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Trego County Republican from WaKeeney, Kansas • 2

Trego County Republican from WaKeeney, Kansas • 2

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WaKeeney, Kansas
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2
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Congressman Ashbel T. Fitch, of New York, has resigned his membership of the itepuDiieaa organization of his district. KANSAS STATE NEWS. Kaunas Fairs. Fairs will be held in Kansas this fall follows In bis letter of resignation he declaims against high tariff duties and whisljy tax reduction, which, he says, are new things 6HEPARD II BARRETT, Publishers.

WAKEENEY. KANSAS. Plate. Dale. ino Kepubiican party.

GENEItAX. The latest reports from Hazelton, N. W. T.f are that the hostile Indians are keeping rather quiet and no massacre Is now expected. The Turkish Government forbade all displays in honor of the opening of the through line from Constantinople to Paris.

Thb world's convention of Y. M. C. A. opened at Stockholm, Sweden, on the 15th.

The officers reported an astonishing growth of the association. A dispatch from Rome of the ICth says: The Pope continues unwell. The utmost secresy prevails regarding his condition. Austin CoiiBin gave a dinner to Hon. Levi P.

Morton, at the Oriental Hotel, THE WORLD AT LAKGE. uoney island, on the l.th. The guests Sept. 17-22. Sept.

a 8. Aug. H-81. Sep. 11-14.

Sept. 4-7. Sept. 26-28L were: lieorge W. Childs, ex-Senator Piatt, Charles A.

Dana, John C. New. Allen State Fair Topeka Bismarck Grove Lawrence Anderson -Garnett Bourbon Fort Brown Hiawatha, Chase Cherokee Cheyenne Cheyenne 'St. Clny iciay Coffey iBurlnigton NATIONAL AMERICANS. The Convention at Washington Split Into Two Factiuna, One of Which Names Candidates for President aud Vice-President.

Washington, Aug. ia When the second day's session of the National convention of the American party was called to order yesterday morning by Chairman Wigginton, the committee on permanent organization made its report, recommending that the temporary officers be made permanent This was adopted. The committee on platform and resolutions made a majority report which was. signed by all the members except C. Thompson, editor of America, a magazine of Chicago, and Secretary Royer, who submitted a minority report.

Both reports were received with great applause but were finally recommended with instructions to report in the afternoon at 1:13 Thorndike Rice, J. Sloat Fassett, Mayor Summary of the Daily News. Oct. 11-14. Sept.

IfMH. cnapin, of Brooklyn, and M. Gomiadieus, Sept. 30-29. ot ljonaon.

Spt 4-7. Sept. 10-14. CONGRESS. Ihe cottage of G.

D. McCarkie, at the (ktwlev. Advices from Suakim indicate that the Sept. s-7. After transacting' business of merely Mount labor Methodist camp meeting "Wtiite Paha" is really Stanley, who had gathered an immense host of natives grounds, near Newark, N.

was destroyed by fire the other morning. Two children or.t of five who were in the house with Sept. 25-28. Sept. van.

Sept. 18-21. Sept. 25-2H. Sept.

19-21. sworn to capture Khartoum. Oct. 2 4. Sept.

-4-2S. their mother were burned to a crisp. Alexander Agaskiz, of Cambridge, has boen re-elected president of the Wmlield Cirard Junction Hope Troy Howard Hays Ottawa Newton Oskaloosa Mankato La Cfryne Mound Peabody Cawker City. Independence. pt.

11-14. The steamships Geiser and Thingvalla, of the Thingvalla steamship line, were in collision off Sable Island on the morning of the 14th. The Geisor 6ank almost immediately after the collision. A number of the passengers and crew were picked up by boats from the Thingvalla, but over one sept. 11-84.

Calumet and Hecla Mining Company of Sept. 1H -21. Sept. 4-7. Sept.

17-2L Sept. 11-14. Sept. 5-7. Sept.

Sept. 4-8. Hundred perished. The tieiser was on its way from New York to Stettin, the Thin; Michigan. Connecticut Republicans have nominated Morgan J.

Bulkley for Governor. The American Bar Association, recently in session at Saratoga, N. elected David Dudley Field, of New York, president. Among the vice-presidents elected was General Harrison, tha Republican Presidential nominee. Council Grove.

valla going in the opposite direction. A Crawford Davis Dickinson Doniphan Elk Ellis Franklin Harvey Jefferson Jewell Linn Linn Linn Marion Mitchell Montgomery Morris Ncmana Nemaha Osage, Osborne Ottawa Phillips Pratt Reno Kiley Kooks Rush Saline Sedgwick Smith Washington Woodson heavy fog prevailed at the the responsibility for the disaster was unknown. Sept. Sept. 18 21.

Auk. 18-31. Sept. 11-14. Sept.

11-14. Reports to the New England Homestead from 134 correspondents, covering the fruit Seneca Sabctha Osborne W'amesjo Pratt City Plainville La Crose Sept. 25-28. Sept. 18 21.

Sept. 4-7. Sept. 4-7. growing regions of New England, New TKJC WEST.

The National meeting of miners and i oik ana aiicnigan, snow an enormous unercsi me senate on tne istn resumed consideration of the Fisheries treaty and Senator Call addressed the Senate in its tavor. Pending a motion to postpone further consideration until Deoember the Senate The House adopted seveial resolutions calling for certain Information and considered for a time District of Columbia business. The Senate bill increasing to per month pensions for total deafness was passed. The Fortiflcation bill was considered for a short time when the House adjourned. In the Senate on the 14th Senator Reagan introduced a bill to define trusts and to punish persons connected with them, which after some talk was referred to the Finance Committee.

Senator Shermaa also introduced a bill deolaring trusts unlawful, which was referred to the same committee. The Fisheries treaty was then discussed until adjournment. the House a spat took place between O'Neill, ot Missouri, and Owen, of Indiana, over the bill for the relief of Cherokee freed-men. The remainder of the day was frittered away in efforts to hold a quorum. Adjourne 1.

After the presentation of several unimportant resolutions on the 15th the Senate proceeded with bills on the calendar and passed several of minor importance when debate on the Fisheries treaty was resumed and continued until In the Hous? the Fortifications bill was taken up in Committee of the Whole and considered until the committee rose and reported the bill to the House. The previous question was ordered on its passage and the bill went over. Adjourned. Soon after assembling on the lGth the Senate took up the Fisheries treaty. Senator Morgan's motion to postpone until December 7as not agreed to.

Senator Edmunds' resolution to pay white depositors of the defunct Freedman's Bank was discussed and went Oct. 2-5. yield of grapes in all sections, a remark. mine laborers clofd at Cleveland, on the 14th. W.

Y. Lewis, of Shawnee, was elected Nat ional Master Workman. atjy short crop of pears of all varieties, a iuii crop oi peaches in Delaware. Mich tan Sept. 18-21.

ScDt. 25-. H. Sept. II) 21.

Sept. 25-28. Ausr. 27 Sept. 1 Sauna ana otner sections.

Information has reached Holbrook, Wichita Arizona, of the murder of James Scott, general Boplanger arrived at Abbe j-ept. 19-21. Smith Ureenlcnf James Stott, and Jeff Wilson by outlaws Sept 12-14. ville on the Kith and went to the cemetery for the purpose of putting a wreath upon in the southwestern part of Apache Neosho sept. U-M.

tne toniD or Admiral uourbet. He was ac County. The affair grew out of the recent war in Tonto basin between sheep and companied by a large party, but the police at the entrance to the cemetery would not allow them to go in with the General and he was compelled to enter alone. Upon cattle raisers. Warrants were issued and arrests made by unauthorized persons-, and the prisoners were taken across the mountains into Yavapai County, where they were met by a pre-arranged mob and hanged.

o-ciocE. a recess was taken until that time. When the convention reassembled the committee on platform made a further report recommending that each State and Territory bo allowed one vote for each Congressional district and two at large. Judge Church submitted a minority dissenting report and the Nuw York delegates vigorously protested against the. adoption of the report.

Governor Sharp offered a resolution pledging the convention to nominate independent candidates for President and Vice-President. The previous question being called for, Governor Sharp's motion was put and carried by almost an unanimous vote. A substitute motion that New York bo allowed one vote in the convention for every two delegates present from that State was lost by a vote of 39 to 40. Mr. Hawley's resolution, allowing a Congressional representative, was taken up.

The roll being called, the resolution was lost by 43 to 40. The Illinois delegation then announced that inasmuch as it came here to participate in the National convention aud not a New York State convention, it would withdraw, and it left the hall. The Pennsylvania, Vermont, Wisconsin and several other delegations also left. The New York and California delegations were nearly the only ones that remained, and a recess was taken until seven p. m.

In the evening the New York and California and other delegations which remained in possession of the hall, adopted the plan of representation: New York to have 38 votes, or one for every two delegates present, and the other delegations present one each. The majority report of the committee on platform and resolutions was adopted. It favors the abolition of the Naturalization laws and demands that no criminals, paupers or insane persons shall be allowed to immigrate and that in order to become an leaving the cemetery he addressed the crowd which had gathered. A row fol lowed and gens d'armes dispersed the rioters. The North Chicago rolling mills at South The business portion of the town of Cav- Chicago has shut down for an indefinite period, throwing out of employment some 1,500 men.

Manager Potter states that the onne, French Guiana, has been destroyed Liquor Shipments Prohibited. A certain liquor house in Louisville, having issued a circular, which is being widely distributed in Kansas, in which they say, in effect, that anybody has a nght to import liquor into the State of Kansas and sell it in unbroken packages, citing a number of legal decisions and the opinions of two prominent lawyers in support of the declaration, Attorney-General Bradford has written a lengthy letter in which he expresses surprise at the opinions of the lawyers that liquors can be shipped to Kansas by outside parties and disposed of in unbroken packages, and that the parties to hom such goods are consigned can dispose of the same in the original packages without being liable to the provisions of the Prohibitory law. The Attorney-General holds that the decisions py nre. loss, ouo.wo. The Governor of Queensland, in opening suspension of work is but a temporary one.

Parliament recently, announced that he would support the Canadian Pacific cable. The National Association of Fire En gineers, at their second session in Miiuie The Sultan of Morocco recently lost a apolis, discussed shorter hours for aetaenment of K) soldiers, who were am- firemen, and voted that shorter hours ought to be adopted. The association also buslied by rebels. The Sultan had pre. viously treacherously murdered a deputa' discussed the storage of crude petroleum tion sent by the rebels to treat with him.

ana its relation to fires. It is reported that the Cheyenne Indians Ihb wheelhouse of tie powder mill at Windsor, Province of Quebec, was blown up the other day and two men are ready to sign the treaty for the open ing of the great Sioux reservation in Da kota. killed. referred to are entirely irrelevant, and after citing cases in point he says: "It makes no difference how these goods get into the State of Kansas. If after the goods are hero and in the hands of consignees, who are authorized to soil thorn The strike of the navvies of Paris has The Supreme Court of Washington Ter collapsed for lack of funds.

ritory has decided the law granting suf ihe business failures (Dun's report) for the purposes specified in the statute, the police power of the State of Kansas frago to women unconstitutional. The grounds for the opinion were based on the ior ine seven flays ended August 10 num bered for the United States, 187; Canada, fact that the Legislature exceeded its powers. Th court took the ground that the may absolutely prohibit the sale of these goods, and in the language of the Supreme total, 2iw; compared with 233 the pre vious week and 101 the corresponding word "citizen" in the organic act can not Court in the license cases, the police power jver. Senator Reagan addressed the Senate the President's message, and the conference report on the Army Appropriation bill was con- turred in. Adjourned The House passed lUe Fortiflcation Appropriation bill without division.

After reports of several committees Mr. Morrill, of Kansas, tailed up his resolution to fix the dates for considering general pension legislation, but the point of no quorum was raised. The same point was raised in the attempt to consider the Oklahoma and Deficiency bills, and a motion by Mr. Weaver, of Iowa, revoking all leaves of absence brought on a lengthy discussion, but was tabled. After notice from Mr.

Weaver that he would renew the motion from day to day until a quorum was obtained, the House adjourned. In the Senate on the 17th a number of bills were reported and placed on the calendar. A resolution by Senator Edmunds as to electric light and electric cables wires in the District of Columbia caused some talk. Senate bill amendatory of the act of June 18, relating to postal crimes was taken up and after some debato passed. It prohibits the mailing of any book, pamphlet or other articles of an obscene or objeotioimble character and imposes a fine of $5,000 for depositing such matter in the mails.

It was ordered that a vote on the Fisheries treaty be taken at twelve o'clock Tuesday. After Ssnator Morgan had spoken in defense of the treatv the Senate adjourned until Monday. House made several Ineffectual attempts to secure a quorum and finally adjourned without transacting any business. WASHINGTON NOTES. The National convention of the American party ended in a split at Washington on the 15th, most of the delegations withdrawing.

Those who remained nominated James L. Curtis, of New York, for President, and Judge James N. Greor, Vice- week or last year, mean any thing else than male citizen. may interfere to the extent of destroying Lmperor William's recent warlike speech at Frankfort caused depression on A special from Coleman, says the new Catholic Church had collapsed, killing one man and crushing seven others so that the goods that the health and morals of the community may be protected." The Attorney-General calls on all county attorneys to arrest and bring to trial all the European bourses. German newspa several may die.

pers or ail shades of opinion expressed ap' On the Illinois Central railroad at South provai or tne speech. Lawn, fifty miles south of Chicago, on the a xciuufju Hurricane nas occurred into, an Illinois Central passenger train Upper Austria. Seventy houses are re- persons who may bring into the State liquors for sale, no mutter whether outside parties or others, and all parties who may oiler to barter or sell such prohibited articles in Kansas are warned that the law will reach them and that they will be held bound for Chicago collided with a freight ported to have been struck by lightning, killing a woman and two children in the lschl district. Au immense amount of train, liie escape of the 200 passengers was miraculous. A number of persons were more or lass- injured, most of them damage to crops was inflicted.

amenable for any violation cf it. trainmen, but no one was killed. George O. Jones, chairman of the Na THE LATEST. Mtorellrtneons.

Ed Short, marshal, and S. N. Wood, iiuuiigiaiit kj ino unitea states a man must satisfy the Consul at the port froia which he wishes to sail that he does not come under the prohibited clauses and must pay a per capita tax to the Consul before sailing. It declares in favor of prohibiting immigration of all persons not in sympathy with the Government of the United States; against alien ownership in land, in favor of free technical schools for American children and in favor of the expenditure of the surplus for the building of fortifications and naval vessels. At ton o'clock Chairman Wigginton an -nounced that nominations for a candidate for President of the United States were in order when ex-Governor Sharp in a brief speech placed in nomination James S.

Negley, of Pennsylvania; Mr. Watts, of Maryland, nominated Abram S. Hewitt, of New York, his uncomplimentary allusions to the British lion, the Fisheries treaty and Grover Cleveland being greeted with hisses from some of the members of the New York delegation, and Judge Church, of New York, placed in nomination James L. Cur-tis, of New York. The California delegation seconded Mr.

Hewitt's nomination as did also the District of Columbia, whilo New York seconded the nomination of Mr. Curtis. The result of the first ballot was ns fol The Senate was not in session on the 18th. Ihe Chinese Restriction bill was before the House, a long debate following its in tional Committee of tlio Greenback party, has issued a call for a National convention of the party to meet at Cincinnati, Wednesday. September 12, 1888, to nominate candidates for President and Vice- mayor, of Woodsdalo, were held by the United States Commissioner at Topeka in bonds of $1,500 each to appear for exami troduction.

nation on the charge of conspiracy in the Stevens Countv case. President of the United States. All the bonds recently purchased by the Government are to be used for the purposes of the sinking fund, the require All the leading railroads of the State xiiis peiuneu uisk oi a mastodon, meas unug i. ieec, incnos, nas peen lound on a ments of winch this fiscal year are $47, farm near Bismarck, Dak. have agreed to give a rata of one cent per mile to the Grand Army reunion at Columbus, next month.

The twenty-seventh anniversary of the Clearing house returns for week ended August 18 showed an average increase of 7.8, compared with the corresponding ihe twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers was celebrated in Detroit on the 17th with 2.000 members present. Chief battle of Wilson's Creok was celebrated by the survivors of the First and Second Kan week ot last year. In New York the in sas, aud First Iowa regiments at Atchison crease was 17.5. on the lUth. Delegations from Leaven Thomas Leonard.

Thomas E. McGrath worth and other points in Kansas were and M. Peeler, residing in Fonda, near Albany, N. on their return from a visit to Auresvilld Shrine on the 19th were present. The following are the officers elected by the First Kansas Association of Veterans: Charles Frank, Leavenworth, president; d.

Kurtn, Atchison, vice- Arthur presided. The next meeting of the National Fireman's Association will be held at Kansas City, September 11, next year. Alexander Wood was hanged at Black-foot, Idaho, on the 17th for the murder of his wife. Two children of Jacob farmer living near Greenfield, were burned to death recently during the absence of their parents. The temperature at St.

Vincent, on the 17rh fell to 30 degrees, the first killing frost of the season. capsized while attempting to cross the Mohawk river in a row boat. Leonard and McGrath were drowned, and Peeler president; Ed Reilly, Leavenworth, secre tary. The next reunion will be held at saved. Leavenworth in 1800.

bKTH Green, the noted pisciculturist. At Topeka the other day Dr. A. E. Det ler, a well known veterinary surgeon, was died at Rochester, N.

on the 20th. He was born in Rochester, March 10, 1S17. His mixing some sulphur, nitrate of potash entire lite was devoted to the artificial and glycerine in an iron mortar when the propagation of fish. compound exploded, tearing oif the doc Rev. Edward H.

Camp, a Presbyterian minister who had lust returned from Pales tor's left hand at the wrist and three fingers of the right hand, necessitating its tine. XT amputation. Pieces of the mortar pene tne otner night. Ill health was the cause, trated his abdomen, his breast was terribly A large baud of Sioux Indiana recently lacerated and a wound was inflicted on his 1 resident. Ihe bolters held a meeting and denounced the convention as being packed.

The President has issued an order placing Major-General Schofleld in command of the army, with headquarters at Washington. General Schofleld will also continue in command of the division of the Atlantic. A correspondent at Washington declares that on the advice of Hon. James G. Blaine the Senate Tariff bill will be abandoned.

The Secretary of the Interior is informed that the Bois and Red Lake Indians in Minnesota refused to consent to the right of way through their reservation, granted by Congress to the Duluth, Rainy Lake Northwestern Railroad Company, by act of April 24, 1868. The Senate Committee on Military has authorised its chairman to prepare a bill giving to the Major-General of the army all the rights, privileges and powers that had been enjoyed by the General and Lieutenant-General of the army when those offices existed. In the cases of the naval cadets, who were recently tried by court-martial at Annapolis for hazing, found guilty and sentenced to dismissal, the President has modified and commuted the sentences to confinement for thirty days and a deprivation of one-half of the annual leave. Secretary Whitney has ordered Admiral Luce, commander of the South Atlantic squadron, to proceed in tk? Galena to Port-au-Prince, as the preseneo of an American man-of-war i3 needed there. The President has detailed Lieutenant-Colonel John M.

Wilson, Engineer Corps, Oommissioner of Public Buildings and Grounds, as a member of the Lighthouse Board, vice Brigadier-General James C. Duane, retired, late Chief of Engineers of the army. A bill to authorize the President to appoint George Stonemau, of California, formerly Major-General of United States volunteers, a Colonel of infantry on the retired list of the army, has been introduced in the Senate by Mr. Stewart. left the Pine Ridca asrencv in Dakota' thigh by a piece of the broken mortar.

The office was demolished. without leave. Considerable alarm was felt. lows: Curtis, 45; Hewitt, Neglej', 4. General Curtis was declared the nominee of the convention.

Judge James N. Greer was then unanimously nominated for Vice-President and the convention adjourned sine die. The bolting delegation, which left the convention hall met at the Ebbitt House last evening and elected Robert C. Taylor, chairman of the Chicago delegation, chairman, and Frank J. Peterson, of Pennsylvania, secretary.

There were present lull, or nearly full, delegations from Illinois, Maine, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Louisiana, Vermont, Virginia, Maryland, Mississippi, South Carolina, Alabama, Florida and Delaware, one man from Ohio and one from New York, twenty-five in all. Resolutions were adopted denouncing the convention as packed and not worthy the confidence of the American party. FEVER 'RAVAGES. Oltlcial Reports of the Yellow Fever Epidemic It Ravages in Cuba. Washington, Aug.

15. Surgeon-General Hamilton has received a telegram from the Secretary of the State Board of Health at Wilmington, N. saying that there are no cases of yellow fever in Wilmington, but there is a suspicious case, isolated three miles from Goldsboro, thirty-four miles from Wilmington, which is supposed to have como from Jacksonville. The official bulletin from Jacksonville, received at the Marino Hospital Bureau to-day shows three new cases, no deaths and A stranger, supposed to be a foreigner. ihe tribal' stock tax difficulty, which shot himself on the streets of Topeka the has caused so much trouble between non- citizens and Chickasaw Nation author! ties, is reported to have been settled, Cora other day and died in a few hours, leaving no clue to his identity nor cause for the act.

The deceased was a well dressed man and in his pockets were found a rubber stamp with the name "William B. Clan- missioner Biazlove deckling that the Chicksaw Nation had no jurisdiction over the person or property of a non-citizen and therefore no right to collect the tax of ley" on it, a silver hypodermic syringe. per bead American securities were lower in Lon three bottles containing morphine, a gold watch and chain, 125.70 in gold and bills and a railroad ticket to Kansas City. Everything went to show that the unfortunate man had been comfortably fixed in life. He was evidently a victim of the don during the week ended Augnst 18.

Business was generally restricted. The Continental bourses were reported qaiet. uenebal Boulanger was elected to the morphine habit. THE SOUTH. John Daughtry, aged twenty-seven, clerk on the steamer Rob Roy, was run over and killed on the levee at Memphis, recently by a freight train of the Kansas City railroad.

In a quarrel caused by jealousy at Fleming was stabbed by Farmer W. S. Duncan, who had been calling on Fleming's divorced wife. Texas Democratic convention re-no7ninated Governor L. S.

Ross and Lieu-tenant-Govornor Wheeler by acclamation. Congressman Hemphill has been renominated by the Democrats of the Fifth South Carolina district. Favorabie reports were received from Jacksonville, on the 16th, regarding the yellow fever, there being no new cases and no deaths. Rosenberg and Jones, two police officers of Louisville, were fatally stabbed by a drunken ruffian named Dil-ger in a house of ill-fame recently. The ruffian was beating a woman, the officers responding to the call for help, when the deed was committed.

Dilger was arrested; Recent stories of trouble between the Hatfield and McCoy gangs in Pike County, are positively denied. J. M. Hunt, Samuel Wislon and J. P.

Whito have been nominated for the Court of Appeals by the Texas Democratic State convention. A terrible race war is reported from Iberia Parish, La. On the Kith the whites mustered in force and killed thirteen negroes who refused to lay down their arms and surrender. One white man, E. R.

Smith, was killed. A freight train ran into the rear of a passenger train near Nichols, N. 0., recently. Two tramps were killed nd two train hands injured. It is stated that the Attorney-General has began proceedings to oust Sheriff Chamber of Deputies in the department of Somme, of which Amiens is the capital, by a majority of He also headed the polls in the Charente and Nord departments.

The announcement of the figures caused great excitement in Paris. Churchill, of Leavenworth, from office. It is charged that the sheriff has been lukewarm in enforcing or neglects to enforce the Prohibition law. Robbers attempted to rob the Union E. H.

Fleming, a Hutchison minister of twenty-three patients under treatment There have been twenty-eight cases to date and four deaths. Dr. Wall announces one suspicious case and one death at Pacific west bound overland passenger train near Rawlins, early on the morning of the 18th. They were defeated the gospel, eloped the other day with one of his congregation, Mrs. Fryreat.

The wayward preacher leaves a wife and six Tampa and no sickness at Plant City. Dr. in their project by the bravery of Brakes urqunart telegraphs from Way Cross. children and his mother in destitute circumstances. The woman is said to have twice before eloped.

man William Tillman, who was seriously woundod while grappling with a robber. that there are five men engaged in fumigating mails there. ihe lumbermen recently in session at The post-office at Chaord.Neosho Countv. Santiago de Cdba, Aug. 15.

There Chicago denied any intention of forming a Is to be discontinued. were twenty deaths from yellow fever in Justice Miller, of the United States this city up to July 28. New food is furnished the disease by a lot of freshly arrived Spaniards, who are workins-at th" THE EAST. The report circulated in Wall street, New York, that the Baltimore Ohio had determined to part with the $5,000,000 of Western Union stock it received In payment for the Baltimore Ohio telegraph lines, is denied by officials of the railroad company. Two heavy earthquake shocks, lasting thirty seconds and accompanied by distinct sounds, occurred the other night at "IVinthrop, Me.

Supreme Court, has granted a writ of error in the case of William Baldwin, who is now in the penitentiary nnder sentence of trust. They had assembled for the purpose of trading in pine lands. The Central Labor Union of New York decided, in the case at the two girls who were discharged by their employes because of the testimony they gave before the Ford investigating committee, to ask Mayor Hewitt to take up a subscription for them as he did for Foreman llartt. tha Jaraguay mines near this- city. Many children and native Cubans in the interior are dying of yellow fevnr.

a. death for the murder of his sister at Atchison. It is claimed by his attorneys that they have evidence that other parties are guilty Of the murder. many as twenty-four children at Sanoti Espiritu have boen swept away in a single day by the disease. Victim of the labor organizations.

Tor-EjvA is troubled with fire-bugs..

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About Trego County Republican Archive

Pages Available:
964
Years Available:
1887-1889