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THE GRAPHIC Wl>cks bats few months of being tht oldest newspaper in Bmle county. WAs an nd-rortlning medinm it is not eieelled U| newspaper in Boath Dakota. I^Una a rapidly inonaiint circulation amont fee B0(t intelligent elan of people in Brule end adjoining countia* t^Haa a circulation seoond to sank Ik tt.li 01 adjoinininc ooontiea, and a paid op snbeoriptlrc U«t it Is believed raperior. Wis Urol*, spicy, in dependant, and devoted •aietf to theinteneta of Kiaball and Brule Co. lw»fliodr enlares reading It. Bh> it a trial. >», 2£imtrall - 4 ^ I 1 ^ 4 - 1 Y * ^ A Published by C. R. TIN AN. THE ONLY STRICTLY MORAL PAPER IN DAKOTA. $2.00 Per Year. $1.50 in Advance. EIGHTH YEAR. KIMBALL, BRULE COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1889. WHOLE NUMBER 401. THE GRAPHIC. 19 1 Tttuii of adrtcibiBfl m cation. WJob work of mrj daseiipMoa wmlrtl the beet atrip and at tt* lowwt Mtaa, pr^Ad vertieeewiti aei eeeeepeled by ieeirw tiona will b* haXil vatfl NM oat charged tor aflomdiagly. Wi Short nnirmnnlnaftaMa n ny of ife aro aocepUbta if MtooNpurtai If to mm* •. the author. t^AU matter Intaadad fair bo in the offioa intrnro pabli< mat * THE KIMBALL ORAPHIO. _ OFFICIAL PIRECTQRV. ujujkiux osnRcn gharlB Treasurer..^.... v.1 Bapt of Bohecjj).... 'tf'ji Py #«tio«...... ... j *m Ooutablw J ( in uisi, M. «. \ 9nA » IT>MTS38 OommUaionora 2*E CHLTIOir»^Xj OX'X'i.C^^g. Mayor ; LOTTIE? RIOHABO*. %rf>H»uror W. H. WiAftfi Apditor W. M. PEAT*. Cijy Attorney .A .J. p. £<wg. DEMNIS RYAN. fceesor ";.L A. Wuu, C. S. BLODOBTT, B. P. OCIXSNSB* 0. K.TIN AN, J. N. BABXEB. Johx PARK**, CHAS. OAUR. lat Ward 2bd Ward..... Ird Ward , go"wireai2? OFX-ICEIUL Clerk Tre&auror Aaeoteor Jnsticos Constables Supervisors C. D. 0ATAOB. Louis HIOBABTS. TnuMAN PATTML i s. B. U>m, DRNNIB BTAK. JAOOS HAVXXI* CHAB. BBADLBT. ! J F KIJ»«ama». H. T. WruLsoK' J?. D. WABNU. ^Euaioua P IlESIlYTEitlAN—8ervict'» pxrry Babbathal lOrhO q. m. un<i 7:80 u. m. Snbluith school at« tor morning service. Prayer meeting on Thar* day eveuinjgs. M ETHODIST EPISCOPAL-I •Sabbath at 10:30 a. m. andfdW school after moruing serrica. ivory WeUiioeany eveoing. Services evan p.m. Babbata Prayer meeting UT. MA.RQAHET'8 CATHOLIC CI1UB0H- K-^ilorvicoe every alternate Sunday. B UULK LODGE, NO. 44, A. V. & A. M. Reg» Inr ooir,imjuicuti<m l?rid«y evoning on or foro the full moon of each month. K IMBALL LODGE, NO. 94. i. o. o. P. MEETS ovary Monday ovening at Odd Fellows HalL K IMBALL LODGU, NO. H. E. of p. Heeta overy Thurfulay evening at Odd Fellows Half H I .NO POST, NO. 85, G. A. B. Meets at Masoa io Hull tho first and third Wednesday ineaoi II. 8HE1UDAN CAMP, NO. 7. SONS Of •. Sleets regularly at Odd I'ellows HalL /? $60.00 Sewing Maoliinb FOR $14.90. Thip Is the "Sioger Model 1 ' tffifhiuo (tho original Singer— patent hftvJog expired). Kqual an^ ever made. Superior to many. Thoroughly well mad?. Warranted/or 5 years, (eigimd npd registered guaranty). Pfrhly finished, wnlnut top F ..'alnuttopaud ^ovcr; drou leaf; 3 drawers. Complete wth full set of nickel UJ and all nedefsary needier, bob- .na and tools, Have others with 4 and 6 drawers and 9U0 without drawers or case for fl2.75. AIPO tnauy other useful articlva on Vhlch we con save plated lii tnauy ^cti £5 to CO per cent. ItUy close figures. Send for catalogues A. T. BVANft <& CO., 18S State St., Standard Watches ut unus* .j ... ^ Chicago. •• fW' ^ WILWAVK A /f°( 1 Fast Mat botwoeo Minnoai vestibule^ Trains waukee, St. Paul and Trana-Cont nental Route between ota- cngo, Council Bluiln, Omaha and tbo Puoifto Coaat. Or ^ , nJSa <, a^ l d??yS'.» 0n CWCag °" fior aiMi tlias tables, rates of pas^ag* and Crpijfli^sto., *PPl?_totQ6 nearost station ngont of j&4 OaidAob^ - Iny SB & ST. PAUL HAII^ Agent anywhero in •OSVELL ni^lB, A. V. II. CABEXTKR, Qsnsml Maaagw. benl l*ass. and Tkt. Agt rpr lDfomaUo ^aowlM WtheCntCAOo. MILWAUKIBK A 8T. RAIXWAT COMPAKY. WRITS to H.Q. U-AUOSN. CommiMjoner. Milwaukee, WlocouBin. aatlon ip reference to Lands and 4 .ud 1 rl BANKERS. A. O. OAJSE, A. 0. WHITBKCS, Ohsrlei City, Io. Kimball, Dtk •oswloMed «a 1 anil siU A OENEItAIi BANKCTQ BU»> DraS TRANSACTED. Farmers & Traders '-•.•.v. te'- -INOOBPORATBD- A~ , w. aOOBAM. fna. K ft';.' •VT.M. VJLXI*AM9IT v. 9ns. y Foreign and Domestic exchange bought and sold. Interest paid on time deposits- A general banking business transacted. Lvans on farma and city real estate made [on favoi> ; able terms. cynic for MALAR make ons which Csrtbe Address, «0. & STSKJTgg, ^rmd BM|K.gWh' Living within two and a half milos of Mattapoisotte, Mass., where all wero born, aro nine brothers and sisters named Holies, who rango in age from 0!) to 88 years. Altogether there wo 'e twelvo children, but three died, one at the age of 02, another at tho ago of 00i and the third whon he was -'5. Tho mother lived to bo a nonagenarian. Tho father died in his 58th year. Henry Caby, whoso real namo is Kish- ka-ko, lives up In Aranae county, Mich- igan, is a great grandson of an Indian chiof of tho same namo, and he sets up a claim that in 1919 his royal ancestor was, by treaty with the government, given sections 28 and 21), on which most of tho valuable part of Bay City stands, and now his lawyers propose to get the land for him or got the money value thereof. It is alleged that tho treaty records show no further disposition ol tho land has ever been authorized sinco tho treaty of 1819. An old farmer couple brought in two #1,000 United States bonds to an Adrian, Mich., bankor which they had been ignorantly hoarding sinco the sec- ond year after tho war, and until tho cashier told them thoy hail boen called in in 1874 thoy supposed tho bonds had boon bearing interest all tho while. Then tho bank man consoled them with tho statement that tho interest on 92,000 for iifteon years at 3 per cent, would have amounted to $900 if tho bonds had been cashed and the money put into the bank. Five hundred million foot of logs ara cut in tho state or Maino annually. Tho name, Pino Tree State, was acquired years ago, but Spruce Tree State would now bo more appropriate. Although thoro aro millions if pine yot standing, the palmy days of that tree, in a com- mercial sense, long sinco departed, and tho spruce, prolific and hardy, is tho mainstay of tho lumber trade. What- ever tho case may bo in other states Maine has nothing to fear from tho do- nudation of her uplands. Tho spruce is a prolific tree renewing its growth in a few yoara, thus filling up tho gaps inado by the lumberman's ax and soon produc- ing a second growth or aftermath. Many townships on tho Penobscot have been lumbered over twice and some three times, while in Hancock county thoro is more timber standing today than there was twenty years ago. The Lewiston, Me., Journal tolls a Story about a West Minot farmer who, to savo a choice barrel of apples in his collar from tho depredation of rats, as ho supposed, sat two traps in the barrel. It appears, however, that it was a fo- male member of his family who had a fondness for the fruit. Happening in the cellar the morning after the fanner had sot tho traps, she started to help herself as usual. Imagino her surprise. On putting lior hand in the barrel slio found herself caught in a steel trap. In her attempts to free her hand she put the othor one in tho barrel, and, as luck would have it, put it directly into the jaws of the othor trap, thus getting both hands caught. As there was no one in the house at tho time, her cries for help were not heard for some time. Whon aid at last arrived the lady had nearly fainted with pain. Farmer Lutz, of Montollo, Pa., missed a young eow, and hunted all over tho place for her for two days, but in vain. On the evening of tho second day his son Billy went up to tho old sinolco house, and pulling up tho latch noticed that the old piece of clothesline with which tho door was usually fastened to the frame by means of staples for addi- tional socurity had been e.hewcd in two. Ho thought this was queer, but a mo- ment afterward; when he stepped over the threshold, tho case was made clear to him. Thoro on tho floor of tho smoko house, mooing faintly in her compressed quartors, and weakoned by the lack of food and water, lay tho young hoifer, suffering tho punishment for her curiosity. She had got there two nights boforo, having first jumped over tho barnyard fence, opened tho farmyard gate with her mouth and fore- legs, and then cliewod the ropo off ttiat fastened tho smoke house door and lifted the latch. A "Convention of Heavenly Recruits' is being held in Philadelphia. Tho fol- lowing report of a meeting is contained in a paper of that city: "Tho object of tho convention is the healing of the sick and curing of disease, convorsion of sinners and to contend for tho faith onco delivered to tho saints. Evangel- ist C. M. Ruth, of Indianapolis, was on the platform, surrounded by a nmnbor of preachers and oldors shouting at tho tops of their voicos. Near tho platform wero a number of men and women cry- ing and yelling. A strange sight was a woman of middle ago prostrate on IJS/ back in one of tho aisles, while around tho chapel wero a number of men and women clapping their hands and kissing tho new reoruits. All manner of dis- eases are guaranteed to be cured, pro- vided tho person joins the army of the saints. Bach visitor as ho enters the hall is accosted by an cldor who aslts him if he is seeking salvation. One older said last night that ho boliovod there was no salvation for reportors." . v O u r G i r l s . Kitty ia witty, : Nettie is pretty, Lutfe is cute and mnall; Iron a is a queen, Annette is u pet, v - Nell is the belle of the bail; •> Dmntha la wealthy, v Bertlia la healthy, And health is the beat of ail. Perfect health keeps her rosy and riuli- nnt, boautttul and blooming, senatblsand swoet. It ta secured by wholesome habits uud the uae of Dr. Picrce's Favorite Pro* scrlptloa. Bertha takes It, and «he also "takes the cake.'' The pnly guaranteed euro for those (ItHtrogslngailmfgtsneenliai to women. Satisfaction or your money re- turned. For Constipation or Sltk Headache, use Dr. Pierce's Pellets; Purely Vegetable. One a dose. 5. ^ P CHOSEN SPEAKER Congressman Reed, of Maine, Elected Speaker in the Caucus. McPherson Will Be Clerk Wheat Will Keep the Door. and The Toronto Truth Newspaper Office Gutted by Fire—Gasoline Works and u Paper Mill De- vastated. The Speakernhip Fight, WASHINGTON, NOV. 30.—Tho speaker ship fight waxed warm last nlglit, and the headquarters of tho different candi- dates wore kept open until a lato hour. Tho theory generally acceptod was that two of tho candidates woro in the field for' important committoo chairman- ships, which llccd would possibly oiler them by way of consolation in event of his election. The capitol this morning 1 presented an appearanco of animation that it has riot known since tho dissolution of tho Fiftieth congress. Tho gathering of the republican representatives gave to it its lively appearance, it is said a western combination lias been formed by which the position of doorkeeper will bo given to Wheat, of Wisconsin, in the event of Ueed and McPherson being elected speaker and clerk, respectively. Mr. Reed, whon asked who would pro- sent his namo to tho caucus, said there would be no formal nomination. Mr. Uuttorworth, manager of McKinlcy's campaign, said ho would probably pro- sent his candidate to the caucus, but tliero would be no speech making. At 12:30 General Henderson of Illin- ois, had been chosen chairman and a call of tho roll was had, showing I<55 of tho 109 republican representatives pres- ent. At 12:*r> the first ballot was taken, resulting as follows: lteed, 78; Mclvinloy, 30; Cannon, 22; Burrows, 10; Henderson, 1U. Tho talk now was all Heed and on tho second ballot a gentleman who had been in earnest conversation with a Heed ©an jyst before tho doors closod said Reed would have had votes enough to elect on the first ballot if he would have consented to support Adams for tho doorkeopership, but Reed would not go back on Wheat. On the second ballot Uecd was nomi- nated, recoiving 8."» votes. McThcrson was nominated clerk of the house and on the first ballot, recoiving 1.10 votes against 50 for Carson. On motion of McKinley Heed's nomi- nation was made unanimous. Hon. A. J. Holmes, of Iowa, a member of the last house, has been nominated for sorgeant-at-ann8. RECRUITS FOR THE BROTHERHOOD. A Newspaper Huriied Out. Tonovro, Nov. 30.—The Truth build- ing was guttod by fire last night. Loss, §90,000; insurance not ascertained. Many nuihlin^s Burned. ALIIANY, N. \\, Nov. 30.—The Dole- van Gasoline works woro destroyed by fire this morning, and tho five-story balding of Jacob Leonard «fc Son, paper manufacturers, was completely gutted. Several adjoining buildings occupied as residences wero destroyed. boss, $75,000. Pre-Kmption Law# AH Right. Sioux FALIS, S. D., NOV. 30.—A few woeks ago the attorney of tho Northern Pacific railroad land department claimed to have made the important discovery that pre-emption entries wero forbidden by tho omnibus bill, and thai; us soon 03 the new states had boon admitted to tho union the settler could not lil'' a pre- emption claim. The section in the! omnibus bill upon which the discovery \ was based was section 21. j Ex-Senator Grigsby returned from 1 Washington yesterday, and as he hail j business dealings with the pre-emption 8 session of the interior department he had occasion to investigate the legality \ of tho question raiised. The ex-senator, : in explanation of tho investigations he j had made that convinced him that the ! Northern said: The old pre-emption law of 18-11, begin- ning with section 10, was mado a part of the revised statutes, and section :'59'» of the revised statutes imikiu that ivvision tho law and repeal* all antecedent statutes. This repealed the statute of !Ml effectu- ally, and the clause in section 2-1 of the ad- mission act is nn idle phrr.se. It has been decided by the supreme court several times that the revised statutes uro the law, and in the construction of its pro- visions reference sholl not be made to the antecedent law except where the meaning is obscure. But section 551*0, in 'my judg- ment, settles the question. Members of the Players' Leaffno Say Thoy Aro (Jetting There With "ISotli Feet." CiucAoo, Nov. 30.—There is an air of mystery about the headquarters of tho brotherhood in this city, and it U so denso that it could not have boen cut with a cheese knife. Telegrams galoro aro received from all parts of tho coun- try, and from tho satisfied smiles worn by the insiders it is plain that tho play- ers' league is getting there with what in street parlance might be termed "both feet." All the prime movers in the brother- hood are at work seeking for new play- ers and trying their persuasive powers on the old ones who have not yet joined with them. So far their elYorts have been wonderfully successful and upward of seventy first class plavors have been signed by Ward, I'feller, llanlon, Ewing, Keefe, O'Hourke, Irwin and Weidon* feller. Of this number fully two- thirds are ball players of reputation and many of them st.'vvs of the first magnitude. In fact Anson, Glasscock, Denny, Boyle, Hutchison, Gubmert, Burns, Glcason, Schriver, t'lements and one or two more are about the onl> old leaguers of noto who nave not affixed their signaturo to the brotherhood con- tracts. In addition to the recruits from the American association compriso such men as C'omiskey, King. Baldwin, Latham, Stovoy, Daley and others, and Mr. Weidcnfelior claims that the play- ers' league can got as many nioro men from the association as are needed. Those who have joined with the brother- hood up to date aro Keefe. O'Hourke, Kelly, Ward, llanlon, Galvin. Carroll, Miller, Staley, Irwin, Mack. Beck- ley, Dunlap, Howe. White, Kuehno Sowders, Sunday, Maul, Pfelfet'. low- ing, Hyan, Baldwin, .lack Boyle. King, Latham, Coiniskey, Daley, Slattery, Kaalz, Twiteheli, Bakely, Nutcliffe, Crane, Welch, Williamson, Darling, Bastian, DuUy, Tenor, Dwyer, Strieker, Morris, Fields, Carney, Beecher, Fore- man, Cross, Hailman. Farrar, Bufilnton, Fogarty, Thompson, Wood, Myers, Muivoy, Brouthers, Kilroy, Murphy, O'Day, Whitney, Connor. Gore, Tucker, Bierbatier, Andrews, Seery and sev- eral others of lesser note. But even with this formidable array of talent tho brotherhood is not satisfied and is still on tho lookout for now players. It leaked out yesterday that before he left Chicago an arrangement was inado with Mark Baldwin to look after the association players and win over as many of them as possible. Pfefi'er, Ward, llanlon and Jrwin have also in- structions to keep up tho work of colo- nisation, if such it may bo called, and Ward has just started out a number of secret agents on a still hunt for the stars of the miner leagues. ' It was quietly hinted that an important conference of brotherhood ollieials would be held at the Tremont yesterday, but it failed to come off. However, it will likely bo held within a week audit will \v; at- tended by President Johnson, of Clove- land, John M. Ward, Captain llanlon, of Pittsburg, and Captain Hwiug. of New York. At that lime delegates will most likely be chosen lor the conven- tion to ho held m Now York, Decem- ber 10. A BLACK FIEND A Crazy Negro Nearly Kills Two Italians and Causes Much Terror. An Elephant on a Rampage Cleans Out a Livery Stable. West Point, Neb., Citizens Missed rheirTlmnksgiving Dinner to 8ee the Circus—Women Nearly Kill a Kipper. A Vessel Foundered. CHICAGO, Nov. :to.—The largest sail- ing vessel on the lnke-». tho live-master David Dows. foundered yesterday after- neon twenty miles southeaster Chicago. Tho crew had a terriblo rough exper- ience, but wero finally saved. Tho ves- sel cost $100,000 when built, six years j ago. Her cargo consisted of 2,250 ions ' of coal. She was a victim of the terri- ble Thanksgiving galo that wrought havoc with the sl/.'amer Caliuwi, ofi" lOvanston. and nearly cost the lives of nine workmen in the cruuson above tho n'nv water tunnel, two miles out in the lake from this city. IjoiKfciseelcor Soeakr?. CHICAGO, Nov. —In the Cronin case today Jud^e Longeneekcr resumed his speech. Tho states attorney dwelt for some time on showing the motive that actuated the conspirators to commit tho crime and told again how tho murdered physioiau had openly charged the triangle With mUappropriaung tho funds of the order aa l for the purpose oi covering the thef: of the triangle, claiming tin? dejlc'.ency had been ex- pended in dangerous work abroad, when the money had gone no further than the flan Amuck Through the Streets. Ni:w YOUK, NOV. 30.—A negro with high cheek bonos, little eyes and bushy hair and whiskers looking like a Zulu, went out on tho war path yesterday afternoon and nearly killed two un- offending Italians. Ho ran out of tho tenement at 70 EaBt Houston street with a warwhoop, a short-handled ax in hlft right hand and a dish-pan in his left,' hold to his breast as a shield. He first met Branca Salvatore, upon whoso head ho brought down with full force the blade of his weapon. Tho Italian dropped. With him was F'lippo Lom- bard!, his nephew. The latter tried to getaway, but tho negro was too quick for him, and down came tho weapon on his head, lie too curled upon tho ground, the blood spurting from tho wound in- flicted. Tho madman ran toward the Bowery, with a big crowd at his back. Two girls saw him coming and oscapod up the stairB of the elevated railroad feta- tion. A woman with a child in her arms was not so fortunate. She started on a run for tho southwest corner of Bowery and Houston street, but fell, and the frantic negro was over her in an instant, with his ax in the air. Stones woro Hying thick and fast about his head by this time, and one well dlrocted hit him in tho oar and he fell stunned. A blow on tho hoad from a policoman s club was necessary to reduce him to sub- mission. A double-barrelled pistol was taken from his pocket. Ho was hustled to tho Mulberry streot station honso, whore tho Italians were having their heads dressed. Tho wounded will re- cover and the negro will go to the luna- tic asylum. Au Elephant on the Rampage. WEST POINT, Neb., Nov. 30.—Thanks giving was a lively day here. Nobody went to church and half the inhabitants missed their dinner, all becauso an ele- phant arrived in town that proved a cir- cus and menagerie all in one. Tho animal arrived on tho way freight early in tho morning, consigned to Sonnesliien & Valentine, real estate agents, who had ordered him for adver- tising purposes. The elephant was con- fined in a mammoth crato and was easily unloaded and the consignees* notified of his arrival. Thoy, however, refused to pay the freight charges of $500, and word was at once sent to headquarters at Omaha. In tho mean- time the elephant had broken out of tho | crate and started up the principal i street. His first objective point was a livery stable, where he ato a balo of ; hay and cleaned out tho establishment. Ho then crossed the street and smashed ! in the plate glass front of Crawford & | Daho's new brick block. From t here he i proceeded to Thompson Bros.' drug ' store and demolished the entire side of ! their elegant new building. Hero his j caroer was ended by the city marshal : with the aid of nearly every able-bodied | man in town, who threw coils of ropo around him and dragged him back to the depot, followed by the entiro popu- STONED THE NEW ARCHBISHOP. Boisterous Scenes at the Installation of n Toronto Divine. TOKONTO, Ont., Nov. 29.—Archbishop Walsh, who was recently appointed to this diocese, was installed last night with imposing ceremony. Two hun- dred Catholic citizens went to Hamilton to meet him as he came from London, aocompanied by Bishop Dowling, Arch- bishop Cleary and several other leading divines. Senator Frank Sm&th headed the Toronto deputation. At Toronto a great crowd wasenoountured. This was composed largely of Catholics, but a small sprinkling of ultra-Protestants made their influenoe felt. There was a good deal of hooting, Dut tho Catholios tried to down this with cheering. On Queen street an attack with stones was made on the archbishops car- riage. One stone smashed a windo - , but hurt no one. The police charged on all sides, but wero unable to mano ar- rests. On Shuler streot a showor of snowballs woro thrown, but here ugain the police wero unable to secure any of the hoodlums. After tho archbishop reached the cathedral the disorder ceased. Addresses woro tendered by the clergy and laity of tho diocese, and in his reply ArohbishopTValph said that the Catholic religion was in this country before all others, and would keep its hold in face of all opposition. He ex- pressed his sympathy and good will toward all denominations. A banquet was tendered his grace at St. Michael's Palaoe. A Reign of Terror. MACON, Ga., Nov. 29.—Tho recent lawlessness In Madison county is thus explained: Owing to a split among the whites tho negroes havo hold tho bal- ance of power. At tho last term of court forty negroes petitioned Judge Lump- kin to have their names placed on tho a list. Being ignored they orgt^n- for vengeance and threatened to ex- terminate tho whites. Notices wero served on prominent white men to leavo. Tho leader of tho negroes was William Parham. Sevoral nights ago a body of unknown men took him out and floggod him, threatening to repeat tho doso if ho did not leavo. Later a colored man's residenco was visited near Paoli and in a fight wnich fddlowcd an old negro named Tom Nuss was shot and killed while endeavoring to escape. Another negro named Gray was seriously wounded. At first it was thought the shooting was dono by whito mon, but it is now proven that it was tho work of negroes, who took advant- age of the trouble to settle old griev- ances among themselves. A negro went to Danielsvillo and swore out warrants against several white men, but they j established alibis. One of tho negroes who was in the house testified that the regulators woro all blaok. POWDER Absolutely Pure. This powder neror varies. A mtrrel ot ptirlty, rtrengtjj tnd whokiOmeneM. Mor# ccqnouilctl than the Ordinary kinds, and ca*' nol be cold in competition with th« multitude of lov te»t, itort weight alum or phopphattf powders. Sold onlj In cani, Rotii. Buuia PO-WDB* C»„ 10# Wall 1 street, N. Latest Stvlos in MILLINERY MORRIS SISTERS. lat-ion. l'aci lie attorney was wronjr. ! ^0^ „f tho They Confessed. ST. Louis, Nov. 30. —In addition to tho nine men arrested in tho Chickasaw nation for robbing tho Santa Fo train at Berwyn Monday night, two women, wives of the men, have been arrested. At their homes in Adermoro A Thanksgiving Cyclone. CIIAKI.OTTK, N. C.. Nov. 20.—A de- structive cyclone parsed over a portion of Buford county Thursday, doing great damage. The residence of a farmer near Washington, the county seat, way blown down and the whole family, eon sisting of father, mother and four chil- dren, killed instantly. A factory near Washington was blown down and two persons killed, while a dozen others re- ceived serious injuries. The reports UM very meager and it i* impossible yet to- got all the names of the killed. Due the Government, WASHINGTON, NOV. 30. —Tho annual report of General Hepburn, solicitor oi the treasury, shows that the stun ol Women Mol> a Hipper. MAHKII). Nov. 30.—A man supposed to 1)0 "Jack tho Hipper" was sot upon by a crowd of women in tho poorer quar- ter of tho city this morning whilo ho was in the custody of otllcers who wero removing him from tho jail to tho court room, where he was to be arraigned on the charge of having recently commit- ted a murder under circumstances re- Will Call More Witnesses. CHICAGO, Nov. 29.—Before tho oourt i opened in tho Cronin oaso this morning ! Mr. Forrest stated to a United Press re porter that he had eight or ton wit- nesses to introduce today, tho tak- ing of whose evidence would prob- ably consume tho whole of the day. The court room was crowded long beforo tho caso was galled and many were unable to gain admission. Judgo Longeneckor in continuance of rebuttal testimony oalled ll. F. Carborry, who swore that ho was in Donahy's saloon tho evoning of May 4 from 4:30 until 8:30 o'clock, and he was positive the proprietor of tho place was not in tho saloon during that, tlmo. This contra- dicts Donahy's testimony which was that ho was in his placo ai that timoand said Martin Burke was there. Will Marry Her Rescuer. EAH CLAIRE, Wis., Nov. 29.—Miss Marian Shu to and Adelbert Brewer, a young business man, will be married to- morrow. Last summer thoy wore mem- bers of a camping party at a norllieim Wisconsin lake. Miss ShutjC, whij$ gathering water lilies, fell from her boat and Brewer plunged in, swam to her assistance and roscuod her. An ln- timato acquaintance followed and *ft- sults in tomorrow's wedding. Fatal Kxplosfon of a Grindstone. KAT.AMAZOO, Mich., Nov. 29. A dpm hi'T.ondyn. 0 ' Th^^erowd"increased , ,. , , , , tw l ar £°: $3S,0()0,000, principal and interest, is packages of jewelry, taken from the r:*- press car, wero found. Tho women made confessions, implicating tho men under arrest and several others who are still at large. Omaha's I'ulilic Building. WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.—It has lioen discovered at the treasury department that the aggregate awards for tho prop- erty condemned for the public building at Omaha, Nob., aro less than tho ap- propriation of #400,000 instead of greater than that amount as at iirst supposed. Consequently no legal stops will bo taken to recover the supposed excess that had been stated. Naval Recommendations. WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.—Tho report of Commodore Walker, chief of tho bureau of navigation, recommends among other things that no man without pre- vious naval service, abovo the age of 35 years, be hereafter enlisted; that tho enlistment of aliens for the general ser- vice bo discourged with a view to its final discontinuance. Frustrated the Plot. PKSTH, NOV. 30.—During tho session of the lower houso of the Hungarian diet yesterday llaron Kass informed tho chamber that tho opposition had discov- ered a plot to assassinato llorr Tisza. tho Ilungariun primo minister, by tho use of dynamite. They had, howover, succeeded in frustrating it. Lincoln's Little Son Dyinjj. LONDON, Nov. 30.—Tho littlo son of Robert Lincoln, the American minister to Great Britain, is dying at Versailles, and Mr. Lincoln has gono there in post baste. A telegraphic mesjago received at tho American legation from Ver- lailles conveys th» sad intelligence that tho child probably cannot survive many tours. due the government, as evidenced by judgments of circuit and district courts, but that no reliable estimate can bo given of the value of tho judgments. The solicitor asks that au appropriation of 810.000 he expended in huuting up these debtors and their property, in ordor that the collection of theso judg- ments can be made. Murderers Arrested. DENVF.K, NOV. 30.—Tho United State? marshal has arrested J. B. Feazer and J. Isor, two of the principal actors in the bloody county seat war in Stephens county, Kan., in which Sheriff Cross and four deputies wero killed on one side and ono of Fcazer's men on tho other. Feazcr has been hero some timo work- ing as a painter. A third party has been arrested near Pueblo. All threo will be turned over to Kansas authorities for trial. Tho New Republic Reeognizcil. Rio JAM-MIIO, Nov. ,-JO.—Tho govern ment has finally readoptod tbe old flag. 1 his action has given rise to some irri- tation. Franco has recognized tho ro- public. Rescued (lie Inmates. LONDON, NOV. 30.—The fever hospital at Rochester has burned. A41 the in mates were rescued, but fifteen of them wero taken from places whore thoy wore 111 groat danger. ^ * llun Down by a Train. DBS MOI.NF.S, la., Nov. 30.—James Uorinan, a section hand employed on tho lies Homes Union railroad, was run over and killed this morning by a train in numbers until it reached upward of n<l(). nio iiy vi'innen, and it was only through Uie utmost efforts of tho gov- ernor of Madrid and a strong force of gendarmes that the yri.soner'H life was saved. As it was, he was so severely beaten that the services of a physician wero nceessary to restore him to a con- dition rendering tho legal proceedings in his care possible. Shot Herself Cor IJOVC. CINCINNATI, Nov. 30.—Cleo. Nelson, a beautiful girl 21 years old, living at 507 Central avenue, shot herself fatally this morning. Whon found sho clasped in ono hand a pair of white kid gloves. It i'i supposed from this that the tragedy was caused by a love aifair. Miss Nel- son came hero a year ago from Louis- ville. Jefferson llnviN* Condition. Isii---.v OIU.KANS, Nov. 30.—.lefrerson Davis passod a restless and nnsatisfac- tory night, lie is still a very sick man Redmond Goes to .Tail. DI'DI.IX, Nov. 30.—Mr. liedmond, editor of tho Watertown News, was to- day sentenced to threo months' impris- onment for intimidation. The Village Big Man. Whilo traveling did yoti ever notice the advent into tho train of tho village big man? says tho Cincinnati Times" Star. Every town has its big man—not generally more than one. That is there is no othor man who approaches near in importance tho certain big rasn. lie is most always a lawyer, occasionally a doctor. But about his entering tho car. The 6ig man has several modes of commu- nicating tho fact of his presenco. Gen- erally it is with his nose. Sometimes a resounding "hawk," stamp of cane, or the tromondously loud and solemn tones of his voice in making the simplest, most threadbare expression. Mostly, howover. his nose it is which gives no uncertain sound and by which all are made aware of tho presenco of an in- dividual of note. Ho is immovablo and silent, savo an occasional blast, as a ways'.do tree. Ho poses m the whole seat "with a graceful majostv that comes of long years of con- stant, diligent pra:tico. By and by tho city is reached. Big man unconsciously reveals anal- most impcrcoptsblo interest, and evon anxiety. Begins to realize that ho is out of hU depths In this great massing of huge buildings, and with no familiarity awed country neighbor s countenance in sight. Lo, his stupendous air of importance is at a swift ebb. And as he alights from tho car and walks off in the crowd his is all tho appearanco of mingled curiosity, mistrust and general wide- eyed verdancy of tho veriest jay. Verily, hpw we apples do swim—at home. room of the Kalamazoo Spring cvnd Axle works burst today. A pieoo of tho stone weighing a ton flew fifty feet and crushed through p brick wall. Irving Hail was struck and possibly fatally In- jured. As tho piece ilew through tho building it knockod two more men •iown. A Dead Poet. LONDON, Nov. 29.—Martin Farquahir Tuppor, tho poet, is dead. Ho was best known as author of "Provorbial Philo- sophy." lio was 7!) years old. THE MARKETS. Live Stock. 8IOUX OITT, Not. ?0. Hoos—Light, [email protected]; mixed, 18.50 @3.55; heavy, [email protected] n . CATTLE—Steora. 1.100 to 1,300 lbs., t3j 1.75; feeders, {[email protected]; stockers, $1.! """I .w^«.vw, owwnvtO, 2.35; cows, common to good, $1.25@?.SS; ' ei.003l.60; yearlings, 83.00@3.50: veal calves, 91.00^2.00. bulls, SOUTH OMAHA. Nov. 30. Hoas—Light, 83.0.(38.6 ; heavy, $3.53 (33.00; mlxod, [email protected]. CATTLB—Primo, 1,303 to 1,600 pound beeves, $3.1X)@4.00: good 1,1CI0 to 1 300 pound beeves, [email protected]; westerns e2.&)(fi) 8.10; fair to good cows, [email protected]; good to choice oows, 8^[email protected]>0; feeders, $3-30® 3.00; stoekers, $2.^002.00; bulls, |1.50m 2.10. KAKSAS CITY, Nov. 80. CATTLB Native beeves, 83.00® .70; stoekers and feeders, [email protected]. Boos—Light, |3.<i®'j.&); heavy and mixed, e3.o5@3>73. CmoAoo, Nov. 80. Hoos—Light, |[email protected]; mixed, $3.58 @3.80; heavy, [email protected]>. CATTLE—Native steers, light to heavy shipping, $2.H>@4.50; cows, bulls nnd mixed, fl.80@'i.UO; stoekers and feeders [email protected]; Texans, $1.> [email protected]. ' SHEEP—Natives, »'[email protected]; westerns, 83.1.00*0.0; Texans, e3.([email protected] Grain and Provisions. CHICAGO, Nov. 3> WHEAT—November, 78>£c; December TOJic; May, 83^c. Cons—November, 82^0; May 83e- OATS—December, 20>(,o; May, 22%c. KTK—November, 45c. BABLKY—November, 60e. FLAXSBBU—Cwh, 11.86; May, IMS. TIMOTHY—Prime, $1.01. WHISKEY—$1.08. PouK—November,$9.75; Jannary,$0-27V. LAUD—November, $0.10: January, $5 02W. Snoui.DEBS—t4.87X@4-o0 short olofcrs. [email protected]. SnonT Rins—November, $5.87}<- BUTTER—Creamery, 17@2lc; dairy, 11(9 21c. CHEESE—Full cream Cheddars and flats, young Americas, e. Eoos—Fresh, io. MINNEAPOLIS, NOV. 30. WABAT—No. 1 hard, November, V7^c, May, 83We; on track, 78c. No. 1 northern,Ncvembcr, 74%c; May, 81c; on track, 7BWc; No. 2 northern, Nof.mber, 7ft ; tSMj, 78e; on track, 71078c. "*««(• >. J? BH0S., feASQB AM* iH<Vl 3NTS WHOLESAXJ9 JJSTD RETAIL. AGEIOUliTUBAL IMPL1 THB BEST IX THB UARKEH. Tin ware, Pumps and Barbed Wl% Acorn and Superior Stoves t "PRICES GUARANTEED tt© BE THE LOTTEST.' OVU MOTIOi «• SMALL FBOFFTS, QUlCS* SAJUBS ASMASt VBAXJtSi&S* .i . OOHSN&a BROTHERS, fittTBAT.T,, , . ~ . . . , . . . , DAXOTJ U m 3 a DAKOPOLIS HOTEL, J. F. CONANT, Prop'r." B0 New Rooms, Newly Furnished Headquarters for Commercial Travelers. Bim'ball, - -THE BEST mm MS, BUGGIES -AND -THE BEST- FARM WAGQS -IN THE MARKET- Send for Catalogue and Price List ( pisn BROS. . WAGON CO., RACINE. WIS City Property I have (or Ml* in the OfUGBOI. TOWH-HITK Of KTWUU, lit, Sad and 8rd addition* to tVe (asp a big* BUlba •( tfe* Mtt |Mfr! dent and Business Lot) nfclcb will told at reuoilUi ffeWaa aai M Utifta stilt the purchaser. Kbafeall is the largest and meat impojtaat town 1* Brute ONM Md flaq af the best located towns In all Dakota. It It growing rapidly ul m batter In- vestment oan be ratdd than la these lots. Call on or i O. R. TINAN, SmSmSiiSSm •ililS B 4 J! r«- S r&v "*y i PISO'S REMEDY FOR CATARRH Best, Easiest to use. Cheapest. Rollof Is immediate, is certain. For Cold In the Head it has no e^ual. A cure it is on Ointment, vf which a small particle is applied tothouoktrij*. Price, 50o. Sold by Druggists or sent bv mail. Addiw £, T. HAZE&XIHB, Warren, Fa. Svr 3

The Kimball graphic. (Kimball, Brule County, Dakota [S.D ......94. i. o. o. P. MEETS ovary Monday ovening at Odd Fellows HalL KIMBALL LODGU, NO. H. E. of p. Heeta overy Thurfulay evening

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Page 1: The Kimball graphic. (Kimball, Brule County, Dakota [S.D ......94. i. o. o. P. MEETS ovary Monday ovening at Odd Fellows HalL KIMBALL LODGU, NO. H. E. of p. Heeta overy Thurfulay evening

THE GRAPHIC Wl>cks bats few months of being tht oldest newspaper in Bmle county.

WAs an nd-rortlning medinm it is not eieelled b» U| newspaper in Boath Dakota. I^Una a rapidly inonaiint circulation amont fee B0(t intelligent elan of people in Brule end

adjoining countia*

t^Haa a circulation seoond to sank Ik tt.li 01 adjoinininc ooontiea, and a paid op snbeoriptlrc U«t it Is believed raperior.

Wis Urol*, spicy, in dependant, and devoted •aietf to theinteneta of Kiaball and Brule Co. lw»fliodr enlares reading It. Bh> it a trial.

>», 2£imtrall - 4 ^ I1 ^ 4 - 1Y * ̂ A

Published by C. R. TIN AN. THE ONLY STRICTLY MORAL PAPER IN DAKOTA. $2.00 Per Year. $1.50 in Advance.

EIGHTH YEAR. KIMBALL, BRULE COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1889. WHOLE NUMBER 401.

THE GRAPHIC. 191 Tttuii of adrtcibiBfl m cation.

WJob work of mrj daseiipMoa wmlrtl the beet atrip and at tt* lowwt Mtaa, pr^Ad vertieeewiti aei eeeeepeled by ieeirw tiona will b* haXil vatfl NM oat charged tor aflomdiagly. Wi Short nnirmnnlnaftaMa n ny of ife aro aocepUbta if MtooNpurtai If to mm* •. the author.

t^AU matter Intaadad fair bo in the offioa intrnro pabli<

mat *

THE KIMBALL ORAPHIO. _ OFFICIAL PIRECTQRV.

ujujkiux osnRcn gharlB Treasurer..^.... v.1

Bapt of Bohecjj).... 'tf'ji Py

#«tio«...... ... j *m

Ooutablw J

( in uisi, M. «. \ 9nA » IT>MTS38

OommUaionora

2*E CHLTIOir»^Xj OX'X'i.C^^g. Mayor ; LOTTIE? RIOHABO*. %rf>H»uror W. H. WiAftfi Apditor W. M. PEAT*. Cijy Attorney .A .J. p. £<wg.

DEMNIS RYAN. fceesor ";.L A. Wuu,

C. S. BLODOBTT, B. P. OCIXSNSB* 0. K.TIN AN, J. N. BABXEB. Johx PARK**, CHAS. OAUR.

lat Ward

2bd Ward.....

Ird Ward ,

go"wireai2? OFX-ICEIUL Clerk Tre&auror Aaeoteor Jnsticos

Constables

Supervisors

C. D. 0ATAOB. Louis HIOBABTS. TnuMAN PATTML

i s. B. U>m, DRNNIB BTAK. JAOOS HAVXXI* CHAB. BBADLBT.

!J F KIJ»«ama». H. T. WruLsoK' J?. D. WABNU.

^Euaioua

PIlESIlYTEitlAN—8ervict'» pxrry Babbathal lOrhO q. m. un<i 7:80 u. m. Snbluith school at«

tor morning service. Prayer meeting on Thar* day eveuinjgs.

METHODIST EPISCOPAL-I •Sabbath at 10:30 a. m. andfdW

school after moruing serrica. ivory WeUiioeany eveoing.

Services evan p.m. Babbata

Prayer meeting

UT. MA.RQAHET'8 CATHOLIC CI1UB0H-K-^ilorvicoe every alternate Sunday.

BUULK LODGE, NO. 44, A. V. & A. M. Reg» Inr ooir,imjuicuti<m l?rid«y evoning on or b»

foro the full moon of each month.

KIMBALL LODGE, NO. 94. i. o. o. P. MEETS ovary Monday ovening at Odd Fellows HalL

KIMBALL LODGU, NO. H. E. of p. Heeta overy Thurfulay evening at Odd Fellows Half

HI .NO POST, NO. 85, G. A. B. Meets at Masoa io Hull tho first and third Wednesday ineaoi

II. 8HE1UDAN CAMP, NO. 7. SONS Of •. • Sleets regularly at Odd I'ellows HalL

/? $60.00 Sewing Maoliinb FOR $14.90.

Thip Is the "Sioger Model1' tffifhiuo (tho original Singer— patent hftvJog expired). Kqual

an^ ever made. Superior to many. Thoroughly well mad?. Warranted/or 5 years, (eigimd npd registered guaranty). Pfrhly finished, wnlnut top —F ..'alnuttopaud ^ovcr; drou leaf; 3 drawers. Complete wth full set of nickel

UJ and all nedefsary needier, bob-.na and tools, Have others with 4 and 6 drawers

and 9U0 without drawers or case for fl2.75. AIPO tnauy other useful articlva on Vhlch we con save

plated lii

tnauy ^cti £5 to CO per cent. ItUy close figures. Send for catalogues

A. T. BVANft <& CO., 18S State St.,

Standard Watches ut unus* .j ... ^ Chicago.

•• fW' ^

WILWAVK A/f°(1

Fast Mat botwoeo Minnoai

vestibule^ Trains waukee, St. Paul and

Trana-Cont nental Route between ota-cngo, Council Bluiln, Omaha and tbo Puoifto Coaat.

Or^,nJSa<,a^ld??yS'.»0n CWCag°"

fior aiMi tlias tables, rates of pas^ag* and Crpijfli^sto., *PPl?_totQ6 nearost station ngont of j&4 OaidAob^

- Iny SB & ST. PAUL HAII^ Agent anywhero in

•OSVELL ni^lB, A. V. II. CABEXTKR, Qsnsml Maaagw. benl l*ass. and Tkt. Agt

rpr lDfomaUo ^aowlM WtheCntCAOo. MILWAUKIBK A 8T. RAIXWAT COMPAKY. WRITS to H.Q. U-AUOSN.

CommiMjoner. Milwaukee, WlocouBin.

aatlon ip reference to Lands and

4 .ud 1

rl BANKERS. A. O. OAJSE, A. 0. WHITBKCS,

Ohsrlei City, Io. Kimball, Dtk

•oswloMed «a

1 anil siU

A OENEItAIi BANKCTQ BU»> DraS TRANSACTED.

Farmers & Traders '-•.•.v.

te'--INOOBPORATBD-

A~ ,w. aOOBAM. fna.

K ft';.'

•VT.M. VJLXI*AM9IT v. 9ns.

y Foreign and Domestic exchange bought and sold. Interest paid on

time deposits- A general banking business transacted. Lvans on farma and city real estate made [on favoi>

; able terms.

cynic for M A L A R

make ons which

Csrtbe

Address, «0. & STSKJTgg, ^rmd BM|K.gWh'

Living within two and a half milos of Mattapoisotte, Mass., where all wero born, aro nine brothers and sisters named Holies, who rango in age from 0!) to 88 years. Altogether there wo 'e twelvo children, but three died, one at the age of 02, another at tho ago of 00i

and the third whon he was -'5. Tho mother lived to bo a nonagenarian. Tho father died in his 58th year.

Henry Caby, whoso real namo is Kish-ka-ko, lives up In Aranae county, Mich­igan, is a great grandson of an Indian chiof of tho same namo, and he sets up a claim that in 1919 his royal ancestor was, by treaty with the government, given sections 28 and 21), on which most of tho valuable part of Bay City stands, and now his lawyers propose to get the land for him or got the money value thereof. It is alleged that tho treaty records show no further disposition ol tho land has ever been authorized sinco tho treaty of 1819.

An old farmer couple brought in two #1,000 United States bonds to an Adrian, Mich., bankor which they had been ignorantly hoarding sinco the sec­ond year after tho war, and until tho cashier told them thoy hail boen called in in 1874 thoy supposed tho bonds had boon bearing interest all tho while. Then tho bank man consoled them with tho statement that tho interest on 92,000 for iifteon years at 3 per cent, would have amounted to $900 if tho bonds had been cashed and the money put into the bank.

Five hundred million foot of logs ara cut in tho state or Maino annually. Tho name, Pino Tree State, was acquired years ago, but Spruce Tree State would now bo more appropriate. Although thoro aro millions if pine yot standing, the palmy days of that tree, in a com­mercial sense, long sinco departed, and tho spruce, prolific and hardy, is tho mainstay of tho lumber trade. What­ever tho case may bo in other states Maine has nothing to fear from tho do-nudation of her uplands. Tho spruce is a prolific tree renewing its growth in a few yoara, thus filling up tho gaps inado by the lumberman's ax and soon produc­ing a second growth or aftermath. Many townships on tho Penobscot have been lumbered over twice and some three times, while in Hancock county thoro is more timber standing today than there was twenty years ago.

The Lewiston, Me., Journal tolls a Story about a West Minot farmer who, to savo a choice barrel of apples in his collar from tho depredation of rats, as ho supposed, sat two traps in the barrel. It appears, however, that it was a fo-male member of his family who had a fondness for the fruit. Happening in the cellar the morning after the fanner had sot tho traps, she started to help herself as usual. Imagino her surprise. On putting lior hand in the barrel slio found herself caught in a steel trap. In her attempts to free her hand she put the othor one in tho barrel, and, as luck would have it, put it directly into the jaws of the othor trap, thus getting both hands caught. As there was no one in the house at tho time, her cries for help were not heard for some time. Whon aid at last arrived the lady had nearly fainted with pain.

Farmer Lutz, of Montollo, Pa., missed a young eow, and hunted all over tho place for her for two days, but in vain. On the evening of tho second day his son Billy went up to tho old sinolco house, and pulling up tho latch noticed that the old piece of clothesline with which tho door was usually fastened to the frame by means of staples for addi­tional socurity had been e.hewcd in two. Ho thought this was queer, but a mo­ment afterward; when he stepped over the threshold, tho case was made clear to him. Thoro on tho floor of tho smoko house, mooing faintly in her compressed quartors, and weakoned by the lack of food and water, lay tho young hoifer, suffering tho punishment for her curiosity. She had got there two nights boforo, having first jumped over tho barnyard fence, opened tho farmyard gate with her mouth and fore­legs, and then cliewod the ropo off ttiat fastened tho smoke house door and lifted the latch.

A "Convention of Heavenly Recruits' is being held in Philadelphia. Tho fol­lowing report of a meeting is contained in a paper of that city: "Tho object of tho convention is the healing of the sick and curing of disease, convorsion of sinners and to contend for tho faith onco delivered to tho saints. Evangel­ist C. M. Ruth, of Indianapolis, was on the platform, surrounded by a nmnbor of preachers and oldors shouting at tho tops of their voicos. Near tho platform wero a number of men and women cry­ing and yelling. A strange sight was a woman of middle ago prostrate on IJS/ back in one of tho aisles, while around tho chapel wero a number of men and women clapping their hands and kissing tho new reoruits. All manner of dis­eases are guaranteed to be cured, pro­vided tho person joins the army of the saints. Bach visitor as ho enters the hall is accosted by an cldor who aslts him if he is seeking salvation. One older said last night that ho boliovod there was no salvation for reportors."

. v O u r G i r l s . Kitty ia witty, • : • Nettie is pretty, •

• Lutfe is cute and mnall; Iron a is a queen, Annette is u pet,

v- Nell is the belle of the bail; •> Dmntha la wealthy,

• v Bertlia la healthy, And health is the beat of ail.

Perfect health keeps her rosy and riuli-nnt, boautttul and blooming, senatblsand swoet. It ta secured by wholesome habits uud the uae of Dr. Picrce's Favorite Pro* scrlptloa. Bertha takes It, and «he also "takes the cake.'' The pnly guaranteed euro for those (ItHtrogslngailmfgtsneenliai to women. Satisfaction or your money re­turned.

For Constipation or Sltk Headache, use Dr. Pierce's Pellets; Purely Vegetable. One a dose.

5. ̂ P

CHOSEN SPEAKER Congressman Reed, of Maine,

Elected Speaker in the Caucus.

McPherson Will Be Clerk Wheat Will Keep the

Door.

and

The Toronto Truth Newspaper Office

Gutted by Fire—Gasoline Works

and u Paper Mill De­

vastated.

The Speakernhip Fight, WASHINGTON, NOV. 30.—Tho speaker

ship fight waxed warm last nlglit, and the headquarters of tho different candi­dates wore kept open until a lato hour. Tho theory generally acceptod was that two of tho candidates woro in the field for' important committoo chairman­ships, which llccd would possibly oiler them by way of consolation in event of his election.

The capitol this morning1 presented an appearanco of animation that it has riot known since tho dissolution of tho Fiftieth congress. Tho gathering of the republican representatives gave to it its lively appearance, it is said a western combination lias been formed by which the position of doorkeeper will bo given to Wheat, of Wisconsin, in the event of Ueed and McPherson being elected speaker and clerk, respectively.

Mr. Reed, whon asked who would pro-sent his namo to tho caucus, said there would be no formal nomination. Mr. Uuttorworth, manager of McKinlcy's campaign, said ho would probably pro-sent his candidate to the caucus, but tliero would be no speech making.

At 12:30 General Henderson of Illin­ois, had been chosen chairman and a call of tho roll was had, showing I<55 of tho 109 republican representatives pres­ent. At 12:*r> the first ballot was taken, resulting as follows:

lteed, 78; Mclvinloy, 30; Cannon, 22; Burrows, 10; Henderson, 1U.

Tho talk now was all Heed and on tho second ballot a gentleman who had been in earnest conversation with a Heed ©an jyst before tho doors closod said Reed would have had votes enough to elect on the first ballot if he would have consented to support Adams for tho doorkeopership, but Reed would not go back on Wheat.

On the second ballot Uecd was nomi­nated, recoiving 8."» votes. McThcrson was nominated clerk of the house and on the first ballot, recoiving 1.10 votes against 50 for Carson.

On motion of McKinley Heed's nomi­nation was made unanimous. Hon. A. J. Holmes, of Iowa, a member of the last house, has been nominated for sorgeant-at-ann8.

RECRUITS FOR THE BROTHERHOOD.

A Newspaper Huriied Out. Tonovro, Nov. 30.—The Truth build­

ing was guttod by fire last night. Loss, §90,000; insurance not ascertained.

Many nuihlin^s Burned. ALIIANY, N. \\, Nov. 30.—The Dole-

van Gasoline works woro destroyed by fire this morning, and tho five-story balding of Jacob Leonard «fc Son, paper manufacturers, was completely gutted. Several adjoining buildings occupied as residences wero destroyed. boss, $75,000.

Pre-Kmption Law# AH Right. Sioux FALIS, S. D., NOV. 30.—A few

woeks ago the attorney of tho Northern Pacific railroad land department claimed to have made the important discovery that pre-emption entries wero forbidden by tho omnibus bill, and thai; us soon 03 the new states had boon admitted to tho union the settler could not lil'' a pre­emption claim. The section in the! omnibus bill upon which the discovery \ was based was section 21. j

Ex-Senator Grigsby returned from 1 Washington yesterday, and as he hail j business dealings with the pre-emption8

session of the interior department he • had occasion to investigate the legality \ of tho question raiised. The ex-senator, : in explanation of tho investigations he j had made that convinced him that the ! Northern said:

The old pre-emption law of 18-11, begin­ning with section 10, was mado a part of the revised statutes, and section :'59'» of the revised statutes imikiu that ivvision tho law and repeal* all antecedent statutes. This repealed the statute of !Ml effectu­ally, and the clause in section 2-1 of the ad­mission act is nn idle phrr.se. It has been decided by the supreme court several times that the revised statutes uro the law, and in the construction of its pro­visions reference sholl not be made to the antecedent law except where the meaning is obscure. But section 551*0, in 'my judg­ment, settles the question.

Members of the Players' Leaffno Say Thoy Aro (Jetting There With "ISotli Feet." CiucAoo, Nov. 30.—There is an air of

mystery about the headquarters of tho brotherhood in this city, and it U so denso that it could not have boen cut with a cheese knife. Telegrams galoro aro received from all parts of tho coun­try, and from tho satisfied smiles worn by the insiders it is plain that tho play­ers' league is getting there with what in street parlance might be termed "both feet."

All the prime movers in the brother­hood are at work seeking for new play­ers and trying their persuasive powers on the old ones who have not yet joined with them. So far their elYorts have been wonderfully successful and upward of seventy first class plavors have been signed by Ward, I'feller, llanlon, Ewing, Keefe, O'Hourke, Irwin and Weidon* feller. Of this number fully two-thirds are ball players of reputation and many of them st.'vvs of the first magnitude. In fact Anson, Glasscock, Denny, Boyle, Hutchison, Gubmert, Burns, Glcason, Schriver, t'lements and one or two more are about the onl> old leaguers of noto who nave not affixed their signaturo to the brotherhood con­tracts. In addition to the recruits from the American association compriso such men as C'omiskey, King. Baldwin, Latham, Stovoy, Daley and others, and Mr. Weidcnfelior claims that the play­ers' league can got as many nioro men from the association as are needed. Those who have joined with the brother­hood up to date aro Keefe. O'Hourke, Kelly, Ward, llanlon, Galvin. Carroll, Miller, Staley, Irwin, Mack. Beck-ley, Dunlap, Howe. White, Kuehno Sowders, Sunday, Maul, Pfelfet'. low­ing, Hyan, Baldwin, .lack Boyle. King, Latham, Coiniskey, Daley, Slattery, Kaalz, Twiteheli, Bakely, Nutcliffe, Crane, Welch, Williamson, Darling, Bastian, DuUy, Tenor, Dwyer, Strieker, Morris, Fields, Carney, Beecher, Fore­man, Cross, Hailman. Farrar, Bufilnton, Fogarty, Thompson, Wood, Myers, Muivoy, Brouthers, Kilroy, Murphy, O'Day, Whitney, Connor. Gore, Tucker, Bierbatier, Andrews, Seery and sev­eral others of lesser note. But even with this formidable array of talent tho brotherhood is not satisfied and is still on tho lookout for now players. It leaked out yesterday that before he left Chicago an arrangement was inado with Mark Baldwin to look after the association players and win over as many of them as possible. Pfefi'er, Ward, llanlon and Jrwin have also in­structions to keep up tho work of colo­nisation, if such it may bo called, and Ward has just started out a number of secret agents on a still hunt for the stars of the miner leagues. ' It was quietly hinted that an important conference of brotherhood ollieials would be held at the Tremont yesterday, but it failed to come off. However, it will likely bo held within a week audit will \v; at­tended by President Johnson, of Clove-land, John M. Ward, Captain llanlon, of Pittsburg, and Captain Hwiug. of New York. At that lime delegates will most likely be chosen lor the conven­tion to ho held m Now York, Decem­ber 10.

A BLACK FIEND A Crazy Negro Nearly Kills Two

Italians and Causes Much Terror.

An Elephant on a Rampage Cleans Out a Livery

Stable.

West Point, Neb., Citizens Missed rheirTlmnksgiving Dinner to 8ee

the Circus—Women Nearly Kill a Kipper.

A Vessel Foundered. CHICAGO, Nov. :to.—The largest sail­

ing vessel on the lnke-». tho live-master David Dows. foundered yesterday after-neon twenty miles southeaster Chicago. Tho crew had a terriblo rough exper­ience, but wero finally saved. Tho ves­sel cost $100,000 when built, six years j ago. Her cargo consisted of 2,250 ions ' of coal. She was a victim of the terri­ble Thanksgiving galo that wrought havoc with the sl/.'amer Caliuwi, ofi" lOvanston. and nearly cost the lives of nine workmen in the cruuson above tho n'nv water tunnel, two miles out in the lake from this city.

IjoiKfciseelcor Soeakr?. CHICAGO, Nov. —In the Cronin case

today Jud^e Longeneekcr resumed his speech. Tho states attorney dwelt for some time on showing the motive that actuated the conspirators to commit tho crime and told again how tho murdered physioiau had openly charged the triangle With mUappropriaung tho funds of the order aa l for the purpose oi covering the thef: of the triangle, claiming tin? dejlc'.ency had been ex­pended in dangerous work abroad, when the money had gone no further than the

flan Amuck Through the Streets. Ni:w YOUK, NOV. 30.—A negro with

high cheek bonos, little eyes and bushy hair and whiskers looking like a Zulu, went out on tho war path yesterday afternoon and nearly killed two un­offending Italians. Ho ran out of tho tenement at 70 EaBt Houston street with a warwhoop, a short-handled ax in hlft right hand and a dish-pan in his left,' hold to his breast as a shield. He first met Branca Salvatore, upon whoso head ho brought down with full force the blade of his weapon. Tho Italian dropped. With him was F'lippo Lom­bard!, his nephew. The latter tried to getaway, but tho negro was too quick for him, and down came tho weapon on his head, lie too curled upon tho ground, the blood spurting from tho wound in­flicted. Tho madman ran toward the Bowery, with a big crowd at his back. Two girls saw him coming and oscapod up the stairB of the elevated railroad feta­tion. A woman with a child in her arms was not so fortunate. She started on a run for tho southwest corner of Bowery and Houston street, but fell, and the frantic negro was over her in an instant, with his ax in the air. Stones woro Hying thick and fast about his head by this time, and one well dlrocted hit him in tho oar and he fell stunned. A blow on tho hoad from a policoman s club was necessary to reduce him to sub­mission. A double-barrelled pistol was taken from his pocket. Ho was hustled to tho Mulberry streot station honso, whore tho Italians were having their heads dressed. Tho wounded will re­cover and the negro will go to the luna­tic asylum.

Au Elephant on the Rampage.

WEST POINT, Neb., Nov. 30.—Thanks giving was a lively day here. Nobody went to church and half the inhabitants missed their dinner, all becauso an ele­phant arrived in town that proved a cir­cus and menagerie all in one. Tho animal arrived on tho way freight early in tho morning, consigned to Sonnesliien & Valentine, real estate agents, who had ordered him for adver­tising purposes. The elephant was con­fined in a mammoth crato and was easily unloaded and the consignees* notified of his arrival. Thoy, however, refused to pay the freight charges of $500, and word was at once sent to headquarters at Omaha. In tho mean­time the elephant had broken out of tho

| crate and started up the principal i street. His first objective point was a livery stable, where he ato a balo of

; hay and cleaned out tho establishment. Ho then crossed the street and smashed

! in the plate glass front of Crawford & | Daho's new brick block. From t here he i proceeded to Thompson Bros.' drug ' store and demolished the entire side of ! their elegant new building. Hero his j caroer was ended by the city marshal : with the aid of nearly every able-bodied | man in town, who threw coils of ropo

around him and dragged him back to the depot, followed by the entiro popu-

STONED THE NEW ARCHBISHOP.

Boisterous Scenes at the Installation of n Toronto Divine.

TOKONTO, Ont., Nov. 29.—Archbishop Walsh, who was recently appointed to this diocese, was installed last night with imposing ceremony. Two hun­dred Catholic citizens went to Hamilton to meet him as he came from London, aocompanied by Bishop Dowling, Arch­bishop Cleary and several other leading divines. Senator Frank Sm&th headed the Toronto deputation. At Toronto a great crowd wasenoountured. This was composed largely of Catholics, but a small sprinkling of ultra-Protestants made their influenoe felt. There was a good deal of hooting, Dut tho Catholios tried to down this with cheering. On Queen street an attack with stones was made on the archbishops car­riage. One stone smashed a windo - , but hurt no one. The police charged on all sides, but wero unable to mano ar­rests. On Shuler streot a showor of snowballs woro thrown, but here ugain the police wero unable to secure any of the hoodlums. After tho archbishop reached the cathedral the disorder ceased. Addresses woro tendered by the clergy and laity of tho diocese, and in his reply ArohbishopTValph said that the Catholic religion was in this country before all others, and would keep its hold in face of all opposition. He ex­pressed his sympathy and good will toward all denominations. A banquet was tendered his grace at St. Michael's Palaoe.

A Reign of Terror. MACON, Ga., Nov. 29.—Tho recent

lawlessness In Madison county is thus explained: Owing to a split among the whites tho negroes havo hold tho bal­ance of power. At tho last term of court forty negroes petitioned Judge Lump­kin to have their names placed on tho

a list. Being ignored they orgt^n-for vengeance and threatened to ex­

terminate tho whites. Notices wero served on prominent white men to leavo. Tho leader of tho negroes was William Parham. Sevoral nights ago a body of unknown men took him out and floggod him, threatening to repeat tho doso if ho did not leavo.

Later a colored man's residenco was visited near Paoli and in a fight wnich fddlowcd an old negro named Tom Nuss was shot and killed while endeavoring to escape. Another negro named Gray was seriously wounded. At first it was thought the shooting was dono by whito mon, but it is now proven that it was tho work of negroes, who took advant­age of the trouble to settle old griev­ances among themselves. A negro went to Danielsvillo and swore out warrants against several white men, but they

j established alibis. One of tho negroes who was in the house testified that the regulators woro all blaok.

POWDER Absolutely Pure.

This powder neror varies. A mtrrel ot ptirlty, rtrengtjj tnd whokiOmeneM. Mor# ccqnouilctl than the Ordinary kinds, and ca*' nol be cold in competition with th« multitude of lov te»t, itort weight alum or phopphattf powders. Sold onlj In cani, Rotii. Buuia PO-WDB* C»„ 10# Wall 1 street, N.

Latest Stvlos in

MILLINERY MORRIS SISTERS.

lat-ion.

l'aci lie attorney was wronjr. ! ̂ 0^ „f tho

They Confessed. ST. Louis, Nov. 30. —In addition to

tho nine men arrested in tho Chickasaw nation for robbing tho Santa Fo train at Berwyn Monday night, two women, wives of the men, have been arrested. At their homes in Adermoro

A Thanksgiving Cyclone. CIIAKI.OTTK, N. C.. Nov. 20.—A de­

structive cyclone parsed over a portion of Buford county Thursday, doing great damage. The residence of a farmer near Washington, the county seat, way blown down and the whole family, eon sisting of father, mother and four chil­dren, killed instantly. A factory near Washington was blown down and two persons killed, while a dozen others re­ceived serious injuries. The reports UM very meager and it i* impossible yet to-got all the names of the killed.

Due the Government, WASHINGTON, NOV. 30.—Tho annual

report of General Hepburn, solicitor oi the treasury, shows that the stun ol

Women Mol> a Hipper. MAHKII). Nov. 30.—A man supposed

to 1)0 "Jack tho Hipper" was sot upon by a crowd of women in tho poorer quar­ter of tho city this morning whilo ho was in the custody of otllcers who wero removing him from tho jail to tho court room, where he was to be arraigned on the charge of having recently commit­ted a murder under circumstances re-

Will Call More Witnesses. CHICAGO, Nov. 29.—Before tho oourt i

opened in tho Cronin oaso this morning ! Mr. Forrest stated to a United Press re porter that he had eight or ton wit­nesses to introduce today, tho tak­ing of whose evidence would prob­ably consume tho whole of the day. The court room was crowded long beforo tho caso was galled and many were unable to gain admission. Judgo Longeneckor in continuance of rebuttal testimony oalled ll. F. Carborry, who swore that ho was in Donahy's saloon tho evoning of May 4 from 4:30 until 8:30 o'clock, and he was positive the proprietor of tho place was not in tho saloon during that, tlmo. This contra­dicts Donahy's testimony which was that ho was in his placo ai that timoand said Martin Burke was there.

Will Marry Her Rescuer. EAH CLAIRE, Wis., Nov. 29.—Miss

Marian Shu to and Adelbert Brewer, a young business man, will be married to­morrow. Last summer thoy wore mem­bers of a camping party at a norllieim Wisconsin lake. Miss ShutjC, whij$ gathering water lilies, fell from her boat and Brewer plunged in, swam to her assistance and roscuod her. An ln-timato acquaintance followed and *ft-sults in tomorrow's wedding.

Fatal Kxplosfon of a Grindstone. KAT.AMAZOO, Mich., Nov. 29. — A

dpm hi'T.ondyn.0' Th^^erowd"increased

, ,. , , , , tw'° lar£°: $3S,0()0,000, principal and interest, is packages of jewelry, taken from the r:*-press car, wero found. Tho women made confessions, implicating tho men under arrest and several others who are still at large.

Omaha's I'ulilic Building. WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.—It has lioen

discovered at the treasury department that the aggregate awards for tho prop­erty condemned for the public building at Omaha, Nob., aro less than tho ap­propriation of #400,000 instead of greater than that amount as at iirst supposed. Consequently no legal stops will bo taken to recover the supposed excess that had been stated.

Naval Recommendations. WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.—Tho report of

Commodore Walker, chief of tho bureau of navigation, recommends among other things that no man without pre­vious naval service, abovo the age of 35 years, be hereafter enlisted; that tho enlistment of aliens for the general ser­vice bo discourged with a view to its final discontinuance.

Frustrated the Plot. PKSTH, NOV. 30.—During tho session

of the lower houso of the Hungarian diet yesterday llaron Kass informed tho chamber that tho opposition had discov­ered a plot to assassinato llorr Tisza. tho Ilungariun primo minister, by tho use of dynamite. They had, howover, succeeded in frustrating it.

Lincoln's Little Son Dyinjj. LONDON, Nov. 30.—Tho littlo son of

Robert Lincoln, the American minister to Great Britain, is dying at Versailles, and Mr. Lincoln has gono there in post baste. A telegraphic mesjago received at tho American legation from Ver-lailles conveys th» sad intelligence that tho child probably cannot survive many tours.

due the government, as evidenced by judgments of circuit and district courts, but that no reliable estimate can bo given of the value of tho judgments. The solicitor asks that au appropriation of 810.000 he expended in huuting up these debtors and their property, in ordor that the collection of theso judg­ments can be made.

Murderers Arrested. DENVF.K, NOV. 30.—Tho United State?

marshal has arrested J. B. Feazer and J. Isor, two of the principal actors in the bloody county seat war in Stephens county, Kan., in which Sheriff Cross and four deputies wero killed on one side and ono of Fcazer's men on tho other. Feazcr has been hero some timo work­ing as a painter. A third party has been arrested near Pueblo. All threo will be turned over to Kansas authorities for trial.

Tho New Republic Reeognizcil. Rio JAM-MIIO, Nov. ,-JO.—Tho govern

ment has finally readoptod tbe old flag. 1 his action has given rise to some irri­tation. Franco has recognized tho ro-public.

Rescued (lie Inmates. LONDON, NOV. 30.—The fever hospital

at Rochester has burned. A41 the in mates were rescued, but fifteen of them wero taken from places whore thoy wore 111 groat danger. ^

*

llun Down by a Train. DBS MOI.NF.S, la., Nov. 30.—James

Uorinan, a section hand employed on tho lies Homes Union railroad, was run over and killed this morning by a train

in numbers until it reached upward of n<l(). nio iiy vi'innen, and it was only through Uie utmost efforts of tho gov­ernor of Madrid and a strong force of gendarmes that the yri.soner'H life was saved. As it was, he was so severely beaten that the services of a physician wero nceessary to restore him to a con­dition rendering tho legal proceedings in his care possible.

Shot Herself Cor IJOVC. CINCINNATI, Nov. 30.—Cleo. Nelson, a

beautiful girl 21 years old, living at 507 Central avenue, shot herself fatally this morning. Whon found sho clasped in ono hand a pair of white kid gloves. It i'i supposed from this that the tragedy was caused by a love aifair. Miss Nel­son came hero a year ago from Louis­ville.

Jefferson llnviN* Condition. Isii---.v OIU.KANS, Nov. 30.—.lefrerson

Davis passod a restless and nnsatisfac-tory night, lie is still a very sick man

Redmond Goes to .Tail. DI'DI.IX, Nov. 30.—Mr. liedmond,

editor of tho Watertown News, was to­day sentenced to threo months' impris­onment for intimidation.

The Village Big Man. Whilo traveling did yoti ever notice

the advent into tho train of tho village big man? says tho Cincinnati Times" Star. Every town has its big man—not generally more than one. That is there is no othor man who approaches near in importance tho certain big rasn. lie is most always a lawyer, occasionally a doctor.

But about his entering tho car. The 6ig man has several modes of commu­nicating tho fact of his presenco. Gen­erally it is with his nose. Sometimes a resounding "hawk," stamp of cane, or the tromondously loud and solemn tones of his voice in making the simplest, most threadbare expression. Mostly, howover. his nose it is which gives no uncertain sound and by which all are made aware of tho presenco of an in­dividual of note.

Ho is immovablo and silent, savo an occasional blast, as a ways'.do tree. Ho poses m the whole seat "with a graceful majostv that comes of long years of con­stant, diligent pra:tico. By and by tho city is reached.

Big man unconsciously reveals anal-most impcrcoptsblo interest, and evon anxiety.

Begins to realize that ho is out of hU depths In this great massing of huge buildings, and with no familiarity awed country neighbor s countenance in sight.

Lo, his stupendous air of importance is at a swift ebb. And as he alights from tho car and walks off in the crowd his is all tho appearanco of mingled curiosity, mistrust and general wide-eyed verdancy of tho veriest jay.

Verily, hpw we apples do swim—at home.

room of the Kalamazoo Spring cvnd Axle works burst today. A pieoo of tho stone weighing a ton flew fifty feet and crushed through p brick wall. Irving Hail was struck and possibly fatally In­jured. As tho piece ilew through tho building it knockod two more men •iown.

A Dead Poet. LONDON, Nov. 29.—Martin Farquahir

Tuppor, tho poet, is dead. Ho was best known as author of "Provorbial Philo­sophy." lio was 7!) years old.

THE MARKETS.

Live Stock. 8IOUX OITT, Not. ?0.

Hoos—Light, [email protected]; mixed, 18.50 @3.55; heavy, [email protected].

CATTLE—Steora. 1.100 to 1,300 lbs., t3j 1.75; feeders, {[email protected]; stockers, $1.! """I .w^«.vw, owwnvtO,

2.35; cows, common to good, $1.25@?.SS; ' ei.003l.60; yearlings, [email protected]:

veal calves, 91.00^2.00. bulls,

SOUTH OMAHA. Nov. 30. Hoas—Light, 83.0.(38.6 ; heavy, $3.53

(33.00; mlxod, [email protected]. CATTLB—Primo, 1,303 to 1,600 pound

beeves, $3.1X)@4.00: good 1,1CI0 to 1 300 pound beeves, [email protected]; westerns e2.&)(fi) 8.10; fair to good cows, [email protected]; good to choice oows, 8^[email protected]>0; feeders, $3-30® 3.00; stoekers, $2.^002.00; bulls, |1.50m 2.10.

KAKSAS CITY, Nov. 80. CATTLB — Native beeves, 83.00® .70;

stoekers and feeders, [email protected]. Boos—Light, |3.<i®'j.&); heavy and

mixed, e3.o5@3>73.

CmoAoo, Nov. 80. Hoos—Light, |[email protected]; mixed, $3.58

@3.80; heavy, [email protected]>. CATTLE—Native steers, light to heavy

shipping, $2.H>@4.50; cows, bulls nnd mixed, fl.80@'i.UO; stoekers and feeders [email protected]; Texans, $1.> [email protected]. '

SHEEP—Natives, »'[email protected]; westerns, 83.1.00*0.0; Texans, e3.([email protected]

Grain and Provisions. CHICAGO, Nov. 3>

WHEAT—November, 78>£c; December TOJic; May, 83^c.

Cons—November, 82^0; May 83e-OATS—December, 20>(,o; May, 22%c. KTK—November, 45c. BABLKY—November, 60e. FLAXSBBU—Cwh, 11.86; May, IMS. TIMOTHY—Prime, $1.01. WHISKEY—$1.08. PouK—November,$9.75; Jannary,$0-27V. LAUD—November, $0.10: January, $5 02W. Snoui.DEBS—t4.87X@4-o0 short olofcrs.

[email protected]. SnonT Rins—November, $5.87}<-BUTTER—Creamery, 17@2lc; dairy, 11(9

21c. CHEESE—Full cream Cheddars and flats,

young Americas, e. Eoos—Fresh, io.

MINNEAPOLIS, NOV. 30. WABAT—No. 1 hard, November, V7^c,

May, 83We; on track, 78c. No. 1 northern,Ncvembcr, 74%c; May, 81c; on track, 7BWc; No. 2 northern, Nof.mber, 7ft ; tSMj, 78e; on track, 71078c.

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Svr 3