i Site StM-ntMs ZrVmc. 1RAL BAKE, Editor and Proprietor SUBSCRIPTION RATE8. Ono Year, cash In advance, $1.25. Six Months, cash la advance v75 Cents' Entered attheKorthPlatte(Kebraskapostofflcea8 gecond-clascinatter. FRIDAY, APRIL 30. 1S97. The Omaha Bee says "every day hrinrS renewed encouragement to ---- " the promoters of the exposition and 'adds to the certainty of triumphant financial and artistic success. Last year the United States con tributed 65,000.000 to foreign mis- sinns and ex oended S22.000.000 for chewing- um. This is not a very irood showing-. Let us in the future chew less gam and save more souls from the unquenchable fire. Many of the populist papers of the state are demanding- that their nartv shall cease to be the tail of the popocratic kite. It has taken the oooulist editors quite a while to realize that the populists were the tail, but the cold truth seems to , have at last dawned upon them. The dedication of the Grant mon ument in JNew York Tuesday was one ol the great events ol tins cen tury. All civilized nations were re presented, and the United States A. was there in force to make up a splendid spectacle in honor of the memory ot the ureal man or war 4 -J who said "Let us have peace." The long-drawn out senatorial contest in Kentucky ended Wednes- . day by the election of Deboe, upon whom the republicans and g democrats united. Senator Deboe . will at once proceed to Washington and assist the republicans in reor- g-anizing- the senate and in the pas sage of the tariff bill. The sena torial contest lasted through two session of the legislature and it re ouired 112 ballots before the selec- 4. tion was made. CUBA PEACTICALLY CONSIDERED. The latest dispatches are to the effect that in Cuba famine has fol lowed in the wake of war. Famine nriorinnllv was held to be "the act is j - Ol UUU. JULICI1V micicssiicsa Jl ' misgovernment have been charged with this awful calamity. We were accustomed to regard want of rain fall or the ravages of insects as primarily changeable with the dis aster. But in purely agricultural regions war-is a predecessor of fa mine. The ambitions of kings and the aspirations of peoples eternally have been causes of war. It argues well in favor of the be lief in God that, generally, and ulti mately always, the people have won. War often has been the cause of famine; and almost always farm ing regions that have been lot liarried by invading- troops have been reduced to a condition of fa mine. Cuba is an agricultural region that for three years has been harried by an army of invaders. For how much of this are the peo ple of the United States responsible? The question applies to the con science, the interest, and the in tellect of the United States. If ..President Cleveland a year ago had recognized the belligerence of the Cubans, would there now be a Spauish army of occupation the title of army of occupation is the utmost that can be afforded in Cuba? The question answers itself. If Cuba had been free, if the United States had been friendly to its free dom, what would be the difference in cash, not to mention the higher glory of being a friend of freedom, between the exports of flour from the United States to Cuban planters at a tariff duty fixed by Spain in favor of Spain at $3.75 a barrel, and flour admitted free by agreement with the Cuban republic? The an swer is, about $11, 000.000 a year; all to the advantage of the United States. And then there are the items of exports of beef, machinery and cotton goods to consider. ,Inter Ocean. .FLOOD AT BEATRICE SUBSIDES. Property Loss Much Greater Thnn Win Anticipated. Beatrice, April 27. Tho flood has rapidly subsided during the past 24 hours, it being estimated that the Blue river is fully seven feet lower than Sat urday evening. As it becomes possible to get aronnd over the submerged ter ritory it becomes more evident that the loss of property has been very much heavier than was at first anticipated. Of the railroads the Union Pacific suf fered the worst, it being estimated that .between Cortland and Mauhat tan over 50 miles of track has been under water. Between Beatrice and Cortland the track is "almost entirely washed out of ine, a greafrdeal of it being swept off of the right away- It will be several days before either the Burlington, Rock Inland or Union Pacific will get a-tram east out of here, as all three bridges over Bear creek are out. A man by the name of Jenkins of Falls City, Neb., one of the Rock Island bridge crew, was drowned in Bear creek. The body has uot yet been re covered. The crew were on a raft, which tipped up, -precipitating four of them into the water. Jenkins was a good swimmer, but was clinched Dy another party, which caused him to sink. OE THE WEEK The War at a Glance. Turks seized large stores of provisions ana ammunition at Tyrnavo. The sultan has recalled Osman Pasha, in order to avoid embarrassing Edhnm Pasha. An insurrection has broken out in Albania'. The Turkish troops are said to be participating in the revolt. Tho Greek forces have penetrated into Turkish territory, reaching the rear of Elassonaou the Mt. Olympus side. The inhabitants of Lakaand Samaria have risen against the Greeks, and have welcomed the Turks with enthusiasm. The Greeks have abandoned Tyr navos and LarLssa and have concen trated on their second line of defense at Pharsalos. Popular feeling in Athens now points to a revolution in lavor ot arepuuuc Five hundred armed men paraded the streets and made a demonstration at the palace. The Athens correspondent of the London Times confirms the report of the appointment of General Smolenski as chief of staff of the Greek army in Thessaly. A Turkish force of 12,000 pushed its way through the passes at Viodendros, Analinsis. Nezeros and Rapsani, has de scended on Derili. The Greeks have retreated to Makrychori. An additional force of dediffs, or army reserves, has been called out to reinforce the Turkish troops operating against the Greeks. These men will total up 72 additional battalions of troops, nuniber- 50,400 men. In Torelpn Land. The Shah of Persia, Muzafer Ed Din, is alarmingly ill. Duchess of York was safely delivered of a daughter at York cottage, Sand- rin chain. Ambassador Hay arrived at South ampton and was cordially welcomed by city omcials. CzarNicholas has formally confirmed the appomtuient of Count Muraviett, as Russian minister of foreign affairs. During debate on Transvaal affairs in tho Capo parliament tho premier assert ed there would be no war with England. Smallpox has broken out in tho Cuban fortress at Havana and is raging in the cell occupied by the Competitor prison ers. Czar Nicholas n entertained Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria-Hungary and the royal party at a banquet m bt. Petersburg. At Leon, Mex., during a bull hgut, a mad bull scaled the fence and charged the audience, killing two men and woundiusr several others. Senor Rirrazaval, Chilean minister to the United States, has arrived atNew York from Colon. Ho was formerly postmaster general of Chile. Tho Irish syndicate including Gustav M. Wolff, member of parliament for Beuast, will build a yacht to compete for the Queen and America s cup. John Joseph Nburi, the deposed king of the Syrian Chaldeans, lias agaiu been crowned patriarch. He claimed to have discovered tho remains of Noah's ark on Mt. Ararat and was for some time an inmate of the insane asylum at Napa, Cal. At Jtome, while iimg Humbert was on his way to the races, Pietro Acciar ato, a political fanatic, rushed into tho royal carriage and tried to stab tho monarch. Ho wus seized before ho could carry out his purpose. The kin; proceeded to the races, and met with an ovation on his arrival. Crimes and Casualties. Navul Constructor Caper reports tho injuries to the battleship Oregon as in significant. .a nreaK in tne levee, ieet wine, is reported at Burton's sawmill, just below Baton Kouge. The town of Norwood, Ont., was near ly destroyed by fire. Loss, S100.O00; in surance, 10,000, A. B. Cox, crazed by the preaching of a nana ot traveling Mormons, com mitted suicide in St. Louis. R.Straub was hanged at Friday Harbor, "Wash., for the murder of Leo Lander man on Blakelee island in August, 1895. The river fell 18 inches at Ottumwa, relieving the situation greatly. The Burlington has succeeded in re-estab lishing tram service. Tho people of Millington, Ills., be came wrought up over tho local option question and went in a body to a saloon and burned it to the ground. The levee on Promised Land planta tion, atShipland.Isaquenacounty.Miss.. has broken. It was 18 feet high, and back water was already against it. A life buoy marked "Samaria" has been washed ashore at Long Beach, Wash. Tho Samaria is a British bark long overdue from Puget Sound for San Francisco. H. M. Hinton, editor of the Prosress- Defender, at Albia, la., was fatally as- U.J 1 Tl T T - . suiuiuu. j mm dumisou, a miner, wno struck him over the head with a niece of scantling. Three men filled a bear with beer at a San Francisco saloon and the drunken animal attacked them furiously. Three of them were injured and physicians were in demand. The president sent to congress the re-' port of tho boundary commission ap pointed to locate the boundary between Mexico and tho United States west of the Rio Grande river. Five masked men broke into the resi dence of John Quinlan at Niles. O.. and after gagging and binding him, ran sacked the house and secured Si. 200 in currency besides valuable jewelry. John H. Kapp was shot and killed in his wholesale liquor house, 574 Mil waukee avenue, Chicago, by his confi- Oental clerk, Cx. W. Braunschmeier. Tho murderer afterwards killed himself. An army officer who has beeu onfc to the Red river country of North Dakota reports that 3,200 rations will be suffi cient to alleviate the immediate wants of the flood sufferers of that section. Fire at the Newport News. Va..whnrf destroyed two coastwise merchandise piers with their contents, three vessels and one tug boat, entailing a total Ins of about $2,500,000. Captain Krnitnf the i German ship J. D. Bischoff : Cnntnin Bulman of the British steamship Clin-' tonia; Captain Roper of the tug boat Wanderer were badly burned in at tempting to escape from their ships. A severe earthquake was felt at Cairn. : 111., Sunday. It lasted about 20 seconds. I Ihe largest structures were shaken with a swaying motion and .wit,u people rushed m terror out on the streets. No damage has been reported. As a result of the warning giyen to all tho negroes in the town of Davis, I. : T., by a mob of masked white men, not a colored man remains in the town. The murder of a white man by a negro was the preliminary cause of the trouble at Davis. A scries of cloudbursts.heavy wind and rain storms occurred in and around Ea- iauia.J-.x., oaruraavmgncana exteuaea over aoout luu square miles of territory. The rain fell in torrents and was tho heaviest for 50 years. Farm houses, fences and crops were washed away to an extent amounting to a calamity. A mighty wave of water.six feet high . and a mile wide, swept down Cotton- woodralky-Jmcl struck GnthriOkla. A deafening roar went up as the watsr crushed houses and drove the people from their homes. At the first rush every boat and bridge were swept away. Fifty people are known to be drowned, while rumors of an appa'ling loss of life are in circulation, .some placing tho number of dead at from 100 to 200. Scores of lives in .Nebraska were im periled by Saturday night's fierce down pour of rain. Beatrice experienced tho worst flood in her history. The Blue river was three-fourths of a mile wide, with the water 12 feet above high water mark, seven feet of which rose in one hour. Hundreds of homes were sub mersed to their roofs and another foot rise would haye swept them from their foundations. The reports received by the weather bureau indicate a rainfall of 2.12 inches at Lincoln, 2.30 at St. Joseph. 1.45 at Plattsmouth and 1.44 at Des Moines. At Clarinda, la., the ex traordinary record of 3.U0 inches was reported. The river broke over the levees at Ottumwa, la., ana nooaea tne bottoms, carrying several houses down the stream. Washington. The senate passed Nelsoa's bankruptcy bill. Provision is made in the measure for securing creditors and the chances for committing frauds by bankrupts aro reduced to a minimum. Gen. Miles, commander of the army, has been authorized by the president to co to Enropo to witness the war between Greece and Turkey. He expects to sail for Genoa in about two weeks. President McKinley has nominated William R. Day of Canton, O., to be first assistant secretary of state, and ex-Representative Bellamy Storer of Cincinnati, to be minister to Belgium. The Democratic members of the fin ance committee will not accept tne proposition made by their Republican colleagues to allow the tanu bui to oe reported direct -to the senate' without passing throught the hands of the full committee and they have so notified the Republican members. The attorney general at Washington, D. C, rendered an opinion to the secre tary of the treasury in which he holds that, under the joint resolution of con gress suspending the operation of cer tain parts of the immigration Jaws so as to admit fort igaers to be employed in various capacities in connection with the Nashville exposition, tho secretary has a right to limit the number to be so admitted. Political Points. William J. Bryan will open tho First district con gression al campaign at Macon Mo., May 15. The" first ballot for United btates sen ator at Tallahassee, Fla., resulted in no election. Ex-Senator Call is in the lead. Frank Moss, counsel for the Park- hurst society, has been appointed a police commissioner to succeed Roose velt at New York. Wednesday's ballot for United States senator m the Kentucky legislature resulted in the election of YV. J. Deboe, the Republican caucus nominee. The senate confirmed the nomination of Harold M. Sewall of Maine to be minister to Hawaii. Ho is a son of the Democratic nominee for vice president and gained prominence in the last cam paign by reason of his advocacy of tho Republican ticket. Those Who Have Passed Away. Prince Louis "William August, brother of the Grand Duke of Baden, died at Carlsruhe. Theodore A. Havemeyer, vice presi dent of the sugar trust, died at his home in New York city. Dewitt C. Taylor, said to bo the oldest national guardsman in America, is dead at Kansas City, aged 82. Judge N. C. McFarland, ex-United States land commissioner under Presi dents Garfield and Arthur, died at To- peka, aged 7o. William Steele Holman, the veteran Indiana Democrat, famed in congress as the "Great Objector" and "Watchdog of the Treasury," died at Washington of spinal meningitis. Samuel Colgate, who amassed a for tune which runs into millions in the manufacture of soap and perfumery, died at his home in Orange, N. J., of heart disease and dropsy. Captain Fred Hansen is dead at his home m Lyons, la., aged 75 years. He enlisted m 1S61 m Captain Mott's fam ous .New York battery or artillery. serving with honor three years. A. Mora, whose property in Cuba was confiscated 2o years ago and whose claim against bpam was finally settled in 189i: by the payment of nearly 1,000.000, died at the Hotel Grenoble, New York. aged 79 years. uean jouu jttaymona trench, vice chancellor of Syracuse university, New York, died at his home in Syracuse. Ho was 72 years old and regarded as one of the best mathematicians m the world. He had been connected with Syracuse university since IS a. In the Field of Sport. Bill Richards of Des Moines whipped Jack O'Donnel of Omaha in three rounds near Des Moines. Pugilist Billy Vernon was fatally in jured in a boxing bout with Leslie Pearce at the Olympic club at Athens, Pa. Minnesota wheelmen split from the L. A. W., organizing with the proposed United Wheelmen , and elected Frank A. Williams of Minneapolis president. Mrs. E. Francis Hyde and Mr. Eu gene DeKeffer, who left New York on horseback to beat their record, arrived in Philadelphia in eight and one-half hours. Ihe best previous time was six hours and 62 minutes.. Mrs. Hyde is the first woman ever to make the trip. inve thousand people saw Jimmy Bar ry and Jimmy Anthony fight 20 rounds before the .National club at San Fran cisco. Although Anthony was still on his feet when the 20th round closed. the referee decided that as the fight wa3 for points Barry was entitled to the de cision and purse and was the champion bantam weight of the world. Railroads. F. A. Nash has been appointed gen eral western agent of the Milwaukeo and St. Paul, with headquarters at Omaha. Rates on lumber from "Wisconsin to southern and eastern points will be re duced about May 1 by the Wisconsin Central road about 2 cents per 100 pounds. Mr. Gilnian, representing (e syndi cate which bouirht tho Oniiicv. Omalm . r J , u 'V"13 vJity road, has announced mat the hrst train would bo running through to Omaha May 15. Judge Showalter in-auted the iniunc- t tlOU asked bv the fiit.ano' Stront: t-,?1- way of Indianapolis aiiainstthe enforce- menc ot the 3-ceut fare. The effect will bo a return to 3-ceut fares. The Chicago Great Western railway has issued a tariff, naming a propor tional rate on grain from Kansas City to Chicago, when destined to the seaboard for export, of cents The flat rato is iz cents. Tho Northwestern has reduced rates on ore from the Marquette Range mines to Escauaba from 52 cents to 45 cents per ton, cud to the docks at Marquetto from 85 cents (o 25 cents a Ton. This will save to Michitran orn shirmers. it is estimated, 50,000 a year. Worli of tho legislatures. The Illinois house passed with the emergency clause tho senate Torrens' land title bill. The Iowa senate concurred in the house amendment to the liquor manu facturing bill, and the governor's signa ture only is needed to make it a law. Senator Humphreys of Illinois has set the people of Chicago wild in his efforts to pass his famous bill providing for the state management of municipal rauroaas. The Now York senate has passed tho bill taxing inheritances. The assemblv has already passed tho bill, and it is un derstood that Governor Black will sign it. The Iowa senate passed the crimes bill, including the provisions which pro hibit ball playing on Sunday, selling cigarettes, exhibiting kinetoscope pic tures of prize fights and pool selling on races. Tne senate committee on appropria tions of the Blinois legislature has ordered reported favorably the bill ap propriating $35,000 to enable the state to participate in the Trausmississippi and International exposition at Omaha in 1898.- Miscellaneous. Six widows wero given judgments in a St. Louis court against railroads in whose employ their husbands had been killed. " K. Foppe. a Rock Valley. Ia.. mer chant, failed for $18,000, with O. Schneckberg of Sioux City as the largest creditor. The apple orchards in the vicinity of Columbia, Mo., are infected with worm3, which threaten to entirely destroy this year's crop. The international Y. M. C. A. at Mo bile elected Joseph Hardio of Birming ham president and F. L. Wiliis of Omaha secretary. The new cold fields discovered on the Londyke river, Alaska, aro said to be much richer than at first supposed. Re cent discoveries show as high as $335 to the pan. The Ohio medical law has been de clared constitutional in tho lower courts. It requires physicians to regis ter and have certificates based on prac ticol examination. United States Labor Commissioner Carroll D. Wright read a paper on "The Relation of Art to Social Well-being" before the Western Teachers' Drawing association in St. Louis. The treaty between Great Britain and Mexico settling the boundary lino be tween that country and Belize, or Brit ish Honduran, has passed the Mexican senate by a vote of 37 to 7. The public meeting held by the min isters of Mexico, Mo., in the interest of the sufferers in India was a success and two carloads of Audrin county corn will be sent to the starving people. The attorney general of Indiana has notified tho auditor of state that it is illegal for stalo officials to travel on passes and at tho same time collect mileage. Offenders will be prosecuted. One million people gathered in Now York to see the Grant tomb dedicated. Military oomp and civic splender marked the ceremonies. President Mc Kinley and Gen. Horaco Porter deliv ered dedicatory addresses. The agricultural experiment station at the University of Illinois has issued a valuable circular on sugar beet cul ture, in which it is urged that the beet has superseded tho cane as the world's chief source of sugar, and that the Unit ed States should act accordingly. The inauguration ceremonies and cor ner stone laying of the Trausmississippi exposition in Omaha Thursday were at tended by great crowds. The program at tho grounds was ushered in by a bril liant street pageant. The Masonic grand lodge of Nebraska had charge of the ex ercises. WHEAT CLOSES AT A DECLINE. Corn and Oat., on tho Contrary, "Were Strongest at the Close. CniCAGO. April 28.-An active, irregular, feverish wheat market today came to a close after an early i ise of lc per bushel had been converted into a net decline of lJ4c. Corn and oats, on the contrary, were strongest at tho close. Provisions were heavy at moderately lower prices. Ihe only apparent reason for the collapse was an attempt to realize on wheat bought on tho advance. WHEAT May. 71o; July, 7lc CORK May, :UHo : July. lajAi. OATS May. 17c: July. 1717Mc. PORK May. ?3.J7: July, $i.i7& LAPD May. S 4.4.071 ; July. $4.lo. RIBS May, 54.57$; July, S1.G Cash quotations: No. 2 red. wheat, 8792c; No. s red. fcOSSSc; No. spring. 73&74c; No. i corn, 24Jc: No. 2 cats. 17WsKc. Kansas City Live Stock. Kaxeas Citt, April 3. CATTLE Receipts, 9.000; ieJ5c lower: Texas steers, S3.O.'4.50: Texas cows. .51.503.4 ) :native steers.3.201.9j; native cows and heifers, 1.251.15; stockers and feeders. S i.log4.lo: bulls, 52.75sa.e0. HOG&-Receipts, lo.urj:510c lower: bulk of sales, So703.7o: heavy, J3.4U3.77: packcra, $3.aud.7-'.6: mixed, S3.C53.75; light, S3.55& 3.70: yorkers, S3.65&3.7J; pigs, $2.8333.05. SHEKP-Receipts, 15.VM; steady; lambs, 54.00 04.75: mufions, S3.0J4.2. Chicago Live Stock. CniCAGO, April i. HOGS Receipts. 30.000: fairly active and fully 5c lower; light, J3.90 4.07: mixed, $3.854.50; heavy. 5i.5a'34.0i; rough, J3.5533.6o. CATTLE Receipts. 18,500; weak and lower: beeves, 3X05.2o: cows and heifers. Sl.ixxm 4.4 J; Texas steers, S3.25S4.35; stockers and feeders. J3.404.4O. SHkKP Receipts,15,000;steady : natives 3.00 3 80; westerns, S3.5034. 80; lambs, S..GJB5.60. Baby Choked to Death With lllilk. Tekamatt, Neb., April 24. The 18- mouths-old child of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Akins was buried yesterday. Its death was peculiar. The baby awoke in the night and wanted a drink, and the father gave it a drink of milk, where upon the little one choked to death, dy ing m a very lew moments. Horses Die of Kidney Disease. Wixside, Neb., April 27. An alarm ing disease has developed among horses in this vicinity. It affects tho kidneys and causes the horses to appear to be lame on one hind foot. Soon after this symptom is noticed the horso generally falls prone on the ground and is unable to rise. No effectual remedy has yet been found for this equine disease. Gathering In Ux-l'ostmasters. Greeley Center, Neb., April 27. A deputy United States marshal arrived in Greeley Center last night and ar rested ex-Postmaster Connell and took him to Hastings. They went by way of Scotia and it is said the marshal took ex-Postmaster Christie of Scotia with him. They were taken to Hastings for preliminary examination before the United States commissioner. Buoklen's Arnica Salve The best salve in the world for cuts bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, teter, chapped hands, chilblains corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay roqaired, It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by A. F. Streitz Maccaline will cure any case of itching piles. It has never failed. It affords instant relief, and a cure in due time. Price 25 and 50 cents. Made by Foste Manufacturing Co. and sold by A. F. Streitz. OWNED, West Guffirie Swept by Destructive Flood. NO TIME GIYE1T TO ESCAPE. Wall of Water Several Feet High Carries All Before It. VICTIMS ARE MOSTLY C0L0BED. Estimates of Lives Lost From Fifty to Two Uandred Property toss Pluccd at About $1,000,000 Men, Women and Children Struggle Side by Side With Horses and Cnttle. GuTHRffi, O. T., April 2!). For miles the Canadian valley is a dreary waste and her pcoplo overcast with gloom At sunrise Wednesday morning a mighty wTali of water, from six to eight feet high and a milo wide, broke upon West Guthrie without warning, crush ing houses, sweeping away property and drowning people by the score Every movable thing was swept before the wave which passed ou into the val ley with resistless force, wreaking terri ble destruction to life and property wherever it touched. Dozens of human lives are known to bo sacrificed how many may not be known for weeks hundreds of houses wero wrecked in the twinkling of an eye, for miles farms were completely ruined, bridges and tracks wero washed out and railway traffic in every direction is left at a standstill. Tho efforts of rescuing par ties have in many cases proven in vain. Many people floated down stream before they could be reached and their fate is unknown; others passed the night in trees in midstream or perched on house tops. It is impossible to estimate the dead. The property loss is placed at something near 1,000,000. Fully two-thirds of tho victims were colored people. .Business was sus pended all day yesterday in Guthrie,tho stores and banks being closed. As thorough organization for relief as is possible has been made, but all aid has been necessarily retarded by the con fused condition of things. It will be impossible to explore the houses until the water shall subside, as many of them are submerged. As darkness gathered over the scene many over turned houses could be seen far out in the flood, but it could not be learned whether their occupants escaped. The river is 30 feet above its ordinary level. A heavy rain began falling in tho afternoon. A threatening bank of clouds came up from the northwest and many persons fled to their tornado cel lars, fearing that another wind disaster was upon them. Luckily, however,the damage was slight. The flood is sup posed to have been caused by a cloud burst, supplemented by heavy rains. Last night 40 or 50 people conld bo seen clinging to trees and roofs of build ings, but could not be" reached and had to spend tho night where thoy were. The strength of many failed before morning. It is impossible even to approximately estimate the loss of life. When dark ness settled over the city last night the wildest stories were afloat. Many wero claiming that all of 50 lives had been lost, aud not infrequently men were heard claiming that 200 Jiad per ished. These wilder estimates are un questionable exaggerated, but the ex aggerations arc not to be wondered at if the frightful incidents of the disaster are but considered. Lives were lost in the flood in every direction, in plain view of the few who were heroically carrying on tho work of rescue, and of the many who stood helpless at the edge of the raging waters. Men, women and children struggled in the torrent side by side with horses, cattle and swine, ouo perishing here and another there, aud in places several disappeared together beneath the flood. But two bodies have been recovered. The bodies recovered arc those of tho following: Axxa Kaiser, a school teacher. Fraxk Mayeks. Others known to have been drowned are: George Owexs. J. H. Caliioux, wife axd child. Charley Rufxeu axd wife. Rastus M'Gill. LEXA BlfRK. Mrs. Jasies Watt. AIRS. WESLEY Al'UILL AXD FIVE CHIL DREN. Jonx Metz. Mrs. J. W. Montgomery. Mrs. Dummins. Jim Lilly. Mrs. Ella Dumas. H. H. Bockfinger. It is believed that loss of life has oc curred of Guthrie along the Cottonwood river. Many farmhouses in that dis met are reported to have been swept away. Seven miles south of here Sew ard Hunt's store and postolfice were swept away. Four thousand dollars was raised in Guthrie yesterday after noon for the relief of tho sufferers. Leveo Break Causes Much Damase. Keokuk, April 29. The levee at Mc- Uregory, Mo., broke today and the water has been running through the town like a mill race. Thousands of bushels of corn belonging to Keokuk and Missouri parties aro in danger of nemg swept away. The Egyptian leveo at Alexandria is practically useless. Tho water has come upon the rear of tho levee and tho town is under water. beveral miles of tho St. Louis, Keokuk and Western tracks are submerged. All irams are aDanaonea above Quincy. Two Destructive Prairie Fires. Tilden, Neb., April 29. A prairie fire swept over tho Converse Cattle com pany's horse ranch, 12 miles northeast of Tilden. Another bad fire has started on the Willow creek, doing great dam age. Tho wind is blowing a gale. Alleged Hustler Shot. Stuart, Neb., April 25. A posse of seven farmers in pursuit of a couple of alleged rustlers who had stolen some saddles and harness in the vicinity of Lutes, Keya Paha county, overtook the latter three miles west -of this place, where they had gone into camp, and de manded that the culprits surrender. A fusillade followed, which resulted in the death of one of the socalled rustlers and the capture of the other. The prisoner, Everett Robinson,said the man who was killed was Frank Cole of Greeley Cen ter, Neb. MOB STONES THE PALACE. Excitement Is Dourly Increasing: at tho Hellenic CapU.il. Athens, April 29. Public excitement is increasing every hour. The foreign ers aro hoisting their national flags over the buildings in habited by them. A pop ular outbreak is feared. Crowds last evening stoned tho palace, broke its windows and cried: "Down with the king; down with Prince Constautine; give us a republic." Some pistols wero fired among tho rioters.and many officers were mobbed. London, April 29. A dispatch to tho Daily Mail from Paris says that M. Hanoteaux, the French foreign minister, had a five hours' interview today with the Turkish foreign ambassador. It is understood thnt the subject under dis cussion was the terms upon which tho powers aro to base their intervention between Greece and Turkey. The Daily News correspondent at Paris says that M. Hanoteaux, in tho courso of tho conference, urged the Turkish ambassador to adviso the sul tan to hold out the olive branch to Greece, adding that if the Turkish troops went further Franco would bo compelled to como forward as tho de fender of tho Christian world. In that event, said M. Hanoteaux, Turkey would have the most reason to regret the intervention of the powers, which would not servo as a prop for the Ottoman empire. It is understood that M. Hanoteaux expressed the earnest hope that the Turkish government would not make the serious mistake of increasing the difficulties of tho task of Europe. London, April 25. Special dispatches from Athens say that after a desperate battle at Mati the Greeks were outnum bered, retreated, with heavy loss, aban doned Tyinavos and Larissa and re moved their headquarters to Pharasalos, a small town on the right bank of the Phersalitis, and at the north foot of a spur of the Chassidiari mountains. Pharasalos is about 20 miles due south of Larissa. Turks Driven Bark. London, April 29. A special dispatch from Volo, the port of Thessaly, an nounces that tho Turkish advance forces have attacked tho Greeks atYelestino, about eight miles west of Volo, and on the railroad connecting tho latter place with Larissa and Pharsala. The Turks, however, the dispatch say3, were re pulsed with heavy losses and driven back. General Smolenski, on hearing of the attack upon Velestino, made a sortie from Pharsala in order to support the Greek forces at Yelestino. Four Hundred Greeks Slain. Constantinople, April 29. An offi cial dispatch received here from Salon- ica says that in an engagement at Losa- fakia, tho Greeks were compelled to re treat, with a loss of 400 killed and many wounded. The report of the bombard ment of Karaburnn is denied in thist dispatch. The people of Salonica have becomo salmer and the apprehension of an at- ack upon tho part of tho Greek fleet is dying away. Powers Troposo to 3Iedhttc. Paris, April 29. The following semi- official announcement of this dispatch was made: "Pour paries between Paris, London, Rome and St. Petersburg, with he view of attempting mediation be tween Turkey and Greece, have been very active, and are now assuming more precise form. It is hoped that the op portunity to mediate will arise before ong. Germany and Austria aro kept informed of the progress of the negotia tions, and do not disapprove of them." May Assassinate the Kinp;. London, April 28. A dispatch re ceived at one of the embassies -hero from Athens says that King George of Greece may at any moment be deposed or assassinated, and that tho mob is likely to take possession of the city. The dispatch adds that the worst is feared. FREEDOM IS THEIR GOAL. Complete Independence the Only Terms Gomez "Will Accept. New York, April 24. A special to The World from Havana says: General Weyler has put down his last card here and lost. His commission has reported to him that General Gomez will not re ceive it. Its members sought to carry to the rebel chieftain a message that if he would end the war Spain would grant the most perfect autonomy to Cuba under the safest guarantees. Gen eral Gomez sent word that they could not enter his camp; his sole exchange of peaco-was liberty and independence. These are moves in tho desperate game Spain is now forced to play. It must have money and to raise a loan is im possible as long as the war in Cuba con tinues. General Weyler, therefore, is getting ready to declare the island pacified. As proof, it will be announced that there is no longer use for so large an army and it consequently is being reduced. The rebels aro active in every province. They never were more powerful. Starving of tho Cubans. New York, April 27. A special to The World from Havana says: Private letters from the interior report whole sale starvation. Some of the cases are heartrending. Children are dying in the streets of Matanzas and babies have been found dead in the arms of their ex hausted mothers. Your correspondent has been through the province of Pinar del Rio and has seen whole villages of living skeletons, in bark huts, praying for death to release them from their suf fering. Hartley Arrested ut Lincoln. Lincoln, April 29. Sheriff McDonald of Douglas county yesterday afternoon arrested ex-State Treasurer J. S. Bartley on a complaint filed in Douglas county by the attorney general charging Bart ley with the embezzlement of the pro ceeds of the 180,000 sinking fund war rant. The amount Of the warrant at the date of the expiration of Bartley's term of oflico was $201,5iOO and the charge is that this warrant was cashed by Bartley and the proceeds applied to his own un in Douglas county. MECCA CATAKKH REMEDY. For colds in tho head and treatment of catarrhal troubles this DreDaration has afforded prompt relief; with its con tinued use the most stubborn cases of catarrh have yielded to its healing power, it is mace from concenstrated Mecca Compound and possesses all of its soothing and healing properties and by absorbtion reaches ali tho infln marl parts effected by that disease. Pri xn cts. Prepared by Tha Forter Mfn- rv Council Bluffs, Iowa. For sale by A. F Streitz. NEWS OF IfEBRASKA. ForUelief of Homesteaders. Washington, April 22. Tho senate passed a bill for tho relief of homestead settlers on that part of the great Sioux reservation in Nebraska. Funeral ot Dr. G. W. Johnson. Fairaiont, Neb.. April 27. The re mains of Dr. G. W. Johnson were laid at rest at the Fairmont cemetery with impressive Masonic ceremonies. Declrlun Goes Against Daris. Lincoln, April 24. George-Washington Davis will have to remain in prison for life for murder if not pardoned. His case has been finally passed on by tho supreme court, and it is decided against him. Lincoln yews Sold. Lincoln, April 28. Tho plant of tho Lincoln Evening News were sold under mortgage and purchased by Hector H. Tyndale, the representative of . tho holder of the mortgage. Tho purchase price was $6,100 Omaha Inlet For the Gulf Boad. Omaha', April 28. General Manager Sherwood of the northern division of the Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf road has practically completed arrange ments for bringing the line into Omaha over the East Omaha bridge. r Heavy Loss From Host Cholera. David City, Neb., April 24. Tho owners of herds of hogs in this vicinity report largo losses during the past week by cholera. One person reports 60, another 100, and tho loss of smaller numbers are reported by farmers in all directions from town. Ten TFIfes and Two Dozen Children. Decatur. Neb., April 23. Jim Dick, an Omaha Indian, is one of the hying curiosities of this place. Dick has 23 children in existence and has had 10 wives. The old fellow is 78 years old, " lives five miles from town and walks in and back almost every day. - Exposition Corner Stone Laid. Omaha, April 24. The corner stone of the magnificent arch which is to mark tho main entrance to the grounds of the Transmississippi and Interna tional exposition was laid yesterday by Grand Master Phelps of the Masonic grand lodge of Nebraska, attended aud assisted by 1,000 members of the craft from all parts of the state, and in the presence of thousands of citizens. OJd Man Steals Four Teams In a Week. Nebraska City, Neb., April 22. Sheriff Huberle returned from Hoyt, Kan., having in custody ' Wilhelm Fischer, who is charged with horso stealing. He confesses to having stolon a team from Fred Schroedor of Berlin, one at Lincoln and two in Kansas in the last seven days. He is 74 years of age, white haired and infirm. He waived examination and was- bound over to the district court. Friendships aro not uncommon De- tween the cat and dog; and have been known between a tlog and a wplf, but the mutual attitude of tho weasel and rat is invariably war war that is waged to the death. Legal Equality. The women are again moving in tho state of minoi3 in tho interest of equal ity before the law. God bless them and God speed them in their righteous quest 1 The shame is that it is left for tho women to lead. Let the men inaugurate tho movement that will make for justice. This cause has lost its newness. It has had to pay full price for tho crudities ana extravagances that gather around every reform, but at tho core the de mand is a righteous one, and it must bo heard, and ultimately it must triumph. Let no one lose heart and let no one de lay any legitimate effort. Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and Idaho have fully enfranchised their women. "Eastward the star of (this) empire takes its way." Chicago New Unitv. Slineral Wool. She What is this mineral wool ouo reads so much about? He Mineral wool? Why, that's tlje wool they shear from hydraulic rams. New York Times. Caps of linen, wcol, straw, bark of trees and leather were extensively worn in Egypt and Arabia in early times and were usually of a pointed or peaked shape. The variety of headdresses used by the Egyptian ladies was very creak Few nations have raised shaving to the dignity of a religious ceremony. In tho Koran there is no mention of shav ing at all, yet the Mohammedans shave their heads in the same manner as tho When a wo man eoes to a hospital for an opera tion, she realizes at last the mistnfcp ;h has made in disregarding what she thought were trifling symptoms. Whenever there is the slightest disorder of the organs distinct ly feminine, a woman's health and life are threatened. A cure cannot come too quickly a woman cannot be too careful her health means more than loss of life. It means the loss of dearer things the loss of husband's love, the loss of children's happiness, the loss of possible children. 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