Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 16, 1881, Page 1

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- .- Bl DA DR Qe naner. 8% rae naver. | BRANDLES--Imported, $6 Q@16 0051 Flonr—lower; XXX, b 66@h 805 fam | dovotion amounted almost to fanati-| ¢+ ¥ DUX L, PTOPrietor. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE JLEVENTH YEAR. THE ASSASSIN, 125 NO. l«i»;‘)m'MONSTER WHISKY POOL. first lumbar srtained, ISDAY MORNT OMAHA, WEDN OVEMBIR 16, 1881 securing GARFIELD‘S TREATMENT.‘.l--vhnu:.l epienlae of the bone, ete., | course undeflected by any should be removed from the back [ through which it has of the wouud as [injury to the russ and any sensiblo man would have shot the | difficulty has been met in osident, A man_who did such a | prompt deliverance of wron. thing was guilty of shooting, that was 1Y PRR A Pool Formed By Western soon as dis TDENT AND CARINET, bullet |eovered and the Proceedings of the Second Day of Guitean's Trial, The Time of the Court Taken Up 1n Securing a all there was about it, but if he was crazy that might make somo diffor: ence. Whon nsked how long ho had been married he answered | with a grin, “twice,” and, amid the laugh that followed he was ac- cepted and sworn in as the ninth | juror, He tried hard to be ex f spent gome time, however, with retaries B sccond a8 Although this was cabinet day no regular meoting of the president’s of jcil family was hold, The president Blaine and Folger, and Post- neral James, Gen, Elmer, istant postmaster general Clerk ~ Vanwormer will master ( and Chief should | vertebra would have heen removal —can | picces of bone and infliction of | have been Professional Opinions of Four \ tesete I 1 ot | bo extracted if its Prominent Physicians on be ed without the clothing would extracted, lessening the the Treatment of | 8eric A , u\'dl(liw ||:<ll Iluym_\ AL frae- | suppuration and danger of pynemia, tured bones shovld be adjusted, and, |and, though the ball would not prob the Case, I necessary, their rough onds re-|ably have been reached, its approxi moved, Al these things should be | mate situation would not have been as done under antiseptic conditions, and er of guess work; that the failure to discover the real tra [ from Cincinnati Distillers to Reduce the Amount Produced. Citeaao, November 16.—A special says thar arrange- nents between westorn distillers for Fammond Thinks the Wound | antiseptic dressings should boapplied Should Have Been Probed I'hero is more necossity for such pre cautions during the fiest forty-eight Jury. but with no avail. This was the first g colored juror secured, This exhausted the formation of a big whisky pool and leave the latter part of the week on o reduction of the mmount produced their southern tour, Cel. Thompson, of the ball and treat tho fractured ribs lod to the burrowing of pus in the ¢ v TR the talesman. An order was issued l 1 ‘the Swearing In of the Ninth | for seventy-five talesmen, and at 12:25 :'.'I‘\'i“.'.f":\'fill”,‘f, “'i{,h”‘;w ry Y Firet Right After the hours than during all the rest ‘of the | right inguinal region and the forma- | have been comploted, and all that now J Hxl ta p. m. the court adjourned until |{'EEE ¢ ”li;hm Wil Bo; it HoAss Shooting, period of treatment, Tf, after & thoe- | tion of a sinus which during life was | Femaing to doas the election of ofticors i uror Exhausts to-morrow. The prisoner was taken | FRREE RS Rt absence of ? ough examination, it should be found [supposed to have been ade by the [ Of the new association or poel and the the Panel, quictly back to jail and the crowd ¢i M !_‘;“ A{Elonil mot. edeled & that the ball has ontered the brain, [ bullet; that the error thus committed | fiving of the amount which each dis- 4 E | persed. Tho prisoner did not make a | e <8 Pl Tl e x“r cge | And that the Failure to Do This| or heart, or liver, or other vital or | was ono of eardinal importance, for, “”I"!y i expected to pay in. - The de- \ o single utterance during the session. s ; R RIS . A GANK, or is 1 in one of the great | had the wetor of tho pa tails will be attended to at a meeting { ’ 3 b may yet go to the Atlanta cotton ex- Was a Bad Error of the At. it ¢ L) . 0 passag it Nov 5 The fact ilv oscape from offico-sookers 4 _ =y ! . Justitiabie, b rogre: © been stopped at once by | dssociatic | a0 1 0 d - day F_ollowed by Complete ”‘:’\-h '?'..'ff:‘lu‘\ ‘\‘b-‘]\x:\'w{‘“l e ¢-800kers, § #uish afack o, it HAng. okabs, oily | ApHEOPHALS. TcRslIs I position, | eries of - Ohio, Tndiaua, Iinois and Rilence Yesterday. \\L:!l at : the trial o to-day .is FRENCH CLAIMING WIS OLD *'S17, ¢ be aseertained by an exploration con- | bandages, compresses, but means f\Immuri and seattering establishments iedatiia Jooked npon with considerable. suspi- | French, ex-auditor of rilw: Ho Commends the Surgical|ducted by a skilliul surzeon, and with | would have boen ndopted for ewsing | it the states adjoining those named. e € | a6/ coatBTaaY. sorbat Sco. [tion of elaiming his old position « p N Aved. 8 o case to be | track of tho ball it was loft open, A |oVe od. My, | oy o in Court Will Lead to His t‘xl']‘:,“:‘}“?;::,l..'f}"[}’.,,,r,l,,,,“.l“‘s. B o Seo- | 1o ground that, as 1o nomination was ilton and Agnew. deducted feom o hurried and superfi- | Iargo amount of pus was thus formed, | ton, Tl ono of the best known X ST sent to the senate within thirty days AL cial insertion of tho finger or probe | the patient unnec encd [ men in the trade, has the contracts of all the Tlinois distillers and o in Being Shot. “You kept him pretty still to-day."” | o1 the senate assembled, his sus- into what may at first sight be [and the danger of ania i cly 1 IR m“_;“il ‘)'t‘fly’ : :‘i‘l'lht‘rtlr ]‘:":'\l'l“l:“; pension during the previous recess be- Dr. Sims Thinks Death was|dcemed the track of the ball. Then | inereased; that ()n-tu is nothing in (ht the more westorn states to go into an ) 3 W { 1BFOLWATRILIYSCRSLOUMIOEEML B comes inoperative and his right to the nevi ith the Spine | Hammond quotes authority on those | revelations of the post mortom to show | Arrangement by which the produetion ) Bethard, the “Crank,” Being|otherwise. s offico is 1l-.wivml in accordanco with = v:(s}.blo Y L L3 poinis, and pro I regard to | that the |v_\‘.:l‘m|\«Ewluhlmu which oyi- | could bo "“'l”'""l'“‘“‘"”"‘l““fli-““""“l Watched to Provent Him | Whetherho meant that Robinson’s | the law. 1t is also said that it was Injured as It Was. the troatment of the hemorrhiago in [ dently existed had any othor source [eapucity of tho distillery, Such a | ¥ 3 silenco added to Guiteaw’s silonco or [0t until ho had an interview with .—— which the president suffered for | than this since which was supposed to | move lad become necessary inorder from Shooting Guiteau. not cannot b said, bug the prisoner | Prosident Arthur, in which heclaimed |gvhe Views of Drs. Ashurst and |the first fow hours after the in-[bo tho track of the ball; that pyncmin | t0 give stability and an uniformity to ——— *l““‘"l'“‘““"l“"' dl‘l‘:l"'““‘ i ‘“‘“" hlifl the auditorship, that he learned to lus Togien fletion of the wound, and the|existed from about the 1 or t""r "";r‘“'h ]"""' proposition is to 4 » prothor-in-law do the talking. Rob- | gurprise of his suspension from oflice. ' management of the fractured rib, 1]24th of as shown not [ duee the production in all cases pos- | The Jury Fxpected to be Com-|jyson asked only three or four ques- O T T e will only mako one quotation and that {only by gors, temporature, [ $iDIe to one-half the registered vflllmviA ‘} pleted by To- tions. Scoville's method of examuna- | the sonate the fact of his sccond sus- | National Arsocinted Preas. will bo frem the excellent work of Dr. | pulse, emaciation, deliriom, and gon- [ty of the distillery, this linit to be ap- { ks tion caused much comment to-day. | pension did not get into the papers; | Nuw Youi, Nov. 16.—The following | . 1. Hamilton: **Tt is seldom, even [ eral prostration, 80 it must have been | plied at once in cases whero distillers 1 . He oven went so far a8 to ask of & | hence his surprise. is the professional opinion of De. [in gunshot fractures, that the inter- | with a degreo of volocity aitogether [lave a large amount of stock juror, who was a department SORTLS or e TsTIOs Hamuond on the surgical treatment of | ecstal urtery bloeds sufliciently to ro- | ineapable of producing il effects, Tt [ o0 hand and cannot at once reduco h The Prisoner Jeored at by the|lsborer, if he had made application | - e ¢ tho chiof of | residont Gartield. 1t is belioved that | quire a Jigature, but in euso the hem- fis to he borno in mind, also, that in | their production to so great an for his placo to the department sccre- he monthly report of tho chief of |00 papers will close the contro- | orrhage from this source is wlarming | the full report of the autopsy it is no | extent without loss. A royalty might Chulan A EpAD) tary. Tho governmont, recognizing [ the burchu of statistics, just given tho 7 on the subject, and it is further | the annot o tiod in tho usunl | whoro asscrtod that the rent in the | be paid into the pool for all’ goods the Jail, that Seoville desired to find out if the | publicy shows tho valuo of exports of | ylieyed that the contenta of tho four | way or its blecding bo arrested by |spinic artery was eausod by tho bullet | manufuctured in excoss of the pro- s man was personally beholden to Gar- | becf, stock, lard, Q?Ih'r“('»f"nm‘ M | articles, fhaviug sbeen made known | digital compression.” 1t wil) bo proper [nor aoes Dr. Bliss, in his report, | posed limit. The amount of the pool ) field, mado no_objection, though Sco- | checse for the LT ;.‘f,:‘,‘[".‘“f"‘ to Guiteau’s cotnsel, has destroyed | to cast o lgature around the entire [ make such a cluim, Tt was roserved [18 to “be fixed at £500,000. Tt i ! L GUITEAUS ville's persistency brought many | 88,92 ;“-;’- o by | their utention of pleading walprac- | rib on the side of e fracture nearest | for gentlemen who had no connection | thought that tho market ean bo clos od Prow, smiles. ~The four jurors obtained to- | October, 1830, Fatue [or J0R MOt | tice for dofenso. the spine, or even in somo cases to | with the ease during life to mako the | up and the reaction in- prices brought IMPANELLINGTA JURY. day aro as follows: Michael J. Shee- | 0f the fiscal year, §L11,725,221, ay st | The following s the paper of Dr. | exsect a portion of the rib ia « to | discovery that if the largo clot came [#bout onor before Decomber 1st. Wasuixoros, November 15.—The | huw, grocer, is about 50 years of ago, [ 815,931,919 for tho same time last| ppyumond; 3 reach and reliove the bleeding vessel.” | from the splen artery, where did the | The redncod consumption of corn will, crowd at the door of the criminal | a man of family and a resident of the | year il S A 1t has been asserted that the unfor- | Dr. Hummond continues: **Nothing | small one come from that was found |0f course, have an efiect upon the court this morning was fully as great | District for over30 years past; J. F. : R | tunate termination of the president’s | more is vequired, so faras T can seo, to [ in the omentum, which, it is stated | Price of that commodity, The num- \ a8 yestorday and live minates aftcr | Hobbs, o well known plusierer, is a| Seerctary Kirkwood comploted bis | illncss was duo to ono of the three |demonstrate whattheseienceof surgiry [in the oflicial report, had 1o commus | ber of distillers ex tering the pool isso the doors were opened overy seat was | native ot Baltimore, who has resided | annual report to-day. Ho fiest takes | following causes: requires of its followers, Its princi- [nication with the splenie elot? Two |great that they will be casily able to taken. There were rather more ladies | in Washington for thirty years, and [up the Tndian question which, he says, | First—Thoe necessarily mortal char- | pls are of no uncertain tone. Cor: [distinet clots show the existence of | entrol the narket. The move is ono in attendance to-day although the is well advanced in years, 18 in high h- has not lost_interest or importance. The methods by which it is to be sident did not die from | two both of which were probably of ruptures, yaemin origing or causcd wound. Tainly th acter of th . The imperfect development [any lack ot positive principles applics Necone of much significance to the liquor tra number did not exceed a score. Phe | standing with his friends and ne i five jurymen accepted yesierday occu- | bors and a member o° Graco M. E. | fnally settled are now fully reorgan- [ of (he science of surger; bio to his case. 1f there wero no| by tho ghloride of zine it Tha ; oy ) ; K nber . .1 ULV iho science of ! o ghlo sine injeetion, That Humbuggol Again. in the box and the talos- | church; Geo. W. Gates, who resides |ized.” Ho holds the dificultiea to be| hird—The disregard by the ationd- [rules to bind_ such a wound as | the 3L thbi o Lclbta Wora TOUNARTHI| | T aavyisd RATRLURKIIKEOAER (D! Mok men were shown in. through private doors. Allthe spectators who were admitted were warned that they had two and one-half hours ahead of them as no movingin and out would be al- lowed and no one could leave the court until recess, Judge Cox enter- ed at 10 o’clock and the counsel soon followed. Gulteau was conveyed from the jail to the court in the prison van, but was not conducted into court until all the pre- liminaries wero over. He entered at 10:11 a. m. handeuffed and walking ahead of the marshal. He took a seat at tho same table as yesterday. He looked much the same except that his eyes seemed wilder. After his hana- cuffs had been removed he began, as yesterday to arrange the papers on the table before him and then fell to talk- ing busily with Mr. Scoville, making many gestures. When quiet had been secured Mr. Scoville vresented an ap- plication for more witnesses, the pre- vious oraer for forry having been ex- nausted. Tho prosecution offered no objection and the court took the ap- plication into cunsideration. The roll of talesmen was then called and the examination of jurors was begun. Thus far Guiteau had kept quiet and there was nothing in the appearanse of the court room to indicate anything more than a commonplace trial. Be- fore the first talosman was examined Col. Corkhill suggested that the court address the panel as he did yesterday’s panel a8 to what kind of jurors was expectod in this case. Judge Cox seemed willing to do so, but could not remember what ho sud. Some ono handed him a Morning Post with his remarks in full and he read them to the panel. The first talesman examined was 4. J, Howard, a young colorod man. He had an opinion but on Tenth street, member of one of the families in that section, years of age, and is a machinist in the navy yar Ralph Wormley, a well known colore man, resides in Howardtown, across | Thi the castern branch, is a_plastérer by | trouble. South End, i8 a|ov oldest [ not sped is about 30 |sp ne are these: The Indians do kand do not wish to loara to c our language. Henco all busi- uess with them by the government . where he learned his trade; | and by individuals havebeenand must bo transacted through interproters. he considers, the great source of The difficulty is gradually trade, and has lived in the district | being overcome by educating tho Iu- nearly all his life. tive republican. The general opinion to-ntght is that both sides made a mistake to-day. Juror Sheechan, ou examination, plainly etated that he thought that the prisoner was crazy, yet the stato left him unchallenged. though apparently unwilling to serve, to a close observer seemed particularly anxious to get on. His answers were studied, and he played well his part if, as is thought, he came to court for the express purpose of getting on the jury. that thus far the juryis above the average disrict jury. In this con-|To ¥ ] he favors supplying them with n sary implements. nection it is no mistake to sy that not much will depond on the jury. Some feel that a scene will result from | Jands courts are To remedy this ho Guiteau's vehemence in court some day which will result 1 his being shot At any rate, ono out of every | ten men seem to think that the gal- |2 lows will be rendered useless not so ! likely by the prisoner's insanity as by some revengeful hand. The assassin himself has fears of personal assault whenever he moves from one placs to |2 another. To-day when he passed out of court the crowd on the street jeered and derided him on every side. He quailed before the crowd and slunk |7 along between his guards as though his lnmbs would not carry him, the driver whipped up the horacs | the erowd surrounded the trembling | ¢ e was, in old|dians. olection tumes, well known as an ac- | educational facilities. Wormley, al- | to civilizo the In lians. favorable terms of the schools of Car- lisle and Hampton and if congross will foster and enlarge them thoir influence may be far more reaching, cussing the future of the Indians ho says that if he is to make upward pro- Tt must be ndmitted, however, | gress he must labor. I which he has subsisted is nearly gone, hearsily into the work of cultiv On this point tho scerotary says: T wish to omphasizo the point that we when we ask him to timber or prairie with the belief that atsome future timo he will bo com- Until [ and his tribe. To this end he favors enlargad Provisions for the conduct of schools have been mado by congress, but even those now in operation must be abandoned unless congress provides for theie support, He claims that only by educating In- dian children can it ever bo possiblo He speaks in In dis- The game upon e effective this agency of labor 4 The titles of Indian are not such that the bound to protect. advises that new laws and new treaties bo made and then the Indian will own the land \e improves. He will enter more ting. much of the Indian build a farm on wre askins too selled to chooso bebween abandoning the fruit of his labor or his kindred White men would not hould not ask the In- Ho reccommends as do g0 and we lian to do so.” t of the president the scicno of sur- | the heart was due to the same cause, ted [gery would be a fraud and the sur-| The killing of the organ with chloride goons who, through the past ages | of zine, and the conscquent displace- down to the present time, has became | ment of the blood that the phenoma nent i their calling, would have | of death were not such unwindful of that dobt|been produced by hemo which Lord Bacon declarer every man | that the explanation given in the ae- while many others of greatimportance [owes to his profession, There are, | count of the post mortem cxamination must be passed over. The first is, | however, explicit 1ules for the man- [ of the cause of pain is entirely insuf- was the wound necossarily morlalf|agement of every possible wound or|ficient; that death was probably di- It appears that the ball, after frac. |injury. Were those rules heeded in | reetly duo to the formation of a throm- turing the cleventh and tyelfth ribs, |the present instance? The question | busor clot in the heart, or to ombel- he former in two places continued [ brings us to the third and last divis- |ism, and the pain was really in the directly on its course witi % narked | 1on of the subject. 3 heart, as tho pitient declared, snd deticetion, and sofilang g wpint | Thicd=-The surgeons in attundance | finallpeto- s ¢ “v* | the igiin obliquely’ passed through the inter- [and in consultation on the case are |conclusions it i wumed that the vertcbrae between the twelfth dorsal | charged with certain neglects and mis- | wound was necessarily a mortal and first lumbar vertebrae, cutting a | takes, by reason of which the presi-[one. Ttis denmed that the science groove in the latter and lodging on the | dent died Wihile not prepared to |and art of surgery are insuch an_im- left side of the spine below the pan- [assert, in the light of all the facts as | perfect state of development and af- creas and on tho side of the peritoneal [ revealed by the post-mortem examina- | ford no certain rules tor the treatment cavity. 'The spinal cord received no | tion, that this ch can be sustained | of acaso like that of the president and injury beyond a slight concussion |in its ontirety, I believe that the fol- [it is asserted that during tho first which was recovered from in a couple | lowing alleged circumstances are true. | forty-cight hours the surgical practices of days. No important vessel was in- | If they are, then, sojfar as they are [ was notin accordance with the well jured and all abdominal organs es- | contrary to sound surgery, were the |defined and acknowlodged surg caped. Now where are tho elements of | chances of President Garfiold’s recov- | principles and precepts and that hunce inevitable death as the result of |ery lessened? But whother true or|tho president did not have all the ad- such a wound? Dr. Hammond then [not, T desire to express my profound | vantages of treatment which modern quotes authoritics, that although tho |admiration for the fidelity, devotion | surgery is capablo of giving. ball must have traversed the body of [and assiduity displayed by the attend- Winniam A, HaxsoNn, the vortebrao in its interior part, and |ing surgeons: That Hle’pn-ni-lunt T although it may have caused puralysis, [loy for at least tén fiours be-| 00 s e we should still trust to the infinite ro- [foro any cxploration whatever was £, (AShuER; aiter & (oareful roviow sources of nature. Tractures of the|made of the wound other than of the (‘"Bk"' ""“;» up by saying thet veretebraol columnwicth compression | the hurried examination made at the ”‘“]""’i"““{"""“r}"'.“lrdl’l“%'”I'}‘C”“"‘" of tho spinal cord have recovered to | railway station; that during all this [0F the ba gl RC S b Ehiore an oxtent greator than could bo sup- | no sorious attempt was made to arrest [ V48 110 ovidoncs of mataria in tho posed. Surgeon General Langmore, [ the hemorrhago which caused such l"““"“""‘.""‘l“"" ‘I“““ 1076 18 110, of the British army, says that “balls | alarming weakness, that acting on the | Pyaemia--in the mod g f“'“l“”."f tho have been known to pass through the | mistaken hypothesis that the bull had word, "“l"y""i ']'.“"'“‘"' 19, ‘I‘ ‘-“""f“"" 7 hoso of the vertabrae and an apparont |gone through his liver it was an- | the lung aud liver after death; that cure follow.” Liddell states that *‘out | nounced to him that he had but one |46 1o time would tho surgeons have of ton cases of gunshot fracturcs of |chanco in o hundred of recovering, | P2 ar l"‘]“_“ A “““'_'."l'“]”.k’ to ro. the vertebrae without injury to the |thus still further depressing his vital ’"“‘”’"l“ u','-“ during “;?f.‘"“?' cord four rocovered.” Dr. Hammoud | powers; that when made the oxplora- | H1ness the president wis fhsh felontly quotes the following case reported by | tion was superficial and based upon l:wm”"'“" Mg e :m‘lh-pliu ized [ th ing surgeons of the well-rec prineiples of surgery, which, i upon, would have diminished or abol ished the tendency to death. The short space in”this journal at my disposal will only admit of a very cursory examination of the pomts, its of Hop Bitters, and my wife who was always doctoring, and never well, wently to got ier some, \ded to be humbugged agan; onths uso of the Bitters my cured and sho has remained ghicen months sivco. 1 liko such lunnbueging.—H. T St. Paul. —S8t. Paul Pionder-Press. novlbdecl Salino County. Lincbln Democrat Last fall Saling vave rine hupdrad majority for Garfield; this fall ihe re- publican ticket is defeated in that same county. Wo say defeated, be- causo the candidates on whom the re- publican machine concentrated all of its efforts to clect have all been de- feated. There 18 a lesson in this, and it is this: The republicans of Saline don't like their machine! Who is that hine? Who works it? Chairman J. W. Dawes, of the republican state central committee. There is against that gentleman a very strong disline among many of the republican leaders of that county, and this disliko is the ruin of the republicans over there. The causes which have brought this dislike about are not, as Mr. Dawes himself believes, duc to the oldcounty seat fight between Wilbur and Crete, inasmuch as the most popular repub- licans in Crete are fighting Mr. Dawes now, while they tought side by side with him in the county seat fight; and the same may be said of the republi- cans ot Friendville and Dewitt. The causo of that dislike is duc to the ele- ments with which Mr. Dawes sur- rounds himself These elements are obnoxious to the republicans of Saline; they have no confidence in them; they despise them. The first result is, that handicapped by those clements, Mr, thought it was not fixed cnough to|prisoner with derisive shouts. One/|an indncoutent for heads of familivs | e, Frank H. Hamilton, one of the erroneous theory that the assassin intertere with his trying the case | from whom violenco is not impossible [to take —lands in soverulty, (fiold's consulting physicians: had stood directly behind tho prosi- | W48 the cause as far as could| Dawey is oblived to fight battles to justly. Mr. Scoville questioned him | is Bothard, the tramp who onco want- |that $600 be given _to cach|ono of the = most instructive|dont and hence the bullet had entoced [hove been; — that, - while difficult | carry the primarics in the interests of closely, found he did not know whether | ed to borrow a pistol te shoot Guiteau | toward “building a" houso thoreon | cases on .record is that re-|the peritoneal cavity, traversing tho|l0 4y~ whothor or - nob tho |k “pots, and as ho is a good fighter, d 4 wound would have been necessarily | Lo goos the whole hog or none. The he know anything or »ot and chal- with in the criminal court room. Wise Iiberality in this direction would ported by Dr. F. H. Hamilton. A|liver and lodging somewhero in the fatal on any wan, yet it can only be lenged him. ~ ‘T'his was the fourth per- | This person hungaround the east por- [ i the ond bo true economy. He|y)ldicr was wounded March 16th | 0 i rdanc cond 1t is, the d 0 ret all Y J Cl i, |abdomen; that in accordance with H . socond result is, the democrats get all emptory challenge for the defonse. |tico of the building until aftot Gui- | placos the number of Indians at 224, | 1845, tho ball porforating or possibly | this erroncous hypothesis the patient | 4id that if the president had beon 8 ¢he pork. ! 3 John H. Lynch, the nextman, saidho | teau’s departure, and although he [ 000, located on 102 reggrvations. He | grooving the interior surface of the | wam subjected to rigorous antiphlo; youth of twenty instead of a man of T S thought Guiteau ought to bo huug|attempted no repetition of his former | pays a compliment to the military for | body of the second lumbar vertebras, | tic treatment for the purposs of pre- | ifty; if all his organs had been per-| ., Buchupaiba.” X or bumt and no_ evidonco | conduct, lynx eyes wore on him, and | their prompt and effective aid when-|ilton found him suffering only with a | venting tho development of poritonis, | {¢¢HY henlthy instead of lus liver cn- | New, aufcl, complute curo in four duys could - chango the belief. That | his cvery movemont was shadowed, | ever oalled upon, but tho amount of | I Scptomber, 1865, o small frag: |of which there was no real dangor, | lreod and futty and his kidneys dis- poaiing, aquest of settled it and L. C. Barley (colored) | A reporier asked Bothard if he was |country occupied by Indions has pro-|ment of bguo esceaped. In |and by reason of which Lis vital pow” it ho had been entiroly freo 5.3 Goodman's, (5) said he firmly believed that the pris- | waiting for him again. “They are |vented speedy concentration, and|September, 1867, Dr. Ham- | ers was further reduced and the ha-|! carc and anviety instend of be- trTymeTy. 1 oner was erazy. Albert C. Stovens | watohing mo, I'm afraid,” sid Both- | heneo o recommeads thatall Indians | alight paraiysis of the bladder, The | bility to the ocourrenco of pyacmia | i Worn down by, trinls and anxicty) Hansay Land Frands, 54 was excused because his opinon was [ard, I wish I could get up behind | be placed upon four and five reserva- | ball wa s oy (PG b er at- | wnd able to eatand digest all the nec- | Natlonal Associated Lrose. ) g P ball was found lying in the musc greatly increased; that no proper u o hc e A RN R Wicaizs, Kan., November. 16im too firmly fixed. Then came Heury Day, a colored man about fifty years him with a pistol, just as he did with | t tho president, I'd fix him then, damn fons and with this object in view suggests a commission to inquire into rtain the pres- tempt was mado to ay matters in the extrancous on the other side of the spine and Dr. Hamilton out it out. Since then his|ence of and attendance mignt not. have saved him. Everything was done that could The counsel for the defense in the Sumner county land trauds appéared of age, Who offered much amusement. [soon.” When Guiteau was brought | the practicability. - Ho suggosts that | recovery has been complete. Dr. | track of the bullet, the dogree of frac- g 0 5 i ? 3 be % i e s degree of frac 2 ) 3 Ho was always a freoman and oxpeet- | along through the hall Bethard, who | some of the older tribes be solected | | il ¥ r, r L rag| have been done and nothing left un- | yesterday before Hon, €. G. Foster, ¥ | ) Hamilton took the man before the | ture of ribs or to adjust the fragments dono that could possible have been of | United States district judge, and der ed to live with his wife all his Jife, | had no opinion as to Guiteau's guilt. He was challenged peremptorily by the defense. Henry Baldwin and Jerry Cross were excused but Michae! Shehan, a grocer, was accepted mu]l sworn as sixth juror. He said he had formed au opinion, but Mr. Scoville by skilliul questions, found that the opinion was that Guiteau was out of his mind; was never in court but once and was then fined $20 for selling had moved outside on the portico, said, and tho experiment of local govorn- “Oh, how T wish I had a six.shooter.” | ment by ballot be given them and if He did not have one. Judge Cox issued an order summoning | b thirty-five more witnesses, for the dofenso. Frow the soventy-five tales men summoned for to-morrow it is |t oxpected the remaining thres jurors| enacted by congress, will be secured. Beyond that point, |t it is understood, the government |1 do not intend to proceed to-morrow logislation crimes committed on This afternoon | successful, to be adopted with other Ho recommends that future for the punishmont of reservations whitea bo Ho snys that he Indian trust fund, §2,186,050, is nvestod in b per cent. bonds and is in ribos, v ludians or the treasury to the credit of the In- dians and the interest is paid to the Indians annually, He refors to the New York Pathological suciety and he | and that, in fact, the fracture of the says: ‘“The members present concurr- | twelfth rib was not discovered until od with me in my opinion, that the |after death; thet it was not till the Bly AINB ; ball had struck the body of the verte- | second day of July, twenty-one daye |says that probing was impossible. brae.” Many other authoritios to the | after injured, when, iuconsequence of | Death was inevitable with his spine liko oftect might be cited, but they | the occurrence of severe constitutional nuu)-ud an it was, It is & wonder that are unnecossary, As to the injury to | symptoms, indicating the existence ho lived so lunig. At least the sur- the ribs no civil or military surgeen |of pyacmis, an incision was [geons did el that was possible, all will vonture to affirm that” gun shot[made for the exit of burrowing that the present stato of medical fractures of ribs uncomplicated with | pus; that tho eleventh rib was |science would permit. Without the lessons of the abdominal or thoracio | found to bo fractured tn ten places and [ wouad of the vertebrao it would have viseora aro necessarily fatal. It wp-|several picces of bone and fragments | boen imposriblo with the treatment ch had been drawn into | for tho president to die, with it im- benefit, pired to argue the motions to quush the indictments, of which there ure a large number, including the offense of perjury, subordination of perjury, and conspiracy to defraud the govern- ment under the United States laws. Tt was finally arranged, at the sugges- tion of the court, that the question being an important one, and affecting a large number of settlers on the Osugo diminished reserye lands in Kansas, it should be reserved and liquor. Scoville acceptod him at once i N8ars Rl i o L as the objection was ;Alroml by the N':'HE‘ A"@’fffi"‘fl‘ CAPITAL. |{nct that valuable coal deposits are :4::“1 :.‘:.;':y';itl;u.flrumnllm:}nld“x‘::i‘ll:n:lr‘; tl'xjxt'rtn::l:‘fitwt 1o wound wore removed; | possible for him to live. tiled ‘"] A"],“’ United SL“‘,}?“ ’l‘("”"“ { prosecution. Then followed the [ Netonal Amociated Fro supposed to exist on the San Carlos o i oyt + i ¢S court, which convenes at Topeka on surgeons will agrco with me, that|that from the examination then made DB. HOGDEN tho 27th of November, at which time monotonous examiuation of several jurors, all of whom wero rejocted, Guiteau sat quistly watching the pro- ceedings, occasionally writing an au- tographand conversing mt«u undertone with his counsel. Mr. Scoville con- ducted the examination of the wit- nesses, Robinson evidently playing second fiddle. Wm. Talbert, during hie examination, occasioned mirth in court by stating that he did not know which of the two at counsel's table was Guiteau, as he did not know Gui- teau, Ralph Wormly, an intelligent looking colored man, had read ‘‘right smart” about the case but not more than ordinary cases of the same kind, Did not believe all that was said in tho papers because they had told lies about him. He could not say whether Guiteau had killed the pres- ident or if he did kill him whether he was a criminal. He preferred to hear ABCHITECTS BEFPORT, WasuiNaroN, November 16,—The | d annual report of Supervising Archi- reservation and the whites are en- deavoring to get the land from the Indiana but the department has refus- tect James 8. Hill to the treasury is | ed to approve any contract looking to It shows a satiefactory | t! iven public. condition of the work upon the val ous new buildings and says that ex- hat end. Ho points to that portion of tho Indian commissioner’s report which refors to the Sioux and Ronea toneive repairs have been made upon |agrcoment and says that tho agree- the custom houses at Mass, , New York City, Rutland, Vt., and |} Springtield, Il Ordinary current |J repairs necessary for keeping various |t Gloucester, | ment on the part of the Sioux wus Louisville, Nowport, R. L,|manly and deserving commission, e invites special attention to the re- wort of [the commissioner general of | Le land office which has been other buildiags in proper condition [ published and concurs m the ree- have also been made, in the price ot labor and materials will probably cause the buildings at Danville, Va., Paduesh, Montgomery, Ala., to slightly exceed | t the cost of the estimates iande there- | | of. The activity in the building busi- | ness hus resulted in less aetive com- | Eutiuun for government work. Prices the evidence first. He did not think ave ranged higher than last year and The advauce | ommendations the Ky., and|Sra in contained The Srrexvip and Raviant Homes p Unsivaren., They have been horoughly tested. No experiments, {undreds using them whom we can @l ryou to as to their many excellent ealures, Miurox Rocras & Box, 14th and Furnam Sts. whilo the president’s wound was [ it was judged that the ball had not|yoce. «¢ iy inemoprehensible how the serious one thore was not a single [ passed through the liver, but had boon president lived six hours with such a foaturo or combination of featuros | deflected by the rib ina downward di-| 4oy hd. " Byerything possible was pro- about it which rendered death inevi- | rection toward the right groin and that | b1y done, Nothing even ilnpruthl table. | this theory was acted upon until death | yuy” attempted, and every hour the _Second—Wan death due to the in- | occurred, when the post mortem ox- | gident lived beyond six hours after cipoate condition of the science of (amination showed ity erroncousness, {m was ghot was tho result of every surgery. In gunshot wounds the{Iu the autopsy was found what had |, ouilable resource of medical ecience acience of surgery requires certain | been supposed to bo tho track of the |y skilfully and constantly ap- things tobo doue, ~ Ln tho first place, | ball was w pus cvity formed by the | o the reiative positions of the assailant | burrowing of matter from the real - - and paticnt should be, if possible, as- | track of the wound; that thero never A World of Good, certained a8 o thorough examination | was a reason why a thorough explora- | One of the most popular medicines of the wound should bo made for the |tion of the wound with a fiuger probe | now bofore the American public, is purposo of determining the course of |could not have been wado within | Hop Bitters. You sce it overywhero, the ball and its situation as the case |twenty-four hours after the shooting, [ People take it with good effect, It required. There is no possible con and that the strong constitution of t builds them up. It is not as pleasant dition which can stand in opposition | president aud his romarkable powers |to tho taste as some other Bilters as to this precept, though there may be |of endurance prove that any nocessary |it is not a whisky drink. It is more such an existing stato of the patient|and proper examination could have|like the old fashioned bone-set tea to cause the examination to Sm do- | boen” endured; that had this been |that has done a world of good, If ferred for a fow hours. Such cases|done the track of the bullet|you don't feel just right try Hop Bit- are, however, exceedingly rare, Then, | would certainly have buen discovered | tors,—Nunda News, Judge McCrary is expected to be present. I e L, FARMERS AND MECHANICS, If you wish to avoid great danger and trouble, besides a no small bill of expouse, at this season of the year, you nL(nl]d tako prompt steps to keep disease from your houseNbld. The system should be cleansed, blood purified, stomach and bowels regula- tod, and prevent and cure diseases avising {rom spring malaria, 'We know of nothing that will so perfectiy and surely do this as Electric Bitters, and at the trifling cost of fifty cents a bot- tlo. - [Exchange. Sold by Ish & McMahon. (1) - . DESDEMONA, On exhibition at Hospe's Art and Music Hall is a fine water uo]o;vpliut- ing of Desdemona, colored by Wilson, novlb-decl all foreign bodics, such a8 pieces of |as it had pursued a porfectly straight X R. A., London.

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