Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 18, 1885, Page 4

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P § i i . THE OMAHA DAILY BE | of the ety ) Ui WHDN e P ———————— A\;lr'vr‘,m:lrnl:\ l‘ young man, and through my negiaint " & 4 M D | The aghitt Compromiso. A railroad tapping the Eik The astness Sitantion | anceship with him [ was let into Titte PHE DATLY BEE, | 0 athgor Hughtt of the Norts | Viorn Vatloy, and not s trank line eston. | Tho general ondition of busin acka Jottings. sncret which not Walf a dozen poople ONANS OFFice, No. 01 AxD 016 Fasas ST | g ruilroad is alarmed at the do W to the north whatour j and | aho the country licates The body of g ik nown man wis :;my:l | the town knew. On bis mvitation T s NOW Lo Oreicsy o Soratiation. oY OB e, Mo (o Yol iz wdunl but steAdy Tipro ", dead ster connty. Er St Lin Dis room in the evening and ke () 3 i i Way e fearing on witerworks: | e that he was o ministor of the oy g P th independent ling of Wit own | en St L i, Mk it ddass sl o gy A caster Stoputin an adequate | who hiad been orduined a few wooks 1 Pob) ing. THe | nto Eikhorn y. As a col | Omaba eny and | while showing no' stiong evidence of an - plant for & fore, and ld come to Ottumwa to A oo £ he eommereial rests of this | definite guarantées of trastecs [ i ng booni " PERSONAL AND PORITICNL. [ Deitricl ot Juaty witeay o | Sort Hlrg STIRFERY GeFeMiony for some s s i B A o onstrict @ | it can ot be diverted from tic perity is nec 1y - Prince Waldemar of Denmark patt et P il was fied 54,00 before | (CSHES L YT e that vers night i Six Months, . 40 O M 100 | &tubvl to Omaha and | which it is proposed to constroet it feds st flrst be way before the | paie in the ddle, but he is by 10 means a | ,..‘y,;; 2 LT S et | T ‘,“' Pretty mm’l“rl‘m"“,_lu ty Tt WEEKLY T e, Published Bvers Wedncs oy | in s that with proper gnarantecs, | receive liberal support from our people. | strong structare of to 1 solidity | dude, L Mace, of Osford, cames 1o e OByl woman came in, 8hook hands woi RHMS, POSTEATD, | that no competing road will be built by | Tt wilf be usele T WeVE 0¥ any fnn | onn e, B eI E il sbetatned Mt o anmminees Tils beltet Tn & pitfe e e G nicent for o | 1V with my friend, ending by st One Yoar v 19 | Omadi capit into the Elkhorn val- | or¢ wm of men, to use the present | activity and strength in the situation | Ny This will be consoling doctrin eration of Maces, hofore him 3 nl.IA,.'mgn»nm‘u Lin ut e 12 h . . . | Ty - 8 o \ Viener. of | nad form. After a time they left and hout | i | 1oy, the headquarters of the Sious City & | v eagerness for a road to the north. | wineh is encournging. The volume of | the mugwumy e et o % poisner oF | new friend said to me p DRNC I’ which wre now at Missouri Val- | tto further their own privito sch | husiness ias decrencdd a little o to| of ¢ sity-coven tepresentatives to tho | feretEs N £ 1S Toot canght it the s ““That, 1 think, is the most AN communie At t aedi- || il bo Jocated aud wmaine | to construct a line in some other divec comtinued unfuvor weather | < presentatives from Sof nuty the wheels, which mu.v:v\(\F if ||"'II\ :"‘|"“""f“\ l.“l‘.“,""" ever g orinl matiers sious b udare CEUE il at Omaha. Tios indieation of | tion. Our commercial interests are a | tions, but the trado movement during | (Boston) tventy-five Trish-Americans ""u-‘.{ff”lfll the tlesh terribly. x(:: “.'"‘.\,u-,'»:"\-:! wrd of its equal aud e * S | n change of poliey on the part | unit as to their noeds * people k the past week hus leen vigor Mills | The govern N woling Is named opot at Alesandria who patmed | What do you mean®* iy " Wbe | of the Chicago & N n mana- | what they are will and under | and factorios gonerally well cme | Seales. s hiiends think he 1o well-bat fed natives wigure of boet Ul ol vou, was Dis - reply | e gL COMEAN: | grers will e hailed wat ction by | what conditions ployed, aud, with few exceptions, manu- | aneed nian, besides having @ gool way abont | and whisks calat St cder s Gl | gow must bodein mind that it s f 1o b i yuble o1l o ¢ | onr people. Ttshows that the railrond | s facturers expross them- | him ; | Bonoring U ciry of Slo ‘-; anl bring COunty ot far from this [“ frwie THE BEC PUBLISKING COMPANY, PR | magnates who conteol the Chicazo & | Geserar Howann has heen making a | selves confide pefully con T is now said that the oppam habit was the e Lt I L v their farm and finally sent o B, ROSEAC AT Eniro North e realize that Omaha is in o | eareful examination of the wilitary ne- | corning the commoreinl and industrial | canse of Androw Jolimsons extraertingn | S e g sBsli o Wekiavttg ol My patents ate welltoilo i prsssmannana | 110/ v 1o enforee lier demands for f; cessitios of the northern Nebraska fron- | situation and outlook condiet, but this doesi’t aceonnt for Me. De- | 0 EEETRE IR E 1 of the ©nion Pacii )'l"“"" "";;: 't "“_'“'I S ”" .‘-‘ y OyAnA contin 1 her position | treati tand proper fucilities from the | tic -:.‘ri gives it his :]‘I'!_'l.ll-ul that The iron trade i< showing special [ PWS e i :;:';:I“u!\ l r]\:‘“‘”‘“ \ ”' ¥ (‘»H’:‘;';\“"v: ‘m \‘ " way up in ti t of cloaring house | ruilroad At the same time, we 5qu‘v‘ | Ports Niobrara and Robinson should bo | strengih. Steel rails have advanced, and | \I"m |».|\‘.1 \\fl.n! ‘u.,l.v _‘Iluv n:lmwrr: a3 dnpossible to bt fu which he said ho was in tro cities | very much whether it 1 be judicions | made permanent and largo posts, He | mills are crowded with orders, while | Sit peniicutiary is said o :- s ’n]::‘m..in.u..‘ s, “fi'"fiCw‘.‘f“z‘f-n..- and wantad my ady nd st e s | and pradent for our citizens to let the | recommends the entire rebuilding of the | other branches are fairly active and | 1f the stoves are not red-hot Mr. Ward should | will be 1l s curly i the spring | ke lon siory short, and ot o SErGHTING for Sophi the hicading | preseut opportunity go for sceuring n | atter, which will be soon reached by the | values well muntained with an improy- | P Watehed . " 0" 1110, he. enueo of tho | Sitens S Euit sEe thit niy tothtre oo which one of our ¢ nexchonges | pailway into the Elkhorn valley that will | pailrond. 1t will take united and hard | ing tendenc Phids S1hestlt sl o CHUIL e | rin at O ford fast week 10s |Gt e haed never Been marri gives to the Servian Our readers | always operated in the iuters fwork on the part of onr delegation to | declined <hghtly, but the demand for :a‘f.?[" l','flf,‘.‘,‘u:“z'.‘""‘]“ln:nlfif, A il b e ko 0" eht Wiieh show | Ui Woman who pissed as his ‘wife will be interested in knowing that the | esis " of - Omaha, A stub road 10 | make the demands of Nebraska for ade- | export and home consumption continues | i BESEEREVEE RIS BEEEES e, | ortunate man wrdered, | Y oy lf"‘l,].‘.'x‘”u el with this wirds for a city, and not for wounded | Kennaed — will —operate very muelt | quate wilitary protection felt at Wash- | good. e sales of wool are much in ex- | (Rl S imeingien [ | Oyl UnEyns | Tiaienit 0 Wosky ahoN it bl afleetion, I like « lino to Oreapolis on | bt no time should be to<t in pre- | ees< of what they were ayear whilc eents it an auction in Massachusetts, | 91 the i, neifher of which cold hive | coremony perforimed | My o T 'A_"m R " war cditor | 1 & M. M Ilw‘;hm\:m‘! the preseut fring and preseating the With production of woolen s worstord |t aitosraph been sictied to @ comn e produe hy on the soft elay of e ‘:.'.f.‘.‘('(”fi ot on, but did wot dure v i o Dl apinion of the die. | manazers of the Northwistern. may | these two importaut pofuts on the flanks is estimated to he 25 ) o a fat ofllee it would huve been worth | Clariy i bt ety v nte |10 SESSRESE S K i 3 \ oine | TithRully carey ont their pledwes to plae of the'Sioux reservation guarded by lavge | Jarger, The dry goods trade continnes the river, Clatiy o to lay coBme are and wi turbance of th ree that is MW BOINE {000 an an” equal footing with Sioux | and durable posts, the settlement and | guict owing to moderate weather w v wliohl sobla ser | avn e | talk would have followed. 1 on botween Servin and Bulgaria. Ho | o Gieh yogard to northwestern Ne- | safoty of the upper country will beus. | ~ CorA stlracted speeututive i i A Muewump, 10 £t i ‘« iherconsultid e, and th bt suysitis nbout e of a war between |l e, But who knows when a | sured tlast week than for o long time past. | tuened to the repubticans, and what was t ; towa ttems, was o ducision to Wit e Riiode Island and Posey connty, Tndiana. | oo ot VR B Rt may roverse | e ) The weather has been unfavorable for [ ro Why, lie had s pockel pieked ot | o Windmill farnishios the ot ¥ o] was orduined ministec; od ragE i the policy. All we know now is that | Kavsas Crmv's stockmon have €ome | gy Cpaiuping and gathiering of the new | $100 watch, NIt ot X S era it o i anprewn court of Hiols bas e | Omalia s boen dofiberately out off from | farard with a_proposition to bear WIF | o, “and the moderate futerior atove- | “Russell Lowell” s given up offcial L5 'for the o I ' irmed the senteuee of Mackin, the Chi- | 5000 G0 ey whoss traflic nat- | 1 expense of a permanent exposition | Ak Al of veoifibte Minve | mnd il Jisieatter (bvoto Tl o ditoru - engo ballot-hox stutier, and Chicago has :.‘:»‘,.Ill‘\ ,'_‘“,,,(,_ ‘IK:”h '.-, k |h\ .‘-.’:..1 it :" ind Lo combine with it a fat stock show ‘:‘,'.1,1“.‘.:?,: ', panic P i ‘fl,,.,,{ i | ture, Has some ruthlos Tatvard frestinian Ut bl bl , HANCOCK'S passod a new clection lnw to sceuro th gy fior jug demand sueh goaran- | Which for several yeirs past bas been | 0" Guentative mtket, where ontgand. | Glled nin STimny™ that ho s s ear | qeeaying giinder in' e R [ix Abus OT0 SRIGH. (4 Wasking purifieatio 5t the polls. Hlinois has |00 ot be reversed by changes | Beldin the neighiborhood. Wesuggest to | 10 wontiiets have been Tavgely covered | t1led his bicthlght o Chicuzo comani-sion i .,::y',,,_‘ P 3 evidently decided that the bu politicrans | ke nent of the Chicago & | the managers of the Omaha distriet fair | AR o E T N A v aG Ruskin, it is said, won't come to America | Oskaloosa Packing cowpany for ss0.0) for | A Washington correspondent writes and clection frauds must go, : | Q'M',‘,"h"::;‘:_“ crishaot el st | that some sueh areangenent might ho | o ""'““’“f“" ""“f“‘, “'r \' \ i"“" " | beeause we liave no ancient ruins. 11e sho A e b Sy i {1ast wick died unother propr ctor o Nt | B | made with the stockmen who make :' ) \d "”w ’x'hn-u‘r.« ;“\ i prics |10t dot Wil ting lkeiliavdcle hin. 1t Fhe body of William Martin, who mysteri- | "\"“I""\'h ‘M L "l“l-y;‘l.l:;‘m\;:”‘w' Miss CLEVELAND has ordored that all The Free Test Book Problom, | Omabin their headquartors and who are | " Glioago espevially have beon | Lieht that if lie soubd wigase an IES Rolisly iRy At oI AT phsott w0 | Hane ek, the founder of the place ludy corvespondents shall be admitted to w1050 toxt hook quostion resolves it- | interested in tho stack yards hore. A |,y yiarons, The hand of manipulation is i“[::,“'\_"‘. M s R ANt R G Fidey TS e diied o e | Dave ld sometting about this plave the white house entevtainments the com- | gelf simply into th AN Ui anohes ab | nuion of the stock and business interests apy sin tiaka ad, while it | i i) - : 0 : acase ol suicide, I',’}Ir ::li :;r..‘nlm’r'_‘l:ll:‘.-",‘nm ulx-.]n"\j“'\”u N s U J8 aa o eay thabihiore g D6t 8T ol Uoara i Hoad® | IOmnnlin swollltl nssuve st w orinuHonb | 1L TR OIAE ity (0F L Lo NG nUEEIIOEs | 3t Aot E 6L T AT Qe eI o0 | it e Bt Al B O e | 1o i1 it s GOU LRV et 80 4 mons will be more "":“ newspag m.,.:u spond | {H168 O tbnBlicha) toPcelngs A\m‘.hmun at the fair grounds worth Have bR TUELETY “-‘I.‘ Ty I“"“; E v im" & You i Ci :\\Hv‘M ST EAT Miles of newspaper’ wrticles have beo gnta ut the national capital than eVer | of qohool fots and the building and fur- | 14708 fortably tight fix, it is uncertain to what | and shot him throu B o e L A e oiar before. v = nishing of school houses, Thoe only way Tue decision of the bourd of education | extent the market may still be oversold| | pears to bealmost us shortsichted as o v | Chas, W, MeCane, a well known citizen of [ place. When Count Bodiseo's wine cot A JArANESE court hus receutly fined | in which the hoard can provide for free | to sell the Bleventh stroet sehool house | 200 therefore difiicult to fo the) ey srttieb UG B e e o s onte |l was soldthio I smin bought it uiid an editor for not erediting wn article | textbooks is by a special tax levied for | aud lot is a wise one. The school is now { immediafe fiture of prices. The temper €. M. Van Wyck. U four of hs brothers all died ot | x“u;'-]:.u‘i ‘)“?Iv’lll‘(‘h‘i‘llllull of llllt“l[‘l‘:ll;ll'.“w" elipped from @ contemporary. It such | that purposs through tae council, only half filled while others are crowded. | 0f specalation is bullish on the near op- Kearney Press: The distinguished g howr of the day and - at the sanie | B0 »rnln GHRIDHE whington wi fines could be imposcd in this eountry, a | Now, we doubt very much the propri- | The location hus ceased to be a proper | tons,owing to the unsatisiactory condi- | 15,00 Whose name hend rticle, g out going to Hancoek's at some tin Targe number of editors would be liablo | ¢ty of any such special tax at the present | one for a school and residences have giv- | Hon of the new corn erop, but the n Tt e Ve Ay T [ oth T in his aer. The place { for not erediting the Omah for arti- | or for some to come. Omaha 88 | o way to stores and business houses | tude of tho erop | d weakons eon- | Nobracka, and one of the most fearless | ¢ Joseh Nis as o cal | R Gl “”(‘,I.y' lfi"dbl';"vh\“:_""“\:;;j eles sppropriated from its columus with- | 81owing city and hor necds in ey all aronnd it. The lotis a valuable one | Adence innext year's deliveries. Legiti- |y untiving workers in the interest of | A~ colony of about 200 Russian Mennonifes | frequenters of the place, and Clay'y out eredit, rection for material improvements, such | qnd with the procceds of its salo the | mate businessin cornhias been quicted, | 4y toiling masses there is to-ds at | avrived i Bon Homme county last week | poker playis s for the most part doie s as water supply, sewerage, polico and | hourd will be able to provide unother | OWing to the exeitoment in the speculis | pge of railway and banking tools. In | Were ihey will ocat ; Al ",““""'I "‘;*{' ; l‘f' l“';"‘_'“j s A auryNAN in Boston was so drunk in | five protection, strect cleaning, ete., en- | gehool house elsewhers, The resolution | tive murketand thie dieposition of fore aet, he is the only man inthe United | g0 Al v..‘x‘v."l.l.‘..‘ll“u.fl“,‘#?;:‘i-’fi-‘: Yoai | ll;::vr ! :‘-.I"‘\:‘.'.s“mv -,.!'.bi.f"'-\'.'.".f;fif\ the box lust week that he had to be re- moved and the trial postponed. This is equalled by a recent ease in an Omaha court, in which the lawyer defonding a criminal was too drunk to proceed. tho court had to adjourn to o him | time to sober up. CIRCuMSTANTIAL evidence is a dangel ous thing for a jury to trifle witl story comes from Mifllintown, Pa., of a young man who now turns up well and hearty after having been looked upon as dead for several years, s father was twice tried for his murder and acquitted on the second trial. Towa proposcs to celehrate over o re- publican muj of 8,000, Times hav changed. Not long ) the democrats would had bontives in Towa over the smallness of a republican majority of 80,000, Reckless leadership and dishon- ost party manugement have stowly drag- ged the state from the former command- ing position as the leader of the republi- ean vangua Tue Chieago 7ribunc publishes an in- Mereating letter fiom Senator Sutton, of | Towa, showing the beneficial workings of the high license law in Nebraska, He re: eently made 4 personal investigation of tho matter in Omaha and Lincoln, and in his comparisons between Nebraska high Heense and lowa prohibition he shows conclusively that the tormer is by far the nore praci nd benoticial measure, Tae Philadelphia Record mukes a touching ples for women in an editorial entitled “Don’t Forget Her,” and inci- dentally it ealls upon the newspapers to devote more attention and apaee to the topics that interest the ladics, who com- prisc more than or If of the population of allour great citios, The Bek heartily endorsos this sentiment and has acted in socordance with it for yoars. No de- partment of the Bee is more popular with the fair sex than our “Honey For tho Ladics."” WarLe we have been stimulating other industries our egg growing industry seens o have boen neglected. Last this conntry bought from the Canadi eleven and o half million dozen of cgss, for whioh we puid them two millions of dollurs, When there is 80 much com- | plaint of hard times and of u luck of light omployment for women it is u won- dor that the poultry business does not got a greator degree of attontion. 1t is n business which does not admit of being earvivd on in & wholesale way. Large colonics of boes do not thrive. They are subjoct to visitation of disense which oarry them ofl by hundreds ean bo mude o source of income to thou sands of smull farmers, paying them bet- ter than wore costly and lnborious invest- ments, 0gIs forack B. Craruix, perhaps the most widely known merchant in the United States, died lust Saturday at the age of % years. Mr. Clallin's long onreer in business, though generally considered a suecessful ono, is an exwmple of the | wioissitudes to which every merchant is subjectod however prosperous or indus- telous Hus tinn during its history wis shree tines forced to ask extensions from its creditors, the lust time in 1878 when Ms annual anles were averngingover . @90,000. *‘Five business men outof every ton," says n Now York business muxim, Stuil to weather financial storms It was o Mr. Clullin's credit that every dollar of his lirm's indebtednoss was Mguidated in cach instancy, and that the ‘Bounesty of the puartners mude the finan- el standing of the establishmont ws se- eure after us before the failures, Lut fowls | il a heavy burden upon the property | (o sell the lot, which means to discontin- OWNers, even rtfrom the specinl taxes | ye the school at that location, was a pro- levied for paving and geading. Tvis, in | por aod timely one. fact, desirable that for many years we e e e should be relicved entirely from local | Rrpns troubles huve onded with his school tax. Our revenue from licens and flines, with the state school ap portionment, should cover the entire cost of sehool management. | tof free test books is to 5 | hanging, but it looks as though Canac | tronbles were just beginning, The ‘rench Canadians and half-broeds will be slow to forget the execution of this I'he main obje man. bel though he was, he was relieve the poor and people of limited | yho Jeader in a o (i Tl thna means from the outlay for the purchase | oreated by unjust treatment on the part of school books. A large proportion of | of the vernment, - Furthermoro, this elass do not educate their children | 1o will always remain o doubt as to | above the primary geades. Probably not | Riol's sanity, and under the circum- more than ten per cent. of t WAMAE | cpamees he should have been given the school and less than ten per cent. of the | honelit of that doubt, high school attendants belong to the ] class that ennnot afford to buy their own | “Geserous Jay Gourn,” who swin- | n- | dled the west out of $10,000,00) in one { . has disgorged #5000 for | the Galveston sulferers, and hissycophant ers are gyrating with enthusinsm over the nobility which prompted the gift. | school books. Why not make ning in the free text Look eflort with the primary grades next yer, and lenve the highe udes until the board isin con dition to extend the system, if it secms udvisable. The text bo for the pri- | Patrons of the Unio Pacifie system pay mary grades are not expensive. The | annually in interest §300,00) on account board probably 1) y de money | of Gonld's manipulutions of that stock, enough to supply these books without | and may bo pardoned on that acconnt asking for a special tax levy If the ex- | for not =haring in the enthusiasm of his cditorial Jackeys. periment proves a suceess, after a fair trial, the ways and means may be found s to include all grades. Wedo not beliove Ty street ear company is just like any that the council will be justitied in levy- | other corporation. Ft pays little or no ing & spocial tax for freo text books, attention to the laws regulating it, and consequently the publie is constantly in- convenienced. Itis about time that the street ear company ron its cars until ets of the eitizens’ league or ganized Last night are commendable. 1o | 35 qing on all the Tines. in necordanco existing laws, to protect the with he eity ordinance. The city authori- ~‘“"".‘= ‘"l‘l."’l‘] LA0UE f!h ‘m”l'l"_’“ ties, whose duty it is to soc that the IRLIMLDEID:ThD dom mun Ly ¢ AT RIS e inances are enforeed, should do their which deserve support and to whieh no one ecan lake exception. The trouble with law and order loagues in Om:iha has buen that they began and ended their careors by passing resolutions and call duty in this matter, nud do it at once. Biee has met his death at the hands of the law, but the Canadian government ‘ will surely reap the rosults of the ex- ingupon llu} press of the f'n) 1o expose | qoutive folly in m iking & martyr of the the evils which it was their own duty 0 | Jouder of the hali-breeds in thoir revols Dring to light nnd eradicats. Toe BEk |, 00jn5 oppression and misralo. The en- had s lile expericnee of its own in | yivo foreign population of Canada s bit this mattor when the high Ticense liw | ey incensed, and will, doubtloss, make fivst went into eflect, and it speaks by | jiolf folt before long in u way whioh Sir the card. Wo are inclined to believe | Joln McDonald drends. thatthe plan of the Chicags eitizons' e league us explained in the me Tuk Herald assumes to itself a little at Boyd's opera nouse is the most e’ | too much whon it says that Vit wlons of ent which could be adopted to further | the city press has been the steadfast ad- the ends desired. Thu planis the em- | vocate of the froe taxt-hi'c scham,.” The Beg urged the adoption of this new departure from the voery first, and we sunder ths impression that it was the first pap v to m ke the sagrestion, How- Herald is entitled to eredit for tion ployment of a special wgent with all the anthority of n policsman, to roport Iations of the law and prosccute o Yonders in the nnine of th ioty, The trouble before this, has boen that business mon | and ministers shrank from the unpleas: ant notoristy and unpopularity which active work of this kwd is certain to 1 dahave plonty of nso for ot Wit was everybody's business | Water in theinflation of their stocks, but was mobody's business. and. the resue | they huve no use for the Missouri river, A TR v ',l.“ 9 gEUAL mAsY | which contains altogether too much nuv- ikl Py i | ignble water to suit them. It do»s not our people are haartily in favor of law | . A and order und will sustatn any practical surprise us, therefore, that such railroad | and sousilo ofort to sscuro the on. | 014803 48 thy Horald should violently op- ions ho i rovor forcement of the one and the pn Aoas for tho lwprove tion of the other. vio- Mississiert hus no bar ussocintion, but Tux Herald is greatly agitated because | is taking stops to supply the duficienc, the press of Omuba do not refer to the | Bar associations, generally, are organ- punor extension of the Missouri Pucifio | busoxisted sclong without it. towurds Yankton, Dukota, and Mr, M ) . - Shano indignuntly donies that his projeog | THE streat aMs.in Lincols have been | hus anything o do with the projeets of | ‘nn_uhe cm_n(urlln f_'" h:r_ the winter by thut corporation. The jobburs of Omaha | PUIng equipped with stoves. lf.lmmulu with Yasnkton, and the peoplo of this eity | oS EFOR B RITIRENT 0GR | are oxhibiting no anxivty w0 make doni- | fumo thing foF its pirons. | tions for lines of rail | towards the northwestern interior of our A illustrated enstorn paper prints s own state. For that matter, we do not | ploture of tiue shooting of the Omuha eure what the nuw road, so long us it is | sireet-car robber, and locates Omuba in elsewhere than | i Milan, of 8¢ Litis the Diggest o has in | |t e Men Who Drive, Y. Ledger Bonner says that men who drive much are never ill-naturcd. Aspiri who have therr manu- returned will hardly suner drives every day. projected new railvond as the “Omaha | izations which meot semi-occasionally HAS k4. 4 e v T A ey 3 FrFi v | Conaumer in the matlor of dress, and'she, Northern." Why should it bo referred | for tho purpose of pussing obituury | §2RHL I e BEEREOL s, i to by that namet The “Omaha North- | resolutions concerning decensed mem- | yent, is the great investor, Wo only o’ i8 nothing moro nor lvsa than the | bers. 1 is remurkubfo how Mississippi | huve'in the world absolutely wiil wo | eontrol the journwism of the countr buyers to hold o7 for larzor oferings new corn, The. wh markets b been alternatoly higher and lower, vesult of speculative manipul, the net ehange for the! week is in favor of the long interests, who have sustained the mavket in the face of a further acc mulation of stecks und utter apathy the purt of export Very Big War, It is not yory The Difference Botween Vi and Jy. Pittshurg C A cablegram in an esteemed contemporary is hended: “Minister Phelps FEats This i3 the ad- ze of being o Vermonter. Had ho Kentoekian 1t would have been “Drinks.” ronicle An ce. orristown Herald: Since 182 5,000,000 huve buen spenton the C cathedral. Itis inferred that the ingis either being constrneted government or the Piladelphia Building commission. L What Ingersoll Was Thinking About, St. Louis Post-Disputch: - When Bob Ingersoll said “Let the gods have the vens, but let us hiave the earth,” he 5 {ently thinking about those land grabs in which he haLacquived an inter- est with Dorsey. EEal L Converts Come Hard in Good Towns, Ch o Herald: The acher mado only twenty converl in Mil- watkeo durin £ tho first woek of his en- gagement there, but that was more his record in Chicng inners come hard in these good towns, where most propls belong tr the ehur - Business Hou A notico to the following cffiet posted up ontside the ofiice of cortain works in the Manchester district No tice! The hours of attendance in this oflice are: To canvassers for church sub serintions, 10to % book and insurance agents, 2 1o 4; connnercial travelers, be: aavs und advertising men, aLL pay. Wo nttend to our own biisiness at night," - over logne build- by the Puablic Don't I oL Her, Philadelphia Record: More than half the population of all our great citics is of the feminine geunler, Acute business men in some fow ppeupitions do not lose it of this fuct, and some of them huve mado a fortune by’ remembering it. After all the pushiyg and palling which are called “transaotions’ in the business world, in which e are constantly ut the front and appéar to be the moving canse, the hard, fagt arvived at, by whitever patient Gradgrind under- tukes to investigate i, is that Lulf the money”gups for womanly expenditure. A Womun may not e us much s a mang bk she is as largo eat and drink and wear; other posses- sions are relative and commonly enjoyed with others, or else not enjoyed at'ull; 50 in the methods of eivilized life it aup- peas that our most muterinl comforts nre all shaped and fashioned to our use by woman. The thinkers and philosophers who ought to learn & lesson from the wiser deulers in merchandise who appeul with shrewder judgment 10 mankind rather than to man, Why sbould the special themes which intereat men rather than women il up nine columns out of ten i bunlt, is numed. What wo are most con | Missourl, Omuha's reputation is bad ned about, is that it shall bo builtin | cpaugh without being ealled & Missouri v right dircetion tor the best interests | town. She can stund wuything but thut. the daily newspaper which gocs into the houscholds bnlf tilled with women* The Russiuns have a proverb that i but | “there s uo faaily without u determined United States the past five years stood up and made o who lus during maaly and fearless fight for the rights of his fellow-men. In politics he isa re publican, of the 16 ant-monopoly type, and has justy carned s national X on by | vecule d tiveles ettorts, to secare for the great mass of his conntrymen justice at the [ | wds o | | ptin During the last ion | s Vi Wyek seeured the pas- o bitl thron forfeitiy illions of nu arants ot criment, o thus tesored these lands (o the public do- win, Senutor Van W a republiean of Aincoln types 10 beheves in Al seeure the st nunther the typ republican editor, of yand 1 od o republicanism is not of ich allures tl islat to-ay to hus support, We think, thit at lenst threc-tc of the republica papers of Nebraska, are to-duy oppos Van Waek's re-el U.s. sen n 1o L ate. The question naturally arises, why 15 this? Hoas because Van K is tor and of the people, in toei at battle power of consolidated 1. 1t because the 1 tear b and his powes od for the peopie they or these sous, they will spare neither pains or moncy to wnd compuss s defe Uhere is not the slightest doibt, but what Senator Van Wyea i stronger hold tpon the affeetions of all clusses of the people of Nebraska, out-ide of rail- way omlicials, than any oth )in the state. it were left 1o & vole of the peo- | pie of Nebraska, us to who they would uuve dor U. S. Senator, Van Wyck would earry the state over nd all competitors by 0,000 n ty. But as tne hght 13 to be nusde, 1ib is very doubtiul whether he will be returned to the the neat year or not. In Buitulo county, three-teiths of the republicaus : for him and all the apti-modsopolists desire his re-clection, you every republi- cin paper in the county is against him nd 1or “unybody to beat Van Wyck.” he politi re ulso aguinst " him, Why? Because the men who own Lo ainst him, ‘The Journal politieians are and Erca, botn elaiming to be of and for the people, are wpposod o Van Wyck because they are under railwuay control Canningai, great moalder and Jesder of public_opinion,” the mun who wields a pen with such doadly cileet, as i wio to pile the earth with his slain, e th Cl8 ONIaents 1o commeno | deed ol f north Dikota, and bad ue LUX | shop. Among the curios was old Hiek res of land in Stutsman county | ory’s white hat, and Wilkes Booth's hat A peculiar case § and ofiice at | is there also, The greatest curios ty o Mitchell. " i ents on- | pyeis old Bodizeo's Russian brandy, wiicn Iy clafn, gave s relinguishment and moved | e ohliging bartender handled a8 if it s b leftitu thenanoved | o, the “quintessence of immortality onfo d holds it as & homestead s | 5 ; i o ahe o . | itslt. Tor i fingor of this brandy i un o Hing of Chatley Adims iny | ordinary : e Hancocks ¥ jridd € | the iabitues ot the saloon” might often 1 AN k ‘13 | be seen Seeretary Bayard, Ministor Pen, 1 " uaiie of | dleton, Judge Kdmunds ‘and Secretary t ) killed him wus don, not | Lamar, of noted men who hav Donuan, wnd theshiooting did nol oceur over Hronize plice would include a game of cards. | nearly every public man who has cut, B | amy figure in congress for the last forty Clay's Little Failin | yeirs” There is wnother Hancock eom AW wgton correspondent s: [ ingold enough to go on with the old ry Clay's we or great will not bo d jac < He v : to take Lind Senator (e bit of cooking. 1y nishitcame aronn mall up-stairs room in - Hancock's, While Waiting at the Te'ephone. a tuble they ean show you there now, [ Bilalo Conrier: “I luve he would sit with some erony all Lo 1o soread 1 Pl said o fascinated by the Kentueky game, He | o a Conrier p rie was not a good player. He bet veckless- | know all soriss o1 peonu Iy for ali the fun there was, and lost of | phone, and doultl 58 you havi course. It is notorious that he lost o1 e unsiintly fune ol temper most of night to the father of Dick Bright of | them sall inio during the interval from Indiany d puid the debt with a | es of lund in Kentucky ‘Hello” to ‘Hello." form a socicty who: Well, T'm g ing to 2 pUrnose shivh o th and some stock in a Lonisyille bank. On | ehain a troe Bib every telephone in sion Clay beeame ernzy o own | the country. This will give the tele- ] that Commodore Rogers had | phoners something to vead while waiting meht among w number of others from | for a response, and so diminish |vmmnnly tue Meditervancan, Clay winted to im- | by inercasing tranquility. The result prove his mule stock 1. This | will be sueh o erop of seriptural knowl- Deast wasa_pure And o, and had exccllent points, according to the stan dards known to brecdors. The commo dore, bhowever, knew the value of his animal as well us did Clay, He wanted to koen him, Then, 2s now, a greut man s wish was law in o social way o | now there was a time when if M Blaine should express o desive to buy b neighbor's property the proper thing would be to him agitt of it It 3 50 with ( nd would be with ( land if he were the man to tolerite it. Roge ad to let Clay have his An- dalu ckass, but Clay would not let it ho wd returned the eom diment ¥ by decding to the commodore’ what is edge us has not been garnered in years, | B % | SAMARITAN INK, THE GriEAT NERVE | conqueroris - invaliable “4n” Nervous | Prostration. “May God bless you,” suid W. L. Martin, Mechaniestown, Md., vitin Nervine curcd my Fits. 0, ut Druggists, by SKIN, SCALP. BLOCD Cleansed, Purified and Be utifled oy the Cuticura h e nsinz Ui skin aid caly of distipuring o ultuyine e L hurning symptoms of $! unt 1w th now called” jokingly * Brewsters Park," | A A Ko the large ¢ rlot adjoining the depnrt- skin and blood a0 s ment ot justice and diagonully across | ey Cuticurn, G et siin ¢ire, wnd Cutl i A AT f Neen | € ra nexe skin e, axter: from the White House, 1t is such u pic nly, and uticr ro Resolveni, the new bloeod of ground ns Vanderbilt would want i he were coming to Washington to live It is worth, probubly, §200,000—more than the posterity of the Audalusiun Daddy Longears. - INLUCK AGAIN. nihibio, ' GOOD, i Coticnurn Remodics 0o or” four yours, wnd huve Wt bui w0l words In their a 8op in decidedly tho Soup wo hanolo. wnd is ly, uro i I, inters NAUGHT I fuvor. best kol defeat of justice and tae trivmph of in- hishly pri: r its soothing and sof.eu justice, in an-cditorial not many montns Senator Jones' Alaska Bonanza. g eifeot upon il e I did that Van Wycek ought to be | Senator John P. Joues of Nevada, 8 | winchestor, Ve, AT F REV MG wearing stripes in the Neoraska pemiten- | Clevelander by birth, after many finan- g —_ tiary instend of holding a scat in the | cial ups and downs has “struck it r THE LARGEST SAL United States senate. Whyv Becauso | again, this time the riches goming f s ur: acios il Outiolinl e SA KR AIE0H Van Wyck is a friend of the toiler and | 1 gold mine, When first”elect- | it TVe never ad n wislo Instance in Cunningham is the fawning trend of | ed to the United States senate iu 1 | Which the purch: sir wis atistod. AW L0 ruilway robber capital To “republicuns who have alwi cluimed that they were anti-monopo! in principle, but believed tnat all the v formsthe people demanded, could and would be seeured throngh the republican Party, we siay, now is tae time o make ood your assertions and belief, by ral Ving to the support of Van Wyck to the end That the people, not only 6 Nebris ka, but of the whole nerican Union, mily continne to have and fenrless, tire loss and invinei advocite in that body Senator Van Wyck is a good cnough an- ti-monopolist for us, beciuse he isa troe ropiblican, and we lave never eeased 1o Diliove in teat, ganuing T publicanism. 1t may be possible that the republican pay ty of Nebraska miy yet chanze front” on Van Wyek. 11 the purty leaders do so and eouclude to support him, it will be hecuuse Senator Van \{'\-‘I‘ in stronger in Nebraska than the leadors of purty. In that ease, the vepublican literary bu- rean will notfy its Khones and Cunning. fins that Van Wyek will have to be re- elected and that must b the battle cry in tae future. Wont it be fun, in that case, to read Cinningham’s Van Wyek edito” | vials next fall, and listen to'him shout for Van Wyck, under uny and all e eumstances, because Van Wyck is tor the the people, and if the politicinns of Buila- lo county shall conclide to support him becanse they cunnot defeat hin, this sup port will not swerve us from our loyaliy | Lo the best man th in the U, 5. senute ys liis Brother Gurdn Club suya: weuk bucks, Lime-Kiln rhoumatism, ble headachos, and o | odder ailments wwo kecpen do | doctah busy." might have added that St. Jucobs Oil curds all these woub the wis worth $35,000,000 made out of the | yoursoup, wo cai sell 10 0 hor, everl o y wana Crawn Point ming on the Comstock lodo, | Cytieimn’ = MULLEL & CHAPNAS, DEusylaa, Bat he lo-titall in real estate, building kol = and = mining speculution, especially SALT RHEUM CURED, in delusive Sierra Nevada But [ Two o £ the worst cusos of suit rhenm I ove nearly coincident with the Sierra | saw wero cured Nevadws timblo surface deposits of | i thelr uies, (xeund, thoso of orien modi freo gold and some prowising veins of | bt aen dan € o gold were fouml on the Alaska const [ GEORGE AL ARTHONY, Drugggist, ibout 150 miles northenst of Sitki, The | Kewaneo, 11 placers were worked by the pioncers, DOCTORS PRESCRIBE THEM. it the quartz was lefi for the second St s comers und_eapitalist. Finally a John [ gThe Cutleien Bomodios uro cxceliont reme- Ire .lu.‘ln n‘ Sun Fr ' T80 e ll lul the | JoCOWHs0N, M. D, Hurvel, 10 now gold fields, and £ #00 bought w | MR - ; monntain_cluim on voughis island, w | CUTICURA REMEDIES, warter of w m'lo from the mailind. | Avo soid eerynhero Proo, Cotiours. e Phe claim promised well, and the hote | Josolyent 8105 Sowp s, 1o s gt dug in it was named the Paris mine. | gond for pamphlet. ’ ' dwell #old one-third of the mine to und & y curod by e At Puin Pluster, At dvg dsts month was prom mountain ol worked in all d ed. The claim s sld-bonring rock, which, get ons, yiclds ihont $3 o PR S Send for "How to Cure Skin Diseases.' wies Frovborn - of - San - Francisco, | Pimplos, Skin Blomishos wnd buby Hus wnd Senator Jonoe got half of | GRUBS, o e oy Saa Freeborn's share, or onesixth of the - 5 ) - | mine, The lnst néws from the mine was | SVEAR UADIL, I wnd wonncas that two months' work had yieldod §200,- hroeh the boin-, 1erine e Lok of 000 profit, and w et proitof §13),000 a l reneth ivity, instantly relioved,, B ton, JLcosts §1.25 u ton tor minin, I milling, Experts say that the | ountain covers s larger niss of or | can bo proitably worked than has cver | 0 GOV Dlga 'S boen found 1n the entire Cotstock lode, s T The Senwtor's share in it will probably be ahout 10,000 1y to him. This is whaut may be called” “striking it rich.” Royal Havana Lottery k- (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTIOND A Bemarkablo Marriage Ceremony. Drawn at Havana, Cuba, Every 10 o 14 Days, Chiengo Herald: T have a story for T 1 you," suitl a Chicago drummor; 1 don't | pdikow !0 Fiftha Wholos, 83 Fractions jirg oan i virn or a joke. but x s mple ac- | " Bubject 10 no manipujation 4 controllod by, count of a fact ast week | was ont in | Hhe birios tu iwterost, It (s the fuirost thingly lows, and one night [ stopped at the Ay shuose Ly oxise sanc ™ T USSY Pl MUOTLENS & Cu,, W Mia u Fur. tlokots waply 10 BIt) Ballingall house rm Otumw 1 T | Brasaway, N4 Cily lus uud gives “de doctalia’ s rest. becnme weli wequainted with a quict | beot Kuusus Vi Mo - e

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