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HELD FOR SHOOTING DALKE. An Aurora Mystery Bids Fair to Be Unraveled. STULL'S CHANCES GROWING DIM. 3is Rival Endorsed By the Union ‘ Labor Party of the First Judicial District—Senator Van Wyck Speaks. Charged With Shooting Farmer Palke A"muu Neb,, Oct. 28, —[Special Telegram ~Malcolin Gustafson, a Swede residing nlmvn ecighteen miles northeast of here, was arrested and brought in to-day, ac- cused of shooting the old man Dalke, an ac- count of which appeared ip the Brg of the 10th inst. Gustafson is to have his examina- tion next Tuesday. It is said the evidence is véry plain against him. The old man has about recovered and will soon be removed to the poor house. Datke is the man who was tiried here last spring for incest, but was not convicted for want of direct testimony. He wus charged with cohabiting with his niece, u young Swede girl who had recently mar- ried Gustafson, It is said the girl left her Young husband, took up with Dalke, her uncle, and lived with him as his mistress. She has been attending him since he was shot. State Baptist Convention. Yonrk, Neb,, Oct. 28.—[Special to the Bee.] ~—Yesterday at the Baptist state convention the annual sermon was preached by Rev. J. H. Storms, of Grand Island. The address of welcome was delivered by Rev. Halsey, of York. President Holmes, of Omaha, re- sponded. The report of the treasurer shows the socicty to be in much better condition than ever before and a balance of hand of §725. 224 to China, gave a ver, pressive talk on the condition of the Chinese women. Last evening Rev. C. J. Thompson spoke on foreign missions, followed by an ad- dress on the state convention and home mis- sions by Rev. W. M. Heigh, of Chicago. There was a much larger attendance than on the day previous and the utmost good feeling provails, The Baptist cause has grown won- derfully in the past year and the (mtlook is good for the year to come, Run Over By a Wagon. Avurona, Neb., Oct. 28.—[Special Telegram 1o the Bex.]—Milo Houge foll from a wagon here this evening and was run over by a heavy load. The four whoels struck his shoulder and passed lengthwise of his entire body. The wagon contained a ton or more of dirt taken from where they were excayat- ing for a building. He is unconscious but no bones are believed 1o be bro The doctor Who is in attendunce thinks he is not fatally injured. Shaking Stull. Trovmsen, Neb., Oct. 25.—[Special Telo- gram to the Ber.]—The labor union party of the First judic ct met here to-day and endorsed Beveridge for judge in place of Stull. This settles Stull's hope for election. Trcumsn, Nob., [Special Tole- gram to the Berk.]—Ex-Scnator Van Wyck el an enthusiastic moeting to-day, address- ing a large number of farmers, His speech was received with rounds of applause. He scored the Pawnee county blatherskite's rail- xoud tool. S Death of Register Welna. Nronranra, Neh,, Oct. 23.—[Special Telo- gram to the B, |- of the United Sta worning of lung dis land oftice, died this S IN IRELAND'S Esmonde and O'Co eting in Chicago. Cu1cAGo, Oct. 28.~Eight thousand people gathered at Battery D armory to-night to hear Sir Thomas Grattan Esmond and Hon, Arthur O'Connor, M. ., on home rule in Ircland. The meeting was presided over by Judge Moran, of the appellate court, who in his remarks said that notwithstanding the fact that the Irish in this country were loyal 10 their mother country, their lo country wi lain wo discover effort at investigation. his speech said he would prefer if he ad ures and physical force, but as they were in Ireland they were supposed to be the best Judgzes of thie mode of proceedure, which was. constitutional ngitation. He referred to Mr. Chamberlain’s proposed visit to this country 88 un English commissioner and advised the Irish in America that he is a ghiest of the United States while here and that they are its He said the Irish parliamentary adopted the motto of General Grant and will fi 1t the battle out if it takes all winte Thowas G. Esmonde Toviewed tho ucis of the Trish party and the Plan of mpnig, n. alluded to the “jubilee cooreion act, sks the people of the United S wlm lave enabled them to struggle o luml to aid this “time, nor Hold a Big without Mr. O'Connor in felt that peated extreme i much rCo o Appr after which Hon. briefly, wnd the me Could Orimes Act. Loxnoy, Oct Blake, erown solictor at Cork, has resigned and declares that the erimes act leaves him no diserotion of juc ng whether un uccused per slieves the cal opponents of ment. rather huw ations, Nebraska: fair y winds, shifting to stuoherly. Fair weather, colder, followed light to fresh ‘northerly winds For N by warm, northeastoer For Tow by warne shifting t AN ‘\WFUL VOYAGE. A Capta ered by A dispateh from Port Townsend \\' ., to the San FPrancisco Chronicle The American ship Oceider vived from \pulco, Mex passago of th i the Occident i 1aden, for Acapuleo, under command of John ‘Willinms, who was acconpanicd i and two childven. days of tho voynge weie ,“lmx.,nnu,\ pusséd until Mareh 16, when John Craine, the first officer, issued a potty command which Seaman Avgust .eflock promptly vefused to obey. This was the heginning of one of the most thrilling and e ing voyages that has taken place for several years. The ofti- oers, excepting the two alr tioned, urged the crew to d captain’s command. On divers b dons prior to the awful tragedy different members of the crew with draw lmns had openly threatened Cuptain Iliams’ and Officer Craine’s lives, The log-book says: O rch 16, in latitude 13:04 north and longitude 25:13 | at 1 o'clock in afternoon, on the fore- castle head superintendi the letting up of the fore staysails, he had some | gry words with John Johuson, able seaman, about his insolent conduct and dilatory actions. The captain's atten- d aloft when Johnsc up {cnlhkulfv and seizing him by the throat, thrust the blade into hiv I The captain called out: * murdere& by Johnson time jumping off the forccastle house | n.nd running aft to the cabin-door. He in his wife’s presonce .und died. - Johpson wis being chased by Craine, wien Senman E. A. Malley, .witha Mutineers., At lln sine knife, attempted to stab Craine, who seized an iron belaying-pin to g‘d his life, when both Johnson and loy were surrounded by other membors of the crew, who threatened the officers’ lives if they persisted in arresting the murderer, Williams was found by Craine dead in the cabin. The ship w left to the merey of the seas, Chaos reigned from stem to stern. very soul on board a; peared to be paralyzed over the awfu told-blpodsd and Unprovoked murder ol the maste; Rumors came that the crew were going 1o take command of the ship. Fortunately, they had no navigator among them. Johnson finally surrendered and was ironed, but would always be released by the crew. The dead master was buried at sea the day following his death. First Officer Craine assumed com- mand of the Occidental, and that was about all, ns he dared not assert his authority for fear of life. The crew allege that Craine was criminally intimate with Mrs, Will- inms, and that such procecdings were continued until Valparaiso was reached, where both parties were seen on nu- merous ocasions to entor saloons and to have been intoxicated on the streets. The murder of the master did not end the trouble by any means, and the shi was heudud for the nearest port, Val- », whero the murderer and prin- i participants were turned over to the American consul and imprisoned, awniting advices from Washington. All but three members of the crew were left in Chili. A new crew was shipped and Mrs. Williams and family came to Acapulco, where the ship was placed in quarantine by the Mexican authorities for fifteen days. The Occidental was finally released and the cargo dis- charged, when John Craine was suc- ceeded hy William Taylor, formerly master of the ship Harvester. Craine was attacked with delirum tremens and sent to San Francisco with Mrs. Williams. The carpenter dicd at sea, alter leaving Acapulco, of Mexican fever. He was on board the Occidental when the master was assassinated. Eleven days out from Acapulco, bound to Vietoria, all but four of the seamen were taken sick with the Mexi- can fever. Evidences of the dread dis- easo was apparent to-day. The cases are ‘now confined in the Marine hos- pital. The fatesappeared to combine against the Occidental, While crossing the Gulf of California a storm came on and carried away over half of our sails, Be- fore leaving the harbor seven of the crew refused duty. They were jailed by the American uil, and finally and perform 1y ental was two ks off Cape Flattery before she could come in. The ship is still in trouble. the scamen claims to have been kidnap- ped in ulca, and the necessary papers to prove the charge bo filed against the master to-morrow. —— SHIPWRECKED MARINERS. A Thrilling Tale of the of the Star of Scotia. One of the crew of the Belfast bark Star of Scotia has arrived ut Liverpool, and has given some thrilling details of the wreck of that vessel on the Ialk- land islands, and the loss of eight lives. Of the unfortunate men drowned one was the mate of the vessel, and of the others the bodies of two were found on the beach with nearly all the flesh eaten off by wild and v ous birds that fre. quent the place. According to the count of the senmen who arrived at Liv- erpool and whose name is Martin Olsen, it uppears that the Star of Scotia was bound from San Francisco Queenstown for order: and on board a cargo of wheat. was manned by a w of l\\vnl) two hands, all t0ld, and got ashore on the rocks at Bull Point, about one hun- dred miles from Port Stanley, Falkland Islands. It was about 11:30 at night when the vessel struck, and the crew ren ined on boird until dayl was calm, but a hea e ng on the islands. The with the majority of the crew, got in one boat; and the sceond hout of Mr. Frazer, the mate. One of ca—TheWreck eir and then in for their clothes, o reach buat the mate’s bhoat was by the hes the shor on the bes were the s of the erew, v cotehman,named Da The mate w poor feilow ha Davis and E t {nnmof two ishman and a 1d Drummond, 80 in the boat, but the d just breathed his last. Drummond both recovered bunt of their shocking ng the short time that sed since they abandoned their vessel. It scems lhlt while making their way to the shore the boat was cap- 2d, and all of the occupants thrown into the water. Some of the men man- aged to cling to the upturned boat, which afterwards vighted. Some of the poor fellows never veached her again, ut were drowned, While making once for the shore, the hoat was capsized, and this hap- poned no less ' than seven times, until there e only three left, viz., the mate, Drummond and Davis. Some of the unfortunate men had dur- ing the time clung tothe capsized boaty but their strength had failed them, and becoming exhausted, they had to loosen their hold and perish in the water. Th to the men’s suffering, cold, and it was only by constitutions that the tw 11\\A~«IKH1 Drummond, saved their '} w their comrades drown- d not afford them the owing to their own help- When the shipwrecked the island was covered nd the pla togother was yeold. They, however, found shelter in the hut of some herdsmen and were as kindly treated as possible, The herdsmen afso rode a hundred miles to inform the authorities of the disaste Whilst the men were assistance the bodies of four of comrades w wushed ashore, ter on the bodies of two others of w were found on the beach. stance from the others, esented - shocking \d s, it appears, the 1d birds of & ravenous ng the eagle and the vulture, which no doubt prey upon the gheep which are horded on the islands. The birds had come across the hodies of the two shipwi men, and were short but complete in their voracious work. The survivors never got back to their ship. as on the night fol- lowing the stranding a heavy gale Sprung up, and in the morning the \tur of Scotia had disappenred. The men lost thefir clothes and had to remain on the island hu a month before they wer taken uway by o German mail stéamer, and subsequently transferred to an Eng lish steamer, Olson could not give the names of the unfortunute men who lost more robust their natu Francisco in April, and * was two months out when the di er happencd. She was an iron bar of 1,000 tons r, and was the prop- arty of M , Jr., of Croydon, Su o was huilt in 1864, in Bel® L, [roi whick port she hailed. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: IN THE FIELD OF SPORT. | The Shooting Tourney Closes With a Very Large Attendance. A BIG GYMNASIUM ASSURED. Primrose Issues a Challenge to Wrest- O lers—Teemer Easily Defeats Gau- daur—A New Ball League Formed—Races. The Yesterday Shooting. The shooting tournament couldn't have had better weathor had it been made toorder. Again the morning broke clear. bright and delightful and the contestants were early upon the ground. Notwithstanding this is the last day. the attendance was tho largest of the weck, and the programme one of un- common interest. The opening shoot was 10 live birds, 21 yards rise, §10 entrance, which resulted as follow: 1-10 11 11 01 10 3. Crabill, fifst whoncy, $5; Rublo and Mortz divided second, &30 and’ Stieco k third, 825, ohin 8. Prince and Howard Kellogg shot a private match 10 live birds, 21 yards rise, or 0aside. The sco Prince. ¢ 11111111109 Kellogg. 11101011107 Following this came a t2 target shoot, 18 yards rise, entrance &.00, Penrose. Stiece, Parmaleo, Townsend. . Crabill tooié ‘rat money, 812505 and Parmalee divided second, $10; Ponrose third, 8840 and Nethayay fourth, $1.00. The next event was 7 live ml;, 31 yards rise, both barrels, entrance. THE SCORE: Budd Ruble. Parmaleo,... .| Huntsman Denn Crabill, Harove Smith. Ketchem Bixford, Nethaway, Kennedy’ Parmalo National Jockey Club Races. WasniNaToN, Oct. 28, —The drizzling rain continued and’ the course was decidedly slopp, One mile: avor won, Young Duke third. Six furlongs uy Sam Harper third, For thro-year-olds, one mile and & quarter, starters Kingston and Dunboyne: Kingston won. Time- 3. One mile and a furlong: Florence M. won, :w\ul Arch second, Richmond third. Time— o One and on Bearer won, Ma Strike third. Time— To-morrow’s races lmvu bc(‘n postponed till Monday. The Nashvil Fall Mceting. NasuviLLg, Oct. 28.—The weather was ant, the track a little heavy and the at- ance 3,000, Six furlongs: Tommy R. won, Rhody Pringle second, Bixby third. T4 me~—1 218¢. wo-year-olds, five furlongs: Orange & 1 won, (\umop second, Roundabout third. lime— Seven lmlnlunl ‘White Nose won, Dark HulE second, Fronie Louise third. Time— 1:3314. Iive furlongs: Cupid won, Second, Bill Sterrit third, Ti A New Base Ball League. Ci1eao, Oct. 28.—A new base ball league was organized here to-day and was christencd Central Tllinois Inter-State leaguo. resentatives are present from Pec nport, Dubuque, Bloomington, R ford, Decatur, Danville, and Crawfordsville, Ind. William Allen, of clected prosident, Lewis Platt, e president and M. D. Henl secretary and troasurer. A committoo on constitution was appointed to report to- morrow. B.u'num second, Hess second, ¥ sixteenth mil gie Mmhvll L Banner cond, Ten 16—1 3 olonel Owens 0634 The Teemer-Gaudaur Race, LAKE MARANACOOK, Me., Oct. 23.—Teemer 1 the race, His time was 20 minutes, 35 seconds, Gaudaur's time was not tuken, e ] Migrating From Canada. OrTAWA, Ont., Oct. 25.—Emigration papers to over fifty persons going to the United States to settle have been issued by the American consul here during the last ‘three days. ——— Wicked Widows. Pesti, Oct. 28.—Seven young widows of Bingula and this city have been arrested for poisoning their husbands, Other arrests are about to be made THE ALA: California A'GOLD MINES. Prospectors Report ant Experienc co Chronicle: A party of a miners have just returned from the Alaska gold diggings on the upper Yukon. In conversation with a Chroniele roportor, one of the party gave the following account of the trip: “Our experience on our trip to the mines was anything but pleasant, In the fivst place, wo found the route from Juneau to the diggingsand the approach to the latter rough, dangerous and ex- pensive. The fiest portage over the Chillcont mountains is at an altitude of 8,500 feet above sea level, and the In- charged us#13 per hundred pounds ing our traps across the range. ous to reaching the mountain range we had to navigate over 100 miles of an inland sea. **After crossing the range wo reached a system of lakes which extends for about 100 mile These lakes we had to we could to reach the Yukon. When we got to the river we found a rapid stream running at the rate of about five milesan hour. Against this current we had to fight our way for before we got to the gold ficlds ble placer grounds of this un- hn»]n ble country. The latest bonanza is Forty creek, which we found to be a fraud. We boated up the ereek 150 miles, pros- pecting all e , hoping ok e posits of value. We tried eve bank faithfully, and in every instance the results were unsatisfactory. At the head of the ereek we found nothing but a number of small lakes bordered by extensive marshes and not a trace of gold. Un- ¥ bar and e 250 miners were working on the river, and the largest amount taken out by any one man, who was known as the **Bonanza King}‘ was $1,100 for the three months’ work. This practically means a year’s time,as a man has to spend nhm months in idleness and do his year's work in the remaining three months, after. expending $400 for his outfit, orhena h been fortunate than the *Bonanza King," clcan- ,SATURDAY ups for she season gunning from $200 to to $500. Many« hml struck nothing at all. “The diggin hard, the water cold, and a fe YN-L back from the stream the m\lq 'f§ frozen solid down to the bedrock, rendering it a physical im- possibility to workthese earths and ex- tract the gold. In the most favored lo- calities adjucen? to running streams work cannot be “prosecuted more than ninety days in the year. I)urmf the rest of the year the miner has to leave for some mm-u congenial clime, or, like the bear, hibernate for_the rest of the season. During:the cold months quick- silver freezes evlil, brandy and other spirits congeal, an 'an ether thermom- eter gave a reading of 80 degrees below zero in March last. “The gold i3 obtained from bar dig- gings on the river, which are small in avea. In one place, in the crevices, as high as $1 a pan was taken out, of fine river scale gold, but even then tho miner could only make from seven to eight ¥l\lls a day. “In Franklin® gulch, a tributary of Forty-mile creek, -about which such brilliant. reports "were recently made the largest nugget taken out was value at $8.50, and it was largely quartz. The largest nugget found on Forty-mile creek was valued at, 832, “Our return trip to Juneau took forty days, involving not-only great expense, but untold hardship. ‘5 do not wish to condemn the country, but owing to the short season, inclemency of tho climate, ground covered with moss and frozen solid for nine moaths in_the year, and Brobdignagian mosquitoes the other three months, and the rivers raging torrents, it presents insurmount- able obstacles to the prospector, Game of all kinds is scarce in the interior, and the cost of transporting supplies ruinously expensive. The miner must have from $400 to 8500 in cash to start with, as it will cost fully that much to 5«51 through tho season. Reports of iscoveries and results of working have been greatly exaggerated, and the rruspc(‘tor and miner should look well before they leap. A partner of Lam- bert, who was the discoverer of Forty- Mile creek, stated that he had made 8600 in one season. As near as we could ascertain he made $600 and no more. “Stewart river diggings are com- glgbulv worked out and abandoned. ‘ew of the old-timers have made ex- penses, and many of them have adopted the life of the aborigines of the country and are known as sqaw men.” ——— A Romance From Georgia. Savana News: A pretty little ro- mance has just culminated in Rabun county, Ga. At the base of Tiger mountain, half a mile off the main road leading to Clayton, lives a small farmer named George W. Dillard. Mr. Dillard is about sixty years of age, living with his wife and three sons, the latter aged respectively thirty and twenty-five. Carly last summer Mr. Dillard went to his neighborhood | postoftice, where he found awaiting him a letter covered with postmarks, which denoted that it had traveled a lung distance to reach its destination. 'The superscription was written in a familiar hand, but one which he had not seen in_a ,.yx,nvrmmu. He tore the seal and read the missive, and, sure enough; found it to be from his wife's brother, whom he had seen for the last time in 1849, At that time James MeCurrie Wwas a young man,as was also George W. Dillard. The news had reached Georgin of the wonderful discove of goldin California. Young Georgians who had gone there had written back glowing uccounts of the fortunes which were Veing made. These descriptions had the effect of drawing still others south- ward to tho great Ildorado. Among those who were full of the excitement were McCurrie and Dillard. They had perfected all arrangements to go, and were bidding the familics good-by when Dillard faltered. The tearful eyes of McCurr young sister touched his heart, especially usshe was weeping for him and not for her brother. Throwing down the bundle he held in his hands he declared that he would stay if the girl would marry him. To all this she cheerfully agreed, so Didard remained a Georgia farmer, while McCurrie jumped into stage coach and wus borne away. Since that time he had never been heard of. It was with mingled feelings, therefore, that Dillard started to read the letter from his old comrade. The letter was a soiled one. McCurrie stated that he had worked against adverse fortune, de- clining to write to the folks at home until he could strike it rich, but every year found him striking it poorer, and now, old, feeble and poor,his great wish was to look once more upon his native hills, that he could not 1‘“ 80 unless was sent money enough upon which return. Mr. Dillard read the letter to his wife and sons. **We must send him the money, id the old man, so a cow and a mule were sold and the money went on its mission across the continent: veral weeks time brought another letter in which the old sed his gratefuluess for the 58 dono him, but he was too sick to travel then, Lust Saturday o large ofticial envelope was received at the lit- tle postoffice. It bears the inscription of a strange hand. The neighbors, one by one, dropped by and told Dillard about its arvival, If was too late for him to get it then, but he on hand early Monday morning. As he read it his hand trembled. Tt recited that James McCurrie s dead; that he wished to test the fidelity of his sister’s family; that theiv prompt response to his appeal had moved him, and that by his will his property in California, vai- t $1.000,000, was willed in equal s to his sister, her husband and two sons. The two young men going to California to superintend the property, which they intend to con- t into cash, when they will return to rorgia. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Combines, In a manner peculiar to itself, the best blood-purifying and strengthening reme- dies of the vegetable kingdom, You will find this wonderful remedy effective where other medicines have failed. Try it now. It will purify your blood, regulate the digestion, and give new life and vigor to the entire body. “Hood's Sarsaparilia did me great good. 1 was tired out from overwork, and it toned meup.” Mns. G. E. StMMoNs, Colioes, N, Y, I suffered three years from Llood poison. 1 took Hood's Sarsapaziila and think I am cured.” Mus. 2. J. Davis, Brockport, N. Y. Purifics the Blood Mood's Sarsaparilla 1s eharacterized by thiee peenliaritios : 1st, the combination of remedial agents ; 2d, the proportion; 34, the process of securing tho active mediciual qualities. The result is a medicine of unusual strength, effecting cures bitherto unknown, Send for book eontaining additional evidence, o Hood's Bursayarila tones up my ystem uri lood, sliarpeus uy apretite, and ake mo over” J. 1!, THOMFSON, ds, Lowell, Mass, rilla heats all others, and I8 worth its welglit b 010" I BARRINGTON, Bauk bireel, New York City, Hood’s Sarsaparilla 8old by ull druggists. 1; six for §5. Made only by C. 1 HOOD & 00, Lowell, Mass, 100 Doses One_ Dsllar. OCTOBER 29, 1887. OMAHA AS IT OUGHT TO BE. A City of 200,000 Busy in Manu- factures and the Arts. VALUATION A HUNDRED MILLION. The Needs of the Place Tersely Set Forth at the Exposition Hall Last Night By George Francis Train. Train's Talk. George Francis Train lectured last night in Exposition hall to an audience of 1,000 peo- The management of the place charged $1 a scat on the ground floor and 50 cents a seat on the gallery, claiming that those were Mr. Train's prices. When Mr. Train mounted the platform, however, he induced all the gallery occupants to descend to the floor, which they did with a great deal of satisfaction. He an. nounced his objection to the prices charged for admission, and further that for to-night they should not be otherwise than 50 and 25 cents, accorning to location, Mr. Train was announced to lecture on ‘‘The Past, Present and Future of Omaha.” When he appeared on the stage he unbuttoned his heavy coat, threw it on the table, gave chairs to several little children whom he led to the platform, and assigned a seat to & messenger boy, who acted as his medium and interpreter. He then gave a buttonhole bouquet to each of the little ones and the reporters. He was dressed in a black suit, with white vest and tie and patent leather shoes. His facial ap- pearance was such as has already been de- scribed in the Bes. The earlier part of his lecture was devoted to showing the ships he had built, the towns he had founded, at home and abroad, and the railroads he had constructed, his description of the path of empire, 600 miles wide, begin- ning in Asia, comprehending every city: known to both ancient and modern civilization to Portland on the Pacific coast being concise and eloquent. He then detailed his connection with the plan to build o railroad across the continent, the disap- pointments, the establishment of the credit mobilier, and the eventual accomplishment of the grand rosult one year earlier than had been outlined for it. Speaking of Omaha he said: “I'll draw you a picture of what I can give you for ‘Omaha in the future, and of that I am cer- tain because I hold it in my Psychos. I was born on top of the mountain, and I can see on all sides. I can mako you all rich, if you n only do what I tell you. If you doubt it, i oaptier sitizons bout it What Taid for them I can do for you. In twenty years you can become a city of 350,000 inhabitants.” The speaker then drew & diagram on & blackboard at the back of the stage showing Omaha to be the center of the continent, with fourteen trunk lines, which had come here one after the other. He then spoke about having sat with Colonel Patrick in Mr, Kountze's bank, when there was scarely Troom to pass between the stove and the wall without “‘loosing the seat of one's pants,” when Mr. Kountze was cashing flve dollar checks, before a railroad had passed the Mis- sourt, He showed Mr. Kountze how little more effort was required to make a check for £5,000 or £5,000,000, **Omaha,” he said, “has eight trunk lines to the sea. On the other gide, seven lines lead to the Pacific coast, I mention this to show you the geographical position of Omaha on ‘the continent. These roads run cast and west. The power, _tho Almighty or it s, I_ am mot altogether in my mind as to what it is, has mnl’urmml natural features and advantages toward the north and south, and singularly tend in'the dire 3 The papers make me say strange things. They have told you about fossils. Now I mean no harm to_the fossils, but I abhor fossils who, like John Jacob Astor, sit down on a skunk skin, grow up on emigration, and then hurrah for tiie town which they havo built up. They don’t build it up. They never did. I tried with them before. 1 beg them to bring their manufacturies and guar- anto them rrecdcm from taxes for twenty or ol Nhn\\'ul them that the the factory, the consumer beside the [n‘mlucn But I couldn’t ke them budge an inch. They wouldn’t me. August Kountze was a most en- terprising man. [Here Mr. Train dr elaborate picture of the Sagi bank in which Mr. Kountze financiered in ] Then I found him signing his 1 told him of the $16,000, cured for building a milo of the road, offered half interest in the credit mobilier—couldn’t budge him.” The speaker then claimed to be the father of the inl policy of the ;,u\-xnlll.v“L during the war, when there was a per ¢ of $#60 throughout the country: *If there is a of couceited — fools in the country we've got them in the senate. They shaky hands, tap cach other’s el . you umlll skate over the ice with a thin crust, a bill paying the national debt when already boen paid in _gold instend of & per capita of $60 and the count above l)u‘ surface of the wheel, w upon the axle of the wagon. whatis the matter. 1f we business, we find money short. enormously rich during the was s we had a debt, one of #1 re never 80 h don't know going into We were fellows—1 don’t know lm\\ \ull do it- assessed valuation is only $14,000,000. city strives to steal from th te' and the state from tho ci J itution you can incur a del cent of the assessed valuation. ou reduce that valuation to onc how little you can have to make advancement. The first thing you must do, then, is to raise your aluation and be honest to your city, your- 'l\ s and your state. hose in favor of this . [The responso unanimous., A 10_per it the 1.7 Well then, we'll lend him If you want to .nl\um ‘e your your valuation. Then issue bonds But Miller’ says 4 per cent low. Muke it & por cent. Fiv only £500,000. must tak A small 1 distant mountain. 11 fly in floc will obscure ides that birds s in swarms, cattle in herds and man must live in_socicty, If you cannot all_be Catholic, all Protestants,” all Masons or Pythians, you can all be linked to- wether for Omaha. Allof you who are in favor of mncreasing the assessed valuation suy aye. [Ayes and applause.] Five hun- dred thousand dollars on @ population of 100,- 000 is nothing—two drinks and a clgar o day.’ ‘ouching the subject of grain, Mr. said: “It is a disgrice to @ city by a wheat and corn country tha not in elevator. No eity that mukes any pretense to size ought to be ‘without a flour will. It is a shame that On How i8 it at_Minneapolis, ! mills which turn out 10,000 bari day, put them on boats and deliver them in Liverpool in twelve dayst 1 ut & new and young man—) nephew of Ed Créighton. 1 did not know him before hie got started. But you all kno at ho has done—stated & whole town in ich will be the nucleus of [Applause.] He is @ 14 Creighton. Mr. Creigh not - classical scholar, he had skill enough to build the first telegraph line aeross the country. [Applause.| And one must heartily applaud and appreciate the effort this young man has ng for South Omaha such men , Hammond, Swiftand others to build up Omah “Then you have not got & gr market, with & department for groceries, weat, vegetables, with its marble furnishing, and plate glass sides, so that people pussing throu will stop over and see the great market which Owaha has built, “You have no grand hall of beautiful de Train sign, no gallery of art, no temple devoted to wnsle nor painting. Men must not be sordid in their deals in wheat and hogs. They should cultivate literature aud the arts, and establish public libraries, sud indulge all movements caleulated to advance the fntelli- cence of il people.” (A gwrulous party near the front of the audience caused, for a moment, Mr. Train to feel that Omaha had no)gnhlh library.] r, Train then described his visft to South Omaha, and the rapidity with which cattle ond hogs were dressed in Hammond's, Noting that the hides were sent to New York, he marvelled that a tannery was not organized here with hemlock bark which could be procured in Michigan, He wondered why glue factories were not opened to save tho shipping of bones and horns to the east. Ho held that the situation of Omaha, with its slaughter-houses, was the place for the fac- tories menti ; and, being so near the cattlo-grazing flelds, where beef could be dressed without shrinka, and shipped to New York in five days, thero was no doubt that Omaha was destiied to bo the great market for cattle and hogs in the country. He then referred to the fact that Omaha was without_a boulevard, extending from Florence to South Omaha, and then east and west, connecting o series of parks, which would be the matvel of this section. These could be made out of property acquired by purchaso by means of the increased valua- tion, Outside property was not boomed too much, It had not commenced to boom. It would pay to buy 2,000 acres of it for parks, beeause it would be impossible later to pur- hem when the city crowds upon them. Hanscom park he wanted tugaed into & 700- logical garden, to educate ti% children, and ‘would have agents sent throughout the world to sccure animals which would show what nature produced in the animal kingdom. Then he would erect 150 poles, with half a dozen clectric lights on ecach, to illuminate the city instead of the drowsy littlo lamps he had seen. Referring to the gradual comin, together of Minneapolis and St. Paul, he mf vocated the bridging and even the (Imnullmk of the Missouri to unite Council Bluffs to this city. Then the Hennepin canal could be cut ncross lowa and Omaha could lh|\ her produce to urope. Wyoming was full of oil wells, whi were ctically inexhaustible on the surface. A Standard oil company should be organized which would extend a pipe from those wells to Omaha and make her tho greatest oil center in the world. Mr. Lovett was here called upon to corroborate the statement of Mr. Train as regards the wells and the feasi- bility of the pipe system. Mr. Lovett did in a few words. He then advocated parking the streets and making other public im- provements, even though the latter gave rise to thieves of the Tweed stripe and the boodlers of later da He closed by asking his audies as to whether he should speak to-night, and there was a hearty answer in the affirmative, Mr. Train said he would again appear this cvening and say a little upon the anarchists, and on any other subject the audience might require, and he would guarantee to offend no person by the expression of his views. Mr. Train was in excellent humor. He was always interesting, sometimes oloquent and frequently humorously and tragetically dramatic. He entertammed and instructed the audience ve satisfactoril, He concluded by distributing grapes among the reporters. Building Permits. e following building pormits were issued yesterday by Superintendent Whitlook : ¥ G Munford, two-story frame dwell- ing, Eighteenth and Spencer L Larson, llvu.llmg Nicholas. ... .. Ed Siefken, one and one- frame burn, 428 Twi nue. Thos Madsen, cottago, and Decatur streets John Grossman, two-story frame flats Seventeenth near Charles. Poppleton Park Building story frame dwelling, Northrup ave- nue near Burt.. Same, one and th T dwelling, AT story fourth ave- ame venue near Six Persons Fatally in Cleveland, VELAND, Oct. 25.—By one of the ovens loding this afternoon in the I. Tapliff Car. riage Hardware company’s works, two men were instantly killed and_five scriously in- jured, two of whom may die. “This evening a boiler in Holden's fire brick works at Mineral Point, O., cxploded with terrific force, fatally scalding four persons and seriously injuring five others. Injured SANY Fraxcisco, Oct. steamer Z ed this ovening from Sidnoy, Hong Kongand Honolulu, Sho r(ll'llllflhlll that the ex-king of Samoa, Malctoai was brought to Cooktown by a Ger- man man-of-war and ther forred to an- other, which immediat Tho dosti- nation is not known. nformation saysthe Samoan group have been pl under a protectorate, with Tam ws nominal king, under tho Tast advice tention to also p Tonga. New Z on this matter, and England f tion. Had the, brings ensure the. Uni not resisting Gerny done so it is cl course of the latter would have been very different. The New Zealand Herald says that had shich action been taken by Denmar or Holland the action of the United States would have been decidedly different, med the “hooner, lie protracted ab- . H. Jolmson, which wo, Inden with co of the schoonor Cleveland a month prise here and eauses anxiety to those ha ing friends aboard. It is fearcd that the sts and cordage reported on the beach on Manitoulin island, Georgian bay, belong to the Johuson. She is valued at §,000. — l'(‘rmlm to \\'v(l ; : 1 Addis Mg, ils C, Hans 1 Auna M. Anders SKIN SCALP BLOOD Faving heen a sufferer for two years and a half from & disease caused by a bruise on the South Omaha. n, South Omah Finlay (to whom 1 . &poke {o me about ntéd to give them a trial \With The reault that I A perfecily enred, There 18 now 1o sore about me, 1 think 1 can show sprang ¥ The Curict REMEDIES 1 manufuctu lay and br. CE e Mr, Comituis, REMEDIES, ot our Iul\h-«( um. Fomiits us above stuted. LB FINLAY & CO., Druggists. Saved My Mot Life, er since I can remember, my mother has 1K le would do her alent, 1witl] 1 hadf. the ndeit, ip her leg and moaning. Eho had no Slie used all the best know remedies in Country without effect. I nsked her 1o try your CUTICUIA REMEDIY Ler a bottle of Comioyna REsoLvEsT, ook 1it, and his taken in all hielp s wonderful Curicu You have saved my mother's a0t ind words to_ express oy gratitude. Ivertised your Cuticuma IREMpDIES far AKD LUEDE! Cunicuna, the gred SoAw prepuied from it cuna i T, CEllS, e u"postiive. gure fox and blood disease from pinples 10 everywhere, Price, CUTICURA, B0c: S0AP, 25c; RESOLVENT, 8100, Propared by the Porrex DitvG AND CHEMICAL 0., Hoston, Muss, B sond for “llow to Gure Skin Disease pag Nustr and 100 testimonials, ISt crofula, 28, bla ds, l'luap“ed snd ml nted by CUTICURA IN ONE MINUTE the PAIN PLAETER Folieves Sciatio sudden, sbarp. a B4 ey Pains, Blratns wnd Weaknzsses., firat wid only puln-killing Pluster, 2o ced o oo 310 aud 311 Ramge AN ELEVATED RALWAY, One of the Probabilities of the Fature for Omaha, A Conversation Overheard on an Elevated Raliroad--A Young Lady's Statement. [Kansas City Star, March 8.1 1o, Dad thisto ‘1h your mouth, bud heaath, iy appotite for your breskgast, feoling Iike & than Liad been tntoxicated thehight befo conversation took place on the ele veen our reporter and a gentle eud last Sunday, tihnt way?” asked the re d the gendleman, Well T should ot uult , but there are thousands of I»nplq- who feel jist that way. Tmyself have had this trouble in an aggravated threo years, My ears hecuine ailocte not hear well; my sight 1 spoke with' a pronou sense of taste was fast leaving me. 1 sir, that 1t 18 not very pleasant, this catarrh— for that 1§ the term’ that this t o § but the name does 1ot exp and tortures of the loathsomo' disense. Dbreath became so bad that my friends could nu{ come niear me. 1 would blow out such offensive scabs that I feared my nostrils were decoms pos! POUWeL, air, satd our reporter, haye goiten bravely sir, T am s w 1 not went to Drs, M doubt hiave been dewd by this time. L Would you object to” my usiug your name ta seem to i ¢. But had would no No, sir; but as T am a stranger fn_your city, would ratler you use one who is known better than I Now, there {8 Miss Emma Overstroot, n nefgchbor of ust street, who hind catorrh foray d as 1, but still iy esult she' obtained at 2 1ad to tell you all atous Ollru-‘nulvr cnlled on Miss Ov home. She told him that she had had a catarrh for a year past, but was now entirely well, and ihat she was willing to add her name to the many putients who Jiad been cured at Drs. Mo- oy s oftico. The ab v Enma O v good likeness of Mise located permanently rs. M hnlnuluhu ana hisve ofices i 310 and 11 Ramge CATARRH DESCRIBED. The Symptoms Mh-udhu: That Discase Which Leads to Consumption, When catarrh hasxisted in the hend and the ¥ of titme peoplo ably, sometimes slo ends down the win pipe and into the hial tubes, which tubes nvey the afr futo the different ‘parts of the The_ tubes become affectod from the swelling and the mucons arisi 11 n catarrh, and, in some Instan become phigged up, &3 10 as freoly as it whould, eath follows, and the patient reathes with labor and diffictilty. D o, chso. there.Ja.u sotad of cracklin ng inside the chest. At this stage of the breathing 15 usnally more rapid than whien i health, The patient” has also hot companies this condition is , felt in the chest, behind the breast bone, or under the blade. The pain_may come and w, days and then bo absent for s . The congh {hat occurs in_the first stages of bronchinl ca- tarrh i ¢ aracter the morning on rising, or going to bed at night, and it may be in the first evidence of the liseaso b | extenaing toto the hu T l\ the toug r. Later ¢ t o contain small | c b which indicates that the s Turigs are now affected. Wi « enks of blood mixed with the mucus, Tnsome cases the patient becomes very pale, s fover, wnd expectorutes Deforo wny” cougli fi otlow mate ubes n the this there are apy T hmnn cases small masses of che &tanco are spit up, Which, when pr tween the fgers, ‘emit 7 OF SHALLKY Junps bae £t work in the Tungs, catarrh will extend into the casos 1t muy be tho aleate serfous In some cas Tungs in a few w \\ T o ci r which diffors With the qifforent glight in the morning, higher in the afternoon and evenly SNEEZING CATARRH. What It Means, How It Acts, and What t Is. Yon suceze when you get up in the n you try t your nose off_every thne you are exposed to the Jeastdratt of wir. You huve w fullness over the tront of the foreh the nose feels as if thero was a plug nostril which you eann dislodge, Y your nose until'y any good, and the ting up a very r the “m!\g menl ou nre unab A % n corr . and you £o frr of that organ th throwgh 16 at all, averdrawn picture of the disense 14 prevalent, florts to tind u_lodgment, frritate the sensitive membrane lining of the ature undertuke rid Lerselt o fit of s inge, wiih thic s for atarrh g n cutity where These emod intorfered ted m st Inul\lm such means the oring 15 pro- Gato gaing and the pe 1gh the mouth, t becomes parclied and dry anced, and then the catarthil’ di Teady nocess to the thront and lungs. DOCTOR J. CRESAP M'COY, Late of Bellevue Hospital, AND DOCTOR COLUMBUS HENRY Have Oflices 310-311 RAMGE BUILDING, CORNER 15'H AND HARNEY STREETS, OMAHA, NEB. s are treated with suee s tronted sklllfully, Cone Sumption, Tiright's. Disease, Dyspepsta e matism, wnd wll NERVOUS Dis A All CaA- ) ln\ at office or by mafl 81, am: 204 pw;iTtod Jrompt attention, are treated successfully by De, 3y through the mails, and it is thus possible for those unable 1o make a journey to obtein suceessful hospital trentment at thelr homes, No letters answered unless wccompanied by in staap Add: all letters to McCoy & H dress o o afiec (flu nx