Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, December 13, 1888, Page 2, Image 2

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KNOTTS BROS.,
Publishers & Proprietors.
THE PLATTSMOUTII HKltALI
Is published every evening except Sunday
and We.vkly every Thursday n, online;. l(ee,W-
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ttfeonl-;l;is matter. Onlee eorner ot Vhieaiid
r urn Birt eis. leieiaiuue ri. jn.
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One cony on? year in advance, by mail SO oo
One copy per month, ty ran ier fio
One copy per week, by carrier, 15
TKKMS FOR WKKK1.V.
one copy one year, in advance Si .V
One cony aix iiioums. in advance 75
Our Clubing List.
WKK.KLV HI-HALO and X
V. World ,?2 40
.... N
V. Tribune. . . 2 ';)
Mn ilia Hr i) '2 .'( i
N. Y. I're-s 2.1
N. Y. lo-t 2 311
Harpers Mastaine Co
Weekly. 4 7"
" Ua.ar... 4
" Young peophi '.i '.Vt
Neli. Farmer '2 00
JJeniorest's Month
ly Magazine 3 10
The Herald is the best advertising
medium in the county.
One cent posture is one of the proba
bilities of the near future.
Head the advertisements in the IIer-
AU), they will save you money.
Tn k merchants that are advertising, re
port the holiday trade opening in good
feh ape.
The Nebriska state poultry and pet
stock exhibition, begins in Lincoln next
Monday, December 10th.
It is finally conceded by the Demo
cratic calculation that the Republican
majority in the next House will be seven.
Jlit. Cleveland completely ignored
the territories, he did not find room for
even one word about them in
message.
his lon'
The report of the secretary of tho in
terior allows that the pension bureau has
expended during the year the enormous
sum of $S2,0:)S,330,ri9.
The senate took up the republican
tariff bill yesterday, and succeeded in
disposing of thirty page3 of it. This is
rapid progress and if it is kept up the
bill will soon be
Turk is a demand all 'over the state
for an ani'ndmtnt to the assessment law.
This law -can be greatly improved and
-Wiiope the legislature will take early
and decided action to improve it.
The police compelled the Chicago
anarchists yesterday to give up their plan
of holding a meeting. There should be
a strong force of police at every meeting
to arrest any who step over the bounds
of the law.
"Majorities should rule in this free
state of Nebraska. The republican party
has spoken and it asks for the submis
sion of a prohibtiory amendment to a
vote of the people." Pawnee City Re
publican. JIajonties do rule and we
will have submission.
The republican majority in the next
House of Representatives stu ks at seven,
on the "face of the returns." Seven is a
lucky number. The outlook for wise
legislation and prosperous times while
the Fify-first congress is in session is au
spicious. James Mann, the axe manufacturer, at
Lewistown, Pa., raised his employees
wags 10 per cent, on the first of the
mouth. He did this because protection
had carried and he will haye a steady
sale for his goods. So for protection for
the laboring man.
The amount of money in the country
outside the treasury decreased $ 1.700,000
in November. As there was anjncrease
in the circulation to the extent of 90,
000,000, however, between July 1, 1S87.
smd the beginning of the past month, this
slight shrikage will not alarm anybody.
It is pretty well understood that the
democrats are opposed to a special session
of the next congress, but they can rest
assured that, if the tariff and territorial
questions are not settled by the pvesent
.congress, General Harrison will call a
special session to dispose of these ques
tions. A.XOTHER democratic clerk, who has
jeavl the wilting on the wall, in his pre
parations to resign ha3 salted down two
Siunclreci dollars in freshly printed treas
ury notes. The notes disappeared some
where between the receiving office and
the sealing division of the treasury de
partment. The party who assists In pre
serving the incognito has not been dis
covered. Express,
Washington Territory, in the recent
ilectbn for delegate to congress and for
member ? its Legislature, went over
whelmingly rnViJican. In 1881 and
the territory was ,trrjed by the
democrats. Montana, which went demo
cratic in kia also been won over by
the republicans this year. Intelligence
,nd politic! virtue are marciiyag on at (
. I.. (Im nnrtlitrrtfif 1
THE MESSAGE.
President Cleveland's message is tlio
snarl of a beaten candidate. In a docu
ment which should be a dignified state
paper he has taken pains to exhibit the
soreness of a discarded politician because
the policy which he had forced upon his
party was defeated by the pcopl
e. In his
passion he loses his sense of the fitness of
things. Even his worshiper in tho
Ec-uinj Post attribute his use of
" terms here and there which may be
considered injudicious" to " the natural
feelings of one who has" been beaten.
X(i one will rind his respect for President
Cleveland increased by his passionate
talk about the " selfish greed and grasp
ing avarice " of manufacturers as a class,
or by his suggestion that they "improperly
influence " voters, or by his frantic asser
tion that corporations are " fast becoming
the people's masters." It is not true, Mr.
Cleveland, your defeat is proof. No
other presidential candidate has ever had
behind him as powerful array of "trusts,
combinations and monopolies" as that
which had been brought by executive
and legislative favors to the support of
Mr. Cleveland. The telephone conspiracy,
the sugar trust, the whiiky ring, the
combination of Vdl street bankers and
sharpers who held over fifty millions of
the public money, the AVashington real
estate jobbers, the host of other jobs and
monopolies which leagued with foreign
manufacturers and importers to break
down an Ameiican policy, hoped to own
the government after Mr. Cleveland's re
election. They failed and Mr. Cleveland
and his free traders went down with them,
and the decisive votes were cast, as
everybody knows, by the plain people
of the f irming regions who are not mas
tered by corporations, and do not mean
to b
II..' who scolds sixty millions cf people
for failing to appreciate his transcendent
wisdom and devoted patriotism offers no
new arguments in self-justification, but
not unnaturally borrows from the anarch
ists and communists of Paris a phrase,
" the communism of capital," and by
comparison justifies the bomb-thrower
who "attacks in wild disorder the citadel
of r;de." . -Most conservative and digni
fied, these suggestions ! But they moye
the nation to reflect with satisfaction that
it n t only declined to re-elect such a
chief magistrate, but never would have
elected him had not the voice of the
people been suppressed in certain states.
The attempt to stir up anarchy in this
cour.try, by pandering to ignorance and
pas; hiii, by inflaming employed against
employer and poor against rich, is not
worthy of any citizen in a self-goyernin
stale, but it is nevertheless the only resort
of the free trader in debate when con
fronted with evidence of the harmonious
progress and unexampled prosperity of
all classes and all industries under the
protctive system.
Tho president sacrifices historical ac
curacy to his free trade theory when he
argu. s that the necessity for a reduction
of revenue i3 as great and urgent as it
was. The public revenue is no longer
swelling but diminishing, and would
diminish much more were the laws iin
pn'inv duties on imports construed and
enforced in the interests of the people of
this -untry, and aeconling to the mani
fest intent of those laws. The ppro
priat'ons have been largely increased by
the p.esent congress, a fact which the
president's brief reference to the finances
does not make prominent, liut it Js true
that tiiere is no controversy between
parti s as to the propriety of a reduction
of rev -nue, and in reaching that conclu
sion tae people do not intend to adopt
the i lorant notion that all money left in
their hands is worth to them 6 per cent
annur.ily, which, strange to say, finds its
way ii;to the message of the president.
T!i? review of the operations of various
depart mcnts elaborately complimets those
Cabinet officers whose performances have
been least acceptable to the country
Th .; management of the Navy Depart
ment ii lauded, as if it had not been made
redicnious by the defects of costy vessels
built upon plans puchased fromEngland.
The postal service is piaised ft3 if it had
not b.'eu, by its notorious and stkaiueful
inefhvi'jncy, a potent cause of the Presi
dent's defeat. Even Mr. Garland is corn
pliii? eiited, but not for lifting a finger to
enj-'oive jL'nked States Suffrage laws in
Southern States nor fcr refusing- a gift
of stoi x. in a corporation seeking Execu
tive assistance. To many the Presidents!
meb; " lioly silance on the subject of
Civi Service reform will suggest that
ile occasion for professions of zeal in
that viiteijign lis pissed. New York
Tribiii-.e.
T;:i: llaytien Consul-General's denial
of t!.? ntcries told, by the officers and
crew of the Haytien Republic would be
ii.oiv appealing had he been tii I7ort-au-I'rie,-
:;nd personally cognizant of what
took p!aee ihcre. If the score of quarcl
som little states down in the tropics
must :i ht and harass themselves and
each other eternally they should be given
cleai'y to understand that they must
.er;; their hands off Americans and
Amei i; an property or be able to give an
im-s-.ti:
N "
isfying reason for iu.y other course.
Tribune.
rLAl'tVMOUTil WEEKLY HKUA.1A),
WHY ENGLAND IS SORRY.
The London Daily News, referring to
that part of the message in which Mr.
Cleveland treats of the fishery treaty, ex
presses English sentiment a lien it says:
"In regard to t!i- IN i : -s question it
is impossible to dis.no.- tne opinion ex
pressed by the Pre-ident. It it impossible
to deny the fact tlia tli ii.ilm-tK'es which
prevented the rat'ui. ration of the treaty
are likely t !; iidim potent in the
government of Ojn. 1 1 trrisoii."
As the opinion expressed in the mes
sage is that tiie sh iiiK'l'ul Chamberlain
Bayard arr ing on -nt which tlu senate re
jected was "a satisfactory, practical, find
final adjustment upon a basis honorable
and just to both parties," it is not sur
prising that England heartily endorses it.
Rights that have been asserted and
strongly maintained by administration
after administration were surrendered by
the one-sided treaty that Chamberlain and
Bayard drew up and that Cleveland en
dorsed. Luckily a senate that was not
under the pro-British influence that em
anated from the White House lolled tne
disgraceful attempt to sacrifice American
rights. The thought that this attempt
cannot be renewed with anv hope of
success for at least four years more add
to the poignancy of England's grief over
the defeat of Glover Cleveland.
This year a patriotic senate was the
only thing that stood between the con
ception and the execution of a plot to
benefit England at the expense of Amcr
ica. For the next four years the patriot-
ism of the senate will not again be tested
in this way. A thonuighgoing Amen
can administration would just as soon
think of surrendering American territory
to England as advising the ratification
of a treaty that sacrificed the lights of
American fishermen. The London Dally
News expresses this thought in a differ
ent way when with ill-concealed sorrow
it remarks that "the influences patriotic
Ameiican sentiment which prevented
the ratification of the treaty are likely to
be only more potent, in the government
of General Harrison."
However much England may have
cause to grieve over the sudden arrest of
the development of tho pro-British senti
ment in this countrj', as evidenced by the
defeat of the administration that fathered
the fishery treaty, thoroughgoing Ameri
cans have reason to rejoice that in the
person of General Harrison there will be
at the head of the government a man im
bued with the American spirit, whose
first care will be for the welfare of the
Republic and not for the good will of
England. Irish World.
TO BE TREATED AS OUTLAWS.
The anarchists of Chicago will be
given no more rope, and if they want to
hang themselves will have to furnish all
the material themselves. They had
given it out that they would hold a big
meeting in thatcity Sunday, (yesterday) to
express their opinion of the convict:
of Hronek, and his sentence to tw. !v
years in the penitentiary. The chief o.'
police notineci tne owners or i.:e vario--s ,
Dalls in the city who have hitherto L .
bored anarchit assemblies, that they
must not open them now or at any other
time for these gatherings, and expressed
his de termination to suppress any attempt
to meet at Ilaymarket or anywhere else
in the city.
lie .ays .lis time for anarchist meeting
has passed and hereafter no .open gather
ing will be permitted. If they meet ii
will have to be in secret. This is better
Ite than neyer. The anarchists are
open! 7 traitor; nct outlaws and it is high
time, since they have endeayoreel repeat
edly to put their murderous principles
into practice, that they were treated ac
cording to their professions, Lincoln
Journal.
SO WDEN'S REASONS.
Mr. Sowden, representative in congress
from tha Lehigh district in Pennsylvania,
one of the four democrats v?"ho voted
agaii-st the Mills bill, sa3's: "1 have lo
regrets or apologies to make. For a
distance of twenty-eight miles, from the
point where the Lehigh empties into the
Deleware, in Northampton county, to
Copley, in my own county of Lehigh,
thete i cue ctictiruous line of furnaces,
iron works, machine huous, cfeel jrcrks,
silk mills, thread mills, eemeiit factorjes..
pipe works, car works and other indus
tries. In Bethlehem there is a steel works
the plant of which cost $8,000,000, and
which employ nearly 4,000 men. They
are putiiug an aJrMtioti to it now, which
will cost 000,000 uicie. in nrf own
town of AUectown wa haye a cutlery
works which turns out goo.ls ad Hue as
anything proiuced in England; we have
silk mills, thread works, furniture manu
taci 'ile- spd. iron mills there, not to
speak of a hundrea cii.cr !:"e? of manu
facture. All these industries have growi
up under a protective tariff. I voted
ugaScst the free trade Mills bill because I
believe in protecting American industry."
The Henderson steel woiks, at Eirui
ingham,' Ala., the Charlotte iron works
at Rochester, N. V- and the Oregon iron
and steel company at Oswrgo, Ore., Jjaye
all started up since the election. These
works employ S2veral thousand men and
saves many a one from going hungry
thee .vinrry nights. So much for pro-fcctiotf.
TtiUKSDA Y, bKCEMni;it 1:3,
CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS FOR
TIIE TABLE.
Exquisitely sheer and beautiful is the
new drawn-linen work, comprising, as
does the assortment, articles of table-
furnishing that fairly, I confess it, turned
me green with envy. Dainty table-covers
of linen, the texture around tho eelges
drawn into exquisite cobweb-like patterns
with small, square d'oyleys to correspond,
are high priced, but they are well worth
tho mouey. More novel, if not so sub
stantial, are d'oyleys of sea-weed; they
are made of natural sea-weed, and either
colored or white net. The process I
was courageous to enquire it is to place
tha seaweeel in a large basin of water,
which spreads the tendrils; then a piece
of net on paper is slipped underneath
and lifted gradually out of the water; it
is then placed between sheets of blotting
paper and under heavy weights. When
dry, the paper is removed, tho net cut
round, or squre, and finished with an
edging of very fine lace. No gum is re
quired.
Another pretty fancy for the break
fast, tea or luucheon table, is a covering
made of oatmeal cloth, a sheer, odd
looking fabric. It is edged with four or
five rows of satin ribbon, placed on with
herring bone stitches and a fall of lace.
These covers, lined or uulined, are simply
lovely. Oatmeal cloth can be used for
many purposes, such as pillow shams,
tidies, table mats, etc. Bolting cloth is
a very tlelicate, transparent fabric, out of
which the most charming articles
are
fashioned, from iH'.Ni";i
Is to a toilet
mat. It is orn imei'fi
-f effectively
wUh hand painiiuir. v--n 'Ii lightest
embroidery is fo .it:;--,- Lor it. De
cember Table Talk
A MECHANICAL NOVELTY.
The remarkable .Ylannesmann process
of making seamless tubes is described by
Mr. F. Siemens as consisting in );,ssing
the red-hot bar of solid metal or glass
between revolving eonoidal rolls. These
rolls are so arranged that the varyin
velocities of revolution with which the
cliff, rent parts of the bar are brought
into contact cau-e tho f rmation of
hol'ow through the bar's centre. Tubes
a foot in diameter, with a shell only
quarter of an inch thick, may be produced
in this way, and great strength is claimed
for them. Tubes with sealed ends may
be made, the hollow centre being
vacuem.
Years ago, when this part of Nebraska
was first settled, for want of cribs, the
homesteaelers left their corn in large
heaps upon the ground without coverall
winter and the grain came out in the
spring hut little damaged. the same
practice is still in vogne to a certain ex
tent, but lately the winters have been
elift'trent and the loss has been greater,
Upon this subject the Ravenna News
tays: "The practice of piling corn upon
the ground for lack of crib room is pre
vailing to the usual extent this year,
'True, there is one virtue in a crib bound-
I ed only by the atmosphere on the sides
";1 the blue vault of heaven aboye it
will hold all the corn you have to put in
it, but it is undesirable protection. A
man blessed with an abundant crop of
corn ought to see that it is to his best in
terest to provide shelter. Each successive
year the cribs will be useful to him, and
the loss of corn by snow, rain, rats, etc..
if piled upon the ground will nearly pay
for the lumber necessary to construct
cribs. To let the corn go uncribbed is a
penny wise and pound fooiiou policy
which can only bring financial disaster
if pursued to its legitimate end." Kear
ney Hub.
The last act in the election of a presi
dent of the United states will take place
on the second Tuesday in January. On
that date the electoral college of each
state meets at its state capitol. The
electors cast their vote for president and
vice-president. The yote is read, certified
and sealed, and three copies are prepared,
Ci;e io be takeu to AVashington by a
special messenger aaci qce sept by mail.
The secretary of state likewise receives a
copy to be placed in the archives of the
state. The business of the college has
become mecanical and perfunctory. The
electors are no longer free to choose
whom they think proper persons for the
high ptffce s wa, Intended by the fathers
of the.republic. They are mere 'Machines,
" instructed " delegates to register the
nation's choice. For all practical pur
poses the electoral college could be
abolisheel. The people, by their yotes on
November 6, set their seal for president
hud Yii.e r-reduert, en 1 the electoral
college is simply at-uryiirai pk' aobsolute
cujtorn. Bee.
The Baltimore Manufacturers' Re
cord says that within the past month $7,
jvi,up.' of Northern capital has been in
vested in' 'Alabama, 'ennefcee, JJorth
Carolina, Florida and Texas. It is this
stream of Northern capital, which i
ponring into the south, mouth after
'month nud ycr afer year, which is rais
ing up ail industrial class ia the latter
section which will t!ot out its big dem
ocratic inajofritics., Facb factory in the
south wins over 100 men to the j-epubli-cansto
the one which the most eloquent
stump speaker could gain.
ls8S.
DIVISION ENDORSED.
Tho convention of North Dakota
which lias just been held at Jamestown,
took the action that it was expected to,
in favor of a elivi.-ion of tho territory.
This sets at rest all epiestions regarding
the sentiment of tho people of North Da
kota. It took action in advum-big the
course of statehood for North and South
Dakota, and other territories. It de
clared in favor of a special session of the
Fifty-first congress, in the eyeiit of the
present congress failing to elo anything
for the admission of tins territories and
united the co-operation of Montana and
"Washington in the movement for ael
mission. The convention adopted a resolution
urging the territorial legislature to
promptly provide, after its meeting in
January, for a constitutional convention
for North Dakota. South Dakota and
and the other territories will also need to
bestir themselves in preparing for ad
mission. The constitution of South Da
kota will require amendment, and the
terms ejf the state officers haying expired
he must have another election before
becoming a state. Jlontana and 'Wash
ington have state constitutions, Put one
being four and the other being ten years
old, they would hardly serve the present
purpose. There will have to be consti
tutional conventions and elections in
both territories. It will thus be seen
that all the territories liave a great dea
to accomplish before they can become
states, and there should be a little de
lay as possible in doing it.
The Christmas numbler of Table Talk
is full, to overflowing, of everything that
relates to the day of glee and feasting,
and its readers will find, before they get
through with it, enough to make them
look for the coming of "the day." with
more than their usual impatience.
"Bethlehem"- an apt poem, aptly ill us
trated by Josheph Whieton, heads th
contents; then conies "A Christmas Din
ner," by Mrs. Rorer, in which that author
itative adviser gives soma valuable points
on this feast; her "How to Live on
Thousand a year" is continued in this
number, also her indispensable answers
to "Housekeepers' Inquiries." "Christ
mas in Foreign Lands," "A Christina
Ramble Among the Nuts," "Ethel
Christmas Decorations," "Attractive and
Inexpensive Gifts;" an original Chri
mas Story, "Vesta's Bequc.t," and
"Christmas Problem, with a generous
offer of a prize to every solver, are
among the contents; also interesting
articles by Tillie May Forney, William
Strnthers, S. T. Sherman, Kate Gather
wood, and other pleasing writers. Table
Talk is published at $1.00 a year by the
Table Talk Publishing Co.. 402. 404 &
400 Race Street, Philadelphia.
A few days ago Goldman & Co. ship
peel to Vulture a lot of goods for the
Kaiser mining company. On the load
was 1,700 pounds of giant powder. At
Nigger Wells the road was too heavy
and the teamster was compelled to unload
a part of his cargo. He took out tli
giant powder and left it alongside tin
the road. He was followed by DeBaud
another teanisrer commonly Known as
' Frenchy." The latter, seeing a cyote
in his way, looking in mere curiosity, as
we suppose, at the boxes, took a shoot
at him. The result was an explosion
which shook the very earth. A hoh
many yards iu dimensions was plowed in
the grounds. The original teamster anel
"jjrencny- escaped injury, out it is
thought the cyote was killed. The pow
der was valued at between rive and six
hundred dollars, that someboely will
lose. Arizonian.
Secretary Paiuchild's argument
against coin certificates will have but
little weight with the country. The peo
ple of the United States woulel rather
have the paper substitutes for money
than they woulel the coin. Neither the
yellow nor the white metal has been pop
ular in the past twenty years, excepting
as a basis fcr certificates greenbacks.
So long as these paper notes are freely
exchangeable for the mttal the notes will
haye the preference with the masses.
The secratary may be right in his asser
tion that certificates are costly, but the
people will cheerfully stand the expense
involyee in their issue rather than be
compelled to submit io the luconyenience
of carrying the bulky and weighty coins
in their pockets. Globe Democrat.
There are some things about the Pres
idential succession that are not generally
known. Jf General Harrison should die-
previous to ff;e asiie'ix.bi;ng pf the Elect
oral College, then someone else would be
chosen, not necessarily Mr. Jlorton. If
Gen. Harrison should die after the meet
ing of the Electoral College, then Mr.
Morton would become presielent.
case of the death of both Harrison and
Morton after the meeting of tlhe electors
anel before the 4th of JIarch, the electors
might reassemble, or the House of Repre
sentatives could elect a President and
Vice President. In the cje of the death
of Harrison arid Jlorton' after he 4th "of
March, the Secretary pf State would act
as President, and after hira the Secretary
of the Treasury, and so on through the
Cabinet. Pawnee City Republican.
A QUEER ASSUMPTlo.
Tho New Orleans Tini'v-D'NO'tn
e
remarks thi;t " (he democratic party is a
national anel not a sectional one, and it
is for this reason that t he people of the
southern states belong to it." If that is
tho best reason that tho people of tho
southern btates can give for holding fto-t
to tho democratic party it is high time
that they cut loose from it. Freedom is
national, and it is tho cornerstone of the
republican party. Slavery was se'ctioual,
and yet the democracy built upon it.
And both parties have been consistently
true to their origin. During tho war tho
republican party took the side of the
nation, while the democratic party took
the side of a section. Toelay the repub
lican party is battling for a free ballot,
just as it used to battle for free speech,
free soil, free men. On the other hand,
the democracy, btill dominated by a sec
tionalism, is making comon cause with
those who have conspired to make the
south solid by frauds upon the b.fliot
box. If the 2'iines Democrat d ' hires to
elo well by the south it will refrain from
uttering the old nonsense'. A paper that
begins by claiming that the ch-mocraiio
party is national and not sectional tlu
implication being that the rcpublii an
party is sectional and not national can
be expected to bring up with the fine old
inquiry : " Do you want your elanghti r
to marry a nigger i" N, Y- T'il'une.
Three hundred mib s an hour is the
proposed speed of the electric postal rail
way of the future. An experimental line
has been erected t Laural, twenty miles
from Baltimore. A compromise between
the pneumatic tube tnd the ordinary
railroad carries a minature tiain of ear,
solely for mails and. light parcels, with
out any attendants. The road has three
rails, one above the car for carrying the
current, and two below for carrying the
ears. The cars are built ef hl.cct iron
and two feet wide and twenty feet lonr.
Speed will be regulated and power ot
brakes applied by electricity solely. If
the experiment at Laural succeeds, it is
stated that similar roads will be laid
betwieu IJaJtjmore and Washington and
elsewhere. A uhuin Posl.
It is predicted that the coming soe ial
season in Washington is to be one of the
most brilliant ever known in the nation's
capital. At least so say the cot r.t pom -ents.
The democratic admini.-tration haj
determined its sun shall set in glory, aiut
Cleveland's udiiilnUtratieiii will go down
in history as one of cosily dinners and
notable balls, ami crowded receptions
and the brief period of democratic power
will be remembered for years to come',
not for great acts eif statesmanship but
for the mighty di.--pl.iys of wealth ntyl
fashion, and the amount of wine Ih-ip
will be drank. Ji flYi -soniaii simplicity is
but a name. So let the music strike up
loudly and let I be raud march Ixjdn.
According to present calculation
Mrs. Lucy Parsons will arrive in Chicago
freini Europe on the loth in.-t. The an
archists propose to celebrate the occasion
by a monster demonstration in which
they" will attempt to show their moral
strength in this city. As he objects of
these fanatic are rtvengo and the d,
struction of life and property the se heme
should be nipped in the bud by the
mayer forbidding the demonstration to
take place, and ehis he will undoubtedly
do if he has the welfare of the citizens ;it
heart. Anarchy must be crushed out of
existence in the metropolis of the west.
Equity.
The governor of Nevada, in his
Thanksgiving proclamation, stirred up
the democrats of that state wonderfully,
and all about nothing. The e'.ovcruor
merely remarked in that document that
4 with malice toward none and and char
ity for all, we ought to be thankful that
the issues of the late political controversy
have ended so favorably for the future
happiness and prosperity of our people."
The style is a little nnusual, but there'-'
nothing wrony about that Lineot
Journal.
Treachery will not always prevail,
nor boodle be triumphant, in the election
of Presidents and Congresses. The hon
est, sovereign people are greater than all
lse in the Union, and the ebiv of their
deliverance wiii not i.e in;,'' de-Lived '-"
Louisville Courier Journal.
'The da" is at hand, and the "de
liverance" is an accomplished fact. A
republican president and a republican
congress nave just been chosen at the
ballot bor. Globe Democrat
The Citizen as the leading" republican
paper in the territory, asks the appoint
ment of Col. Lewis Wollley to the gov
ernorship of Arizona. He h woithy and
well qualified for the position, a man of
broad ideas and full from hat to booti
of practical cc mni'oa sen e. He kno w.
the wants of th'territory and : can Wc
honestly believe, do more towards filling
these wants than any man resident here
ia. -Ai teona C'itie a
--Any one tending us five new names
will recieve the Weekly Herald free
for one year.
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