Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 51, Number 52, Jasper, Dubois County, 24 September 1909 — Page 3

DEATH CONQUERS CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF MINNESOTA. CAREER OF A SELF-MADE MAN Born of Humble Swedish Parentage, He Rose Almost to Presidential Nomination. K hcster, Minn., Special: Gov. John A n f ...hiison (lieu nt a:at luuauuy mumTijp end cnmo as ho lay peace-hi.'c-plni?. nftor four days of fighti his life, following an operation a. 'Ok for an Intestinal abscess. cjovernor was conscious almost , .ml. He seetned to realize that . dving, but he did not spoak of i tu- of the doctors felt the dying iinlso. After a moment he exi "Hi-is gone." With a cry of Mr." Johnson foil upon the ,,.! und burst into tears. The , , ut- was most pitiful. i Albert Johnson, Governor of .ta. was born at St. Peter. July 2S. 1S01. His father and were Gustave and Caroline .n. who were born in Sweden and a ,,! to this country. Thoy were a i -1 poor. rn-- step by stop, winning every , .? h.. way by sheer force of char- . lucatlng hlinsof, saving every hat could be saved until he eni pt.es and the road to fame and ,f not gnat fortune, was opened . i At one time he was a candlr Pre.-ddent of the United States , it w.-re many who believed him , lulate host lltted for the high- . u the girt of the nation. 1 . aK' of the lad was sent to jiit how, no ono but the heroic tvtr knew. He studied for ..us. and at the ago of 12 he ! to ro to work and help supranuly. He first drove a groi,. r wagon and then obtained a drug store. A little Inter he Mirk in n general store, i-f of 15 tho boy informed his at he must quit working and v . .! Mipport the family. From n he did. of 25 Johnson, without !iMrinl experience, was made i ü little Democratic paper in own, tho St. Peter Herald. : r was H. J. Easier, and they . i ''Ml printing work under t Jc .,. of Ussier & Johnson. Juno . .. married Miss Elinore Pres:l as editor of a party organ ' n-.n into tho political field ! - lie was elected to the State ! l hU strong qualities of personal j. - .-in and popularity winning him tl. ,...-f ,n a strong Republican (lis " in 1102 he was defeated for re i. as State Senator, and this in -'ratiRe as it may seem, turned fortunate for him. i' ; " he was nominated for Gov ' ' the Democratic party as a 'r -n hope of cutting down the plurra f the Republican party, which r ) minated a man of cor pt'M un affiliations, but whom no one ' . l to defeat with the impetus of T !.-. Roosevelt at the head of the ' Johnson, however, was elected ' a i irlty of 7,000. although Roose '. . nrried the State by 101,000 l " u years later he was re-elect-a majority of 72,000 and this in . i. i u'lioan State. In 1908 he was ! auain. !'. - this year he was a candidate f Democratic nomination for - i. and. although favored by tho imTvative element of the partin Jennings Bryan was noniir. ! i i !ier and badly beaten. öl Johnson was known as a t the people. He forced the r a two cent railroad rate bill I lied the binder twine trust exactions In Minnesota. u:or Johnson Is succeeded by iirit Governor Eberhardt, who ru in as Governor Tuesday. fi. . FOR TWO LECTURES In New York Hippodrome Dr. Cook Is Offered $10,000. York Special: The first htmlr received by Dr. Cook on his as from the Messrs. Sintbert, "I ready to pay him $10.000 for lay night lectures at the Hipprovided, of course, that they tirst lectures he gives in New The Messrs. Shubert hope Dr. ill accept their proposal, which 'i to take under serious consid'II v a-. r . Great Storm In South. 'ans. La., Special: The tropane which swept the Gulf ' Louisiana and Mississippi on aused the death of at least nons and a property loss of and left New Orleans nnd r cities in four States pracinit out from communication outside world by wire for ! nir bourn. i' a, t. ' 'a , nan. . t-a , t. i Emigrant Girl Gets Prize. v York. Special: Pauline Garb, ' old. who couldn't speak a f I'ngliHh when she landed here ' 1 -"da nine months ago with a r immigrants, received n nry the commencement exercises ' iron de Hirsch school, Jeffer s and East Broadway, for a ""lt omposltlon entitled, "Amer- .. All Off Again. t K-r,. cable: All the beautiful storh, ,a8f fcw (la'8 regarding n ' Htlon between the Duke of and Miss Katherine Elklns.hls " t dance, have been upset by the am.in, t o 1 made a rear admiral, will .r. herember on a cruise that will r. r " veral months. ..r '1' elf Before Students. irZ'l - Special: a fashionably Le o." woman fatally shot herself in .....1R room of the Park Hotel, In , r. pre of m atu(ients fa

WASTING OUR TIMBER.

Government Expert Saya Forests Are Being Ruthlessly Destroyed. Washington Special: A startling situation has developed as the result of n taking of stock of the forestry resources of this country, according to Treadwoll Cleveland. Jr., expert In the Bureau or Industry, In a bulletin Just mado public, entitled "The Status of Forestry In tho United States." It has shown. Mr. Cleveland declares, that we are still destroying tho forost us wo use it; that we are taking from it every year three and a half times as much wood as Is added by tho new growth. It has been shown that less than one-third of tho growing trees foiled by the lumbermen is ever used at all, so that two-thirds of the timber cut is simply destroyed. It has been shown that one-elovemh of all forests is swept by fire every year, anil that on tho average since i!70 forest flrbs have yearly coat $50.oo,oo in timbor nud fifty lives. King's Son Dies. Bnngkoff Cable: Prince Frubongdo. youngest son of the King of Slam. Is dead. The little princ-e was known as a general favorite during the King of Slam's last trip through Europe. ftSi COOK MAKES A TRIUMPHAL ENTRY INTO AMERICA. ALL NEW YORK ACCLAIMS HIM Distinguished Explorer Declares He Has at Hand Irrefutable Proof of His Feat. Now Y'ork Special: He who first stood uikmi tho apex of the world Dr. Frederick Albert Cook was welcomed home Tuesday amid a demonstration of popular confidence and enthusiasm without a parallel In the history of this city. Hundreds of thousands acclaimed him an the hero of the North from the moment he left the deck or the steamship Oaear II, on which ho arrived from Copehagon. until he had completed his triumphal Journey through streets lined tor miles by cheering throng. For hiui a flotilla of peace shrilled stentorian salutes, and from the waters of the rock-wulled Hudson the sirens of a foreign ileet of war sounded in noisy greetings. By a stiange coincidence and almost at the same hour, Commander Robert E. Peary, whose announcement of reaching the pole was coupled with the claim of being the only white man to reach there, sailed into the harbor of Sydney. N. S., amid another enthusiastic welcome, in which the public dignitaries of Nova Scotia Joined in giving ollkial as well as public recognition to the returning explorer. Dr. Cook announced that he had brought with him Irrefutable proof of his right to the title of the discoverer of the north pole; that he was ready to meet Commander Peary at any time, and that he would gue his data and observations to the scientific world as soon as they could be properly classified and arranged. Dr. Cook received his first American greeting half a mile off Quarantine, from newspaper men on the tug C. P. Raymond. His first words were an expression of thanks to the American people and a defiance of Commander Robert E. Peary Wl his chargesthat the Brooklyn explorer had not discovered the north pole. In the upper bay Dr. Cook was transferred to the tug John K. Gilkeson. which had come to meet him with his wife and children and his kin, from whom he had been separated so long. After the reunion he was claimed by the public and. from the deck of the tug, was the focus of scores of cameras and the target of half a hundred Interviewers. Soon after his arrival Explorer Cook Issued a formal statement relative to the expressions of disbelief of his story- The signed statement in part was as follows: "On Board the Oscar II. After one of the most delightful trips of my life across the Atlantic I am indeed glad once more to see the shores of my native land. 1 have come from the "pole. I have brought my story" and my data with me. The public already has a tangible and a specific record of that trip. In a very short time the narrative, with all the observations, will be published and placed before the world for examination. "The expedition was private. It was started out without the usual publicity bombast Mr. John R. Bradley furnished the money and I shaped the destiny of the venture. For the time being it concerned us only, but the re sults were so important that on re turning I at once placed before the public a report containing the main outline of the work. "I have not come home to enter Into arguments with one man or with fifty men, but I am here to present a clear record of a piece of work over which I have a right to display a certain amount of pride. "When scientists study the detailed observations and the narrative In Its consecutive order I am certain that in the due course of events all will be compelled to admit the truth of my statement Frederick A. Cook." Another Aviation Week. Paris, Cable: Thirty-four entries havo been received up to date for the "aviation fortnight" at Juvlsv. Oc tober 3 to 17. Prizes of 140.000 are already assured, and, according to Count Jacques d'Aublgny, the affair will bo second Jn importance only to tho Rheims aviation week. Break the Herring Catch Record. London, Cable: Tho Grimsby her ring fleet broko the Reason's record for a nigntfl eaten recently, wnen los drifters landed between them a total of over D.O00.0OO herrings.

ffl I III

COOK AND PEARY GIVE MORMON THEORY JOLT. LOCATED TRIBES AT NORTH POLE But Explorers Declare ' Pole Bleak Desert of Ice, and Mormon Elders Are In Bad. Salt Lake city. Utah. Special: Mormonlsm In Utah got a sevore Jolt when the announcement was mado by Dr. Cook and Commander Peary that the north pole country had beon discovered and found to be nothing more than a bleak desert of Ice. Since the beginning of Mormonlsm tho followers have thing to tho theory of the land about tho ioIe being occupied by the descendants of the ton tribes of Israel who left Palestine a few centuries before Christ and traveled In a northerly direction for a year and a half. Through a series of remarkable discoveries and revelations tho Mormons claimed to have located the descendants of tho ten. tribes at the north pole, which must surely have been their stopping place ir they traveled north from Palestine for a year and n half. To confirm the theory that the descendants, probably many millions In number, were In the north polo country, the books of Isaiah and Jeremiah were referred to by the Mormon elders and missionaries. In these books many references are made to the Lord's peojde of the north and how they would be "brought down from the north." Joiephus, the Jewish historian, is sponsor for the statement that the ten tribes went north a year and a half. Through revelations and inspirations tho Mormons drafted the story of the descendants being co-fnvoritos of the Lord with the Mormons. The ten tribes wore tho chosen people of the Lord in the early days, while the Mormons claim to be tho chosen people of the latter days, and for that reason they call themselves Latter Day Snints. A sense of protection always has been felt by the Mormons in the teachings that in the day when they were In the sorest need of help from the opponents of their rollglon the north pole tribes would march down to Utah and combine forces with the Mormons. Led by the Lord, tho two armies of saints would be a world power, and all other religions would fall before the progress of "the army of the Lord." With the dlscover of the pole and the failure of the discoverers to lo cate the missing tribes, Mormonlsm is suffering considerable ridicule from those who often have listened to the Mormon elders staunchly advocating the north pole theory. It Is up to the teachers to arrange a new account of the whereabouts of the ten tribes and their descendants. No explanation has been offered as yet by the president and chief reveiator of the church. SEPARATE BOUDOIRS Will Be Provided For Hens in $20,000 Chicken Palace. New York, Special: If the hens belonging to Ray Ralney. at Huntington. L. I., do not appreciate the efforts of their owner to make them comfort able they will surely be ingrates. They are to lay eggs in the future In a $20.000 house. Ho has a liking for fancy chickens and conceived the Idea that the hens will thrive better if they are made as comfortable as he is himself, and had plans drawn for a $20.000 house. Each hen Is to have her separate boudoir. (Common hens call them nests). A record will be kept of the eggs laid by each pullet and the length of her life will depend somewhat upon her output and their hatching quality. OH, YOU SUFFRAGETTES! English Women Tear off Roof and Hurl Brick at Asquith. Glasgow, Cable: Despite extraordinary precautions taken to prevent suffragette demonstration a band of women succeed in eluding the vigilanco of tho police and ascended to the roof of a house adjoining the hall where Mr. Asquith was speaking. Reaching the roof the women with an ar loosened slates and bricks, which they threw at the police in the street The police finally dislodged tho suffragettes with a fire hose and they were taken to goal. While Mr. Asquith was leaving the hall another suffragette hurled a brick at his automobile, narrowly missing him. Wright Rides In Dirigible. Berlin. Cable: Orvlllo Wright has returned here from Frankfort, where ho made a trip in the Zeppelin dirigible balloon. Speaking or his sensations, he said ballooning did not compare with the flight of an aeroplano in the sense of power over tho elements or the exhilaration from rapidity of motion. Mr. Wright is to make another aeroplane flight in Berlin. Wheat Sowing Now On. St. Louis, Mo., Special: Tho Moilorn Miller, on tho crop outlook, says winter wheat farmers are busy preparing the soil, which Is In excellent condition to receive the seed. A full acreage of winter wheat is probable. Soedlng will be general by Oct 1. Yearling Colt Brings 5OO.O0O. Buanos Ayres, Cable: A yearling thoroughbred colt by Baldo has Just been old here for J 60,000, the highest price on record in any country. The colt was bred in the Argeatlnc Republic

HYPNOTIZED' BY LOVER. Pittsburg Girl Was Influenced to Steal Thousands. Pittsburg. Pa.. Special: Pittsburg police record tho most sensational case of hypnotism on record. Stella Jones, a buxom bookkeeper of tho Ohio and Pennsylvania Milk Company, at Uraddock. Is under arrest, charged with stealing $3,000 from her employers to give to her alleged Intended husband, G. W. Eslor, who also Is under arrest, charged with being a suspicious person. The police allege Esler hypnotized the girl; making her steal for him. Esler was Keeping three other women and hiring an auto by tho month, presumably on the money furnished by Miss Jones, who has been a most consistent church worker in Braddock. Miss Jones, who comes of a good family in Pittsburg, collapsed In her cell and two physicians are attending her. She has made a confession of all her stealings, trying to shield Es lex, who also travels under Ui4cJHime

arrested many time- TlaTrewwt urougnt about by h)formUtl)it; ball him out. but the pollcerffiftd to permit this and began to look' Jap ner connection with the young maa, D ESKIMO ROMANCE RESULTS FROM PEARY'S DASH. HOW OOKEVAH WON EWAL00 Successful Journey of Young Tribes man and Resulting Reward Buys Bride From Parents. Battle Harbor (By Marconi Wireloss Telegraph, via Cape Race, N. F.) : One of the passengers on the Roosevelt must have been Dan Cupid, and the first north pole romance In the world's history Is told by Commander Peary. It concerns one of the four Eskimos who were with Peary at the north pole, Ookevah by name, and Ewaloo. an attractive 19-year-old Eskimo girl. Ewaloo's mother died, and her father. Ikwah, marriod again, aud Ewaloo was not happy with her stepmother. Sho fell in love with Ookevah and they wished to get to housekeeping in their snow Igloo, but Ik wah objected. When '.he Roosevelt arrived Commander Peary told the assembled natives that four men would be chosen, to go to the highest latitude. It was his Intention, ho said ,to bestow a number of presents on thoso-fonr on 'their return. If-they reached Jh' polei j.Me ..would giva to each of tkfour fuiUi.&B41miHUHltIou, IClll tlUU, I HUI!! AHu.iuTBpitie;riur nlshings for a house, 'W Ookevah, who fs 24 years old,' and who had never been on the. Ice with Peary, heard the oonHuaade's announcement and applied 'for the priv ilege of being onet the for.tq go. to the front- He said that it he reached the pole arid secjtre'd the preheats he would get the' eotisest of Ewaloo's father. Peary 4old"ki-n. he would give him a chance. - igZ .v t rom ine meraeai. 'iL, taking leave or Ewaloo tue brave lfctivfi proved one of the most düs'vi the polar paity. nil endurance In XfÄ and experienced Wkn ontfte tr Peary's system Is ysurvlva fittest, men. dqra irad siedg love triumphed, Qnthe lttiuioo tney were -matneu stars and stripes., t"em cave to them their wed and they had taelrhbaey Roosevelt during 'the' ' steamer remained in port. .otteriet to'Le!l : An ftfocWlslfs ,efFrench Loh Paris. Cable feet to the governments resolution ot July S to liquidate, all lotteries, twenty-seven of which, awj.'In" operation un der tno government; permit, ,nas been. Issued. Two large lotteries. 'flgiu-e lithe first regulation. There. w be offered 2,l50,0Ö0.J;tlcket a $4 eachThere will be eight drawings between Nov. 5 and the end of . 19 19. TMere will be six prizes of 0,060 eack. three of $10,000. besides many smaller ones. The second big lottery drawing will take place in 19 ll, after which no more lotteries will be an thorlzed. ' . 1 1 ' Little Joke of Suffrageta, London, Cable: - The suffrafcetbi are becoming humorously militant. When Herbert Gladstone, entered the cabinet meeting Thutsdjiy he brought with him a mlsslleiiarked "bomb." It had been thrown a't him while he was addressing a meeting. Naturally it caused anxiety. But the "bomb" proved to be only a s'ample of suffragette wit It was Just a common stick of wood, ominously labeled. Congo Cannibals Eat Man. Brussels. Cable: In Longho, In the Belgian Congo, a white man, whoso name and nationality are so far unknown, has been murdered by the natives, who afterwards cooked his body' and devoured it. Teddy Kills Bull Elephant. Nairobi, British East Africa, Cable: News has been received hero that Theodore Roosevelt, who has been hunting In tho Mwcru district, has killed a bull elephant with good tusks. Kermlt Hoosovelt has been hunting independently at Guaso Mylro, and has been very successful, bagging five Hons and three buffaloes. He has now started out elephant hunting. Mr. Roosevelt will move on to Guaso Nylro to Join his son as soon as tho skin of his bull elephant has been pre-

unu stolen 5300 worth aJUdhtifoade from another girl MIssTimwm sent for by Esler and she 'fwtiilmtVtb

flf I

iHMimii-u-aBe oiu

He.-

m, aau

laTaWthe

khw i'earv

nftt

infei on the

teafltays the

I Ifl GREETS DELEGATION OF JAPS NEAR MINNEAPOLIS. COMMERCIAL WAR ONLYTHREATENS President Warns Orientals That Uncle Sam Is After Eastern Trade. Minneapolis, Minn.. Special: Tho war that Is to be fought out betweon Japan and tho United States. Presl dont Taft declared, is a commercial war. He grasped tho hand of fellowship and peace that was extonded him by tho Japanese Commercial Commission that Is touring the country and at tho same timo warned them to look out fpr us. since American business men vftre atast awakening to the demands orxtne oriental trade and are up and 'doing. Baron Shlbusawa, who Is Chairman of the Japanese commission, pledged the old-time affection between Japan and the 1'nited States as an awumnce of peace between the two nations In the future. . 'JhS Taft humorously laid all tho waritflilf in tlin nnu-cnnniiru wlilnli lin Ldeojnred, were also now reconciled to the fact that there would be no armed clash. 'It was a veritable Japanese-Amerl can peace conference that the Presl dent presided over, appropriately ar ranged for Sunday with an ideal set ting in the Lafayette Club, on the shore of beautiful Lake Mlnnetonka, 20 miles out from Minneapolis. the health of the President was drunk amid banzais from the throats of 50 merchants from Nippon and then the health of the Japanese Em peror was pledged to an accompani ment of several hundred lusty Amerl can cheers. The President Is happiest when dls cussing Oriental questions. His term as Governor of the Philippines has left permanently in his blood the voices of the East Wherefore Iiis speech was in his happiest vein. Out of his knowledge of far Eastern affairs ho warned American business men of the dangerous competition they must meet from Japan; at the same time he warned thu visitors that the Amerl cans are at least on the move. He complimented the Japanese on their prowess in war nnd declared that Ja pan, having .demonstrated her nation id spirit in this manner, it was a nat ural consequence that she should now bo moving forward that she ha? moved forward with giant strides In tho ways and accomplishments of peace. Throughout the President's address was a warning to business men In America that a powerful foe has en tered the field nnd that the new con ditions must be mot that Japan must be fought within her own field If ono of the most important of American trade markets is not to be lost. KNIFED IN THE BACK. Dr." Cook Victim of Tongues of Traitors, Says Explorer. Mattcawan, N. Y., Special: "Tho denunciation or Dr. Cook and the ungenerous and. disgraceful effort to discredit him berore he had been given a proper opportunity to prove his claim to the discovery of the pole," fLeonades Hubbard In the hitter's fasaid Dillon Wallace, companion of tal Journey to Labrador, "Is one of tho ylost shameful proceedings of recent years. 'The plain Justice of the case de mands that Dr. Cook's claim be ac cepted In the absence of unassailable proof that It Is not founded upon fact; and absolutely no proof to question the validity of his claim has been produced those who are crying so loudly against him. On the contrary, every point raised has tended to strengthen his position. "I have reason to believe a conspiracy has been on foot to discredit Dr. Cook should his polar dash prove successful nnd that this conspiracy had Its birth two years ago, when those who are responsible for It first heard that ho was in the north prepared to attack the pole." END OF TIGER HUNT. Beast That Terrorized Marseilles Finally Loses the Battle. Marseilles, Cable: The Marseilles "tiger hunt" came to an end when the royal Bengal tigress that had terrorIzed the city for two days, was shot to death as she plunged Into the sea In a last desperate effort to escape. More than a score of shots were fired at the tigress. The tigress escaped from her cage aboard a docking ves sel, since which time a constant hunt for her had been Kept up. The body was recovered. "Sane Fourth" Cost 215 Lives. Chicago, Special: Tho Independ ence day celebration of 1909 claimed as Its grim toll 215 lives, according to the figures compiled In the current number of the Journal of the American Medical Association. This year, In which the "sane Fourth" sentiment was supposed to have reached Its height, had by far the largest total of deaths In the last five years. Easy Way to be Shah. Teheran, Persia, Cable: The pretender to the Persinn throne, Abdul Hussein, has appeared at Lurlstan and proclaimed himself Shah. He is receiving tho support of thn local population. The Government has sent a detachment of troops, with artillery, to suppress him. Assassinated From Ambush. Lexington, Ky., Special: Charles Scribncr was assassinated from ambush in tho mountains near Boattyvllle. Suspicion fallB on a former convict who is alleged to have threatened Scribner and who had shot one man.

WORLD'S CROPS Are Generally In Good Condition, Says Federal Report Washington, Special: Conditions of the crops in foreign countries as reported to tho Department of Agriculture Indicate that tho European harvest has generally surpassed expectations. In Houmnula along have tho genoral results, because of sovero droughts In July, fallen below the preharvest estimates. The wheat crop of Hungary has also fulled to glvo even the modern results looked for a month ago, but the othor crops In that country have exceeded estimates. The latest forecast of the probable yield In Russia Indicates a generally good harvest Harvest weather was favorable and supplies are said to be coming to market rapidly. This year has been unusually favorable for barley and oats. Hungary indications point to tho largest crop on record for both these cereals, as well as for corn. Tho drought in Russia and Roumanla has caused a considerable decline in the prospects for corn. The hop crop of England Is seriously endangered by blight and a low yield Is predicted. Estimates of tho world's probable wheat crop havo been published during tho month by two English trado papers and by the Hungarian Ministry of Agriculture. As compared with last year, the estimates show a gain or from 1SS.000.000 to 270.000,000 bushels In the case or wheat. For corn an Increase or 265.000,000 bushels and for barley a gain of 334,090,000 bushels are Indicated by the estimates of the Hungarian Ministry. Orits show the enormous increase of S57.000.000 bushels, while rye is placed at only 24.000,000 bushels above last year's production.

HORROR IN GHETTO. Mob of Russian Peasants Murder Helpless Jews. Berlin Cable: News has reached here of an anti-Jewish program at Kleff, Russia. It Is stated that eighteen Jews were killed, eleven dloil later of their wounds, 150 were seriously injured aud more than a thousand less severely hurt The outbreak, it is learned, was organized, like others that have occurred, by the reactionary League of Patriots. The leaguers brought a mob of peasants Into the town from tho surround ing county. They were made half drunk with spirits, their nnti-Jew superstitions were worked up. and then, with town hoodlums, they were let loose In tho Ghetto. The mob first attacked a synagogue where a Now Year service waa going on. They butchered the Rabbi, drove the worshippers Into the streets and pursued them with clubs, axes and other weapons. Those who were not caught on the streets were chased into houses, where they were struck down, after which the furniture in the houses was thrown Into the streets to feed big bonfires. On one such fire two Jewish boys were thrown and roasted alive. A few young Jews, who had revolv ers, stood with their backs to a wall and kept their assailants at bay for a while, snooting three of them. Ulti mately the youths were overwhelmed by numbers and hacked to death with axes. Aunt Is Killed By Niece. Browton, Ala.. Special: Enforcing a threat by a shotgun. Mrs. Henry Nowling. or Pollard, killed her aunt, Mrs. Will Pollard, ono of the wealthiest women of the State. The women had been quarreling about tho storage of goods In a small house owned by Mrs. Henry Nowling. Tho assailant escaped, presumably to Florida. Mexico Has Anniversary. City of Mexico. Spoclal: Tho nine-tj'-ninth anniversary of tho Independence of Mexico was celebrated throughout the Republic last week with much enthusiasm. In this city the day was ushcrod In by snlvo3 of artillery, and later a great military parade. In which President Diaz participated, was held. Pastime for the Harem. P Cable : El Rochl. the rnliolllrma cuiiWt nf tho Sultnn of Mornom recently was brought hero a prisoner In nn iron cage, was pui 10 ueatn sunday Inside the palace and In the presence of the imperial harem. THE MARKETS. Indianapolis. Wheat No. 2 red Corn No. 2 white.... Oats No. 2 white I lav No. 1 timothy.. Poultry cocks Old torn turkeys.. Hen turkeys Ducks Chickens Butter country i.Vch fresh Cattle prime steers. .$C50 itncs heavies s.J.u Lichta 8.20 (iX S.35 Sheep good to choice 3.50 4.2o Com. lO esi Uli". ..uu hp i.Zl Chicago. Wheat No. 2 rod $1.03 1.09i Corn -No. 2 white.... .ca Oats No. 2 white Us-Ji New York. Wheat No. 2 red.... m.Gll'. Corn No. 2 white l TDV Oats No. 2 white.... 4.39W . . . r Kaiser Is a Costly Luxury. n Berlin. Cable: There Is some com ment of an adverse character being mado by the German papers jesardlng the cost of traveling of the German emperor, who 'generally goes from placo to place, oven tq foreign countries, in a magnificent special trnlu painted In white and gold. Hut this Ib not all. Several of: the towns i.n Una visited wcre-obllced to meet tho enormous expenses of entertain ing him by contracting enormows debts which brought flnaacialfuln to them.

1.08 .CS Vi .39 13.50 .07 .12 .14 .07 -.14 .19 Ob S.I3