Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 11, 1895, Page 1

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7 ESTABLIS HED o o e — ——— — ———— — S— Clll‘,\fi TL Rl{)lS SI)RI \Dl\( BISMARCK WAKNS THE AGRARIANS BOU\D TU \lpl)ORT RLYS\I‘ [ STAADING OF WEST POIVT GRADUATES A IR LAVLMN. | A\ A MIA Pat Not Your Teast In Men Who Seek | Cadet Schulz of West Virginia Head: the —— Atter OMce. List. t y : LONDON, June 10.—A dispatch to the . WEST POINT, June 10.—The military ex Nothing Definite Has Been Received Con- | mimes from Berlin gives a detalled account | Importent Statement Regarding French | were heavy artillery drill at & cerning the Fate of the Missionaries, of the address of Prince Bismarck to the Policy Made in the Chamber. i\‘ sea coast Battery and drill agrarians on Sunday, mention of which was £ 1 pyroteehnics t evening. made In these dispatches Sunday n | \t dress parade this g the standing in WASHINGTON AUTHORITIES KNOW LITTLE | p; Bismarck said he was ig nt of the { JUSTIFIED SENDING SHIPS TO KIEL | seneral merit ¢ Lig-e b=l B plan of the present legislature, He pos lows: First, E. H. Schulz sessed no Influence with and no author ty ccond, Harry Burgess, Mich ¥lnce 1s One Which Has Just Been Opened | over them. He intimated to his hearers that | Soclalists Call for the Pablication of the (Jurney, Michigan; fourtl to Forelgn Commerce Under the Chines; " ,“,‘ “]‘ 1"‘:‘”;‘lr‘\“l‘w‘"vlwr‘lv 'f’r a n.w;f:x .“u’“h'{x‘l.‘] Treaty with Russia but the Min BiNotks Sish, “H. Smith Japanese Treaty, Which Likely ce of this character when once he had \sters Declined — Govern Ota; teventh, Harry H.'Stout, Penasyl Angered the Inhabitants, abandoned his position as a leader. H ment Sustalned. ighth, 1. A. White, 1 th, J. L. trongly denounced the manner in which the Hiinois; tenth, C. H. Payne, Mary T commercial treaties had been rushed through et ey $4 0.—No definite news | Parliament, and said the money which might C. H. Arnold, jr., New York; thir SHANGHAT, June 10.—No definite news |, ,".on gerived from the public revenues| PARIS, June 10.—The question of France N. K. Averill, Michigan: fourteenth has yet been received here in regard to the | ghyg carelessly thrown away was urgently in the far east was revived in the | H. L. Cavaugh, Oklahoma; fifieenth, Josepii latest report concerning the fate of mis- | required for strengthening the German army. | cyambar of Deputies today by M. Milleraud, | Wheeler Alabama; sixtcenth, A. 8. Fie sionaries at Cheng Tu, capital of the province | He urged the agrarians t more troubl bkl 3 &, Kentucky; seventeenth, P, B, Payne of Bachuen, who are sald to have been massa- | tion tim r 1 genuine rej t socia puty, who protested a t Siahted M. 0. Big MiGHIEAH 0 & o (RR RRMATE | men with inter allied to the voters, | France pla what he termed \inet h, W. G. Sills, North ( a3 tweh ::“"l e b ’]“"“ it el g and LTI se interests lie chiefly in Ber i Mi th, A. C. Nissen, Ohio; twenty-first, T. W oting occurred recently at Cheng Tu, but | 1in, among people without an acre of land . 0 Dis I twe \ 18 affairs there have since b reported quiet, | wit 1o of corn to thelr nam H SIe Mitciell, Alabama; twe \ B M although the rioting wa cading in the agrarians not to give their vot ed to the part o tiventy-fourth Grew, N country southward ning a | e g festiv Jersey; twenty-fifth, Penn The rep the total destruction of th From | the ovening of t SONNIH i Wen Ty REvRRtHL 0 Y misstons of Cheng Tu, Kia Ling ' canal Howland, Ohio; twenty cho-hu has been confirmed, The local ¢ 1t 1s usel The minister for f Pennsylvania; thirtie'h refused protection to the missionaries unt cultural in x, replied amid rad gan; thirty-first, L. M the mob completed the work of demolishing & 1s | Were met by centrist cries of nee com L the buildings. The mission s ns at ot “hig s | munist M. Hanotaux dele g S OV CH A asH, . ONG! places have been threatened. About twenty those " sence of the French squa t Kiel by TR thirks A adults, es a number of children, hav was th 1 reg t rty-sev \ B taken r at Cheng Tu Vice Ly s 11 but a nat a; thirty t roy Ling is blamed for th VIR 1 éh on U WASHINGTON, June 10.—The|Chinese 1 We must | in with no other L. H. Liewls, New York gatlon has received no news as' to the re ist the drones ¢ - tanley, Dekota; forty ported massacre of all the missionaries ir nothing but | Adverting o the question of France's 8 NGFEH. Caralines foity Cheng Tu, and strong hopes are entertain v 1. Ha L in, Loufsiana; forty-fifth that the affair may be less serious than tl sm "‘Ji, then called i i auciar i <‘(‘. even issachuse tyssixth meager reports indicate. It is stated at the | poror gy Ted hrepctetor ot of Fent woull : legation that Cheng Tu is a large city in the | because h r first prince and rul to T ennsyl h, Wil- interior of China. The people are far r s . vene immed terests | liam 1. 'V n, Ne th, 0. J moved from centers of foreign commerce, |V W threat 1 1 blind, | Ch 111 fifty-f A. Pea such as Canton and Shanghal. Recently, | f°¢} how ultit 1, to the of eversal | Texas; fifty-second, Danfel Duncan, Kentu however, by the treaty of peace with Japan | for his sak sty n ref t ‘h‘ rt ‘~., SECRETARY OLNEY TAKES THE OATIH | this Interior city was one of several TroHTAGWish T B L kT Ll to be opened to forcigners and forelg and noble custom i ; "85 | Chiet dustice Fuiler Camo Over from Rich- B no o, Jcubt, 1 tated, Bas Al | ceiving no salary, } | monid to Administor 1t ated the people who have lived by them- | japds. therch HINGT 10.—Mr. 0 to- selves from time w remembrance. It | pyshandmen 2 aluding_their families, in the entir g il b Iz Sharw] Gresham. Chief Justice of Se Chun, of which Cheng Tu by bl 19 i ot ahe, Taallxe ot ¢ e R E b6 1ead A 100, S we would apply a similar process to th me to n from alitfes, The missionaries’ le i t et | aiministered of of Cheng Tu, where it is believed ther | rl‘ v secretary in lomatic rc exceeding ten m ies, the re { g derartm O'ney ca estimate is based ! al | S ; fow tnd of Chinese official there are no exact | r. Carl von s details of the extent of the missionary serv- | AL LS am, he was § ice through Chin 98 reta Ull, Ad The Tsung Li Yamen ht to secur L NEW ITALIAN PARLIAMENT OPENED 1t bigral each foreign government a comple | p i e the missionaries and thelr places of s *“. | King Humbert Warns them that Retrench- | ! A " rned. T 1 by b Dub this was not. given. It is said that ti ment Is Absolutely Necossury | red Activity tary Lan A emperor of China and the Tsung LI Yamen AT S ; Pariial jd ad lif Lo have given every possible tion to the OME, June 10 e r 1 Parlla- | o mong d pess ble to guard ag mob violen r- [ by King Humt ' | Hiar 1t I ticularly at remote interior points. The | (ha cccasion and ¥ Vappui she ¢ ath wa Chinese government has asked foreign gov= [ o000 & : 1 by ask The & ernments to appreciate these difficulties and | DLW 08 of ail members of the | bureau chiefs of t has advised that the missions should be kept [4tors and deputies eaid, a policy of vacillation | 8 1 ¥n to within safe limits, but the zeal of the r Margarita were aken [French prestige abroad. | o sionaries has led fhem to push inward with- | they drove agked if in' return for French | cONTHACTS FOR NEDRASIA PEOPLE out fear of results to po'nts where the Chineso [ lined with tr in the east Russin would a.d France officials have had difficulty in affording full | His majesty at upon the thron n the freedom of Egypt E T | protection | with the’ c and_in_ his blet_demanded the publication of the | Muceln Individuals WWho Get a Sileo of VICEROYS HELD RESPONSIBLE speech sald ple have so of alliance with Russia, it one was| ksl s B R AT Ehis, « thie _aulhorities at|clenr 1 nion at the polls ) WAS June 10.-~(Special Tele Peking have done thelr utmost. They have | that no doubt remains regarding the que s point M. Ribot interposed, saying: | gram.)—T degartment ha aced upon the viears of the gring | DB eeaure SIS Drompteat disunyl now well enough we cannot publish | quthorized the custodian of ts public buiid htirches, eto., the viceroys understanding that | the finances of Italy occupy the foremost p'a: blet then continued his remarks, in- | AR, 0t they will be degraded if mobs are permlitted [ In this connection, and the most strict re- g that the visit of the squa supplies to be uged during the to. Alsturb the missions. As a result, the|trenchment of the expenditures is necessary Kiel was the unfortunate result of the [ nding June 80, 1°96: To C. B Wiseroys “nnd’ ot ‘prefects: or police. aro | iR to raise Italy's credit abread, Par [ raton with Russia and_Ger- | Co., contract for supplying_fue motive In. restralning mcb outbreaks. The | liament will then be asked to devote itsell y in the far east. Frenchmen would of §969.30; to the Lincoln Street officlal gazette of Ohina, recently received|to the important ~ ques of communal | never understand any policy of reapproach- [ Railway company and Lincoln Gas comy here, shows that a chanze has been made ces and administration and to judicial [ ment with Gern o0 long es the disputed | contra furnishing electric lights the viceroy at Cheng Tu and that a new on rms | auestion of the provinc f Alsace and Lor- | gag at ir ective bi $420 @ has Just assumed his duties, This, added to | His majesty also sald that he trusted that | raine rematned unsetl | and to ston, contract for fu the ‘agitation of opening the city to for e cltsags o1 the v M. Ribot concluded the debate by endors- | {ii i bid of $78.75. The acting chlef eigy may account for disturbances, al s of the y ng all the remarks of M (','”\"“"\'\ he | Clark of the treasury has sent to the cus though, as already stated, the fact that dis- It dwelt "r(‘;\r ¢ ““;,',""\ e adopted hy 360 | todian of the court house and post- fice build rbances have occurred 1a not known Lo t ing be ofthe gosernment was then adopted by 302 | | ebraska City a check for $200 on the Chinese officials her: | 1 3 {0K195 AL Chekd Omaha National bank in favor of D. F It s sald that' Wo Chank. the placo to| € tiat the ; f es urne & Co., this sum having been deposited Sther largo intorior town near the river | P WILL RETURN 10 JAIL TODAY. warantee of faithtul verformance of # & . pan s eeslone, o === t for uilding with fuc Chang, but i unnavigable further up. It is | o to maint Serve Out Their Sen More Bliips tn 158 Bent to thd Blaride Corst probable, therefor t the French ships go | ¢ erected by h CHICAGO, June 10, ne And WASHINGTON, June 10.—The adminis to Wu Chau the far T ":'\* king's A ther officials of the American Rail 1 | tration ha cided that United States point red onARad ansn L | s and there w | will be sent to the Woodstock county jail to- | vessel of war should be sent to Key West French legation no information had been re- | (005 L0 S NS abiRE i arile w{‘n W, The certified py. of the order of | for the 1 \pf coscneniting: 3 th th ceived concernng the reported massacre. The [ pi ho United States supreme court was re !l fng' expeditions leaving that _and = ot French ambassador, M. Patenotre, who rep | RECKUITS JOINING GENERAL MACEO | today and the United States marshal places In ida to ald th i resented his government at Peking some t Dl iRion (L it ) fail o This decision was re lte tc years ago, and who negotiata] e (16318 Y| (tuia on tho City of Gibara Feared by the | under sentence of impris ar v. | nlght, just before Secretary rts d Which Tonquin became a French provi s u | parture’ for Alabama, @ oncluded - Ppanish Authorities. Debs, G. W. Howard iher, L. W. |} i e pressed his doubt of the corr ss of th . 8. K | that the Raleigh should be used for_the Fal O O o v intorcepting | HAVANA, June 10.—The bands of Miro, | Rogers, James Hogan, W. E. Burns, R. M. | purpose latter vessel fs now at New ispatches bearing upon the alleged mas- | Maceo and Sa nave added to their nur- | Goodwin® and Martin 'Eiliott. There s no | York. e expected to be sent tc sacre. -When he was in China ten year s alxts nae | near Gibara, On this | Guestion as to the time the men will sd her Commanter to prepare for the Voyag he said dispatches were never intercepted, | oo T BEktra Ctioge N Bandyl )i oon CE R ELERCUISHIN g AR Bl RinOn will be on her way to Key West. and he alw had free communication both | ! B (iaadiy i b RaTshroann nths for his a e ROV 6 amiva soon pay a visit to Gibara. Insurgent General | two Qifferent contempt cases, the sent T T T I e vith his government and with the admiral ¢ n pay a vi 2 urvevors Wwere Not Marderad. rx.‘- "Frenc fleet. He says it is possible for a | Gomez has passed through the province of | being made concurrent by the cour The WASHINGTON, June 10.—The report pub- French gunboat to go up the Yang-tse-Klang | Puerto Principe. Troops will concentrate in | defendants attorneys later had the septence L lished in New York today that a party of river, which is navigable as far as Hanko. the vicinity of Tunas for the purpose of help- ’f‘i cumulative in order to take a desired | o ornment surveyors were killed by Chick- Tar Bat 4 sferring to some | o b egal action, and the time to be servel by 4 4 \ 4 Minister Patenotre, by referring | ing the citizens in case trouble should e | [tB8 ACtOn ARG T08 BIC 10 be Mol . | asaw Indians near i in the documents at the legatlon, o ned that | threatened. It is reported that the insurgents | 16 PSR U TORN & NOVETer (hat | Indian Territory, o nesday s there were about 100 Catholi aries In | quring the last revolution buried two cannon, | PRt¢ hae 16, NOWeVar, [ihat | corrant dispateh enreceived at o 5 n 1 effort will be made to have Judge Woods | the Geological survey from Henry Gannett China, of which eixty-four we wch and | and according to recent advices these have | M € L the Ge Y from g i, (of wie Concerning the number | hooy Soralng (o recent advices these have | reinstate the conourrent sentence. chief topographer at Little DBoggy, stating twenty-five Ttalian, ~Coneerning (A Meciic | been dug up and will be repaired and placed | ®Georce Howard, the former vice president | there is no truth in the reports of a mas: of Protestant missions he had no spe in readiness for future act Maceo, the : y { sicre. The survey has ten partles of ubout knowledge. The number of misstonaties ut a | insurgent commander, hae issued orders com- G the A R U, now president of the In- | FEG o0 Gich 't work in the territory: sur post varies from two to ten or more. manding the insurgcnt sharpshooters to kit | dustrial unlon, which is'a rival organization | \(yimi "tne Tands o the Chickasaw nation The State department has recelved no dis- | Colonel Sandoval if the opportunity is pre. | Of the A. R. U, desires to be sent to some | j¢ js ‘said the Indians know the work is patches from Minister Denby or other officials o, ot of revenge for the death of Moril. | county jail in Indiana and has recelved what | for their benefit and give the best of treat- P China rexarding the reported missionary | Gaptain General Martimez de Campos is to | he construes as a promise from Judge Woods | ment to the surveyors massacre at Cheng Tu. There are no reco ¢ loave this city for the pr of Puerto | to gratify his desire Tharston Will Speak ar Cleveland. SAREHPUSTLRENtC ANOWIRE LD, RITDOE. B || Princlpe.. et ; > PROVED AN ALIBI FORSENATOR BUCK | CLEVELAND, 0. June ‘10.--James H ALIea ¢ Ohang Tu. - There 1s & ie The insurgents have fired upon a coast Hoyt of this city, one of the most brilliant h line to Cheug Tu, and the State de- | guard vessel which was watching the coas | Y 4 B ent oMeials. think thers should b Between Punta Corda and Sabanitia fe Mat. | everal Persons Saw Him o Oakland | after dinner speakera in Ohio, has been difculty In learning all the facts in the ca anzas. One volunteer was killed and one About tho Time of the Murder. ated coR the ‘!"‘1“:\“\”1:’!‘\-”!'“r“‘h\-"“"‘ ¢ and as no report of the massacre hud been re- | wounded - SAN FRANCISCO, June 10.—The coroner’s | Rt 1 Ge. . ‘Chauncey M. Depew celved by the depariment it was thought that P T T Py inquest into the death of Miss Nell 1'a toast. 1t 15 expected the outrage ARALO0 I S8 G LONDON, June 10 House of Cc ton, murdered in her flat ten 3 McKinlor angl sx-Qovarnor AtryoLion R reassembled t and the parlia- | resumed today. Mrs. Crouse, a B uncertainly about it tif the | ary secretary for forelgn office, Sir | Miss H ,“said that Senat ? alls, J. C. Turrows of Oheng Tu m )t es s the d Grey, 1 a bill to regulate | B who had visited the m higen, Hon. . Oy HyRnL of At point on the Y t robable } catching of seals in Bering sea. In s v Another elderly man had fr among the other epeakers that there are f nt wis- | oj explained it was designed (o replac ntl ! g s - — : | quently taken her driving. Mrs. Mary Rof 5 sionaries and two or A 1= [ the act of 1593, to earry out greement | sister of the deceased, tastified tha ot Nobeasion Postoflices Estunil-hod. aries at the place, with Ruseia, and that there would be a few | quarreled with Miss Harrington because the | WASHINGTON, June 10.—(Special MADE A MIS altere bill_passed its frst reading. | laier persisted in accepting Senator Buck m.)—Postoflices have been established S tharmoon. Blats doy OClh | Wiamurek Cannot Attend the Opening, | dltentions, knowing him to bx & married | follows: Nebraska—Mahign, Polk county Lhough an error had been made | trans- | HAMBURG, June 10.—Regrets have been | (o' rostaurants and resorts was injur v \ison inty, Bradford Ierson mission of the name of the place where the ved from Prince Bismarck, who says that | character. Several wit s testified th tmaster % 3 e massacre {8 gaid to have occurred. It is b | Senator Buck was in Oakland after 1 p. m. he following nastofMicest have neen dise lieved this name { heing Chung Tu, lay Miss Harrington was murdered mail will Ko to. Strickland, | Towa— Kissmee should be Chang capital of Hu that Buck could not possibly crossed’ the | (aihoun county: mall Will &8 (6 Pomery. " In this place the number of fc | bay t the hour her d ly was dis wa. postmasters were afipointed today s missionarics, and uti-foreign f A coverad follows: ™" Avon, Pollc count wRing, ery strong. In t wera (b | ——r— e vice W. Iiveand, resignec ru, A Bt tattons Pl and. the mis: | crar Afer SANTA FE ROUND HOUSE RBURNED | count W. Keller, vice i | gran.) A ounty, sfonarios wer me tir A 8tate | 1oouy of Des M e e L s ing the vi and warning the | d¢ ] udg the Struciuce VASHINGTON, June 10.-Becretary H natives a aff . The | €0 S noatnt WICHITA, Kan., June 11 rt 1 today that it had ‘not yet been ion or efiairs was s United | ¢/ e | m Arkansas City termined whether a war vessel would be States Minister Denby as grave enough to | 0 v e s nt to the Florida coast to prevent a fil ernment, and the were made the su L age s ba rebels. Navy officials generally are geet of Foveral re Tt rts. The qu r re burned to the | of th nion that th necessity the State department. ( T ible | on ! . S e ond] any such action by United 5 to small ¢ a rship v [ L | There ar m ten to fif en- | | AP fvy des fted the rhood 1 years ago. | | gines in the rou ) 1th will be | Biate Olne f he Wit @ warshiy - | L c from $100,000 to $150 patrol the coast one will be sent AlL Wikliug 0 Fupport tho Gevornment. | I i | O ey owa to e Made a flagship. LONDON, June 10.-=The Preat assoclation | 3 4% PU0S _ Funoral of Reid's Mother W > )N, June 10, battlest thiy evening states t leading F pol a5 been .| XENIA, 0, Jun lowa is to be made a flagship, though not tiglans have int 1 \e members of the | PR wi 1 at Ced ) designed al retary Herbert Rosebery isters will be | i directly to the has found it llent to At her out . ‘ot | wmbezzler Sumpioa country, where his way, an Loard of naval bureau sapp v | f er MMk | He was great hefs was engaged today | scussing tey If Great y 1| SIOUX FALLS, S. D. Al It soen e DIANSE A 1 P PR T T g a reply (o th )—Ex-Act is | Wil be buried tom rangement r meut In rexard t . ox cemetery, a T ts for the t \ of | 88 n t s of ‘\\l‘nr‘ s her husbar i Second Trial of Howgate Commenced, men w ses i WASHINGTON, June 10.—The trial of N eene— b ve T money | atovemes o of 0 teumers June 10, | Captain Heory W. Howgate on two indict- VIENNA, Juue vy e % Bde g ““\ At w—Arrived—Carthagenian, from | M harging forgery 1 falsification VI NS, I \'“' s g P8 | not t Philadelphia, | of accounts while disbursing officer of the recelved here from Wienernousa ent ———— B ot ot o Gew | SlEnal service in 13, was begun today cloudburst” washod away & number of Lo [ Allsgedt Tujel Hogad Qren S Eed S LR ST R Ol moning was consumed in otisising s Dbridges aad whole strects in the commu | PAWNEE CITY, Neb, June 10.—(Specal | “At Southampton—Arrived—Fulda, from [ V7Y 8nd making the wpening specches. Schargeubach, Schalatten and Hocwalkersd Telegram.)—Charley Brown, the colored boy | New York Nebraska *p s Assoc ation. It ia added (hal twelve persons wers drowned | urresied Friday for robbing C. Bice & Co.'s | At San Francisco—Arrivéd—Australia, from | ppe Nebraska LA AR ut Scharaeubach alone, avd that the damage, | general merchaudiee store, had a trial this | Honolulu 5 ; ticn will hold a three days' meeting in this which eannot be repaired for vears. amounts 'aficrucon and was put wider §600 bonds to | At Leltu—Arrived—Missour, trom Baltl- | ciiy, 'beginning od Fricay of the present da these three places to over 300,020 Qorius. appear in district court, more. week. PL E \ ll N l' V E N \\' settlement of accounts of the former receivers pany H. H. Clark and others and the present receiver, MeNefll, was finished yes terday morning E. 8. Wood was presnt enaintad Jol f last week and represented Major McNelll W. H, Bancroft APPO""‘_‘, Joint Receiver Joseph Simon of Portland of the law firm of of the Utah Lines, Dolph & Simon was the representa- tive of crs Loan and Trust s pany Judge Kelly looked after the LAV L L A L N s T B R G view of t t there is a great deal f exp be milled over. Ju Uaton Pacific Virtaally Wins a Vietory by | Kelly a Jud; MeArthur left Sunday even the Decision and Order of Juage ing for St, Paul, where they have certain SaFFite AL AAIL Laks matters to present to Judge Sanborn of the Eighth circuit City, LR S TROUBLES OF DIVORCE APPLICANTS SR O Mra. E. B Appellus aund Dr. Belden Cuuse a | SALT LAKE ( ”“ L ””‘Il‘ 10 Scensation at s1oux Falls, clal T legram.) Judge Merri i ".;M[, . SIOUX FALLS, 8. D., Jun ). —(Spe- cision this morning in the Oregon Short Line | 1)) mne trial of a clvil sult involving th receivership case. He confirms the app: | paltry sum of $50 has created something of ment of hn M. Egan as receiver, but a il nsation in t city The 1 was in clates with him as joint recciver W. H. Ban-| 0004 o Mrs, L. E. Thompson, who cam croft, present general super lent of the|® ' v ¥ 4 wes end of Union Pacific system, |04t from ter o, 983 . ! THESHEOLEL panion to Mrs. E. B. Appeliug, who f P rritt requires the American Loan (o0 for a divores, to recover $50 to pay and Trust compapy to pay all i t due on A MrE, Thofiplon Il first mortgage bonds luding the Ham garodtiant tHAt sha Shoula KAV mort Ctah & P expense aid both way les her {h iil6F - of Feeatvarn ficates the | as con n, and that had been dis A it having y for her return order is silent. The failu mention the | Eharged witl certificate " 1 b ys f ra. Appelius did not appear Am Loan and Trus Quiva- | her physiclan, Dr. Belden, alsc i flcate \ b A et i rs. Appelius during her % 3 i Wite \ on | testificd that Mrs. Thompson i ’. ¥ LR : LA 8l g dischar 1. Instead, the door between the Uta | rooms ot @ two women has W the appointment of co-recelver | keep Mrs, Thompson out bec had been foreshadowel in these dispatches, it | had a disagre throat SurbtiEs e iexia o | Breatly annoyed Mrs. Th n LRI PO L L 'O M Here s wiere the sensational part which it protects Pacific Interests. | v ipson then took the stand and testi 1 re than the Union oncerning the doctor’s professional and Pacifl asked It poged impozsib) visi t he Istre and told of cond ns, according e trust company which ghe beerved whi w by ordering t pay f delaulted inter- | suppored by the others to be 1l [ sight est, and r ing to ze certificates | A judgment was rendered against the d upon which to raise funds fendant for $30 and cos The story of th While the attorneys refused to state what | trial soon got abroad and Dr. Belden pulled the sed to do, & representative of the | down b hingle and took an evening tra | trust company, who i known to ak author aying he was going back to Vermont. It | itatively, said We have stated from the | however, thought that he has gone to som | outset that e would not accept the Uta ther South Dak town, where he will re lines under a Union Pacific joint receiver- | main until he gets his divore o 8 an we will not re from this posl. Mrs. Appellus left with Dr. B L tioh, Ve We will leave | trunk was attac at Dell Rapids the Utah ne. We cannot it back to »4‘:4. the judgme take them Union Pacific re- | tckets ot Bt Baul Srsalr g SIS i nuot touch them. | g rRoor IN LEVIDENCE AGAIN Wi ate receivership o but ich a pointment. - The | gueer Capers of the Beatrice Man Who fal the issue of recelve cer- | Marcled Against His Wi, t st atter 1 We car L ARTAE ! Hot et | BEATRICE, June 10.—(Speclal Telegram.) W at inconvenient to ain b himself ) at f Utah without e Feb ry ot we to A asked ed to Mrs. Kate i At any | Returning to Beatrice in ! 'l as @oc as V“;u{w\' days he denied being married, claim HAvink 1t et | he had ch 1 ut ot m FAGE (CbraiTe bt (b NS | ter after procuring a license, A few week 1 company. operation of the utside | later Mre, Russell-Root came to this city and ah, with T 1o probably head- | proved to faction of every one tha uarters, or ent abandonm e joot was her lawiully weided husband. Afte eivership pros I is believel that |she had remained h « number of days the former course will pursued and that | matters were arra 1 between the parties foreclosure and s under the consolidate A they began housckeeping, she attending to nortgage will b hed. The decision is of the § ninaries of rent 1 furnishing loubtful advant t » Union Pacifie. It is house. Apparently all had gone well until given acce:s to Salt Lake t is shut off from turday Without apprising his wife of his Butte and Portlan and is cbliged to operat movements Root went to Lincoin, From there the unprofitable lines running south from thi e sent he me ge saying he had been ity All the lines in Utah will remain under | callel to Lincoln unexpectedly, had secured a Union Pacific centiol, as Judge Merritt's or- | paying situction and would return the day fol der becomes inoperative through the refusal | lowing, but up to this time has failed to put of t 1st company to accept it in an appearance, and Mrs. Root is positive Tae decisicn is not well reccived by the |Le hes no intention of returning es3 community, which was anxious for | Root is a man of no means, aside from a T Line headquarters to be establishel 1 two lots in this city, and these h here, and the court is very warmly criticized. | his three children. Before leavin, Senator Th n and family leave t he was city as sor) he finished the annual row for 1 the decizion, the | assessment and sold his claim against the en r sald nt of an ass herefor ate recel an abandonmen ough an entire st ger here until last f the fiel e trust company, as it can- | Friday, Mrs. Root has gainel the respect of St carry present plans in regard to | everyohe by her demeanor since comiig the line s > i i N here, and the sympathy of the communi are LOCAL OFFICIALS ON ThE DECIsion | MIECl with ver '\"‘\"‘I“ Rl B ',f“""‘j ippolntment of Co-Reseiver Bancroft Re- Sakiid garded with Satisfacti ELMER HANK i DEFAULTER. It was a foregone conclusion that th —_— | Short Line and Utah Northern would be placed | Wsom'ng County Treasurer Found Several under the control of a se recelver, th Hundrad Dollars Short nly hope of the interests antagonistic to the | LANDER, Wyo. 10.—(Speclal Tel American Loan and Trust company being to | &7am.)—Elmer Hank, who retired from the co-recelver who would be falr to the | county treasurer’s office In January, 1593, Is | cific, which has now been accom- | found to be a defaulter in t i of $1,400 1 in the appointment of W. H. Ban- | The money was secured by making false en ) ‘_H‘”:v“: “xhl";‘\ ‘:‘,-“ theimountatn divisioni iries SUHM‘:\ the sheriff went to Washaki General Manager Dickinson was elated gk Hank was employed in th DO he appointment of Mr. Bancroft, who | trader's store as clerk and acting postmaster s as the one man of all n to di YJ‘ w found that he had not been the the interests of the separated property store for three days, His books were at onc But 1 don't believe Mr. gan will accept xamined and the discovery wa made that he terms of the transf. embo; ng it | he had robbed the postoffice of over $400. does the h uthern, p erty which | The sheriff learne hat Hank had gone north has not paid operating expenses. Our people | toward the Rattlesnake range feel satisfied with terms of the fer as CHEYENNE, June 10.—(Special Tel am.) made by Juc Merritt and if it is accepted | —The Wyoming supreme court today decided by the American Loan and Trust c ny r the defendant in the application for b {it must b done at great cost to that |©of E. 8. Crockor the Evanston cattleman corpora The American Loan and Trust | charged with th wurder of his partner, Har- company ugh its attorneys, has fought | Ye¥ Booth It held that the statute which the co-receivership idea from the begluning, forbids bail being allowed after an indict- and this, coupled with the interest feature |Ment has been returned charging a capital of the order, which is along the lines out- | Offense is unconstitutional 1 inoperative lincd by the ‘attorneys for the first mortgage [ Where the proof is not evident or the pre- Interests, receivers of the Unlon Pacific and | Sumption of guilt great; also that the district Oregon $hort Line will probably prove too | €OUrts have furisdiction in determining the much of a load for the receivers to carry umption fot JRulit, “uin: aeoordanice - with Should Mr. Egan accept it will not affe telon Grocker will-be: givenia. hearing e forces at Union Pacific headquarters to | OfL he auestion of bail in the Uinta county hie extent of more than thirty men, and as [ 1'Strict court Thursday. for our mechanical forces, they are reduced f e c folthe mintmum TEU gy HeAnta e s RICH GOLD DISCOVERY IN OKLAHOM j‘l'm:"i\l'r’;; .‘f‘,"flw‘.‘lq“m “";f";r‘:” :;‘)_‘ ¢1| Prospectors Flocking Luto the Country and the contentions of th eys for the fir Staking fut.Olnimy, nortgage and other ir followed that| GUTHRIE, OKL, June 10.—For several day 'w;\ successor receiver could not consistently | rumors have been current that gold had been ake the property. X digcovered paying quantities on Boggy Ninth circuits,”” addressing the reporter, “but | Arapahoe, Guthrie county. Last Friday I can hardly believe this, as Ogden is the key [ Tommy Bell came to town and stated som ) the situation and it would leave Mr. Egan | very rich leads had been found and that the ends of the line to operate, while the | people were flocking into the mineral region great middle woull be operated by the pre:- | from all points of the compa In less than ent receivers, for 1 take Mr. Bancroft | two hours several parti ere equipped and ould refuse to take the it his senior |on the road, Messrs. Leo W and Alex <hould object to the order. Hanshaw returned today and reported very There was cons r o eatisfaction ex rich fields and th hundreds of sed about headquarters when the terms | on the ground k 1 clai v f Judge Merritt's order bec e known, for | runs from Cobb creck, in the ( untr the majority of the heads of departments|io the head of the Boggy, a distan f forty felt that Mr. Egan would not take the Short | mi and rang: ) three to eleven mile Line loaded down with nonpaying divisions, | wide. Messrs ndikanshd wihrouent as In the case of the Utah Southern and | pack eon, rw‘ Slisang. brel Southern Extengion | testea by Mr. Cramer, ‘ar winer William H neroft, the co-re Ver ap- | and assayist, who report 8 very pointed by Judge Merritt for the Oregon Short | rich with precious metal a of gold Line & Utah Northern, was born October found on an aver n feet 1838, at Newburg, O. He entered railway | below the surfade, and serviez April, 1856, as telegraph o r and | ut and ticket clerk of th Michigan Sout n Rall- | t 1 way nee which time he has c U | g 1l tively, May 1861 to 1869, divisic tor, | Ired a and dispatcher Erie road; 1869 to 1872 |d teher, endent's clerk a a N pe—— atcher, Kans Pacifie, October FOREST FIRES STILL BURNING to April 1875, assistant superin 1 — M Topeka & Santa Fe; May 1875 Nothing but a Heavy Rain Can Effectuslly superintendent St, Louls, Lawrence & Check Them, rallroad; January 1, 1876, to April 1§ BRADFORD, Pa. une 10, The fore fir dispatcher Missourl, Kansas & Texa 1| that started last Saturday are etill burning 1878, to July 20, 1586, superintendent various | . ; - . divist f the Denver & Rio Grande road; | flercely and large gangs of men werk August 15, 1884, to July 1886, rece r of | r¥ing prev » the Denver & Rio Grande Western; July 29, | to property 1886, to July 1, 1890, general superintendent | w € Denver & Rio Grande Western; January abla ¢ 1590, to dat neral superintendent of 1 Mouatain division of Union Pacific by fi 1 SUBWMITIED THEIR PROOFS, larg Judge MeAithur Has the Navigation Com- roperty pany Sult Under Advisement. Bug estroyed |‘ 3.4 f her The hearing which has been going on be- | And 1,000 cords of bark belonging to Stout & s T ) "]“‘“‘t: B ok hecn BoWg on be- | Hojen. H. O. Ostrander lost 3,000.000 foet of re @pacial Mastier in RROETY ta logs and some lumber. Allen's lur Arthur of the Ninth circult at Union Pacfic | jyy peen destroyed and the peoy headquarters under the foreclosure suit | place barely had time to remove their brought by the Farmers Loan and Trust com- | hold goods. A big fire is reported between pany, trustee under _ the consolidated | Chipmunk and Limestone, and much valuabl mortgage of the Oregon Rallway and Naviga- | property is in danger. Everything in the tion company against the receivers of the | woods is again dry and unless it ralus soon Union Pacific and others, pertaining to the there is Do telling what the result may be. SINGLE COPY FIVE CENT - ISH KILLED CHAPPLE Tragedy of funday Night Now Made as Olear as Day, LIAISON THAT TERMINATED IN DEATH | Guilty Love Between Mrs, Ish and the Dead Man Caused Murder, | HUSBAND DISCOVERED THE INTIMACY oming fuddenly Tnto the Bedroom He Saw the Whole Truth, | CONFESSIONS MAKE THE STORY STRAIGHT Jumes Ish Acknowle that ¥ired the Shots that Killed Chapp'e Beeause the Latter Had Been Intimate with Mrs. Ish, by a shot » and beh ly through the the brain | rignt beneath Jame t he fired thal ks of powder unds short k nor to cause arily fatal ntract lead und ade prof [ 1 Ish t thelr story both br down told the same [ first and ry le of thought on H intimate the dead evening being when Sunday Ish to came was not to fix the sewing machine, ce Mre. Ish. Instead of going to the cellar, as he said he would, he went to & bedroom adjoining that in which Chapple and Mrs, Ish were looking at the machine, Re= turning suddenly, he surprised the pair in a compromising position, and the firing be- gan Yesterday's development the case will be found in the following matter. Wik fsh Owns Up that Be Fired the Shots that Killed Chapple., longer any doubt The that The that th vidence and was fin- the confessions decided to tell of the HUSBAND AND CONFESS There Killed Chapy published fully corrobor ai 1 and positiy Ish a s that Ish no story ry by the ¢ that day W vat svered during the p wile W ally ly of b and Dl part of \apple carly part isted in maintaining the time he was arrested, to dead man had been killed wif onded him by gi unt of the shooting. In giving the details wo not only contradic themselves, Ish was e in his statements AT three different explan the revolver which he claim s, m his band and had e To one man he said that he it of burean drawer, to an- other that he had it in his pocket, and to a third that he did not have it, but took it from the hands of his wife. Finally, In view of these and of the evidence th pointing to the fact that Mrs. fire a shot, Ish was taken into office of Chiet Detective Haze and asked for the true statement of how the tragedy oc- curre At first he attempted to malintain that the story he first told was true, but the improbability of the story was forced upon him. Then he said that when he entered the bedroom Chapple was lying on the floor, shot by Mrs. Ish, with Chapple’s own re- volver, and that he then fired four times at him, was then shown to him how it s gullt if he shot at a man who ady wounded and not position ad at- himself, even If t) 1 hi f that Ish man who hat they know killing of € During the of the day tory the by ing Ish per- told at the effect that the wite, His same ac- th the 1 each tragedy the ther, but pecially contradictory n he gave ns of he got 1 wife had with which she instar contradictions t us plainly Ish did not the private It ated Ir agg was to e man At e was th WHAT sald HAPPENED that on had be IN tur intimate « THE BEDROOM, liscovered with Chap- to evening, he felt Ish, evie n came k 1y he tN Cha that I 1 dec ple ned 114 not ot n at h 1 but day. by the it expect to aw Ish fix the ) to the r, that hine ma fol jefore the ma- h told Ish to g . Ish left the cellar nutes r m. I her and, Ish roth g effoct 1 11 DEN Mras, Ish ten th person THE tively that were found on re 22 I ed had i b LETTERS nad Chepy r early denfal at them, She also relations with persecuting her ug. but e had lo never that he to statement made by Ish, the first wan Lo draw & Weapop even b 1 apple, but et According | Chapple was

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