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THE DAILY BEE. Ouana Orwios No, 914 axp 918 Fanwax 82, |o WMew Youx Orrion, Roox 63 Tamowm BUILO: | o)y republicans but cltizena of all olaeses | public and private. avery morning, o Sunday. The -T.".}‘:?s.‘, o oy faily pusiiahed (1 the sate. o Yoar Months .. 0 The Weekly Bes, Pabliksed every TR¥S, PONTTAID. Year, with premium. .. O Your, withant promiin. Bix Months, without premium One Month, on trial. conrusro NDRNOW | All Gommeanteationn relating te News and Editerial | yiont bestowed on him. watters should be sddressed %o ¥ EDITOR OF TES Baa SraINEss LETTERS. Pustness Letters and Remittances should be adiremer to T Ban PORLEANMS COMPANY, ONXEA. Dratts, Ohecks anZ Post office orders to be made pay- whie 10 the order of the compaty. THE BEE PUBLISHING CO.,, Props, % ROSEWATER, Eoirom A, H. Pitch, Manager Daily Ciroutation, . O, Box, 488 'Omaha, Neb. sereed of THE REPUBLICAN TICKET, ~ The republicans of Omaha have placed | llkely that the day will come when the munlcipal ticket in the field which not | ¥ an heartily support. The conventlon | ¢ for the pence, s in many gyoars justics and that capncity has qualified himself fo: the police court bench, His excellent record as a citizen and as an officer com- raends him as an eminently fit candidate for the position to which he has been nominated. Mr. E. K. Long, candidate for clty to it that wonld not do in a promiscuons crowd In a public riak. nial, this time for the brother of Glenn Judge Sten-|Kendall, who has distingnished himself berg, the nominee for police judge, has|as a defaulting postmaster. L4 THE DAILY BEE-~WEDNESDAY MARCH 25, 1885 I T ————————————————— — musement assemblies. It I8 not un- inks will be divided into two classes— The private rink, onducted on the eame princlples as & was enthuslaatic and harmonious, and the | private soclal club, would undonbtedly candldates represent the best elements of | Pay, and many features could be added | An Eonglish «yndicate, No. 8, in 150 | the party. Mr. Marphy, who hesds the Wednesday |ticket as candidate for mayor, has dia- charged the dutles of the office under the $ % [most trying circamstances for the pest 1% | year with exemplary fidelity and discre- | to get up another silver eervice testimo- tion, end fully merits the high compli- 11 will now b in order for Gov, Dawes Tur s'ate courts of Maryland have raled, from time to time, that the state laws should be amended before colored lawyers could practice in that common- wealth, These prejudiced rullngs, how- ever, bave been suddenly and uncere- moniously upset by the supreme court, which has admitted a colored lawyer of Table of the 1 exas ... Yaise The Holland Tand Gompany, Sir Rdward Rl English syndicate in Mississippi Marquis of Tweedale Thillips, Marehall & Co., Bryan Dake of Sutherland Britieh Land Company in Kaneas Wm, Whatley, LAN D MONOPOLY, of Lands in the United States, With Amount of Hold ings in Acres, + 8,000,000 ‘. 4,500,000 i n syndicats in + 2,000,000 + 1,800,000 1,750,000 1,300,000 Mexico Florida London. forman-American syndicate, Lon don...... 1 o 750,000 vans of London, 17,000 42 M P., Peterboro, England Missouri Scotland. ... . Robert Tennent of London, Dandee Land Company, Scotland., Lord Dunmore i Benjamin Neugas, Liverpool. Lord Houghton tn Florida d Duoraven in Cclorado. ... Jnglish Land o, in Florida English Land Co., in_Arkansas 310,000 Land Co., Fdinburg, 300,000 1000 000 000 ,000 000 60,000 50,000 ) [ peop'e’s g = Joux Browx's soul goes marching on Albert Peel, M, 1 Inter-Ocean and the State Journal, ls unanimous in its praises of Senator Van wonding Alien Holders | Wyck for his Gouid & Co, gallant fight sgalnat Teller, He Has No Equal, Weeping Water Republican, Senator Van Wyok, Nebrarka's “gai- fly,” is making It exceedingly intorosting on the floors of congrees these day for ex-Becrolary of the Interior Tellor. The latter has apparently prostitated his office on one or two occasions In the intorest of railroadmonopollsta, and Van Wyck 18 in his eleniont in showing the transaction up In fts teue light. “Our Van may have his faulte, but as a guardlan of the ts againat officlal trickery, he has no equal on the floor of the senate, r— Nebraska Junketers, Ohicago News, Senator Manderson, the sawed.cft, in- tellcstual Hercules from Ncbratka, s anxious that a senatorlal commitice of fivo should go to Alaska next sammer for the purpose of investigatiog mattors and things, Theso Nebraska statcsmen seem to have a penchaut for traveliog In far-away climes. One of them, Church STATE JOTTINGS." Oreighton has & “shinny” club, Thirty Virginians located in Madieon coun- ty recently, W, 8, Tamblin, a prominent r!;nl suddenly of heart disease, Stanwood, one of the fugitive prisoners from the T,ancaster connty jall, was captured in Hiawatha, Kae, A company is reported as being formed for lho‘\n,mmul Iaying out a new town on the south line of the Santee reservation, Fred Hordy, of Silver Creek, noar Ponca, was badly torn by his own dogs while en deavoring to part them in afight of their own, The sesthotic sunflower proved to bews good substitute for wood or coal to many poor farmers of the state during the past winter, A dostructive prairie fire swept over o large portion of Harlan county, Considerable farm property was destroyed and a large strip of timber rumed. J. A, Lensler, of Dunbar, hurled several chunks of profanity at William Feldt, and felt #o ploased with tho exercise that he paid 80,70 into the school fund for injurles to the code, One of the new laws of this state prohibits the marriage of divorced persons within six montha after the granting of the decros, in Lincolnte, At the age effective, Her ssbhjoct was ‘Al truistio Faith,” and for her {llustration of this she took Ohedldja, the first wife of Mohammed, who was rich, a widow, and much older than he when she martled him, When ssked why he did not In later years put hor away and take & younger wifo, he replied that ho loved her bost because she believed in him when all mon despised him, This was the fervent offectual falth f ore soul in another. It was her faith that wronght out Mohammed. Thore Is faith in God, in self, and In hamanity, The firat producas the o'hers, Give this full growth and the others will have full aweep. Our creed should be enlargod tc add to ‘I belleve In God, the Father,' I belleve in mysc!f, or In you. The three fold faith should be tanght. Faith in others fa faith in humanity, fiest in the abstract and second in the concrete, Tho first is the general alt! tude of mind which s hopeful and cxpec tant of humanity. It looks to a goal of final geod. Tt 18 not pessimistic. [t be- lioves that life is worth living infinitely, and infinitely worth saving, But ft must not stop with the absteact. Life {s lald order to allow time to be given for settiog [0ut in definite door yards, A whole at Des Moines, auditor, is one of the best known and | Baltimore to practice. This action ls 1n t——— e highly rospected citizena of Omaha. He |accord with the sontimonts of the ma- Ix the coming election Mr, Buck will |{s fully qualified for the important trust|jority of the people of that state. plag a lone hand. of the auditorship, having been the tickct - aunditor for the Unlon Paclfic for a num- Keer the board of educatlon eut of | ber of years. polit'cs If you possibly can. t {The convention made no nomination| nusiance, bat he does not seem to resl- —— for treacurer, there being no candldate |, thq fact.” Nobody elss realizss the for the position, which Is conceded € be | ¢, .o except the employets of the boy in asfe hands. Tue Chleago Inter-Ocean declaves that ““Van Wyck has hecome coneiderable of Tur labor interests are well repre- rented on the republican ticket. Ooetle; who bas Besn drawing §7,500 & = = The nominces for councilmen and year fcr the /nter.Ocean and giving that Tue mugwumps at the corner of Tenth | hoard of educatlon are nearly all promi- paper & valuable correspondence. Every- and Douglas streets will have to show [nent and well-known tax paying citizene, body reallz:s the fact that the Znfer. their hands presently. who can be sately trusted with the affalrs Ocean is a barnacle that has had too of the city. much government pap. Kassox will now bid adlen to Bismarck, and return to Towa to mend his fences once more for congress. Tue United States minister at Stock- holm Informs the secratary of stats that the Swedish diet has voted to admit pork Tur workingmen who are talking so free of daty Into the ports of Sweden. loudly for Boyd ars workingmen for|qye American hog will accordingly accept revenue only. 2 the freedom of Sweden. It is a good thing for the diet. Avrrover Gen. Hszen is under a St Tue only bad bresk made by the re- publican city convention was in elesting John M. Thurston as chalrman, Mr. Thurston was not a delegate in the con- ventlon, and in view of his peculiar rola. tlons to factional politios his election was a blunder that may cost the party many votes, for the reason that men who for cloud, the weather buslners is continued at the old stand. Tur Virginla congrossmen asked President Clevelan whether it would be years have refused to train under him ., Liecestershiro, . 10,000 5,000 Ling Sir J. 1., Alexander Kansas, av, Yorkshire, Fog.... Grant, of London, in s esiee 85,000 110,000 English Syndicate, Wis. . M, Ellerhauser of Halifax, in West VARSIV SV I A Scotch Syndicate in Florida, A, Boysen, Dauish Counsel Malwaukeo { Miseouri Land 600,000 500,000 50,000 165,000 Giay ... 20,647,000 These 20,000,000 acres of land are In the hands of a few individuals, Theland batons who own them will rarely visit this country. They will draw their dlvi dends upon the profits from stock-grow- ing and other purposes to which the land will ba devoted, while the poor man may seek In vain a quart:rsectionupon which to place a filing for a homestead for his family, To these syndicate holdings ehould be added the following, a report of which was finally forced from the sec- retary of the interior, much of the land being held by foreign syndicates: Tho Arkansas Valley company in Colo- rado, a fore'ga corporation, whese inclos- ures embrace upward of 1,000,000 acres; the Pralrie Cattle company (€cotch) in Colorado, upward of 1,000,000 acres; H. H. Metcalf, River Bend, Colo., 200,000 , of nburg Total. Howae by name, wont ona Blalne and Lo- | asido said decree by proper legal procee gan mission through the sunny but be-| The last legislaturo p nighted south last fall, and at the end of “"l i) ‘;“"""“,‘“"".lh.‘]| y i three months returaed a wisor and better [ Y <47 ey, Washingtons birthday, Decora . - tion day, Arbor day (22d of April), Fourth of man. We don’t know that Senator Man- | July, Thanksgiving day and Christmas day, derson needs intelloctusl and spirftual Fre A v it purification, nor are we positive that, in day tion of granting right of the event of puch a need, a journey to|to the street car company, was a very qui Alaska would accomplish the aesivad re- one. Although a majority of the vote ca sult. But, in view of the benefits of |¥A3 in favor of the proposition less th the Howe trip, wo aro dispossd to favor | 0Nt of the ¢ty voted, and the courts Py sposed to favor |y v to determine almost any sort of exoursion a Nobraskn | carried. man may propose, even though It| B, 0. Smith, sged al sixty-six _yoars, be at tho government's expense, started (mm' ‘Lum\ to lml |n]v|;\? in lm‘lwm e —— county, near Jackson, on the 18th, on foot. y el Nothing was heard of him until the following Blufl Van Wyck, Ohiteko Hesica Sunday morning, when his body was found hicago Herald, lying on tho prairie some seven miles;from his > v 3 Senater Van Wyck s not courtecus, [home on the highest peak in that coumtry. but he fs honcst. Senatorlal courtesy | No traces of violence were discovered on his has come to bo only another name for | Poreon, and the presumption s that the old waostefulness, jobbery and corraption, | ™* sat down to rést and died, Van Wyck has a big job on his hands, BRI R but if be can meko tho United States|o, = . Good trom Kvil, senate honest, decent and mindful of | V080 Herald. public opinion he will be the greatest re-| Sevator Van Wyck fs more than a former of the age. mM.Ich for Senator and ex-Secretal Teller. Thrice armed is he who hath e —— Not Our Miller, but a Desolate Dude, | his quarrel just, and Van Wyck bas Chicago News, truth, honesty, and justice on his side a8 whother ,the proposition | rushlight to any human being, milky way of generalitios may not glve a It must touch humanity In the Individual if for good, Tt muet look Info alms housts and asylums and prisons and the darkness of the cities’ night, The faith whish believes in another does not requirs nogatively, firet, that ita profesor be a femalo, yob it is oftoner found in # woman then in a maw., Mon believe in themsclves and aro occupted with themselves. S:cond, thisis not In fepsrablo from tho bonds of matsimony. But sho would have a woman moderately marrled. She need not be a buttonhole bouquet to a man, nor be dead in love with him. They may have falth in each other, Third, it is not hero worship; it will eerve, but not worship. It bolieves that he can bo and do one thing. This was {l- lustrated by Mrs. Carlyle. Chedldy be- lieved In Mohammed. Aflirmatively, thls faith is that faculty of mind by which one diecriminates what I am good forand best for, It soes that this, and no other, is your way. It discerts the ordinary and the extraordinary in you. Itdivines you; it appreclates you. Whence this falth? 1t fs the giftof God. Chedidja As wo understand it, the Millor who |In hls arraignment of the interlor depart- to is @ Theodora. Miss Cleveland did not belleve In self-made men. — Will not b likely to consult him or co- |acres; John W. Prowers, Colorado, 200,- |bas been appointed internal revenue [ment for its palpablo favoritiam worth while to recommend & Virginlan for commisstoner of who was nominated for sgriculture, and city treasurer by the republiosas, willbe | o franily told them ho was disposed to defeated by an overwhelming majority. |, ninate western man for that place, Tur remintacences of Lincoln by Don | It may be barely potsible that the presi- Piatt are Interesting, bot his remin-|dent, at the suggestion of Bayard, has iscences of Poker BotSchenck would be | bis eye on the Sage of Arbor Lodge. much more so. Omamna’s ex-candidats for the postmas. Tur storm of indignation caused by | ter genera'ship acknowledges that he has tho appolntment of Higgins ought to been nominated by the democratic state cauee that gentleman to change his name | central committee for governor of Alaska. to Wiggins. He theraofore defends Senator Mander- e e son’s proposed trip to that reglon, as he CLEVELAND is raisng the standard of | wishes to learn something concerning political morality ameng ths democrats by | that far-off territory before he accapts the his civil service reform policy, but he is | governcrship. lowering the spiri‘s of tha fellows who run with the machine. Faraer BurcHarp has taken to lec- operate with him now, Tuere Is a great wrong perpetrated in this city in the matter of assersments,and now Is the time to right it, as the assess- ors will scon begln their work. The city and county suthoritles ought to see to 1t that all the preperty within 100 feet of the main tracks of the rallroads is properly asseesed. There is no authority in law and no equity for allowing the ratl- roads to exempt from taxation acre upon acre of property not within the right of way limit, Tue supreme court of the Unfted States sustalns the Edmunds "tah act which preecribes a discriminating test Tur Colorado eenate bas killed the bill fixing maximum railecad rates, but, like the Nebraska legislature, it voted for an advisory commission which shall draw turing, his subject being, *“The Men I|08th requiriog a voter to swear before ho havo Met.” His priacipal subject was |i8 allowed to vote that be lsnota biga- bimselt. He remioded his audience that | mist or polygamlst, This decision fs any- he had been called a roligious slouch, an | thing but comfortirg to the Mormons, ecclerisstical dude, an old fool, a jackass, | 81 it will, no doubt, strengthen them In 000 acres: McDanfel & Davis, Colorado, 75,000 acres; Routcheler & Lamb, Colo- rado, 400,000 acres; J. W. Frank. Cole rado, 40,000 acree; Garnett & Langford, Colerado, 30,000 acres; Leivesy Brothers, Colorade, 150,000 scres; Vrcomsn & McFife, Colorado, 50,000 acres; Beatty Brothers, Colorado, 40,000 acres; Chick, Brown & Co., Colorado, 30,000 acres; Reynolds Cattle company, Colorado, 50, 000 acres; several other caresin Colorado, embracing from 10,000 to 30,000 acree, Ooe & Carter, Nebraska, fifty miles of commissfoner is not Dr. George L, Miller, | corporations in the matter of public ]_fThura is at least one Chedidja in every ife. of Omaba, but a desolate dude who hails from the mountain fastnesees of West Virginia, This person has never traveled under an alias and therefore he can’t amount to very much. ——— Frank James For Bank Examiner, Senator Vest s (uoted as saying: ¢‘Mistourl wants an cflice of tome kind, but I have only one candidate—I want Frank James for bink examiner,’ o — fonce; J. W. Wilson, Nebraska, forty miles of fence; J, W. Bosler, twenty wiles; Willlam Humphrey, Nevada, thirty milee; Neison & Son, Nevada, twenty-two miles; Kennebee Ranch, Ne- braeka, from 20,000 to 50,000 acres, Many of the cattla companies have gore on to the public lands and fenced them in without 8o much as askirg the permission of a tender hearted and com- plaisant secretary cf the interior. They have shut up United States mall routes and inclosed the homes of the settlers, and the equatters have been powerless n defense of their rights of free ingress and egress to and from the lands claimed a bigot, and even a plumber, and he did | their determination to proclaim a “new | in 160-acro tracts by them. The aseaulta salarles with regularity and dispatch. Jor McDoNALD has refused to be ex- iled as minister to Russia. He prefers to remain in Indiana to make it warm for Tom Hendricks, and at the same time lay his pipes for the United States senate. not forget to indulge in alliterations, which flowed from his mouth as readily ag water off a duck’s back. We believe that Mr Burchard has struck his gait, and {hat as a lscturer he will prove a brillianv success. Hlis biundering allit- eration, which gave him such notoriety, may, after all, bo the means of making Ir there has been any doubt as to Presldent Cleveland’s religion it is now definitcly settled. He has rented a pew in the Firat Presbyterirn church at Washington. The next step ior him to take s to ocoupy It. Civi service refcrm has alteady been begun for Nebraska. An order has been issued to the chief of the railway mall service for this divlslon directing him to fill vacancies only upon the recommendation of Dr. Miller, Applicants will govern themeelves accordingly, and send in their blds to the /Herald bursan., Tur roller-skating rink haviog been quite generally denounced by the clerical brethren, it romained for a Chattanooga preacher toopen a warfare on progressive euchra, which he brands as 2 modified form of gambling. Now let some other minister open his batteries on Prosbyterl- an billiards, otherwise known as croquet. Buk prohibition wave has at last struck his fortuno, It isan ill-wind that blows nobody any good THE ROLLER RINK BUSINESS. The crusade against the roller skating rinks on the part of the clergy is not without some reason. As a rule the rinks are conducted as public resorts, no diserlmination whatever being exerclsed a3 to admieslon. The attendance thers- fore fs as mixed as that a public balls, which, as every cno knows, are not gen- erally commended. So long as the rinks revelation” which snall advlse the aban- donment of polygamous practlces. It begins to look as If the solutlon of the Mormon question is not far distant. Tur Bartholdi Statue of Liberty is to be shipped to this country In a vessel of the French goverament early in May, and the pedestal committeo 1sata loss what to do in regard to furnishing a rest- ing place for the statue. It again fran- tically appeals to the country for fands with which to finish the pedestal, but we imagine thatthe country will not reepond. The peopls have come to the conclation that if New Yourk City cannot rsise the necessary §150,000, the statue can re turn to France, even if such a result will bo “to the everlasting diegracs of the | American people,” ia its appeal. as the committee says aro conducted on the same princlpls as a - - public ball room, where promiscuous| Mgs, Eiiza F. Epoy, of Boston, left crowds assemble, parents will do well to | her property, after the payment of cer- accompany their children or see that they | tain legacles, in two equal portlons to are otherwiso protected, Thero aronow about thirty thoueand rinks in the United Statee, and the “Industry” has become a very important business, Thereare on an average at least six persons attached to each rink for the purpose of conduct- ing the pastlme, making 180,000 in all. A New York dealer says Susan B. Anthony end Lucy Stone Blackwell, with & request that they use It tofarther the woman's rights cause, but without placlng either of them under any lega! responsibilily to do so. The supreme court of Mas:achusetts has de- clded that the will does not impose a trust upon the property bequeathed to these Texas, and strangoas it may seom, the |thet from thirly to forty thou-|women, but left it still a simplo bequeat, scaolution to submit to-the people a con. | ©4nd palrs of skatos aro sold each week, | 1o bo ussd “according to thelr own judg. stitutlonal prohibitory amendment has |#nd that five hundred establishments aro [ ment and consclence.” If there are any pausod the lower house of the loglalature engaged in the manufacture of the article, by en overwhelming msjority and amid The average nm_nhet of workmen to each great anthusissm. If the peoplo of Texa | factory is eet down at forty, making 200, should adopt the prohibltery amendment | 000 Inall. According to thesefiguresso,- women among the women’s righters that could be trusted to honestly carry out the wish of Mrs, Eddy they are Susan B, the squatters have recotved in many in- stances from the spurred and booted cow- boys in the employ of these wealthy syn- dicates add quite a chapter to a long cat- alogue of privations and hardships en- dured by the pioneers who have Crossed. the prairies As of old our fathers crossed the sea, To make the west as they the east, The homestead of the freo, Eenator Van Wy Work, Crete Vidette. Senator Van Wyck brought the North- ern Pacific to time; he made it exceed- ingly hot for the Union Pacific; succeded In getting his anti-fenca bill through; recovered 15,000,000 acres of urearned and to thegereral public; secured a $75,- 000 appropriation fer Nebraska City; alded in getting throogh the inter-state commerce bill; is now on the track of Secrotary Teller and a 7,000,000 acre and ateal; was responsible for the in- e to widowed persioners from 8 to $12 per month, and has made himaelf useful in a hundred other minor affairs dorirg the sersion of congress just clored. The Linccln Journal calts him “an fdlot and a demo- gogue.” The question is, will tho people of Nebraska stand by Senator Van Wyck —a brave general durir ¢ the war, an able congressman from New York and a faith- ful sepator of Nebraska—and withal a life-long and coneistent republican, or will they dance to the tune of the State ournal—en organ which never breathed & breath of pure, truthfol atmosphere during its calloused, corrupt and cramb- ling career! Time will tell. “A Godsend to Thousands," Rapid City (D, T.) Republican, “Tho press of the northwest seem to be unanimous in the praises of Senator Van Wyck for the brave and good battles he has fought and won in the Unlted States genate, by which the lands that were for Anthony and Lucy Stone Blackwell. we shell begln. to think the millenfum {s | 000 personsaredrawlnga direst llvingfrom | That the money will bo judiclously ex- near at hand and'the devll Is about to be. | this rink buslness. The skates are reck- | pended for the good of the cause no one oned as amounting to millions, each one |doubts. of whom expends not less than $1 per — — Tre “gonvine’.counterfelt silver cadns | week in the amusement, The large| Havina ordered the ““boomers” to keep now belng ananutactared in New York by | rioks in New York take ln $2,500 daily, | out of the Oklahoma territory, it is in- parties not .connected witn he govern- |vhus showing a patronage of ten thou-|timated that the adminjstration now ment are atiracting considerable atten-|sand skaters st twenty-five cents each.|proposes to turn its attention to the cat- ton, Those cofns contaln tho samc|The price of skates ranges all the way |tle monopolists. Itisssld thatit s the amount of silver, and are justof thesame | from thirry cents a pair for sidewalk utc, [ fixed purpose of the administration to welght aud finencss as the coloa turned'j up to §6, Theaters and similar places of | compel the removal of the cattlo from «out from the United ¥iates miat. The|smuscment, together will saloons, are|Oklshoms and from sll Indlan Territory (profit on these “genulne .counterfeits” s |the chlef sufferers from the ekating crazs | lands, and also to cause the removal of faund in the deprociation of sllver. The | which overruns the osuntry. The clergy | all fences from the government lands, bulllon value of tao hatt dollars ls now | ehould therefors go slow In its attacks on [ To carry out this plan the first step will only seventy-seven cents. Coln of the[tho skating riuks, if these estab-| b to annul the leases of Indian lands, atandard finevessis obtalned by welting | lUshments tend to diminlsh the at-[after which negotiations will be made for wp trade dollars. ¥he makers realico s | tencance at other *‘Inatitutions” which [the purchase of such lands as the Indisns profit of 23 per eent, which ls the (have boen much severely condemned by | do not need and add them to the public differenae between the real and the face | the reverend gentleman, However, the | domaln for the benefit and use of setilers, valao of two half dollars, which is aa |pulpit crasade on the conduct of tito [ This movement on the part of the goy- awple margln for speculators. Genuine [rinks is having & ealutary effsct. 16 is | ernment will materlally affect the Inter- *‘counterfel:-dollars can easily b .colned | causing ¢he managers and the other prin-{ ests of the cattle men who have fenced in the aame way. The bullion value of{cipaw ie the business to constder the |in and oocupled every available acre of sllver dollars {a only about 82 cents, and [adoption of stringent rales and reguls- | land {n Oklshoms and other poriions of come a;penitent convert. felted by the Texas Pacific rall- road, have been returned to the public. If it had not been for him the bill surely never would have passed that body. The lands In question amount to fiteen million acres, which at elghty acres to the person wlll enable nesrly 200,000 familles to make and embellieh homes weere thoy mey live bappily, and this, too, in one of the most favored and genial sectlons of the country. It will be a godsend to the thousends and thou- sands of people In the large cities fight- fog the battle of life against the odds which eriminal economic laws have glven their enemies; the monopolies. It has been the purpose of great monopolles to crowd our clties wltg poor people, and they bave succeeded well, eo well, In- deed, that nine out of every ten of them are virtually thi ve of some monopoly or other, and Van Wyck has given these people a chance to emanclpate themselves from tyranny that has been ruthlessly exerclsed over them by heartless em- ployere. The passage of the bill will bo as an entering wedge to the forfelture of many other land grants that are held to- day by other corporations in dleregard of all sense of justice and right, Always at the Front, Johnson County Journal, Brave ana Useful, New York Sun, Senator Van Wyck, of Nebratka, I8 a brave and useful public servant. s St by FOND OI' HEALTHY MEN. No Candidate Need Apply to Oleve- land Unless Physically RRobust, Wathington Special. It is said to be one of the hobbies of the president that all applicants for cffice must be in perfect health. A gen- tleman who has been present at a num- ber of the applicaticns for cffice ssya when & name is presented for his consid- eration, and after he has satisfied him- self that the candidate has the other nec- essary qualificatlons, he invariably fol- lows it up with ecmething after this style: “What eort of a looking man is he ¥’ *‘How much does he weizh 7"’ “TIa he in perfect health?’ Do you think he could perform hard work and still keep his phyzical eonditlon unimpatred The president llkes a robust man, and believes that it is a mistake to put men into oftice who are more thanllkely cither to neglect their duties or to retire with shattered constitutions, candidates who are not vigcrous Ina physical senge meet with linde favor at the white houee, EXCEPTIONS TO THE RULE, Yet the president has already been un- fortunate in this respect in three of his bureau appcivtments. Mr, Clark, the ssisfant eecrefary of the in- terior, has been eerlously, and at one timo It was feared fatally, ill ever ince he arrived here. It is not lands, The action of Teller at the last moment of his ho'd on executive power In the interior department In issuing patents for a land grant to a swindling railrosd company which has no existenca was fortunate in one respoct. Tho rascality of the proceedings was go plain that even partianship, that miserable preju- dice which induces men to cover up wrong doing, csuld mot undertake to dony cr palliate it. Mr. Teller ttinds alouc in deferse of his course and Lo cne is willing to aesiss him in his effort to relieve bimself of the re- eponeibllity for his acts, 1f Mr. Teller was stll]l a cabinet officer his impeachment would be in crder. Having been elected to the senats tcr six yeass the paople of Colorado must paes upon his claim to fu- ture confidence when that term shall have expired. The plea from Teller that his conduct was in line with that of his predeccesors is cxactly the polnt which the unpur. chased and unpurchasable representatives Your own faith wiil at times nced the support of snothes. This will be when all men despise you and you de- spise youreelf. You will have much hunger and thirst, and will crave wealth and health and affection, but your keen- est craving will be for recognition to do something, to be somebody, o accom plish something, to do a good piece of work, to do your best. It may boat housekeeping, or dresemaking, or in lit- erature, or in art. It is in you, and it ought to come cut. You all have human testimony to this, Some one will say to you: “Go on ond you will con- quer.” You may listen to and ohey that veice, She dospised eolf-sufficiogness. You can get along alone, but you have no right to get along; you were born to show not how little but how much you can do. We went moro life and fuller, and necd all the help we can get. Men would fail but for Chedidjas, She would make a new clasificaticn of manking, and divide thom into boosters and bocsted. The boosters are the fmport- of the people with to make. The whole land policy of the govirnment has been corrupt and wasteful to the last degree. ant, and do the most good. It may be well t0 boost & man, but bettor to boost a woman. Be Chedidjas and do the The precent dirgraceful exposure and the | thing next to you, and by your faith as- make every honest man, no matter what hs politics may be, fnslst on a farreach- ing reform. st e CRUICHES AND A PLASTER JACKE Courtship in Bellevae Hospital Ends in a Happy Wedding. Mrs, Marletta Johnson was admitted to Bellevue hospitsl on Jane 10h last for hip trouble. She was a bright little widow, with sparkling black eyes, and was always gay and cheerful in spits of her iofirmity, which compelled her to move on crutches, Herry Mundt, a very jolly German painter, entered ward 15 in September to ba treated for spinal discass. Wards 15 and 16 arc next to each of , and on watm autums days, while eitting by an cpan window, Mrs., Johuson could smile lame defeuse made by Teller {s enough to | 8ist others. known when he can resume his duty, |00 Mr. Munat, who sat bolt uprigh’ in a Mr. Malcolm Hay, first aseistant post- | plaster jacket that was built around him master-general, i slso In feeblo health, | to brace his epinc. It was notlong before Owing to this, Mr. Hay did not scek the | the nnrees noviced that two of their pa- Altruistic faith is moet rea- gonable, This abstract will give but a faint idea of the thonghtful and practical charaster ol the address. ). T. SWIFT, Rochester, ars suffered from hereditary rheumatiem, many times being utterly help Joss, ospecinlly in warm weather, In July, 1884, she used o few bottles of Warner's Sark Rheumatic Cure, and in January, 1885, eaid her restoration to health was a3 complete as miraculons. Curo permanent. Try it. MRS, CARRIE N e ——— Consequently, |and assigned to ward 16 to be treated [The Way to Approach the President Chicago Tribune, Cnarles Francis Adams is credited with exerting the Influence which kopt Thur- wman out cf the cabinet, If there ls a pointer in this for officeseckers it is that tho way to improes the president is to op- proach bim calmly, eternly and pateen izirgly, and lat him kuow who yeu are. e —— Mies§ Nevada's Recoption Prancisc 3AN F'RaNcisco, March 24,—The ovation given Mile, Nevada, who, after three weeks illness, made her debut before a San Francis at San appointment as assistant postmaster-gen eral, and when spoken to upon the sub- ject by the president urged it as » reason for his refusiog the office, But Mr. Clovoland insisted that he was the right men for the place and he acceptod, only with the understanding that it should not interfere with the trip that was held to bo necessary for hls health, If he dees not fmprove after breathivg the perfume tieats were enjoying horpltal Lfa very much. The rales of the hospltal do not allowa patient to enter any ward bat his own, so that Mr. Mundt's courtship lived mcs: of the time on plty and silent contemp!ation. Bat on fine days the patlents wereallow ed togo down In the yard for exercise. Then, too, there was chapel every Sunday, which included arlae with Mrs, Johoson of crango blogsoms and belmy alr, some | Up and down in the elevator. Aftorwinter of hia friends think it not unlikely that |8t in the clevator was their only solace. bo may resign, Mr. Atkine, the com. | At last, toward the end af January, Mrs, missioner of Indian affairs, has long been |Johneon was elmoct well and able to in fesble health,! o ——— ¥acts About Cancers, Pittsburg Dispatch, Nearly every case of cancer can be traced to rome exclting cause, suck as an Injury to the part, a local d!sease Insome of the glands or a neglected warty growth, High living with Insofficlent ex- erclse or the neglect of thegeneral health conduce to it. The most gencrally ac- cepted [dea of the nature of the discase is that it is the result of the morbid growth or development of white blood s the calls usually found In mble theee more than any other, These cells do not Increase and develop like the cells found in pus and other morbid conditions, but seem to em. anate from a definite source, and are pro- duced at a comparatively elow, bat con- stantly increasing, rate. The Incroase has been notlced to correspond with the decline In general health, and the de- crease to begin with the improvement of health. — Who Was Under the Hat, Youth's Companion, One of the church wardens wes ob served to cast uncasy glances toward an individual wearloy a silor jacket, and cap of a sesfaring and jaunty appearance, which latter surmounted a clean shaven face and clotely coc hair, After a little while he approached the eqllor laddie and leave the hospltal. Mr, Mundt had not fmproved so rapldly, but he was much better, His first idea was to be married in the ward, and then go on wlth his treatment, but Warden O'Rouke ob- jocted, Dr. Matthias E. Willing, the chaplain of the insittation, had tsken a great interest in the courtship, and he told Mr. Mundt that If he would leave the hospital he should be mar- rled, Mundt got s pass entitling him to an absence of forty-elght hours, and Mrs, Jobuson got an absolute dis- charge, vue hospltal, and with Dr, Willlng start- | 1 ed for the home of Mr, Mundt's slster, | in Williamsbargh, marded, groom went back to the hospital and stayed for a little while, but now he has left {t for good. He and his wife, wil There they wera ||, house In Brooklyn, Mrs, Mundv {a en- | tirely recovered, and Mr, Mundt s well enough to earn a good living at his trade. Everything looks euncouraging, and the | s happy couple tay they will never firget On February 2 they left Belle- | | ticura Soaj When his leave was up the |meut wi th bis two children | uls, by a former marriage, are now keeplng | untii'we on my Iy, and had nearly cleane co audience last night, surpassed anything evor tendered an actress in this city. Tt is gonorally acknowledged this was due moro to the fact of her being Pacific coust girl than to any g rtistic merit. She was recalled # great r of times and when attompt to King ot Home,"" burstinto t tage, Many valuablo gifts among which nted by her old s Lills seminary. and fled from WEro vrerentec gt of 5,000 pres mates (uticura Infantile Blood Purifiers and 8kin Beantifiers, Absolutely Pure and Safe from \the Moment of Birth. NFANTIL] Head, E Pimpl th Humors, Milk Crust, , and every g s and I in and Scalp, with 0 Ako, cured by ‘the © arltier, internally, the groat skin cures externally, Abwo- uro and safe, aud may Le used trom the mo- rth, “OUR LITTLE BOY.” Mr. and Mra. Escrett Stebbing, Bolchortown, Mass littieboy was terribly afficted with Scrof It Rheum, an wipelas ever since he d nothing we could give him helped him d Cuticurs Remedios, which gradually , until he is now as fair any child. “WORKS TO A CHARM,"” 3. 8. Weoks, Kaq , Town Treasurar, st, Albans, Vo & lotter dated Mur iuby's face and be i ew blood utely ured b b face of sores. 1 have the elevator or the elevator man as long | recommended itto several, and Dr. Plant has order as they live. R ST MIS3 CLEVELAND' LECTURE, Dividing the Human KRace Into the Boosters and the Boosted, [ pr lotely cured of & d it for thein “A Charles Eayre rite:: UMy son, & SRRIBLE CASE.” e, Jersey City 4 of twelve rible case of uticura Remedies. From the top of his b ples of his foet was 0no mass of scabs.” Every other remedy and physicians had been trivd in vain: FOR PALE, LANGUID, 18 per cent would leave a neat profit after | tions! for thess places ¢f amucement, |the Indian Territory. They will bave to poying the expanses of coining. It is|and the probability ls that the matter |seek new ranges, and move thelr herds, more than probable that this work will be [will soon be serlously consldeted by a | which will involve great expeuse. Be. exposing some rottenness In which the executed on an extenslve teale by coun- | general convention of rink managers. It|sides it will be somewhat difficult to se- | late secretary of the interior, Teller, is torfelters. This is one of the evils grow- fis true that wumerous scandals bave(care new locations for large herds, and | deeply inyolved. Van Wyck continues to keep cur state to the front by bis able speeches in the U, S eenate. Juet now he is engaged in The Evangellst of June 28, 1883, con-| Ta thero | tained the fallowing Feport of @ leoturs | Easisted chikdrun, with Bany, sllaw sklo, the by Miss Clovoland, the presont mistress | dearivg blood and siia’of inhoridol impuriita hatt of the white house: ‘‘The great u‘.ldrlal and e rheumatism, By the discomytted look of the uee-|of the commencement at Flmira Female tloner as he returned to his seat and the [college was that nefora the alumew by whispered audibly: “Can't you takecfl your hat? any rsason why you can't take off your rolvint, 20, Ing out of the govermment colnage of [ariten in the rluks, but it bas been | perhaps some of them will conclude to 82-cent dollars and 50-csut half dollars, |shown that they are not aoy more nu-|sell their herds to other cattle-owners The government yeally offers # premium [ merous in proportion to the sttendance|who have plenty of grazlng grounds for counterfeit nz. l!nn' those wkich ocour in other public’ glsewhere, Almost Cnanimous, Lincoln Democrat. The press of the cruntey with the ex- appearauce of the rest of the costume as the weater walked cut of church at the conelueion of the service, it was evident that the whlsper reply was am @ ception «f the New York™ Tribuge, the girl. Miss Ebzsbeth Cleveland, sister of Gov ernor Cleveland, This was so gocd that we glve oar 1eaders a full ats'ract. She somewhat resembles Anna Dickinson {o looks, but her delivery was very Potter Jrug BA & Chemical Co. Bosten. A for *How to Care Skin Discases:" Use Cutiours Hoap an_exquisitly pertumed Skin - Beautifier, and AL and Nursory Sansuve.