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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE TUESDAY., DECEMBER 1, POSTOFFICE NOTICE, (8hould be read DAILY by all Interested, a8 changes may occur ai any time.) Forelgn mails for the week ending De cember 5, 188, will close (PROMPTLY in all cages) at the General Postoffice as £51- lows: PARCELS-POST MAILS one ne hour earlier than closing time shown be low. Parcels-Post Mails for Germany close At § p. m. Monday, per & & Kronprinz Wilhelin; Wednesday, per Neckar; Friday, per & 8. Pretoria Regular and supplementary mails At Foreign Station half hour later closing time shown below (except that Sup- plementary Malls for Europe and Central America, via Colon, close one hour later at Foreign 'Station) close than Teansatlantic Mails, t8:30 a. m. for ITALY direct per & & Lombardia (mall must be 4ai rected “per s 8. Lombardia’); at £:20 a. m. for, ITALY direct, per s. 8. Princess Irene (majl nust be directed ‘per Princess Trehe’): at 8:30 a, m. (suf mentary 11 a. m.) for EUROPE, per s. s Kronprinzg Wilhelm, via Plymouth, Cher. bonrg and Bremen WEDNESDAY At 11 a.m 12230 p. m.) for EUROPE, via Queenstown (maill fo France erland, Italy, Spain, Portu Egypt, Greece, British India and Lorenzo .\"Am\wz must be directed “‘per 8. 8. Ced rle’). THURSDAY At BWITZERLAND. 1 TUGAL, TURKE TURSDAY (supplementary per 8. 8. Cedric m. for FRANCE. ALY, SPAIN. POR EGYPT, GREBCE BRITISH INDIA AND LORENZO MAK QUEZ, per s s La Touraine. via Havre (mafl for other parts of Kurope must be directed “per . 8. La Touraine’) FRIDAY—At 6:30 p. m. for AZORES 181, ANDS, per 8. 8. Romanic, from Boston BATURDAY At 2:30 a. m. for IRELAND, gor s Ftruria, via Queenstown (maii or other parts of Burope must be di- rected “per . s Etruria’): at 6 a. m. for EUROPE, per s s Philadelphia, via Southampton; at 7:30 a. m. for ITALY direct, per . & Prinz Adelbert (mail must he difected “per & & Pring Adelbert ') at 780 . m. for COTLAND direct, per ® % Astoria (mall must be directed '‘per s & Astorfa’); at £:30 a. m. for BEL. GIUM direct, per s. s. Finland (mail must be directed * Finla “ of the Supplementary Transatlantic Mails named above, addi- tional Supplementary Mulls are opened on the plers of the American, Euglish, French and German steamers’ and re main open until Within Ten Minutes of the hour of sailing of steamer. After the closin Mails for Sounth and Central Americy West Indies, Ete, TUBSDAY=At 9: a. m. (supplementary 10:5 a. m.) for CENTRAL AMERICA (exeept Costa Rica) and BOUTH "PA CIFIC PORTS, per 5 8. Seguranca, via Colon (mail for Guatemala must be di- rected “‘per s. s. Seguranca'’). WEDNESDAY At § a. m. for BERMUDA per s. 8. Pretoria; at 12130 p. m. (supple + mentary l\r m.) for TI'&KR ISLAND and DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, per s. s New York, THURBDAY—At 8 a. m. for CUBA & Vigilancla (mail for Mexico, via reso, Campeche and Vera Cruz must be direcfed “per s. #. Vigilancia”); at 12 m. for MEXICO, per ». s Opland, via Tam- Bico nail wust be directed “per 5. s pland”). FRIDAY~At 9:30 a. m. for NEWFOUND- LAND, per s. & Rosalind; at 7 p,_m. for NEWFOUNDLAND, per s Sicilian, from Philadelphin. SATURDAY At §:30 ® s Tennyson, via Pernambuco, fa, Rio Janelro and Santos (mail Northern Brazil, Argentine, Uruguay Paraguay, must_ be directed “per 8. 8 Tennyson); at 8:30 a. m. (supplementary %30 a m) for CURACAO and VENE- ZUBLA. per s. s Maracaibo (mail for Bavanilla and Cartagena must be di- Tected “per 8. . Maracaibo”); at 9 a. m for PORTO RICO, per s. s. Ponce, via Ban Juan; at 9:30 a. m._ (supplementary 10:30 @, m.) for FORTUNE ISLAND, JA- MAICA SAVANILLA CARTAGENA and GREYTOWN., “per s s Valencia (mafl for Costa Rick must be directed “per & s Valencla); at 9:3 a. m. (sup- ementary 10:30 x. m.) for ST. THOMAS, Er CROLK, LERWARD and WIND: WARD ISLANDS. BRITISH, DUTCH and FRENCH GUIANA, per s s. Korona (mall for Granada and Trinidad must be directod “per &. 5. Korona'): at 9:30 a. m (supplementary 10:30 4. m.) for INAGUA and HAITI, per s s Flandria (mall for Port au Prince, Aux Cayes and Jacmel must be directed “per s. 8 Flandria'): @t 10a. m. for CUBA, per s 5 Me: Tavana; at 10 a. m. for HAITI, per s. & Oranje Nassau (mafl for Curacao, Vene- zuéla, Trinidad, British and Dutch Guiana must’ bo directed 'per s, 5. O Nas- w’): et 100w m. for AR iNF URUGUAY and PARAGUAY, per s. Boldler Prince. per 8 Pro. a. m. for BRAZN Ba- for and rland, Ete., Bx- preific. CUBA~Via Florida, closes at this office dnilly, except Thursday, at §5:30 a, m. (tho connecting malls close here’ an Wednes. days and Saturdays via Tampa, and on Mondays via Miami) MEXICO CITY—-Overiand, unless speclally addressed for dispatch by steamer, closes at this office dally, except Bunday, at 1:30 p. m. apd 11:% p.'m. Sundays at 1:00 p. m, And 1l .p. m NPWFOUNDLAND—By rail toJNorth Syd- ney, and thence by steamer, closes at this offide daily at 6:30 p. m. (connecting mails elose here every Monday, Wedn y and Saturday). JAMAICA—By rall to Boston. and thence by steamer, closes at thig office at 6:30 p. m. every Tuesday. y rail to Philadelphia and thence by steamer, closes at thie office at 11:30 p. m. every Wednesday MIQUELON—By rall to Boston. and thence by steamer, closes at this office dally at . m. 1Pk PUERTO CORTEZ and GUATEMALA—By rail t6 New Orleans, and thence by steamer, closes at this of- fice dafly, except Sunday, at §1:30 p. m. p. m., Sundays at §1:00 p. m. and §11:3 p. m." (connecting mall Closes here Mondays at {11:%0 p. m COSTA RICA—By rail to New Orleans, and then by steamer, closes at this office daily, except Sunday, at §1:30 p. m. and 11:% p. m., Sundays at §1:00 p. m. and 1130 p. m. (connecting mall closes here uesda t g1 . m. IREGIETRRED MATL Cioses at 6 p. m. eoyiocs Sy : Transpacific Mall NEW ZEALAND, AUSTRA (exoept West), NEW ' CALEDO! FIIT, BAMOA and HAWAIT, via 8an Wrancisco, close here dally at 60 p. m. up to De. cember 85, ‘nelusive. for dispatch per a #. Ventura. (If ‘he Cunard i ng the Br ish mail ‘or does ot arnve m time = nect witk this dispatch, extra malle—closing at 5:3 a.m. and 9:0 a. m. and 6:30 p m.: mun- days at ¢:0a. m, $4. m and 6:30 p. m will be made up and forwarded”until the arrival of the Cunard steamer.) AUSTRALIA (except West), FLIT ISL. ANDS and NEW CALEDONIA (specially addressed only), Vancouver and Vie- toria, B. C., close here dally at 6:3 p. m up to December §5, inclusive, fer dispateh r 5. 8 Moana CHINA and JAPAN, via Seattle, close here daily at 630 p. m. up to December 6, {pchusive, for ispaich per s. 5. Hyades HAWAIL via San Francisco. close here il al 630 p. m. up to December 12, fnclusive, for dispateh s & Alameda HAWATL JAPAN, CHINA and PHILIP- PINE IHLANDS. via 8an Franclsco, close here dally at 880 p. m. up to December 7. inclusive, for dispatch per . . China CHINA and JAPAN, via Vaascouver and ictorta. B, 'C., close here dail: at 6:3 p. m. up o December §22, inclusive for dis patch per s s Empress of India. (Mer ebandise for United svates Postal agency at Shanghal cannot be forwarded via Canada.) HAWAIL, JAPAN, CHINA and PHILIP- PINF ISLANDS, via San Francisco, close here dally at 6:30 p. m. up to De- mber 17, inclusive, for dispatch per s 8. Dorid. PHILIPPINE cisco, close here daily December §27. U. 8. transport TAHITI and MARQUESAS ISLANDS, via Ban Francisco close nere dally at 6:30 p. m up to January §i inclusive, for dispatch s 5 Mariposa NOTE—Unless otherwise adar Australla forwarded via E New Zealand and Philippines Francisco—the, quickest routes. pines speclally addressed ‘‘via or “via Europe” must be fully the forelgn rates. Hawall is forwarded San Francisco exclusively Transpacific malls are forwarded to port of salling dally and the schedule of closing 18 arranged on the presumption of thelr uninterrupted ovegland transit. §Regls tered !n..n cloges 6 p._m, previous day CORNELIUS VAN BT, Postmastor. Posioffice. New York, M. Y.. November 2, ISLANDS, via at 6:30 inclusive, can Fran m. up to for dispatch per uroy vi Phillp Canada’ prepald at GOVERNMENT NOTICES. PORT MEADE. 8 I aled proposals. in tripilcate, will be re celved unul' 2 o'clock p. m. December 7 1808 for the construction of macadam roads nnd cem. walks at Fort Meade. § Information furnished upon ap United States reserves right to reject any or all propossls, o any eot. v ning proposa roada en NTS a0 D aa November 7. 108 0, via | sed, West | nd | San | 'H.uuuun TIME CARD, lhli;! STATION<10TH AND MARCY. Iinois Cen N Leave. Chicago Express ........a 7.3 am Chicago, Minneapolls & St. Paul Limited Minneapolis & St. Paul TXPress ......ove b 7:3 am Chicago & Northwestern. The Northwestern Line, A 3:40 am all:) am §:10 pm Arrive 210:35 pm A 7:50 pm @& §:06 am | Fast Local Mall Local Sloux City Daylight St. Paul.. Daylight Chicag Limited Chicago Fast_Chicago Local Chicago Fast St. Paul 8t. Paul Express Fast Mail Local Sioux City Norfolk & Bonesteel Lincoln & Long Pine | Deadwood, Het Spring: and Lingoln Casper & Wyoming Ex..d Hastings, Superior, and Albjon " Union Pacific Overland Limited The Fast Mail California Kxpress... ... The Chicago - Portland Special ... 3:20 pm The Portiand - Chicago Special Eastern Fxpress ‘he Atlantic xpress. ... « Colorado Special..a11:35 pm hicago Spectal........... Ancolr, Heatrice and Btromeburg EXpress Columbus Local Waba Loul fxp.e st. Louls Locai, Cot ¢l Bluffs........ a 915 am CUnicago Great Western Ity, 21 Bt. Poul & Minne- apolls Limited.. Dodge Express Dodge Express..a Paul & Minne- Limited art Dodge Express.. Dodge Express nicngo, Rock inl EAST Chicago Daylight L't'd.a 3:6 Chicago Daylight Locala 700 Chicago Express | Des Moines Express.. Chicago Fast Express WES™ Rocky Mountaln L't'd. .« 7:30 Lincoln, Colo Spriuxs Denver, Pueblo and West 5 | Texas, California anu Oklahoma Fiyer Missourl Pa Bt. Louly Kxpress. K. C & 8t. L. Exp Chicago. Milwaukee & St Pa Chicago Daylight..... Chicago Fast Ixpress Chicago Limitea....... 2750 am Des Moines Expres: a 340 pm BURLINGTON STATION=~10th & MASON, Chi Chicago 7:60 am 5iv0 am am 2:50 pm 2:50 pm 16 pm 2:50 pm 10 pm 9:40 am 8:60 am 4120 pm 06 pm 40 am 10 am 45 pm 36 am Carnon Ball ....8 586 pm un- 210:30 pm am am am pm nm am a1:20 pm .8 525 pm 10:00 am 85..a10:50 pm 10 pm Chicago, Burlington & Quincy. Leave. Chicago Special.. Chicago Vestibuied Chieago Local...... Chicago Limited, Kast Mail...., Burlington & Missourl River. Wymore, Beatrice and Lincoln ... veveed 8:50 am Nebraska I3x as Denver Limited a 4:10 pm Black Hills Puget Sound Express.........all:10 pm tibules s Colorcao Vi Flyer 8 Lincoln ‘Fast Mail.. Fort Crook and Platts- mouth > b 3:10 pm Bellevue & Pacific fof..a pm | Bellevue & Pacific Jct..a 3:30 am Joseph & b 2:57 pm Kansas City Day E: | BenEenis Flyer....... iKansas Clty Night B! 810145 WEBSTER DEPOT—15TH & WEBSTER pm pm A 6:30 am Missouri Pacific. Nebraska Loeal, via Weeping Walter. Chicngo, St. Pa Omaha. .b4:10pm a10:% am Minnenpolis & Leaye. Arrive. A §.8) am a $:10 pm 00 pm al1:20 am 5:45 pm b 8:46 am except Sunday. d Daily e Daily except Monday. Twin City Passenger. Bloux City Passenger...a Oakland Local b b Daily Nine Million Dollars in Frelght Charges from Immense Citrus Fruit Crop, An official of the Union Pacific who makes it a business to anticipate the move- ment of frelght of different kinds has re- cently complled a statement showing wha may be expected this season in the move- ment of oranges from California, Accord- g to his figures the three lines which handle the orange crop ffom the coast will haul 30,000 cars of that frult to eastern markets, This is 6,000'cars more than were moved last year. A few statistics ha been compiled In connection with the moy ment of this fmmense crop, among which the item of freight which will be paid by the shippers looms up to the, extent of 9,000,000, Sald the ratlroad officlal: “It seems almost incredible to one not familiar with the volume of this business that the east will pay this amount of money, for frelght on oranges, but when you add to this the cost of the frult itself you will find that $36,000,000 {s the amount which orange lovers will disburse for the enjoyment of this Jusclous frult. The most of this immense amount of money will be collected by fruit venders 5 cents at a time. This total does mot include the retaflers' profit, but simply the price which will bé 1 to theé producer in California. When you add the middleman’s profit it will swell the total to @ much largen figure.” Even at $9,000,000 the raflroads do not eon- sider that the hauling of the orange crop pays them, as the cars have to be taken, in most empty to the and, of course, no frelght is realized on the hauling of an empty car cases. west, HOW TO PREVENT CROU Some Read esting te Young M Guard Again hers—How to t the I ne. post them concerning the cause, first symp. ftem. The origin of cold. Children who @ cold very easily to follow. The first symptom is hoars this is soon followed by | cough, which is easlly recognized and will | mever be forgotten by one wi it. The time to act is when the child first becomes When Cough Remedy is freely to croup will soon the vent croup is a e subject to it take 1ese hoarse. siven, disappear roup cough has developed, it will pre the attack. There is no danger glving this remedy, for it contains not injurious, Ev it Colored Women Arrested, Officers Maloney, Bhield and made a rald on a Tesort at Chicago strect streets Sunday night rounded up several colored women, who were given these penalties in police court | Ollie Green five days: Minnie Lewls, and costs; Pearl and Lettie Kennedy, $1 and costs each: Mamie Fleids, cos| Ditheller 35 and was chased by Officer blacks before caught PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. wte. Josle Maloney Greer for seven trip Sunday E. E. Bruce business, s at hom | General J. C. Bates came in | Unlon Pacific from Denver Sunday J. J. King. president of the Nebrs lowa Creamery company, has gone tc ver on busivess. H. A, Perkins, commercial a Rock Island, left for & trip to Sunday evening. evening who has begn to Chicago or ain over De t of the nsas Ciiy am 40 pm 10pm | .f 3:20 pm | a8 am | BIG RETURNS FROM ORANGES & that Will Prove Inter- Croup is & terror to young mothers and to toms and treatment, s the object of this common and croup Is almost sure pecullar rough | » has heard Chamberlafn's 1! tendency after mn Ing Crowe eventh and and 85 and Jessie Green 35 and costs nnd‘f:.mne Euclid Martin returned from an eastern OLD VETS SPIN WAR YARNS Tell of Btirring Times During Civil and Indian Oonfliots. VIVID TALE OF PHIL KEARNEY M\SSACRE Out of Garrivon of One Handred and Seventy-Five Men, Ninety-Five Are Slain by Hed Clond's Tribe, A group of grizzled veterans of the eivil and Sioux Indian wars were discussing the herole achlevements of certain of their | comrades at army headquarters the other day to decide which was the bravest thing they ever witnessed. Sald one think about the nerviest thing 1 ever saw was at the battle of Fredericksburg Our regiment, the Sixth United States cavalry, had been detailed dismounted to |lay the pontoon bridge across the Rappa- { hannock under a heavy artillery fire from the Johnnies from the cliffs just back of the town. Aside from that, atong the river front was a skirmish line of Johnnies partly secreted in the tall stone and brick houses, and they kept pouring a deadly fire on the pontooniers. All but the last boat had been placed in the river and some one had to jump into the river and wade ashore | under that deadly fire to fasten the boat thus completing the bridge. Sergeant Henr: Sible, I think was his name, volunteered to do the job. A dozen men had already been killed by the sharpshooters in the houses, but Sible never flinched and waded out shore, pulling that unwieldly boat around and made it fast. Tge very audacity of the act compelied the respect of the Johnnies and they jolned in cheers av Sible's act our ay Sergeant James Delaney, Twenty-seventh United States Infantry, was stationed at Fort C. F. 8mith, Mont., {In the winter of 1866, and told of the sixty- five miles ride of Sergeants Craham and Grant from Fort Phil Kearney to that post after the Fort Phil Kearney massacre, De- cember 21, 186 We knew rothing of the massacre at Phil Kearney until the arrival of Grant and Graham of the Twenty-seventh. There was a garrison of 175 men at Phil Kearney the morning of the massacre, but ninety- five of the were killed about noon that day by (he Sioux under Red Cloud. Tt wa Mmter shown that nearly 00 Indians participated In the massacre which oceur- red about four miles west of the post ' Phil Kearney. Colonel Carrington very reasonably presumed that the garrison at Fort Smith was also wiped out and after the massacre he called for volunteers to make the ride to Fort Smith and ascertain the truth. Sergeants Graham and Grant volunteered to make the ride and did so. They had to cut their way through the In- dians and reached Smith in safety But on the return they were pursued and had many narrow escapes in reaching Phil Kearney safely, but Grant id not show up for several days and when found he' was wandering about In the mountains, insane from exposure and pri- vation where he died fn the Natfonal Home for Insane Soldlers formerly of the boys “There w.a a little fellow in Company I, of our regiment, the Sixth cavalry, named Bllly Smith," sald Gus Schmaltze, “who aid a pretty brave thing on the Miles ex- pedition in the winter of 157, near Ante- lope Hills, Indlan Territory. He volun- tegred with Amos Chapman, the govern- ment scout, and three others of us fo carry some important messages-back to Camp Supply. Billy was company cook a good deal of the {ime and he got an id into his head fhat the boys thought him a coward. On this trip back from the front we were jumped by a bunch of In- dlans M the Wichita bottoms. We were all well mounted, but before we knew what was up we were completely surrounded by Indlans. We dismounted and made .for s buffalo wallow, with a view to making a rifie pit' out of it. Billy held the horses while the rest of us burrowed in the wallow to make a breastwork. He was about twenty down his knees and Chapman called to him to leave the horses and come into the pit. Billy said, ‘No, I can hold them, but hurry a little, for I believe I'm hit.' As he spoke he vomited a lot of blood, and then started to crawl toward us. The horses pulled away from him and a on just as, he reached the pit he stretched himself out along the top between us and the Indlans, saying: ‘Boys, I hain't any good any more. They can't hurt me now #o T'll Jay here and be a breastwork for you! He was dead before we could drag him down back of ‘the little breastwork. Our horses stayed near us and we suc- ceeded in driving the Indians off. 'The government afterwards put up a monu- ment for poor Billy, with his last words cut on it." Billy Beard of the Bighteenth infantry told this one: “I was with a detachment of twenty men that was attacked by In- dians under Red Cloud at Crazy Woman creek In the summer of 1886. They jumped us the morning of July 2 and kept us busy all day long Tieutenant Daniels was killed at the outset and Sergeant Terrell along toward evening. Nearly every other man in the command was wounded. It began to look desperate for us and we decided to kill ourselves rather than sub- mit to capture, knowing it meant worst kind of torture. Just before sun- down Chaplain Alpha Wright and Private William Wallace, who were of our party, though badly wounded, volunteered to ride from Crazy Woman to Fort Reno for re- inforcements, and had to cut their way through the Indlans to do so. They did this, and I never saw, nor do I hope ever to see, & more glorious sight than those two men galloping through that cordon of Indlans shooting right and left with their pistols, The Indlans were astonished at thelr nerve and hadn't the courage to follow them very for. They reached Reno in safety, but the ride killed both of the horses. The distance was thirty miles. || We were saved that night through the enforced march of a detachment of 300 men that happened to be coming up from Fort Phil Kearney, under command of Captaln Burroughs. Jim Delaney, here, was one of the rescuing party. Chaplain Wright dled In Nebraska City a few years ago.” The scalp of ldeutenant Danlels was re- covered from the Indian who killed him and the gruesome relic can be seen in a clgar store window at Thirteenth and Far- nam streets. RUSSIA INDULGES IN THREATS Tejls China it Can Easily Japan Should that Nation Interfere. LONDON, Nov. $.—According to the To- kio correspondent of the Dally Mall a tele- gram from Tien Tsin to the Amiji reports a sensational conversation between Gen- eral Wogach and Yuan Shal Kal, director of the Peking-Shan-Hal-Kwan railroad, in which General Wogack Is reported to have stated that the demand for the evacuation | or Manchuria is unreasonable and impos- ble of fulfillment. Yuan Shal Kal is said o I replied that a third power would never consent to the nccupation. | The srrespondent at Tokle of the Times i ®ays that Admiral Alexieff, Russian vic Crash n | Graham succeeded | He was later taken tg V. ashington, | feet from us and suddenly he fell poor Billy stumbled and crawled toward us and the roy of far ¢ Poltava and stroyers to Chemulpo demands for redre recent affray between ese gailors, regarding at Seoul the has three as sent the battle boat & Russia tion with t nd Ja which the Ru maintains un ehip torpedn | NIEDERMEIER WANTS NONEY | Offers to Oonfess C:m: for Roward to Bl‘ Paid to Mother. N‘MAKES PARTIAL CONFESSION OF SOME support « In conne Russiar minister atttitude WOS Y GIL AT SAN JUA Former President ot Dominican Re- | Says that He Helped to Hold Up Chi- public Speaks of Conditions in cugo & Northwestern Train San Domingo. P | SAN JUAN., P. R, Nov eneral | Wos y Gil arrived laet night on the Ger Falke. The Falke light 03 its return ¢ an Near Boo cruiser started day- | to 8an Domingo. In ti of interview with a represta the Associated Press General Wos | Gil said | No significance attaches to_the ¢ trayeling on the crulger Falke Minister Powell oftered m wunboat Newy gston, Ja., but to ¢ Juan and the officials Kkindly offered me transportation | Regarding the overthrow by my govern- ment 1 can only &ay that it_was due to the impatiencp of the people. With my re- | spect for thel constitution this {mpatience | caused the revolution. If the new govern- | ant to know ment starts constitutionally my people will | . WAt to know that agree with ft; If not they will try another | cared for after I'm hung, revolution. 1 had the chair through peace; (0ld boy, who not want it through war, which i8 | murderer of five ralizing to the try | . future of> the minican republic of which depends on the recognition of the protacol | for which There are sigied "by the Vasdues government” with | Minister Powell. I never wanted the pro- nted the Dro- | ana conviction. If you will guarantee me that these rewards will go to my mother tocol ratified, unless the Dominicans ac- cepted it, my acceptance of it was forced | when the revolution came. This protocol | I will convict myself. 1 will confess crimes demands the arbitration of certain ques- | 50T v tions between San Domingo and the United At Will starde you Btate: In accordance with President | In order to make his word goed, Nieder. Roosevelt's agreement with me, signed by told of few crimes which he | claimed to have committed. He outlined them in such . Chlef O'Nell de ed tonight one who ‘was con at CHIC ot young bandit AGO the Nov. #).—Peter Niedermeler, ot who for the last six months | one the quarl course tive of ¥ have elon terrorized vesterday icago, in another confe added several morecrimes to | the long list already charged against him | and his ¢ Van Dein, Marx and Roeski. With parental love uppermost in his mind, Niedermeler offered to tell Chief of Police O'Neil of a score of train hold- | ups, burglaries and crimes that he | has committed, if the rewards offered will only be given to his mother to fact ¢ Unite mpanions, Orlear other y mother will be said the 2i-year- the self-confessod men. “l am gulity of you know nothing, and innocent men are suffering rewards offered for my eaptyre s now wheat malto sts er a “In cereal on a manner as only them b however, his pending rtners | proot | e Additional Crimes, e- | re | A few to { of the additional crimes he claims | participated In are as follows: | one of them. T did not get any, as 1 was Robbery the Central limited | lucky in getting away with my life. They | express at Paducah, Ky, In which Barnes. | found Barnes in a swamp, with his throat one of the robbers, cut his throay while | Saeeounded 1o oAy Viers | cut. He had the ragor in his hand that he escaped. | committed suicide with., Before last May :p of a stags coach a mile from But- |1 spent three years in holdups to have of Ilinois line He nd rob. |1er, "Nev.. two ygars ago, and robbery of | ler, Nev. ‘two years ago, and robbery of {yores outside Chicago, and i the rewards escaped without recognition are forthcoming for my mother 1 will make | Holdup and robbery of Chicago & North-| g clean breast of everything.” Wemtern passenger {rain near Boone, 18., | “qpg police have been so appalled by Nie- Holdup_and attempted robbery of Balul- | dermeler's confession that they hardly give more & Ohjo train at Bdgemoor, Ind., four ! credence to all his assertions. It is ORGE" 1 A thought that his anxiety over his mother's Minor holdups and | ot .Citoago i welfare has prompted him to make him- Belt the author of crimes he did not commit. From | meier the president and_received in San Do mingo, President Roosevelt cannot reach an agreement with another arbitrator | other than mine: Senor Galvan was ap sointed by the ar gove ] oo Psdorl P aenetal Wos ¥ Gii will remain here two ‘r'”"]" in ‘m‘l-: do. Niedermeler fe. monthe, When asked it he were contem- o :‘l‘ “".’]"" "": ’“;:"T t plating asking the United States to estab. g e W ot i lish a protectorate over San Domingo, the | C U B ] general placed his finger the lips and | 3 ! waved his hand significantly, his entire T manner indicating the truth of the port that this was the object of Senor | Galvan's visit President Roosevelt The United States collier Arethusa | arrived here with a full equipment for the establishment of a wireless telegraph sys- tem at San Juan and Cuebra. The will be established before the naval maneuvers are held The Baltimore saifled this afternoon Hampton Roads. Several of its 6-inch guns have become displaced and tention. ¥ for require ut FEAR CANADIAN COMPETITION | Bounty Fed Making Ser Inronds on the British Market, robberies in and out vere mentioned by Niedermeier. But in ull cases he was careful to conceal | he names of his associates In crime, giving sufficient itiine of the crimes to warrant Chief O'Neil in beliey isg that Nledermeier was telling the. truth, | When Niedermeler went back to his cell | it was with the assurance that his mother 1 be bettered $500 financlally Plg dro the. assertions made by Nieder- and Van Dein today, it is sald by the police that more arrests will be made. Chief O'Nell tonight asserted that there was 4 strong probability that Niedermreler and Van Dein would tell of all their ac- complices in other crimes in which both | men have acknowledged they had help. i | LONDON, ' Nov quotes 30,~The Standard this morning statlstics ing that there has been a curtallment of the produc- | tion of pig fron of th» United Kingdcm in | the lnst six months amounting to 190,000 | Northwestern to Pay tons. The report says: “Notwithstancing | this deciine In output stocks have grad- ually increased here from 28,000 tons In May to 523,000 tona fn October, owing to the imports of the Canadlan fron and steel. This competition, which fs bound viewed with misgiving." ONLY HEIR TO MOTHER'S WILL Henry Dodge Estabrook Petitions for | sho wot to Rewnrd. Special Agent William Riley of the Chi- cago & Northwestern raiirond promised | MOB HIDES NEGRO SUSPECTS him that Mrs. Niedermeier should be given | the reward of $500 for the arrest and con- | viction of the Clybourne station robbers, ufter Niedermeler detailed the robbery to | them and exonerated a man named Dolle of 8t. Louis, who is now under indictment. | Operator Dougherty and Ticket Agent La- { throp, the victims of the robbers In sthe Clybourne station holdup, were present | during Niedermeler's confession, going over | with him in afl the robbery and the bounty-fed Canadian to grow, is Men Who Killed Loulsiana Merchant Concealed from Officers by Lynchers, SHREVEPORT, La., Nov. 3).—Uncon- firmed reports from Belcher, La., where Robert Adager, a’ prominent planter and business man, was shot down by negroes last night, are to the effect that three of shooting of Lathrop. the negroes have been caught and identified edermeler detailed the Paducah, Ky, |and by this time have doubtless been holdup particularly, refusing to tell mimes | lynehed. - Five megroes were implicated in for the reason that none of the Tlljnols Cen- | the shooting, which will probably result tral detectives were present. He offéred to | fatally. The fhree men caught were cap- tell Special Agent O'Keefe the entire story | tured within ten miles of Belcher and the of the daring robbery, and even show him | others are moving across the country 1n the the house in Kentucky where he hid after | direction of DeSoto parish with two large | the robbery. posses In hot pursult. 1stalled the train alone,” said Nieder- | The negroes caught near Belcher were robating _of the Last def | estament. Henry Dodge Estabrook of New York h petitioned the county court for the ing of his mother's Wiil.[ He alleges that he s the only heir end that his mother, Caro line Augusta Estabrook, was possessed of real estate in this city to the value of $40,000 You've heard some Champagnes are good Hurried Mornings Active Noons thoroughly cooked, Read, \ds peerless and original form, taste and_substance the best food the world has ever known. ™ my Cashier_Gree Jersey City, N. J. 1 have used all of the cereals, but none of them equal Ready Bits.™ —Rosenr B. Maxtec, Actor, Atlautic Highlands, N. J. i . Weary Nights Ready Bits is always ready, wholesome and satisfying. “Made from perfect whole- , ambered, peptonized, sed and three times Bits in opinion R Bits is the best the market.”-~Fow. 8. Prersoy, dille Banking and Trust Co., NN S ties from rescuing them. The citizens made Iment of thelr intentlon to lyneh the negroes, their crime was a partio- ularly It is impossible to get in communication with Belcher tonight and the fate of the negroes is not positively known. Mr. Adager was shot six times while trying to quell a street disturbance. Very Near n Crime no conee as rocious one. To allow censtipation to polson your body Dr. King's New Lifo Pills oure it and build up your health or no pay. For sale by Kuhn & Co. Movements of Ocean Vessels Nov. 20, At New York—Arrived: London At Havre—Sailed: La Champalgne for ew York. Reported sailing St. Louis 2th as ‘an error At_Cherbourg—Saile 8t Southampton for New York At Scilly, November 3—Passed; Kalser sse from New York for Mesaba from Louls from n Der Gr Plymouth, Cherbourg and Bremen, At Liverpool—-Arrived: Umbria from New ork via Queenstown. Medical authorities now concede that under the system of treatment introduced by Dr. Frank Whetzel of Chicago, ASTHMA CAN BE CURED. Dr. L, D. Knott, Lebanon, Ky Brown, Primghar, lowa; Dr. J, C. t. Paul, Minn.; Dr. M . Beard, So. Framing: ., bear witness to the eficacy of his treatment and the permanency of the cure in their own cases. Dr.Whetsel's new me hod is a radical departure from the old fashioned smoke powders, sprays, etc.. which relieve but 4o Bot cure. FREE TEST TREATMENT prepared for any one giving a short des- eription of the case, and sending names of two other asthmatic sufferers. Ask for booklet of experiences of those cured. Form an opinton of your own founded on taste. You'll find Cook's Tmperial better. mel, 'hen 1 entered the baggage car | placed in concealment at the latter place and threw out three sacks. Barnes grabbed | by citizens in order to prevent the authorl- FRANK WHET: p Dept. N, American -..3.5 hd..”éu?.f;... the 1000f Beauty Every month there are 16 full-page illustrations of popular and beautiful women, mostly of the stage. Christmas number these portraits are reproduced in tint. One of them won In this Prize in Paris 00,000 Copies of the MeTrOPOLITAN MAGAZINE were nec- essary this month to meet the great demand These, as beautiful as they are, are only 16 of the nearly 80 illustrations, on the finest of paper, appearing in the R METROPOLITAN AGAZINE for DECEMBER R. H. RUSSELL, PUBLISHER, 3 WEST 29TH STRERT, NEW YORK