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THE OMAHA BEE. anly One_Year #10.00 | Three Months @00 it Months o0 | One Month 1.00 TR WERKLY BR, FUKLISIED KVERY WEDNRSDAY iree Months 8 One Month 9 Agents Newsd Ons Yoar §2.00 Six Months 1.00 American News O s in the United States, ORRRSONDENCR, News and Edite he Epiror or WUSINKSS LRTTRR. and Remittances should be | TSSO COMPANY, OMATIA rdors to be made pay Able to the order of the comipa THE BEE BUBLISHIN(} 00, PRUPSw E. ROSEWATER, Editor. 'ux cholera is increasing in violence in | o cast 'k question that is now agitating political circles is whether a postmaster | « a bigger man than a United States sen ator T'wo more southern editors have heen trying the difficult job of fighting a duel, but at last accounts no one had been in- jured Sesaror Manderson says yes and sen wor Van Wyek says no and if the rope does'nt break something is bound to give in the vicinity of Fifteenth and o streots, I'ue indignation ot our citizens upon whom the eity council have endeavored to foist o worthless sandstone is at fever pitch, It is very doubtful whether the machine has yet been oiled enough by the d contractors to make it work surely 1 with ease s taken by mterested in the paving matter ought to be taken at once. be lost in blocklng the game that isabout WHATEVER steps a citizens There is no time to to foree on Omaha for paving purposes, a that is gutte mate being condemned ing. Let those nterested, examine the flaky and haly stone for street of our citizens who are that lies along Fifteenth street and imagine its value for use in the middle of a well atreet traveled Turrr is a report from Washington that & cortain Democratic Representative inCongress willon the first day of the next session introdnee a resolution in the Howse to investigate the newspaper arges concerning the appointment of Matthews as Justice of the Supreme Court for a consideration of $100,000. Thisis good. While few be. lieve a word of the report it might as well be investigatod. There are some people who will believe the charge until it is refuted and if the advocates of the charge wish to furnish the refutation by all means Tot them do so. n heard from, and ne from Washington, Aftera long v with the President oln, Mr. Teller was visitod, and the indications are that the conclugion of the talk was not to his lik- ing. The Secrotary of the Interior in- forins the Associated Press reporter that he offered to turn the police control of the San Carlos reservation to the mili , but that he would not hold his de- partment rosponsible for the vesults if the capture turn to i ing to Mr, Teller, the Indians re permitted to re \ Carlos At present, nccord- matter 15 in abey ance. [f common sense rules, the prom- Gen. Crook to the Chiricaluns will | be fulfilled to the letter. In this instance the cheapest way of solving the Indian problem in Arizona happens to be the best 180 ‘I printer’s strike collapsed yostorday and fifty men who had steady work and wore curning good wageshave been forced to seek employment elsewhere, The re sult was a foregone conclusion from the start. Ttwasan untimely and unprovoked movement untimnely because the labor market is everywhere falling and unprovoked because the printors, at least in the Bk office, had been treated with uniform consideration. The net of the strike may be summed up in a loss of nearly $2000 in wages and the throwing up of fifty permanent positions by the striking men, No one denios the rights of any man or any body af mex to refuse their labor when thev see fit to do so. And no one denies the perfect right of every Iaborer to endeavor to better his condition. But no strike has ever been successful when a strong labor market,and public sympathy were both lacking as they wer present instance, The stri tried coercion and it failed. only themselves to movement colapsed. THE STATE OF TRADE. The six months which closed last week were a profitless half year for trade For the first time since 1878 failures ox ceeded those in the corresponding period | of 1872 and 1873. The period has boen | one of slow and painful liquidation, wnd it closes with nearly all raw materials at their lowest point since the rise be in 1879, and with’ most manufactured articles at the same level, The m‘lllnw of prices is always accompaniod by an case of failures and the most sur prising circumstance is that the half year has closed with cheerful predictions along the whole line that the worst is over aud & recovery is ‘close at hand, It is not easy to find the exact basis for these predictions, which seem to rest oo the three facts: first, that cheap food will increase the purchasing power of av- erage incomes; second, that the low range of raw materials promises profit to the manufacturer from a very slight .d- result in the ng printers They have blame that their not phenomenal, are large enough to give enconragement. The ted in 1878 withont doing more than boom next year Whent pro mises better than it did, corn has reached pave the way for a crops remain doubtful « eritieal point, with cverything depend ing on the coming weather, and cotton is at best only fair in condition, with an in | crease of one-twentieth in acreage. The prospects of crops abroad make it reason ab | 1 oly next fall with the natural result o # boom in prices. Such prosperity as is predicted is in the direction of a steady at fair profits and enlarging fall Now that the very serious collapse in o has blown over Chieago two weeks ¢ the signs of a fair fall trade multiply m—— OTHER LANDS THAN OURS The Count De Chambord, chief of the eldor branch of the Bourbon family, and known to the Fr Henri V, weh Legitimists as King of I his exile residence of Frohsdorf. Cham bord is the posthumons son of Due D Berri, the youngest son of Charles X, the last of the Borboun Kings, who left France in 1830, prior to the ace sion of Louis Phillippe, the citizen King Two years later, the returned to France for the Count's mother purpose of stirring up an insurrcction and claiming the crown for her son. She landed at Marseilles, hut port there she made her way toLa Vendee where ceeded in rallying a fow ad horonts. They were quickly subdued, however, and she tried to mak securely out of the country, tr finding no sup he her way o was be od, however, to Louis Phillippes ernment, and made a prisoner in the castle of Braye, from which she was sub sequently released. The Count deCham d in 1864 a daughter of the a but he has no child bord “ma Duke of Mod and remains the only surviving member of the Bourbon family. Most of his life has been spent in exile at his castle of Frohsdorf near Vienna, As earlyas 1843 he received visitors in London in the role of King of France. and the Orleans b Ten years later he anch of the Bourbons harmonized their claims, and yet during and after the Franco-German war the count of Chambord continual the rightful king of France, that title outright in a proclamation July Hth, 1871, It was at this time thought that ihe Legitimist and Orleanist factions would be able to unit posed as in a compromise, accepting the things accomplished, and aiming to govern the country constitu- tionally. But the count followed this by repudiating all the results of the revolu- tion and making the since hist ation that “*Honry v abandon the white flag of V. % d he immediately tired frem France, not to embarrass the younger Orleanists, sorve the state whatever was done. The two branches of the family were, how ever, united ten years ago in a re tion of Chambord as the royal house of France, and that pe hus since received deputations, proclamations, and written numerous let- tors upholding his position with unyield- eclur cannot “Henry ing rigidity, proving himself the proverb- ial Bourbon. It is actually thought that there have been junctures since the com mune, when but for this obstructi pidity Henry V might have | France, s stu instead of a were name. For| these twelve years Chanl the castle of Frohsdorf, wife, Princess Maria Theresa of Modena; in veligion, and every way u resp man. The count of Paris, son of the| eldeat son of Louis Philipy head of the Orleanist elder branch closing in Clam news of the impending death of the L gitimist pretender has o is now the | the Bourbor eod mere less excitoment in France, and the Or loanist papers of Paris are calling upon the count of Puris to assume the title which is his by divine right. The question of pauper emigration has finally been brought into parlisment by the rigorous action of the authorities in New York. When two ship land in the United States, England sees which her own avarice and cowardis rospousible. The secretary for Ireland on Thursday informed the Commons that steps would be taken at once to and the exodus from Irish workhouses wmay therefore be expocted to coase. The election of Healy, the Parnellite candidate in Nonaghan county, Ireland, which took place last Saturday, 1o garded as significant of the determina tion of Ulster that the Gladstone Land act must be amended. Fully 700 Pros. byterian farmors voted for Healy. The rumll of the election serves notice on Mr. Gladstons Sha$ unless the Land act nell will rotatn to Parlinment with o | practically golid delegation of Irish members, that the Whig party in Ulster will cease to exist, aund that for the future the @eatost there must be wage | botween the Torie s Parnellite Much of Healy's suceess is no doubt due to the splendid campaign which he and | Parnell conducted Anothea feature of | the election is the disappearance of sec tavianism, The Catholics and Protest | ants were united on the single question of the land, AN appeals to prejudice useless, The attacks of tho Y..,\.‘A Papal orgaus who accused Healy of in sulting the Popefhad 1o more effoct than the uttacks of the Tory organs which de | nounced him as an Cmissary of Rog | Healy is the ablest of Parnell's licuten- | ants, a fact which must also have con tributed to his success. Hud the Liberal | andidate withdrawn it could hardly have had any effoct on the result The cholera shill rages with unabated first two conditions ertain that food exports will only |y t low pricos and no import of gold is | ance, lies dying at| - | known to exist in ceded t who proposed to | P head of the nige | Peru one-half of the net proceeds to be | wsucd | obtained from guano at m king of d s lived at | ynap showing the near Vienna, [ districts and their [ like & country gentleman; faithful to hiy| Fespects the danger of infection. fond of hunting, devout and punctilious | the «d. The [and is altog loads of | starving. paupers are peremtorily forbidden to that it is time to remedy an abuse for | soft debris has fallen back into the in | in such quantitios tha dealing with the Trish quostion is alono | Wil P® Feruired (un\pmr the excavations, meet the objections of the United States out the is smended i Wflwuh the do {munds of the UNelee farmers that Par- | THE DAILY vigor in the East, although its ravages, up to the present time, seem to be con fined chiefly to the tlements at the mouths of the Nile o reports from Damictta, Port Said and Samnoud give | f unts of the filth upon which foeding, and of the wretch ed condition of its victims, more than a thousand of alrendy died The fright of Europe is intense, and all the countries on the continent have now | inatituted a rigid qu itine against ves. sels from the Kast. The scourge first ap- | peared last August, in the s‘...lm..qlun.la} n archipelago near Borneo, and it is sup. sed that of the population of 200,000, s many as 20,000 died during the season. As there was no quarantine, the discase | soon spread to the Philippine group, and in September appeared in Japan and | carful acec the sconrge is whom have | some parts of China, and some cities suf | fered terribly. The pest made little or | no progress durng the winter, but in the | spring began the westward journe which may not improbably_end” in San Francisco. It appeared in Bombay, and [ has worked along the old route through | |the Red sea to the |»!||l|m~ of Suez, There fourteen vernments, our own | |among them, have cstablished quaran tine, but it is said that England permit ted some perilons risks to health to favor | and Egypt to-day is the suf- | I4 pror here is only the Mediterranean hetwoen infected places and the European s, and the infection is directly on the sreat naval highway. It will b very for tunate if cholera does not sweep throu, | to the Atlantie during the summer | under its usual course, our own great | r will come a year later 1 | | nese ||(1|‘rnl|| . | blo that a peaceful a | rived at. Both countr rent that France and China to a peaceful understanding | Still it is not impossi ement will be are undesirous of war- China because she knows Hml it would result in inevitable defe | France because she fears it would I« to serious trouble with other Europ {powers. It is said that the Chinese want United States as an intermediary except for our hostile atitude toward her emi- grating citizens. It is an offer that this country would not covet and it is not probable that her services will be needed, th being a willing mediator much nearer and much more experienced in the dark ways of eastern diplomacy. That power is Russia, who has been dealing with the Chinese ever since the 3 s appearedon the Amoor in the seventeenth century and has since had intimate intercourse with all the tribes of the Central Asian steppe Russin does not know ate ways of Oriental di- is superfluous knowledge. Sinc roubles on the Amoor she her first sottled every difficulty she has with China by peaceful negotiation and has always come out winne The last news from Panama confirms the report of the treaty of peace between Chi'i and Peru, and publishes the follow- ing ubstract of its provisions; Absolu cession of T aca; the fate of Arica and Taena to he decidad by a plebe afterward; military oceupation by Chili, the losing nation to receive $10,000,000 from the country acquiring the property Chili to pay over to Peruvian bone holders one-half of the net proceeds of | [guano taken from the deposits rritory: th safter be brought to light (m ive property of Chili; the | rn ts in the nitrate deposits Will bo respected by the govermment of | Peru. The indemnity tobe puid to| the Chilians who suffered losses throug expulsion from Peru will be discussed at | some future time. Chili will give to| the Labos 1s- lands. The municipal and other Peru- vian authorities in the different towns throughout the north have been notified by the Chilians that they ave prepared to withdraw from all ponts where Gen Yglesias is recognized | The Ttalian Ministe Var has just |« iusued a discouraging report on the sul | ject of malaria in Ttaly, with a statisti ngition of the malarial rvelative standing as | At the nine from onous exhalations, and upwards + [ of 40,000 soldiers are annually affected at | 1 cost to the government of 100,000, Moreov vin: throws thousands of | workmen out of employment, prevents the cultivation of tracts of land, ther an - enormons sconomi | drawback, 1t is worthy of note that| | with the construction of railways the ma- | al 18 increased at an alarming the u\plmm(mn being that the ex cavations have brought much swamp land nn the surface and interrupted natural nlx.mm-u- | present time only six of the siy rovinees of the kingdom are fre Distressing reports come from the far- | ‘m\.\) dinmond fields of South Africa, In| parts of the country there hus been no | | rain for three years, and the people are Id to the mll'runful condi tion of aflairs produced by the failuve of the crops the Kimberly dismond mine | has met with o serious disaster. The mine vighteen months Tur French lh- oublic has driven a sharp bargain with ATt companies by using s a leverage its right to buy wds at a cost after a certain pe- ach of the big lines agrees to assunme the construction of the new lines which the government engineers consid- ered needed, on condition that the state forogoos its privilege of buying them out for fifteen yoars. In addition, the rail- roads modify their old agreoment as to dividing profits. with the government, and the eastern lines agree in future to pay two-thirds of the profits over 5.1 per cont, the northorn over 4.6, and the| | southern 4 These are all steps in the s making in all European coun | prog BE nquin is denied by the Chi- | f: .nhm,mun and wounld have selected the | I | and palm-leaf fans as bad as he wants to g ) VN OMAIA SATURDAY JULY H WESTERMANN & CO, HONEY FOR THE LADIE th " daughters ofthe tribe. Not wishing Quaint K igns appoar on tho han- | ose o sight so interesting as this promised . dlox of par fo b g “ "]‘ , | to be, werepaired early to the place where Lebatirididis i y was to by rformed, which tints, with nat had for music a sort, of drum accompan Tistond of eetete. narrow ibbone match. | i6d by fife and reed whistles p ing i end af brace Lot B e e tied | weird, though not displensing consonance | T e wites Then follow sports and games, which Conching paracls sre of red, bue and | last until well into the afternoon, when creatn silk. with bamboo handles, and very | the real ceromony of “bride catching’ be - o striped in th me color gins he would-be brideis stationed by | her father some hundred in front of her then at a given signal she starts [ for a goal distant about half a mile, to reach which and return, before ove |L|Lnn by her pursuer, releases her from his a | tentions. This result, as you may n....‘, . sufficlent finish to & morning | ine, is not frequent, as these dusky maid ws of gingham or satine | ensareaseagertobe ‘eanght”as their more | | fashionably trimme o, with a gilt cord with dark Summer with the linen canvas rit Tt combines well sitor China and Glass, |608 WASHINGTON =AVENUE AND 609 ST. St. Louis, Mo. WHOLESATLHR velvet ribbons. STREET 1sisters of civilized countries. 1 have never witnessed anywh a more | xcitin e than this. The maidens, | straight and well formed, standing in their tunic dresses reaching from the swelling | bosom to the knee, exposing yet conceal now very little used except by | favor therofore, the chofce has very | manufacturers not beir irection of uovelty tourists, and much 1 don't like to have my hushand chew to. remar it up with i bcco, ayoung married lady for the tiu d, after handy for anything in doing up my front | ing their charins, stood chatting with each | erimpw.” other until the signalis given, when, pres No," s rides SLam not willing that | ol away like the wind they sped, follow {on g tour ~wH ificlude this Xollow l... by the young buck, who soon diminish- | _w"\mm» ¥ A "“y«m, distance between them, and the | | | marringe ceremony is complet Tho fastion ws started. by nenaitive mis- | hour, whe i the mln_'. again ussumes a vs who wish to avoid being mistaken for | quietness and silence only broken by the their servants, who wear silk haying of the dogs, which are o real pest In north Brazil there ssional | in‘all Mexican towns, as well as among the finest ladi % | the Indix ’ tumes, When iy hig | 1 lyillt dress he doesn't have to give h 10 to get it made, Thero are somo things in north Brazil worthy of imitation in this country A Brooklyn Heights girl, washed the sidewalk of with the hose for the sake of [ ance to turn the water on a dude F who insisted on making love to her. A young lady of Ottumwa, while out walk- SAML C. DAVIS & CO,, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. MO, ' STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS 1N FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOJS, ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE R THE GREAT GERMAN | REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relieves and cures RHEUMATISM, ng with her fellow, had her dress nearly Neuralgia, buri off by a spark from his cigar. The Sciatica, Lumbago, variation from the usual sparking routine was HACIKACHE, animated. “1 have often noticod that gallant young men walking with their «weethearts offer the rm, whill devotod married yien with theiy | \\In it this?" | HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS. SPRAINS, Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, FROSTBITES . SCALDS, nd all other bodily aches and pains. " BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AEENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & IMNIJ PDWDI:/? €0. J. A, WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN The women's association fnnnulm I‘. Ve 2s to be a highly sue- ; dosigned for tho ben efit of working women d ||1|'n\i‘|~ for lh"i\i FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. fnstruction in embroidery and other arts, anc A L offers opportunities for refined social enjoy- ; i o A e nients. I The youngest telegraph operator in the world 14 probably a 1ittle girl 10 years o Hallie Hutchinson Vr» name, who lives in Texns, and has ch at the railr The average you ot of seat in n blocks, but she will f aday Sunc wneezed 1ntn o bugg U8Ry oNEs. min nd the Joast fuul. | The Charles A. Vogeler Co. (Sucoemsors 15 A, VOGELER & C0.) REAL ESTATE a ride of Lmaer, Lath, Shingles, Piekes, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C. TENT COMPANY. OMAHA, NEB, STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CE Near Uman Pacific Depot, - : - C. F. GOODMAN, & BELL, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN unersion, under the circumstances; drew a | the'credit of having put in an appearance. SH RI v ER A New Haven (Coun ) woman joined _the | Salvation Army lust week, leaving her neigh- bors o look out for the salvation of two small children tied to w chair in the yard, A Pennsylvania Protecti when Lie went to church and heard the announce thatsalvation was free. at down and Cong ing why the mischiof hie allowed it t nist was sho The Babtist pastor at Cherryville, Ind., does not weigh more than vounds and one of his Indy converts no less than 300. The rite of PRI e posenee, | 1IS, DI, VArLISES and WiDAOW GIaSS, or and the sandidate had to be OMAHA, NEBRASKA Bargains in Improved Property.i his family every summe hope that he might di heaven, ns that was the wife couldn’t got in with s pel him to fight with the ¢ A good il Cit, P. BOYER & CO.,, | DEALERS IN i Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. 1 and go to place where | trunks and con No. 9 House & rooms loacon not a the t rooms on leased lot ST corner, | 170 House S rooms on Park aveniie, cheap to excuse his ad heen up un. til lute the ni spening the finest lot | 167 1o bronght to town, | near Saunders strect, full io, o FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF of year )1 boy leoks re y aw it drops'in the hat, and “wonder |H the little lieatheu wants flannel undershirts 1041 pen | 16 {10 v h 1163 B0 t0 100 ITouse two rooms, | ireus, An Eric, Pennsylyania AL b oG ek, R 1020 Farmnam Streot. Omaha. about a minister in Mercer who enred a dog of | 125 House § T, 0th st | paralysis by praying ov an hour, We | 161 Houso 2 rooms, kitche o0 | = —— — don't doubt it. honr 1 | 5o hors u wooden. doy St 10 600 id walk. The only wonder is now | St 180 00 v ]; ar parson conld stand it so long him- ar line 1 500 >3 JOBBER OF - Wall Paper and Window Sha EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, \\l' th.m wan haus willed ¥2,000 to the Meth- | HT hurc hnl hix native town on condition | 146 H ves up sociables, Any man who has | 185 Housc 6 rooms, Divisio Gieap heen ed by et e month to | 156 House 4 rooms, trees, redt, .. the church ociables would have hard f { uition wenue and 10th he could not well ki 1 150 1 ; (38 1500 Young Men's | 122 1650 an_enter- | 119 chuir o | 13 Jay ent printed | 104 e in red Just over part of it the Associa- | 101 H 100 | 1118 FARNAM STREET, 5 - » OMAHA NEB. tion had pasted a card bearing a Se .94 House 4 rooms, 16th strect 4 600 | . o liiredinks Dhetcombinat Two houses, full lot, rent for =76 per | me———— — e —— e —— v o follows: “Tho Wi 50 House’s rooues, Diiee and 31 200 The gift of God s eternal | phie ol R ¥ e, swing, velocipede: and toys i | M. HELLMAN & CO,, ¥ va | Unlmproved Property. | i | 1 000 ing of the Limekilu elub the ¥ 1 000 3 D i 6 Par um A (u :IIV\ ng on Sunday iy Lln Last flse 866,451; number of fish caught by AR indies 0 s ber of fish liss told in” the last_year, 6,000, 000,000; greatest State in the Ubion for fish lies, Geory Illn committee further re- a ported that it was its solemn belief, founded | 109 1ots in Hanson Fiace, upon the result of & series of experiments, | i & Sele that there is twice as much fun hooking har Redick's addition to 1600 vest apples on s moonlight night as there is Park place to 1 509 uumg on a wet log b.....f‘, afternoon, s on Cuming street 6 800 ] 1307 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, HRik L'Tu' OM;\IIA, 2 A . We Boyd's additi NEBRASK LOUIS BRADFORD . 50Tots In Patrick's addition 400 to 650 you don't,” replied theman. _ **You { g jots in Shinn's addition 400 to 1000 can't get me into no game and ring in four |1 in 800 to 000 | DEALER IN Tve traveled too much | 13 lota in E. 400 to 850, kings on my f ks i right on this and turned awa y know who that| Lotsin all parts of the city, and in every addition | 4 Wi you Tnsultod so grossly ? » aaked the con | on ey termsd Call or send for descriptivo pam. I‘ as Il S S ductor of the .mn,m. in'an avgry tone. Phiets, 3 ) ) ] ) The Doctor apologized | 810ts in Horbach's 1st addition, each 1 000 “Do :1 I;.].lrmll the Ilwl;g‘ar 'm;: was Five Acre Tracts, he r, Talmage, & minister of the gos- S = o - y N i pel. Rl ey 1 0 o e ETC-, LOW PRICES AND GOOD GRADES the man. “That’s me, clean through ! o 8t 0 per thought ho was w card sharp from Reno. I'd knowed he was # sure-enough ministe Lave gone in his pokor game in & holy minute. T way. you go and explain it to him, and teli | STA him he can wso hix own deck if ho Hkes roperty luirably adapted to gardening call and fet My Prices Before Buying Elsewhere, Yards Cor 9th ana Douglas, Also 7th and Douglas, P NEBRASKA, ) oo DOUGLAK COUNTY ¥ court held at the county eourt room in county, July Snd A, D, 1583 _— | bries towards state control of the railroads | and a division of their profits with the | [ public treasury to lighten taxes | A win providing for a ministry of Scoteh ffairs has boen introduced in the | British commons, The head of this de partment will be cabinet minister. The | salavy it is proposed will be 810,000 per | |annum, Either Lord Roseberry or M | Baxter, & Scoteh radical mombor of par limment, will be appointed to the new | | post, probubly Mr. Baxter. { T.w preaching that draws more at e | | .iom to itself than to the truth is always | ;qul The pernicious sensationalism i | that which makes & congregation think | ;muw of the speakers peculiarities of | style and_eocentricities of manner theu | of the religion he sets forth, Whent congregation praise the preacher m oy \ey praise God, they have been mued instead of fod on the Bread of GATE CITY 3 ity Judge wattor of the Eatate of Martin W Yaqui Bride Catching. A correspondent in Sonora writes: In 1n the company with Mr. Bate, who came to ' this place with me from Hermosillo, T vis ited the settlement of the Yaqui Indians, sftuated on the river of the same name \ S AT s Our entrance was announced by the A0 that metit aying of the dogs who, keeping close to sppolitted c our horses’ heels, followed us through the 3 Wi v a e te s m t als | town, which differs very little frow an ‘“"\L“‘.'.“‘.”).HfJ‘,‘l‘\“.iu.ff,.'\h rp n r a erl ] | ordinary Mexiean village. The Indians 1 wald ador Ty by o avegoverned by an alealde uppointed by the Mexican government, and who is us- |1 ually their chief, for although peaceful | and Taw-abiding, the Yaqui is pruod, and | will not permit & ruler save of their own | printed in sid ‘county, race. Bofore this individual we were im. P17 £ G gfhearing wediately summoned, and Mr. Bates, who [ _July 8t ewh is well known to the chief, nuoyneed the A. MOYER, Propriotor. object ofour visit, The chief, who spoke | JAMES McVEY, | UNFORTUNATE. Spaniah fluendy, wsured us of our wel- | o o i o) o nee Shoer | come, placing apartments in his own house | Catareh is oue of the wonst diseases of the prescnt time, Hundreds are suffering with it whon they ean at our disposal, he excitement and [ Ao ruleived at once. | will guarantes o cure the worst ase of Cataridy in three wonths or refund the wioney Makes a spocialty of Roadsters wnd tenderfoot hord his medicine is good for 1y the e discnse, By sending me W 1 will send the medic pre pa bustle which we imagined ourarrival caus- .».«.,.’ Dol ‘areet k. H1th aid 150, 01 | €SPross or mil DO mod s i onger whens ot can i e or o sl st ooy wd, the chief informed us, was owing to | Belevys i Sk o1 hox 469, Owaha, Neb 0rs, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window ey M T e wntry will be promptly executed Address all communications tc & Door Frames. &, nd Matchiug a specialty A M. CHADWICK, Nl