Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 23, 1883, Page 5

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-t . 4 e e e TREASON IN THE CAMP. Evory Scheme of the Irish Revolationists Sold to the Enemy While Hot. Informers as Plenty as Orim- inals in all Developed Oonspiracies Hints at Startling Hvents Given Out By the Police of London. The Authorities Confident of Be- ocuring the Extradition of Rossa. A General Variety of Foreign News. COMING EVENTS. Spec’al Dispatch to Tux Bxn New York, April 22 - The Herald's London cablegram says: tional as have been recent revelations, I understand rovelations of even more sensational characier are in store and the anthoritiea autlcipate confident] that disslosures will be made whicl will justify them in preferriog formal reques’ for O'Donovan Rowss. Very strong evidence, it is declared, wiil be forthcomiog involving O Dinovan in the commlasion of overt aote, such as will bring him ander the operatlon «f the recognizad law of extredition, This much I am in position to ssy. Nothing beyond whatis clearly war- ranted by law, as it now stands, will be suught or expocted by the Britleh government, One source of confidence of the authorities may bo hinted ar. Lynch is not the only informer whose budget of infor.uation has heen placed at thelr command; indeed, before he appeared upon the scene at all there n treachery in the camp of the ors aud it was owing to in- on received that he and othera were arreeted. Lynch’s evidence has of course rein- forced that previously obtained, but 80 far the real sources of irf rmation have not been revealod. This much may be stated with perfect safety, all the leaders of the conspiracy on both sides of t.u Atlantlc are known to the police herc. Oage effact of the arrests and the beltef that the authorl. tles are in possession of all the clues they need, is showa in the ocomplete restoration of publio confidence. All apprehensions that n.adethe metropolis the last week a very Badlam seem to have died out. The epeech of your towaship judge, Noah Davis, delivered before the Young Men’s Hebrew asso- clatlon Wednesday night, in which he denounced the society of dynamite fiends, has been telegraphed to this slde of the Atlantic, and has been re- celved with grea* satisfaction through- out the country. I am given to un dorstand the British government has hitherto avoided making any serious diplomatic communications upon the subject of ‘“dynamitera” in the United States, ENGLAND Special Dispatch to Tun bux. LoxnpoN, April 22, —~The London & Northwestern railway company has lost the Irlsh mail contract after a bitter struggle, but 1t will enter with all the more energy upopn iis project for abolishing the Queenstown route for American mails, Tae intentisn is to have the government build a pow- erful breakwater at Hollyhead make it the mall and passenger of transatlantic service. One effect of this scheme would be to reduce the tilme between New York and London for transmission of malls on an average of twenty hours per trip, Passengers via Liverpool get to Lon- don in nine cases out of ten before the mails are landed at Queenstown, The present service gives goneral dis- satisfaction, and Holyhead landing for passengers would bs productive of immense advantages. Hon, Edward Morris Erskine is dead. He was secretary of the Brit- 1sh legation at Washington in 1858, His mother’s malden name was Miss Fanny Oadwallader, daughter of Gen. Jas, Oadwallader, of the Philahelphia T, The International steeple chase handicap was won by A, Tates, Al- bert Cecll, Lord Yarborough's Mon- taubon, second, S. Smithwick's Stand- ard third, Five starters. IRELAND. Bpecial Dispatch to Tas Bxs, Dusuiy, April 22.—Owing to the recelpt of private information of con- templated misdeeds by lawless per. sons, policemen armed with swords and revolvers, have been placed In the central, postal telegraph, excise and custom offices, and every - precaun- tlon has been made to repel any demonstration against those build- ings. ‘it is statad that the divisional mag- {strate of the Dablin metropolitan po- lice will open an inquiry to-morrow, touching the mm-dn‘n in Dnhl;n :.nr- Ing the past yeat of persons who have b‘:“n llP!‘-.to’d for orime and then turned Informers. It is belleved that Eugene Kingston, the man arrested in Liverpool, Is incriminated in these morders. His oase will be among those examined. Twenty persons have been arrested in the town of Milltown, County Clare, on the charge of conspiracy to maurder landlords’ agents and officlals, Two of the prisoners turned Informers. The hearing in the casesof Oarmody Morgan, O'Herllhy and Featherstone, arrested {n Cork some days ago on the charge of being engaged In a dyna- nite conspiracy, continued Saturday. It was proved that two documents found on Daasy, one of the men arrested at Liverpool, for bringing ex- plosives and Infernal machines into England, ordering actds in the name of O'Herlihy, at Glasgow, were In the writing of Featherstone, It also dls- closes that the name of . Featheratone 18 an alias. GENERAL FOREIGN NEWS, Special Dispatches to Tus Bus, Tne crown prince leaves Berlln to- day for Italy, for a change of alr, A report iu been recelved in Parls from Oalro that El Madl, the false prophet, has captured the town of Khartoum, in Soudan, Salehman Pashs, well known for # defense of sh‘p‘l pass during the Inte war between Russia and Tarkey, is dead. The Krupps of Essen and other industrial firms in the Rhine prov- inces, Intend to present Admiral Von Btosch, late chief of the admlralty, with an address and a substantial teatimonial of thelr esteem. The sum of 36,000 marks has already been col- lected toward the latter object. Daring » seasion of the Skanlshsen- ate Saturday night the prime minister Sagasta declared that the government was prepared to enter into negotia. tloos for commercial teaties with for- olgn countries, provided Spanish in- terests did not suffer thereby. The policy of the government was to maln- taln and improve ocordial relations with all foreign powers. The Emperor and Empress of Rus- sla will reach Moscow the 21st of May, and the coronation will take lace on the 27th, The festivities nclade elght grand balls to be pro- longed until the 8th of Jane. The state entry into St Petersburg will be mada on the 10th of that month Bismarck hald a oonference n Thursday and Friday with the mins- ters of worship and the Interior, onthe sabjeot of the charch bill, and partiol. pated In the cablnet ¢runcil held on Saturday to discass the bill, which he atill strongly recommends, The prince proposes a withdrawal from clrculation of 20 pfennig pleces, which are unpopular, and the colnage of an equivalent amount of money in 1 and 2.mark pieces. PISTOLS AND ‘POWDER. A Car Load of Powder Started On Its Travel By & ‘Pigtol Ball, The Town of Kitanning, Pa, Violently Shaken Up, Terrific Explosion Special Dispatch to Tus Bxs. Pirmssure, Aprll 22— Kitaning, a town 44 miles from Pittsburg, was startied this afternoon by a loud ex- losion which shook the whole town. pon Investigation it was found that a couple of cans of arotlc powder had exploded in a car at the depot. Thou- sands fl)cked to the scene and found that the exploslon had made sad havoc among houses withln two squares, hardly leaving a whole pane of glass fu any of them, The cara be- longing to the sccommodation were badly damaged and also an engine and statlon house. Pieces of the wreck were found four or five squares away. The ocar which contained the powder was blown to splinters. The sliding door on the accommodation train and bag- gage car was blown into the mliddle of the car. Walter Diffenbacher had his leg badly cut, and the conductor had his head slightly Injured. The baggagemaater was sleeping In his ocar at the time, and escaped wlithout being Injared. vohn Hile was on the osr next the one which contalned the powder, and was thrown down upon his face, but escaped without Injury. Harry Lakes, who was setting up a grain drill near the depot, was hit with a flying brick and knocked over. A horse of R Brevey in & stable next to the car escaped while some of the flylog debris knocked in the whole slde of the stable. Mrs. Fowler was thrown into convulsions, and it took four mon to hold her, A couple of men named Richardson, d|with a team, within ten feet of the car, were knocked down and also escaped without injury, but one of the horses was slightly injured. Wher the explosion occurred qulte anumber of citizens ran out of the atores with the impression that thelr buildings were falling. An alarm was sounded and the department re- sponded, The accldent ocourred in thefollowing manner: William Rheem and Wyley Reynolds were practising shoo*ing and shot into the powder and set it off The powder was shipped as merchandise. There was quite a number of narrow escapes and the damage will be large. THE STORM. A RealOld Biizzard on the Plains. Special Dispatch to Tuz Ban. CHEVYENNE, April 22.—One of the meverest snow storms of the season struck Wyoming and Nebraska Satur- day, prostrating telegraph wires in all directions, and blockading rallway outs, The blockade of saow near Sherman station, the highest point on the Union Paclfic road, stops travel east and west, and passenger tralns are laying in Cheyenne and Laramie Olty respectively. Trains will move to-morrow, The storm was a blizzard and severe for s time, It extended over most of the Wyoming and west- ern Nebraska. Cattle losses nominal because the snow is passing away rap- idly with the winds, ‘Wind and Rain. Bpecial Dispatch $o Tun Bus. 8r. Pavus, April 22, —Telegraphle communication with the northwest is almost entirely cut off. The indica- tlons are that a severe wind and raln storm s prevalling all through that territory. The Missourl and smaller rivers are high at present and If the storm lasts destructive floods must follow. The storm prevents any posi- tive information. The river is rising here slowly and the chances are that west St. Paul will be inundated. Train Wrecked in the Storm. Bpecial Dispatch to Tun Bex, Desver, Aprll 22, —During the storm in the mountalns yesterday a passenger traln on the South park road, which left Leadville in the morning, was blown from the track near Como and the baggage car and three coaches turned over on their side. Several of the traln crew and two or three passengers were slightly injured, nobody serlously hurt. The storm was very severe, the wind at- talning a veloclty of sixty miles an hour, The snow is badly drifted, Court Records Destroyed. Bpectal Dispatch to Tux B CoLemaN, Tex., April 22,—The county court house ef Coleman county was broken into on Friday night and all the criminal indictments destroyed, and the district and county records for several terms carrled away. There 1s no clue to the perpetrators, S8TATH JOTTINGS. road boom this season, The Missouri Pa- will move it shops from the Iatter place to Falls City, The Burlington and Missouri River will also looate a part of ita shops in the town, toghether it will makethings quite lively for the little city, The Pawpee City Republioan has an item headed ‘ How wa live,” and then says that the following named persons have paid theie subscritp Port. ‘As this statement Is not followel by & solitary name it is natura'ly presamed at the editor must huve pretty hard soratching to exist onsuch a mythioal sub. | di weription llst. A ynung man named E 1 Farrell, an em. ploye of the B, & M, railroad at Platts. mouth, shot himself Iast Sunday through the breast, 1o claims that it was acoi- dental, but other persons, who pretend to know more about the matter than he des himself, insiet that it was done purposely, with the intention of enicide, It is very likely that the unfortunate young man will dis, There is & wan in David City who s ove of ten living brothers and sisters, ex equally disided, whose ages aggre, 9 years, He is postmaster, s member of th school board and several other organiza- tions, His name is A, F. Coon, and he is said to have not only the remarkable in- stinct of that animal but also to poscess a high degree of human wit. Last Monday the St. Paul and Omaha and 3, C. & P, roads commenced running a through coach from Omaha to Norfolk vis Blair daily. for the accommodation of through travel This obviates the vexa- tions incident to a change of cars st this place and will be appreciated by the teaveling public, A.J. Ftay snd ¥remont Smith, two reridenta of Soringfield, Nebra ks, have just sold their mining interest: in the Black Hills for 8140,000. The two men left Nebrasks only three years ago and have in this short time made a life time competency. One day last week five females mot in Brownville shoe store and it was learned that not one of them weighed lees than 180, The local paver says it is a good country and advises eastern girls to come west and grow up. A company of forty ladies of Juniats, handsomely uniformed and armed with bronms, will appear ut the state re-union at Hastings next Ssptember, where they will give an exhibition of the drill of the broom brigado. Some local novelist is writing a ocon. tinued story for the Creighton Pioneer. It i« intensely utter as will be seen b{ the tollowing extract: ‘‘My God ean it be you, Wileby Stemwick?’ ‘“Yes, Carl Neilser, I am.” The Sioux Oity & Pacific railroad has arranged to put on & fast passenger train between Missouri Valley and Long Pine. The train will be called the Cannon-Ball, and will commence running the 1st of next month, The Fremont Tribune attempts to oriti- cise the performance of the Baker & Far. ron combination which played there re- cently. It says the company needs a sober violinist and & play with a plot to it Light comedy is thrown away on such critics, . A new postoffice has been 2stablished in the New Eogland settlement called “Fletcher,” with Foxwell Fletcher as rnntmuur. This will be a great oconven- ence to many people in that mneighbor. hood, Two spans of the bridge across the Platte at Schuyler have gone out and the taxpayers of the county are very mad. The bridge has long been the most prolific source of expense Colfax county has had. Certain parties are traveling through Polk county, representing themselves as heing connected with the pension bureau, They fix up old T‘nuslon claims and charge a fee for it. The men are swindlers, On last Saturday evening George W. Showalter, a young man living four miles northwest from Hastings met with a fatal accident. A team he wos driving ran away and he was thrown out on his head, Some Fremont citizens are discussing the question of erecting a storage ware house, with s capacity of 250,000 or 300,- 000 bushels, for the purpose of handling the products of the Elkhorn valley, An sttempt was made to burn Eno’s hotel in Fremont one night last woelk, which by the efforts of the fire company roved unsuccessful, The motive or the incendiary have not been learned. The reward fund for the capture of the murderers of Cash Millett, at Hastings, consisting of 8621, has been equally di- vided between W, H. Stock and F, H, Streeting, who captured them, A fire at Nelson, last week, consumed a livery stable, three horses and a meat mar. ket, The village men and women turned out and did good work, The loss was something over $2,000. A petition is being circulated at Arapa- hoe for the purpose of getting the county sommissicucrs to bond the county for 83,000, and build & new school house which is badly needed. The B, & M. railrord people have de- cided to build & depot on the farm of John Humped at Crab Orchard and make it a station. The place designated is fifteen miles from Tecumseh. The amount of local travel through the state this spring is ur{’ heavy. At the Fremont depot of the nion Pacific for the week ending April 4th, the ticket sales amounted to 87,000, The fourth pler ot the Blair bridge scross the Missouri reached bed.rock 57 feet below low water mark on last Friday night, All the piers wall be completed in two or three weeks, Within the g::t week there has been an immense number of trees set out in Dodge oounty, One J. W. Love, has alone st out 50,000 of maples, willows, box elders and catalpas, On May 3rd next an excursion will start from Blair to St. Louis, About thirt: reons have already decided to go, and it rllkely t more will make up thelr minds to go along, The Evsngelical Lutheran church of Hardy has bought a new lot of s and & fine organ, and the members will otherwise improve the appearance of their worship. p'og place. The citizens of Plattemouth are clamor- ing for a new depot. They say the B, & M‘. should have sense enough to give the town a decent building for public accom- modation, The committee at Falls City selected to locate the new fair grounds at that place, have concluded to choose 40 acres belong- ing to Judge Dundy, about four miles from the town, The pupils of the Kearney schools are practicing a fire drill, The principal rings an alarm bell and the ssholara practice on getting out of the buildiog as rapidly as possible, Last Saturday night » lodge of Knights of Pythias was organized at Blair, There are twenty-five charter membere, and the socitey starts out under the most fayorable auspices, Daring a prairie fire which raged in Col- fax county on the 9th inst., Mr, Ben Stub. bert lost 11 head of cattle, one horse, lum- of hay. Thirty-five of the workmen engaged in laying steel rails on the Bu:lington & Missouri near Hastings, are on a strike, They were getting $1.10 per day and want more, The citizens of Ulysses are warmly dis- cuming the subject of building a town hall, The majority are in favor of it so it is thought it will be commenced this sum. mer, Two persons were baptised at Blair last woek by the minister of the Baptist church, At Hastings the other day, after the lynohing of Ingrabam and Green, for the wurder of young Millet, Judge Gaslin, the upright judge of Nebrasks, turned to & Falls Oity will experience quite a rail. cific has decided to make it the end of » division instead of Hiawatha,and the road ions since the Iast re: ber for a house, & corn crib and a quantity, state will not reverse any way.” At a recent meeting the Has '.t:' the lence, stable, hall and other moveable property, and convert the ground to other use ound association decided to sel De. D, E, Beadle, the oldest residen. of Pappillion, died on the 7th inat. uulnrbulll the firat building in ths town of Pa pillion and was ita first postmaater, Burglars entered the store of Henry Howe, at Ayr, last Snn.lx night, and putloined all the money the pl taived. The burglars were not caught. A woman named Dayton, living five miles from Valparaiso, Saunders county, lied from suffocatisn by smoke while fighting a prairie fire on last Thuredsy. ‘T'he bicycle craze has struck Endioott, and the farmer's boy who heretofore has conquered the wild broncho wiil endeavor to tame the more wsthetic conveyance, The Sioux City and Paoific railroad has commenced laying steel railsa on the Ne- braska division, gl‘lnlvo m!les of the rails are on the ground resdy to distribute, The heavy storm of Iast Tueeday blew down about 100 feet of the cottonwood trestle work next to the Missouri river on the bridge now being built at Blair, Waterloo contractors have boen award. ed the contract for the creamery buildin, at toat place. The work is to_be finished September 1st and is to cost 85.100, Grand Island diyision No, 98, of the Lo comotive Engineers, will give a_ball in North Platte, on the evening of May lat It is expected to be a grand affair. The West Point high school has been fortunate inits graduates, It has turned out wome of the best teachers in the atate, all of whom have ¢ood positions, Last Sunday a party of B, & M., survey- ora arrived at Fairmont for the purpose of surveying s branch from tnat place south to Che:ter in Thayer county. The First Methodist oburch, of North Platte, was dedioated Inst Sunday morning by Bishop Hurst, of Des Moines, Iowa, e buildiug was free of debt. ‘I'he new safe for the National bank at Schuyler has been placed in position, It is burglar proof, has & time look, weighs 4,200 pounds and cost 81,000, At a creamery meoting of the Waterloo pentle held last Thursday tha contract for the building was let. A six-acre tract of and was also purchased. The people of Pawnee Oity are making war on the druggists ef that town who sell whisky to customers without having a #pecial saloon license, At the Harvard school during the past year there has been an average dll{{ ate tendance of 297 pupils, This is considered a very good showing, A lar, e number of prairle fires have oc. curred in Burt county this spring and many of them have caused considerable damage to property. The question which is agitating the citi. zens ot Albion at this time is the locatitn of the site of a new school house which is “Well, there are a o uple of oases the supreme court of this Det THE REICN OF BULLS. Rapid Ohanges in the Condi- tion of the Chicago Pro- duce Market, The Budden Advance ot Wheat and Feeble Position of Corn, Offices and Shivments Inoreased by the Reduo~ tion of Freight Rates. Dr, Fishblatt can bo Consnlted Onicaco, April 21.—[Herald Spe. and Saturdays, these two Days olall. —A great change has taken place In the position of operators on ‘change during the present week. At its beginni.iz the ‘‘bears” were nu. merous and strong enough to give the ‘“bulls” a tight tussel, but & boom has been in progress in the wheat market that has demoralized the former and brcught about a revolution in Ideas The advance has been almost phenom enal and scemingly Impossible to check, until now the situation is ex- actly the reverso of what It was two woeks ago. There are numerous rea- sons for the upward movement. In at Des Moines, lowa. Speclal attention glve THROAT AND LUNGS, CATA! disch fmpot heart, fhmldity, b affoction of bh 1ts of mbling, dimness o OMATXA Meoicar [Jispensary | ight or giddiness, diseases of the head, liver, lunge, stomach or bowels—those ter: ourh, and ufl“‘flncfl o8 more fatal to the victims than the songs of 8; ] arlors over the new Omaha National Bank, 13th, between Farnam and Douglas Streets. A S, FISHBLATT, M. D, - PROPRIETOR. Every Day Exo:pt Fri being dovofad to " D Speaial attention given to diseases of the en to Diseaves of the RRH, KIDNEY AND BLADDER And Female Diseases, as well a All Chronic and Nervous Diseases DR. FISHBLATT Fias diacoy rod the greatost cure in the world for woakness of the back and limbe, involantary oncyy goneral dobilly, nervousness, languor, contasion of id ol § of o Jaipitation o the Trom 20 ary hae o the toarine le disorders arisfn orv of Ulyses, blighting their most radiant b o the panio induced by the recent rapld | Those that are haoflng ‘rom m':nl‘:m? Jooa which ‘Iin':r‘::oy“lh:: ‘::L"\'-Iu::;"pn;o:n .,.'.’5:. decline nearly everybody sold, so that the short Interest became extremely large Moanwhile several rich speca- lators were quletly absorbing oausing NERVOUS nees and social duties, makes happy marriage | flushes of heat, de_ ression of _Nfl‘)' oreb o to be built there, Two men from Saperior have obtained consent from the B, & M railroad com. pany and will immediately build an ele- vator at Hardy, Itis reliably stated that » Franklin | young Iady went back on her fellow be- oause he was 8o bow-legged that she fell through his lap, John W, Brown, a lawyer from New York, has bought on 8,000 acre tract of iand {n Piercs county, ' He will use it for stock purposes, ’ An Towa man is visiting Wayne for the purpose of looking up a looation for a woolen mill, It may be that he will de- to build there, At a convention of Webater county as- se.s0rs, held last week, & uniform basis of assessment was adopted tor every precinct in the couaty, The last government homestead in Thayer county was taken up last week. Hereafter land will have to bought in that county. The improvements made on farms in the western part of Adams county exceed those of any year since the organization of the county. The Methodist church at Falls (:ufi will soon undergo a series of repal The in. terior and exterior will be cempletely re- modeled, The people of Harvard are very much pleased with the new pastor of the Congre gational church, the Rev, Edward South- worth, The town board of Waterloo has ordered the county surveyor to make a plat of the town, The work will be commenced this week, The farmera of Clay county are taking advantage of the cheap price of coal at Hastings and are laying in a good supply. North Auburn, in Nemaha county is having & boom this spring. A number of sightly looking buildings are being put up. The lightning rod men have commenced theie anoual journeys through the state, taking in all tho chumps they may find. There are so many improvements being made in Schuyler at this time that it would be hurd work to name them all, The Grand Army post of G, A. R., of Oaceola, will bulld a hall 40x80 and 16 feet high. It will be comstructed of briok, There will be no spring term of the dis- trict oourt in Sherman eounty, Judge Sav. $dge having decided to lot it run over, Two millers from Weeping Water will soon commence running & mill near Alexandria on the Little Riue river. Among the elders present at the meeting of the Presbytery last week at Madison was a full fledged Omaha Indian, Falls City is infested with gamblers, The pa) call on the naw city marshal to abate the nuisance immediately. The contract for building » bridge across the South channel of the Platte, near Fre. mont, was let on last Saturday. The foundation for the new Episcopal ohurch, which will be of stons, has been eommenced at Weeping Water, There is a plan on foot at David Oity to organize & company with a capital of $5,000 to build an opera house. A kindergarten school has been started at Osceols and parents living in the town are generally patronizing it, The new steam flouring mill at Scribner has commenced running. It is & complete structure and cost $16,000, At the present time there are twelve saloons and four drug stores in Grand Island which pay licenses- Beveral new buildings are being put up in Margnette, besides a large flouring mill which is nearly completed., The corner stone of the new Methodist church at Schuyler was laid last Sunday with appropriate seryices, There is $2,500 surplus in the village treasury of Tecumseh, and the people want & town hall built with it. The First National bank ot Aurora opened its doors on Monday of lass week asa national institution, The members of the Falls City band are making efforts to raise 8100, with which to purchase new uniforms, C eameries are springing up in all parts oe Nebraska so fast that it is impossible to keep track of them, A few members of the Methodist church at Tecumseh, subscribed $360, and paid off the indebtedness, The brick 'yard at Osceola has 80,000 brick moulded and a kilo will soon be built to burn them, About thirty teachers attended the teachers convention, which was held last week at Blair, Stromsburg post of the G, A. R, old its distriot re.union on June 3tn, snd 5th, Shipments of sced grain still continue from various points in Nebrasks, to lows and Illfnois, The North Bend schools bave four teachers, the offerings at every down- ward tarn, When KEaropean and eastern markets firmed up a check was interposed. At this stage & flood of unfavorable crop reports came pourlog in, notably a gloomy eatimate of the winter wheat yteld of Illinols by the state bureau of agri. culture. Chinch bugs made thelr appoarance in Kansss dispatches and all at onoe the {dea became universal that In the scare values had been forced too far downward. The afore- said big ‘“‘bulls” became more or, and lmmeodiately the ‘‘orowd" realized that they had oversold and rushed frantically to cover thelr deals. Par- ties whe had thought dollar wheat about the right thing became possess- ed of the opinion that July wheat would be worth $1 20 or even §1.40, Everybody turned ‘‘bull,” Lester and MoGeoch belng now about the cnly prominent ‘‘bears” left. Whether or not the reactlon from the long depreaslon s too sharp or being carried too far {8 an open question. One “bear” argument s now belng removed. Tae constantly accumulat- Ing stocks of graln In store here have been a bugbear for some time. It has been expialned that the quarrel be- tween nhiplpen and oarriers, and the nearness of the opening of lake navi- gation ls largely responsible for this, but 1t exerted a dlspiriting Influence. On Thuraday the rallroads met the demands of shippers by according to a reduction In frelght rates to New York of 6 cents per 100 pounds, or to 26 conts. This has alroady had its effact In causing a large increase of shipments, and the lake fleot is busy choly, tire easlly of company and have prel Who have become yictima of solitary vice, that might otherwise entrance listenin, sonators wi ey the living lyre, may call with 1l confidence. Marriod persons or young men contemplating self ucder 4he care of Dr. Fishola t may relizious! dently rely upon his exill as & physician, ORGANAL aroap to commlt oxcrases from not Now who $hat understands this subject will deny wprings, the moat serio comes doranged, the physioal and mental trame, cough, consumption and death. astonishing curos that wi timos with derangemont of the mind were oured I mose f the back and limb, paine In tation of the heart, dyspey consumption, ote. CONSULTATION FREE. Charges moderate Modical treatmont. Thoso who ros Shrough mail by simply sending th Audress Lock Box 34, Om o a, Neb- ‘e, ovil toreb dings, digsluess, forgotiulnoss, unnatural Lhmnu‘u. pain fn the back and] hips, short breathing, melats eronce to bo alone, foeling Ay tired I when rotiring, seminal weakncas, lost manhood, white bone dupolllnltl the nflno,l::::v.o::.“‘ - Tusion of thousht. trewbling, watery and weak e, o8, d; s, {oonsti) woaknos In the limbe, oto. should COnRUIL me Immediately aid s rebtorad b partocs mes YOUNG MEN procreative power , impotency, or any other disqualifica‘ion speedily rellev: fnto (nto improper habits than by pradent? Bosidos being depriv d of th and destructive tgnpwlu of both boi‘ inctions weaken; Loss of procreat! rvous inability, dyspepaia, pal nluum: of the heart, lndl.mm:'konmm lonal dou‘il‘ll;‘?"w&n:.alm DEBILITY, The sympto.as of which are a dull, distressed mind, which unfite them from performing thelr buste 038 ble, distresses the actlon of the heart, causing cowardioe, fears, droams, restless nights, con- [ ly and ba restored to pertect o dreadful and destructive hablt which an: #woops 0 an untimely grave thousands of ymn'lg men of exalted talent and brillisnt intellect whe the thunders of thelr eloquence or wake to ecste= MARRIAGE marrlaco be aware of physical weaknem, low, Ho who places him 5 confide In his houor aa & gentieman, and confl- WEAKNESS Tmmediately cured and tull vigor restored. This disirossing afiction—which renders life s burden and marriage impossible, ia $he penalty paid by the victim for | 1 ) r‘ou per “;:l “y" =i .m «Lr ml:fmpcr Indulgence, Young people 0oy that may eneus. t by those falling aaure of healthy ofie y andmind arise. The systom be« ful conseq! that procreation is lost A OURE WARRANTED, Porsons ruined In health by unloained protenders who ki taklog poisonous and Injurious compounds, should apply imm DR, FISHBLATT graduate of one of the most eminent colleges of the United States, has effacted some of the most ever known; many troubled with ringing In the ears and head, when Maloep, groat nervousness being alarmed at certaln sounds, with frequent blushing, attended some them trifiing month atter mond latoly. mmediatoly. TAKE PARTIOULAR NOTICE. Dr. F. addresscs all those who have Injnred themscives by improper Indulgence 'aud solitary habitawhich ruin both body and mind, unfthing them for busiaow, study, sodety or marriage: "Theso are somo of the melanchcly offcte produced by tho eary habita of vouth, vis *Woax. o hoad and dimnoss of i, nervous (rritability, derangement of digestive functions, debllity, ht, losa of muscular power, palpl. PRIVATE OFFIOES, OVER THE OMAHA NATIONAL BANK, OMAHA, NEB. and withiu the reach of all who need sclentifia ¢ & distance and cannot call, will receive prompt attention ymptoms with postage, i e ——— preparing to augment the movement, A week henoe will show a large falling off In the amount of grain in store in Chioago elevators. The May dellver is the future most oversold by specula- tive traders, but, while it still leads other options In the aggregate tran- sactlons, there is a strong and growing tendency to changs the base of opera- tlons to June and July, the lattor be- ipg now the favorite, The brokers for the New York clique still lead the buyera, and bave sent another representative here in the person of Wm, O, Badd, a broker of sume note, A leading commisslon firm here, sent the following clrcular to its cus- tomers this week: ‘‘Operators now begin to realizo the truth of the re- ports as to the serlous character of the damage to winter wheat. At thisdate we estimate the crop as likely to ap- proximate as follows: Ilfinols sud In- diana, 50 per cent f an average; Ohlo 70 per cent; Kentucky, Tennessee and Missouri, 70 per cent; Kansas, 80 per cent. Any variation will be to lower these estimates, as weather, weeds and Death of Mrs. Stover. Special Dispatch to Tun Bax, Nasuviiie, April 22, —Nows has been recelved here of the death of Mrs. Stover, sister of ex-President Johnson, at Union Dapot, Carter county, Tenn. She was burled at Greenvllle, Friday, This loaves Mrs. Patterson, who formerly presided at the White House, the last survivor of the late prealden Shipping Special Dispatch to Tus Bux. New York, April 22 —Arrived— City of Berlin, Italyand Nevada, from Liverpool; Hingvalla, from BStettin, and Servis, from Hamburg, LonpoN, Aprll 22 —Frisla and Maen, from New York, arrived out. bl Nohooner Blown Ashore. Spectal Dispatch to Tun ixn, Onrcaao, Aprll 22,—In the storm last night the schooner Eveline Bates, 233 tons, bound for this port from Muskegon, loaded with cedar posts, dropped anchor up the lake several miles from the shore. She dragged insects have yet thelr work to do.” anchor till 4 o'clock this morning, On the other hand, another firm | when the captaln slipped cable and writes: ‘‘It {s true that the growing |headed for the beach. The vessel ran weather of the last week has shown considerable areas to have been prac- tloally winter killed, upwhll{nln the southern half of Illinois and Indiana, but it should be remembered that this is not unusual, even in good crop So far as observant people can u the weather of the last six months has not been nearly so unfa- vorable to winter wheat as was the oorres ing season two years ago, the ix: acreage promises more for equivalent weather conditions, and tbere is nothing in the way of a falr yleld of spring wheat this year.” COorn, duricg the Istter days of the week, showed strong sympathy with the movement in wheat, but 1ts slow- ness in responding is an evidence of its lask of inherent strength, The varying prospects of the wheat har- vests will rule the course of the mar- kets antil next fall, when ulations a8 to the yleld of corn will as- sume importance. However, & some. what better feeling has prevailed dur- ing the past few days and the falling oft of receipts had something to do with this. A soare over alleged heated oorn, both here and in 8t. Louls elevators, and stuff ng Inspection aa rojected that is of too poor quality to be given any grade, appesrs to have little foundation. Oats are doing falrly, Trading In May has greatly lessened, and much of that month's trades have been changed over to June dellvery. Rye Is firmer, but is very unsettled, flactuating widely. Barley fl extremely dull, Provisionsare again belng advanced, Both the speculative and shipping de- mand have Increased, MoGench's lard and Armour’s pork deal are still talked, ‘i'he latter appears sure of & good profit from May lard. Flour, too, is again held firmer, the almost dlspirited holders galning new confidence from the course of wheat, —There 18 not much talk of any cor- ner In the leading cereals nowadays, It would require too vast a capital to absorb the great amount of cash stuff, “‘Scalps’’ are the present past time of the wheat traders, and milllous of bushels have been sold during the last fow days by large ‘‘long” opera- tors who are satisfied with r profit and fear a break, but as long as the ;l‘ofi:vd" is buying this affects prices ttle. sground six miles above Evanston, and the waves broke her in two, making » total wreck. The orew, consisting of five men and one woman, were rescued by the life saving crew at Evanston, Loss and Insurance not learned. Floods flh.ofll- Special Dispatoh to Tus Wixsires, Man,, Aprll 22,—The Red river has rlsen thirteen feet and still rising. Should the ice not break up soon dynamite will be used to break up the jam, The James river at Jamestown is high, snd that part of the ocountry between Steele and Blsmarck is under water. It is thought the Northern Pacific tracksare washed out in some places. Heavy ralns in Minnesota and Dakota all day Bat- urday and Sunday. Notwithstanding the unfavorable weather seeding Is progressing rapldly in the northwest, e The President’s Health. Special Dispatch to Tus Brx, Bavannan, Ga., April 22, —There is no trath in the report that President Arthor had a congestive chill, He 1s in splendid health and remained aboard the Tallapoess, which fs still lying In front of the city, until noon yestorday, when he came ashore for lunch and left in the afternoon by rail for Washington, e A Game in Now York. Npecial Dispatcn to Tus Bax, New York, Aprll 22.—The New York and Yale college teams played thelr first game of base ball on the Polo grounds yesterday; 3,600 persons were present. The professlonals out- layed thelr opponents at every point, guora, New York, 14; Yale, 3. |A Wife Murderer Convioted. Special Dispatch to Tun Bxn ATLANTA, Ga, Aprll 22,—Jos, C, Jones, the wife murderer, has been convicted. He married when his wife was 11 years old, He assaulted the mother-in and flad the coun- try. Returning not long ago his wife refused to live with him and he mur. dered her, Evacuating Frontier Forts. Bpecial Dispatch 40 Tun Bxa. Saur Lake, Utah, April 22,—Fort Oameron, near Beaver, Is being eva- ouated, All the movables are packed up and nothing remains but the road march. The finestone bulldings will be sold for a mere nothing, and the land opened to pre-emption. Fort Hall 1s also to bs evacus The troops from these two garrisons will g0 to Fort Thoruburgh, which is to be moved 120 miles sonth of its present location, to within 10 miles of the Denver and Rlo Grande rallway. —_—— Senator'Anthony passed a comfortable day, and hisfriends are hopeful, CATARRH. 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The Natural Min KAISER WATER From Birreshorn on the Rhine RECOMMENDED BY THE HIGHEST MEDI- CAL AUTHORITIES, FRED'K HOLLENDER, Sole agent for the U, 8. and Canada, 115, 117, 119 Elm 85, New York. A23-3m

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