the: americ an . THE AMERICAN i t n tt miuh , tw4 . I- t ..( t Vi. ,HCMPSON MUtV, IN e WVS I'UHT fitx Ti 1 1 t tt.t, ! Ml U.'klHI I. . V..t-s - 4tlt I l S, f:t t h i!ft f ,.i,. . r i . SM t K AMM M t fcll ..(,! 0Nt C. lMCHf0", . W. ' lltllllf, W.tes lsf. t OMAIM. 1 lUlHY, M V , A I II M 't H MMln I i ! thatl Ik bumHcr. TttrtiK should l no toleration d hustler by 1 hi' A, I'. A. order, Wotl.O It K tho proper thtdjf to tmnpe seiie of patriotic meetings during tho Methodist conference In this oily ' TliK a;itl.imtod May day troubles failed to ntnUilllx In Europe. Work Ingim n generally wore very quiet and orderly, ami but few disturbances were Hmoo. IT 1 announced thai tho hikj hnt given hi approval to Ireland's public sohistl system, hut not without the usual appendage, Ho want the chit drvnto receive a church education fu school hours. IN the province of Uaiulti, In Kant Afrloa, thoro I now raging quite a mt ioim conflict httwH.n Hoinnn t'ntholic and I'wtcctant native. Tho war Is purely re Unions affair, and in attracting but little, attention. TltK counly conuniwloncrH havo agm.'d to Hiibmit the proMnltion of the Nebnibka CVntrai H. H. Co., to tho people by a KjK'clal election to beheld May Slat, It should carry. Tho safe guards a iv miniclent. LAST Sunday a crazy woman made an atmault iion a Roman prlcitt in Mount Washington. The prlcut warded off tho blow and drew a revolver. Why do prleata always have a revolve handy? No Protestant mlnlMer carry firo-arma? A LITTLE rliplo occurred at tho Huptint church tho Other day, when even deacons precnted their realgno- tion. and akcd that they bo accepted Tho difference! will probable be. ami cably settled when tho congregation InventigaU tho trouble. The tmixM'Atntnnm Kwzrn geota that a nerlesof atriotic meeting lie held every week during the World's Fair at Chicago. This is certainly good suggestion, and will meet tho ap proval of patriotic visitor who do not fancy having tho Romans carry off all tho glory of that enterprise. A CoiyiKS pon dent writing from Rome says: "Tho jmpo had confirmed tho decision of tho propaganda in favor of tho plan advocated by Archbishop Ireland allowing American Catholic ehools to ho taught by stato teachers. and religious Instruction to bo given after achool hours, tho object being to relieve tho Catholics of its burden of expense of separate schools." While is look plausible on its face, may it no be possible, that the pojm desires to detract attention from the public school agitation now going on In this country jhk iiomans wno control tho demo cratic party in New York are becoming very bold. The plan they havo adopted Is to displace the school toaeJiers, c peeially when they are Protestant, and appointing new ones in their places for political reasons. Take for instance the city of Troy. Nineteen Romasi Catholic teachers were appointed by a Roman board of education in place of twenty-one Protostant teachers whoso competency hal never been questioned, and some of them had been teacher for forty years. Most of the new teach er were selected from attendants of the convent schools, and who had never bo fore held positions as teacher. This 1 one of the result of an educational law which give politicians the right to dictate who the teachers shall bo in tho public schools. TUET UK NOT AFRAID. At the regular mooting of tho IJoyne Loyal Orange Lodge of Monti eal, on Monday evening, ths,t intelligent body placed itself on record against the Ro man Catholic church, punning a resolu tion, which has been given out for pub lication. The resolution ran thus: "Resolved, That whereas we believe that the time has come when Orange men should spealc out more plainly, and let the world know what is their belief concerning the Roman Catholic church, we hereby place on record our firm con viction that the said Roman Catholic church can in no way be considered as a part of tho Christian church, and we also believe that the pope of Itomo is identical with the antichrist of scrip ture." Lindsay M'ankr. That is a strong indictment. But the Orangemen are capable of promulgating and sustaining such indictment. They corporation. Their belief 1 shared by are not alone in their estimate of that thousand of men who never will be Orangemen by men who see in it a political monstrosity. f i , ? t!.hf I'K ii.ni, I. I 't)lm!U .t tv,:,l j li I ill. v f, IV il t'.' I !, n li 1 1 ,.l I Hi i in i-n 1 !'. S ! Im Mil' 1 ( i ". b.;l j . ltMe !m mrv vii't h t' llii V luV'e t-'M. s?. I wh ! I ;m Islil at th. dmr 4 ' pnwollwiit liiU r tf the Atoi'lirsn nli Th h.ar t!it uti n f.H,iil liic A IV A vntfs N, aw tin ' Jii tri Cn h A. P, A. ! H iml t tiy insn. or anv t 4 n n" 't have ! 1.1 that tSti' "U-tt In tti Anieili'sn a,SUi'ii ' iol m r elmiiil that thev ! m II w ho I tho tights of eltlc. tiMi far l highly to hnrti-r Hu m awsv dr a fe dollar hold tin in far l.snt..r In sil a few fliu w oik ! in to nmniiitilsni th-m In the In terl of any candidate, A anile, Urn rank and lib' In the American ai'lrttliiis isu r tnisted to do only w hat honorable men could bo i.ivvsIIihI iiimhi to do. Hut theii are srtaln silitielans who claim to carry tho A. P. A. vole in their vent jHs ket, who should not be truxted. That there are wnuld-ho leaders In the American order, who havo allowed the lmproion to gain currency that the A. P. As, could he delivers! 'greatly to thedetri meiit and dlsgratv of the order you and i, and every other man. have heard tiMin almost every street corner Mow much truth tln-n Is In these rumors these' barters and sales you cannot 1st hohoi1 to know. We d not know, but w herever the finger of suspicion is pointed, there should 1st an investigation. If the party susplciotied is proven Innocent, exonorato him fully If ho Is guilty, exoll him from the order he Is not fit to associate with decent, law-abiding men. No man who is innocent of the charges of ImotllerlHin will f ar an in vestlgution; he will ask to K Invest! gated he will insist uhhi tho truth ls-lng known. Only those men who are corrupt will hinder or try to forestall an Investigation. Were charge of corruption laid at our door, wo would lie the first man to Insist upon tho most searching inquisition being made, Will those other g -ntlemen condescend to act In that manner If not, they must not attempt again to assume leadership In the A. P. A., for as certain as there is an American order In this city, just that certain will they bo ostracized. The members of those order will not condone corruption. They witl over throw Its votaries Wo bellevo that In every member of an American order should le found fidelity to one's self and to the order we IhUovo that every man should bo tho embodiment of purity, and that every man should offer protection to the order and Its momlrs, and not start out to assasslnato a friend' char. actor. One way to afford protection to the order and Its friends is to run down and expose boodlors not cover up their short-comings, as d'S the Roman eorjxirat ion. We detest secrecy We have no use for boodlersl We abhor men who engage in tho despic able business of character-assassination And wo value our citizenship too highly to allow this talk to continue without asking the gentlemen, whom common rumor charges with corruption, with corttrollng the A. I'. A. vote, to tep to tho front and ask to bo Investigated Tho Amoru an assis'Iatlons can much better afford to expoll unfit men, to weed out IssHllers, than to allow tho good name of the order to bo smirched by their knavery and treachery. Tho American Protective association i greater than any one man; It principles aro broader than any sentiment ever evolved by the minds of a whole shoal of iHilitlcal pigmies, and its aims and purpose can only ho understood by honest men! There may bo no truth in all these rumors, we hoK there is not, yet the association cannot afford to pas them by unnoticed. It cannot afford to take the cuo always used by Rorno. It can afford to say to tho world, wo practice what wo preach True, some of the men under suspic ion of handling boodle, of trying to liver the vote of tho American orders, have been warm friend of this paper, and this paper has In times gone by, given them it earnest, hearty sup port, but that fact will not deter us from pointing out to the American tho advisability of being constantly on their guard, of calling to their mind tho old truism, "Eternal vigilance l the price of liberty." If this shoo fit any of our friends, we wanf thera to put It on and wear it- even if they feel that they will have to get even by stopping their paper. We havo but one aim in life the elevation of Protestantism. That can only bo accomplished by opposing corruption, and we shall oppose it wherever found. Will the association sustain that posi tion? We believe it will, for an over whelming majority believe in reform not In the practice of Rome. Considerable excitement was oc casioned, in Troy, N. Y., tho other day, when the recently elected Roman democratic school board discharged twenty-on of the best Protestant teacher in the public school, and ap- I ft HVK I j ji'i !..! I! ..., it, tt ir !, Tt.. ! -l Uv ..! h tlt i hi ell; 5 " lt.t I ''atholtv Th i J tu el Vv i itiiit Kin.,' t, ,.) io.Htf r.',.,ii ii, I,..,,. i.l (l,i. I'fi.l. slut.ls was riv a tmnvsAi. urnx. IW ! t,.Mhi a ft j. ttd In this fly t.s ' Itding Ms tiit!s.f In Mi. t. gnn ii.j.f Tit Ami iuhh, ami M, I what be y In a hn nl h-n. r. l uiwum, Mien., April 2, -J -lvr tnihr I n tv ihe p r o i) a Thanh to Tit Awi HI i Them I a cliaiik'" of admtnUtra- Hon in this town. IM spring. V elected a Pitil-lnt 1 1 t It and miln'r- !"'', and cam near gvttlng ti-oautvr of tho aim' mtnpleilnn. iet to gvt inure im-t time. My family vi 1 ii k Ami Iiu an, and then the neigh lr get It and ! II from one to an other, u Is wonderful w hat a change on copy hs wrought. Tho hew sus-r- viiwir ealled yosieniay for tho ln-1 pair. and sIiowih! mo a sis-elmen of hi iin- dieeswr's la Roman Catholic) work last year. A Protefuit and a Roman .... .. . ..,h. o, mu.i tin , . . I..1 ..I III'lMmltil alitea ill tin. e. tn.l (l,ul iiu-n,t I'". ' ' "'"-' hv the Itomnn ni iu.m i nu than that of thf Protontant. The Prot- estant Wiw aHS.(w.. fliO. tho Catholic ;-. o ZSZS "lVr. alsmt Ci. lloth aiv located in the same solnsd district, 11. L. Who will, after reading that letter, ask the mission of the A. P. A? Has It not a great field in which to work? Yet where is the difference between allowing that Romanist to escape fifty per cent, of his rightful taxation, while, his nelghlsir Is fully assessed, and tho Roman church holdings on West Leavenworth rented out for gardening purposes which csonx taxation en- tirely, while only a few block this sillo, on the opMisito side of the street, is a tract of land owned by the city attorney, not as valuable, and standing idle, brings into tho city treasury hundreds of dollar annually i It is the old dislgo of having Protestants pay all the taxes, w hile Romanists hold all the office and exempt their fellow Romanists and the property belonging to the Roman cor-1 poration from one-half, or all, the burdens of taxation. How long, Amerl- cans, will you submit to this imposl- tlon? Aw;ike! Shako off tho joke, and deal firmly, yet justly, with Rome. ." A8 TO TEMPERANCE. There Is not a reader of TliK Amkki- can whodis's not believe in tomiHiruncu. There aro many who do not believe In prohibition, but all will bo surprised to hear this sentiment was uttered In the great Methodist Kpisoopal conference: "Tho Roman Catholic church Is work- lng up on this question," dcclardd tho banning i.that nZZ more Interest than themselves In th r t- A 1 ii iil 1 suppression of this great evil. Arch- Idshop Ireland of Iinnesota-I Iioiki they will make him a cardinal Is with will not Isi long ls;fore tho Catholics will Ihj (IghtJng tho battle of temper- anco side by side with us." If Ur. Kynett know aught alsmt thJ Roman Catholic church-and he should, s.cause he comes from Phlladelphiav he know that corporation has tho life ofthosabsm arid the brothel in her grasp. One sentence from the lips of the bishops In tho various dioceses would close nine-tenths of all the sa- oons, and more than three-fourth of all tho house of lll-famo. Ihcn why do they riot promulgate that sentence? Ilecauso them! .laces are prolific sources of revenue for the Roman machine. It could not II vo If they were abolished! Licentiousness, crime, Ignorance and superstition aro tho corner stones of Roman Catholicism. Virtue, purity, honesty and sobriety aro tho exceptions, not tho rule, That being so, how can Dr. Kynctt, or any other Intelligent Methodist, accuse the Roman machine of "working up on this question"? Ho knows that Hlshop Kcanticll, of the dl(sso of Omaha, could close more than three-fourths of tho saloons in till city, if ho (Dr. Kynctt) ha taken the trouble to read the signs alsivo tho ntrancow of the saloons. Romo and reform, rum and reason, do not travel In tho same class. Dr. Kynctt ha been taken in by a very smooth Jesuit dodge. - Tub councilman who Imagine that the prohibition shibboleth can do nsod to frighten fellow councllmon who may desire to vote to confirm the appoint- ment ofamanwho several years ago I supported the amendment, 1 certainly U behind the times. Tbl Is not a brothel administration. Prohibition was do- feated several year ago. ; . . WHY not ask all tho visiting laymen and minister Into tho A. P. A. fold? . , , , .. . , . , Editor Interior: Will you bo so kind to insert In vour earliest Issue tho statement herein contained? Father Chlnlquy ha been here for some time, being now quite sick. A hi case necessitated a surgical operation, he called to hi assistance hi own physi- cian, tho eminent surgeon, Dr. Ed mund Andrew, of Chicago. But be fore Father Chlnlquy wa put under the influence of ether, as ho is now so advanced in life being in Lis eighty third year he wished to make a state ment which he wanted to u?n with hi own hand. A he ay in his declara- tion the priests if the Church orilome have published Several time that he I had r iioiitm t Pt-'l tnl Um l e lf lit li t.' -it ie d III t. Hi I alo - llw -.ifttii, M i e-.!.' it.. a at Ii i o ii .(li i' '.i ih. i,i, it.g d. -nil,, hi wl.t l, I i.n hii, v.Mt f"f p- t-iii i. ii Mr. i i.ttM.,.,1 I atui.... t Ii t ttio wnU drsiitt Ibal t.e U Rom in lit l!u n ttie lo the fn!i of x s'.i.'. li.al i t lhniy whl, fi tia deli Illicit m ItlMiity fur ala.nl ttillij.no Ji-si. and Dial he l ii I j far feisii Ittltiklng of raUing ttio while fWg and prt-M hllng Die I'lho tifwhi-h t' hi old f" l f.iii dll'ig, It 1 li!ii Isnt that the i l'.i iiiaii world t riiflul mg nliaiit of father I hlnl.jii) ' faith and fWllngs w In n tai ing death. Ho l tl!l III !-d and fit l quite f. hlr. Your ivrl'Hll(v, P. Ihtftmr At. Patr t'tiliilipiy t'tmreh. Tho solemn moment hating arrived forme when, on account of a painful ill'', I mimt, l ar a surgical ojsTa lion which insy a Well lend inn to my grave as restore mo to health, I I that I have a duty to fulfill to mil the chrUi Inn elnm-h: whl. ti Im m Wiii.ilv , ... ,, Kni1, t.H ' j,. ,. ,,, . , .. , . . . . . Ml oi o.i in enu nn miea to him, Ilea ve this life with Joy, for hear all the echoes of heaven mill em-tli th.wn.a,rf my Havior ,n pn'l"1''" 0 place tor you. And ii I go and tu-epiire a place for you, I will come again and receive you unto my self, that where I am you may ls also, I know that on the cross ho has paid I my debt and secured by salvation. H has torn with his own bauds tho con demnatlon which I have merited by my sins. My trust is in him, and in him alone. Ho is my only hop), my only light and life everlasting, It is he and be alone, who has acquired for me a place In tho eternal kingdom of his Father. I bless him Uslay more than ever, that he should have oened his eyes to the errors, the superstitions and the idolatry of the Church of Rome, in which I was born and of which I was priest for more than twenty-five years A It Is very probable that the priests of lUnno may do to me as they have done for so many others and indeed as they havo done already to mo several times that they may publish that have mado by pence with the Church of Rotno when very sick. I protest now against this new calumny. In tho presence of death, and standing on my open grave, I Invito more thar ever my dear French countrymen and all Roman Catholics to break tho heavy and shameful yoke which tho Church Ilomo places so "heavily on the nations which she blinds and holds as miserable slaves at tho feet of her Idols. There Is but one name that we ought to In vokn. bv whom wo can h r ' tt s tin, name of Jesus Christ. The !' 't of Romo deceived tho people In making them believe that they havt tho newer to change tho wafer Into c i AnA s..vOP t,,m..b fh,.Ht The f !o1 ml Httvl", whom lt,mlnlsts worship Is nothing but a powerless Idol. Mass noth lng but a tissue of blasphernh and idolatry. Tho priest, lifting up the wafer and snvlm to the tsundu "This is your Cod who has saved you uism tho cross," commits tho same ac Lf idolatry that Aaron committed when he said to tho Israelite In showing them tho golden calf: "These bo the; trods. O Israel, which havo brought thee up out of tho land of Kgypt." Auricular confession is but a snare which the immense majority of priest fall, as in a bottomless pit of iniquity, with their female imltont. Confession is a dlabolital Invention bequeathed to tho Church of Rome by Idolater of olden times, I forgive with all rny heart the calcumnle which my enem las havo spread against mo. I thank and bless all tho kind brother and sister In Jesus Christ who have given mo tho hand of christian fellowship, and have holwd mo in tho midst of tho trial through which I have had to pas since I left tho Church of Rome I ask from C and from men forgive ness for all tho faults committed during my whole life. My soul ha heard the voice of tho bridegnxwi saying: "Ho- hold, I como quickly," and It has answered: "Come, Lord Jesus, como." Ht. Anne, 111., March 23. C. ClIINIQUV. The priest, as confessor, possesses tha secrets of a woman's soul; ho know every half-formed hope, every dim do. aire, every thwarted feeling. Tho priest, spiritual director, animates that wo man with hi Ideas, move her with his own will, fashions her according to hi own fancy. And thi priest Is doomed to celibacy, lie is a man, but Is bound t0 Pick trom hi, hoflrt tho f,,,,!!- ot , i i,. i. m,uunnuu i... desperate ue of his power over those confiding in him. If ho Is s ncere y !e , , ' vout ho ha" to tmKgle with hi pas- lnurB ' Pnious cnance oi h18 MnZ defeated in that struggle. And even hould be coma off victorious still the mischief done la incalculable Und irreparable. The woman' virtue has been reserved by an accident, by a power extraneous to herself. She was wax in her spiritual director's hands; the bas ceased to be a person, and I become a thing. Exchange. nT not 8,noK8 "artry sta when ya C8n buy t for & ents. 107 South loth Street. j A tetpli fraud, Wiw lnti Vret and Whil ' Il7 A i""Mrq.-i'ii'l willing .i I lot in iti i-iiti . IjuhI Amofti sn, Ksthii, n ntn'ttt a e '"( fkp Piirsl.l) It IK lt p ttg iriMUt. ,. . , , , . . tl" of ttm Il iiuUh loin h It t a Ilatt'l an Intention of tlMtlfc to rhral I bf Igiiniaitt mil of iKfir iikiih v through fosr. It woilvd l.-r si) It I worth by ths pti t. Purgatory, All othet unciipiurl I. gins of ths ItoiiitsH church, t a do- liipnient. Cardinal !wmhh thoot j ts, that th church gra.laslly d Vt hp diH tiln out f rt of liidoihf, sn.lt In ii when it tHitvuntf p.'p til'tr th0 pope sanction it fir th twinlit of hi f.ilthfut dupv. Then such doctrine beoitnies matu-r fith whrthrr right or wrong, whethrr scriptural or not, and mut b tlivtf4 by at! RomanUt unJ.-r pr u of drum tlon. Purgatory grew up in tbi wsy from an hli'ii. It niMiit, at firr, a ort of imposed pt-mtnee for ia, piatd on earth by the living. Aft;r cvuturis it was found to be like the discovery cf a ilch gold mine and the bt p)iog doctrine ot the church a bank that never f tils for patron who pay their last dollar for love of kindred and friends. The Irish are naturally very affec tionate and sympathetic and do nt like the idea of having the souls of poor relatives suffer In torment, hence their gullibility in paying largely for their rescue from the fire of purga tory. Like all other change of doctrine in that changeable papal church, purga tory now means, according to Romish theology, a place or state in which the souls of sinner after death, expiate for sin committed on earth which do not merit eternal damnation. After purgation by rain and masses by the priest, tho souls are supposed to be purified and fit for heaven. Popery Is a wonderful religion. Money can get you an indulgence or a dispensation to sin against the law. It can even buy heaven for you. Simony hus been it curse since the days of Constantino the great, and today there Is not a critro committed for which pardon 1 not granted for sufficient money. Now, my Roman Catholic renders, I would like to havo some of you ask your priest tho following questions, viz: Where purgatory Is found in tho llible, when, and by whom it was Invented? In what year did tho pope sanction It as a doctrine of Komish faith? If a place of purifying fire, what kind of fire l It? It can't bo natural fire, for the soul or spirit is not matter, and the body of tho sinner is in tho grave, and insensible to pnln. This will give your priest work for a life time. It him prove from scripture tho existence of thi fraud, which no intelligent man or woman, that has read tho Ifoly llible carefully, can believe In. It seem now that poor old Ireland Is to be credited with tho first purgatory, established 700 years ago, and ever since that lime tho Irish have paid well for the dis covery in mental fear and millions of dollars to the priest. Mary Frances Cusaek, the nun of Aenman, while a Roman Catholic In Ireland, wrote the lives of several saint such as St. Patrick, St, Francis, etc. In her lifo of St. Patrick she speak of a legend of St. Patrick' purgatory, which sho doubts as she doc other fabulous legends. She next mention a story of an Albert Patrick In the eighth century as having estab" lishod a purgatory in Ireland; but not until the twelfth century docs she give tho first authentic historical account of it establishment. In 1152 an Irish knight named Miles Owen first in formed an English monk, of Saltery Abng, of Its existences in an Island in Lough Derg county, Donegal, Ireland. So to Ireland and an Irishman, pur gatory is Indebted for Its origin. Miss Cusack states that this purgatory at Lough Derg was quite a paying concern, and becttino qulto popular. Pilgrims in largo numbers went there, and tho landlord rented tho right to ferry over the pilgrims to a ferryman for i'UOO to 300 a year, who charged so much a head for ferrying them across to tho island. Rome makes everything pay. Her masses, her scapulars, blest rosaries, her indulgences and dispensators are all sold for money. Heaven itself is a matter of dollars and cents. The rich can buy a high mass, the poor a low oue, but the poor soul who has nothing to pay has of course to endure all the punishment and tay in purgatory un til his sins are purged. What merciful priests and what a merciful church the worthy mother of purgatoryl She grades the masses ac cording to tho amount of money paid by rich and poor. What a travesty on jlt.p tilii Sr l'lms al.iru im i. i. .(t !?ntioiif, Jrn I t lt.t. Wlol Is fully ! sli" d f.i iir lli, In hrd.Ug (lit I pffetoH Llimd i. t Hr ni j 1h" ll J. iiUi .f pMitt. tt i an ini!t to mi, IUdiiit, I hi iit who it!.t lt.tl AH, I i,..l f, K.I mil I , ' tl b!i IhMill to Hod !h ; . . , , j t sti.rr, w nil aenptru me anniriiu tu in or t tts'f I ihmim i t it . t litisl bring a pn't tf uth artn I'tsnc, heic the (devil i f Christ clrsiitr us fr.i.u sll in. I John 17, Pj grsee w ar th'M.'. t lvns,, ihriigh faith In thi. t leariou sl.-tirun nt of Chi 1st, and not tv nts-Mf ef thr priest and pur g stry. The nun of I Unman, fi out who life of M. Patfivk, thi alote account of purgstory is taken, waadi'Vout K nun tV.bolie about thirty jtnrs, but aftrr many trial, psruerutlons, Insults and doubt In that aposte churrh,he left bvr position of mother general su perior of the sisters of pence, In New Jersey, and btrchnie a Protestant Epis copalian. She has written fmir books sine, her conversion, proving herself a noble scholar, a pure and dvvottd fol lower of Christ, acd a liberal christian. Her last three books should be read by very Roman Catholic and Protestant in America. She prove the Roman church a foe to liberty and education. Its celibacy and confessional a cesspool of vice and the w hole church an infal lible fraud, including the pope and purgatory. II. Died. SEWARD Horatio L., at his home, 2020 Hurt street, Tuesday evening, May 3rd, 1!'2, of pneumonia. Such was the announcement which apMared in tho papers Wednesday morning. To many it was a complete surprise, to others it was half expected, but to all who knew him itwasasad, sorrowful bit of news. As a friend, Horatio L. Seward was steadfast and unswerving; as a husband kind and af fectionate, and as a father forbearing and loving. A a citizen and as an of ficial he was patriotic, broad-minded and liberal. In any and every position of trust and responsibility he proved to bo faithful, tireless and thoroughly coiriH'tont. A contemporary, in siH'iiking of Mr. Seward said: "Mr, Seward-was born at IJatavia, Oenessoo county New York, in 1K11, September 23. After finishing hi course In the common schools of Hatavla bo began to grow restless of tho quiet, uneventful life in a downcast farming district. California was then tho goal of every restless, active, ambitious man, and those who could beeume Argonaut (o 'tnat promised' inar- "Vrt t i swwsi. joined the ranks of tho wealth hunter and reached California shortly before the war of tho rebel I Ion began. With characteristic vigor the deceased began organizing a company and entered tho army with tho rank of captain. After js'iteo had been declared Captlan Sew ard camo to Omaha, in JM4, and after residing hero two years ho entered tho quartermaster' department at old Fcrt Sedgwick, located at Julesburg, and until it abandonment wa associated with tho army. In 1W8 he returned to Omaha arid was made city marshal of a town which then had only 1500 people, After living hero for some time Cap tain Seward left for Texas, where ho took a position with tho Texas Pacific railroad, and lived in that state for flvo years. In lxl bo returned to Omaha, and shortly after was made atutlouor of the Union Pacific, which position ho held until the office was abolished. Later ho become chief clerk to Harry (Jllmore. assistant superintendent of tho Missouri Pacific railroad, which iosl tlon ho held until a year or more ago, since which time he has been out of business. Captain Seward was a mem ber of Covert lodge. Ancient Free and Accepted Mason, No, II, and a past master of that lodge. Ho was a member of tho Veteran Masons' association, a member of Omaha-chapter, No. 1, Royal Arch Mason, and also omemlstr of Mt. Col vary commandery.Knlghts Templar. Captain Seward was married shortly after ho came to Omaha, in 1W4. to Miss Ella Iliidlngton, by Rev, Mr, Van Antwerp, then rector of old Trinity church at tho corner of Ninth and Far norn streets, where tho Tlvola garden now Is. Ho leave a wife and three son. and, also, a mother, who is a halo, hearty woman of 85," Tho deceased was burled Thursday afternoon In Forest Lawn cemetery, under the direction of tha members of Covert lodge, A. F. and A. M. Word fail to express tho deep regret of hundred of our best citizens at tho sudden and unexpected taking off of one so universally esteemed. All will unite in saying, "Peace, peace, thou soul of immortality" - To A common individual it would seem that tho city council had wrestled last Tuesday night with a very ordinary subject, much in tho same way it would with ono of Importance. Honest labor ha never been employed by tho city authorities, since we havo lived In Omaha, to clean tip tho alleys Id the business part of tho city. Tor that reason if the vags and other petty crim inals were worked upon them, their labor would not compete with that of honest men. It woukl bo a new de parture. Why should honest men be taxed to feed and house such characters and at same time to pay other honest mon to do the work which criminals could do. We believe Munroe's resolu tion should have been passed. Try again.