Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 12, 1887, Page 4

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in Omaha, Counci} Bluffs, Lincoln and | Inghouse engines of six horse power each, In | goods merchant, four of the new alder- CHASED BY A SHE BEAR. people in every important town and vil- the Brush Electric Light works, Buffalo, | men are mechanics and one a retal The Adventures of Two Boys Who lage in westernjlowa, Nebraska, Southern | York. L iansidls ¢ Arted to Get Away With a Oub, Dakota, Northérn Missouri and Northern | Philadelphia leather dealers supply 1,000 ml:‘f‘:.""‘l““":“:“t':f‘_yuf':‘(';“‘:‘:‘:"l‘l':“‘f:'l'n :‘":“" On Friday morning last, writes & Kansas. No othdr medium in this sec- | pounds 0113"":‘\}"‘ per "‘VI “’u"“’ 150 e | pacity for eighteen Drisoners for the new | Seranton, Pa,, correspondent of tho New tion reaches one-fitth of the same num. | ¥IC'8 in the Kansas penitentiary. ‘The _|1|] at Des Moines York Sun, Hiram and Cyrus Whitlock, ber of read While the Ber weekly output is 1,700 pairs of shoes. b oy Tn. | 2ged lifteon and thirteen, sons of Farmer s CALIURL L R B IR brick- | 4 A delegation of six Tama county In- | Xjansom Whitlock, of = Spring Brook practically a monopoly of special wants | great many carpenters, jolners, bric - - dians paid its respects to Governor Lar- i, took their sleds and started weil for the partied who prefer to pay for p ore him the grievauces of the tribe , Phineas Beckwith, in the adjoin- this advertising in- the Brg; rather than places, notably at Chicago, they have been | against the general government and ot disappointed. songht to secure his aid in setting mat- fi"‘!f‘ ‘|‘;’|fi£~”{’l‘|‘|‘-b||:ll||?u;‘m ::“::dw&fm:?u'l‘\t use the free giffwhnts columns of other | ug brickmakers in all large elties are of | ters right. playful young shepherd dog accompans ‘papers, to know tHat their money is well ] invested, There 13 no cheaper advertis- The Ransas Experiment. in the welfare of the people, whether it The advoeates of franchise reform have | related to their civil and political rights met with another reverse. The defeat of | or the conditions essential to their mater- the woman suffrage amendment in Ne- | ial prosperity. No man who esteems his braska four yeara ago and in Orogon two | charaeter for intelligence and fairness years ago had a very depressing effect on | will not pretend that any part of the the cause, The leaders of the movement | great financial work performed by Sena- began to despair of their ability to ex- | tor Sherman was in the interest of cap- punge sex from state by popular vote. | ital as opposed to the interests of labor. They changed their tactics by centering | Such a proposition would not stand a their influence on the national legislature | moment before the logic of events. and endeavoring to get an entering [ Those who attempted to disparago Sen- wedge in the states through the munici- | ator Sherman in popular confidence must pal franchise. Much was expected from | to be largely successful, find some other THE DAILY BEE PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERMS OF SUNSCRIPTION Dally Morniag Eai Brg, One Year for 8ix Months or Threa Mont The Omaha Sw address, One Y ATA OFPICE, NO, 014 AND, 918 FARNAM STREFY. EW YORK OPFICE, TROOM 5, TRIRUNE BUILDING. ASHINGTON OFFICK, NO. 515 FOURTEENTII STREET. B CORMESPONDENCE! Al i lating to a edt the opinion that the demand for briek will be The Pacific Coast. od them, and as soon as they entered oommunications relating to news and edl- twenty-five per cent ahead of last year. The Hundreds of Indians are dying at | the woods, near the base of the hill, they 5. forinl matter should bo addrossed 1o tho KDL | 1) ioipal suffrage which had been intro- | plan than that of attacking him on the | ing anywhere than the popular want | number of men on strike upto March 24 | Yuma with the measles. took the strap off the dog’s neck and let BUSTNEAS LRTTERS! duced to a limited extent in England by | score of his wealth and misrepresenting | columns of the B o throughout the United States was 9,536, There are 831 male and female teachors }"::l“fl'l“‘l“‘ \t”lllll(l{l‘l!‘:ll:‘!u 01“;.‘;‘:"“0"“’:; R"(;‘:g; a\l business lotters and remittancos ghould be | the enfranchisement of tax-paying wo- | his business affairs. The American peo- Machinery rejeeted twenty years ago In | in Washington territory. 16 tob oF the ML Lhay s(btoWE, S GINE No Irishman who has the true senti- Ameriea Is In use in Germany to-day, and Blackleg and Calamity are the names ment of his race can have failed to be men. A writer in a recent number of 5 d distrust & e G sl b L yet in many textile products we are under- | of rival baseball clubs in Candelaria, OMAIA. Drafts, chooks and postoffico orders the Forum, who evidently belongs | mun who has acquired u fortune by en- sleds to rest, and while thus seated they 1o be wade payable to the order of the company, heard the dog making a noiso a fow rods g thi tional school of politics, profoundly touched by the eloquent story | sold. The substitution of American ma- | Nev. away a8 though he was at play with an- THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, PROPRIETORS, ::dulzfi! ‘:“::e 70110,”““ prediel‘l):n. ¢ z:el{x::n;:‘sl:5:"2‘]"“1:, ‘h;:::l:pz! told in the columns of the BEE yesterday | chinery will take place on a moderate seale, | A new cannery is to be built on Shoal- | other dog. The boys whistied for him o E. ROSEWATER, Entron. Woman suffrage will not array women | eially is this so of ono who daring more | MOFNIng of the presentation of & home to | 8nd thus intensity competition. water bay, near Long Island, W. T, this | but he did not come and that surprised A plate mill 1s to be built at Littsburg 203 | 8eason, wherein salmon, clams and oys- | them. e {'o“‘ B vel Witk with two M“L & | ters will be canned. The intention is to | = Hyram and Cyrus thon loft their sleds feet wide. The horizontal roll will be 72 | K¢OP it runniug the year round. and hurried into the thicket, whero thoy inches long and 82 Inches in diameter, and Samples of tobacco raised on Burnt | found the dog rolling and tumbling in will roll thirty-ton ingots. It will b’e the | TAver, in Baker county, Oregon, have | the snow with a small cub bear, he N S il ¥“ ki :l W T4 been shown the editor of ‘the Democrat, | cub was just asfull of play as the dog, REREES MK OF 168 kia I W18 WOotids who says it will compare favorably with | and they didn’t let up & particlo at the The legisiature of Connecticut has just | the best grown in the “‘Old Dominion.” | presence of the boys. Mr. Whitlock's passed a law restricting tactory labor to ten Montana now boasts of the four groat- | Sons were completely carried away with hours per day, or sixty hours per week, for | est mines in the world—the Anaconda, | the antics of the two g Wwho women and children. The Maine legislative | Blucbird, Granite Mountain and Drum | had got so well acquainted in such a shor Iabor committee has reported a bill making | Lummon, Their combined product for | time, and for several minutes they stood Mrs. Michael Davitt. The thoughtful and gerterous people who conceived and carried out this most worthy enterprise seem to have omitted nothing that could be desired. Even the musical taste of the distingnished champion of [reland's cause was remembered. The event does not, however, address itself wholly to the hearts of Irishmen. All men who honor patriotism, courage, and great personal against men, but will unite men and women | ¢hqn thirty years ot public life has main- for the general welfara, Women will be called upon by men to help save soclety from :;:::g r:p::’?:;d for: S eclal intgtity its vices, and they will respond to the call. Not because women are wiser or even better N aT e than men, but because they are different, and The Devil Playing Monk. this difference needs to be represented. We | We heartily concur with our local con- want neither smoking car politics nor petti- | temporaries in urging upon our citizens coat government, but a state and national | an elevated stanaard of public morals in home, where good fathers and good mothers | the conduet of our city government. We are alike indispensable, “in honor preferring fally coincide with them in the belief THE DAILY BEE. Sworn Statement of Circulation. Btate of Nebraska, | €unty of Douhs. | & Geo, B, Tzschuck, secretary of The Bee Publishing company, does solemnly swear that the actual cireuiation of the Daily Bee v. Aprilg.. April 8. 3 Aril 4 one another.” that there are reputablo peoplein suf- | sacrifice freely made in the interest of the first Monday of September & labor boll- %‘003‘533‘“?n.g"i,‘&”‘,',:'i‘,‘e,‘;'."fi?;,‘ ‘,,‘;',Y;E It‘: dr:::l‘i%“:h‘:‘: ":i\erl;he:ol\zl‘:ina lots oI; T This was written before the re- | gijont umbors in Omaha to defeat the | Others, will heartily commend this recog- | 485 tory will produce fully $12,000,000. trouble for their young dog, and possibly Thuraday, A i turns were received from the |y lomont at the primarics. But | Dition of the brave and honorable carecr | National trades organizations are Increas- Owing to tho tricks of the Chinese | fOf themselves,if the cub's mother should Friday, April 8.... lato suffrago campaign in Kansas. | oofjonin from history that there is | Of one of the truest and staunchest :::d‘n‘,'x"‘;:{':e:;mo;i;r;wv:-',::; b;‘m ";fr,:; miners in Northern Idaho the people are z‘;‘l“‘fg‘g‘ h‘:"xm‘:l';‘l":‘n::‘g;“",;“‘:h""“ :l::‘zd AVETBRO. ....vvveree +.14.430 a&';‘&“g:‘op'gl‘;'a érl:‘d l:"::fls::ib:{;lr: danger from the Greeks bearing pres. | smong Irish leaders. No one of them | f5% FECT O S0, (I Ot of Na. | demandinga gold comn basis in their | 8 BEE00 AWRSs has better earned such marked considera- denlings with them, says an exchange. tion, and there is none who better knows how to appreciate it. Mrs. Davitt is of American birth, and is a lady of superior mind and accomplishments, —_— ents. 1n less classic and more modern language the cry of “stop thief!” often enables the pickpocket to get away with the stolen pocketbook. The appeals to the moral clement of this community, coming as they do from parties whom we know to be night after night log-rolling with ward bummers and political shysters, with the sole object of capturing the primaries, and controlling conventions and nomina- tions, are very deceptive. It is an mgenious device of the low gang which carried on the oil-room orgies at Lincoln to hood-wink the re- spectable people of Omaha. The cry of “down with the dive influence in politics,” 1s a sham intended ounly as a cloak for the infamous plots which are being hatched inside of the dives and dens by editors who have donned the livery of heaven to serve the devil in. Do figs grow from thistles? Are men who associate with the patrons and keepers of low dives sincere in clamor- ing for moral reform? Do men who are privately urging the gamblers to organ- ize a raid upon the city primaries for the purpose of defeuating the decent and law- abiding element of the community mean tional Central Labor Union or Federation— | rpyp . “What's the matter with takin’ the cub on a different basis from anything now ex- l‘,::flyw‘g:‘fhd‘.‘f& :':&'f,',;sos;r o‘:“','famwél';: along toot" said Cyrus. “He ain't much i isting. maximum figure. Besides this they fail [ bigger'n the dog, uni1 could carry hum Employers are here and there discussing | to burn their fine dust sufficiently, there- l‘:z‘::.f:lr m.u"‘nlmlen Iwc v:%u 71 n?“"keo hin‘: in an informal way the merits and demerits | by retaining much quicksilyer, and also wx\lk"‘ of dividing profit_with workmen. In the | file up silver dollurs and mix the filngs | ™ ¢hought it over a minute, snd New England states the feeling is that the | With the gold. L sald ey world t8 it Bo O 5 il n Sai y 'y it. So Cyrus construction of workmen's homes 1s the bet- A Game Savage. crz‘?\e slyly up behind the cub and grab- ter plan. Labor organizations themselves Curson Appeal: A few days ago soma bed it, and Hiram ran back after the are giving the subject no special attention. | y AEROT CRP T O e vaeant | Sleds.” While he was gone the cub began The printers are finding more abundant | jot, when suddenly the best drossed of :;; tW(':nmxwlr nlr‘;d tr{o hx'fi bn'-at m] got mlv‘ag, employment in the west, especially in job | the crowd rose up and took off a shining | [ *§E0S A8 08 10 MR FEELYs Bl Ehe work, Commercial printing is_inereasing, | brondcloth coat that only a week before | (49 08 WAG SSPROC 10 LHILE LAAL, LAG partly through the needs of railroads. The | was presented to him by Jewott Adams. £ WS EH CXEROETRATY B AYEEOW MOb: multiplication of manutacturing corporations | He laid the coat down™ on the old card w'm*’m“ HBIa A tack LRV hia oD L is also & source of activity. Wazes havebeen | blanket with a great flourish and called | 4, 4o that he conld play with it more. advanced in a great many cities and towns. | vociferously for a new deal, On their way through the woods the boys deal d and hi M & Y. The building trades are assured of a year | Ahe deal wentround and ais opponent, | ¢4 tyurng carrying the cub. It was 'a 1 nctivity, The strikes of | /1o was an_ old Washoo squaw, laid | g0 deal heavier than it looked to be of unprecedented activity. 'The strikes of | jown a greasy ace on his king. He then | 8% o tt Tt roll toonarwith thi the past week are comparatively trifling, and | raeq up with a loud oath and peeled oft a do‘e 'm‘llny::;hwe h:dlt‘:)z Tx m;n wil e very fow are anticipated by the leading | yest, presented him last ‘Lhursday by the | { O AnC, 88 HHOY Bal 00 8 Tl over SIARY builders hera or elsewhere. Plasterers have | oditor of the Appeal as a spring benevo- lir(e?d"w‘;n‘m t‘l‘w“ Imnchéd Cgmw%‘?npm ty asked and obtained higher rates in three or | leace. The deal went round again, and | gv¢ Wpid "my hatt mads ythelr “gf‘;: four cities, but most of the agitations have | once more the old squaw terminated the to tako the llt’tlo captive o‘:'el‘ to their been for an equalization of vay. play with an ace. Again the buck rose Uncle Phincas’, if mothing prevented Somo remarkably heavy orders are bemg | UP and after invoking the blazing sun, | yhom: and as soon as they got to the laced for material of almost every sort | hauled off & white shirt, somowhat the | 5joaring they hitohed their slods together, ot constru A New York | Jorse for wear, prosented him by Bob | fiad'{hg still'whining cub fast to the top for construction purposes. o nd 10 | Keating during the pendency of the lot- | ofthe'f lod & o d ,.p company has ordered 100 miles of 8 and 10 tery bill. i goi’aee n::ln:‘s‘:“.dm:nu‘r li;m olgo::;g t:: inch pipe. The demand for piping s 8o vast Once more the cards were flipped over | D018, thne Alleghany City authorites havo bse | ho old horso blaniet:and ehat sco was | felt; drasging o sleds and cub bebiad obllzed to sen sonisville for lons o nid down y e skinny-hande squaw 5 water pipe. Even Philadelphia has been | amid & shout of triumph from the crowd, | 16 Was 8 mighty sight more fun than Gx0. B, 1'Z8CHUCK, Subscribed and sworn _to before me this 9th dayof April A. D., 1887, N. P. FRIL, ISEALI Notarv Publie. Geo. B, 'l'zschuck, belni first duly sworn, deposes and says that he 1s secretary of The Bee Publishing company, that the actual av- erage daily circulation of the Daily Bee for themonth of March, 1686, 11 coples; for ££ril, 1886, 12,191 copies: forfor May, 1888, 12, - coples; for June, 1886, 12208 coples; for Ju%.‘ 1886, 12,314 copies; for August, 1886, 18,464 coples; for September, 1886, 13,030 copies; for October, 1856, 12,980 copies; for November, 1856, 13,348 covles; for December, 1886, 18,237 copies; for January, 1887, 16,260 copies; for February, 1857, 14,198 copies. GE0. B. TzSCHUCK. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 9th | fllrv of March, A. D, 1887, SEAL.| N. P.Feir, Notarv Public. test. Susan B. Anthony, Mrs. Helen Gougar and scores of eminent sufirago agitators from all parts of the country stumped the different cities, and made a concerted effort to arouss the Kansas women to take an active interest in the muuicipal elections. In this effort they were successful. The women polled a larger yote than had ever been expected but they were for the most part not the kind of women that tend to purify the public morals. One of the surprises of the experiment was that the turn-out of women at the polls in the principal cities was large, while in the villages scarcely any interest was manifested by the fe- male population. Under the Kansas registration law every voter 18 required to give his or her age, name, place of residence and occu- pation. It is by referring to the latter head we get an idea of the class of women who avail themselves of the right of the suffrage. A glance at the registra- tion books of some of the larger cities shows that about one-half of the women who registered were classed as teachers, clerks, saleswomen, hired help and a few as housewives. The other half wore written down under the denomination It 18 now more than a year since the B. & M. railroad acquired the right to block- ade Farnam street below Kighth, on the express condition that the company would promptly erect a viaduct over its tracks from the Eighth street crossing. The company has taken no steps what- ever to comply with 1ts contract, and it seems to us that the time has come for the council to take decisive action to en- force it. The principal thoroughfare is now absolutely closed to all traflic below Eighth street and 1f, as is nroposed, Far- nam street is to be the western terminus of the Council Blufts wagon bridge, the B. & M. railway should either build the viaduct or clear the street from all ob- struction. { THERE has been no spring epidemic of street cleaning yet. It is claimed that the country is flooded with counterfeit dollars and half dollars. Contribution boxes should accordingly e be supplied with coin testers. THE next thing the county wants is a new jail located within reasonable dis- tance of the court house. The jail building in the court house grounds mars the beauty of the surroundings of the finest public buildfng in Omaha. It is e—— § *‘AN unconscious liar" is referred to by & southern paper. This has no reference to Eli Perkins or the *‘clearance record’ man of the Kansas City Times. S— 8ix libel suits have been tiled at Garden T = what they pretend, when they ask | al e m + 5 they had expected to get out of the jour- City, Kansas, against tho publishers of [ OF “sports.” The sporting women consti- | ¢, po)ice 1) cloas) e gamblis: (denat m::n:ar i c’bfir".“l:::u:: :m‘ omete | Sendia pive to Pitisburg for gas purposes. of the Washion tribe (iashits a his aye, | meY over 1o their P HgRheteatosan the Democrat at that place. Not aione tuted fully one-half of the voting women Isn't this sudden outbreak of high polit- | surrounded by sof of the finest and most BT T danced out, and, pulling off Judge Haw- j‘ffi?d it g'rcntly,hllulzhlng ”1"“5' an}i in real estate is Kausas enjoying a boom L, () (B Wyt B L) LG ) morality a little premature and | attractive buildings in Omahs, and it be- AUCLORS G L OPHA T \EOC ALORR ley’s pants, flourished thom in mid air, “n ‘l“gngfien::tt“w‘:fl?gs”'g:n’ht?m a ul‘l: el * | polls on election day. They assigned as gauzy? aLS New York Tribune. and staked them on the turn of the next | BReie Wi » comes a matter of local pride to have the grounds surrounding the court house im- proved and beautiffed orge Washington. | card, Amid a murmur of condolin, :n?l:nlti‘ltfi;‘:v:;‘::t:ri: :gedgt’:{ivh“th'u ::g over Cleveland. | voices he lost again, and this time pulled | Jo oot Presently they reached the 7 oft another pair of pants, the birthday | 7 w0t the hill, and then the; e’ i ¢ = H FoLEE 3 R y both got _},‘J}S'."(,',',',',"{.}Rfl‘fi'fi.. FhereLo) my ey fi"[ of H. M. Yerrington, on last election | o the gleds with the cub betwecn them Entangling alliance.— Innocuous desuetude. a reason for their activity that they were fighting the proposed temperance mea- sure and were endeavoring to elect anti- prohibition candidates for the municipal THE Salvation Army has received a rather cool reception at Quebec. An April shower of five-pound icicles was rather rough on the Easter bonnet of the Woe fully agree that the success of a city, like the success of un individual, is based upon clean living, honest methods t ‘ and general decency, but we take no IN Philadelphia the Law and Order A & and rode to the foot, the dog keepin, captain. Ofhos "A"‘:I“‘ Iunulnz:ln; fact that in | ;o0 dtock in the appeals of our con- | league is interasty (€ itsclf in behalf of X s demostat l:::ld B AL .“'1‘;"“'“‘" ;’h"“" 'i’é’"? M’,ll‘flllt‘ially fotll? close to them. A short diu‘;nco J:ongl { nearly all the towns and cities tho bulk | ;00 rios for elevated political morms | the law abiding citizens. The lieuten- | This tind to tyrands vor the sworn foe.— | Tingled, and the ol fossil xelio b the | thare they had to climb another ill, and SAM JONES has returned to sin-stricken | of the female vote was cast against the | o "o "G in an orthodox sermon | ants of the various police districts have | John Quincy Adams. LT Y - | they took a good rest in the hollow be- temperance candidates. And Jones he pays the freight,—Licuten- | He still had an old palr of pants left as & | £,,5 ¢hoy started. As they were about to = AntGOVernor Jonen: valentine present from Joe Douglass,and [ 260 53 FATCE o O DO TSNS well worn. Amid breathless silence he top of the hill down which they had | Cincinnati, and the Commercial Gazette been notified tha§ they would be held welcomes him as ‘‘a hurricane of righte- strictly responsible for the enforcement from Bob Ingersoll. It is a sham The Kansas experiment, which was ex- Ahd -k FaalAlON . 7oh Titat fane, BAL *o i ousness, a tornado of truth and a blizzard | Pected to demonstrate that woman suf- | ' 1ovoq on] f th lati bli Give me liberty or give me death.—Patrick | lost, and peeling off his only remainin 5 y to throw our best | of the laws relating to gambling, policy e L4 ? coasted and saw something that made it of sanctimonious sarcasm.’ rage would purify the political atmos- | ;i 0o off their guard, while the | playing, poker playing, prize " fighting Tl live. AL 1, Gatland Heneeghe (:l‘:ir::‘g'tnth‘;psi?ln:v‘:mlxx\c}alnd“‘z his eyes bulge out. Ho became very {8 phere and elevate the moral standard | /oo dive-keepers, and_dive-patrons | or “sparring for points” and Sunday s ve.—A, M. Garland. g z q : pale before he called his brother’s atten I - howl of aboriginal laughter went up, and ‘Stand by the constitution.—vLewls Cass.. | the squaw, motioning toward the bréech- | HoB yb:%:‘gg;;? e b Don’t lot a_little matter like the constita- | cloth, began manipulating the cards. I tion come between friends.—Timothy J. | But the buck, who still had some living t'!'a:rnxnn b'::rmv.v}::t‘xl :::'ey were in their uncle's Camobell. remnants of acclimatea modesty, de- | ™7 *e b They concluded at once that the bear Tam just going to léap Into the dark.— fihm"kd! to {“"h‘"h"““““;d“‘"“‘“l(i.k‘“‘l was the cub's mother, because she was e g e | Lo, fom, 8 S, 0, ke | Yy A Lo oG ook I’ st golng aver aw Yor! o & & © 7 for something alon) e brow of N um:;‘,, nn‘m-.l:z.‘—llzloual Lamont. much nltolfishmunt to several households | 44 i+ wag avidont shoe had not discovered *, along the line of his flight. Then the I have not loved the world nor the world | old squaw placed the articles of clothing, :?:}‘1‘: wfiggfi&“x;:fi;flh‘g%fim:& of elective city officials, has proved a lamentable failure. It affords ptrlquz illustration that the influence of “\When the devil was sick the vicious clements among female The devil a monk would be. voters will predominate in all large When the devil got well— cities. The ballot in the hauds of the venal and degraded among women would more than over-balance the moral A Fatal Gontingency. effect of the presence of respectable and | Congressman Springer has expressed WALT WHITMAN is to deliver a lecture i on Abraham Lincoln at the Madison Square theatre on the afternoon of April o 14, The ‘‘good gray poet” will perhaps read a few pages from his ‘‘Leaves o’ Grass,” SE——— Tue Louisville Courier-Journal pub- & lishes an editorial a column and a half liquor selling. Theeflote east is twig- are preparing for a grand raid on our ging the western fashions, city government all along the line. —— A spECIAL dispatch from New York announces that Blaine will have a solid delegation from Pennsylvania and is sure to carry the state in 1883, This an- nouncement will be very gratifying to the friends of Mr. Blaine, not only 1n e TR in length upon the ethics of betting. | honest women at the polls, even if that | the opinion that Mr. Cleveland will be | ponnsylvania. but elsewhere throughout | me.—Byron. e o one by one, upon her husband, who im- | yiroq of hunting for her cuband gone | There is no other subjoct in the world | class could be induced to loavo their | renominated by tho domocracy, and that | tno country, The question which repub- | yLIaY®, ot loved The World” nor “The | mediately began to strut around tho ring 1 haok tothe woods. Just then tho dog i upon which its editor, the gifted Henri, | homes and mingle with the hoodlums | it Will be done by acclamation. Mr. | Jicans should ask themselves, however, g el R e & e Ao barked “ka‘:;" “‘l.:" ’x‘" “‘.’d"m:‘::‘g | :;:fl easier write, He has called many | and inmates of dives and dens that | Springer was re-clected last fall, though | i3 will Mr. Blaine carry New York? m‘“"“!;'a"";f"“ right than be president— The Mother of Parnell. :fi;sfl,':,‘d:: 5 f:‘mfio ;:zm da?m. would gather at the polling places. | by 2 reduced majority, and his opinion Kansas was certainly a vory fair tield tor | must consequently be regarded as worth placing municipal suffrage on trial. She | something. There are democrats who has no eity of over 80,000 population and | Would not acquiesce in the full predic- the worst elements of vicious femalo so- | tion of the [ilinois congressman. There ciety are comparatively limited in num- | are perhuaps some who would question it ber, Had there been cities from 100,000 | entire. Yet we are disposed to think 0 500,000 population in Kansas the re- | that Mr. Springer voices the very general sult would have been even more humili- | opinion of his party. But what of the ating to the advocates of the cause. olection? Mr. Springer suggosts a con- tingency. “If congress does as it ought A news item says: *‘Ihe bark ‘Cap- Foolish Misropresentations. to do, Cleveland’s olection will be an tain' Humphrey from Seattle for San | ‘The mendacious newspaper correspon- | ensy matter.” What it is that congress l‘un'mscn, has foundred off Cape Flat- | dunts are already taxing their ingenuity | oughtto do Mr. Springer explains as a tery.” People throughout the state will | iy misrepresenting the financial affars | reduction of the revenues, and to this universally regret that this has no refer- | and business affairs of Senator Sherman, | end he says “'the democrats must unite.’ ence to the barking blatherskite of paw- | as if to contess that only in this direction | So far as Mr. Springer 1s concerned he 9 —C . | . Correspondence Hartford Times: In a | Jittlo captive’s screams reached tha ears rls‘:x:‘.“ sinuers valuo I resign—Carter Mar- | b opor's oftico on Broad street soveral | of the old bear, and a few seconds later ¥ oy years ago—just eight, as I count them—I | ghe was treading down the hill at a rate The paths of glorv1earl but to the grave— | was introdueed to a middle-aged woman, | that made the lads shudder. The danger Gray’s Elegy in a Country Graveyard. well but not showily dressed, dignitied in | they were in, flashed before them as ‘Fhe vaths of boodle lead but to the Tombs. | manner, and hoth pleasing and intelli- | quick as & wink, and they seized the rope —Aldermen’s elegy in a Sing Sing institu- | gent in looks. She was the mother of | and rushed up the hill a little faster than oy & ! ce]nazrzntic_lr‘ish lox:der. a-rnug. thofl they had intended to do, looking back T just looming into notice. Mrs. Parnell | every few steps to see how the big bear Wisdom Is the principal thing—Sotomon, | e GelaR 1 liad been for some time, & | was gottng along. bl The principal thing is to get the delegates. | siondy operator in the stock market. Whon they wors about half way up the ~Paniol Mannlug She had considerable weans, partly in- | hill they saw that the old bear was bound Those that like this sortof an adminis- | herited from her father, “Old Ironsides,” | to overhaul them before they got to the tration will find It to be & sort of an adminis— | and the excitemont of speculation had a | top, and so they let go the rope and tration that they will probably like.—~Henry | special charm for her. She was there | hastened to get as far away as possible, Watterson. almost daily, looking over the quotations | As soon as they dropped the rofe the Whoever says that Boston {s not the liter- | and giving orders either to buy or sell | sleds ran backward down the hill, and ary center of “the continent is a liar and the | with the nonchalance of a veteran. | when they passed the mother bear she truth is not in him. Myarm isall right | Some of her family tried to draw her | recognized her whimpering cub, and, AgRIB.—d ol Linwrenos SHIIvRR: away from the risks of speeulation, but it | turning about, she foliowed the sleds WiGGINS, who has been denounced as an ignoramus and a orank, offers the pre- diction that there will be another earth- quake between August 17 and September 19 next, affecting western Europe and the eastern part of North Amcrica. If Mr. Wiggins would predict general hap- piness when he gives the country a rest, and then experiment on his prophecy, there is no doubt of its fulfiliment. ——— TwE women of Vermont do not care for sufirage, Out of 386 names of women on the registration lists in three wards of Burlington entitled to vote for school of- ficers in the recent city election, only one woman availed herself of the privi- lege. There is a wonderful field for Mrs. Gougar, EX-CONGRESSMAN HALL, of Iowa, who is about to assume the office of commis- sioner of patents, will rank among the very best appointments made by the democratic administration. Mr. Hall nee county, dohis opponents sce any hopo of de- | sees the nocessity of the situation so | W8 deservedly popular in his district, e is a characteristic of the Parnells to have | into the hollow. Before the sleds wera e—— which is republican by several thoussnd | _The saloons must and shall be preserved. | i} o """ way, aud the old lady had | half way to the bottom they upsat, and THE prevalence of cholera in South | tracting from his growing popular | clearly that he is prepared to do almost mnjority. He is a man of high integrity, Esl.;emmnm legislature at Albany, A.D. y o O O tres occasionatly turned .‘:m': y !mm tumbling -lon;’: the oub was Amerioa gives cause for alarm in this strength. The folly of these misrepre- | anything in the way of a compromise to country. Suould the discase come north, sentations Is in the ease with which they | secure democratic unity—induce the two wo will have no protection 'n.”v": can be disproved. Several of them have | wings to flap togother'’—and reduce the ith railroads running from Texas into just beon authoritatively disposed of by | revenues. TheIllinois congressman has his ;.m it will be difficalt to maintain an the attorney of Senator Sherman, who is | own views of what is bust to be done, but R lully cognizant of all his business affairs. | he is willing to yield them in the interest —— There will doubtless be more of them as | of the party. Unfortunately for the dem- J . Jox rman tional | the campaiga progresses, and it is im- | ooratic cause, the contingency suggested 7 t:’u:fl::l ::mu:n.:m .“n.' ;:‘ h“not a | vossible to anticipate the variety of forms | by Mr. Springer is the one on which that h o ey out well, but more frequently the turn of | on top only now and then. When the (B e e1mlsten with tho maw | the whoel was against her. and the re- | ads saw thaold bear turn back they tried m.!’ sat behind it at the theatre.) sult that might have been expected finally | to call their dog to them. But he dashed T came. All’xh: m?ine{,-m; I?Iuklinw d‘? after the t»l::«hl,d.mi nwyAm:od atill end street wus lost and at last she found her- | watched the old bear. minute or two RTATR ANI!_’I‘-EIHH‘I'OII.Y. self nctunll{ poor. It was a infal | after the sleds came to a. ola Nebraska Jottings. (_!hnndlti. as ;I the beu‘er gmeam e :;' au ;%):I'm Ildg:fd'bddl' t::}.r. beh'hdo‘ t 'he B. & M. depot at Al hoe burned yed Juxurious comforts, e e ere before s and when he under- dowme et waaie ot o Arapahoo barned | ERy LM Yorkc hotels o in her hand: | ook to piay with hor she knooked the Cambridge has voted to invest $6,000in | some home, once the residence of her | life out of him with one stroke of her big and possesses cxcellent qualifications as an executive officer. TrE expansion of our city government under the mew charter will demand a greater intercst in city affairs by the respectable voters of Omaha. The tax- paying voters very seldom take an active hand in political primaries, but this time * efficient quarantine. . father, at Bordentown. N.J. Forsome | paw, The lads saw that their dog was ocandidate for re-clection. Church Howe, | they will take. The country may expect | cause is almost certain to spht. | it becomes a matter of serious concern | S¢hool building. i 5t Ne s member of the same committee, has | 10 hear however, of the senator boing | There ~may be other mom- | which they cannot afford to neglect. On "’li‘;:x:n n::‘gz?;l ?&?nnn is booked to }mu.b:'l&:xezh:l}:u :nuavev{r:drk::;lllfil:l:lb ?:.'?‘13:‘&'::’.}1‘&7... ;:uuz. it :voé‘fc‘lh 'fi not declared his intentions yet. How- | identificd with all sorts of financial | bers of tho wing . to which the | thissubject the Bee will have more to | 'Ine Loup City postoflice has aitained | mittances from her son, aud these were | sleds, and so they made tracks for their ver, Mr. Howe was never known to ro- | Sohemes and speculations, reputable and | Illinois congressman belongs who are | say in due time. the presidential grade. her soul means of support. Few women | wncle’s house as fast as they could. otherwise. It may be well to say in ad- | willing to go as faras he in the direction have more reason to regret orsonal Uncle Phineas was threshing in the : [y fuse to take anything he could get. Railroad surveyors and graders have knowledge of the ways of Wn?l strect | barn when Hiram and Cyrus got there, PosrarasTeR COUTANT Is said to have | reached Blaine county. than Mrs. Parnell. She bhad abundant | alt out of breath, but they soon told him wvance of this output that very little of it | of compromise for the party's sake, but —————— ‘THE inter-state commerce commission | will be entitled to very serious regard. it takes two to make a bargain. Mr, | been removed because of his outside The school census of Hastings showsa 1 he went there and nothin; 11 about thei loit, intimating to him bas suspended for ninety days tho en- ‘The purpose of this sort of attack is | Randall does not compromise. He would | business—not *‘offensive partizanship.” | total of 1,916 youngsters, indicating a pop- 2{:2:1,;".,‘1’:,: g 6 :hu: n‘.‘(, ,fd';‘z,{’,"...'m’)‘.t"'..(, lxfimd and forcement of the long and short haul | obvious. 1t is for effect with the masses. | listen to no such proposition in the last | What will Con Gallagher do? Will he | ulation of 11,496. p ———— shot if some one would go back right clause in the south—on the application of | Senator Sherman is a wealthy man. | congress, and he will enter the next with | continue to be a silent partner? Miss May Conklin, a Frontier county The Food of Man. away and hunt for her. In a little while lass, failing to find comfort and happi- | Lancet: Thereis no doubt thatman | Furmer Beokwith told his neighbor, Jef! ness at home, invoked strychnine and | cap exist on a vegetable died. He can | Pierce, about the fun ahead, and then joined the angels in fifteen minutes. obtain from the plant world, digest and | Uncle Phineas and Jeff shouldered their ’Chudron'l big bore is booked for an- | assimilate those materials which are | rifles, and the boys led the way o'vunr tio ather turn. The lost augurs ara to be | needful for the repair of his own tissues, | where they had left the boars and their fished out and improved machinery used. | The arts concerned in the preparation of | sieds. They found the ulx:I benrblu tns ‘I'he town is bound to strike water. food will nlso undoubtedly aid him in | hollow vlf' ing to lrfilums] nr] ct:‘kfld“: Nebraska City is a first class site for a onversion of vegetable into animal | Jefl' blazed away a J"i xle hL: B 1? hemp factory, Bohanan, Shellenber- valents, lt:nd will supplldemcm ‘l;m i!\lul \:’x‘n%“wlfl I‘n‘ir;;s:“o'v::“ ll‘t ru:mdn:h‘: i ' be i ers by shortening considerably the hnes e r T, f s ime. Still, after all has been said, it mus e , o 1Bo plapels asiad Kmee o L allowed that the labor of the alimentary | tied the cub, placed the body of its Tha . Beatrice: _sower _Pino :elory tract is better adjusted and the formation | mother on the sleds, and marched over Loy 'f,im .nk‘mmo;:"‘emml,?, “,',';{,; of sound tissue more assured h{‘mu use | to the farm house, Hiram and Cyrus car- fl:f,,"&,““oum"mf: of 'Jw ;; &M. The | of a mixed diet i"' on l.l;a nr:‘n nndfi we :lymu t?gl lo"‘“;:"“ulh‘;;l[lrb;flxl';! tnn‘uzl 1::2 i i 1 ories i ert th ved value of bydro-carbons | done while pickinj y over maiy building is 150180, three stories ia. | L3, 18" G bustion, not. morely as | falen trces of the forest, Tho next da o Rah ; 5 heat.producers, but as sources of ncrgy, | they took tho cub Lome with thern, an Every able bodied man in Stratton was | j,, ', uort of our use of vegetable will try to make it take the placc of the fi:"‘:t&'finrh"&:“{n:gnp;i‘;;::,‘,:n‘“'.}":: must also maintain llu\;. meat pet dog. Sy battle wu'n' warmone.” ‘Tho nam'- wora | Jields us most sally tho formitie W | Barquskeeiialy Has Had subdued after devouring everything 1 | oqrded. Our internal physical conforma- ndon Daily News: $ 4 thamubgrbe. tion. which is intormediate betwven that | list of Itatisn earthquskos” 350 serious Some playful youngsters started a fire | of the carnivora and herbivora, should | esrthquakes are note . in the barnyard of J. 8. White near Blue | afford at least a suggestive clew in our | fallen the Italian peninsula since the Hill. A large barn, seven head of horses :hg{cc‘ol & diel year 1400. The most disastrous ones on the Southern Railway and Steamship As- | In the course of forty years, | stronger motives for adhering to his po- sociation. Half of the railroads in the | by such judicious business invest- | sition than ever. That gentleman has oountry are now wanting similar favors | ments as would be expected of him, | saved his congressional district by re- granted, he has amassed a large fortune. In half | newed assurances of fidelity to the pro- that time a groat many other men, with | tection policy. He has made “‘assurance less financial and business sagacity than | doubly sure’ by becoming a member of “The Golden Legion,” has been pro- | Mr. Sherman, but who were enabled to | an association for conserving that policy. nounced aterrible failure. Pinafore and | devote the whole of their time to money- | Politically he can have nothing to gain . The Mikado were enough to make Mr, | getting, have built up fortunes five or ten | by compromise. The party as at present Sullivan fame. There is a time for all | times greater than that of the Ohio sena- | organized has no higher honor to offer * things, and Sir Arthur should Lave re- | tor. No fair-minded man questions that | him than that which he holds from his - membered this and retired three mouths | Sherman's wealth has been made by ac- | district. This he would imperil and . or more ago. tively legitimate means. There is no | might lose if he yielded a single demand scandal associated with his prosperity. | to the wing to which Mr, Springer be- The corrupt schemos that have soiled the | longs. He will not do 8o, and his follow- robes of 8o many other congressmen | ing will adhere to him. The experience ¥ e 0l passed him by. But he is wealthy, and | of the last congress will be repeated, and & do “Mignon."” From the fact that the | this fact his opponents would put to use | the democratic party will go to the coun- © cable has not wearied Awericans with | 1y grder to discredit him with the people. | try nextyear with itsirocord of failure em- b the announcement that sho was to ap- | Being wealthy, they effect to believe that | phasized—a record which the administra- © pear, it may be possible that Miss Decca | all his sympathies must necessarily be | tion was powerless or incompetent to pre- ~ will meet with sucoess. on the side of wealth. So reputable a | vent, but for which it must share the re- Tae ““-="fi" Pt e R peper as the New York Evening Post, | sponsibility, It the re-election of Mr. THE BEE's sugg& fion that a first-class family hotel is ed in Omaha has caused favorable comment from many eitizens. Will some capitalist act upon ity 2 ———— At Augusta, Wisconsin, this month, about an inch of perfectly yeliow snow fell. This is a diréct insult to the author of “Beautiful Snow.” A e ¢\ Tux last opera by Sir Arthur Sullivan, Commissioner Mike Meany that there are a “few planks loose'’ in the sidewalks in muny parts of Omajm. e— We take the libe:;iv to remind « Street Miss lcca, an American singer of rare promise, made her debut at the " Royal theatre, London, last Friday night, ONE of the most, powerful elements of the boom which Omaha is enjoying is the unprecedented boom of the state 1n gen- eral. IN the spring the ice man supplants the coal dealer,and a congealed dew drop while admi )/ . | weighs ten pounds. hog house, chicken house and four S —— record occurred in the years mwv at (l-q ~ . onthe Crosby high license bill, and among | of Senator Sherman, found its ohief if | as well be given up as hopeless. THE question is, What has become of | sters thoroughly warmed. Washington Letter: The naval bureau | 506, ci timy. 1027, n _the provincoe of | other things recommended that Governor | not only objection to hum in the assump- — our Omaha coal bole? Towa fams of ordnance has recolved 8 model for & | pig)ia, 4,000 vietims: 108, 1o, Calabria, ~ Hill snould not sign it, Figured from a | tion that his sympathies are with the Cheapest and Beat. S—— Des Moines 1s_harboring & boom of | gun ;’fi“'&:‘;‘;’:‘hfl‘:“‘l‘j""‘:‘;fl: other | 9,000 victims; 1008, in Bici r. 93,000 vic- persunal and individual staud- | money power rather than with the poo- | We hear a great deal said about cheap | JOHN T. RAvaoxD is dead. Colonel [ moderate dimensions. 1€ s intem tims; 1708, in Central Italy, 15000 vie- . . Itis simpl t _ . 5 Vairiad s ring 83000 0 devlop [ merey e worc o crak, i snl | Lt 17 ke, "0 it manufactures in that city, Sidfashionsd eanons, and is mounted on | 1808, Terra di “l’;":;{;;' v'mi\:l:‘ ‘T&;fl 4 Lighting struck a building and starwed | 4 rogulation carriage. The inventor says b o i d afire in Ues Moines Sunday morning. itis lie size, and suggests that large LT A The Iawyers and the courts have made | pumbers of the guns be manufactured | por coughs, Colds and Throat b the two Rainsbargers cost Hardin county | and placed on all ships of war. He | opders, use “Brown’s Bronchlal Troches,” $15,000. . names the terrible instrument of War | having proved their eficesv by a testof niuny ‘The new mayor of Dabuque is a dry | “Uncle Billy,” after Seoretary Whitaey. | years. . 4 A B Sellers still lives. — THE FIELD OF INDUSTRY, The makers of wood-working and saw- mill machinery report quite a booming de- mand. One mechanic operates twenty-one West- t, they could not sce the necessity of | ple, . advertising, but by all odds the cheavest ‘asing the price of cook-tails from | * Need it be said that there is not a .dunm-: for a certain class of busi- centato§l. So it appears that the | page in the record of Senator Sherman's | ness is the want columns of the Bis. : »nu of New York City are alive to | public life that justifies such an assump- | Every advertisement in our columus of ~ Shair own interests, end fully appreciate | tion. On the contrary no other public | special wants appears in all editions of j° in its broador sepse the proposition that | man living has shown a larger, broader, | the daily circulation of nesrly 15,000 j Oteraal vigilance is the price of liberty. . | or more earnest and consistent interest | copies, and is read by nearly everybody

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