Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THIRTEENTH YEAR. CRAY SPECIFIC MEDICINES' iR GReat E: i TRADE MARK LIS REMRDY TRADT AR ness, Spermatore- haa, 1m !!F’IIIR“E“T‘M(ll‘. n AFTER TAKING, mnc remature Old Axe, afid many other diseases that lead to Insanity or Con’ suw and a Premature Grayve Y to refund money, when cine i bought nufacturers, & eliiom, iJ e Univer. Al ™ 5, wo have adopte ke tot, which we e sire to send free by mail to R4 The 8, @ Medicine 18 sold by atl druggists at 31 per pac age, ¢ by addressing €., pu v Geelman, Investigate for Yourselves. Postmaster-Genoral Grosham having published Itul and malicious falschood in rezard to the char n State Lottery Company, the ts are given tothe publio to prove his nt, that we are engaged in & fraudulent bus o hefalse and untru s paid by The Louisiana Stato Lot- 1870, to present date: Sold in Omahia by ¢ anager 5 1,800,300 National Bank. 468,000 nt... 125,100 ational Bank, it S £8,560 Lank, 84,450 cre, Pro'dent. 67,000 N 1 Bank, Jules Cassard, President.... 30,000 Paid to Hibernia National Bank, _ Chas, Palf 87,000 18150 to ank, Eo Paid to Mutual Natio Jos. Mitchsl, Cu Total paid a8 above. ........... Paid in sums of under $1,000 at the various offices of the Ci y Total paid for all : Far the truth of the above fasts we refer the public % of the above named corporations, and nd standing to the M o ow Orleans, to tho Stat 80! {1 ' many of our best d' of Brokers, and own: known and res citizens, M. A DAUPHIN, President, £47 CAPITAL PRIZE, $76,000. Tickets Oniy $5, Shares in Proportion. “We do hereby certify thet we supervise_the ar rangements for all the MontAly and Semi-Anmias Dravings of t na State Lottery Company add in person manage and control the Drawing themselves, and that the same ave conducted with and’ we authorize the company to use this cer te, with fac-similes of our xignatures attached in its advertisements.” i« / Romesty, fairness. and in good faith toward all par S t [/ Z CoMMIBSIONRRS. Inoorporated in 1865 fo_ 2 years by the legislaturc for educational snd chari’able purposos—with a cap ital of §1,000,000—to which a_reserve ot over 650,000 has since been added, By an overwhelming popular vote ita franchim was mado o part of the prosent state constitutior adopted December 24, A, D. 1570, ‘only Lottery ever voted on and endorsed by the people of any state e O eates o Postpones. Its grand single number drawings take place monthly. A_SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY 10 WIN A FOR TUNE. Tenth Grand Drawing, Class K, at Now Or leans, TUESDAY, OCT. 9th, 1853—16ist Monthly Drawing. OAPITAL PRIZE, §76,000. 000 TICKETS at FIVE DX tions, in Fifths in P LIST OF PRUKA. 1 CAPITAL PRIZE 1 do do 1 do do 2 PRIZES OF 86000 5 do 2000 a0 10 do 1000 20 do 600.... 100 do 200, 300 do 100 500 do 50 1000 do 25 9 do 9 do do 1967 Prizes, smounting to. Application for rates to clubs should be made only tho office of the Company in New Orleaus. For further information write clearly giving 1 addrom. Mako b 0, Money Orders piyablo and Sildress Reglstored Letters to reus RONEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, Now Orleans, La. Ortinary loters by Mall or Exprom t0 A. DAUPHIN, or M A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, La. 607 Soventh St., Washington, D. C_ LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY (O B. Frank Moore. 127 La Salle Street. Chicago, (Formerly 819 and 212 Broadway, N. ¥.) Now Manager of Chicago Office. To whom apply information woltickets. * 161t Monthly rawing, Tuesday, Oct. 9. irst Capital Prize, §76,000. Tickets $5. Seld 1 hs at §1 each. Soe full scheme elsewhore. wodkart tor 5w Tu chronic d plaint and in ohron Constipation s nd other obstinate dis casos Hostetter's Stomach Bitters i beyond allcompari son the bost remedy that oan be taken. Ax storing © winking un der the debilitating offects of painful dix orders, thisstandard vegetable inyigorant is confessedly un- wuelled Bl"m“c" For sale by all TTE Druggiits wad Deal | wrs generally. y 1 ) 4,881,000 | THE , OMAHA MISSIONARY TRACTS. How the Humble and Unregenerate aie | Prorided with Pious Pabilum 1 in the West, ‘ A [ A Loud and Unanimous Appeal for an Increase of the Old Appropriation, Avkansas Eats Humble Pie, While | Nevada Declines in the Moral Scale. The Indians Proclaimed a Supe- rior Race, But the Whites Strip Them Alive, Congratulatory Speeches and Mes. LRepresentatives of the sages fro Church of England, Puitaperenis, October 5.—The an- nual convention of the Protestant BEpis- spal church of the United States reas- sembled this morning. The morning prayer was read by Rev. William B Ashley, D. D., of Wisconsin, and Rev. Samuel H. Giesy, D. D., of the diocese of the convention. The benediction was pronounced by Right Rev. Henry Ben- jamin Whipple, D. D., bishop of Minne- sota. Lord Bishop of Rochester, Right Rev. Dr. Thorald, was then introduced and addressed the house, all deputies re- maining standing. He begged most sin- cerely to return thanks for the kindness nd courtesy with which his name was received. This was not his first visit to be the last. hide from himself the fact that kinduess sxtended to him as & representative ngland_and of her chureh, Let o you, said the Lord Bishop, that England has ceased to love Americ The ish church is proud of the nd activity of her daugh- ter. in the old country do not feel as if we are in our decrepi- tude, yet the American church is the foremost among the religious bodies of which he ! eligious land in Jess than one hundred years, Sixty- two have been created in this coun- try without asking permission of the leg- islature. In the words of Cardinal New- man and John Bright, ““Only be united among yourselves and you will be in vineible. On motion of Bishop Stevens, of Pennsylvania, the rules were suspended in order that the Lord Bishop of Roch- ester might present a communication from the Archbishop of Canterbury. The, Lord Rishopuiaid the, Aseh) desired to congratulate the American church on the approuching centennary of the consecration of Right Rev. Bishop The Lord Bishop paid a glow- Seabury. ing tribute to the memory of the late Dr, Tait, Archbishop of Canterbury. The Lord Bishop argued for increased missionary_work at home as well as United abroad. He considered the States as kingdom of common sense. Where much of our preaching, said the speaker, is unintelligible to the masses, what are we to dof In England they say to the masses, “We will give you churchos of your own, where you can come and bring your wives and children, and the service and preaching will be ecasily understood.” The key to the problem is, “‘Let a Mis- sion church beannexed to every wealthy church and sco that the congregation is cared for.” He did not wish to be con- sidered guilty of impertinent flattery, but when he went home he always would say the American people were the most religious people in the world, and he considered any religion better than none. He wished the laymen of the Episcopal church of America to reflect that their Master might ha vork for hem to do here, that they never thought of before. You ‘are, all of you, born speakers, and if you can nfmnk on politics and temper- ance and other subjects, why cannot you speak in the service of the Lord Jesus Christ. Resolutions of congratulation were also read from the society for the propa- gation of the gospel in foreign parts. The committeo appointed to make a suitable reply to the second triennial report of the board of managers to the board of mission, of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary society, stated that the total income was $1,169658, an in- crease of $220,731, The creation of new missionary jurisdictions in New Mexico, Montana and Washington Ter- ritory at the last session of the general convention, added largely to the demand for appropriation. The gross receipts applicable have increased sufficiently to mect them or nearly so, The sugges- tions in the report were made the order of the day for Monday. A committee was appointed to report the names for the board of managers. ‘The report of the Bishop of Yeddo stated since the last convention the number of hists and assistants doubled, gn teachers incressed from two to fivo, baptisms increased, schools from four to cight, scholars in boarding and day achools 40 to 90; in Sunday schools from 100 to 125. There are now twelve chapels, in 1880 there were five. Bishop Tuttle of Utah pleaded in be- half of missionary bishops for all the ter- ritories. He referred to the inroads of Mormonism into Georgiaand Mississippi, and eaid the Mormon church was a mighty missionary one. Bishop Morris, of Oregon, read a re- port of the work in his dioe since the meeting of the last convention. 1t is stated that there are now in the diocese 18 elergymen, another ready to join, and 127 adults and 481 children were bap- tized and confirmed. The number of communicants is 920, Thirteen rectories were built The diocese endowment amounts to $33,000, The completion of of the Northern Pacitic road in Au Ihas inaugurated s new things in that section of the « 3ishop Whittaker, of N condition of untry da, reported | the same number of clergy his diocese as three years ago, Tho fact t be looked squarely in the face. ada will always be a missionary field. The ' Bishop made an_appeal for §3,600 to pay off the debton the Reno school, Bishop Pierce, of Arkansas and Indian Territory, said & great deal had been this country and he hoped it would not | He was not so foolish as to | | bound tr: Lo, - heard about the large population of the northwes The ulation of Arkansas is 802, not a doubt, that in 18090, it wonld be willion and a halt He had heard of « ntiibutions for mis sionary work in the way of ‘‘specials, { any coming to Ar- | 80 called, but not kansas | Bishop Hare, Nebraska, said that | thirte ago, when the missionary jurisdiction of Niobrara apart, that scetion of country was almost exclu | sively oceupied by Indians, about 30,000, I'he Tndians had never been subjected to the degradation comir n tact wi the whites. T'he s maintained th 0y was set bish Indians were mentally and morally a supervior people. They are being deprived of everything thiey hold most dear and act ually steipped alive, In any bargain undertaken with our people they have been egregiously swindled. 1f an out- | break of Indian violence should make us | shudder, we must rememoer that with | the sense of their great wrong thiey are apt to fe themselves. There are in [ the Bishop's diocese thirteen clorgymen, five natives. They have several books in their language. If any one thing has made the Indians the prey of the white man it is that they have lived on little ervations and constituted the in- tible mass of which the social anxious togotrid. The sooner the Indians are like the white people the sooner they will cease to be Tudiins iobrara there are thi Ist ing women and thirteen men. During th lults and 468 ¢ active iy past three years 864 dren have been bap tized, and in the past 10 years 900 per- scns have been presented for confirmation, The board of missions then adjourned till to-morrow. Other missionaty bis- hops will present reports. The publish ing houses of Cleveland and Stuttgart show largely increased receipts, and the Orphans’ home was reopened free from debt. e A Railroad Tr: Runs Into d i Puiuavpurnia, October 5, —The in- n on the Northern Pennsyl- vania branch of the Philadelphia & Reading railroad ran into a street car of the Union line at Susquchanna avenue and American strect this morning. The car was demolished, and all the passen- gers more or less injured. Ten person who were the most severely injured, were taken to the Espis 1 hospital and wce died. The driver of the was in the carat the time of nt. Thoso who have died Hammill and James Devi the injured was a woman named ) who was terribly mangled. She wa ed to the hospital in a bag. She and several others are expected to die. Purtapereaia, October b.—The of the victims of the street car w John McKeown, gardener, kil leaves a wife and seven children. James Hammel, coal dealer, kiled, and several others were badly iijured. There was no the accic James Among &4 cu_l\dunmglon the carand mf driver’s duty s required him to guide hi {eam, see that the fares were deposited in the box, and at the sume time watch for trains at the railroad crossing. The railroad company had no safety gate at the crossing, al- though they have been directed by the council a year ago to erect one at that place. The driver had stopped the car while the north-bound train passed. but had not noticed the approach of the train on the other track. Ho started the horses, and before the passengers had a moment’s notice, the south-bound train, running at the rate of twenty-five mi per hour, struck the car on the side, tear- ing it to splinters, and hurled the passen- gers, bruised and bleeding, into promis- cuous heaps. Ambulances from the copal hospital arrived quickly, and most of the sufferers were removed to that institution, while others were taken into neighboring houses, and a few of the injured to their homes. 1tis said by a man who watched the accident, that a boy was acting as driver while the regular driver was inside the car. & A Trade and e Platform, S1. Louts, October h.—The trade and labor federation continued in session to- day. The committee on declaration of principles, made a reporl, which was adopted, Its salient points are a demand that railroad land grants forfeited shall be reclaimed by the government; equal pay for equal work to both sexes and the abolition of convict contract labor sys- tem; compulsory education and the State to furnish books and scheol material free; prohibiting child labor in factories and mines under fourteen years of age; rail- roads and the telegraphs to become the property of the State; purely national circulating medium issued directly to the people; employers ing corporations liable for injury re- ceived by persons while in their employ; all trades and labor unions to be incor- porated by the Legislature the same as other incorporated bodies. Clabe Young i Cuicaco, Octobe Detectives passed through here last night for Tilden, Tex., in charge of a man named Clabe Young who is wanted for the murder of a man named O'Donnell in - Novemoer, 1878, The prisoner was arrested on a ranch south of Rawlins on the ailroad where he was living with & Mrs. Castro, having driven the husband of the woman away. It is told of Young that he and his brother carried on a career of brigandage in the south- western part of Texas for a number of years, robbing stages, ete. The murder of O'Donnell resulted in their being driven from the country. ——_ Gov Cleveland at atertown, Warekrowy, N. Y., October 4.—Gov. Cleveland arrived at noen from Ogdens- burg and was being entertained at the residence of James Lansing. It was given out by leading Democrats that no one would fu-. lowed at the house ex- cept those holding inviations. This fact being published in a local paper raised & howl among the common people. On the bulletin board to-day every body was in- vited. ——— The Pittsburg Kxposition Fire, Pirrssunc, Pa., October .—The the ory that the exposition firo was started by Prof. Warner's balloon was greatly strengthened by the statement of W. C. | Cook, the exposition painter. He says | that the day before the fire he saw Prof. | Warner and two assistants pour beiled | linseed oil on the balloon by the bucket full. This was in the boiler room, and | [he thinks the heat caused the il to |ignitc Tho fire marahal agrees with | this theory y act, hold- | A PRESCRIPTION WITH POWDER. The Marder of a Wheeling Draggist Dramatically Pic ured Dy the Author, And the Jury Considerately En- dorse Him for a Lifo Job in the Penitentiary. I'ho Standard 0il Company Pur- Peace in Pennsylvania by Bribing an Attorney. ch Iniportant y Taken by the Legislative Tnvestigatiog itte Testimos Com CRIMINAL RECORD, A COURT SENSATION AND CONVICTION, Wukkiixg, W. Va., October b.—In the Cireuit Court to-day Guenthor Schuello was found guilty of murder in the first degree and sentenced to impris- onment tor life. Last March Schuelle Killed his uncle, or, as ho alleged, his {ather, Dr. Guenther Schuchardt, a Ger- man medical spocialist, in the latter's drug store in this city. Schuchardt was vory wealthy and had provided for Guenth brother but mot for him. The S:ate alleged that this was the motive for the erime, and that the evi- denco showed deliberate premed tation, The defense sot up the plea of insanity. Yesterday Schnelle created & sensation by going on the stand himself, and giving a'dramatic recital of the crime and his motives. He said Schuchardt had ruined his mother and then refused to own her his. He went to the drug store to got Schuchardt to sign an acknowledgment of his patervity, and failing in- this he was resolved to commit guiide. He had promised his mother to revenge her nig by killing the doctor, but.did not intend to fulfill the promise until con- fronted by Schuchardt, when his moth- er's form appeared to himn and urged him to kill the doctor. shot himself in the head, produci slight wound. 'I'he case went to the jury at 10 o’clock last night, and atdp m. to-day the verdict came. An appeal will be taken to the Supreme Court. POLITICS AND SWINDLES, Bosroy, October 5.—The executive counsel rejected 4 to 4 the nomination of . G. Walker (eolored) to be judge of the municipal courv of Charlestown district. Walker was immediately renowinated by the Governor, . The polico are searching for & man who recently started a comuwission business in | ing uK the corpse and jamming a hat this city under the name of Solon B. Hodgkins, and to whow, it ia ssid, west- ero merchants forwarded 1 ¥eg §10,000 | the bar. Worth of flour, tor Wileh 1’|y Hus béen | hd straighcway departed. Fno 1 received. Six car-loads of flour con signed to Hodgkins have been seized by officers but tho balance is supposed to be | liquors consumed. disposed of by the alloged swindler. STANDAID OLL BRIBERY. PriLapeLeuia, October 6.—Franklin AN WNIIA Y ) He fired, and then| al FORTCh 0L I8Ss. DAILY v, NEB. SATURDAY HORNING, OCTOBER 6, 1883, and Canada by fire during the nine nths of 1883 T'his is &,500,000 more { than in any nine months recorded since 1850 CAPITAL NOTES, THE MOONSIINER RED MEN. .~ The Com id to-day Wasnisaron, Octobe missioner of 1 tornal Revenue that the statemoent recently m in the United States Court at a, Wost Virginia, that an organization known as [ ““Red Mon™ has for its object the protoc: |t it distillors, and that the Uni wl § named Marion Hawes, was at its head, and had been levying a | tax on the moo , would be investi wted by the revenue sfficer, He had received no_information confirming it, but he regarded them suflicier | y import ant to be investigated. CHICAGO SNUBBED Secrotary Folgor decided to-day that it is incompatible with the interests of tho public servico and with public conve nienco to provide a distinetive issue of rold certiticates for Chica HAKD KNOX ON FINANCES, The Comptroller of Currency accepts | the invitation to attend tho conventionof the American Bankers’ association at Louisville on Tuesday next. Jeremiah McKean is_appointed post master at Boise City, Idaho, vice John H. Post, re THE LOTTERY BANK. The Now Orleans National bank brought suit against the Postmaster Gen- eral for §100,000 damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of his rocent order that money orders addressed to the bank, but intended for a lottery company, shall not be delivered. The plaintift con- siders the order was intended to charge the bank with fraudulent practices and | illegal action, and has seriously damaged its business, THE SIMPSON COURT MARTIAL First Lieut. James K. Simpson, 3rd l\-,\nh.\, tried by court martial on the charge of conduct unbocoming an oflicer and gentloman, in having married a woman who had been lis forier mistress, 18 now before the s y of wa transmission to the President for final action. The court found Licut. Simpson guilty and sentenced him to be dismissed, It is understood Judge Advocate General | Swaim in s view of the case takes ex ptions to the action of the court and reconfnends that the sentence be set aside, for Washington Gossip. This is . story that Colonel Amos Webster tells in illustyation of the readi- ness with which we_jump at the self-de- fense plea in these days: Two penniless Trishmen, sitting up with the dead body of a friend, found themselves thirsty. After vainly ransacking their pockets, they laid their heads together and framed a plan to relieve their thirst. Pick- over his eyes they carried him to the nearest saloon, and stood him up against Then they drank son et‘hi;:' e hind the bar turned to the man in front of the bar and demanded payment for Of course, he ro- coived no respone. Further appeals of a like character were met with a like silence. Then the bartender became B. Gowen, president of the Philadelphia |gry, and, reaching for a largo lemon- & Reading railroad company, to-day ap- peared before the Legislature committve imvestigating the character of the testi- mony taken i the Standard Oil invesu- gation wyear ago. B Patterson, of Titusville, charged with selling State in- formation to the Standard Oil company, was present. Gowen said, regarding his statement, thav Patterson had been paid $7,600 by the Standwmd Oil company to suppress the testimony col ted by him for tho Commo th's use, he had obtained the test - mony from sworn testimony of Patterson himeelf in the suit between him and the | Tidewater Pipe compuny, tried at Mead months ville, I some Gewen went on idence to show that Patt hibald, of the Standard Oil company had a mesting m Philadelphia some ume in April, 138; and an agreement was then made which wus subsequently ratified by the payment of the moncy at a meeting in the tevens house, N York, a few weeks later. In answer to a question Gowen said he relied for prosf on the testimony of other witnesses, They would be re- luctant witnesses, perhaps, but he sup- posed the process of the committee would insure their presence. Dodge, general solicitor of the Standard Oil company, said if Gowen would furnish the names of any persons connccted with the company who were wanted as witnesses he would > they were brought forward. 1f they were out of the state, a subpoena of the committee would not be operative, but that would make no difference. He sup- posed the important witness was Jno. D. Archibald, one of the managers of the Standard co npany, who, he was au- ay, would appear when needed. tterson was then sworn, but before proceeding with his examination, 4 recess was taken by the committeo. Patterson testafi he was in this city April 11, 12 and 13, Archibald was here, and a wmutual friend came to him and said Archibald wanted to see him and make peace. The following week in New York, another consultation to place. We came to terms. They to reimburse in cash for the ex- penses of the suit, mounting to $7,600 as agreed upon and pay me an additional §7,600 in installiments from time to time. For this he was to desist from his aggressive attacks, 1t was not untilafter the trial of the comwon wealth case, aud after his final interview with Attorney General Palmer, who had cted his proposition for re-openingthe case, that he met Archibald. ~ Gowen asked for the name of the mutual friend Witness said he had no objection to gy mz the name to the committee, but aksed proviously. z to be excased, This closed the day's ex amination, — Fire Statwemaont, New York, October The Com mercial Bulletin says September has outdone any previous tember of which there is any record in the numerous sizeable fires and their aggre gate destructiveness. OFf the fires rang from £10,000 wd upwards we find no less than 224 mentioned, whose aggregate cost to the country reaches £8,200,000, to which we may fairly add §1,800,000 for unrecorded fires, and on thousand or 80 where the loss was less than $10,000. This gives us 10,000,000 as the fire waste of september and §7 squeezer, he struck the dead man on the head felling him to the floor. Then the dead wan's friends, who had been in hiding, walked in and accused the bar- tender of killing their fricnd, who was, us they said, quite dead. *Well,” said the bartender, as they talked of courts and prisons, “*ho drow n wilfe on me first.” Tha sargeon general of tho army has | Just maued the fourth volume of that ad- | izl ¢ catalogue of the splendid medical | ik { his oftice, whicn has given Sur- geon Billings, its coupiler, o lasting rep- utwson. The treusures of this great [ Iibray ure woll represented in this at- traceve volumo. Its thousand pages the work along from “E" to 1zes.” Some of tho subjects fill a great many pages. Tho titles of the THE OLD WORLD. ‘ The Hooting of Alfonso Decapitates a French Cabinet Officer, The Portfolio of War Made Va-| cant to Sati Spain, The Dublin Castle Kings Shut Of the | Wind of Several GENERAL FOREIGN NIWS, | SPAIN'S GRIEVANCES AND DEMAND The Paris Pigaro st that the Span Loxnoys, Octobe and Gaulois both 1 ish Ambassador yesterday handed to Forr Pri Minis nd Challemel Lacour, Minister of Foreign Affairs, a note setting forth the grievances of Spain in connection with the arrival of Alfonso in Paris, and demanding the punishment of the authors of the manifestation against his majesty and sutisfaction for Spain in proportion to tho gravity of the outrage. The note, S0 papers say, was well received by and Challemel Lecour. Forry juently held a conference with ident Grevy. The n.vpuhfi..u.‘ Francaiso asserts Grevy has instructed Ferry to request Goneral Thibeaudin to resign the port folio of war. Voltaire expresses the be- lief that Thibeaudin has already rosigned. A Madrid dispateh say Challemel Le- cour, French Minister of Foreign Affairs, has advised that the full text of Grevy's apology to Alfonso be oflicially published and that the leaders of the demonstration in Paris against the King be punished, At Saragosa a crowd assembled bl tho Fronch consulate and began to stone the building, when they were charged by the police and dispersed, N THE TONQUIN CAMPAIGN, Loxvox, October 6. A Pavis dispatch | to the exchango telograph, sa mem ber of the Cabinet declares the campaign in Tonquin must be energetically pushed and a decisive blow struck before France comes to terms with China, whose resis- tance to the French terms for settloment of the question, is largely duc to the en- couragement she recoives from England. A Paris dispatch states that Grevy has accepted Thibandin's resignation of the War oftice. HUNTING DOWN THE INFORMERS. A Dublin correspondent says, the In- vinoibles vengeance committee has been formed to hunt down all informers. The committe -+ paid spies throughout the British colonies and in North and South America, THE NIHILISTS STILL LIVE. The Russian_government has received NO. %. Denver & Rio Grande, forence to consider the traflic arrange. ment between the two companies. Ames and Adams left for the west last evening and President Lovejoy leaves next wook, when negotiations will be resumed and closed at Denver, R have held a con- Bank President Arrested, Broomixaroxn, 11, October 6. Joha K. Snyder, President of the Exchange bank of Chenon, who made an assign. ment a fow days ago, was arrested yes terday and br charge of d ught here on ndiin ad - embezzlement, ¥ two ot his ereditors who as ived tunds, kuowing the bank was in- THE WORLD OF TRADE. A Generally Quict Week in the Commer- oial Mar(s of the Natien, Failures Reflect the Mistakes of the than Present New Yourk, October b.—R. Dun & Co., of the mercantile agency, report that the weck closed has been one of quictude in Now York with a very con- siderable decline in the volume of busi- ness, which is to be expected as the sea- son advances. Reports from western es indicate more activity and ex- changes in that section show increased business, No special feature has been presented in the markets. A moderate activity prevails in _dry goods circles, and the season’s trade, neither wnsati factory in dimensions or in profits, drawing to a close. Failures continue to be numerous, but they seem to to reflect more mistakes of the past than any scrious defects in the business at present. The money market continu casy though the exhaustion of the suj plus reserve of the Yauks leads to con- traction of loans, the effect of which, however, has not been at all se The grain markets have been irre and unsettled, but without much tion in prices. There is a better feeling in the provision trade, but the advance in prices is slight. Cotton is stronger in view of the probable reduced ecrop but receipts have interfered with any material advamee in prices. Petroleum has been fairly steady, with a_tend ney at the close upwards. Freights are in good request at about previous rates, though for some descriptions prices are a little better. Raw sugars are fairly ac- and refined sugars are in good de- mand at steady prices. The grocery trade generally is without change. The iron trade is ot yet showing much sign of improvement, an anonymous letter giving the informa- tion thata deputation of nihilists will at- tend the funeral of Turgenieff. Extensive precautions _are being taken by the authoritieg i jpw to prayenk any demonstration upon the occasion of the funeral. The trials of the members of the Nor- wegian Ministry who have been im- {:Mhud by the supreme tribunal, have b en postponed until the 1st of Decem- er. The Madrid Iberia denies, upon official authority, the statement _of the Corre- spondencia that Duc de Fernan Nunez, Spanish Ambassador at Paris, has been instructed to leave his post unless the French government makes a more satis- factory declaration concerning the insult- ing reception of Alfonso in Paris, IRISH MEETINGS PROMIBITED, A mceting of Nationalists which was announced to be held at Ennis next Sun- day and at which Kenny, M, P. of Ennis, Williwms, M. P. for Mallow and editor of The United Ireland and Bigar, M. P, for Cavan wero to speak, has been pro- hibited by the authoritics. The Parnell fund committee has received a draft for £1,628 from Dennis O'Connor of Chicago, the fund will close at the end of Novem- ber and it is expected that with the dona- books and the pamphlets on the human s fill more than a hundred large two- column closcly-printed pages. The fovers of various sorts take up nearly 300 pages. It seews a national disgrace that such a complete collection of valuable books should be in a dingy old-fashioned thea- tre building, at the mercy of the flumes, If the library were half as large, and if it served but one of its many purposcs, 1t ought to bo decently and safely housed. The good done by this library among the medical men of thearmy alone, undor the system which keeps the new books as they come along circulating from post to post until every surgeon has had his day, 18 incalculable,” But, apart from its usc fulness in this practicable and immediate way, its value as @ library of reference entitlesit to a home where 1t will at least be free from the ordinary danger of fire, Thoy tell me the roason Mr. Blaino d’ his handsome house on Dupont o to Leiter, the Chicago dry goods dealer, was because he did not care to d’ the money necessary to live in it. The house is large onc for Washington, and has, 1 belic twenty or twenty-five rooms, and it could not be kept up in good style for less than about $25,000 a 1 should think it would take wore rather than less, Blaine has not 25,000 ar to spend for this purpose His when he first thought of. the house as it now is, when he was Garfield’s “Premier,” was that he ought to have a fine house to entertain in while he was directing the affairs, espocially the for eign afluirs, of the nation. The house was planned and begun before Garfield died. He simply finished it, lived in it one year and then rented it He is will ing to sell it on long time and at sonablo rate. A good many card c have tumbled since that fateful 2d of July, 1881, T'he ladies who count the greenbacks, new and old, in the Treasury Depart went suffer o great deal from arsenical poisoning, From 9 to 4 o'clock eve day, with a slight intermission, they are handling Treasury netes. OF courso thoy wet their fingers in order to help them | the sticky money. This process soon brings out the arsenic in the green | dye, and by 2 o'clock the sponges in the | finger cups, which were fresh and yellow | in_ the morning, are of a muddy g color, Every tune a counter puts her great finger to her faco she runs the risk )f blood poisoning. Many of them have uffered from it again and again, The| least abrasion of the skin on the hand or the face gives the poison entrance to the system, Once in it is hard to drive out | ove ) 500,000 as a totalloss to the United States | agaio, i tions from Australia it will reach a total of £40,000. NOTRS, Gieneral Thibaudin has resigned. Lowal is mentioned as his successor, The Ottawa Government is making efforts as far as possible Sunday labo with the postal servico, It is waid President Grovy pointed out td General Thibaudin the impossility of his maining in the cabinot. General Thibaudin, in reply to an interviewer, stated ono of the reasons for his absenco from the reception of King Alfonso was the Uhlan affair, Itis stated the Queen of Madugascar has nvited all ¢l fi to the Capital decide won the expediency of an agreement with France, General Alfonso's Reception at Madrid, Spocial Cable to the Commercial-Gazette, Maorip, October 3,—The king's jour- ney from Irun to Madrid was a complete triumphal procession. Kvery window was decorated with the traditional Cas- tilian Colgaduras, surmounted by Span- ish and foreign flags; but the tri-color of ance was nowhere visible, In the aadn Baylen two large banners wero minent, with inscriptions recalling the spot where the capitulation of 1807 was signed by the French General Dupont. The public manifestation of loyalty on tho part of the entire population has been without precedent, and te-day Madrid, even in its remotest streets and suburbs, displays a scene of National joy, never witnessed sinco tho Spanish revo- lution. The royal carriages could only move slowly amid the multitude shout- ing and cheering, forcing their way even to touch the carriago of the King, soloyal and fiorcely pussionate were they. Tho King as heembraced the Queen and the infantas, remarked with a smile, “The old Castillian spirit is up again.” —— ‘Lrain Fi Abiiax, Mich., Octo H.—As the Lake Shore train, which left Chicago terday morning, due here in the af ternoon, was nearing the city, it was fired upon by concealed persons. Three windows in the smoking car were broken and three passengers had their faces badly cut by fragments of flying glass. Officers are in_ pursuit, but no arrests have been made. . Into. New Youk, October It is stated that the Panams Inter-Oceanic canal loan has been more than subscribed for, net- ting the company more than 170,000,000 francs, Francis Aduws, representing the Union cific, and Prosident Lovejey, of the e —— Storms on Luke Michigan, Miuwaukee, Wis., October b, —A bot- tlayvas picked up on the beach at N Tont Cecdeyoholding. acpoaper on, wbi was written in plain lead pencil, **Steam« of Rice ran ashore and all hands lost.” It was signed P. J. Rice and Charles Groffer. There is no steamer Rice known to the warine men here, but there is » barge Rive of which nothing is known, not even her approximate where- abauts. The wina has been blowing all night and day from the southeast, and the schooner €. C. Trowbridge shifted her cargo off this port and 1ost a deck load ef posts. She was not water-logged as reported at first. The storm has been 80 severe that vessel men look for wrocks on this part of Lake Michigan, though none have beun reported as yet. —— The 50 orkers. New . York, October b.—The Board of Directors of the National Prison As- sociation of the United States, met this afteinoon, ex ident Hayes in the chair, A motion to call a National Con- erence of prison ofticers and workers to discuss the indefinite sentence, the mark system, prison labor, and other vexed questions, wore referred to the exeeutive committeo for action. Such o meeting in all probability will be held soon. —— “The O Cuicago, October b nouncement will be made to-morrow by Edgar L. Wakmen, of a new literary en- terprise to be begun Christmas day, It will be a weekly literary journal to be called ““The Current,” for which ample capital has been provided. Awmoug the list of contributors are the names of wany distinguished literary men and women of Burope and America e The President in New York, New Yourk. October 4.—President Ar- thur re nained in his room at the Fifth Avenue hotol during the early part of the day. Among his callers to-duy was John Jacob Astor. In the afternoon the pres- ident took a carriage drive Central park. L Limited to 1,000 Bushels Per Day, 10460, October 5.—At a secret ses- sion of the Western Export association liere, it was decided that no distillery be taken into the pool whose capacity ex- ceeded 1,000 bushels of grain per day. e The O'Donnell Defense Fund, Ou1cAGo,October b, —Oitizen Congresa- man Finnerty's paper has received $2500 in subsoriptions from the Trishmen in Ilinois and Wisconsin, to be used in- the defonso of O'Dounell, the slayer of Carey. ) PURIFY T BLOOD. HE marvelous results of Hood's Sarsaparilla upon all bumors and low conditions of the blood prove it the best BLOOD MEDIC Such has been the success of this article At home that nearly every family in whole nelgnbarhoods have been fuking It ab the same tune, It PURi- &8, vitulizes and enriches the bload, o yspep- s, billousness, and all angements of the stomach caused by o blood oF & debiliated condie rvous wywiama occasioned by excessive oF physical care labor or dissipation, 1t ula and all foul humors, and renovates the whale peculiar polal in Hood's Ia 18 that It creates an ape oulids up and strengihens the m, and proves invalnable as a protectidn from e Tty i Gl U Sl S HiRato wudof 6. 0. 1. Hood Co, K ot recdnsined Lo PLYRTALR B EE R & Bty ef S tnc Sin i the B B e SR i i i by SRS T iy Pttty bootsiiens mySpiadé S Lrecitd i i e sty SEl, O e o Dol \ll:m,'l}& f e for by Lol Masr 0 4l;|0|w1'||, Muass 7 o Tigob s A