Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 9, 1886, Page 4

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» THE DATLY BEE. ‘ MATTA OFF1CE, No, 014 AND 016 FARNAM ST, NEW VORK OFFICE, ROOM 65, TRIBUNE BUTLDIN WASHINGTON OFFicr, No. 315 FOURTERNTH ST Publiched every moming. rxerpt Sunday. The only Monday morning paper published in tho staic. | TERMS DY MATE: £10.00 Three Months 500 One Month 20 One_Yenr 8ix Months Tie WERKLY Bre, Published Every Wedn TERME, POSTIALD | One Year, with premium One Yent, withe eminm g 8ix Months, without premiui ki One Month, on tria e | COMMESPONDENCE! | ATl communications relating to_ news and oli. | torial matiers should be wddre | TOR OF THE [E) RUSINFSS LETTER | ATl briginess Intters and somittances should bo addressed 1o Tiy BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY OMAA. Drafte, checks and postoflice orders 10 be mnde payable to the orderof the company THE BEE FUBLISHING COMFARY, PROPRIETORS, E. ROSEWATER, ¥ Carlisle's Committees, Speaker Carlisle has ecompleted his task of ass<igni the members of the to the varions committees, as an- notnced in the press dispatehes, Though there are the nsual namber of disappoint ments, the work on the whole been has welldone. The changes from the chair mans<hips as indicated in our Washington specials are fow Mre. Hewitt kes second place on the naval eommittee in response to the urgent requests of h constituents to retain his old place on the ways and means committee. Me. Mor- vison natarally heads the latter com mittee, Mr. Randall will d t the emascnlated appropriations committe nd My Bland will have his say as chairman of th: commit- tee on coinage Ihe friends of Judge Reagan will be pleased to note hi at the helm ot the committee v, This assures {the country question of railway regulation on-loled during the pres continuane on comme that th will not be p’ ent session. The Pacific railway com ‘Thos double-leaded Hirald editorials | 400 s not entirely satisfactory in its | remind us of the blizzard that has been | g nndtion. It is probable that Mr skirmishing over the state for the Just | ¢yiste has given in to the pressure of few days—they are very windy [ the railronds who desire to sceure a fav- —— orable report upon the sisty year exten OMATA will soon be a port of entry, | sion bill. The bulk of the important thanks to the efforts of S or Mander work of the session will fall upon the five son. The senate has passed the de 1 | committecs of ways and means, coina Dill, which will no doubt pass the house, | naval aff comme and Pacitie e s e railways I'his does not, of SULLIvAN says he can whip Mitehell | coarse, exclude the necessary labors every day for a we He is becoming | of the new and special ap- very bonstful since he whipped that litt propriation eommittecs ereated by tho newshoy theother day. Somebody ought | house. Tn the ways and means commit to knock the brute ont with o hard elub. | tee, Mr. Morrison has certainly dealt —— | Tr is reported that Church Howe retived from politics, Don’t you b it until you sec his name signed to a for has iove | mal announcement to that eflfect, afte the style of Dr. Miller. Even then he | will need watching | BN Uron VAN Yy oR I about, 1o nt | tempt to reform the running of the Wash ington street railwavs, If the senator had been in Omaha during the late storm he would have found food for reflection on this subject nearer home than the national eapital. | S——————— | Tite week of prayer is in prog | Omaha prays tohe delivered from of her mosshack citizens who are block- | ing the wheels of her advancement and | hindering her more enterprising dents in their efforts to further the pros perity of the city. A sourneny eritic likens a certain lit- erary lady's sonnets to “the silvery tex ture of a cobweb endowed with the dur bility of a pearl.” If a national univer. sity is to be started at all the chair of rhetoric should he filled from south of | Mason and Dixon's line. Saran Avrnea Hien, who worried Sharon into his grs has married her | counscl, David 8 ex-chief justice | of the supreme court of Californin. As | Terry is 62, and evidently afilicted with | softening of the brain, his bride will very | likely soon be a weeping widow again “For the first time,”” says a Chicago | paper referring to the Utah commission incident in the senate, “Van Wyek and | Teller were on the same side.” Henry M. T vetires to the rear when the Nebraska senator opens his batterics on the r: He knowsitis dan- gerous to be within range. road tools, Hicu license is advertising itself all | over the country from the beneflts which | resulted from its operation in Ne- The Philadelphia Press says that | wing demand for a | high license law is so strong that it will | be impossible for our legislature next | winter to di handsomely by the friends of protection Mr. Hewitt is a conservative protection- istand a heavy manufacturer. Messrs Hiscoek, Reed, Kelly and McKinley all high taviff republicans. With a com- mittee thus made up, the opponents of free trade need searcely foar any very radical revision of the tariff. Mr. Bland, as chairman of the coinage committee, will have body of balanced on the question of suspending assoel the coinage of the dollar of our fathers I'he composition of the committee in this respeet fairly repre sents the complexion of the house. ‘Lhe | congressmen who are to have in charge the preparation of a bill to the navy are said to be thoroughly in a cord with Seeret Whitney's views in this respect and legislation changes in the department itself may be expected to precede any measure greatly increasing the personnel of the nay Nebraska is v niz tion on five committees Dorsey secures a place on the commit- tees of private land elaims and clections Mr. Weaver holds down a chair on the commerce committee, while Mr, Laird is given places on the commit- tee on military aflairs and on the election of president and vice-president As more than two thousand bills have al- ready been introduced into congress thero will be no lack of work for all the committees. Government in congress hag become nowadays largely govern ment by the members in ecommittes rooms and Mr. Carlislo evidently labored hard to are: the wheels with the object of ereating as few animosities and as lit- tle fricti on as was possible, @ nta has Zeal and Discretion, We cheerfully give De. Miller the bene fit of his emphatic denial, that he wrote the article which drags John A, Creigh- ton’s name into the Cummings casc disbarser of bribe mon The doctor announeed, over his own name, only last week that he had withdrawn from poli- tics and would attend strictly to his newspaper. This left the 1 infer- ce that no leading editorial was penned for his paper without his sanct on when in Omaha, In his back-handed apology, e e the doctor advises Mr. Creighton to Stxator Manpersos had madé inquiry | Festrain - his eager defenders —in with regard to the propriety of continu- | their il beeause it seems to ing the surveyor general’s office of No- | lim to outrun diserction, What braska and Towa. Mr. Weaver, however, | does this — mean? Mr. Creighton is the power behind the throne in that | has not been consulted by anybody con- case. His right bower, Stephenson, whe | Bected with the Beg, much less has he in had been a surveying contractor for | SPived its comment in this instance, ~Ho years, and was badly mixed up with the [ could not restrain this pap he tri old surveying ring, which was organized | 4nd he knows better than to attempt to under Boss Cumningham, finally beeame | dictate its policy us regards himsclf or surveyor gonoral. When the confeds | 4Dy issuo in which he has an interest captured the white house, he took fright | This may scem strange to the edito and threw up his commission. When | the Herald who is very impressible Weaver failed to get a Weaver demoerat, | Clegg, appointed as his Stephenson filed o paper recommending the abolition of the oflice. There may be some grounds for retrenchment in the surveyor general’s department, but it looks very much asf phenson became convinced that th no use for the oftice as soon as the oflice had no use for | him. It strikes us that Stephenson should ave known that there was no use for the office long before he left it, and resigned | like an honorable man, with a view of closing it up and sparing the dear tax- | payers the expense of maintaining a use- less department Tuere will be univer action | among honest men of all parties over the | assuranco that John Sherman, oi Ohio, will be his own successor in the senate at Washington. A united republican cau- cus has so decided, and as the republi- cans have a clear majority, notwithstand- | ing the iniquitons ratification of the | frauds in Humilton county by a demo- eratic supreme court, the result can con- fidently be disconntod in advance. The election of last fall in Ohio was the most disgraceful political episode of the year. The prostitution of the ballot by the democratic ‘“‘reformers” of Cineinnati was boldly devised and brazenly carried | out. Exposed by a non-partisan | committee of the bést citizens of Hamil- | ton county it was defended and ratitied | by the supreme court in a decision which forover damned its authors in the eyes of peputable men and lawyers throughout | the country. The conspiracy whose sole | object was to defeat the re-election of | one of the strongest and best of senators has happily failea. Scnator Sherman’s broad and subtle intelle well equipped mind, and long expericnce in national legislation will be at the disposal of his state and the nation for another six years, while his reckless and ambitious Lilliputian competitor, John MclLean, will continue in his attempts to secure motoriety through the columns of the Cincinnati Enquirer. Some of these days | when age has perhaps brought wisdom, expericnoe and moderation, McLean will discover that the public distinguishes between reputation and notoriety in pol- $tios a5 well as in business, in public life | fre | Judge Benek ‘fl well us in the social cirele. of those outsido it willionaires. Our comments on the Zerald’s uncalled :n made just as enees, especially for assault would have be y if Mr. Creighton had been o man of the most limited means. To us it secmed a studied and malicious effort that mer ited rebuke. Had there been the slight st proof that Mr. Creighton had put up purse to bribe Marshal Commings or , whom the Herald hus now stigmatized as the prineipal beneficiary of the alleged corvaption fund, we shoulil not withold onr eensure, Tulk of zeal outrunning d very good No one who has impartially watcehed this Commings inquiry ean have failed to have observed that in his zeal to ot Cummings displaced, and to obtain control of the police foree for political Dr. Miller has outrun not only or y diserotion, but the bounds of com- mon decency What is there in threatening Councilinan Lee with indict ment for some \gi offense if he doesn’t join Pat Ford in a eooked up re port that does violence to all the facts adduced? Wherein the deceney of assailing Councilnan Furay for daring to act on the committee simply because his wife niece of John A, Creighton® Thisis about on a par with retion is seNse is the crazy freak of ling for the gnation of Beneke, when it is woll known that he has not oceupied the beneh for nearly a year and is now entirely out of any oflice What an outrage to call for the investi gation of Councilman Goodman who is not on the committee and is in no shape or manner, divectly or indirectly, con- nected with the case. Dr. Miller cannot deny the respousibility for the conduct of his own paper, when the very issue in which he makes the denial contains the most reckless and promisenous assuults on wen in and out of oflice. How soon will that branch asylum at Norfolk be open for business? There several demented persons in the Hurney street concern who have become subjects for treatment. iven the knife between the vibs of his friend, John A. Creighton, by charging that he was the disburser of bribe money, the kind doctor now twists reorganize | looking to | Congressman | U ——— his blade aronnd two or three times by publish ing a double-les ded bill of § rtic- ulars, which is made up to leave the in- fercnce that Creighton had made himselt party to a very disreputable job. From such kind friends Mr. Creighton will pray, “Good Lord, deliver us.” Dr. Mirer assures John A, Creighton that under all circumstanees he has an unwavering disposition to be very Kkind to him Under all circumstane s good. It implies that Mr, Creighton is in a very bad way just now. The doc tor's killing kindness is likely to be as ta tal to his friends as his pills used to be to the Pawnee papooses. S1. Loris will not be heard in congress this session with an appeal for appropri itions 1o complete her new custom louse. Itis finished at last, after four teen years, and has cost the government tract Other 3,030,000, How much i s is not stated. t cost the con Lands Ti ehration of the han Onrs, silver wedding of the Emperor William to the throne of Prussia man o Sunday and Monday throt Twenty-five years pire Tiam, t sumed the erown, the most Goer w wonde quarter The Ha nent states were antagonistic to Prass even in the Was geners now seat wors, hen sixty-four 3 1 politicians did ful changes wl of a century psburg influen Several of th the north there was of imperial ( \ly obscrved on out the em ago, when Wil- vs of sagacious of foresce the the g to produce was then promi- south German i was not that cor- age, as- not h diality which men aspiring to the restora tion of the empire under Prussian lead ers! the scepter from Vienna they wi he eanses Teading up to th change various p would have wished to see. confederation of the Rhine the government was then the umpive. day its influence m that guarter TN empero; Il ereet their th In the strian To is ml f the past wielded In the future in Berlin remarkable rones are num but the principal ones may be found in the longing of the German states for wmty, stabil . imperial grandeur, their iy, nat of the I Tustre o with De | wtic nl"l ol speedil Prussi pes ral race afiiliation with the Prussians rather than the Aust is, the eraftiness Sismarckinn diplomacy, and the the Prassian arms. The war smark over Schleswig-Holstein, suted in also by Austrin as the zn of south Germany, was y followed by war between wd Austria, in which several of the subordinate states, from the foree of habi took to ing de forever on the Rhine. did not the thr 1870 to gether, combin the warrant for and the \ero 2 peop! the gre It was wond nation: The luli in the confliet alo r that t, m assist the latter, sat of the Austri their hope of fu Althong! follow imr il at of an invasic bind all the Ge and the victory nies oy the ereat downfall of anc r in his nine proud and unit st military 1 historic its nd'p 1rejoic ore than anything else, unde JU The overwhelm- ans extinguished rther supremaey ) imperial union Iy, it needed bt m by France in rman people to- wehieved by the poleon T was ion of one empire ther, Tl zed th year rul ) 1 wieldin the day. ry and no ration ealled ont opti kan frontier continues, but it is daily be coming more appavent that the peace is merely o temporay expedient to afford the chief actors time for prepurations for agreat war, King Milan's speech this week on the situation is regarvded in Ber lin as fully confirming the belief that the renewal of the war next spring on a I r seale has been deeided npy e paratious for hostilities are being pushed forward in g © proportions than ever before. A ustrian oflicers ave drilling Servian reeruits, and the overtures of R issin to Bulgaria ave being repeated with urgent solicitations. The silent Turk is silent only in specch and is work- ing hourly to merense th ieney of his iy and his strength i the powers, The porte has a quarter of a million ot men under arms in Europe awaiting even under the assumed belief that th viees will sooner or later be requived to take part in o war of colossal dimensions ® The sultan and Prinee Alexander, with the approval of the powers, have Tinally nged to tr the union of the Bul wias as an accomplished fact, But the iuns are not disposed to sub o the results of the war and the Greeks are yrted as determined to fight for new itory to recompense them for Bul r ains. Meantime Servia, it is stated, acting vnder the instigation of Austrian will refuse at the end of the arm istico to diseuss terms of peace with Bul garia excapt upon the basis of 2 the stat of a wu 1l t by s (o ante g r indemnity return to e non payment herself. - All the conditions for a resumption of hostilitics which European war The Freneh ministevial eri by the form a indicate cannot but en *"% u to be p in a general ent 5 has ended decision of M. De Freyeinet to new cabinet o the lines of poliey od by the temper of the chamber of deputies which overthrew Do Bris-on id to sil solidation of the national y. and the abandonmnent as far amnesty is possi grandizement wli disastrous M. De E man who {akes the reins of government | in Franc no enyi meet i prople in a France. Do Freycinet include a bu ble of the policy P in Anna cinet is not t ut the present able task. No | n an instant t for emple bad way The dep! ment commercially sion especially in cities, is very great s programme is 1 reform, a con debt, \s of forcign ag uit has proved e and Tonquin. o be envied. Lhe crisis will have political tact can of the “Things an of real ¢ owing in part to the sending of thousands of uncmployed laborers, elerks and middl men back to the rural dis there are 50,000 apartments to let in P; and th evéry department of busincss financial polic in short that the young republic is a spendthrift. y on railroads and school houses, show of cconomy. while came the depression of 1830 und 1881 order e is a shaky of Fran It spent u The the money was to meet an en ots, It is said ris, feeling in nearly to the o, it may be said nillions of mone with no ¢ wus a boom being spent, then In rgency a coloninl policy was decided upon, more millions were squandered, and the returning ebb. tide has now set in. . 3 2y o Parliament will meet in_London on Tuesds y, the 12th, ter the election THE OMAHA DAILY | | BEE: SATURDAY, of a speaker will adjonrn until the 21st, when the queen’s speceh will be read, followed by the stwearing in of the new members, From evaservative sources it learned that the queen’s speech will announce the Irish teform bill, a county government bill for England, a land bill for England, and several bills amending Irish laws relating to the purchase of land, education, and grants of money for public works. It safe that various amendments to the address in reply to the queen’s h will be introduced. Mr. Gladstone has is to say prepared one affirniing the insuflicienc, | of the government's Trish measure as a home rule concession, and Mr. Parnell is d to rise to the oceasion with an other, aflirming Ireland’s right to legis The Irish leader maintaining his usnal ecantious attitude coalition with eitier side until the government'’s proposal materi- alizes in @ form fit for opposition or sup port. If the scheme is as ported by ble, simply increasing the powers of loeal government, it is safe to say tha My, Parnell's party will not acquiesco with it as the measuce of relief demand ed by the situation expe lative independence and declines Tudia is begmning o f the burden of the war preparations made last sprin against Russia, and of the recent cam- paign in Burmah. These expensive luxuries, together with the decline in sil- ver and the resumpticn of work on the military railvoad throagh the Bolan Puass toward 1 have caused a deficit of ),000, and the income tax incomes of all p 1 0 in the Indian hudget It is an extension of the cent on per th fessional men and oflicials who have here : been exempt from such taxation hard on the Hindoos, some of whom will be taxed under this be forced to help pay for England’s military pre mens; * The report that p las been con cluded between the hoaud their sturdy opponents in Madagascar is good news, althongh the invaders have secured which they war began in 1893, con do not deserve, sserting that a treaty made in 1841 with a local chief, gave it rights over a large part of the Hovas tervitory. The spectacle with which the world has since been favored, of one of the christian nations trying for two years to starve and bombard a free people into submission, will long be re- membered to the diseredit of the French It is France which has at t sued for pence, and the statement that a protec tor has been acquiesced in by the Hovas must be taken with a grain of salt Senor Picrola, ex-presidentof Peru, re paired some time nzo to - Paris, where it was given out he meant to take up his resulence. But since the recent events which have practically secured the depo sition of his opponent, the Chilian repre sentative, 3 President Iglesias, through the agreement made by im with General Caceres, S, las changed his mind. He arvived in: New York this week from Havre, and he sails th »on the following day. It is therefore to be inferred that Senor Pieroln will take an \etive part 1 the coming Peruvian elec- tion, and it is quite on the that he may at once pay oft old scores and re- cover the political position of whi md tely deprived sins so lately him VIEWS AND INTERVIEWS, General ger Wonld Not Take a Doubie Salazy. In the contse of a conversation with an old te'ezrapher, Colonel Clowry, general super- of the Western Union, who was in Ounha the other day, related some inter- esting reminiseenses of General Stager. Af- ter paying a high compliment to General Stager n electrician, Colonel Clowry talked about the general’s velat with the army. At the outbreak of the war, Stazer,” id Colonel Clo neral tendent of the Western Union, with head: quarters at Cley 1. His serviees were brought into requisition by Governor Denni- of Ohio, who aftcrwards beeame post ster general in Lincoln's eabinet, Soon tter MeClellan began his W Virginia catpaigin against Stager was ordercd toreport at Washinzton. He was commisioned as captain and assistant quartermaster, and litary telogra placed in_charge of the lines, which in due time extende all over the union. Stazer was soon madea colo and My, Eckert, now the | Lol the We Union system, was maae captain and a stant to Stager o all four years' servicee,” said Gen, Stager (o ‘1 never got acentout of my commission, I turned my entire salary over to the Western Unijon, in whose serviee T regarded myself withont in- terimission during the entire war, “Ihat was rather a singular arangement,” L observed. “The faet was,” continued Gen. Stager, ‘1 always remmined superinfendent of the Western Union and ded myself as sim ply detailod in t artment. When the war was over [ returned to my post. 1 did not consider myselt entitled (o two sal aries, and turned over to the company all the money Lgot from the government, and the company paid me my salary as geueral su- vintendent, ouzalin Takes Cave of h iends, I notice that Mr. Tonzalin keeps up his reputation of g care of his frie ro- marked a tailcoad man. *When he left the Burlington and went to the Atehison, Topeka & Santa Fe he took with him several of Lis partienlar friends, anong them being George B. Harris, James Ban G Har- greaves, who we ovided with good berths, i the Builing v the Chicago, thy new line which ) 1o St. Paul, and sidont. Esee that he has azain gathered is old friends around him® Mr. Harris s the general manager with head quarters at St Paul, and Mr. Hargreaves is purchasing agent, Chicago. Touzalin never goes back on his friends. He is the Kind of a man to tie to . Mr, Touzalin, who is g ton Bas announced hi lington & Norther hie is building from Chica of which he is pi The ¥ orfw OfF, Iness is very dull just now,” remarked ominent saloon keeper. *What's the cause of it he was asked. “It is the effeet of swearing off at New Year's,” sald “lin wediately after New Years ouy receipts always drop off for two or thiee weeks, Most of the boys can’t hold out g louger thau t, and then they drop in one by one, Not one man in twenty-tive i Year's resolu- tion longer than When they come Keeps wonth, back they generally spend more money than ever, Itallthe men who swear off at New Year's would stick to it, someof the saloous in Omaha wouldu't pay expenses and would have to close up.” 51 A Ha Man to Interview, “Tom Potter, of the Q., i8 oue of the hard est railroad managers 10 interview that I ever ran across,” said an experienced re porter. e Was never known to give any- thing positively away. If a reporier can draw anything out of Lim, well and good, or if he manufaetures an interview and makes # good guess Mr. Potter, while he way deny having heen statements n JANUARY 9. 1886, ] denies the grossly in- interviewed, rarely wade, nnless they are and millionaires be | nessis done fora poor woman, me nothing if the busi- | colleges, 018 academfes, and 8,631 parochia <chools. 49,040 ., The tended by correct, When he was asked the other day | - charitahle institutions number 449, ) if the interview telegraphed from San Fran- | Both Working t Yown' Va 8 B ‘ e wphed from San Fran- ing to “Down" Van Wyck. 1t 1s Snow Use. cisco that e had said the Burlington was | Tohnson County Jonrna Now the small oy sl hl Lead going to build throngh to the Pacifie coast, | Weaver and Laird are both working with Now the small bov sits with heavy hea was true. he did not deny or affivm it, but | & view to “downin Van Wy and will For he sighs to swap his Chiristmas sled simply said, with a va smile, {hat the Bur- | endeavor to be his successor. Fact s, it For a pair of roller-skates, lington needs and must have better facilities [ World vequire a whole regiment of such men 3 — i ‘ beyond Denver, He isa harder man to in- | s they to old Van's place in the United , .. The Red-Haired Gitl, terview than Charles Francis Adams.” | States, Only last week one of Stinking We know that her natuve is fiery - | Water Laird's men was here in the interest | 5\ ¢ KnOW that her temper is quick, Buffalo Bill on the Tndian Problem. | of the wioat ol piiate i AL LR KR b ey B BTl Bill, In » Ch1sngo News intereiew | - | b SR S of January 7, says I have just returned | Church Howe's Retivement, | SINGULARITIES, from a two weeks' hunting expedition with | Nebraska City New | Mr. Booth, a wealthy Englishman, We [ Bythegape vine linewe learn that Chiageh | TWwo aluttons at Warsaw, Wis, ate b started from my ranch in northwoestern Ne- | Howe, the handsome granger from Nemaha ‘\]“w”x‘: cakes on 1w They both stopped braska, and had a tiptop time. 1 am not | county who parts his hair in the middle, has | 1y Guntenala vact plantations are devoted playing any theatrical engagements this | withdrawn from polities, refuses tobe wean- | to raising the cochinel insect, of shieh 16 winter, as I lave large stock interests to | didate for U. 8. senator, and will devoto his | requires 10,000 {0 we ound \ look after, 1 have read Gen. Sheridan's re- | whole attention to railvoad building, A re Aot Gia, a free whieh® yielted ' port on the Indian question, and think that | publ convention in Nebraska, without | s year 20,000 nuts re | ) what he recommends is the best thing to do, | Chureh Howe present, would bea lonely | $)78 8! | chestnuts in ' called He was long in command of the affair B (it lvialon i wiileh o TNEIH Pasetvailons Are ® PALL R A R A LUl ! ¢ Indian reservations are The Sun Shines on he Castor., Ind., 35 years old has a head thirty three located, and i whieh the troubles live oc. | Moo T Sien inclies in‘eircumterence and (hirty-five inclos curred, lie I therefore the best informed [ o1 Mr, Van Wycr, of Nebuska, has mado | [T ehn (o crown. e ias faie intelien regarding the character and needs of | Ly of enemies by his habit b L VUL e el mit, . The INAIAS. TiRes. o s i his habit of abusing | Ninety cigars in two hours was the test o HOeH" 6F (A% TAHRS . 48 fabe | Deople and things he doesn tlike, even if | a record by which an Orfando. Cal., man cu e o et rge tescrvtions. Hake | ey are republican, So there are a number | deavered to_smoke hinsel€ fito fame and | Ix tribe, for instance They | o men in Nebraska who east a longing eye | Some cash. He Jost only on the nineticth | number 65,000, and_ have a territory a8 1820 | on s seat i the sonato amd it Torted | et which sickened him 1 as the state of Wiseonsin. There is 10 game | ghat one of thein s a man of the name of | @ SUAIEC animal was recently Killad in on it, and therefore they have no occasion 1o | ¢aetor— ol o ) e Tone | Washington Territory, Ttappears to b J « Castor—Tobin or Tobias Castor. We lope | fo thewolf family, only 1 roam over it As the land is held by the tribe | 3 AMELEMILERI U (AR I 18 e Theet r ATV IAT | that he is a nice man. But it cannot be that [ measuring three feet high at the shou!d s h neentive for individual enter | e Jonest and explosive Mr. VanWyck is to | 40 seven fect from nose fo_tail, an it prise in cultivating it. 1t each Indian had | o sueeceded by a ‘Tobin Castor - Brauty of skin, whic Snow whitd and je say 320 aeres set apart for him, and ho knew | chid | Black, intermineled with eray it was his, he would take an interest in mak- | Was e a Neb N 1 Avlarge, old-fasioned elock at Green ( ! i i k- | Was He hraska Represents . ¢ ing it productive. ‘The Indian is generally S L [ fa Rt Lok 10 SRARNL -G Surme Ly : ST AARTTod T SA & el . { | being sct back to standard time rofused smart and alive to his own intorests, By stern member of congress who we n resudarly, Finally it was set forward to wiving each Indian family the amount ot | hom L vacation telographed his con sun time, when itretuned to its sonses, an | Land now atlowed to them by law the greater | to eertain friends, and a< he rolled fnto town | D4s tun regularly ever sinee. 'This mast have | part of these vast reservations would be | his enr was on the steain to eatel the firs | oot theoriginal grandtatier's elock of 1y thrown open to settlement and the publie | not t tod bra Plie L greatly benefited. The proceeds of the sale | came bilt thoy were a mile away, (e looked | dised e Pt Coma a s y of the lands could be put into bonds and the | for the crowd, b ewasnone, Goingup | grower, under the name of Lusiadas. 1t interest devoted o the payment of annuities. [ the street he et one of the (riends who must | Was a pale vellow spofted with red, and was i Ihe Indians of the west must grow into the | have received his word, and hotly demanded: | ftarded, ccrtifates of | merit by severil ways of civilization just as those of the east | *“What sort of 8 way is this to recol | Ereneh horticwtural socicties, and now it is have done. s member of congress?™ My dear sir, it is | the ro el ‘v‘m\-l‘\x;\-v»vllzij‘ll!|ll‘l\~ i X N = very unfortunate, but none of your friends | meantime Pedro has poeketed 50,000 ¢ POLITICAT POI are toblame. A champion fenale rollor-skat. | (o e sav ol bis novelty, while he Cortain Washington eorrespondents pro- | O SFck the town this morning, and no con- | (01ieS the vainting. \ dict that Frank Lhund will et 1 seat in con- | E1CSsian i Lamount to ¢ ]mulnl of putty ool Mukes Muscle, ERE mtil her engagement expires, The I 1 of +Cook: In 1883 o ) § 2 of tha contmui counoll Aan-atl e cotnsy ofé | arom. in Aaron Trix Senator Voorhees of Indiana has been nom- | fieinls are now escorting her to the rink, and | s Was peeforming on avoute th inated for the presidency in 1855 by the La- | e boys are erying, ‘Our congrestian | Pennsylvania, and at Pattsville Nup v FAVGLter Thils, BRUsts be - { Turner, the old man Tarner's son o ¢ - afancy to a wretehed, starveling loc g . The United States senate will not need to The Hiawatha Indian Policy. oy, hetween 6 and 7 years old, who g ull down its Vest.” Hugh J. Camphell, of Giveib InATAN T e REmy mooning about in fhe neighborho : Dakota, has done it Give the red man to the soldicr, the show. The little fellow seeme § Ex-Conzressman Whitthorme, of Ten nes- JLhen shut off bis fire-waters be & nico, b nt boy for his ag e R O T Tell i that the barroom’s nowhere, miscrably thin and weak, All his JORES T PEFIR G IR Tell him that ie mast loe potatoes, were thin and shapeless 4s spider : R DLCEY Putin wheat, and be a swineherds cept for their clumsy jonts, 1is eh wtor Plumb wants the whole diplomatie Leacllila maldans buiter niakd were sunken, and “his breast scem d servieeabolished. There are none of the se dje-construction, roller-sk I S bresst seeme rviceabotished. There are none of the sen Fie-construction, rollcrslating have enved . Nap found tho fat ator's triends in it now. Tot 10 don tho gorzeois sealstins the lad, and managed to gt : Talk about southern zenerals and Missouri Pell him that it he'd a dude be hoy apprenticed to him. ‘The circus 1 colonels, Gov. Hill, of New York, has had ‘lrh-”n;m( In\vz‘l .<.|:|.-I;m.! WOwW some; were amazed at the sight of Nap's i {000 ApLIIGALIONS OF DIAEES OTtIiis i o ell him that the daily papers G and free to prophesy that he wou 1: i wplieations for pla n s imilita ry Hb iniist rend that o 1nay KEOW N0re~ | nevet Amount th: oHothing - e aff. Moreabout his wite's dear mother; mind,” replied Nap, “cven it he doesn b Gail amilton hasan artiele in Lippincott’s Aore about politles, and so-forth. bR ot o \ 1 t | N 0 itles, and so-f Ul siive him from Starving to death any | T e e e Thus the Indian, thos the red man s Ay e R Shall become a noble pale-tace, way.” They found that” young Whi republicans for puiting the thing in its plat comb could not eat meat. 1le had never foris. CONNUBTATIDIES: caten simy. The smell of it made him A Princoton, N. waiter lins been made 3 sic The first article of faith in a cir- erazy by politics, There is many a patient A couple recently married at Niles starg | G108 min's croc 1 s that one must cat waiterin Washington who is on the verge of | out with Gwenty-five ehildien. lusband | Leef to be strong, and it was o matter of Bl contributed foiwteen to the union and the | l“'l" ‘d- erim’ vH“'\” in Nap ‘Turner's S | wifeeleven, mind that young Whitcob should be Both parties are pledeed to ehange the civ- | A Joving couple were married recently fn | Strong; and as Nap was the big- 1 1 ' d il-service law in New York state so as to give JpOsig-Toom it Ko west, young Whiteomb bad to eat heef, greater preference o the vetorans of-the | bridee, vt The ceremony crformed | Tle commenced 1y on it, a little at union army. e sint ot el | 4 graduatly of his own choico Senator Vest of Missouri fs looml ng in | 1o W'Sydon't wait for lean v R ;““"‘1“[ the rations. Ilo was not put A T | G SR, oot | 40 worle it anytlilig but dnat ailowedto ) inthe senate. He is about the best ofi-hand | the front portico asa pre-nupti oaf around (i .l 1t when the other boys i : ! - were practising, and try to imitate them speaiser in that body. Ihe golden wedding of Mr.and Mrs, Van- [ Wit B eyt \ Al el SN .| sicle, of Newton, N. J., Intely, was attended | \hen he chose todo so. Vory rapidly ho ) Phere are four Taylors in the New York | 3yl monre mi brothore fid sistoe apd | picked up flosh, and veritied'the soind- legislatuve, There will probably be some | were pi tat the matriage 4 | nessof the civcus confidence in beef by P at the marriage ball a ccutury Y new measures introduced about the elothes of | azo. growing strong. In a few sensons he the session eom terning breeches of the peace. Ihe hig marriage celebrated in Colo- | EFew to be a robi straiehit, handsome (it s Coti i o K of savage. | T00 TS VO Wi i ot Gutir Oisen an | felloy ood at leaping, tumbling, slick- MLt Nty ol Som otk L e | AL Cottnors, who were, weded on sngw | rope walking, apd evériually. wider tho § R * | shoes on the top of the divide, 15,000 feet [ nume of Henry Turner, e famous jEas ke itho By altioes as one of the best four-horse ridersin the i gion when it was n wy by Oh, yes Lizzie and 1 awere made one In | country—thanks to good beof “and ork,”exelaimed a VIv-married 1o fit,” us Nab Tun sed ; o 1 uried | plenty of it,” us Nab Turner used to say. Secrctary Bayard objected to Curtin as | W0 3 friend on the cars, “Travelling o 7 ; chairman of the for viirs committee be- | go be mude’ bvo again, My congratut S aAlChosenuct siNGaRr anise, itis said, he has a fondness for talking | Tations & Buftalo. Wor A Deliwnro youn| i to newspapermen after dinner. This has a | A favious feud hetween the retiring and in- | 1ady,while stepping into a carriagzeé, held [4 B ae i ol M | coming postmasters of Ripon, Wis., has fin- | her skirts in <ucha manner as to reveal i i 3 ally been stanehed in a romantie and satis- | considerable more than the top of her i Lhe uew howse of commons contains 112 | factory manner—the davghter of the outgo- ( boots. Willie Strat, who was passing at & Lawyers, 60 manutastueers, 42 merchants, 35 | ing olfensive partisan has maried the son | the time, riveted his eyes upon the ex- i Journalist:, 2 bankers, 24 brey and o | of mine reformer, and they are to | punse of hosiery thus digplayed which shipowners. Not wmore than 50 out of “, n the !-';- mu'l;nx the postoflice. | 3ipaeted the attention of a friend, f : . lie aunouncement of the engagement of | il . o nenibers aro of the disinetly. aristoerutic | Arigd Sy Sinderson, of San Erantincor 10 | gopicioh Willio, whatare you looking class. | Sir Arthur Suilivan, the composer, is bejng | 1%, be asked. e illie! Gl Hamilton ‘Civil-Servieo | discussed with no litt YORE, I AVthir For the fortune,' was Willie's reply, Tofor nt. andacions, | et the lady on the ¢ woing over to “}"“ forhmo s plaus! wnd b times ais: | PPN AN RLIERt Sials 1 AI&‘;‘; — jointed, selt ey and ladierous, It | good one for the lady, as the Enclish compo- | 5 5 is a long, e sncer at something | Sor is very comfortably settled, 5o Tar 18 s |2 R e B Sl As to the s wedding and golden wed- u ik forpbnetbor | i most of us Kinow about tose anniversir- of the present conzress seems to have bee AR IV apRIn SR new in the - el q R o S L BRI ol BN e inihe | Diseases from Pimples to Scrofula Cured by v N T msin also fur- | mond wedding, ‘11 ! mid ann Cuticura, nishes the yonngest senator, and it is even [ Yorsary is the sivty-iith, and such an apni- versi S ob w short i out \ undreds of lotters in our possession coples ¢ A hinted that ho ixyounger than the law allows. | SoGIL T e S ot Al Hsv e o | s hieh i b b b Tl st rin g 4 - Jeteid their sixiv-itth year of wedlock, Clas | Storyi—1 finve been torrible sulfoeor for yo Small Favors Thanktally Reccived. | Fitobson and his veneiible spon By O Tk hoa A i 1 Blood Humi e (Kas.) Inter-Sta lessed Dy the parson of their parish, | bliged to shun public phices Ly v J Thanks for that chicken sent to us Christ- t for the difth thne in their long wed- | disfiuring humorss have had the b T s through the form of mutual iroth- | povaiiof untll I used the Caticur Rtomedies, -~ piighting before the altar at which they had [ which haye eured me, and left my skin und blood Brinzin Your Wood, Tor the st time beea tnited before thebattle | as pure ns achild's, ] e i T o of Waterloo was foight. ‘The unlied age of - We will aceepta few moro loads of wood | the eouple is 173 years, - COVERED WITH SALT RITEUM, B (asrvine o | emticura omodios ave tho greatost moticines 1 subseription. Br o-“ dong N Resotution Wiped Out, t\lulm.h’ Hvrufl worst ouse of Salt Khenn in g : ) iis coun y mother had it twenty years, Y, A Timely Measure, L BECEMDBER BL Haetdiod from It 1 bolieve Cuticura would hAve Chieago Neics Chalk it down behind the door, love, suved hor life. My nems, breast and hed wore Noting the stealthy approach of St. Valen- 1 Whero e Shoyar will see it dvar; eaverud for thireo veare, ihich nothing rolig /, tine's duy, and desiving to promote the ten LIRS SR Lt N iy, and Cutieura and Citlenrs Soup, oxto derand beautiful uses of that amorons gala Promise goud for all nest year. J. W. ADAMS, i day, we desive to aseartain, for the b of e work; O, e Miss Gail Hamilton, the postofice aldress of et b R e HEAD, FACE AND BODY RAW, one John P St Johin, And the promise which [ mnde, T commenced to use your Cuticurn Romedies 4 - For i've thougit the matter o'er, love, Iast July. My fead i face snd some parts of My, Keiley Once More. . 1 h my hody were abinost raw. My homd was coye And Pinovery m 1 G v ey e vt with seniss i s s ind i elioring wie Antliony M. Keiley, the would-bo diplomat - | 18100 st i Woat, | My ciises wils considorad » who failed to achieve a fivst-class mission, HELIGIOUS avery b -l\uu'A 1 have \lmx not nticle “‘1"”3 will, it is now said, e made consul-zeneral At Fiiscopal ;ission achooliins! Justbean: | or ML, 8. L WIHIPPLE, at Paris, Ifhe tails in this, however, he may | qomtared at 1ol antey, Dakoa, Mich, consent, like the old-time ofiiceseeker, (o w Norwegian Bvanzelical Lutheran po take o patir of leather tronsers and o lome, | el Uin Biooklyn, BOZBMA FLOM HEAD 10 PRET L Chnrlos Eayre Hinklo, Jovsoy City Toigits, N, { Sure Cuve for Hydrophobla. Thie Lutheran eLurch almanac for 1880 ye- | o Wltos WMy son, & I of Twelve yoirs, wos f St. Louts Globe-Denerat, turns i toml 0 SE membors of the Lu- | fhe e ouve Romadios. I tho ton of I 3 The newspapars are full of preseriptions | theran ehurceh in this country, including 1 hend Lo the solc his 1 WIS One s of [ for th By ranhohia St iogn s Canada, ol Evory oior somedy il physicans i sider the bost presoription of all hus ot yob | Kl annual xeport of the Areliiocess of | i buon tricdhn vitin | been published, [t is this: e Aty A ‘f"“hl,:“"\ CUTICURA BEMEDIES | Cold le § o TaAthia oot L r Visited, 4% | Ave sold everywhere, Prec, Cuticurn, 5e.j ! et Apply internally to the sz | Phere w ecular priesis and 124 regular’ | Bewolveot. § 19 FsQDhros Y L Kop | L | pr total of 402, b o FAUBKASAI 10, 1) - | - | letter of the Oxtord faculties favoring Send for ‘' Cure Skin Diseasas,” Jditor Palitzer's Generosity. | a rim s prod effect, ‘The | npp i . ) 1) lies nnd Buby H I,“ F Balitzer’s Gonorosity, | arehb ) of ( ‘Im,v drawn abill | GRUBS, | H.‘.w,’u\ SouD. y Noww Tork Corvesponden e Boston Herald, HUHIND, OF Sl eaur ‘ g ) ¥ Haboux Mr. Putitzer, of the World, ma le the season | #i 8 Syt e S0 B e very 1A ANTI-FAIN NLARERE 1 & memorable by distributing £10,0%0 among his | pueh ¢ ned oyer the d plishment 1, clogan A infullible employes between Now York and St Louis, | scare of kstmonth, and are mu lasle o | ain iind fulymmatic n and Mrs. Joseph Pulitzer will present oy niake a il of peturi yithin tho pasty, | Wi R f poor boys and girls of the East Side. [ e Dyl naluleg BN A MRS (8 v 1 oy | burg, Pa, conlerence, shows what a deep | His Pantaloons s )0 Short, £ 0f procressive Jidal Chicagn Times | news of this entint | Madame Adam writes that she does not be s that the sentiment of lieve that Gladstone is a grea v in favor of more 1th century ) “he wears his paunialoons too o | grandold man st not allow ! o Congrouatiousl churh | e 50 wrappeld up in his home-r B o, 1 to Aud s cheaper | 5 to forzet o let out his s, o even | « ye. it is burs | the pantaloons of the atesmen |« Lol 1 which th have a tende ney to shorten through bagging | i ¢ 5100 ¥ auil the Hide at the knee. |8 {ition to the oiher eurrent - 3 Conkling's Kind . wy of the Roman | Letter in the Clevcland Leader | Catix b it Uniked fo P Speaking of Roscoe Conkling, I heard a | ye v datin, 1, 13w, shows th | story last nizht which gives an insight wto a | bi bistops 4 cats | | part of his nature mot generally known to | ¢ 1 Ll BALIGQS L VM1, i the public. He is very kind to women in dis ke are 6,763 clurchi- | tress, and the chargos which he i $la 3 diosean | ¥ V. WerrERy AN, B2 IE { puts upon ki rvices W great wosopolics 0F louses o study tur vegulars, 5 | bl LLVADI 4Ky Ho Bs.

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