Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 30, 1887, Page 4

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et the Bosses St When the Holly waterworks jobbers were cornered by injunctions and the citizens of Omaha were in arms against they got themselves elected at political primaries by the bummers and ward strikers and appeared in conven- tions as honored party representatives whose exemplary conduct was endorsed The same tactics are THE DAILY BEE. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERME OF SUBSCRIPTION ¢ ) Including Sunday ™ Dafly Morniag Edition) Ber, One Year For 8ix Months. For Threo Months by the people. ATA OFFIeR, No. 914 AND 018 FARNA Ew YORK OPFICE, RO SHINGTON OFFICE, NO. 615 FOURTEENTH CORREYPONDENCE! All communications relating to news and edi- torial matter should be addressed Lo thi TOR OF THE Bex. BUSINEAS LETTERS? ATl businoss lotters and remittancesshould ba PUBLISHING COMPANY, sgan employed to get an endorsement for the councilmen who are starving the volice and inciting anarchy and disorder 1n this city by their high-handed defiance of law and popular sentiment., in their plot to pocket the whole deloga- tion to the state convention, the council conspirators are now trying to have themselves endorsed at the primaries with a view of controlling the repub- lican county convention, dictating its nominations, and naming the delegations to the state and judicial conventions. This programme can only be carrica out if reputable addressod to 'Tal ) Drafts, checks and 0 be inade payable to the order of the company. THE BEE PUBLISHI COMPARY, PROPRIETCRS, postoffico orders E. ROSEWATER, Forron. THE DAILY BEE. Sworn Statement of Circulation. Btate of Nebraska, County of Douzlas, Pk compante, Tomnly. swsar shing company, does solemnly & Ahat the actual clreaiation of tha Dally Boe for the week ending Sept.23, 1557, was as decent repub- attend the primaries and candidates in their despera ble for oflice allow the desperadoes to have their own way. Inthat case the republicans are certain to be overtaken by disaster this fall. party vlace itself in position as an en- of the council bosses? right have they to thrust a municipal quarrel into our county politics? Why should they persist at thi; endorsea through conventions have no concern with city affairs? they imagine the republicans of this county, or this distriet wiil support cand- idates for judicial offices nominated by delegates which are dictated by Haseall, Bechel, Mike Lee & Co? If so, they are Why should the Mondayv. Sept, time in being Sworn to and subscribed in m: this 27th day of September, A, D. . P. FEIT, Notary Public. State of Nebraska, Douglas County, Geo. B. Tzschuck, being first duly sworn, deposes and says that he ls secretary of 'The Bee Publishing compan. average dalily circulation of themonth of September, 1846, 13,080 T, 12,989 coples; for Novem- for Ueeemher.llmh 1 coples; for February, 1857, 1857, 14,400 coples. 14,316 copies for May, 1 7, 14,147 coples; for July, 003 copies; for Anuu»t.“ woetully mistaken, It will be time enough for these coun- that the actual f the Daily Bee for for endorsement when thoir terms of office expire. time they should be content with the power they wield in the management of 98 cobles; for for April, 1887, 4,227 coples; for ire. They have already created discord enough in the party, and we earnestly protest against any con- cession that will enable them to dictate nominations for our county and district courts and give them a voice in naming the candidate for supreme judge. A word to the wise ought to be suffi- Every candidate who goes into combination with the council bosses, con- cedes to them the naming of his dele- gates or places any of them on his ticket will run the risk of defeat at the polls. We say this now before the tickets for primaries are made up. Candidates who aspire to office and expect the cordial and undivided support of the party may gov- ern themselves accordingly. 887, 14,151 copies. xo, B TzscHuck. in _my presence 1887, Notary Public. and subseribed ATES to the judicial district con- yention should be selected with great DouGLAs county should be represented at the republican state convention by mon of ability and character. Ir the name of any council boss ap- pears on the primary ticket, republican voters will endorse it by a clean scratch. EVERY republican who desires the suc. cess of his party in the fall campaign should attend the primaries to-morrow. The polls will remam open from noon The New York Nemocracy. The Now York state democratic con- vention got through its deliberations and completed its work with less friction than had been expected. There were very strong indications in advance of the con- vention that a hot time would be experi: enced. Numerous contests were threat: ened, and a lively and warm contention oyer the platform was looked for in the event of that document being pronounced in endorsing the administration and ap: proving civil service reform. I1 is an off-day that does not bring to light a new ‘‘trust’” 1 some part of the The next thing in order is a vigorous legal attack upon these incor- porated robber associations. must be educated to perceive that itis just as wrong for individuals to commit robberies under the cloak of law as it is to demand delivery at the point of a gun. averted and an appearance of harmony THERE i8 trouble between the whites d the negroes at Columbia, Texas. here are armed bodies of men of both colors, shots have been exchanged and soveral men killed. among the negroes was feared, but there is probably no ground for this. foolish kind of business and the sooner southern people, black and white, outgrow it the better. aged the situation with shrewdness and Extraordinary efforts had been made by the friends of the administra- tion to secure control of the convention. Every democratic federal ofti throughout New York had worked with the utmost zeal to secure delegates fav- orable to the president, and they were The very respectable minority not in love with Mr. Cleveland were nduced to forego expressions of hostility for the good of the party.. Itis not diflicult to conceive the nature of the appeals that were made to them. fronted by the well-organized and har- and threatened with a heavy loss by the labor movement, any disaffection among then lead to inevitable defeat. Their failure this fa)l would in all probability lose the party the national election next year. things in the interest of the party might be expected of the administration if con- The renomination of Mr. Cloveland being a foregone con- clusion it would be useless and foolish to make war upon him, and besides no other democrat would have anything hke an equal chance of being elected. Governor Hill 18 young and can wait, with the assurgnce of having the full support of the party in the state in 1892, tirely probable that these were some of the arguments employed to soothe and silence the anti-administration eloment. Whether it can be effectively maintained in keeping this element in line until the close of the election is a question which perhaps will be determined only by the A general uprising Tnv general term of the supreme court of the state of Now York aflirmed Jacob Sharp's conviction, and he will undoubt: adly have to go to Sing Sing. Of course this is hard for an old man used to all the modarn conveniences of life, but he has only himself to blame. vated his morals with one:tenth the as. siduity wigh which ne cuitivated his ac: quisitiveness, he would not thus have to Now let justice take up the cases of the younger financial crim: Inals who are still actively engaged in their nefarious schemes. largely successful. Huad he culti. republicans, come to grief. M. DEePEW is to be credited with having a level head. enthusiastic admirers having deavored to start a presidential boom for ality entirely out of their effort by saying that he has not the slightest desire for such honor, being entirely satisfied with what he has, and clinches the matter with the sagacious suggestion that a would have very little show as a candi- date for the chief magistracy in the pres- ent state of public opinion. Mr. Depew is right, and he might have gone farther and said that the people do not want any man who is even so remotely associated with railroad presidents that he might under any circumstances feel called upon to render them a service in repayment of tinued in power. The anxiety of Governor trol the organization of the s mittee will undoubtedly be disappointed. In short, that aspiring politician will have nothing to encourage him except the val- ess endorsement given his administ: tion and whatever equally worthless as- surances for tiie future the majority may have been pleased to vouchsafe his fol- ‘The obvious fact is that Mr. Hill has been ‘‘done up,” and very likely He has shown himsel to be a very narrow politician and by no means a courageous one, and when such n man begins to lose ground he falls It is doubtless an exaggeration to say, as some of the reports from Washington do, that there has been an epidemic of drunkenness in the army and navy dur- ing the past summer, but the facts show that there has been a great deal more of this vice than is creditable to either branch of the service. West Point, where tive cadets were tried and convicted for drunkenness, and an army oflicer is quoted as saying that the army would speedily be reduced to a corporal’s guard if all who are found drunk, even when on duty, were dis- missed from the service. affairs is a most di tary upon the discipline of the army, and prompt remedial measures rigidly enforced. It oven invaded | yormanently so. Hill ean hold up a presidential boom for another five years, e! material of the democratic party should continue as light as at present, country will doubtless hear much less of Hill hepeafter than it has done for a year Such a state ot paragingz commen~ if the available RaiLroap domination in Vermont has been broken, and the people of that state are to be relieved from the exactions to which the corgorations have for years subjected them. enough before the inter-state commerce law went into effoct, but they have been more severe since. finally presented to the attention of the inter-state commission, with the result of obtaining the desired relief. now to be made to secure a reduction of passenger fares within the state, which on one or more of the roads are as high a8 four cents a mile. will doubtless accomplish this as it did the reduction of freight tarifts. seen that railroad extortion 1s not con- fined to the west, though generally prac- ticed with rather more severity in that section than elsewhere: ‘The platform is not straightforward on the subject of civil service reform, and makes the absurd suggestion that in view of the changes that have been effected in methods and the differ- ences of optnion that exist the subject might appropriately be submitted to the makes & bid for the labor and farmer support which ybody familiar with the administrative ‘The situation was popular vote. not mislead a Ariug opposition ary laws, wiich shows o lack of courage Regurding -the tariflfit is explicit in demanding a revision and The convention ‘was uumis- takably an administration body, leaves uo doubt that the Cleveland fol- tickets in tne field in the Fourth ward at 1 %fi st Sotbniiat l‘hu‘vm::uu I‘!ru‘.' v the primary election, but there can be T is now nearly three months since the oloneltienty Vvatierion's Atwmbns t0 pop= | month. o enty Geo oaly one legitimate d;&lezntion elected to | conncil began the policy of starving the | ularize the ten commandments in Kentucky The Woodville tunnel on the Butte "lfltv! for wl||.ch '“1 ""I\ ":' rge ‘(lb"‘l.‘.l.. by republishing them in the Loulsville | brayoh of the M Central in | and the bequest of a large sum to the convention, But we cannot see how | police. Only twenty-four members of rauch of the Montana Central 1s now in | hivargity of Ponnsylvania to make an Mr. Moores or anybody else can prevent | the police force were voted pay for the Courler-Journal has resulted in a fallure of | 500 feet, 250 from the Butte end and 150 people from having as many tickets as [ mouth of August, and the remainder A primary election is a | have been compelled to nawn their valu- free-for-all contest, and nobody can be | ables and raise money the best way they n&pusod at all times and under all circum- barred out. they please. attempt of the *' pack method of allowing any one man to name S : ¢ bequests; considered 18 the class of industrial and tho entire ticket for any ward we most | EVERY vote given toany of the council | pardware in Fleck's store in Grand only the most noteworthy bequests; and bosses as a delegate to the republican | Island a fow decider e/ 3 : Skl : ofc:;;}s‘t{,‘:{:{ffiz;f t::‘.u":"(xif;“‘dh:ccl:fi:z? convention will bo boasted of as an en- | Stromsburg and Long Pineare the latest | factions that ave niade evory month, | gyery one of the Pacific millionnires who %= -,Iho .L h |§ 1ai ba end 1 dorsement. The only way to repudiate | converts to pure practical prohibition. rgerlm_lm every dfl)'. T i;‘y t(.:s:,e.;,q:ol‘:mi: l:;;‘;r;?,.“.j,'ll:.usi'x. the city scoundrels is to scratch their Both towns arve negotiating for water- | libraries and schools in small towns, 1s | ant prosperity has remembered the pub- implements of the sort have almost en- tirely supplanted thocs of English manu- s Jury of ungallant men assessed the dam- | at; for th llent rea that trade in public and private, L Sir Henry Isaacs 1s the third Hebrew mer- | zallar ations, for the very excellent reason thal B facture. Pittsburg stcel has become so i it of Lond uges au $950. She wanted §5,000. it has n larger accumulated capitul and a | May=Itsad Clavaiand out of va —and de p o chant who has become sherilf of London. e ¥ A b : . nouncad him and all hisc net ina excellent that it is being sought afterin | genator Sherman is said to be a great pe- | ,; Lhe new Touzalin hotel at Wymore | larger proportion of rich men thun any erushing actiole. Also read andail out Europe. One firm has recently estab- | go Loty g (hol liens toward bankruptey before it is | other section, and the south comes last of party. r by S - destrian, He likes to foot fv over o whole | uned, Mcchanics und material men | beeause it has fewer fortunes. 1f a com- | June—Read all democrats out of the part lished agencies in a number of the prin- | country. A T T $30,000 worth of | parison could be made which should Hoa dl“( F Todral aid to. eduony : $ 4 g have shingled 1t wi 0, worth of a 3 \o aro in favor of federal al oA~ cipal cities of Europe for the sale of the | Bob Burdette will resume his contributions | claims. show the generosity of each section, tion. Also disposed of Samuel J. Ran- finer of steel, especially | to the Burlington Hawkeye at therate of a | The motion for a new trial in the case | New England, the ‘middle " states, the Jul;‘_’t‘l'_:;‘(fl‘;f;“{.:‘ré'i‘“‘;":‘d“’"":(',"‘?r:fl‘{‘h‘l all those in making edge tools, | column a week. of Shellenberger has boen stricken from | Western states, the south and the Pacitic who hiave any Taspect for Itatidatl out ot and business has nssumed | Pnil Armour, the pork potentate, pays a {)‘IU 1‘00{‘0‘ of ‘heh’u“‘i“"‘fl fi."““v ;‘? Ne- :L‘g;&;}:’;‘\’fl'& :::i‘;"m';" sg]o’fi“’l ;‘,"rw‘l""'; the party . ot N ftata ¢ i raska City sent the plantiff to a higher : August—Lead Randall f th rty thi N [n‘Dp((yl‘llOll; which n:.cessnt.m, ]a:'gbcrnd:u: ?:clg(:&)fi):[:;z:;:: see that his pulse is DRI ¥ g a8 another; ‘?fl Lo/ volnins of x)l;bllu bfi' A m't‘l‘:ms fl“;‘fl\k“hl::sl}‘:‘le‘r(nlv(n:ll:;(m)l '"l&o- ments and guarantee an establishe [2 3 + N . uests is rapidly increasing in them all. ering articles ever written, Conse- teade on a gradually incrensing scalo. | Prof. Brouks, the distingnished astronomer [ , Outin Scotia, last wook, church mom- | 1o jist that 'has been kept of public [ duencois tandall s rulned though I can's Another American firm of steel makers | of Phelps, Y., has discovered eloven | 4 ate cake and other goodies to reple- bene:m.:um:; lsw x!\,ru reported !rr]sm”:hc :’;:‘::lm ml(fi’:]:fn‘:u“l aln‘|° ‘n‘&‘r’i}k‘l’l‘“nm':nfl some two years ago placed a considera- | comets in the last seven years. tion for the good of the church.” Such a Tflff'm‘m'flir ‘l‘m:‘:‘ ez e :';‘(,)r';(-d ‘i-‘V‘ September—Tried through friends 10 Tnduge ble quantity of Americau steel with a Eugene Higgins is sald to be soclially as | generous, self-sacrificing people are en- h t8 ot thie colnir! the president to consult we about the B 4 St § 1 lamb. 1t is onl spoils | titled to a crown, other parts ot the country o tarift bill which he, Carlisle, Scott, Fa firm in London, who sold it side by side | amiable asa laml t b L G L PRINCE! D S, ; | L e of Bl sl at | statesman that ho becomes ferocious Considerable alarm is folt in Nebraska | gome 'of the” benettetions of pri citla and Randail are (eaming, DUl i¥ with the best brands of English steel at | ® 2l ¢ = 2 Y L L 2 Lt Some of the benefactions of princely s0 ignorant of my great ability to handle the same vrices. No complaint was eve made of its quality, although it wa bought not onl France, Ital, other prices obtained wer to the prodacers. Such fucts are full of promise for our 1ndustries, all of which are making steady progresg, would go forward still mo the conquest of new murkets of the barriers set up by the protective | whom the latter’s awful Baconian secret was tariff removed, revealed. IN the current number of the Forwm | mill owner of Bontbay. has in twenty years | ment: "The heart of this editor was once | den gift in New York, was given last ———— Mr. Carlisle gives his reasons why the | &iven away $1,000,000 for various benevolent | more muade to teel light and frisky last | year); Dr. E.D. Stanford's gift of 150 Negro Characteristics, democratic party should be kept in | Purposcs. Saturduy. He was the happy recipient of | acresof land for a park in the cityof | Burnsville Correspondence Selma power, Pnive, it is 10 bo oaid in- fairncss (hat | ¢inia farm and moved back to Washington. they are presented in terms that com- mend them to respectful consideration. Their most int statement made regarding the demo~ crati to pas sentatives. surances which jusiify this taith, but the recent utterances of Mr. Randall have | and distributed $5,000,000 to sick and ,630.6: broadening thought of the time. Pl\lm':-i said: “No, boss, I t'ank yyou; but can’t not been encouraging. His nddress to | wounded soldiers during the civil war, died | The Grand Island [ndependent is con- | lioval institutians are still the preferred | work for dat.” 98,0 ® : 2 » G pendent is con f 1 : s ‘ the Lllinois farmers lust week was not | Friday at. Manchester, Vt. aved soventy- | vinced that too many railroads are s | OPicets of benefactions for the public | [ said well, as a starter, and to induco suggestive of a spirit of compromise, at | four. e leaves an estate of $1,000,000 to his | curse rather than a bel and presents good, but it 18 no longer the clas st to the extent of the concessions Mr, | wite and four daughters, the following example: lisle would require. And it still re | Mr. Villard bobs up ngain as a controlling | LY their pooling are doing a great in-| ;0 e educati mains a fuct that the democratic house | mind in the future course of Northern Pacl- of represent nothing on this subjoct without the aid | u¥Ant as cork and us brisk &5 e Kansus | attond the real estate salo noxt weok, the | yricuftura and socinl science and such | trade.” “Well” suid. 1, *“wh of Mr. Randall. s I 2iness - & M. and Union Pucitic nsked as much | 2, tical departments of the *new edu- | will_ you pick forr” 'I'll piek a railroad power will give life and point and | for two coaches from Omaha or Lincoln i i i il Dakota. the Uuited States are to establish not appropriated for the establishment of a | mond and Danville railroad. 1iere he boards o 5 s ¥ T A labratory for uso in_experiments in the | With a private family wnd livos in seclusion. | A valuble voin of :::{r:‘“‘ been dis- | librarics of the i’.{"g‘fflf‘;.‘.’é‘fi sbaoluioly university, which he thinks ample, Dr. His time is passed amonz his books and in | covere s ’ library gifts as those of Enoch Pratt of Billings re N up this week and will soon be in com: Y. J . i 0 295 were s tak era ¥ ork, Walter L. Newberry of Chicago, $a.828,wers Lo ba aken <1 the general The Pracession of Seasons. piSiRONCER;ion, : | and Bundreds of similar but_smalier do- aullowance of ‘«l,("-)l): Dr. Bullings is Boston Post, A well directed shot in the Iron Hill | ayions nave so turned popular attention ready offerings of pigs | 'The base ball season is aimost at an end. | mine hit the golden bullseye and knocked | fo tno foundation of absolutely free to amount of 1,000 to | 1t will be closely followed by the sunowball The echoes of the shot will | |ibraries as a privilege and duty of rich experiment upon. He wants them now | season. | ipuly DR wood voted in tavor of bonding | serving this tendencey, recently remarked saltiptlie oan manlnilnto thom And Bave Bls Boarch Acqomnlished. #5000 to buy the right of way | that it would soon bo -prn:)u'h for any !hcm ready to be sent to infected herds Philadelphia Inqu g through the city for the Fremont, Elk: | town that had a rich zen not to have in any part of the statc to be tested, the | ~Despite Mr. Huntington's po& meuiory,the | Jorn & Missouri Vailey railroad. a fully equipped free Library. In the list intelligent farmers to be the judges. He | fuct is evident that he found the kind of con- | he Rupid City Journal is convinced | of the donations publis the is confident inoculated hogs will not take | £ressinen he was looking for. that Hthero is the dawn of . tin boom | lust threo months ate ot loss than » disease. This1s an i rte + B, At plainly discernable above the horizon of | twenty- o free public libraries, » :ll::;ld:ltu;:tl‘d l]»:‘usm;::stlimpc(x)x‘::h"::l;mz‘ufz A New York Compromise, possibility.”” 1n other words, a soldered aggregate (this includes none of the fontifi e bl g8 Chicago' Tribune. recoptacle of vegetables consummated an | largest gifts given above) about one mil- scientifically. Personal wrangling is out | Many a New York millionaire who has not | attachmert to & canine narrative, lion dollars. ; of place. 1f the disease can be mitigated | contributed to the Grant monument fund will | “Itis probable that people who have PARKS AS GIF by the method of treatment under discus- | compromise matters with his conscience by | been sion, the people of the state could af- | voting for Fred Grant. ford to pay well to have it established. If it is useless we want to know it as w soon and as cheaply as possible. Tue crowding orab Inst thre mansard roof of the high school is some- | be a mugwump in astate campaign is very | best Nebraska, Towa or lllinois corn. As | 0 i i onse. | made presents of ks or corntributed AT thing that the board of education should | vulgar indeed. for potatoes, thoy are simply immense.” | FNb 8 USRS, € Wlifioation, it i an e S S I stop.” ‘The children are not only injured O et Utah and ldaho. Atabaning (SR HIA FeoaREonC g e N raw oe in health by climbing the stairs, but they one Too Soon, Bricklayers aud stonemasons are scarce | to practical aid in the making of be wnn, bocauss [ aiways keep e R ra 10 AR raEATS Tnoras Washingtom ( vitic. § : : factions may be mentioned such favts as ' " ™ aro in dunger in oase of fire. Increased | qyq progress that Mr. Okey is making in | A% Shoshonc, and the construction of the | o At Trinity college (Hartford), H_AGANHS( Mes gu‘ ALM. school accommodations should bo pro- | ig jnvestigation of Castie Garaen methods | ") 55 B L et the departmeat of | theological school, o very lnrge partof | This sahi Cors, ¥ U6 her compunions, aa vided as soon as possible. Meuntime | ghows that the reportsof mismanagement o flrst meoting of the departiea some ofher place than a mansard roof | have not been in the slizhtest exaggerated. d be found ohi s A ziven to promote the good exercise got tree . n RIS . B ) should p found for the children who are | Brutality, uxto_rtmu and thievery seem to The money is nearly all rsed for mak- hum ]“wll ols: at Now Haven, Heary fires b Soth o ‘Jw.lh'n'u"p:‘n::. vy now bLeing exposed to danger. have characterized the eonduct of affairs in | iy 4 preliniinary survey of a route for & [ Farnam and James . lish have each B ldgutd, sppiiod mont and O . T — all its departments. big irrigating canal in Cassia county, | yiven about $100,000 o construct public T'uk contract for paving Seventeenth Se——— Ldano. eet between Farnam and Harney as it Where the Money Has Gone, The banks of Salt Lake City report the | sted, Conn., s gift of 8§14, has been uwarded leaves the pavement New York Tribune receipt for the week ending September | 000 ' has been made to grade a only forty feet wide, while the sidewalis | About §15,000.000 gold has come Into this | 21, inclusive, of $58,083.04 in ' bullion and | boulevard around Long lnke; ut Water- are to be thirty feet wide. This is o | ROrtfrom Europe since August 1, aud over | §83,023.75 in ore, a totul of $141,705.70. bury, Conn., a lady left a fortune to ‘aKisatro-Mag: blunder which will cause the eity and | 15,04 'and yet the banks of New York have | seribe county needless expense in the not very 1 o $8,700,000'0f thelr reserve. ~'Ihe. conun- .| rq distant future. . There is no doubt that | drum puzzles the street only because men re- | & ! the'court house will sooner or later be | fuse tosee what is-bofore thetr eyes—that | years from to-day you can take the cars | warten system of schools, the establish- state convention to foist | at the mercy of outlaws and | ' awley's temperance views should cut ) son- | tio h h N o Councilman Bochel on the Fourth | crooks, still = continues. Business TS TRTOAL Men Who Are Famous For Their Con c have come. There have beon som ward mits to such dictation he may find that | and order maintained and life and { Gr Lincoln in the west should pop'lar be, ished in the his path is not strewn with tosos. The | Property protected should como forward | Or Watterson or Reid should kick, why then | lic good that have beon published in the Fourth ward docs not want to be repre- | and subscribe to the stock of the Police- T'm blamed ef 1 kin tell how it will ba. 'y 1 he “Ki f Trade. 's Relief Fund fation. Thero is e T T months, writes the New York correspon- | and statucs to the ang of Trade. sented by Bochel in any capacity, and | men’s Reliet Fund association, T STATE. AND TERRITORY. Mr. Moores ought to know enough not to | 10 risk in this method of defeating the offend the overwhelming sentiment of the | scoundrels of the council who persist in While very far from boeing con- | Brady, of star route fame, has left his Vir- | & beautiful bouquef position on the tariff and the inti- | practice nets him $100,000. t'other dear charmer were away."” manding gift by S mation of the writer that a compromise James Campbell, president of the Pittsburg The Black Hills P:oneer thus sum- | the university that bears his name, and | them the benefit of my discovery. lus meusure will be brought forward in con- | Window gress abolishing the tobacco tax and | nent candidate to succeed Powaorly at the | Workshop: *“The Omahu Smelting works | erected in 5 making & reasonable reduction in the | head of the Knights of Labor. are saud to be the larg, tariff on necessities. It is to be inferred Mrs. Leland Stanford has given $1,000 that such a measure may be already for- | toward building at San Jose, Cal., a home mulated, or framed, the Curlisle of this character would be almost certain | Fecent discharze from the Albany peniten- | 4oyiq, ve” Tiwenty thousand tons ot coal | hospitals and ‘home the democratic house of repre- It is poss berhaps as a vesult of | children of union veterans and army nurses. | of the works, at least two_ ! - TRAETA0! il S " ‘Tom Ballard. the famous counterfeiter, is | more will bo'employed. The works are | amount of them ate cortwin tendencios | th y T tb “ces‘ B tryinz to do a legitimate business since his | Never shut down, but are kept in constant that are shown in the purposes of public | ag it was Saturday and they must have eve a measure ¥ nes S doctors are discussing the subject of inoculation as a preventative of hog cholera. The arguments seem to be in relation to cost fully as much as to method, Dr. Gerth, veterinarian of the 4 state sanitary commission, states that Dr, | Powhatan Court House, about twenty miles | Pooicd point. “"d&H{C{“.‘,“g“ merely 8 Way | goyeral of the Billings has $5,000 in addition to $2,225 | south of Richmond, Virginia, on the Rich- y 2 es that in his opinion the Yhe cultivation of flowers. ‘The Deadwood flouring milis will steam s OMAHA DAILY BEE: FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 30. 1857, lowing dominates the democracy of New | enlarged by tho extension of the wings | the treasury 18 absorbing larze amounts of | in Salt Lake and bo in Los Angelos in | ment of which was begun by Mrs. w reot line, with a | money, and that the exigencies of building | twenty-four hours. ford in San Francisco, now’ includ \\ e ::::'n:'n m:‘i‘ln!: :‘bn m::re accessible by | and speculation at the west and south and on Montana. rc;'on: additions, l; mnfi "“ 'y An Tmbeocile Threat. the Pacific coast are absorbing even larger " N &chools, where more than 2, ol p . J providing elevators at each entrance on s The Manitoba road 18 within whisthng | aro taugnt froe; sinoe tho establishment The Republican serves notice on Feank | the stroct lovel. Soventeenth stroet will | *mounts: T — distance of Benton. of Cornell university most of the se! Moores that unless he ‘‘leaves the selec: | then bocome the main entrance to the Wisdom Looated. Bullion shipments from Bulte last | that have been endowed have made pro- tion of the delegation from the Fourth | pyjlding, and the pavement in that case Somerville Journal week were valued at §120,506. visions for the conduction of the se: ward to a committee of his friends and A thirteen year old boy in Washington A lump of covper weighing 1,200 | for example, the ur'm! Leland Stanf N they mak up o ticket that satisfies all in- ;‘:,',:',‘;',’,'f.?;,:‘:;:fd;hf,:,:;{,a‘,’,:';‘;:: publishes a paper called Universal Knowl- | ounces was picked up by prospectors | Jr., university, in Californin, -and Hae~ vard and John Hopkins and Columbin 3 . o i hur springs. terosts, there will b two sets of delegates | tho court house, 'This change oan be | (&% Ouly 8 thirteen year old boy ora | near White Sulp i colleges in the enst, and & very Inrge| to the convention from the Fourth ward.” | made much cheaper now than at a later e (mhm—m—sw“h ek gxfl‘l?nzliglgn :finm;ggu:n '|'~f§'é .}’.’.‘H::,’;,m number in the middie and western states This is simply idiotic. There may be two | gate, The Commandments Fall Flat ton-stamp mill pounded out $03,000 last | Admit women, most of them by virtue of donations for that specific purpose; month, and will vroduce §50,000 this benefactions have been” made to the investigation of spiritualism is yot in everybody’s memory. THE BENEFACTORS. There are somo interesting facts about the Lind of men who have been the most dismal deseription. The Kentucky | from this side. The total length of the democracy denounces the commandwents a8 | t@nnel will be 1,300 feet. sumptuary legislation, to_ which the party s The progress on the Montana Central's Wickes tunnel amounted to ninety feet last woek at both ends. As the tunnel could for keeping the wolf from the door. | stances. ——— greatest public_ benefactors with The Itepublican’s stupid threat of two | Another month has passed and the pros- A Political Prediction. will be over 6,000 feet long, 1tis now | \wealth, Every large city has 'pmd delegations if it means snything is & bold | sure to drivethese men into throwing up From Judge, about one-sixth completed. : generous merchants and” manufacturers, 0 i ol i pav Yousee of Blalne should git the Irish vote. 5US MILLIO and from this class the greatest number ‘conspirs,” who tried to | their positions and leave the city And Shorman shouldn't carey his own state, || GENEROUS MILLIONAIRES. 8 well as the greatest sz" to the pub- TO! t 1 o ftributions to Worthy Ohjects, noble beqnests to the people by ,“"‘""" 1t Mr. Moores sub-|men and citizens who desire law [ Or Hllls hould be the one they nominate, sional men, but the rule is that rich pro- And Cleveland fail to win the free trade men, A list of the benefactions for the pub | gic ) ve 8 ate of los’ advAnES givers than rich commercinl men. We leading newspapers during the last three | owe our schools and libraries and parks dent of the St. Louis Globe Democrat, | Naturally n-,nou{zh many of the groatest ka Jottings. shows that within tins period alone the S"b"” L] been bachelors, as Neb! ohn Hoikins or den were, or child: v Crote has contracted for waterworks. | people have fallen heir to more than less men s Enoch Pratt is. The class ward. wnmholqmg pay from faithful employes Crete has been elecirified on the arc | $10,000,000. Of course, this is by no ncflllio]l:‘aln:s (ll?:(n‘ h;: (h!;lm pruugl::ug While the Bei: does not approve the | of the city. and incandescent plans. cumplete list, for it includes | nothing when their opportunities are Thieve: made o $50 haul on the fancy the aggregate of the many small benes commercial gamblers—Wall street men, ights ago. for instance, On the other hand, nearly & to hospitals and | fouud fortunes in mines and the attend- Anot, names from the tickef works. very large. But more than $10,000,000 Iv’v‘;nlmm been generous to the common Thero P in Dodge gounty seventy ber- | have been given for the public good in i g v consuls furnish much grati- ANOTHER union depot has been evolved | SOnSs on the pension rofls of the govern: | gygiciently large quant| to be reported Watterson's Diary. fying information regarding the progress | out of the fertile imagination of one of ge"‘;‘lr"“:;:g’ffi;‘;fi‘;fiT‘“‘"’-‘"’ amount | ¢ ¢ho larger nowspapers. That is, por- | Louisyillo Post: Wo have beon per: which the manufactured products of the | our contemporaries. This time itisto | = il Norfolk board of trade has clected | haps, the largest aggregate over given in i“t“"-‘"l“"'::,’l““';f """"{‘.'t'.“"l"‘xi "_"‘e";“fi"_‘ United States are making in foreign | cost $300,000; but as it 1s only & castle in | M, A, Rainbolt and D). A, Holmes as dele- | the United States for these purposes in ll?:n:v e P e v ‘ markets. s especially noticeable | the air it can be built for much less. ates to the dedication of the new cham- | the same period of time. Although the | janyary—Read Randall out of the party, in the manufactures of steel, which are = er of commerce in Omaha, number of rich men is constantly in- | February—Read all democrats out of the everywhere entering into successful com- PROMINENT PERSONS, - Corn, candidates and conventions are | creasing, there is evidence also of a party who are infjany way interested petition with the English product. In Sy the high c's of the state just now. Their growing habit of giving money for the n_inauufactures. ~Also read Raudall TR a1 o American Minister Lothrop has returnea | whiskers are cropped short and no com- | public benetit—a habit yery worth culti- ou Australia and New Zealund, American | o5t potersburg. mon fog can wet their whistles, i March—Read all democrats out of the party hoes and shovels and axes and othor | ¥ L i Wb g who aro not in tavor of free trade, Also Mark Twain is over the half way line. e Mrs. Reeder slipped up and bruised her New England takes the lead of all the read Randall out in a territe editorial, n on a sidewalk in Wahoo, and a | sections of the country in the list of don- | April—Denied that L ever advocated free will be fifty-two next month. pers Bism: s ono bath a day. He has a [ City lost the Missouri river invade the | \uonitude are: Jonns G. Clark's gift of R A e o P atho theory that too much bathiug takes out too :‘:]:z:le*‘:‘c’\bj)}'f““? v‘r‘m:Ji‘;fi:“l:‘";ll“"'&“'*’,[,‘"’":‘ an additional $1,000,000 to Clark univer- with me beoause 1 erushed him with one oitic o 3 ity, at W 5 : of my letters, that he won’s do wuh of the oy substanco of theskin. | SN QUSCLVSI Y apont in keoping | S, b Worcostor, Sass $100010 to | LY It et i sl tiak he Rl “mlvlv"lfl:'hflffl‘_'lllfflml‘"'fl F&"fllfl"l‘l the Missouri sober and within bounds, s e IR s S seems foally to havo a contenint for me; row the continent and will settlo down in The Plattsmouth Herald says: “‘Joseph | seience: *lm},()f)ll 151 ARECRn A BTRY Sut 1 shall soon write a double- his new Louse at Debere Gardens, London. | A “Connor, Esq., went_to Omtha to-day, | at New' Britain, Conn., by O, B, Erwing | 54cs that will desteoy, bim completelys Knelish authors have sentout 8800 to the | expecting to clos land deal. Mr. | the more than usually large donations This publication 1s made entirely without fund for Walt Whitman, the “good gray | Connor will,if the trade is made, lecome | to such old institutions as Harvard and | Mr. Watterson's sanction or kiowledge. poet” as the mark of their respect for a great | the owner of 505 acres near Omaha, | Yale, ,an additional $175,000 to Butchel | Were e here his well known modesty would g - and which | writer. worth fully $300, 0\‘10.] He ap) x_lul]cs n pay- | college, Akton, Ohio, by the Hon. John '\'c‘:)l‘(&x‘»:::;euly prevent its insertlon in these rapidly in Appleton Morgan says he Is the first per- G LA At %30 per acre, | R, Butchel, making more than $4,000,600 | © 2 A i waroRuons} levitiadiaide SUIRMEA Dantell bk casuie to| Dlunce, $52,000, cash. © Mr. Connor | in alti Mr. W, C. DePyuw’s addition and | mother, has your child got the croup? e ! r MeLenn's Tar Wine Lung Balm . | more than $1,000,000 given by Enoch | gy safe and effectual remedy, plonswnt Horald is luminous with | Pratt, of Baltimore, for a free public | 1o take and rapid in its action. = 25 ceats this week. Here is a frag- | hbrary,(though this, like the great Til-| 'y qtle, in England, but in and a number of countr and the ntirely satisfactory e maha are both to be congratu- gift of $10,000 to DePauw’s universitys | pp, J. H ated.’” R Sir Dinshaw Manockjer Petit, a Parsee arlanded | Louisville; within five years $2,000,000 [ (Als.) Times: Ithink I haye found the by tl‘\(u mlirlhumlh has been gwgn for art llll;l cduc:\vignn : secret of the negroes’ sluwl work in pin!: 0 : s ie Reed, daugh- | purposes in Cinciunati; the muniti ing out the cotton crop; they seem to oy Ho tound the country lonely andsoon sighed | v\ o' I, Reed, The rare beauty of | establishment by Mrs. Newcomb of u | utterly ind ut as to whether it is lost for the bustle of city life. the floral gift can only be excelled by | college for young women at New | or saved, picking in most cases barely General Butler heads the list of money- | that of the Jovely donors, and in return- | Orl and every city as you go_west | enough to pay for meat and bread, and making lawyers of the country. His fortune | ing heartfelt tnanks we can truly say | has had its recent beneficieries. = When [ as some farmers throughout the coun- is estimated at $3,500,000 and his annual | that we could be happy with either if | the Pacific slope was reached the com- | try are complaining that they can't get ator Stanford to | the negro to work, I ‘will give from Nebraska tlower: of Misses Alethy and ting feature is in the is Suturday and, unlike the New Yorl holiday statute, custom among the ne- groes has made not only Saturday evel the kind in the world. Five hundred men 1 NI ing holiday, but they tuke the whole da are employed, whose wages amounted to | - But a very small proportion of even | So I bethought myself to try and hire 00,000 last year. During the present | the —great” recent public benefactions | some of them as they passed my field. year, by reason of enlarging the capacity | Would include too many to enumerate. | Taking n sent on the fence by the road= ¢ Findrod men | More iuteresting than the number or | side I offered to hire many who wended r way to Selma, but they all declined s Workors’ assembly. is a prom- | matizes the benelits of Omaha’s greatest | Mr. Sutro’s gre. t establishment of is in process of being | for the widows, destitute wives, and orphan aperation, night and day, Suudays and | bequests and donations. Colleges and | rest. Finally an old gray-headed fellow have, until ve- | came along, and after much parleying [ and 12,000 tons of coke were consumed [ cently, had almost a monopoly of the be- | shamed him into the idea of working. in 1886, ana the shipments for the year | guests of the rich. But the fashion isnow | Said he would vick for me. Asked what aggregated 20, as follows: | fast changing and the directions the | I would pay him. [ told him 50 cents v lead, | chunge is tuking oare indicative of the | per hundred. He shook his head, and tiary, He has opened an establishment for steel engraving, Mark Skinner. of Chicago, who, as presi- dent of the sanitary eommission collected le that he has as- cal or theological departments ot colleges s, I'll give vou 7 ts per hundred, that | but he must not let the others know I was are selected so largely for endowment, | partial him. ‘“No, no, no, boss, al gifts now confined | can't pi for dat,”” and he started to t4 collogos of any kind. High schools, | leave me. ‘“Holt on,'’ saia I, “§1 per polytechnic schools, industrial schools, | hundred. What say you to thatt” kindergartens, gymnasiumt, schools of | “Wuss and wuss, boss. Speck we can't The railroads justice to Grand Island in more wa than one. In regard to running an cursion train from Omaha or Lincoln, to ¢s can unfortunately do | fic specuiation. This little Zentleman Is as 2 5 Rl A3 £ catiop are now_selected. Hospitals and | for 25 cents a hundred, boss.” “Well, wn‘:r g P hEN taar DO prnollcéd oD but now th(;mlls gullllemklly z:;)m(s Hpt'{‘: xi \u“mvl,l lgs'culxls.bwllulxl lufl|((xr you 8]}; er. ol o A purpose, which indicates the practical | **Well," said ne, ‘‘boss, Iapeck you's like W. W. Belknap, the secrotary of war under | feights of all kinds, to the detrimant of tondency of the thonght of tho times | do balncs of b white folks, you mout President Grant, who fell _into disgrace, 15 hame s G 5 shown by the donor. not pay me, and den I wouldn't loss making hils home at the quiet little village of | Decause Grand Ialand i8 s junction and | "7y qeif iy espectally noteworth that | quito so much.” argest donations for the | =——————— public good that have ever been made in stution on the B, Baltimore, Samuel J. Tilden of New in the Hills for months. men that a distinguished educator, ob direction that skeptic: ject corn Another somewhat 1 um,,;,,kl_i Riioal 1'{{:.&'?;,6';2{,‘:,““"‘%v- Cnys | public benefaction has recently taken is the Rapid City Journal, **may see some- | in the donation or u;!lnrlnnn lu([ pnrkln, ng A ir opinions at ir. | T ial establishient of purks e Mugwumps is Vulgar. thing to change their opinions at the fair. | ‘I'he municipa i 1004 0 b Cineinnaté Commereial Gazette, Samples of corn from various of the ag- | has recumid wl;nl m‘ng'm be L‘n‘l,l:l:: }:url‘:l’l‘a £Ohio mugwumps should bear in mind that | ricultural valleys in this partof the coun- ular !“l’,l, y 'I‘f- -i‘li ‘sr"(“" Il'(:wlw u‘rn- (Hiis it is not the New England style to be mug- | try are now to be seen in town, and many | ¥ pirit. welve cities o & i PN cluded in the list, to which, during the wumpian on any but national questions. To | Of these will compare fayorably with the O Aiha arivate! Citlkenk have f children into the . A (0" | last year's donations was to build and Billls, 1oun telie aud sashore. !:x’:lh\?fi'\:-’l}\:édl:; fl'.';flfi?..{'é;f’&'}sf"" 866 | oquip the gymnasium, and $10,000 were MAGNOLIA BALM drives in ® park, and at Win- Guk ‘ ) Lt onty*ae in the world e aontinuous Klecirio & Mo v beientifie, Fowerful, aut 5o 39‘" . 3 mp for pay ALED ELECTRIC BELTS FOIt DISEAREA. o HORRE. laveutoa. 181 “Guiakos $10.500,000 has been paid by the treasury for The people of Salt Lake City have sub- [ Henry Bergh, to carry on his work and er,ooo towards building a . | $7,000 to erect a fountain on the public d between that city and Los Angeles | green with a figure emblematieal —of the Tribune prophesies that in two | Kindness to animals; the frec kinder- WARAB AVE..

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