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od the result farmer at his hest f duly sawdusted, a hoavy canvas | this and strapped down s arm and th lers, clafm a fo Gorman's hand which fs disallowed. instant by a double-nelson Roe. p-four minutes | McMillan is but I was stretched and forty-three Lowls ST ¢ possibllity of either man being thrown through or na botwoen s being filled to the of sawdust and extra eantion againat the but the next ropes were taken, the the inner and outer 1 depth of a foot or mor padding wrapped about the posts. Here Come the Glants. eateh-as-ent in less time than the king | sceties that followed | STEWART a superlative de ance of the crowd rath o, the preponder- I'he men shake hands for the final and de- momentary struggle German's thick nd locking his he up ends h s shoulders mat and the champion ntly occupied by the lamented Mr neck with his right und the German's right of the eye and are jammed into th ship of the world belongs to K This was accomplished 80 erowd could not realize it | were in the air and MeMillan and Choyuski | from his vanquished ad Fitzsimmons' Fitzsimmons' by Lewis presented the a weighing 18 Roeber, although dubbed the cules, looked much smaller. seven pounds of Lowis winn until Duffys’ arm wis' avordipols the toss, the first bout was announcing were pulling Ey nt applatse that th Ryan Willing to Fight. Rocber looked more like a beer opvonent of the Wisconsonian's unanimously contest in Lewis » hie stepped out on the mat. Roeber in a Tight 13 worth this morning, and all on account of the ymmy Ryan and George Dawson afte otwithstanding tonight will witness t augural events Olympic club in ish fight between MeMillan and fonship wrestle betwee corners and were: introduced b and the cham sly for s fay but unjustly hands and last mght was in a boded uo good to and hammer ndency that dous strength | rul finally forcing his shot his dangerous did all the work and At L was Roeber the Lewis secured “hold and_half-nol under any auspices or circumstances, He de d he felt better and the physicians demonstr the swelling had about disapp Roeber wriggled out of dang: Won the First Fall. the doughty ( rman no time able to gey it Lewis had him in a position as no eseape. ugly position in which' Tommy was placed, consented to his den tled off to see the Dawson contingent, wound his sturdy ands and_ at torso of his strugg left wrist to the mat and ing adversary, pinned his by the half-nelson and slowly but resulted only in disappointment and renew hard feclings, Ryan's ba Madden and Bookmaker Humphreys name their own terms. 's Offer to Fight, sureiy bore him down The throng of excited men fairly lifted the cker demanded th fifty-six seconds, nd Roeber entered the ring a telegram was handed Roeber, which read as seven minute before Lewis PIILADELPHIA, Olympie Club, New' Orleans: mike him do the Good luck, and wi 'a., Murch 2.—Ernest Rocber, a finish fight before either one of the cly Thursday nig whatsoever . Ryan to weigh in at 142, and Dawson to go in at catch weight he added, “has o and e is heart broken, yet he says he thinks he can whip Mr. handicap, and if he is mis z to have his head beaten off,” Still the Dawson party held back and Mad- that it would 1AM MULDOON essary to men Tn explanation, it is but u tion that Billy pion, and Lewis have ever since the n doon quit in Chicago been deadly enemie Lewis made Ever siuce that mem: orable night Muldoon has been hunting for a to date his search has been in vain, Lewis Was Too Strong. At the termination of the t ladiators were back in the ring, this bout den then int minutes the notwithstanding Theroe 18 10 | 4o 1y peging to jook as 1f the Dawson {10 faith in the cinen they loudly claimed Ryan's offer is a foolish one, but it is better ight Dawson, evel ping below the hips Lewis showed good rub down, while and flabbier than h cloth, while Rocber wore black | er a brisk skir- mpelled to lot tights and old gold sock: mish Roeber got Lew flat, put was ur plastered all over him, and There is such for it that there s ink they wiil unanimous demand s to be no escape from ccomplish anything ngler was too quick, too s for him, and w There was anotl s quickly upright Quinn Very finally closed behind hiad the big Gern a vight half-nelson, other down, but the . and quick as a flash he ) on all fours, it looked like an- hn Quinn, Smith's backer, at the ning, and he nt to post you a bit, 13d has never been properly ight in his life, until now? bumped Lewis and occupied ten glistening with perspiration, but while Roeber blowed puffed like an oceanic ust fairly enjoying Lomself. orlous Struggle. auvas and the like a panther, gained his_feet. good fig when he went against Peter Jack- mster Lewis seemed in'a hammock than he did in a ring. The fight ad of keeping himself in shape and stayed that w Roeber slipped to Strangler was on his back Roeber got a neck hold, but this was wl Lewis seemed to want, for like a flas but secured A moment later Roeber , however, to be ¢ for a whole another fall. again_upon his feet, on rushed off them again bofore he had time to demonstrate his supposed superiority off his A cloud of steam instantly arose from Lowis shortly He hus trained hard and industriously and is a cuckoo this very moment. gamest men who ever donned a mit, can stand any amount of hard he is head and shoulders over that big Australian stiff in point of science and athletic convoluted allowed Roeber to slip his back hold. Roeber was the uppes essayed the hammer lock, but failed. truggle, in which all the thrilling climaxes of championship com- First it was this hold and then that, but finally by sheer strength Lewis lifted his bulky antagonist into the air and threw him off. p in & moment,when th van down and by a full-uelson came within @ hair's breadth of gaining a fall. Got a Fall fro Lewis broke this deftly and then took a turn on top himself. double-nelson, but couldn't make the hammer 1ock, owing to Rocber's's body, he was equally unsuccessful. T got the upper, and though he nad a balf-nelson it availed him nothing. picce of muscular work seldom seen 2 Roeber suddenly secured a tugged and by persistency The German Then there not be over you quoted on Goddard and’ suppose your mind is made up, and what I tell you don't But it does—Ed will beat the head off the favorite, you hear me " s Own Opinton. away from Goddard, a sort of a chance,” 1 fighty for that, and They were rman again had “If Smith would stay but he is too ently I expect to see him There are few men up with this fellow.” “Well, wait and see- just now, unle: lose quickly. strained for the that's all we can do s it is take a d Upon investigation 1 find that there are more people than Backer Qunin wio enter- i Denver Ed is about to make the fistic effort of his life. that he is a hard citizen, but ervatic and un- reliablo, and while many venture the opinion that he 'will be victorious, they are pla but few shekels in support of the opinion. all say that the fight slaughter, and for me I think Smith will be and shoulder, superhuman Lewis' shoulders to the ho eheering at this accomplishment Twenty-eight a veritable minutes and tw ngler Getting in His Work. d the third Lve seconds. The measurements of the two men are ap- uk BER'S readers can c them and draw their own inferenc pended, and Lewis opene cateh-can, by picking Roeber up and whi air, and dump- . both 'points down, ing him onto che'can Atwas a clever, undeniable, palpable flying s thinking of his it and refused \ regained his pins, and failed to when he alighted the German w Both were on_ their feet, and again Lewis stands the emperor on his head and | Lewis juggled the | ANDY GRISWOLD, Seats for Corbett. There are plenty of choi any performance. nded the bout German and all but jerked him'li Limb with o cracic shoulder hold, PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS, banged and slammed and jammed Germany the sawdust until the big crowd expe left limp und lifeless in tho ving always managed 1o get ¢ until’ Lewis Rev. and Mrs. W, H. Niles of ' | Neb,, are visiting in Omaha. Mr. R. B. Wahlquist, editor of the ted to see him of the tight place ; ight arm to mat and twining his naked legs about the y wedded wif ing for St. Louis and a whirl through the t last even- threw up his hands and oxclaimed, *Lewis wir bout in twelve minutes and nine seconds.” Wrestling for ¥ The fourth bout was Grue A little fiddling and Roeber is on his hands and knees, with tions are’ quickly Lewis is uppermost A. A. Jaquith, manager of the Omaha vator company, has x Minneapolis turned froma trip to caught in the recent -Roman again. | hours in making eighteen miles on the train coming from Minneapolis. At the Mercer: W. J. Johnson, L, W. Rus- sell, W. S. Jefferson, W. D. Davis, Chicago | E. M. Walsh, Detroit, Mich. ; Dayton, O.; Bartlott, Muscatine, D. Baker, Edgar, Neb. Little, Bloomfleld; Owens, Carson, Ta. A.D. Crain, Des Moines; A. M. Jucques, Lincoln; W. O! Tibbit; ‘Then again Again upright, ounly to 0 to the mat, Lewis holding the vantage. M. 'E. Foster{ M. Gilbert, New York; C. H J. McConnell, Lin- . F. Smithy double-nelson Ten minutes are up, and Lewis will have the naming of the style if a fifth bout is struggle, by upright hold ever sinew and fiber b extent, Roeber goes down and Lewis gets a half-nelson, but fails to bring it to an issue, as the German writhes loose and _gains the A hammer and half-nelson broken, and the muscular Baru rman over. Ahalf-nelson and arm old almost settled Roeber, and in fact he | touched both point o see and he gets away. Koeber's Second Fall, Lewis is angered by this and he rushes at the slippery German and dashes him, like a bunketo_}!:uud, wl the maut. Ao A capes. The next {nstant Lewiseis down an for uelsou, then the 'here i3 too much Roeber gets the double-nelson and all but downs the champion. There is an uproar, the audience with Dufty, who preclaims no fall. head ad again now, with In foillug him Lewis lays in Laughran, Menden; A, At the Murray: eing strained to the fullest Bush, J. H. Crow, J. W. Stout, J. W Now York; M. Heimenchadorf, jr., lchrist, Des Moines; M. M, h, Cleveland; D, Hemingray, Covington, | top position. Mayer, Chicago ) but the ref- | Walling, Kostorin , O.; Nellie Burnside, Cres. Miss Herzog, Guttenberg. CuicaGo, T, March 2.~ to Tue B Northern—M. Carl S Special Teleg ram J~Nebraska arrivals: Great mith and wife, South A, Chamberlain, Omaha, Wellington— Victoria—Mrs. W. B, Auditorium—Mme, Pacific--Mrs, W, B. Fordick, Again he es- William Wade, ¥, Fremont. under, Roeber Fordick,” Omal 1ewis' cord Mrs. M. Norris, Sick headaches promptly cured by Browo-Seltzer—10¢ a bottle I'HE_OMAHA WORK OF THE LEGISLATURE { | Bmoke of Wednesday Night's Battle Still Obsonres the Senate Chamber. AFTER MATTES' DECISIONS His Private Opinion of the Hamentary ¥ pes Into the Records House Busy Getting Ready Bills for Passage. Otoe County Par- " Lixcory, Neb,, March 2.—(Special to Tie Bee. | ~The smoke raised by the conflict in the senate chamber had not entirely cleared away when that honorable body convened this morning. ‘This fact was evidenced by the action of Senator Stewart in arising to aquestion of privilege, He wanted to enter an emphatic and vigorous protest against the proceedings of last night. He protested bitterly against the rulings of Chaivman Mattes agd declared that he had trampled upon the rights of members of the senate Senator Mattes answered the somewhat excited remarks of the senator, and said that | if he wanted to make should have made them He claimed on his own part that the inde- | pendents had undertaken to prevent the senate from carrying out a rogular order by filibustering. He took his seat with the | tatement that he would make the same g again if placed in the same position. was spread upon the iy complaints he the night befor Stewart's protest Journal, Reports from standing committees were then recei The most notable report was | the one from the committee on miscellancous | corporations, recommending the indefinite postponement of senate file No. 98, The bill was introduced by Pope, and fixes the rates on telephones at $1 per month for bus- iness places and $1.50 per month for resi- dences. Objection being made, action on | the report was postponed until tomorrow, The committee on reapportionment re- ported Young's bill, No, 131, making a reap | portionment of senatorial and representative | districts, with the recommendation that it pass as amended. Consideration of the re- port went over until tomorrow Lobeck's bill, No. 196, v cation of articlos of incorpor to the general file, ring the publi- tion, was sent heock's bill, exempting 400 acres of cemetery property from taxation, was recommended for pas: Babeock's bill placing all canals con- structed for water power or other usef purposes under the laws relating to irr iion was placed on gel 1 fil Upon report of the committee on federal relations Correll's joint resolution asking congress to submit a constitutional amend- | ment providing for the election of United Slates senators by a direct vote of the peo- ple was postponed The committee on deaf and dumb reported that it had visited that institution at | Omaha, and recommended an additional appropriation Jangling Over ¥ ‘The sengge then involved itself in a tangle over the question of pay for employes. The discussion arose over the resolution | offered early in the week by Senator Teftt, reciting that the secretary of the senate and | his assistants haa been drawing double pay, and declaring it the sense of the senate that criployes be paid only one day's salary for one day's service. The resolution had’ been | referred to the committee on accounts and | expenditures. Chairman _McCarty, from thit committee, reported the resolution bac to the senat® with the recommendation that in the future all claims for overtime should be referred to his commiittee. The report brought Senator Tefft to his fect. He declared that the report of the committee practically admitted that em- ployes had been drawing double pay and en- dorsed the practice. He asserted that some of the employes in the secretary’s office had | been drawing as high as $5a day. He be- lieved that 34 was sufficient, and if there were not enough clerks he was willing 1o vote more. Chairman MeCarty admitted that 8 per day had been drawn, but remarked that it couldn’t be helped at this late day. He kneyw that the employes had put 1n overtime, but the committee had not ascertained how much. The debate contini ong these lines for some time. _Dale tried to justify the double pay scheme by citing the fact that the work | In the secretary’s ofice was now being done vy six clerks, whereas several years ago fourteen were employ d. Senator Gray met this assertion with the reflection that because the senate was ex- travagant several yoars ago the fact could not justify the same course at the present time. Will Hoid Out on the Clerks. The debate ended by the adoption of a resolution offered by Senator Tefft providing that the receiving of double v in_the past should be taken into consideration in dr: ing vouchers in the future. The effect of the amendment will be that the extra pay drawn by employes in the past will be de- ducted from the salary they draw in the future. Mattes’ bill amending the act creating tho State Board of Health was recommended for passage. It permits that board to issue cer- tificates to midwives who are graduates of a legally chartered school of obstetrics, A little flurry was created by North's mo- tion to adjourn for the day. It was met b an amendment by Dale, providing for a re- cess until 2 o'clock. The amendment was carried. ‘This afternoon the senate thought better of it, however, and adjourned immediately after roll call in order to allow a large dele- gation of Omaha people to occupy the senate chamber to present their objections and ar- guments on the Omaha charter before the senate committee, mittee of the Whole Pushed to Keep Up with its Work. LixcoL, Neb., March 2.—([Special to Tue Brg.]—As soon as the houso had been prop- erly opened this morning McKesson tried to zet the committeo of the whole into working order, but objection was made and his motion to that effect was not agreed to. Chairman Rhodes, frem the engrossing committee, reported that his clerks were en- tirely out of work and he believed taat if the house would go into committee of the whole the present force would be able to do the work. With this explanation the house went into committee. Before doing s0, however, one or two mat- ters of minor importance. A committee of four was appointed to confer with the goy- ernor in regard to the gulf railroad project. The matter of paying fees of witnesses who had appeared before the several investi- | gating committees was briefly discussed and it was tacitly agreed that they should be paid whether the committees had been authorized to call witnesses or not. The house then went into committee of the whole for the consideration of bills on general file, with McKesson in the chair, Watson's bili, No. 91, providing for the se- curity and payment of rebate vouchers or certificates issued by incorporated com- panies, trusts, associations, etc., was the first measure taken up. Mr. Watson explained that the object of the bill was to break_down the several trusts now operating in Nebraska. The tem of rebato vouchers now adopted i braska by the distillery, starch, cracker, match, coflee and other trusts, enables them to get around the auti-trust law passed by the legislature in 1857. The bill was recom- mended for passage with no opposition. Postponed Stevens' Bill, Something of a fight came up over Stevens' bill to tax real estate mortgages. Oakley asserted that the bill would drive capital out of the state, DAITLY Jousen claimed that it was class legisla- tion, Goss alleged that it conflicted with other statutory provisions, and Cornish pointed out the fact that the tax would have to be paid by the man who borrowed the money, Kessler stated that he had been o bor- rower of money ever since he had lived in the state, and he had found that every hind- BEE: FRIDA rance thrown around the eoll invariably rafsed ihgtate of interost. Ho claimed that the Nofraska farmers neede mongy from the east and that this bill would inju® the farmers who borrowed monoy more than it did any one clse Carpenter could spanothing but complica tion in the bill. Tt Would put a_doublo tax upon the money lohitbr. He claimed that the il would work a great hardship to bor rowers Stevens undertook to answer all the argu. ments urged against his bill, He gave th house an excellent sasmple of eloquence from tho rare old Websterian stock, and insisted that ho wanted all’ti members to go on record, whether thuir sympathies wore with the poor and ghg gppressed or with the rich and the favored Dobson recogn ' jgroat deal of justice in the bill. He c that almost every act on the statute books was put there in the interest of capital. The farmers and laborers of the country have been reduced 10,1 condition of almost serfdom. I'he committee rose, on a motion to report progress, and asked leave to sit again. ‘The house summarily disposed of the bill, how- ever, by indefinitely postponing further con- sblon o1 money sideration by a vote of 47 to 43 The house then took a recess until 2 o'clock Discussing the World's Fair Bill. After recess the house again went into committee of the whole and took up Schap- vell's substitute fargetise roll No. 208, the bill appropriating S0 for the Nebrask: exhibit at the World's fair. Schay called the attention of the house to the fact that the enacting clause had been omitted from the bill. In the light of recent experience the housc hastened 10 correct the crror Carpenter offered an amendment adding to the £25,000 the amount now in the hands of the commission, $19,458.6; Elder ved an amendment to the amendment making the entive amount $15 000 to be equally divided between the hog horse and cattle breeders of the state In support of his amendment Elder charged that the commission had squandered the 0,000 appropriated two years ago. He proposed to stand up for the “hog brecders of Nebraska Carpenter knocked Elder's amendment in the head by the statement that®no live stock would be permitted in Jackson park. Rhodes wanted to know what had become of the money al well enough posted to give him the required | information, and he returned to the perusal of his favorite volume of Cushing. Kessler thought £25,000 was not_enough to insure u creditable display. He favored an amendment increasing the amount to £40,000. A substitute for all the amendments wi offered by Jensen. It simply provided that £25,000 shall ba appropriated in addition to the unexpended balance in the hands of the World's fair commission. It was adopted The debate over the bill was hot and heavy foran hour and upwards. The op- ponents of the bill_fought it section by tion, but the friends of the measure were in the majority, and they suceeeded in presery: g the main fe in The bill was further amended so as to set apart the following sums for the purposes named: Horse exhibit, £3,000; cattle ex- hibit, £,000: swine exhibut, £,000; agricul- tural and horticultural exhibits, £,000 each ; dairy, apiary and poultry exhibits, 1,000 o After the bill had been | thus amended the committee voted torecommend the bill for passage, Other Routlne Work. House roll No. 163, by Hi pravid sdiction of justices of the pe shall, unless otherwisc be Jitllited to the township | wherein they have béen elected and where shall reside, the committee voted to mmend for indefinite postponement. - It was discovercd that in the bill pro- | viding for the payment of the incidentul expenses of the present sescion an item | making appropriations for newspapers and postage had been included, and an amend- | ment striking out the jtem was carried. | The committee then arose and immedately after making its report the house adjourned. SR R AMUSEMENTS, that the ju in civil “cases ted by law Modjeska has added one; more to her gal- | lery of great histelonde interpretations of feminine character. Her' Katherine of Ar #on must be placed alongside of her incom- Stuart, with. which it ¢ weakvess, queenly dignity, and t| faith which, through suffering’s sovest hours, gives sustaining solace and strengthens res- ignation. Last night at the Boyd Modjeska’s produc- tion of Shakespeare's “Henry VIIL" was presented for the first time in Omaha. The fingers of one hand are more than enough to tell off the worthy presentations of this great historical tragedy seen on the modern age. Modjeska's will surely rank as one of them. The y is spectacular, and Mod- jeska's setting of itis, and must rema‘n, notable. The scencry, painted by Albert, Grover and Bur *hicago, “is all as pictorially accurate as stage limitations will permit of. The London of the sixteenthicen- tury surrounds the onlooker, and following Buckingham to thy le and the block, as cheering Anne Bullen in her coronation procession, he lives and in the streets where the towers of tmisster throw’ their shadows, and where, in Oscar Wilde's fine phrase, “St. Paul’s’ floats like a bubble o'er the town. “The interiors are as notableas the exteriors The second scene, the council chamber, is triumph of scenic art, the pictured tapestries being lifelike to a degree. The court at Blackfriars, the queen's apartments at Bridewell, the death chamber at_Kimbolton are_ull as worthy of commendation. No praise can be too high for the enterprise, informed by such rare artistic instinct, of the womau who has put before the public such a fitting frame for the action off one of Shakespeare's greatest s and the reputation of Omaha ana her bns in theiv abilivy to fully appreciate, nd properly attest their appreciation of, the higher stage art is at stake. Not a seat | should have been vacant at the Boyd last evening, and several dozens were, But the living ceutral portrait in this sumptuous frame, Dr. Johnson, speaking of “Henry VIIL," said “‘the genius of Shake- speare comes in with Katherine and goes out with Katherine. How sweetly womanly a figure is he And Modjeska is Katherine. She is more beautiful than Holbein's great portrait; but throughout the action of the play, from her first appearance to plead for the relief of the overtaxed com- monalty of the realm, through the court that would deprive her of her dear honor of wifehood and queenhood, in her retirement, to her last sad, saintlike ing, she is th Katherine of are, th Katherine of plain, unbroidered hi 1 How sweet @& queen, how strongl simple a woman. In the trial scene Modjeska's interpretition was luminous, with Wolshy expressing the true and perfect touch of Castilian temper. Her interview with the cardinals at Bridewell was the perfect expression of a fine_concep- tion; nothing could be finer here than the alternate weakness and strength, the natural indignation of the unjystly repudiated wif. the inherent weakness of the woman and the acquired spiritual difference of the_religious Lier pass: devotee. The dying scene at Kimboltor, with its finely managed vision of angels, was unbpeakably touching This is treating ~ the performance broadly; columns wight be interestingly filled in demonstration of the detail, all his- torically accurate and finely interpretative of Katherine's character, based on the chronicles of Hollinshed and Hall, filled in and elevated by the soul of artof Helena Modjeska, : The company supporting the great actre is admirably fitted. to its works. The small parts are played with notably unusual judgment and suce Mr. Otis Skinner is a surprisingly good ‘‘bluff King Hal." The Huekingham of Mr. Beaumont Smith 18 wholly admirable in his first scene, but, though the actor may elaim t! Huckingham's naturally choleric temperament must needs be unsubdued, even within the Tower, the fine shadow of the T lines, conceded to be Fletcher's, of the fare well speech were marred by an’ overstrenu. ousness of unwarranted movement and a too emotional articulation of lines that bear nothing in themselves but a sense of almost religious resignation, ; A feature of the production is the dressing, which is sumptuous and effective. The inci- dental music and dances, t0o, are worthy of special mention, and, all in all, the perform. Ance is one to Bee more than once if one Would perceive all 1ts beauties of setting and appreciate all its perfection of character in- terpretation. See Dentist Keim, 40 & 41 Barker blk | MARCH |(‘L0$ED THE | d@onc the elub will soon bo on BLOODY CRIME UNEARTHE Sullivan and Mitohiell Agreo to Liok Corbe Fight Made. Awful Discovery Made by the Authorities at Bucharest, MeAuliffe and Mike Mooney of this eity mot FEUD OF YEARS ENDED FIREWATER CHILDREN MURDERED FOR THEIR MONEY Ex-{ hamplons Got ¥ to the Delight stakehiolder. yefeit was put up, | other 2,000 to be deposited in thr Charley Mitche postpone his land until the fight o Such s the Aceusatio Against the Differences MeAuliffo's eturn to Eng. Sr. Lovis, Mo, crimival sensa tion hus been developed here in the on stof Madame formerly mayor of The woman les Mitchell was spanned this aftorno I the two met on the sty theater and pany, died of pleurisy at his home ne | year of his age grasped eact small town s the widow of Louls in 1855 a rom business The scene that followed of the wildest ev Louis theater. to the doors and every this meeting was | geveral years ago, afte var he was a prominent unionist JACKSONVILLE, Bishon of Ciucinnati witaossed or heard in The house was packed widow the truste on the instant to go roaring, stark mad . the Chantilly children has diod or ever sinc of his son in suspicious circum past with a complica waged a war of words unparalieled even in | tion of diseases, annals of fistiana for governor by the dew Everything is as marriage bell be taken to Cix gt for interment, > BREVITIES, best to divest the cham A horse hitched t on the oceasion of tl Sullivan was Orleans last boy thief who has a mania was held to the district ka for trial for consciousness thatif he was to be court yesterday by Judge 1 stealing a bridle. championship, ago he stood by th But it is DI gentlemen purchased nearl There was a small fire at the C: lead works last night wrter white but the blaze was ex damage to amount to anything w careful examination spe Galveston's g cation and de 1k volumes for North urces, magniticent lo “fully metamc dy spent, but no one was | himself now declares n as against an L-year-old cirl who lives i3) Cuming stroet, has been missing since Wednesday, and her pa rents are much worried over her disappear with her parents ut Charley Mitehell, George Baird, Jack Auliffe and several of thewr St. Louis fri Admission John Hollenhorse of Des Moines came to ywn yesterday with a woman na chultz to have a good got Hollenho and skipped. An unoccupied ¢ afternoon which th As Mitchell ente recognized him | up, Sullivan entering on tho st The latter evidently had rea | what had happened in the house, and amid | e arunk and then robbed | afterward damaged by bowed first to t C hat to Mitchell, who was that the fire was started by tramps. tling continued school children | on for fully five minutes. | without interru : sixty days in the yesterday, twelve days to be on round sparring Baird and McAuliffe, on | van, stepped on Tnstantly the r five minutes the cr »d and clapped ) the stage and s Y00 or more we of the town wd yelled and Then Sullivan re | stam Dr. Towne wus called and saved the | Finally securi quiet, Sullivan stepped to the front and s et was partially destr a ltle before noon yesterday Lyman Richar Talking About Gentlemen, was owned by Ladies und G just extended to Mr Mitchell was ext and by the time men arrived was burning rapid was about £1,000 on buildi Norris, Wilcox & H shaken hands sin man born on thi ward Shoe com ank Wilcox Shoc y, Lately incorporated with o capital 000, the transfer to within a few days. d brothers will retire one born on the othe And in addition 1 inst Corbott, he is not on the da few hisse hands with Mitchell th the balance of the party to the rear of the st BABIES ON FIRE Babies burning up, babics in agony new concern. | from itching and eczemas and e The business will be continue: [ ot Akt Optuting L Qlalit i ng and he, coming forw: nd_Gentlemen: and blotchy YESTERDAY, thank you for Chairman Fi adjust Minn 2. D. Finley, county cle nsin, is short in his ¢ ailed 1n his efforts to when their tender skins are liter wn you I have never had any {1l will toward him. rely a business of Ashiand county, | ylly on fire. To know that a single aps the Curicura REMEDIES but did not r will in the great majority of cases afford Mr. Sullivan last September wis not th van I met and fought a draw with want to be offensive or say it ning, but Jon, ik sometimes makes a fool of hims won from hir 1d Beach, Mich., with the outside is still cut off from com- Lo e com | instant relief. perm restand sleep, and point toavermanent and economical (be- with bud me sthers of us, £ and takes orth Caroling cause most speedy) cure, and not to use bett ho had a long spell of 1 fought Sullivan I expe And I want to say right he the world never saw nd never will p bett and Sullivin them is to fail in your duty. rs of suffering entailed by such not only of phys The Loulsville, Evan road company will issue bonds to thi 0 £15,000,000, By the bursting of an fmmn the’power house of the T Rajlyay eompany « : bndly dawag ceident at the | as a pugilist and athlete, allivan's equal, If 1 win from ¢ challenges me 1 and retire and let him die the chanplon nse fly wheel in | neglect, years of mental suffering by reazon of pe:s man was killed and the | T s Why delay a moment d in throwing a score into the water. ve been drowned. buried in th Indianapolis, Ind they were tearin this speech, and then the play was The whole party were Sullivan’s guests at dinner this evening. | Tonger the vse of theso great skin cures blood purtfisrs, and numor remedie:® inty fnes Cures made in infancy and childhoed DALY COULDN'T WIN IT, v specedy, economical, and almost ine d with slight brui Another Long Winded Lightwelghts wit] Stovx Crry, Ta., March 2.—(Special Tele- to Tug Ber.]—Dan Springs, who broke the lightwel at South Omaha two years ago b, Tom White ninety-six rounds to a draw, and Billy O'Donnell of this long draw near the townof Rowena, north of early this morning. | variably permanent. No Declsion. superintendent employes of that indicted by the Cook county BSOLVENT, 3100, ) AND CHEMICAL o railroad erossing at Forty-seventh sirect number of people werd PORATION, Boston, Skin, Sealp ht another AMUSKMENTS i BOYD'S ruliiYre|Modjeska Thursday, HARCH 2 MATINEE SATURDAY, 'MODJESKA and her own Because of police Yy foods in ce the fight was held in a tent on the prairie and in the bitter cold. decide that neither man could best the other. The fight was fu od hundreds Of peaple meeting of the Ulster Orangemen held in Belfast, violent nouncing Gladstone’s hom burned in effig: Cures Ofhers Will cure Yon, is a true statement, of the action of AYER'S Sarsaparilla, when taken for diseases originating in impure but, while this ass AYER'S Sarsaparilla, attest, it cannot be truthfully applied to rations, which v dealers will recommend, st and swift O'Donnell leading the fight- ing and punishing he broke the bones in the back of his right hand with a blow that sent baly that time on he was except in_ defense. hukospenre's bistorioal trazo HENRY VIII. naldrima o tive acts, to the ground. use his right Daly took advantage of the opportunit rushed the fighting until the thirtieth round Then O'Donnell commenced with lefvhand jabs in the mouth and rose. s historlcal play rtion is true of s thousands can pushed the sixty-seventh swings on the jaw landed terrific Three Nights, Commenc Monday, March 6. No Wednesday Matinee, LOUISE LESLIE-CARTER, Insco’s Comedy. MISS HELYETT| And Durinz MISS LOTTIE COLLINS, The Famous Orlginal *Ta-ra-ra-L ‘The sule of suats will open Su fock at the foliowin ¢ Be, 8100 an'd 31.50; baleony FARNAM St, THEATER "7} T0-KIGHT---HATINEE SATURDAY. THE CHAMPION OF THE WORLY, JAMES J. Assisted by a S ropes limp and O'Donnell fell helpless to the like a double fore counted out and \d try to im- but both men g | clinched as time was « From that to the seventy-sixth O'Donnell fought like a demon, In the following rounds both_seemed winded and helpless, and could ba; Daly asked for a division of the #00 purse Sarsaparilla and Ayer’s only, if you need a blood-purifier and would be benefited permanently This medicine, for nearly fifty years, has enjoyed a reputation, and made a record for cures, that has never equaled by other preparations Sarsaparilla eradicates the taint of he- reditary scrofula and other blood dis- eases from the system, and it Lias, deser- nco of the people. eightieth, but O'Donnell eighty-first the men exertion and punishment that they could ordered the purse divided and declared all western sporting men saw the fight, which lasted five hours and twenty-two minutes, O'Donnell & marvel of s vedly, the confic AYER'S Sarsaparilla 1 cannot forbear to express my joy at the relief I have obtained from the use of AYER'S Sarsaparilla. Iwas aflicted with kidney troubles for months, suffering greatly with pains in the small of my back. this, my body was covered with pimply remedies prescribed T then bogan to take AYER'S Sarsaparilla, and, in a short time, the paing ceased and the pimples 1 advise every young man or woman, in case of sickness result- ing from fmpure blood, no matter low long standing the case may be, to take AYER'S Sarsaparilla.”’—H. L. Jarmann, 83 Willlam st., New York City, Will Cure You Propared by Dr. J.C. Ayer k Co., Lowell, Mass nd all pronounced ience, strength and WILL BUILD IT UP, Athletic Club Members Dete Ined to Save the Organizatio A meeting of the Omaha Athletic club was held last evening to hear the reports of com- regarding the con; | Athletic and Roadster clubs, and to de- | vise some means of paying off the pre: Robert. Wells reported that his committee had had an informal talk with the directors of and that those gentlemen we g the Athletic clubdirectors next Mon- was empow- in the matter of consolidation and will make a definite propo- Roadster directors. is desirous CORBETT, oot Dramatic s New Pluy, GENTLEMAN JACK. Free Ilst entirely suspended during engagement. FARNAM St. THEATER 32k 15c 26¢ 3He HOe and THo fuaday, March 9. Hurry 1% Munson's Celebrated Military Play, A FAIR REBEL, Founded on Colonel Thos. able escupo with 100 U WO lidation of the Co.npany In ing indebtedness To addislor s e desirous of S failed to help me. ered to act for the club disappeared. sitiou to the derstood that the of consolidation and it is thought that the matter will be definitely settled at to be held next Thursday evening. 100 or 80 new members which will be gained the consolidation members of the Athletic club who have pald their dues up to date again be on on a sound basis and new Inter- est would be instilled into the organization, and the debts would all be paid inside of six . Rose's memor- 0 otlicers frouw LibbY. at the meet- N]iERLAND and Bijou Theater. All this week ~—EAST LYNNE-— BRAZIL & ALTON NOVELTY COMPANY. Jiver plated buteer kuite vl:«lll)' at each perforidance. the club would A benutitul triple A resolution was passed unanimously d claring it to be the sense of the meeting that uts; resorved narauet, 40 cenls