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THE OMAHA lDAILY 'BEE: SUNDAY, AUGUST 14, 1887.~TWELVE PAGES. “At s meeting of the officials of the Union | ductions. They think that he Is Just & little Phenomenal Financiers. come prominent in English affairs, sit- | ence seems then utterly uninviting, | spolls,” and boasts that {t has been put ia DAILY BEE. The phenomenal financier is pocu- | ting in parliament and the minis- | and the thought. of a rest from | practice so faras Indiana is concerned. Pacifieroad at Denver last night General | too cute and a little too fully aware of his — S — Traffic Manager Thomss L. Kimball was [ own acuteness. Some Americans think so A liarly & product of this great republic. | try, have achieved their first | which there is no waking to wearisome A Substitute for Oabbage. c PUBLISHED E_VERV MORNING. He is indigenous here, where he sprouts, suiccess in the arens of this oongress. | duties appears inviting, In the same ‘Bost n;, Py < appointed second vice president.” Whether | too. this appointment is a crime or a casualty, or e both, Is what some people would like to THERE I8 a town In Texas by the name of know. Possibly some may think it a casualty | Panhandle. It is & new town and the boom- to Mr. Kimball, and maybe Mr. Kimball | ers have set to work to create a season of un- thinks the abolishment of the office of gen- | paralieled activity in the real estate market, eral trafic manager is & crime. The matter | by advertising for one hundred single women is reterred to Tom l'umr. to come there and get married. ‘The mascu- “WaiLk on my way home from cm“‘o line panhandlers have evidently become the other day I met Senator Alilson on the | tired of handling the i train,” salda well-known business mun of . I 4 P this clty. *The senator Is beginning to show A RussrAN aeronaut named Casloviche age. Streaks of gray are visible in his beard, clalms to have fuvented & balloon that can but he looks robustand hearty, He mani- [ be navigated according to will. He is sa fostad n great doal of Interest in Nebraska | ADXlous to preserve his secret from ""y"'! political affairs, espeelally the coming sen: eyes that he has had the different parts of torial fight. He Inquired about Van Wyck, | the machine constructed In varlous coun- who, hie sald, was & big power in Nebraska | $ties. He should take a lesson In secrocy olittes. 1t was impossible, he added, to keep from Keeley, the motor mau. His invention down a man like \'-n W:ck. i8 probably on a par with the motor in use- fulness. TERMS OF SUBSORIPTION | blooms and flourishes for a time with a | Henry Broadhurst, Alexander Macdon- | way the troubles, the dgspnirs of life, are | A cabbage leat if placed on the head is mu::v&nmm including Sunday 0 vigor and luxuriance only possible to a | ald, Howells, Leicester and Cremer are | less supportable in this exhausted condi- | satd to bea sure protection agalmst sun- country in which cities have grown up | among those who rose from the ranks of | tion of body, and reliof 18 sought in | stroke. 1f you are far removed from agri- like mushrooms in a night and the boom | labor through this congress to parlia- | death, cultural districts, and tho cabbage leat can is an ever-present condition. There are | ment and positions of honor, doing great | The public sentiment against suicide | BOt beeasily obtained, the five cent cigar of “ PARNA several varieties of the phenomenal finan- | servioo in these positions to the cause of | comes down fiom thiose early times whon | cOmmerce wil SESWE Svery purpon W‘gm%' ROTK et cier and they spring from all grades of | labor. An excellent idea of the charac- | the welfare of a tribe or,nation depended Railway Rasoality, B s oS Fou T kA society. Herein we see another valuable | ter of this congress is obtained from the | largely upon the number of its members Philadetphia Record. suggestion respecting the opportunities | leading subjects that will be proposed | to diminish which, in any voluntary man- | Rallway rascality and the price of rib-roast and possibilities that are scat | for consideration, smong which are “Co- | ner, was disgraceful! S§ nations enacted | e more nearly connected than most of us tered along the pathway of the | operation and itsrelation to trades-union- | laws against self-destruction. In many ““""‘i kT'“"'l_:,‘ boet on the hoof is “h“"'“l’ favored son of American soil. As | 1sm," ‘‘Represcntation of labor in parlia- | christian countries ,suicides can not be ;:;'a‘ :o Y ."' d::":" ‘;::':I“e';:"m:".‘f ':r"‘n’: in political life the way is open to every | ment," “Reform of the land laws,” and | buried in consecrated ground. England cattle .ln:ny.“ (h: ratlways have an spired citizen to attain the loftiest station, 80 | ‘‘International trades-unionism."” These | has stringent laws for the punishment of | vo tiat and. likowise in the financial world, or thut | and similar practical questions, | would-be suicides who do not succeed in ———— part of it which is American. Our glo- | of immediate interest and importance to | their attempt. Some of the states of tho | The °‘"‘""""C':'l"':," Notso Bright. rious institutions interpose no obstruc- | the cause of labor in the United King- | Union have similar laws, The dairyman 'r:’:‘:’“ ‘.'r';"“ b0 1noishsd tion to reaching the highest pinnacle of | dom, will absorb the attention of the con- | There are those who regard suicide 88 | the priceof milk evidently have no fear that i wealth and power. Given enorgy, dash, | gress, undistracted by issues and issues | an indioation of insanity in every case, | the oleomargarine factories will come into | ‘“Senator Allison Was very frank in dis- A v A S e oo i daring, and a total lack of conscience, | wholly extraneous and which are likely | but this 1s manifestly absurd. There is | competition with the cow in furnishing still | ussing polities. ‘New York,’ said he, 'will | = &’L’: {'o“t‘k lu: wf‘;:'l: lI:“wI: ::ll ::.lu and any child of the republic may hew | to be of endless controversy. a suicidal manis cortainly as there is a | another product. The cow still has a brignt | be the battle ground of the campaign. The : habit of smoking a large number of ciga- his way to fortune with comparatively | American workingmen can certainly | homicidal mania, but every porsoa who | future before her, but in viow of the promised | !88ue, however, is not to be men so much as | FEC daily. Cla‘nom :m.,“n. has bc‘un a)-:rmmlmm Al .--nl-hm- relating to news andedi- hould be addressed 1o ¥ 10 the Epi- i Won ln 'rn BUSINESS LETTERSE bueiness hm.ru nd romittances should be HING COMPANY, m».m. ohookl AN stoffice orders ‘made payable w the order of the company, TOE BEE PUBLISHING CONPANY, PROPRIETORS, E. ROSEWATER, EpiToR. THE DAILY BEE. Sworn Statement of Ulrculation. of Nebras| * a8 Counf uglas. little difficulty. Suchan one will always | Joarn something from the examplo of | kills himself is not insane. There are | Faise in price the future of milk consumers principles, and party lines wlil bo strictly demonstrated to be ruinous to health agai : o ] f i ous to health again ishing eomh“:". does ;;Yn:nfnly ‘swear | find an opening for his gifts in some one | this congress, even it they shall find in | those who regard suicide justifiable in N g::";,,;‘,,‘,‘,‘,’,," ::‘ az‘mv.z:":fl:::l:; p“‘bnd agaln. For boys and young men the habit is the actual circuiation of the Dally of the many directions in which Ameri- | js deliberations nothingin whicn they | certain cases, but in the main mankind Too Heavily Handicapped. charge all along the line. The party must | especially deleterious, and they need not be can enterprise is continually moving, and he will never fail to find numberless people ready to walk into his shrewdly- baited trap--people, too, who ought to have a common 1nterest. It is instruct- ive as showing the value to labor of ad- hering strictly to the considoration of those n:atters which immediately oon- the week ending August 12, 1857, wasas Saturday, Aulusl 6. mday, August 7 dav. August S eadav, August 9. looks upon 1t 8s a crime agninst self New York World, which u‘;mts out all prosmect;‘fol' happi- Our genial and philosophical fellow-towns- man, Roswell P, Fowler, considers Chaun- ness hereafter, and this feeling keeps " Y ” muny from voluntarily taking the leap 1n s CYCI BB AT AR L not be required to dotend any candidate,’ | SurPrised to tind themselves broken in health Inquiring how Nebraska would act next | 10n& before they reach old age. spring, I told him that I believed she would send to the national couvention an ua- e ABouT sixty letters written by the German - Depew is not “coming”—he is already ar- hilosopher Leibnitz were disc . be wise, but whose greed is stronger than | cern it, instead of wandering | the dark, rived. He isghe favorate orator and the most ::::::g,ddgm::' wl::x ':'&““d:’:"dwh‘; ’l;‘hey trl;-t for the mos:plrl ol“sr::?h:ficn:?::l experience or wisdom, and who when | off and wasting its energies, besides run- — likable rallroad autocrat of his native fand | jFAevGR 50 ppflshow of n arrying | 8ubjects, and were written in Latin, German the promise is made to gratify it can | ning the risk of dangerous dissensions, The Reason Why. But he will never go to the whito house ex- | No vk T remarked that his (/fllluzn'sg) and French, Leibnitz possessed one of the readily dismiss conscience. in the discussion of theories ana policies | ~Some people wantto know why the | coptasa welcome visitor, His handicap 18 | ayances for the presidential nomination | MOSt comprehensive intellects that ever ex- Bw Ul sutes Gro. 5. TZSCHUOK. The varieties of the phenomenal finan- | which have but a remote relation, it any, | BEX d9¢s not take tho $500 which the | too heavy. sl e e soemed at present just as cood as any one’s | 15ted. In metapliysics he was an optimist, this &:“, ;'(’ Au::ungflm.lnw{ Presenice | cier are an interesting, and should be an | ¢ its interests, and which it cannot hope | Republican has offered to pay for that ad- The Difference. as he had noboom yet and the booms that | TeBArding this s the best of all possible instructive, study. But the lessons taught by these men are as short-lived as are the carcer of most of them. It is Geo. B. 'l‘zaclmct. ngmg first duly sworn, | barely two years since Ferdinand Ward and says that he is secretary of The | was sent to tho penitentiary for his re- 5 "h"‘h"’m"‘mon"n’(tfl“fi‘fi"’”fi"(fi markable rascalities as a phenomenal E onth olv Aumlu!, 1898, 12,464 coples: for | flnancier, and yet we ventare to say that b l!.ild } Nflfll"fiflh'e lu‘r Bsfé"‘l"h"‘-l four-fifths of the business world would n'” D&,m & ,,g,;"';,'_ T coptas: for | mever think of that extraordinary cha nter Jnmuz of financial villainy. Perhaps if it had 108 '07 lNh 1857, 14400 | made » deeper and more lasting to settle. vertising contract which we asserted to Washington Post. are now belng pushod are liable to callapse, [ WOrlds. If ho had lived in our day and seen have been made at a give-away rate of | The difference between tarilt reformers |.}e seemed pleased at this observation, and | the &rowth of monopolies and similar evils, about six cents per inch. and internal revenua abolishers has been | iy reply indicated that he would not take | he might have changed his views. There is a very good reason, and that | Father pointedly putas being one between | second place under Blaine, or any other reason made it perfectly safe for the those who favor a free, untaxed sideboard | man,” Republican to issue the challenge, which and those who favor a free, untaxed ward- | ;0 1y Chieago recently sn Omaha robe. Those who oppose reduction of the o, )’ was merely a gameof bluff. We had _ | man met Robert ‘1. Lincoln in an architect’s y & tarift are for the liquor, and those who pro- | ;4.0 ‘\wiiare he was examining the plans of made public the fact that sucha con- | yose to continue the tax on whisky are for tract had been entered into by its man- | giving th peoplo fres, untaxed clothing in- | 5 "ingnifeent residenco which ho proposes ager when tho party who had [ stead. Thatsaboutthesizsof it g = “Omaha is growing to be quite a city,” re- the document was induced i Feir, Nonry Pubile. A Few Suggestiens, Our public schools are to be rcopened within less than twenty days. A fow sug- gestions to the board of education may therefore be in order. First and fore- most the long needed and often promised reforms in our educational system should be inaugurated with the new term. There out to be a weeding out of incompetent w*e - Miss Loutsk CiANDLER MOULTON vis- ited Oscar Wilde and his wife in London re- cently. The latter is pretty and so is the house they live in. She came upon original- ities at every step. The dining room of the prophet of aestheticism had white walls, white chairs,white cabinets and a white shell ran all around the room at a convenient ————— J{ , 1887, 14,316 1 b Nothin’ to Say. marked Mr. Lincoln; *“you are havinga i :‘3&" o'Amllmmlnr' fi:‘;‘u "’”"X impression E. L. Harper of the |and ineflicient teachers, no matter to | togive it up on conditions at present | james l”&llmm}? uu:, (n"lh: :u:nul Century. | great building boom ounnyexe." . Ll b o dbadClle e 1 Vil coples; lor.lnly. 1887, 14,08 copies. Fidelity bank would not have found such | whom they are related or who in- | known only to Cadet Taylor and the | Nothin’ to say, my dauzhter! Nothin' atall “Yes, there’s been quite a change in the can tell better stories than any one she last two years,” said the Omaha man; *why lv‘:n:‘::ty?‘. SESIEDESON I W Lo wsiE don’t you come out and see us?”’ », 5 2 i ) :.},‘:;s l:‘n"(‘) ""::;:;: "::.’.,,y ears ago.” RoscoE CoNKLING sald recently that he i ¥y U had pald $50,000 to the creditors of a Utiea ‘I was out there with President Arthur, lawyer named Johnson who died about twe :’i‘lll';flw'? vassed through the city in the night y:’:]r:ju?('l' .lulm:‘on \;‘;s »unpo:ed ;(I'l m: fl:;:. it L and Conklingeendorsed paper for him to the ‘_w::: r&zm;‘a{;fit:hfilr”‘“‘z" # amount stated. The ex-senator set out ta ity & VisiEY Ll tuake yOUur | ypake money when he retired from publie t/ . life, but at this rate it will take him some Gro. B. TZscHUCK. | smooth sailing, and the stockholders of u,’,"'“ym‘"d proen “’i before me this | ¢yt {nstitution might have saved their [SEAL “'}q FriL. Nnun Pudlie. money and Harper kept out of the pen- itentiary, although it is more than pro- bable that in any event he would have ultimately landed there. The most re- cent addition to the list of phenomenal financiers is Henry S. Ives, whose man- ipulations of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & terests himself in their retention. There has been altogether too much nepotism and favoritism in our public schools for the good of the system. Our public schools should no longer continue to be valid homes or alms houses. Every teacher should be able to esrn his or her salary, and the most meritorious should in all cases be given preference. party who allowed it to be cancelled. | say!— 8% i Thisisa game which has often been ('m""';}:‘wsn;" L Gy L L vlayed in politics, a8 well as in business. | Yer I;,l](’llh&l;l a&d. afore you, when her folks Parties who have put their signatures to object me— tell-tale papers some times succeed in h'“::firne"l_:v'fl;,?:fl, ,’}fer; AL LEELD getting possession of them and thea at- i You looks lots like yer mother: Purty much tempt by bombastic challenges to vindi- same in 8ize} v ¥ cate themselves. And nbout the same complected; and favor about the eyes. SENATOR RIDDLMBERGER, of Virginia, | 1uike her too, about livin' hera, because she Contents of the Sunday Bee. Plnl. New York Herald Cables to the P-nl. Telurrnphle News.—City News.— Advertisem Plle‘i ’ipeul-lAdvnrflsemu s, 4. Editorial.—Political Points,.— oAl Commente—Sunans ot —Cur- | Dayton railroad have been for a couple | The only test of competency toteach any ) *“I'here's no telling what may happen. You 32y 3 2y t Toples. ¥ i of weeks the most absorbing topicin | branch is a rigid examination, supple- | no doubt has an inclination to encourage | 1¢'11° ?l‘lloiglseg;:,ilko you was dead like her!— | may come sooner than you expect.” “::x"'g;‘:“:.';':‘:b'r'::lm‘;"::‘"fi'“ ;{8;'&“:;: ”fi’_A“é‘mgNLflrrfigmfl“ Soclal | Wall street. This individual does not | mented by the results of the teacher's | mob law. Ho was yesterday released but I hain't got nothin’ to say “Iam willing to do so under those circum- ‘;udly ik A8 1ncotiies LM (S WYeEs TaHa Laged. Councll Blufts “News—Miscellany | take on inferior rank among those | work at the end of each term. | from jail, where he had been sentenced | Shelatt you her hittle bible—writ yor name | Stances.” dootors are usually over-estimated. ‘The 1 vertisements, of his class in the measure of his rascal- | Certificates to teach one branch or study | for five days by a mob of most deter- acrost the page— “Wno killed Geor a Clarke?” This | yearly earnings of most professional men :g&'z.flm(g:n‘er-l and Local Markets— ity, and in some respects he has shown | do not nccessarily qualify teachers to in- | mined Virgimians. The senator's life Amlul:-le::irne:r ~bobs fer you, of ever you question seems about iicult to answer as | have decroased in later years. It is only t| ‘e 8. Helona Modjeska in Omaha— | himself superior to most of them. He | structin other branches. Iiisa matter | has not been a happy one. When | Pye allus kep' o -na guaurded 'om, but ef | the famous inquiry: “Who struck Billy Pat- | monopolist and the boodier who have big ine Local Mlug’ lany, ta P appropriated millions of dollars, but he | of notoriety that some teachers assigned | he foll out with Mahone he fore- yer agoin’ aw i terson?’ comes In these days. Mnaf’_’x"zm, At ,fl{nymflw‘:‘g; 0¥ | appears to have done it so cleverly that | to the High school do not hold certificates | swore Washington, soclety because N"'E&usnwluy my duu;hmrl Nothin' at all | gome of the capitalists who silently investt M O'Hmm—'rho Soldiers of the 'Lrou— the contiding and mulcted stockholders | for the branches which they have taught | he was tno poor to owm a spike tailed money in amusement ventures, says the New TroMAS J. MooNEY, who was recently ar- wth of the Church—Advertisements, 'age 10. The Faith Cure Discussed, <~ Beancis Power Cobbe—Kisctrioity. nHac. -o—A Musical Dieagreoment—Advertise- aae 11, The Trials of An Emigrant— koklux for Jhn. An Original Story Written Bre—Free Churches ; miaqi [yBL F. Sorenson—Singularities— \ ' nx-. by Jovial Men—Educational. b " o mfi:nelns PNomblal Wlt)xman—- les—Peppermint Drops— Efia Thoroughly Mmlad—Coml ublalities— iglous—Musical and Dramatic—A Strange coat. He no sooner -allies himsolf to his | You don’t rickollect her, I reckon? No; you |York Sun,are sorry that thoy sald no to | rested in New York for an attempt to bui wasn’t & year old then! H \j the British steamer Queen, of the National former political crowd than he is thrown | And'now yer—how old air you? Why,ehild, Buffaio Bili, The sending of the Wild Wes Q oy into a Virginia prifon.’ Senator Rid- not ‘twenty ! Wihen? to London was at a risk ot $150,000. A | line hadpreviously circulated a prock And yer nex’ mmm,.y“., Amm and you | steamship had to be chartered to -carry the | in the city in which he warned peoplo not to dleberger, after hi§ sir years in the want o git marrid that day? cowboys, Indians, horses, and properties | €0 down to the sea in an English snip trom senate, will have had sufficient experi- | . .\[ wishtyer mother was livin’I—but—I | across the ocean and back; grounds had to | the first of August, 1857, until the English ence to equip him for thelecture field. hain’t got nothin’ to say ! bo leased and buildings erected in London 'wfmm&";s“r;l ‘v;:lke‘:'mplaslnd m“m ] states. Summer tour- Twenty year! and as good & gyrl as parent ries had to be providea for, because the | apolozy he Un! 1r General Crook 'shotild fortunately wuvs¥¥oum ¥ (i L recoipts might be next to nothing; and it | 18ts who should walt for such an event would get his hands upon the Ute chief Colo- | There's a utnw ketched onto yer dress there | was determined that, it & fallure wasto be | be rather mouldy by the time the apology row ho may be compelled to change his (uer_,‘,,!,',}};';’{:,{: O FoUnd, o us two | €Ncountered, no bankruptey should destroy | reached these shores. Mr. Mooney has evi- alleged mind about: being a ‘‘heep big run aw. the American value of the concern. Buffalo | dently been moonstruck at some tim of his Ingin." Unless the: hostiles show an Notlnn maly. my daughter! Nothin’ at all | Blll demanded, in view of the essentlal ele- | life. immediate disposition'to behave them- ment of his name, a good share of the proba- selves it is to be hoped General Crook SUNDAY GOSSIP, ble profit without any ot the possible loss. heretofore or which they have been en- gaged to teach. These teachers should by all means be required to pass the proper examination in the High school branches. ‘fo make the High school what it is ex- pected to be, the duties of the principal and assistant principal should be clearly defined. The salaries paid justify first class ser- vice. In fact some of the high school salaries are extravagant in view of the duties performed by the principal and his assistant. While the patrons of the schools will sustain’ the board in main- will have noredress. He was an equally skillful and daring robber, who laid his plans in the most systematic and thor- ough way, and when they were consum- mated deliberately seized apon all that was available. When a committee on behalt of the swindled stock- hoiders went to New York to obtain the details of the steal, they found the robber amply fortified for defense. He refused access to his books, declined to resign his official pusition in the com- pany until he got ready, and only did so at last when he had made terms that Q'fi THERE Is a tribe in Africa which has sud- E— WHAT's the mattert—Has Manager Holdrege lost his grip on the railroad i denly become ver: progressive. It hag ‘Sommission? leave him in possession of suflicient [ taining the training school and employ- | will be ordered to carry into execution | wTyg conversion of one-halt the expos E&':::::f:afi":?::::;:fil:':: l:lsc:!d ;"";: Ilillle{'lo kept llsel’; aul'lct{‘y separated from e S means to enable him to live luxuriantly | ing tcachers for practical studies like | the partial plans already completed to | tion building intoa theatre may be & g0od | old partner and manager, Nate Salisbury, | Other tribes mingling with thew neither in It must be some satisfaction to ex- | for the rest of his days, or to embark in | mechanical and mathematical draw- | make quick word with Colorow and his | thing for the amusement public, but it | wasable to take only a comparatively small | WAT norcommerce. The young men, how- } Becretary of State Roggen to know that | other enterprises which offer o field for | ing, there is no valid ex- | baud of unwashed followers. effectually destroys the value of the building | share financlally, Barnum was willing to | 6Ver finally decided that it would be btter j Judge Mason is filling the position from | phenomenal financiering. cuse for ornamental and . uscless o= _______ | for the purposes for which it was originally | go in heavily, but only on condition thatit | fOF the tribe to cultivate relations with their which he bounced Charles H. Gere, with | It would not be dificult to extend the | teachers under any pretext. Vocal and | Tue indications at Washington aro | Intended,” remarked a prominent —mab. | bomades Barnum show. Erastus Wiman "f“"”;’"‘ and open ;‘l’"“’ country I"’""“"‘- s good deal of oredit. list, for we might properly include in it | instrumental music are luxuries for | that the superb railway robber, C. P, | “When the building was projected,” he | promptly took stock to the sxtent of §50,000, ;I“o': :n?i:‘;':n:ru;:éy?m?lwy::l;I"ncol'v'li all of the men who have for yeurs been | which parents that desire musical train- | Huntington, is to be indicted for his cor- | continued, “it was generally undorstood that | {or he had done well with the Wild West at < 5 o it was to be for the general public—a place | Erastina, and felt sure of London success, | WArensued in which the patriarchs were ar- rupt methods and practices in the Pacific where large political conventions, religious | It was not without considerable effort, how- | F3Yed on one side and the young men on the railrond steals. By all means let the | ;.. plies and great gatherings of all kinds | ever that he inspired enough faith among a | Other. The result was that the patriarchs indictmonts ba found and the entire 10t | could be held, The main object of the build- | few of his acquaintances to secure the | Were nearly all killed or thrown iuto the of Pacitic railroad boodlers and high- | ing, however, was for exposition purpuses. | requisite capital. The outlook 1s that every | Zuluriver. Then the youug men threw waymen be sent to the peniteutaries, | Two expositions have been successfully held | dolla invested will bring three or four. gusnhole doors o cammeree Kad oy fiey where they would have gone years ago | there, and accommodation has been atforded ————— dress like white men, Progress i3 becoming bad the laws been rigidly and honestly | for large public gatherings of all kinds. It OURRENT TOPIOS, well nigh universal, executed. was just such a place as was needed. The enterprising men who originated and carriad NTS, out the project put their money 1nto — it, as well as the money of others, ‘The Boston Traveler says: “Tho repnbll- | \itn the understanding aud full can party I8 not the property of any one man | knowledge that they would not at JorN M. THURSTON has been immor- | defrauding the government and the peo- talized in spite of the veto of Governor ple, as the ofhcials of railroad cor- Thayer. The new legislative apportion- | porations—the Huntingtons, Stanfords, _ ment bill as published in the session laws | Crockers, and others like them, living allots part of a representative to Thurston | and deat—but there is a more expressive ocounty, when as a matter of fact the | and comprehensive term to desoribe governor’s veto blotted it off' tho face of | them, with which our readers are fa- ‘the rovised map. miliar. If it be asked how much longer the phenomenal financier 18 to be given 9 Helpral Bhowers, opportuuities to carry on his overations, | During the past forty-eight hours more or depredations, the answer must be that | or less copious rains have boen general just 0 long s the mad rush for wealth | in the northwest, and although much ing for their girls can afford to pay. Mechanical drawing is very useful for both men and women, but fancy sketch- mg, water colors and oil daubs on china and tinware 18 utterly utter, and should be remanded to the parlors cf people who pride therselves on their high art. *, LATEST advices from toy King Kalakaua Mr. Francls Galton, who has for years and his toy kingdom show that the | been studying the subject of heredity, tempest in their toy teapot has subsided. | finds that good or bad temper in people is in- The royal toy play can now proceed peaco- | herited as much as any other personal char- fully again. acteristic. 1o has discovered that among POLITIOAL A BALLOONIST at Chatsworth, Ill., fell geaterday over a thobsand feet and es- oaped injury. At the same place on “Fhursday night the ill-fated passeuger | continues and the groed of capital is so | more is needed to secure the improve- | orset of men,” first make any profits upon the e English people the proportion of good teme eain fell about six feet and almosta | sirong that shrewd and daring men can | ment hoped for, a great deal of good bas A woman suffrage bill was indefin itely | investment. They assumed the roleof | ACCOUNTS of victims of ico water are now | pered and bad tempered people is almost ex« " hundred persons killed. There seems in | command it, the phenomenal financier | been done. In some localities the rain- | postponed in the New Hampshire house of | publicspirited men and benefaciors on the | coming in with increasing frequency. lced | actly equal. He finds the rule - #this something approaching a melody of | will find scope for his evil genius. Ives | fall has been quite heavy, and at such | representatives on Tuosdsy by a vote of 143 | ground that they were supplying a long-felt | drinks are much more dangerous to lipand fto bo that good tempered vare . montradiction. There was every reason | was distrusted, but he had the dash | places the drought is roported broken, | to37. want at a porsonal sacrifice. They accor- | health than the hot weather. ents have good tempered childreny *%e and parents with bad tempers have bad teme MiNisTerR PHELPS {8 reported to have | pevod offspring. The doctrine of heredity stated recently that there are 75,000 Ameri- | bas done much in recent years to lighten the cans in London, 70,000 of whom are singers. | burden of individual responsibility. To be And yet we have soveral thousand singers | sure each person can do somewhat toward left over here whom we would be willing | modifying his character for the better if he should join those in London, tries, but In the main the pocullarities of w'ty temper and disposition manifested by the AvrroNso XILI, of Spain, is now a year | child will be the peculiarities and disposition old, and a tailors’ guild, of Madrid, has pre- | of nriddle lifeand of old age, as any one can sented him with & uniform, It is pretty | convince himself by looking back upon hisg much all covered with diamonds, Alfonso | earliest years. also draws a salary of about $1,500,000 a A—— year. A suspicion seems to be lurking in An Impaired Insurance Company, some minds that this greatness was not ALBANY, N. Y., August 13.—Tfe superin- achleved, but acauired ln same way, tendont of Insuranco reports the examina » tion of the condition and business of the AN exchange sm!lks ol a “suspiclous as- | Pheenix Insurance company of Brooklyn, on sagstnation.” How the times are degenera- | which the insurance department examiners ting! Why can we not have honest, respec- | have been engaged for months, shows the table stralghtforward assassinations and | company’s capital of a million dollars was hold our heads up nmong the virtuous of the | impaired June 40 lust, $437.000. In conse- earth, quence of this impairinent the officers of the o company have been airected to make a requi- he sition on the stockholders to pay in ONLY two of the sixty-three alzners of the | yinount of the deticiency, or to call the board original declaration of the American anti- | of directors together “to take nedlate slavery society in 1833 are now alive. These | steps for reduction of I.Imun]niul to $500,000. are the poet, John G. Whittier, aud Robert o Purvis, of #hiladelphia. The United States 8. has Inld up as large a stock of history during 13.—The war de- the past half a century or so, as any nation T am from the gove 1n existence, ernor of Colorado announcing the uprising Py of the White River Utes near Meeker, WrSEMINSTER Aunky holds the bones of | Col. and asking the assistance of the United Dr. Livingstone, the African explorer, while fmlfi:elmmflw '.'Llf»'fnp{:'?:l-':.fi.lh fi&k‘;‘:fi his wife lies buried on the banks of Zambesl | jrg command of that military department river. 8hedied In 1862, She was as devoted | for sach action as he deoms mlvlll.lln& [ ‘why the passengers shiould not have been dnjured, while there is no particular | cious capital, and when he offered . feason why the balloonist should not | it the generous terms he could give with _ ‘have been killed. collateral not his own, it could not resist the temptation, Furthermore, this very rash and daring had won him the confi- dence of the corporation, which was of | welcome. Roadjuster Riddleborger declares that no | dingly received agreat deal of credit. But otherropublican could poli as large a vote in | they soon got tired when they saw it would the southern states as neighbor Blair of New | be some time before the stock would return Hampshire, any dividends. Hardly had a year passed Sonator Alllaon, of Iows, s of the opinion | before they seriously entertained thatthe republican prospects are bright, and | ® pronosition to rent the < v building for a dry goods store. This, how- :)ll::l“wh:rrtgywll‘:?d only. foistand osyiner ever, fell through. They mnext rented the course a prerequisite to the successful | Regarding the corn crop, 1t is re- % annex to the city, aud now they have rented Benchmen who engineered the com- | gurrying :ug o(qm. scheme. There will [ marked that at no previous time has ,htz:;z:fffl,fi:: ';';".EE"?:‘S@‘S“Z;‘:‘Q?OJ: one-half of the main building to a theatri- smission bills through two legislatures in | pg other phenomenal financiers, beoause | thero been such a wide diversity of opin- | 1\ iver tao large by at laast 400, lccumln[:' to | cal manager. The structure is no longor an Mefiance of tho expressed will of the peo- | gno qualities that distinguish them are in | ion among well-informed men as to the | Assistant Secretary Porter. exposition bullding In any sense of tho word, : ?«*- Mr. Holdrego and his oil-room | dymand and there are people always | probable yield. The agricultural bureau | g Margiand prohibition platform de- l|“s 'Q"""'i}"' maxma-ll:x"“ o :‘ gonbe " wirlkers mado tho law ns wenk and in- | ready to risk largely on them. | report warrants the expectation that the | mands the distranchissmont of men Who | jarser . public meem"! St G [ ‘sfisotive as it possibly could be, but even | And the opportunities are still | crop will exceed 1,700,000 bushels, but | sell their votes, the regulation of immigia- | in " 1¢ any more. ‘The national con- ‘fttn shape Mr. Holdrege has become | numerous and likely to continue so far | other estimates vary trom 1,000,000 to | tion, and laws to eatorce arbitration, vention of Correction and Charitles was . Wery much disgusted with its interpreta- | heyond the present generation. 1,400,000 bushels. “‘The difticulty,” says | 1n the eventof Cleveland’s nomin ation in | to have been held Init, but now it has to tnnd operation, —— the Chicago Tribune, ‘‘of arriving ata | 1883 Kentucky may be counted among the | meet in Boyd’s opera house, Thore was E— A Parliamont of Labor, close agreement 18 obvious to any one | doubtful states. The *'boys in the trenches” | greathope of Omaha becoming a uational Tk Pacific railroad investigation com- | One of the most important of the an-| ) oonsiders the vastness of the ground | don't like Cleveland, and even tho “star- | convention clty, but we have no fonger any ‘malttee are not to be bulldozed nor trifled | nual assemblages in Great Britain i the | ¢, ye coyured and the impossibility of | eved Roddess” cannot draw them to his sup- | building large enough to accommadate any | 'with by Senator Stanford. The request trades-union congress, the twentieth footing up the account, even after thoe | POrt: such great assembly. 1 say it Isa shamo ‘lnz an order from the court to show | session of which will be held next | o .0 hEvu l:ll been gathered in, But the “With the sure republican states of Ohio | that the ‘public spirited’ exposition man- _ mause why Stanford should not be com- month at Swansea, Wales. This | yimonlty is mcreased by the fact that | A04 Pennsylvania harmonious and united | agers have been seduced by the almighty dol- ~ pelled to answer certain questions is a | congress is composed of dolegates | p g ol{ue shortage 18 ,}; nHbiReniaan ::Bll:eliipg'r:bflll:: bht:;":l:lflc;lfim!r“'fll :_::"m It ots"“;:a '::"“"“:“ dwnxlxlu:nl:nlra- #tep in the mght direotion. The robber | from some of the most success- | oorp states, which a few years ago raised fonnhl:blo pum‘l’ldl':l(fll' prumen?"nnth.a T ATt ana i ofich® A e “Btanford may, before he gots through | ful and wisely managed trades uuions in | yq hulk of the crop, whilo the least dam- | piladelphia Record thinks 3 the revenue from the main hall, they should | Wit the committeo, find bimself in jail, | the world, and from having encountered | 400 anpears to have been sufferea in § [0 . | have been satistied to leave the original ex- | hough it is safe to sny ho will not be re: | st tho outset & vigorous 0pposition, bOrn | iy larye areas westof tho Missouri FIvAr, | man van ba. samiastod, by the. repmbiinan | Position building as it was, ~ Axain, if they [ demsed through the offorts of any indig- | of the aporehension that its mission | wyjoh have but recently beon added to | party, coupled with such @ namo on the | Wanted moremoney and at the samo time Bt citizens, as was Senator Riddle- | might prove to be mischiovous, 1t has by | ¢ha gorn belt. It is, however, rensonably | ticketasthat of Senaton Jogeph R. Hawley | desired to continue in the role of public bene- - berger. 8 judicious and conservative policy | aertain that fully one-sixth of the orop | forvice president, the e lrmrly could and | factors, they should have convorted the ¢ O — grown steadily and firmly in pub- | w o aut off by the drouth of last month, | would rally to its support. Business men | bullding futoa market house. ~No botter lo- EurraEy yoars ago the Hon. Frank | lic confidence. No better evidence could | orobably that the loss was inoreased to | Would all uaite in the elogtion of such a | cation could bave beem sooured, and tho | Walters, alas Nagol, kept a low dance | be asked than is to be found in the his- ticket. Thers would be. Do, mugwumps fn | rents would have been very profitable. though of course the damage done can- not now be repaired, while at others the ‘visitation has been light and the full effects of the drought are still apparent. On the whole, however, there has been a very material improvement that is most and daring that impresses rapa- 4 Mg. HoLbrEGE i8 getting his fill of _ railroad commission. If memory serves | ms oorreotly, it was Holdrege and his —~—— The Ute Emeute. ‘house RRZo! to the African people as he, and her remains | —~~— and groggory on. tho sonthwest ory of this congross of the cspmoity of fryy lv'v'-:I? ) .::g::t ‘:l:d a':;'l:::;l: tsfl: the camp or lu the campalen.” Opahanoedip inarket house much wore | g bo worthy to rest by the side of her A Broken Broker Sulcides. | morner of Tenth and Douglas streets. | workingmen to give intelligent care to %0 say that in at luu’tone-hnlfof el STy A i a2 BrokenHieakey Suloldom ° Mast wintor ho was ono of the chief | their interests when rejocting the control | pele the raius of this week came too late Shzoudod iy Mygtery, “Ir 18 an {1l wind "that blows nobody any e Palmer, a Wall atreot brokor and member of Boaton G " ton Paoll . 4Ot ‘mixers and drinkers at the logislative oil- | of selfish leaders and political dema- | 45 materially inorease the yield from what | The word sirloin ls ‘derived from the ::fi;, r;_:::;\::: ‘h:’.':do&“m}wfi,;rz“, the fooms. Yestorday he was publioly offered | gogues. While keeping fully abreast | ;v would have beon without them, The | French. It would puzzie ouk best lawyers, J A position on the editorial staff of the | with the most advanced thought on the | rainfall will add much more to the corn | Bowever, to tall where the meat we call sir- :,’,"'l:.:’ :,3{,::::._“’;&?‘:?,:H:)?n:":vl:cx:; ‘Omaha Republican, which is located on | subjects nearest to tho interests of the orop indirectly than directly by helping | l0in steak ls derived from, David City blew iutothe Union Paclfic treas- the vory spot where Nagel-Walters used | great body of workingmen represented, | the growth of some of the feedstuff which ury over $000 extra profits, arising from the fo eutortain his wrotohed patrons of yore. | this congross has never yot been charged | yn\hiog tne stook-grower to dispense travel of persons who went to visit the scene &"‘“" of E. B. Taylor aud John Taffe! | with being the mouthpieco or advocate | wip the use of corn during & part of the | Omaha houses have packed 377,323 hogs | Of the wreek.” ¢ & tumblo your great paper has | of demagogic or reactionary schemes, year. It now appears probable that the | since March 1, nearly all of which were TrE bestowal of titles by certaln news- en 10 a few short years! Its strength In advaucing the interests of | whent orop of the United States this year | ralsed in Nebraska. Omaha Is destined to | pavers has recently taken a new turn. The E—— labor and in commending 1tsolf to | 5 a)g0 short, the total being little if any | be the chief pork-packing conter of the west, | “colonei” and ‘‘general” racket has been Tue courts have often decined that | public confidence is in the fact more than a round 400,000,000 bushels." if mot of the world, at no distant day, supplanted by a wholesale distribution of the estrians have the first right upon | that it confines its efforts - A title of “judge.” One newspaper now con- oughfares as inst vehicles. Our | to the task that is legitimate to it, in- The Democratic Tiger, stantly calls Mr. Poppleton a judge: also s ARy gliinpe 0 th j e 1 Midawmm: Loutsville Courier-Journai, Mr. Woolworth, Mr. Cowin and Mr. Thurs- CHARLES DICKENS, a son of the novelist, | tho Union club, commitied suicide Thursday wiil visit this country in the fall to glve read- | at Concy Island. The body was not dis- ings from his father’s works. e s quite | eovered until last night. 1le was dispondent successful as a reader,and is a clever amateur | OVOr his mcmll_r--! bed o actor, He has adaughter,Miss Mary Dickens, o Chromo Cake, who has alsoacquired soms fame as an ac- g o ily i ic tal Prerspunra, August 13.—-No less than kil The whole family s Listrionic tal- |\ Jon e porsons are sick from theetfects Puts of eating cake with crome yellow or somn O Q. o8 General Longstreet is an old man now with g,‘,’,“,:’n‘i‘l‘,‘;}{',\‘,‘,’,'.’QS',",‘,’:.‘,‘,.".'..'E x::?t o, white hair and beard. He 1s wonderfully like < e the pictures of Ewmperor Wilham of Gor- The first Aaab to get a reputa many. Ho is at oresent writing o history | gomposor of comic apera 15 1 which, it is statod, will contain some start- | Fla has written music for the ling statements about about the late war. the Shrew.” ) ‘Tagoux, I'nining ot ordinances so provide. Yet the | stend of expendiug its force on questions | Every summer during the heated term #* ! . . 13 an (ha loss drivers of all classes of vehicles | which are 2t best only remotely con- | the number of suicides is larger than at ms:'q?:::".fi:::' T;;w'::‘ Ao‘:“:m:y" fon, l“ X6 AR ok '“l:::'k“" '&0'60"5:,“!‘-:,‘:1(:‘3 P.’I. Barnum I8 again afering §30,000 for d:x’.‘l—n‘: d,.:«‘,”m”'fil.'fllff".'.u‘fr' li: l’ll:lvl.) :\;r Omaha show an utter disregard for | nooted with its proper functions, and | other times of the year. It has been s0 | around, but those wno go up close to hiw g;:"h::‘l“:r;:;:“’s; m:t.ri]:h:‘t}) o, title, | ®sea serpent dead or alive, whien must N A S et g i ordinance. Our streets are becom- | which it oould not have any influence | this season, and, a8 usual, the papers | kaow that the niety-nino stripes around his | Fo was once a fustice of the peace, and was | U1ty feet long. ~ Mr. Baruuun s evidently | io 50 of domiestic felicit 80 crowded that pedestrians cannot | upon one way or another. find the cause in the heating of the blood | tail are all there yet. defeated for the district juageship. How- f"“f;“.‘:l‘:::‘:'l . ‘:1“’“":{6"::""“‘““:":”IV:‘,""S;‘,':‘:_ auscb e A8 pass certain cross-walks, and are | Ithas, therefore, been deemed an honor | aud the setting free of the evil passions orprgp——r ever, all the above geutlemen are eminent ;":N o fiat w‘:”;,mm of the mlxmm-‘-‘ ugli- | 1 1.’:'.’!.‘:.‘3113?‘{:ur2;].u:3: t;xglrx,rn;‘wtr"-fip ;" pelled to dodge hore and there inces- | by tho most advanced thinkers and earn- | supposed to lurk in the human system. | Semator Voorhees and the Spoils lawyers, and don't care what you eall them. v ) Y YR ness and dimensions. full war paint, ., B SiNce W, D, Howells had his little tling & It is whispered that the Crown Prince Thackeray and Dickens, Eaglish readers | and Crown Princess of Austria have have been ready to ind fault with bis pre- [ quite got over their tiff, &Ilmerfi’::::“n:’l:’::l‘ the couraze | They have no desire to be judges, eliher in of his appetitoas a spolls-hunter, He de- | MAMeOFInreality. clares most emphatically his beliet in the UNDER the bead of - *Crimes and Casual- doctrine that “to the victors belong the | ties” the World published the. following: . The police should puta stop to | est laborers in the eauso of economio | The true explanation is unquestionably at once. A few. arrests would | science to bo invited to present their | to be found in the lassitude and debility the sense of decency of some of | views before this body of representative | which result from a long heated term. vers of vehiclos upon our streets. | workmea. Not s few men who have bo- | Continued struggle for mere - existe