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& < v THE OMAHA DAILY “OVE LEVELS ALL HUMANITY. Bome of Cupid’s Queer Conquests in the Rogal Courts of Europe. A PRINCE WEDS A MAID-OF-HONOR. Bons nnd Daughters of the Reigning Houses of Great Britain and tho Continent Who Have Wedded Social Inferiors. any an interesting volume could be written on the lpves of royalties in the past. Legendary or historical lore re- veals many a page in which kings woo for shepherdesses and princes do not dis- dain to kiss the red lips of rustic hoy- dens, ‘Without going back to an antidiluvian epoch the chronicler could quote many instunces of cases in which crowned heads and their consorts or cousins fell victims to the ravages of the tender passion—the weakness of Queen Yseult for the gallant and handsome Launcelot du Laec, despite the ties that bound her to-her lawful lord and master; the dainty intrigues that took place in the palace and the Trianon of Versailles, where the Lovis 6f the day spent their royal lives away. mesmerizek at the feet of a Pom- padour or a Du Barry, or whisvered soft nothings in the ears of a Louise de la Val The Erench revolutionof 1789 may have contributed much to the equal- ity of humankind, but none can deny that love is and has been the deftest levdler of all. There are indeed, and have been re- cently, cases in which unfortunates cions of royalty had to bow to the exigencies of state and pledge their loyalty to per- sons whom they couldnotlove, A daugh- ter of the late King of Italy, the prin- cess (Clothilde, was compelled by & min- al decree to give her hand, when could not give her heart, to Jerome Bonapurte, alias “Plon-Plon,” of France. A German princess, young and hand- some, but absolutely portionless, had some years ago to become the bride of the decrepit old king of Holland, who has just been deposed bo- cause, fersooth, it was necessary that an heir should be provided for the dynasty reigning over the Nether- lands. For a similar reason the gifted Princess Amelie of Orleans was sacri- ficed to the stupid commonplace king of Portugal, and in a few months’ time the newspapers of the old world will be full of reports detailing the ‘‘diplomatic marriage” of Princess Victoria, the Ger- man emperor’s sister, who wasso cruelly jilted by Prince Alexander of Batten- erg, with a pretty, obscure stripling of the Vaterland. There are many such instances of busin like marriages in the annals of contemporary royalty. More than two decades ago the present. empress of Russia, then a princessof the house of Denmark, fell passionately in love with the eldest son of the Al i the attachment—with the, were engaged to mar- ried, Before the nuptials could, however, take place the youth died of rapid consumption and the princess had to espouse her lover’s brother, the actual ruler of all the Russias. In the English royal family love mutches have been few and far between, Vietoria's union with her cousin was one of mutual affection. The queen’s daugh- ter, Princess Beatrice, defied the remon- strances of her brother, the prince of Wales, by linking her destinies with those of Prince Henry of Battenberg, a tall, well built, Adonis-like popinjay, who had cleverly laid siege to the girl's heart and as cleverly captured it, thereby resigning his capitancy of dragoons in the German army, with its 80 marks a month, for a life of luxury and ease on the gold of the British exchequer. Louise, the eldest daughter of the princo of Wales, could have married into any of the royal or im- rial families of Europe, but she pre- berrml instead the duke of Fifo asa hus- an A sister of the late king of Spain is about to wed & mere doctor of medicine without a solitary handle to his name, and had the courage to say, when sharply criticised over her choice, that she would rather have a man without a title than a title without & man. The marriage of her brother, the recently deceased Alphonso, with the Princess Mercedes was one of love; but his second union, with the now widowed Queen Christina, could not be classed as one. The late king's uncle, the brother of Francois d’Assigi, husband of Queen Ts- abella, who was known as the Infant Henry, duke of Seville, became enumored of Dona de Cordo- va, & prepossessing lad of noble origin, whom, however, he was forbidden to marry because she had not a royal current of blood flowing through her veins. The duke tried in vain for some time to obtain his brother’sauthor- ization for the nuptials, and eventually dispensed with all permission and mar- ried the lady of hislove. This daring feut on his part so incensed the royal family against him, and outraged " in such an evidently profane fashion the sacred pride of the royal house of Castile, that he was never forgiven, and was ostracised thenceforward from the pre- cinets of the court. The vengeance of the result that = ~_the same court followed him and her almost w the end, for it was only a few {mu‘u ago it was discovered that several of his children were actually starving in a misevabie attic in the slums of Paris. The late Alphonso—to his credit be it said—rescued the hapless youngsters from poverty and opened to them the doorsof society in Madrid, Omne 0 the latter—the present duke of Seville—made but a poor return for the lindness thus shown to him, for scarcely was Alnhonso well in his grave when the daring duke sought to captivate the affections of his benefactor’s interesting widow, for which piece of audacity he was sentenced to two years’ imprison- ment in a forlress, One of the most interesting of royal love marriages of a decade orso ago was that of Crown Prinee Rudolph of Austria and the Princess Stephanie of Belgium. The young prince wooed and won King Leopold’s daugh- terin the orthodox romantic fashion. Being invited one day to the palace of Laeken, near Brussels, he was struck by the ]{remneas and coy manners of the royal maiden to whom he had only just then been introduced. 1t was in his cace ~—though it may be presumed not in hers —love at first sight. After a week's courtship he asked her to be his r‘i(o and kxocdp avers she told him to ask papa. The mar: as is well known, was a der::f;i failure. The young wife, neglected by her husband, sought for some comfort in innocent flirtations with a eavalry offi- cer, who was subsequently d ved of his epaulets for having won the platonic of the imperial dame, while Ru- dolph on his side became the lover of & baroness and sought im vain to effect a divorce from Stephanie with the view of wedding his second love, The sequel of this liaison is too notorious te need repeating, “Y'he late king of Bavaria, the unfortu- nate Louls, who was 8o passionately at- tached to everything except womankind that was beautiful and sublime, and who was once a musician of the Wagnerian school, a t of the Homerie, and a fanatic in his ad- miration of both, inspired not a few senti- montal ladies with a deep and tender passion, aithough he vas himself the pest living type of the inveterate woman- | hater. Ono of these hapless Ariadnes was the sister of the empress of Austria. The eccentric lnmmn:lh resented the lady’s attentions, vowing that he would never put a bridal ring on a daughter of Kve, and, in order to obviate the possibility of & scandal, her brother-in-law, the emperor, had her sud- denly united in marringe with one of the polty potentates of his empire. After a o years of wedded misery the lady's reason gave way, and she has now b for some time as helpless a maniac as was the royal woman hater on whom she had set her heart. Self-abuegation is often the acompani- ment of true love, and in this quality there are some European !\rlnces who are by no means deficit. Prince Oscar of Sweden, the second gon of Oscar I1. of that kingdom, renounced all his rights ol succession to the throne and gave up his royal title in order to be free to take to wife one of the maids of honor in his father’s court. Mlle. Munck was the daughter of a colonel, and had no_ blue blood to boast of. Yet Oscar loved her faithfuily and passionately and became a social nobody in order to make her his own. If Prince Alexander of Battenberg, late of Bulgaria, had wished to wait a year or two he could have secured the hund as well as the immense fortune of Pri s Victoria, the sister of the Ger- man emperor, but as he did not care par- ticularly for that lady he married Mile. leisinger, o penniless actress, whose father was a shoemaker—simply because he had fallen recklessly in love with that seductive creature. The Grand Dulke Alexis was another royal victim of the caprices of Cupid. As brother to the Czar and admiral of the Russian navy he occupied a position second only to that of the emperor himself. Yet he, too, had his little romance, for he be- came enamored of the daughter of the national poet. Joubowski. When the news of this love idyl reached the ecars of the Czar Alexis was exiled tothe Baltice, while the lady was escorted to the Austro-Russian = frontier. But tho grand duke fled from the shores of the Baltice, and, hav- ing “rejoined his sweetheart, brought her to the United States, where he married her clandestinely. After a short period Alexis and his bride returned to Surope, where, owing to the influence of his mother, he made dutiful submis- sion to the czar and his mar- ringe with the poet’s daughter was declared null and void. The young lady, having mourned her truant lover for a few months, consoled herseif— prasalcally enough, it must be admitted by becoming the wife of an elderly German baron, He was as proud of hi conquest as Marquis do Boissy of Paris used to be of h's marchion who, as Countess Guiciolli, had previously been one of Byron's most favorite mistresses. ———— After diphthera, scariet fever, pnen monia orany other severe illness, there is no better, tonic than Hood's sarsaparilla. il ity TERERESTRIAL LIFE. Jacques Lectard on the Dangers that Threaten It. Before reaching the present period of its history, the earth passed in succes- sion through great geological phases, during which its continents and seas were several times deranged by the in- ternal forces that its nucleus of matter in fusion developed, says La Nature. None of these revolutions has been able to destroy the powerful germs of lnfe, and it is today more impostible than ever for a geological cataclysm to cause such a re- sult. The most important of the historic catastrophes of the kind is cotemporane- ous. Woe refer to the gigantic eruption of Krakatoa, in 1883, which claimed 50,- 000 victims, and totally transformed the configuration of the Strait of Sunda. Despite their great violence, such phe- nomena _are al s local, and, conse- quently, without untoward influence upon animate beings collectively. The internal activity of our planet is now greatly reduced tered upon the calm period of its existenee, A rapid examination of this progressive diminution of internal energ, is to lead us to a particularly rational solution of the problem of the world’s end. When the solid erust of our globe formed it sur- rounded an incandescent fluid spheroid, which afterward condensed toward its center under the action of cooling. In measure as it contracted this nucleus diminished in volume, and the external covering gave way in places, and cracked in order to follow the motion of shrinkage. Itisin this way that were produced the large folds that formed the principal reliefs of the surface. Consequently, the terrestial erust, hav- ing become thicker, will be covered with enormous crevasses, through which the oceans and atmosphere will be gradually absorbed in the numerous internal spaces, The surface of the moon, deprived of air and water, with the immense furrows that traverse its plains and mountains, presents the spectacle of this beginuing of rupture, for “our sat- ellite is more advanced in development than the tervestrial globe. Having passed this stage, the dead star, eracked In all directions, will break in piecesand the fragments will be scattered along its orbit, This destiny of the earth is still a thing of a very remote future. Yet it seems as if the natural evolution of dur globe wiil cause the disappearance of life long before the extinction of the sun. It is, moreover, eusy to see thatin the geological epochs lost in the night ef ages the vita forces were more powerful than those of our day. We have a proof of this in the exuberance of life that then gave birth to animals and plants, besides which the present igantic beings are but dwarfs. 'he day on which., through such general weakening of vitality, man will have fallen into a general de- endence that his refined intelligence wilt not be able to supply the place of, will rrulmbly be also the day on which the ast representatives of our race and the entire creation will have tolivein the bowels of the earth in the pursuit of air and water, which will slowly descend toward the center of the earth. De- prived of atmospheric fluid, the surface of the globe will thereafter have for temperature only thatof interstellary space, say & hundred centigrade degrees below zerol And while our human race will be reimmersed in the.nihility from which it had emerged for afew thous- ands of centuries, other humanities will succeed one another upon the innumera- ble stars that people infinite space. e sty Both air and water abound in microbes, or germs of disease, ready to infect the debili- tated system. To impart that strength and vigor necessary to resist the effect of these pernicions atoms, mo tonic blood purifier equals Ayer Sarsapurilla. s s B Marvelous Fecundity. In comparive the animal and the veg- etable kingdpms, Linn denominates seed the eggs of plants. The fecundity of certain species is simply marvelous. A single sunflower will produce from 4,000 to 12,000 seeas in oue summer; the So the earth has en- | BEE: WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1890. 32,000, One plant of the cat’s- mfii produce two to five m, cach containing an_average of 10,000 seeds, | One root of the East Indian elecam- pans will throw out thirty stalks, | ench having a seed vessel containing 8,000 seeds, or atotal of 90,000 seeds trom a single root in one summer. Ray, the English scientist, says that it takes 1,012 tobaceo seeds to weigh one grain and that a single plant will produce 800,000 seeds. The same author esti- mates the annual seed product of the | spleen-wort to be upwards of 1,000,000, [ S ——— That Intercontinental. Another Pan-American congress will shortly assemble in Washington. This time it is railway and not commercial union that will form the subject of dis- cussion, and the particular question to be brought on the tapis is the connection of the two continents by means of an in- tercontinental railroad. The scheme is a grandiose one, and worthy the enter- prising spirit of the great republie, says the London Times. If carried out, the traveler will be able to journey by rail right across the vast stretch of country that separates Canada from Patagonia, chernl of the principal Central and South American states have appointed delegntes to ropresent them at Washing- ton, and others will in all likelihood fol- low suit. Unless the coming congress prove asabortive as its predecessor, which does not appear probable, we may expect that the work of surveying for the proposed railroad will soon be un- dertaken. i, Even the most vigorous and hearty people have at times o fecling of weariness and lds- situde. To dispel this feeling take Dr. J. H. McLean's sarsaparilla; it will impart vigor and vitality. iisiangas Couldn't Guy This Boy. Tne four-year-old son of Charles Clif- ford, the pugilist who is now in jail for propably fatally wounding David A. Greever, the stockman, is precocious and *“*a chip off the old block,’ says the Kansas City Times, Police Surgeon Iuen, while teying to entertain the little fellow at the police station yesterday pointed to his hunting dog and said: “There's a nice dog. He can catch a ball in his mouth when I toss one to him.* “That's nuthin’,” said the boy, “I've got a dog that will cateh up a stick in its teeth and bat the ball back.” “But this dog can climb a tree,” said Dr. Inen, slyly winking. . “That’s nuthin’,” again retorted the boy. *‘All the dogs climb trees where I live, My dog goes to school with me and is in the same class,” The police surgeon’s breath was taken away and he had nothing further to say. The Jersey Lily has become quite famous for ler beatty and she means to keep it, too, for hasn’t she learned in the great United States to cure colds with Dr. Bull's cougnh syrup? Make a note of it—Twenty-five cents buys the best liniment out, Salvation oil, at all dealers. FI1ELD OF PU The Radical Move of the C., M. & St. Paul to Manage Its Own Sleepers. Local railway officials have a topic for con- versation in the action of tho Chicago, St. Paul & Milwaukeo company, sntounced ex- clusively in yesterday morning's Bek, m assuming the management of the Puliman sleepers on that company’s lines. “The Milwaukee is the first of the western roads to undertake the management of its own slecpers, and railroad men here hold varying opinions as to the wisdom of the movement. Tho innovation makes public the terms of agreements between the sleeping car com- punies and the railroads, thatare but little understood by the ing public. In the case of the Milwaukee, the company owned a three-fourths interess in the Pull- mans onerated on its line, Pullman owniag the other one-fourth. The cars were oper- ated by the Pullnan company and the profits ‘were divided between the railway company and the sleeping car magnate, This plan is in voguo on several of the roads but in most instances the Pullman company owans and operates iis cars on the various lines and charges the railroad company a milesge and makes & very meagre division of the uet profits. This arrangement is under a contract plan and all of the earlier Pullman contracts were made for a pariod of twenty- five years, and most of them are still in force and will be for some years. “Tne Milwaukeo won't make a go of it,” said a well known passenger man In speaking of the matter. *It has been tried by compa- nies just as big and powerful as the Milwau- kee and none of them have been successful, The Baltimoreand Obio tried it for several years and then gave up the plan. The Wis- consin Central and then the Illinois Central took # hand_at ruaning theirown sleepers, but gave it upus @ bad fob. Every compuny that has tried It has lost monay, ‘The trouble seems to bo in the inability of the railroad companies to properly manaze this branch of the busines: ullman has the business down to o science and every carrun under his management is a money-maker but there is always a loalk a8 soon as a railroad company attempts the management. Every railroad envies the sleeping-car companies, their profits, that_ are apparently so easily and surely eamed, but a railroad company has a white elcphant on its hands whenever it attempts the management of this branch of tho service.” - A good deal of interest will attach to the Milwaukee's experiment and if it proves sue- cessful other roads may adopt the phn. The Union Pacific has a contract with the Pull- man comvany_that will not expire for five years. The Northwestern patronizes tho Waguer, while the Burlington and Rock Island are patrons of Pullman under con- tracts that will hold good until 1592, The Union Pacific Car Famine, Superintendent of Car Service: Bucking- ham has returned from a trip over the road. “The car famine,” he said yesterdoy “still prevails on the Union Pacific as on all western roads, but things are easing up a trifle. Our groat trouble nas been & lack of motive power. We have received thirty-one of the 130 engines ordered last spring and the others are coming at the rate of one a day, s0 that we will soon be in shape to handle all the trafic off us. Our new cars, of which 7,000 were ordered, are wariving rapidly." A New Union Pacific Time Card. A new time card has been propared for the Union Pacific to take effget on Sunday next. Noue of the passenger trains will be af- fected by the change exeeps No. 8, which ae- rives at. 12:45p. m. This train will reach Omaha at 11:45 &. m., one hour earlier than the present time. Notes and Personals. Colonel D. W, Hitcheock and Harry Deuel weunt to Tekamah yesterday. Major Trout, eneral commissary of the Pullman company, is 1n the city, Ed. Hoyt, l’ermery purchasing agent of the Oregon railway aud navigation company, is in the city. A. R. Newton, traveling passenger agent of the [llinois Central, with hearquarters at Kansas City, is in the metropolis. Superintendent Jaynes of tho St. Paul & Omaba, accompanied by his secretary, P. M. Rose, have started for Randolph to make ar- rangements for building thirty miles of snow fence along the Randolph extension, @ new branch of the road which runs through the foot hills to Fort Randall. This fence will be the longest snow fence in the country. Work on the extension will be pushed with alt possible speed tn order to complete it be- fore cold weather sets in, so that the im- mense number of cattle which bave been grazing in the hills all summer may be put on the market, e ed The new offices of the Great Rock Island route, 1602 Sixteenth and Farnam streets, Omaha, are the finest in the city. Call and see them. Tickets to all points east at lowest rates. MWKEIGHAN NOT-A DEMOCRAT. The Sod House Oongressman Defines His Position in Politios. HE SCORES HIS METHODIST FRIENDS, The Milwaukee Company's Radical Move—A New Union Pacific Time Card—The Car Famine— Other Local. ongressman-Elect W, A. McKeighan of Red Cloud was the center of a group of demo- alliance enthusiasts at the Paxton hotel at noon yesterday. The leaders of the faithful in the city were paying their respects to the next representative in congress from the Second Nebraska district, McKeighan is tall and slender, with proml. nent cheek bones, sharp deep-set eyes, & stubby mustache of dark auburn hair, and wears asuit of tailor Tade clothes that fit ouly in places, A m‘;omr for Tur Ber who asked Mr. McKeighan for an expression of his views on the resuit of the recent land slide, met with a chilling reception at first. “I have nothing to say” said Mr. McKeighan, on the fight that has just closed and nothing of the future resuits of the fight. One of the papers in this city did not agree with my views during the cam- paign and don't _ care be quoted by It now and have nothing to say." Then,after a short pause, the congressman- elect proceeded tosay s lot of things, and this was one of them : “1 am not & democrat, I want. that under- stood. 1 never wasa democrat. Some of the democrats have seen fit_to enthuse over my election and claim it as theiv victory, but that is their affaic andnot mine. I have al- ways been an independent man and am_ yet. 1 never was in a caucus and never attended a convention.” uestioned as to the provability of a eon- test being made_ by the alliance on tho elec- tion of a governdr, Mr. McKeighan said: *'I don't know anything about that. I only known that Taimin favor, personally, of & fair count, and that is all any ' man should want. If it had required the steuling of one vote for me to beat Mr. Har- lan for congress I would not have tried to beat him in that way.” When questioned as to his opinion of the future of the alliance and its relations with the existing parties, Mr. McKeighan au- swered: “The alliance is growing in numbers every day, and I am not afraid of it losing any of its strength. It is growine in this state and everywhere else and will grow until the prin- ciples for which itis fighting are recognized and its demands complied with.’” A gentleman from Lincoln named Baker, came up at this powt aud coneratulated the congressman-elect upon his victory, “O yes,” replied McKeighan, T knew I would bo elected 25 soon as the Methodists inmy district got after me. I would have been' elected by a bigger majority if all of them had got after me, They knew I had no use for the churches. 1 nevergo in one except to a funeral. There is a great deal of difference between Christianity and religion, Christianity takes the heathen, clothes him, washes his face, puts a spelling-book under his arm and starts him to schoot. Religion on the other hand 18 contagious. It is like the itch—any one can_catch it--and the rest ongressman’s dissertation on fine i wis lost as he and apartment gentleman was busily polishing glassware befors a large mirror, EUECTRICITY ON A TEAR. A Broken Feed Wire Enlivens Men and Animals on Harney Street. Considerable stir was occasioned at the corner of Tenth and K'wmam streets yesterday by the breaking of oue of the induction wites stretched over the motor trolley wires by the telephone company to protect their wires. 'he break was occasioned by the slipping of a trollev, which sprang up and struck - the wire, tearing it from its fastenings, The wire fell across the trolloy wircs, and then the fun began. The dangling ends dropped to the rails below, and every contact was followed by a series of sharp reports and Drilliant flashes of bluish flame. An_inquisi tive Newfoundland dog, which was attracted to the spot by the unusual scene, trotted up and stepped on the wire. He struggled bravely ~ but painfully for fully ten seconds bofore he could le go, and then he escorted @ cotple of bushels of yelps around the corner wWith secming zest and unparalleled atacrity. Ono of tne Cousolidated Oil company’s wagons was driven by and one of the horses stepped on the wire. He immediately pro- cevded to indulge in a series of gymnastic ev- olutions that astonished the driverand highly edified the crowd of spectators. After this demonstration, the police kept all toams at a respectful distance from the spot. "o motors could not pass, and four of them were blocked there before thy trouble could be remedied. The motormen and conductors did their best to keep the swinging wie off the rails and were fairly snccessful. One or two of thew received slight shocks, and others had their gloved hands burned, the wire being at times almost at & white heat. The break was finally repaired by two Western Union linemen who happened along, and fastened the broken Wire to-a teleplions pole, PPiio street railway company's offico was apprised of the break by telephone, but the swer was not shut_off until after the trou- lesome line was outof the way. Noone was injured, although the demonstration was witnessed by several hundred people. How Was He Injured? Conductor Erickson of the Hanscom park and North Twenty-fourth street motor line was seriously injured yesterday morning, but Just how no one seems to know. R ‘The train had left the south and had gone as far as Leavenworth street when the watchman noticed that his conductor was missing, He at once reversed his motor and ran back to the other end, where ho found Erickson lying on the track, uncon- selous, and a deep cut in his head, He was E:‘ckod up and carried into the street car rn, where medical aid was summoned At 1 o'clock this afternoon the injured man was still unconscious and unable to give an account of the accideut. Another Eledtric Break. Another of those guard wires broke at the corer of Sixteenth and Jackson, and the end was fastened ' to an _iom tree box in front of - the Ter block. The wire crossed one,of tho motor ‘‘feed wires,” and a pool of water in the street was charged with the ourrémtl A dog belonging to F. Manweilor o ventured into the ‘water and receised a shock, which partially glm‘l{nfld t. Two policemen gus the dangerous ace until the wire was removed. The tree was 50 charged with the current that it smoked, and set fire fo pieces of wood or other combustible material thrown agaiust it. o s i MORRUARY. Impressive Funoralof the Late Fred Walter—Death of'Rev. Mr. Helin. ‘The funeral of the late Fred Walter, agent of the Anheuser-Busch brewing association of St. Louis took pisice this afternoon at 2:30 o’clock from his late residence, 1617 Wirt street, It was largely attended by friends of the family and of the deceased many of those present being representative business men of this city and adjoining towns. The remains lay in a beautiful casket, the features retaining the benignant expression which characterized the deceased in life. The casket was literallv covered with fowers, tributes from the many frieads of the deceased and the several ussociations of which he had been a member. The employes atthe agency of the An- heuser-Busch association in this city, of which Mr. Walter had charge, sent a broken shaft, a pillow, o lyre aud several other ex- pressi igas. The Liederkranz singing soclety, of which | o Thio pall beawors wore Dr. Tonry Vo the deceased had been one of the most retir. ing yet serviceable members,was representod by & beautiful floral lyre, one of the strings of which had been broken. An eloquent and tender tribute to the char acter of the deceased was delivered by Mr. A, 8. Ritchie of this city, he father of the deceased arrived vester day from St. Louis and was a tearful wit ness of the solemn scene. Mrs. Bang of St. Louis, the mother of Mrs. Walter, was also present endeavoring to assuage the profound grief of the widow whom the shock had prostrated. Mr. George Krug, the general agent of Anheuser-Busch, arrived today at 12:30 p, m,, and was grief strekon over the loss of his associate, whom he held in almost brotherly esteem, The remains were escorted to the union depot, where they were placed on the cars and transferred to the Wabash train at Council Pluffs, by means of which they were forwarded to St. Louis, where they will bo interred in Bellefontaine cemetery, ‘The funeral will be held Thursday afternoon from the paPent's residence, 932 Morrison avenue, The remains were accompanied 1o the former home of the deceased by his father, wife and children, his wife's mother and Mr. George Schroeder of this city. The funeral was one of the largest seen in the city for some yoars, Ramacciottl, s, George Schroeder, Chief Galll’ gan, George Whitlock and Chris Shaw. Mr. George Krug, in behalf of the An- heuser-Busch brewing association, the par- ents and family of the deceased, requested Tur Bee n‘[lmrmr to express to the friends of Mr. Walter in this city the gratitude of tho bereaved ones for the tender mauner in which they, had aided throughout the ob- sequies, —-—— A Long-Headed Railroad President. Hon, Charles Francis Adams of Boston, president of the Union Pacific railway, ro- cently returned from a trip to the west. At Trinidad, Col., *he secured a wagon and spent four or five days near that place looking up the coal lands there, for which Trinidad is ht!l.‘ominf famous. Asa result of his visit thousands of acres of coal lands there were purchased, presumably in his interest and that of the Union Pacific road, which already runs fnto Trinidad and beyond, and is re- celving an enormous coal trafiic at that point. s - vibaiuonah Judge Savage's Condition, There will be a feeling of relief in Omaha and throughout the state when it is known that, as the result of a severe, but successful surgical operation, Judge Savage was re- ported last evening as greatly improved with good chances for his ultimate recovery. The operation performed by Dr. Bryson of St. Louis, assisted by Dr, J. E. Summers, jr,, and Dr. Bridges of this city was over an hour and & half in duration, but was very satisfactory in results. Judgo Save well from its effects and was at last reports resting quietly. The surgcons express the beliefsthat the chances for the permanent re- covery of thejudge are much more than even, although eonve nce will be necessarily Ieng and tedio Rl To Nervous Devilitated Men; If you will send us_your nddress wo will send you Dr. Dye's Celobrated Voltaio Belt and Appliances on trial They will quickly restore you to vigor, manhood and health. Pamphlét free. Vorraic Beur Co,, Marshall, Mich. ES RN, 8 Turkey Shoot Today. There will be a great turkey shoot held on the Dunmire & Cross grounds across the river this afternoon. The management have fifty birds to dispose of, and the best rifle shots in this part of the country will be ‘in attendance to contest for the honors. g i Injured by a Runaway Team. Mrs, James Stockdale, who resides at 1510 North Twenty-second street, was seriously injured Monday evening by & runaway team atthe corner of Sixteenth and Dodge. TAKE S. S. S. FOR ECZEM 4. My little four year old girl had an aggravated case of eczema, The best physicians treated her, without any good results. A single bottle of S. 8, S, cured her sound and well. This was four years ago, and she hag had 1o re- turn of the disease since; and herskin ig perfectly smooth and clean. James E. Henry, Detroit, Mich. Treatise on Skin diseases mailed free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga " a>HUMPHREYS’ VETERINARY SPECIFICS For Borses, Cattle Sheop, Dogs, Bogs, 1 AND POULTRY. B00Page B e ont Froo: cours oA b Bots or vorms. i e i1, H . Urinary and Kidney Discnsess 3 l'('.'«!i'mm""’ D..m‘l':‘ ll.-fi.l.l‘llyfllv Single Bottle (over 50 doses), - - 60 Seable Sniry Caro Ol num $7.00 Jar Veterinary CureOil, - = 1.00 » ¢ BT o] S s E g HUMPHREYS® MEDICINE O, Corner William and John Sis,, Now York. Tn uwo 0 Nervous d Pi een. HUMPHREYS MEDICINE CO. of or. William and Jpha Stas N. ¥. Kako never works up or down or breaks. If it does in a year, you shall have your money back from the store where you bought your corset. The steels may break—- the best of steels have their limits of strength. But Kabo has no breaking-limit; it doesn’t break at all, And the Kabo corset is perfect in form. The store has a primer on Corsets for you. Camica60 Conswr C0., Chicage and Now York. Liebig Gompany’s EXTRACT OF BEEF For improved and econowmlo cook- ery, use It for Soupw, Sawces and Made Dishes. In flavor—incom- parable, and dissolves perfeotly clear In water. Makes delicio u Beef Tea and keeps in all climates for any length of time. 1 Ib equal to 40 1bs of lean beet. Ouly sort fuaranteed geouine y Justus, von Lieblg A and bears his signa- ture in blue, thus: ADWAY" S n:."-'»‘:a_fi PILLs'c:;..,S THE GREAT LIVER and STOMACH REMED! Cures all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bi ous Disenses. Loss of Appoetite, Headache, Constipation, Costivene: tion, Biliousness, Fever, Piles, Etc., and renders the syste m less liablo to con DYSPREPSIA, tract disease. RADWAY'S PILLS are a curo for this nealthy action, restore strength to the ston Prico %50 o bos, Sold by all druggists, or matled by RADWA York, ou receipt of price. pl alnt. They tone up the Internal seorctions to and enabla’it to porform [ta funotion: & CO, & Warren ot, Now DAUPHIN! DAUPHIN! DAUPHIN! Any person having business up to the r12th of Decembet with M. A. Dauphin of New Otleans, can send package contain- ing money, not less than five dollars, free of expense by Express, NO OCURE! NO PAY. DrDOWNS 1818 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. Beventeen years' exporience. reatest success all Necvous, Chironie and Priva atorrhan, L ki o OF tne B to cure. Consul’ation fre 10 13 m. he Sper it -PIANQS: * inelyMade; filly: Warranted] ' s Marvellous: i Topes - ORTALAGUEFFTM. BOSTONOFFICE, C. L. Ericson, Local OMAHASF = Medical and Streial Istte Corner 9th and Harnoy Streets, Omaha. AR -l ez < TP 14'. m,. A R i) Ve gT——- X FOR THE TREATMENT OF ALL Chronic Diseases and Deformities. DR. A. T. McCLAUGHLIN, President. Founded by Dr. J. W. McMenamy. BOYDY 4 Nightsgesiv N ow. O HOYT'S Masterpiece and Crowning Effort MIDNIGHT PHE ORIGINAL GREAT CAST. 5 A CARLOAD OF REALISTIC Seats will be put on sslo Saturdey morning at regular prices. GRA N D oo Wednesday a.nd'[’hunda; Nov.12and13. SPECIAL ENGAGEMcNT OF THE NEW YORK LAUGHING SUCCESS, RUNNING WILD By CHAS, T. VINCENT, author of “A Grass w dow," “The Editor,” ete. As Aplnyud in all the leading cities of the United States. PRETTIEST GIRLS! BEAUTIFUL COSTUMES! FINEST COMEDIANS! NEW SPECIALTIES! SPECIAL SCENERY! Popular Prices. Box Shest opeus Tuesda) BOVAS Shnes : ¥ OPERA HOUSE. et ‘@ 3 Nights and Matinee, 4 Beginning, B saai N1 sThursday, fiov. 13 DANIEL FROHMAN'S Lycem Theater Nuccess. By the autbor of ““The Wife,” “Lord Chumley," etc., Davia Delasco and Henry C. De Mille. cHAREry [missucsessusr BALL. LYCEUM THEATER, Produced with specisl sconery, accessories and detail of rara porfection. Bale opens at box ofice Weanesday morning, The Gran THREE NIGHTS ONL Commencing SUNDAY, NOV. 18. K. D, Stair's Rea)tstic Production of the American Character Comedy, by Herbert Hall Winalow, “ABARREL OF MONEY" Interesting Exciting Laughable Natural Pleasing Ever written, Interpreted by the best company of comedinns In existence. A carload of scene a effects. The greatest and most thrilling of alf tional seemes. The irom mills st work. wurprises! Unequalled specialtios! Bright mus) Fleyant costumes! Popular prices. Box sheet opens Baturdny morol: THE MOST COMEDY. Dime Ege_n M_upze,_ Will Lawler, Manager. Corner Lith and Far- L Arab Gunoer folan: Asteria, Anvililater: Senor Fernandos, Mandolin Artist, ONE DIME ADMITS T0 ALL A rogular graduate in modlelne, as diplomas show. te disentes Nlght Losses, B, In atiilotteln with A permanont curo guarantas for Catvren npotency, Syphills Nt . I guarantoo $0) for every oase 1 un seot free. Oco hours— 9 a. m. 0 § Sandar, GREW LR ™ THE SFEClALIST.“ PRIVATE DISEASES. A curo guaranteed In 8 to ive days without tholoss of an hour's time. STRICTURE Permanentiy cured without pain or instrumonts; ng cutting; no dilting. The most remarknbie rened. kuown to modern selence. Write for clreulars. SYPHILIS CURED IN 80 TO BO DAYS. Dr. MeGrew's trentment for easo hins been s th successful remcdy ey v eure of this dis Tus never beon e Write ANTEED. lars MANHOOD oy absolutely cured. Therad iate and complote. SKIN DISEASES. Catarrh, rheumatism, amd all dlseases of the Llodd Tiver, kidneys and bisdder permanently cured. FEMALE DISEASES neuralzie, nervousness and diseases of tho stome od. The Doctor's “Homo Trestment’ o1 onoanced by all o usod It 0 be thomost comp eto and conyen nody @yer of- fored for the treatment of fomalo diseases. It is truly a wonderful remedy. No instruments; no paln. TTOURS FOR LADIES FROM 270 4 ONLY DR. McGREW'’S marvelous success has won for him a reputatic which Is truly national fn charactor, and his gros army of patients reaches from tho Atintic to th Paciio. The Doctor I3 n gradunte of “REGULAR medietno and has had long and hospital practice, and s classed awm ] speclalists in modern sclence. ‘Treatment by corre= spondence. Write for circulars about each of the above diseases, FILEE. Office; 14th and Farnam Sts Entrance on elthor streot. SYPHILIS %5 CURED We . guarantee to cure any case of Syph= ilis no matter of how long standing. And we havetheonlyrem= edy that will cure the disease. You have tried everything else and wasted your money, why not now try us. We guarantee to cure orretund every dollar. When it is nec- essary for patient to come here we agree to pay railroad fare both ways, all hotel bills and refund your mon- ey if we do not cure you. 'Write for partic- ulars; do not be hum- bugged any longer. ‘We are financially re- sponsible with $300,- 000 capital. COOK REMEDY CO0., Omaha, Neb., Rooms 39 & 40, 13th and Dodge Sts. DEE.C.WESTS NERVE AND BRAIN TREATMENT, Fpocitia for B Dizztnew, Pits, Fun: ulness, e promion, Hortening of ¥ain, ro- sulting: in insanity aad leadiog to misery decay and BRI iow Tavoldhtary Loseer tad Busrms tor oaused by Overexertion of the' brain, weif-sbus oF o eontains one month.'s treate by mall prepald; g, send plechisag sl st gontinG w1 oLy LY GOODMAN DRUG CO. WOFarnam Street, = =~ Om :mmmu.fivm-.-fi Farisetiaifd, rongthsned. o Frestise sont fres Boureay, Prek M. & BUT'TH, 174 Fulton b6, 2, Ko Wike- b, MANHOOD Farly Decay and Tmpotency. Lost v