Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 3, 1894, Page 1

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ESTABLISHED JUNE 19, 1871, OMAHA, LUMBER YARDS SCORCHED | fecond Destructive Fire Visits ths Lumber District in Chicago. TRIAL OF CARNOT'S ASSASSIN authorities that you have not always had a horror of women." continued Judge ponsible for your actions.” The prisoner here said with great anima- S nsible for my I have never been ill."" Replying to further questions he said that not one of his famlly had ever been weak Formal Hearing of the Italian Anarchists Begun in the Paris Assizes, CAESARO INTERROCATID BY THE JUDGE THREE LARGE YARDS WERE EURNED OUT presiding Judge prisoner and n Have w Narrow F Bridge—Dri , His Family and pe in Crossing His Answers Marked killed the president ‘from anarchisi motives?' Are_these your words tis Convietions by Indifference or Deflance 1w in Court. Horses Also Singed. Caesaro had as a child figured as a poseur in the religions procession his native town, for the beau'y of the pris- was remarkable LYONS, Aug. 2.--Caesaro, allas Santo, the assassin of President Carnot, visited by a second fire, which 1 in destructive- was ton'ght for a time threatened to riv much drawn moval from the St. Paul prison was without fnflammatory IteratdEs "hxoited CReEAFO’ £6" Meh dued it had wiped cut the yards of the fol- lowing concerns: John Sprey Lumber company. McBean, cedar posts. . Breulllac, who presides over the court, is the Judge who drew much criticism upon himself by condemning the bill for the sup- pression of anarchistic crime which was re- cently passed by the Chambers the Jury at the opening of the assize July his dangerous utterances and a warning hint the polsonous doctrine was incurably in his veins and after some ups and downs, notably five months in prison for distributing anarchist leafle's out- Milan, Caesaro planned and executed the deed for which he s now on side the barr Ashland avenue The fire to- “While the Chamber of Deputies acting upon government, question fn regard In reply to the judge’ aking part in rell- to his childhood and his It was directly e deavoring to relegate partment had been gradually withdrawn dur- ening but one engine HIS ASSOCIATES ANARCHY. The judge then examined Caesaro at length as to his conncction with anar this examination the president said family tried to wean you from th try, we, In this court, by the aid of twelve honest and free citizens summoned from the bosom of the mation, will punish the mur- lay, and endeavor, according to the measure of our power, to prevent the peril of tomorrow.” de Justice was today guarded r against pos- The regular reinforced by batallion of Infantry, and the vicinity of the had in consecuence very much of the smoking ashes of the yards burned over l:st night. At about § o'clock a lively derer of yeste lumber yards, love my mo‘her,” the prisoner replied “but T cannot submit to her prejudice or tc my family prejudices. family of humanit In spite of further the prisoner some staten Is' for help were sent power could have prevented the travel southw.rd sible bulletins attempts to draw from twenty minutes they were a roaring furnace. n up, one to the e; to the west of the burning lumber, and the attention for the most \ of adjoining property, for they could not get down on the ground where the fire ast and one would say nothing on the subject, bein pecially dumb when the jud tract from him information adopted by an each other and as in_anarchism. The prisoner / o sought to ex s were stationed upon all approach double cordons the building itself. s devoted their part to the pretec A comoany <t infantry, in addition, was posted in the entrance halls, cavairy surrounded prison van as it was driven at a g the prison of St. Paul to the court duty about the are_supplemented of police officials, to the schrewdest large squad of citizens dress had been the audienc available to the public being reserved for the detectives; but at was change were opened a in, and in a few moments all the available space within Without there to his immediate associates was located. then questioned about to side and were on fire in every part. tongues of flames leaped is fully 200 this point, and set fire to the Ashland ave- nue bridge, which fell into the water within fifteen minutes after it began to blaze. before it caught fi assassination, s portion of the trial the “Your relations were udge remarked: every varlety Naturally," consort with the Bourgeol he presiding judge afterwards questioned engine company No. pecially told off to the engine, slightly scorching se cral men and badiy burning Peter Fleming, Fleming clung however, and urged his horses through the | flames, both of them being severely singed. in the hospital, the last moment he had remaining after he had pa‘d his bill the remaining 5 francs was allowed " a poignard, waiting_crowd replied Caesaro, was brilliant sun- | his approach L In the slips adjoining the fire were sev- had narrow All of them got off without injury the propeiler Albert but because of the in getting her into the river and extinguishing the flames, was not severcly burned. At 10 o'clock the fire department flames so well under control that there was | no danger of their spreading to other lum- are estimated The only air moving was that from a ing to a question would ‘be death: rgeoise, soclety alty of his act anarchist and I hate the bo the heads of the this reply from weapon with which he Kilied was brought jury, the president saying, ladies, almost all young and gally dressed, furnishing striking touches of color. PRESS CENSORSHIP SYSTEM. The press benches were speclally selected newspaper men, and these, owing to th postponement of the’ trial, made the government anti-anarchist Soper, which caught fire, V.,‘ >resident Carnot i purposely by enactment of find themselves under strict control. For the first time in the experience of many of them ously preserved. relic which must be pre isoner then $2,000; total, $100,000. All are protected by th:y are not to put in their reports. The trial s expected to vceupy, the whole of today, but a part of tomorrow. no long speeches, prosecutor confining himself to a forty-min- Some people who should have on the right side of the A large eight-story building at was_cleaned out the lumber hand side of the pavement. “At 9 o'clock there was a buzz of excite Carnot was_entering ds were bla: The building was occupied by a num- ns, the largest of which Supply com the Chicago There will be ment as President AN ot the Chicago ute address. come forward fearing reprisals, but twenty-eight indispen- sible witnesses have been called by the gov- include all rememberzd having spokn to Caesaro as he was journeying from ; limekiln where baker who employed the chief of military household; M. prefect of the Department nts who sat the rumble of the late president’s carriage, and Dr. Gailleton, the mayor of Lyons, who rode in the carriage with M. Caesaro struck him. : The evidence of M. Artigaud, the gun- smith of whom Caesaro bought the dagger, is expected to be very dramatic. times before he pald for the weapon Caesaro to see whether he could properly, and several times, before the gun- the assassin rehearsed his how he would stab his victim. republique.’ “I laid my left hand on the carringe and hustled aside a young man whe was in my the bullding and dent and dealt him a violent thrust with my | [0 foal Iosp fo he, B The blade stuck fast and my hand touched his coat. ““As T stabbed him, I cried: Thomas Con- ladder company ally injured by a falling wall, and Captain Sullivan of engine company No. 34 was seriously wounded by falling glass. in his breast late president's Brefullac asked the prisoner what MBER BUR Property Value of the Lumber Foot Up to Two Milllons, AGO, Aug. 2.—The sixty acres of the over which last night were still smoldering today before daylight, but all danger of a spread of the flames was over. tween Blue Island avenue and the river and | Roby street and Ashland avenue the yards were covered with smoking piles of lumber and wrecked buiidings and streams of water poured over total loss is estimated at close to $2,000,000 the burned I felt his decp glance straight in the face. I poinarded him."” Carnot when and uproar). - Replying to the question: wish to strike elsewhere?” “I wished to art, but my arm failed me; the strike his hi blow glanced. Questioned in regard to the truth of the plans revealed All over the district be- the soldier, himselt, but will have the assistance of M. Dubreull, a Lyons advocate of considerable note in criminal trials. Eruesome, always noticeable in French trials, will be suppiied by the instruments used in drawing of the carrfage in wh'ch the president was sit- Caesaro's dagger and the liver of the murdered president in alcohol. during his lite Paul prison, has found time for one regret away after To himself his crime is justifiable, credita- whole plot hatched at Cotte, according to general belief, accomplices, General Versin and General Borious, were in President Carnot's carriage, te: The revised is as follows: list of losses S. K. Martin Lumber com- pany, $850,000, insured for 60 per cent; Sie- mens & Halske company, $500,000, insurance Lowe & Co. surance to cover; Wells, French & Co. $135,- McAdams Cedar ! ting when stabbed, s, after which subsequent occurrenci trial was adjourned until tomorrow. The prisoner, NED RuVOLT company $15 Plot to Assassinnte e R, Discovered. ompany $60,000, covered by . C. B. Palmer $6,000, covered Shoemaker & Higbee $25,000, John Spry Lumber com- . F. Conway & Co. fully insured; Sarrell & Locke, $1,000; Bar- | Hines Lumber Columbia grain $1,500; loss to railroads and docks $110,000, anxious to be sent the assassin any money since he was arrested: and he has subsisted on prison fare. which was imposed upon him In lieu of a straight jacket has not pre- Nobody has or assassinate Dr. Moraes has been discovered. the conspiracy was to prevent upon the duties of president of the republic of Brazil, to which position he was ele by an overwhelming majority in the closing days of de Mello's rebeliion. satisfaction throughout the country, particu- larly in this city and The object of his entering The leather harne: supplied him, and with these he has whiled His penmanship is fair, but indicative of vulgarity. many books There 18 dis thrown out of employment Phe police are tie destruction was A SCARED LOOK. by the fire is 2,200, ar The court opened at 9:15 a. Judge president was no sooner seated than he called upon the gendarmes to bring in the which suffered. of Presdent LIEUTENANT JOHN McGILL of the fire r, burned, died at county hospit NFELL, 683 Carnot was brought into court RioiQrande, doiaul: Very Sudden. what scared as he cime in securely hand- cuffed to a gendarme on either side of him and two others bringing up the rear. Caesaro, as he marched to the dock, wore a somewhat strange costwme. of a yellowish color, his vest and trousers He wore a white shirt with a turn-down’ collar and a gray necktie, 4 he was in the dock his counsel, M, Dubreuil and Italian at the Lyons Business college, the latter having been appointed Interpreter, ex. changed a few words with the prisoner, and the prisoner took his seat of the long indictment be, {mpassively reading of th's document, which contained what was supposed to be a full account of the events on the evening of the murder, VIENNA, Aug. cian town of Zaleszyky describes the sudden- ness of the death from cholera at that place People who have been attending thereafter attacked severe pains from which they die in a few The rich people have fled, while the working people promenade the sireets in a starving condition, take the dise on the spot where they are attacked. Jubez Balfour Handed Over. LONDON, Aug. into the river and drowned; body His coat was UNKNOWN MAN, knocked ipto the river UNKNOWN BOY, 17 years old, burned to The Injured are: Edward Jones, plpeman, burned, Captain Byrne, engine company 15, struck In eye by stream of water; will lose an eye. Yosemite, over- an 3 4 the reading come by smoke; will recover. pipeman, badly burned absut face, body and arms. Parllament, r Phelan, pipeman, overcome by heat the reprosentatives Dantel Murphy, hook and lad Tooord OF Cassara's {ourney f knocked insensible by fiying | ing the name cf n i oner spoke rom Italy, giv- early every one the pris- Chief Malaboch PRETORIA, Transvaal, J. P, Flaherty, fireman, hurt by swinging into fire and badly burned; will ‘recover. Otto Richter, fell from lumber pile, inter- nally injured; may die, Caesaro only became Interested in the in- dictment when, It varrated. tho actual deed as | crouble to the authouitles of the Bouth Afrl- can republic. has surrendered. Kaffirs were killed and injured. Many of the “The murderer approached the poignard wrapped In a plece of paper, and plunged the blade, sixteen centimetors long, up to the hilt into the breast of M. Carnot, crylng ‘Vive le This ery was only h the. footmen In the general confusion. Caesaro dropped the weapon he cried, 'Vive ' Anarehde!’ When the reading was finished names thirty witnesses were called and t Ing Judge, M. Breulllac, began to question the ONLY TWO BUILLI HAMBURG, house on Grosse Reichen Strasse, contalning stores of general merchandise, stroyed by fir coed 1,000,000 Child Died fiom Cholera. Lamoure, N. D, Almost Wiped Out by a Fire ed by u Strong W has been de- This city Is In The loss will largely ex- street at an fauned by a strong wind, center of the early hour, lald waste the Four blacks of stores including the county court house and cland hotel and a drug store are the only buildings dled aboard o forelgn vessel at this port on July 27 his disclosed the fact that the death about the family of the prisoner, the latter | Wa8 due to cholera. answering, *“Just %0, sir; 1 never had a dis- pute with any one.' MORALITY OF THE ASSASSIN, “How about by insurance. Tew Excursioniats Urowned in Wales. T e R DOLGELLY, Wales, Aug. boat laden with excursionists from capsized In the Mauddach river last Ten of the passengers were drowned, and spread Moore's hardware shop. The city was with- | fire protection. are burned and the About forty buildings your morality me us that of Daesaro, smiling other young men,” replied lae - ¥ P Viaced 1n Dry Dock. Einaak hx 4 JEFFERSON main building of Lincoln Institute was struck | SOUTHAM I has been placed The examination of her hull was entirely satisfactory, 1 understand that you desire to pass as an upon the dry ¢ have evidence from the Celte SINGLE FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST and burned to the ground.. The loss is par- tlally covered by insura All of the fur- niture and the extensive Mbrary were de- stroyed, For a while ft. was thought that the dormitory and the manual training depart- ment would be destroyed, but by hard work they were saved. The loss te the state will amount to about $25,000. MADE MONEY WITH MAT Hassachusetts Family Which s Done a Lively Gusinesd In Insurnnce, CONWAY, Mass., Aug. 2.—Mrs. Susan J. Taylor of Walpole 18 under arrest, charged with attempted incendlarism. The Insurance companies allege that there have been within a few years no fewer than twenty- six fires in property owned by the family of which Mrs. Taylor is.a member. A little more than a year ago George and Brice McDowell, brothers of Mrs. Taylor, came here and bought a grist mill. Some time after a barn they owned burned and $850 insurance was paid. This fire, the Me- Dowells claim, was caused by the careless- ness of an employe. Last January the grist mill was burned with its contents. It was insured for $1,600, and the stock for $2,500. George McDowell admits that this fire was of incendiary ori- gin, but declares that he has no idea who set it. The insurance companies refuse to pay the amount demanded in this case, and the McDowells will next week bring suit. Mrs, Mary E. Griggs, a sister of Mrs, Taylor, lived here until recentiy in a house owned by Tucker and Cook. The bullding with its contents was destroyed by fire. In March, 1893, the house in which three sisters and two brothers of the McDowell family lived at Dorchester, was burned. They all held insurance policies ranging from $150 to $1,500, and the five recefved in settle- ment '$1,586. They then moved to Walpole, and in the following August the house in which they lived there was destroved, and | the insurance, amounting to $1,200, pald. George McDowell, %0 the police assert, formerly resided in New York, and there col- lected insurance on three fires, $1,400 on a dwelling, $3,300 on a wheel-wright shop, and 2,300 on a second dwelling. Mrs. Taylor has been released on $1,000 bail furnished by her brother, Brice. TWO FIREMEN KILLED. Tiooe Suddenly Gave Way When the Fire Was Supposed to Ba Out. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 2.—Two firemen were killed and five injured in a fire today which destroyed the mill building at Ran- dolph and Jefterson streets. The building was 200 feet long and four storles in helght and was situated in the heart of the mill district. Tt was owned by David Cochran, who occupied the third sad fourth flocrs for spinning cotton yarns. Part of the second floor was used by McCloskey & O'Hara as a carpet cleaning establishment. The fire Is supposed to have originated from a spark struck by a niil in the picking machine on the second floor. After the fire was quench several firemen entered the third floor and turned their hose cn a large quantity of cotton that was stored there. Suddenly, without the slghtest warning, the floor gave way with a crish, precipitating the men to the first floor, where they were buried among the debris. Two of them were taken out dying, having been smothered by the bales of cotton. The killed are; GEORGE GEISLER. GEORGE DICKET. They died cn their way to the hospital. The five other firemen sustained less serious injuries. The coroner will investigate the condition of the floors and walls of the building. Loss, $55,000; fully insured. FIREMEN CAUGHT BY BALLING WALLS. One Killed and Several Injured, Some of Them Seriously. DETROIT, Aug. 2.—One fireman was killed and six were injured this- afternoon in a fire which destroyed the planing mill and lumber yards of E. C. Richards & Co. and Hunter, Myles & Weeks. The property loss will aggregate close to $60,000. The water supply was so poor the firemen were ham- pered. They succeeded fn preventing the flames from spreading. At 4 o'clock two squads of pipemen were playing streams at the southeast corner of the mill when a portion of the wall gave way and a hal? dozen firemen were caught by the falling bricks with the following results: The dead: EUGENE M'CARTHY, single. Injured: Henry Trap, body crushed, head cut, burned; George W. Lyons, hip broken, body bruised; Louis E. Tate, back injured, leg crushed; Thomas Schieble, leg broken and burned; Charles Roberitz, body bruised. Freight Sheds Burned Up. DETROIT, Aug. 2.—The Michigan Central flour shed, Noble & Co.'s salt and lumber shed, and several freight cars were de- stroyed by fire at noon, The flour shed had about 4,500 barrels of flour, one car load of oatmeal, and nearly $15,000 worth of paper, cousigned to Detroit dally papers. Noble & Co’s shed was filled with- cement and salt, about $15,000 worth of flour consigned to local dealers was destroyed. The total loss estimated at $40,000, Another Incendinry Fire in Minneapolis, MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 2—Another fire early this morning Is believed to have been incen- dlary. It broke out in the warehouse of the Nelson Paper company and the nearest fire alarm box was found to be plugged up tight. The warehouse, full of paper, burned, to- gether with a quantity of dry mill wood. Loss, $6,000; insurance, $4,000. Furnlture Company Burned Out, INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 2.—The Stone Furniture Manufacturing company's plant at Plke and Sheldon streets was totally de- stroyed by fire at an early hour this morn- ing. The loss will reach between $10,000 and $50,000, and s fully insu el HER NECK W48 BROKEN., Miss Mary Adams ustings Meets n ident at Cleveland. CLEVELAND, 0., Aug. 2.—(Speclal Tele- gram to The Bee)+A must horrible acc dent occurred today to @ young lady from Hastings, Neb., Magy Adams cf that city, a very handsome apd prepossessing young woman, only 21 years of age, was killed al- most instantly in a streéterailway accident, Miss Adams camo to Cleweland some wecks ago f:r the purposeof atending the Chris- tlan Endeaver conwntions end since that tme has bee nthe’ guest af Mrs. Kate W. Selden, the matron of {he Bethlehem Day Nursery at 144 Hamiltan estreet. At about 2 o'clock this afternoom shos was riding down town on a Woodland Avenue street car. At the corner of Fowest istreet a gust of wind blew her hat off. :She signaled the car to stop. ; The comiueter rang the bell, but before the car stopmed Miss Adams stepped off backwardki: il 50 dolng she was thrown upon hew hea#h, and her neck was (nstantly broken. She did not die at once, but expited som after her arrival at Huron Street hospital, where she was taken post haste in an ambulance. Her family in Hastings have been notified by telegraph. bt \ts Of Ocema Steamers Aagust 2. At Boulogne-Arrived—Amsterdam, from New York y AL Hamburg—Arrived—Rhaetia, from New or! At Genoa—Arrived- York At Fulda, from New New York—Arrived—Fuerst Blsmarck, burg. sn—Arrived, 1st—Havel, fr San Franeisco—Arrived—Alameda, from Honolulu and Sydney. - ‘wie Mediclne Maun Gets Elghteen Months, INVER, Aug. 2 — Judge Hallet this afternoon sentenced W. H. Hale, convicted of using the mails fraudulently, to elghteen months imprisonment at Joliet, 1ll., and m ew by lightning at 1:30 o'clock this morning ‘ W fine, IPLAYING IS LAST TRUMI [SPIRITED BUT 00D NATU was again at administration tonding a friendly ear to Paddock’s interests. Tom Majors' Desperate Mov: to Braca Hi Waning Political Popularity, Repub'ican State Ocnvention of Wyoming with an eye to the future that Senator Pad- [t Selcots a Strong Tioket, retitor in the s nominated governor Lambertson given the vacant place When Crounse BOASTING AN ALLIANCE WITH CROUNSE LETTERS FROM NATIONAL LEADERS READ liffereht dircetions. ANOTHER TURN OF THE WHEE! developments of Deal at Lin- ivents of the Cam= Years Ago—Some pinated for Richards of Johnson County Ne coln that Re palgn of Tw Contest Over the senatorfal contest which of Paddock's aspirations, will remember that LINCOLN, Aug. K MONDEL —It has been a time honored custom among republicans was entirely secured the nomination it is well knowr ndent’ of Public’ Thstruction.. stone to the United States senate. down to the present incumbent of the execu Court Judge Tate fully understood the gover renomination reasons that have never been given to the convention opened electing C. corporations compelled the retirement of Tate substitution Rickman of 1 Chsuncey M. Depew, Reed and ex-President Crounse would be renominated by acclama- had been forced upon the ticket by the mere lected chalre state central committee the last legislature, 0 drawn to his feet and required to Lorenzo Crounse w his commission because the position did not During the recess a fight was made on the fill the measure of his ambition, which had contemplated eding to the place nator Padlock leglslature assembled and his hopes of s00n to be va was spirited but good and people had been talking ahout it when the now historic letter to Lieutenant Gover- ors appeared nk_Mondell have forgotten the contents of this letter its reproduction may not be out of place. correspondence Hay of Liramie county; of public ins superintendent renzo Crounse, e willing and anxious to Pitter of Laramle county. intimations through the press that you would acandidate for wovernor, 1 felt impressed by a sense of duty the party of the embari tainty by a pesitive cxpression as to your desires and ambitions as N unwritten law of as who does well governorship, nted, but it was not what by a great deal wis during was nominated on the sixth ballot. republicans i @8 a whole, with warm to the gove As the complexion of the the senatorlal | popular support recelding from became so he determined shall have a sec of getting tho the western is conceded a_senator. would look as though Clark of Evanston and pulling against ne and Torrey of Fremont Over 1,000 people attended the cons venton and it was enthuslastic from start ta sgusted with strka of political again take ples pert of the sta 1 am, with high respectfully, LINCOLN, Neb., ajors, Peri, Neb.: your communication of y say that it is not my’intention to’ be as governor cisard, your anti-monopoly or Crounse bitterly that he became disg which the people wanted oceupy for their own sakes and cot for his, seriously considered the propo- of retirng from The platform adopted reafiirms the Minnes conspicuous for the am glad to avail my and that he nouncement, and so relieve th meeting will be held the speakers wha SURPRISED by the hands manner in which my nomination and _ele tion came to me and combination preciate the dispo- seneral Potter. nomination, did so with single term, quently expressed, inclination lead me ermination. Of all the me; Majors are sected of joining hands in a po- DEADLOCKED A the purpose of serving nd private inter Congressional Cannot Chosse w Can tidate. Conventlon to adhere to t Thanking you for kind expregsions contained in your i yours truly, A RESULT OF It is no socret among the Intimate friends 0od as the exponent of ant'-nio- nepoly republivinism in been a pronoury/1 enemy of the boodle and Laring the impeachment Bee.)—The Sixth congressional conventicn convened in this city 30 p. m. in the North Side opera house. prominent candidates before the conven- were M. P. Kinkaid, Matt Daugherty of Ogalalla, H. Strayner of Sidney and F. M. Dorrington of Alliance, supporters put “STRATEGY. strongly with the effort made by the honest pressure was necessary to induce letter declining a sec- It.is also claimed by friends governor that house and make an example of the office the hands of public ond nom!nation. liad plaved Each with thef# the day faithfully, s able to secure the 101 votes res nomination. could Le obtained just before convening showed an estimate of eighty-five for Kinkaid, fifty for I Dorington and thirty for At the openin On the other hand, Tom Mafjors has been the friend of the rings and the tool of the corporations. deny it, and his backers known to be in the emplo: thrown into the waste basket, was a part of pressure which desired renunciation of further political pre- The writer does not wish to vouch for the truth of the statement, but he does ing efrontery ugherty, twenty for Strayner, the rest of the convention Majora’ cappers here in Lincoln and lrughed at as a plece of good political strategy. impeachment changed the aspect of the political hor! % It was interpreted by Majors and his backers as a vir ual endo; other candidates the governor's unfavorable it ocupied by the ladies. During the prelimine the Broken Bow Cornet band. dlled to order by Chairman an enthusiastio Is and the asylum plunderers. It is little wonder, then, that the news of peached offic convention was head of “the ticket epistle as the opening for a free-for-all race Up to within was considered since then the sizns of a threatened Crounse celipse have mult plied, and it Is now giv out cold that the governor is to be brought in as the man of the hour to save the party. According to the Ing to your correspondent by a gentleman whose position mittee certainly entitles into current Majors has at last realized what never admit before, popularity as reached its height when he failed by a few obtaln the nomination unfavorable of the alleged combination ha Reynolds of Dawes was selected On motion of Currie of Sargent, the chair appointed a committee of five on organization The committee on permanent organization res making the a candidate is beginning to for lieutenant wonder where resolutions, CHOOSING Nearly everybody in Nebraska is familiar with the Lincon ‘method of selecting dele organization amendment Judge Wall was made permanent state central Wall made “the specch of the evening on The report made by a The resolutions as conventions representatives of selecting conveniently corporations, and Brown of Kearne; At twenty minutes past 10 o'clock p. m. an informal ballot was taken, giving Daugherty 58% votes; Kinkald, 78% votes t. Rayner, 291 votcs; George of Custer, 20 votes. The first formal vote result d as followst Daugherty, 653 ; Kinkald, ; total vote cast, 198, Daugherty, 58%; Dorrington, himself as tho leading candidate. realizes that he has overestimated his own committee at for reveral 5 posed as a delegate is called into executive into the ba coveted chair in the executive office at the His latest move, according to the be gathered, independence If he Is entirely ¢ St. Rayner, 8 Second ballot i Kinkaid, 78%; information an alliance once rejected. wishes of the permitted to pose as a delegate to the con- vention, but he does so with a string his neck, and he always responds when the is Governor Crounse. The scheme 9, the same as it had been for the the sixteenth votes from the nothing less than the nomination of Crounse for a second term and Tom Majors for a third term as lieutenant The combination a majority of the next le by elevate Governor Crounse the United States senate, Last year when the confederated corpora eding ballots, nomination of unty conven- Kinkald 81%. On th> scventeenth ballot the ature and there- nton and men of his ilk to choose the delegates to Daugherty and St Rayner on each vote, making the v-te stand the same as the nited States senatorship would leave Majors he has wanted to be for many years, executive office, of the ring-ridden state institutions. the convention took a recest nomination, had been selected, but the list was not printed, and the paper that was so of delegates*| full” control twenty-elghth ballot stood Dorrington, 19; Kinkaid, 8434 ; In order to understand it is now generally believed in inner political | g oy nack office of Marquette & Dowee solicitors of JACKSONVILLE, democratic conve . —The state ) nominate Liddon of Mariana for justice of The resolutions adopted reaffirm alleglance to democratic principles, promulgated recognize with pride patriotism of ccutlve ability, aintaining a sound and stabla least tacitly understood, if not actually agreed This year the same plan was adopted HpRn Lt S wilikbe, the supreme court history for the past three years. tion may supply some of the missing facts necessary for an phase of the political situation. Two years ago, ante-convention ention upon the ple; a_candidate for lieutenant the Chicago platform unswerving integrity and the beginning of Lorenzo Crounse was not looked upon as a gubernatorial pos- He was at- that time assistant sec- retary of the treasury, a position he se by a combination of his personal good qual- ities, his standing as a republican, his faith- ful career as a fluence of Algernon Sidney Paddock, who was then completing his s senator from Crounse was not gubernatorial well understood that he was an aspirant for the place occupled by Paddock in the senate None were more thoroughly conversant with it was discovered that he h his wisdom in drous chanc demwacratic principles; approves the course of Nouse of representatives in its_efforts to relieve the people of all un= Tom Majors. had been re his candidacy his” friends ratlc senators who of the ime mediate representatives of the people. publla: sorvant. who were not so well recognized as strikers an open secret : Tom Majors. term as a Uni - Mal will sacrifice looked upon cans held a OWEN'S PROPOSAL DELINED, rousing caucus here tonight. Stay in the Settle Suys He representative, IXINGTON, are dlscussing a proposition Settle to have Lambertson was another senatos there were as many good reasons why Lambertson should be sent to the United States senate uld be returned for a aw mark what took place In the mind of Henry Grossham, Owens to Mr. voll of thelr | William Griess Dermott, J. C, Mers Crouch, A, in all probability With an acumen as creditable to his shrewdness as (o his ability as a se slezed the first intimation that Crounse might bw a gubernatorial candidate and turned the Idea to serve his own purposes. Breckinridge's secure the nopinaticn ter Commonted, NEDRASKA WARRENS RARK. this state was the Crounse movement the sentiments of Js y democrats, to President is generally ceded that the nomination will go to a Cass county man en forwarded in recollection of the vigorous efforts of the present governor of Nebraska Clover Comes Back to His Old Love, TOPEKA, Aug to encompass to Chalrman Clover, ex= congressional his allegiance to the party and returned to his St polite monopoly candidate for cor nominating nomination once secured to Mr. from ruin and the democratic party trom disgrac

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