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THE OMAHA DAILY BE APRII ARGUED THE DEPOT QUESTION | P et o st Jdiok | SOUTH AMERICAN ;\FI'AIRS’in"‘h'iv-?!\"-“? ~.‘3--<'"‘\1§v-é'7'?7 s Cane | AFTER THE l;\'(!.flxl", I’A\SSED;f‘"\i“kliff.“.::" PMAEI 1y gy Omana for e HURSDAY get whatever 1t wanted. To that body it ‘ Quiet Keftordd In Santiago. Normaltemperature 503 | 5 . av ok | Ay f April 12 1y Moxioan Cable to the Now Normal precipitation 0 inen | Effort to Modify Stubt's Injunction Against | “orid % Politics in Several of the Countries Becoming | $hmt "Fiatat Hrnioatt Cable b Mo ounded by the e tiors of countics Trom | DCRCLEY (i ey 10 1heh s i s w d & Depot, Not History. Decidedly Iuteresting. | Quict hias been flllygrestored i Santiago 1o castern border, nearly every county suf- | Deficiency Mareh 1 71 inch the City of Omaha. €. J. Greene said that he was not in the b v i | and all partics are now awaiting the an. | fering more or less. Montgomery county, in Reports from Other Poluts at 8 pom. Will cure You, {8 a true statement of the — courts to recite ancient history, as that was | n suncement of the nes cabinet 'rnnlr‘..‘:n.m-, ::: ”\'l'-"lnw southeastern portion, suffered " action of AYER'S Sarsaparilla, when . | not the question of the hour. ' What the peo " lalmacedists, ex-Colonel Fuentes and Bland © mos! o4 -t < 4 GEN. COWIN ARRAIGNS THE RAILROADS | It thesuucstion of the hour. What the bec: | PERU ~ DRIFTING TOWARD REVOLUTION | 1ot i S St the. Unitod | - Parker, n hamlet ten miles south of tndo- | taken for discases origiuating in impure history. There wer n who had made - States logation hotbe)) x.Colonel Fuentes | pendence, was almost totaliy ruined. Man blood ; but, while this assertion is true of 30 niws @ dee history for twenty years, but they were not 4 . sor Hovo- | c8CUPed “from prison not fong ago. He | houses wore demolished and many others srATIONS AYER'S Sarsaparilla, as thousands can Bhows & Long List of Unfullilled Contracts | the men who had made Omaha a city, [ Rivera, the Rebel Leader, and Other Revo: | returned to Santiago~from the south with | Wige, Ae wrecked attest, it cannot be trathfully applied to & ta—Connell's Plea for | Touching upon th fon the streets| lutionlsts Killed Santo Domingo an Holley and secretly squght the home of Min alnut, a village in Crawford county, also | e it Flillg N | referrea to by Mr. Cowin, Mr. Greene said Sayis Want Perde=Onitinn | ister Figan, who gitined the ill will of many | in the southeastern jortion of the state, | ier preparations, which vy sincipled thie Concessions Asked hy the Core | that most of them were vacated twenty i o Mitoe | Chilians through Bis" protection of Balma- | Siffered soveroly in wrecked houses, Lut | gmab | Cloar dealers will recommend, and try to im- portaions - Under Advi | years ago. He insisted that the Union Pa- | noes 10 8 Bewte OF Dioge: )'\'I‘““'N\l" ' the dlose of the |.N“\\... i l«l;\«: "x” \‘\\’ .l h'\(‘! A n['u m;p.‘m. r pose upon yon, as “just as good as | Cific company had fultilled every agreement . Minister Egan visited President Mcntt m that place states that it is feared * that Ayt Takie Aers SABARAAIL i | that 1t had made with the city ‘and now all | yesterday and asked for safe conduct for the the loss of life in the outlying country dis ® ’\»‘ - ]l o yor's Sar i 3 Ila and ‘ Whether + the courts of this county | that the company wanted was a modification | (Copurizhted 1923 by James Gordon Bennett) | two rofugoes. 'This roquest was refused by | tricts has been great o Ayer's only, if you need a blood-purifier O Whether or not the courts of 1 €908 1 of the injunction that the union depot might PANAMA, Colombia (via Galveston, Tex.), | the Chilian president | In Brown County, Kansas, 1 and would e benefited permanent] will modify the injunction granted by Judge |y et in aecordance with the terms | April 12.—(By Mexican Cable to the New [ A dispatch received from Rio Janeiro says A QTR O ot A WAL A Wiavew Ao tiio | B | w This medicinie, for nently Afty yeurs; Doane one and one-half years ago, restrain- | of the contract | York Herald—Svocial to Tne Bee thut General Maura, Brazilian minister of | g4n \wrought groat havoe in Browr ol Lake City 0 has enjoyed a reputatiol 1 mad, he delivery to the Union Depot company | ? [ war, will sail for Rio Grande do Sul tomor ght great havoe in Brown county, | apid City ol a reputation, and made a ’ mg the delivery i | M, Connell's Closing Appeal, | Grave political troubles are reportod from | 5'o take command of the troops sent to | I, the, northeastern portion of the state | ol T Snow record for cures, that has never been of the $150,000 of viaduct honds and also re T closing the areument Mr. Connell said | all parts of Poru. ‘Iho most serious disorder | suppress the rebeilion, Twelve war ships e B A e Bl Tl B e T R R T RS equaled by other preparations. AYER 3 straining the city from deeding to the Union | tyyt “he had no apology to ofter for the rail- | g0 far reported occurred at the towns of | are being got iu readiness for use in the | joas damaged and many lives are reported | Choyenne I @ rart vloudy | Sarsaparilla eradicates the taint of & Pacifio Railway company the lands and lots | roads, s they had never given Omaba fair | (oo und Chote. An armed body of men, | Work of -maintaining peace fin that stat i o Svd HEE 1 oo | Miles City » 18| Cloudy ‘_l“v" b : b A held n-brust by Alvin Saunders, is a ques- | treatment. ‘'he question was, would Omaha | | FEERE K0 LI P b | ARother dispatch says: that n portion of | .Lhe cvclono struck Gurnett, Kun, about | Gaiveston 1 W ciowdy. | reditary scrofula and other blood dis- $10m tiaat sests wholly in the'hands of Judge | 20 shead and do what was th best for the | ne2Cec by LOAFSL Hyers B 0 AR AP [ the foderal urmy s marching aguingt | oo ik HOIK from southwest to orthenst | =« miasing " i trace cases from the system, and it has, deser- 1on tha y 3wl ity and for all parties concerned. Without | Guerro, attacked the governor's palace. | {ppeyayana, These troops are well armed m-[ eaving much de ).1\- in its wake. o GroraE E. 1@ Local Forecast Official, vedly, the confidence of the people Ferguson of the equity division of the dis- | Lo Py 00T tho responsibility, the fail- | Viva Pierola” was their battle cry. The | A division of the revolutionary army is now | LOAY was seriously hurt here, though the — 3 . tricteourt , before whom the arguments were | ure of the railronds to construct the depot | uipuck upon the police began at 3 o'clock in | alicifed itt. Gatiipt;. Bromn. thnt. polit o ]w»‘\v‘:\\f \\‘ wter 1.1“‘\\\‘» W Henry Sykes, | AMUSEMENTS, 9 mado yesterday afternoon | had caused the loss of thousands of dollars |\ fiomoon and the siege lasted until 2 | dotachment was sent out which captured | “jie SUhers, were, complotoly demolishod. | Ty » out the terms of an agreement | to the city, and it was a burning question of i > b | Guarahy il vere L POWE | i rAnATIS . 105 Hok Siored it At anl ‘;‘.’r).",w ‘1{ ‘x e ciime s called | Whether oF fiot Omaha should be used a | o'clock on the following day. During all thav | =y Sre avg corpe spondent in Montevidco ll.!H“m were ,.“y‘m de n hed and several | 1‘. \}|.l u }l ! red its first finan: B\ oy (9 R O R, e Hooket showing | CoU&-pnw Dy the Milwaukee and the Rock | timo the mob held possession of the town | telegraphs that the president hus named ":f,‘."',:m‘,'”,""”\ e e L Y s - Ve promptly on time, with the docket showing | 1ejund to puil their chestnuts out of the fire. | and made known their political sentiments | Minisicr Banza as “his candidate for | NG Rlhinson 13 1. Polte LAY || (hanck Has been bioket and s to Lo Hoped . o : Stuht on one side and the eity of Owmaha on | railroad companies from the lands that were | 0 % ; suon be announced. A meeting of a lavge | S oncot AL Dk wat fod | continue through this and many seasons e GBIty Saave AD: . THHCItV Goald | Sxsaiotutor Wwho de {nexlle el | i) s At Muscotah several houses were unroofed | the other. That was the legal title and the | FEREE SRELE oG eould come fnto the | While one fon of the mob held the | Dumber of radicals wus bl e . | and o Mrs. Burus and her baby were badly | The club deserves a better fate than tho un T cannot forbear to express my joy at name which had been carried by the injunc- | GG ST T they get beyond if the | town another Heslobad thu svormiois | Areootnh. SHNEY DuTsht taa duione exs | oured ] consclonable weather disturbances that had | the relief T have obtained from the use tion ever since the Union depot fight found | {uion pPacific company did notsee fit toallow | jlace and many volleys were fired at the | pressing sympathy for therrevolution that is ““"‘;[‘ part of the cyclone which struck | come to be almost provervial attendants | of AVER'S Sarsaparilla. Twas afllicted its way into the courts, ‘The Stuht side was | them the right of way over their tracks, The | (o0 bh i fol oo il one of the | NOW in progress g et Mg A el the | on all entertainments under the aus with kidney troubles for about six Sinvesstitad by John D, Howe ,appeared | city should have the right to say what kind | 9 : : 5 sourt, struck successively the | o = oo e i ™ lut y ) s % & ¢ 475, | of “an ordinance should be passed, but what- | defenders of the house, was killed, Just Equitable Will Build No Canals. towns of Mu age City aud | Pl { \ Apollos, e club | months, suffering greatly with pains in 4 l\'; 'v\t\w\‘*‘“ '",{mr;:“.‘.:‘f “N ‘,‘.‘:‘.'“,-G“'L for | ever it was hie hoped that it would be in the | the mob was about to batter down the doors | [Copyrighted 1593 by James Gordom Bennett,] i ”"j\““_“\’v- r considerable ‘ym is instrumental in bring to the small of my back. In addition to o it ere City At. | interest of ‘the taxpayers and beneficial 1o | of the palace,while their leaders were shout Pants, April 12.—[New York Horald | 48MAge, spontits forca, = i ot | Omaho such o musical organizition as | this, my body was covered with pimply e Connell G Greene and President | the city at lavge. The urging of the disso- | jng “Kill the goveruor,” the troops, who had | Cable—Special to Tug Bee.|—Mr. Taber, | o east oseph 3 cyelone moving from west | last evening performed at Exposition hall oruptions. The remedies proseribed Kimball of the Union Depot compan [ M nd the modification of the injupetion; | becu sont for, apoeared.” The SollIers | the general European manager of the Equita- | miles wide und five miles long, causod con- | deserves well . the bnds of tho peopic of | failed to help me. T then began to take 3 oyl b R LA ' . charged POl 2 oters, uvera, e ble fo ur ol g e he o re. SOVOr, A > ore | Omaha S earne: 8 e ¥ ne — ¢ Mr. Conneli’'s Plow for the Union Pacific. | heaviest taxpayers,and in support of the | oid leader. was killed by the fiest | Dle Life Assurance society, was seen by a | ;“‘j 1.» i g :ll\. al |n|u)|llv] were | “"'!’1' "‘, ha e "” reward and it AYER'S Sarsaparilla, and, in a short City Attorney Conuell was given the first | statement he read u petition by Milton | volley fired by the troops. With ~the | Herald correspondent in reference to a cable | Brers SHOH it fft\ GEACE "“)* | should be ungrudgingly given it. That time, the pains ceased and the pimples hearg A addressing his remarks to the | Rowers, Heury Yates, Dr. Miller and others. | loss ‘of their leader and the approach of | about the company forming a new Panama | Spay s SQUously injured e was also John | great baru, with its cireus seats, that fills | gigappoared. I advise every young man court, said that the object of the gathering | 1o show that the city would be a gainer | the soldiers the rioters became dishoartened, | company. Ho said: I don't believe it. Tho | Killed Most of tha. neople sit the storm | Uhe place of a concert hall in Om was R M Was to present some arguments to show that | by the transaction Mr Connell declared | They ceased firing and fled in all dircctions, ATEO B e G Al B ABbETE0: | DO Rt e b et i et savag | skt comblataly AU SIRE, (voltg L 00 (ROTILA} S0 CE8Y of sickness result- the old injunction which had tied up the | that if the Depot company was allowed to go | but they cavefully retained their arms,which i ol AEECr 10 | At eacapad. dntunr e doss here. wil] | the large audience. representative of the [ Ing from impure blood, no matter how construction und completion of fhe Union | on with its work and the proposed ordinance | will, no doubt, be used on another occasion, | 40 business of that kind and can only invest Amout i thee s of dolines. Mho dany. | bestof ecitizens, were given such a treat as [ long standing the case may be, to take depot ought to be modified to such an extent | Was passed the cicy would get the Win- | Besides the lcader, Rivera, three other | in 1 estate for business offices.” | iz 1‘_”_,“.'“ "_1‘{)‘“‘ "‘ Lk ‘“‘“ b ke ““'l‘ is ravely tendered outside of the great cities AYER'S Sarsaparilla,"—H. L.J £ that the §160,000 of depot bonds could pe | b triangle. worth $250,000, and a deed to | pioters and a child were killed. More than o - | ‘“u_m"\v}“ “I\’! oth s| .{l\_.» wi |"" I ': - | of the east, and appreciation was evident S S RN Adbanlt cunceled and that the deeds to the lands | the five blocks of land, blocks L to P in- | twenty persons were wounded duriug the ENGLAND'S EXUIBITS, R e B R Tt hout the evening 83 William st., New York City. Beld in trust by Alvin Saunders, the decds | clusive. There was no person, he said, try- | fight ' v SWOULA SUROIY ikt b ReR NSRBI o | work'of the Seidl orchestra is beyond M to the Winspear triangle and those to the | ing to keep out the lowa roads. They couid An incident similar to this, but less | Valuable Articles for the Fair—-A farty of | X S | the criticism of the writer, while his admira city blocks from L to I inclusive might pass | come over the Bast Omaha bridge, or they | bloody in iis resuits, occurred in Lima a English Editors. $5 SOURE Dot | tion is so great that to praise it seems almost, Ho said that s far as ho was | could buy up the Nebraska, € entral fran- | fow nights ago, While a band was playiug | New Youx, April 13—Fifteon British ROXA | cqually above his powers: he is in the posi concerned he did not care whether the depot | chises and build a bridge of their own. 1t | on the plaza in front of the president’s palace | journalists arrived here today frd o e tion of Browning's lover, who could not s 1ooatod at Tenth and Mason streots or | would be bettar, he thought, for the city if | & crowd gavhered and someone raised the 'u:":\lwlv:\l:)‘v\?I\yl:(\v\lwv';:-ll |n‘nyl.:l‘\m'f>r\‘l I«nu:_ | Much Water Fell and a Hurricane Blew for | g0 he loved so much. A new light and a At the. foot of Farnam strest. What he | the ends of the Union Pacific bridge were | cry, “Viva Pierola,” which wus repeated by | Pooton th Sk cnea Ve " RIONES 3 luminous meamng are given to the sup- | Prepared by Dr.J.C. Ayer & Co, 1 wanted was to have the depot fight brought | boarded up and the other roads compelled 1o | nearly all the persons in the crowd, ‘Tho | They are the vanguard of a large detach Storx Faius, S. D, April 12.—[Special | posedly well known Tannhauser overture 10 & head and the matter settled for all time | \l“\l; m}'lvvrvn!ll nee to the rnl\ o | & ards around the palace were about to fire | ment of English editors and proprietors who | Telegram to Tue Bee Reports have been | in the rendition of Mr. Seidl's artists. It | - - —— 10 come, After hearing the arguments Judge Fergu- | when the crowd fled. A ffairs in Peruappear | are coming here for the openine of the Col- | peceived from all parts of the state covering | MUt have been a rcvelation to many SOHBERG Attorney Cowin in reply devoted an hour | son asked for the authorities that e might | to be drifting rapidly to revolution umbian exposition. Among the many other | (et LA B O e e novti | Who thought they knew the work last HHIR dréy W:““Lfng £ or moro 0 the reading of an agreement that | investigate the question, saymg that he e passengers are dames Dredee, the British | 4 RSl e | evening. The artistic gems of the concert L SPECTACLES %7 was made with the Union Pacific company | would take the case under advisement and S royal commis or to the World's exposi- | West vesterday and today, Very little dam- | were the numbers allotted to the orchestra 3 ot in 1878, by which the company was to build a | decide it at some later date. Pueito PLata, Santo Domingo (via Gal- | tion, and Walter H. Harris, who is assis 1o was done in South Dakota, but the en- | alone. The vocal features were admirable, union depot and maintain its terminals on | = — veston, Tex.), April 12.—[By Mexican Cable | him in the transportation of an immen tive state was flooded and in many regions | but they were eclipsed by the instrumental this ‘side of the river, provid locity | COOKING AND HEATING BY ELEC- | to the New York Herald—Special to e | shipment of English exhibits for the fu B rAinTE o e 1o ialBntBiEet The vorspiel to the first act of *Lohengrin voted eertain aid rning his guns, Mr. TRICITY. Bee.] — President Huereaux has re- | The exhibits which the two commissioncrs In Mitchell the streets were filled to descriptive_of the descent of the Holy Cowin remarked that the agreement was | — spouded to the request of President | prought with them consist principally of | depth of several inches, and not only was atl | Grail, was interpreted with a power and a years ago when the city s smaller than | New York and Omabu Parties Investing in | Hippolyte of Hayti, by withdraw- | poyal Windsor tapestries. passage stovped, but all lehter matter was ess that Wagner himself would now, but whoen the administration of its Gothenbar } portion of the Dominican, Commis: Harris brings a letter writ- | carvied away. ‘TheJim viver, which ordinar. have acknowledged as an entirely affaies was in honest hands, e greatest | Goruexuend, Neb,, April 12—Nowhere in ops which wero \I;:’!,lxi»n--::l:Ilh;v‘nf”“'“',Ik,"": ten by the queen and nddressed to the f ily runs twenty feet below the town, over- | adequate expression of his conception i obstructionists that the city had to contend | Lo country are the tomfortable benefits and | & hetwe s republic and Hay his | committee, in which ‘she wishes every suc- | flowed its bunks and became a raging flood, | 1 swian song, that “choicest flower - with were those inauthority who would g g > | action of the Dominican president indicates | coss to the exposition and adds that Great | sweeping away buildings and - doing gner's creative faculty,” was so YE GLASSE! stand by and argue i f i romate | profitable ndvantages of water power more | that peace botween the two repubiics will | Tiritain is interested i the sreat affai much | damage. to 1 U0y %K | Tendored that ono folt that vhe-(ntroduction PATENTED JUy 771889 the exclusion of all others. This, he said, | Prominently fllustrated than at this booming | be re-established. It s now doubtful | “ghe war medals dnd war decorations were | bridges near the eity were washed out aud | of the human voice would have marred its at Intorest to the Fublic was not talk, but the opinion of the railrond | new city whether the aid which General Manigat ex- | personally collected’ by Mr. Harris and are | eommunication by road and railways was | perfect beauty. But the gem of the even . mmen who were 10t a purt and purcel of the | - The powes plant has been in operation less | Pected from Santo Domingo in his proposed | loaned for exhibition purposes only. These | destroyed. The river is still rampant, and it | g was_ the interpretation of the “Sieg Omantauu Vst Union Pacific. 1f Omaha was overto be a | REco e Eh R DAL th s otupepe | LOVOLULION aguinst President Hippolyte | medals and decorations are worth $25.000 is feared that there will be considerable loss | fried” waldweben: listening to it the wrapt AR S sity, it would have to open its arms and nog | (Han thrce months, but the manufacturers | wijj be extended The biggest portion of the Britist to_ buildi \ \ f wditor felt rather than heard all the st city ould have Lo open its arms and nof T o .‘ . o biggest portion of the British ex- | to buildings along its banks for several | auditor felt rather than heard all the stir show all of the favors to one road —the rond | had their plantscompleted ana ready to use | In a State of Si hibits, Mv. Dredge says, is now earoute to | miles below rings of the multitudinous leafage, all the . » J s that_had ever been @ curse tothe com- | the power upon its completion. Without a | \LranATSo. Chili (via Galveston, Tex.), | Baltimore. ‘There are ‘beautiful exhibits of | ~Iu Union county, seventy miles south of | trilling tale of the bird—it wasa triumph | profassor of the Eye and Scionce of Ontios to ln,l‘l,l"’"..\fl_l‘ R vy pound of coul or a_cord of wood the town is | Ay 12— By Mexican Cable to the New | laces valued at $100,000 here, many farm houses were blown down | 0f consummate art. Siegfried’s death from | the Hirsehberg Ophthalmic Institute of New o city concil, Mr. Cowin urged, wanted | lighted by electricity and the houses are | Yok flovart—Special o T S iy b (At B by the wind and scores of barns and sheds | vthe “Gotterdammering™ was hardly less | York and St. Louis, wishos (o stato in repiy to deed away its possessions and give the | lighted in the same way. There is cooking | pregident Montt has signed the de Balls Last Night. were destroyed. The storm which laid | perfectly presented to the numerous inquirios of his friends and Unlon Pacitio full swaytodoas it plensed, | wid heating by cloctricity und factories runi- | crag formally decluring othe Chil- | Union Pacifle Shops lodgo No. 8 of the | Akron, la. in ruins traveled in » souun- | The vocal numbers wore notavle for the | PRUICHN SHRE Betnay, b inuaulced vl ors aud without any legal restrictions upon its | ning by the same power out here in tue | | 4 ? Shntiagor Nl 3 | Railway Employes Fraternal Beneficial as- | westerly direction through the southern | perfection of concert in the work of the | ofilicuge MRS e Rl n i action | midst of the plains B Siramigshi LR AL L I el i f Sersed | DAt of the state, : V'track | singers. The quintet from the third actof | Jr's <o wa “Phat i 1 % < g » " and rug o be a state of [ sociation, gave a da g pur ersperse part of the state, cutting a wide track gers. e quintet from the third act o That is all that s in the case, as I under Mr. David Kemlo of New York will at once | Sio, i g B e, | 2 ‘l'”'v’ WAL '_”;v'_ persed | B P the thickly settled district, and | the “Meistersingers” and the scene of the | MAX MEYER & BRO. CO. V7 interrupted Judge Ferguson | build a house on each of the 100 lots wnich | 74{5iow cabinet has not yet been formed with vocal and instrumental selections at | \while there was no loss of life so far re- | valkyries in the last act of the *Walkure” 16th and Furnum St exact point,” replicd Mr. Cowin, | he bought on the 6th inst’ The Omaha syn % s 4 ued, | the old Metropolitan hhll at Fourteenth and | ported, trees, small buildings and stock were | wer¢ admirably rendered. Miss Juch’s r e and they claim that a city of 140,000 should | dicate ikl i | but will soon be announced. The trouble be- ] 12 ; . smal s k : s re- pnd whey clatm that a city of 110000 should | dicate lias mude an offer for 45 lots. It tho | tyveon Brazil and Paraguay has been settlod | Dodge streets last niglit nis was the sce- | damaged to o great extent. A heavy rain | cital of Elsa's n from “Lohengrin S R | u position where it cannot let | deal is concluded they will improve them as | W60 Foer MG lie 1 ond party of the season and was a pro- | Avcompanied the wind and flooded the entive | pleased the audience so much that it did its il . her road " o | and the commis: 'y of polic in Asuncion part) ASON - an 18 a | n French Preparation CALTHOS another road within its limits. rapidly as they can get brick. Everybody in | jiie poon reinstated in. ofice. . That official | nounced success. The Union Pacific quar. | COUBETY. washing out bridges and roads and | utmost to induce o repetition, but in vain free, aud u logal Kuarautee Uit Giving Something They Did Not Own. town is canvassing the brick supply | had imprisoned several Brazilian 1 ofti- i ik A48T G juri the new crop which had just begun | The Elsa and Ortrud duet was carefuliy sung CALTHOS will B A iing h A n e B The machinery for Colonel Holton's fac ! imprisoncd soverul Brazilian naval offi- | ette, consisting of\ Meéssts. Frank Wallace, | to'sprout. by Miss Fabris and Miss Stein, the rich con Mealih, Strengt stated that it w ‘,‘,‘l,\ whan the ‘.“:”"f:: is on the way. The First Nutional | povernment of Puraguay. A Brazilian war | J0mes Gardner, A, R Lemon and Walter At Canton the electric light plant wires | tralto of the lawser lady showing to fine ad- Use it and pay if satisfied. Atarted to do this yory thing that ho socured | 1o , fully organ # |1< ready for business. | Siibavas sent to Asuncion,but it has been de- | el fayored the company with several | were burned out and poles iu many section | vantage. The whole concert was one never Address VON MOHL CO.. oS blon Bveh- riovr the Gonnoh Kad 1is makes three banks in Gothenburg. cided that the commissary of police did not | S0ngs. ‘Fheir singing was well received | of the city leveled he wind was terrific | to be forgotten by those privileged to enjoy Hole Amerisan Agouts, Cinclauati, Ohle. | Voot R the e of lettie thaed had | One thing which looks well is the number | oxceed his ordinary duty. There is great | Wi revenled o good blendiug = of | and several buildings were blown from their | it. e ream—— = oy My everytning thy i vatiroad | of casn offers made by straugers who are in- | oxcitoment in Paraguny over the approach- | Yoices, which augured well for their | foundations. - o = == - O T Dk ba: e NEATa. Lad. Toantin. vesting in Gothenburg property. £ | ing election for president and ““! party future. M Grace Pike of Perry The storm did no damage at Watertown or | Refuse to Kepair Santa Feo Engines. AMUSKEMKNTS. LV e N Ay aaa heerl in- Too high praise cannot be given Mr. Ken- | jaiars are busily discussing . leaders, . De, | 13=8 pianist of ability, rendered several in- | €| a tremendous rain fell, | ST Joserm, Mo, April12 - About. twenty. | Ee= g T ool st whot wos proread at th ton | nan, the secretary of Commercial club, | Bioeond, recently minister from Paraguay | Sirumental solos. Siic is a teacheref the | heavier that for ten years past. Taking the | five union machinists employed by the St. New s e Tt e oot it paune | for ihe work the club is doing, inanswering | 16 {ruguay, is one of the candidates Y | artand made a favorable impression on this | state as a whole, the ground is drenched | joceph Terminal company struck today be- that a promptly and reliably all inquiries for in- 3 4 occasion. Frank Wallace sang two baritone | with water for two or three feet in depth | '°° > 7 5 b Theater A ow.” said Mr. Cowin, “they are here | f0kion about the town. The club sends Joined the Reyolutiontsts. solos in a very creditable manner. and the crop for this year is certain, The | cause they were asked to work upon dis- asking that this injunction’ be modified thay | O1¢. Of the Gothenburg papers for three | A dispatch from Porto Alegre, Rio Grande | ‘The success of the social was duena | Sioux and Jim riversare over their banks SHlbd Aol hont T 0y e e Siehee: e able but firm, mon ths freeto all who request it do Sul, Braz y give aw sthing icl oy s the German and Italian | large measure to the committee of arrange- | throughout their lengths and are still rising. The strikers are peac B 4 f,"‘l‘m‘,‘x‘}c;:“, ,,iu\‘,;'-‘,‘_"l“’,'f“,“"';[,‘jfi “,l’“:,;! urey e colonists in thiat city have joined the revolu- | ments, Messrs. George Maltby, Charles s e THURSDAY, APRIL 13. o go on in an absolutely autocratical man- REARRDSEHBOLL, tionists ; while from Rivera comes the report | Smith and J.J. Curtis. The wee sma’ hours YPSILANTI IN RUINS PERSONAL PARAGRAPIS, togoon i an ubeolutely autocratieal man ; Bt that the Castilhiata forces are-mussed at | had come on before the participants scat- fet S : Rgc/pkng | ‘Em_“m';I::w;m:"";ll‘ alleys and Memphis Opons Todas. )y Gabricl, where they ire awaiting the ar. | tered toward their homes ; Bulldings Demolished and Unroofed by the | John J. Roche of Sioux City, Ia., is in USB 8 Bl"son pussing thew over to thegompung on & silver | Mers, Tenn., April 12,—The bedraggled | rival of reinforcements sent by President | ‘Uhe first_ annunl ball of David Gilbert Sto Omaha Rircots are, buit they kuow that there aro | SKITts of yesterday's storm whisked over | Peixottofrom tiode Janeiro. Colonel Sagaudo | councit Xo,2 an Order of Steam 13- | purnorr, Mich., April 18.—At 12:45 a. m, | E.J. Rosccrans and wife are in from acres of them, and they are willing that | this section this evening and the drouth of | ha® sent a division of federal troops to wel- | #RCES & SOHARTR VT RITET B HHECHT | the following dispatch was received from | Rushville. And bis own company fn wnot)n-rsm"m be given as free as so much | many vgeks was broken. Ruin in torrents | it DB Ay e Masestad and oo iv. Fully 200 people were present and | Ypsilanti by the Associated press: John H. {_‘"h‘ of Nebraska City was in ' M) P ordinance of which we have Leard | 13 fing tonight, but the thirsty carth | marching to join the revolutionists. ry one scemed to enjoy the twenty-four “This city is in ruins; a cyclone struck | OWn yesterday 4 3 Rl Van W]nKle 0 moh provides thiat. e city shall resetve | WIIKS it Up s fast as it desconds, and | oral Sariva, onc of the leading rovo. | dances onthe program. The committces | nere tonight, coming from the southwest IR B orComilig Neblinaa i . The right to construct sewers-u the streots | Scarce a surface’rivulet is seen outside of the | lutionists, has gone to the frontier to receive | having the ball in charge cousisted of the | sweeping _everything i ¥ lns 5 . | Bhorlght to construct sewers [u_ the streats | SETe b S KO 8 e e e v, | horses anil arnis which are expected from | following gentlemen: ~ Reception, R. H. | 4hd sweeplng everything in- its path. | 0o, ppessman A, 1. Hager of lowa called Box sheets open Wednesday upan the ratlroad company e nd soimo 1000 work s expectod tomorvoy. | Which reached here today was “the rather | Charles . Weeks; floor, . 1. Garlick, F. | was caused by it. The-storm took a strip | Mr. William Scholes of Greenville, Ia., / NEW | L RAT | “} want tosubmit that the city council has | The Tace program for tomorrow cmbraces | Starting one thay federal troops had evacu- | M. Coffmun, Henry Schrocder, Gus. Wik | through the ~business portion of the 1B o 2T Feaier g THEATER | 0t 20c™™ | W e y s | T I or tor mbra 20 Alogre and hiave refused to continae | lund; door, D. J. Wyckoff, Henry Hill, Alex : . e e ol sy st t o Horight to give away the stroots of the | six cvents, five purse races and the Tenne: te g ¥ ditutinay | (IUndidhorDI W YRReM IMery FLH 8 town, moving houses from their founda General E. I\, Test, editor of the Council dity, and that that body cunnot even change | sce derby. The latter is of course the maiy | Uhefisht. Noexplanation of this reported | McBurnoy, Heury Colvin; arrangements yes- | Friday, Saturday and Sundq, he fight. u lcBurney, Henry Colvin; urm tions and raising others, Cleary busmess | Blufts Nonpareil, calied upon Tur B the grade of any street after it has once | attraction. Hugh Penny s o doubtful | 82tion has been reccived. The Herald's | Willlam Harris, Charles E. Weeks, Jumes | cojjegoand Cutis carriage factory are in | terda RELE /LS R A LiiAnan . 1t eaniot aven se | 3 dis ot in raving: form nevnt. | correspondent in Buenos Ayres telegraphs | W, L g o s Viley 4 i MATISEE SATURDAY but now the luwiakers would not only | push so early in the season. In tho-pooling | 14 troops ‘and revolutionisis in Uruguay- | of 0 delegato to the Natlonal ¥nelnocts co | ui¢ the stores were simply blown off. | trip cast last evening. HOWATD TRANS i vacate, but it would give away the | tonight ho was a slight fayorite, coupled | O Las no foundation. 1t wis merely u | vention which meets in Philadelphia next | 1 wenty store fronts werealsosmashedin, On | 1, s, Hunt of Reading, Pa., after having PRk ey 3 “lands which they hold in ‘trust for the peo- | witn Belfast. but the latter willin all proba. | Jirmish between federal troops and Castil- | month. - L Hllxcnntadi thio TN LA b i plinn ton Tooh | snonbikeraralinys ia Omana dabicinsss lery || BLmaGIALTY.OC o (SEROIAAEICE i g(lle;loljgltfln:‘l".:‘:;lv.’;ln"f'il.‘\"mmlv.ll:';'x‘v;’llu‘x)l::"l"::utxll: bility represent the stable m the race. " Colonists at Cruz Alta, Rio Grande doSul. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS. h_l'ui.:i i llnx‘lll’-:stt»(lli«»o “lnu}qnxgv \\';«)s“dtl'p‘u‘fl last evening for St. Paul enroute home. Posttively the two grostest and most refined Ehie i1ty Bthornoy (o denun Phat TACEL" At Enst St, Louis. enraged over atrocities of Bandit Ferregra, ished and the mail scattered in the street. | g y,u01 Wygant of New York, brother of | vaudeviile compnnies in the world. Consolidated iph. telephone and electric lig All tele B o Ny el 1o visiting | for the Brat tmo at Haviin's theater, Chlengo, pro= S1. Louts, Mo., April 12, - Results at Eaet | Who confessed that he murdered the Cerrule D Alex Wyga ostic, 3 d ) urd i Tea MR O ke R B : u 2 L pAALory TOF An eX(onaIve tour 0f L Puctlc const : Hisia ot an Barsanniiive, St i ey family, uttacked tho Jail 1 which bo was | A prairio firo neur Downs, Kun., yesterduy | incs B0 o, o e I onarty | in the city. Ho “expects to spend the sum- | Kowuimbor, aospiic the snoriions et o thixcon Fere City Attorney Connell intimated that | 5% veraas dollows | confined. The guards were driven away and | did a great deal of damag thut has becu exposed to the storm mer in Coiorado. sotldation, tho prices will b the regular ones of the B U iniviis dpposring i bahat of somo st race, flve-cightlis of amile, selling: | Forrogra was Jynched, Tire in the lumber yards of New York City AL Dt heon EXDOARC 0 LSS IRNK, vesent!| . Mr. Zach Talor. o populsr hotel ‘clesk, § FEMOE. Sl L ke moriag rond that wanted to get o foothold in | ypjagtOfyon: Lrish Patsecond, Luke Richards |~ 4 dispatch from Buenos Ayres says | last night caused u oss of $100,000 o e e s pe. | has returned from n two weeks pleasure | e foliowini priove: Kifat Hoor. . 566 and $1.00 : Omaha, ;. Ao aco itme-fourths of a mile, Paladin | the negotiations for settling. troubles | Johu W. Mackuy hus recovered trom his | tefvad injuries more of loss sorious trip to Velasco, Tex. He regained his health | aleony, 0c nt ¢ _This Mr. Cowin denied and waxed warm. | wou, Buck Thorn second, Luke Richards third. | i3 Catamarraca have failed. The con. | younds and yosterduy took a drive sround L sinie very rapidly while in the south Continuing his remarks he said that he was | Tlue: 1:221, flict between the governors of Sala- | San Francisco, Cal. Notes of ! c representing tho interests of the people and e, eleven-sixteenths of u mil ov. Dr. B, T. Perkins, rector of St. Paul's Sict the Storm. E. A. Becker, an Omaha traveling sale ) NEW [T TG0 arc At 7:80 last night a tornado struck Ypsi- | man, arvived in the city last eveni He TURATE b ) Louisville, Ky., for twenty-five years, i s 3 R S ENDE Signed, owing (o o1d age, > YEYEAS it Mich., and wiped out the business sec- | reports that he had leéft Akron buta fow THEATER. fuois o and Santiago therefore continues, the ot Dhe riglts of any of the roads.. " Did tho Aol Lizale V" second, " Flo governor of Santiago refusing to surrender people in 1872 think that It wis to their in- | *anks ird, inie: 1o, 0 tzee | Drisoners demanded by the executive of 4 ; : hours before the eyelone struck tow Toront to have but ot renayedo thelr in: | Fourth ruce, three-fourtiis of a mile, Switzer | RSONORS ) ho bombardment of Fort Sumter was cele- | tion. The damage is heavy. 1t is not known | hours before the cyclone struck town. ) BRRe il L aer boktien tilon g tacaah [ sy Sinpiencele, sscaufl fialshnsa fthled. brated yesterdiy at Charleston, 8. C., by | whether there was any loss of lifc or not ‘At the Mercer: H. 1. Hochstein, Mitwau- | NONDAY & TUESDAY BPRIL T & (8. To Observe the ¥ LPARATSO, Chili, (via Galveston Tex.,) , L 5 TR pse memorinl exercises in-honor of the late'Gen= with one road Fifth rd eral Beaurogird. kee; E. J. Hazen, Chicago: R. H. McDonald, | My. Connell interrupted by asking: “Why | manic won, kir A. H. 'Eckerman, Sibley; N. D. 1irst vislb to Owana. sixteenths of u 0 Osa second, Advices from different parts of Indians are to the effect that the storm of last night [ Lincoln v have you not ot other ronds? third. Timo: 1:00, April 12, (BY Mexican Cable 10 the New | poquetor Saxton's bill forbidding the salo of | and yesterday did much damage in many | Kelly, Chicago: H. P Johnison, Davenport; | Ghase Frohman’s Gompany 1f 1 knew the inside history of city af- e York Herald—Special to Tie Bee.|—The | {ho New York assembly yestorday and went | Seetions of that state. Bdward Gillette and wife, M. G. Swan, fairs a8 well us yon o T TMEHE aRswer that | Hawrnonen 1 i e o e b s I slar Tar i His N aw Y Oplrias L Crops., orchurds, farm houses and outbuild- | Sheriaan, Wyo.; C. W, Butteriield, South question,” retorted Mr. Cowin solar eclipse of April 16 has bee X ation convention held ut Ver- | ings were demolished near Albuny, Tex a; Dr at Minaas m L established | At an immig 3 I Bl ranal i nOW 6Lat0 he entire town of Robinsonville, Miss., | I'rench, Milwaukee: N. J. O'Brien and wife, . Tirst race, Going " back Lo the argument, Mr. Cowin | 1 2 ifutlongar Gliford wo . ceond, Fred Pisher third. Time . : N i exaySRmIday UG une Mbro ddoptad | VS urged that the stroets of tne city should not | “Sevond seven furlongs: Jack Richoe | 30 40 secondssouth, and longitudo 23 dogvees | culling for, b Samutin, 1o wmas ) o be deeded away ; that if they were o court | liew won, Blue Banuet second, Kay B inind, | #0d 42 minutes west. Instruments for the | ©utof the Panhand was swept away by a cyclone about 4:30 yes- | Cheyenne; Con Kirk, Grand Island: L. W A acarh ) of chancery would interfore and stop the | Thme: 1145 i obsorvation are in position. They consistof | e San Antonlo & Aranans Pass raflway | terduy afterndon. All tho stores are In | Russell, (Glenwood, tai doby itzsqrald: | y I uixh proceedings. It was an outrage, he declared, | Third race, one mile: Morse won, Colonel | spectroscon isunl telescope, o double | ficlals v practicully me tho demands of | flames. Several negrocs and perhaps some | Edin, Nev( . Vitageruldy Natlere Nebi f 550 B Tkt iox sheats opon SuT Yo contemplate such o thing and 4 siolation | Jheatley” sécond, Marry Kubl third.” Tiine: | camera and o cloud recorder in *addi | thoeont il Gt o froth o ot s | Whites are buried in the ruins. “The dopot | Dr. D. S Martyn, Columbus, Xebs Pl | flaiho® llowine prives: it oo, s, of any system of government A o iBve itiitlanze: L Buly Bav tion to the usual meteorological mstruments LA ARK uble has | oo Completely destroyed and the night | Schuitzler, New York; Charles A. Dodge, | fitY, 54 #ltoo. Bulcony. b0 and 7ac J Have Given Up Too Much Already. B T T T Yt R T ‘Ij'y;{” hYnC | The differential barometer is oxtreme 11 the Brooklyn, N. Y., officials indicted for | OPerator's wife killed. A colored child was | Ogden A NIW D 1 Ady. NPy Qubiof. Big h seusitive to atmospheric conditions. Th sing fraudulent bills'in puyment for ex- | 8180 ki'led. Only two bouses are left stand- | At the Murray B. speale, st Joseph: | BOYD'S 45, : CONCERT J. M. Woolworth reviewed the history of | Iifth race, holf a mile: Ono Dime won, | Situation selected for the obscrvatory is mosa | penses for the Columbian cefebration ap- | ing I e I S v the advent of the Union Pacific road, ‘the | Morgan second, Tom Stevens third. Time: | favorable. Prof. Schaeberle reports exce | beared before Judge Moare in sessions court N oL | mew, New York: J. C Buetz, Chicago; E WEDNESDAY. EVE ARRIL Y. voting of £50,000 of bridge aud railroad | 29 ient conditions at his station, which is lo | Y¢ 1y and pleaded_ got guilty. y Rlispard:in Worth akots. | J. Conker, Herbert Williams, Minneapolis :M"lsl e conltpovirsics of th. st e e e S R e R A B e e monhly mootRE the loard of Trade IN PAvL, mfhuu IA\m.ll ‘If \A\ Il)w.m- | i, $ eaine, New Voris W, B Do uns PAD ER Ews Kl WanLy years, with the numerous attemp e Sl dis o el b nd ansportation coR@pany yesierany at | Press speeial from Ellendale, ) ays ‘hicugo A ements, Now York; L. J degrees and 19 min 25 degr ding, which i most one-third | Brunswick, Chicago; I, Deering, New York L. 1. Brooks, J. H. Brown, Boston; John The world's sreatost living pla its venerable president now, he declured, was not with the Union | bali should go to Nebraska City next and | Snow, who has held the offi Captain Ambrose Pacific, but with i A for sixteen y atur, utes, and latitude done in this locality, has been para s progeny, the Union | day and witness the contest between the | 27 minutes south, with an altitude of { McLaughlin, Thomas Smallwood, New Seats now o le at dax Meyer & hro. Co. ) ) . ) A freight train go 'th o 6 Monc 00 v one he worst blizzards | McLaug nas & N f I on sule at ddax Meyer Depot company, a company that came before | Omaha High school and Peru Norn hool | 6,000 feet. Tho photo-heliograph aud. other | wenitheboen u i Leldes near Crawfouin, | y2ed by one of the worst bllzards | v i\ "siqeq Day, Steubenville, O.; Mrs. | 16th aud Farasm strovts the people and said that it ws willing to do | teams. A special train will loave the Wb | instruments have been installed at Prof. | ville, tnd, yesterduy. Vittoen loaded enrs | o1 5001 here, following the rain which fell | \ \y"pates, Miss Josephine Thatcher, I at i aereed to do, ¢ t what hus it | ster street depot at 11 a.m. atexcursion | Pickering's s agreed to do?" he asked rate; which has In the evening there is to be a hop | 8,700 feet. Prof. Ab an altitude of | went through, taking one span of the structu L of Valparaisn is o | With thom. A’ broken truck caused tho Slbroins itk Tact AMghe Ana. has Mapt jo | miont - FARNAM St. THEATRE | "3t TR e AU Wadtenrth || DSERL NS aTRDRIRERS kil 9o 8 Y| o il 00 | wreck. Noono hurt up incessantly ever since, and there is every LOCAL BREVITIES. y o 00! TOR 6 tha vidtaraand tha o | operating with him, Senor Echaumen, the ¥ i continued, “‘aud now we are confronted with | go are sure to have a good time. | owner of the Aris Mina, has placed évery < reason to beliove it will continue vhrough TO~NIGHT. rd of Public tonstructing | ROBERT -- MANTELL a report of the ¢ity coun ive | On Friday, April 24, the Bon 1L in which that abouts a 188, another night, Prairies he — convenience at the disposal of Prof. Picker- Fag. body proposes to abandon everything that Orioles Win One. ing’s party i fires in he Pon: ridd colliery, Wales, | with stock, and great suffering will follow Works v\\'\l‘J recelve |h"\"-' Jor col Kidl) we have worked so long “to sccure. The | LovisviLue, Ky., April 12.—Baltimore de have been put out, Dut s thick 1s the gas the i S i sewers in districts 181, 182 and 153 = whole thing now rests upou the mere fact | feated Loutsville in an exhibition game this Battle Between Indians. oxploring purtles’ duebfmot enter the pit to Made Things Lively at Lyons, N, ¥, | “Jens Nelson has sued Joset P. krejei in | VICTOR ‘:Egt'fi RABAT ; that a committee of the council will give the | uerernoon. Score Paxawa, Colombia (vin Galveston, Tex.), | "ol for Lo Kend o § Lyoxs, N. Y., April 12.—A tornado pre- | district court for $2,000 damages for being | i rugenwely Intorosting Romantic Dramn, o Union Pacific company any and everything | | s April 12.—[By Mexicaa Cable to the New | grmeriin “haee comuomed yestordny, 7 | vailod here today, doing much damage of & | bitten by Josel’s dog e N that it asks. 1 do not call this a settlement. | Hatisvile 410040230011 York Horald—Special to Tar BER].—A | Herni the Cafo Varyomicr Whon the an. | minor character. | THE FACE -1 MOONLIGHT. 1t is simply opening the way for new contro ; S letter Just received from the Herald's corre- | archists threatened ie ball, was & witness == Saturday Bight, by special requast Hits: A Loulsville, 11: Baltimore, 11, Erro Epsom; 1 severe north | ve been unearthed. WasuiNaroN, D. C,, April 12.—Forecast | | verses and placing the whole matter just | poniminc /5y Gt Balts hrors: | spondent in La Paz says that a furious battle were killed and a greater number were In- | *° T John D. Howe declared that it was not his | City and Suburban handicap at The White ver Teutonlc encoun- | for Thursday: For that the council had no more right to dispose Thomas Johnson was arrested yesterday | Brazilians have captured Indians and sold A #Ppear to have been noticed so far asre- | ern portions. | ) bis latestNow York lnughlng success, The researches of thes American School of WEATH FORECANTS, R =™ where 1t was five years ago, the Union | Clausen Hemininz and Harrington; Smith | W8 fought a few days ago near Cruro be- | Archwology ut the temple of Herat, Micenae, THE coflslcl" BROTHERS. i Pacific company controlling the situation | and Robinson. Uwmpire: Cline. tween the Indians belonging to the estates | have just ‘revealed the foundati of the | y¢ will e Falr and Slightly Cooler in Ne- —~ < and the business of the city of Omaha. of Guancaroma and Quelcata. The battle | Bncient temple mentioned by Howmer as having Baea e POPULAY TR - 3 FARNAM St. THEATER, 5% jured. The authorities finally interfered | r T ebraska—Fair, light 150, 25¢ 350, 500 and 750, purpose to talk upon the subject, but he ter ¢ gules on lust | of the public property than it would have to | for giving checks on a bank where he had no | them in slavery He charges that Brazilians | Ported: G : For the Dakotas—Generally fair: north- SPORT MoALLISEER \, © vHE 400 sell the property of a private citizen deposit. Mrs. Anmie Harris of Johm T, | o0 the border of Bolivia have been fre- he reception of Stambouloff b pe erly winds; rising temperature in western ra s You can't afiord to miss 1t B has Rioads K uookiag for Admisslon. King Charles Won, lasted five days. Thirty of the combatants | Deen burned 423 B, U, Nany pri I o 0 ) Dmclous COMMENCING DO L i A ame s Do vy | Wineall sccond ; Lady Hermit third. and compelled the Indians to lay down their | and Saturday. On Saturcay, in latitude 42,47, | Bortherly winds; slightly cooler. 4 NIGHTS "3RS SUNDAY “What o spectacle is presented here | v\ onan & Co. was the-complatnant quently flogged by citizens of that country | Lrancis Joseph of Attirls husstirred ov portion of North Dakota Popular Wodnesday Matinoe-2ic any 9 the theory of giving away the streets, lands embassy and foreign office on the con capltals show that the Loeal Kecord. 4 G Loxnoy, April 12.—King Charles won the ks of art 1 | L] o | arms longitude 41.7, she passed a quantity of wreck- | For Iowa—Fair; diminishing northwest he Inimitable Irish (omedian ' The Brazilian minister to Bolivia has pub- | age, which compelled the vessel to reduce 1ts | gy w . 4 S dhatane o and the property of the city. He drgued rom the Police Dooket, | 1iahied o lotter denying the oharea that ivs | aused, ‘The arigin of :the. wreckags does nop | 7Y Winds; cooler in the eastern and south ROBERT GAYLOR 3 today,” 'he continued. ““Two roads. the and that many have been assassinated | W8vices trom o Milwaukee and the Rock 1sland, seeking ad- | Bell Brandon, a notorious woman of the |~ Additional reports of disasters in Peru | uetion of the emy 1 regurded us an event mission to our oity, and the council standing | town, was arrested yesterday for abusing | reached here today. In Pano, Ayacuchoand | of the first inte importunce. The Orpice oF THE WEATHER BUREAU, OMAHA, uAmRALFRUITFLA\MiS- wouDEnLlun .nd skground ou keep out, for | Sergeant Whalen. Her case was continued | Aric ere_have bex S Supporters of the triple wco comment fa- | April 12.—Omaha recordof temperature and BIJOU THEATER . Y o o e R g el g e fAmuips there, have been many scenes of | YbEbly on the recaption, whith thoy considor | rainfall, compared with corresponding day of et e ALL THIS WEEK. ; wraTerthe Union 1oacifie keep us bottled up | Eans Nelson, who runs a_saloon on Tenth | wholly duo to attacks upon the government 10 be equivalent 10 i foriual approval of the | pust four years S e S Vanllla THE BlLIOU STOCK COMPANY for all time to come, " street between Harney sud Howard, was | bocause the houses of many private citizens | *retu® 4uo iu the Batkans N o 180D, 1608 1881, 14 Lemon | Of great strength— Supporting AGNES FULLER lu k Purniog another gun on the council, Mr. | asssulted by two toughs aud quite severely | were sacked and 105bed. The attack on the | gy, i semporature. 489 40° 805 & Economy in their use SEANGCHON.?? Howse said that the railroad companies | beaten because he refused to set up the | Masonic lodge in Mollendo in whieh the for fsle Chesn, o temperature., 50> 430 630 B3O P delicatel NS PN .* eould net toueh the mayor auy more thau | drinks tosthem. One of themen wis recog- | American consular agent was wounded ap- | A dental office in Omaha, Neb. Ad- | Precipitation 00 22 .04 00 - avor cately AND THE NOVELTY COMEDY COMPANY. ihey could touch the north pole, but with | nized as s B.and M. brakemas. | pears to have beer u part of the general dress £ 12, Bee office. Statement showing the condition of tem and deiiciously as the fresh fruit. | MATINEES DAILY-POPULAK IRICES