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1 THIE DAILY : I ROSEWATER, BEE, Editor, PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERVS OF SURBCRIPTION Weekly Reo, One Yeur 19 OFFICES, /017 Chamnber of Cc Bevm o v CORRESPONDENCE, All ooy v § relating t Edit } 1 [ N LETTERS, The Bee P ATEMENT OF CIRCULATION 1 « I ! T 0 Fite DATLY 1RE 3 ' A ] | | tiry. Augnst 7 10,44 Average Grbsiies 20,5506 T78CHICR s ( ribed In my presinee A, .. 1500, 1AL ary Public I'7chuck, beine duly sworn, de y8that ho I8 secrotary of The Bee Company, that the actual avera ilation of Tug DALY Bee for the s for Jn iy for ) B TZ8CHUCK subsceribed n- ny AL D Noti to chn » probability will suffor BoTi parties are out with a complete of candidates in Wyoming, but ce of a feminine of the council combine in the wilds of the west would be o profitable invest ment for the city, i most strenuous opposition to the lottery that has developed in Louisiana comes from the farmers. Therural pop- ulation, in spite of all that hasbeen said, appenrs to he the strongest against the continuance of the drain on the credu- OiiGoN demands a recount. For some unknown renson a sufficient num- her of the inhabitants iped the enu merators to reduce the total below the figure necessary for two congressmen. The disappointment is dreadful in po- litieal circles . SENATOR Braimr’s bill for con- stitutional amendment givi women the right 10 vole contains no postseript. The gentle and opprossed sex can rest ired that the >w Hampshire sen- ator will lave the last word on the weasure, even though it ruptures a vocal cord, Tu losses by fire in the United St were very heavy in the month of July, aggregating about $15,000,000, The losses for the year upto August 1 foot $62,310,000 inst in 1889 $74,342 000 and in 1888 §76,603,250. There were 269 fives in July were large and expensive, causing heavy loss to insur- ance compani and many A BUSINESS cireular has been issued in the cast to show that the Am forests are rapldly disappearing, tion of the ¢i rin ques- tion is that the Grand Rapids Bending works have discontinued their business onaccount of the _searcity of timl "his practical evidenc the disappear- < farmer the necessity of planting all of trees, By proper cultiva- tic “arid” west may yet furnish the manufucturing cast with lumber of many kinds, EASTERN republ furiously denounce western nators for working and voting for veduced tariff, and threaten to read them outof the party. By what right have the champions of the MeKinley bill become the | When out of ¢ duties, th on hand cover t wty for oppos ¥ ¥ Pl n it comes to wdin ublicans x prohi st will be antocrats may 2 not in > yoemanry of the w nd eastern e party leaders g position to bid deflance to public senti- ment in Kansas, Nebraska, Towa and Minnesota. ArTER floating in the breezes of the Baltic for cighty-three years, the Brit ish fing has disappeared from the island of Heligoland and the wan flag flont inits stend. British occupancy of th island, com did the mouth of 11 » 1 German 1 and willingr ests inZ. moment England 4 to trade # for Ge nzibar, the offer Gerr d a inter- accepted. wny Lhus soeures an portant concession in exchange for the sand hills and Buaac s of Eastorn Afvica, and Emperor Willlam and his grandmother are happy Tie Knights of L * in the political vineyard hereabouts are still without a rational explanation of t independent position on the eight hour movement The pol | telumvirate in charge of the movement boldly declared for eight hours for workingmen, ‘‘except farm hands, In other words, Butler, Powers and Buriows are entbusinstically in favor of reduced hours of lubor provided somebody else pays the bills, but should they find it necessary (nv"nplu\ u politi- cal farm hand, dawn and darknoess will mensure his duy. This is a delightful straddle of a burning question, which must he interesting if not agreeable to vorkingmen, COST OF CONGRESSIONAL DELAY. | THb OM.AHA DAILY hl‘.l«, I‘II[ R I)A\ AL(‘L' trol is a priv Ate matter with which they Some of the republican senators who | muy*do as they will, vegardless of the have beon most pronouncedin opposition | consequences ('.w.‘ ;- iblie. If state Jaws | | to any change in the rules of the senate | cannoteffect this, and they have thus | intended to put a limit to debate have | far failed, thore must bo national | | c or achange of mind. My, Ed- | legislation ¢ reach this mat- | | been thestrong - | te made so comprehensiv and freedom of ¢ ringent that it cannot fail | troducing an order providing that dur- [ are so vastand far-reaching, and ave in- | ing the m of any item in the | creasing so rapidly, that they cannot tar bill _or ndment thereto | safely be left at the m of arrogant five minutes on tho one item | pulsive and reckless workmen. The mat- | without the consent of &he senate. On is alegitimate one for control .l'u\' the same day Senator Sherman referred ilation by national law, and there isno while he did not wish to sec any chang SE———— | r offects of the hot weather, tthat the farm s of most of \ wnd nthe state has pr | us and annoyi - prolol 1| willing to supply this | 1 1 N n is fosteved by men w Ve litt do 1 that The pulation of Nebraska, t | i regarding what will | O farmers are in a hopeless state of | flnally be done with the t or | Pankruptey and a w.]HHm_r T" Ht..\ whethor a bill will be puesod at the | from bud to worse. It is unquestionably | g ous busi. | true that the proflucers of t state the offect being damaming to both | miintined discrimination and ex- | capiti los, import- | 2ctions of the railronds, less pros- & have | Perous than they otherwise would ; vilv. | b and undoubtedly me of iR privation, Some of them have been | N 66 R isi s forcedby usuryand other causes to part | 55 of : furms, and thereare indolent | SiYoatn it . 1en 1mong them who have | hat i | i show an ave | | fan Comn- | that will compare favorably with that of | 1 consequence of the delay in demoerats of Mississippi have the Indian appropristion biil come together under the cloak of o con cal yea wise it was not - the Tu- | \wpioh will dispense with the shotgun, | ian wean has 1 great difficulty buek- m ballot hoxes and other apnli- | otwithstanding tho extension of tho | uieos for purty supromaey. The formor | 2y 0 velieving | woypon has lost caste owing to its pre- nediate wants of the Indians, | ;initate haste in disposing of cbnoxious re 1s danger that supplics for | yopors, while bogus ballot boxes and tis- 1 et to bo contracted for cannot be | 4o pallots lack the finesso of modern delivered at remoto pointsbefore the rig- | polisienl methods which the situntion ors of winter set in. Moantime the | gumands. They have become back nums overament is purchnsing provisions in | org in the backwoods, hence moro ¢ the —open marker —at’ nec Vil | fotive means are necessary to perpot- highe prices than it would | 4o pourbon rule, What form will be otherwise have to pay. the | yiopted is not yet known, The most Indian commissioner stating that on one | fiyvared plan of negro vote suppressior transaction he was compelled to pay one | i g attac qualifieation_ to hundred and twenty thousand dollus | 11q franehi Allenionaor aealing more than would have been necessavy if will he raclously pormitted to vote, the approprintion bill had been passed | g A Bt I A AT When it should have been. It is still | yopegof 1nd owned. By this means the pending, while everything to be pur- | junded aristorracy will entrench thems chased under it is advancing in p solvosand the poor but proud, whit Doubtless other examples of the cost | and Back, must dance to their political of congressional delay could be discov- | musie. The injustice of this suftrage cred, but specific instances are not | scheme isso glaving that some of the fecessary to establish the fact that | regulators shink from incorporating it the unnecessary delay of legislation | in the titution. Whatever plan the Is mental to the public inter- | convention adopts becomes a law with- ests, and the extent of the det- | out further action and s that body hs riment ean not be accurately m wed | but two representatives of the oppos| in dollars and cents, The present cou- 53 promised to be a thoroughly p al body, and the house has done fair tic well in this vespect, the principal fault for delay being with the senate, and for this the democrats of that body are ve- sponsible. If the minority insist upon adhering to the tactics thus far pursued it will manifestly become the duty of the majority to find some way, in the lan- guage of Senator Sherman, te talong with business, — OBLIGATIONS OF COMMON CARRIERS. The New York Z%mes finds in thestrike on the New York Central 1 Hudson River railroads a text for some time observations regarding the qbligations of common carrier It remarks the too much ofticers of railrond companies ¢4 disposed to treat the business der theiv control asif it were a purely private matter with which they can do as they will,” losing sight of the im- portant ation of the husiness not simply to public cne dation, but to public rights and public authority. Common carrying being a public funetion, subject to control and regulation by law, and de- viving privileges from public au- thrity, it owes to the public correspond- ing obl tions. s being the faet, the office of a bound, in deal with the employ 1 of s in dealing with other provis- ions for the ¢ or their no right iduct of thei gal obligatiy to stop have f b it it ot v Hlar and w0 for the accommodation wnd that obligation should 1indenl Lany labor ransportation to anybody wse it sees fit to quarred witha s workme It has no right to in- dulge in a quarrel that intercrupts ts- business unless tho quarrel is forced upon it quite beyond Its power to settle.” We do not think wny falr-minded man will question th this view of the obligations of comm | ¢ €18 18 correet, and in the case of the New York Contral the quarrel with its wkmen was certainly not beyond its power to sc Several yea g0 this company had a n its legal obligations, when it ongog contest with its freight hundlers it appears to have been forgotten, or any rate no attention was paid to it when the nflict now on was ipitated. This suggests at something moro is needed to com- pel railvoad companies to regard thelr publio obligations, and to remove the tion, the country confide or, 1tly looks for an iie model of southern ropression. FarMur EDGERTON of 1th Omaha, with his palmy bunions and wisps of fresh-plucked hay, has made an alarm- ing discovery, which he yielded up in lence to his fellow-toilers in Platte county. From the moment Farmer Edgerton cast aside the musty tomes of legal lore and grasped the horny- bandled plow to turn a wide fur- row in the political world, a t his v The and ita ty came at lasf at secret gnawed longed-for opportuy when our ui zed on the t teen every fil d in mel ed suburban { ked face tte county distin sof “elg farmers, ing thrilled with joy he coughed thousund of 1 weholy ead b up the secret, “Our liberty is lost.” The | startling words ¢ d cighteen thou- sand jaws to fall instant but it must be siid to the credit of the muMitude at the homy-tongued orator eseaped thout serious injury, The farmers of Platte county possess a rugged rogard for truth, but when a stall-fod, well paid democratic officcholder guys them with ghastly political the tension on the paticnco more than averag humanity should calmly beur M STONE, founder of the Chi has abandoned the de- tective field, and evolved a new proj which at nothing short o ing the control of national affui ¥ s, is WVILE 120 News, ims fir panics are il traps T {nsurar discounting the risk by charging five | and yofusing to carry the | most dangerous frames al any price. * There wae a time when the establishment of fire limits in South Omaha would have barred the growthof the town, bhut 1 » {8 gone by, On on the prin \l business sireets would “m.iw;‘ operty o s to build a better | Ar m 1CANTS for pensions under un-’ It is a mistake to .,,..‘ can advane .‘m-\ 4)(" iployment rd them to the office. | vetera THE pet n ing for two addi- tional voting places in the Seventh | d ghould receive recognition by the in other w as well. There are enough voting places fora city of 135, With the p t Inadequ dations a full vote could not 1 Under our tedious registration system not more than five hundred voters should e el to any precinct. At that ratio we ought to have not less than sixty-five polling pla IS 1T not about time for Fire Chief Galligan and to boxes that oceupy the the building inspector declare the ting new postofl site a nuisance and have 'm pulled down or moved away? o rookeries ave not only unsightly, but positively dangerot 1 Uncle ps to cause their removal the should have the rook- eries pulled down and take the ofa damage suit. chances | worlk ry Nebraska is Doug formed in Tugp mereen: of organization a son the sault prosper jgressing rapidly Clubs nujority of the w precinets, and numbers enrolie enthusiasm displayed shows that our citizons are alive to the necessity of de- fending theivc material interests, A RIGID >nforcement of the paving specifications, without fear or favor, is due to the property owners who foot the | bills. Too much vigilance cannot be shown in protecting the city against scheming contractors GRENERAL ALGE is just now rec mentum among the veterar at the ¢ s prosidential hoom | deal of mo- in fvin, an wnd Avmy veunion at Bos- ton, But these carly boows are liable to hateh prematurely. THERE is no telling what aday may bring forth. It even that some day our citizens will be startled hy the report that we are to have a new postoflice in the not very distant sweet bye and bye. T Michigane ne and saw and were eaptivated. The visible charms of the city, coapled with unaficcted hospi- tality, has made her troops of admirers throughout the country is possible OMAHA real estate is the magnet that attracts the sagacious investor, and the steady increase in transactions furnishes substantial evidence of unbounded confi- dence. WHO WAS Eh! Well, now, don’t be teo sure about it, If the father of his country shontd come back 1d un for president, and you 1 campaign life of him maybe you that you did not know such ar What yo d to write a mizht find awful sight about hin ant in that | > would written, trustworthy and under unt of the immortal George’s youthand manhood, his training, bis achievements, his character 48 man no cherry treo, or canuot tella lie business, but just t #ht truth about him, what ever ghost storics wight be needed you could fix upto suit yourse ud the plage where tannica. you could find all this v thie Ameri- zed Encyclopedia I3 the Ency derstand, but the cal A Britannica, you lopedia thing, | Anericanized Eney Brita sounds pretty near the but it is a mighty different thing, Franklin and Jefferson, o way with and Hamilton; with Patrick Henry, and John Hancoek, and Francis Marion; with Henry Clay and Long John Wentworth, Lookin theoriginal Eucyclopedia Britannica them and and you will find some of but “mighty little mor not even thut—any onc orges gets a column where un gets halfa dozen words he Aeric d Eneye mentioned, e of then the old American pick up Britannica of an But dia 5 | aud you will see the difference at once; interest of a syndicate, Mr. Stone pro- | snufty CGeorges tako o back Seat on'ther poses to establish cireuit of penny | Engisn thrones, aud the men of deeds a 5 m | braius who made this western empire,. are morning newspapers extending from | braius who made 1 | New York to St. Louis, with himself as Want to kuow what we aredriving at! \anager-in-chief, for the rpose of | Well, we'll tell you, We memn to sell youa .5 4 405 1he. TNy et of the Amerlemiized Encyele 4 Britan booming Grover Cleveland. Two mil- | ét.28 1% Asnerieanios facarobuis Bt | lion d s are said to be back of this [ Bk for one year, both at the swmne time, | olitien n Tre b s faot ¢ Perhaps we'll do it and perhaps we won't polilice), \‘. BN Ml ‘” 'I“ 0 " 'i‘_” | but if we don’t you'll miss it worse thau w Cloveland is expec o furnish the | ! | bulk of the provende vos the scheme it afld | land's contributions 10 benc | you yet. | emes, even when his political und | DYoucan staud § ceuts o day, surcly? Wy, | have not If My, private interests ave involved, been of a vory lavish nature, Stone succeeds in floating syndi picayune prints the Cleveland will bear but little of the cost, his ite urplus PROPERTY owncrs who contemplate investing in eheap pavements will learn something to their advantage by exam- ining the job lotof decaying blocks on Sixteenth street, b en Farnam and Howard, Ttis an average sample of the aeres of rotten cedar dumped on penny wise and pound foolish taxpayers. WHY can't the busineds men of South Omaha prevail upon the council to es- tablish a limit? Wooden tindor b sandwiched between & around substantial brick business blocks fire es are boir very common idea among railroad man- agers that the business undor their con- and the whole town will some day be the daily papers alone costs You b cents you must have a dai paper, k. whether you get an encyclopodia or 1 put 8 cents into an old stocking foot each day | | for amonth and then add 10 cents if it's i | short one, or 2 cents if it's a long month, or 16 | cents for February, and be ready with tie | whole $2.50 when our agent calls on y v | that#2.50 and your proiise to pay the same sum monthly for the next eleven months, he | will give you tho fint five volumes' of | | the Americanized Eneyclopedin Britaunica right then and there and we will undertake, wiped out by a conflagration unless steps are taken to check the construction of in our name, to de er you the last five vol. nmes within four months, and will put you | | down for ome yeu's subscription to Tue Owmata Bee, daily and Sunduy editions. | Really, 1f you want s futter thing than th | yow'll havo toraise it for yourself, for we | 't give it to you, What is the Amerleanizea Encyclopedia Britannical _ Well, you know what “the Kn | eyclopedia Britannica is, don't yout The | Americanized Eneyclopedia | just that with all the subjects of interest to Axner | lcans rewritten - exbaustively and brought | down to date, the subjects which Amcricans domr't care about condensed within reasonable | limits, a wholo serics of biographics of prowi- nent living men added, and 4 completa new | set of maps. You won" find as much about Lord 'l‘onuudd) or Mugby Junction in gthe 1890. m asin the English; but moroe about Benjamin Cleveland, or Oshkosh American you'll find a heap s Harrison and Groye t and Ka , “fen volumes of t, about 1 thousand | TR Pt g meen thousand columns, oqual | Ap 01d German Farmer South of Inoln ibout 110 ovdinary volumes in amount of contents and ab ne thousand ordinavy | Assaulted by His Son, volimes in_interest and real value. s Want (o hear some more! We co 1 you = Ehd chaantity b dvertiging space is WSt | BURGLARS AGAIN VISIT NEWMAN'S STORE. than two co futl, we shall ha nt to that daily ¢ mother c ght. O sentative will be rou \ 1if you need more talking to ho youjustas much as you can st ouldun't come soon ¢ h to suit 3 postal card to us will bring him in a hurr, - NEWS OF THE NORTHWEST. at Sher 1 roven tock company s driving Moxico o th 1o and 20,00 in” Albany county ] f England, was urrested tuee 10 one to \ mine at Atl e f tho \ties ind havo the orc hen be paid $1,000 and tho ivilege of tuking the min tics at Cheyenne have arvested s, Fred Hagerman and who during the past month aling and running off W r Ha the wska term in An emigrant naned John Bright was shot Dy his five-year-old child at Lander a fow days ago. The ne was playing with a 1 ac tully discharged it I'he ball st < Bright inthe leg, breaking the b ] and Lacerating itso badly that it will have to be amputated. The Wyoming and Nebraska frrigation and water supply company has been incor porated at Cheyenne, with a capital stock of 290,000, Water will be taken from North Platte river and applied principall Laramie v, butlands in_Scott's Bl count ka, will be reclaimed ater count, < forty" ik while v g his herds raigir u Bear and Snake rivers, Of course he se. cured somo splendid heads. A number of these we mounted by John Wilson, a deaf- wte taxidermist, and now ten sets of antlers are displayed in the windows of one of the Rock Springs varas has est stores ton mounts Ed 100 each. For theso , it is said, fus Colorado. Glemyood Springs is becoming popularas a sunmer resort. San Juan county has yet mineral land unsieveye Durinz last week J. Conejos shipped oy castern mark The Union 000 acres of M. Archuleta, s er'ten thousand - shecp , of Pacific is doinggan i stone business at their quarries® in Col lins. Theyare now working 300 men and have advertised for 200 more. The fruit growers of the Grand River val ley are confident of being able to completely shut out the California products from their seetions within a year or two. Denver 1 and philo sophical farm is: “The trouble in Col iy while the sun shines,' while the diteh boss isn't u Colo., havepeti tioned the Burlington people to assist them in buildinga road from Creeley to Rayme Such a Id give them o dircet route esstand and also connections with Chey- . which would give them a voute with the Union Pacific. James Beall, a wy Pass tunnel, was v mature blast. Or competing rkman on the Tennessee v badly injured by a pre- of the shots which he had placed failed to go off, und he supposed it was dead and went to investizate, and us he reached the rock the explosion oceurred, His entive face was budly burned and injured. His right arm was also badly hurt. It is thought that he will recover. - ~ . The Cloud Still Lowers. Chicagn News. Emperor Willlam and Lord Salisbury have had a friendly conference, and still the frayod-out Buropean war cloud refuses to disappear. How These Doctors do Fight, Detroit Free Press, Look out for a merry war now that the doc- tors present at the Kemmler execution are fairly by thé ews. Fora real, hearty,ablo. bodied controversialist commend us to one of FROM THE STATE CAPITAL Several Hundred Dollars Worth of Valuable Silks Stolen-A Boy Has His Sthonlder and Foot Crushed, Neb., August 1 Speetal to Tir Ko is an aged German | 1 south of the HOW A min g W \ and - for o welfive W 1late, but 1 man has been rewarded with noth tude. The w o n has boen mer and last ¢ ho t wslon tor ch his offspring, who: John, f lent, determination to by o prol ite and worthloss fellow s 80 envaged vore out a t. At3p. m Consta loft for the p e 0 ar NEWMAN A For the sec nd time inside of t 1 burglarizod ¢ months vorth of gods, The as usual ot he rear w had things thisir A been taken could discover noth erning tity of the burglars. Later a tel A freigrht train that left Lincoln th had discovered a tramp in a b th a contents of to Cwa i the tran mped fre t caran tl A bundle of silks in the hands ot the uctor. The v 1 man will retuen to Lincoln this eve z wit the goods and When N An's_ store was robbed three months ngo W00 in money wis taken besides s and mortrages, FELL UNDER TIE WHERLS. Fred Ashmore, o young vagrant of eighteen, whose hon is at Cc T fell under th cars near the paper mills ith of the city this forenoon und had bis foot. and shouldcr crushed He was ingaride, atthe time ngingon the side of the car fjust dropped. His foot fell in front of 1 was crushed flat. He lay be side the track in agony until a farmer driving by discovered ham, He was then put intothe farmer’s wagon aud brouglt to the police sta tion, where it was found necessary (o ampu- tate the foot, Afterwards he was removed to St. Elizabeth’s hospital. WATCHING TilE JATL DOOR. W. H. Rickurd, the bevehiskered justice of the peace from Lewitt, who wis put under 00 bouds yesterday to a teforethe district court to answer the charge of ruin ing poor Mary Morforl, the young girl who suicided a fow d all 1 county ys ago, is stillin jail despite Sheriff Barton™ of Suline and is camping on his trail. 's possible rel Bar urest him for a erininal ton is waiting tc sault upon a fourceen-year-old girl Rickard, who is suing for a divoree, says some of these terribla crimes are surprises to her, but says she has sufficient charges against hi rendy of infidelity to secureadi voree without using either of these Mr. and Mrs. Stannishave both beon put under bonds until the session of the disirict court, Since the employers of Stannis b connection of him and his wif of poor Mary M him, @ learned the with the ruin vd, they have discharged TE DOCTORED THE HORSE, Justice Cochran’s court has been filled with a cloud of witnesses nearly all day in attend 1 sharply contested case in which the use of the death of a horse was the main wint in dispute. Louie Posky, the defend- at, sold a horse to an Hibernian named Mur- guaranteeing that he was sound Later aswelling appeared on the steed’s neck and Murray applied some medical concoction to it of his own manufacture. The horse died Murray thereupon climed the horse had polo evil and sued to recover the money Le paid for him. P . - however, claimed that the Trishiman kilic > horse by his doctorings. The case wis cu. _acted with all the solem- nity of a murder trial, COULDN'T CARRY OUT IT1S SCHEME, Will Turck, the son of wealthy parents in the east, but whose waywardness has caused nim to feed upon the husks of prodigality, has of late been engaged in the intellectual labor of cleaning cuspidores in Alick Jettes' saloon, Y was discharged and he mother t leave tho house, struck him twio q over the head and finally deserted him, Mrs. Addic Bell is another un fortunate who wishes tobe freed from the bonds of Wedock: s A i that hor husband, Nomn Last ever Lancaster county physi clans hold an luter at D Elag gard's ofic 5 - POLITIC AL CHOW-CIHOW Now that M W f Grand Istand strict, the doubloedecker has 4 el try anotler strad The f | which ithas lavised on My, IS canbe insertal where Kem haveapparel. 1 the d lomanded it, Kem woul \ Audit ton wa 3 1 1 » ) sy £ t r, 1 he will hawd work agiinst hin, John MeMan one of fth, \ for stato med bt ready for the 1 wheel lorse in N t hn, inhis excessive mod el at Among othor disti 1 politicians in the city, it must not be f ho most homy fisted of far David Butler, is here. He is accompaniod by J, I, Crad dock and Tobe Custor, who have just finisled harvesting acropof ice. These thi ntle men have attended every convention that has met so far this year, and Mr. Butler con in his eyes, that ho feared tho farmers woro notacting in havmony. Heworoon the lapel of his coat a handsome pewter bad, which he glaimed he had purchased of Dictator By rows. Mr. Castoralso wept as he thought the great wrongs that corpotations were in flicting upon the people. Mr. Craddock states that he could Bot weep unloss the bue tender would dropa stick into his lemonade. Hon. E. B, Brown, who has been thrice tendered the governorship by the repiblicis—p— of Lancasterand refused the b v asjt was tendered, came in last nich sail that he was liere as a spectalor a notin the ast intere d in Keat Fa, '8 boom for treasurer, M. Brfwn will remain i i til after the conven Ho thinks in these days of doubtfu she would rather sacrifice bis cashier than himself, chiirman al is coming to of comi Davy, ocratic cen ieoTgoe the county e word that b Omaha th ingand will bring the hose cart of t mont fire company with hi nominated he promises to vefrain from ing, Otherwise e will tum on the John H. Ames of Lincoln, the H of the First district, is in the city, will make spe oxlers early ches toall Mr. Ames, like tatesmen, perfers to place his orations on filoandbave them printed in the Record. His master picce is The Tarifl on Tallow; ¥ those who will leave tof our or How Our Butchers Are Robved of ‘Their Pt Mr. R. B, Wahlquist of Hastings, politi- cian, editor and artist, appe d on the ball groundearly, Ho will take tho nomination S forstate auditor and regulate the air g bumpers on freight cars as son us ho'ls elocted, Charley npredicted at 9 o evening, as he wandered through t lobby, that Boyd would bo the 1 Brown ulso stated that J. Sterling Morton was in Chicago and would ot be at lome for - : . CANIDAS RACE WA The English and Fronch Spoaking rovinces Row Over an Ofii Orrawa, Ont., August 18— [Sp grun toTie 13 el Sir Er Middleton has packed up his tru with his fanily laves Canada I from the nand of the Canadian militia he stated today that he had been weriticed by the government o save the [Mre 1vote. The fact is the Freich -Can s of Q for theactive part ho took in French halfbreed rel 1l the nort! L They succeeded in disg , b : churges that he Looted furs from i French balf-breed whilein the r est Now tl s in the I h speaking Bar 1are al ttoa titition igs: I ! 1 h 1t ani from all CConts 1o, - | . OMAHA LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY. Subseribed and Guar | Capltal... 850,000 Puld inCapital $ 0 Buysand sells st I bonds; nezotiatos LU L5 MO TS A8 1 t lo3ts taxes Omaha Loan & TrustCo SAVINC BANK, Sl 'um ri6th and Douglas St OMcers: A. U, Wynian, proesident; J.J, Broway the medical professi suys his employer” refused to pay him his = wages fc S past, amomting to Poct O'Reilly and the Toilers. S, Turd it amount, and Kunaas Oity Times, toJettes’ barn, whero he has been Sleepin Reillv 0 get some of his effe s and to put so John Boyle O'Reilly was a teacherand a | 10 gCtsomeof his of Y pu ' Py > medicine upgn some sores on his log While friendof tho toilers. Howroto not only, but | fredi e upen semc sores o his 1oz, While tie worked for tho masses. Some of his | of trespas While the boy was lyiug in poems were sermons. Al of them were | Jail Jettes attemptedsto have il cuse called arguments in favor of tho wage-carner, Ho [ in w uit was brought agiinst him did what he conld tolift up tho workingman, | {Jettes) forthe #0 that ho owed thelad. As : el i : ' | the boy was in jailsof e he could not and that will be his bestepitaph. have appearcd dnd the case would have hecn o o dismissed had not the boy employeda ! Acknowledges the C; who interfored with the nitous Chicago Tribun bailed the b out of jail 4 acon ““We will state,”” continues the Crawfords. | tinuance until the trespassing pretence was ville (Ga.) Demoerat penitently, “that the | Settied editorof the Domocrat was inno condition STy ““']‘I ""“ EBOORCUTAD. 6 last woek to write or know what was pub. | Mvs. Anna B, Goldsherry, who commenced lished in these columns. Thereforo heis not | Manco Goldsherry sestonday. on tho je responsible for what was published.” 1t is | of criminal condict, has also sworn ot a war- 1ot an wnusual thing for democratic editors [ vaut for his arvest on th ¢ of illicitcon tobe in a siilie condition, but fow of them | AUCt With acertuin colored womun. A deputy o lining the muttor after. | S1erifl nas been sent to Broken Bow, wher are as frank in expluiniug the matter a the recreant husband is,and he i to be 1as this Georgia journalist. brought to Lincoln for prosecuti Bepas - = E & A DRUNK FOOLS WITIH A REVOLVER, How’s This, Mr. Copper ? Charles Clark, a stone mason, while out Albany Fepress - seeing the town last night became very badly Whenever you read ina newspapor artielo | futoxieated, | On goiig homo o atton ptod 1 that “tho police avo dotermined to break up | load his revolver when the weapon ex p the in jgous practice,” you may_ aiways fad the bulleh sivudkhim i sioacm, i safolybet your last paie of socks that the | 16 8slightflesh wound, =~ “infamous practice” is the pitching of poa The r Hican Caiata T oot T At thme nies by bogs or the playing of ball in a va leld o meeting at the Capi i 1 lot on Sunday afternoons, or the habi ing i 1 ) r 25 and I 1gers to cong; gate on a certaiin corn AL that, iost t hes ¥ but nothing more serions, Tho determina- [ ¢ ¢ . [rdose pointof developr neetion with | tuei Ty 1 th ings of that kind, evils don't Ledyvith X u 1 el the Cap i the afor ition worth | hotel : . This aft Dt A L t | from [ n B wit J (‘ox 1 THE AFTERNOON TEA iR aR B S 3 Some girls are pressed for time and others | from J, H. Hasty, o fa 1 for the fun of i ity ¥ oy [ en lorly suitor—I have spoken to your . 3 7 ) mother, Helen and— Helen—0, I'm 50 glad oica ; e ol Did she accept you! by Fina Tulonc I thought you said Mis. Manhattan was | piivosin 1 i § the Society women of New Yorl) et W W't shep? ¢V y she as s1x child: MWl s sk Vi 1 S lngllis) il Wi ] lace, is. 1 ' i - A At the garden gato: YOt George, papa fs [ DICe 15 ubi 1to | unchaining the dog ‘sall nght. Ho [ festarslour i bty used to bemy dog. | gave him to the dealor B . g fatherd “There wasn't any giving about it | Yoar o Craesus paid cash down 1S NOT A DIGAMIST Sue (atthe seaside, in f to WJ “. a (0, McCaslan ¢ s Ella coedingly meagre bathing co ) LB wies the report” pib! 1 con- | that ridiculous! Harry A v t | cer wob N o biga t ¢ | “Anew female pursuit in the lavger cities | TS B aid not ta d e from | is collocting bills This |s encouraging. | jiop firet yand Albert B 4 The old female b pursuit i he lar citles that she did not have ) 1 rod WA to run e up 2 divaroe 4 ow McCuslan There was quit m of At an brides | 8 e {10 hoe - 1o Fof NMeGysl in~ London, but as one of them married tho | [beld Very nich bt 4 i n of acduon the boom wus uaturlly fn | fREFAEE RO e A “Alorey, but you've had @ varrow escape. | 104 If it hadw't beon for that mau you would CITY NEWS AND NOT have been drowned. Did you viank him Harwood W. Peun asks fora divorce from “Why, Ethel! Of course not. o was an | his wife, Lula Peun, on the grounds that utter'strauger o me. o you think I'would | while he was dangerously sick with typhoid > wan 1 fevershe refuscd Lo wait ou b speak to a strao, ordered his | Directors:=A, U Wyman, J. . Mitlud, 1. J Brown, Guy €. Dart W. Nush, Thom J, Klaball, George Brtie. e — . st - o et