Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 10, 1886, Page 2

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. OERAP TOM FOR SALE BY Boggs & Hill LN S——— Omaha View CHOICEST LOTS IN OMAH! PREPARED TO CONTRACT HOMES, ON Tk BERAL TERMS AND PAYMEN TS THE T, AND ARE NOW WITH PARTIES WANTING DESIRABL WE HAV VIEW L ABOUT 250 OF FOLLOWING The LOTS range in price from. 8300 TO S$700 FOR INSIDE LOTS. CORNER LOTS "ARE$100 HIGHER. ‘Will build houses worth $500 on a $100 cash payment. $800 on a $200 cash payment. $1,200 on a $300 cash payment. $1,600 on a $400 cash payment. $2,000 on a $500 cash payment. $2,400 on a $600 cash payment: $2,800 on a $700 cash payment: $3,000 on a $800 cash payment, $3,500 on a $1,000 cash payment, $4,000 on a $1,500 cash payment. IALL ONLY LEAVE THIS OFFER OPEN FOR A FEW S WE Wi TO DO W 'ER BUILDING WE ARE TO DO WITHIN THE NEXT X (60) DA BOGGS & KILL, Real Estate, 1408 Farnam st. OMAHA VIEW! Located on the gently sloping side hill, facing towards the river, between Ittner's brick yard and the residence of L. B. Williams the southeast corner of the addition being at Lake and 30th streets. The Red and Green car lines hoth ran to within 4 hlocks of OMAITA VIEW The Belt Line Runs Just West of It. A Fine Brick School House is to be Built There. K i "The lots are the cheapest by all odd A Church will will Probably be Built this Summer, There is now a Good Store on the Addition The View and Surronndings are Excellent, B0 good houses have alveady been huilt and are occupied by the very best class of people, The new foundry is but a few blocks north of OMAHA VIEW, and it is ru- mored that the North and South Cable road will run out 83d street in this addition at an early date, o in the market. and are all that could be asked in point of beauty. The terms ave such as cannot fail to suit all, Qhe attention of all wanting homes is invited to our proposition as stated above, Call on us for maps, plats and particulars, and go out with us and see the lots, . Boggs & LHII, Real Estate, 1408 Farnam St. THE OMAHA DA1LY BEg: ¢ FAST FOLDING THEIR TENTS Chautauqua Campers at Crete Leaving Out- door Life For Their Homes, THE FAREWELL MEETING TO-DAY. What the Rock Island Has Ieen Se- cretly Doing A Stockman Crushed to Deathat Falls City — State News, Drawing to a Olose. Creve, Neb, July Special Tel to the Bre.]—We b reali the various preparations for home going on the grounds how near the end of this assem bly teastof good things is. Sunday, Ju Iy 11 u five day service of 1 meetin l Iliese meetings will be in charge of the dif ferent ministers of the state and a good time is expected. All on the grounds are cordially Invited to remain, Mr: llen Foster, of lowa, left this morning for Topeka, Kan,, where she is expected to speak. Dr. Alden with his wife (Pansy) and son, lett this after- noon. Clara B. Colby, of Beatrice, who is vice-president of the National Universal Suffrage organization, eame in this morning, ‘The Nebraska News association have nereed, It lot be provided them, to put up a building costing about 8300 furnished with a telegraphic instrument and operator. The morning was given up to the examir tion of the children’s normal classes by their various teachers. Protessor Sherwin put the finishing touches on his choruses and gave s elass some sllent advice for the to y see PRt 10S] ns. future. The lecture by Dr. Meredlth on SChirist as o Teacher” was especially for the teachers. Ile says of this class of workers that before they can properly teach the truths of the Bible they must make those truths real to themselyes,” Dr. Meredith is personally and so deeply interested in the subject of the neces qualifications of Sumday sehool teachers that he never fails to bring the truth of what he says on this question right home to the hearers, The grand social and iistru. mental concert in the evening was one of the rarest attractions of the wssembly, The oruses were especially good, Among the special features were voedl solos by Mr, ¥. A, Ricker, Miss Hamlin and Miss Cora’ Gates, a violin $0lo by Forrest Cheeny, and a reeita- tion by Miss Parker, After the concert a very hearty vote of thanks was tendes the ladies of the dining hall, also to the president of the assemply, Mr. F.'L Foss. A farewell mecting will be held to‘morrow morming at S o'elock, whicl all will wish to attend The assembly has been a magniticent sue- cess, and all who attended this year will wish to come nest year, They will be heartily weleomed, The Rock Island’s Secret Work. SipNEY, July 9.—[Special t) the Bk, ] —A party of nine surveyors - has been diseovered in the field thirty miles south of Lodge Pole, Neb., heading for the northwest. Their destination and in whose employ arc facts which have been kept secret until to- day, when it became known that they are running a line for the Chicago & Rock Island railway from Kansas City to Fort Fetterman, in Wyoming, where the line will strike the Fremont, Missourt Valley & Elkhorn, whi is the trans-Missouri extension of the Chi- cago & Northwestern. The Rock Island surveyors will run their line across. the Union Paci Lodge Tole, twenty-two miles east dney, about the 24th of this month, thence northwest toa point eighteen miles west of Camp Clarke, on the' North Platte river. which they will cross, and thence run the line to Fetterman. This particular i work on the south sido of the latle river. A Stockman's Fatal Step, FaLLs Crv, Neb., July 0.—[Special Tole- gram to the Bre.j—About hall-past three o'clock this afternoon, while the Missourl Pacitic freight train near the B. & M. crossing at this place, a stockman by the name of A. W. Smith fell under the wheels and had both legs mashed at the knee. At the time of the accident the injured man was standing on the top of one of the which were movingslowly, and was in the aet of stepping onto the top of the next car ahead of him, when he made a misstep and fell be- neath the wheels. e was at once carried up town to the Umon hou in an unconscions condition, where he died in about two _hours, He has no near relatives in this part of the country, except two married _sisters, living “at Howe, the other at Verdon, nine miles north of this city. They have been tel- cgraphed and will be down at 1:30 to-night, Failure at Wahoo. W amoo, Neb., July 9.—[Speclal to the Bi: —Today W. W. Commercial hous present no definite s ] Burns, proprietor of the failed in business, At cment of liabilities or assets can be given, His ereditors are nu- merous, and it is quite certain thatjthe eredit- ors cannot recover more than a'small per- centage of their claims, A Farmer's Arrest. OAKLAND, Neb, July 9 Special Tele- grav, to the B 'homas Conner, a well- to-do farmer, living five miles north of Lyons, was arrested this afternoon by E. Wells, of this place, for selling mortgaged property to the amount of $1,000, He was brought here and gave bonds for his appearance to- LIOITOW, ] The Brown Impeachment. Des MorNes, Ia., July 9.—The senate met at 8:50 a.m., Manager Cousins beginning his argument on the part of the state and oceupying the forenoon. Each statement made¢ was followed up by a long list of American and English precedents, support- ing every phase of the question which had been presented during the trial, Afr, Cousing was the youngest member of the lnst house of représentatives, and his speeclh to-day attracted a large audience, Sen tor Bills oceupied the afternoon in the clo: ing argument for the deten His speeciy was devoted more to the general features of the case thun to the specifie. ‘'he court ad- journed at 6 p, m., with Mr. Bills still oceu. pying the floor. It is hardly probable that thie arguments will be finished this week, ———— Great Labor Demonstration. LoxNDox, Ont., July 0.—A labor demonstra- tion took place here to-day in honor of the delegates attending the quadrennial conven- tlon of the International Moulders’ unfon of Amcriea, The demonstration originated with the trades unions and Knights of Labor, Over twenty thousand operatives walked in procession through the principal streets rying banners and Amerlean and British tlags, the visitors occupying the posts of honor, ‘The prineipal features of the pro- cession were Wagons containing workers at their different trades, machinery in opera- tion, and the presence in carriages of young wonen members of the Knights of Labor vearing badges of the order. This evening ssrs, Luny, of San_Francisco, Trevellick, Jetroit, “and McFadden, of Chicago, de- livered addresses oefore an immense audi- ence, SIS A Lie on Logan, WasmiNcroN, July 9.—-Senator Hogr, chairman of the committee on privileges and elections, furnishes with request for publica- tion the following: SENATE CHAMBER. To the Publie—The published statement that Senator Logan requested that the votes of the members of the committeo on elections asto the investigation into the improper means used, if any, in the election of Senator Payne should be Kept a secret, is without any foundation whateyer, Senator Logan made no such request, nor did any senator on this committee make such a vequest. 1 do this by unanimous authority of the commitiee, [Stined) GEORGE F. Hoin, Chalrman Committee on Privileges aud Elections. R — Transcontinental Time Shortened. BAN Fraxcisco, July 8.—General Superin- tendent Fillmore states to-day that the Cen- tral Pacific railway will co-operate with the Union Pacific to shorten theoverland schedule time, The decrease between hiere and Ogden will be one hour eastward, two and nnsSnfi hours wutj.nt The new time table goes into effect July 25. It is stated the Atlantic & Pacitic will meet any reduction wade by other roads, INDIGNANT AT HALL. fowa's Delegation Denounce Action on the Des ¥ Wasnivaroy, July to the Bek.|—Cénsjders i being shown by the Hawk ation on account of the action of Representative Hall of the First Iowa district, on the Des Moines river land bill, when it was before the house the other day for passaige over the president’s veto. It was generally supposed outside the Towa delegatian that Hall was a friend of the bill, and this impression allowed him to do considerable harm. A member from New York says that Hall not only did not work for the bill. but did all he conld against it, and that he (New York member) was in part induced to vote against the passage of the bill by representations made_to him_ of Hall's position on the measure. None of jthe Lowa democratie members have any apology for Hall's dodge. of the vote on this bill, while all the rcpublicans condemn his course WILL WORK FOR IT8 PASSAGE. Representative Holmes, of lowa, will make a vigorous effort to secure the passage oyor the president’s veto ot the bill to pension Edward M. Harrington, of Fort Dodse. The rosident vetoes the bill on the ground that Tarrington was injured in a difficulty with a comrade, His friends say, and Major Holmes will prove, that Harrington acted ‘in- self-de- fense, and is now Insane and in an asylum, BAYARD WANTS 10 BE A JUDGE, It is learned to-day on unquestioned au- thority that Secretary of State Bavard is am- bitious of serving upon the United States su- preme benel. When Mr. Bayard accepted the portfolio of state hie used all the means at his commaud to secure the election of Mr. Gray as his successor tor the remainderof the unexpired tevm., More than that, he assured Mr. Gray that the same influence should be exerted to insure his re-clection for the full term, whieh commences March 4, 1857, But for this promise Mr. Bayard himself would endeavor to suceeed Senator Gray, for it has been an open secret for months ‘that he is dissatistied with his present surroundings, Next to a seat in {he senato Mr. Bayard would prefer a seat on the supreme bene He has communicated this desire to the pre ident within the last week, and received in reply the assurance that shouid a vacaney occur before the close of the present admini- istration his wishes shall be complied with. RATLROAD LAND GRANTS, “It is my opinion that there will be no forfeiturcs of the Pacitic land grants by ngress,” said an old railvoad attorney, member of congress. *The troub) ontintied e, “that the railroad compa have just enough friends in the hoi ‘m_‘ll senate to defeat the final passage of an) bill.? “But the senate has passed a bill, and it is now hefore the housc, torfeiting about thre mitliuns of acres,” | Suggested. 1 1 the statesman, “but the bill is amended so that 1t ean never pass: the sei- te, ‘The house wants to forfeit all of the Notthern Pacific grants, or pretends. that 1t when it knows full well that it can agree to it Those are of the railroad men in the house. Nearly man in the house who is mak iy 8o much fuss about Tand forfeitures is afraid there will be forfeitures, and every one is de- nding more thap hg knows the ate will nt. R\'Iml musy by done to get back these uncarned lands inpiee meal work—take a Tittle time, if, we cyn’t get n 1 know these pretended éifthilsiasts are saying that L part of thie grunts is to continn the ce, and that therctore we must forfeit at onatimeall we expeet to forfet, That is another line of foxy argument by the railroad member The bill passed by the senate a clause in it 1ing that this fo feiture shall in'! affect the other portions of the' grant or grants. Be- sides, the house ecan make that faintas clear and strong as it wishes and the senate will coneur. But mark my : When you see a witniber, clamoring fora ‘%l of all grants, toar or D, @ forfoitur b n set him down dfriend of the road "and an enemy of the forfeiture, likew o dex le. It has been the practice of ‘fhe Pacific companies for matiy years, and 1 know it,because it was a long time my business—to o so far as to ruin legislation and defeat forfeiture nito- gether, If we ever get any land from the cities it will be by small-amounts,” ONE o 1T, The country, irr tive of party, should uynite in praising President Cleveland for at least one thing, calling a halt on the custom of using the appropriation bills in the honse as a leverage to control legislation, resulting in prolonging the first session of 4 congr for from two to four months, ava cost of 1 lions of dollars. 1t is believed that the frst session of the next congress will be at least vo months shorter than this. To show can when it must be done, the house— senate, too,—accomplishes the same on_appropriation bills at the se o of & congress in eight weeks tl requires six or eizht months for at the first session, ‘The second session_ends, by pro- sion of the constitution, on March 4 'is the reason. A SUMMER ) 1 SCIEME, It is amusing, the deyices thrown out b proprictors of sunnner resorts to_get an_ad- vertisement by having the. entertainment of President Cleve nd wife. Having met with unitorm rebuffs by extending direct in- vitations, they n engaged in doingso through conz governogs and distin- guished private eitizens. The seheme is to get Mr. and Mrs, Cleveland to visita private citizen near a sunnmer resort not weil ady tised, and then have the citizen take gue: x Lo the resort fora few day at the expense of the propri K The president is not hasty in making replies toinvitations, and in_considering them in- quires into the geography of the adjacent country. W and his n commissioned postmaster at Oldfield, La., and Robert Aus- tin at Tama City, la, After to-morrow Cedarville will be omitted from the’ service on the star mail route ex- ‘\omlhlx from Prairie Centre to Loup City, Neb. Changes have been ordered in the time schedule of the star mail route from Trenton to Brighton, la., as follows, to take eficct July 180 Leave "Trenton. Tuesdays, Thurs: days and Saturdays at 7 u. m.; arrive at Brighton by 12 m. Leave Brighton Tues- days, Thursdays and Saturdays at 1 p. m.; arrive at Trenton by 6 p. w, PERSONAL M E. €. Webster, of 11 The Payne Reports. WusHiNGros, July ‘The senate com- mittee on privileges and elections Leld a weeting this morning ut which the reports of the majority and minority in the Payne case wer 1, but no time was afforded for dis cutsion and consideratl ) another me ing will be held pefore they are made publie, Strikiyg Troubles, DaxvriLr, 1L, duly 9,—The striking pe Crock are still in a state of inten nent, o i the report that ne- gro winers are to. he fmported from Ken- tucky to take their pinces, and it is their in- tention to keep the’ substitutes from going to work, Persuasfop i3.% be used fivst, and if that fails forco wili Ve resorted to, The negroes will arrive ‘to-morrow morning, Sheriff Turtle has thirty-five deputies at the creck, who are under ofders to quell any dis- turbance The sur] T are determined that noone except theMsceives shall work the mines, Serious trdbleéls anticipated. i i The Dropght Ended. MiLwAUKEE, July &+ Ran fell early this morning and therg are promises of good showers, Rain 15 rted 1n many parts of the state and there. fa Ipes the great drought atanend, In many parts of th has been no rain since May 15, suffered terribly 80 far as e od. Al forest fires that have r the northern part ot the state for some past have been extinguished. TION tings, Neb., Is here, — - He Stretched His String. viLLE, Tenn,, July 9-—John Lam- bert, a printer by trade, was executed at Charleston, N, €., to-day in the presence of soveral thousaud people for the murder of Dick Wilson, twenty months ago in Jackson county. Lawmbert had been drinking beavily the day of the murder and had a grudge against Wilson. He left a stalemeut protesting his innocence and charging an- other person with the murder, — - Sam Archer Hung. INpiaNArouts, Ind., July 9.—Sam Archer was hanged at Shoals at 11:30 a. m. The erime for which Sam Archer suffered death was complicity 1 the murder of Sawuel A. Bunch on July 11, 1552, The wurder was the esult of an old fawily feud. ATURDAY, JULY 10, 18S6, “SMELLS T0 HIGH HEAVEN" Serious Obarges Made Against the Omaha Medical Oollege. DEATH IN THE COUNTY UJAIL Hurt in a Runaway—Court Notes— Building Permits—A Man Miss- ing-Brevities and Va ous Local Matt o Sweet 8 nted Lahors, A party of ity councilmen, consisting of President Beehel and Mossrs, Lowry, | Lee and Schroder, accompanied by two reporters, one of them w representative of the BEr, might have been seen toiling up the Tenth street hill south ot the sbout two o'clock yestorday The party was bound for the corner of Eleventh and Pacifie stroets for the ex press purpose of investigating s horrible stench—or rather medley ot stenches— said 1o urise from the dissceting room of the Omaha Modical College building which is bemng removed from the corner of Eleventh and Pierce streets to the cor ner of Twelfth and Pacific streots. The residents in this vicinity say that the odors emannting from “the dissccting room of the institution are noxious and well nigh unbearable, Arriving at the old site of the medieal college the party gazed at the ruins of tho foundation and. wondered how and wh they we i to commence their investigation Councilman Schroeder was just about to suggest that all hands adjourn to got aglass of beer, when Mr. I P. Birket, who lives in the neighborhood, put in an appearance and volanteered to show the party of city tathers something about the grounds of complaint. He escorted them first to a large pit in one corner of the foundation, which he said the coll nrofessors were in the habit of throwing the dead bodies into. This pit connected with the dissecting room by two trap doors and us soon s the.disséetors were through with the corpsck, the fmangled remains would be dumped without far ther ceremony into the pit. Workmen exeavating on this spot had uncarthed the vers of large number of in fants in all stages of dissection, as well as thie corpses of several full “grown subjects, The stench from thi pit v simply hor. rible, until it had been covered up with the dirt. Even then, at close range, it was appalling, Mr. Burket also pointed out a cornerof the lot in which the medi- eal colloge fory y stood. Hesaid that h had witnesses to w that the authorities were in the habit of burying their half disseeted vietims there a few ehes below the soil. ‘The next visit was made to the medical coilege which was on wheelsat the corner of Eleventh and Lucific strects, being in process of removal by Baldwin & Belim From the building, the doors and windows of which were open, Mr, Birket asserted that the most nostril-rending stenches procecded, greatly to the detriment of the health of the people in that vicinity “There is the corpse of & man lying in there on the dissecting table now, half cut up, ‘disemboweiled and tropanned, which is almost in the last stages of decay,”’ suid Mr. Birket. *L will show 1t to you — 0, you won't,” d the foreman of the moving gang, blocking up the door way as Mr. Birket and the city fathers wete about to enter the building. “What! what! d that gentleman, “Uye got order: verybody ot of this building, " said the foreman coolly. “T guess the members of the city coun- cil have got a right to enter,”’ put in a city father at this junceur “That’s all right,”’ returned the fore- man stubborniy, folding his arms. “I've got my orders,” and I am going to obey them ~ Besides that, there ain’t no d caying corpse in the dissecting room.” ButMr. Birket was sure that there was. A short consultation wus held, and it was agreed that the city council ought to uphold its authority. = Accordingly a policeman was sent for and about three o'clock the obstreperous foreman was set aside, The committee then made an examina- tion of the building, making discov which weroe followed by the cireulation of a petition, which resulted in the call- ing of a svecial meeting of the councl which was held at 8 o’clock last evening. All of the aldermen were present except Gogdman and Ford, President Bechel cu led the council to order and stated that the ob ot the meeting was to consider the advisability of declaring the Omaha Medical collegé a nuisance on wlhich had heen made ens living in the vicinity of the college. Ernest Stuht, who lives near the col- first called upon to inform the upon the state of aflairs existing at the college. He said that this nuisance had been going on ever since the collegzs was started. He lived in the vear of the building and last winter, one cold night he elimbed out upon his roof and looked over the window into the dissecting room of the college and there saw the doctors and students at work upon a subject. He was in the bwlding a day or two ago when they commenced to move it and saw a purt of a subject dried up, lying on the dissecting table, with ribs and bones and old clothes scattered around the room. Mr. C. P. Birkett was then called out and detailed length his knowledge of the college dis: secting room. He grew cloquent in giving an account of the horriblo condi- tion of the dissecting room which he pictured as “filled with evidences of dead mortality.”” He said that when the col- fege was located there six years ago it wis with the distinet understanding that the dissceting room would be kept in a condition that would not give rise to any unpleasant odors, Of late the residents of the vieinity had been troubled about a fearful odor which has pervaded the neighborhood but eould nottrace it to its igin until on Wednesday when the col- building was placed on wheels for to its new location. Mr. then visited the place found that the cellar under the building had been used as a place to deposit the surplus flesh as it was cut from the bones of the subjects for dissection and that the stench was 8o teing that he could not sta: leg remoyil Birket and plac place. The doors of the build ing were open and he entered and went into the dissecting room. On the floor rags and remnants of h he thought had como from d¢ who had never corded a christian burial. On was the frame of a human All of the ole in their ) odor that v were scuttered clothing embowelled, Iying on_this noxious ness, emitting and sickening, My Birkett wanted the colle removed outsido of the eity limits, The citizens would cternally protest against its relocation in city where it now is Alderman 1 said he was = at the revelations which had been He didn'’t think it possible tha educated people like the doctors of On would 50 negiect the laws of he deceney as to eart dead peonle throug the stréets of Omaha in Ulu-u houses thought it was a blanked nuisanc an_outrage. : The matter was dispo: lution offered by Mr. Daily and” adopted by the council that the matter of u nuis- the part of th dof by areso. ance being waintained b{ the Omabs medieal eollege be red to the board of health with instructions te abate e same and have it removed beyond the city limits I'he conneil then adjourned THE DOCTORS SPEAK Drs. Leisenring, Carter and Ayre members of the Omaha Medica! college, were soen by a BEE reporter last even ing. 1 stated in substance that there were no g Is for the charges made Last winter the college had a janitor who was earcloss and did not properly cloan out the disseeting room, but he was dis charged and the place filled by a more re onsible party, since which” time the has been no trouble whatever. Dr. Ayr stated that the fuss had all been rs about some specimens that_belon. me pre for hac dical musoum, pared in Philac red to, he said, wa 1 been n case DIED IN THE ¢ o0 M last ost of whic hia. The s perfeetly bod ry JOUNTY JAILX Tom Boyl y Te ind ted, ready to be piaced in a cer of Tom Boyle Brought to a Sad and Sndden Ending evening e, a young man well known in Omaha, wherc he was born and reaved, died death in the county disl Ho t ssing was feq im ek an wful jail under the most circumstances i arrested on Tuesday evening while suffering from able of delerium tremens and placed in the city jail. agc that wer tention was givon sir th on tormenting d effect and sugh the night him his ravings continued From sheer oxhaus Medical the him without Here ho spent a night of untold o8, fighting the imaginary demons at e de- tion he became quiet on Wednesday and was sent to the county jml to sober up. He appeared to be resting casily during the day and on Wednesday night, but yesterday the reaction set in and it 5001 beeame evident that he could not recover trom the tervible effects of the debauch which had brought on the attack, Physicians were powoer- less to wid him, and he sank rapidly until 8 o'clock when death ended his sufterings s at once removed to the undertaking rooms of Drexel & 1, where his remains we repured for his burial, which will take place at 3 o'clock on Sunday afternoon from the residence of his mts on Chicago street, between Twelfth and Thirteenth L ticularly Yo he' deceased w nty-eight year i, and position freight department of the Union Ile fell a vietim to drink,however, ruin s A young man but age. He was par- for a number of of trust in the 10! his own prospeets in life,broke the hearts of si ged parents 1d untimely deat nd brought his I, Doepsympi own ithy prevails for the unfortunate young man’s 1 atll Tnspe ts yesterday as follows: Frank « Natha Natha Jerome R Hen icted. 000 in T tor Whitlock , one-stor Niheteenth onesstor taze, Twentieth Lake. tenement Twenty-fourth n tage: Tywenty-third el two-story Williams and Fifte three nii vin ar Do 1 Bro.s, Twentieth n Eight permits acgregating......... Bohl, two-story ence, on North Twe Juildings, issued building ¥ frame cot- street near y frame eo street ne frame cot- street mear fianie store. ith streets. brick sto A Man Missing. Rohwer, a reuts and brothers, who are so sadly por- 16,000 8,000 300 1,400 2,000 2,000 0,450 oung man who lives about cighteen miles north of Omaha, on In th tra see al: nin; heig! and wore, when elothe wher Couldn’t Raise the Marriag Anton Fraka was arrested y me into the cit, ady friend who was exnecte ening tram from started to walk the ¢ the afternoon he stock yards to 1 in. r n of him. His fr rmed over his abse ey ahf, s of ag air compl bouts will be uncle, Mr., Hen son stree! to ar ind Isla meet the incon riends nee. ar He is twe s od ry Rohwer, ™ Fe terda 5 feet 9 inches on, light must t seen, a black ‘Any information concerning his gladly rece on Tuesday to meet a rive and. to ing Since that time nothing has been wtly nty- in che it of by 1913 e. vin South Omaha charged with being the father of uan illc aughter of one of h to compromise the irl was willing, but as funds enough to get sent o vanted he out jauil While attempting to stop a t S running aw Wi near Ettner noon, Jumes and Bol L ported to the gov the con sary to the The L two e and the conldn’t rais amarriage | Hurtina R y wit s brick r, sust run 5L ov teu and wound und — dof sense, card, y Bobster was knoc| ning a broken leg. w was also started by the mders iter having collided with, sev is ncighbors. matter he w unaway, ha l 10 1 dc up on ing considd Troops For Rowan County. OUISVILLE, July nor, condition of affai nty, that the assista anford p judge has asked th Of these thirty o others will go fi tisville troops left nty, where the war officers. o Weather Inc pummand of Captain . —Judge € after investiga ie governor for go from Lexin ht factions m to-ni in v resisting the law after having nearly killed tlications, Wisconsin—Fair weather; stationary perature; variable winds. fown and Nebraska—Generally weather; stationary temperature; varl wind Hlinois—Local rains, followed by weather; stationary témperaturc; var winds, - The Hop Crop Fails, Urica, N. Y., July 9. —Feports from 5. imate child born to the He by um which ad of brick y after- Hwn il ble le has re- ting < at Moorehead, Rowan 1ce of troops is neces- ment of law in this connty. tem- fair able fair able ont- gomery county to the Herald show that the fai iy B ure, Many growers hop crop fn that comnty will b almost a olal at it will say 10y to pick the vines. They are contident that hops will conmand 25 or mor MALARIA. “ff people could only splendid me Jate wit lible in malarvial infe ¥ Sin aine or i3 there woald be liout a puticnt and ¢ doetor bill sa i been a peri know wha umons Liver R s many a physic many an interr I cous it I had for m ion t a n nin. fal ny « physical wreck from smbination of eomplaints, all the out wth of malaria in my system, and even under th Hful hand of Dr. J. P mes, of this city, I had despaired of ever being a well woman agaim. »im mons Liver Rogulator was recoinmend ed tome. Jtricd ity it helped undl i is the only thing that ever did me any good. 1 persevered in its usc and wn now in perfeet health. 1 kuow the medi cured me, and I always A% D standby’ in o Lagy ny fu iy, Ay, Cat WEATHER HOLDS THE REINS And Lack of Rain Causes Wheat to T'ly High in Ohicago. THE DROUTH HELPS THE BULLS. A Day of Bad Crop Reports From the Spring Wheat Reglon — Corn Fails to Follow Suit—The Cattle Market. CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET, Criteaco, July 9, —(Special Telogram to the Bre. —WrEar—Wheat opened 8o lower this moming on wet news from the northwest and depressed cabl Another fact that had an fimportant bearing on estab. lishing the basis of value for early dealings was the Knowledige that about 1,000,000 bush els of August wheat, bought yesterday morn- g at Sxas2 e on account of K. L. Dwy would come on the market. Dwyer, who gi recently clected moember of the board of trade, yesterday morning telegraphed from New York, whero he is sojourning the begining of business, to “Buy the crop,” and Underwood, Hovey & Robluson under took to execute the order, ‘T'hey suceeded in buying about 1,000,000 bushels nt the top, and it was not until late in the afternoon that the brokers and commission men who had sold before the stuff realized that they had been done for, w0 margn being put up. Dwyer dropped suddenly from sight, This morning the wheat was sold ont at 784, (@78 entailing loss of ahout 835,000, which falls on those who had properly sold him. ‘This deal having besn eleared up, the market advanced, and trading, wnich had at first been contined almost wholly to August, spread out through other options, The course of the market was steadily upward for the next half hour, an advance of 1wt je being scored, August selling up to 107e, September to S1i;e and October to S25ge. Adyiees from the northwest in turned hot, Duluth wired that the heat was intense and St. Paul telegraphed that a terrifically hot wave was sweening south from Manitoba, more blister ing than anything recorded. The Jim river correspondent wi shaw that the yield in that great fertile v would not exeeed seven bushels to the acre. Numerous dis patelies were received on the floor that the Iate rains in the spring wheat country had en local and that only slight relief had orded in consequenee, The raintall n followed by exee heaty 1en the situation more eritical than At no time sinee damage reports wan coming in has the news been <o unan- imously of injury 1o cropsas to-day. Dis patehes and létters poured in from hundreds of points, and the burden of the tale told rein To offsct this were al Chi whicli dampened the svirits of the bulls temporarity and. in spirit the selling. The market was' affected bears ishly 5¢e by clouds that overhung the head of Lake Micligan, but those whoso vision was not limited 1o the houndary of Cook county wereundismayed, There ‘was good, and it times, very laree trading throughout th the close o'clock was at s compared with the last ofticial pric lay, of le for A L e for September, and i,e for October. The feelir right at the close was exceedingly bullish, aud within two minutes er regular trad sion, and advane g elosed S0ie was bid for August, e more than was oficred at 1 o'clock sharp. Clear- g skies here had something to do with the firmness, but the unquestionably serious out- look in the spring wheat region had a hun- dred times niore effcet. It outweighed local v enormously, Coity—Speculative trading in corn was of aller volume to-day. ~ Comparatively peaking the felling under this head was weaker than in wheat, as the anxiety felt coneerning the growing erop is not wide- spread or general. Leading futures oper 1 e and elosed 1@ige lower than yester- Prominent local houses were free s carly. A good eash demand existed and roont was taken for 269,000 hushels, The feature of the eash market was firming up prices for “oft” grades under sppirited competition between u few of the vrineipal buyers in the tace of the decline in contraets. OATs—Oats were active ina speculative and the market was irregular and un- s day. The opening prices were Sg@1ie dlow vesterday’s closings, and the latest Dids for July and Augusl were ofl, with Scptembe hade stron ales for selling orders were at the extr of the latter were liberal. ProvisioNs—Provisions sold down carly, but later the whole List reacted sharply in sympathy with the advance in wheat, and pork elosed 5 10e higher than yesterday, lard 10¢ higher, and ribs #ige higher, which wis 0@ above the inside prices for pork, 12ige for Jard, and 1012 ¢ tor ribs, Lard showed wore steadiness than any other line of the product, Speculative business was only of fe volume. though oceasionally “con- srable s manifested. ON Tk the close when it eased off to and eallsat Sle. CHICAGO LIVE STOCK Cineado, July 9,—[Special Telegram to the Bup.]-Carrii—At the Union stock yards the receipts to-day as eompared with last Friday showed an increase in cattlo, a slight increase in hogs, and a large decreaso insheen. < thus far the receipts show an incr 800 cattle, 600 sheep, and o deerease of 51,000 hogs as compared with the corresponding time_last week. The cattle market to-day was qulet and unsatis- “tory, but the slight Improvement fn tho disposition to buy heavy eattle noted yester- day wits not [ost to-d e far eattle of light weight were in fair demand and sold a shade stronger, The hog market was dull and fully 10e lower than yeste Sheep sold slowly without. ehange. The eattle re ceipts for the day were 7,500, making about 3,500 for (e so far. There was more life than on any other day this week, and aslight up turn us compared with the past future. Country weed to 8097 for Puts clo: For the weel of Thursday. Yet there was no real advance and the outlook is not promising for sellers, port Steers—Extremoly low prices on this class, especially on stale and undesira- ble lots, has at last developed @ demand sufficient to nearly clear tho pens, It is sald Monroe hought seventy-live (o ty loads late yesterday within the ruin- of $460@4,90 for 1900 to 1500 ously low rat 1b steers, astonal | Lof fresh making 8500, There have been “bar'ls of money" lost i ths class of stock this week. Medinm—As compared with yesterday there is no ehange to note, This class hay lad to stand ity share of loss this fweok, Grassy stoek 18 40@itc lower than a weck or Distillery Stock—One to 1500 1b steers sold at $ Texans—The veceits gnwment of L today were about forty cars. Trade was dull at the decline noticed a day or two ugo. Values are 40a@30e lower than at the elose of last week on com- mon and thin Cows and Heiters canning stock continue Common and low zrade dull. Buyers prefer chieap Texans, l'oorest old cows and faiv sanning stock have dropped 40@20c in & weok Veal Calves—Sales of 14, averaging about 150 | Stocker lers—The trade in this s dullas in all others, Stock hus somewhat for a day or two past 1 the chanees now are that prices wl pping steers, 1350 to 1500 0 ) to 1350 1hs, $4.4064. 0 10120 | stockers and feol 2200 1s and mixed, S51.% slop led steers, $1.604 tle, slow but’ steady 0,000, waking 108.000 for week so far, The market opened prices weak, and elosed 5@loe lower, with ihe buik of sales of mixed at $4.70644.15, and of Licavy 34, Light sold at §4.135 .50, 1 & B, 5 st $1.50 a8 against ¥4, @190 yesterday ; rough and mixed, $4.404 ipping, 230 Lo 10 L ips, Kin 3 Lght weights, $440@4.85; Hamiton Warren, Eoleutlg Physi- and durgeon, Room 6, Crouuse thy Dr cian corner 16th and Capitol svenue block s | Dayaud uight calls promotly aueunted o i )

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