•THE FRONTIER. VUBLISHBl* ■▼FRY TEUMDAY By _T— Fkottikk rmsTiso Oo. HIIU, ■> NEBRASKA. NEBRASKA. Tinspostmaster at llertunn has 'ten tiered Ills resignation. Bnewx county has tfcc largest crop of cern it has ever produced. A roosixicss twn's fraternity orguni tatien has been effected at Valparaiso. I Qtitk a spirited figlit is -enter the bsnd-oontest'at the fall festi val at Dei|ver. Mrs. J. N. "Norton-df Fremont was last week adjudged insane and sent 'to the asylam at Norfolk. Thk Iianinton county fair tvas largely attended and the display in all department*-exceptionally fine. A iioasK stepped on the foot- of Will llayes' little daughter at lied Cloud. Tuesday, anil smashed the member so badly as tosseecssitate -amputation. Miss Nkttik E. Harhinoton has been designated as secretary of the board of civil service examination for the postal service at South Omaha in place of M iss 'Williams, who -resigned'from the serv ice. • TnK baby’th«tt-was mysteriously* left in the born-of a farmer near Tekamah a couple off weeks ago was claimed from the eoantyauthorities by a daugh ter in the home -where ib-wras left, she Claiming to last- spring. fa Plattsmouth the other day the people of the Methodist church raised m debt of 910/100. The debt-has-been hanging like -a iheavy pall over the congregation tor-years and mow that It has been lifted-off there-is great- re joicing. SneciAT, Aobnt 'Matthews- of - the general land offiee*has up to date-rec - ommended the -cancellation - of > nearly 1100 homestead entries in the North Platte land district which were aban doned by entipmen - during > the; times -; . *731: total, 613, 1 church property If churches to be |ted valuation of >te front remote red a mot card the fair, ft lim , station from Omaha sad re all points where . one fair, unless more than *6. seven miles south - threshing Friday up 6,700 bushels of ; to fOerman butcher of fved in that city for tired of life and bis head.. He 9gk I FOR THE NORTH POLE PEAKY'WHa. FIND IT OB DIE IN THE ATTEMPT. Plan* l.»W f«rr'flext War's Expedition, Which Wilt Start Jnlj, 1898— ■Conditions I’mler WMrh the • .Journey to be Undertaken ■—S»B|«lue of Success. tenant Pe»ry*<» Next Trip. T'liri.AUKi.i’HlA, Sept 2V.—Lieuten ant I’eary said to-day. concerning the Arctic trip from which he has just re turned: "in addition to securing the Cape 'York meteorite, ! laid the plans for next year's expedition, and when I leave again, which will lie about the rnd of nett duly, it will be to remain up there until I reach the pole or lose my life in the attempt, if it takes five years to accomplish this object. "Next summer I shall take my ves sel up to Bherard Osborne Fjord and make that place my base of supplies. "fin the last trip. I made arrange ments with Arctic highlanders, a tribe of Kskimos, consisting of ‘.MO tnen, wo men arid children, known as the most northerly tribe of human beings on earth: to put in this coming winter in obtaining seal, bear and deer skins for our clothing, and in securing all the walrus meat they can for dog food. 1 have singled out eight young men of the tribe, who, with their wives, ca noes, dogs, sleighs and tersfs, are to accompany me to (Sherard Osborne Fjord, which is about 300 miles further north than their present abode. “My .party will consist of a surgeon, possibly another white man und my self. The rest will be Eskimos. Tlie latter know how to drive dogs, they can go.hungry, and know how to get food. “The conditions under which I shall make the coming expedition are of the most satisfactory character. The American Geographical Society has assured 9150,000 to meet all expenses, and 1 have been given five years’ leave of absence. I shall probably buy a new ship: for next year, though we may use the Ilopo again. Mra Peary will not accompany me. >:>, “J am quite sure that I shall succeed in reaching the pole. Nansan got within SCO miles of it, but Andree did not have one chance in 1,000 when he started to drift over the pole. I don’t think Andree' will accomplish any thing. and he may have lost his life long before this ‘n his attempt.” DUN’S REVIEW. Ecropc leading Gold to Pay for Amer ican Grain. NeW York, Sept 2?.—• R. G. Dun A Co.'a Weekly Revifew of Trade says: “Gold imports,have begun direct from England andfrom France, besides the arrival of 94.000,000 at San Francisco from Australia for wheat exported. The .gold i .received there and stapled from Europo amounts to ?i,1>00,00') in , four days, und the dvanee of its rate by the Bank of England to per cent seems little likely to check the movement, in view of heavy merchandise balances due this country, and a rise in the rate of interest here. The August excess of merchandise and specie exports over imports was not far from 913,000,000, and the September excess will evi dently be larger,, unless shipments of gold are considerable. B'radstrea t’s says: ' ‘There is a cheek to the onward sweep of demand in staple lines notiesable throughout the country for the past six weeks. The yellow fever quarantine, which ex tends from 'Texas to Georgia, has brought wholesale business to a prac tical standstill throughout the greater portion of the region embraced by the tlijlf states” MURDER MYSTERIES. 'Mmlwn Crimes Commuted in Kng toad Dally months past ihu friirhtened mdiassaulted per sons .on 'the road from Windsor to Matdanheed end whohu.always.man aged to.elude capture. AUMLQST WIPED.—The lit tle town of .Allan, L T.. fifteen miles test of VlnJta.lL T., wss almost -wiped sot by fire yesterday afternoon. AU the business bonus were destroyed, including the ’.Frisco depot and fifteen Bare of wheat The loss will foot up between >50,000 and $75.pool The CwanmlMtaa tacks Witnesses Chicago, Sept 87.—The interstate eommerce commission adjourned ita bearing of1 the warehouse company complaints to-day on account of the iiffieulty of procuring needed wit nesses The commission, it wu an nounced, would return ia about a month and finish its hearing. A Xevada. tie. Merchant dells. Nkvada, Ms, Sept 87. —J. It Lat imer, retail dry goods merchant, hu nada en assignment to David Davts of it Louis u a preferred creditor, for fcWNt ENGLAND’S CHANGE. CUMlt'i Protest Against Participation In Sealing Coalsrsscs Heeded. London. Sept -.JT.—Officials of the foreign office decline to give the rea sons for Great Uritian's notification to the l.'aited States that It cannot participate in the sealing conference at Washington if Russia and Japan take part in it. The action of the Marquis of Salisbury is the more sur prising because he accepted for Great l!rltain the invitation to take part la the conference with the full knowl edge that Russia and Japan were in cluded ia the invitation. it is known that Canada requested the withdrawal of Great Britain from the sealing conference and the gov ernment unwillingly acceded to this request, in accordance with its policy of cultivating the friendship of the colonies, even at the risk of offending 1 other powers. It is thought in diplo matic circles that Canada's action in the premises was influenced by the fear tbatGreat Britain would be out voted by the 'United States, Russia and Japan, whose views regarding the protection of seals coincide. LOVERS DIE TOGETHER. A Blacksmith ak Francisco, Sept 37. —A fortune at*250,000 is awaiting W. F. Kasson, who is • now serving a ten months' sen tewee.In the county jail here for em bejudement Kasson is one of the two sons of. James Kasson, a mining man of Mem York, who died a few weeks ago«t Austin, Iowa Ore ssh same— Flying Rear Hiawatha. Hiawatha, Kan., Sept 37—Farm ers of Irving township report that myriads of grasshoppers are flying aouth, sow dropping on the way. They fear that the pests are making ■ready to locate in Brown county and hatch out in the spring. The Epidemic AJboat m Virulent ta Kmu Orlnaae as It Was la 18S7. New Orleaks. La.. Sept 37.— Emi nent doctors believe that the work of the beard of health ia productive of good results and that the fever is not spreading, but on the contrary, is be ing confined to localities. Thus far there have been a few less tban 100 eases and fifteen deaths. The death rate is in the neighborhood of 15 per cent It was. in l$7s, 10 per eeot; so that up to the ptesent time the disease is about as virulent as it was in the last great epidemic New Orleans bad PERISH IN THE PASS. EIGHTEEN KLONDIKERS LOST IN A LANDSLIDE. Oily One Body Recovered—Victim. Were Pecker, en the Dye. Trail—Steamer Alkl Return. With Many Dl.ap pointed Pai.engcr.—Buffer las Ale ay the Klondike. Burled la an Avalanche. Port Townsend, Wash., Sept. 25.—* The tup Pioneer, which left Puget Sound September 13 with the bark Shirley in tow for Skaguay, returned at I o’clock this morning, having made the run down in ninety-six hours The Pioneer brings a report of a landslide near Sheep camp, on the Chileoot pass, last Sunday morn ing, in which eighteen men are said to have lost their lives. Only one body is said to have been recovered, that of a man named Cboynski, a cousin of Joe Choynski, the prize fighter. The men supposed to have been lost were packers on the Dyea trail. The officers of the Pioneer says that the story was brought to Skaguay Sun day evening by three men, who told it in such a way as to leave no doubt as to its truthfulness. They described the avalanche as consisting of rocks, ice and dirt which had been loosened by the rain, which had been falling con tinuously during the past month. All the bridges on the Skaguay river have been washed out and the river is a raging torrent W. W. Sprague, of Tacoma, who started eight weeks ago with a three years’ outfit, returned from Skaguay on the schooner. The steamer Alki, a week overdue from Alaska, arrived this morning at 4 o’clock. It carried a large list of men returning from Skaguay who were unable to eross the pass. The snow was six inches deep at Lake Benton, and three inches fell on the summit of the Chileoot pass last Sat urday. HURRICANE PREDICTED. J’rofea.or Wiggle. Bay. the Planet. Are In Position to Raise a Rnmpna Ottawa, Ont, Sept 25.—Professor Wiggins predicts a great hurricane .and says: “The announcement by the marine •department that :a hurricane is now moving up the Atlantic coast from the West Indies is a meteorological event -of more than common interest. That a great storm is near is a meteorological fact The moon will 'be in conjunction with Jupiter and Mercury on the 25th, and Mars on the '27th. The moon crosses the celestial equator on the 25th, moving south ward. She will be in conjunction with the sun on the 2ox. 4 25 © 4 Apples—Per bbl..'.. 1 05 © 2 Hay—Upland, per ton.. 4 00 © 0 St. SOUTH OMAHA STOCK MARKET. Hogs—Choice light. 3 00 ©4 Hogs—Heavy weights.. 3 00 © 3 Beef steers. . 300 @4 Bulls. 200 ©3 Stags. 3 75 © 4 Oalves. 5 75 © 0 Western Feeders. 2 75 © 4 Cows.. 2 00 © 3 Heifers.. 3 90 ©3 Stockers and Feeders. 2 50 © 4 Sheep—Western Lambs. 4 75 © 5 Sheep—Native ewes. 275 ©3 CHICAGO. Wheat—No. 2 spring. 03 © Corn—per bu.. . 23 @ Oats—per bu. 20 © Barley—No. 2. 42ft® Rye—No. 2. 47 0 Pork . 835 ©8 Lard—per 100 lbs. 4 00 © 4 Cattle—Choice beef steers. 4 00 ©5 Cattle—Western Rangers..3 15 ©4 Hogs—Prime light. 4 25 © 4 Sheep—Native Lambs. 6 66 ©5 Sheep—Oregon. 2 00 ©3 NEW YORK. Wheat—No. 2, red, Winter. 97}<® Com—No. 2. 30 © Oats—No. 2. 2* © Pork. 0 75 ©0 Lard. 490 ©5 KANSAS CITY. Wheat—No. 2, spring. 45 © 85ft Corn—No. 2.. 21 ■ ® 24ft Oats—No. 2. 18ft© 22 Cattle—Stockers and Feeders 2 50 © 4 40 Hogs—Mixed.-.3 80 ©406 Pbeep—Muttons.3 70 V 3 © 18 12 12ft 7ft 7 7ft 00 50 14 60 00 60 65 2ft 50 00 00 05 85 . 90 50 00 00 25 30 35 00 00 03ft' 29ft 20ft 43 47ft 40 75 20 40 35 75 85 0814 36ft 24\ 80