THE OMAHA DAILY rff3BE : MONDAY. JULY 15 , 1889. lit * * * * TOOK TWO OUT OF THREE , The Omaha Team's Bocord on the Oonvor Grounds , SltiUX CITY GETS A SHUT-OUT. 6t. Pnnl Suffer * Defeat nt tlioMlnnda of tlio Tnll-Kntlors StnmUng of the Chilis Other Sports , ' _ ' Standing of the OInui. Following Is the standing of tlio Western association clubs , up to and Including yes- tcrday'a games ; 1'or Ct. Omnlm. , .707 81.1'nul .C83 Sioux Cltv CO .517 Minneapolis. . . CO .500 Donvcr . . .59 .475 DCS Moincs.f j .400 St. Joseph .55 .382 Milwaukee 53 .345 „ , . Oinalm 17 , Denver 1O , DBNVBII , Cole , , July 14. The homo Cdnm fell an cusy victim to tbo Omaha pmyors to day. Two Donvcr pitchers were knocked out in tun first f9ur innings. Nichols , for Omaha , pitched n good paino. The game was uninteresting , there bohiK no brilliant fea tures. Score : Nichols out for not touclilnif second. lir 1XKI.V08. Denver 4 0030040 0 10 Omaha S 1 U 8 1 0 i U * -17 8UJIMAUV. named runs Dcnror. ! , Onnvlid 2. Tno-b > e hlti TrcmlwflT. Dolan und NK | . Tbroo-limo lilts An- drewj. Nichols anil Mossltt. Dnsos stolen Denver i , Omabn 1. Doubles plars Wlilto to llowo. laso on balls OITfnuun.H : otillnirinan , 7 : niT Daruliroimii. none : olT Nichols , J. Bit br kall-Mes ltt. Struck out HIT Fncnn , none ; by. HnlTmnn , none ; br Darn- brouxh , II : bf Nichols , fl. l-aiscd hnlla-Dolnn 1 , NauUl. Wllil pltebus Kavau ' . ' . llortuion 2 , Duru- brough 1. I. ft on bases Donvcr 7 , Unialia 0. Tlmo of gamo-2:10. : Urapiro McDurmot. Ht. Joseph 11 , Bloux City O. ST. JOSEPH , Mo. , July 14.- Knoll shut Sioux City out without n hit , and but two of the visitors reached third. St. Joseph pounded Scibel deliberately and decisively , earning ten of the runs made in the game. The Holding on both sides was excellent , but ono of the errors affecting the score. Score : Totals 11 1027 9 Totals. . . . . . . . . 0 057 14 4 11V IN'NINOS. St. Josnpli. , .40011030 2-11 BlouxClly. . .U 0 0 U 0 0 0 U 0-U SUMMVllY. Huns ciuno < l-St. JoiopU 10. T 'o-bnso hits -AnJ- ncr , Krloxaml Knoll. Homo nuis Krlcir. 1'lrst bis ; on bulls-Oil Knoll 4 , off Slchel 4 , btrtlck out-llotnl- Inn. bhclUmsic , Mahonor. Ceiilns , Undluy 4 , hicbei. btolcnbascH.OnrlrlRlit. , SlclJnrrS. KrlPRl. Cliito. lilt by pitcher Jovne. Hulk tMubo ) , Parsed bulls Crotty ; ! . Wild pitch Non . 'lllnu or fe'iimo 1 hour nuu 4j minutes. Umpire UrloJy. Wilwnukoi'7 , St. Pftiil O. MILWAUKEE , July 14. Milwaukee de feated St. Paul to-day by a score of 7 to 8. 'OTHER ILVLL GAMES. Tlio American Association. KIjtsAsX'rrr , July 14. ttesult of "to-day's Kama : KansasGlty. 1 0000300 4 7 Athletic 0000 0000 t 1 ST. Louis , July 14. Result of to-day's ' Rome : St. Louis 0 0010001 7 0 Haltunoro 0 0000000 0 0 CINCINNATI , July 14. To-day's game between - twoen Cincinnati and JJroolcl.vn was stopped nt the end ot the lourth inning by n heavy wind and rain storm. The aaino stood lour is- to nothing in favor of Cincinnati. LOUISVILLE , July 11. There was no game to-day on account of ruin. Amateur Guncs. QUASH ISLAND , Nob. , July 14. [ Special Telegram to THE BBC. ] The "kniihtB ; of the prip" stopping ut the Palmer house "chose " and of ball . up" played a game to-day. At the end of the olghth the score stood 9 to 11 In favor of Coohn's team , but the game broke up in a row , as the lobes tried to run in some professionals. MISSOUIII VALUSV , la. , July 14. [ Special to TIIK BKi.l--Thogainoof b.iso bull bolwocn Missouri Valley nud West Omaha resulted in a sooio of U to - In favor of the homo team. QREEI.KY CENTER , Nob. , July 14. [ Special Telegram to TIIK Beit.-Tlio ] Grand island team has bean matched for n gunic of ball with the 13. M.'a lor Wednesday , the 17th , at this place , _ CALLED SUIjDlVAN A fclAK. Bailer Brown Gote Knocked Out in Short Ordor. CIIICAOO , July 14. John L. Sullivan made tilings rather lively for a while in Tom Cur- ley's saloon , on the levee , to-night" He had buen drinking somewhat , and dur ing tha conrso of the evening Put or Jackson und Sailor llrown , tlta Caucasian slugger , caino in for u urinlc. In the course of an animated dis cussion between all parties lirown culled Sullivan a liar. The Boston champion promptly knocked Hrnwn down. IJoforo Is bo could bo Bolzed by his friends ono "I'rof. " Conloy attempted to in terfere , but was knocked down by Saloonkeeper Curloy , Sullivan not deigning to notice him. Sullivan was quickly hustled into u back room b.v his friends , and the little unpleasantness was BOOH forgotten. To-night Sullivan anil bis friends are out In carriages doing the town , making frequent stous at various lively , resorts. K1LUAIN IN CHICAGO. Weary , Unnliorn nndi Busted Sullivan Still in the Uity. CHICAGO , 111. , July 14. Jake Kllraln ai-- nvod in Chicago nt:8U ( ) : this morning. Ho was accompanied by Johnnlo Murphy , his bottlp holder at the recent tight with Sulli van , . ! They had aaparated with. Charllo Mitchell , twenty-four hours before In Indi ana , for the purpose of throwing the oftlccrs otf thcirtruclc. Pony Moore Is understood to bo-stlll In the Indiana forests , but U ox- pcctod to turn up iu u day or two. Kllraln und Murphy were u sorry looking pair. Their faces were unshaven , and thuir boots heavy with Jiidmna mud. They wore nearly broke , UutSvcry t'ikcn care of b.v Parson navies , who loaned Kllraln all the money ho neodou until ho could get at his eastern bank ac count. Thu'two loft for tno east at U:15 : this nftqriop" | . Notwithstanding many conlUct- ing rumors John L. Sullivan was In Chicago all duyto-duy , 1'YiUlior-\VoiiilitH Alatoliod , ST. Josni'ii , Mo. , July 14. [ Special Tolo- gnun to Tins BEE. ) Oliver Uordcau , a foat\ior-woliut \ of this city , has Issued a challenge for n fight to u finish , with skin ptovcs , for from S500 to 811,000. The ch lUnge l- Ungo has been accepted by William Ditto , also of St. Joseph , and each has deposited a $50 forfeit. The fight Is to take place within n mouth. Uordeau weighs 137 and Ditto I' J pounds. ' Got tlio llunr , Ask for Storz & Her' * Yjonna export beer. IT AFFECTS THK MILK. Nature of tlio IHaonao Among Council Bluflto Cattle. A disease which appears to bo n sort of contagious opthalmia prevails among the cat tle in Council Bluffs , especially among the cows belonging to prlvnto citizens and pas tured In the bottoms. The disease Is rapidly convoyed from ono to another when associ ated In bunches , and the cows are rapidly be coming blind in ono or both eyes. The ani mals recover very slowly unless properly treated In the early stages. Dr. Hixmncclottl was neon and asked If , in his opinion , the milk glvon b.v these cows was fit for consumption , Ho stated the disease would affect the milk Indirectly , as It would tend to stop the secretions and render the milk more or less unhealthy. Ho oxpro od the opinion that the animals would event ually recover with proper treatment , but thoucht they should bo separated from the other cows , as the disease spreads very rapidly. It was learned that only two milk wagons como to this city from the BlulTs. The names of the proprietors could not bo lenrncfl , and it U not known whether or not their cattle nro nlfoctod. Dr , Kanmccloltl was of the opinion that the COWK atTcotud were family cows owned by Individuals , and thnt none of them wcro to property of milkmen. Ha also stated that no trace of the disease hod appeared in tli is cltv , and "ho anticipated no trouble on th.it score. Ho said that the disease had undoubtedly originated among range caltlo which had been brought from the range and were affected by the change la the atmos phere. nn American Pope. LONDON , July 14. The Standard's ' Uomo correspondent says : "Tho Italian cardinals oppose the suggestion of several foreign car- dinaU that the election of an Amorican'car- dlnal as pope would tend to solve the Roman ( Uies'.ion. The pope has asked three cardinals whether It Is advisable that a conclave to elect his successor bo hold at Homo or else- whoro. _ _ An Uiimnnacenhlo Cable Car. CIXCIXKATI , O. , July 14. A cable car broke loose on Vine street hill this afternoon , and being out of order It could nut bo stopped. A panic seized the passengers , who began to jump. Mrs. Julia Tilghedor was instantly killed and seven others were injured moro or loss seriously. None would have boon hurt had they remained on the car , as it was stopped within fifty yards by another train. - A - STOUNOGIRL'S VANITY. Anxious to Have a To3 Amputated to Make Her Feet Symmetrical. "Doctor , plonso cut the other too off , won't you ? " "My dear , I can't do it. It's 1m- posslblbl" And tliat ia part of u con versation Hint Dr. Robert Taylor , of the Actors'Fund ' , and a pretty Rroclc villa belle Imvo repeated almost weekly since July 8 , 1880. On that dnto the younff lady , then the daughter of a wealthy mnrohunt , had her foot crushed in a carriage accident. Several hones had to bo removed and when the foot healed the little too was missing says the Now York World. It was neces sary for hoi * to _ have her shoes made to order , for while the original foot re quired a 31 G hoot the reduced member was comfort'aplo in a 3 A. In the terri ble blizzard of 1888 the retired mer chant met his death , and when the girl with the nine tees caino into possession of her snare of property her lirst con sideration was with Dr. Taylor regard ing the possible price , not pain , it would cost to reduce her tees to a double quartette. It so happened'that the case at the time wont on record ns the only in stance where the affliction had not ter minated fatally , as traumatic tetanus or' ' lock-jaw resulted from the wound , and the greatest skill was necessary to save , the life"of tho-patient. For nine days she endured most excruciating pains , ' that nothing but largo doses of mor phine would allay. Lock-jaw was mani fested three days after the accident. The body was bent so that the headland hoola almost touched and the jaws wore so firmly set that a _ tooth had to bo re moved through which aperture stimu lants were administered by the intro- ( tuctioir of n tube , life being - ing sustained with rye , brandy , punch , champagne and cggnog. All through the case .the muscles of the face , arms and side twitched so violently that the constant attendance of two people was requireiSrat the bod- side. Yet the remembrance of all that horrible agony seems to have remained only with the doctor , as the young lady with the odd pair of foot is not only willing to co through it again , but will take her life in her own hands and ab solve Dr. Taylor of all responsibility for the sake of having her foot mates' , ns she [ Hits it. And suoh is the extent to which a woman's vanity will lead her. LINCOLN'S RELIGION. He Had Depp Convictions But Fol lowed Nn Creed. The forthcoming ( August ) number of , the Century will contain-n chapter on "I-iincoln and the Churches" in the Lin coln history , by Messrs. Hay and Nico- lay , from which the following is an ex tract from advance shoots : Ho was a man of profound and intense religious feeling. Wo have no purpose of. attempting to formulate his oreed ; we question if ho himself over did so. There have boon swift witnesses who , judging from expressions uttered in his callow youth , have called him an athe ist , and others who , with the most laud- ttblo intentions , have remembered ini- urolmbloconvorsutiont * which they bring , forward to prove at once his orthodoxy and their own intimacy with him. But leaving aside those apocryphal evi dences , wo have only to look at his authentic public and private utterances to see ho\v deep and strong in all the latter part of his life was the cu-ront of his religious thought and emotion. Ho continually invited and appreciated , ac their highest value , the prayers of good people. The pressure of tbo tremend ous problems by which ho was surrounded the awful moral alg-i niilcanco of the conflict in which ho was the chief combatant ; the overwhelming sense of perfeonal responsibility , which never loft him for an hour all con tributed to produce , in a temperament naturally tibnous and predisposed to n spiritual view of life and conduct , a sense of reverent acceptance of the guidance ot a Superior Power. From thnt morning , when , standing' amid the falling snoyvllalces on the railway car ut SpHngjleld , ho asked the prnyovs of his neighbors in those touching nhrnses whoso echo lose llmt night in invoca tions Irom thousands of family altars , to that memorable hour when on the atom of the capital ho humbled himself before his Creator in the Bublimo words of the second in augural , there is not an expression known to have como from his lips or his pou but proves that ho hold himself nn- Bworablo in every act of his career to n moro august tribunal thnn any on earth. The fact that houis not u com municant of any church , and thut ho was singularly reserved. . ! ! ! regard to his personui rqllglous life , gives only the greater force to these striking proofs of hi ? profound reverence and faith. I am of the opinion S. 8. S. should stand at the head of the list ef blood remedies. I ar rived at this conclusion from the testimony of scores of porsoas who uavo told mo of the good results from its uso. I have boea Bell , lug S. S. fi. for years und it has won a largo O. A. Giurmu , Daytiowcr , Ark. TWO LITTLE TOWNS AT WAR Ono Has a Depot and the Other Has Nemo. o THAT'S WHYTHEQUARREL BEGUN An Interesting Cnso lor lawn's llnll- road Commission to Decide Colored Mnsonfl A Con' tnnunntotl Stream. Rural Hlvnlry. DBS MOINKS , la. , July 14. [ Special Telegram - gram toTiiBlJEE. ] There Is n very amus ing , and no doubt to the participants a very Important llttlo fight going on botwcou two little towns In southern Iowa , which Ufa railroad commissioners have been called upon to dccldo. The two rival towns are Knowlton and Diagonal , both on the line of the Chicago. St. Paul & Kansas City rail road , though but ono of them , Knntvlton , la n station. At Diagonal the Humcston & Shen&ndo&h road crosses the other , by nn overhead crossing. The people at that plnco want the Kansas City road to establish a station there , thinking that with the two roods they will have a boom right away. 13uc tlio road stops at ICnowltou , a mlle and tf half "away , and the company thinks there Is not business enough to Justify'the main- tcnunco of two stations so near together. The pcopio of Diagonal want the road to make Its station there and abandon Knowl ton. They have generously offered town lots to Knowlton pcopio If they will glvo up their hamlet and come over and llvo with them. Hut neither town is willing to surrender its grip upon the future , and so the commissioners were sent for. They wont down last week and had a great picnic. Each .town had prepared a Fourth of July celebration in their honor , and they wcro met vt the train by the local dignitaries and given a great rccoptipu. At Ktiowltou , the mooting was hold in the church , where local orators waxed eloquent with pralso of the future greatness of the placo. Then came ablgdinncr ; for the vis itors , and then everybody adjourned to the rival , Diagonal. Hero the exorcises , were hold lu n grove , and substantially the same proernmrae was carried out. The commis sioners listened patiently to the oratory and arguments and then took thi case under advlboment and caino away. The people of Diagonal urge that tno railroad is obliged to make a station at tliolr place , because it Is at the intersection of another roaJ , but as the crossing is an overhead ono and not on grade , some ralso the point that it is not the one contemplated in the law. The two little towns , neither of them much larger than a pint of cider , are wa tliu' anxiously for the decision of the commissioners on the question which is to thorn of momentous in terest. u i Tlio Gubernatorial Contest. Sioux CITT , la. , July 14. [ Special to THE BEK. ] The interest in the contest for the republican nomination for governor of Iowa is increasing hero. There is in Sioux City virtually no difference of opinion among the politicians as to qhlco among the three can didates who are contesting for the nomina tion. These candidates are Hon. H. C. Wheeler , of Sao county ; Lieutenant Gov ernor Hull , of Polk county , and Senator Hutchinson , of Wapollo county. Lieutenant Governor Hull has _ many personal friends hero , but they nro disposed to discard his claims for olllco this year , inasmuch as ho has not drawn a breath out of ofllco in Iowa from the day ho returned homo from.ono year's service in the -army during the civil war. The unanimous disposition hero is to stand byitliacandidate of northwestern Iowa , who Is Mr. VVheeldr. His county -is ono Of tlio extreme northwestern counties 6f the state , which constitute the Eleventh eon'- grcssional district. This district has never been allowed to name the republican candi date for governor. It has never been conceded - coded any of the prime honors at the party ia Iowa. And yet the party is now forced to depend upon the north western rqnntlos for a majority in the state. Outside of them the republican party is a minority party In Iowa. But for . their republican strength Larrabeo would have .boon de feated In 1883 , and again in 1837. These and similar facts have bound tbo re publicans of northwestern Iowa together in a common interest , and this feeling is stronger this year than over before. The entire northwestern quarter- the state will go to the convention virtually solid for Mr. Wheeler , who will have , Itis be lieved , much support from other sections of the state. This county is the lending county in this part of the state , being entitled to twenty-two delegates , and it will be a solid and distinctive Wheeler delegation. There are only three other counties In Iowa baring so inauy delegates as this county. Pullrd Off Hie Trains. DBS MOINF.S , la. , July 14. [ Special Tale- gram to TUB BEE , ] A rather peculiar case of a railroad going out of business is found In southern Iowa. This is the Ceutorvillo , Moravia & Albla railway , twenty-four miles long , running from. Kolay to Alula. The , road has never paid expenses , and tno' ' owners cor.cluded a few days ago that they couldn't afford to run It for the moro pleas ure of running a railroad , and so pulled off the trains. The people along the line of the road that had contributed some $40,000 in taxes to help build it , are not very v/oll pleased at the turn things have taken ; but smco the road doesn't pay expenses its own ers can hardly bo expected to run ll ut a dead loss. However , the case has been re ferred to the railroad commissioners to sue if they can devise any relief for the people who llvo alone the line , but now llnd them selves living in the country , several inlles from railroad facilities. Xot n Sinecure. DHS MOIXKS , In. , July 14. [ Special to TUB H. ] Tbo mining Inspectors of Iowa have no sinecure. They have to cover a largo territory and keep close watch upon the op eration of the mines. There are three dis tricts , with an 'inspector for o'ach , Some time ago whentho assignment of districts was made the distribution was Hot nuito even In its disposition of the work , Some changes have therefore been made to romcdy that flifllculty. Marion county has boon taken from Inspector Birck's district and Is amioxed-to Inspector Stout's , and Jefferson and Van Bnron counties are taken from Mr. Dink's district and annexed to Inspector Glldroy's district. The Contaminated Iowa , DBS MOINES , la. , July 14. [ Special Tele gram to TUB BEB. ] The contamination of the Iowa river is still agitating the people who llvo along the river , and they are get ting rather Indignant ut the delay in abating the nuisauco. The state board of .health has received a sworn statement signed by 140 citizens o ( Indian Village , Tama county , stating that thov are suffering on account of the bad water ; that there is a scarcity of good water in the vicinity for man or boast. They also complain that the smell is Intoler able , and that the ilsh In the f Ivor are dying. The people of that vicinity put the blame for the pollution UDoniho Marshall to wnGlueoso works that empty their waste water into the river , and they insist .upon rollof even if the Glucose works has to malto a Special river of its own to carry oil the water. Colored Masons. DBS MOIXKS , la. , July 14. [ Special to Tun UKK. ] The Iowa grand lodge of colored Masons hold a successful meeting in this city last wcnk , The leading o ulcers elected for' the next year wore/ : Grand master , J. D. Gillam , Kookulc ; deputy grand master , George Wright , Burlington ; grand lecturer , K. W. Vauctmn , Das Moines. The next meeting will bo held at Oskaloosa. fitnto Stenographer * ) . DBS MOIXEI , la. , Julv 14. [ Special to TJIB BEI : , ] The stenographers of the state have organized a slate association , and will hold a convontioirnoTO next Tuesday ami wodnes- . day. There nro snvoral hundred stenograph I ors who will probably enter the association , and an Interesting meeting Is expected. The discussions will Include the 'subject of moro uniform compensation , court work , and other topics of Interest to the profession , The dif ferent systems of stenographic work will also be considered. Hall Nonr Ijo Mnrs. Lit MAHS , to. , July 14. [ Special fologrum to Tim BKK. ] A terrible hall storm passed over this cttyflBst night. It was about four teen miles ftuci and two miles wide. It do- Btoyod thoiffiatiis of windows and every gar den In toww.JRlaliy farmers xvlll lese tholr entire crop. Several largo Holds ofcorn ( are pounded clear into the ground , not moro than nix inches of , stalk being loft standing. Mos of the corn will partially recover , but small grain has suffered worse , ns it is cither entirely smashed Into the ground or broken down so it can't bo cut. The loss will bo many thousarfds. Snvero AVImt. Gut.woob , la. , July 14. | Spoclal Tele gram to TUB BRR. ] A very novoro wind and rain storm prevailed hero 'last evening about 8 o'clock , doing much damage to fruit and corn. About one-third or the apples were blown from the trees and the growing corn was badly lodged , Trees were broken and considerable other damage done. Tlin Mi88igni | > pl la. , July 14. During a heavy thunder atorni last 'night more than five inches of water fell in six hours. The Mississippi river rose seventeen inches dur ing the night , but began subsiding this morn ing. It is feared much damage hai been done to the crops. * THE LANGLJAGEOFTHE WORLD. the Mont Complete Medium for the Expression of Thought * Ono ot the dreams of philosophers for ngos has been the discovery or in vention of a language which slmll undo the work of'tho Tower of Babel ; a tongue which till kindreds and neoplcs and nati6ns can spolik ; n medium of communication which shall ho so nearly .perfect thnt nil the people of the world shall hnvo the power of communi6ating with each other' , and thnt the man of Europe and tlio , man of Asia and the man of America may put their several thoughts and ideas Into a common form and'u common mode of expression. In the palmy dnys of Rome thisdrenui was realizes" iu part , for the mailed hand of the conqueror bore ns. well a Latin grammar as n Latin sword , and the vassals of Rome were forced to learn the speech of the nation which had subdued them ; and so to-day in every country where the Roman eagles How can bo traced the remains of the Latin language and the inlluonco of the Latin literature. But in time the somi1- universal languago'was replaced hy the vernacular , and Latin , us a spoken lan guage , died and was hurled , since which timd there has boon nothing which could aspire Jo the dignity of a universal liinv uage. A few yjia s ago a priest named Schloyor iii ejilod a-languago which ho1 called Volumil and which ho hoped would bccdimj universal , or at least so nearly so asMjiJ'furnish a means of inter- cpinmunicat\oii among dilTorent na tions' , but tljoro is little indication that Volapuk is making much headway , ex cept among a'cdrtain class who are fond of novelty allftTVlio have a natural tnsto for philology.1 f People in general do not take kindly to Volnpuk , and this fact alone is fatal to its universality. At ono time French had some preton- tions to hocoming'tho language of Eu rope. Like Jhe-Romans , the French , under the llrstpNupolooii _ , spread their language ovcr the whole continent und established it'fts the language of courts and iploniacsi pgrlmgsibecauso it waster tor flttell ? oJcottCeal * thought -ihaii any-other spoftwii longu . It has held its own well n what taro called polite circles , hut iirhasgombfar short of being a universal itWrg"uage. - " _ ' But of latethoref.hasarisen a now as pirant for popular favor in the English language , says 4 the San Francisco Chronicle. ; No < 4 modern tongue has begun to make thOistrides that English is making , ami itLms : como or is coining to bo recognized as the most complete and exact medium for the expression of thought now extant. "William Walter Phelpsrhas recently told us that the proceedings of the Sam- onn conference > at Berlin ' were conducted in English , and that the draft of the treaty was muuo out in English , because it was found that the terms wore made more clear and ex plicit than they could have boon if written in Frpuch. Mr. Phelps says that now that the precedent has boon sot it is not unlikely that every future conference of the kind will bo carried on in English , and that it is the lan guage of the. world. It is not strange that clearness and exactitude should bo possessed to a marked degree by the English lan guage. Unlike most other languages , it is eclectic as well as evolutional. It takes its own elements and builds thorn up and improves upon them , at the same time seizing upon and appropriating a root or a stem or a whole word from some other language when it deems it proper or necessary. It lovio ? tribute upon every tongue of the world , civil ized and uncivilizedand atonco domes ticates and naturalizes it acquisitions , hlonding them with itself and defying anyone to question.Hs authority so to do. The Anglo-Saxon race is the race of conquest , but its victories of them'osent are , for the most part , bloodless.ones. Its arms are the gleam engine , the elec tric telegraph , and the printing press ; not the short sword of the Roman legions nor the sabres of Napoleon's cuirassers. It , too , impose' : its language upon its subjects , hut it does so hy moral suasion instead of by force. It giycs solid and substantial -reasons for so doing , and few of the nationaof tfyo earth arn prepared - pared to gainsay them. It is hardly too much to say \thUt \ hy , the end 'of the twentieth cojitury the "civilized world may bo an EdIMsh-spoaking world , and that the clraan'fit a universal language will find Its ruaflzntioii in the speech of Chaucer and mOcapearo and Longfel low and Hawthorne. Catarrh"cuVc'ul ' ! health and sweet breath socur8Uv'hy Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy , Price CO cents. ' Nasal injector free. For salqJti.Y .Goodman Drug Co . A There is irnSfflhswick a little negro boy whoso'yqtnis ilrobaby do not exceed eight , who huff1 ifuvor attended school , but whoso naraVTlT genius is romarknblo. says the BrunV.vlEk' Ga. , Times. His' name is AlOxmiuJr Washington. He is known as "FrotTohor , " from the fact that , without license and without donomlnatloit ? UFK ho makes his living by * preaching to the negroes , cbnnrfng somoumes 6 cents , sometimes $1 for UBounon , according to the nature of Ills congregation. On Sunday lost a Timus reporter heard this juvenile oxhortondohvoring a discourse on the gamblordviieaf the PopoCatlln's dock. In a quaint but thoroughly sen sible manner he condemned them to ovorlustihg death. His use of English so readily , always hrtvlng words to ex press a thought.is.cflrtainly remarkable. The nogrods almost reverence and wor ship hini'on ' account of his unusual in telligence. If your complaint'is want of appe tite , try liulf wino . "glass Angostura Bitters before meals. , Dr. J. G. B , Blo- gort & Sons , biilo manufacturers. At all druggi&ts. . WAS DEATH'S ' AMANUENSIS A Now York Doctor's Grim Con tribution to Solonoo. THE DIARY OF A POISONED MAN. lotin W. AVntoro Takes Morphine , Keeps nn Accurate Glironiule or Ills StifTorlujcn ami Iliou Blows Out Ills Brains. Interviewed the Grim Destroyer. Hoiv nn oducnto'l ' man , a scientist and physician.fools whllo trying to end his life with repeated doses of poison , his sensations anil experiences , IP told in nn extraordinary narrative loft by Dr. John W. Waters , who committed suicide on Sunday evening nt his lodging house , No. 30 College place , says a Now York dispatch to the St. Louis Globe-Demo crat. The record of his forty-olght hours' experiment with death is con tained in a letter found yesterday in his room. It Is addressed to his friend , Dr. G. W. Wells , ono of the medical exam iners of the Mutual Life insurance com pany. It is as cold-blooded and scien tific as the report-of a chemical nunly- sls. Dr. Waters was sixty-live years old. Up had boon a man of wealth. Years ago ho was the leading physician of Carson City , Nov. , whore ho had a flno homo and a practice worth 820,000. Thq letter to Dr. Wells is : i detailed ac count of his sensations after ho had swallowed poison enough to kill throe ordinary men. Ho intended that it ' should bo u , CONTUniUTION TO S1KDICAI , SCirNXJE. Ho wrote it-as Pasteur might write of inoculation experiments on dogs. For moro than thirty-six hours ho endured the agony tho'poison ' caused him. Al though his hand trembled so much that , much of his writing is almost illegible , he coolly jotted down his observations on the o'tToots of the poison. It failed to kill him , and ho put an end to the horrible rible tragedy with two shots from a re volver. The record begins in this fashion : "I took , as- near as I can estimate , fifty-eight grains of mornhino between 10 and 12 o'clock Friday night. My syringe only holds an ounce. The en tire number of injections was fifty-four , and I drank three and a half ounces of the solution. " At 2 o'clock he writes that the morphine has not produced any "soporific olTcct. " But his skin has been covered with "an itching , prickling rash. " His hand shakes so that ho can scarcely write. Ho fools nauboatod , but his stomach is ompty. His system is "completely relaxed , " the perspiration "profuse , " and the pulse rapid , "rarely falling below 100 , but varying so from minute to minute that 1 hardly know how to.charactorizo it. " At 4 o'clock ho writes : "I can scarcely believe that such a dose can fail to prove effectual. " A little later ! "There is no case on record of recovery from such a dose. Can it bo that this will fail ? " At 10 o'clock Saturday morning ho notes that it is twelve hours since ho took the dose , and. expresses surprise that ho still lives. At 2 o'clock ho be- gins-to think of taking cocaine. "I do not know the effect of cocaine , " ho adds , ' -and fear it would not bo deadly bnoiighHor ray'-purposo , bin I must try' it and take the chances. " Ho takes live drops and records "pro fuse perspiration" and "aggravated nausea. " At 11:30 : his stomach rejected "some ton or twelve ounces of dark green bile , " which affords him "somo relief. " Ho llnds his head "dizzy , " but his hand "steadier , " Ho comforts him self with the rolloction that on previous occasions when ho had _ taken morphine the soporific effects did not follow until twenty-four hours afterward , and adds : "It will bo INTERESTING TO NOTE the effects of the overwhelming dose taken last night when the time for its soporillc effect arrives. " At 4:20 ho writes : "I presume no ono else over had so tedious an exit , and I am at a loss to understand it. Of course , I know that I could take a largo dose of morphine without danger , but that over fifty grains could bo taken without proving promptly fatal never occurred to mo , and I believe still it will bo fatal to-night , when the tjoporihc effect comes on. " At 9 o'clock , twenty-threo hours after taking the morphine , ho experiences no soporific effect , and , the morphine - phino being all gone , takes moro cocoaino , and saya : "I would like to know how uuch cocouine is required to cause death. " A little later ho contemplates using a revolver. "I always had a dislike to shooting or stabbing or any mutilating , " ho writes. "It seems brutal , but I fear I must como to It. It seems that misfortune and failure attend my efforts oven to the end of my existence. Now , if the co- cainp fails , the revolver may also , for the cartridges "are ton years old. But they have always been kept well wrapped In the original box , and maybe bo good yet. " Atl2o'cloekSaturdaynight ho writes : "It is evident now that the morphine Is a failure. I am very much disappointed and don't know what is best to do. The revolver would bo perhaps the best , but I have a strong prejudice against using it , and. besides , it would alarm the house. " A little after 5 o'clock Sunday morning ho writes : "I am sinking , If my feelings are any guido. I shall not have to use the revolver. I can scarcely hold the pencil. " This follows at 0:30 : : "I am exceed ingly sick and weak. This is anything' but a pleasant way to end one's ' life. It is too tedious , painful and distressing. Hue luuibca alone would bo hard to boar , but when it is complicated with half a dozen othordistressing symptoms it is indeed hard to boar , and I shall not boar It moro than two hours longer. I can not'stand it. If I do not die by 8 o'alock I shall use the revolver. Ono symptom I did not mention was the INAllIfclTY TO JUDQJ5 OK DIHTANCKS , Everything appeared nearer to mo than it was , and In taking up anything I invariably reached beyond it. " At 1:25 : : "lam very thirsty from profuse porsp'ratton , and water does not seem to ngree with mo. What would I not give for some good brandy or champagne now if I had anything to give ? 1 am a tough ono , it Booms. I wonder if n bullet through the heart will kill mo , or ono through the brainV I must try it , for J can not endure this suffering any longer. It is now 8:50 , and I am no nearer death than I was at 8 o'clock , when I appeared to bo sinking , " This is the last entry : "It is 9 o'clock Sunday morning , and I will wait for death no longer. I will try the revolver and see how that works. I expect a good and immediate rcault from that if this trembling does not confuse my aim. I shall aim for the heart just below the fifth rib. You can not expect one to tell n story very connectedly when ho has taken so much poison ns I have. I have now boon thirty-six hours trying to kill myself , and I hayo not yet succeeded. It Is now 9:50. : The symptoms of dissolu tion are passing away. I want to use the pistol \yhllo still numb from the co- calno. I ntn nfrald my violent trem bling will disarrange my aim , butl will stonily the muzzle of the pistol on my breast and so steady my hand , I am feeling horrlbloi No food has passed- my lips for forty-eight hours , and my nervous system Is in n state of complete prostration from the onormouB doses of narcotics I have taken , I have no do- slro for food , and cannot have while the deathly nausea lasts. " That was the last flmry. According to Dr. Wntor's landlady ho was alive , seated at the table , apparently writing , nt 0 o'clock Sunday evening , when she took him some toast and tea. An hour later ho was dead , with a bullet in his brain. THE ORIGINAL HOME OF MAN. Where AVn Edoii 1/oontcd / ? 'Xlio Poo- trine of Involution. Eden , according to the prevalent idea of the teaching of the blblo , was n district of Armenia , watered by the Tigris Und Euphrates. The biblical narrative , in fact , mentions the Eu phrates as ono of the rivers of Eden. Undoubtedly , in the common bollof , Parndiso was In Asia , and not In Europe - rope or Africa. A low ingenious persons , it is true , have lo cated man's birthplace In Europe or Africa , some < having tno hardihood to establish it in America ; but these who have made the most fan ciful u&u of the scanty evidence supplied by the second chapter of Genesis have been content usually to find the "gar- don eastward in Eden , " within the lim its of Asiti. Scientists , who hold a special view respecting the mode of man's origin , nru approaching , it is pleasant to observe , says the Bal timore Sun , agreement with the general view as to Its place. In his now work on ovolutlon Mr. Alfred Wallace , who may bo said to rank with Darwin as the creator of the now view of the origin of species , expresses the belief that ninn originated in ono of the plateaus of Asia. Hnoukol's view WIB : somewhat dilTorent. Ho hold that man , or his progenitor , originated in a conti nent which once existed east of Africa and south of Asia , but which is at pres ent the bed of the Indian ocean. This continent , ho supposed , was con nected on the west with Madagascar and Africa and on the north with Asia , and it was by succcbsivo migrations westward and. northward that Africa and Asia were peopled. Hero in a trop ical region , according to Hneckpl , were found the conditions which favored the intellectual and physical development ot the progenitor of the human und the monkey races. Wallace holds , on the contrary , thnt man originated in Asia and in some part 'of it favored with a temperature of sub-tropical climate. "It is probable , " ho say.s , "that bo began his existence on the open plains or the high plateaus of the temperate or sub-tropical _ zone , whore the seed of indigenous cereals and nu merous horbivora , rodents , and game birds , with fishes , mollusks in the lakes and rivers and seas , supplied him with' sin. abundance of varied-food. " Hero ho would develop , not the aboroal struct ure of the monkey , fitted in hands and feet for obtaining ripened fruit from trees by climbing , but the btruc- turo that titled him to got his living while roaming through scanty woods and over the open plains. Mr. Wallace finds man related to the an thropoid ape. It is not his belief , of course , thut ho is descended from the ape as ho knows him , but th.xt man and the anthropoid ape are descended from n common ancestor. The genealogical tree of man and the ape , according to the ' evolutionist view , has many branches , widely separated for ages post , but if converging lines could bo followed back far enough a point , it is believed , would ultimately bo reached where tbo son wh.o was the lirstancostor of man was the brother of the ilrst ancestor of the anthropoid nno. The father of them both was of course noithor'maii nor ape. It was his sons who , differing much in character , force , and progrossivonoHs , developed in them selves and in succeeding generations the structure and qualities that now distinguish man and the ape from caoh other. To Mr. Wallace it is clear thnt ninn and the anthropoid tipes originated in the same region of the earth. Where , then , have the latter been found to bo now existing , or to have existed in former ngos ? They have never existed , it appears , in America , and did not exist in Africa when it was connected with Madagas car and both were separated from Asia. Madagascar was ( separated from Africa before the latter became joined with Asia by the Isthmus of Suez. The ani mals of ancient Africa are therefore to bo sought in Madagascar. But there are no traces of anthropoid apes in Madagascar. These , therefore , which now exist In Africa must have como. from Asia. There is proof that man existed before the Isthmus of Sue/ robe above the level of the ben , and , supposing his distribution to have been like that of his buppoaod relative , ho must have ranched Africa by land from Abia. The color of the Chinaman , intornieditito between the blitck of Africa and the white of Europe , Mr. ' Wallace thinks the original color of man. The suns of Africa ebon i'/ed the complexion of the African while the winters of Europe \vorehlnnchingtho European. % Further explanation of the plateaus of' Central Asia may bring to light , Mr , Wallace suggests , the early man , the missing linlc , whoso persistent alibi , so to spunk , is so damaging to the evolutionist. Mercury und potash mixtures dry up the secretions of tlio body , cause mercurial rhou- mutisin iinil dyspepsia , und Anally run the system down to Kiich u condition thnt other diseases are induced. Swift's Specific builds mi tlio putlcnt from tbc lirst dose , and gives life unit vigor to tlio wbolo human frumo. Tint Intcrnntioiinl Among the political and diplomatic innovations of which Prince liismnrck is the father , remarks Das Volk , the most novel and most amusing is the "international kiss. " says the Pall Mall Gtr/.otto , When Bismarck and Crisp ! mot , the Prussian surprised the Italian by giving him a hearty kiss. The poetry of kisses is encyclopaedical , but n Gorman pool has said that there are only three kibsc which come diront fnom heaven tlio kiss of a mother to her now-born babe , the first kiss of two lovers , und the last kiss which is impressed upon the lips of the doad. The Bismarckinn kiss IKW not boon anticipated by any of the poets and no precedent is to bo found for it in the rich literature of oscu'ntion. Many a poet has looked upon secrecy as ono of the elements of perfection in a kiss. The now diplomatic kiHS , how ever , was ostentatiously public , arid it was supposed to bo given by the whole of Germany to the whole of Italy , and to pass from Berlin to the remotest elec toral districts in the valley of Apulia , As Bismarck iu the glass of fashion to so many of our modern statesmen , wo may expect his diplomatic kiss to bo Jmftatoa. * When the shah arrives in London , may wo bo present to sue the kiss with which Lord Salisbury , iw premier of England , greets the highest dignitary in the train of the Asiatic potentate. _ _ Dr , Wertz , dentlttt , 1G07 Douglas at. GOOD , BAD AND INDIFFERENT Some Peculiarities of tlio "Laws or Nebraska , 1Q8D. " A GENTLE HINT TO CONGRESS , Tlio Work of the lnt Ijt-Rlslnturo Ghnriiotnrlzcdl by a Strange Ity nail Wisdom. How the Imw.4 llnvo BRIMIVntomiod. . OMAHA , July 13. To the Editor of Tin UKK : Tlio great Napoleon In his march through Egypt formed his army Into hollow squares. Many "wlso men" ncrompnnlcd him to study the iniclont cities. Wlicn his army was attacked by the enemy tlio noncombatants - combatants sought protection within the square ; so tlio soldiers were In the habit of crying out : "Jnclc-aises and aavunts lo the cctitor. " The first ilnys of January of this year nro memorable In the history or Nebraska , for then our suvmits gathered themselves to- pother ut Lincoln , tlio center or legislation of this sovereign state. Tliolr labors nro now bofdro mo In a book ontltlcd "Laws of Nebraska. 1889. " Between Iti covers IB the undoubted evidence of the work of the lonn- careil animal , ono Instance of which will cite. Chapter SO authorises transcripts of Judg ments ami decrees of the United Suites court R to bo IHeil In the ofllco of the clorka of the district court. Whether It Is Intended to repeal the United States law * upon this subject or not Is a question which K hard to answer judging from the act itself , but con gress wants to "look a llttlo out , " Ono of tlio most Important enactments Is that relating to the descent of property. Heretofore a wlfo had only u dower rlgnt In the lands of hci husband that li , a life estate - tate In tho'lncomo of one-third of his real estate , liut chapter ! > 7 amends tho1 law so that now the wlfo takes one-third of her husband's real estate In fee simple , which virtually makes her a joint tenant with him. Tlio husband also has a fee In one-third of the lands of his wife , thus doing away with the cstato by cpurtesy. So radical a change Is apt to complicate estates , especially largo ones. Chapter ll ! amends the charter of metro politan cities ( Omaha ) . Tlio principal changes are in roioronco to the powers of the police mid park commissioners. Chapter 57 provides for a very complete system of registration of voters In cities. Chapter 20 gives the board of llro and police commissioners the exclusive right to grant liquor licenses. An nuiondntory and supplemental net to the liquor law is found In chapter id , giving the authorities the right to ontorany building to search for liquor mid destroy the same. This law was enacted so as to reach saloojis within the "two-milo limit , " and houses of prostitution. Chapter 17 creates a rcservo fund for met ropolitan police , by assessing all policemen not to exceed ono uor cent of their pav , ap propriating the flues of policemen for mis conduct , ono fourth of all rewards received , and one-third of all moneys received by sale of unclaimed property , which Is to bo uscil to support policemen while sick or disabled , funeral expanses , relief of their families in case of death , and to pension those honorably discharged. Chapter 22 , entitled "Ofllcoi-H , " gives cities of tlio metropolitan class six justices of the peace instead of eighteen , us at present. Chapter S : ) is a hint to our large-hoartod philanthropists to donate parks and publlo grounds to cities and villages. Don't ' all speak at Once , gentlemen. The governor can pardon two good , well- behaved convicts on the glorious Fourth of July of each year , so s.iyu chapter 30. State banks , as per chapter U7 , must liavo more cusli and less wind otherwise bankers , unless they go to Canada , will pay a line not to exceed 810 000 , or spend live years in the penitentiary. The occupation of tlio professional juror is goneif the law as providcd > in chapter 43 bo strictly complied with. ' r Insurance companies did not got in their work very well with the legislature of 18SU , for chapter 47 require * them to pay a certain rate to llro com panies In cities and villages , whllo chapter 48 compels the insurance company to pav the face value of the policy. The registers of deeds worked the boys In good shupe , for from this time on they hold ofllco for a term of four years , instead of two , as heretofore. There are a great many other nets of minor , importance , mostly amendatory of existing laws. Taken as a whole , the last legislature , ns evidenced by this book , has dnno very creditable work. I presume the courts will "knockout" the usual proportion ns uncon stitutional ; many will rcqulro a jualcial in terpretation , some will remain ns "dead let ters , " and the next tluio our savants meet they will repeal souio. So tno work will go on forever. ' X. X. The Choir Reason for the great suctcsi of Hood's Havrfnpnrlllu Id found In tlio nrtlclo Itiolf. It Is M orlt That Wins , mul the fact Dint llocxl'rt Sarriapurlllu actually accomplishes all that IH Ualmqil for it , Im.s gtvon Uili ineill- clnu u popularity and KUH greater than any otliur har.iapurilln or bloo 1 purifier. Hood's Snrsnparllla li sold by drug- jlsts. Jl ; six for JS. Vroparod byC. I. Jload A Jo , , .Apothecaries , f.o\vull. Mum , Ulva It a tiial. w Bisrwait yvu * HAKIM AMERICA .MAIL g dAS-S-KlRK li HITE CLOU ATINfiOA * WRAPPERS ( UXtC 3IZE } > Tec ivc t. 3 HAHDSOME3