Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 24, 1900, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE OMAHA DAILY" P.E12: TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1000.
Telephones 013-CDt.
50c each Special
Sale of all Sum
mer Wrappers
chased from 86me cheap manufacturer to sell at bargain
counters but the balance of our own summer Btock
There arc outto a good many largo sizes among thorn, This sale Includes nil our
(1.00, U.25 and $1.60 Wrappers Salo price 60c each. ,
Alro one dozen wrappers sizes 10, 43 and 41 always sold at $4. 50 salo price J1.E0.
We Cloie Our Storo Saturdays at 6 P. M.
aflBRTa von rorrcii icid glovks ajd McOALis PATTEn.u,
Thompson, Beldem &Co.
THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE DRY GOODS HOUSE IN OMAHA.
T. M. O. Ju BUILDING, COB. 10T1I A.WD DOUGU4I ATI,
r
European governments have taken the stand
abovo Indicated. The last of tho answers
to Secrctnry Hay's note reciting the Conger
message has come, nnd nil of them In terms
polite nnd diplomatic, express utter In
credulity fn the authenticity of the Conger
message.
rjoililnoiv DoiiIiIn Mmiilnr,
Consul General Ooodnow, himself n man
of good Judgment, alro cabled k warning to
Secretary Hay ngalnst tho nr-ceptnnco of
the message without confirmation, but tho
Etato department has fully considered the
message In nil of Its aspects, has carefully
weighed tho numerous objections and sus
picions put forth here nnd In Europe, and,
without gunraiteelng tho authenticity of
tho message, feels It to be a matter of
prlmo duty to act upon the theory that It Is
genuine.
llPiupy'H Trip to TIph Tsln.
Admlrnl Homey' notification to tho de
partment that ho has gono In portion up tho
Pl-Ho from Taku to Tlcn Tsln Is attributed
to tho rocelpt by him of Secretary Long's
urgent tncjsago to hasten the offorts to get
to Pckln, nnd Important news from him Is
expected noon.
The War department. It appears, under
estimated tho time 'that would bo required
for tho Grant to nrrlvo at Nagasaki.
ClimmliiK tlip t'liliiPKp miiic.
After mnturo consideration the offlclalo of
tho Stnto department have come to tho con
clusion that by a telegraphic error the name
of tho Informant of Consul Oonoral Oood
now has been turned Into "Titan" from
"Yuan," Tho latter Is the famous Yuan
Shlh Kl, the governor Of tho province of
Shan Tung, Ho always Inn maintained mi
attitude of neutrality and even has leaned
toward posltlvo friendship for tho foreign
ers. Ho has froth tho first divided with
Shflng, tho director of posto and telegraphs
at Shanghai, tho distinction of bolng tho
only means bf communication botwecn
Tekln and tho outsldo world. Therefore It Is
extremely probable that he has served In
tho same capacity In thl( Instance. On thu
other hand It this really cmno from Prlnco
Tuan tho fart would bo of great nlgnlflcance.
In the opinion of trp officials hero It would
Indlrnto tbilt thfs official has cither been
grossly misrepresented n.s to his nntl-for-elgn
tendency or that he U seeking to escapo
responsibility for the outrages on foreign
ers, an act Itself significant of n breaking up
of the antl-foroign pirty, with each principal
looking out toi himself.
NEWS FROM MISSIONARIES
Cubic from flip I'nu Itenclica I'resliy
tcrliiu llouril of l-'ori'lK"
Missions.
NEW YORK, July 23. Tho Presbyterian
Hoard of Foreign Missions today received
tho following cablo from Cho Foo:
"Situation not Improved. Shantun, gov
ernor Cho Foo, tnotol, publish Imperial edict
enforcing protection foreigners, Christians.
Peopfo Pokln nllvo. Trying through gov
ernor get word Pao Ting Fit, whero for
eigners In ynmcn supposed safe.
"TOWLEIl."
Nov. Arthur J. Drown, ono of tho secre
taries of tho board, said: "Wo do not know
nny missionary named Towler. Probably
tho signature should be Fowler. All our
missionaries left Cfo Foo for Corcn or
Japan somo days Hgo. Boforo leaving thoy
havo asked Consul General Fowler to keep
our board Informed."
Tho Foreign Methodist Missionary society
today received thu following rnblo:
"FOO CHOO, July 21. Danger. Mission
aries leaving. LACY."
In rcsponso to tho cable tho secretary nt
onco forwarded 3,000 to help tho refugees to
get away.
riov. Dr. John Fox of tho American Dlble
socloty today, received, a translation of one
of thf Inflammatory Epccches used by tho
Iloxcrs. This wrh forwarded by "the now Dr.
John It. Iijkes of Shnnghal, who received It
from tho tfsv. Charles F. Gammon nt Tlcn
Tsln. It Is a sample of mnny varieties, of
which 200.000 copies wero distributed In
Tien Tsln crty. on Juno 4. Only tho prompt
arrival of foreign ttroop prevented a second
Tlcn Tsln massacre, if Is ns follows:
Sacred Kdlrt Issued by tho Lord of
Wealth and Happiness: Tho Catholic nnd
"A Little Spark Map
Make Much Work'
r Vie Utile "sparks" of bad blood lurking
fa the system should be quenched with
Hood" s Sarsaparilla, America's great bood
purifier. It purifies, vitalises And enriches
the blood of both sexes and all ages. Cures
scrofula, salt rheum, dyspepsia, catarrh.
3ccd& ScVtiafxttidt
M 11 1 cV. iit Jk- -41 4 M
j Send this coupon and
I Only 10c
to Tho Bee Publishing Co., Omaha Neb j
it:
For part J;
5 Paris Exposition Pictures, t
Sent postpaid to any itddross,
wt stay at homo and enjoy tho proat exposition. 16 to 20 vlows .
"25 every wok. covering all points of lntort?st. Altogether there will i,
bo 2(1 parts containing 350 views. Tho ontlre set mailed (or 2.00. j
llec, July 23, 1900.
Tuesday Morning at 8 o'clock Wo
will close out .all our summer wrappers
these are not goods which have been pur
Protestant rcllclotin belne Insolent to the
gods nnd extinguishing sanctity, rendering
no obedience to lMddhlsm nnd enroling
both henven find enrth, to rain clouds now
no longer visit us; but 8,000 spirit soldiers
will descend from heaven nnd sweep the
empire clean of nil foreigners. Then will
the gentle showers once moro water our
lands, nnd when tho threats of soldiers nnd
clash of HwordH ar heard heralding wopk to
nil our people, then the Huddhlstn' Patriotic
League of IIoxith will bo able to protect
tho empire unci bring peace to nil Its peo
ple. Hasten, then, to sproil1 this doctrine far
nnd wide, for If you gain one adherent your
own person will ho absolved from all futuro
misfortunes. If you gain live adherents
to the faith your wholo fnmlly will bo ab
solved from all evils, nnd If you gain ton
adherents to the fnlth your whole village
will bo absolved from nil calamities. Those
who gntn no adherents to the causo shall
bo decapitated, for until nil foreigners shall
bo killed the rnln cannot over visit tlx.
Thoso who aro ho unfortunato ns to have
drunk water from wells poisoned by for
eigners should nt onco mako uso of tho
following dlvlno prescription, the In
gredients of which nro to bo Hwnllowed,
when tho poisoned patients will recover:
"Dried black plums, hnlf an ounce; noln
num delcamara, half nn ounce; -cncommla
ulmoldes, hnlf nn ounce."
A lotter was rocelvod today by Dr. A.
Woodruff Halsey from John M. Swan, M. D.,
dated Canton, Juno 18. He says that tho
province of Kwnng Tung, of which Canton Is
tho capital, has been rlpo for rebellion for a
year past. Only tho vigorous measures of
1.1 Hung Chang In suppressing piracy rind
robbery had preearved order. At tho moment
of writing Dr. Swan said tho bodies of eight
men wero exposed In public places within
ten minutes' walk of his house. The men
had been put iO death by torture. Dr. Swan
also said that largo quantities of arms and
ammunition had been Imported at Canton
during the last year.
THRONE URGED BOXERS ON
Mllnmiry Wilder Clinrgrft (lint C'hl
iipsp (iovprmiipnt Incited l'rc
pnt Trouble.
IIOSTON, July 23. Tho American board
has received a letter f"rom Rev, George D.
Wilder, dated Tien Tsln, Juno 12, which
fclvoB details concerning tho outbreak of the
I3oxor movement and makes iknown tho
readiness and deto'rmlriatlori 'with Svhlch
Captain McCalln of the United States navy
respondod to calls for aid. Rev. Sir. Wilder
says:
The Hoxer movement hns reached a cli
max. Murder und arson nro filling the
provliico from Knltjnn to LI Ching, ap
parently, with Tlon Tsln, Pckln and P.io
t ng Fu as n grout centrnl trlnngle where
the lire Is the hottest. In tho triangle many
minor outrages were committed on Cath
olics nnd Protestants during May nnd
great numbers of lloxern imuimMxii At
tho last of the month tho word came down
mini mo inroii? lor mom to create ells
order" ns rnpldly ns possible, They jath
cred In ureal force north of Chou Chou, and
on May 8 begun work, burning the railroad
Stations of Lin 1.1 Tin rMtntif lluln Tlin
and Lit Kou Chluo that day. Two men, a
woman nnd a child were brutally murdered.
Tho Hoxors went on looting station nfter
stutlon on tho lino from Tien Twin to Pekln.
e reported to tho consul and he sent
for troop. Tho Jnpnnese landed a few on
Tuesday afternoon, and tho Nownrk sent
us 113 marines and bluejackets and two ma
chine guns and n three-Inch cannon under
the energetic lend of grand old Cnptaln
McCnlla. Tho railway refusing to bring
them, they came on iv tug and lighter,
reaching us on Tuesduv nlirliL All nation.
nlltles gave them n rousing reception. Their
prompt nrrlvnl doubtlosn prevented an at
tack on tho settlement by thousands of
noxcrn. in two or tnree unys other na
tionalities arrived and Tien Tsln was pro
tectrd. Hut, alas, for those In tho Interior.
After tho trains stopped frantic nppeals
onmo for protection to the ministers nt
Pekln. Lnst Sundny night tho various con
suls hero had n stormy meeting until 12
o'clock midnight. The French and Hits
slan representatives bitterly opposed send
ing troops to relievo Pekln. They with
drew for consultntlon severnl time, Con
sul Carts (Hrltlsh) held strongly for that
action, followed by the American nnd Jnpn
noso consuls. Finally Captain McCnlla
nam; -wo nnvo tiiineu u good deal. Now,
I will toll you what l will do. Our minister
telegraphs that ho Is In danger. It mat
ters not what others do nr do not dn Mv
entlro force of bluejackets will tnke a train
and start ror renin tomorrow morning.
Tho Ilrltlsh. Japanese nnd nermann fol
lowed this lend, the French nnd KiiKHlans
refusing. Hut the next morning, when the
train wns made up, they sent In Inrgo
forces, which bnd to report to Captain Mc
Calln und then wait, portly for n second
section. Twenty-fpur hundred set out thnt
day and the next rtnv .100 Germans. Tortav
another train with officers hns gone. The
llrst train pushed Hhead two of the Hat
enrs with seven cannon nnd machine guns
nnd material for track construction. Wo
do not know how fnr they have gone. The
Chlneso tracklayers deserted nnd American
sailors took up tlie work. Tho Boxers who
had boldly fared Chinese troops armed with
blank cartridges, nr under orders to tire
high, g.tvo these trains n wide berth,
though they wero massed at various points
along tho line. This forco mny bring bark
those In peril If the gAtes are opened. If
not. It will be war against 75.0no Chlnee
troops armed wuti foreign rules and arm
lerv. but. thank henven. with Chinese nm
munition. Two thousand Cossacks nnd BOO
Hrltlsh aro mnrchlng overland from Pel Tnl
Ho. we nro told.
Tho viceroy was In consultntlon with four
Iloxer representatives on Hniurnay nnd is
snld to have secured their nromlso not to
massacre foreigners at t'ao ling mi,
Vrmy KiiKliif cm Ordered AVcst.
WEST POINT. N. Y., July 23. Company
E, battalion of engineers, will start for
San Francisco tomorrow. Orders to that
effect wero received from General John M
WlUon, chief of engineers, today.
HOLDS THEM IN PAWN
(Continued from First Page.)
allies In the south and tho other of tho
Russians In the north, confront the Chlnoso
and tho rising so tho czar Is said to argue
would be bound to collapse.
"We want no conquests," he Is reported
to have declared at tho conclusion of n sit
ting of tho council. "What wo desire la to
protect our frontiers nnd to sleer Into
smooth waters tho Chinese ship of state,
now buffeted by tho waves of civil war."
There Is nothing further this morning that
throws any light on tho mysterious situa
tion. Two" urgent dispatches wero addressed
yesterday by tho Chinese minister to the
Pekln government and to tho director of
telegraph administration strongly advocat
ing the necessity of restoring telegraphic
communication with n view of enabling tho
powers to obtain proof of tho safety of the
foreign ministers, t'ntll such proofs nro
secured no one hero Is Inclined to alter tho
opinion thnt tho Chlncso nro merely Juggling
to gain time.
Humor circulates briskly around tho per
sonality of 1.1 Hung Chnng. Ho Is credited
with n mission to offer to cedo to tho al
lied powers two provinces ns Indemnity for
tho Pckln outrnges nnd also to offer to
restoro order nnd give facilities for trade
with tho outside world on condition of tho
surrender of Klao Chan, Wei I let Wcl nnd
Manchuria by tho powers nnd tho wlth-
drawal of nit missionaries. Little attention,
however, need bo paid to nny of these
rumors.
Ill IIiIiik ( Iiiiiik Suspected.
In a private me3sngo from Shanghai It Is
assorted that LI Hung Chang avows that
tho object of his Journey is to place tho
regular Chlncso army In lino with tho al
lied troops for tho suppression of tho
Doxcrs.
Tho Times editorially suggests that LI
Hung Chnng Is playing the old game of the
sublime porto by putting forwnrd proposals
which will appear In different degrees and
different ways to different powers. It says:
"President McKlnley has been asked to
mediate nnd the request hns been fncllltntcd
by tho care which has been taken In Wash
ington not to commit the United States to
any very thorough-going policy."
Indian troops nro dally arriving nt Hong
Kong, Three transports reached there yes
terday nnd two others hnvo left Hong Kong
for Tnku.
Reports from Canton say the city Is out
wardly quiet, hut that thero is n strong
undercurrent of unrest among tho Chinese.
Only n fow Kuropenn ,women hnvo left,
mnny still remaining.
St. Petersburg dispatches represent tho
situation In Manchuria ns fnr moro serious
than had been supposed. It is asserted that
tho Chlneso hnvo occupied Hnllar, where
tho Russian rnllwny stnff Is surrounded nnd
In despernto straits.
According to the St. Petersburg corre
spondent of tho Times Oenernl Kouropat
kln, tho Russian minister of war, will prob
ably hecomo commander-ln-chlct of tho
Russian forces in China and will presuma
bly take command of nil tho allied troops.
BUSY TIMES WITH THE ARMf
(inventor's lulnnil ItcscmhlpM the
Ncpiipn of the Spanish
Vnr.
NEW YORK, July 23. Oovernor'H Island
and tho ferry entrance at the Battery re
call tho days when tho troops were prepar
ing to depart for tho south nt the outbreak
of the Spanish-American war. Threo com
panies of the Fifteenth United States In
fantry, I, L and K, aro under orders to
leavo Governor's Island tomorrow for San
Francisco, nnd tho soldiers believe they
will seo actlvo scrvlco In China before they
return to this part of the world. Relatives
nnd friends, the majority of them women,
spent as many hours of Sunday with them
as tho rules and regulations would permit.
Mnny a tearful farewell was taken by tho
visitors, but tho soldiers themselves joked
and laughed, nnd acted generally as If tho
prospects of fighting In a foreign land were
pleasing to them. The threo companies
that will begin tho long Journey tomorrow
will bo undor tho command of Major O. W.
Cornish. Preparations for departure havo
all been completed, baggago Is packed nnd
olllcers and men aro ready for the sound
of the bugler's "fall In." At Ogdcn. Utah.
Company M of tho samo regiment will Join
tho contingent from Governor a Island. This
company for a year has been at Fort Mc
Phenson, Oa. The companies will go Into
camp at tho Presidio In San Francisco, pre
paratory to shipping for tho Philippines or
China, ns may bo determined by the War de
partment. The departuro of the companies of tho
Fifteenth regiment will leave Ocncral
llrooko with but a small garrison nt Gov
ernor's Island until tho arrival of troops
now In Cuba. The Island, which Is tho
official headquarters of tho Department of
tho Kant, will for tho present he garrisoned
by companion of tho Fifth artillery, now
stationed around tho harbor.
Army officials In this city, particularly
those attached to tho quartermaster s do
partmont, nro very busy In looking nfter the
troops ordered home from Cubn to their old
stations. Tho belief Is general thnt theso
commands will not long bo permitted to
onjoy tho comfortB of their homo stations,
but nfter a brief resf will bo recruited and
sent to tho cast via San Francisco.
Company K, of the hnttnllnn of engineers,
two officers nnd lf,0 men, stntloned nt West
Point, Is tinier orders to proceed to the
Pnclflc roast. This detachment will got
away tomorrow.
Moro troops nro exported here this week
from Cuba. Tho trnnsport Rnwllns Is now
on tho wny with part of tho Fifth Infantry
which will go to Fort Sheridan, near
Chicago. Two battnllons of tho Second In
fantry, twenty-two olllcers and 850 men, are
on the transport Sedgwick, which Is expected
hero tomorrow. Theso troops will bo sent
west at onre to recuperate nnd recruit
Orders have been Untied by the Washing
ton authorities to withdraw tho First In
fantry, now stntloned nt Ounnajay and Plnnr
del Rio, In Cuba, and early next month part
of the Klovcnth infantry will leavn Cuba.
A squadron of Iho Fifth cavalry has also
been ordered from Cuba to Fort Meyer
Wash. Theso aro nil seasoned troops nnd
It U expected that they will be ablo to give
n good account of themselves If It becomes
necctsary for them to go to China. Army
officers stationed nround New York aro In
clined to the belief that most of the troops
now under orders to go to San Francisco
will bo landed on Chinese soil.
Army officers say that tho Chlneso trouble
and the prospects of United States troops
seeing, service In that country have given
a great Impetus to recruiting In this city
Nearly nil the regiments In the scrvlco nro
below their quotas, and the officers In charge
of tho recruiting stations hnvo received or
ders to redouble their elforts to uocuro men
for tho regiments now in the flohl. Most
of tho applicants, mnny of them veterans
of tho Spanish war, want to be nrslgnod to
regiments under orders or likely to recclvo
orders to go to Asl.i. No difficulty Is an
tlclpatcd by those In army circles In secur
Ing all tho men necetsary.
Co m in miller of Kcllef Force I nUiinvtit
WASHINOTON, July 23. It Is unknown
to tho State department even yet who la
to command tho International relief column
on Its march to Pekln, which begins tho
first of next month. News dlspatchrs of
late date havo assigned tho command to
one of two Russian generals Dragomtroff
and Llnevieh, Tho State department known
nothing of this, but has been afeumlng that
In tho possible event of the failure of tho
internationals to agreo among tjbcmselves ou
nny other basis, the JapAhe&c field marshal,
Nodzu, would command by virtue of senior
ity and rank.
LETTER COMES FROM PEKIN
I'nreiiln nf 31 ImhIoiiii ry nt CIiIiicap Cni
Itlll Itccclve nnlstle Dated
Mny tlO.
I1URL1NOTON, la.. July 23. (Special.)
A letter haa como from out tho tomb of
Pckln to tho nnxlous parents of Miss Eliz
abeth K, Leonard, living near Darlington,
who Is a Presbyterian missionary In Pckln.
Tho letter Is dated May 30, nnd In a wny
unconsciously foreshadows tho doom that
has probably come upon tho foreigners
there. It Is, In part, as follows:
I'tShiN, .May .to.-Dear Folks: Wo dis
missed nil the girls from our school and
sent them to their homes, not thinking It
safo to keep such n body of large girls hero.
I think we will be spared nny harm. Wo
do not know whnt n night or n ilny may
bring forth. have had n guard of Chl
neso soldiers nt our gates since n week
ago Sunday. They were sent by the north
yamen unreqticsUd by us. 1 suppose they
aro very little good. I doubt If there is n
gun In tho outfit. I venture thero Is no
ammunition, Helng modest young womdn,
It would bo unbecoming in us to look
nround und nsk questions. No attack has
boon mndo Insldo tho city yet, nnd we hopo
thero will bo none. To be sure there nre
Iloxcrs practicing here, but It will bo very
(luring for them to do anything nt tho capi
tal, and It seems to us It would mean the
overturning of the government.
Tho noxors In practicing bump their
heads three times on the ground In n cer
tain direction nnd repent some form of
words nnd full back In n state of trance,
where thoy lie for ii little while then get
up and beat themselves furiously with
their hands or Chinese swords and say
they nro some particular spirit. They claim
thoy nro invulnerable. One of the leaders
who was making such a claim was asked
by n man If ho would glvo permission tor
him to try n sword nrross his neck. Tho
Hoxer said, "Certainly," whereupon the
sword wns uppllcd with considerable, force
and the head rolled to the ground. Tho
fnther of the Doxer stnndtng by was nsked
for nn explanation. He suld his son was
not suhiclently tinder the spirit, thnt he
himself could not bo hnrrned, Tho man
replied that ono dend tnnn was enough ror
him nnd ho would not try the sword on
another.
EIGHTH INFANTRY IN PORT
After Heine ItccrilltPil Will lie Sent
(nr Heivlpp In Hip
Orient.
NEW YORK, July 23. Tho United Stntes
army transport Crook, having on board a
detachment of the Eighth United States In
fantry from Havana, arrived hero this morn
ing. Tho enlisted men of tho Eighth Infaptry
on the Crook numbor 012 and nro under
tho command of Lieutenant Colonel P. II,
Ellis. The troops comprise bIx companies,
band nnd hospital corps. Tho officers of
tho regiment, with families and servants,
number thirty-six persons. There nro also
on board eleven cabin passenger". Including
Colonel W. V. Rlchnrds, adjutant general,
Division of Cuba; Colonel W. L, Hasklna,
Second United States artillery; Major 1J. S.
Godfrey, Seventh United Stales cavalry;
Major A. C. Taylor, Second United States
artillery; Lieutenant K. . Shull, Second
artillery, nnd N. S. Stelnhart, chief clerk,
Division of Cubn.
Tho Eighth infantry contingent Is ex
pected to proceed, Immediately after release
from quarantine, to n post In the west,
probably Fort Snelllng, where the regiment
Is to be recruited to full strength for service
In Chlnn. The officers of tho Eighth Infan
try on board the Crook nre: Ltcutennnt
Colonel P. Its Ellis, Majors J. F. Stretch
and W. J. Pitcher, Captain C. W. Kennedy,
adjutant; Captain John Stafford, quarter
master; Lieutenant M. n. Steward, com
missary, and Lieutenant J. F. Jnrda, bat
talion ndJutnntiCaptalns C. P. Tcrrett, M.
D. Parker, Fred iPerklns, Charles Oerhardt
and F. H. Sargent, .Lieutenants F. J. Knud
son, H. M. Merchant, 11. A. Eaton, E. W.
Perkins, J. F. James, C. n. Smith, F. W.
Healy, H. P. Goodnow and D. II. Pope; Urs.
N. M. Salcoby and Do Porteus, and Chief
Musician P. C. Conterno.
Tho Crook will be detained until tho five
days' quarantlno expires, which will be
nbout midnight. This time may bo short
ened somewhat because the troops wore
aboard the transport for some time before
sailing. All are well on board and the
men nre In excellent condition.
Colonel Kimball, depot quartermaster, an
nounced today that tho Crook would re
main In tho bay during the day. Tomor
row morning tho 'roops will bo landed and
go to tho Grand Central etatlon, from
where they will go by rail to Fort Snclllng,
Minn., whero they will recruit and refit
ready for further orders. Three battalions
of tho Fifteenth regiment, stationed on
Governor's Island, will bo taken from the
Island tomorrow morning to the Lehigh
Valley depot In Jersey City, whe o they will
go to San Francisco. They will take with
them two curloadp of provisions, medical
stores, canvas warehouses, bardwaro and
entrenching tools. Tho First battery of
artillery from Fort Wadsworth and the First
battery from Fort Hamilton will tako the
place of these three battalions on the Is
land. Sixteen packers bovo nlso been sent to
Seattle, Worn., 'there to Join tho packing
trains now preparing for servlco In China.
RUSHING TROOPS TO CHINA
Hancock Nulla for Tnkn Ahead of
Schedule with Artillery
und Soldier.
WASHINGTON, July 13. Tho War de
partment U considering tho advisability of
pending tho Hancock, which Balls from San
Francisco July 28, with batteries of artillery
and S00 marines, direct to Taku, Instead of
to Nagasaki. These troops wore to have
gone on tho Meade, which sails August 1,
but It has been decided, owing to the urgent
ncreralty of getting reinforcements to China,
to havo tho Hancock mako a special trip,
It will carry stores and provisions only for
the troops In China. The Meade, on August
1, will take out one battalion of the Fif
teenth Infantry, ono squadron of the Third
cnvnlry and ono company of engineers from
West Point, In all 1,171 men and sixty
ofllcors.
Tho Garonne, carrying two squadrons of
tho First cavalry and 100 recruits, thlrty
llvo officers and 050 men, will sail from
Seattle tho same day for Nagasaki. The
place of tho Hancock, which was originally
scheduled to sail August lfi, will be taken
by tho Warren If It arrives at San Fran
cisco In time. It will take out two squad
rons of the Ninth cavalry and recruits, In
nil forty-two ofllceri and 1.212 men.
GERMAN C0NSUlT"0N CHINA
llnrou I'nul McrlhiK Snys Hp Hellene
CoiiKcr' .Mcnsmkc Is tlni
' nnlnc.
DETROIT, July 23. flaron Paul Merllng,
German consul general to Pekln, China, and
an Inttmato friend of tho lato Gorman min
ister, Daron von Kotteler, passed through
Detroit today onrouto to Now York, whence
ho will sail Wednesday for homo, Just bo
foro leaving Pokln ho had a long talk with
Minister Conger, who, ho said, was very
sure thnt tho uprising would not amount to
much.
"I cannot bcllovo," said naron Merllng,
"that all tho forclgnors have been massa
cred. I oni quite certain that tho cipher
messago received by your govornmont from
Pokln Is gcnulno and was written hy Min
ister Conger. I havo several reasons for
believing so, but I cannot glvo my ronsons.
for my government would not llko to have
mo talk too much.
"You can bcllovo one thing that Is as cer
tain as the rising of the sun-the armies of
Europe will duvastato northern China."
NOME IN VERY BAD SHAPE
Kill n rdlrnclc Will Save Mln.
1 ! U Tonti from l)catiillnu
Klildetulc.
WASHINGTON. Jtiiy23.Captnln J. T.
Cantwell, commanding tho revenue cutter
Nunlvak, which operates in the Yukon
river and around St. Michaels, hns written
n letter to Captain Shoemaker of tho rev
enue cutter service, explaining affairs at
St. Michaels. He says that the Btnallpox
epidemic nt Nome has made It necessary '
for the safety of St. Michaels nnd tho rlverj
settlements to estahllih a quarantlno at
St. Michaels. Tho revenue cutter ofllclnls 1
Joined with those of tho nrmy And they
have overhauled vosscIb filled with refugees
from Nome nnd compelled them to go to
tho quarantine stntlon nt Egg Island. Speak
ing of Capo Nome, Cnptaln Cantwell snysi
Tho situation ns regards health nt Nome
Is n grave one and It Is hoped that the true
state of affairs will bo known In the flitted
States In tlmo to prevent more people from
crowding Into that enmn, which Is already
In n condition of congestion thnt will
hnvo to be seen to be appreciated. The
lack of sanitation, even In the crudest
form, has rendered tho place n quagmire
of disease breeding tilth nnd the wild
struggle constantly going -on for every foot
of space renders It Impossible to get any
thing donn In the way of claming tip the
town. It will be u merciful providence If
there Is not n plnguo started hero before
the end of tho summer, and If tho small
pox cannot bo subdued before the cold sets
In nothing on enrth can prevent Its spread
to nit adjacent camps.
l'i:.VSIO.S FOH WKSTKII.V VHTEHAXS
Wnr Survivors It enieinlirred hy the
General Government.
WASHINGTON, July 23. (Special.) The
following pensions havo been grnntod:
Issue of June 2!, UX:
Nebraska: Original Levi N. Thorndlke,
Adtniih, $S, Additional-Peter Mtmtz, Cam
bridge, Jin. Original widows, ctc.-Ootty W.
Drury. Pender. i. War with Spain
(widows, etc ) Ullznbeth McLaren, mother,
Humphrey, $12.
Iowa: Addltlonnl-fiark T. Marls. Hay
nrd, $3: Thomas Marshall, Missouri Valley,
f 12. Restoration and Increase Mahen
Tlckel, dead, Hauer, Jl". Increase Joseph
A. Latimer, Shenandoah. $17; Dlrkott CJ.
Jennings, Cedar Falls, 112; Joshua Free
myer, Atltelston, $17: James Lockwood, Keo
kuk, $17; Corydon Russell, Ion. $3.
Issue of July 3. 19o0:
Nebraska: Original George A. Williams,
Omaha. $B. William K. Atkison. York, $s:
Albln .1. White, Greenwood, $15. Increase
Wlllluni II. Nichols, Kearney, $S; Mnnly .1.
Wright, Whitney. $S; Samuel Perscls,
Omaha, $1. Original widows, etc. Frances
J. Pierce, Ilnvelock, $8.
Iown: Original Joseph Ackersott. New
Hartford, ii; Honjamln Hnker, Hernard, Jti;
Bonjamln L. Flathers, llockbrniich. ; Eu
gene Allen, Cedar Itnplds, S, Increase
William F. Shlffor, Nodaway. $10; Samuel
W. Anderson, Keokuk. $3; Andrew Condron,
Sioux City. $10; John Dealy, Lewis. $10.
Original widows, etc. Henrietta M. Cade,
Doud's Stntlon. $S: (special act July 10)
minor of William T Chapman, Corning,
$12; (special accrued July 7) Ida M.
Saner, Cedar Itnplds, $S; Marietta M.
Wnlker, Des Moines, $8; (special accrued
July 10) Helen A Gates, Swan, $8; Eliza
beth Hyce, DeWltt. $8.
Issuo of July 2. 1900:
Nebraska: Additlonal-austnvus A. Hesse,
North Platte, JO. Increase-William John
son, Auburn, $14; James Dooley, Hrokcn
How, $17. Original widows (special accrued
July CC Sarah Hnynes, Page, $8; Anna
M. Drown. Madison, $s. War with Spain,
original-Albert H. Holllngswortli. Heat
rice. $15. Reissue (sneclat July 6) Richard
C. James, Lincoln, $21.
Iowa: Restoration and reissue Frederick
Lloyd, (lend. Iown City. $3. Inrrenpe-Ohlo
Knox. Council Ulufts, $12; George McLay,
Ilerdlnnd, $12; George W. Cnrr, Indepem -once,
$12: Henry Kroly. Dubuque. JS; II
llnm P. nowmtin, Spencer. J12; Louis Robin
son. Lawier. js. Original widows, etc. (spe
cial accrued July 0) Maru C. Duane, Du
buque, JS.
MncArthur'n (.'usually 1,11.
WASHINGTON, July 23. General Mac
Arthur has cabled the following casualty list
to the War department:
MANILA, July 23. Tho following deaths
have occurred slnco last report;
Dysentery. July 18. Company O Fortyslxth
Infnntryr Charles W. Wfld; Troop O. Fourth
cnvnlry. Hugh Mcnoberts: July 10, Com
panv O. Thirty-eighth Infantry. Corporal
Lanier Schley; Company E, Ninth Infantry,
Frnnk Jacobs; July 10, Company M. Thirty
ninth Infantry. Archibald Roberts; July 18,
Company H. Fortieth infantry. George Oli
ver; Juno 7, Corpornl Albert O. Hemphill;
July 17, Compnny M. Fortieth Infantry,
Frederick G. Hurt; July 14, Company G,
Forty-tlrst Infantry. Sergeant Harmiel H.
Hovnn: Julv 17. Company F, Thirtieth in
fantry, Emll P. Corrensen.
Enterocolitis, Joseph II. Shlbley, Troon A.
Tvphold fever. July 20. Compnny D, Forty-third
Infuntry, Patrick It. Harrington.
Variola July 17, Companv K. Forty
eighth infantry, Corporal Fletcher Wil
liams; July 10. Al Wnllaco; July II, Ser
gennt Snmuel Tnylor; July 10, Thomas Tol
bert. Ilronchltis July 11. Compnny V, Eight
teenth Infnntrv, Sergeant Jnmcs Jones.
Pneumonia .itny lti, Troop i,, 'rniro cav
alry, Edward Shilling.
Kryslpelns July IS, Company M, Thirty
fifth Infuntry, John Flnucnn.
Killed by comrnde July 7, Company K,
Forty-fourth Infnntry, S. L. Allen.
Malarial fover July 10, Company A,
Twenty-sixth Infantry, Frank A. Smith.
Anemia Juno 5, Company F, Fortieth In
fantry, Frank Hnnkley.
Hcnrt illsense Julv a), Company O, Nine
teenth infantry. First Sergeant Thomas
Burke; July 17, Sergeant of Ordnance Wood
Miller.
Culm n Cnminlly Lint,
WASHINGTON, July 23. The War de
partment has received tho following casualty
list from Cuba:
HAVANA, July 21. Death report 10th to
20th: Rowcll Unrracks, 17th.. Sergeant Alex
ander Zoch, band, Second infantry, mitral
Insufficiency,
Mntanzas, 16th, Sergeant John Lung,
Company L, Second Infantry, acute dysen
tery. Columbia Rarrocks, 1 1 tit. Corporal Frank
McNolly, Company F, Second artillery, sui
cide by pistol shot; lfith, Lucius L. Edle
blute, civilian blacksmith, quartermaster's
department, yellow fover.
Havana, loth. Private Wllllom II. Thomas,
Company G, Second artillery, yellow fever.
Plnor del Rio, 10th. Sergeant Thomas L.
Cook, Company L, First Infantry, pernici
ous malarial fever, with nephritis; Iflth,
Private Clarence Leftwieh, Company O,
Seventh cnvnlry. pernicious malarial fever;
18th, genernl prisoner, Arthur R. Hnsklnn,
lHte Company G, Seventh cavalry, samo
disease. SCOTT,
Acting ndjutnnt general In nbsenco division
commander.
Transferred In Naval Control.
WASHINGTON. July 23. Tho Island of
nncllan, near Mindanao, has been trans
ferred from tho control of the military to
tho control of tho naval commander on tho
Asiatic station and all tho United States
troops stationed on thnt Island havo been
transferred to other garrisons. Tho estab
lishment of civil government on the Island
will bo conducted by tho naval authorities.
(iorcrnmcnt's (iolil HolilliiKa,
WASHINGTON, July 23. The govern
ment's holdings of gold today ronched the
highest point In Its history nnd amounted to
$127,403,182, Including the lawful reservo
of $150,000,000. Tho next highest amount
was $427,23R,600. which was In tho govern
ment vaults on May 2. 1000.
.Smith llclnriiN to Capital.
WASHINGTON. July 23. Postmaster Gen
oral Smith has returned from Atlantic City.
Whllo there he read Iho report of Fourth
Assistant Postmaster General nrlstow on
Iho Cuban frauds and stated today that an
abstract of the report would be mado pub
lic tomorrow afternoon.
llcxlicnnlloit llccelvcil id ' Capital.
WASHINGTON. July 23. Tho resignation
of Perry S, Heath as flret assistant post
matter general reached the postmaster gen
eral this afternoon. It Is to take effect
July 21.
RISING
BREAST
woman who ttbcs "MoTiimt's Frii'.nd" need fear the Buffering nnd danger of
child-birth for It robs this ordeal of its m.mm.
horroraud insures safety to mother and child. MkMM9W"M.M KfWi W y
Our booh, "Before Ilaby is Horn," is worth lFf M FWKmFk V
its weight in cold to every woman, and will
be sent free in plain envelope by Bradfield
Regulator Company, Atlanta, Ga.
WAR ON SHEEP IS RESUMED
Colorniln Cattlemen Urgent the Invn
nlon of Shepherd from V)iini
Init by Killing (he Flocks.
CHEYENNE, Juiy23.-lSpcial Tele
gram.) News was received here late to
night of tho slaughter of a band of 1,500
sheep Just across the Wyoming line In Routt
county, Colorado, by a party of nrmed and
mounted cattlemen of Routt county. Tho
sheep, which were owned by Martin John
son of Rawlins. Wyo., were shot down. The
herders wero not molested. There hns been
open war between the cattlemen of Colo
rado nnd sheepmen of southern Wyoming
for several yearn. Tho latter have been
warned repeatedly to keep their tlocks out
of Routt county. Severnl small bands have
been driven, back Into Wyoming or scattered
and a yenr ngo a hand of 1,000 head wns
slaughtered by the rnttlcmcn.
Tour of Cheyenne Hull 'renin,
CHEYENNE, Wyo., July 23. (Special. )
Tho Cheyenne Indians, the crack base ball
tenm of the west, which has a record of
twenty-seven victories out of twenty-nine
games played this year, will leave here
this week for a tour through the western
part of tho state, Idaho nnd Utah. The
team will open In Ogden orT Sunday. July
29. After playing threo games there Salt
Lake will be visited and three game each
with tho Rio Grntido Westerns nnd Oregon
Short Lines will be plnyed. Pocntcllo, Hutte
and Helena will be visited nnd returning
three more games will be played nt Ogden
nnd one ench nt tho following Wyoming
towns: Evnnston, Rock Springs, Rnwllns
and Larnmte. Arriving home nbout August
22 two games will prohnbly bo played with
tho Denver Neefs nnd tho tenm will leave
for a trip through Nebraska, playing nt
North Platte nnd Grand Islnnd during the
street carnivals at those places.
"Mulch" Cn.vntdny nt l.nrce.
RAWLINS, Wyo., July 23. (Special.)
Considerable uneasiness Is felt by railroad
nnd county officials over the report that
reached here todny that "Butch" Casslday,
he notorious train and bntik robber nnd
outlaw, has been seen In Carbon county nt
tho head of a sang of despernto horsc
thleves nnd cattle rustlers, Men who know
Casslday believe he Is planning another
raid upon the rnllroads or somo of the banks
of tho smnllcr towns In this section. The
railroad nnd county nuthorltles nre taking
every precaution to prevent a hold-up and
when Casslday nnd his. nnng appear they
will be given a warm reception.
County Sent Contest In Dakota.
SIOUX FALLS, S. D.. July 23. (Special.)
McPhcrson county Is booked for n lively
county scat this fall. Recently 640 voters
of tho county filed a petition with the Roard
of County Commissioners asking that the
proposition for the removal of tho county
scat from Leola to Eureka be eubmlttcd
nt the regular fall election. Tho board
grantod the petition. Under the law It
will require a two-thirds vote to win tho
county seat from Leola. Eureka has offered
(o donate to tho county what Is known as
tho city hall property In the event that the
voters select Eureka.
Fire nt Lead.
LEAD, S. D July 23. (Special Tele
gram.) Flro this morning destroyed tho
Catholic church, All Saints' school, the
parsonage and ono dwelling house. Losb,
$0,000.
The fire this morning was pat by thieves.
Saturday tho mayor of the city received nn
anonymous letter stating thnt a fire would
occur nt some place In Lead and that dur
ing tho flro bouses would bo robbed. An
extra forco of police was put on and the
flro occurred as promised. As yet no rob
beries hav been reported'.
Trnuhle fur Sheepmen.
RAWLINS, Wyo., July 23. (Special.) A
report wao received hero last night, stntlng
thnt a band of masked nnd well armed cat
tlo men of Routt county, Colo., took posses
sion of a band of sheep owned by Hetzler
nnd Rivera of this place nnd nfter killing
upwards of seventy head drove the balance
of tho band across tho state lino Into Wy
oming and scattered tho onlmnls In ull di
rections. The owners havo gone to tho
scene.
Coal Miner Killed.
HANNA, Wyo., July 23. (Special ) A
coal miner named Andrew Nylan was In
stantly killed In the mines hero yesterday
by a string of cars running back Into the
mine and crushing blm against tho sldo of
the tunnel.
FUli nnd Gnuio 'Warden Appointed.
PIERRE, S. D., July 23, (Special Tcle
grnm.) Governor Leo today appointed W.
R. Erwln ns game and fish warden for Stan
ley county.
riles Cured Without the Knife.
Itching, blind, bleeding or protruding piles.
No euro, no pay. All druggists arc author
ized by tho manufacturers of Pazo Pile Oint
ment to refund the money where It falls to
cure nny case of piles, no mnttcr of how long
standing. Cures ordinary cases In six days;
the worst cases In fourteen dnjs. One ap
plication gives ense und rest. Relieves Itch
ing Instantly, This Is h new discovery nnd
Is the only pile remedy sold ou a posltlvo
gunrnntee, no cure, no pay. Price 50r, If
your druggist don't keep It in stock send us
BOc, In postage stamps, and wo will forward1
same by mall. Manufactured by Paris Medi
cine Co., St. Louis, Mo. Manufacturers of
Laxative Rromo-Qulnlne and Grove's Taste
less Chill Tonic.
Drummers ('nil nn I'renldrnt.
CANTON. O.. July 23.-TM evening a
number of commercial men organized n del
egation at the hotels nnd called upon Pres.
Ident McKlnley In a body to pay their re
spects, It Is probable that Secretary of State
Hay will be In Canton within the next day
or two. Iln Ix In Cleveland and Is llkclv
to return to Washington via Canton, stop
ping long enough to confer with tho pres
ident on some official matters.
Murdered Men Identllled,
ST. JOSEPH. Mo., July 23,-The two
young men found murdered yesterday on
the Maple lcaf tracks near Savannah wero
this afternoon Identllled ns If. Speth ami
Guy Splelmnn, both of Plattsvllle, wis The
back of ench man's head wns crushed In
The supposed murderer Is another young
man seen In tbclr rompnny at Savannah
Saturday. He has not been found
l.lKhtnluK Kills HnrvpMt Hand.
FORT SCOTT. Kan.. July 23. -Three
threshers working on tho Kennedy farm
near here were killed by n bolt of lightning
this evening. The dead are: Joseph Ken
nedy, Archie Itulston nnd Henry Howes.
Roy Cox wns rendered unconscious, but
will recover.
.Mui cmenlH nf Ocean VphhpIn, .Inly X'l.
Hergen Arrived Auguste Victoria, from
Now York, via Hnmburg, etc., nnd n North
capo cruise.
Genoa Arrlved-Kaher Wllhelm If. from
Now York.
Cherbourg Arrived HarlmroHsu, from
New York for Hremen.
Antwerp Arrived Noordlnnd, from New
York.
Liverpool-Arrived Saxonln, from Iloston.
Yokohama Hulled-Argyll, from Hong
Kong fnr Portland, Ore.
Hamburg-Snlled-Grnf Wnldersee, for
New York
New York Arrived Rotterdam. from
Rotterdam, (leorglc. from Liverpool; ,u.
nomllio from London.
And other painful nnd terious ailments which
so iiiuny mothers hitffer, can he avoided hy
the use of "MoTfiKu'S I'ruK.m" This
remedy is a God-send to women, localise it
carries them through their most critical
ordeal with nerfect safety nntl no pain No
FRIEND
Acts gently on the
Kidneys, Liver
and Bowels
f leanses the System
overcomes!? '
PERMANENT1Y
OV7 THE GENUINE - M AH'F O Oy
(aurrniaTgpSyrvp(.
,jtatuTtiuucccTieiaiatrtjicpHV
mi:WI:l:
Special Excursion
AUGUST 8th.
To Niagara Falls, N. Y.
To Alexandria Bay, N. Y.
To Toronto, Out.
To Montreal, P. Q.
Homcscckers Excursions, 1st and 3rd Tues
day each mouth. Call or wrlto for Summer
Toum.
Trains leave Union Station dally for
KANSAS CITY, QUINCY, ST. LOUIH ul
all points cast or south.
All information nt CITY TICKKT OKFICW.
1415 FARNAM ST.. (Paxton Hotel Plock)
or wrlto Harry . Moores, C, P. & ". A.,
TO
CHICAGO and E&ST,
IjBAVB 7:00 A M.-4:55 P. M.-7t T. M.
ST. PAUL and MINNEAPOLIS,
LEAVE 6-X5 A. M.-T:35 P. M.
HOT SPRINGS - 0EADW00D
LEAVE J:00 P. M.
Gift Offices. 1401-03 Farnom
BUFFET LIBRARY CARS
Best. Dining Car Service
A Fatuous Killer
Mull's Lightning Pain Killer Instantly
kills Neurnlsla, Ime Hark, Diarrhoea.
Stomach Pains. Pleurisy, Sore Throat or nny
pain, Internal or external. 25r. Ask your
driiKKlst.
For snlo In Omaha bv Menton-McOlmi
firm; Co., .Ins. KVirsj thi the KlnK
Phsrinncy. L K. Peytnn, John II. Come,
Sum II. KnniHworth in Council IJlulfj
hy Geo. 8. Davis, O. H. Urown. in South
Omnlin hy M. A. Dillon.
PR KM ATLJ IM'rtRAY N RSS
If the fttt of in my young Uet,
Imperial Hair Regenerator
1 the nnljr liarmlnss prr para tlon known
which liiKtantl)' rfntnrM hair l any
color nr aliiiitn, liuranl. laatlnir ami
leaves the hair rlrnu, auft und Klnaur,
(ink AiMM.mATiiiN wn.r. .ai,'!'
r5iJV" MONTHS. Hawplsof htlreolnrrilfrcn.
nuuu iijr iiamimri. rnvney aanurea.
IMPCRIAL CMEMICAl.MfO. CO., tl W. IU St.. Ntw YorV
Bold by drueRlsts und hnlrdressers.
AMI MIMH.VI'.S.
V
ISIT NATURE'S SYLVAN RESOfiT
LAKE
MANAWA
CAP.H UlltKI'T TO TIIK LAKH FHOM
OMAHA HVUIIY TWliNTY MINHTH3.
DntliliiK. Homing. Fishlnu nnd All Sorts of
Field Amusements.
All I iiKiiriulNNCil I lite mill HpnIiiii
riinl. I'iiIIIii Vaudeville Afternoon mill
.VlKlil.
IU ALL STAH AIITISTS IU
l.oriMiro'x Concert llmiil Afternoon
mill Mulit.
Boyd's
TO'NIOIIT
THE CASHIER
O M llfar. Mgr.
Redmond
Lust half of week,
MY KHIHND
F1KJ.M cuKOMO,
foiniiifiicliiK Thurs
day. July Jii.
Stock Co
NIOHT Prices, 10c, 15c, :6c.
MATINLLH Any rsTVcd hint. 10c. .
DENVER
Wm