Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 25, 1890, Page 4

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THE DAILY BEE. i E. ROSEWATER, Editor, PUBLISHED Y MORNING, el SUBSCRIPTION ndny, One Year #1000 Your Yeur OFFIC Owaha, The Bee Buildi &, O N und . il I vl St [} ago OMee, M5 The Re 1 sl 13 Teibune Butiding R i\ Lington, hostreet CORMESPONDENCE Al communientions relating (o news and et atter shonld be addressed o the Editoriul Depurtment BUSINESS LE ¥ Al letters and it wees should Ve addres to The Bee Pablishing Com 1y, o Diafts, cheeks and postoffiec orders to be made payable to the order of the Com- ny 1l‘hc Bee Publishing Company, Proprietors. The Bee Widing, F enteenth Sts, i and The f5 the rute of postage nece wary 1o coples of Thtk BeE out of the ity K- paper.. .U, & 1 cent Forelgn 2 conts T2-pige i per 1 cent i piper s » 4 ity I ¥ Divge i per CIRCULAT SWORN STATEMENT State of Nebraska. | zlas, | Tiue OF ry of The Bee Conpiny : uinly swear wetunl elredlation of Tue DALY BER ek 180, wiis as fol- ding Aprill Sunday diiy ity April 1 April 1 prilin iy, April 1 iy, April 17 Friday. April 15 Suturdiy, April 10000000 20,025 Avernge I PZRCHUCK, o hdfore \d subserlbed to iy v Uil 1t of April, AL D, 150 W N PEELL tiry Pubfi }ss. i ing duly swo cretary the DAt aetu 1y BEE M for Tananry 3500, 19,361 coples; Swari o before sthday THE Tekwimah incident foreshadows he fate of intoler and slug cosmopol it FARTHQUAK wive lively an Franciseo, matehes cham o fife in ctunl cash will the N < put into the proposed Don't all speak at onee, How much ACOW hoome Tats proposed limitation of gon Dt on the tariff bill 1o six days most popular feature of the measu hest favor in » of the anti-option bill is the f men who in ument ol the T it I8 hy the neces- Wl it< opponents ar rown vich by gambl of li ¢ CLARKSON will survive th on of the discordant kan wtics who were too intolerant to allow mnn to defend himself against and ealumn slander Now that the council has ovdinanee to change the geade of t, the and most uns hack™ of old Omaha will soon he passed the Do sl DEMOCRATS alarned about the fute of the Republicans made and they ean be depended on to dishu it to the best advantage of the national a surplus sirplus possibl o ¥y DURING o few months moral suasion in lowa Francis Murphy Drought ahout move genuine temperanee veform than prohibition has in five years. Lwenty thousand persons signed the to- tal abstinence pled, campaign of T conelusion of a v Tetwern Omaha and Council Blufts for the benefit of tenmsters should bo sup- plemented with a schedule of rates which will save their patrons from in- voluntary hankeuptey. ciprocal treat COMPARATIVE meat-paeking statistic are slightly fi ible Lo Omal; ord, hut the increasoe not : the extent of the tevvitory tributary to the murkel would warrant if the busi- ness was energetically and . persistently worked ol e s'ate banking bo have suftered anothe forcement of the law. state ba rd appenrs to elapse in the en- {f there nre any ng with the law in publishing their quurterly veports, the fact should not he conveniently hidden i obsenve corner of the y (s comply Tueee split in the gentile in Salt Tuke City is not surpris The alli- ance of the democrats with the progres sive elements was 8o unnatur manency w tion with ¢ that Afilia- s out of the question irold allic . the Mormons, tion of time THY Omaha Dbulldozers to work up public sentiment attempts of the South agatnst annesation hus not heen i hoy Ing success. The intelligent voters know that theiv immediate and future prosperity depends on a union of all i tevests for the common good., AN INVESTIGATION commitiee sho Do appointed to investigate the charwe of Councilman Wheeler that some of his colleagues cannot vead nov write, This is u vile and uncalled for assault on our e form administration, which should ally refuted., nd for persons PROUIBITION goes into effeet in South Dakota on the fivst of May, of the law may be inferved from the fact I'he suceess that the Omuha revenue eo, which embraces Nobraska and Dakota, laid in an extra stock of stamps to supply the increased demand for liguor dealers variubly follows prohibition which i WHILE our local lawmakers ave t oning the cords around the pawnbrokers, thoy might polid supervision over the chattel mortgage shurks, The rovelations recently made in the courts show that the pawnbroker: ave honorable compared with the leeches who ply th apectable surrounding s profitubly extend | | { | 'HE OMAHA DAILY BEE, FRIDAY, APRIL 25 1896 T INTOLERANCE RERT « | there should be any legislation to pro- | United States senate if it cost the com- | binding twine factor The outeome of the stupid and malfe- | tect American roadg against the compe- | pany one hundegd thousm® dollars,™ | I‘:j:\‘"nl'l‘““”‘ on the ious prosecution of the editor of Tu | tition of the Cafadian corporations, | The investigatops failed to discover | ¥ | v at Towa market at i 111 conts per A new systom of waterworks will be put in | BEE by the Tekamah fanaties is The expediency of requiring the alien | whether this sum was paid out. The | at Towa Falls and morited rebuke tointosran | roads doing business in this country to | vecord shows that Johnston was defeated, | The coutract has been lot for rebuilding | &peech isembedded among the foundation | conform to the provisions of the int One hitilved SHonma miEy: ssetn ant ska \\v;‘iunu;u aroledo, © i rocks upon which the whole superstruc- | state commerce law 8o far as that sum to pay fo nited | ok ”4‘\‘ ""““w\”m?xl_l\\l‘l!-"'m‘”‘;; Towa wi ture of this republic is supported. The [ can be made applicable was ad- or, bietetls o teifing draft | " Tie toard of tho Tows Baptist state con: vight of any man to defend his reputa- [ mitted, but there was strenuous op- | on the “miscellandons expense fund™ of | veution meets in Ottumwa May 6 and tion when nssailed in a public pla is | position to the proposal of any new | the corporntions and s mere bagntelle Grandma McCoy, living near Gurrison, as sacred as the right tolife and liberty. | legislation intended to cut off Canadian | com lvantage of having | AL v BUHEINAEH INEVIdRY ‘-:_“ oy And these privileges and rights our | competition, an {tlltlve Tn the upper line Willlums, convicted of passing courts must uphold whenever they are | There Is no reason to suppose that this | house, P o 10 thivie years i the ALRHOSH | denied or abridged. | sentiment has undergone any change, | & SE————————— 3 I;"nhm\ .”“‘ is hiis second torm for a sim- No organization or socicty that seeks | and if the senate committes shall recom- IN view of the!elements controlling | lar offensc Z it refor oan e | i ¢ K g | the political destinies of New York, the | John Kweseh and Mebel Hatfield ¢ to promote political reforms can enter | mend legislation of the eharacter to bes| ; " Hington: were married. Satuidiay, velet the domain of public discussion hedged | expected from the tone of its report so | COUNtEY will be suvpeised to learn that & | Sunday by getting drunk, and Monday wer in by the laws that are framed for the | far us made public, it will hardly fail to | Measure of doubtful election reform ve- | suteneel to, 4 twenty days’ boneymoon i protection of religious worship from in- | encounter the vigorous hostility of New j':'”".'.l the approval u[ut-u AP tR AASY . b Veksiond. titon trusion or disturbance. Helen Gougar | England and northwestern interests, | 1he “eorrupt practiees™ ety 15 | ypeliin, has boen’ bound over to the dist was hired by tho state prohibition com- | The people of those scctions are con- | HOW 8 law, requires that every cuudi- | eourt o u chagee of burglrizing o confic mittee to deliver u number of temper- | fimed in the belief that they cannot | 48te who is voted for at any public elec- | QRS SERE JRE FOEE Sl H L anc tures in Nebraska. The object | without suffering great loss haye | Honin the state shall file, within ten | oy e sawmill in the world is located of these lectures was political. She ad- | their business placed wholly at | 90¥% after the election, o detailed item- | at Clinfon, It cost &60.000 and is hl sawing 450,000 feet of Tunbe u eight hour | | ceds ssed herself alike to men of all ¢ 1. Her lectures were simply dr and no ere | the me | and no “d statement of all moneys expended by him, divectly or indivectly, in aid of v of the Ame considerations of ailie 4y fotism are | 1t has seven band two I ies of ten b Mo ng saws and campaign speeches, and were so adver- | likely to dissuade thom from this prac- | 18 election. He s also requived 10 | ‘Roy, Mr, White, tised, Attention was ealled by posters | tical view of the situation. Nevertl ;"""" under - oath the specific pur- | tional “'I"::"" 00 &- ilaslousivy pvelae and papers to her effective work as a po- | less, some legislation in restraint of | l""l" for which the money was used | FEOREIGDE 0 \ATLRERIE To0 hi8 Kot HaId litical agitator in the woman's suffrage | Canadian competition s highly proba. | M4~ the —names of = the | Dersous | of labor about the middle of June. campaign, She spoke in the Teknmaly | ble. The matter is onoof very great | recelving it. The law s modeled afler | Sult hns been commencad tn Boweshiek vink, which is certainly not dedicated to | importance in its benring upon the in- | the system in vogue in ind, which | conntvaralnst el The burglar jous worship. tere 1 welfare of millions of our | N8 been the monns of diminishing the | (ied out to be w respectable farmer who Under such conditions the 1écturer, be | people, as well as upon the prosperity of | BPuses of the election system in that | waslted to the place wheve he wis killod. it man or woman. was amendable to or- | important vailvoad interests, and also in IS ly possible that the | A (J;'.'.‘- ~“”‘-\v;:mw:»;l\;;;“.m divoreed in dinavy politieal usages, If a campnign | the influence it may have upon our fut- | MW W Iy purify the politieal | g0 of i wunity during her | p speaker anywhere singles out any indi- | ure commercis ations with Canada, | Atmospher w York. The men who | offc at the time to settle for 8,000 spot i v romi use money for other than legitimate elec- | eash, but the hushand vefus Up to the vidual, however obscure or prominent, _ 3 ( : AL A A 1E MHA T s Bty SS:5001 MeAE e 1l charges him with disreputable or AN CACITED. tion expenses will not scruple to pile up | Goioped hulf still presents o youthful and criminal conduct, that person is always | The silver question appears to be at | false statements and add perjury to theiv | healthy appearance privileged to demand that the speaker | last in a faiv way of sottlement. The | crimes, The law, with its severe p.-n:_fl.- [ ‘:‘\‘nl. .31.::‘“;\1;...'-:«:..',u;lnt .v.-'l.'” : ‘\.:uv i“)\\: produce his authority for such chavges, | joint committeo of the scnate and house | tics, does not strike the root of the evils | Uit fobEuo dumues i fuch cisg et Helen Gougar went out of her to | have reached rcement which it is | in the Empire state. As long as the | piain sos that the defendants are saloon denied a secret ballot the | ke orown of buildings in which probubl of both likely | brough senate publicly retail and repeat a vile slander for which she had no proof or justifica- tion. And it was the guilty consciousness of this fact that made her shout Rose- water can’t speak in this meeting!” Had she been able to sustain her charge she would have challenged any question that | ver bu could be usked, Had she been an hon- | commit orable campaigner she would have ad- | was W mitted that charge wus based on | be X mere he bullion y. But Helen Gougar isnot built that She had uttered a | of the g tion of the notes to b @ will be approved by a majovity 1l i that 1A oy the administration. This was tabout by w ression to the vegarding the redemp- issucd against sil- J voters b s b : oG lquor is sold, and L dischavged from the company by ndisturbed. houses case v £ ablished: That prohibition agit nnot masquerde under the cloak of religion to slander those who differ with them, o demand the vicinity. 1, and that hor cmploy ¢ on_account of drunkenn quor sold by the defendants An artesian well near cause of considerable anxicty to the peoj A rock had become fixed in the the rock out the cas i husband was o v Plaine is th Ilion, The issue between the Wi 5 : obihors 4 B | huuled up und 5o left the water to o wl R CLER O OB Ol ADVOCAT it pleased, The water did not rise to the top whether the notes should | .° P T of the well, but spread out through a layer of edeemed in silver., either | 100 Will lewrn something to advantage | guicksand and saturated the ground for rods around. and for ing hundreds of lit ve buffeted e by. by consulting the men who 1 It spr or coined dollars, or at the option | the sand burs uudsnags in overnment in gold, as provided calumny and she was determined to gag | for in the house bill, or redeemed in luw- | Axormen hotel schome has b el and choke off the man who had the | fulmoney, either gold, silver or I | sprung on the town without warning, | and_the e temerity to face her, tender notes, as contemplated fn the | i e do not propose to discount the | fcured that uless th In this outrageous conduct she was | senate bill, 3 Tk lidtetioraas supported by the misguided prohibi- | The agreement reached that the S il niry o W is - ads out beneath the surface its way up through the soil, form Hoiniug and it is shut off the artesian well system in the vicinity will be NATURAL RIGHTS O MAN. | has hied himself to V Pand industri NOT RUNNING FOR CONGRESS. Attorney General Leese Contradiots the | Seward Rumor, | Close of the Women's Convention Clark Succeeds Davis in th in- coln Linnd Offices- A Hitch in s Confirmation, [Spectul to Tur: | omeof the Omalis | Liscons, Neb., April 24 By A Wil cial to papers, published this morning, states that | Attorney General Leese has abandoned the iden of “running for governor ou the anti- monopoly republican ticket, and thag he will | attempt to capture the nomination Tor con- dis- 81 gress” from the Second congressional 18 creating a rapture between him- nd Mr. Nettleton of Clay county, who is | understood to be after Laws' brogans. The | also states that Nettleton, who is one | of the prime movers fn the My convention, | now refuses to have anything to do with it | snd that he proposes to wait for the “regulu- | on vepublican convention' and go in for th congressional nomination as an old-time re publican | Suy for me” sald the attorney general, | “that there is not w syllable of truth in it. 1 wm not a candidate for congress and never have b ations between myself | and My of the most friendly chara both working for the of the May convention and T beli iticipations will be fully realized In this connection I desire to say that the | convention ¢ consider principles and not men, LAND OFFICE H. Clark succeeded Tom ster of the United States day. M. Clark reccived h tevduy evening, and the oftie turned over to him this mor It seems that thel pointmient of Joe that our lled for May 20 W NGE, W B land comimissic Davis as oftice to wits formially ing. 1 the ap : confirmation. 1 ot do this, as | is not a unit for his fences and thus is saidl, however, that | the Nebraska delegation him MALONE ON TRIAL, Policeman James Malone is on trial before Judge Stewart for committing an uuprovoked assault on the person of Orrin Snyder a few ks ag culars of which were pub- Bri at the ti The case is sinterest, for this officer uelly treating prisoners many times and” there has been demand for his removal. His think that he has heen fort will be made to will hardly be o nearly s L INTELLIGENC ¢ commissionerof L'I""'J commenced today to | Seed throughout the | Jolin Jenlins, depy tistid - heet stribute s state. He will send ont %0 pounds of sced for exper 1 purnoses. Mrs. Judge Gilehvist and daughter, Miss of Vinton, Ia,, are the the guests of statétreasurer und Mrs, J. B, Hill. Miss Mary and Miss Cavola, Mr. and Mrs. Hill's | second danghter, were clussmates at Luke Forest seminary, 111, tionists of Tekamali, Not only did they | silver bullion notes shall be redeemable | Unea | rente isgracel isturl te smand in law SO ¢hen so | Buston Glole, | | ive swashbucklor, Dr. Piorce, severalq greter or less nmount of such notes shall | Pompelf withpantson, [ e i‘-..‘,,,\,.-! chureh roeentl of their most zealous erusaders, notably | be outstanding at any time than Been Expected. | Dr. Thomas laid down the principi Judge Wade Gillis, had actunlly used | the cost of the silver bullion then Adeertiser. that the natueal vight of every mun profane epithets in an assembly which | held in the treasury purchased | e lingly prompt with ‘ go,.-l.r-vunpu}w was m:n!lu-v] “v-l ol stat- 11 elaimed to have beena veligious | by sueh notes.” suming this | tariff measure. i ::n‘tl:l: f"\llf\llw:“i‘r‘uli‘\”irll:mlica:x“:\‘m” Upon tobe corvectly reported, it is evidently | N | ihvolved altruism, says the s of course the privile intended to maintain as far as practi b Dot Diaiesr Press | Tribune. The greateit gains socially, band of fanatics to pass a vote of censure | ble a constant equality between the Towa governor since 153 is alive | mentully and morally has” been attainéd | upon the editor of THE BEE, just as | amount of bullion on deposit and its | and hear The Towa gubernatorial chair | by ¢o-0) I"I“n-. }\ h:fl{‘;n}' ]mv']“rh“:.h they have censured the distriet judge. | puper representati in civeulation, | would scem to have distanced Dr. Brown- | OVer ’['.‘I'i‘l"l';f R 'I'“"‘_'L“”l' vhe But they did not stop with | Thusif at any time the redemption of | Sequard. S o o resolutions of censure. They took it | certificates should reduce the amount How Long, O Lord, How Long. ! cruelty and oppr m there have into their heads to make an example of | below the cost of the bullion they repre- SUTnie G DURIGRAL: | simply from the failure to obse the editor of THE Beg by a criminal | sented an equalization would be re-estab- | While M has boen predicting | law o reciprocity. — This last proseeution. They had his name promi- | lished by the veissuc of the certificates, | that the ses f eongross would close by | order ||I~ ! " .H"\lv:n:ll ':‘l\‘i_'m)[u-‘rlf;":;l.l”"‘m\“;' nently inserted in the ceriminal docket | whileon the other hand a decline in the | the be s AN =ik v b B W ehne ot I aDulN0s of Burt county and sought to castn | deposit of Dullion would require | thabeventin Septemberd. Whereis w wide | COVAT 07N G Tina the stigmn upon him by associating his [a withdrawal of cortificates from | Movein of vime hetivooy these dates, it the | G poverty of the many: the nume with forgers, burglars and com- | civeulation. There would of course | ettt ke novance. the intemperance, the un- mon thieves. With the assistance of a | be times when either of these conditions | | nn.h!m\ u‘w; l[lu-‘ "lll’;l‘m wl-.~~. ¥ ;;»!,n i sap-headed county attorney they sought | might happen, and it is obviously im- 3 T s .‘filllfl.""-ln\'.':‘\ e ”';"l o ““,I'\“”l"I,‘_"‘,'[:{iv_’ H to carry to its full length their scheme | portant that there should be maintained, “";»"i‘.“:"f,"/l,.‘f"'yhm' R R RERhR of persecution by piling up costs through | s nearly as possible, an equality in the | g o B Gyt -G e hearts T T | | witnesses subpanaed from all parts of | amount the state. cost of resolution to do- | of the outstanding notes and the | the bullion vepresented by them, | ) of | day the world s A sl more philanthropic Their patviot- | est endeavor to devisea vemedy. : ming more anid e +—that is Five loving man- But when the crucial test came they | It 1% also provided that 1 ary has pone to even geeater lengths and |G utterly fuiled to show that the society | the treasury may refuse to veceive bullion ¥ have cut down the salury of every ety | B phomas then b onia under whose auspices Helen Gougar had | if In his diseretion it would appear un- 10t 25 par This lutter oxhibi- Blanticas Mo i : : A 8 i S ojaRtlof thinhaine tim of public spirit, however, is akin to thy G R, S N Adivered hor abusive harangue was u | Wise to do so, the object of this being to | i akin _eentur “Voliey delivered her abusive harangue wus a | W ) withdrawal of silver for | Of the man who would sucrifice his wiie's ve- | Ruins,” He 0ld how the genius in 1he religious society, and the prosecution | prevent the withdrawal of silver for | St JRisio f L5 " G1oUBIH0CIobY, DL 4 T AT e Phe bull- | ations on the altar of his country. ! vision had veplied to the young Frenchi- fell to the ground. But even if the W, | Purely speculutive puv oy X | maw's query as to why the gr E C.T. U. was n veligious society their | 100 n0tes are to be veceivable for cus- | STATE JOTTINGS. | zations of the past were but mere vuins, charge of disturbing u religious meot- | toms, taxes and all public dues, but | 3 | “Tgnovance and Cupidity.” Then inthe ing could not have boen sustained. Any | 10t as legal tender, though practically | Nebraska. | vision the seer had seen ‘the people sepa- | numbior of pracorlonts would havo hoen | they would luve this quuiity for all or- | TR NCAL IR\, o, | e thomsclves lnto two, clisesthe 3 53 TR, i 3 A land ¢ vestine) €O any has been useful and he useless, n the one side cited from supreme court decisions to | dinary transuctions. ; anized at Columbus with a cupital stock of | {1 Laporers, (he mechanics, the mer show that unless there was a meeting for | AS the sec) of the treasury is re- | S100,000. A | ¢hants, the business men, tho artists,the worship or u meeting to areange for | Quired to coin such portion of the silver | The State bank of Gothenburie has bowght | e on the other, priests, monks, the | veligglous exereises the luw for the pro- | bullion purchused as may s necessavy | 3 #it6 and will erect a arge two-story bricle | vy, “the aristocracy, the few, ‘who tection of religious sociotics did not | t0 provide for the redemption of the Mo contractors who will sonsteuct (ho B, | Made their wenlth orninie (he apply. treasury notes issued for such purchase, 1. belt line avound the eity of Grand Is- | Mal uac (AU NG 5 LA —— the agreement is rded as a vietory | land have begun work _“But your med tion is oo expen- CANADIAN DISCRIMINATION. for freo coinnge, although it appears |, The$H0D0 bonus vaised at Gothenbure for | Siv¢ d the people. “Wo doall the I A e e SR ge, i BEuanDe: the erection of 1 %,000 hotel s still opeu for | work and youshare in the profits. The senate committee which investi- | some of the advoeates of that policy d® | some enterprising mun. SAT ix Tost, ™ lumented the few, | ha | him to s gated the velations of the railvouds of | ot deem it so, and these nre likely to | €. H wtly editor of the Noeth | people have become intelligent.” the United Statesand Canada has com- | eontinue to fight for fi o, how- | Plit e llofontaing, 0, ,l',i~\“ s “‘“I\--“-"I vejoine ”u“ rted ita ropon! S brial palars 8 3 5 e 3 } your: “The e have become intellig Dloted itg voport, From tho brief yofer- | ovor unwiso and hopoless such a stvug- | i "pocouport, creamory manufuctuved | Dy, “Thomas. then roviewod tho vl ence to some of its conelusions conye (3 TR (O AT O] b A S MPOGIE R SLER Y e Db € by telegraph it presents u strong st reement is that it doss not provide for | April 1, 1559 £ April 1, 150 Ao "t thet lusbswords, *Live oty ment of Canadinn discrimination, which | yyuking the bullion covtificates o logal | The boiler and ivon for the waterwork e caav eyl r i livat for by muy be expected to lead to the proposal | tonder, but if they are made rodsemuble | Saibibi pitve urived ot Mindow nd the | follow-citizons that they muy live for of decisive logislation looking to a re- | jy lawful money the ahsencs of w spacitic | The engiucers of North Platte are makin e N moval of the difficultics compluined of. It | Jopy] tender quality will not bo found a | extensive proparations for their cighth - | e, Frst e A vepresonts that thevo is unjust dis- | gopious detriment. Thoro seomed a | W Muy day party which occars nexthurs 3L ECCE G000 of them, proseribed crimination against American vessel :.~|--.mg probability o fow days ago that | "o voune pe the Prestytesion | ond oppressed by Bismarck and the pussing through the Welland canal | y1¢ difference botween the two houses | church at Waterl v suecessful o smpire, until in the last ¢ to American ports, which it s E might vesult in defeating all efiorts to :;.unu‘\l.k-j‘.;n last week to raise funds to build w ‘ “IW‘”“:\ \;“I:;I.,.|I;!:I:..\|'\|:Illi|:”]xl\l"v'\{l:'-lnu-ln‘t. ::\ held is a violation of the treaty of Wash- | ington. This is an old complaint which ‘! has many times been presented to the | attention of the government, although efforts have been made to rect the injustice they have not secure proves hope t1 hut, i session, but this agreemont | disposed of. logislution at the present Wy im- | the situation and warrants the it this subject may b spoedily silver Russia, in | | own country John Harets of Gareison was attacked and sovercly bitten by an envaged stallion the other ¢ Phe timely arvival of assistaned saved his life. While the « of Scotin w 5 a friendly eye, tho Williams | iy extravagunees oo 08 L the past Churisti ldren of Rev. Mr, ugz with a hatel other's hand and ne tinnity must look on th nity at cnuse for the nglan renlk weh it is 1 ind its e suspicion A and inour or, 10t rors, withont If in thut it had Chirvis- | movement with | « can couvention 1 not given too | Auditor B Before going he gave it out that iis was business that had nothing to do spent | politics. ‘ the day in Owmalin Johu IR assistant manager of the Union San Francisco i e company, of | Chicago was atthe state house this moruing. | NEW NOTARIES PUBLIC, ‘ tments: ounty . Svd Hopkins, cointy: AL Trommer’ Holt county s Jolin H. Tate, ity s ol B Saw v Pawnee City, Pawnee county; B, G, Dur bank, Gmahe, Doy county WOMAN'S BOARD OF The convention of the Woman's ssions elos otional exercises w qon, fed by Mus, J. 1. Rhc NS, Presbyte vian bourd of 1 Do this fore At 4 o'clock | tant | PRESBYTERIAN BOARD OF MISSIONS, | ! other | public | into temptation, | evil should be hateful to him, ing a religious newspaper. The apostle, throughout his Christinn minise tey, mude use of means and methods for the publication of his teachings |mmf 1z o those supplied by the modern newspaper. He taught by the pen ns well as orally, and teansmitted his write ten expositions and injunctions to dise churches, to be published for the benefit of the world, and to remain until now the basis of Christian theology St. Paul, too, laid down principle maxims for the guidance of editc nid veligious teachers which are of immortal truth, Let us call thel attens tion of our brethren of the newpaper fraternity to a few of them: He that giveth, let him do it with sinipli- city: ho that ruleth, with diligence; he, that showeth mercy, with cheerfulness, Abhor that' which is evil; cleave to that gros ud | which is good, Be not w Provide men If any man think that he knoweth any- thing, e knoweth nothing yet as he ought to Know Kuow ve not that they which vun in a raco run all, but one receiveth the prize! So ruu, that ye may obtain Let him' that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall 1 had rather speak five words with my une derstanding, that T might teach others also, than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue. Be not children in understanding: howbeit in malice be ye children, but in understuand ing be men Let us not be desivons of veinglory, provok- ing one another, enyying one another, It man thinks himself to be something when he is nothing, he deceiveth himself Put on the whole armor of God, that yo may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. For ye wrestle not agninst flesh and blood, but against | Alftics, against pow ors, dgainst the ru of darkuess of 11 eld, ug spivitual wickeduess in i Lces, Stand therefore, havi about with teuth, and hay in your own coneeits, things honest in the sight of all your loins 1 on the bre plate of vighteousiiess. Whatsoever things are true, whatsoover honest, whatsoever things are ever things are pure, what lovely, whatsoever things are of sort: Af there be any virtue, and if iy praise, think of these thin Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophiy and vain de Let no inan judge you orin v | moon, or of the ihbath S, Put off all_these: Anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy, filthy communication out of youl mouth Wi vit, 1 meat, or in drinl v, or of the new or yve do, do it heartily, as to the unto men Let your sy be alivays with grace, seq soned with salt, that ye may know low ye ought to answer every marn Ch them t sviel fn this world's good that they be not high minded, nov trust in uncertain riches, but in the living God, who giveth us vichly all things to enjoy Study to show thyself approved unto ¢ wshamed, at needeth not to b the word of truth, rned questions avoid a workman t tly divid lish and unle b the word; he instant in scason, out of season: reprove, rebuke, exhort with all uffering and doctrine. These are maxims whi v editor should study and lay to h 5 guides for his daily conduet. Truth, honesty, sincereit couray justi should always abide with him. He should write in the fe of God and without fear of men, His thought should not ho of himself, but how best to influence the judgment and move the hearts of the In other words, his writing hould be without self-consciousnes, w prime vice He should deceive in noth- ing. bear false witness in nothing. give due credit for what he borrows, and print nothing as his own unbiased opin= fon for which he has been paid as an ad- vertisement, He should not lead men but ward them from wrongdoing: not bribe people to commit offences and then tey to railrond them to the prison in which he should be him- f. He should do good to all men, and His ques- tion should he: Is it the trath? not, I it the populir delusion of the preseut, profitable to gratify? So conducted a new er becomes the it del ideal religious newspaper, of which our PHNUIBAG (eniee | Baptist, Congregationalist and Presby wis on the sulb ' by A s huve beel alki D. B, Wells oth iuter: | |t '1 e ru- nal ‘\-1 h‘: 11‘1‘:“"!“" lwllli(lv- sting and profitable, Synodical and foreign | 1MOU religlons merely in " ‘l‘ g1 | reports took ap most of the time of the day, | Partment,” so designated, but in th The letters by Mrs, W. G, Craiv and Miss secular department™ also, 1t is vel Sophin Rhea were exhaustive and_emineatly | fous throughout. satisfuctory to the convention. Mes. Mary | Tohe such a newspaper is the constunt . Pratt and Mrs. A. A, Fulton delivered ii- teresting missionary addre: The five | minute tulks on specinl phases of the meeting by Mrs. C. O, Van Cleve, Mrs. J. S, Oliver | and Miss L. W. Irwin, however, were the meut of the progranune of the day kv thing considered, the convention was a decided su Mus. hnson delivered the “Good SUPREME COURT CAS| The following cases were filed for héaving before the supreme court today : State ex rel Willinm W. Wilson vs Willard 1 Stewart, county judgeof Lancaster county; | mandai In ve Louis W.Stricklett. The relator, Stricklett, alleges that he is unlawfully de’ his liberty —by Frank Harriman, Washington county-—and upon | supreme court for o writ of s corpus, Stricklett was arvested upon | the information of Henry Lucas,who charged | that hie assaulted hin with intént to commit | mnrder, and at the April term of the district | court, just closed, he” was tried and found wuilty s charged, and the court seutenced vea term of three years in the te penite The velator, who was de- d anew trinl, seeks el and final dis- » from enstody through a writ of habeas s s i L CITY NEWS AND NOTES * Gregory of Talmage and I prominent stoclc and gr werd in the city today e has it t the state I nomination at the Lancaste prived of sheriff of showing askes th ti se Conger in men, John W. Scoit, ussistant gen of the Union Pucitic railway com the city, It is said that 2 is portant’ vailvond wmatters, It is lewened from the At of il that Ed Holmes will be appointed | inner circle the torney O, 1 Muson is improving, 1stained when thrown froy VS UZ0 WEPe IIOKe SOVerd Tlis hiis bu than wi first thot Hon, T. M. Cool to have his ap pointmients of cuumerators for the various | precinets of his di all wade on or before Monday nes Work on the n way. 11 s oxp is under that the building will mber 15 | n Brothers in- | 0y ¥ Sept that Kiteh n the old Capital hotel build. | i HOW ONe o its site | - | Iy . AL NEW S Some Scrvipture for | urnalists, the theme of avery inte 1 inares cent meeting of the Presbyterian union No more ot could hay onguged the the company for every newspuper should he an id 15 noWspu e nd until the jority of* them beeome such rveligion antlot do its perfect work in t orld the New York Sun editovially, s the grodtest engine for moving ed in the ser- public sentiment is emple successful, or only temporarily so. Evi senatorial campuign in the | carotd bos livin ton | Lont tself to the ads of royalty and op- | veport asserts that for muny yeurs our | western states hus been more or less in- | Huv Stickly, a tonyear-old bos, fiving [ e R e A n e O i e competitor on the novth has been ex- | fluenced by the corporations. They have | yung by o rattlesnake, bt his futhe | friend of truth, of son, of liberty, of | ploiting upon Amerviean commerce and | invaded conventions, forced the nomina- | the poison out and the boy is thought to | an, the helper of the needy, how ~ the is doing so now on & more high-handed | tion of pliant eandidates, supplied liberal | out of danger | heart of the people would hive gone out i St S R TR ind main. | The boiler in the croamery at Stanton ex- | to it! Yet this was the mind that was und extensive scalo than ever befove. | bund ol sews ol war, and malt= | ;) 4oq Wednesday, one of the flues teaving a iy Cheist Jesus, What the world needs ix evident from the tone of extracts from | tained a horde of lobbyists duving legis- | hole through the wall and landing outside the | 000w oart which will vegared such the report that the committes [ lative sessions. But it remained for the | Noone was hurt and very Tttle | qyogtions as the cavpenters strike from red to recommend vadieal L | young and guileless state of North Da- ool ehild of Jacob Garber, a | the moval stundpoint. Lot us be willi for checking the competition of Cana- | kota to furnish the exact value of a d near Duncan, while playiug about the ‘”l Lxllu'vm;‘ .vl.vh’ :‘»er to Iw..m- II dian railroads and vessels with those of | senatorship to the railvoads, and the | house fell from the secoud story into a boiler | other, to ook at other mon s nilnirs, an he U Stat | price they were willing to puy for a vop- | ©F hot water on the cook stove und was so | to in_us the mind that wasin | the United States, 4 | price they weve willing to pay fowr @ reps g iy sealded that death ensued in a few | Christ Jesus, he facts clicited by the investigation | resentative in the house of lords. The | hour ————— it inly showed that the advants | report of the bribery investigating com A. T, B cnear Bower in Jeffor, | \1‘,'l‘"" Polith l: Re "'I'"‘* R o 5 Ak anadndin [lmiktas . NAET st | son county 1 two acres of lund he civil service, with most beneficia by the lrouds of Cannda 4 - bk ot th ,v" islibure, — Juak | o8 o o Whish ha pulled 500 bushe vesults, is doing its work in the adminis- their compotition with the ronds of this [ given to the public, is a revelu- [ Wikt solling ithe market now for #1355 | {rative branehes of the government, | In country, being practically free from all | tion, This interesting official history | per bushel, mukiug she gross receipts oF one | g papresentation we must silence the | the restrictions imposed upon our o shows that the tyo leading cororations | 40 BT ) dentalls ot | oWl of the claims of locality, says the alien corporations were turning | of the state had ‘decided to divide the | fehn Bystiom, whe was aecklaptolle She Chauncey Depew in-hiv. Hafler Dinnex W the best possible account, necs | two senatorships. Whether the: Norths | ton duys affer the gdclddnt, the dircet cause | Specehos ‘1‘”'-""“|l‘"y"'fm'H“"“"“_:”“}“y"““ " % ¥ At A Eaa e e T 5 of his death being hemorrhag 1o deceased | ¢ tional ability, pi sm and use aril to the loss of the ern P ific secured its man is not lknown, e I"“‘n ot \‘“,.,h wand one of the oldest | fulne il he fails in ono distriet, his | American lines, But it was shown | The Manitoba, however, did not have a | W8 BRI RECE B0 BIey ' Wife and | puety i vetuen him from anothers thus | on the other hand that this resulted in | walkaway, The republican eaucus nom- | four children | all His time and talents will be given to very material benefit to a large number | inated P e without opposition, and Two 1 -l\~ named Brown and MceMullen | the vepublie: thus will the honor become 1 i g z g he second | While herding ¢ L ate W S0 1 that its possessor, without fo of our own people, who consequently | after a long struggle awarded the second | WREE ORI CF i SRR | Ao o A Dakschsor. oTLibout Tars were found to be strongly opposed to any | prize to Maurice Johnston. Accord: | proved to be something of a poisonows mature, | i U6 BER G ee nmong | interfc the Canadian competi- | ing to th timony, Johnston was fivst | resulting in the death of Brown, = MeMullen | 3 i® g oW “thus will we' escape tho tion, The people of the northwest ynd | offered o consulship to withdvaw from | IV e ten asmaines S EERERE | danger of having public service filled by of New England were in full accord in | the race. Then a cash consideration of o bt Sa0 m) at theend of | those who ave simply fourth-rate attor- | vice of true and g nuine i lig “m.m, declaring that this competition was most | ten thousand dollars for himself and fif | Fobruary, about tw thinds of which was | heys or mutto h m.':} willion lres, E,m:;.;.r. sneration of mankind is yet essential to thelr mutual interests, und | teen thousand dollars for his followers | from farintes on '\'x:.'w.;fl}.fx! il b HAD "‘"“_"" “_‘ '_“““‘_ :” .u\v‘v-" b 0 he. Re De. Dext T that its destruction would result in | was tendeved and declined, The short of funds. Ina month from this tiu our wives, our sisters and our danghters, | the Congregationalist, wu ht, there forcing them to pay a lar und | jection of this y liberal oYor an- | when the fat cattle and hogs have been mar- | gy yotive nnd intelligent interest on theiv | fore, when he said that all the daily % it ’ ! L keted, bankers expect to see the farmers’ de unjust tribute to American iy gered the corporation forces, Ko IR BRURCH o M \ partin the vital questionsof the duy will in greatly inereased cha thoy decided to defeut him at any cost. owsT] vo to H;- patitios of |: future thad N fransnontatin T e L PR & nolitical attors owa Ltems, purity and higher tone and enrnestness by rl" P “"’ "“' ,‘f“ ’I" - hosld the } Jolinalon swears that {v" ."Il" :" "I lo | A 813,000 hotel is being built a which the loftiest pateiotism and the damage to thelr business from re- | ney of the company, W. E. Dodge, whil ard will build &,000 of most intense materialism can supplement | ducing the outlets for their products, | privately assuring him of eight votes, o are 11,000 Knights in | and support each other, giving to the usurious trade umid re- | The sentiment in both sections was most | declaved publicly that “th> Manitoba conntry the best of governments and the prouounced against the proposition that | vead could not atford to let me go to the 1 @ouuty fariners are establishinga = la t prosperity. pupers should be religious journals; and he showed his confidence in the ultim nd complete triumph of velizion by ex- pressing his belief that they would be- come such, The Rey. Dr, Wayland, the editor of the National Baptist, hud much renson ulso for his thut if St. ul were now living he would be edits | Burns before he could | man to sell L would be | Patd im of The Sun, and when in any respect at any time it fails to attain so” lofty an ideal and so far as it fails, it bows its head in humility, confessing the wes ness and short-coming of man and his powers, it Irving and Cooper. I belicye that in the second century there will be but two names that wiil live to be enshrined in the temple that it pusses down to the third, of ull that it received from the first, and those two numes will be Washington Irving and Fenimore Cooper. s Chaunce Depow in his After-Dinner Sy . And that will be for the fact that they are sinply and_only of America—that they have o cupied their genius with things that ar entively and only American.” By that time the Indian will have dissap- pearved from the continent to be vemembered only w edveam, Lo, the poor ndinn, will then have been ethercalized to o form in whieh he would not know himself, And Fenimore Coo- his romances the superiors ay's o of Dick- a5 per will live, notbecause e the equals or rott’s o of Thacl . but hecause they represent the In- i the sceond century will love to te him, and will paint him in its pletures, and will present him in its comedies and tragedies, And Washing- ton Trving will live beeause the Hudson will live, So long as the Rhine is the inspivation of Europe Jong will the Hudson be the inspiration of the romance and the poetry of Amer- 4. And every spot upon the Hudson us the centuries roll on, will be e picturesque and move beautiful, hecause cound it centerssomuch that will carey Je undying fame and memory of Wasli ston frving, the father of American literature, n - — led With Washington. Quarre The grounds on which the white house now stands were once the orchurd of David Burns, an old Scoteh favmer, whose cabin still stands in lonely obscu ity u few squares b mnnsion, It ton, when engaged in laying out the city, had many a long and hetter quarvel with persunde the old even though it for the homo of the land, used in future the presidents, OMAHA LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY, Subseribed wnd Guarantecd Capital... §60,00 Patd in Capitul 550, 00) Buys and sells stocks and bonds; negotiutos LHUSLS; 0TS e LHAnsfer ngent ad (rustoe of corporit tukes eharge of property . Teets tixe Omaha L-:(.x;ln& TrustCo SAVINGS BANK. Cor, 16th and Dougla Cuplt Sts, 30,000 Suly daund Guaranteed Capital 10,000 Liability of Stock s 0,00) 3 e Cont Interest Paid on Deposit FRANK J. LANGE, Cashier Onicers: A T. Wyuw B . . Brown, v prosident; W n AU Wy Barion, | 0 B Lake sinany amount inade on City and Farw iy, wnd on Colluteral Security, ut Low 8L TalUs Cukielb

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