Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 6, 1885, Page 4

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e A N L e N S o TR 4 YTHE DAILY BEE. Saana Yww Yoax Orren, rma. g, Dty R b aREn T AT One Menth. . ¥he Woskly Boe, Pablihised every Wednesday 10 in NATURALIZATION. United States In another comntry? At firat thought we shounld say that he has, but upon investigation we find that the WRTOU, FORTPADS. one to snswer satlefactorlly. An allen One Yoar, with proat e lleglance to the United States and to support the constitution, conamsrowpmRoR t Oommunisstions relating b News and Rditorial | and at the rame time he renvunces all whould be addrossed Vo the ESITOR OF YA | ), oo oq to any other country. In ro- turn for this oath of fealty one would w [ should be Al Dustnses Lottors and Remittanoss roseed 4 Tin Bin PUSLISHING COMPANT, ONANA- O ks and Po ofios orders 4o ve made par- | itled {0 T TAT S 1 States wherever he may be. He has m BBE PUBL[SHI“G Uu-, Pm“' become a subject of the United States, R ROSEWATER, Evrron f oty He oan M AR, ll‘te-b. Nea‘“’ o and at theend of five y y 3D the fall funotlons of citizenshlp, Onsrcror HoumAx does not object to | According to the statutes of the United his son drawing six dollars a day as olerk of his junketing committee. Tur Hawkeyo editors, who are xoam- | protection of person and property which Ing over the country, are not the editors |y aooorded to native-born oltizens. But of vhe Hawkeye, but of Iowa. it would seem that tha mere declaration PR of intentions does not make a person a fall-fladged naturallzed cltizen. In disouseing the subject of natural- ization arlse, one of which a person can, by his own uct, put off his citizenship? The prevailing Ang Buzzarp, the noted Pennsylvania outlaw, has surrendered. It is suspected that he hay made an engagement with a Philadelphia dime museum. W Tak census-taker is the terrorof the ladies. Thequestion of age is consldered & plece of impertinence, and it Is not . Tht 1 teathfully snawered once in ten times, | ‘h2¢ b0 cnnot. This proposltion seems quite clear where the sovereign distinctly Tae bolldlng boom in Omaba this refuses to permit the renunciation of citi- seazon will equal, /f not exceed, that of last year, Some very handsoms and sabatantlal business bulldings will be erected, while the mamber of dwellings will be large. reciprocal rights and dutles; the state oannot rightfully dlscard the cit!zen with- out just cause of forfeiture, nor can the cltizan repudlate his obligatlons to the state without Its consent. Assuming that ng been recommended | mutual agreement Is necessary to dissolve as an artlcle of diet by Prof. Riley, the the relation of soverelgn and citizen, the Louis Globe-Dewocrat commends the Insect to the democrats as an accepta- | 8greement of dlssolution ble substitate for the Cleveland crow |lnferred from the prolonged 1 which many of them are eating just now. [the cltizen, coupled with foreign naturalization, and the failare of the PresipeNt OLEVELAND has rowarded | stato, after which, to reclaim him. the Beecher family. Herbert F. Beecher, | better opinion would seem to be that son of the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, | there must be some affirmative act of re- has been appointed collector of customs |nunciation on the part of the state to for the distrlct of Puget sound, In Oregon | which the alleglance is due, though there aad Washington terrltory. are weighty opinlons to the ccntrary. For the purpose of settling the perplex- By the way, what has become of J.|ing and irritating questions that frequent- Sterlig Morton daring these hot sum- |1y arise, this country has entered into mer days { We have not heard anything | treatles of naturalization with a number of him lately. Is he lying In the shade[of forelzn powers. In countrles with of Arbor Lodge fanning himself while | which such treaties have been made others are perspirlng in the ecramble for | there would seem to be no question what- office, or Is he planning some deep-lald | ever as to the protectlon of a naturalized strategem ? United States citizen. The treaty with Great Britain, for instance, provides that cltizens or subjects of either country naturalized as citlzens or subjects of the other country shall be deemed, to have divested themselves of thelr original nationality; the natural- Izatlon may, however, be renounced and the original natlonality resumed if the person should renew his residence in his — native country, and apply to be readmit- THE rumor that John W. Morrls, of | ted to the privileges of a citizen. Treaties Ohlo, has been tendered the governor- [of the same general nature baye been ship of Washington Territory is not in |made by the United States with Prassia, accord with the declaration of the presl- [ Belgium, Sweden and Norway, Denmark, dent and the platform plank that none | with the Austro-Hungarlan monarchy, but residents of the terrltorles ought to | Mexico, Ecuador, and other countries. be appointed to territorlal offices. It[It seoms, however, that in the treaty would seem that a capable man could be | with Prussia, which was made in 1868, found In Washington Territory for gov- [and to continue In force ten years from ernor without golng to Ohlo. the time of ratlfication, it 1s provided that citizens of elther country who become Mz. Ouase, editor of the Scranton |naturalized cltizons of the other, and (Pa.) Zimes will do hls editing from the | reslde therein uninterruptedly for county jall for the next two months. |fivo years, shall be held to This is becoming quite the fashlon among [ haye become oltizens of the Iatter coun- editors. Had Mr. Chase, however, apol- | try, and shall be treated as such, but the ogized to tho millionaire whom he had | declaration of sn intentlon to become a been convicted of libeling, he need not have gone to jail; but he preferred im. prisonment rather than make an apology. —— can TaE one hundred and fifty Towa edi- tors who are going hrough to Portland on an excursion will reach Omaha next Tuesday, and will spend a few hours in the ofty. Would it not be well for the Omaha board of trade to give them some kind of a recoption? The courtesy will be appreclated, and Omaha will be well repald for | cltizen of the one or of the other coun- try has not for either party of the con- ventlon the effect of nataralization, 1t should be borne in mind also that Tue edltor of the Wall Strcet News|whilo maturalization involves all bas been ssylng some very ugly truths rights of person and property, it about Jay Gould, and as a result he has does not extinguish claims which been arrested on a charge of criminal were In forco at the time the per- libel preferred by the preat rallrosd |son concerned altered his alleglance. wrecker. If Mr. Gould were to attempt | Thus, numbers of young men have feft to punish all the editors in this country | gifforent parts of Germany to escape who have told the trath about him and | from the military duty required for a cor- hls operatlons, he would have a blg con-| tain time of all able-bodled males, The A correspondent asks the B whether | t1me beoome equal to Kansas Olty. Oprren Mo, 914 AND 918 Fanwax By, | & party wio hea declared his intentions [ new beel slaughtering house consumes s ey THE DAILY BEE veason whiy It shonld not in a very short | the Britlah government and the British people. When the Afghan question was The | adunly beonght to the frons in Biitiah politics, the government wss in a very *SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1885. MUSIOAL AND DRAMATIO, —_— Miss_Charlotte Thompeon will close her wuccessfal veason at Springfield, il., to-night. T nation trom the Greek chair was forced. The press of the state and the university students are doing much to create sympathy for M; Stephens, and it is bolisved that the regonts I be forced by public opinion to state thelr Roox ¢4 Tamsuxs Botuo- | to become a eltizen of the United States, | large number of cattle dally, and Its con- | procarious sitnation. A motlon of cen- has the right to the protection of the | sumption is to be increased from time to | sare of its action in the Soudan had been time In keeping with the buslness de- mands, Other almilar establishments aro to be started at no dlstant day, and question ls in doubt, and a very difficult | the result will be that the home ocon-|the government cou'd be redeemed by sumptlon of cattle and hogs will In Itself who declares his intentlon to become a|add materislly to the building wup of our r Omaha market, — A WasminaTox speclal to the St. Paul Pioneer Press shows that the geologioal bureau is In a lamentable condition, that naturally Infor that he ought to be en-[no attention has been pald to the strlct | Rus: i the protection of the United |sclentific requirements of the survey, and Havlng served its turn, the Afghan ques- that there are ‘‘dczens of men drawing pay as scientists who don't know enough about geology to pound stone.” The taking the proper proceedings, exercise[whole bureau is to be reorganized, and | S the first step will be to get a proper head. The Bee heartlly recommends Prof. Kit- States, all nataralizsd oltizens while in ftlo, of Fremont, who 1a one of the cand!- | seaslons are conterminous, The hope of foreign countrles are enttled to and shall |dates for the place. We have no hesl- | maintaining & permanent buffer between | o recelvo from this government the aamo | tancy in saylng that hejknows enough them is fdle. about geology to pound stone. CoMpPrAINT made that the census enumerators refuse to reglster persons of Bohemian and Moravian birth as such, but as Austrians. This isa mistake on of Welsh, Scotch and Irlsh birth are reg- istered as such, and those born In Meck- their place of birth and not olassed as Germans, the Bohemlans and Moravians should bo treated in the same manner. the enumerators to follow a uniform rule In this matter, EveN the newspapers of Nevada have not escaped the general decline that has been gradaslly golng on in that state for years, The Virginia FEnterprise, which o t I h the | 8t one time dld the largest business on |jon, GG I U bo |the Pacitic slope outside of San Fran- | blnthg with the torles, absence of | €100, has beon greatly reduced In size, [t aud the ability displayed In its columns during the prosperous days of the Com- days, says the New York Tribune, its ed- Itors were pald princely salaries, and the composltors thought they were doing a poor day’s work when thelr string would not measure $10. THE scramble for the New York col- lectorship has developed Into an inter- esting three-cornerad fight. Herbert O. Thompson 1is supported by Secretarles Manning and Whitney; Willlam E, Smith, a law partner of Smith M. ‘Weed, Is backed by Sam 7ilden; while Joseph Treloor, an employe of the cues- tom house, is the candidate of the mug- wump element. Meantime the president is in hot water, and knows not whom to select. Tre Illinols leglslature has passed a clvil rights bill. The colored man can now occupy a seat in the parquette of Illinofs theatres. EvceNe F1ELp ought to be entitled to a commission for the advertlsement and sa'e of ex-President Hayes' saloon prop- erty in Omaha, THE campalgn in the Northwest terri- tory has been converted into a Big Bear hunt. OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. The past week {n Great Britaln has been chiefly devoted to the Derby, and very little was talked about in London beyond the great races. The publicatfon of additional chapters of the correspon- dence between the Russian and English diplomats with regard to the Afghan troubles has drawn forth {from the London press much that will not tend to flatter the vanity of Lord Granville. The London Times tersely sels forth the Impression that must be made upon every dlsinterested reader of the cabled summary of the dispatches by means of which the negotlations between Russia and England were carried on: “Earl Granville constracted the most admirable arguments, which had an awkward habit of disappearing at]the very moments one expected them to issue forth in barely defeated In the house of commons, and there was & good chance that a re- newal of the motion might be successfal. There was no chanoe that the position of the results of any military operations then ending In the Soudan. The only hope ay In a diverslon, and this the Afshan question offered. As a diversion it eo completely cxtricated the government from the snare Into which it had fallen that Mr. Gladstone's proposal to evacu- ate the Seudan entirely, In order to ren der the troops available for service agalnst was not strenuously opposed. tlon in ils turn goes to the rear, and the British claims, supported by ‘‘ admirable arguments "’ though they were, disappear. It must bo as evident in London as In t. Poteraburg that Russla, though now the sggressor, Is right in her position that the Russinn advance will not cease until the Russian and the Hnglish pos. Nilason will_reappear in Londan June 10, at the Balfe Memorial Concert in Albert Hall, Aniece of Colonel Robert Ingersoll is in the cast of “Tom Sawyer,” Mark Twain's new play. Frank Mayo's “'Nordeck," which was origi nally produced in Chicago, has made succees in Now York, Charles Gayler fs writing & new comedy for Mlle Aimse, Tt is to by completed on or before July 1. The heavy spectacular pantomine ballet called *Excelsior” has just been produced for the first time in London, It i6 sald that “‘a play must have s motive,” The motive of most playa seems to be to make men thirsty between the acts, Lawrence Barrett ocarries £120,000 insur The play by Wills which Mrs, Langtry has v & Heliotrope, the generous, magnificent =Bhagwandas Browanidas Bhangsall is the 1t is probable that Mr. Gladstone him- eelf has already percelved that this Is a moat inopportune time to Introduce into parliament any proposition for the ronew- al of 1rish coerclon acts, or for even mild measures of that kisd., The Irish feeling and that of an Iufluential element of the several interesting questiona the part of the enumerators and ehould |liberal party is earnestly agalust such a whether | 8t once be ractified. Inasmuch as persons | step and in favor of of the entire aban- donment of the coerclonacts, the prompt passage of a land purchate bill, as supple- mentery to the clumsy land act of 1880, opinion of jurists, with some dissent, Is |lenberg, Bavarla, &o., ara credited with |and for the actualization of a scheme of local and county government on a Iiberal basts. The officlal records show comparatively lttlo agrarlan or other crime in Ireland—not near as much in zenship. The tie of allegiance creates | Stperintendent Lane should at once order | fact, proporticnately, as that committed in England and Scofland; and thers was never less reason for coerclve measurer. The criminal business, even in the west of Ireland, Is reported by the law author- itles to be exceedingly light. The de- mand of the Parnellites is, therefore, reasonable, They are certaln of defeating the Ulster whig can- didates at the next general elec- and In English districts, by com- they can deprive hirty or forty liberals of thelr seats. Coerclon is opposed in all the radical dle- telcts of England, and it is very certaln that the new franchise will bring a very The stock mines s not visible now. In those|large number of radical voters into the field, The outlook is for the abolition of the Dublin castle regime, for which probably, at an early date an Irish secre- tary of state wlil be eubstitated, with the corollary of a very appreclable degree of local self-government. Parllament resumed lts session on Thuraday. Next Monday ths redistri- bation bill will come up for its third reading in the houee of lords. At the time this day was assigned for the com- mittee stage of the b'll, the Marquis of Salisbury remarked, rather significantly, that a bill which had been brought to life in 8o pecullar a manner needed sharp examination at the hands of the peers. The measure belng no longer protected party compact, may be more roughly handled by the upper house than it was by the commons. The report that the frlendehip of the Ozar for the English cabinet, and his de- slre to avert a return to power of the con- servatives, were the ruling motives In Russla’s acceptance of English propossls, is hardly credible. Probably the Czir believes that the liberal party is less in- fected with hatred of Ruesia than the conservative parly, and th's belief may have influenced to a certaln extent his conduct durlng the pending negotiatlons, By the way, nave the correspondents for- gotten the pretty tale abount the influence brought to bear by the Czarina and her sister, the Princess of Wales, in favor of o peacefal settlement? They should keep In mind that, while ‘‘a lie well stuck to is as good as the truth,” of two fables one may destroy the other, The London correspondent of the New York Times affirms that the death of the emperor of Germany would be welcomed in England as a good thing for Great Britain, The crown princs ia believed to be very much under the inflaence of his English wife, and the supposltion is that his accession to the throne would be promptly followed by a close alliance be- tween Giermany and Great Britain, This is & bad case of counting chickens before they are hatched. Blsmarck is not very apt to die at. present, and hais likely to dominate German foreiga policy for many years vo come, no matter who is on the throne, ance on his lifo; Edwin Booth, $55,000; and Dr, T, DaWits Talmage, £60,000, urchased, is entitled “The Little Teamp,” frs, Langtry plays in boy's costu:ne, growth of which no other country can equal, has & constant friend in Mary Anderson, Rontle name of & Bombay tragedian who is to make his debat in London, Eng., during the all, Anton Dvorak, the famous Bohemian com- poeer, has received the title and diploma of doctor of music from the University of Oam bridgo, Lilies of the valley ere tavorites with Lotta—by tho way, the natural taste of Miss Orabtreo in all things is o prominent feature of her personality. The International Musioal congross at Ant werp, which promises tobo of exceptional 1mportance, ia to eit from the Sth until tho 11th of next August. Carlotta Patti and her husband, M. De Munck, the famous cellist, will return to America for a concart tour next season, under Max Strakosch’s direction. M. Pollin, director of the Stadt Theatre, of Hambure, has concluded a contract with Mme. Patti for the entire winter of 1885-'86, including tours throughout Europe, Mrs, Harriott, known upon the stage as cato cgainet Mits Stephens, if they have one, Arbitrary Action by the Census Takers To the Editor of the B, I'am informed that some of the census enumeorators refuse to enter citizens of Bohemlan and Moravian blrth as such, and persist in classing thom as Austrians. In vlew of the fact that the enumerators sre instructed to enter cltizens born In Wales, Scotland and Ireland as such, and not of Great Britaln, and those born in Baden, Bavaria, Mocklenburg, &o., ns such, and not cf Germany, euch ac's seom to be arbiirary and in contradiction to ins'ruc.ions, 1fall other natlonalities will be enumerated, whby should an ex- ception be made with Bobemians? Hop ing that this will be noticed by those concerned, and eapecially by the ceneus commissioner, I am yours &o. J. Rosieky. ST How Uyrus Fleld Does Business, Most peoplo have an idea that Cyrus W. Fiold is a rich atock operator. This idea has besn made more general of late by his great eflorts to advance Manhat. tan. Fleld 1s not an active speculator at all. His plan ls entirely diffsrent from Gonld’s, He buys a lot of stock out. right, and then booms it to eell it out- right. I do not think he has ever been a bear In the ordinary sense, not made a practlce of stocks short to secure the of that side of the market. He has, however, been known to employ means to depress the price in order to buy a stock and then hold it for the sub- scquent rise. Field {s not an enor- mously weally man, On paper his for- tune foots up something like $3,000,000. Ris persona! characteristics are striking. He likes to shake hands with cne finger, Clara Morrls, has_purchared the property having o frontage of 320 feot on Riverdale avenue, at Mount 8t. Vincent, for $40,000, Olara Louise Kellorg, Laura 8. Graves, Whitney Mockridge, Ivan E. Morawski, Ollie Torbett and Adolph Ulose constitute the new concert company to begin a wostern tour Jume 15 under J, B, Pond's manage- ment, The Vienna Opera house employs 535 per- sons all told, including 106 members of the orchestra, and about ns many in the ballet. The solo tingers are about 20 ladies and 20 gontlemen, ~ The chorus includes nearly 100 sinvers—81 for sopraco, 22 for alto, 22 for tenor, and 22 for bass, Messrs, Robson and Crane are making elab- orate proparations inithe way of scenery for thelr presentation of the ““Comedy of Brrors” at the New York Star theatro in_ September, Mr, Philip W, Goatcher is painting it, and eays it will cost at least $25,000, Mr. J. H, McVicker is drawing together an exceedingly strobg orgrnization for the opening of his theatre in Chicago. This ovent is to occur about the first of July, and the opening play will be “True Nobility,” from the pen of Mr. John C. Freund. Mr. Frank Mayo will remain at the Union Square theatre, New York, for a longer B riod than was originally contemplated. He came in for two weeks to fill the time for which the theatre had bzen engaged by Mr, Harry Miner, who intended to produce a play called ‘‘Blackmail,” Christine Nilsson is here, says a Paris let- ter in the Boston Traveller, lookine very handsome. I saw her at the Episcopal church last Sunday morning. Sheis to sing at the Trocadero in an immense concert next Satur- day, the firet time she has sung here for fif toen years. The tickets are already selling at 25 francs apiece, J. E. Carpenter, England’s most prolific song writer, is dead, During the last half century he has written about 2,500 songs and duets, and his Iyrics have been set to muric by Balfe, Vincent. Wallace, Bishop, Glover, and many other famous native composers. ““What Are the Wild Waves Saying” is re- garded as his most popular production, Operatic kisses are now agitating the coun try. The “Patti kiss,” iucident to Patti’s embraco of Miss Nevada in Boston, is radiat- ing from the Hub. The “Nevada kies,” at- tendant upon the singer's bestowal of 300 kieses npon 300 girls of San Francisco, s aweoping over the Rocky Mountains. The #*Abbott kiss” has taken a new start in Rich- mond. M. Coquelin, the French astor, supported by a picked company of arrists, opens his en- gagement in America at the Star theatre, New York, the 4th of next January, His timo in this country 19 limited to ten weeks Ho wil! play four weeks in that city, and vide up tho remainder between Boston, Phil- adelphis, Washington, Chicsgo and New Or- leans. The firat step to realiza Mra. Thurber's dream of a_thoroughly American opera_has been taken by the departure of Herr Hock, the futura conductor,of the American School of Opera, to Europe to secura th services of Herr Candidu, the celebrated German tenor, engnged for a series of fifty rovresentations, beginning in January, and $28,050 hes been paid to ita directcrs. m— To a June Kose, O royal rose! the Roman dress'd His feast with thee; thy petals preesed Angustine brows; thine odor fine, Mixed with the three-times-mingled wine, Lent the lovg Toracian draught its zest, The result of the elections in Austrla ls significant mainly In the defoat of the Jew-baiting caudldates. The llberals galned very materlally in Vienna, and defeated the present ministers of com- merce and agriculture in their respective districts, Salzburg was carrled by the liberals, Dr. Edward Horbst, who was minister of justice in the cablnet of 1867, What ma-vel then, if hoat and guest, By Love, by Song, by The caress'd, ‘Half-trembled on the half-divine, O royal Rose! And yet—and yot—I love tho beat 1n our old gardens of the West, Whether about my thatch thou twine, Or Hors, that brown-eyed - waid of mine, The New York Academy of Music has been | plication of Cuticura will ins and if he particalarly wants to impress a porson with something, he will throw his arm around the person’s neck and begin, * Now, my dear Christlan friend ” He s & reputation on the ‘‘atreet” for slamming office dcore. On entering an office he will give the door a slam that threatens to shiver the glass, if there 1s a pane In it, and on leaving the office he will give the door a eecond slam that nearly pulls the screws out of the hinges. ——— NEWSPAPER OUTFITS. TO PUBLISHERS. The Western Newspaper Union, at Omaha, in addition to furnishing all sizes and styles of the best ready printed sheets in the country, makes a specialt of outfitting country publishers, botl with new or second-hand material, sell- ing at prices that cannot be discounted in any of the eastern cities. We handle about everything needed in a moderate sized printing establishment, and are sole western agents for some of the best makes of Paper Cutters, Presses, Hand and Power, before the public. Parties about to establish journals in Nebraska or elsewhere are invited to correspond with us before making final arrange- ments, as we generally have on hand second-hand material in the way of type, presses, rules, chases, ete., which can be secured at genuine bargains. Send for tho Printer's Auailiary, a monthly publication, issued by the Western Newspaper Union, which gives a list of prices of printer’s and pub- lisher's supplies and publicly proclaims from time to time extraordinary bar- gains in second-hand supplies for news- paper men. WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION, Omaha, Neb. e —— TheEtrongest Man That Ever Slung a Pick, Pretzel's Weekly. “Talk about yer strong min,” eaid Jerry Mahoney, as he reached scro:s the table for the beer pltcher. *‘Sure ye hev no strong min in this country. Ye ought to have seen moe furninst Ccusin Michael O’Keefe, wot got killed in the American war, poor divil. He wor the strongest mon that iver slung a plck, Molke used to worruk for an old divil in Tipperary, who rafsed fat cattle for the falr. Ivery mornin’ Moike used to go out an’ grab two of the largest bastes by the tails sn’ swing 'em around his head foive or eix toimes, jos" for exercolee,” ‘Sure au’ that must hev been a hard b,” sald Mr. O'Keefe. “Not at all mon,” sald Jerry; ‘‘the saisles’ thing In the worruld. You see he began when they wor young, an’ he never notfced the bastes growin’. Hand me a lofght, Tim Bryan.” And lighting his 1 pe, Jerry left the house. HEMC RRHOI DS Blind, Bleeding, and Itching, Posi- tively cured by Cuticura, A warm bsth with Cuticura Soap and a single ap- Iy allay the intense itching of the most aggravated case of Itching This treatment combined with +mall doses of Cutic ra R strength esolvent (hroe times per diy, to regulato and the bowels, overcome constipation and remove the cause, will cure Blind, Bleoding, and ‘Who lulls the on her lawny breast, 0O royal Rose! i Ttching cians fail. ¢3 when'all otber remedies and evea ph; - ANO EST WARNER’S PEC o Tir THE THE CAMPAIGN TOKEN OF 1840, SNY3IN 11 LYHM SX104 10 IHL XSY [oorvmauteo, PURTEFIERR. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. H, B, WARNER & CO., Rochester, K. Y. FOR $1.00 a Bottle, . H. Warner ¢ Co., Rochester,N. Y. Phillip Van Tacol, Newark,N. years from dyspe rts that bo Y., wffored for many derived greater Tipsecanc, the best than from any other medicind he ever u ed His daughter also used it with su.coes when every other kuowa remedy falled, ConstitutionalTonic IT HAS NO EQUAL. 1 oo A BOITTILE H.H Warner&Co Rochester, N, V. W. K. Slfu, ot 8t. Johns, Mich., was completely rated by tho hardship’ endured during the He returued home a wreek both in mind and nty ycars ho smply existed, half the d than slive until he’ was restored to 11} ecanoe,the bost e adv . "'Write to him at 8t. Jo w.0APITAL PRIZE,$150,000, “‘We do hereby certify that we supervise the ar rangements for all the Monthly and Semi-Annva Dravings of the Louisiana State Lettery Company and in person manage and control the Drawingd themselvés, and that the same are conducted with honesty, fairness and in good faith toward all par- ties, and we authorize the company to use this c tificate, with fac-similes of our signatures aitac in its advertisements.’ __ COMMISSIONERS, UNPRECEDENTED ATTA ACTION. OVER HALF A MILLION DIsTRIBU TED, Louisiana State Lottery Company Inocorporated in 1868 for 25 years by the legisisture ftor oducational and charitablo purposos—wish & capital of $1,000,000—to which a reserve fund of over 8650 000 has sluce been added. Ly ac overwhelming popular voto ita franchise was made & part of the present state constitution adopted Decemb . D, 1879, number drawings take place 1t never sealos or postpones. Leok at the following distribution, 181st Grand Monthly and the EXTRAURDINAD%K SEMI-ANNUAL Tn the Academy of Muslc, New Orleans, Tuesday, Juge 16, 1846, under the personal suvervision and mavagement of Gen. G. T. BZAURRGARD, of Louisiana, and Gen. JUBAL A KARLN, of Virginia. CAPITAL PRIZE $150,000 & Notice.—Tickets are Ten Dollars only, Haves, 85, Fifthe, $2, Tenths, $1, LIST OF PRIZRS; 1 OAPITAL PRIZE OF. 1 GRAND PRIZE OF 1 do do 2 LARGE PRIZES 0] 4 do do 20 Prize: of 50 Prizes of 100 Prizes of 200 Prizos of 00 Prizes of 1000 Prizos of 100 Approximation 100 do 150,000 £0,000 Prizes of § 200 . do 100 [ Application for rates to cluvs should b made ooly to thooffioe of the Company In New Orleans, For further information write clearly giving fu address, POSTAL NOTES, Expross Money Orders, or New York F xchango in ordinary lotter, cy by Express (all suims of ¢6 and upwards a4 our exe ponse) addrossod, M. A. DAUPHIN Or M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleane, La, 607 Seventh St., Washiugton D, C. Make ' O. Money Orders paguble and address Reglstered Lotters to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK New Otleans La, OMAHA INSTITUTE MEDICAL AND SURGICAL. tract on his hands, There Is no doubt|fact of passlng through the forms | °tion.” and who secured, among other reforms, ITCHING PILES. that he would like to see about half of alleglance mccordlng to tho laws That Is exactly the state of the case. | the abolitlon of imprizonment for debt in The Price of Cuticura no s ccount, —[Austin Dobsonin Harper's Magszine. S — AT, the edltors In jall, aud if he could put |of the United States would not protect them there he would do it with pleasure, | guoh persons from the operatlon of laws —_— to avold which they removed from their THE introductlon of a bill in the native country, Illinols leglslature to repeal the charter| How far, therefore, the incomplete of the Chicago board of trade has oo- process of naturallization 1s to have effect casloned some conslderable surprise, es- |in entitling a person to protection isa mat- peclally as the committee on corporations | ter ¢ doubt, since it depends upon the has agreed to report favorably upon the person himself whether he will complete measure. 1t Is intimated of course that | the ot according to his expressed inten- it emanates from the bucket-shop | tlon. The questlon of protection to per- brigade, with which the board of trade is | sons who have merely declared their in- at war. If the blll Is passed, however, the board of trade can contlnue business lnstitution, It Is rather amusing that the board of trade should| TuE llve stock market o Omaha Is make the claim that it is dolng a leglti- daily growing in Importance, This s mate business, and that the bucket shops | due to the fact that stock shippers are never handle a bushel of graln, becoming convinced that they can obtain We would lke to know If the board |as good prices at the Omaha Union stock- of trade does not deal in graln without yards, allowing for the difference in ever scelug or handllug it? Is not the | frelght, as they cam in Chicago, They great majority of its transactions slmply | will always find boyers on hand, and gambling deals on the rlse and fall of [ bustness is transacted with as much quotations? When settlements are made promptness as it s in Ohlcago. An- is the grain actually dellvered, or are the | other important advantage to be derived ditferences settied with money! Every- |to from the sale of stook at the Omaha body knows that the latter way of dolng | yards, s that the shipper saves the haul business is the method pursued by the | of five hundred miles to Chicago. This board of trade. We can see but lttle, | fsa big item, as cattle and hogs lose if any, difference between the marglval | considerable weight in a five-hundred deals of the board of trade and the |ride, and the saving in weight by dlspos- transaction of the bucket-shops. The|log of them in Omahs, enables the seller trouble with the board of trade Is that | to :salize more money than if he shipped the bucket-shop deals seriously interfere to Chicago. 1t will b seen, therefore, that with its business, and hence the uapleas- | the proepects of Omaha for becoming a antners between the two gambling Insii- grest stock market axe of the most en- otlons, coursging character, There Is no good England had throughout the best of the |the emplire, has beer elected to the reichs argument. Russls contented herself | Fath by the liberal P‘_"_’Y in Prague, with producing bad arguments, or none | gomg of the mont delightfal features of at all, for getting and keeping what she | the new colonlal enterprise of the Earo- wanted, and she has succeeded in retaln- | pean nations are beginning to develop. ing by worse loglo than Lord Graaville's | Ltaly, obtaining under the wing of Great T f Britain, a port on the Red ses, which ?nueulonl to which her title was founded (ormerl‘y {:clong.d to Abyulnl’n,wnow in force and fraud, taros a lopging eye to another spot. Mr, Gladstone'scoutse Inthisconnection King John of Abyasinia is the obstruc- is naturally due to his personal aversion tlon to this little ambition, and now that to war as much as to a ferling that Eng- {..h.l:ri:.i:hmdln uped{ltlvn has_col- sed the ces are In favor of a litt] Iaud was 1ot n a posttion .. this time to |skirmish between King ‘Huwmborvs. war. sesert ltaelf. England could not afford | riors of sunny Italy and the swarthy to go to war for a frontler which it was | warriors of King John of Abyssinis, necessary to cross hundreds of miles of — difiioult and hostlle country In order to| (jermany pushing things ln the nelgh- da”l’::. belog true, the English gove: boshood, %I.andb:‘l'l o kaly o ol N ro- % ment is not to be blamed for not fl!qhtlng. fnio ¥ GT 7 Seitrsisiog nalas L bors. A squabble over & protectorate What it 1s to be blamed for Is for putting | over Zanzibar will soon be It pordcr. and forward and supporting by *'admirable | the sultan of that country, though most arguments” pretensions which It had no Interested, and pouib]yr’r'llhor isllking moans and no real ntentlon of backing | both “‘protectors,” will have to choose :gihhA‘l';!bem:lklnz ::.'c :l-l':l ktl;;n was botween tham, with the certalnty of lone 0 bac em 0| my of or to back down from them, The nor': Tiabiux &0 suamy of otidy I ob botb. respondence strengthens the impression, SETRREET———— which had become general before, that Ohicsgo Shipping Contagious, Niw YoRK, June 5,—~The state board of ch Enghhnd did not see her way to fighting the | health calls attention to a carload of hogs for her frontler, Thls was evident), impression made upou the Russian diplo |shipped from Chicego to Fredonla, N. Y., matists, who seem to have determined | and sold in small lots to farmers and others, that England should not eacapo by any [ Maay of the hoge have since died from what evaslon is supposed to be cholera, In several in- from an unmistakable retreat, and this retreat has accordingly been [ stences, where one of the anim; made, to the conslderable detriment of | cago was introduced into lots r pumber of them took the di aud died, Brttah preatigo 1o Europo as wellay in| Sbee ol S1oe tack the diseate and disd, The question why England should have | *2 267 of the discase. made clalms that she did not mean to sustaln, and could not have sustained, is — An Indiana Tragedy, The Ins and Qats, 1 was taken, for the flrs$ time in my life, with Blind Piles, 80 severe that 1 covld hardly keep on wy faet. Tured various remedies for three wosks, when the diseaso took the torm of Itching aud ¢0w- ibg worse. By advice of an old gentleman 1 tried the Cuticurs. ~One application relieved tho itching, and I wassoon cured. I wish to tell thoworld that In oare of itching Piles the prico of the Cutiours isof no account. From an unsolicit quarter. 0. C. KIBBY. 02 West Btreet, Con, N'jcord PILES 2/ YEARS, A Martyr for 20 Years cured Haviog beon & martyr to Piles for twouty yoars, was advised by a friend 0 try your Cutioura Rem- cdlon, which Tdid, and am thaaktul to tate that | am now Telicved, ana hope permanently so. Now York, RICHAKD NOKMAN P. 8, 1would send you my address, but A pr to remala In obsourity. ITOHING PILES. I began the use of your Cuticurs Remedies when you first pus them on the market, and know of two cases of Itching Piles that have been cured by the use at Ilkgn.lwn. of these remedies, F. N, MARTIN, I ALL THAT YOU OLAIM, 1 have tried your Cuticurs Remedies and find them all that you clalm, and the demand for them in this soction is great. AUGUSTUS W COLRINS. Higgston, Ga. Cutiours Resclyent, the new blood Purifier, Cutiou- ra, the great 8kin Cure, and Cuticurs Soap, an ex. quisite Bkin Beautifior, of Itchiog, Ecaley, Pimply Scalp, aud Blood, from Fimples disenses of the §i to Scrofula. 8ol here. P.lce; Cutieurs,bGe. Nigh to an office newly made, A Bungry and thirsty stranger stayed ; He peeped through the keyhole, lingering long, As he aLnled 4 strain from an old-time song, And tll:‘: sad words fell from his lips so thin— “Iwanttogetm! Iwant togetinl” Olose by the office fire there sat, A well-dressed citizen, sloek and fat, Soft was his chair as a throne might be, But he mournfully played with the office key, And sobbed, as he listened the stranger's shout— “T'll have to get out ! I'll have to get out !” —[Burdette, —— EDUCATIONAL, Mrs, Rutherford B. Hayes is establishi at her own expense, In a southern city, & school where colored girls may be taught practically in house service, The ceremony of laying the corner stone of the new college building at Naps, Californis, took place on the 23th, The structure will cost between §35,000 to $40,000, Out of the sixty-five students at _the Fort Collins, (Col.) coliege at the beginning of the term four have been expelled and two left for reasons of thelr own, leaving fifty-nine who will come upto the examinations this month, Towa college ia to have one of the finest li- brary buildings in the west, Mr. I, vt el e i L R being donor of the funde, i will be the Dakote granite, cated about June 20. Yale college is aaid to have a private detec tive who kesps an eyo upon tho conduct of students and sends weekly reports to the *'govnor,” or in other words, to their parents. He aso furnishes the number of marks the pupil receives, his loases at carde, the names Potter Drug and Chemical Co, Boston Eend for “How to Cure Skin Discasos:* SEIN Wewisher, Pimpics, Blackbeads, Baby Humors, Cu icurs Sosp. EUROPE. COOK'S EXCURSION PAKTIES sall from New York In April, May, Juce aud July by first olase stos mahips. ST TICKETS for INDIVIDUAL The material used It is to bededs- SPEOIAL TOU! TRAVELERS at reduced ratos, by the best reutes for pleasure travel. one that 1s not very easy to answer, if wi lock at the relations of Russis and Ep !and alone. Butlt becomes when we consider the relat & lain enough ons between Ciicaco, Ill, June 5,—The Daily News, © | Vincennes (Ind.) special says: Word has just - | been received here that Fred Groudyout and his entico family were murdesed last night near Edwardspert in this county. of the girls to whom he pays his attentions, where he spends his evenlegs, and the like, There is much local interest 10 the contro- versy between the Kansas State University regents and Miss Kate Stephens, whose resig- f COOK'S EXOURSIONIST, with waps, coutaln ull partioulars; by mail for 10 conts THOS COOK & 8N, 01 Breadway, 5. §. 108 Doarbora 84 ., Chlcago, Lis. -satllwas P e 2 . FOR TIIE TREATMENT OF ALL CHRONIC AND SURGICAL DISEASES. The la t Medical Institute West of Mi; ippl River, r00ms for the accomodation of patients. iywielan and Kurgeon in chargo of tho Tnstitu B Jeary,of successtul practic xperiel Pilos, Tum n, Blectricl -8kin and Blood [\7 ) Town Lots in Denver Junction Weld County, Colorado. Denver Junction is & new town of about 200 inhabitants, laid out in 1884, on the great t y across the continent, at the unction of the Julesburg Branch, 197 miles rom Denver. The town is on recond bottom land of the Platte River, the finest location between Omaha and Denyvi ud is surround- ed by the bast-laying lands west of Kearney Junction, Neb. ; climate healthy and bracing; altitude 8,60 feet, Denver Junction bids to become an important point, as the U, P, R, R. Co,, are putting up manyof their buildings while the B. & M. R. R. Co.. are ex pect~ t at this place, Tha present chance for good investments in town lots will ecarcely ever by e elsewhere, For salo by the lot or block in good terms by H. M, WOOLMAN, Agent, Denver Junction Colo,

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