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THE BEE GMAHA 1 Pablished evers morning, except Sunday. The | only Monday morning daily FRVS BY MATL. One_Year #10.00 | Three Months ......83.00 00 | One Month 1.00 Six Months TR WERKLY RER, PURLIRTIRD RVERY WRDXRADAY TRRNS POSTRAID, One Year £2.00 | Three Manths ] 8ix Months. 1.00 | One Month ‘Amerioan News Company, Sole] Agenta Newsdeal erw in the United States CORRRSTONDRNCR. A Co tions relating to News and Editorial matters should be addressed to. the Epiton op Tie B, SHUNINRSKSURTTRRS, All Business Tettors and Remittances Sshouldszhe addressed to Tiik BRE PUALISIIXG COMPANY, OMATIA. Drafts, Cheoks and Po orders to be made pay ahle to the order of the company THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor. | A urTe more warm weather would be welcomed by our farmers, ' strike has T, railrond telegraphers failed to materialize Srock watering lies at the bottom of nine-tenths of the complaints made by the people against the railroads. No more cases of cholera have ap- peared in Europe and the disease is di- minishing in ence in Egypt. Somk traces of the macadam e still visible on Farnham street, has learned after an expensive experiment that macadam does not pay as a paving material, Tup presidential party have reached the Wind river, on their way to the Yel- lowstone park. The country scems to have affected the press reporter, as his dispatches will show WiLe the president is taking fish in the Yellowstone he is capturing votes further east. The Arthur boom seems to be fairly started, and the leading re- publican papers arg rapidly wheeling into line, Tur Herald obj government by injunction. Dr. Miller has been preju- diced against the courts ever since Dr. Cushing’s little scheme, in which he was a partner, was blocked by Judge Savage's decision. Moe Irish paupers are petitioning for passage money to America. We have i | brate his birthday. but Omaha | * LUTHERS BIRTHDAY. The four hundreth anniversary of the | | birth of Martin Luther was observed | Friday throughout all of Protestant Ger The greatest social as well as re the days of the ‘npmuu-, it was especially fitting that the |land which gave him birth, should cele By command of the N | many. ligious reformer since orators recalled in eloquent lar guage the days of the great reformation and the history of its originator and garlands from house top testified to the remembrance in which the mighty reformer held in the country whose liberty and prosperity is due so much to his exertions. and flags and cornice is still Catholic countries as well a3 Protestant lands have reaped the benefits of the re formation. The church « not the church of to-day. private of Luther'stime is ion for which he contended has asserted itself in overy church and in overy creed. The separation of church and state has followed as the direc sult of his crusade against intolerance and oppression and ignorance, and that separation has been better for both church and state. Catholicism, in the words of one of its ablest bishops, ‘needed the intluence of the reforma- tion"” and society needed still release from an intellectual and pe bondage, which was dominated over by an ignorant and corrupted priesthood. With the advent of Martin Luther came a new impulse to science, religion and philosophy. With the assertion of the rights of men to think and to act for themselves came invention and progress in all the lines of mental endeavor. The religious results flowing out of the re- formation were great, but the political and economical results were even greater, For this reasen Catholics as well as Pro- testants could well have joined in doing honor to & man who, in the words v(' Heine, was “a brave soldier in the war for the liberation of humanity.” more a ical OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. The defeat of the tories last week on | The right of | - | gary si | to barbarism, | beginning of the Yrials of the Trish con | apirators at |n\4>rp¢m| | From France comes news of the col lapse of another legitimist plot to seat the convalescent Chambord on the throne of Louis X1V e action of the British government on the Suez canal question gives general satisfaction It is felt that a claims of De continued denial of the Losseps would seriously emperor, every town and village observed | strain, if not altogether rupture, the [the day as a fostival, Historical pro- | friendly relations hetween England and Al ! ance, From Tonquin there aro ro cestions traversed tho - strects; | ey of the bombarding of Hue by the banc of singers chanted Luth- | French troops, which are not yet con- er's hymn, “Eine feste burg’;|firmed. China is still massing an army | on the frontier of Annam, but her pleni polentearies continue to assert the good {will which the government of the emporer feels towards the French | Among other notable events of the week | was th ting of the emperors of Ger- | many and Austria at Tschel, Austria, on | Wednesday., Greetings of the most cor | dial nature were exchanged and the two | sovereigng attended the th re togeth in the evening. The meeting was ar- |ranged as much to emphasize the late | compact hetween ¢ ny and Austria, to which Ttaly was a consenting party, as to indicate the continuance of the friend social relations between the two em ewish demonstrations have out with greater violence in Hun- the acquittal of Joseph Schardt, charged with murdering a Christian girl to mix her blood with the passover bread. On Monday the Jewish quarter in Pesth was stormed and some fifty Jews killed and beaten, their houses wrecked and a number of stores sacked. The disturb- ances were renewed on Wednesday when the military were called out to quell the riots. Advices from Russia, announce similar disturbances which were quelled by the Cossacks, Western Spain_has been the scene of a republican rising which began on Monday in the province of Badajos originating among the Spanish troops, The garrison of the town pronounced fo stitution of 18 arepublic, and the con- ed the fortunes and occupied the railway station, A thous- and civilians joined in the movement, which was_promptly suppressed by the arrest of all concerned upon their arrival on the Portugese frontier. Latest ad- vices claim that the object of the rising was to cover up a robbery of the public treasury, While Great Britain is deporting the inhabitants of Ireland to this country, the lands of that island gre relapsing in: The area under cultiva- » last year shows a decrease of 000 acres, and 80,000 acres, the canal question wus s0 overwhelming | that Northeote has since found hmuelfl enough paupers of our own to support. Every assisted emigrant who is likely to | become a charge upon the country should | be promply packed back to English soil. Tue volume of business lust week as recorded in the statement of bank ci ings was smaller than for any week sin June, 1880, That wus the great business boom and the country, after ne depression, had fally rec panic of 187 w when the i 3. Twoand a overproduction. .extravagine speculation have pr the benefits of the r with econc no grounds that which began ure in Hascarr has a ring in the nose of the mayor the cil, and he leads them around- when it suits him. The latest pie gery is the ordinance taking the board of public works their and seven of coun- f sculldug- | 4 hwm upervis- unable to rally his party vppnmlmnn to the ministry M. Gladstone's | lnrge c an effective | The effect of | tory is seen in the| amount of business which has been | this week transicted The [ish lnl by a in the commons. ers bill has been passed the national mensure s g to 1ts wdous majoricy second , and the tena bill is well Irish was adopted and | P. O'Connor. It sanitary authori- | n most cases in Ireland are | of poor law guardians, m g that a laborer’s cottago is | tary condition, eause it to be | aired or torn down and replaced hy a The ¢ construction nd well-constructed cottage. for the will be advanced by t public works, and b the rates of the district. money repairs ome a ( The provides that the bonrds of guard- ians may attach t, each cottage a plot not exceeding two acres mnor less than hal! ionigE public works. The ordinance was | cre, on which the labor- written out in Hascall's hand, introduced |67 ™Ay Taise vegetables for his fam- by the Second ward : jobber. and pushed | 1Y Tho rent to be paid for tho got- through the council. It is o barefaced | Jand plot may be fixed by the b attempt to throw down another safeguard which protéets the city treasury, and to open the doors for barter and sale tween the contractors and the cou be- We fail to see what right or power the council the mayor or any one clse has to interfere with the private police which a number of our merchants are supporting for the better protection of their property On general principles it takes o thief to catch a thief. It does not pay to investi- gate too closely the character of the aver- age detective, Any citizen or collection of citizens has a right to hire block watchmen, 1t is done in every large city. There is no reason why there should be any conflict between the watchmen and the regular police force. It is notorions that our present police force is unsufficient to properly patrol the strests much less to thoroughly guard private property. Twenty policemen in a city of 45,000 people are as difficult to find as needles in o laystack. 1f our citizens desire to supplement this force and to pay itout of their own pockets no one ought to object. It is reported that Mexico and Ger- many have by secret treaty entered into an offensive and defensive political al- liance, against the protest of our min ter, Mr. Morgan, with whom the Ger- man minister came to a breach of deco- rum, The story *‘lacks confirmation, to say the least. If it wero true it would be quite a grave matter. It doos not seem probable that Mexico, after having been assured her independence of European empire by the direct interposi- tion of thetUnited States, would culti- vate alliances with any of the European powers, What we do fear is that our delay in ratifying the reciprocity treaty with that country will be taken advantage of by Germany and England to put in a claim for the treatment of the most favored nation, under which they may either block any concessions to American trade or secure equal advan- tages to themselves, Spencer St. John has been sent from England to re-open diplomatic intercourse, and we wmay be prepared to see & strong effort on the part of our Efpean competitors to gob- ble the trade of that country for them- selves. There is also to be met the claim of Mexico for protection of her nutive in- terests, e o— | of guardians or by #he land commiss Mr. O'Connor’s bill whe duced was warmly supported 1 ers. tions of the Irish members, whigs, tories, Parnellites. The large ma- jority hy which the third reading was carried, makes it almost certain that it | will pass through the house of lords and liberals and become law before the close of the pres- ent session. I its provisions are honest- ly enforced and liberally intorprote will confer u very great boon on the Lrish laborers, who are without exception the most wretchedly housed people in Europe. Nine-tenths of the so-called dwellings in which they are now lodged are wretched mud cabins, badly venti- lated, badly lighted, and without any pretensions whatsoover to sanitary rangement, If the local authorities do | their duty 70 per cont. of the wretched hovels will be demolished, and new and | comfortable cottages in their erected expiring in 1885, The effect of this will be to cancel nearly a thousand millions of the national debt in twenty years. A new Irish relief bill has been introduced by Mr. Trevelyan, whose object is to aid the working people by the establishment of tramways in Ireland and which also appropriates $60,000 to aid emigrants. Mr. Gladstone scored two wore victories on Monday in the defeat of the conser- vative resolutions condemning the gov- erument operations in the On Tuesday the premier attended the Lord Mayor's banquet and in resp onso to the conventional toast to “‘Her Maj. csty's ministers,” delivered a noteworthy speech. He announced that England | had no intention « |m|n|‘uw||lly oeeu- pying Egypt that would disappear from the Transvaal and English troops country us soon as the needed roforms were accom plished. He belioved that no difliculty existed between France and England in connection with the Tamatave atfair and that nothing would arise to disturb the long accord between these two friendly nations. Continuing he recorded with thanks the restoral of law and order in Ireland. continental press comments very fuv, bly upon the tone of the premicr’s speech, which is believed to presage continued | peace in England's foreign relations. Other English events were the Brad- laugh demonstration on Monday, and the he a Trish board of | arge on | bill also | has gone back to bog. The petato crop was 1,500,000 tons short. The Lrumh‘m;., walls of deserted cottages mark the failure of British domination and of Irish thrift A Honolulu newspaper has been pub- lishing some excessively plain talk to King Kalakaua. It tells him that no one among his advisers commands public respect; that the public money is eing squandered to gratify personal vanit; that the public works are shamefully neg lected; that the government contract sy tem is a scandal, and that the only re- markable prosperity of thenation restains the people from giving vent to their opin- ions. *Let that peosperity have a slight check,” itsuys, “‘and the whole affair will (1,”]. Tiko a pack of cards.” ; Glasgow has ¢ H\)ll lonses of one room n-\rll, 2,600 of two rooms, 17,700 of ms, 6,700 of four rooms, and n.-_(ln of five rooms or over. Two-thirds | of the people live in houses of not more artments. The operative 55 in these close quarters nd there are 950 fi ten to sixteen persons. population of about 10,000 persons in apartments, or more than five t room, necording to a caleulation by Bre rte, Reports from Ttaly show that the con ts of the country is growing wretched in nsequence of the iling m he region which malavia claims own has a wide extent, and is filled with a farming population. Within the last | | dition of the people in many more | ests, which has wrought so much mis- chief in other countries. The worst effect of the malaria is upon the railroad | employes, who circulate it upon their Of 9,000 wiles of railroad in 00 are within the malarial influ- ence. “In spite of the dangers of malari multitudes of people work in the f | in summer within its range for a pittance {of forty or fifty conts u day, and li brown bread and onions and themsclves from the tarantula at nig | burning rosin. In | Lo o farm hand earns 17,20 [n year besides his corn and ric hul hut free of rent. This con- |dition of labor in Italy affords an casy | ceent years, | of Italian farm hands wander from places. The debt reduction bill s in | and more distant regions of Europe in the nature of our funding measurc, | search of work. When they ean secure | Bosides reducing interost it proposes | Passage they cross the ocei to replaco tho terminablo annuities |26 Custle Garden, to begin lifo anow M i under vory different conditions, Noth- ing but dire necessity drives them forth, as Italy is naturally one of the most highly favored regions on eal and the rural attachment for their native soil the king, has been succeeded , the king, in the kingd Tudug by Phud; veally an emperor with absolute power, whose government was administered by the mandarins, He was a bitter enemy of Christianity, and was responsible for | the murder | tween 18564 and 1858, but after his armies had been conquered by the French in 18062 he was compelled to tolerate that gion in his kingdom, Tu-Duc | had become aware before his death that | | & formidable military and naval force had | left France to attack his kingdom again, {and ho doubtless foresaw the spee .l\ de struction of his power. It is not un likely under the circumstances, that he | was put out of the way by the mandarins | of his court, who may have possessed the | information that his successor, Phudac, {would save the kingdom from ruin b making p aco with France. Tu-Duc wi an unlucky king, having lost a great part | of his tervitory by the French conquests Jmuu, years ago, so that his country ve- | came widely known by the name of the provinge ARy mquin, More precise data as to the profitable noss of the Suez canal are given in & re- lmn by the British directors on the hoard to Lord Granville. The gross re- ceipts for 1882 were 63,400,000 francs, his means a | twenty years the territorial limits of the | \ rotect | htby |1 p the province of | lect some Km:l- ) | wmenu as a substitute uplmmn..uut the flow of emigration in | ¥ During harvest thousands | v’ pro- | i vinee to provinee and thence to France | trowth, T am ki o portions of its population have a strong llll;nmlmh-«uunu of his death the jury is of several missionaries be- | THE DAILY BEL --\'JMAHA S \'I‘l RDAY, Al (-l' . 1883, ST —i) 4,000 frmw-. Mul «h.- e divided on the share u\p.ml r cent, This s the Suez canal, for which Lord Palmerston, the greatest English statesman of his time, had such a contempt. The transit dues, which were 12 franes per ton in 1879 were reduced to 11 franes in 1882 and to 10} for the past six months of this year; notwithstanding this reduc tion the gross revenue for that period is at the rate of 70,000,000 francs a year. The British directors anticipate such a growth of business inside of seven years as to pay 30 per cont dividends, when | the dues will be reduced to 8} franes. the net profits 31,¢ peres 16} The Sunday law cxponents in Germany have met with a serious set-back. Some six months ago Her Von Wollf, president | | of Prussian Saxc the questioned right of Prussian authori- | ties to entirely prohibit Sunday trading, and issued an order prohibiting trading | | on Sundays. Fhe rc sult was g number of prosecutions, in which judgment has Just been given hy the court of justice. This court has ided that there is no law in existence which restricts the right of citizens to buy or sell on Sundays within their own | doors, although the act of exhibiting ar | ticles in shop windows, or at open doors, may be prohibited as tending to create a public disturbance. All the cases against | those shopkeepers who have | effected sales without making any publi display of their goods have been dis- missed, whilst solitary case in which a shopkeeper was proved to have made a public display of his goods, and which | had heen heard before an ordinary court, has been transferred to another court A lotter from Russia in the New York | Sun says that the czar is undoing all the good work of his father. He is restoring the partiality formerly shown to the no- bles and which his father had Jargely done away with, The children of all classes were cqual in the schools, but the czar has re-cstablished the cadet corps for sons of the nobility exclusively, and has given secrot orders to favor their children in the schools. Tt is proposed to give the nobles supreme control i the local gov- ernment, which has been hitherto quite democratic. They can close schools “if they find them harmful,” and will have public works under their control. The press is suffering new restrictions and is pretty effectually muzzled Unbelie There is no unbel Whoey ced beneath the sod And waits to see it push away the elod- He trusts r says, when clouds are in the aky, ient, heart; light breaketh h_\’muh Trusts the Most High, ver soe, ‘neath winter's field of snow, lent harvest of the future grow God's power must know. Whosver lies down on his couch to sleep, Content to lock each sense in slamiber doep, Knows God will keep, Whoever says, ““To. “The known, The I llhlrn' " trusts that power alone Hao dares disown, morrow,” Un- The he And t that looks on when the eyelids close, to ife has only woes, God's knows, oni There is no unbalief; And day | The heart Shall we lea you go to the the | \\hl mmm Chicago News, If o much it might be worth what is et's go out and [hed lo 5 co on o correspondent asks: “Tx there an be burned to keop away mosquit Oh, yes. Burn the mosquitoes. Miint will ooy thoom away, Of course your ice has been left with | mendablo regularity during the cool we | But just you wait until another hof Here s anoth ‘\\n The mon and town Herald, | to bite | “What is the next thing to a ‘|.u | asked in a Indy ansy | dise lavo extended with great | fan, but wi rapidity, although formerly it —was |\ jonly litthe “known beyond the Pontine |y i arshes. The spread of the disease is | gho Tonissille o e | attributed to the destruction of the for- e grass 30 conts, Iy in Retting blind | which aided him mate drunk, A New York'police inspector declares thore [ aro very few rich thieves, and that nearly all | dio wiserable paupers in’ the ne” Ky | dently that inspector has not the | Now York sos At oue of the White mountain hotels ln 1w student waiter for some gre to inform you,” sid the int has become nll the diner suid, A s old fellow in - Maine hix fonrth wife was_accosted | who had nu'nl asked, ir wife Capt. Plow T captain rep] with a “Wall, to tell yer t out of wives just naow. The cost of stopping o train of cars iy said | to o from 40 to 60 cents. ~ But it wouldn't do face [ any good to hold up half a dollar o the brako: and land | | ma'on e e erf of tho train you avo just | missed, a it go | The W o s out of the depot, 1 the following verdict: 1 Matthew Webb came th while attempting to sw irlpool rapids of the Niagara river, ury returs oo i termine.” Most I:lml, the poor fi | Iuw i od of smallpox or yellow fover, or f thirst. *“What station you say this wast” lu- joruff - brakema ; ; , ired o passenger “of a Anuw, with which France is at war. aty. growlod the polita. employe, wh Tudue, or more properly Tu-Duc, was | was mad Decause his first was not” distinet h," smiled the then you must feel perfuctly at home Tho brakeman slammed the door f and then bit off a pi Drake's Magazine. Kalo ring has boen built for the king The central stone is one and a hal hes in diameter, and is encireled by a ruby enough to be understood. travele an emerald, a sapphire and five other stones, 1f Mr, Niaw wears that ring when he visits | | this o will be iistaken for the wdvane snake show Norr II-uII of a i man kil hiuself, T I ived o Mossage, zon blocks awa: ir three hour i O, yes, Tt t oven with tho se 1o hooting now. What will 14 dispateh that at the other ut like this HCatay x at ott of corpy dox v ¥ v, How 1 to telegraph in a” School ond will read ellantii nice it I} —— | A Happy Family. | Pulled from the breast, squoezed from the bottle | tomacte Will sour aud wilk will curdle; | Haby haliclujeb al that night, Hotsehold bumping heads i awtul fri | Don't deny,'twas thus with Victorla x Night was hideous without CASTORIA; Wihen colfo leh; for peaceful slumber, AU said thelr prayers and slept like thunder. y, attempted to m(lh" superior | simply | A attempted | I makes g averag entree into |3 of the iron | | Buulmk R | LOOD BITTERS Cures Scrofula, Erysipelas, Pimples and Face Grubs, Blotches, Boils, Tumors, Tet- and Irregularities, Dizziness, | |Loss of Appetite, Juandice, Affections of the Liver, Indi- gestion, Biliousne. Dyspep- sia and General Debility. The Cow-boy's Bone-anza, | The cowboy mounted his musta nd .mmu that dripped with dew, [ Through forests, savannas and pampiv The cowboy and mustang flew, ‘, liath the mustang halted? hy doth he shiver and shake? sth he rear on his hind legs, der and tremble and quaket For conduct so strange and unequine, Som ust surely be atter with Hannah? What doth the mustang seet He sees, and <o doth the A sij 'ht most. Kelstons olairn heir bones all bleac A xort of skeleton family Rusticating alone, Ho soes two xkeleton horses Standing silent and Like a couple of megath In the British museumn Tuwo stately skeleton horses Under a big onk Standing erect 1 As skeloton horses can be. | The cowboy jumps down off his mustang, d going over to them,| . Begins in coroner fashion 257200 ‘o hold & post mor-ten: § i He enters the skeleton carriage, I 55 And there with his skeleton keys, Contrives to open the rusty lock Of the skeleton’s big valise. v B What treasures the cowboy found there The telegram does not suy, For s are not the sort of boys For giving such things away . But he saw how a bolt of thunder Had riven the giant onk And surmised that whole caloodle And this is the tale of the cowboy, And cowboys are not marines, Although you may think that this story Alittle bit that way leans, And when Barnum comes here next sumime You'll all have a chance to see The skeloton team and earriage And the skeleton famil New York Star, X i EDUCATIO Eriends of the telling with pride that profe different chairs of departments in polytechnic schools and other institutions | higher receutly been ch The destriy of the Tndiana State University has heen The University nu Professors Jobdan an }( nu t, lwlh\mmg men, who within vi;: s discovered typical examples of of fish new to science. This valy . nwas burned, s well as many collee tions in alcohol sent rom other colleg for examination and clas University of Virgini i from its alumni, mal - employmg d short-hand is ot one pe wiing the study of short-ha thing that can be called suceess o ho Yale class of aee of as 149 men, of s n . Of thes ing; duritg sopho awve attended all the rushe J tionalists, i Ik | theology, 1 surgery, business, 6 jous are undecided, xponses ha | been lighter than usual ——— *The tevrm Aydra may be used to re resent any manifold evil, battle successfully with headed monster of disease you will find 1f you wou this man, Banning. nge upon the b ul.u‘llx And Watch tho iirls In bathing suite Of red and blue and yellah o through all sorts of pretty tricks T fasciunate a fellah; 1 the spray bedew And briny fragian, rom out tn-gllnwmnu sand sel sholl, ah! think you'ro in enchantod land Held by a fairy spell, u ly a talo of | Tu whispered tones to tell, aht And then perhaps & kiss to get “That nial 1 swll, ah! 1, ah! loubt, go seek @ beach, » bowitching belle, ah! Aud whilo away an hour or two Beneath u big umbrella. Harper's Bazar, REMEDY FOR PAIN. 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WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake. 1t isthe best and cheapest food for stock Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall of runaing down, will increase in weigh be in good marketable condition in the spring n, &4 well a8 others, who s nm testify ¢ bta merita " Try It aud Judge for yourselves. Frice 822,00 per fon: o charge for wacks, o4 -eod-me - OODMAN LIN 1L COMPANY, Oaha NOTICE TO t any kind. pound is equal to three pounds of corn - - 4 s QUEENSWARE! - N - -