Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY BEE PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. Daily (Morniag Edition) lacluding Sunday % DI ENODETORE. vs oo ce.voss Biarssvons s, SIGOY Tor Six Months (301 i Three Mot aie 2w rhe Omabn Swnday B, midled to any nddress, OO Y OAL. . sosspusonesres S0 0. 918 A%D, ¥, ROOM 5, TRIN & B, NO. 018 FOURTRENT11 & CORRESPONDENCF ! munieations relating to news and ed uld be addrossed Lo tho Lot OMATIA OTFICE, N NEW YORK ¢ WASHINGTON OF All o torinl YR 0 at THE DY RUSTERE TRTTERRS AN busine addrossed to Tz OMATA, DER(s, checka aig 10 be made payable to th TH Bt PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPETORS T, ROS ATER, Evrorn. oFo the cor THE DAILY BHE, Sworn Statement of Circulation. State of Nebraska, 1 Connty of Dot Geo. B, Trsehuek, Publishing company, that the actugl circulat for the weck ending Nov. follows: Saturday, Nov. 20... Sundav. Nov. 21.. Monday, Nov. Tuesdny. Noy Weds 5. Nov Thuorsday, Nov Friday, Nov. 2 Average. weerotare of The Bee loes solemnnly swear n of the Daily Lee ith, 1856, was a3 Subseribed and sworn to before me this 27th ny of Noveubor, A. D., 185, N. P FEir, ISEALI Notary Publie, Geo. 13, Tzsehuek, belug fimst duly sworn, deposes and says that he is secretary of the Bee Publishing company, that the actual av erave daily of ion” of the Daily Bee for the month of Janna ropies, for February, 188, 10, r March: 1556, 11 s | coples: (or May, 156, 12, 1885, 12,208 coptes: for July, 1856, 12,314 copies | for Auenst, 159, 12,464 eopiesifor Sentember, 1850, 15,050 coples; for October, 1856, 12,050 copies, Gko. B, Tzscnvek, SYRACUSE in Otoe county has struck conl. The mama for black diamonds seems to be spreading m Nel NEBRASKA republicamem is sound on the tariff, It knows n tax when it sees it, nowever digguised under hifalutin names and coneealed in false economic theories. Mr. Auuson isemd to have declined in advanee the presidential nominati The! might be f: worse selections made than that of the Town statesman. And the ight ve bette aror - VAN Wryek is attending ctly to business in Washington He feels satisfied to leave Ius canvuss in the hands of his friends, and finds no cause for worry over the situation, SE stri I spite of Mr. Stone’s pleadings and the teavful remonstrances of the mug- wumps, Mr. Cleveland firmly declines to reinstate the suspended oflici The mugwumps have been asking the presi dent for bread and he gave them a Stone. Tnedemocerats of the District of Colum- bia are preparing to renew the fight against Matthews, the colored recorder ot decds of the district, when his appoint- ment again goes to the senate for con- firmation, Colored men everywhere who have democratic tendencies will be inter- ested in this fact. Russ1a is negotiating another extensive Joun, Germany is increasing the size of her standing army, and Turkey is strengthening the fortifieations of the Dardanelles. These are significant signs of an opening overture of heavy guns somewhere when the snows of spring leave the sides of the Balkans. WirLiay Crirrorp, of Maine, has been recommended tor the Lurkish mission by Secratary Bayard. Mr. Bayard sought his latest foreign mivister frow a prohibition state, hoping, probably, to prevent a renewal of the Manning in- cident. But is Mr. Bayard aware that Neal Dow pronounces prohibition as ad- ministored in Maine a failure? Tue. Northwestern bas sury through route from Sioux City to North Platte. Now let the Missouri Pacific build from Omaba to Yankton and tap for this eity the eastern counties of Northern Ne- braska, now bound hand and foot to the Northwestern road. Omauha will try to take eare of her western trade. What she needs are inlets into the northwest and southwest portions of the state, now controlled by lines not overfriendly to her merchants. ANOTHER Buit involving thousands of dollurs and o large amount of Omaha city property has been decided by the supreme court adversely to the assailants of a twenty years' title. Oursupreme court has adopted a uniformly conserva- tive course 1n questions of this character. Their line of deaisions give cold comfort for the sharks and harpies who bang around every eourt records waiting to find flaws by which they may profit through the inunocent mistakes and the migfortunes of others, Wirn capital and labor engaged in fierco conflict the western furmer stands between and receives the blows of both, He s taxed to i se the prolits of the eastern capitalist and the eastern work- mgmuan, He vorrows his money from the castern manufacturer and fulls a vietin to combinations of eastern indus: trial monopolists, Thure ne wmoney of western farme seeking eastern loan from western farm viffs on their produc- ng to tax eastern consumers. The taxation is altogether one-sided Tne friends of the Hennepin canal pro joot do not despair, although their ex- perience thus far has not justified thei; hopes. 1t was understood that a number of them were to wait on the president this week forthe purpose of asking him to make a favorable reference to the canal in his message. It has not trans. pired whether they were successful in see- ing his excellency, who has recently been somewhat impatient of interruptions in the preparation of his wnnual recom mendations, and it is possible they coun- cluded not to run the canal into his line of thought at this vital juncture. But whether or not the president shall say anything on the subjcet, it is the inten- tion of the friends ot the project to agui urge it with inoreased zoul and vigor. The board appointed to examine the sub ject have their report completed, snd it will be among the firét documents pre- sented to congress. Not Sertted. 1t is n favorite ory of the rulitoad or gans of Nebraska that the anti-monopoly | is<ue has been wettled. Men and papers which persistin voicing the complmints | of shippet: dainet the diseriminations of | which are & burden upon the producers until the million pobulation of Nebraska | g, ion uniil the wrongs from which tho | people of Nobraska have suffored for rs end from swhich they are now suf- fering, nre righted. The rarlroads must be competled to comply with their oharter obligations as Ve me people and the corporations will remuin | o unsottled, puy for fair ser from common carcicrs will still romain whose seventieth birthday was last Wed- nesdiy, and Justices Miller, Field and | Bradley. Of these Justice Miller has been st in serviee, having been appointed | lon, 2. Next is Justice Field, by Lincoln in 1862, who wis uppointed in 1863, also by Lin- co! coln, Justice Bradtey was appointed in | ), both of them by Grant. They were ap- | 4, vointed respectively from lowa, Califor- | v, New dersey and Ohio: All of these tinguished jurists mie in vigorous | 4, health and the full possession of th mental powers, so that there is nothing impelling them to retirement unless it be nin thy th; a desire to pass the remaining y of | o their lives in quiet and leisure, frec fi m | the demands and constraints of impe 1 not be severely burdensome. They have none of the small details which annoy and perplex the judges of inferior courts, nor are they doomed to listen to so much of the wrangling and disputa tion of attorneys, which to a lIayn seems the most mtolerable requirement of a judicial career. From ther exalted ace in the temple of justice they can | review with calm and patient deliber- ation the issues that are presented for their final and unimpeachable judgment, unterrificd by any fears of political con- of ol th th juences to themselyes or of ill-effeets to | fallible. their juds rendered a few years ago,fthat all these undoubtedly - examples of inadequacy | W regarding any of them are extremel; rare in the history of the court, the rale being that the members of the supreme | he bench devote themselves to their grave duties with a profound sense of thewr great importance. i imposes some coustraint, and it unlikely that some or all of the four tices who may retire on full pay s will u condition to cnjoy life. ity of the members of the supreme benel are republicans. In the eyent of any of them retinng during the term of this ad- ministration they would of course be th sucee who are eligible to retirement should - copt their privilege the political com- | a plexion of the court would undoubtedly | hi be reversed. Itis not improbable that this fact will bave some woight in indue would nceent s place on the supreme | we beneh, as a welcome release from polit- | a icnl perplexities and contention, from which he probavly expeets ao further vantage. Two, years ago Mr, could perhiaps not have been induced ad- | fo to ve n moment's thought | n to accepting such n position, | th but his later experience must | fa: haye conviveed him that bis ambition to e president is a hopcloss desire. With lis politienl future somewhat elonded, it er of come the security and seclusion of an honorable judicial position. Another gentleman said to be not unwilling to | av self from polities at the end of his pres- eni term in congress, and whois a lawyer | in: of fine atlainments. But the president | ta would have no difficulty in tilling vacan- | mi cies, unless perhaps bis standard of merit and qualifications should be teo high. The justices of the supreme court other than Harlan, of Kentucky, appointed in 1877; | A William B. Woods, of Georgia, pointed in 1880; ‘Stanley Matthews, of Ohio, and MHorace Gray, of Massachus- etts, appointed in 1851, and Samue! Blatehford, of New York, appointed in 18 Justice Woods has been for some time in ill-heaith, and wiil not sit with his colleagues this winter. He would the debate crd publicon cone 1870, and Chief Justice Waite in 1871, | ine for themselve and wha © | when that paper v | an that point. presides. paper into an inperso: vopu n | the Bk course which measures in which the respon er 1 dacy at the ballot box. conditions are not complied with, but | men 7 | his calling and clection sure. believes that Van W when compared with th 1 been named as a competitor. Comparing the - | fidence in the i ¢ { backed by the he: In their political afliliations the major- | jority of Nebraska republicans years should be Bayard | prof property. light when they oppose ¢ is ensy to understand that he might wel- | cil to agree on & compromise. or & third time. ap- | character to that whick our postofl subsidies therefor, able to defeat the attempts of the British Pos Itke to rotire, but has not Leen long waough on the beneh mor attained the e refyuired o sccure & petsion, P Min@ing Its Hnsincss. A vepthiie s not foftile gronnd for dar- ¢ feats of diplomaey. Its tendency the rafironds, of farmers against grain | 40 jong run ds te mind its busimess and elovatot monopolies, and of the state | o are enough domestic problems to at large agaivst the exorbitant tollS | o140 jisattention without dabbliog dn matters onteide of its confines. Eventhe of this State, are ridiculed by the news- | gonch republic in the present critical papers whose byekbone consists of il | et i its Imtornational afairs, is yad patronage, and whose editors value | 3, nz a gennme disposttion to limit an annual pass move than the honest | i aorivities to its present boundaties— praise of their conatituents and this, too, with a ministry disposed to The anti-monopoly 1ssue is not scltled | qo rreat and brilliant things on foreign in Nebraska. Tt will never be settied | 5517 7o a French minister, who gets the sy without paying the bills, the temp are placed onan cquality.so far as rates | 4oy to figure in Furopoan politics is and tarifls are concerned with the peo- | groqt andeed. De Freycinet and ples of neighboring states. It will oon- | 1is istrionic minister of war have tinue to force itself as a subject of par been planning great things on pa- mount importanee upon public con per as the handmaid of the Russians, but n the budget has produced a ry sobering cfivet, The picture of a republic figuting as cup-bearer to the st powertul and most misorable auto tin the world is evidently too depres i to the people of France, The cham- cominon carriors. As long a8 railiond | yof deputics nave ruthiessly cut down tarifii in Nobraska ave double what they | (i estimates, and if signs count for arean lowa, a8 long as o hundred weight |\ oiping in France the present diplo of freght can be transported as cheanly | watic union between that vopublic and from biverpool to Omalia n8 it is from | Ry giais o mere paper one, Tt there is Oraha to Hastings, the issue between the | nncvitality m it at all, 1t is owing to the that Frauce bears to Germany y's speech of Premier de Lrey- t s proof enongh of the sobering red 1 the battle cry ot the producers of the | (yiotof popular opinion. It was a thor ong pacific speoeh, The mainte- 5 Z n; e said the premier. *fis _ The Suprome Court. the f and the er It is mot improbuble #hat before | ... <pudy,” andhe added that France the “expiratiguiiiot iathe torm' OF [ Jvust content berself with organizing her the present administration there | LT Glonial possessions. His ex will be soveral changes in the beneh | o ioq polief that the republic would of the United States Supreme court. | o4y 11ow Egypt to passinto the hands of eligible to retirement, with full pay, by | 1050 BEO G S reason of having attained the age of 50 years, These are Chief Justice Waite, o It is not our r Position. intention to engage in a ordy perzonal encounter with the 7 about the Bre anditscditor. h subjects, to which the rn has found it advi nsiderable attention e habit for many years past of through results ed no advertiseme: cir contempor ‘They it in the columns of s, What they are ¢ they have done the public by fully determined Jut sures its remders that e editor of the Bre does mot believe at Van Wyck can be olected, we feel lled upon tostate oneposition so clearly at there ean be no further controversy The Bee always repre- is time has tive duty. It is generally undeystood | sonts the sentiments of its editor. Its that the labors of u justice of the supreme | editorial columns voice his honest views court are not of the most arduous and | ypon the topics which they treat exacting character. It is undoubtedly | Phe editor of the Bee has no possible for the nine lawyers who con- | private opinion on private maticrs stitute that great tribunal to z¢ | which differs from his opinion open their dutics from time to time so thatthey | expressed in the paper over which he Ile has not icarned the lesson modern journalism which converts a ] entity in which and a shifting t mview. If 5 it has been ightforward dopted to- It has advoeated ble editor 'nestly believed, and has fought 1 the weapons atits command for cir success. All human judgment is But they hayve been honest mis- nsisteney has no ple rity is the sole obijc 1S Won any suc the honest, st it h wrds its constituency. rough al reputations from a veversal | takes of judgment and not the failures of their decrees. Stillthe supreme court | of dupheity, The Bee believes = that justices have a work and duty to perform | Charles H. Van Wyck will be whieh demands of them most careful at- | his own successor in the ional tention, exhaustive research, patient and | genate, It has no reason to believe th conscientious deliberation. Itmay some- | contrary. Public sentiment in his times bappen, as wasrecentlyoonfessed by | favor. A constituency which he has one of the justices inrespect of u decision | honored has pronounced for his candi- It pledges of are worth anything, General ck has to-day enough votes to make The Bre k will be elected, 1se no opponent worthy of choice senator has yet It has con- sober, common sense of tory of the supreme court of the United | the people of Nebraska who States with that of similar tribun have selected members of the legislature of other nations and none f suflicient in numberto voice their senti- a more bonorable rocord. Every duty | ments on the senatorialissue, It does ot | not believe, it bas bad no evidence to Jus- | makeit believe, that enough traitors have ces been found by the emissaries sent out for within the next year or two elect to do | that purpose to compass Van Wyck's 50, securing o merited and honorable re- | defeat. The BEk is confident of Van lease from further necessary labor while | Wyek's re-eleeti.n. It will work its best yet they ave physicadly and mentally in | to forward it, And in o doing it will be ety good will of a ma. and of ¢ producers of n great state. Iris bigh time that the slipshod and : expensive system of grade estublishment ded bydemoerats, and if the four | under has suffered for sed. Thereisscarcely street running east and west over the 1ls which has not been ent or filled a which Omaha half & dozen times on as many different profiles. Property owners have suffered ing a part or all of the septennavian jus- | more in cousequence of the repented tices to continne on at least until after | changes than they have from the result of the noxt presidential election, when in | the grade as finally established, There any event doubtless all of them will re- | has been absolutely no assuraunce that tire. ltis said that Secretary Bayard | the grade as determined this year the next, the be ersed proposition, uld not general As easiest gradient onmain thoronghfares is the bost r the interests of the city and the most ble for the owners of adjoining The street whieh is the most carly level attracts the travel and draws e trade. Lotts abutting lively thorough ves command the highest prices. Prop- ty owners, therefare, stand in their own radieal change ade at the outset and force the eoun A short experience with the street as changed shows the nes essity 1d the same proce of farther grading s of dismantled door wear the ermine is J. Rundolph Tucker, | yards, impeded travel and general in of Virginia, who desires to divorce him- | convenience must he undergone a second Cutting off a limb by che the most painful kind of ampu- tion. Where heroic surgery is needed inor operations are barbarous. — ‘I'uk British postoflice departmont is en. gaged 1 a contest with the steamer those aboye named are Jobn M. | lines which nave for years d the \rin ce des merican mails somewhat sii partment had with the Pacitic steamship company. The three English lines which have enjoyed a monopoly in the trans- itic mail carrying, receiving liberal bave lutherto been department to break the monop- the fastest stean complish this ma the late Postmast unsnecessful termined to has made cont the lines forme ure is wholly 1 11 n t dited service, which it scemed impossibl to obtain under gratifying to notc matter that the eral justified his the American ma and @mve the earry The present b British departmen g of the mails to nere, An effort to ac de three years ago by r (teneral Faweett was 1 of the however, scems do ¥ ‘out this poiicy, and ts which exclnde two of v employed. ‘The meas he interest of an expe the old system. It is in connection with this British postmaster gou- coutse by ng to il systom g his gunde, of which he spoke a few evenings ago at a public dinner tary terms, reciprocated the ness le country muy sti learn in this de Wrrit o mayor less elasses and by his eucmies, placed in an which 1t is har howl against s class which has The mar thrown 1n his p T'his countr rned of K with in the most complimen- has more than m postal busi sland, and the older find some things to wtment of the younger. lessons who supports the law- a police foree appointed Marshal Cumings is cmbarrassing position 1 to fill gracefully. The retention comes from a little respect to the law. Il the obstacles ath, shonld read the riot aet to the gentlemen President Can the republ inate us its next either Mr, cont apparently that there is “buc distinguishiod g the same hotel in factional fight, sl cipieut of the not bo ries and jealous less shouldl it esy of the Iactionis 1If, on a full conside pear {hat out of the ring, tc look for . sutisf for the coming contest The rosult of Tudia voided eacly wid of the strong pro! both have plaecd themselve showing a r of mord than nine. thonsanc 1 Availabilities, ican party afford to nom candidate for president Blaine or General Logan? Re- rehable reports show L blood" between th sntlemen; that while in New York they studi other. In view of ability of o wnld either be the re nowmation, would it be © party to nominate cither? impnign of "84 the party should mdicnpped by the personal vival ies of its leaders, still Jotse by nominating one L his dido of the row ion, itshould » whom actory anthe party standard bearer the rec pu votes, gives the party strong gronnds for the belief aine himself s expresse that the coming 1 state. Mr. I the opmion t i will be trom t t the party “must go woest™ for its candidate, and it has been intimated that he tinguished eitize tion. 1, howove son Some of them m, as follows: e cedents; he was the war; he was iicer during the ablest lawyer a »had in his cye a dis n of fowa for the posi General Ben Harri should be the man, itis not untimely to consider the strong points in hi or y be brielly enumerated s of good family ante an able lawyer before a very distinizuished of- > war; he beeame the t the Indianavolis bar after the war—a bar-composed of such able men as Hendricks, McDon- uld, Baker, and other S o oson- ator he has proven himsclf the intellectual peer of the ablest states- mien in that distinguishea body, He is a man of uncxceptionable habits and morals; he is poor in this world's goods notwithstanding ate, and to all th able orator, & poy of the proper best efforts of his sl 1¢ ndida tions ’in the part, THE FIELD OF An effort is to be made to ests bureau in Georela. Fhe v \ze to mve to the ofl lume of mon his six years i the sen- ese advanmages he is an sular stump speaker, and ¢ the manhood. Can a botter : for anyone else? More- cy would unite 01l “fuc- T.M.C. 1 - INDUS! iy, Jlish a labor v seeking employment in the industries is greater than at any time previous. The Pocahontas coke-ovens turning kets by next spring, conl region will have 1,120 astern ma No less than 5,000 coke- z out coke for ovens will be erected next year. The great activit has given & stimu terprises in nearly The Chicago Cc Proyision compan v of the past three months lus to manufacturing en- every direction. p-Operative Packing and y will shortly start into business with a capital of $100,000. he Illinoi making a vi decision against constitutional. Upto N erected in New Y an increase of last year. In Michigan, Vi great deal of inc becn aflected withi ing, mi rectigns, Mr. B, Giffen, un British goyernmen! covering the showing rates of hours of labor, con: the facl Je-islate inteiligen le The builders in several cently been invited heavy construetion will not rush into new enterps vember 1st ptison-labor contractors are gorous eflort to have the prison-labor de ent - un- 3,704 buildi ork ata cost of § g5 were 000,000, ,000,000 over the sawe time sconsin and Minnesota a lustrial organization, has nashort time in lumber- g and general manufaeturing di- Jder the instruetions of the 1. is diging ont statistics years In Great Britain ages in all industries ditions of laborers, and all to enable parliament to atly upon the labor prob- o clties have re- to make fates on work next year. They : until the probabilities of labor agitations can be hetter diseounted than at dications are that amount of general early next sprinz, ‘I'here were 1500 vear. ‘The 18,000 and Brooklyu gain £100,000 which has added Day-roll, aud wh lours of labor twenty-thie * cating additional cuployment for annu besides 1,000 men. present, The present in- there wili be an inmense building work to be begun strikes in New York last driversin New York 1ed a strike at a cost of 000,000 10 their s lessened 8 hours per wei All of gun, rifle and ammunition establish- ments in the country are busy, The lion works have just r {an order for 500 rifles and 1000 earbines. The worls at Spring field and at_Hartford are very busy, and ne- otiations, it 13 understood, are in progress Detween the manuracturers there and the reps sentatives of certain (oreien powers for large supplies of arms and nunition, Wild With Joy, Chic Sixty-eight wed, Louis Thanksgivi wan 15 wild with Joy A Matter Busto Lt was natural th to Boston. wind wust go whe now, T Pl Among pogket-book ranks The mind reader to the “hundred ) Tribac, in St directory dings took pl n day, The )r Course. n Transeript, at M Bishop should come read the rothe mind is, Mind that —— Best Book, iclylia Call best books” the I it is sufticiently first, robust, there will be no dificulvy in selocting thie other nined 1t Wasn't Van Wyok. Brown County Bugle. Less than one year ago had Dr. Miller been disposed Lie could have caused the removal of every official in the Niobrara and Neligh land offices by & “simple twist of the wrist,” Why did bhe not do it? Au explanation from Lim will'be the on 1y convincing thought that Le didn’t want Bruee and Butler removed, _— Wait for the Retuens. Lincoln Democrat. Omaha climbed r ngs last week—! right up in the bank clear- 1t 1s, sle passed dEluneaps olis, Tonisville, Milwaukee and Providence, though she did about the same amount of business as the week before. \When the re- turns from the coal boom eome in she will warm up Kansas City in real Nebraska style, —————— Too Big Londs, Chricago Herald, I'he yonng gentleman in the city of Mex. ico who takes pleasure in persuading Amer- ican diplomats to fake bigger loads than tiey can carry is having more fun than the Iaw aliows. If this thing keeps on it may become necessary to send a Missourian to Mexico to uphold the hionor of his country, - Tit for Mr, Marvin owes Dr. Mulernotliing. When Dr. Miller was running about the countr) under an assumed name and begging for an office at the opening of Cleveland's adminis tration, he sent a letter for Mr. Marvin to sign asking his appointment. Mr. Marvin signed that letter, and when in turn he wanted Dr. Miller's signature he had no lesitancy in asking for it, s soutipe Hoxie's Suocessor, St Louts Republican, MrS. L L1 Clark, who succecds M as the manager of the i< a man of ability and corporation management, Mr. Hoxie's death was a 1oss (o the system, but under its theory 10 one man, however powerful or able,counts anything mote than a part of its machin- Men may come and men may go, but the corporation is arranged to go on forever. Hoxie ithwestern system, long experience in or a-lee nor wear, in vain we try, v ler steadily But just as Fortune’s wind may blow The vessel's dviven to and fro, Yot come but Love on hoard ts with pleasure stoid, n ean overwheli, il blows in vain I'he hiarieane While he is at the helu, ATE AND T Nebraska Jottings. Rushvilte has a night watehman who £ Holt county is strnggling with twelve newspapers and Custor with fourteen. Columbus is slowly recovering from a s' enthusiasm, The North Nebraska Fair and Driving Purk association has been organized in Norfolk. A bed of white marble has been on the Ruderiek farm near at adepth of 1730 fect The Holt County People has just closed I pProsperons y wd the ‘editor ex presses i determinidtion to continue at- tending strictly to business, to pile up “rocks” on - foundation of merit, and court success without tearing others down. ‘Lhe Beatrice couneil or works a snecess, but the press v that at u fire there Friday night the companies could do nothing toward put- ting it ont beeanse it was two blocks from the nearest hydeant, Beatvice invested in Holly Mrs. Clarvissn Bumpus, aged cighty years, residing near Berwick, in Garlield county, narrowly escapec fearful fate by being frozen to death i the highest fury of the late blizzard. She had been lef( without fuel, and in trying to et toa neighbor’s house to keep from freezing, exhausted, Timely discovery just saved her, e Oakland Tndependent strue, ring S wve voted their points the of pride toward Omaka and ealls “I'he Second Pittsburg.” *Wefancy that we can see old Kansas City pulling off her mghteap and rubbing her eyes in unfeigned astonishment _and alarm. Never mind; with coalat $2 a ton, | will he @ softer snap than heretofore.” lowa Items, The farmers of Lueas county have or aani a mutual fire association Six divorces were granted by the dis triet court of Clark county 1 > Oleomargarine seizures are becoming quite common in and around Des Moines, The jury in the Kelly murder case at Chariton returned a verdiet of guilty and fixed his punishment at amprisonment for life. . A prisoner a break for n the Polk county Jiberty he ail made n Satordity, but ran ted shotgun of the The widow of John Ryan, of Wapello, has brought suit against’ H. Howoy, druggist, for $10,000 damages, who sold her husband liguor, from the effeets of which he fell out of his wagon znd Kifled himself. The youngest scion of George John- son's family at Cedar Rapids, two_yenrs of age, on Eriday pulled the cork” of a bottle he had found and filled his mouth with earbolic acid, It didn't kill him, but his little mouth is raw, his throat blis- tered, and lus stomach made very tender. Typhoid-mularia is becoming very troublesome discase at Des Moines, A family named Reed had five of its mem- bers on Saturday down with this terrible malady. Late in the day the wife and one sister died within a few moments of othel Another sister and two children are not expected to recover The state superintendentof public in- struction has notitied teachers to pre themselyes for an examinution unde new lnw concerrng the ciiect of nureot- ics and stimulants on the human systen. e Jaw provides that “the county super intendent shall not after the fivst day of July, 1887, issue a certifieate any per. son who has not passea a satisfactory ex mination_in physiolog, Wl hygiene, 1l reference to the effects of alcoholic drinks, stimulants and narcotics upon the hun systemws and it shall be the duty of the county superintendent, as provided by section 1771, to revoke the certificate of any teacher required by law 1o have a certificate of qualification from the county superintendent, if the said teach hall fail or negleet to comply with section 1 of this aet; and snid teacker shall be disqualified for teaching in any publie sehool for one vear after such revoeation, and shall not be permitted o teach without compliance.” Dakota. ap cluims a popalation of 800, lo ( Thera ure 765 children enrolied - the schools of Sioux 4 aulls, Exploring with n diamond drill is one of the novelties of Iron Hill mini The territorial thermometer has tuken up permancit winter quarters below 7610 One hundred and fifty new buildiy have been crected at Aberdecn the pust SCHSON A wminer in the Homestake mine fell down the shaft, a distunce of 200 feet, and live The Vermillion university facuity ad vises all young ladies to boycott young men who use tobace The Farmers' Independent association of Nutelinson county has been organized Olivet. Its purpose is to encourge the building of another railrowd into the county, to give competing rates on freighit. - 7 35 S The Good Work of High Licease in Arkunsas. Little Rock Gazelle There is no separate prohibition party in this state. Ap abortive atlcmpt was made to form oue by confining wember: pof the State Temperan an voters, thus exciuding those most earn est and unselfish of all workers in the temperance cause, tho women. But at | the recent annual meeting of the ailiance at Russellville thisdiserfmination against women as members was removed, At each genetal election license is voted up or down in the countics, Besides, the traflic can be driven out of a community so far as refusal to license is concerned, by a petition signed by a mujority of th THE T0WA “PEN” AT ANAMOSA Reception of a Fomale Horse Tiief, Aged Ouly Sixteen Years he Condemued My Who fs to be ¥ Month Arrivals, rdorer Dellows, wed This Novemter adults residing in a community, This i< the operation of what is known as ~ three:mite law, We have “high heense in Arkansas, which eloses un the low, ir responsiblo doggories, and has proved by the most effective of all neies i | reducing the area reached by the liquor flic. Its methods are cal; and 2 80 are, of course, rej the naries whose intemperate zeal and utter Inck of capacity to deal with ANAvosy, ence of the crimmal incar Towa the , inthe person of Miss Minnie an ren received at peni prizon A FEVALE HORSETINEY, question not yiolding to froth, empty de. [ THO isbut littlo past her sixteenth birth Munciation ind gross mistepiesontation | day. Her home is in Vinton, Ta,, and at of the motiv them ine by the Marion she stole a horse and buggy and started home. but was soon caught, tried and sentenced to one year in the peniten s of men who differ with | se the dillicultics enconntercd uine adyocates of temperance. y. She arrived here November 20 She was employed ag Kitchen girl. She ¢ soom to | fnprossos her observer with a feeling of be more of 1 prohibi- [ wonder and respect so frequent when in tion. The Chicago Tribune ently | the presence of Iadies, one forgotting made an investigation to the working | that when woman arrives belind the of the system in 1llinois, which shows Ist that in several count are known no more during s not anopen sa- | their stay there as a lady, but simpl n loon can be found, while in twenty woman. She is red-headed, woars 8 No, countics the rule s virtually prohibitory, | 84 shoe, stands five feet one inch in her license towns being the exception, and in | oo cine foet, has ¢ nd hae 2 largo number of others i pre ibition | fair eduontion. ia SHETATNG towns are in a majority. The Tribune | gt OhG i Shemmerate . T omor concludes that prohinitory: regulations | {nt S i intomperate. Hor oniy now cover two-tlards of the soil of 111 o ANOTHBINOIHD ¥ inois, while the nrea of such regulations | 4nd ono that is kept it close confi is steadily widening. Tn the places which | 3L R Ghoster Bollows, in for safe keen permut t le of liquor the tax is usually | {0 dnd who is now undot sentence . of very high, reaching in some cases $1,500 or $2,000, and a burden of §4,000,000 or death for the murder of Miss Waterman, yers to the saloons. 1t would seem * AT O i BRI iLc any candid prohibitionist must con: | N Waterman and he dosired hor Lo de the superiority as a temperance | huir“rolationship. Bollows pressed his measure of such wsystom o a4 S PO | gyt hut always mot with repulse. Bo- hibitory Inw,which could not be enforecd { oming desperato he shot her, but not in Jocalitics: whare the amajority fueor | faally, Ste got on ter knees ani begged license, and would simply cut oft this | of er inhuman vnele te svare her life, great revenue. amid hor tears and prayers the brato TR took deliberate aim - and put aball Ko STATURTR: Lo ol FB N BRS b through mnoecent hoart, eausing death Qo B G EIC s s instantly. The u came ofl lust week is over, and a number of people whohave | "Charles City and Bellows was cons been on the rond ave making their tempo | jomned to death, the, execution to take vary headquarters in this eity. A fow of place in December, Ho w s sent here to the guild huppened to ussenible at John keop the people from hauging him. He Claucy's Saturday afternoon, and enter- [ & hbtaG ) king man, 38 tw 3 tuined onch otlier with reminisconcos of | Lot b bid looking man, is twenty-elihe s of age, and hus been married, his their summer work being dead i { : At ing dead. [lis_only remaining Wihen we were at Olean,” said Tom | rolative is o mother. His home is in Dolphin, who was with Pollman’s cireus, | les City where he was eng 1as a we picked up gantic Inmbermun | sanmstor. Ale tvns born. in Nioy Yore numed William - Pike, who had neyer ~l<n«|:,hl sliowa 18’ not. il \I\l\\wll‘\h\l |‘1‘\"\'th been further wost than Michizan: - We | 1 on and the closeet guard is kept o er proceeded to bill him as SIL" [ i, for, should he the opportunity noted scout and reformed dosperado; Be | 106Ul Tather have the. obmis - shodt ully big feilow, but astender b 4 foll o him than be hung The followimg are tho ken, and wouldn’t dare to shoot At Johnstown we got five or six dians and puinted them up to ien we started a Wild W show to top off the performance Tiger Bill ARRIVALS FOR NOVEMBER Henry Jackson, Hawkins, home Mason City, sent nme months for 1 1 VO 4 10 b e KHy apnounced us tho best shot, il | = yogophGroff, home Independence, is SHOIR ' AR ine s old, sent one or lnr: of the age. Mo would cowe | o oraoll, sont-onojyeariorilar into the ring, _sniff, cvy, ‘ha, L] “p¥ étnoil Tnguns.’ i ‘thon stall stonlthily | p,iS¢bett Benton (oolored), homo in, St until he discovered them lying in in ho; mbiish, when he would blaze away and | faom hove 18 n native of dennessee, ili all bt one or two, whom he would | (X V) e e e, ¢ finish with a koife. The audience was | 100y Robimson . 1o Clara. Sl s assured that he obtained his name from | oupmenier, twenty-ons soacs old. eihtoon the fact that he once killed three tgers | nonihs for thiovine - s 0l cighteen on the pluins with one shot. He loved to | ™08 Williame alis I et impress people with the notion that he | Goorge Whaloy. | He s an old eriminad was a very tough enss. Every hotel we'd | (SGGT8° L0 Q01 R o1, CERne go to he'd say to the waitress’ in a deen | Wieeling, W. Vi, age twenty-cisht, sent voice, which you could hear all over the | gor ciuhtyoars for atiempt 1o mupder 100 ey 8 S. I Kramer, West Branch, lu., sent CBring two ponnds of raw beef and 8 | o) vou for adulte D pintofblood.! e | Jaek Martin, swindling, sent for two Phe girl would reply that she couldn’t | v aps aged forty-one, home in Wisconsin, et the blood, and he ‘would vesignedly A S R T sk for milk instead. The raw beef he | " U pnS oux Lt Al siding in South O, N 2. Tdon't think he Jiked it, 1(“( it \\‘nrln(]l it dm\nlm good style. Slonnal g ter: After a while, in addition to his = S Wild West show set, we ot | BENNETT GOES BACK TO PARIS, him to do foat of marksman- R ship. He would knock the pipe out | ndmcements Held Out to His Lditors of the mouth of the man smoking it or and Reporters. brush the ashes ofl' & cigar with his trusty James Gordon Bennett went back to Y with | Europe as suddenly and surprising us ho moment he | came. His six fired the other man would bite the pipe- stem in two or bite the cigar so suddenly that the ashes would tumbled off. One night when Tiger Bill had inspired the nths of hard work that he promised to devoie himself to lustod ten days. But in that time he revolo- tionized the Herald. 1 will give $100 to any editor or reporter who will invent a andience more than usnal with a sense of | new way of writing an article,” suaid he his feroeity, he essayed to shoot the ash | He promised lesser rewards for slight de off a cigar'm the mouth of one of our | partures from conventionality. Better boys, who, for the fun of the thing vet, he pmd them. “Don’t write u sen- wouldn’t disturb the ash, but Kept .flnutv tenco that vou ever heard before,” he ing the cigar as cool before. ‘Tier d: “don’t express an idea that Bill fired four or five unsuceessful shots, | is_not original.” Do not do any- and then tne audience began to laugh | thing in the paper like anything and hiss, and he ran off in a rage.” ever saw 1 it betore.” He fell to - Unwilling to Promote Marder. Detroit Iree Press: “If you don’t get out of this alley you'll hear from me!” shouted a Spencer street woman to a couple of boys who were pounding on the fence wrote editorials himself and they ce ly were breezy and original. The wholo paper be uight and odd, The mil lionaire could be seen ut his desk o'clock in the mornmg d But be was unused to the str n = - gave itup and took the French steamer g How :‘]nvuml one A for Paris, where ne keeps o house and g 1'll eall for a policeman ilut, “You will, ehr 1f you are kind of a Mr. Pahitzer; of the World, b woman that wants (o sce two or three | giving prizes for extra good work. As policemen hammcred to death by two | he grow move and more successtul, he desperate: boys who will never be'taken | bogan making presents to all the em- live, blow your whistle! We wash our | ployes of the World. One day he gave hands of !l responsibility awiy 800 orders for hats, Just Christmas The sober second thought scemod 10 | ho gavo a turkey o cach of his 800 om- prevail with “her, as she retived and left | ployes, next he took his compositors on a them masters of tl I, pichic’ and raised their wages several P S s s cents a thousand ems. s list gonerons Tamoi'R * 11 golls -4 1dened act w the purchase of 200 shares in the JumosRuesclldow nm suddened | gding and Loan associntion sturtod wlen I soe our success us u nation | putt G “HC MOTH BROCIES i measured by the number of aercs under | 2 for B PR BIPGG S tillage or of bushels of wheat exported; | YeaL = W 0" “Dlrehased " them for the real value of & country must be | 5 oneo divided m.‘n]; among five per- woighed in scules more dolicalo tivw the | (65T IR AMCN s TR TR balance of trade. “Fho garners of Sicily | 3,0 money he does not know what, to are cmpty now, but fho bees from ail | fRIEE EHCY R CO0R AL EOW ¥ chimes still fotch honey from the tiny | G0 VRN I, H6 1% Wb 10 s Dk garden plot of Theoeritus. Oua map of | U110 Hoked me to write something the world you ‘muy cover Juden with | oo #78CC K06 10 WEUE BOIE RS your thumb, Athens with a fingor tip, [ @ OO E A AR LI SRS and neither'of thom figures in tho prices | i Sebt WG Gheek Tor B press oluls current, but they still lord it In the | %00 or 8o "o enjoy. themselves.’ and thought and action of every eivilized | Fool0 G0 0 hed for sick journalists in man. Did not Dante cover wilh his hood | (&3 SRAaWETH BEE J0E SR VA all that was Ttaly 600 years ngo? And, it | 90008 BiC UOSIHUUA With I8 sality du we go bnok a pontury, whor wos Ger I was in congress that he made his muny ontsido of Welmar? ouly failore in recont years. He found it Groontawn eemorery. I Indiananofis, | didnot rhyme to be & congrossman and the owner of a n has o vaalt in which the veral cof snajiax He wus ar of thess last wock tho sexuan cume ta tho | b rion “to tim,. Wik “Amos’ . Cumy who died in 1846, The body w petri | :\‘4 n 4,.: lu.‘11: 1‘.‘ didit um,{ % II“ [ v‘_‘:L ‘..:< corpse was blue. O resulinfs remew- | business, Mo lanot vesponsibly for e ber her as o comely French girl | nows n ony pager and so v u The other day Michael O'Brien went to - the cometery and spent some time at- | €oloncl MeClure JWanted a Stake, tending to anew lot that he had just | Cleveland Leader: A, K. MeClurg, of bought. Then he went down town and | the Pidludelphia Liny 1 10 b one ordered a fine monument to be ent, i of the kind heanr , most antetl t eribed, and erected on the fot, Then he o zonerous of the noted mon. of went liome and laughingly siid to-his | Philadolpiia. oo is said to scorn sinall T Everythit ! it | ¢ to be very lavish with his money, sick and die) 1o be pur ss than to be not averse to a good giwe of B A on | poker. Not long ago, my informant suys, of the bowels and died he hid Deen playing wguict me - | with come of hia fricods, in which the Dr. Bernays, of St. Louis, last | stikies were vather high, und oft the successtully ~ performed g teble dend bre Hi upon the upon a tailor aged forty, for the 1ri street and v od juuntily wlovg until ho tion of an ordinary silver-plated dinner | metone of his willionaire frici knife nine uand o il i I 4 nm o lay s which hie swallowed in Imitation [T for nic 1o 1 the jugaler’s teat u't Can yo - P i untl L . Joe Demongs, fifteen ¥ Cortainly,”’ was the reply, w ailuck, went dowis Lo tho Jit gt e sy sl MeClurt § fersonvilld, Ind., to sce a st Metlure took thi wd Juoked eon out. As he stood looking she blew hor | temptuousiy ativ. He then looked it the whostle wiciously, and immedi Iy tho | minn, and he up the bill, saying ‘And boy lost the power of seh and endl §00 money? ) cull it only ap spoken since.