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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY JULY 20, 1888 -TWELVE PAGES. g =SEYMOUR PARK. This Beautiful Suburban Propemm rty, Belonging to Dr. Miller, will be Put on the Market this Week. | Seymour Park consists of about four hundred and eighty acres ot woodla.nd and lawn, situated on a high eminence. commanding a magnificent view ot Omaha ‘ and surrounding country. = The entire property is covered with thousands of beautiful forest trees, consisting of oak, hickory,walnut,ash m-mple.box elder, catalpa, black cherry and other varieties. Dr. Miller, the owner of Seymour Park. is now building a magniflcent stone mansion at this place and is making arrangements to put in an extensive system of water works, supplying the purest kind of water to all those who build at the Park. The Park will be lighted by Electric Lights and a perfect system of sewerage put in. The elaborate svstem of sewerage. electric lights and waterwork contem= | plated.added to the already verfect nature of the ground for Homes, will make § Seymour Park the finest suburban residence place in the west. SUBURBAN TRAINS now running at regular intervals afford quick and easy transit between Seymour Park and the business center of Omaha. Lots in this beautiful addition, with 100 foot frontage, on broad avenues, will be sold at prices ranging from $300 to $500,or at three to five dollars per front foot. ‘We will be pleased to show this property at any time, and cordially invite all those seeking a home to call at our office and make arrange- ments to go out with us Wednesday or Saturday of this week, to see SEYMOUR PARK. . E.F.SEAVER, - - Room 40, Barker Blockf’ HARRISON'S CHINESE RECORD | i, He him- CELESTIAL AGRICULTURE, Sgan, in a writ i ting to natu r\ll/\tlnn A\lr The Chinese objected to this, as it operated | passage of the bill, namely, its disregard for ) YT N\ opposed th bill, oceuipying several | 10 ing i of Hibopers | S it exising ity o LAW'S EXTREME PENALTY. ours, By a yea and nay vote Farley whose immigration might be forbidden. The | (Record. Vol. 13, pt. 4, p. ten confession, dated January 25, 1868, nearly | How the Chinese Farmer Raises and Jendment, was wdopted; Mr. Harriason ab. | Amoricans repliod thyt they could not cone | - On July 8, 1884, Mr. *\Bilices (Ou) movea two years after the inurder, that e had i sent. Mr. Grover's amendment relating to | sent that artisans should be excluded from | to take from the table for consideration stolon & numbor of articles, had fired one Handles "'N(mh It is Glven in Detail as it Was | |yorers was adopted by i the class of Chinese laborers, for it is in this | house bill s, and the motion was agrecd | The Two Men Who Pald It in nt aman firom woving in, | Wasmyeroy, |Special to Tma i amendment pro- Cmaha. the incendial ) burned the block United States min. m r\n m Thi street to Samuel sent a communication ta Harrisson absent. A non the ton y Officially Recorded. very competition of skilled labor in the cities | to. After re where the Chinese labor itimigration concen- | posed by Mr, 18 and nays were trates, which has caused the embarrassment | ordered” on the of the bill. Yeas ) absent. Mr. | and popular discontent. In she subsequent | were 43, nays So the bill was of the murder was robbery, s departient of sate, undor dato of Aprl S h‘ bii thiis l,ml,“,. ¢ amendment: ptintions this definition dropped out, and | passed. ' Mr. Hg reported as ab- | THE HISTORY OF THEIR CRIMES. eposited about W in the f 23, last, about agriculture in north China, red with the s 'lum Indiana | does not appear in the treaty. Article 2 of | sent. nmm after banking hour Baker | which contains some observations which will ison) who is nee: absent, | the treaty confers the rights, privileges, m- | On May 26, 1856, Mr. Sherman, with the Lnow of this and laid his plans accordingly. | g of special interest to the farmers of this Shiould. vote nny If hio waro hore, and the | ‘munities and exemptions which are accorded | consent of Mr Dolph, of Oregon, calied up | A Vieim Wrapped in Chains and | Retirving early he feigne - 2 HOW HE VOTED EVERY TIME. The Stories Started By the Democrats | | s slumber until Hig- | © % ekttt Utterly Refuted—Hard Facts senator (Mr, Harrison) would vote to citizens and subjects of the most favored | for consideration sendte bill 1,901, Which was Sunk in the River—The Horrible gins was fast asicep. en stes country, if not to evesy reader. In the course Which Cannot Be Hidden The amendments of the committee were | nation upon Chincse subjects proceeding to | debated at some length and ‘.,.,A“\M_d\-fl.. 3 arising ho took up an o of his dispatch Mr. Denby s ; on nnot then concurred in and the bill put lem its | the United States as t ers, students, wer- | ord, vol. L. 5, P 4,958 to 4,062, Coolness of Ottawa Baker's dealt his victim terrible blows upon the head, “In threshing n the Chinese spread it By False Assertions. passage, the yeas and n: lered. | chants, or from curiosi The American It was again considered on .I\.vw 1. The Orime. untit satistied that life was extinet out on a smooth cluy floor in the open: airy | i The bill was passed— Yeas, 2 . | commissioners report that the Chinese gov- | amendments of the committes were agreed taking the keys from Higging' pocket he | 4o oine such a threshing fl djoini i { Mr. Harrison absent. Senator M v ernment claimed that in this article they did, | to, and the bill passed with a yea and opened the safe and withdrew the money iore being such a threshing: fHoor NEIGHEN b What the Record Shows. his namie was called, said: “I was paired | by exclusion, provide thut nobody should be | nay vote.—(Iiecord, vol. 13, pt. 5, p. 5,100 to Fiogni Hxeontionain Omanar which he secreted und o | every farm house, and either by threshing \, July 24.—[Special to Tur from Indiana(Mr.Harrison) | entitled to claim the benefit of the general | 5,111.) Innumerable murders have been committod | bY; Ho then scattered mateh with flails or by rolling a stone roller, drawn upon the request of ' awendment. In_the note | provisions of the Burhmgame treaty but The conclusion of any careful stude ¥ i i i 4 . sat d several r: by a donjey, over it detach the grain. . The ok s hich he wrote me ho said that if | those who might go to the United States in | history must be says Captain Me in Omaha, but only two murderers have paid | gino. and sot the building ¢ chaff is remoyed by tossing the grain mto soo of the leading republican senators and | yup~ gmendment should be voted | those capacitics or for those purposes. T ac- [ Sthat the fivst Chin was opposed the penalty of their erimes upon the gallows. | obliterate all traces of the erime. In order | yna i in a slight breezo, the kernels of grain members of the national republican com- | down he would vote against the wm.tlun as the definition ut the word ‘labor- | cause it was in contlict with _existing treaty | The first legal execution in the city, as well | to throw suspicion on unknown parties, he ; g, ling s RECts ENG g;mmd- the choff and mittee, Captain T 18 H. MeKee, assist- | bill. I am inclined to think _th ors’ as used in the treaty.” obligations. The second and third bills were | aq the first in the state, was that of Judge | Shot himself in the arm and ran “down ' the | Gust being blown aside, " | an of cnate, bogan the work | under that statement he would Mr. Harrison said: “Tonly want to make | passed without conflict, because th 8 \ g ust 23, 1503, for the mur. | Srcct shricking “wire! Thioves| Murder! 'hie two niost characteristic featuros of Chinese agriculture are’ the use of manure and the systems of irrigation. Manure I8 apair upon the because the amen atorial record of | ®Pair upon the bill, eful examimation of | he, from the Cyrus Tator, on Au ggestion. Tn the treaty the word ‘labor- | in harmony with treaty obli der of his is used. T take it that it is not inthe | tor Harrison's record on these bills power of congress to enlarge the meaning of | tainly is on the side of law, ovder and na- sating the so 1 Harrison in relal question. He made a c: d volunteer fi onded ln thie alarm, <ging’s body v tment promptl ud th I river, as found un- v It i rathor om all conccivable : the statement made to me, would | that word. Whatever it meant in the treaty | tional honor. 1 think the people might tiio! Highty having souked tho | Sathered from “”'L,h;”‘ll":‘,:'l’,‘mf;‘u‘l‘l"""‘ In $08 Jolluel Gitisacnde and JuRkon the Eun e i i youlll moan ihosamo Shing s used In the | with groat reason, troat him wilk the leaving upon its bank the body of a man so that they had | yijeg of streots and alloys is gathiered by meull A L e e e R . Huwley mado the following state- © caunot make it mean more than | cution of treaty obligations in preference fo site i and boys in buckets and mixed with™ cl the sun_and sold ‘to farmers. ire to make a statement in ro- therefore why not let it stand in_the | some who absent senator: s in the t ped round a 1 round with heavy log we declared openly in national | W X ms. The man had evidently been dead ® compilation cmbracing every vote cast by reaty, and let the use of that | counsel that & great treaty bearing the seal | cb General Harrison from the first to the last | idence of Baker ad he not ert liar, telling a very T did not g 4 " ! 1 oft in time, or 1_should have done so in th de what 1t will. & and obligation'of this nation with that of | but a few days, and the marks of some sharp maiclies having fallen i1 el A, ‘,m,“,f‘;“fi‘..'f,"ngl,;"asnm 3 ! day while he was a membor of the senate, rning hour. Mossrs, Sewoell, Harrison rover objected to_the proposition of ) other powgrs is & humbug.” instrument upon his head showed plainly r. Pe dressed the | i liorses, cuniels and_wules pass, | both on the floor of the sonate chamber and | and Hampton ave necessarily absent, in an son for_ the rcason le said, tho e that he had been muvdered and his body | Wound in hi that the shot | yupnering into buskets the material which 18 ¥ fn the room of the committee on foreign re. | Investization at the soldiers’ home, and loft rd can be defined in different ways, and if CAPITAL PUNISHMENT. S g S et s 24Y | which cau have been fired only | Jtiorwards, with such beneficial effect i ¢ e 6 o 81 T | hiote atmy desk which I did not got in sea- | it is left to bo construed by those who ad- thrown into the water with the expectation | by the pacty himself. Ba ssted i % thelr fiolds. Earth from i i lations, which hore diroctly or indirectly on | on “usking permission of the senate to be so | winister the law, they will have to determine | Hanging Snid to Produce Death | that it would be forever hidden from | fow duys afterward and came up for triul be- nd oity stroots is also)CRELAE . legislation affecting directly or indirectly | ent.” that Senator Harrison's ab- llcnlhml'ur‘liwt:ln\; or l:‘h‘ ornhw-. _Mr. Harri- Quicker Than Hlectricity. sight. The corpse was rccognized as | fore Judge Lake, Hon. G. M. Doane was for the same purpose, Other subs * [ Chinese immigration. After every page and | ‘:‘fllc]\‘x";;él"'fl"'fll g *OU 1 possible that the senate s right in | Globe-Democrat: Ata recent meeting | that of Neff, who in company with | thely district atgrned, and Hon nces are diligently collected, ns hair from i DSLATIADD Ghoto0ySEnptop ouTnn. DR DOOR | ahrnd; 1532, thie prosident « voto mossage, | saying that the word may be construed dif- | Of e ll\lfl‘l;l‘?-lw:!ul society, of New | Tator had been camping near Sulbhur | thon Colonel Savage, Raris; ey | BAEion SHoD8 | 'ii‘."'::!““u’h'fi;.‘:“::fir;’l.:t:g s gone over carefully and every vote and ac i} SRS 3 3 YR i > enlarge 3 z Cork e Willig Ve Hd > | Spri i tonAr ore N 55 o} apIe od | SWeepings fro @ streets ;. g 1 o f O R0 Triotadl tha Yoo cstlBton || :‘lllkia\m:]h\\ufi|)||i(‘nlul to the | ferently; butcan we enlarge the meaning of { York, Dr illiam A. Hammond, the | Springs. Tator was uowhereto be found,and | Hopkins and Ben Sheiks represented from kitehons and old buildings, soot, bon was compared by Captain McKeo and Harry | diation of tre Simith, late journal elerk of the house, to sce | and bill wi ed upon the repu- | it asitis used in the treaty! Thatis the | eminent s‘wcn.nliat and physiologist. ! his sudden disappearance at once turned sus- | the de! ant. Owing to a disagreement in ¢ obligations. The message | question I present. If we use the same word | discussed the subject of unpn.ul punish- ! picion upon him. It was learned that he had | the jury, the case was not decided for nearly ore lnid_on the table.—(Record, | in the law that is used in the treaty we are | mont by hanging' and clectricity. Ho | hunctiand sroserios in soneidoati 18 | fwer years, at the expiravion of which time that the data was absolutely correct in every | vol. 13, pt. 5, . 8, going as far as we can go, for we cannot ¢ Y Al 3 purchased groceries in considorable quantity | pjer wrote the confession above referred Yotat, That the somplets Sad anthenticated | | On April onator. Farley moved to | large the word as it is used in the treaty fod "‘.“5""““"5 ¢ois colleagues were of | g few days previous and had started across | 1o n chis ho disciosed. the hiding:piace of Fecord of General Harrison on this subject | take up senate bill 171, returned by the pres- | M=. Grover proposed to put a legislative | the opinion that hanging was the move | ounery.” Sherift Thomas L. Sutton immedi- | the money. Father Jzav, Judge Savage und landltha it ®ay be_ placod in_convenient. and. compro. | ident with his obj Motion ugroed to, | interprotation upon it and Mr. Miller (Cal.) | painless and certain of tho two meth- | g1 to110wed in pursuit, and after several | John Delaney proceoded 'to the spot and S e '5'{:’,"“““" hensive form for the ready reference of any | Mr. Sherman submitted again the motion to | remarked: “We start out with the presump- ods of inflicting \cgnl death. As New v 4 P found there the $1,500 cntire, just as it had D8, here running water a i or. l ) At = g h 2 i vi a days overhauled him near Columbus, finding ' MR LY hand he turns it to advantage by directin -l ono interested it is here given in full, i it to the committec on foreign ralations, | tion that congress will not legislate to vio \urk had'changed its laws, substituting | ¢ : 5 s .2 | been placed on the night of the murder. over his fields i large channels, banki ln On December, 1581, Senator Miller, of Cali- | which motion caused considerable debate | late a treaty, so that in tact it is probable | electricity fqr the (lumcmpu the sub- | in his possession a team and wagon which * “rpho scaffolding was crected for Baker's | S¥ek clay, and subdivided. into smaller add ® fornia, introduced sehato bill No. 71, “to ca. | upon the point of order raised by Mr. Mor- | that the words of the treuty ‘would govorn | jact was on,of great intorest from q | had belonged to Nefl. The sheriff returned | exceution inthe ravine nt abont the place ] fish and animal remains. The quantity ol these fertilizers used and the importance the Chinese attach to them are proved by the number of pmp\c whose livelihood is gained | : s HoRN 1 s gk 3 e smaller sfrcamlets, until every parv of the force treuty stipulations relating to Chinese.” | gan, of Alabumasaud the leading questious , unless there was 4 plain intent manifest that | yodjeo-legal point of view. to Omaha with his prisoner, and district | Which is now the inteis n of 'I'wen ground has been reached. If no running This bill was referred to the senate com- | nvolved in tho bill wero freely discussod. | congross intended to, violate the treaty or | Wag 5o Soct'of seience and the cu- | court being then in session with Chief Jus- | Scventh and Dodze, a spot which the pay water is found, s arc dug and water mittac on foreign relations, which was com- | The yeas and nays being ordered on Mr, | lezislate in conflict with it. I any one ¢ of that duy describe s a “quarter of w milo man’s motion, the senate refused to re. | 8how a good reason or apprehension that | thanasia of would-be murderers in gen- | tice Kellogg presiding, a special grand jury drawn up by hand_and poured into the yeas 18; Mr. Harrison voted | skilled labor so-called would come into this | eral, several well-known surgeons de W west of Caitol square.” It was n placo ad- | g,ch0s, which are subdivided into numerons & ut onco called, and Tator indicted for the | mirably “adapted for a public 1 wwl of the following scnators: Messrs | She { indom, Edmunds, Miller, Ferry, Lapham, execution, as ! g TG } ) smalier oncs, Holes are dug in which rains hnston (Va.), Morgan, Hill (Ga.), and yea. The question of the passage | country under this bill unl this section | termined to perform a series of experi- | murder of N the hiils slopea gradually down from all di- | 308 R T J;;"c,:.uflm.( ) 1 1] of " uio “bill " over tho ™ veto | Woromlopted 1 should certainly desire to | ments on living ammals to decide the | ator having no funds, Mossrs. Lt | rections, forming a natural ampitheater. A Jaior socumoly ‘:‘“2“’.‘;‘:‘,‘:“WWMQ;,1[‘:“‘;":“"““‘ On Junuary 25, 1882, Mr. Miller, of Cali- | upon which the nays were ~have it adopted.” question, and their results, which are j 8ud Poppleton were appointed to defend him, 1 vast crowd assembled on those hills to wit- | 25, ospocially i tho vieiotty: ot Pamtuii fornia, reported back the bill with an amend- | taken, resulted in 29 yeas, 21 nays, Mr. Har- Mr. Grover read an extract from the Daily 3 2 which they did in a very able manner indeed, | n the hanging, ¢ of women | t3sc$ especially © of Pel O . substitute, and xaye | rison voting nay, The bill did not pss, two- | Record-Union of Catifornia, of April .22, | 4hout to b“.l’“?l"f‘ed in & w &"“"‘l"“'} the state being represented by Charles H. Totice that ho would endeavor to have the | thirds not voting'in the afirmative.—(Kecord, | Which discussed theamendmnent made by the [ scientific journal, are —considered of | Brown and Judge Lake. Popular prejudices | tieman who was & bill considered on February, 155, vol. 18, pt. 8, p. &, 607 o 2,617.) senate committee, criticising the effect of | special importance. The experimenters | were so aroused that 200 meu were examined | gtatos that hundreds of them woro th On February 24, 1552, the bill was taken The position of the president as set forth | leaving out the provision of the fifteensh | were Dr. B. Curtis, Dr. G eorge Brown | before a suitable jury was empanel T'he Baker made 1o spe t up on motion of Mr. Miller. Mr. Bayard of { in his veto rests upon treaty obiigations, | section. Phelps and H. b.l W They were | tral lasted ulmuulm tnight and the c Sh.-ufl' Hoel and D-||ul\ bhum' Delawarc antagonized the the consideration | His objections to the bill were in harmony | Mr. Harrison replied to Mr. Grover as fol- [ assisted by three medical students. given to the jury, who,aiter twol ¥ with the tariff commission bill, The ques- | With the position taken by most of the re- | lows: “Will the senator from Oregon allow | * There programme was: ation,veturned u verdict of ment in the nat done very laboriously by hand. Windmil is not_ono muulld Peking n China), might be used for this pose with great increase of eficiency FEoRR n labor. Ry ultural implements are of th ministored religious consolation. And thus on jat o Aoy are chiefly b BiE present being pi ¢ noticeable, 1 eye witness of th ¢ ) , ; et andanbETabiD ¢, the harrow, the rake and the s tion of consideration was decided in favor of | publican senators (excepting those from the | me to make a® suggestion to_him? He reads Sha i 3 T degree, The defendant's able attorneys | February 14, 1863—St. Valentine's day— Tha o the Chinese bill by @ yea and nay vote of | Pacitic states), us shown throughout the de- | an article froma paper to the effect that the hull.x ’%",",“ required to produce death by | wore unsuccessful in_their several motions | n two years aftor the commussion of his | T fl“;'(;‘x"",;’l:"h‘; \lfj{;:;"‘guf:igl‘;“l;‘d bladels 1 yous, § vs, 16, Mr. Harrison votng yes, | bate. Senator Harrison undonbtedly acted | word ‘laborers’ as used in the treaty or as ! E‘T.b ivod A s Aaii for new trial and on July 10 Judge Kellogg | crime, Ottawa H. Buker, the second and Sna drawn T tamne of tHe At ‘Y:u b, o ousider the Chinese bill, in good faith in opposing this bill from the | used in the law may be limited by meaning 2. Time required to produce death by | passed the death sentence, fixing the day of | last person to bo legally hung in Omaha, ro o T ot s farror Rm On February 25, 1582, the senate proceeded | point of treaty oblizations. Senator B: applied to those wio are unskilled. 1f the | electricity. execution for August 21, but Governor Saun- | ceived his just descrts. s docy and. drercainE to the consideration of ‘this bill. Mr. Grove the present secretary of stute, declared court should sodecide, giving that meaning 8. Post-mortem appearances. extended nis time te August 28, A peculiarly touching incident connected | pisl & “A“_u‘ ,“‘t‘ 1m ane “n;]u:.:“z :n of Oregon offered an amendment, as follow: this debate on April 5, that the Burlingame | to the word ‘laborers’ as used in the treaty, 4. Resuscitation aiter death by either Cyrus Tator was a man of much more than | with the murder of Higzins was the fate of Noties™ dbnlie bt fs bulloal it & Ph “Ihe words *Chinese laborers,’ wherever | treaty was a humbug; it began and ended in | would the senator from Oregon be in favor | method. ordinary ability, beinga lawyer by profeasion, | his fiance, Miss Li Heard, a beautiful m‘-.{. At eopty fim o “; ? 'z"no‘h wsed in this act, shall be construed to mean | it (page 2, 616), and it is prosumed that be- | of going beyond what we are authorized 0}~ The experiments were chiefly carried | & Drilliunt coniversationatist, and a man of | and accomplished young lady. ‘The shock of | 12 8, 8 Al i i parning, cld the 5 ; A i am or boy ‘and any one or more . of Yhe anis & both skilled and unskilled laborers, and | licving as he dld he had aright'to disregard | do by our tr R LTy - ' | learning. He had held the position of pro- | his violent death and her great grief resulted | A0 Of boy and & Chtines oraploved in miin g 2 0Phe ament. | it. His argament would tiply at loasta | Mo, Grover swored: “The commis- | O At the Carnegie laboratory. Boys | hata judge for two torms in Lyking county, | in her decease six months arer e ws killods mals wbove nawmed drawing the same plows ment was laid on tho table. disvogard for the treaty, while the republi- | sioners on the part of the United States, who | Were employed to obtain the unfortu- | Kansas, where he was elected to the state | Consequently Baker was virtually guilty of [ Chivese farmers measuro the depth o On Murch 8, 1383, the senate again re- | cans ou the other haud félt bound by its obli- | negotiated this treaty, are unanimous in | Date canines, and all collision with the | legislature, but apparently he cared little for | 5 double murder. Dirtowe shy e s ‘fi"*l*\‘;;v o:n{‘hr‘:“dfleflfll sumed cousideration of the bill. Senators | gations. AR their expression that this clause is properly { society for the prevention or cruelty to | public honors and leti for Pikes Peak with- —_— ’llnn w‘lh(l)'“"o‘ “’;N mzm % lio ‘“c \ne Eurley, Maxoy, Suulsbury, Garland, Ingalls, | On Avril 1S, 1585 Houso Bill 5,804 was ro- | in tho bill" o which Mr. Harrison re- | animals ~ was ~ eurefully avoided " by suutaeloghinsent SHis cAtesh dI& “L';:‘:‘rg‘r‘gv English Fashion Notes, culty of making a decpor furrow with 9! Burnard and Miller of California discussed | ceived in the senate and raferred to the com- | plied: Y A vi y unsayory, : a Aha bl Mr. Tugails offored aa ameadment | mittoo on' forelgn’ rolations, April 10, 1853 | © It rominds me of & will case that I was A laborat in whigh | 8While' o wvas' ncarceraicd iy thia c.ul Women’s World of August: Sovoral ) plows, and not bou T Loy e Ru AN to the committeo's amendweut relating to | Mr. Miller (California), reported this bill | once trying, when tho lawyer who drew the | ) o Seh f R t th after hig trial, & burly man with unkempt [ new trimmings have been introduecd of | the m‘vml -nft-v A ¢ Y s';‘mum 10 the removal of those unlawfully entoriug. | with amendments. In making the report | will was on the other side. Thero wasa | UNe eAperiments were i was at the | huirand weather-bsaten visaze—a typical | late, nmong them bands of leather four cflu] tive tool an [1 18 wil b this (Record, 13, pt. 2, p. 1,551 to 1,501 Mr. Miller said great deal of controversy about tho meaning, | tear of the building on_the fifth floor. | mountaincor—came to tho door of his cell. | or five inches wide, laid round the skirt | orl berwesa the furrows of grain March 6, 185, consideration was resumed, | I wish to say that the report is thatof & | and he undertook to scttlp it by saying that A.p?‘;vurrul electric di'm\mo was ob- | Wi : 1uwrgx1&v tu;n he fooe haiary of rec | and carried up the front of woolen hay "",'(?,‘:;: agricultural mwmmnu e question being the amendment offered bp | majority of the committee, and is not a unan- | he wrote tho will und knew what it meant. | tained and a gibbet of the most ap- | ogni ion, as with a face livi with rage, the | oo o 4hay are borded with gold braid ugalls, Senators Slator, Cameron of | imous report, the chairman of the committeo | 1t scoms to me that1s o parallel case with | proved puttern erccted. Room was also | man burst out in a torrent of abuse, declar- | EPRESS FEOF I AORACC WOt BOMG BEGG Dblows, might d Wi Wisconsin, George, Brown and Teller occu- | having reserved the m{m to support or op- | our commissioners undertuking to suy what | provided for the dogs who should be re- | g Tator to be a thief, a liar and a scoun- | BAvn L0 B s - SRR EC b O O i foter all but 5 p’ pled e day in discussion of the bill. - (Kec- | pogo amendments which way be offorad.” the word means.” itatod after appavent death by | drel and expressing picasuro that he was to naissance designs, intermiy prico would deter all but vory few frons q, p “April 21, 1852, Senator Miller (California) | Mr. Grover again answered: “The prosi- | 51 g ! B be hung. Beneath the storm of invectives, | filigree gold bullion, the groundworkall | ing them. A Chin low can bo bought nrM!vr?"ll'llillS“l tll)mlw:l:l::tllsmuum)fln rosumed | attempted o i day for wmfxderuuon of | dont of the United States, after considering °"f‘_‘{', means. The animals were se- | mator cowered in his cell. cut_ away, when laid on the material | the cquivalent of two or threo Mexicai, doks consideration, the question being the amend- | this bill, but fuiled. the protest of the Chinese ambassadorand | curely muzzled before the experiments | "During his peregrinations in Colorado he | makes a very handsome trimming, | 1ars, and smaller tools in proportion. ment pro by Mr. Ingalls, relating April 25, 1882,0n motion of Mr. Miller (Cal- | reading what the American commissioner | Were ‘attempted, but this did_not pre- | formed the acquaiutance of Neff, with whom | Mope 3,,1\,,““(‘ and showy are the course are no gleu‘t ulm.es devoted to the sale o the time limit of twenty years. Scnator | ifornia), the consideration of tho bill w said, decided thut this clause was correctly | vent their howling, ~The details of | ho came to Omaha in Junc of 1863, His rea- | \woven gold Russian braids, cmbroid- | Mi¢ "l",m}l ll:]l*l"llflfl‘l}n with us, they Dawes spoke in opposition’ to the bill. He | proceoded with. Mr. Morgan gave not in the 1f any court should decide that | each experiment will be published by | son for murdering Neft Tator never di- () made by hand, either by a neighboring blag was frequently interrupted by Senators Mil- | that the bill in its present form did not re- | there is u conflict between the law and the | the oxperimenters. The results were ed. 2 44 , o ot BN ler, Tellor, Farley, TE ot Dereis Aot | oatve s ansatian 'l Shewhblh sominiaas | Are aty will 2o to the wall.” gl.fi,mv" e e fn RO It has alwaysbeen a mystery to me,” said | Of shades and tones of the same color, | domands, i Slaer, Mr. Edmunds spoke in favor of Mo | thero were at least threo mombers of tho | Mr. Harrison —Phat doos not answer uiy | &N, 1 Jov0r O JRUETEL | F- | one of the lwycrs counceted with the case, | well combined onone piccoof stuff. - All | “ilie principal crops in tho vielnity of amendment. The day was oceupied without | committee who were opposed to it iu its pres- | question. Is the senator from Oregon in a it 088, 7 y hl/ "€ | in a recent conversation, “that a man of | such trimming are chosen with a due | Peking, besides the fruits und vegotables d coming to a vote. (lecord, vol. 15, pt. 2, p. | ent form, as amended. (But he did not | fuvor of driving the treaty to the wall by | 8nd fifty submitted to the electric | Tator's attainments should commit a crime | regard to the shot and jurkiniere cfTects | Which they are almost all that ure found ia 1,067 to 1,61 name them). The committer mmendments | legislation uu.\,,v,‘l i o glflmh{\x';zle. gf l.ht';ne hung twunt_vd\;:crc by “lht:h nn_m:iclyl might be lost and so little | o be found in the stulls of the year, :{;;!H;rn wunl‘:ml ‘:\‘ru l\vhnut‘ bx‘;lrll:'y. buck. March '8, 1883, senato rosumod consid- | were agreed to without calling the | Mr. Grover: “I thinl ave answered | dead in less than five minutes, and from | could be gained.” 0 8 3 el YOI cat, numerous varietics of millof, beans eration, the Ingalls amendment pending, | yeas and nays until the scction providing for | thut sufliciently in_ stating that the commis- | post-mortem examination it whs appar- | The day of exeoution was one of the most :,]I‘(]“J:I;‘:)flu“lll‘l]:xl\ln)l,L]'_l))\::;Lll,'l.“‘.;‘0:' l:‘l ¢,” | Tndian corn, sesamuwm, hemp, ¥ice, cotton Mr, Platt spoke In opposition to tho bill. A | Chineso citizenship was reached, this being | sioners and the president have given their | ept that they died almost instantly, | memorable days in the history of Omaha AT T i tho aanulant some tobacco. F yea and nay vote was tuken on tho Ingalis | section 14. The yeas und nays were ordered | construction of ‘the trouty. —That is the [ Ffve out of the fifty were resuscitated | Company C, Scventh lowa cavalry, compri OELING S DIIRR 0L 340 ORI IALIL Doth spring. und autumn wheat arg amendment, which was rojected by a tio American view of it, and I follow that.” i ¥ U0 ing forty men, formed a hollow squai but they are alway; exclusively for wote. Mr. Hurrison wus absent, engaged in k Mr, Harrison: *“That does not answer the | 804 are alive, but they were all small. | ground “the bupgy containing Sherift | hue. luw the »Hlnaufl m ing ground by the investigation of & case in the committes | Harrison voted The next amendment | question atall. The question I asked the | It was found that the heayier the | Sutton, Constable Riley and the con- | galons colored stones are introduc > on military affairs. Ho was pairod svith Mr. | was to strile out the fifteonth section, which | senator 1s whether, it the tacaty and the law | animal the quicker the result of death | demued, escorting them from the | “Apd thicker down the front with jev Mixey on all politieal quostions. Mr. | reads us follows: “That the words ‘Chiucse | in the section to which he has referred aro | was obtained, and where a weight was | jail to the gallows, erected near Sulphur els than the sward with drops of dew,so d Maxoy declures that this case was accopted. | luborers,) wherever usod in this act, shall be | in couflict, he still believes in passing the | added to the dog’s weight, death | Springs. The way was thronged with people | )% Byt BTy o ! ly do- | the inferior grain, The subject of mive oul Mr. Maxey made the statement to show | construcd to mean both skilled and unskilled | law and driving the treaty to the wall: or, | seemed to take pluce instantaneously, | o0 foot and horseback and in vehicles of hickly shone the gems,” exactly de- | ruro hus always ranked with the manu Why Mr. Harrison was absent. laborers, and Chincse employed in mining.” | in other words, trampling” upou our treaty | Of the fifty submitted to the electric | eIy description, scribes the appoarnnce of many of the | ture of siik and the wrowth of tow as bl Mr. Ingalls' second amendment was then e yveas and nays were ordered on this | obligations.” A - 4 Hon. Byron Reed Las in his possession | embroidered breadths introduced into | three wmost ¢ cteristic pursuits of th Mo g, g o0 g gl dmont, Tho yeas were 89, the uays hof the debate closed by Mr. mmhmgn.of_ the strength and in the a copy of the Daily Nebraskan, issued the | the fronts of gowns. Some of the | population of China. They bave beon th .mo..a,,,m related to the time of giving The amendment was agresd to. It | Grover declarmg that ho would stand by tho | manner pregeribed by the state law for | next day, which contains verbatim report | galons are worked on crepe lisse, so | thenos of many books and _treatises both b notice to Chan kon out. Mr. Harrison voted yea. ies he had cited, and the bill, aftor | the death 0f criminals, instant death | of Tator's speech upon the gallows, thereby !.hu color of the dress shows through | foreisners Chinese 0pe Mr. H oftered the foll)wing amend- vley then gave notice than when the ite, went aver for the day. (Record, [ was produced in only five experiments, | badly scooping its contemp the Repub- | wnq ghus deepens the effect of the man mul empresses ha ften interested ““That this bill shall not apply to any | bill came into the senate from the committee 1,851 to 1,360.) It requived on the average ten minutes | lican. In this speech, he that he is not, | $11 MAUS ‘l‘huh ey La or e kY ves in those purnu!l! and have done skilled laborer who shall establish ‘that he | of the whole he would rencw his motion. , the semate again resumed | 1o kill, .and in cighteen instances | dfraid to die, and professes his innocence of | ¢ Y. Qre. weought. 'Imkul to nssist und encourage the e comes to this country without any contract | The bill was then roporied to tha senae as | consideration, ‘the pending question being | t1o aninal wes easily. resuscitated, In | the crime imputed to him, but refuses to Cream flannel in several widths is | in lollomw them, ered with .[‘\n-kish letters in a variety | smith or by the farmor himself, as ocea y, 1 think the ¥ Water power, Both upland and wot rice are grown in the vicinity of Peking, the former producin by which his lubor is the property of any per- | amended and the reserved amenduments, to- | concurrence in striling out the fifteenth sec- 4 B state who is the guilty party, During the | worked in the same manner, ready tobe on of the yicla of the fields son other than himself.” After disposing of | gother with the bill. ordered printod. | tion. Scuators Morgan, Ball, Pendleton and | SeVen he'cale to without the slightest | gelivery he was perfectly collected, his elo- | applieid to both tennis and tea gowns. dhihat of Amorican favme woul several minor amendments & yea uand nay Senutor Morgan addressed the senata at | Lamar all spoke in fuvor of the section being lr\m!mfl"twlgh"l two hours after appar- | quence” drawing tears of sympathy from Belts are always more worn with sum- be futer *"" it it could be nccurately mi vota was ordored on Mr. Hoar's amoudmont | great length in favor of the bill..—(Record, | stricken out. Senator Edmunds, in reply to | ent death. The prescribed discharge | many in the vast assemblago, who accepted and some | The difference between the styles of ' which was rojoctod by o voto of 37 to 17, Mr. | Vol 1 pt. 4, p 32 to 8:371) vomarks of enator Call, gave'some exam. | entirely faifod to produce death in three | as true hus intimation that: he preferred to | Tor than with winter drosses ‘Harrison voting with the yeas. The vote in April 26, 158 2 kinds in leather show 1 tlio senato resumed consid- | ples of questions of opinion in describing | instanc one of these ce dogs | die rather than betray the real criminal, now 0 detail was as follows: eration of the bill, 1ho question beins on con. | Eriuios, stating that more. mischiof had beos | L oyt 10 016 of thoso three A0S | T there can o 1o dowbt whiut he' was | 818 like flsh-scalos or fine ivory cary- | SEMAT" QIACCY, YSHE, SoWn, oroudeas —Aldvich, Allison, Brown, Conger, | curriugin the mméndment as in committes of | done everywhera in ewilized countries by g the real murderer, as it is said that a gentle- | ing. Stecl and oxidized chains round | fully 'planted in_ furrows, wide { Til.) l)a\\cl. Edmunds, Fryo. Hut, | the whole, striking out tho fifteenth saction. | undertaking to make over-definition in laws | €I5¢tric dischurge had been given. ¢ | man closely connected with tho trial years | the waist confine the fuluess of some | tances spart. The absence of nu H-mwn Hoar, I u. Mmm McMillan, | After considerable debate Mr. Kdmunds | about crimes than there is in using gencral ! “’m the post mortem appearance of | afterward made the statement that Tator | makes of gowns; as, for cxample, a wool- | statistics as to the average prod Mahone, Mmha\l, offcred an amendment to the pending Af- | language. the brain and nerve centers, and from | had confessed his guilt and asked advice as | en of the blotting paper tone, with wide | per acre, suchas aro found in the IJa “\:y.flgl?.m "ukvl Ul‘i" wkr}o{l‘: (,aul:., king the sectin read: After further debate a yea and nay yote | other thipgsobserved, the experimenter | to which way he should plead. His counsel sut in Lnu-u, make this comparison much. rley, Garlang mn&e, mpton, ing makes this dificult, if not impossil pousse de- | peain i America being sown broadeast tripos, tho bodice and skirt all cse laborers' wherever | was ordered on concurring ith the commit- | concludgd the electric discharge caused | -¥as that he should plead *not guilt " as by i, Sy difticult, the products, bo 0 Fareis, Jackeon, Jones, Jonss {Nov.) Muxey, | used in this act suall b construd t, inlu | tao of the wholo i, strikiug from the bill the | tho Intans oy o0y B,lm;‘.fiy e ] 20 GaiiE Eredior symethy wouldbearoassd. |/988: tho former made with a rounded {he Fiekd of Hood Iead tor & sost er Miller (Cal.), Millor (N.Y.), Morgan, Plumb, | person who are usuaily engaged in man- | fifteonth section. Tho yeas were 30 and tho | not strong enougth 1o kill at once, white ot onty Tor hunseif Wt for his Tamily, yolo of short sill to match the matorial, | bedibla, howevor, St i fraporconto !;u.h, {u som, ‘kSaumII&-:.’ sl;’wr. Toller, ;ml h_dhor“') A{lflu debu‘tf{ m:d.{ml“fs ad- | nays 35.30 tu!Mwn'#mflgmnt was non- | iy the easo of hanging the evidence | . JeV: Mr. Lemon acted as Tator's spiritual which ;fl L."M“-ltdl over it in "Ull"u sixor | quantity 'of seed sown, tho farmer of mo ance, Vi 3 3 Dnrm without action.—(Record, Vol. col red in. . E o s i ya Shing g T arTecs Rae i e, Hoar syala i B L e aarias, on Yotad ves, 18| pojted widtmumoedinte peralysls of the | AAYiser: Suerid Satiee placad the wooss | soven Jinok, aud aguin gathered In {Chine goia 8 308 to 3,312.) aroind his neck, Constable Riley adjusted | points at the back and front of the waist, | return in Ameri u 17, 1352, tho senate resumed consid- | Mr. Edinunds then moved to amend the fif- | nerve centers and a painless death. | the black cap, sprang the trap, and the vic- v'ffm skirt is hemmed round and allowed | tural result of his careful system of planti laborer who shall roccive a certificato from n, with the Edmunds amendment pend- | tecnth section by striking out Such are the chief results of their in- | tim of the first legal exccution in Omaha was | to fall over a plain peiticoat, or it can be harvesting and throshing, ‘involving no the Unitea States consul at the port where Mr. Edmunds withdrew his amend- after “ihat" and inserting: vestigations. dead. caught up to suit m; - s fi whatever, The saving in America is off he shall embark, that ho is a citizon | ment, stating that he was under amis- | ‘Chinese umm;} wherever used in this act, e KRS up wearer’s figure. | yethEIET G0 mmuf ot sowiug bro eomln. to this' country at his own | apprehension whon ne offered it. At this | shall be construod to moan persons usually Execution of Baker. One of these chain belts over the wai moved an amendment providing that “‘any bably et and 8t his own free | point of the proceediugs the senate | e in mauual labor." On tho night of November31, 1560, Woolsey | gathoring is docidedly an addition. This | Chiness metnod. Fhia is- pot to e wl L, ud hu uuhlllhd suth fact to the | found itself very imuch embarrassed | The yeas and nays were takeu, which ro- | family left Washin this 1 D. Higgms, a clerk in Will R. King's store, | style of dress is just one which could be | ever, that the grain is sufiicicat to ,satisfaction of such vonsul, sha!! not be af- | upon examination of the condition | sulted ‘in 17 yeas, 25 nays, and the amend- v slilugion margng; for the f Twelfth and F , | wpplied to most ‘o the requirements of | sate Tor the great extra labor, foctod by thia Bl *Tho dmendmot waa o- of " tho’amendod _ bill. ' The " Akilled | mont was rojossed dr. Hartison yorad for | their country homo at Wayne Station, Pa, | 08 the corner of Twelfth and Farnam streets, | 4DP A O R D el ““I'he Chinese systom of growi By yoa and nay vote of 34 to 19, Mr. | labor scction was stricken out, whilo the | tho amendmont. Randall was taken t0 the station in « closed | Was cruelly murdered by his room-mate, | 10, Without tho yoke it would servo | ' Hihe Chiness syslom of growl N wrrigon voting yoa. Yeas—Aldrichy Alli- | Tourtoenth saction was retained. Under this | & bl Bqomont. again moved to amend the | CArriage, the blinds of whioh were closely | Ottawa H. Baker, who worked as porter in | for evening, and i is sulliciently loose | 08 BIRRECR SONEE K 0 COTMe ..., son, Brown, Conger, Davis (Ill), Dawes, | amendment the drift of the debate was gon- | fourteenth section as follows: *Nothing in | rawn. ' While the pationt was feeble this | the same store. The murder of Higgins has | 800 unrestraining to answer the pur- | SUREIRTERNT SUP PR n.iu Fry, Hale, Harrison, Hoar, lnn\h. Jack- | orally sottling down to the definition of Chi- | this uct shall be construed 1o ch n‘elhe ex- | mornlg, owing to the unusual exertions | probably never been excelled for cool de. | POSe Of & tea-gown, which, by the by, ! detorioration rnr“ulh in the m son, mm?l MeMillan, Mahone, nmn nes laborers as used in the treaty and i the | isting naturalization laws, 30 as to admit | consequent on his removal, his family 1s | © y was a garment originally intended to be | if not in th Lty of the yi .fl" "“ 11, Plumb, Saunders—19, bill under cousideration. Mr. Grover con- | Chincse persons to citize well pleased with the continued improve- | liberation. Mr. H. Livesey, who was per- | (o5 Gy ouy stays. "‘lth‘llll i m'fil‘-fiy ) ‘lhu umlul that the president was satisfied with The amendment was nhcgnd by a yea and | ment of his mudnmn sonally acjuainted with Higgins, speaks of The idea of cutting all bodices on m-s Importations of wood come chief approved that portion of the bill contained | nay voto—yeas 16, Ifl arrison him as a yourg man of most excellent char, plan come lung ago exploded United States, the 8panish 1s] lu the touth section, and read the fellowing | voung yea, in favor of t-ndmul At !nofllcel'l' mooting held last Friday | acter. He was of obliging disposition, al- ! and Formosa. Were it not f uu use from tho president’s messago: "Tho bill was placod ita passage, night much business of importanco was Shdlew, ""“‘ ia ‘iow mado by ihe oterios roce wealt AS 10 tho cluss of 10 bo affastod | celving 83 yeus and 18 bays, Mr. Harrison | transactod, and the proposition to proporly | WAYsaffable and ploasant i mauncr aud a | clever ition of stripes SREMEIS I Onius, would -be the Americins insorted n tboir draft @ pro- | voting nay. “So tho bill P colebrate tie anniversaty of the ‘unifors | Ubiversal favorite. On the other hand, from | These comoteries. are vision that the words ‘Chinese M i oy .“‘...‘ oyl L el Inhm ais. | Tenk, on A: 98, was favorably disor all that can be lcarned, Baker was & verit- nw g boxes of Tiik Bir are l"""""“"""I and ot 1o i mty all lm-icn m e Mb‘f :‘h- one_prominent feature of opposi- | and a committee was ww.h od m::::d' able “tough,” and probably she oaly emi- 'I't' oonV»Monoa to the EnIoNA : abmatiin s Aol 0 N ] Y pead- ) “oachiag, breds, fee ' and eurloaity.’ | tiou from “the” ropublicen winority 10 the | Programme, wio wflm»?munmlvdm ently proper act of is life was whea ho drow ; Drink u.n..ssu.-uumu.,