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P i THE DAILY i THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6. 180 BEE. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Daily Morning Bdition) including SUNDAY Tiye, One year #10 00 X Months 50 * Three Months 260 Tve OMANA SCSDAY Brk, mailed toany | dress, One Year o] WrrkLy ik, One Year 300 OMAT A OFPICENOS. 91 AND 816 FATN AM STREET, CHICAGO OFFICE 067 ROOKERY BUILDING RNEw YORKOFFICE, ROOMS 14 AND 15 Tiinu N BUILDING, WASHINGTON OFFICE, No. 613 FOURTEENTH STRERT, CR ) nows and edl. 10 the EpitoR CORRESPON DE! Allcommunications relating 1al matter shonld be address: e 1) NG BUSINESS LETTERS, All business Ietters and remjttances should be addrossed to Titk BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY, MAIA. Drafts, checks And postofice orders to made payablé to the order of the company. The Bee Pablisting Company Prorietors E. ROSEWATER. Fditor. THE DAILY BEE. ent ot Circulation, Sworn State Btateof Nobraska, | County of Nougias, | George I3, Tzscliuck, secretary of The Res Pub Nshing Co ny, Aoes solemnly awear that tha tual cireulation of TiE DALY Bre for the wreek ending February 2, 1880, was as toliow: 1an Jan, Bunda Monday, Tuesday, Jan. Wednesday, Jan, 3, Thursaay, Jan, 31 Fndny, F 1 Baturday, Fel Average. . GEORGE B TZ8CHUCK. Eworn to before me and subscribed in my presence thiy 24 day of February, A, D, 183, Seal N.P. FEIL, Notaty Public. Btate of Nebras a. &b County of Dougias, (5% George It ick, being duly sworn, de- oses and _snys that ublishing company, thag the actial dally circulation of THE DAILY BrE month of Jn iary, 188, 10,200 cop ruary, |55, ples: for March, 1885, Eopias: for AT TRk, Ti44 cople: Tor My, 15, I8 1K copies: tor 3884, 18,3 coples for ‘Angust, 18 Tor Keptember, 1558, 15,154 copl le fs secretary of the les averags tha for 18,163 cop £5r Octobe IEES, was 180K coples: for November. 1835, 18,98 coptes: for December, 1885, 15,22} coplas. worn to befors me ani subscribea i my Presence this ird day of January 1859, N. P. FEIL Notary Public. FIERSON SQUARE can be made into & really beautiful park. LANCOLN \v-\twr(li\\ added one to the growing list of Nebraska tr IN his grasping tendencies to gobble up overything in sight Bismarck is the the Jay Gould of Eurone, TiE architect who planned that cit hall air- flerson sq has ragrance on the desert air, are J CREIGHTON and pany are buried under a landslide wpoor Hascall is used to landslides, know, com- but you Wirh three thousand five hundrod majority holding down theircollin lids the Jefferson square boomers will her after rest in peace. AN excollent way to enhance the walue of real estate is by making im- provements. This 1s sometimes done at private expense. JouN WANAMAKER has bought him- self a house in Washington. That is protty good timber out of which to build a cabinet rumor. TUESDAY was a cold day for every- body. But it was about 40 degrees eolder for Jefforson sauare boomers than for anyone else in the city. THERE is a possibility that certain gentlemen of Douglas county, now at Lincoln, from to-day will be real that after all there is no place quite like home. Tiiis country is hardly ready for a state which would have to take the vote of alleginnce by the aid of an in- gerpretor. This is the trouble with New Mexico. ICEMEN are not saying much lately about the danger of ashort crop. They hope that they did enough talking before the cold snap to bull next sum- mer’s prices. THE vag and the trawmp will now be put to work cleaning the street cross- dogs. Inlieu of a work house and a rock pile the streot crossing is just the proper place. THE notorious Belle Starr is dead. Bho was that ravity in real hifo—a fe- male desperado. As sho had lived, so she died. Any end but violence would have been unfitting. CIRCUMSTANCES suggest that an ex- pert mind reader be put to work upon the president-elect. Such an opera- dion, if successful, would dispel a won- derful amount of suspense. No prnpnmunn should be entertained by Socretary Bayard from Prince Bis- marck regarding the Sumoan difficulty unless it includes the recoguition by Germany of the American porker. T™he oul-l wave x\mwms to be general, @t this point the thermometer foll #ightly bolow zero, At othes places it was 50 far down vhat by contrast Ne- braska seems to be in a warm belt, WARNER MILLER insists still that he fsnot u candidate for'a cabinet posi- tion. If Mr. Miller will look carefully around him he witl observe that fow people are insisting to the contrary, HANGING men for horsestealing will add nothing to the lustre of Nebraska's name. It may, however, serve to ele- wyate the moral tone of the horsethicves, and this object is worth some sacrifice. ALL the Omaha dalies excepting T BeE were noutral with a strong bearing ‘goward Jefferson square. Now wo ex- t to hear them get off their neutral pedestal and tell the peonle that the outcome was just what they expocted and were working for. e—e—ses— WiLLiaM O'BRriex, the Irish patriot, enjoys the sympathy of a large part of #he American people in the harsh and mojust persecution to which he has been subjected by the Balfour adminis- gration. It seems almost incredible #hat the right of free speech, of which ghe English boast so much, should have Brought upon O'Brien’s head the #yranny of an overbearing government, POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN THE | statements than befors by the core- | having been in d. providing for | at Westminister, Windam county, Vt, Feb SOUTH. spondents av Washington and Indfan- | an appropriatioll for such a school. | rusty 6, 1562 i The report of the senate committes | apolis, and thero is venily nothing that [ Thers is also a large number of towns | The school boned at Clear Lake has suthor: which investigated the political outs [ can be accepted as definite and con- | ambitious to be selocted an abiding | vears age for the purpose of building a school rages in Texas will reccive moro atten- | olusive., en with respe to Mr. | place of expectint’ pedagogues. and | bouse tion from the country by renson of the | Biaine going into the state department | these are importining th gislature | different charitable orany 'Svm:lr‘ recent assassination of Colonel Clayton | there is now said to be uncertainty | with more or less generous offers for N6 TAoviag i thy MAtTGr oF mRoridiag in Arkansas than would otherwiss be ! although a fow days ago there | the privile Fhegnnual charge upon ron to lave care of the girls given it. The people had very gener- | appeared to be no doubt in any quarter | the state for instructing toachevs is al- | fof thlen women who fall under the cog ally ceased to concern themselves with | that he would be at the hend of our for- | ready large, and ought not to he in- | ERE I oL eon poniten the accounts of political violence in the | eign affairs for the next four years. So | o d unless thbed! appears to be the | tiary for tie month of January shows the south, and but for the illing of Clayton, | with regard to Mr. Wannamaker the ry best roasond Yot doing so. Sverago number of ".',""”"”}'T"':fi..'”u'ml‘»'.fl evidently from political hatred, would | only evidence that he is likely to be ————— I (ks dvarere not have been aroused to any new in- | in the cabinetis found in the fact that IN a Kansas City court Monday one | number of inmates to be 347, terest im the subject. Th event, | ho has leased or purchased a residence [ prisoner pleadnd guilty to manslaughter wy n however, has again drawn public | in Washington, which is by no means | and received a sentence of two years. [\ o0 (EVER AR e build attention to the unfortunate condi- | conclusive. The national capital is a | Following him adother pleaded guilty | jng association at Kvanston. tion of affaics in some of the | very attractive place for wealthy men | toa burglary, the sole result of which The Rock Springs waterworks will be southern states, and will add force and | who desire for themselves or their fam- | had been the theft of a pie, and the “-vllx :-\!‘wzul.:u[.n _nfi‘.xfl x‘l‘l\l‘lrv:":)i opens, volume to the demaund for federal legis- | jlies the social opportunities to [ same judge sentenced him to three A "::_‘"T:‘ ‘)“r'j:‘:{.; ;‘" ‘l;_“m* ;\il:‘i.‘\\'\lh £ lation to protect all eitizens of that be had there, and the Philadel- | years'imprisonment. These facts show | governor of Wyoming against the proposed tiomin their political rights, phia millionaire merchant might in- | the relative value of life and pie in | oreanization of Natrona county, and tho Regarnng the charges of outrages | vestin a home there without the in- | Missouri, an extremely stupid judge or *"“\"|“"§“'j”“‘“{'“‘ ) 'l’;"‘jfl\k’ A and murders in Texas for political reas | ducement of a cabinet position. Of the | a foolishly vicious law. VGHAL AH LIUDE 1OE FODAILINE A chIAYRINE sons the senate committee found them | pther numerous g lemen who have = the United States penitentiary at Laramie to be fully sustained by the evidence. | heen mentioned with more or less con- Tie Jeflerson square boomers will I["‘K“fl.l‘tll\ contract can be made work The men shot down in cold blood were | fidence as having beon booked or | now understand the will of the peoplo, [ Wil boRin dbout Marchih, = ropublicans, and their murder was the | “slated™ for the cabinet, 1t is not cer- [ Everybody else understood it before. | sontenced to five years' imprisonment in the penalty for having kilied the leader of | tainly known that one of them will be | But the boomers have an excellent J tates penitentiary at Lar mie for a gang organized tosuppress the ves | chosen, chance to prove the sincevity of their ‘-"‘l::;::‘:l ',f;:.‘,‘,",,'""h“'"“' potition publican vote, and who made a raid on | Among the interrsting statemenfs re- | declarations that they only wanted o | 15 (ia romarks the Evanston No the ballot box for the purpose of de- | lating to this matter is one that Sen- | know, you know, what the people de- | that a Douglas girl broke off a front tooth at stroying it. No effort was made [ ator Sherman has given General H sired. For this, even in the face of de- | the root “‘Ill‘lilt"lR?“}l:"l:‘\!::.i.Iyl‘;.'l“:m(l” ?'y' ul:l by tl authorities to bring | vison to understand that the appoint- | feat, they should be grateful. S VAR taHA LIS Laot Al ABTIY. oy, to trial the | tors of these out- [ ment of certain persons who have been e — wax and thought no more avout the opera: rages, and the free to renew their | publicly named would be displeas- NEBRASKA should feel perfectly safe “"".i‘.‘.‘.‘;':.‘;:;,.‘ vallowed the tooyh at the poliey of terrorism and violonce when- | ing to him. Among these is General | and secuve from forcign attack The Buffalo Echo says that the gencral ever another opportunity shall be pre- | Alger, of Michigan, toward whom [ from ‘any nation on the face of the | pelief that the B & M's! intention is to build sented, it is alleged the Ohio senator arth, Her available force numbers "4.\»:«[-‘!1\‘:"v‘n‘uN_I|1‘:'i‘~l‘-.‘-n?§.h "M“f‘(”:'.m’ h. With regard to the assassination of | has anything but kindly feetings, due | one hundred and ten thousand men, | FHEE PG gk (R e ets, all Clayton, it is not pretended that it was | to the belief that Alger's friends in the [ and Towa is willing to act as a buffe interested in the Burlington, elosing a prop: due to any other cause than political | Chicago convention seduced nway Sher- | With two hundred and twenty-five | osition for tho purchase of tirty two town hatred. He was the ropublican candi- | man delegates from the south. The | thousand soldiers according to the re- | @5 © "IW' 601K blky: OB T AN D ate for congress in the Second distriet | friends of Sherman are said to have a [ port of theadjutantgencral newspapers print such advertisements as the of Avkansas at the last election, and [ black list of forty-three names of dele- - r”“‘;“fi”h ““'1" ‘:‘lfi‘““;" LI had been obtaining testimony for con- | gates to the Chicago convention, and | IF THE railvoads refuse fo build a J I8 FiC BUSECR, SIS, PRI S every testing the seat of Represontative C. [ to have entered upon a cumpaign | Wnion depot, at all events they should iption, to suit the most fastidious pal R, Brockinridgo in the nextcongress. | of vetribution. Too ready credence | be compellod to construct a vinduet over | ate sorved by the renowned Jueglor of It is not doubted that he would have | should mot be given to reports of this | their tracks on Tenth stroet. The | EEEHEEG GATRI G RAT TOF good thoat- been able to show fraud and the suppres- | eharacter, though it is very likely true | necessitics of the city demand this to be | ment. sion of republican votes, very likely to | that Senator Sherman and” his friends [ done speedily, and the council has the RS OUEhE an extent suflicient to unseat his op- | do not hold General Alger in very high | authority to ovder it. Q > ponent in a republican house of repre- | regard. That they would venture to in- hnes TR 3 A French Name for Shoddy American sontatives. This possibility the por- | terferc, however, with General Harvison | NOW that it is reasonably assurod ristocrats. petrators of fraud saw but one way to |in making up his cabinot must [ that General Hur eabinet will | ap, crawford in her latest lotter avert, and that was by taking the life | he regarded as extremely doubtful. “““*“""f"\ “{l“'*"l"‘r";\ i\""";l;hflll :‘ m-..mynl' |-|<[{|{I.wml;vn Truth says e of the man whom they had robbed of | Senator Sherman is quite apt to pay | & great agricultural state should rencw | Golden-call worshippers never think an election. This they did in the most | politieal scores, and in the game of poi- | hev efforts to secure the head of the f’( ,],‘\U;‘,f,'.‘u.:h.k, LN ‘\,:“”Iufi};.vf s department of agriculture cow ing apot him when'j itfes it has not been his habit to return simply a r an staquere xpressive in the mhum.. of his apartment he [ good for evil, but he will do nothing to = F French appellation to denote a man_of i 4 £ The Latest Teast. R R AR : . 1 could not have the slightest thought of | embaaress the president-clect or to Dodtin: Gobe: 7'\1«” e ilth, “1;‘_' spends it ‘““‘)‘ danger and shooting him down without | ereate disseusion in the party, nor will | Tne latest trust annonnced is the dime [ Pii WUS COMES AHOT '1;:’,""';:f‘\":[ e “\“_ warning. [t wasan act befitting he permit his friends to do it in his | museum trust. And there remain yet other | 416" tho La Plata riv Tlionlarada lot-box thieves and midnight outr: name. worlds to conque that he must be of Spanish-American of defenseless negroos. General Hurvison has undoubtedly e or Portugucse-American origin, No- A Question of Veracity. Cineinnati Qi The signal service department has figured out that the ground hog y mistaken, Well, it is sunply a question of personal veracity. body here would ever think of calling n Yaukee, however vich and unculturcd, a rastaquer The most perfect type of the species the ssini- found cabinet making a somewhat per- plexing task, and it is quite probable thiat he 1s not himself sure at this time advisers. It remains to bo scea whether perpetrators and abettors of assy tion will be permitted to profit by thenr murderous work. That they will es- | of all who will be his cabinet isthe owner of a fine house in the cape o is ultogethor probable, for | 1t hus been suggested that there will be eatisa € Our Mary. Avenue du Bois de Boulogne, on the those who should bring them to it are | a surprise for the public when the an- Chicagn Times. right-hand side as_you go to the Bois, He is known as “UHomme qui Rits” is well knowu (by appearauce; and tro- mendously laughed et Ho isa large man, over six feet high, with a he under free, a majestic girth of wal coat, and legs tapering to a point. His clothes are not loud, but they hav Sunday spick-and-span newness nd neatness about them, H 'son informs us that she dearly us. But Miss Mary will nover enjoy the cfrcus until she has carvied water to the elephant or crawled in under the can nouncement - of his selections is made, and it seems very likely that such will De the case. Speculation and suspense cannot continue much longer in sympathy with them. But it w in the power of the next house of r sentatives to determine whether muy devers shall be given the fruit of their crime, and it cannot be doubted what the verdict will be. Méanwhile it will not be surprising to find a renewed and timent favorablo Tog contemplated movement to ex- Not a tend a road from Norfolk to Yankton to connect with the Union Pacific has, it tisement, Chicago Tribune. We will do P.T. Baroum the justice to a intensified public so enthoton RGRATH to moro stringent logislation for the | seems, stirred up the Chicago, St, Paul, | say that we do not believe'tho destruction of | S15¢ the tomptation of crowding din- rogulation of federal olections with ref- | Minneapolis & Omaha rond to head | bis new dwelling House,a day or two ago by | (15 SIS LR G ToMa A glo fire, was intended as an advertisement of his circus and menageri e are not worn unless by cads or fogeys altogether out of date, his rings show. The face is puckered into a fixed smile rival and close the the gap of o miles between Hartinglon ofl the twenty-f erence to more fully vights of all citizens in protecting the the southern states, and Yankton. As predicted in Tue An Impending Conflict. pauo; EOEOULEILO IBIl O Bre some weeks ug(l», it was merely a Chicago Herald. filipiencelbisunicknume) jand fhtsloves JUDGE BREWER'S RULING. matior of o few months bofore such ac- | _BY the solemn deoreo ot a court it is held | WWAELE SEERUN: 0 e Judge Brower, of Towa, has followed | tion would become necessary on the | that barbers in Liucoln, Neb, must shave | g5, overyone in Paris. One of his first A colored men as well as white men. This g ; up his ruling of & fow duys ago by & | part of one or the other of the two roads. cares on avriving hereis to set himself judgment is caleulated to revive race and > aweoping docision in theshippers! | b ie s ian’ o ; o up with a picture gailery. All the bad case against the railronds, His carlier | yongions will be made in the near fu- ————— e decision was m effect, that the rail- | tupe, which will give Omaha direct Asteroids Not in Demand. S oA AT ez an i or roads of the state must seck redress for | . fcati ith Yank e New York World, i SR ] His communication with Yankton by two [ oo o Sew YO O s fur. | Diring out noblemen for parties, for b any wrong dono them in the state [ lines. The jobbing trade oLey 1sts, and really gots the worth of hi o 5 b g trade of our cit, SSEE ¥ , | guests, and really pets the h of his Cah e rnthar thaat iheifodarallico il = 0 g ' ItV | ther dppressed the planetary market. The | FE0E 06 N R €O L N His latest decision has be b more | il bo Deneflitted by the openiug | fact is, thore has never been ahealthy de- | bourers of genuine and fine-sounding 10 Aieg 101 1S DEGN MUCH MOXe | up 1o them of southern Dakota, | mand for asteroids and the supply, growing | i, ? radical. It overrules tho position he | whilo the live stock growers | constontly, has hada saddening effcct upon | * Tho house of “I'Homme qui Rit” is had assumed on former occasions in which the railroads were sustained in ions. of that region will have direct railroad connections with the markets and pack- quo still unfurnished, with the exception of a wing e Colonel Clayton's Assassination. which has_baen done up provi- their injunction suits. Heo has finally rithi sionally. He has agents scouring Fu- ion suil ¥ | ing houses of Omaha, Within a few Kt ity Taamal Yol gonts scouring Bu dissolved the injunction brought by the | years, with proper encouragement, a | I the assassination of Colonel John M. [ }oP® f‘,"‘u‘,“’r'\“‘:‘(fi‘ ERrS '",‘,',“"‘,‘“ . AHlers railroads to restrain the state railway | great trade should be established be- | Clayton results in the creation of a senti- W,h haye the. satisfaction of paying commissioners '“"." exereising their | tween Omaha, northern Nebraska and | ment strong enough to stop political wurders s, The rastaquere’s ‘palace suthority as provided by law. By | southern Dakota, andevery effort should | and crimes agaiust the ballot in Arkansus, he s the house bought from the adopting this view, Judge Brewer | pe put forth by our citizens to encour- | Will not have died in vain. It is beyond | Duc de Nemours by M. Ephrussi when makes it plain that the railroads of | yoo i, question that his murder was instizated, if | he married a Rothschild, and cast it Towa must accept the schedule of | = - — not actually committed, by the men who | into the shade. Its fucade declares the transpovtation rates as fxed by the Tite numerous fires in the past few | stole the Plummerville ballot boxes and wu{.nn n{f ".I" u)\'x;r llf)l\\‘ ].: ,“',h,"']mt[' state commission, at lest until they | days aggravated by the recent high | Whoseerimo he was surely bringing to light. | Eptec, 6 BE (he R MUECEER, can show that the rates so fixed are | winds should call the attention of STATE AND TE&KRITORY, living in Such a mansion. TWO MONSTER DYNAMOS. houscholders as well as the proper au- thoritics to the danger which menaces The attitude transporta- unreasonable and un just. Nebraska Jottings. of Judge Brewer upon the & The people of Nelson are working hard for tion question must strike the our city. There are certain quarters | gnormal school. e o My S ATy Y YR fllled with rows of wooden tinder boxe: The York Tinics has changed from u mory- | T MaT&est Eloctric Gonerating da There is no disposition on A defective flue or a stray spark due to | ing to an evening “ 1 i A -I S aotla AR i . o e FB] aan aar = I ap =t follnant sl fae b Knight Bros., grocers of York, have falled The twolurgest dynamos in the world part to. do the railronds bl 186 B BEOAL | (ith labilities 0f about $3,000. for the generation of eloctricity ave that state an injustice or to discourage | conflagratien any day, especially in the ceipts of the Fremont postofiice for been pluc od in the new plani at the the extension of railroad lines. They | face of a high wind, Due precaution amounted to §1,477.40. n Eleetric Light company, on ask for reasonable rates without dis- | should be taken to prevent such a dis amp of Modern Woodmen has been | Sansom street above Ninth, says the Philadelphia Record, In addition to being the largest they are also the most powerful mae. ‘hines of their kind eve constructedd Each is capuble of 3,000 1ghts at one time the ordinaar ul,\ carry about N0 each, The dynamos fect monstrosities, and w tons or 86,000 pounds at Osceolu, with seventeen charte asl It would not be out of place it tho fire authorities would institute a personal examination of such districts of the city where if a fire should break out, it would be liable to cause a'great conflagration and threaten the destruc- tion of yaluable buildings. crimination or extortion on the part of the roads. There can be no doubt that if the railroads show good cause why the schedule is too low, the people as well as the commissioners will correct the fnequality. The roads have s: tained their losing fight against the merabers, Anew brick Dblock, a lumber yard and soveral new _residences are expeeted o-ma- tevialize in Nemaha City shortly. A petition has been circulated and has re- ceived 700 signature at Iremont for an clection to vote on issuing bonds for u high school building. An expert has been engaged to inves apiec igate ‘“'”.""‘ on the ground, thut tho law TRANOIE MURE naer 4 the books of the Polk county treasurer from ; ind “'"‘,'.‘,"'IL :““’“ and are about si which provides that a rate may be ad- RANCIS MUrPny, the famous temp- | yhq qate of the organization” of the county. eet in breadth i - vanced whenever it is proved un- orator, refused to speak in Penn- | It is a three months' Job. The ('unl]{n‘in‘mlll’ ul’ o Lz-h h. llnluml\' ens y o burde Ivania i ror > prohibiti During the recent high wind the roof of | copper, which is the best conductor of reasonably low, puts the burden of [ sylvania in favor of the prohibition n.!« il $he rocs Ampf'nm»\\-Jun:m-:,ux"f cl‘lwn o T YT TS AT TS 1 making such proof on the railroads | amendment to the state constitution. |y, fell in among the scholars. Eight o 5,000 pounds and can make 440 revol themselves, That is just the poin [ He looks upon the high license law as | pupils were hurt and one boy may die. tions per minute, o perfeet prodigy in which the railronds are unwilling to | an excellent measure, having brought | A, 1, Bull, chairman of the exceutive com- | machine work, all things l.».m,.;.l.-.- 4 ver, - They have 1 a et . s 1i et ate o | mittee of the state Sunday School associa- | Leading from the gigantic dynamos ar answer. . They have refused horetofore | tho liquor trafls {n that state under f FoP ooy teoting of tho committa | 1o uf Copper or h wires one inch to certify to the exuct cost of service | perfect control. — Mr. Murphy, there- | at Tecumseh February 2, tomako arrange- | (i it mater, while the switch which and the amount of capital invested in | fore, cannot conscientiously support a | ments for the coming state convention, ““.“; T e AT their particular railvoad proporty, | probibition which is not practieal, as.| The last share of stackbus beou taken in | {he veverse lover of o locomotive. Th Their rates huve been aranged with a | has boon shown in Towa, Maino and | yiohiolions’ orcanidihand clocted. thets | elt which will drive the mastodonic view of not aloue puaying operating ex- | other state The prohibition party | board of directors. A $0,000 plant will be | dynamos is 20 inches wide and tray Is ponscs and afair veturn” on the actual | would do well to accopt the cloar- | but in and groutd bfokou about the middie | ai. the marvelous rate of one mile pe iz i 8 01 ad § sme . ) minu 2 capitalization, but also lar honded judgment of Mr. Murphy, and | “i® TR 00 be wihington's birth. | | Bollors to run theso machinos are dividends on fictitions stock. | tho noted lecturer snould not fail to | day will be approprintely observed at Ponca | heing placed in the fourth story of the Here is whore the people of | come to Nebraska for missionary work ::.\"uI:z:::udrb:lll"utlm‘n:u:m-:‘n l(lplls‘\cmulthl\l' com: 8 new building, and have Towa intend to draw the line. They | in the near future. BOIMAOES O BIRAMAN _Pask, 4, ¢ Will | fyonts about eighteer: feet high, The P e e e hold 8 banquet and oamp fie avtasl engines ave twenty in number, and of do not propose to pay the vailroads a rate adjusted on a scale to give returns on capital never invested but floated for speculative purposes. It will therefore the same evening, A Pierce merchant left a traveling insur- ance agent in possession of his store for a short time the other gy, and when he came back 86 ju_change Vg missing from the 500 horse power each. Blast bands used to force the fires are ten feet in dinme- ter, and each of them will deliver 50, 000 feet of air per minute. Twoof these MONTANA interests have greatly profited by the exceptionally mild win- ter thus far, and the outlook fora highly bo most intoresting o wateh the deve- | Prosperous yoar for the territory was | money drawer. No urgests wers made, but | bands are already in the plant, and two lopmentof the railvoad problem in Towa, | never moro favorable. Stock of all | the merchant hus his sigpicions. moro will soon follow, ™ The floor of the RS LES ‘hether will the | kinds has done remarkably well, the | Farmer Dulitz livilg ten miles from | dynamo room, which is in the secon I'he question is as to whether will the Y Grand Island, was surprised to find a liwtle | story, is composed of twenty-four inches grazing being all that could be desived. skmen and ranchmen are said to be very much encouraged at the pros- pects, and if no extraordinary change railroads grietty swallow the pill and conforw. their tariff sheets to the rate made by the state railroad commission, or will they bring their books into court baby packed in a box in his wagon on his re- turn from town the other day. The infant was alive and kicking, and as It has not been identitied Mr. Dulitz and his wife have cou- cluded to adopt the littie one. of conerete on t and is covered with sl flooring was built to hold forty dy: similar to size and weight to the 1nos two e > o om pr conditi 0 which have alveady been erected in the and honostly try to arrange a schedute ;m." pr lllltl u)mll;mnu ocours large o— A R AYD e R o er tha equitable to themselves and to the [ fortunes will be made by them next There were 120 arrests made by the Des | forty dynumos will be mounted before people. summer. Nothing but su a misfor- | Momes police during January. i e b o tune as came with the destructive bliz The new G. A. R. hall at Atlantic will be e AT CABINET U INTIES zards of two or three years ago can pre- | dedicated on the 2:d inst. ANl Tastes Suited. Speculation regardiog the cabinet of | yent Montana beating all her previous nuw"fl«'fu’fi::Sff.-:'r't'v'.:"'fnlu:v"m"c patients are | phijadelphia Record: Waiter—*The hospital at Aua customer I's waitin’ on says the brandy neral Harrison continues with undi- A brandy minished activity, records as u stock-raising countr mosa. Sixteon porsons jolned the ( sauce doan taste like it hid any od Templars | S3US while the uncertain- ties of the situation can hardly be eaid Dos Nebraska need at present an- | at Ceaar Rapids last week as a result of the '“(' i s to grow less. Indeed, since Seuator | other Normal school? At least sixteen | Hemperance revival ffoali=V Who Ty The oldest soldier of the rebollion known g and chuck in Allison declined to accept the treasury | members of the house evidently be- portfolio there is greater confusion url ligve she does, that number of billy s the sauce back alpharic acid and 10 be living is David Averill, uow « resident of Sibley, Osceola county, ki, wie was bora a lttle rosens 0il,” THE MAN AT THE THROTTLE Tho Dangers Which Beset Him on His Lonely Run WINGED BY A FLYING ARROW | A Stampede of Buffalo in Which the Doad and Dying Are By the Score Ttems, No Signals of Danger. “How long have I n vice?" asked Engincor Sullivan, of the the heen ser- Union Pac in conversation the other dny. “Well, just look here,” said he, as he lifted his oily head-gearing, dis- ving a largo s the side of his on nd; 1 got this in the sixties when |1 was pulling a train westward from North Platte. Boys. that scar is where I was struck by an arrow that was dis- patehed from the bow of an Tndian evi- dently with intent to take my life. [ was whirling along pretty lively, and im Baty, my fireman—poor fellow, he is dead now-—was a-throwing wood into the old fire-box for keeps. We had trouble more or less with the Indians it lifo to go over the ¢ worth a man's 1, But [ tell you those days, and bread and butter was needed, and we had to get it Well, as T said, we were ploughing into the wind hard on to thirty mles an hour, and I was watching for o clear track while Jim kept sding the old horse with fodder that made it faivly spin. The eab in those not the pavlor we have to-d, o had but little shelter to proteet us from the combination of rain and snow and ln- dians. But, on this oceasion, I was un- protected and was little oxpecting dan- ger from the redskins, as it was about mid-day, but suddenly 1 felt my head come in contaet with something, and [ fell with an imbedded in my 1p. “1 felt no pain until about three hours afterward, when 1 fully recovered the sense of feeli [ was sic racked at alittle town ealled Villa, in those days. and my inju were attended to. Yos, Jim p \wf the arrow out, and with the sve of his jacket ticd up my head. 1 was laid up for a long time and had a0 narrow escape from blood poigoning. ‘But perhaps 1 think that Indian escaped. Not so. Although we were being wheeled along rapidly, Jim reached for his rvifl was buckled to the side of the en e and sent that fellow el through the skylight to another home, But, to tho trath, boys though it seems like this has long si pussed into history, every time | see one of those red cusses, cither in the form of nature, or in the outlines on Lhz cover of a dime novel, this wound will start and pain voading is fun now to what it w: days.’ “But,"” continued Mr. Sualli of my strangest in those days was in ' does not fail me, We re westward bound, and it was t 4 o'clock in the afternoon. The atmosphere was dull and soggy and there was evidence of o storm being not far off. Shortly after 1, fone Ading my memory exploits in vailr if noon it began to cloud up. We had about onc hundred and twenty-five wmiles of prairie to run across and what few stations there were along the road afforded us no_shelter, As we we speeding along T observed that, in vanceof us, was what to be a place where the a- t fivst appeared <s had been burned off the ground ving o dark patch covering severs but as we appronched I discover asa herd of buffalo, perhaps nbering fully seven thousand, I had been informed the bulfalo in stam- 1 that the herd view of the condi- nd 1 knew what this m were caught in the rifile, to escape death something little to be expected. Well, enough the wind began to blow a Hurvi- cane, and those follows tossed theii heads and tails in the air and started when we were abreast of them. For a moment death stared us in the face. But, if ever an engive pulled a train rapidly over a track, it was the one over which I presided on that occasion, She shot ahend, but I saw that at my best, we could not get elear of the im- pending danger, neither did we. Theve were three counches in the train, and the rear one was struck by a remnant of the herd, but fortunately it juaped the track and did not topple over. as to the natire of peding. and was afr would fake as i tion of the It we When the thing was over we had all tho buffalo meat we needed for the remainder of the year. Yes, sir, soven of tho iinest epecies of that type were lying abo the car, not dead, but injured so t they could nob move, You see the came in contact with the ear and before they could get out of the way another more fortunate trampled over their prostrate peass. There were Lwo pis: sengers in the car, but no ono Tall about a frightened man, wi my huir just simply gotupon its di nity and stood that way until every buf- falo had been killed that was in the herd. I have heard about a stampede, hu',umhl not fully appr te 1t until after my experience in this instance. Whenever you see a buifalo start just getout of his wiy or ho will muendaiiizo Railrond men as a rule arc extremely fond of King o joke on each other and, whena good story presents itsell concerning one of their kiud, or- ally goes the rounds. 3. M. Cuming, who been appointed assistant i rof the Union Pacifie has gencral mas comes in for rece the latest riflle in the line of jokes. It is stated that, by reason of his limited knowledge of railways, lie has [ur nsh his constituency with ma a well-grounded joke, The latest is to the effect that a few days ago, whilc scrutinizing the track on the Wyoming division, of which he lias heen superin- tendent, his collegiate cye vested upon two guard-rails that ave used to prevent engines and from jumping thoe < or spreading th ils, whe ossing a siwitch, something vl old-time railrond man 15 ind pensible, What are th remarked the auster eing mccompunie whose long service had led him 1o form the opinion that even & Hurvard grad- uate should know that much, uo reply was made, want those s a que wasting prope up, and be mo would bankrupt any rond cars th But the rails ar il Cuming has also learned fo PO { PIM | Dickinson, who has just ret geneval superinienden the Union Pacifie, takos delight in ‘tell- ing his first experience in reportovial In 1871 he was train dispatcher at this place, and in the suin of th Ben flogan wod Tom Allen met in west- ora lows to battle for the champion inson was inclined in that dir entered into an engagement pross to furnish a telogr the fight. "The time fo! the the spot witn full ments, It will be fight broke up in a generai the sixth ronnd, but t young Dickinsou's repor contrary, the following tele veceived by one of his intimat The fight cemmenced; wi and numerous holos she reportorial membe dr stov into the assistant general \!\lpn( the groat transcontine tng upon the pr again, srogatives of a al Pointors dducatio Detroit Fre LEsSON 1 IHark! serenms and eries? Yes, I hear them planly. ceed from the hed in ¢ vine-elad cottay St must b S0t s, Some do you 1 wood some child in d ket s receiving o duosti nds ¢ )v’~lnu!‘n|. 2 Ah! She the right, by ument?” Vs frost in. The boy in o neighbor's at meal ti vened to remark that he had vicce of eake hefore for si g but half- that mother's wded prid LEssoN 11 —Shall we go u ). wo will elimb the stair 3ut why not vide?” said to year nd, but ator is aliead of him.™ “But why don't they repair “They do, but next day it h inanewspot. It is the busin elevator to get out of vepuir, | the stair builder would have t the clevator boy would have n kating or fishing.” 1t must be nice to be “S0itis Tbis adife ith several back ¢ the ay e of lu ounti oase, from. hore is evide ood_ne LESSON TIL—“Ah! man who laughs and |v'\ over some some one left him a lepacy?” SRy no means. He hus bag, ved that Lis % ifo was mi sod claimed that his beer than the rent of the cott family flour put together, down and figured on it.” sAnd e proved that she “Way off. she was in ¢ cents per week.,”and he over it that he is_going extra glasses, Wive what they are talking about make such broad st: re wa o fe to d 2 ements.” Is the man doy sitting on the pa hg anything?” remark! LEsSON TV “Yes, he is “1s he say! 1 should heavy-weight medal of the world. phic tells the story of his attempt at journal- tisa boy of ten, illing himwill wo nd should He is Dic ection,and with tha roport of latter ar- rivad, and the young journalist was on accoutris od that the row after was not part of On the gram was o friends revolvers ot in the airy give me a clear track, for I'm com- ing. Too hotfor m Signed: . DICKINSON The individual that is now about to manager- utal lin istic work on this occasion, and states that no union wiil ever have to bo formed to provent him from encroach- roportor A NEW THIRD READER, From the o Press, hear thoso They pr r of that strass?" and his ngoat the it why not Diiten be- happenced and - hap- n't scen a X mouths, sootho » in tho +and see our friend on the fourth or is closed for re- closo twice ave 117448 realks out, 1ess of an fitdidn’t 0 go, and o time for levator xury and s 10 hear have a ntly well sws, Hag | figuving istakon.” cost more and tho he sat s o2 by thirty S0 good rink two know when they wn vement,”? making what might he eallod a lengthy speech. “But his language is gentic.” “Vory gentlo, Children could listen to him without fear, Wt is he saying now ssays he will | jam il he won't spend his days looking for hyena who put ashes on t But the truo philanthrop 3 to make the ro ufe for the public.” o he does, but when ano philanthropist comes along down in the pudding it isa another color, —*Does the man e wanis one WOrst way *Does he fes “Oh, no. owling eat. But can’t a cat use her voics “She can, and there ought te to protect her in it. This ide man heart’s conte off into the voice, should be s an attack by He wants to A and that aeat wildernoss to he t down on, Angostura Bitters appetizer, of exquisit log-gone balance of the ram-sh 4 over the v br r her ¢ 110 jim- slilo dewalle.” 4 puls out the ico ther true and sits hovse of rush for moh?" win that 07" » be alaw ' that a v sing and yell and whistle tohis must over the world, Dr. J. G. Sons, sole m'f ASK your Ll X Tewpsichor psus Hymen, Pun: Sho—Oh, Jack, darling, T veully thini T must break off our on- igement, tie—Good gracious, Flo! Why? She—Bocause, dear, if we mirey wo shan't be able to wultztogether, and that would be awful! SKIN, SCALP AND Disenses Cured by Cutie when Hob Sprives, Doe all other Medicines fail, < heen a sufferer for 1wo yo having been enved by t N When A1l other methods 1, 1 deem it duity ) 1 visited Hot ) 1oy 1 eon 10 vesult thist L am p rfe abont Curie atrinl with th Tnere 18 10W 10 s0r0 about e, 11 show tho '@ surface whore my Kpring frc wiy one in the CUIA RENED B dre e cares munufaciure! fo I Flalay wnd b, 1. 0 M il 110 Dr. Sn ATLEX ANDEI 1A CT, Mr, Bench wsed the Cor our request, WIth results as above A B FINLAY & CO, heen troubled with yeurs, Which first staried on the top Eivin me fnfiniy troabl Tng, custing oif of dry seales, lguid exuded from under th it for neven year uccesstull ahle to eleck it untll 1 found y REMEDIES. Ou CUitA BOA 1 have ASE SIIN DISI y 1 Cur niks Aaia for 1 ich has heen of In ‘of dotlurs Nk Nothing (i Q tho s of will never M Rockwell Clty, Callion any i CUTcUna | m without them Our hous I'rice OLVENT 0l everywhere, FOAL, 2 cent Po 1ty L0, Pr h W Lo Cure lons, and 100 te kin i PLES, back-heads, rod rouch, olly siin preve 1w YEARS CURE wondor ROSA KELL CDiG AND CHEMICAL Uiy ha 20 by CUTICUKA BOAL. BLOOD Remedies nil s and a 1w on the 2 COTICURA and reme- commend ad yoral doctors without L and at prin ionl dewgeist, My dohn V| i | slill ever Fatetul, sp. fvo th 1y « L, i he , wind skin tJohn u Crrieu MED LS, ¥, 4 o, Tan CUTICUIA, B0 conts; pared by Boaton, Ao onials, NO RHEUMATIZ ABOUT ME! VTR CUTICUIA ANTI 1 relleves Khewinat i o, shirp &nd Iy . Jialiik, HIEAIDY ad . WanKne: nos The first and ony palu-kiling Plaster, %) ceuts,