Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 29, 1887, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SEVENTEENTH YEAR. O)[AHA—, SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 29, 188 NUMBER 133/ BEN BUTLER'S BUNCOMBE, | cpimes, s thesy chtit o, e, fahete s | e menrties e painted ke necing | SIMMS SNUBBED BY SPARKS. s e wiova oAy wieckeD. | AN ECHO OF A CONVENTION, to doall I might to defend them.” After some | as if they had been so many pigs to be Vienna Astounded By the Discovery | A Freight Strikes an Obstruction In- further talk General Butler said he agreed slu\luh';'l.“t‘d when it came hkflmlmp killing —_— of a Ferryman's Bloody (‘rlml‘l.h tended For the Express. fully that the first ten amendments of the | t The male curiosity scekers were just VIENNA, Oct. 28.—It is just discovered that Jouret, 111, Oct. 28.—A telegraph pole laid His Ingenious Argumont in the An- | fontitution were imitations of federal power | as oftensive. They stood around and waped | The Courtly Southerner Falls t0 |, forrman on the lower Danube, who had | across the Hock Island railroad track be. | EmvArrassing Position of a Poste archist Case. and not restrictions of the rights of states. | at the relations of the anarchists much as Carry a Point. “Privileges and - immunities,” however, | they would at afat woman in dime museum, been in the habit of conveying across the | tween Anooka and Morris this morning master Noar Sioux Oity. cluimed by the prisoncrs wera privileges in: | Parsons was asked about the point —_— river workmen returning from Roumania, | about 8o'clock wrecked train No. 16, Engin- PRIVILEGES OF FOREIGNERS herent in each one of the citizens of the se that tne governor could not consider ) who took thls route to avoid producing | eer John Mills and Fireman Orft were in- eral states of the union, because in a | the lvm'il:m ‘Imh"!u_ the - names ot | AN APPEAL TO THE PRESIDENT. | \\1iq.510 that they paid taxes in | stantly killed and the head brakeman fatally Yab 2 lab il LA Ak TN T W TS T | S kiR TS aven’t Userd 6718 Nera ANA T '_',r Roumania or money in default thereof, | injured. The miscreants doubtless intended The Boston Lawyer Holds That in | and immunitios inheritod ander common 1aw | am not very much interested in it Mrs, [ ARdrew Carncgio ¥alks About Mr. | has taken them to a small island where ho | to wreck the Kansas City express due here at Progress of the Trial at Waterloo= ’ o) and the magna charta, We claim _that all | Parsons said to him, *You'd better take your Blaine's Presidential Prospects murdered and robbed them of their savings. | 4:30 a. m. The passenger was fifteen min- | goarlet Fever Among School Chile Some Cases They Are Superior to | {08 8¢ TRUHD (MMd immunitics. that be- | exercise now,” and he obediently turned —Military Matters—Federal Judicial inquiry reveals the astounding fact | utes late and the freight pulled out ahead to g e ('f iy Those of Americans—Grin- longed to a British subject under the magna | away, while she took her wicker basket, and " that hundreds of workmen have been dis- | run to Anooka, striking the obstruction at State Center— nell For the State. charta belonged to each citizen of the United | With a sigh, turned and left the cage. Building Bids, tates. The words “Due pr s of law" The sheriff patched by him and their bodies buried or | With the above ults, The excitement here Towa News. ts the jail every day now, o mean By the law of the land,” and ot the | but he preserves a_sturdy silence about all . thrown into the reeds along the river banks. f.‘.(:.‘.‘«"‘h:.%"..‘fl"..‘?’,.“n‘r‘.‘.“?,.f.‘.“"fl:'.'.‘x‘x‘.i‘ d dn the Made the Judges Smile. law of the county, a proviuce, or a state, but | preparations for the exccution. “Have you Much Ado About Nothing. e CiiReids at ol i track with the deliberste purpose of wreck- Arrested on a Gross Charge. Wastixorox, Oct, % [Special Telegram | the 1aw of the country—the whole country, | received any intimation that Governor | =~ WasniNaToN, Oct. 28.—[Speciul Telegram The Garfields at Bournmouth. ing the passenger train. The excitement is | Stovx Ciry, In,, Oct. #8.—([Special Tele- i Any other meaning given to “due process of | Oglesby will grant the condemned men a | to the Br ]—There is a decidedly mixed [Copyr ight 1857 by James Gordon Bennett.] augmented by the growing belief that the | gram to the B A. Gre f Correcti to the Bee.]-The proceedings in the an- | j;i+ g uged in the fourteenth amendment, | respite in case the supreme court denies the | gt o¢ things in the ges Y X Bovrssovr, Oct. 28~ [New York Herald | Schwartz-Wa e s il e st archists' hearing to-dny were less interesting | would make it simply ridiculous and frivo: | petition for a writ of error” he was asked, | *81¢ hings in the general land office, “Watt express car murder and tob- | §ille. was arro gt charged Wi pecial to the Ber.]—The residents of | bery gang planned the crime. A large re. [ Ville, was arrested lnst night, charged with e ey bees offered by the: Rock | obtaining money under false pretenses, 18 ' o Cabl ¥ stito may onact @ “dgo | FNot a syllable: don't know whether he will | Which promises to result in the loss of one s than yesterday. Everybody knew the points | lous, because | e et w / i s At fhto. by | or nos b particular roason for it,as I sce,” | ofticial at least, Generdl Stmms of Virginia, | this shellered scaside rosort, which is as de- relied on by the anarchists’ counsel and the cess of law’ L : Sl JAIs0A vompRay otoctives are on the | seems that M. E. Crowther, of Corrections arguments made on them, and it was appar- 1 man's life may be taken, and from | the sheriff replied. is the chief of he division of fraudulent land | HENtnl throughout the winter as in tho sum. | ERAM compuny and detectives are on the | SRS Ay o 8 PTG e ilines ¥ RS Loy PI | not a single right or immunity of —————— claims. ~ Simms is o couptly gentloman, very | Me s been politely grocting on the pier, bank and the Sioux City National bank cushy ent from Butler's brief in the case that he enship can proteet him. General Butler THE TELEGRAPH COMBINE. O RaET 5 i 7 | the plaza and in their walks, Mrs. Garfield, A CORPSE e oA hiad only one new point to make, which was | then proceeded to consideration of the special — punctilious in all matters of decorum and eli | nieq Moilic Garfield, Mr. Harry Garfield and il b kel i e mentioned in my dispatch of last night. [ and peculiar questions raised by the cases of The Country Again at the Mercy of | quette, not a personal friend of Commissioner it > The Remains of a Murdered Youth | Correctionville by Gross, It was learned Discovered in Chicago. that Gross never had any money inthe banks, CiicaGo, Oct. 8.—In a carriage shipped | The checks were for 0, #40 and two for §25 from New York to Studebaker Bros. at the [ each, Mr. Crowther was asked to make the Pennsylvania depot was found this afternoon | amount good, but refused to do so, saying ho the body of a murdered man. It was found | rightfully obtained the checks. Gross could upon opening the door of the carriage that | ot give bonds and went to jail. Crowther the corpse was that of a young man twenty- | presided at the last_democratic county con- one or twenty-two years old, b feet, 8 inches | vention and is a leading democrat and posts high, slight mustache and brown beard. He | master. Gross wus seen in juil to-day by & wore dark trousers, soft felt hat, laced shoes | Ieporter = and said: =~ © 1t - was - upon 3 " the day of the democratic convention. and rubber coat. Under his hat was a bullet | (powther wanted some moncy, and nsked mo hole. In his pockets were found arestaurant | to sign the checks, saying he would pay me ticket and a ticket to an entertainment to be | the amount in full when he r;u;urnlml JoCor- given to-night by the Beaver Valley assembly | rectionville the next day. 1 did as ho wished. The chee ore “rank Tibbette,of- of fflass packers at Rochester, Pa. fce. 1 Greo iy (“‘r\,'\‘v‘l'l‘,f.'l.'.',‘.?f ptners | e Have The Mystery Explained. put i the night at' the gambling houses and come on & quict, visit solely for tho benefib o | CHicAGo, Oct. 28.—B. Lazarus, of Roches- | Crowthier lost all the moncy he had drawn their friends, Dr. and Mrs. Boynton, and States Attorney Grinnell from Chicago | Fielden and Spies, w > foreigners. He the Monopoly. Sparks, but, on the contrary, he does not get |y ' . iz ) i wument to-day | contended that treaties were the supreme law | New Youx, Oct. 28.—[Special Telegram to | along very well with that gentleman. Sparks® LA R S L L LG o e et himaet ity o | Of theland and that theso prisoners ¥ the Bek.]—The Tribune says: The most im- | especial pet has been o man T R S L L i and addressed himself mainly to [ titled by vi ith G 5 VHh SowE ottt Ebttacient of | Wi 1' oy Tow yoars ago by | Walks. T paid them this morning the compli- the constitutionality of the Iinois jury law. | and Great Britain to all the rights and priv. | portant step toward complote sottlement of | Who made o sensation o fow years ago bY | 1ents of the Herald, Mrs, and Miss Garfield He made quite an impression as an able and | ileges of American citizens at the time such | the telegraph war, probably second only to | accusing. Congressman Ellis, of Louisiana, | ghwed by their braced appearance that they the purchase of the Baltimore & Ohio sys- | of all sorts of \mplcuIm things. George - treaties were made, A state had no po logical advocate, and the court paid him un- | 1" el state had no power, f It Hiad eitiie)y Fotoverad Thom LHS aSats oL s ustal attention, Butler finished the argu- | i ..‘:;f, i.‘.’;‘l‘,‘,,'&‘(,’{'éf.é’fi..'.‘.fn 'l'l;.”;h]cm:i!:n‘:‘ the | tem by the Western Union company, was | hus been employed as a gpecial agent of the | gy vo, mo.‘ uud‘ Wekd, A15edA pleased ment in ¢ h of an hour and three quar- | treatics wore ratified. He did not mean that | tuken yesterday. ~An agreement was made | land office for some timb and has been under | wiph “tne many English courtesics shown ters, To may that he made an argument is | forcienor could come into a state and break | between the Muthal Union, the fighting con- | the direction of General Simms. This gentle- | ¢ from the time they were received by rorhaps dofne his spoech too much lonor, He | its 1aws with impunisy und that, the state | tingent of the Western Union company, and [ man never liked George and has been for | 0 "0, loai et Laddig R i could only try him in accordance with | the Postal Telegraph company, which now | 0me tme trying to gt him discharged. | Consul ~Russel at Liverpool. — Young spoke ramblingly, like a man who either has | {iu® oW toy i - in accordance ACE : ; pany, wh Sparks opposed, but at 188t Simms succeeded, | Garfield was spokesman, 1 had shown no definite ideas or whose ideas are sadly | land—at the time the treaty with his gov- | fpresents the only opposition. It is proba- | Recently George was segt by Sparksto Simms | them a copy of an American newspaper mixed, He sought to strengthen Tucker's | ernment was made. This was an important bl-"hf“t :m; xll_;i'yvc-u;u:l:mn~ly gur.;s)mffiluws ;::‘r( a srl:lllmm:n (:{‘ :. _llgc‘o“l}li He:m;}i;»d.; saying that they were in England for matri- s el Hie ostiof X i en. beck a perfect coalition, but the principal e om Sparks, in' which that official rposes. Wi visiting i arguments as to the jurisdiction of the | que «l:" n lmr '\‘ l\n}ulum_\nmn be ‘Ill 11} i Ly ot -dl cip .Dv'.“.m Baved o Phiel( ot the fihuds diviion to “:P:“ monial purposes. *‘We are visiting in Bourn- court, and them nctually claimed | in_return for the conc of both companics insisted that it covered l Y| SHRUAN itk - Amafidan FeRORAN Y “WalaLH d 5 \ . government in the treaty with Great Britain | only an advance in unprofitable rates. It was | MI: George courteously. This was very dis- [ {nonth with American friends,” sald he. that aliens in this country must be tried | fio vovernment of that country had made L pr 5 pleasing to Sims, who remarked that he did | “There are nine of us altogether and w under the laws in force here at the time | similar concessions to us. = Suppose u citizen | Suted With much postiverioss that no_pur- | not think that it Was nocelaRty o inatruch him on the checks, When wo returned to Correc: i Fideateh {tv Tiatores f the United States should go to Ireland, | chase of the opposition lines was ever con- | how to treat a gentleman as a gentleman 5 1 4 ter, Pa., telegraphs to-nig) body e B Ty * when tho treaty of amity between this and | of the United States should wo to Ircland, | £008 O, CF, CRPYLIqT, 008 FH40 VG5 (a1 | shound treut wnother, . This remari was car. | (he health of a friend. However, the length 8, telegraphs to-night that, tho besy | tionvilloT asked him to squure tho deal, Ho their respective native countries went into it} gitod ara trled by tha f i 3 he 0 T T i poraunc W8 CT. | of our visit will depend on the health of this | found in a carriage which arrived on the | said he would get, me the money in & few effect. These treaties only stipulate that | BGYsERCih 08 BEsteq SRC ;‘\, AV othe | Telograph company it was said that the tar- | Yoy 2 (O SO aalatant chief in Simma® | friend. We shall possibly stay & month. We | Pennsylvania road this morning was that of | hours. He kept putting me off and fiually re- foreigners shall have the same privileges | we not stand up and kay this man must be | i 1% dccordance with the agrsemont, had not | division. Simms heardof it and demanded the | like Bounrmouth, the public gardens and | Barney Horan, of West Bridgewater, Pa, e oty 10 oo E thie. fhreme and immunities when tried under the laws of by a fair and impartial jury? 12 this | Jitfo lines by the Western Uuion was not an. | Femovalof Young. . Sparks declined to re- | general surroundings. I have seen the | Horan left his home Sunday evening last and | it honrd part of the conversation in his the United States, but Butler's position, actu- | should happen General Builer hoped the | boon made and o Wallctreng | move Young, but intimated that he would | % rican papers in which reference is made | has not been seen since. He was of a very | office iho. ovoning: the: checks "Wa b Vb k) English authorities would mnot be able | 2ecn made and common opinionin Wallstreet | yecept the resignation of Simms if the latter o Sl v elsome disposit 1 the tl | e e Tt Rtill SeThY ally, was that Spies should have | Fng : able | younced until terms with- the Mackay com- | & i 1o a marriage, There is absolutely no foun- | duarrelsome disposition, and the theory of | Grawn.” Gross was to be in court at 2 p. m. S S ity to hold up to his guze the decision | 1itioaliad been arranged, and that the pres. | Siose to tendar it. ThisBimms declined todo, 4 e here is absolutely no foun- 1 ghe getectives at Rochester is that he went | {o.day, Mr. Crowthers last evening teles ; . d 8 I ent agreement was the natural consequenc ot e o 5 3 e o Pittsburg and after spending all his money | gpraphied that he would be hiear by that time, en tried according o the law | of the United States supreme court e ; :;m:l{ul he went to the gecretary and asked | dation for it. It is not correet thut we are | to Pittsburg and after spending all ) et in fo a hundred years ago. | sustaining the right to try an Euglishman by [ 5 anticipnted that an advance sn cabie | that Young be tfired.” Secretary Lamar at | here for marriage purposes. We are solely | he started for The court did not follow Butle speech with | the local law of a state which was nothing X home on a freight train, | 'Ahdut noon a tolophone message " once instructed Sparks to discharge Young. IR ot i el ERataa e About noon a telephor sing rates wi > = ol deds ¥ on a quiet visit with friends and for the bene- | Meeting with tramps o quarrel ensued and attention. he. Judgos. smiled ocensionally | but a swamp and a howling wilderness at the | Sates Would b made immediately, and in | Sparks said that he would do nothing of the : stating that he would be in the city to-mor- ol e o e ncamonally || (ime, the! trealy Whs ratihed, After somio/| 2 t‘l::b;:n;:‘-fl of the opposition (elegraph | kind but that he would carry tho matter to fit of health. - We shall soon leave for the row and settle the matter by making payment but they generlly occupied themsclves with | desultory remarks about the record, refer- | \Wog i % i the president. Yesterday the attention of | continent, mm_Union company. It is tolerably in full. The matter will rest until that time. H eBlabR b = was St Jooking over briels tnd other. papers. The | ences to breaking open the safe and desks | werats shor bomo ot an the president’ was called to the controversy - = fr S iite latase U ve i ro ejudice agai jury. < all par o anxiously awai e rc- Banqueting Bartholdi. ; he Hemme der Case, lawyers p t med to be amused at his | and ges of prejudice against .”"‘.’“” ists between Gould and Mackay and the pre x:m} nlllm.tu are Vlmxmusl_\ awaiting the rc L :\_ oS I vIu ':n d 3 A Missouri Farmer Dies Under Suse WisEi 50 A DM, 282ihe el line of specch and one of them said | General Butler said that the defense was ol aavafics in Tates Dy:tHis PMutual U ult. If the president sustuins Sparks, Simins LCopyright 1857 by James Gordon Bennett.] picious Circumstan afterwards that his argument | compelled to accept the Tast juror, Sunford. | i Postal companios 1 generally necepted | ShL Bave to resign. 16 on the other band, | Paus (via Havre), Oct. 28—[New York Jorati| M55S06 98 (Spoolal William Mandfrom, charged with the murder was nothing more than ingeniously | Their peremptory challenges we xhausted o ! & - ! Simms is numunml the commissioner of the . Josern, Mo, Oct. 28.—[Special as suflicient proof. Gould swid in reply to an . S L R T land_office will probubly swallow the insult inqu Lo e iteiiand AT Sorption. of the ‘Mackey, Iand and’ jocenn | oo roaii hisatice, - Hadsnot liiely tolet § s like N leave a fat | hotel to celebrate t E the Macky Tud and_actan | little thing like that induce him to leave u fat | b celebrate the Herald Cable—Special to the I banquet wi absurd. The lawyers of the anare ]—A grand a want of confids given to-night atthe Continental iniversary of the Bar- s and they could do nothing clse. Under the \ce in their success. Cap- | circumstances the d to him and coaxed tain Black . Solomon went about in a | him and tri him into a state of mind of Christian Hemme, began this morning. Considerable testimony was taken, but nothe gram to the BrkJ—Harvey Henton, a well known farmer living about ten miles south- 1to g 1 line i ! west of this city, was found dead in his bed | l”{ AT e .'”“'l \ '“; dishearter " the hear- to_ their side as they could. | gituaiion, the Mutual Union and Postal com- | P14 tholdi statue. Mr. Blaine, who was prescnt, | o ona of bis neighbors who chanced to go to | Seac) M8 S At B ing was or stood in the ; 1{; the o lll‘r‘| ! tu»ln panies have agreed to ad Carnegic on Blaine. looked very pale and careworn. He made no | 175 coce Hanton has been living with o | 5% boot-tracks the m«n;ui"l! }\f her father's corridor, leaning against a' pillar, moodily | 8¢l on the other side tha i Rreiling 3 § e specch—merely a few casual remarksto tl b, i death leading from the door of the house to Smoking and ehewing n cigar, while Tucker | petitioners had waived some of their L o WasnINGTON, Oct. | Telegram | Speech—merely a fow casual remarksto three | ypo00r named Jume & Smith and his wife. Smith was away from home at the time, but the woman’s account of how the man came to his death aroused the neighbor's susp was standing by them with his cyes e ey have been fighting each_other, but the | to " the Br.] ; ption | Western Union is not greatly interested. I ; the floor and seemingly lost in thought, Only | or objection at the proper time, and that, [ huve not heard of any advance in cible | Arlington hotel, where he Rutler was as usual, puffing, blowing and | therefore, they were stopped from asserting | tes v Vice President Rosener, of the Pos- | 1ast evening by a former chewing away as though he had some par- | these rights now, Butler contended that | fa1° eo y aaids: “The > of the | Blaine's, This gentle: i kath of President Cleveland, whe: B e v cn 6. it voaa e A o T O tal company, said he pui e of the | Blaine's. This gentleman to-day repeated to st on | through not insisting upon them by exc Andrew Carnegie is at the | O four persons. M. Spuller, the chairman, dled upon | Who sat next to Blaine, delivered a_long ad te of Mr., | dress and coneluded by proposing the health cupon Blaine the well, jin which the body was found, and back to the house, but could find no tracks of 210 | anyone barefooted. It was also shown that ion | when Hemme was found in the well he had Gl G LW S SRR G i poiee St M tocised i 1ipato | Mid o started off ard calling. in somo'of th| o clotiiosion oxedpt b/ ki ':Imul](lul-v'l-;\'us i Micke) y the Jnion your correspondent what Mr. S rned paler i touched his lips IhTo ol f the eccur | clay on the top of his fect as though he ha EE ey plovalis yitotortwllnonyy| (rgng 810 } of the question. 1 do not think there is any | wuia oo Surnogte ad | champagne glass with a faint but sardonc | ™ Ighuors. "“"‘f:“‘“‘l‘l‘ii‘ nof the ot | been drage 3 he petition. ) intention.of that kind on either side, and it is | A o A T ats S akard o X renco, 1 a short while a large crowd hac Mrs, Hemme is sick and unable to go on EA e e searches and sein understood that the advance in rates on the | the stories about Mr. Blaine’s heaith having | *m rere were about fifty persons pres- | jjjocted and one of the number was sent | ye staud, She stated to the county attorney s Qosnanans o Dotell HRCEL L, d under 7 Postal lines will carry with it abolition of re- | given way. ent, including Nupoleon, Ney, Burtholdi, | ¢ the town to inform the coroner. When | before the investigation that she heard [Press.]—When the supreme court opened | lry leaded by staters attovey on s bates, and that all competitive 10 and “The fact is,” said he, “Mr. Blaine never | Gounod, McLane and Laboulaye. the Intter arrived & jury was selected from | Hemme and Mundfrom quarrcling in the at noon, Attorney General Hunt stated | OWn admission —-no miscrable policeman OF | cont rates will be given up, and the v | enjoyed better health in his life. Oh, yes, T » crowd, and the wom o rod night, and also heard her husbund muking & e s iy Mishod diaar. | PEaitted constable, but tho statc's prose: | Sheatio Wil aereo Yory noaHy with Wost- 3 e . Oh, yes, Grovy Threatons to Resign. the crowd, and the woman, who appeared to ) cuting attorney does the by . steals the he talked quite freely to me about the politi- ehtavhon thalcour! RS SAter AR ern Union, 3 politi mn:u l:! \;llu n:h_l.umf m!:mmull melu:\ papers and says you can't help that He puts The oficials of the Postal Telegraph com- | cal outlook and said he would acceptthe e nnl an ‘“\‘1‘ ""(‘ “;"“" Ee | il Qoo iumnh ‘;'_;'.’"‘,{;‘,_ carotold | pany have formally amnounced that as o re | nomination if it was offefed. He is not nor way to Grinnell. Grmnell spoke forty-five | that o s and_ privileges are sult of the conference yesterday the rates of | will noi be active with & view to securin minutes, paying particular attention to the | itvaded and ourremedy is to sue for tres- | the Postal company will be advanced to the Ly , Hele: puss. What a beautiful remedy. Sue the TRioHEEIaRANH rnameg | the nomination, but expisses the hope and composition’ of the jury. After reviewing | Muters attornoy and be tricd by Western Union standard on, all messiges | belief that if he is nominated he will be A b & Dtif: noise as though he was _choking. Then she This evening President | PO the ouly witess Wi called o testityy but | SNl from go out o the louse curry g 'y, at the cabinet council, intimated that | culled, but his statement contradicted itself | Some heavy object. 1 he would resign if an inquiry Was not insti- | so many times thut the coroner ordered the o tuted into Wilson's alleged connection with | jury to appear at S eph this morning fowa Bupremte ¢ 1 the decoration scandal., Grevy said he did | and brought the bod wn. The farmers | DEs Moixgs, Ia., Oct. 28 Panig, Oct. Gre Decisions. —[Spdeial Teles . ¢ GOV inthe meantime took SHiTh and his wife into | gram to the Ber.]—The supremo court flled briefly the ground covered by the argument | us the Taw of Illinois would give. Better be | Lhaer D B o | ielaotad:t not object to Wilson being tried in the reg- | ygtody. An autopsy was held to-day and | he a8l e oLy of Attorney General Hunt yesterday, Grin- | in o placo ot to hamed for comfort,» | higher than that fl“,“]'l‘:h:}"' muennEfcoti iin d to the return of Mr. Bluine to | War way for any offense, but he must, objec ‘ : ¥ the following decisions here to-day. the jury roturned a verdict that the deccased cral Butler i » o to the nell said that so far as the composition of the in urged that the the United & Q.81 M Gdrao tem of bluckening his son-in-law's e told my in- Standard Coal company vs Independe advance will tak < 1 ) ftoc »f No- e B ! cume to his death from a_blow received on bl (L el . 4 o : oners had been sentenced to - death | Yembon, effect on the 1st of No- [ £ G s e e settled wpon, | character, not ol through the press, but | fuie 1o hs JEth TS DOW InEVEE | District of Argus, appellunts, Boone district. jury was concerned there was only one man L 1B C ORI i o e | TG but it was certain he would not return through a commitiee of the chamber embrac- | ,/q fig wife, 1t was not cleariy shown who | Afred, in it to whom any objection was | gion said: CIf mews lives can be G T T T T next May. ~ Mr. Blaine in_one_conversation | W personal oncmics and party hatreds. | (el tho blow. Warrants will bo sworn [ | e 1 1S D Ya ddiiEtoniREes raised by the defense and that 'n in this way, as you have scen exhibited . referred to the political status of New York, oquet assured the president that the cham- | ;4761 the arrest of the parties implicated sy 3 was the man Sanford, whe » to-day, we had better hi ve anarchy and | A Califor ia Sheriff Trying to Capture | Ohio, Virginia and Maryland and said that | ber held him i rederick C. Patten, ap) undiminished respect and The affair has created great excitement in Alant, ve Central was the lust Juror sclectod. Theattempt hud v be’without law thun with any such United States Troops. they, could undoubtediy bo carried by the fivged 1o Tooyerlagdie T L w‘,‘,“""""“x!:.“ red | the neighborhood. IwE ARG ORUCHEDRE L S Juror named Denker had > hun objected | Tho chief justive 1the next case on | District Attorney Carey has received a tele- | there was no doubt that Blaine was the com- | 8Wait the report of the committee. b Lddats o A Miner Killed By Falling Slate. to but in repiy to that it was only nece the docket and the hearing of the motion of | gram from the sheriff of Mendocino county | ing man; that if nominated he would surely T e oI The Building Contractor Getting Deep 2 ) Oct. 25— [Special Telod to say that at the time Juror Denker was ac- | the anarchists for a of ervor was over. | informing him he was gathering a posse to | be the next president. i S R e U R in Financial Quagmires. gram to the B The state mine_ inspecs copted the defense had the right to 142 pre ”n secms to be the general impression atnong ipture Captain Shaw, whom General How- AL T ttars! o 1 »"l'\];” Je e l“"“‘l‘ ing galled i DexvER, Col., Oct. 28— [Special Telegram ofice has been notified of the death by emptory challen If they had objecto isenyhiomiye paiCiliageloassticuonton ard had sent in command of United States | Wasmixaroy, Oct. 98 —[S; il 16 J0rg My or dust L g bVibo Covaa0 InCansHOL i R e T The trouble between Con- | falling slate of Henry Stockslidge in a mina 1y the pro t the counscl for the state ; 3 ct. 28, —[Special Telegram | yggisting the decerving poor of London, : i Mine Inspector Smith, in whosa him very strong 1.1‘,1‘(;‘. he be “{ the argument, and | troops to cject sheep herders and others from | to the Bre.]—Forty-five recruits have been ool chatoars aontad tractor Richardson, of the state capitol build- | at Delta. Mine Inspector Smith, in whose of the preempto to exclude him, | that the writ of error wil vising the public | 5L 0L board of capitol managers, in. | Qistrict his necidant occurrod, suys that the last death prior to this was in M ast, and ios which were able and deserving, but | augurated a couple of days ago over the be granted. the Round Valley Indian reservation in this | ordered to Fort state. The telegram also states that the nelling, Minn.; 200 to the | to do all in their After reviewing at some length the cases i and 20 to the Twentieth in- | cha of the jurors, Sanford and Denk Bagtingiu Twelfth infantry s0 Tar but &ix deaths have been teported. in i Cehinaimin || R o | state court nas issucd a writ of injunction or- | fantry. A board of engineer oficers consist- | t© e more discrimination. ment, of money for the constry L Sline TS, an waid that every man on the jury was duly | o, G860 Qe Bhes B Bt | qering Captain Shaw to desist from remov- [ ing of Coloncl Thomas L. ¢ 4 — - : foundation, which resulted in Richa unsually good showiug for'so large u dis- qualified under the common law. Tt was in | pua "SR o yosto fhat, Spics ona | N8 tress from the reservation. Dis- | Henry L. Abbot and Major William R. King, A Question of Veracity. | stopping all work and going cast, reas- | tric i no sense a class ju hiree of tho jurynen | ade, by Butler Sosterday that Spics and | ¢ Attoruey Carey advised General How- [ has been ordered to mectin New York for | , LONPOX, Oct 3% —General Sir I . Pou- | ing. He had hardly left tho city before tho T s wore men whio labored with their own hands; | 10 06 alions, have privileees guaai | g to ovder Captain Shanv to”surrender to | he examination for promotion of Firs souby, the queen’s priv retary, in_ o | McPhee & MeGinnity Lumber company at- one of them was a man of forc y DEs MOINES, m to the B office has been offic ous outbreak of scu v, Oct. [Special Teles The state board of health ally notified of the scris let feverat State Center. virth, and b : the sherift, which Ge ; Bl g 1 thindk it's & poor polnt, said @, T Do | 1o shertff, which Gen not a capitalist among them. o et wrd to “unreasonable scarch ana | ShAnAm of the pasons earch and o ogtion was addressed, as the man most innell said he did not desire letter in reference to the statement made by Canon Welden at the recent meeting of the Church of Treland Temye he was present during the ul Howard declined | tenant S. A.Rosslor to do without orders from the president or v, whereupon Ci dispateh to the attorney general and Second Lieut, David Dubo Galliard and Harry Taylor. st | Liutenant Colonel James Moore, deputy tached a train load of cement consigned to Richardson to cover a claim of §1,500. Sev- eral other attachments were made upon ma- there w With r seizure,’ society, says stival ‘in - the 1 : Jfor A S : artermastor goneral (has boen roliovod | hishiahds oad did not the tay: diunke terial and tools lying in the yards, and to-day | my G et e e i srominent in the effort to obtain amnesty for | ton, in which ke reviewed the above facts | uartermaster g J highlands and did not see uny drunken per- e Ban s ho disease sprung up in the priu and this was not the place to apologize for il G (aIEik i haaEot T nd statens V1 tho sheriff porsists and Gen. | from the department of Dakota and ordered | sons. the Union Pacific attached all the other ma- | 4nd spread so that all the schools huve been anything ho had done in this case. He ot s0. Dre. Shios tetls | orul Howard continues to »fuse following | to take charge of the quartermaster’s depot T terial and property of Richar the first plac son tosecure a | closed. It is beli believed, however, that it had always been [ the first place ed that the epidemi is wy advice it will probubly result in blood- | at St. Louis, relic Blunt Will Not Down. - laim of §2,65 : 3 v under control. ) r 2 R e e e ng Mnjor Charles Foster, o mung W No, | etaim of 82,650, “The attachments now ag- | now und regarded as proper to deprive a_crim osi| mos Aupust Bploa 18 o natiratired clizon g0 od. Who is ordered to Fort Leavenworth: Major | DUPLY, Oct. 28.—Wilfrid Blunt, while | grogate $30,000. Richardson’s attorney, ex- R the instrument of Lis crime and to use such | she telis me, and I think Fielden is, too, but, s O L ot 1ot | traveling to Loughrea, addressed three meet- | Ritormey General Thomas, says ho wiil ro- A New Packery For Sioux City. instruments as evidence against him. 1t had | that docsn’t cut any fizure, Whether they The China-American Bank. enworth, to report to the qua been done when the pistol was taken by fr 3 termaster gen- | ing are voters or not is of very little consequence | Nuw Youk, O --[Special Telegram to v in this city, Captain Henry Q. | Loug now. They have made up their winds to | the Bee.]—That part of the report tele- \\";"l%i\'mmshz ed ‘f}"’“' Phil hang theso men, end [ guess they're going to | graphed from San Francigeo on Wednesday | Phia, to Buffalo, relieving Captain Daniel od by the crowds., At | turn in a couple of weeks, cffect an amicable | Sioux Crry, Ia, Oct. 25.—[Special Tele/ ed the crowd that | settlement with the board, and resume work. athered to meet him, using batons. The | Upon this subject, however, there are many 1| mob replied with sticks und stoues, but were | opinions. 1t was rumorcd upon the streets m llu' s ssin Guiteau, uml gram to the Ber.]—D. T. Hedges returned from Chicago this evening, having concluded i "Floyd. Captain Floy pliaveMajor || commatie A torduy and to.day that Mr Richardson is | the conference with the great beef packery nu-.n\-mgmvhn-ugnmulmmu-.-umlm;u-w, do i regrdiug the new Chin Bank | s (OO i el Mnior | conrellag to disharas: Hoayily smbarrassey financiily, His debts | Swift, relative to the S atablishment, of such as bombs, dynamite, ete., which be. he point has been made that unless the | which referred to Vande S od to Spics, hists wh new | Captain Cur gover- | president of the bank, was treated with in- nce of it credulity yesterday at the general offices of w'the! Thelaw | the New York Central & Hudson River s of the an | condemned men sign the petit the Arbeiter | nor cannot take any cogniz rs of the an- ““I'hat’s all bosh. Why ca s E. Munn, assistant surgeon, The s been relieved from duty at Fort Canb (Iml ordered to Fort Kialath it Thomas Ridgewd ish LoNDox, Ocf oo, dpsih 5 2 here result is in Sioux City" e R iaaionT in Colorado arc estimated in the neighbor | house here, The resu Sloux City i morming | hood of #0,000, and in’ Michigan, Wisconsin | favor, us usual, and such ahouse will ba k S | and Illinois he is reported to have judgments | built. A hes the flshe standing against him nggrogating $200,000, s The New sbury w had been yuses, but 1) citunge office, the leadquar s itu e, t . v s v has been relieved from duf otiations between England and the United | and if he fails to overcome this complication Prompt County Treasurcrs. archist i party. ll‘u maintained —that | provides that exceutive clemency may be lroad comp: Cornelius Vanderbilt, 1 school at Garden City, I e to be hopelessly doomed from the out- | the result may be scrious. According to the Drs Moizes, Oct, 28.—[Special Telegram the question Was not, how did these arti Tited untordcentain leondibionatanatwhen:| wh e R\ RG Gl Bal i cles get before the court, but what was supposed to be the Vanderbilt al- | granted fourteen days leave. )n\u\nhlnlw of ppointment of Cham- | contract if work isd e conditions ave simmered down they | luded to, was not in the city and will not re- | leave have been eranted as follows: - Captain Innhuu and s ntinied on the build- | o the Ber.)—All but two of the ninet ommissioner, ing for a period of ninety days the contract iina @id they prove, and again v 1red to the ct anothe s T ¥ {ERS o 15 3 ¢ counties of the state have paid their Scpteme ease of Ker vs the people of 1linois, cited b n that executive clemency must be asked | twn until next i Proxident Do, | 200l Esle,. TulrhioSashur, thtee montn : SN L ‘l"l“,'"l the building becomes the | o wgpicetions iuto the state tr , mike the attorney general of the state yesterday. | for. The prisoners m n the petition | pew, after carefully reading the San Fran- | cuvaiey LR W, ‘:"'!'"';"(“' At 8 Salogn). ) DOVES 0SS i e i romartublo record in this respoct for g Il\l"i'r !‘l| alkl d 8 ecither for themselves or by attorney. Well, | cisco dispatch, said that Vanderbilt had not | ton Fish, F . has resigned, his 'I‘\I'” i ‘I"'““)f\_‘“i Loy I‘L iy “‘;;“ ]"\_ 'h‘“l‘ promptuess. H oll close er arose and ob- | o stle for them, ain't T acting | told him that he had assumed any such ignation to take effect Decemb ) ump, at Rushville, was blown up by dyna- This morning . ton Will 8 jocted to the latter o Grinnell's avgu. [ 171 lm‘l 4 20 und for | ‘Im,ltm B L Aok | L B R s hans. it | Tostenation 1o, deks allegh Pocernb mite at 3 o’clock this morning. The building his morning L The Injunction Will Stand. ment on the ground that it went outside of | A8 their attorneyt don't understand said Depow, “that Vanderbilt does Pensions Granted. and contents were completely wrecked, as x, the maniac daugh Dis Moixes, Ia., Oc © motion by the printed record and brought in extraneous | that all of them have refused to sign wd 1o bo prosident, of this Chineso [ ywysivaton, Oct, 25 [Spocial Telogram | Well#s a livery stable adjoiniiz. ' well-known swloon Koeper, eluded hior | yyo dofendant, Carpentor, to modity. tha matter to which no reference had before | the petitions. 1 think there are only ) u to permit the use ATONy 0 e L DREY Lh — - nd after saturating her clothes with been made. He obsorved tkat this extrancous | two of them who wont, but if the others do e ale oud | to the Bek.]-The following Nebraska pensions preliminary injunction ordes ed Tast woek by Ayoub's Companion Choked. kerosine oil set fi matter must be popular with the court oy o0 her person. She was and a general amer SR rige the United States cireuit court in the cuse o Hitior must bepopular with the cour is granted, do you ¥, aikd become thoroughly | have been issucd: Original: B. I Gra Loxpos, Oct, 28 Genoral Nur Mahomed, | Burned in shocking manner and will proba: | o United States clvcult court in the cuss of Flo and his associntes iad hecn talon by sop | mean to tell me that it wont apply to the ApGRehil Jandioh joo yay Clay Center; Wellington Potter, Elm Creeks | companion of Ayoub Khan in the flight from | bl die. to-day und @ writ of injunetion ordered to ke ol D Dbl SR et It hrdan i | Buch roatedotlons oan only worls: to abiidga;| BOT WIS W0 LGNS ho ias on hie hands Vo'l Amos Miller, Ulyssesy . O. Huokins, Cal- [ohoran, hos beon captured publicly o issue, RO im‘u|lln‘\-ul~.' fully and show that the facts | the right of petition which is granted to e \'v[rt. I <o hanged at Herat., = Ll A‘n;. HOULIORG e stated by Mr. Grinnell were not in the | ¢ citizen' of the country. Take t weiver For the Che o : Ohio. owa pensions exican Sarah, T TR 2 C 3 0404, A0 10,/1164 AULIOpItIO) OV g record. If he should bo wroug, he hioped he 1 wherein does ¢ rent Meceiyer Hopithe Chasapaake & Qhlo. il IIC TR B ons T B Grimes, ANOTHER CHEYENNE CRASH. | 4,504 Surgeon General Hamilton that they i Crianrestos, W, Va,, Oct. 258.—Yesterda; ge Cox, C i 4 - The Arizona Penitentiary Break Re: would be corrected by men who did not ad ym the worst form of ism eve AL Wi Yty Och -8 Y | Russell, Orig O Marshall: LA ale Grocers. | hud found thirteen of the immigrants which | The Arizona Penitentiary Break Res GRQRIL Lo corrected ty. me did s R O] Ane LAt DA et ell, Orig Baker & Johnson, W sale Grocers, I My T sloaling and pr “‘_;l::*‘"“_‘.“,,v fessod judgment in the clerk's office e 4 Gl A j Che . Fail For $10 000. ’ came over on the Independent from Palermo, Oct e ”W”' i Aft ribing w happen Van Zandt was King 1o circuit court of this county in favor of C. P, Walker: J CHEYENNE, Wy0., Oct. 28, —[Special Tele- | and that the packages and bundles which te |n|m to escape from the prison to the Huymarket meeting, he s and she said ju the heavi Huntington for $1 A thE A eas et Hiram Rockwell, Bed. | gram to the Bee.]—Baker & Johnson, whole- | they brought with them would be cither iy i e At that meetinis w bomb was thrown by “It scems to me that the ruling of the su- | o "y o anacial termof the circuit court M. Perkins, Parkers- | sale grocers doing business here and at | buracd or fumigated AR5 ORI by bady for some purpose, und there is not one | preme ¢ which is that it ‘doesn't mako | S08t8- At the speciaitermof the olroult cour 1 T e e T P PR e - Killed and were buried thisafter- word in these 8,000 pages of evidence to show | any differcnce how the evidence was ob- | t-day Huntington filed a bill in chancery T S e vy T A Profitable The condition of Superintendent that any onoe of the: rd anything to do | tained so long as it proves the man guilty | against the Ches e & Ohio railway com- Bids For Approaches. suit brought by J. I Gordon, dealer in grain Avstiy, Tex., Oct. 28.--J Smith, the is critical, but it is thought he may with the throwing of that bo Tis ex- | isan entiro novelty in law. The article in | pany and others, setting up a lien of his judg- | Wasiizatoy, Oct. 25, al 1 A chattel mortgage for #5,000 was [Spec sgram h to the Bree.|—Bids were opened to-day by | subsequently filed against the & b At 0l Paso, ‘was pald ) v is being largely signed for the pardon ing architeet of the treasury for | Panking hous A. Kent liubilities | train robbers near El Paso, hied! ald §2,000 convict named Riges, who shot tlie_cons of the firm will ite 100,000, Assets ay by order of Governor Ross asa Lonvich Ramon TEERS AN NASIINE PHA without examination and without proc well as anybody that they only found keys | company is insolvs nd praying for the ap: | the approach for the federal building at | upknown. Bal ohuson, in addition to wd for his act. Smith will probably get | itk W6 WiE BICD s R o] until they were indicted by a grand jury.” | uud some letiers there, Oh, its just wwful, The court appointed | Council Bluffs. The bidder John P. | their grocery business, have been heavy | £,000 from the express company and £1,000 [ ERICH CONEIES WO g terms :l'“-w-“ was ready to | > hiin: : viveting more fetters on the peopleof m receiver. Wickham is | Weaver, Council Bluffs, £, John Ham- ) gpoculators in mineral and oil elaims and | from the railread compa; ono for G 181G here was not s, man I} plosion killed a single poli 10 within a | to-day’s Tribune whigh says that a bomb was | ing and of his judgment and alleging default fow days all these men wer sted with- | found in August's desk, is just as mean as it | of full payment and of interest on bonds, and the %0 out warrants, conmitted o il and held | can be. The editor who wroto it Luows just claiming that the Chesapeake & Ohio railway | e Sub€ by tha | express messenger who vecently killed two | survive his wounds, A petition to the gov- man of the country sure I don't | now second vice president and _actag mana- | mer, Council Blufts, 3,786; Dumesnil Bro land sehemes in Wyoming and their failur - Compromised jury selected who had not said that he had a v what is us all.” ger of the Newport News & Mississippi Val- [ Louisville, 35,500, is ibuted to the unprofituble outcome Bail Reduced. ani b fivin and some of them an e at the jaii the sightseers exhibited | ley company. sy these ventures. NEw YOKK, Oct. 23.--On application of Lovis, Oct yiction, opinion and prejudice agaiust the an usual im: > Postal Changes. R # Dby ; Mo, suit for | mon & Farr, the fendants, After u great deal of rambling jree or four won came in and hung A Great Case Settled. WASHINGTON, Oct. Special Telegram Post & Co.'s Statement. gounuas fox &) AR a0t e capitalists of the Niobrara cattle company, talk abeut the_compositio the jury. dis- | around where i*arsons was talking with his | CLEvELAND, Oc he great $20,000,000 | to the Bee.]—The followi braska post- | Cuexexxe, Wyo, Oct. 28— [Spocial Tete- | £,000000, browght, by bls kg 6060 | wiion: failed a fow woeks ago, have agrecd to satiefuction with e record, ek of thivo for | wife and did_ theie very best to- averhear | cusc against the New York, Pennsylvania & | musters were appointed to-day: Thomas L. | gram to the Brr.]—The schedule of asscts 0D Sasnio00; Toouced e B8 accept 45 cents on the dollar und release the Abaence And that of thelr counsel the | avhiio where Ning V i tallias ta | Obio railroad company was ended in-the | Austin, Julian, Nemaha county, vice Thomas | and liabilities of the suspended banking firm | “prancklyn was then released from Jail on | debtors from further Hability, Tho cutiva injustice done them by able sourch | Spica, Sples® |, siater: i with | common pleas court to-day by payment of the ; Nelson A. Wells, Lutes, | of Morton E. Post & Co. was filed yesterday | bail, a number of the most prominent men in | liabilities of Newman & Farr amounted to wnd seizure, ete. aid that if | Schwab wwhile, and th avesdrop | small amount of costs remaining. The suit Vice James Leverick, ro. | in the probate court. It shows atotalamount | New York haviug gone on kis bond. about §50,000, all these things could be done, the question | on their conversation. Miss Van Zandt | was brought in 1551 by James McHenry and ssgrove, Mound, Howard | of assets, consisting chiefly of stocks, bonds ———— e 3 Y 10 be debated was whether this govermrvent | turned avound and gave them alcok freezing | J. C. Conyveare for themselves and others, | county, Mr. Nettie ewall, resigned. | and notes, of & with liabilities Chicago Joh Printers Will Strilie. G s Governor On the Stump, would not -be better if it were overtuned | enough to put outs blast furnace, but it. did | holders of certificates issued in exchange for |~ T'he name of the postoft i, Keith | Amounting to 8511,007.85, abalance of assets | Cricaco, Oct. 28.--Typographical union sy, Get. 20 —General John B, futo’anarehy than if itwere to ba carvicd on in | not effect them in the least. of the Atlantic & Great | county, is changed to Lisbon, and Edward | over liabilities of # 0. Of the assets, | last night voted to restrict & i talior'ta ordon, governor of Georgia, made his firat this fashion. “1 have no feor;” he said, “of | = *When is they goin 2 * said one railroad company againt Charles E. Seuny appointed postmaster, Jucob A. | however, u large it is pledged and nob | 1 by v i B § SR Loy g T TaL being misunderstoad upon this question, T | of tha women, right out loud, cali, in. utes and oth and the New | Wertz, superseded, Nlable and & large percentage of the notes j Hine hours, wi hno reduction in pay. Ata | speech in Onio to-night in, the have the indviduality of being the only .‘mm,..“\- ansylvania & Ohio railroad com- BT, included s assets are uncollcetuble at the | meeting of employing printe: this afternoon | state campaign, Hi “.u. I was la in the United States that condemncd and | Why, Novembier 111" replied another. Steamship Arrivals. o s e a resolution wis passed to resist the demand [ voted 1o a v m of the claim of cx~ exccuted men for undertaking to everturn | “Oh,’ my. tain’t but aiittlo while. Let's ity ppa— ¥ y 1. A strike on November 1| confederates to loya robably he the result e - Jay Can Sail. Locomotive Engineers, Youk, Oct, Distriet Attorney C1cAGo, Oct. 28.—The' proceedings in the | Martine to-day gave attention to the charges inst Jay i1d and Russell Sage .in the the law. There were thousands of | see to, them, and for that e, plepse your ‘honors,” & .price. was set on my head as though | were a'ywolf, and §2,500 was offered to any man that could capture me | Cav and wurder me by Jefferson Davis ad b 25th, P e New You, Oct. 28.—([Special T mto ————— 1o the bitter BEE,] —Arrived—The Britannic, from Angell and Putnam Return. by Liverpool; the Ganada, from London; the | WAsHINGTON, Oct. 28.—Messrs. Angell and Aller, from Bremen; the Wicland, from | Putnam, fisheries negotiators, have returncd Hamburg. to Washington and are in frequent consulta. rch Masons. ~The grand chapter of yal Arch Masons of Jllinofs ‘held the final thirty-cighth annual meeting wider W. Barclay, of Cairo, and said the fivst, counting days -hath Scptember, 1er,—only tiree days aonth and then dleven by I e just two weeks T to-day. T'd “kinder )@ to | Yoday QUEENSTOWYN, Oct, 28— Arrived—The Wis- | tion with Secretary' Bayurd. regurding the | mecting of the Brotherhood of T.ocomotive & A T (A _sociates, and who, if they were here see 'ém hung. ) Wtow it'll be just awful, but [ Sylvester O. ing; of Peoria, were elected | consin, from New York. approiching negotiations, The Knglish com- | Engincers to.¢ y consisted mostly of vontine h S84 i . bar trying to ascertain whether th T'd ke to se it, just to kinder brag wbout it, | grand bigh priest ‘aid deputy grand high | - Haxbung, Oct. e great | yon know,” aud ihus they chattercd o, &8 | priest, respectively, from New-York, o desive to. interfere with Goujd's inf salling for FLurope W-morrow, —Arrived—The Moravia, | missioners are_expected here the latter part | business. Itic wmond, Va,, was chosen as the have av honest anu fair wial for v X of the first week of \uycmh»r. place for holding the hext meeting. | | R R S SN S SRE e

Other pages from this issue: