Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
LADIES MERINO VESTS, 256, | EOdozen, long sleeves, exceptional value, LADIES' S8CARLET VESTS, $1.00 82dozen, all sizes. strictly all wool, last THE OMAHA D reduced price, 28e¢, season's $1.50 quality; to close $1.00. Children’s Gotton Hose, 25g, 20dozen, brown, searlet, and navy blue, reduced f pair. Ladies’ Black Gotton Hose, 25c, These are guaranteed fast black, and were at 89¢ a pair. LACE CURTAINS, $4. BOO pairs Imitation Brussels Lac regular $3 quality. price from 78cto 28c a sold early in the season ALLY BEK; SUNDAY, Sk} LADIES - We have buta few left of each and will make price to close the lot, Ladies’ $8.00 Cambric Suits.. Ladies’ $10.00 Cambric Suits. Ladies' $12.00 Gingham and S Ladies’ $10.00 Dark Wool Suits................. Ladies’ $20.00 Wool Suits. . price $5.00; sale price $2.50, "LKMBER 14, 18U Children’s Cloaks, §3. Children’s 8 and 10 years Gretchen Cloaks, just the thing for school wear, regular SUITS. ateen Suits........For $8.00 ..For $38.78 s eissisaiisnrsesssiss FOr $10.00 Ladies' Stackinet Jackets, $450. Ladies’ Black Stockinet Jackets for fall wear, size 32 to 42 bust. Price previous . B4 in~hes wide, 84 yards long, Removal price $4 per pair. Imitation Irish Point Curtains, $3.95. 380 pairs Imitation Irish Point Lace Curtains, 82 inches wide, yards long; regular price $3.75. Removal price $3.285 per pair, Holland Shades, 40c Each. 1000 Holland Shades, with border, mounted ons to hang, will be sold before removal at 40c each., Down Pellows, 18118, filledwith Eider dozon and leighly perfumed, at $1.50 cach. Black Gros Grain Silks,. 3 SPECGCIAL VALUES, LOT 1--10 pieces LOT 2--10 piece: 20 inches wide, at 7Sca yard. 21 inches wide, at 89ca yard, LOT 8--10 pieces, 22 inches wide, at 98c a yard. BLACK ROYAL ARMURE. A Bargain--10 pieces, 22 inches wide, at $1.17 a yard, COLORED VELVETS. Our regular silk-faced $1.25 quality, before removal, we offer at 88c a yard, 34 to moving will be $4.50 each, Ladies' Cloth Jackets, $8.00. Ladies' Fine Wide Wale Black Jacket, with embroidered reveres, collar and pring rollers ready cuffs, moving price $8.00. Ladies' Stockinet Jackets, $8.00. Ladies’ Black Fall Weight Stockinet Jackets, withreveres, tailor made, price $6 SPECIAL BARGAINS IN LINENS. 72-inch Bleached Damask, $1; reduced from $1.35 yard. 64-inch Bleached Damask, 7sc; reduced from $1.00 yard. 5-8 Bleached Damask Napkins, $2.50; reduced from $4.50 dozen. GIANT HUCK TOWELS. We haveonly a few more of the Giant Huck Towvels, and will sell them Monday at 6 for $1.00. During our recent special sales we h Monday and until asks, ete, DUCED PRICES. ave accumulated a lot of Remnants of Dam- our removal we shall sell them at GREATLY RE. Morse Dri; Goods Co. The Morse Dry Goods Co. Standard Indigo Blue Prints, 3. 2 cases Best Standard quality, Monday only 3o HEAUY OUTING Specially adapted for housewesar, FLANNEL, 10c. stylish patterns and marked down from 18¢ to 10c. COMFORT GALICOS, 6Y4s. 2,000 yards, desirable patterns, our yard, 8je quality veduced to 8 1-4ca Honest Pound Gotton Batting, 17¢: To-morrow and Tuesday. 10 bales of PURE W HITE Cotton Bat- ting, full 18 ounces to each roll, reduced from 23¢ to 17c. BOYS WOOL SHIRT WAISTS, 95c. These come in both Twilled Flannel and French Tricot, closing price 95e. Men’s Black Sox, 19c. These are made of an extra heavy cotton thread, and guaranteed fast black, Men's All Wool Undershirts, $1.25. Have sold from $2 1o $3, and come in colors, gray, brown, white and scarlet, in shirts only. MEN'S MERINO In white and gray, extra heavy, for winter wear. only. SHIRTS, 39c. We have shirts ——— WHITE FILANNELS. Monday morning we place on sale 180 piece: in four lots, at just 83 1-3 per cent less than last senso: of White Flannels, prices. Cold weather is here, you will need them, buy them while you can get them at this reduced price: Lot 1--8-4 wide, reduced price 17 c. Lot 2--8-4 wide, reduced price 2215¢. Lot 8--7-8 wide, reduced price 27c. Lot 4--8-4 wide, reduced price 80c. SCARLET FLANNEL. Our regular 88c quality reduced to 28c. Morse Dry Goods Co. DECAY OF THE WAYSIDE INY, A Relic of the “Good 0ld Times" Going the Way of all Flesh. <THE INN AND ITS PLACE IN HISTORY. ©Ol1d Red Horse Tavern at South Sud- bury and the Immortals it Shel- tered—Where the Tales of a Wayside Lnn were Written. The day of the stage coach had ended, says Albert Ellis Hoyt in the Boston Globe. The steam car, with its mar- vellous accession of speed and power, had told its story to New England, and the old favorite was doomed. It fell, never torise, and with its fall came achange over New England so great that itis almost impossible for us of a later gen- eration even to imagine what the old Now England was, It has gone so utterly that itis only now and then, when some unexpected reminder of its dead form suddenly flashes up in the ming, a partial portrait of the New England of the not very re- mote past, that wo can getany concep- tion of the completeness of the change. Such a reminder I have lately visited, In melancholy grandeur, upona little eminence beside the once busy thorough- fare whence the wave of advancing ¢ lization has swept the travel of a worn- out age, stands the old Red Horse tavern at South Sudbury, one of the 05t romantic of the old hostelries that 80 eloquently tell the tale of a day that is done. Built over two centuries ago, it was the center of amore than one Indian raid, and up in its wenerable attic the first settlers hid their corn from the watchful eyes of the redskin plunderers during their earl hardships; it know Massachusetts when she was a slave state, for here is the odd little bin swung from the garrett w the bunk where old "Squire Adam Howe's dwarf slave used to sleep; it was old and hoary when George I1L lost his colonies, and the Dutch brick in its chimneys had blackened with the smoke of more than acentury when Washington dined wined, no doubt, beneath its anc rool. In its guest chamber, hardly g00d as most modern farmhouse atiic slept Lafayette, and one wonders how he ever got o wink of sleep on the old-fash- ioned rope bedstead that was considered sostately and grand in that quaintold time. It was well on in the last quarter streteh toward its two-century birthday when Longfellow and his litile coterie told inits front room the legends that have been woven into the ‘“Tales of a Wayside Inn,” and forever idealized and given a tinge of poetry and romance to the picturesque old inn. It bore a am in the stirring scenes of the revolu- on, lodging alike the continental and the Hessinn—willingly the one, by com- ~pulsion the other—for even hotels have opinions in time of war, 80 s0on forgotten are all things tempo- ral! The waysideinn silently yetimpross- dvely poiuts the obvious moral, 'Fhure 1800 room for the individval, no matter how great his worth, no matter how ex- alied his rank. All, even the old roof that sheltered Washington and Lafay- ette and Longfellow, must step out of the way for the incessant chof eivili- zation, or remain intheir picturesque Ennlllm and provineial lonliness only, ke theold inn, as & curious relic of & forgotten past. Individuality must bow before corporation, mass and class, syn- dicate and trust; the central and the general must absorb the local and the remote, as the shark devours the min- now. Not alone the country tavern, but the country itself, must decrease, has de- creased, that the city might {nerease. The centralizing force grows ever stronger, ever more unmerciful to the wayside inn and the wa; 2 tion. Theold Red House no longer hangs out its signal to the guestto enter, for the inn is an inn nolonger. It stands todayonlyas a picturesque velic of a bygone era—the era of the country slore, the stage coach, the tallow dip. Honored beyond its fellows by reason of the associations clustering about its his- toric name, it can nevertheless claimno more than they, any practical place in the hurry and ‘worry, the incessant hur- Iy burly of today. ‘It has dropped from 5 the railroad, theelectric light, the telegraph have set a pace that its ancient prowess cannot hope to rival, It stands, by the <-n|umendubL- decision of its owners, almost identically as it stood when it was finally abandoned us & hos- telry thirty years” ago; but were its bill of fare today equal to the finest in the world, no oie except the historian, the poet, or the pleasur er would be tempted by its beautiful surroundings to step beneath the roof that has sheltered some of New England’s greatest men, to register at the hotel thatin its day was 50 prosperous and pretentious, - The sceptre has departed from Judah. 1t is distanced in the commercial race, It looms up in the commercial _graveyard i i onument. **De mortuis >w England and middle states stand wayside inns that were in theirday full of the busy hum of the com- ing and'going travel of the stage-comch and the post roa A and untenanted, save for the g grewsome tenantage of bat aud beetle, and ghoul-forsaken and forgotten Never aguin shall their desolate halls ring with the laughter of thecountry swain and country lass. Gone forever are bar maid and tapster—gonewith the good old country squire and the slim but upright New TEngland deacon. Gone with'the old-time country merchant, at whosestores our grandfathers could and did buy anything from a neodle to a mowing machine and gone an iconoclastic gencration whose woodmen go to Boston, whose Boston- luns go to New York, and whose New s g0 10 Paris for their hairpins, sleeping the last sleep of a past that is more absolutely dead and forgotten than Babylon, that “could never be repro- duced unless every mile of railroad, strand of télegraph wire, every spaz of inventive genius were utterly blotted out forever, and a lethargy like Rip Van Winkle's sleep benumbed the intellect of all mankind. It was o good civilization in its way, but we would not eallit back. It is more than childish, it is idiotic, to sigh forthe quasi good old days, with their limita- tions, their narrowness, their provincial- ism. But perhaps we have moved, and are moving too rapidly in another diroc. tion, Weuare wearing away the tire as we perfect the power of the hub, Farms are deserted, villages ave growing poor- er and smaller, local enterprise falling out of an unequal contest with trust and syndicate, with enormous aggregations of capital and skill. Might is right; the fittest must survive, The weak and lit- tle must not stand in the way of the strong and mighty, The old wayside inn, antedating by a century the repub- lic itself, tells the story—the decay of the individual and local " before the in- cessant massing and classing. **Centralized to death” is the burden of the true tale of the Way ANOTHER DEBATE, The Liquor Question to be Agninm Discussed for Nebraska Voters. Arrngements have finally been perfected by whicha debate will take place at the sugarplacein Grand Isiand, Neb, on next Thursday afternoon and evening and Friday afternoon and evening, on the prohibition question. The prohivition side of the issue will be presented on Thursday by ex-Attorney General Bradford of Kansas and Chancellor Creighton of th e W 'yan university of Lin- coln, and on Friday afteroon by ex- ernor Larrabee of Iowa and Mr. Bradford. The anti-prohibition side will be presented on both days by Hon. J. L. Webster and k. Rosewater of this ci The Omaba_real e tate exchange will send out a special train containing a hundred visitors durimg the debate, and & large attendance is expected from over the state. The debate takes place under the auspices of the managers of the sugar palace, AMUSEMENTS. “Saints and Sinners” was the attraction at the Boyd last evening, the Palmer com- pany rounding out their engagement to the 1argest house of the scason, It was a repre- sentative louse, the life and fashion of Omaha being represented, though it was Sat- urday night. When Burns wrote his “Address to the Unco' Guid,” he sounded the keynote of “Saints and Sinners™ ; “Then gently scan your brother man Still gentler, sister woman, Tho’ they may gang a kennin wrang o step aside is human.’? Noplay of the modern stage appeals so strongly to the hearts of theater-going people as it. Emotioml to a dogree, it comes as near being possible as any thing tow pictured for the entertainment of devotees of the stage. And the company that produced it last night deservedly ‘may be called the representative dramatic organization of Americ Ir. Stoddard would remiin as he But ageis coming on, and before long his place on the stage will be but a ence. Yet it must be satisfaction representative actor to kaow that what he has done in the lastquarter ofa cen- tury will suice upon abich to vest his repu. tation for all time Miss Harrison was sweetly pretty as Lotty chier, while Maurice Birrymore was as a villain os the contemporary een. was excellent, better than ever Dr. Bimey cures catarrh, Bee bldg. NEW POLLING DISTRICTS, The Ordinance Creating Them Passed by the Council. Messrs. Bechel, Cooper, Lowry, Ford, Morearty, Blumer, McLearie, Sander, Ost- hoff, Wheeler and Shriver were present at a special meeting of the council held last uight, Inthe absenceof President Chaffee Mr. Wheeler was chosen temporary chairman of the meeting, A resolution, introduced by Mr. Bechel, was adopted, requiring the president of the council and the city clerk to sign documents requiring their signatures on the date of the passige of the same by the council in the presence sf the council The city engineer was instructed to make plans for u seweruge system between Blondo and Lake streets west of Tweaty-fourth street “The petition for a change of grade on Twen- ty-ninth street, from Hickory to Martha, was rejected, the proper number of property own- ers uot Baving signed the petition The petitiou of C. S. Montgomery and others for the repaviug of Park avenue, south of Leavenworth, was rejected, the touncil deciding that ithad no jurisaiction in the case The council accepted an invitation to at- tend in @ body the laying of the cornerstone of the Sistexs’ orphanage in Benson this afternoon, The ordinance was passed changing the names of the streets in the outlying additions { being unabie to to conform with the streets in the original lats. The ordinance creating new polling pre- cinets in the various wavds was passed. The boundaries of these precincts were de- fined in the ordinance as published exclu- sively in Tur Bee of Wednesday last. oA AT WAS A LANDSLIDE, Wyoming Republicans Jubilate Over Their Victory. CueyesNe, Wyo., Sept. 18.—[Special Tel- egram to Tur Ber]—The republicans had a public demonstration this evening to cele- brate their victory, the Union Pacific band and uniformed flambeau club mainly com- prising it. Inono portionof the town the club was stoned by a lot of hoodlums and one of the members quite seriously hurt, The republicans now thinic Warren elected by about 2,000 majority, but it may fall short of that. The republicans have carried every county from which returns have been re- ceived. In this county there was agenuine landslide. There is a slight possibility thut the democratic candidate for sheriff may pull in by a few votes, but the possibil- ity is so very slicht that even the democrats do uot hang much hope onit. The rest of the democratic county ticket was aunihilated by majorities running as high as 700, e Bhe Swiss Rebels. Berwz, Sept. 18.—The latest advices from Ticino are that the federal officers who were arwsted have been released and the provi- sional government will be dissolved to- morrow. The authorities of the canton of Schyitz deny thatthey have ordered the William Tell gpisode to be expunged from tio school ooks. The bundesrath has sent a dispatch to Colonel Keunzli, commander in the canton of Ticino, instructing him to immediately dis- solve the provincisl government setup by the revolutionists and uscertain wifn the overthrown government will be ready to re- sume, P Weather Crop Bulletin, WasmixeToy, Sept, 18.~The weather crop bulletin for the week ending September 13 says: Frosts occurred in the extreme north- west and in Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Colo- rado and northern Illinois, with the tem- perature from 3 06 degroes lower than has herctofore been observed during the firsst ten days in September. The frost in South Dakota was destructive to imma- ture com and the reglcrops But slight damage occurred in Nebrask, lowa and Kansas, Seeding is progressing under fa- vorable condidions in ¥ilinois, Potatoes are reprted as rotting extgnsively in Eng- and. e e Peoria Bicycle Towmament Ended. Peorun, 111, Sept. 13.--The bicycle tourna- ment ended this evening, The attendance today was very large and,great interest was mnifested in the events. . New York and other eastern competitors tarried off @ ma- jority of the prizes. In the ten mile open race for the champiouship of America, A. Zimmerman won, W. Windle second, A. E Lumsden of Chicago, third. Time—42:01- il Polsoned by Rusty Tea Urns. Loxvoy, Sept. 13.—Miss: White, a benevo- lentlady residing at Fulbam, Wednesaay evening gave a meat supper to 100 laborers outof work. Hardly was the meal finished when the entire company was taken ill, many suffering extreme pain. Doctors were called aud found that the wholé party had been poisoned. Autidotes were administored, but thive persons have died and others are 'still in a desperate ndition. The poison was traced toa corrosive deposit on the interior of the tea uras, which hud not been properly cleaned by theservants . Floods in the Mohawk Valle AmsTeRnay, N. Y., Sept. 13.—For five con- secutive days it hus been raining in the Mohawk valley. Both Schoharie creek and the Mohawlk river have overflowed their banks and the water is still rising. Early fruit is rotting on the trees, the f.rm; ick it 1o consequence of Lh rain. The weather is very vad for the bop harvest. BASEBALL. National League. AT T0STON, Boston. ... 01000380 015 Philadelphia....1 0 001 0 4 3 0 *—8§ Hits—Boston , Philadelphia 12, rrors— Boston 12, Philadelphia 3. Batteries—Nich- ols and Hardie; Esper and Clements, Um- pire—Powers. Cincinnati, 2018 00-6 Pittsburgz 002308008 unati 9, Pittsburg 10. Errors Pittsburg 5. Batteries —Duryea and Koenan; Anderson and Decker. Umpire —Strief. ORK. 0300 01—4 0010 *—38 Called at the end of the seventh inning on account of rain, Hits—New York 3, Brooklyn 8. New York I, Brooklyi Buckley and' Clarks ; vire—Lynch. Errors— Batteries—Rusie, rry and Daly, Um' AT CHticaGo, Pirst gamo— Chicago 30012133801 Clevelan 00102300 0-—6 Hits—Chicago 9, Cleveland 11. Errors— Chicago 5, Cleveland 5. Batteries—Stein and Nagle; Viau and Sommers, Umpiro— MeQuaid. Second game— icago. . 2000000024 Cleveland)1 04 00 038 0 *—s Hits—Chicago 11. Cleveland . Errors— Chicago 4, Cleveland 2. Batterios—Huteh- inson und Nagle; Beatin' and Sommers, Um- pire—MeQuaid Players' League. AT PHILADELPIIA. Philadelphia 2300008 0—7 New York. 00100800-5 Hits—Philadelphia 13, New York 6, Er- rors—Philadelphia 4, New York 4. Batteries —Knell and Gross; Ewing and Ewing, U. pires—Knight avd' Jones. Sccoud game postponed on account of rain, AT BROOKLYN. The Boston game was postponed on account of rain. First game — Buffalo 1 Pittsburg. . 8 Hits—Bi Pittsburg Buffulo 2, Pittsburg 2. Batteries bam and Clark, Staley and Quian. Helbert and Ferguson. Second game— Buffalo. . .. Pittsburg 0-3 “8 Errors— -Cunning- Umpires 000000 09 h 300200 *35 Gae called on account of darkness, Hits—Buffalo 1, Pittsburg 6. Errors— 5, Pittsburg 1. Batterios—Twitch- oll_and Clark, Maul and Quinn, Umpire s— Holbert and Ferguson, AT CLEVELAND, First game— Cleveland, ag and Suteliff, King anda Boyle. Gaffuey and Sheridan, Second game— Cleveland, Chicage Hits—Cleveland 9, Chicago 8. Cleveland 3, Chicago3. Batteries and Brennan, Bars —Gaftaey and Sherid Amerlcan Association. AT ROCHESTER, 10001 *—p 000000-0 wcuse 5. Errors— yracuse 6. Batteries—Barr Keefe and Brigg, Umpire—- Rochester. Syracuse Hits— Rochester 7, Rochester wnd McGuire ; Taylor. AT BALTIMORE, First game Baltimore 11000000 0-8 Athletic. 00000040 * 4 Hits—Baltimoro 10, Athletic 5. Errois— Baltimore 1, Athletic'’s,” Batteries —O'Rourke and Townsend : McMahon and Reddler, Um- pire—Doescher, Second game— Baltimore. Errors. Batteries—-Mor- and Riddle, Baltimore 3, Athletic 6. rison and_Townsend; Green Umpire—Doescher. AT COLUMBUS. Columbus.......1 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0—4 Louisville. 0000000 01—1 Hits—Columbus 8, Louisville 8, Columbus 1, Lowsville 2. Batteries and Doyle; Stratton and Ryan. Ewslie, Umpire— AT ToLEDO. 05, St. Louts 5 St. Louis 1. Batteri ledo s S ivetts and Munyon. § Umpire— Kerins. Heavy Damage in Genesce Valley. MousT Mokg1s, N. 3, —Theheavy rains which began September 9 and lasted three days have had the effent of raising the Genesee river and its tributaries to the Teight of last spring. Thousands of acres potatoes, beans and corn ground wi ruined, Many stacks of hay on the Ge flats will be partially ruinod. The v is still threatening and should more rain fall the damage, which is already estimated by some at §100,000 o crops alone, will be greater yet. P S Cheyenne County Republicans. Sixey, Neb., Sept. [Special gram to Tue Bre.]—The Cheyenue county republican convention held heve today 8 nated General W. P. Miles for county attor- ney and John Vanderhof for commissioner, Thie delegates chosen to the congressional convention are headed by Julius Newbauer, and are solid for Dorsey. Fatal Cave-In at st ST. Josern, Mo, Sept of laborers was cng sewerin this city today one of the banks 1in, burying five of the men. Two men were taken out dead —Lewis Evickson from Jowett county, and William Frazier. seriously injured. Joseph While Destroyed. At 10 o'clock last night a small house be- longing to John Dennis, on Izard street, be- tween Twefth and Thir and was almost entirely destroye niture in the house was also badly before it was rescued. The loss wi to about §0, with no insurance, — Sale of Race Horses. W Youk, Sept. 18.—The racing stables of Labold Brothers and W. O, Scully were 50l at Sheepshead tod Among others Isanc Lewis, a chestuut colt by Prince Har. tie, sold for &7,500. other horses all brought good prices. - - Not Very Polite, Loxnox, Sept. 13.—French war ships have vombarded several villages in the Society islands. The marines landed and laid waste the country, keeping up the work of devasta- tion until the natives submitted, - St. Paul's Populatic ST. Pavt, Minn., Sept. 13, —Special Super- visor Wardie of the census department to- night gave out the figures of the recount in St. Paul as 133,301, St Paur's increase since 1850 i 91, ent I'ne Engineerand an Blown to Picces Sr. Lovis, Sept. 13.—The boiler of aswiteh engine exploded in East St. Louis this afta noon, blowing Engineer Bar gheny into fragments wrecked. tt and Fireman The train was - Very Light Frost ar Sidney, Sivxey, [Special Telo- gram to Tue Bee.|-The very light frost here last night wus not sufiicient to injure crops, CAUCUS GF CONG RESSUE Republican Representatives Di, Tarifr Bifl | rocedure. WASHINGTON, Sept. Republican repro- sentatives Leld a caucus tonight to discuss the procedure to be adopted respecting the disposition of the senate amendments to the tariff bill. The main proposition was one coming from the repul ways and means committee, and embodied in aresolution introduced today in the house by McKinley looking to consideration of the amendments in the house instead of in ¢ mittee of the whole and vote upon uon-con- currence in them in gross after reasonablo debate. McKinley explained that he had communicated with the minority members of the w and means committes and they had promised to cousult their party colleagues and anform the majority Monday what amount of time they desired for debato, There was considerable discussion in the cancus of the proposed programme, andwhile most of the speakers favored it, others were 10t wanting who contended that the amend. ment, should be considered in committesof the whole or some way that would afford an op- portunity forane xpression of opiunion upon certain senate amendments, Payson insisted that no general motion to non-concur should be adopted, and gave notice that he would oppose it. He was for froo binding twine, for the house sugar schedulo against “art on the free list,” and shoul stand out for these thine, iug the right of the conference com agent in the first instanc pointed out the 1y vosed in the interest o and harmony. Finally, upon voue vote, ley's plau was adopted and the committee on rules instructed to fix a time o be allowed for debate after the minority is heard from, and bring in a special rule eirly in the week, BONDED JMERCHANDISE, February 1 of Next Year Fixed as the Date of Withdrawal. Wasnixerox, Sept. 13 partment caused a car today as to the proba! ing a later date th vember 1in the pend- ing taviff bill for the withdrawal of bonded merchandise uuder the existing schedules, and Assistant Secretary Nettletou has given ed press the following statement 4s Lo what conclusions wen it as su islative event can be forescen that the for the withdrawal of goods will be fixed shruary 1, 1801, 1 well nigh ' unive business community be fixed, and notw [ appreher 'y connected witl peared 1o be but 1t uge. Th 1o formal coufereu have seen Allisor the ate coumn ley of the hous initel, 5 with them that they fuvor e proposcd exteasion Lo February I, The president toduy expr bis concur- rence in the suggested chay - An Unfinist [ Copyright 159 by . Loxnox, Sept. 13, (2 York He Cable—Special o Tie Bir.]—It is under- stood that Cunon Le untinished mes oirs of Dr. Husey will be completed by his friend, Canon Scott Holland, who, like Canon Lode don, at one time eujoyed friendship of Dr.'Husey, ' to be made tios of congross tix- dois the may opposition ate committee has held to the matter, but [ h and Hiscock of and Chiaivman Melin- u W state dof- Bennett.| the - Killed While Crossing 7 racks, St.JosErn, Mo., Sept. 13, Lemuel Penals ton and wife were struck by a train today, while crossing the tracks, und both were killed, - - PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS, David O, Hugher of Dayw city, on his way buck western coust, and reports ¢ ™ Nebraska as compaving y found ou his o 1 o New York morning after s five weeks, Mo., Is in the