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1 4 : ' _ THE OMAH.A DAILY BEE THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1883 Omaha declared that they would not wea | holders hav been turned o THE DAILY BEE. PUBINSAED EVERY MORNING. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. ity 3forntne Kdition) including SUNDAY Tikp, One Year. .. . f or ot Thites Mouths .0 TrEOMAIA BENDAY TikE, mal gadrews, One voar IMAMAOFFIORNOR. 014 AN General Harrison's Letter, The pity is that the false friends of the The letter of General Harrison, for- | Indians, whose motives are wholly solf- mally accepting the nomination of the | ish, should have so great an infiuence republican party, followed hard upon | with them. that of the domocratic candidate, os if —_ to give the people of the country an op- Assessing OMceholders. portunity to immediately compare the Mr. George William Curtis is consist- two documents. If this idea moved the | ent in condemning the action of the republican candidate to make public his | democratic state committecs of Ohin, lotter, which evidently wus ready some | Massachusetts, and other states in send- time ago, within forty-eight hours after | ing out eirculars to federal oMicoholders the appearance of Mr. Cleveland’s for- | calling for assessments, but what justi- mal accoptance, it was ashrewd thought | fication can he offer for supporting an which General Harrison will not fail to | administration that allows this to be profit by, No eandid and fair-minded | done? hy overy uniforms made for convic eloctionoering cente why postmastors and | OWn pass away trooter has signified that he | tics: why the employes have been assessed; | YO udd her name will “‘stand” for the presidenc Bach | Why notorious criminals and partisan fine- stands about ax equal show, workers have been appointed to office; why Ashland Gazofte: John A. McShano has | the Denston buroau and the postal department formally acespted the democratic nomination has been used as part of the democratic ma- for governor, and during the campaign will | Shinery in defianco of faw; why the presi- run for governor ahd United States senator at the same tins, and in all probability will run himself into the ground. Nobraska Taborer: We have long been ernor. Mr. to the office anc ejected,” said M isn‘t a nigger on L INEW YORK OFFICE, ROOMS 14 AN i Ui piNG, W AsKINGTON OFFICR, No. b13 OURTEENTH BTREE CORRESPONDENCE, Al communieations retating to news and adi- torinl marter should be addresscd to the Eprron OF T HER, RUSINESS LETTERS, Al huainess letters and r nddies cd to Tne e P local politics of New York; why his attor- | tne poss, ney general is now trying to break down the | Lammon, ng n co safeguards which congress has placed around | ity and the immensity of your gall, I es should be the ballot box Georgo said yes withouta blu uniforms made’ by convicts. That's right, | postoMice and custom-house of importance in | sir,” said Mr. Croc boys, and be careful that you do not wear | the country has been converted into partisan | it, and besides, I fecl liko cer, ‘'you ¢ from you.” L ‘W 1 nnot get ng your nmon Nebraska City Pross: Mr. McShano haa | collectors have beon perniciously active in then :mhl: ““I have callea to got it.and informally accopted tho nomination for gov- | Lossing conventions and running local poli- 1don't intend to leave this offico until to the pass.” 1 will call the colored funll-‘umn who attends have you summarily r. Crocker. ** the coast who ns ho did s Thore could put one side of me out of these rooms,” said Lammon. Crocker immediately dent himself has personally interfered in the | picked up his pen, added “family™ t y? to HMr. deration of your abil- and why he himself has con- | grant you all you ask, and more, too— nin when that runs out.” mon cloeverly thanked him, bade him Lam- OMAIA, Drafts, checks and p 0 man who will comparo these letters can It is true these circulars do not de- | regaled with dissertations on the moral | yuiiytad alargo sum of money toward the | call ag e mufli paybis to the order of tho compuny. | 1 44 1o fmpressed in favor of that of [ mand contributions. They ars simply | Wickednoss of the boycott when wielded by | goocratic campaign boodl peny Pl’flflfl&mm the republican candidate. suggestive. But who does not under- | labor organizations, but we mnotice it has a R good day, and took his departure. ally The distinctive merit of Goneral Har- | stand that they are practically ascoercive | different aspect when recommended by the STATE AND TERRITORY, IR, Editor. chief magistrate of a great nation, Beatrica Republican: The republican leg- islative ticket of Gage county 1s composed ot men who cannot be wheedled or bribed by the railroads into any measure that would be | scare in the town. detrimental to shippers or producing classes, Nebraska City parents are making a howl They are men who ave in close sympathy | on account of another change of text books with the people, and Who will stand by their | in the public schools. rights, ‘Workmen on the Plattsmonth sowers ex- ' hir huiner i ich was buried Wayne Herald: The nomination of Mo- | Hined an Indin's skull whioh was burled | o,y and choap Shane for governor will let him down much s casior than a renomination for econgress | name of a elean and infelligent looking paper | Paso del Norte. would have done, and save him considerable [ just started at Central City, W, P. Watson New Moexico we h money. Thero isno possible chance of his | 18 editor and proprietor. tance of the primi election, but as the leader of a forlorn hope | A young man adefoa will be less humiliating than a fail- | )il carried away while he was holding | that we aro in alic ure to secure a re election from the First dis- [ londed guu by the muz trict. 'he old vote Blair Republic Hon., J. A. McShano | ebrate the anuiversary of the battloof Antie- s bl bernatorial | tAM September 17, with a picnic, camp fire will find his campaign for the gubernatorial | Kt Feblembor 1 Wi blo i, o, hand chair in this state an exceedingly rocky road [ and give to travel. He is possessed of the most | A Utica man nanied Cobb stole a toam sov- important requisite to success from the bov bon standpoint—plenty of money—but grant | ofti L him that and thoaid of tho third porty to | 820 hove Just becn rewarded by catohing | are ¢ boot—and he won't leave u grease spoton [ M WHIC Ol @ visit to her. tak rison’s lotter is vthat it explains clearly | As if their language was mandatory? and sufciently the position of its au- [ They bear upon their faces the argument thor with respect to all matters which | that, being stipendiaries of the immediately concern the interests and | administration, those who get them are welfare of the American poople. It is | expected to support the administration not contined to a single issue and made | financially as well as othorwise. If the to do service for one question. Every | administration is sincere in its civil ser- problem that engages the attention of | vice reform professions its manifest the country in the prosent campaign re- | duty is to publicly and distinetly d coives attention, and not in a merely | countenance this mathod of bleeding perfuiictory way, but with a care | the federal officeholders for campaign and fullness that leaves no room for a | purposes. doubt or quostion respecting the atti- But the administration will G0 noth- tude of the republican cancidate. Re- | ing of the kind. The sontiment that garding tho leading issue of tho cam- | controls it was fully expressed in Dan paign, the tariff question, General Har- | Lamont’s explanation of Cleveland’s vison’s letter is entirely reassuring to | contribution, and the examplo thus the advocates of a just and equitable | set by the president himsolf policy of tariff revision. e points out | ever, stipendiary of the ad- most forcibly and convincingly that the | ministration is expested to emu- contest of the two great parties is not | late. The avorage politician between schedules, but between wide | will perhaps find no fault with this, but apart principlos. On the part of tho | itis noteasy to see how the virtuous demoeracy the purpose and inevitable | mugwump veformer can conscientiously Nebraska Jottings. THE DAILY BE enic route cauines by the score, Thereis a mad dog El Paso, a city ¢ Sworn Statement of Circulation. Btateof Nobraska, g o County of Douglaa, | 8 8- Geo, 1, Trachuck. secrotary of The Ties Pub- shing company, does solamily swear that the et cirewation of Tk DALY BEk for the week ending Beptembor 8, 18, was a8 follows: Ennday, Bopt, 2 . puss oifered the ¥, Sapt. 4 Wedneslay, Sepf Thursday, Sepr. 6 Frl'lny,s'fif. o Baturday, Nept. 8.0 G RO, T Sworn to before me and sub Prosenco iy sth day of September, A, D, 1855 N. P, FEIL, Notary Public. Ftate of Nebracka, 1’ o County of Douglas, { ® % George B. Trscnick, beimg first duly sworn,de- es and saysthat he is sccretary of The Beo bublishiug company, that the actual average daily cirentation of THE DALy Bee for tho morith of September, 1657, was 14,54 coples: fox October, 187, W% copies; for November, 1847, 15,520 coples: for December, 1587, 10,041 copt fex:'for January, 185, opies; for Fehruary, k8%, 15,42 coples’; for March, N85, 10,080 coples: for April, 1498, 18,714 coples: for May, 186, 18181 but because tho depot of the Mexi Aunie Miller, a sev N -vea copies 1584, 10,243 o) July, 1588, it the assured republican majority for Governor |, Graw 48 thiow! ’ > Ay SO e et M Lgpers For NN IS | uitt 1s toward froo trado, while tho | voto forwman and a party that thus | myver g pour Crawlord, ws theown, by an snruly | bygono ventarios. GEO. B, TZSCIUCK. ro ie insi setorving | 1 3 ardi rine sivi st e Npeebdiles bt A ks ivo oxcar Sworn ta_before me and subscrived in thy | I€ publicans insist upon preserving | violates a cardinal principle of eivil Grooley News: Jho democrats and tho milo with her foot caught in the stirrup of | (ooo PR 1 apart presence this§th duy of September, A, D., 1885, the principle of protection. “The | service reform. N. P. FEIL Notary Public. republican party holds,” says Genoeral = Harrison, “that a protoctive tariff is THE recent inquiry made by congress constitutional, wholosome and neces- | With respect to the amount of money be- . We do not offer a fixed schodule, | 10nging to the government in the hands but a principle. We will reviso the | Of the banks brought out some valuable schedule and modify rates, but always | facts. Two hundred and ninety-four with a provision as to the effect upon | nutionul banks during the year 1857 domestic production and the wages of | Were made depositories for government our working people.” Noone who has funds, the amount of which, as reported believed the republican wndi- | to congress, exceoded sixty millions, in date to be in favor of maintaining the | liew for which the United States tr war tariff can fail to be convinced of | urer held as security fifty-six millions of his iistake after reading the | government bonds. Formerly no bank lotter of accoptanco, and those | Was permitted to hold at one time more who have gratuitously charged than $500,000 of these deposits but un- that General Harrison was opposed | der the new rules of October, 1887, this to a revision of the tariff will be com- | limit was extended. The cause of this pelled to acknowledge that they have leniency regarding deposits was due to done him an injustico. If he shall be | the money stringency in tho market last elected to the presidency he can be | futumn. To relieve this pressure safely depended on to recommend to | retary Fairchild was led to put these congress such changes and reductions [ Sixty millions into ¢ reulation through of the tariff as will give the people the banks, lz\khl;; their luuvorumont needed relief without imperiling any bonds as security. The holding of treas- railroads ave putting forth every offort to de- [ U sadle, Tho dittle siris face was hor- | 4,6 yol ;.:m William Leese for aftorney general. | ji.on Bellville, » farmer living between ltle That tool of “‘monopoly,” Munger, is striv- | Whitney and Chadron, is said to have pois- ist ing havd for the place, and he would bo a | oned some of his wates 8 sad commentary on the people’s reg ard for u-,:a\mnl.)lhil-\'c:« _The Crawford Cresent | it should never the daring sorvices of Leose to defeat him, | Wants the matter investuzated, and sa i i oo if the report be true Bellvilio would be a dis- | embiom of patien Leese has proven himself the people's friend, | yrico to a coat of tar and feathers and ; and if railvoad power causes his defeat it | should be chased out of the country by blood will be cause for much regret. hounds, Wayne Gazott vo years ago thofrail | G- W. Sarpy county farmer, road organs were unanimous n_saying that | Soid s crops, stock and furbiture at a sac Van Wyck was politically dead; now they too, Mg. CLEVELAND'S letter of sccep- tance needs a postecript. TIn it he did not sny a gingle word about a second term. Mni. THURMAN is said to sleep with a snuff box undor his pillow and a ban- danna fer a night cap. What he does with his cholera morbus is not stated. ing some _offa “BADP MEN" are once more breaking loose in she Black Hills, and yet there is no talk of tynching. Tho old minin g town vigilantes have evidently emi- grated to Nobraska. Kill him again, In fact the goneral scoms to | money from the sale, however, was absorbed | Not much is ne have as many lives as the foliow in the sham [ 10 1 Kirl battle at Norfolk last wook, who was | aeiabend's red the fact he skipped. He ntended to rob his victim of the eight times, 13ut then the general is used to - Ll ol i it. His enomies have been singing his death itk AN it song ever sinco we woro a kid. Lisasulooas: Cortland Herald: The Omaha Herald says | Algona’s building records fortho yearshow | exerting himsel MoShano will be elected governor of Ne- | #50,000 invested. women, the wr braska. David Butler says that he will be Slocted guvertioh, - We Witld tika'bo khow the largest in the history of tho society. | alien to us. how many governors they think it will take ie_gov torun the state of Nebraska, The ropub- | 10 Clte lican party has run the state for upwards of e ANDIDATES do not take kindly to criticism ib Georgia. Two Atlanta odi- tors bave just been thrashed by an agpirant to the legislature, and the cam- paign has only just begun. oc- g state superintendent of weights How candidly and how innocently the IHerald chirps of democr atic success Miss Loui Sowneberger was attacked by Stock yards are being built at Crawford, | The Land of the is carrying off Ulysses American of the Rio Grande. The Morrick County Republican is the | ican 1l Paso und the old ‘Mex sthat | stupidity, which should be donkey, is woll represented rying o load of wood, there some bun- dles of eharconl and oceasionally munch- et e IN OLD MEXICO. rOStE. old and y Lotus—Manana— ot new, once an important trading post, since the best communication e boty 0 hotwoen Mexico and the country north We found Lere an International stroot car line, affording Amer- n city, On our trip through en country; al n, not I : only beenuse wo have left the stars and ns Living noar Crawford col- | gtripes behind us and see the Me tricolor waving over public buildings; language, manners, Look at that et & Tl customs, all are distinctly foveign. The in Central railvoad, - | ernl weeks ago and made his escape. The | though built of adobe, and the enrs are s kept an eyo on the thicf's bost gil, | the only objects reminding us that we ill in the ninetcenth centur, a look around at objects but, rimate or old girl lving | inanimate, ana they will remind you of primi- jits rade two wheels would at the first motiony uch as wo have road of in the middle ages. Thedriverstanding tlesaly by his slecpy teams, seems rolons ns ngnarinteo | satisfied to wait for work, even though > made the acquain- e udobo houzos aund med Craig, living near | their swarthy oceupants; yet, after we “rim” of his hand left. The | have crossed the Rio Grando, we focl yme. The emblom of ce and fro rather the 1 with which the Tilic Tast weck to. ateopt the offorof a . | Streets are plentifully sprinklod, theso y crative job made by a slick individual who [ animals are in reality the bost frie st to bo Just as united in endeavoring to | eluimed to own a stock farm in Kuusas. The | the poorer class of Mexicans have s ded, it seems, to make © bun nan’s debts, and when the | g living. There is o stalwart fellow, in the prime of life, squatting down be- brought in dead from the fiald no less than | procecds of the sule. Hindia Gininutive tableron which ishis representing a ten cents, Instead of The oold water people have cleaned out the | employing his time he is satisfied if he n make his daily tortillas, without ex- f. The hood of the ) ; pper with which they he Towa State Fair receipts are over #1,- | hide their features, it is all foreign, all or reappointed L. G. Weld, of It cannot be the airfor that ishracing enough, it must bo something in the the race itself, which accounts for the n 55 | ggtablishod industry or onterprise. | UrY deposits by navional banks is by no | twenty years with but one governorata f a highwayman on thostreots of Dubuque and :":,‘:,2“";”3,',"3 10 ProB oo (th"f‘,".'"”,l iy to como! One would thiuk, to read its | myisis the plain promise and assur- | means & new featuro in our govern- time, and will continue to do so in the future. | robbed of her purse. movere, which is apparent evorywher prattle, that there are not a handful of republicans in Nebraska. ance of the letter, and the charactsr of | ment’s financial dealings. Since 1564 | McShane and Butler need not lose any sleep Actual count showed that over 5,000 peo- General Harrison warrants confidence | hational banks have had in their keep- tend to the governor's department. But for | Sinxle du. Tt cannov bo ealled laziness for that is 3 ol 1 Thayer will at- | ple passed thr th 5 11 v during a | More an acquired habit; it seems almost over the matter, for John M. Thayer will at- | ple irough tho state library during a | o 570 SOR 0 PN Cctinn race had boen A ——— et O o ing at one time or other government | [ 0 T : = o oo | Davenport ministers will hold union re- | fed on the lotus plant. Order Tie girl of the period knows her | o p”‘gurd 15 mé importa- | deposits varying from six to sixty mil- E,:;:fml' on the Omuha Herald takes the | v 'sorvices in November, with an eminent | Work done and rights., A Providence young lady has taken hers in the shape of death be- cause her mother had the presumption to ask her aid in household affairs. — THE conferees on the fortification ap- propriations have reported to congress a bill to expend nearly four million for coast defonses. It is more than likely that the bill will be accepted by the house and immediate work be ordered in the making of new steel guns. evangelist from the east to conduct the meet- | Muanans MeCook Tribune: Demoeratic gall is ex- | ing row. The old s clusively earried in original packages, Build- | 1 ¢ workat Sioux | Mexican ing high on tho purchasing power of Me- | City, tion of foreign laborers and | lions. During therefundingoperations the immigration of Chinese, | of 1878-0 under Secretary Shevrman, General Harrison’s plain and unmis- | however, the banks held funds belong- takably honest language is all that any | ing to the government to an amount ag- faiv-minded Amevican citizen could | gregating three hundred and thirty aslc. He doos not bolieve that wo should | millions. How far the govornment excludo the worthy peoplo of othor | shall zo in making national banks its lands who seek homes in this country, | depository is a debatable question and but that we should rigidly enforce the | one upon which congress will be culled laws for keeping out all the objection- | sooneror later to pass carcful judg- able classes, a8 paupers, criminals, and | ment. those aliens who cannot assimilate with us. His position regarding Chinese im- fans ave employed in cit borers, “The Des Moines Electric Railway comp claim his election for governor over Thayer as quito sure. Preposterous! The claim is | commenced sotting polos last Monday. Tho prima facio evidence of insanity. We dis- | company expects to bave cars running by parage the congressman not. But the sim- | October ple fact that he carricd the First district | Postville is getting an unenvi over a weak, unpopular man, by 5,000 major- | tion for burglaries ity, when Thayer carried the district by over G oL gL seven thousand, is hardly suflicient evidence of his ability to cavey the state. ~Outside of | ci natural r 1 as mine able reputa- ¢, and the lapse of time | Of P _vlcz, who is thor- COUNT MITK b dedication at Marshalltown is that | still vast quantit i hEVAS Omaha he will but poll his party vote, every member of the board of trustees and | people are poor, or CAPTAIN ANDERSON, who abandoned Tashblon 1 ssiraioRsly btated that oughly informed as to China,is reported e e the mister who performed the dedicatory Lm.!,- Wi L.'_I.hc,”y his dory, the Dark Secrot, in mid-ocean | MIETAtion 18 80 y stated that no | ¢4 ceout the idea that China has re- PROMINENT PERSONS. rites had served as soldiers in the uniod | of the simples m: one will hereafter venture to question army during the wai it. General Harrison recognizes in his trip to England, sets a good ex- jected the new treaty with America. never do to-ds id in reply to the general kick the | do to-morrow. Tt Shane's bar'l, they now have the temerity to | £4t actors aver a shortage of American la- | will find ample evidence that our south- i ern neighbors fully believe that. We are the same that our have been. Mexico is arich country urces, agricultural as al, cannot be surpassed. oy b ity | Notwithstanding ' the immense amount ous metals taken from its mines Betiysen UM AR HOPLeRIAL DS for hundreds of years, the states of A pleasing incident of the Maple Grove | Sinalon, Chihuahui and Durango yield ‘With all this the what we would con- some the answer will be: ronghoit Mex poor. Their k ater father, (from mah-nyah-nah) to-mor- ng seems to read in y what you can ico we hous f n , are almost en- tirely without furniture; their food is ¢ SREW LY 5 Pope Leo, nssisted_by Abbot Possuto as of the simplest, beans or the flour of ample to the democrats. If they don’t vt ¥ % In his opinion China favors the treaty ; it T e Dakota. « implest, beans or the flour o hurry and abandon their dark secret | the objections to this immigration | yogpicting the emigration of Chincsc pationimt A Bleivotk Bons $n Rillo A gigantic wheat trust is gradunlly being | beans forming the staples bub in tho party they will find themselves adrif | 2 conclusive, and assures tho country | ¢4 the United States because China does | Attorney-General Garland 15 said to be | "yl 10 & Feeis U ATEO. BP0 SISO 8 S0y RIOWE O that if elected he would faithfully en- force the laws relating to this subject. Protection of the political rights of every citizen, public education, the sponding his time hunting deer at Hominy Mitchell university is now almost free of | bet with a capsized boat in the November Hill, Arkansas. debt, while last year it was nearly $30,000 in There gales. not favor emigration. For that reason China would accept the treaty, since it would affect English interests at Hong Kong and Canton and not its ewn. cont s 0f 290 o s G rand Boulanger peiset | . The M. T church at Armour is the recip- | President Dinz for the Bt Malo Yerattn, ient of a checls for 100 from 1. D. Armour, | Ame OMATIA wants parks in her suburbs and sho needs eity parks within a mile | trusts, pensions and civil service re- | ) s i v Tho Chinese ministerto thisgountry is | °f,ChICoEO: que 'S " he attitude of congresson the Chinese el sgountiry 1s Pie vill vote i R 5 A 4 g 4 h LS ; T o Eertiiana b Hokkenaten Huo erre will vote October 1 on the question | ity with which the purpose of building two school houses. by finglis further thei Y ther PO SRR e ougAcie O A. McBam, of Fargo, offered the diroctors ends. It is evidently an English tr President Cleveland has parchased from complications of Mr. Fairwether, of McLane, Pa., eight head proposed Florence park on tho north forosee the end. ness and directness which enable the kK an - enterpris and ask no more. . a great influx of Americans el B b gIvet bt iahiati| Bbaimle) into Mexico, and the government of seems to encourage But now, the tion arises, if the extreme libera it our ecapitalists are which it is diflic W 11 not give rise to political sult to refer especially to e, the the suburbs will be reasonablysupplied. [ least intelligent veader to understand | ¢ spread abroad the rumor that China of llA(y};}lflg]&i)&(‘fl Ayrshire cattle, for which ?':h(?x l;‘?l'!:l’:uv: “.x\chr:‘.;lr El{.l;fl::"f:::;;hll:“lt'l"l\! theimmense concessions of land granted But as yet no proposition has boen mads | the views and position of the author. Tt | oioeted the treaty with the view that "cu‘l’::'m:l'm e | A Tl Apor i Eatiinedi 3 to Americans. Take, for instan to convert a square or two within the ofty proper. ‘The time will soon come, however, when the latter will be an ab- soluto nocessity. is a concise, straightforward and mani- | yiii1a legislation would shake the festly sincere letter that General Harri- friendly velations between China and son has addressed to his party and to | ¢he United States. This would allow the country, and we believe it will have | yho British to take away the Chinesoe the effect of greatly strengthening the | yrade from this country, and to kill the republican cause, project of builaing American railroads in that empire. Should it turn out to be true that China has not rejocted the treaty, the suspicions of British inter- fevence in our relations with China would be strongly confirmed. Holmes amd Prof. Charles Eliot Norton those who couverted his dislike for Ame closed its third annual meeting at Aberdecn, | Conn. This cor o associution. fornia and anoth Sidney Dillon received a painful kick on The W, C.T. U, session at Fargo has ( P the thigh from his horse the other day while | decided to establish and maintain head- | ico, south of 1 ont riding, at his summer home,in Litchticld, e rek during the session of | menso territories Conn. It is stated that uo dangerous results stature.; _ ! The Rapid City Republican says: The At the opening of new waterworks m Lim- | fronticvsmen who have long been famili erick Bishop O'Dwyer, who has hertofore | With the reservation and its resources have been hostilo to_home rule, spoke strougly in | variably m\n.:‘d‘n]lm\ the existence of fine favor of the measure, and expressed it as his s iaRconkh thD ppssayalions: Pedblofvlio '..f.’f:-{Lf::'\.u',’.',‘,‘.,,..,ru_k" vould “speedily obtain | (/06 huve found indications that this ma- | which may find B O B PRI A o S terial is there in large quantiti Irom | decds rasher than b * time to time parties have pros) rted o he culiar method of reaching his decisions in the SR A L B T old board of education was well -aware that there would be a large in- creaso of school pofmlation on the open- ing of the fall term and should have prepaved for it. The new buildings cofild have been finished for the open- ing of the presont term if proper pre- coution had been exercised by the board. Contractors should have tion, the new own ments to settlers, The Sioux Agreement. The opinion is thatin due time ths bill providing for the opening of the Sioux reservation will receive the vequisite number of signatures, not- withstanding the hostility to the meas- ure thus far manifested. It is found AvrrovGn there is disappointment The James River Baptist association has | International compan omas, in the northe upon which the nativ thy, is likely to drive him to the s to time state that [ wall and produce sporation obtai er large grant sming. ure ob but this imm » feelings of av i part of Mo As these im- ined without any or at the merest nominal consic offer great induce yeation, ooks now with of Hartford, ned a cans_ into somothing like an affectionato re. | FOur new churches were received into the | grant of 18,000,000 acres in Lower Cali- in Las wrsion, heir expression in word : : PP J arned to Life on the Prairie, over the wheat crop on which great | cases presented to him in the United States | ) L : q ¥ XA de 3 2 i ; 4 . : Mis city with good reports of their explora. The R GARR, S boon placed under ponaltics for farluro | 1At there is much loss opposition at | jigpes wore built enrlior in_ the seuson, | Sutt,"fior a caso hug beow tried bo et | viona. o ectloman. who evie wb 10 145 [ o0l nia with UG UL 0 o ol P 5 ho lower agencies than at Standin g A b ary i ound the rg i i Rt ehe e k deals o) e airic to complote their work in tho py S e Sl ’;’ there need bo no such apprehension re- | gometimes. for hours, until. Le has reac city 8 fow 3o trom b s e [0 Ol oo L 7o cribed time. ock, and it is less unreasoning. AS | o,qing the yield of corn. During the | conclusion. He has worn a track in the of t he bolieves to bo a superior | is & *bit deseribing one sort of prairic S—— matter ‘],[ fact agreat deal of ?hc oppo- | Dust two w s the corn crop of the | Pet l;y his jndicial |le h-;\r nism, ; ; y and expects to take possession of it if | life- g THEREIs said to be an organized gang | Sition shown is not serious. Toa con- | <0 ntrv has passed out of the danger of “Ouida’ has really become religious. Tt rve is opened. The value of coal de- Whe yare no wives and sisters of thieves systematically robbing the | Siderable extent it is simply in con- Cedt i Yas rumored some lme ago tha Posits in the eastern vicinage of Rapid City | on the the insides of the houses being nipped by frost. It may ha safely asserted that fuily two thirds of the ield is now out of peril. The rest of the crop is rapidly passing into that stage where frost or insects can verging towards repentance, loarned that she spends her day pious books and making long pr east, and if they will bring ch even refuses to associate with worldly peo- | door's the mining problems of th ple. She is not devoted to any special de- | find ready solution. It is now apparent that nomination, but seews to be slowly forming | the only thing needful to bring out the @ cult of her own. wealth of the Hills and make it attractive to cannot be overestimated. ‘The first to the city will in all probability be fr ilroads | ape neither v m the | Are ne her tidy o e from e | ong settlor--who Bt ion will | it,” as this life is ¢ -how often he v formity with the Indian habit of fault- finding and obstruction, which has its motive in a desire to he bought. TheIn- dian nature is not so different from that of the white man that it will not take mails between New York and the woest. ‘The attention of the postofiice depart- ment has long been dirvected to this abuso but it is apparently powerless to run it down. There is evidently a screw L affect but little the drying husks. gty R0} the E2lIa By , 8 / : € bt ! b g ) = it cheap fuel and coke. But tho | ¢ A loose in the postoftice department under [ advantage of an unusual opportunity, | myg poturns from Nebraska, Kunsas, Every Man of Them a St. George. | United States government has virtually left | 4| ; Mr. Cleveland’s admimstration, ana | Such as the Sioux believe is presented | y,w. and Illinois ave highly encourag- Phitadely hia Times, the whole matter to the option of the Swoux [ "y, &G to them in the pending negot Don Dickinson as postmastor general is ions, > a little eaution in [ Indiaus, e tempting. 1 had been nt wlled, for come wshed the dishes, ply. 1 take t on with the 3 ¢ rinsing them them a good rub with prairie grass asked ching years About once a month in the samme r i s the r them cook- got a A pos Y ] ing. The average condition of corn,as | Senators may cxc 4 S ing? J anything but a brilliant success. m:fll)l(thuur[o has been nfnt(_lonun‘-t‘x; '23::; reported by the national depart ment of :,:v.!::‘l‘!;:l:; ;’.‘x,\i‘ra:;l;;s(rnmaln:llx‘; :l.:.‘:llxt\" MR. LAMMON'S GALL. m““y‘l.flllt.l‘(lll‘ hyl..rl‘ :‘-n: hu';v\\,:‘ill‘k “l‘ sum- ; RYRWIDS:QPRARVION. AN agriculture, for September 1, through- ot cUIHENR SIRRIn ey er after a hard day ork. COVINGTON, justacross the river from | time and a good deal of further effort | ohy "t X " B 17 | are allon hund and eager for the fray. How a United States Marshal Got a L biscuits; sometim and in seven of out the country, is 94. Sioux City, is fast securing a hard repu- | Will be required to overcome it. The | ypo viont corn producing states the Mr. Cleveland's Letter, Rafiroad Pass tor Oharles Orocker. m,,,w|,},\‘,‘ T taiion. Low dive keepers who have | Squaw men, whose interest it is thatthe |, cov\gq condition is 95 as compaved with | Kansas City Journal (rep.): Mr. Cleve- | The denth of Charles Crocker of the W hat about the beon outlawed in Towa have swarmed into the little Nobraska town, and with their advent have come reports of rob- bery, midmight brawls and general law- Indians should remain as they are, have been hard at work, and they have been actively seeonded by certain self-sufti- cient philanthropists, who, it is justly Jand’s lotter of occoptance is now public | Central Pacific railrond calls to mind [ «phe what?” sui property. 1t is an indictment of Mr, Cleve- [ an incident thathappenod when Charles “The oles land’s administration. It is an ackaowledge- | 1. Lammon was Unitod States marshal ment that under the management of Mr, | for Nevada.about the year 1874, says [ the most of that. Cleveland and his party managers the | the Virginia Enterprise. Lammon, in 64 at the corresponding time last year. Such another autumn as tho present season has not been experienced for years. It can be aptly described as ring of the housc cook a fowl, me right.” s spring cleani d he in surpr cs on but it “Well, I guess that tne dog’s tail did Sometimes 1 took a & o broom, but it raade more dust than be- losness. The latest isa murdor sup- [®xid, have been tho curse of | Yoo voathor,” boing 000l, with | country has been brought o @ condition | Dis official eapacity, had served four or | fop, iy posubly trac one of these dens of i g o ik . i 5 5 i 3 8 @ “And the clothes-washing vico. It is high time that the authori- | genevation. This combination,® ac- | 1 v" Wol pejoice at the plenteous | Globe-Democrat (Rep.): There is nothing | A0 5" pho suit was for possession | i os save so & R00d BaAl ] pome. ties called a halt, and it is to be hoped [ cording to trustworthy reports, has 1 s OV 8L, times gave somo of th bounty which he is promised. to bosuid of the letter of acceptance which | of "yyter rights. The persous served | had not already boen snid of the mossage, | Jiyed on the line of the Central Pacific, which it reiterates witout the correction of a | oty single mistake or the improvement of a | and a car was fur single weakness. If he has noted the perva- | murshal while m sivo and emphatic popular uprising against reck, but the afterward.” thay this last development will lead to an investigation which will drive these criminals eut of Dakota county. been most nggressively busy in poison- b ing the minds of the Indians against MORGAN CRANE, who is trying to fly the proposed arrangement, and with | yig political kite in Loup county, will what degree of success the situation at | fn4° out that the old thing wobbles this time amply attests. But there are | paqly, Traitor Crane cap’t use the indications that these murplots are now | people of his district as a tail for his losing ground, and once the Indiuns | ouping aspirations. hed the aforesaid ing the services, [ ' IN no other city of the country would a valuable franchise such as the one granted to the Horse Car company on the Eleventh street viaduct be given failed to derive instruction from it, or to be | went into the company for $815. which | oo boegin to manifest discrust of them in B ] 7 and himself. He is content still to recom- | joke of this article unmlh':.\vhx«n La ha! away to a corporation without\compen- | considerable numpers it will not be dif- VOICE OF THE STATE PRESS, mend u free trade policy as the best means | mon soon ull‘u‘l' ',’"'G".'”"“.rm'.'l:"‘.”""l_}l [ was, howov, sation, The building of the!viaduct | ficult to bring over the whole body. of reducing the surplus revenue, and to urge private office of Mr, C er, uskiv sidered hims that his wife be added to h . : if he had a team vearly pass, in compensation of T Wwas & severe tax on the property owners of the district assessed for its construc- tion, The Omaha Horse railway did not spend ene cent on it. Nevertheless, that corporation is given the use of the bridge without being required to con- tribute aven to the expense of keeping the bridge dn repair. Ianot thi:, a fli- -grant disregard of the interests of tax- payers on the part of the city council Py Tho statemont s that the more intelli- | | ll?m:: :::gv':::';"{fi:li.:gl..rff‘...rfff.".j geut Tndinns are doing their bost for [ 1At L e b Ete Con e hen. tho the treaty, and it is believed tobea | i 00q will have loss interest in buying practical certainty that when the tribes | gove omcers. have discussed it to thelr sal-| gy 0y Telograph: Congressman McShane isfaction, and this they havo | il accept the nomination for Goveruor. an unquestionable right to do, and | Suill the people of the state will have some when they find they have received all | thing to say and MeShane knows exactly the concessions they can hope for, they | how thoy will say it. will sign the treaty almost unanimously. | Nemaha Grauger: The democrats of upon the country the alleged duty of surren- dering to foreign mnations those benefits which have bocn seoured by protection, und | o jonyors in its behalf, After he had which can be proservad only by maintaining | gaien his seat and stated his cas the protective theory. bt Chicago Tribung (Rep.): The president | yud coming, ¢ looked him square in the face | The exper d: *Lammon. are you the m have been interesting for bim to have ex- [ nnd now have the cheek ask for = plained why o-round hundred thousand office | puss for your wife over the road?” Driuk Multo, 25 —~ nents w : motor on the Brooklyn has uow been in oMce nearly four years and | shal who has just been paid 8515 for two | have proved so successful tha fails o tell us how the sole issue upon which | days' work—quadruple the amount you | lie trial trip will be made to Fort Ham- he was elected has progressed It would | had a right to charge under the law-= | ilton in a few days. K Phis provoked a great laugh. ug but ‘@ portion of two days to “Ironing? Shirt collars are unkuown his plan of tarif® reform, he has clearly | transuct the business. Lammon’s bill | o\ the peaivie. [think I have a fow A o here, but where I haveu warned by it to the advantage of his party | after quite a wrangle was puid. The | i, Troniug? Starching? Ha, ha, ha, beeame too little for me cen Verdi and Humboldt station, [ ])id you ever try starching or iron- 10 NO- +, told that a man oon- entitled to take a wilo a dollar to puy the the ents a bottle. Wis | papson, not neeéssarily n wagon, al- faithiul services to the company wnd his | 4,ough that looked better for the home- th the electrical City railroad pub~ THE STANDARD TIME. —— A Chaptor on Horology That Wil Prove Interesting. Four Hours Difference Between San Francwco and the Eastern Coast of Maine, S —— t of timo f« wholly arbitar; Luractor, bioauss the actial wnd tha four clocks wgree only a8 to locel time on fou duys ‘n i Aprit 15, June 14, Augnst and Docamber 3, ity applies eqtiaily”e local stan iards used n this countr troubls to practical men was the iact that there Wits four (ours differance hotwee runcis co and the eastern portion of Maine, Tho ado) ton of both Washington and Now Orleans tine @ 0 single standard was open to the same ob- foetion, © iho great change (st would have to he made to maka 1t 1¥ o'clock, noon, in ull parts of the county e samo_ tiine would serious- 1y interfe 11 changs ull old customs and usages, Prof, Abbey sugeested the welts for tse in this couns 10 and 12) degrees of one 1 b two of these point unimportant differonces any 05 where two Delts meet, and then in pisshig from one belt + thero i fu 1o hours difference in Npiest and Wost cons oy ised, e eariy b y of clocks atd watehes is e doped fiso much obsearity that it would be most impossible to point out any individusl Who could with propriety be ciled the inventor, ks werce known in Italy as early us part of tho 15th or the beginning of ev. ‘The middle of the lth cen: 15 (o be the tine which affords the irst vid f tho ext of what would a clock or regilatod Tio . Tiie first clock at Bologna w up in 1358, ¢ dus Dasypodius 4 W clock crected at Ntrasbu that there was s had oue in 1 rom tho evide hore adduced 15 that & weil regulated horologls enl machine is neithor of 8o anciont a date s O WIS Suppose, Nor get the more recent vention of the lust (o _centures and that the noi certainly Known. 8o numerous oveities in the clock and watch ia the last fow years that the ation of the names of the inventors 1py & considerable spice, ng (he many expert watchmakors in i 1% cne, Mt. B, M. Boyer, w ‘n inter- o worked at hi I velry No 24 South 1 Mr. Hoyer is & ot Denmark, and_came to this city from there aboat tiree ?'oau wyo, he sayve: U first notieed thers was'something the mate tor with me when [ was about 1y years old, and Erow worse until it became al- My head ached me and 1 hud the most excrucinting pains over my eyes; my e, TOWInR we my Bosa was eontinually stopped up. irst one sde, thon the othier, and in the morning I could blow dry, hard scibs from it T had a continual Aropping in the back part of my throat, which cansed an unpleasant hawking and spitting and caused my throat to be quite sore most of the o u»;my\uuga were sore and I hud an awful tightiess on iy chest, making it ditficult, for mo to breuthe at timek, particularly was this noticenbly at night when 1 would® retire: I tren have to got up and sit in & chair 8o able to hreathe: this of course would e to get but littls sleep and make me r active work the next day. | was both- ered considerably with my stomueh, too, and to make a long story short I was aboiit as misers able a sufierer from eatarrh as ean be found. I road the advertisements of Dr, C. M. Jordan inthe daily pipers and found ‘the symptoms there described to fit my case so well that I called on him and was examined, ana he told me that it catarrh and that T had some olypus tumors growing in my nose that would Bitvarto o removed. Ho ronioved them, and, the treatment, he gAve mo soon brought m2 out! awell man. I treated for three montha aa#d my nose and head Is clear. No more headaches, no move pain over the eyes, no moro sore throat nor hawking and spitting, and when I' retire at night it 15 toa good and Tofres ag sleep, and do not have te getup to beable te Lreathe, What bothers me now iy that there are <o many peo- ple i this city, ono Sees them overy day on the Btreets, who can not say they have heard their natural volce for a long 11me, who have not had night's rest for months, and who are in ual misery, all 0WIng to i chronic case of Ccatireh, but thote s no necessity for such things as long as there is a do whe. can and will_cure it, and do it cheap!y, too, I s surprised at tho cost of his treatment, I suppe that it wonld cost quite a sum of money und that I would have to lay off from work, but 1 was agreeably disappointed as it costbut a nominal sum, and Tdid not lose a day from my usual ooeupition. e following are tie syuptoms tond by Mr. Boyer and which convin i that he had ens tarrh, Kead them, if 5o, then you too have ca- tairh, —_— SOM HING WORTH KNOWIN The Beginning and Progress of a Dis- ease 80 Common in this Climate. A Few Symptoms of Disease That May Prove Scrious to You. Doyou have frequent fits of mental deproy slon? Do you experfence ringing or buzzing noises in your ears? Do you feel as thongh you must suffocate when lying down? Y Are you troubled with a hacking congh and cneral dobility? ECNTG your evex zenerally weak and watery and trequently inflamed? Does your voic a linsk, thick sound and anasal sort of twan Is yon breath fraquently oftensive from some unaccountable cav Have you i dull, oppressive headache, gener- ally locited over the oyes? Do you congh froquently in the eifort to clear ) Are you losing your se smell and 18 your sense of taste becoming dul ? * Does your nose always feel stopped up, fores i to br through your mouth? Do you freque 73, Dartjcutanly s Y the floor? when st G 4 coustant desire to hawk Spit ot a oss quantity of phiegm ! Do you rice from b us tired and woal woro the ngit befoge and a8 th Wanted to lie there foreve 14 Vo thront flled with phie 1 only be discharg Thawking o fonully wake fron D with a start and £ s 1t you had just V horrile doath by choking? you lost all fnterest in your calling or saros, wil mnbition gono, iorent whether to morcow or doad? Lwith a discharge from the ptimus watery and excegs 0 oltensiver whove ara some uf the many symptom Atarti and the beginning of luig woubles, A th hundred will have wll of themn, Dut every one nffected will hive & foiv or many of them. The grcater or more serfous your Symproris, the more dangerous your condition, nis cluss OF disease 18 troatad very sue ully by Dr. MeCoy or his associntes. The many fi cases reported throusgi the columns of tho daiiy Japers proves Lhis, ind statement pube (shed 14 substantially the sam patient cuved. Dr, MeCoy u Uise 1o secret nostrums, but eure dis thelr skiilfal combinstion of the 1 Je les, applied in the MOt appr ner, and by using thoe latest and rocom ppliances known to the pre sion ro Do ¢ thon 8 1, uu st t nt ph stcinna hive achieved a_ snc aring dis oise which few or no other doctors can dupl cate. J. CRESAP McCOY, (Late of Relleyne Ho ital, Rew York,) Bune by DOCTOR CHARLES M. JORDAN, (Late of the University of New York City and¥" Howurd Universify, Washington, D, C. HAB OFFICES No. 810 and 311 Ramge Building Corner Fitteonth and Harney sts., Omala, Neb, where all curable cases are treated | with success. Note—Dr, Charles M. Jordan lias bsen rest. dent physician for Dr, McCoy, in Omaba, the pust year and {5 the physiclan who hag made the cures that have been published weukly iu this paper. Medlcal diseases troated skilifull tion, Bright's diseass, Dyspepsia, and all NERVOUS DISEA; cullar (0 the sexes & spe CUKED Comsumpe tism, A pas CATARL CONSITLTATION at ofce or by " hours—{ito 11 . i, 2604 p.1n., 740 8p, ay oflice hours feoin O &, 1 1p. 1, (lorresponudente recelves prompt wisention. My diseases ipe treated suscessiully by Dr, Jordou througn the maiis,aid 1t s tius poisiLie for tho<e unable to ikl o jouriey to obia) BECCESSFUL HOSPITAL TUEATMENE AT THEIK HOMES,