; * Aigv. fr/S1 p 3tr - . : t 1 f.V THE TRIBUNE. F. M. & JE. 01. KIMJtIELIj , Pub . McCOOK , NEB. OVER THE STATE. XOOKI\a OUT FOR THE PZEURO. Lincoln special to the Omaha Herald : Dr. Gerth , state veterinarian , has returned from Chicago , where he attended tho veter inarians' meeting. He says the session iras attended by about eighty leading vet erinarians and members of sanitary coin- Tnissions , representing nearly every state and territory. Dr. Gerth took pains to ascertain as well as possible , by personal investigation , tho facts concerning thopres- ence of pleuro-pneumonia in that city. He Bays that there are a great many cases o' ' the disease there , and that the authorities "will begin the destruction of diseased cattle "to-day , and will probadly kill 500 of them before the end of the week. Dr. Gerth be lieves that not less than 5,000 cattle have been exposed to the disease in the city of Chicago , and is more emphatic than ever in liis opinion that no precaution sliould be spared to prevent the possibility of the in troduction of the disease into this state. 3faj. JSirney , of Crete , one of the members of the live stock sanitary commission , also attended the meeting. A. SAD DEATH. i Day before yesterday Chief Engineer Ulickensdcifer , of the Union Pacific road , who is visiting in tho east , received the sad intelligence that his youngest son , Herman , was fatally wounded last Friday at a point eighty miles below Ontario , Oregon , where ie was with a surveying party * It seems "that the party were going into camp , and "wliile unloading a wagon a transit man named Simenson-accidentally discharged a line. The ball struck young Blickensdei- ler's abdomen and passed through his body. Twenty-four hours later he was .1 corpse. 3fi < brother , SuperintendentBlickensdeifer , ol tho Idaho division of the Union Pacific , -was notified of the sad affair , and started Tit once from Pocatello on a special train "to secure the remains , which will be interred at Lebanon. , Mo. They will be met here by "the bereaved father , who will arrive this morning. Herman Blickensdcifer left Oma- la lost August. He was a levelman of a surveying party and a promising young en gineer. [ Omaha Republican. THE COAT. DISCOrjSRT. The news that a wide scam of fine coal lias been struck on the river bottoms in Omaha , is the sensation of the hour. The capitalists , who for weeks past have been patiently drilling through clays and rocks , in search of natural gas. have been rewarded by a discovery which , in nil probability , means a fortune to themselves , and a last ing prosperity for this city. It promises to be the solution of the questfon of cheap luel , the most perplexing problem with -which tho people of this section have been wrestling for thirty years past. A seven loot vein of a fine quality of bituminous coal , at a depth of less than GOO feet , is a bonanza , which will do more to push for- ivard Omaha's permanent prosperity than n , dozen .assumed booms. There seems to no reasonable doubt ol "the size of the vein or of the quality of the coal. Competent judges have declared that it is not lignite , and havc pronounced tho .specimens brought to the surface to be a a superior quality of fuel. The mine , for BO it may now be called , is in the hands of men with ample capital and its develop- inent will be promptly pushed. Cheap coal at any great commercial cen ter means a prompt development of all classes of manufacturing industries. It means cheap fuel and cheaper living for wording people , and cheap living for mechanics means the ability of manu facturers here to compete with other manufacturers where the cost of living is low. Aside from the large number of laborers employed in mining , coal mines tvt Omaha promise to this city an imme diate industrial growth which will make all other booms fade into insignificance. 0maha Bee. A. DEADLY KICK. Almeria special to the Omaha Bee : A sad and fatal accident occurred at the farm-house of Bird Spangler a few days ago. From conflicting reports received it appears Mr. Spangler had dismounted from a. fractious horse , on returning from ol hunting trip , and set his loaded shotgun against the side of the house. The horse continued cutting up and finally kicked the gun and discharged it. The chargo struck Mrs. Spangler in the head , killing her in stantly. Seventy-five fine shot penetrated lier skull. A four-months-old babe , which the mother held in her arms , was uninjured. Mrs. Spangler was only nineteen years of age and leaves two children- . JCTSOELXufJTEOUS 8XAXE MATTERS. J. L. EVERSON , on trial at Stanton for the murder of Albert Davidson lost August , was found not guilty. ArouNomen's republican club has been organized at Seward. MAYOU LAKSH , of Nebraska City , raided n gambling den the other night. It was run "by strangers , who got acquainted with , the railroad men , and when pay day came . made a practice of enticing them to their den for the purpose of robbery. Ten per sons were captured , while a number es caped. JOHN WAITE , of Nebraska City , was found guilty of the crime of rape and sen tenced to three years in the penitentiary at liard labor. THE sheriff last week took to the asylum n veryviolenfcpatientwhohas been at that place some four different times heretofore , and whose unalady apparently is worse r than ever , so that his residence at the asy- Inm must bo permanent. THE law of Lincoln compels property owners to clean their sidewalks of snow , and they attend to tho matter with promptness for fear of a fine. - THE Depot hotel at Lincoln sustained about § 350 damages by Cro on the 17th inst. inst.THE THE board of stato printing have forwarded advertisements to a number of papers in the state asking for. bids for tho printing of the biennial reports of the stato officers and for printing tho house rolls and eenatc files for tho coming session of tho legislature. The bids will be received and the awards made the coming month. A NEW side track , station building and fe chipping yards are being put in on the lino te of Fremont , Elkhorn & Missouri Valley railroad between. Norfolk and Battle Creek. COLD weather has put a stop to work on the , post-oDice building at Nebraska .City. NORFOLK special : A passenger from Long 'Pine ' says Ole Anderson , arrested nearBas- sott. ( or murdering liis wife last Wednesday and throwing the remains in a well , bas confessed the crime. He says he quarreled with her because she would not consent to the sale of some stock to pay his debts. The prisoner CAme near being lynched by the infuriated neighbors and only escaped the fate by the alertness of the sheriff of Brown county , who lodged him in theAins- worth jail. BEATRICE celebrated completion of its water works last week. -TiiERE are seventeen licensed gambling houses in Omaha. A year ago there were only nine. BEATRICE special : A man supposed to be John Kilouki , a"section hand , was struck by a Burlington & Missouri train from Ne braska City this afternoon and instantly killed. The qccident happened three miles east of town in a curve. The whistlo sounded , but probably on account of the high wind the man didn't hear until too fate. HASTINGS is badly in nwd of a better postoflice building. THE Blair Republican speaks of a banker in that place who invested § 20.000 , and H house and home in whisky , which ho con sumed in eighteen months. THE diphtheria plague is still abroad at Seward. THE sheriff of Mills county , Iowa , cap tured a horse thief in Omaha last week , and also recovered flve horses that he had stolen from Iowa me n. THE charter for the Kansas Midland rail way company has been filed in the office of the secretary of-state. The corporation is to construct , operate and maintain a line of standard guage railway and a line of tel egraph in connection therewith from the city of Wichita , Kas. , toRed Cloud. Neb. THE late enow blockade extended over more territory than any yet experienced by the Burlington. It was an expensive blockade , as blockades go , for the first snow is more easily handled than that which follows , when the sides of the cute are.filled and there is no place to throw the beautiful that drifts in. ACCUSE STONE , of Lancaster county , has been convicted of bigamy , and will have a term of three years in the peniten tiary to think over his illegal proceedings. "WEEPING WATER always has and always expects to get along without saloons. SAM JONES talks to big houses at Omaha , but the number of conversions is distress ingly small. BURGLARS went through the house of Henry Erenfhart at Omaha , securing con siderable booty. Mr.E. fired several shots but the only thing he hurt was the wall. THE trial of John Shafer in the district court at Minden , on the charge of murder in the first degree , closed with a verdict from the jury of guilty as charged. THE full amount of insurance on the burned Barker block in Omaha , § 18.500 , will pe paid. THE Baptists broke through the ice in a brook near Ainsworth in order to perform the rile of baptism upon a couple of con verts. Ay effort is being made to secure § 3,000 bail for James Casey , now confined in the county jail at Beatrice and awaiting his second trial for manslaughter. Casey had served about a year in the penitentiary on his new sentence , when he was granted a new trial. ED STAGGS , the Pierce county desperado , is again confined * in the county jail at West Point. He is awaiting the convening of the Antelope county district court , having taken a change of venue from Pierce county. . THE B. & M. Railroad company has com pleted the survey for their new track to the South Omaha stock yards. The line , as surveyed , leaves the Ashland cht-off at the big cut west of the stock yards. THE annual report of the Union Pacific railroad to the railroad commission was received last week , and the report of the B. & M. is the only one now delinquent. These reports are for 'the year that ended July 30 , and will presumably be incorpor ated in the annual report of tho commis sioners to the legislature. THE Union Pacific is advertising another California excursion to leave the Missouri river on the8th. of December , with a rale of $00 to San Francisco and Los Angeles , or § 64 to Los Angeles via San Francisco. ATWOOD & Co. , of Red Oak-la. , , have leased the Columbus packing house for five years , and will start up in ten days. They will employ seventy-five men and slaughter 1,000 hogs every day. WORK has been commenced on the new depot at Pawnee Citv. It will be 22x90 feet. RULO was out of coal during the late storm. . MR. L. K. HoLMES-of Lincoln , met with a severe accident theother day while water ing some cattle at Oak creek. Holmes had driven several cows to the creek , which was covered with snow and ice. One of the cows ventured too * far and broke through and sank into the water. Mr. Holmes sprang to tho rescue and had succeeded in driving the bovine to the bank , when sud denly the animal slipped and fell upon him , breaking his right leg. A MUCHLY-FRIGHTENED boy about thir teen years old burst into a Beatrice drug store the other night and called for a doc tor to extricate a piece of apple which Had lodged in his throat and refused to come up or go down. The physician forced the apple down with an instrument and tho boy departed feeling greatly relieved. AN order has been issued at the Sidney military post forbidding the use of coal oil for the lighting of fires. THE Sidney Telegraph says that Fort Sidney boasts of an unprecedental prison record during the past two weeks. Last Saturday was pay day , and prior to that time there were two prisoners confined in tho guard house. On Sunday morning there were three prisoners , the next morn ing four , the next three , and the next but two again. " As pay day usually produces a great many offenders , the cause of this change for the better is attributed to the work of the Stars and Stripes lodge , I. 0. Q. T. FREMONT is considering the proposition ofK. . Griffin , of Arlington , to operate a Backing house in that city and kill from /wenty-five.to one hundred hogs per day. j , JV 1 f THE editor of the Lincoln Democrat has received a letterfrom Gen. Victor Vifquain , consul at Barranquilla. He is in the en joyment of excellent health and spirits and likes his place. BOONE county agricultural nooiety will hold a meeting December 4th for tho elec tion of officers. THEHE arc 1G7 pensioners in Adams county who draw § 1,570.75 from the government every month. Of this number 154 are invalids who draw § 1.420.75 ; five are widows who draw § G7 ; one a minor who draws § 20 ; four dependents who draw § 48 ; one survivor of the war of 1812 who draws § 8 ; one widow of the war of.fl1812 who draws § 12 per month. TiiE'land agents of Sidney are all happy here over tho news that Cheyenne county carried-off the second premium for the best show of corn at tho great cattle show held at Chicago. EDWARD M. NCEDLES , president of the Pennsylvania Mutual Insurance compciny of Philadelphia , has purchased the whole issue of water bonds of Hastings. He has already taken § 40,000 and will take the rest whenever tho city is ready to turn them over to him. THE railroad surveyors drove their last stakes at Sioux Citythe day before the snow came. THE trial ofLauer , the alleged murderer of his wife , is about to take place at Omaha for the second time. SIDNEY is booming , with three Or four railroads pointing that way. THE chicken thief is said to have been getting in his work quite successfully ol late at Fiillerton. THE opera house atBeatrice recently had a , narrow escape from burning. THE B. & M. will put in an ice bridge at Nebraska City. GRAND ISLAND'S street railway system will be commenced next year and several miles laid. THE Masons of Osceola have taken pos session of their new hall , which is said to be a fine one. .LINCOLN street cars are comfortably warmed. ThoseatOmaha arc not warmed at all. ANNIE ANDERSON , the Omaha girl acci dentally shot by her room-mate , died from the effects of her wounds. THE foundation has been laid for a new Baptist church at Tobias. DBIUNO the recent storm the snow drifts were so deep in the vicinity of Benkleman that one man had to cut a hole in the roof of his house in order to get out. THE Omaha Republican places the esti mate of damage done to the railrosds of the state by the late heavy snow at § 2- , 200,000. Rev. BERRY , of Connecticut , has been called to the Congregational church at Fremont. 1 THE firemen of North Bend gave their third annual ball Thanksgiving evening. SAM MEYERS , living near Glencoe , had a horse valued at § 200 so badly cut in a barb wire fence that it is thought it cannot recover. THE F. E. & M. V. railroad will run on mountain time on and after the first of December , from Long Pine west. That is one hour slower than the present time. THE December ST. Louis MAGAZINE is an excellent issue of that interesting monthly. There.is a handsomely illustrated article on Hartford , Conn. ; four good western sto ries by John R. Musick , Mrs. H. A. Chute , Horace S. Keller and Minnie W. Armstrong ; Editor Alexander N. De Menil has articles on Miss Cleveland , Henry George and other writers ; the poetry is by Maude Meredith , Laurence Muiston. L. F. S. Barnard , Ed ward L. Fales and others ; "Light Moods" is the best humorous department in any magazine , and "Home and Society" is of particular interest to ladies. OMAHA is full of garoters , sluggers and house breakers , few of whom are being nabbed. LAID AWAY TO REST. The Funeral of the Late H. JIT. Hoxie Held at His Otd Home. Des Moines special : A special Rock Island train from Chicago , bearing the re mains of the late H. M. Hoxie and wife and friends , arrived here juat before noon , a Wabash train bearing associates of the dead railway manager arriving from St. Louis a few minutes sooner. Several thousand people were at the depot The procession , which exhausted every avail able carriage in the city , promptly formed and proceeded to St. Paul's , where Dr. Van Antwerp rendered the Episcopal service , intersperced with vocal selections as fhe vast crowd filed in. The casket was of plain but rich black velvet with eight sil ver bar handles and a simple silver plate bearing the words : Horncrt If. Hoxle. aged S3 years and 'J months. Died. Xew York , Nov. 23.1836. It'was placed on trestles at the bead of the nave. The church was well filled with old settlers , railway magnates and employes and local visitors , and the sun breaking through the clouds for a few moments shone through the stained windows and lent a soft harmonious color to the scene. Tbe altar held two floral pillows of Easter lillies and white roses , one bearing tho words "Not forgotten" and the other , "He is not here. " Tbe space before the chancel rail was occupied by four large handsome crosses and a beautiful cen trepiece. The crosses were of Easter lilies , white rovses , mosses and evergreens , taste fully arranged. The centrepiece was a tall column with a large anchor resting at its base. On this were the words "Hoxie Employes. " The top of the casket wns covered with flowers. A funeral sermon was dispensed with at the request of Mrs , Hoxie , as it was her husband wish tlmt his funeral sliould be as quiet and simple as possible. The cortege then wended its way to Wood lawn cemetery and the re mains , after being replaced in the box , were consigned to the earth , while the short service was read. The grave is in the northeast portion of the cemetery , on the level , in a veritable woodlawn spot , where it is most beautiful in summer. Oue other grave occupied the lot , that of Mr. Hoxie's little boy , who died several years ago. Mrs. Hoxie , wife of tbe deceased , and Capt. R. S. Hayes accompanied the remains as mourners , with William H. Hoxie , of Corn ing , la. , ann Melville B. Hoxie , of Schuyler , Neb. , who arrived this morning. NOT A fOLICE INSPECTOR. Washington special : It is stated at the executive mansion that the president re- senta the manner in whicb. his name has been coupled with the police investigations and the efforts now being made by various interested parties , or their representatives , to secure his intqrference. The president , it is said , sees no reason at present for tak ing any action iu reference to the acanduL I.A.TEST FROMffnt CJ7JrM2AOS. ZTc Givcs Hitiisef Dead Away in a letter to a lUoberly Stan. Moberly ( Mo. ) special : TheDaily Head light , of this'city , to-day received a letter from Jim Cummings which 1ms excited a good deal of Interest in police circles , and may possibly afford a clue by which the robbers of the Adams express company may Le traced and detected. The letter came through the mails in the regular way , reaching here'at noon on theWnbash train from the west , the envelope , a common one , addressed in open backhand , "Editor Headlight , Moberly , Mo. " It was post marked at Council Bluffs , la. , November 24. 8'JO : p. m. , both the post mark and the stamp cancellation evidently being genuine postoflica work. The letter is written upon a sheet of note paper , legal fold. Tho penmanship is tho same open backhand seen in the letters to the St. Louis papers and shows in tho circulars Bent out by tho express company and tho detective association. It read as follows : "OMAHA , Neb. , Nov. 22 , 188G. "To the Editor of the Headlight : "I was in your city on the 4th of Septem ber , and I guess that Jim Blackwell wil ! recollect my visit there to the tune of § 120. When I get things straightened out I will send him the amount , as I only took it as a loan. If Jiui hacl known that I was tho original Jim Cummings that was to do up Fotheriiigham he would not have taken so much stock jn me. I needed some money to get the things ready for the robbery ol the express company. Give my regards to the old bfbke. Kiely. and _ tell him if he had had any wealth with h'im that night ] would have borrowed it from him. But ] don't need any now. as I have just got § 52.500 of tho express company's money left , having spent S500 since I wrote tho GIobo-Democ-rat. Holy nmole ! but I am having a good time ! Tell Kiely I will yet send him a race horse that can beat any thing in the west outside of Corrigan's sta bles. Yours , JIM CUMMINGS. " Now comes a history of events that give importance to the above. On the 4th of September last , three days before the opening of the Moberly fair , there came to the Merchants hotel in this city three suspicious looking men who gave their n tunes respectively us Riley , Ryan and Wilson. Riley approached the land lord , James J. Blackwell , and professed to know him , saying that he had stopped with him when he kept hotel at Slater , Mo' . , and alluded to some incidents which Ratisfied Blackwell that the story was tine. They professed to have a lot ol horses at the Moberly fair grounds which could beat anything in the west except Corrigan's , and proposed to give Black- well pointers , so he could win a large sum of money on the races during the fair. They were genial fellows , and soon ingrati ated themselves thoroughly into the good graces of the landlord and the horsemen who made headquarters about the hotel. They spent money freely at the bar , and could talk horse with the most experienced jockey. During the evening Riley stated that he wns about out of change , and naked Blackuell lo cash a § 10 check on tho Exchange bank. He wrote the check and receivedthe "money. This they also spent in treating and finally pot the landlord well under the in fluence of liquors. During the evening Marshal Lynch had noticed the trio in a crowd on the street and had spotted them as crooks. He followed them to the hotel , and seeing Riley in close conversation with Blackwell asked the bartender who they were. The bartender replied : "Oh , he is an old acquaintance who has horses here for the fair. " This allayed the suspicion of the maishal and he went away. Beforo midnight the jolly horseman got Blackwell out for a quiet talk on some beer kegs near the back door of the barroom. Here he became unconscious and when he awoko his friends had disappeared and likewise SI 20 , which he had placed in his pocket. Immedfately after securing Blackwell's money Riley entered the hotel office by the front door and approaching the clerk of fered the § 10 and"the checks which had been laid in the safe to await the opening of the bank next day. Riley then disap peared and neither he nor his associates have been seen here since. Now , when the descriptions were pub lished of the express robbers at St. Louis , Blackwell at onre recognized them as the confidence men , Riley , Ryan and Wilson , who had fleeced him out of his money. He mentioned it to the chief of police , and he also states that the description is the same , Riley corresponding to Jim Cum mings , while Wilson and Ryan represent respectively No. 1 and No. 2 of his suppose assailants. It is also remembered distinctly that the clieck'was ' written in Uie same backhand which characterized the letters to the St. Louis papers and to the Daily Headlight , and it is hoped that this link in the chain of evidence may result in locating the ex press robbers. The man Kiely alluded to is John Kiely , a painter , of this iity and an excellent gen tleman , but somewhat addicted to drink , and they were very social with him while here. COXSUKAK SALARIES. Washington special : If the foreign at- fairs committee has followed the sugges tions of the state department in the prep aration of the diplomatic and consular ap propriation bills , some revolutionary changes will be made in the service , that is if the bill passes. The Chinese mission is elevated to the first rank with London , Paris. Berlin and St. Petersburg. Belgium and the Argentine Republic are raised to third-class missions , at § 10,000 , and the salary of the minister resident and consul- general to Corca is doubled. Secretaries of legation are furnished to all embassies which have not at present that useful ap pendage , and in addition four secretaries of legation at lame are provided for. Nearly all the consulates below SG.OOO are in creased from § 500 to § 1,500 per annum each. The consulates of class 7 at § 1,000 are transferred bodily to class 5 at § 2,000. and in compliance with Senator Beck's amendment to the last appropriation bill , estimates are submitted for fixed salaries for a large number of commercial agents , consuls and consular agents now paid by fees. The new salaried ollicers , this proposed number thirty-four in the British dominions , twelve in Germany , six in France , six in Spain and ten in other countries , at f-aliiries ranging from § 1,500 up to § 2,500. There are no con sular salaries below § 1,500 in the whole schedule. Under the present law there are twenty § 1,000 consulships. The entire appropria tion suggested bv the estimate amount to § 1,934,000 , against § 1,35G,000 under ex isting laws. TERRIBLE ACCIDENT TO A MIXER. Denver special : Ou Saturday last , near Breckenridge , an old miner met with a ter rible accident , the news of which has just been received. He was drying giant powder and had a stick of it in each hand , a giant cap between his teeth and a box of caps lying on the floor. Suddenly both sticks of powder exploded , followed immediately by both boxes of caps. His left hand was terribly mutilated , also his left leg badly injured. Surgical aid was summmoned bis left hand amput < ri U. after which cop flesh. He will per was picked out of his recover. . V t 8BROUDED J.V MTSTERT. Charles Spi-iiifier the Victim , bitl the Assassin JlrtjJfcver be Knoii-n. KIXSAS CITY , Mo. , Nov. 23. The Time > savs : A murder that promises to be as rnys- terlous'as the celebrated Con way murder wise was perpetrated In "Curly's place , " a saloon on Lydla avenue , between Fourth and Fifth streets between 11 o'clock and midnight last night. Charles Springer , the bartender , was the victim , but who the assassin is may , front tbe peculiar circumstances of. the case , never be known. The story of the murder is given herewith : Atabout midnight Lewis Shane , alias Curly the proprietor of the saloon , who had been to tbe cigarmakers ball at the Ciislno , drove tij to the saloon In LauJis hade No. 107 with hit , little daughter. He entered tbe saloon and found an old man named Fresl Cur < ! ilius , an assistant In the saloou , asleep bchiud the stove. Not seeing Springer Mr. Sham- aroused Curcilius and asked him where Charley , meaning Springer , was. The old man looked arouiid ami replied : * 'I guess he has zone out. " Mr. Shane then went behind the bar and saw Springer stretched out on the floor , with his braius ooz ing from a bullet wound in his head. Leaving his little daughter , Mr. Shane ran out of the saloou and called to the hack driver to call for the police stating that Charley was dead. Mr. Shane himself fan doivu. to'Kehoe's sa loon at the corner of Fifth and Ldij , about OJ feet distant , and bursting in upon a crowd o men who were engaged in a raille horrified them bv exclaiming , ' 'For God's sake tule- phoue for the police , " Cliarley Is killed. " Wil liam Blaiue tele-plumed to the central police station , and No. 1 patrol wagon with Rounils- mau Grifliu , Police Surgcoii Wood and seve ral other policemen ou board was at t e scene o the murder a few moments later. The patrolagou left the central station at between 12:15 and 12:2J : o'clock. It went at the full speed of the horses and nrrivc.l at Curly's place uithin five minutes from the time it started. Surgeon Wood found Springer \v here he had fallen. The heart was still pal pitating faintly , and the body was still warm. In Dr. Wood's opinion.he could not have been shot over thirty minutes after he examined the bodjThere was a bullet wound on the left side of the head about two inches back of the forehead , and the bullet had ranged downward and backward toward the ear. Under the b.ir was a tfi-calibur revol ver which Roundsman Grifliu examined and found had not been loaded for some time. The body uas lying doubled up back of tbe bar where it had fallen. It was removed to tbe central station and thence to the morgue. Police Surgeon Wood , with the customary presence of. mind , took the precaution to take most of tbe important witnesses to tbe central station , and from them the facts which rend rs tbe murder such a mysterious one u ere ascer tained. There had been a raffle at "Curly's place , where Springer was murdered , as well as at Keboe's. One witues = states that be left Curly's at about 11 o'clock and a number of meuVere still there whose names he did not know. At about 12 o'clock Mr. Shane , or "Curley , " discovered the old man Curcilius sleeping behind the stove and Springer mur dered behind tbe bar. Curcilius stated tbat he was sleeping most of tbe night , beard no pistol shot and knew nothing of tbe murder tillMr. Shane woke him up. Mr. Shane states tbat he found empty glasses and a whisky bottle standing on the counter as if Springer had set them out to give some one"a drink. Suspicion natural ly points to old man Curcilius , but it only needs a talk with him to convince anyone tbat be , as be claims , was asleep. He is a simple , half witted old man , wh6 was employed to stay around tbe saloon at night and relieve Springer if necessary. He says there were still several persons in the saloon when he went asleep. JIIsJ appa rent simplicity , his entire lack of motive and his straight story seems to excul pate him. Besides , the * fact of tbe empty glasses , apparently set out for some one to take a drink , which was never taken , tbe fact tbat the wound in Springer's head showed that he was shot while stooping seems to in dicate that tbe murderer was some one who came in and ordrcd _ a drink and while Sprin ger was stooping back of the bar to get out a water pitcher or something els j tbe person shot him over tbe bar and escaped. What the mo tive was is a mystery. No one in the vicinity heard the s-bot and thu old man was not awakened. Tbe murder must have been com mitted between some time after 11 o'clock and midnight , as oue witness left several men in the saloon at 11 o'clock , and tbe bod ) ' was dis covered before midnight. Tbe bullet was sbot from 33 caliber revolver. THE yjsirs itniEFi.Y TOLD. Bradstreet's report indicates a healthy tone in general trade. It cost § 30,000 to receive and count the vote in San Francisco. The funeral of the late H. M. Hoxie was largely attended at Des Moines. Dalrymple , the old Chicago left-fielder , has been secured by Pittsburg for 18S7. A company has been formed formannfac- turing a substitute for sugar from coal tar. A man in Cincinnati has been left seven different legacies by seven different uncles and aunts. Judge Comstock , of Syracuse , N. Y. , ex presses entire confidence in the soundness of the Tilden will. The Chicago , Milwaukee & St. Paul is set tling claims for damages incurred through the Eio disaster. s Three incendiaries were lynched in Frank lin .county. Louisiana , for burning Har rison Colcate's cotton gin house. At Atlanta , Ga. , Robert Hill , shot his brother , Tony , and then killed himself. The trouble was caused by whisky. The total number of business failures oc curring throughout the United Stated arid Canada for the last seven days was 21G. ' 1 he loss of the bark Sara Anderson , from Coquimbo for England , has been confirmed. The captain , his wife and the crew were all lost. lost.The The Wholesale CliPese , Butter and Eg ? association of New York indorsed Senator Warner Miller for re-election on account of liis work iu behalf of the oleomargarine bill. bill.Blind Blind Tom has been adjudged a lunatic vnd incapable of-managing his own affairs. His mother sues to have Tom's manager account for money received during twenty- Lhree years. Forty-one sailors were drowned on the lakes , and § 500,000 worth of craft , with cargoes valued at twice that amount wrecked on the lakes during the bcnson [ list closed. There is direct communication between Buenos Ayres , where cholera is raging , and Galvcston and New Orleans. Eleven ships are bound for the two places from Buenos Ayres , due to arrive by Christmas. Postmaster-General Vilas is democratic in his lunches , whatever he may be in poli tics. He is frequently seen , about the mid dle of the day , at a dairy lunch counter with a mug of milk in one hand and a piece of apple pie in the other. Keece Sunflotaer : We are Informed that par ties in this township , old cotton irrowers , have sent to Alabama1 for seed and Intend next sea son to try tba experiment of growing cotton jere , and will devote several acres to the de velopment of tbe project. The Chicago , Kansas and Nebraska road lias let a contract for fencing its road through Kansas. For this work It pays SHB.5Q per mile. lrJf\S-F'S F : " Pff'SiSFSrSfg ' . * - Terrible Explosion of a CoalXRneln 1 rant a. Wilkeabarre ( Pa. ) special ; At ten min utes past 7 o'clock this morning n ten- rible explosion of fire damp occurred in the- Coiiyngham shaft , owned rtnd operate * ! by the Delaware & Hudson Canal company * and located in the Second ward of this city. Tho black breaker rises in the centre of field , off a mine road which was to-day covered with six inches of snotf. About filty men bait gone into the mine and were > sitting in groups about the bottom of the- shafts-Inch is nearly 800 feet below the- tun-face , waiting for orders to go to work. . No work had been done yesterday on , account of Thanksgiving. While the miners , were engaged iu general chats about tho- hanpy holiday , the thundering report of nr * . explosion rang through the dark corridors- nnd in a second the frantic men hurried to- the foot of the shaft , all anxiously peering- upwards. In less time than it takes to tell it the deadly gas flame circled around tbeir heads and agonizing screams rent the air- _ Many fell at onco in a heap , whilu otbers- less injured dropped on their kness nnw stuck tbeir blistered heads into the ? stream of water that ran along lite canarr- way. The fact that the men were in sncfc close proximity to the shaft rendered their removal to the wurface an expeditious mafe ter ; in two hours all were safely taken irp-- As they came up to the surface , two or three at a time , the horror-stricken crowds at the mouth of the shaft peered nnslons y at the faces of tho men. It was impossible- to recognize any of them at that time. 3n- some iiistanres'lhe skin had been ripped oft' in masses , leaving the purple exposed" , , which in turn was begrimmed with coaldtrt- to nu extent that made the faciled s6zar&- meiit horrible. As each man a lifted from the cage a thick blanket wasthrown' completely over him and he was hurried ! away to'the neighboring offices. Sin& * were taken to their homes. All sorts c/5 conveyances were sent to the scene. Many of the sufferers were passed into commont coal carts and jolted over rickety ronds and pavements. Mike Clinton , ono of tbe men who escaped injury , said : "We were nil nt the foot of the shaft waiting orders togo * to work. It was about 7:10. The inside- boss had not arrived. Most of the in en weio seated in groups. Suddenly _ _ a. terrific explosion was heard and in an in stant we were all thrown down on the bot- tom of the gangway. Some of the men. dove their faces into the running water. . The water was up to the rail and we didn't , know whether we cou'd work until it was- removed. " A laborer named Cornelius A. Boylewalked to the chamber across whicb a little board was stuck with the won ! "Gas" on it. He either didn't see this or- was careless. Anyway he went in with biat open lamp and thus set fire to tliegns nndt caused the explosion. Fire Bosses Willinni Evans and William Williams. Welchmen , . were both taken out terribly burned. In side Foreman McDonald wont down niter- tbe explosion and was overcome by the fire damp. He will recover. Some forty-fiv& men were burned , many ot whom will die. Dozens of others will be horribly Bcarred and mained for life. From the indications this evening twelve of the injured will die. The number of per sons badly injured is now learned to bo forty-two , and there were several others , slightly hurt. HELD WITHOUT HAIL. * Croston special : The coroner's juryre turned a verdict that Nelson Hogue carno to his death from a gun-shot wound in flicted by A. S. Hughes , with felonious in tent , and recommended that he be held for murder without bail. The funeral of Nel son Hogue took place from St. Malachy's Catholic church this morning , the Rev. Ste phen Lynn. O.S. B. , officiating. Therewaa j. large attendance at the church and along ; funeral cortege followed the remains to > their last resting place. Mr. Hogue was u. good-hearted and popular man. and his un timely and tragic death is deeply deplore * ! by all classes of citizens. His widow anil children have the sympathy of the commu nity in their terrible bereavement. Yester day was a sad Thanksgiving , not only to > . the widow and fatherless family ol Mr. Hogue , tint to the murderer's family as. well. Hughes' wife is an estimable woman , and he has four children , tbe youngest an infant , who by reason of their father's ter rible crime , are deprived of support , and , in a measure , of the public sympathy. Tha- family of the murderer are greatly to be pitied in their sufferings from an act Tor which they were in no wise responsible. THE DAKOTA HLIZZARD. Bismarck dispatch : At noon to-day snow stopped falling and the greatest blizzard ever experienced in North Dakota , was brought to an end. The wind is still strong but no snow is flying and citizen e are out in full , shoveling drifts and making roads. Scott , the stage driver , between this city and Fort Gates has not been heard from. He was due here at 7 o'clock last evening and there is 'much alarm among his friends. THE MARKETS , OMAHA. WHEAT No. 2 BAKLEY No. 2 RYE-NO. 2 COUN No. 2 mixed OATS No. 2 BUTTEK Creamery BUTJEU Fresh dairy EGGS Fresh CHICKENS Old per doz CHICKENS Spring per doz. . . LEMONS Choice , perbox. . . OiSANGhS Per box A PPLES Choice per bbl BEANS Navys , per bu ONIONS Per bu * hel POTATOES Per bushel HONEY Neb. choice , per Ib. . Woor. Fine , per Ib SEEDS Timothy SEEDS Blue Grass HAY Baled , per ton HAY In bulk HOGS Mixed packing BEEVES Choice steers SHEEP Fair to good NEW YORK. WHEAT No. 2 red 8.7 WHEAT Ungraded red 81 I'OISN No. 2 43 i OATS Mixed western 33 I'OUK 1000 LAUD G 21 CHICAGO. WHEAT Per bushel , COUN Per bushel OATS Per bushel . ' . POIJK 0 47 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l AI D * . . . . . . . . . . . . t > OO MR HOGS Packing itshipping. J > 50 CATTLE Stockers 2 00 SHEEP Natives 2 50 ST. LOUIS. WHEAT No. 2 cash L'ORN Per bushel 34 OATS Per bushel 2G 27 HOGS Mixed packing 3 7O 385 BATTLE Stackers 1 90 275 SHEEP Common to choice 3 Ol > 400 KANSAS CITY. WHEAT Per bushel 61 CORN I'er bushel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 OATS Per bushel 24 CATTLE Feeders 2 80 HOGS Good to choice. . . . . . . 3 5O SHEEP Common to good. . 2 7.5.