaaaaamB. mmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmkC? 'lmmmmmmmammmmmP"lfm. ' . v jr2NEezr SAFE AT MUKDEN RUSSIAN ARMY DODGES THE, jABtAMsraur. cheat wmiinr iwic MtW Pfsaaw alwwlf loQ iSwsaiawfJawlTwi llsspltala Tmwd ky the ' ST, PamnttBURO It deflaltely established tkat tired aeematoke J Field to jar&r The UBited Irish Leagae of Ameri ca at Its sessioa la New Tork coa ferred an koaor oa Joka F. Fiaerty of Chicago by re-electing him to tke omce of president Patrick Egaa, wko was elected first vice-president, re sides ia New York. He was formerly minister to Chili. Botk Mr. Fiaerty and Mr. Bgaa are amoag tke league's most earnest workers. FINDS A VOLUNTEER FLEET. Orders of Russian Government Com municated. ZANZIBAR. Island of Zanzibar The British cruiser Forte early this morning found the British volunteer fleet steamers, St Ptersburg and Smolensk, within the three-mile limit and communicated to them the orders of the Russian government to desist from interference with neutral ship- i . Aad 'now a Brooklyn man rises to 'remark that he has carried the same packet knife for forty-seven years How irritatiag such complacent vir- is! 3 In friendly salute a Utica maa broke Ike ribs of an acquaintance, wko mast "aew be glad that he did not run across tke aalater when the hitter was feel- Somebody ought to ask the announces that he has carried one pocket knife for more than forty five, years how many umbrellas he has iwhile. That precious Russian baby weighs ! pounds now, which doesn't seem considering the weight of the and responsibilities that have pat npoa him. :" Maybe there is something in this no- fad, after all. Hats are still con- indispensable by most per- kat so were nightcapsr-at -one stage in kamaa development Alexis, tke high admiral and other naval ofllcers on board, put out from Peterhof, on the other side of the bay. with an escort of three torpedo' boats. Admirals Rojestvensky, Voel- kersam and Bnquist went on board the Imperial yacht and personally said farewell to the. emperor. Then, with the destroyers ahead and abeam, the Souvaroff led the squadron down the Finnish gulf. (The water front and the 'piers and forts were crowded with, spectators. The ensigns on the forts and yachts were dipped and the guns of each chain of forts across the bay joined in an admiral's salute, while from the sig nal masts above the forts fluttered a string of colored flags reading: "Good lack to the Baltic fleet on its long voyage." ping. The commanders of the Rus sian vessels said they would forthwith proceed to Europe. A report was brought ia yesterday by the German steamer Kriaprinz that the St Petersburg and Smolensk were coaling in territorial waters. The Forte - immediately proceeded to search for them, anjd eventually found the Russian vessels. They were not coaling, tut after the orders of the Russian government had been delivered to them the Sholensk and St. Petersburg Joined a German collier and proceeded to Dar-Es-Salaam, on the African coast, twenty-five miles south of Zanzibar. AMERICAN COLONY IS SAFE. IN SPITE OF THE FLAMES. tsdered i .- . . Vs. Hetty Green vigorously objects to S30 taxes oa the old bouse ia kasetts where she was born. . -Tkat loot tke reason she gives fot ' Bcsteatlag. but it fs a good one. The eagagemeat of kis daughter to Capt 8peader Clay is said" to be a great relief to William Waldorf -As- car. Tke cause is obvious. It might a easily kave been Capt Speader employes who Jumped ia at N. J., aad rebuilt a burned and thea had a big dinner with tke owaer are living proofs that the is still fall -of good native Jape Get Vast Stores and Ammunition at Liao Yang. TOKIO The general staff has not yet made public the details of the battle of Liao Yang. The people are still celebrating the victory, but there Is considerable speculation over the official silence respecting General Ku roki'8 movements since Sunday. It is reported that the Japanese, notwithstanding the ravages of fire, captured vast accumulations of Rus sian, stores and -ammunition at Liao Yang. The report that Lieutenant Tera ouchi, son of Lieutenant General Ter aouchi. minister of war. was killed in the fighting -before Liao Yang is denied. TWO ARMIES ARE AFTER HIM. Bkmdi. the Italian sculptor la saiag the Metropolitan art ma ia New York for $200,000 dam- i kecaase of its refusal to exhibit "Sataraalla." takes himself seri decent he? The yacht America, that won the cap fifty-three years ago. is afloat la those days a yacht was a mere skimming dish and was for something more than Junk tke race was' over. fiadetk a wife," says- Solo- "fiadeth a good thing." And Sol i-was oae of the most experienced tkat ever lived. The records lern divorce courts would indi cate that either' wives or husbands jvaat kave changed more or less since his day. af-mm A foreiga cable dispatch announces the extraordlaary fact that a German paateBSor rode horseback from Berlin Bakeath. "Whether this fact is ex traordmary because a German profes .aar was able to ride a hose or be- ke rode to Baireuth is left in A Caaaectieat minister who missed km kerne foaad kirn finally in the : at tke ckarck, tie exploring ani kaviag made his way down the aisle and into the study, with ; doing aay damage. Horse on the lister! A Philadelphia- man at the risk of Ida life stopped a runaway, horse. wfceioBpoB tke driver gave his res caar a S-ceat piece. . Ordinarily 5 cents la a tow price for a human life, but all ikiBuV considered it was probably a Ugk estimate ia this case.- key at Louisville, employed as clerk, wko returned to a banl: hi bills oat of a package ol tkat had been given him bj for 95,900. has evidently mas- tke great truth tkat a clear con- ia worth more than any of money. Kureki and Oku Are in Pursuit of Kuropatkin. ST. PETERSBURG A dispatch from General Kuropatkin, timed 6:30 o'clock Wednesday evening, was re ceived later in the day. He reported that General Kuroki's army was about twenty-seven miles eastward of the railroad and that Gen eral Oku's arm'- was twenty miles west of the railroad. . The general staff expects that a big battle will' be fought At 6:28 p. m. General Kuropatkin reported that he did not lose a gun during the retreat The best Information of the war of fice indicates that General Kuropatkin lost about 17,000 men during the ten days' battle at Liao Yang. Consul Reports Many Victims of the Massacre. WASHINGTON The American consul at Harput has reported to the state department that he has visited Bitlis and is now in Moush. The consul states that the district of Sassun is tranquil and pacified and the strategic points are garrisoned by infantry detachments and permanent barracks erected. The survivors of the massacre are in a destitute condi tion, but are attempting to rebuild their ruined villages with a little gov ernment aid. The consular corps at Bitlis estimates the number massa cred and dead from exposure and hun ger, eta. as 3,500. The American col ony at Bitlis appears to be ia no pres ent or prospective danger. Sues Secretary of War. WASHINGTON Major Peter R. Egan. surgeon in the United . States army, brought suit against W. H. Taft secretary of war, to compel him to remove from' the record of court martial proceedings, adjudging him (Major Bgaa) not guilty oa charges of neglect of duty, the indorsement on the court's. finding of Colonel Saaao, the reviewing oflicer, then command ing the department of Colorado, which indorsement the complainant says is in effect punishment for alleged of fenses of which he was found not guilty at Fort Douglas, Utah, ia De cember. 1901. i kead oC General Ksropatkln, army kaa arrived safely at after frightful experieacea la ring taroagk mad aad mire over tke MaadariB road. 8ome deacriptlOBB ef .tke aceaea along tke line of retreat are. almost incredible. Tney tell kow tke mem lay down ia the mad nad slept In a dreackiag ram. It la evident-that, the last deter mined effort of the Japanese to krtag Kuropatkia to bay waa day. bat the Rusaisa chief faced about aad two corps with artililery heat oS tke Japanese, waile tke remainder of tke troops continued tke march to Mukden. After that the Japanese could only hang ea to the flasks aad try to shell the retreating columns from tke kills. ' Tk outposts are still la coatacL bat they are not evea exchanging skota, A late Associated Press dlspatck from Mukden describes tke horrible plight of the tentless and shelterlesi soldiers. ' r The detailed statement of the Run sian losses, which It Is promised will be issued on Saturday, is awaited with intense interest The geaeral expectation is that the losses will ap proximate 20,000. as agalast 30,000 for the' Japanese. - The work of burying the dead "was left for the Japanese, who were forced to attempt the task as a matter of self preservation, but it was an im possible undertaking. The awful rains have handicapped the work of cremation, on which the Japanese re lied, and only shallow trench burials were possible in most cases. Not only is such burial one of great dif ficulty, but it is almost valuelers from a sanitary point of view, the storms undermining soon after it is accom plished. The care of the wounded has taxed the hospitals to the utmost. One cor respondent says that 12,000 wounded have passed through the Mukden hos pitals up to Sunday and only the most severe cases could be attended by the nurses and surgeons. Many there fore bad to be left, to the rough, but well-meant care of their comrades. , Now that) the battls of Liao Yang is history ofllcers of the general staff are more disposed to discuss some of the phases of the fight,. but they still lack specific information, mak ing it impossible to speak on many points, General Kuropatkin's army at Liao Yang consisted of twenty battalions of infantry, 147 squadrons of cavalry and 700 guns, approximately 108,000 bayonets, 15,000 sabers and 10,000 gunners. Portions of two European corps and one Siberian corps had ben left at Mukden and a number of these were brought into the fight ' The. size of the Japanese army has not been definitely established, but its actual fighting force is supposed to have had a superiority in, numbers of from 50,000 to 60,000 men and a con siderable superiority in artillery. One of 'the chief advantages pos sessed by Field Marshal Oyama,. ac cording to Russian experts, consisted in the greater elasticity in movements. awftlBB) Foreign); .Oflfae Leoka. fee Set-' ef IX)ND0N---Tke prellmiaary repre- tke 2- by to tke hi oa the tadkate that t ef making to tke United States aad Great BrMaia raaatdlng the aueatimv bC'Coatrabaad of war. an a resalt of the sabmiesioa ky Foreiga Minister Lamadorff of tke report to Emperor Nicketas today' wHk informatioa traas mitted by' Ambassador Bengendorff ahowtag tke views ef the Britiskgov erameat '" Tke Russiaa foreign minis ter m expected to present to the Brit ish government tkroaak Sir Ckarlea Hardlaae, lae British ambassador to Russia, tomorrow tke final reply at It is aaderstood ia oftcml drclcs mere, tkat Rasata, wkfle aot ackaowl edgiag itself at fault for tke captures made ky its ships la the past, will more specifically describe'' the condl tJeas under which certaia goods, each as foodetaCs.aad. cotton become ialts view coatrahaad. The British Foreiga oMce is satis fled from the repressatattons made to t tkat sack substantial coaceasfcms wffl be made' ky Russia as will lead to' aa early settlemeat of tke vexa tious question. iasaj NEBRASKA STATE NEWS FEW APPLY FOR WORK. Many ef the Chicago Butchers Do tost Knew Strike la Over. - CHICAGO More than 600 live stock handlers who went out oa a strike appeared at the office of 'Mana ger Skinner of the Union Stock Yards and Transit company Friday to apply for their old positioas. He had previously announced that he would employ all tke old mea needed. Members of other, anions were not so much in evidence when work was begun nt the packing houses Friday. Most of the men did not know that the strike was off. . President Donnelly has received a telegram from the last member of the international executive board of the butchers giving- permission to call off the strike. None of the stock handlers were taken back, being informed that they would be sent for when needed. It it understood that before going to work they .will be required to sign an agreement setting forth that they return as individuals and not as an organization. Business Agent Golden of the team sters said, that the teamsters will go back to work as an organization or not at all. NEW LINE TO PACIFIC COAST. JAPANESE INSPECT THE NOVIK Teamsters Return to Work. CHICAGO All probability of com plications at the stock yards was re moved when the packing house team sters voted to return to work on Mon day morning. The offer of the -packers to take back now as many teamsters as are needed an dto hire the others as necessity demands was made known through a committee that had visited the packers, and the proposi tion was accepted without opposition. The packers were at once notified that the men would report for v.crk at 9 o'clock. Emperor Issues Some Orders. LONDON- The Daily Mail's Sin mintan correspondent cabliag under date of September 11. says: "General Kouropatkia has returned to Mukden after inspecting tke fortifications at Tiepass. work on which was not well advanced, but which is being hurried along. At the same time costly efforts to delay the Japanese advance are be ing made. I learn from Russian sources that this Is the outcome of the emperor's orders and that the emperor even peremptorily commanded Kouro patkn to retake Liao Yang." Attendance at the World's Fair. ST. LOUIS The attendance at the World's Fair for The week ending Sep tember 10 was 875,947. Total since the opening of the exposition, 9.994.510. Tragedy in New York Hotel. NEW YORK Warren J. Ferguson, 38 years old. a theatrical advance agent is dying in a New York hos pital from a bullet wound received during a quarrel in the Metropolitan hotel, in Broadway, and a young wo man, who gave her name as Mrs. Gertrude Roberts, though 'acknowledg ing it to be fictitious, admits that she did the shooting. She alleges that Ferguson attempted to assault her, that she pointed the revolver at him to frighten him and that during a scuffle the revolver was discharged. cherish ancestor wor- as a cardiaal doctriae of their re- sad in tkefar military operations tkey kave consistently exhibit hesKaooa la iacreasing the of their ancestors. to coafese the Japanese telegraph operators and pre- their receiving messages, the operators keep telegraphing over aad over. Tkat this last he a great success will' to aayoae.wko knows tke taebmkia fall-: tke alphabet -s maaBmaadaaahet ,. ;. mm.aaae ef the stock broker who EBfc?A - t1 L BflBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBS fiBHBUBS BVnUIBI SBlBBBaB'- BUBBHBanBB BMiJ ViFY1 -" '"J'TWnW -BBFWeBBWB- anno . --rrS5T"wicBBBBBi -enaoBV Bamgl.: W m . fjaj ke as i sn li if i -.. Vf Reports on the Islands. ROME Papal Secretary of State Cardinal Merry Del Val, who came to Rome Friday from his summer resi dence at Castel Gandolfo to receive the diplomatic corps, granted an audi ence to Archbishop Chapelle. the apos tolic delegate to Cuba and Porto Rica and archbishop of New Orleans, which is a special distinction, audiences be ing very rare now. The archbishop explained' that the object of his visit was to present his homage to the. new pope and to submit the report of his delegation to Cuba and Porto Rico. Conditions in the Balkans. ST. PETERSBURG Prince George of Greece, high commissioner of the protective powers in the island of Crete, wll arrive here Monday. It is understood he will report to the em peror on the conditions prevailing in the Balkans. Offers Prize for Automobile Boat PARIS The- Auto announces that C. L. Charley, -the automobilist. has offered a prize of $10,000 for the first automoble boat which successfully ac complishes a voyage from New York to Havre Find Russian Vessel Sunk Within Six, Hundred Yards of the Shore. ' 'TOKIO The ofllcers commanding th Japanese expedition sent la to ex amine the wreck of the Russiaa cruiser Novik report that it is beach e! 900 yards southwst of Korsakovsk lighthouse. It has a"30-degree list to starboard, and with the exception of a small portion of its bow it is en tirely submerged. Even on Its upper deck the water is knee deep in the most shallow places. Its- conning tower and upper works were heavily damaged by the Japanese shell Are. It is impossible to ascertain defiaitefty the extent of the damage under the water, but evidently it is consider able. Russian land forces fired on the Japanese expedition while the ex amination was being made, but the expedition retired without sustaining eny casualties. Rumor that Rockefeller Interests Will Construct Another Railroad. . ST. PAUL, Minn. The Dispatch on Thursday said: "Reports received in' St Paul, coming from a thoroughly reliable source, state that L. R. Man ning of Tacoma has informed railway officials at that point that he is the personal representative- of John T. Woodward, president of the Hanover National bank of New York, a Rocke feller institution, and that deeds to all the Seattle and Tacoma property which he has acquired during the past six months are in President Wood ward's hands. "President Woodward, Mr. Manning now' states, is acting for a new trans-, continental route, to be pushed through to the Pacific coast within a short time. "Mr. Manning refuses to name the railway, but intimates that the reports that the recent heavy purchases of terminals were in the interest of the Harriman combine were far from the truth." , THE NEWS IN NEBRASKA. Fire destroyed the roller fleering at Bralaerd. A kerveet festival is a keM at September -St. 21 aad 22. . imoaatmese mrVeral ef doOara kave keea by the UaleavPacrJc ahoat the depot aad yards ia Sutherland tke east' Week or two. Heary 'Toler. a aurckaat of Anoka, was burned to death trying to save kis wife after keroseae exploded; eov eriag her ia flames. She may 'ale. Tke buildlag ia aartlally burned. At. s special electioa hi Osceola tke boadiag of the towa for a sys tem of water works to cost SIMM was voted upon. Tke resalt was a majority ia favor ef tke beads ef over four to one. Tke Kearney Coastructiea com pany, ef which T. "E.- Parmelc of Plattamoutk ia president aad W. J. Stadelmaa ef Kearaey is vice Brest deat 'kaa keea granted a fraackise for aa iadepeadeat telephone system at Miadea. A flrst class exchaage win he installed ia the near future. The articles of incorporatloa filed by the Beat of Bensoa kave keea ap proved ky tke state Banking board. Tke capital stock is $50,000 divided lato skares valued at $100 each, aad the incorporators are James A. How ard. B..H. Post. CA. Tracy. Peter Gravant F. D. Pamur, H. O. Wulff and B. F. Thomas. The members of the National Guard who are alleged to have in sulted women in David City duriag the recent encampment there are to be 'punished if proven guilty, and tke investigation that has been started by Adjutant General Culver will be pushed with vigor until the name of every guilty man is known. ' Tke state board of public lands and' buildings and the state board of irri gation held their regular meetings last week. The former board passed WSJ OP STATE TREASURER, ,wS wlafj ImfeFIvwtw rR LINCOLN-raUjisadltares have ea- ia tke state treasur er's deaartmeat, botk duriag tke quarter ending August 31 aad the to the reports of Tke total re ceipts for tke quarter were tdl5.286.t7 the expenditures $l,f5JC4.l. aa of t250.577.14. The reeeiats for tke meatk ef August were $lss M2.72, aad tke expenditures $24,. 7txJt, er.aa excess of $41,420.13. Cash ea kead fct all funds amounts to $3,638.26. aad cash oa deposit to $331.778120, or a total cask fund of $335,416.46. The cask oa kaad la tke eat school faad ia $6,31aJ5, $2S35.3f oa June 1. The decrease ia-owing to- the, la vestment of the funds in state aad county securities, of which the state hoard of educational lands aad fuada kaa purcaased heavily duriag the quarter. No securities are beiag pur caased at present tke treasurer coa fialag himself to the purchase of state warrants as aa Investment. Collec tions kave beea slack duriag July aad August, but are expected to revive duriag September aad October, be cause of personal taxes becomiag de linquent on November 1. Following, are the balances for the quarter aad moath, with the statement of beak balaaces at the close of business Au gust 31: Balances. Balances. Funds June 1. M. Aua. 31. 'N. General $ 1944.02 t 9.2S6.67 Permanent school. 296.235.36 Temporary school. 17e.ee6.95 Perm, university.. 2.212.40 Ag. col. endow..... 13.166.23 Temp, university.. 46.953.31 aad hi five nswewJesV swT ided! WeS. a farattare . . lor came here veatarsmv-' t ' mlaatii' wJk she astd kirn ' " ' I i she had. made herself." . .. 1 j la formic acid Dr. Clsmaat ef the French Academy a to kave discovered edy far maseular fatigue. Be hues K wRk Btearboaate ef soda to save tka A Jersey of a bar Harrison. N: J. lag aad a Ik oa kis The raaor was directly serti ehla. aad ia drive away the gash la his throat A rived 'too late te save Hospital, insane State library .... university cash Normal library , Normal endow .. Normal Interest Inheritance tax Pen. sp. labor.. on a number of claims, including the Pen. land A CHANGE IN RESIDENCE. Serious Anti-Semitic Riats. ST. PETERSBURG Anti-Semitic rioting took place at cRovao, in the government of Volhynia, September 4, during which, it is said, many per sons were injured nnd shops pillaged. A similar outbreak occurred at Smela in the government 'of Kieff, where the troops were called. Ninety-eight houses aad 145 shops were ' pillaged and several persons seriously and many slightly wounded by the troops. Many of the rioters were arrested. The affair lasted for two days, Sep tember 4 snd 5. Steamer Sinks at Dock. SEATTLE. Wash. The steamship City of Topeka, a big passenger vessel oa the Pacific Coast Steamship com pany, runnng between 'this port and Southeastern Alaska, sunk at the dock at this port HIGHLAND LIGHT. Maes. A large vessel has beea seek off Highland ligr'.hip The crew left the vessel te It is- aot known whether tke was tkat of a freighter or a Thibetan Omeers Sign Treaty. LHASSA. Thibet (via Gyangtse) Colonel Younghusband. head of the British mission, aad the Thibetan offi cers, signed a formal treaty on Satur day in their apartments of the dalai lama at Patau. The ceremony was simple and it was conducted amid quaint aad picturesque .surroundings. The terms of the treaty were read out only in the Thibetan language. Its details will, be published later by the foreign ofllcers at Simla. The pro ceediags closed with a. short speech by Colonel Younghusband. Big Fire at Juarez, Maxicoe. EL PASO, Tex. The city of Jaurez, Mex., across the river from EI Paso, is threatened with destruction by Are. Already one block of the best business houses has burned and all efforts of the fire department have thus far been futile. The loss is heavy. - Cenfessss Hie Complicity TOPEKA, Kan. B. F. 8Iagel, alias Robert Romaiae, a deported Colorado miner under arrest here for burglary, has confessed to the county attorney' to complicity in the Independence de pot and the Vindicator miae explo sions in the Cripple Creek district last June by which fifteen non-union miners were killed outright and oth ers Injured. Romaihe says he helped to place the dynamite and wires run ning beneath the depot and by which the charge was set off with such dis astrous results. Reserves Called te Arms. ST. PETERSBURG The emperor has called to arms the reserve troops in twenty-two circuits hi the govern ments of KaersoaU Beymrshls, Ekater iaoslav aad Taurida. belonging to the military datrict of. Odessa. FkatFeet BaM Victim. TTARRJSBURG. Pa. Blala Hoffmac ltlyears, received: sack serioai a game of football him,' that death Davis Confers with Carman. BALTIMORE, Md. Henry Davis, democratic candidate for the vice ares idency, stopped off nt 'Baltimore. He met and had a conference with United States Senator A. P. Gorman at the Hotel Bennert during the early after noon -and later visited some of his friends in the city. Senator Davis de? clined to discuss politics, his only ref erence to the coming campaign being, "I think we shall win." Mr. Davis left for New York City to have a con ference with National Chairman Tag gart and other democratic leaders. Judge Parker Likely te Move to New York City. NEW" YORK There is reason to believe that Alton B. Parker will make arrangements to come to New York City for temporary residence soon af ter kis letter 'of acceptance is made public It is known that the leading democrats have strongly represented to him that his continued presence at such an inconvenient place as Rose mont with no hotel accommodations, has kept Judge Parker from personal contact witk many prominent men who are frequently in New York City, but who have no time for a trip to Esopus. The plan has even progress ed as far as. the making of tentative arrangements for him to take a suite of rooms. According to a clerk in Parker's counsel, his idea Is to be immediately in touch with the party leaders and accessible to those whom It is desir able to meet as the campaign pro gresses. .Bury Japanese Dead. CHE FOO Advices from Port Ar thur say that following the terrific bombardment of the fortress for the five days ending September 1, heaps of Japanese bodies were removed by the Chinese under orders given by the Port Arthur authorities. Vermont is Republican. . WHITE RIVER STATION. Vt ermont elected a governor and other state officers, two members of con gress, thirty state senators and one representative from each city and town. Tke republicans were generally victorious, electing their entire ticket and maintaining control of the legis lature by the usual large majority. The campaign was hard fought by both parties, the democrats bending their efforts to a reduction of the re publican majority of 31,000 given to William W. Stickney for governor. To, Extradite Romaine. TOPEKA, Kan. An- effort will be made by the Colorado authorities to secure the extradition of Robert Ro maine, who confessed to the ofitaers here that ho had a part la the Viadi' cator and Independence explosions la Colorado. Before this csa he brought about it will be necessary that Gov- Bailey great Romaiae a aardoa tke Kaasas penlteatiary. He ir Mamra miea nana mat-tar a ta i - m - aj t tm ! i -. - I ' mm mm mi - A. " I - , , - -m j . " - 1 . .' I r .imww MR.. . , j I MMii..' l..r- ..'" .. - -- -' -.--- . attakdl' Hot Saring in Simplon Tunnel. ROME Work on the Simplon tun nel, which it was expected would be completed by the beginning of Octo ber, wss suddenly stopped on Friday owing to the exposure of a hot spring flowing 1,500 gallons sad causlag the temperature ia the tunnel to reach 122 degrees. Refrigerators will- be to talled and the work resumed a month from date. The Simplon tunnel, which is cutting through Simploa mountain, will be 21,374 yards long, and It has already been pierced for a distance of 2L142 yards. one for the construction of the hos pital at Milford, and the latter board merely approved the work done by Secretary Dobson during the last six months. Rev. James Mark Darby, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church of Wahoo, among ' the announcements Sunday morning, made one of unusu al interest to his congregation, that of a donation of a fine, new piano by a friend of the church. Albert C. KU lion. The congregation showed its high appreciation of the costly gift by a rising vote of thankst A young German, apparently about 21 years of age, who has been con fined in the county Jail at Wahoo for some time, was adjudged insane by the examining board and taken to the asylum at Lincoln. The young man was first discovered at Ashland run ning about in a half nude condition, and when parties tried to approach him -he jumped into a creek. A little waif was left just outside the door of the residence of Richard Sampson, a prominent farmer resid ing about a mile north of Seward. Cries from the child were heard in the house and Mr. Sampson went out and found it lying in a basket The baby was a male child and well dress ed and a card pinned upon its cloth ing told of the date' of its birth. A horse and buggy belonging to Henry Nast, a farmer living four miles south of Scrlbner, were stolen. Next morning the buggy was found beside the road on Somen avenue just outside Fremont and later the horse was taken up near Leavitt It is supposed that the thief stole the rig to come to Fremont with and turned the horse loose just before reaching the citr. Deputy Game Warden Smith went out into Hooker county and arrested James Cleary and A. O. Crawford, charging them with killing seven prai rie chickens. The men were taken before a justice aad fined $35 and costs each,- which they paid. The house of Dr. T. C. Sexton at Fremont was visited by burglars. A marauder secured entrance to it by placing a chair under an unfastened window and climbing in. He went through everything in two rooms, se cured some small articles nnd $15 in money, and then climbed out, taking Dr. Sexton's clothing with him. From the pockets he took a fine gold wateh, but he left the garments on the lawn. Governor Mickey and party will leave for Seattle to witness the launching of the battleship Nebraska, about October 3. It has not yet been decided over what road the party will go. but it has been decided that no free transportation will be secured. The trip cannot consume more than ten days, as October 18 has been set apart as Nebraska day at the St. Louis exposition, and the governor and staff will leave for that place Octo ber 16. Ag. and mech. arts . S. exp. station 4.497.35 17.462.C6 176.45 1.700.60 2.144.29 4.697.36 2.346.15 3.585.00 5.049.01 2.473.29 69.312.83 151.C2S.M 3.67X23 29.19.34 6.916.9! 3.765.99 3a8fPaw 14.Sil.23 682.33 1,769.69 2.535.34 4.956.21 2.346.15 3.585.99 3.445.99 Totals S585.993.90 3335.416.46 saas a: taey will bay DtBmate Catd Water Starch for leuadrv aaa thaw' will save aot oator thae. huMM aever sticks to tke kaa. hat fiiaii each package eoatama If ea oae faU fpBBd while all other Cold Starches are put up la -aeaa sea. ana iue price m the same. 16 cents. Then agaia because Deflaace Starch ia free from all injurious chem icals. If your grocer tries, to sell you a 12-oz. package it la because he has a stock ca kaad which he wiskea to dispose, of before he pats ia Deflaace. -He knows tkat Deflaace Starch has printed on every package ia large let ters aad figures "16 ozs." Demand Defiance, and save much time and money aad the annoyance of tho iroa ticking. Deflaace never sticks. Tibetan Earth DweHera. Eartk dwellers are common In Ti bet 8trangely clad 'men aad women, wko siace childhood have rarely looked upon the sun, are found living in roomy clay apartmeats la a mode, as stringent as aay monastic order. They are supplied with food sad oth er necessaries by their children, whe alone leave the caverns; aad much of their time m occupied In extending, their curious residences'. NURSE CAUGHT UNDER TRAIN. Alice Beth Maline ef Cezad Loses Lege Below the Knees. LEXINGTON Miss Alice Msliae. a professional nurse, whose home is twelve miles northwest of Cozad. and who has been nursing two typhoid feP ver patients in this city, concluded she would go homefor a short rest Train No. 5. which stops at Cozad. is due here at 12:15 o'clock a. m. When Miss Maline arrived at the depot yards a freight train was on the side track between her and the depot. Train No. 3, which does not stop at Cezad. was at the depot Mistaking this for her train, Miss Maline crawled under the freight train. Just as she did so the train pulled up to open the cross ing. She was caught under the wheels and terribly mangled, requir ing the amputation of both limbs be low the knees. The local surgeons here deemed it best to have her,, re moved to a hospital in Omaha. Very little hopes arc entertained for her recovery. Drone Dead at Telephone. BEATRICE John P. Anderson, for the past eighteen years a grocery man of this city, dropped dead in his store. He bad stepped, back to the rear of the room to use the telephone, when he suddenly dropped to the floor and expired. One of the clerks heard the body fall and rushed to An derson's assistance, but life was ex tinct The receiver of the telephone was swinging below the transmitter when the clerk reached his side, show ing that he.had been talking to some one when stricken down. Arranging for the Launching. At their request Governor Mickey kas sent to Moran rothers. builders of the battleship Nebraska, the Barnes of the state ofllcers, congressmen, judges aad others who will be invited to attend the launching of the ship. October 7. Governor Mickey will be accompanied by his daughter. Miss Mary Nain Mickey, who will christen the ship. Mrs. Mickey will be unable to attend. The arrangements for the trip will be made by Adjutant General Culver, but so far nothing definite has been deeded upon, and it is not known whether a special train will be se cured. General Culver is in Omaha. and upon his return it is expected he will soon complete the details of the arrangements. BUTTE. Mont Another range war between cattlemen and sheepmen has broken out in the country adjoining Pryor mountain, across the Wyoming line. The camp of George Crosby was attacked at night aad 400 or 500 of his sheep killed by driving them ever' a cat ia a canyon. ST. PETERSBURG Persistent re: ports are ia drculatioa of serious aatUewlah disturbances In several of tke awraraaNacs of flewtaweat bat ap to this Old settlers, of Otoe county last week held their thirty-sixth annual picaic. Judge Paul of St Paul was In Grand Island the other day and stated that he would' have a bill introduced in the next legislature providing for, the requirement of bonds from court re porters. It is found that the recent departure of Reporter Kendall of that district necessitates the retrial of two cases in Hall county, one in Greeley, one in Loup, two in Boone and one In Grant because the records never completed. A number of Japanese are wnrk'ng in Cudahy's slaughter house at South Omaha. Ralph Bennett, son of Dr. Bennett of Kearaey, was kicked by a horse and three of his ribs were broken. A few minutes later Kenneth Leitch was kicked by the same horse and had a gash cut over his left eye. Young Bennett was driving the ani mal when it became fractious be cause of something wrong with the harness. The young man alighted to fix it, when the horse planted both feet in his side. J. D. Colton, the owner of about 5,000 acres of ranch property in Daw son aad Custer counties, passed through Grand Island from his home in Kansas City, en route to his ranches. Mr. Colton was one of the forty-aiaers and while Inspecting Hall couaty'a aew court house could aot otkerwiae teas" comment oa the rhaasra taking places ia the last fifty-five years throughout tke entire west Mr. Coitoa waa oae of those lost ia the Death valley la the early sad aaaaarry attends tke Pulled Crepe from Door. GRAND ISLAND Dodd Gilmore, a stranger, was arrested for drunken ness and fined ten dollars and costs. Gilmore in passing the' law office of Hon. W. H. Thompson pulled the crepe, hung there during the death and burial of Mr. Thompson's daughter, from the door. Fatal Hot Potato. Margaret Kirchbaum died of 'eating hot potatoes. She was In a hurry to go out aad gulped several hot pota- toes. She died in great agony. The autopsy showed that her throat had the lining of her stomach had beea so badly burned that the swelling had caused her tc choke to death. First Bomb Outrage. The flrst "bomb outrage" -was com mitted oa Christmas eve, 1800. by Saiat-Nejaat. wlo wished to remove ' Napoleon, then flrst consul, in the in terest of the Royalists. Napoleon es caped, but among his escort and the bystanders there were about 130 cr.su altles. Steals Little Beys' Sheas. An English thief wss arrested whose method was to induce little boys to take off their shoes ia order to run a race, aad leave him la charge of the , shoes. When they returned, breath less, he and the shoes were gone. Man and Wife. Buxton. N. Dak.. Sept 12 (Special). ' Mr. B. L. Skrivsetk of this place ' as been added to the steadily grow ing following that Dodd'a c Kidney Pills have ia this part of the country. , Mr. Shrivseth gives two reasons for his faith ia the Great Americaa Kidney Cure. The flrst is that they cured his wife aad the second is, that they cured himself. "I must say," says Mr. Skrivsetk. "that Dodd's Kidney Pills are tho best remedy for Kidney Trouble I ever knew. My wife kad Kidney Disf ease for years aad she tried all kind's of medicine from doctors but it did. not help her any. An advertisement led her to try Dodd's Kidney Pills.. The flrst box helped her so. much . that she took eight boxes more aad now she is cured. T also took three boxes myself and they made me feel better and stronger' in every wny." Dodd's Kidney Pills have aever yet ' failed to cure aay kidney disease from Backache to Rheumatism. Dia betes or BrighVs Disease. Collections Are Slow. LINCOLN There probably will be no call for the retirement of state warrants issue by the state treasurer this month, unless receipts pick up. Collections are very slow at present and there Is on hand in the general fund available for retirement of war rants only about $15,000. Warrants usually are retired in blocks of $50. 000, and at the most not more than C??: nnA ran tw rotirpfl this month The cash on hand in the permanent S 1 MmJt a.lnn fn 1a ahiibm A. ik a Were scnooi nmu oieu ia iu, uniug iu iue close investment Real Leaders ef Men. Mea of geauiae exeelleace la every statioa of life mea of Industry, of in tegrity, of high principle, of sterling honesty of purpose command the spontaaeoas homage of maaklad. It is natural to believe la such mea.- to have confidence in them aad to imi tate them. All that is good la the world Is upheld by them, and without their presence in it the world would not be worth living la Samuel Smiles. Catch Words or Phrases. If you desire to get rich quickly, la vent catch-words og phrases that will grip the attention of the public. Big sums are paid for the right article The inventor of a word now used for a brand of crackers is said to have re ceived $5,000 for it Manufacturers of various things from soap to nuts have paid nearly as high. A railroad com pany gave $100 to a girl who suggest ed a name for oae of its fast traias. Tribute to a Dutch Smoker. To pay due revereace to tke mem ory of an ardent smoker named On dersmans. who had died in Rotterdam, all his old cronies came to the funeral smoking long clay pipes. Oadersmans left a sum of money to pay the ex penses of a yearly smoking concert tc keep his memory green. Will Teach Incorrigibles. TECUMSEH Robert Dillon of Ves ta, this county, has received an ap pointment as instructor in the indus trial school at Kearney. Mr. Dillon Is a prominent educator of the county and also a good republican. Socialist Leader Assaulted. NORFOLK Colonel Bigelow of Lin coln, a socialist leader, was assaulted by thirteen farmers during a speech In a school house near Pierce. He was driven out Prosecution will follow. Some men go through Ine pretty much as a dorg with a chain to' his collar and a woman yanking at the business end. WHAT'S, THE USE Burned with Gasoline. CRAB ORCHARD Mary Svovoda. a domestic in the home of P. J. Mur phy of this place, kindled a Are with gasoline, and is now lying in a critical condition from burns upon her face, hands and chest, caused by the explosion. Good Crop ef Sweet Corn. GRAND ISLAND The Graad Is- lead rmnit! factory Is working every passible "man it eaa place aad sweet cora is proving aa exceUeat crop, 17S daily. Te Keep a "Coffee Complexion." A lady says: "Postum has helped my complexion so much that my. diends say I am growing yoaag agaia. My complexion used to be coffee cpl ired. muddy aad yellow bat It fe bow clear and rosy as uhen I was. a girk was iaduced to try Postum by a friend who had suffered just as I had suffered from terrible Indigestion, pal pitation of the heart aad sinking spells. "After I had used Postam a weelr I was so much better that I was afraid it would not mst But now two years have passed aad I am a well woman. I owe it all to leaving off coffee and drinking Postum-ia it3 p!ice. "I had drank coffee all my life. I suspected that It was the eause of my trouble, hut It was not until I actually quit coffee and started to try Postum tkat I became certaia; then all my troubles ceased aad I am now well nad strong agaia." Name furnished by Postum Ca, Battle Creek. Mich, ia.eack package for a copy of Wtteboak, -He Baas ia Tkere' Look! ,' itigae. Be earn- ' '. 'i Mate ef aeda ta .j ef Death. . 2 . caased tke death -t I J emmmasamp Aemia$aS aa a barber was shav- . . ' V- ji ." 'i . . v . . ' I If. 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