VOL.. 8. NO. 9. LINCOLN. NEBRRSKR, SKTURDKY, FEBRUHRY l 1S93. PRICE PISB CGNTS 1 fit IM , .,,, H. To ono who hangs aniuiiil tlio United States court rooms during tho notions of that tribunal it Is apparent that, under tho present Hystoin of inunuge incut, tho holding of tho sessions at both Omaha and Lincoln inlllcts ma terial hardships upon litigants in tho way of Increased expenditures so that tho real purpose, of permitting sessions at both places is defeated. It seems that matters might bo no arranged that, during sessions in Omaha, tho litigation of thoso people, who live nearest Omaha could bo entertained and vice versa when court is hold in Lincoln. There Is no Immediate dan ger, however, of such a system of con venience and economy to litigant be ing adopted very soon. And why? "Why, .ludgo Dundy lives in Omaha. Of course ho prefers to hold court at homo, where ho can rest in tho bosom of his family and save board. If tho people who livo nearer to Lincoln than thay do to Omaha wore permlted to at tend to their court alTairs in Lincoln, by far tho greater quantity of tho courts business would bo done here, whereas, at present, Lincoln sessions are always extremely short and .Judge Dundy and tho attaches of his court never attempt to disguise their Impatience to get back home. Tho matter of expense to tho people does not seem to entor into tho judicial reckoning. No such n con sideration need bo expected to worry a federal iudicial functionary. And thus it is that Omaha people are com pelled to coino to Lincoln to look after their business in federal court and Lin coln people are compelled to go to Omaha and do likewise, and people from all over tho state aro dragged to tho point most distant from their homes and mulcted for mileage in tho pay ment of costs for tho service of pro cesses and tho attendance of witnesses. Tho federal court mill exacts appalling taxes from its patrons at best, and It doesn't seem necessary to go to so much pains to Increase tho burden to litigants. For Instance a follow away out in a far corner of tho state is charged with some potty violation of a fedeial stat ute. The district attorney summons pretty nearly every ono procurable as witnesses and tho marshals aro sent Hying hither and thither to servo tho processes. Ample fees and mileage accounts pile up with every lino that is written in tho case and every foot that an otllcor or a witness travels. At length tho man conies In and pleads guilty, rendering tho witnesses un necessary, though always on hand, and tho court tines tho culprit a dollar and costs. In a recent case, where the cul ni'it lived rlL'ht hero in this city, tho lino was ono dollar and tho costs about two hundred dollars. Had tho culprit lived out two hundred miles ono can easily see how the costs would have n.uuntod. Sometimes the man lined is madd to pay and sometimes not, some times Tn is Imprislonod a few days and yunu-timtb not, but the magnificent cost process g's on forever, and heio and theio. in jMivhvps half of the cases, one sees ipon tiio iccord a clincher read ing. "DUii "let attorney allowed WO oxtia." ' is perhaps well for the federal jmJioial crow that poor people who hiwo litigation poifding can be diaggoduUo the relentless cost mill eKo it is more than probable that thoy wouM not bo there often, litigation in any court of justice Is decidedly ex pensive, but it Is to bo hoped that some day some one will Inaugurate a leforin whereby the same work that would cost a litigant.") before a justice of the pence will not cost him KiOO in a federal court. Col. Walter Mason, who recently re moved to Washington, D. C, to accept a situation on the editorial sialt of the K ening News of that city, has many friends In Nebraska and especially in Lincoln, who will never neglect an oppcitunity of devouring every para graph possible that is marked by tho pathos and poetry that llowed so natur ally and lluently from his tireless pen. Hero is ono, written in moinoriam on tho death of .lames G. Hlalno, that Walt's friends will readily ascribe to him: "In the early w Inter of tho year and the early winter of his life, a giant In a century of giants has tin own aside his falchion and gone to his rest. The chi villi ouh champion of the lists has fallen befoio the black rider, Death, and his plumes are sables now and his spirit walks the stars. A great man is dead; gieat in Intellect, great of heart, great In ambition, and great In achieve ment; u mini whose name was lustrous (.lining tho minion of the world's states men; who was tho Idol of millions of his countrymen; who arose,, as so many Americans have arisen, from an hum- 1,1 " A' il'icusSLik j J '' i. ' H- i i i 1" " J,JI( l.J, .. . Lil Hi no'.1 .CI .id t X X . IKI i. -w.', 'a th .-.r,n 1, -3ak rH s. i ' fir J "S'- ECivl iM; Rii mmumj-vmmmaKmmr mmmMmm m i.d m ui w i icn inravuyHinBrxr.tiai"iwi . i-',n. i mmmaMwninmKtm - . i . x ".:" ' 'LiM:.!111'. HI9 Z ZfmSB&nfll JI Jl Wi1.W - 'i, riii!,, ; Tiywii f MM 3 ?1 HMUSaHBMBn iHS Pit . k'm '' ' BiHBI -. JffiBuiBl 3 1 Hik - r RHfl ? JlflHBiffl 335 I 'i'" , ,i'i !.!"' ii'; '' raHMi - 4FHDRaiHnnSHBni a II H I I 1 Mill H laiB I UKNiH IMVBhHITI B iiairui IH B. ff'iW'jj h lint- bBi riRiBBEIHBHtMBBIM s s ! I w., "V,T- SJSMBWMl H rHlTOBMaV-'IWfVfl S h mI BBn lira H H1 Mil n bbmHBIRIBIiBH P h h JU'IHW r Ti IH fRL fililo'll r 1RiIm!e3SwH Ft- iDjH c " a BH tHb! i I..-T- JFfifffMi,a liaiiiiiiBI i s a 19 t E Ml Mb iTtia m nDiBiiiaiB sua e a mgi ; u ra Fiini MxfflWl'WvWBVJI ..IF . Hulifn W:n7Siim. 1 , filu IB fl jCIKBTI .. ( HHM i HBV i Jl:t ESUiTPi liSlilBI'lOi lilB.aliai S BElli aS SGila I,e ijBii ill 1 i i iM r u " wi Utllfl. . ' - JF. K K'1WffiCIKWIWrjr1U jJ- li.ij AL 'I1 1 " i ''.. Ah, r i ' p u , f i!i. i! b 1 , I J I .m'l ' V -1" 'V '!'" ,K : s riLH MM I mnrnw ODD FELLOWS' Nein TEMPLE IN CHICHCO liiiiroiiuoiitri will shortly lie miido. The piesent iiarters will ho onlargod and remodeled sons to take In thontoro adjoining on the west, which Is now fll'IMIIllllll lit Hut fl.iiul I in. f ... mid Don Camei oil's Cafe on Kloveuth Htreet, forming and L shape, which will give the llrm an excellent showing on both O and Kleventh streets, IJn coin's two most iromlnent retail thor oiighfmes. Ily tho time tho altera tions are completed tho linn will ho ready to open a complete department store on the order of several of Chica go's prominent merchaulllo houses, and then our eltlens will lie on hand to admire another stroke of genuine Lincoln enterprise. So It will be no ticed that In this move the capital city gains new and additional prestago in commeielalclieles, at tho sauio tlmo retaining one of her prominent young business men whom it had about con cluded would locate olsowhoro. Friends of tho University and all students lu art and drawing regret ex ceedingly tho Intelligence recently an nounced that Miss llarton, instructor In clay modeling, di awing, and higher art, has icceived and accepted an otter from tho president of tho South Da- Itota agricultural college of a moro desirable posltltlon in that Institution., whereby she Is enabled, through tho work of but eight months in tho your, to realize a much better salary than was paid her at the university. Sho has been at the Unlvorsltj only a fow mouths, but in that tlmo sho has awak ened new Intel est In art studies and great admliatlon fori the mastery of lior favorite arts. Sho had further more won a warm place In tho friend ship of tho faculty and students, and had begun a work that promised U do much toward advertising Nobrasku'ri resouices In a lino that none have yot essayed. At tho invitation of tho com mittee in charge of wowan's work at tho world's fair to model a Ufo-sUo statue of, clay for exhibition at tho Columbian exposition, bIio was pro paring a remarkably expressive statuo of a foot-racer, which sho proposed to label "Nebraska," Indicative of tho energy and push of this young state. It Is to Imj regretted that Nebraska's educational Interests mo subject to such encroachments by the younger and cruder states surrounding us and it is to be hoped that the day will coino when the Nebraska State University shall meet with such thorough ap preciation from the legislatuie and tho people that no sister state Jim coax away Its instructors until it feels dis posed to release them. No successor for Miss llarton has yet been secured. The recent sale of the Home Street Itailway company has knocked tho energy out of the movement to secure a franchise for tho Metropolitan Klec trie Light and Gas company, as tho former owners of that railway lino were tho men who proposed to put in the gas mid electric light plant along with a new power house they expected to build next spring. Tin- street rail way Improvement and extensions and the new lighting plant contemplated mi expeudituto of about illTid.lKK) this ear but the sale knocks the entire project in the bead. That ordinance for a fianchi-e Is still before the coun cil, but It will piobublj neei be pushed. Meantime another company known as the Lincoln Llcctric Light company has applied for a franchise, upon which application the council appears to be disposed toslt down hard. It is backed by a man named Mcl'iir land from Omaha. Theieaie entliely to mau of these" schemes being sprung on the public nial its time that the wele beingdipOM'n oTwIthout nTiung upiiseless attention of tho council. Tho do not seem to amount to iinj thing when tlnally brought to light and whv waste the time onthoiii.' bio condltson to carve his name upo the lock of enduring fame, where it will remain when the waves of count less years liavo rolled against and re coded from it. In tho sere autumn of his life his house was a house of tears. "Unmerciful disaster followed fast and followed faster;" death Invaded his homo again and again, until the em blem over his door was a broken heart. Sorrows and disappointments threw their grelous weight upon his whit ened head, and his tears fell to the sob bing of the dirge and the moaning of the ritual. And now Death has taken the mourner, and It Is for those to weep who linger In the wintry world and close with lev lug touch the sight less eyes. III the palace of American genius theie are mmiy knights and nobles, but the prince of the purple chamber lies dead." It Is not vorj often that an attorney-at-law is arraigned in court to answer for the commission of a violation of law, although there is a suspicion cur rent now mid thou to the ellect that some members of that profession do not always get their deserts in that lino. Last Monday afternoon Walter M. Woodward of this city was forced by stress of circumstances to plead guilty to tho charge of having received and secreted. or failed to return to Its owner. a letter containing a live dollar note, addressed to William II. Woodwind, .county attorney. It was a decoy letter sent out l the federal authorities to catch him. L. C. liurr, who appeal oil for the prisoner, called attention to the fact that he was in stiaightened cli eunistmices and Judge Dundy let him dow ii mighty easy. The law prescribes a penults of not more than "oi) Hue or I not more than one year at hard labor. .lodge Dundj gae him rltH) mid costs mid he was permitted to go out with- I out lslble icstialnt. The light sen tence was undoubtedly due to the fact .that Wxdwmd has a wl' and one child dependent upon his exertions for their support, which undoubtedly led the district attorney to nolle the charge of einbe.loinent. Woodward admitted having received the the dol lars but the story ho i elates of its sub sequent career ought to be a llrst-cliis-. temperance lecture to him and to all others who dally with the bowl. He says he started out immediately to take the letter and money to W. II Woodward but met a few friends who engaged him in a game of high the When he was through with the game the tle dollars was through with hlin, and when ho rccoeied he had for gotten all alMiut It He never after ward recalled the live dollar incident until he was anested. That Lincoln Is an attractive place to Invest inonev was again recently demolish. itcd. About a .voir ago Mi Harry iviug disposed of his iuteiest ill the li'rnof H. It. NissVv Co, mid since then bus lieen abioad seeking moie lucrative Holds for Investment. Mr. Krug has visited most of the large cities seeking a location to open a drv good stole, hut like tho prodigal son lie came to his old home and decided tba' no place offers better inducements than Nebraska's capital citv. It had been riiiuoied that Mr. Krug would soon opi n a dry goods stoic on O street and then another rumor placed It on Llcvcnth ntieet, but to the contimv of Inith he decided to euibarU in an es tablished business and link hands with one of our Kst known and most popu lar houses, that of .1 W. Winger t o. Tills was accomplished alnnit two weeks ago and now the announcenient Is made that Mr. Krug will take active maniigeincnt of the stoic, which cer tmnlv speaks well for the abilitv and integrity of the tlrms new pattner. I With this change comes a c'lane.o f , tin linn's title which will h i eatl.-r be, known as 11. it Krug t With the in w tun of affa.rs tiuiny j A batch of inteiesting papers has been recently handed the writer from historic ltonie. They are December copies of the Koiuun Heiald, which is printed in I'.ngllsh and devoted to tho Kngllsh speaking tourists mid residents in the eternal city. It also circulates in italv, Helgium. lVance, Holland, Switzerland, Cicruiany, Kngland and the Unit d Mates. I'.ach Issue contains a long list of v (siting tourists.and a very huge piopoition of them me registered from the United States. In fact, the publisher seems to cater to the Amer ican ati ouage bv far most falthfullv Kveii ItMidverliseineiits, which are as numerous and atti active as those of the most enterprising Yankee publisher, me of Interest to the cultured tiaveler and the stav-at-hoiiio student of his ton,. One adveitlser in particular rivets attention to daily excursions to and lectin es on the ruins of ancient Koine On Monday mornings, for instance he guides his patrons to the Colosseum and Gulden House of C ex ( e '".,' t,lt.