Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 9, 1902, Page 2

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" Astde from passing upon minor amend- MRS, DENISON IS PRESIDENT Néw York Woman Elected by Federation, with Mrs. Burdette First Vice. MRS, DECKER . DECLINES NOMINATION Ovlorado Delegate D nts Fer Ardent Supporters by Her Action— Con fon Adjourns After Mrs. Lowe's Address. President, Mrs. Demies 8. Denison, New o rat vice president, Mrs. Robert J. Bur- dette, California. vice president, Mrs. Emma Fox, secretary, Miss Loulse Pappen- Caroling.' Mrs. Emma Van Vechten, s Freasurer, owa. uditor, Mrs, George Noyes rectors Mrs. chusetts; Mrs. ¥.ne Humphrey, K ‘Wisconsin. West, Massa- M e, Pennayivania; Mrs. Samuel Hay M Wit Fllltotl. rs. gnho W. B Missouri; elden, Utah. (From a Staft Correspondent.) LOB ANGELES, May 8.—(Special Tele- gram.)—The refusal of Mrs. Decker of Den- ver to accept the presidency has provem a great disappointment to the women of the middle west and occasioned resentment and hard feeling that promises to put an end to her universal popularity. Her action fis admitted a mistake by some of Colorado's most prominent representatives. While her loyaity to Mrs. Denison is apprecfated, the women feel that her first consideration was due them, especially as their loyalty to her.had practically made impossible the success of another candidate from thelr wection s time. General satisfaction and no little sur- prise is expressed at the other represent: tion it has recelved, however, and no spe- clal regret s manifested over the dlsposi- tion of the Loulsiana purchase memorial project. Tonight sees a general scattering of the visiting women, the headquarters being broken up and the women departing for all wections. The majority of the Nebra: and Iowa women will remain on the coa for soveral weeks, visiting points of in- terest. oyd, Election and Address. Two thin, distingulshed the last day of the Federation of Woman's Clubs, one being the election of officers and the ad- dress of the president, Mrs. Rebecca Lo of Georgia. The election resulted in the acception by ballot of the entire re- port of the nominating committee and the election of the officers already named. The ‘scens at the election of the presi- dent this afternoon was easily the mos sensational in the history of the federa- tion. Those who at three biennials have clamored to name Mrs. Platt-Decker of Colorado as thelr leader, were roused to enthusiasm at mention of ‘her name by Mrs. Gallagher of Ohio, who made the | nominating epeech, amid Intense excite- | ment. Mrs. Decker arose in the gallery, whore she sat with the Colorado delega- tion, and with earnestness declined the honor. Many of Mrs. Decker's admirers voted for her anyway, the vote standing 667 for Mrs. Denison and 258 for Mrs. Decker. The election proteeded with more or less disorder and Mrs. Hamlln of Minnesota moved that a committee be appoluted to devise some saner way of conducting the election. The motion was carried. Settle Charter Discussion. ‘nents to the bylaws the conyention settled e charter matter by aceppting the report fl that committee, while the report of the committee which suggestad the erectlop of & hall of philanthropy at Bt. Louls was re- ferred to the board of directors, the con- vention evidenfly being overwhelmed by the demand of $100,000 as its, contribution toward the plan. The afternoon was devoted to memoria! #ervices. At the final session tonight Mrs. Lowe dellvered her blennial address: Some one has sald that fhe two things which excite surprise and command re- ?n.‘-qy fo Take Easy fo Operate [ oy B s b ‘Hood’s Pillg A"I“ll’t‘. BOYD’S Omaha's Favorite artist BLANCHE WALSH TONIGHT-SATURDAY MATINEE “JANICE MBREDITH" Saturday Night “LA MADBLEINE" ‘Mat., e to $1.00; Night, e (tndllu the mati- handsome 'ho 35 Siss Weloh ©, TUESDAY 'GH'I' ONLY RICHARD MANSFIELD in SBEAUCAIRE” Prices Sc to §2.60-seats on sale today. — e to HONE 1381, “OF THE SEASON. 5, EVERY NIGHT s 8 HiGH CLASS. VAUDEVILLE btta Gladstone: ROV R m.,%‘s,.. e, S Amateur l‘m nwth-y alne May ‘10. { TELEEHONR Spect In the Amr and success. be safely Avph.a every Section ot out country, territory in g tted with wo- e Zube: hoidG embershig in_ this organization. tion. As you know, = aah- fngon. ana Alaneme remain without the told. 3 con- cerned ‘with m:& %m w many A .t } 1o teil yo'nw -K‘ plished. For, atier most hopeful feature of our organization les nul in our numer- fcal strength, which , enal us and will _enable us not |o think thin, but do thihgs, and not oniy 10 fmprove and upliftpourselvés, but to render important se In” the “upiiets and betterment of humamty. To this although our size, numbers and material Suscéss are indeed im; t: tactors, yet we wish to have our ‘material success in- epired with a' recognition.of epiritual values as well. A tadton Means Growth. tatlon and unrest pervading our m’[nnllu fon seem to rn- to be signs of Srowik aad health. ‘ means of such experiences that we hre finding our soul Ve cannot form any adequate conception of the vast changes that will be brought about, as women become more and more self-consclous. | use the term in its deep sense and mean that as women become more and more consclous of their powers and possibilities of thejr souls; they wili Anevitably demand wider fields for their activities and that with the, wider play | of their activities will eome Increased re- spamsibllities. 12 e glory motherfiood will recelve a new lustre by the ition: ‘what motherhood means to civjlization, Even a superficial glance at“the development of soclety shows that ‘woman by virtue of her maternity has been the conserver of the human race. Vast number of wefnbn realize the ne- essity for some gort of training in the home for thelr chil hey believe that Tide nrust rlumph. T (he eud. (hat rectis tude and exactitude -ave. splendid weapons with which to equip them. But compara- tively few women have any conception: of the Reads of Nfo, beyond the sheiter of the four walls fn Which they live. The burni auestion_of” the heur, "cttside the Circls F domastic anes, sewh %o them ‘8o occult that it would be selces even ta make the effort to understand ‘the. They do not fyen surmice that the Krea( movements o life which are du or. econo- mic frequently bear nuv ) painfully upon the well being of thelr own little nests. On the other Mand s growing num- ber of women, who kre not only scannin the horizon of life,'but are stu. J'"' wit passionate, sear (s actyal conditions ‘of a work -day world.” try to infuse lght of today in i of today, FefieBx (hat overy era its .own needs and- characteristics, ;'gt: at the influences which reach out fromvthe old into the new era shogld be mouldad;and shaped b,h the e Existing age an er. Do_the work that. lims. nesrest the says one of the high.priests of Fhere 1s no surer way of bufidin {hose ‘wha come after ab then to best we can here and mow: for o the HOPKINS. THE® CHOICE | (Continued fromr First Page.) R h-b v etk oo S condermn all conspiracies and combinations to restrict business, fo create monopejles, {o Jimit prodyction or fo contral an, favor such legislatio will ¥ Teatrain ana ppevent il uch abu fect and promote competition and secure the rights of produ _ laborers and all ! who are engaged ry And commerce and we approve mimend the efforts iy Foosevalt Lot shforcs. (he laws .g-lvm Diseal combindstlons:in vestraint of d pledge him aur hearty. support i s’ nis etforis to prevent ¢ 9 Reges om oppressive combinations of c Oppose Lolvu( (.-bm\-. While recognising ti from juman tarlan und economfc e andpoint those’ don- fined in our, penal and'reformatory nstitu- tione must be kept emnmyaa and ‘should contribute toward thelr maintenance, vet we favor such legislation as will, red: the competition between convict ufid Treo labor 1o the minimum. o We, pl earnest and mayln...flon- 04t of such at t ourleg- islature will brlnfi fach results in accordance with the oonlutuun of the othia ot i llllnol- Db it nrvlce mle. In the Mflsc M of t ! ate. %‘ prasent atay ully tour stitutions and call fof Teg the general assembly” prevent ‘unjust removals n'mn change dministration or the party power. We favor a reciprocal trade’ treaty with Cuba. Charles G. Dawes tonight formally an- nounced his withdrawal as a candidate for United States senator, récognising, he'sald, “that the expression of a convgntion of 1,600 delegates must be considered as alrly representative of the will ot & majority of the party.” \ Senator Willlam E. Mason ll{d he was| still confident of succeeding himself;| claiming he had made no fight for delegates to the state convention. AR The concensus of opinion among the del: ates is that tod: actlon, gf the.con- vention settles the-senatorial contest. FIRE RECORD, on Refinery in Flames. , NEW YORK, May 8.—Fire sta early today in. thc cooper house ot the Bwan & Fineh oil reflnery ap_ qus lnunq zunn below Elizabethport, spread rapidly, burning uwmlvm con- tplning 1,600 barrels of erude -oil. Thou- sands of barrels of.refined and crude oil were stored in the yards and In the shipping sheds and all wers comsumed. » As the fire reached the big tanka they exploded, send-! ing burning oll high tn the .1. and scht ing it over mew material . The Joss waa $100,000. House at Hastings. ., HASTINGS, Neb., May 8.— pw‘l 'l’.l.- gram.)—The house occupled Mrs. A. D. Haas was burned to the ground late this afternoon., The hous loéated In the extreme suburbs of city #nd’ the bulld. ing and all its conf were eampletely destroyed.. No lnsurance. YELEPHONES HAVE BARS. Famillarity is sald t btood contampt, re- marks the Medical mmul. u;d it may. well be that the {nq!wy f the tele- phone by physicidns l-d o to ‘gotful- ness of the fact thilt lhf‘Mui servant canngt be Telied 8n to cotitorm®t6 medical ethics. A mnnl‘ 1f@dent “repuited” from Bay City, Mich., ‘emphanises: thie fact. A man fs sald to have entered & public tele- phone box and ctlled up & messenger to g0 four miles nnvml‘ni andtell hiy wife that he mul‘ because Re had” smatipox. mrd?‘ heard 1t and very ropor ho health officers, booth was fum . 'A went n search of*the st other things, & -dlnm-u- There is, ‘ ust. 3 ba pility that the insisted ‘on by. llllhllrlllu #nd, ‘amon, was staried: S, “‘::'1 580 & :n“ Uoh“l:ol hospitsl and’ 'v: the ssage s N o_receive “However, while in agpe we. must tommend Inie o B SRR mpt & Sblic intereat: e cannet heriook s tu: Pihat he she and must draw ‘the fn nes, like hat m bod @s spAringl ot exchiangs of mhll{annl m. 8T, LOUIS, May 8.«*There is mot & word nl(r\n.l in it," sald M. A. Low; general at- torney of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pa- eific rIIIl-l today, discussing” & report effect that the Rock for the purchase of v.;_m'" 2| GRAND JURY 0N BEEF TRUST THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: FRIDAY, Will Investigate Alleged Bales of Diseased Meat by Packers. MATTER FOR THE CRIMINAL COURTS reunlt Attorney Ventures Aswer that Sellers of Decayed Meat W Be Pimced Beh the Penitentiary Bary. BT. LOUIS, May §.—The Beef trust is now under Investigation by the St. Louls grand jury. Following the revelations at Jefterson City, that diseased meat is sold in St. Louts, Circult Attorney Folke today presented the subject to the grand jury. He announces that he will subpoena all [ the witnesses who testified at Jefterson | City and all other persons whom he can | find that know anything about the opera- tions of the beef companies. ““This has become a subject for the crim- inal courts,” gaid Mr. Folke, ““and the mat- ter will be as thoroughly favestigated as haye been the bribery scandals and I have no doubt but that men who have been sell- ing diseased and decayed meat to St. Louisans will be landed behifd the bars of the penitentiary.” SARPY MAY LOSE HATCHERY (Continued rrnm First Page.) attendance upon the committes on inter- e and foreign commerce, of which Rep- resentative Heoburn Is chalrman, left to- day for his home. Mr. Blythe was here for the purpose of fighting the "'l in- creasing the powers of the Interstate Com- merce commission. The South Dakota delegation called on the president today and urged him to sign the oleo bill. They also talked with the president about South Dakota appoint- ments. e tng Restrictions. Senator” Gamble of South Dnkote, as chairman of the senate committes on In- dian depredations, presented today in the senate, in réference to the present law under which claims growing out of depre- dations committed by Indians on the prop- erty of the whites are prosecuted in the court of claims, a report which is of much interest to the people of all the western tates. The subject of the report is a bill introduced by Senator Warren of Wyoming to remove from the law two conditlons to the allowance of these claims, vis: that the person suffering the loss must have been at the time a citizen of the United States and that the Indians committing the dep- redation must have been at the time not hostile to the United States, but, the law states it, “in amity.* The committee in this revort unanimously recommend that the requirement of citizenship be removed, as proposed by the bill. On the subjeot of eliminating the requirement of amity of the Indlans the committee has had several discuseions and has not been able to agree to recommend the amendment. The discus- sion on this point is adjourned to the floor of the senate, where a number of western senators will desire to be heard in ad- vocacy of removal of this condition in the law, which they regard as a harsh and un- Justifiable discrimination. The bill will come up for discussion fn a few weeks and an interesting debate 1s éxpected. Friends of the bill belleve 'enough votes can be counted on to paes It through the . elther Introduced or with slight modification: - Ae the bil) read originally it would in broad and simple terms wipe out the whole requifement of amity of the In- dians. It seems not nltkely that a sort ot compromise provision will be adopted by which payment shall be made for losses suffered at the hands of all Indlans who were at the time of the depredations in treaty relations with the United States. Some eritics of the bill have thought that to restrict it to this would be more con- nt with our poliey toward the Indians as established before the passage of the present law in 1891; while the friends' of the bill think this provision would not fall very short of giving all they have asked tor. Postal Matters. 1J. C. Clappham hae been appointed post- master at Victor, Davison county, 8. D. Rural free delivery service will be es- tablished on July 1 at Cheney, Lanc: cotnty, Neb.; area covered, twenty-s'a aquare miles; population served, 500. E. C. Carpenter of Sioux Falls, 8. D., has been appointed special laborer in the Navy department. SOLVING > CONVICT PUZZLE Good whges are. belng pald hers and a number of good men.ean eeoure empley- ment, COPELAND CASE GOES TO JURY Specialinta Testify Bellet that Ac- cused Wan Insane at Time of Kinn CHEYENNE, Wyo., May 8.--(Special Tel- egram.)-—"The case of Ned Hartley Cope- land, formerly of Omaha, wh llled A. C. Rogers of St. Joseph on a train near Wam- sutter”last summer, was given to the jury late tonight after lemgthy arguments by the prosecution and defen: Barly in the trial the defense admitt erything set up by the prosecution and the case prac- tically devolved upon the question of the sanity of the accused. Eminent physicians from Denver, Rawlins, Rock Springs and the superintendent of the State Insane asylum testified that they belleved Cope- land was (nsane at the time the deed was committed. Dr. McGhee of Rawlins, who was on the train with Copeland when the shooting occurred, sald he thought Cope- land was drunk. This evidence seemed to bave littl eight with the jury and the bellef 1s general that Copeland will be found insane and committed to the state asylum. BRAKEMAN'S SHOT IS FATAL J. F. Aman Kills Fire At Green River, Wyo., and Gives Himself Up. e GREEN RIVER, ‘Wyo., May 8.—(Special Telegram.)—J. F. Aman, a Union Pacific brikeman, shot and killed Henry E. Wads- worth In the yards here this morning. Aman gave himself up and 1s now in JAll He says Wadsworth threw a stone at him and fired. This is his only explanation of the aftair. Both men live fn Evanston. Wadsworth was a firemen on Aman's tratn and coming down Granger hill last night they had a quarrel, which was set- tled for the time, but when the train reached the yards here Aman s alleged to have gone to the engine and called Wadsworth down. The fight was renewed. The bullet took effect In Wadsworth's brain, entering the back of the head and lodging In the forehead. He was taken to Rock Springs on a special train, but he dled before reaching the hospital. Sheepmen Strive for School La: CHEYENNE, Wyo, May 8.—(Special)— The state land board has on flle applica- tions for lease of a large tract of school lands situated in Sweetwater and Carbon counties, in what is known as the Red Desert country. In all about 7,000 acres are wanted. The applicants are sheep- men, who want the Jand for grazing pur- noses. As the schoel .land wanted Ifes within the so-called rallroad land grant it is probable that flockmasters will apply to the Unlon Pacific for a lease on the al- ternate sections. ALL KEPT THE SECRET. Incident of Mr. Wynne's Appointment tant Postmaster Gemeral. In January last, retates the St. Louls Globe-Demoacrat, when the Gridiron ciub, that most famous of newspaper men's or- anizations, held fts' annual dinner Presi- ent Roosevelt was the guest of honor. It is an unwritten l.w,o( the club that noth- ing which, ocours in the banquet hail shail be given ‘publiclty. Tt will do no harm, however, to refer fo one statement mndu by the rrenhent in .r:cpnndlnl io8 toast: I wish he B always take mm new: -per men Inlo ‘my confidence.’’ The president of the Gridiron club is Rob- ert J. Wynne. ' 'He ‘presided u the ban?u"} an A and President R \(flt. u honor, was sea hL ust be- fore the pre-ldehl‘ohrud on, hie trip ‘to Bouth-@arolina he llf come to the whne House be!ore 9 °°‘:§‘ in the morning. Wynne got the presiden lll Mm to accept a with the adminiatr; that of a cabinet officer. It was t| Eh? of first assistant postmaster eral western senator had been urging one of his constituents for the appointment, and until this Ianllor could communi his candidate and arrange matte le— factorily lh« president did not offer to Wynne to becume ublie. “How lhlll we oedp his out of the ‘: the president. y llkl’ll the newspaper men into our confidénce. done. . Wynne notified a majority, of the 200. correspondents at the capital of the offer made to him by the president, and asked that nothing oe sald about it for two aays. Not a man ed the confidence imposed in him. It was a good illustration of the ethics in t corps " of Washington corresponden Wynne was one of them, suddenly trans; formed into ublie officis had asked of the ‘boys” had be Hundreds of times. n' the jast thirty_vents In which-he has been an active newspaper 'l‘he way in which Wynne was selec for the Dblace s ‘worth teliing. _fenator Hanna gave a dinner to a few public men and the Washington correspondents whom he knew best. nator Pll(l of Connect- cut and Heary C. Payne, .the postmasi eneral, weére guests, and w seated side y side. Thty were flllcull availal ing Prisoners. CHEYENNE; Wyo., May 8.—(Special.)— The State Board of Charities and Reform | has' been wrestling for several days with the question of caring for the fast increas- ing. population at the new penitentiary at Rawlins. No definite action was taken In the matter, The capacity of the Rawlins penitentiary is 200 convicts. There ai oners there a in soon. The plan that will undoubtedly be adoptea 18 to transfer about twenty-five or thirty prisoners back to the penftentiary st Lara- mie and run two institutions. The ture will not meet agaln until next Janu- ary and its appropriation would not be available-before April. Another matter considered by the board was the request of Lessee Boswell to be released from his contract with the state to care for the prisoners. This the board could not do under the law. Lessee Boswell also asked for an fin- creased allowance for caring for the con- victs. It is learned that the caring for the state prisoners is costing upward of $2,400 per month. NO FOOD FOR THIRTY HOURS |° Woman Wanders on the Op 1l She Finally Rea & Ranch. Prairie CHEYENNE, Wyo., May §.—(Special Tel- egram.)—Mrs. Andrew T. Clark, wife of ex-Councliman Clark, who disappeared from her home early yesterday wmorning, was found this afterncon at the ranch of H. Fartbing, on Pole creek, twenty miles north of Cheyetne. Mrs. Clark spent the night oo the open- prairie and was almost famished [ 500 when she reached the Farthing place, She had water, but was without food for thirty hours. She was brought in tonight. See End of W ing Strike. CHEYENNE, Wyo., May 8.—(Specigl)— The Federation of Labor met last night, but pothing. was done in regard to the carpenters. plumbérs and paluters. The boases said they would pay good men 40 ocents, and even 50 cents per hour, but that they could not afford work: the same wages as the ekilled mechanics. It seems to be the gemeral opinion of both bosses and men that the present troubles will blow over in & short time. Carpenters and plumbers and painters were all at work this moraing and 8o more trouble 1 anticipated. men, fof the place as first assistant Box master general. ence to offers l(nll:a and Hl'li\’)' de 'l Ji “b.'fl - \! .'; | an ol ew.of Tnlana. Benator Payne, Platt, “and ses com-wnd-nu 0U_Wa) sald it l-fllll the ~two-score rmnt you do not see "‘J Payne ,’unud up and do e rows of ress who were Ml‘d at the decorated tables. the m:l\—hn above all_6thers,” He -Ilnu:lh.( M'. general. d o *the snua. where sat” AL e 0% o6, Sendsar of the guents of NONGF Thaf 'was ‘who T had in mind” said Platt. A PHILIPPINE TIT-BIT. Minute Fish Mad Amerl The sl pine ".;3-’::-" "h: Into Cakes for Seldie: minute fish in Phillp- any other fish in shape and proportlon, €0 far as the untrained eye can see.. On unt of its Phenomens] minuteness ft 1. almost transparefit. I has a black chin, a black line down its center, behind the'anal fin and a fow black s bac any of the specimens aliilote nder “ine microncope contalned ripe eggs, comparable with the mernl needle nolnt and measuring 1-200 of an inch in dl The females are lll'h(ly large n lhe males. The former aver: nc( on more than half an inch length: the males just half an inch. "R'"m mature specimens are but t hs of an inch from tip of nose to WM fact ard to these in- foliesiinel creatures 1o 1 Hatn riged for human food. Lake Bum 1% & velcanic basin in the shadow of Mount Iriga. ‘Here the #ide of a mountain seems to have baen recently bluwn out by volunlc action. oy Tariolies of fshes of svery -sise :h;’l::lr the lake, but the sinarapan are Y e mosL numerous. The Bicols wh::\“ fishi l. for them use large sheet of close wi hloh !h' dl under "¢ water whe i con: MAY 9, 1902. 4964009608000 OL 0O SO *PRO OV ICIO SO0 SO CDIO 400G +D 000y High Beef A Benefit if it teaches you that Better health Greater strength Keener Brain come from Grape--Nuts Try the change and “cut out” meat for breakfast. Our word for it you will feel “‘Fit as a Lord” in a week’s time by breakfasting on Grape-Nuts and cream, a little fruit and perhaps one or two soft eggs. If you ever try this experiment, you will always bless the day of high beef that waked you up. There'’s a reason why Grape-Nuts furnishes power fo the body and brain. The food contains selected parts of the field graius that furnish phosphate of potash in a natural state that can be assimi~ lated by the human body, this joins with the albumen of food and forms the soft filling of the brain and nerve centers. Feed skilfully and you can “do things.” The greatest brain workers in America eat Grape-Nuts. Ask one or two, they’ll tell you, You meat eaters who are ailing in any sort of way might take a valuable hiut from the foilowing statement of Chief Chemist Wiley, of the Agricultural Department, in the Daily Press from which we give the following extracts : “Thereis no doubt of the fiact that meat~ eating is not essential to human life, and that men can be wzll nourished without resorting to a flesh diet, I think the statement may be accepted without question that, as a rule, we eat too muzh, not only of meat, but of all forms of food. The question of limiting the diet is based primarily not on the priciple of economy, but on the requirements of hygiene. “At the early breakfasts which Americans are wont to indulge in, that I before going to their daily work, the omission of meat is to bs earnestly advised. “It is well known that the ‘men who are nourished very extensively on cortaln csreals are capable of the hardest and most enfuring labor. Meats are quickly digested, furnish an abundange of energy soon after consumption, but are net retuined in the digestive organism long enough to sustain pcrm-n-nt mmcullr exertion.” a hearty meal You will feel the energy of Grape-Nuts longer than any meal of meat. Remomber Grape-Nuts food costs nbout one ceut per meal for each person aud all grocers sell it. Made at pure food factories of Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. o Ce@e O_O@OGOGO [oR2oL JOR RO S JORJORAOL A CRJORFORAOEFORIO O OR RO FOR A RO 2oL OO 2oL AT 2 T OT A oR R o o Y T e QP9 ¢VID 0PV ICLOIPIIO P00 9090 PCIVIBINV IV 20202099 9C VIV IDI09R P09 ICIP IV ID 209D 2090 2E 90 9096809 @ Coe 00D® 00 PP 0P POEO PP PPV G0V ICEO CPID FDEPIO SO D ICEO SO FRENCHMEN FICHT SHERIFF All Three of Them Are Seriously Wounded Before They Give Up. WOMEN THEN TAKE UP THE CONTEST Trouble All Arises Over mg_m to Pnesess Some Accretion Land Along the Missour! River. ated and voted for, postoffice and custom | since the destruction houses our’ forefathers will seem mrmK befors the bu indeed; embarking upon eity building with was the ais grane of $U.200 from the states of Vir-| Banke, about twélve years | #inla and Maryland. jemifie, Lu., tan miles above This, however, was supplemented by a 1llhaulfi not accom; by national lottéry, for which 60,000 tickets of e, the accide m |- u it widhout were 8old and of whioh 18,730 were to draw p rallel because of . the o etroum- prises, the,capital’one being a Botel Which | biances, under which Eever]: pessons per- was 10 cost he price of the tcket Ished after the Teacus seemod cortain. was $7: ‘and- the Grides ringea from 416 up boat was southward bound, with a to the hotel. "Nor need the student of cur- ot , near Pla- Dbig cargo end & large number of paksengers morals and manner depressed by | aboard.” While in midstream fire was ity of eur times, wholly despond covéred in one of the for: ard cabine The e reflects that the lottery was made | command to bank it vml And at use of -not. only: in ‘the -bullding of our n -n% The fire tlonal capitol,’but. churches, schools, col leges, even Harvard {tself, were Indeb(ed to the ‘wheel for monéy o secure : thelr usefulness. b 17% the president's house and the capitol were the only evidences of a city | where the (raveler now sees squares and monuments, edifices and gardens and parks that eelipse : Parh jenna, in beauty ARd taste . When'the lottery falled and. the sums voted by Virginla and Maryland gav Washington was less of a cit down {n Alaba.na, whic al of that state and was M water, while the rest, cl\nk’ t lhn w ld fely reach the bank, re- ot uwod at_the w] I. hh elolbu lmolln‘ and h\l flesh bliste) flg;‘u.l hul'm l:l'\"ll: 8, M" ( (hflr P answerin t was run aground. (nllo'-fi the rrm- enes nm nt-mm tha nflm"'u:fl worst in "Eerecthey the crew and passe: ‘Bon |'o‘lhe lbu:t. g LB - leep in l sort o ulck- o the pt to he Untor- tuw a ll.d boxes and timbers bet f boat IM IIM helpless viotime. intense heat T he boxes and runlln& boln:- fllcd in agony before f eyes of their companion: 4IOUX CITY, Ia., May 8.—(Special Tele- Lram.)- young Frenchmen named Turgeon, living in South Dakota, five mil northwest of Sloux City, were badly wounded late this afternoon in a running battle with Sheriff Lewison and posse of Union county, South Dakota. Frederick Turgeon was shot In the body just below the heart. He is lylng In & critical con- ditlon at his home. Valarie and Adelor Turgeon were wounded quite seriously in the legs. The fight was over a strip of acofetion land along the Missouri river, which was claimed by the Turgeons. M Adama of Sioux City also claimed it lnd leased it to Homer Robb and Al Griffith. However, the Turgeons held fdraible po- ssesalon and defled officers to oust thém. Today thé sheriff was directed to serve | papérs of ejection upon the Turgeons and | he went to the disputed strip with three deputies. They found the Turgeons de- flantly gwaiting them and before they got mear them the fighting began. Bullets | flew thick and fast from the guns and re- volvers. One after another the Turgeons were wounded, but they kept up t firing until their ammunition was e: bausted. Then they surrendered and cal ried into their homes. Their mother and ‘l Mrs. Frederick Turgeon tried to keep uup the battle with clubs and the sheriff and his deputies wererequired to use force to sub- due them. WASHINGTON' by, the commissionars Lo 0 on | sank nea with the work' and the country was als- | tracted by such profiigate outlay. pres of the time thundercd against such ex- travagance. — RIVER DISASTERS RECALLED. Burning and Sinking of St DEATH RECORD. in Last Twenty-Five ~Phere Nave been iy the Ia Dr. Bdward Laurence Feehun. Lhaie A Sogon.. atanmbont ST. LOUIS, May'8~Dr. EdWard Laur- . In » B m n‘;’l‘?‘nolnl‘mn;r:h:l ence, brother of the most wevelsnd Arch- g‘ulurl on 2. bishep P. A. h-z..yt Chicago, who for forty years had practicing physi- months ago. clan in 8t. Louls, dfed at Ris residence to- from Paducah, when a storm ove Bright's dlagase is given as the cause T et T e LI "‘;:?" of;Dls death. He 'was 67 years of age. chil- Beveral Dereeha’ (bolbelng wost. an —— 'aducah nearl ng,. 11§ dren, were drowned. g of Cityof ear ago at Brumkhorst | mifes below 8t Louls, caused the. d thirteen persons. The boat md nding and was backing ou& g hannel, when it struck a hidden A hele- forty. feet ong was torn in ull, lnd fl Iunk 80 rl)l ly that there waken the passengers llnnlnhroulubuuu many of whom erished. of » Paduach = settled in Ywun!y ~ui% kvl ot water and never was | raised Beveral persona o Fors and arew of Kate Ad“#fl lolt !u lives 13 “that boat in January, e bon, took hro In-the"cabin aad almost wiholly a when its com- nder brnuxhlrgt to the bank a short ance ‘above: a, point forty dams KANSAS OITY, May Matthews, who hadl been general of the Milwaukes Young Women's Chris- tian association, state seorefary for Mis- sourl and ‘general: escretary of fhe Bt. Joseph Youns Women's Christian assocta- tion, died today in this city. — Carnegle Scholagehips Awarded. LONDON, May §.»-At this morning's ses- sion of the Iron and Bteél institute it wi announced that the Andrew Carnegle scholarships to earry o0 Tesearches In metallvrgy for this year had been awarded to & ).y, Campbell of New Y BEGINNING. Hew & Lottery Alded in Putting Up Efforts to provide more decent and repu- mF'll'fe, |a miles mp {able g et i (B Washiron T npe A e:::g:fo:‘.uwan.:: 1';.". "4 to 1t| Euglishmen, 1o & Parisia dnd to & resident e oone ot the nabito bulldings Lh | Orover Cloveland from Weat Memphia to | of Berlin. Thres scholerships were g.“’"’ 9f pome of the publio bulldings in | YERCL " O (e’ occaston of his Visit to that city in e Jpost errible catastrophe on the Miss) A rivef or any of lts tributaries awarded in 1901, but Mr. Carnegis was so gratified with the results then obtained nol unfll 179 that the tempest. mcu- the thirteen coloni ey ru oven Blskets: trom whioh. he water 3bon draine, lcaving a comml mass of the um- creatu hen fleets of rmen bring them to Shore In his_eondition the natives buy them riy., They are ses. h pepper and ot uncooked into cakes and in p Sun. Our soldiers are reported to have y grown fond of this strange dlet. - Valuabi Rains is Kansas, PHILLIPSBURG, Kan., May 8.—(Special.) —The recent heavy rains In this county Liave giehily benefited whewi. calitios where wheat was put in stubble ground it will be listed to corn, as the dry| ¥ weather dusing April damaged it consid- erably. Pastures are in fine condition since in some ib-| 3 fires andenu- of the federal city that he doubled bis donation. Lmlflflof the wits, the M . The circumfer- .mr'}:‘ 1“:‘1 as it now spreads out | ome s greatly contracted | posing dimensions originall 1aid out t onfinm, L'Enfant. the supes office now stretche: u;ony The. poetic Frenchman, in- oired recent events in Paris, 'had marked site for & natonal tabsrnacle, where national events were to rel . where national ob The World's Cure for . CONSTIPATION Natursf Lazative Miners! Water. opes and pla loF evan in those ‘days | found t 11 sides b Tegisia- t 18 the Best and Hafest 5 ";;u A and yflull- snese and liver trou “‘w res gally coerded into wing ‘up his com- S e o & D Toes wmm AP iT88 003 i g0ld was offared, without restriction as to calling, to the citizen who - . for B in the ted design b Prasidents, noum: “Five pundred :;,..;..: o et Mlnlonl' (7-'1 odm M b-'l--h\d ”‘ lur‘.tlan lhl ha bacom- sums aanually sppropri- | '.' T Tamaline wich

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