Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 10, 1893, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 THE OMAHA. DAILY HER ; SATURDAY , JUNE ] 0 , .1803.
tree * . Wlmtfa the toiM number ofilonuly
lTfl Hint you liavo aworn In tn | > rutcct
llfo mill 1'roporty nnil prmppcw of
ponce In your county , nml ni o
In cncli of thn two other counting
Copioi lit tlin dhnntch received licro
Incllciito that. the olllcors have boon tiiMtori
of the Munition. Nobody 1m * been hurt ex
cept tril M , several of whom linvn Imen
hilled tuid a largo numbur woundrd. If this U
no. why rail for troops , find If Additional liulp
1 * needed why not swear In inoro deputy
Mirrlffs ? Answer nt oneo.
The snmo telegram was sent to J. 11. Oil-
tort. shcrllt of Cook county. . ,
At 10fiO ; p. tn. Governor Altgcld received n
telegram from Sheriff Kennedy of Will
county. It was stated that It was next
to Impossible to secure men who will
ncrvu as deputies. The use of deputies liatl
tlio effect merely to bring on n light nnd
results , as It did today , In bloDdshcd. Ho
believes n military demonstration will save
Iwth llfo nnd property. Ho wns Informed
that another movement would bo under
taken tomorrow , nnd ho feared the result ,
which could no avoided by n strong display
of force. Hli deputies nnd posse numbered
but twenty-live.
At 11 o'clock Governor Altgcld was wait
ing to hour from thu shcrllT of Cook county
before forming any dellnlto action relative
to calling out the militia.
Troops Ordered Out.
At 11:150 : o'clock Governor Altgnld
Imd not received any word from tbo
sheriff of Cook county , but fearing
further outbreak at Lomont , ho ordered
Adjutant Gunor.il Orcndorff to go
at once to the scene of action nnd telegrams
wcro sent calling out the Second and Third
regiments to repair at once to Lemonl nnd
Joliet and bo thcro by daybreak tomorrow
morning. Tito Second regiment Is composed
of Chlcngo companies and tlmy cannot reach
Lcmcmt In n very few hours. This regiment
was ordered to proceed to Juliet. J he
Third regiment is composed of companies
from Jollot , Strentor nnd surrounding
towns.
Adjutant General Orcmlorft lott on the
midnight train on the Chieatro ft Alton for
Ivcmont nnd will arrive thcro about 0 o'clock
In the morning nnd will remain upon the
ground until peace Is restored among the
otrlkcrs.
_ _
Itimdy to Aluvo.
CiitOAno , 111. , Juno 9. The order calling
out the Second regiment wns not received
by Colonel Judd , commanding , until 12:3 : (
tonight. The regiment is quartered in twc
armories , ntio at the corner of Washington
boulevard nnd Curtis street ; the othci
being on Michigan avcnuo on the South Side ,
By U o'clock this morning both armories
were the scenes of the liveliest description ,
The Second regiment is fully 1,000 strong
nnd fully capable of handling several times
more strikers than nro to bo found al
Lomout.
AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA.
llurly I , < mf < Ts I OB u ali-nl nnd Stonl r
Wnldi In Kntiirn.
It will bo safe for persons who nro calfci
upon by beggars to watch then. . Ycstordnj
two burly lonfors cnlled at the residence o
John Alexander on A street betwcci
Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth and askct
lor something to cat. They wore accom
inodntcd , and shortly after they were gone !
silver watch was missing. The watch wn :
lying on a stand and was used to givi
medicine by to Air. Alexander's sister , win
Is confined to her bed by sickness. The un
grateful thugs have tuns far evaded arrest
Kniindoil Up by Ihi ) roller.
Thcro were so many visitors in the pollci
court room yesterday that the lloor had thi
appearance of a pen at the stock yards on i
busy day. Dill Greoloy , u man who Is in fo :
o few days for vagrancy , took compassion 01
the judge and last night gave the place i
first-class cleaning up.
Seven idlers wore disposed of and A. C
Anderson , who was thought to be slightl ;
demented , wns discharged. Hit Achnei
John Menach and Joe Ching , nl
musicians , wcro lined ? l cacli fo
disorderly conduct. George Fox , wh
lives at Thirty-seventh and L streets , re
fused to pay BO cents to the dog catcher fo
pound money and wns arrested. Fox said h
was willing to pay J'J for a dog tag but he re
fused to stand any further assessment. Tin
dog catcher has had considerable troubl
within the last few days and says his voci
lion is the most trying of any in the city.
Two pairs of pantaloons were stolen froi
Goldstein's place on N street yesterday fen
noon.
Chief Hcckett found a suspicious charactc
hiding behind a door In ono of the room
over the Nebraska Liquor house and lockc
him up. _
Cnmmc'iiueinont KiorclHes.
The program for the commencement cxoi
ciscs of the High school which takes platen
on June 2 ! ) is as follows :
Instrumental music . Collins' Orchostr
Kiilutat ory . Kit her Ctirtrudn Krlu
Ewfay The Inlluunco of Fashion on Our
Moral Judgment . Oullii Anna \ VelA
A ruverlu . Uriico I.ydla KlcliurdMi
Yoenl Solo Open Thy Lattice .
. Mls < * Sndto I'lnlc
Essay l-'rom School Llfo to Llfi-'s Mihool. . .
. lllunchu ( iltisio
Essay The Ideal Woman .
. . . . Mlk'rud Kthul Dunn
Class History . Orln Sylvester Morrl
Instrumental music . ' 'ollln.s' Urche.sU
Essay The Mission of the Agitator .
. Junnli ! Minillno Lai
Essay The N'owspnpur . Norn. Mac Snyili
Chorus Tim Mil lor . Hy chorus cla
Essay Iln Who t'nnnot ' Paint ftfiiit ( frlnil
the Colors . Marietta ! ' . llov
Class SOUK Down In the Dewy Dell .
. Hy the ( JradiiatliiK ( Hn
Valedictory . Marlut la ! ' . 1 lov
Presentation of diplomas hy the president i
the School Hoard , Mr. W. 11. ( . 'hook.
Stolu u L'lro Ti'iim.
A queer case of horse stealing has ju
been reported to the iiollco. On Wcdncsdn. .
while the llromen were making a run , tl
two large , line sorrel horses at No. 3 cngii
house disappeared. One wns tied to a stnl
eattug grass at Tlilrty-llrat nnd H stroo
nnd the other wns loose and grazing in tl
same locality.
This team was given to the city by Mr. Cu
nhy , the packer , with the proviso that tl
animals should bo used for no other purpo
than na llro tior.sos. Kor this work It seams tl
horses were no good , nnd although they we
kept at the tingino house they wore not use
Search has boon mndo in ovury dlrcutli
Quit the nnlmiils have not been located. 1' !
horses nro beauties and would bo easily il
tooted if thuy were seen in this locality.
I'ythlaii Mumorliil Snrvlcpn.
Mcmorlnl services will ho observed by t
Knight of Pythlna niomborsln South Omal
on Sunday next. All Knights are request
to meet nt the hall of lodge No. Iblt at
o'clock In thu morning. From there th
will m ureh to Laurel 11111 conuitery nml dt
orate the graves of their departed brothrc
In the evening services will bo held at t
Episcopal church , when Hov. H. ( J. Sharpl
will preach un appropriate sermon.
MitKic Oily
Another larco crowd of sports nttendi
the rnccs nt I'apilllon yesterday ,
The enumerators have commenced t
work of taking thii school census.
AV. II. Crawford starts today for Clilca
with two speedy nags , Hob lxo : and John
Wllki-3.
Itlchard Swift of the Cudahy force , i
ixmipnmcd by his family , loft yesterday J
Chlcngo.
llobort Lnrkln , the genial yountr man w
tins charge of the oleomargarine dopartmc
at Cudahy's , loft yesterday for Chicago
take in the sights of the blc fair.
Trenton.
Puck : "Iox bore , " said Colounl Gore
Louisville- a school director of that n
' 'you'll Imvo to discharge that now tuucl
from Massachusetts. "
"Why11 !
a "Why , sail , sho's telling the schola
that the human body is hO per ccut watc
I' Ho bmokiul n 1'lpo.
I < Now York Weekly : Wifo-My dear ,
Imvo to go and see a doctor. I'm afraii
have a tobacco heart und it's of ten fatal.
Husband Good gracious ! You do
smoke ?
Wife No , but I Hvo under the satno n
with you.
I'oncrnlmint Nuocumrjr.
Detroit Trlbuno : UllloWhy , Hilly , w
do you put your umbrella under your coat
Billy Smlthcri Is coming.
"ito you fear that ho will steal III"
"No , that ho will ronopnlto it- "
TO INVESTIGATE RAILROADS
ETioir Management to Bo Inquired Into by
nn Illinois Grand Jury ,
LINES ACCUSED OF DISCRIMINATING
Vow York Suld tn lln I'mming nt llio lx- :
pound of Oilmen nud Oilier \Vf > Ktern
I'omtiVltnc e * that IIilTO
llcou Sutuuioiiml.
CIIICAOO , 111. , Juno 0. An investigation
into railway management will bo com-
nonccd by the grand Jury on Monday next.
This promises to be the most far-reaching
nnd thorough Inquiry Into the affairs of the
jig railroad companies that has ever been
undertaken by the Inters tnlo Commerce
commission nnd it is said the present In
quiry Is to bo begun after a diligent survey
of the situation by the commissioners and
iVttornoy General Olney ,
Some ot these on whom subpmnn ? have
l > ccn served , are : G. 11. Dlnnchard , chair
man Central Trafllo association ; F. C.
Donnld , vlco chairman of the Western
J'raflle association ; IJ. W. Cnldwoll , chair
man Western Passenger association ; W. F.
White , western traffic agent of the Atch
ison ; C. S. Crane , nssistnnt passenger ngcnt
of the Wabash railroad ; J. Charlton , gen
eral passenger agent of the Alton ; Major
W. 11. Smith , manager Laden wanna lino.
Nor is this all. The Ticket Brokers asso
ciation has nlso been served with notices to
bo In attendance. Complaints of both pas
senger and freight discriminations have
been made to the commission , it Is said ,
about the eastern , western and southwest
ern lines. New York was said to bo profit
ing nt the expense of Chicago and western
points , llntcs between these two points
favor eastward t rattle , and it is charged that
some of the passenger agents are selling
blocks of return tickets .good from Chicago
cast to brokers bore. Immigration business
will nlso bo a subject of inquiry and the
rates fixed by the various fnst freight lines.
The attorney general has sent A. G. Snfford
from Washington to assist Attorney Mll-
christ In the Investigation.
i\cunsioNS : TO THI :
They Will Not Start from tlio West llcforo
Augiint 1.
CIIIGAQO , 111. , Juno U. There will bo no
World's fnlr excursion trains from the west
before August 1. Whether there will bo any
after that tlmo depends on circumstances.
This applies only to the lines in the Western
Passenger association. The Atchison and
Alton may run excursion trains before that
time. The matter of cheap excursions to
the fair wns the only thing considered at
the association meeting today. It waa
agreed that no cheap excursion trains
should bo run before July U3 and that
If no agreement was reached at a meeting
of the association to bu called at that time
the roads would bo free to take individual
action in the matter , provided any road
wishing to run cheap excursion trains shall
give live nays notice to all competing lines.
No notice of such an excursion can bo given
before July 215 , and that moans August 1 be
fore the lirst excursion can run from the
west to the fair , unless it comes over the
Atchison or Alton. These two roads
have been awaiting the action of tin
association and are not prepared to say at
once just what they will do. The result ol
thu conference ever cheap excursions is not
exactly what is expected , though it is a de
cided movement for the bettor , considered
from a railway standpoint. It has disposed ol
the last obstacle in tlio way of tin
adoption of the revised agreement ol
the Western Passenger association ant
prevented a general demoralization o !
business throughout tno west. Il
wns a far more peaceful outcome of the long
and protracted meetings which the nssocin
tion hns held.of late .than was expected
Tlo agreement as it now stands will give
the roads ample opportunity to learn wbcthci
people of the west desire to travel on regulai
trains or on cheap excursion trains whicl
consist of coaches alone. The assoclatioi
agreement wns ndopted , to become effective
Juno 15 , provided the lines absent fron
today's mooting agree. These lines wen
the Minneapolis &St. Louis and the Burling
ton , Cedar Hnpids & Northern.
Kruijjht litr : .
ST. PAUL , Minn. , June U. The Grcn
Northern today entered the lists nnd cut a bii
slice off Pncltle const freight rates from th
Twin Cities , Mississippi river comiuoi
points nnd Chicago ami Milwaukee commoi
loints. The reduction us first announcci
was to bo of effect only In classillcatioi
rates , but the Great Northern people toda ;
said that they had instructed their agent
.o use the newclasslllcalion ratesas thu basi
For n correspond ing reduction to the sain
> oints on commodities. The commodity tnnfl
based on the reduction , has not been issued
luit is in preparation and will bo pushoi
soon. The reduction is sweeping in man ,
respects. The llrst-class rate from St. Pal
and Minneapolis to Seattle is reduced fron
$3 per 1K ) to.Oit and the fourth class fron
$ l.iiO to ? 1.-10. To Spokane the llrst-clas
rite ; is cut from f 1.00 to $1.-10 and the fourt !
class from 81.55 to $1.45. The llrst-clnss rat
to Helena and IJutto City. Mont. , wns * 2.in :
It is now reduced to 61. 05 and the fourt
class from S1.40 to ? 1. 0. The other rcdue
lions are in the samu proportion.
The wholesale reduction is justified by th
Great Northern oflleitils on tlio gorvnd thn
It has been mndo necessary to protect the !
interests from the competition of rail an
water rates from eastern points which huv
resulted in the war of rates between th
Canadian and Southern P.icitio routes. It 1
bullovcJ the Northern Pncillc and Oinah
roads will follow suit soon.
T.IMCS ox
B
o A poutloinnii recently arrived froi
Slonx City said to u UKK nitin yeatorda
in rpjritrrt to the recent collapao then
"Tim fooling ns to the future is tlivldoi
some being1 ( llscourujfoil anil others ci
rmratreil. On the whole the solid biiH
mou nro { flail Unit tlio agony of sii :
o is ever with , us tlio crush in th
quai-tor where it occurred hail bee
looked for by llio more conservative cl <
incut of the business people with nppn
huiiHion for Homo lime. Now that
liquidation is taking plnco in the hioci )
hulvti Venturis , thuro in a fooling of n
liof , as well as an assurance that 111
growth henceforth will bo wholly of
solid clmraetor. As custom money wi
not bo disposed to coino there now , t
il least not for BOIUO tlmo in the future , tli
growth during the next few yours wi
0 bo principally from within , "
"Notwithstanding the largo incroas
in orange aerongo In California In reuoi
years , " remarked a gunst at ono of tl
hotels last evening , "it in a fact that tl
domaiul for that product Uoups pnco wit
the mipply. Almost everybody that go *
there wants to raise oranges , I kno
one man who went there u few yea
since who hot out ton aoros of olives , ai
they are now yielding him a proilt i
$1,000 an aero. Lust year ho elearc
$10,000 from the plauo. Olives don't r
quire any irrigation , ami are almost i
trouble ut all to ralbo. There uro voi
few oilvo farms in the estate , the provai
ing idea bolng orange culture. "
' 'All this claim about rain making
about on a par with the so-called psych
cal phenomena said to bo produced 1
mesmerism , and concerning which
much has recently Iwon written in bo :
ICuropo and America , " said a gontlcmi
of bcfontifio attainments yesterday. '
BOO by THE HICK thut the latest pr
tender in the artificial rain fake 1ml
from Tojwka , Kan , Prof. Nowcomb
tlio Naval observatory knocked that pi
tension in the head , nearly u year ag
with the simple remark that raolstu
cuiiuot bo produced by noiso'and , wit
out moisture you cannot have rain. In
vestigation into all the rainfalls alleged
to Imvo been caused by I'rof. Dyronfurth
lust summer in Texas showed that in
ovury instance the ruin was the result of
nattirnnl causes , nnd commonly extended
over vnstly larger areas than these covered -
orod by the rain-making experiments.
The notion rolled upon by those quasi *
sctctiUllo people nroso originally from
an allusion in I'luturch that a belief ex
isted among the Konnuis that ruin fell
after heavy battles , but the would-
be rain-makers seemed to overlook the
fact that gunpowder wns not used by the
Koinatif , and Plutarch explicitly states
thnt the superstition referred to was
based upon the idea that the gods sent
the rain to purify the corruption
produced by the corpses of the
slain lor the purpose of preventing
n pestilence. It was not supposed that
the clash of nrins had caused a humid
condition of the atmosphere. The au
thor of a recent work on war and tlio
weather , written with n view of bolster
ing the idea of making ruin by means
of explosives , could only show that of
U.'JOO battles of the American civil war
rain followed but 7 per cent of them.
Yet he imagined that ho had made out
his case , just as the Hindus in charge of
the great pagoda at Tanjoro inform the
traveler that the edlllco 'casts no
shadow , ' Insisting upon this pious decla
ration oven while ho sees the shadow
us plain us Indian sunshine can make it.
The intricate operations of nature
which result in the production of rain
you may bo sure are not to be duplicated
by bomburdlny the air. "
An Atchlson lawyer , says the Globe
of that city , wus recently plnccd In u
somewhat embarrassing position in
Omaha , tie und his wife were regis
tered at the Puxton. Ho went out in
the afternoon to attend to some business ,
when Lee S. Estello , the well known
lawyer , sent him u note asking him to
call ut his room. Ho signed himself
. -"Estollo. " The lawyer's wife got hold
of the note , and the lawyer mndo the
best speech of his life in demonstrating
that lOstcllo wns the name of a nmu.
"Tho commercial world has but very
little occasion for feeling alarmed ever
the alleged financial crihis thnt wo hearse
so much about , " said President Gibbon
of the Omaha Commercial club to a BKK
reporter. "As a matter of faot there is
a good , healthy tone to business , par
ticularly in wholesale nnd jobbing lines ,
and all that is needed to make this n
prosperous season is the confidence of
the people. The pan icy f col ing we hoar
about is the result of a , fearful imagina
tion rather than the effects of any realer
or threatening1 danger. In financial
matters , as in mutters of physical health ,
a good deal depends on the imagination
und the confidence of the people con
cerned. A man can worry himself intu
a sick spell if ho permits himself ui
brootl ever imaginary ills.
"Tho most damaging tlnng'to business
that can bo inspired is the circulation ol
groundless rumors with regard to the
standing of banks and other financial
institutions. This invariably frightens
the small depositors and they im
mediately draw out the surplus thnt
they have deposited in the bank. While
these deposits are not largo , indjvidu-
ally , they camount to n vast sum in the
aggregate , and when this is drawn from
tlio bunks it is not put into circulation bj
investment in any other line of business ,
but is curried to the private homes ol
the people and laid away to become a
temptation for thieves and a source ol
anxiety to the owners. This bus a very
detrimental olTect on business , for it h
just that much money actually wiped
out for the time boing. It is of no use
to anybody so long as it is hoarded up ii :
the ciosots and old ubrcau drawers all
over the country. You can imagine the
oll'pct of taking u lot of blood out of u man1 !
veins without giving him any nutritious
food to help replace the life lluld voi
have taken away. Well , thnt is jusl
about the clTect that this absurd scare
has upon the business of the countrv
when small depositors begin to honrt
their savings instead of letting then
remain in circulation.
"All this conntt y needs at present t <
make business first class is universa
confidence on the part of the people am
1 believe that this will bo established it
u very short time and the npparon
financial panic will disappear entirely
You will notice that the banks of tin
country uro in the main all right. The
institutions that liavo actually fuilei
have been these that were not ongngci
in the legitimate banking business. Tin
Omaha banks are especially llrm unc
much of this is duo to the faot thu
banking in Omuhu has been carried 01
in a safe and business like manner
Omaha bus been fortunate in having a
tlio recognized head of Us bunking inter
ests ono of the safest und mostcarofu
bankers in the United States. . It i ;
not necessary for mo to name him
Everybody acquainted with the leading
financial interests of Omaha and tin
west knows to whom I refer when
apeak of the recognized * head of tin
banking business in Oinahu. His udvie
und tlio intluenco of his example havi
permeated the banking business of thi
city for a quarter of a century and n
man can measure the substantial olTect
of Ins having been a citizen of Oinuhn
I believe that the banks of Omaha wil
pass over these somewhat panicy time
in perfect serenity and the reputatio
for solidity which this city now enjoy
from ono end of the land to the otho
will only bo strengthened by the event
of the year in other localities. "
TURNED THE TABLES ON HIM
Xovrrtliolew tlio Koon-UT toil 'iVomn
Sllll I.lvurf un llin I'rontlur.
It was during Cleveland's llr t Ii
cumboncy , nays tno Kansas City Times. Tli
daughter of u lawyer prominent In n noigl
boring Kansas town bail married an office
who , u few months after the ceremony , tin
been detailed to a rmnoto post. The youn
wife , who had enjoyed u sort of bolleshlp i
the semi-metropolitan community invhie
she hnd been reared , felt ns if she wei
nbout to bo buried nlivo. Encouraged I
bur husband and father she repaired l
"Washington to seek reprieve at hcndrjua
tcrs.
tcrs."Fort Hiloyt Why , that's n pretty goc
detail , Isn't HI" asked itho president , t
whom the lady had staled her case.
'No , sir ; It doesn't suit mo at all. "
"Shouldn't wo try to bo satisfied whoi
wo are i" continued the chief niagistra
with a patrouliiiiK smllo.
"You might have boon satisfied wll
being sherllf ut liuit.ilo , but you wanted
bo the president of the United States
came the port retort.
Mr. Cleveland arose with the same pati
nrchul smile on his fuco , but the lieutcuant
wlfu still dreads her visit at Fort Hlley.
I'atrlutio Chips.
Washington Star : "Yes ' , " said young Mr
Milder. "Charley was o'ut rather late la
night , but 1 didn't have the heart to sco
him. Ho wns ciig.iKod in a patriotlo celobr
tion. "
"How do you know ? " aslted the worn ;
whoso husband wns out with Charley.
"Uecauso ho cuino homo with a lot of re
white and blue pieces of Ivory. I dot
know just what they are for , but the cole
show they Imvo somothlug to do with p :
triotism. "
An Iiicruto ,
Jack Ford DW you sco that girl cut i
thont
Frank Wilcox I noticed ho didn't bow ,
Jack Foal And yet I saved her llfo I
Frank Wilcox Howl
Jack Ford Wo wore engaged , and Una !
slin said sho'd rather die than marry we ,
'Ilethoroff.
CLERKSiCRUSHED
[ CONTlNTEHtntOM
the crowds back so.tlucro wns no Interrup
tion to the work o'lroscue.
The news of tho-dtanstcr flow like wildfire -
fire through the jlty nnd soon anxious
relatives added -W these who wcro
drawn td the scene bv sympathy or curiosity.
In a short time bodies were being brought
out so fast that they qould not bo attended to
by the doctors on the scene , and after oon-
slderablosufforing forwantof attention extr.i
vehicles were brought and the wounded
wcro taken to the hospitals , which worn
soon overcrowded and the sufferers were little -
tlo better oil than at the scene of the disas
ter till medical students awpcared on the
sccnoand took charge of these least seri
ously hurt.
Ono of the first victims found
wns George M. Arnold , n colored clerk
from \VoU Virginia , who Jumped
from the third story window nnd was
dashed to death in the alloy where Wilkcs
Hooth bad his horse tied on the night ho
assassinated Lincoln.
S. S. Uaker escaped with a bad scalp
wound. lie was at his dcsic en thu third
lloor front. The crash came , ho said , with
out a moment's warning. Half stunned and
d.izod , ho found himself In the ccllur pinned
down by debris and covered with plaster ,
furniture anil chairs. Ho extricated himself
as best ho could ana crawled out of ono of the
windows. It was fully half an hour before
ho recovered himself and oven now can
hardly account for his escape. His coat wns
' , om to tatters.
Account ot nn KyinvltncM.
Mr. S. Dana Lincoln , who occupies a room
n the Atlantic building , facing the rear of
ho theater building , gives this account nf
ho scono. Ho wns sitting at his desk at the
imo of .tho giving way of the lloors ,
Ho said ho heard a noise ns though
of dumping of bricks in an alley. Ho looked
out ot his ofllco window and saw clouds of
ilust rising to the top of tno building. 1m-
inedlntely lit every window do/ons ot heads
rotruded , wildly calling for assistance. It
seemed ton or llftcou minutes before the
llromen appeared with ladders , which wcro
Immediately run up to the windows. In
reality it was only a few moments. The
liremen rescued all these who had not es
caped by Jumping from the windows.
The last man taken out of the building
allvo was Captain Dowd of Indiana. Ho wns
found near the southwest , corner of the
building covered to a depth of two or three
oot with brick and mortar. Ho had lain
ihoro for three hours , buta falling beam had
odgcd near him In such a position as to
break the fall of the brick ami timbers nnd
when lifted up ho raised his hand , showing
that ho was conscious. When ho was lifted
into the Garllold hospital ambulance the
crowd saw that lie was nlivo and cheered
again and again.
A * the Tnjuroil Were Jtomovud.
The ambulances wore kept busy carrying
away the dead and injured. The faces of
many of the victims were covered with
pieces of cloth , an old coat , a newspaper or
whatever else could bo had , but some of the
mangled bodies were carried out with their
faces exposed to the gazoof the eager throng
that surrounded Uio"building. During all
the long hours w'hilq the workmen wcro
working with all , their strength to rescue -
'
cue such as wcro , 'not past help the
mothers , sisters and. " daughters of these
that had { rene ' down hovered around
the front of the building and with stream
ing oycs inquired of , all whom they met of
some tidings of ther ) dear onus. Some could
hardly bo restrained , from pushing their wr.y
Into the buildintr. '
i\ look into the Interior told a sickening
talc of how some weru.taken and others left.
Desks wcro scan .half toppling over the
brink ot the broken floor ; others stood up
right , but the chair which stood besldo It
nnd Its occupant wont down with a crash.
Records ami paperywpro scattered every
where , but as fait , ad possible they wcro
gathered up and saved , Many of them wore-
spotted with blood. ' '
Crush oil Out of llumnn Semblance.
That any ono should liavo escaped with
his life seems the work of a miracle. As
they were brought forth they presented a
spectacle that no one seeing it will over for
get. In many cases the semblance of human.
ity wns gone. It seemed as though the
helpers wore carrying out moro bass of mat
ter , smeared all over with blood , fllthy with
dirt , dirt ground into them , blood on their
faces. A wife could not have recognized her
husband in that condition. With such ten
derness ns rough and excited men could sum
mon at such a time , they were laid out upon
the stretchers nnd carried to the ambulances
that llllcd the space from E to l ;
street. All the doctors could do for
them was to clear away some of
the dirt , plaster and lllth from the
faces of the injured men. In many cases the
dirt was ground into the eyes , noses anil
mouths so that without such attention men
might have suffocated. Many were uncoiv
scious and could not h'avo helped them
selves. With a clang of the bell iho ambu
lances started off for the hospitals. These
were soon overcrowded. Drug stores were
turned into temporary hospitals. People In
the neighborhood of the accident opened
their doors right gladly nud the dead anil
the wounded wcro hurried in.
When the accident wns over nnd before
the rescuers could got inside to their rellof ,
there wcro injured men who wore caring for
their worse injured brothers. There were
men who did not rush for the street to save
their own lives. Hcg.irdlcss of the fact that
moro walls might fall und bury thorn once
moro , they stayed to succor mou who couli
not got away by themselves.
Ilorolo Dooda.
A man whoso arm was crushed used hi :
other arm to drag n man from that place o
death. Men stayed to struggle with beam ;
and rafters that bore down upon their fol
lows. They upoku words of cheer whoi
their struggles wcro in vain.
When the first of the relief corps cntorei
it wns struck by the silence that pro
vnileii. There were no cries to bo bean
from beneath the debris. If any eries wen
made they wore stilled by dirt am
mortar that made almost a solid lloor 01
which men might walk. Alcn did not wall
upon it moro than they could help , howovci
for no one know but that ho might be stnnd
ing directly above the bodies of the ( load o
dying men. Nervously nud excitedly the :
tore away bourns nnd rafters Hint made th
tomb. It was n horrid tnsk ; it was a dirt ;
task. Men worked like demons , with swoa
pouring down their faces. The dust nnd th
dirt lay thick upon their faces , so that on
could scarce toll the color of the man. Th
trim uniforms of the firemen wore riihioi
and battered , but never for n moment ill
they stop In their noblo. work.
Every moment throwing aside of wrcckag
exposed the bloody nndoftou mutilated fen
of some ono of tlo ( yjetlms , Occasional ! ;
ono of them revivedsulllciently to need bu
llttlo assistance to | pct ) to the outer air , bu
the majority of thorn dusty uud brulsoi' '
with their clothing"1 't6n ' almost In tatters-
were carried Into the Wear atmosphere an
through the sorrowtyva crowd to the ambu
laiiccs that were waiting ,
First Kir rts 'nt ' KCHCIIO.
At first the efforts' " to rescue were mos
inofllclent , but aftwi , llttlo while syi
torn prevailed nnd tlm work wontnhoad wit
the utmost rapidity.'Weary rescuers gav
plnco every few minnU'S to fresh and willin
successors who woncep with torritlo energ
in their endeavor to save some of the uurio
"
ones. , .
As the blooding and mangled bodies wcr
brought out groans nWi outcries arose on n
sides. The surrounding houses , drug store
nnd business places were tilled in a shot
tlmo with the bleeding and groaning men.
As a mangled body was brought out
would bo surrounded by weeping friend
The persons who were evidently dead wor
laid aside , while these who possessed 111
were brought out.
Ono man was found sticking head flrstinl
the debris. His foot wcro soon first. Soc
they ha 1 uncovered his legs , which move
feebly , showing tfiat ho was still alive , A
fast as human hands could work these re
cuors did , and soon they had the unfort
nnto man out. Ho was nlivo when he wi
brought into the air , 'but ho died before 1
reached the ambulance In the street. Th
was but ono of tbo many shocking sceui
that wore enacted.
The general opinion is that the ncclJoi
was caused by a weakening of the aireai
weak structure by reason of excav.uioi .
made beneath it for an electric lighting sy
totu. It was stated thin afternoon tbi
several days ngo the clerks la tbo bulldli
circulated a petition protesting against th
work bolng continued , as they consltlore
that It Impcrllod the llfo of every man who
wns working in the building.
OlOrctlnrn of nn ( ( melons Clerk.
This afternoon the flro department turned
a stream of water Into tbo building. This
was dona to lay the dust so that the work
of clearing away could bo bettor accom
plished , A dled-ln-tho-wool
- - - government
clerk objected to this procedure , because , ho
said , the place was stored with Important
government pnpfirs , which would bo ruined
by water. A man who was standing besldo
him shouted back excitedly : " \Vo don't care
n d d for the pnj > ers of n government that ,
lots its clerks work In such a trap. It's
men we're trying to save not papers. "
At tbo morgue the sight was ono horrible
to behold. The little building , in which was
ono Ice chest nnd n dissecting table , 'vas not
nearly Inrgo enough to hold the dead bodies
brought from the wrecked building. When
the morgue was llllod the stable ! was turned
Into a reception room for the bodies.
Dlankots were spread on the lloor nnd the
remains were laid out as respectably as pos
sible uudr.r the circumstances.
Hlood from the bodies formed a largo pool
on the floor , and crushed skulls , In-oken
arms and legs , made the scene * Indescribable.
Then thcro wcro some of the victims who
linil not been crushed. They had been
smothered , nnd the discoloration of their
faces nnd necks gave visible evidence ot the
cause of death.
The president was Informed of the sad
event juat as ho reached the entrance of the
white house , by ono of the clerks and ho nt
once Intorcatcd himself in relief measures ,
learning with .satlsfnctlon what had been
done by Assistant Secretary of War Grant.
At thu HuA | > ltnl.
The superintendent in chnrgo of the
Emergency hospital says that none of the
men nl the hospital will ale.
The following injured are nt the hospital ,
their condition at present bolng too bad to
permit of removal :
R W. TEST , seriously , about fneo and
arms nnd fractured ribs.
FUANK MiyruM.r , seriously shocked from
fall.
fall.A.
A. L. AMKS , seriously Injured about the
neck , fuco and ankles.
KoiiKHTriMiTit , fractured skull ; operation
necessary.
An examination of the ofllulals shows
that the Insecurity of the building was
brought to the attention of congress in a
pointed manner as far back as 1SST ) . Atten
tion was then directed simnly to the army
medical library and museum. The protection
of human llfo was not especially brought In
the question.
Mr. S. M. Stockslagcrof Indiana , who was
chairman of the committee on public build
ings and grounds in the Forty-eighth con
gress , made a report In favor of I he construc
tion ot a now building for the museum an'l
library In place of Ford's theater , then used
for that purpose. "Tho building now used
by the medical department for its library
and museum. " ho said , "is not only too small
to contain the records of the library and
museum , but it Is unsubstantial and dis
posed to destruction by lire. "
11 Insecurity \Voll Known ,
When the bill was before the house for Us
consideration , Fobrunry 10,1SHT ) , Air. Slorlt-
slagersald : "There Is a medical museum ,
the most complete in the world , the result of
the grc.it war , which Is now kept , in the old
Ford theater building , a building totally in
adequate to Us safe keeping , a more tinder
box , surrounded by wooden huildimrs nnd
liable to bo destroyed by llro at any time. I
visited it a short time ago in company with
the surgeon general and fouiul the building
in an absolutely dangerous condition. The
building was originally nut up under a con-
trnct in ninety days and wns very badly con
structed. The east wall is more than twelve
inches out of plumb. The southwest corner
of the building has given way until there Is a
great crack in the wall and the oftlcers in
charge have been prohibited from putting
heavy articles into the upper story for fear
of pressing out the west wall. It is , indeed ,
in a tumble-down condition. "
General Sloeuni , who also visited the
building in the course of the same debate
said : "My attention was directed to the
importance of this proposed building by
visits to the building where the manuscripts
and books and specimens are now kept nnd I
do not bulievo that there is a gentleman on
this lloor who would hesitate to vote for this
bill after going there and seeing for himself
the value of the contents of that building
and the danger to which they are now ex
posed "
Ilntl No Thought for-lliiiniiu I.lfo.
Congress acted upon these statements to
the extent of removing the inanimate con
tents of the museum to a now and safe
building , but congress and the War depart
ment thought proper to expose governments
clerks to risks from which they shielded
skeletons and medical books.
From a responsible gentleman who yester
day took a look nt the work going on under
the doomed building , this statement is ob
tained : "As 1 passed the building Cap
tain M. H. Thorn , chief of the bureau of
supplies of the War department , seemed to
bo directing some work and I stopped to see
what it wns. There was a bride wall run
ning from the buck of the building to the
middle of the lower lloor. which it supported.
A number of workinpmen wcro excavating
under this wall for the purpose , ns
I wns told , of putting in nn
independent electric light plant und
they were preparing to support it by under
pinning. It now seems very evident to mo
that ns they undermined this brick wall the
first lloor gave way , the second lloor , being
supported by columns rested on that lloor ,
collapsed nlso , nnd that the third lloor col
lapsed In like manner. "
As soon as Secretary Lament returns to
Washington stops will probably bo taken to
thoroughly investigate- cause of the dis
aster and to llx the responsibility if the
coroner's Jury does not anticipate the de
partment In that direction.
The collnpso of the building had excited
earnest attention to two other great public
buildings believed to bo in an almost equally
unsafe condition ono the government print
ing ofllt-o , where l.SOO people are em
ployed ; the other Is the rickety shell
known as the Winder building , also be
longing to the War department and oeeupled
by hundreds of clerks of tliut department
and the second auditor's olllco , This place
is notoriously dangerous , and the lloors nro
overloaded , all of the facts bolng known to
congress for years , but receiving no atten
tion ,
IJulldinp Inspector Entwlstlo , who has
two assistants , was on hand shortly after
the accident occurred. Ho said that last
week application was made to him for u
permit to underpin the bulldlmr , but ho do-
cllncd to give it , as it was a government
building , nnd came under direct supervision
of the federal officers. In fact , ho Imd no
Jurisdiction over the government buildings
nnd was prohibited by law from in
terfering. The cause of the whole
nffnlr , ho said , wns undoubtedly duo to
the underpinning. The workmen dug
under the heavy upright columns which sup
port the building and the collnpso followed.
One of the workmen , a colored man , who
was employed In oxcavntlnjr the collar , and
who escaped with only slight cuts says : ' !
told them yesterday that thu archway would
fnll , for every time any ono wnlked ever the
lloor It would bend. "
Jt is thought thnt when the debris la
cleared away all the papers of value will be
recovered.
Hiivi ) tlio llndloK All Out ,
The laborers did not ccaso their efforts
until ntiout 7 o'clock , lly this time
they had reached the bottom of the oxra va-
tion in the basement and further se.in-h
seemed useless ns the debris in nil
parts of the building had been entirely
cleared away. Some hold thnt two laborers
who were nt work in the basement at tin
tlmo of the accident were still missing , but
ns the search had been so thorough , nothing
to warrant its continuance could bo shown.
Hut one body , that of Dr. Nelson , was found
during the lust novcn hours of the search
nnd these In charge of the work think it Im
possible that moro remain In the ruins. The
work wns therefore stopped , the streets
roped close to the building und u police
guard stationed thcro for the night.
Various plans for the relief of the suf
ferers are on foot. At a meeting of citizens
this afternoon ? 5f , > 00 was subscribed ,
President Cleveland , who had bout
asked to preside over the meet
ing , but was unable to do BO , because
of a pressing ofllclal business engagement
sent his check for tlOO nnd Secretary Thur
her his for t 3. The newspaper * of the cltj
are actively engaged in the good work am
the clerks in the department are contribut
iug liberally.
Thu number of dead is now known to lx
twenty-four aud the injured so furasasc r
tnlnnblo aggregates fifty-two. The hospl
tnl * all report the patients doing nicely.
In Iho Wreck ,
WASMIXOTOX , I ) , C. , .1 line S' . [ Special Tele
gram to TIIR UBK. ] The following Nebraska
clerks were employed In the ill-starred Ford
heater building which fell today : I. S.
linker , Injured on the head and hand , but
vnlkod homo , ills escape was most mira
culous. Ho fell from the third story to the
> nsoment , and was protected from the fall-
ng debris by an Iron joist , llo extricated
diuself nnd walked out. t' . II. Cast , .1.11.
) onoiT. H. Ixswls , C. Lucas. W. E. Kosen-
Nitnn , S. P. Spreeker and W. A. Tyler. S.
' . Spreeker , with thrco companions , es
caped by seeking shelter in a vault.
iiisToitY or TIM : nim.iitxu.
Drought Into \Vorld-\Vliln Prnmlnmico ! > )
Mncoln'H . \ * : mlimtlcin 1U IUer : ( Urn.
Note the coincidence ) tlio building In
which Lincoln was nssassinatod falls on Iho
noriiing of the funeral of the last surviving
brother of the assassin.
whole generation , as Unto is counted , has
passed away between the occurrence of the
awful tragedy which brought the odlllce
into world-wide nato and the hardly less
shocking catastrophe ) In which It figures
today. The date of the assassination was
April II , 1805.
Tlio building stood on the east sldo of
Tenth street W. . about midway between E
and F streets N. It was a plain brick struc
ture , painted dark brown , throe stories
high , having a frontage of sevonty-ono feet
and a depth of 10'J feot. Originally It was a
church , nnd then n theater. The building
was closed by Iho government limneklatoly
after the assassination , and twelve months
later it iwns purchased by congress fur
$100,01)0 ) for thu purpose of an Army
Medical Museum , to which it has
been applied , at the suggestion
of Surgeon-General Joseph 1C. Dnrncs , who
wns the founder ot the institution. The in
terior was taken out , remedied nnd made
lire-proof , leaving no tracing of tbo exact
scene of the assassination.
A Irent Loss to Sclmicc.
The museum was on the third lloor , and
was a unique. Institution , having no counter
part in America or Europe. It obtained
great celebrity and was visited by thousands
ef people , mostly mcdicnl men nud students ,
every year , who came from all parts
of the United States and abroad.
Visitors of every class were allowed
to Inspect its immense collections.
An attendant was at hand whose duty it waste
to answer questions relating to objects of
special interest. The iloor was well lighted
in front nnd roar nnd by a Inrgo central sky
light which also lighted the lloors
below through oblong openings. The speci
mens were arranged in cases and otherwise ,
divided into six sections , and numbered
10,000. The sections wove thu surgical , mod-
ic.il , microscopical , anatomical , the section
ot. comparative anatomy and the mis
cellaneous section. The museum was
founded in the interests of sci
ence , and its eolloution was the
finest of the kind in the world. The original
dcsiu'ii of the museum was the collection of
specimens illustrative of military surgery
and camp diseases tor the education of med
ical men for military service. Its destruc
tion will be a heavy , if not irreparable , loss
to the entire civilized world.
Vuluiihlo Itciordx Iuiniiiil. :
On the first lloor ot the Army Medical Mu
seum , ns the building has been called , wns
the pension nnd record division of the sur
geon General's department , where the
clerks employed numbered overlOi ) .
The majority were engaged upon matters
concerning the settlement of pension appli
cations. The hospital records stored on this
floor exceeded 10.UIK ) volumes , and as the pay
ment of pensions is based upon Information
received from these records the work of the
pension ofllco for some time to oonio is
likely to bo seriously impeded. The
alphabetical registers on this lloor , over
10.000 volumes , contained about t 1100-
000 names of the dead of the uriny
and besides these were the papers bulonuhig
to thu military hospitals and monthly
sick reports of the army during the re
bellion , 1SI51-0.1 , and these since received
from tlio various posts of the regular
army. The registers , in all , contained
the names of over 7,000,000 of
sick , wounded and deceased soldiers ,
and Hourly half the names were arranged in
convenient foim for overy-dny reference.
\nien roi'ovorod from tin' rains a largo portion
tion of this innnenso amount of v.ilunblo
military information as well as the records
of the civil war , which were preserved bo-
sidn it and very complete , is only too likely
to bo in n badly mutilated condition , and
much of it may hu irreparably destroyed.
TliuluiHitU nl" Mudleul Volumes.
The scco-.id lioor contained the library of
the surgeon general's- department , which
was considered to DO the largest and
best collection of medical books in
the World. In the cases wcro over
50.000 volumes and nearly seventy
thousand pamphlets , &omo of thorn very
ancient. They wore in man.\ languages , and
constituted n thorough history of medicine
nnd surgery , from the earliest times. The
library was used free of chnrgn by phy
sicians nnd was much resorted to , many
members of the profession going from dis
tant parts ot thu country to consult Us r.iro
and precious books.
On the north side , in the rear of the build
ing , wns n smnll wlntr , oecupird by tbo mu
seum workshops , nnd in front , on thn
south sldu. was another wing , used
by thu chemical labor.itory nnd the
ohiecr-s on duty. The laboratory .was charged
with the examination of alleged adultera
tions of medicines nnd hospital supplies , nud
other investigations of n similar nature
which come before the surgeon-general , who
has the cnio of the health of the army.
Among the most pn/.ed articles in the
museum were Illustrations comprising over
IiO.000 specimens taken from llfo ami arranged -
ranged in syslcmiUI,1. series. It was a very
interesting exhibition , even to the nonpro-
fesslonal. and furnished many instructive
object lessons. The display of surgical
implements and appliances was very largo
nnd Included the ancient ns well as the
modern , and thorn wns a Inrgo collection of
models of bnrrauks , umbulancns , railroad
cars for the sick nnd wounded , ect. A grunt
deal of pains wns taken with the museum ,
nnd yearly its unsurpassed collections have
been considerably inn-eased.
When one thitilis of the nature of tbo con
tents of tbo collapsed building , embracing
not only collections of various kinds and
rare value , but nlso slacks of documents
necessary in the purformanco of thu
functions of two important depart
ments of tbo general government , one
cannot but foci thankful that thn fnll of the
Btructurn was not attended , as l.s HO often
the casi1 , with tin outbreak of llro , since its
absence from the scene loaves some reason
tn hope that with careful iiiaiiagomont a
great deal may yet bu savod.
Ddiitlnv DIIIIII .Nuturo.
Drummer--It just boats nil. I'm traveling
for an umbrella homo , nud every plnco 1'vo '
struck has been suffering from drouth.
Inventor I'm traveling with a rain-pro-
duelng apparatusnud every town I'vostruuk
wns kneu deep in mud.
Drummer 1 say , lot's travel together.
j > j/&o.v.i ; ( i , I'.tn.i tin.i 1'iin.
Hov. A. J. Turklo nnd family returned
yesterday from their visit with friends in
Ohio.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Frank Gould of Portland ,
Ore. , nro In the city , guests oj Mr. William
Hochefoni , Jr.
Frank Lord , formerly with the Dollono , Is
now with the Ingram , Chicago , nnd w. A.
Fanning has suceeodod him nt thu Dcllonu.
E. YY. Btlcknoy and wife of tbo Mercer
Imvo gene to Denver for a visit of n couple of
weeks. Mr. Charles Cr.Uo will hold the day
desk in proper position during the abseneo
of Mr. Stick n y.
At the Mercer ; C. II Williamson , J. W.
McCabe , F. M. Halo. J. Mottor , II. lluitnur ,
Chicago ; W. W , Tlubudenu. Dead wood , S.
D.C. H. Hicks , Philadelphia ; L. W Rus
sell , Gleinvood , In. ; H II. StevensWestern ,
Nob. i Ed Schneider , Collc-go Park , Cal.
FOUND A WOMAN IN THE CASE
Developments of the Ooronor's Jury in the
Gotham Killing.
STORY OF CARLTON'S ' A LITTLE MIXED
Hitlli Worn IntcirrMcil In the Sninn Young
Womaii-Tliulr lin- llo AflHtr.4
l.lttlo CuiitiiMMl story
or the Urlnui.
There's a woman In the caso.
Yesterday inoining TUB HEI : printed n ills-
patch from l-Yemont , giving the particulars
so far ns then known , of the killing of Au
gust Gotham by Charles Corlton. Only from
what Carl ton told the sheriff of Dodge
county on giving himself up was anything
known of the crime , oven the Identity of the <
murdered man being covered ny throe nil-
dresses found and the gonorat statement
that ho was a tramp. From what was de
veloped yesterday H Is safe to assume that
the tragedy was ab.itit the last In u llttlo do
mestic affair that will bo all cleared up be
fore the end of the trial.
August Gotham recently came to Southl
Omaha from .Norfolk , his family coming
with him , nnd the household goods were
established nt ,1 and Twenty-third streets.
Now , Gotham was about ! . " > years ot ago and
had four children , the oldest a boy of Hi , the
youngest a boy of 7. Ills wife had been
dead some time when ho met nt Norfolk a
young woman , or rather a girl of IN. Fooling
the nocii ot a wife ho mailo inatrlmonlnl
overtures to Iho maiden , and thev accord
ingly went over to lovv.i last November and
were married. When the Gotham family
left the Norfolk homo for South Omaha the
young stepmother started with the others ,
but somewhere near Fremont she disap
peared , and from that time till his death
Gotham saw no more of her.
limiting Spun of Mule * .
Last week a span of mules belonging to
Gotham strayed , and on Wednesday ho
started in search of them. Quito nntur.illv
hu concluded they had beaded for Norfolk ,
ami so ho started In that direction. Uoforo
leaving ho gave to his son , Louis , S185 and
left him in elinrgo of the fi.mily. With him
the dead man took some $110 , most of which
sum was found on his person nftor his
death.
The next heard from Gotham was the report -
port from Fremont of bis death. At the
coroner's impicst yesterday U came out that
ho had found his missing wife. On reaching
Omaha from Norfolk , limilo. the oldest of
Gotham's sous , disappeared , and It was sus-
jM'ctml that ho bad returned to Fremont and
joined his stepmother. This suspicion is now
removed from the youmr man. According tote
to th : > testimony of Mrs. Gotham , she was
married last week at Tilden , Nob. to Charles
Carlton , who is now charged with killing her
lawful husband , .lust , how Guth.im made
the discovery will probably never bo known.
It is known that he met the man who
killed bun , and after a short conversation
with him wns shot.
Kurts I'rtnn 1'rmnoiit.
So far as facts concerning the deed are
concornotf-this.ilispateh from Fremont gives
about alt that have yet been bromrhtout
Fiii'.Mo.vr , Nob. , Juno ' . ) . ( Special Tele-
cram to Tim Hun. ] The court room wns
( tensely packed with men this afternoon to
learn moro of the particulars of the > shooting
yesterday. The evidence showed thnt
Charley Carlton , while coming to tlio city
yesterday with a team , met August Goth-
nn ; > IKI nfter a few words conversation
passed him , nnd taking another road re
turned homo und sent his wife and father
away from homo before Ciothan arrived.
After killing Gothan ho told several
neighbors what ho had done anil came to the
city and told tin : sheriff ho had shot a tramp
and wns locked tip.
Mrs. Charles Carlton , IS years of npo ,
testified to being married to Charley ono '
week ago last Monti iy. She saw the dead
man ami know him to bo August Gothan. .
Continuing , she said : " 1 came from Til-
den , Nub. , with three boys nnd ono girl.
They were my step-children. The dead man
was the father of the children. "
She ndmiltcd to the sheriff this morning
that they were married in Iowa last Novem
ber. A post-mortem examination found
Uirco gun shot wounds in the head of
Gotham. The Jury adjourned until tomor
row.
I.UU.ll. ItHKI'JTIKS.
The annual election of officers of the
Omaha Tnrnvereln will take pmco next
Monday ul Gcrmnnin hall.
Mr. William Anderson , who has fur several
years been n familiar llgun ; behimt the desk
at the Murray , has resigned.
Mayor JJemis hns approved tli oruinnncu
llxing the hc'i'iises of circus. > s nt $ .wj for
llrsl-elass , WUO for second-class aiul SlOO for
third-class.
The Indies of the Saratoga fV-'H'i'fpMtional
church will give a dimicr nnd > * i > per on
Saturday at the Young Mali's C hristian
association hall 11 : : ! ! ) to a nnd : > , ' ! 0 t J 7 * ) .
Union Veteran Legion encainpmi nt 21
will hold a regular assembly on Saturday
evening at S o'clock sham. Klet'tlmi and Im
portant business will be tbo order of the
evening.
The blto of n cat of n few days npo caused
the hand of the 8-year-old daughter of
Andreas Xiinmcrman , residing at 11 0 North l
Thirtieth i street , to nwi-ll to such proper-'I
lions that amputation was thought necessary
fora while.
Huilding Inspector Tillv Is causing the '
walls of the Shlvorlck building to bo torn
down as rapidly as possible. In a day or so
he expects to have the portions down thai
ho considers necessary in tlio interest of
public safety.
Deputy Sheriff Lawls jcstnrday re
ceived circulars from onof tbo eastern -
ern liuinano societies , requestui' ' . ' him to bo
u party to tlio stopping of thu cowboy rico
from Children to Chicago , nii < ! nlTi ring him
.r.Miil if he would hold llio bjys ui > on the
route. ' '
The Veteran Fii-fc.r-'r will mfr-i Siiinlny
evening n't 7:15 : o'clock as Mitx MI-JII store
at hlxti'imth and Farnnm. In full ui > ir > < nii.to .
attend the lionuilt perforJimm o at the Far-
iinm Street theater for tin' fiiiiuh-s < .f thu
firemen who were killed or injured nt thu
hhlvurlfk llro a week ngo.
Tlio long drawn controversy ever the
boarding of the city prisunurs has been
ndjudiented and thu city und > 'i/u ty hnvu
passed receipts by which they h.u-u uijuared
up nil of the accounts to the 1st of last
January , the city Contributing ifiu.ooi ) for the
purposi ) of innking the Kottlemont. The
money wns turned over to thu county yester
day.
m 1
Mra , Amanda /'afw/oy /
For manyyoars nn esteemed communicant o !
Trinity Kjilscopal church , Ncnbuigh , N , Y. ,
always siit ; "TluinU You" to Iluod's Bar-
haparllln. Hlio suflert-d for year * Irom l.ranna
nnd Hrrofulu soies on her face , licaU nud
oar. < , maUInu her deaf nearly a year , and nltrct-
JiiK htr sl lit. To the surprlio ol hur Jilciid *
Hood's SarsapaHlla
Ha > clfi-ctcil a cure nnd she can now hoar and
sco as well aj ever. 1'or full parttcuUin ot licr
case send to 0.1. HOOD & Co. , Lowell , Mass.
HOOD'S PILLS " hand mtdo , aba art j > V
( < clla couilltloupjoyoill'B anil Jp mnc .