Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
I | 5 THE OLD WORLD. The Need of a Strong Leader a "Loog Felt Want" in France. The Senate Determined to Re- jsct the Exoulsion Eill Davitt, Healy and Q1nn Sent to Kilmainham Frison for £8ix Months. Parnell Wavers in the “ Thank- less l'ask” ot Maintaining an Irish Party, A Large Number of Marins Dise asters Kipirted Genoral Foseign News FRANCE Spectal Dispatches to Tux Ben, POLITICS AND PRETENDKRS, Paxis, Fobraary 8 —Tue socialists 1o France have decided to cunvene a meeting with a view t) organiziogaad being In readiness for the anticipated geaeral election for members of the ohamber of deputtes. 1t is stated that Jules Ferry de clived to form a cabinet and that Presidont Grovy will summon Brizsaon for that purpose, The report of the committi e on the -expulsion bill was made to the sanate to-day. Dabate on the report is figed for Saturday. The repor: states, in the opinion of the committee, thers is no cause for the republioc either to fael alarmed or resort to violent measures embraced in the proposed law, It would be a step in a dangerous path and one contrary to the idess on which the ropublic was fouaded. It1srn mored tho report says if oovflicta or dissolu 1o do not disturb the country it will reriain ateadfastly republican. Urganuy was voied for debate on the bill Saturday, and much excitement exints in parimmentary circles, D salers and dem do mainly at- teuded the sale of the Sara Barnnarde jewels A necklace «f rcss dismonds brought 24,000 fiaacs; two bracalets 8,000 eaon WHOLESALE CH Paus, Fobruary 8 —Sweeping changes in the ministry,. msking vir- tually & new cabluet, is expeoted to he gozaited on Bunday night. It is even sald that Goneral Shebarden, the minister of war, will be the only mem- ber of the present ministry remalning, THEY WANT A GOVERNMENT, Paris, Fobruary 8,—The f eling of uneasiness contiuucs Baeiness 18 stagnant and the putlic is yearning for a strong goverrment, IRELANO Bpecial Dispatches to Tun Bxx. GUINNESS AND HEALY, DusLiN, February 8 —Thomas A. Gatoness, liberal conservative, candi- date for the county Dablia for parlia ment, at an iuflaential meeting asked Qol. King Harman to be a caudidate. T. M. Healy, in a speech advocating & better aystem of g vernment for Ive- land,advised that ais local affsirs such as the minagement of rates, appointment of magisirates, etc., be confined to elected boards, each of which shall send delegates to a central council of the province, which shall have powera in regard to private bills now exercised by parliament. THB LEADER'S LRTTER, Parnell, in a communication asking the attention of Irish members of the house of commons at the opening of parliament next May, says events of the greatest importance to Ireland will be .discussed. A preliminary meeting of the party will be held the 14th Inst. to consdor the action of Irtsh members during the eession.§ Parnell, writirg to Joseph Walah concerning & possible vacancy in county Mayo, deprecates the election of a member who refuses to take his seat. If the time came for Irishmem- bars to retire from the house of com. moaqe, he says that they ehonld do so in a body. He earnestly advocates the adoption of some system of secut- ing compensation to members, If -constituencies do not make an effort in that direction he would be obliged to consider whether he could persevere in a thankless task of endeavoring to keep together an independent h party. DA¥ITA, HEALY AND QUINN, arrested some time ago for making In- flammatory speeches, have refused to give bill, and this morning were lodged ia Kilmainham jail for a term of six mouths, o The trial of Dywling for the murder of policaman Cox begsn to-day. Dowling was convicted of shooting with intent to marder and sentencsd to penal seryitude for life. Archbishop McCiba is better but still f:eble. E.rl Spencer arrived from Lendon to.day. He was escoried from the railway by a troop of hussars, followed by cars laden with detectives, Chief Bicretary Trovelyan started for Eagland to-day escorted by de- tectives, AN IMPOSSIBLE THING TO DO, DusLiN, Fevruary 8 —Davitt says that to give bail for his good behavior toward the laudlords is impossible, for the growing importance of the Irish party in parliament is beirg rec- ognized. GENERAL FOREIGN NEWS. Special Dispatctes to Tus Bas DISARTERS AT BEA, €1 Jonn, N, B., Fobruary 8 — The brigante Zingu, trom Cardift, was lost with all aboard, New Onreans, Fobruary 8.—The steamer Celiic Monarch for Bremen, 1s ashore at the east end of the jetties. Grascow, Fobruary 8 —Tne Anchor line steamer Ut pia, from Now York January 23, arrived all well, ANTWERP, February 8 —The steam- ship Nederiand passed $:illy Lelands Mouday night No unusual bad weather has been reported, ging was intact, Tais makes the re- porc of her loss unlikely, LoxvoN, Febroary 8 —The eur- vivors of the disaster to the steamer Konnaro Castle, which foundered in the bay of Biscay the 24 inat , existed three days by chewing a flannel v The third offiser became starving ma: Her rig- | g ln:ld jumped overboard, but was ree- oued, A schooner has been wrecked near Poriaferry, Ireland; another near Shetland Ialand, Scotland. In the firat, five sailors were drowned; in the second, the whole crew prrished. The steamer Bavarian, which sailed January 24 fir Bostou, retarned to Liverp ol with machinery danmged. ANOTHER STEAMER LOST, Loxvox, Febraary 8 --Tt is reported the steamer Kenmuce Castle, 2,000 tons, from London to Shanghal via the Surg canal, is lost, and the psssengers vero saved. Many of the crew are irowned, A heavy gale prevals on the cuasta to- Saveral minor casualties, involy! a loas of life, are reported. The report of the loss of the steamer Kenmure Castle is confirmed She foundered 1n the Bay of Biecay on the 221 ioet,, in & fow wiuntes, and wae ouly able to launch oue boat contain- ing ol the pomzeugers, numbering eight, and elcht ot the crew. The ctew numbered forty persons, Tae sarvivors, when resoued by a French steamer, only wore their night dressos and were very wenk LATER, Her captain, first mate and thirty of the crew - Asiatios —were drowned. A STEAMER REPORTED LOST. Lonvow, February 8,—A bottle has has been tound on. the Boarnemouth beach containing a saloon ticket, on which are written the following worde: “‘Our ship is fn great distress. The masts are destroyed. Immediate re- lief is vecesary. Steamer Nader- land.” The Red Line steamer Nedor- land, Capt. Uberwig, sailed from Ant- werp, Fobruary 34, for New York. Bournemouth beach, where the bottle is said’ to have been found, is in Southampton county, Eogland. VERY MUCH PLRABED, Berniv, February 8 —The emperor is espectally gratified at the acceptance by the prince of Wales of the coloneley of the Blacher's hussars of the Third buswrs He announced the appoint- ment ia & very touching autogrsph letter to tha prinep. A deputatioh «f the regiwent requestipormission to tender pernoually o Wales an exprer- ston of their rensn of the houvor con- ferred, and lops he will attend the spring or autumn parade aud preeent the regimeant to the emperor. THE G)VERNMENT MUST GO, MiLsourse, Fobruary 8,—Roturns of the election for members of tarn- torial parliament, fireshadow the de- mont, FERRY WILL FORM IT Lannox, Febraary 8 -~ A Paris dis- $ s Forry yesterd.y cd Prosident Geavy to ex- pal ths Ocleans princes by a decree Grevy hesitates to take such a course, bat it will probably be adopted if a ministry is formed under Ferry, THE GERMAN'S FEAR FOR FRANCE, BeruIN, February 8 —The liberals anduttramontares are against holdinga soesion of the lsntag and reichstag simultancously. Germany continues excited over the clevation Gen Thu- bandia to the ministry. The Post says: Tao incldent may possibiy prove a source of fresh calam uies for France and Gormany and misfortune to the countries likewise, THRY HAVE GIVEN UP, Carwo, February 8.—The report is here that the Egyptians in Soudar have yielded to the false prophet. NOT THE UT)PIA, Huul, Eog., February 8.—The ship Bramble Tye, from San Fran- oieco, lost four men in a hurricane, A boat with the stern marked ‘Utc- pia, Glasgow,” was found at Mavagis- sey. The fannel of tho steamer Utopia had no band, consequently the steamer reported off Cape Cornwall with a red band around the funnel caunot be the Utopia of Naw York, The steamship Utopia sailed from this port January 23, for Glasgow. WILL BE TRIED FOR MANSLAUGHTER, Hampura, February 8 —The case against the captaln of the steamer Sultan, vhich ran into and sank the Cimbris, will be brought to trial on Siturday. Sixty-eight witnesses from the Sultan and Cimbria will be exam. ined. It s ramored the prosecution for manslaughter is intended. HE WILL REEIGN, LonpoN, February 8.—A Paris dis- patch states that Falliers, president f the councll, to-day expressed an in- tention to resign, MISCELLANEOUS ITENS, Cork, February 8 —The White Star ship company subscribed to the Qork exnibition and offsrs to ocarry free 10 tons of American exhibits. Cerrinse, Fobruary 8.—The Mon- tenogrin government anaounces the rupture of relatlons between Monte- negro and Turkey because the latter faued to agroe to the cession of ter- ritory. Juih P. Bonjamin, the queen’s conusel, hes ratired from practice, LoxpoN, February 8 —The bullion in the Bank of Eogland increased £00,000 Ibe, the past week. Tha pro poriioujofjressrve to Mabi'i y is 464 per cent. Thirty thousand tons of new ship- ping wera orderod on the Olyde the paat fortnight, including two steamera for the North Garman L'eyd c>mpany, . — Th» Dyo-m #pecial Dispa‘ch to Tur Bxe, Bosron, February 8, —A Philadel- phia dispatch says Leon Hartmann, the Russian nihilist, arrived from Washington and had an all pight confarence with Herr Moat and three members of the International society of Now York. Tae conference had relation to the coronation of the ezar, Bachmann, another nibilist, arrived to-day and another conferance took place. Herr Most sout a cipher dis pateh to Berlin socialists and ar- rangel for another confarenee this evening, Hartmann declared to the German eocialists there that the coro- natlon will not be allowed, Fiends. ——————— A Notsd Crook Caught. Special Dispatch to Tun Bex, CHicaco, February 8,—The police have in custody an expert hotel thilef who has been commltting a eortes of dations for the past two weeks He gives his name as William Slade, He is believed to bs the man who robbed the room of J. H. Flemuming, the New York drummer, at the Palmer house, a few days ago, and when discovered, frightened away three hotel porters with a revolver and escaped. In his room in the west side were fonnd 926 shares of stook in the Danver Oircle rallway, the prop- erty of Marshal Jowell and Thomis M. Nichol, politiclin; & promisary note by Nichol for §1,60) in favor of Soeakar Keifer, of Onio, all stolen from Jowell's western agent at the Paofl & week ago. To addition there was valoable jiwelry and two 1,000 mile railroad tickets. Tie police are avable to identify h'm in the list of crooks, s s, TECUMSEH'S §'X (Y- HIRD General Sherman’s Birthday Cele- brated by a Har qiet—-Speech by the Great warrior, Spocial Dispateh t) Tuw Kan, Wasninarox, Febraary 8 4A bin quet wis given at Wormley's to.night 1 commemoration of tho 631 birth day of William Tecameeh Sherman, generz! of thearmy, The gueste werc Obisf Justico Waite, General She: dan, J. Warren Keifer, Senator Haw. ley, Marshal Clayton McMichael, Me Stilson Hutcbing, Gen. Van Viet, Ohief Justice Carter, of the district supreme court, Ssuators John Sher man wnd John A, Logan, Justice Mo arthur, Senator Aliison aud Ramsdell, Heory Watierson, Justice Stanley Matthews and Justice Miller, 1n re- ply to a toast to h's health, General Sherman made a speech of some length. 8peeches were ala) made by Obief Justice Waite, Justica Miller, General Sherldan, Senator Hawley, Senator Logan and Mr, Watterson, Gen. Sherman beian by saying: ‘‘According to our family Bible I was born the 8 h day of Fobrusre, 1820, conscquently I am in my G4th yoar of life, and 1f I survive another year, will pass from ac'ive command of the army of the United States to a life of comparative ease and retirement. The law for compulsory retirement of all army offi jors at the age of 64 was in my jadgment wise and propes. Idid not ask for or wish exception in my own case, and I declare that I then as now approved the measure and asked my friends not to interpose any objec: tions by reason of its effect on me I think I am duly gratefal that I have passed through 63 yeara of varied lite with mind and body sound enough to promlise a ren:- onable romainder, énl I'am thankfal to congress that euitable and libera! provisior s has been made for me and those dependent upon me, to enable us to live out our appointed days in compara‘ive eass ' He then reviewed bricfly the pro gress of the world in the arts of civil- zation duriig the past half a contury, referred to the stirring events which hud taken place in this coantry within that period and especially to the ware in which the people oi the Unaited States has been engagod and said that even now, sfier a very short lapse of time, it could be seen that these wa's had sccomplished valuableresalts which could not have been reached in any other way. As an illustration cf this he asserted that the Awerican war, which ¢xtended our a system of gov- ernment from the Atlantic to tho Pa. cific, converting lands which hsd re- mained for centuries 1n possession of wild beasts and wilder ravages, into prosperous states and terr tortes 1n a short period of yeara. After pointing out the fact that the acquisiiion of Oalifornda was slso one ot the results of this war, Ganeral Sherman review- ed briefly the rise and development of that great otate and the open- ing of railroad communieation acroes the plalns. *‘In these mighty enter priscs,” he said, ‘‘the han hand with the civilian,” ferring to the late civll war, Gun Sherman eaid: ‘'l neod not speak to you of the civil war. Ita history ie written, and all who now hear me re- member its dotails. I will ventare to #ay, however, in this connection that friend and foe alike now shara its glories and fruils. No part of the union has experienced a larger meas- ure of profit than the section over which we seemingly triumph. I be lleve that nine out «f ten etoldiers of the wsouth would rather be members of our present glorious Union, at peace with all the world, than citizens f the Southern Confederacy, with slavery the corner stone, and at constant war with their neighbors. I have not the least de- slre, here or elsewhere, to boast «f my share in that war, but I do feel a sense of pride and sfaction that we a8 a people met the issues of that day like brave men and carrled our ship through breakers which for a time appeared to be a thipwreck. "’ ‘‘Peace and good order now reign suprems and I canlay aside the armor with which I have been clothed with honor and safety, Another will take up where Ileave (ff and our army wi'l move on its glorious career to ul- timate desting, which no man mey foresee.” In conclusion the general said: ‘“The occasion is not suitadle for me to say even this much, but though my military career is in its ponalti- mate, I cannot help pleading to my countrymen at every opportunity to cherish all that {s manly and noble in the mi itary profestion, becauss peace is enervatiog and no man is wise enough to foretell when soldicrs may be iu demand again,” Gen, Grant in a speech, sald: In perhaps, fitteen months it will be pos- sible to g by railway to Mexico, and from any point of the United States The new treaty, the general held, will open a market for many manufac'ures which Mexico does not produce, and which we do, and it will be the moat advantageous thing for both countries. Paywe Captured Spocial Dispatch to Tns s, Leavesworth, February 8.—The headquarters department of the Mis- souri to-day received offislal notice of the cavture of Captalu Payne, the Oklahoma boomer, south of the Cimarron river, by Lleutenant Ste- vens, the party being on thetr way to Oklahoma outfitted with one hundred wagons, Captain Carroll, command. ing troops in the Oklahoma country, will take the party to Fort Reno, The Agents Deny It. Epecial Dispateh to Tus Bxs, PriLaveLraia, Fobruary 8 —Petor Wright & 8§ ns’sgents, of the Red Star line, still continue to sasert that the steamer Nedorland will arrive safoly. In regard to the mossage found in the bottle on Bouremouth beach, they belleve some foclish pas- senger had thrown the bottle over- board, The ship s most strongly bullt and had just undergone a thor- ough overhauling, .| cans are rich at forty unless they had THE DAILY BEE-~OMAHA FRIDAY FEXRUARY 9 A FAMILIAR FIGURE. The Remarkable Carecr of Jay Bon'd, His Bar'y Life"fx- periences, and His Later Trinmph:, What He Says of Him:elf Un. der Protest ~How H- Liv s, and Some of Surroundings. His A Teibots from His Friond Rastell Sage, Also a Conplon ns Characteron the Buat« ling Strest. 8pccial Correrpondence of th Pisneor Pres:. Niw Yonk, January Gould weighs 110 pounds, ful politicians are ususlly large mon— physically large, I meau. 1 have no doubt, judging from ihe members 1 am acquainted with, aud the avoirdu. pois o1 past congresses, that the mem- bers of the present congross weigh, on an average, 180 pounda each parhaps more. laa Usited 8'a to, not vory long ago, the averago weight was 200 pounds, Theoause of this is not far toroek, Other things (qual, large mon have great vitality, and so arc ocapable of overcomiog vbatacles, Most of the famous wditors this oountry has producod have been large men, Horacs Greeloy weighed 200, Thurlow Weed weighed 210; Henry J. Raymond welghed 180 or more; so did Samuel Bowles, Hugh Hastings and Gen. James Watson Webb turn the rovlen at €00, Robert Bonner woighe 2060; George Jones weighs moro than 20); 80 does Oharles A. Duna; 8o does Gen, Hawley: sodoes Murat Halstead; 80 does George Alfred Townsend; so does Mr. Hurlbu'; 80 will Whitelaw Roid in five years more, Juy Gould is one cf the daintiest euters I ever saw. He ls often to be scen at Dolmonico’s, opposite his cffize (which is in the famous old build- 1wg at 71 Broadway) and if he cau get a piece of steak as big as his fiager— his finger, mind yoa! —and half & cap of black ocffse, he is abundantly sat iefizd, If, in ndditon, he eats a stick f celery and iwo slicos ¢f broiled po- tato, he calls it gorging. His d'gs- tion {8 not good, his stomech is 1 o state of memi-rebellion all the time 1t is astonishing how a man with the very citadel of life cccupied by the enemy can possess such overmastor- ing power. I don't know where Sel- over went to after he had indignantly fl_ngJay G uld over tho railing in Wall street, but if he had avy mauliness in him be was thoroughly wshamed of bimself and hasn't gt over it yet. I called at Mr. Gould's cffize the other day, had a talk with the great financial gen w3 about himself, and ob- taincd from the principal memnber of his busine:s family, G. P. Morisinl, some facts additional to those gener- ally known about him, BICGRAPHICAL, Jay Gould was born in Roxbury, Delavan couaty, ina rude part of Western New York, May 27, 1837 — 20 he 18 not yet forty six. ladeed, his coal black beard and halr, which, though thin, is scarcely touched with gray, indicate a man below middie life. Jay Gould was lucky at the very start ~—in belrg born poor. Few Amort an inheritanoe of poverty. They who have an easy boyhood and find them selves at twenty with a few thousand in hand, which they try to increase, are the onos who are really ‘‘born to ahard lot " Jay was not thif® handi- capped. His father, Johu B. Goald, was a poor farmer, and could scarcely earn anough to support his large fami- ly in the simplest style. The boy was the youngest, and when at the age of ten or twelve his great thirst for knowledgo developed, hie elder sisters, young ladies of considerable oulture, became his teachers. I couldn’t in- duce Mr. Gould to tell me much about this period of his life—or, in fact, any other. “I have nothing to say,” he protested; ‘‘why should I talk about myself? It doesn't seem to mo at all proper or necessary. I am talked about now ten times as much as T want to be orought tobe. I prefer to re- main a striot!y private citizen,” “You caunot be that,” I took tho liberty of suggesting, ‘‘unless you go ohance to keep books for the village blacksmith, who had started a little store next the shop. This helped him out, Ha spent mornings and even tngs with the son of Vulean, and paid his woy at echool. He restod li-tle, layed littlo, talked littlo, and worked hard—Ilike Napoleon at the ariillery rchool of Brienno, Ho made su.pris log progress. In six months he had learned what tho academy had tc teach and lett 1it. He leit the village blacksmith, too, aud entered & hard ware store as clotk, devoting his oven- 1nge to systemaio study of trigouom- otry and sarveying. Ho orose at 4 in the moruing ana gave three hours 10 book aud slate. He borrowed an a set of surveying t og the boys of the village to bec e his flag and chain bearers by presenting to them toys o f nis own manufactare, he sucooedecd in iearning practical surveying “‘withcut & master, At the same time he spplied him se f to the hardware business so euncr @etionlly that at the age of fifteen the little prodigy was made full partner a.d entrusted with the entire charge of the bustners Ho camo to Now York for the fiest time in his life, and was able to op:n account with Phalps Dodge & Co., and other heavy hous But he had not yet found his oareer. Tae hardware trade was not congenial aud the same year, 1802, he slipped ont, loft his litule capital behlod, put his father in bis place, and engaged to tako charge of a surveying parly at $20 a month, to complete the msp of Ulster county. He organized his party, and sarted with §6 in his pocket; walked for.y miles the first day and worked a fortnight, when his employor suddenly ‘‘faled” before he had paid them a cent, Gould at once resolved to carry on the survey himn- solf. What now happenad to the tifteen yoar old boy is best told in MR GOULD'S OWN WORDS, 4 was out of monoy, that is to say, all T had was a 10 cent piece, and with that last coin I determined not to part. ([did not part with it, and never shall. I keep it ncw as a memento ) Fall was approaching, and unless our surveys were finished before winter sot in they would be postponed till the next spring, subjecting to addl- tioval oxpense and perhaps ciusing their abandonment, I determived to o ahead, it possible. But how? I had neither time nor money to go back to Delaware county for supplies. 1 was among entire strangera and with- out credit, I could neither advance nor retreat without money, and o deoply aid T doplore the ratns of our project that I shed tears, 'lired ou with my laet day's tramp, hungry and dejected, I was rosting in a rocky nook near the town of Shawaugunk, my toara trickliog down on the face of ¢ the compass, when I was suddenly hailod by a farmer, who asked ma to go home with him and make anoon- mark—a north and south line, s0 -drawn that the shadow of an upright object falliog on it will in- dicate mid-day. I was asked to take diuner first, and joyfully accepted, as I had supped on two emall crackers the previous night, had been hurd at work since daylight, and felt exceed- ingly faint. Afier a hearty dinier, I made the noon mark, aud was about to bid the hospitable farmer g od-bye, when he asked what I charged for the work, Ieaid I charged nothlng—he was welcome to it; but he offered me half a dollar, insisting that it was the price a neighbor had paid for one, I aoccepted the money and departed ro- jolelng, Ii I had discovered a now continent, I could not have been more elated, for with 60 cents in my pocket, and the prospect f making other noon marks along the route, I saw a way to ago, for he uses nelther liquor nor tc- bacco, loves his family, retires st 10 and rises at 6. Mr, Gould has a fine library, with a choloe selectlen of books, strong In the department of history, and he is a close student out of business hours. He is not a re. ligious man, like Russell Sage, bot goes to church sometimes, Mrs. Gould is & daughter of a Mr, Miller, a retired grocer of the city, and is a_quiet, rofined and Interesting Iady. There aro six children, equally divided between the sexer, and the threo boys aro all in business with their father, The eldest, Gorge . Geuld, a youth of 22, is & member of the tirm of W, E. Conner & Co., of which Mr. Morisinl himself is apecial partner. Cofinoer, by the way, known to his familiars as “Wash,” began life as Mr. Gould's «flics boy, and is now a illionaire ~and more, too. The Treasury Empty. Special Dispatoh to Tiik B, Nasuvitie, February 8,—A mes- sago from Gov. Bate was read before the loglslature to.day, the greatoer por- || tion of which refers to the settlement of the state debt and payment of in. terest bonds funded, together with the late defaleation, The governor says Polk left the treasury empty, The Fire in a Russian Cirous The Vienna correspondent of & Lon- don papet gives the tollowing details of the recent barning of a Russlan clr- ous: Tho performance had reached the fifth item in the programme, some clowns being in the ring, when an- other clown in acting costume rushed o, shouting “‘Fire!” At first the pao})le thought this was part cf the performance, and laughed; but imme- diately after the ringmaster rashed in and gave the alarm, The scene of horror that ensued was indescribable, The audience were so closely packed that motion almost impoesible. Bome in despair flung themselves from the galleries, and parents unable to save themselves made a desperate attempt to save their children by throwing them down into the ring. Some ot the men, wearing the long coats of the Russlan Jews, were en- tangled on spikes, and remained hang- ing in the air, while the whole build- ing resounded with heartrending ories. In the ring, where the clowns had beon performing, there was a carpet, and for a little while the children were safe in the centre of thie; but when the grown up people in their despair began jumping from the dress circle and galleries, tho whole ring became one inextricable mass, in which the children were trampled to death or rutfccated before the flames reached them, But even this was not the worst. The horses soon became unmanageable, and about a dozsm of them, driven mad with pain and ter- ror, broke into the ring, trampling to death the people huddled together there, All this ocourred in less time than it takes to desortbe, and in twenty minates all was over—at least half the people who had been in the building being burned to death or suf- focated. At the windows and various exita soones of the moat horrible de- eeription were enacted, some of the strongest, in their efforts to extrioate themselves from the stroggling mass, forcing others weaker than themselves into the flimes, The fire brigade was summoged; but the engine was delayed by fallivg through the ice, and when it arrived the water in the tanks was frozen. The doors of the circus opened in- ward, add the side entrances were nailed up. KEfforts were begun on Sunday to reoover the bodies. At the maln entrance to the circas lay the N PROVE 87 CURK for Y DISEASE ) ( lame bask or a disordored indioate .hat you aro a vietimP THEN DO [NOT HERITATE ; use KIDN SY-WORT at calthy action toall theorgans. complain ¥ vox, ek aapatn and weaknesses, KLONEY-WORT ia unsu 5| pamod, aa it wil) sot Fither ox. Incontinen deposits, and dull 7 yield toita our. power, 2) # LD DY ALL DRUGGISTS. Prico$1. va o presciib d Kidney Wb with very grest 1 wneee & re or o ore cheinato cas 8 f kd- 10y or treublos, ale £ ¥ fema o wankness- nd Philip C. Ballou, M. D, M nkton, Ve, been mnch henefitted from the y Wor . Shohd K & d other = 1S A SURE CURE for all diseases of the Kidneys and ==L|VER=—— 1t hiaa spectfio action on this most important organ, enabling it to throw off torpidity and. {ninetion, stimuiating the hoalthy secretion of the Bile, and by keeping the bowels in fred ¢ condition, effecting ita regular. 3 Malaria, (ounmsmtrng rom a ® malaria, havo thechills, are hilious, dympeptio, or conatipated, Kid. ney-Wort will surely ra}{eve & quickly cure. i this peason to cleanse the Eystom, 1 am a living advocate of the vir ues of K'd- nev wort. euffer d intold agony from lver disodir. Tt curd we."—John D, Kevine, 8, ringfle'd 0. CONSTIPATION. E| No other diseaso in o prevalent in this |S|country as Constipation, and no_remedy|8| ‘o|han ever equalled the colobrated KIDNEY- E|WORT as & ocure. Whatever the cause,| @[however obstinate the case, this remoedy t. '§, TII8 distromsing com. | ® plaint is very apt to L[complicated with econstipation. Kidney.| &|Wort st es the weakened parts and| #lquickly curos all kinds of Piles even when| o) 5| physicians and medicines have before fail- €[ed. £9°1f you havo either of thess troubles|S Linall i 8 form', sicldsto Kid “‘Constipatin rey wort 1) fema'e disea o8 1t 8 vory scccess fu’."—Dr. Philip C. Ballou Monkton Vt., April 20th 1852, |~ An it s for all the painful disoases of the [ O(KIGNEYS, LIVCR AND BOWELS.| E| It cloanses tlie system of the acrid poison) Slthat causes the dreadful effering which) 01511y the victims of rheumatism cun realise. H THOUSANDS OF CASCS £lof the worst forma of this terriblo d Linave boen quickly relieved, and ine <ime 2" PERFECTLY CURED, QUID or DRY, SOLD hy.ll;KlJflm. o be 1t b . NEY-WOR could find ) remedy formy K'dney com- avwnd Frou natism,” writes <r. A, B Burr, Torplo Mil Floridy, until I was cured by Kidoey Wort " E posurs, inc'deut to lumber- frg. can e Mr Buri's ciscrders. burned and blackened bodies f a heap carry my entorprie through. I can never forget that day. 'rom that time forward the fame of my noon marks preceded me; applications came in from farmers ail around, and out uf this new source of supply I pald all the expenses (f my surveys and came out at the completion with $iin my pocket. A respectable sum was recelved from the map Young Gould now became a profosslonal surveyor and civil engineer. He mappad Albany, Ulster, Greene and Delaware counties, fa New York, Lake and Geauga coun- ties, in Onlo, and Oakland county in Michigav; made the surveys for a p auk road and a railroad, wrote and pablished a history of Delaware oounty, started a tannery where he employed 2560 men, built a town (Gouldborc) and establiched a bank and carried it through the panioc of out of Wall street, out ¢f specalation, and out of business and put your money Into bonds and Jive on the in- terest of it. At presént, the public have a right to feel an igterest in you.” “Very well, then,” he reluctantly conceded, ‘‘my boyhood in Roxbury was about the same as that of other boys roundabout. 1 worked around the farm, p'anting and hoe ng, going to district school some, doing chores avd milkiog cows nights, aud abont tho most vivid memory of that time I of an old briodle cow that I tried to milk, She kicked me in the most skillful manner, and I tarned a com- plete someraet in the yard. It seems funnier now than it did then,” Tae growlng boy studied nights, read all the books he counld get in that sparsely settled coantry, and at the age of fourteen applied vo his father to send hlm to the academy in an ad- jinlng town, 1857 bifore he was twonty-one. He sold ani nterest;in his town for $80,000, and invested the money in depreciated rallroad securities atter the panic Soon after this he secured a controll- tng interest in two railroads, and it was not long before he embarked all his fortunes in the Erle, with what success 1s well known, With herou- lean energy ho has reached out and gathered in the reins of transporta- tion droppad by other hands, tiil now he {s the ¢ntral figure of 30,000 miles of railrosd communication, and the most potent financial genius in the re- public. HIS PRESENT QUARREL with the Mutual Uonion Telegraph, undertaken in behalf of his pet, the Waestern Union, is sald to worry Mr. Gould more than anything else has recently done, He is surprised to see of viotim, thelr heads fairly outside the door, while their bodies were held as though in a vice by those who had orushed upon them from behind. Farther inside the ruins many of the bodies were burned to a cinder. The total loss of life has been ascertained to be 268, and of these 187 had up to last night been identified and claimed by their reiatives, Twenty-one bodies are still awaiting identification, while sixty o'hers have been literally burned to a cinder and are past all hopes of rec- oguition, Among those who perished are said to be two Eaglish otowns, one of them named Weston, The head of the Bourse committee and the colonel of the police are among the vic'ims, the majority of whem are said to be Jews. A Jew named Barcsowac, whose wife and three daughters were killed in the oircus, attacked In the open street on Sundsy M. Korcsiloff, the chief of the Merchants' Guild, and sfter se- verely wounding him with a knifs at- tempted to coramit suicide by cutting his own throat., It fis stated that Korosiloff, in effeoting his own escape, had pushed back Bercsowac's wife into the flames. Four women who lost their husbands went mad in the confusion and horror of the night, ALA E. KEITH HAIR GOODS | Correct aud vsliable Waves » Specialty, MASQUERADING WIGS, 1 222- #t, Omahe. Neb. the new company develog such fizht- ing qualities, and he has been tempted to do some things «f the Jim Fisk His tather could not afford it, The boy thought it over deliberately, folt that his study of mathematlcs, now beyond the instruction ¢f Roxbury, must be gratified somehow, and re. solved to go to the academy and pay his own expenses, He asked his father's permission, *'Of course, you can go if you to,” was the natural reply, “you ain't good f>r much here " It was tho solema truch —Jay had al- ready dizcovered that he was not born to be & farmer—by u large msjority The next moroing the ambitious youth bastily arose from the hreakfast table, held out his hand to his sar- prised father and said ‘‘Good bye." There were tears, entreatier, warnings, bat he bhurst away, scized his lictle bundle f olothes aud started on foot throug's the wild and sparsely settled egions over the mountains to Hobart academy, with 50 cents In his pocket. Thirty-two years later, being charged with treacherously melling out his asacciates, he Jaid upon a table stock and bonds of his own of the value of 36,000,000, GOULD GEETING ALONG, Arriving at Hobart college and can- vassing the town for work, he got & order, that are not regarded as _quite s juare by his assoclates, Cyras Ficld, Dr. Gieen, G ckert and men sen- sitive to buriness houor—such as the recent breaking open and exemining of JohnG. Moore's private papers during his absence from the ofty, Jay Gould is not ‘‘nice,” but his quarrels do not rankle, Russell Sage said to mo a forinight ago: “Giould is one of the best natured of men, After the failure of vhat per- sistent conspiracy to ruin him, in which his fiogers certainly were inched some, he was jast as pleasant vor with the parties to it; he dealt with them just frecly as ever, and gave them as m chances as he did anybody., Butw the contest lasts he never lets up. The bears at pres- eat sre not ha a very good time in their dealings with him,” HOW HE LIVES, Mr. Gould lives in an unpretentious bnt spacious mantlon at the corner of Fifth avenue avd Forty-seventh strcet, in the winter time. His tasttn ere slmple and democratic. His habits sxe thoroughly domestio, He is not 1j) e Jy to die as Tom Boott did three ycars DISSOLUTION NOTICE, CaRLisLE, Pa., January 27. 1893, Notice Is hereby +iven that ho partnorship bereto(o e ¢xistin: b tween the unders ¢ ned, for stock growing purposes, i1 Cheyenne county, Nebraska, has boeu this day disso ved by mu'ual cousent, H. Lawkexce, J. U Hosurm, Feb21w (eo, M, BosLER W ESTERN ORNICE WORKS! 0. SPECHT, . . Proprietor. (212 Harney 8t, - Omrha, Nob MANUFACTURERS OF Galvanized Iron CORNICES, DORMER WINDOWS, FINIALS Tin, Iron and Slaie Roofing, Specht's Patent Motalio Skylight Patent Adjusted Ratchet Bar and Bracket Shelving, Iam the general agent for the above line of goods, L TRON FENGING, 1 s; also \ GENERAL AGEN YDiA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Sure Cure for all FEMALE WEAK. NESSES, Inclading Leucorrhem, Ire regular and Painful Menstru: n, Inflammation and Ulceration of tho Womb, Flooding, PRO- LAPSUS UTERI, &e. W Ploamant to tho tasto, eflicaclons and tmmediate its effect. Itisngreathelpin pregnancy, and re- wes pain during labor and at regular periods. PUYSICIANS USE IT AXD PRESCRIDE IT FREELY. [FoR ALL WEANNESSES of tho generative organe cither sex, 1t {s second tono remedy that has ever en before the public; and for all discases of the DNEYS It 26 tho Greatest Remedy in the World. TKIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Either Se¢ Find Great Reliefin Its Use. Dot the Componnd and Blood Pursfier are pre. Jred at 233 and 25 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass Fico of efther, 81, ix bottles for §5. The Compound sent by mafl {n the form of pills, or of lorenges, on celpt of price, 81 per box for either, Mra. Plukham oely answers all lettors of inquiry, Enclose cesd amp. Bens for pamphlct. Mention this Paper. s FITLs cure Constipm mm@»fh‘.’mflfimx'fifir the Liver, 2 ecnts £2>Sold by ell Druszsists. 68 (L] OLD MEDAT, PAR 8, 1878 BAKER'S BREAKFAST (O0COA. rctn whie the exo @9 hosn r moved. Ith 8 three times the strength of Cocra mix d o Bt reh, Ar- raw Roovor 8t gr,and s 1 re- for f rnoree onuical, 1t s ncurlhing, straoy b lly digoste, ard ad- pled for 1nva 'ds ag well a3 for persne in be.lth, MR Sold by Qrocers Everywhere W, BAKER & Co ,Dorchester, Mass, FOR SALE. New 60-horse power §team Boller, Pow 25 T8 power Steam Baller. New Vertical Steam B | er New Vertical - toam Boiler, 15-horse vower. Secoud haad vertical stesm engine of 15-horse pows Pigieond hand eogloe of G-horss power (nexly new.) Also Pumps, Smoke-Stocl longing to tuat line Missouri Vallay Boiler & Shev Iron Works, M. W. HARTIGAN, PROPRIETOR" ard all artic’es be - 1101 *BLACK-DRAUGHT ” cures &y ey #= =T glion and | eartbosm.