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HE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, AUGUST 5. 1888, ~TWELVE PAGES 4 A Séhotar ot the Schools. population, whil you the name of thewwriter of the men! W your ' caucuses! Watch | havi rugged face half hidden under & Be was unable to read, and . THE DAILY BEE The current number of the Atlantic | tribute to the. pride of America question. - Respectfully, . T. | ‘your conventions! . Watch eversbod, mass of wild mustache aud whiskers t WH:WWOWM rovt { PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. | 5/ 1) contains o most interesting ir- | Neither is 1t encouraging to thoss who lg. m:m J.“L.‘i'u: = l;i }z [1:\::‘1::1 AR, 'l'fiLffi”.‘.L‘fé'f.fi'wL“o“.’f32:{1."“.}'“;"'1,'1'& fr"-. :Ilymnlum;'\)uu: ‘le:i:hough‘ :I:‘:yfl};\ th 1888 \Bere were 80 Rlatita Oatholla : TERME OF SUBSCRIPTION, ticlo by, President Eliot, of Harvird, on | offer as the most formidable argument | =, FEGi B C0 AR B B ETE, L g e e Mo corporations, by | fova by (oo mearted. (e muawots there- | priests o misslonary duty in this country. 4 iy (Morning Edition) incluaing Sunday the problem of how to lessen the pro- | against the increase of the foreign popu- K W JESIPSS byt sHISWE Ipnlitions, theongh loest tolet: | & " whom Mr. Beguare ks of 1 ho Rov. Peter Haverman, of St Mary's 3 KK, One Year........ V el 810 00 s \ - at { o) 1t 1 ¢ | to comply with the request of the indig- | shrewd manipulations, through local pol ures," whom Mr. Haggard speaks of in his | chureh, Troy, N. Y., is the sola survivor, 3 Ly :-,l.-umm.-« 'I’fl the public !l;:\)fl{i)rslzll;:l at :xlhnnl the llinl}m]m?n :rlltlx:lll.-l“;l:t:r nant oitizens of Marion gounty, in the ‘.,m',.,“.“h promises and with money—aroe | last story, :‘c‘, h““lm‘n ;m';?l?%e‘&:gdn‘;er%),lg‘,‘“‘ he sume time increase their richne argely responsible for the increi { ‘hile con- | MAKking a stronger effort than ever before to | Empo William and his consort wil vears. He is y, wnd toanyad- , o | und usefulness to the pupil. While | orime tn this country. L5 :L«l;:flf(.-fil)‘fh Pl e con | continue in control of the equalization board | crownod King. und. sueen af Drussia abodt s many friends among the protesiaats of ARNAMSTREET. | acessarily having as the guide to his There is another aspect of the matter. 3 s ‘| and board of transportation, together with | October 1S, Hitherto only two kings of v 3 b L g : ) . COrres- i g r g 1t is currently rumorod that the Rev. Stop- o ws und conclusions the system and | however, which somewhat mitigates the | V¢ ?1". o 'f;”np?fl“ g1 our corres” | the ofticers elected to superintend the several | Prussia have boen crowned, Fradorick L | ford Irooke of London « the. father of tho 3 methods of the schools of Mussachu- | severity of the reflection made | Pondent, who is ad olfl union veteran, | state departments. They will repeat theit | and William ., othor monarchs having con. | Rev. Stopford W Hrooke of the First Ohurch, f CORRESPONDENCE, setts, which in their entirety are not of | by the statistios referred to upon to tl.m persecutio® ¢ which he would old tactics in attempting to defeat all needed | tontod themsolves with what was called the :-,n: lvf-;l‘u invited to come over and assume e All communications rll»"nut:; news "fim.;:!‘. universal practice, much of what Presi- | the native population. Thi ig | inevitably be subjected at the hands of legislation, and to elect John M. Thurston | Huldigung, or the solemn declaration of L}h“_l*‘.st\;srh:f“t:l:ml‘\:lt‘o I\J(“rmlo!.roo{om:ag T e e | et Eliot says is of general applica- | that the vatio of Toreign-horn prisoners | the Mississippi chiyaley which docs not | United States sonator, as fitting roward | homago from the reproscntatives of the | s fosmorir ot tho oot 1y Dok, Who "B esiNmss LETTERRS 4 A ! L N T i usually respect the right of free speech | for his services in the “oil room” two years | states of the realm. came convert to Unitarianism somo years {news latters and rumitiances should be tion. Authentic figures for the last de- | to the foreign population is very nearly SHUTiES I‘;':";‘ No m"!m Sl l"'w in | 00, If they fail on Thurston Manderson or | pua king of Denmark will colebrate the | 820, and is & brilliant preacher and utior 3 0Tk Brk Pratisnise Compasys | cade demonstrate that the number of | double that of native prisoners to the ok o Y solared “sarvant’ vill colebr: | r v ) . Drafts, checks and postofiice orders to . $ autic e o n- | 0y other brass-colared “servant” willan- | ¢ooo o0 ArateN alip < Prince of Wales recently attended the b s payabi to the order of the company. | pupils in the higher schools show vela- | native population. The foreign-born taay ;‘}“ on of the country ""_";’ Is offen- | \\o tho same purpose. In this congres. ,:::;:Sr“"" “"“l‘l;::,';";“I‘:,rh:’:.'“‘:,'x‘\‘",‘d";:“‘l\“:l hof St. Botolph Without on Trinity tively a very much smaller increaso | population istothe native whito popula~ | $iVe by reason of his political activity | gional qistrict these forces are being concen- a4 ; Sunday, and the result of his visit was an n " Compeny, Pr Im“(l]'s A o popu in opposition to home rule us 1t is prac- | g . subscription was being promoted among all | expenditure acconnt by the parish autnori- It Bee Publisting OMPERy, FTOPPISIONS, | than™ that of the whole mass of | tion as two to eleven, but foreign crime m'dl‘ e trated with tho strength of Laird, | ciaseen of Danes—nolentes yolontes—to pros- | tios of £330, 10s, 0d. Among the items wero: ROSEWATER, Editor. population This class of pupils, | is to that committed by native whites ed 1n the gulf states, and they all are one and the same. | ¢ to him a magniticent jubilee gift in the | . Prayerand hymn books to order; renovat- in numerical strength at least. is not | us two to five. This statement would In order that no innocent party may | fed by corporation bread and | gune oty country soat in Ju W, He has | in& Prayer Book and Bible, £15." ‘“Four —_— ¥ b hobbod 4 . X el 5 . ia. | uffer from groundless suspicions, we | butter. In this county the old % bl e A, 4 © | bookmarkers, £33s." “Violet cioth frontal, P2 keeping puco with the national develop- | however, said the report to the associa- | il A by 1 loos | line ropublicans and democrats | 1 teh a letter in which he states that when | embroidered ' and fringed, £9 19s. 0d.” i THE DAILY BF ment, and the very important question | tion, convey a false impression if al- | Will state that our correspondent does » he looks upon the existing cconomical condi- | “Ribbons and silk for ditto, £1 0s. 11d." not live in Hillsdale nor in Poplarville, | Who have drunk poor whisky together, at- Knowing that he would be tracked, | tended and advised in each other's caucuses, tted, hounded and kukluxed if he | “id ovenly declured that certain men b Sl gl b a L * | couldn’t be elocted to certain offices because mailed his 19"_9"’ at the ‘l“’-"-“"'“’ they didn't have the *‘stuff” to put up, are where he receives his mail, he has | thochosen local licutenants who expect to taken the precaution to date his letters | visit the central committeemen and job the from another town not very distant, | primaries and conventions in the interests of and mailed them through a second per- | their bosses. While the farmer's grain is son from another town. But his letters | being gathered, and he is busy in the field, are written in the state of Mississippi these direct blows at his personal welfare are being planned for him to ignorantly ratify tions of Denmark and sees the hard struggle | “‘Cupboard for ditto, £4 15s.” ‘‘Paid police. for existence which his poople are carrying for taking man Into_custody, 10s.; paid on, he fecls obliged in conscience to refuse to o B, fn Foivgf aceept any gift so costly, opposition rather than permit an “unprofite Professor Curtius, who was an intimate | #ble scandal friend of the Kmporor William L, recontly told this ancedote in Borlin: “When Wil- Rabert J. Burdette n Texas Siftings, lism was king of Prussia, butan exile in A sailor for sea, i England, he witnessed the tremendous en- And a spinster for tea, thusiasm displayed by all London in front of | A lawyer for talking and a soldier for fighte Buckingham palace after the well-known at ing; is how the public schools can be so man- | lowed to stand without comment. The aged that they will give to the bulk of | erimes against the person, committed the youth of the land a satisfactory | by foreigners, when compared with foundation training, concluding in sea- | those committed by native whites, are son to allow them to leave school atthe | nearly as two to five. As regards age for leaving, which for the great ma- | crimes against property, the ratio is jority is by the time they ave fiftecn. about two to seven. But in the matter of The gi trouble, in the view of | offenses against society, most of which President Eliot, underlying the higher | are only quasi criminal in character, grades is lack of thoroughness and com- | the ratio is a little more than two to Sworn Statement of Circulation, Statoof Nelroska, | -, “County of Douglas, | % & Tzschnck, secretary of The Bee Pub- @eo, B, Tzschnck, secrets o lice Pub. - Json pleteness of instruction in the prepara- | two and a quarter. In other words, X\"Id to our best knowledge and belief, {5bAK .1 tempt on Queen Victoria's life, when she And a'cireus for boys, Average. .. Savietdob idbens L8088 | jely BOATSS TN i 23 H i (e SONS, o @ queen’s bo " LU G50, D TISORTOK, \1.3 m.e‘ o lli)l]lfl, _nl. study "1;1 far more in vnnmv(m\hly and dllsmdu VOICE OF THE STATE PRESS. Majes Dhisatre whoh tha ovation bt the A "{'“““F for chink, WWorn' o, bafote me.and. subscribed 1h my u'\u pubtic ll{st\l\l\\:»n-» i with | than ndfms in dishonesty and violence a——— P. T. Barnum has just celebrated his | audience on secing the quoen enter know no Alea ;\:}l. ;I]rx‘l::’l‘-;r fur‘mk,v b D s presence i dth day o Mgy A D1 | #hat prosented in the Fronck | —a showing that must cortainly bo re- | Guming county politicians are bocoming . bounds. Stricken by his own anomalous | AN (e rbok s bl Horeror *tcking: TR RN S s " | classical schools. At eight yeavs of age | garded us decidedly favorable to the | very liberal, as witness this promise from | Justico Gray, of the United States su- | position—an exile at the hands of his own A OpOrABIHEEN " County of Douglas, { % % th ench bo; studying a modern | foreign-born population. Accepting | the West Point Progress: ‘To the Citizens | prome court, is gunning and fishing in Cau- | subjocts, and his kingdom on the point of de- | A shotgun, a mule, and a choir for kicking, George B, Tzscnuck, being first duly s language, while here thatis not thought | th of Thurston County, Greeting—Name your | gqa, struc R CANTON 1y \tistics as accucate, so far as of until ut least thirteen, when history | they go, while no doubt can reasonably is also approached, which the French | be entertaived of the absolute imvar- lad has undertaken at eight. Less at- | tiality of the official of the association tion—the king could not rostrain his Robert T, Lincoln, now in Geneva, is to | tears; but the queen, secing his great emo. by sail for home on August 11. tion, seized his hand, and, witn true womanly . nty r(ixrl ) have graduated as T X : instinct, divining its cause, said in an aftec- | 10Wyersin Michigan this year. Mr. Gladstone gave to a poor tionate and pAtHRAL Ground for the building to stand on the s and says that he Is secretary Publishiug company, that the act @aily circulation of the Dally F month of August, 187, wns 14 for September, 18] man for the legislature and we pledge the entire vote of Cuming county to his sup- port.” The Nebraska City Press is suro “that, so church the October, 137, P i f f voice: ‘Your ” . sgive France » endle v rosente o . ve 4 sum received for his recent contributions to 3 site ¢ o's historic fence m; 8 copte; for te 1\“({1[13,, !Ln.'ll]ll H\I‘M.A h{l]u endle ‘:«hq .p;n.n nted ]tln m, they leave 110 | 44+ ns tho attorney genoralship is concerned, et i e contril Majesty Will 1ive to sxperience & similar :I‘t;('\r \“g s historic fence is to be broken 6,52 coples; for March, repetition of arithmetic and the memo- | choice but to mod the general opin- | jy will be Leese against the field, and 1t will " < p demonstration toward yourself from your Yo 410 dlky 6t ATLNORG LHom 11,78 April, 1 L 8T cople rizing of geographical fucts, but a more [ fon respecting the increase of crime in | cost the raiironds 0s much to make their | P Oliver Wendell Homes has written | o0\ icoe’s v s AR B O LRl ATt g A general view of different subjects is | the United States. point, if they do make is, as to elect a United | Chapter on the dialect of Massachusetts for SEslgl o to 5 hildreen of school age aro worni to hefore me and subscribed I my | taken at a time when the mind is more — States senator.'* Mr. Leland's forthcoming book on Ameri- An August Da those between five and twenty years old, Presence this Ist du& "l’.‘ “?":.‘ Aary Bubtic receptive. The French idew is not to Justice to a Great Scientist, It is nearly time,” says the Hooper Sen- canisms, e o enh “'[u'lln.m, in Augist Table Talk Prof. \\'f O. Vance, superintendent of the inflict upon the bhoys and girls the | The late Professor Spencer I". Baird | tinel, “that aspirants for the honor of repre- wfifl":"]‘g?‘:\L"v};"::ul;e’:‘o:‘?)nc:;m::l( l‘llon 1 iglis rolgn is o'er, and now her ced | colored schools of Now Albany, Tnd., is try; L : DOy 7 1 o s f 3 d Bret Harte Ic 0 get home | b ikt » k EVEN the Sioux pow wow i necessity of committing to memory long | Was one of the most distinguished | senting Dodge county in the legislature AT RELERS 8% _mm‘c""! m‘*" B“‘ u)n(- o | Beckons her glittering suite, grows faint, | ‘“Join Brown clubs™ among the people of i by the “unit rule,” which the commis- [ lists of nan dates and localities, | a0ong American scientists. His la- | should be making themselves known, The Haavi HIRRA3EHL {Ga l‘ y and throws the country, for the purposc of honoring the ! bre ‘hich ar y ich | bors, pursued with an unselfish devo- | picnic scason is at hand and the walking is [ MC2¥t Deats high for his native land. Her sceptre to the coming sun. martyr's memory und, eventually, of erect- i sion has been so far unable to break. which are forgotten, and which | POrs, pursuc R 1 Goorge H. Boker, the nuthor of *‘Fran- | E'en as I look, helifts the new-flushed morn | ing & monument in his I With this end S————— are insisted upen in the pub- | tion, contributed largely to the sum of | good. i 0 b i - THTRILY 4 B B . | High on s shoulders up into the blue; in view he I 1 lecturing ceseoidIumin, |18 gutnenigl matetial 0elinyty Sraiithe hill-tops peeps, himself, and | *“John Brown and Harper's Ferry, anew book which his friends are confident ‘soon, i The industrial home and sohool of St and offered a prayer for the condemned, the | WillProveto be the great American novel | Aslant the valiey, wood and field, he flings Francis ¢ ales, founded by the Misses Schuyler Sun says that “Nebraska is set. | the Critics have been looking for 8o long. that ail-athirst drink up the dew— | Drexel, ton, Pa., near their country Schuyler & V8 t A a s Tst bklore Clernral Bunar arasted dov hia ty draught—a royal draugit! Out- | s 18 anformaliy opencd July 19, Two ting the world an improved example in the 8 Gren 5 ey 2 ng. dred children wero transferred from tha Rt of lyrakings i annual cruise on the Americ ST : @ ho was asked | Thag the Bgyptian queen prop John's orphan asvium to tho schoots Captain John Steen, candidate for land | TOF his opinion as to the result of the coming | Her Anton sides furnishing $200,000 for tho Indiana on Commenting on the fact that a minister ¥ the boy preacher, Harr! who is 3 e i was present at the Pawnee City lynching, © fortyodd years old, has converted a New York editor in the midale of these dog days, the day of jubilee must be at hand. lic schools of this country. Our the world’s scientific knowledge. As ystem of memor| non-es- | the successor of another great scientist. sentinls, as for example o knowledge of | Professor Henry, in the office of secre- geography which enables the children | tery of the Smithsonian institution, he to appear precocious, President Eliot | did much to promote seientific interest does not believe to be the best training | and investigation at home and to ad- 3 i repared to please ems by the billion, hers hp'l” o 1'\ ‘rh : \u-‘i‘c:«':lr- <;r\m\:”\:c‘s“ in the primary schools. He finds also | vance his countrv iv_ the respect of the | commissioner, says the Fremont Tribune, | Presidential Ol R T Ut aIE etl Dot gy oreXali Il Deot s PR r 100 ano is making | that the schools are lacking in method. | men of science in other lands. In the | wisa genialand capable fellow, but his can- | S7¢N" answered the general, “and I cannof The morn—'tis but a flattering pre- | tutson, : &y statesmen. Like them he is making | o promotions ure mude on cxamina- | realm of his laors he won a high and | didacy is suggestive of a kind of fruit com- | 5¢¢ OVer the heads of the very tall men in- lude Mrs. H. B. Kells, professor of physiology ~ dates at this ae;mnn ml u(\dl::s the h‘v;l- tions, and the result is that classes ave | honorable venown. monly called chestnuts.i He has held office “‘Lc' et B g e LA U eR Vs and hygicne n the Mississinpi. state ‘indus- country fairs when e pumpkin i 7 2 o BIEERS o a P of ban- The new German embassador at Washing- BALICECHS e | tralinstitute and college, hus been dismissed i x ity pump composed of various agos, whereus they | - But the erowning work of Professor | fora grost many yoars, and hus beon 4 can. | | T3 o Ceriun debdesicor b Washing: e tedious” length along. The torpid | Far hor poaition for pesaming. 1 o e should be divided more by age than ac- | Buird, in its vast practical value, was 3 ) —— now he wants lad@ o@umissioner. John | Varian aristocracy, but has been in the ser- Tnvisible it should be—unwilling Geornor Lowry's veto of the seientific tom- Mrs. Kells is a quisition. Rather than to fix promo- | in connection with the fish commis- kil A idiebitbin Ll Tk Chicago board of trade will per- should give the people of Nebraska a muoh | Vice of Prussia since 1870. In 1871 ho w Hugs the hoated earth, then quivering \ E i it fe At ¢ I ho woman of talent, an excellent teacher, and mit no more “put and call” trading | Hon by arbitravy standards of knowl- | sion, the ovigin and practical develop- | 7% 5% appointed secrotary of legation at Washing- o I S a lady of high social qualifications. She 86- ¥ ¢ edge it is better the child should go | ment of which were due to his intelli- e " ton, and in the following year was trans- D aqeooler regions. Silence un- | cured her place in the institute through the * among its members. But the buying i L ooy e Wi e sand Hero is a hint to Omat§ merchants from | oo b o0 R tqhentiv i W stirred— influence of Jefferson Davis and his wife, snd selling of “'margins” on 'change is | 41002 with those of equal years, even if | £enty comprehensive study and under- | yo foraia, printed fn ou neighboring city | €€ 1duna, aud, subsequently was at- Save by the drone of locust or the 5 b not completely mastering all the steps | Standing of the subject. The bureau ooy A S ypono b albaw il o i | of Plattsmouth: ‘Mo Omaha merchants | tched to various embassies, For a time he humming bee— be u delegate from the Dana Goological sooi- President Eliot regardsas first among | 1 operation nearly twenty years. The | a motor line between here and Omaha and Csiaralin BRVIL: The cattle quit theit browse for shel. [ 104l congress which meets at Lone bou in Sep. s essential improvements a better class [ 9Pjectand duty of the commission are | get it in shape for o i Ll A § S s o] v | mcmber, and so the speakers will not b put FAIRBANKS, the great lard manufac- | of tonchers. His policy would be more | £ inquire into and study the fluctua- ‘u;‘“snf“;‘"ov‘;“‘l’:jr i wonlnon, Lol A Loud Smack. o e e ia lonsRlake R tisiy to the comical strait of hoir brethron of ton secd oil trust, abut,l'h‘;lufl(:)e‘s ';Ot teachers rather than in extravagantly | o0 TShes o0 the cl:"‘::h“;ut,; di';;"‘_ goods to Plattsmouth customers. duchess of Marlborough seems to have been Humanity is_mute; and Nature's self, | Delled to address theassemblage as*Madamo v :lpslflyltnll‘:lt::;t;::e:n t‘l":c ‘:;arkh: i;; ?xl;llfi‘;d‘nz r;xloney .l(;n' L‘;pplianf% and | o able cavses 1 guxist for diminution | The talk of ubolhh'h‘;\* "fi; IEea ot anady e i QuastD WORl Y tespacscomir fwlinitierowalas |Gt i o foi bequeathed by 3 i bu ngs. e evidently ' &) % Voo iV five —— - - N e S oy to Corne! ive itv. at * will bo placed on the shelves of grocers | tanchers nnd would encourage teaching | i the SUPPLY or that may load to in- | Portation mukes the Waod River Gusotte Her Glory Gone. Eaniaforilienevning shators, ol toibtaou AGCare SR T . .im bottles stamped ‘‘pure Italian olive | g 4 gtatod profession. He urges a bet. | CFeMses and generally to watch over and argument of the corporations that the rail- New York World. 4 SINGULARITIES. chanie arts of said university, the said sum il for and mote substantial course of studg | PrOtect that important matter in our | roads have mads. Nebraska what sho is | BOston is stirred to its depths by tho fail to be invested and kept. safely and_ securely t, and the income there- ‘THE shabby manner in which Tal- Mid university to the ure of the league team to play admirable A moving train knocked the tail off a Mis- | invested upon intere baseball. After sinking 7, —more meat in the school programmes. | 40Wmestic economy. ~ To this work, | and she should release them from all statu- 15,200 in a nine [ souricalf without in any way hurting the [ of to beapplied by . % Sl which in the earlier existence of | tory restrictions, because if notso released & 5 Ao rest of the calf. maintenance of such professorship, and to no mage treated the Crete Chautauqua of f.‘t‘“d'e" l‘”‘“ 'hf"‘k’"’m:f“_t :0 be- | the commission was exceedingly [ they will aiscontinue building in the state, | 10 ity could bear ucw L A cat at Norwich Falls, Conn., is bringing | 0ther, burposes or obicet whatever. The this state and similar, gatherings in | Hleves, more from lack of the right ma- | |\ 555 00 ™ 0= 0 FO TR | igthe thinnest kind of bosh and makes us One Way O he Woods. up her kittens on a diet of frozs’ legs, which | Principalis not tobe diminished or any part 71 cooklyn di- | terial on which to feed them because NN A Y i ey L ear i @ she catches for them in a near swamjp. of it.diverted {0 arly other purpose, Minnesota, may lead the Brooklvn di L iv | voted himself for many yeavs, | tired everytime we hear it. The muscle News. et u Tho Lo Moyne school for colored children vine into a complication of law suits | they are overcrowded. Straining their | JHAC, HREE - IE country ~ have | 41d sinew of her settlers have contributed | 1t would be a good plun for Chairman Quay | | A colt in Gegrgetown, Iy, possessos thrce | oy “Noyiunis, Tenn. i8a model one, appar- & s ti gl H J, s, o et ; ads. rout, | i v \for breach of contract. Sam Jones, who “’m‘;‘t’w“e‘:":“le:t‘;:”f“,"‘“’c‘:‘;““;:‘s‘sgg;s”"“‘r:‘d been of the greatest value, and immeas- | MOre {0 Nebraska's prosperity and develop. | and Chairman Brice to get up a grand fish- | GG, 1805 O d0000 and. the third & dolts | €RY. A visitor. discribing it, saya: “Im- promised to speak before an Illinois so- ciety has been sued for 32,000, and the Nebraska people are waiting to sce how the suit terminates before they serve their papers on the great preacher from the city of churches. ; —— THE number of fatal vprostrations " from heat during the past few days calls for precaution on the part of every person to guard against sunstroke. The opin- don of leading physicians as to the best methods of keeping well may be sum- ‘smed up: Keep out of the sun,don’t “work too hard, don’t worry too much, don’t get excited, drink lightly of iced ~water, eat moderately of plain foud, and ment than the railroads have, and against | ing contest between President Cleveland | yoqd. the rapacious encroachments of the corpora- | and General Harrison, the one first succeed- | A gix-months.old calf in Rutherford v'ons the sturdy sons of toil are deserving of | ing in landing a certain number of fish to be | county, Tennessee, givesa quart of milk left in ¢ rof o monitor, who is responsi- just such protection as Messrs. Leese, Mason | declared the winner of the presidency. If [ duily that makes ubout two ounces of beauti- | o for thair safoaud orderly conduet to et. al. are now trymg to give them.” the contest should end in a tie the ofice '"ll\w'ld"" butter. Asd the sitiark gas +c | thele recitation rooms. A girl sits at tho p Sibadicd o " fic 4 telli g negro woman diod the other day at | piano, and at the word from the monitor Tuisits tho way GeorgelD., Matklejoti's |(mIghe be awarded to/tho) one telling:the |y iomphla & from thevOIURtAry opeutag oL thel | ateikest1hi0 s ALt and” e Shild ot hs home paper, the Nance county Journal, | biggest fish stor: sutures of the skull. The doctors are puz- | out. How the children are madeto behave speaks officially of his candida “For zled over the case, and cannot account for it | so nicely is a mystery some time there has been a persistent call Chicago News, by any laws of physics or of anatomy. : Quite a tempe !lin a nlml |\o\‘,‘ is ]guinz on ! ¢l 1 d Joseph Guilfoy of Binghamton. N. Y., between the churches and the schools in Bos- fi';;‘i‘é';l‘ e :;:u;x?:h:}ugfi "i',‘ii.ffi,',“’,{,’.fi“}’; Mr. Henry Watterson has been holding a | o 15t0'a partial trance o cutaleptic slocp | ton. The use of Swinton's History in tho accept the nomination for lioutenant. gover. | MYSLorious consultation ' with Presidont | two vears ago It March, from which ho | schoole i the causo of the trouble, Tho Ro- & b " | Cleveland. W president sai hat kened. He remembers nothing | man Catholics have objected to what it says hor at the coming state election, Mr. Moik. | Cleveland. What the president said on that 2 lejohn has not desired the position; in fact, 5 good authority that Mr. Watterson said A curiosity in Minneapolis, Minn.. is an t has been transferred by the school he positively refused heretofore to stand for | T " Prasl " o osi. | infant eighteen months old, whose entire X 3 0 s Aseira Hasiten 1| "Yes, Mr. President,” and “No, Mr. Presi- [ (nisnt SETAe TRaELE O O o huir. | board and consured for what ho has done. S0 s b thie doaiso. M hotn, 80 il g | dent,” several times with considerable effect. | At “birth tho peculiarity was apparent and | The result of this action has been that some e o o Tort to socure the momination. | As a conversationalist Mr. Watterson has a | since several atempts to chock the hirsute | Of the HeQisudn olorgy isveitalien i e :;nt\ Lnn:(e 32"}1"2”‘?,?532""’15 enom‘unfln, A IlSrthv] heareratation e D R e case, and considerable animosity Las bee it be tendered ni will accept. This 125 white children up north remaining quict w Moyne urable advantage is yet to come. The patient and unselfish scientist who did aimost the whole of this great work in the interest of his countrymen, and in- deed of all civilized mankind, died com- paratively poor. The government paid hout a teacher in sight. In the Lo inattention. The numerous reviews in hool that number of children are gencral practice President Eliot believes to be superfluous. The pupil would be better engaged in taking up new subjects, re- serving the review of all his course % e & 3 until maturer powers have enabled him hl}n ,10tl11:1g for his services as fish com- to re-grasp the subjects he has studied, | Mi*sioner, not even allowing expenses, Another fault he finds is that children | 214 his salary as secretary of the Smith- in the same line are kept too long in sonhfn msmuuon'—not paid from the the different grades and held to too | PUPLiC treasury—did ot enable him to strict a standard for promotion, in con- acoumulate mu'ch to leave h.m !mnily.. sequence of which many schools are fens) !;nlion i eorallyiblaidenioniin burdened mentally with dull pupils who sureth;{‘g morj m"g‘ble e grails have not been thought by their teach- ade, do gerformed s “groatserrioe ers sufficiently advanced to pass on with 1hay RIREYGN 7B, S RPNOROUR: ~10a ——— Yes, Mr. President, engendered betwoen the two parties, R B L, com willingl given. "¢ | . et An _atmospheric phenomenon was wit- A don’t drink whisky. others of similar age. President Eliot | SOmPenses gly given. Yt ) coatify his many friends, Mr. Moiklo- A Division of Labor. nessed in the English chaunel lately. Tho T e — would have pupils pass on by regular "h";‘““w‘:xx':};"“:g in 'E‘z!“?l“““’[""‘ john is well fitted for the position, as he has Pioneer Pross atmospliore hocuno. rarefiod to e oxtent ! R iy f pay his y thousand dollars for istrict | w " \Yes, sire.”” | that objects thirty and forty miles distant | Wifty miners have loft the Connellsville AND now the insurance trust, which | stages, regardless of the question of hjgy O (T v e represented this district in the state senate Look at that hand, Dan. Yes, sire. I D AN R (PIL‘)smk" O s Couna for the past two years, and was elected pres- [ “Looks Limp, doesn't it *Yes, sive.”’ “And | could be discorned by the o7 WK [ (Pa, /o honado went pro tem of that body, and presided dur- | horo we are with @ letter of aceoptance to- | JFK G E, IO N Ron tho | o The Saturday huitholiday s almost gon: ing the greater part of the session, and later | get out and four bushels of pensions to veto. | French coast. cago. % was unanimously chosen chairman of the re- | And that hand is 80 stiff from hauling blue “Four babies in ten months.” was the | A flour mill at Wheatport s sald to be the publican state central committee. With Mr. | fish over the rail of a cranky, bobberty, | heading to the following Hartford, Coun largest in the world, Its capacity is 2,000 Meiklejohn o the state ticket, this county | chunk of a yacht that it can hardly cling on | telegraw in the Now Nork World receutly: | parrels. will roll up a good old-fashioned republican | to a ball bat, say nothing of a penbolder. [ Mif QNONCK 4. last. 1t lived but ona week. | At Sioux Fails, Dak majority.” Say Dan, you work off the letter and I'l1do | July 24 she gave birth to triplets, all girls, | Struck for & for a nin The Wayne Gazetto has no use for traitors | the vetoes, u dozen u day to bagin with. DIl | making four babies in less than ten months, | ten hours. 48 another name for underwriters, has advanced its rates at Lincoln twenty- . ' five per cent, under the pretense that the water supoly of Lincoln has become Bnpaired. We do not profess to know “#bout the condition of the water supply @t the state capital, but we do know Mhat with constantly improving fire pro- equality in the absorption of abso- lute knowledge, deeming it sufficient that they go through the course, each one assimilating what is natural, and the country there was a vigorous oppo- sition. The proposition, however, for- tunately for the credit of the senate, not be hampered and harassed by im- finally 'pussed. It is yet to be acted pediments in tho fever of examinations. upon by the house, where narrow dema- The lesson which President Eliott | S0£ues who talk economy for buncombe secks to impress is that the public will doubtless oppose it, but it is to be stonecutters have hour day instead of . hoped there will be a sufficie he ; . 5 eannn . Connorton was married eight years | The first Chinaman who ever came to tection, insurance rates at Omaha have | schools ure not intended to teach any | [oP%" LA et lnu‘:}?‘,fi“;"hz‘;‘:_‘e’;'; and monopoly henchmen, and calls on tho | be limbered up before the weel's out. e a Ao el syven” mutiieons Sur f1ohT8 | Goaur d'Alane arrived somo days ago, and ho been gradually advancing. The truth [ absolute thing to pupils, nor to force a [ yWPressed wi fation 1o hee O | untrammeled voters to b on their guard No Ml aes T caes Por Ta. but one. was given his walking papors. © s, that the insurance trust, like our | cortain amount of knowledge into each. | o+ L 'h":‘l“‘“ b“g‘f”‘j;;:‘ lop °dl’l‘:” it | against the army of railroad strikers. *All Chicago Tribune. Thereis in a southern asylum an cight- | Twonty-ono wmiles in ninctoen minutos wos : o carviors, will charge all that the | They should by a carefully devised | (MOUER SA body, Thore need bo no | gver the state says the Gazette, “the | Now cometh the millers trust. "Twill fall | Year-old boy who has never been awako | the speed Jatoly attuined Ly a trai pul h & y Y Y fear of its becoming a dangerous pre- d Robbi h betrayed . i since the day of his birth, He was the child | railway between Bosta bor “raflic will bear unless the people check | course of development meet the ave- ¥ a et S Orapes.-an ULN - VD0.7 5 Detray e Like Persians at fatal Thermopyla, of a paralytic mother, and has delicate fea- | The Long Island Railroad comy their rapacity. rage power of assimilation, letting all | ¢20¢nt, and at any rate it is time our | their constituents in the last legislature, | Tho people will never sumit to tho thrall | fures and & high, whito forehead, with long, | placed at convenicut pornts. in its the youth pass through that course | §0Vernment should begin to mani- | are serenely bobbing up as candi- Of such a grinding monopoly, black curls. His arm is not larger than an | Long Island city pails filled with iccd tea, at h Tt b LT TR g2 "% | fest a more liberal spirit toward | dates for re-election; and everything indi- ———— ordinary man’s thumb. He lies on_his bed | the company’s éxpeuse, for the employes. BEwill Vo gratifying to the student of | with . more _or lods profit, Leeping | 0 ® O ¥® SRR O who de- | cates that the railroad shysters are already The Old Story. year after year, taking nonote of anything | Mo Rogors Locomtive works at Pattorson, learn that the great Lick | ever, go together, and s - X o % rel Vi " sonla by Tlarper's Magazine. that passes. Twice a day he is aroused | have just finished a number of new engines i asyonomy to 1o st Lingh SR ie A " subo | vote their ability and offorts to advanc- | Preparing to thwart tho will of tho peopleby | S AT Mgl e enough to take a littlenourisiment, and then | for the Union Puciflc rond. They huve two ~ telescope has more than realized the | ranging the grades that new sub- ing in practical ways the welfareof their | PRKIRE the conventions and securing the 'i’;l 'L"idl‘t{“m e }ltl‘l’l- oF I Llumu' relapses into sieep. cabs to protoct the engincers and firemen BRRRE e ciations ash upan £ by $ho s [Jects and - freah developments, will co’;nlrl' and mar ki‘ml Tt will be o re. | Romination of men whom they know they f iut EHOMEERS CRAEE AR 10 DRATAS, Prof. F. W. Cragin, of Washburn colloge, | from the western storms and colt tronomical world. Not only is it the | be made sufficiently often to interest <At “H "‘“‘“‘pmp'lb o "h‘ifl P’l‘\:’ ;;mmd can ‘:M‘i And tm nm;:ws not om.\"fl to the | “NWhen you never once mentioned the same? d|m~ol\"arm'nh|l>v;wu-. Orborna county, Kan ILis oxpact 1 that. 5,00 il\ilr;nlw\x'hnnfl on o '] v- | o i i seki 0! . pople e egislative can t tto state oMcers sve walked i th ¥, sas, the petrified remaius of a hug gineers will bo a o anniversary celebra- 1 1 delibl: h ! recompense of he public service of | well, and the fiat has gone forth that Attor And have risked my ¥y \ ] § nost : v § dmg been erected on Mount Hamilton, | indelibly stamp upon the minds of | ;) 4 5 Yet among them I've never found any markable specimen found since 1877. The | Brotherhood was born at Detroit on August ~ali ¢ L8 Prof. Baird, many times earned when | ney General Leese, who has been a true and g them L' * fila o atetas . in the remarkably clear air of Cali- | pupils dead facts and rules never to be v But had something decided to say. animal complete was a little ov 17, 1863, h tunities for studying | thought of later in life, or if remem. | th® immense worth of his labors are | tricd servant of the poople must go. They ; fect in length. The jaws measure three feet [ “Aogal yillages for manufacturing oper- fornia, the opportunities for studying oug! fe, emo copsidered, shall be denied those who | have the machinery and propose to work it | You thought that your silence had told me!? | eightinches, the neck between four and five | yjvesure cheerful products of the time, the marvels of tho heavens are | bered to be of no practical value. The FrrE for all it is worth, Will the people submit The silence that's golden we've heard; feet long, and the body about nine foet long | pyo 1aer exporimeut is Mr. Hartloy's villago unsurpassed. Although the tele- | views and suggestions of Harvard's ARy or will they attend their party primaries and | But the girl of to-day prefers silver, and toree or four feet through. It had im- | g5,y 400 operatives of the jam factory at 1 e——— ) : Coined into words sweet and absurd; mense teoth, about three inches in length, | {3Lario01 " Great attention is being paid to see that only men who will truly represont | myorg aro lovers whom there's no mistaking, | and each pair worked independent of the [ (o TRhiegic grouning of the bulldings, them are sent to the party conventions? It Whose language leaves no one in doubt; rest, like a pair of hooked shears. ‘The ani- | 06 SHEEEL I SCM B viige will have is not a question of politics merely, for the | There are others who leave one's heart ach- | mal was of such gigantic proportions that it plenty of garden and air space. scope has been erccted but & short time, the immense lens has wrevenled the heavens in an entively new president should receive the careful On the Wrong Scent. consideration of all who are engaged or About two wecks ago this paper pub- activelyinterested in the work of public | |ighed a letter dated from Hillsdale, i Iroads have thei ted ugents in both ing 3 would have been able to crush a_horse in 11 PRLAIEAT APNOS RS AR Eucleacr Holdey of Sho obs | eQusetion. Miss., which gave o torse and caustic | ettt camme. Like St B ony on | Fora word there's uo living without. masivo Juws, nd must ave boen king of Omaha Tndian Rescrvation. . EmT—— g0 N o " ater, '8 " ) Toithd p“‘:e"mk 0"; e t,du nt:i Forcign and Native-Born Convicts, | 193°7iPtion of tho political serfdom that | republicans in republican districts, demo- | Bug since the swoet year has grown older, | seal's, and_its fect, two in number, woro Jon -‘-"v.rtl:u-‘ I nml:f:\-i‘dn- mothing to on for granted an " prevails in that section. The writer re- | crats in democratic districts, but always for |~ And you've failed as a special pleader, short. It is plain that it was an aguatic | reference to an act % D there is no object in the whole heavens A““;’"‘ ;"‘" ‘"”T“"‘?“h"‘“” (pve | iterated what has been time and aguin | tho railroads and ngainst the people. The | Shall I'be left out in the cold, sir, animal of the reptilian ag ing for an extension of time of pay- N i in 3 \ ! b oy e me D purchasers ol . which we must not observe as if viewed | sented to the attention of the National reported by men of good repute with re- | pins have undoubtedly been set up in both | Because I was not o mind reader! = T 1en purchasers of land oo tho ~ for the first time. ‘We have to use the | Prison Association at its late meeting ¥ You blame me, I think, without reason ; Omuha In the senatorial and legislative districts, and ; . — . re N s i irie would be {airly yeprawiihd st Liscaln. the | “Why cau't e.ue bapur—io-day! Support the prohibition party. celved the signature of the president: coming winter. For ourselves, whatever : - There are now 5,00) Christian endeavo Be it enacted by the senate and house may be the ocutcome, we shall support no KINGS AND QUEENS. societies, the :.ul{.\hm' hu\'(ln::l ‘uln:;bl;jrt):);:;:/ of representatives of the candidate for legislative bonors this fall , S year since 1531, the time of the frst ory | of America in congress assombled, Whom wé o not heliove 1 be farly in secord | - Prince Louis Perdinand, of Bavaria, has | Jition . g gard to the disfranchisement of the negro and the methods by which the votes of republicans are suppressed. This publication has stirred up the Mis- sissippi democracy to a fever heat and the ex-confeds of Marion county . new telescope in & now way.” The [ Wasa statement of the percentage of test success so far in the use of the | forcign born prisoners as compared 'mumem has been solving the | with that of natives, which will serve to | msteries of the nebule world, | correctaquite general misapprehension. especially that surrounding the Ring | It was admitted that statistics were not ' i That the seeretary of the interior be, _ Nebulie in the constellation of Lyra | s0 thorough as could be desived, but i « ¥ 4 - | becowe an M. D.” Recent statisties show that there are A he 18 hereby. authorized and di- fi':hh has bafled every previous at- | such as had been obtained showed thau :::, cu:-’:ap;::ontm;hc‘f,:llll:)wl:gmllzxfl mmfl::;'::g‘:;:,:,r'\5’,::,:'\?:3{:).3’ M| Phe queen of Denmark has been made deat | about 6,500 Catholic churches in this coun: :fgclllh”‘(‘,u;;flfd'-"‘]‘u fhopiasy L fompt ot explanation and has led to | thero had heen & marked change In the | o "yugjut ronched us, with on ad- | The Linwood Journal calls on-its readors | DY & bUE crawling iuto her ear ut night. try to which are attached 3,000 parochlal | 50" yhg “purchase moncy due for lund percentage of foreign to native born . . i > criminals betwcen 1830 and 1850, dressed envelope to carry the response: . A LAKY h Co., Miss., o doubtless still maintained. The common -‘\,P‘;_:'e";.;‘;;;: b:,m;\‘:‘. u,ltmwl'uwh::e idea is that the increase of crime has | geen a letter copled from your paper, dated been greater among foreigners | Hillsdale, Miss, July 7, and signed “Iron than - among natives, but it | and Steele,” which is a tissue of slanderous is the roverse of this, tho | lies—lies 0 patent that we do not see how statistics showing that while in 1850 the -nyl u‘!‘tlm.dnvl l:;e;“ul! l::’“ ignorant and oy _ percentage of foreign-born prisoncrs | Prejudiced, cou e them. s _For sciencp, then, the Lick telvscopa | Was five times that of native prisoners, N:V;::“‘;:u‘:‘d" m‘w“lu: 'lh' "'l"‘“:: jas oponed up a great field for Investi- many speculation With one sweep of . the Lick tolescope the structure of this ~wonderful constellation has become as ~ ah open book. At glance, as it were, ‘the Lick telescope has revealed a cor- of the heuvens where one can sce i‘ work of oveation going on, suns ‘- ved from the unformed nebulous n e o1 Jhil i E 1 1d on Omaha Indian reservation under to by d battlo for their political | 'The youthful emperorof China riscs atd | oy o ey unmarried eolored woman sont [ 50 an res L Hihts this fall, and_ urges them on to the | o'clock in the morning, broakfasts at 6, dines | o The frst unmarvied eiortd WORGH TR | the sales made by virtue of un act to 0 llowing lan . “Already | 8 noon, supsatdo'clock and goesto bed | iy, is about to start for southeastern | provide for the sale of n part of the fsten the Lo SRS SASEL MR e | vy, Afrlca.” 8o i o graduate of Fiac Univer: [ rosorvation of tho Omuia tribe of 1n- \.:u‘ isind (‘lliwtlx r ‘v.w ?:mmmfi The death of the ex-Empress Carlotta of | sity dians in the state of M :l'mlj\“‘ 1’ml for thalr canvass of Butler county. Tlo WAr I8 | L texico may ocourat any momeut in Bel- | J0 Cook, of Boston, kas como out of the | other purposes, approved August on, 0 campaign V'swag’ ing planted, N 4 4 prohibitionists. In hi: inion the “salooufin | 1852, as follows: The time of each puy- Campaign promises are being made to be | Bium. She ia rapidly sinking and has become | y),g saddle Is to-day # greater evil than the | mont shall be extended for the period broken in the future as they have been in | entirely helpless. south in the saddle. of two years beyond the time now fixed: the past. As an independent paper, above The young empress of Germany is German The Lutheran church is d“n.r!: knxul W{?;k Provided, That the interest on said the narrow limit of party dictation, but a |.and Danish to the core. She is also sprung ?““};‘.‘.“::.'Z"‘..‘u::‘:.';‘l";."& e s ichies; | payments'shall be paid at the vime said friend to the interosts of the agricuitural | from the plain poople, for the founder of her | 40 150 TUR, RETAEGLTRERCRCIN LR UG | puyments are due: And provided fur- at the last census it was loss than cinity of Hillsdale, Miss., (which consists of | masses from whom it derives its support,the | family was one Soeren Matthisen, sexton of | (o) 40, Now there are over 1,000,000, ther, That the act. abave mentioned, gation, whore the heaveds: will reveal | double. ‘Chis is az exhibit which cov- | oue store and two maie iuhwbitants) and | Journal “admonishes its roaders . to [ Trinity courch, Copenhage. oy | A olorod preachot near Macon, G, has Sx0opt a4 :z'mfl:m.';‘o‘:dxw by this ) marvols of orention. o | inly speuks well for the foreign-born | wkink that wo have the right 10 demand of | watch. Watch your central committee: | Emperor Fravcis hulh s d-tlbcqu m_n-n.u_d_lo wamory ukfn 3 ; | 3