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THE OMAH E 19, 1871. OMAH DAY | MORNING, OCTOBER 8, 1894. committee, has resigned besaure of Fisher's alleged connection with the A. P. A, State Committeeman Robinson also threatens to resign If Mr. Fisher does not dlsprove the charge. 1n a speech at Ann Arbor last night Mr. Fisher emphatically denied any connec- ton with the A. P. A. KILLING " West Virginia's Congressman Declares the Press Reports Were Garbled, Rifle Will Not Riae on Pallmans. WASHINGTON, Oct. 7.—The Interstate Demoeratic association, composed mainly of office holders, has adopted a resolution pledg- SAID NOTHING HE IS ASHAMED OF WILL PRODUCE ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 7.—The consolidated vote of last Wednesday's election shows At- kinson's majority for governor to be 26,000. The rest of the state ticket got over 30,000. alifieincn CHAPTER FROM THE ORIENT. falr Mar er — As to His Future Plans, ward BALTIMORE, Oct. 7.—The Baltimore Sun correspondent boarded the Néw York as she came up from quarantine and carried to Mr. | Advices Concerning the Negotiations Be- ‘Wilson the first home news he had received Lween Japan and the United State in some time. His attention was called to SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 7.—Advices re- ] J the Sun’s report of the speeches of Major | celved here from Yokohama announce the ] } WASHINGTON, with the Krag-Ji peating rifle, it McKinley commenting upon the London | arrival from the United States of Mr. Ye speech and the Chamber of Commerce dinner, | Sung Soo, the Corean minister to Washing- He read this attentively, and, putting down | ton, Who is on his return to Corea. the paper, remarked that “the best answer | They also give some interesting detalls o all this is the speech 1 delive of that celebrated chapter in the corre- spondence between the United States and Japan, which culminated in the letter from would disappoint medical staff of peated by our b tion. The terribl ed and | which Major McKinley is criticising. It Major McKinley is rightly reported he has | g i 4 new weapon appear strikingly set out in | Selves were in u degrec responsible for the i simply garbled my speech by using the first | Secretary Gresham to United States Minis- | o 0 00 ™0 T (he wounds infilcted by | fandency of many Chinolie ‘priestss . 1 half of a sentence to twist it in oné way, | (of Dunn, touching Japan's attitude toward | " ooy yore bullet, notwithstanding its | ularly those of forelgn bieth, to and omitting the last half, which could not | Cored. which had been the sublect of s | o\"i re nignly destructive owing to | fices, "He denounced the astoolatio ‘ be used. I knew full well that whatever | | Much comment in the United States. It winn | wiasll oo, 08 FERTEY SERRRECE OF ORI K Wak founded on unpatriotic. and b ; : be remembered that at the time Japan was s ik dishonorable principles, and called R o8 . w1 vodawlon would b6 ABCE 'y conipléta .milie trol of Seoul, the | the tissues struck to be torn within & ra- | Cutholics to pay no attention to the move- b garbled and falsely presented to the Ameri- | &5 CHPEIC WILATY bontrol of Seoul, the | T rur inches. The report sald: ment. Toward the close of the addre [ can people by protection speakers and papers, | gweeping, being as follows: A reorganization “Up to 660 yards a bullet striking the "“‘;I‘,?jm;’w‘h:,“::‘“ ‘TRoSHY" Cathollos. and so [ did what I seldom do or have time | of the duties ~and service of the | neck or' abdomen means death. From 660 | When Dr“Mcalynn concluded, Alfred N i to do, dictate and gave o the press | rovenue officers of the various departments; | (" b "0 ) mile) most se- | Martin, who ‘announced himself as the na: 20py of the addrcss to the London Times, | foijons the public roads must be widensd | certain to be inflicted. Beyond 1,600 ;flrd: e "Mctilynn it A1l wronk, *The Drinciplus paper the next day, from which Major Mc- | the government bolween Seoul and other . LISty A St Pt s TR vel a e co mportant es; the number of government | fore 1860. v The speaker got no further, for his voice i I SR comn: | iroktn ks bu.redload 854 thelesios of | . OUF afmy Y they had progressed | was drowned by a storm of hisses. Dr. Moo “I went abroad at my doctor's suggestion | officers sufficlently increased so they may | to the line of safe prectict FUEP lynn again took ine platform and rebuke 1o shake off my unspeakable fatigue, so as [ live properly; the system of records of re- | adopted the calbet cf T8 FEATREES BO | the Cathohos, for WESRg sayior to take part as much as possible in the cam- | celpts and disburs:ments of the government | -8 Inch for their viflo o 189 WA CRS SO | et Fach LT ne® paign. In England I visited friends at Ox- | must be changed and a way of increasing | disposed to 'r‘“ M' A w{ il PUrther p TRl A Kt S ford and Cambridge. Everybody being, in | the public revenues determined upon; the | When 1t went beyond thers S BUC GO0 Er MYSTERIOUS DOUBLE TRAGEDY. London phrase, ‘out of town,’ I saw ~few | monetary system must be changed; | reduced the caliber of thelr rifles to § il — public men. The dinner tendered me I felt | Jew rules ~and regulations for the | metres, or .236 inch, DHK‘.V‘ 2 irifle JarECT | John Tierney and Wite of Middletown, N. Y., 100 great an honor to my country and my- | Manag:ment of the custom houses | than a 22-caliber pocket pi .!N?- \be- tend ey oand’ Doad. : self to be declined, coming from the great | must be adopted; ‘the farming lands of ail | the last report, they concede the LeAGRey | 0 oot Mg ¥ oet, g commercial chamber of the world, and I ac- | the provinces must be resurveyed and num- | of the best suthoriiies seems to B8 LSRG | ou e and suicide or double murder ; cepted, fecling that I could not show my | bered for purposes of taxation in order that | @ still smaller caliber, some profestionby | terlone miter CAC SEChEr Lot T B ] appreciotion of it better than by speaking as | the amount needed for public Improvements | men even asserting that the calibor whewld | oveurred n this G tls Horn Ow: I BB' °° an American citizen exactly as I speak | may be raised; the administration of jus- [ never be larger than 6.5 millimetres. ey was a § here at home. SPIRIT OF HIS AUDIENCE, be educated and the old syatem of the army “In this 1 was not deceived, My speech | 404 navy must be abolished and reorganized ‘Was received by the whole audience in the [ On & modern basis; the police system must spirit in which it was made, and while many, | be thoroughly reorganized and stations es- perhaps most of them, may have disagreed | tablished in Seoul and other {mportant places with me, I found that more than one long- | and the school system must be recognized headed Englishman agreed our reduced tarift COREA'S PACIFIC REPLY. would make us a great competitor in the | To these demands Corea replied she was world’s markets and eventually regain for | and for many years had been instituting us our share of the carrying trade of the such changes in the governmental systcm world. as the public revenues would support, and In London Mr. Wilson paid not the slight- | that while they realized th. est attention to politics and saw few public | ower of Japan, which they would not re- men except at the Chamber of Commerce | Sist, they hoped the national independence dinner. The English public men so far | Would be respected and the Jananese troops seem to know but little of the tariff, and he | then in possession of the capital and the heard not many expressions of opinion on | country would be withdrawn. At the same the subject. But as a general rule the | time the king instructed the Corzan minister English people always welcome anything | at Washington to represent the matter to that will promote trade. the United States to the end that the good of- “Mr. Strauss here interposed and declared| ficers of the United States be used to bring that Mr. Wilson, with characteristic mod- | about the withdrawal of the Japanese troops. esty, had tried hard to conceal himself, and | He was further instructed to say that the kept out of public noti But the hospit exact conditions described in the treaty of ity of the British business men had learned | 1853 with the United States had arisen and of his presence in London and insisted oni to beg the United States to carry out the ob- entertaining him. The entertainers, Mr. | Igation it had assumed in tne article, read- Strauss added, are the greatest merchants | ing: “If other powers deal unjustly or op- of the world, and the compliment paid to | pressively with either government, the other Mr. Wilson as a tribute to his distinguished | will exert its good offices on being informed abllity and great reputation as a patriot is | of the cass to bring about an amicable ar- one that few Americans have recelved in a | rangement, thus showing its friendly feel- forelgn country. Mr. Wilson repeated that | jngs. he was perfectly well aware of the use the | = Secrctary Gresham responded to this ap- republicans would make of the incident, but | peal by communicating with both China and to have refused it, he sald, would have been | Japan in Corea's interest. China agreed to 1l bred, churlish and cowardly. withdraw her trooys, but Japan declined to AS TO TRUSTS IN ENGLAND. do so. Then the secretary addressed the Mr. Wilson was asked whether he had | celebrated note of instructions to Minister 5 irusts in | Dunn, which, after summing up the situa- ;‘;2,"";"’ Investigation about “trusts’ In | (io1"0nd the obligation of the United States, "5°81d not this time,” he replied, “but | toneluded in the following words: ‘‘Cherish: whe‘n "I“w“ oy, R 1880 1 i, and | M& sincere friendship for both Japan and discussed the subject in a serles of articles | Corea, the United States indulges the hope I wrote for the press at that time. Some ”'l‘l‘ll b(.ur““” lu;lvu;‘mlénce 1‘“"‘ bm‘;”fl“my P Gy 4 will be respected. You are instructed to say of those articles were written from England. 5 e 4 om. AN to the government that this government will Tf‘“‘:fli Pk lk“z:’";:"'l“‘-“‘,’]“p‘r:“'(‘l;‘- Cahate | be painfully disappointed should Japan visit :-xn:m l'.l m:‘m i pabe o} teats cor- | UPon her defenseless neighbor the horrors of Ot tha matket.’ 4 Ao unjust war/t s ol ern boundary of With regard to coal, Mr. Wilson stated Du Capture the Velivese Capital as usually given that the English syndicates which formerly | AMSTERDAM, Oct. 7.—A dispatch to the owned the Nova Scotla mines were much | Handelsblad from the island of Lombok says A D ey B e onhe e i | the Duteh forces nave entered Hataran, the i in the MeKinley bill. Forelgn steamships | Capital of the island, which was held by the could and can buy Nova Scotis coal at Bos. | rebellious Belinese. The troops, upon sea fon, New York or any American port free of | P& the city, found 300 barrels of smokeless Quty, and yet they prefer fo buy the Mary- | Powder, a lirge number of cartridges and a land and Virgina coal. This fact alone ought | Breat avantity of explosives. The Dutch flas X 10 do away with the scare about free coal | 18 A¥Ing over the Jakara Negara and several ! . “It ‘You should be unfortunately defeateq | Of the Balincxe chiefs have surrendered. R & for the house,” observed Mr. Strauss, "I have q no doubt the people of West Virginla will % L BERRE 0 potting oo in the sanAte LONDON, Oct. 7.—A dispatch from Shang- “I much prefer the house,” Mr. Wilson re- | hal, dated October 6, § p. m., says: Telegrams Plied. “It ls & far greater and more at- | from Mookden report that thousands of ractive fleld. Chinese soldiers are passing through the city 4 (M. Wilkon proposes to begin hs canvass | in wild retreat. The Japanese army is be- at once. lieved to have arrived there, now aided by S 10,000 Coreans. The empress dowager Is cx- DI E| KD A ., ASBEDERED AT OME erelsing supreme power in Peking, Michael Ryan Writes u Caustic Let'er Con- cerning Pennsylvanis bemocruey. LONDON, Oct. T.—J. Russel Jefferson has PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 7.—The publication | returned from Iceland, having come by way of the names of Michael Ryan and other | of the Farce isles. He says the Jackson- prominent democrats as speakers at the meet- | Harmsworth polar expedition was sighted ings to be held under the auspices of Chalr- | in latitude 73.45 north, longitude 44 ast, man Stranahan and the state administra- [ steaming north in open water, ¥ tlon has brought out the following from nd G Mr. Ryan to Candidate Singerly: “I de- clined the state chairman’s invitation to speak. Upon your urging me as a personal favor to you to help, I assured you of my willingness to aid you, This did not mean that I was to form one of a party to travel (s through the state ostensibly to secure your i election, but in reality to endeavor to revive the dying political fortunes of a discredited state administration. “It hus been false to every promise made to the people. It asumed the place repre- senting an aggressive and united party that promised to be a power for good govern- ment, It will surrender the reins with an unbroken record of increasing popular dis- ) approval with its methods and its members | New Yotk for alleced infringement of”the and with the democracy of the state dis- | Lily " “Thix iv the first case arising under heartened, disgusted and faction torn. The naw litornalional cory ekt [as unees “You have been nominated simply to pre- | fn 180, and Involyes the constitutionality of zerve the political life and enable the ma- | the act. el chine to hang together long enough to con- rJ"»*;v.h n"r t\\runld ()l.{ww York, counsel trol the state conventions of 1895 and 1896, so | {OF) the efendant, urked that the right of | of the delegates from Pennslyvania to the na- Py tional convention may be delivered from the blank up to 725 man can_shoot lowance for the is thus relieved SOUTHERN land is expected between Brazil his return from panied by a large the decision. 10 next, but as affairs, w2 £ o Buzzard's Bay I complicated case, o R the maps, old tre terests involved is as large as an United States s land’'s decision w Atlantic, state of Rio G general width of stretching from Chinese tetreat. Moreover, the dis valuable from it resources. of 5,793, most of the treaty made veror of Brazil. make the survey Polar Expedition Sighted. opportunity for Jups Land Near Port Arthur. LONDON, Oct. 7.—A dispatch to & news agency from Shanghal says & Japanese ex- pedition has landed In Taliowan harbor, close to Port. Arthur. TESTING INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT YOSEMIT) WASHIN( tendent of the Yi Ifornia, has subm Novellst Haggard’s Sult In the States Court on Trial, PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 7.—Judge Marcus Acheson of the United States circuit court heard arguments in the chambers Saturday on demurrer to the bill of complaint of H. Rider Haggurd; the novelist, and the pub- lishing firm of Longman, Green & Co, of New York against the Waverly company of United vate ownership would be wise, b park, and he thi praise all land the park is on park by withdra natural treaties with the various foreign countries under the copyright law was a_delegation law went into effect. i SOUTH DAKOTA SNOW STORM. though the state and national administra- tions are democratic, the contest here Is of the supposed for you; I can do nothing else.” T. PAUL, Oct. 7 i ST. PAUL, Oct, 7—Reports from various | o¢ ot WRPORE Trawbull Espouses Popalism. parts of eastern South Dakota and the west- CHICAGO, Oct. T.—Judge Lyman Tram- | €M Part of Minnesoia are 15 the eifect that bull last night addressed an audlence com- | & TENETE SO SOFM :’r:\'nn;flh today, ac- posed of adherents of the populist party. 0w ) re et A hoeary faine, was placed there He declared himself against the transmission | and lasted for three hours, while west and e ks . by Inheritance of such large fortunes as | POrth of that city the storm was even more ;;':L W g those of the Astor and Vanderbilt afmilles, | SéVere. This is the first snow of the season, O RO SAEN, declaring that in his opinion & law should and I seems lkely to report for duty in L~ TS b2 passed forbidding the bequest of any es- | b by re morning, the mercury being tate over §1.000;000 in value. on the down grade, with u stormy wind | #0¥ RAart of the Denles Belug an A, P, A, from the west blowing at a lively rate, Lofl b Massachusetts Steikers to Ar DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 7.—There is a po NEW BEDFORD, Mass, Oet. 1. litical turmoll here over the announcemest | amalgamated couference committee of the that Spencer O. Fisher, the democratic can- | strikers met this afternoon to discuss the didate for governor, has become afliated | Fecommendation of the State Hoard of Ar- With the A. F. A. Hon. Timothy E. Tarn- | Ditration, ana & committee was appointeg declined to make a campalgn address on account, and Charles C. Casterlin, a member of the democratic state executlve CHICAGO, ( Murphy, compan known "distance made & total scol sible 200, With o score ever made to confer with the manufacturers at 2 o'clock tomorrow. It is the general opinion amon mill men tonight that the conference will result o terminating the sirike. Destructiveness of the Modern 8mall Oaliber ¢ ing its embers from riding on Pullman ] Charges Major McKinley with Having Usea | ©AF* When they go home to vote. Experiments of ] 2. Portions of | Remurks in an Un- Through Counting in Georgia. Develop Muach Information on the Art of War—Tendency To- department decided to abandon the old heavy caliber Springfleld rifie and arm the troops berents of the old arm that the new weapon destructive power. disproved by experiments c: own b; Ce st be changed; ary officer: t | result of the reduction of caliber is shuwn by tice must be changed; military officers mus| oL Il "atoh o) any distance within two-fifths of a mile a | occu justing the eights for each range inchuled. Cleveland to Render an Important Decision superior military as Arbitrator Soon. | H WASHINGTON, Oct. 7.—President Cleve- bitrator of the important boundary dispute Branco, special envoy from Brazil, accom- The case has been in Mr. Cleveland’s hands elght months, and, as the treaty of arbitra- tion provides the decision must be made | ago Thomas was very with congress and public affairs after his return, he is expected to dispose of the ar- | swaythere but himself] bitration question before taking up domestic It is understood he has made the affair is special study during working hours at Branco filling several large volumes, while Dr. Zeballos, the Argentina minister, make a fair-sized library.” Mr. Cleveland has not turned this mass of documents over o the State department, but has undertaken per- sonally to go through it and unravel the dispute. It s a self-imp the president does out of courtesy to the southern republics, and in the extent of In- by a wedge-shaped projection almost to the 1t Argentina gains this strip it will have a considerable effect on southern | slept Brazil, as it will almost sever the great ch- | Brazil, the remaining connection being a very narrow isthmus compared with the | it will give Argentina a narrow strip of land, leagues of the Atlantic. Mr. Cleveland’s coming decision is awaited with great interest by the southern envoys, as it means much to the stratezic strength [ 2 o'clock, of the two dominant southern countries. It embraces 11,253 square miles, with towns and villages having a population Mr. Cleveland’s arbitration is the result of Mr. Cleveland’s decision will close the long controversy. He fs obliged, treaty, to give all the disputed territory to Brazil or to Argentina, so that there is no satisfy both parties. Game In the Preserve on the Inerease Ac- cording to the Superintendent. pany of which the defendant Is the manag w rpose of interesting tal in American ew his arrest as mallclous, ITON, Oct. 7. Gale of the Fourth cavalry, acting smperin- ment to purchaze the timber land in the for a commission to be appantel to and ‘learn 1If it could be secured recommends a reduction in the sizs of the | eral. cuilural lands, and wdvocatas ths ad instead of artificial lines. The reduction would throw out about twinty townships and leave the b English Vice Consul at Kuosas Uity Takes | a Ledgers' body was found floating in the Cottonwood river coroner's inquest disclosed that the body saia Mr. Burroughs. Shooting ut Fort Sheridan, distinguished himself yesterday in the pre- liminary practice at Fort Sheridan. the Fort Sheridan range. The best record AS A SCIENCE | felvs psnbin i rifle in making this seore. b, Be Made BALTIMORE, Md,, Oct. 7. Cardinal Gibbons af Demonstrated, DEATH ALMOST A MILE German Medieal Experts | 5Ok i pari: Yirgin Mary. I thim dent of history will Sn ler Guns. domestic life. ‘The ehurch , Oct. 7.—When the War previou of woman is in the home, fluence she gains in publi will lose In private Ilife. are the sovereigns of the wives command them, orgenson small caliber re- was predicted by the ad- care of your home: its friends in its lack of This prediction has been made by the the German army and re- [ 0% SICENTE S0 ureau of military Informa- | oy A AL Tts Conses e destructive effects of the | MeC selve: Dr. McGlyan wnd yards. This means that at accurately without any al- | Mr ey 1 dropping of the bullet, and | @Woke at 6:30 this morni from the necessity of ad- NATIONS INVOLVED, & body, young man returned Shortly ~afterwards Mrs. to give his decision as ar- bodies. and Argentina soon after Buzzard’s Bay. Baron Rio- suite, is now here awaiting | Warm. Fie sulcide now within a year, it is expected almost any day. | rlage and left the o el About the time of the The time for the decision expires February | About te time of the e Mr. Cleveland will be busy | -COUBEly SHTLSE b committed suicide. his summer. It is a very CLEVER JALUL BIRDS , the brief of Baron Rio- Swindler George Sage and panions Again at BELLAIRE, Md., Oct. 7 aties, etc., and the briefs of | other allases, m from jail here d task, which Sherift Hughes h 8 o'clock, and at § and legal complications it y legal case pending In the upreme court. ill settle whether the east- eastern Argentina remains in the maps or is extended Kane. adjoining cell, which was rande do Sul from upper Brazil. On the other hand, the north to within forty alarm, puted territory is Itself very s mineral and agricultural | Yember term of ccurt for them Brazilians. when Dom Pedro was em- It has taken since then to s and present the case and | NEW YORK a financl Oct, . r of Brighton; syndicate of Am Teste a compromise which wil NA ONAL PARK. ONA| BX. police of Des Moine, fa., With obtaining $1,500 £ organized for the English ¢ Allen characteri; and says at b aptain H, G. osemite National park, Cul- the case nitted his report to the aec- [ 1 ettle u civil matter by retary of the interior. many misunderstandings, owing to the pri- ceedings. The amount he He says there are preliminary expenses, - and of land in the pa he believes, for the gov. It | satisfaction. ROCKFORD, 11, Oct inks It woull be advisable P | has appointed € owned by privacc parties, | Mich., insp Game in | Yonkers, N the incraase. The report | L. Benmett, Chic V. R wing the mining and agri- };‘:[','r pHON | Waterville, Me. boundary | (thelsea, Mas City. it E ance of auction block to advance the fortunes of | of legislative and judicial power in violation | the park almost wholly in possession of the Did Not Gv fo_ gy Jones", those whose trade is politics, and to whom | of the conatit tion, 1t this view is sus- | government BAN r"‘"&\‘ 1800, Get, 7.—The bark Ore- the democratio party has ho higher end | talned it will render invalid every copy- - ik 2 gon, which was reparted wrecked off Cape than their personal enrichment. Today, al- | [IEht sranted to forelgners since the new JUSTICE FOR BRITISH SUBJECTS. Flattory. arrived BEEE™ - Naniamo leat d nothing unusual had Occuslon to Open His Mouth. voyage down. The Nabi practically abandoned, and there s nothing ? 703 y 0 n i « but discord, demoralization, disgust and im- | Wigh Wiad and Sever Cold Bearing Down | JCANSAS CITY, Oct. T—British Vice | UL Wheckuxe belongtag fo the g hisd pending overwhelming defeat. [ shall vote NI S Consul Burroughs has taken official notice B murder near Guthrie, OKl.. s of Buckingham, England. IRVIN Ky September 30, and the her home, after life was extinct. Mr. | miles dist mployed detectives to ferre %, the Oklahoma author- showing no inclination to with a club, 1 her clot ’ be done Britlsh subjects in | tions that oo g o0 KANSAS CITY,* Oct. 7. t. 7.—Sergeant Michael J. x % ol iy D, Thirteenth infantry, | yy Postoftice Inspegtor MuClure In the ""“T at four ranges he of 179 points out of & pos- ne exception it is the best in that order of shooting on There appears 0 have b rioter, pltinac - A VY GIBBONS ON WOMAN BUFFRAGE. Declares that While No Distinction Should or Proper Sphere Is Home, The sermon of the cathedral was addressed partfeularly to the women and tonight the cardinal took occasion to express his views on woman suffrage. “Today we honor the queen of saints, the the dispassionate’ stu- acknowledge woman Is indebted to the example of Mary for her elevated position, both in soclal and declares that woman |8 the peer and equal of man. mighty God, in his distribution makes no distinction on account ond:tich oF 8 X. 7Lhe [TOper sp-ere and the more in- life the more she While the men therefre éxert a controlling power. Above all things, take o A PROHIBITION PARK, 8. I Dr. McGlynn spoke before 3, %00 people In e today, His subject was: ni sald he belleved Catholics them- were in_a degree responsible for the right temple, His wife was lying » with a bullet hole in her left breast, while a pistol lay a few feet away. A in a cafe owned and conducted by Tierney. An aged ugcle, R bert Fiynn, and went down | stairs to the kitchen in the basement and | bullt a fire. While thus engaged he heard a report, which did not seem says, like that of a pistol, and the fail of A moment later it wa < followed by another report. He sent a youig man, who had just come fn the back door of the cafe, 0 ascertain the cause of the noise. reporting Thomas, who was said to have been sleep- ing on & sofa in the Kitchen, found the two His ‘mother lay in the parlor with her feet in the hedroom adjoining, and his ste father lay in the center of the parlor. ran to his mother and found the body still warm. Tierney was ghsping and frothing at What at first appeared to be a murder and looks to the like a double murder, Tierney married Mrs. McGuire, a widow with a son, lfl\&I weeks at the mar- oule. illl‘ AW0 Weeks. rriage he took & in a cleset in his bedroom. He claims thdt no one knew Young Tierney gives it as his opinjon that his mother was murdered by her husband, who, he a: — i Several Com: George Sage, the notorious swindler who traveled under the name of Horace Haker and e a sensational escape arly this morning. with him Thoms Kane, committed for rob- bery, and S8am Kelly, charged with assauit. 1 locked the jail about 0 o'clock Keily the lock m his cell and then sawed the lock ce. | on the door behin ich stood ML Dlave, Afier releasing (he latter, both went to the second floor nnd, released the wily George Sage. Then the trio went into the which Manuel Turner and James colored’ bove who work in the jail KKelly picked a hole to the third floor through the celling, while Sage and Kane covered the boys with pistols. The hole through which they gained en- trance to the third floor was 12x7 Having gained this point they went to a far window ~overlooking the jail sawed two bars, each an inch square. sheets from the beds of the three prisoners .were torn into long strips. These were tied together, making a secure rope, by means of which the men descended in safety to the ground. As soon as they were gone, about Wilmer and’ Turner gave Sage was to have been trled at the No- swindling the Hartford County Nationgl bank last April. e —— HE OPERATED IN 10W A4, English Promoter Hpbert Allen Charged with fome Crooked Work, Hubert I, gland, the man- R £ | ager of the Langes property Hnder. ;s ca, with offices at Nos. 155 and 157 Cannon street, London, was ar- vesterday by central office detectiy and arraigned this morning in police court. The arrest. was telegram from Frederick Johnson, chief of m Dr. Des Moines on false pretenses. stealing was, he aileges, given to him for his arrest was the first intimation he had of Lyons' dis- s S e H Chief Lawler's: \awistunts. . —Commander-in- Chief Lawler, Grand:Army of the Republic, Pond, clor geberal; Matt Y., judge adyocate &d, pssistant ad, on committee named i nalienapol is; Dennjson, Fa.; dsaac ©, McDougal, night. The Oregop mas In good happened > dispateh for the report that she had been 'wrecked, micws o A Killad with & Club. Oct, T.-Mrs. Wyly White was brutally murdered this afternoon near She had been to Fainville, two nt, shopping, and was returning home Uhrough the woads, She was met by some unknown man and beaten to Her breins were b tions that Ak NeA Tade 8 demeraté broa ons thut she hid made a desperate Strug- world, even in OKlahoma,” | gle. AMrs. White leaves five ehiaren. —© oo abatiilind Crime of & Ka'gas City Tough. tough character of this city, has been held the coroner's jury for the murder of rofval night, Several witnesses. identified Adler man who struck the blow th Clure, whose death resulted from the fall een 1o motive the assault, It was sigply the act of a " SINGLE cory FIVE CE UIKE HIS “ONE HOSS SHAY” Oliver Wendell Holmes, M. D,,Quietly Passes Away at His Home, PEACEFUL ENDING OF A PEAC: He Had “Lived to B the Tree In the sprin War Governor Andrew Cu tin Also D BOSTON, Oct. 7.—Oliver Wende fUL LIFE K- e {1 Holmes, famous as a poet and author, died at his residence on Beacon street at 12:15 p. m. today from heart failure. Dr. Holmes has been in feeble health for a long although an fron constitution has fled disease, it was at last shatt time, and long baf- ered. The last hours of Dr. Holmes were passed quietly, with his family by his bedside. returned from Reverly farm days ago, and the removal greatl him and it is thought hastened The family residence was darkene parently deserted today, and few Holmes was in Boston. Dr. Holmes about ten y fatigued the end d and ap- knew Dr. The news of his death was kept quiet until a late hour to- night. HIS LIFE AND WRITING Oliver Wendell Holmes, M. I at Cambridge, Mass., August graduated at Harvard c began the study of law, w for that of medicine, Having att hospitals of Paris and other Europ he began practi was elected professor of anatomy fology in Dartmouth college, and i ce in Boston in 1836 was born 1809, He and Ton; ended the ean cities, In 1838 and phys n 1847 was appointed to a similar professorship in the Massachusetts Medical school, fram which he retired In 1582. As early tributions in verse as 183 his con- appeared in various periodicals, and his reputation as a poet was established by the delivery of a metrical essay, entitled, “Poetry, lowed by others in rap writer of songs occasions he occ for marry years a popular lec which 1 success serles of articles under the titie itocrat of the Breakfast Tabl were followed in 180 by e Pro the Breakfast Table,” in 1872 by At the Breakfast Table,' “The New Portfolio.” published “Astraea” (1! 30); ‘Cur, lyrics and poems fo pies the first pl he began, ‘in the Atlantic Monthly, was_fol- lon. As a festive ce. He er. In a The which essor at ‘The Poet of and in 1886 by addition he has rents and Counter Currents in Merical Science’ (1861); sle Venner, a Romance of (1861); “Borderiands in Some Pro Medical Science” (1862); “‘Songs Keys" (1864); ““Soundings from (1864); " *Humort ¥ Guardian Angel” (1868): Thought and Mo a's” (1570): (186 Mechanism in ‘Song: “The Iron Gate and O dical Essays" (1 Volume ~of _Life Emerson" (1881); athy’ at varfous reunfons and dinners. Destiny svinces ‘of in Many Atlantic™ )i ““The s of M " (1874); “John L. Motley, a Memoir Ralph Antip- (1885); and numerous poems recited In 1888 he visited England, where he was received with great cord ity. Editions of his col- lected poems have appeared from time to time, the first in 1836, the last in 1881, He i distinguished for his researches scopy and auscultation, and has in’ micro- contributed largely to current medical literature, as well as to r velws and other journals. The latter vears of h's life have been spent in quiet retirement at Heverly Falls farm, broken occasionally by a lecture to the Haryard students, WAR GOVERNOR CURTIN DEAD. One of the Interosting Charac! Civil Con s of the lot Passes Away. BELLEFONTE, Pa., Oct. 7.—Ex-Governor Andrew . Curtin died at 5 o'clock this morning. His end was peaceful, been unconscious during the last hours. All the members of hi fa he having twelve mily were at the bedside when he passed away. Mr. Curtin hud beed in feeble health weel Thursday last, and rapidly. he” ex-governor was in this being combined with m that tim, for some but his condition grew serious on e he sank Death was caused by old age. K0th year, ervous trouble, Which, upon reaching the vital point in theé brain, ended his life. When the took ‘on a serious aspect physic summoned, but they abandoned al recovery, and the death of the governor was not a surprise. case first lans were I hopes of old war Andrew G. Curtin was born in Hu\l?fnnl--, entre county, April 22, 1815, H is father, Roland Curtin, emigrated from Ireland in 1793, and in 1807 established near Bellefonte one of the first manufactories of ir region. Andrew studied law in th on in that he Dickin- son law_college and was admitted to the bar in 1839, and soon became prominent He early entered politics as a whig, laboring for Harrison's election in 1510, and making a successful canvas: 184, He was a pre and a candidate for elector on ticket in 1852, In i85 Governor Pollock appointe secretar: cio supe in_the discharge of his duties N of the commonwealt! n the state for Clay in dential elector in 1848 the whig him and ex-offi- ntendent of common schools, and ir. Curtin did much toward reforming and perfecting n the school system of the state. his an- nual report of 1856 he recommended to the legislature the establishment of f normal schools, and his suggestion was adopted, In 1860 Mr. Curtin was the republican can- didate for governor. The democrats, though divided in national politics, were united in Pennsylvania, but Mr. Curtin was elected by a majority of 32,00, He advocated the forcible suppression secession, one of the war governors who wer earnest in_the support of the na ernment. He responded promptly t all for troops, and when General who was in' command in Fen) asked for and was most fonal gov- o the first Patterson, nsylvania 00 more troops, they were at once furnished. General Patterson's requisi- tlon was afterwards revoked by the secre- tary of war on the ground that the troop: were not needed, but Governor Curtin, in- stead of disb rding them, otta ned authir ty from the legislature to equip the em at the state's expense and hold them subject to the b of men bec sylvania reserves,’ and was acce authorities at Washington a later. Governor Cu n was untiring ing carefully the numerous le all of the national governme me known as the nt. The enn ted by the ew weeks in his ef- for the comfort of the soldiers, an- etters sent him from the field, and originated the sys- tem of care and instr of those slain in battl of the state. H. ranks as the “soldler's friend."” vernor Curtin's health began 1863, and he signified his intenti ction for the children making them wards thus became known in the to fail In ion of ac epting a forelgn mission that had been of- fered him as soon as his term should ex- pire, but in the m. nated and re-elected by 1 000 ma, antime he was renomi- o ity. In November, 1865, Mr. Curtin wenf to Cubu for his health, and in that year d. offer of a foreign mission. Grant appo'n!ed minister t) K in 1868 and 1§72 he was promine tioned as a candidate for vice He returned home in August, 157 eclined an In 1869 General u sa, ard ntly men- president. support- ing Horace Greeley for the presidency, and subsequently joined the democratic ngre by which he elected to ¢ three successive terms, serving 10 1887, In recent years, he had b iy, for froin 1881 heen living a retired life in Hellefonte, where he was a conspic us figure, and where his home was pointed out as one of the most interest- ing features of that localily. HARRISBURG, Oct son {ssued @ procl ing his profound s ex-Governor Curtin ute to his public ser state, and in the other fmpor which “he held. He [nvokes fo re ¥ v Of the ex-governor people of Pennsyly mation tonigh row for the d paying a hy of th 7.—Governor Patti- t express- death of high trib- fce as executive of the ant positions r the be- the sym- ania, and v rdeis all flags on. public bulldings to ve displayed at half mast and that several de- partments of the state government within executive contrcl be closed on the day of the funeral, which will take place at 2 o'clock next dnesduy afternoon It has been decided at the urge: of Governor Pattison to bury e nt request jovernor Curtin with @ military escort, It will con- slst of a regiment of infantr cavalry and a batter. the escort accorded | a commander in chie T and of a brigadier comma Gev A troop of lery, and Is military etiquette to The whole will be ander. Kx- rnor Heaver has charge of the arrange- ments of the funeral, which will be held under the auspie the Republic. s of the Grand CHICAGO, colored contralto siuger who ma aof Jublive xingers, died tonight. Cuptain « haries haws or PORT TOWNSEND, Wash., Oc tain Charles A, Sawyer is dead, Army of de a tour lurope several years ago with the Fisk t. T.—Cap- He had command of the bark Orpheus twenty years Ago when she collided with and sank the steamer Pacific off Cape Flattery, entailing a loss of nearly 40 lives and upwards of $1,000,000 in gold” dust. Funeral of Prof. Swing. CHICAGO, Oct. 7.—The funeral mervices of the late Prof. David Swing were held this afternoon In Central Music hall, where he had preached so many years. The serv- ices were attended by 3,000 people and fully as many more were unable to obtain ad- mission. Denth of a st erchant. DENVER, Oct. 7.—John K. Tirrill, a mem- ber of the firm of the Graham Paper com- pany, of St. Louls, died yesterday at Port- land, Ore., of rheumatism of the ri. The remains w be taken to St. Louls for burl:l, PASSENGER TRAIN BURNED. New York Express on tho Cinelnnati South- ern Wrncked by Unknown Persons. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Oct. 7.—A special from Bristol to the Times says: At a few minutes past 1 o'clock train No. 1 from New York on the Cineinnati Southern railway jumped the track about three miles south of Bristol, Tenn. The engine fell across the track and the express and mail car jumped over it, and, falling on their sides, were soon a prey to the flames, which consumed all the train—eight coaches—with the ex- ception of the last Pullman, which was cut loose and backed from the train. A train with physicians from Bristol ar- rived about an hour after the wreck and immediately set at work to relieve the in- jured. The injured are: Samuel Smith, engineer, leg broken, scalded, burled under the wreck of the train, taken out with difficulty, will probably die. Will Homes, fircman, head cut badly and scalded. W. W. Rogers, express messenger, arm broken and head injured. — — Tucker, postal clerk, ankle broken, cut in the head and back. C. N. Markworth of Bristol, postal clerk badly hurt, arms, legs, back and head in Jured, W. H. Simpson of Mossy Creek, baggage- man, arm broken and internal injuries. Thomas McDermott, Michael Coleman and John Coleman, emigrants from Ireland, sus- tained severe injuries on the heads, thighs, chests, legs and arms. A foreigner, name unknown, was badly hurt in the chest and on the legs; very serfous. Everybody was badly shaken up, and it is & miracle that many deaths did not result. Captain Bell, conductor, escaped with slight bruises. The accident happened in a cut between two high embankments, and was the result of a bolt having been placed on the rails by unknown persons. - FATAL SIREET CAR ACCIDENT. George C. Chandler of the Northern Pacific Kiiled at Tacoma. TACOMA, Wash,, Oct. 7.—A street car accident occurred about in which George C. Chandler, ger agent of the Northern Pacific in this city, was killed and several other passengers injured. The car was returning from the Interstate fair grounds and was crowded with pas- sengers, Chandler and _other gentleme were standing on the front platform, be- hind the motorman. As the wheels siruck the crossing of North Second street the axle on the front truck broke near the right wheel. The car left the track, plunged along at an acute angle to the rails fof a rod and then fell on its left side, Mr. Chandler, who was then on the steps fell underneath the car.. The heavy woud and iron work struck his face, killing him instantly, and crushing his head to & shape- less pulp. o dreadfully was his head crushed that, although “one of the best known men in Tacoma, his identity was in doubt when the remains were first removed from_the wreck, and was only ascertained by examining his watch, upon which his name was engraved, His body was removed to the morgue. James F. O'Brien, another passenger, wax forced down by the struggling mats of passengers, The fron roof of the car fell upon his Tight leg, pinning him to the ground, tearing the flesh and lacerating the limb terribly, “The others were all injured elther by failing from the platform or by being thrown violently against the break- g glass of the windows, in the accident are: James F. O'Brien, deputy county clerk, right leg_mangled, Ed B. Hare, left shoulder dislocated. M. Sidney, real estate agent, hurt about the face. | Mrs. M. Sidney, bruised and cut In several s Miss B rtha Lavghton, rendered inse. s bie, cut about the head. A. W. Latham, bidly bruised, Mrs. Wilam H. Upton of Portland, sl'ght- ly bruised. | shocking tdnight, Those injured - MAJOR W HAM'S Court Martial Prosecutor Not Certain that His Evidence ix Suflicien VANCOUVER, Wash., Oct. 7.—The trial of Major Wham, paymaster, U. 8. A, prom- ises to be a protracted one. The court has adjourned for twenty days to give the prose- cution opportunity of securing evidence sub- stantiating the charge. Judge Advocate Mec- Clure produced a certified copy of the judg- ment upon the amended complaint in the case of Holcomb against Wham. but being unable to obtain sworn depositions upon which sald judgment was rendered, the same_having’ disappeared from the files of the New York court, the judge advocate re- quested an adjournment for twenty days, in which he expects to secure the deposition of Beach, Major Wham's attorney in the Holcomb_suit, corroborating the allegations contained in’ the specification, the = docu- mentary evidence thus far being entirely in- sufficient to sustain the charge. It appears that both the original complaint in the case and the depositions upon which the juas- ment of the amended complaint against Wham was render.d, have disappeared from the files of the ew York court, and the coples upon which the War department was urged to proceed against Wham cannot be verified by the records, as the clerk of the ASE. New York court both telegraphed and wrote that they could not ‘be found. | e THINKS THEY ARE SMUGGLERS. Tacoma Ofticer Connects & Murderer with u Desperate Gang. TACOMA, Oct. 7.—The sheriff of this county claims to be in possession of evi- dence which unearths in connection with the capture of Blanck or Hamilton, the Seattle- Puyallup murderer, a band of regularly or- ganized smugglers, consisting of nine des- perate professional crooks. Wade and Brooks, who escaped from Me- Neil's 1sland government penitentiary last week, were with Blanck, a member of this gang, which had headquarters at Missoula, Mont. Four of the gang are thought to bé at present In this vicinity, United States Marshal Drake Is inclined to doubt the sheriff’s story. He thinks he has both Brooks and Wade located, and has sent to Ellensburg for bloodhounds to assist in run- ning them to cover Guilty of Two Murders, SEATTLE, Oct. T.—Thomas Blanck, the murderer of Charles Birdwell, has been positively identified as the murderer of Mar- shal ies of Puyallup. He was taken to the court and pleaded gullty to the charge of murder in the first degree. His trial s set for October 16, Smallpox Interteres, GREEN BAY, Wis., Oct. T.—The Indlan fair &t the Onelda reservation has heen postponed, owing to the fact that smallpox has broken out. The State Board of Health has ordered inio quarantine all persons ex- ed, among whom are many school chil- The situation is considered grav w Ll Hindoo Gets the Greek Prize. 2W HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 7.~The faculty of Yale has snnounced the award of the Hugh Chamberlain Greek prize to Robert rnest Hume of Abmedenegar, Tndia. The rize is given to the student passing the pest examination in the Greek required for admission to college. e i Vecapitated by a Holler Explosion SAVANNAH, Ga., Oct. 7.—Ten miles from Adel yesterday, & boller exploded in B, M. DeVain's cotton gin and decapltated Jumes Futch. Several others were injured Movements of Beagolug Ves els, October 7 At New York—Arrived—La Bourgogne, from Havre; Calend, from Amsterdam. CALAMITY ~ MASQUERADERS True Inwardness of the Railroad Businesg Men's Combine, DESPERATE ATTEMPT TO SAVE MAJORS & M. Clearing Touse and Stock Yardg Owners Form an Alliance with Re- bate Jobbers for n Campalgn of Bugbear and Boodle. (From the Sunday Tee.) The much talked-of organization of tha “business Interests of Omaha,” that is te do so much for the people of Nebraska by insuring the election of the tattooed candidate for governor, has finally been perfected and the citizens of Omaha have for the first time an opportunity to look at the names of the men who have gone into the business of “‘preserving’ the credit of the city and of the state against the threatened overthrow of the B. & M. oligarchy. An inspection of the list of names attached to the muster rolls of this calamity army reveals the presence of & great many prominent men who have long been recognized as veterans fn the railroad army. In fact, the new organization s merely a rehabilitation of old forces dressed in new cloaks. The people are expected to be decelved by the bright, new uniforms and to be confused by the loud beating of the railroad drums, but the citizens of this stata have too long been famillar with the tactics’ of this grand army of corporate strikers and, camp followers. The active participants In the alleged busie ness menis organization are Henry W. Yates, uther Drake, John A. McShane, W. A. Paxe ton, Frank Colpetzer, C. N. Deitz, H. B, Palmer, L. D. Fowler, Herman Kountze, W. D. McHugh and Dan'Farrell. While these names are shoved prominently, to the front of the organization, the prime movers in the scheme are Henry W. Yates, president of the Nebraska National banks| W. A. Paxton and John A. McShane. Thesg. three staunch Majors supporters are alf} democrats and each one of them Is promis nently identified with interests that are to ba subserved by the election of Tom Majors, The Nebraska National bank, of whieN Henry W. Yates is president, Is the well known B. & M. depository in this city. The bank handles the immense sums of money disbursed by the Burlington system in the west. It Is the clearing house for the scores of little banks all through the west along the line of the B. & M. that handle the B. & M. funds. It is well known that the B. & M. some time ago abandoned the prace tice of paying off its thousands of employes on its western system by means of the old fashioned pay car. Now the pay car is idle in the yards, while the employes ate pald off each month by checks drawn on loeal banks throughout the west. By doing this the B. & M. avolds the danger of having its pay car wrecked and robbed, and also binds to itself all the little country bankers who are favored with its business. The Ne= braska National bank is the main clearing house for B. & M. business. Between voting his party preferences and individual choles and his B. & M. patronage, Mr. Yates nature ally prefers to surrender his individusl abandon his party and plrce himself entirel at the disposal of Czar Holdrege. e QUALIFICATIONS OF THE OFFICERS. Naturally Mr. Yates did not want to be too prominently identified with everything bearing the B. & M. brand, and o the press s idency was conferred upon Luther Drake, cashier of the Merchants' National banks The Merchants' National bank occuples pres cisely the same relation to the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley raflroad that the Nebraska National does to the B. & M.- Mr.t Drake was selected for the presidency, mot because he was a republican, but simply be= cause he was a convenient agent to worlk he will of Yates, Holdrege, Paxton and s to the exacutive committee we find first on the list the name of Lorenzo D. Fowler, cashler of the German Savings bank. Mr. Fowler is a B. & M. poli= tician with a long pedigree. He formerly, resided in Clay county, where, with the notorious J. W. Johnson, then editor of the Sutton Advertiser, but now the B. & M. representative on the State Board of Transe portation, (a position he securel through Fowler's influcnce), he manipulatel Ol county politics In the interest of the B. M. candidate. It was Fowler and Johnson that overturned the expressed wishes of the Clay county delegation in 1889, and by the purchase of proxies turncd that deles Eation to the state convention against J . Reese. Fowler is the ublest politiclan n the whole executive committee of th: busis ness and railroad men's combine, and he is recognized everywhere he is lkuown as the staunch friend of every political pro= Jject conceived at the B. & M. headquars ters, Next on the executive committee is Wil llam A. Paxton, a democrat, who has made no secret of his desire to kee Tom Majors both nominated and elected. Paxton i8 = prominently identified with many Interests in this city and South Omaha that are de~ pendent on the railroads for substantiad favors. In fact, it may be said there is not a busi~ ness venture in which Willlam A. Paxtom is at present engaged that is not vitally cons nected with the railroad interests, and it is worthy of note that all that Paxton cam secure from the B. & M. is an advantage In the way of rates and rebat's that cannot - be secured by business men who refuse to make common cause with the rallroad 0 managers in politics ko Next on the executive committe: is Johm A McShane, president of the Unfon Stock Yards company and the Union Stock Yards bank at South Omaha, and a democ ut. Mes hane fs the especlal guardian of th: stocls yards company, and for the past (wo Bese sions of the i-gislature it has ben Mos Shane’s business to prevent any leg.slatiom ragulating stock yards, Tom Majors has always been a slick worker in ridetrsekl and pigeonholing the stock yards - bil hence McShane is for him first, last and the time, Another prominent member of the execus {lve committee is Captain M. Palmer, known all over the state as the czar's “mam Friday.” Captain Palmer has o long a recognized political manipulator for the | B. & M. that his assoclatior with “husiness men" in an organization having for its object | the election of Tattooed Tom will make that organization the laughing stocle 'of the stale. Holdrege himself might as well have had his name placed on the executive come mittee, mor was formerly u resident off Plattsmouth and came to Omaha to «mba in the insurance business. He was for years the man who handled the insurance policies | for the state. end his profits from the state treasury were known to be large. [o is politician of the rallroad stripe and poses a capitalist. He is a partner of Czar drege In the latter's investments at Shet idan, Wyo., and other ventures, and rep sents the dictator in all matters (hat reqs diplomacy. Still another member of the execative o mittee is Frank Colpetzer, mansgem of Chicago Lumber company, and a gentl Who Is far more interested in tho rate lumber over the B. & M. than he is in credit and prosperity of the state. i ntire list of officers. meml fve committes and even momk: bers of the organization Itself, and it witl b difficult to pick out a man who is not has not for years been enjoying speel | of the B. & M., or other rallroads runni into and out of Omaba, Bankers have joft the organization beca they huntie railroad funds. Lumbermgn belong hed they are interested In recelving favo rates, which are not made public, wil Wi never appear on the printed ra Wholesalers belong because they rather recleve a secret rebate than enter active competition with others on & ge bug- i low rate. The trail of the raiiroad :