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THE DATLY OMAnA OFricr Ne New Yok Orrice, Roos WasHisaros Orrice, No. TrIBUNE Tt FouRTEE Publis only Mo state y morning pupee published TERME BY MAIL $10.00 Three Months 500 Otie Month One Year £ix Months jshed Every Wedl JETPAID: Ty WEEKLY Ber TERME One Year, with pre One Yenr, wit Rix Months, w One Month, on Al torin Ton ommunicn mntters <h ¥ THE BEE. BUSINESS LETTERS: ineee Ietters and remittanc e to Tur BEE PesiisiniNG ( Drafte. checks and Mee 10 be made payable to the order of the e THE BEE PUBLISKING COMPANY, PR E. ROSEWATER. En1Ton. Al nddre OMATA 1 every morning. exeept Sunday. . — — = };EE. | Re-Opening the Railroad Campaign. | 4 AND 015 FARNAM ST ILDING ST St The in the 8250 100 nesdny. * i MPANY orders smpany 1088, Wies Maurice mouth he put both feet into it Sullivan open o far is a comple plant will huve ure second A NEBIASKA trappers prediet an spring. They have been taking ol tions at the b dam woer OxLy 790 bills were introduced house on Monday. Abou 0 W their way into the waste | Keese, the t touch of paralys T'hix is the re his attempts to paralyze his audicn VALENTisg prodicts that Van Wy not be re-clected, That settles it. good authority on futures, as he patent on spirits AFTER 0 yo board of trade able to find an el No.3 n lot notice the ble to v 1) couneil n location f ine house Cloveland wrot Puck about have adde Whex Grover letter to the editor of paper lving, he might S.—Burn this letter.” Lamn's great undelive ars in his Huastings or bound to hav only « little one for a cent Now that a boiler inspection ord has been passed by the eity coun next thing to be done is to puss a building inspection ordinane: wral of Nebr: body politic w0sis of the ca I'he doctor Tie surve still “an uleer on th is Dr. Miller's di careful examination. expert on ulee s, who ek, wi Alaska W Wireian Warres Pt few million dollars at his create a “olony in wishes to make it for the lawbreakers, Ir Speaker Carlisle has not enongh to make up his committe out dictation from the Pacitic rai he will Jose the respect of the count disappoint everybody that has p confidence in him. per cold place acold bae Dr. Wiinian Hayvonn, at t meeting of the Nincteenth Centuy in N York, declared in an addre; in a thousand years all men will genitally bald Buldheads in th row will then ot no attention Tur queen of the Belgians sits valace in Brussels and listens operas in the opera house through phone. If the telephone docsn any better at night in Brussels does in Omala, the oper: the queen like a cat concert. AN interesting question to banlke business men is the extent to whicha | responsible for | hit is | cl checks on o the clearin, bank fuils after the clearing house exchanges. L growing out of the failure of tl Bank of Jersey City bring up th tion ing louse bank is n ountsid nt, hank for whic where the ¢ Soxme of the Washin General Miles think | take in secking General Crook's he will not su d any better Crook, but necording to a Wash dispatch “the stars of a major are to be give retires in a few months, and Miles achance to earn them,” ton frier < making Mg, CoarLes OGDEN be saved from his fool friends, wi trying to make him belic that managing an impeachment teinl than that of Warren Hastings, Johnson or David Buttler. The mings trial is doubtless very imp and it may be handed down to generations history, but it is not hkely to add lustre of Mr. Ogden’s fame. ught 1o g Tue compliments of the season b ex-Land Commissioner Williamsc the present commissioner, Mr. § are rather pointed. A few days linmson said Sparks was the next to an idiot, and Sparks came b him with & reference to the in Maxwell land grant, saying: elear to me that Willinson dupe of designing sharpers, or himself in collusion with other My opinion is the latter Sy right ont in meeting, and it is quitc that he knows what he is talking R ¢ Maurice Sullivan proves Cummings he sh and sent up as an Wi against M arrested, tr the check has gor ed his fail to be in the ill find sult of ok will He is has a te y or the be the that news: iy B n audience, even if it is inance cil, the proper 15k has «a mts to e as L. wvell “khone s with ut any he last ry club ss that be con- ¢ front in her to the tele- t work than it must sound to and utside ¢ into wanits i City o ques s of W mis job, as r than ington eneral away when General Pope wants ray to ho o he is reater Andy Cum ortant, future n the annals of police court to the etween and arks, vo Wil thing uck at fumous It was us the 1 about hiscase ould be aecom- phice to a bribe-taker. 1f he fails to prove his case, N i prosecuted for eriminal sland any event Sullivan suecee proving that he has no rvespeet truth men mings alike—that he believed Cuu to bo u square man, who could gampered with, When he assurances he eluims to have had of the most barefaced the part of Cammi of the dilemma Sullivan muy el take, he is loft in an unenviabl Refore the commiunity, hal Cummings should er, “In ded in for the He has voluntarily told scores of | the friends and encmios of Cum nwmings | not be made these | knowl corruption ¢ Whichever horn hoose to o light nd | e | Mr. Thomas L, hielm of the Union Paciti of General Manager ( an opportunity Ita impending Kimball is again at the The absence away affords him ‘ at the Bee with | There is acam this valiant rail tht 1l to stab fine an hand and mothor » bra publican 1 warrior is spoiliy noopen s the e mere puppets 1t not dare 10 know will in @ bitter and os who Union Pacif r hands. The make mo which t! Union Pac war in his craft we volve t relentle patron saint afloat contests in consulting their for years kept memorable sena Union Pacitic played and come without who has In the qu for a rand bunimers and Thomas L horts them a tor master, rmy t dead beats Kimball was rceords that overthrown, n unorgan I'he dutcome ot campaign will, we fo | dent, be more disastrous to the Union | Pacific and more humiliating to the | crafty schemer who delights in playing | the political boss. Whether Mr. Calla- | way approves or condemns his conrse in opening an assault i< time isa mat | ter of no « pience. M. Kimball will s somchow to shift the responsi iy tical whom ral o | Kimball's lorse, foot and drag ized mob of the peopl <imo. tory were on, by, the coming conli- The Adams poliey of non-intervention | in politics does not suit Me, Kimball. He loves a political fight for all there is in it it he g worsted. To him tl | posspm policy is distastetul, and to the concern that is propped up and kept alive by railroad job work it is almost disastrous. 1t was doubtless this feeling that myp the traflic manager | orde reopening of the war at any hazard. Having failed in their attempt to the editor of the B hypocrite and fraud who was waging { mock railroad war and the same | ime carrying Union acitic an [ nuals in his pocket, returned 1o the charge ind point to the red stone front of the BEE building ¢ a proof that our opposition to Color paving material was a | ckmailing sham. While they do not | dure to charge downright bribery, with | the verdiet of a recent livel suit fresh in | their memory, they go so far as to inti- mate that the Union Pacitic the Ber on Colorado sandstone by fur- | nishing a red-stone front for our building free of cha T'his is of a piece with all the villainous libe that have been | concocted and circulated for years by Thomas L. Kinball and his henchmen Nobody knows better than Traflic Man. Kimball that thisis a lie coined out He knows that the stone not Union Pacitie stone. The lorado even S they has silenced g of whole cloth. for our Colorado pavin sundstone u building s d Tor paving purposes is of and was not taken from the same quarry, But even if it had been identieal, the faet building aftords L corrapt le with Tuner | grayish color, while our stone is red, | : | [ its being vsed in our for intimatin Our contract wis ma including all wy and The plan called for a red | stone front, and the contractor sublet the | masonry, ineluding material, to Mr, Mel- It was immaterial to w it his stone so it came wit cments of the contract | know to this day whethe | bought it from the Union Pacific | agent or procured itdiveet from the owner | of the Colorado quar At any rate he | puid for his stone and for the work | o exer bar- ain | Trother | brick We | Tttner: hd 1 opposition to Colorado sandstone paving material was based on sound r ons. Itisnot andnever will be though it may be an excellent mate for building pur- Do We d any Union Pacific organist to produce a single line from the BEE in opposition to Colc sands of what < a building material. | Quite apart from the objeetion raised | against the Union Pacitic sandstone for paving purposes, was the ob; methods employed to foist that materinl their 1 oand sustained by If the ble paving stone, iul me, color, s tion to the on our citizens will. That the courts | Unién Pacific the | | conncil, should ever attempt a repetition of the obnoxious and dishonest methods, we shall be as outspoken and vigorous in our opposition as we have evel Our Colorado sandstone front niously made th is of a proposcd change of Union Pacitic mileage tickets | with the By e, Kimball snecri and astics ks *this ing' of the Union Pacific corporation is a big thing, that institution being a new and unknown aflair, and consequently | very anxious to get its business before the public,” Mr. Kimball may possc his little soul in patience, We do not ask any odds of him, even if he were the | | owner of the road instead of one of | | its paid servants, His newspaper flunkies n enjoy the privil not only of tieir annuals, but of passes for their strikers and drumme who travel on the Union Pacitic year in and year ont in seareh of job work and stationery orders, while other job printers and siationery dealers are compelled to pay for their transportation. Advertising” is worth money in the Omaha but literally worthless in the sidized railroad sheets, which ppendages of job | offices. Other important and | as well known as the Union fic rd it ¢ | ns to adve mn the Bk, rthe use of our advertising s both in money and in mily The Union Pacitie, spite Kimball's aversion, has ad s favor but u At the same time remark that thousands of 1inst i hearing | afte | in out of been in this paper, not as a matter of business howover, let us dollars of ad by the Union Pacitie in the shape of local s of excursions, state fair trains | changes of timeand time tables, There is no more re n for the deadhe ol excursion notices, | tables, & there is of dry and millinery openings, ball and fuirs, or any oth | nouncement. If a great | pany cannot aftord to for the use of advertising space, nobody else can, An exchange of mileage tickets for advertising is in reality more advantage ous to the railroad company than an ex- change of merchandise would be for ad- vertising space. Sinee the Union Pacifie is determmed to reuew the war upon this paper with ting | oad time than " concerts business an: railroad ecom | tem) | notice - | man of Kansas City | for 50,000 damages for libel and didn't | |P out any provocation, it must tuke the responsibility and be We are ready for it, and have no fears of the outcon The € The investigation bribery p of the immings' Trial. of the charges of al rred by ex-C F poli fore against Marshal Cummings, is now in progress before the special committee appointed by the council. Common decency would dictate that no effort should made on the part of any newspaper to comment on the case until after all the testimon; A fair, impartial and thorough in wnd an tnbiased report by should be satis partics who tramped up the 1f Mar<hal Cummings, who manded the inve guilty of bribery or corruption by unim testimony, he should be re ited to the fullest ex If, on the other hand, the nbout his bribery are a mere picee of spitefulness on the part of subordinates who imagine that they have not been fairly treated by the marshal e should be vindicated, and Ius aceusc severely eensured, to say the least the paper, which has been for months clamoring for Marshal Cummings’ head been content with publishing the testi mony and leaving the committee to its unbinsed conclu would be no fault todind. Bat the malignant attempt to forestall the ttee and to distort the testimony and ereate false impression the public mind befor half the testimony in cannot be too severely condemned, Itis an outrage on common decency, gnd only shows to what base ends partisan feeling and a « foree into a political machine will We ¢ no desive to defend Marsh Curmmings for any act that will not benr the fullest inve tion. We earnestly protest, however, against the course pur- by the democratie i, which 1 club over the heads the demo cratic members of the committ nd is attempting to bulldoze them intoa v dic to Marshal Commings, even bof had one single wit- nes leged plain in vos on, 1o commiittee tion, is proven peachable moved and pro tent of the law reports ms there com on lead sue o hold 14 man a hog. has v ‘talways safe 1o ¢ he Wisconsin supreme court ily decided that it is dibelous, and Mirmed the judgment given for the plain- i in the court below against the editor of anew per who had applied the epi- thet to him Judge Orton, in the opin- ion, said: “The use of this term is most intensely contemptuons, and intended to bring the plaintiftinto ridicnle and con- md to injure his nding and reputation as a citizen.” The news- papers of Council Blufls, Sioux City, 1 coln and Kansas City will please s and govern themselves It will not do for them to vefer to the citizens of this city ceor ly. m Omahogs as bull-dozer who has to depose Marshal declares that “honest, incor- trick Ford must n partisan trickery men sirous of saving other reputa- taining that of the oflicial Lhis gh to make a lemocratic the Cumming 1 taken contr raptibl pered by who the of tions by on trinl.’ horse Jaugh is ceno SENATOR SP onsin, who has been represented o ONER, Of with other members and he contidently the tion that he is about the same hieight witor Manderson. We now know the size ot Senator Spooner. He I} an than Billy M make 50 nd wrote his s, he dudn't sven newspaper WieN President Cleve denmeiation of news) know that there wer wn in congress, but there arve other men in that body who have no more regard for the trath than the average journalist linr, » Far Senator Sherman points d all competitors in Ol but w dark horse is being groomed by the democrats in hopes that enough repub licans will bolt the caneus to send him to the front. Mi GAN, of Alubam; the o torical wind-mill of the United Statc senate. Hetakes up about onc-half of the time of that body. — If he would only sy something when he talks the tuxpay ers would not object the crushed clergy who sued the Zimes Tarier JARDINE et a cent, has decided to be monk "hat's the with the press when it is in motion. Tey are having Nebraska weather in Philadelphia, The Zecord of t i ays: “If there has been a pleas: winter since Adam and Eve walked in the garden, no chronicle of it has been Tar farmers of rs of Ameri E in exch ermany, like the farm- willing to take silver for their produce. PROMINENT PERSONS, E in Malone, Mattuew Hawthorne produced, Mr. Gladstone received over one thousand letters and telegrams of congratulations on his birthday, Jay Gould will reinain in the winter, becanse water there in cold weather, President Cleyeland will tions to dine from persous other members of his inet, Ex-President Arthur suffers from insom- nin. Evidently he does not read the record of the daily doings of congress, Mr. Parnell is a bachelor and lives the stnplest sort of a life—in lodgings, a8 8 rule -President Wheeler is still living Arnold considers the finest writer thaniel America has Florida during does not frecze ept 1o invita- than the | taking bis diuners at a hotel. 1t is only four years since Grover Cleveland became wayor of Buttalo. This shows that it 15 better to be born lucky than ri Prince Paul Esterbazy, according to a European journal,with his boundless estates, Trausylvanian forests aud other sources of wealth, would probably go beyond the late Mr. Vanderbilt by a tritle of twenty or thirty million dollars or o Philadelphia Record. It is reported that not less thay 1,000 ap- plications have been made for places on the military stafl of the governor of New York. The distinction to be thus attained is an empty wilitary title, with the privilege of weariug @ bright wilitary unifons ab the Had | THE OMAHA DAILY BE r the conscquences, | governor's inangyration, Talk of the love [ | porting Van Wyck fog re-electic tory to | | mission to the Union before long. sire to convert our police | n- | be ham- | the smallest man | in the senate, has been sizing himself up | | West | [ ilustrations | an editortal de | ation | shivercd in the cold I putup 1 P HURSDAY, of titles and rank] arfong the inhabitants of the effete monarelies of the Old World ! - Wyck's Phpi n paper in N not all owned by the rai Van pporiers. Eve b public - 1 View of It tran vert a South and then | dime show - Will Beliow Hovald. A consus of the horned cattle in ves the population at 620,000 Ticad ted that they will be ywing for Tt costs £10,000 {6 cop nibal to Christianit worth S0 a week in Arizona Admission, Arizona and it is expe ad- - 1t May Have Be o n Red Ink, N If the justices of the prenie cotnt had not indignantly keep a black bottle in their we should. of course, have supposed that was a bottl k United States su denfed that coat-room it - Aid for the W n There is little doubt pr &Y nen who have [ afree junket come back 1 of an approg fair that is bein ‘s Fair, bly that the con- New Otleans on wing the recess will v impressed with the necessity tion for the so called world's held there. The Kansas ¢ iving v ice, one of which is * is believed to be the tirst one artment in_this country, works perfeetly, and is said to dueed the price of conposition that a has been ordered, whieh will be p once, ty Times prints a number of ws of the interior of the atelier.” This attached to It cond in at — e The Backbone Lar St. Joe Gazette, ator Van Wyck will move the investi- by a secnate committee of what is known as the “Backbone Land Grant™—in- volving a subsidy of about 1,000,000 actes of land bestowed in- the aleyon days of the Lobby upon the New Orleans Pacitie railrond company. As the names of fifty witnes SCNALOLS, CONZressinen, newspaper men and lobbyists—are’ in the hands of the Ne- braskan, we may expect a miniature of the Credit Mobilier seandzl, Grant, They Usually Get Rich. Phitadelphia Record. tlemen who manage railroad compan- ies and zas eompanies usually get rieh, They liave an opportunity to skin thousands of peopleina small way, The agerd their robberies s large, but it is so widely distributed that safe wred by the peti- ness of the contributions of single individu- als. When the time comes that the oflicers of these companies do not accumulate wealth any faster than the h of the salaries paid them for their libors there will either be awgreat reduction in freights and gas bills ora doubling of stockholders' dividends. - STATE A IRITORY, Nebraska Jottings. Grand Island wgain works. (o] i ng to the front lodge of the Ancient Ovder of Uy ciicn has been organized at Ogal Loup City judge down nity the other day fed an in Tting lawyer to and a knock out A wild wolf inva week, and every ¢ a bead on him i less to say the animal escaped Dodge county has let the contract 1ther bric teross the Elkhorn into Wishington county. Henry Hunter, of int, being the lowest of nine bid- | s the job for §1,250. A cruel sight met the gaze of travelers on the road to Star, flolt county, late last week, Adittle girl, not more than 11 y stood ina corn field herding cn feet and limbs bare while she is agitatin, as Ted Rushville Jast K snot in town drew vamoment. It is need for e le, he The Plattsmouth (€ 50,000 eans of tomatc s, last year; paid out § machinery and Inbor and ri protit. The company propose to the plant and double the produc present y Contractor Fitzg of men and te: heavy licks on the grade of the Burling ton & Missouri near Grand Island. 1t is expected that the road will be graded to the western line of Custer county by rly spri There are 150 teams and 300 men at work on it nning compa and b tiie | 1d with rge foree putting in some Towa ttems. Clinton is to have an estal the manufaeture of eracked w weticle of food There ar $ more females than males in Keokuk. There ar 40 widows and 108 widowe Thomas A gets back pen wmounting to $1,150 Willinm Becker, an old resident of T )] died Jast Sunday from the eff nand @ Fumaway team linton citizens expended a little over 3,000 in new buildings and other im rovements lust year, und Lyons follows th $133,000. J. M. Estes, of Osceola, is the owne a madstone which he maintains ‘Imml numerous bites of snakes and The city council of DesMoines have re- solved to” enforce the prohibition law in its dryest detuils, and thus m it as odious a5 possible to the legislature about to nble there The editor of the brought suit for 3,000 for against the editor of the Intelligencer, of the same place, because the latter'in timated that the foruer had been stealing coal During the year 1585 there was shipped from the little town of Whiting 262,800 bushels of corn. Jt ook 527 cars to insport it to market. Altogether 86 ars of produce were ghipped from that ion Thegostofiice at Beetrace, ,\;.‘ county, has been abolished. 8§ L republican, who has been ter there for twenty-six years, I signed, and as the silary 15 only %12 anum no democrat cai be found wants it for an nent et 5o Kirkputrick, of from June Creston, 21, 1863, of has mad Monitor has Joged libel A No0se L. Ear post T per who Dakota, _Jerauld county's total debt 0. The young daughter of A, Russell, of Terraville, Black Hills, was run_over’ by o tramway car, Saturday, and instantly killed. The date for the grand blow-out ut Yankton in honor of the completion of the Northwestern road not yet heen fixed, but will probably occur sowe time during the present month, An cighteen-ineh vein of coal, under- laid with pipe-clay, has been discovered west of l‘ufl ap. Itis not a very good quality, but it is thought it wouldl {mprove if followed under the surés .o The compsny tailor of Troop K, Sev- 1 cavalry, was run over, between Fort Meade Sturgis, by 8 Northwestern coach, and seriously if not fatally injured He was too full of goose vil 1o get out of the way. is only Two farmers tried the past two yeurs a6 an experi- | JANUARY ment, the plan of sow and plumpest grain extra cultivation, with abont thirty two bushels quality of wheat offered fift e only (h nd giving gost ittle vields of pet of a superion A nts aboye Colorado. 280 children 000 1 and 188 towns An oil refinery has srence, in the Ark Pueblo boasts a mustac Over $65.000 has b Collins during th The new year wa Water, a station on the Grand, with the murcury zero < of railro nd eities n established nsas valley who chaves won n expended at Fort vear in buildings and ushered in at Clear Denver & Rio 102 below experiment sceding land at mont with alfalfa and tinothy seed IEand-half has heen suceesstully tried » yield and the hay better Greeley wantsa pork packing estab lishment; more hogs laying been raised there by the vanchmen than they have a market for, One farmer has raised over 500 head A mont e nuniber who con propose to cst thousand milk radius of five Fremont o nehmen near Long rol 30,000 acres of land, blish dairy farms, Onc cows are’ fed within a s of Longmont county cor creasing every year. It is years when o ent of conl was considered a good There is now not less than ipped daily from difterent cotnty The mineeal output of the district for 1885 aggre Daring the year Leadvill ver, Pueblo and othier point of ore, the value of which F7, 000,000, he silver yield of qual to about 300 tons and the g to ole and a quarter tons pure There are now in operation sevent furnaces, where on the st of July were but twelve furnaces. ‘The sipply of ore at the smelters in the past six motiths has increased about 25,000 tons v Seventeen thonsan D00 W t year, Twenty cars of bulli of ore we t week The Cove Creck sulphur works during styear has shipped cqual to fifty 0ad$ of retined sulphue or about 500 husing but a 30 day’'s 2000 tons ts of the in fow tons of work ship G52 Jen 0L tons wis over 1885 was yicld nictal on there h. ons of salt worth shipped from the Salt Lake m and twenty-five shipped from Salt Lake City tons. The earnings of the Denver & Rio Grande Western from July to November 80, 1855, were §1,45 X | E1,018,232, The Mormon temple in Salt Lake City i 2 slowiy. Work on it has heen in progress thirty-seven it take several more to « A new steel bridg ed aeross Green rive Rio Grande Western, 000, It is a brond ga years and it will mplete it has been construet by the ab ¢ + bridge, co T span being 1 ce were shipped from Utal in 1885 000,000 poiinds of wool, sent castern markets. The increase, which Will e over 20 per cent, will give a elip of over 6,000,000 pounds ot wool nest | spring. Montana, Ex-Governor (a law in Halena. A five foot vein of coal lias been un covered at Summit, near Boz Alderman Mel) rl pped the cor i ditor's from a new ed at the ry town nter ik of or er to the ton i over the find. The husiness of the Butte postoflice in erea 1,000 at of 1831, The sements of the otlice wmounted 10 3 12 T Butte Inter-Mountain celel ut the new year with a tusty suit of brevier, and n pictorial representation of half a of sad-eyed copy m; The mineral ontput wiet for the past 358,800, There ke near s of £7,000 is all excitement zlers, f the Butte dis ear is valued at %15 hipped from Butte s of copper or ul ta and . ver ore. Phe L Ixpr has carried out of the camp for the year 375,000 pounds of bullion, zold and silver, or more than 1,000 pounds a day. This L the Leadyille record and places Butte at the head of the columm T ramento b cets and rweitic Coast sdisearded g ubstituted the cleetrie W £6,000 worth of feathers have been sold from the twenty-one grown ostriches at the Anaheim ostéich farin during the past six months, The new Atchison, Topeks hospital al Santa Fe' cost $12,000, and is supported by monthly contributions from railroad employes If the eattlemen in easter) keep up their pastime of shootin, Indians, the country will have var on its hands t will cost seve ion dollars and hundreds of lives jos can put )00 armed war riors in the f I'hey are restive from frequent collisions with cattlemen ove disputed water rights, and beeause several of the tribe have been killed recently by covhoys. At Lebanon, Linn county, Or excitement prevails over the discovery of a wild man in the mountains near that place, who is supposed 1o be the long lost John Muckentive, The man was entirely desutute of clot and his body was covered with lor irlike an animal’s When first seen the man was voracieusly devopring the raw flosh of a deer. Tho hunt Poroached within o fow yards before being discovered, when the wild man tled into the mountaivs with the swiftness of the wind us soon as he saw the hunte sona Navajo n Ind ron, great man Hair, ik World, tion comes Dy The Doom of New ¥ A startling pred Nineteenth Century Club A in about one t carry us to tl all mankind will be or 0« from the Wilham 0 that , whicn will o 2885-86, th ye of our Hummond advances ousand year Lald. Unless the gen von living in 1uld choo unterfeit their ent day by wearis polished heads, coyering will of theaters churches Dr. Hummond ¢ not undertake to prediet to what men and women of that distant era will vesort to supply this de ficiency of hair, r whether they will e gard it us adeficieney at all = Ho only makes . proposition bused on his vation of the steady increase of without even expressing whey the daelfng of ha i1 be a “emish or an ornamentation. Perh the esteemed doctor is inclined to it as the latter, since his own head vn lates the days of 2835, except as to a light filamentous fringe which borders the base of the skull 1t is difficult 1o conje niversul baldness may lead If the present fashions \ould prevali in thide days, it is not lwpeobuble that ladies ane wigs, only smoothly destitute of capillury visible from the family the cries of s of the pre or ) , circles gall on ture Lo what this to | may employ disti “Mikado' " fignres, birds of bright plun age or indescribable animals on fo the hair- be considerah may use the yoth purposes ing wigs the business o | and the lady's mnid wil hightened T D, Hammond s correct | diction, it is cortain that the wife of SS5 will not be able to 1 hold upon her hashand o o present time. 1t may ¢ will & my m f ISS5, eveniif t wded n 1f piec Tadies d¢ we in of lould be mor HORSES THAT SOLDIERS LOVED. Char rea That Scemed Battle as Their Several horses boeame war of the 1 | tion with famons | bly the Sorrel, as Fond dera, famons in their comumanders bellion from <8800 Proba mly sury o them a Stonew Bim in all t part Ve Gen o on rod in which he took back when h which he died. A | varions hands, OId Sorrel w Mes. Juckson, Who afterward to the Militiry institute at 1 Vi He is about thivty years old mane, tail and e hive nearly disappearcd, one h a time, throt the persistence hanters. T horse is still &) st in | Ho i ind i military in e th <sit th sent G Ninglon and hi land i <in of the colebra e Gen. Sheridan to Win v twenty miles aw i the fall of 183 at Mich., and dicd on October was tiken into Wy by anollice ho 2 Michig Iy, of which Sheri dan was co nd was presented o idan by Capt. Campbell in the name e ollicers of the dment Gen rvidan was on his back in n te which he fought from ning to the end of the war, never wounded, and had no superior | aficld hor mg othier color mark he had three wlite foct, which are sup wosed by superstitious people ill-luek 1o the rider. This' superstitior will iave to be changed slightly fortuncs of Shevidun's hovse; th white feet must now be construed mean ill-luek to the enemy. Sherid horse was dark—not in the presidential eandidate- and battle his hair turned to | black, doubtless owing to p CDick,” a favorite war hor: Oswego, N. Y., last January. Governor's Lounted the begin Ie in brillin piration dict whose olil acadeiny his sent many men out into the world—governors scholars, statesmen, pocts, and scient Dick was as cavefully trained as the ch of & fond parent. When, hroke out, id the ant Twenty fourth New York was organized, Osweg county citizens looked around for hor: Jr.. to the front. Willinm B. 'hel the regiment r‘.\ mira, Col. Doyla satisfaction of s Adjt. Oliver. Di with the boys, who petied might a favorite dog. Th acquired an undevstandi | ous and important we H wed s « animal s seleeted Dick proceeded as far svertook it, and ha ick mounted to the Bim as they speedil dangor d to him rations e wing the utof the Wihen me them, Great torn. The ficl carnage found Dick und his ma the fore. The streamns of Llood, t of shells, the rain of balls, had no for hin. With [ covered with foam he dashed throu horrors of battle, fearless of the ro artillery and of all the terrible sights sounds aronnd him, He fou i 1 the second I g Sonth Mountain, mounth, / Rappabannock Cro ing, and Frederickshoy wounded at times Robert Oliver, J licutenant colon, Dick was left as a legacy to Robert | ver, his tather. Every™ comfort t horse might enjoy has been gratefully tendercd o Di On every Fourth of July following the war he was out and monnted by Mr, Oliver nia shal of the day to veceive the plaudits | and cheers of “thousands. On such ocea sions the old horse scemed to 1 hiis former five I'he martial ! and the gleam of arms seemed st to him. He was o war ho to the last, and died snddenly and as pleasantly as if he had been strick en down by u bullet through the heart ARTHUR. almost with s with min their he neve e died in 1874, and Oli as PRESIDENT How He Was Kidnapped in Marble- head, Mass., in 1554, Harper's Weokly thur tells the followving story: *1tis not gencrally known that I wis kidnapped onee, but the same is true, nevertheless To thie summer of ‘81 1 was taking a trip m o government dispateh boat along the const, when one morning we putinto Marblchead inorder to visit Salem, the ancient home of witeheraft. Our time was limited and we desived o cape observation; but no sooner we landed than 1 was We hurried into e to Sal , but whils city whic the witel Lx-Presudent Ar- in the musetim of thi wmany souvenirs of accosted by u sad-fu black eyes, who me to say afew words to the people of Marblelivad, I firmly, but wtly, refusen, on the nd of engagements, and ompell eat my refusal at wee times b lepurted. On th ol my cartia, the door was ri faced man, wl should speal totl Ihice t Zain One of the naval oflice me became yery angry door with a slam. Th jumped upon the box river, ane vere driven wharf. Presently the carr again, the s the door, and i mysclf b o nd into a packed by the i tant )y i ess. 1 had by Yielding to 1 ced man, W if yon will hall” b th nd k to the vessel 10 fuet hat 1w wead The Mugwump's Thanks, Yurk Kecning Post There is hurdly goud 1 oted for Blaine in 1hsd 3 not do a of wha it con con ask ng to 1 af Marblehe ined with the nn i Liut ad-Fneod o ongside the toward the e stopped \in opened ttodo 1 > alon city-hull h" wa nee wi th 1o wh ofl iy fect to the sad-f for five minut Five minutes it worried along well as I co allowed to can never kid tH \ny publi who ymething his own education by giving aportio n ever time it for the beginning of th sideration of the from which the experi livered him. There were —we know of them ours who thought med 1 Lo the s abo o of 18 ntell he tation ntry sont men Ives personally year ago that thi eleetion of democrat to the presidency would produce some terrible financis disaslerso great #s Lo threuten social or to bring ‘ - sguished artists to pant | der. We cs N their heads, and enterprising men of business advertismg than Old attles and was on hLis wound from him every was | ¢ ghitly in view in's of u | structed with th the leat i in N He was born i 1852 in Mexico, that little village noted | 1 i | ot all partics, ought in 1861 the war a »"to send with Adjt. Robert Oliver, Col, James. Doyle und 1 he | by front ent, well: | i iis himan o know it and | “° battles | terrors Aithough Dick | i the sadile, fiinched. | sufiici retirned 10 Oswego o | a | the wa brought | nd still prominent republican who solemnity i N year from {1 active and predicted with much vember, 1824, that in on date workingmen would, in the bitte ness of their suffering, be knocking dow i and robbing the well to-do in the 1S of this city, without mterference feom the police. We know of another whe in L fit of mingled rage and despair offored to sell ceuritics at fitty eents on the dollar ALt ulatly in ticularly women; tl liis ugh the conntry New | of 1 on the shadow of o which the republican oratc alists had fo > many vr. How deep this sha imated from the fact Knowleo stricts, there 1 and repu reat fear and jou years filled the Tow was may In that in spite ot e ol the machn Tnent posses<ol s, va numbers of them Wiy persaded that a dem ident would, in some manney Towoer the tarift and thas pro duce a commorcial erisis. Many of th forgot th wer of congress over tavitl, and the absolute inability of a pre ident totouch it as pletely asif th w Frenchmen 1l had ney read the constitution, The old gentleman who predicted the street robberies an | the gentleman who offered to scli hi property at half price, had in theirmind tonceal closing of the f gl about by some mysterions n of a demoeratic administy m. the ¢ nat st which they had probably 1 thought ot for themseves, The bul e party was in faet in that most ni choly for all situat in which 1« citizon of a free democratic country ¢ tind bimself —a situation in which he oo every election all that he holds d n Cimminent peril, i whie tion is not which of two pan Lost administer the government whether the government itself will 1y 1 more than thice montis Lhe result was that R to the polls and mounted the stamp he alarmed. if not desperate and re < frame of mind, of men who feel t are on the eve of a battle which w of both lte and fortune. A 'lo stecession of political contests conduc il mditions would of cours the eud have proyed fatal in constit al government. Men long tormented such fo Ay for " nmen W own go republ were thoro! ddenly 1 [ ks, Iy i ns i e I th < finally hecome from thein —even despotism it Uhe man who firmly believes that o ‘o | one of the two pariics into which his | be safely i . low-citizens are divided can vernment, | half ready for come chy which wiil maki wpilar election idle form. he deliverance of the from this hideous nightmare durin stoyear | is, we do not hesitate to say blessing only second in importance” to the sup- on of the rebellion, and hardly less sary to the safety, honor and” wel- f the nation. For it all Ameri at the o profoundiy thankful veal peace and real seeurs duable | is an nntry wes: far | new year to be means at | ity 1 Only one degree I | liver from the southern | which also the past year has witnessed, Nothing but actual ” experiment would | ha iced to destroy the old tradition of the slavery period that the southern people had interests diflerent from or op- posed Lo those of the North, There was | in the vepublican party o wide | liet that af they tinto powet president were elected by means of their would in* some manner, which zard to the power of the president over t 1 dew exaunined seriously for selves, take immense e trensury-—one $3,000,000,000 ! Jartly tion for the m to i the de- bughenr, S v | sums o mowey out of wmount wa miong the comyp 1 duriy fo 18 | How | how they v it 1o the United St be secured byt would managi 10 hi exelu vor exy over it it were not to and low th fie taxation horng wid not by the d. and proba- shed themselves, the Confederacy agmm in Yawvas i faet considered n i answer to all eynical demands for minute particu | € Morcover, alt | and boast of Tl Vi thie prido wty th destroyed id al- < eardinal articlen the creed that 15 slavery which outh hostile 1o the union, ne until last year the fact that Hy dead was never thor- it liome o the minds of tho Very el like the man who [ stil pains in the lea he has lost by amputation, the party still’ felt the pangs | of the old south in their bones, and noth- ing but w demoeratic trinnph woi ve relieved them Iu the | of multitudes, the Yancey the Broc S, il the =till brandishi repu gh | ertheless | sl | oug lire caters antation their y the th wert whips, and preaching tion of lubor, and dissolution for the of the peeuliar institution. Clevelund's election | may be said to have banizhed all these | phsntoms fron the northern bram. Thero | 15 no scet of republicans so strict thatona cannot riise u smile in it by speaking of | “vebel elanms,” or produce silence and little shamelaced incholy by asking, “How is business?” or what Cleveland is going to do with the tarifl In short, | theconntry s entoring on 1586 with & frecdom from care and anxiety and dif- wal forebodings w5 1L has not known nee the weainst slavery began, and tsalvation wo owe S0 mysterions are the ways of Provi- denew o the very recklessness with which the republican party defended itself. In nominating “Blaine it took counsel of nothing but'its { und yet the very badness of the candidite at fast hus brought it peace - An old farmer of Quiney, 11, one of ioncers of that connty, hasmade live | wills il destroyed cach in tim, as ho { found it impossible to disivibute his §60,- | 000 worth property wmong his five childre s 10 keep them from spatting Jout Vhe other day he submitted @& wth , which rise 1o renewed Dicker Lo then tore the paper u and shot himsell tivough the head, r SNEEZE BEZE unti] your saoms ready 10 iy 0ff; il U your nose ond cyos dig Gl excousive | quunts ) e of i, (et wa. wery Hulds il your hoad achios, noith and ot o, i D00 Wt fevir Car. NS i e Acute funtly e by Gl von Treatment with Inhaler, 81,00, SNEEZE! ! . a W. Munroo, it M Moov. 5. v Lo, and Chemical Co., Bostan, RIEUMATLZ A question victin ol ltheu dinary ut and he veliof, L sl HOEVOuS pRiG cdy, i AL druggists, ur, iniiied (ice. POTTER ., Bosion, Danishing anishin, Sudded S five Buia'& Wl il o o1 di HEMICAL