Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 8, 1902, Page 5

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home. The most impressive thing Is the work, the working man and his dinner pail 8oon after the b o'clock whistle blows they | pour out of the bufldings, a perfect army of them, compared to which our few work- ers are unpoticeable. They add much to OPINIONS ON RHODES' PLANivrom\nsnr persons. An address and silver gifts were presented to Prof. Schiechter. * MINING IN THE BEACK HILLS |7or e tiie ot ¥ tams st it v cyapide tanks in connection to handle tall- | BAweators Generally Commend the Ings Plan of the South African | The Rapld River Mining company has ab- | KIDNEY TROUBLE, LAME New Wa ry in France. PARIS, April Weather Berionsly Interferes with Work on M. Clemencua has been i Rugusie o fhe T | ine prosperiiy of, this clty and 1 can not i sorbed the property of the Big Bend Min- ¥ elected secretary for the Department of | help wishing we had more of them. BeveralTropertion. ing company, situated on Rapld creek, fit- —— War - :'rv:h,.‘r‘e“;‘v-rrn“":hnx§:‘d;v;”v|hl;vr;“r‘rl';ll":ll - | teen miles west of Rapid City, paying $1,- | LONDON, April 7.—The Daily Telegraph HOME MISSIONARIES TO MEET | i fioek yarde. fhe odors o the saioon DEVELOP) AIMS T 100,000 for the property, including the Peggy | today announces that Emperor William and !\m their parks, which are even n-w: au NG CLAIMS ON CITY CREEK | (Foup of cinima. The decc. transterring the | Fresident Roosevelt both received sn n- — fifal, he, wight ot the blufs, the gvee CURED BY SWAMP-ROOT, »\ - property has been placed on file in the office | timation from the trustees of Mr. Rhodes' | Active Workers of Conkregational Banks, its many boats arifting lasily | dditious Being Made to Reduction of the register of deeds at Rapld City, the | estate as to what the will proposed before along, its big trees hanging over the water. Chureh Hold Annual Sew P e | w urging, everchanging sur- |4 Plants Which Will Add Wate- instrument bearing $548.75 In revenue | that document was made public. The presi- | in June IR 5 08 B | . ce glves I d picturesqueness to the - riatly to Outplit of the stamps. The Rapld River company is com- | dent and emperor both intimated to the | whole' soene. © We may 'some time have To Prove What the Great Kidney Remedy, Swamp. posed of New York men, H. M. Johnson | trustees, according to the Telegraph, theit St parke, we are young vet, and have room | . e i on being president and G. U. Wright, secre- | pleasure at the approval of the legacies in| SYRACUSE, N. Y., April 7.—The Congre- | o gTow, but we can never, never have the | Root, Will Do For YOU, Every Reader of The Bee river. ik tary. The Big Bend Mining company was | friendly and gratified cablegrams gational Home Misslonary soclety will hold _— ee By Mail. DEADYO0D, & B Rart 5 (8pecialy | oraloedearly In the yeur 1, for pacer | “Toe ‘Duly Mul this moraink ives the | o soveniy-sisth samunl meecine here June | STORY OF A BLIND MAN'S CHILD| M@y Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free By A bar of bullion welghing 580 ounces and | Mining on Rapid creek near Pactola. By |opinion of some distinguished men con- |3 to 6. The sermot will be deliversd by valued at a lttle over $7.000 has just been ©Xiensive excavations the channel of thelcerning the Rhodes' echolarships. |1ts new president, N. D. Hillis, D. D., of | paughter of an Organ Heponited In the First National bank of Creek was changed and placer deposits| Mr. Moberly, canon of Christ Church col- | Brooklyn. The committee in charge is com- Stricken with Smallpox, Tells that had previously been inaccessible were The company cleaned up $35,000 posed of Mre. E. B. Egaert, president of the | lege, spoke in eloquent praise of the plan. Mrs. W. v el t t tw Deadwood, being the result of the last two It would, he sald, bring picked men of the | Oregon union; Her weeks' run at the Wasp No. 2 cyanide mill mple Tale. reached. A. Knapp, presi- | " for its summer's work, of which fully $20,- | best type of Americai rather than the | demt of the New Hampshire union. and | th WL 'm.k .Thl‘fl mm::"’: r:’.:: 000 was net. A dispute arose among the | wealthy Americans who had hitherto come [ Mrs. C. M. Patten, president of the Missour| arguerite Margery Bisdorf, aged 12, e Rtk akiin Sre Tt : any, and as a v state union. daughter of John Bisdorf, the blind organ Bisck Hille, making two shipments monthiy, | Stoskisiders of the cempany to Oxford mainly for social advantages. aug! consequence the property waa tied up in The Congregation Sunday School soclety. | grinder who has been a familiar figure on litigation last year. A valuable lot of | jege, said if the yearly allowance of £300 | the Congregational Education soclety and |the more frequented streets of Omaha for mining machinery, consisting of steam | was merely for the university semester it | the Congregational Chueeh Building so- |several monthe, was taken to the police dredgers, pumps and conveyors, stands on | would suffce to enable the scholar to|clety will participate in the proceedings. (station at 9:30 Sunday night, where it the ground, and will be brought Into re- | jjve comfortably, but if it was intended | The field of the Home Missionary society | was discovered that she had the smallpox. quisition again this year. A good-sized | (o include vacation expenses, the balance | extends from the Aretic circle in Alaska to | She had gone to a restaurant for her sup- camp has been started where the Rapid|jeft for (he university would render it in- | the tropics in Cuba. Its missionaries are | per when her condition first attracted at- River company has commenced operftions. | aqcisable that the beneficlary of the schol- | At work in cities and rural communities in | tention. After Police Surgeon Borglvm ex- The last two weeks' run has been coneider- Mr. Skene, bursar of Chrict Church col- ably Interfered with on account of the deep snow and bad weather, and it s not ex- pected that the mill can work with any regularity before May 1. The company pro- poses to add fifty tons to the capacity of the plant during (he present year. The Spearfish Gold Mining and Reduction and has been named Placerville. The | arahip come to Christ church. all the states and territories and its work |amined her he directed that she be sent to company is taking out ore from under-| .,mpany is also the owner of valuable in behalf of the Congregational churches |the pesthouse, where she was taken last ground stopes during the inclement '!l'hef‘q“l"z clal in the same region. Emp! fe in His Predictions. will be fully gone Into at the Syracuse |night in & carriage. of spring fnetead of out of the open cuts — Dr. in which it has been working for the last| WASHING JACKSONIAN LINEN year and a half. A year ago at this time| the company was compelled to shut its plant down as the ore was being mined in the open and hauled half a mile to the mill with wagons. The Indications of the proximity of good McGrath, the popular provost of Queen's college, was emphatic in his pre- dictions of future good arising from Ox- ford from the Rhodes' scholarships. Hg {d he was particularly struck with the wisdom of Mr. Rhodes in arranging that the gradual operation of the plan spread over three years meeting. QUINN'S MEN ARE REPORTING Des Moines Manager Announces His Team and Some Exhibi- tion Gamens, Her quaint, ingenious manner and frank- ness won much eympathy, and when she burst into tears and sald her father was at the corner of Fourteenth and Douglas streets with no one to take him home, im- mediate interest was taken in the man, who is 60 years old. The little girl was greatly relleved when she learned her father knew South O Democracy to Be ndered by the Omahn sized bodles of pay ore on City creek, be- | A washing of dirty linen In the Jack-| «I¢ wiil give the scholars” sald Dr. where she was and all about her trouble, ginning at the city limits of Deadwdbod and | sonian club promises to give the | yuGrath, “time to assimilate with the | DES MOINES, April 7.—(Special)—The | 14 that he would be cared for, too. extending up the creek for a mile or more, | admirers of that assoclation of democrats | maes and it will prevent undue herding | D¢ Moines base ball club will 8o to| .pous i very good to me,” she said. “I are considered excellent by mining men who have been making examinations of the different, properties. On a claim belonging to the estate of the late J. A. Miller, join- | ing the city on the west, there is an oute cropping of a strong vein of free-milling considerable chagrin shortly while lend- Ing comfort to the unterrified braves of the Douglas county democracy. The wash day is caused by the alleged action of certain members of the club which glories in the name of Old Hickory Omaha a week from Monday for a practice wme of two and wiil then. go 1o Cedar | have been golng to the German Catholle oo Rl x'"{r‘";;; | echool on Douglas street. We live in room bition game of team here will be with a_Drake university | No. 7 at 218% North Sixteenth street. We nine on Saturday next. Practice work wiil |eat at restaurants. My mother lives in Waterville, Ia, with one of my sisters, with their own kin.' Although the scholars will enter as un- dergraduates, Dr. Magruder said that pos- sibly he would be quite willing it his cel- leagues agreed, to place them in Queen's | college on a level with Queen's own schol- begin tomorrow, as the grounds are in fine condition. Manager Quinn has seven men here and will hay ctically all the on | Who is married. I haven't seen her since quartz on which some work has been done [ at South Omaha during the municipal cam- | grg, provided the educational tests proved | who are signed here this week. The fol- |last November. I stay with papa and have Thoomn, Weik. Wow B 3 in the way of a seventy-five-foot tunnel | Paign which closed with the triumphal elec- | agaquate. lowing have Seen stgned: - Pitchere. Tl | raveled a great deal. | We were st In | pu wriamm & oo, B Sl . Nov. . 1901, and an opeu cut. The vein Is a true fieaure, | tion of the republican candidate for mayor | pr. Esson of Merton, Prof. Smith, history | | nelhnaty, JSaryy of St. Louis, who J ., Binghamton, N, Y. " - 3 3 3 itched fa ‘hattanooga: Hoffer |Omaha when the exposition was here, I Py £ and is opened up for a width of twenty- | and the defeat of all but one of the can- | iu,¢or of Balliol and pitched fast ball for Chattanooga: Hoffer GENTLEMEN :—It gives me great pleasure to add my testimonial to that of hua. the others all wel- of Cedar Rapids, who pitched for the Cleve- | don't remember just now the city we were : five feet without locating the hanging wall, | didates of the democrats for the school | comed the idea most heartily. land American league team last year and ‘Hn betdre we came here this last time. We l‘rod-: :l::u regarding t::"w‘d-r!'“l t:::"-‘;-[):::x:n':- 'c;f Swamp-Root. I had & for several hundred feet | board. ‘The d ? New three” years before was a _wonder with A ame back three years ago before leaving o coast. Soon after my it may be traced fof e dean of New college said he consid- | Baltimore, and Wilkins of Wood, Ia.; (were in Buffalo, N. Y., at the exposition | jon " the Puget ey %t becam™e very much worse. I felt i thaf The peculiar thing about this inquisi- v Satehers. e odtight . n got Sound country a Ty worse. 1 felt certaln that across the ground from north to south and P ered £300 ample, even if the student had | ¢atchers, hbe of St. Louls, who caught | there, but they would not let papa stay, eo test pits have been put down at intervals [ tion, which is to prove the guilt or In- |t maintain himselt the year round, but he | fOF Detroit last year, and Wiikins of Glen- | UL, o) the comit climate hud §ivea Mo dcute rhoumiation and came to the comclviton thet I” of every fev hundred feet. Ore taken from | nocence of a large number of South Omaha o wood, Ia., a brother of Pitcher Wilkins; 4 could mot live in this climate. Later I became convinced that what 1 really had was said that Cecil Rhodes had fallen into the same error as most educational benefactors first base, Hickey, who played with Denver was asked. ““How do you travel?" last year; second ba: the face of the tunnel assays from $2.50 to | members of the club, is that it was in- kidney trouble, and that the rheumatism was dus tc my kidney trouble. The lame , Quinn; third base, & 4 *'Oh, we ride in the cars, Papa pays OUr | yogq fn my back fncreased rapidly and I had other symptoms which indloated that I bbbty o iae i o Fyrhg gl RAT/ONG: e AP WAOeT SUADNElOD | aacreeione ihat the uuiversity nedted s | ool )’n‘;‘{"s“n'\:m“'i‘?‘k:;"“‘h"‘:“‘”wg”"mm" way. I remember we were in Chicag {07 # | Lola soon be prostrated i g et 6 e Noticlng your offer of a alned by pan test on any of the ore. . endowment quite as much as the acholars. | Des Moiries last season; Warrender, right [ good while. He always takes good care of ground is about to be sold and if the deal | Were being watched closely during that 000, 48 Cld-tims THes Moines tavorite, and |5 sample bottle of Swamp-Root, free, I had a friend write for one and began taking it Wil Give Oxford Good Athletes. me and arranges so that I can go to school, or If I can't do that he gets & room some- where near nice people that I can visit. I do mot stay on the street with him, but I like to help him get home. He is away all day unless the weather is bad, and some- times makes as much as $2 a day. He al- ways, when he is playing the organ, gives me money to get my meals, and when he ten't playing the organ we eat together, day by a committee appointed by the presi- dent of the club on the preceding Sat- urday night. The matter came up at the meeting of March 29, on charges preferred by South Omaba democrats, who complained to the club that the late mayoralty candidate was being bitterly oppeged by some members of the club. The resolutions recited this fact and called for offictal Investigation. goes through it will pass into the hands of men prepared to thoroughly develop it. Developing Hidden Fortune. | Nick Treweek has been engaged as con- sulting engineer by the Hidden Fortune Gold Mining company, and the operations of the company in the future will be largely under his direction.. Mr. Treweek was for years mine foreman at the Homestake. Backof, a University of Missouri man, who is a comer. Morrison, a pitcher, flelder and general utility man, and two or three other good men are in sight, and Quinn feels gertain that he has a good team on the 00KS. HARVARD MAN UNDER PENALTY is Debarred immediately. Withia three weeks the lameness in my back began to disappear. During that fall and winter I took three one-dollar bottles of Swamp-Root with the result that I became obmpletely cured. I no longer have pains in my back and can excercise violently without feeling any bad effects. I have recommended Swamp- Root to several of my acquaintances who were similarly affected and without excep- tion they have been greatly beneftted by its use. Yours very truly, (T.¥. MoHugh.) fi / ; ; F ' : 701 E. St., Snur Lame back is only one symptom of kidney trouble—one of many and Nature's timely warning to show you that the track of health is not clear. It these danger signals are unheeded, more serious results are sure to follow; Bright's Disease, which is the worst form ef kidney trouble, may steal upon you. The great kidney remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, is used in the leading hos- pitals, recommended by physicians in thelr private practice, and is taken by doctos themselves who have kidney allments; because they recognize in it the greatest and most sucoessful remedy for kidney, liver and bladder troubles. EDITORIAL NOTE—8wamp-Root has been tested in so many ways, and has proven so successtul in every case, that a special arrangement has been made by~ ‘which all resders of The Bee who have not already tried it may have a sample bottle Canon Weldon of Westminster Abbey and late bishop of Calcutta, also expressed ap- proval of Mr. Rhodes’ plan. Dr. Stevenson of Exeter college sald he thought the plan would bring Oxford good athletes and enable the university to achieve the much desired object of van- quishing Cambridge in athletics. The Daily Chronicle also publishes the Franz, First Baseman, One Year for Profes- : . baving entire control of the work of min- | The committee was appointed; the names |opinions on this subject of Lord Strath- i "‘f.,",.‘,"{,"l: ‘nh“l':.:‘;el;neyuighl"' pg ore and developing the property. He|of this committee not made public gen- | cona and Mount Royal, the Canadian high “Papa ia & waguimaker and the paiat 15 ) resigned his place with the Homestake | erally and the investigation begun. It was|commissioner in London, and the Austra-| CAMBRIDGE, Mass, April 7.—0. G. o g to become superintendent of the Clover 1 Leat company when that concern pur- chased the Uncle Sam mine at Perry. The | Hidden Fortune company is working In I three places, driving the Baltic and Hood- some way nearly made him blind. No, he isn't altogether blind, but as he le doing all he can to get his eyes cured he must not strain them. He every .day uses medi- cine or paste, or something to cure his eyes. He hopes they will be all right. 1 hope so, too. We wanted to go home to Waterville, 1a., soon, but now I don’t know when it will be. 1 am afraid he will not be able to take care of himself.” Marguerite said nothing showing she was expected that the committee would make a report Saturday night, but no report was forthcoming and it was then sald that it would probably be a month before it would be made, as the committee desired to be sure before bringing formal charges of party disfoyalty before the club. Members .of the club will not give the names of the persons under suspiclon, but say that it is probable that several will be disciplined. lian agent general, all of whom concur in Cecil Rhodes’ splendid fdea. A member of Oriel college approved Mr. Rhodes’ plan especially as one likely to lead to other benefactions, particularly from America. This opinion also referred to the fact that Mr. Rhodes’ plan would prove expemsive to the university, which he said was already @00r. Effect Will Be Far-Reach Franz, first baseman on the Harvard base ball team last year, has been declared in- eligible for the nine this year by the Har- vard Athletic committee on grounds of rofessionalism. Since the Cutts affair in oot ball last year, the members of Har- vard teams have been asked to consider their records carefully in order that no such state of affairs should again exist nz wrote to the committee stating that In the summer of 1885 he played on a semi-professional team in Winfield, Kan., near his home. He_ played three’ weeks and recelved about $5. out of which he lebug tunpels, and drifting with the ore \ in the Spokane property. Plans have beea decided upon for the bufiding of an ex- perimental cyanide plant on Deadwood Gulch, a short distance above the mouth of the Baltic tunnel. The company has The Times in an editorial on the recep- | Pald his expenmscs. The Winfleld teams|apprehensive about herself. Sergeant Hud- bsolutely free by mall. Also & book tellh 3 Abeut Swagip:| secured the Badger millsite and intends “These so-called respectable democrats A toured the country and Franz spent more sent al utely Y o ng Al u amp-Root and oon- to obtain water by ‘erossouttiug on bed- [are really doing more to injure the cause | 0% Of M- Rhodes’ plan abroad saye: than the $36 ho had secelved. This clears|son took the old man to his room and-the | tqining many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received from rock.Thaant Vikgn G 110 ions ch: |50 pwrity 1n paiion (has ey are doine It s unnecossary Lo discuss the polit- | him techhically ‘0t rbtessionaism, it | 12-year-old vietim of smalipox was hurried | men and womea Who owe thelr good health, n fact thelr very lives, to the wonder- s y o ArVal commitiee a8 lecide 0 pacit s intended to_treat the ores | to help it,” sald & prominent member of the | Mo Ao op it b k‘&f“““‘d"‘ debar him from Harvard athletics for one | 3WAY to the pesthouse ful curative properties of Swamp-Root. In writing, be sure and mentfon reading from the horizontal measures of the com- | club, “and we must show them the error of | o ol SIPTRUERR TOF & Reer wnder: | year. As was done in, fhe casc of the other| MAIL MEN WANT VISITORS this generous offer {n The Omaha Morning Bee When sending your address to Dr. pany's ground. Some of this ore is of | their way. In the first place when a man A 8 And | Mutphy, this year will Sount as one four- | Kilmer & €o., Binghamton, N. Y. Germany, but it cannot be doubted that the exceptionally high grade and effect of the change on Oxford itself will shipped to smelters. will be There are thousands not satisfactory to them is nominated they get out and make a fight at the polls. They If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you meed, you can pur fers Not Pleased | chase the regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles at the drug stores everywhera Omahba Letter playing’ years. Franz ‘s one of the leaders in Harvard be far-reaching, and it is hoped invigorat. [ Young Men's Christlan association and | with Official Route to Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp« of tons of low grade siliceous ore that will | then become known as bolters and the sings in the glee club. The loss of him " 4 % supply such.a plant for & long period. The | loyal members of the party, the mafority | % The influx of Americans and Germank| yefieny {ne Harvard ritne very much. Denver. BARGAME the sS8reny; NingmaRitoh 11T will tend to quicken the intellectual life.” company already owns a cyanide plant of fitty-tons capacity and this will probably also be used in milling the ore found near the surface. The bullding of the plant on Deadwood guich will not interfere In any way with the plans of the company to ultimately erect a 200-stamp mill with 1,000-ton cyanide annex, as it will more readily enable the company to arrive at the most practical plan for handling the ore satisfactorily with cyanide. Ten of the new stamps have been started in the mill of the Clover Leat Mining com- pany at the Uncle Sam mine, giving the company thirty stamps in operation. The shaft is 520 feet deep, and the drift from the 500-fcot level fs over 100 feet lon. running ln the direction of the ore. The mill s being supplied with ore taken frcm the 400-foot, level, and there Is enough in sight to run a 200-stamp mill for years. The ledge is dipping aw: the shaft, and the drift on the lower level will have to run about 400 feet to reach It Mining Company Buys Ramch, The Globe Mining company, whose min- fng property is situated at Lead, has pur- chased the McKay ranch on Little Rapid creek at Nabant, in Pennington county. The price paid for the ranch was $5,000, and it is the intention to use it for a mill site and utilize the water for power and milling purposes. Little Rapid creek contains from 1,600 to 2,000 miners’ inches of water dur- 1ng its lowest period, and owing to its great fall it is an ideal stream for power. The Globe Mining company has been purchasing and developing & large tract of mining &round adjoining the townsite of Lead on the west. The company Is composed largely of Red.Oak, Ja., capitalists, C. A. Dutton of that place being the president. Bodi of fow grade free wmilling ore, of wide ex- tent, have been opened up within the last —— of whom stand for clean politics, 00 use for them. support is a weakne champlon are usually defeated. If good while they now do mothing but harm. It le almost nec done.” PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. Thomas Kilpatrick has gone to Chicago. Danlel Sully stopped at the Iler Grand. W. A. Thomas is in Omaha on business. E. H. Dalbey of Broken Bow s an Omaha visitor. C. E. Nicholas of Rock Island is at the Millard. J. C. Cox of Lincoln is registered at the Millard. \lAl‘l @G. Chopin of Winside is in town on ne G. Cotrill of Shenandoah, Ia., is a 11lard. o. guest at the M o 7. McGrory of Moorhead, Ia. spent Bunday ‘at the Millard. E. Owen, a railroad constructign con- trRStor of Norfolk, 1o at the Murrey. Mr. ) estérday trom Has {he Tier Grand, C. A._Booch, Geor, H A Lavender are stockmen from W. Blae) 1a. registered at the Murray. e at the Merchant AW fiecan of Columbus, J o Springfield and Herman Aye of . R, Henry of Fremont and 8. J. Th and M *Bradley of Nebrasks - City are among state guests at the ller Grand. F. N. Merwin, who represen and Juage J. T. Sumny, who rep Muhry of Beaver lone. days’ visit at me he attended the Chari tion hall by the Knj the cit; in th cam| place esday. Good building material — Stone and mortar. Day by day the building grows, becoming higher, broader, more solid. ‘The best building material— Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. Day by day it makes thin and pale children take on renewed strength, until soon they become stout and robust. All puny and languid children need this great builder of pure and rich blood. Feel perfectly free to consult your family physician on all these subjects. He knows the formula for our Sarsaparilla. “ All through the raising of my family I found that Ayer's Sarsaparilla was th best medicine we could keep in the house. lnm’ynlu -u:‘oha.ud: know MWMA Sarsaparilla is the best world."” —, Annw-mfl-o. Ind. medicine in the 3.€. AVER CO., Lowsll, Mass, have From that time their and the men they they would fight their battles for respectable politics in the party they might do some ry that some shining examples be made and I guess it will be H. Chapman arrived registered at E. Spottswood and est & Miler o Blair. " the press, resents the ty, Neb., are at the Mayor Moores has returned from a two Kansas City, durln, which ity ball given t Templars. roes of a , and that the election Owing to the absence of the most of the authoritative men from Oxford at the pres- ent moment, says the Times, it will be im- possible to get an expression of university opinion on the subject now, but doubtlessly the trustees have many important polnts to decide under the large discretion left them. The Times considers that if Lord Rose- bery would accept the presidency of the trust the decision would be generally wel- comed, and says that he is by far the best of the executors for that office, NUMBER OF DEAD IS LARGER Ca ty List of Foot Ball Park Disaster Shows Twenty. Ome Ki GLASGOW, April 7.—The casualty list of the Ibro park disaster, when a number of persons were killed or injured by the collapsing of & spectator’s stand during , |the international foot ball match Satur- day between England and Scotland, has been completed today. It eclipsed all the reports and estimates of the casualti which were current last night. The disaster has resulted in the death of twenty-one persons and the Injury of 260. Nearly 200 of the latter were seri- ously hurt and they were taken to in- firmaries for operations and treatment. One hundred and fifty of them still remain in the infirmarfes. A large proportion of the Injured had limbs broken, bodles crushed and mangled and heads and faces gashed. Several more deaths undoubtediv will result from the most critical cases of fractured skulls. Today the infirmaries were besieged by friends and relatives of the victims of the disaster and heart- rending scenes were witnessed when the names of those who died teday were posted outside the buildings. The actions of the authorities at Ibro park in averting a more general panic by permitting the game to proceed while they encouraged the im- pression of the crowd within the enclosure that the accident was not so direful, is now generally commended, The incongruity of the yells of applause mingled with the groans of the struggling sufferers will never be forgotten by tho who witnessed the scene at the rear of the terrace. NEW GOLD FIELDS ARE FOUND Distriet Ope in Northwest Penin. sula Invites Hordes of Prospectors. VANCOUVER, B. C., Aphil 7.—Princess May arrived last evening from Skagway with a few phssengers and the news that the northern (ralls are commencing to break up and an early spriog is in prospeet. Miners coming from Mush creek, a new section of tl tern Porcupine distriot, say that important finds of gold bave re- cently been made there and a large number of prospectors are now going into the dis- trict. BANQUET ~TO SCHLECHTER & Reception Givem fessor Zangwill and Other Friends. e P LONDON, April 7.—Chief Rabbl Adler presided at a dinner given at the Trocadero restaurant last night to Prof. Schlechter, on the eve of the latter's departure to take up the duties of president of the N York Jewish Theological seminary. The company included Israel Zangwill, the woll kuown man of letters, and other COAST LUMBERMEN PROTEST of Reduced Rates by Minne- wota and Wisconsin Mills as Unfair. Comp TACOMA, Wash., April 7.—Lumber or- ganizations of this state have received in- formation from Minneapolis and Chicago that after April 15 rates on lumber from the Minnesota transfer to Chicago and in- termediate points will be 5 cents lower for the output of Minnesota and Wisconsin mills than for the coast product. They de- clare that such discrimination will shut Pa- cific coast lumber and shingles out of a great number of towns in Minnesota, Wi consin and other eastern ftates. They have accordingly protested to rallroads, and an appeal on: the subject was malled three days ago to Chairman Knapp of the Inter- state Commerce commission at Washing- ton. The appeal for interference by the Inter- state commission is made officially by the Washington Red Cedar Shingle Manufactur- ers' assoclation. If necessary local lumber Interests will try a test case before the Interstate commission. CATCHES MEN SETTING FIRE Owner of Plant Discovers Incendia at Work and Frastrates Thelr Pla COLUMBUS, 0., April 7.—Early last evening fire caused a loss of $20,000 at the lumber yard of Smith & Powers on the westside. A few hours later fire de- stroyed $15,000 worth of lumber at Comes & Menefes yard in the same vicinity. The fires were of incendiary origin. While the fire was in progress at the latter place Secretary E. T. Blogham of the Columbus Rock Plaster company's plant discovered two men setting fire to a shed at the com- pany’s plant, which is but a short distance trom the lumber yards. Mr. Bingham struck one of the men, but was promptly knocked down and the incendiaries es- caped. Later filve men suspected of belng incendlaries were placed under arrest. IN THE EYES OF OUTSIDERS Lincoln School Ma'sm Writes Down Her Observatious im City of Oma A Lincoln schoolma'am has discovered Omaha. She got on the steam cars & week or 50 ago, and after traveling miles and miles in an easterly direction finally got off at & place where there were a lot of big bulldings and a lot of people moving about, and of this discovery she uttered her mind 10 the extent of & column In a Lincoln pub- lcation. To this she signed the name “(Mrs.) Francis Prey.” Among her minor observations are these: Things are on a larger scale in Omaha than in Lincoln. The gardens are larg tcehouses are larger. She resumes: They feed cattle by the hundreds and have a wonderful sheep ranch in hafling distance of the city. Where we have only one kind of odor from our West Lincoln s yards, the different packing houses here i th each other as to sirength and variety. Everybody s busy, not in a com- fortable, easy way, but with a rush. W here we have one saloon they have whole stre-ts of them. They tell me If I am in an: s to what business is in a bullding I am safe in calling it a saloon and letting it g0 at that. Old landmarks are plentiful yet though mew houses are crowding out the d, but ¢ will be 4 long time at*the pres- gaf rate betore this will'be called o bewuti- Ly, There is plenty of enterprise and music, good fhese we have st and schools, but all tl doubt | The Omaba Letter Carriers’ assoclation is troubled over the action of the National association in its selection of the official route from Chicago to the national com- vention, which will be held this summer in Denver. It was the expectation of the local union to entertain the national of- ficers and the delegates enroute to the convention for a day in Omaha, but at the last meeting of the executive committee a line of road from Chicago to Denver through Kansas Clty was designated as the official route, and it is said that rates very much reduced were granted by that road. The Omaha association at its meeting Sat- urday night appointed a confmittee to take -_— ‘We have a good, old common-sense medicine for those subject to malaria. The sufferer from maiaria is too apt to dose himself with constantly increasing amounts of quinine, which, while it gives relief, is very injurious to the system, as all who have taken it to any considerable degree have found out to their cost. The way to cure malaria is to drive it out of the sys- tem—and at the same time to so strengthen and tone yourself up that malaria will find you immune in the the matter up and an attempt will be made to bring a number of delegates through Omaha in ite of the official designation of the Kansas City route. This committee will try to secure rates equally low from the Chicago-Omaha roads and then will send invitations to all eastern and northeastern assoclations, inviting them to visit this city and spend one day euroute. By this means they expect that many of the d gates will through Omaha and that the local assoclation will have an oppor- tunity to entertain them. SURE OF A LARGE AUDIENCE Indieations Are that Many Will Be Turned Away at Irish Meeting. Reports received by the gemeral commit- tee in charge of the Redmond-Devlin meet- ing to be held Wednesday night at Boyd's theater, under the auspices of Emmett branch of the Irish National league, are to the eftect that practically all of the tickets for the evening have been disposed of and that the demand for additional seats is such that it seems that many will have to be turned away. Joseph A. Couner, chairmam of the hall committee, has reserved a number of seats for persons who may come from out of town, so that these people may not have their trip for nothing. Residepts of Omaha will be accommodated as far as the tickets in the hands of the committee and the stores will go. After 8 o'clock on the night of the meeting all seats not occupled will be placed at the service of the people who may be on hand without tickets. Word comes from O'Neill, Greeley Cen- ter and other towns where there are large settlements of people of Irish birth and descent that big delegations will come to Omaha to hear the Irish members of Parlia- ment. MRS. KERNS TRIES TO DIE cause She Belleves Women Flirt with Her Husband. Mrs. Ed Kerns of 604 North Seventeenth street took chloroform at 10 o'clock Sun- day morning in an attempt to end her life, but was discovered before the pofson had accomplished its mission and she: will recover. Mrs. Kerns is about 24 years of age and her husband is employed at the Paxton hotel as vator pllot. For some time Mrs. Kerns bas believed that other women were trying to win her busband from her and for this reason, while tem- porarily deranged, it is believed, she took the ‘poison. Before drinking the chloro- form Mrs. Kerns wrote two letters, which he sealed and addressed to her husband nd mother, telling them goodbye and ex- plaining her reasons for desiring to die. She was attended by Dr. J. F. Bishop and last night was reported to be out of dan- ger, future. The way to bring about this happy condition of affairs is to take Smith's Green Mountain Renovator, EVERY SUFFERER FROM MALARIA SHOULD TRY IT. IT IS POSITIVELY GUARANTEED. ] This medicine is conceded by all who have taken i to be the one sovereign gure for this much dreaded dis- ease. This isn't a new medicine, although its name may be new to you. On the contrary, it is very old, having been for many years the standard medicine of Vermont, where its home is. Now a company has taken hold of it, appointed reliable agents throughow -the country and placed it within the reach of everybody. The poisons of malaria, when they once get into the system, must be completely driven out before perma- nent relief can be hopéd for. SyiTH'S GREEN MOUNTAIN RENOVATOR never fails to do this if taken regularly and [ persistently. All the noxious, poisonous, malarial taint will be completely removed from the blood, and you will be permanently cured. This is not only by far the best way, but, in fact, the only way to cure { } SMITH’S GREEN MOUNTAIN RENOVATOR will not only drive out malaria, but it is a tonic, strength builder and general cleanser and renovator of the entire system. We sell it with the strongest possible guarantee— your money back if you are not benefited. BOSTON STORE DRUG DEPT. SOLE AGENCY. : THE BEE FOR ALL THE NEWS

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