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Show f- OGD EN DAILY COMMERCIAL. OGDEN, UTAH. SATUKDAV MOUSING. APRIL VOLUME V. NUMB Ell 13. skirt, quality t.4 the underdraws and )U LortoM ot the upper drapery. The 1I Biode bubt approved of by the adherent of socie ty is the Syrian trousers and vrlvt--t zouave f ail of silk over bodice. Ladies crowded the exhibiThe YanJerbilt Road is IU-Ior- tion ball to look kt the new eombma-Uooa- . The Congress Nearly in Favor No Bieoiber of the society, ha of Free Coinage. as Coining. yet rent u red to walk out in the rational costume fur public eritKusui. to the New Orleans lynchTRADE. ing paper here print eUtietu-- s allowing DON'T WANT FBEE THIS ArPEAKS PROBABLE. that Italian murder returns exceed tbee of every other nation oo the earth. The Russian influenza is spreading in Cutt-riii- ; a Efsolution fertile Burial The Northwestern Vast Soon Have a Licdon, Hhettiekl and Birmingham. of AuiUHfeities Between the Lancert predicts a wider extension of rariffir Oat let and Osdeni tie North and South. the area of the epidemic unless milder ITare t Find It. weather chicks it cow WILL BL'ILD TO OGDEN. ted Chicaoo, April 17. A story is told here today bich thro a new light on a trip of Cornelius Yanderbiit and party to the far weet- - It bad been reported that the party was to meet Jay Gould in Denver for a conference, the object being to arrange for a harmonious combination of interests in working out the western railroad problem. This is denied by parties in a position to obtain iuride fecta. It is said the movement of the is for the purpose of heading off Gjuld. If Gould had attended the meeting of the advisory board of the western traftio association this week, it was the intention of President Hugh-itt- , to have of the northwestern, 'had an understanding on the quotation of divisions of through rates between that road and the Union Paeilic It has r traflic teen asserted that the .ontract with the Northwestern has been ignored by the Union Pacific since Mr. Gould obt&ined control. Through business being largely divided to the Pacific and the Northwestern people have been growing indignant and when it was found that Gould had no intention of attending the meeting Hughitt telegraphed the fact to New York. The result was that Yanderbiit, D.pew, Rossiter and Trombley immediately started west in a special train. It is said their object was to reach Denver in advance of Gould and be the first in the Held in making preliminary arrangements for carrying out their plans. These plans, it is alleged, involve the ultimute extension of the Northwestern system to Ogden. The Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri Valley division already reaches Fort Casper, and the laying of two or three hundred miles of track in asouthwest-erl- y direction will connect it with the Central Pacific at Ogden. When this is done, the Northwestern will parallel the Union Pacific its entire leDgth,' and will possess an immense advantage in having the Chicago terminus. It is said this has been contemplated for a long step time by the Vanderbilt interests, but the scheme was abandoned when the trallio contract between the Northern and Union Pacific was perfected. Now that that contract is a deid letter, the northwestern will delay no longer in establishing itself on an independent footisg. Should the plan be carried out, it can hardly fail to work considerable injury to the Union Pacific. Furthermore it would limit the effect of combinaproposed tion in the southwest and save to Chicago and the northwest much business that must otherwise be diverted to other routes. Van-derbi- lt ten-yea- Mis-aou- short Jay Gould in Kansas Citj Kansas City, April 17. Jay Gould nd party arrived here this afternoon. In conversation! with a reporter, when asked about the alarming reports regarding the collapse of the Western Trallio association, he said there was no truth in Neilherhenor Mr. Clark atthem. tended the meeting of the advisory board in Chicago, because it was not necessary. "We will," he said, "attend all meetings of the Western Traffic association that it i necessary for us to attend in New York City." Heavy Suits for Damages. Chicago, April 17. Three suits fi r damages, aggregating 8300,000, were tiled in the superior sourt this morning against John I. Blair a millionaire railroad man of Blairstown, N. J. The plaintiff in the suits are Theodore G. C.ise, a Chicago lawyer, who sues for services and for damages for libel, and George Hiles, a Wisconsin railroad magnate and landowner, who placos his d.iuiages at 8550,000. . England's Scandals. London, April 17. Copyright 1891 by he New York Associated Press. The 1 ibby report associates others besides Captain Verney and De Cobain with the scandals that will require their retirement from the commons. The "social purity" vigilants to whose private shadowing are due these charges against Verney and Might of De Cobain have been hunting down other members suspected of being unfaithful to their wives. Some of these resented the action of the viglants and joined in the demand for an apology while in other cases the result has been inquires leading to the divorce court. Regarding Captain Verney, intimate friends hold that he is guiltless of knowingly abetting the Procuress Florent in inve'gling girls. The police have lost 1, li nun l Vlnnf i ivjiouw. A topic extensively discussed in society at present is the exhibition of the Lady Harborton, Mrs. Oscar Wilde, and other ladies are aiming ti introduce new dress combinations, the rationnllity . I. ....;,, i !, l, OI Willed coiibitna iu liio uichj ui luu line. ENGLISH YKSSEL WRECKED. Ninety Persons are Reported Drow lift I Other Honolulu News. Sax Fbaxcisoo, April 17. The steamship Monowai, which arrived here today from Sidney and Honolulu brings of the British ship Si. Catha-ri- n being wrecked off theCaroline islands The and ninety persons drowned. Hawaiian superintendent of census states that the preliminary summary of the population of the kingdom gives a total of ninety thousand persons, native Hawaiian, who either of pure or mixed blood, are in their minority, their number having decreased ei,;ht er cent, while the number of Hawaiian born foreigners had increased thirty six per cent. ri Gould-Huntingto- n :.. The Canadian Sou Line. MissKiPOUN April 17. An interesting bit of railroad news conies to t he surface todav to the effect that the Canadian Pan tie railroad inteods to complete its western extension of the Sou route and make it the main hue between Boston and Montreal and the Pacific coant, and making it a transcontinental I'aniell Defeats Morley's Aim. London, April 17. In the commo.is, today, Thomas Sexton, one of the members for Belfast, who was loudly cheered by the McCarthyites and by the liberals during the course of his debate upon the Irish land bill, strongly condemned attitude lest night, when the latter made an attack upon the liberals policy. Sexton said the liberal position was not changed, but that ParneU's" attitude had undergone a change. Parnell proposed an amendmeut to the Morley motion, making it operative whenever the local government bill was passed. It would prevent Mr. Morley's object from being attained, which object was to compel the conservatives to give Ireland a local Morley's amendment was to the effect that an advance of money should not be granted. Morley's aud ParneU's aDiendmens are rejected. Chamberlain, Russell, Major Saun-derso- n and Col, Nolan continued a lively debate, Tim Healy made a bitter attack on Parnell, and his followers for their inconsistency, which' was spiced with references to the fox that had lost its tail. Parnell, before a full house, again turned on Healy and Sexton, they were, he said, trying in an underhand way to destroy the bill. He offered to withdraw his amendment if Morely would withdraw his and allow the hous to divide on Sextons nmendment, which would fulfill the dual object. Morely assented, but tho government insisted upon a division. Parnell lias issue! a manifesto ad dressed to the niendiers of the national league of Great- Britain in which he says: "The attempt of seceders to wrest the national league of Great Britain out of the national hands, forces me to take a step to thwart them." Parnell savs the seceders are resolved to drive him from public life and make an English statesman the arbiter of Ireland's des tiny and calls upon his fellow countrymen in Great Britain to ignore the convention summoned bv the Irish Enwhigs, under the shadow of to declare glish influence, and that Irishmen alone shall regulate the conduct of Irish business. The seceding members of the executive of the league of Great Britain having resolved to make the organization ftn English electioneering machine, he has, pending the meeting of the convention, constituted a provisional executive "consisting ot members of the old executive who were faithful to Ireland, and of the representative Irishmen residing in England whose names are a guarantee of their worth and patriotism." Par-nell- 's Washburn's Close Call. Ohioaoo, April 17. The official canvass of the vote ended today. Washburn (republican) for mayor gets a plurality of 290 over Mayor Creiger. The official canvass returns of the recent municipal election were completed this afternoon. It practically settles the matter, although, as several precincts are subject to a revision, it is possible that there may be some changes. Hempstead Washburne (Republican) is elected mayor by a plurality of as'.). The unexpected surprise of tho dav was the heavy gain made by Kern, the democratic candidate for city attorney, in the last few of the wards canvassed. The gain was so great that it elected him by a plurality of 1,172 over Richolson not (rep.), whose election heretofore-habeen questioned. Kiol Bassa, the democratic candidate for city treasurer, was successful by a plurality of 4,2os, his triumph being due to a strong combination of Irish and Polish, and dissensions an Cleave (rep.) among the Germans. for city clerk, lead his ticket with a plu rality of over 5,000. Mayor Cregier, in an interview with a representative of the local democratic paper this evening, when asked what he was going to be, said: "I am going to be, first and above all things, a Democrat, for the next two years. I am going to saw wood to help save tho state for the democracy in 1892. The great and only difficulty is the deadly work of the traitors to the party." d While services were being conducted the cathedral at Haizen in Austria, a shoemaker in the congregation suddenly drew a revolver and tired at the priest wno reu ueau iefore the altar in KiNsA Citv. Aprd 17. -- ol. A. C Fisk of Denver delivered an address upm irrigation. It was estimated that there are one million square miles of arid lands in the western country that could be made productive by irrigation. At the minimum price of public lands, 9125 per acre, this land bad a value of 10 per acre, the moderate $)0,uuat estimate of value when irrigated, it If these would be worth f i9.2tJ0,0iM. lands were properly provided with water one could scarcely contemplate what an empire of population and wealth it would contain. It was said the people of the regins that desired irrigation should provide it theinselve, without agriculture the lands would never be settled and there would be no people to provide irrigation. The govenruent should start the work. Mr. Wickliffe, of New Orleans, spoke upon the immigration and settlement of vacant lands from the text "America for Americans." He had been told, he said, that this land is broad enough already, but he submitted that the old world has made it the dumping ground for paupers and criminal clauses and he believed that he spoke for the whole American people when he said the time has come that it must stop. There is enough room for all who want to come here to !e one of us, but not a foot ot ground for one of those paupers and criminals of the old world. "I may feel to deeply Uwn this subject," added Wickliffe, "but I have lately come from the most terrible object lesson which clearly indicates the need of a change of our immigration laws. He argued for vigorous action by the national congress. The majority report of the committee on resolutions made today, favors the free coinage of silver and an issuance of a sufficient amount of legal tender notes, redeemable in both gold and silver to restore equilibrium between money and all other products; a tariff for revenue only; that the interstate commerce of the country should be controlled by the general government and favors the improvement of the Mississippi river, endorses deep water harbor for Galveston, favors the construction of a ship canal connecting the northern lakes with the Atlantic, declares it the judgment of congress that the Mississippi river can and should be made navigable for ocean steamers for a considerable distance above New Orleans and recommends the construction of levees from St. Paul to the gulf, recommends a system of canal and slack water navigation to connect the "waters of the Ten-- n ee with the Gulf of Mexico, also a s'lip canal from the headwaters of the Ohio to Lake Erie and from Lake Suit faperior to the Mississippi, of the construction vors the Nicaragua canal as distinctively an under American American work control, and favors prohibition of nonresident ownership of lands, recom mends the admission of ISew Mexico and Arizona int j the union, And in conchis the rejiort hails with delight the spirit of fraternity displayed by the The minority delegates in attendance. report was identical, except in regard to the silver and tariff. ' Hennepin canal and other water ways the equalization of the government; by taxation, a national bankrupt law, the suppression of trusts and combines, the amendment to the immigration laws, the restoration of railroad land grants to the public domain and the opening of surplus lands to settlement, the re claim ing of arid lands, the enactment or laws to prevent dealing in futures and commends the secretary of ngriculture for his efforts towards removing the restrictions on our foreign meat trade. The minority report favors free, unlimited coinage of American gold and silver on a ratio established by an monetary convention which shall make silver and gold of equal purchasing power; favors a tariff for revenue with incidental protection. The free coinage and tariff resolutions of both reports were received with applause, as was that relative to the immigration law. A resolution, which was hailed with delight, for the burial of all animosites between the north and south received tremendous applause,and upon a motion of Major Warer, of Missouri, was given three hearty cheers. E. V. Smalley spoke for the minority silver resolution, General Waner, of Ohio, replying. The silver clause of the minority report was then voted down. The minority tariff resolutious were then taked and again Smalley presented the minority's case. He said there had been to much polities in the committee. When he accepted the chairmanship he did not expect that the democrats would crowd their party platform down his throat. He claimed by interference that the convention had been packed in the interest of the Democratic party and that the congress was really being held for the purpose of welding together the Democrats and the Farmers Alliance. Speaker Niblock, of the Indiana legisany lature, denied that there had been and partisan discussion in the comittee, Congressman-Elec- t Bryan, of Nebraska, wanted the congress to have the courage of its convictions. The debate was participated in by others and became very acrimonious. Finally General Warner, of Ohio, submitted the following as a D,.ui!tit fnr fiiA tariff resolutions of both reports: "We favor neither free trade nor exclusion of trade, but favor a tariff for revenue limited to tho actual needs of the government, economically an lnviod- ns to cover ..... w tlUliHiimivivi lnt the differences in industrial relations between this and other countries, but itder-nation- w 1. ritlCE FIVE CENTS. 1691. not to create sod foster mooopoi;." After long drbw I'rw.drtt Franca HARRISON AT MEMPHIS ruled the resolution out of order. Gnd.ey (M.ce.,u then to subeUVJt fur the minority a similar to Wartter's aad it addled. The debate of the minority as a U4 (jiveii a lifrejftion by the Mavor was begaa, and the d.-ueiaratti ami a o?rl irt r-- it a acy idea as to Low or where the matter ill end. It w oft. iitlJy decied that there is any truth m the rejjort aent from Ivme to the Di! t'hrociK'le of London that Porter, the L'n;ted hutea minister to Italy, mas upon tiie point of departicg from IVanie on a three months" leav of Coventor. On. anoortty , ' nw cMoioLi.w cLared ue ooefreea with being e ithicg but a dem The President at Little Rork. ortnltc eon reoUon. The t Largt caused .MEETS HIS OLD l'LAYMATE 1U a. Ark, LiTTi.r April 17- .- Presigreet tumult. Finally the representadent and party received a Harriajn of the business union of St. Pul tives cordial weUvMiie at this point. Goyernor a ithdrew from the eon veo tion. The m la the Old Colored Fag Se of Arkansas, the mayor of Little Shape of a report wsa then voted down. The Bot k aud a committee of citizens escortWemau W hj Brlou-e- d consideration of the majority report aas to Hi ed the party from Memphis, A military proceeded with, and the debate again ftidute was tired as the train reached Father iu "Ole Vlrfftury. beoaase intensely partisan and heated, th's city and the president was cheered final!? a vote was uken by a rail of by a Uiiyrt cruad which had aifeeuibled. on the Utt adoption jf the majority Mkmahis Aprd 17. Ttie pridiiiiil He and the remainder of the party were and was it to ji, all of party arrived here this mornirig fur so escorted to the report adoptyd, state bouse, where an the BUte dfkgstiona bring divided upon all run from Ala. Birmingham. address of welcome by the governor the question. The reaulutHins as a a hole Tl.enight only incident of the run ix i urrrvl at was responded to by the president. Secwere then adopted. n was to Ala. illuniitiatnl That hubk and Postmaster General "Consideration of majority report pro- JasMr, and 2Vi inhabitants eie gath- retary Wanamaker, after which the president ceeded with- -' The minority report by ered nearly r th.-iat the station to pay t. held a public reception. The party left the California delegau also failed. I t As BXHit of the prwidentikl party bad this evening for Texarkana. was: We object to the free coinage of retired for the night, eiiple were silver on the ground that the tax payers at not being able tost tl.em. LIKE SARDINES IN A BOX. of the United States are now buying all and other munL-ipa- l Mayor Clapp of tha silver output at about 97 cents oBuvrs received the president and party per ounce. Whereas it m claimed free on their arrival here. A Urge crowd, They All Beached Their De&tiuatiou coinage will raise the price to I l.Jlt per including the local military, gathered at Alive. ounce, we see uo use of tax payers ad- the station, and burst into cheers as the Conn., April 17. When D. vancing silver. We recommend the chief executive apiteared. The party P. Shki.ton, Ioveland. of Vermont, purpurchase of the silver output of ttie was immediately taken in carriages to chased a farm in northern this vicinity recently a United States for money used at the the exchange where thous- serious problem presented iUelf to him. lowest bidder's price, just as the govern- ands of people had aKeemblfd. The He had a house full of goods and some ment pow buys any other article it ot introwelcome in address his mayor live stock. To sell them meant a sacrineeds. duced the president and he replied in a fice to him, so he set his Yankee ingeSmalley of Minnessota then said, that short sjeech. to work to see how he could as the congress had degenerated itself He congratulated the people uKn the nuity into a democratic pow wow, he desired, progress made and rejoiced to know move his stuff to his new home in tVmnecticut too heavy without as a delegate, to resgin as that they had turned their thoughts to week he arrived Last expennes chairman of the committee on resolu- spinning cotton as well as it. He here and this a bow he d'd tion! Then a great disturbance arose, knew no reason why they raising should export it. He went to the station agent in his air rent with hwsos and the being groans it as raw material rather than as a manchartered the largest and mingled with cheers and applause. ufactured product, holding in their town and m.'it box car to be had. 1 hen he Smalley's oponenta attempted to howl midst the profit of the transformation of onded his goods into it. These consis him down, but he stood bis ground until the raw material to the finished goods. household goods, one he had finished his say. A resolution In closing his seech, which waa inter- ted of aa'd his and a horse rake, 5I0 plow by Bryan of Nebraska was adopted urg- rupted many times by prolonged cheers wagon, Miunds of butter, hf ty bushels of pota-:oeto tba law a congress ing pass making the president thanked the people for the two barrels of buckwheat, three all legal money legal tender, notwith- warm welcome extended him. five cows, two pigs, eleven sheep, iorse. contracts call which may standing any Calls were made for Postmaster Gen and three turkeys. chickens By sixty for the discharge of an obligation by the eral Wannaiuaker, who reejoiided in a putting up partitions and making a loft Other resolutions few well chosen remarks. He was fol- over payment of gold. the cows and horses for the smaller were adopted, endorsing the World's lowed by Secretary Hunk, after which animals and poultry, he got his live Fair, endorsing the Torrey bankruptcy there was a reception. After the presi stock into of less than bill and making the congress a perma- dent had shaken hands wi'.h a large car. Then he becan at the the nent organization to meet number of people the party went to the The congress then, at 9:15 p. m. ad- depot where another reception whs held. other end, packing in his househould and his wagon gods, taking meet executo of call at the the journed A number ot beautiful floral offerings horso rake for the sake of com apart tive committee. were placed on the train by the pactness. These occupied nearly half of Governor r.agle and the committee the car. Ihen he slung a hammock from WANTED HIM TO HAXti. who arrived this morning met the party the roof of the car, put in a stove, run at the depot and will act as an eecortjto ning the pipe out of the door, Bnd preThe Crowd Tried to Lvnch Haven-stinLittle Kock. to accompany the goods himself, pared taken 11:55 was the train At nlard lie in a bale of hay and some grain, Who Was Reprieved. boat of the Little lUn-- and and put the a stack of canned goods enough to . ferry 1' roan, on .lme Omaha. April 17. The crowd which .nempnis wayioine.r last him for a week. Bread and meat he had gathered to witness the hanging of kansas capital. purchased wherever the train stopped liavenetine, was incensed at the action During the ovation of Memphis Mayor long enough. The. trip occupied five hi the gorernor, and three attempts were Clapp in his address of welcome to the that time Mr. Loveland !8ys. During made to lynch the reprieved man. president, said; "this is a restored. the car with his effocls and his Armed with crowbars the mob made an paramonious and lndestructiuie union occupied and says he enjoyed the trip. attack on the jail, but the sheriff and In dealing with the greatest problem animals, held them at our confronted ever armed, has T he Trouble Settled . bay, that deputies, fully people.it made pacific is our intention to be lust and law and leading citizens Lisbon, April 17. The troubles which with speeches and the crowd finally aban abiding; while at the same time resulted in the resignation ot the mem-Ijer- s doned its purpose. an instinct which pervades our race, on of the cabinet have been satisfacparamount aim is to guard our social torily settled. A Double Hanging. nuritv. preserve our civilization and caucasion prestige and Small pox on Board. Tahlkocah, I. T., April 17. George maintain our North and Fred Dunawas were hanged at l:,io supremacy. Nkw York, April 17. The witnessed was A incident just German pleasing with 921 this afternoon for the murder last Sep steamer Fulda, Lloyd Esther lefore the train left the depot. tember of Wash Lee, a Cherokee. steerage passengers aboard Brrived in Mosby, an aged colored woman who bethis morning but was delonged to Harrison's grandfather, John quarantine Two Mnrders Expiated. to a case of smaUpox on tained owing E. Page, and who was a playmate of the board. 17. William Npw Orleans, April at in Pacebrook, childhood, Green, colored, was haneed here today president Va.. was trying to get a glimpse of him. THE BUKMEANS SIWW FIGHT. Bt Gretna for the murder of Joseph From window to window of his car she found she frosper, oolered, in January, ltyjo. had satisfied not until went, Lacrens, S. C, April 17. Walker him and shaken him cordially by the Want to Resent the Destruction of Brown hanged today for the murder of Their Temple. hand. It is hardly inmsible to tell who Noah Ketnage, last October. enjoyed the meeting more, the president Benares, April 17. The excitement in or his old playmate. this city originating from the demolition Attorney-Genera- l Miller. of the temple increases every hour. All Washington, April 17. The cindition Mexico. in His the shops are closed; all natives of the For Reeeption of Attorney-Genera- l Miller continues to and district have sullenly stopped 17. Colonel city City op Mexico, April improve but owing to his illness the El Paso to meet work and are gathering in large crowds for left has Villaneuva sea sealers' Sayward Behring case, in and about the principal thoroughfares. which was to have been argued before President Harrison on his arrival there result is the serious riots which the United States supreme court next and invite him in the name of the Mexi- The have already occurred between the navisit this to can country. government will be further postponed. Monday, President Diaz has found it impossible tives and local authorities. British troops are guarding all the to leave Mexico now owing to the press Quarrel of Sheep Owners'. of official business and because congress banks and public buildings and will also Kanab, April 17, JoBeph Stafford of is in session. The governor of the state occupy many points of vantage throughthe tirm of Stafford & Butts, sheep of eventually. The Chihuahua and the military com- out the city and district inowners was shot and killed at a ranch mandment of that district will also meet effect of the spirit of resentment and is on' Buckskin mountain on Monday by President Harrison at El Faso and ten- dignation existing among the Hindoos F. T. Tilton, also a sheep owner. Mr. already felt far and wide in India and der him the hospitality of Mexico. Tilton, Bnd his partner, Mr. Weymouth, cannot at present be correctly estimated. were the only ones present, and report The Indians Feel Unsettled. that it was done strictly in The Races at Memphis. 17. Captain April Washington, Memphis, April 17. There was a trac POCATELLO ON THE ALERT. dash; twt Penny, United States army, acting In- fast here today. Half-mil- e dian agent at Pine Ridge, has written year-oldSam Farmer won; Nihanti Lank Sharks and Speculators not unrlar dato nf tha 7t.h n loni? letter to second, Minnie Gee third. Time 52. Three-quarte- r the commissioner ot Indian affairs relamile dash; Linlithgo Wanted. tive to the situation at Pine Ridge. He won; Laura Doxey second, Frose He PocatelIiO, Idaho, April 17. A mass says the Indians look upon the recent ard third. Time 1.19. " meeting of the property owners and legislation by congress as only another Half mile and a sixteenth; handii other residents was held at the opera promise, but their confidence is some- for s and upward; Blarni house here last night to take steps to- what strengthened by the performance stone jr. won; A tticus second, Hocksey ward forming an organization for the of the agreement as to rations. He urges, third. Time 1.52. half-milprotection of property owners from however, that the recent legislation be dash; Jim land sharks and speculators at the com- carried into effect with all proper speed. won ; Leonra J. Second, Queen Muephy ing Bale of lots in July and to see that Ite says there is danger 10 oe Olivia third. Time 52. nf future trouble, and bases his every one who had built a borne or busOne mile dash; Redsign won; Gilford iness houses would be allowed to pur- conclusion upon the fact that the people second Sourire third, time 1:46. nave chase the lot on which it stands at its are in a state ot unrest, not, One mile dash: L. H. won; Bob iney A and value. twelve committee of houses propappraised begun farming- Their second; T. J. Rusk third. Time was appointed to decide on a plan of ac erty were plundered and there is a feelU9.. tion and the meeting adjourned after ing of discouragement. A Monstrous Stoek Combine. listening to eloquent addresses from the leading citizens. The feeling is very inNew Cure. Another St. Louis, April 17. D. Andrews, of tense and the forming of a vigilance comFort Texas, who represents a in 17. Worth, Medical circles Paris, April mittee is talked of. France are greatly interested in the new syndicate of Texas and Kansas stockis authority for the statement that system of troating tuberculosis diseases. men, Yesterday's Base Ball The new method was discovered by Pro- contracts are completed under which AT ST. LOUIS. fessor Germania See. According to his the syndicate will control over 8000 acres of laud on the Missouri. The idea is to 7 Columbus. 4 plan patients suffering from tubercuSt. Louis losis pass four or five hours daily in a keep the cattle on the western lands AT LOriSVlLI.E. e until two years old and then send them close chamber in air saturated with for a year's fatting on corn. eucalyptol. Several excellent and to Missouri 3 Louisville. ...41 Cincinnati was forced upon stockmen permanent results have been announced This move owing to the action of the government as obtained. in expelling them from the Cherokee Married a Colored Divine. outlet and other grazing districts. As Italy Sees It. Putnam, Conn., April 17. Mattie AW bott, a belle of this city and a handsome Rome, April 17. The Messagero today A (irain Frm Kail. and accomplished girl, has just married says Blaine's reply to di Rudim's last New York, April 17. The failure of the Rev. C. E. Roberts, a colored minis- note evinces a great desire to elude the ter of Haverhill, Mass. Miss Abbott demand of the Italian government; to J. M. Shaw & Co., of New York and became acquainted with the colored di- escape from indemnifying the families Chicago, is just announced in the stock vine by playing the organ at his church. of the men lynched at New Orleans, and exchange. The firm has been mainlv in grain. to refrain from acceding to the Italian interested Prot. Bennett Dead. in the to intervene government's right Decreased Bullion. Chicaoo, April 17. Rev. Charles W. New Orleans affair. London, April 17. The bullion in i, The Popolo Romano also discussing Bennett, professor of historical theology at the Garrett biblical institute at Blaine's reply says in view of the tenor bank of England has decreased 0fX) r" of Blaine's answer it is difficult to form pounds during the last week. Evanston, died this morning. aaausoed n - trtoi& I form. . i. rt-i- x dinnp-pointe- d Men-hantt- n s, one-thir- e, k e. three-year-old- e appre-homlf- Mc-Ca- rt cre-sot- |