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D 2 i H £ WHE OMAHA DALY BEF, THE PUBLISH TERMS OF Dally and Suns EIx months Three months Kunday I Woekly I Omaha, Th & Omain, ¢ un. CORREEPO Al comm i editorinl patier should L Edftorial Departme BUSIN Al bosine EWORN ST State of N Fublishing That the i Wednoi Thur ¥ri Buturday. J Average,, ., Eworn to hatore me presence [Seal] Btate of Nebraska, v ot yen el 20,048 for Febr OWING to olumns to defer the Dickie’s closing a upon our ters op THE pr motor tr ful prote Tie double-de insists that the Missour opened for mavigation. machines should also be put in operation between Vancouve Gulf of Mexico. Mu. ¢ nominated Eleventh Towa will spoil a good editor to monplace ¢ THE republic Adams county don’t propose to allow ex- County Judge McKeighan to dictate to them, and threaten to shake the alliance and go into the republican primaries. This is the sensible thing to do. THE fisoal report of the financial con- dition of Canada shows a surplus of eight million dollars, despite the whole- sale poculations of officfuls during the year, A surplus is a rarity in Canada, and few governments in the world need it more, Tue local medical society has at last od the necessity of enforcing the medical laws of the state. put a stop to the imposters preying upon srof professional socurity, regular practitioners should mply with the law themselves to secure better laws for the protection of the profession and the reall the public. not only but endeavor public. knaves are too blind to hypoerisy. RAILROAD movements Nebraska foreshadow an early closin of the gaps in ity of new lines leaves no doubt of their y out their plans, thus corporations ability to ¢ forcing the strengthen their defences. ments and extensions urged by people and refusod ave coming to a head What publie pressure failed to secure rvivalry prom- ises to uceoinp by force of TuE attempt of ington paper to implic aland grs boomerang. unbending integrity, stainless. plunderors, name with Lowis A, G sevent, nue laws. A QUESTION OF JURISDICTION. A decision of the qu the authority of theinte commission and the German DATLY government, sent delogafes to Paris in 1881, and, was then alive to the situation to offe aid in the work of joint interest. questionably the work of edu rstate commerce a reduction iom rates will be awaited with port of the com- » in the early | wwding rates on sufficiently substantinl SUBSCRIPTTON. 000,000, tmission sent of his position in the dreibund, moreover, part of last month, © food products botwean the west and the prineipal distribution centers of the eas made- famili land and Germany, fon on gold and silver ¢ opinion was was growing stendily public has commission or greater a hundred votes house of commons, is true, but still a large gain over a fow ars ago, two members of the cabinet cents to Chicago and slve cents to the Mi ippi, cast si at the rates should be 5o reduced and adjusted, reduetion of two cents should be ting to news and addressed to the was excessive, of economic thought in \in their cause. Tiee Publishin Drafts, ¢ yable 10 the order « it the Come The Bee Publishing Company, Proprictors, Tho Bee iding, Farnam and Seventeenth Sts annd Kansas, port was followed up by *ts are certainly \gement, but thoy are the result its purpose yan order based on its findings, and offering the companies an opportunity CIRCULATION tary of ‘The Beo sl ejrot o week ending such an orde hearing of t the eighth instant. the situation is undoubtedly cle more promising time in the last new silver policy influence in sti sunments was bogun on iday. fune 20 Monday, June Tuesday, July 1 * of the national commission, and now avery great \irman of that almost forgotte ization, the » the proposal of an nee for the resolution ap- is at least a posi- have benetficial GRORGE . T7SCHUCK, Notary Publie. pears timely and the bility that it may , in the natur oly to the notice ) contained n motion to dismiss the pending proe jurisdiction, conclusions remarkable in declaring that he is upter, in face of the fact under his instruc- not a vote cor | that his pus, acti tions, have distrit commission *t the results would aenings of railrond companies aged in the transportation of grain. together, the noE B, TZSCHUCK, orn to before prescnce this of hum ten to one hundred dollars have sh hand,theonly rery vote shail avdless of oxpense, 3 y to flaunt in the face of people of Omaha, who are thor- Janus-faced vas held that be secured re t should be n to the fact,” its of citizens. and will positively apooar NDAY BE Wit Wyomi another how ¢ our constitution no citizen can be s property owners rratulated on the i contended that ous and une i provincial east :x pected all along the Atlantic inee is a costly e nature of its P — gument against the folly hoard of publi profitably extend its tions to the medieal qu wting in the cf s of first cost, s the cheapest in owners on street bo paved ave profiting by T imlm_ commission upon the pt tended to result in the announcement of sighbors, and have, with prac- 1 unanimity, petitioned for substan- tial materi of jumping on mo ins promises to cure, The vesulting L ugainst a he : only in swelling the demand for TiE pet poodie of Billy Broatch re- yank of the string with a hood and pro- fanity are mixed in equal proportions. Coming from the immaculate mailsack ", the sanetimonious oil room and worker, it serves- to il- determination fon itsclf to investigute the mat- ter in question, and that the c i tefested must bo the complaint in advance of the investi- gation and notified 2 eard thercon, A similar line of argument, demu to the jurrisdiction of the commission in the present lnummdmw. wa »m.muh-d other attorn other side was pre: ys, among then , of Nebraska, who appeared at the ¢ Thayer and on sponds to th . in which fal A line of flying ministerial fine luminute the disinterested pate one whose great aim in life is to plant Dodlin granite with incidental statistics where they will net the usual commis- SORGE D, PERKING, of the Sioux City Jou OTHER L. If elected it muke a com- I unlm’(svm. \U\ lll ALl OURS. strong s m]\(ums of impending request of Gove half of the is |nrnp4|'i||g t0 send her Black rlash waters for the purpose recent Cemand for the im settlement either in cash or in terri- tory of the 1877 war indemnity, ),000, which remaius still due her by Moreover, the czar has ast three months presented five batteries of Krupp guns and 100,000 repeat- i I 1; and finding that the Bel- barred by the state of ying with his demand farmers in Mr. Lambert- of en )‘m‘«-m; he ossion that quested to have it printed for distribu- ctofore spoken of the importance of the issue thus made re- garding the jurisdiction of the inter- state commerce commission, but it is to d that the position of the amounting to sublimo’ porte. its finances from comp for the call to arms of the national militia, he persuaded the Hoskier syndicate to issue ervian loan of 10,000,000 Mysterious matosuvers are also reported to be taking place on the lower Danube by the large flotilla of stamers belonging to the St. Petersburg Gargarin navigation which, although founded ostensibly for coutinues a_dcpenden in its favor. as was threatened when it was fi posed to demur to the jurisdiction of the The impression then con- veyed was that it was the intention to deny the authority of the commission ircumstances to o Auction of rates, question now under consideration, al- though it rofers only 10 the prosent pro- will doubtless determine tho falles ope of the authority of the com- mission to regulate transportation rates and the conditions undor which it commission. It is time to mercial purpos indifference s and sanguinary 2 ceen the Armenian and the Musselman inhabitants, more than 40,000 Mohometans aucasys, who have served their i thereforo still reserve forees, have set- and i other portions the reports of serious affr — “IF Broatch car spite of whisky boodle,” of the pretende being penned were scouring the saloons, dispensing Tammang boodle over the chasing favor actually imagine that the people sce their tric time in the Russian army Douglas county in xelnims a pal ‘While the wor tled around E ILVER CON. followers of prophet, it was impossible The joint v n to exclude them fi United States s looking to an i to adopt a common ratio between gold ilver for the purpose of os Lho international use of bir of relative follows ap- lution introduced in the conference sed in frequent quarrels with the whom they dyw h troops inva- value h-‘l\\m'n those mots propriately the action of the passing the conforence silver bill. more than probable that the proposed resolution will be adopted by as it is not apparent that any opposition to it. hatever may the chances of it accomplishing any pra It is doubtless prop:s the purprse ed in the resolution should ori with this country. n northeastern »tched Armenians cat powers of protection nizainst Mussulman . Russia, which c that section. cruelty and oppro: asortof spi tan’s Christian once more to inte subjects, Is now behalf as she in Bulguria in the war of 1577, tical result, competition. 0 much concern as its of the country and . upon tha finer.co: Atany rate it is uot a sensational Wash- Tudge Groff in bbing scheme will prove a Judge Groff is a man of His reputation is As land commissioner he has stood between the settlers and the publie He has introduced honest business methods in his office, and any of the feeble attempts to couple his crookedness will fall flat, Inall the departments in Washington there is not a man who bottes stands his duty or who will more lessly do hhl duty than Ixperience with int, the purpose A number of strat and foran ing e of about 50,000 men, the hope that a come of anothe Sevendl such conferences R none of which did anything to advance | the cause of thgse, conven mended the establishment of the sin standard of gold, with silve sidiary minox coin. 1878 and 1881 were somewhat less un- favorable to the cause of silver. elfect was to bring to the attentic the European nations that had par demonetized silver the fact that it was for their interest to join us in an attempt to re-establish the logal'equality of the | If the paople in each nation of | Europe had been alive to thalr own in- torests the wholo been settled within a short time after But neither England and G then roady to do hor share ferenco of 1878 oporated, however, to call a halt ia Germauy's demonetization, effort in this dive H\ an lhm n[l' T in men less than that of l; 15 Frauce by about. six hundrea the of German fi an ndditional burden ich anust be borne reased taxation bimetalism, in Paris in 18 Tha conferenc Commissioner | is not looki Smmmm——— THE county board of equalization has concluded its labors The increase in the assossed valuation of all property over last year amounts to one hundred and sixty-nine thousand dollars, or a total assessed valuation of twenty-five willions one hundred and nine thousand sum reprosents scarcely one tenth of the actual valuation property, and forcefully points out the necessity of a radical change in ourreve- An honest valuation 1s impos- sible under the existing system. |t and adjourned. and 50 on indofiy asiead still frthor to pavaly Al Life tu the endeavor to nour growing strength of the dragon of y. And yet thus far tho sacrifico is y made, despita the i would have 0 with Von Moltke that of the two consideration, ms justitiod | | at tho outset. centrating hor war power, Austria and Italy left as a proud wman's ver. been announced at Vienna that the govern- ment will propese an increase in the army in- volving a costof between £5,000,000 and §10,- smor Orispi of Ttaly is too jealous not to strain ks personal power, if neces- sary, to hold the terrible pace, and before long we may expect similar proposals from him, Where is the end of it all | is a ques- tion that grows more and more pertinent with each new year. On the last day-of June the government of the Netherlands Tntroduced in parliament a bill proposing general conseription, theologi- cal students and ecclosias! alone to be exempt from it, for eight yeuss for the army and six years for the navy, to b followed by five years in the landwehr. The army war footing is to be thus raised to 116,000 men; that of the navy proportionately, In 1858 the population of the Netherlands was less than four million five hundred thousand, and it is probably not much larger than that at present. This includes, of course, men, women and children, the porfect and defective clusses, and of the able bodied men 116,000 are to bo forced into the army on & war footing. Other thousands are to bo similarly fo H into the navy. areat the ar footing. It cons nmmr 36,01 510 cavalry, 1,520 engineers, 18,9 and 500 mounted police, in all about men, including officers and special ser- The proposed increase is over 100 per cent. The great armaments of Russia, France, Germany, Austria and Italy do not s0 strongly suggest the terrible tyrauny of the existing political conditions of Europe, which permit the continuance of peace only Dby o show of war, as does this example of a little nation of much less than 5,000,000 souls, and that is not actually involved with its great neighbors in international disputes, being compelled to maintain on & war foollng an army nearly four times as large as that of the United States, with its population of 6 000,000 and of practically unlimited wealth. ey The home politics of Italy are peculiar just now, and tho overthrow of the present goy- ernment of Crispl, or even its continuance in power, might hasten a rapturo in France. Iho prime minister is in & quarral with some of his former friends of tho radical party, who lose no opportunity of taunting him with having become the Bismarck of Italy, rather than its Gladstone, He has a strong majority in the house, but not in the senate, which not long since voted against him on an important question; and in thenew election which will soon occur his friends may not be able to ¢ the country in his support. The party most likely to succeed against Lim, if any does, will be |h extrome liberals, uniting with conse who oppose the minister on other gre ud thero are some indica- tions, that in anticipation of this, Crispl may retire from the ministry, which he told the house a few weeks ago was a “post of mar tyrdom quite as .anuchas of duty.” Crispi has passed for an_enemy of Erance, chiefly because ho formed the triplo alliance, but one of the radical leaders, in a recent oration commemorating Benedetto Cairoli, the last of a family of brothors who mostly died fighting for Italian liberty, used such language about Tums that tho French expect to find that party, if it comes lnto power, no more friendly to France than Crspi has been. In fact, lowever, the internal condition of France, makes all experionéed statesmen dosire peaco and greatly dread war. Italy, though mak- ing great progress since 1860, has still a large population in extreme poverty, and of late, in some proyinces, inclined to be disorderly. s Since the chief justice of Samoa, under the peculiar treaty made at Berlin, is to go as far d becoming the dictator of that archi- pelago as a judicial officer could well go, the appointment of a Swede to the ofice is prob- ably a wise step. The treaty declared that it the three signatory powers should fail to agree in nominatinga chief justics, he should be named by the king of Norway and Sweden. Considering how much this func- tion has to do, it is not surprising that the treaty alternative thus mentioned has lgen actually adopted. In case of dispute asto who is king of Samoa he is to decide; in case of ‘“any difference’ be- tween the treaty powers ho is to be the arbiter and to settle it; he is torecommend to the Samoan government any law he may think proper for preserving orderand collect- ing taxes outside the municipal district; he decides all suits concerning real estate, all civil suits of any kind between natives and forcigners, and varlous criminal suits. All thisand more he is to do for 85,000 a year, payable the first year in equal shares by the three signatory powers, and afterward from the revenuos set aside for tho Samoan govern- ment. Although his sa the first lien on those revenues, yet to remove any lingering doubt in the chief justice’s mind the three powers agree to shave In making up any de- ficiency. We shall soon see how this rather novel device in governmental machinery will work in Apia. « The motto of Dr. Nansen, who next year is to take a journey to the north pole, is “For- ward! To victory or death!” It is a most appropriate motto for his enterprise, for if he s into the unknown far north of the he must work out his own salyation or perish, Itis quite certain that mo government or private enterp would imperil the lives of scores of men in the forlorn hope of carrying suceor to Nan- sen's handful of followers if they are swal- lowed up in the unknown realms of the ice king. All the moncy on needs has now been provided, and if he lives his little 170- ton vessel will enter Behring Sea in June next He hopes to take his plunge into the ice north of the New Siberian islands in September, and t ctrronts will re- lieve him of all further respousibility as a navigator. He must go whore he is taken The plausibility witty which he has urged his theory that the ice deift will carry him across the pole, and the fact that some Arctic ex- perts think his thec explain the important fact that he has induced a gov erament to supply most of money he n his is somewhat remarikablo, ¢ peditions in search of the north pole have not been at all popular of late years, e The Bist Thin: to Do With 1t, Minue: ol il Aking of the MeKinloy bill, the senate s to think that the casiest way to carry aything down Stairs is to (hrow it out of the window. is reasonabl Cummmings an ne Prohibitinists, Kol M Oty Times, There is little at Auos Commings Kansas prohibition ote. His sharp erlticism of “tho prohibi I ¢ " ulte in the house was as well deserved as it was thoroughly meant, P Has a Symbolie Sitnificance. Chiengo Tines, 0 Clark, who lived near ywas r (tly stung by a b n olght hours. Ta t to take warning by Mr, Clark’s A man v s St Jose und died wi men in whos buz is sad fate, - Woman's sphere Ealarging. Pitsiny B ltin $oon there will ba no profession or trade own. Women SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1890. similar measutes. How the peopls of theso three countrissscan endure additional bur- dens is always o mystery. But it hasatready | tional | i Bee fully mastored farmin ing, the law, telefrraphy, and many other pursuits, and now an Ohio woman has begun work on a railrosd bullding contract. A fo- male captain crulses along the Atlantic coast in 0 neat schooner of her own, and & stoam. boat on the Mississippl posscsses a woman enginecr. L Ca— Dropping the side lssues. St Louis Globe-Iemocrat, The Iowa republicans are gotting together atarato which signifies that the season of folly isended, and that they propose to re store the former majority of tho p in that stato by working for the recognizel repibli- can principles and letting side issucs alone i iga® FOR READERS NOW l?‘i EARIH Threo things ought to find o place in every American home: The sacred Scriptures, o good daily newspaper and a thoroughly reli- able encyclopmedia. The fisst 0 ore quite sure every family in which Tur Bee is taizen already enjoys; the second it has been tho business of our lives to furnish; the third wo placo at the dispasal of our readers from this moment. htcents a day, with anaddi- action of a cent 100 sinall to be oasily statcable, will horeafter enap lo uny citizen to secure the daily and Sunday edition of this aper for an entire year delivered at his rosi- dence, and in addition acomplete set of the Americanized Encyelopedia Britannica, which, after a careful examination, we confi- dently believe to be the most comple i ble and altogether best work of its kind ex- tant tods This is another illustration of the motto that lies at the base of American institutions: In wunion there is s We have simply organized the read- s of Tue Bee into a club of encyclopmdia buy and obtained from the publishers the concessions which so vast an organization has the legitimate right to demand. Our reward will come in an in- creased circulation, which, agair, will prob- ably enabloys to secure similae advant for our subscribers in some other dirvection, This is as it should be; the publishers and readers of & great newspaper should work together for mutual advantage. The work which we have thus secured for our readers is neither a mere reprint of a for- publication nor a hasty compilation o Ycatchy? title, Ttis reallya edition of that world famous we relopa pre staff of Americar th a speeial view 10 the necdsof American homes. Not a sub- jeet treated in the inal “‘Britannica” has been omitted; not aword has been left ont that by any possibllity could interst un American der, and a vast amount of new matter the waut of which deprived the Eng- lish work of half its fulnees has been added. The title accurately expresses tho poand planof the book. It is tho I a Britannica Ame ed. What the publishers have dono is to the Encyclopmedia Britannica to pie rebuilt it with amendments and improve- ments, The latest or ninth edition of the or- iginal work was compiled some fifteen years ago; the American editors have revised it to the present yoar. Tho oviginal work was crowded with minute and exhaustive do- seriptions of English towns, cities, countics, boroughs, minor institutions and other mat- ters of peculiarinterest to ki shmen and to Englishmen alone, while American subjects were treated with the same brevity as French or German, The American editors have reversed this method, condensed the articles on distinctively British ubjocts within reasonable limits, and utilized the space thus gained for exhaustive dis cussion of purely American topie: The original work excluded from its plan all mention of . individuals, however famcus, who were alive at the time of its compilation ; it says not e word of more than half the mon whoso names are written on the pages of modern history—no word of Grant or Sheridan, or Sherman, of Hari Beoecher Stowe, Julia Ward Howe, or beth Stuart Phelps, of and, Harrison or Blaine, or Parnell, Salisb or Bism: This woful lapsus, too, s been supplic the Americanized edition, A ser of biographies, cach brought down to the p: ent enables the reader to learn glance, the life story of every mnote individual of the present generation. To all this add a complete series of ps and a number of well e uted engravings illustrative of the text, a Americanized Bn lopedia Britannic fore you—a work in . whoso introduc our veaders we foel a not unwarrantable pride. s¢ e GREAT M The king of Sweden is said to have a first n living in Lyun, Mass, The Cineinnati Enquirer says that Speaker Reed has run his first heat in the presidential is accused of having sen- 1d a desire to suceeed Sen- ator Evarts. The cldest member of Lord Salisbury’s cabinet is Lord Cranbrook, who is seventy- Lord Salis bury is sixty oper monument is to lh Now York town that James Fonimn made famous by locating his home the P.T. Barnum’s fortune is esti £11,000,000, overy cent of which e since he reached his for birthday. Gilbert, the amatist, begir literary work ht and keeps on writing until the sun has visen. He 15 a great consu Count Dillon’; arcttes, friends say that he hg compelled into trade to mak money losses he sust.ined in t General Boulanger dictator of 17 is P, Walters of Phanixvil s hoen d the , Pa..who has been appointed to succeod S, Dayis Pu as assistant treasurer of the United States Philadelphia, is known as the al {1 i , the first to break from the P delegation at Chicago. o czar has had a serious quar brother, the Grand Duke Alex duke is the head of the mariy tion, and it is said b \\lthllm " administra- 1dod the czar by slesule roform to an end to h now characterizes the na wator Evar a hur able lo on the ba vd, furnished colored man ading vé the senator s, but it has not besn u ored man and his wife duriag b has owned it King, the new cony: \u\ residont o comf Potomac, 1n Maryl instant us in re general 1o 1 andan enthusiz some and distin white e and e striking fi the Americun « in Hane warmly atta Chauncey Doy by i middle-azed lady by his urbanity him who witness hether he was used to that sort of thing, ud he veplicd ; “It is one of the regular rules of the oftl as 1 good soldie and his friends are a Ex-Senator Gilman Marston of New Hamp. shire, who died Thursdiy, was wounded badly m the armat Bull Run, but refused to have the member amputated.” thouh tho sur. geons told him his life depended on that operat He insisted upon being pla upon bis horse and was lod' to the front amid checrs from the “boys'! of nis regiment, He once vefused ded transpor broaght those men fr fight. not to be d tyrannical superior to bulld a pwruard hov sywithout so much as & 0 107 he obeyed he had pshire to litorally, solid logs b 50 used that there was not even a doov to enter by." - Bismarck s Memorial, al Cablegram to achrichten de- Hamuuna, July 11,—[Spec Tho Hamburger s yoport that Princo Bismarck intendy to request Empe William not to croct Bismarck’s memorial during his (Bismarck's) 1ifotime, nies th cou congre Grand Isl the west and northwest will endorse that g tloman for governor Davis of Columbus, who is booming Baruum, 100ks at it. \ month. county fully insured. will hold a convention July 17 to place a county ticket in the fleld at Duni Columbus and was paralyzed. e cannot re- cover, Milford, was st Hi lold a pi 10" be chosen by the Epworth le tionon the school board of distr market and The complaint sets forth that the orders were issued in wiolation of law, as there w debt existing against the school district at thetime of their issue, southern N be held at Superior August 4 to 9, promises to bo the biggest gathoring hold in for a long time, The railroads entering Superior will run_special trains. Senator Tng Go MeNall, Henr Thayer and staff and many other’ prominent men will b there. be thirty bushels to the acr farmers’ allinice in Hand count Dalkota and wage Yankton and fittin boat house on the Jimriv and the wood farming land s being v agricultural j gravey iounds as a nat onal cemo cure proper care for the grave ex.ment, hotel cauzht an old farr raachine tho other da bt 1ii in 1 can side of th T this city has | pugilist named Tony | champion of tho state. Miss Sturgess is a tall, slonder, protty toen year: tho town. For som working for » allow bis roops to board, ut | rowned The orders of o | aft door step. Mrs. Stur wis up ina minute a soreamed and hor eries for he who quickly rushed o her mother's | om oa 1 Wy risfidont, .0 i, \ POLITIOAL GOSSIP, Thereports from the primaries over tho state will soon commence to come in and tho man with straws or a slate can commence to figaroon the situation. Wost Point is tho first to como in, with a city dologation di- vided botween Richards and MacCull for governor. hn M. Stewart of Minden, who for soveral years has bean doputy attorney gon- eral, announces himself as a candidate for the olitical shoos of Mr. Leeso, Mr. Stewart expects to come fn with a portion of the west, hwill again divide the strength of St 1t is evident that Mr. Richard B n I8 not as doe) in the ¢ for licutenant governor as he might have boen a fow flooting wooks ago. The fight for the Aubum postofice still | goos merrily along, Dr. MeGraw is confident and Rush O. Fellows is confident, Mr. Col nell continues o roceive hy potitions, but remains fiem in his admiration of David Campbell, tho preseut incumbent. As Camp- bell’s commission does not expire until danu ary, itis altogether probable that nothing will happen until tho heated term is past. Judge The orderto give the othex fellows all tho show possidle, says that o lsnot a candidate £ governor, Ho oxpocts to boa candiduto for fudggo again next fall, and that is about all ho lias time to hoth J. W, Jomson of Satton, eandidate for see- rotary of state, is in tha city, o says that the briof canvass which ho hasmadsleals him to think thatho still hus somo frionds throug! aska. Mr. Johnson's f political worl: was when ho groomed Hen Gros Laws for state auditor seme thre ours, ago. G. P. Hildebrand was in Omaha yostor- from St. Paul, Howard county. While he is 0 de , ho suys ho speaks for A. E. Cady when he \.\m.u all that gentleman Wants is 10 go to the | This is o peg ort uan from the ature from Howard vo lower than being Third district. The der nd insist that a great portion of This is not the way M - NEWS OF THE 5O RTHWEST. Nebraska. The now Metnodist church at Gretna is under way and will be comploted next W Freoman of Blus lost two barns by fire, but they were The independent voters of Gosper coun The members of the Furnas County Veter- pssociation will meat in convontion at Beaver City ou Saturday, July 10, The State banlk of Cro ton_is tocrect a new, fino and commodious building, Its capil al stock has been increased to $51,000, 5. M. Slawinski, postmaster 1 merchant fell off a Union Pac train at J ohn Nice, wh worked in an elevator at k bya tumbling rod and enjaw and a fractured skull. s very doubtful. wioe farmers' allianco expocts to rie in the near fatw ominent speakers will bo ¢ d a bro recove The Ar gad to ud- dress the people on that oecasion. The electric light company of Norfolk is gradually getting the new ate stroet lights in, and it will not be long until Main street is 1it'up with an are light at each intersection, An open meeting for the (i sion of tho issues of the day will be held by Central al- liance No. 021 at the Weimer uorth of H; chool_houw fternoon, July 19, pworth e i } 1oy Tho Norfolk District 1led to meet at L Each chargo is ¢ titled to' two ¢ ne, is 0 nized in the charge—if not let the pastor appoint them. The sheriff at Stuurt has served an injunc- 't No. 44, raining it from payiug interest or principal on $,000 in orders issued by the board_on the building fund and placed on the sold ono year ago last spring. no The reunion of the Grand Army men of cbraska and northern Kansas, to ebraska alls, Governor Humphirey and staff, ex- rnor Anthony, George 1. Pecl, Webb Booth of Kansas, Governor The Two Dakotas. The yield of wheat in Hughes county will There aro twenty-six b nches of the Harvest hands are ard to g ave high in con There were mytiads of hogs in Bon Homme year, but this scason they have ared. inizing & boat up fiue groun club at ud a The fallir chande ion church at € nifig oil in all divection a full blooded Tndis b damaged pton, scatl , is t the Crow Creek Lker, well educated, 1sus enumerator fc y \|Il' ‘\H«nn western ation for settlement, says a very ition is pouring inld that section pidly and Wate for The county is well w not a better county in the At Fort, Rice, in Morton county, in thopost v lie the vemains of some fifty sol- who were massacred by th ars ago while building the was visited by relatives the gther ovt the graves in a wofully n n. An effort will s pass a special act wting the thus se- by the gov- An clectife battery fiend in an Aberdocn Iy escaped oming a murderer, ed with heart disease 2 uneonscious condition and had to b r hpsician's office for treutment and tho practical joker tulate Limself on belug on the out penitentin Pl KNOCKED OUT BY A GIRL, moved to o Connecticut’s Champion Pugilist Beste el by a Farmer's Daughte v Norwark, Conn, July 1. [Special we Bue. |—-Clara Sturgess of ked out a middleweight ok, who elaims tobe ® gram 1o skiug miss about elgh tis the talk of diys past Cook has b s, Clara's fathe of age, and haying, T allows the men to drink all tho hard cider they can stow away, and as a result Tony becamne intoxicatod and i the 100n went to sleep on the farm s objected and un- ov oft. His blood »0k 1o drive the sly and makes fivo candidates instead of | were arvested st January in thi | bered that we were arr ppleget of Johnson, fn | | licly announce that T was 10 assistan A P 10 Ttk Bk, ]—A shocking yesterday on hoursvillo b ratie friends of Sam Wolbach of | 4 spells of in were usually ver alarm was_folt family, with whom Cammi ngs boarded. Yo D e und he b dition ho ente the lives of the placesof safety. Pl nei al ug twohad o tussle on W oy, York | e unfortunately secured the end to which he dead. Leaving the dead body in the roud, Cummings then went 0 & barn and I Uimself in attempted suicide by sevoral ¢ time o reseue him, Hewas conye Tur Bek|—Prince Bisn says that e would not have Gorn ox-chancellor holds that He the emperor w might by event of wa braska ure 1 their several counties to meet In conve the elty of Linc o'elock p. m., for the purpose of placing fn nomnl office A5 sentation vote cast f dential oie COUNTI Adams. Arthur. Antelope: Bannor. Biaine Boone Box Bu Brown . Bufnlo . Rutior Burt. Cuss Codur Chaso. Cuming Custer. Rea Wil ) Richard 15 lock... ‘ Salino, 15 . . 35 ity Dundy suundors L0 14 Scott's Bluif 1 ' ) “'TLE or with his infemal | IVER PILLS., regulate the Dowels. Purely Veg SMALLPILL, SWALL DOSE, SMALI. PRICE. Subseribed and G Paid in Cupital e 0,000 comme 1 he struck her. She p were She picked up & ohiir and belab- fightor_over tho head, The olmir was broken ina few moments and Cook | turs vd | Directors—A. s atention o the girland started © | 3. Kluba'ly George 1. L thrash hor. Sho grabbed him around the nock and gave him a pummelinge. The girl's father arrived on tho scono and added further to tho prize fighter's umilie tion by siving him & shaking up. Cdok was thrown into & wigon and taken to jail. Ho hns won several battles in tho ring lately, the last one taking placo not less than o wook ago when he defeated Jim Reynolds of New Haven, - - . KILRAIN (AN WHIP SULLIVAY, That's What Muldoon Says and He Offers to Back Jak w York, July 11.—[Special n e Bre.]—~Muldoon has written a let. isworlng Sullivan,in which ho calls Suls livan a liar and braggart. Ho says Sullivan r paid him for training him and ace ¢ an in rom tho time that Cleary and myself ity, up to as over, th the time whon the tria blackguasd, Sullivan, nover ol ¢ gle dollar towards dofraging the exponsc Mr. Cleary and myself, and ¢ will b vou 1 on an indictme ainst us for belug his seconds in tho found fight He coses by saying: “Tf he w ght Kil vain again, 1 will o on the other side. 1 will put Kilraln in the ring 5 pounds, and | Will bot #1500 that he wins the fight in less iy than it took Sul n to win the last cht from him, when Kileain went into thy ving woishing only 178 ponnds, There would be plenty of in such a fight, as Kilrai n get backers for 810,00, and 1 Sho, t Worth, Tex, offers a big purse and 1 also from tho state peru ing tho ) take place without inter ence, § Kilvain fail to winand in loss time than Sullivan won, then Twill pub. to Sul Sullivan in this last fight livan has acted in_this whe m whipped | that he will have tho good st son alone, As badly o matter, I ¢ negro, and b > o' ot Jack cara to s R : MURDERED BY 4 MANIA ylvania Farmer Beaten to Death with a o~ Pirrstoy, Pa., July 11.- n rder occurred the Palmerton farm near Bar- Sylvanus Palmorton, o prosper farmer, was beaten to death witha hoo one of his hived men, Albert Cummings 1o marderer, it is said, had been subject o anity forsome time past, but they mild and no cause for r Ly Palmerton or his rday ho wi aving maniie. In this ¢ h and threate o family flc u then started to 1hors and on the way picked nings overtools him: and tho during i i 'm 50 oo, ich the hoe han attachod tho ™ steel | at Palmerton on t and with until he v Ting but anein ehibors forced an entrance ed to Jai Bismarck Wouldn't Have Don: It.”) Beuwry, July 11.~[Spocial Cablogram to arck, fn an inter- w vublished by the Fraukfort Journul, ned the Anglo- sent form, The oland, which hed to secure to Germany, i obtained at less cost. Un: 1 agrec ent in its pre Iy loss the 1is strongly forti might o dunger'to Germany in tho Mepublican Stato Co The republican ¢ vention, tors of the state of N uested o send delegates from tion In atd L Wednesd July ation caudidates for the followlog state Governor. Lioutenint Governor, tary of State, Public Accounts Tronsu erof Publie Lands and Bufll- ; ntendent of Publie Tnstruction. And the transaction of such oth business come hefore the con TUE AVPORTIONMENT titied to ropro- being based upon o 11 Mustin The seve Arge o ei i Kelth, .. Kimbail Knox. v rgnizod Ter 1| Toul.. SO 9 - smmended that proxies be mitted to the convention, o e el cates prosont bo ait horlz ust the full ation L. D. RicuARDS, Chalrmian By Secretary. of the dele these Little Pills, Thoy also rellove Dis: tress from Dyspepsia, T digestion and Too learty Eating. A perfect ren cdy for Dizelness, Drowsiness, Bad Tuste I tho Mouth, Coated) T Paln in the Side,| TORFID LIVER. They 'CARTERS LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY. aranteed Capital... 850,000 Buys ol1s stocks por; I s Crans foragent and uted utes trusts; set trustos of corporations, tukes chargo of property, col- Tects taxi OmahaLoan & TrustCo SAVINGS BANK. s front | S+E- Corner 16th and Douglas Sts Pald In Ox Subseribed and Guaranteod Capital Liability of Stookh pital 2 5,000 dors 6 Ver Cont Inf t Puld on De: VIEANK J. LANGE, Cashior Vice-president, Wymun, Lroisurer i “)mun 3. 1. Ml Brown, Gy O Barton, £'W. Naasb, d,J, J Bouius - c e et wmtar