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THE DAILY BEE. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERMS OF 8UBSCRIPTION. Patly Mornihig Edition) {ncluding Susna Brr, One Year ;.rr’u\ Months ‘or Three Months. Mok OMAHA B address, One Y g OMAHA OFFICENOS ST ANDOIS FARNAM STREET NEw YORKOFricE, ROOMS 14 AND 16 TRIBUNE BCIDING, WASHINGTON OFFICE, o FOURTEENTH STHEET, sav HEE, mailed to au: CORRESPONDENCE munications relating tonewsand edl. torinl 1 ¢ should be addrassed to the Epitoi OF 11 DR BUSINESS LETTERS, All business lettors und romittances should be addressed to The Bee PUBLISHING COMPANY, OMAIA, Drafts, cho ks and posioffice orders to Do mn e payabié to the order of the compa Al cor The Bee Pablishing Company, Proprictors. . ROSEWATER, Editor, THE DAILY BE Sworn Statement of Circulation. Stateof Nebraskn, | unty of Doulas, | l Teschuck. Ushin; v«ums wetual circulation of Iy week ending Septombe Eund Mon: Tue Wednediy Thursday, Sop. fduy, 8¢ Eati Avorage y of The Bee Pub- swear that the BxE for the 5, 1645, was as follow 18, 15,024 it 18070 15,080 1800 15111 18056 30, 11 TZSCHUCK. and subscribed in ptember, A. D, 1835, . Notary Public, Eworn to hefore me presence this 15th Etate of Nebrask ¥ of Do Deing first duly sworn,de- is secretary of The i that wotual > ik DAy Bee for L was 11,348 conle October g5 coples; — for No ) 1887, 1 tor December, 1 01 cop: fes: for January, 55, 15,24 copies: for February, 1888, 15,402 coples: M irch, 154K, 10,680 coples: for April, 188, 18714 ¢ for May, 18, 18,151 coples; for Jurie, Ik tor July, 185, 18,083 coples; for Anigust ( dally errculation of month of the 18 fox Eworn to before me and ribed Presence this sl duy of Kept A . P.FEIL Notary I’VIM i m) Prancis \ Charles Adams g enthusiastic in telling the Boston peo- ple about Nebraska’s big corn erop. M. MAYNE suceeded in inducing the city council to accept his resignation. Now let We, Us & Co. step in and name his successor. ‘Wiri all the precautions taken to prevent the spreading of yellow jack in Florida, there is little hope to kill the insidious pestilence until juck frost visits the soutl Tue report that Posumnster Galla- gher had consented to poke a printed copy of the Mills tariff speech in every lock-box of the Omaha postoffice lacks confirmation. CONGRESS is slowly adjourning. Itis disintegrating itself by ones and by twos. If this keeps on nothing but the skeleton will be left by the time the present session is ended. T dismissal of Mr. IR, D, Wilbanks, the superintendent of mails in the Chi- eagopostoftice, for **pernicious nctivity may reuct soriously on Mr. Clevelanc professions as a civil service reformer. THE mayor was expected to hand in the name of a successor to Mr. Mayne on the board of public works, and the chair- man of the committee on judiciary found it most convenient to be absent from the mecting. Ir THE reward offered for the appre- hension of Tascott, which is now twenty thousand dollars, be made large enough, he may take it iato his head to turn up at Chicago and claim the money. Worse men than Tascott have been cleared by Chicago justice. As A newspaper manager Cal. Brice 18 N0 more a success than as a “‘rainbow chaser.” The Now York Star has been in his hands only a few weeks and the whole staff of the paper has struck for pay for the second time. Evidently New York journalists do not trust the democratic national committee with the prospects of defeat so very near at hand. “ONLY A FA most disrepy who keeps up a ro upon Attor- ney General Leose, isa B. & M. hireling who once achieved fame as the mana- ger of a fraudulent insurance company down in Beatrice. It isin accord with the eternal fitness of things for such cattle to attack a state official who has had the manhood to discharge his duties fearlessly. SENATOR ALLISON says that the re- publican tariff bill will be reported be- fore the presidential election, and will provide for a reduction of from sixty to seventy millions in the revenue. With a little patience the country will be given a tariff which even its enemies will be obliged to acknowledge asa faarver solution of the difficult problem -of taril reduction than the sectional Mills bill. Tue New York Sun appeals to Mr. Cleveland to call in “Brother Vilas.” Tt is to be hoped the president will give no heed to this counsel. Mr. Vilas has done a good work for the republican party. No one who has talked for the democracy in the present campaign #aid so much of which the republicans could make advantageous use as did Secretary Vilas in his bombastic speeches to the people of Wisconsin. Furthermore, the example of a cabinet minister under this reform administra- tion actively engaged in the campaign s not at all injurious to the republican cause. On all accounts it is to be hoped the rhetorical secretary of the interior will be kept in the field. THERE may be some intoresting dis- closures connected with the dismissal of the superintendent of mails in the Chi- cago postoffice. The charge of insub- ordination was perhaps well founded, but it appears to be also the tact that this was due to the knowledge possessed by the superintendent regarding the assessmont of clerks in the office under circumstances which he knew to be 1m- proper, and which he had the manliness to condemn. Under the present post- master, who is an 0ld democratic politi- eian, the Chicago postofiice has been a good deal of a political machine. The dismissed superintendent is now in a position to tell what he knows without fear or favor, and it is more than likely 10 be interesting if he sball disclose it. A Misleading Leador. John G. Carlisle, who. was renomi- nated for congross on Tuesiny, has beon rogardod one of the fairest of the democratie leaders, as he is confossod 1y one of the ablest, but his repatation for and fairness must suffer if ho on talking as he did to his constit- nts aftor his renomination. Mr, Car- an certainly atford to ba entirely candid and truthful when addressing o Ken audic because the aemo- y in that stato does not increasod. But whenever of the houss of reprosanta- ays anything in public it is - tended for the earsof the entive country, which plains why he isuncandid with his own people when his personal inter- ests and those of his party would be equally well subserved by talling them the naked and exact truth. Mr. C. lisle's misrepresentations are for ov effect, In his speech to his .-mwmu nts Mr. ‘arlisle said that *“the republican pu h 1d substantially declared in its plat- form in h\nx of reducing the revenue by incr taxes.” The speaker of the | is the first man, far WO are aw to put this interpretation on the republican platform, and we may be sure if there was any ground for it other democrats would long ago have made the discovery, and Mr. Carlislo himself would not have waited uutil now to announce it. But there is no ground for such an interpretation, and nobody understands thisany botter than Mr. C He knew when he made the declaration quoted that ho was de- liberately misleading th who would accept what he said as political truth, and to do this was to play the part of the most contemptible sort of a dema- gogue. In another respect the speaker of the house misleading. Ie said the demc arty had been struggling to devise schemos by which the surplus could be gotten rid of and im- plied that its failure was due to the obstruction of the republic: party. Can any one who with the record of the democr during the past three years call to mind any plan its representatives in congress have suggested for getting rid of the surplus and returning the money to the people? The late Samuel J. Tilden did suggest a plan very soon after the dem- ocratis administration came in, but not the slightest attention was given it at Washington. Republicans in congress have repeatedly pointed out that the surplus could be restored to the peo- ple by purchasing bonds with it, but for more than two ye: the administration declined to do this except to the extent required for the sinking fund. The president and his first seeretary of the treasur, quibbled about their authority to buy bonds, and not until congress passed a joint resolation declaring that the au- thority of the treasury to purchase bhonds with the surplus was complete under then existing law would M Cleveland permit the secretary of the treasury to use any part of the surplus for this purpose. And even sinco then he pur ed but sparingly, pre- ferring to allow the banks to derive the benefit of the use of some sixty millions of the surplus. But there is one vespect in which the democratic party has struggled to prevent a further accumulation of the surplus, and not unsuccessfully. That is in increasing the ex ditures of the government to unprecedented figures, so that at most the addition to the surplus for the cur- rent fiscal year will not exceed fifteen million dollars, and there may be none atall. In this particular there has not been sufficient obstruction on the part of the republicans. Demoeratic extrav- agance has been allowed to proceed un- checked, and as a consequence the peo- ple will have to pay a larger bill for the support of their government than they » paid in a year of peace. Carlisle referred to the remark Blaine regarding trusts, with the obvious design of holding the re- publican party responsible. The re- mark of Mr. Blaine was unfortunate, but the responsibility for it rests with him alone, Tt happened that long be- fore this utterance was made the republican party, throngh its national convention, had placed itself on record regarding trusts in language so plain that no one can misapprehend its meaning, while the democratic convention had mnot a word to say concerning these combi- nations, But if the attitude of the re- publican party regarding trusts wevo not defined, what has the democratic party done respecting them of which it has any right to boast? It has simply investigated two or three of the great trusts, and as a result the chairman of the house committee that made the investigation, Mr. Bacon of aid in a speech in the house that he doubted the power of congress to interfore with the trusts, The position of this democtatic repre- sentative was not exactly in line with the view expressed by Mr. Blaine, but it was not ver ay from it. The fact is apparent that the democrats in congress have not intended to legislate against trusts, and Mr. Carlisle 15 un- candid in claiming any special virtue for his party in this regard, A political leader of the character and ability of Mr. Carlisle cannot ben- efit his party or advance himself in the respect of the country by attempting to misload the poople, by false pretences, and by employing the expedients of the demagogae. This is a campaign of in- telligence, and the people are thinking more carefully and earnestly than al- most ever before. The leader who will exert the greatest influence is he who discusses the issues intelligently and with absolute fairness and candos candor go neod to b the spen tiv A tsidoe S0 arlisle. is The Pacific States. The national committees ol both the republican and democratic parties arve proposing to ymake a vigorous campaign in the Pacific states. The democrats profess to be hopeful of carrying Cali- fornia, on the ground that General Har- rison’s Chinese record will lose him votes there, but the toue of the repub- lican papers of that state dooes not indi- cate that there is any disaffection in the party. California has always been close, and very likely if the xnrm isgno nent * this would aava ate. o proini- republicans small chance of carrying But the people of California profoundly interestod in the ‘tariff quostion, and it i3 believed there dre thous of mocrats engaged in growing wool and fruits who will record their votes against the democratic policy of making the former free and materially roduc the tarif on the latter. Ex-Congressman Converse, of Ohio, 0 clear-honded democratic poli- tician, recently said that he believed it hardly possible for the democracy to carry California with the policy of the Mills bill to defend. That measure at- tacks the two great industries of the state, employing a nst amount of labor and capital, and in the present status of the Chinese question the people of Califor- nia will be likely to vote as their ma- terial interests prompt, rather than to waste their influence on a matter that bids far to be of no further serious trouble to them. It therefore appears reasonably safe to count California in the republican column by a plurality fully as | s that received by Mr. Bluine, which was a little over thirteen thousand, the question of prohibiting Chinese immigration being then the issue. As to Oregon, there is no reason to suppose the popular sentiment there undergone any change since the . when the repub- seven thous- On the contrary, the s that the republican ma- jority will be increased in November, in order to emphasize the protest nst the house tariff bill, which the demo- crats refused to pay any attention to when made before the passuge of that measure. Nevads vied by the democ contest, and thero is not the ability that the state this year. These three states cast fourteen elec- toral votes, and all signs indicate that they will go to Harrison and Morton. wore year the nds rge tate b, has never ats in n pr lenst prob- will go that wa Tue high-salaried clerks in the cit, much needed rest by vote of the council. Thore must be some relaxation from incessant work, and the city ball match will furnish an opportunity for it. The many hard- working people who nceessarily will lose valuable time in order to attend to busin with the city officials on that day, will have to call again, They have no rights worthy the respect of so august a body as the Omaha city council. supernumerary offices will have a ay afternoon, :Ns out that Prof. Richard A. death at New York was not ellow fever as at first suspected. The diagnosis proved that the unfor- tunate scientist died of a severe attuck of matavial fever. In consequence the board of public health of that city is d by the press and publie for dragwing Mr. Proctor to a pest house, which undoubtedly aggravated his sick ness and muy have caused his death. It TU. Proctor’s due to censury Same. Sioux City Jowrnal, No, it isn't just accurate to call Mana Brice a “rambow chaser,” as the demoeratic New York Sun does. Brice hasthe pot of gold in his hand and he is looking for the base of the rainbow, not to get gold, but for a place to put it “where it will do the most good.” —_— Can't Hide the Discolored Optic. New York Tribune. Democratic and assistant democratic news- papers are consuming a large amount of their vital force in the hopeless effort to demon- strate that Maine did not give Grover Cleve- land a pretty bad black eye. The longer they labor at this impossible undertaking the more panfully distinct becomes the sable opuc. Has Almost Got There. Davenport Tribune, Rev. George E. Pentercost, of suggestive name, affords a remarkable instance of how a man can graduate or gravitate downward, was fivst a Baptist, then a Congregation- t, then an Independent. About this time he left the republican party. Next he be- came au infidel, and now he is a cemocrat. He is fast approaching shcol A State of Deviltry. Cleveland Leader. By endorsing Hill the democratic party of New York endorses corruption, the degrada- tion of polit and all manner of deviltry, and in New York democracy is as respect- able as in any other commonwealth, The mask behind which Cleveland went into ce is thrown aside, Hill is the type of democracy, and it must stand or fall as the party of all that honest men hate in public affairs, et Trusts in n New Aspect. Philadelphia Record. By the formation and development of Trusts a new aspect has been given to the affaits of business. Formerly, the manufac- turer or tradesman had only to think of meeting competition from those engaged in similar business; now, he finds it more neces- sary to protect himself from the exactions of combinations which have seiz upon his sources of supply of raw material, Agaicst these he1s in turn forced to combine with his fellow-tradesmen, with the result that ihe great body. of consumers are compelled to suffer from a double exac —~— Cleveland's “Luck" Leaving Him, Chicago Tribune, Then, too, these devotees of luck must ro member that nothing is more dangerous than uninterrupted and unbroken success. What aman has in this world that he must, as a rule, pay for. Now, at this critical moment, a8 he is aiming at the highest point of Amer- ican ambition—a re-clection to the presi- dency—the Fates will demand their pay for what he has had, and defeat will come upon him. Like the pitcher in the fable, he is going once 100 often to the well. *Your luck is too dangerously great,” said the Wise Man to the Tyrantof Samos. “Iam going to leave you, for something is sure to happen.” And it was not long before it came. e Step Down, Brice. Chicago Times, But the committees, useful as they are, and money, indispensible as it is, are not all there is of a campaign. Indeed, the mass of the electors is never touched by these com- mittees. The great body of voters read newspapers and seldom hear speeches. Their opinions are formed without the aid of any committees and they would scorn money as a bribe. The eloction, therefore, would be held and 90 per cent of the vote would be cast if no such organization as a national committee existed. It is easy, therefore, to over estimate the influence of committees on cam- paigns. The capacity of the people for self. HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20. 1888, | Buffalo a March next, ho Hias show 6 hims | loss of government, will best he shown whon no com- mittees assuing to control and di - The Chine Chicago News, Cléeveland is privato lifo after if President phe Dl will not be will at least no longer be the rep and exomplar of a party of “ch tho shafts and arcows position party, barbed and feath ,nough to admit thud the blundors—worso than crimes, politically his own followers and adherents, G AT The growth of this lnuh of union veteran rs and sailors is most interesting and April 6, narkable. It dates from when Major B, F. Stephenson, field, T11., who had been surgeon of the Four- teenth 1llinois, mustered in the Decatur, in that state, monies betokened the elaborate which the organization was to assume. original intent secms to have beer society in Springfield, but ci led to the printing of the propo ritual by some veterans in Dec the first muster there. At soon afterward, Post No The project was taken all over the country, that year posts were organizod at well as the west. Then and department commandy vember the nment at Indianapolis, encampment was held at* Philadel in 1568, the third came the next ye cinnati, the fourth followed at the fifth at Boston, the sixth the seventh at New Have Harrisbu at Philadelphia again, the elevent dence, the twelfth at Springheld, , th thirteenth at Albauy, the fourtoenth at Day- ton, the fifteenth ay teenth o Indianapol teenth at Portland, Francisco, the twent, the first at St. now the twenty-second at Columbus. LABOR NOTES, umm Brothers of Neun . have offored a prize of best means of preventing th dust by the workmen slag. As a general thing the shoomakers' profits are better in this country than in An American shoomaker can mik to himself of 6o conts what an £ maker has to pay $1 for, while ture of ladies' shoos tho e ts in this cents in Bngland. A chance for mechanical fered by a_railway depa t land, which has issued an_ order all engines traveling kilometers an hour to use a speed which must mark correctly tie variations of speed. A good market is can furnish the best artie Building stones made of corn object of a new Italiaupatent. pressed by machinery into forms bricks and held tozether by wire, made water-tight, by molds are very hard and weight is less than one-third nollow brick, and they can The Americ: dod utterly worthl u thrown aside penters and wos nds u u > into fauc open str of never s, and 1workers of good prices as being made’ of lish ouk. wood rality have a astor oil and oli tained they hav future all exp. be lubric h oils are to be used for lubrication, STATE AND Nebraska Jottings. Tho Plattsmouth schools opencd rollment of 70 N given orders Achi r oil ylinder celebrated The district court of Custer co session, has 200 ¢..ses on the doc In nine mo has recorded 6, The first white frost at Norfolk c > was de S I Ast week. on Tuesday, but no dama, county woman w. 1-foot tape worm wster's ice house has be combined school hou hall. attsmouth youths John Bauer and his son two w been fined #1535 The fourth annual fair County Agricultural and Driving clation will be held at Auburn Oc Thedford, in Thor paper, the Tribune last week. It is o wducted by Baum, and is republican in politics. J. H. Burrowes, a Burwell struck by lightning last week across a bridge. H and the team of mu knocked senseless. An eastern tend last week on a sur wost. While cleaning up his re hotel in_preparation for tomary fostiv cowbov, chary finger, oy of the wild meetin; the lowa, Sioux is Dblessed City churches. Dubuque citizens are trying to raise a bonus for a £120,000 hote “he first motor for railway has arrived. Potatoes bring 30 port and onions 25 cents The Congregational socic has extended a call (o Rov. ln, Mich. b Sholl, a resident of Cart quarter of a contury, died last eighty-nine years. Only twenty of the 100 or of De: intoxicating liquors. There is talk of having a ho Scranton this fall and-giving a p the best colts in the county. Dr. Jennie McCo summa Women,” in the July number of teriy Journal of Inghrioty. A Waterloo the Des A P more cook like their mothers-in-law, Tue newly issued city duw 83,000, estinating two and to the ground at the same time papers containing the news from rived at the postofice. The elevator in August Anderson's furni- ture store in of forty-eigh nawmed Black, who were ou it suffered conchission of the sp injuries which will result fatally. Masonville has a scandal on h foux City dropped at Cook, wife of a prowinent resident of that place, eloped one day last week w and attractive mun pamed Eddy, wi me time past bid been employ o he pair hied themselves away fleld, Wis., where they were warried. ¢ Blunder. relegated a8 the foremnost citizon of without its compensations, He | Bven then th d rules and tur, and 2 wi up and came departments s, while organization was already sive enough to hold its first national o The second Washington, 7, the ninth at Chicago, Baltimore, the seventeenth ver, the eighteenth at Minneapolis, the twentieth at San irchen, Ger- g inhalation of engaged in grinding 1 manufi penditure of 23 ountry is equivalent to that of geniuses is of- more than The sonking with tar rong n red oak,which has long as unfit for use by the car- this , while and similar 'ERRITORY. church and who of the as county, has the first issue while riding was slightly 8 he was ar rfoot landed at olver at th gun and the tenderfoot is now with Moines Belt cants o bushel Moines have made application to sell en of Davenport, has a of “Clinical Cases of Inebri woman who knows how make pie, is accumulatiug a fortune selling her producets to young housewives who can't tory of Daven- port gives that place a population of ov thre persons to every name contained in the list. A singular coincidence occurred at Maquo- kota one day last week. A banner bearing the portraits of Cleveland and Thurman fell feet and Anderson and a man e and oth | aherilt of Dilavare county phrsued rect yotars, honeymoon in the oounty jail. Dakota, A union femperance league has anized ut’ Rapid City he highest price for hoy Yankton was paid on Monday— 8 his T'wenty stacks of grain aprairie fire noat about $1,500. M. J. Starr, of Spink county, comb resentative | two callings of sheriff and umps,” the | his name, ho's a sparkler. of the op- [ - The territorial vetorinarian has o red by tho | the infected ocattle in Yankton of | says the discase is not blackles, reported. Tho s to the 4th of elt philo e wvere dostr republic as largest senior class o stitution. The shooting scrape Lookout camp, near has had the effect of driving out saloon in the camp. A Rapid City man who is now < writes home that he has re nation that the 1. & M. will buil ad into the Black Hills dur ling which occurred near De ked out. ‘The con boasted by which oc 1586, of Spring- post at core- s characte Tho 1 to found umstances arst, and Miss Ida Watkins, In i of the event the Deadwood Tim 1 wa g know, by h a desi ? appy couple to make it known it w rday.” s have to Springfield, as formed. rapidly during the enst as beon_compl ob Astor s, The mai on the g 110 feet high, a houso 42 nd 44 feet high, th and with tower the sume as ' th ux alls granite will be used the KEELY WILL FLY with a tower by No- exton- - national Iphia e par at Cin Put orih s Philadelphin Record: “Yes, wue that Keeley has invent motor,” said v of Motor company about a dispat Cleveland, 1e eighth at the tenth h at Provi Mass,, the an offic the ch from Pavis r such an invention. ished and boxed up for a year, the time when he shall take out for his other motor. The pate the acrial machine will the sume time. It will be dep upon the motor, and nothing done until that is completed. Keely has received a letters from stockholdersof the ec in answer to his recent circu with a single exception ull the have expressed themselyes ing opposed to the acti the New York directc in ing suit against favor of his propositon for sganization of the company. of the stockholde words of encouragement, and ventor is confident that he will ported by a controlling inte stock at the special me One Boston m tation as a s approval of K the six- Den- nine Louis, and 00 for the ko at a cost nglish s in Switze compelling forty-fiv 1 indicator enthy 0 of able rop: entist. pressing wrote: Yo to whoever form the cobs are similar to They are Their that of a get damp been has making histo 4 iod has waited 6,000 an observer. I can wait for will understand and iate coveric So you ing turn you a recording form Ve you | be abund forc The d tin importanc volee L power: of nature and sots them a for the w o moment the most famous of men and _wi mumber of 4 ggsurily, command all h ds. aining the ) L P s Pullman Started Lite With ‘snhv Orleans Picayune: [ the orge M. Pullman in a p 'y are to t hie was the third mincral His_two eld: uished mini mother was left a widow wi dren of tender was twenty-two yours old, trade or profession. He had, accumulated a small capit niture business in Albion, which he consumed in discha obligs ness, and the world to tenance and bued with pr from the his fath and inv he s building which ne tors, L fiv wit with an en- its fif- ty, now he was struggle for education, their r county Deey ourred example and who had been ntor, it was not long ured contracts to made n vation for ome, elieved of converted the o on 3 tion, but saved the to the state of New York in lieu ing damages to the adjacent bui as the state had been previow demned to do. About this tim sary to raise the buildings . and Mr. Pullman sawa g portunity for the exetrcise of and ability sult. He moved to tracted to me which all Park tob a news- pearing Cowles & man, was pibid wrgo hrick bui Iving wi e wwhile, in 1858, boon directed to the nece {ng car, growing out of the had tried tho hunk of a for that purpos: In 1859 he alterad two ¢ cago & Alton and conv sloeping cars; but shed the “Pioneor : his car conveyed tho Lincoln to its vlace of rest, and able it to pass over the road, on of its size, platforms tions had to be alte safe passage, his mi ity of et t car in Niobrara and woolly g the cus was dis- s for th minus a rted the 1874 he bu which forty-six nd other ¢ at Daven- f Towa Falls Cossar of | o 7o P+ for Septe me usual gener continued: “Aund b mighty blessing, the R., the A. M. and B. C. R. R.,a P. D. G. R. R., which thou know being rapidly built toward ou Bless, also, the street car lir be speedily built to thine hon: glory and’ the advancement of opolis. Ior and the new church, which the tallest steeple in the | would ask thy choicest blessings zus well to be begun n ch but undeveloped « sroposed telephone line, ights, and the many other rgan in D M After hage for a 16810 week aged 90, o druggists rse fair in rewium for the Quar to al hoomingest city in the state. thou lookest down ou Highlan most beautiful addition on the footsto and selling at on lot, we would ask thee tob hundred new houses to be ere this spring. ee-quarters 258 U when the Maine ar- Bullulo 'z people ‘out on L sked his wife after dear, the Bible say : uliways with you. a distance S the time, ‘Th tured the runaways and thiy willspe ndlord, Hill, & nephewof ¢ yund, yesterday, when him and ting called those and Georg on a trip to Ch cost G. and O. a0 eap- nd their been or- @8 this season at r 100, yed by Aberdeen, the loss being hines tho Liko xamined county and at firsy or class of the Sioux Falls Baptist college contains twelve members, 1t is the that in- curred in Rapid City, last weck vhe only in abl d o 1l 1850, eadwood tracting nator ts men- s sy s given sted for emorial n build- 48 fooy \ree sto o oth When His Motor Is Finished He Will Air Ship, it is od an aerial Keel ask to **He has had it fin- niting patents nts for be taken out at endent can be 2o number of mpany ar, and write as be- on of bring- in a_re Ve have sent the in- be sup- in the for isiast consider in course, ex- who my d Let n 11, nec £50. led son of a e chil- who hout a ions incurred by his fathe left with only main- ly im- weiples of probity derived instruction a mech befor £l ssary rvices brought hi ustnds of pay- 1din in Chi- oat op- his 11 in accomplishing that r Chicago and con- lding: advanced his prospects ma nd had asleep- hat_ho tended hicago. e Chi- m into ilt in him body of to en- account ybstrue- red to conform to its gazine the Kuansas minister with a K. R. nd the est ] cit that will or and Boom- g will hav state, W on th Xt week, the mine, the electric improve- ments that will make Boomopolis ti And, as the d, the green ¢ $200 per he one ted there Why didn’t you pray for the poor, Wal- rmon. e poor But I am eastern capitalists are and, Mrs, | altogethos 400 scarce to wasto, I ith & young o for d by Coolk. W Spring- Tue that those three fussy old chaps corner wer w Yorkers, and lou with m . Me and B y. l Hooks'll get shut of thataddition, Juring the first hymn Brother Hooks whispered in the fairly rother yet.’ THE FILTHY WEED A Driaf Aunalysis of the M . Cigar. That smoking is mare or less ious there is not the slightest doubt in the wor but those versed in - patho- gnomonics diffor groatly as to the ab- solute results brought ‘about by this senscloss habit. Of course the emin- ently poisonous nature of nicotinnine is well understood, and to it of course is attributed the evils of the practice of using tobneco. Nicotinnine and nico- tine are two different substances, the former a conerete or solid oil obtained from the plant. It smells like tobacco smoke, tastes bitterish and 1s slightly aromatic and as deadly as the emerald fluid secreted in the tiny cul-de-sacs at the base of the rattle snake's fangs. Nicotine is an oily, limpid, colorless fluid, and is obtained from nicotianine. It has a wenk, brackish taste of to- bacco, and whil ighly poisonous, is not n ¢ so fatal as the o i stance from which it is de Nor it is any wonder that tho use of tobaceo cannot be reasonably expected to evolve benefits to the human system. The inhaling of the vapor made by burning the primeval material from which is extr d such deleteric drugs, drawing it into the lungs and ex- haling it through the nostrils, swallow- ing the juices, must certainly boa str upon the whole system, and as a isequence, injurious, In the weak it can only produse further encrv nd lay a foundation for g ity, decrepitude and wh in the robust it may only transitor- dim the luster of the and unsteady the nerves, but not bo noticed. Of course, some constitutions can stand more than othors of any sor of abuse. However, some authorities, and of prominence, too, claim there is nothing inimical to good health in either the practice of smoking or chow- ing, but instead is a delicate stimulant to the body and the mind, and it is this sort of stimulous that every busy worker in the great hive of Lifé needs oftener than is expected. But in refuta- tion of the non-injurious consequences of the habit, it is' but nocessary to in- quire why isit the physician o often advises the discontinuance of the use of tobaeco? However, it isn’t my mission to decry the practice. Tobacco has been used by all people, all nations, the world » for ages and agesand will con- tinue to be used so long as man exists and the plant grows in the earth. It doesn’t make any difference one way or the other what the resalt of materia medica may be, or what the press may y there will not he one less smoker in lh~\\mhl, nor one less chewer. The need have on been thoso long since deduced by the science of symptomtology and therapeutics. XS YRR, The Origin of a Picturcsque Phrase Let tc Boston Post: “F. D.” wishes to know the in of “puintlng tho town red,” T e it s the para- phrase of an expression that frequently oceurs in an old Irish balledry. In looking over a collection of old Irish war ballads descriptive of the tinary conflicts between tho I s and_the Anglo-Norman invaders of Irclund, I have y fre- itly found phrases closely aKin to nting the town red.” For th h Ke , under lord of Kenil count of West- th Euglish at Ardenycher A. 00 of the tter, the r tells us that the mid- e reddened with from the highlands es in honor of the viet The nlots, 18, wherein the victors dwelt, blazed or with the inhabitants thereof naturall loose rein to their mirthful ties. The fires upon the highlands were the primitive mode of telograph- ing distant kinsfollk and sym the glad tidings and the exubort ultation that follc ) deseribing the efTects of the battlo of Ou art Hill, which was the first en- ement between the Irish insurgents and the English army in the ford rebellion of in I which the insurgents came ious, the local balladist sa; The hills und skies were lat night with be » Wexford’s sons had well avenged e Saxon slaughtered sire Teould cite of other quota- tions showin \l other expressions exactly similar to that of *“'painting the town red.” It was a favorite one with the old Irish bards when depieting the scenoes that follc military triumph on the part of their counteymen. Is it th onable to infer that the phr ainting the town red,” or in- dulg in the wild ics of unlicensed i L had its origin in the way [ al- This is what William M gehan says, and [ believe him most excellentauthority. P.J. A, - Lorne on American The marquis of Lorne says in the September Forum that to foreigners the great nation which is the predom inating power in the new world offers a spectacle of admiration and envy. She is not obliged, through fear of her posi- tion being lowered, to place a trem dous tax on th rning power of her peoplo by igntion of military or naval service. With a muss of ex- ports to offer, and with the immenso population demanding foreign goods she will n time draw more comm to ner than has ever been handled in oh Mooted injue: consumption, and the Ve William Feacha, meath, D. 1 lic chronie night skies we rents of fls and w towns kiudi wor overthrew off seve lude to. stitutions. the history of the world by any em- pire. It is safe to assume thiat her mil- lions will at a future date prefer to have her own flag over the countless cargoes that will pour from and will pour into her harbors from Asia and from Kurope. In compuring systems of government few of the older republics, emp kingdoms are found to enjoy more real stability than the system founded ungder Washington. The American ship of state is built in 50 many compartments that even if several became watcr logged the ship would float. Ti not be said of many older nations, Mer centralization, either iu the hands of a monarch or in the hands of a democratic “chamber,” has reached to such a point that any great popular impulse, any wave of passion promoted by disaster and driven by envy and po may overturn the vessel'and cause it to be me for a time a helpless wreck, This is not conceivable in the case of the United State There is so much check and counter-check, so slow an operation of the forces of movement, that men have time to consider. - e Next to having wise friends in plenty, and fortune to make them doubly yours 50 us well as enjoyment, come good ling and pictur Home Journal and Prac- keeper is just that; and rters of a million fam- So shall you. have the |n~lnl the year September included—why? tical about thre ilies know it. You shall for 10 cent ATale of Interest to Grand Army Men A8 Told by One 0T¢ st McClellan's Mon—A Hero of Three Camp- algn's—The Story in Detail, While enfoying @ fragrant havana in an up town office recontly, the WITter wis an interest- od listener to w spirited conversation between two old soldiers. “They hiad both_fought og the winning side during the late war, and nad not metsin timo, and were ighting their bat- ties over aggain s’ only two old soldlers can, While listening to this talk the thought occured o tho Writer “what & book it would make to mal exper- who'e Into & large sely interesting 8 fend recentl has his atring of oxpel friend for a 1o m hiis bed fo in fact, Kept the write 1 From among lis string the the wiole nfeht following is taken, MR JOHN THORNTON, MrJohn Thornton, u tarmer, rosiding on his farm, situated uhont fivo i 1 had asoldier experience that any mun may bo proudof, - Mr. sted ut the outset of o el dundil the close, lio was vith G an's army in the Peninsula apalicn and was with General Cauby in his ck of Mobile and uia pan was 0150 with General Banks in his serving thr out with tohis country. In spoak experionce Mr. TROrnton Says, o continually exposed to all i 1t Was that the hich of- sarious inte 4 u 4 get and o Kk and was piaced on wus px- and was dis- t1 grew bet (l\l(l RO I know that \nlh Y enthren fhat [ ko Kk list. Whiie on l| Riiinod by tho reimon S rged on Mecomptof rand went hack 1o XYIV com) again, woll ATter 1ho war was over 1 went homo and then I didsutfer with tho catarrh, 1 tried all the doctors about and took enough patent medicines 1o kill R palr of army muies, it I was no bottor and 1 belleve if such thing were possible | was WOl my eyes grew weank III\{ were always watery; my head ached continually and there wasa )H\“lll\i T my eyes as though [ had a steal band around my b 1 and some modern her- cules was riveting it;my throat was sore and [ Was and spitting - morning until night, 1was very nervous too, 1 would often bo workingin the field on my mower when 8 nerv- ous attack wonld come on me, and 1 conld searce- Iy keep my seat and very often I would huve to quit work for the day on mccount of it, My anch was out of r too and altogether ¥ bad w 1 been reading the for sometime and ( that Twould eall on him and 1 did so, 1 went 1||l||hhl‘ nllll o and Wasoxan could eure n t 1 hind had this eatarrh of & more e it turned lice the war. bat [ had had nd could do nothing for me, so I told 1it about seven years, but that uo difference, he commented Uroting me 3 medicine to use at homo and he and was under Lis (reatment and that time ne only saw me 1was too far away from his office eatment. Ile has certainly done for me what many otlier has tried to do and failed. and 1 wani to wive him the eredit for it 100, 1100k my sisier down to the doctor to and she is geiting better very fast and I do ne doubt in the least thai ina short time she will also be cure ve stated, Mr. five miles from Diaix locality, espe Thornton resides about and is well known in that Iy in Hair, whore he gets hi madi. 5 willliig to substantiate the truth of th and wil do <o to anyone who doesno believe it if they will cail to see him or addréss him to Liiair, Neb, an It Be Cured. 1 afe wracterized by of acut h, complicated sometimes w thma, result of aspec pibility on the p: rtan in- dividuais to become influcnced by certain sub- stances, and wlhen the irritating substaices are present'in the atmosphere. “The attack usually hegins with a sensation of tehing in the nostrils, which soon becomes ves intense,and causes violent and prolong ing, A'pricking, burning sensation in tie inner Ot the eye, followed by profuse wi 500N the nose becomes Stopps breathing through it practically fmp: ¥ discharge appears, which soon hecomes ery profuse, which s very irritating to the and upper lip, and the patient makes efforts by immoderate use of the hun kerchlef 1o clear the nose of the cause of irrit tion, and uction. Chilly sensations, ring- ing in the 58 of smell a woutl, tehing of 1 perlodical attac ata As the nflaction 1 and asthma sufferings of the To persons sufle offer a speedy rolic discase musi e tre witis these symptoms we nd permanent cure. The A scivntifieally, that is with a knowledg s can and of methods forremoving e canse, Makiahite t 1ont v edicines and palllative remedies, iy i the disease for a e on'y to break out with increased fu- tensity. How Catarrh Is Produoced. Although taking cold is one of the common- estand most familiar of phenomena, yet the dangersot its neglect in treating and its ulti- mate result are not appr “Ihe rule s to t wear itself out or s ority of cu i an attack of acute in tion of the upp: lenst resistinc cutehing wtion of her. s these attacks na gravity, w itself furiher as rogards lould be sxisting rhaps 80 typoas 1o give trivinl e passed unnoticed; but still wn exi catarrh, the result probably of a neglectad cold and the rencwed attacks to which he individual becones 8o liable, consists in the lighting up of the ol1 troub A8 each fresh attnck substdes, the chronfe trouble makes ilself known by symptoms, fresh colds oceur quency and thero 5 1y establish atarrh of the Annoyane in the thre eyes and bridge oirs, hacking ual dryn raver trotibl 1t 15 vory much tol an ordinary cold 15 s t. It i part has onco e Inflamed it is loft 1 a weakened condi- tion which invites renewed attacks from i very slight cause “Fiim country 15 flooded with patent medictues for the cure of caturrl, which are concocted and made attractive for the expross purpose of makin y. It is utterly impossible to pre pare a sl nedy to meet the different hasos of catarrh. A Ay for e {njurious to another. 1t 15 jus rations, with their *gua; that have weakoned the mujority of sufferers of this of having their disease skilitully oliysician who bas made u study of the | wvery condition, has devised remedies, ing them and with the large ing treated thousands of cases Fo your case comes bafore him. heold le- that “Procrastination 1s the Thief of cmplified than ine d up 10 andl apit own in L deprecated that wllow Buas0 Pemanently Located. Dr. J. Cresan McCoy, late of Bellevue 1ospi- tal, New York, succeeded by Dr. Charles M. Jordan, 'late _ of “the ' Univer sity of New York City, also of Washing- ton, % cated” permanently in the Ra 3 s, Neb., where all curable d ekilifully, Consu Dyspepsia, ltheumat All dlseases pecu Bocause we want your half-dollar for next year, nd it in silver or stamps. The Oc- tober number is on the news stands—6 cents. LADIES HOME JOURNAL, Phila- delphia. Consultation at hours 910 11 &. 1., Sunday Hours, from 9 a, m, to 1 p.m, Corespondence recelves prompt attention N lotters answered unfess ao-ompanicd by & cents in sLalps,