Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 15, 1901, Page 1

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"HE OMAHA DAILY BEE. e== — — — ESTABLISHED JUNE 19, OMAHA, MONDAY MORNING, JULY 15 1901 SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS, MANY STATES ROAST/S™T our o Fiwo pernt 0NAHA MAN'S DUAL KILLING | THEATER TRUST TE LATEST | NGTHING BUT HEAT [N SILIT | CONDITION OF THE WEATHER | J0E BARTLEY'S DEED Expediti on the Steamer Erik | All the Orphenm Clrenit with Many Forecast for Nebraska—Falr and Continued | Sal's North o Al Other Vau ses Ine | | 1 ts Wi Geovernment Rep:ris Bleven Bwoltering m‘ LA !R“'" Prange Fhoots Wife and Belf Weather Man We'sh Eees No Sign of : | ! [ | i at Bt Joo Immed.ate Roli ok { Why He Was feut te Prisen Ly Peop the Peiliag Bun, HALIFAX, N. 8. July 14.—The steapp s CHICAGO, July 14—The Tribune tomor- of Nebraska Erik left h noy this mernin row will say: With a capitalization of b e s et et e THCE, o | PREPASES AL DETAILS BEFOREHAND | [uton 41160 i omt 80000100 twelve of | CORN WELL FIXED FOR A DRY SPELL| ’ Ay 2 KANSAS MAY GET HALF L%, % CORN | (00 Tibiane aud hen at the vation | i | the ‘chiet"vaudenile theaters between Chi- T wslHIS SHORTAGE WAS HALF A MILLION | cago and the Pacific coast are about > 4 Z —_— = | Esquima stations in Greenland We be merged into a single property. The itions of Growth Are Such as Must #h'p Oattleto Market Beoa. T [ in about three weeks. At the various sta Some Quarre ing=0Omaha Friends | oonoinies » Feaching Brah under faverable conditions | Deed 1n Done Arter Much Consing and " X 8t | i % avor the Staple Cereal and ste Tunds Disappeared Daring His Two Getting Eoaros. tions it will make Inquiries as to news bines aie belng used to bring about the | Ter s ¢ Licuten Peary and the Windward. | unification. Stock in the new corporation Ubvinte (ke Cuntomary THROUGH NIAGARA RAPIDS orme as Troasurer, he rik took 250 tons of coal and will b 188U to the Individual theater Damuge from Hent, - — . | Carliste raham Makes the Perl $ CITIES ARE AFRAID OF FIREY stoned for at least a year. The mem proprietors in amounts proportionate to CONVICTE VARIOU £ | s the Peary Arctic club, who went | | the valuation placed upon the respective —_— Voyage in a Locust Wood D OKLY AFTER A LONG TRIAL v | ot «he steamer, are Dr. F, A. Cook, sur-| ST J(\Sllil'lll Mo., Jn.lly H\ pecial T“:' theaters. Papers of incorporation will be 0 FOBOrUE. &8 W FRRIVe i | eon of the expedition; Herbert Stone and | ekram.)—R. Prange, whosce business cards | g @ e iiws of Tinols. The larg: course such reports ve receiv t Fruit and Vegetable Crops Total X‘ml\ml AR e MU LTS B e i Rt s e ot (L1 u:lvl:~.‘:(l‘"‘n\:‘1\\-m1 e wouttion "+& | on Sundays are very meager and I have not SdiRe i % ity Every Logal Expedient Exbausted te Save and Pastures Dried Up. Wikoff and L. C. Benedict of Ithaca and | Schlitz hotel, Omaha, and m ot uy..- those of the Koh! uud Gwatie thesters of :;;fln I'":.:Ix lllvx,u';u'; \,ulr\ml-.nlt'\nv»::ylt:'lrr\\‘l"l::‘l:n:l Rt Wb s i1iahe D, Grabel Him from Pevientinry. P Ll’ Boo R (o it Al derl ME Wity “”W[B\km:fl Fotary late | Chlcago ind of the theatefs of the Orpheum | .iiC, 0l ot Yo ving we.n them | would not | make his Afth muccessful voyage through F. Cook sald that fourteen American |dered bis wife near Lake Contrary 1ate jo..i of the west. The only vaudeville A Ing S | i Re e ] d t ¢ )1 d « 3 [l y undertake to hazard a t ast as to proba- | the whirlpool rapids in a barrel this after- | . WHEAT WILL HAVE TO BE USED AS FEED | gentiemen have agreed to contribute $1,000 | this afternoon and then committed suls | e v ng far east as Chicago Bl o B o e L e o Tudgs | ocn, ThN barrel 14 8f locust, wood, oval | PUBLIC SENTINENT CONCERNING. PARGLE —_— to be a party to the arrangement fs M. [ oo CF B0 P 5 Wil % oeDt that It Bas & flat head; it D used to the | crime by destroying r-vhuxl( a Nx‘ "vu”\-] Heuck's opera house and the Walnut Street | o rajjof from the existing state of | diameter at the foot and twenty-six inches | GOVErnor's Action Debated hy Citizens Heing Injured by Dr h that lce here was a large crowd at the dock l.wlh & that would lead to his 1.4\“ theater in that eclty. weather. The same torrid condition pre- st tne toad With its 100 pounds of bal- | Who M varl u Brevailsduston ot wy» bid farewell and success to the ex- | Prange came to this nl‘l‘)'yl‘s'v‘vhl.l\' ml;\']fl:,—,‘ The twelve theaters which will become | yaily throughout the west, or as far west | last it weighs 165 pounds. The start was plore g fro a o lool or s wife, | the T e P o ) A = LS :”“ R he property of the combine and theif | 45 the mountains, and it is extending cast- | made from the Mald of Mist landing - had left him eral days ago because of | o o iiony e as follows e HMan Pursued | sty | 1 ony 8 ow ward, 8o that there appears to be no im- | jow the fall #s Farsued. JAPANESE REMAIN IN KOREA his alleged dissolute habits and cruelly | hicago- The Chicago opera house, the | mentate prospect of & change. It has| The barrel was caught in an eddy and toward hor They met at the postofice | g1ypnic theater and the Haymarket thea- | reached the Ohio valley and is moving | gjpcled about a little above the Canti e 1 " o . | during the afternoon and again later in the | o; gwned by Kohl amd Castle: Hopkins' | castward, so that the distress and suffering | jever bridge for a quarter of an hour. The | Joseph § rtley, who has just beem evening | theater, owned by J. D. Hopkins, and, in- | recently experien. in the eastern clitle § N6 MIdda oF 196 | autared , o Pry 1 king late the day and | stronger current in he mi paroled by G rnor Sav was confined range was drinking late in ay directly. the Masonic Temple roof theater, | are likely to be eated unless local | gream anally jorked it out of the eddy | in the penitentiary three bt il i Lo taining | TADAged by J. J, Murdeck conditions come to their rellef. As far a8 !ynio (he foaming waters of the rapids.! week to a day. He { man and Brown stopped a hack containing | Cincinnati—Heuck's opera house and the | local conditions at Omaha are concerned I | puyiine ynder the second bridge the barrel | Douglas counts the couple and because of thelr Walnut Street theater, M. C. Anderson, sce no chauge from the past several days . 8 i . " oot ool i chan| . ad arrow escape from being dashed to y 6, 1898, and was teloas demeanor ordered them oft the " proprietor. | | bad a narrow escape from being dashed July 6.1 and was released on July 1 n v - Record-Making Wenther, | pleces against the stone abutments of the | 1901 His term of twenty years s o under penalty of arrest. They retired to & |~ gan Francisco—The Orpheum theater, x | bridge. The passage through the rapids | sixteey years, cleven ly‘nmxl ¥ :m‘.... ; VUM GURIIEE, ARG pnared hm;‘,‘ N N ST gereny “Yes, this section has been smashing | oo "uir 1t took the barrel five minutes weeks to run. Hi ph \' |“ ;::l;x P them quarreling. Pranke appearcd to be| New Orleans—The Crescent theater, | records on hot weather for some time past. | 4 R ysical condition | JasE ’ P e i » ! to reach the eddy from the startin oint | reported to be excellent, excep s eye endeavoring to persuade his wife to re-| owned by J. D. Hopkins to reach the eddy from the starting p | re 1 to b llent, except his eyes There has been nothing experienced like it | . | and twenty minutes to out of it, but | He has always had trouble wi turn to Omaha and she refused. ThIs| Kansus City—The Orpheum theater, | here since the hot spell of 1874, when the (404 twenty minu i He bas alw had trouble with his « afternoon they went to Lake Contrary,|owned by elected to the office | 1t took only three and one-half minutes to | even before he was the Orpheum gompany spell' lasted from the gth ot July unthl | 2 HGE ST, FEER L, O e whifinoo). | ob s 4 took lunch at a restaurant and strolled | Omaha—The Creigaton-Orpheum theater, | 80me time in August and the mercury ran | P4 ':;m»‘\’ )lhnr‘ulyl: o n\'um b ot tate treasurer | about the lake front for some time. They | owned by the Orpheum company up to 102 and 103 for a number of days in | & distance of about o ki bl o B carmer also in the upper lake region and | of the country is now Japanese quarreled most of the time and their ac ? L05, | Auring the passage through the rapids was | Tndiana, October 25 foy B b -1 “Russ : " the barrel los t as taken from | Nebrask 1880 o New England,’ Marquette, Mich., report Russia, recognizing Japan's power, acts | yions attracted the attenion of mAny Vis- | night tc ik el That was the record for years and it took | the barrel lost sight of. It was ta | aska In 1880 and wettled in Holt ing today a record-breaking temperature L with studied conciliation, ostentatiously | jtors there. They strolled south about two | w. 0 & question asking if the union the water after It had eircled about in the | county, where he WS ONG It il B astacts o hot wind uly 26, 1894, to wipe It ! | engaged In farming. In of 102" degrees. Hope of rain today in the | communicating to the Japanese legation | miles and called at the home of a farmer | :u‘: :u"u et b 4 Al el L:'u hn‘n“;:mlx ’:Ji'.-»-J :lu- 2n...rmmm-ur r].-m. whirlpool for a few minutes. Graham was | 1834 he removed to Atkinson and started reglon affected by the heat was not ful (‘: r;un»mwnm of the Russian troops m‘“,,(, asked for a driuk of water, which | d tered 106. The highest polut reached dur- :thfly‘ bruised n;;flullllu- ’Mh'-\\~ ulle\'“»h Exchange bank He was connected only traces of it appearing in one | Monchuria end particularly If these affect | they recefve | ated spell was 103, but [ knees, but was otherwise unhurt | With that institution until it was close T Catvanolr et | e Kordn eoneior | they received IS GETTING RATES ALL FIXED | 1o b0 extne e o tae excen |[Eo' o Biats BAnking. barre o where about one-third of an lnch fell, and T e et nE - ion of two or threa davs, the mercury has | OHIO BRYAN MEN TO BOLT| In 1802 Bartiey was clected state trens in eastern Texas, where there were local | MOURN FOR THEIR PRESIDENT| Returning toward the lake Prange was| Merchants' Association of New York | pon lingering around the 100 degree point urer and he was re-clected to the office thunderstorms. The temperatures re- ity seen to grab his wife by her right arm Persundes Central Passenger Over in Illinols it has been up to 113, In [ Ten of Mix Democratie Followers In | (W0 years later. During both ported today show only slight variations | Body of the D, Chillan Mag- | and shake her severely. She broke away Men 16:80 ABEBSANTe, Missouri temperatures as high as 114 have from the extremes of the last few days PN AR from him and ran ahead. He overtook her been reported and down In Kansas it has and these are due to local conditions en- and the couple entered a grove. A few ——t gone to 100 and possibly a little higher. the Party. tirely. In Des Moines, la., today the tem State. minutes later Prange sent a bullet through| NEW YORK, July 14.--The Central Pas- [ “Out along the Pacific coast, however, shiisie perature was 100, in Kansas City 102 —— his wife's brains. He carefully arranged | senger assoclation, which has Jurfsdiction | they have been having an even tempera- CLEVELAND, July 14.—On July 21 fo Omaha 102, while at Davenport, Ta., SANTIAGO DE CHILI, vla Galveston, | her body and himself lay down to the|over the linés west of Buffalo and Pitts- ver, Colo.,, Little Rock, Ark., New July 14.—The body of President Errpzuriz, | left. He sent a bullet through the center | burg, its tcrritcry extending to the Mis o A 1 wel leans, North Platte, Neb Paul & who died Friday, was brought to this city [ of his own forehead and almost instantly | sissippl river and as far south as the Ohlo sl laad R Vicksburg, Miss., it was 96 or higher. today and received with solemn public | became a corpse. river, including the cities of Chic KANSAS CITY, July 14.—No rellef came | ceremonlal, no fewer than 100,000 people Prange carried in his pockets a number| St. Louls, has, at the request of the Mer- | diate cause for alarm for the crops In Ne- toduy from the heat. It was a repetition of | participating in the procession and as | of his own business cards, but caretully de- | chants' assoclation of thls city, agreed to | braska as a rule. Of course there are ca the past two weeks, with reports from|spectators. It will lio in the hall of the | stroyed them. He was about 45 years of [ concur in rates which may be made from | plaints from some polnts in the state, but many places in western Missouri, Kansas | Chamber of Deputies until Tuesday, when | age and his wife about 3. It was learned | the territory of the Southwestern Passen- | that js always the case, no matter how!a new party should enter the field of Ohfo | been lost through the failure of the Caplial and the territories of temperatures over | the interment will take place tonight that when Mrs. Prange came to this | Ber bureau. favorable the conditions generally through | politics. National bank. The legislature passed an the 100 mark. At most places the sun| All the theaters are closed and the oc- | oity several days ago she went to the home| This last-named assoclation has juris- | the state. During the many vears I have| The attendance at the conference was|act authorizing Bartley to draw such shone mercilessly with not even a fiiful | Chslon Is one of general mourning of Ada Oakley, the keeper of a resort on | diction over the lines in Texas, Indfan Ter- | been connccted with the weather service|larger and represented a greater area in | WAFTant. April 10, 1895, he drew the war cloud to break its rays nor a slight breeze. SRR Main street. whom she had known in|ritory and Oklahoma. Application was | here 1 do not belleve there has been one In | the state than was expected by those who | Fant, but made It payable to himself per In Kansas City last night proved more MINISTER CONGER TO LEAVE | omuba when both were school girls. It was| made to it some time ago for the usual| which complaints did not come from some called the meeting #onally, rather than to Joseph 8. Bartley, bearable, a breeze from the north allevi- - also lcarned tonight that Prange visited | Tates from its territory, but no action | points in the state of damage to crops from| A formal statement of principles was sub- | State treasurer. ating the condition, but a day of intense | Yoted Towan Arrives at Francineo | Kansas Clty last week, searching for his| could be taken until the intervening lines|tne heat. Corn in Nebraska is 1arge| mitted to the conference and was adopted This warrant was brought to Omaha by heat followed. on His Way to His Station wife. fn the central west had anunounced theif | onough to shade the ground and thus retain|This will be printed and sent throughout | Bartiey, who negotiated its sale through tho Tonight there is a prospect of rain in in China. Prange's History in Omaha. willingness to concur in the rates which | (he mofsture. On the other hand, it 18 not| (he state to those who are known to be| Omaha Natlonal bauk. The bank ofclals Oklahoma, but there are no indications of 4 Rovhre: ! B Wad 106 B4 3 might be made. The trunk lines having | 4o far advanced to be most susceptible to! faithful to the Nebraskan A convention | 5aY that Bartley ordered the proceeds of change In any other part of the southw: el : iwiserat th l“{f yoinen o8 Omaner| Jurisdiction east of Buff+)o and PIttsburg | damage from heat. None of 1t'has tasseled. | was decided upon to be held at the Great | !hie warrant placed to his personal credit With 0 reltof in alght the fears for the | | SAN FRANCIS (n‘, July Sy H. Covger, | twice at i l'ln'ujxrr-nt ln| m’!hl- had aiready agreed 0 coueur It is after corn has tasseled that it Is most| Southern hotel on the last day of July. To| 3¢fore Bartiey went out of office, January crops that have been expressed are fast| (O "n' 'l" ““:“_;Y W\ hlnn..hl« ar- o lG"ll'! ' "hfl ‘1“0. Gh'flvozl "]":1 The Southwestern Passenger bureau will | aaqily affected by heat, 8o that what was|(his convention may come all those who |8 1897, he drew a check on the general fund Decoming realities and the scarcity ot | Fived. emroute to Pekin. Minister Canger | 1888 to 1891, when he quit Omaha and wen! some time ago a cause of complaint, the sign their names to tne declaration of prin- | Of the state for $201,884.05, the amount ofe 3 3 | begin its July meeting at Glenwood Springs, SAter and generally dry condition make will sall next Wednesday on the steamer | to California. He returned to Omaha in (glo., tomorrow. C. M. Pratt, chairman backwardness of the crop, is now a decided | ofples. the warrant and Interest which had advantage. crued R o i1 vsat Meviuta Tosis. | NiEDOR Mary. 1898 ond was employed as head waiter at| of that bureau, has been notified by wire What the real damage to corn, the crop| Baden-Powell fo Go to England, Maurer's during the two expositions. Later|of the action of the Central Passenger | .jusi now I should say that there s no STARTED BY INCENDIARIES | 1o defense of his action Bartley insisted most affected, will be 1s problematical, 2 i i i % he made an effort to secure a lease of the| aggoclation in agreeing to concur in dates immediate cause for apprehension in Ne- that he used $164,000 of the money derived but It s probably safe to say that halt l,L”_']‘l““:- ,r-'"‘-“ 15.—General ~ Baden- | Schiltz hotel, but the party upon whom he|and rates. He has been asked to take the | hryska, but one cannot tell how long the it g g from the warrant In payment for Otoe and 1s short in almost every direction and the [ SRR FHCTRCED DRGIAN 4 g s | tion of Nebraska corn, however, it is hard bles Atire, By | Bducational Lands and Funds instructed o South Africa have ordered him | Merchants' hotel and frustrated his plans. b shipments of cattle and hogs to this mar-| ., yoye complete rest and proceed to En- | When Mr. Buthorn took possession ot the| FOG TIES UP NEW YORK HARBOR | to Kill and docs not yield to heat until the bim to buy with money from the permanent ket to save them must continue. In Kan- | 0 14 TN D puhoru) took poseshlon 1c tha L FontiaFuitolldienrt school fund. Attorneys for the defense in sas Clty today the government thermom- - a '"m"“‘”_ b":"m he' eniiof m_‘:_: months | FETFY Boats Feel Their Way Through irain men say that in the northern part! gin FRANCISCO, July 14.—A series of [ S18tcd that Bartley paid for these bonds eter reached 102 and at Maryville, Kan., s Will Not Meet. WAL \ahareatiead i Mr. Buthoin avd He the Narrows with Greste of the state and the extreme west the cOTn|grug early this morning indicates that in- | With money from his own personal bank ac corded ;i 00 yesterday ’ g B . - J b > stand te vs of exist cather, but | b y b A | count and thus refunded the e o 104 was "“‘"“ 4 *““:““'“‘ N Mary. | LONDON, July 15.—“King Edward, Em- |found that he was not a success. Since est Difculty. will stand ten days of ex! I:’f‘f’ NERLhO lh“ | cendiarles were at work. Stables were made | TV 80 FEUE Te MECe 1 '; Ko Sl There were three prostratfons ¥* | peror Nicholas and Emperor Willlam |then Prange has been selling cigars on down In the Republican valley country they | o special mark of thelr torches. Twenty | B ords wed, however, that ville. will not meet at the review at Mayence | commission for the A. J. Sherret company| NEW YORK Juie 14 are beginning to feel the need of rain|y . . were burned to death. The fires oc- | the permanent school fund was reduced in Weather Report fr neotn, about August 15.” ® he Be St ) A i NEW YORK, July 14.—Fog tied up the | haaly, and the same condition prevails| wor e amaral melshborhood, | the amount the treasurer paid for the i & ays the Berlin cor- [and Blatz beer for Tom Foley. Prap ey e st . r curred in the wame general neighborhood, | ) LINCOLN, Neb., July 14.—Ncbraska again | respondent of the Standard. but they will | No one In Omaha knows Just when | conow Taland had to feo! their way througn | “/OM% the southern tler of counties. COrh I8| near Larkin street. At midnight the stable | COURLY bonds. suffered from the heat today. The highest | exchange visits at Darmstadt. Prange went to St. Joseph. £d Maurer [ (i it One of these hents. whion 1o | BOC #0 #ood this year in the ever frultful| o¢ (o San Mateo Dairy company on Turk Convicted in Douglas County. AADRTatEe tOBUTOn by the weather burssy Ex-Premier Criapl Better, says that Prange was at his place last N e, p southeast corner of the state as In the| iroeq and Van Ness avenue was discovered Pler 1, North river, at 2:45 p. m., did not ally less-favored localitics of the west- was 102 degrees at 4:30, but the thermome- Monday or Tuesday ovening. Maurer in- B L el usually less-fa to be burning. The frame building with its | qy o'oY BA8 GO0 . ters in the business district recorded 100 NAPLES, July 14.—The condition of {vitea him to take a glass of beer and | c2CD Coney lsland until 6:15 p. m. On|gerp part of the state. e case was tried In Dougias county dur- AL contents was destroyed. Twelve horses per- | | 1 FHe bt d Lo . The mean temperature of the day was 90| Signor Francesco Crispl, who last Monday | when Prange intimated that he aid not :"‘"“'";.“" Narsow the pilgtvung the Light Loeal Rains Reported ished. While the firemen were at work an ":’:‘ kJ,:”‘ LR LR R G AG degrees, the Nighest of the year. The re- | suered an apoplectic solzure which 10 | care for any Insisted on his drinking with | fof *0 (BIck that he declded 1t would be i alarm was turned in from a stable on Eills ports show that no rain has falien in the| view of his advanced age caused con- | hym Prange did so, with the remark that | y.¥ 0 SHemMPL o sieam 4 POUER ""1 SI" The most encouraging bit of weather news | strect, three blocks away. The six horses state during the last twenty-four hours, siderable anxiety, I8 now much improved. | ¢ wag pobably the last drink they would | pit PPRE RS A CIFCR ARd, Tetaried A1 | that has floated into town for several days|in the stable were rescucd with difficul y. Reports that reach Lincoln tonight indl- ReaiG A dhiais, ever enjoy together. Were mystified by this movement. the | Was (hat received last evening telllng of a|Shortly after 2 o'clock the stable of the cate that rain failing within two days will 3 4 TtHIs Bald) by’ onellot' the! smployest o] IO SIRRESHORTEARE OISR ! nly by | Hhower at Fremont that got up steam|Signal Transfer company on Larkin strect yet save the corn crop. The wind shiftea| LONDON, July 15.—~Emperor Nicholas, | yaurer's place that he had heard that | goiverient was repeated twice and only DY | chough to burn a barn with a stroke of between Rush and Sutter. caught fire. There to the southeast this evening and the at- | According to a dispatch from St Peters- | prange's wite had gone to St. Joseph | 10/OWIE @ tug throug he NATows |yionining. The weather burcau reports re- | were fitty head of horses in the stable mosphere 18 somewhat cooler. burg, has issued an order that 308,500 men | gome time ago, but he knew nothing fur- [ {ieC\" i Island. The presence of the | . i00) jagt evening showed that a trace of | Eight of them were burned to death, No Crop Near St Joweph. shall be recruited for the Russian army | (her. Mr. Buthorn says that they were a | .8 (ONIBht ave rise to long stories that fa0n Had' tastt a&iied & B Ll Dusine Stelger, Hugo Wahlers, Benjamin Trumbull, . s s b I ra q be ved Louts. John W. Stiles, John A, Finch, C. A. Rob- a1 JOSKPH. July 14.~The long contins |0 B8YY Quring the preasnt year. queer couple in their relations, as the | (%0 €Xcursion boats had gone down with . ¢ Ay FA0i Gias Rl & e e T 8 SHOIE PENIDEh 58 ainy | Al on hostd, When sitted these stories | the 48 ':‘""’ e “"2?' :” . '"r'\."‘;'v" 4 COMING FETE AT NEWPORT |erts. #red ¢ Anthony, Charies A. Thomy- ued drouth has resulted in the entire ruin TSR T T ey T ATy (0m ANE RESUARS | develonsd:ihe taot that the'Julls; piviag | SUARISE 180 1DAD SbBMAFG A and - sett &nd Henry A. Homan. of the corn and oats crop iu this section - n California or elsewhere. Ed Maurer| o0 “canariie and Rockaway, had gong | "OMEtRINE over a third of an inch at Gal-| yarahal Joe Wheeler Invites Mi-| The trial began June S. A day later ; D e need 10| BERLIN, July 14.—The emigration from | recalls that onco while In his employ | > BArS ¥, o veston, Tex., showing that the fountains of PEARHe M LI, ¥ Int of the country. Corn bas comme Germany by way of Hamburg and Bremen | Prange told him that his wite had at- | “*hore In Carnarsic bay. but was floated | o oo veny have not gone wholly dry and $ary Qegaulsationy.jo X YA ntaa Fi TN 48 Ne g B tassel only o fow foet high and 10 aWOUL' | during the firat six months of this year | tempted sulclde by taking polson. None | %%/ In two hours. No one was hurt.| il oving the startling theory of the Kan- Prescnt, e ar Wil KBt ALY ieia (A shalalh. would aon b o b frops | Tetched 112,065, as aguinat 117.030 {or the | of the acquaintances of Prange who were Another rumor was that the blg exeur-| .. city man who asserted that it would be e R L S O] t cereal. The fruit and vegetable crops | Loit! 4 d sion st jene n A — o s admission of guilt created a -:: Firt complete failures eRcavie crens | corresponding period of last year. consulted knew much about Mrs, Prange | 100 stedmer General Slocum, with sev-| 0 ocgibio for it to rain until the weather| NEWPORT, R. 1., July 14.—General Jo B - moderated, as the terrific heat would vapor- | seph Wheeler, mars OEAl hundhed! naneentles Chonvd lad /xtas great sensation and it was thousht that or her antecedents. et . DAL SO0 0 0 5 er persons ! 1 tures have dried up so that the hurmn-n; Melha Cannot Sing. dowy o Nertan's point, _ Investigation'| Liotnrs@dn e tArEi0e hest WaUIE vhpors | eph Whetler, mars ||\‘r’ll':l\nr“n;“:v:‘nrplo u:lli‘ xr”xln rl u:l: \\n‘\m: be implic ;{v\.-y: )m the are paying enormous prices for hay anc T e showed this st so from the accident | ™ could day, has sent to Governor Crane of Massa- | attempted jury bribery, but Wright re- feed.” Today was clent and hot with no| HONDON. July 15.—Mme. Moiba is wut-| TO ARISE AND SMITE CHURCH | {700 (n ot hrote from the sectdent | o ground. chusetts a request that the Eighth and |fused to difclose any information concern- reliet apparently in sight. Unless rain | fering from an attack of laryngitls and r— R e WAHDI CRRAREIING DAY NG Ninth Massachusetts regiments be eent | Ing the persons who employed him, her physiclans have ordered her not to sing | Mexican Students Appeal to All | O Cpum was detained down the paigON CASE IS REVIEWED |here on the fete day to take ti comes this week wheat, which was wn | jeF PRVERIERS BOVE BEACEEL B My g g bay by the fog. e ay ! part In Bantentih Ay Jodes Bakes abundant crop, will have to be substituted 8 ountrymen in Manifesto Againat :hp v:\-rcln« fl»n:rn:’ Wheeler {5 anxlous i Vst for even the coarser and cheaper kinds 5 9 Roman Catholics, Mra. Botkin's Attorneys Will Carry |for the presence of these regiments, they he case was tried before Judge Baker oF asd. Another Carnenie Library, TRAGEDY AT SAVANNAH 1616 s Tnited Hluiss having served in the Santlago campaign with [ 0f the dlstrict court. After being out . LONDON, July 16.—Andrew Carnegie has e — him. Thers will be 3,000 men in line seventeen hours the Jury brought in a ver- 4 e T R ) ) . A A P ; & i ) e 3,000 men in line, men ght (0 a ver ¥ °“"" f' o Vnehonges { offered £10,000 for the erection of a free . h’lE‘z(l;:‘\ an‘n} d\flinl: l::;:d:‘:\x:!“l(nhy Six Hebrew Plenickers Are Drowned Court, from the Atlantic squadron, naval appren- !dlet against the defendant. Nine of the "‘“‘ ‘I‘:;:'\‘l"')"z; ‘:: -""""‘:l;':r"‘?“!'m"‘"‘ public library in Annen, Scotland. jiaeg & ‘.‘":im oy vn:. ”m“_‘m [""":" While Bathing in the tices and local militia. Military organiza- | UT0rs were for conviction from the first e »l h da successiol a e er- — e - " e e SAN P ST . . " n ol ea ol @nd the other three hung out Chris B 00 A el milene G b hosed of educated you f the coun- Sarf, SAN FRANCISCO, July 14.—The attor-|tlons from other nearby states will be e 100 wnover. There are vo | ANOTHER FALLS FROM WINDOW e ot e e o Tk attion on neys of Mrs. Cordella Botkin, who has |asked to be present. Secretary Root and | was the last Juror to he won over s of relie! soatil) | try o : 2 — Ak R S e |'Sacratary. Thbn D Loak _ -l ority. A verdiet was returned ARDMORE, 1. T., July 14.—Reports from | Well Kno ® Man of Louis. |church matters. The governmenf will be AVANNAH, . July 14.—Six persons | DOTD €7D ,1' ",1“,.”.‘.‘“ L4 ”; N"",.!" to :,.-“fr‘..,.‘;..“ P- Juan hateshoon ‘iaviien 22 and on June 25 Judge Benjamin the cotton belt show that cotton is belng St e e 4 asked to confiscate all property found to | were drowned while surf buthing at a pienic | §re™®) €OUrt on the '";'“", nardening L d 3. Baker sentenced the exetraagiran. to tnjured by the drouth that has prevailed . bo held by the clergy of thelr agents, the | of the Hebrew Gamahl-Hasad at Daufuskie | non Oof B CURURE 80 TRIGRArs 858\ net eBRATE. PERRY’S VISIT | twenty vears' tmprisonment at hard labor. o Chickasaw Nation for the past five Far, proceeds to be applied to the payment of [ beach this afternoon. The aead B - Immediately after the ennouncemmt of weeks. Unless rain falls within the mext| the national debt MRS, ABE DICKSTEIN B Oy ahia bt for | Amarienn ai8 Jammnsis Apaakays|iDP Yordls Judgs BaMAr feiessed Bavilepts few days crops will be cut short. About| LOUISVILLE, Ky.. July 14.—Stewart| The students call on all Mexicans to| ANNIE KRONSTADT, aged 10 o Ll s RIS Saom o 8 it W bond for his appearance In court and re 60 per cent of the corn crop has already | Leathers, one of the best known young|Arise and smite the church and declare| IDA KRONSTADT, aged 17 WL of habeas corpus. It I8 expected ;fl-"’, Pwell on Friendly Relations manded the defaulter to jall been ruined. There will be no marketable | men in Loulsville and a son of Captain | they will ralse the standard of revolt| LEAH SILVERSTEIN, aged 17, S Ant 04 DAk wililhi parciadia thstUmiian Hatoeen FroNat Notins lor Oev (HMA ware stemuied corn. The crop of other grains is a total | John H. Leathers, fell from a third-story | Against the church above the sepulcher | ANNIE HOROWITZ, aged 13 SYRIL 10 DASS Y. 08 OATEIRG “»’\ o nited = SOl AR ALY NS MO oxame failure. window of his father's residence on Ormsby | of Juarez and will continue the anti-cler- | [SAAC ZACHT, aged 22 rh‘.-'\hs' ~v’||‘yl|'1::.. n.nur“ffl' ;" ‘;“ y‘ a5 FERR YOKOHAMA, July 14.—The ccremony of | “OUrt. The lower court was sustained by ST. PAUL, July 14.—The heat record was [ Avenue at 11 o'clock tonight, breaking his | fcal movement fnitlated in the most en-| A strong southeast wind was blowing and | 1o (B¢ Pettlon for w writ of hubeas corpus | oy ™0 ribama the monument 1o | the higher court in a decision handed down equaied. today by tho Eovernment ther.| Jawbone, risht wrist and hip and rustain. | ghtened nations of the globe the tide was at flood. Fifty yards off shore| G ¥ BOIMe on the question et durls: | ooppaniorate the landing there of Com. | JaDATy 6, 185 Attorneys for the de mometer, the maximum beink 95. There was | 1€ futernal injuries, Physiclans are un- | There are fears of u rencwal of the antl- | is a shoal and between the shoal and the | Thogoh W1 be rleed. Wirst, that 0| oog0n perry July 1y 1863, was pertormed | fendant were afterward allowed to sub- & hot breeze from the south blowing most | @ble to say whether Mr. Leathers' injuries | clerical dicturbances on the w_n inst., | shore Is a slulce. The party was hathing or tha mai) Shiat e mlm. ”" “';_ | today by Rear Admiral Rodgers, commagd- | Mt additional argument, but without of the day, which greatly added to the dis- | are fatal \:‘I\dn':\l ,“ ](l‘x:-" ..m;_\\‘». ary xlyv |r.-«m-‘m‘ the shoal, but finding the t1de getting rather | i WY TG SR s, Deane. was | 106 the United States visiting squadron. | 8vail. Bartley |""““"“" in the Douglas comfort. The hot wave continues through J b's des oduy it 1s announced | high, the bathers concluded to go nearer e e L My po | Viscount Katsura, the Japanese premier, | €OUnty jall until July 6, 1898, when he was Ut Minnesots and the Dakotas, Huron re-| CLEVELAND LUMBER BURNS|:'hnvhx‘-\«-ry‘\\nrknmn‘;ahy soniaty Ll B0 [ Rhene: AL et Lt onbh. vt an ‘h""‘vl’le(l‘;“l:“\“rl!]l::n L.} Ix’x‘.’.h :"u‘l:m'l n:yrn::\‘l n’m‘;"-‘r;. delivered the memorial address and a num. | taken to Lincoln penitentlary by Sheriff porting 102 and Sloux Falls 100. At the lat- g filn. b Pprocession. Some portions of the | selves in the sluice, over thelr heads, with f {po' Fidee 0 ber of other Japanese officlals of high rank | McDonald, ter place a child went to sleep n the sun Trestle Destroyed, | manifesto are #o vlolent that the news-|big waves pounding and a sweeping current | were prosent. Three American and five Publi and died from (he heat. New Ulm, Minn,, n Getting papers huve retused (o print them runaing. Of twelve who started across tho | Japanese warships salut Various | Teports o temperature of 104, with & number b a .nrl:;:“:nv;zn::::'\ !\‘;-':;m:‘vn(‘hll; 1I:“n|r.‘l‘| n"i: T PP e G o Mra: Tlokstolatt :mw]mn \.{n.‘ / m lm- by Americans and .*Hllnu“l‘\lvn'Timp 'n:‘ sentiment y.l of prostrations 0 Sha o ) and the women's | pody was found floating In the surf an hour apanese, all dwelling on the close rola- | 88rTds the actlon of Governor Savage in Prof. W. M. Hayes of the State agricul- S e - socleties under his direction have issued | atiar (ha tragedy, but the others were swep: STABLE BOY MADE DESPERATE | tions between the two powers paroling Bartley were scoured yesterdoy tural experimental farm reports that the| , CYEVELAND, 0. July 14.—Fire tonight | an address declaring full beliet in his in- | ou¢ 1o sen | S They follow thus P | destroyed $80,000 worth of lumber belong- | tegrity. l Dot wave is dolng a great deal of damage | (" ol S wmin and Lumtor —_— Killa a Young Girl at Newton, Kan-| MEMBER OF DALTON GANG| John L. Webster—I do not know the pro. employed In industrial com Barrel —— a year for a nuthber of years to aid Lieu- ‘ cide { tenant Peary. The Erlk carries a crew Report from Far South Says Cotton I8 ' of hardy Newfoundlanders Sagnelty of the Co orn Crop Burne WASHINGTON, July 14 ~Reports to the | Watehing By Wove ot woather bureau show that the hot weather stans continued today fn uincteen states and gerritories of the great corn belt, the Ohio valley and varlous portions of the south. | ik There soems to be no immediate evidence [ LONDON, July 15.—Dr. Morrison, wir- of abatement, except in the south and|Ing to the Times from Seoul, Korea, July southwest, where local thunderstorms may | 10, says ‘ Along Korean Border, g sars and one was taken from the jall to the penitentiaby on Sause some modergtion. The states affected | “The Japanese are well maintaining their nclude Indlana, 1llinols, Wisconsin, Min- [ position In Korea, cting cautlously, yet nesota, lowa, Missourl, Kenitoky, Tennes- [ watching with unceasing vigilance every soe, Alabama, Mississippl, Louisiana, Ar- [movement of Russia and particularly along Xansas, Oklaboma, Kansas, Nebraska, | the Korean frontier. They are increasing South Dakota, North Dakuta, Colorado and | in number constantly throughout the penin- | Michigan. It has - become considerably |sula and one-nineteenth of the shipping I e | Denfal of u vigorous sort was given to- | Succession and one day it touched 1558, He removed to 3 terms the SIRAT Dadie s apiie state's money was scattered among banks | Which were favorites with the treasurer | 8ud was not regularly accounted for. When {he went out of offce there was ahout Ohio | $500,000 worth of state funds which could ture averaging around in the 50s and 60s. democrats who believe in Bryan and the s ‘w-' be satisfactorlly accounted for. sues which he represents, which the rec nt | democratic convention ignored, will as- | Al 1 do not think there 1s any imme-|semble in Columbus and make up a state | Specitic Charge of Emberslement, Bartley was charged with embezzling ticket. Ten men met this morning in a | $180.101.75, the proceeds of a warrant drawn downtown office buillding in this city and inst the state's general fund to reim decldcd that a bolt should be made and that se the sinking fund for money that had a ac- Bartley was convicted of embezzlement. Attorney General C. J. Smyth and H. }. Baldrige, attorney for Douglas ' county prosccuted the case. T. J. Mahoney of Omaha and C. 0. Whedon of Lincoln were Bartley’s attorneys. The jury which found Bariley guilty was made up as follows: A P. Fry, J. V. Shipley, G. R. Wahlgren, Chris trial of an accused person except in the state where the crime was actually committed Sentiment on Parole. to wheat In southern Minnesota and that lng to 11 B e sus, Then Shoots Himaelf vislons of the parole, but I signed an a chinchbugs ar numerous and are con ‘“\”l\"\‘nfi\..-nnx & Lake Erie trestle in the YOUNGER BROTHERS ARE OUT ROCHE R, N. Y., July 14~The close Becaune of Love, toar IAL6A tn Ok ":1”\"::'- |'“‘r..]”".-.p h.}:"u]::lv‘l;:I;:lxl(l.'llx |)A"“: .’.T.:‘x:‘ tributing to the destruction. He belleves| yoipiiy of (ne blaze was burned and trains | Notorious Bank Robbers at Last D S iant o taa Tal¥arentiat Shotinasien | — Safoxiog frem » D e avad s ML e tuat bul @ emall crop will be harvested 10| on that road will enter this city on the Joy Full Freedom After Long ushered 10 by mestings In several churches. | KANSAS CITY, July 14 —A special to the Wound. been made to suffer o & great extent for 148 aaghion. tracks ot the Valley road 1 This evening o mass moeeting was held In| mpes from- Newton, Kan., says: Last il the shortcomings of other people and it Okl n Expects Hain, mprisonment, the Lyceum theater. Rev. M D, Shut i e k IT———— D. D of Minneapolis delivered an ude night Miss Oma Beers, the 15-year-old [ ARDMORE, I T, July 14.-—Scar-Face | was Bartley's kencrous nature that induced EL RENO, Ok, July 14.~The trains to- . —. on “imiversallem In Modein Though .| daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Beers,|Jim, alleged to be a member of the Dalton | him to yleld to the solicitations of friends day brought in moderate crowds for regis- | INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., July 14.—OMmeclal [ S8T. PAUL, July 14.—Coleman and James | Rov. G Lo Perrin, D 1y of Boston, enoke | wag shot and killed by Herbert Shacklett, | gank of outlaws, wae located last uight | when, perha \o should not have done tration. There are probably 10,000 people | announcements were sent out from hers | Younger, wko were granted a conditional | fhy. o ar*ajism In Modern {4 | a_stable boy formerly i the family's em. | in a secluded spot twenty miles east of | so. In short, that he had beos wore Bere. Everything is quiet and orderly and | today for the National Socialist Unity con- | PATole by the Board of Pardons on Wednes- | Mass. closed with an address Thé | ploy, who afterward shot himself through | here, suffering from a hullet wound iuned against than sinnir every man is comfortably situated, The | vention to bé held at Masonic hall in this | day last, were released from the still- [ Rellglon of 4 Man b the heart. Shacklett became fascinated | week at Sulphur he had a desperate fight | i Pischer—In the light of (he fact temperature hers todiy was around the | lty, July 2. The convention will repre- [ Water penitentiary at 10 o'clock this morn R g T P with the young woman, who did not in| with deputy United States marshals and | that Bartley fs almost biind; that he Las 100 point, but no serious inconvenfence | sent all branches and locals affilfated with | Ing. For the present they will make their| """ ! g any way return bis infatuation. The bodies | was wounded, but escaped. The marshals | served several years for the crim was experlenced by the homeseekers. Io- | the Soclal demacratic parties with head- | home In Stillwater and it has not yet been | \CANTON, O, duly 1.=President and Mrs. | were found today in the roadside threa |had a narrow escape. Today United States | hus heen a model prisoner, connceted with dications point to rain during the night Quarters respectively at Chicago and [ decided where they will be employed. The | most of the day in the house or on the | miles west of Newton. The girl had been | Marshal Hammer several deputics | the fact of the pardon of Henry Bolln MUNCIE, Ind., July 14.~The continued | ringfleld, Mass., the sections of soclalist | men spent their first day of freedom upon front porch. During the early mornii | shot four times and (no surroundings In- | started for the scene. Scar-Face says he | the parole may be all right, but on the »w“‘"“ed Sl ) ol’ x‘l!:l':ll:';‘::l‘: the varlous organizations :h:-rumbnu excurslon up the 8t. Croix | ey fook a duive The pres (i:‘[uw'm dicated that she had made a terrible strug- | will not be taken allve. He s wanted | other hand I am opposed to turning mea o church for morning servic | gle for ber lite. | tor many crimes, out of the penlicntiary throigh the avenus

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