Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 15, 1887, Page 4

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DAILY BEE: MONDAY. AUGUST 15 o e il THE DAILY BEE PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. Ty have b bbed it that is beyond re- | price, Tut thoy conld not do it alone. If | to-morro vernor Thayer will torminus of the Blaok Hill line, and c:::ry?‘t:x:othuy cunno: IU:l‘d {o allow &mu public wrong that should be udI:ld and £p aker Harlan will deliver an THE 0UTLO0K AT Slm“. Douglas, Wyo, theend of the main line, the rascals who have profited by a | checked by law itis the crime of combi« address. il this city, as well as the country immed;- ot o Clinton Hulet, an ex-drug clerk at conti by a prolonged and unparalleled system | nations to force ficticious prices upon the Bouttice, hus bocn Juiled at Rteynolds for | Better Now Than It Has Boen For Year ately contiguou The Ute Outbreak. The outbreak of the White river Utes, under the loadership of the troublesome old chief, Colorow, is giving Colorado an suffered o relapse. A TRRMS OF SURSCRIPTION ¢ unwonted degree of excitement. Thus | of corruption to gounwhipped of justice. | necessities of life. When it shall become 3 great many thought that wo bad sunk Dy OMornigg Baiton inciding untny - | $0r'th Tndians have commitied 10 dop- PleL o gosnmhippey ot an offonso that leads to the ponitentiary | eniplayars and surtivg o store on his Before, riso no more, and % & eonsequencd, or v . 5 | rodations. They have taken up a defen- Political Salvationists. * | to attenpt & “corner’’ in any of our | own hook. e pulled their freight” for greener ficlds » t'i.: (,.':’:h:"',{‘.‘:,',,’, e, metied 25 | givo position near Meeker, having sent | Thisisan era of new parties. They ! staples and to charge extortionate rates Dr. Mead, the Platte Center masher, | ITS NATURAL ADVANTAGES. | and pastures now; where money they address, One Yoar. “ 200 | their squaws and pappooses mto Utah, | are springing up like mushrooms all over | for transportation of same, we may look e‘nmpounnl:\d pHI's in l’l:\usmoull; :-nmlo a—— lho‘uum was plenty and easily obtained. 5 16 Fanaw srugrr | A0 aDpear to be awaiting events, They ( the land, have their little birthday and | for relief but not before : m“m’- h ‘}: c?fi“":}%}f“;{“‘i}; of ““l‘i:l: Buffalo Gap's Prospects Getting | 1hesummer, so far, has been better in N o i g & Tuint xe poiiorea. | are well prepared with good rifles and | disappear. The latest was recently or- ——— 30 ~ e odors PPy ino W low untainted, Brighter—Marble Recently Dis- every reipect than the most sangu ganized by & New Yorker at Buffalo, It | “For waysthat are dark and tricks | O, " 5 is started on the omnium gatberum plan, | that aro vain," the council bosses are | o, * kg early birds, in soarch of the a sort of rag bg of political parties. A | very peculiar. In the salary appropria- | worm concealed in county oftices, T'hey ceiving from the east consignments of call for a convention to be held on | tion ordinance for July $160 of rentin | will compose a large and influential sur- goods to keep full their different lines of August 24, at Syracuse, was issued last | the exposition building is charged up | prised party in the fall. Sidney’s Success, wares they are so rapidly disposing of. Weck. The now. organization I8 to bo | against the police fund, and only $100 | An O'Neill girl foll ‘ont of a sccond | Sipwey, Neb., August if.—{Corres- | Otherlines of business are doing wll, know: N Rof Party, | against the general fund for the rent of | 8tory window to the ground and landed | pondence of the Brk.|—The Sidney of | Our brown and red building stone nown as the National Reform Party, 8¢ off fod il oh uninjured on her rubber backstop. Asa | to-day is far different to that of the win- :]uurlen are shipping by the car load and a permanent organization 15 to be | the offices occuvied as council cham- | go¢.(y yalye for falling girls the r. b. has | ters of 187677, when it was well known nily, to Lincoln, Omaha, Fremont and perfected at the coming convention, The | ber, and by the mayor, boiler inspector, | no equal, barring the handy sweetheart, | to the Black Hillers, being the gateway | 8t. Paul. Ono of the quarries, owned call is comprehensive and is addressed. building inspector, gas inspector and | The contract for the Missouri Pacific | to the vast mineral Intorests of the north. | and operated by the Brown Stone com- “To all cltizens of the state of New York | several other officials, The only rent | depot in Nebraska City is signed and [ Cheyenne county, the largest in the stato | pany, of th‘lsfilnco ] }v;w:‘lfluw(!’ in (lit and of the United States who belleve in God: | which properly is chargoable to the po- | scaled. It looks substantinl and imvosing | and of which Sidney is the county seat, | Judige G C. Moody, of Deadwood, and in the abolition and prohibition of the liquor | lice fund would be the quarters occupied | O Paper and draws admiration as read- | embracing some of the most fertile lands | kre vans, of Sioux Uity, besides of J in Nebrask: hich fact to be | eastern capitalists of St. "Paul and Chi- traffle; In a revision of the tariff laws; iu the | by the chief of police and his force, and &Ynd?! ) s s e pnmnB i‘t‘:‘:)rfihg'{\l'yc uujgrsm’c::rmi‘:ld:in; cago, Mr. ‘Evnns being president. Be- ASHINGTON OFFICE, NO. 513 FOURTRENTIl STREET. an abundance of ammunition to resist an attack, and undoubtedly the band, which numbers about a hun- dred, would make very serious work for & much larger force if a fight should be brought on. On the part of the state there is & company of militia stationed at a convenient point for repel- ling any hostile movement of the Indians, which ean be reinforced by settlers and ranchmen, all of whom are well armed and reported to be rather anxious to ex- change shots with the redskins. The governor has communicated with the na- anticipated, Merchants are selling large amounts of merchandise, and daily re- * ‘ohibs in wvarious counties are covered There—~The Business CORRESPONDENCE! Boom at Fairbury, E Al sommuniontions reluting to nows anded!- % torial matter should be addressod 1o the Evr o TOR OF THE Brn | BUSTNESS LETTERS? Al bueiness letters and romittances should be Mdressed to Tue Bre PUBLISHING COMPANY, AWA. Drafts, checks and postofiice orders be made payable t) the order of the eompany, THE BEE PUBLISHING CONPANY, PROPRIETORS, E. ROSEWATER, EpiTor. THE DAILY BEE Sworn Statement of Circulation, Btate ebra i submission of the question of female suffrage | t1,e hasement rooms used n jail. These v by the number of people from other | sides this there are the Colies Gulch, Elm l)m:' N,,g Du'::lu, is- s :I‘t;.nln] t":“"ho'":;’" but as “.l“lll '“"Mh to the direct vote of the people; in the mA- | 4oqin]y are not worth $160, if the other m’“]'(e"f,r;d%f‘t":':g" "l'}:;m,f‘g,(l '},‘3‘1"0}3;7 states who have sought homes within its | Creek, Springdale, Iron Grit, and various Goo. B frachuck, secretary of The Hee | ATuirs the war department is slow in re- | tional government Issuing all moneys: botn | ot AN AT IO C TR0 per month. | brara are in the heart of & county seat | borders. Itis butu few years since the | other quarries that more or less have east- sponding and the state executive pro- poses to go on without its aid. The course to be pursued, however, is not an aggressive one, and un- less the Indians commit the overt act the duty of finally bringing them back to their quarters and reducing them to obedience will devolve on the national government. From the reported temper of the whites in the region of the disturb- 4 Publighing company, does solemnly swear that the actual eircuiation of the Daily Bee by for the week ending August 12, 1857, wasas ows Baturday, August 0. unday, August 7. onday. August S |, Tuesdav, August 9. ednesday, August 10. 'hursaay, August {1 lay, August 12. coin and paper; ina uniform international i alt n .. | only industry that was thought would be | ern capital invested in them. There has standard zl weights of gold and silver dol- | But the design, on the face of it, is to re- {'v‘fg:;, ":":}, :l"“l"‘““lfi'“ bchwl?tlnl“i‘:lflgfil cur{:n-d on to any reasonable degree of | been discovered and to & certain extent lars; in devising methods for the continu- | duce the police fund and cut down the | {FEeh oL CRILL the gall of = success was cattle-raising. At this time, dovclopn-d;!n nl:nrbllelellzn, :lhn:ltutmat out t St Ve 1 B i D! ne ance of our present system of national banks, | number of policemen. Judge Hancock, of Papillion, is being ."'G’&f}-ffl'd n' l:c';:.l;:‘.?\r h;‘l:d::l‘l“’y l’:fiec]fi' :fll‘\‘;u(';:l'l ll’l:: fu:l“':':oll:?"l‘c Ctl;m‘l:'y!l?l!' b L e \ il she groomed by friends for a seat on the dis- | RAc"500n" farthor orowded <o tho north- | where. ~Nogotiations are now ver: mutual and fnseparable from each other and T1e council should lose no time in di- | tvict bench. He controls the molding: | wost. " the Countey that was niways | mearly comploted that ‘will place this are entitied to equal protection under the | recting the clerk to procure the neces- | ladlo of two both weekly, and eX | thouiht to bo too dry to be productive, | proverty in the hands of a Chicago syndie law, and that each of the sevoral states | gary blanks and books which will be re- | pects an easy uscent to the boudoir of | hyg by the sturdy hund of the industrious | cate for operation and they are now at should employ Its convict lavor in such & | quired at an early day under the new | the blind goddess. pioncer been made to blossom like a rose. | work prevuring tools, ete., for the proper way as to bring 1ts fruits into competition | ¢)ootion law for metropolitan cities. In- The Times belieyes that the advent of ‘The products of the soil embrace all | development of it. Wwith those of free labor In the least degree cidentally at strikes us also that a great ourt Pacit Average....oiuee- ool 14210 GF0, 18, TZSCHUOK. to Nebraska City is | kinds of grain--vegetables, hay, millet in All of these in ments tend to give ance it may be expeoted that if the In- | possible; that foreign pauper and contract he dawn of a new light. We can 10w | large quantities and of the best quality, [ the local capitalists more confidence, mfi'lm d‘r?y :?t::m’fi’f‘%).":g{ Presence | giang bring ou a conflict there will be | laborshould be prohibiteds that the laws | deal of money can be saved to the tax- | hogin to see our way outand get our nose | while near Sidney is to be found a quality | and already the effect s readily apparent ’ N, P. FEIL, few of them left to tell the story of the | regulating tmmigration should be carefully | Payers by inviting competition for this | from the B. & M. grindstone. of sand and limestone that only awnaits | on the local money market, that commo- [SEA L. Notary Publie. | posult, revised; that a Iabor bureau of statisties and | Work as well as all other printingof | The Hammond boys, of Fremont, | development to become a source of rev- | dity being easily obtained at fair rates of Btate of N“',’"'“l»} e faf { arbitration for the regulation of the relation | blanks and books used by the various [ ought to plug the mouth of the ghump [ enue highly remunerative. intevest. Inside of two years the town g"“'l";’.;"“:‘y' It is to be hoped the uprising will be | Won i o eapital should bo established; | city officials, This printing amounts to | ¥ho prances through the columns of the The rainfall this season has exceeded | will be a flourishing city, and built sub- o e0. e ur‘llr, I‘x‘:‘nz’ first duly s;vq[ln- quelled without bloodshed, and if 1t shall | y)00 46 employment of young children in | thousands of doll ear. The Beg | Lribune and “indecently exposes his ta- | that of preceding years in a large de- | stantially. o Publishing. company, Snt e Cactunt | be, the first thing then to be done should SHE tastont L v{urknho .ym o{ner A | 12 <A Rk oE s T peryear. 2he BEE | miliarity with falschood and hatred of [ gree. y L An artesian well is being dug and is 3 average daily cireulation of the Daily Bee for | be the disposal of the troublesome chief, hm“u“flnfihoum nozx‘m allowed: that our :]so“j‘;g‘L’l‘]‘i';'::“"?"l':;"s‘:::n“’v?m; "tsh‘:“““:‘f every Omaha interest. Chain him down | ~ The population of the county is esti- | already down over six hundred feet, = themonth of August, 1856, 12,464 copies: for Beptem ber, 189, 13,030 _copes; for ot 12,080 coples; for November, 1586, coples; for December, 1856, copiesy Jnmu? 1887, 16,260 copies; l&brunm 1857, 14,195 coples; for March. 1857, 14,400 emr for April, 1887, 14,316 copies; for May, 1857, 14,227 copies; for June 1887, 14,147 copies; for July, 1837, 14,003 copies, ' Gko. B. Tzscmuck. Subseribed and sworn to before me this 11th day ot Anwnt. A. D, 1887, [SEAL.| P. FriL, Notary Public. to truth and Ius dexth is assured. mated at about 7,000 inhabitants, and a h most flattering prospects of water, other taxpayers its interest 18 simply to Maud Perkins, a bnmhnz‘c?uutr‘x Ilnss &;‘O“mnl;lo'::soc;zxm:fhvv;:u'lfllunflg::k:;d}y s\ho|w 1[];(;1'(;:sl‘:l:007 l:m}l-;;‘I:TNNIuflhi‘lll‘!rjll'ltl:ll:"l‘i: o i iftee ildi v v . Cheyenne ¢ may be at s 3 B shiould be held sacred for tho benafit of citi- | 8o the needless gquandering o money fifvl‘::m,: ';i y(;lli“‘}:::i'i‘q[ ’,e(,“r(fl)'m..“:.l,m;‘c,d 6?,5 safely ranked as one of the most promis- | Hills. Telephone and telegraph service zon settlers, and who beliove in the contimu- | o1 favorites and traflic In city patronage cnme’MrAf’\ . S. Barnett. They are now i“'f counties in the state, direct with all the surrounding towns ance and extension of reform in the civil | for political influence. cooing in n cottage in Loup City, and 'he school systom of thecounty is well | and cities of the Black Hills, first-class service; in the equalization of the laws for ———— the parents of the girl bowed gracefully | orgamzed and in charge of Mrs. Julia | railway accommodations, gnogl hotels, LR el A T C e o b b sl B e ooy auporiatndent.. 1 overy Sstie. | Brecyihin fhat pots (o IRARe. 8 <ivllised 4 ] i 5 y J 0) o ery settle- very! e: uke d males and females. draws $70 per month for opening the Two prominent nssmlu.nu of Black- | TPIHEY,, RS & well ‘organizod school, | being happy and contented. There is much more, but what has | doors and windows and lighting the gas | stone 1n Valley, cuunt{ came together | 04" (FEOC Nty contains - about eizhty This town, with il ith owa Advantages been quoted will show that there is noth- | in the ccuncil chamber and standing "l!!'\"(?:ogflsé‘e::}n?;g'iigbbfizph;a’tw‘:ffi:‘d school dis?l?ic?s.y ‘l“t)isnsl:‘rpr’i’sig“ to ote | and oceupying the position it dues,fié ing diminutive about the intentions of | guard over the aity legislature two | hislunes ((;fll;c]lowillfl altitude in behalf | the active interest mamfested by the | entrance to both the southern and nortu- these political salvationists. They don’t | nights in the week. Computed at four- | of his olient, and turned a loud point call- children for the advancement of intellect- | ern hills, the place for transfer for freight hesi - Ly 4 &P o1 | ual pursuits. A $18,000 school house is | and passengers for Hot Springs, Custer esitate to rush in where more experi- | teen hoursa week or sixty hours per | ing Thomas L. Redlon, opposing counsel ) N “ : 3 enced reformers fear to tread. 7 a blunkety blank liar,. ‘Tom instantly re. | Now under process of erection here, and | City, Hill City, and all the tin country; il month the pay of this officer is at the | 8 Bt Kby DlanE e O oy wast. | Will be completed by November 1. At | with'all the “beautiful hill and prairie rate of $1.16 for each hour, or reduced to | P! o 1y y P present a tenchers’ institute is in session, h\rmlnfi 1and laying all around it, well i Colorow, where his appetite for mischief could find no opportunity for gratifi- cation, The evidence is that he is virtu- ally never at peace, being always either engaged in broils or in preparing for them. It would doubtless be advisable, ulso, to separate and widely scatter the bana of which he 13 the head, all of whom are renegades ever willing to engage 1n any desperate undertaking. The tolera- tion of such a band of thieves and out- laws can have no justification. The fact that the government has no troops near enough to be immediately available is noteworthy as an illustration of the in- adequacy of the protection from Indian depredations which the nation affords. The probability 1s that the Utes will await the proposal of torms, and that if a little shrewd diplomacy 18 used the systom of non-sectarian public instruction should be preserved; that the public lands CuARLES FRANCIS ADAMS says he can’t see where there was any need of a Pacifie road investigation. Of course not, ‘No rogue ere felt the halter draw,” etc. S——— ¥ Ly n 3 The Railway Disaster. day-work of nine hours' service would ‘b‘:%n‘shtnnfil :“_"J;“}vg,&kkc"‘m:ng?a;?:g"fi:; with an attendance of fifty-five teachers. | watered; in winter with s olimate The railway disaster at Chatsworth | po'oqual f + g I The population of Sidney will easily | reminding one of the orange and banana i qual to $10.44 per day. This 18a | outin elegant shape and windless. The | Lt Lt 1 il v i the momory of many for yours | pice sagar para: Bloynivsn himsol, | HRbt Wi docIATol draw on condition | fopresott Liapsouis, The o las bcn | groves of the nouth, ‘and n summer to come. Ats horrors and sufforingshave | who js a very expensive man, would | that Robbins keep his mouth shut in P years, he muniei- i i al government is conducted by an able | north; with all these advantages that can not half been told. Its like was never | 10 5 gontract to guard the council at public. Eonl‘-"d of trustees, five in uumyhur. Its | be expected. GOVERNOR ADAMS, of Colorado, does not manifest much respect for the gen- eral government. 1s it possible the able governor is afllicted with the antiquated O s 's i B before recorded in the history of steam Callawayans have changed their tune | qiis i e e - K1 Uhe0ny trouble can bo sottled without tho loss of [ transis. Desolation and sorrow have | " " e perceptibly, i accounts voice tho goneral Ohiaeneises nd T aRvenoing: the Ttors || marmetoromtte oo b 5 Is diso i life. Thero is an element among the | entered many homes. There is no com- [ Tg police very properly compel post- | PPimiof, OF the wames [ayes tragecy. | ests of their town. The latter 18 hand- : - TS S 60 et Colorow;a disorato ho will bo I/l o) Swever thinb (WORIA mok} objact | sensation. to. bé rendersd for tha! oss o1 ofies AT MO ayes was the town blacksmith and was | (60 3L iS40 1n wide streets and avenuies | Tespondence’ of the Bee.]—The ity quiet. Stranger things than the killing { bo) oflice loungers to “‘move on” during | particularly sweet on Mrs. James, when | whioh are kept in & manner creditable | is full of strangers and many are invest- [ of a few lawless Indians have happened to a fight, and if one is begun the con- | the loved ones. business hours. Now, if the postmaster | her husband was out. Last spring James 3 5 ALl . to any large city and the buildings are | i d adding themselves to the citizen- Emblems of mourning festoon the once | would order his janitor to brush the cob- | found him *‘at home' with Mrs. J., and mo»u?v tfo.smf_v, substantial ,;m‘.lcmm: ;"lligp“(’:i t;:‘u ulngce. o The Chicago, Kansas happy homes of those who sacrificed | webs from the ceiling aud uncover the [ Objccted to his familinrity. Hayes ro- | of hrick, stone and frame material, s : is buildi tho lives in the terriblo horror. It was | dial of the alloged clock which hangs in | tloted by inviting James to a third of | ©A'fuw'months ago a trotting and driy- | & Northwestern is building a number of . ¥ the couch. Three in a bed did not suit | i purk association opened its existence | SWitches on thoir grounds south of town. a pleasure purty who sought recreation | front of the gencral delivery, the patrons | his ideas of domestic economy, and | \mPAVE ASI0CALOR OPencd IS GRISIENCE | 1 o teack laying on the Denver exton- after the summer’s labors. Upon the other | of the office would feel under lasting ob- | pulling "a revolver he sent the | jieet VoM KON CHSHIERR S AT | oo KMtahll and\balatellons we hand, the railroad had inaugurated the | ligations. soul oFlluycs into unpenetrable obscur- | fave = & e MG 1SI0SR COIR I O USE I LR SSiitalon to Fesentin e ) 4 d Pt T 9 Later the Cheyenne county fair and | will have another outlet by rail. Also —— ity and himself to jail. For this violation | Jovioultural assoviation was inscituted e 5 indicato that the accidont was caused | Tk Rev. Dr. Savidge has taken up tho | Of law and poace he was tried and ac- | qnd w county fair will be held here in | the Fairbury T chieflythrough the carolessness of the | casos of the loafers. The able doctor, it | futicd James disappyared from town | October. Thisisindeod a novel thing | the Kansas Uity & Omakha s Iy iujieacks ‘ flict may grow to be serious. —_— Let Them Be Arraigned. Whether or not the department of justico at Washington has been consider- ing the policy of arraigning C. P. Hunt- ington and his fellow Pacific railroad boodlers on charges of bribery, as it is snid to have been, there can be no ques- tion that the matter should receive the attention of that department. It is not doubted that the law relating to the bribery of me:abers of congress s suffi- in this country, Mister Colorow should know when he is well off. that he will do all he can to repeal the inter state commerce law at the next ses- sion of Congress. Perhaps the senator 1 has been refused a railroad pass. SE———— ‘ SENATOR CULLAM it is alleged has said < g ¢ L . or a time, but returned recently to find Sidne and are out of the county by this time, rond’s managers. [t was a large single [ is to be hoped, will not lose his grip on | that the biacksmith's friends hud “‘nursed f",';di‘é','e"d-vg,,’;;“t‘cfl';;fl:,",,Z:;"‘:.v,;":fld | e R Rl M s train when in fact it should have been | this subject until he has converted the | their wrath to keep it warm.” |W hen it | foon declared *“‘a little loose under the | fom here to Dewitt or Crete. divided into sections. The train dis- | last loafer in town and transformed him | Wus announced that he would settle | ;¢ n Anotber road is needed here badly; patcher has testified that the train was | into a picce of industfious humanity, Dr, | doWnin thei midst their rage found ex- | ““Froq culture has been a Iemlin& feature u THE street car conductor has made his appearance in Minneapolis and has come to stav. Itistime Omaha was evi- dencing a like spirit of enterprise. A > pssion i vi, vitati i Si one running direct to Omahn by Btreet car without a conductor is not an | cient to enable the government to pro- | running at the rate of sixty miles an | Savidge has undertaken a great task. :‘;'1::‘33“:“.““‘_ ','?,',’fi“.:‘: 1:,';:_““11'&““,2?0 l;vl,"': of "“,‘.""I‘A‘f"““.‘d‘“ “‘(" 5"1"““":‘ of Siduey, “;’ way of l;inco‘l‘n. ard it is expected soon, equipped car. ceed against the whole pack of Pacific | hour. Had not the speed been so —_— also escorted to Broken Bow, where the | O ¢ither side of stroeis are rowsof | myp St Joe & Grand Island and the great the accident in all | PRESIDENT ApAMSs, of the Union Pacific | leaden tendencies of the authorities will m’iv'(',t.“t ';'i',;l,fl,';,"i’: l‘:)rc':nalg:ic:;a:l:gogg'utheun Kansas City & Omaha have commenced probability would not have occurred. [ road admits in an interview printed in | have a soothing eflect on their conduct. | porder of the town where 275 ofticors and | 018 NOW "’:L"S'I" &",fi:";‘ :’,Tn)fizg?":‘n:g':"d The road is a bankrupt 1nstitution. It is | this issue of the BEE, that the debt of the men are stationed under command of the 1 T uite handy for business. but further 1n the hands of a receiver. The interest | rond does not fall due for ten years. If| qyooorn L,‘l,(,:v:',: (lht:“:v:sm ™ half of :)“w'k"""" veteran, Gen. Henry A. Mor- | #1037 tho (Xxieaxo. Kansas & Northwest- railroad corruptionists, and it is not at all questionablo that a case could be be made which would procure their in- dictment and would make sure their con- E——— THERE should be some way to compel non-resident express wagon and omni- bus owners to pay a liberal license dur- ing fair time, when they compete with | viction. on the bonds mature this month. Some- | 80, why was he so anxious for the pas- | Guthrie county will be very large, e ern depot than is desired. Work has also our rosident oxprossmen who pay license | - Everyone of them who has been called | thing must bo don to help pay tho ap- | sge of the Outhwait funding bill lust | Tho railronds will carcy deozates to | enim’ doon serctdl dapd s boon bogan on tho roundhouss and water tank ™ all the year round, before the investigating commission is a | proaching obligation. The cxcur- | winter? the stato conventions at one furo for the | offico opened on July 1. The land ofice | £0F the Jaint uso of bath ronds, This is 1 - — self-confessed criminal. Their evasions | sion was planned. All haste was | yo\ e eboaT has faral o round trip. in itself has proved a big thing to the burg branch of the Kanss City & Omahn PArsoN NewMAN, who disappeared | and refusals to answer questionsreferring | made to get the people’s money. Equal E hope somebody has furnished City | ‘'he memorial tablet raised by Hamil- | merchants, bringiug in a_rcvenue from ich i ion Pac . 5 q I'4 & peop! Y. q A 2 5 which is a part of ihe Union Pacitic sys: from public view soon after the close of | to the alleged use of large sumsof money | haste was indulged in to make a switt | Attorney Webster a copy of the new ses- | ton county to the heroes and survivors of m,-mlrmlslgf people who probably other- | jo - ghe last prosidential campaign, has | to influence logisiation can be reasona- | transit. The general order was givon to :mnblnws. If he will take the time and t}!‘r(i!dbapml Lake expedition was unveiled :’l:zl:) :‘V;znrnfli,gg':fir:;) ‘lfigv Og;r;g.‘:f;': A woolen factory 18 talked of and will tarned up again on_the Pacifio const, | bly regarded in no othor light than as an | run tho train with all possible speed re- [ FUPIe torend up in thonow laws, ho | EOABY o Lo p | W submitied to vote of the people on | PORaps bobuilt, L T e e & whore be is locturing on Grant and | scknowledgment of guilt. When Hunt- | gardless of consequences. The brave | 1Y discover somothing that will modify ticainitis : tho 20th of July and it |, Colonel Ha e aing Comi &ul g q WV | his opinions as to the legality of the languishes in the calaboose for stealing 5 Ao beautiful structure. It is cut stone and Logan. Coming ovonts cast their shad- | jngion confessed that generously paid at- | engincer who met his death protested Tate 5 y from a gentleman's vest pocket a $100 | Was carried by over 1,000 majority. | yorry cotta front. ws before. We aro evidently on the | torneys were keptin Washington, with | against running the train solid, but | \*t¢ SPecial election. watch. gx:‘l‘:le"a":d"‘?:(?h;';:efl‘:::ez‘s:‘;fimi” der | The building boom continues active, A hreshold of another political eampaign. | yplimited privileges of expenditure for | thoughtit should be divided into sections, Wiieni does the—l‘n_m idomalls ’l]‘lhf l\lle '.Ie Vallm‘ri Trottin, nssulqiatim: stroying the crops. o number rof llne tljcsldencel are under . EEEEE——— ", al i o w1l hold 1ts second annual meeling al ) o (% PR Y ¢ inter course of construction. AccorpiNG to McShane’s eavesdrop- :.{'gm‘::‘:gooiee ::"r;’;":;g::g nl[lh ::g: wx':; g:::‘ (:hlz,r;;l“xru‘);e:‘vzl;elnolt‘:;:;g ":::‘fl; ",‘f keep himself during the hot weather, and | Mapleton, August 80-81, September 1. pulzli‘?\ E':;’;‘ml;l':‘“yi’gu'{fal;?{o ;2?;!,‘:‘ "gg New Neel per, C:l:'m;isslouut’l‘l:mo has '-:ioon @ | hocossary to o ity Taa e tional mant| (ST} Sl yed i his Toaoe Pl b v:hnt e dvn‘o AT e () #Lopgpremiums’ ymount to wore than | quarries of the Sidney Limestono com- | Ngpr, Neb., August 14.—[Corros- roache man w e the conditions of the sidewalks? P any . The limes ant e e Ilfnxuor l{h: if he :“';::p?f:'nmwn: _thnt a systematic and costly pol- vyl_th the passengers who had bclen oy |12908 — The Rock la]:g.m company has offered )c):::,‘,.:‘:‘y“;m?ltéfi:&vx?ee:‘;ehd:::::j;ltm:; pondence of the lh.k.]—jln the nqrth- BH6 stampe, but Timme fought shy of | 1oV of céruption had been pur- | licited to emvark upon the fatal trip. 1If STATE AND TERRITORY, a reward of $200 for the apprehension | 750 curs'a year to compensate the rail- | ern part of Dundy county is located in a | 4 sued. Equally when Stanford evaded | it can be proven that the accident and,conviction of the parties who at- | way company for this construction, wide extent of excellent country, lying UMt bald, bad man. What s pity his | 0" rooker refused to answer the | was the ocause of carlessness, upon Nebraska Joctings, tempted to wreck a train near Iowa City | " 'Fhe Nobraska, Wyoming and Colorado | between the Republican and Frenchman ) bosom triend, Frank Walters, is away on i . ¥ g e8R080, JMp Copious rains where corn is king. last week. 0i A Mining com ani (s i Y nestions of the commissi - 3 7 il and Mining company organized h the town of Neel. The soil & G 3 direct questiol commission re- | the part of the railroad officials there 3 By ~ M rivers, 5 6 other side of the big pond. Frank oo ithatfits of monay o fiaen it for tb Seward has captured an oat meal mill The July reports of the wardens of the | a weck ago with §500,000 capital, to lo- | of the surrounding country is guod; i nows how to manage such delicata | 82°10R ) y i RO LAWALO0BRYOEQ ToT VoM, .| to cost $20,000. penitentiary have been recoived by the | eate and work oil and mining claims in | the water soft and pure an & e legislation they vnruymlly admtted the Torture after the tasluo!l of the inqui- In Platte county they call 1t “‘the anti- | overnor. Anamosa shows 301 prisoners, | Wyoming, T'wo thousand acres of the | the lands cheap. A town has been 5 SE— implied allegation. The circumstances | sition would be mild punishment for the | snake-bite ticket.” a reduction of Lv\(ul'vu for the month. | best land in Fremont county, Wyoming, | Iaid out here, where is now located & () Last Thursduy morning the New York | are such that anything snort of a frank | scoundrels. The managers of railway [ Schoonover's skunk was heard if not | I'ort Madison has 349. 4 has alrendy been taken and the company | postoflice and general store. A lumber {8 Blar indulged in the following comment. | and positive demial of overy imputation | trains in this country have grown en- | smelt round the world. The combination wooden bridge across | intend to take 5,000 acres more. The of- | yard, drug and _hardware store, news- 8 ‘Harmonyis to be the order of the day | must be regarded as a confession of | tirely too reckless. An example should ; Corn z’;ievefi‘ ALe 111‘@(‘:'3"‘"3 the distil- | the Botna north of Lowis fell while a | ficors and dirctors of tho company con- | paper, blacksmith shop, hotel, livery i the justice of such imputation, | be made of some of them. ery cribs at Nebraska City. o & X onit. The driver was uninjured and one | Oberfelder, James Mcintosh, secretaries; ind i ises. ——— g“" :J'l’lh"‘ P"fif"“ has ‘}fc"tl‘?“ to build | j1orse only sligntly il.\jm'ud.j Most of the | Edward M. Mancourt, treasurer; Henry thelndiigirial nterprises BisMARCK'S latest move is his proposi- | & 'en-stall roundhouse in Beatrice. corn was lost. Domer, M. H. Tobin, J, W. Harper, di- Grafton Gone Glimmering. tion to establish a central European ""T'““;l and s‘%‘lxéi“}' are now !hl‘lk- Ford reports this tho dryest year on | Fectors, Most of the stock has alroady | GrArToN, Neb., August 14.—[Corres- zollverein, a sort of European union, ;Efim‘::d“l“’,":y' the bloody chasm of & | rocord, Springs of water toat hive run | been subscribed and inside of thirty days | pondence of the Bre]—The barloy 3 i p the machinery will be on the ground i i based on the plan of the American union, | * The Grand Island canning factory em- 8‘,’;3,'"‘&'-‘.}:,‘“' egf(i“:E‘::‘ifiyr?yv';yi‘s/‘li)s(\nl;g:z; ready to begin operations. K crop is an entiro failure here, sixty acres team of horses and u load of corn were | sist of Edwin Elmer, president; Joseph | gtable, etc., has already been added (o amilton and Dayton railrond. The ‘ Honest men, having nothing to conceal ; * Warious committees had long conferences and nothing to fear, would not have had reoourse to evasion, subterfuge and re- fusal 1n & matter so vital to their charac- ter. They would not only have given prompt and full answers to the questions ;‘ N ong the creditors of the Cincinnati, | with Harry S. Ives, and everybody is to " Deprotected, the young financier as well |l ms the rest. Thero seems to be little 1 25 There i destroyed by the chinch bug. The | soubt about the ability of young Mr. Ives in which there is to bo free trade between | ploys 125 hands and turns out 30,000 cans 3 o T'here is strong talk of the Union Pa. | Were yRaby. 8. Ro drive a good bargain.” On Thursday | propounded, but such ample and com- | each of the present nations of western t')’lzyoods:day. p ffi;’;?fi.}’.fi“'ubfifi‘;“".'1?,"",,.1;;“";“ ,fg.",‘,‘; cific yniqund“buildiug a new depot | fietd was afterwards planted to corn. gfternoon young Mr. Ives closed the | plete explanation of their whole course | Europe. Bismarck's desire is to have all | _No stretch of the imagination or high | frost. somothing similar to the one now being | The bugs got away with it also. The oors of his bank and declared himself a | and conduct as wonld dispose of every | the people of western Europe banded to- | license justifies reforence to undertakers ereoted at (‘h“”.""'."" wheat _crop has shared about the same | ‘busted community.” We have heard | imputation upon their integrity. That | gether in & commercial union as ”;“" ‘business™ men, 5 Roller skatin| l‘)::( m;:' 1 Highmore nefi?&?xfi“{&g“l‘llfi:: ’:!s:h;“lgll:?l’: r:ncgnlltll{ :,“f,'" Nw:,_ ",’,':)'ihf,;l’,{m::{fd ".‘ll ncri: 2‘1‘1’ " - pothing since about harmony. these men have by manifvst prearrange- | against the United States, England, | .o :’,,‘:"{.,f{{.,’n &‘It,ln;&':v‘;anep‘t\flo'noggr v% The Dakota sgchoufi)t Kminus g. 0; Episcopal church on Rose street are n?)lt y,{, 1,000 bushels of Spring wheat ) VR 1 —*‘_r——————h -_ld ? th ment pursued the opposite way, and have | Russia and the Asiatic nations. | yuilg chourt house. 2 J Rapid City in September with ':"f“"u handsome additions. The new Lutheran | threshed in this county this year. The “:“:;.m‘: :umr‘n-:ny ":l'“:“ nn‘i required their subordinate officials to fol- Ho is vory anxious to put an embargo | ~Bancroft lovied a tax on dogs some | COps of professors, t;!““'k‘;h b“‘l"::,'i'[‘l!‘.;'s'll'm:’; t""':‘l"f“;",l “")‘ 8 few | corn crop 13 very poor. A great portion * moally finds investmont in txn west. The low the same line of conduct, strips on Americean imports, but, taking as this | weeks ago and the ofliciuls are now open | _Blue Bear, the noble red jailed at "1:’,":(,. n(")._,,.,fi,],l'cr “mg,‘wuf"(.r eot :?:’«; Sf,é‘ v:‘;‘:u‘f“:;:}‘{.am(};vg:‘;ylf:::fi:nfi\lgfl:l:m!t B i ticssod a particuiarly from them every doubt that might | idea may be, the iron chancellor will not | at every pore trying to collect 1t. Yankton for highway robbery, made an | gry building, 60x48 fect in dimonsions, | the acre. have been in their favor and leaves them naked befora the world as a band of as utterly unscrupulous cor- uptionists as this or any other country ever produced. This being so elearly and uncguestion- ably established by the strongest possible circumstances, it will be a shameful de- feat of justiceif these men ure allowed to escape all responsibilitv, Counting thewr ill-gotten wealth by the tens of millions, and long used to the exercise of unques- tioned power, they have now virtually live to sce such a union. The conditions | A runaway team attached to a mowing | unsuccessful attempt to reuch the happy | jn'a’few days. It will be an iron front would not be like those which obtain be- | Mmachine ‘killed Thomas Daily, aged [ bunting grounds by choking last week. * | and plate gluss windows. There will he The Rich Cedar Valley, tween tho states of the American union, | tWenty,n Saunders county last Thursday. J. W. Hoit, of Brown counlfr. who is | three stores down stairs and oftices up | SraurLpiNG, Neb., August 12.—[Cope This country is self-sustaming. whils the. | . [he Tefusal of the prohibitionists to | now harvesting his seventh crop of | stairs and will be the handsomest build- | respondence of the Birk.]|—The Cedar 5 y pel ® | “take water” will have a cooling effect | Wheat, estinates this year's average at | ing in town- 4 Valley combines the richest crops and European nations are large importers of | on old party tactics in the fall ca thirty bushels per acre. In 1886 his aver- Articles of incorporation have been oy ios of li Aty BEIDAIKD, 7 . he best munufactaring facilities, Even the necessarios of life, and the commun- | A mad dog enlivened the human race | %@ Wasfifteen bushels. filed with the secrotary of state for the | the best manufa § IR0LIVIOR: 3 ity of interests would not be a suflicient | in Nebraska City last week, A civilian Sheriff Boyd, of Pennington county, | Sidney, Northwestern” & Pacific railway | in this dry year small grain gives fair re- coliesive force to make such a union per- | With a shotgun dispatched the cur on the has recovered a bunch of twenty-five [ company. The road will run from Sid- | turn and lh}x corn stands very green and manent. fly. horses that wudro stolen fromjnhWyonung nluy xpl (,mru‘nn xlu'ku. thence !nn{\thwu.n_t to | livel It will be a good crop. i 0 el ranch some days since. They were | the oil and coal regions of Wyoming. el R R e e il atar Plattamouth’s two caneries are doing found out on Spring creek Monday and | The incorporators p Juy Gould, Russell On ¥ ndfw' tho 6th, & heavy X “_ .- ot DAN LaMONT has proven himself to be ':;‘.i‘flé{",%..'i;;“}‘:gfi !»?505'?:@ 01;;6«; daly | 0 oW corralled thero awaiting tho | Suge, Washington Conner, Addison Cam- | Struck parts of the Loup, but it scarcely the monumental ingrate of the age. His gav o W00 cans & | o rrival of the owners. mack and S. H. Clark, touched us, Storms and tornadocs rage attempt to take the advantage of ex-Sec- h The Anheuser-Busch Brewing Co., of | mostly along the big rivers. | gctive drain of money from the east to ghe west, with the effect of creating n shortage in tho former section which just mow 18 being felt, It is reported that X ton alone has put about $50,000,000 " $nto western railroads and land com- . ganies, and probably two or three times is amount has come from other eastern fiuarters, even the not over weatlhy state of Maino having sent comvaratively lib- eral contributions. It may take a little time to get returns from sowmo of these | Investments, but ultimately they will all ! i ) The old settlers of Seward, York and . Colorado, St. Louis, have erected a large ware- [ The Cedar is about 100 miles long. It “bo profitable. Meunwhile the oppor- | defied the authority of the government | rctary Manniugis a suflicient oxemplifica- | Butler counties will come together for a [ Denyer has lnvited President Cleve- | houss here, making this their westorn | descends seven feet to a milo. It % tod _ gunities for sound investments in tho pro- | ® represented 1 the investigat- | tion of the forme: gratitude, It was | picnic at Lord's grove, Butler county, on | j,nd, supply depot. Doran & Tobin ure their | by springs. It is never frozen to the bot- grosmvo west are very far from being ing commission, and are doubtless ex- | Manming wnl°l made Lamont what ‘h:l”‘hé P. Marvin is ey The Denver base ball club is tumbling | 8&ents. ;:)ul, nm{\vr goes ;lry and ucvcr'ovurflown; i i i d on, s, P, arvin again sole owner i Si S q hus making such an even waler power | exhausted. pecting that a liberal use of money | hc in. (1 it mot been | o Baatrice Demoorat tha bonrbon | in financial rapids. Sidney is now the largest horse market 3 they have tho best e E— will continue to buy immunity asit has Tae fact that this country imported | bitherto done. The power thoy have at muore iron and steel during the fiscal | command must not be uuderestimated. year ending on the 30th of last June than | It permeates overy channel and aveauo ©ever before in any one year, oxcopt 1880, | Where they may find advantage--Guaa- _ 4ssignificant of the great demand which | cial, socisl snd political. They will net | ghe pass year has developed. Our own hesitate to use it freely and n‘!nu-rupu- S i Cedar Rapi through tae influence of the ex-secretary, | 4 f Colorado is determined to act the hog | in the west. During the past sonson that at ( ¥ Lamont, would have been hoolng corn | bbb y of Gage county. John O. Burke | o ith) tie watersof the Platte und sarcasty | seventy-five cars of Grogon Rorses have | Hour mill of the stat o. Feof i Iy e el 1f tho Union Pacific had heen able to in bis native county in Now York, | The Hall County Press, by Riner & | %il¥ invites Nobrasks to dry up. boon disposed of ut thia baint besidesthe | o jor'tg "branches the Codur valley whero he properly belongs. Man- | Rice, is the latest, It lopks'vigorous for | Thecorner-stone of the Larimer county | /ny %0 wony nor fraternity 13 well repre- | Would to-duy be one of the best of Ne- niug is aflicted, almost 1n the | 8 dailyinfant and premises to survive Sfi“"‘ d"““",f.n":’“"l‘}:j “‘mf‘c’;zll‘%‘:}(‘ffl' sontad 1n the county, Bush & Callahon, | braska. But nnv_vhtha B. «: '!'-1',"" lr(m.s.:;«d grave. Lamont seeks to rob him | the countless ills of childhood. uraday. £he bullding h000. | ogitors of the Siduey Telegraph, the | )t fifty miles 'gnl‘l W;ml of Oedur Hagl ", of bis politioal power aud personal The sightless maiden with the Roman | ,The police of Denver are in the mudst | §ijney Democrat with J. ‘L. Kellington [ Three important railroads have been su P balance penned up a pair of burglars on | Of another spasm of reform, They pro- | at'the hel - - Poie I y ) veying around Spauldin, Our country productive oapacity was fully employed, | lously. But they canmot longer do so te. The president’s secretary | gho'tnira round in Schuyler. They will | Pose to run in or out the horde of bunko- | Morga, ‘;;’;",‘,‘,’,f,;‘ '.“shl,":,',’,re'fls'k’v‘,".fl'..fi is :du(g:idml‘l\' one of tfiovgn-nl railrond '} besides which we paid over $00,000,000 | Without the people belag able to trace | will live to s the day when he will be [ fatten on the state for five yoars. steerers and tin-horn gamblers infesting | w; ; iu the cditorial sanc. | fields of this y .»,1 Our nw,:- 'ww have 1 'l for forelgn iron and steol. Pricos, also, | accurately whore their peculiar form of | the most dispised man known to Clove- | The Santoo Indians will exorcise th | 110 city, &nd prohibit the lower girl and K vor, Brother Randall | nisny factorics and our country bo one | ¢ ave ranged higher than for a number of | influence kas boen exerted.: If they are | land's adminlstration. The character of | rights of American freemen in Knox female er-jorker the ehief, Minatare Trumpet, J. I, Ring- 5 L4 %, aud if there is any iron manufao. | not brought to an accounting there will | the maa ix oleariy shown in his treatment | county this fall. They will vote, and ardeus, ———— I['{'X‘"\"y'-',:;,,'g\:nz.fi‘fi,:, flfuy(fr‘,:“m ;,I‘;; Williamn McDiarwid, who elaims to be v fl'.r in the country Who has not made | be little ftrouble in MAxiug the ro- | of Mr. Mannin, °‘,::“’“°' “"°“|“ "‘:""‘:"“’ ot it, At the laying of the foundation stone | workers and fight hard tor their rospee- { the foldcst living printer and uowspuper - monoy the reason is certaluly not to be | sponsibility for the failure. The ——— 0 examination of teachers for state | of'the fmperial institutethe Quecn used | tive constituents writer e United States,”” lives in found in the absence of demand. In | present administration bas much to 17th and at Aurora on the 28th, The ex- was born in kdinburgh in 1792, was ap- i r than a shiling gitating the public mind and the il yiow of the fact that the million and a [ gain or lose by its oconduct again agitating the publie 1w The continued bigh price of beef is bo- | SSriifcates will begin at Fremont on the | glusses in publiofor the first time. The | * ‘T question of the county division is | Healdsburg, Sonoma county, Cal. He ocoming % subjent of general complaint in | amination will last three days at each | 1ooae: arct et in iar ! . t . o o itted | prenticed to rinting firm when he was Tl tans of foreign iron and steel im- | in rolation (o this baud of corraptionists. | the east. The price of live stock in tho | place. plecs, aud set 1n 8 plain it of tertolss | quastion WLl o ey, b “araheny | fourteon yoars bid, cam to this couniry ported pad a profit to the manutaoturers | 1t can commend Itself raore strongly to | west is not mmoh more than half of what wJohn McMurphy has forsaken the e — its ovorwhelming defeat, thinking it & | in 1836, worked on various papers bere and was laid down in our markets &t no | popular approval by briuging them to Digher price with the duty paid than the | tho bur of justios, sad it ounuot escape and in Cincinnati untii 1878, whi went to Californ e I wus fow yoars ago, but thero has | Wahoo Wasp, and the parting sting | At the recentgarden party at Buoking- | little too premature beeu o lollni;lo udsotnmln the cost of | TAkes him sad, Mr.J. A, Srith *wi ham palnce great astonishment was ex: Buftalo Gap where, until a yo the Boom. 5 3 Vol 1 ; « ; ) w20, he used to write for the press, | ‘hosue produot, some idea-mey bo formed | rosponbily fo a fallars t0 do it A% | beaf 1o the commumers. ‘There is extor. | Mg s 10 Business end ol the | pressed over e chatinbgne, BN K| Bukrauo Gar, Dk, August 1| Biorte tonie boing an improved. oo ©f the very handsome profits realized by | W¢ ""’ b"‘"‘:““: mm:.olwmh“a“‘ tion soniewhere. Of onimes middlemen | . Grand Army veterans and old_settlers | sipposed to have been all drunk up. [ [Corresponde of the Rek]—Natur | lite, atter tho ideas of Owen, Fourier, ford to wl ] Aok Abe home munufacturers. have s hand. in wmaintaining the high | of York will picnic at McCool Junction | There was plenty of it.” v ally, - after Rupid City. became the [ Cabot and others,

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