Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 1, 1890, Page 1

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"OMAHA., MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 1. 1800, - TWENTIETH YEAR meee— e | NUMBER 166 CONDEMNED BY COLLEAGUES. [t et [T INTERIOR DEPARTMENT, n. THEY CHANGE THEIR BASE, | s ot st suvetantatat butpactes | THE PROSPECTS DARKENING, | shcommons. Tuostary gfons totay shas hea affair cum Brookeadds: ‘“The Indians here are suffer- dignitate. To tell it to, nationaists has the . Parker in his sermon today said that R ing for food. T have nothing to give them. same effect as o red rag'on a bull. What 1 % 1U's mauifesto showed that the writer M Bt tottias s v 8 1 The proverbial improvidenca of the ludiang makes the nationalisté Hter is that many of megdmad, i e Hostilo Indians Are Now Encampe and the insufficiency of food causes this.'’ a . .. | them believe it. ‘Thecomsérvatives one meets | 1. s ; ol M % el Davitt in an interview regarding e 1 5 Bad Tandl, o ; o also recelved from Fort Bennett Parnell's Olosest Friends Admit that Ho is aro Jubliant and with refion, By tho way, Irish Envoys in Amfirm;x U;ble ’lllhmr Judg- the\ 2 ration of the Irish dolegates, in Seoretary Noble sl‘]‘h‘lll‘" 5‘5 Aunual Report ng still continues at Cherry Cree! { i h as O'Shea drowned himselft is name i ment on Leadser Parnell. Amd % said tonight that it rendered Par- tl Tes1 7 under the isadarehip of Hump snd Blg Foot. Rapidly Losing Ground. npver mentioned, and be hasi't heen soen pells % imvanco i leatorsnin an mpostl L bl e — since the verdicts may be killed, but bility, © weight with the Irish peoplo wil —_— REPORTS OF CONTINUED DEPREDATIONS. Alaem Among sottlors, ho will bo remembered ; O'Shoa might s well be fnk @ Tho barty his como through f i 8r. Pavr, Minn., . 80.—A Pioncer | THE OPPOSITION GREATLY ENCOURAGED. | be dead, for he is forgotten, HIS LATE MANIFESTO DEEPLY DEPLORED. ;_hl'nn\ “ith the t honor and he be. | SYNOPSIS OF A VOLUMINOUS DOCUMENT, bas specal from Dicki D., says the g e ieves it 1l remain united and independent. Escapo of Police Sples from the Hos. | 1ndian troubles aro causing - considerable THE CLEARANCE RECORD. berared ; Ho belioy 5 that tomortow's decision will bo ; e ¥ " “ Morley's Answer to Statements Af- | g N Nothing But Kind Words Expressed | brac ily unanimous, A few n Join | A Vast Amount of Vacant Lnnds, with ule Camp Under Fire-The alarm among the settlers, A large number Financial Transactions of the Coun- g | darnell's treason. If Parnell remalns in o) Mol Lo of families came into Bellfield yesterday be- fecting Him in the Manifesto— try During the Last Weck. in Regard to Gladstone—The parliament and is hostile to the Irish party Figures Showing the Number Troops Still Under cause of @ report that Indians werounpr Interesting Developments Bostoy, Nov. 8.—[Special Telegram to Character of John Morley o Will be an intolerant menace o theit in Nebraska—Pensions Orders. ng. 1t is undeistood that some - . BEE]D Tollowi b e R efficiency and unity. Ireland to a man would ey b <II‘Iunsdu @ eong gating in the vicinity of the Anticipa ;r,:;‘ rz‘r,'l,m:"l:r ,:.,;, ';;: fi’,‘;::,,,,;";{:}::‘fi Strongly Defended. \"-‘]uulhu him and Cork will do its duty ana Census. L' river, - . = " {ome rule st not be rther end ¢ Pixe Rinoe Acscy, 8. D, (via Rushville, |y SV ‘\{"" s e BT T [Copuriaht 1590 by James Gordon Bennett.\ changes for lust wool with rates per cent | Cuiicago, Nov. 30.—Touight while O'Bricn, | thoso whio may uphold his effort tosmash the | Wasmiarox, Nov. #. —Secretary of the Neb.), Nov. 80.—(Special Telegram to Tus g U G il “| Loxnoy, Nov. 30.—[New York Herald |Of incroase or decrease, as against the | iy and O'Connor were drawing up the doc- [ party. Though he has lost Ireland’s coufi- | Tuterior ive at Regina 33 the Ame of the ay they will shortly an boundary at the brethren thes This is un- ult of the Messia oble has submitted port to the president, It is nous document and summarizes the work of tho dopartment for the past vear, ‘The secres tary begins his report with astatement of the vast amount of labor required in supere s annual ree very volumie Cable—Special to Tz Bee.]—Some of Par- ?nl“l(\l\?l\ amounts for the corresponding week nell's closest friends in parlisment have ad- [ — coming down upon us, and many of thd In- | doubtedly the mitted today that his prospects here have dians now here were descrting continued - darkened during the last twenty-four hours, until nearly daybreak, The troops slept on OPENING OF (ONGRESS. He has hidden himself to only two persons, their arms, and the bugler remained wide- and they only knew where to find hin awalke with horn in hand awaiting the ord Campbell, his secretary, and Powers, This tosound a call toarms, General Brooke kept isolation may have been good policy when he himself behind closed doors and body guard. desired to keop up his characteras a mysteri- No one could ascertain from him how much ous man of politics, but 1 this crisis he Bee,]—The fever of excitement caused last night by reliable reports that the reds were ent severing their connection. with Par. | dence, hostill retains their gratitude, but if umont severlng thiolr conncetion, with Par | },5hutiecs 'ty thor nttompt-to. dlsturt the 1 lines agreed upon with their col | 5o hawill be crush, leagues in the afternoon, the othre delegates here is a ramor that Parnell ha Dillon, Suilivan and Harrington—we to retire voluntarily if Gladstone will s dining in another part of the city in company cITiEs, CLEARINGS. paper pledging himself to include in the next with Mrs, Parnell, the aged mother of the 'l",f:":::vl‘l‘“"‘ bill certain points specified bY | yigineand directing affairs submitted to his man they had decided must vet S o far as el control. The foree employed under him is can be learned the knowledge of what had What Archbishop € 16,120, been done was kept from the old | Loxnoy, 0.— Archbishop Crokeina [ Under the head of vacant I Second Sesston of the Fifty gins at Noon Today. Vov. 80, —'The second session ;first congress bogins atnoon rat Be- WasiN of the Iifi Iphia. £t Louls ds a table is t ’ Th ?the - bk Pittapirg lady and to those who knew what | telegram to MeCarthy says: “All are sosry | printed showing that theve are over 10, more Intense a pitch tho excitoment must ‘;"lllllr.lufv- L |n'nh'r.lnm‘nco‘ tlm 1\Nd"'llss should seck to bring the waverers to | San was goiug on down town the | forParnell, but still in God's name let him | S6lfacres, exclusive of thosein Alaska, In No needs go in order to fnduce him to act, of the week has not yet been determined by his side. His opponents are active in all airections, and they are groatly strengthened by the sentence of doom pronounced by the American delegates, 1f all tho leading members of the party are sconemust have seemed strangely unreal. | retire quietly and with good grace from the | braska the umber of acves of vacant land is The delegates who signed the manifestowere | leadership. If he does the party will remain | placed at 11,220,584, The policy of the dee deeply agitated this evening, but felt that | united in an honorable allintice with the | partment, says the secretary has been contine they had taken only the proper course, stonfans and home rule will bo certain. | ued in giving a liberal interpretation of land Late tonight it was announced that Harring. | 1f he docs notthe alliance will be dissolved, | laws in favor of the settlers and by advance either house. Lodge of Massachusetts will introduce in the house tomorrow a bill to reg- ulate immigration. It is an elaborate meas- ure. It excludes any person obnoxious in any way to existing laws, including the alien Lodges of the supposedly friendly Indians > been here at the agency for several s were observed to withdraw to the hills and thon dash off toward their homes and the camp of the hostiles, some twenty-tive miles | contrict Tahor law seclcs to Shut out discased | B8ainst him and ho s loft. with the dregs ho ton, who did not sign the manifesto, will | Bomo tle indefinlloly posthaned, wooteloh | fug as far s can reasonably bo done distant. The Indian police who were doing | paupcrs, thoso liable to become - public | may still prolong the fight, but the odds scparate from his comrades and return Erliiod‘und’ public confldence outiaged. the carly docisions upon ull entries made, duty o few hundred yards from the agency | charges, and thelliterate. The main point | againsthim must be tervific. He is just be- to Ireland. Tn an interview Mr. Harrington Stk contested or uncontested. buildings dushed into Agent Royer's ofice at | 13 tho vequirement that every immigunt | ginning to flnd out how many of his followers said that the leadership of Parnell was abso- | Parnell Disappoints a Cork Crowd. It appears from the report of the commise 9 0'clock and said that a panic in the camp of | fioibe win @ cortificate from some United | 1, yugofonded by his haughty and imperi- lutely necessar ¢ tosuccess, Heo desires unity and the independence of the Irish party, and deems Parnell's leadership necessary for this. The delegates, in the manifesto prepared by d X tates censul or diplomatic representative, - the “friendlics’ was inevitale unless they | withont which he cannot land in this coun: | Ous ways. Te has always ignored the ardu- were given protection. All had received an | try. The bill is framed to secure a rigid en- | ous campaigns of Dillon and O'Brien in Ire- urgent invitation to join the hostiles and go | forcement of its provisions, * | 1and and America. He threw cold water on on the war-path with them. Agent Royer GCRAFIING "*‘“ IN TISS the »lan of campaign, though the older sioner of the gen Conk, Nov. 30.—Parnell expected to JICICTAE Lo 0 arrive here this morniog, and a large crowd b Dl g e il gathered at the station, . The mayor and a | Actual settlers during the past. year, embrace committeo of the national league were In | 18 those upon final and commuted homestead waiting to present him an address of wel- | entrics, pre.emption, timber culture, desert phis s sent them an extra guard of 100 leaders wero prepared to stand or fall them, say in part: come aud confidence, and thousands of per- sash town-site, and Pntrics armed scouts, but even this did | Successful Experiments in New York by it. In his manifesto he admits “Our sense of the matchless genius of Mr, | sous accompanied by bands of music were in | for strictly agriculture non-n . little good. The Indian village continued with n Cat and Dog. that he kept Gladstone's new scheme of home Parnell as a leader, of the imperishable ser- | line. Ho did not come, and aftergivingthreo | The lands patented to states for education, melting away and the light of this blustel N Yonk! Nov: 00/—A: remackable plece | Tule a secret from his colleagues. They ask vices he has rendered the Ivish cause, of the | hearty cheers for Parnell the crowd dis- | futernal improvements and public buildings courage, integrity and splendid success witn | per which hie has led our people for ten years, Lo and the personal respect and affection which Archbishop Walsh on Parncll. for years bound us to_him have made us sus- | Denpiy, Nov, 50 pend to the last possible moment our juag- | ;1o At PO ment against his further leadership, ~The | MMterview tod: obligation to express that judgment is to all [ guarded because Paruell had ot then | © tho patents fo 189 cover- of us the most painful dutyof ourlives. | spoken. Now he that unloss Parnell | {157 nores; those for 1980, 11,22 No carthly consideration ~could move | clears himself of the chargeof adultery the | pio, . sy . ! | party taking him as their leader will not find | In addition to these there was an in = 10056 betaoon Parnell and the de. | the support, co-operation or contidence of the | of 494 in meral and millsite patents issu en to cuoose between Parnell and the de- | 1) Li:.hnp\', Parnell's breach of Glad- | in 1500, those for 180 being 14073 for 1880, Sabbath morning reveals that over two | of vivis-redon has been accomplished re. | WHOt right he had to withhold from them thirds of the 3,00) who were horo at sunset | cently, A dog and a cat were the subjects of | Communications so deeply affecting them and have disappeared, and most of them hawo | the experiment, The end sought tobe shown | their constituents, He treats them like dirt, gone away with their hearts bad toward all | was that brain tissue could be grafted with. | S¢ldom speaking to any of them or even ac- of us in general and the government in par- | out interfering with the novmal functions of | knowledging their salutations as they pass ticular, the body. The operation was conducted in [ bim in the lobbies. The accumulated ill- | pirmingham. © Look at the situation a moment. The gov- | the laboratory of the University Medical | fecling and sorencss can now apparently be | Grand Rapids. ernment, through Agent Royer, 8 weck ago | college by Dr. W. G. Thompson, professor | ischarged upon — his head without ordered these friendly Indians to leave their | of physiology, @ fortnight ago. -The dog | Fisk. Consequently the wavering today homes and all their stock, ete., come to the | ana cat wero first bathed in a weak | DS been among Parnell's friends, some have exceeded 300 per cent ov year, amounting in 150 to ; Tho patents issued for t Archbishop Walsh in an | June 80, 1500, numbered agrainst A his vecent opinion was | 0,141 the preceding syear, or an increase for the last yvear in patents of 47,106, and in land the previous us to our determination except the solemn conviction that dri L : oy struction of our country’s causo. The man- | Lo, P £ SHtibrop Soraldered | o0, ThB. Avea 0L GoNl Lands grantad At agency and stay until “the trouble” | solution of bichlorido of mercury, then they | ©f Whom tomy knowledgo show a distinet | Lexingtor & ifoato which Parnoll lias just Issued cuts us | 3002 confldencene archbishop considered | I5. 1tho ares of coal Lonce granted 1n "}T& i5 ovor. Tho friendlivs oboyed. A | wero placed under tho influcncd of othes, | tendency to flow over to the other side. Al ke Gity off from the last hope to which we cling. b e 1500 there were 224 patents, covering 33,473.73 day or two after their arrival | An incision was mado through the skin on | Thenews that Dillon, O'Brien and O'Con. | ‘Houston. Anxious to avoid a war that might embitter | Gladstone Iznored the Threat. acres, and in 1589, 155 patents, covering here the government was notified that the | %¢h of thew skuils; enough of the skull was | ner intend to stand by Sexton and McCarthy | Total L Sy ste v L nep e apni IS 046,80, sawed off to expose the brain; then the The property of these friendlios was being stolen, | preater part, of the co ch 0 burned or despoiled by the ghost dancers. | through and taken out. That from the dog | Such a critical hour. It isspread abroad that The reports were corroborated to both the | Was placed in the cat's skull, and that from | Parnell is spending the day with Mrs. | e £ Indians here and the officials, and yet nothing | he "':l‘ was “'l‘,“""‘ in liul' dog's fk;ll.l'l'lni O'Shea. This isa bitter doso even for his | CROCKER COMMETTED SUICIDE. . 3 i wounds were then sewed up and bandaged ost, fricl v o r was dono except to makean aite mpttoon- | with anticeptic dressings. During hl(‘}l fllltl\‘l“ 1’0 swallow. % i forco the friendly Indians to stay heve, These | the contiuuance of the operation tho | Gladstone has been receiving his intimate friendly Indians urged and begged of the | roow in which it was performed | friends and holds to the opinion that Monday oMicials hero to send. protection to their liwlo | Was kent at .n - bloodheat tempora- | will soo tho end of Paell’s leadorship. S : vonly thev re.” | ture in order to minimize the danger of in- i P ora homo properties, buttho only reply they re-'| yiuiymation from cold in the exposed parts. ¢ hmyiheiRal Sulmon & Bnstul Besh ceived was the echo of their own words. Dog axd cat were then put in quict quar ing of his party and work for a re- Forsome reason, known only to them- [ and carefully attended. On Tuesday week | union of his divided forces. Should selves, tho hostiles decided upon another | last the patients were considered well | Parnell find the opposition too strong for tack than that of forcing a fight last night, | ¢nOUgh to exhibit to a class of 150 studeuts. | him, he intends to demand another adjourn- but they Qidwt chango their minds, | LDEY Were apparontly in their usual health. | ment until tho Irish constitucncies can bo Nov. 80.—The Daily Telegraph vs Parnell has seat an ultimatum to cruel injustice with which he treats themem- | LONDON bers of the party that has followed bim with | sa loyalty and affection such as no leader ever | stone, with the threat that unless he experienced before. His recollection of their | in twenty-four hours a reply favorable to his ty to him in many hours of trial mizht | interests he will roveal everything concern- well” have saved them from the imputation | ing the relrtions of the English radical party that any section of them could have allowed | and himself. Gladstone ignores it. their intogrity to be sapped by the liboral digives wire pullers. Tho method in which, igaoring S e the origin’ of the present calamitous Mrs, O'Shoa at Brighton. situation, Mr, Parnell endeavors to | TLospoy, Nov. 80.—Mrs. O'Shea is at fasten tho responsibility for it upon | Brighton w Gladstone . and Morley compels us to dis- associate ourseives in the strongest mannes from an imputation _which we believe reck less and unjust. We view with abhorrence the attacks made on Parnell by public and el emen the | tends much to shake the Parnllite camp at | Quislte of ads have also reccived patents acres less than last vear: ¢ 1800 agains .01 acres were in Minnes uainder in Iowa, Louisiana and this time last y in, there were patents to Indians for lands in severalty, and miscellaneous claims .02 aeres. On June 30, 1800, there were 203,084 final entries of all kinds*pending, as agair U her four daughters and Par- | gu Juue 50, 1580, @ decrease neil was with her during the parliamentary r of 05,687 entrie: recess, He urned to Brighton after the © been quite trial of the divorce case. s from publi On reference to the commissioner’ His Remains Found ina Corn Field Near Dinver. DexvER, Colo., Nov, 8).—[Special Telegram to Tie Bee.]—The remainsof Freeman B Crocker, president of *he board of public works, who disappeared one week ago today, were found this forenoon.in a cora field about four miles from the city, where he had com- mitted suicide by stabbing himself witha during the lasf The financial results : 1 . ill be observed that over four times as I The dog moved about freely and responded | pocket knife. The remfius were found by o | private cnemiecs under cover of his present Requested Him to Retire. btk Ay s 4 H . bowever, until they had traveled over | o motionsof the hand, though somewhat | heard from through the local committees, wman named West, who will receive tho 81,000 | difficultics. To attacks of this kind, ad- | Pimaperrnia, Nov. o | Parnell | Y e L twelve miles, or neary half v from thewr | stupidly. The cat also seemed to be all It scems probable that Ircland will be split ¢ y ) 2 reward which had been'dfered. 1t isacurious fagt that notwithstanding the search, which has %2en going on for five days by the police and many personal friends and by others who were eager to ob- tain the reward, West did not start out dressed 1o one of & proud and strong spirit, | hrnch of the Trish National league, one of | to two-thirds of all the sales. o s AUt many o the erHible - | olest and most imporfant in the country, | The following fizures, taken from the come :,,d we fear that they may do tho furthes | today adopted a resolution calling on Parnell | sioner's-report, show the lands claimed by A URISE of-averting . the- minds - of. many | 0 FeLire: the subsidized railronds and other corporas people from grave national o purely DU? —_—— e — tions. There were certified or patented up sonal issues in the natural resentment” of an THECFARNERS S ALDIANCE, Lbiol ungenerous attack on a_great leader in the ! hour of stress and disaster. But, while mak- | How President Polk Expressed Him- ing every possible allowance for Paruell’s self in an Interview, or canil purposes (188 1o 1800) . 4, foelings, we consider it unjust to the Euglish | 0cara, Fla., Nov. 30.—The annual meeting | FOF Fiver lmprovements (152 to 1500) 1. people and lamentable from the point of view 5 iR Ssimtl of international good feeling to describo as | Of the farmers’ allianco begins Tuesday. In Engiish wolves those . who have | an interview today, President Polk said the not been able to ouriig themselves | national alliance would stand squarely on the nln(x’mnx:gu:‘:i'“? TX:_N‘\M;«] h‘l‘.p‘ul.ll;l ?hfi.‘i‘fi‘: watform adopted at St. Lows. Referring to Previous to June 0, 1800, the number of e b oumt e menr I o uriell S | the recent election, he said that for the result | miles of such rouds biilt wits 18,070,715 but Parnell that Gladstone's letter involves a | 00 must look beyond the MeKinley bill. | durmng the last year only forty claim to dictate to the Irish party and thereby | *‘The people,” he said, “have scratched away completed, and but, one mip of lo camp, toward us. Although we may noy | MEht. “Dr. Thompson, who performed the | in two by this struggle. Limerick pro- eration, explained to the class that It | nounces for Parnell, Clare for Gladstone, know what caused their plan, wo do knoi ut ; < the new one upon which they havo docided. | (aocd pine, bossibility of grafting brain | and so it will go on. Parnell counts upon n Government scouts brought it in to the | forepaws of both animals after part of thejr | COmpact phalanxof forty members at least. agency this morning. For -the most | 0wn brain substance had heen removed. The | With these, if necessary, he will oppose S < part it is 8 substantiation of the | Union between the old and now brains in | ton, Dillon and the other rebels in the house " ., e e . of | Gch case was now-so far completo that this | of & 15 g R R U1 8 oal e Tt | L bis 2 mCkiiTh B SR ARl UR OB clusive information sent out from | ¢oil HE N IO Thiored. | Tho. possibili, | Of commons. He declares that he will create | him he started out and walked almost straight here and published in ue Bek | ties involved in a Succosstul operation of tnis | © 1eW party altogether and strike down the | to whero the remains lay. some three days ago. They have decided to | kind were very great, the professor thought, | Seceders, one after the other. Even Ireland l.“'; % "‘g““'l"““ Wk s Ak TN move their cump into the “bad lands” and | It meant nothing less than patching up tho | has notseen a bigger fight than this 18 “'r‘“‘lv“‘;‘ ‘f‘\“ ;"“'l) bed "'"!‘jh' in !“!EIN‘ LT aa b brain of & man with a portion from one of the A Me P glon of the heart, in faiestomach and els ~ghero await the coming of the troops to cap- lowot anlinals ‘Tn' & short tie Dr. THomb. MeMBER OF PAR where on his person. he vody was not ture them, They began moving there this el L es O Py _— ¢ badly uemvuJ and was readily identitied. son will again open the skulis of his patients, o5 'E, Thers {6 ol morning aud by night all of them were hid- | i order to 66 How far tho structuies hass MORLEY'S ANSWER, There is widespread public sorrow over tho den away o that region, which our best | united. = sad event, but a relief is experieceed that the i o 5 P He Desires to Correct Two or Three | mystery is at last solved. Therc is no ap- :n‘uh; PO o s ety y«‘nrwnmu the lava A Deranged Man's Tramp. Statements. parent explanation of the traggic ending of eds of California, in which the Modocs took | gy vvone, Md., Nov. 80, Yesterday [Copuright 189 by James Gordon Bennett.\ an honorable carcer, except that the work 1road purposes (1830 to 1900). 51, on roid purposes (1824 1o 1800) 1 ing the last fiscal year thore were 5 acres patented, and these were ; bt v norat P 'k | strike at the indepencence of that party as u | all the rubbish of the negro question, bloody | flled, being that for Southern Pacitic - sheltar. Ticso l:;m Innds aro doseribed 85 | orning Mes. Laura V. Doaver diod in child- | Losoox, Nov. 8.—[New York Horuld and worrydatibivositi BRI d punsottled hishyieittiaTcial national body is one calculated | shirt, tariff and foderal control of_elections. RdMovShronty st e R eing more like the ordinary conception of | yiih and immediately % (GableZSnacial Tae Bee.l—1 si 3 £ to inspire every Irish nationalist with alarm, A i * y . b A X y after, her husband, | Cable--Special to Tur Bre.)—1 saw Joha S A y I t I, | 1t is the money power, the rule of plutocracy, | The pending lists yet unacted upon are: what hell would be with the fires put out | (. S e Tancar i dlix ot Search | Morley at his house this evening. He de- STATE NEWS, it that plea were not an obvious fal s O e ? thun anyWing elso. They begin at_the | "M:“tl ‘-d“t .“d“t'l (hsvl‘pp:l‘lmd' ies t:nvh clined to talk about the result o{‘llm re 'e)‘;t, Whkteyen difiorenaie o1, opInlp mayiSxlel e b‘:\ : (;‘l'.“‘-k.r”t ! LG rallroads o0 85 om0 mouth of Wounded Kuee creek, of which was instituted, an hough he police gave .| o A Lincoln Boy Horribly Crushed. to the haste th which Gladstone the slogan henceforth is financial i 'a="0an’ every assistance, 1o trace of the missing | political disclosures, but ‘said he had just Yor Oregon wagou roac 80 much has been heard of late, and which is | 1ay could they find. To the surprise of his | given his answer to Parmell’s manifesto to the gathering point for all these hostiles and | relatives, he = suddenly reappearcd this [ the London Press, and showed me the whero the ghost dunce started upon this res- | afteruoon, composed and rational, and yet | original copy of it. There were a number of ervation, They run 110 miles northeast to | unable to account for his behavior. " Nor did erianrea and xm'““"m 5. but these wore street, was run ovor by a street car in front southwest and about fifty miles east to west. | 10 recollect anything that happened sivce ho | 1o " oor ot .minfia'my of the author, | ©f his bome at 7 o'clock this evening and re- R e A e by carncd of his wife's death. ‘The twenty-four P et . | ceived fatal iajuries. The accident occurred ¥ #ion, of precipitous | hours were a blank to him. His clothing was | 1 read it, and when T said *“Poor Parnell?” A : canons and fantastic and ghostly formations. | torn and bespattered with mud, and the in- | the remark elicited & smile. Morley had | % the passing polnt of the cars, and Beverly Fow white men are acquainted with the ro- | fevence is that he had been. walking nearly | jugt returned from a visit to Gladstone when | Strted across thestrect after the west-bound gion, but the Tudiaus know it thoroughly. | thirty hours, and mechanicaily traveled ina (v, EUFEE TN S HS RO WER | car had passed, not noticing that the east- The fact that it1s possiblo for the Ind circle, returning home without knowing 3 L e A 06 T by T2 et 8. wherd he was going until he reached the | lows: e ; when once established there, as they now are, | house. Ho had been watching at his wife's | .The manifesto published by Parnell con- | f£ont of the horses and was kuocked down to continue making raids upon tne settlers | bedside, and the doctors say that his mind 5 ; - hiol +t | nd trampled under their feet. His body was adjoluing the bad lands, will cortainly, | £V Wi towporarly. Deavcr hud boen mar | 1% (N0 IyeR SO WG 4ot | doubled up in suoh shapo that tho front it would scom, fnduce the soldiers o push | tied only eleven mouths, fo comoct. One is that T raivde no sout of ae | wheel of the car could ot pass over him, and into the region after this big thieving band of The Farmers to Build a Line. tempt to fotter Parncll's action on the land [ 16 s thus dragued the car being thrown rebels, notwithstanding the fearful chances | - mycons, Wash., Nov. 80.—The wheat crop | purchase bill. He agreed with me in all our | attempted to stop it as soon as ho saw the to be Incurred, 2 of Washington is the largest in its history, | conversations that the bill ought to beop- | boy dart in front of the horses, but the stop The scouts who brought information con- | poing estimated at 16,000,000 bushels, Tho | posed as omitting the principle of local con. | Was made too late. cerning this latest plan. of tho hostiles also | elevators, warehouses and box cars along the | trol, and for other reasons specified by him | _Ehe bleeding lad was earried into his home said that the latter had just slaughtered 500 dlins tha Laler iy \ 500 | railways ave filled und stacks of sacked | in hisspeech April 21. The only question :.‘fl"\.“,:g{“s,';{“m,,'g;:,‘;&’{::"if;g%c,é‘g",;‘sw"n'; head of government cattle and 800 belonging | \wheat dots the fields. The inability of the | now is as to the form of the motion for the | broken below the knee; the hip bone of the to Governor Mellette of South Dakota. The | vailways to obtain wotive power to move the | rejection of the bill. Lpointed out to him | right leg was fractured, while one of the ribs scouts saw this boef boing hauled in wagons | enormous erop to market is_exasperatng the | (April 14), as many liberals objected to the | Was broken square off, ' There were also in- v and pack-{rains to the new camp in tho bad | farmers,whoare charging thom with collusion | G0 W 00 TR R SRECIEE TR | Juries to the stomach, ings and other orgaus. lands. Many wagon loads of flour and other | W ith the warehouse men tolowerthe prices of ey . 2 4 " The boy's condition is eritical. wheat. So intense has become the feeiing | Stating the reasons would beless suitable than —— provisions that had been stolen from the set- | among the farmers against the vailroad com. | a moution for rejection simplicita, and Parnell Differences in the Santee Normal. tlers wero also seen headed for the region of | panies that they, through their farmers’ al- | assented. Two days later he explained to me Niosrira, Neb,, Nov. 80.—[Special to Tue .. death. fance, threaten to build an independent._ line 4 ietter was made public, it was obviously | reform, The national banking systom alid not his hostllity to home rule, bub| gy, go, The farmer and 1aborer Total ... L 20,770,0%.78 is loiter. | Wo deplore that the difleulties of [ money they need upon security of their real axplaued Jithe .H::‘,;:-'.’-‘.,';\"l\lu:.;1‘«'.'"‘.'-1,.\1‘.:;‘\».(;.-"{3 Gladstone's position were not frankly recog- | property. The issue is to be a square one be- | foereir the lands of 1hose roads that were nod nized by Parnell, and that, on the contrary, | tween the manhood of America on one sido | built within the time provided iu their res friendly private communications, obviously | aud the great American dollar on the other, | spective grants, made with a view to smoothing the passage | und unlese the leadors of the great partics | A luge part of the lands granted to rails of tho home rule bill, have been made the | yocopnize the real fssue and make it there is | road companies has passed into the hands of basis of insinuations of treachery to the Irish | going to be terriblo times in this country. | purchasers from the railroad compuny and cause. By his conviction, again and again | Sectionalism cannot pull the people apart any | is now inhabited and cultivated by them, expressed, that home rule, to be effective, | jonger, We are sick of thatrabbish, and | The question as to these has practically must be such a measure as will satisfy the | only men who can secure popular support are | ceased to be one between the government and Irish people, Gladstone is bound toa fulland | yhose who understand the great economic | the railroad companies and become one be ample measure of self-government to Ive- | questions of the day.” tween the United States and its iuhabitants incredible folly, and we emphatic pa- Assaulted by Smuggloers. oinas ahebismpsral Il schoniniy the tern; it should be carefully Telegram to Tue Bre.]—News has just | identifie erved as i part of the pube reached here of an outrace committed by | e domain for the benefit of the people Spanisli smugglers’ on the port sanitary Under the head of private land claims the J scerelary recommends thata United States spector in Charlotte harbor. His nameis | jand court be established in nccordance with Morris Cochran, an_appointee of the state | the bill now pending beforo congress, He board of health. He boarded a Spanish | also urges thatsome legislation b taken to sohooner, and,when asked toshow his papers, | settle the disputed land claims of New Mexe ed him and threw him ovi loo, Liscoty, Neb., Nov. 80.—|Special Telo- gram to Tng Ber, | —Beverly Morrison, the eight-year-old son of John Morrison, 1631 F rato ourselves from any such chargo agathst | Poxta Gowo, Fla, Nov. 30— (Special | (hroreed, but the mineral lands o of the Gladstone,” Referring to Morley's suggestion that some of the Irish party stould co-operate in c ing out the rish programme on lib tho manifesto says: “Nobody who knoy Morley’s character will doubt that the sug- gestion was made in the honest belief that the liberal ministry would be helped in tho difcult worl of carryung hrough the dotails | & ] of the Trish home rule bill by the co-opera- he crew sel DLa aaarataLy: z e 5 tion of Irish colledgues, and It was notan in. | boord, after cutting bis bont loose, With | eeipic Socretary discusscs at length tho frrl 1 1d 1 we cation problem and details the work that has sidious attack upon the integrity and inde- *h diffic i T e e S A B sidious Biack pea st 0t niuch difficulty he reached theshore. The | already been done by his department. Ho T e timon: . fye have now to confrons | Sthooner sailed off and her name could not [ calls attention to the various methods which ¢ v t e N inel | ¢ lear: 3 . have been tried and ury CONEIess Lo enact nee, il v i fndoy line | i altornative plan for fining down rents, | BER.]—Rev. A. L. Riggs, principal of the | the statement that Parnell's leadership opens | be leared. St has | have boen tr rges cougress 10 o General Brooke has just received atelegram | i comvetition with tho Sorthorn and tnlon | pyis "0 “purnelrs roquest, T immediately | Santeo normal schiool, and Joseph H. Steer, ablo gulf botween the repre- | madean official compiaint to the tre comprononslvo laws to detormiae thonationsy asury de- partment and the marine hospital service, be- ides notifying the state department thav of Tretand and the party who have faithfully obs of seven hundred words from General Rugeg, | i policy fu this matier for tho purposo of warning him that threo hundred lodges | to author o urge the coming state legislature | communicated to Gladstone, and the same | treasurer for the American Missionary asso- guarding against the misuse of the wates © the 15sue of stato bonds to build | evening I wrote to Parnell that Gladstone | clation, under whose management the school - P o s g < ORATIE HONGE 10 1 3 thelr sides of the agreement, and the situa- | Spanish vessels a continually vio- v on o o po: (avout one thousand warriors) of Cheyennes f;nlli.!u vad s re lu_rlm the peopie, the | felt we could have nothing to say to bis plau | 8 run, have been summoned to the New | tion is aggravated by deplorable expression m'mx.‘u G ol A TiE oy 4 '.:‘|'1'.’.-lxl.'\?:.':|;m“.”'L‘il‘-‘{. ‘E}"’”:j"irlm::"z were coming from Cheyenne agency to join | State to own and control it. one way or another, but that of course he | YOrk ofiice to make some explanations. For | of ill-will towards the Irish people, who h ; — - B 5 ¥ hraait] S has bes ; » | again and again within the past five yea Betrayed Dy His Wife, was perfectly free to propound it on his own | Some time there has been friction among the | again and I i v yed 101 ! Mirecr ,w,"' VU’ 3. —Today Andy | responsib so carefully did we realize | 1ocal board of mnagemedt, caused by a mis- | Mmanifested their detevmination to do justice | limit. Cuba has placed a high duty on Amer- | tions with respect to the period of cultivation A u . oday Andy i ¢ Tk to I Aisburs ¢ of | 10 Ircland, and bave by their votes paralyzed | jean fish, and this, with violations of law, | required of the claimant. 1t was heid by the ¢, vesiding cast of here, was jailed, | that our relutions with the Irish party were | Understanding as to sbursement of | the arm of coercion. “fa deliberately bring- | has N " {ness at 1 ) 11 g £ d § 2 funds. 1t is understood that Dr, Riggs h k. 7 y has broken up the export fish business at | department for many years that the time al- vas getting il it 7. w. | alliance, not fusion. unds, s understood that Dr. Riggs has | j,0 things to this position Parnell has entered | Koy W, ‘hic ey 4 L 5 . rati TThis was the day sob for the oppearance of 'y was getting out railroad ties on J. W. the management of affairs and makes such | € B Key West, which formerly amounted to | lowed by the statute for the preparation of Rdayis © oppearauce of | goygicle's farm and delivering them to the | Parucll imputes to me that in our conversa- | estimates and requisitione us he deems neces- | UPOD & rasn and = fatal = path, = upou | $100,00 or more amnually, and the state | tne lund and the planting of the trees might the new Indian Messiah, but so far as can bo | Big foour ut Selma. The wouey was paid | tion of November 10 (five days before the | sary for the success of the school. In ail | Which every contideration or Ivelands | health bourd asks for a coast patrol. - A reve- | be computed us n purt of the requisite elght learned the red chlldren who have hugged | Mr. Bortsfield, who equally divided with | proceedings in court) I made a remarkable | such associations it {s dificult to secure [ }o/Y ¢ S | SDe0lUtElY to follow Bim, | Rue catter s insufol yearsof cultivation. Under this construction the delusion bave becn disuppoluted. | Bainey, Last wight Bumey and his wife | proposal with the object of absorbing | £1nds for many noedod and desirable ends. | WHG Nt Puracll aks us 10 do, stripped of OF tho law sl proofs wero submitted .on a store on Poraupine, eame fu this afternoon | within ' veach, cansed lis arrest, Sho in- | means of ofice.” Imade no such proposal, 1u | another instead of belug’ returned to tho | Sry seitlement of the Irish struggle to his | Sax Josr, Cal., Nov. #0.—Charles Marvin | Gircular fogulation to the effect that the per- and reported that the hostile gang had raided | formed Bortsflcld that herhusband nad been | was natural that in a freo and confidential | main office. In this way the misunderstand- | FSCI¥C Lo maintuin his porsoual poition. Wo | loft Paly Alto yestorday with Sunok, with the | fod of cultivation must be c from the his store and taken nearly §,000 worth of | robbing him by hauling half the ties he made | giscussion of a possible future I should wish | ing is said to have comgup, Mr. Steer claim- [ §us ¢HEH G OO RRIERR ST (G St | inteation of taking her cast to deliver her to | timo tt of trec sgads, ot oute £ E i) 8- the later e goods. A party of cight scouts under | tonother marke in"this city, where be | " puke sure, for Gladstone's information, | 18 the entire control of all financial matters | gite™ Wo ave convinced that o calm but reso. | her purchaser, Rohert Bonner. When hear- | Hugs was planted, Unde the hostiles near here. The Sixth cavalry, enroute from Albuquerque to Fort Mead, have been ordered to stop at Fort Sill, wh another ghost dance fever has broken out. o | treaty obligations by fishing in question of serious import Florida waters inside the marine league | arose, involving former departmenta) regulas - Frank Garard, chiof government scout, has | Ol kot woney fand ecep Atk | that Parnell stil held to bis. selt-denying do: e oD, g anevences Wil 10 | luto course of netion of our party in this cruel | rived at Swn Jose he received n telogrum e T Just started out to get futher information re- | good charactor caused tho confidence his | claration of 1590, His answer to my inquiry | ities at the main ofice i New Yorl. smergency will pedound io the sdvautago. of | fiom Mr. Boaner asylng to keep the My iy |iniying tho rightof 'parties to muateotion garding the war-hungry devils, and very im- | partuer placed in him. was what I had fully anticipated. futiae the cause Ly furnishiag conclusive fes | California this winter and be acoordingly re- | had aoted undar the departmental construos portant developmenta’ are’ expected, | The MRS BLILAS LS ML AR e X Yranster of Valuable Property. timony of ihe capacity of our party | turned with herto Palo Alto. Hion of a statute. and fallowlng. Sho rule that SIMIKERAS a0 Sipoolad, o o —_ arnell’s account of what passed on the oF VoIl roperty. | and “people for self-government, = We ————— Hon 03,0 Akabhic, g A0 LA MIAS. VL0 KU 0 SUA troops are still under orders to be ready to R 1 Diooving > subject of evicted tenants on campaign es- Nenrasia Crry, Neb, Nov, 30.—[Special | cannot relinquish the hope that in the face 1 ¢ I Lal Confe the f offect of law. LS hold th 2 Ra0 R AREY s\ 5 amatin Hiba Stovx Crv, Tn, Nov. #.—{Special Tele- | g2 CL D s O S erved. thay | Telogram to Tug Bur.|=Mr. Adolph Hellor, [ of such doc dn.tnaraptional Jalop Gonfopanoe:. | e jare ILALAM QIR AR NG ik ve action by the representa- S i b formerly of the Nebrasks City packing com- | tives of the Irish pecble Purncll's seuso ot Benuiy, Nov. 80.—[Special Cablegr has sold bis clogant residence prop- | Patviotism will withhold him from plunging | Tne Ber. |- S8 Jjournals here state that C. H.C. gram to Tue Bee. ) —The Kuights of Pythias P of tbis city and surrounding towns united | SO0 divect action mi ader Fire. this aftornoon in a memorial service in honor | though of coarse I fore m to | the proofs thus submittea should be ac- cepted if otherwise satistactory, though tde hering to the later construction of the I ht become necessary, " aw there were diff. [ PAnY pe Spies Es momor AW -4 M- | erty 'in this eity, valued at 0,000, to St. | Ireland into those horrors of dissension | the miuister of will call a confer- | case of T ia Pixe Ribae Aaexey, S. D, (via Rushe | of thelato John Van Valkenburg, post culties in the way of legislation. Ineversald | Mary's catholic church, and it is said will be | Which have so otten robbed her of lierty at | onoq tg meethoro the middle of Decomber, | Ttitr lavies of the ville, Neb) Nov. 30, —(Special Telogram to | Breme chunccllyr of tho Kulghts of Pythias | thateither [ormy colleagucs had formed any | used us u convent, tho moment, it was within ber grasp, and | 550U doloren bt LovALRROMIAC S SH1N0 BERTIR 0L 408 Tue Bex.|—Red Hawlk and Guy Belt, of the | nmform awith a brass band. . The sorvices | Conclusion against legislation; I never said e itk 10 One passionule |y, v, consider the expediency of international | each. Itis also recommended that a much T R gy A Y Dtae THA At Sanst hour the results of all his incomparable ser- ageney poli LR e G legislation for the protection’ of worki , have just returned from spy | were held in the Fi t Baptist church, and | OF hinte orco be employed in the work of the work at tho camp of the [lostiles in the bad | were conducted by Rev. C. H. Strickland, | Irish parliament to do anything in the mat- | NEBmssa Crry, Neb, Nov. 30.—(Special | 5o an unomeial source it s learnod that ——— Joni oioes ae SHiscvork ol shal: G lands. Oue (had bis horse shot from under | Pastor of thut church, and Rev. George H. | ter. 1did say that, whether by direct or in. | Telegram to Tug Hek.]—The Otoe county | Harrington, in wiving his reason why he Express Robbery in Mississippi, F onvenions to the people. This him and both were chased away with bullets, | ornell vector of 5t. Thomas' Episcopal | direct action; evicted tenants ought not to ba | district court will conivene tomorrow. There | could not sign the manifesto, said his judg- | wesr Porvr, Miss.,, Nov, 80.—A robber en- | delay bas caused a large amount of criticls m . 4 2 chureh, allowed to suffer. As to Tippocars. thero 1s | 47¢ @ large number of civil cases on the | ment was against Parnell, but his heat was | , LA 3 . Y O e A Tho Lostiles said they were prepared for the A A d tosuffer. As to Tipperary, there is | v & only Ko GrliaAl and none of | with hix, tered an express car on a (ieorg among the settlers on the public lands which 1)t great baitle in Indian history, and all Five Men browned, all the difference between sensible concession | them importunt. —_— train near Indianola last night, held up the | W5 WLust and were tho force increased are thirsting for blood, C H.C. Rick Lake, Wis., Nov. 80,—By theswamp- | of dificulty and the desperation which Par e, M o Parnell and tupporters Confer. | qoont with a revol took the money and 'll']u:‘l 1,?[,’\'.'1’.'.‘.7'.‘”&4-“1:‘1":. bathe .’1‘;“1;:“::» — ing of a small boat on Long lake last night | nell ascribes to me. Gladstone is well able Receiver of & Railroad. ~Parnell and sucn of his | jumped from the train,’ There was Jittle in | 40004 of wark to bo transacted in them, No Material Change. five mon wero drowned, ~ They wero Frank | to deal with his own share in the matter, but | Macoy, Ga., Nov. 30.—John W, Hightower | PAIY 88 support him had o conference last | tho packages, Today the robbor and a com- | * Under the head of Ldian_ aftairs the seere- Cuicaco, Nov, 80,—Adjutant General Will- | Founier, William Knight, Charles Stike: Tam bound to that on November 10 I sterday appolnted temporary receiver | PRt It is understood that Condon, Roche, | Panion were arrested at West Point, tary reviews the work of the past year, bup 1ams tonlght received n telogram from Gen. | L« Clark and Arthur | was under @ most distinet impression that | of tho Emplre §DUb road. o short line | D¢45Y and Lane urged rarnel to retire, | r—t— 1o reference is made to the troublé now exs Y erul] Brooke at Pine Ridge agency, saying M Jull’rm;;;:uor Parnell did not object to the sug- | under construction by the l'Il‘n]viro e e | Paruell, owever, expressed his determina- The Weather Forecast, isting. He details the results of the work of there is o material change in the situation, Some Indians have slipped away and jolned the Rosebud Indiuns, who have moved their camp to White viver, thirty miles from Pine I P s dote AR FHpCO S the commission among the Sioux in North 4 ha- Lol b gestions thrown out @ year ago ut | company, whose failuré recently created great | 1o to fight to the last. If raruell's sup- | For Omaba and Vicinity— Faivy slightly | i SO Dakota, and the cessions ni ,‘I“_'I_‘"l';;v:,\"‘\" "l"“ [Special Cablegvam 1o | Hawarden on subjects for provisional ex- | exciteuent in southern financiil circlos. " The | porters adopt obstructive tactics at tho meet- | cooler, aud South Dakota, and the cessions made to g ) 3 other tribes. During the past year it has y, the labor candidate, | amination if these suggestions were likely to | road has a bonded debt of over $300,000 and ing tomorrow the anti-Parnellites will leave For Nebraska and Towa- Falr; colder; | been discovered that the number of Indians has been elocted to succeed the late M. | make the scheme generally accaptable to | other unsecured debts amouuting to $100,00 " ol 3 B . the meeting in a body and vote for his retire- | northerly winds, at Rosebud azency was greatly overestimated i Roported e itcs frow Pine | Joffriu as member of the ciamber of deputies | Great Britain, " Joux Moniev. | The hearing will be bud ut Eastman Deéen:; | ment elsowhere, A roport is current that | - For South Dakota~Fair: colder; northerly | and that rations swore. Lisued for over twa ge. Roepo P ous by the Iu. | for Clignancourt, | Tomorrow will be a warm day in the bouse | ber unless Gladstone withdraws tho denials in | winds, | thousaud more Tudisns than (here actually

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