riiwr vi:au BW-!mwxtniiiMUiim wmiib nmnnu Mayor, Tifasuirr, Attorney, i.iiini i r. Polio- .ludg, M.uh;ill, C'ouncilineii, 1 ward, Ifnd rd 4th I I Simiso.V II Smith .! H V.'A I KII.M AN it i: n 'i. A i n A Maiioi.k - .IS MA III KWS W II MAl.li.li .1 V Wki UUACIl ) A W 'A in ik i i M .1. i is I Wm' V l l-.i K I A! I'. Mi iii-u v l S V Df l I I. N ) K S (iKI.I SKI, I I .Mi'Ca i.i.i-.v, Purs I V.I'lllNS .,l 1IAIIOI4.N PJLATTSMOUTII, NI2KKASKA, TUIISDAY KVKMNG, OCTOJSKlt 18,1887. latest by Telegraph. N I'M unit :s. ItOIlKOWMl AND STOI.KN. CARLANS'S ABILITY QUE! TIONED. Bayard Says That Eiihor Ho or tho Attorney General Mu3tCo. I .1 W .Johns ,i h a i Hoard Pub. Work i Km i. i;oi;iu.i 1) II 1 1 A W Iv.lWoIt i n Treasurer, I.ei.tity lioasuivr, - Clerk. J.Muiy ;i"ik, V.Xvr: .f lu-tii e! " li t, Nli'TiT, 1 put y Slicriif. .Surveyor, Attorney. Ktr.it. ol ru! SitVxil, County J u iw. i-.wakii or t;i-K.t;vi.si:s. Lot; is Foi.rz, t'ii'ni , Weeping Wnt-r A. 15. Tuiui. ... riul imiioiiMi A. 15. IH-JliSiiN, - K.liiuootl l. A. Cl'lii-.l.l. Tll'l-4. i'nl.lx K .1. M . 't'USINSON f . .M.-'i-llKllSd.N V. C SM..W M.TKIt .J. '. I'll ::s v. lcv 15. V. V K'lM ASS A. M mi.i; A l.l.l-.. i.K.I'.S T.l V SAKIl S.'IXK t:. llUSSKl.l. GIVKS SOGLK'iUKS. mini) Liincr, v.i. s;. a. o. i'. v.'. .v.TTs ever :.!!.i'i ii.-.i I'; i'lay Vfiihi'i at K. ii I". hall. Trai.sic-il nril'.cis :ir" ivsju-rtl iilly in vito:! toii'ii-ml. 1'. 1. While, .!.i-.tcr 'v i;ui ; 11. A, 1 e.tc. i'.ii. .t..i i ; 1". .1 .Moiguu, Overseer ; J. K. Moms, krcunjer. f 1ASS CAM! NO. H l-!t. V()l )i)ll'N V Of A l.'I'TI :M - Al .'(t-t MMH i-i llil.t i'-'UI '. il M.lll- d :iy f Jti :i-; :t K. of I. h.iil. All transient lr! !ier are :i ''in s: il !i ni.-el w il h u-. I.. A. ;..' : '.-, Yc:i.-rS.p- I'.ie-eil ; W. ( ', Will. 1 1. :n !iy ! -r ; T, .t-fi-.;i--., i;x-i;.iui.T ; K. "gSi,4Tlsv-:)i.' i ll i.i! ii n a.. t:. w. - ?.: (!- i-vi v 1 i i-i.-.y rvviiniLC :i! l(ii.:!,i'.u;h! : il! :i i-'i i-'.-.i. Mi i.t 111"" -T !l - :.. rr .;! I n.' y iv. 1 1 i ;tit":it!.' .'. A. . i r M. V.'. : i. I", Hit. !. i.-i-'i,i-.!i : Ij. V'll.:. ii.":;: ii. i ; f-. t.. Nu a ::. iv.'S .. MuCOl'iHIi: POST 45 G. A. '(si i.:;. rv .1. w. .; )i!s-.,.v . . r .v!' - 1 a . I" a rv.- ;;. it.i-.s A i'.:i'rT 1' v :vs. il M i.c-; ; )! . . "!i i; t.r.s i . "! N.I. ..'.' ft. ' .1 :u .: ''. if : '.'a v. . . A I l' I -V U ! : I J 1 1 . . i'-ccLi;. .;;! ur iay ; ' i .- Vic l:'.l:i:niil'r, i . M. i t I ! V. -;i::r'. -.!.!:!. To, I (. A ii. S"i '! I ISI I tfIULSVU 1 -DEALKlt IN' CMS. .VXI) i ut '-( pi 1. h. C SssciaiAtieatioa dveiiac!i Ropairiiig WE WILL HAVE A I 3 a Bum LiiiO -OF- HOLIDAY GOODS, -ALSO n sn -LID i y E2 4 ex in -OF DiiBiDftHEaMPallems AT THE USUAL Cheap Prices Trouble In to OHlclal Housohold WAfSllIM.TON. 0.;t. 17. EUIict Mr. IJ.iyitnl or .Mr. Cul iti'l illliiiv t lcuvc tlio culii:.t. So Mr. Il.iyuitl himself says moot eti)i;li:it:ra!lv. Tliis is lccuii'-c the new i istnet attonn v lor AiasKii in mo nuit auinst llw Jnlisli seal ti.-hiii vos sels taken uj u line of .'tigniiiciit which controverts a!iii.. t if net every point brought out an 1 rili il moii !y Ilayaril in the fisheries d -siuite with Cuna.la tint England. .Secretary lSayanVs frieitds (and perhaps it would he jut ns proper to say the .secret ary himself), lliink t!iat Garland is no good. Tliey feay ha is not a good lawyer, :tnd they eyen intimate that lie is "on the make" and al ways has been. Thev wiv ik? was "on the make" in t?i l'an-Eli-etiic business p.nd intimate that ho is now working into the hands of the Alaska Fnr company and del lure th'-re is no other explanation for the con duct of his n-w attorney for Alaska. They also say that if Cxi land hid e.ny sens,; and the tee'iug and uel.cacy til a gi iilleinaii h ; would have residue I long ago. AVIien tlie t'an -Electric matter was up and (Jailand mad.' his report to the preaid- nt tli-.r latter said it was satisfac tory to hiia. although the press tiiindiy to him, as well the opposition pres--, took an entir. Iv diiTrrent ;: of it. But Ilayaru's friends say (Jnlanl r: stod con tcntedlv under tlrj president's indorse ment and did. not tv-ign. Later on th president offered him t!u: pe-ition of meinhv-r of the inter state railway coiii mission for two yetirs. Tliey s:.y that G.iiland bragged of this as an in lorse ment, but if h.: had any feeling of delica cy he would have understood it rightly, namely, as an invitation to resign the at torney genera! si iip, but as he didn't and has kept up his connection witli pe.rties pursuing private object--, Sccr-.lary Bay ard's friends say that the president must choose betwei n ( ' :! land and 1 ..yard, as soon as he returns from his swing around the circle. Garland has not many friends, but tiio.se he has say tint Dayard is pulled up with lils imagined self-importance to a degree where he listened to no seme and argument, that 11 ivard knows a great deal less than a secretary of state oupht to know and that while his appointment was down to Delaware's credit he is no credit to Delaware at all. It seems to disinterested parties that both Garland and Bayard are right and that Cleveland might get along without both of them. Coon, to the home of the Ryan family where they were identified. Coon was lynched ami Duff shot and his throat cut from ear to car. William Drake, one of the robber.-, was caught, and confessei Hint Dan Cimniii'ihaiii. a member of the Eureka detectives of this city was insti- "utor of the affair and the balance of the gung carried out the scheme. The vigi laiitcs started to Spencer, the county seat nf I'n-inf with Drake. There were over three tlious uid persons pi t sent at th funeral of the murdered minister yesterday. Pensions Crantcd- Wasuim.ton. Oct. IT. The following XVI .fd L-ii Kinsiniis have been issued: Original: Truman E. Hart, Red Clout Charles II. Uligh, Royal; Danie l Desmond, Xorfolk; Wiliian Wilton, Reaver City; Clu.ih.s X. r.cekwood. Stoekviile: Geo. W. Marsh, Clay Centre; William II. Web titer, Central City; I'atriek Claneey (navy), Verdon; Madison Brown. Mern i. R issue: Thomas J. Vandusen, (navy). A nsle V. A Thousand Lives Loot at Hankow. San Fkancisco. Oct. 17, Additiodal details of the ili-astio is tire at Hankow, received by advices per steamship Rio Di Janerio this morning, give the number of lives lost at 1. ()!;(! and the value of pro perty destroyed at 2,00ft, 000 teals. Deaths From Yliow Fovssr. Washington-, Oet. 17. A telegram from the deputy collee'or at Tampa. Fi.i.. this iifUTiioon !-ays: Four Tic last report a:.d live new cases. casts ol lever m ) nor t itv. Lin since Several Tho Crovi3 Aro Quiet. Wasiiixo:;o.-, Oet. 17. The commis sioner of Indian affairs to-day received a i r f T . a iciegram iro:n urov agency, .i-ntana. saying tliat pi;et prev.iuetl there, but no arrests had b; en le.a'ie. A Kra!'ian Cruiser Lost. Washington", Oet. 17. The navy de partment learns that the Brazilian cruiser "Imperial Maainbeiro," was lost S-pt. S, y running upon a bar at Rio D ire. One officer a:ul fourteen seamen were lost. AT- SMITH & BLAC 21 I ft V 1 1 vnn mm r. it.v i i Ubi ejioi i WORK BOM -OF- CALL OIv Cor. 10th anl Granite Streets. Sept. 12-f.m. JULIUS PEPPERBERG. maxufactuh;-::; ov and WHOLESALE k RETAIL DKALIIU IX THE Choicest Brands of Cigars, including our Flr da PepuerbergoTJand 'Suds FCXL LINE OF TOBACCO AND SMOKERS' ARTICLES always in Bteck. Nor. 26, 1885. The Morincns. Washington, Oet. 1 7 The annual re port of Govt ruor West, of Utah territory estimates the population at neatly 00. 000 and the assessed taxibl-j property at $ 3j,5-(;.),S05. Commercial affairs are in a prosperous condition, agricultural pro ducts abuudant and of oxeelent grade, the stock interests flourishing and the mining outlook promising. The govern or recommends the repeal of that part of the alien land law that relates to mines. To the discussion of the subject of state hood for Utah the governor devotes con siderable space. He says the movement was inaugurated by the leaders of the Mormon people and their representatives alone took part in the convention. He reviews past ex; rtssions up to a very recent date in opposition to the federal law and says: "Before clothing them with sovereignty should not con gress wait until tluir laudible professions hive had time to ripen into praisewoi thy works; until the conduct of the ptop'c and the legislation of the territory in con sonance with their profession, are brought into harmony with the general views or the country, and the territory placed in the advanced position it would have attuned bat for the past attitude of those whii arc now asking the boon of stetehood? It is more than probable that the question of Utah as a practical factor in national affairs will be con sidered in connection with her npoliea tian for ad:n:sion.but neither of the great political parties, so far as the past hi.-t.Ty of the people is concerned, can lay claim, with any degree of certainty, to their support. A Modest Millionaire. In his former days of prosperity tho per sonal habits of Mr. Henry Vi;ird and his family wero of th most modest character. A friend who ebw the family at the opera describes tho scene as foliovrs: "In looking about me at the new opera houne the other evening it is the thinj to look about you up there; the boxe3 would be awfully cut up if you did not rake them all over I noticed across tho aisle from where I sat (mine was only a poor $5 orchestra chair) a family of three father, mother and daughter. I was particularly struck by the plainness of their appearance, contrasted with the glint and glitter of the rest of the house. They were well enough dressed, the father in evening suit, the mother in a white orepo shawl and bonnet; the daughter, a fresh looking girl in her teens, wore a brown silk dress and a black folt hat, trimmed with feathers, set square upon her head. She evidently felt the cold winds that rushed through the lower part of tbe Louse, and had pulled across her shoul ders a white worsted breakfast shawl. J don't think that tharo is anything in the way of a wrap much uglier than one of theso crocheted breakfast shawls; but I liked the girl's independence in wearing it. I will wager a ?10 bill that there was not another in tbe house, and, what is more, not another young lady in the house who would have dared to wear ono. "In chatting with a friend between the acts I said, for want of something better to say, I wonder if that girl wears u breakfast shawl to tho opera because she likes it, or becausa she can't afCord a cloak.' He looked and laughed. '7 hat girl could afford to wear twenty opera cloaks if she wanted to. Don't 3'ou know who she is?' 'No,' said I. 'Is she anybody?' 'Well, her father is; that big, Gdrman looking maa sitting by her side is her father, and hi5 name is Henry Villard, and his business tiie Northern Pacific rail road, as you nra probably aware.' For once I saw a millionaire who did not flaunt Lis millions, who sat iu au orchestra seat rather than in a box, whose wife was not sown with diamonds, and whose daughter couid wear a worsted breakfast shawl to the opera." A millionaire who, together with his family, could be as modest as this in the days of his prosperity will find few who will not wish him the vc ry host success in these days of Lis reiut iiii-s; rood fortune. New York GraDhjc THE NATIVE AMERICAN. THE CROW RESERVATION AND THE INHABITANTS THEREOF. Civilization or Iho Noble Rett Man of the West "Blanket" Indians Pony and I (; Plucking Out the IJciiril. t'liililrcii mill Son;;. Nothing so ni'ilds a savage into a civilized statu lis tho neee-sity of ii.aking a living in civilized wuys. Tin-re mo nu ullt-jr ways f-..r him now. Ties builalo are gone from tho plains, tho elk from tho mountains. There Is I'.o wil l grass fur his pony savo thu grass upon the reservation. lie fore tin- u lvalue of raiiroud.s and civilization hu bus yielded year by year, till there id now no more l"..r him to yield to civilization but him.-eif. ile yields btuhhoruly; hi! does not, like lh white man's ways. Among 2,.ri()0 Absaraeas who havo fought and as.sociuted with lha whites for "n generation not 100 is;i.-ak Engl:.-h, and when they aro taught it in the schools they disdain to f-j.euk it oneo they ure in tiio camp again. The blanket is hisi-purublo from tlio idea of the wild Indian. It is tho emblem of snv agery. Indueo him to lay e.-iiio tbe blanket and rejjlaeo it with cont r.r.d pantaloons and ho is eiviiiiivl. This u co li no that thoyare classed as civilized Indians and blanket Indians. Tho blanket is wrapped about tha body, brought up over the lx-ud and all the face enveloped except Iho eyes. If hois in duced to work, he holds tho folds of the blanket iu tbe loft hand and usi.s tho ax or hoo with tho right. Wuh tho squaw tho blaiiKot t jrvco a douolo purpose; it is dress for herself and cradle for tho papoose. A dexterous folding of it forms a pouch upon the buck and in this tho p'ipo:;?o rides, peer ing beside Us mother's head us she In. is along. "Tho earth is our mother; to plow tha ground is to scratch her shin, to riigditc'RS is to wound her bosom, to op; n inir.es is to crack her bones, und she will roiibivo no Indians when they dio if they so at. use her." This is tho explanation tho Indian gives of bis disinclination to work. TLat is the poetry !' it; tho tact is that tho Indian, liko white brother, is lazy and only work.-, when ho cannot tielp i;,. liiD tho Italian is learnmz Vi -labor. His native food, tho wild r.io of tlio I01v.1t and plain, is gone; tho government lssua cf beef and ba con is scanty, r.nu, l:ko tho iiiim-ov- i-nt negro, he often cats tho rations r the week in tr.-o or threa dars. The stun T1K DiYLI(?,Hri' STOF,Fi 1 l mm .Vv . .."SS-JC 9i l fm H 1 r u . l oil A U f I'll' 'M TO $:,:). In a lintel Lobby. A man who spent three hours the other day In the lobby of the Palmer house, Chicago, gives the following statistics about the peo ple who came in during that time: One legged men who came in, 47; one armed ruon, IS; men who wore glasses, 4l; men who wora mustaches, IOC; men who wore full beards, 50; men who had no hair on tlieir faces, 7S; men wh-j wore Prince Alberts, ISO; men who didn't, 100; men who went into the bar. HO; men who camo in and sat down and said nothing, nud then cot up and went cut, ISO. -New York Tribune. A Cane: cf Murderers Wiped Out.V3 CiiaULKStox. W. Va., Oet. 17. A courier this moniitttr brought in the news that a mob of citizens and officers who i are after the murderers of lie v. Thomas P. Iiyau, who was shot near Walton, Roane county, this state last Thursday, killed George 31. Duff, jr., Friday, and took Robert Ford, together with Jack Tho Salmon II eM in Arersloa. The fishermen in Scotland declare that the salmon's tail is pointed "sineo Loki became a salmon, and ites caught by that appendage while Slipping through a net sit for him by t the gods." Curious to say, in some parrs of Scotland the sa:aion is held in great aversion, its name not even being mentioned. Thus in certain districts it is known as the "so-and-so's C-di," and in others as "the beast." Chi cago News. ttr.is ci h::::ger has iinv n him to work. .-cry famiiy of tho A'iBaraons or Crows, am- ng whom the writer sojourns, during tho pn; t yeitr has lived at its own hour) and cul- vutrd its own crop. Tho lands are now bc::.g allotted, but tho system of separation ui.d family ownership is already in operation under lh efficient managoment of tho agent, a dis tinguished Mississipp-an. Iiach family pos sesses a cabin, a roothouso for winter pro visions, a corral for horses, and a wire inelceure for cultivatim, nr.d in this tln.-y vc rmsed corn, potatoes, gram, melons and vegetables, tho government furnishing ail seed and tools. It waa unkind to call them Crows. There is little enough poetry In tho real Indian, how noblo soever his red brother of romance may ba, and .".urely it is unkind to take from iim that little he has. The Absaraea, tlieir own name for themselves, is quite dili'orent from the ill famed bird wa call a crow. It is a small blue hawk, of graceful poiso and swift flight, common upon the prairie. The Crow reservation is perhaps the largest and most valuable possessed by any tribe. Lying 200 miles along the Northern Pacific railroad in Montana, and extending south ward to tho Wyoming line, k is traversed by many clear mountain streams with fertile bottoms, and bordered on the south and west, by mountains rich in minerals. The Crows have ever been friends of tho whitos, abetting them iu their long wars with the Sjioux, thj Nez Perees and other northwestern tribes. They are rieh in land, ponies and cattle. The pony and dog .are part of tbe Indian family. The pony is tho properly of tho buck; he never walks. The dog is the sequi tur of tho squaw. I have seen as many as eleven at the heels of one Indian woman. They are mongrels of every breed, domestic and wild, are poor and worthless, but eat at the same table aud sleep in tho same bed with their erect kinsmen. Uotii men and women are expert riders. I have seen children 3 and 4 years old furiously racing the half broken ponies. Though there are many aged people in tho Ab.saraca tribe, I have never seen one -whoso hair was perfectly white. It is often streaked with gray und sometimes quite grizzly in the very old. When it becomes gray it is often a fancy with them to paint it rd. The hair grows long upon the heads of the men as well as the women, and is neve v cut save as an evidence of mourning. They wear no beard, plucking out each hair as it comes upon tiie face. They carry suspended from the neck by a string a pair of broad tweezers of their own construction for this purpose, and the young buck in arranging his toilet examines his chin carefully iu thj mirror to be sure no offending cap-ilia is there. I 'rob ably from generations of such rough usage tho beard grows sparsely when undisturbed. There is mi imbecile in the tribe who has lacked cither vanity or brains to pluck his, and after a growth of forty j-ears it is but a sparse stubble of still black hair. But here is a marvel to run and troubles our theory of heredity. Tho children of this tribe, among whose ancestors no song was ever sung, aro easily taught to sing. Thelittla girls in tho agency or mission schools sing the Gospel.hymns its sweetly aud correctly as the Sunday school children of the south. As their clear, sweet voices ring out on tho twilight air iu the familiar melodies of "Sweet Iiy and By," or "What llust It ba Thc-rel" tho writer easily imagines himself ti,000 miles array, listening to children among whom are blue eyed uiul golden haired fairits, instead of theso little Absaraca maiden-, with coal black eyes and hair of jet. Crow Agency (ilon.) Cor. New Orleans Times-Democrat. a. - r Miss; riifi.M ; :. to $12. 4- mm IX AM. STVf.i.S. Pi Mi cii;! Far TriiBEi'. To 4-3.-J. A full Hi.r riio:: i- t "V -v. . JQS. V. VJV.cvz DAYLIGHT h-Toili:. M 3 m ff 7?Z & xj j a 3 $1 W 3 r. 1. 7 r 1 I JL T ST o til : J "l T.VI 173 OOMPSTITIOlsf. The citizens of Car"; ceur.tv will f cognize at a viatic? that th county roost or crowing loud and ever t'levictoiy ai.'ive bi.-.l is a CaJ dried by Solo jell(cir flic 1 .11101 hii ii 1 jljo iii.' (01? MI LI MARY AMD CARPETS 1 exhibited oyer all compel it'i style, value and ouai.ti when we asseit The award is T,'CC cai.t in e.r.d will c(M!it ia:i:t your I.:-.! v.o liave this 'ea-f-n tl;; ami 'e.ot vaiitd line of pciiii 1. y rr.;:c: 'ttia-i'.it. mm, :,jpreniaryi . ::co Value of Fast "Walking Horses. At the fair many thousand dollars in pre miums will be given for fine blooded horsus. There will be trotting and pacing to every thing from a sulkly to a stake wagon, and everything from a Kentucky thoroughbred to a Clydesdale or Pereheron stallion will be put around tho amphitheatre in all the gaits, out thero will not be a dollar offered for the fastest walking horse. No accomplishment ihat can be bred in a draft horse, whether ho be intended for dry, stake wagon or plow, is so valuable. - Oxen are always judged by their walk. .Stock Dealer in Globe-Democrat. m m n J 1 1 r. ' flfir.n atiUtto, iuuiii illifiry, Carpels, HoisEMfl MmM Tu 1- lut.fid ill .9 ti. The ladies of riattsinonlh t;:; some of the v.'uufiirfi: .-iciiuty i -!ec full y in? :ct I ..nufactured T-xtilc F.d.- . 3 V i. t. peeSal Hula oi This sale will ccnliaue this and all next we- It. Grcit bar'wai We nrc rather late in flne'tnif our lMo-toi- :i tl great rush and rec.ijit ol" iir. impossible, but from this duty thereby. rr.'ii A i Yitteh 1 - ;i (.i'.vi n 1 making f 1 our advLi'li .ciiicn o oSfertd. - to the wur::tei!itnt tiiid rofit AM. White Front Dry Goods House. Main street - Plattsmouh, Nek