New Ulm weekly review (New Ulm, Minn.) 1878-1892
May 8, 1889 · Page 1 of 8
OCR Text
sps^ EW S IB BRIEF. Peristal Mention. Few Ulm Review O S N 1 Republican candidate for jrovernor of ii iv iv 1J.X *jjLfU*_,IY. Tennessee. Ruhra is a substantial German Nels Nelson, of Harmony (township Minn, citizen. Borland, tne Virginian, is acceptable It died from a tobacco cancer. Deceased was mm '-____ i?#v to botn faction?, though a Mahone man BRANDT & WEDDENDORF, Publishers. about fifty years«f.age. 'The'cancer started NKW^ULM, MINN This Thrifty Tribe of Indiani Liable was a candidate against him. Hill and on the Ifjwer lip, «nd during two years had -.- MANUFACTURER OP Brown are said to be good citizens, and unobjectionable The Latest News Cleaned From Asso-, to Realize on Oklahoma's eaten aw. the whole right side,of the jaw locally. The whole list of FINEaiGARS. NEW TJLM, ciated Press Telegrams. MINNESOTA Southern appointment*!, with the exception, and into the juglar vein. He has been a resident ,y Boom. ,':• perhaps, of Cla3-fcon. is commended by Democrats of Pipestone oounty thirty-five years. as well as Republicans from the localities Washington Jottings. A LEAST two-fifths of the 10,000 Hon. William H. Barnum, chairman of the concerned. It is regarded as a distinct homesteads in Oklahoma are alkali official reorganization of the New South, and The postmaster general asked the president national Democratic committee, died at Harrison Recognizes the New South as a gratifying promise of satisfarstorv relations Lime Rock Connecticut .on April 30. if he would postpone sbeyond May 1 the enforcement stretches which are not capable ol by Some Really Judicious Appointments. oetween the communities or" that section Mr. Barnum warn bcrn in' Conecticut Sept. of civil service regulations in the g@-Special brands made to order. and the administration. cultivation. 17. 1818, received a common school education, enforcement of civil service regulations in the and at the age of eighteen years embarked railway mail service. The president stated Abolishing Red Tape. in business pursuits. He was for that he could not postpone the date for putting WASHINGTON, Special Telegram, May 3.— many years engaged in the production from JOHN BENTZIN- IN HER new book Mme. Blavatslcj the order into effect. WM. FRANK. It is understood that CommiFRioner Tanner the ore and the mamufacture of car iwheels :i WASHINGTON, May 3.—The Cherokee Indians intencis to abolish the board of re-review in Cottonwood Mills. In 1852, he was accepted in .the state legislature, eontends that Americans are destined Commissioner Taniser was asked what he are going to make more oat of thethe pension office. He has not issued an was a, delegate toithe Philadelphia union proposed to do with the pensioners who had to form anew race, which will order to that effect, but he is finding place3 Oklahoma boom than anybody else. It will national convention of 1886, and in been.previously drawing $2 per month and for members of the board in different pension April, 1869, he was elected a representative probably bring them a clear cash return of succeed the present race of Europeans. whose certificates he refused to sign. He divisiona Commissioner Tanner is convinced from Connecticut to the Fortieth congress $7,500,000. All the settlers and corner lot explained that several years ago Commissioner that there is too much red tape connected serving on the committee, .on manufactures speculators in the country taken together Bently put a number.of men on the pension Custom grinding solicited. Will with thiB department Pension papers and roads and canals. He was reelected to will not realize such a money profit out of rolls at $ 1 per month. Col. Dudley now go through the hands of an examiner, grind wheat for (one eigth) or exchange congress up to and including the Forty-fourth their investment in the course of a generation. raised them to $2, and now Commissioner then through a legal examiner. If found all session, and served .on wanousiimportant 34 Bts. flour, 5 fts. shorts and 8 THE Tokio Dempo remarks that Tanner will make them air $4 per month or The opening of the Oklahoma country right they pass to the board of review, and committees. then are finally examined by the board of rereview. take them off the roll. He thinks most of will compel the immediate opening of ihe Hs. bran for one bushel of wheat. Flour the faet of there being so few (qualified It is this latter board that is to them will be given $4, as a veteran who was Cherokee outlet The outlet should have been and feed sold at low rates and delivered physicians and dentists in Japan dispensed with. Decision was to day rendered rulesentitled to a pensiomof flundertheseveraly opened first, as Oklahoma can only be Foreign Brieflets. in the case of James Dunn, late of ears ago is now entitled to at least $4. a JSew Ulm free of expense. amounts to a public grievance. reached by crossing it But the Cherokees Company B, Massachusetts volunteers, for The proceedings of the Samoan -conference were more thrifty than the Creeks and an increase of pension. The claimant was There are only ^seventy six graduated in Berlin, scanty as they .have thus far .been, FRANK & BENTZIN. Seminoles who claimed Ok'aboma. The pensioned 1884 at $4 per month for a gun Minor Casualties. are followed with great interest in England, dentists. latter sold their land to the government shot wound of the back. Since then he has and nearly all the London papers .contain last winter. The former waited for the value filed numerous applications for an increase, A boy employed in London & Eoberts' daily comment on the matters now being deliberated AUG. QUE1TSE, all of which were rejected on the ground of the outlet to be enhancer! by the rush to at the German capital. The .Radical store went out the paint and oil shed back that the claimant was then receiving the Oklahoma. They are shrewd fellows, these press is persistent in its .accusations of the store at Winona, Minn., and accidentally THE EEV. MB. SLEMMEJSS, a Mercer, full amount of pension to which he was entitled that Lord Salisbury has leanings towards Cherokees. Southwestern people call them placed his foot on a parlor match that under the law for the disability resulting Pa., bachelor minister, has invited Germany's interests in the .conference and the Yankees ot Indian Territory, and they dropped out of his pocket. In ?ten seconds from the gunshot wound of the back In HARNESS MAKER are jointly opposed to the American commissioners. his congregation to pick out a wife merit their title in aii their dealings with the place was amass offl ainee, as it was full the claimant's organic declaration he alleges This, the Radical papers assert the white men and with the government of oils, paints, etc., and the floors soaked that he was wounded in the small of the for him. He promises to marry any is a grave blunder, to sacrifice American to —and Dealer in— with oil. A barrel of gasoline was fortunately back, "and the bullet was never extracted," German interests, and point out how much The commission to negotiate with the young lady who is unanimously Whips, Collars, and all other and in a subsequent application he states rolled out without an'explosion. The fire more England has, and ought to have, in Cherokees for the purchase of the strip, that "the ball struck the spinal column and articles usually kept agreed upon. spread to R. D. Cone's barn in the rear and common with the United States than with which has just been completed by the appointment was imbedded in the vertebra." In an application damaged it pretty badly. Germany. in a first-mlass harness of ex-Congressman Baker of Indiana, filed in 1887 he says: shop. Morris Welsh, a miner in the Elk Horn is authorized,if necessary,to pay them Recent news from Batowche, the *pot of ACROPHOBIA is the name given to I ask of the pension department as a special Queen mine at Elk Horn, Montana, was the full government price of $1.25 per acre for the half breed rebellion of a few years ago., New harnesses made to order and re favor to have my wound opened, and I am under an exaggerated condition of fear killed at that place by falling down the it Under ordinary circumstances it would be creates considerable anxiety at Winnipeg, the impression there will be no difficulty in shaft. In violation of the rules, he at-and pairing promptly attended to. obtained for a great deal less. The outlet is the people now regret having allowed which is felt by many persons when locating the ball in the vertebra. tempted to descend the shaft by means of the rebel leader^ Gabriel Dumoat, to re-enter not occaoied by the Cherokees, and they The assistant secretary cails attention to NEW MLM, MINN in high places—a fear which in some the whim rope. The brake slipped and he the country, he threatens to cause more serious have made no use of it except to lease ic to the fact that it does not appear that any fell to the bottom, a distance of 200 ieet. trouble and the authorities are bein°urged is painfully strong, and almost the cattle men. Under the last lease they received heed wns given to this request, which would, H.FRENZEL, The coroner's jury exonerated the management. to summarily suppress him. The ot $100,000 a year for it. The cattle men at once, have determined a fact—one which worthy of being considered a symptom Deceased was about fifty years old, er night a large deputation of prominent is a potential factor in rating his disabilitv— were ready to pay $175,000 per year for and it is believed he leaves a wile and child half breeds waited on him and presented him and in case the bail was found to be lodged of nervous disease. a renewal of the lease, but the government with an address thanking him for the gallant in the East. where the claimant believes it is, it would would not permit it It is understood that fight he had made for his countrymen account for the real disability from which Manufacturer of they are paying the Indians at the rate of Fire broke out at La Cross in the extreme and congratulating him on his escape. They the claimant suffers and so entitle him to a POSTMASTER GENERAL WANAMAK* $200,000 per year for their present temporary SODA WATER, upper story of William Listman's flouring urged him to again become their leader, and higher rating. In his several applications ER has established an inviolable rule mill. The mill is located just north of John occupancy of the land Capitalizing promised to remain firm and keep in the agitation the claimant speaks of important testimqny this lease at 5 per cent we have from which he had from time to time sent to his Paul's saw mill and yards, and on the south until all their wrongs were righted by SELTZER WATER that no post office shall be kept in a attorney, but which does not appear in the of that is C. L. Coleman's mills. The fire the government. Dumont replied in a vigorous $3^000,000 to $4,000,000 as the probable files of the office. The assistant secretary saloon, or in any room from which a caught in two places quite a distance from speech, urging his compatriots to demand commercial value of the strip. This is from and sayR: compensation for damage done their each other. One was extinguished, but the 50 to 00 cents per acre. saloon may be entered. Over 100 The records do not show that the claimant property by Canadian troops. He believed other burst into fierce flames such as immense had been notified of the non-appearance of this their cause would be successful. The government might have bought the saloonkeepers were appointed railway Champagne Cider. piles of dry lumber can make. All the evidence, and has, in his opinion, just cause for Cherokee outlet at tnis price last year, but it burned lumber belongs to Mr. Paul. Loss complaint of inattention. It would seem that mail agents under the Cleveland can't do ic this year. The Indians will be as since claimant has volunteered to undergo the on lumber $65,000 covered by insurance. Miscellaneous Items. pain necessary to a surgical operation the government regime. They must go. quick as anybody to see thai, in view of the The Listman mill was valued at $125,000 Centre Street, New Ulm, Minn ought to be willing to do its part towards and insured for §80,000. Richard Busse the chief steward ofthe Hoffman settlement of Oklahoma, this strip must absolutely getting at the facts, especiailv when the house, expressed the opinion that not be opened to settlers this summer, facts are such as would affect claimant's rights. Empire Mill Co. since the feast of Belshazzar had so much The asoistant secretary directs taat anew Miss ANNIE WALTERS, of San Francisco, and they will make the mo»t of the necessities wine been drunk as on the occasion of the and full investigation be made in this case, Petty "Wickednesses. of the government The Cherokee commission .has made a bad beginning in and that, in case the former decision is adhered centennial ball and banquet. will have a harder task than the to, that the case be returned to him her attempt to strike out a new line Frank Cady, who had charge of the San Sioux commission had last year. They will It is learned that placer' diggings have for final action. An examination of tbo ROLLER MILL. Simon cattle company's ranch at Deer Creek of industry for women. She started probably end by agreeing to pay the full government been discovered at the head of Jefferson pension roll discloses that there are 858 New Mexico line, was shot through both legs gulch that are the richest ever found 'in price of $1.25 per acre for thepensioners upoa the rolls dr.viag pension? out as a highway robber, but was and then put on a stove and roasted to for total blinddess. Montana, yielding from $25 to |50 a pan, land. It is quite probable, too, that this jjf] death by Indians last week. 24 Rollers and 4 Burrs. captured and locked up before she and upward. Jefferson creek, which runs sum will have to be paid at once, without through the gulch, empties into Nevada Parnell's Xerre. City Marshal Byrnes of Ironwood captured any provision for repayment to the government had a fair opportunity to demonstrate creek, and from Avon, nearest railroad point a robber named Martin Walle at High by settlers. The whole available country LONDON, May 3.—The cross-examination ol "We take pleasure in informing the what an enterprising women is about twentymilesin anortherlydirection! Mr. Parneil was continued before the Parneli Bridge, Wis., who had stolen $1,600 in gold in the Indian Territory should have been The new diggings are about forty miles commission to-day. Mr. Parneil testified thai public that we are now ready for bus.neas. could do if let alone. from his roommate. Nearly all the money opened, like the Sioux reservation, to purchase he had often reproved Mr. William O'Brien, ed« northwest from Helena. The best maehinery and all the stolen was found on Walk's person. by settlers, the purchase money to be itorof United Ireland, for the violent articles that appeared in that paper. He had not publicly The people who are pushing the opening of invested for the benefit of the Indians. But latest improvements in the manufacture James A. Kelly, yardmaster of the Chicago, repudiated the articles, because he did not the Sisseton agency in Eastern Dakota may the opening was provided for by hasty legislation THE RATIO of female births to male of flour enable us to compete witfe St. Paul & Kansas City railroad, shot 'and consider that to be the way to effect the alterations as well save themselveB the trouble. The Indian enacted under political pressure from births is about 105 to 100 everywhere. he desired in the tone of the articles. Mr.ihe best mills in the country. mortally wounded Harry McMullen at Chicago. bureau will not move in the matter until the boomers. The result is that the government, Parneil said he considered Mr. O'Brien's teachings McMullen had attacked Kelly with a the patents for the Indians are issued. Some We are constantly buying In Massachusetts the birth to be in advance of his own. Mr. Parneil which in Dakota simply becomes the Wheat, knife. There was an old grudge between the time ago the Indian bureau asked the land denied that he knew Number One, either by the rate is 26.45 to the 1,000 living,and ageat for the sale of Indian land to the settlers, office for the patents, and the two girls were men growing out of a switchmen's strike name of Tynan or anv other name, and said that Bye, in Oklahoma buys the land from the set at work writing them out. There are the death rate 20.28 the latter increasing he had never heard of Mr. Egan's being associated some time ago. resulting in McMullen and Com, 1,354 ofthem about 700 have been completed, Indians, at a good round price, to make a with "the martyr's fund" for the benefit others being thrown out of employment. while the birth rate and and it will be about three months before of the families ot the Phoenix Park murders. Oats, present of it to the settlers. He saw nothing criminal in the fundi the balance are finished and recorded. marriage rate are decreasing. In Jerry O'Shea. who was shot at Hawthorne, Buckwheat, and rather thouirht it was right to assist The Indian bureau is in no apparent hurry Wisconsin, by Charles Hannifin, is lying in a There arc six million acres in the Cherokee the innocent victims. "The martyr's &c,s &c. New York State 19.64 was the death for them, and the land department is doing precarious condition, and his recovery is outlet At $1.25 an acre this will bring the fund" might not. however, have been the most the work with characteristic Washington rate for 1888 year. appropriate name for such a fund. He could At the Highest Market Prices. doubtful. All effects to probe for the two tribe a plum ot $7,500,000. The Cherokees slowness. If the people who are anxious to not, he said, recollect denouncing outrages between balls, one of which is in the left groin and are not rich in invested funds, though notably have the reservation opened will bring sufficient 1878 and 1881. He believed the outraees the other in the leg, have been unsuccessful. thrifty in their tribal and individual We sell all kinds of pressure to bear on the Indian burecu perpetrated to have been the work of small THE MEN most familiar with the The preliminary examination of Hannifin the work might be accelerated to some ex. dealings. All the funds invested for their secret societies. Witness was then asked FLOUR, whether, if secret societies adverse to tjie league tent. barren portion of the Oklahoma was postponed on account of his victim's benefit and held for them in the treasurynational, had existed, and a vast majority of the people SHOUTS, condition. Hannifin still maintains that the school and educational—amount to had belonged to the league, there would not country lately opened, and with alkali Five men in their coffins and a maniac in about $2,500,000. The sale of the Cherokee shooting was done in self-defense. have been ample evidence obtained to convict BRA&, &c, irons were carried north from Oklahoma. streams, state that such invaders the perpetrators of outrages? But he parried outet will at once increase their national The body of an unknown man" was found The dead men had died natural deaths. The the question, saying that that might or might AT LOW RATES. wealth to $10,000,000 and make them the as were shrewd enough to preempt not have been the case. Here occurred the most by the men of the mounted infantry, while madman John Evans, left his family in Eldorado, wealthiest tribe in the United States, taken I remarkable incident in the witness' cross examination. Kan., a few days ago, and was apparently a ten-rod patch on which is a skirmishing in Fort Range, Manitoba, with collectively, though not so rich individually Attorney General Webster quoted a in the best of health. A claim Special Attention given to a bullet hole through his head and a revolver statement made by Mr. Parneli in the house of spring of water, have a more valuable as the Osages. This little tribe, numbering which he finally secured was jumped by professionals, by his side. His pockets were turned inside commons during the debate on Mr. Forster's bill O-astona Work only 1,500 souls, has a fund of about and a revolver was flourished in !i and money-making possession out and nothing of value or anything in 1881,. suspending the writ of habeas his face when he remonstrated. Evans had $8,000,000 realized, from the sale of their corpus to the effect that secret societies ^hereby his identity could be established than if they had forty quarter sections little money, and his subsequent trials original lands. Their annual interest is had then ceased to exist in Ireland. An extra stone for giinding feed. was found about the body. The body was robbed him of his reason. As he lav on the $400,000, which gives an annual income of of the arid land. that of a well-dressed young man, about Steam Cornsheller. "Did you believe that when you said it?" asked platform waiting for the train, he talked incoherently neaily $1,000 a year to every familv. There twenty-three years of age. He had evidently the attorney general"No," of claims and town lots, and implored Wood taken for cash or in exchange are 23,000 of the Cherokees, so their wealth been dead two or three weeks. replied Mr. Parneli. "At any rate it was those near him not to rob him of his would not sro so far if divided But it will a grossly exaggerated statement." A NOVEL USE of electricity has been fifopitfe Mill Cfo. little piece of ground. The sight was a pitiful Gordon Young, a man well known about There was a buzz ot" surprise throughout the make them a very prosperous nation, and one. Evans was taken to Winfiejd and made in India for the prevention G* court room at this response. t-™~ ~'5? tlCrtS-v V»p 5?f?r? 9i "Qli^e magistrate plasci in a hospital fcr.tbe insane, Another give them reason to bless the Oklahoma CASH PURCHASES "Did you, or did you no'?" continued the attorney at Winnipeg for a preliminary esj.. man weSt Z7Z7.J thG pI^TlGus night and was boom. E A, CAELE. the intrusion of shakes'into dweliine-s. general, "intend to misstate the facts and CHEAP SALES. animation on a charge of forging the name when you made that statement." placed on a north-bound train. At Alfred he Before all the doors and around the The "Xew Sontli." of a city real estate dealer to a cheque for a "I have no doubt I did," was the reply. broke away and tried to assul't. Ljeut. Yaite Attorney General—Deliberately? considerable amount. While the examination WASHINGTON, Special Telegram, May. 3.— house two wires are laid, connected of the infantry company stationed there, Mr. Parneil—YA-S, deliberately. RUEMEE & SHAPEKM, was in progress the prisoner by some but was overpowered. "I want a claim, I The following appointments were made by Attorney General—You deliberately made the with an induction apparatus. Should want a claim," was his incessant cry. He means got hold of the check and quickly the president to-day: statement, knowing it to be untrue? was put aboard the train again and will a snake attempt to crawl over the Mr. Parneli—Yes, or if not untrue, very extravagant swallowed it. The crown counsel prosecutor United States Attorneys—Samuel Hawkins of Oa,r peirters, probably be treated in the Winfield hospital. and boastful. Tennessee, for the Western district of Tennessee and magistrate are now at a. loss to know wires he receives a shock of electicity, Attorney General—And you have never since A Kansas man named Stevens was shot and John Ruhm of Tennesse, for the Middle what to do. igfy $2-£i sp^i$^ ^%::ffl" withdrawn it? district of Tennessee: Thomas R. Borland of Builders and Contractors* killed in the presence ofhis wife four children by which either kills or frightens him into Virginia for the Eastern district of Virginia W. Mr. Parneil—No, I have not. two men on a claim near Alfred on Wednesday. J'oim Peterson died at Parneil, Traverse H. H. Clayton of Arkansas, for the Western district The nonchalanco with which the witness made fled: a hasty retreat. The murderers and the unfortunate NtW ULM, MINN. cou%ty, Minn., last January, very suddenly, of Arkansas: David S. Alexander of New the^e, admissions astonished the audience and widow walked to Alfred with the news. 1'ork, for the Northern district of New York. elicited hisses. •'of'heart disease, as it .was alleged at the time. The dead man was buried by the settlers, United States Marshals—Joshua B. Hill of "Probably," added Mr. Parneli, "the statement Designs and plans made to order and •^Lately, however, there has been a growing and a small subscription was raised to send North Carolina, for the Eastern district of North was meant to mislead the house. I am afraid it A BOSTON CONFECTIONER the other estimates on all work furnished and "Sentiment in the neighborhood that Peterson Carolina: Carter B. Harrison of Tennessee, for did not, for the bill was passed. My purpose the family home .The rude fttneral was in the Middle district of Tennessee James M. was to exaggerate the effect the league had in contracts faithfully executed. day received the following note: "Sir met his death by foul means, and recently progress as the train passed. ^jjijjjs^ik- ~m Brown of Tennessee, for the Western district of reducing the number of secret societies. The the body was exhumed and examined,when —When I was a child, over thirty Tennessee. leaeue undoubtedly diminished the number of it was found that he had been killed by a H. HANSCHEN, '•'ibis group of appointments is notable for secret societies, though it had not swept them Specimen Scene in Oklahoma, 'tip^ years ago, I took off your counter in blow on the back of the head by some blunt away as 1 stated." several reasons. There is a distinct personal The St. Louis Republic's Wichita correspondent Mr. Parneli was npxt asked what had become instrument. Who inffiicted the blow is still Brattle street a little sugar man, interest in three of them. Carter B. telegraphs that paper as follows: of the land league's books. He explained that a mystery. Contractor and Bnilder. Harrison is the younger brother of the president, Out or the many, wild rumors with which some were brought to London and were before price probably one cent, and it has but the circumstance ofhis appointment the commission. The cash books and ledgers the border is full, is one which seems to bear Andrew Gregorie, proprietor'' of'the Saginaw diverts it of any quality of nepotism. troubled my conscience off and on had disappeared, he did not know where. the elements of probability. The report is of hotel at Marquette, Mich,, shot his alleged Harrison was in the Union army and settled Neither was Treasurer Kenny, Mr. Egan, or any an attack on an oid soldiers' colony, located ever since and once I sent money to Special attention given to mason' wife, killing her instantly, and then in Tennessee after the war. He was successful one other of the league officials able to tell what in the southwestern part of Oklahoma. It had become of them. The letter books and files shot himself in the right temple. The couple in business and became very popular. you by a friend and she was ashamed was first brought to Guthrie by a runner to of letters had also vanished. Presiding Justice work in the city and country. came from East Saginaw. Gregorie is well Immediately after election the Republicans Dr. Mmnick, the chief of the colony, who at Hannen here impressed upon the witness the to deliver it so I enclose it by mail prepared strong papers lookiner to his appointment connected, has wealthy brothers and is himself once leit Guthrie to take command. The face that the court attached great importance to New Ulm. Minn. as marshal and sent them, to well to do. The couple has quarreled terribly (fifty cents) and beg that you will the missing docnments.and Mr. Parneil promised runner stated that the fight occupied nearly Quay, who committed them to Gen. Harrison, to try to find them. lately. Gregorie's wounds are not fatal, The North Star Lung and Throat Balsam one* hour. The old soldiers are located on acknowledge it." lVcommendiDg the appointment and though he was fearfully cut and bruised with the Canadian iriver near the southern border. is a sure cure for coughs and colds. Misi Daisy Wounded. expressing the hope that Harrison's relationship a large water pitcher in the hands of the Their lands ate very desirable, and a number GUTHEIE, Ind. T., May 3.—A strong undercurrent tofoepresident-elect would not be an of cowboys tried to take them from- the of feeling was displayed here yesterday woman before the shooting took place. Both obstacle. The papers have been laid over A QUARTER of a century ago the over the plat of the city as laid off by the city settlers. The cowboys were mounted on are supposed to have been drunk. Five hundred THE ever 6 iice, but in tne meantime no competitor CHICAGO council. It appears that ia order to satisfy fleet ponies and rode down on the camp, school readers contained one lesson dollars was found on the woman's 1 or the office has appeared, and all the greed of certain settlers some of evidently "with the intention of surprising body. the streets were made much arrower the Tennessee congressmen have urged the which was doubtless impressed upon NORTHWESTERN them. The soldiers, however, than others and some of the blocks appointment Under the circumstances were prepared for them. The cowboys many a mind embryonic in those Judge Parker at Fort Smith, Ark., sentenced almost twice as long as the others. A large there seemed nothing else for the president rode down the line yelling and corp.s of surveyors have been working on the to death Jack Spaniard, FrankCapel, to do but to give his brother an offica days. It was a sketch of an old man firing revolvers. The old soldiers began to plat for some days. The marshal bas begun to William Walker, Joe Martin and Elsie James D. S. Alexander is an old Indiana newspaper clear the streets of such obstructions f.s tents use their guns, when the cowboys turned and engaged in planting a tree, who, when for murders committed in the Indian Territory. man and a friend of years' stancing of the and frame buildings. As a consequence some dashed across the prairie. A volley from the They will die on July 17. Spaniard president, who, when senator, had him made people have become suddenly aware that they ', asked by a passer-by why one of his soldiers brought down a man and a horse. are living in the streets. Tnose that were forced killed an officer in trying to rescue a prisoner fifth auditor of the treasury. Cleveland The rider of the latter jumped on the back of out of the streets immediately proceeded f'years should plant atree whose shade and his will be the fourth human life sacrificed turned him out, and he went to Buffalo to a companion's pony and in a minute all the to jump other people's ioti». practice law. He was Gen. Harrison's private in this case. Capel killed his sweetheart he would not live to enjoy, replied: cowboys were out of range. This fight was No trouble occurred, and it is RAILWAY. secretary during the campaign, and through jealousy. His mother died of grief after the Indian fashion. The horses were saie to say that the good sense that OVE 7,000 MILES "I plant for those who live, as others after the election rumor assigned to him the pervades the communitywill prevent anyserioua and his father died suddenly on hearing of used as barricades, and over their backs the place Ealford finally got. W. H. EL Clayton affray. Miss Nannita Daisy, the Oklahoma lady his son's conviction. Walker brutally killed cowboys shot and killed six members of the before my time planted for me. He boomer, was shot through the arm by a Santa is a colony. When it was seen that the soldiers Colvin Church. Elsie James is the second Of steel track in Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Fe engineer named Stafford, who bad jumped who plants a tree does a good deed." were being worsted, they drew up in line, and woman sentenced here for murder. She and BKOTHEE OF EX-SENATOE POWELL CLAYTON her claim. Miss Daisy was making a visit to her Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Dakota an order for an advance was given. The and of John M. Ctayton, who was assassinated claim after filing on it, and was met by Stafford, her sister kil.ed a hired man and hid the and Wyoming, penetrates the Agricultural,. while contesting Breckenridge's seat in enemy retreated to the bushes, and who fired three shots a^ her. She is not seriously body. Mining and Commercial-Centres of the the Second Arkansas district Powell Clayton's THE LATE James Flood, of California, for a half-hour -longer the ring wounded. Stafford appears to have abandoned WEST AND NORTHWEST. •n influence in Arkansas politics and with his engine before 12 o'clock Monday in A jury was secured at Cumberland, Md., to continued, but only one man was wounded is said to have spent $5,000,000 the administration has been greatly increased order to stake out the claim. try Melvin C. Garlitz for the murder of his and nine killed. •A on his San Francisco home. The by the events connected with the murder, The Unrivaled Equipment of the Line wife on March 26. An exciting scene occurred and he is credited with his brother's appointment At the expiration of this time the cowboys A PALPABLE BOOM. in the while Samuel King was giving embraces Sumptuous Dining Cars, N bronze fence about the grounds cost The new United States attorney was WASHIXGTOX, May 3.—Postmaster General jumped to the backs of their horses and his testimony. He described .how Garlitz Wagner and Pullman Sleepers, Superb an' Oklahoma boomer and is said to have Wanamaker to-day received a telegram from $60,000, and the bronze gates dashed madly across the country, yelling in stood over his wife in the street and fired day Coaches and been one of those who gained early access Postmaster Flynn at Guthrie, Okla, in which he retreat that they would soon return. From almost as much more. He had four shots into her body. Before the witness to the territorv as a denuty United States says that the daily sale of postage stamps at his FAST VESTIBOLED TRAINS the best information obtainiable a partial ofhee amounts to about $50 that the eleven concluded Joseph White, father of thelist marshal. The Tennesse, North Carolina acd agents seouring Europe for costly of the killed is as follows: J. N. Red field, clerks in the office are kept busy until midnight, murdered woman, sprang from his seat with Virginia appointments are tangible evidence of Oil City, Pa shot through the heart Running direct between Chicago, St. Paul and that when the mails are ready for delivery of the sincerity of tne intention so often attributed articles, furniture, bric-abrac, and a cry of agony and rage. Seizing a chair, Willard Woolworth, of Quincy, III., shot in there is usually a line of men a half mile and Minneapolis, Council Bluffs and to the president by his friends, to he rushed towards the prisoner, but the police long waiting for their mail. About 3,000 letters pictures, for the adornment of his the head: Samuel Hertzier, Fort Wayne, Ind.. Omaha, connecting for Portland, Denver, build up an industrial white men's party in laid hands upon him before hs could and 1,000 newspapers are delivered from the office two wounds in left breast Stephen Dennvj the South. Most of the men are like Carter San Francisco and all Pacific Coast Points. palace. Mr. Flood was keeping a 4- daily. There are five banks and six newspapers reach the object of his wrath. White was Paris. Tex., literally riddled with bullets Harrison—Union soldiers who settled in the ONLY LINE TO THE BLACK HILLS in operation in the new town. Land removed to the judge's room, but the excitement little lunch-room in San Francisco Anson L. Toyere, Galena, 111., shot in tie South after the war, identified themselves Commissioner Stockslaeer to-day received a report was^ so great that twenty minutes head: Robert Hutchings, Milwaukee, shot with its material interests, and prospered in from Inspector Hobbs at Guthrie, which before For Tickets. Rates, Maps. Time Tables and full .i the trial was resumed. ,-^-... through the left Jung Antoine Creigh, teriously business there. Hawkins wan not long ago shows that during the first week 450 entries information, apnly to any Ticket Agent or ad« wounded. &« were made and 42 notices of contest made. «re«8 the Gen'l Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111. J. ». WSITKAH, B.C.W1CKB, S. P.WILSOS, &&SMM Sauralfeuger. Tufislkugtr. (to'lFm-Atf. '&£& to