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e A 4 [ ——1 THE DAILY BEE-~-OMAHA FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1882 The Omaha Bee. Pablished every morning, except Sunday ® 10 onty Monday morning daily, TEXRMS BY MAIL —~ One Vear,....810,00 | Three Months.$3.00 Bix Months. 5.00 | One . 1.00 THRE WREKLY BEE, published ev- ty Wedsesday. BERMS POST PAID:~ Ono Yonr.. ...82.00 | Three Montha., 50 Bix Mc 1.00 | One “w 0 Angnicax Xews Coupaxt, Sole Agents or Newadealers in the ' 'nited States, PONDENCE—AIl Communi ing to News and Editorial mat- 1 be addressed to the Eprror or OORRE Ketters and Remittar should be ad- dressod to THL UMANA Punuismine Cou- #ANY, OMAHA. Drafts, Checks and Post- ofice Orders o be made payable to the rder of the Company, The BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props. £, ROSEWATER. Editor, e Fuirrer will now join Whittaker on lecturing tour, —eees WuiLe the country prespires tho ocorn reaps the benefit of a high ther- momoter and cloudless skice. ] Frourine the standard dollar doesn't pay in congress, as the vote on the bank charter bill makes very plain. Arroros of the Newburgh gambling game a western gentleman remarks that “Four aces and a pistol will beat a straight flush every time.” — Press dispatches are beginning to report that Washington is hot and malarious. This ia the usual indica- tion that congress is auxious to ad- journ. — Nexr to lecturing on the ‘‘Mistakes of Moses” Bob Ingersoll finds defend- ing the mistakes of Dorsey & Co., the most profitable occupation he can en- gage in, — First and last the arears of pen- sions act which congress was told would require only an expenditure of $20,000.000 will cost the nation $760,000,000. Tuosn editors who think the crops will keep Nebraska farmers from “fooling with politics” may change their tune before the end of the pres- ent campaign. Wk are promised another Atlantic cable, with low rates and indepen- dent, of course, of all existing compa- nies. This 18 an old story, and after it is told the usual moral of consolida- tion will be in order. Postmaster GeNcrAL Howk has found the strawberry mark on Gen. Van Wyck’s left arm. He says there is no intention on the part of the ad- ministration to slight the senator. As usual, those wicked newspaper re- porters were responsible for the mis- understanding, Turke hundred thousand dollars have been appropriated for the exten- sion of the White house, If the plans are carried out, King Kalakaua's new palace will be nowhere beside the residenco of the chief executive of tho United States, Tue St. Louis Dispatelvsays that so far as the suppression of public gambling in that city is concerned, it may now be set down as accomplished. For years a confiict has been going on between the professional gamesters and the law there, but finally the law is triumphant, and gambling as a trade is at an end in 8t. Louie, Tuose who expect that Guiteau's hanging will be a six tent circus with side show attachment are likcly to find themselves mistaken. Genoral Crocker says that ouly a few spectators and a couple of reporte.s will be ad- witted, and as little gensationalism as possible will attend the execution, Nothing will cause grcater pain to the vain glorious egotist who has survived for a year the assassination of his vic- tim, A Bax Francrco exchange eoys that the wool elip of the current year [romiscs to be the largest ever grown in the country. Sheep raisers have suffered less than the usual loss, owing to the :pen winter, and the stock as a general thing 1s 1n excollont condition, and likely to yield a largo percentage of desirable The backward spring has delayed shearing, wool, but has not injured the olip. The quo warranto clause in the bill to regulate the counting and decision of the elecioral votes, providing that a writ of quo warranto may be ap- plied for at any time and issued from the federal court to test the title of the incumbent of the white house. This clause has naturally excited very strong criticism, and as pointed out some months ago in Tue Bee, would be dangerous in the extreme to the public safety. It would wmake ihe presidential title a shuttlecock among the courts and a football for the law- yers. When a profane member of congress from Georgia characterized the bill as & bill ““to raise hell in the Uaited Slates,” he was more forcible than polite, but he made the point very clear. THE NINTH I0WA DISTRICT. The republicans of the Ninth Con- gressional district of Towa have nomi- nated Major Anderson as their candi- date to succeed Congressman Hep- burn. Major Anderson did not carry the nomination by acclamation, as his friends so confidently predicted, but by a bare majority of one. The plat- form adopted by the convention that nominated Major Anderson is vory pronounced in favor of anti-monopoly principles, and Major Anderson, in acoepting the nomination, has plodged himself to the support of those prinei- ples. 1f these plodyes aro and Major Anderson meana to live up after the he makes vincere, election to the promises hofore the election the the Ninth Towa district will have no cause to peopls of complain, But it very often happens that the pledges of candidatss are made with a mental reservation which does not bind the man to their per- formance. As a rule the best guaran- tee of the future course of public men must be their conduct before they be- came candidates. Sudden conversions in politics as in religion, are fre- quontly followed by backsliding. We hope, however, that Major Anderson will agreeably disappoint those who have feared that he was bound by stronger ties to corporate monop- olies than he will incur toward his constituents, Tue Ber has opposed Major Anderson from no personal or mercenary motive. Our aim and desire has been to sus- tain the principles wo advocate through men who are outspoken and above board in accord with them. Major Anderson’s political backers in Pottawattamie county were kncwn to be monopoly henchmen, utterly de- void of any other motive than a de- sire to mserve the corporations and gather in the spoils. It was mainly because Major Ander- son was 8o persistently urged by this class of politicai plunder mongers that Trr Bk allowed its columns to be used in opposition to his candidacy. Having no axe to grind and no favors to ask we are freo to express our views from a standpoint that looks solely to the public welfaro, As a republican journal, Twe Bk desires the success of the republican party and its candidates; but we shall never advise republicans to give blind sup- port to any man morely bocause he happens to be nominated by a repub- lican convention. TIn this we voice the sentiment of the mass of the party. In all probability Major Anderson will be taken on probation by the re- publicans of the Ninth congressional district, but it is rather unfortunate that there should be any doubt what- ever as to his honest convictions con- cerning the relutions of the people toward railroad corporations and the necessity of regulating the manage- ment of railways in the interest of the people, TrE astonishing discovery has been made that the licutenant in charge of the detachment of regular soldiers who guard the remains of President Gar- tield at Cleveland is accustomed to exhibit the corpse to privileged vis- itors. Some weaks ago Governor Buren R. Sherman, of Towa, stated that he had been granted this privil- ego, and a roporter of the Cleveland Herald was detailed to learn whether it was true that the remains of the dead president had been exposed to view. The sexton, being interrogated about the matter, said it was true that Governor Sherman had been allowed to view the remains, but that he had nothing to say or do in the case. The keys of the vault were in poesession of Lioutenant Van Vliet, of the Tenth United States infantry, the officer in charge ef the detail of soldiers guard- ing the tomb, and the lieutenant un- locked the gate of the vault, un- scrowed the lid that covers the glass plate set into the top of the coffin, and allowed Governor Sherman and party to view the remains, Inquiries dis- closed the information that the com- otory trustees and the sexton in charge of the ground did not have any cou- trol in the matter, the romains and the key to the vault in which they are placed boing under countrol of the gov- cflicer aszigned to tho duty Peoplo will now ask indignantly by what authority this military mantinet panders to the idle curiosity of itinerant sight scors by making a public exhibition of the sacred dust of the dead presideunt, If the case lies under the ty of the secretary of war peremptory orders ing them. autho: should at once bo issued t. Licufen- ant Van Viict, advisivg him as to his duties and prohibitiog of the scandalous proceedings. 1y recurrence Tue Chicago Z'imes is aroused over the dangerous disregard of public in- terests exhibited by the Pacific roads. It says that Gen. Rosecrans’ bill to prevent unjust discriminations in froight rates by the Pacific railroads cannot receive any attention at this session, and it may not be in such a shape as to give any promise of suc- coss even if iv could be enacted. But it cannot he denied that when rail- road companies attempt to regulate interstate commerce in the most arbitrary manner and to erush oud American shipping interests, which most Americans profess s strong de- sire to promote, it is time for congress t0 see what can be done. 'Lhe case against the Pacific railroads is the stronger because they were not, like most lines, constructed entirely by private effort. They received mag- nificent grants of public lands, and liberal grants of the national credit, to encourage them to build a trans. continental line which it was sup- posed would be of great public im- portance. If the public has any rights in the management of any railroads, it has in these. Yet the companies have manifested a surprising ingenuity |in evading the piyment of their | pecuniary obligations to the govern- | ment, and as to the public interests which the roads were constructed to serve, no companies have been o un- mindful of them as these Pacific rail- road companies. POLITICAL ECONOMY AND MONOPOLY. Under the caption of “The Political Economy of Seventy-Threo Millions,” Mr. Henry D. Lloyd contributes an interesting article toth e Atdantic Monthby, which deals with the dis- honest financiering of Jay Gould and the immense accumulation of wealth which has resulted from his stock jobbing and bond watering operations. The Erie swindle, by which $8,000,- 000 wero filched from the stock- holders of that road, the corruption of legislatures and the judiciary, the “Black Friday” Episode, the tele- graph capture, and the elevated rail- road enormity, are all treated, and the true inwardness of the various raids of the railroad wrecker brought to light. Mr. Lloyd points to Gould’s carcer and method as a refutation of the assertions of political economists that competition will of itself correct the evils of railroad monopoly, and cites numerous cases of undue ag- grogations of wealth throughout the country, which have been acquired in brazen defiance of every sound econ- omical principle and in opposition to every known maxim of commercial honor. There is no doubt that monopoly knows no law, yet the laws of politi- el economy exist, whether ob- structed in their operations or dis- obeyed by those by whom they should be applied. All such obstructions are artificial and can be removed. When the railroads pool earnings and combine to maintain rates to prevent competition the remedy lies in the hands of the people through their congress and legislatures. Says the Globe-Democrat, in commenting on this subject: ‘‘We are finding out that the law of competition works very imperfectly, or not at all, with railroad, telegraph and some other corporations, that combinations of capital and combinations of la- bor both interfere with its operation. There are some who take a dark view of things and see nothing ahead but a general economic chaos brought about by a succession of Goulds and a succes- sion ot capitalist and labor organiza- tions. We see ncthing of the kind. Our civilization is not such a bantling that 1t is to be overthrown by prob- lems of this nature. Itis capable of meeting them, and will do it. The time will como when Standard oil com- panies and Goulds will be impossibili- ties. The trouble now is that society has not time to adjust itself to the wonderful developments of the nine- teenth century. It has not learned how to manage railroads or kindred corporations yet, but it is learning very fast. The knowledgo as to wa- tered stocks, bribed legislatures and other things connectad with them is spreading. The people are gaining a clearer perception of the whole bus- iness, and the process will go on until the constituencies will stand .10 more trifling, and means will be foand to put an end to corporation abuses. Whether it will be through govern- ment control of railroads, or limita- tion of dividends, positive prohibition of making stock out of wind, or in other ways, we do not pretend to say; but 1t will be done before the world is very much older. Neither corpora- tion money nor the legal talent that it secures can stave the treatment of these problems off forever. It may bo more or less delayed, but a tide will gather behind the barriers that If in no other way is will come through will cwry everything before it, rovolution, Human progress is not t> be balked in this particular any more than it is in others."” Dunaxa the fizcal year just closing he foderal land offico has sold and on 13,000,000 acres of land, the number on rezord, If to these are added the sales by states and the rail- roads at least 17,000,000 have passcd from public to private ownership by sales within the twelve months just closed, This is sn ares half as large as Penvsylvauis with a popul: twice the size of Vermont. " Hands OR. Cleveland Leader, The country is safe! The naval committee has reported in favor of building two cruisers to add to our navy ! Now let England, with her forty-five iron-clads and four hundred other vesscls of war, beware how she troads on Uncle Sam’s toes. The Crops and Prospects, Chicago Tribune. The prosperity of the country and the condition of the crops are so in timately related that no one who has any stake in the one can be indiffer- ent to the othe: A postal clerk on the t ain to Leadville accidentally threw a package of lotters out of the car, A tramp found it and rifled a number, He was arrested soon after with some of the stolen contents in his posses- sion, and will probably go up, THE RELIEF MEETING TO- NIGHT. Magor Boyd's proclamation calling a public meeting at the court house this evening to consider measures of relief tor the Towa sufferers is timely and to the point. It will doubtless meet with a hearty response from our citizons who have always been fore. most in every movement for the re- lief of the destitute and suffering. 1In the present instance the great calam- ity is brought very near home to our peopie. through a sestion of western Iowa which is tributary to our merchants. A number of the dead at Grinnell wore related to citizens of Omaha, and many of our people have friends and connections among the sufferers from the tornado. The statistics of the disaster are ap- palling, Nearly one hundred deaths arealready reported and 500 more are reported wounded, many of whom oannot survive. Three hundred homes are ruined and fifteen hundred peoc- ple shelterless. In Grinnell alone the los of property is placed at $400,000, and between $2,000,000 and $3,- 000, 000 of damage is reported from the region devastated by the late hurricane. Money is needed and needed at once. There are hungry mouths to feed, mangled forms to be tenderly nursed, and homeless families 10 be provided with shelter. It is estimated that $100,000 will be needed to provide for the most pressing wants of the sufferers and to care for the wounded, while at least $1,000,000 must be forthcoming to secure shelter for the suffering poor. Iowa is responding nobly to the call for help and Des Moines has sent a munificent contri- bution of $3,000 as a portion of her share towards the relief fund. Chi- cago and other eastern cities are fall- ing into line and will shortly be heard from. Omaha cannot afford to lag in cause which appeals so powerfully to her sympathies. Lot the meeting to-night at the court house be alarge and representa- tive one, a meeting organized moro for work than for speech making nnd whosé results will be worthy of the cause for which it is called and the reputation of the city in which it 1s held. OCCIDENTAL JOITINGS, DAKOTA. . Aberdecn has three banks. Watertown has its first caso of mea-les The Pierre Signal is advertised for sale. The Furgo roller mills run day and mght, There is now at Fort Meade only one white troop. New potatoes were in market in Stur gis City, June 8.h, The total ass ssment of Spink ¢ unty will be $700,0.0, The total valuation of Beadle county is neaily $100 000, Iive car loads of fine blooded stock were uloaded at Bismarck, Custer City’s ball for the benefit of the tand netted one hund ed dollars, The democraic territorial conventioa will be held in Deadwood in Auguss, Matilda Fletcher will lec ure in Pierre on the beautiful American tagle, July 4th, Work is_progressing rapidly on Capt. Kaeney's' $60,000 business blo k in Iargo, Siux Fails pays its principal and teach. ers of the public schools avout $500 per month. Range stock in Pennirgton county will this year be assessed at seven dollars per ad, It is reported that the largcst ctamp mill in the wor.d is to bs erected at Lead City, Two thousand dollars is _the amount to he raised for a Fourdh of July celebration in Deadwood. An enterprising artist in Fargo takes photographs from seven to eleven p, m by wid of the electric light The Manitoba road will shortly issue 5,000,000 additional capital sto-k “on ac. count of branch extensions, Four district school houses are being built pear Vulley City to cost all the way from $1,000 to §4,000 apiece, A farmer at Pleasant Lake, Aurora county, har an ox which he hitwches to a bugyy and drives around like a horse, The citizens of Fargo have raised $10,- 000 towards the building of a bridge across the Red river to Moorhead, The sum re- quired will nct exceed §30,000, ‘The Huron Times has been informed that recently a latge party of railrosd sur- veyors passed through Spink couaty, on the east side of tie river, running a pre- liminary line southward, The Brooklyn Presssays that at the supper given by the ladies of that village & ouple of weeks ago the sum of forty-two cents one mill aud one tenth of & wiil was od. The proceels will go the ceme- reali tery fund, WYOMING. Cheyenne organiza 1 a musical society on the 15th, - The Liramie Times and nOW appesr as mworning inst papers. John T, Arngld, Wyoming's re tive in the Unifed States naval a gradusted third in his elass, C, W. Youny and H. G.tts were drowned by the ferry boat ut Jurvie's ferry, Brown's pa k, June 10th, ‘The first W yor g le of the reason, consisting of firy ad, were sod re- Me:srs. Gregory & t §4 25, rewen have sold o Pet 8,000 catves on the ranges in Wyoming, The animals s ld for § 8,000, and will ba deliverad to M, Lorillara's agents on or before October 15h of the present year, 2 Just before a Laramis woman was about to retire the other night she made the graud rounds of the house, and to her hor- ror found a wan stowed away on a shelf in aclosst, She made such an awful fuss about it that the man got away . “The president bas offered to nominate Boomerang evening Geozge W. Friedly, of Bedford, Ind., as|® governor of Wyoming tenitory, Mr, Lricdly has not decided whether to take it or not, but his friends thivk he will, He is & good lawyer and a first class man. A wan named G, H., Morris, from Lureks, Greenwood county, Ks, was drowned at Fort Steelo on the 15th, while trying to swim his horses across the Platte. His boy slso came near drowning, but was got out, He leaves a wife and six children, They were emizrants enroute vis the over- land route tu Oregon, Wm, MoCabe, the man who shot and killed James Callison, at Rawlins, on the 7th, was admitted to bail at Carbon on the'15¢h, 1a the amount of 000, Almost The track of the tornado is| every prominent man in Carbon and Sweetwater stood by MeCabe, and bail to the amount of £10),000 was offered, it the prosecution would accept it and waive ex- amination, COLORADO. Greeley is to liave a new school building to cost $30,000, Denver will have a grand balloon ascen. sion on the 4th. 1t is sail that one hundred coke ovensare to be erected at Crested Buttes this sum mer, The state medical society closed its an. nual session at Pueblo on the 15th with a grand banquet. The merchants of Colorado Springs are adyocating the establishment of a Board of Trade at that place, The owners of the smelting works burned at Leadville, will immediately rebuild at Argo, a tew miles out of Denver, On the 18th the Italian-American citi- 2ens in Denver observed the funeral servi- ces of Garibaldi in quite an imposing man- ner. The newsboys and bootblacks of Lead ville have organized a mutual benevolent and protective association, with officers, constitution and by-laws, The members of the G. A. R. at Fort Collins will erect a monument to the mem. ory of their late comrades buried in Lin- coln park, to cost $1,600, Mr. J. C. Jones, at West Las Animas, commenced four years ago with a herd of fifty goats, and now has 1,400 under his charge, from which he makes $15,000 a year. A reward of $300 has besn offered by Gov. Pitkin for the arrest and detention of John Walker, the man who murdered Wm. Holwes at Buffalo a few weeks since. The Wool Growers’ association of Bent county has agreed not ship or rell their fleeces before the 15th day of July, and then only direct to manufacturers, The clip of the county will am>ouat to 225,000 pounds. By the accidental discharge of a pistol in the hands of J. W, Yeaman last Satur- day at Lake City, Henry S. Garvin was killed. The parties were tradivg pistols, and Yeaman was examining his newly ac- quired weapon, when it went off with the above result, A state ecnvention of school superinten- dents and teachers was held in Denver on the 17th, The subjects for consideration were the becessity of a uniform course of study in the high schools and the necessity of » uniform course in the graded and un- graded schoole, The Fort Collins Expresssiys the Cache 1a Poudre has not for years been so high at this season of the year as it is now, All the ditches and canals are also full to over- flowing, The flood does notarise from the usual cause—the melting of ths snow in the wountains but from actual rain fall, There are large quantities of snow in the monotaias, wnich has only hegun to melt, 80 that a scarcity of water for 1882 hus been placed bsyond peradventure, UTAH. Juvenile thieves are worrying Ogden, One sheep-owner in Utah has lost 200 h;rmlxn this spring by eagles carrying them off. A few days ago, Mr. Rasmusen, of Smuthtield, was riding on hor:eback when his horse fell with him, and fractured the ateila and seriousl y injured the knee jsint. To is now duing nicely. The Salt Tiake Tribune says that there has been lively times in the Kndowment House thers recently, A (i4-yes took a buxom young Scandin hix harem, wherein lives her sister. An ossocintion styled the Salt Lake Rock Company, has been organized in Salt Like + ity, with a capital ~tock of 100, 000. The object, as stated by a Salt Lake contemporary, is to quarry rock by the wholesale, 1t is statcd that the company owns all the land containing sandstone in any quantities within twelve miles east of the city. Presilent John Taylor has received in formation from President J. D 1. M lister to the cffect that Elder Levi W. Hancock died at 12 o'clock on the 10th inst. at Washington, Kane county. Do- ceased was, up to tue time of his death, the oldest ljving member of the quorum of the Ficst Seven Presilents of the Seventies, having been set apart to that pos tion i1 183), and was assoc'ated with the church from rhortly ufter its organization., J H. Togeroll, a man between forty and nfty years of nge, was engaged near Boulder Springs nauhng ties for the rail- road, While passiog along by the side of his teawn, he turied his heal wuddenly to look Iackwards, wien he dropped to” the grousd in a helpless condition, Persons coming to his rescue - und him pa in all his lunbs » and beal. Phys arlery, - IDAHO, The population of Sawtooth at piesent is about 200, The product of bullion from the quartz mines ot Idaho will this year exceed by one-half the product of any former year, Gov. John B, Neil has been invited by the citizens of Lewiston to deliver the oration at the c ration of the coming 4th, at that place, and has accepted. An organization of Ballevas cisizans has been made to prosecute any person caught using giant powder in the capture or killing of trout in the river or mountain streaws, MONTANA, The people of Benton have subscribed $2,750 toward buildiog an Odd Fellows’ hall, Saniy Point, the other side of liake Pen d’Oreille, has ten or fifteen gambling hou-es and the dwellers live in tents, A colony of emigrants has arrived and are located temporarily at Silver Bow Junction, There ave fifteen cases of moa- sles in the party. The miitary telegraph line to Fort Magingis via Kocsy Point and Poplar River wil be comploted and ready for business by July 1st. The Miles City B only Protestant” chur Mundaa and Biz mau, on th Northern Pacific rilroad, The Ter Montans wil ist church is the ) edifice between line of the day, August Lst, tinue in session two ¢ The Crows are ri in horse, or rather pony flesh, than uny other Lndian nation on the continent, having an aggregate of from 15,100 t 20,000 head, naboine camp has pulled out for ey are to mees the North n Mik River have the anuual Sun Dance together, el 1 hus & member. iu Montana, with 633 in the 1 1, The wmount_raised tor wis treate d by being put H the steamer Me has com enced suit against th the boat, ¢ aiwing 32,600 dam ges. Jawes Griffith, an old Baunock pio known as *“Dobey Jimumy,” died in Ban nock last week at the age of eight-five years, e was the discoverer of a rich bar at Banuock, known as “Jimmy Bar,” Two strong currents of a'r met in a field of oats at Highwood recently resulting in ch a cutting brecze that the cut off close to the ground as & : machine, The roots were not disturbed, T, C, Burns was in town few davs this week, He says that Le is ready to put his 50,000 ties in the Yellowstone, to becaught at different points, There will be about 800,000 put iu tie river st or near Boul der.—Billings Post, 1t is said that the Society of Jesus will establis a college in Helena shortly, A buodred acres of Jand haive been pur- chased as & site for the buildings and ground and a handsome building will, be erected at & 0t of $100,000, Hev. L. B. Palladino has charge of the matter, Some days ago, Louis Legarre, a halfe breed tradse of Wood Mountain, while on his wav over there with an outfit of goods from Fort Buford, was held up by a war parey of Crges for allof his provisions and is guns, They laft him his horse and carts. He reported the matter to Capt. McDonald of the moantain police, and he arvosted and put in irons eight of th patty, and will deal likewiss with the rest when he can capture them, WASHINGTON TERRITORY. There has been a fair average catch of seals on Nea" Bay and Quilente, this sea- son, but owing to the advance in cost of catthiog, and decline in valae in foreign markess, the se1son’s business on the whole has been unprofitable. It ia believed that there are 5000 elk ranging on tha head witers of the streams and tributaries heading up in the Olvmouic range and putting into Gray's Harbor. Fish, hoth fresh and salt water, areabund- ant. Itissimply a paradise for sports men, OREGON. Salem iz to have $100,000 flouring mill. Pomeroy is to have an Episcopal church to cost $2,000, There is said to be a company of 500 migrants en routs from Ohio to Wa: county. There has ! ean left in Umatilla county, this spring, between $10),000 and £500,000 by the diffe-ent buyers of cattle, sheepand It ix estimated that 160,000 sheep een driven out of that county. The prices paid for these sheep were from 81.50 2.25 each, It is thought that 5,000 head of horses have been suld at an aver- age prics of $12,50 per head. From 20,000 to 80,000 cattls have been sol 1 at from 820 to $8) per animal, CALIFORNIA Mereed has a fat boy who is 15 years old and kicks the beam at 285 pounds, The town hus hopes of his reaching 300. It is expected that the Oregon & Ne- vada railroad, running north from Reno, will reach Goose Lake, California, within a year, There is a strong effort beiag made in Los Angeles and vi.inity, in southern California, to get up a mamnmoth excur- sion to the mining exposition, Blackberrying parties in the vicinity of Chico are sometimes enlivened by the sud- den appearancs of Calfornia lious upon the scene. A very large one w s killed the other day by a man who had taken the precaution to take a Henry rifle as a part of his berrying outfit. An atrocions murder was committed at Los Gatos recently. Mrs, Gaudalupe Flores, aged twenty, while ou her way from Rogers’ store to her hou:e, was way- Bend & Al EX A W " HEALTH OF WOMAI IS THE HOPE Of e\ 7 g LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND A Sure Cure for all AR SES, Including Lencorrben, Ire regular and Painfal Menstruntion, Inflammation and Ulceration of the Womb, Flooding, PRO- LAPSUS UTERI, &oc. 7 Pleasant to tho taste, efficacion: mmediate in its effect, 1t {sagreat helpin pregnancy, and re- Lieves pain during Iabor and at regular poriods, PHYSICIANS USE T AND PRESCRI of either sex, it 43 second tono remedy that has ever been before the public; and for all discases of thy KIDNEYS it 18 the Greatest Remedy in the World, & BIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Either Sex Find Great Rel iniis Use. LYDIA E. PINKHANS RLOOD PURIFIER will eradicats every vestign of ‘1 Filood, at the game fime will givc tone o thesyitem, Asmarvellonsin reeults as {h £ Doth the Compound and Blood Purificr are pre- pared at 2% and 235 Weatern Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of elther, $1. Six bottles for §5. The Compotnd 18 sent by mail in the form of pills, or of lozenges, on receipt of price, $1 per box for either. Mrs. Pinkham freoly answers all lotters of inquiry. Enclose cer stamp. Sond for pamphlct, Mention this Paper. £ LYDI B, PINKIAW'S LIven PIiis cure Constipa. tion, Biliousnéss and Torpidity of tho Liver. 25 centa. A%~Sold by all Draggists. 68 () THE McCALLUM laid and stabbed five times. When ais- covered she was in a dying condition, and expired in a short time. Circumstances E int to John Wnrulufi her former hus. and, as murderer. He was releasedfrom the state prison last April, having served two years forgrand larceny, and returning 0 San Joee found his wife had obtained a divorce daring ns absence and married Flores. ARIZONA. The Tombstone region in Arizona will furni-h a good divplay of minerals for the exposition. As . H. Albro, an old miner, was travel ing from Arizona to Salt Lake City re. cently, he found on the Sixty-five Mile desert a double-barreled shotgun beside a skeleton. The bones of the lett hand were grasping the barrels toward the muzzle, and higher up the barrels re:ted in the skelct n's right hand; the stock was broken, and sand had drifted on the skele- ton and gun, The whole apoearance was as if the man had been kili-d in a fight, and had died in the act of clabbine his gun on his foe. Some time ago Albro found at Turkey Tanks, A. T., eighty miles west of Brigham City, on the Little Colorad », the body of a white man, who, he thinks, from appearances and su roundings, was_killed by white desp:ra- does, The body was lying on its back, with the head raised, the eye sighting along the barrel of a Henry rifle, which he bhad evidently been using to the best ad- vantage, Ths rifle t".e finder sold to one gfllz) paity of eastern excursionists for NEW MEXICO, New Mexico's convicts are hereafter to be jniled at Cnester, Lllinois. George Washington, a Lincoln negro, eluped with a Mexican girl. He died soon after—hung mob, Much of the salt used in Las Vegas comes from the salt lakes in Lincoin coun- ty, aud is suppied by Mexicans. A bunch of «teers are now on their way from the !ecos country to Nebraska, There wre 5,000 in the lot. E. M. Kely, the condemned Gerrillos murdeser, after three repites, has had his sent nee commuted to lfe imprisonment by the president. Jesus Dominguez 13 held for trial before Justice Severo amillo, at Colorado City, for refusivg to contribute work on thy erection of a Catholic church. Adaughter of Jose Santa Rosa was ax- rested ut San Marcial for a tri offense awnd was subjected to punishment by an al- cade wio demandea her to work out the indebtedness. A mob of Americans res- cued the girl, The rich yields of potatoes in the ca ons in the Katon mountains, on Red ri at Elizabethtown and other places in Col- fax county, has inspired Lincoln county ranchmen to make un experiment in potu- to raising in the White mountains, A Mohave Apache Indian went to the ranch at Oudley occupied by Mrs, Wat- kins, whose husband is a wminer and was absent at work, insu'ted ber and attempt- ed to outrsge L-r snd rob the house. She resisted vigorously, He leveled & gun at her. She then picked up a Winchester rifis and shot him through th The citiz=ns of the county are ra purse to buy a medal for he No woman really practices economy unless she uses.the Diamoud D, Many dollars ¢ Ask the d FOR THE PERMANENT CURE OF 5 CONSTIPATION, ; No other diseasois so proval [ Constipation, aad ‘:'i\nH overcome it. PILES- T8 dlsirosin o THE KENDALL PLAITING MACHINE! P p o= g URESS-MARERS' OONPAKION, Chicaro T Adwme JAGOB KAUFMAN, Office 802 18th 8¢, Cor, of Burt WAGON BOX RACKS. TED = —= WARRAY T g Can Be Handled By a Boy. ver be taken off the all the helled The box necd b agon sud Grain and Grass Seed Is fave - Tt 8t losa than the old stylo standard wagon i3 rold with our BUY NONE WITHSUT IT. Or buy the attachments ard app!y them to your old wagon box. For sale in Nebraska by J. C. Cuat, Lincoln. ke, Every comple.e CHARLI 8 SCHEODE: SPANOGLE & FUN NE & sy Glenwoo:, 10 s, every first class dealer in th them for desceiptive circular or sead di 10 us. J, Molallum Brog. Maunf’g Co., Oflice, 24 West Lake Street, Chicago, 75,000 TIMKER-SPRING VEHICLES / NOW IN USE. They surpa 8 all other vehicles for o sy riding. style and durability, SPRINGS, GEAR3 & BODIES For salo by Timken, Patonteo and Builler of Fine Carriag 8, 1003, 1008 and 1010 St. Ch.rles $t., St. Lous. Cata- logues furnis Henry L o THE BEST AND ONLY ABSOLUTELY SAFE OIL STOVE 1N THZ WOKLD, Every Yyousckeeper {eels the want of something that will cook the daily food andavoid the excessive heat, dust, litter and ashee of a coal or wood stove, THE MONITOR OIL STOVE WILL DO IT, better, quicker and cheaper than anyother means, It isthe ONLY OIL STOVE made with the OIL RESERVOIR ELEVATED at the | back of the stove, awayfrom the heat; by which arrangsment ABSOLUTE SAFEUY is secured; as no gas can be erated, fully twenty per cent more heat is obtained, the wicks are pre- served twice as long, thus eaving the trouble of coastant trimming and the expense of new ones, EXAMINK THE MONITOR and you will buy llb\ other, Manufactured only by the Monitor 0il Stove Co. Cleveland 0. Dealer in ALL KINDS OF WINES. Send tor descriptive circular or call on M. Rogers & Son, agents for Ne- braska.