Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 3, 1885, Page 4

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PHE DATLY BEE. Ouana Orvrow, No. Mt New Yonk Osrrow, © L AXD 01 FanyAw 81, 465, TrIBUNE i 2. exeopt S, or put Pubiished overy morn M"( Monday morning A TEAME B MALL ©Ono Year $10.00 Threo Months L 8ix Monthis. % One Month Tz WeskLy Der, Publishied Every We TERMA, FOSTUAID Ono Year, with promium e Y onr, without prom i fix Monthia, withont promium ne Month, ou trial COURESPO Jeations ahoul D DUSINERS ATl burginoss lettors o faressod to Tae De PURLISHING DMATA. Drafta, chocks und postol ~ 0 bo mado paynblo to the 6rer of the connny THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIETO B. ROBEWATER, T A1l cotnmy. torisl ma TOROF T ' e LT ol remitEanee DOUGLAS COUNTY TICKET. FOR SIERIE WILLIAM coBUr POR COUNTY CONMMIZSIO ’MIIH\I MEANY. AURER BOLLN, FOIR CLERK CHARI, l S P, NEEDHAM, JUDOT, . McCUI . K. BUR FOI BURVEYO! GEORGE SMITIL FORJUETICES OF 1 F st District id Distriet Thh\l District- GUSTAV Topay will wind up tho tion of the campaign liar. occupa Vot down the county poor farm sale proposition. 1t is unsafe and unsatisfao- tory. Par Forp will find that “bood’e" dorsn’t always win against brains and ability. Tue Now York mugwump will in all probability cust his bullot for the straight republican ticket. Vore for the pav bonds. The on- ward march of public improvements in Omahs should not be stopped. Dr. MiLLer better book himself up on the early history of Pat Ford before Lo goos off half-cocked in his opera house harangue. Louis Berxka, Lee Helsley and Gustave Anderson will make Justices Brandes, Weiss and Bartlott enquire whether they were running at all on cloction duy. Wiriam Cosurn should receive the vote of every reputable citizen who - pires to see tho office of sherill in the hands of an intolligeut and upright man. AS USUAL, the assessors have been for< gotten. The same old crowd will go in becauso the tax payerag hun, let the matter go by default. 7, e Tne Belt line company put: in- day's work in teack building on We presume tho company the principle of *‘the better the better the deed.” Trere are some things that Dr. Miller can't explain, and one is Lhow Pat Ford became the possessor of property worth Jrom $30,000 to $30,000 in & fow years from “honest labor Turow out the old whose cost mills have dis Jong enough. The republican ticket on Justices fills the bill which honest men are ready to endorse. ang of justi We NeED aradical change in the man- agement of county affaivs. Mr. O'Keelle has been altogether too delinquent in Tooking after the interests of our tax payers, ParForp drew a bagful of §5 gold pieces from one of tho banks on Satur- day. Patevidently proposes to pave the town with five-dollar gold picces on this election da Cuarres P. Neeovuam, for county elerk, can safely appeal for the votes of our tax payers regardless of party, on grounds of integrity, ability, and emi- nent fitness for tho place. His majority ought to be a rousing ono. WiLL Mr. Pat Ford tell us some of his early history before ho came to Omaha? It might be interesting to workingmen to know how Pat played double in the mining regions and gave the working- men away in one of the struggles for living wage GouLp has returned to New York from s wost trip and is taking a lively hand in the state politics. if some of his opponents among the newspapers aro to be believed. The New York Times charges that the great corrupter is ard at work to secure the election of Judges in the supreme court and court of common pleus and prints a list of u hundred and forty-two cases on the dockets in which Gould, throngh his cor. porations, is interested. Mr. Gould once Bboasted that he pud for his law by the year, and if he can puy for his legal docisions in the samo way the people will bo crushed between the upper and the mether millstones of corrupted justice, Tue Union Pacitic general offices are aguin on wheels. This time, acc to the Kunsas City 7'om to Kansus City me year went over to Council Blufls, and later $hoey were moved to Denver. Moeuntime, u is not moved in the least over so newspaper removals of the Union Puacifio headquarters and shops. Some People seem to forget that the Union Pacific has over 700 mi Neobraska, and whon it moves its gen effices and shops out of the state it m #s well take its track along with it, as it oould not afford to pay the taxes that would be imposed upon it. The Union Pucific knows this us well as anybody Besides, if ugreoments are worth any- thing, the Union Pacitie is bound to muntain its headquarters and shops at Omaha, & fact that seusations] papers in m Kansas and Colorado u obably not AWile o Whrn‘ Wn~ He? General Hazon's “Narrative of Mili- v Service,” just published, isin many o interesting volume. Itis so & that it wonld havo inevitably 1 the it the generous offer of the general, to the York Hern to liber, eward favorable editorial mention | Tt throws m | ohseure situations in the Haz ipant; 1 we regr to say not wer the question us to whero he v t the timoe of that memor at Shiloh, Hazon is his own horn, the silent recor war department are echoing buck Series 1, Vol. X, Now various which o or less light on war in was a part Gener brazenly of t a different refrain Part 1, of the Oilicial Records of tho War of the Rebellion, containsg a report of Colonel W. B, Whittake o Sixth Kentucky, which is so remarl that it is no wonder that the s feer every pressure to inducs its owis- sion. We cull the following cxtract “1t i proper, in this connection, to re- mark, u\ addition to what heen her tofore reported by me, that the toenth brigado should’ reccive specinl commendation for standing the shock of tho my. About 11 o'clock they were deprived (we know not how) of the efiicient services of their acting b dier, Col. W. B. Hazon, who most unt tunately, at the tin most needed when the brig pressed by the enemy, got sepa 1) Mot unace bly from it joined it no mo v in thoe sach regimoent was then Left to its com- niander, the colonel of the Sisth Ken- tucky bringing it intoline of battlo brave Nels |||"(hn‘ sting b, Col. W, I isent, usked whe he was, Col \\hnl ker replied, ‘We fear ho is killed or wounded; none of us have seen him since tho charg nerous us ho is brave, & peeun $00 was offered by Gen uny ono of the solliers of tho Kentieky who would recover his body, ul or wounded. Six of company A stepped out to perform that duty, then datigerous from marauding parties of the cnomy. A company of skirmishers wits sent torward to protect them. Th made most diligent search, but tho body was not found, dead or wounded. We, who had never left the field, were ro- joiced to meet our ucting brigadicr, Col W. B, Huzon, afier the ight, unharmed nd in his ustal robust hoaith.—Dp 316, Where was General Mazen during this critieal period of the desporate charge on Shiloh's bloody field? This is the ques- tion which has remained unanswerol for twenty-threo y , and to which his “Narrative” gives a most unsatisfuctory reply. V he storm hunting in the bushes lining Owl Creck, or sceking to predict a coming eyelone in the direction of Pittsburg Landingt What business did this valiant neting brigadior find so pressing that it detached him from his command immediately before the charge in battle and detained him from that en- gagement until the bullets had ceased dropping? Such conundrums are pertinent, but we trust will not be deemed impertinent by an officer who considers the remon- strance of abused privates at Fort Meyer | service. mutiny and insubcrd natio nd - who ‘agserts that an apology for profanity and | foul langunge used by a shoulder- ;:rwbped instructor to his enlisted pupils would be derogatory to the dignity of the Just how much to the interests of the service the retention of this noto- riety seeking blatherskite = is at the present time we fail to see. The genoeral demand which is coming in from all quarters for his investigation ought to be promptly met by a searching inquiry which will loave no partof bhis record untouched Vote It Down. The proposition to sell one-hs county poor farm should be voted down. ‘The proclamation issued by the commis- sioners leaves wide room for jobbery and speculation at the expenso of the tax- The resolution passed by the commissioners does not help the matte: It is simply a promise that the commis sioners Wil appoint three men to appraise the land and will not scll it below the appraised value. Th toap- praisement, made of a hundred foot strip through the entire county poor farm, was cheertully accepted by the commissioners at $300 an acre when the property 18 worth at least $1,200. ‘I'ne commissioners have very care- fully omitted committing themselves to make the sale public to the highest bid- der. They reserve the right to dispose of the land ut private sale and to any bid- der low or high as longas he comes with- in the limit of the app appraisers chosen by thnnmlw's not L_mul policy to place such unlmmml powers in the hands of the commission- whether they are honest or dishon- When they come before our citizens the interest of the people and prote agzainst jobbers and land grabber be time enough to grant them authority to sell this property. Douglus county can better get along without a work house for a little while longer, rather than take the chance losing $10,000 or $30,000 m u sale of valuable property which is bound to double in value in le than three years, The City Hall Proposition. The proposition to erect n eity hall costing not more than $200,000 on the corner of Eighteenth and Farnam wiil voted on to-day. The building to be constracted on the lot oppo ite the court house is to be a magnificent and substantial structure planned by E Myers of Detroit. The perspective view of the building has heen on exhibition for several days and been pro nounced by all who hiave scen it a sightly and tasteful elevation. While it is to be Just as substantial in every respeet as the court house it hus been planned express ly with a view to ma sty trast to that elassie building. That Omaba needs s commodious and permanent city hall building is adwitted on all hunds, The old five trap, now cupicd, in part, as a city hall, would be a disgrace to any villag he quarters which the city has sccured in the new court housu for some of its oflicers must be vaeated in three years under the con- tract, which is not likely to be extended, because the county will ueed the roora for its inereasing basiness, Next to hav- ing the city under the same roof with the county buildiag, the locutios opposits o has ug con oe- tention of reviewors even | | property owners | property owner | ments in THE OMAHA ‘DAILY RT'E. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1885 e, mw oontt houss . Aho| most convenlent and desirable. The prop- erty owner who goes to pay his taxes docsn't want to travel half o mil one sct of offices to the other tho city and co busi beeoming more nearly identical and the transactions botweon the officials of tho and those of the ethor more frequent and important Viewed from the standpoint of public improvomoents, it is to the intc of sition should the carly con- will stimulato on upper Farnam to o and costly blocks of ofiico and s buildings within the next two years, give employment to hundrods of laborers and mechanies and add largoly to the aggregate tax income. Tt will give Omaha Iding boon during the | year, which will soon place us by the | side of Kan: t. Paul and Minue- | apolis, ‘ | vear struction of the city hall coming —_——— Paving Bonds. The proposition for $30,000 of bonds to pay for the paving of streot inter: tions will be voted on to-day. The u‘ should bo no opposition to the proposition which is necessary to continue much | noeded extensions of public improve- | ments in Omaha, Under our laws the cost of paving is assessod on the adjacent but the city bears the | expenso for that portion of the pave- ments which covoers the interscotion of streets and alloys, The sum askoed of onr citizons will enable extensive improve- wing to bo begun us soon as spring opons, while if tho submission of the proposition had boen postp the sjring election the deluy: ing petitions, bonds, &e., would have thrown the beginning of the work into | midsummer ery oltizen, taxpayer and workingman who is interested in Omaha's prosperity, should not only vote for the paving bonds but work for them. Our eleven miles of paved stroets are to- y o rtisement of this city which has proved worth many times their cost. Public improvements have not only giv en work to hundreds of laborers and ms chanics directly, but thoy have stimula- ted private improvements and the labor market in every portion of the city. In- creased population, buoy: to, cmployed labor and developing industry have been some of the results of Omuha’ offorts in improving her apnearance du- ring the past five years, and the good work should not be permitted to halt. Tue Standard Oil company is the most powerful monopoly in the world. It con- trols nearly the entire production of petroleum on this continent, and fixes the price of refined oil in every eity in tho land. Its managers raise or depress valuea according to their own speculativo i interests, determine the rates of !vipu‘l lines and railroads, increase or restr production at will, and bleed the publ at diseretion. Until Tately this gigs oil octopus has dict fined petroleum in e y quarter of tho globe, but now a new competitor has en- tered the ficld from the Russian oil wells, which promises before long to monopolize the Buropean market for pe- | troleum and ecut off the Standard from its most luerative foreizn consumption Improved methods of retining have been d in operation on the Caspian, and w dispateh from Vienna announces that the Danube Steam Navigation company is about to commence the importation of Russiun petroleum on alarge scale. The oii is to be shipped from the wells at and | r Baku on the Russian shore of the pian, across Georgia to Batoum, the chief Asiatic iu.n of Russin on | the Black sea. A pipe line has been laid between these two points and at Batoum the oil will be taken on board ships to bo transportéd to the heart of Europo | up the Danubey Arrangements are also | being perfectel to ship the oil through \ the Mediterranean to France and Kn- gland. This will be n..- stserious com- petition which American petroleum has encountercd. Though the Caspian wells are enormously productive, lack of trans- portation facilities and of skill in refin- ing it have prevented liu“mu petroleum from meeting Pennsylva oil in the markets of the world, With thesc ob- stacles removed, the Standard Oil com pany will be forced in the absenco of a grent foreign market to pay more atten- tion to that at home. If competition from any source will only loosen the grip of this commercinl mounster from con- sumers in America there will be few tears shed among those who have been forced to submit to its merciless extor- tions. Tue Utah commission has presented | ita report to the secretary of the interjor. The commission recommends amend- ments to the Edmunds bill which will make it more effective. Congress may be trusted to strengthen this measure, which has done excellent service within its limit- ations in making polygamy odious in the territory. With President Taylor, Can non and Smith in hiding, fifty bishops dodging the oflicers, and s muny more under indictment, while twenty-tive are | in the penitentiary, the efliciency of the | federal law in dealing with this trouble some guestion is undoubted. Religion- | ists of every and any creed which not strike at the of home and fam ily can find o peaccful welcome in our conutry, but the polygamists must ¢ to defy the law or seck another climate. does ot 150 Tite tone of the life are on press comments on the | and Goneral MeClellan | the whole fair and just. A fow ralied party organs seize the occasion to ken the slumbering animosities of but by fur the greater propor- uk in kindly and appreciative language of the admitted services which the desd soldier rendered bis country while they draw the mantle of silence over the mistakes which time has lergely reetitied. services of e the pust, tion sby ———— Wit §30,000 of paving bouds for next yoar's work, three times the of puvi that was accom plished with the same sum this ye In s otions eat up the city's share of pav Extensions of paving bayond the business part the oity will puss through fewer interacoting strocts, | Amonnt can be doue ar of | heartily dospises Ford, | fed at the publio [ an objoct in view. | of § | becan | that his wi that this is u slur upon Mr. Bartlett's fam- | | he may wi Toss Miller #nd Boss Ford. When the two big demooratio bosses, Millor and Boyd, mady their onslaught » the domoctatio primartes and carriod Douglas conuty by machino moethods swhich wero in vogie in New York dure ing th 5(\'u B I\\ o, 1t was no and the 1 disgraceful victory., Groat hordes of peaters and hired hoodlums overmat the rank and file of respectable dey racy. Tho arrozant besses rodo rou shod over their opponénta and trampoed them with, theic own heels whoen they had them down. Boss Miller with the most cruel vindiotivencss, in sulted tho most popular democratic leader in this conzression d district, and tauntingly referred to him as Brown,” who had been burled by the followers of the big bosses Among the most pli tools of the big bosses aspires to bo a great be of o carried the day o upon “one Pat Ford, whe sheriff of Douglas county. tho hoss of hirod Bo, Altho and kid-gloved Herald actually house to give Boss Ford a boost. Ford has mot done a square s work ia many y Ho has been cib atmost to Oma Ho been policeman, street commissioner, coun- cilman, and incidontatly on the Union Pacitic pay-roll as watchman. But Boss Miller has a debt to pay and Pat holped to pack the Omaha opera the 1's ovt has ince he camo domocratio primar necded in the future to keep th bosses in the saddlo. Boss Mille ef fort in behalf of Boss Ford is, therefore, very excusable, Tt is & military neces It is the grand climax of the cam Evory demod the rear when Boss Ford leads the cession will pleaso fall into line, A Timely Notico. Tho republican county central com- mittee of Douglas county ofers a reward in cush for tho dotection of each and every oldvnder found attempting to cust an illegal vote in to-day's clec- tion. This is a tunely notice. There has been onongh of frauds and aundacions repe every reason to believe the outragos will be repeated unless the parties are spotted arrested, and proscouted. No matte which party attempts to run in the illegal big pro votes the offenders should be promptly brought to justice. Tre next time tho onterprising ro- porters of the Hrald interview the ed- itor of the B in bed they should print exactly what he says without garbling i According to the MHerald the editor presented a8 saying that ho hed mot o doctor who gave it as his opinion that | was paid for the corpses taken from the poor farm. Why did not the reporter e what was said. o ws informed in plain language by that a prominent and vespoasiblo pl cian hud told hiw that he could not swear from his own porsonal knowledgs th Picree was paid for the corpses, did know a3 much as any man what he has not secn, that mone, paid to Picrce for dissceting muater This is not the ouly voint whic Herald veporter has g I i know Pants and London both | cited over the discovel hydrophobia may oculation. which he has sucecoded in developing by his exporiments on rabbits appears to have the double virtue of curing the pa- tient and of making dogs mcapable of conveying the by their bites. The boy, Meiste from hydrophobia and pronounced st the | point of death, is now, ufter nearly four months, practically well. He had | bitten sixty hours before the first inocu- lation. The notion of Dr. Pasteur is that wre hly ex be prevented by in- disease been | all dogs should be inoculated, by which means, after generation or two, they would be made incapable of hydrophobia. Tr there any workingmen of Omaha who wanted to vote for Ford beeause he has been in sympathy with labor they should read the letter of Mr. Lawrer The trath is, Pat has been one of those agitators who work into the confidence of laboring men only to betray them. His conduct in selling out the anti-mo- nopoly t cket when he professed tc be working for it three years age, is still very fresh in the memory of hundreds of workingmen who wero in Omala at that time, Bartlett claim a foul statod t he of Om: for the reason esides ut Lincoln. The Frinsns of Mr we have properly ily. We fail to see any slurin a statement of facts. The conduct of Mr, Burtlettis the only slur we know of on the famil What we say is, that he isnot a fit person for the position which Mr. Anderson has ably filled. If any details wre wanted, apply at this office Pricsons who have taken out their first papers since the #tl of October are not permitted, under the law to vote. Quite & number of such persoas have had their numes registered evidently with the in- of voting, - Their names should be stricken from the lists, and if any of them attempt to vote they should be arrestod, tention e A GREAT many perdons wito are now drinking wine, whisky and beer will tik water straight atter election day. e——— It is the early voto that catches the ballot box. Get your vote in early, —— PERSONAL. Mary Anderson now aceents her words after the Ligiish fashion. Alexanie veet Is making & fortune out ol Texa “Uheodore Tilton's eldest daughter presides | s in Furope. the caricaturist.gave Conkl ‘ou his forel Stewart, of N or statuary & 100 for nny 1o watter how short i <timaster General Creswell is on oficlals of & Washinston bank. wiks sud Lugineer Mulville et ) ing the sin Mr m o who bri Wil Carleton ge ok, pay the e pocin 4, Ex-1' nf the icadin Licui nt and blatant | s and expects to { | lord it over the common demoer hatted | s, and will be much | rat that wants to tramp in | ting in past elections and thero is | cditor but he | was 6 | I)m v of Pasteur that Pasteur’s hydrophobia virus | from Alsace suflering | is not 5y [ aro agali Taying thei plans o find tho nocth | The ery 81 zentory of the estate of the lato Fin- Stores shows the 1S 0 bo only ato hnmorist Sh the Tate Gen, O, K. | encineer slowm V., Nashy" § w was & relative of Baveock, of the cotps of and has oty i woll fifty of $10,000°a year, W0, it | is W00 The | The kno: King of Bavarin owes about $7,500,000 10 OF the newspaper lie tried @ run s Vi y Walker v probabiy thinks OF secucing u hus Col Fred. Grant puld ke to vots, but L et prospects last week paid the last half of Dr. Douglas’ fee of 7,00 for his at tgndanco ipon s fader, | “Tlerte Lotiliard 1s willing to pay 810,00 year for wvood jockoy, Aud yetsomo peoplo nkor Tor a 81,00 consu President Eliot, of Hary antual sary of $4,000-—l il boe Parcer house restanrant. 0y Gould does notdrink any whisky. sy ints for a groat deal “of | money and sc of his meanness Thern is ® erazy wirl out in Detroit who cluims to bo daralh Bernt Like the great actress, her eim is too thin, Is Geno Hazen a knave or a fool?” asks & ) York paper. 1 ts possibe tor a man W elong o ot socie Mompiis - Ava Innche, Jduy Gould never eOpL o ot s i rinmed. o shaving & man, Juy takes Herr trying tions with nis windmiil than a ey and, recoives an IO B8 Ehe CO0K This s a barher shop ex W nen it conies lossons Lrom 5 in Conneetiout istod instity 18 more of i e, o say the least, Senator dohn I, Jones says he is delighted with Aumska, O his new igoul mine he sys iU i 0 ugnificent deposit, - with ore plaiiy i sichl i amost inexhatistiple guianities. Edwin Amold, author of “The Light of Asi,” 18 one ot the lacdest Working caitors i the wortd. e does the e wriing o0t London Pelegraplh, and daets tiat suceessiul journal, rince Bismarek is 0 whnibiiato our mouth, Most 1d to bo toying with | poery. Tne wasie basket in Geruiny witl 1 never zola tasie of 1t tor iLhe wais it pub- Iished TUWaE appear at top of cotumn, next W reuding miatier, every i Julin Smidh, the Conneetiout woman who KOUTAne by refusing to ay Wxes 10 4 Bov- CENINEHE UL Wolld not let her vote, remarks 0 tiose wio predict unhappiness irom her BALTILLE UV Y Cars ugo, nged 8o, that sie iy extrenely hap; it AND TERRITORY. Nebraska Jottings. Ipos has disappeared from Ante UL siXtecnt casos enly three STATE The s lope county, proved 1 Noah Robinson, who was tried at Dakota Cliy tor tie murder o a brakeman at . bard, wis acquitied by “twewve good wen and true.” Moorhouse is the name of anew town on Crenghwon branen ot the Sioux City & Pa. L between Pieres and Plainy 3 s to be a dively city, water supply of the Elkhorn Valley rond 5 didequite 1or the increased tratic of tae roud. Sieps have boen taken W suppiy a sutliciency ol that nnportant thid. The safe in the lumber oftice ot J. T i Hlumbo d, was cracsed Wednesday night and o seeuted. The tollowing night the store of Sarbach & Friend way entered and =00 worth ot coothing and jewelry taken, Smith Sutters, a Saunders county farmer, ot alfcetionat cow, which recently sinb o1 his neek and chew his Vil bovine s ed in and s now chiewing | th clue rou promi Linn, Licalinz S the cud of reiors Anton Kramer, living near Oal threshing, iound'a larg cong | seruet | working | At Ash | s ol i s dale, w m ol the i tho aro! 5 0f an ol lady over n the depot ttull specd down, breaking e Lip bone. 3 nnitets, und it is doubeul i s b i hhwn has appointed a committee of fif- 10 visti aid conswi with Omahi 1 re-ard 1o the On (e conmittes consi W. L. Ramey, W, ot do.in Paye L Y. W L L Biakely, . O, Campbell, can ever wak el W, l!m e, tord o Towa Stat Dubuque is again thr depot. Oae thousand hogs have died of cholera Bear Builiinglon Wiin thie past LWo We ths. Joshua Shuflleheam, of Bremer couaty, shuitied off a leg i a threshing machine st W, br. ( 1tems. atened with a union artow, of Riehland, who was re- by David puke, died of lus nport is crying for more court room, W0 COUNLs 111 session Uere a0 busiiess | ernnte d e postoftic ymour, Wayne county, wats redieved of 5250 Wordh of Posite stumps | vae nigut last week. During October the Des Moines Danded 5L preces of mail ma | Whiicl 426 were special deiivery fetien. 15, L. Harding, of Indianola, sued and re- covered $ro,000 trom the Des Moines, Osccon & Southern’ railroad, the Tull suount due bim troun that corporiion. O'Brien county has started a caif case that s tair to outnval the ceiebrated Jones county ealf case that has been In- the: coul Lot the past ten years, At a shorthorn ek, oue cow sold for & Jarze number ot b were soid at good prices, A SLEANEE WAD Was run and_horribly mangled Dy o passing U ar inllas Geni- tor Fursday night. Fie body was cut in two. ki one of the pockels of the dead man was found a letter With tie B of Thowus Coughim, “Fhe agent of the Hinofs Cent; who wiss 1 at \W duy for in thitt station tor twenty y oflicia say = that a carciul estinate 1083 01 LHe COMPANY, 01 ACCOUBL UL tiv igent's pecuiations, at fuliy ¥ A competitive test cars Wil tuke Burlington 1 dueed Tnder the ausp | Builders' association, torth i the cirenar | vach compuiitor st | equipped with his deviee. The brakes st | be ntted to both troeks, After te public test | the cars with the brakes attached may b put | it servies until May 1, when whotler tet o in which & anul d will be . istoffiee Voot at_ Cedar Falls last 3. There were and ntty-one hewl 1 company, s for Lot the il by the terms set ANNOUKCINE the trinl turnish nity cars ! ision reached The heirs of Aquilla Ch | Fort bod and vicinity, | trymng to pire up their S| Fuelind saud te worth » | Ciirse, of the Duncoinbe of the Arlineton how | Henry Wright ter, Mrs, L. My Fowler | Aquilla branch Cliise s thire and Chase B A Sheiby W0, T ing ingin upnights in Loy ke Morrill 1D anty win ol n avil b ¢ the arrestod fials prete r Ny t the defendant i t st againat the cention thro and Htow 1 by lenders for m cured a verdiet of 150 and o n out y money and e Dakota, fleent white swan was killed by a + Medinis Lt woeks and_Forks contracted | A magnt hunter o A wan dicd in | contly trom s dise | The Sioux ¥ soutaern Dakotu there is 0o rewson why industry shouid b Dakota’ farmin Canton is o have a flax il I s nearly completed, the nece [ chinery bas beon ordered, and it i | Whieve b w 1 Ll wpeiatiou suul, county wihuls ro- kil mers of thinks Proatabi feature of ises fa 0, w this most s e The bulld- ATy Mlii= peciod ufacture of to: Tracklay the Elkhorn Valley ity of the very nieh def crs; but rece vl viiote piic drivers an building forco. They will now on ily, especially n stk | \ wiero i rive Casily A0 W oAt Ui e vicinity of Horsehead, requini sridzes, and ihe delay has been ¢ fact that it hias been found a to drive piles in the hard, dry, coniy sanids will be boguy tn a few dags. rs on the Biack Hills tranch of ©WOTh i [l o e buitd or Wyoming. l: lion is flat and lifoless Tke of the coal miners, A sandstone quarry has Ix within turee miles of Larnmie. “Teton A notorious Dbeen eaptured and ju vd at 1 Imnmun & Weaver enttl on aceount of wn uncarthe Ol 'S Lo live stock traflle of the € Line up to October, this yoenr, ol nearly 2,000 ear fonds over is Willtam day, rnchiey tekid the biist Inst Wédnesday and died Fridiy. Waork will begin this week on club house, ‘Lhe building when ¢ will outshine suything west of Chic Miss Polly Garrett and Howard paraiyzed Laran socloty last quietly siipping out of own and wel tiey ‘Lhe threo voluntecr companics co the Choyenne nre depart 8 expenses at Connor Woes itorlal Ree L e s paiding t 1S douby oflicials 10 ay calling the I tary Morgan ytary ol atre, the tary it con ilature, The business of the governmen At Che enne anonnid 1o sd00 st S day. The business of the oflice is increasin and the munher of itings are tully cqual the aumber of “provin = up’ Ahout on Lourth of the territory i siii SUIVOV and ol the Land suiveyed aboit one-low 15 taken up, ess acuon betore nd oflic —-— Cardinal Manning on Education London Telegraph: At the Pro Gathe dral, Kensington, on Sunday morning his eminence Cardinal Manning, in n dis ton crowded congregation, said sighteen hindred yeirs ago, an old new world e Phey who dish ot deny the fact that this new world lirst gave o man a new formation The old worid troyed man by a distorted theology, a per- verted moradity, and w deitication of hu m I'he Christian world taught ! wl e and his of nobleness or 1ght it wrought hristianity is but a power, sonscionen, formed him to Master, whose then and « Oh, o the S 1o weity of life or death, cness. And what it t It regencrated mun, for not 1 mere philosophy, It educated man in intelled heart and will, and co the example of his Diving diseiple he became, A he sophist in the toarth e yo gods of Greeee, how women of the Christiy them as martyrs and confessors for vs of saints, The divin 2 1 ehildhood in the eyes of Christi n world, The Christian world, in forming to a new life, forme Ihe home is not n mere dwelling, but a saered ! ity. In the heathen world domestic life could hardly ive when fathers pos wvof life and death over 1w W so d 1 that the wite could neither carn own, and was any hour liable to divores, Christianity, by the sacrament of matrimony, has restored to the unity and indissolubility ol ni nd by its sucred legislation has created and suarded the sancities of home. The fatherhoold of God, the brotherhood of the Son of God. and the motherhood of her who bore him have conseerated the relations of nome. And the home rests upon man, so the com monwenlth rests upon home nity has created 2 new con mong ien. created nd the cf Christian world, which is the ngeregate of homes ‘_'Hlnnd into nations, and ions g «dinto one family, that s, The Christendom Iinuml the power of l o ny, of democriacy, and of € smj they son the subj but for congcience s var to defense and jus zated even the execution of ous. They protected s of man, his liber- ty. In ubolishing lavery and in protecting the Liberties of the weak they tanght the value of human life, which is eternal. - And all this was transmutted by Christian educa tion, by the perpet tradition of one type and one mind, springing from one faith, one law, one ju sdietion formation of all men in all condi li isciples of Jesus Christ. y be snid in a word that the Chureh s the school of the Christian world, that Chuistianity is ation, und edueation Christianity: that the elements of rehgious and secular knowled, we in sepirable, and that o part them s to destroy w the stian world has built up. There no ri Europe when St. Gre great, to whom we owe onr restored Christinnity, reigned over his twenty-three patrimo nics, which were the germs of Christin hnmp om that cen the Christian life and th ot nations. It was not warfare, nor lation, nor any human pow mude England; the unity England and the common ~ nume of England ar the oflspring of the unity ef Christian faith, which made the heptarely into wmonatehy, and has created its Christian life, In"the Saxon period every cathedral had its school, and so had cvery monastery and every pastoral ehurcehy so far s the poverty of those rude times could form them’ In the Norman or English poriod it was Christianity that founded our universitios and grammar schools und seholarships, and the whole instruction of the e 3 waich begian to sproad over the eountry at | In our modern times of thr hundied years, scantily and slowly men have endeavored to reirace the fobtstep: of our forefathers, and down to 1870 the whole primary education of England s the fr spontincous work of the Christian people, by thew zeal and selfdenial, and with slender ald, provid ing for the' ehildren of the poor. We hive come now to a erisis for which we hitve no precedent in our history since Snghind wis Christian England.” A new of shoo's, dependent upon Government, in wiich the doctrines of Christinnity have no recognition, has been set up in the midst of the people. 1t 5o new departure—a deviation' from the unimterrapted traditon of Christian Englind. We are where two roads part under, ind we have to chooss whether re in the old path or wlh il turn aside inte new The £ on of mun, of home, und the common wealth ' grows from root und lives by one life and that root and li s in tie Christinn faith ulone Wi lreap as we sow. If we v tures or hemlock, or more salt, we shall roup burrenness. But that 15 for another duy sl onderfu for he man Pow |h|l«(xrn. nor mon- the only fo they r war in all tho libert It ut i one - Sharon's Prospectiv Chicago Herald: The sprightly young womin who has manuged for several yeirs 10 keep u|» a logul Duttle with ex Senator Sha o Nevada, thinks her prospects are matorially improved by the possibility of the old mun's death at an carly duy. Sharon is sick in b us well us'in niind_znd 1t would surprise no Tue waus | oue if e suould Lot recover from lis of | v | Tive | conspionous | Bany Wi i present indisposition. flis donth, wi he suits of Miss Hilt still pending, woul lnq hoirs a h«m-? of ‘litigation and seandal which his millions wonld hardly Siflien to tondor aters tive, and it is pre. sumed that o Kvl-unlul wounld find it mueh casicr to effoet a compromise with them than with the presont defondant, whose opposition 80 her claims, at cnotinons expense to himself, has won for lin: not « Littio public admiration faron's punishment by this woman d her friends has been severe enough L Serve a0 warning to the licontious yivives of the const whose private teon made seandalous by their Jation of the proprietics. A8 nds to deny that, whatever s motive now may he, sho is 1 Sharon, the world could Leompromise of the case on al: my terms with great equanimity, on's denth would hasten that most 1t too, could be accepted Ho has hiad nothing te hut revenge, and his suo- lino has not been very 1f Sy lesivable ¢ L Compostre for ot 1 in that - ADDITIONAL Fidst of Vorors in thoe First Distriot of the Fourth Ward, on C G 1613 Capitol ave Wik 1303 Catitol ave dains G VI3 Dodie Andoron duhn 255 Capitol ave S 1t and Dodge dusnph ¥ 1amd Davenpors N 1512 Doulas <A W 200 Dodeo tTolin T bet Dodze and Capitol ave Ain ho dand Didge i WIS 1 tol «ve rly Syivester i WV O Cr win Wikl 1 oplt Bt 1611 Dod U and Capitol ay o and Capioo, ave 1 aven 3 Dol 2210 Capitol Ave i1 Dod 111921 Chies <Jobim T 2istand Chieage b 3210 Davenport MOt and Dougins L) Capito Ave witianey G A Czbd Diddze Ving Piilo e Davenport Cowing Clus H 122 Davenpos e { Dol Dy Geo A 241 Dave DU Tl S 208 Davenpors Davic 1UC N 1th Eds G D IGE Capitol Ave Fney J A 2120 Chicago Fre (Ilul\ b Chicago Frnkhowser Lee P bt Do lge Eloming 1 LG Davenpore air I‘x i N Nl Feil N m B3 ook Fonda T 11 9438 Davenport Flynn John N 1713 Dodigo Gatrnenn Joseph jr 15th and Capltol ave Gray L B Lt amd Dodie Gerhold Henry 15th and Dodge Goelz S 2214 Douglas Gatiel J A 2210 Capitol ave i John M510 Davenport bbs A H Plinte use enke 15 pitol ave W ltth and 2 Dodge Wi O W (colored) Loth and Dodg, st 1T Wth and Dodge ward B A 218 N Lot rrl K L1108 1t nJ A Planters house Hnis m W H 1316 Capitol ave Hetlley C P 1518 Douslag Jackson B A 1518 Douglus Johnson Alvin 215 N 1ith 17 Chicago 16th Davenport N 1 i " it 1] i He Ho Ricrstead Wi Kernd J 111N Tith Kei (or' D W 2210 Capitol ave Knutson Henry 2407 Chicas Knutson Knui 2ith and Chicago Loveil Israol 2417 Davenport Leavenworth £ A 165 Capitol ave Lyon J G Planters house Morse Farl Dth and Dodge Miskowsky V L .d and Capitol ave Munn A 16th e Meisel Henry 255 Chicago © A 222 Dodge St iton bloclk Capitol ave A 310 Doz Phihin J J Creighton block Preundervilie M oth and Dodge Patterson A W 1619 Dodze Prichard Geo A TILS 17th Phelps G W (colored) 20th and Douglas Pugh I H 2510 Dave umlL Patterson R C 1808 Ch Quackenbos H 17N 17th obinson I 15 1615 Capitol ave binson Moriis 204 N 16t osewater Frank Creighton Block Rockbid 1 C 26th and Capitol ave Riley W H 1712 Dodge Ttons W C 23 Dindice Rudd Dell 150 Davenport 1 Henry tith and Dodge paon duines Moisth and Davenport Al F T Dodge anson S 1 100 ;llul' Capitol ave 5ihand Capitol aye 1 Cupitol uve N 15th 1 N Jefferson Sith | Sievenson Hu Sweeny d V 1 Capitol ave y Do e Wood Renben Planter alker Clias 1ot and Doduze crse (col) 219 Chier 1 1ith and Capitol ave hotse 5 Dodie 5 Dodse Whi S A ore Walter J 1175 17 Wilson Frank 1 Dodie Willinms Geo 0 15th and Dodge Wolte L, W N 10th Welsh 1 eeitify that the above 1% a te liat of ads ditional names of registered votees in distriod No, one, fourth ward. W, J. Mount, Nov. 4, 1853, Rugisirar, ——— ADDITION A L List of Voters of the First Distriot, Sixth Ward. Carlson € W Suinders and Clurk wntis WS 716 N 116 Cuming i and Webster dand Calitornia Dowd H A Fried V Morehou Wind Wi Citining Woodard ¥ How Women Would Vote, Were women allowed to vote, evel one in the land who has used Dr, Pierco s SPavorite Prescription” wonld vote it to be an untailing remedy tor the discuses peculinr to hor sex. By druggists. Standard Medical Work for Yorng and Adiddle Aged Men, only 31 by wal, pontpiid. KEOW THYSELF, A GREAT MEDIC L WAk 0Y HAN DI Vialit it Plysical Daviiite Doclin f th, n l, Wl Hkerary 1 i country for e, 11§ wamuile, 6% Gr by the Nw 1 which he o road by Lo young (o8 hon Lur relivl. L wiil boue . UL sovioty 10 whom the Scienoh ST W HGAAEE ) Vsl PRTERL KUAR Y ur bE WL i1 i ex o AB08 atsts el KNoW THYdEwL? CING. LML B Ousi il Lo wkill ol uli ot cluns, z Lvilted wugess ully wit Wi st e cffuliure, Menuon this puovr. i

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