Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
"HE OMAHA DAILY BEE. — - - — - FSTARLISHED JUNE 19, 1871, OMAHA, MO MORNING, JULY 15 1901, SINGLE COPrPY FIVE CENTS, fi‘m STATES ROAST!S™AT our 1o Fino PeaRY OMAHA MAN'S DUAL KILLING | THEATER TRUST THE LATEST|NOTHING BUT HEAT IN SIGHT|CONDITION OF THE WeATHER| j0F BARTLEY'S DEED | Expedition on ¢ Steamer Erik All the Orphenm Clrenit with Wa Forecast for Nebraska—=Ialr and Cont | | —_— Sal'a North to Al the ' Other Vaudevilie 1 . 0 € Omahn Yesterdus Gevernment Rp-ris Eleven Bweltering in Explorers. Rebert Prange fhoots Wife golf rporvate. Weathor Man Wolsh Bees No Sign of e Heus, bes { ¥ at Bt Joo iy Immed ate Relist . ' i SR G R IR L e tke Poiliag Sun, HALIFAX, N. 8. July 14 " - prre CHICAGO, July 14.—The Tri v of Nebraska bt A0 A LELLEAL F CORN then at ¢ ! il {He GHISE vEWAWVIIlE theafers between Ch ‘ HIS SHORTAGE WAS HALF A MILLION Ko the Pacific coast are about to — . ! be mer i single property he | Must #h'p Oattle to Market Booa I Wbofit tKees woslk i . NS GRReRa N IR t i 1 il B uyl:l K/ T Itons of Gro : State Funds Di | Getting Foarcs tions It will mal st » bines aie being used to br hout the| Favor the Ntapte e Ly PR Y THeHeARANL T ! HHiNation, Stock 18 G tew ! Obvin THROUGH NIAGARA RAPIDS Terms as Treasurer, he Frik took 0 tens of coal will be 18w to the lndivid Damage from > R Carlisle D, Gra m Makes the Perilous FRAID OF FIREY sloned for at least a year. The mem proprietors in amounts proportiona SO VARIOUS CITIES ARE AFRAID !‘ Jt the Peary Arctic elub, who went | the valuation placed ullbn the respective | e voyage i CONVICTED ONLY AFTER A LONG TRIAL k. | ot teamer, are Dr. F. A. Cook, sur- | ST JOSEPH, Mo, July 1-=(Specitl Tel-| (heaters. Papers of incorporation will be | o " i i i otal Failure | ®oon of the expedition; Herbert Stone and | esram.)—R, Prange, whose business Cards gy ynger the aws of fllinc The larg Of course such reports as we receive " " Fruit and Vogetable Crops ;"‘ Herbert Perri, both of Brooklyn; C. F.|repicsent him to have beeu manager of the | oy intorests involved in the coulition are | O Sundays are very meager and I nave nos| 0 00 o0y T Y., July 14— Every Logal Brvedint Extaveind to fave and Pastares Dried Up. Wikoff and L. C. Benedict of Ith nd | Schlitz hotel, Omaha, and manager of the | o FOERT Lt and Castle theaters of | %€ even them,” sald Forecaster Welsh a NIAGARA 8, N Y., July . P L. 0. Whitniey Obiireh of Bigin, fil, | Schlits Brewery agency at that point, murs | oy i L heaters of | ) T youl office of the weather bureau. | About 3,000 persons saw Carlisle D. Graham Him frem Pevitentiary. =3 Dr. Cook sald that fourteen Amerlcan|dered his wife near Lake Contrary late Chicago wnd of the theators of the OrpheUIN ¢y poue grgt having se.n them I would not | make his fifth successtul voyage through | - ha irteen Ameriean circult of the west. The only vaudeville 5 Y his atter. WHEAT WILL HAVE TO BE USED AS FEED | gentiemen have agreed to contribute $1,000 | this afternoon and then committed sul undertake to hazard a forecast as to proba- | the whirlpool rapids in a barrel this ufte manager in a city as far east as Chicago |yt 1 G KGRI R K Pl dRe | noon, | The tarrel is of locust wood. oval | PUBLIC SENTIMENT CONCERNING PAROLE [ from the reports received during the weck |.shaped, except that It bas a flat head; | I do not see any cause for immediate hope | fs about five feet long, nineteen inches in |of relief from the existing state of diameter at the foot and twenty-six inches vernor's Action 1 nted by Citirens ]“.n:h.-r The same torrid condition pre- | at the head. With its 100 pounds of bal Who MHold \..\is; lllrnuh':m‘m the 1“1‘ | = .u”mr \n;' 1«-.‘ n'u.ma‘v !v-\»' l\"l'"“;l‘“ 'f""' "]‘"' )i Sagnelty of (he Conrne v o because o us the mountains, and it 18 extending cast- | made from the Maid o ¢ land JAPANESE REMAIN O | e amsaatite aB(ik” na vualiy | "2oatione are w folicws { Ward, so that there appears to be o im- | low the fulls He Man IN | LR R t | Chicago—The Chicago opera house, the| medlate prospect of a change. It has| The barrel was caught In an eddy and ‘ - e e e Td ey iy | e reached the Ohfo valley and 1s moving | cipcled about a liitle WASHINGTON, July 14.~Reports to the Move of the during the afternoon and agatn later in the (o700l ROREE N T« bl b LRI AT G G G B o Weathur Bubshs anaw (it the Hot Weatfe & Korean evening theater, owned by J. D. Hopkins, and, in- | recently experienced in the eastern cities continued today n nineteen states and Prange was drinking late in the day and | giroctly, the Masonic Temple roof theater, | are likely to be repeated unless local | territories of the great corn belt, the Ohio at a late bour last night Patrolmen Kinne- | pane by J. 1. Murdock, conditions come to their relief. As far as valley and various portions of the south. | . man and Brown stopped a hack containing | = Cincinnati—Heuck's opera house and the | local conditions at Omaha are concerned 1 | There scems to be no immediate evidence LONDON, July 1 Dr. Morrison, wir-|the couple and because of thelr nOISY [ \walnut Street theater, M. C. Anderson, | seo no change from the Past svearet G of abatement, except in the south and |Ing to the Timew from Seoul, Korea, July | domeanor ordered them off the streels | proprietor 3 where local thunderstorms may | 10, say [ | a year for a nuhber of years to aid Lieu- | cide |to be a party to the arrangement is M tenant Peary. The Erlk carries a crew | He made careful preparations for the | o' “Anjareon” of Cinclonati, controlling Report from Far South Says Cotton I8 [ of hardy Newfoundlanders, used to the | erime by destroying everything about his | pera house and the Walnut Street | | " Heing Injured by Drouth that fee. There was a large crowd at the dock | clothing that would lead to his identity in that efty. Hax Prevalled=Most of 1o bid farewell and success to the ex twelve theaters which will become he property of the combine and their | Prange came to this city yesterday morn- | qpo Variousty as to t | | plorers | ing from Omaha to look for his wite, who Corn Burn; theater and the Haymarket thea above the Cantl lever bridge for a quarter of an hour. The | Joseph 8. Bartley, who has stronger current in the middle of the | parol crnor Savage, was confined stream dnally jerked it out of the eddy | in tb tlary three years and one into the foaming waters of the rapids. | week 1 Yo Wad - tidwn: trom the Passing under the second bridge the barrel | Douglas county jall to the penitentiaby on bad a narrow escape from being dashed 10| July 6, 180§ was released on July 1 Record-Making Wenther, pleces against the stone abutments of the | 1901, His term of twenty years still had bridge. The passage through the raplds | sixteey years, cleven months and threc was swift. It took the harrel five minutes weeks to run. His physical condition to reach the eddy from the starting peint | reported to bo excellent, excopt his eyes and twenty minutes to get out of it, but | He has always had trouble with his oye and [ under penalty of arrest. They retired 10 & [ San Francisco—The Orpheum theater, tause some moderation. The states affected The Japancse are well maintaining thelr | hotel and during the uight guests heard [ owned by the Orpheum cor “Yes, this section has been smashing tnclude Indiana, llinols, Wisconsin, Miu- | position In Korea, cting cautiously, yet 1 quarreling. Pranke appearcd to be| New Orloans—The Crescent theater, | records on hot weather for some time past nesota, fowa, Missourt, Kenzucky, Tennes yatching with un PAsing vigllance exery | endeavoring to persuade his Wite 0 1o | gwned by J. D. Hopkins "| There has been nothing experienced like it see, Alabama, Mississippl, Louisiana, ovement of Russia and particularly along | tyrn to Omaba and she refused. This sas ¥ p SHu | here since the hot spell of 1874, when the ansas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, | the Korean frontier. They are increasing | afrernoon they went to Lake Contrary,| owned o .|I;,.“’.yrsxti‘y.y,.(“r:u[y AEY, R i?;.:Ilh::fl\t“‘l‘"":,,: e o "ot "uly. until | 1t took only three and one-half minutes (o | even before he was elected to the offic Bouth Dakota, North Dakuta, Colorado and | i number constantly throughout the penin- | took lunch at a restaurant and strolled | Omaha—The Crelgnton-Orpheum theater,|some time in August and the mercury ran | Past through the raplds and the whirlpool. | of state treasurer Michigan. it has - become considerably |sula and one-nineteenth of the shipping | ; i e | a distance of about a mile. At no time| Bardey wae | n about the lake front for some time. They | owned by the b up to 102 and 103 for a number of days in | s be n 5 y 1| o _ | owned by the Orpheum company v ¥ | during. the basssne thre e rapids was | India t warmer also in the upper lake region and | of the country fs now Japanese | quarreled most of the time and thelr ac-| Dental of during the passage through the rapids was Indiuna, Oc 5 a vigorous sort was given to- | fuccession and one day it touched 105. | LI LIE PR ¥ 5 TR i b ) sions attracted the attenion of many Via- | night to a question asking 1f the union | THAL Was the record for years and it took | fhe batrel Jost st of 1t wh taken from | Nebraska in 1880 and settled in Holt {tors there. They strolled south about two | Wi one either of offense ot defenon apuiiat | the hot wind of July 26, 1884, to wipe it x‘hr:":m“v?]r ':.'mr 'ulwlu\;l I.;:’r'. | 1'"':‘.‘)'“”’1:. ‘m“ r’;.;‘:nlg where he engaged In farming. In | miles and called at the home of a farmer | (ho east. out. On that day the thermometer regis- pool for a few mil HATRE W he removed to Atkinson and started reglon affected by the heat was m;x (u“l |‘|'-», l;lm:mnnv: of :nul llluullunhvrnmm |n‘u,,4 asked for a driok of water, which | (,m.,‘ 106. The highest polat reached dur- :l‘:u:;ly] \:\‘xu:;-: ;::;n:n l«:w\”’;-.;\r‘\ ws and ”n‘hlll‘x‘lmm bank He was connected filled, only traces of it appearing In one | Manchuria end particularly If these affoct | pe celvi existing heated spell was 103, but ces, bi otherwie | w hat institution until it was closed O two sections, sxcept at Galveston, Tex., | the Korean frontier.” Ll ks IS GETTING RATES ALL FIXED | ifo"tne 50 or Tune, with the. excep- | by the State Banking board where about one-third of an inch fell, and A L e Shooting. —_— tion of two or three days, the mercury has | OHI0 BRYAN MEN TO BOLT| m 1 Bartley. was elected state treas fa eastern Texas, where there were local | MOURN FOR THEIR PRESIDENT| Returnine toward the lake Prange was | Merchants' Assoctatton of New York | peon Jingering around the 100 degree point ... urer and he was re-clected to the office thunderstorms, The temperatures re- seen to grab hie wife by her right arm Persundes Central Passenger Over in Illinols it has been up to 113, In | Ten of Hisx Democratic Followers in| (W0 years later. Durlng both terms the ported today show only slight variations [ Body of the ad Chillan Mag- | and shake her severely. She broke away Mon 16/ Be Agapentie, Missouri temperatures as high as 114 bave Deelde to Spiit state’s money was scattered among banks from the extremes of the last few days Ihtrite & from him and ran ahead. He overtook her . been reported and down in Kansas it has which were favorites and th are due to local conditions en and the couple entered a grove. A few — Bikts - gone to 100 and possibly a little higher. and was not regularly accounted for, W tirely. I Des Mofnes, la.. today the tem 7 minutes later Prange sent a bullet through [ NEW YORK, July 14.—The Central Pas- [ “Out along the Pacific coast, however, — he went out of ofee perature was 100, in Kansas City 102 and — his wite's brains. He carefully arranged | senger assoclation, which has jurfsdiction | they have been having an even tempera- | CLEVELAND, July 14.—On July 31 Ohio | $500,000 n Omaha 102, while at Davenport, Ia, Den- | SANTIAGO DE CHILI, via Galveston, | her body and himself lay down to the|over the linds west of Buffalo and Pitts- | ture averaging around in the 50s and 60s. | democrats who believe in Bryan the is- | not be ver, Colo., Little Rock, Ark., New Or-[July 14.—The body of President Errpzuriz, | left. He sent a bullet through the center | burg, its territcry extending to the Mis leans, North Pla Neb., § Paul and | who died Friday, was brought to this city | of his own forehead and almost instantly | sissippl river and as far south as the Ohlo Vicksburg, Miss., it was 96 or higher. today and received with solemn public { became a corpse. river, Dearborn county 1858, He removed to in New England, Marquette, Mich., report- | “Russia, recognizing Japan's power, acts ing today @ record-breaking temperature | with studied conciliation, ostentatiously | of 102' degrees. Hope of rain today i the | communicaticg to the Japanese legation with the (reasurer there was worth of state funds which could satistactorily accounted for. es which he represents, which the rec nt ‘rops Are Doing Well. Suss Wi Speetic Cha o QIR ATE TUnE democratic convention fgnored, will as b " £3 aalement, including the cities of Chicago and “No, 1 do not think there is any imme- | semble in Columbus and make up a sta Bartley was charged with KANSAS CITY, July 14.—No relief 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-|ticket. Ten men met this morning in a | $180.101.75, the proceeds of todny 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 this city, agreed to | braska as a rule. Of course there are com- the past two weeks, with reports from [spectators. It will llo in the hall of the | stroyed many places in western Missourl, Kansas | Chamber of Deputies until Tuesday, when and the territories of temperatures over | the interment will take place the 100 mark. At most places the sun| All the theaters are closed and the oc- embezzling w warrant drawn downtown office buflding in this city and @8ainst the state’s general fund to reim them. He was about 45 years of [ concur in rates which may be made from | plaints from some points in the state, but|decldcd that a bolt should be made and that | burse the sinking fund for money that had HEAA R E TR It was learned | the territory of the Southwestern Passen- | hat s always the case, no matter how!a new party should enter the field of Ohlo|been lost through the failure of the tonight that when Mrs. Prange came to this | ger bureau gL S O AR B L L ur horting Tares 1y e city several days ago she went to the home| This last-named assoclation has juris- | the state. During the many years I have| The attendance at the conference was|A4ct authorizing Bartley to draw such (A e AL Boal pikee i i) CHTHA SR s o and GHUAGR ORMIES M Veioe s bk FibeHt on‘idh'(km over the lines in Texus, Indian Ter- | been connected with the weather service | larger and represented a greater area in | WATFant April 10, 1595, he drew the war cloud to break its rays nor a slight breeze. = Main street whom she had known in|ritory and Oklahoma. Application was | pere I do not belleve there has been one in | the state than was expected by those who |FABt. but Wade it pavable to himself per In Kansas City last night proved more | MINISTER CONGER TO LEAVE |omabta 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 e A niars CUBHOEoRIbh B il ctleyi bearable, a breeze trom the north allevi-| o = e also learned tonight that Prange visited |Tates from Its territorg, but no action | points fn the state of damage to crops from| A formal statement of principles was sub- | State treasurer ating the condition, but a day of intense | Voted Towan Arrives at 8an Francisco | Kaneas Clty last week, searching for his| could be taken until the intervening lines | the 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 wite. in the central west had anunounced their | enough to shade the ground and thus retain|This will be printed and sent throughout | Partiey, who ncgotiated its sale through the Tonight there is a prospoct of rain in in China. Prange's History in Omunha. villingness to concur in the rates which | the molsture. On the other hand, it I8 not| the state to those who are known to be| Omaha Natlonal baok. Tbe bank officialy Oklahoma, but there are no indications of a Robert Prange worked for Ed M might be made. The trunk lines having |y, far advanced to be most susceptible to| faithful to the Nebraskan A convention | 8a¥ that Bartley ordered the proceeds of change n any other part of the Southwest. | o\ pp \veiaan Jur 14 (wln at the Iereor e re et 1o Qpurer | jurisdiction east of Bufi+o aud PIttsburk | gwmage from heat. None of 1t'has tasseled. | was decided upon to be held at the Great | hie warrant placed (o his personal credit With no rellef in sight the fears for the [ 45 FRAFOINCO, July 1 Fm" e SR Biat.ln the Iabtirtiaanioy . tm | medEIFERaySRETect iy ton P {t is after corn has tasseled that It I8 most| Southern hotel on the last day of July. To| 3¢fore Bartley went out of office, January crops that have been expressed are fast| (GORG FEALEE 1% ";?f:r * R A Ak 1l 1801, when he quit Omats aet went |, The Southwestern Passcnger burenu Will | aglly affected by heat, so that what was|(his convention may come all those who 0 1887, he drew a check on the general fund becoming realities and the scarcity of | M¥ed. enroute to Pekin. Minister Congor | 1855 to 1801, when he quit Omaha and went | pegin its July meeting at Glenwood Springs, | ome time ago a cause of complaint, tho | sign thelr names to tne declaration of prin- | 0f th state for §20188405, the amount ofs water and generally dry condition make | NIl sail next Wednesday on the steamer | to Californla. He returned to Omaha in | Colo, tomorrow. C. M. Pratt. chalrmun | packwardness of the crop, 1s now a decided | iples. A Ly LU R LR vater and_generally ary condition wake | Sy, ot S0 808 oud was employed as head waiter at| of that bureau, has been notified by wire advantage. "I G T - Maurer's during the two expositions. Later| of the action of the Central P What the real damage to corn, the crop Baden-Powell to 0 England. y ‘q Al action..o e Central Passenger | .jugt now I should say that there is no In defense of his actlon Bartloy insisted most affected, will be Is problematical, he made an effort to secure a lease of the | assoclation in agreeing to concur in dates | ynocaiate cause for apprehension in Ne- STARTED BY INCENDIARIES that he used $164,000 of the money derived the crop will be lost. The supply of WaLer | ¢y "y oryork and fever And his medical |Gérman brewer, committed suicide at the| - ot oS corn wiitiholotiouty’, In| the prenetit aqtdls L Ly soNbly Bandk, WUIGh e Bokd ot s short in almost every direction and the | gy LS "g kYA price have ordered him | Merchants' hotel and trustrated his plans. tion of Nebraska corn, however, it is hard bles Afire, Burning N Educational Lands and Funds instructed shipments of cattle and llnvfl; to n\;. Enr- {0 take complete Fest and procead o Bo- | When Mr. Buthorn took Rosseshion 0”! ‘he | FOG TIES UP NEW YORK HARBOR | to kil and does not yield to heat until the h"!“ “]' :'“\dw: money from the permanent ot to save them must continue. In Kan- v When Mr. " : h EW oy il g 2 bim (o by mones from the permanen ‘:” Clty tofay the government thermom.- | K187 - — Schlltz Prange went to work for him 8! pe ) wopts Feel Thelr Way Through | Grain men say that in the northern part pter reached 102 and at Maryville, Kan Rulers Will Not Meet. manager, but at the end of three months a ac- SAN FRANCISCO, July 14.—A series of | 8ted that Bartley paid for these bonds S HAFRS 3 he Narrows with Great- of the state and the extreme west the corn | qoo "0 0 S ndicates that in- | WIth money from his own personal bank ac 104 was recorded agalnst 100 vesterday LONDON, July 15.—"K 2d o R g L will stand ten days of existing weather, but ik s o Mary. | LONDON, Jily:1s ing Edward, Em- | found that he was not a success. Since eat Difculty, ) o o o 4 -‘rm were three prostra peror Nicholas and Emperor Willlam | then Prange has been selling cigars A "h"lu'["‘“ R Neinoior at ville will not meet at the review at Mayence | ¢ She Sathng R s e are beginning to feel e Wenther Report fra about August 15," says the Berlin cor- ;fi:}":':‘;?’?‘oi‘:’,érfirn\"‘ 'L.",M;,‘"“ COmPARY| NEW YORK, July 14.—Fog tied up the | phaqly, and the same condition prevails g " . " ad oot ey, barbor today. The iron steAmboats to | 1 e ounties, Corn i LINCOLN, Neb., July 14.—Nebraska again | respondent of the Standard, but they will | No one In Omaha knows Just when | cones Istand had to fecl thelr way througn | “1On the southern tler of counties. Corn to suffered from the heat today. The highest | exchange visits at Darmstadt. 8 g e ¥ through | 1ot so good this year in the ever fruitfu Prange went to St. Joseph. £d Maurer| ho mist, One of these boats which left By o i g k s 3 ese boats o ef corner of the state as in the was 102 degrees at 4:30, but the thermome- y Monday or Tuesday evening. Maurer In- | roqch ‘Goney Istand until 6:15 p. m. OB | eon oir of the ters in the business district recorded 109 NAPLES, July 14.—The condition of | yited him to take @ glass of beer and » L g ern part of the state. A LI Pl e ) reaching The Narrows the pilot found the The mean temperature of the day was 80| Signor Francesco Crispl, who last Monday | when Prange intimated that he did not | o Sl it e Light Local Rains Reported. v e re-| suffered an apoplectic seizure which in og 80 thick that he decided it would be degrees, the highest of the year. The re u care for any Inslsted on his drinking WIth| ¢;1) (o attempt to steam through it. So ports show that no rain has fallen in tho| view of his advanced age caused con- |pim prange did so, with the remark that | 0" 0 #eMPC (0 stoam hrough Wt 891 o most encouraging bit of weather news state during the last twenty-four hours siderable anxiety, is now much improved. | \aq probatly the last drink they would | yiou " piar' s again. The 1,200 passengors | (1At has floated into town for several days|in the stable were rescued with difficul y Reports that reach Lincoln tonight indi- Russian Military Increase. ever enjoy together. were mystified by this movement. The | %28 (hat received last evening telling ot a|Shortly after 2 a'clock the stable of the | Omana and . 0. Whedon of Lincoln wero cate that rain failing within two days will It 1s sald by ome of the employes at e | shower at Fremont that got up steam | Signal Transfer company on Larkin strect 4 s LONDON. Jidvi 1 ibandn * Niahotas movement was repeated twice and only by | Dartley's attorneys. The jury which found yet save the corn crop. The wind shifted| LONDON, July 15.--Emperor Nicholas. | yaurers place that he had heard that | ool CAERE MER BERERRT WACK ARG GHY (¥ | cnough to burn a barn with a stroke of between Rush and Sutter. caught fire. There | garijoy Luiity was made up as follows: A to the southeast this evening and the at- | fccording to a dispatch from St Peters- | prange's wite had pone to 8t. Joseph | o OE0E B 0 Tlan The presence of he | Mghtning. The weather burcau reports re-| were Afty head of horses in the stable.|p pry. ) v. Shipley, G, R Wahlgren, Chris mosphere 1s somewhat cooler. burg, has lssued an order that 308500 men | gome time ago, but he knew nothing fur- P A A n.:. Lnr:- hat | celved last evening showed that a trace of | Bight of them were burned to death. g i MUY No Crop Near St. Joweph. shall be recruited for the Russlan army | (her. Mr. Buthorn says that they were a b ’ 3 L] rain had been enjoyed at St. Louts. During | Steiger, Hugo Wahlers, Benjamin Trumbull, v out Ve exe ad gone q v 8 4 he s | John W. Stiles, John A, Finc pi ST. JOSEPH July 14.—The long contin. | 00 NAYY duFing the present year. aueer couptn e e velations. aa ne | tWo excursion boats had gone down with | Finch, €. A. Rob o was & fs | e : queer couple in thelr relations, as thelall on board. When sifted these stories [ \O du¥ there was a fall of & lttle over 4| COMING FETE AT NEWPORT |erts. rred C. Anthony, Charies A. Thomp- ued drouth has resulted in the entire ruin o P T T TP s usually away from her husban A ter of an inch at Santa Fe, N. M., and : developed the fact that the Julla, plying ' 3'*" 4 sett and Henry A. Homan in California or elsewhere. Ed Maurer | something over a third of an inch at Gal-|{ ey " 1 : o corn and oats crop fn this section Wi ¢ tween Canarsie and Rockaway, had gone Marshal Joe Wheeler Invites MU= | The trial began June S A ¢ e :; ‘(‘::v foountey Corn ‘bas commenced to| (BERLIN. July 14—The emigration from | recalls that once while in his employ ::x,:‘,.-.f‘l“.. n.'!::,\,l.,u’f.'.“h’l{\ ].:,: l\“',,’.“ ,‘,nfi{:", Yeoton, Tex, showibR thet the:founiainn.of | Josta 8. Wright confessed ta m:‘:)-(u.;l'” r Sassel only u few foet high and no amount | G¢TRIANY by way of Hamburg and Bremen | Prange told him that his wife had at- . | the heavens have not gone wholly dry and tempted to bribe one of the jurors and during the first six months of this year ed sulcide by 0 None | #3in in two hours. No one was hurt Stad . Oy d = of rain would now be of any benefit to [ or PR FI, L0 A A ¥ " tempted sulcide by taking polson. Nome| o oy " \uor was that the big excur. | 91BPTOVIng the startling theory of the Kan- | was sentenced to the penitentiary for two that osreal. The fruit and vegetabls orops | CoRPARl it BE MEINRE 1, (ot the | of the acqualatances of Prange who wers | ., "goymer General Slocum, with sev- |'®% Clt7 WAD who asterted that it would be vars. His admission of guilt created o L a % | corresponding period of last year. v # dmer Gene Slocum, - 2 L TR gt I8 ea b are also complete fallures and the pas- | “°FresPending per k ¥ consulted knew much about Mre. Prange | tmpossible for it to raln until the weather| NEWPORT, R. 1. July 14.—General Jo sensation and it was thought that A 4 cral hundred passengers aboard, had gone 4 tures have dried up so that the farmers Melba Cannot Sing. or her antecedents. down off Norton's point. Investigation | M°dcrated, as the terrific heat would vapor- | seph Wheeler, marshal of the coming fet would be implicated In the are paying enormous prices for hay and . " ihane sue from the aesidunt | {6 a0y precipitation before it could reach|day, has sent to Governor Crane of Massa- |attempted Jjury bribery, but Wright re frea. Totny was clenr and hot with no | LONDON. July 15.—Mme. Moiba ts wut- | TQ ARISE AND SMITE CHURCH | fhoyed this story arose from the accldent | g ground chusetts n request (hat the Eighth and |fused to dielose any information concern- rently ) foring from an attack of laryngitls and — % BUR LM CNRIRON CAREEAL UM Ninth Massachusetts regiments be eent | Ing the persons who employed him, rellet apparently in sight. Unless rain |, "o o iion s have ordered her not to sing | Mexlean Stndents Appeal to Al | Oeneral Slocum was detained down the POISON CASE IS REVIEWED |here on the fete day to take part | niaixd comes this week wheat, which was wn | OF PAYOIRITAS BEVE ORACHEC AY Wy the fo. ere on et day to take part in Kis Sk abundant crop, will have to be substituted LU RES Countrymen in Manifesto Againat ;h. v;l‘rclnl (n‘nn"rn:‘ Wheeler is anxlous “ even the coarser and cheaper kinds , Roman Cntholies, Mrs, Botkin's Attorneys Will Carry | for the presence of these regiments, they| The case was tried before Judge Baker ONDON, Andrew Carne —— — Apxe Ytpathey Voshangef: ofovsd 210,000 Yor ‘tha Shemicn oesle A% | MEXICO OITY, July 14.—Btudents todsy | 8ix Hebrew Piostckers Are Drowsed | Court, from the Atlantlc squadron, naval appren- | dlct against the defondant. Nine of the BURLINGTON, I, July 14.—Today was ! jublic library in Annen, Scotland issucd a flery manifesto against the Roman Wihilo Batline I ihe tices and local militia. Military organiza. | Jurors were for conviction from the firat the sixth day in succession that the mer- ikl s Cathollc church. They say & congress com ARl e T s C SR L L G UL T L R Db e e il g L iy RARE )RR SYBETHAIN. A0h 0| ANOTHER FALLS FROM WINDQW | 7osed of educated voung men of the coun- ness of Mrs. Cordells Botkin, who has | asked to be present. Secretary Root and | Sleiker was the Just juror to he won over A W 3 soon assemb ake action of pi i SRR v | Besratary: 10! ong have bee ited | b the majority verdiet was od ARDMORE, 1. T., July 14.—Reports from | well K Youns Man of Louis. |church matters. The government will be| SAVANNAH, Ga. July 14—Six persons| DOh Eranted o new rial by the state ou- gy o "'I_“W""',"' B: 1ok have besn lovited | oo PR e D ,‘,;'“'l",,: the cotton helt show that cotton I being | oo I‘I‘k'k‘\('l;wb4nl;fln-.“((‘ all |m;1~‘r',\ tound 'm ! \\"y-nr»'nr'n\xxwll while surf bathing at a pienie ’\";1"’ "‘_I""‘l” ‘v”"lnf"‘x'mm‘“;;' ‘I'" u':‘“‘l"‘“""'l‘_'f Rreesh §. Bakon sentanced i ihs R e tnjured by the drouth that has prevailed e held by the clergy or their agents, the | of the Hebrew Gamahl-Hasad at Dautuskic | MF* . Du of Delaware, are - b o st et b M 1 e weeks. Unless tain falls within the next | the national debt MRS. ABE DICKSTEIN States supreme court. They will file to-| ety the verdiet Judge Buker released Bartley’ few days crops will be cut short. About{ LOUISVILLE, Ky. July Id.—Stewart| The students call on all Mexicans to| ANNIE KRONSTADT Worray 3 petiliap 1o th atste coust fop ¢ 5 PORKET | bond for his appearance in court and r $0 par cent of the corn crop has aiready | Leathers, one of the Best known young |Arise and smite the church aud declare| IDA KRONSTADT, aged 17 wrlt of habeas corpus. It Is expected that Dwell on Friendly o e been ruined. There will be no marketable | men in Louisville and a &on of Captain | they will raise the standard of revolt [ LEAH SILVERSTEIN, aged 17, the applioation will be denled, 1n whish 5 Motions for new trials were overruled corn. The crop of other grains is a total | John H. Leathers, fell from a third-story | Ageinst the church above the sepulcher ANNIE HOROWITZ, aged 13, event the case will be carried to the United and the case was appealed to the suprem tailure. window of his father's residence on Ormsby | of Juarez and will continue the anti-cler- | JSAAC ZACHT, aged 22 States supreme court o & Wrlt of eITOT. | YOKOHAMA, July 14.—The ceremony of | OUrt. The lower court was sustained by ST. PAUL, July 14.—The heat record was | Avenue at 11 o'clock tonight, breaking his | ical movement (nitlated in the most en A strong southeast wind was blowing and | ' H:‘ petitio ‘!flr a T’,” r“! hl« DeAs COTPUS | |\ velling at Kuribama the monument to |the higher court in a decision handed down equaled to by the government ther-|Jawbone, right wrist and hip and sustain- | Hghtened nations of the globe the tide was at flood. Fifty yards off shore '1‘1‘"""“ "]‘1"",“ 90 A8 AU D ”‘f durls- | o mmemorate the landing there of Com- | JADUBFY 6, 1898 Attorneys for (he Ao mometer, the maximum being 95. There was | D& internal injuries. Physiclans are un There are fears of a renewal of the antl- | js a shoa! and between the shoal and the "lf"" “" s Taised tret, that the { o ogore Perry July 14 1863, was performed | fendant were afterward allowed to sub- a hot breeze from the south blowing most | éble to say whether Mr. Leathers' injuries | clerical dirturbances on the 18th inst., | shore is a sluice e party was bathing on | ono & I“ “' hox of poisoned candy through by Rear Admiral Rodgers, commogid- | ™It additional argument, but without of the day, which greatly added to the dis- | are fatal \:\m;nl 1s ‘lhvh .u\nT)\ srsary Tr P m)rlwnvl the shoal, but finding the tide getting rather ;Z‘:‘_”’I{'_?" v::;“h"‘rw"*;"'r ";‘h ‘1”;'_'\ J' Mr: the United States visiting squadron | 8vall. Bartley remained in the Douglas comfort. The hot wave continues through inres's doat oduy it Is announced | high, the bathers concluded to go nearer| o.rh o8 And her sister, Mrs, Deane, Wi | yigoount Katsura, the Japanese premier, | county jall until July 6, 1808, when he was out Minnesota and the Dakotas, Huron re-| CLEVELAND LUMBER BURNS | that every workingman's soclety will be | ghore. Almost at once they found them [ e '7, "’x”' sni fsioagd, '{“"'“'l':" livered the memorfal address and a num- | tken to Lincoln penitentiary by Sheriff Dorting 102 and Sloux Falls 100, At the lat- in mn‘ ‘nrnv"-w\]ml. Some portions of the | selves in the sluice, over thelr heads, M,h_‘[;‘: -le-l ’::’Lu" f.'w u'h"_:;' .»’n‘":‘\‘»x “"' l' ber of other Jay e officlals of high rank | MeDonald ter place a child went to sleep In the sun | Railrond Trestle Deatroyed, Causing (Madlfesio are @0 violent that the news- | big waves pounding and a sweeping current| ns siate where the crime was sotually | W€F¢ Prosent. Threo American and five and died from the heat. New Ulm, Minn., Trouble In Getting Traina papers have retused to print them. running. Of twelve who started across the| oo tiite, Where fhe crime whs Actually} Japancse warships valuted. Various reports o temperature of 104, With a number Through, Father Icaza now repeats his denlal of | gjyjce six were drowned. Mrs. Dickstein's | "0 *® speeches were made by Amerleans wnd me expresslons of sentiment as Te of prostrations the charges against him and the women's Japanese, all dwelling on the close rela- | Bards the actlon of Governor Savage in body was found floating In the surf an hour ) Prof. W. M. Hayes of the Btate agricul-| o/ oy (op (=70 Ktiatie valse Bia ""“';""‘Y“““ have lssued | apiar (he tragedy, but the others were ,,,,“,ISTkBLE BOY MADE DESPERATE | tions between the two powers BAFRIRE BArHier WAre $POUTND - yaNtATdAY tural experimental farm reports that the | , CEVELAND, O, July 14.—Fire tonight | an address declaring full beliet in his In- | gu¢ to sea cemmy They follow thu | destroyed $80,000 worth of lumber belong- | te < . A <an- ol e o not kno! e pro. Bot wave In dolng a great deal of damage | fost7OVSe #0000 werth of lumber belong. | tegrity e — Kills @ Young GIrl at Newcon, Kan-| MEMBER OF DALTON GANG!| J‘obn L. W I do not know the pr to wheat in southern Minnesota and that Ao Wumber | | | I | 1 ‘ omDANRY. Universalist Young People Meet, ann, Then Shoots Himself ‘\hw(h of the nle, but | signed an pit chinchbugs are very numerous and are con- | “*PaRY YOUNGER BROTHERS ARE OUT i . cendiaries were at work. Stables were made | count and thus refunded the money to the the special mark of their torche: Twenty | féte. The records showed, however, that horses were burned to death. The fires oc- the permanent school fund was reduced in curred in the same general l'lkhhurhlm\“”" amount the treasurer paid for the near Larkin street. At midnight the stable | OUNtY bonds of the San Mateo Dairy company on Turk Cony street and Van Ness avenue was discovered | | | | nglnn County. i... be burning. The frame building with its Bartley was convicted of embezzlement The case was tried fn Dougias county dur- g June of 1867 and lasted for nearly two weeks. Attoruey General ©. J. Smyth and H. Ji Baldrige, attorney for Douglas ' county prosccuted the case. T. J. Mahoney of contents was destroyed. Twelve horses per fshed. While the firemen were at work an alarm was turned in from a stable on Ellls street, three blocks away. The six horses him. There will he 3,000 men in lins, men | Seventeen hours the jury brought in a ver ged 2 1ged 10 Public Sentiment on Parole. y i s s i sy > (o 3 cation for his release and would have heen Aributing to the destruction. He belisves| A 1Vhseling & Lake Brie trestle in the g e ok QUL M cipee Bsssem 5t Lave, pleased to see an unconditional pardon e destruc e vicinity of the blaze was burned and tralns | Notorious Bank Robhe oh’ s that but a small crop will be harvested in d trains a1 ssoclation of the Universallst church wis ey b e e | on that road will enter this city om the joy Full Freedom 15| 1 in by meetings In several churches, KANSAS CITY, July 14 —A special to the Oklahomn Expects Rain, LA B This evening @ mass meeting was held i v the Lyceum theater Rev. M D, Shutter, S————————— D. 't Minneapolis d Socinl . EL RENO, Okl, July 14.—~The trains to- falist Unity Comvention, e — on iversalism In Modein Though ." | daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Frank Beers, | Jim, alleged to be day brought in moderate crowds for regis- | INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, July 14.—-Ofeial| ST. PAUL, July 14.—Coleman and James | ReV L Perrii, D. 1 of Boston, spoke | wag shot and killed by Herbert Shacklett, | gang of outiaws, tocated lust unight | when a io should not have Ao, | ’ on iVers n in Modern Life na & 1 uigh ¥ have do tration. There are probably 10,000 people | Announcements were sent out from here | Younger, wka were granted a conditional | by O "Hall. D. D.. of Cambridae |8 stable boy formerly in the family's em- | in a secluded spot twenty miles east of | s rt. that he ¥ y here. Everything is quiet and orderly and | today for the National Socialist Unity con- | paFole by the Board of Pardons on Wednes- [ Mass.. closed with an address on “Thé | ploy, who afterward shot himself through | here, suffering from a hullet wound. Lagt | sinned t than sinnin every man {8 comfortably situated. The | vention to be held at Masonic hall in this | day last, were released from the Still Rellglon of a Man » heart. Shacklett became fascinated | week at Sulphur he had a desperate fight her—In the light of the fa temperature here todiy was around the | Clty, July 20, The convention will repre- | Water penitentiary at 10 o'clock this morn e Gnia Dar with the young woman, who did not in | with deputy United § warshals and fartley fs almost hiind: that he b 200 point, but mo serfous inconvenience | 8ent all branches and locals aMiiated with | Ing. For the pr they will make their | ¢ i ! any way return his infatuation. The bodies | was wounded, but escs The marshals od several years for the cr was experlenced by the homeseekers. In- | the Soclal democratic parties with head: | home n Stillwater and it has not yet been | (CANTON, O duly 14=Prestdent and Mrs. | wore' found today in the roadside three | had a narrow escape ¢ United States | has been @ model prisoner, connected wi 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 cn the | miles west of Newton. The girl had been | Marshal Hammer and several deputies | the fact of the pardon of Henry Bol MUNCIE, Ind, July 14.—The continued | SPriogfield. Mass., the sections of soctalist | men spent thelr first day of freedom upon | front porch. IDhuring the early morning | shot four times and (ho surroundings In- | started for the scene. § ays he | the parole may be all right, but on tha o 1 ¢ labor parties and the various organizations | o steamboat excursion up the St. Croix [ they took a drive = The president then | o004 that she had mad. 1ble - will be tal . . . (Continued on Second Page.) of soclalist partl | river, ment to the First Msthodist™ Bpiscopal | IR A RPN | MIHBRLCRS. AR " church for morning services, | glo for ber lite, | tor I have nlways believed that Bartley ha, been made to suffer to a great extent for Times from Newton, Kan, says: Last the shortcomings of other people and it livered an addre<s | night Miss Oma Beers, the 1S-year-old | ARDMORE, I July 14 was Bartley's gencrous nature (hat induced member of the D him to yield to the solicitations of frien wanted | other hand I am opposed to turning mea many crimes, out of the penlicntiary tiroigh the wvenus