Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 28, 1886, Page 4

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i THE DAILY BEE. OmAnA Orrrce, NO. 614 AND 016 FannAw 81 | KEW YORK OrFIcr, ROOM 65, TRIBUNE BUILDING | WASHINGTON OF¥ICE, NO, 813 FOURTRENTH ST. | excopt Sunday. The r published in the | Published every morning only Monday morning pu staie. Qe Foar ix Month FuE WEEKLY Bre, Published Every Wednesaay. TERMS, POSTPAID: One Year, with prem v One Year, without premiin Rix Months, without premium Onc Month, on trial TERME MY MATL: £10.00 Threo Months 5.000ne Month..... . CORRESPONDENCE Al communieations reliting to news and torinl matiers should be addressed to the E TOR OF HE DR DUSINFES TETTERS: All butiness letters and remittancos should be o wed to ;. BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, OMaita. Drafts, checks and postoffice ord 1o be made puyuble to the order of the company. THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPARY, PROPRIETORS. E. ROSEWATER. Eprron. i THE DAILY B Sworn Statement of Circulation, State of Nebraska, | unty of Douglas. | % N. . Feil. cashier of the Bee Publishing com solennly swear thai the ac- tual _circulation of the Daily Bee for the week ending April 23d, 156, was as follows: Morning ening Date. Kditiom. Edition. Bflllutlu\'.ll?lh. o 8, 6,100 0t 5,1 Average. 5, N. P, Frt Sworn to and subseribed before me, this 24th day of April, A. D, 1856, Sni0y J. Fraimn, Notary Public. Feil, boing i and'says that he is eashie lishing company, that the actual average daily cireulation of the Daily Bee for the moiith of January, 185, was 10,378 copie: for Febr copies; for Marel, 18, 11, Sworn to and_subseribed before me this 17th day of April, A. D, 185, S0y J. Fisiing, Nofary Publie. OMAIIA Fose to the occasion again last weck in bank cloarings, which showed an increase of more than eighteen per cent over those of the corresponding weck of Iast year. y sworn of the De A waN was killed in Allegheny City the other day by coming in con alamp post, charged with eleet won't do for tired men in the: clectric light wires to lean against lamp posts, ATOR VAN Wyck has been henrd again in the senate on the anti-monopoly question, His sarcastic pen picture of Jny Gould will be best appreciated where the prince of railroad highwaymen 13 known the best. —_— SENSATIONAL prayers are becoming all the rage since the blind chaplam of the house of representatives stirred up tha Washington menagerie. The chaplain of the Ohio legislature has created a sen- sation by pitching into the tax-evaders. He ought to be invited to Omuha for a brief season. A swALL trifle of $15,000 more is necded to pay the expenses of putting the Bar- tholdi statue in position on its pedestal. The people of the country who paid for the construction of thisornament to New York harbor will permit the generous citizens of the great metropolis to make up this little deficiency out of their own pockets. —_— ThE editor of the Herald denies that that journal is “‘out of politics,” but calls renewed attention to the fact that Doctor Miller has quit dispensing patronage through miscellaneous endorsements of rival candidates. This move of the doc- tor's towards harmonizing the party y Out of the Wood The movement on the part of Omaha business men to suggest a method by which the Union Pacific ean raise funds to build branch lines in Nebraska with- out menacing the rights of the govern- ment and the interests of the people is an important and a timely one. company, throngh bungling and dishon- management in_ ye itself face to face with disastrous competi- led in its own territory b Through the operation s past, now finds tion and ase: wealthy rivals government operations of stock jobbers and management, erions disad- ge when compared with its com Under the Thurman compelled to lock up hundreds of thou- sands of dollars every year in the national s a basis of refunding its debt In addition it is pro- wing on its eredit or sing its indebtedness for any 1is now pls to the governm hibited from bort in its treasury »s of constraction, and fis found the road must able for pury unless some od from the ady hundred miles of ntages of seve ator Van Wy some weeks ago, introduced his bill per- mitting the Union Puc 4,000,000, now to its ¢ wnchline construction in this st Opposition to some of the fe senator’s bill posed to draft a m redit in the trea will secure the ka and the Union Pacilic sted in finding a solution to plexing problem of how to r 1 without diminishing the scenr- ity on the government loan. one objection to be overcome and which will be sought to be covered by The people of Omaha are in- This is the as much business n secure thronghout the ems are bus draw to its main li arc pushing rapidly into sections which the benefits of the Omaha ring produce beyond our borders to exchange for goods from ust and south, road built by the Union P come at one ¢ mile of rail- The people of Neb ly interested in securing connections s competing lines. present management can be carr If the plans of car, by far the larger portion of whic Senator Van Wyck will bein uggest that Omaha next week, the committee make it convenient to con- for with him regarding the matter. object sought has u ad support, and the eady received his co-operate in furthering the movement, Tax It To Death, ‘The bill reported by the house com- mittee on agriculture which proposes to e and tax the olecomar; ill be cordially endorsed by the country without regard to geographical The bogus butter business is ng our dairymen to the wall. 18 ago we exported 40,000,000 pounds Last year we exported scarcely half that [amount. 40,000,000 pounds of grease were sold as butter in New York. Since that time the amount produced throughout the country seens to be particularly appreciated just at present in his own wing of the warring democracy. NEBRASKA has no desire to retaliate upon any system of railroads which has treated her people unjustly in times past, by crippling its resources. With her rapid increase in population and pros- perity, this state will throw no obstacles in the path of railroad extensions which aim to join togoether by commercial bonds her widely separated scctions. In de- manding justice from the railrouds the people of Nebraska do not propose to act with injustice towards the corpora- tions. Tue Herald shouts in clarion tones over the appointment of Mr, Crites to a federal position. Mr. Crites has boen made chief of the division of captured and abandoned property, whatever that §s. This is a great victory for Dr.Miller, but meantime Mr. Pritchett—who was the only man in Nebraska that the doctor, according to his own declaration, really eaved to have appointed to a federal office—continues to practioe law at tho old stand. The promised appointment of United States district attorney has not yot materialized. — A NEw YORK temperance paper, the Voice, carelessly credits the Beg with a long assault on high license, taken from the columns of the Christian Hour, of this city. 'The position of this paper on Bigh liconse is well known. Itadvocated the movement when it was inangurated and it has seen no reason since that time #0 change its views. 1t believes the Ne- braska law to be the best restrictive meas- wre of its class on the statute books of any state, flexiblo enough to be adjusted o the sentiment of any community and eapable of rigid enforcement wherever eommunities demand it. So far as the success of the Slocumb law I8 concerned it has accomplished more than was anticipated by its pro- moters. In fact it has cut dowa and kept down the number of saloons, di- minished drunkenness, as shown by the 2% qrosts by the poliee, and thrown the bus- ness of liquor selling into the hands of “Pn responsible for the abuse of their li- ":km. The same results are noted in chupery large town and city in the state. Qs 8 & measure to restrict the evils of in- the perance, the high license bill is a nd euuine success. It is so, beeause it has udas proved itself eapable of enforcement 3 has drawn to its support the law- i\ abiding clements in every community. Experience bas proved that no license means free license. ~High liconse is more than a heavy tux on the traflic, imposed to decrcase the ber of dealers and to secure parties cially vesponsible for the damage @hich they may intlict through tho law, has mcreased by 50 per cent. State after state has passed laws forbidding the of the stuff under false pretenses. aro not enforced. The prolits in hand- ling colored grease and palming it off as are so enormous that nd dealers can rogard the law and to pay the In New Jersey the legislature ed a law roquiring those bogus butter to brand it with a hing label on each package demoralized creamery butte! manufactures indignation employed counsel The bill placing a tax of 10 cents & pound on every pound manufactured and re - al stamp on every goes to the root of the matter. throws avound the production of oleo margarine the same restrictions which surround tobacco factories and distil- Not a pound of bogus butter could be marketed unless stamped and every mill would be placed in charge of a government oflicer. Such a law carried out would very soon work a transformation It is kept allve by fraud. Sham butter is sold because purchase believe it to be real butter. true character on the fac be driven out of the market. interests and our farming interests, as well as the public health, demand thg bogus buttor must go. Taxing itto d with exposure of the colors under whi ades is & good way in which to dispose of the butter fraud. quiring i spe If it bore its it would soon OrposrrioN to home rule is showing a bold front in Englund during the easter Both parties are holding pub- lic meetings and striving hard to influ- ence public opinion for and against the measure, looking to legis independence for Ireland. Lord Harting- tion, Mr, Chamberlain and John Bright are the most influential the measure, but the home rule liberals are not lacking in able orators to counte balance the eflect of such prominent de- fections from their most significant specel; was that made by Earl Spencer, late Lord Vicervy of Ireland. No one in that strenuously attempted to carry out a poliey of coercion, and yet hie now admits unreservedly that it was & failure, and that neither was sanctioned or encouraged by the Lrish party. In view of Earl Spencer’s previous course such an authoritative ut- terance ought to carry with it great weight, and it will undoubtedly have a flect in shaping legislatiye so- Mr. Chamberlain does not sppear to have changed his position materially further than that he bas prowmised not to gather around him any malcontents and to acave of Adullum. m association ias indorsed him, l ing of garbage. This is an important i “farewell” occusions, deserves enmuiend- One of the s on the question position ever mor crime nor con- tions l but) the liberals have burned his portrait and the disaffection from his standard of such an important factor as the Lancas- ter radicals will more than counterbal- ance any advantage that he may have gained from the action of the Birming- ham caueus. Althongh it would not be safe to forecast the fate of the biil on its second reading, yet it is plain that the prospects pf success are brightening. The Business Situation. The general volume of business during the past week has continued only fuir. The temper of traders in most lines i very conservative and there is a disposi- tion to move very cautiously until the labor troubles cease to be a disturbing element in the situation. Reports from manufacturing eenters note that the dis: tribution of goods, and notably boots and shoes and dry goods, has heen more active under the stimulus of favorable weather, which has hastened purc for consumption. The opening of inland navigation and a general improvement in the condition of country roads | also had a helpful influence on business in the interi Cotton planting in most parts of the =onth is making favorable progress, and the prospeets for winter wheat continue very encouraging. ‘The diversion of attention to spring sceding in the agricultnal seetions is causing comp: light movement of and other produce from the hands of farmers, but an inerd in shipments may be expected in the near future, The sugar market has been excited and unsettled by the strike of workmen in the NewYork and Brooklyn neries.and prices of refined sugar have advaneed fully 1 cent per pound within the week. The strike has curtailed production to the ex- tent of about 15,000 barrels per day, and there is a general uncasiness as to the future of supply and prices. Cotton ex- ports have continued liberal, and now ahead of the total for the previous crop y to date. The demand for home consumption has continued moil- been little act yin the speeulative market. Wool is moving insmall lots foractual requirements, alues are w nd tled. The cautiousness of buyers is ducto the general uncertainty as to fu- ve ture market_conditions, which is caused by the competition of foreign s and fabrics, the labor and tarifi agitation and the n pproach of the new wool clip. The general jobbing trade in dry goods is fairly active and values in most depart- ments rule firm. Wheat prices ruled higher by 2 cents a bushel during the week until Saturday, when there was a decline of a cent. The rise was largely the result of speculati buying, both for long and short ac- count, which has been stimulated by the recent improvement in export business, the Greek war news, and a fear in some quarters that strong parties in Chicago who are extensively interested on the long side of the market are | plans to corner the May option. The s vance has checked new business on for- vign orders, and while there a rin- quiries for European shipmen: lower rates, exporters do not show much dis- position to follow a further rise in prices. Crop prosnects continue favoravle, and current trade estimates point to a yield 300,000,000 bushels of winter wheat, as inst 212,000,000 bushels last year and 856,000,000 bushels in 18%4. The unc arge movement of grain by the water routes from the west started last week, and about 6,000,000 bushels are now under sail on the lakes in transit to Buf- falo. The corn market has advanced slightly, owing to light receipts points and a steady demand for hom consumption and export. The progr of spring work on the farms has delayed shipments to the commercial centres, and the smaller interior movement in connec- tion with the reduction in sto by home requiren:ents and exports has caused a d in the domestic visible supply amounting to 1,250,000 bushels of corn and 1,800,000 bushels of wheat. Pork prices are 12¢ cents per 100 pounds lower, but other hog products show no impor- tant change. Exports last week showed a gain in both meats and lard. The home trade distributioh has been a little more active, and further improvement is expeeted now that Lenten season is over. i war upon the “Mother Hubbard,” which was started in Omaha by Mar- shal Cummings, and extended all over the country, has not yet died out. The other evening in Burlington, N. J., a well-known young lady appeared upon the streets in a “Mother Hubbard,” and was mobbed by a crowd of men. Her her, a prominent citizen, propo to legal proceedings in the matter. The resalt of the queer affair was the issuance of an order by the mayor forbidding the wearing of *‘Mother Hubbards" on the strects of Burlington except under cer- rictions. Young women will hereafter be allowed to wear them as loosely as they please while seated on the steps of their own residences or upon their own grounds, They will also be allowed to wear them under the sanction of the law upon the streets if the dresses are belted but not otherwise if the girls are alone If they have escorts they can wear “Mother Hubbards" as much in the flow- ing boudoir tashion as they choose in any part of the town, both in the day and the evening. The regulatic plained, are simply for the sake of pro- tecting the girls of Burlington from the wrath of the populace, and are not in- tended especially as reflecting upon the toilet itself. These regulations are com- mended to the attention of Marshal Cum- ings, in case he should find it necessary to revive the war upon ‘“‘Mother Hub- bards’ in Omaha. THE recent visit of Charles Francis Adams to Omaha will no doubt bring about several important improvements in this city at a much earlier day than any one had reason to exp: M Adams is warnung up towards th growing city of 75,000 people. He begins to realize that the Union Pacific has too long neglectod its duty to Omaha, and that it is to the interest of the road to build up the city. Tk showers that come in the spring, tra-la-la, ave rather depressing for real cstate agents but they cause a 7x9 smile to spread over the face of farmers who huve tinished their seeding. —_— Soame systematic and thorough method of garbage-cleaning should be provided by the city council. At present there is uo regular or convenient way of dispos- ns, it is ex- matter, and the health of the public de mands immediate action in regard to it. C——p—— Tae “Poet of the Sierras,” writes to the Chicago 7ime§ & defense of Gen. Crook. There is more truth than poctry in what he says. Mr. HERMAN 2 is opposed to the cable line crossing the viaduct, He aw asons in this issue of the Bre, 5D PARAGRAPHS, roi A kite ought to be madp of fly paper. A motto for the Knights of Labor: “All that glitters is not Gould.” Anyone who is quick at repartee must nec- cessarily have a great response ability. 1f cases of drunkenness were argued before afull court there would be no convictions, “Phey say the word *‘chestnut” has reached interior Africa. That seems to be carrying a joke almost too far, The master workman is the biz steam ham- mer in Krupp's gun works, Strange to s: that while it is always on duty it is always on strike, There are some men who have “schooners" running into them every d nd yet are not wreeks, This shows that the human frame is tougher than a big iron steamship, Jdward Atkinsow’s argument that a man ean live on 5200 a year in Boston is all built presumption that there will never 1 fuinine. “The word salary comes from the Latin arinm, Jiterally salt money, from 1, salt, which was partof the pay of Romar soldicrs. This will probably explain why certain young ladies recard young men who receive n e sualnries as being entirely “too fresh, - Another Yo n Going Right. Y wn Herald. We shall not send our son to Yale College. Its base ball elub was defeated last week . Brayed with the Droy Mitwankee Journal. When Rev. Becelier called the democratic party a double-cared ass he doubtless foigot that he brayed with the drove in 1834, Only One Exception. St. Laois Post-Dispateh. Publie sentiment is, with one exeeption, unanimously in favor of arbitration. This exception is merely the Missouri Pacific rail- way management. g Al Clergymen and Editors as Husbands, Kansax City Times Clergymen, as a rule, wake the worst hus- bands in the world. ditors rank next. The r ons are that, while editors ar day and night, clersymen are at how and day. — Fred Nye and Dr. Tanner. Lineoln Journal. Fred Nye has a good deal to about the fare turnished to the inmates of the Home for the Friendless. To look at the inmate: and then at Fred, one would conclude t he had himself a regplar Dr. Tanner time of it as to vietuals. Showed 1ty Gaod Sense. Kansas City Journat. 1of Omaha has passed an nee providing for a system of building on and creating the oflice of inspecto of buildings. Such a gystem been in operation in this city. for sever the best results. The Omaha council has shown its good sense. S e 1t is Human Natyre to be Stubborn. Boston. Herald. Poor human nature is! pretty mueh the same all around. 1s Jay Gould eager to cor- rect his mistakes? Even the Senate of the United States cannot back down gracefully from a wrong position. And our excellent and courageous president is not disposed to withdraw or revoke bad appointments that e has been led to mak et Why the Laboring Men Support Van Wyck. Boomington Justice. If it was true that Van Wyck was doing halt that the corporations intimate that he was, we would not support him; but the very fact that money-sharks, corporations and blood-thirsty monopolies oppose Van Wyek, is the greater reason for his recerving the support of all laboring men. If these arch knaves could control him, they would sup- port him. e A White-House Ballad. Eugenc el in Chicago News. “What of these tidings, Grover dear, That are reported far and near Upon suspicions breath? And is it true, as eke 'tis said, Thiat you have infde your mind to wed?” Quoth Rose Elizabeth. With that ) conscience smote him sore— He cast his eyes upon the floor, But not a word he saith; Then did she guess secret flame— 1In sooth she wa Was Rose Elizabeth. She flaunted out into the hall In grievous wrath and tears withal, Did Rose Elizabeth; And when he saw her grewsome rage That no_entreaties could assunge, He fiercely muttered *S'death I” UL STATE AND TERKITOKY. Nebraska Jottings. A member of the Smith family is gong to start a paper in Sioux county. A prairie fire near Gothenburg last week destroyed §1,500 of property. The water bonds recently issued by Co- lumbus sold at a premium of 2} per cent. Tecumseh's ambition in_the hotel line has dwindled down from $10,000 to noth- ing. T. W. Pommel, of Auburn, boasts of a stone jar, a family heirloom, 180 years old. The bankers and educators of Ains- worth knuckle down to marbles as an evening pastim Ex-Governor St. John billed to de- liver a series of cold water epistles in various towns in thelstite. Ex-Mayor Lantry, bf ‘Blair, is charged with embezzling $718.17 cemetery funds, and the city has sued hith for the mone; Gamblers are bupking against hard luck in llusllnfis, Sfx :}‘(’.rufmmnl chips were raked in by thepolice lust week and finea $100 and costs ¢ach. Chadron is rapidly forging to the as a wholesale distnibuting point. town already has saven wholesale houses, all doing a good busin ess. Our own Mary Anderson is said to be negotiating for a stock ranch near North Platte. What a delicioas prairie picture it would be to seciand hear the great actress declaim in Giagie tones, **Come, bossie!” bk T 1s are cominiz' to the surface. Out at Edgar the other duy & deer’s horn was found it a depth of sixty feet. A peur fied Easter egg was found at a_depth of twenty feet by the graders of the Belt line in Omaha, “Kids who mm\ko{ with a gun and live should be raised with a hand,” remarked Mr. Lofander, of Oakland, as he grabbed a youth who toyed with a gun in'a group of chilrren. ~And Mr. L. promptly smoothed the fur on the boy’s spine with his palm, The salutatory of the Sidney Democrat, just started by J. F. Mellington, isa model of brevity and breadth. Here it is: “Democrati¢ in polities, temperan: and religion. Terms $2.00 a year in ad- vance.” The paper is planted firmly on the path of the new land oftice. “The soul stirring advice given by some of the proviicial papers, espeeirlly om able notice. The following is from the Rushville Standard: “‘Shorty™ Griswold is upon the eve of a trip to ih-ll—l(oarin' Creek,” in Wyoming. Our farewell word of advice to Shorty is—never weaken. Map peddlers in the state have little trouble planting new towns and making railroads grow where none grew before. If o ron objects to pur ing a map because the Jatest grade stakes and town additions are not plainly marked, the cn- terprising peddler hufries to his room and with_pen and pencil makes the town a railroad center, as well as a prospective county seat. That fixes the sale. Nebraska City is just now trymmg to unravel a mystery and a romance spring- ing from the humbler walks of life. Mrs. Miranda Jennis clheerfully put on the matrimonial yoke at the age of 14 with a man tottering on_the shady side of 40. The folly of a union of May with De- cember was soon apparent lousy, abuse and misery trailed about the do- mestic hearth for six weary y when Miranda attempted tosever unnatu tic with a pis She put two bullets in her hus body and left him for a life of toil. st week, so the story goes, she suddenly left her work in a‘promi- nent hotet, beeause the brother of her husband had arrived in town in search of her. One false and foolish step le: to another. ge of 21 Miranda finds herself v with peace of mind and conscience replaced by fear and pove lowa tems, Corning is building a §13,000 neademy. There are over 200 additions to the city of Des Moines. Crawford county’s saloons have been <hut up with an injunction o toots a loud bugle in praiseof the potters’ clay found in” that vicinity. The bounty for wolf sealvs in Louisa county has been cut down from A Shellsburg lady dislocated her attempting to dislodge mucus from her throat, In Elk township, B 2,000 hogs have died fr rna Vist m cholel county, during sant street M. E. church of Des Moines raised $1,000 on Easter Sun day for the benetit of Simpson college, at Indianola. An Emmet county man with a long memory says this spring resembles that of 1860, in the north, though there is less wind in the south. The Irish people of Burlington have rased about $100, which will be sent to the starving familics of the fishermen of the islands of Achill, on the west coast of Ireland. Wha ieved to be the sma record was born on the Humphr 'm, in Dickinson count < The ealf, which 15 in_perfe health izhed at birth only eight pounds and as twenty inches high. A Waterloo contractor was caught by his wife in the embraces of a _courtesan, and Id time cnsued. The angry wife tickled his bare shins~ with hide and made him dance a lively before he got « hitch onhis su Mr. John L. Hubbell died at the r dence of his son_in Davenport last I day. Mr. Hubbell was born in C cutin 1796, He came of a long-lived and prominent race of mechanics and manu- facturers, The family lived in Fairfield county, Comnecticut, a century and a half. A 20-months’ old child of Charles uble, of Hartley, was scalded to death st week by falling into a dishpan- ful of hoiling water. The mother was washing, and had sct the water on the floor while she emptied a tub. The little one w. ing around a chair, and ac- into the pan. Itown man insulted a re- 1y of that city. The citizens nd gavo the man a coat of ® The man therenpon instituted a suit against the husband of the lady who was nsulted for damages. The case was tried last week and _the jury returacd_a verdict in favor of the defendant for $1, thus throwing the costs of the suit upon the man who brought the suit. Dakota, A large elevator is being builv at Ord- way. The last semi-monthly output of the Iron Hill and Belt mines near deadwood netted §200,000. Wheat in Hughes county is several inches above ground, and farmers wre putting in corn. ompany has been organized at City to build a narrow guage rail- to the tin distriots. The Northwestern railroad company has purchased 500 acres of land near Ludden, Dickey county, for a town si Groton college, in Brown county, has 113 pupils. The town of Groton | x;('nlll'l‘ the college with forty acres of and. There will not be as much flax sown in Douglas county this year as there w The farmcrs are Tuvorable to mixe farming. The annual meeting of the Dakota Press association will be held at- Aberdeen, be- sinning Monday, June 21, and continu- ing two da ‘The Dismal Canyon strike near Buffalo Gap issaid to pan”out_well. Ore taken from the Mother lode last week assayed 840 ounces of silyer to the ton. A ton of the mineral has been sent to Omaha fora thorough te: A Scottish syndicate has recently pur- chased seventeen sections of land ‘in the counties west and north of Cass county, paying §87,000 for it. There isno better unimproved land in the territory. The Kingman farm near Hillsboro is not among the largest of the bonanzas, but in culture and_equipment is a model and the admiration of visitors, It for some time past been putting in 100 acres of wheat u day with seventy horses. An enormous kite was raised at Puk- wana one day last week. It was 11 by 16 feet in size, and the tail, composed of grain sacks, was 70 feet long. A lurfu rope 2,000 fect long was attached to the kite, and it required a windlass to draw it down when it was taken in, ———— e Current, April The editor who writes with a free pen may lay his mind to Gladstono, to sily to unnecessary public debt, to exccutive aggraadizement, or to the admission of new states into our union, but his thoughts ever turn to the erisis in tho af- fairs of capital and labor. That is the question of the hour. The artificial scarcity of our currency may have hur- ried the matter to a head, but the cause lay somewhere beneath, and would in time have worked its effect. It has often happened, of late, that employers aud their men haye quarreled; the men have stopped work; the state has taken but one view of the case—thatthe work must £o on, not that the men must go to work; alicns have been brought in by the selfish employers; the state has marshaled its troops; the alicns have b hooted, stoned, maltreated, killed; the troops have fired into the crowd, and have almost always killed a woman, sometimes u woman and her babe. This has had effect of scitling the disorder. The work has proceede and the self-oyicted workmen ha migrated, the state baving made exiles out of citizens. This has happened in | 1llinois twice of late—at Lemont and 3 east St. Lowis. Each time that the o ployers and employes quarrel and the matter is settled by law 1o suit the em- ployers, there is ah added number of con- verts to the belief that the social system must be changed, This ides eompre: nends so much which is terrifyi the men of conservative nature anc victions recoils horror from But his horror only adds rs of the time, ve the opposing fo would make the social T more difficult to the dange) us, or we must go on striking, and killing women and we shall be willing to ek over the ! 1st month, wo may see | gave his word that he would make pe strikers accepted his word | The next day Jay Gould nd the strike w! i is said that Jay cumbed to the by eastern magnat him to make cause, had J in good faith. equivocated, who did not want Bat, whatever the IN THREE SIZE BOTTLES, PRICE 25 CENTS, 50 CENTS, AND $1 PER BOTTLE CENI BOTTLES are put up for the & commodntion o all who and low prioad Couzh, ColdandCroupRemedy THOSE DESHRING A REMEDY FOR CONSUMPTION LUNG DISEASE., Bhould secure the lavce $1 botties. accompanyiug each bottle. Sold by all Medicine Dealers. WHITTIER 617 8t. Charies St., 8. Louis, Me. 1 desire & goo hd the woman would not | such a proposition thinker, does there not sonable seque put down a strike i we are not el there not some centr Jut ointing the aning the bloody 1 truth in this thing 3 re mutinous 1 there be done with a mutinous army What did Rome do? cepted the mutinous W is it not time {0 inquire int duct of the dustrial avmy unse possible that, ‘mics alwiys wron that Jay Gould was r that March Sund: y Gould were wrong, the woman killed by law for That is the question we mt should the statute the employe 11 01 rentdents ow Debility, Mental and Physical Weakness : Mercurial and other Affece tions of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Polson old Sores and Uicers Nervous Prostration, Exposure or Indulgence, whiel prod 50 long us t all the law we have? ermetenty onred, Famph ny such peace during the con- 2 3 v A Positive Written MARRIAGE GUIDE, elegant cloth snd gilt are the ringleaders of the next onslaught should tirst_inquire into the gen: ship of the army of industry. If ral or two were roundly pun or they had erred, there issi law and order. been the only offender against industry. from the poverty of the s grown rich through the use of Labor and not ¢ the more important factor. justment of th no adjustment at shange, and men may with bloodshed or without. ng difliculties There must be a more than he could in former centur and he 1s determined to or it will surcly be trampled under foot. an have our own republic or we ¢ have its suc s we choose; but we will have as freely into the action of capi- mto the action of The present law and the present repub- lic may not have gone to their utmost supporting’ Jay Gou. - will so0n ar of the law is doomed. dustrial dictum that the employ is to-day without ma no wrong is to not, thay bio. work per se should resume, but that the n; should resume their arrangement should be Beautiful Women. nd unattractive by DUEBER Thousands of testimonials, ON EVERY C Weeping at the Gettysburg Pano- Detroit Free Press: present at the pa tysburg the oth He had been g him for about fifteen minutes, began to weep. and direetly a gentleman said: “Ah, poor lad. This painting revives some episode of grief in his life. vhy do you weep?" sir,” was the broken Among the crowd moramic battle of Got- BEST IN THE WORLD. The fact wa Warranted to give satisfac. Mlta cocn ) nuy work and in any the sight of this battle move our father lay down his life on “But you lost a relation of some sort?” “Not-not thut I know of " “Then it mustbe these bloody scenes that overcome you, poor chi J.B.TrickeyaCo WHOLESALE es with and it has just struck m the whole_union giving me a can’t stop him ] kon that feller r there on a stretchor 1s me—after SKIN Sole Wholesalo agents TORTURES BLOOD HUMORS UMILIATING Eruptions, Itching and Burn. ing &kin torturcs, loathsome sores, and pecies of ftching, sonly sorofulous and conia blood, skin nnd scalp, with 1035 of bair, from fancy'to old age, ure positive oura, the great skin_ cure an exquisito sdin beautitior, externally Cuticura Resolvent, the new blood purifiér, in- DEALERS SUPPLIED Facrouy Rai SlemRanEie N. B. Thisis not a Stylo: funa iy Sutk graph poncil, but a first clase flexiblo gold pen of any de sired tinencss of point. COVERED WITH SORF T have beon afflictec co skin disease the dootors cull ec: was coverad with scubs and sores, and_ thi ing und burning were almost unbeurable. ing your Cuticura Remedies #0 high mended, concluded 1o give them w tr ticura and Cuticura ent_internally, for f cured, in g thils public statement. Mits. CLARA A. FREDERICK, Broad Brook, Conn. LP, FACE, EARS AND NECK. T was afflicted with ecze aurs aud neck, wh your remedies, pronoun: ouses that had ‘come under his notice. ¢ Lo try your Cut )up externally, au tude for which I make druggist, wher Ladies Do you want a pur ing Complexion ¢ fow applications of Hagan’s MAGNOLIA BALM will grat- u to your heart’s con- It does away with Sal- lowness, Rednes: Blotehes, and all imperfections of the skin, 1% overcomesthe flushed appear- ance of heat, fatigue and ex- It makes a lady o THIRTY appear but TWEN. TY ; and so natural, gradual, are ifs effects is impossible to detee its application, v Rewedics, und cars, néck, and the other HERMAN SLADE. “of un uggvavates “How to Cure TIFY the Complexion and Skin by the Cuticiry S04 BEAU SEWING MACHINE i e pains nud wou Plaster is dusaliible.

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