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CONSTITUTIONAL TINKERS. The prosent congreas includes q number of astute gentlemon who believe that the conatitution of the United States requires a groat deal of tinkering, although during a period of over ninety - 0! i nded only three Pabjished evory woming, oxcoph Sunday, The | J03T it }‘" been amended only oaty Monday morniog dwily. times. Twenty-one amendments to the kbt constitution have been introduced in the £10.00 | Throe Months, s Aix Moncns. 6.0 | Ono Month. v house and eight in the senate. It secems s wanuy sww, PovotsurD mywny waosmoar. | a dittle singular that so many defects POATEAID, should have been so suddenly discovered 0 Mont i ¢ oonstitution whi y v Qoo Your . 0 | nregMontha.....-8 @1 in our constitution which has a0 well American News Company, 8 & .|served the purposes for which it was T framed- 1f the amendment business is e r—— b ¢ A Communleations relating to Newn and Editorial | carried out the constitution will be inabtors kol be drised £ tho' KOion o7 118 [ Jongor than tho moral law, and puzzlo . : WURINRSS LETYRRE, that will require the combined talents of e e ents s courae, Owans | the most eminent constitutional lawyers Dratts, Checks and Post ora to be mado pay o is safe to say, however, b6 to the order of tho compa tountavel, It i ste 4 THE BEE PUBLISH[NG C[]., PRUPS. that the constitution will not be amended to any great extent, although proposed B ROSEWATER, BT |amendments may be submitted to the vote of the people. Public sentiment is un- doubtedly against constitution tinkering. The representatives of tho people have no doubt been called on to introduce these amendments, and in most instances thoy have very likely done 5o simply out of courtesy to the potitioners. Tho vari- oty of ideas embodied in the twenty-nine proposed amendments affords an_inter- ng study. Senator Wilson wants citizons of the United States protected in their rights and privi'eges and immu- nitiea and assured the equal protection of the laws. So do Messrs, Keifer, O'Hara, THE OMAYA BEE. Omaha Office, No. 916 Farnam St. Council Biaffs Ofce, No. 7 Pearl Street, Near Broadway. New York Office, Room 63 Tribune Building. A On) Your Tae woman suffragists continue to pull the coat-tails of congrossmen. The latest petition for woman suffrage comes from the strong-minded of Kansas. Ir the Mormons could be annihilated E by a gubernatorial message, the volumi- . nous broadside fired by Governor Murray would come very nearly accomplishing that rosult, Masor D. H. Wirerer, who has been wecretary of the Nebraska state board of S R S et N LI a2 2 KA e A S A AR AN AN T s SIS 0 THE DAILY BEE-+OMAHA,; THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 18¢4. — and when France and Germany are as-|county was underl#id with conl. Rail-[let the work to Van Alstyne without, =i it ey 1 = e bt S, et fok o Y i ]| GFRELE, JOHNSON& 00, p o 2 on Amer. | And & town near the centre of the vast | builders hereabouts say there is a $14,- doubt will remove the embargo on Amer-| el sprung up as it by magic, and |000 steal in the building, ne it is proposed ican meats, was alled Rich Hill That town, or|toerectit. The main building i s large ) rocer pR——— rathor ity now, containa nearly 20,000 [ono and is to bo thiee stories kigh, and H ANOTHER STATE SCANDAL inhabitants, and is unquestionably the | yet there is not to be a cross wall in it. ; A [ most thrifty and enterprising place in all | From the collar to th top between the W iy st & D Shic . The stato of Nebraaks has besn 8681 | iy Kow Woat, Rich HIll numbars het min building snd the winge i to be | Fyins Lo G o0 0, (formerly of Toc g S willhpad) Wik b dalized on various ocoasions, whenever | manufactories by the score, and her mil- |run up with studding, and lathed and| °8 i A AR T i contracts for public buildings have been | lionaires, all poor men a few years ago, [ plastered. This building will set up high all grades of above; also pipes and smokers' articles carried in let, or any large quantity of land belong- | by the dozens. Tt is estimated that 250 | on the bluff, and be exposed to the blasts st nol«'; Prices and samples furnished on application, Open ing to the stato has been appropriated or | C2Al mines are now in full blast in Bates [ of very strong winds, without any solid orders intrasted to us shall receive our careful attention . 81,000, s coal | state of Nobraska is committing the , paign of 1882 this papor called attention [is tho average output of the mines near |criume, throngh its board of pubiic lands | AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN &*RAND FOWDER CO to the school land ring which was fos- [ Rich Hill. These .heinu facts, is it not a|and buildings, a trap for the pur- - tored by Tand Commissionor Kendall, | it1o strango that St. Joseph, though hor | pose of the destruction of many fives who nided it in absorbing great tracts of | O Ay lie Tittle’ lower, ‘should not |in tho future, by eithor fire or wind, and e ] take the hint it is being done, in our humble opinion, land which are the patrimony of our ta enable the contractor and the ring, to i children. As usual the corporation or- THE TEXAS FENCE WAR. aivide shent 214,000 as spoils, between JOBBER OF gans and jobbera at Lincoln and Omaha | Tho state of Toxas has beon virtually | the': Lhis ;*‘.“7‘;’} el "L‘";dl“l: of f . : - act, that in future, it may result in branded our statement as & campaign | fenced in with barbed wire by tho 1are | just such a drondful disstor oy the one U lie, although our puthority was no less a [ cattlo owners, and the result is a general [ which occurred at Bellovillo the other porson than Hon. Leandor Gerard, of |fenco-cutting war. Most of the fence- |day. With only the four outside walls ” Columbus, We had taken the measure |cutting is charged up to the herders or | NOthing would stop the rapid progross of ¥ ; 5 Ari it fire, when it was once started, or in a of this man Kendall more than ton years | cow-boys, whoso occupation is ruined by | high wind there would be no adoquate EASTERN PRICES DUYPLICATEDY ago, when he was an active partner in|fences. A cattle-herd that is fenced in | support inside. for the outside walls, and 1he old surveyor’s ring, of which Boss npeds no herders. The cow-boys, how- | the whole structure would be liable to 1118 FARNAM STREET, . . OMAHA NEB Cunningham was the head, and now the | ever, are not the only ones who are en- ::"z“m' xn\ duslr})y' the l‘llvzu of }:h_eh;n» B — g 7 Skl ates. We are informed by a builder ohargo s mado directly by the|gagedin this warfare. It appears that | that thin contenct was.lef o Van Alstyne C. F. GOODMAN, Kearney P’rcss that the contract|the ranchmen have erected their wire |by a trick on the part of the board and for the new state reform school | barriers in unbroken lines for more than | it certainly appears to us that some legal L] building, for which the legislature ap- | ten miles at a stretch, closing established '°m:§v ahlualgl ll:u l;x'ph?d l‘? stop “‘; 0 es e r u ls ly let through the board of public lands |any, openings for horses and wagons. |it. It is the duty of every in Ne- s TN § i g | it very paper in Ne IAN and buildings, of which Kendall is chair-| The consequence is that any one | braska regardless of politics, o speak ont AP min. Wo ropublish the article and |finding a wire fonco obstructing B%nilkx,lt this grrong and demand that 850, : - . ¥ agriculture for fourteen years, doclined a re-clection. It certainly will be some- thing strange to see another man filling that position Brown of Pennsylvania, and Mackey. Senator Blair proposes to prevent the manufacture, importation and sale of apirits after 1900, and Deuster, of Wis- consin, on the ground that all men are invested with certain inalienable rights, would prohibit the states and territories from abridging the manufacture and sale of any article composed in whole or part of any product of the soil. Senator Butler wants to insert the word ‘‘nativ- ity DLefore the words *‘‘race, color or previous condition of servitude.” Mr. Collins has & similar amendment. Sen- ator George would have no money paid out beyond the original amount appro- priated for any purpose. Scnator Lap- ham believes in giving the president power to veto separate items of appro- priation bille. Representatives Throck- morton, Wemple, Payson, Davis, of Illi- nois, and Cox, of North Carolina, have evinced a similar desire. Senator Lap- ham desires to confer upon woman the right {o vote. White, of Kentucky, offers a similar resolution. To give the Esor1oNAL insanity will be the defense in the trial of young Nutt for the killing of Dukes, the traducer of his sister and the murderer of his father. It will pro- bably win in this case. Justifiable in- sanity would be a more appropriate term. — Kansas Orry does not propose to get left in the matter of congresssional appropriations. Representative Gravos Zas introduced a bill appropriating $200, - 000 for the improvement of the Mis- souri river at that point. Omaha ought to ask for nothing less, although she might be satisfied with half this amount. ————— NorwITHSTANDING the reductioa in poztage thoe total receipts are only one and throe-tenths per cent less than they were for the corresponding quarter of las! year, when letter postage was one-third higher than it is now. This shows a large in- crease in the postal business of the coun- | president power to veto items of the try. The receipts of the postal depart- | river and harbor bill is Senator Morgan's ment will be sufficient to pay all ex-|desire. Senator Voorhees wants post- pensoa. masters, revenue colleotors, marshals, judges and distriot attornoys elected by the people. Bayne, of Pennsylvania, under which the Mississippi river com-|agrees in this, save as regards judges. mission was organized makes no refer- | Calkins of Indiana proposes a civil rights ence t) the Missouri or its tributaries. |amendment. Herbert of Alabama would This oversight will probably be remedied | limit the house to 361 members. Springer by the introduction and passage of a bill | of Illinois wants to take away from con- creating a Missouri river commiasion. | gress everything except the enactment of The representatives of the state of Mis- | general laws. Beach of New York pro- souri are now oonsulting the members | poses to abolish the power to give any from Kansas, Nebraska and Western |person or persons exclusive privileges Towa in regard to this matter. and franchises; also, that the government shall not loan its credit or money to any private undertaking. Thomas of Illinois desires to prohibit bigamy and polygamy, as does Gen, Rosecrans, who in his pre- amble condemns polygamy for its con- travention of reason, its injustice to wo- men, its degrading influence on the fe- male sex, its brutalizing effects on the male sex and its general repugnance to the spirit of modern freedom. General Brownell of Indiana proposes to elect the Ir has been discovered that the bill Tug several Chicago medical colleges have been the means of making that city quite a market for human bodies for the dissecting tables. The recent arrest of several body-snatchers have caused a temporary scarcity in *‘stiffs” and a cor- responding increase in price, about 150 per cent, The enterprising OChicago newspspers out to publish the daily quotations of *‘atiffs’ in their market re- ports, as they have become a marketable commodity. popular vote, and Townshend of Illinois wants senators ohosen by the peoplo. Axorner telegraph company hus been incorporated. It is called the Standard Multiple, and, with & capital stock of $2,600,000, it proposes to string its wires all over the country. Mathema. ticians are now engaged in figuring out how much money will { have to be spent and how long it will be before the Mul- tiple is sold to the Western Union at a handsome profit, of more than $10,000. Hutchins of New York would give the major- ity power to pass a bill over the presi- dent's veto, instead of two-thirds. Rea- taxes according to property and not pop- ulation of the states. Davis of Massa- SxeLL, who killed the Wright woman at Oroft's road-house, was released on $2,500 bail yesterday. Instead of giving his viotim a decent burial, as he had promised, and which he was abundantly able to do, he skipped out for Valentine and left her to be buried at the expense of somebody ¢lse, probably the county. The undertaker had kept her body at his request, as he had oxpressed the desire of giving her a decent burial. His con- duct does not confirm the impression, ‘which he took great pains to create, that he was grief-stricken over the woman's death, It would seem that he really country regulating marriage and divorce. most thorough consideration and per- mitted to the people. to trial, E— Tax Denver papers are making consid- erable fun of a Mr. Crofutt, who has come to that city with a proposition to build an elevated railroad. Mr. Crofutt claims to have a million dollars to back the enterprise. The Zvibune regrets to say that his proposition to spend a mil- lion in Denver has not beenreceived with | tory measures. Mr. Vest was of the enthusissm by reason of a painful doubt | opinion that a thorough system of inspec- on the part of a suspicious public as to[tion would set matters right. Mr. his possession of the million—so far he | Ingalls stated that the herds of this coun. has only drawn checks on his try were more or less aflected with though he has an unlimited depositthere, | pleuro-pneumonis, and he believed that it is not legal tender, It is evident that, | the people of foreign countries had a right although Denver may be ambitious, she |to protect themselves. Mr. Maxey, of doean't want any elevated railroad, The | Texas, maintained that if it be truo that only elevated roads that she cares for are | our meat is unhealthy, the position of those leading up intothe mountains, Mr, | France aud Germany is imprognable. Orofutt isadvised to shake the dust of | The discussion will bring out the facts, Denver from his fect and come to Omaha | and congress is acting wisey in proceed- and invest his million in the Omaha Belt [ing slowly and cautiously in this matter, ilway, which needs an elovation of this | The result will probably be the establish- ment of a thorough eystem of inspection of the porcine caudalappendage. Thehog qQuestion was the subject of considerable debate in the senate on Tuesday. Mr, Logan spoke strongly in favor of retalia- president and vice-presidont by direct [ber of responsible citizens, she could |tracts, the state officials ought to have [ explaining how state property may be easily have secured the fair for the |foreseen the trouble that would naturally apm‘i‘prinwd to privut_e uses? poriod of fivo years, It is to|follow if rights of way for public travel [ Mr. Kendall, the Press desires to be (&) Turner thinks the yeas and nays | by rattod L thab thi ) ot nroyiaea| fair, and will gladly publish your replies doar b4 i nAVR (Dol regrattod - hat thixiwas not done, provices; | to these questions, after which we have should bo called on all appropriations [ However, it is hoped that next| The probability is that the Texas legis- | some more in regard to wrapping pro- I, The probability is that of these amend- | Iris hoped that when the capacious|Traflic association. One day she is|gages in careful training for th menta the only ones that will receive the | maw of the Father of Waters has been | happy over the restoration of tariff rates, | = haps be warmly discussed are those relat- | mind congress that the Big Muddy needs | renowal of cut rates. On Monday the ing to civil rights, and it is not unlikely | considerable tinkerine and that an appro- | thermometer dropped, as will be seen by that a civil rights amendment will be sub- | priation for the protection and improve. | the following from Tuesday's Zribune: It is very likely also that the proposed | appreciated by the people of this city, resumed. As soon as the chamber of ameondments as to bigamy and polygamy commerce gets in working order it should will be carefully considered, and we should not be surprised to see congress AoThe iadinifted 'aa FRVEASs SR LN stringent railway legislation passed at conclude to submit to the people an anti- . his tail twisted nearly out of joint by [pared to prove at the proper time that | distracting matters, and votes that would PHRES Irish- Ameriouns, is now laughing at the | sho ia on tho aide of the majority, ordinarily bo cast for the legislation | Rheumatism, Neuralgi American hog whose tail has been severe- s neoded will be traded off for all sorts of | , Lumbago. Backache. Heada ly twisted by France and Germany. Con-| Iy )s stated by the 8t. Joe Gazette that purposcs and measures. A special ses- greas, however, will soon take the twist out | oal in inexhaustible quantities lies be- sions, Some members of the board may | the nippers and makes an opening | hundreds of boys and girls, that V. - girls, that Van Al be innocent of any design to defraud and | for his team and wagon, rather than drive | styne may fatten at the public_crib and OMAHA, NEBRASKA. it will be their business to clear their |around the enclosure, perhaps a distance divy with Glenn, Kendall and Company, | = skirts. Kendall is - now serving his sec- | of five or ten milos. Theso fencos have | o, 9° ";,’:,‘,’:};fi",fg”,’:z,f‘fi"b".’,’il,‘d‘i’,',,; R J. A. WAKEFIELD, ond and last term, and probably, like | become such a nuisance that bands of | be erected unless they are sharing in the WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN other political desperadoes, cares nothing | fencae-cutters have been organized to cut | spoils. Kendall and” the board of pub- ! ik . . for public opinion or the consequence |them down. The result has been the | li¢ 1ands and buildings have leased over unloss it were criminal prosecution and |destruction of a great deal of property | 100000 acres of school lands to a syndi- 5 s e i S cate, and 40,000 acres to one man, punishment. By ths time Kendall|and considerable fighting and bloodshed. | thus depriving actual settlers from secur- leaves his office it will be made manifest | The most bitter and hostile feeling pro- ix;‘g then:l without meing a large p)\;niit tlo ] 3y ) H that he has feathered his nest prett; ils bet the different facti the syndicate, and after doing this sol- st worm Tt of v b | wetomont. o M v, o s Toasve i ey e atod |~ SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, NOULDINGS, LINE, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C. that the stato school lands have passed | luwlessness that has arisen from tho | the resolutions thoy. passed. they sdmit. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. into the hands of & lot of speculators | fence troubles, property has depreciated, | ted them selves to be officinl scoundrels, | Unron Pacific Depot, - and sharks through his manipulations. | business has become paralyzed and im- ]who dnow, after the lands dhnve bu;u — — — Itis just such rascals that have made | migration has boen checked. Of courso | “itts BFHIES e Double and Single Acting Power and Hand the republican party in this state odious, | there arc io sides to this question, as|gentlemen will alljbe candidates for re- and make honest men ashamed to con-|there is to almost every controversy. election and the people will be fully in- foss that they ever belonged toit. It| Tt is claimed by the fence cutters that folrmeld vlv}nzln t:m time comes, hpwlu:e;o g A : i g5 - schocl lands have been manipulated. may be asked '"“'. proprlfaty, tvhuru i8 [ no one has a right to fence in large tmf:u Thero are ugly facts connected with them, the governor of Nebraska? Why does|of land for pasturage alone, as grazing | which cannot be explained away. Lands ’ H ho allow such jobs to go on without tak- | lands, they assert, are common until cul- | have been leased to the syndicate at ing some ateps to prevent them? Whydoes | tivated. They seem to think that al- [lower rates than was bid by the sottlers, | g ine Mrimmings, Mining Machinery,? Belting, Hose, Brass and Irou Fittings) he not stop the construction of a build- | though the ranchmen own theso large | 313, & time of reckoning is coming.|giouy Packing at wholesale and rejil. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCE ; 1 Right h desire to da fe : ing that is liable to bocome the grave: tracts they cannot erect barb wire fences | questions to Glenn Kendall, land com. | AND SCHOOL BELLS. yard of acores of boys and girls? in such a way as to inconvenience | missioner: - tho public, and in this thoy may|, M Kendull, id tho stao of Nobras- Corner 10th Farnam St., Omaha Neb. 20 % 5 s ka, through you as agent, every buy a 3 " BRI THE STATE PAIR. bo right. The public should be al- | & TE FOLIT) BT ] 3 onograph oftice, Tho stato board of agriculture has |lowed passage through theso tracts of |and cause it to bo shippéd Lo, the Kear: P. BOYER & CO.. located the atate fair for 1884 at Omaha, | land by roads at frequent and convenient | ney state reform school, by a citizen of DEALERS IN and in doing s0 it acted wisely, and per- | intervals. This, however, would neces. | St Pault =/~ T 5 5 4 i 3 ey &5 id you ship from the city of Lincoln, hape treatod Omaba ltlo bottor than itato o greatdoalof additional foncizg, | PiATot bip fom the ety i Lineon | P o 1)’ Qo fa and Liock Comp'y she deserved. The only formal proposi- -lnd. of course, thl«; raneh";:n object to |4 fine large safe, to your brother at St. tion from this city came from the Oraaha | the expense as well as to the cutting up | Paul, who is owner, with you, of the St. Driving Park association, over the signa- | of their tracts into sevoral ssparate pas- | Paul Phonograph 7 FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF 5 ; 2 i 1f you did, did not that_safe belong to : ture of J K. Boyd, president. This |tures, as would have to bo done if the |y " Fibe of Nebraska, and wore you not proposition offered the grounds for five [ public were allowed to travel over the | grdered to send it to the state reform years, the state board to keep the grounds | country. Al the trouble arises from the | school at Kearney. ildi i i disposal of enormous tracts of land with-| Why did you send a small safa from and buildings in ropair, and to pay for | dispos St. Paul to Kearney, which did not be- ) j ) s their use ten per tentof the receipta. |out retaining for the public reasonable long to the state, but was either your The board could not consider this propo- | rights of way. The legislature of Texas is | own or your brother's property, and send E2RO Maraam Stroct. Oxah sition for a moment, inasmuch as Lincoln | now wrestling with the problem. While | the state’s safe to your brother? offered very liberal inducements. The |theymaymakefence-cuttinga folony, they | How much was the money value dif- {SPECIAL NOTICE TO 5 g ference between safes, and have you paid board finally adoptedalmostunanimously | should on the other hand devise some | ;#7000 PCHest B of'Nebmk-?y P A a resolution locating the fairat Omahafor | meaus of remedying the evils arising | " Was this an attompt to steal from the Growers of Live Stock and Others. one year, taking advantage of tho fact | from the fencing of miles upon miles of | state, the difference betweon the prices that it had the option of the grounds for | territory. Of course where the public | of the safes? Weare reliably informed WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO ono more year on the same terms as it | domain has boen fonced in, there ia no [ that you tont a safe fi.?flhf";.f:;iff’.fl’,i n : b e e 0 00 ety wan iz m e e @Qur Ground OGil Cake Tt was the intention of tho board to|fonces. It cannot b denied that before | Paul. You even tried, or had it tried, » have located the fair for five years, but | the disposal of tho state lands the people | to obliterate tho lettering on the safe, JJpst aad heapest tood for atock of any (. 0no pound t squs to thrse pounds of it was concluded mot to do this until | of Texas had certain rights and particu- | Why? o maciatabe condiion o (h oprin. Diiunes 4 woll ar ibar,eho 05 1 can er i i ig] Did the other member of the board of ‘Try it sad judge for yourselves. ., Prico §25.00 per ton; no charge for sacks. _Addross next year. Had Omaha put in a liberal [ larly the rights of way over those lands, publio lands snd_buildings consent to WOODMAN LINSEED OIL COMPANY Omaba proposition, backed by a sufficient num- [and when they were sold in immense | {1is transuction, and will they aid you in year Omahn will take early steps|lature will repeal all laws permitting | posals for school lands in grecn paper. in this matter, and when the time comes | companies to be chartered for the purpose S IMPORTERS OF 5 5 % All vous and blo ises in- put in & proposition that will be satis- | of purchasing land, provided such action v,,iabi'y‘"cfi,",‘;fl‘,,“;’}g',,"‘,’,‘ifl‘f)‘,",‘(‘,f:?,',,f,',‘},:,“,. ' factory. The fight will, as usual, be be- | comes within the purview of the govern- | Nervine. H gan of Texas wants to apportion direct |tween Omaha and Lincoln, and the latter | or's proclamation convening the extra| *Samaritan Nervine would be cheap ot 2 ; font is & diff inion. | at 8100 a bottle. It cures fits.” J. Ster- AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC city will leave no stone unturned to win |session, There is a difference of opinion, ling, Charleston, §. C. Only $1.50 per A e e D CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES § SMOKERS' ARTICLES chusetts proposes t> give congross power | ence manifested by Omaha in regard to | that some bill covering the fence-cutting o y /] D to limit the time in which mill operativos | the state fair, and we say again that she | question will bo passed. It is evident that Blaine and Arthur are not PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING may bo daily employed, and Ray of New | has been better treated this year than she — #9ig to wasto alssronginilntagy, pretimi: York wants uniform laws throughout the | really deserved Tun Denver thermomater of happiness | s s s not s cantrinio, st shois] O ELEBRATED BRANDS: T yories with the changes in the Utah | £oehin WI0E L erpedunn, The vbue 02 | poina Wrictorias, . Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 = to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Pfiog‘ress Nebraska, Wyoming and. rigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPL£S. satisfied, the Nebraska delegation will re- | and the next day she grieves over the ment of the river front at Omaha will be| The cut rates on Utah trade have been S—— make every effort to secure an extra ses- Moxraxa will find it difficult matter |#ion of the legislature and have some once. This is the only way to get good didn't care any more about shooting her sion of a territory depeads mainly upon | treatment, Tl it t g gt Nl 4 4 e oy B i 7 7 than if she had been some noor dog, Mr. polygumy amendment. one thing, and that is whether umir.:;l;o;-h h:‘:rs ::?err e HE GR isd f y / > Snell acted indiscroetly, to say tho loast, S— . ita political comploxion is in accor-| A#wo have said before an extra ses- it WNSE \ and the cruel abandonment of his victim [ TAtL twisting is becoming quite fash- | dance with the politics of tho wmajor- ;;": O'lr:'th"“‘ ‘"l': way of ":l""f' '")l'i MAN REM ERME ¢ (‘;!! D 3 g Py } ! ¥ iti i, 3 : W, 0 regular session ere wi. M) will not be forgetten when he is brought [ ionable. The Dritish lion, having had | ity in congross, Montana must be pre-[he a senatorial race and many other| FMOOER. B2 ATIN. e . T, SINEOLD, MANUFACTURER]'OF |balvanized lronComices, Window ~ CapsFinials, Skylightudbo 4 Thirteenth Strevt]Omulia,Neb sion, during which every member's action can be closely scrutinized and be held neath that city. 1t seems strange to the | accountable, “will result in action which (Gazette that tho business men of §t, Joe | Will be effective, cannot be made to see the advantages that acerue from the development of coal rosourcos. A proposition to bore for , coal has been made, but as the sum of w:u:c‘:ufol;. I{::‘nlld\i:: ‘:hl::y:x‘:v hr"ulutrl:: 5,000 is asked for to help the enterprise sohool buildivg at Kourney. Why he along, it is not very likely that any coal | 80t the contract after building the origi- mines will bo discovered in or noar 8¢, |18l Building in so worthless » muner| BARKER & MAYNE, that it would have blown down had not Joe, The (azette says: Dr. G. W. Collius I Tho discovery of coal in St Joseph | mado somparatinely s o ke et N, £, Cor,13th & Farnam Sts,Omaha,Neb. The State Reform School, Hearnoy Pross, 0. M. LEIGHTON, H. T, CLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, KSUCCESSORS TO KENNAKD BIOS, & CO.) huudred per cent. Take Bates county [ families, The contract should have been —DEALERS IN— 1o tawn of avy consequence, and lands [ and spocifications of the architect, but means a now impetus to trade und man | we can tell, excopt it was because 8 good a8 an exawple. Only afow years ago no | let to other parties who made bids to do s0ld for u tere song. All at once it was [ the bowrd of publio lands and buildings roAND Paints, Oils, Brushes. Class. [ i e luil}' of & hundred thousand | poker pl: q WHOLESALE SHIPPERS AND DEALEWS IN iulnbiuu{a before the coming of 1890, fiwr: lfi;: ; rt«rz‘li\'ia:)u::u:}i(:l: t‘l‘l’t:“!lrlul:la aud an euhancement of value of every | thau a man or men wha dovotedall thoir foot of real estate in the city at least one [ time to legitimate business aud their a[ f U Ua n railroud entered her confines. She had | the work in' sccordance with the plans | domcustrated that nearly the eatire [ changed tho specification and plansand| CONENLSVILLE COKE !{oMAHA . - ’ - - NEBRASKA