Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 30, 1883, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

i [ e ————— THE DAILY BEE. B. ROSEWATER, Edltor, LAPSED FROM THEI Bosovnxe crushed to earth will rise again P ] Now that the Thanksgiving turkey is digested, lot us prepare for tho presi dent's message. The speakership contest has reached Within forty-eight the boiling point. hours the agony will be over. e — No complaint has reached us about the _turkey coop but the Omaha be't railway js by all odds the greatest gobler of the season, — Now that the American hog has re- sumod his friondly relations with the French, Bismarck can't bar him much longer out of Germany. Y — Tnp speakership contest which has been raging so furiously in the news: papers for more than a month is no nearer settled than it was when it was begun. PR —— 1r the clegant cowshed that adorns the Union Pacific dopst grounds could be transferred to Capitol avenue or Jeffer- son square, tho market house problem would be solved. Fou tho first time since her admission into tho union, Nebraska will bo repro- sontod in congross by a delegation of w a majority hold seats in the house. For sixteen years Nebraska hss had buta solitary member in the lower branch of the national legislature, and that solitary member has for the most part been a man of straw. On and after Monday Nebraska will have three members in the house, and she ought to wield an influence cor- responding with the increased represen- tation, Tuar New York remains a doubtful stato is shown' clearly by the result of the late election. The vote polled in New York was not a full one, being 14,000 leéis than in 1882. The total democratic and republican vote compares as follows: 877,782 L873,060 The republican increase over the Fol- ger vote was 84,234, and the democratic decrease from the Cleveland vote 88,049, The prohibitionists polled 17,000 votes, against 25,783.in 1882, The greenback- ors cast 11,000 votes. These figurce show that there was a large vpte not cast at all—a reserve that makes the contest next year uncertain. A mirimLuiNG description of a Spanish bull fight, which took place in Madrid * last Sunday, was cabled to Americn, Crown Prince Frederick W postive Head of The Pro militant of Germany, graced the brutal and bloody exhibition. According to all accounts it was a mest oxciting affair, and swhen tho matador delivered the fatal * sotmke to the terrible bull, the enthu asm of the spectators was immense, The populace were esneiully flaitored by the Anterast v hich the crown prince took in #he¥; yational sport, and there is no fear now of a rising of the mob of Madrid, But what will Rev. Dr. Julius Stocker, tho court, chaplain and spiritual adviser of the imperial family of Germany, say? A wavE of satisfaction has swopt over the country since the announcement was made that Jthe Harvard college athlete committee has decided that the game of foot-ball with Yale college may be played. The condition however, has been 1m- posed that the reterce shall be an alum- nus, and not an undergraduate, of one of the four coileges in the association. This is virtually saying that an undergradu- ato would not be an impartial referee, The country stands with bated breath awaiting the result of this great contest in this branch of collegiate education, which seems to kave attained a greater degree of importance in the corviculum than mathematies, Tatin or Greek, or Agame of foot-ball or base-ball excites more interest than the Another dose anything else. commencement exercises. of Charles Francis Adams would knock the classics entirely out of the Harvard ring in three rounds, Marquis of (Queens- busy rules, and elevate the alumni to the standard of John Longfellow Sullivan, ‘Herbert Slade and Paddy Ryan, Tux St. Paul & Omaha managers have ismissed their injunction suits against the Omaha Boit railway and the Union Pacific. The bolligorent corzorations L}‘ have buried the hatchet, and the lamb s and the lion sleep ‘ogether; the lamb in. side of the lion—of course. But there are other interests and other rights in. volved in this contest between corporate monopolics. . The owners of property on California and Fifteenth streets havo rights which have been violatod, and the vitizens of Omahs are also doeply concerncd, It is still an open and unsettled ues- tion whether tho grant wade by the council in a manuer that savors of jobbery and bribery is yalid. It remains also an open question whether mere possession —obtained in o high- * handed and unlawful manner on Sunday - ~—when the courts were closed, conveyr permanent franchise to the Belt ilway company. 1t strikes us that the must—if applied to, pronounce whole transaction as brigandage. 1f Belt Railway company wants « legal Trera is dead, but truth | VIRTUF., | The total votein the state this fall on | the judge of the supreme court was a little over 100,000, It was a very light vote, and indicates that for president, a year from this November, we shall cast borhood of 125,000 pallots being A comparatively young lawyer and living remote from the large towns, was at a disadvantage as the opponent of Judge Savage, and was more or less scratched in tho westorn part of the state by straight republicans who knew his opponent as an old soldier and an active member of the (i, A, R. The counties that saved the repnbli- can party from dofeat in the anti-monop tidal wave last fall lapsed from their virtuo a littlo this year and disappointed us in the aggrogate majority that the returns in the eastern and contral portion of the state led us, soon after the election, to oxpect. However, the canvass of the vote on regents of the university, into which no personal con- siderations entered, will show, wkhen completed, a snfficiently decisive majori- ty for the republican ticke The repub- lican party is strong enongh after the an- ti-monopoly hegira for all” practical pur- Imsuu. It is not two to one, te be sure, yut two to one is a proportion more dan- gerous to the dominant party than it 1s to the other. It is provocative of un- wise nominations and of extensive bolts. — Lincoln Jovrnal, Coming from the most defiant organ of the old railroad ring this confession is very significant, Only a few days ago while the editor of the Journal was still hugging the delusion that Reese was elected by from 10,600 to 12,000 majority, Lis insolence kuow no He hurled satire and withering sarcasm at what he imagined to bo a political collapss and made merry over the leaders who were prominent in the anti-monopoly cause, Since the re- turns have been canvassed he is more temperato, He admits that it is not two to one or three to ono as it was only two years ago, and ho oven reaches the con- clusion that it is better for the cause of good government that it s no longer within the power of the dominant party to make a nominvtion as good as an election. At least it would seem 8o in the light of the result in the first district where Colby was snowed under by 3,600 while the re- publicans have fully 2,000 majority. But wo digress. The Lincoln organ of the railroad bosses tells us that the counties that saved tho republican party frem defeat on the anti-monopoly tidal wave last fall, lapsed from their virtue a little this year., What are we to understand by a littlo lapse from virtue! Are the ropubli- cans in those counties guilty of a lapse of virtue because they rcfused to support candidatos that were foisted on the bounds, keen Who is guilty of & lapse of virtuo the'ropublicans of theso counties who accepted pledges made by republican leaders last fall in good faith, and saved the party during tho anti-monopoly tidal wave or the insinoere and dishonest lead- ers who betrayed their confidence and handed theparty over to the monopolists. Wasit a iapse of virtuo on the part off betrayed republicans who sincerely de- sire to put a stop to the abuses and ex- actions of railway monopolics to withdraw their support this yoor after what has happened in the past? Tt strikes us that the oot is on tho other log. We ven- ture to say further that a many more republicans will have lapsed in virtue by the {ime they como to vote for the next legislature. They will ask for something more than empty promises, which are made so earnestly during every campaign to be broken as soon as the clection is over. On national issues there will be no divi- sion among republicans, but when it comes to the election of congressmen, state officers and legislature, we mistake very much the temper of the republican masses that saved the party last year from the anti-monopoly total wave if they continue to play into the hands of corporation henchmen and political ad- veuturers. o Warer waste is of late becoming a matter of serious concern in the leading cities of this country. Those who have given this subject close attention are seriously alarmed over the marked in- croase in water consumption, which in many of our cities compels a complote reconstruction of waterworks and costly enlargement of the water supply. A carefully prepared table of water statistics shows that the daily per capita consumption of water has increased in Boston from 30 gallons in 1850 to 92 gallons in 1882; in Brooklyn from 17 gal- lons in 18066 to 54 gallons in 1880; in Chicago from 43 gallons in 1867 to 114 gallons in 1880; in New York, from 62 gallons in 1867 to 100 gallons in 1876; in Philadelphia, from 56 gallons in 1867 to 07 gallons in 1880; in Cincinnati, from 21 gallons in 1845 to 87 gallons in 1881; in Hartford, from 53 gallons in 1859 to 110 gollons in 1883, Each inhabitant of Boa- ton consumes on an average three times as much water as he did thirty years ago; each inhabitant of Brooklyn, three times as much as he did fourteen years ago; each inhabitant of Chicago, nearly three times as much as he did thirteen years ago, and 80 on, 1t might at fivst reading be inferred that an increased use of water is one of the marks and ac- companiments of an improved civ- ilization, and it probably is, but not to the extent which these figures would show. Itis the opinion of experienced waterworks officials that nearly the whole increase in consumption in each of these cities is due to waste; persons 1o not use more water than they did fifteen years ago, but they waste more, An al- lowance of thirty gallons aday per capita, party by Church Howe's convention?|, AR DAILY BEE be an enormous wastage, This view i strengthened by the consumption in the y of That city has a ulation of 120,000, and its consump- 000,000 gallons a This is a low average compared with that of other cities; and yet it is not stated that the Providence people, who are largely en- gaged in manufacturing, complain of scarcity of water. Their water system is very strict in the direction of prevent- ing waste, and it is to this fact that the low rate of per capita consumption is due, Providence. tion of water is only 3 day, or 2 allons por capita. Tie Bee's prediction that Sergeant Mason would invade the lecture field did not come true, but it was not far out of the way. The Sergeant has accepted an engagement to exhibit himsalf at & Pittsburg museum, notwithstanding he had agreed to hire himself out as a sign for a Chicago clothing hou A Pacudo Nnpoleon. Mr. Morris Ranger, the great Liverpool cotton speculator who recently failed, is a German Jew, and has been described as follows: “He is a native of Hesse- Cassel. and in personal appearanco is said to be the living counterpart of Napoleon 111, In the small, piercing oye, the clear complexion, the air of half-mystery, half-frankness — in fact, in the tout ensemble—the resemblance is striking to a degreo. He has a well-knit, broad-set, substantial flgure, and has a certain bear- ing and gravity in featuro and form that bespeak importanco, Unfortunately, like the Emperor of whom he is said to be the counterpart, he has met his Sedan. His carcer has been too eventful; one day he has been up, another down; he has made fortunes and lost them; and who knows but one day, his three-quarters of a mil- lion of debts heing wiped off the slate, and the chastening process over, he may commence operations again, corner mar- kots and buy ‘futures’ with as much zeal and temority as cver!” Carpenters are at a premium in Custer, Holt county wants more school teachars. Ponca has arrived at the plate glass period, ld;l‘hu Journal says Fullerton needs a brick n, The Park hotel at Auburn was burned on the 26th, Skating rinks must pay 300 per year tax in Plattsmouth, W. H. Jones reports 1,200 bushels of oats from 20 acres, Mr. Hornbeck, of Juniata, oarned $1,100 threshing this fall. Corn in Dixon county is turning out better than was expected. The Tekamah dog ordinance has been de- clared unconstitutional, J. H. L, Knight has 1,068 beans raised on one stalk in Lee's Park. Ponca, with 1,200 inhabitants, is the larg- est town in Dixon county, Some one has been stealing coal from the thodist church at Neligh. ‘ino_coal is being taken out of the Cinein- nati mines in Pawneo county, (iao. Newer lost 26,000 nsh trees by fire on his timber claim in Custer county. Several citizans of O'Neill have been made mourners by three-card monte sharps. Fullerton s to b tor. Itis to be Prairio firea hav north of Sidue: The™ loads of butter to the Black Hills the other . Tho Parl house, at Sonth Auburn, burned Mouduy vuoon, 1t was built last fall, and cost $5,000, nploted January 1st. lamaged the range budly il south of the Platte river. mes Davidse burned on Tho residence of wiles east of Milford, with all its contents, , two unday Grand Island people talk of digging o canal from Wood river, to supply the city with water for vatious purposes. Plattamonth has a Mormon society, said to bo in a flonrishing condition, and consisting of moro than twenty-five members. A joist which fell from a scaffolding in the now opera house_in Lincoln, struck the nose of 4 man named Cain, tearing it off. Mrs, Rachol Boers, widow, has begun_suit at Fromont against Chas, Sang for breach of promise, The alleged damage is $10,000. An Aurora shoomaker carelessly discharged a rovolver, aud the ball took effect in a bar- ber in tho next room. 1t was too close u shave. The highest pension paid to any onein Fill- more county is §24 a month, aud Marshall J. {ouok gots it for the loss of an arm at the elbow. Sorenaders at a Nebraskn City wedding a fow days sinco utole the bride's ciko from the window, beforo tho coremony aud suppor took place. Some one a few nights ago at Blair killed Chiis Gulsch s best horse, valued at 8200, by sticking a knife in the animal’s breast, Minuesota farmers are buyig corn in Dodge county to feed their hogs, and Towa fanmers aro skirmirhing the state for corn to food cattle, Kit M. Goodell, of Glenwood, was severely injured by jumping from a train at Platts- month Monday, It is feared that ho isin. jured internally, The Tribuno says Shumaker, tho man whose team ran away and killed Mrs, Thomson noar Wahoo, sometime ago, was indicted by the grand jury for manslaughter. A family of Danes who mrived in Des Moines Sunday night on their w-{‘m the land of polygamy, {25% 6 vomaiun that clty long enough to bury an infant that had been born on the journey. Prof. N. N, E. Leach, principal of the Onk- land schools, will addross tho toachers of Cuming county at West Point on the 4th of Docember and the teachers of Burt county at Tekamal on the 5th of December. The Columbus Journal reduces the report that diseased beeves had boen sotd thero to this: Itis a fact that o steer witha *'bi jaw” was offered for salo, and that several of the butchars declined to purchaso it. Michael Gallagher, » Saunders county far- er, way golug home from Fremont on horse- back. Crossiug the Platte bridge about 8 Olclogk in the evening, the'horse frightened d plunged into the river, ~About 4 velock the next morniug Mr. Gallagher was from a sandbar and shallow watar, wicomfort- able enough aud soberer than whei ho left the bridge, Scott Brownlee, of Red Onk Junction, 1 has two turnips, ralsed in Holt county, Nek which weigh twenty-three pounds each, and wauts to know where there are any larger ones, He journeyed alone and on foot, this fall, from Omaha to Neligh, on the RElkhorn river, & distance of about 300 miles he thinks, in one w If this walk has been beaten recently he wants to know it. Lancaster and Hall counties have the floor, e OCCIDENTAL JOTTINGS. Wyoming. The opium den at Choyenne hns been pulled, or five barrels for every family of five persons, would seem liberal of-way let them proceed in a legal, ! d way. Let them first e lae st CA oads enough, and when this is raised to three barrels for each person, or fifteen barrels damages w0 property owners and | a day for every family of five persons, the inference is irresistible that there must SRS Ve L, e The telegraph line running from Rawling to WhiteJiiver s now up and s (n good working order, The Union Pacific officials are distributi :unw‘"lu‘l‘lsh along the I’wil. and are OVlrhluli og oy vary precaution wil b taken o provent Rf The action of the Stockgrowers association OMATH ‘e FRIDAY, NOVEMBLR 30, 1883, already firet of th Wtle thieves at n rocent special most fruit. Warrants woek for the approl Despite the fact that the Union Pacific rail- way company waut 1 in bonds bad en them to erect a arauie county's & gh, it i 000 depot in this city and build one hundred miles of the proposed nort ern road during the coming season in lieu thersof, it is generally thought that the newly organized eompany of local capitalists will mako the haul if thoy mean business, having plenty of high prossure influence, plenty of money, and the additional recommendation of being of the peopls, and not for the Union Vacific. Action in the matter is awaited with a deal of interest,—[ Boomerang. Dakota. Ashton has an assessed valuation of $88,800. jalirand ¥orks county s building » 815,000 il Crow Dog has been recaptured and taken to Dendwood. Nino new Brown county townships have been placed on the market. A plow-manufacturing_ establishment will e started in Bathgatein the spring. One hundred and thirty-eight children are enrolled in the Chamberlain public schools. Tho Capital awerts that gold-besring quasty b doen found in rismarck at a depth of 68 eot. Hotels in Wahpeton have to make beds up- on stretchers to accommodate their many Zuosts, The county seat of Fdmunds county has been forcibly removed from Ediunds o I swich, The monthly average of the product of the dwood it for the first half of 1883 was 000, The outlook in encouragiug to the territory. The Missouri Valley Townsite company is a Chicago rgauization operatiug humbug town sites above Picrre. “The owners of the town site of Yorktowntin Dickey county have presented a coruer lot to tho first child born there, @Tho o 1at Mandan_have voted to Faise the liquor license from %100 to £500, dat- ing the now law January 1st, 1884, The_seats in the Congregational church at Plankinton sold tho other day for 870, ‘Ihe church i to be seated with opera chairs, ‘orest City, in Pottor county, has o popu- lation of 200, Twenty thousand dollars worth of town lots havealready been sold there. Wheat receipts average about 5,000 bushels er day in Bathgate. Thero is cousiderable {nconvenience in securing cars for shipment. Acting Governor Tellor dates his notary public commissions at Yaukton, which s e designates as *'the capital of /Dakota terri- tory.” The engineers who are at work on the Ord- way, Bismarck & Northwestern road, report that' there is much fine land in McPherson Pherson county s very tlers in that part of the county. All the land in the Huron land district has beon surveyed and the plata filed in the Hu- ron land office with the exceptien of two townships. The Southarn Minnesota road is now com- ploted to_Woonsocket, and the Milwaukee company has ended its construction work for this season. Shippers at Grafton cannot bo supplied with freight cara fast enough. Kifty-seven cars were ordered one day last week and only five were sent, Among the Black Hills exports the Pionoer, of Deadwood, enumerates besides gold and silver, lumber, hides, salt, mica, and cattle. Horses will soon be added to the list. The city council of Redfield is composed of good material. It has purchased a steam fire engine, & hose cirt, a hook and ladder truck and one thousand foet of hoss, The cost of this apparatus is 32,900, with five per cent off for cash. The Hastings and_Dakota extension wost of Aberdeen is now finished to Ipswich,which will be the terminus for the winter. Railroad building in South Dakota is now ended for the season, During the year about threo hun- dred milos of track have been added to its sy n. i 1t ry e tspvir st - sasyorof Sione Falls has gisen tho tol: | manyg day in that grout ine. ephone company notice that when it puid the ty 5200 for the expense incurred by the city ing the poles and wires, s the suit it has institnted puncil would give it the privi a and_operating its system in Sioux Falls, 4 not before. Colorado. The population of Grand Junction lias near- 1y quadrupled in o There is half a milliou of dollars of railroad property in th new county of Mesa. Grand_Junction has the record of $10,000 w buildiugs, on the townsite, sinco last in L Furay county has increased 50 per cent in population, and 300 per cent in vutput siuce January, 1852, The proprietor' of The Leadville Chronicle and Democrat has fifteen libel suits on his hands, the damages aggregating a million dol- ars. The bullion output of Durango this year will aggregate at least $275,000. This does not incinde the ore that has been shipped east for treatment, The Canon City oil wells are producing steadily, and new wells are being sunk con- tinuonsly. The discovery of lubricating oil has done much for Canon The track on the Leadville extension of the Denver & South Park is now laid for a dis- tance of seven and two-thirds miles, or to a point very near Wheeler. The white elephant which the Denver spec- ulators captured in_the Mining Exposition building now bids fair to become of some value to the mining interests of Colorado, Bouna Vista’s water works are now in good running order, greatly to the delight of the insuranco agent and the property hold- ers. 'Ihe fire dopartient is beiug put in good shape for tho winter. Colorow and & band of about 300 Utes are camped on the White river for the winter, at Blair's ra forty miles below Meeker, lair's wife i o squaw, and tho Indians have pienic with his cattle herd, About 180 tons of coal }mr day is now being shipped from the mines of the Union Pacific conl company, near Baldwin, The greater portion of this coal is sent to Pitking and to h.avme and to other points across the range. The Denver & Kio Grande rmlway company. has closed a contract with C. A, Dean, of Danver, to furnish all the ties needed for re- pairing on the first, thirdand fourth divisions of their rond for 1884, The first requisition calls for 200,000 ties, Inone day last week the Colorado conl and iron munYnny shipped from their works, near the Puoblos, 1,050 kegs nails, 150 tons steel rails and three cars of pig iron, Their rend}nt« of raw material are now at tho rate of fifty cars per day. They turn out about 5,000 kegs of nails and spikes every month, making & product of 60,000 kegs overy year. The gross earnings of the Denver & Rio Grande from January 1. 1883, to October 31, wore 85,303,200, Tliese figures do not include the Utah lines. The approximate earnings of this road (including Utah leased lined) for the fir t weel in November were: 1883, $153,800; 1882, $128,100, Increase, 89 Diy arnings; Colorado, Utah, ado is making wonderful progress in agriculture now; where but two or three years ago the land was considered of very little worth, can Lie scen tho by f the farmer rounded with large stocks of grain, getein manent foothold on the great cattle B the whole valley of the Platte, it city to Denver will be one grand farm, Moutiuona ol to the National Park has ended for o, the se: Thore are 1,338 patented mineral clalms in the Putte district. Gallatin county taxes the Northern Pacific and its Park branch $13,721,21 this year. Two hundred Chinamen are at work at Garrison grading for side tracks on the North- ern Pacitic. Hays City is the usme of the largest camnp inthe new mining district, Coeur d'Alene. Eagle City bhas been absorbed. ‘The total assessment of Deer Lodee county lfl-mvflll«uny. a8 near as the assessor For testumoulals 806 licuisre send siawmp. (18) aring | ing in the Powder River | £300,000 | 1, to prompt | is abla to estimate at jresent, al The Billings artest s now_over 700 feet deep and has The com- | pany will not give n until they get | down 1,000 feets 5 Tho troasurer of Madison county heads his bones, the signif hish is that death and taxes are equally cortain. During the building of the Mullen tunnel on the Northern Pacific there were but two fatal accidents, though several thousand men have been employed on the work. The McNutt placer mine, near § City, ha produced the present yoar in gold dust, In fineness it averages upwards of 930, and is worth $19 an_ ounce. The bullion product of the Alice mine at Butte for the month of November was $1 886,063, The_ disbursoments for the same manth wero $41,600, leaving a balance of $64,- The assessment roll shows that there are mules, 10,058 horses, 85,642 cattle, and ,566 sheep in Meagher county. -The total the property of the county is ioners of Missoula county, in special seasion, lowerod the railroad assess- ment as follows: On real estate, from 8938, 000 to 879,400: and on personal property, from £509,300 to 8325,050. California Black Bart, the famous stage robber, got six years in the penitontiar; 1¢ costs Sonoma county 16 2-3 cents a day sach to feed the inmates of its poor house. S\ ranch recently purchased at San Lis spo. s to bo subdivided into small farms eatimated homos for ) families I Pacific railron nod or. ders to station agents in the intorior not t cept checks in payment of freight bills, Some of the country papers think it is a_railroad scheme to take money out of the li Iroad company is ex- perimenting with an_invention designed to throw obstacles from tha car b sists of two trunc wh re to revolve by connection with the front wheels. The Central Pacific railroad building what will be the lurgest in the United State The boiler will | tonder will be 105 tons, this monster engine. Tho highest point on the new railroad be- twoon Los Angeles and the east, via the Needles, is on the Atlantic & Pacific sailway, twenty-three miles west of Flagstaff, A. T the colebratod mining station, and’ is 7,1 feet high. The name of the station is Parker’s Mill, and is an important point for the ship- ment of lumber. mpany is Utah. The Nast mine at Bingham is now shipping all the ore that Swan's teams haul, and claim to be clearing $2,500 o woek. Freight contracts arestill made at Salt Lake with the Union Pacific and Denver and Rio Grande roads at 50 cents per 100 pounds, The Salt Lake Tribune has been purchased by Pat Lannan and Judge Goodwin fo 000, Mr, Loannan puts in 815,000 and John W Mackay furnishes them 860,000. He takes & mortgage on the property. The True Fissure mine, Bingham, is devel- oping a large and rich body of ore. This lpm» Jerty is owned by a Chicago company, which Lm developed it with an energy characteristic of the wide-awake people of that city. The recent strike in the Vallejo is the largest. made in Alta for several years past, so we are informed by parties who jcane in from that district last evening. The ore assays 130 ounces silver and there are about 200 tons ready for shipment. The Ogden Pilot says that on Sunday last an 18-year-old colored” boy enticed the little 4-year-.old daughter of Frank Ould intoa vacant barber shop and _committed rape upon her. He was soon arrested, and unsuccessful efforts were made to Iynch him. The Old Telegraph mine, Bingham, is ship- }ninz about thirty tons per day from the recent big strike. The ore body is said to be from twelve to fifteen foet wide across the face, and lored sufficiently to demonstrate is one of the biggest strikes made in 1 of tho projected now road Trom Agitati e Denver to the coust, through Southern Utah, connecting with the Utah Cent 1 ford, Tho_ peoplo Ney og with the uew Escheme, thew forth from their un: o werited obscurity into the bos fefits of quick, though perhaps not ch ansportaticn. New Mexico. Railroad motters are boowing in the terri- tory. The cattle-raisers of the torritory are rapid- ly improving the quality of their stock by im- porting choice herds. The Perea brothers, of Bernalillo, are_said own 160,000 head of sheep. A flock of this wonld not have roor. on the entire state of Rhode Island. The Prosbyterian synod has about con- cluded to eroct a college building at Santa Fe. That city claims to be the educational and ro- ligious conter of the territory. The white scoundrels on the Arizona-Mexi- can borders are fur worse as enemies than the Indians, It is they who stir up Indian ex- citements and magnify reports of Indian raids. They follow in the wake of the army to rob or hire out as guides or teamsters, The New Mexico cow is, perhaps. the most athletic animal of its species. She mway be roduced in health, but her horns aro always in « flourishing condition. She seems to have been intended more for the production of horn than milk, and Lus Vegas is just the place to start a comb factory. Miscellaneous. Tor the first thres quarters of this year the bullion yield of Nevads amounted to §1,500,- 000, At Pocatello thero is daily transferred from the Utah & Northern to the Oregon Short Line twenty-five cars of ore going cgt. This ix with the exception of four or five cars from this districk. Thoe ores go to Omaha, Kunsas City, Buffalo and Liverpool, England. According to a Nevada exchange the net yiold of bullion of the state fur the first three fuarters of this year exceoded by $100,000 the wmount for the same periud of 1882, the ag- rogato being something. over 81,400,000, and upon which the stata receives a tax of about 13,000, Mail cars of standard length will soon take the place of the half-compartment ones now in use on the Northern Pacific. Other changes will include an incroase of postal divisions from two to three between Bismarck and Holena, and from one to two between Helena and Portland. provents Ringi g Yous Headache sl . In Chronic Catarrh it ges of foul mucus, restores he senses of smell, tasts and hearing when' affected, froes the head, throat and bronchisl tubes of offen sive matter, swoctens and purifies the breath, stops the cough and arrests the progeess of Catarrh o wards Consur b hadicar Cure, oue box Catarehal Sl vout and Savford’s Inhalor, all in one package, of all druggists for $1. 5. ‘s RADICAL CUKE PorTRk DU AND ston, ¥or the reliet_and prevention, | § the INSTANT IT 18 APPLIED, %/ CGLLW of Rhoumatism, Neuralgia, Sciat: \VOLTAIC,” /{ca, Coughs, Cilds, Weak' Back, Apd 2%/ Btomach and Bowels, Shootin Ny 747 VPaina, Nutubnoss, Hystoria, Fo EON '+ 82,800.0% |ELLA LARRABEE, BURGLAR. | A Brooklyn Young jWoman “Who Couldr 't Help it Journal November 25 *‘1 couldn't resist the temptation judge, and I plead guilty.” The speaker was a young woman who appeared to be about eighteen or nineteen years of age. Her features were prepos- sessing, her manners modest, and her dress neat and becoming. The young woman was Ella Larrabee, known to the policeas ‘‘the female bur- glar.” Yesterday morning she was brought before Justice Walsh in Brooklyn, on the charge of having stolon clothing valued at 825 from Mrs. Henrietta Hall. It appears that while in the act of passing the residence of Mrs. Hall the prisoner observed that the front door was open. Without a moment’s hesitation Ella en- tered and walked into the nearest room, where some silk dresses were lying. She succecded in vetting away with the pro- perty unobserved. A'fow evenings ago Detectives Lowery and Chambers visited Billy McGlory's boudoir in New York for the purpose of hunting up a male thief. Their attention was called to Ella by the re- mark: ‘‘There is one of the liveliest Brooklyn girls that comes into this dive.” The officers noticed that Ella was well dressed and apparently in funds, but did not speak to her. Upon returning to Brooklyn, however, they learned of the robbery of Mrs. Hall, and agreed that Iilla was just the sort of person to have committed the theft. Then they pro- ceeded to the girl's residence, charged her with having roobed M Hall, and were delighted to obtain from ler a con- | fession. In court yesterday the oflicer stated that the goods stolen were worth more than $25, Lut that it would take consider- able testimony to prove the fact. They were of opinion that it would be a saving of expense to the county to accept a plea of guilty to petty larceny. “I won’t do that without the district- attorney’s consent,” said Justice Walsh. This girl has served a year in the pen- itentiary on a charge of attempted burg- lary.” The district-attorney consented to the plea, being convinced that it would be difficult if not impossible to convict of a graver offense. When the prisoner plead- ed guilty a fashionably dressed young man who had sat by her side grasped her hand warmly and seemed to be on the point of bursting into tears. The judge sentenced Ella to imprisonment in the remtentim-y for six months. As she was led back to a cell by a court officer she murmured: “I couldn’t help it; I couldn't in- deed.” ““That girl is one of the most remark- able criminals that Brooklyn has pros duced,” said a detective to a Journal reporter; “and her history before sho became a criminal is a strange one.” “How so?” ““When a baby her mother could not nurse her, and placed Ella in charge of a woman who also had a young babe. The nurse’s baby died, but when Ells’s mother came for her child she was met with the remark, ‘Why, your baby is dead. This is my baby.’ " Of course there was a live- ly scene, but eventually Ella was hand- ed over to the woman who employed the nurse. But the nurse claims her still, and so Ella may be said te have two mothers.” «+How abgut her career as a criminal?” “She has been arrested ropeatedly Tor thieving, and, as the judge fsaid, has served & year in the penitentiary for attempted burglary. ~ On account of her youth and beauty several humane people have from tima to time interested them- selves in her welfare, One eld gentlo.oan of wealth was anxious to marry her, but I guess that she shook him for a young man, She has promised to reform with such evident honesty of declaration as to decaive every ono who came in_contact with her. For one, T don't think tha she is right in the head.” “How not right?” ““Why, she is a kleptomaniac if there ever was one, and T heard a doctor say that when he saw her on the witness stand a year ago. She says herself that whenever she sees anything valu- ablelying around loose she wants to steal it “You're something valuable lying around loose,” said Court Clerk Hannon. “‘It's a wonder she didn't steal you,” The court rapped for order as the de- tective muttered something which sound- ed very much like “you’re a damphool.” The old and rotten timbers 1n the Comstock mines are said to cause malaria among the miners. F AND IF. “ 1t youlare suffering from poor health ‘or languishing on & bed of sickness, ‘take chieer, if you are simply ailing, ‘or it you el weak and dispirited, with- ‘out clearly knowing why, Hop Bitters ‘will surely cure you." “It you area minister, and have overtaxed your- “selt with your pastori rduties, or & Mother, worn out ‘with caro and work, or a man of business or laborer weakened by the strain of your everyday duties, or man of letters, toiling over your midnight work, Hop Bitteas will y strengthen y “It you are suffering® *from ovor-eating or “drinking, any Indescre- “tion or dissipation, or ‘are young and growing 00 fast. 88 iy uften the case,” #Or It you are in the workshop, on the farm, at the desk, anywhere, aod fesl that your system needs cleansing, ton- ing orstimulating, w thout intoxicating, you are old, blood thin aud impure, ‘pulse foeble, nerve unsteady, faculties waning, Hop Bitters is what you need to \to give you new life, health and vigor.” If you are costive or dyspeptic, or sulering from any other of the numer ous diseases of the stomach or bowels, it s your own fault if you remain ilL" It you are wasting away with auy fora of Kidney discase, stop tempting death this moment, and turn for s cure to Hop Bitters. 1t you are sick with that terrible sickness ora resident , Varricado your ainst the seotirgo of all coun- ia, epidemic, bilious ~and ermittent {overs—by the use of Hop Bitters. It you have ro breath, Hop blood, the s paid for » o 3 That poor, bed-rldd or daughter, can be few bottles of Hop Bitters cost asmia plmply, or sallow skin, bad pimy Il give you falr skin, 'rich ith. $500 will be ) , sister, mother, picture of health Ly & trifle. "DR.EMILY PAGELSEN, RESIDENCE AND OFFICE /{L;g(qn:c\\\rflurnmv cOiiniD PLASTERS "R "% srorvwises i o e b g savarecd to (LIS "THK GRAY MEDICINE c., Sutain X Y. m il U ONE spselle pivio 16 Omaba by 0, . Geodman. v 1omieo-s | gt Belt 00 1§V b tu rewp Lhcwve, 1613 Dodge Street, Bet. 16th and 17th, l Office hours trom 10 0 126 w. and fromd op2 w, UNITED STATES Nallonal Bang OF OMAHA, Capital, - - $100,000.00 C. W.HAMILTON, Pros't. 4 M. T. BARLOW, Cashler. Accounts sollcited and kept - Ject to sight check. Ceortificates of Doposit Issued pay- ablein 3, nd I2months, bearin, Interest, or on demand without In- torest. Advances made to customers on approved securlties at market rate of Interest The Interests of Customers are closely guarded and every facll tv compatible with principles 1 sound banking freely extended Draw sightdrafts on England, land, Scotland, and all parts of Eu~ rope. Sell European Pa ge Ticke Collections Promptl, Mace. Though snaden in every jolut and Aibre I with 1evar and ague, “CCELEBRATED or bilious remittent, © system iy ye¥ reed from” the mali nont virus with Fostotter's § omach Bitters, Protect the systom against ik with thls buneficent anispasmotic, chis furthermor remedy complaint, ation, rheumatism, kidney by all Druggists and Deal- BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS. An excellent appetizing tonic of exquisite flavor, now used over the whole world, ' cures Dyspepsl Diarthea, Fever and Aguc, and dicorders of the Digestive Urgans, A lc'llln‘!n {m) flavortoag es of ch toall summer drinks. Deware of counterfy grocer or druggiet for the genuine. article, manufactured by DR. J. G. B, SIEG) & SONB. 2221 J. W. WUPPERMANN, Sole Agent. S st g3 Brondwav. N Y. . H AY PRESSES. ERTEL'S HAY PRESSES A tne chespest; will alo hay at less ox load moro n iirosd car than any other; 8o warranted or no Soma-To cular. CEO. ERTEL & CO., Quincy, Ilil. N. B.—Mr. Dederick: Tho Keonomy is still ready the’ challenge’ with 8500 00 to the winner. Just say when aud where, and we will go for spoils. G. 1y 11-waev sat me UY NOW! The increase in real estate values in Omaha during the past 6 months has been most remarkable, and the demand still continues unabated. In view of these facts and the certain- ty that this is to be onc os the prin- cipal cities of the West, prudent persons will realize that the present 1s the time for real estate invest- ments. Ten Per Cent Cash. In comparison with other cities, Omaha suburban property is held at very low figures, which another year of prosperity will materially en- hance, and probably place it out of the reach of people of small means. During the past season various tracts have been sub-divided into acre property. Of these HIMEBAUGH'S ADDITION is unexcelled in location and price. 1t is situated on a high elevation, commanding an extensive view, sloping gently to the east towards the city. The north line of the tract i the Leavenworth street extension, and is, by actual measurement, the the same distance from the post- office as the Water Worke reservoir or the southwest corner of the poor farm, $200 to $250 per acre is the price asked for this property on time payments of tea per cent cash and $10 per month. SHRIVER & BELL, ECTH Arrii oTRIo will ond on Thirty Days OROLD. who ar suffering Lo Vizaziy, and thow Naturx resulting from vs. Bpeody and com: o fyatoration € diaiin, Vidow nd Maxiioon ABANTEED. Send atonce for Llustrated Pampllel QuanartasD for Llustrated Pam) VoLrale WESTERN IRON AND BRASS FOUNDRY, 108 S, 11th Sireet. s pre) to make all kinds of Small Casting: DTt e e " 218 UTH lnm m ';“‘5 Beur Co, Mansoaus, Wiog ¢ —— A/

Other pages from this issue: