Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 21, 1890, Page 2

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{ ! } i s illegall THE OFFICE SEEKS THE WA, A Noticeable Dearth of Candidates for the Towa Demooratic State Tioket. EVERYTHING WIDE OPEN IN DES MOINES. Description of One Place Where Liquor is Itlegally Sold—Tho Flimflam Game Worked on a Farmer. Dre Morxes, Ta, July 20.—(Special to Titr: Bry gust 0) the demoerats of Towa will assemble at Cedar Rapids forthe purpose of nominat- ing astate ticket. Fora party that already holds the governorship and claims to be able to knock the republicans out this fall again, is @ noticeablo dearth of candidates probably waiting for the ofice to man. Tt isalso probable that the is muking a still hunt, and it is excopd- ke the offic ingly difticult for an ou 1 your cor- respondent to make & rational guess where lightuing is likely to strike For secretary of state, which will be the head of the ticket Hon. Fred Leh this year, man of this city has been suggested by some of the ing democratic papers. He has not siguified his willingness to accopt, how y would not. K kind of a fellow. He doesn't ca oMce unloss he has a ¢ 1 sul thing, and then would aspire to something even bi than the governorship, let alone th taryship of the state, He is willing that others should sweat isn't that run for ever, and perfectiy - toil teying to procuro those offices, but nothing less than the United States senator- ship would satisfy him. But while he IS mo petty ofce secker himself, he 15 recognized as the leading democratic political worker in tne state, and his power behind the throue 1s greater than the throne itself. L. B. Kennington of Nowton is understood to be u candidate for auditor of state, and it i3 suid that ‘Pom Bowman of Council Bluffs would not refuse to run for treasurer, and is likely to have the chance. J. C. Cleggett of Mason City is a candidate for judge of the supreme court, and Kditor J. ¢ of Sioux City would like to fill Gib Pray’s J Beem of Marengo would like to bo supreme shoes as clerle of the supreme court (s court reporter, and L. L, Ainsworth of W Union is mentioned for attorney general Hon. Poter A. Doy, the vetcran commissioner, is a candidate to succe self and will ive the republican candidate an uncomfortably elose contest, although tho nilway excitenient in lowa has prac died out and it is not thought the republicai ticket will be very badly scratched on that account 0 far as the platform is concerned, the will not be much change from fornier’ yea A bid for the farmers’ alliance vote will un doubtedly be made by the adoption of tarifr- for-revenue-only platk, and the arraigninent of high-tviff taxation s being detrimental to the interests of the wer and day borer and creative of trusts The platform will also pr y favor the Australian system of voting, the right of the state to control railway and other corpora: tions, and in the interest of true temperance will ‘demand the passage of fully guarded high lieense law. This lattor planik, however, will dey position of the ori gross. ud very largely on the dis- sinal package” bill by con- LIQUOR SOLD OPENLY, Apropos of this subject, the sale of liquor 15 running wide open in this and other cf of thostate. The exposure of the conspi of the justices aud constables to grow rich at the expense of the public treasury has had the effeet of lopping off the fees and dampen- ing the ardor of those offivials, The legislat- ing out of office of several justices and con- stables by the vacation of the townships in which they were elected also takes out of of the cont several objec- tionable officials and it was high time, for the county fund out of which these ofticials were paid,” which has beou ample in former years, was overdrawn in the first six months of this year to the extent of #17,000, Aboutall the ‘searching-and seizing 13 now beiug done by the city police, and they are only half-hearted in the matter. Itis an easy maiter to avoid them, and most of thelr en- deavors are fruitless, ONE OF TIE J0INTS, The descrintion of one place where liguor sold will serve to show how well in this city are protected, This o restaurant, on a prominent street the *joiuts place’ withiu a block of the Rock Island dopot. 1t is dquipped with eleetric wims, and a half dozén connections are made between the lower and upper floors, the keg being usually on tap up stairs, the door to the staivway & iug always kept locked. A look out is always on hand, bowever, to admit unobjectionuble customers, of which_ther 1y a pretty constant stream, But let ofticor or constable enter the place for the purpose of muking a raid. The waiter behind the lunch counter touches one of numerous electrie but- tons, the alarm is sounded up stairs, a con- venient sledgehammer comes down . whack” upon the keg, the contents arc emptied into a large pipe which leads to the cellar, the keg is heaved through an open window into tho alley, and allis quiet, This takes place quicker than one can tell about it. The door is unlocked, the officer enters, he sces a number of per. sons in the room or casually leaving it, “nothing is stirring. " Sometimes an s made of the supposed dor of the prohib- ited article, but usually nothing comes of i, Aind s0it goes. Darkness is the harvest time of THE “BOOTL) and those who have 8o ¢ busiuess. An “original package is secured and taken to a convenient place, the junc. tion of two alleys, or a vacant collar or hurn, and runners sentout to notify the thirty hat o “keg is on tap" at sueh and such place, and customers are not wanting. In a tew moments the contents of the pack: VER," tabliskod place of age have been rod to “original? stomachs, and the place of sale is changed for the purpose of br other pi nauseun. FLINFLAMMED TILE OLD MAN, One of the smoothest confidence games ever worked in this city took place last week. A favimer had a fine téam of horses which he was offering for sale. Aunother man drove up with a teum of dilupidated mules which he offred to trade. The farmer of course re- fused, and tho mule driver passed on. Shortly after a well dressed and gontlemanly appearing fellow came upon the scene. He accosted the farmer thus: *Phore is & man down the street who has a temn of mules which my fatherat one time owned. I am wvery much attached to them, but the owner will not sell them to me. Now, you want to your team and Pl help you'to dispose of You trade your team for the mules and Ll give you £200 for them, $10 more than ask your team.” The schemo worked. Tho trade was made and the new possessor of the team of horses drove off. The fellow who wanted the mules stayed with the farmerand when the horses were out of sight around a corner he handed the unsuspecting farmer to bind the bargain and went uround another coruer to get check cashed. Heo is around the comer yet. The farmer waited three hours for hu to come back and then started home with his mules, sadder, poorer and pos- sibly wiser. A STATE Towa Is the state of palaces. rass paluco at Creston, a corn palaco at joux City, n coal palasce at Ottumwa and now it is announced a flax palace will be built at Forest City, to be completed in time for the county fair In September, dng and emptying an- age, ad infinitum, ad slibituwm, ud OF PALACES, It has a blue Were Not Given a Fair Show. Fouwr Donee, In, July 20.—[Special Tele- gram to Tue Ber. ] —~William Munn, Thomas Parel, William Stephens and J, L. Guast of ‘Webster county, who were candidates forap- polntment as state mine inspector last spring, have just preferred some sensational charges against the executive council, of which Gov- ernor Boies is presiding oficer, and which is made up of both democrats and republicans. They claim that they were not given a fair deal in the civil service examination and that the appointment was made without regard to tho results of the examination. These cand dates say that when the ones from tiis county requested to see their standing after the ex- awluation, they were refused this privilege, In about two weeks now (Au- | THE OMAHA DAILY :BEE. MONDAY, JULY 21. 1800 but after persisting for some time the, finally permitted to see their standing. board, whon asked to show where the an- swers to the questions were wrong, un- able toexplin, whereupon the Webster county candidates theeatened to expose the fraud, and one member of the board snatched the papers and ed from the room. They now ask for examination and ¢ T to forfeit 81,000 if it that they did not sucee ly answer all the questions in the examnl Died of His Avoca, Ta, X, njuric Special Tite Bre. | ier Husckampf, the twelve year-old son of Fred Husekampf, died this afternoon at 5 o'clock from fnjuries received Friday in the hayfield of A, W, Coffman, mile sonth of town, The boy fell 'om the load, falling under the horses' feet, the hors, cking him it head and side, To Mannfactn Musox City, la., Juty to Ture Bee.|—A stock med in this city for the purp 1 kinds of creamery ket to an en ¢ Creamer; Suny ecial - npany will f man- supplios 1 zirk. Davexpont, Tn, July 20.—Ther fourteenth biennial feast of the Upper Mississippi turn- bozirk bogan hiere today. The attendance is of the association. 'S HAUL. Lllis Arrests a Man Wanted for Sev- al Craoked Jobs, a sneak nor of Fiftednth er a lively tus 1 to club the Detective named Tom Kix and D sle, in which 1zl la fellow into subm On Saturday afternoon a residence at the corner of Twenty-fifth and Seward wus vis- ited by thieves, who secured three breast pins, avinganda wateh, The fellows were 1 the back yard by the family and by neighbors, who suspected nothing suntil the 10ss of the Ity was discovered a few hours later. The police w with a description of the thi Detective Ellis saw three 1 drug store, at Fift 10:80 lst 1 © then furnished enter Kuhn's onth and Douglas, abo t, and at vuce sized them up the feliows hie wanted. As they came out he placed them under arrest. They showed fight and broke away and ran in opposite directions. The officr pursued one and fived once in the air to stop him. He overtook the felloy, who again’ resisted, and the ofticer struck at him with his gun, The thief caught e blow on his wrist, which was badly cut the gun. It took the fight all out of him aid he submitted quietly to arrest, When searched at the two bronst- i o vs of ldi those stolen from the re on Twenty- fifth street. The pipe was a new one aud had never been sme The felloy 1d not g e a satisfactory ne- count of himself He first, claimed that he bought the property in Denver, ha [ vived from there ‘last night. He aftc denied this and refused to unswer Captain Mostyn’s questions, SWhat are You k g : askitig me these questions for ! will lie to you n ow | The detéetives took another look two who ot away, but th for uld not find them, ¥y took a hack ank skipped across tho 10 the Bluffs. Shartly after t as vi wrest Henry Hornbergor L the police that his money ¢ stolon while he was te) cent from his lunch counter at Las street. Tho drawer wa tho back door. He said that it } ned about 8, all in silver. The mon, und_ on King consisted of o bill “and .10 in silver. The police were satisfied that he and his companions had robbed Hornberger's place and had then en- tered the drug store for the purpose of got- ting the cu hdrawer thore. This suspicion was strengthened when itwas leamed that one of the men tried to engage the attention of the drug clerk and get him to the rear end of the store, but the clerk suspected that they were thieves and ordered them from the place. There is a strong case against King and charges of grand larceny will be placed against him, —— THROWN FROM THE BOAT, Paul Frank Meets His Death Through a Companion’s Carelessness. The body of another victim of carelessness lies at Heafy's morgue. ome days ago Paul Frank left his home in Chicago, and, stopping at Council Blufts, he worked at oda jobs until yesterday, when he concluded to visit Omaha. Early yesterday morning he walked down to the river, where hie met a boy with a boat, who said that he was coming to this side. Young Frank engaged passage, and, taking a seat in the bow, he was soon pulled out mto the channel, where the oarsman apparently lost control of his craft and allowed it to drift with the current, Frank, knowing something about handling Doats, took one of the ours and paddled to this side of the main channel, and then handed the stick to the other boy, instructing Lim to land at the bridge and let him out, An ll'l(‘m; t was made to do this, Inul_l\c;lin the boat drifted, and when near the Thomp- son-Houston eleetric light works, at the foot boat sud- ly turned it toward the shore. The turn made so quickly that Frank was own into the water, when the other lad turmod about and pulled vapidly for the lowa shio) Workmen on the Thompson-Houston saw the lad fall overboard, avd vunnin the boat rowed out to the spot, re just as he was sinking the second time. vas taken i the boat, rowed to the shol of Jones street, the owner of the den! vorks to hing him He sent 1o St ¢ he i until 3 o 3 3 woon.The physician in attend stated that death was caused from acute pneumoni: used by the sand and water taken into the Tungs. The name of the other boy who was in the boat could not be learned A telegram has been sent to young Frank's parents, who reside in Chicago, and no dispc sition will be made of the body until a roply is receive Coroner Harrigan will hold au inquest over the remains this ulternoon, s il M POSTPONED THE EXCURSION, Signs of Rain Prevent the West Point Trip. much talked of, widely adyortised Turners' excursion did not go to West Point yesterday, therefore a great many young men and protty girls all dressed in white, hung on the left arms,and Councilman Mike Lee were sadly disappointed. ALS o'clock, when the pulled out, it looked so m the committee in charge ish to go. Turners’ The train should have ch like n that aid it would be fool- In consequence @& hasty consultation was held, after which the spok man announced that @ postponement to next Sunday had been decided on. “1t has been raining all morning,” said ho, “sand promises to be raining all day and you kuow how impossible it is to bave a good time in the " “The delegation of West Pointers aud juven- ile band who came down on Saturday to es- cort the excursionists were put aboard the artrainat 4 o'clock and sent home. Soveral hundred people had assembled at the Webster street depot willing to make the trip, rain or shine, but they took their disap- pointment good naturadly, and vowed to, be etter prepared by next Sunday, Mike Lee was going with the expectian of meeting several state convention delegates at the picnic, consequently ho felt the disap- pointment more keenly than anybody else. But Mike was not there to get left entirely, When the Turners declared their affair off ho immeaiately bought twotickets, and joined the Iron Moulders' union excursion to Arliugton. Ll New York's Clubs. There are 208 club in tF city of New York, and very fow hav less than 200 names on their rolls, ome are purcly social, whilo others mix polities or ro- ligion or literature or athletics with their sociability. Some of them own great buildings and maintain expensive ouisines, Nearly every fourth adult man in New York is a member of a club. thiof | their own minds. It was learned, howevor, on very good authority, that they decided to make an attempt to oust Mr, James and en- gage Mr Bloss at this evening's meeting. The members present were not disposed to give out any information s to the action The Attempt of Third Party Managers to | falen at the mo ing and were frigidly non- Enmare Laboring Men. communicative whoen approached with refer- % ence to it. il 0T AN CNQUALIFIED SUCCESS They are Striving to Gain Footholds in the Northwest, ““The Mormons are now gaini hold in the Canadian northwest, B. Hydc wyer of Vancouver, B, ( i o u Chicago Tribune re now directly m- ¢ wore not permitted In 1838 the leaders capital and n\.'uln nin propositions, They asked that } they be ullowed to take up & large block | & Pelesation Visits the Single Tax of land, that their agricultural imple- Club and Typographical Union, ments be admitted free of duty, But Ape Promptly Sat 1d that those who already had more Down Upons plishing w A TO DEATH, 1o do two years ago. visited the dominion SOME TEMPTING INDUCEMENTS HELD OUT, Remarkable Effcct of the Bite of a Texas Insect, Old storios of the bite of the Inducing an uncontrollable dance have been called to mind the death of little Maurice ntula desire to here by Benton, son than one wife should be allowed to of Lomucl Benton, a prominent lawyer, practice polygamy. Of course, “he Can- ‘\\l,\(i«'h‘nm"lm‘l'i-l’l yee I-dl v, 80y8 @ '1'.~I\I;.~» lian government would not L'ston 10 | oo y . etter to the Philadelp imes, The thase faqieats ard now the MorRioHs Are e ek o s Indopendent movement | |itto follow hud been playing on tho getting ready 1o compel the government | W4de 8 desperate attempt yesterday after- | ey of his father's residence and ran in to listen to them. They are determined | 1001 10 induce labor and politics to go hand | {9 his mother complaining that some- to gain such a hold inthenorthwest, and | 1 hand. The attempt was a dismal failure, | thige had stuck in his bave foot. The b far as inducing wa Ea coun concered. woon the membors of the smimitteo of the independent especially in Alberta, that the govern- ment will be obliged to accede to the de: mands of their big politic member was examined by -Mrs, Benton and a small red wound, such ns a larg sized needle might hive punched, w tion. The Mormon church is party met in one of the ante rooms at Gate [ found, but was accompanied by no swell- a fow scheming leaders, and the City hall, where a committee, with 1. D. | Ing, and but littlo pain: so, applying a istie principle was taught by By Chamberlain of Stromsburg as spokeswman, | little camphor to the place, his mother Young. You know'he claimed hie thought no more of it was appointed, o it immanding that all things | This commitiee was instructed to visit the During the ni ht, howover, sho was be held in common by the broth- | OmahaTypographical union, No. 19, which | Aroused by the child's uneasiness -and ren. So it is in the Mormon church | waqin ses fon, and there offer inducements | COmplaining, so she took him out of his that when a ‘member comes 1nto | i phemeion tud there ofter fnduce | bed, und, to her horror, discovered th itto | ¥ ers if they would go into poli Lol I i possession of w farm he must deed it to | U bl ety the entive limb had turned a purplish the ord or Lnoch, and the chuveh | liva o1 bl RS v‘h‘- | Dhlac A physician” was sent for, but then owns it. This 'applies to_other | duration, for the members of the union at | hafore ho arrived the boy was in convuls property ulso. He must give his horses, | 01¢C inforined the committee that they were | sionsg of so peculiar a charactor that the oxen, sheep, ete., to the chureh, and if | 1ot in politi 1 no propositions could bo | doctor at once suspected the presence of Ho refusch Y 18 exéominurioniod and be: ertained unusual _poison. The spasms comes a parinh in the Mormon settle- | The political ambition of the members of cd to his limbs, which ment. In Utah the life of one excom- | the committee was cooled off to some extent, re so violently and continuously con- iicated is not saf He is more than | but, not in the least daunted, the turned | vulsed as to keep the child dancing up linble to he issinated, In Canada | o where the main body was in session, wait- | and down, throwing its arms wildly and this could hardly be true, though the | ing to hear the vesult of the interview, The | twitching its fingers, Theso painful unfortunate would be boycotted and | report w s made, after which the same com- | contortions lasted until the litile fellow finally he would be obliged to < | mittee was instructed to visit the Henry | $ank exhausted and unconscious, in wother clime. The effect of George club, which was in session at Gato | Which state he remained all the next community of goods isto prevent a st e upon that body | day, dying in the evening. City*hall, and attempt the’ importance of pendent fold. After entering the hall Mr. Chamberlain of Stromsburg stated the ¢ pede from the church, If a man le the Mormon church he cannot tuke away or donvey his property. Not only this, The body was perfectly livid, with great spots'of discoloration nearly black on the limbs and stomach, whils a pe within the inde- but he ‘is not his own master and he | Of Str H; b of the visit, | culiar fungus growth made its app must do what his superiors command. | [RHMERES Ve ee hore o the burpose of | anco botween the parted lips, The Therefore his ballot belongs to the | 1o ourarms and join siih us i tading tho | Physicians wero much puzzled to ac- church and the Mormon vote is neces- | land of political * cor uptionists and pg count for the case, as the limb was so surily solid. If the Mormons gain us- | tyrants. We want you to be on the i swollen as to render any examination of in Alberta—as it looks now-— | believing that if you are on the outside you | the wound impos but old settlers utiful country cannot be inhab- | 4re against us. Do you know, brothe say that from the d ption of it and | dinns, 1 !lul\v fil\n'r lillLllu b h and | the convulsions produced it was un- each one o hoso boys earries | sdly dausad by ite ¢ aran- Mormons aro striving to get [ $ich ono lof - thos - boyy ~eurrie | doubledly caused by the bite of u_taran hold of a territory that will become a | fop $1,000: mortgages rated there by the | Uil hese deadly creatures hav provinee, then enough gt they would acquire political influence to force the rnment to recognize all the ovils of people of this state,” Mr. Chamberlain s the free and unlimite grown very rare in those parts, so they were not at first though of in connection with the case, d he was colnugzs in favor of | of silver, but Mormonism, including polygamy. This | he would prefer to have a piece of paperbear- is their ambition and wim, wnd 1 i not | i the Unitol Statos dollar st ¥inglish Nating Habits, ARl AR b m have the silver dollar. He the t o that dief impossible that it will be realized. They | WG the silver dollar. Ho the n : g that a diet 'lves ov o : bR il . of one part of nitrogenous to seven or voted anhour to its discussion, frequently declaring th posed of general pr Mr. Ste thought th stern part of the United States, Mormon settlements can_now in Idaho, New Mexico, Mon- eight non-nitrogenous is a good combin- ation; that adiet of twelve to fourt ounces of chemienlly dry food, digesti- ble, with the i allpolitical partios ave com- | yrruptionists and men who upon | ciplos are robhe ens of the Honty George club proposition was too indefinite | be found tana ind Wyoming et . 3 uite | portion suff t to keep in good PASSING OF THF BUFFALO. and smacked top much of politics to elve | health g ized man on moder- s any consideration. He suid the prono ftion | o C ros that the majority of Result of the Ruthless § htor of | {0 80 lhto wav'l‘r‘lv i) lwv;:; CHR | people ind eat literally twice s Nobls Animal. owners rather than the residents of Ne- | much nor does such excess vary In 1868 the Union Pacific railvoad and | braska. Ho thought the members of the | mu different oo ipations; and, its Dbranch in Kansus was comploted | club would be willing fo unita in_ move- | while moderato over g may not be across the plains to the foot hills of the | ment that was in t1 cht divection, but he | considered to he ly injurious, Rocky mountains—the westorn Limit of | $i0 v think thoy waited to sta vomand it is o fact that mot only do the buffalo rango—and that year wi “Another momibor thought, tho Jnaopendenss | many men eat much more thian the nosse «l(,'n-ln‘m, xllixhnr\ltx‘f‘lhv' wholesale a mass of unorganized men, without | it s no un- and wanton slaughter of the great r v fixed purpose (in view, and he saw no | rage-sized man nants, ending only with their practi son why the members of the club should | work to eat twenty- extinction in 1855, by regular hunters | take up, follow and endorse any third party | five to twenty-seven ounces of chemically for their hides, and " by the vis of | movement. dry food aday, On adiet from which tourists who crossed the continent for [ | This put s d oyt enitheiiiops fof st [ all meat s “excluded it is found that y e U 81 f he: " y o y) % o olve 3 irteel CO8 U ay vi me ._) 1:[ : ur ) ||ll'\‘ sport, then !{\_.nh Mr. Chamborlain braced up and said | l.\\ IT\L‘ '(:]1 vfl!m.l{ fnl lu‘uln fi‘]. day will possible by the advent of the “iron | yo will join with us wo wil take | comfortably feed a hard working man, trail;” these latter heartlessly killed | the county convention and allow | and, while a moderate amount of stimu- for the excitement of the novel experi- | delegate for ey ten members of your club, | lants appears to increase the average, ence, often never even touching | and an extra delégate on the major fraction | modc tely free drinking diminishes it. a particle of flesh, or possessing them- | of the ten.” | The habit with women exhibits a sclves of asingle robe as they rodo along | This for a thne logked as though it was | mariced difference, the fact being that going to be an inducement to join, but the at a slow rate of speed, sa club members rallied and the proposition was a writer in they eat much loss than men, after mal- Harper’s Weekly, The former, num- | goeted ingallowance for differences’ in weight bering thousands of old fronticrsmen, all J. C. Tierney, avother member of the inde- | and work; that is, where a man eats expert shots, and as many novices—the ianeer settlers on the **public domain” Just opened under the various land laws —from beyond the Platte to far south of the Arkansas, within transporting di tance of the two roads made it a lucrative nineteen ounces, a woman of the same weight and of active habits eats only fourteen or fifteen ounc et St A Hard Youngster to Kill Frederick Rudloff, a seventeen pendent commiittee, threw himself into the | reach, and as an_extra inducement said: “When we formulate our platform we pro. pose to give the Henry George men their single tax and land plank, the laboring men their hour plank and the farmers' allianco p(-n\yh-(hlbll' transportation plank, and this ye ought to satisfy all - of 'the ele. | 0ld South Brookly boy, who lives at 54 for robes only, a market for which had | meats.” — As andther inducement, Mr, | Fifteenth strect,” says the New York suddenly sprung upall over the country, | Tierney informed the club = that | Sun, bocame rocently a helper to Jack On either side of the lines of the nllfl‘l llmln;t‘ul"'lurw'olf "K‘;u‘r‘l‘n‘mlw-"l move- | Gallagher, a plumber. Gallagher was lose range for nearly their | Ment would pledge themselves to cut the can- | worlcine the othor day on the 4 road withip cloge eange for earlyithett | SUREIET ERIZH publican and _democrati | NOLKINgE tho othor day on the fourth whole distance, the mcast conspicious ob- | & story of a row of now fiats on the south ets and stand as a unit for the nominees jects in thoss duys were the disiccated | of the independont side’of West One Hundred and_Forty- cavcasses of the noble beasts that had | * gohm 1. Fmblos was so well ploased with | fifth street, this city. Young Rudloft been ruthlessly slaughtered by the | the situatic he moved that the club en- | was assisting him more or less. A thoughtless and exeited passengers en The debu quare air shaft two feet and six inchos 0 withdrew his mo- tion and offered asubstitute that the club | route across the continent. prairie, too, mile ‘088 runs in one building from eeiling On the open 3 torool. It had a facination for Rudlofl away from the cou H A K o 1 delegates to the convention. 4 ik P - b pretty evidently a whito heat by the current, and this of legitimate travel, cne could walk Chamborlain once more ot the floor | A4 though warned to keep a fromi[fRECEDES e e o, NOME by o ouctangEiancRihie in_ places all - day on the dead | and stated that if the delogates appeared at | it he just could not. arfentco MYEIS gnate Y ting oz ; bodies of the buffalos, killed by | the convention thiey would b . At| About3 p. ‘m., wishing to got into o | Information in whispors us to tho mom- | paper suturated with kerosene immed- the hide hunters, without ste vlain down | room opposite, Frederick conceived the | bers and the state of the bill. On_the | iately blazes up and there you hayo piug on the ground! Then was the | by the president informing hin that the « idea that it would bo a fine thing to get ‘-’fh'r'fi“l“ sits ono Ltake to boan Amerl- | five. 'A quarter of an hour liter v“'_'l‘,‘” i opportunity for congress o utorposo. | Sttt of the cub ymbificdtho beds from | thore Dy Toupine across tho' shatt, 11 | ¢ from b oxcosaiy 1y perfootvaimont | ourrent is oponed by e plog R Restricting the transportation of robes };;:fiflf‘":f!:::"g"yli',“'flylh"l”::v;;‘ L ““:1;:'1, Wi u:\~im-tn\i‘lflk m‘n\mll, it, hu)l fhiis {iang Betl "u:'l'l'z:'l')' i u.:‘": Il:';,,‘;l"f\‘\x.i"f....“"'f”.” a 1 Inthe bed- Pyl ondnodl sxsaiicol pinlos Journed without ¢ uy action upou the | TS i T laok the thoublo %o | evoss of half an hour, and tho wempers ALl'this i not in tho least complicated tinetion. I believe there was some ab- | 144 four feet Ligh opening into the air shaft. | troop out to dinc. and is made with little cost, ung surd law o Lin relation Lo provent- Wanted He proposed to leap to the sill of a simi- T Orth has successfully operated the thin ing the terrible slaughter, but it made Tom McDona sted yesterday on | lar door opposite, The LONDON IN 1616, in his workshop for the lust few weeks, it only a misdemennor on the part of the | a charge of grand larceny. Ho is one of a | easily cressed, for his L —— and it 1s pronounced by all who have hunter to kill—about as offective o p wang of young thieves who are wanted for | long” enough ' to step 5 How the World's Metropolis Looked | scen it to o the best deyise for the pur- vision, so far as the average plainsman | stealing 800 worth of ralr ashort | he Qidn’t want to step it ‘our Centuries Ao, pose yet ma was concerned, us o at- | time ago. Fitzgerald, of the | wanted to jump, He jumped and hit his | The ancient rhymoster who met his kAT TN O tempt to deflect a tornado with | gang rrest at South Omaha, d against the lintel of the opposite | sister Ann_as they were both crossing Tl o o AR palm-leaf fan, il price of liam Munskey was ¢ ted several duys frame, so instead of landing on the | London bridge in the thirteenth year of . The ox-Kinpy menio ndig “"‘ AL robes ranged all the way from 50 cents [ 20 forrecelving the property, and his cuse | ho landed in the cellar, sixty-five | the First Jumes, if ho could come buck | #dventure some time ago en route o —the amount paid prim: —t0$2.50 as | 13 20W pending tr 2.3 = | fect below. Luckily for hima small joist | to London in tho fifty-thivd your of Vie- Ttk iR Clgno, WiLheh s sls "“_‘!'(1;“3 they became seaveer. I have bought PEESONAL 1AGRAPHS, about two feet from the concrote floor | toria, would find it more i st b A B SR it maiy a finely tanned and ornamented s caught him fivst, and, breaking served |nize his sister Ann than to vec in o fist-oloss raflvay comparimont . 1k ¥obe” fiom the Indians for half a | R. T, Smith, Carroll, is at the Millard, to some extent as a spring board in let- [ London bridge, or London its: “"“_“1»‘ i "“"’] e du i loaf of bread or a cupful of sugar: but Allen Jillson of David City isat the Casey, | ting him down gently, He sprained one | writer in Havper’s Weoekly, L At AR e R that wus twenty-five y ago. Today . Wall of De the Merchunts, | Of his foet, und “his ankles swelled up, | London was the London of Shakespeara | Kuard roproscnt e (BgNAL LY same kind would' eusily “bring 8150, | Jonn MeBride of O'Neill is a Casey guest, | Dut thougli they kept him in the Man® I Bon Jonon, ‘and! Londou as ( compaciment wis wesorvod for adio, if procuvable at all anywhere, which I §'G, Russcll of §t. Paul is at the Paxton, | hottan hospitil yesterday to sec if he | the wars of York and Lancaster | WL ang ik noilisetino i very much doubt 1. B. Davidson of New York is at tho Mil. | Would not dic of internal injuries he | had found “and left it—no muorc | fufliun, irin the compartment soon by %= A TIET lard, g | would not, and they let him go. ;;’1‘» {o the Lendon of lml';y;‘un,;\.u [AnEsR0 MEin S olmpdimpnt soon v A Very Rave Stamp. i bk s | ‘- 10 flat island discovered” by on- | came olerable and C eS8 BELlatelints IVt LataE s (o in e o v Y oaiiat Milwedkee it lnfdurray I'lr:null Payment .}.r l‘lll lln-ulrl;m drik Hudson in 1 0like unto the If.‘“:‘l"‘_‘lir;" il ."h'u"'l“l\‘}u-:l“;i"'-“\-\',"“-j: tain passage of the last official report A o| H. C.Ritchie, who died at Platts- | tropolitan city of 1800 which wo eall | Femoved toanothor compartment. Wh whichls mado by tho Tritish consul i | ot Of Niobrara s stovping at tho | [, O T policy in tho Bank Now York, In 1016'litlo John Milion | fold who tholudy was thomau oxpressud Tamsul, in Formosa, writes Eugene | prank Boyd N Buniaved o | insurance company ‘of Nebraska was beginning the study of Latin in | $atisfaction that he had smoked her out. Field in the Chicago Nows. It Is to the | coren 5ovd of Leigh Sundayed at tho e fence of | Pawl’s” schule; Bacon was living in | “I've puid my fare ard Im as good effect that the supply of the so-culled | 3. Watson Riley of Albion was at the Mer- | the company’s prompt method of dois mbors i Gray's inn: Dragton ocou- | ABybody —clio,” said he. Strungoly Formosu stamps has comesto an end und | chants ; business: d tho bay-window house next to the [ enough, the fellow was no it that accordingly the value of current | J. A, Patterson of Creston was at the Mer- | PLATTSMOUTIH, Nok 16, 1800, wt end of St. Dunstan’s church in Fleet | Violation of the RIS SDE, SR stamps must necessarily increase as time | chants last night W. A. Lindley, E v Banker street; Isnak Walton had half of a shop | lonintoand smolkir | ‘I” ““' 0IpR goes on. The Formosa stamp is 50 far a Broudyay fs stopping at the Mer- | Life Insur y, Lincoln, Neb, amo thorughfuvo bwo doors wost | Ient rosorved for ladios. Tt 14 8a nuine stamp that it was originally | chants. % | ae Sir: I am in receipt, through your Chancer Lt und was buy- [ howove i “““ ‘-" : ) ‘,‘ ‘l ' produced for postal uses, but, as a matter D. Soper of Chicpgo is a guest at the Mer- | general agent, Mr. H. D. Brooks, of your his in Harp | 1surope ave enf HI‘ |'\. ‘..’. \: ”. “‘:y‘.._..——"l of fact, the intention was never vied | chants, | draft for £2,000, payment in full of policy | Afleys it having fln- |ioign - puirons. ol PSP Pl out: 50 it has been impossible to obtain A. Hamllton'of St. Louls is at the Mur- ued by the Bankers® life. iri- | ished his History of the World, was iit- | breuk tho petiost rulo and hols mul specimens uuthenticated by a postmark. ; uy of Nebraska,on the | ting out his expédition to Guinn:; | [‘promptiy-and to y Hmlt, As philatelists would say, it has never B. Hunn of San Franciscols a guest at | life of my husband, Harey C, Ritchie, de- | mont and Fleteher weve living toge ay Thave o o e eain been more than an *“‘essay.” However, | the Paxton, censed, on the Bunkside, not far from the Play | apyu'fdon't think [have the pleasure of your these stamps were utilized as railway C. W. Perry of New Yorkis stopping at | Permit m ik both yourself and | house, with “(he swmo eloaths and | uequuintance.” 0, yes, I trod on you 5 on the Formosan government 4 the Bankers’ life insurance company for | cloake, ete,, between them;” and John | about half an hour and I heard you v line, and us fast us used they | . H. Kellogg of Chicago Is iu the city, at | such prompt and generous settlement of ylor, the water poet, till a | you would rememby ws long ws you destroyed, The supply issued for | the Mu 3 my claim, _ The money was paid to me in | watermun, getting ready to starton his | lived s purposo s been exhausted, When | F. AV, Barber of' Grand tsland is stopping | just five (3) duys from my husband,s | “Pennyless Pilgrima I 1616 | = Al the stamp was first “essuyed” it brought n0.LAM0Y: v 30 . 3 g | death, without uny expense of colleetion, | King ~ James wi selling peer- | 0 high i price as 6d in London, and, of | Wiliiam H. Wodds of Chicago is reégistered | on deduction for advamee payment, run- [ ages to the best bidders, | late, collectors have been paying $2.50 | 8t the Paxton. g ; paid bl of annual premiums, holding costly th \ i for apoulmons, Of Sourse, slmoet any. | o i oame o s Molnes fs regtaterod | though by {ho torms of tho polloy it | Wiitehll on Sunduy avonigs, o th price can be demanded and will be id A SRt : " | not due for ninety days. Yours grat utter horror of the Puritans, lavishing for one of these stamps. = Cortain Mauri- | M, To Blsmoreof Hustings was at the Mur- [ Tully, " pTan JOSEPHINE RITCHIE favors upon Buckingham ut the publlo | tius stamps are exceeding vare and the Pkt > nefic expense, und doing all of those unae- | mps of the defunct German principal- | 4 McComb of Des Moiues was at the — countable thinzs which led Sully to call | sidly becomi AN SMRL IR 1 h Good Indians Now. him the wisest fool in Burop In 1616 | I A i Thomas A. Railsback of Atchiuson is & | gy o0 " SR Py e b VLU U 1 n vergo of | £ucAS 8y the Millard e {tho notorlaus "\, Roho, hinve been bap. | London, as Visschorsaw it whils Wiitie: A curious incident occurred on Wash- | pgi0n 1 Beten of New York 13 at the | 41,03 iy tho Catholie ehurch, suys & | hall was tho extrome westorn boundury, ington strect, Albany, Gu. A country- | © [ IS POTIRE. sidney | Mobile, Ala., dispatch to the St, Louis [and the city of Westminster was silll £ ) f enry St. Rayner came down from Sidney 4 b 5 arabla. diste ut of s man had a lond of wmelons and was t | 1ast night and is at the Paxton. | Republic. The ceremony took placo at | a considerabl istance out of town; ing to sell them. He stood there for | s uud M. W. I. Scanian were at | Bt Thomas’ ehurch, Mount Vernon, and | the gard:ns of the avistocrutic munsions about half an hour, and at last one of | Millard last night on their way from was performed by the Rev, H, O. Grady, on tho Strand extended down to the the boys eame up and priced them. The | York to the Pacific coust i a missionary attached to the Cathedral | Thames on the one side, or back to the countryman turned and put his hand on > of the Immaculate Conception, this eity. | open tields on the others the streets wore a melon to 111t 1t out and show it to tho . The Auti es Kaction. | Gerenimo and a lavge number'of his In- | narrow, diety, ill-paved, full of ruts and N cnstdgier. — When the countryman | The auti-James fa f the school bo { dians in full war puint attonded the sev- | he and robhers and ruffians of all touched the melon ho gavea yell” that | held a meeting yesterday afternoon at | vice, The squaw, who was instructed in | kinds; the Fleet river, the Fleet ditch, | could have been heard to the depot, and | office of H. B, 1, ut which nine me the doctri of the Catholic church by | and —the Fleet prison were filled danced around like o crazy man, shaking | bers of the board were present, The me Father O'Grady through an interpreter, | with pestiferous inhabitants; the come Absolutely Pure. his bund. The melon had laid in the ing was held behind closed doors aud all re receive n baptism the name of A\Ll_ i | mon people herded in poor wooden build: sul 50 long that it was red hot, and the | porters were excluded. It was n tof the papoose that of Frances. The | ings, and even the merchant princes, | A cream rtarbaking powder, 1igliesy " countryman had burned the skin off his | session of the auti-James coubin N nsors weye chosen by Geronimo fry ngin luxury over theiv own shops, | of lewvening strengih—U. 8. Gos=ramsut Boe hand when he touched it kuowledge of what th lients in proper pro- | i i docked up i | aisong the ditizons of Mount Vernon, { THE COMMONS, SCROFULA 1s that impurity of the blood which produces unsightly lumps or swellings in the necky which causes runuing sores on ho arms, logs, or feet; which develops uleers In the , OF nose, often causing blindness or which is the orlgin of pimples, cane cerous growths, or “humors; " which, fastens ¢~ 1 the lungs, causes consumption and¥ 1t is tho most anclent of all diseases, Elizabeth Bisland's Graphio Pen Pio- ture of Kngland's Lower House, Wo are going to the house tonight. 8ir Fredorick has an fmportant bill coming on in the evening and wishes us to hear the debato, He goes down oarly and sends us tickets for the sp r's gallery, to which one gains admittance only by acard from Mrs Peel. Wo climb many steps, and a benign elderly 7 FEsignia, bf Ofa. shows o Ioth s ‘1}‘.»}'.' ol | ndvory fw persousarecatinly s from cage that looks down over the house, a bit lower, is the ladies’ gallery, grated It Be e pet Y L R By taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, which, by D Who THERIROYR® SrLt 1h) Hetly | the remarkablo cures it has accomplished, - A ) 08 I1iss o RE OV cl 0 be a potent and peculis Bisland in Harper's Buzar, Wo are di. | 18 Proven itselt to bo a potent and peculiae medicine for this di roctly over or, and see only e o e e e 4 : scrofula, try Hood's Sarsaparilla. ”,‘,",““"’r‘Vr; puliily ':l”“" “""I"vl i “Every spring my wifo and ehildron hive wigs of his three clogks, and the been troubled with serofula, my little boy, gnormous gold maco, On the tlor bolow | gires yours ald, belng & Sariblo sefemy is tho reporter’s gallery—fagged, hard- i s o " Prmeiy 1 yiel) Last spring he was one mass of sores fro worked looking men, who scribble furi- et LU S TR headto fect. Wealltook Hood's Sarsapati andall have been eured of thoscrofla. little boy Is entirely free from sorcs, and four of my ehildren look bright and healthy. W. B ATuerrox, Passale City, N. J, Hood’s Sarsaparilla Bold by il drugglsts. 81;six for g5, Preparedonly by C.L HOOD & (0., Apothecarios, Loviell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar ously, One can see what they are doing quite well, and it is noticeablo that mos of them writein long hand, The count of the debate is to bo found in the Times next and the speeches ns ven by thom are for more suceinet and foreible then whenthe members delivered them, Opposite is the gallery for distin- guished strangers, and crosswise run the galleries for the peors. From time to tinfe some one dropsin from the house 1y of lords—now also in session—and stops omfort nvenic 3 of lif Tha to hear a portion of the debate, Now it | Thames was the main highway, and in isa portly, florid old gentleman, who | 1616 and for many years thereaftor, iy listens with Tis hand behind his eary | had but one bridge for anybody's sist and now some slim, pink-checked boy | Ann_ to cros The population of just suceceded to a title, arrayed in evening dress, with a pink peotty in his button-hole, ' The conserva- tives sit on the green-cushioned benches London at the time of the accossion of nes was a littlo over one hundred and y thousand, the poople of Paris num- bering more than those of London and immuculately to the right of thespeaker: the minis- | Dublin put together. The eity wus ters in front. Mrv. Avthur Balfour, sce- | lighted with lanterns containing Gotton- retavy for Irelund, is speaking when we | wick candles. n all travolers carry- enter. A tall, slendey silken brown man, with little vipples all over his head; ing or having carried for them theirown links whenthoy ventured into the streots good-looking, mand faultlossly | after the set of the sunj and rod and., dressed; and with delieate, slenddr | white roses in 1616 grew in the Temple nands, which he rests on the'desk boe- | gardens as their descendants grow in fore him ns he speaks. very languidly, | the same earth toc AN AUTOMA 10 FIRE 1G Invention but eloe: and with a slight hesitation. They are talking ahout Ireland as usual On the bench from which he has just risen sit Lord George Hamilton, also TER. The Clever of a Bright handsome, tall and dark-haived; My, W, Young Cleveland Mochanic. H. Smith, leader of the louse whose | Charles P. Orth, o bright you head is very large and quite bald mechanical genius living at No, 886 St Goshen, and the rest of the ministers. | Clair st s perfectod a device for Behind sit the consery fine body | the automatic: ition of fives which of men, extremely well set up, wenring | is different > superior to any- glossy. silk h id looking, on tho | thing so far d, suys the Cleve- whole, rvather indifferent and bored, | land Sun. Some months ago Charlie grinding out an octasional **He: was employed at the Morgan Tithograph hear!” when Mr. Bulfour makesa point | works, at the corner of St. Clair and against his opponents, Wood streets, and he occupied a o his gentleman s suying in polite | tion which necossitated him avising ot 4 parliament phrases, and with a | o'clock in the morning to start the fires. somewhat fatigued munner, that he | Although a good hard worker he, like considers his accusers liars, one and all. | evervhody else, did not relish the fdes When he is done, My, Gladstone ta of getting up so y, and he began to the word, rising from tho opposite | figure vschome Which would make it unnccessa nights and o gr benehes, and looking extremely white After many aple and feeble, speaking keenly and to the deal of labor the point, in the trembling, squeaky tonos | thing completed, and now he is ox- used by the st old man. - Close beside | hibiting it to his friends and to all him s Lord Hartington, with his hat tipped over his eyes. his legs thrust out, and his hands in his pockets. Further others who may be interested in it with much satisfaction, Thearr ment is at once simple and plain and has the d- buck, among the Irishmen, is Brad- of costing but little monoy. the famous infidel, rosy and | Electricity and clock work are the I, and very like the late Henry | means use A clock costing not move Ward Beecher in appeavance. Pinally | than seventy-five cents is connected with the Trishmen get on their feet one another—Dillon, O'Brien, Parnell—and seream fliently and vituperatively at Mr, Balfour, who looks over his notes and pretends not to hear them. George Trovelyan, nephew of Macaulay, speakson the Irish side with the pols Lol | a buttery clock 1o the under the gr soveral little to the cle fire started o'cloc The wires are run from the wple little devico placed of the stov The re ingonious appliances fised Should a person want a in his cook stove at six c he would proceed in this wise: ~> 3 ished roundness of the elocutionist; and |~ Ho would place a small amount of acertuin Mr. Fowler, with his laconic | paper, a picee of which would be dipped severity, brings a flush to Balfour’s | in kerosone, in the grate with kindling forchend and malkes him stiv angrily. In the gallery with us is a large handsome old lady with much white lace around her head, Lady B—— whisper: tome it is Mrs. Gladstone, who is lknown as the Stormy Petrel, for there is sure tobe trouble brewing when she appears. It is rumored to-night that her hus hopes o cut the government major wood and coal enough to burn hour, on top. Then he would tea kettle with water and plac stove where it would boil readily whon the fire got to going. He would next take down the electrical device from o hook behind the stove and afix it to tho and | o . Lastly, he would **set” his cloclc yon | at the hourof six and could then go to lf an fill his ton the the land purchase bill down lower than | bed and know that when he would arise it has over yetbeen. She shows very | in the morning he would find a warm, little excitement, but watches aflaivs at- | cosy kitchen and a boiling toa kettlo, tentively through the gratin, The hour-hand of the clock serves to On one side of us sits aslim givlin | open the curvent of electricity. When red, so interested in the debate that she | it arvives at the figure six it touches a has thrown off her hat and _glo and pushed back her hair from her forohend. | She holds the bavs with both little white hands, and will not miss a wor throfgh it a and upon a w tiny picce of p The electricity passe d the vim of the clock 1o the stove. Here a atinum wire is heuted to kuew nothing of what we consider the | bort Aug. 1, dew,

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