Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 10, 1887, Page 4

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S s DAILY B THE DAILY BEE. g ! PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. 7 TERMS OF SUBSORIPTION ! MONDAY. OOTOBER 10. 1887, aimvamq‘.by a farmer's daughter at 10 L AND AND C ATTLE KINGS' abilities ot Millionaire Huntington as & | the Loz Angeles banker, who was ‘mmr The Farmers of Kansas. ous, and at the same time enthusiastic, No state suffered greater on thelr journey. Let us show them that crope this year thun Kansas, and theout- | the rowdy west has been most unduly look for the farmers of that state 18 some- | goandalized. what gloomy. The corn crop was very — nearly a complete failure. In fow Conaress will convene within less than northeastern counties about balf a crop | two months. Omaha is vitally interested will be secured, but 1n most other coun- | in securing favorable action on behalf of ties the yield will not be over a quarter | her importers, who desire the benetits of to a third of the usual crop. There is & | an immediate transportation port. Our considerable quantity of old corn on | postoffice building has become too con- hand, but still it is believed that perhaps | tracted for the constantly increasing o'clock. The farmer sta: r the fire lotter writer. nently named as & competitor of Hearst and saw the incendigries disappear in the Lux* and Miller, the millionaire butch- | for the United States senate. dlfdkl'lelll- T"IO ‘?fld ‘?l?’ fifl r“‘“' ers of California, were known a few ylonrc.: A l:ll those r:;}lhmmrvla. wht;‘srlc?.mbmml ated with coal oil and fired. Havinguno ago simply as the owners of more lan fortunes makeCsalifornia rank high among implements to fight the fire the farmer Pacifio Ooasters, Poor Twenty Years Ago, | than nr‘n’y’ other single firm in the state. | the states for wealth, were pour men confined his efforts to flagging the ap- Now Many Times Millionaires. Within two years they have become the | twenty yoars ago. Most of them would rrouhing passenger trains and prevent- greatest menace to the future develop- | have gained moderate fortunes in auny ng & catastrophe, ment of California agriculture, as they | community; but the marvelous oppor. There was a wild _and wicked house- [ A GREAT LANDED PROPRIETOR, | lead the party that ins s warming at John Rodden's ranch, six forcement of the old English common law | California gave them the wealth of kings. miles from Crete, s few evenings ago. of riparian ownership ofgthe waters of | Most of them have had little leisure and The dance, as ususl; was fast and furious, | James Ren All Aagein, s Man of Many | the state. William Lux Same here from loss inclination to use thoir vast wealth aad increased to fighting proportions as Resources—Lloyd Tov, Atsace. Henry Miller from Wurtemburg, | for other than material purposes, but it 18 sists upon the en- | tunities of tho sudden development of GTON OFFICE, NO. 513 FOURTEENTH BTREST. - " il . iation for | the jugs were emptied. A slung-shot s Very Both were bred to the butcher trade, and [ not an idle dream tiat thev or their suc- - ORI 40 edie e | lnpl’l:p:' i wnll'ng from Sllll.t)gesk struck out‘ln a Peculiar Man—Lux and Miller, in early days in San Francisco they made | cessors may follow the example of Stae- All communications rolating to pews and ient for their needs, and the prospect for [ 8 mnew postoflice building or san forel; 8 d Liok, and do tholr pass N torial matter should be addressed Lo the Epi 1o b; f thi {Hter 86 enlargement of the present build- grand right and left with O, Hulbertson, Milllonaire Butchers, large profit from the buying and selling | ford, Sutro and Lick, \ par 3 TOR OF THE Bre. TORGIOR CRELI0 KOF DURE il A L P ity | And started all hunds round in an in- of cattle. They gradually became the pos- | in founding institutions that shall ad- e ontl profit 18 said to be very poor. It {s slso [ ing is an absolute necessity. | gtant. An adjournment was had to the sossors of large tracts for the pasturage [ vance the arts and sciences of this new 058 lettors and romittances said that the usual supply of fat hegs from Kansas will probably be reduced one-half this fall. They are worth only three to four cents a pound, and at this price it is not profitable to fatten them on corn worth thirty-five cents a bushel. An intelligent Kansas farmer who has been looking into the situation in a Concerted action of our congressional delegation is nocessary to secure results in these as well as other projects and in- terests, The Bee suggests early action on the part of the board of trade to en- able our representatives to know what our merchants and citizens generally de- sire. prairie, Ike Hudson, of Crete, embraced From the Cosmopolitan Magazine, of their cattle, sccuring rich agricultural | western Jand but yesterday reclaimed :,hs g;nthl:mnn "!rnm !h;s mnrgum&z Among the score of men on the Pacific | Iand lu! ou‘\i:lumh the price l(tl now ‘(I:lqm- from Spanish-American barbarism. riny, but loasened ms grip quite sud- | coast mands. hey own over three million denI;. and narrowly ‘uclped being funds 'nl::;’ n;.‘u‘ll"?“; "ts‘ T" ‘:l'“f 10| aores in California and Nevada, on which carved to death. His neok and shoulders & ndustrial enterprises, | gro hundreds of thousands of cattle, and Haios —_— were horr! ashed, and he was hurrie are wor 3 8 thel N 3 ibly g d, and b hurried ' nearly all can trace their rise to lucky th $12,000,000. It is their Tie WRITINGS of Frank R. smold.anrl to town for treatment. The matinee mMining investmonts. The marvel- | bonst that in driving their herds [ are lnlwny- ploasing and instructive, an closed with Ike's departure. ous advance in. mining shares lifted | from the far southern counties to the l“’d ":"‘;"' °‘,""u“;i The Boo-man of Orn It 18 quietly whispered in militiacircles | them 1nto wenltn, and they have | EFeat stockyards mear San Francisco | X R e o Al b ressed to Tnk BEx PUBLISHING COMPANY, AlA. Drafts, checks and postofce orders B 0 be made payable t the order of the company, THE BEE POBLISKING CONPANY, PROPRIETONS, F. ROSEWATER, FprToR. * THE DAILY BEE. — —— Nebraska City that Major Watson's hey can water and feed the droves evory | 0 equal intercst. ‘The book is from the Sworn Btatement of Uirculation. | thoroughly practical way asks how the [ oy ot Calimorts it tonrs i fo":.‘,"m“go' P e ody guard was | Used this wealtn in speculative [ pj s o \Beit own Innd. house of Charles Seribner & Sons, New State of Nebraski farmers of that state are to pay their ex- | i due to an overwhelming admiration for | ePterprises and in vast agricultural op- 'ho advance given to irrigationt by the [ York, und is woll worth a caretul read- O ounty of Donzins. }"'" nses and thg inevitable taxes this year, | ©¥eF the alleged monopolizing of the | iC K0 OC N nd s desire to bask | orations that dwarf even the work of the | guccesstul experiments ot Hagain in | ing by old and young. This work will § Geo. B. ‘I7schuck, secretary of The Bee | DO S - | republican state committee by the anti- | g5 e n™ ingtant in the shadow of her bonanza wheat farmers of Nebraska and | Kern county alarmed these cattle barons, | be found on sale at John 8. Caulfield’s With a greatly diminished crop, low prices preyailing, ‘and the extortionate charges for transportation, he cannot see Publishing company, does solemnly swear Ehat the actual clreaiation of the. Dally Bos “ for the week ending Oct. 7, 1537, was as Van Wyck faction. Inasmuch as the smile. His succoss was not equal to his Dakota, These men own land by the | They saw tint the streams which watered | book store in this city. committee will have nothing more to do gallantry, however, s the following league; their cattle and sheep feed on a | their stock would be speedily diverted to : »hy Al thousand hills; they have built irrigatin, ai 4 EpwArp OwiNGgs TOwNE is the com- from a Chie: aper will explun: ‘‘A i gating | anrion the barren plains of their neigh ) s the 3‘:'33!1 , Oct. 1 the way clear for the farmers of Kansas than “: '”Mhlnh ;.Ll) :z;:‘;e:‘a“:l::“: militia oflic:rfowntg 8 lurnlull, of gold c““":? that cost "{"“"“"l'h"’" &reat | bors. Houce they determined to have | piler and Charics H. Korr &"“"""'0““‘:‘ Bunday, Oct 2. to make ends meet during the next year, | Sonvention, walc 2! 8t | bFiid and much brass—in buttons— | 8 nmil :‘u ‘p!l;ln'expn llluu-\w hole vllln&es the old law of riparian rights enforced. { the publ.whern‘nf n_rl!mlu Tbook 3"""1-3 i Monday. Oct, 1 woald Seem inevitable thas many of large to the national republican conven- | jumped out of fine at the Palmer houso l(‘cr:dnle b;‘:n tamr WOrK :uz n‘cioplc. Mo The struggle was bitter, as Haggin was T‘Al’hfl',i_’l:““' of the Three lmfi: o nlne v Tooadav. Oct, 4. them, however carefully they may econo- | {0 it does not seem material what the | reception and attempted to shake Mrs. W (A L o s equnIly bound to gocure tho rights | Taree Throos is social clubot nine R ‘Wednesday, Oct. 5. em, howe ! ‘4 y may complexion of the committee is as re- | Cleveland's hand. A police ofticer, mis- sway than these men, who have cl‘ono of the irrigators. Money was poured Clucago gentlemen, who ne together K, ;;"“MIY- Oct. 6... mize, will find the balance against them gards the ex-senator. Our demooratio | taking him for s disguised bomb much to develoo the resources of Calis [ out like water on each side, but the | at stated intervals at a down-town ros. o day, Oct. 7... before the date of another harvest. If conwmporar‘y s, Boweven, only guessing, thrower, took him by tho coliar and belt, fornia, and yet who are the greatest | supreme ‘court decided the test caso in | taurant. Meeting every minth night e Average............. o 4.205 | by that time the majority of them skould 2 Wit as to the factional make-up of the com- mittee, excepting, perhaps, the members from Douglas county, who appointed i Gro, 15, TZ8CH UCK. Sworn to and subseribed in my presence this 8th day of October, A, D, 1887, and rushed him to the rear door with | Curse to tho state because thoy are | favor of the riparianists. There is no | after the first night of each and every of Brore oelority than poritenees, His belt | butlding up in 'this “new ~ wostern | question that ihis. decision will bo modi. | the nie months following the ninth buckle blazed with the letters, N. N. G.'* | 1and the hateful —system of ten: | fied yery soon, so as to allow the separate [ month of the yeer, and seated in throes H ant farming that “has beggared | counties to decide whether they shall | 8t three threo-legged tables, theso nine reach the conclusion, as this intelligent farmer has done, that it is a very serious N. P, Frir, hardship in such circumstances to have lowa ltemns, the Irish people and converted their fair- | have irrigati r not. On the right to | wise men of Chicago spend the evenin, [SEAL. Notary Public. | to pay ll heavy tariff tax on lumber, salt, | themselves after the convention had ad- | ygookuk has decided to expend $75,000 | est lands into decr purk and barren moor. n;mc:;rrlifla ‘water for Grchards and yine. | in discussion. ‘The drops which disti ; "1';':“% Nebraska, |, clothing and pretty tfuch all their other L T — in a system of sowers. tlhii‘vs?_:::‘:a n:-hd "““’{'l"-“"}“' -rlr:’:ml?l a8 | yards depends the development of the mor?_lwel‘r’ L h}f- {lt;wn? I;‘n‘lg crsuu(hl Ln X Geo. B. Trachuck, belng first duly sworn, | necessities, it would not be a matter for [ Tue Burlington road 1s about to open scg‘:& :‘:fl‘kfil‘}go::n:‘“fn;:fig? cannot [ oF R e ".;:‘er’:"p‘l’;hwr oy ‘:‘l‘l‘; w&::fi:'é‘;l"‘lz‘k";fl"llggl:“‘ll‘l!s.hflcn il HUAUESE R ISte-tW0. LIS Tiktle WoEk A m.flfi?hfl" lw': he'is Dfi'tn"ao:ctl;h:l wonderment. The more intelligent and | two more Nebraska fveders to its main A attahy nrm’edy e+ noces- | 010 Tegimo rogarded the “'poor_white” | the sugar King of tho. Sandwich Islands, | is worthy s prominent place on the book- thoughtful of them are very likely to ar- rive at such a conclusion, for adversity is a most forceful and 1mpressive teacher. The exactions and abuses which a peo- ple are indifferent to or complacently tolerate when they are prosperous, under an opposite condition of things become burdens which set them to thinking and arouse their resistance. The farmers of Kansas are likely to be taught a hard lesson, but it is one which may ultimately be largely to their advantage. Fortunately the farmers of Nebraska have no such gloomy outlook to face so far as their crops are comcerned, Asa whole they have every reason to be satis- fied and grateful, in that they have been better favored than their fellows in nearly every western state. Bul they have a similar complaint to that of the farmers of Kansas respecting the exac- tions of the railroads and the oppression of an excessive turiff. By reason of the former they will be robbed of a large part of the rewards of their labor, while the latter will take from them a liberal share as tribute to the protected monop- olies. They are, however, perhaps somewhat in advance of their brethren of Kansas, fully aroused to the necessity of remedying these wrongs. The first is largely in their own hands, and aremedy for it will certainly be found, while as to the latter they have indicated their wish in unmistakable terms which will not fail to have their due weight. The farm- ers of Kansas should make haste to put themselves in a similar attitude. line. These branches traverse territory north of the Platte, which the Union Ps- cific, with its short-sighted policy, has neglected to annex. While the region which is afforded railway facilities will be benefitted, the outlet to the east by the way of the B. & M, 1s circuitous, and the Nebraska metropolis will derive very little advantage from it, excepting where shippers prefer to patronize her market. sary around the juil at Toledo to secure :?:figfir;,‘:’ofl?;?mfi:fl:” hurried and | as most of his millions have been drawn | shelf. A the safety of Brithman, the saloonkeeper A 1€ o from the cane ficlds of the Hawaiian ? O ] JEERR 1} In many parts of California these men | jsiands, and for many years he ruled the DONNELLEY'S SHAKESPEARE cipher 18 who shot Brown racently. still monopolize thousands of acresof the | pigmy 'kingdom of Kalakaua ns abso- | based wholly on the world fumous and The Burlington Ttolling company has | public domain, which they have inclosed l“',,lcr as Kthough he sut on this | very rare folio edition of Shakespeare been reorganized aud the treasury re- | with the barbed wire fence, and woe to South Sea island throne. Swreckels | published in 1623. The cdition has lon plenished. The works will be enlarged | the small cattle raiser who dares to cat | is o South German who bogan life here | been s perplexity to scholars, It is fu ::fly‘r::{g'fid at once and started at an llflese fences or to fimml \|p(fi| his “ngILts 88 a corner qrocer_v keeper. He made gl :‘he mol'.d‘p(-cu“nr pu&:ctunt{un, ALlis of pasturage. is cattle will e | money in scllin, ‘oceries, and his ex- racketing, odd spelling and paging. . The Sioux City corn pulace is a van- knllm'l, and he will be fortuate if he es- p‘,,:,,nyo, led hirfi .fi'...,dm',.kc sugar re- | The cirlmr depends on these, and in- ished beauty. The upper ten of the | capesdeath or maiming at the hands of | fining, to which he had been trained in | variably on the number of lines on a town, however, will exhibit themsclves | the hired retainers of his powerful | the old country. He was au expert chom- | bage. ~ Any other than a fuc-similo tr;-nlghtlin full dress in the merry whirl {nmfihbor. Of course, ?Ilglm_su ‘wsn}:hy ist, invented new processes refining, n}l:mm“ lwuuld l_notkegnn\l‘g one“m |}|;u:e of a waltz. and owners are notto be included in | and soon had built upa large trade in the | the cipher. Fun agaulls, New Three 1mportant conventions were [ this category, but the possession of refinl:; of‘thn c:mxl)e sugar, from the | York, have now in press a PIID'A‘,I'Z“PhW_ beld in the state lnst weck—the Knights | power is generally fatal to gencrosity [ Sandwich [slands. He saw the profit | fac-simile of the 1633 folio edition of of Pythias at_Cedar Rapids, Knights of | and fairness. ‘The millionaire is beset on | that there would be in raising, ,refining, ) Shakespeare. This is an oxact rcpro- Hotior at Marshalltown, and woman | all sides by th8 human sharks that feed | and sale of this island sugar, could one | duction to the minutest detail off the gists at Des Mgines, on the vices and the weaknesses of | man or oue company control all branches | original, only the pages are photographed The Western Blizzard—It Blows for :I'::nl}gén lnghglflr“g ks ho"llhia own | of tho business and reap ail tho _profits. G T c'lfw:.'.'"m“"fig.'f Humanity,"" is the title of a paper pub- | ¢ nes hard and bitter, and too often | In 1876 he acquired possession of about | any one to test the correolne 2 i ke i . | »ets on the principle that might 1s right. | wenty-six th d ncres of land in the | nelley’s astonishing claim that Bacon {;::,‘?f:‘n(,c'l‘:,{'m l'}’eg?:sf.'fi:xa';‘:l'"fi(“?,‘,; Hence some of the worst_tragedies that | Istand of Maai. nesr some of the bost | had conceuled by & complex cipher in the cditor inserting a bill in the frame of a blacken the pages of California history— | sugar plantations, ‘Chere he dug a ditch | lines of Shakespeare an exten od secret delinquent. theeadly ,,"‘,’1':,,{'3 betmeon railrond | and | which tapped the mountain streams | history. 5 EY y ettiers i i - - bulta‘;:‘ixvlvnml’n;fl“::l “v':'?le ‘:{“lflzbfifl‘z who saw the work ot years snatched from :’,-'\I.?gs ,.:‘,3"’.';.;"; u::.‘;.““m{l:l;l]u"l"fly LETTERS FROM HEAVEN is the title of ice ives ese contests 18 | boring planters tried to restrain him, as ew York. 1hi 18 itea | }::flI:;)liltclel‘eu::s:vr‘;e::ilIi‘:lz:}ccu?iu.;:fl;l‘u,:\fi Like ulbe dray olnu lx_eeul s(;wecli he injured their water supply, but fi!f lourfih(-e'll'm:llu edition and is inter- of the husband. Hu e 8oil—1t brings orth | Spreckets had loaned the king money | esting throughout. . b acropof hate and vengeuance thatisa | and the injunction fell through. That The letters are supposed to be written ,A lady came into the office of Dr. | porpetual menace to the public peace | sugar plantation is now one of the most | by a mother 1 heaven to her son on Chandler at Rowley to get a tooth pulled. sufety. valuable 1o the world, Spreckels ruisos | earth. She describes herself s the wife I'he doctor Pulled tho tooth, butdropped, | = Of the millionaire landed proprietors | the cane and crushes 1t by means or | of & German pastor, who is with her in us she thought, in a faint. On a close | of Culifornia, the first place must be | cheap contract labor, procured from Ma- | heaven. Heaven 1s conceived, after the examination it was found he was dead. | given to James Ben Ali Haggin. Haggin | deira South Sea 'Islands, China, and | example of Luther, as a sanctilied “'l" m‘:;:»r ;pokc or m(€W“I~ Sl ';s ul Keuluukian,hwhone mu;ur{ml grang Japag; it is shipped to San Frareisco in | and lrmmig\mlstl c‘nrth}y ; exlsulencu: n 1877 Sioux county had twenty-two | father was a christianized Turk, com- | his vossels; refined here in his mills, and | and the epecial pomt of the volume miles of railroad assessed at $72,881. 1In | pelled to flee from his native country. | the: rried to all ts of the coast and | is to 1llustrate, in an almost 1897 the number 15 119, and ussessod at | Ho was bred. to tho Jaw, joied the tide | Logachrricd taall parts of tha geust ot | Anending serica of examples, tho happy §451,302, with seven miles more in cou of argonauts, practiced his profession in | by the Southern Pacific company, under | ways in which the heavenly life comes to of construction. In 1877 the total asse: San Francis was twice burned out in | y'contract with which no one else can | the aid ot the life on earth, solving its value of Sioux county wus §1,815,83: the great lires, and twice lost a valuable | compete, mysteries and contradictions, completing 1887, $3,010.443. law library. He first Bogan to accumu- When to this is added the fact that he | its work, rounding out 1ts unfinished ex- The pioneer sottlers of Scott held their | late wealth when he entered into part- | pays not one cent of duty on this crude | perience, rewarding its faithfulness and thirty-first annual reunion and feast at | nership with Milton 8. Latham, a brill- | sugar brought from the islands, some | filling in the lost or wanting chord Davenport Iast week. The way they | iant lawyer, who made and lost a great | 1dea of the enormous profits of the busi- | which 1s required to raise life into n har- knuckle down to and demolish the good | fortune in railroad and land enterprises. | ness may be gamed. It was estimated | mony. The book is written in absolute things of the earth once a year is a sight | Mr.Haggin afterward formed an alliance | three years ago, when the business was | and ~ unquestionable faith. ~ One of that” would kill a dyspeptic in ten min- | with Lloyd Teyvis, a fellow-Kentuckian | at its iicight, that Svreckels made 600 [ the finest passages in a book which is Y, average dally cl rcnlnllc:nn( the Dally Bee for the month of October, 1530, 13,089 coples: for s November, 1886, 13,348 coples: for December, 39 1886, 18,257 copies: for January 1667, 16,268 g coples; for February, 1887, 14,108 coples; for March. 1887, 14,400 coples; for April, 1887, 14,516 copies for May, 1847, 14,237 coples: for %lana 1887, 1'4,14; coplgn; 1‘38’7";‘4‘.’1‘51 w.lu,- copies; for August, 3 copies; for September 15:{.',“14‘340 coples, . Gro. B Tzscruck. Bworn to and subscribed in my presence this 6th day ot October A. D)., 1887, [SEAL.| N. P. Frir. Notary Public. THE crop of candidates is getting very ripe, and it is pretty near time to throw clubs at the rotten ones. Some of them will drop on November 8 of their own weight. STATE AND RRITORY. Nebraska Jottings. Hastings struggles along with 200,000 allons of water a day. A section of the waterworks in Ne- Sraskn City will be put 1n operation to- ay. ‘The track layers on the Elkhorn Valley extension are within five miles of Hast- MINISTER MANNING has position as representative of the United States in Mexico. Mexico has been the political grave yard of American minis- ters. E— THE total expense of the late bogus Ute outbrenk, it is said, will excced $75,000. The fun of exciting Colorow into a revolt will thus cost the state of Colorado quite a little sum, THERE are now eight parties in the political field. The last one has just swung into line in New York. It is the personal liberty party and has tor its ob- ject the repeal of the Sunday law. ings. E‘he Seward Reporter-is sixteen vears old and a monopoly organ with un- changeable barrel. ‘The contract for building the sewer in Plattsmouth will be let this week. The lowest bid is $28,000. The turning of the tide in railroad regulation has compelled the corporation organs to stick in _a new barrel. ‘‘We Cannot Sing the Old Songs.” Mrs, George J. Fredericks, of McCook, was thrown out of a wagon by a run- awuy team, receiviug severe internal in- juries and a broken collar-bone. ‘The Counverse Cattle company, near Burnett, Madison county, lost a number of outhouses, 15,000 bushels of outs, corn, hay and other feed by fire last week. A party sailing under the name of C. Wind offers to build and operate machine A CoMBINATION has secured control of . the coke mines at Spangler, Montana. ‘The increase of working capital will no doubt increase the production of coke, but the price will also probably be raised. —_—— MR. ALEXANDER'S speech insupport of his resolution to submit the issue be- tween the council and the police com- mission to the supreme court, is pro- nounced by those who heard it as the most rational and forcible appeal in favor of good government that has been madein the council chamber this season. Improvement of Western Waterways. A convention to discussthe guestion of improving the western waterways will be held in Memphis, Tennessee, on the e 1 and utes. and a brother-in-law, and the firm has | parrels of sugar every day, each barrel | rich in such passages is the conception . 20th and 21st of the present month. !nc shops and foundry in Wayne for abonus. The state election proclamation besides | become known throughout the Pacitic wom.}:m_ thus giving him'vu daily reve- | of heavenly love near the end, in which Tur lumber barons’ syndicate which is | €Xecutive committee tenders an nvita- | 1t will taken considerable wind to induce the election of state officers calls for the | €oust fur its extensive deaiings in mines | nue of $18,000, or $6,570.000 & year. His | 1t is said that “‘love must be learned—it : rapidly obtaining control of the lumber | tion to members of congress, state and | the town to put up. election of thirty-one senutors, two to fitl | 8nd land, and other enteryrises. Haggin | profits were cloar $10 on every barrel, | does not spring up of itself;” and an ad~ Y icipal official = The Goddard estate of 28,000 acres in o Spre! ivesand one dis- | W88 among the tirst to see the fortune | making his yearly income $2,190,000. | mirable account is given of the processin Y industry in the northwest commands | Municipal oflicials, and also all commer. 7 s 4 2 2! 168,100 representatives and one dis; ! z y y 1n¢ , 190, a:a A § # cial, manufacturing and other organiza- | VY #¥ne, Knox, Pierce and Cedar counties | trict judge to fill vacancy in the Seventh | that was in store for the owner of good | Now, however, the profits have dwindled | which it is developed in the human heart. ; from §00,000,000 to $70,000,000. The | ¢'3h DR EBLIZE- | s 16 be divided, by order of court, among | dstrict, composed of the counties of | #griculturatlands in “Califurnia, = Prier | sadly, as the railroad company can no =ty 4 i o smaller dealers, unable to compete | tions in the Mississippi, Missours and | the seven heirs. It is worth a quarter of Muscatine, Scott, Clinton and Jackson, to 1860 land was held as of small value. | Jonger make special contracts with him, TueRE ARE few books which will meet e nst sucl Ohio river valleys, mterested in the im- | a million dollars, 3 i g . v | The prospector despised the slow gains | and a rival sugar refining compamy is | & more favorable reception by the read- t such an enormous combination H. Spaan, one of Holland township's 0 = .8 r z Y 'y i T of capital,are gradually being frozen out, | Provement of the waterways of the west, | ‘The country papers are now publishing id farmers, of Stoux county, raised | OF the farming. Every one was 8o intent | competing with lum_for control of the [ Ing public thun that just issaed by Lee & - Builders allover ) t will Tool | to send delegates. In addition to the | a thrilling sérial entit] “The Delin- | this year on 400 acres, 70 acros of wheat, | 07 08 mining that good land could be | sugar interests on the islands. King Kala- | Shepard, the production of the pleasing £ OYSn eR W1 800n, Tee i i ; uent Tax List for 1886.”" ‘The thrills are § yoar ! h £ 1°hy | bought for a’song. " Haggin purchased | kaua,after borrowing three-quarters of a | pen of George Lowell Austin. ~ The title $ th 1t h i i primary object of aiding and encourag- | 4uen’ which yields him about 2,100 bushels; 120 Y B i . S X “w v ot i % e result of the pressure in the increase | ! p 3 5 confinea to the editorinl cash box, where | wores of corn, which will yield him apont | L0usands of acres of wheat land in the | milon from Spreckels, has recently ne- |18 *‘Henry Wadsworth Longiellow, his 3 of the price of lumber. ing continued and united action on the | ;00 will do the most good., 5 Y e - Yot | Sacramento and San Joaguin valleys for | gotiated & loan of $2,000,000 with Enghsh | life, his works, his friendships.” The L3 y [ 6,000 bushels; 40 acres of oats, or 2,200 ! & $2,000, gl LSRN ; A — part of the people, the fuilure to becowe Q) v b s a few dollars an acre. 'I'hese lunds are | capitalists, a proceeding that led to a | book is written in a decidedly interest- Frank Shrear, n‘frado agitator,politely | bushels; 51 acres of flax, or 725 bushels. but viciously called J. Sharp-a liar in the broad avenues of Nebraska City, Sharp replied with a knife and made three in- sertions in Frank’s cuticle. The blade was too brief to draw well and both par- tics agreed to postpone a settlement. a law of the river and harbor bill passed by the last congress is thought to render the convention especially necessary at this time. ‘lehe question of improving the western waterways is one of permanent and in- THE transportution of western cattle for eastern markets is now well under way. Shipping has been delayed at least amonth on account of the lean condition of the stock. The shipments on the Northern Pacific are zlready extensive. Y as rich and inexhaustible as the violent quarrel between the monarch | ing vein and us instructive as it is pleas- }ll" 3’2‘:’ é’“t‘u‘;“ nfi‘? ‘1‘:":“:&1";’1':;“:‘;‘“5 40 | Joy of the Nile, us level as a barn floor, | and his I‘noneyvlcmlcn So long, how- m'f. N on St 1886 O ' as free from root or stone as a well-kept | ever, as the reciprocity treaty with ‘he work is hundsomely illustrated The cow pastures in the suburbs of | kitchen garden. They have been made | Hawaii continues in force, Spreckels | throughout and is devoted to a complete Dubuque are dangerous. On ‘fuesday a | enormously productive by scientific cvl- | will coin money out of his sugar inter- | history of the very remarkable life of the bovine lost her balance and came rolling | ture, and in_early summer one may see | e IR errmRia i wnuch loved poct, down the almost perpendicular blufl witit ; . yibes| ieas i InHotmatcditha it lisiworth oG ! he sun shining on thousands of acres of | $25,000,000, a large part of which is in- & A man named Jacobson drove a team 3 ~ Bk 2 HONR OLA0F 25,000,000, a large pa whic s in 20 N S | The drawback about the business now is | Creasing interest to the peqvle not only over a bridge near Neligh and tumbled ?ol;;lt“x:}|§‘“Lv‘:ifizmt‘!:?nltgl:utsag":'fi(ol.nl I‘II:; (‘gal,l{’:,v:',lgn: ln"‘f‘l :’,‘,,’{;‘.‘1‘}..,‘;‘,’,’.}}...3:‘; :fi::,‘:d.‘::hpsl.:l'i'lli',?:(".zzgul;fm'"""ry‘ steam- ,,“].,::,"',:rm“:: fif“#lg"&.1\‘3,"“.:'((.':(‘(;}‘;2u:fi that the railronds will pocket most of tho | 51 the wesh bt of Lo eniire Kountey. | e e o Aorh, and | Sy ovie, e injured, but the famly | shows the progress of the wondorful ma- | *"Claus Sprockels is an- old man, but g | by tho boys. s latest s tho sixths of the prolits, leaving the ranchmen httle else & ay ecessa al o 8 8 2 4 S siderably ene aving 4 chine that reaps the wheat, threshes, | has the clear skin, the bright e, and | Poat Builder series entitled *‘Ready um‘ Ik so x::xcgrvl:\c|ll0\l~l!‘_NK‘I‘VWL - winnows, and sacks the grain, and leaves | the energetic movements L(,( a man of | About or Sailing the Boat.” It is 1ssued Considerable interest is being taken in | a row of bags in its well cleared swath tharty. He hus small education, speaks | from the well known house of Lee & & gang of geventeen surveyors that struck | to mark this modern miracle of the in- | with a strong Geeman accent, is' suuple | Shevard, Boston, and is us interesting as Rolfe Iast week running u line i a south- | ventor’s art. 1 his tastes and fond of his home. 18 productions of the author. western direction. They claim to be | But Mr. Haggin did more than develop A number of California capi % running a line from St. Jacobson paddled on a plank to land An inventory of the wreck showed the driver to possess ore luck than sense. The oniy damage was the breaking of one strap. The wise councilmen of Sutton have must become more valuable as the country advances in population. The duty of maintaining them 1s obvious, and the policy of so improving them that they may be utilized to the fullest pos- thun the husks of the industry. — A DRUMMER is traveling through the south trying to find a town that will send him to jail. He refuses to pay the local alists aul to Omahas. | what was clearly valuable. He was the | have recently tranferred the bulk of their *"r . CIDEDLY interesting and very in- ” i x i . inl | sible extent can be most convincingly | decreed severe pains and penalties for | The chict engineer refuses to talk in re- | firss to see the possibility of converting | property to the cast. Among them are book has just been issued hy | ::‘evl:!z;:r:al; ;::;:’::;;“m::';g:m:‘:-’;m:':?:;l shown. So far as the proposed ,,.m.vgn. any person or persons of any age or sex, | gard to the matter, and no one knows in | the desert umcis of thuy state into nnt ;\lrrs'.u}\lynsx-‘k tHopkins and lfi'. O. Mills, | Lee & Shepurd, of Boston, Illul,ur tlu; i e A h e 1o w CFk % 1 tion hus 1n view the enforcement of these | \/10 Shall keep on their premises more | th:e intorest of what company the survey | ductive farms. He Lad made a careful | Mr, Mills 1s n banker above all else. As | title of “Grasses and Forage Plants.” i rk up n test case. So sk it than one quart of liquor at a time. The | is being made. The line runs from Rolfe, | study of irrigation in Egypt and the Holy | early as 1850 his checks were familiar in | Charles L. Flnt, late tary of the far he has not been accommodated. The | considerationsit may be heartily com- | liberality of the fathers is entitled to | Pocahontas, Fonda and Sac City. Land, and "he avplied "the principles | all parts of California. His bank was | Massachusetts Stato Board of Agricul- unconsti tutionality of a drummer's tax “:“"“;‘l'l But :: is :° be "°l'l'-“' it will not %"";""‘; n‘;}::’:fi‘gp‘;‘]“‘ém":g‘a rg‘l’:fi_‘e“;‘;_‘: o gained there to Californin. He secured | regaraed by the miners as the bank of | ture, is the author and has handled the has alroady been aflirmed by the United | Stop at this, and it is opportune now to 8 ) 3 vast tracts of land in Kern county under | England is by the loyal.Briton. He was | subject in a thorough manner, The i S“e"!m;*‘l acres of wheat near Clear | the Desort Land act, and by irr’?gn:mg Known o by very conservative, rigidly | work is worthy of & place on the shelf of ke yielde ,80 bushels. canals, constructed at fircnt expense, he | honest, and an enemy to all speculation | all interested in the subject of which The Duluth & Manitoba road has [ made this land which had been given | and gambling. This gave him great in- | it treats, It is in fact, a-praoti- crossed the Pembina river. over to the cactus and rogarded as the | fluence in & community where few had [ cal ~treatise comprising the = nat- than a quart at a time. ‘I'he family of William Roth, who died recently in Plattsmouth, have fallen heir to $10,000 by the timely demise of a say that what it should notomut to do is to give the whole weight of its in- fluence to a more practical as well as n States supreme court in two cases, of Ci clared William Kissane under the protec- more liberal system of improvements | grandparent n Germany. There is a | The Northwestern road has surveyed a | abomination of desolation, as preductive | the self-control to adhere to purely iegiti- | ural history of grasses, their com- tion of the statue of limitations. Mr | thaD has been the rule. A vast | streak of touching tenderness initems of | road from Tracy to Dempster. a3 the river bottoms of the San Joaquin; | mate business. ‘L'ne original bank was | paritive nututive yalue, methods of cal- this class. The demise of rich relatives strikes a sympathetic chord at any time and makes the tear founts flow 1avishly until the will is read. Then come la- mentations or rejoicings. A practical preacher in Firth comes out flatfooted with the announcement that “‘there is not a cent in the treasury, not a pound of coal in the bin and we are several dollars in debt to the girls for Jjanitor work. Salvation and chills are a roor combination and the camplires of holiness cannot be started with promises to pay. This must be attended to.” amount of wmoney has been wasted 1n this way, with the effect of creating’ a considerable public sentiment hostile to such improvements, simply for the rea- son that there was waating a practical understanding of what was required and the liberality on the part of congress to carry out improvements promptly and thoroughly. ‘The'whole course of our government 1n this matter of internal improvements has been radically differ- The grade of the Cherokee & Dakota | An investment of million thus yielded | ostablished in Sacramento, the capital of | tivating, cutting and curing and tho railrond will be completed to Sioux Falls | twenty-fold. 1t did even more for the | the state, but the rapid growth of San | care of grass landsin the United States in two weeks. ;ll:ll('* llm‘l;l for M{r. l;lx\g;l:_ln. for ‘1{! led tg #rancisco soon drew him to the metrop- | and British provinces. t 15 positively stated that M. V. Mi the founding of the Fresno, Kern and | olis, where he founded the bank of Cali- 4 »" ‘ pl'lesillt!,nts of the boarl‘l‘ol‘l"’u;{lun‘m ’2;“3.’5 Tulare county colonies,which have given | fornia, of which he became president. | WiLLiayM HAGUE DD. is the author, Brookings agricultural college, has fled homes and competence to thousands of | He heid this aportant position for nine | and Lee & Shephurd the publishers, of the country, taking with him 3,000 of | Settlers. Mr. Haggin has also conducted | years, when he retired to give his sole at- [ an interesting work entitled Life Notes, college funds and soveral thousand dol- | 28ty experiments co test the adaptability | tention to tis large and constantly in- | or Fifty Years' Qutlook.” There is no lars in funds secured from banks by | Of soiland climate to cotton, sugar-cane, | creasing property”intercsts. When the work which will be of more bencfit to various processes. President McLouth of Egyptian corn, jute, and many other | bank failed in 1875, he consented once | tht young and old than this, if closely the college declares that the story is falso products. His energy, hus fertility of re- | more to take churge of it, and in | and carefully read. T'hroughout its and that Miller did not take ond cent of | Source know no bounds; neither, appar~ | three years he restored itto its former po- | teachings are oxcellent, a8 its matter is tie college funds ently, docs his acquisitiveness. He is as | sition. Mr. Milis has & beautiful country | interesting. Almost immediately after i Kissaue,it will be remembered, was prose- % cuted bv personal enenues for an alleged crime committed more than a quarter of & century ago. He has lived under an A assumed name on the Pacific coast and has won a good reputation, Even if he were guilty of an offense a generation #go, u subsequent life-time of good citi- wenship should condone it. Otherwise there is little encouragement to reform. E ~ . = intent on money-making now as he was | seat at Millbrae, n the Santa Clara Val- | examining the last page of appendices of 3 CoNGRESSMAN BUTTERWORTH, of Ohio, | o1t ffom that pursued by the govern- | f6 (¥, & MEMES, 8 EAIOT e North Wi s quarter of ucentury ugo. ‘Ho has & | ley, but his homte isin New York. His | this book the author, Dr. Haguc, closed s has opened the campaign i the United pe, q! y Platte in London. He hus written to the The Mongolian mining colony at Rock large family, and lives in one of the | only daughter was murried several years | his earthly’ life. On ‘Saturday, July 30, been relatively yery much more costly. States in favor of commereial uni i ore:Al.union with We need a departure in the direction of boatd of trade bat he will send. out 100 | Sprines i e graduedly thinned. ‘Tae | Palaces that overlook San Francisco Bay | ago to Mr. Whitelaw Reud, editor of tho | 187, Dr. Hugue sent by muil to the pub- C dan. He h = i famili d ide homes for them on i less th 0. —na mansion that is as large as u big city York Tribune. Mr Mills has n- hishers the last proof pages of the work. 8 E:::.‘“: w‘m‘:“:,“:(":\?cf,o ;%:th:nlzf“hll:: wiser methods in this business, and if c‘f,';’.'u'.“.f,,’.‘"m'.’f”{fw; ulrn given employ- m»‘}‘l‘,z“Euf::i:“m::':nmon ot ito hotel, and that is famous for its hospitali- sted largely in real esiute in New York, | On the Monday following he visited Bos- the proposed convention shall do any- | ment, The board of trade 18 considering | Omaha to interview the Union Pacific | WSk and, itis said, has sdded much to his [ ton and was there stricken with apo- man who very warmiy espoused the 3 - 5 i nal 4 The partner of Haggin, Lloyd Tevis, is | fortune by these purch His wealth | plexy. His death wax peculiarly sad, and i f 5. | thing to promote this it will h: ¢~ | the question, William does not display | officials on freight rates, report that th & REMIGE NA 2 2 S b Y LAGRRS A LpeSs i 4 i 3 cause of which the Ohio congressman is mmkhsh'tdo poa m" i b ave ;u a vastamount of taste us an immigra- wu;fi“gmmm it Woat ‘h‘;ly““ked. 'Y | & very peculiar man.” Ho has a genius | 1s set down by good judges at twenty- | it closed n life of usefulness o his fellow. the parent. There is no denying the fact plishe dmething worth meeting | yion agent, It was not necessary to go 3 for accounts, as well as for gathering i | five million doilars. beings. that the proposed policy is ably and in- | ©F Wb evhetiony v ¥ acrossg the pond to find hundreds of ;)3‘3%"%1,;,'23-»(~t’.“.f:.“’§i'n m‘l:r;!:;e: "?l coin. Of all the rich men on the Pucitic | There are half a score of other Cali- e L e fluentially championed, d if it should T worthy men to accept such a liberal bputy Heak e PAyers | coast he 18 probably the ablest financier, | fornia millionaires who have climbed 'we Forua for October onta 5 Y P , and if it shou TrE mayor of Chicago has been pretty | i $25,000 to conviet, and several thousand | as he is undisputedly the first in | above the five million level, but the lives | the following interesting pap fail, as 1015 to b apprehended it will, to | sharply taken to task by some of the | °'A cheerful et £ Wayno writes tothe | 10r¢ Will be required to pay his pur- | carrying on lurge business nego- | of few of them present picturesque foat- | The Continuance of Democratic Rule, 8 make many converts, the fault oannot be | newspapers for the mismanagement of | hose rnor oo otlat e the motrop, | Suers. Murderers come high but ‘the | tiations. Since 1850 he has been | ures. Nicholas Luring mude n fortune | John G. Carlisle, Education and Law- charged to any inadequacy in vresenting | the president's reception in that eity ofi:n:ulifige:::::fl:;x‘n:nt fnmle QYRR | people will have them. associated with Mr, Haggin, and the two | as money-lender in the early days of San | lessness, Bishop F. D, Huntington. ‘The b its merits. The consummation of such a e policy is perhaps an event of the future, but it is apparent that the present geuer- The new territorial insane asylum at | now wield a power which is second vnly | Francisco, when as high™ as thirty or [ Treasury Surplus, Judge William D, Evanston will be under roof in a few | to thatof the railroad triumvirate. Tevis | forty per cent s month wis paid by mer- | Kelley, * Aristocracy — snd Humauity, weeks. The man building is 120x40 | has been connected with nearly all the | chants on steamer day in order to meet | Prof.” Thomus Davidson. Is Amecrica feet. In the basement there will be | large manufacturing and industrial en- | their es Industries of Omaha,” that *‘the water of the Missouri river, though naturall muddy and repulsive, when filtered is There was very little order or system to the arrangements, and the mad rush of the people overbore all barriers. In this tion is not 1 i o clear as crystal and VERY NUTRITIOUS.' ) S AES " ; A stern Inlhl; He lmuu-,(: many li:;Iru“\)‘.“;lI‘Zil‘H?l%,vl'l.j'(]‘{ulum“n(l“ld“xmll : BUAD 1500¥ A o)) anxiops abapt it. i i : ) TTIOUS. " | wonty-tiireo rooms, some of which will | terprises of San Krancisco, and each of | thousands on San Francisco real estavo | Ihe Anathemi of the Rowan Church, i — :::’;';'":m;f;h?fl: ‘:}‘;{c";‘ ‘:,',t:,:,f,?’[‘, f',‘,‘:o"'("‘fi;;gfifii“g;‘ Ihe discovery 18 | bo used for kitohen, bakery, laundry, | these has yiolded him s ric it. He | which fell into his hands, and in this way | Prof. E.J, V. Huiginn. Queen Victoria's store rooms, ete. ‘I'he first and secound | has the instinct for dete: ereial | he (became the owner of much valuable will each contain twenty-three rooms, | disaster, and the great ps property. ‘This alone makes him now making 1n all sixty-nine rooms, which the Bank of California went [ many times a milhonaire. He hasdone lit- ———— under, found him unburt. He is fre- | tle to improve thecity, asit is only within A preacher who beld forth in St. Paul | quently called upon to manage important | two or three years that he has begun to ia the early days in closing up his prayer | commereial negotiations, and he i build houseson his vacant lots which one b‘unaulf usked the Lord: ‘“T'o com- | modest about his fees for such se: . | dot thy ity fort the afilicted, heal the sick and raise | Thus, he was asked to arrange a com Other who must be dis- —— . the devil.” The congregation was, of | wromise between the Central Pacific | missed in a ! ot are Louis Storr, A well-known and trustworthy citizen course, greatly discoiuposed, and even | railroad directors and Mrs. Colton,whose | the head of the Alaska Commerei ienernl Viscount Wolseley. the Object of Lifet Prof. J. sley. Books That Have Helped o L. Gilder. Ousting Richard A. Proctor. The New Uncle Tom's Cabin, Alice Welling- ton Rollins. To-MorRROW will be the first day of registration for the November election, and it is to be hoped that voters will bear the matter in mind and get their names on the list. No one can vote at the next election without being registered, the law disfranchising those who neglect this duty. It may also be expedient to city to an unparalleled boom and exclu- sive right to the nutriment. The hour is ripe for Bob McReynolds to cume to tho rescue of Lincoln. Bob is a Mulhatton of moderate reputation, His exhausting labor in phot: phing a soul on the fly and injecting life into the dry bones of Brigham Young. stamped him as the champion har of Salt Creek. held to be largely responsible. He seeks to exonerate himself by pleading that he left the management of afiairs m the hands of the commuttee, but this is not nccepted as a satisfactory excuse, which in fact it1s not. On the other hand the Milwaukee authorities are cordially com- mended for the admirable arrangements Just his Hy t 1 T 1t b ' , com- | of Citra, Florida, saw # Iul'glu alligator L say again that a past registration is of no | which relieved the reception of any an- | JUst BOW services are unanimously | the good old eacon found it ngi:'tl work | husband died suddenly while in the | pany, that nas the monopoly 5.{«huy_1nr come out of the Water, dash among & value. Every voter, 1n order to exercise | noying or lamentable incidents. Mr. sought to resurrect the extra session | to keep a straight face. Horritied by his | service of the company.” He succeeded | seal business on this coust; W. B. Carr, | drove of hogs, the' best one in the soheme and invest 1t with the cnnrmmfi robes of vyitality. Come out, Bob, an brush the moss off your whiskers. The Beatrice Democrat is convinced lapsus linguse, the minister, in the mean- | in inducing her to accept $200,000 and re- | who is extensively interested with Hag- | lot, and eat kun. The rest of the hogs time, made atters very much worse by | linquish all claims on the company. The | gin in ranches and irrigating schemes | then rallied, attacked the alhigator, correeting himself in the words: “O Lord, | widow's mite is generally regarded as e D). Carr, who owns thousands o; | killed him, and ate him. That the hogs we did not mean raise the devil, but | sacred eveu by cold:-blooded business es in Canfornia and Oregon, and has | should eat the alligator is not at all « A lus right of sufirage in November, must b be newly registered. The object to be 3 accomplished hy registration every good Cleveland will be in Omaha this week, and it is very, much to be hoped that the committee and the authorities will have A i i 4 i that the burning of the Burlington | raise the dead.”” The organist, who was | men: but Tevis coolly reserved half of | enormous herds of cattle; 1. W, Helmun, | matter of surprise, but any man who has . :m:::ri.:mfll" flf.hfn'x;flr’m:l ‘:h:{ mtl‘::?:;‘!:‘?:ho’ il “:W:mn;:-nmex]" bridge, nine milesgwen of Lincoln, \fimt a sagacious man, immediately took in | this amount as his pay for the work. The | —— ever seen a Flor hog can realize to k og! & hiul R 2 pel at the president and his wife } nosduy night, was *he work of fiends | the situation aud helped the very much | facts came out in the famous trial of the | eSinee this was writen Mr. Lux bas died, | What 8 frenzied pitch of sturving desveru- i self to huve others do 50 who may be in- | will have reason to remember this com- | who dehiberatily planued a repetition af | rattled parson out by striking up on a | suitof Mrs. Colton aguinst thesuilrond | te left 465,00 to various chiritable institu- | tion the alligator wust have beem 5 different or develict, munity as one of the most cwvil, courte | the Chatsworth horror, The fire was | hyma. l company, a trial which also reyealed the | tious, | wrought, : - :

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