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6 OCCIDENTAL JOTTINGS CAL!!'OR‘"A. iding the State ud mear th n It The Stockton " t for the cireulation of books on e vl A ¢ mhorin twvel N N rdered & route surveved fron fro com to Placerville divec Los Angeles county, turns out 1,000 ponnds cheese daily, with neigh! are raging, Many t trees are destroyed ed by incendiaries in tl itain fire fires are ca W for gravel mining i« hec e in Sie County, The American | Hill hydraulic claim has already shut down, and other slickens factories will follow suit s fruit trees of Gilroy valley are overs . Plumsand peaches hanz: ers like wrapes, amd orchs ving the limbs with an eye to Durdene An agate bowlder twelve feet long, vight wide and four feet thick, was found near | Rich Bar, in Plu nty. The minera lear and e and would make sleeve-buttons for the world | A swarm of bees in the Sweetwater val ley re m,l\ pettled o rattlesnake mens. uring six feet in length, inches in girth and hnm. rattles. They stung hing violent] he was blind, “twisting and | quiverir U was casily Killed with | spade, About 500 (7hin:un: n live at San Pedro, most of them being oceupied in and drying shrimps and fish. It whrimps m actuall now the Chinamen of them yearly. 1,600 tons of sturgeon a year. OBEGON 2,020 Odd Feliows in Oregon, ate grange held ity wes There are The Or expressed loy over the propo freights by the Oregon and Navigation company. The work of constructing line fiwln U nnlLllln, on the l I nmenced immedi- uuh L)u tri way nn‘i Boston |h~l< at ]{m‘ churg have 1 ing tor the purchase from th o tors of the franchise of tha Ros (d Coos Bay railvoad, The incor- wtors will not sell unless the guaranty 1 will ) mmence hed in two years, in Douglas county (Oregon) | find the sta; 1 thro wonville Canon practicable for the Oregon and California railroad —a thing not dreamed of before, This saves over eighty wmiles, compared with the generally accepted | ronte around the spur of the mountains, in six monthy and fi Surveyors company i l rnmm 0 firm for building a lhu,h over the Yamhill at Lafayette, to It will be 160 1 water wtack of the largest boat t the upper Willamette is onl, the water, the bridge will navigation acuctiire 1t is currently pum.l that the u..-m-u railroad and Navigation conipany had pur- chased the Oregonian railway, limited, from the Scotch company. This is n nar- row gange, thus far confined to the Willa- metto valley, with the boasted intention of ultimately “connecting with the Central Pacific | aching out toGovernor Wood' Oreyon and Nevada railroad. The O, Railroad and Na reported to have purchased Starr's line of Puget Sound steamers. MONTANA. ht inches of snow fell in Tong anc Ax the versing Helena last Tontana works will be immediately rebuilt, Virginia City is going to ¢ Fourth of July. rate the A stone l'l m\ml church 86x60 is soon to be ere at Butte, The Utah North be removed to One we Butte aggregated 5] 3 There are 100 nien prospe in the hills north of Kuby rivi The Silver Bow compar trict will add 10 stamps to Recently 8000 buffalo robes were solid Carroll at prices ranging from $6 to %7, in- cliding GutRpARClE T A latge canal to the Missouri ri ilex in length, has been compl some agriculturists, in Meagher county, The Iudians have made o raid on the set- tlers in the vicinity of Stillwater, running off nearly all the stock. The military has started in pursuit. Thirty Red river carts accompanind by their half-breeed drivers, 1 the Judith Basin, lately came to Helena with 600 huf- falo robes, besides skiny and furs, dried | meat and pemmican, One day last week eighty sti powdder accidentally exploded ton mine, at W, nlkenlll heanl for miles around, was felt thr ern torminus will soon k. f Butte dis- heir mill r, seven e by the | cks of Giant 1 the Moul- The noise was and the shaking ighout the town, The Associated Stock Growers of Fort | hundued | The price | Benton have contracted for one blooded bulls for their rage wis 310,000, and they » b be brought from Minoid and landed huu h) boat this summer, The loss on the Northern Pacitic railroad during the late i on the Hart river, is larger than at first reported. 1) W only sustained a loss oven pile bridges, but fifteen miles of roadbed was wasked away. Old Fort Benton, which was built over thirty-five years wgo, is almost a complete wreck, The winds and storus of almost half a century the adobes, until the structure s & woe-begotten and dila ance, ave warped und eated into now ‘WASHINGTON. Seattle proposes to light her stroets by electricity Deny looses Ly fire in the past year aguregated $250,000. A free bridge is to be built across the Spokane river at the Falls, Last week the Durango coach was stop- ped by four highwaymen and the passen gers robbed. A collision oceured lust week on the Dan- ver and Rio and road Ly which four lives were lost, | Large booms are being placed across the mouth of the Takima in suticipation of the log drive in August, Auditor French says the Cascade division of the Northern Pacific railrosd must be built imnmllnul) or its charter will be forfeited. Grasshoppers have made their appear- nal thinks the |t o has increased 200 | mormon increase has been onl. | tum, THE ) Telegraph Conipan last week to oo tending their BLACK HILLS, Hay sclls at 222 o ton in D Four aplum « Dhen 1 Jast week Four ear Chster is wine calored estake com sl large the mica A full theatrical company ha aged for Nye's theatre at De mm...v| | Tt i< rumored that the Hon pany intend to erect a G0 st the Buckeye West mine A ary survey of the t viver ditch will be weeks, The dime of pi abont thre reservoir ,in Sawpit amp mill on gulch whole ronte in « of all nsic the line wlll be taken, he stock and st f the Wyoming stage company have been transferred to the N vatern and the mail_contrac | Pierre to the Hills by ir boen transferre ht inon the " car the former, h ter, and is bre e, NEVADA. Waork i ty at Hawthorm The Wood River exodus stil Eurcka Lonsts of beiug the the stat wseacora lias acollege g street seaven, The farm lant. Mo cunstances ar It is reported that the now ade mountaine, o< con ¥ feet last year, pox s ke erul new i twe rep o for aln Duck Valle: of land w son at the profit of Walker River re to e un establis} copper mi eviudi, t. s room ane for a dozen furnaces, Tt is helieved that the cro: 1w mine will not | arrival of Senator The York from Enioy snowatorm set in st of Elko, and the | white with smow west almost to 5 west to the | alko #nowed in the moint Humbolt range. Tt rained three hours in Reno, also, A company of st i ized at Winnem or the shipping dressed heef and othe ancisco, Tl tle wil Winnencea and . sen in refrigerator cars, ix prog xon and Colo It is s to within the into Candelaria months, UTAH. s very quiet. moving in the iu iv turning ou The Kni a lodge at Ogden. The artexian_ well at Saltf] thts of Pythins hav down abont 500 f The smelters keep pegging ferents parts of the territory. The railroads of importance etly toward Salt Lake. florts are Leing made to iron industry in Salt Luke. district has heen Valley, to he kn District, r, and an uy ntly anticipated. The Old Mill Farm near Sa n |]>\ ha by the city turned into a pleasure park,’ An electric light company the territories of Wyoming, U Arizonn and New Mexico, The sus of Utah, recentl reveals the fact that the gentil At Silver Reoef, | and subsequeny | Union mines occurred, the 1 works have: arrange to put laborers in the shafts and tunn WYOKING. Evanston will' organize a Loard, Wyoming beef eattle are bei to Denver, Summings City still reports peetiny -mf.\mnl results, Decoration Day was magnif brated at Cheyenne and Laran The new Mogul engines on t ision of the U, I, are ens, The U. P, refuses to pay i Cheyenne, and the case will g preme court, the eattle never looked Detter of the year, There is a lively dispute oy coal elaims north of Evanston in feared, It is settled, almost beyond Green River will be the te; new railroad from Granger. shops will at once be Gireen Rive They will be those recently burned, Sheep shearing on th plete id the wool will be market in a fow da; Fritz R by fire large 1y, ® Cheyenne has just complete to her cemetery, Seven ye: were only thirty-three graves W there are and finer one out of t gang of workn quarrying stone at the H iniles west of Siding, shops to he erected by in Cheyenne, the U, The judications are that may ranges in county is tle business will ud advantage will be t there, fict. 'n.. Granger exte he grading s veady for the Le @5 the necessary b ance in certain parts of Klickitat wuut W. T, aud fears are enterteined for the fruit erops. 1 Latest intelligence from Columbis coun. per mings near K two car loads to a Baltimore pany that will pay bim about dirtiest town | Paradice valley, i plentiful, 1 unustally favorable for Tatter is hourly expx f the Jordan per centurn, ol was destro hout y. }..m:ku...uv. northwest of Granger. o the lat Northwest. | 1 continues aluate for are jubi and all cir i« about five deep now on the stunmit of the Sierra apared with veported inside of mdant crops | he y Indian nder culti ining in the | now ap| The Reno Jonr- 1 ocenpation | ents in the non Sunday l hailed for |,m1.‘ ill I it to market apidly an aid run the nest 1 three matter of an t $13.000 of e Torganizad ix now way in - dif- are!pointing extablish the organized in | own us the valloy aprecedented alt Lake, nd will has heen or- ganized in Salt Lake, to furnish light to tah, Idaho, v completed, e population while the y 40 per cen- convietion ¢ NERKENEETS O g nels, n insurance g shippe active p ently cele- nie he Mountain pronounced taxes to ) the su- Stockmen who have been north say that at this time er contested and trouble adoubt, that uinus of the ol at larger than ntanelle is com- brought to »erect a | b he insurance 1 an addition % ago thore in the ceme- use in the new P. company 1y new cattle now be safer up aken of the pleted to a Tron nel will be Luid as soon dyes are built, The owner of the newly discovered cop- awling, is about to shi l\ur..' com- 00 por bou, | cattle line the hanks al is drained into the river in I | building the dam at Bel | sued in Philadelphia, ian_co Imunlul ant OMAHA DAILY BEF ATURDAY, 4l The probal is that larged W f cal ente ment nally be steuck was given, the | I R } n teansferted to | borw and their cb into th Fort THidan i ) rin | Ihe next § Ca n | "_‘ »7 R 3 . the & | 1 nal: T i e " 3 . o . 1 h I I 1t it } t th p v h n T 4 t 1 . i\ ay., He < ) ¢ hi v te " it i E from his captors, he O bwe cont eixht foot fence surromding ¢ X ercnped, 1l is I e Plece bf MUSIC. 1, AND DRAMATIC w worth eaptaring, . COLORADO. [ Maag, the te rejoined Mapleson ( " Springs has a two headed | ton i to \ new music hall that The (rested town-site is being hn Stetson, of Boston, has leased | hoomed oth's Theater, New ¥ Silver CfF i« making an effort to orga- | Tt i ( nize a military company i< m Wall I'en visitors have accomplished the s Haverly ha 2 the scenery « ent of Pike’s penk so far this season | Iate spectacle produced at Niblo's 0,500 have ol fund at ( A new strike has heen of the Carbonates, Silver An fmmense b apened up in the Cliff. Over § the new he sk The Miners Reduetion Works company, | of the “All the Rze Iden, started up their of ( we In the Rothschild mine, on mountain, Tin Cup district, ade of galens has been Another rich gold st turday in the Mou Custer connty. broken which or plece of ex Jong, A larg inches in diamet ort from the the effect that the 2 So quantiti W o theposibi © Ridge pl e mill will he sim The about to be forme 1ls stone Sionx twee Glendive and M onx Falls thinks it perfect happiuess to on clul, . Fifteen ck carloads of fathers Mor heen | trappers, prinei Steamboat mail refjise to 1 key—and the citizen satisfied, The bridge aeross the Sionx nd w vill bey ial can | Mitchell Ing improvements sin At least 100 additic The legislative assembl, ized Lh.- establishment for its use and stpport. [;nrflll(lll have now hee Honolulu boasts the fi the Chinese for themselye seriber came to the island The union of the Ame Hregati the sessions commiey neing month, The States n | inaries lands an chur is about to extend a call Herford, of Chi the steamship € in the great Kew to be held in Lo | Towa 813 churches and 7 cants, a wain in ten and 14,687 commun The United wious work 23,602,0: 2,34, The Year Bo f the Presbyt and the population of ad was held at €' ‘olumbus, KYROZOLUE WAS given up Christian clergyman to ,..luunnl Association of but the vote wat af At the rec m, I‘nn delphia, 1 : agninst giving Ahm other warlik y York county, | ner county for the Luthes in its bounds are about wembers of the general churel There in the counc r hvn\ I| Iu \' ric gy he revised ok agents. il m;. s in his han city witl ladelphin Ne formed Episcopal church, council i n-l.uu ent be te Dute a dreary and forbidding an expedivat for giving 1 storm in ( by the Indians on the frontier, Fitkin has sent. 4,000 poun tion to l,nlu" ity, 4, 'l)('l tol is b 1 at Alexandria one a p«m.m for sismatuires requestiny servi and Benton has been di or of the postmaster general, act has been Vermillion, and at its last mwu-u [ donated seventy-two sections of the unap- }:rulm.m e public lands within the territory ns will be held in Chic: Congregationalists of the Bishop Sitmpaon has engagod pas ity of Berlin to take p 1 Methodist (4\I|IILI] ars of ants, 2,920 Congregationalists in the ates gave last year for their reli- nnsylvani re two colored cle that could be easily and profitably by every congregation in the United States. It had & bare-looking patch of ground in frout of its church, which gave the |vre|mnc-1 racdo Spring I CIiff, mineral has heen lale mine, Nilver smelters last struck, ! ) per ton, ley on the ie number measured it Platte are to asses of m and the sickening ty of* disturhance ¥ wnmn- A Plata conn. wnother will at an | ta g of ground for | Cunard lin has commencedd, Iver Cliff, and will have fifty. stam)~. DAKOTA. Alexandria agricultural society is be used for r hit, A line of Concord coaches is to be run ilex City. | 1 fonnd in the bad lands will not burn in the Northern Paci e locomotive ; e | B and Vogrich have sailed | 1] it ] _'l'" San Franciseo for Anstral Miss b ganizg o bnso ba the_ soprano, whe e s Ak heard with much on the immigrants were | rm, has heen engaged to_ accompany day last world, will, mext season, irpulated | oy the 1 Brooklyn with a h | eapncity of 8000, and proposes to rum it 0 this and pring otter, let for a new opposite Calliope, gin as soon as the expended S,l'-fl.()()(\ in bnild- buildings will go up during the next three months, ly in Im of & 2 author- Articles of incor- en executed and a oard of trustees elected, RELIGIOUS, rst chireh huilt Ly 1 as a Coolis Hebrow con- oin July, on the ort is in elreulation in Boston tlmv. ch of Cambri tothe Rev. Bros The Mothodist Bpiscopal church has in 74,781 commni- Leing an aver: of nearly $10 per member, Presbyterians, is- er herents 12,000,000, When the Southern Baptist conyention Miss,, the on Sund ireac The first religious body to formally adopt the revised new testament was the Congre- Marilboro, Mass,, rwards reconsidered, " meeting in Philla- spoke earnestly words, guns and to their children. u church, eighty thouss synod Luthera Testament is a bonanza to A man with d ca hout being kicked | W, wen and laymen Bof the re- who has heen in New York, solemly avowed their Lelief in the doctrine of adjourned. cternal pun eform church in ‘w" the Appcu subseribed to | lein the king Rotheelild | cert i vedy fine | st im, Five pounds of rock were | was picked up Governor in make to the @ Dbetween Bise ontinued when els of s seemed perfectly ity at gress ‘The chief sub- 12th of that l uitm| 320 churches is the ban- | The L With- gymen present ek will i will next autumn by Rob. ater in Chicago probably e « son Mis %, Dainty will be a member ompany next:ve: | u n. Remenyi i to give a series of violin con New ¥ a i vicinity during the Immer season vi‘m‘ Gilbert and Sullivan's last product ciie even A greater succes [ thian the “Pina A tmovement i« on foot to orzanize an | | English operaconpany, led by Mme, Ger- | ster and Sig, Brigquoli tize his new hero is the rominent aquin Miller will dram Shadows of Shasta. T Indian <juaw by a wonof an I Frank | nd N agree wer will play, w the coming cason_in | the Galley Slave. She has signe | rient; t that offect Misw M Williame,one of the few hur. of the “Camille” type, under mans of Brooks & Dickson, Her engagement | with them is for thre cently de. 4, is con the Union | y has already dramatic com- se< wherever the | ased mplatin Sequar | money. a first-class variety and vaundeville theatr At ch i Thrall o mrl \\llhum are ta special concer June 11, to produce England, his sacred v of Babel.” in at the Crystal Pal for the first th dramy, “The CONUBIALITIES. ll ix rumored that Miss Emma Thurshy ed to a German nobleman of tor A country couple sther | enie, in pplied to the Peoria, the ith, telegraph « Miss Lemmon, 1 him a lemon-sque e Howell, Louis of thy ast Mon y b grand niece at of President John Tyler. Mlle, Grevy is to marry | artist, with whom she ix sa | in Tove while he was taking pay She is not very young but a nice, person. At a recent wedding in New Y two little wirls pre the altar, strew from a wi i, Bon to have s port sensible t, an T an v d wife nntil last w uded it wouldn't pl A \\In-n the ny more centric_and wealthy nnmarried | y ettin, Pomerania, has bequeathed £60,000 to the city on condition that it | whadl found an asylum that will give shelter to forty women more than fifty ' 1 to ten old bachelors, sived at the Tutt- St. Louis the WS one rman, and one from Jofferson Davis, They were exhibited to jends of the family tied together by a picce of wh Mhon. A Wisconsin yman says the smallest wedding he over received was one dol- lar, and that was from one of the riehest wmen he ever married, It is only a rich man who can afford to be that” mean, |Norristown Herald. Effie Ellsler, the original wore at her wedding damasse Hazel K Theodore Stanton, som of Mrs, Cady Stanton, while in Par lml\ N graduation with high hnm n. lruln [y leading French sl % W cors \\lmll Iu| to an o one of aintan ndon Cnickoo, speaking of wed- ays that “at one of the fashi ngs this week the bride carri six feet in circumference, yped that this precedent will 1 It would mean ruin te cirele of ludy friends and small in- ) comes, The weddin, Times staff t ried Mi massive ift of The Howard Carr who mar. Wednes Was 8 hamniered silver New York I, of and gold, of exquisite and rare workman- | ship, beaving the wonogram of the young f couple, Lot us hope that Mr. Carroll will daughter of Prol o of Prince JUNE [ three or fonr pass | Ttalian | for the term, he has a barrel of | ! - | Speaking of the subject for the first | cons | cignty never love the cup more than he does his | wife.—[Buffalo The warria Lottie Shields art.F Wi monds and st skill into - the riate er s of of the bride and petal 3 the youth and innocence her bridesmaids, well as_ souvenirs of herself, the pet name by which she has heen known to her family and friends sin her birth being Daisy the feature of & I .rm Avent eddin t Tuesday. The bridegroom is w e about 50, His name is Urman Val , and he is an Ttalian merchant, who betwixt this city and cross the bride is just 13 youthfulness woul ery year, Her remarkalle if she were of northern birth and _rearing: but you have only to go int Croshy strest to Bnud plenty of Ttalian wives and mothers at 13 ¢ W Iheir would be, if they made any, that they watire as American girls o ars olde the dark little ame Mrs, Valleti was not tly young in the f her country pe | | Rocent Progroess in Constitutional Law, v York Herald. 8 the supreme court of the United States has pronounced its last opinion which began in October | last, we can now review what has been dong during the past year by that branch of the government which wields [a power of whose extraordinar | there is little popular concepti is th scope n - It munon belief that the funetion | e s B f".,:.‘f“.‘;""'_;f.‘|'.ll(l.".-1 judicial tribunal is to interpret Mr. Daly's eompany for next season, | 1a nd not to make them. This is Adelina Patti's has been already | true in - theory, but not in practic on_ the new steamer Servia, of the | That the judiciary is not clothed with | She starts for New York, | Jegislative powers is a commonplace Octobe truism. But to say that it does not and Net Coshlan will star in plays | cannot exercise such powers is mere | cant in view of the fact that courts are | always making and unmaking To this rule our highest tribun; exception. In theory the o of the country is what t the constitution made it; in fi | what the supreme court says they made orintended to make it. When | it is remembered that the court has divided on great constitutional ques- tions in a thousand cases, and almost evenly in scores; that it has repeated- ly reversed, changed and moditied its own opinions; that in_expounding the constitution it has had to keep pace with a marvellous national develop- pment of which the anthors of that | trument never dreamed, it is idle to | framers of et it is | of powers to no claim, What we have said is illusf several opinions which were render during the past session and which | have now passed into history as léad- | ing constitutional authorities. In the Califory case of Lord against a steamship company the court had to determine the relation existing be- tween the States and the general gov- ernmect under the commercial clause of the constitution on a question touching the control of commerce that had never before arisen. The opinion delivered by the chief justice marks another important advance toward the recognition of a central power whose nature and extent can be best realized by tracing its growth in the past. At one time the respecti rights of congress and the states to pass laws affecting commerce were involved in almost hopeless discussion. PHBIini EieBY AbARAkes ed by time in the great caso of Gibbons « | against Ogden, decided in 1824, the supreme court declared, through Chief Justice Marshall, that the power m\ regulate foreign and interstate com- merce was exclusive in co 58 when | once exercised by that body. Fors quarter of a century following thi judgment it was stoutly maintained, not only by leading public men and itntional lawy but also by several of the supreme court j that m the absence of cong legislation o state was free te on the subject, and two de the supreme court during that period are in harmony wiih this view if they ao not direetly support it. But the court put an end to all doubt on this point in 1851 when it took from the | states most of the power that had been claimed for them and lodged it | with the general government, Tt held | that in all matters of national cha ter and concern the power was exclu- sive 1 congress whether exercised or | not. It then conceded, however, | what has been reaffirmed as recently as the session just closed, that in the | absence of congressional action the | state may deal with certain str tl) local matters connected with fe or interstate commeree; but even m such case local legislution wust give way to or at least harmonize with any acts that congress nmy choose to pass on the same subj While thus attir mm s federal sover- over foreign and interstate commerce the court has always con- ceded that in purely internal commer- cial affairs the authority of the state is supreme, But even here the federal has been steadily pushed by the ogic of events into the 1[nmmu of ery state, and corvesponding inn have been made upon state sovereign- ty. The wonderful commercial and | industrial development of recent years | has nationalized the comme of the country, State lines are cut by a mil- lion arteries of trade, transportation and communication, Interstate com- ton, to Bayard Stockto wm of Co e Rlaaktan, fonks. pikos Laak ookt Princeton, N. J." The bride was dressed in uty-ninth street, New York City white satin wod on & carpet of flo niversary on Friday | ors under f lillies of the valley evening last. According to this the church | John Steves Hoboken, presented the wiust bave been founded in 163: Ty ¥ 30,000, The subject of spiritualism has been o planter visiting New York saw Lrought before the two Archbish a charming woman on_s Brooklyn ferry church of England, and the spi Doat and fell in love with her. He traced are elated with the idea that it will gain |her home and learned that she was a wuch dignity from being seriously con. | widow, respectably connected, He was sidered by these able prelates, even if they | called to Cuba, whince he wrote her a lot do condemn it. ter full of atfection, Her fri n\l-mv‘mxnl A religious society in Philadelphia has | and found that he would make a desirable doing sowething of a novel ch husband. They replied to the letter. He ponded. She wrote until there was an f marriage and an acceptance, and She prepared her the wedding day fixed. : B e returned to New )n;k, of her They met at the house of one friends, sbe wondering how he looked, be merce penetrates cvery state, and in { [every state internal and external commerce mingle in one, In 1870 | | the Supreme Court, holding that a | steamer whose trips were confined to |one state was subject to the laws of | | congress because transporsing thing: brought from or destined to another ‘nl.lh}, declared that all local a or instruments, though operating | wholly within the state, fall under the Juna-luuuu of the general government | when employed in inter-state com- merce, The court has now during the sossion just closed carried the lines of federal “supremacy to a frontier in e domain hitherto unknown. In California case above cited it the States, has been ened by the supreme court during the session of 1880-81, same tribunal upon the power of | judgment ‘,\mvri an constitutional history. | it to the right and authc | house to | Marshall - as | | powe | few bottles of Si | purified, malarial PAGES between ports of State and | engaged in tratic purely and wholly tra-state is employed in comme ver whichcongress has exclusive control, wided that in makit ts trips m s ont of the jurisdictional waters he state upon the high seas for any ance, however shor As vessels loyed in e stic trade do gener ) i seas, the line of miles from the shore, latest d. m is to ra-state coasting trade f the ¢ itry from a claimed state to national control There has been, ther 1 st rrl\ tendoney toward contralization on al stions relating to e control « commerce. The supremacy of m. nation over the sovereignty of the was further upheld during the in the case of Williams against Brufly, in which the supreme court was compelled to assert for the | 1A titio axaiist the. commonwoalth of Virginiaitsownundoubted anthority state past session over state courts in cortain cases anising under the constitution, tre m\u‘ and laws of the United States. But in Wilson against McNamee, whe ore vin | the constitutionality of the New York pilot was atfirmed, the lines of | state Jurisdiction were extended for the first time in a given direction far boyond what has herotofore been sod to be their limits, The laws court declared that the operation of the maritime laws of state in the case of its own vessels is not limited to its territorial - waters, but extends in definitely into the ocean. The com- | pulsory pilotage laws of New York | were therefore held to have the same | force fifty or ovan a hundred miles at do near shore. But this is not an enlargement of state at the | expense of foderal jurisdiction, since | 1 laws on this subject may be su- | d at any time by congressional egislation, While the aut government, as a sea as thoy ersed ity of the gencral | st that of the materially strength- | the most impor- tant limitations have been put by the n gress over the rights of the people. Neither during this last session nor in |recent years has a more impertant | been rendered than that | pronounced in the Kilbourne case, and destined to become a landmark in Here- d no lim- ty of either | summon the people as | witnesses, to inquire into their per- | sonal affairs, to examine their pri- | vate papers and to punish by fine and tofore congress has recogn imprisonment any one refusing to answer questions or produce papers, To the exercise or abuse of this as- sumed privilege no check until now has been imposed by that tribunal, which alone 13 elothed with authc to define the constitutional limitations | resting upon each branch of the gen- | eral government. The feedral supreme deny or doubt that a large part of our | oype hag passed upon this po nt but > fundnmental Taw has been made by | (1 SIRPARES CLOG G PR EE PO Hstr in tho practical “exercise | o Storey sat on the bench, \».np chief given generrl punish others | members for contempt, thority was mot derived from any- thing expressed in the constitntion, | and it might have been carried to al- most any limit by the reasoning ad- vanced in support of it. Although the question that arose in 1821 was analo- gous in many respeets to that just de- | cided the judges have now rightly re- fused to sanction which was then Jjustice. The | conceded tu undefined | than | This au- | spinion then congress a | power to recogized if not expressly confirmed. Tn declaring inthe Kilbourne case that neither house has any constitutional | to compel a witness to testify concerning ma not legitimately within its province, nor to inquire into f the citizen, the ally enlarged the lib- erty and the rights of the people, and has put an end to an abuse which has been too often practiced by congress. Really St. Jacob’s Oil is a wonder- ful remédy, writes Mr. Wi, Reinhart, | Elmore, Wis., for 1 could mention dozens of cases where it has proved its magical influence. One case in partic- ular T will state: T know a man who suffered with rheumatism for the last twenty-four years, and of late hecould rdly move md. After using a Jacob’s Oil he was entirely cured, —_— TRUE TO HER TRUST. Too much cannot be said of the ever faithful wife and mothar, con- stantly watching and caring for her dear ones, never neglecting a single duty in their behalf, When they assailed by disease, and the system should hava a through cleansing, the | | stomach and bowels regulated, blood | sison exterminated, she must know that Electric Bitters are the only sure remedy. They are the best and purest medicine in the world, and enly cost fifty cents, Sold by Ish & Mv,\lnhum | GREATEST REMEDY KNOWN, Dr. King's New Discovery for Con- | the greatest | | sumption is certainly medical remedy ever placed within the | reach of suffering humanity. Thou- sands of once helpless sufferers, now | loudly ! w their praise for this L A covery to which they | votheir lives, Not only does it posi- | tively cure € m, but Congl Colds, , Bronchitis, Hay Fever, Hoarseness and all affections u[ the Throat, Chest and Lungs yiells | at once to its wonderful curative pow- | er as if by ma We do not ask you | to buy a large bottle unless you know i mase getting, We therefore ¢ request you to call on your druggists, Isu & McManoy, and get a | trial bottle free of cost which will con- vince the most skeptical of its wonder- | ful merits, and !]Ilr\\ ou what a regu- lar one dollar size bottle will do, l-‘m sule by Ish & McMahon (4) —_— WOMAN'S WISDOM, New Haven Palladium: She insists that it is more impor- tance, that her family shall be kept in | full health, than that she should Sm\u | all the fashionable dresses and styles of the times, She therefore sees to | it, that each member of her family is | aup]-hul with enough Hop Bitters, at the first appearance of any symptoms of ill health, to prevent a fit n} sick- w A FAMILY TONIC Seventh Biennial ' SIENGER-FEST! OF Tii Sengerbund —AT— OMAHA, Junefi 9, 10, ]1 and 12, '81, JUNE 8th Pioneer Reception of Guests and Reception Concert. JUNE 9th: FIRST GRAND CONCERT. JUNE 10th: Grand Parade| y all Civi ocieties, Fire Dep and Manufacturer Interest, and Mili- tinent, IN THE EVENING, SECOND GRAND CONCERT. JUNE 11th: {BANQUET AND BALL. JUNE 12th: PELIC-NIC! SOLO ARTISTS: MISS KATTIE LOWE —Soprano.— SIGNORA MABELLA! —Contralto.,— Prof. E. STRASSER, Violinist, The Grand Chorus, 350 Vs 350 Voices Under the Direction of {PROF. AUG. WALTHER, THE GRAND ORCHESTRA, |4 of the best instrumentalist of the 40 West =Conducted by Prof. F. M. Steinhauser. REDUCED FARES on all Rail- roads Leading into Omaha. Al Festivitios will be held inthe spacions USIC HALL, being erected especially for the Smnger-Fest, and located on the CORNER OF IGTH AND CAPITOL AVENUE. my2idewiw D.T.MOUNT, MANUPACTURKER AND DEALER IN SADDLES AND HARNESS. 1412 Farn. St. Omaha, Neb. AGENT FOR TIIE CKLEBRATED |CONCORD HARNESS Two Medals and a Diploma of Honor, with the very highest award the judges could béstow wis awarded this harness at the Centennial Exhibi tion. mmon, also Ranchmen's and Ladies' SAD W Keep the largest stock in the west, ite all who cannot exawmine o send for apitt DL and i T KENNEDY'® EAST -INDIA 0D *§SJUBMIASIRIAY SNONIL ‘WSILVINN3HY ‘VISd3dSAQ 804 933 ‘NOILdWASN ILER & CO., SolsM&nufncturers. OMAHA. MRS. LOUISE MOHR Graduate of the 8t. Louls School of Midwives, ¢ ness with its attendant exr-nw, care and anxiety, ~All women should exer- ercise their wisdom in this way." held that a vessel plying exclusively jl-eod&w-16 1608 California Street, Between Fifteenth and Bixteenth, north side, where calls will be romptly rompond- ¢d 10,84 oy bour durlng the £ “ifismo ' ‘| -