Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 16, 1893, Page 6

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i { | e ——————— Z— THE OMAHA DAII,Y IH' E: ! (1N ) 1 and Tam sorry that we shall not be able REAL TRAGEDY ON THE STAGE | 55 %oniftoe 5t tertormancs this sror ir She has been removed to her i I, where, T hope, she will shortly | End of a Young | e retlrel | Actress ot Missonla, | Nat Goodwin is as charming as ever,” | said the reserved scat | o 1 The audicnee dispersed. ( VAS ) w*y Al A b WAL In the oftice of the Flovence hotel the ettt | ¢ clock, across whose doors and dial Pathetic Debat and | iitle Mae Missoula merchants have had adver- | WifiecA Sitry ot ¥ Nege | tisements painted, struck midnight, As Teten Tirave &b 1l Moath of ‘ the last’ stroke sounded a timid little 4 maid came down the staivs into the Hell Gate Canon, office ana walked hesitatingly to the J— l clork's desk | “"Wonld you please send for a doctor, | Unmari more pret ous | sir? Miss Durfeo s worse: and-—— | monument ti plain wooden head- | will you send Mr. Goodwin up when he | board, wary il decaying as the | comes in, pleasc? She bhas asked for yoars go by, o isa grave in the rude | hip \ ' the s mountain town of “Certainly | ar off bleak northwest, | The clerk sent for the doctor. He of Montana, which a great | came in diveetly and was shown up- | man bers of the that | staivs, i play in tie \ The | g | story has ne ! 1w oto Just across the street from the Flor- the t Republic, for | enee hotel is “The Exchange,” a gam- there Lan joy in it | bling house, saloon and variety theater, and mo than b < | Intoit, as big clock in the hotel was | ness, v who know of it, [ doubt | striking 12, stumble ther than walked | 1o, God 1hey way f i, and | a good-looking, well-d man of a | speed wid there are nowing | livtle less than middle wy tie had on | the st who whisper it low when tiey | a heavy ulster—it is cold in Montana in | speak concern lovers whisper, | March™and: carried a ecane. He pro- under the o ceeded to the nearest faro table. About thio v aons | ¢ s the aee for #10," he said, and | hange, hs the wind, or roars in { threw u bill to the dealc wrath. Come the zephyrs of the spring | lealer turned: the ace won t it that heal the wounds of vatire and | “Your chahge in checks or mone, that would cover over with green and | he asked, | flowers the mortal wounds of human | “Check ¢ have the cases wpirit of the carth. Comes then the The deal el out the chips to hot breath of the summer, as sealdug | Mmu- led himeself in th tears from grioved eyes, thut diies up | keeper's ehafv a noarr spring’s green and withors its flowers | The pla, At the end of and lays wounds bare again. Autumn | ti)den s the Py winner, e chants its funeral dirge and yields up | looked up and his'« rested for a mo- its dead to h winter, Cold blow | ment on the pictuee of an anburn-haired winter's blasts oy the lonely grave, | young girl of about 20 years posted on | dashing on the wings of the blizzard us | the wall back: of the favo table. He | if ficree to avenge some wrong | smiled and coned o the barkeep The little headboard bears only the A small bottle.” he said | words: tabout 1:3 boy in hotel | ' ory eame walked up to the | Mar Duiri, 1859 1 hope that when the next theatrical season Goodwin's company ¢ journey tothe cast from the citics towns of the DPacific eoast, the great man whoso name it beaes will stop it for | Formerly | | | fullness of the | shall find Nat ! its homeward a one-night stand at Missoula. he found it protitable to y convenient point betwe Spokane and Helena— at prior 2o the year 1880, Sin, v there, as a the ieast » th cities of | he did | n, to be sure, he has not set foot within the town; but let him not, for that reason, sup puse that it is not a Jfitable point 1o s it was then, Missoula has grown mmazingly since 1880, and many great actors and companies play it every yeur. It has grown quite civilized, al- | though there are gaming fables the e | yet, as there were then, whereat o ven- turesome man may still lose his thou- sands in an o (|< uble them, *'if he is tucky The 8, too, the grave in the cemetory at the mouth of Hell Gate canyon, wherein s slecp, life's trouble ps, in her lust ealm oblivi- ended, and ous alike to the sighings of ohyrs and the roaring of w Yy W of winte Duefec:™ perhaps it would But to the facts, Manager Hartl of the Bennett opera house in Missoula had very good reason for believing that a slizht ad- vance in the price of reserved s would meet with no objection from hi: regular patrons on the cccasion of the third annual appearance of Nat Good- win and his excellent company in high- elass drama in March, 1889, ° His recu- lar patrons remembered Mr. Gocdwin well, and with great favor, as a charm- ing man and an actor beyond the ovdi nary, very far. There would be an ad- ditional attraction, too, this year, Mr. Hartley said, and the big bills' bove him out in the statement—a new star, a young lady, very bright and very be: utiful; a charming actress, also. They i her picture, along with M win's, o in the windows of the stores, on the bill- boards about the town and in the hof They put it in the saloons, too, up in the corners of the big bar mirrors, where the drinkers could it, and the pla ers at pool and billiards, who were many. Over the faro tables in the gambling houses one could also seo it unl , indeed, one were too much absorbed in the shuflling of a stack of choeolate-colored ehips that had cost a thousand dollars or more, and that scemed o grow lower with cach re ring “deal.” The regular patrons, therefore, did not grumble at the slight advance in the price of reserved scats. Neither did a great many people who were not regular patrons, and the reservod seats sold out to a seat. Ihe night for he appearance of the Nat Goodwin company came; 1 forget the date. Larly in" the evening the owners of the reserved seats began to arrive and to claim their places; the ushers grew quickly busy with them, Out in the box office Manager Havtloy was selling the benches—the Bennett had not then visen to the dignity of hal- conies and gallerios; it was a of wbarn The benches sold aislos filled and shortly the sigh of tanding Room Only” was displayed Missoula had never turned out a lurge or g more representativ. said the papers next day The orchestra played its opening overture, the lights were turned on and the curtaid rose at the appointed hour, audiend sharp. Itis needless that 1 should, fols low the performance through - needless and impossible, as wells for T have for gotten the play. But that is not ma- terial nows nor was it then, for a fact. 1 doubt whether the srathering remem- bered, any one of them, aflter a week the name’of the play. Missoula theate goora were not noted in that day as he- ing critlc thestors were a recrestion, in general, and Mr. Goodwin was to them “an honest, | ing sort of a follow, melike, unassum- very charming,” in particulur. That was about all Hu-\ paid their money, heard the *shoy saw each other there and the actors and actresses, and were well content, Of course there would bo a cranin necks and an extra stiv on this evening, when the new star thay the bills had spoken of and portrayed appeared, and when she did at length appear there was a storm of applause, Fach time she reappeared it was vepeated louder than before und more enthusiastically, The bills and Munuger Hartley had mll min- stated her beauty. She was 20, not over, and s beautiful as a lllcnm, "suid the owners of the reserved seats to each of other, As to her acting— well, it is not necessary that, 1 should speak of he seting: it appeared to that she w clevor. But as to her faco and figurc and T return to the reserved seats thoy were exquisite. Not too tall burn hair; lovely blue ~eyes; just a trifle pale, poerhups ©s, a little too ¥'s Suadenly there wus a fri from the stage and the new star sank sensoless to the floor. The curtain fell qQuickly and the audience was on its feet, By and by Mr. Goodwin cwme before the curtain and announced in his soft, Sleasant tones thut “'Miss Durfeo is m‘ itful seream me, sir, but are you Mr. | he asked | u. What do you want?” | The sick lady ut the hotel would 1i W to come “over, sir,” veplied the Al rights 11 A2 o¢lock ap o there dircetly.” ted woman in ballet costume eame forward into the rambling | Il from the variety theator in the s, elbowing her way through the i stood about She stopped | | “Hello, cully; hiy winnin'" she asked ack asmall bottle and change your luck. A half dozen, if you like, and if they'll change it The player contin An | hour later the night s hotel | t0 ked him, He f you can, M. ( ter come over Lo vs Durfee continy the doctors fear sh, “Wait until 1 play 1 loser.” The dunl was finished and the player bought morechecks. Ve me a stack | of chocolates,” he suid. “You seem'to bo ot of inck tonight,” remarked the deal “Have a dvink? | Barkeeper, the same. A little before 4 came in. at, for God's ) come over to the room. Mae is dying.” sJust one more deal and The girl must be searcd, tinued to play. 'The out The big clock in the hotel struele the | hour of 4 in the morning. A little muid | came down the subbing, and | passed ont at the front door, A moment or she ente hange.” “She died ask Mi. Good—" | Iy God! The playe rose from his chair, threw a chocolate-colored faro chip to the s, buttoned his ulster up tight about his throat and walked, steadily enough, ought into the st t. The dawn was just breaking in the ouhad bet- « mowent. | < toask for you an cowing wo deal out, wdwin, w0 hotel I'm o'cluck a strang I'll be there. nd he con- stranger hurried g for you, The Nat G panied by the Iwin company, 1t nan w aceom- ¢ name it | hears, took the cari wning train for I to mcet cugement—ail but one. By eollection, before it left, it raised money enough to buy a plain coftin and to dig a grave A fev » of Missoula —poor little “What was the troubl asked one of them on the w the cometes doeto 3 back from ither not diseuss it,"” Ay, and would plain’ wooden and decayed An unsighitly « too, over the sunken in and hollow, he ve- 1y no mo headboard has with the passing m shows in the grave, which is About the g warped us the seasons chunge whispers the soft south b or rages the flowers and green e which the hot be withe Autumn’s divge dies away in the rush of the snow-laden winds of winter; and the years, tov,are numbered with the dead A chipmunk makes its home in the un- sightly seam. ve italene, no living thing Visits the lonely grave in the com- etery at the mouth of Hell G in the bleuk northwe fur awa, 1roor Muc Durfe e A SISTER'S SACRIFICE, Remurkuble Courage nud Endurance Dis- played Undec the Scaipel One of the most remurkable and deli- | catexcases of skin grafting in the history of medical s l(mhu!m nmee was Ll peently hur Wheelc was playing with some other children w performed in “About two the vurd, They started a bonfive, Avthur swumbled and el into he flumes, is coat caught five and his en- tire breast, abdomen and one side were frightfully burned. 1t was decided that the ouly thing that conld be done was to engralt the skin of some healthy person upon the burned parts of the little fol- low’s body, but for some time no one could be found who would consent to parting witl his or her cutic It was finally suggested that Mionie | Wheeler, sist of the little sufferer, and aged 17 years, should submit to tho operation.” The young lady at first objegted, but at last her love for her brother induced her to submit to the operaticn. ‘The little boy and his brave sister were tuken to the' city hos- pital, thut being considered a ‘better ||1.u| than their home to perform the operation, and the difticult and delicate work waus performed. Miss Wheele was placed under the influence of ethe and strips of skin from both thighs and one of the hips were shaved off with sharp razors and transformed to the body of the little brother, An idea of the operation may be gained when it is stated that enough of the skin to cove Lwo square foet of the burned boy’s bedy was removed from the young woman. One piece of skin that was removed ex- tended from just above the knee fully nine ine! limbs were «he was the boy expecte put in an appe; an 1 tha cly 1 vember, A HORNET CYCLONE. T have ing he traveler It was at the tlemen sized t mild castern foik, how the sand sifted out of the bootheels of the whole crowd, and we sat or stood or crouched and cowed like helpless, | seaved infants under cover of two | medinm-sized Winchesters. But I was | aboard a tiain in Mexico that was held | up and gone through under eireum- | stunces of horror and terror that were | beyond anything I have heard of or imagined. We were running along smoothly | through the state of ahuila oné wretchedly warm day last fall, when Just as we entered a pateh of woods, the brakes n st up eons < scomed instantly tostrike every one and there wasza hurcied seereting of valuable But it wasn't to be that kind of an invasion. Thoe decayed trunk of a hig had fallen squarely across the track. It was too big to take ¢ o8 on thrusting it aside by charging it with the pilot, o the train hands and some te W W then a break by man thr; a windy “Hort man who headed the ru himsel slamme others, pened t und got half a s, th vestiga were o) was in possession of seve Mexi 4 on wings, of futur wlive wir hornets’ the hauling of the tr out the ment of paping surprise, then a chorus of howl left in th the scuts, thing over their disy train r¢ moraliz rare pr crowd who had hauled on the tre shouted, “Break for the baggage ear,” unid, as only the one door of that car W 'I'Iu- glecfull smothe and all But we couidn't stay theve, yet we daren’t turn out and fight them. Fi ally, so 1 beard later, the fireman volun- t war started her back with a lively jolt. The tree was dragged almost clear and the rope broke, But the fiveman was hav- ing too perimen ata m flew out after running back a couple of mile stopped sore and But ful ch v us window cng we wen pilot struck the old_tree und sent skyward, ing hornets nests, sig (R the slee amazen yet anof ery of 1 and when we ghtup the ment, oils and single drug store, and surgery we boug THE COST OF LIVING. An Al- % pr Justify though quit than ev 000,000, and, assuming the tes made by the Departmient of Agricultu ‘on September 1 to proximately correct, it would appe that the harvest per capita has been a light one, We have produced, aecord- ing to the government figures, the fol- lowing quantities (in bushels) of wheat, corn and oats, and to this is appended the production per capit gl Yiold Capita Wi 't Corn 16141000000 4 Oats GLIO00O00 91 The wheat hurvest is the smallest sinee 1877 with one exception: the corn produet is about 10 per cent below the average of tho last ten years, while the yield of In 1891, tjonally of whe: bushels Crops a be former ensue Besid our neat The Agr th 90.2 per The tend to furmers, and therefore pork It sells at this sheep, cently quotations show that mess beef is $1.50 a bavrel ¢ live cat weight by some But things year, n Lond of of the passengors paches could 15 open the score or 80 of passenge onee bundled although hor ol to face his blouse around . ti to the pilot, it in a few seconds and slid past the sived ducts in 1 n-light, and we serve stocks of wheat car number the high. The glel's | swathed in bundages, and | tuken home in the ambulance, | remaining in the hospital, It is d that a new eiticle will have rance inside of ten days, t Miss Wheeler will have on: ccovered before the 1st of No- hes along ——a Passengers Mexico Held Up by Stingers, had just one exper of be- Id up by train ll"w.“ said a | toa Kansas City Journal man. hands of some Texas gen- and in company with a good- ain load of fiory southrons and and 1 well remember were clupped tight on and the opped with a jerk that shook us wderably, The idea of train vob- wl with | ydrag itoutof the way. The as fastencd vound the stump, as a strong pull all together, and frightencd howl and a ybody for the cars, shing his avms in the air mill. et wild | every like *howled the burly h. as he huried into the first ¢ incontinently d the door in the f: of the and dived under a seat. 1 hap- 0 be on the platform of this car in just ahead of him. Probable dozen passengers were in thy o rest having stenped off to in- te the trouble. All the windows en and in a few seconds the train Wl hundred big the wickedest things with business ends like a dose punishmentadministered with There w at least three in the decayed tree, und in hands bronght There was a mo- ns hornets, nests inhabitants, s und” every muan and woman | he cars tried to erawl bencath pulling coats, dresses, any- heads with shocking “d of the proprieties. Not forty sbbers nor a whole tribe of hostile have inspived such d ed terror. The conduetor, with ssence of mind, who headed the in, were hope nets buzzed comparativel y ly prisoners. angrily, or maybe outside and about ihe passeagers in the coaches, a burning blank. ed wa the horror for us, Tying his head he ran for- rope, still fast to the tre wnped on the engine and 1 th warm atime oty 13, 50 he kept her ighty gait. further ex- running back The hornets either or blew out of the windows and, he train and coaxed us out, a wd. couldn't go back and we ¢ there, and we were loth to rther chances with the hornets, we imagined to be lying in wuit up the track. Finally all the sand doors were closed tight, o1 shut himsell in his cab and t plunging ahead. He said the | 1t fly- enveloped in a eloud of thus dislodged from smashed But we were out of range and the 1 sorr we ¥ station at a pace that brought | Py Mexicans to the platform in went. An oceasional how! duvin ther hour or two told the disco v lingering hornet in the cars, ached the next village entire stock of oint- soothing salves inthe the train for the remainder of the duy, — Round Ady 10 Prices of Neoes- waries Probable. ably accurate reports have heen concerning the yield of favm and enough is known to the statement that the yield, not deficient, is by no means suys the Philadelphia In- in mind the fact that be supported is greater being probably not far er before 371,800,000 by oats s also below the avera wiien the havvest wus exc large, we produced 9 2-5 bushels at 42 bushels of corn and 114 of oats per capita of population. | 1l over the world seem to have itnot for the r ied over from sufferin would ¥ much s the scanty supply cultural harvest of grain seems deficient. department reports of hogs in the country as cent of the number a year ago. ity-and high price of corn will prevent raising of hogs by the high. at $17.00 @ barrel, as against 312 time lust y As tocattle and no authentic statistics hay been prepared. The mavket dearer Ihun a year ago, and that | tle are 75 cents per hundred- higher. Live sheep ave cheaper 00 cents ver hundredweight. flour and weat are not the only that are higher now than last The revolution in Brazil has in- tercupted the ‘..mt modity is now 24 o ‘ade and that com- s apound higher than a year sugar, another luxury, is thre@eoighths of a cent higher: lard risen 3t cents a pound, and “butter and cheese arc both dearer thidfi at this time last . Among hpdchold necessities sene oil is 1 &gy and anthracite conl ton lower. v Living expensesthis winter may be expected to be high, a gallon cheaper, s about 50 cents a Serofula, whethe 18 thoroughly Hood's Sarsapa HER v'3 YOVE OYSTER. A Collection « l"ll on the Half Shell saponke M The oyster industry is & very impor- tant one in N and in the neighbor- hoed of the waters of the Chesapeake ba Indeed, it has been said that this industry was more fruitful and impor- tant than any other, becanse by it more people were divectly and indirectly sup- ported. 1t ie possible that, leaving out Iture, this may be says Her- i Wecekly, as in the industry more than 30,000 men, women and children employed. Of these persons about W0 men are engaged in catehing, 3 the remaining 18,000 are kept at Hling. grouping, pucking and wh work at sh soon, There are two ways of taking oysters, dred and tonging, and in the season )3 there were over 900 vessels engaged in dredging, and a great many more than this in tonging. The crews of dredging vessels vary with the cay eity of the boats, and range from a cap- tain and five men to acaptainand twelve men. These men, by the way, though . and ave exposed wreat havdship and frequently to wger, ure not well paid, Therefore s good class of labor is” not attracted. A Mar vland state ofticor who recently i vestigated the oystormen of the Ch AdgIng crows we up from *the lowest stratum of all nations on earth.” The tong- ers are of a better class, and are usually natives of the Chesapeake counties, The life of the oyster cateher is hard and thankless, as he can sca ever hope to earn move than enough o sus- tain himsclf meagerly. They arve out in theseverest winter weather, and not in- requently the very unsuitably elad v such work.” Many of the men so em- ployed goout in the coldest weather they must work hary 0 peake said that the d mude with no heavier body covering than half-worn 1 shivts. Last winter vossels zen up out in the bay, while the ¢ were without cither food or water. The officer luded to has expressed the If the tender-hearted before al- apinion that among tho oyster msumers knew with how much pain and suffering these bivalves were brought from thei lt-avater homes to the dining table they would not eat them in the hupoy frame of mind nee- savy to g full of this Kings and Other Koyal T Py High for 1 have boen time was splendid and near kings were magnificent who conld have understood the position and telt the pride of the mastet’ of Ravenswood; but, according o the London Speetator, all that has passed away, probably forever, The prince of today who is to be mag- nificent at all, who is to be free in s movements, to tuke trains when he es Boing thing. when a court starving, and likes, to entertain like any other digni- tary, to show good horses and many of them, to keep servants suflicient to” see that puests accustomed to luxury be not neglected, to travel when he pleases, to patronize art, to encourage charity and to live when nec v among cqual princes. as beeomes the na- tion he represents, must pay away money at every turn and always b vv.ul\ with more, Everything costs: from the speeial teain which secures punctual and freedom from pr ' to the rooms which loyal or hospitgble crowding ren- der_exceptionally dear. It isall very well Lo speak »d management, and, of eourse, there 1s such a thing, and it is worth perhaps 30 per cent of addi- tional income. But no extent of good management will reduce ithe eost of any kind n( magniiicenee, or do away with the feeling of the innkeeper who charged avoyal grest a frane apicee for eges, not becanse eggs were scarce, but be. cause kings we We have heard of charges paid by an Indian viceroy at o Paris hotel which would have made Mr, Vanderbilt wince, and there is not an uneducated man in any land, who, if a_prince disputes his charges, does not become theneefor 1a repub- an. withinimits, is this fecling together unreasonable, for the de- mands of prinees, which are usually only demands for frecdom, upset the nsui! routine, just as the queen’s teain, thoug her majesty asks only a little ext security and some privacy, unpsets the routiné traflic on the great railway by which she travels, Moreover, though extravagance is a vice, economy isoften a foible. and one rather sym pathizes with the hint given by tl noble who assisted Louis Philippe in his ‘h after lost sovereizn by lighting bank note, State, in fac 1oour day costs money, and it is as expensive to be a prince, if you livi a prince, a8 to be a spendtnrift hei e h Hazel Sulve - ot De\Vitt's W cures hurns, Stab Endd 0f Thoug Detroit Free Press: What we we are some people know we ar and what we know we are not somo ple think we ar A good dinr Orange bloss widow's weeds. We should not dearn by Trust i too often a bitter 1 Promises are blown-up bladders, Poets love to wash their lines in tears, One of the delights of heaven is look- ing upon death as un accomplishod fact, think not, peo- v abstages grief, & sOmetimes grow on a trusting, ndship is solid gold: love is fili- A woman's smile is worth man's while. L ; Some men's ambition never rises above a torpid liver, - Oune word descril periection ” We re- ferto DeWitt's Witeh Hazel Sulve,cures piles - Econom zlug on the Corpye, Marietta Journal: While an excursion train to Alabama was waiting at the depot 4 uegro appeared st the ticket window in the denot and purchased a ticket for himscll, Then be said to tae ticket agent; “oss, 1 want ‘nuder round trip 'scursion fer a corps A nt opened bis exes in astonishment ursion ticket for i corpse was some bing new Lo him, even with his varied ex perienc i negro explained “You see, boss, my died yesterdiy, and | want ter La ae corpse down to Montgomery und ¢ family view the ‘wains, aud den brivg ‘em back Lo Birmingham and bury ‘em. Dis will be & heap cheaper den fur dé family to come up heie.” - DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures piles. i were light, th COMNERCIAL AND FINANCIAL Wheat Trade Had a Hard Time of it Yes- torday. BEARS PRESSED THE LATE SELLING There Were No Cablos and News from the Enst, Nearly All the Wires Belng Down and Ope erators at Sea. Peactioally No Cuicaco, Oct, 14, hard time of it today. the bears prossed the The wheat trade had n Late in the session selling and forcea prices to the low point of tho year. Decem ber broko thoe last half hour to 63 and closed 1ge under st night's quotations, at 63 This was 2!gc off for ten days, Char ters were ,000 bu. for wheat, but nnthing an apparently proventa large incroase in stocks here for the weck and an enormous increase of 020,000 bu. or ble supply. The dilato ning silver tont more in the visi sof the senate wed as 4 weakening Jorn s 11gc lower: oats from !¢ to 14 and provisions yielded to the general aviness, There were no cables and practically no news from the east, nearly all the wir being down, and operators were left s what at sea. This gave the bears an ex - lent opportunity for raiding, and they im- proved it. I wheat orothoer cereals had any fricnds, they held all the powers to them- seives, The market yielded on hostile dem- onstrations, and showed 1o rallying power. Holders who have been bravely fighting the decline for woeks got demoratized and let stop-loss orders became operative and selling on exhausted 1 demoralization. Nothing seemed favor for the cercals, the oxports for the liveries in the northw and the demand was e rgins completed the ble were again | less than yesterday. Ou the break drigge covered a good deal of short line, and Bryant-Walker did the same, put’ the remainder was nothing in comparison to the offerings, and weakness and depression resulted. ‘The opening was about ‘we lower than yesterday's closing, 1 with only slight mges of pr 8, further declined from e to 17, the Ma future suffering the greatest aeeline, then held steady and the closing was from 'ee to Jq¢ from the bottom. Corn was depressad by the o and the offerings of new ¢ who ctionoi wheat e futare deliv- are supposed to be wmony again selling free while the buying was scattered and mainiy 10 cover “shorts,” the smaller traders beige lined to r The market opened with l0ss, dually worked down from 16 to e, froni e to e changed some, ruled and closed within e of bottom figu Outs declined Je for May, and closed at lye above the bottom, with a net loss of | Uno near futures were off from 1« the close, but the trade was | unly i freely, and the market did have good supy Provision t absence of active elined somewhat in markets. There w ment looking the largest sh teady ongs not had a dull day, operavions, prices de- ympathy with geain e ittle develop- like short sales by the local trade. Prices were lnrgely noniinal ades seattering. Closing i owest of the day, #0e down for off on lard. and from 7' “essel rates were steady nd 19,¢ for corn to Bu to Kingston. ated receipts for Monday s oats, 400 ¢ In th s for corn Dot PLOUR-SI0W and w lower Wit G160 KU OATS -No, No. 2 white, 25/5@201,, No. i white, KvE-No, Baiiy nominal; No. 8, 44c; No, 1, 1.0 b, BRE450 LAY S, Tinorny Seen Porg-Moess e H0W 1800 lard per 100 1k shovt 1ibs stde Toosen, 39475 salted shoulder (07 clear sides (hoxe Wiiskv—DistHers' finishied woods, per gal #1.14. UGS he Unehanged, the roceipts and ship HECRIT TN, ENTA B ur, bbls. L . f 14.000 00 Wheat, bit % | 10 n. bu 67000 .| 270,000 1000 Barley. bu | [ 97,000 On the Prody today the butte et wis 4T84 ries, 164 M 1 Whe et, MINNEAPOLL 14, Wik bioke from the outset this morning und continued to set- e, as one holderafier another dropped his loud u the ket The [ Iurize, with heavy arcivids at Dulit Twns underste untry ele i thit the o trilting, umulitions in i the Supples, cuused Benson s Porous Plaster IS THE BEST, = RELIEVES PROMPTLY and 5, CURES QUICKEST, Umau Stock Yard) C)n;m/, South Omaha. Beat Cattle Ho and 3h1an winrsst il the w " Yood Brothers, Live Stosk Commission Meroisats S01th anahis—Telepa0us 115 Chlos e JOIY D DADLMAY, | WALTER E. W00 ("“‘ il Market reports by mail and wire choerful araished upoa application. i guts £3.1588.40; tancy and export bakers, ca8e $1.7082.10; Tow grades, (1 bugs, Ineliaing red iy dog, $1.16@1.95.° The hdded dnily output of o S Is grinaing today will probubly aggregate 1 | Colorad 80,500 bl Dran market was onsy ut | sold f hor fair grassers about #9 for hulk shipients. Shorts woll at | kille ¢ . Beef stoers avorag #bout #10.26 for the ordinary qualities in bulk. | fng from 1000 10 1.5% s, are qu ot Shipments, 720 tons. to #5 15 and fair to choice range beoves §i Lo St Louis Mucke #, uccord weights wnd quality 81. Louts, Oct. 14.—Frovn -Weak and lower, The murke S Stock Was reason to s0l ably activa Prices in the main were WHEAT--Started tie off and steadily declinsd . Ci to the nishing 2@2% holow yestordiy stock # tober, 574¢; Deceniber, 60'4a th rood At SIRRL Aid olowsdl % Sales today were nt an o October, 85 Do vance of from $1.30 to $2.75, but around §210 §280 for fair to good and October, 26 ¢ 305c. The outside inquiry for stock + was [ e DU OWing to light receints spo Towa BOR00c; Minnesots, | Jators picked up the buik of the fen: N Quict; 50260c, enst t HAY - Unchanged LEAD Steady; $3.25 SPELTER Offored at'$3,271¢ FLAX SErn - Lower; $1.02 bid BUrikn - Unchanged; creaniery, 20@30¢; duiry 27 Faas Firiers fresh, 1603 CORS MEAL-Qrilet, §1.0¢ WHISKY Stendy, 41,14 HAGGING - Un vl 4Y@6e, Corron Ties Unchanged; 95¢@#1.00, PROVISIONS Dull, with ouly a small job- hing trado at previous quotations; o Baeon, s $11.1214; RECELPT bus corn, St b eoti, KANsAS tionully 1 ol Corn-Mixed, slow; for No. 2: white in den #3¢ for N OATs ~Active; No. 2 whit RYE “Siow; No.'2, nos FLAX SEED Tirm BIAN- Firm a4 HAY Firm; timothy, 7507 Braven @27¢; du LGus RECELPY bu; onts, SHIPME 500 b o Minwa Wi norther cons -l BAKILEY RYE Lo PrOVISIc fwhich 1 xport 1 Holders offer niode WhEAT—Holders o PROVISIONS - Pork. Holde s offer yode Lard, holders offei frecly. Corn, st holders offe SPOL A8 1ad; OCtol o Crr S, Lou and there ona Cattle Re Oficial parisons: iy Lav. ¥ tals ol st Wedk ne week 159 cattle on suitable f shoulders, i ENTS supnly of be limited, only fhorts, & houldor shiorts, $11,2; & -Flou, 4,001 66,000 1.5 o0 Ilouy, 73,000 bu'; o Kansns Cit Crry, Oct, 14 weri' No. 2 ) 2527 No. 2 1 . \\ a1 i, s, 1 Miw KEw, Oct, 14 k: No. Decen No. 8 No. 2wl il wer Quict: d4ige wer; No. 1, 4 jobhing, $18.50; ! ul'l 871 o Mark 37c long 1ots, longs soxed 1 un 0 BhIs s wheat, A, 67,000 bu. 00 DOIS; whed (s, 11,000 by, ¥ Markets, i ribs, more. d i, 08,000 t, 8,000 Wiirat-Wealk; frac- ard, O1g@ode; No. 2 ity F1 lower at 311@3 wid and very mixed, $5.0022.00; e, firm; croan frosh o 300 bu; ndied, It 08,500 bt eol Frovie spring, Gty *; No. firn at No. 2 innlly, 44@450. ) pratrle, nery, 24 160, 10,600 o, 10, 3 white, sxuple, 33@506¢, NS Drooping; pork, $16.2 lard, Ilour, 3,200 bbls.; wheat, 41,600 L 155,000 b S our, 700 bbls, wheat, none; { Oct 14, Cor Firm: fair do- Hine, 4 11-16d; , 12,000 bale 0000 Biles was for spoculation and 1 inclueed 5,000 bales Amworle closed quict . Oct 14, s 1o Chinge 1A LIV ceipts o Satisty Sade; SATURDAY, seipts the past week with i ondddiing Tair, 8 13-100 Fatures 14 WikAT—The Vighest, 3, 5,000 Bhis.; National transit Hosed at GO Woor n pric OCK MARK Increase. Nothing doing O market t. 14 ne or two burches of cornc nd but few of the grassers s, The market is im 7 the at about stea fig ivo ders are quoted at €5 to $1 1o good ut &2.60 1o & and ¢ VAt g V0 The roeeipts of hogs were about 5000 hend, a fair run for Saturday, and included A good many fine, heavy hogs, the quality especially in heavy grades being much bot- v for s The murk ened b to 10¢ lower Primo heavy 1L Shippers showin least decline an sed at the low point, with, however, a it of first hands. on {0 choice hows| of alt weights sold at a rar 02 1o £0.40, the great bulk sellin: b i, against §.55 to #0140 vosterday and #0630 to 45 on Satuvany. Representative sales Bk t tockers wore o demand for all s of ? fuir and the il steady. Fair to gzood natives, 0 faie W owesteras, $225a common and stock sheep, #1.7 ool 10 choice ) to 100-1b.lmbs, & Representativesiles Chicago Live Stoek Market, Oct, 14, The recolpts of cutile ated aELBO0 hend, mnking 77,147 A for the week inst’ 64,080 laxy Kand 84420 for (e corresponding week Styent ere was but lle demand from any quart i the market wis barely stendy at the decline notod earlier i the L which i commion and medinm gide s 10 fron 1610 20 per 100 Ths., nid in At les 1o 10e, The week's i sted ¢ Out 36,800 native 00 and 16,300 Toxais ho niarket was dull, and sellors had to yield up th they criday On most of the K trnins werg it 11 1he day. Wies @ niost wCtory one to sellers. At from (et ot Friduy's prices most of the st it 1y workod Heavy Tots, aver 10 400 e, wenerally sold nt mixed Jotsat from 6,40 10 $0.70 Welshits at £ ) to $6,00, T vy unup to about’ 105,700 w i 72 for the previous Week 17 corresponding week Last <l and unch vedid their week's purelinses in ) e cteatiee, totsd o do so the Ve Deon WL (o nake stizhit con, Quotations range from 51,15 to ferior toc sheep and frons for pooE o ex e s coipts: Cattla 1,500 head; head; hogs 9,000 head; sheep Kansus City Live KANSAS Crry, Oct 6,100 he dull and shippin S0t Stock Market 11 Reecipts, | mix Stocker oGS pments, 500 hewd bulk ot 3 Hights, $6.405 I, 3640 1 Snrey 400 head nd weak, Shipments, St Lowls Live S ock Marker, Oct 14, =gy ents, 1,000 5 10,000 top price cadys shipments, none; < Dixposition ot Stock, nid disposition of sto ) the Unidon the twonty-four hoirs i OCtober 14, 1503 HECEIUTS, TexTry s, SHEEP. [Bonis € Cara. e Cars, Mead. | Cars. [Hoad | Cars B I . BIEEOSTTION i WY RS CATTLE [ 0GR, SHLED, The Cadatiy Pack g Co 3P S & ¢ Gl ao1al 192 1t live stoek at thy fou il western mirkets Saturday, Octaber 19 Catflo. Hozs, Sheop. South Omalin 2 4,860 i ch 000 EOD ) Kin (1000 0 1400 St Loul 10000 1,500 5 W77 11912 5,470 You'll have to Insist, sometime Otherwise, y Pearline. grocers may give you some poor imitation of it which pays them a larger profit, but which it will not pay you to use. It isn't enough to order Pearline. Sce that you getit. It has grown into favor so rapidly that it has not only bronght out a host of imitations, but it , upon gettir has led people to callany powdered soap, washing powder, or so-called washing compound— der for ¢ .ln\”\ flattering to Pearline, but lfn s thes used, you can't be enth purg )05 stic anything in the ~ Pearline. im way. of a poy This is all very ations that you've JAMES PYLE, York. an BAGS & Bemis Omaha Bag mnlln fent \4\\.1|ud [ Rector & Withedmg MAHA Manufacturers « Jobbers Direclory TWINES | COMIPANY Importers turars of wid manufue Hour sacks, | [ | TENTS, ETC. Compa HOIs 114 F cov i3 —— e Mors Salosioom COMPANY mirs, ag BOOTS AN wad Onice Fasto + ONLY Many tate Of Nebra fon i onts D SHOES, Coe Sho2 Company. 11211 1o of My 1450 10wl Ly A St il ingpact DRY GOODS. 5 Smith & Co. | Kilpatrick-Koch bry oy b Pl | e N R FURNITURE. | COAL . Omaba U Uphols $102-1 M pholstering ANY | Johason B WHOLESA 1005 Omabia, Neb. [0S, 3 COAL. Street, l HARDWARE 3 Lobeck & Linn, COMPANY rner 19t wid Juck HATS, ETC IRON quK'i,-A W. A L Gibboa & Co | Omaha Sale and [ron _ COMMISSION. | LUMBER. Branch & Co. |[John A Wakelicld LIQUORS. | STOVE REPAIRS “rick & Herbert, | Omana Stove lupm e e e PAFPER. | OILS, Ldlplfl er Paper (u Standard 01l lu Carcy u full stock of PEBUAKL WoAppInK S | enoed and wiltlog paiers, " vard | papers, eic, luliricatiog olls, Kre ,vale ole § & rol l A b IS B3 L L § g S RGN e 4 B e e

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