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¢ 3 ; 4 hos Hn hat a Declares Cuban Government Will Grant No Concessions to the Insurgents.. READY TO FISHT TO THE O:TTER END. Beport Prevaiant that if Government Oun- not Control Lu.urreetion by September 15 the United states Will be Asked to Tutervene ~- Abundance of Money la the Treasury to Continue the Was, Havana, Sept. 3—The hopes of those who on Saturday night tenta- lively suggested a proposition of mu- tual concession as a gicans of ending the rebellion were shattered Sunday when President Palma called General Cebreco, one of ‘he proposed peace commiasioners, tc the palace and in formed him that the government had no concessivns to offer or accept and no intention other than fighting the matter through and suppressing the In- surrection, General Menocal, who headed the list of the proposed com- miseioners sent word to the promoters of the project that he would have no- thing to do with it unless he could —m_|f. - pie f | 4 = approach the Insurgents with a defi- nite offer of some kind from Prest- dent Palma. The promoters, how- WESTWARD BOUND. ever, are not entirely discouraged, and Bryan Leaves New York Escorted by| ®20ther meeting may be held later. " | Nebraska Friends tn a Spe- The Associated Press learned Sun- cial Train, day from a source ordinarily absolute- a ly relable that the inner circles of the government had about reached a tentative understanding that if the government waa unable to control the cane insurrection by September 15 it would | Progress around the world in a SP ask for the assistance of the United SETTER TO PUBLIC PRINTER STILLINGS | cial train of tive cars which left Jer States, but whon this assertion was sey City over the Lehigh Valley rail- broached to members of the govern- road at 5:80 Sunday afternoon, There ment ft was met with such an em- was no demonstration at the station, phatic denial as to leave no room for _ but many passengers in the walting doubting that whatever the govern- jroom introduce xi themselves to Mr ment may have decided, it hag decid- w| bryan and shook hands with Bim. ed to ase the thing through by all The special is expected to reach De the force of arms it can command troit Monday morning and after a day and abide by the results Lniess Public Approves New Spel-| ing Will be Dropped by Government. New York, Sept. 3.—Escorted by the ; Nebraska “home folks" more than a hundred strong, William J. Bryan started on the home stretch of his Dr. Reasevelt States That He T eotbin phutic wha Wet by ary and tional Te «ism of the Vat) be Disregarded What It M a7 evater Bay, Sept a—to a letter to} and night reception will start at mid- While the publication of the peace Cherise A. Stillings, ‘public abet at) night for Chicago where another re project Sunday caused much discus- Washington, made pubhe Sunday.) ception will be held Tuesday. The} son there was little hope evinced @reardent Roosevelt wrote that ifthe] train ts scheduled to reach Lincoln] iat nm would succeed as it wah Gin: ekners ip spelling advocated by the] Neb, on Wednesday when a rousing : ceded on all sides that the govern- Cs ited spelling board and putinto! reception is promised by Mayor S sted ciate ; ae ie official documents meet popur| Brown who headed the delegation of oe 2 eel ebeicey a Aer approval, they will be made per-| Nebraskans, oneal mt resuit from it. Boaldes wmuoent, M not, he wrote, they willl Referring to the reported disagree | io. ¢ gs sini sick: te unwilling yes we tropped. The president's letter) ment of prominent democrats with Mleaceh orgie of contra pirelbes ar . his advocacy of the federal ownershij mental control of municipalities this suid Charles A. Stillings, Public) of ratiroads, Mr. Bryan sald: Iso would be a serious stumbling rier, Washington, D. ¢ “[ bave seen it stated that prom! " ee hase Sihgsisie “My Dear Mr. Stillings: I enclose! nent mea have protested against the "One oF ike eat y acaaehe why the lkermwith copies of cerlin circulirs | qoetrine, but until the prominent men | i sigh ; ee jaa at ie oan ei (te simplitied spelling board,| give thelr names the objections can government tecis © 4s gue tht fight to the end by force is, ~ 4 sen be obi as outlined to the Associated Press tree from the] not have any influence, I have uct m avenue,New ! tated with any one who had protest » hereafter direct t9 make But T have discussed the . iewtions atter, both before and after my nts th cooeeh with men who have agreed : iT with me [| have talked the matter eeuar No. 6 shull be speed us ereia | oyer for two years or more,” £ wth oe ara at No, 1 ¥ rity Pk Qi cu all governmer executive departe = 300 words enumerated in cir- tary of the treasury, its abuundance of money. “We have nineteen millilon dollars on hand,” sald the secrotary of the treasury. “Don’t overlook that. And we have a monthly income of two * any one asks the reason for tee action, refer him to circulars 3, GOVERNMENT TO GRADE GRAIN million dollars. The August receipts 4, ec 5. as issued by the simplified seoretary of Agriculture Wilson Hae Taken and customs duties were greater than ever before. We will not need to ne- proposed tep is evidently gotiate loans for some time to come we au entire ignurance of the very at the least Yes, most of what we Moaterate and c iews | Washington, Sept. 3.—The secretary | have has been appropriated by con- oard, Most of the criticism Steps to Supplant the State Luspection. ion 8 ie so Lhe purposes to be hieved, | 2 agriculture has appointed two ex- | gress, but these appropriations must we Sows a so excellently set |Perts to make an ivestigation of the | watt. We shall use the money in £ irs to Which Ihave | scientific methods of grading and in- | putting down the rebellion.” me There ts not the slightest |specUng grains. The move ts prelim- — inaetion to do anything revolution. | ary to legisiation for the substitu- New York, Sept. 8-—-The Cuban asi cur initiate uny far-reaching pok | ton of federal for state grain in- | government transport Marta Herrera icy, She purpose simply is for the |sPection. One of the inspectors will | arrtved Sunday from Havana in gue-nment, instead of lagging be conduct operations in Baltimore and | charge of Marlo Carillo. The trans 3 sent, to advance [the other in New Orleans. Their pur- | port will toad stx militon roands of nies it and at the same ti y|pose will be to develop acientific | ammuunitton, a battery of rapid fire a@vzersast of the views of the ablest cnd methods of determining the quality | guns and other munttions of war to mower practical educators of our time )@nd value of grains, instead of the | be employed tn the suppression of the ax well us of the most profound schok | Present methods, in which the judg- | Quban rebellion. mp of Prof. Louns- ment of individual inspectors, no two acr--men ¢ ie Am of Sk of whom guess alike, determines the euiel Mormons to Mexico. 3 vht changes in the spell- | Price to be paid for the entire grain] Mexico City, Sept. 3—Mormon rep img of «be three hundred words pro- | Crop of the country year by year. resentatives have purchased another pewet wholly or partially meet popu-| It is said that grave abuses and | isrge tract of land in Mexico. Some Exe approval, then the changes wil frauds have grown up because of the time ago they purchased for coloniz- Beewme permanent without any refer- great power enjoyed by inspectors ing purposes a large tract of land in ]ac2 to what public officials or indi-}|Who are charged with playing Into | ine state of Mexico and another in ‘wiitm) private citizens may feel; if the hands of the grain buying monop- | the state of Oaxaca, and within the ther do not ultimately meet with pop-| Oly. Senator McCumber and Senator | jast few days have closed a deal for wee approval they will be dropped and |LaFollette secured the appropriation | 399,999 acres of rich land in the Fuer- thet is all there is about it. They Of $15,000 to investigate the matter | te river valley of the state of Sinaloa. represent nothing in the world but last winter, and under this Secretary | 7¢ ig said to be the plan to send 12,- = wery slight extension of the move- | Wilson is starting to work. ‘When he} 999 Mormon families from Utah, Cok wmesti which has made agricultural im-|has developed a system which will | orado and Nevada into Mexico. pement makers and farthers write | assure approximate unifority and ac- “plow” instead of “plough” which has curacy in testing grains, it will be wzatie most Americans write “honor” | reported to congress and an effort will ‘witfmaut the somewhat, absurd, super-|be made at once to have it adopted wes “u' and which is even now mak-|and to place the federal government fimg people write ‘program’ without the in charge of the whole system of in- ‘tee", just as all people who speak spection and grading, under a bureau Wxwish now write ‘bat’ ‘set’ ‘dim’ of the department of agriculture. “we and ‘fish’ instead of the Eliza akan REE othe Gefkian ‘batte’ ‘sette’ ‘dimme’ ‘summe’ gem fyshe’ which makes us write ‘pub- ier “atmanac’ ‘era’ ‘fantasy’ and ‘wa- gma’ Instead of the ‘publick’ ‘almanack’ Meera’ ‘phantasy’ and ‘waggon’ of our @qgeremtt.grandfathers. \ “lt, is not an attack on the lan- New Mexico Penitentiary Shortage Albuquehque, N. M., Sept. 3—A re- port submitted to Gov. Hagerman by experts who investigated the affairs of the New Mexican penitentiary states that there is a shortage of $7,000 in the funds of the institution. H.C. Bursum, who managed the af- fairs of the prison up to April 12 Yast, is held responsible by the ao countants for the alleged shortage. Bursum is also charged with having destroyed the records. Stensland Captured Again. Chicago, Sept. 3—A special cable- gram to the Tribune announces that Paul 0. Stensland, president of the Milwaukee Avenue State bank was captured Monday in Tangiers. Btens- land was arrested at 8 o'clock Monday mornmmg by the Tribune representa- A Chicago Street Car Panic. Chicago, Sept. 3—Mrs. Anna Edel- hertz was killed and Miss Anna Robin- son was seriously injured in a panic on a trolley car Sunday. The panic was caused by a short circuit in a con- troller box' followed by the burning of qveest of Shakespeare and Milton be vend pe yesiney scaiteua tiinaee be tr exuse it is in some instances a going-|;, their efforts to escape from @anck to the forms they used, and in|.) oh © hers merely the extension of chang- es evhich, as regards other words, Beers taken place sin¢e their time. It Se xof an attempt to do anything far- seearbing or sudden or violent, or im Head anything very great at all. It fs merely an attempt to cast what A Holton, Kas., Railway Depot Borne d. Holton, Kan., Sept. 3—The passen- ger depot and eating house of the Western rail- ‘was. destroyed by fire Sun- contents were| | ! this evening by Font Sterling, secre: | BRYAN IS MOVED TO TEARS BY TRE- MENDOUS OVATION Twenty Thousand Persons, Waving Stars and Stripes, Make Most Remarkable Dem- onstration Ever Accorded a Private Citizen. HALF POLICE FORCE OF CITY NEEDED AT HOTEL VIC- TORIA. New York —Packed from floor to upper gallery, the great Madison Square Garden Theater trembled with the cheers of 20,000 throate, the clapping of 20,000 pairs of hands, as William Jennings Bryan was welcomed back to his native land. It wassucha demonstration av seldom In the nation’s history has been accorded to & private citizen. For ten minutes after Mr. Bryan’s appearance volley after volley of thunderous acclaim rolled through the building, and when Chairman Tom L, Johnson, {ntroduced the Ne- braskan, referred to him as “the first citizen, if not the first official of the land—not yet the first official,” the great gathering broke outin unre- streined cheering, through which the band’s triumphant “Hall to the Chief” could be heard only faintly and at intervals. Mr. Bryan was visibly touched by the spontaneous outburst of entha- siasm, as great as he has ever known in all his years of popularleadership. His oyes filled with tears and he strode nervously up and down the platform. “How canI thank you for this welcome home?” he sald. “My heart would be ungrateful if isdid not con centrate itself to yourself. It was kind to prepare this reception. I¢ was kind of Governor Folk to come here. It was kind of Tom Johnson to lend bis presence here. “It was kind {n you to recompense me fully for belong absent so long from my native land. I thank you. |1 return to the land of my birth, more proud of my citizenship than ever before.” | Every person in the audience had lan American flag, and every cheer from 20,000 throats was accentua ted by the wave of 20,000 stafis bearing the Stars and Stripes. The Garden Theater was 6 sea of color. Outside, meanwhile, the streets and avenues were choked for blocks with many thousands, patiently walting foreven a glimpse of the distinguished guest of the Commer. cial Travelers’ Anti-truet League, ‘There fs no building in the country commodious enough to hold the crowd that tried to see and hear Bryan. The reception accorded Mr. Bryan during the afternoon and evening may: be said to stand absolutely alone as an event of unique interest. It 1s important to remember, first of all, that Mr. Bryan holds no of- ficlal position. Hele nota naval hero, nor yet a great General who has been president, which was the case with Grant. Nor is hea citizen of New York. Yet this busy city took on holiday airs for bis coming. Old Broadway, the most interesting lane of human traffictn the world. was given over toa parade that. pursued s course four miles long from the Battery to Thirtieth street. Hundreds. of policemen kept clear the Iine of march, and other soores of mounted officers guarded the gest a battle hymn, I propose a “Columbia, my dear, my native soll! Black Splotches All Over Face — the name of religion upon which {t has placed the stigma of hypocrisy. ' tanze, but slightly changed, from one of the strongest of the poems of = “4 pl 4 # wich to; Produced Severe Itching—Year’s | Treatment by Physicians Did No And, if I may be permitted to sug- Scotland’s great democratic bard: — Long may thy hardy sons of rustic toll Good and Became Despondent— Be blest with health, and peace, Affected Parts Now Clear as Ever and sweet content. —Al be dy's “And O, may heaven thy simple lives prevent From luxury’s cotegion, weak and CURE BY THE vile; CUTICURA REMEDIES Then, thro’ unearned wealth to —_+— wickedness be lent, “About four years ago I was afflicted A virtuous populace may rise and| with black splotches all over my face and a few covering my body, which stand, produced a severe itching irritation, and A weallof fire around thelr much-| which caused me a great deal of annoy- loved land.” ance and suffering, tosuch an extent that I was forced to call in two of the i physicians of my town. After a thor- h examination of the dreaded com- OMAHA EDITOR FOUND DEAD. plain they announced it to be skin eczema in its worst form. They treated me for the same for the length of one year, but the treatment did me no good. ‘ “Finally I became despondent and The End to Edward Rosewater decided v4 diacontinve ‘heir services. Shortly afterwards, my husband in read- Ina Court Room. ing a copy of a weekly New York 1€8. e pure! en- Omaha,Sept.—Edward Rosewater, tre cuktt, end after ca the contents proprietor and editor of the Omaha} of the first bottle of Cuticura Resolvent Bee, identified with the political,| in eoachne’ pooh et financial and business affairs of} stopped. I continued the use of the Omaha and the state of Nebraska Cals Remedies i “ — fter that every splotch was ent for forty years, was found dead in wink and the affected parts were left as district court room No. 6, on the] clear as ever. I have not felt a symp- third floor of the Omaha Bee build-| tomoftheeczema since, which was ing early Friday morning. Mr. Rose- water evidently had eat down ona bench in the courtroom, fallen asleep and had died of heart disease. Mr. Rosewater went to Waterloo, Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, 88, County of B: In the Cirenit Court, October term, 103, Alice Rogers, Plaintiff, years ago, “The Cuticura Remedies not only cured me of that dreadful disease, eczema, but other complicated troubles as well; and I have been the means of Fag being ted of he — fee y the Cuticura Remedies, an lon’ esitate in saying that the Resolvent Mab Towetag etoracon, viene he} ie bet blood medicine that the world made a speech a soldiers’ reunion. as ever known.” Lizzie FE. ge, He reached Omaha on his return at 540 Jones Ave.. ‘ Selma, Ala. 7 o'clock at nightand went to his |. Cuticurs Soup, 280-4 Oink; office immediately in the Bee build-| Hills’ tk Otay, hd fa rage ing. He is known to have been in u : his office in the evening, but was not seen by members of his family after returning from Waterloo. Mr. Rosewater was born in Buko- van, Bohemia, in 1841. He came to she United States in 1854 and began work asa telegraph operator when | g.orge'i, rogers, Defendan 18 years old. He was at various]: Now st this comes the tiff herein, by her attorne Jacksor id file her peti- times a member of the Nebraska leg. | tion and aiidavit, allee! ong other thin islature, member of the Republican SR eeimentsh nisiiolt freer bio eet ft national committee, member of the | sree panes ie gery ef pon Ais : ‘and is Rote J festdent of the State Of Missouri: — United States mint commission and | * Whereupon, it is ordered by the clerk in vaca- ——— - - oe States ton’ ih cle de a cmmenord again ourg, el it 0 the universal postal congress, of] itch is to obtain ® divorce trom him be- which he was vice president. He was] canse the defendant, George M. Rogers, bas h 7 absented himself without a reasonable cause the original promoter of the Trans-| from the plalntiq Altce Rogers, for one whole ear next befor D © 0 t= Miseieatpp! exposition held In Omaha {ion in this caso and for failure to Tapport hls {n 1898. wife and t nies the said George M. Rogers si at this court, at the next term thereof, tobe begun and holden at the court house in the clty of Butler, in eald county, on the Ist Monday in October, 1906, and on or be- fore the first day of said term, answer or plead to the petition in said cause, the same will be be Lo eal and judgment will be rend- ered accordingly. London.—Lourists who have visty- | "And itis further ordered. that a coby hereot ed Egypt will learn with regret that RLY Tivys, & new paper” pubilshed in said , county of Bai r four weeks successive! the Virgin’s tree at Matarieh (Hello-| Dubliched at least once 8 week, the Inet inser: polis, ) in the suburbs of Cairo, has | ton to be at least thirty days before the first day of said next October term of this court. fallen. C. M, BARKLEY, Circuit Clerk, This famous tree was a sycamore,| A true copy from the record. Witness ry beneath whose shade the Holy Fam- | (seat) Bates oakay aah sa aae er, angus, fly is sald to have found shelteratter}. «iat bait ny ite filght into Egypt. Alshough this is doubted by many, the tree has re- mained asa relic associated with sacred history. Many people carried away frag- mente of its bark or leaves as a re- [a ss. membrunce, and to these espectally | in the Ciroult Court, May Term, 1906, in Vaca- {t will doubtless be a consolation %0| xa! og hid guardian and curator, Lewis know that, although the old tree audCectf Hovell-her husband, end Leonazd has disappeared other trees descend- Piaintifts, ed from it still remain. Virgln’s Tree of Egypt Falls. From the Chicago Inter Ocean. Order of Publication. Has Stood The Test 25 Years. The old, GROVE’S Taste- lees “sin toni Yow know when you are taking. It is ironand quinine in a tasteless form. Nocure, nopay. 50e Gherif’s Sole in Partition, M. ¥, Raina tad.W. B, Rains, platatit, "Yoel Matton, ME. Piabler, de i i 5 5 eH i nt ! é 5 F s bh Hu ; \