Iowa State Bystander

Friday, September 27, 1901

Des Moines, Iowa

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IOWA Communications must be written on one side of the paper only and be of interest to the public. "Brevity is the soul of wkt." remember We will not return rejected manuscript, unless accompanied by postage stamps. to speak friends Mrs. bome in A. J. Vaughn, who has been quite sick for several weeks, is still quite sick at his home on Oak street. The R will spee later par daughter ```markdown ``` VOL. 8. IOWA STATE BYSTANDER. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY THE BYSTANDER PUBLISHING COMPANY, FIFTH AND LOCUST, ROOM 403 MARSHAL BLOCK. IOWA *PHONE 899. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE AFRO-AMERICAN PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION OF IOWA. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE MOST WORSHIPFUL UNITED GRAND LODGE OF IOWA, A. F. & A. M. One year..... $1.50 Six months..... 75 Three months..... 50 All subscription payable in advance. J. L. THOMPSON, EDITOR. J. H. SHEPARD, MANAGER. Send money by post office order, money order, express or draft, to the IOWA STATE BYSTAN- DER Publishing Company. CITY NEWS Czolgosz will be eleetrocuted Oct. 28. Miss Ethel Wells entertained last Wednesday night. Miss Beatrice Hicklin is quite sick at her home on Tenth street. Mrs. W. H. Humburd is much better at this late report. Mrs. Dora Dungee still remains quite sick at the home of Mrs. Jordan Morris. Mr. and Mrs Harry McCraven are at home to their friends, 1063 Fifth street. Wm. Wilkinson, a chair car porter on the C, & G. W., is enjoying his vacation this month. J. H. Mixon, Jeweler, No. 312 West Third street, tunes Pianos and repairs Organs, Mr. Chas. Richardson of Clive is fixing up his property on 31st street, preparatory to move in this fall. Mr. Jackson Ford returned to his home last Thursday, in Montana where he has a good situation. E. M. Houston has purchased the barber shop at 309 Walnut street, and took possession last week. We the undersigned wish to thank the friends who were so kind during the death of our father, James Ford. MRS. JANE FORD. JACK FORD. Mrs. Martha Bass leaves to night for Fayette county, where she will spend about ten days visiting relatives and friends. Those who owe the BYSTANDER for back subscription will please pay up at once; be fair and honest with us. Mrs. Fitch is dangerously sick at her home on W. 19th and Carpenter Ave. She has been in bed for more than two weeks. Mrs. M. B. West of Kehoka, Mo., arrived in our city yesterday to visit her daughter, Mrs. A. Forbs on West 13th street. Mr. E. T. Banks, our faithful janitor of the Court House, received the sad news that his mother was dying. He left immediately for Pachuto, Miss. Harding Ice Cream is always best and suits the people. Phones 647. 762 Ninth street. We received several correspondence this week, late as usual, coming after Wednesday noon. We emphasize that if you wish your news published, it must reach our office on time. Our city collector will call on all chose who are yet in the arrears on their subscription. Please be prepared to pay up. Wm. Coalson and J. H. Shepard returned last Monday, after a very pleasant visit in the White City. They say that Bishop Grant has the interest of Des Moines and its people at heart, and he believes they will like their new pastor and his wife. The Daily Register asked the following question: "If Czolgosz had been a black man would he be alive to-day?" Our answer is, we doubt very much if an atom of his body could have been found one hour after the deed had been committed. A STATE BYSTA DES MOINES, IOWA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1901. Mr. Geo. H. Dunn returned last Tuesday after spending several days in Kansas City with relatives. Mr. Wm. Washington left Thursday morning for Colorado, where he expects to stay until his health improves. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wyatt are rejoicing over the arrival of a son on last Tuesday. Mother and son are doing well. Seeley-Howe-LeVan Co. LEADERS OF LOW PRICES Four Busy Floors Selling Every Minute of the Day. A. M. E. CONFE The African Methodical Conference of Iowa annual session at St. church, corner of Aust and Rubey street, Chic day evening. Bishop Grant presided. The C in many respects ex The Trustees and Stewards of St. Paul's A. M. E. church are requested to meet at the church Monday evening Sept. 30, at 8 o'clock sharp. Mesdames F. H. Johnson and W. H. Hughes will leave Saturday for Poone to spend a week or ten days visiting friends and relatives. Mrs. Estella Lucas returned to her home in Chicago last Tuesday evening, after spending several weeks visiting at the home of Mrs. Fred Jackson on Eighth street. Miss Orey Shaffer returned home last Sunday from Minneapolis, Minn., where she has been visiting relatives for nearly three months. She enjoyed her visit very much. Chas. J. Roy has taken possess'on of the barber shop at 320 West Thi d street and would be pleased to have your patronage. This shop will be known as the Equal Right Union Barber Shop. The will of the late Mrs. Martha C. Callanan, which was flied in the district court last Saturday, bequeathed the most of her $50,000 to charitable institutions. She gave to the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institution of Tuskegee, Ala., $20,000. No doubt the relatives and many friends of Chas. C. Lewis will be glad to hear that he is now head-waiter at the Russell House in Detroit, Mich. He at one time had charge of the dining room at the Aborn House in this city. The Rev. and Mrs. James Higgins will spend a few days in the city the later part of the week, visiting their daughter, Mrs. L. R. Palmer, before going to their new field of labor in Moline, Ill. Miss Annas Logan returned to the city last Saturday evening, after spending three weeks at the parental home in Missouri. She was accompanied by her cousin, Miss Mary A. Logan, who will make her home here with her sister Miss. J. H. Shepard and attend school. There will be quarterly meeting Sunday at Burn's M. E. church, conducted by Rev. O. A. Johnson of Oskaloosa. Hours of service: 11:00 a. m. and 3:00 p. m. Rev. J. O. R. Winbush, of the East Side Baptist church, will preach at 7:30 p. m. All are welcome. C. W. Holmes, pastor. There was given last Friday evening a party at the home of Mr. and Mr. Price! Alexander, in Highland Park. All those present enjoyed themselves by dancing and with different games, after which they departed for their homes. When in Oskaloosa, Iowa, stop at Mr. Peter Williams, No. 216 North A street, for good meals and room. Mrs. J. D. Foreman who has been at Chandler and El Reno, Oklahoma for several months, has returned home. She was at El Reno when the drawing for claims was in progress. She has a claim near Chandler, and says that is a good country for industrious people to make money. 4 Paw & Sells Bros. circus gaga two performances here last Saturday, and as usual they have a colored band. Prof. P. G. Lowery has had charge of the band for the past three seasons and it is beyond a doubt one of the best bands on the road, for the number of pieces they have. The professor is playing some excellent cornet solos this season. IOWA PHONE 1081 MUTUAL PHONE 493 (Office) Miles' Drug Store OFFICE HOURS: {8 to 10 a. m. 2 to 4 p. m. 7 to 9 p. m.} DR. A. G. EDWARDS. Physician and Surgeon. Over 764 West Ninth:Street Because They offer Right Merchandise at Right Prices. READY TO PUT ON GARMENTS The swellest you have seen, always without the Fancy Prices. --- Honest Goods & Lowest Prices FURNITURE, CARPETS, STOVES. Grand Millinery Opening. Sept. 25th to 28th. YOU ARE INVITED. 5 cases, dark Flannelttes, direct from Eastern manufacturers 5c, 8 1-3c, 10c and 12 $ _{1/2} $ c. 3 Great drives in Percales, dark and medium light colors— 6c, 9c and 12 $ _{1/2} $ c. 2000 yards Novelty Wool Dress Goods worth up to 75 cents, choice— 39c. READY TO PUT The swellest you have the Fancy Prices. Do you want FURNITURE Go to a RELIABLE Where you get Honest Goods & FURNITURE, CA CHASE 712-714 WAL THE Best Stove THE ROYAL MIL 610 Waln Grand Millin Sept. 25th YOU ARE SIMMONS-FBANKLIN NUPTIALS Last Tuesday night at the First African Baptist church, Mr. Edwad Simmons and Miss Alice Franklin were united in marriage. A few minutes after 9 o'clock Mrs. Jarvis (white) begin playing Mendelshon wedding march, and the bride, leaning on the arm of her uncle, Mr. Vaughn, followed by her mother and aunt Mrs. Burnside started down the isle. The groom, accompanied by his brother Frank started down the opposite isle and were met at the alter by the Revs. F. Lomack and R. Jackson. Prayer was offered by Rev. Jackson, and the ceremony was performed by Rev. F. Lomack. The bride wore white silk, and the groom wore full dress suit. After congratulations refreshments were served in the parlor of the church. They received some very useful presents. May joy and happiness be theirs is the wish of their many friends and the BYSTANDER. The committee that was sent from the A. M. E. church to attend the Conference returned home Monday, having accomplished the work they were sent to do. They will now have the honor of introducing the Rev. H. Graves to the members and friends of St. Paul A. M. E. church. The reverend comes to this charge highly recom- Good, heavy, filled back, floor Oil Cloth, worth 35 cents: for a few days, a yard— Extra heavy Ingrain Carpet, in splendid patterns, a yard—35c. Big lot of Lace Curtains, just received, special value, a pair—98c. ON GARMENTS seen, always without FOR STOVES E HOUSE & Lowest Prices CARPETS, STOVES. & WEST NUT STREET. s--Least Fuel. LLINERY Co. out Street. ery Opening. n to 28th. INVITED. mended as a christian gentleman and the members and friends should turn out and give him a hearty welcome next Sabbath. Mesdames Jas. H. Harrison, C. B. Woods, J. H. Soward and Wm. Tomlin will leave on the excursion for St. Louis. Mrs. S. G. Lewis, who was to accompany the party, can not leave on account of the illness of her mother. The above named ladies will be the guests of Mrs. Harrison's uncle, Mr. Henry Hord, 2825 Adams street, St. Louis, Mo. HOME VISITOR'S EXCURSION TO OHIO AND INDIANA. A grand opportunity to visit your old home at a very small expense. On September 17th and 24th, October 4th, and 8th, the BURLINGTON ROUTE will sell tickets to nearly 400 cities and towns in Ohio and Indiana. These tickets are sold at greatly reduced rates, and are good to return anytime within 30 days from date of sale. The route is through Peoria except on October 1st tickets will be sold via Beardstown to certain points. Full information at city ticket office 400 Locust St. F. L. Gannaway City Passenger Agent, Des Moines, Iowa. Quakers in Cuba. One of the curiosities of Cuba is a Quaker meeting-house which has been erected at Gibara, near Santiago. The congregation of Friends is said to number over two hundred. A. M. E. CONFERENCE The African Methodist Episcopal Conference of Iowa closed its annual session at St. Stephen's church, corner of Austin avenue and Rubey street, Chicago, Monday evening. Bishop Abraham Grant presided. The Conference in many respects excelled all former efforts in the history the church in this state, which shows the onward march of the people of this denomination. Among the distinguished visiting church men were Drs. Chappelle, Parks, Grahsm and Watson, who addressed the conference on the various interests that they represented. Oscaloosa, Iowa was selected as the place for holding the next Conference. Bishop Grant made the following assignments of the ministers for the Conference year: CHICAGO DISTRICT. Presiding Elder, G. C. Booth, Chicago Quinn Chapel—A. I. Carey. Bethel—A. L. Murray. Chicago Institutional Church—R. C. Ransom. St. Mary's Church—Jason Bundy. St. John's Church—G. M. Tillman. Hyde Park Church—G. W. Slater. Galesburg—S. McDowell. Aurora—D. W. Brown. Elgin—T. J. Porter. Joliet—L. R. Brown. Monmouth—Cornelius Wright. Princeton and Kewance—David Lewis. Payne Theological Seminary—R. R. Wright Jr. IOWA DISTRICT. Presiding Elder—Timothy Beeves. Keokuk—F. J. Peterson. Des Moines—H. Graves. Cedar Rapids—A. Boyd. Davenport—J. Bass. Dubuque—D. A. Basfield. Ottumwa—M. I. Gordon. Mt. Pleasant—J. H. Ferrabee. Burlington—W. M. Williams. Clinton—W. A. Searey. Buxton—R. H. Williamson. Oskaloosa—James A. Clemins. Muscatine—J. W. Malone. Clarinda and Bedford—T. A. Clark. Boone and Fraser—William A. Ford. Albia—E. G. Jackson. Colfax—L. A. Jopliu. Washington—Eli Grant. Sioux City and Yankton—W. H. Speese. Minneapolis—St. Peter's Church, P. P. Taylor. Minneapolis—St. Jame's Church, D. E. Butler. Chicago—St. Stephen's Church, W. S. Brooks. Chicago—Wayman Chapel, I. N. Daniels. Chicago—Allen Chapel, D. W. Jones. Rockford—S. B. Moore. Moline—James Higgins. Rock Island—S. B. Walkup. Evanston—George W. Gaines. Lake Forest—J. L. Warton. Milwaukee—T. W. Lewis. Rucine—Lewis Dixon. Duluth—J. B. Polk. West Superior—L. M. Fenwick. Glenco—G. W. Jones. Beloit—J. W. Dowden. LYNCHING IS HELD ANARCHY. Booker T. Washington Declares Na- tionalhood Saving tion Reaps What It Is Sowing. Tuskegee, Ala., Sept. 25—Booker T. Washington of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial institute, has given out a statement in reference to the assassination of President McKinley, in which he says: "In all sincerity, I want to ask, is Czongosz alone guilty? Has not the nation had a part in this greatest crime of the century? What is anarchy but a faction of law, and has not the nation reaped what it has been sowing?" According to records 2,516 persons have been lynched in the United States during the last sixteen years. There are or have been engaged in this anarchy of lynching nearly 125,800 persons. To cease the present tendency it seems to have there are two duties that face us: "First—For all classes to unite in an earnest effort to create such a public sentiment as will make crime disappear, and especially is it needful that we see that there is no idle, dissolute, purposeless class permitted in our midst. "Second—For all to unite in a brave effort to bring criminals to justice, and where a supposed criminal is found to see that he has a fair, patient, legal trial. "Let us heed the words of our departed and beloved chief, as he lay upon his dying bed, referring to his murderer: 'I hope he will be treated with fairness.' "If William McKinley, as he was offering up his life in behalf of the nation, could be brave enough, thoughtful and patriotic enough, he would his his nation and encourage he be fairly and honestly tried and punished, surely we can afford to heed the lesson." --- No.16. Parker's Interview. A Negro is a national hero to day. He is James Parker, the giant who hurled himself on the would-be assassation at Buffalo and kept him from firing a third shot that might have proved fatal. All America is eager to know about him. At the Executive Department, Washington, it is suggested that the department reward him. Savannah, Ga., where he was once a constable, with a fine record, is proud of him. For the first time, Porker to-day gives to the world, through the Evening Journal, a detail account of the thrilling scene. His story was modestly told, but it gives a most vivid description of the historic scene. Here is his version of the.shooting: By James Parker. I believe that I saved President McKinley's life in preventing the third shot from Czolgosz's smoking revolver. I do not make this statement for glory, but because I believe it is best for the public to know and for any small honor that may come to the race to which I belong. I would have tried to save any man's live, but I would have given my life for that of the President and truly believe that if the third shot had been fired it would have lodged in my heart instead of the President's. The deed was done so quickly that it blinds me when I think of it, and I am surprised at myself that I did not lose my nerve. I acted on the moment and I believe to the best effect. I was curious and anxious to shake hands with the first man in the land. I admired him and was glad of the chance to show my deep feeling for him. The Temple of Music was crowded and it was with great difficulty that I pressed my way through the throng. I noticed no one until I pass single file. Here for the first time I noticed Leon Czolgosz. There was a woman with a little girl close beside me, and in the struggle she shoved me aside to let this man between us. I do not mention this as of any moment, but as I remember the incident. I was as anxious as Czolgosz to see the President, and I crowded forward, but he slipped in front of me and so we passed up the line. We were close together. I can't say now whether I noticed the bandage over his hand, but I saw that he was nervous, as he kept tramping on my toes and brushing his right arm against me. The President was now but a few feet away from me. The woman shook his hand, and the little girl paused a moment, smiled, then hurried on to catch up with her mother. The President looked at Czolgosz with a spimpathetic eye,' and at the same moment my eye caught sight of the bandaged hand. Almost instantly there were two reports like the explosion of a fire cracker under a tin can. Bang! Bang! Like a flash the realization was over me, and the last report had barely time to die away when I snatched Czolgosz on his right shoulder with my right hand and flung him half facing me, at the same time endeavoring with my left hand to knock the smoking piston from his hand. "You scoundrel!" I cried, "you've shot the President." I saw nothing then but the wild look in the face of the assassian. I closed upon him, my right hand clawing at his throat. His head went back and his eyes protruded. I tore at him like a wild beast. Tighter and tighter my fingers work into the soft skin of his throat. His tongue stuck out. There was a low (Continued on page 4.) ```markdown ``` Wise Did Not Deliver Message at Santiago. LONG'S ORDER IGNORED. Note From Sampson Advising Flying Squadron's Chief to Stay at Clonfsegos Is Before Tribunal—Records Found Altered—Admiral Cotton's Testimony. Washington, D. C., Sept. 27.—In the Schley court of inquiry captain W. C. Wise, who commanded the scout Yale during the Spanish war, admitted under oath that, notwithstanding positive orders from the Secretary of the Navy directing him to inform the "flying squadron" that the Spanish fleet was in Santiago harbor, he did not do so. Captain Philip merely notified Captain Philip of the Texas, just as the flying squadron was starting for Key West to coal, and, so far as was developed today, this important fact was not communicated to Commodore Schley. Slowly but surely it is brought out that important papers have been suppressed and that official charts and reports have been altered. Supremed Letter Introduced. Suppressed Latter Introduced. A sensational development was the introduction, as evidence, of the suppressed letter written by Sampson to Schley, directing the latter to remain off Cienfuegos. Sampson had received a dispatch from Secretary Long which said that, according to the best information of the department, the Spanish fleet was in Santiago harbor. Sampson then wrote Schley, under date of May 20: "After fully considering this telegram (the one relating to the Spanish fleet), I have decided to make no change in the present plans; that is, that you should hold your squadron off Cienfuegos. If the Spanish ships have put into Santiago they must come either to Havana or Cienfuegos to deliver the munitions of war which they are said to bring for use in Cuba. I am therefore of the opinion that our best chance of success in capturing the ships will be to hold the two points, Cienfuegos and Havana, with all the force we can muster. If later it should develop that these vessels are at Santiago we could then assemble off that port the ships best suited for the purpose and completely blockade it." This and another dispatch relating to the belief that the Spanish fleet was in Santiago were the only dispatches received by Schley until May 31, when the flying squadron was off Santiago. Schley's Dispatch Is Altered. The correct version of Schley's dispatch, in which he informed the Secretary of the Navy that it would be impossible to obey orders with regard to coaling the "flying squadron," was introduced as evidence. It was shown by this copy that a number of changes had been made in Schley's dispatch as it appears in the official records. The copy, as printed, does not show that Schley said the sea was boisterous and prevented coaling. In addition to suppressing this the department, in its official report, inserted the words "very difficult to tow the collier. Unable to get the cable to hold." This sentence does not appear in Schley's original dispatch. In the department's version of the dispatch appear the words, "much to be regretted, cannot obey orders of the department. Have striven carnely." The original dispatch, however, as it appears in Schley's letter copy book, reads: "It is to be regretted that the department's orders cannot be obeyed, carnely as we have striven to that end." Rear Admiral Schley's attorneys contend that the correct copy of his dispatch gives an altogether different appearance to the incident. Harvard's Commander Confused. Rear Admiral Cotton, who commanded the Harvard during the war, upon direct examination said positively he had delivered dispatches to Commodore Schley on May 27 from Secretary Long and Acting Admiral Sampson, informing Schley that the Spanish fleet was in Santiago harbor. By referring to the official records and after refreshing the memory of Rear Admiral Cotton, Attorney Rayner demonstrated that one of these dispatches, which Cotton claimed to have delivered to Schley on the afternoon of May 27, was not sent from Washington until that day. It was impossible, therefore, to deliver this dispatch to the commander-in-chief of the flying squadron at the time as first sworn to by Cotton. HE STANDS BY HEILNER. Machinist Claxton Supports Commander at the Schley Inquiry. Washington, D. C., Sept. 26.—The Schley court of inquiry resumed its sessions with a fair attendance. A. B. Claxton, who said he was a first-class machinist on the Texas during the Spanish war, was on the stand shortly after the court opened and gave testimony supporting the evidence of Commander Heilner that the log of the Texas was incorrectly written. Rear Admiral Cotton was also a witness and told of conversations with Schley regarding the subject of coaling. Claxton Supports Hellner. Claxton supported Commander, Hellner's testimony. "To his knowledge there had been no signal for the reversal of the engines. He said that he had been excused from service in the engine room, but still he knew that the engines were reversed for about two minutes. "What was the next change made in the indicator of the port engine of the Texas?" he was asked. "Full speed ahead." "What was the next after than?" "There was no other order given for some time afterward." "When was a further signal received by the indicator, and what was the signal?" Direction Is Changed. "Within the first hour of the engagement the direction was changed to full speed astern." "Can you not give any estimate of the time when the signal was given for full speed astern, and how long after the beginning of the action?" "I could say within the first hour." "Was there any other signal given during that watch within your knowledge for the port of engines to reverse?" "There was none to my knowledge." "You were on duty in the port engine room throughout the day, were you not?" "Off and on, sir." "Where else were you on duty, if anywhere, at the time?" "I was excused for a time on account of the heat." "As a matter of fact, were the engines reversed?" "They were, for about two minutes." There was no cross examination by Mr. Rayner. Rear-Admiral Cotton Testifies. Rear-Admiral Cotton Tessler. Rear-Admiral Charles S. Cotton was the next witness. He is a sharp-spoken man, and he answered the questions of the attorney almost before they were uttered. Cotton, who was then a captain and commanded the scout ship Harvard, testified that he met the flying squadron off Santiago and that he went aboard the Brooklyn with four or five dispatches. He said the weather was smooth enough for a seaman. Cotton then detailed the conversation that he had had with Schley in the latter's cabin regarding the coaling of the ships. Several points were discussed and Schley told his visitor that if he could not coal nearer he would have to go to Key West. BIG BOAT RACES. First of Series of Contests to Be Decided Today. New York, Sept. 26.—The greatest event of the year in yachting circles begins today. The Shamrock II, representing British hopes, as the challenger, will meet the Columbia, the American cup defender, and these giant speed marvels of the ocean will strive for supremacy. It will be a battle royal. When they meet off Sandy Hook there are likely to be many exciting moments when quick handling alone will avoid collision. It is estimated that 100,000 enthusiasts will go down to the great ocean race track, which is about two hours distant by boat from New York. They will pay more that $1,000,000 for the pleasure of seeing the international conflict. Every police boat has been pressed into service, anticipating the trouble of keeping the course clear of the immense flotilla of pleasure craft. Threaten Big Tle-Up. Chicago, Sept. 27.—The Brickmakers' Alliance, which has within its membership nearly all of the mem employed in the manufacture of building and fire brick in Cook county, has sent forth its edict that unless the Owans Terra Cotta Company of Hobart, Ind., signs an agreement with the union and takes back the men who, it is alleged, were discharged because they became members of the organization, work on bricks which are intended for the post office and other big buildings now in course of construction in Chicago will cease. Dartmouth Honors Webster Hanover, N. H., Sept. 27—Dartmouth college, the college of Daniel Webster, is observing the 100th anniversary of his graduation. A two days' celebration, to be the most important event in the history of the college, has been commenced, hundreds of returned alumni and invited guests being in attendance. The old town is fairly aglow with brightly colored decorations. Grain Burned at Chenon, Ill. Chenoa, Ill., Sept. 27—E. D. Churchill & Sons' large grain elevator at Meadows, four miles west of here, containing 40,000 bushels of grain, was destroyed by fire at 2 p.m. Loss about $30,000, insurance about $10,000. The fire is supposed to have been started by sparks from a passing train. City Wins in a Big Sult. La Crossse, Wis., Sept. 27.—Judge Bunn in the United States court rendered a decision in the case of Samuel J. King vs. the City of West Superior, involving the validity of $700,000 in bonds, in favor of the defendant, by which the city is relieved from paying the amount of the bonds. New York, Sept. 27.—Henry Siegel, senior member of the house of Siegel, Cooper & Co. here, has retired from active management of the business. B. J. Greenhut, youngest member of the concern, succeeds him. The sale of Mr. Siegel's interests involved over $1,000,000. Killa Wife as Poor Cook Homer, Ga., Sept. 26.—Neal Riley, convicted of the murder of his wife, has been sentenced to be hanged October 8. The woman could not bake bread to suit her husband's taste and he killed her. New Head for Augustana. New Haven, Conn., Sept. 26. -Dr. Gustave Andreen, instructor in Scandinavian languages at Yale, has accepted the presidency of Augustana College at Rock Island, Ill. CZOLGOSZ BREAKING DOWN The Strain of the Trial Weakened Him. HE IS NO LONGER DEFIANT. His Meeting With His Father, Brother and Sister Completed His Humiliation and He Is Now Miserable—Said He Couldn't Talk. Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 27.—The assassin of President McKinley has broken down. He is no longer the defiant anarchist, glorying in his infamous crime. Isolation and treatment like any other criminal has brought about the change. He expected to be made much of; he thought his evil eminence would be a pedestal from which he would astound the world. Instead of that he has remained unvisited in a cell, and in his two days in court nobody spoke to him, and the routine of his trial and conviction bowed him down. It has been whispered by the guards about him for several days that he was weakening. His meeting with his father, brother and sister completed the breaking down, and he is a subdued and miserable man. In court one of the guards asked him if he wanted to say anything. The assassin whispered back: "I can't." The visit of the family was a worse ordeal even than waiting in court for the jury to pronounce his doom. Worse even than what awaited him this afternoon, when he was brought forth to be sentenced to death. FATHER SEES THE ASSASSIN. The Murderer Has an Affecting Meeting With Family. Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 26. — Another unsuccessful attempt to break through the impenetrable reserve of Czolgosz has been made, waken his father, sister and brother were admitted to the jail for a conference with the prisoner. Throughout a conference lasting 30 minutes the convicted assassin maintained the same cool indifference he has shown in all his public appearances. Father and sister broke down when they met the disgraced son and brother, giving way to tears to relieve their nent-up feelings. Murderer Is Affected. The brother, while less demonstrative, was visibly affected at the meeting, but face to face with his family, upon whom he has brought disgrace, which means ruin to the hopes and prospects in life, the cold-blooded assassin expressed no regret for his crime and confessed nothing not already known by the authorities. The family after their fruitless interview said good-by to the prisoner, probably for the last time, and departed more dejected and downcast than when they came. Unmoved, the assassin sat in his cell and watched them depart much as he does his guard when that official carries away the empty tray after his lunch. Regards Family as Spies. It was noticeable that the prisoner suppressed all filial affection, treating the members of his family as so many spies brought in to watch his actions. At no time was Czolgosz left alone with his family. Detective Solomon, who has been a bodyguard to Czolgosz throughout his trial, took the family to the jail and remained in the cell during the interview. Assistant Superintendent of Police Cusack, Assistant District Attorney Haller, Jailer Mitchell and a stenographer were also present. In such a company the family gave way to their grief, but the prisoner remained in complete control of himself. ANARCHISTS ARE INDICTED. Tacoma, Sept. 27.—Charles Govan, James W. Adams, and James E. Larkin, members of the Home Anarchist colony in this county, have been arrested under an indictment found by the federal grand jury at Spokane charging them with depositing in the mails a lewd, obscene and lascivious newspaper. The prisoners were brought to Tacoma and committed to jail pending examination. An indictment was also returned against G. Morong, who, it is claimed, was the author of the objectionable article. Morong is now in Massachusetts, but will be arrested and brought here for trial. The newspaper in question is the official organ at the "Home," and is called "Discontent," and advocates anarchy and free love. Incendiarles Fire-a Mill Mattoon, Ill., Sept. 27.—A palpable attempt by incendiaries was made to destroy the Prairie Queen mills in this city, which was frustrated only by the sharp work of the fire department. A bunch of ravelings and waste soaked in oil was placed at the foot of the shafting on the first floor and ignited, the flames following the inclosed shaft to the fourth story. This city has suffered $250,000 by fire losses since June 15 and most of the conflagrations are believed to be due to incendiaries. Rich Merchant Arrested. Fort, Wayne, Ind., Sept. 27—Montford W. Fay, commission merchant and president of the M. W. Fay Warehouse company, was arrested here on a charge of embezzlement. The warrant was procured by a New Orleans commission house, which claims he has improperly used $800. Mr. Fay has been a leader in business circles here for several years and his arrest caused much surprise and speculation. By SEWARD W. HOPKINS. Copyrighted 1900 by Robert Bonner's Sons. ```markdown ``` CHAPTER I—(Continued) Arthur Medworth smiled and answered: "General, as I am the one most interested, it is proper that I should undertake to explain the case as well as I am able. I will tell you the whole story as it lies nearest to my heart, and you will be able to take from it what most concerns you. To begin, then, General: Some time ago I was fortunate enough to rescue a beautiful girl from being dashed to the ground and killed by a runaway team of horses in New York. That girl was Lola Garza, the daughter of Don Juan Garza, a proud old Spaniard who has lived in Venezuela and latterly in New York, where he married a wealthy lady, now dead. Don Juan is one of the proudest of Castilians, and though I am by no means poor, I was not wealthy enough, or of noble birth, to satisfy his ambitions for his daughter. Lola Garza, who has then seventeen years of age, and is now eighteen, inherited more of her mother's American nature than her father's Spanish one. She cared nothing for royalty and old-world courts, and being wealthy in her own right, was independent. I grew to love her, and she returned my love, but Don Juan forbade all communication between us. Still, we met clandestinely as often as possible. "Well, Don Juan, about six months ago, began to receive strange men at his house, and it was evident that some kind of conspiracy was on foot. Still, he guarded his secret closely, and we learned only the name of one of these—Ferdinand Gomez. There was another, whose name we could not at first learn, who always wore a gorgeous uniform, concealed, when on the street, under a long Spanish cloak. "On the evening of the fourth of this month, these men and several others were at Garza's house, and Lola was called to meet them. Don Juan put her hand in that of the uniformed stranger, and said: "Philip of Aragon, this is my daughter, Lola. I made my bargain, and who shall say you will not be the gainer by it?" "There was a great deal more said, and the poor girl, though much frightened, gathered enough from the constant talk to know that these men were engaged in a desperate plot to seat Philip of Aragon on the throne of some country now a republic, and that her father had furnished the arms and ammunition and ready money for the enterprise, stipulating, in turn, that his daughter, Lola, should be made queen. When, after a long time, during which she trembled with fear, she was allowed to leave the room. Ferdinand Gomez, who was near the door, bent over and whispered in her ear: 'Heed him not—the madman. Whether he be king or not, you shall never be his bride. I have loved you long, and love you now, too well to give you up to him. Rather than have him marry you I would kill him. And rather than give you to another, I would kill you. Remember, peace or war, success or failure, you are mine.' "As you may suppose, General, the poor girl was doubly frightened at this, and made haste to tell me all on the following day. Before I could act, however, on the morning of the 6th, Don Juan Garza, his daughter, Gomez and Philip of Aragon were missing. I was much alarmed, and with my tried and true friend here, Jack Tempest, visited the Venezuelan consul, among others in New York. At the consul's office we learned that the steamship Agostura had sailed from New York that morning with the conspirators and a cargo of arms for Bolivar. Therefore, it is certain that Venezuela is the country to be turned into a monarchy with Philip of Aragon on the throes. Now where are the conspirators?" Salvarez laughed, and said: "You need not fear. Your Lola is now probably safe in the hands of the Republic, and will not be harmed if your story is true. The Agostura is so long overdue that I do not expect to see her at Bolivar." Notwithstanding this opinion of General Salvarez, the smoke of a steamer was seen approaching on the 22d. Activity began at once, and Salvarez prepared to receive into captivity the enemies of his country. When the steamer drew nearer, they were surprised to see that she carried the Custom House flag, thus showing that she had been examined and passed at La Guayra. Then it could not be the Agostura. But it was the Agostura. Slowly she swung into the dock; the bustle of landing occupied some little time, and the captain presented his papers. Not a passenger was on board; no Gomez, no Garza, no Lola, no Philip of Aragon. The invoice was examined. The seal of the custom house was genuine. The work of unloading began. Case after case was brought ashore, and by the command of Salvarez broken open. The contents of one was a plow, of another a harrow. So on, until the dock was strewn with agricultural implements. Not a gun, not a cartridge, was on board. General Salvarez, his chief officers, Medworth and Tempest, stood on the dock at Bolvar, and looked at each other in chargin. Some one had blundered terribly. "It is a trick!" exclaimed Medworth. huskly. "I know they left New York on that, ship!" "Then where are they now?" asked Salvarez. He was soon to learn. It will be necessary, in order that the reader, who is interested, may understand the mystifying event which upset all the calculations of General Salvarez, and filled Arthur Medworth with dismay, to turn our attention to the men who were conspiring against the peace and liberty of Venezuela, and follow them in one of the shrewdest moves the brain of plotter ever devised. It had seemed to Salvarez, who recalled the words in the message of President Crespo, that the consul at New York had been too hasty in jumping to a conclusion. But the sailing of the Agostura laden with arms for the royalist cause was a fact. The consul at New York, in cabling his information to President Crespo at Caracas, had stated nothing but the truth. Where, then, the mystery? Shrewd as Medworth had been, shrewd as the consul had been, they were children compared to the shrewdness of Ferdinand Gomez. The first thing was to discover a king. It may be wondered at that Gomez did not aim to the crown himself. But the astute Spaniard was experienced enough to know that if he, as father of the scheme, admitted that he wished to be king, re would drive from his side his strongest supporters, for it would stand bare as the selfish, grasping plot of an adventurer. He discovered the man he wanted, and supported by the glory of the house of Aragon, they began operations. They found plenty of sympathizers in Spain, but mostly among men who were ready to join the expedition with visions of old-time Spanish conquests before them. But there were two great difficulties that confronted Gomez. The Monroe Doctrine, so positively enforced and mained by the United States government, made it impossible for the royalist movement to emanate from Spain. The impulse must come in the way of a revolution in Venezuela, and for this there was no money available. But Gomez was not the man to sit down and acknowledge himself defeated. He went to Venezuela. He felt the political pulse. He appointed agents to all the states and provinces. Then he went to New York. The reports of his agents were favorable. Men were ready to take up arms for the royalist cause. But the arms were lacking. Now Gomez showed himself a master. He carefully studied all sources from which assistance might safely be derived. One after another he cast aside as undesirable or impossible. In a splendid house in New York lived a proud old Spaniard, Don Juan Garza. Don Juan had, in his own way and time, been something of an adventurer. Born in Castle, of a very proud, very aristocratic and very poor family, he inherited all the love of pemp and royalty and nobility without the means to gratify it. For a time he served in the army, but at the age of twenty-two he left Spain and went to Venezuela. That country had, after a thirty years' war, enjoyed ten years of liberty from Spanish rule. The country was unsettled and dangerous, and Don Juan had his fill of exciting adventure, but did little to fill his depleted coffers. He remained in Venezuela long enough to bring down upon his head the anger of the government for intrigue and political treachery, and was forced to leave. From there he went to New York city, where he met and won the beautiful daughter of a wealthy merchant. His married life proved happy enough to keep him out of political misfortune, but his mind often turned longingly to the pomp and glory of courts. The merchant died, leaving his fortune so arranged that, at the death of Don Juan's wife, it should descend to the daughter, then a pretty little thing of six. When Lola was fifteen years of age her mother died, and the old Spaniard's mind turned with greater longing to political fields. Thus it was, when Ferdinand Gomez was looking for some one to assist in his great enterprise, Don Juan Garza was looking for an enterprise to assist. They met, these two, and conferred. Don Juan was sixty years old, and was shrewd. He desired to know the exact position of the new movement in Venezuela. Gomez, therefore, sent for his agents, and for Phillip of Aragon. While waiting for them to arrive, Gomez fell violently in love with Lola Garza, who was herself in love with Arthur Medworth, against whom the father had issued his decree. Philip and the agents arrived. A meeting was held at Don Juan's house, and it was made apparent to the old man that one hundred thousand people in Venezuela stood sworn to support Philip of Aragon. The pride and ambition of Don Juan was touched. He agreed to furnish the arms and ammunition for the enterprise, if Philip would agree to a contract in writing whereby he bound himself to marry Lola Garza as soon as the crown of Venezuela was on his head. To this Philip assented, and Gomez found A Shrewd Move. mussel, commanded by a coalition between Phillip and Don Juan that badefair to defeat his own secret purposes. So, when the contract was signed, Don Juan went to a certain wealthy man in New York who frequently became the backer of shady enterprises, invariably exacting a great return for his money; and this person, upon the promise of Don Juan to furnish a contract, signed by Philip of Aragon, to give him, Sollima, the backer of the state, the full control of all trade between Venezuela and the United States, agreed to furnish twenty thousand rifles, millions of cartridges, and a million dollars to promote the success of the royal cause. The plans worked smoothly without a break. The Agostuva was chosen as the vessel to carry the arms out of New York; and this was where Gomeza proved himself to be the master-hand in the whole conspiracy. Up to this time the success had all depended upon him, with the one exceptional instance of Garza's aid financially. But then, Gomez had chosen Garza. He had selected his agents shrewdly, managed their movements, and guided their hands. He had been all over the ground to prepare the way for his emissaries. He had met Pedro Francisco, and had trusted him. He alone, Gomez, controlled the situation. At the same time the Agostura was being laden with arms in the East River, the Turtle, a ship in the carrying trade between Boston and the peninsula, lay at her dock in Boston receiving a cargo of bona-fide agricultural implements, ostensibly for Nicaragua. The invoices of the Turtle and the Agostura, one false, the other true, were identically the same. The invoice of the Agostura tallied correctly with the invoice of the Turtle. The morning of the 6th was a memorable one to Lola Garza. She had been awakened before daylight by her father and ordered to dress. "Come," he said, "we go to place you on a throne." She had rebelled. A struggle had actually taken place. Lola had been dragged forth against her will, thrust into a carriage with her father, Gomez and Philip of Aragon, and taken to Port Morris. They boarded the Agostura. The ship sailed at five o'clock. Gomez was radiant. His plans had, so far, been signally successful. His associates wondered at his hopefulness. They knew nothing about the purchase of the Turtle. But Gomez had a surprise in store for them. When the Agostura had reached a point about five degrees east of Washington and thirty-five degrees north latitude, she hung about as if waiting for something. That something was the Turtle. "We are lost!" Don Juan had exclaimed when he saw the strange steamer coming toward them. "We govern," Gomez replied. "Venezuela is ours from to-day." The two steamers were lashed to together. Each had been furnished with donkey-engines and hoisting apparatus. The cargo of the Agostura was transferred to the Turtle. The Agostura unloaded at Bolivar, as we have seen. General Salvarez had started for home in disgust. There was no way for Medworth and Tempest to leave before El Callao sailed, which would be in five days. Castle Salvarez was only twenty miles away. They accepted the offer of hospitality Salvarez held out to them, and accompanied him up the Coroni valley. In the meantime, the Turtle, free from all hindrance, had followed the Agostura, and at the very hour the Agostura was unloading at Bollvar, the Turtle, loaded with twenty thousand rifles, came to anchor in the Orinoco at a shorter distance below the mouth of the Coronil River than Bollvar was above it. Gomez had outwitted them all. (To be continued.) How to Become Wealthy. In a New Hampshire city there dwells an octogenarian physician who, in addition to his wide medical skill, is known far and wide as a dispenser of blunt philosophy. The other day a young man of his acquaintance called at his office. "I have not come for pills this time, doctor," said the visitor, "but for advice. You have lived many years in this world of toll and trouble and have had much experience. I am young and I want you to tell me how to get rich." The aged practitioner gazed through his glasses at the young man and in a deliberate tone, said: "Yes, I can tell you. You are young and can accomplish your object if you will. Your plan is this: First, be industrious and economical. Save as much as possible and spend as little. Pile up the dollars and put them at interest. If you follow out these instructions by the time you reach my age you'll be as rich as Croesus and as mean as h-1."—Buffalo Commercial. Seller, Posts Wanted An English literary writer says that "the time is fully ripe for the advent of a sailor poet and the marine engineer poet. "Whether they write in terms of rhyme or no I care not. A virgin field awaits them, a noble inheritance, maturing for ages. They can, if they come, utterly refute the false and foolish prattle of the armchair philosophers and prove triumphantly that so far from the romance and poetry of the sea being dead, it has hardly yet been given any adequate expression whatever." Lawndale, Kan., a town of two thousand inhabitants, boasts of a police department that has not made a single arrest in the last eight years. Robert Lowe, afterward Lord Sherbrook, once saw a deaf member of parliament trying his best to catch with his ear-trumpet the words of an extremely dull speech. "Just look at that foolish man," said Lowe. "throwing away his natural advantages." A minister in a Kansas town recently adopted a novel scheme for bolstering up the church collection, which had been diminishing. He informed his congregation, just before the plates were passed around, that the members who were in debt were not expected to contribute. The collection that day was double the usual sum. On one occasion, when Robert Fechter, the tragedian, appeared in "Monte Cristo," the curtain rose at twelve thirty for the last act discovering Fechter in an attitude of contemplation. For some moments he did not make a movement, and not a sound brisk the silence, until a small but clear voice in the gallery queried, in tones of anxiety: "I hope we are not keeping you up, sir?" Gladstone once talked with much enthusiasm to James Russell Lowell about the noble conduct of the United States government in providing pensions to the amount of tens of millions of pounds sterling a year for men who had served in the civil war. "I do not wish to disparage the generosity of my countrymen," was Lowell's reply, "but I may just observe that these persons are voters." In speaking of the terrors of the slay tongue, Opie Read remarked that a druggist in the heart of the Russian colony in Chicago recently had a telephone instrument installed in his place for the accommodation of his patrons. The minute the first user of the 'phone began to talk Russian into the receiver, the wire kinked into small knots, like a tensely twisted string. They couldn't do a thing to meet the emergency until one of the telephone linemen, who had once attempted to do missionary work in a Russian settlement in Minnesota, replaced the smooth, insulated copper strand with the ordinary barb wire. That jagged medium proved a perfect means of transmission for Russian speech. The wife of a well known New York lawyer, who visited London this summer, was operated on for appendicitis in the British metropoils shortly after her arrival there. The first day the patient was able to accompany her husband for a walk she met Embassador Joseph Choate, an intimate friend, who had shown much solicitude for her recovery. The delighted Mr. Choate greeted the lawyer warmly, but seemed to ignore his wife, who finally said, with a pout: "Why, Mr. Choate, you don't take any notice of me. You haven't spoken a word to me yet. I really believe you have forgotten me." "My dear madam," said Mr. Choate, smiling, "I must confess that I did not recognize you without your appendix." David Wilson, a molder, of Newark, N. J., gave full play to a yawn, and the result was a dislocated jaw. It was fully an hour before a physician succeeded in getting the jaw replaced. Among the feats of a wild man on exhibition in Wichita, Kansas, the programme stated that he would eat chunks of raw liver. He failed to do this, and the spectators wrecked the tent. A learned police justice upheld the act, stating that when people pay good money to see a man eat raw liver, they have the right to see him eat raw liver or know the reason why. President Hayes, when about to retire one day from his working room in the capitol, asked his messenger if there was any one waiting to see him. "Only two, and one of them is crazy." "Send in the same one," said the president. A grave looking man was introduced, who announced himself as the emperor of the world. The president rang the bell, and told the messenger if that was his idea of sanity to send in the maniac. "Not in the Trust." This is a favorite expression with persons who have goods on hand that they wish to sell to the public. But their goods are not always good. Neither have they a right at all times to claim that they are "not in the trust." As a matter of fact they generally are in the trust. Trusts know the advantage of advertising their goods as "not in the trust." It helps them to sell an inferior article that they may pay dividends on watered stock. The Defiance Starch company has no false stock on which to pay dividends. They simply manufacture the best starch that is made anywhere in the world, and self 16 ounces for ten cents. Ask your grocer for it. Made by Magnetic Starch Co., Omaha, Neb. A women never forgives a man for believing some of the things she tells him. WISCONSIN FARM LANDS. The best of farm lands can be obtained now in Marinette County, Wisconsin, on the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway at a low price and on very favorable terms. Wisconsin is noted for its fine crops, excellent markets and healthful climate. Why rent a farm when you can buy one much cheaper than you can rent and in a few years it will be your own property. For particulars address F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, Chicago. A sailor is probably called a tar because he is pitched about on the ocean. Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE STARCH, the only 16 oz. package for 10 cents. All other 10-cent starch contains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. The first thing a young man learns at college is how little other people know. HIGHER WAGES AT FALL RIVER. M. C. D. Borden Will Make an Advance of 5 Per Cent. Fall River, Mass., Sept. 26.—The announcement that M. C. D. Borden of New York, owner of the American print works and other factories, contemplated a 5 per cent increase in wages is the chief subject under discussion here. The new wage schedule is to go into effect next Tuesday, Oct. 1. After the announcement the question of what would be done by the other mills in the city was presented. The Textile council has called a meeting for tonight, when action on the 5 per cent increase will be taken. As a result of Mr. Borden's latest move George A. Chase, treasurer of the Bourne mills, posted a notice of a similar increase to take effect Sept. 30. INDIANS' FOOD FAILS. Natives Near Nome Neglect to Lay in Supply for Winter. Port Townsend, Wash., Sept. 26.—According to reports from Nome, brought by the steamer Oregon, the Indians of the place are threatened with starvation. During the last few months about 300 natives have visited Nome bringing furs to trade for supplies. As soon as their goods were disposed of, however, whisky peddlers got among them and they changed the proceeds of their sales for liquor. The Indians have again camped on the beach, generally in a drunken stupor, allowing the season to pass in which they could lay in supplies of fish for use during the long winter period. Unless they are assisted by the government, it is said suffering and starvation will surely follow. SPAIN BUYS YANKEE CARS Close to 1,000 Ordered from an American Company. New York, Sept. 26.—The World says: Spain is at present placing extensive contracts for railroad material and machinery in the United States. Close to 1,000 cars have been ordered from an American car and foundry company, which are said to be used by the Compania Del Norte, the principal Spanish trunk line, and the Bilbao-Santander railroad. The government gun factory at Trubia is to be equipped largely with Yankee machines, tools, etc. Large electrical orders are also being placed in this country. Fined for Man's Garb. Springfield, Ill., Sept. 26.—The local police arrested a woman who was dressed in man's clothing. She was placed in jail, but refused to give information concerning herself. She admitted she was a member of a theatrical company and had dressed as a man for the fun of it. She was fined $50 or 20 days in jail. She telegraphed a real estate man of Tower Hill to come to pay her fine. Students Hurt in Cane Rush. Newark, O., Sept. 26—Denisen University freshmen and sophomores had a lively flag rush at Granville, the sophs winning. Wickenden of Toledo, Pease of Dayton, Oxley of West Carlisle and Jackson of Granville had to be carried to their quarters and many were slightly injured. Clothing was torn and wild excitement prevailed The "fun" lasted two hours. Disloyalty Costs His Job Centralia, Ill., Sept. 26.—Anton Baumgarton was discharged from the mines here for making disloyal statements regarding the death of President McKinley. Baumgarton is a eGrman Socialist and when charges were first made he denied them on affidavit. His affidavit was disproved. Quick Trip from Phillppines. New York, Sept. 26.—The United States supply ship Culgoa, in command of Lieutenant-Commander Hugo Osterhaus, has just arrived in port from Manila after a voyage of sixty-one days, a remarkably quick time. The Culgoa touched at the ports of Colombo, Perim, Suez, Port Said, Malta and Gibraltar on the way. Soda Tank Explodes. Estherville, Iowa, Sept. 26.—While the gas cylinder of the soda fountain in Dean's drug store at this place was being charged the tank exploded, killing Fred Henson, 10 years old, and injuring Ed Rose, a boy about 9 years old, so badly that his recovery is doubtful. Travel 531 Miles in Balloon. Vienna, Sept. 26.—Herr Herbert Silberer, son of Herr Victor Silberer of the Aero club, started Monday with M. Emile Carton in the balloon Jupiter at 10 p. m. They landed Tuesday at noon at Cuxhaven, covering a distance of 850 kilometers (531 miles) in fourteen hours. Degree for Roosevelt. New Haven, Conn., Sept. 26.—It is announced that Yale University will confer the degree of doctor of laws on President Roosevelt and Rear Admiral Sampson at the bi-centennial celebration to be held from October 10 to 23. Illness Adjourns Inquiry. Trenton, N. J., Sept. 26—The state hospital investigation was adjourned because Dr. W. S. Baldwin, one of the managers, was stricken with paralysis. His condition is serious. Plumbers Go On Strike. Memphis, Tenn., Sept. 26.—Every plumber in town has gone on strike. They made an instant demand for a raise of wages, were refused and 150 men quit work. Blo an Infected Port Buenos Ayres, Sept. 26.—President Roca has signed a decree declaring that the port of Rio Janeiro is infected with the plague. To the Ladies: Don't let your grocer sell you a 12 oz. package of laundry starch for 10 cents when you can get 16 oz. of the very best starch GUARANTEED SUPERIOR TO ANY OTHER BRAND OF STARCH MADE MONEY REFURNISHED IF NOT COTTON SECTORY HAS NO EQUAL. DEFIANCE TRADE MARK DEFIANCE IN QUALITY & QUANTITY STARCH 16 oz. REQUIRES NO COOKING PREPARED FOR LAUNDRY PURPOSES ONLY MANUFACTURED BY MAGNETIC STARCH MFG Co. OMAHA, NEB. How to Paint Finishing Touch Folding Cuffs Shirt Bombs EXACT SIZE OF 10 CENT PACKAGE. 72 PACKAGES IN A CASE. chances in pushing this article, we give an absolute guarantee with every package sold, and authorize dealers to take back any starch that a customer claims to be unsatisfactory in any way. We have made arrangements to advertise it thoroughly, and you must have it. ORDER FROM YOUR JOBBER. If you cannot get it from him, write us. SOZODONT for the Teeth and Breath 25° At all Stores, or by Mall for the price. HALL & RUCKEL, New York. If there is any truth in the saying that happiness is the absence of all pain, mental and physical, the enjoyment of it can only be found in heaven. But so far as the physical is concerned, it is within easy reach; at least measurably so, as far as cure will go. The sum of human misery in this line is made up of greater or less degrees of physical suffering. The minor aches and pains which afflict mankind are easy to reach and as easily cured. There are none in the whole category, which, if taken in time, cannot be cured. They must in some form afflict the nerves, the bones, the muscles and joints of the human body. They are all more or less hurtful and wasteful to the system. St. Jacob's Oil is made to cure them, to search out hidden pain spots, and to cure promptly in a true remedial and lasting way. Very, very many have not known happiness for years till they used it, and very many are putting off cure and happiness because they don't use it. The use of the mosquito is to show us that troubles are not always in proportion to their size. A SAN FRANCISCO PHYSICIAN- Uses Herpicide Successfully in Treading Sycoals of the Beard. He says: "I recently treated a case of sycosis (similar to 'barber's itch') of the lower lip, with Newbro's Herpicide. There was an extensive loss of beard with inflammation extending well down on the chin. The result of the application of Herpicide was most graftifying. The loss of beard ceased and a new growth of hair is now taking place over the once inflamed area. "(Signed) Melville E, O'Neill, M. D., "445 Howard St. "San Francisco, Cal." Herpicide kills the dandruff germ and causes the hair to grow abundantly." Perhaps a watched pot never boils, but a watched boil gets there just the same. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. for children teething, softens the pains, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colds. 25c a bottle. Let the sluggard attend a picnic and the ant will surely come to him. Pianos enable girls to show their fingerings and their finger rings at the same time. What is the use of employing some one to do your dyeing for you. If you use PUTNAM FADELESS DYES you can do it just as well as a professional Sold by druggists, 10c. per package. The marriage ring and the prize ring often lead to the stage. Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE STARCH, the only 16 oz. package for 10 cents. All other 10-cent starch contains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. The spider has no wings, yet he often takes a fly. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is a constitutional cure. Price, 75c. Some juries lose a lot of time in trying to find a verdict. I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago—Mrs. Thos. Robbins, Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17, 1900. Some men in performing a duty look as if they were hired to do it, and were afraid of not being paid. We thank you for trying Wizard Oil for rheumatism or neuralgia, then you will thank us. 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Only a fool ever attempts to argue against success. Are You Using Allen's Foot-Ease? It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. Hope is the broth that hides the dregs in life's cup. DON'T TAKE ANY CHANCES. Russ Bleaching Blue does the best work. All good grocers. 10c. Avoid cheap imitations. A first class pump is a thing that deserves to be well tested. BIG MONEY MADE Selling "Life of McKinley." Send ten cents at once for postage on sample or most complete book, giving History of Anarchy and secret detective service. Best terms ever offered. Credit given and freight paid. We are headquarters for this book. Write Quick. American Citizen Co. Chicago. There are lots of skins in the leather business. LIFE OF PRESIDENT M'KINLEY By Murat Halstead; large book; only $1.50; big profits to agents; freight paid; credit given; agents making $15 daily. Send 10 ets for mailing free outfit at once. KNAPP PUBLISHING CO.. Kansas City, Mo. Whisky has caused many a man to go to work—to get money to buy it. AGENTS WANTED Garfield; complete inside history of the villainous workings of trated; over 500 pages; liberal commission to agents and a str advanced positions. You never had a better opportunity to mu have today. You can make $500 per month for the next three good and good and useful life. Strike now, while the iron is $200 per month. Get off your feet and keep in mind that if you that later in the fall we will be willing to employ you under a stra instruct other agents. This is the chance of a lifetime. We make the offer of any other house and will to so. Many of these concern metly general agents and buy their books from us. We advise you with the manufacturers. Credit given; freight paid; outfit free. postage on outfit. CO-OPERATIVE PUB. CO. (Manuf of McKinley), 909-356 DEARBORN STREET, CHIC GO SLOW-In placing Laundry Starch. You won't ounces for 10 cents while your 16 ounces for the same money DEFIANCE STARCH IS THE BEST COLD WATER No Chromos, no Premium starch, and one-third more of tained in any other package for Having adopted every idea No Chromos, no Premiums, but a better starch, and one-third more of it, than is contained in any other package for the price. Having adopted every idea in the manufacture of starch which modern invention has made possible, we offer Defiance Starch, with every confidence in giving satisfaction. Consumers are becoming more and more dissatisfied with the prevalent custom of getting 5c. worth of starch and 5c. worth of some useless thing, when they want 10c. worth of starch. We give no premiums with Defiance Starch, relying on "Quality and Quantity" as the more satisfactory method of getting business. You take no chances in pushing this article, we give an absolute guarantee with every package sold, and authorize dealers to take back any starch that a made for the same price. One-third more starch for the same money. GO SLOW-In placing orders for 12-oz. Laundry Starch. You won't be able to sell 12 ounces for 10 cents while your competitor offers 16 ounces for the same money. DEFIANCE STARCH IS THE BIGGEST THE BEST COLD WATER STARCH MADE. BIG MONEY MADE ```markdown ``` To the Dealers: ```markdown ``` A GREAT COUNTRY The eyes of all America are turned toward North Dakota's magnificent crops, just harvested. Over 80,000,000 bushels of wheat and corn are grown, good new land and abundant grasses. Thousands of farmers raised 14 to 18 bushels of flax per acre on new breaking, now bringing them $1.25 a bushel. Think of your getting free government land and realizing $25 per acre for the first breaking! There is plenty of good government land, but it is being taken up fast. Also, there are many new businesses in new towns on the "Soo" Line. If you want free land, or are looking for good business locations, write D. W. Cassaday, Land Agent, "Soo" Line, Minneapolis, Minn. WANT SALESMEN TO CARRY SIDE LINE TO Drug, Stationery, Millinery, or retail sales; sample beverages. Easily carry $150 per commission. THE STANDARD RING CO., B 406, 188 Madison 11., Chicago Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Loss of Appetite and all. Stomach Troubles surely cured by MILK or Pepsin Compound. Sample bottle FREE. DR. TABER BFG. CO. Fowler, HI. SAMPLE BOTTLES FREE I CURE FITS FREE A Full-Size 1 Treatment of Dr. O. W. Morris, Dr. J. H. H. H. H. Fits, Episodes and All Nervous Diseases. Address O. PHELPS BROWN, 98 Broadway, Norwich, N.Z. DENSION JOHN W. MORRIS, Washington, D.C. Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Ayrshire civil war, 15 admissible claims, attys Parker's Interview Parker's Interview gurgling in his throat. His lips moved, I thought I heard him mutter, "I did my duty." Some one was snatching the revolver and handkerchief from his hand, but I saw nor heard nothing but the terrorized face before me and the furor of those about me. Down we went in a death struggle for he was as strong as an ox and had I been a smaller man he would have overpowered me. As it was I clung on to his throat while the crowd closed in around. In such scenes one's mind sometimes runs blank. Mine went blank for a moment, and I was not myself until I looked about and saw Czolgosz pinned to the floor, the blood streaming from his nose, and heard the wild cries of the women. I looked up and saw the President sinking into a chair. His face was like a sheet and he struggled for breath. My heart sank within me, for I thought he was dying. But it past soon over and I found myself alone in that terror-streaked crowd. The next day I heard that the newspapers said a Negro had dropped down on the assassian as if he had fallen from the dome. That Negro was I. But I have said nothing, and do not care to committ myself except the story I have told. The truth will come out on the witness stand. JAMES FORD. Mr. James Ford of Deer Lodge Montana, died a few days ago and his remains were brought to this city for burial by his son Jackson, with whom he has made his home for the past two years. He leaves one son, and a daughter Mrs. Jane Ford of this city. The deceased had been a-resident of this city since the early sixties, until he went to Montana to make his home with his son. It is claimed that he was 101 years of age. He left to his son and daughter a butiful home on 17th and woodland avenue, valued at about $4,500, clear of all indebtedness. The funeral services, in charge of Messrs. R. N. Hyde and Shank, were held from the chapel at the cemetery, Tuesday afternoon, Rev. S. Bates officiating. Many of the old settlers and former friends were in attendance. The pall bearers were: Messers. Birney, Jefferson Logan, Horace Lewis and R. N. Hyde. Much praise is due Mr. Hyde for the way in which the funeral was managed. OHIO & INDIANA HOME VISITOR'S Excursions, Via the BURLINGTON ROUTE, at very low rates. Tickets on sale Sept. 17th & 24th, and Oct. 1st & 8th, or on such dates as will enable passengers to pass through the eastern 7ate way by evening of those dates. The route is through Peoria, except on Oct. 1st, tickets may be sold via Beardstown to certain points. All tickets good for return 30 days from date of sale, if deposited with desti- nation agent within twenty-four hours after arrival. For further information call on any C. B. & Q. agent for rates and particulars, or address, J. M. Becktel, Div. Pass. Agt. Burlington, Iowa. Cuts and Bruises Quickly Healed. Chamberlain's Pain|Balm applied to a cut, bruise, burn, seald or like injury will instantly allay the pain and will local the parts in less time than any other treatment. Unless the injury is very severe it will not leave a scar. Pain Balm also cures rheumatism, assains swellings and lameness. For sale by all Drugrists. CHURCH AND CLERGY. The Rev. A. G. Fitzgerald, D. D., has been pastor of the Third United Presbyterian church, Philadelphia, for 25 years. The Rev. C. S. Abbott, pastor of Christ church, Newark, N. J., has completed a quarter of a century as pastor of the church. The Rev. A. C. Eggleston of Windsor, Conn., has accepted the position of financial secretary of Wellesley academy at Wellesley, Mass. He has been a trustee of the academy for many years. Normals as Motormen: Nearly all the motormen employed on the new trolley lines in Buffalo are young Canadian farmers. The railway officials say they are the most satisfactory of all their employees. OHIO & INDIANA HOME VISITORS Excursions. Via the BURLINGTON ROUTE at very low rates. Tickets on sale Sept. 17th & 24th, and Oct. 1st & 8th, or on such dates as will enable passengers to pass through the eastern gate way by evening of those dates. The route is through Peoria, except on Oct. 1st, tickets may be sold via Beardstown to certain points. All tickets good for return of 30 days from date of sale, if deposited with destination agent within twenty-four hours after arrival. For further information, call on any C. B. & Q. agent for rates and particulars, on address, J. M. Bechtel, Div. Pass. Agt. Burlington, Iowa. TRICK OF VOICE. now One Lawyer keeps the Judge from sleeping. There is said to be a lawyer in Philadelphia who possesses a trick of the voice to which a certain measure of his success in United States Supreme court practice is due. The trick consists in waking a judge. Whether it is a common practice for the high dignitaries of the federal supreme bench to indulge in a nap in the course of a long and tedious argument, such happenings are not unknown, and it is well for an able logician of the bar to be prepared for it. The trick of waking a sleepy judge would seem to be something in the nature of slamming a law book under his nose or connecting his personality with the current of an electric battery. But the trick is explained as purely a matter of sound involved in the skillful control of the voice. It is said that a barrister practiced in the art and rhetoric of addressing the bench can gather all the waves of sound from his throat into a focus and deposit it in the orifice of the judge's ear with the general effect of a bomb. The trick, however it is accomplished, is said to have been worked repeatedly with success on the late Judge McKennan, whose habit of going to sleep on the bench was once a notorious subject of comment in the litigation over the Berliner telephone patients. This queer trick of the voice, while it is said to be the peculiar property of one celebrated lawyer, is probably attempted often with varying success by others.—Philadelphia Record. WANTED-TRUSTWORTHY MEN AND women to travel and advertise for old established house of solid financial standing. Salary. Cash. Expenses all payable in. No canvassing required. Give references and enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. Address Manager, 335 Caxton Bldd., Chicago. HOME VISITOR'S EXCURSION TO OHIO AND INDIANA. SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER 1901. A grand opportunity to visit your old home at a very small expense. On September 17th and 24th, October 1st and 8th, the BURLINGTON ROUTE will sell tickets to nearly 400 cities and towns in Ohio and Indiana. These tickets are sold at greatly reduced rates, and are good to return anytime within 30 days from date of sale. The route is through Peoria except on October 1st, tickets will be sold via Beardstown to certain points. Full information at city ticket office 400 Locust St. F. L. Gannaway City Passenger Agent, Des Moines, Iowa. HOME VISITOR'S EXCURSION TO OHIO AND INDIANA. SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER 1901. A grand opportunity to visit your old home at a very small expense. On September 17th and 24th, October 1st, and 8th, the BURLINGTON ROUTE will sell tickets to nearly 400 cities and towns in Ohio and Indiana. These tickets are sold at greatly reduced artes, and are good to return anytime within 30 days from date of sale. The route is through Peoria except on October 1st, tickets will be sold via Beardstown to certain points. Full information at city ticket office 400 Locust St. F. L. Gannaway City Passenger Agent, Des Moines, Iowa. SCURCH AND CLEAGY. The Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman is to write the life of D. L. Moody. Bishop Edsall has just completed a highly successful mission at Jamesown, N. D. Tomkins Avenue Congregational church of Brooklyn raised over $27,900 for missions during the year. The death roll in the Congregational ministry in Great Britain was unusually heavy during the year 1899. A congress of the history of religions will be held at Paris, France during the first part of September next year. The receipts of Plymouth church, Brooklyn, for the year make a total of $38,000, of which $17,000 is from pew rents. The annual council of the South African churches was held at Graaf Reinet, and owing to the preoccupations of the war, only thirty-eight delegates attended. Since his resignation from the Church of the Pilgrims relief from care has conducted to a marked improvement in the health of the venerable Dr. R. S. Storra. Swiss Rifle Union. The Swiss Rifle Union has no less than 4,000 sections spread all over the country, with a total of 120,000 members, says a Lucerne correspondent. Every fourth year this union organizes a grand rifle meeting, at which prizes are given. Cured of Chronic Diarrhoea After Thirty Years of Suffering. "I suffered for thirty years with diarrhoea and thought I was past being cured," says John S. Holloway, of French Camp, Miss. "I had spent so much time and money and suffered so much that I had given up all hopes of recovery. I was so feeble from the effects of the diarrhoea that I could do no kind of labor, could not even travel, but by accident I was permitted to find a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, and after taking several bottles I am entirely cured of that trouble. I am so pleased with the result that I am anxious that it be in reach of all who suffer as I have." For sale by all Drug-gists. CHURCH ANNOUNCEMENT. The Corinthian Baptist Church —situated on 11th St. between Crocker and School Sts. Presching; at 11 A.M.; Sunday School; at 12 o'clock Presching; at 7 P.M. Rev. S. Bates, Pastor. St. Paul A. M. E.-Corner of Second and Center Streets. Presching. at 11 A.M.; Sunday School; at 9 o'clock Presching; at 9 P.M. m.; presching at 8 p.m. l. J. Phillips, pastor. First African Baptist Church—Corner School; and Fourth streets. Rev. F. Houlst pastor. Presching 10:30 a.m.; Sunday school 2:30 p.m., Mr. M. E. Housten. Superintendent; Young People's meeting 7 p.m., preaching 800 p.m. Burn's M. E.-East Second and Des Moines street; Sunday school quenching at 11:00 p.m.; Sunday School at 12:30 Prayer and Class meeting, Wednesday 8 p.m. All are welcome. Rev. C. W. Holmes, pastor, 220 Des Moines street. Mount Nebo Baptist Church—E. Second street, between Lucent and Grand Avenue—Sunday School at 11:00 p.m.; Sunday School 12:30 p.m. Superintendent, Rose Johnson. Presching at 8 p.m. Rev. J. H Bell, pastor. Tabernacle Baptist Church Mission—Situated over 605 East Locust street. Presching 11 a.m.; Sunday School 9:00 a.m.; preaching at 8 p.m. Rev. J. R. Winburn, pastor. SECRET ORDERS. CALIFORNIA. Broad Vestibuled First-Class Sleepers DAILY— Between Chicago and Sanfrancisco WITHOUT CHANGE OF CARS. Great Rock Island Route Leave Chicago on Big 5 at 10:00 p.m. All the best scenery of the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada by daylight in both directions. These cars are carried on the limited trains of the Great Rock Island Route, Denever and Rio Grande (Scenic Route), Rio Grande Western and Southern Pacific. Diming Car Service Through Buffett Library Cars. JOHN SEBASTIAN, G, P. A., Chicago. Grave Filling Device. A device for use in constructing graves, the invention of Henry D. Cameron, of Burlington, Iowa, is designed to fill the grave with earth after the coffin has been lowered, and to conceal as far as possible the actual throwing of the dirt upon the coffin, the most trying termination of the grave ceremony to the bereaved mourners. It consists of a receptacle, with detachable sides and bottom, and a gate in the latter sc arranged as to be capable of being opened to allow the contents to fall. The front is a flexible curtain, extending from the top to the gate, and designed to prevent the earth within from being seen. This receptacle is filled with earth previous to the ceremony and carried to a convenient point. When all is over and the grave is to be filled, the receptacle is placed over it, and the gates opened, thus gently closing the last sad scene in a much more fitting manner than the seemingly cold-hearted return of the earth with a spade. --- The Merchant of Venice A Venetian merchant who was lolling in the lap of luxury was accosted upon the Rialto by a friend who had not seen him for many months. "How is this?" cried the latter; "when I last saw you your gaberdine was out at elbows, and now you sail in your own gondola." "True," replied the merchant, "but since then I have met with serious losses, and been obliged to compound with my creditors for ten cents on the dollar. Moral—Composition is the life of trade—Lanigan's Fables. 221 S. Market St. Ottumwa, Ia. LITERARY NOTES. E. Nesbit's new story, which will be published in the autumn, will have the queer title, "The Wouldbegoods." S. R. Crockett's new book, "Love Idylls," will be published soon. It will be uniform in size with "An Englishwoman's Love Letters." Maurice Thompson's "Alice of Old Vincennes" is to be published in Great Britain, as is also "The Story of Eva," the Chicago novel by Will Payne. Few persons are aware, even in England, that a privately printed collection of unpublished writings from the pen of Robert Louis Stevenson is about to be issued. In Dr. Minot J. Savage's new book, "The Passing and the Permanent in Religion," the author tries to make clear the great positive elements of religion which cannot pass away. Henry James was recently told that Sarah Grand, the novelist, says she was 14 years old before she ever learned to read or write. "She hasn't learned to write even yet," he remarked. Edmund Gosse is about to become a publisher. His first venture will be a collection of the poems of his friend Austin Dobson which have been written since July, 1899, when the last edition of his collected poems was published. The new book will contain about thirty pieces, among them being poems on the war and on the late queen. Mr. Gosse intends to charge $3.20 for each copy. A new book on "Modern Strategy," which is said to be a work of importance, will be published soon. It is the work of Capt. Walter H. James of the British army. It is a treatise on the strategy of today and deals with the effect which railroads and telegraphs and the increase of newspapers have had on war. The campaigns chosen to illustrate it are chiefly taken from the Napoleonic wars and those of recent times. At the end of the book a chapter has been added on the effect of modern weapons upon tactics. IN A NUTSHELL. in size, not counting colonies, the European powers stand in this order: Russia, Austria, Germany, France, United Kingdom, Italy. Immigration from Europe. Immigration from Europe. More immigrants are said to be arriving from Europe this year than ever before. Most of them come from southern Europe and Scandinavia. Italy furnishes the largest quota this season. Most of them are coming west to work on railroad extensions of the Burlington, Union Pacific and Great Northern. Italians, it is said, are the best track workers that can be obtained, and they are replacing the Chinese heretofore employed by the railroads on the Pacific coast. Latest Fad of Critics The latest fad of critics, the New York Press says, is to rebel against the names of months. They point out that it is absurd for Europeans and Americans of today to dedicate one-sixth of the year to the memory of Julius Caesar and Augustus, to name a third after heathen gods and goddesses, to have two months of doubtful nomenclature, and to designate the remaining four by misleading numericals, September being obviously ninth and not seventh in order. "Papering Up" Silk Goods. Silk goods should not be folded in white paper, as the chloride of lime used in bleaching the paper will impare the color of the silk. Brown or blue paper is better; yellow India paper is better still. Silk intended for dress should not be kept in the house long, as lying in folds causes it to crack or split. White satin dresses should be pinned up in blue paper, with coarse brown paper on the outside, sewed together at the edges. Lord Chancellor of England. Lord Halsbury, the Lord Chancellor of England, is the son of Dr. Stanley Lees Giffard, who was editor of the London Standard for twenty-seven years. His grandfather, a noted Dublin politician of the union period, John Giffard, had for more than a generation the sole editorial control of the Dublin Journal, which had been started and for fifty year edited by George Faulkner, the friend of Swift and Chesterfield. Orange Free State Flag. The Orange Free State flag is a simple rectangle of vivid orange. An orange tree in full fruit is the most distinctive feature of the arms of the Orange Free State. Beneath the tree are on one side a lion and on the other a number of oxen. An ox-wagon similar to that on the Transvaal arms and three suspended horns complete the whole. "Spes Bona"—good hope—is written underneath the arms of Cape Colony, the chief feature of which is a lion rampant. A figure of Hope surmounts the shield, the "supporters of which are a couple of native animals." I. M. Jones Restaurant AND ICE CREAM PARLOR. FRUITS CIGARS TOBACCO 318 W. THIRD ST CAPT. GEORGE BEALL, Chief of Capitol Police, Des Moines, Iowa. what Captain Beall says today: Dr. C. M. McLean, bighted by a loophole such, and cursed me, and when of the stomach which was killed me, and when of my case you took hold of it and cured me. I have not or seven years, and I want the world to know it." Very respectfully yours, GEORGE BEALL he cured, among them: H. C. Harris, of Harris, Emery, St. John's Lutheran Church, Des Moines, Iowa. Includes all medicines the cure of the disease, Heart, and Lungs; also Stomach, Lines, mitation free by mail or at office. Sheets with Dr. McLean's Monograph on Deafness, Address, and is of Great Value to the Afflicted. Antimonial letters from cured patients. AND MEDICAL INSTITUTE, C. M. McLean, Chief Consulting Physician, 606 Walnut St. Des Moines, This is what Captain Beall says to day: Dr. C. M. McLean My Dear Doctor. "After catarra had bled my boyhood days and was taken away, and after it had produced a chronic catarra for seven years, I took hold of it and cured me. I have not all the other doctors had made a cure of my case you took for seven years, and I want the world to know it." Very respectfully yours, GEORGE BEALL We refer the afflicted to people we have cured, among them: Harriet M. Emery, Dry Goods Co.; Rev. D. Wirt, Pastor St. John, Church Des Moines, Iowa. The treatment at $5.00 per month of all medicines for the cure of the cure of Stomach, Deafness, Hay Fever, Bronchitis, Allergies, Throat, and Lung; also Stomach, Lice, Bowl, and Bladder troubles. Consultation free by mail or at office. Consultation Blank and Symptom Sheets with Dr. McLean's Monograph on Desulfate Affected. Bowel, Kidney, and Bladder troubles. Consultation Blank and Symptom Sheets with Dr. McLean's Monograph on Deafness and Catarrh Sent FREE to any Address, and is of Great Value to the Afflicted. The book also contains hundreds of testimonial letters from cured patients. folders, booklets, etc., are tastefully gotten up and are valuable for what they contain. Here is a partial list of what MAS. S. FEE, General Passenger St. Paul, Minn., will send out, carefully on receipt of prices given. Any combina- ly or express orders, silver or stamps will be try to obtain good descriptive reading matter beautifully illustrated in color member treats particularly of the Send Pacific's Trademark, the Custer Six Cents and the Yellowstone Park. education containing a complete Pacific Trademark. The artis- Send and 1901 are used in miniature. Four Cents EWSTONE- flowers from Yellowstone Park ers in their natural colors. A Send evenir—ten specimens of flowers Fifty Cents ations of Park scenery. PARK- in strong flexible covers, good Send rated, pocket size, a compend- the World's Wonderland. size book, 72 pages, in strong Send on heavy paper. descriptive of Twenty-five peak in the United States—Cents glacial nature. SERIBE FOR THE State Bystander IN THE WILDEST COLORED INERNAL IN Iowa paper in the North-west. into counties in Iowa states in the Union foreign Countries. towns in Iowa and corres- many different states. MR. CHAS. S. FEE, General Passenger Agent, St. P. Minn., will send out, carefully mailed, upon receipt of prices given. Any combination of ordersSilver or stamps will be tion can be made, andnoney or express orders, silver or stamps will be accepted. This is a fine opportunity to obtain descriptive reading matter for little or nothing. WONDERLAND 1901— An annual publication, beautifully illustrated in color and half-tone. This number treats particularly of the history of the Northern Pacific's Trademark, the Custer Battlefield in Montana, and the Yellowstone Park. MINIATURE WONDERLAND— A neat and dainty publication containing a complete history of the Northern Pacific Trademark. The artis-tic covers of the wonderland 1901 are used in miniature. WILD FLOWERS FROM YELLOWSTONE— A book of pressed wild flowers from Yellowstone Park showing the real flowers in their natural colors. A dainty and beautiful souvenir—tenspecimens of flowers and six full page illustrations of Park scenery. YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK— A new 112-page book in strong flexible covers, good paper, plain type, illustrated, pocket size, a compendium and descriptive of the World's Wonderland. CLUMBING MOUNT RAINIER— An illustrated pocket-size book, 72 pages, in strong Send flexible covers, printed on heavy paper, descriptive of Twenty-five an ascent of the highest peak in the United States—Cents outside of Alaska—of a glacial nature. Iowa State Bystander --- A. H. My Dear Doctor, "After catarrh had brightened hood, and after it had produced a chronic catarrh all the other doctors had made a failure of case had a pain or ache or a sign of catarrh for seven very We refer the afflicted to people we have cured, an Dry Goods Co.; Rev. Dr. Wirt, Past St. John's. The treatment at $5.00 per month includes all Hay Fever, Bronchitis, Asthma, and all affections. Soreul, Kidney, and Bladder troubles. Consultation Blanks and Symptom Sheets wi and Catarrh Send FREE to any Address The book also contains hundreds of testimonial le THE OOPELAND MED Dr. C. M. McC GOOD LITERATURE FOR ALMOST folders, ten up to contain NOTHING MR. CHAS. S. Agent, St. Paul mailed, upon receipt can be made, andnoney or exp accepted. This is a fine opportunity to obtain for little or nothing. WONDERLAND 1901— An annual publication, beautiful and half-tone. This number treasured history of the Northern Pacific's Battlefield in Montana, and the miniature WONDERLAND— A neat and dainty publication co-history of the Northern Pacific Territory covers of the wonderland 1901. WILD FLOWERS FROM YELLOWSTONE— A book of pressed wild flowers for showing the real flowers in the dainty and beautiful souvenir—tea and six full page illustrations of YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK— A new 112-page book in strong paper, plain type, illustrated, po-ium and descriptive of the World. CLIMBING MOUNT RAINIER— An illustrated pocket-size book flexible covers, printed on heavier an ascent of the highest peak in outside of Alaska—of a glacial n. SUBSCRIBE Iowa State THE OLD COLOR JOURNAL IOWA and the leading paper It Goes Into 76 Counties 29 States 2 Foreign Agents in 24 towns in pondence from man A statistician has discovered that the average business walk in New York is a mile in twenty minutes, and the church-going walk is a mile in twenty-five minutes. The fastest walk is that of the homeward-bound Brooklynites, a mile in eighteen minutes. Sixteen of the violins and violoncellos owned by the late Sir Arthur Sullivan were recently sold for $1,800. The greatest prize realized for any one of the instruments was $850, which was paid for a violoncello by Joseph Guarnerius. I. M. Jones Restaurant AND ICE CREAM PARLOR. FRUITS CIGARS TOBACCO 348 W. THIRD ST In'184 Capt, Beall's days seemed to be numbered. His friends had given him the gift of a Captain's stripes during the war, and who later became a Chief of Police was Beall. He was killed in Beall's Capt, Beall did not die; he was caused by Dr. McLean's New Treatment. The family doctors and his friends were killed in a living monument of what Dr. McLean The Northern Pacific is noted among railways for its adver tising matter. Its pamphlets, OHIO & INDIANA HOME VISITOR'S Excursions, Via the BURLINGTON ROUTE, at very low rates. Tickets on sale Sept. 17th & 24th, and Oct. 1st & 3th, or on such dates as will enable passengers to pass through the eastern gate way by evening of those dates. The route is through Peoria, except on Oct. 1st, tickets may be sold via Beardstown to certain points. All tickets gold for return 30 days from date of sale, if deposited with destination agent within twenty-four hours after arrival. For further information, call on any C, B. & Q. agent for rates and particulars, or address, J. M. Bechtel, Div. Pass. Agt. Burlington, Iowa. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy a Great Favorite. The soothing and healing properties of this Remedy, its pleasant taste and prompt and permanent cures have made it a great favorite with people everywhere. It is especially prized by mothers of small children for colds, group and whooping cough, as it always affords quick relief, and as it contains no opium or other harmful drug, it may be given as confidently to a baby as to an adult. For sale by all druggists. The World's Wonder Indian Pile Cure! Sure cure for piles. Others have been cured, why not you? I have had remarkable success in effecting pile cures. I guarantee from 1 to 3 boxes to cure any case of piles. Read the following testimonial: I have had piles for fifteen years. I have used all kinds of salves and had two surgical operations performed without any permanent relief. I have been entirely cured by using Burnett's Pile salve. L. R. GENEVA, Met Merchant, Oskaloosa, Iowa, April 8, 1906. Only 50 cents a box, or upon receipt of 50 cents I will forward a box to any part of the United States. For further information see me. PROF. T. L. BURNETT, 402 South Jackson Street, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. WANTED—TRUSTWORTHY MEN AND women to travel and advertise for old established house of soils. Mail salves and expenses, all payable in cash. No canvassing required. Give refer ences and enclose selfaddress stamped envelope. Address Manager, 383 Cxton Bldg., College EVERYBODY KNOWSTHAT MUNGER'S LAUN- DRY is the best in the city. Try them and be decided. Mane Office 211-215 NINTH St Brane Office 504 MULBERRY St. PHONE 579. CHEAP ROUND TRIP HOMESEEK- ERS' RATES-VIA NORTHERN PACIFIC RY. On the first and third Tuesdays of each month, up to and including Sep- tember, the Northern Pacific Railway Co. will sell, to points on its line west of Little falls, Minn. round trip tickets at the rate of one fare plus $2.00. For full particuliers, address G. D. Rogers, D. P. A. N. P. R. 503 Locust St. Des Moines. Ia. Chas. S. Fee, G. P. & T. A. St. Paul, minn. SHANK BROS., Funeral Directors 517 Mulberry St. Telephones 686, 688 and 689. DES MOINES, - IOWA. IT IS IN THE LEAD! ....DO YOU READ..... THE FREEMAN? If not. Why npt? The Leading Paper OF THE RACE. NEWSY, SPICY & EDUCATING A digest of all the news of the race, on all ques- tions, from all parts of the country. SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR 30 DAYS THE FREEMAN will be sent to any address for one year for $1.00. Sample copies on application. Write for list of premiums. Address THE FREEMAN, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS & C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion on the invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Ouest agency for recording patents. Patent taken by廊市 Muni. & Co. receive special works, o.o. large in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circulation of any scientific journal. Torns. $3 a year. four months. $L sold by new dealers. MUNN & Co. 361 roadway. New York Branch Oloe. 65 F. St. Washington, D. C. A Harmless Powder. Oatmeal mixed with water makes a most soothing face wash, as well as softening and whitening the skin. It should, however, be sparingly used by those with large pores, which it is apt to clog. Fine oatmeal, or oatmeal flour, forms a very good face powder, and is, of course, absolutely free from the harmful ingredients of many expensive powders. CAMPAIGN IS OPENED "What is said here will have little influence upon the fate of our country, but deeply concern the future of your fellow men." Good government is the ultimate object of all sincere political discussion, and it inspires every conscientious political act. There never has been and will never be a proposition. What good government is, and how it can best be attained, are matters upon which honest, polite and patient people can be persuaded. It may safely be said they always will differ. It is this Concurrence in the end to persuade people to walk paths leading to it, which appurate the people into political parties, and which create the basis for political gatherings, and which create the arles of the field of settled principles or mark the limits of the region of fair dispute, we instinctively know whether any person should pervade the minds of the people. It is plain that when we meet to consider questions that are still open for discussion, we should pervade the minds of the people. I can conceive of no hours of graver moment than those in which the voters of the region should pervade the minds of faith and discharge their political duties. "It may sound somewhat startling, but I am not willing agree with me when said that you should do right; you should do wrong and more important than that you should do right; it is that you should believe that you are doing right, and that you should selfs and for your country, to do wrong, believing that you are doing right, than to do right, believing that you are doing wrong." "These observations, tite as they are, will be our opponents in beginning the campaign of 1601. I am here, firm and steadfast in our beliefs, and enforces principles which are necessary to the honor of the nation and to the welfare of the people. I would give it a clear title to your confidence and support, and a future with a Brighter and clearer promise than any other history of your country. But I am not here to impugn the motives or question the doctrine inconsistent with my own, not to unfairly disapare and unjustly belittle the doctrine inconsistent with my own, not to finished, some of you may say that I am allstaken, but I am determined that none An Appeal to Citizens. As a citizen of Iowa, I shared the humiliation experience of being strongly injured in a car accident. I courageously repolishation to pledge the Iowa democracy to the seer, and I am proud of my age. I am not thinking alone of the demands for the free coinage of silver, however. I have doubt not they were perfectly sincere, the history of the last five years has been austin it, and those who really expect or desire to see the doctrine become a part of our national currency moreurgic than the disciples of infant The Spanish-American War. Will Hold the Philippines. Turning to the commercial phase of the Philippine question, and speaking of the importance of the islands in connection with our affairs in China, Mr. Cumminas said [12]. I cannot conceive of a man whose view of the rightful powers of government is so narrow as to question the authority and independence of his own country. Therefore, we must be concerned in the nightly demand of the American farmer, merchant, manufacturer and laborer to preserve a land of our own destiny. With the Philippines we have the power to enforce our reasonable demands. With them we hold the key to the problem. Without them we cannot preserve our negotiations or impossible war. I look upon the coincidence of New China and our acquisition of the land of the Alhunyay, interposed for the maintenance of our pre-commencement among the nations of the earth. I repeat that we must be prepared to resist us to these islands in the Pacific sea, but I do know that so long as we are struggling with our enemies there will be the American territory in the Philippine islands, and American barbarians along their shores." The Tariff Revision. After quoting the plank in the republican platform which demands a revision of the Constitution, the Supreme Court This declaration is worthy of more than a casual thought. It is another evidence of the importance of the industry of the manufacturer, the American farmer and to the American workman, has always been, and is now, a key element in the development of the industry. It must be assumed that because the Iowa platform of 1901 suggests a modification of the duties brethren in our adherence to the principle which has inspired the tariff laws of which central thought of all tariff legislation enacted by republican congresses, and approved by republican legislators, is to say to the industry and develop the beautiful resources of his own country, to pay his employees good profit in our own markets. My faith in the principle and my enthusiasm for its results, and in the progress of the process of time, for I firmly believe that the United States, without the benecient protection by the patriotic freedom of whig, and afterward republican statesmanship, would be languishing at the very head of the table around which gathers the council of nations. It is sure that of our own citizens, you may well expect the republican party to discern the opportunity and to meet it. I correctly understand the temper of the Cedar Rapids convention and the views of the catholic resolutions, the paragraph of our platform which I have already quoted means something more destiny through republican evidences. One of the most striking evidences of the modern industry is the tendency to all the manufacturing nations of Europe. Within certain limits, which no man can accustom to, which will be under lain say: "Within the limits of economy in production and natural but healthy food, if effective competition remains, the wages of the laborer will be increased, the field embraced and uses or intends to use the unlawful and destructive power, thus increase products, it becomes the enemy of good government, in perils the peace and good health and destructive power, thus increase an injustice against which they ought, to and will rebel, it does not seem to me evil to put indiscriminately every article which may be produced by such a combination, upon the honest manufacturers and custoers, would anabolize many an honest business, impoverthous thousands of honest manufacturers and custoers, if however, congress in looking over the field, finds a commodity or a product which is thus clearly monopoly, would foreign competition is one of the factors which enables the vicious manufacturers to the counden of the lewa platform, expressing as I believe it does, the unanimous crievous trump upon such an article or such a commodity shall be so reduced or abolished as to release the greedy producer. "I would not have you believe that I should not be able to take the oath for the evil of the trust. I shall not be able upon this occasion to examine the various conditions of the trust, looking to the subversion of vicious combinations. I can only pause to suggest that you should not indirectly attacked. The keenest intelligence and the finest courage of the mind should not be upon the problem and failure is impossible. Railroad and State Taxes. To the question of taxation, Mr. Cummins devoted considerable time, made his losses public, and parked executive branch of the state government. They are significant, however, because another law is not wholly satisfied with the law as now exists, and the state's impatience bases on the betterment of our stat utes I hope I may be pardoned if at this point I suggest my views with regard to "I saw Theodore Roosevelt and Grower the teams fleeing from their eyes as they dived into the water and I knew that the edge of parisian skirp for this campaign was dulled and that they were fleeing from the hearts of republican and democrat allied but event away the last vestige of acrophy in the water." Must Stifle Anarchy. These metanachly reflections not only heighten the waves of desolution that have been released in the beloved country, but they impressively remind us of a duty too long neglected, and of the need to reclaim the asylum of license. It is the home of free thought and free speech, but it is not the home of fear and cowardly assassins. It welcomes unlimited discussion, for the betterment of the government, and for the victory that has for its object the subversion of the government, but it also strips it for the archist, whatever he be his methods of warfare, and he must either change his mind By the dead body of William McKinley the millions of American citizens have sworn to do justice upon the men and women and the teachings which brought him to the grave. We will do what we signify they will do it they will do it speedily, and they will do it effectually. OTTUMWA NEWS. Mr. T. W. Hunbuele of Cleveland, Is. passed through our city last week enroute to St. Davis, Ill. Mr Jack Quinn and Edd Daily of Chicago are here visiting friends. Mrs. Crowley is very ill. Miss Annie Myres will leave for St. Louis, Mo., next Sunday. The I. B. U. met at Mrs. Neusum Friday. Mr. Wm. Bradshaw was acquitted from the charge for whiche he was indicted for murder in the second degree. We are glad to see Mr. Bradshaw on the streets again and with his family. Mr. Hicks of East Grant lost his little top last week. The Grand Master of the Masonic lodge will visit us the second Tuesday in October on important business. He wishes for all members of Golden Star lodge to be present. Mrs. Ella Early is married again to Wm. Alnut. Mrs. Maud Brown and her sister had their f. tunes told last Monday. They will know what is coming now in the future. Mr. Walter Davis and family will move on West Main street the first of the week. GRAVITY, IOWA. Mrs. Ama Isom, wife of Daniel Isom, died at the home of her grand mother in Bedford. at 2:00 p. m., Wednesday the 18th; age 35 years. Death resulted from consumption. She has been failing in health the past eight months. She leaves relatives and a host of friends. Miss Georgia Stewart of Clarinda is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Johnson of Gravity She also attended the funeral of Mrs. Ama Isom of Bedford. Mrs. Lula Franklin of Bedford left for Galesburg last evening owing to the serious illness of her aunt. Mr. Henry Johnson and brotherhave returned from Galesburg where they went to see their slater who was very ill. She was much better when they departed. Mrs. Zach Lincoln of Conway entertained a few friends at home in honor of Miss Georgia Stewart of Clarinda, the guest of Mrs. Emma Johnneen of Gravity. Miss Susan Marshall of Sharp attended the funeral of Mrs. Isom, Mrs. Caldwell of Shepandosh also attended the funeral. of Shenandoah also attended the funeral. Mrs. Joe Jones of Clarinda returned home from a two weeks visit at her parents home in Blair, Nebr. She also spent a few days at the carnival in Omaha. Mrs. Allen Jones of Clarinda has been very sick. ALBIA NOTES. Rev. W. A. Searcy is attending General Conference in Chicago this week. Those who attended the emancipation celebration in Buxton Saturday from Albia were Mrs. Josie Meadows, Mr. and Mrs. H. Snoddy and daughter, Misses Mable and Francis Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Mack Davis, Misses Mattie Bouian and Nellie Grayson, Messrs, Wallace Davis, Roy and Will Grayson, Frank Vance, Lewis Franklin, Miss Cora Thomas, Mr. Joe Brown, Mr. Burt Jones and some others whose names we did not get. Mr. and Mrs. Burton of Albia spent Sunday in Hilton. Messrs. Will Oliver, Warren Taylor and Grannison, Mrs. Reece Underwood of Hilton were in town this week. Cal Anderson out near Hiteman was burned and his house one night last week. Mr. Zieh Taylor of Hilton was in Albia Saturday. BUXTON CELEBRATES EMANCIPA- TION DAY. (Special to the BYSTANDER) The 22nd has come and gone and with it the grand emancipation celebration of Buxton. The celebration was on Saturday the 21st as Sunday was the 22nd. At sunrise a salute was fired and from that time things begin to liven up, the celebration was on. Hundreds of people poured into the town from the country and neighboring towns and thronged the streets waiting for the parade. At noon the parade moved from the Odd Fellows' hall by John T. W. Washington, marshall of the day, L. C. Carry, assistant, W. C. Rhodes standard bearer, and the Buxton Cornet Band, next in line came the ladies and Knights of Tabor, Sir Knights and Tents in dress regalia, next cane the A. M. E. and Baptist Sunday Schools, following in line came Major Grever's drum corps, an emitation detachment of the famous Ninth cavalry under the command of Capt. Hobt. Carey, following came the Rough Riders and then came Old Uncle Eph, John Tolliver Junior was Uncle Eph, Luctan Heywood Uncle Ned and Bud Jenkins was sam, the boys were pretty happy "cause dey was tree." Next in line came the speakers and citizens in carriages. Early in the afternoon people began to flock to Jackson Park, where a sheep, a hog and the fatted calf already nicely roasted was quickly eaten. The afternoon's program commenced with a concert by the famous Buxton Cornet Band, after which Mr. Washington introduced the orator of the day, Mr. S. Joe Brown of Albia. Mr. Brown delivered a powerful speech and were I to attempt to repeat the part of most importance I would be compelled to repeat it all. Mr. Brown's topic was the Negro in History, and he certainly did the sub- --- jret justice. Beginning with the race when it first sprung fourth in the days of Noah, he touched upon lives of great Negroes of centuries ago and those of the recent past. Let me here say that Mr. Brown's speech was greatly enjoyed by all present and in all a great benefit. The band played after which Mr. E. L. Smith read a paper on Abraham Lincoln, his work of emancipation. His paper was well prepared and instructive. Next Miss Maggie Coleman read a paper on Rev. Dickerson, and the emancipation, which was well prepared and well received. After music by the band the program closed. Baseball game and shooting match consumed the rest of the day. At 7:00 p. m. the banquet opened with music by Linn Willis and assistants. Promptly at 12:00 the jollification came to a close and all went home feeling good, voting the celebration a grand success. Among those whom we wish to thank for their kindly lent assistance are: Supt. B. C. Buxton, Mr. W. A. Wells who closed the store and contributed also, H. A. Armstrong, N. P. Harrington, Rev. Williamson, Agent M. I, Courter, head clerk R. G. Hultman, Miss Sunderland, A. Perkins, Mrs. J. W. Riggs for her work with the lodge, and the ladies and Sir Knights and the children of the Sunday schools. Sorry business detained Hon. John L. Thompson, Prof A. R. Jaekson was the one who first proposed that we celebrate and the 20th Century club took up his suggestions and carried things through successfully. The club is going to organize a company of home guards, steps will be taken immediately to this end. Next year will bring fourth improvements. KEOKUK NOTES. Last Week. Rev, Reeves delivered a very impressive sermon at the A. M. E. church Sunday night. He will leave for Chicago Tuesday to attend Conference. An entertainment at the A. M. E. church Monday night for the benefit of the pastor, Rev. Reeves. The young ladies of Seventeenth street Baptist church on Thursday night gave a paper entertainment which was a novelty. Mrs. Ada McConnell and daughter, Ruth, have returned home to Chicago after several weeks visit with her father, Ed, Martin. Mrs Mary Wright has gone to Kewance ill., to visit her brother. Miss Geneva Harris has gone to Des Moines to visit friends and relatives. The trolley party given by Mesars. Paul Gilstry and John Smith was the first one of the season and first among the colored. The Mesames Jackson. Fields Teabeau served refreshments at the home of Carrie Fry. Mrs. Hugh Hoskins of Chicago is visiting her parents in the city. Miss Carrie Turner will leave Tuesday for Chicago. Mrs. Holt is growing worse at her home. Mrs. Alden is very sick at her home. SAYLOR, IOWA. TO THE COLORDED CITIZENS OF IOWA: We the citizens of Saylor, Iowa, have organized a Negro Protective club; the object of which is to appeal, unitedly, to the christians, law abiding and liberty loving people of the country, to protect the life, liberty and property of the Negro wherever he may be found in these United States. We further desire to get up the greatest petition ever gotten up in this country, and present it to the Congress and President of the United States; praying them to do something for the protection of our people in the Southland, and to maintain Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendment of the constitution inviolate. We desire that the ministers of our churches take this matter in hand and organize their congregations into clubs and these clubs unite and form a county organization. It is from these county organizations that we hope to organize toe state of Iowa. Friends, the hour is at hand that we must be up and doing something. Remember that "God helps those who help themselves." Bear in mind this is no money catcher. We do not intend the anyones pocket shall grow fat off the earnings of the helpless poor. We must work without pay. Organize at once. Oe shall be more than glad to hear from you through the columns of the Bystander. Human Nature Exemplified. An Atchison father who has a lazy worthless son sent him adrift on Saturday at noon, saying he never wanted to se him again. The young man's mother carried on in a pitiful way, but the father was inexorable, the young man must get out and shift for himself. The young man went away saying he would return a rich man some day and make his father assembled of himself? His mother said he was a noble boy, and swoohed. They night at 6 o'clock the kitchen door opened softly, and the young man came in, carrying a small armful of wood. When supper was ready he took his usual place at the table, and ate with his customed appetite. The father said nothing, but the mother waited on her son with unusual care, as though he had returned with the fortunes he had talked about at noon.—Atchison Globe “Towa State Bystander, bby BYSTANDEN PUB, Co. ‘pes MOINES, = = TOWA. — Ss NOTES FROM THE CAPITAL Re eT es Se aay: Se Ste ern gay ne one eee School at Tuskegee, Ala. It 15 possi- Die, however, that! these bequests may not be paid in full, for the Iowa Jaw provices that but ‘one-fourth of an estate may be left to corpora- tions. Mrs. Callanan’s estate 18 es: timated at $50,000 and these two be- quests include more than nalf of the estate, ‘The legal limit would give About §5,000 to the institute and $4,000 to'the Home. Governor Shaw has offered a re- ward of $200 for the arrest and con- vietion of the murderer or murder- ers of Dr. b, M. Failor of Newton, Dr. Failor responaed to a night call and was sandbagged and robbed. His dead body was found in a lumber yard the next morning. The crime was committeu September 1, The biennial report of the land de- partment has been filed with Gover “hor haw by Secretary of State Maur tin, ‘The report is for the period ending June 0, 1901, During the bi- ennial period a few patents and eer. Tifeates for swamp and railroad Jands were received from the general goverment. ‘he state has also re- ceived from the government swamp land cash indemnity to the amount of $32.88.38 which in turn was turn ed over to the treasirer of state to the counties to which it belonged. Whe table giving the quautity of lands the state has received under the sev: eral congressional grants shows 9 total of SAa7,SHL21 acres. In view of the recent unseasonabie weather during whieh time frost was reported generally all over the stare Director Sage has issued a special weather and crop bulletin. for. the Week ending September 23. ‘This bulletin is mainly for the purpose of giving an iden of damage done to Corn and to other growing vegita- tion, “Iv is found that all vegitation suffered very little from the effects tf the shghi freeze, It says: ‘The past week was unustlly cold, the daily mean temperature’ rang: ing from § to 12 degrees below nor- mal, Frosts occurred in all districts, reported as “heavy or “killing” in the westera counties, and “light” in the balance of the state. ‘The dam- aye resulting trem the frosts in the More as a whole appears to be rel- atively light, ‘The percentage of un inatured corn was small and. the damage to that portion of the erop iais been mainly in killing a portion Gf ‘he leaves, thereby impairing the Nalue of the fodder. ‘The general effect upon the quality of the grain Wil nat be appreciable, as” the Bulk of the crop had “been cut up. or was beyond danger of harm. from frost. ‘The recent heavy rains have been very heneticial to pastures und meadows, and in some scetions late potatoes are giv- ing promise of a better yield than Tiss been expected. ‘The soil is in fine condition for plowing and fall seeding. ‘The probabilities are ‘that the Des Moines, Iowa Falls & Northern road will not commence operating trains into Des Moines before spring, though there’ is a possibility that wperations will be commenced this fall, ‘This is beeause of trouble in se- caring right-of-way and aid trong the town of Nevada and ii Keeuring an independent route into’ Des Moines. ‘The grading has been com- pieted to MeCallsiurg, on the Towa Central, and trains will be operated to that point in a few weens, The track has been laid to Buckeye and will be pushed south as rapidly as possible. The company has asked for h right-of-way through Nevada and a tax of 2% per cent, Business men. of the city have arranged to donate the right-of-way, and the tax proposition is to be submitted at an early date. If the result is favorable, it is barely possible the road will be completed to Berwick this season. It not, the work will be stopped until next ‘year and the line will be built to Berwick over a survey made to the east of Nevada. It is not the intention of the company to .build its own Tine into Des Moines for a year or two. ‘An arrangement has been effected, however, by which trains will | be brought into Des Moines from Ber. wick over the Chicago Great Western tracks and the Des Moines Union ter aninals ywill be used here. Governor Shaw, having been not: fied by the United States naval de- partment that the protected cruiser Des Moines will be ready for launch: ing about the end of November, has selected Miss Frances West of” this city to christen the vessel. Miss West js the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Fiarry West, old residents of De: Moines. The christening will take place at the Quincy, Mass., shipyards Governor Shaw, Mayor Hartenbower and a number of state officials and Des Moines citizens will witness the event. The only similar ceremony ix which Iowa people participated wa: the christening of the battleshiy Towa. Miss Mary Drake of Center vine, daughter of General F. M. Drake christened that. vessel. “The Des Moines has a displacement of 3,20 tons, a speed of 16.5 knots per hour and has an armament consisting o: ten 5-inch guns, eight 6-pounders, twc S08 PSRee Se Oe ote onan When a man takes a, load of hogs to town ,and then takes on a load of eer, and his team runs away with him ‘and breaks his neck while going home, it gives a job to the under- taker, the parson, the sexton and the judge of the probate court with- out any serious loss to the community at lavere, ar. LOTHROP APTEH THE $400,000. Attorney Who Discovered Amount Due Meats on War Clalme fa at Work: Des Moines, Sept. 26.—The arduous cask of examining old records of the oftice of the state auditor to deter- Mine the amount due the state ns ie terest on war bonds has been begun by Captain J. A, Lathrop of Siow Gity, who is working in conjunetion with Attorney General C. W, Mullan and Governor Leslie M, Shaw. There is a difference of opinion be- tween Mr. Lathrop, who made the Giscovery of the interest due the State from the government, and Gor ernor Shaw and Attorney General Mullan, Mr. Lathrop thinks the amount will equal between $50,000 and $400,000, while in the opinion of the others interested the estimate is about $100,000 less, Mr. Lathrop be- hieves that -the investigation of the records of the auditor's office will disclose that he is right. However, the claim will not be filled with the war department until this has been determined. ‘The war bonds on the Towa loan were taken up @ number of years ayo Dut the interest accumulations have not been recovered by Towa and it is claimed that the claim is an equitable fone and can be established. ‘The re- search of old records and the prepar- ing of a claim will take several weeks, AULTEOR MEmnIA WAKE: Granted Decio> of Divorce Hy tho sie titet Court of Foik County: Des Moines, Sep, 27.—-Judge Mlolmes yesterday granted Auditor of State Frank Merriam a decree of di- vorce in his case against his wife. The divorce was ranted on the grounds of desertion, Mrs, Merriam Wwas represented in court by her at? torney, J.B. Johnson. There was no opposition on her part to the granting of the decree. While Merriam secures the decree of divorce, the balance of the decree fs absolutely against him. By” its terms Mrs, Merriam is given all the household furniture and personal ef- fects in their home; is granted the custody of their child, Frank Howard Merriain, and receives $109 cash ali- mony. In addition to this it is pro- vided that Merriam shall pay her for her support $50 on the first day of each month and that he shall pay her $25 a month in addition to be used in for. the. support and education of the child until he is 18 years old. ‘There are no reservations in the decree giving Merriam the right to. see. the child. Merriam the right to see the child. Merriam ig also required to pay the costs of the suit. Ce Sc a gia: Sioux City, Sept. 2.7—Geo, Bushar was erushed to death under several tons of earth and sand, ‘The land- slide ocenrred in plain view of his three sons and other workmen who, with teams were engaged near North Riverside in hauling sand. Bushar's team and wagon were also buried Bushar, when hos body was dug from the mass of earth and sand, was crushed into @ shapeless mass and death had probably. been instantan- cous. He was ten fect underground, Moys Nearly Suffocated. Sioux City, Sept, 27.-Ignorant of the deadly possibilities of the fumes of ammonia, several young boys al- jnost suffocated Meyer Mushkin, an- other J-yenr-old kid. by holding 2 Bottle of the liquid under his nose and making him smell of it until he Became unconscious, ‘Then they be- came frightened at the result of their joke and gave the alarm. Physicians Were called at once and with difti- culty they revived the Ind, Dead Woman [+ Identifed. Oskaloosa, Sept. 25—The corpse of a woman found a week azo Friday in a brush thicket, has been identi- fied as that of Mrs. Carrie MeBurney, who disappeared from her home near here September 4. It is believed she was mentally deranged and that she took her own life, though the faet thas her hair was disheveled and the rush was beaten down, indicated she had been murdered. a rL., Sioux City, Sept. 27-—W. ©. seter- son, of the Omaha Beet Syrup com- pany, and William Gordon, of Sioux Gey are negotiating with eastern capitalists who Propose to erect here f beet sugar plant costing $500,000, if Jocal stock to the amount of $150,000 can be disposed of. ‘The matter will be taken up at once, Kitted Ia an Bleeator, Bldora, Sept. 26.—A fatal accident accurred in the sewer pipe factory here, the vietim being Joesph McHav- en. MeHaven was caught at the top of an elevator between the heavy tim= Bers and his life crushed out. ‘The chest was crushed so completely as to almost sever the body. Killed While Resisting Arrest Ottumwa, Sept. 25—Steve Kirk- man, an. insane prisoner whe Groke jail three weeks a> and has since been in hiding, was shot and Killed while resisting arrest, by Deputy Sherif Kirkman, who ‘was compelled to aet in order to preserve his own life. County Officers Indicted. Centerville, sept. 25—The grand jury has indicted Sheriff Climie, Constable Smith and Justice Hender- son for conspiracy to rob the county by illegally collecting fees for con- fining tramps under the vagraney law. Indictments o1 other officials are expected. ‘The oftencr a man is sold the cheaper he feels. a Clinton, Sept. 23.—The ‘year-old on of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Richmond, who live near Monticello, is dead from injuries received by falling from a tree. The lad was playing about the farm and was round un- der a tree unconscious, having fallen from a limb where he had climbea in order to get hickory nuts, Kate Livingstone, a cousin of Dr. Livingstone, is living in the Isle of Mull, in the Hebrides, and has just completed her 106th year. She js, ‘however, very weak. mie SYSTEM IN INEFFICIENT. Te eee ee ra: Deg Moines, Sept. 26.—Aceording to Dr. W. R. Patterson of Towa City, professor of economies at the state university, who read a paper before the conference of superintendents of ‘state institutions yesterday, the sys tem of county care of the poor in Towa is remarkable chiefly for its utter inefficiency, ‘Three quarters of a million dollars are expended an- nually by the counties for the care of the paupers and in spite of this large outlay the couditions of the colinty asylums are intolerable, if the statements of Dr, Patterson are correct. Statistics given. by Dr. Patterson show that it costs the counties in round numbers $50,000 more yearly for the care of the paupers than the total amount expended annually by the board of control of state insti- tutions for the direct support of the institutions under the board's man agement. ‘Another notable statement made was that in. twenty-nine counties in the state persons dre held as insave that have never been legally declared so, In these counties there are sev- enty persons held as insane never lawfully judged so. Dr. Paitersou's paper was on the subject “County Care of Dependents in Towa.” It produced little short of a sensation at the conference. It opens up a field of thought and study that has been given little attention in Towa. It is likely to have an im- portant bearing on future legislation bn this subject. Judge Kinne, ehair- [man “ofthe board of eonteel pre nounced it one of the most valuable Contributions that had ever been pre- |Sented at a board of eoatrol confer [PAC ee close of the paper, Dr. Pat terson discussed the remedies ayail- able for the relief of the prevailing conditions, He urged that a state hoard of charities he established, oF a state superintendent be provided for, fo have power to inspect or have inspected the institutions in the counties where the dependent are Kept, “Me believed the. superintend- ents or overseers of these asylums | Should be accountable to the board or superintendent, ‘The Taw — now tives the board of control supervis ory power over the county. instfu tions where insane are kes, but this j board has no jurisdiction over the paupers and dependents other than Nice fcieanea” ASSASSINATION NOT GOD'S WILE. | dngencsleqpent SAG an, SRS | done. ‘Those words will ever be Oto, Sept. 25.—The infant son of Mreahd Mrs. Joe Honnel, about four Infies west of town, was drowned in frean of milk, ‘The mother was in the garden while the baby, 11 months Old,eslept in its. cradle,” Beside it Stood a tall ean of mth The baby is supposed 10 have Mawakened “and rolled vont of the cradle. He” fell Into the. can head foxemost, and Shen the mother came in was drown- td with head at. the bottom and fect protriding from the top. Faint Tank Explonion. Estherville, Sept. 2.—While the tank used in connection with the soda fountain in F. A. Doane’s drug. store Stas being. charged about 5 o'clock, Jexploded with terrific force, killing the dosyear-old son of Peter “Benson ind invieting injuries to young Eddie Hose from which he is expeeted to die at any moment. OtHers in. the Store were badly shocked but not se- Merely injured. No. blame seems. to Itach to any one for the accident. Sites Enter niouz city. Sioux City, Sespt, 25-—It is said here upon good authority that Swifts of Chicago have purchased the stock of the Credits, Commutation. company dud now have a controlling interest Inthe Sioux City stock yards. Tbis ie taken to indicate that a third paek- ing house is to be established here. Wie. Larranes, Ji for Lexlw'ature, West Union, Sept, 25.—At the Fay- ette county "republican _ convention Milian Larrabee, Jr, of Clermont, don of, exGovernor William. Lara” iee, was nominated for representa- tive to succeed Christian Miller. Mr. Miller had served two terms and was et a candidate for renomination. Battlo With # Burgtar, Sioux City, Sept, 28—Mrs. John H. Charles, wife of the president of the Floyd Memorial association, grap- pled with a burly negro who entered the Charles home. ‘The negro chok- ed her in his efforts to get her not fo scream and was dragging her own stairs, when Mr, Charles, who is nearly 80'and very feeble, appear- ed with a revolver and put the in- truder to flight. ‘The negro jumped through a window, Nothing was stolen. _ Corn meal and Fiec are the logical and natural substitutes for the po- into: NEWS IN GENERAL day to the naval court which ts in | vestigating the conduct of Admiral Schley during the Spanish-American war,” The witness was Commander Seaton Schroeder, who was execu- five officer of the battleship Massa- chusetts during the war and is now governor of the island of Guam. His testimony dealt with the eruise of the “Fising Squadron” from Cien~_ fuegos to Santiago, and the bom- bardment of the Spanish ship Cris- tobal Colon as she lay in the mouth of the harbor at Santiago on May M. ‘The commander said the eruise was not as expeditious as it. should have been, He also said that in the bombardment of the Colon the fleet had not acted as deliberately as the commander-in-chief had announced to be his purpose to have it to act. While Commander Schroeder was giving his testimony, Judge Wilson, Counsel for Admiral’ Schley, sought to have him make a comparison of the distance of the fleet from the shore under Admiral Schley with the distance under Admiral” Sampson after the latter officer arrived and took command, but the judge advo- veate objected and Mr. Wilson with- arew the question, saying, however, ‘that he did so only temporarily, and ‘that he would raise the point ‘at a later stage in the intestigtion, Washington. Sept. 24.—The "part played by the battleship Texas in the haval battle off Santiago July 3 1898, in which the Spanish fleet "under Admiral Cervera was. sunk, was the basis of the greater part of yester= days proceedings in’ the “Schley naval court in inquire. Of the four Witnesses examined during the diy. three had been officers on board the ‘Yeas during the battie, and two of of them were new witnesses. ‘They ‘were Commander George C. Heilner, |who was navigator on the ‘Texas, and ‘Commander Aiex B. Bates, who was ‘the chief engineer on that battleship. “Commander Harber, executive officer land the chief surviving officer of the |ship since the death of Captain Phil ip, was recalled. The fourth witness WaseGhmmander Seaton Schroeder, executive officer on the Massachit= setts and now governor of the Isl and of Guam. The testimony several times during the day was somewhat exciting, and it was especially so when Cominand- er Heilner deseribed the battle and the part the Texas had in it, He said that when the Brooklyn ‘made its loop at the beginning of the battle it had passed across the Texas's bow at a distance not to exceed 100 or 450 yards, aud that at the Command of Captain Philip the Texas had been brought toa dead stop. Engineer Bates testified that the starboard engines had been stopped and. said he thought this also had happened to the port. engines. Commander Heiluer ‘expressed the opinion that three miles had been lost. by the | maneuver and the fact that part of the machinery was deranged. He said that he considered that the ‘Texas was in greater danger when ‘the Brooklyn crossed her bow than at any other time during the battle. ‘On cross examination Commander Heiner admitted having taken part in the preparation of the offieial navy department chart showing the posi- tions at different thnes of the ships whieh participated in the battle, He said that, according to this chart. the tio ships never were nearer than 600 yards of each other. But. he contended, the chart was inae- curate, and he said he only consent. cd to it as a compromise, Commander Bates admitted that the oflicial steam log of the ‘Texas contained no record of the signal to reverse engines, Washington, Sept. 25.—The Schley court of inquiry was brought to 2 Stdden. termination for the day tighteen ininutes after convening yesterday: morning by the announce- Inent of the sudden death of Judge Jeremiah Wilson, senior counsel for Adiniral Schley. Washington, Sept. 26.—Two new witnesses were introduced inthe Sehley court of inquiry yesterday. They were Admiral Cotton, who, as captain commanded the ‘auxiliary cruiser Harvard, and Captain Wise, ‘tho commanded the auxiliary ervis: er Yale during the Spanish war. Both these vessels were used as scouts and both came up with the flying squad- ron off Santiago on the 27th of May, before the retrograde movement to Key West was begun. ‘Ramiral Cotton testified that he had gone aboard Admiral Schley’s flagship, the Brooklyn, on that date to take orders to him, and said at first that he gave him four or five Gispatches addressed to the com- mander of the squadron, He after- wards modified this statement, saying that probably all but two of ” the dispatches were addressed to himself (Admiral Cotton) But they contained information which he” supposed should be in Admiral Sehley's pos- session, One of these was a copy of a dispatch from Admiral Sampson, Which had not been printed in. the official records, stating that the Span- ish fleet was at Santiago. He said also that coal could have been taken from the Merrimac on the 27th of May, the day on -which the retro- grade movement to Key West was be- gun for the purpose of coaling. Cap- fain Wise testified that_on the 27th beg has i pr lye ea lg er Ansanain’s Bullet Not Poisoned. Buffalo, Sept. 24.—The most impor- tant development in the Czolgoss case yesterday was the announce- ment that no poison had been found on the bullets of the revolver with Which the anarchist assassinated President McKinley. Chemical and bacteriological examinations were made and both revealed the fact that no poison was used by the murderer. One of the streets in Canton, China, is occupied entirely by druggists and dentists. ‘The name of this thorough- fare is quite appropriate—Physic street. SALEY COURT OF INQUIRY, Washington, Sept. 27—The Schley court of inquiry was only in session for an hour and three-quarters yes- terday, adjourning at 1:45 in orderito | permit its members and others en- | gaged there to attend the funeral of Sudge Wilson, Jate chief counsel for Admiral Schley. Captain Wise con- cluded his testimony, Admiral Cotton Inade a brief statement on recall, and Lieutenant. Spencer 8. Wood,’ who commanded the dispateh boat Dupont during the Spanish war, began his testiniony. Machinist Gray, who was in charge of the starboard engines of the ‘Texas on the day of the battle Of Santiago, also testified briefly. He Said that-on the day of the battle the Marbourd engines were stopped and the machinery reversed. — Captain Wise was questioned at considerable Jength as to what he had done before the arrival of the flying squadron off ‘Santiago toward locating Cervera’s fleet in the harbor. He said that while he had satisfied himself of the presence of the Spanish fleet, he had been content. to communicate his knowledge to _ Admiral Schley, throngh Captain Sigsbee, not consid- cring it necessary to. make direct communication with the commander- | in-chief. ‘CZOLGOSZ IS SENTENCED ‘Must Die By Blectrocution During ‘Week of October 28. Buffala, Sept. 21.—Colgoss = was yesterday sentenced to be eleetrocut- ed the Week beginning October 28, 1901, According to the law of this state October 28th is the earliest date that could be mxed for the exeeution of Caolgoss. “Mier a few preliminary questions by the judge, Czolgosz was asked: “Have you any” legal excuse why sentence “should not be pronounced against you?” Crolgosz could not, or pretended he could not hear the question put by the clerk, Jt was repeated to him twice und then he said something in an inaudible tone. The judge in- tervened and explained what was meant by the question, “First, you may claim you are in- sane. The next’ is, have you good cause to offer,against sentence being pronounced against you?” ‘The judge also stated legal reasons the prisoner might have against sen- tence being pronounced, “TL have nothing to say about that,” was the reply. Justice ‘Titus asked that the pris- oner be allowed to say something in exeulpation of his crime. The prisoner began to speak, His voice was so low he could scarcely be heard. Judge ‘Titus was obliged to repeat it, sentence by sentence, so that the court might hear, “I have nothing to say,” whispered Czolgosz to his counsel. Judge Titus—"I think he ought to be permitted to make a statement in exeulpution of his family.” ‘Turning to the prisoner again, Judge Titus held a brief conference: ‘Turning to the court, counsel for the defendant said: “He says no. other person had anything to do with it; that no. other person knew of his commission but himself. His father or mother or no one else knew any- thing about it.” "The prisoner closed his lips, stared straight ahead of him and waited the courts pronouncenient of his doom, ‘The sentence was brief. “Crolwosi.” said the court, “you have committed a grave crime against the state and our unin in the assas- Aination of our beloved president. After learning all the facts and cir- cumstances in the case, twelve good inen have pronounced sou guilty of murder in the first degree, “You say that no other person abetted you in the commission of this terrible aet. ‘The penalty is fixed by statute, and it becomes my duty to impose sentence, upon you. ‘The sentence of this court is that in the week beginning October ds, at the place designated and in the manner prescribed by law, you suifer the punishment of death.” Crolgosz stood — erect, looking straight at the judge. Tie did not tremble, not a muscle quivered. As soon as the death sentence was fin- ished he took his seat in the sam jndifferent manner that has charae- terized him throughout the trial. He was brought to his feet quickly by the officer, They shackled him and led him away to the jail, while the crowd surged after them and the of- ‘Hears: AMERICAN ATHLETES WON. ‘Took Six of the Niue Events at Nerkeley ‘Oval; Defeating England's Cracks, New York, Sept. 26.—The athletes of Yale and Harvard met the athletic representatives of Oxford and Cam- bridge universities yesterday at Berkeley Oval in. track and” field events, and as was expected, the brawn’ and muscle of the American, collegians proved to be too much for the visitors, the Americans winning: six out of the nine events on the program. Points were counted for wins only, so that the Harvard and Yale men defeated their English op- ponents by a score of 6 points to 3. Honors were equally divided, Har vard and Yale each winning’ three events. The Oxford representatives failed to gain a point for the visiting team, the light blue of Cambridge being in front in all the contests which were won by Englishmen, ‘Ten Hoot Leaders Haniahed. Pretoria, Sept. 27.—Ten Boer lead- ers, who have been captured since ‘September 15, have been permanent- ly banished from South Africa, Not Anxious to Go to War. London, Sept. 25.—The result of the government invitation to the imperi- al yeomanry to re-enlist has proved a great disappointment. It was ex- pected that a majority of the men would rejoin, dnstend of this, ‘the irst week witnessed only thirty ap- feations. ‘Nessaqmensures will have tdvbe taken to ‘Secure reeruits, ‘The trouble is largely due to the fact that the men had'to wait for months before getting their arrears of pay settled. Praising 8 riva] may be good Chris- tianity, but it is poor politics, CZOLGOSZ FOUND GuiL; Assassin of the President Convicieg Jet aN Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 24. - Ceolgoaz wan placed on triat ag day morning, charged with the mot eee eens Oca He entered a plea of “euilty.” wink was subsequently enanged to, guilty” by direetion ot the count All the events of the day indica tint the trial will be sal convened at 10 o’elock and within t hours eight jurors had been secun ‘Technicalities were not raised” Geatiisiage sounesin Bae itr nificant, that every’ man who sald’, had. not formed ‘an opinion on case was excused by the distric that iey nad formed an. opinion stated that they were prejudice, admitted that their ‘opinion ei be changed by evidence, Were cepted by both sides. ‘The presentation of the — gover ment’s case began shortly before drelock, when Assistant District At] torney’ Haller began with muck ¢ liberation to address the jury. Hol spoke very briefly. Z ‘Dr. Herman Mynter’s — testimon was of importance inasmuch ay j Drought out the fact that the req why the fatal bullet had not beew Joeated at. the auopsy was because of the unwillingness) of the pres Gent's relatives to have the body /further mutilated by their instra ments, Dr. Mynter and Dr. Maan, who followed him, both testitied that The primary cause of death was the gan shot wound in the stomach, One (Gfect of this wound, they said, was ‘to ease the gangrene to form in the pancreas, and the spot of pois oned tissue was as large as a silver eliar. | De» Harvey Gaylord testitie similarly. “puffaio, N. Ya, Sept. 25—Leon F Crolgosz, alias Fred ‘Nieman, wos found guilty yesterday of murder i the first degree by a jury in part Il of the supreme court, in having. oy the th day of September, shot Pres ident William MeKinley, the wounds inflicted afterwara resulting in the death of the president. The wheels of justice moved swift ly. ‘The trial of the assassin com sumed eight hours and twenty. minutes and covered a periol of only. two days. Practically all of this time was occupied by. the prose: cution in presenting a case so dear So conclusive, that even had the pris [oner entered the plea of insanity \ fs doubtful if the jury would have rendered a verdict different from th one rendered yesterday. ‘The announcement made yesterday afternoon by the attorneys for Cz | gosz that the eminent alienists sum jnoned by the Erie County Bar ass Giation and by the district attorne fo examine Czolgosz and to dete mine exact mental condition had d Clared him to be perfectly sane, de Stroyed the only stage of a defens that Judges Lewis and Titus coul have put together. Before adjournment Justice Whit announced that he would pronoun Gay afternoon at 2 o'clocky The Pe oner was taken at once throuzhh i funnel under Delaware avemuq tad to the jail. To all appearances h was in no way affected by the resul ae tha tela: COLUMBIA LN THE LEAD. Bas the Better of the Shamrock: ts Wa First Fetal. New York, Sept. 27—One of the} biggest crowds that ever put to s went down to Sandy Hook lightshi yesterday to witness Sir ‘Thomas Tpton's second challenger, Sham rock IL, and the white flyer Colum: bia, which successfully defended the: old America cup against the first trophy hunter two years ago, strug: ile for the yachting supreniacy of. the world in the first of the eup faces of 1901, But the fleet returned dis: Appointed, ‘The great single stick crs went out fresh for battle, bit the sea refused them a field for con fiiet. ‘The wind, never more thaw nine and sometimes as low as three Kuots, was too light and shifty carry the contestants over the thir ty-mile course in the time allotted by the rules. At the end of five and a half hours, the time prescribed, the race was’ officially declared oft and the yachts were towed back to their berths inside Sandy Hook. When the gun aboard the committee boat was fired to call attention to the signal declaring the race off the American yacht was still | several miles from the finish line. ‘The Eng lishman was hull down astern of het, the experts estimating the distance behind the Columbia at over three quarters of a mile, ‘Americans will have reason to cot- gratulate themselves upon the result of the first trial. ‘The yacht which carried J. P. Morgan's ‘private sige nal, a black pennant with a yellow maitese eross, to vietory two years ago, was headed but once in’ the twenty-three miles covered and then the Englishman showed the way for only five minutes. Tn windward work the Columbia beat the foreigner several minutes and 15 seconds to the outer mark and increased her lead somewhat in the broad reach for home. While the test was unsatisfactory, the yachting sharps, who have been skeptical sp to this time as to the ability of fhe Columbia to successfully defend the cup, are more confident tonight that it willbremain on this side of the At lantie yet awhile, longer. Certainly Columbia's superiority’ in light airs appears to have been demonstrated Paris’ Latest Senmntion, Paris, Sept. 27.—The Patrie prints a sensational story to the effect that a conflict has broken out between Great Britain and Turkey, saying that three British war vessels have been ordered to the Prussian gulf te supppress revolts at Touete, in the British province of Bagdad, and that the Turkish government’ has dis: patched a strond detachment of troops with instructions to oppos® the landing of the British forces Russia, Germany and France, the P& per also says, have agreed to SUP port Turkey. CZOLGOSZ IS GVILTY. Jury at Buffalo Convicts Him of Murder in First Degree. Leon F. Czolgosz, the anarchist assassin of President McKinley, Tuesday was found guilty of murder in the first degree after one of the most rapid yet dignified trials in the history of jurisprudence. Despite the eminence of the prisoner's counsel it was apparent Tuesday when the alienists decided that Czolgosz was sane that no defense was possible, and consequently that any delay in the trial would beAIN. In a period of eight hours and twenty-six minutes the assassin of president McKinley had been found and Judge Truman C. White announced that he would pass sentence on Thursday afternoon. Remarkable as the trial had been throughout its dignity equally with its absence of delay, not the least engrossing of the day was the address to the jury made by Loren L. Lewis, counsel for the prisoner. The venerable jurist explained the necessity of defense for the prisoner even though J. he guille could scarce be questioned, and made his address the occasion for criticism of lynch law, which, in all probability, will go down in the an- als of history as the most masterly indication of the jury system and con- munation of mob violence ever ut- ted. Prioner Knows Chicago Anarchists. Superintendent of Police Bull was and: Were you present at headquarters as the prisoner was brought there the night of the murder?" Yes." Were any threats made against tell us what Czoligosz said. He said he knew President McKinley. He knew that he was shooting president McKinley when he fired. The son he gave was that he believed at he was doing his duty. He said at on the day President McKinley knee at the exposition grounds, the year previous to the assassination, he good near the stand on the esplanade. o favorable opportunity presented it. He followed the president to Niagara Falls and back to Buffalo again. got in line while the reception was progress, and when he reached the president fired the fatal shots. Czoligosz told me in detail the plans he one had worked out so that there could be no slip in his arrangements. asked him why he killed the president and he replied that he did so because it was his duty." Did he say he was an anarchist?" Yes." Did he say any more on the subtext?" asked the district attorney. Yes. He said that he had made a body of the beliefs of anarchists and was a firm believer in their principles. The prisoner also stated that had received much information on subject in the city of Cleveland, said that he knew a man in Chicago named Isaak. The Free Society is the name of the organ mentioned the prisoner." Said Rulers Should Die. Did he ever say anything about his lives in committing the murder?" asked the district attorney. Yes," was the reply. "He said that went to the exposition grounds for express purpose of murdering Present McKinley. He knew he was aim at President McKinley when the al shots were fired. Czolgosz said all kings, emperors and presidents said die." superintendent Bull was cross-examed by Lawyer Titus and said theendant had on his person some moranda and $1.51 in money. There is also a piece of paper, orange-cold, with an address upon it, a memandum book and a letter of identification card from the Order of The den Eagle. Did you ask him if he was an anthist?" Judge Titus asked. at the conclusion of Superintendent Is's testimony, District Attorney any announced that the case for the secution was closed. Lewis Gives Up Defense. then Mr. Lewis arose slowly and, pressing the court, said: We are embarrassed by the sudden ing of the case of the prosecution. had not expected them to close so LEON CZOLGOSZ Tell us what Czolgosz said." Sald Rulers Should Die. And he said he was?" Yes." Lewls Gives Up Defense. abruptly. We have no witnesses to call for the defense, but I ask the court that my colleague and myself be allowed to address the jury." Permission was granted by the court and Judge Titus began his address at 2:45. "Gentlemen of the jury," he began, "a calamity has fallen upon this nation through the act of this man, but the question is whether his act was the act of an insane man. If an insane man it is not murder and he should be acquitted of that charge. He would then, of course, be transferred to an asylum. "Much discussion has occurred in our midst and has been called to my attention as to the propriety of any defense being interposed in this case. Many letters have been received by me since I was assigned with my associate to defend this man, questioning the propriety of a defense being attempted. You, gentlemen, know, perhaps, how Judge Titus and myself came into this case. The position was not sought by us, but we appear here in performance of a duty which we thought devolved upon us, notwithstanding it was an exceedingly disagreeable one. "Gentlemen, when they become members of the legal profession become members of the court. They are compelled,if assigned,to defend a criminal, or rather the one who is charged with a crime. They are compelled to respond and accept the duty unless they can present some reasonable excuse, and if they refuse to perform that duty they are guilty of a misdemeanor and are liable to punishment by the court. "There are in our country individuals, not, I hope, in very large numbers, but we know they are scattered all over the country, who think in a case like this or even in charges of much less degree that it is entirely proper that the case should be disposed of by lynch or mob law. We can hardly take up a paper without we learn that in some part of this free and independent country some man has been murdered on the suspicion or belief that he was guilty of some crime. This state of things does not exist in our community, but it does in some parts of our state, as every intelligent man knows. "Gentlemen of the jury, while I believe firmly in that, I do not believe it creates a danger to this court equal to the belief, becoming so common, that men who are charged with crime shall not be permitted to go through the form of a trial in a court of justice, but that lynch law shall take the place of the calm and dignified administration of the law in our courts of justice. When that doctrine becomes sufficiently prevalent in this A. H. country, if it ever does, our institutions will be set aside and overthrown. Trial an Object Lesson. "This trial here is a great object lesson to the world. Here is a case where a man has stricken down the beloved President of this country in broad daylight, in the presence of thousands of spectators. If there was ever a case that would excite the anger, the wrath of those who saw it, this was one, and yet, under the advice of the President, 'Let no man hurt him,' he was taken, confined in our prison, indicted, put upon trial here, and the case is soon to be submitted to you, as to whether he is guilty of the crime charged against him. That, gentlemen, speaks volumes in favor of the orderly conduct of the people of the city of Buffalo. "Here was a man occupying an exalted position, a man of irreproachable character; he was a man who had come here to assist us in promoting the prosperity of our great exposition. And he was shot down while holding a reception. "His death has touched every heart in this community and in the whole world, and yet we sit here and quietly consider whether the man was responsible for the act he committed. That question is one you are called to decide." Judge Lewis was crying when he finished and the eyes of many of those in the courtroom were filled with tears. Judge Titus then arose and said that Judge Lewis had so completely covered the ground that it seemed entirely unnecessary for him to reiterate it and he would therefore rest. JUDGE WHITE Trial an Object Lesson. District Attorney Sums Up At 3:10 District Attorney Penney began summing up. He spoke in a clear, well-modulated voice and every word could be heard in any part of the room. He said in part: he said in part. "It is hardly possible for any man to stand up and talk about this case without the deepest emotion. It was the most awful tragedy that ever came upon the world. We have shown you how this defendant stood in the temple of music that afternoon and shot down our beloved President. We have shown you how he deliberated on and planned this awful crime. We have shown you how he attended anarchistic and socialistic meetings, at which were sown in his heart the seeds of his terrible act. "This is no time for oratorical display. Counsel for the prisoner and myself have endeavored to eliminate all sensationalism from this case. It is not my intention to indulge in extended remarks. You understand the responsibility resting upon you." National Heart Is Broken: "It is a great lesson that so great a man can stoop so low; that he was so great he could forgive his own assassin. He was the noblest man, I believe, that God ever created. A man JUDGE TITUS. (One of Counsel for Defense.) who stood near him in the temple of music said to me: 'I have traveled in all parts of the world and have seen people assembled to greet their rulers, but when I saw people stand in the railroad stations and along the country through which the funeral train passed that they might get a look at the casket of this great man, I was convinced as never before that there is such a thing as a national heart.' "That national heart was broken and it will take God's way and time to heal it. "It was broken by a class of people who are coming to our country in increased numbers, and while harbored by our laws they are propagating their malicious views; a class of people that must be taught that we have no place for them on our shores, a class of people that must be taught that they can not take the life of anyone irrespective of consequences." Judge White's Charge. Justice White began his charge to the jury at 3:29 o'clock. He arose from his seat and stepped to the side of the bench nearest the jury box. He said: "Gentlemen of the jury:—In this case the defendant has acknowledged his guilt. Such an acknowledgment under such circumstances cannot go to the jury or the court. The law requires that the defendant charged with such a crime must be tried. The law says that all the facts must be observed and reviewed by you. The law guarantees that the defendant shall have a fair trial by twelve men, impartial and fair, capable of taking the testimony of the trial and giving it thorough consideration. "If when all the circumstances of the case are considered by you there still exists in your minds a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty you cannot find this man guilty. The people have submitted evidence tending to show that this defendant committed this crime; they have given evidence tending to show that there was design and premeditation, and, if in accordance with that premeditation and design these shots were fired, then the defendant is guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree. "You must consider all this evidence that the people have submitted to you. You must consider it fairly and without prejudice. You are the sole judges of facts in this case." When the trial was ended and the verdict rendered, Judge Titus, at the request of District Attorney Penney, admitted that the defense had no suggestion to make as to the time when the final judgment should be pronounced. Justice White then said that as it was the custom to give the guilty murderer two days between the finding of the verdict and the sentence, he would adjourn court till 2 o'clock Thursday, when judgment will be pronounced. The prisoner was then handcuffed to his guards and led back through the tunnel to jail. Length of trial—Eight hours and twenty-five minutes. Number of witnesses—For the prosecution, seventeen; for the defense, none. Actual time of taking testimony—Four and one-quarter hours. Time of the state in arguing for conviction—Fourteen minutes. Time occupied by the judge in charging jury—Twelve minutes. Time occupied by the jury in deliberation—Thirty-four minutes. Emma Goldman Out. Anarchy took its high priestess from the prison to the heartstone Tuesday morning at Chicago. With smiles and kind words for all Emma Goldman became a free woman shortly after nine o'clock. Prosecutor John Owens said there had been an agreement with the attorneys for the defense that both sides would abide in the Goldman case by the decision in the cases of the men who were released yesterday. He therefore would state that he would interpose no objection to her release. "Dismissed for want of prosecution," said Justice Prindiville. Then the woman with the stern blue eyes was taken through the crowd, and a few moments later escorted to a cab, which was driven to the home of the Isaaks. FOR A PACIFIC CABLE. Company to Lay a Line From California to Philippines. Articles of incorporation were filed at Albany having in view the laying of a cable from the Pacific coast to Hawaii and the Philippine islands. The company w.1 be affiliated with the Commercial Cable company, and all its incorporators are officials of that corporation. The length of the cable will be about 8,500 miles. The part first laid will be from California to the Hawaiian islands, a distance of about 2,200 miles. It is expected that this portion will be laid and in operation within nine months. The time required for the laying of the remainder of the cable from the Hawaiian islands to the Philippine islands will depend upon how quickly the cable can be manufactured, but may be completed in two years. According to the articles of incorporation the company's lines are to begin in New York city, although from that point to the Pacific coast the line of other companies may be used. The capital stock of the company is to be $100,000, divided into shares of $100 each. The term of existence of the company is fixed at 1,000 years. Poisoned by Mosquito Bite. Mrs. Thomas Eaves, living at Fourth and Walnut streets, Gloucester, N. Y., was bitten on a finger of her right hand several weeks ago by a mosquito. Her hand became swollen and she visited the Cooper Hospital, Camden, where physicians found it necessary to amputate the finger. It is supposed that the mosquito which bit her had been on some poisonous weed. THE SULTAN'S PALACE. It is Proof Against Assassins, Bombs and Fires According to a writer in the World's Work, the sultan's Yildiz palace at Constantinople is a monument to fear. It is assassin-proof, bomb-proof, earthquake-proof, fire-proof, microbe-proof. Architects and engineers are building and rebuilding incessantly. Some new secret retreat is always under way. The entire domain is surrounded by an immense wall, thirty feet high, and the choicest troops of the empire stand guard around it. An inner wall, twelve feet thick, with gates of iron, encloses the private residence itself. The walls of the sultan's dwellings are filled with armor plate, to resist projectiles. It is said that a mysterious passage connects with ten secret bed chambers, forming an intricate labyrinth. No one but his body attendant knows where the sultan may sleep during any particular night. He has electric lights and telephones in his own apartments, but forbids them in Constantinople. Telephones might prove handy for conspirators and he believes that a dynamite cartridge could be sent over a wire into the palace. He fears electric explosions, so Constantinople gets along with gas light. He hates the word dynamo, because it sounds like dynamite. Balloons are tahooed, lest one should pause over him long enough to drop a chunk of explosive. As to the real luxury of the Yildiz that is a matter of course. The domain is a small world in itself. Five thousand people live within the outer wall, not counting a small army of workmen and the 7,000 imperial guardsmen. There are shops, factories, arsenals, stables, a library, museum, picture gallery, theater and even a menagerie. The monarch loves trees but he keeps their branches well lopped off, so that he can see to the farthest corner of his grounds.-Chicago News The Girl of Today. Little does the girl of the present day realize how much better off she is than the girl in the early part of the nineteenth century. Then she had to submit to social restrictions too numerous to mention; she was treated with scorn and contempt if she once expressed any desire to work or do anything for herself and attempts to think out a subject for herself was deemed almost a sign of ill-breeding and lack of refinement. Her life was spent in a narrow groove, and her mind was not allowed to develop to its full extent. Intercourse with the other sex was carried on under the rigid surveillance of an austere and elderly chaperon. Nowadays a woman has almost perfect freedom in whatever she cares to do. Chaperons are getting rarer and rarer, and social intimacy with men is allowed without one thinking it means aught beyond a pleasant and natural friendship.—New York Weekly. In the bakeries of La Rochefoucauld in France it is said that women enter the ovens when they are 301 degrees. The least guarded of the monarchs of Europe is the old King of Denmark. He is said to walk about the streets absolutely unattended. The New President Outlining Important Annual Document. Asks Cabinet to Furnish Larger Part of Facts in First Report—Affairs Will Be Credited to Those Who Carried Them Through. Washington, D. C., Sept. 27.—Members of the cabinet are preparing elaborate summaries of the work in their departments which are intended to be embodied—at least in substance—in President Roosevelt's first annual message, to be submitted to Congress next December. Having come into the office of chief executive late in the year, as the result of a calamity which could not be foreseen, the President is entirely unfamiliar with the details of the public work. Only a little over two months remain before the meeting of Congress, and so President Roosevelt requested the members of his cabinet to supplement their various annual reports with comprehensive summaries, to be used in the message, either verbatim or with such condensation as may be necessary. President Roosevelt is a ready and forcible writer and the preparation of a message has no terrors for him so far as mere literary workmanship goes. He feels, however, according to members of the cabinet, a natural diffidence about making a report of the work done by another and much beloved President. The fiscal year ended with July 1, and President Roosevelt's actual administration did not begin until after the period of the usual annual reports. It is believed, therefore, he will summarize these reports to a large extent, so far as relates to the history of the last year. The President has already begun sketching out the message and he will have the summaries from the different departments within a short time. By far the most important part of President Roosevelt's message will be that of defining his own policy. Following out the pledge he made when he took the oath of office, the President will, in so many words, adopt as his own the domestic and foreign policy of William McKinley. So far as the matter has been discussed in the cabinet, the President is understood to have arranged in his own mind to take the Buffalo speech as the keynote of the McKinley policy and to elaborate this line in the message to Congress. President Roosevelt informed the cabinet that he was deeply impressed with the necessity on his part of acting merely as the executor of the political estate of William McKinley, administering the affairs of the government as closely as possible on the lines laid down by President McKinley, as defined in his most recent writings and speeches. The Roosevelt administration will be pledged in the President's first message to continue and extend the present colonial policy in Porto Rico, Hawaii and the Philippine islands. The development of American trade in the Orient and the open door in China will receive in the message the hearty approval of the new President. As part of this colonial policy, attention will be called to the peaceable condition of Cuba and the fact that its people are now ready to assume control of their own affairs. In announcing the probable establishment of the Republic of Cuba not later than May 1, President Roosevelt will call attention to the fact that this splendid and speedy result was the natural outcome of the wise policy inaugurated by his predecessor, particularly so in insisting that Congress should assume the responsibility for defining the conditions on which the United States troops should be retired from Cuba. President Roosevelt will make the announcement that the conditions imposed by the Platt amendment have been complied with by the Cubans, but will show that the constitutional convention had taken its action before the tragedy at Buffalo. Mrs. Roosevelt Enters White House. Washington, Sept. 27.—Mrs. Roosevelt arrived at the White House at 9:30 p. m. She was accompanied by Colonel Bingham, Mr. Loeb, her two children, Ethel and Kermit; Miss Yunger, the governess; the housekeeper at the Oyster Bay home and a maid. President Roosevelt met the party at the threshold and his greeting was the only ceremonial which welcomed the new mistress of the White House. DAILY MARKET REPORT. Chicago Board of Trade. Wheat—Open. High. Low. Close. Sept. ... 68% 68% 68% 68% Dec ... 70% 70% 70% 70% May ... 74 74% 73% 73% Corn— Sept ... 57% 57% 57% 57% Dec ... 59 59 58% 58% May ... 60% 60% 60 60 Oats— Sept ... 34% 35 34% 34% Dec ... 36% 36% 36% 36% May ... 38% 38% 38% 38% Pork— Sept ... ... ... ... ... 14 80 Oct ... 15 03 15 05 14 80 14 80 Jan ... 16 20 16 27% 16 00 16 02% Mystery in Missouri Crime. Higginsville, Mo., Sept. 27.—Mrs. Mary Hagood, wife of Robert Hagood, a well-to-do farmer residing about two miles east of this city, was shot and instantly killed at her home about 2 o'clock a. m. Her son Ben found her body. The shooting is a mystery. ```markdown ``` At Boston— Boston .....1 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 *-5 Chicago .....2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-2 At Washington— Washington .....0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0-3 Detroit .....0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1-2 At Philadelphia— Milwaukee .....2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1-4 Philadelphia .....5 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-6 At Baltimore— Baltimore .....1 1 2 0 0 0 0 4 *-3 Cleveland .....0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4-5 National League. At Chicago— Philadelphia .....0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0-4 Chicago .....0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2-3 At Pittsburg— Pittsburg .....3 0 0 0 3 4 0 0 *-10 New York .....1 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 1-5 At Cincinnati— Brooklyn .....1 3 0 0 5 0 0 0-3 Clinchnatt .....0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0-2 At St. Louis— St. Louis .....1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-2 Boston .....0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0-1 STANDING OF THE CLUBS. American League. W. L. P.C. Chicago .82 52 .612 Boston .75 57 .653 Detroit .72 60 .545 Philadelphia .71 61 .638 Baltimore .66 61 .508 Washington .61 70 .466 Cleveland .54 78 .409 Milwaukee .47 86 .353 National League. W. L. P.C. Pittsburg .84 45 .651 Philadelphia .76 54 .585 Brooklyn .76 56 .578 St. Louis .80 60 .554 Boston .66 65 .504 New York .51 78 .395 Chicago .51 83 .381 Cincinnati .47 79 .373 GOVERNMENT AID IS ASKED. El Dora, Col., Sept. 27.—John C. Joyce, register of the state land board, and M. C. O'Brien, special agent of the United States land office at Denver, have begun communications with the interior department at Washington with a view to securing assistance from the government in fighting the forest fires in this section that have been ravaging the timber sections and threatening the settlements. A high wind has been blowing for the last twenty-four hours, and the fire on Tennessee mountain has become a roaring furnace. Unless the fires are placed under control soon there is no telling what the outcome will be. There is no danger at this time to the town of El Dora. THE OBITUARY RECORD Charles Mac Is Dead Mattoon, Ill., Sept. 27.—Charles Mac, past grand commander of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of Illinois, died at the residence of his son, Carl Mac, in Arkansas City, Kas., of paralysis. He formerly was prominent as a superintendent of railroads now merged in the Vandalia and Big Four systems, and was at one time mayor of this city. Mr. Mac was 68 years old. The body will be brought here for burial Friday. Illinoisan Dies in Honolulu: San Francisco, Sept. 27. Honolulu, Sept. 18.—David A. Ray, United States marshal of the territory, died suddenly of heart disease. He was at one time editor of the Bloomington Pantagraph in Illinois, and later was secretary of the interstate commerce commission of the United States senate. G. A. R. Chief Names Staff. Minneapolis, Sept. 27.—Ell Torrance, commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, has announced the following staff appointments: Adjutant-general, Gen. T. H. Towler of Minneapolis; quartermaster-general, Charles Burroughs of Rutherford, N. J.; inspector-general, Winfred A. Wetherbeer of Boston. This will be Gen. Burroughs' fourth successive term as quartermaster-general. He has served under Commanders Gobin, Sexton and Rassieur. The appointment of Mr. Towler makes it certain that Minneapolis will be the headquarters of the Grand Army during Judge Torrence's administration. Socialism Is Condemned. London, Sept. 27.—The Brussels correspondent of the Times says the congress of trades leagues of Belgium has just closed at Bruges. This congress is different from most trades meetings because it is under the direct patronage of the Catholic church and has the approval of the Vatican. The business included the discussion of measures to ameliorate the conditions of labor affecting both sexes, and for the promotion of technical education of primary schools. All tendencies toward socialism were strongly condemned. Tragedy at Plymouth, N. Y. Norwich, N. Y., Sept. 21.—Henry W. Wood of Norwich shot his former housekeeper, Mrs. Elizabeth Greenleaf, and then committed suicide. The tragedy occurred at Plymouth. Mrs. Greenleaf had been keeping house for Wood about three years. Two weeks ago she left him and went to live with Louis Carneros, her brother in law, at Plymouth. Wood had brooded much since her departure. The woman is not expected to live. Drowned in Pan of Milk Davenport, Iowa, Sept. 27.—Joseph Hennel and his wife, who live on a farm near Oto, are mourning the death of their infant son. The child was asleep in a cradle. On the floor was a pan of milk. The baby in its sleep rolled from the cradle into the milk and was drowned. Its mother found it there dead. Many Return From Nome Port Townsend, Wash., Sept. 27. The steamer Roanoke has arrived from Nome, bringing 397 passengers and $350,000 in gold. ```markdown ``` Iowa State Bystander. Rev. C. T. Cake of morningside preached a grand sermon at our church Sunday evening. Mr. James Washington went to Chicago Saturday to attend Conference. Missess Lettie Mitchell and Mary Kinney returned home to Yankton, S. D., Monday after spending a pleasant time in our city. Mrs. Leona Miller of St. Louis, Mo., has come to our city to make her home with her aunt Mrs. Strotter Morgan. Miss Jessie Lamb of Sioux Falls, S. D., has arrived in our city and is lady attendant at the Turkish bath pariors of the Garretson hotel. Mrs. Racheal Harris and daughter Lena have returned to Pierre, S. D., after a pleasant visit in our city. Little Harvey Grant was hit in the head with a rock thrown by a white boy; cut not serious though painful. Rev. E. D. Wilson, pastor of Mt. Zion Baptist church and Rev. J. W. Jeffress of Lincoln, Nebr. left for Council Bluffs to attend church meeting. Mrs. Cora Gilds has gone to Sioux Falls, S. D., or a few days vssit with relatives. Mr. Robert Early has stopped working for James Washington and has opened up a blacksmith shop of his own on Third street. Rev. J. W. Jeffress of Lincoln, Nebr., the moderator for Nebraska and Iowa Baptist association, occupied the pulpit Sunday. He preached a grand sermon both morning and evening. There was a surprise party on Miss Lettie Mitchell Thursday night; all report a jolly good time. COLD INDEED. Some of the Odd Tricks of Liquid Air Liquid air is, perhaps, the coldest thing in the world. It is so sold that a cake of ice is like a fierce fire as compared with it, for a kettle of liquid air placed on a cake of ice will boil just as water boils over a hot fire. It freezes mercury so hard that one can drive nails in it. The story is told that Mr. Charles E. Tripler, the experimenter in liquid air, recently took a quart can of the remarkable substance with him on a visit to a friend. On the way he stopped in a restaurant to eat a beefsteak. The waiter brought in a hot broiled steak and placed it in front of Mr. Tripler. As soon as the waiter's back was turned Mr. Tripler hastily opened the can and exposed the meat to the liquid air. Instantly the steak was frozen hard as a rock. When the waiter came back his customer complained that the steak was frozen. So the waiter called the head waiter, and the head waiter blamed it all on the cook and the cook was at a loss to explain, and the result was that the frozen steak was taken back into the kitchen as a mysterious curiosity. A new steak was broiled for Mr. Tripler and this one he ate with much palest Sherry in the Coffee: A little sherry and also coffee added to chocolate very much improvis the drink. A tablespoonful of sherry and four of clear, strong coffee to six cupfuls of chocolate is about the right proportion. Both should be added after the chocolate is taken from the fire. Police Need Language Drill. At the suggestion of a Chicago justice of the peace a school is to be opened in that city in which policemen will be taught elementary grammar, so that they can express themselves more clearly on the witness stand. Baltimore's City Bacteriologist Dr. William Lloyd Stokes, bacteriologist of the city of Baltimore, has been elected a member of the faculty of the College of Physicians and Surgeons in that city, and has been given the chair of pathology. Ex-Gov. Morrill of Kansas owns what is said to be the largest apple orchard in the world. When work now in progress has been completed, the orchard will contain 64,000 trees. Ellijah and "Dr." Dowie Compared, "I am Ellijah," says "Dr." Dowie. One difference that suggests itself is that whereas Ellijah was fed by the ravens, Dowie is fed by the gulls. New York Herald. Ingenuity. The following ingenious mode of crossing a river was once displayed by a kafir, who had for some time stood watching the vain attempts of a party of scudiers to cross the stream at a time when to ford it was attended by considerable danger. After smiling at their efforts with that sardonic expression remarkable among these savages, be quietly raised a heavy stone, placed it on his head and then walked, with perfect ease, through the torrent to the opposite side. Sober Second Thought. Tom—"Was it hard to tell Miss Autumnal you loved her?" Jack—"Not half so hard as it was to explain matters after I got sober."—Chicago News. If we could only look at our own troubles as philosophically as we do at those of others happiness would so is easy. DES MOINES PASSENGER TRAINS C.R.I & P., GOING EAST. ARRIVE 9 30 pm ..... Chicago Limited. ..... *8* 35 pm 9 30 pm ..... Day Express & Mail. ..... 4 45 pm 11 16 pm ..... Night Limited. ..... *12* 01 am 18 31 pm ..... Day Express. ..... *12* 48 pm 9 10 pm ..... Hawkeye. ..... *6* 40 am C.R.I & P., GOING WEST. DES MOUNTAIN 4 35 am. N. Ridgway Mail & Express. 12 10 pm. 40 am. Tara and Fort Dodge. 4 4 pm. 8 18 am. Minn. and St. Louis. 9 00 pm. 4 60 am. St. Paul and Minn. Flyer. 8 30 am. WINTERSET BRANCH. 11 30 am. Mail. 4 40 pm. 6 40 am. Freight. 7 20 pm. 6 40 am. Freight. 8 45 am. CHICAGO GREAT WESTERN-NORTH CHICAGO GREAT WESTERN - SOUTH 6 50 am ..... Kansas City Limited. 7 00 am 11 30 am ..... Day Express. 11 40 am 7 50 pm ..... Night Express. 8 45 am CHICAGO BURLINGTON & QUINCY *18 15 am* Albia and Burlington Pass. *15 15 am* 5 40 pm* Albia Passenger. *8 00 am* 7 00 pm* Albia Passenger. *4 54 am* KEOOKU & WESTERN PASSENGER TRAINS LEAVE Q STATION, 0 35 am* Mail and Express. *12 40 am* 5 50 pm* Mail and Express. *8 25 am* CHICAGO & NORTH WESTERN 8 15 pm* Sloux City, N. & W. *9 10 am* 1 15 pm* Colorado Special. *4 40 pm* 6 40 am* Chicago Limited. *9 30 pm* 4 15 am* Dagota Limited. *3 20 am* 6 15 am* Chicago Limited. *11 05 am* 7 20 am* Chicago Special. *11 05 am* 7 20 am* Omaha Express. *9 10 am* 7 20 am* Chicago Express. *4 40 am* 10 50 am* Omaha & Pa. Express. *8 00 am* WABASH RAILWAY 8 15 am* St. Louis Passenger. *10 45 am* 9 15 am* St. Louis Eastern Ex. *10 20 am* C. M. and St. P.-Fonda Lime. 7 20 pm* Storm Lake Express. *10 05 am* 1 05 pm* Fonda Lake Express. *9 05 am* 7 20 pm* BOONE LIME. C & M BOONE LINE 1 25 pm ... Boone Mail and Express ... 3 40 pm 1 10 pm ... Mail and Express ... 7 40 am 4 50 am ... Chicago Limited ... +9 40 am 11 00 am ... Chicago Express ... 11 00 am 12 45 pm ... Sioux City & Omaha ... 2 00 am *Daily. †Daily. All other trains daily except Sanday Cheaper Than Ever TO COLORADO AND UTAH Daily to]Sept. 10th, 1901. VIA THE VIA THE GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE ROUND TRIP RATES FROM Chicago to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo $25.00 Aug. 1 to 10 $31.50 July 10 to 31 Sedt. 1 to 10 Aug. 11 to 31 Similar reduced Rates on same dates to other Colorado and Utah Tourist Points. Rates from other points on Rock Island Route proportionately lower on same dates of sale. Return, Limit October 31, 1901 The Superb New Train Rocky Mountain Limited Leaves Chicago daily at 1:00 p.m. arriving Denver 4:45 p.m. Colorado Springs (Manitou) 4:30 p.m next day. ONLY ONE NIGHT OUT See your Agent for details and Colorado literature or address JOHN SEBASTIAN, G. P. A, CHICAGO. IOWA'S BEAUTIFUL LAKE REGION Lake Okoboji and Spirit Lake most favorably reached by the quickest route, the C. M. & St. P. Ry. New summer schedul now in effect. Two fast express trains each way daily with dining cars, serving all meals enroute, A la Carte. Excursions and low rates now in effect. Ticket office 410 Walnut. Train arrive and depart from Union Station. BLACK SKIN REMOVER REGISTERED IN PATENT OFFICE U.S. BEFORE AFTER both in a box for $1, or three boxes for $2. Guarantee do what we say and to be the "best in the world." One box is all that is required if used as directed. A WONDERFUL FACE BLEACH. A. PEACH-Like complexion obtained if used as directed. Will turn the skin of a black or brown person four or five shades lighter, and a mulatto person perfectly five. In forty-eight hours shade or two will be noticeable. It does not turn the skin of a black person. Will maintain beautiful without continual use. Will remove wrinkles, freckles, dark spots, pimples or bumps or black heads, making the skin very soft and smooth. Small pox pits, tan, liver spots or rashes will not occur. Will get the color you wish, stop using the preparation. THE HAIR STRAIGHTENER that goes in every one dollar box is enough to make anyone's hair grow long and straight, and keeps it from falling out. Highly pertinent and makes the hair soft and easy to comb. Many of our customers say one of our dollar boxes is worth ten dollars, yet we sell it for one dollar a box. THIS NO-WHILE churned in free. Any person sending us one dollar in a letter or Post-Office money order, express money order or registered letter, we will send it through the mail if sent C. O. D., it will come by express, 25c. extra. In any case where it fails to do what we claim, we will return the money or send a box free of charge. Packed so that no one will know contents except receiver. CRANE AND CO., 122 west Broad Street, RICHMOND, VA. Subscribe for the Bystander. You assume no risk when you buy Chamberlain's Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. All Druggists will refund your money if you are not satisfied after using it. It is everywhere admitted to be the most successful remedy in use for bowel complaints and the only one that never fails. It is pleasant safe and reliable. HOME VISITOR'S EXCURSION TO OHIO AND INDIANA. SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER 1901. A grand opportunity to visit your old home at a very small expense. On September 17th and 24. October 1st and 8th the BURLINGTON ROUTE will sell tickets to nearly 400 cities and towns in Ohio and Indiana. These tickets are sold at greatly reduced rates, and are good to return anytime within 30 days from date of sale. The route is through Peoria except on October 1st, tickets will be sold via Beardstown to certain points. Full information at city ticket office 400 Locust St. F. L. Gannaway, City Passenger Agent, Des Moines, Iowa. FRILLS OF FASHION. Variations in children's gowns blossom out from time to time, even though they are very slight, and small girls rival their mothers in their ambition to keep up to date. Soft wool materials make up very prettily in this way. In figured French flannel the collar may be made of the same and trimmed with rows of narrow braid or velvet ribbon. Skirts of the small gowns are usually plain, but the older girls have some sort of trimming, either tucks, stitched bands, ruffles or velvet folds, stitched on. The long-waisted mode, in which the waist line rounds down low in front, is conspicuously evident among the gowns for girls over 10 years of age, and the small gowns for dainty little girls of 6 imitate this fashion as much as possible by having the long waist all around. Guimpe dresses, which never seem to go out of style, are suitable for all ages, from 6 to the more mature years of middle age. Bolero jackets are very popular in the kingdom of small costumes, and the attempt to produce the effect of stole ends is seen in one little gown, where narrow lace reverses are carried down the entire length of the front, as shown in the illustration. Another pretty effect is made by two box plaits in front, one at either side from the yoke to the hem, and two in the back, giving a long effect to the waist, which is defined with a narrow velvet belt ending in small velvet rosettes at either side of the front on the plaits. The skirt gathers on to the waist between the plaits, which apparently are a continuation of those in the waist. A sailor collar of lace covers the shoulders in the back and opens in front over a yoke of tucked white silk or butte. Thin gowns of point desprit for party wear are variously trimmed with ruches, ruffles, lace insertion and rows of colored satin ribbon. A pretty feature of the small girl's costume is the coat and hat to match.—New York Sun CAUSES SURPRISE. Connecticut Man Declares His Assoc- ment Is Much Too Low. Robert M. Bruce, one of the millionaires of Greenwich, Conn., a former cotton broker and a friend of E. C. Benedict, has caused surprise by appearing before the board of assessors of the town and asking them to have his assessment raised 50 per cent, says the New York Sun. He said that he had never paid any attention to the making out of his list of taxable property, leaving it with the assessors. He had looked the matter up recently and had decided that he was not paying all that he should into the town treasury and he asked for the raise. The assessors promised to comply with his wishes and it is understood that they will raise the taxes of all other millionaires there to some extent. Mr. Bruce's example is the subject of much comment. For many years past Greenwich has raised $90,000 by taxation, and has spent $30,000 more than it raised. The debt has rolled up to nearly $400,000. The town appointed an investigating committee and the members reported that more money must be raised by taxation. Fixing up the taxes last fall was put over until next spring. The assessors figured up the amount of taxable property and an increase of the tax rate seemed probable. Persons who have looked up the matter say that there appears to be one law for the poor man and another for the rich man. The law says that each property owner must put in a true list of the real value of all property, real and personal, but the general rule among persons of moderate means has been to pay on 60 per cent of all value. The millionaires in some instances have not paid on 10 per cent of the property. OHIN & INDIANA HOME VISITOR'S Excursions, Vla the BURLINGTON ROUTE, at very low rates. Tickets on sale Sept. 17th & 24th, and Oct. 1st & 8th, or on such dates as will enable passengers to pass through the eastern gate way by evening of those dates. The route is through Pearia, except on Oct. 1st, tickets may be sold via Beardstown to certain points. All tickets good for return 30 days from date of sale, if deposited with destination agent within twenty-four hours after arrival. Foher information, call on any C. B. & Q. agent for rates and particulars, or address, J. M. Beehel, Div. Pass, Agt., Burlington, Iowa. FORECAST OF FASHIONS. A fichu effect of Hamburg is pretty on a wash frock. Lawn collars with colored borders are the latest fad. Very long waisted effects are now the fashion for small children. Black grenadines, both plain and figured, are offered in great varieties. A popular style of trimming for the street and everyday hat is the draped silk scarf. Gainsborough and Duchess of Davonshire hats appear among the high-priced millinery. Rich, dull black is exceedingly becoming to golden-haired, fair-complexioned women. Embroidered pongees appear beautiful in the excellence of their fiber and needleworked design. Costly netted fringes add greatly to the grace of, the sweeping, clinging gowns of soft fabrics. Long, unlined sleeves are again the mode of evening gowns. They are made long over the hands. Entire gowns of crape for either the street or the house are exceedingly handsome, and always becoming. French chalis and sheer nun's velling are two very favorite materials in the preparing of the summer outfit. Black and white is perhaps the most favored combination of the season, and some lovely effects are to be seen in simple materials. All waists have a becoming fullness at the front and skirts are extra full at the bottom. Puff effects are also noticeable on the sleeves. Striking-looking parasols are those made of silk of broad pronounced stripes, running around the upper part of the parasol, while the lower part is of chiffon and silk. Mercerized sateens, which very closely resemble satin foulard, and soft silk and linen mixtures in dainty colorings, striped, dotted, and plain of surface, are among the favored materials for shirt waists for morning wear this spring. HAPPY TIT-BITS. "Poor Matie, her marriage was a disappointment." "Was it?" "Oh, yes; she didn't get half the nice presents she counted on." "You are not addicted to any kind of athletics, are you?" "Athletics?" Gracious man, I earn a good living for a family of seven. "The doctor says I must go away for a change of climate," said Mrs. Dukane. "If that's all you need," replied Dukane, "stay right here, and the change of climate will come to you." "Wait a minute," she said to the young man. Now, the young man, being a wise party, immediately went to the telephone and told his friends he would possibly be with them in two hours. Mistress—Bridget I am tired of your carelessness. Only look at all that dust lying about on the furniture; it is six months old at the very least. Maid (very dignified)—Then it is no fault of mine. You knows, very well, mum, that I have been with you only three months. WHAT THE LAW DECIDES. A loan made to a married woman on her credit, although she gave notes therefor payable to her husband, which are void, is held in National bank vs. Tyndale (Mass.), 51 L. R. A. 447, to sustain an action at law against her estate upon the common counts for money lent or money had and received. Bona-fide residence of the plaintiff in a suit for divorce is held, in Bell vs. Bell, U. S. Adv. Sheets 551, to be necessary to give jurisdiction of a suit for a divorce against a resident of another state, and a recital of facts necessary to give jurisdiction is held not to be conclusive on the courts of another state. Actual notice of proceedings for divorce in a court of the state which has always been the domicile is held, in Atherton vs. Atherton, U. S. Adv. Sheets 544, not to be necessary to bind a non-resident defendant if reasonable efforts to give her actual notice are required by the state statutes and are actually made. ODDS AND ENDS. There are now fifty-eight factories, with 250,000 horse-power in the French Alps. The number of Japanese at present living in the United States is estimated at 35,000. The population of the German empire includes 3,000,000 who use the Polish language. The Neodesha (Kas.) Register has a report of a shale bed that shows the prints of horses' feet, shod. In New Hampshire the state government pays a bounty on dead grass-hoppers at the rate of $1 a bushel. "Tartar" morocco is the leather of which the new card cases and purses are made. The colors are delicate and artistic. Although the letter carriers have been ordered to wear shirt waists, they are not forbidden to deliver mail in wrappers. Godmother on Wholesale Scale. Ex-Empress Eugene of France is not only godmother to the children of an immense number of personal friends, but also to 3,384 of her husband's subjects who were born on March 16, 1856, the day that her son, the ill-fated prince imperial, first saw the light. DAILY EXCURSIONS TO CALL Through first-class California PERSONALLY Shortest F Only route the week and the way. For descri- of nearets Chicago & THE AMERICAN REVIEW THE AMERICAN is the one importa- t its text, in its co- comprehensive, tite the enumeration of the month, in utterances. The b indispensable. 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