Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 19, 1891, Page 1

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MW ION T ' Pl mr s 7 Ty 7 8 B a o , WENTIETH YEAR. OMAHA, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 19, 1 NUMBER 330, " | g ’ ) i 'r AR N MOTHRR | spring Acreage 110 per cent as com- | QIR IVWV!Q VIUL w LVR]' that matter. We will now proceed with this \ l N N D FRAY [ tlon has been & popular expression ever “ QT ,‘l U PN A NEBRASKA'S BRIGHT FUTURE. | e itk ik, wndet sorsoe s | SHEEDY'S SKULL N COURT, | thatmoveer- ALL READY FOR THE FRAY, [ doeiets.decs, s emtsr sspesseien, ovor [ WESTERN POSTAL FACILITIES, plunted; uecds rain. Wheav—Looks well; Dr. H. M. Casebeor, one of the physicians an appearatice, and the reprdg, Yatives of the * u\lmulllw sume acreage as last year, Oats —— :vhlu Iu-flp»;d n'n|:h||'b| the autopsy over :nu — grasshopper state after u o s that lasted Needs rain; good stand with %0 per cent body of John Sheedy, was then cailed. Be- ot : several hours dociaed lato toles ¢t to support e org! P erot r | of crop. Barley—Prospect good: acreago itnes + the od Mur- | fore he got through with his testimony the | Cincinnati Crowded with Dolezates t> the | the organization of a thirdes 'ty through . . ‘0 Farmors' Prospects for o Pm’,‘p toud Ted about the same as last year. Rye— Short crop. Ghastly Witnees Agans )f" Aconsed eves of the attorneys for tha defense began Great Natlor p thick and thi ® Need of Improvement Recoguized by the Never 8o Good as Now. Flax—Very little sown, derers Introduced in Court. to gleam with pleasure while the reat National Oonferencos Tho cancus was marked B8 joveral do- Postmaster General, Sitver Creek, Neb, May 15.—Crops in attorneys for the prosecution looked cidedly livoly exprossions 2 opinion e this loeality are all looking well, The ground r|lm-ulvdl,\ il ,ut g‘nse\. klhul\\iuuxnlilm nn‘l VARIO and cspecinlly when Coner€ len Simp- s as vet is quite moist, althougn a_light rain show a vory familiar knowledge either with S STAT! NGS, | son und Clover ecndeavored convince | pr . REPORTS FROM THE GRAIN GROWERS. | \would o' yuite. accoptable. - Condition: very | PROFOUND SEN ATION AT THE TRIAL. | Slow™ very familal knowledgo cithior wits ST B RO HOLD M TIN S e plCror thnc oo S L o [DENOGAATS (N 'BESPERATE" STRAITS: ( favorable about the average acreage, th Onco when Mr. Lamborison asked hir — better part of valor, and that 1 Yould be fourths now planted, ground in : 2 *\What bone is here! " pointing to the cheek, | : . " better to adopt a platform contai a fow Acreage Largely Increased and AN | good shape. \\.n.m Condition (food; estimony of a P'hysician That De: lhu’\I\_'Iill:l'f«‘l;upl(u'ni: o Stormy Session of the Kansas Contine | olioivinl dootrines, Appoint 8 \uee on Senseless Critie sm of Peesidont Har- S S (ha acre: below the average. Jats. Was Not the Result of a Blow That is the temporal bone." gent—Much Speculation as to propaganda aud then adjour nest Al T el Grains Growing Finely—Very Lit Condition very favorable; acrenge 3 g “Is it not the molar bone!™ asked Mr. the Blath b t i spring, then to determine whothet e was | FiSom -An Incident of the Journey tle Complaint on Account about the same as last year. Barl ~The Skuil Not Lai ||)>I|‘rlunl|. i Lddseu e bone and sinew and stamina enou in the ~Condition of Crops in st little sown, will be used for feed, and th Fractured, Oh, yos, excuse me, itis,” said the v of the Bast. granger labor element to arguo tae formal 8 Morthwe of Weather. sam be said of rye. Flax—Acroage de- ness. ‘ baptism of a thivd party and the placing of the Northwest. I per cent, looking wood In descriding |hr‘l¢*mu-'»; of morphiine the iy 210"y an - independent presidontial ticket in the — Vaiiey, Neb., May 15,—Corn—Acr MBS R g | Witness twice stated 1t eaused & dilation of | (yyeres ). ¢ 18, 1T ok 0 field, The enunciation of these views was » Forty-two reports of crop conditions from | About the sam> as last year, two-thirds | LiNcoLy, Neb,, May 18.—[Special to Tur | tho yupils of tho eye, For the third time AR L AL ] "Hr;_‘": received with a shout of disnpprobation that WasmyaroN Benew Tre B agents and dealers have been received by | PInted, not suffering but noeds rain; sprout- [ Brr.|—The most profound sensation yot pro- | the question was put to him: nundrod dolegates who had arrived yosterday | yqqthgiaftect of putting an effactunl quictus on 518 FornteeNta Stieer, | I id dealers have be , | I iu the valley all vlght but on the'hils dry | duced in the Sheedy murder trial accurred | D, Casebeer, do you moan to say that | o attend the national conforence which bo. | L newly fledged ropresentatives, and third Wasiizarox, D, C.. May 18, :'lfl“mnhn elevator company, ("'M'f“‘ll‘ :“ and not sprouting. Wheat and oats—Acro- | ahout 5 o'clock this aftornoon, when the | morphine c ufl-«ddnuuun of the pupils of the | gins in this city tomorrow were reinforced | party resolutions went through without a dis Rosy, brown, hearty and heavy Postmas- erritory along the line of the Union Pacllic | age increascd ; b f eyet” he replied: th ening by the nerlv senting voice or cal W ot 3 ¢ s = skull of John Sticedy was brought into const 0 i A his morning by the avrival of a speciul train \ting tor General Wanamaker, after a 10,000 mile south toinclude Marysville, Kan., and west | Scorry, Neb, May 15,—Corn—Two acres A Aidilbe 0, no, I mean it causes contraction. L R i g ) The decided stand that has been taken by [ (" 8 A eaNti e b A [ to Stromsburg and North Platte and north to | Planied to ono last yoar. Wheat—A good | 1t was not known at the time that it was pre Meanwhile Lumbortson asked -the witaess | PCaring ten carloads of delogatos from tho | ) F8 SAEER] ARG Pt has, Deon takon B¥ [ rip with tho president, soeing his wife and G ol Al " These reports | Crov if the dry weather don't last too long. uted that it was the skull of the murdered | if such bones “were not called by certain | Western states in contradistinetion to the eranger clement [ daughter off to Kurope, and spending Sunday { irand Islund and Columbus. Theso reports | 00 poct % WETE (R pl o man, and Dr. Gannett, who was on tho wit- | names and put nearly all his questions in [ This afternoon was dovoted chiefly to con- | was largely rosponsibie for this rosult. At | at his home in Philadelphia, arrived in Wash. { show that on the nights of the 15thvand 10th | “Huvenwey, “Nob, May 16.—-Nood rain | noss' stand. showed on th HREBLLY. foch \udiug manner that finally the de- | forences of tho various state deiegations, thoy | the general caucus today of representatives | ington this morning and was soon at his desk { thero were local showers at nearly overy | budly and if it should come within four or | Ji5 Stiid, SUOWed, on the Rhastly rolle fonso raised o great objection to such coach- | boing for the most part harmonious in their | Of MOstof tho organizations that will have | o tho department station. 11 so indicate that there is | five days then oats may turn out a full crop, o ¥ s c ing of a witness, Qellbasat delegates in the convention some pretty plain 16:Wks & grent and: portost 461 T lenty of moisture, a ‘rease in the acre- | DUt wheat will not be over half u crop even | outer fractures, The osseoas tissue from Meanwhile the witness declared that from | deliberations, . talk was indulged in by President Wushburn bl L sl ol T LG L DSy O HIUISLUTS,; rl i e, with plenty of rmin. Corn must have rain to | the check bone to tho process of the | the symptoms of the patient as described L T'he Iowa delegation, among othier things, | of the Northeastern Industrial alliance, and | enlarged my viows on a large number of age and that the condition of tho Rrowlng | aoime’ out of the ground. Corn will all be temporal bone was missing. The doctor | Mr. Lambertson and from the result of ti adopted a resolution urging the nomination [ who voiced the ideas of the labor clements | things,” said he, “The president has - crops in that territory is all that could bode- | planted by the 20th of the ln‘nnl.h‘, As '.; tastiflad that the blow: that John Shesd ;‘.E«:.‘p\y' that )sn.q-.l_\_/ had died from the | of a full independent ticket next June, and .lx‘r tho cities as apart from the a 'h\ll.lul‘u;\ proven himself to be the broadest minded of sired 1s | 10Dk cont: Barley 28 oo cont oy arainof | had receivad was of an exactly simi- | OTCr's Of morphing polboning » ; | tlegraphied its decision to prominent, men of | He told the caucus that the industrial ele- | o, “ind the attentions shown him are the In some sections the planting of corn is | 10 per cont: barley 25 per cent less and flax Ldon't believe,' said Philpot, attorney ment did not propose to be used as ) s ; planting of eorn e | 15 less. No rye at ail lar nature. ‘That it had crushed tho outor | for Monday McFatland, but who' hus done | the Party in sympathy with tho movement. | gatiiaws to "t Hoommeatio sucmss o (s [ sourco of common pride. T was wnxious to comploted and in uh soctions at least three- | VPR FOTREEEAL e portion of the skull, but hud not in any mau- | mast of tho fighting for Mra. Sheedy on the | Thero was a rather turbulent meeting of | next logislature, 1f a third party was to bo | see something of the practical working of the fourths of the planting is done. In some lo 10 per cent incrense: condition averaae. | jop affected the lauer plate of the skull or the pnl:nx.xbtl|.unr\".“'l>h4\l that fellow kuows where | the dolegation from Kansas, duo largoly to | formed the s uthern and southwestern dele- | postal — system in tho far west, calities the corn was up and doing nicely, | Wheat and oats favorablo unless rain | =00 the arbor vitae is situated the fact that it is much strongor in point of [ KAtes would have to come in s weil s tho | \hora progioss is turning affaies even bofoye the rains, 0mes 5000 ; Acreage same as last yoar. Bar- The colon o complaints of 1then came tothe front and sime as | Mr. Lambertson, attorney for tho state, | asked the witn northern ones, he iudustrial element of the und rye—Condition fair; acrea, 8 numbers than that of any other state, thero Rl ] ¢ over every y poor seed have been heard, ar - or two, and to oast, west aud northwest were neither willing tyear, then asked : +Doctor, ean you tell me where tho arbor | being nearly 800 persons here revresenting | or dusirous to draw votes from the reputlican | know what should be done for those peo- It will be noted that some of these reports, ConriaNn, Neb., May 15 —Corn—Acreage “Whose skull 18 that you hold in your | Vitae is located seven orgaaizations, viz: The farmers’ alli- | states, while at the same time the pscudo al- | ple. You see I have mado some notos of my which are dated the 15th, and which com- | same as last'year: enough moisture to sprout hand 3 “]l d;r"il kuow that thero is such a place,” | ance, the citizens allianco, the people’s party, l:'um-lem-u of the AL Tu;kiug to | trip and have propared some memoranda as plain of the dry weather were sent out be. Acreago one-third Barloy | ™ e . i1 replied the witness, o I 2 N § . their democratic allegiance and helping to i s TaSTHE it 2l { e L S sl ter Tho witness replied: “It is the skull of | "REile'Vol ot Ty some of the hooks read of i aapory e Haoal Industrial | muko tho solid sonth more solid than ever. W athed iy HdugE Bt have since od the shension of any oxt, Noeb, May 16, —Corn—About | Jonn Sheedy " a place thiat Is supposed to represent the cen- | Alliauce, tho auti-monopolist party and the | "Gior'snoakers laid atross upon the fact e BL IO R HOSUHUS W HOHUIY pediate dArincs trom dinith R OV | wocthirdaiplanted, bt In'many. plices (Hoe | \Fot s tew) moments'the fudge, jury, specs | toriof Iife and ik aowil by the name of arbor [ single tax men. There was a large | that the eastern people’s movement differed | poluted toa huge pilo of newspapers on his immediate damage from drouth, is not_suflicient moisture, W s f at—None. tators, but above all the attorneys for the | Vitac, or tree of life” attendance at Dexter hall and Congressman- | f:on that of the granwers, inasmuch as its | desk, A lurge crowd of chiefs of divisions It will also be noticed that many of the | Oats—Ratuer good and acreage large, | Bar. . g The physician declared that he had _never e it organization was moulded after those of the A ‘ o > ] 3 . Stenisg Vo alyeed; Vel Sheedy elect Otis was chosen to preside. A ques- ‘ and assistants crowdod about the postmaster #iokt favorable reports come from sestions | ley—Noue. Nyo—Very limited Amount, 0 defenso wore paralyzed. Bven Mrs. Sheedy | ygary of such & thing and the ‘eyee of Col. ! d old nolitical parties and recognized neither q ropped her eyes for y after. g i ion soon arose as to the basis of represeuta- AL {5 | general to congratulate him on his fine ap- vhich last seaso crop 8. None. dropped her eves for a moment, but afte onel Philpot twinkled merrily, He then pro- [ tion s00n arose as to the ba: i secret rituals, grips or pass words. All this T iioh last, seasou suftered a crop fallur Corvanrs, Neb,, May 15—t has bsen ve wards raised them, first in a dazea manner, | cceded to display his knowlodge of physiol- | tion to b accorded the various organizations, | flummety, it was contended, would have to | bearance and listen to his interesting remi- 6 following reports cover the territory im- ) ! A dry up till today. ' A bico little rain which {8 | but later she recovered and in a scrutinizing | 08y and_toxicology and though apparently | and a motion that cach orgaaization bo al- | bo abojisted \f ali - meri enaton ve '8 | niscences. | Mr Wanamaker is an entertain- mediately surrounding and tributary to the | now falling is very cooling_and no_doubt way sho looked at it as though it wero s | 1688 conversant” with ~tho " subjects | lowed to select two porsons to act as com- | gene atform. g talker and ho gave his hearers some val- stations mentioned, Wil causo corn to sprout. Wheat and other [ FFH B gp s, Bt s O e | thon Lambertson, - he succooded” in mitteemen provoked o livoly discussion. It | Mason Greene of Boston, the porsonal rep- | yuble information dircet, from the hub. of OsCEOLA, b, May 16.—Small grain [ small grain looks very promising, Corn is | Curiosity. She did not shed a tear, or eve getting the witness to admit that he had L - ' resentative of Edward Bellamy and his dwar tho mational | Practical life. He told of the wonderful and stian' sociulists, and Itev, [ stable growth of the west, the work and t theorles, Brow entation in proportion to | leader of the Ch doing nicely. Corn about the sam sage | about all planted, but little has sprouted yet, | 1ok troubled after the first surprise. Sho | formed his theory ufmorfmmu poisoning be- | WA urged that the different organizations as last year, mostly planted; some of it up. | Acreage: Corn, 1520 per cent decrease; | could not help but recognize the grinning ap- | fore the autopsy was male; that in case of | should have a repre Wheat has eained in acreage 20 per cent; | wh » lh@20 por cont incronscioats wnd | parition ns that of her murdered | morpbiue poisoning the bladder would be | thewr power and numerical strongth, S ral | W. . Bliss also urged on the same line, and | needs of the pustmasters and what was onts 10 per cent, Thero is 1o barloy or rye, | barloy, unchanged. ; ] liable to contain more evidences of the sumo | amendmonts with that object fu viow, were | the Kansas mon, who had dono all the listen- | shown him at. varlous Dottte- Bt HEAGE: > ( and a falling oft fu tho acroago of ilax of 20 | | Bokius, Neb, Miy 10.—Tho hoavy ratn | Bisband, bocause n = tho forehoad | yon'tho kidneys und yettho urino ned oy | Smendments with subsequontly withirawn, | 10, then went hto caucus and placod them- | per ent. last night mukes all crops look bright, and | Of the bony structure was the depression | heen examined at all, ] seoms that at almost overy place ] 4 and the motion, as it fnally prevailed, con. | S¢Ives on record. There has beon no confer- | I s€e el L Miitarn, Neb, May 16, No flax sown, but | prospects for a_bountiful harvest aro ex- | familiar to her where once a would-be mur- | ~ Otnerwise the doctor's testimony agreed templated the Aclection of | ih peisons from | €1co of the strictly southern delogates, but | Mr. Wanamaker was cornd by the post- 3 the acreage of other ceroals the samo a<last [ cellent. Corn—All planted, u little larger | derer attempted to blow her husband’s brains | in the main with that of Dr Leachloy, the | oach organization presented. in conversation they expressed the opinion | master, taken to the postofiice, told what was year. Cornis about three-fourths planted | acreage. Wheat—Outlook good, acreago out and almost succceded. Sheedy bad re- | Witness declaring that the brain and medulla | 1y ring the discussion Mr. McGrath called | thét it would be unwise to endorse inde- | being done and what ought to be dono, Mr, 0 and will sprout. oblongata, or portion of the gpinal cord next | atention to tho fact that there had- been. too | Pendent political action so long ns there was smaller. Oats—slightly damaged ' by frost, J ‘ 5—C covere at shot, but the depression i o ! D 0 Wanamaker is of an inquisitive turn of DLUR| Dbuixas Nob, Moy 15—Corn is | acreagoless than lust year. Barloy--About | (0TSFel, from that siols but the dopression it | 1o ihe braln showed no evilences of blood | RLLentiou to th paid to thocities and tho in- | & possibility that they would bo able to got [ [TEILEER 18 08 b Wauistiive tam of most all planted, coming up good. Iine | onc-half the acreage of‘a year ago, prospects even In the grinning skull the same reminder | 1ot Tho skull was not fractured. A small | yarasts of wigo workers. aud urged that the | relief on the most important economic qu Sl e tatnad bl s L LU weather for corn, plenty of moisture aud an | good. ~No rye or fiax g of that deadly assault was apparent the same | % 0f blood was found in the right ventricle | Kipnts of Labor should be properly recog. | tons through the lder parties. wants o people, and make a. Increaso of 20 por cent in the nereage. Tho | - Crtiar Ciry, Neb., May 15, —Never was [ Of thut de of the hoart, He was nogpositive that blood | yizaf by the mootinge. Lo g as an official. Thereforo this was a tour for present outlook was rever better in this part | thore s bottor prospect for big crops. Corn Tho composuro of Mes. Sheedy was uni. | $lots 1 tho heart indicated morphine poison- | " Kifier the adoption of the motion to appoint | DENVER HOTELS CROWDED. | information to him It s safo to sas that it of the state. Very little old corn left in the | Prospects good, acreago same as last vear, v ing, nor was he sure that the lungs were two persons from each organization names v g : y : versally remarked. Her sistars ‘showed e counwry. Wheat shows an increase of 25 per [ about two-thirds planted, pleaty of moisture | Yersall £t cent in acreage and oats 20 per cent, No | for the presont, but will need rain before fl.‘?“_c‘r,“’l',‘,‘""’:“f“: 'r"{ pa :r"‘{f_“["; damage is reported and the condition of the | many days. Wheat and oats —Condition good, | She i ang "““‘:f‘w““"“l oy rowihiz orop Is 100 por cont. Such a favora- | acrengo groator than last year. Barloy.~Vory | 500 e, tud thoy ovluosd & disposition | sumed the cross eximination: that two or three men were undertaking to | Dixver, Col,, May 18.-Tho hotels are 12 prospect has not been seen in teu years, | little raised here. Rye--Noue to speak of, | S00d & ot L d +How long is the medulla. oblongata, doc- | yamg the porsons who should ba chosen. by | swied Lonlbt 4 Rye—Condition good, acreage 3 per cont [. Flax -Samo as last yodr. *fho. result of the srragnment of son. | 0%\ 81 he, *'botween ; two aud thros | Al tee meeiebaer of dot i, 6, cho ¥ | erc more than last year, ' Flax ‘Condition good, [ P vrTi OrNTEl, N;I), A\my{m TFarmers | ;. S MaHAtisn ana Mia the a9 for, the hn-n‘; " e There was considerable excitement, and a acreage 40 per cent less than last year, are complaining for the want of rain. Some 2g0d Tmurde; o § o | .Yes, siv, in that neighborhood.’ i v each organiza int | P L ELIOSELS L Howsraviiie, Neb, May 15.-Com—Abou | are plowing up “their wheat and ‘oats. | 8i0kpd wurderof My, John Shoody ls 8 mat | Cojonel Philpot then sayagely demanded: o law Tl orpaiaationtd oot | o congress, which assomblos at tho Fif. | 4L bis desic twenty-fivo months with the ex- throoquarters of the crob fu the ground and | Should ‘we have anothor week of dry [ toF Of speculation. not sufticient testimony to | . Don't you know that the medulla oblon- | tie o Ao 3 tecuth strect thoatre tomorrow evening. | at'long ntersals dudng the hot men i plenty of moisturo to mako it grow. Itis | weather the — small ~grain will be | fur Vict Mrs, Sheedy, unisss the nogro. pocs | Bata is seidom an inch nud a quarter long, | 19,4 delogatos then gathered in groups limive nunaved dolegates " have baen | honhe e vaws Guring ithe hol’ weather growing nicely and the acreage is about the | short. Corn- Ouethird loss acreage, | €01Vict Mrs, Shecdy, unless the negro goes | &1q% 7 £y g ot (A0, (WAC 8 auarter long, bout the hall, discussing the situation and | .vo bundred delegates ~have A0 e AWRY Lto.u 10, J80a I RUKONRYLS, snmo as lustyear, Wheat—All right and [ one-fourth planted, prospect poor. Wheat | 90 the stand, und that already enough evi- | {ic s 00 longt Why, the medulla | 200 SN orsalk £ accommodated at the hotels in the | averago duration of the head of the depart- i T R L S ieas (. aapaok. DooE. dence has been brought to send the negro to =ity 9 " lulla | selecting persons to represent the various ment without breaking down from overwouk dolug finoly. Thero aro five ncros this vear | and oats—One-third more ‘acreags, looks | 4°0¢0 hits boen brought to send of the cight-foot Missourl girl' aint an inch | grounizations under the motion as 1t was | clty, and it is expocted that at il SR oW TIom. DvarnoLE to one last year. Oats—All right so'fa’, | badly. Barley—One-third less acreage, looks it AL T LT edh and a half long." Horited T whb d from the stago | least five hundred more will arrive, | OF being compelled to take prolouge 4 i % A T L801e The testimony today was not considered G adopted. was announced fr Stag " | has been nfteon months, about an averige ucreago sown. Ryo—All | badly for want of rain. Rye—Very little f i R iRt ou- | jgane docior suld nothing and tho audienco | thay the membors of the farmors' alltango | Provision will have to be. mude for them right, doing well, Flax—Not as wmuch | bere. Flax—One-half less acreage, very lit- | YOIy Something of 8 scnoution maProsecu: | langhed. Mr. Strode thiow,took tho witness would hold & soparate moeting fa the hall % s MARY JONES OF OREGON. sown ns usual but looks well, tle put in the ground yet, by Detective Malone tonting it ho made | aud began guesticuiug bint, as to the differ- | WOl ! inquiry wns made whether the hall | "WhCrever it cau be found. Evidence of the despocate - straits luto. Nowrit Bexn, Nob,, May 15, —Corn—Two- [ Suriny, Neb., May 16.—It is trying to [ 0¥ ] piaokro slono don¥ing lev's naquest, | ence of symptoms ‘in” casé of cancussion of | “ean engaged for the delogatos from | Lo chamber of commerce has boen a cen- | which the democratic pross has been driven thirds planted, early planting coming up, | ram now, but don't amount to much yot. It e ME Brreda s e 4Uest | the brain and “compression of ~ the | Kansas of the furmers’ alliance alone. er of activity during the day. The reception | in its efforts to find something to criticize In but the corn that is being planted now will | rained three miles south very hard, but did | W B O Pl e Arst s oo showedi dia- | Draiu, and Mr. Strope handed the witness a | o' tivmors alliance immediately met and committee met at 9 o'clock this morning and | President Harrison's conduct during his not come without rain. Wheat—Very littfo [ not do any good here. Corn’is not' up yet, A R sement of the | Mmedical book, but Judge Field sad thatsuch | wai"%ailed to order by Mr, McGrath, its | appointed a sub-committoe of five gentlomen | Yecent tour of the south and {ras sown. - Onts—An averago amount sowu, | but that which has beon planted long enoughi €1, of the interior "arrangement o a proceeding was out of order as the books [ PR, FUEG G QERery v, M Metivatlh it8 | appointed u sub-com g Pacific slops is founds in & widely but looking badly on acccunt of the dry | is sprouted: acreage as much or more than | ° M arSbat Mol ok teatifad that tho socks, | $hould be introduced w evidenca, A quest- | DO tary, A motion carried to “pass the | 'O GWait the arrival of the guestsatthe | pylished telogram from Portiand, Ore, weather. last year; about 60 per vent planted. Wheat T T A R s at the | ion was flually 'put to the witness as to_what | word s and all Persons not members were ex- | nion depot and to give them all information | that the president refusea to shake hands Em, Nob., Moy 10.—Immediate rains | —Mostly wintor, looking pretty good. Oats | hockties and night shirts D bt wore foung | B would expect in case a dose of morphine | SOy ‘fro erson At a late hour in tho | as to hotel accommodations and other mat- | with a colored woman, & Mrs. Mary Jones, Will insure good crops. - Corn—Three-fourths | are not looking well and are going to be thin W R o ibe anme,shavwors faul had been given to John Sheedy atla. m., | afiemoon the mooting was still in session. J. | ters so us to obviate any difficulties which | because she was colored. Somo of the storfes of entire crop planted, bulance will nov be | on the ground: rain needed. Flax--Coming " County Attoros Snoll presented & num. | and the condition of the man was the same at T. Little ana S. 8. Snyder were chosen to | they might experience. The entertainment | based on this statement embody an interview oL into the ground until there is rain. | slowly and will not be a full crop unless we | , ¢ e elis e il et ol that timg as has boon alveady given in evi- | rprosent tho citizens' alllance, and S. H, | commitico mob in the afternoon and dis- | with tho woman, aud reports hor as honestly Wheat —Acreage 10 per cent increase over | have rain soon. Honce Bt iy o o Snoady 10s- | dence, ‘Tho witness replied: Huzo and Levi Humboldt the people’s party. | cussed plans for the arrangement of the ox- | believing that the president refused to take last year: stand good but suffering for the e domieey but they were not allowed in evi- | “i[ think a fatal dose of morphino could be The other names were not made public. " | cursion to the most interesting points in the | her hand on account of its color. Usually want of rain. Oats—Acreage about the Same In hansas City. S Ditickive TimiMal thon put on the | Siven at L o'clock to a patient who had vom- | “rpyo” National Reform Press assoelation | state, such stories are unworthy of the slightest same; stand good, also need rain badly. Atcmisoy, Kan., May 18, —[Spectal telo- | detectivo Jim Matono was ont 1o \wal | ited two or three times aud not be manifest held a meoting beforo noon, and at 8:30 it is | Tonight the Colorado delogates meet the | weight, but lest there are others, and many RorleyVery littlo raised in this vicinity. L gram to Tir Ber.|--An elovator firm of this | Jtand He ¢ attor tho arrest of that, follow | Within three hours. “If the stomach had | j&i L TEGUAE fJefote Roow, and Bt 880 bt 1o | 1 O committnas ae a public moeting in [ others,'on the Pacific slopo_and along tho en- p N i sood, " o Ny cor than 145t city received roports from twenty-fvo agonts | aiid found. there. some “soeke. neokiier ey | notin but food in It a toxc dosa would bo Questions pertaining to the admission of new | chamber of commerce. The principal matter [ tire scope of the president's journey who. Dlantod at differont points of westorn and northern | micht shirts which ho showod to certain | "I wivtin antoge’t 5 | dembers aud the uso of boiler. blate matter | to bo discussed is tho action of ths Colorado | may be made to believe that they were was fortunate for the south and west that Delegates to the | the postmaster general accompanied, tho ) o president on 3§ p, for he comos back filled LRI LY L ARG, ruumr; through which he traveled, and he bt with delegates from all over | believes it should have ol it the country who are to take part in or be | wants. When Mr. Wanamaker started sont at the deliberations of the commer- | AWAY With the president he had boen congested in cases of morphine poisoning. At the afternoon sessica Dr. Casebeer was acaiu put on the stand. Colonel Philpot re- were suggested for the places, and the man- | Appival ner in which it was done ovoked a spirited protest from Mr. Schenault, who insisted x A - sk . ER el 0 jal d at length, the proposition | delegation upon the arid land question. slighted, a word on the point Is proper, At 16 N ot , Reausasiitils imorines Theo i clerks at Herpolsheimer's and Schwab's, and | ¢ 5 . I | were discussed N prop clegatio ho & ; N B slight oint 18 nroby foroage, planting noaely done. Wheat—Looks | the lato rains. But one wan had any fault | Shecdy, On the day of tho arrost the wit- | pfy, fine, largely winter. Oats—Acreage about | to find. He saia the vield of wheat would that oficer showed Monday MeoFar the same as in 130; not growine as it should. | ouly be 90 per cent. of & full crop. e Yt There Is much speculation as to the plat- | ated tonight., The moment the curtain falls | was taken over a town or city there flocked form. - Objection to the Ocala_declaration is | upon the last act the men will begin their [ about him hundreds and thousands of people strong in some quarters and thero is a dispo- | Work, and by morning it will present an | who wanted to shake hands with = him, Courtnay testified that he was at the Sheedy” residence shortly after the murderous assault. He holped put_him to ¢ d nisrawi o i i iti v . Louis plattc Interesting appearance, Sometimes when he was being taken to a 8bout the same as i 1890, but not much sown : 9 STE S elar PO Yy apers, advised Mrs, Sheady to deposit £50 A el silver ques- | Rogers will welcome the delegutes on behulf | him to walk through, thousands of hands L DX. GRAVES ARRESTED. water's. ' McFarland said he had bought o | R nong papers, fn o bank subjer tahes | 10 the position to bo taken on tho sfiver que: R co # cane like that for a man from the Black v | tion and an “eight hour plan.” A conference | Of the city and Governor Routt will perform | were thrust forwara for him to touch, \ FurLertoy, Neb,, May 15.—General out- - > TP 4 - check. Ilad conversations with Sheedy v W o1 ] s | & similur duty on behalf of the state. The | Many old soldiers asked him to take the ] look brigt. ' Cora’Threo-fourths planted. | 19 Admission to Bail Will Be Acted | Hills. When the witness started to take | G, U4, shooting one month previous [ fYus beld today with the leading delogates i maanv McFarland to the police station a porson Wheat and oats—Good. Barley—Very hittle on Today. 3 amavkod, A ore, [ gown. Rye—A No.l Flax—l00 early to | Drxvem, Colo, May 18.—Dr. Graves was | ficar b remarked, “l, hero, [ thought determine; prospects good. A delightful | arrested this afternoon and taken to tho i from the west and south and the demunds of | first busini will be the aprointment of | hand of a comrade, and wherever the presi- the east were fully made known and received | committees on credentials, o order of busi- | dent had time he spent it in shaking hands. with favor. Eastern men want this plank | nass and on resolutions. Afterthis the dis- | But at some places he was hurried and he to his death. These occurred in the oftice of the witness. Sheedy suspected K. L. Bra- dem, Mose nith, Alex Juttes and Frank el S i il : adopted on the silver question: “That the | cusston of the subjects to be brought before | shook few or no hands. Had he shaken all rala tadey, county fall, where ho will spend at loast one | awiumace consiouaycy o0, 8ald thisdhe Waians of conspiciug to put him out of the | gonforonce favors the restoration of silver to | tho convention wil bo ovencd, Aok thone | the hands extinded o woul b o bosn Woop Riven, Neb., May 16.—Corn —Acre- | night. Ton ' v 3 “Ishowed Monday McFarland the cane [yt Lo Withess wdvised Shecdy to emloy | 4 position it occupied before 1573, viz: On | Who ave arrived is Mr. D, Hinton of the | out in Texas somewhere shaking hands, ago increased 10 per cont. - The carly plant- night. Tomorrow he will have a hearing, y detectives. Was asked by Mrs, Sheedy after vhot o vl . | found on the porch after the assault on John when the question whether he will be ad Sheedy, Junuary 11, Monday identified the ing is up and the rows can be seen across the ity o - | irrigation engineering department Washivg- | It happened at Portland ~ where the funeral if he (Courtnay) thought her | 150N ‘v"Jl'\’.n“’"i‘ls“é"l‘.‘,E“fofl,wfili“"“,\.”:?;‘#, wn‘.‘" e b doputed by his office Lo | the colored woman’ atatoned | hos elds, und the stand is cood. It will all be | mitted to bail or not will be decided. cane. 1 asked him where he” was the even- | FUItY. - [Overruled]. This question was | pob BF PR | CHE logal day's work for gov- | represent it at the congress. self along the lines of persons planted by the middle of next week if the ‘The sensational developments spoken of in | ing of the assault and his answers were such Q-lrilpfa'[l )h.\ Lllullrmkh « r::nrll!h)' fi;:va‘ M,""‘ ernment employes in mechanical departments . botween whom the president walked that he Tieather is good, Wheat--Acreage increased | last night's dispatches did not materializo | that I charged him with being at John | SH2edy on entering hor house. The conver- : : : belioye this principal should bo further | CONSUL CORTE IN WASHI was hurried for tine, Hundreds and hund- g 4 L , sations with Mrs, Sheedy were of a fiy 1| N & reds of hands we; tended, and whil Ty the ecomoon Huve ; o | e ¢ commenced to tako them it fnally this time of the year, No burlos. rye ex flag. | Miss Suliie Hanley has slso boen indicted ‘\i‘gjl‘r:lotn735:33'5;(:-:‘:‘:'})?}Mw was struck. | Jand in the house the next day becauso thera | POrations emploving labor in the different became necessury for him i order to reach Accompanied by the Boy who Signaled | ! ; states of the union, thus reducing the hours ivhe 4 3 ; . i ler Having a pico rain here now and ‘it rained | It was thought yesterday that an wndict- | "o witness. then festified that ho was WA t00 ok Ok NG Ho testified | Of Iabor and in proportion increasiug the de- Shisf R 8yI8sARRrOACh) nia dsetingtioniilo Srefiifel to sk imioee all night. The prospects nevor were better | ment against Mrs. Graves had been found, | present at the time the first confession s VAt o s aer AL Sale. o tes ‘e | mand for it.” WasmiNaroy, May 18.—Consul Corto of [ hands Heo had to stop his hund shaking for ull kinds of grain and grass than at the | and it is snid that such was the case, but | made. This was on tho Sunday morning £ IR PrCASn VBIILES BULOEY Sover; the Eastern men announce their determination | New Orleans arrived here today with Gas. | 'Puch to his regret just before he reached, in to make & strong offort to secure the incorpor- | ‘pari Grimaldi, the boy who, It is charged, | the ! 109, & Wimuer lgidol‘l‘lv“;‘nhll::n“lll:wvx:(;:: present time, the grand jur, Yuray, Neb, May 15, — Corn — Acreago v ) : the St body of John Sheedy and participated in_ the , Beting on the advice of 'Dis- | following the arrest. Thoe witness then da. | 200 ARR-ahoety pavk ¢ triet Attorney 'Stevens, reconsidered —their | tailed the confession, it being in every par- | S2me. His testimony in regard w it was _ox- Ao LFogad o ; ation of these planks in the platform and in- | P27 e 4 b i) , ; 48 Jnrger, about threequarters in tho ground, | action, not having evidouco encugh to. war- | tioular exuctiy - ko = that givon ©in | 813 Jike tuat of Dr. Boachley, who testified | icata’ that their zoal in the futuro will de. | KAV the whistie us a signal that Hennessy Along with them wos tho colored. woma, Corn that was plautod deep sprouting all [ rantit. The theory Is that Mrs. Graves | evidence by ° Officer Kinney, telling | "} “ji"{l"}f John . Shbedy Juced | Pend largely upon their adoption, wis approaching on the night when the chief | Mrs. Mary Jon After shaking hands with right; shallow plantine needed rain to | wrote the lavel on” tho bottle sentto Mrs. | of the criminal intimacy batween Mre e akull of John Sheedy was produced Mr. G. F. Washburn, president of the New | was shot to death in the streots of New Or- "{OHTfl"fl» und tens of thousands of colored England industrial alliance, said in relation [ Jeons, Grimaidi was confined the prison | PCOPIO it is not supposable that the president moisten the ground before it could possibly | Barnaby, while Miss Hanley carried 1t to | Sneeay and the negro, how the murderous | With the result noted above. The last ques- sprout. Had a nico shower this aiternoon | Boston and mailed it there. plot was first rovealed 'to Monday and the | 008 were: 3 (L to the matter: “*We feel that the work of the FE it Sk ol | Would stop with Mary Jones of Oregon, She which will start crops growing all right. [ Dotective Hanscom, who has charge of the | full particulurs loading up. o the wssanit State whethor from the examination you at th time tho citizens broko ir. and tok | was no miore slighted than tho millions of L ins alliance has not boen broad enough, for 1t \ 0o b Whoat and barley none. Oats — Acreage | case, went east Last nixht. to securo” further | Whilo the confossion wis being mado Casies | BaVe made of the skull of John Sheedy if gn | Blince has v ohiefly to agricultural interosts, | Yengeance for the death of Chief Hennessy, | persons whom the president found it neces- about one-third less, evidenc came in and told McFarland to keep his | YOUF oplnilon the blow that was administored | 0y 15\ of tho east have many important l. | and i the ome who saved his life | sary tosin ply salute. but with whom, for Ovenroy, Neb,, May 15.—Corn — Acroage ———— mouth shut as e had told enough alroady to | At e Son s b mabroduco death | wcs at stake. Unloss this confotenca will | by biding undor & box in @ cell | the want of time, ho could not shake hunds, largor than lust year: all planted und the Divided Up th> Moncy. hang him. MoFarland did nov appear scared | ivus"tho’ blow et e admint ored | broaden the scope of the work already com- | goross the cormdor from the ceil in NEBRASKA, I0WA AND DAKOTA CROP, ground has sufticient moisture to sprout the |y suivaroy, May 18.-In the district | at tho time, to Tohn Thheen TessIREoN AN . 9dmin stored | menced by the movement which has 1ed to it ITE IR AL e alae e s From the moutLly bulletin ou the condition seod and the early plauting is growing nicely, | HASHREION WY 3 ounced the | _ Philpot then asked tho witness: “Didwe | (8 A0 Sbeady —and = the “wound = n- 0™ that 'ft will searcely bo worth | Which his father, kizer of the growiug crops just issued at the de- 'he acreage of small grain is tho same as last court today Judge nes announced he you tell me ou the day of the confession that | fieted LT o impe stoms that | While to “go into it farther. If | Wascrouching whou bis body was riddled | Pariment of ag culture, 1 take for Tue Bee MoFurland was frightened and would prob- | TRIEELED Scoqunt tor b eymploms that | ghoy winl " grant us what . we | with bullets. Consul Corte and the boy are | haroment ol following 'on Nebraska: The er | ably commit suicide?” " The audicnce bent eagerly forward to | 8%k however, we are ready to push the work | on teir way to Rome to give Marquis Rudini | notablo tendency to' chiange the acraage of ived No, sir,”” was the rey atch the reply that camo out distint. ang | forward in I8 Wo have conferred with a | a personal account of all that transpired. | crops has been a decrease in corn from the year and is looking vory good at the present | Opinion of the court in the suits of Ward tim, Lamon and others against McKee to e Westoy, Neb,, May Corn-—Some early | part of the large amount the latter rec planting up, good stand but making little 0! ¢ services i Choctaw claims cas “Very well,” said Philpct, “T will probably | ¢iteh number of persons from the western and | They left for Now York this afternoon and | fact that with the excoption of failure b gErowtn on' account of drouth, One-half :‘“l‘l e‘“"r"‘”“‘_‘l";" "'::zlmlm:f“w‘m'" ,"(:"“““"] g0 on the stand myself," plopen S southern states and find that therois a dis- | will'sail for Europe either on the Majestic on of drouth in 1800 the impression his planted. Wheat —Acrcace slightly increased, oy 8 ol 0 This bluff, however, had no effcct on The witness was excused and M p, H, | position on their part 1o view the matter as | or the City of Berlin prevailed that in this we were overcropped, .short and suffering for rain, Oats—Same | award. The court decided that Lamon was | Malone, Swift was callod. The defense kicked on her | WO 00 A large number of peopla in New A veporter called on Mr. Corte this after- | hence the decrease in corn acrenge in many loreago; some frost-bitten; sort and need- | eutitled to recover from McKeo an' amount | Stsade then commenced asking the witnass | ¢ Yas thoy doclarad that. the name | Fngland aro anxionsly waiting to learn what | noon apd fopnd nim willing to talic upon. tho | pa dug rain badly. Barloy—None. Rye—Looks | estimuted at $130,000 for services in the | anumber of questions as to whether he did | APPearance as they de: s of the state is possibly 10 per ¢ el no change in acreage. = Flax ~Acreage | prosccution of claims from 1867 i0 1874, and | not state at the coroncr’s jury that dohn | ) the back of the. info 1y other parts corn is’ re nt. In rded as the action the conference will take in r subject of what he had dene and what he in- | mation was P, H, 3 it these two planks which we will proposc and | tended to do. Mr. Corte protested vigor- andard crop, and the disposition is at least . samo as last year, early planting looks well. | fov monoys expended; thut Lathrop was en- | Sheedy said to him befors dying. that he | SWith i tha Thep "‘f,"' boen hanting all | which wo will insist shall be waae par ot GUALY AERinalthe biealnndt nb. Bad rocalvod [ te Bala onmerk e tHe ClsDONLOD | In some i Suowsnuic, Nob., May 16, Prospects for | titled to recover §15.000, McPhorson and the | belioved 1t was Frauk Williams whe e Arehioroabion ta Cuoaul L man. ne Judgo | g platform to be adopted. The: anx- | at the hands of the newspape parts there is a slicht decrease. The acreage all kinds of grain good at the present time. | assignees of Luke Lea was cutitled to #14,- | the nssault, This question was ruled out by | finelly ended the matter by adjourning court. | 5u.P1o a8 an incligation to Broaden tha L have no fault to find witn the popula- | in spring wheat is largely increased in most Had a nice shower last night which holps | 000, and Ms. Cochirano hs a vight to 5 por | tho judge, but Strode persisted b pottir tbn THE WRATR R bonEcas principles on which the independent move- | tion of New Orleans,” ho coutinued, *“'hey | paris of the state owing principally 1o the Ofts out In good shape. It 1s & litule cod for | cont of tho amount McKee received. he | same question under different forms, Finally ; Lo X A A ment 18 based and hiope to have their iuter- | are n fine set of people, and us a rule they are | failaro of the corn crop of last year. The corn to sprout well, Corn acreage about 10 [ court directed that the #147,000 paud into | Lamberton arose and declared that Strode For Omaha and Viciuity~Fair: warmer, ests as well as those of persons who live in | opposed to ull that has been doue. ~The | acreage of fiax and broomecorn hu been in- per cent more than last year, about one-halt | court by MeKee be divided pro rata among | was merely resorting to o trick for the pur- ast till 8 p, | other sections consulted and recognized.” trouble s that thero is a large class of kunow asing from year to year of lato with a ir Tuosday s | AMODE the artivals tonight are Senator | nothing people who are hostilo to the for- | decided incrense this spring. Those. crops ERIROAY q Peffer and ex-Governor St. John of K eiguers, and the difficulties were all brought | seem well adapted to Nebraska and havi asked sarcastically if Lamberton had not re- | slightly warmer, except stationary tempera- sas, and Miss Helen Gougar. Plunted, Wheat- I gond condition; acreage | those persons and judemonts bo - given: them | pose of having & cortain one arger than for threo or four years and 0 | against MckKeee for the balan per cent abovelast year. Oats—Looking well, K ik Lo she. WASHINGTON, May 18, -+ Stearns came to the rescuo of Strode and | M Tuesday: For Missouri - ! - - i Senator Pef- | about by them. I aiso hold Mayor Shu proved remunerative. Spring planting (all nover any better for this timo of the yoar, Forest Flr s, rted to a trick when he got Gus Saunders | ture; south winds, for, who has been quoted asan opposing | speare responsible for what has taken place. | crops towether) shows an increaso as com. acreage about the sume as last year. Burle Pirrsivne, Pa, May 18, -A special from | to testify about Mrs, Sheedy being a mis- For lowa—Generally fair; cooler by Tues- | party, states that such a course would be | Hundreds of law-abiding citizens have called pared with last year. Wh Not uny to spoak of. Rye—Vory littlo sovn ; 3 o lust year was pproval | very trying to Nebraska farmers and the that | tendenc ve | tress to Sheedy several years before the mur- Edinburg says: The forest fires which Gt tha o been raging 1n this vicinity have been doing ight; winds beconting northwost rathor a queer one for bim, considering the | upon me to assure me of their di North Dakota—Fair Tuesday ; cooler; | Part ho has taken in the independent move- | and — disgust ot the out looks well. Flax—Acreage about 25 per cent less thau last year, but looking well. e of ¢ in the more stricken districts is to ; No," said Lamberton, “I didn't, because | ,oih oot s Dk ment and the ofticial position ho holds, “but was committed upon thoso persons, | decrease the acroage, still the increase in the BRAINARD, ¥ 10.~Com >Acrosas |, 8 great del of dnmiage o property, = Among | the court st first ruled that the questions | POpiiest winds. Showars; cooler; north. | Idoubt whether it would be wise for us to [ O, but that was & shocking | more favored sections will overbalance about the saie as last year, about 80 per | other losses are two steam sawinills,” which | were all right, but 1 notica that you caten WeitRTa e AP | i R0 too far ut present,” sald he. “We should | outrage, for. although there may have been | any loss from this courso, The ent of it planted and tho ground is in good | were burned on Sunday, together with sev- | onto a trick about as quickly as auybody.” For Nebraska—Faic wnd_cooler Tuesday, | #ct pradently and cautiously. But there will | criminals among their number, threo men 1 | acto of ~ national mowing lands, shapa 80 fur us moisture 1s concornod, but the | eral houses. = A general smilo went around excopt showers in norih portion; winds be. | Surely be a third party in 1562, believo under heaven innocent of tho charge | (wild grasses) decreases annually by reason Wenther is too cool to grow well. Wheat— | Warkrtows, N. Y., May 18.—A great fira | Strode then demanded If tho witnoss had T L The third party fecling is growing, and it | of murdering Hennessy, as innocont of the | of more farming lands, and s & watter of , None to speak of and 1o rye or barloy sown. | is raging in 'the wooas near the town of | not told him (Strode) on the eyening aftor or Kansas—Failr Tuesday: warmor: | 18 said that in the event that & vity of | charge as you or I ar usparl Gri- | course the acreage of tame grasses incroases. l-‘luxf4\4'r\‘:l.'9l:\l per cent fncrease aud pros- l'hvrmlq U\iq‘r six hundred acres are al- | the 4'n;|lc\s|;||llllul a statement had been | goitharly winds e ' | the delegates should d i against it ‘the aldi, the'boy who esc that day, is up | The tamo grasses more successfully culti- pects vory good ready burned over. scared out of the negro. ‘The witness replied | *°piaclis Winds. Ry e minority will withdraw and declare them- | stairs und will toll you what te saw if you | vated are red clover and timothy, Millet is MARTIVILLE, | Kan, Moy 6 CorAl || Dol Aupa, W, Vi, May 18.—Dostruc. | that he had not. 'Strodg relterated tha quos: | o, Solorado—Fate, Tussdoy aoplee:. by s in favor of it. Tue claim i3 that the | wishh A R B e A T A G planted; ground i good condition: raining | tive forest fives have boeen raging on tho | tion and shook his long index fiuger at the s 0% WINSRbmaaIIng nosh, conference is simply a mass meeting and | - In i few moments Grimaldi camo down \at arid districts whore irrigntion 18 ayails > Vhe: S o ‘hea diver r 20! rac - 0 Wi 1 e " “ N ) 1 % 4 T today. Wheat is good and oats about the | Cheat River mountains for a weok. A tract | witness, but Malone was importurbable and The Death Rol such action by the minority would therefore | stairs, as handsome a young Corsican s is | ablo alfalfa 18 grown to somo extent, The same us last year, 0f 20,000 neres north of here Las burned over | refused to accommodate Strode by answ . be justifiable, pver met with in fiction, Hesaid he was four- | latier is not popular, howey in this state, - 4 y Al growing . i 8 destroyo in the afir ’ CiNcINNATL O, May 18,—Colonel L. M. of T SYOK g il . H10 831006 was four. | Ja BOputar, & L ] Baryestoy, Neb, May 10.—All growing | and a number of farm houses destroyed, At | ing in the afirmatiy ey Y 18, 4o R M. R. Humphrey of Texas, organizer of the | toen years and six months old. *“Da putta | The total aren of mowing lands has not been crops all that could be desired. Corn is about | Oalkland village great alarm is felt, as the Mr. Lambertson then remarked in his [ Duyton, a prominent wember of the soclety | colo d wiliance, “claims w membership for { me i jail for whistling when da chefa come,” | materially changed, 1f charged at all it haa all planted and thero is suficient moisture in | town is uimost entirely surrounded by burn- usual quiet manner: y of the army of Tennesseo, and who perhaps | the organization of 1, 0,000 In thirty | said the boy, excitedly. “Me no whistle; me | beeu decreased by reason of the wild e 0go the ground to cause it to sprout. The acre- | fug forests. “Wusn't Mr. Strode and a legion of other | was the closest tc General Sherman of all his | states, - and lustancos 000 i | kuow nothing about the wholo thing. Mo | being put under plow. ‘Thrifty farme ] age as compared with last year is: corn, 100 —— cf—— luwyers at the jail there thatevening auxious | military family, died hepe this morning. Texas, 100,000 in _Alabam 10,000 | fader was put in jail, oo, and he was killed | ers as u rule are utilizing corn-fod- or cent; wheat, 200; oats, 9j; flax, 60; o Murderer Breaks Jail, to get the case " KRORUK, May 1. —Judge [dward | in Mississippi, 75,000 in North Carolins and | fornotting. " ¢ der more than before, Most of the month " arloy or rye sown, " 3 Siovx Ciy, Ia., May 18, ——(Special Tele- | This made Strode angry, and, before the presidentof the Towa Columbiun | 50,000 in Georgin, [t is said that an effort —_—— has been warm, growing weather, but cons lm\’\‘cu“ l\)::lLil.‘ y 15, \\*‘»m';sp:rufl“tl::ru. gram to Tue Bre. | ~Wilinm Molutyre, who Lwl::.;:]:: could answer, Strode demaaded with exvonition, Is doad, _Judgo Jonstotio was & wil bo inade to Incorporato, a plank (n the founds Like a Ghost Story, tinued and eavy. rains have rotarded mnH ell. 0 KO0C 4 pu 3 o {Etmant o0 5 eyes: member of the lowa' constitutional conven- | platformor **Declaration of Principles” pledg- Herers) P - work materiall In most cases where smal in tho best condition for years, Coru—Aver- | s under Iudictment for the brutal murder of | “UACEM0he nave you ever scon mo go | tion woas twrs speaker of tho house, and | lug the new party. if formed. acainst sup. | KAN548 CITY Mo, May 15.—Mrs. A, A. grain was sown it sprouted before 1t could be KO lucroaso 10 por ceut; ubout all planted; | Christopher Oemog last wintor, broke jail | begeing for cases about the police station 1 | oned ehosen senatar. His brother was for- | porting any man for the prosidency or vice | Contre of Pottsdam, N. Y., who has been | EU W3 MGUE L OpIopied Fofare i coid bo some ruln‘lngulfl. uoeds rain hmll_Y W m‘-m hwu.‘;m short um-x;s»_o'.-l.mkI Jailer Mag- | 'l'h’:"nns\\“e‘r was m.'u\:'.nml in 3 ripple of merly governor of Pennsylvania, presideney who has ever favored liquor | Visiting at the home of W. W. Morgan, says | gyer the state has boen quite general and far nerearo {n averaze ) por cont; 3 well, ©onerwwas putting tho prisoncrs Into the cagos | lanahter, Mr, Steodn than continn d: Cnicago, May 18.~HKev, Joseph Travis | license laws, the brid N b [ i 4. Iio has been In t ve winistry | Tho Kansas Knights of Labor selacted I, | fell last Friday, careying with it s passenger | yond thé 100th meridian, usually regarded sown, and is doiog well. Very Little of bar- | struck the Juler cific tlow on tne head | in the criminal courts as you have, the 1rag Methodist y-fiv B. Maaon and i Bnsh as their repre- | train two hours aliead of the train by which | arid, The ground everywuere is thoroughly ley, rye or tax sown, with a large iron buckle and then rushea out | Lambertson. ' wiis one of the organi o y sommitte fon | e : . ) Wi, o~ b b s of the organizers of tho 1 sentatives on the committec provided for vns traveling, Mrs, Centre sovs it was | saturated, uplands as well os lowlands, Moxror, Neb,, May 1.~ Weather very | into the street. 'The entire police force was “Well, gentlemen," said the judee, who . hois, lown and Wisconsin “conference a this afternoon at the moetivg of the Kausas | repoited Luat tweive or £ n people were 88 has come forward rapidly snd pas- Ary for the last ten days, ground is baked | in pursuit within five minutes, Mugueris | kad been trying Mmeanwhile to. concenl o | presiding elder of alffereat distrects for | delogation kilied, No telegraphic report vt such a ! turesare m.ore thun ususlly advanced, © In tome from the very heavy rains of the early | badly burt. smile, “the récords are the best evidence iu | weuty years past. As joes Kuusus 80 will g0 by conveu- | wreck bis boen 1ecoived. | Suulivusteris Neuraska the peach, plum g but needs vain, Outs— Aboutthe same umount | and Melntyre | d behind the of the Atchison at Albuquerquo | above any average seasou's, cven west bLes est and Stk ©have had at loast us ma

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