i M - m I u .ragr. . tow -fi rfli "N. l I Vh.f'- iB - 1' "v jByjMiMft" Jrll'foJlliluvv7xvvVlM'lUl'JMvc' .;mv7tjr BiPir-rTaTAj. w -. ja .:r-... -.:. ;. . .:rr ii- . " niaaiin. iMim? cnnr "rfrMJsra!y:ifw hkf tj2,Wm7Awjr niwairaiWiiQ 'V r M..:ii j raai HI7AVH mmifi mm- wsm Mw,vy 3r.-w,a ran & nM aiTrjaa rq i" "wav mm Hi' - . vffJxHkV ujir mi mir t tmw r ' v- i tj j.i ' jiviiw MMMMriJi mmim w- -. 11 kub, jt.,1 a'wi tt h 1 . j ---' '" hiuiil.im "-mi, . ji au:jm luium vaii ii min .mi bi j j '-;.v,it .'a j - ..; i-riv, b.&wm mK.r'x mir m-'ii-.'ii.v.i t srsja & xj"j uu -' vi ww n. hj LHnaHiaHW ihh ir -& -ftMfo( AlEBf?A5A'S ELITE FAMILY XeWSEAEER. ' SgBaSF " VOL. 8, NO. JO. 10 When Fred Nye mill Frank Johnson purchased tu Om.ih.l llfinililir.ui throe .veil is ago that jiiiiriial Immediately lie came the must enterprising newspaper in Nebraska, and it remained so until Fred and Frank, who dually pit fright ened at the expense account, sold out to Major .). C. Wilcox, one ot the most picturesque llgutos.whn over attached himself to Neliraska newspaper. The enterprise of the proprietors muni tested itself ininiiu.v wn,s.oneof which was the establishment ol a Lincoln Imiean by means of which the ' nth licmi sought to liecome a competitor of till' ioiinml, .i irx and Cull in Hie In oiil Held. Several columns of Lincoln news worogien ouch da., and it wasn't loiiK helorethe h't inihlicin had a cir culation of aliout !HX) in this city. When Wilcox obtained control he very soon spoiled all this, as he did every think' else of aluc connected with the paper. (!. .M. Hitchcock, the proprietor of the Omaha Worlit-Urrulil, lias for a loii time had his eyes upon Lincoln, and he has lliially decided to follow the e.Mimple set by the L'iiiihttrtn and makehispapera real compel itorof Liu colli dailies in their own Held. A hand some olllce has been secured at Kiev cut h and C) streets, mid the Lincoln business has been placed in the hands ot a set of youiiK men who can make a success of the venture if success is at taiimble. Will .M. .Maupin, an exceed iiinly active man, who is one of the star members of the W'urhl-IUvuhl stall, has been Installed as chief correspond cut. Mr. Muupiu has the knack of turnliiK out the kind of "stull" that newspaper readers like, and ho is a very hard worker. Jin will be assisted by Ii. .). Driiuimoud, who will also act as telegraph operator there is a spe cial wire running into the olllce. lid. Harmon will have charj;o of the busi ness alfairs of the Lincoln branch. From three to four columns have been set apart for Lincoln news. The out come of the Wiirltl-Uvralrf'H latest stroke of enterprise will be watched with interest. '1'herc is apparently no piod reason why it should not be suc cessful. Mrs. A. Weber, who will be remeiii beied in Lincoln as a most charming singer, was married .May 1) to II. .1. (.'usjjruvi', formerly ot tnis city. She bus been cliKaed to s'iiik' in a number ot concerts to lie k'iveii in music hall on the world,s lair grounds, and some time during the latter part of the mouth she will sinu at ('ushiuau Park, this city. Mr. and Mrs. I'o-roxe will make their home in Oak Park. The cauipaitni which one of the daily papers iswanin against thevile places in "the bottoms,' raises a question that has agitated cities lor mans years. There is no ollicial attempt made to throttle the social evil, it having hnu since been demonstrated by a very pe culiar kiudol lo,'lcthat it is not "piac ticable" to break Up tlie-e eil icsoits. The only question is how to regulate the evil. In these days tin authorities meat intliiitely nioio pains to license and "regulate'' crime and icu than they aie to suppress it. The proposi tion is as follows; ( iiw a certain num ber ol these icious places under the triendly protection of the law shall they bo gathered together in one sec tiouof the city and constitute a dell nito burnt district, or hell's half acre, or shall they be allowed to spring up and llourish wheresover they will, en croaching upon business houses and icputahlo homes? From the stand point ol molality neither horn ol the dilemma should bo accepted, but then the alfairs of municipal government are seldom conducted on a basis ol morality. If Lincoln must have thee places, ami nearly everybody seems to think that she must, it is uuipiestiou ably preferable to heap the dirt to Kt'tHer in one pile lather than scatter it broadcast ovei the city, and il their is anyone place better adapted torn dumping ground of immorality than the bottoms Tin; ('oruir.u hasn't heard of it. Ol course it is wry hard on the hundreds of icspectable people who are lorced by poverty to make their residence in this part ol the city; but the public is told that the vice can not bo exterminated, ami they are only sullorintf what others would sutler il the resorts were moved elsewhere. It is almost the universal practice in the larue cities to slice oil a tfood sized chunk ol the town and dedicate it to licensed imiiioiality. The clothes a man wears uudoiibt edly haea yreat deal to do ill Kivinj.' hln'i a place in society, and it is some times said that the best seats in the house of Ooil are reserved lor those win) aie attired in the liuest raiment. Some of those people who delight ill criticising the chinches usseit that that they the churches, jjive a warm reception to the genteel lialld, while tile door Is often closed in the lace o tlie miserable sinner. In short it is said that the churches draw the line at poverty and welcome onl the well to do. And nothing delights these carp iii critics so much as an incident that apparently pioves their assoitions. So when it is known that the chinches of Lincoln will be held up to 1- public view, and in a few instances in what mi'lit be regarded as a more or less untasorable liKht, in Sunday's II oilil tlrmlil, a nood many people in this city will look lorward to the ex pose with pleasurable anticipation. i Last Sunday seven reixirlers of the II mill lit nilil, in the Kiiiso of tramps sought admission to the churches of thlscity. Twenty two churches weie isited in all. The experiences of the lepoiters will be related ill detail in tomorrow's issue ot Mr. Hitchcock's interesting paper. As mitfht have been expected the treatment accoidcd these counterfeit tramps was not the same at all ol the churches. In one instance the dis pulsed reporter was actually refused admission. Then in some of the churches the louli looking visitors were coldly receiNed and shown to seats in obscure corners. In other houses of worship the leporters were treated in precisely the same manner as the "patent leather and diamond" contingent, as one of the newspaper men expressed it. ()i the whole, how eer, the boys consider that they were burly well treated, and it is uot'proba tile tliat this sensational feature ot the loithconilliK issiieof the Wurltl Ihniltl will contain much that can be con strued as an unlavorable relied ion on the churches. In the case of the one man who was retused admission it is haidly lair to blame the church lor the toolish mis take ot the usher, and it should be borne in mind that what the dilloront, erring ushers did or did not do can hardly bo held to represent the spirit ol the people who make up thecouri1 (ations. in iiiaiiy cases tney are quite yoiuiK men, inexperienced ami more or less thoughtless, and the extreme rarity of such visitors as the II oihl 7 ((( explorers is, init.sell,a partial excuse for the nom-rally courteous attendants; and riKlit hero is another point that should be taken into con sideration; there is a vast dilferonce between a poor man in tattered gar ments, and iv disreputable thug who presents a half tipsy appearance and looks as though he had just stumbled across the threshold of the chinch at the end of a wild debauch. The M'aiitl Jlriultt reporters, witli several days' giovvth ot beard, unkempt hair, the most disreputable clothes, blackened eyes, and court plaster blotches on tlieir luces, presented such a lorhiddiug appearance that they narrowly escaped tlie clutches of the police 'I here was not a semblance ot Humility or pi'iu teuceaboiit them. They merely looked like the toughest kind of criminals out on a lark, and it cannot be denied that under the circumstances they had the chinches at a decided disadvantage It is an open question whether there was any Christian or other obligation on the part of the ushers to welcome with open arms these seeming villains out on a sprc oaud place t hem alongside of sell respecting people. In these days no church reiuses a welcome to the poorest mortal the most aband oned wietch, it he but manifests t he slightest degieo of interest indeed the churches in e constantly leaching out ami seeking to gather these people in. Hut when a blear-eyed trump loices his way into the presence of rev erent and respectable people with an o ident intention of mocking and Cro at iugn disturbance that is another matter entirely. a. The idea is a clever one from the newspaper standpoint. It was tried in Omaha a year or .so ago and occasioned miichcoiiimeut. In this city t lie scheme was directed by Metcalte, who has done so much to liven up the H'urlil Ucniltl. The reporters who played the pint of toughs were: Will M. Maupin, K. ( . Hemming, lCd Harmon, II. .1. brum nioiid, K. M. Jlradloy, K. O. Maylleld, and John Tieruey, What has been called the "North south railroad convention" will be held in this city. June Us. Delegates have already heeii appointed ui a number ot states, and North and South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa. Kansas, Nebraska. Oklahoma, Missouri, Indian Territory, .....I 'I'...... ...II I ....I MM.. 41 i I I r.in Mill in- iri,rmi-u. I in scheme which this convention is to piomote is very largely a populist plan intended to demonstrate that govern inent ownership is the practical solu tiou ot the railroad question. It is said that the proposed new line is to give the lariiieis an opportunity to get their grain and products to foreign markets at less cost than at present, establishing, at the same time, reci piocity between this country and South America. Meetings have been held ill central and western Kansas lavoriug the enterprise, The money lor the new road Is to lie furnished by the several states through which it is to run, and when built and equipped for business the road will be the joint piopertyof the states so contributing Its maintenance and muiiagcincut will be their joint obligation. Kates are to be low, no dividends are to be paid, and the prollts which might otherwise goto the capitalists will be turned into the pockets of the farmers. "It may not have occurred to the minds of the populist theorists," sa.vs tint Now York Sun, in discussing the project, "but if theieworo any proba bio piollt In building and operating LINCOLN, NKHK.ASKA, such a Hue as the political economists nropose, private individuals would have taken hold of the matter, or would do so now. The truth Is that thcic is no profit in sight. Air line railioads, built in disregard to topo graphical conditions, seldom pay. Theie is much unproductive laud in Western Nebraska and western Kimsiiu through which this road would run. There are many eiigiiieeiiug dilllcul ties. The present population Is scanty, and the local tralllc would, therefore, amount to little Few railroads are supported by through Ii eights; few, even in the most fertile ami favored sections, can be thus smiportcd. Send llli, Itli.ttil In I litli'nul,,,, Ii. I I,., ii. ,....!. "h ,..,. Ml in illllir-lli tl1'-.l,'l(- tiouof gaining South American pro ducts, also agricultural, for return trains to carry over a long stretch of unproductive country, may commend itselt lo the populist fancy, but it does not promise to the states participating a let urn of the cash invested" It might be interesting to know how much the gamblers of this city con tribute to what is known as the press fund. V .1. F llallinger, of Lincoln, follow ing in the footsteps of . (i. Ingersoll, has written a bunk entitled "Nudis Ver bis or llible and Keal Truths." It is an agnostic's criticism of tlie scripture. V Alter many contradict ions It is dually announced wit Ii a degree of positive uess that Mgr. Satolli is coming to Lii In. The dill'eiences in the Catho lic church here will soon boa matter of national concern. Fvery movement of Satolli is chisel v followed by the public. V Mr.W. K. HnrdyassiiresTiirC'oi nine that the music this year at the (Veto Chatituiiquaasscmhly will in some ways be in advance of that of previous years. The two assembl', classes will meet daily for eight days and take up the jn.i,. ..I- ...... i. ...;.. ...,,i.... ii... .11......1 :.... -Mini,, ill IMIIMM III lllllll-l llli- inn I null of Mrs. P. V. M. Hnyinoml of this city. 'in : i ...in i r i in1 iio-isrs i-iiiu-t'i i, won u ciiim us oi two hundred voices will bo given Sat urday, July 8. Later the Lincoln Ora torio society, assisted by the assembly chorus, will give an evening of grand oratorio. I lot It concertH will be un-ter the direction of Mrs. Raymond. The soloist engaged by the assembly is .Miss llorteuso Paulsen, who has a high ren utatlon as a contralto singer both in concert and in church vorl in Chicago I and Huston. Miss Paulsen was a pupil for live years ol Warren Davenport In Huston. Her work in conceit and ora torio is well known throughout New Khglaud. She has lllled two of the liuest church positions in Huston, in Dr. Meredith's church and the Dudley street Haptist church in Huston High lauds. A year ago she was induced to cmiiii i 1 1 ( 'Idi'iii'ii tu iiccmit n I'liiiiiimir ative position as contralto in one ol the largest churclies in that city. .Miss I 'il 1 1 lt-lttt Kill h.illlf llflilll J I f 1 III ljiIiil. mini ii iiti nin i in ii 1'tf nvinn only, during her stay at Ciete, and will give one evening concert. .Mining the selections already announced are "The Pilgrim," by Adams; "Answer," by Uobyn; "Polly Willis." by Arne; "Lul laby. by Dennee; "Fur All Ktornity, by Maschcroui. The second "mat inee" of the iiewlj ' formed roadster club was held Tiles day at the state lair grounds and the interest nianilested on this occasion evidenced the popularity of flic sport which the club will provide from time to time during the summer. There will be a third racing meeting next Friday. f' W li iwliiw i oiil nn OiiiWifi tiff rii. porter the other day that lie will plead ' guilty to the charge of cmbexlemeut ' and falsifying bank records at least that is what the reporter says. Mr. Mosher's father in law, Henry Mans Held, died at his home in Peoria, Moll day. Mr. and Mrs. Moshor both at ' tended the tiiueral. I , I i Theie seems to be a prospect that the O street viaduct may be erected on P street. The advocates of the latter stieet make many claims, some of which aie well founded. i The edort to pay oil' the debt of the Y. M. C. A. building is not meeting with the encouragement it merits. No institution in the city is of more gen end bellelit, and It ought not to be dlt liciilt to raise a sulllcieiit amount ot money to clear it from debt. Ill I'll )1 c. 11. ctvitke. I Chailes II. Clarke .lied Thursday af teruoou iii liis apartments in the Hotel Ideal, altera brief attack of pneumonia brought on by a cold contracted at Cushmau Paik last Saurda.. The deceased was twenty-two years of age He was a member of the last legisla t lire ami lor some yours past was ac lively indentilled with his father's business interests in Omaha and Liu coin In this city he was espcciall.v well known and his death is mounted by many sincere friends. The remains were taken to Omaha yestenlay. The interment will take place at Finest Lawn Sunday. Funeral services will be held at 'J o'clock Sundav. at the ies deuce of 1J. T. Clarke, Tw.nt.v tilth ami Cass ht roots. If the hair Is falling out and tin mug gray, the glands of tliu skin need stun lilating and color-food, and the best lomedyaiid stimulant is Hall's Hun Honower. SATfRDA V, JINK ,,, iSn?. f! .cinq The daily papers united in saying that the bamiuot given by the Wiling Men's I'opuluicati club was a success, iinl as they are all agreed on this tvilnt, It must be so isn't thooasiesl thing in the world to make people pav and turn out to hear political speeches nl a time when there is absolutely no political excitement, and the alt'eud unco anil enthusiasm the banquet Monday night were paiticularly grati fying lothe mombois of the club. noteworthy lent tire of the gathering Mas that while the large dining hall ol i (lie Windsor was almost completely! filled those present with very few ox' I ("options wore young nieii' Judge i Chapman and ex Judge lioese were the I only gray hoadsthore but they stayed just as long and had just as much iuu I as any of the bovs. I When Tin: Cui nil ii piomised a rare treat in Mr. Kstnhronk's address on "Parties" It knew Hint the rulllllment would llll up ami overflow the promise and It did must oll'ectually. Mr. P,s tabrook's speech was delivered lo the young men surrounded by the four wul Is ol'thoWiiiilsorilining hull, but in reality ho spoke to the entire city of Lincoln. The paiiors, nntably the Sttttr .Imirmil, gave admirable reports of his address, but the electric cll'cct of his peroral iuu was communicated by the ImnqueteiH to those on the outside, and that's the way lloiiry Fstnhrook's magiiillceut olfort has become the talk of the town. A reporter with the celerity of chain llglitning.tho euro of an obi maid, ami the amiability of an an angel couldn't reduce one of Kslnhrook's speeches to paper and half do him justice. His sunlloly of oxproHsinn, grace of man nor, splendid delivery, a voice that rises and falls in musical cadoiico in correspondence with the rhythm of his words, all these are lost in the printed report. Cold type congeals thu tiro oT passionate eloquence, and deadens the liner qualities of speech, I .villi; but a bare outline of a form lull of beauty a colorless photograph of a brilliant bouquet. Kstahrook is a scholarly man and his mind is not muddy. Ilohasa keen wit and is a master hand at sarcasm. His address on "Parties" was an ideal banquet talk, a speech with real thought in it, polished oil' with a deli ci icy and wit Hint made it sparkle wllh billiancy. The other speakers lie quitted themselves most creditably. Mr. ndrevvs, who is not yet well known in this city, was at a disadvantage in coming at the end of the program, but his twenty minute talk on young men was interesting ami forcible and made a very pleasant impression. Ike Lau sing and Thurston have been heard many times in Lincoln and both are favorites Their subjects were well handled, as usual, and Mr. Kelley, I he president of the club, made an excel lout toastmastor. The death of Col. K. D. Webster, of SI rat ton, which occuned a lew mouths ago, calls to mind the fact that not long prior to his death the colonel caiuo near taking a step that would have mado him a very important factor in tlie republican party in Nebraska have restored him to the position ho once hold. It is true that Col. Web stor came very near stepping in be twoen the OiiiiiIki li'i'iiiihliciiii and death just before .1. C. Wilcox term inated his exciting career as a news paper proprietor by sending into ever lasting obllv ion that remarkable news paper, the newspaper that beginning as a weekly with I'i. D. Webster as edi tor years ago when Nebraska had just donned her swaddling clothes, and when the condition ol the g. o. p. made the establishment of the Hi inthlirnii llll a long felt want, was alterwards the varying joy and sorrow of a long line of editors and proprietors, among whom may be mentioned St. A. D. Hal combe, Public Printer Hounds, Cadet Taylor, O. II. Hot hacker and Fred Nye. o Col. Webster had long since ceased to take an active interest in politics or the newspaper business; but deep down in his heart he cherished an at lection for the Hi imhliriiii which had been the menus ot some of Ills earlier triumphs, and when, before Major Wil cox had succeeded in doing that which so many able men betoie him had not been able to do killing "the leading republican paper ot the west," the tor llble plight ot the wobbly old sheet was represented to him, he very promptly determined to lend a helping liiitiil. Webster made an oiler ol cilo, 1 1 x ), through the thou managing editor, lor the plant, and he expected that Wilcox would jump at the bait. Hut the colonel did not know the major Although Wilcox paid only ?:t-"i,mi tor the Hiiiiihltniii when ho purchased It Iroiu .eund Johnson, ot which onl.v about ir !.",( km was cash, and uotwith standing the tact that he had, with in credible celerity, transformed what was in many respects the best news paper in Omaha into a journalistic monstrosity, lie fondly imagined that the llt'imbl'ii-nii was worth ."it),iM, and when Webster's oiler was laid befoie him hcdicw himself up with all the ellroiitcry of a Cul Mulberry Sellers Hi:; and said he would lake '.iii.iKm or nli illg. It is, perhaps, uillleci ssiuv to add I that he took iiolhliig. t this Ilmiiiiijiiniiiil the ,'i .k.i, ,( and all the omplniccs and some o the ciedil ors weie bankrupt Salaiies had ie iiiuiuod unpaid lor a couple ol weeks ami Hie wolves had allead.v entered the door. Hut Hie major Insisted on lecoivlng Kiii.imu lor a planl Hint was worth about .'i,mi o III a lew weeks, just a leu ilajs be foie publication was suspended, Wil cox condescended lo Inloini his man agillgodllor thai hcbelleved he would sell lo Webster lor tXITi.Um." tut I he latter had by this time loll Ihecitv and gune east and could not ho touched In time lo slave oil the disaster thai quickly followed. It is possible that had it not been lor WIIcox'm obstinacy icpuhlictiu poli tics in Nebraska in I he last I wo or Ihiee years might have iiiulei gone u radical change. Iletween Webster and I he editor of the llu , known otherwise as "the pilot," theie was lit lie personal friendship and in polll ics they dlllereil radically. The Itiiiuhlinni, under Webster, would have lieen a "sllaight" lepublicaii newspaper with the most aggressive leadoiicles, and II would have been stiougly null Kosewater. Few men are bettor lllled to conduct a great piuly newspaper than was ('ol Webster, lie was W. II. Seward's pi i vate secretary during His war and I'm many years was prominent in public life as a republican. Al one time la wns an editorial w rltcr nil one o the leading New , ork dailies, and in No braska he was for a long time act im-I.v Ident i lied with the g. o. p. However, on account of his ago, he would not have taken the personal management of the paper himself. Hut he would have employed thobest Intent and was ready to spend money freely In building up the unfortunate newspaper, o There is some talk to the ollect that C. W. (irilllth may pull out of the race for the republican nuiiiiuatiuii for leg isler of deeds and become a candidate for county treasurer, o Many newspapers are demanding the removal ol Joseph (larneau, jr., world's lair commissioner, and it is baiely possible that Hie governor may yet see the error ol his ways and in iluec I lie crueller man to quit. The commissioner has recently been urged to set apart e."ui lor a sj iul educa tioual exhibit which would show some ol t he advantages ol the state univer slty, but ol collise he declined I he i e quest. Meanwhile the tllllds are being lapidly consumed in traveling and other "expenses." o C. II. Van W.vek didn't die, bill he came very near it, near enough to be extensivelv eulogized by uow'spapois that have aliused luin lor .veins. Van Wyck uiuloubtedl.v has many ad uiirable pi'isonal limts; but politically he is the biggest lialld who has ever aldicted Nebiaska. The wold dema gogue Ills Van Wyck just as though it had been made lor him. Theie is quite a sentiment in I ii or of an early lepublicaii county couven tion. It is piohahlo that il will be called lo i the latter purl ol next month. o -Sam 10. Low wishes it to bo under stood that he is not a candidate (in justice ot the peace, o Olio of the llrst speeches made by ( i. M. Laiubeitsoii ina political couveu lloll was a filing) of Lorelto Crolllise incident the placing ot his name belore the ci ill v ii t lull as a candidate lor con gross, awa.V back 111 the seventies It was a ery high down speech ill which the eagle soared so high that Its screams pierced the blue canopy of hoa eu. It was one ol those "a man who" sj dies, m which the speaker without giving the name ol his hero, proceeds to round out swelling periods of praise, now in thunder tones of eloquence, now in subdued strains, like the I ar awa.V whistling ol the wind through t h. pines. "I desiie to place in lioiuina Hon" said Mr. Lamboilsou, "a man who " and then he upot ln'osird his man; "a man who," continued the speaker, and then more apotheosiing A couple o gentlemen were sitting in a private box in the hall in which the convention was held one ot tlnui, a stranger in the state, and alter this sort ol thing had berii going mi lor solue tlllie, until the tension was at tk illg cv ci , hoi, liel'Volls, thi' l.ittil turned to Ins companion and asKed, "In hea vi n's name who is Mr. LuiiiIm rt sou placing in nominal ion, w ho is this man he is talking about ." The npU came in a wliispi r "I don't know, but I think it must In' , testis Chi ist." Whit these gilitlcllieli t bought W lieu at t he end ot the speech came the words "!, I oll.o Crolllise" Is hcvolld coll ect lire Comparisons, somebody once iciii.u kel are odiousaud Tin. Coi im a has n.. de sire to cast odium on uuvhody. o .la) Hurrows hasn't seen a n.d live vision lor nearly two weeks lter discovering the gi eat republican con spiracy to make Crouuse senator. Van W.U'k governor .llld IJoscW.ltel genelul THICK 1'IVK CICNTS. high cockalorum ho hasn't seen any I hlng but plain, urdluary spool res, "Not lung ago there was u vigorous controversy In Omaha as to whether Mien (I Tliiirmun Is dead or alive," lemiuked John M. ThuiHton to it Cm mi ii lepiesetilatlvo the other day. "Somebody stalled the query mill slrangoly enough nearly evoryundy to whom the question was put answered uiihoNllatiugly that Hie '11111)10 old Human' was dead In many Instances I he approximate date of Ids death mid more or less minute details of the fu neral were given I believe Dr. (joorge L Miller was about the llrst man to In ing Thurinan to life Considerable money changed hands when It wiih Mindly decided Hint the aged doinocrat Is ically alive." Mr. 1 Illusion wiih asked II it was positively uncurl allied that Thuriiiau Is si III on ton of the eailh, as a similar query lias been heaid in this city. "Well," ho replied, "he says so himself, and I believe Unit, is as lar as the Invest igatniH wont." Charles II. Clarke, of Oinahii, whnso death occuned in this city Thursday alleruooii, was, for his yours a remark ably keen business man, and In politics ho achieved greater success than many older men wlio have dovolod their whole lives lo the lasdnatliig bill uiiHiitlsfue lor.v puisiiit. He Is believed lo be tlie .vmiugesl man over elected tu the legislatuie, and prior lo his elevation to the senate he had obtained a con siderable degieo ol proinliieiico in politics in Lincoln .mil Omaha, oung Clin ke was one ol the llrst to mention Loreuo Crouuse lor governor, ami he worked hard to bring about his uoiiii nation, in which endeavor the Clarke lamily, singularly enough, found them selves pulling wllh Mr. Kosowutor, for Hie llrst time in a number of years o Church Howe and Congressman Meiklejohn and Dave Mercer wore in I he city this week. The former Iiiih nearly recovered from Ills severe attack of rheumatism. o A temporary organization of the bi metallic league was alfcctcd at the Lilidcll hotel Wednesday evening. F. F. Ilrowu was elected chairman, Jay Hurrows, secretary, and C. C. Hurr, tieasiiier. The next mooting will bo hold Tuesday evening at the olllce of the Allititiri l.iinln: o Mrs Helen M. (iougar, who will bo ri'liiembeied ill this state as one of the piincipal pcrliirmers In the prohlbi Hon ciicus three years ago. and who has a habit ol saying sharp tilings, has lallen under the displeasure of the or gan ol her party, the Now York I'oiVi'. I hal paper says. "There has boon on her paitol late a recklessness in us snult upon other prohibitionists, men and women loo, whoso sincerity has been tested by lar longer service than her own, that has tried the tolerance of mine ot her friends probably than she Is aware of." o The supreme emu I decided to wait u week or so belme giving out ii decision in the impeachment case. The result is pietty sure to be uiinouui'cil is a few days, however. It is signillcant that the populist and democratic news pa pers aie just now administering talfy to Judge .Maxwell in large and enthii siastic doses, and it is somehow dilll cult to believe that the venerable, though still ambitious judge, will bo able to entiiely separate political con siderations 1 1 urn his action in the case. An opinion against the state olllcei's will not unlikely result in his lecelviiik' the independent nomination lor another term on the supremo bench, and a great many democrats would gladly vote for him. Judge Chapiiiau was in town this week. He bus thus far given no iuti luatiou as to his prospective candidacy lor Judge .Maxwell's place; but most people think he will be in the race. Constipation, and all troubles with the digestive organs and the liver, are cured by Hood's Pills. Unequalled us a dinner pill. mi can buy glove littiug shoos at one third less than usual prices at llerpolsheimer A Co. Something good "White Loaf Flour ?1 in per sack. Miller .V tiidord. New Imported Swiss cheoso. Miller a I'lill'oid. giocei's, opp. Hurr lllk. Lirgest underwear ami hosiery de pailiiieitt prices the lowost lit Hor polshelllier .V. Co. The liuest grocery stoic in the city. Mill, r a t.dlord. Millinery ilcpurluicut of llerpol sheiiin r A Co odor Leghorn A Milan luaid.it I'leeiits worth oO cents. Mountain Hose Pino Apple is bettor and ehoupi r than any other ill the lliulkel. .Miller A lillford. Visit tho Now Students' gullory uml bo convinced that tho work Is llrst class -1031 O atroot.