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THE DAILY BEE. | 010 FARNAM ST PRIBUNE BUTLDING FOURTEENTH ST, ‘Omana Orrrer, No. vy New Youk Orrrce. WASHINGTON OFFICE AND i ¢ No. Published evory morning, exeapt Sund only Monday morning paper published in th #tuie, TERMS DY MATL: [ One, Y enr $10.00 Three Months Fix Months. 500 One Mot | ThE WEEKLY Der, Published Bvery Wednesany. TERME, POSTPAID! | One Year, with premium Crnenn 8200 | ¥ One Year. without premivi 12 £1x Months, without premium i One Month, on trial Vv 39 CONMESPONDENCE? AN communications relating to nesws and adi- torial matters should be addrossed to tho ET FOR OF THK IRk nust ATl business jotre wncos s nadressed 10 i HING COME OMARA. Drafte, che postoffice « 10 be made puyable to th | THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIETORS. ROSEWATER. EDITOR —_—_—— THE DAILY B srder of the company. Bworn Statement of Oirculation. State of Nebrask County of Douglas, Geo, B, Tzschinck.secretary ot the Bee Pub- 1ishing company, does soemnly swear th the actual circilation of the Dailv Bee for the week ending July 2d, 1856, was as follows: Saturda; Monday, Tuesday, \leuvuh\. 3 I\I\ Thursday, 1st. Friday, 21 ., 50 0 . TZSCHUCK. before me this N. P. FEIL, Notary Pubiie, Tzschiuck, being first duly sworn,de- oo Subseribed and sworn to Bthday of July, 1556, * [8RAL.| Geo. B, sos and says that lie is s Publishing company, tha of the daily cireulation of the month of .lumnu\, l“l!, was 10,378 for Febru 505 1850, copis; pies; for March, Dril, 1855, 12,19 0 copies; for June, Copies for May, 159, 1 Gro, B. Tzscnuck, Subsetibed and_sworn to before me, this 5th dny of July, A. D. 1555, N, P FRIL, Volary PPubil vorably with the most enterpri politan dailic ATTENTION is called to the large and varied quantity of forcign cable news in this 1ssue of the B PraveRs were offered up in some of the Omaha churches yesterday for ‘We now look for rain within fort hours, cight of Justin Me- in this issue will be found very interesting ThE telegraphic letters Carthy and James O'Kelle, of the B! Tue New York Herald sy reading. ' Oxg of the weather prophets has pre- dicted for this week a cold wave and frost. The cold wave cannot come any 100 soon. | } Tae shears of the pirate will no doubt plow through the eablegrams of to-day’s BEE as usual, as well as through its other © grams appear in the Omaha I same morning that they ial cable- on the are publishied in mopolitan daily. special nows. the great New York c Wanis to be maugurated upon the Sioux City saloouns, which have been run- ning wide oven up to the present time. By tho way, we thought Iowa was a pro- hibition state. Perhaps, however, Sioux City does not consider herself within the Jjurisdiction of Governor Larrabee. E——— PoSTMASTER GENERAL VILAS, who a little while since dismissed a number of postal clerks who were attempting to or ganize a secrctsociety among themselves, on the ground that they were engaged in a conspiracy detrimental to the service, has joined the benefit association of the clerks *‘to inspire the men with contfi- dence.” There is undoubtedly urgent mecessity for some action on the part of Mr. Vilus to restore confidence among the employes of the railway mail service, and the public will hope that his connee- association will accomp- :E's special cables to-day even more than usually interesting Justin McCarthy and James O'Kelly | present brilliant and instructive reviews on the great electoral struggle in et Britain, with individual tore s of what may be oxpeeted in the near future when parliament meets. London cablegrams give picturesque details of the royal ball and the Baroness Coutts' garden§ par with descriptions of personages and cos- | | tumes, which will be read with much fnterest by many readers. The story of # grout criminal trial carries our renders Lo Italy aud affords some entertaining matter for warm weather reading. the nomination of Solicitor Goeneral Goode ought not to be displeasing even to e Prosident, who must have learned at in fominating him his confidence | was misplaced, It np'hnrs that Goode’s pord as & vartisan is most decidedly of offensivo sort, and that he lacks the litiontions for the position he ocoupie: ‘while his violation of all the precedents d practice of the department of justice his haste to serve the Pan- tric eeulators, obviously with the expect ot strengthening himself i the re- d of the attorney general, demon- tea that he is capable of being roughly unserupulous. —————— Sexaror Hoag, chairman of the com- pittee on privileges and clections, has ued & card by unanimous authority of eommittee, pronouncing untrue the blished statement that Senator Logan ested that the votes of the committee the question of investigating the g THE action of the senate in rejecting 1 3 r rge of bribery in the election of Sen. Payne be kept secret. It is well that ral Logan—at whose instance, of , the doeu 15 made—realized the nate position in which the report i bis injunction of secrecy placed him, the denial does nothing to remove a as to whether the motive and intiu- that instigated Senator Logan to against an investigation are entirely endable. The senator will have opportunity to vote upon the and his action will be awaited very considerable intcrest, and per- some anxiety. The Same 014 Yelp, The people of Fillmore county who at- tended the Fourth of July celebration at N | stream of the Atlantic. Grafton will be surprised to learn that | Rosewater “‘sneaked away from home' to d r an anti-monopoly harangue on Independence day which he has taken great pains to suppress in order that the Union Pacific manag Id not tak offen This char coming from t Union Pacific Republican job office, is very eruel and smacks of ingratitude to eay the least. The fact that Roscwater was to deliver an address at Graf ton on the Fourth of July was m open seerct 8o far as hand bills and advertisements printed in th | ¥ yre county papers could make it he presence of o very large audience Lindicate that the pe of that on of the country were not kept in ignorance of the event, It mav have been an offense in Rosewater not to blow his trumpet about Lis “‘grand oration’ in the columns of the Bre, but it certainly was no fault of his that no report was published, The speech, with the excep tion of some ext was enti wets read, oft-hand, and if it was “‘off-color,’’ as the railroad organ intimates, no apol therefor will be made to the Union Pa any other railroad Passing by the indecent persons which this Fourth of July sy has called forth as beneath contempt, we will say that this paper and its editor do not need to define or to defend its with regard to the railroads. Their views are well known and nave undergone no change. The principles which they in volve are as immutable as the eardinal principles which gave life to the repub lican party. The discussion of the principles and the need of stemming the tide of corporate aggression were proper subjects for review on the anniversary of the birth of American independence The Union Pacific job oft s need- lessly alarmed. Tt's places apper of railroad bosses and the job- hers, will not be usurped by this paper. The Bk has ample patro from the common people and needs no railroad pap to stiffen its spine or drive the wolf away from the door. We have nothing to ask of any railroad outside of fair deal- ing as a common carvier. We havenever waged personal war on railroad mana- gers unless they have done dirty work whicl no reputable man would engage in. Those who have acted as gentlemen and good citizens have neve had reason to complain of bad treatment from us. When the offensive methods of corporation managers and corporation politics enter into debate, we handle the subject without kid gloves. This has been our usage and policy for yes 1t will not be changed during the present cam- vaign, even though the whole pack of job office wolvi citie or lassaults ch course are iet .o0se. The Hennepin Canal Debate, Every effort to induce the construction of the Hennepin canal by government aid promptly brings the railrond lobhy swarming into the capitol at Washing ton, The debate in the senate on Satur day over the Hennepin canal appropria- tion item is an instance in point. That valiant champion of monopoly, Ing: of Kansas, was promptly on hand to d¢ nounce the scheme as * iolation of the 1aws of nature” and ‘‘as nst the hest sts of the west.”’ int To Mr. ingalls anything is iolation of the laws of na- ture which violates the laws of corporate pool and other methods to provent natural competition and any plan is against the interest of the west which tends to lower the power of corporate monopolies to pay exorbitant intereston their bonds and stock obligations. The Hennepin canal projeet is too well known in its general features to require extended di ion. If carried into ef- fect it will join the waters of the Missis- sippi and the great lakes by an open commereial highw la enough to transport all the produce of the west and cheap enough to afford every shipper a r return on his investment. With its completion the western farmer could be independent of Iroad charges on his product from the great river to New York harbor. Grainsent from the Iowa shore could be unloaded in the clevators of the Hudson without traversing a mile by rail. The Hennepin canal, the lakes and the Erie canal in combmation would form one continuous route by water un- trammelled by pools and undisturbed by the schemes of stock gamblers and rail- rond wreckers, The E waal s the groat regulator of railroad rates between Chieago and New York. The Hennepin al would extend the wholesome com- petition along the whole length of the Mississippi valley. No wonder that the railroads have watched the projeet with growing alarm and that ail the efforts of their lobby 15 being put forth to defeut the measure in congress. The Erie canal has carrvied 6,000,000 tons of freight in a single year. [tsinflu ence in determining rates, according to 50 good an authority as Albert Fink, “oxtends to every part of the country.'’ It's free and open waterway saves the producers of this country from twelve to fifteen millions annually. The Hennepin canal would be scarcely less eflicient. 1t would pay for its estimated cost of 7,000,000 every year in the tolls it would save to western producers. At the same time it would forever abolish the exorbit- ant freight tarifls with which western railroads are wringing from the pockets of our farmers the largest share of the results of their toil Alaska. The expedition sent by the Times to explore Alaska has aroused new New York interest in that country. The BEee has been in receipt of several inquires r speeting that portion of Uncle Sam’s possessions. Alaska was purchased from Russia by the United States in 1867, the price paid being $7,200,000, It contains 550,000 square miles of territory. Com ed with other countries it is larger than Great Britain, France and Germany combined. Twelve states of the size of Pennsylvania could be placed within its boundarie The line from north to south measures 1,400 mules, a distance equal to that which separates Maine from Florid e extreme western island is as far west of San Franci Maine is east from the same point, so that in the United States “'the sun never sets.” In Behring sea are two small islands which yield the United States a revenue of $300,000 a year. Since 1870 this revenue has f paid for the whole of Alaska, and this, too, in sealskins alone. The Youkou is one of the largest rivers in the world, and is navigable for 1,500 miles, with a distance of seventy-five miles | purch | the pr across its mouth, rarely falls to zero in winter, or rises above 80¢ in summer, owing to the Japan current, which corresponds to the gulf In general there diversity of climate, and alth is found in spruce and hemlock lumber, gold-bearing rock, furs and salmon. This is the country whose o by Mr. Seward was denounced ce of reckless national extrava is wide Alaska’s asap gance. Ireland’s Victory. The British elections, on their tace, a defeat for Mr. Gladstone's plan of self government for Ireland, The returns are not all in. Nearly a hundred are yet to be filled. But these will not ma vially affeet the proportion of political parties ready determined. The min istry isdefeated and with the ministry the ministerial plan for and an Trish parliament at Dublin goes down for ent. Lord Salisbury will doubt less be called upon to form a government whose only aim will be to postpone the issuo which called the present election into existence seats home rule Admitting all this, the friends of Ireland have still strong reasons for congratulating them- selves upon the result of their ap- peai to the country. What these reasons are ay be scen from the brilliant cable specials printed in this edition of the Beg, Four years of the nationalist camp h wrought a remarkable cha British opinion. The of Dr. Butt have become under Py and Gladstone a solid ph two hundred and fifty Eng! Welsh and Irish members of parliament, eleeted tosupport Gladstone's plan, while fully three hundred British boroughs have declared for the primeiple of Irish autonomy. Such aremarkable reversion of public opinion can searcely be called a de- feat. Gladstone is defeated but Ireland has won a victory whose fruition cannot be long delayed. In the words ot James O'Kelly, “One million British voters have recorded their opinion in the ballot boxes thirty home rulers rne'l that Ireland should be granted bome rule.” Ounly cleven hundred thousand have voted against Mr. Gladstone’s par tieular plan, What wonderful has the nationalist movement made since the time not many months ago when its leaders lay in Kilmainham jail and their followers were hunted like hares by the spies of Downing strect. If to convert strides two hostile seetions of Great Britaim to her views and to bring to their support nearly a half of the entir vot- ors of th three countrics is to win a victory, lreland's triumph though not yet full and complete is one in which all her sons and every lover ot ]lI~I¥ ¢ mi \ wel l] r The tide is se Iyancing waves of y washing over the rocks judice and bigotry. The sar at hand when its irresistible fore will wash away every obstruetis which with totterig foundations now in- terposes between Erin and her hope: Progress at the Equator. While the struggie for Irish home rule makes a demand upon American atten tion to tie exelusion of most other foreign matters, it must not be supposed thatthere are none others haying an interest for the friends of political progress. In other lands than Ireland there are earnest men who are battling to the full extent of their opportunities to secure the political advancement of their fellow citizens and to replace an oid order of things which has become intolerable with a political system more in harmony with the ad- «l and progressive views of the an probably beonly a few years more beforeslavery in Brazil will be entirely wiped out, and meanwhile the libers party in the empire, which is growing in strength and influence, is voting its eftorts to the reform of munici- pality administrations, which are fettered with many restrictions in their autonomy. The demands of the libe rty » for an inerease of the franchise and an en- largement of the functions and powers of the municipal chambers—a tem of local or county government which appe to be somew similar to that proposed by Mr. Ch, lain for Ireland, though pert extended 0. While the reform is conceded by the conservatives, they make an issue on the question of ex- tending the franchise, scouting all idea of any approach to universal sufl The mistake made by the liberals a few ity of years ago, in allowing a large number of voters to be disqualificd, they have not yet recovered from, and as yet the con- wtives, who are made up chiefly of the moneyed classes, are able to control lozisiation. But they are steadily losing strength, and they peet that by the end of another decade the views and pol: of the liberal will dominate th »|mmn-s and legislation of the wealthiest and most pupulnr state ot South America, with the certainty that this result must ultimately transform the government of Brazil to the republican form. The influences operating to this end have been less potent than wonld otherwise have been the case by reason of the fact that the government of Dom Pedro has not been seriously oppressive, while it has been liberal in developing the empire, but when the question of a successor is reached these influences will assume a force that may be found irve- sistible. Tue republicafis of Pennsylvania on Thursday nominated a state ficket and announced the platform upon which they will fight the campaign. The ticket is headed by General Beaver, who was de- feated four years ago, chiefly because his nomination was ccured by tne Cameron machine, against whieh ther was at that time o rather vigorous popu- lar revolt. Heis a man of r ability but is to some extent necessarily handi- capped by the ciroumstance of his past political tions. The declarations of the platform on the subject of the tariff are in the usual vein, showing that the Pennsylvania republicans have made no 28501 progress in this question, and perhaps none was to have been expected. The prohibition movement is likely to play a very important part in the coming cam- paign, and democeratic hope is that its effect will be to weaken the republican DE LEssEps has asked the French prime minister to withdraw the lottery loan bill, doubtless wduced thereto by the un: nimity of American sentiment in opposi tion to the French government b in any way identified, directly or indircctly, with the Panama canal. The engiucer N 1 At Sitka the mercury | reserves the | for subseriptions to & hew issue of shares a proceeding which woutd be entir | ]‘!’Hll«u and doubtl not very pre PropanLy the heard ¢ W. Fuller, respectively Gladstonian eandid Wbused each other guards and then eng: encounter from which badly b ap. Th worthy of a reference sim ken bitterness in and that exhibit as much Ameriea, not confined to the repul 1d be rectified disablod by the shou soldiers manded party. But for veterans eyery exposed funds for unworthy in the the bene pension cause are deserving as well cants will suffer seve ment in a raily plishment being Ge half a pound boarding hous restaur, that of butte ORTY-FIV}E Boston for the west, R the scarcity of women i matrimonial market has s bireh wiclders Free whisky and tobs res for food accepted by the produc the much vaunted tarift pr selyes. HeNky WARD By in London on Friday, bert T, mittee report. Beecher rose ) ScorLanp, Ireland manfully together for and many months h ssed Cy CLEAN the alley should see that they the streets in a filthy condition. FLORIDA newsp lishing the tempe groves not att ature act immigration. 1 British lion. land as Canon rrar w States. Honors are eve Yy Warn Bk He i THER s big son why the poorest bank not visit Canad being captured. T to be some distance off. it. tes this week. PIRATICAL pape: fina field for theiv for 0 democratie n Toledo, Angust 17, reported t loman Chase, General Chalmers September, Blaine's friends are now popularity sury the days of Hen St. John is s prohibition nom Seeond Kansas dist Clay. ation ety “The Savannah News points out that pro sented alone hibition is more _successful than when joined with other Senator Fair and Mr. Macka, Levi I, publican election tion,” Some of the mugwump suceess in “almost cer munds in Vermont, very useful or to iy tions for campaign purpbs ment clerks don’'t kuow about it, lution for amendment, St. Loufs Post-I “United we get into the we staud out in the cold. — f Lord Harry Thynne that political warfareis we ism as incidents of politics school teac! home D} land will be whipped into line before the North icans will hold no state convention, the Maine greenbacker, falls into line with the republican party. is again a candidate for congress in the Second Mississippi district. The Massachusetts republican convention will probably not meet before the midd —— an conservative f they ina y they s ocenre ply as Engla ions of al con lie by service people irrespective of fit of deserving fraud should be Wholesale voting of l-n\»lw cases will certainly etion in sentiment from which as undeserving ant, hes she can speuk man and make sixty sandwich n the tarted Leeo nd clothing will of the wi form to which both political parties have pledged them- d his s , was bounced by the senate There is a thorn to every 1 Wales stand rule. of the Is jus i gun s i the United the BE ing shears. TS, Car saying that his ses auything known since e issues, y have ory 45 10 s just ction., One. pateh, Union; Motto for Dakota, New Song. Judge. “There is & new son Keely. 1t is entitlea, His Motor,"” —— ©Ohio Too Fresh. Pittsturg Chron A lake of salt water has ile. been in any Liberal pensions for ans right to appeal to the |»u¥-‘-r‘ world would never ha 1 Mr had ke a couple of bla gili emerg nee show red with quite s rafli tosts A cLosE scrutiny of the president’s pen- sion vetoes should be made It injustice has been done congress A vouxa lady advertises tor employ 1 acc keeners please copy. hers have ] weste A genu- ine emigration fever among the Baston and high never 1nER was banqueted on, Hi o The city authorities are kept At present many of them clean as rers have stopped pub oran Just at present the tables would t now a in k Wrrn railroad fares only 810 from Ne- braska to Toronto, there is no good rea- hier should RONIMO is once more on the verge of verge will be tound Within Miles of Toere were 179 failures in the United 5 The biggest one was atlure of Jupiter Pluvius. Tue weathe: said to wilt the presi- dential collar but it has no effect upon the exceutive veto. A TEN dollar rate to Toronto and re- turn is much cheaper than staying sat home. convention takes olina d to be willing to accepta i for congress in the ‘The Virginia City enterprise denies that adjus their differences and becowme friends, Morton considers the chanees of re the next presidenti n with a wise nomina- Gath says a man without fortune does him- self great injustice in going to congress, Un- less he has ample means he b above the lower level, A citizens’ commltee s been formed Washington to receive voluntary contribi- The depart- what to do how to be “The strength of the prohibition movement in Pennsylvania was recoznized by the re- publican convention when it adopted a reso- the submission of a prohibitory Congressman Dingley lias been a life-tong prohibitionist and one of the most effective temperance workers in Maine, but the pro- hibitionists have nominated a candidate congress to oppose his re-cle: A Very Good Iuis dedieated to My ot Me Kill Him for tound and ense appli ely in the end. confess their surprise at the undoubtéd strength de- veloped by the opposition 10 Senator Ed- divided cly v not ck- | stie rod is i in an are m- oft b items upon ern est or- m 3 re- of ted for at krnn Ohio, 1000 feet below Qho surface. ven nature recognizes that Ohlo istoo fresh. - Will Be :\pprm IMN‘ Girand Isiand Times. The Omala Ber can afford to put on airs becausc of its increased telegraphic facilitios sccured by an arrangement with the New York Herald for special foreign cables dir from New York City. 1t is a stre ntor- | prise that will be appreciated by the reader of the Bk, ——— The Bee as an Advertising Medinm. Cedar Rapids (Neb) Republican John Landis recently desired to seeuro A blacksmith, and advertised for one in the “special” columns of the Omaba Beg. In two or three days after its uppearance the repliescame rolling in by the score from all pa wa and Nebraska. Such is th value of printers’ ink - The Leading Newspaper of the West, Fromont Tribun The Omahia Bex has just enlianead its tel egraphic facilities by securing the New York Herald's special foreign cables, which are wired to it direct from New York city. Tiis is a big feather in the Brr'scap. Itisin the line of policy which has made the BEr the leading newspaper of the west, to ultimately make it one of tiic tial in America. and which is wost inthn - What is Life s in Philadelphia Novth American, and then to die, "To joy and then to sorrow, ) laiigh and then to ery, And endless trouble bortow, To win and then to los ) love and then to pal o Ky o b V. Duik To live wrief’s heavy pangs, a burdened heart: To work and daily stri ‘The woal of life towin To grasp with seliish greed ‘Ihe fruits of wayward sin. To feel a thirst for more T'han earth ean ever give— To live and then to die, And to forever live, i Mo B STATE AND TERRITORY. Nebraska Jottings, An artesian wellis to be sunk at Me Cook Dodge county claims n premium for rays i pork. Rushville wants a starch factory to stiften her front. The canine race in Grand Island was w until December, s of North Platte muzzled by The 1 g have let the contract for a church to cost $7,000 Tracklaying s commenced on the Lincoln branch of the Elkhorn Valley road, The Knox County Democrat and Hast- ings Independent made their appearance lust week The luying of the corner stone York county court house has been poned to July 24. Rudolf Cumback and Theresa Goet, g ‘oncluded to go it together jed last weel A large party of Iowa prohibitionists celebrated in” Blair and punished im- mense quantities of the ardent. O. Y. Williams, an insurance crook, with consider ul experience, vietim- ized a widow in Nemaha county. “The pr hicken crop does not ap- pear to be eficeted by the drouth. Pot- \unters are the only cnemies in sight, The F ys are willing to give the Union Pacific club another tussle,pro- 30 for expenses, ke Morgan's earcer as publisher, as well as postmaster, at Kearney, is ended. of the Dost- of and R.W.Revnolds has purchased thie Courier, Work is progressing rapidly on the bridge over the Missouri lo. The framy tor the second p Clark Byrum, a B. & M. train man at Nebras] City, has taken a ln off to nurse a fractured limb. A coal” bucket fell on it. Frank opening s carly ready, of Tamory, fired the and blew a MeCann, sulute with an anvil section of his leg out of town. He will invest in a crutch Rev. J. T. Sriiith, of O'Neill, who ha heen transferred to Cheyenne, was the ‘ecipient of numerous valuable gitts from s old parishione The Hebron Iyne the appearance in avenging brother. They hand in the unexpected d 1.‘.\1 A petition is Crecciving signatures in Blair asking the] county commissioners to submit a_proposition to issue $30,000 in bonds to build a court house The business of the last quarter of the fiseal year was the heaviest in the history of the North Platte In 'he en- tries amoun 25 of land and the are alarmed over their midst of an r Al Owen 38, The Ei will begin this week a fast train service betwee Chi- eago and the Black Hills, The tume to Omaha will be eut_two hours, and that sed will be continued to Rapid City 'om MeGift, a Hastings tough, earessed his brother's wife with his hoot and kicked her out of her own house, Tom rted pork and beans, but will be con- tn nted with bread and water in j A Butler county aspirant for tive honors is described as soft-h palms unealloused by toil, parts his | in the middle, pig mouth and bellows, and the possessor of two galls, Rev. Father Cassidy, who was tran ferred from Rawling, Wyo., to O' city, received a gold leadad a sil- ver set and a woll filled purse from his old parishoners on the eve of his de- partur Mrs. A Wentworth, of Nemaha county, was induced to take out a life iuiumnu, policy for $1,000. Her fivst payment, note for 10, turncd up ten days nrwr raised to $44, and she is still waiting for the policy. Norfolk tackled the waterwor! question. A petition asking the city coun cil to submit a proposition 1o & vote of the people, is beiug generally signed. v is estimated that 000 will secure a first-class plant, Liberty's shrine was thoroughly car mined at Auburn. Harry Cole dropped two fingers in the cogs of an ice cream freczerJohn Morrison fell out of » wagon and broke a leg, and Bert Whittield se cured a center shot from a large gun Surpy county is ngain agitating the question of 4 voting bonds and building « il. It iselaimed that $1,000 is paid an. nually for quarters in the Donglas county il, and that this sum would more than ¢ the interest on the amount required 1o build a juil, A well developed ease of hydrophobia oceurred in Grand fland last v The young son of Chris Reese died of the ef- ts of a dog bite, and s symptoms showed all the pec ulinritios of the dreaded dise They also showed that imagin- ation had n.-nn“;_( to do with develop ment of the disease, as the child was too young to exercise that faculty Fremont claims the champion fraud of the state, His name is C.F. Guild, @ meek and measly engineer. The T bune's biography shows that he jumped the country leaving his mother destitute and sick abed, dono up his partner, J. D Patterson, r $1,000, eashed a check for $32 and left scores of unsettled bills in other hands. Pass him aroun That was adaisy family procossion that took in the main street of Nebraska City one day last week. It was ted by the father, u six-footer, weight 225; next enme the mother, & delieate, fair-haired, biue eyed littl 115 pounds. who we children Woman The \ed | followed in rs, eight of them, four sets of twins, the oldest fonrtecn, and the youngest Seven years ch pair wore u distiug tive suit Henry Hartz, a Hebrom stone cutter, extonded his patriotic howl boyond the allotted three days and essayed the pugi- listic act with a local preacher, The meek and lowly man humbled himsel? long enough {0 point a moral and adorn Henry's countenance I'he ministerial gestures were singularly eloquent and effective. Two hours later he had pailed his cows and was ding his class through the byways ‘How much will it cost to send a lettor to Vermont® iquired a blooming conm try girl at the Springtcld I'wo conts, Miss,'* responded oratic p. m. “Why, Postmaster Spea man charged me 2 ¢ 15t year to | aletter to Papillion.” T am not st prised at that,” said the obliging p. m.; | Uthat was the way things were run under rep ican rule.’”” And the . g left the oflice with an enlarged idea of reform Dr. 8. C, Warren, of Syracu Now York, lied to Nebraska a few years ago sccured a divoree at Fairbury and mar ried a woman who journeyed westward with him, Some time after he sottled in Vincennes, Ind., where e was arrested He was taken to Syracuse, tr on the charge of bigamy d convieted, The jndge declined to allow the plea of his ska divoree, holding that_the only iid ground for divoree in New York was lultery. The doctor appealed the case to the United States supreme, and pend ing a decision he was admitted to bail This is & warning to divoree huntors who come west to grow up with fresh wives Town Items. Mashalltown is threatened with a det- ocratic daily. wneis Murphy will invade the state with red ribbons in September meet at soldiers Hardin county veterans will Eldora August 25 and unveil a monument The eircuit court of Poli county elosed a continuous session of eleven months on the Gth ourteen persons were poisoned by nned salmon at Fort Madison, They were suceessfully pumped he Ottumwa rowing erew attribute their remarkable good luck to the se vices rendered them by their mascotte, a bob-tailed bull pup. A man in Mahaska county has seven sons who do not smoke, driuk nor swear are all members of church, and all vote the same party ticket A brick muason, while asylum_at Clarin becanie overheated and fell from the third story to the ound, He is believed to be fatally in- Jured. Two Bedford youngsters, aged seven and eleven, got into a qu el and the younger one struck the other in the tem- ple £0 hard as to probably Milict a mor- tal wound Potato bugs are so ravenous around Burlington that they mnvade the newspa- ver offices and seizé the puste. Contribu- tions from nighboring towns are sufli- ciently liberal to avert a suspension of tho papers working on the Dakota. Water mains are being la wdale wus dusted by id in Mitehell, a eyclone on e 700 Seven-Day Adventists by a dozen ministers in the ter- ng of tramps, quartered near rep the police in i sw the residents. Blizzard has nished from the The Dbreath of Manitoba will The territory supply the vacuum next winter. Sioux Falls is disgusted with gas and electrie street lighting, and her cconomic council willinvest in tallow dips Numbers of farmers propose to boyeott the chineh bug by recing not to plunt a kernel of wheat for nine Last spring a Dakota editor was treated to a package of congressional elover s He planted it and is now cultivatin thriving pateh of turnips beside his front door, —— Colorado Scnatorial Aspirants. New York Tribune: Senator Bowen's m will expire with this session of con- ss and the legislature soon to be Mmh-ll will sclect his successor. Hes a candidate for re-clection and his friends say he will be able tosecureit. Ex- senator N. I Hull, who was defeated by Mr. Teller two 0, has beeome bound up clokely his extensive business aff ing not over anxious to_contest Sei Bowen's seat, although it was generall) exvected that he would do so.” Senator Hill's family would like to return to ington and that may influence him :coming a candidate. Another man as his eyes on the scnatorship and 4y known to the nation, 15 or” H. A. W. Tabor, the loro of newspaper articles without num- ber on the subject of night shirts and diamonds, I am told that Mr. Tabor has recovered his luck, which was somewhat down for two or_three years. He has re cently raised 1 the mortgages on his Colorado property, by scearing o loan at a low rate of interest from castern in- surance companies, by whieh he is ns sured an income over and above his in- srest engagements of L sufliciently b ome sum for do millionair he man from whom Senator Bowen has most to fear is said to be David H, Moflat, who is i no Sens indidate. As president of the First National bank of Denyer and of the Denver & Rio Grand road, besides being interested heavily in min- ing and othier Colorado enterprises, Mr. in that he 1s reported Moflat bas scoured a strong hold on the affections of the Colorado |nup|o He 13 entirely without political ambition ard for this reason has the support of two widely differing classes. One is the solid and substantial element thauis always to be found in_any community which likes to see the offi cek the man, The other is that numerous class of ward politicians and strikers who ure never happy until they can drew a man of wealth into a fight for oftice, during which they hope to be able to pluck him freel So far Moflat has ised to vive any connten to the talk about fim- self for the place. e A meeting of the board of trade will be held Monday evening, when itis expeeted that a lively discugsion of the Fort Omaha place. vemoval bill will tuke Carefor the Childres Children feel the debility of the changing seasous, even more thaw adu d they bes come cross, pecvish, and uncontrollable, The blood should be cleansed and the system invigoratcd by the use of Hood's Sarsaparilla. my two children were vaccl , they broke all out with e # sores, s0 dyeadful I thought 1 should loso Js Barsaparilla cured them come 4 they have Lean healthy ever feel that Hood's Sarsaparilla ehildren to me Mus, C La West Warren, Mass Purify the Blood Tood s Sarsapariila is characterized ny peculiarities : 158, the combination o \edial sgents; 24, the propertion; 3d, the vocess of securing the active medicinal The amedicine of ut ual s hitherto unknown, & additlonal evidenee, pariils tones up iy evstem perines ny blov 3 ny appetite Jme 1o Hake wie 41 Fioabaon, Hegister of Deeds, Lowsll, Mass “Hood's Barsapanila beats all ofthers. and £3 ot 18 we 171 BAKKINGTON, 132 Bauk w1k Oy, Hood’s Sarsaparilla by ail drageiste. 815 alx for 46, Niade 9aly by G L HOOD & CO., Lewell, Mass, 100 Cosce One Daliaw | PAIN- KILLER 18 RECOMMENDED BY Physiclans, Ministers, Missi of Tactorics, Work-s Nureo n Hopitala<in snort, eve body everywhere who has ever given it a trial TAKEN INTERNALLY 1T WILL T FOUND A NEVE FAILING CURE FOR SUDDEN COLDS, CHILLS, PAINS IN I'HE STOMACH, CRAMPS, SUM- MER AND BOWEL COM- PLAINTS, SORE PHROAT, &o ATPLIED EXTERSALLY, IT 18 THE MOST RFFECTIVK AND DEST LINIMENT ON BARTH FOR CURING SPRAINS, BRUISES, NEURALGIA BURNS, FROST-BITES, &o. RHEMATISM IFOOTH ACHE, Prices, 20c., 60c. and $1.00 per Bottle. FOR SALE BY ALL MEDICINE DEALERS (#™ Bewaro of Imitations. &3 Nebraska National Bank OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Paid up Capital. .. .. ... Buplus May 1, 1885 . H. W, Yarks, Presidont. A E. Touzavniy, V Prosidont. .. $250,000 . 25,000 W. H, 8, Hucugs, Cashior, 8t W. V. Monr, L "Jnu Coruing, Ho W, Yares, ALK TouzaLiy, BANKING OFFICE: Lewis S, Rekp, THE IRON BANK., Cor. 12th and Farnam Stroots. General Banking Buainoss Pransastale WOODBRIDGE BRO'S., State Agents FOR THE DeckerBro'sPianos Omaha, Neb. is fui At Yy lted by Binpto L giving DR. IMPEY, 1502 FARIT.AM ST, Practice limited to Diseases ovver 1 RE LS WA < 8 '8 174 Fulon Sireer. New Yorks of tho EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT, 2] 829 BGO wore shipped dur tw mer in curemploy. Ono agon wanted in o Tansill’s Punch Cigars e tho past urs, withone & drum- No othor Lougo iu the world enn truthe fully muke such @ showing. 80LO BY LEADINC DRUDEISTS. R.W.TANSILL &CO0.,55 State St.Chicago. Templeton & Whitney, ~—Dealersin— HARD AND SOFT COAL AND 00D, Rock Sp and Iowa Soft Coal. gs, Hlinois, Oflice—218 South Fifteenth st, Yards—Eighteenth nd 1zavd 1[\!. DOCTOR Missourl WHITTIER 617 St. CharlenSt., St. Louly, Mo, A regular graduts of two Medieal Collcges, by tlon, Physical Weakne! llnm of Throat, Skin or Bone: old Sores and UICers, are treated with woparall SuEnabh on IntestselcobiBe prinolpies Sarely, Privats Diseases Arising from Indiscretion, Ex Exposure or Indulgence, which produce somo FoNbwing ciocts : nervousnoss, denility, ais i e, rusion o o Ranapy Von the o Boe or by mail frec, lnvited 5y d st: sitive Written G ase, Medicine seat o rably beon fonger nvovs, Sate o 1n B4, Louls, Mental and i Mercurial and other Afface BIuonPolsonlnfl. wan Tollowlng ) ot Wiy § maulicod, wor Bo0d. phya ofectibacy und excess, the phys. 1ology of re conttial Those misrsied o T geiar callog: 0’0" br. Whlkler, J. B, HAYNES & 00, STENOGRAPHERS, 1511 Dodge 8t., Omaha. TYPE WRITER COPYING Ladies Do you want a pure, bloom- ing Lonmloxlnul jl’ 50, & fow ap) licanions i Heean’s MAGNOLIA BALM will grat= ify you to your heart’s con- tenf, It does away with Sal- lowness, KRedness, Pimples Blotehed , and all cl’lsumw #ud imperfections of the skin. 1t overcomes the flushed appear~ ance of heat, fatigue and ex- citement, ltmukmulndn;f a1 lllll'l‘Yappl' ar but TWEN- 1'Y 3 and so natural, gradual, and’ perfoct are ils effects that 1t is impossible to detect its application -~ e