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New Ulm weekly review (New Ulm, Minn.) 1878-1892

January 7, 1891 · Page 1 of 8

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THE CANNON' S ROAR. New Ulm Review. FARMERS' ALLIANCE «*G:LAISTOXE A PARXELI. which has too long survived the object of ita creation, shall be radically revised, giving The Former Will Not Retire, Though very material reductions in "the necessaries of the Latter May. life and placing raw material on the free list BRANDT fe WEDDENDORF, Publishers. to the end that we may compete with (he Inconclusive Reports ofa Battie LONDON, Jan. 5.—The Daily Telegraph Nearly a Thousand Members world for a market, and that such luxuries (Liberal) says it is authorized to deny the as whisky and tobacco shall in no manner be HEWTJLM, Ten Miles West of MINNESOTA report of Mr. Gladstone's intended retirement Assemble in State Convention relieved from internal taxation till the high from the Liberal leadership. protection tariff has been wholly Gordon, Neb. Custo at St. Paul. The Times repeats its acceptance of William divested of its extortions, and wo grind HUMAN hair waves from the helmets especially denounce the McKinley bill as the O'Brien's denials that he was a contributor crowning infamy of protection. to the Irish World. However, it change of the French dragoons. I is the Second.—We demand government control A Eeport Circulated Without adds, "but in regard to his (O'Brien's) assertion [gnatmsDonnelly, PresidentMiss lbs. bran for product of Chip.ese and Tonquin of railways, both by state and nation, to the that the Irish World is not still end that all discriminations shall cease that Foundation that Gen. Miles and. feed skulls. preaching dynamite,we can only reproduce McDonald State Lecturer—the reasonable rates shall be established that Mr. Ford's own words from his issue of N watered stock shall not receive the reward of Was Killed. Platform. Dec. 13, assuming the responsibility ot an honest capital that the pooling of rates is I is a a impossible for some peomind honest interpretation of the term 'dynamites.' such an element of monopoly as should be absolutely piohibited that our legislature their own business as it shall enact a freight rate law which shall fix The Paris correspondent of the Daily OMAHA, Jan. 4.—A Bee special from Gor3on, The great convention of the Farmers' Alliance rates no higher than those now in force in is for them to have any business of News says: "There are the strongest Neb., dated yesterday, says: "A battle Iowa, and the reduction of railroad passenger grounds to believe mat Figaro is well informed met in St. Paul, and contrary to expectation ifoiiv own to mind. is now raging about ten miles northeast of rates to two cents per mil». We anticipate in declaring that Mr. Parnell insists there was no great fight between the the ultimate ownership of railroads by this place. The booming of cannon can be on the resignation of Jnstin McCarthy Donnelly [and Anti-Donnelly factors, and the government as the solution of this question. from his leadership as the condition Mr. Donnelly was promptly elected President distinctly heard. Everybody is under arms. TEXAS jury has awarded Charles for his own retirement till by the surprising vote of 592 for Donnelly, The wildest excitement exists. A company he married Mrs. O'Shea. Galignani says it Third.—As producers we demand free and 105 for Halvorsen. 6 for Hall and 2 for N. Briggs $30,000 for the loss ot a of state troops is expected to-night." open markets tor our grain, and that the learns from an intimate friend of Mr. Owen. Most of the first day was speut in Specials iron: Gordon to-day say that two railways shall recpive and ship grain as they leg while in the employ of the Southern O'Brien that if the negotiations with Mr. Whips,\ organizing the convention, an unwieldy committee scouts just arrived there confirm the report receive and ship other commodities for the Parnell be brought to a satisfactory conclusion er art on credentials, causing a long delay, Pacific BailroadCompany. He owner to its destination. That the grading of a battle yesterday. within three weeks, then Mr. O'Brien but the time was occupied with the in a''^r\ of wheat at country stations be abolisheJ, will submit to the sentence of imprisonment Lued tPe^orporation for $50,000. delivery of speeches by Mr. Donnelly, CONFIRMED BY SCOUTS. passed on him. and grain be bought and sold upon its merits nei GORDON Neb., Jan. 4.—The scouts just by Mr. Ashley of Iowa, lecturer of the National that the right to establish side tracks to "IN THE HANDS OF HIS FRIENDS. Farmers' Alliance H. L. Loueks of arrived confirm the report made last night grain warehouses and the equal use of cars New harnesses^ DUBLIN, Jan. 4.—Mr. Parnell and his IT is said by an eminent physician South Dakota, president of the Alliance of of a battle north of this place. The fight shall in no manner be abridged. sister, Mrs. Dickinson, spent Sunday at the pairing promjifiy atuNEW that state and late candidate for governor that no child under twelve should be was between the Indians and a detachment Marine hotel at Brano. Mr. Parnell Fourth.—We demand the maintenance of on the independent ticket Mr. Donnelly MLM, left Kingstown to-niaht lor the present freedom of traffic law, the present sent by Gen. Miles lrom Rosebud agency to permitted to study outside the and Miss Eva McDonald. Mr. Ashley detailed London, whither Timothy Harrington grain laws and the law lor the distribution bury the Indians killed at the Wounded at length the difference between the of cars and the erection by the state of will follow him o-morrow. Mr. Parnell, school room, even one half hour out Empire M52 Knee fight. National Farmers' Alliance, which is distinctively accompanied by Mr. Harrington, will public warehouses where the producer shall of the wenty-four. A rumor was current to-n ight that Gen. the Northern organization, and start on Tuesday lor Boulgne-Sur-Mer, store his grain unmixed in special bins at Miles had been killed, but the report was where Messrs. John Redmond and Clancy the National Farmers' Alliance and industiial actual cost, at Duluth and the agricultural await him. It is understood that Mr. Parnell union. The Southern or secret ordc r, fair grounds, and we demand that the legislature unfounded. ROU^EE? A WOMAN in Arizona recently killed has "placed himself in the hands of his which recently held its convention at Ocn o, shall thoroughly investigate the ON WHITE RIVER. method of handling, inspecting and weighing friends." and adopted the famous "Mibtreasury platform." a wild-cat with a broom, and ye LINCOLN, Neb., Jan. 4.—Specials to the grain under existing rules. We demand At a county convention of the Gaelic An attempt had been made at fct. Journal from Pine Ridge confirm the report a law forbidding any railroad corporation league at South Sligo to-day resolutions man with all his wisdom and philosophy Louis to unite the two, but an organic 24 RollerwtuU of an engagement between Gen. Carr's lrom issuing any mortgage bonds or stock were adopted condemning Mr. Parnell and union nt that time was dpemed inadvisable has never been able to kill the command and the Indians on White until an itemizea account of the cash, labor calling lor the retirement ot Edmund and impossible owing to inherent differences or property duly sworn to, has been presented river. It is believed that no Leamy, who represents South Sligo in parliament in the specific en 5a sought, to tamest kind of a tommy with an to some officer of the state for examination, We take pleasure i^nlft on account of his support of Par. one was killed, though several reached by each, although their ultima-e and if found to be a true account, of nell. iron bootjack. jublie that we are now reax Indians were wounded. A Indian courier aim, the emancidation of the industrial the money, labor property..received, to register and producing classes, was identical. .ness. The best machinery brings a message from the hostile camp, the and certify to the same as issued FURIOU S ITALIANS. latest improvements in the substance of which is a demand that all pursuance of law and as constituting a part THE REPRESENTATIVES A MOST curious indication of the of the capital stock of such corporation. soldiers withdraw from the locality, and, Unpaid Laborers Create a Scene and aire of flour enable us to con The committee on credentials finally made Fi.th.—Our public lands shall be reserved lingering of superstition is an agency further, that they will treat with no one for Troops Are Called Out. a report, showing 679 delegates entitled to the best mills in the country' in small quantities without cost to actual peace but the vice-president of the United seats among the counties as follows: TRENTON, N. J., Jan. 4.—A bad riot which We are constantly buying which has been inaugurated in Paris settlers only, and we favor laws for the protection Counties. Deiegates.lCounties. Delegatep. States or the commissioner of Indian affairs. occurred at Barnegat Park yesterday caused of our lorests. Alien ownership of Whtat, Blue Earth 25|Marshall 11 for the supply of the "fourteenth This message came direct from the hitherto the governor to order the Camden battalion land should be prohibited, and we demand Becker 5,Meeker 8 Rye9 supposed friendly chief Red Cloud. of the New Jersey militia put under arms Benton 8|Norman 15 the iorfeiture and restoration to the public Corn, guest." Dinner parties of thirteen Big Stone 5|Nobles 8 domain of all unearned land grants. Roving bands continue to scout the to-day. The trouble was so vicious at midnight may be increased at short notice. Brown 12|Nicollet 7 Sixth.—The present high rate of interest is country in the vicinity of Pine last night that Lieut. Farrow, U. S.A., Cottonwood 5|01mstead 7 unjust it should be reduced to per cent, Ridge. A man named Miller, formerly fearing the place would be burned, made Chippewa 5|Otter Tail 25 per annum, with stringent penalties to pievent Clay is I Pipestone 8 a government herder, was found the requisition for troops. money loaueis .rom exacting a higher Chisago 5iP0De 12 NEW YORK has a novelty in the five miles from the agency. His body was rate. Barnegat Park is the scheme of a number Carlton 2|PolK 21 Al 'the Highest Markefi riddled with bullets. Many persons coming Carver 9 Rice 11 shape of a woman locksmith. Her of army officers to build an all-the-yearround Seventh.—We favor an increase in the volume Douglass 15iRock 8 of money equal to the requirements ot in tell of narrow escapes. The Indian resort in the New Jersey pines, the husband, who has become an invalid, Dodge 12|Renville 28 WtsellfllkindTof residents to be army and navy officers. increasing trade and business. We demand training school at Pine Ridge was burned Dakota 19 Redwood 30 There area number of valuable buildings the free coinage of silver, and condemn the taught her the trade, and now she Freeoorn ll|Sibley 18 last night, no loss of life resulting. FLCmR, in the place. A grand boulevard and an silver bill as a fraud upon the people. Fillmore 25|Scott a The friendly spies all say that there are a has a large and special line of custom. electric road are being constructed, and this Faribault 6|Steel 2 Eighth.—All public offices which affect the IOJRT8, large number of warriors in the enemy's work has kept a large force ot Italians busy Grant loiSwift 11 interests of the people should made electoral BRAN, Sbi camp who have worked themselves up to a Goodhue 18 (Stevens 10 for some, from seventy-five to a hundred therefore we hold that United States Heni.epin 8|Sherburne 2 condition of frenzy similar to those who W BA men being employed. They have had little senators and railway commissioners should Houston ll|Stearn8 1(5 committed suicide at Wounded Knee they or no money tor three months and were be elected by popular vote, and also the Hubbard list. Louis 2 say they want to die, and are going to die ONE of the largest rosebushes in getting the blues. superintendent of public instruction. Isanti 4|Todd 33 I Attention give while killing white men. It is also said We ask the next legislature to establish Jackson 6jTraver«e 32 Ten days ago they struck, and a sheriff the world grows alongside the residence that two bucks escaped alive from the Kandiyohi 18| Waseca 3 the Australian system of voting lor the and posse have been on hand watching Wounded Knee fight who swore that they Kittson 7|\Vright 6 whole state, and that election day be made a of Dr. E. B. Matthews, in Mobile, them. Their pay was to be forthcoming LeSueur 14| Winona 4 will set the agency on fire and kill the legal holiday. on Jan. 1, but it did not materialize, and Lac qui Parle 21|Wabasha 9 Ala. It was planted in 1831, agent themselves. Tenth.—We demand the prohibition of the the Italians proceeded to work themselves Lincoln 18|Wilkm 5 employment of children under fllteen years Gen. Miles sent out a letter yesterday into a lrenzy and threatened to kill Lieut. Lyons 10|Washmgton 6 and now covers the entire house and in the mills, shops, faetoiie3 and workshops McLeod 1C| Wadena 7 Farrow and others who were protecting asking for a hearing. The Indians tore the Wooc taki for cash neighboring trees. MilleLacs 2|Watomvau 1 of the country, and we also lavor the adoption the place. The sheriff and his posse were letter to fragments and threw them into Morrison I1 Yellow Medicine 14 of the factory and mine inspecting law helpless, being largely outnumbered. The the fire, saying:' "We want no treaty we Mill Mower 7| and the employer liability act, and we favor women were removed to the pines for are here to fight." Martin 2| Total 057 the publication oi free text books. cusap A CHICAGO man who sleeps with a safety, and all energy and persuasion were This forenoon, in accordance with instructions Murray 14| Eleventh.—We favor the settlement of all used to prevent the infuriated mob from telegraphed from Washington, A S EX-PRESIDENT BALL'S REPORT. revolver under his pillow discovered strikes by arbitration, and equal pay lor burning the building. Gen. Forsythe was relievedof his command At the second day's spssion Ex-President equal work, irrespcct've olsex, also for shorter lin CELft The last resort was to call for troops. recently that the weapon had not of the Seventh cavalry pending investigation Hall introduced and read his annual report, hours of labor actories, stores nnd The sheriff got a large posse who were able ot the Wounded Knee affair. as follows: public works, and we also favor a lien law been loaded for five years. He miraculously ANSCH to control the mob, and the governor ordered II. Maj. Whiteside succeeds to the command Mr. Hall reviewed the binding twine that will give labor a first hen on its products. the troops who were being held in of the regiment. Maj. Whiteside says that the escaped death. It is the trouble and requested the cominglegislature readiness mustered out. Lieut. Farrow expects affair was an accident that a few moments to make a thorough investigation of the Twelfth.—We are opposed to the giving unloaded revolver that always goes to pay the men before the end of th« Ooi lactor and Bull dr before the fighting begun the squaws were methods of the board of managers of the away of valuable franchises by the state and week. merrily pelting ihe searching party with off unexpectedly and kills so me one. Stillwater prison. He recommended that municipalities. bundles ot rags. The accepted reason for the convention select a legislative committee Thirteenth.—That we hold that mortgage A I WORK. Gen. ForsythVs relief is the manner in whose duty it shall be to secure the passage indebtedness should be deducted .rom the 6pe:ial attention feiven which his troops were placed in the fight. of a law that shall put four systems of tax on reality whether such mortgage is held A Hasty Marriage Almost Results In a VINCENT SCULLY, the defeated Darnell American machinery to manufacture twine at at home cr abroad, and we ask such laws as JL.EFT STANDING BOCK. Work in thefcity and |*untr Double Tragedy. the St. Cloud reformatory, during next will make the hidden property pay equal candidate for parliament in Kilkenny, DENVER, Colo., Jan. 4.—The honeymoon season. taxes with the visible property. At Least a Thousand Young Warriors Nev Ulmjj owns 55,000 acres of land in The inspection of grain at Duluth was of Banker Dow's son and Millie Price, the Fourteenth.—We believe in a graded income Start to Join the Hostiles. touched upon. Farmers and shippers, he tax for corporations and individuals actress, who were married here Friday Tht North Star Lun Marion county, Kan,, on which he contended, were being plundered at that FORT YATES, N. D., Jan. 4.—A large number to the end that wealth shall be compelled to night, came near ending in a double murder am a sura cure for of the young warriors of the Standing point. He recommended the erection by the pays an annual tax of $7,000. He is contribute its share to the various burdens to-night. Dow's father has refused state of public warehouses, where the producer Rock agency have gone south to join the of taxation. to have anything to do with him or unpopular with his tenants and his may store his grain unmixed, in a hostiles in the Bad Lands. The discovery Fifteenth.—That the salaries of all our aid him financially. was to have left special bin nt actual cost, at Duluth and at public officers, state and county, should be RIEfflKE was made on issuing rations that they did reputation as a home ruler in Kansas here to-morrow morning with the coml'.'i.v, the agricultural lair grounds. reduced to correspond with the reduced income not come to the agency, and one ot the and several creditors hearing of this Referring to the troubles in the Alliance is no better than it ought to be. of the producers and working people. friendlies stated that.they had armed themselves during the late convention, Mr. Hall said: Cajrperiite nu.i Am young man arrested Saturday on a Sixteenth.—That in obedience to~a reasonable and gone to join the bands in revolt. "I have no hesitancy in saying that had demand we request the coming legislature charge of obtaining goods under false pretenses. How many have gone is only conjectured, it not been for the attacks made on the Alliance to submit the question of constitutional The trial was set 'or Wednesday, STANLEY says that certain orttions candidates by the Great West, S. M. a but the indications point to at least 1,000 prohibition to a vote of the people. which made it necessary for him to remain Owen would be the next governor. I have of Africa will always be worthless Seventeenth.—That we renew to the soldiers desertions. behind, but he intended to join his wife and no apologies to make for the Alliance campaign NtWULM, whose valor saved the nation the expression on account of the ravages of the The Grand River Sioux have been fomenting the company at Salt Lake City. committee. To say the least they are of our pro oundeet gratitude, and trouble ever since the killing of Sitting To-night the couple retired to their room tha peers of the men who slandered and defamed we declare that it is the Bense of the American grasshoppers. In one instance he Desgn and plana Bull, and they have not been slow in manifesting at the Windsor hotel about 10 o'clock. Two them. I am informed that there is people that the men who fought for the estinutes on all vsark their intense anger to Agent McLaughlin. hours later the door was thrown open and nearly $ 1,000 shortage. The Farmers' Alliance saw a column of young grasshoppers Union shall receive liberal pensions,and that Most of them regard the taking Mrs. Dow rushed down the hall clad in her should take immediate action to wii con tnets faithfully exec the same generous spirit should be extended ten miles broad by thirty long off ot the Did medicine man as murder outright, night robe, screaming murder at the top of out the debt." to the widows and orphans of the heroes of and it has been common talk lor her voice. Several guests hurried into the The report went to the committee on resolutions. marching down a valley, and when the war. three weeks that the reds would accept the half just in time to see the husband emerge I THE FIC [TBE Eighteenth.—That while we still believe the grass was fired against them from his room and fire a shot from his revolver first opportunity offered to massacre the THE ALLIANCE FINANCES. that the convict labor oi the state could, it The fgure 9 in our daps will at his fleeing wife. whites. honestly directed, furnish cheap binding Gen. J. H. Baker then made his first public they were thick enough to smother No or woman nop livid Seeing that he failed to hit her, he reentered twine to the farmers of Minnesota, yet, as it The detachment of the Eightli cavalry, appearance on the scene of action to 3ocum lit without Usui the the flames. his room and attempted to blow appears that it is the manifest purpose of under Capt. Fountain, will move rapidly move the adoption of aresolution of thanks in the liird place in 18C, wber hra brains out, but the bullet flew wide of the present management of the penitentiary bouthward and Company H, ot the Twentysecond to President Hall, which went through with years nd then movelp tos its mark, and he was overpowered before to thwart that just desire, we demand of the iniautry, now near New England a cheer by a unanimous rising vote. Mr. he could make another attempt. where twill rest for ole hund present legislature a thorough investigation City, will come to this point and move Donnelly then wanted to put in his advice, THE ready recovery from ounds No one knows the cause of the trouble, but at the suggestion of John Diamond he of that institution and ofthe recent purchase thence southward to aid in squelching the Thei :isanother "9"lhichha but it was probably over money matters. of Bystem of twine machinery, and II necessary and the success of grave surgical gave way to the report of the treasurer, H. uprising. Troops are also in readiness to It is u: like the figure lip. our This couple have beaten the record. They lor its radical reformation, nnd the removal P. Bjorge, one of the representatives-elect take the field from Fort Lincoln, and the that it las already mJed up td operations during our civil war, under met lor the first time on Thursday morning of the penitentiary lrom its present from Otter Tail county, which showed a balance detaqhment ot the Twenty-fifth infantry at it will lermanently ot this week, were married Friday morning location. of $10,785. A. L. Stromberg. who Fort Keogh is expected to march in a southeasterly circumstances which were on Hig Arm Wheel and practically divorced on Sunday jlsoif^ Nineteenth.—We demand the passatre of wears John Lathrop's shoes with dignity direction. Every hour increases evening. The No. 9" was.e ied fori the whole less advantageous than and grace, also presented a report of the the Conger 11.rd bill now before the United the number of the hostiles. expert of Europe at] financial transactions of his office since Sept. States senate and such lurther legislation as Puns E| those which attend the conduct of I A THIS CAPITAL. 10. There was a disposition to ask John may be necessary to control the traffic in where, lfter a severejjnteat vntj SAY HA S HI S SAY aduitrated food products. chincslof the worli Lathrop for an accounting, hut it was wni &$ war in Europe, prove that the Am erican None ot the Indian Scouts or Police Grand »rize given He Animadverts Upon the McKiuley Bill headed off by a report from H. V. Pool e, Twentieth—That auction gambling on roily body had more recuperative others exhibit Join the Hostiles. boards of trade should be abolished, and chairman of the finance committee. This report ing recef™ and Farmers' Alliance. of gol( medals, eti we ask the state and congress to pas* such reviewed the entire difficulty betwet'n The FiW power than that of the European. WASHINGTON, Jan. 4.—The commissioner PARIS, Jan. 4.—Leon Say, in an article in also rei agnized Mr. Lathrop and members of the executive laws as to moke all such transactions a rlontybylPre^denti ot Indian affairs has, in response to a telegram the Journal des Debats, severely criticises Mr. Ka hanielAVhi committee, which has already been aired in criminal offense. sent to Agent Boyeratthe Pine Ridge with tt Cross of the McKinley tariff law and the American the public press. Twenty-first.—We denounce the force bill igioii of H° agency, inquiring as to whether any ot the The No. 9" is IN view of the terrible destructiveness now pending in congress as a dangerous and Farmers' Alliance. declares that America, EVA MCDONALD WINS. an old mtf Indian scouts or police have joined the upon. 1 ut an e: revolutionary measure, devised for partisan ely^iew,iw notwithstanding its immense wealth, Nominations were received for state lecturer. of hand-thrown bombs, as demonstrated hostiles, received the following reply from Grand ri4e at Pi purposes. It will open the wounds of the "as award* tl cannot carry out its industrial, commercial There were a host of aspirant*—Gen. the agent dated the 3d: est adv nee in sci war and retard the happy day of regeneration by the Anarchists and nne 14 Uaker. Dr. ^Fish, J. O. Barrett, Carrington or agricultural enterprises without European "None of our enlisted scouts have joined age. 1 iose who and peace, and we hold that one ofthe Phelps. G. W. Muller, Miss Eva Nihilists, it is a wonder that there the hostiles. Capt. Seward gave three permission capital, and continues: lore, ol having the irrandest aims ofthe Alliance is the restoration McDonald, J. M. Bowler, James Ball The to go to the hostile camp after "The tact of the situation is that thev of fraternal feeling and true concord to is no suggestion in military and -question was raised as to whether Mis* McDonald their families who have not yet returned. have destroyed their credit by abusing it thp people ofthe republic. was a practical farmer. President Police and scouts are rendering good service, by maladministration of their transport naval circles of a return to the old Twenty-second—Ttiat the governmental Donnelly ruled that she and Fish were both and by their vigorous firing prevented enterprises and by their even worse administration methods of dealing with the Indians is illogical, eligible. lb was decided to have the first hand-grenade idea. Hand-grenades the hostiles irom burning agency buildings." of their local finances. Unless a imbecile and expensive. The entire ballot informal, and the call of rountie* began. reaction occurs in public morals American management in all its details should be filled with dynamite would seem to The vote was badly scattered, resij'ting A reporter to-night called the attention of credit cannot recover from its abasement, promptly transferred to the war department, as follows: J. H. Baker, 130 Bull and its agricultural, like its other industries, be terribly-effective weapons in repelling the commissioner to the reports from Pine and our bold pioneers eaved irom perpetual Poore, 2 O. H. Page, 6 Dr. Fish, 148: Ridge, saying that Gen. Miles had recommended will remain a prey to successive convulsions, menace of li.'e and property, to which Barrett 86 Phelps, 21 Eva McDonald ... an assault upon a fort, or the removal of the Indian agents lor which transient remedies will be American citizens siiould be no longer exposed. J. M. Bowler, 15. A motion to make M.. a at Pine Ridge and at other places, and to sought by the adoptiou of experiments boarders on a shin. McDonald's election unanimous was headed the statement that the Indians were slowly certain to fail, continually Twenty-third.—That we df mnnd that tl off by Carrington Phelps, who withdrew in starving to death. The commissioner said leading the country to graver crises. It is government foreclose its lien on the Unii favor of Gen. Baker. Dr. FiBh paid a high that so .ar as the agents were concerned astonishing that in a country of business Pacific railroad and take possession, a id tribute to Miss McDonald, but feltconvinced A STRANGE whim on the part of a there was no evidence that there had been men they have brought themselves to believe operate the same in the interests ofthe people that she was not eligible, and also withdiew any dishonesty on their part in distributing that there are no limits to money circulation. of the United States, and we do not approve widow, of Kent, Englan d, has caused in favor of Mr. Baker. supplies. said he was preparing tor If America turns its mines into the report of Senater Davis, of this publication a full statement ot the amount Mies McDonald's adherents saw a good ,"%% considerable comment. Shefrequently ceifr and raises the paper currency in accordance state, on that question. of supplies voted by congress and distribute chance for a nice play and rushed that lady to with the ideas of the Farmers' Twenry.fourth.—That the Alliance deems it the platiorm, where she made a little talk for changes her residence, and on eachhasdsubmittee to th Indians. The commissioner Alliance, no agreement will be possible unwif-o andmindicious to establish an organ, to the president a statement heivelf and said she did not propose to retiie with Europe on the monetary question. but regards with favor and will encourage removal chan ges the burial place of covering the question ot the charge made" from the tight, although she bad not been a Europe would be foolish to transfer its capital with its support all papers%hich espouse its that the agreements with the Indians have candidate of her own volition. A formal herlafcahusband. Two years ago he to America in exchange tor an absolutely cause and defend its principle?. not been fulfilled. -r vote was ordered. The natural gallantry of useless mass of silver. Sis^?* wenty-flfth.—That we invite all industrial died in Portsmouth, and was there the tillers of the soil carried them away and organizations of kindred principles with our it all went the lady's way. She ^fron by a buried. She moved to Highgate, and own to federate with the Farmers' Alliance vote of 436 to 209. Mr Donnelly introduced *»", Not a Food mu&.*,1m ', each maintaining its generate and distinct 2vJ her as a another illustration OS the fact that ,~t had her husband exhumed and Made a Great Mistake. NORTHFIEU), Minn., Special^TelegraW, identity, with a view to confederating them "the hand that rocks the cradlaJs the hand os ANGELES, Cal., Jan. 4.—Frank H. Jan. 4.—A store valued at $1,000,' belonging into one grand union. ?l?i brought to the Highgate Cemetery. that moves the world." She apknowUdped Maudevi He stole into the room of Mrs. to L.Tschann and occupied by John Hoberi, After the resolutions, the constitution, and she had wanted the ofBee and wps glad the Millie Shaw, a dressmaker, last night. In a year she moved to Canterbury, was entirely gutted to-dav by flam* start-1 many other things were debated the convention WIfEKT.KRd%WiI518 an got it, and would do the best ma could to When Mrs. Shaw entered he fired three ing from a defective^flue. ThelbntSite adjourned- rs*v fill it. dug up her former partrried Sal Wae shots at her without effect and then shot were saved and the hSSmM^Stsas insur C-!H.lb^ himself dead. Mandeville was a representative THE PLA1 him with her. Each $300. 3 3 9 $ »*, tien. Baker presented ti of John Allison & Co.. advertising Preliminary suggestions for plans for Ne**1 the old coffin or coffins principles, over which agents ot Chicago, and had served in^Uie government building at the world's fair weft studied all night. regular United States cavalry. was Bnrned one. -Now she has received at Chicago front Washington. Th# ED. |loe and rends as follows: IAUI about forty-two years of age." Mandeville WEST SUPERIOR,, Telegram. provide for a building. 85 0 fleet wide and 450 -The Farmer's Ajiiaaof ol had been paying attentions to Mrs. Shaw [iverpool, and thereto The hanjj lonsr. with a dome 160 feet -nigfe. »1t and stoue nesnta in convention for some time, and was acquainted with her LUenqi Mr.^onjgs will soon Iding of~ dnin and establish the foll^ will be subeet to change when the board/ot fogon eoniSfj^'fire in the East. About a mouth ago h^ threatened of principles. j^^^^^™™? [Tjnrnett| to shoot her^ a ii pi not architects meet Jonf 10^ fee building is nM'" origi"^500 to call on "irst.—We demand a $o be a permanent one. the base! tally the first til W ?£t