I SIOUX COUNTY JOURNAL IIMMI PtTTKHMM. Pakltohara. HAKKISOS. KEB STATE NEWS. NEIRASM MISCELUNEOUS MATTERS. The O'Xeill roller mill have agaiu Urted up. The Real Estate Exchange of Oma ha is to be revived. Some eaaee of diphtheria are re ported at West Point Mayor Broateh, of Omaha, declares himself a candidate for re-election. The prohibitionists of York comity have placed a complete ticket in the field. The season is now ot hand for the champion corn husker to get in his work. Kid Nichols, the Oniaha pitcher, Las been sold to the Boston club for $3,000. Beatrice complains that it is practi cally overrun with a bold snug of sneak thieves. The Pawnee county fair association will pay 25 cents on the dollar in the list of premiums. . Ogalallais figuring on a woolen mill wMi Chicago parties und is about deter mined lo have it. The Geneva building association mnde loans to the amount of 17,000 at the last regular meeting. Nearly 1,800 town lots in the town cf Decatur are advertised for Bale for delinquent taxes of 1888. The stand-pipe o! the Grant water works system is now sixty feet high and will be finished next week. A prairie fire which passed over the reservation south of Emerson destroyed over 500 tons of stacked hay. O. E. Benson, who left Sargent for parts unknown, has been left a legacy cf $4,000 by tlie death of his father. In the Dawes county district court last week Green Gnivly, n colored sol dier, was convicted of manslaughter. Lemuel P. liresact.of Dodge county, aged 82, whs married last week to Mira E. Sowers, of Colfax county, aged 53. It is expected that Lancaster coun ty's new court house will be ready for occupaucy about the 15th of November. The Missouri Pacific will at an early day put on a local train between Omaha and Falls Cily and intermediate points. Tho tenth annual state convention cf the Tonng Men's Christian associa tion, will be held in Omaha October 24 27. There is a rumor that the Lincoln postoffice has been tendered Hou. C. H. Gere by Senators Paddock and Mauder ton. William Crawford and W. S. Mon nie, of Sonth Omaha, have arrauged for sheep slaughtering contest at au early day. Diphtheria is pievailing to quite nn extent iii portions of Saline county. There have been a nttmber of fatal cases. V Paul Thoman, who some time ago shot Jack Cross at Cut Oft' lake, near Omaha, will be held to the district court. Barney Feeney, who for many weeks was sick in Grand Island, 1ms been adjudged insane and sent lo the asylum. The government engineers will establish a ship yard at Nebraska City, where their boats will be stored during the winter. All the street car lines in Omaha the horse, the cable and the two eleclric lines have consolidated into one giant monopoly. One of the most disastrous prairie fires ever known in Keith county de stroyed $14,000 worth of hay owned by John Bratt A gray eagle measuring seven feet from tip to tip and a pelican just a foot larger were killed by residents of Ne maha county. Fred Koch and William Miller, of West Point, returned from a hunt in northwestern Nebraska, after bagging thirty-seven antelope, - The term of district court now in session in Central City has eleven crim inal cases with which to deal. This is the largest for ten years. Miss Lizzie Jackson, a school teacher in Madison, fell from the porch at tier residence, receiving injuries which resulted in partial paralysis. Good Templars in Nebraska will hereafter abstain from birch beer, root beer, gincer ale and all kinds of pop, the graud lodge having so ordered. The little child of C. L. Stockman, while crossing the streets in West Point, was run over by a team and killed. Tho driver, one Beoachek, was arrested. W. H. Williams, of Falls City, has thus far shipped fifteen hundred barrels of apple from that placo, aud expects to skip as many more beforo freezin, weather seta iu. Bill White, Frank Williams, Tom Barnes and Green Gradloy, all of Dawes comity, have recently been as signed places in the penitentiary for sot era! years each. The members of the Omaha real estate exebaace are making preparations for daily sessions and an open board. They are going to try to inaugurate i boom in ml state. ' ' At a mttUmt of the directors of the Xerfolk Eleetrlo Light osspauy it was iltttir to teerss the authorised cap ital seektoP,M0. T1m pretest paid The dwelling house of M. De Langbrey at Dmkuta City was burned to the ground last week. The fire was caused by a defective flue. The build ing was only partially insured. General Secretary A. M. Clemenee. of the Fremont Young Men's Christian association, ia his third quarterly re port of the couditiou of the organiza tion makes a very excellent showing. The democratic judicial convention at Omaha nominated Joseph R. Claik sou for judge. Clarkson was the choice of the Donglas county bar aud was dis regarded by the republican convention. Ex-Governor Furnas Las donated o the state university two dozen reiorts of the state board of agriculture. The books Lave just been issued and are very neat aud substantial in appearance. A A Sabbath rest convention has been called to meet at Superior October 22 aud 23, to which all churches and other organizations iu sympathy with the movement aro requested to send dele gates. Ex-Congresxniau E. K. Yalenlino, of 'West Point, wants it understood that the "Judge Valentine of Nebraska," who secured a divorce from his wife in the Iowa courts recently is entirely an other fellow. A traveling man paid 25 cents fur a enp of coftee nt a Table Rock eating house. lie kicked and acquired the in formation that the people of that berg do not live there "for their health," but for "business." MR. NOBLE'S EPISTLE. .V WUK H UK ll'l'rs TBK CKS TION Or fBSHUXa. 4 FmIIU Wfclrb Ha Supp-rta br latuce Halt Maal ha ll4 Fanataa axis "lra arrlullf Examine-I be Great fturplu Not to b He4leaal)r qaaiaa'erea'. A Lincoln man estimates that pota toes will soon sell in that city for ten cents a bushel. Go into the counlry and every farmer is found digging them. They are large and a great many of them in the hill. Jacob Wist brought a twig of ap ples to the Falls City Journal oflice twenty-four inches long containing thirteen well developed appies. They were of the Stark variety aud were fine specimens of the kind. A slock company has been funned aud money subscribed for the purchase of the entire plant, good and subscrip tion list of the North Platte Telegraph. There will be a change iu the politics as well us the management A Chautauqua eirclo has been estab lished at the state penitentiary with twenty-live members, and nu effort is being niado to raise the necessary funds for the purchase of the books mid magazines required in the course of reading. The town of Sickens, iu Lincoln county, ia comiug to the front in good shape. It will soon have a newspaper, and several men will put up stores and stock them with goods. A bank, hotel and livery are needed, aud all will do a good business. In the recent collision at Gibsou'B station the coroner's jury rendered a verdict that Peter Iteulaud came to his death by a wreck ou the Burlington, caused by the carelessness of Engineer Gillespie in not complying with the rules of the company. The state board of transportation met in Lincoln last week and ordered the preliminary order of lost June, re ducing freight rates on coal to a given schedule, to go into effect within thirty days from date. This, it is agreed by tlie board, shall be fiuaL Two burglars entered Ed Pratt's jewelry store, while the proprietor was absent at supper, and stolo about $00 worth of goods, consisting of gold and silver watches, gold rings, etc. The thieves entered by a rear door and were escaping when discovered. The national benevolent association of Minneapolis, Minn., has complied with the laws rcgulatiugsceret societies, aud has beeu authorized to transact bus iness iu the stateof Nebraska. Thecor- poration is an insurance association doing business among the Odd Fellows. The St. Taul & Omaha will, ou November 1, adopt for its country sta tions the same demurrage rules that are to be then put in force at Omaha, Sioux City and several other important points by the Omaha and Council Bluffs di vision of tlie Chicago Car Service asso ciation. The Ulysses Dispatch says a little more light lias been thrown on the murder of the Leavitt children by the recent finding of a lot of bloody clothes buried in the field. It is not at all im probable but that the guilty parties to that awful murder will be found and punished. , A German farmer by the name of John Wolf suicided by jumping down a deep well on his place, thirteen miles southeast of Beatrice. The deceased was generally believed to be demented as some six weeks ago he made a ghastly attempt on his life by cutting his throat with a razor. George King, of Pilger, was taken to Omaha last week by Deputy United States Marshal Lyons, charged with sending obscene matter through tho mails. King was taken before Commis sioner Anderson aud bound over in the sum pf $500, to appear at the next term of court for trial. xue urana ijoage j. u. u. r. in session in Grand Island last week elected officers for the ensuing year as follows: Grand master, W. IJ. Barber, of Lincoln; deputy grand master, John Evans, Omaha; grand warden, Loom is, Fremont; grand treasurer, Sam McLay, Lincoln; grand secretary, D. A. Oline, Lincoln. - The state university authorities are in receipt of a telegram from the cus toms bonse officials at New York, noti fying them that ease of books for the library lias been received from Heiti bnrg, but that they cannot be forwarded iu the nsaei tuer as Liaeola has beta abandoned as port of entry. Nokia Itatra Tannr. Washington, October 19. Secretary Noble's first letter to Commissioner Tanner ou the subject of the rel ating of pensions is made public to-night. It is dated July 24. The secretary acknowl edges the receipt of Tanner's letter of J ill v 11, marked "unofficial," but w hich he could uot receive as anything but au official paper, raising as it did the ques tion of authority betwt-eu the commis sioner and the secretary and asserting that the commissioner is to be the superior as to the matter discussed. "Your iKisitiou in your own lan guage," says the secretary, "is that 'ttliile tho secretary of the interior has )ouer to reverse the decision of the commissioner of pensions ou appeal by a claimant against whom the commis sioner has decided, on the other hand, if for any reason it should be held that the claimant has been granted too much pension the commissiouerhiinseif is the only person who has the power t call a halt mid reducu the pension. ' Tho commissioner is laboring under a great misapprehension. The secretary has the power to correct any abuses iu the bureau of pensions, or any other bureau in his department." The secretary in support of his )osi tiou quotes copiously from the revised statutes, and adds: "Jt will uot do to say that the secre tary may not inteifere and stop by his on u power the execution of nnv orders obviously illegal ami arbitrary. 'J ho secretary is responsible for Hie conduct of tho commissioner, is. bound to see I n ut the law is enforced, that tho public treasury is not unlawfully invaded, mid that on i) citizen entitled to a right, whether of a pension, laud or anything else, is not unduly preferred either in the time of hearing or iu the allowance of money." The secretary takes up the reraling cases, which, he says, seem to be largely mere increases of pension allowed for long periods prior to the date of the ex amining surgeon's certificate establish ing the sumo under the pending claim for increase. "Ju fact," lie says, "tlie commissi. iner himself acknowledged them to bo cases of increase of pensions." l'he secretary continues: "The cases refrred to were ten in number. In each one of these the claimant was an employe iu the (tension bureau, receiv ing a salary sufficient for his compila ble subsistence aud was at. his work daily. They were associated together; most of them had beeu iu their places miller former administration, but thev did not then prefer their claims. They made them soon after the advent of tlie present administration. There was no reason under the existing rules that th eir cases should be made special or rushed through in advance of all oth ers. On the contrary, there was then, and had been for some vears. a printed rule iu full force "that no cases should be made special except in case of destitute, or when the applicant Was at tlie point of death, let these cases were all hurried through by your order, while hundreds of thousands of other applicants were awaiting through out the land the allowance for t ho first time of the bounty the government bad promised them. These other pension claimants were, ninny of them, support ed by iio such salaries as these particu lar men were receiving, aud the associa tion together of tlieso men. wherehv preference seems to have been se- mr be granted without ant- former consideration of f-ct or Urn lb... to have been ei'M these cases t will depend solelv upon a single or fleer', disposition whether the .nrrrt of the government shall le "";e,,t ' its maintenance or not lher ' more than enough of these applications already on file and increasing daily t exhaust the surplus of wlucUso m ch bal.eeu Mid iu connection with this matter, aud 1 am informed that applica tion for reralings are greatly on ' increase, and now reach the amount of seven to eight thousand a week. this cured, and the subsequent allowances obtained is iu itself a faot that shows that their purport! was to impose upon tho commissioner. A further fact in each case is that tho iucrcasoVas al lowed prior to tho surgeon's certificate in the pending claim, and that the sums allowed aggregate over $18,000. "Neither yon nor I can afford to act upon personal considerations in a matter of this magnitude. We arc each bound by the law in rill things and it is our duly to take tho law as we find it. Wo are to fully exercise that power given to cither of ns and to abstain from its abuse to any degree whatever." The secretary refers to the duties of the hoard of review and says it is on es tablished ami well known rule that the department will uniformly refuse to disturb an adjudication of claims bv a former administration, except upon the most conclusive evidence that error has been committed. "When a question as to the propriety of a given rating is one of judgment merely, depending upon tho weight of evidence, the de partment will not allow the opinion of to-day to overturn tho opin ion of yesterday; and, further more, old cases will not bo re opened, reconsidered nor readjusted, except npon tho presentation of new and material evidence tending to show the existence of a palpable error or ruis- laKe. mo department does not enter tain the least objection to the increase of a pension, the increase to commence nuder the pending claim as the law di rects and upon evidence to support it." The secretary then reviews at con sulerablo length the cases of three of tho pension office employes whose pen sions wero rorated, and concludes that tlie reraling was illegal and unwi.r ranted. "I will not go into the other cases," says the secretary, "ibey are before yon. I have said enough, J think, to show that, the secretary may well call a halt until theso cases can be more csre- lully examined. I notice, yon say in your letter that you have such regard for your official and persona I reputation that yon will not permit these coses to remain its they are, lint will order each claimant for medical examination before men whose word iiikui medical point cannot bo challenged. The question is not what may later be found out about these men. The question In, what should have been done upon their rec ord as it stood when judgment was ren dered, it may lie that this govt-rnnieut is strong aud treat and has at its eom- maud a Mtiridna that no other nation orer had, but If auras of to tl4 aaowate above BOTH CABLES BROKE mi roi'r'"t""' 1:1 II- avarfal cl- ' rlnuall Ks- J.I.. ... M.-rM.-J-rl . ,k lunilaillTnWN -Aid Brtus ' ,ur adrrrra Itakuia Naarly fin MMi.4rd -mou-a on in HHa. WasnisoTOS, Oct. 20. -The annual report for the fiscal year 1SS8 8'J of the comuiisioiierof mions shoos there were at the close of the year 4S9.7U4 lnsiouers. There were added lo the rolls during the year named Ol.S'il new IH-nsionerH, 1,704 were restored to the rolls and JC.107 dropped from the rolls for various causes. The amount paid for pensions during the year waS$-8,-27.r,lU. Tho amount paid as fees to at torneys was $l,oG3,5x;. Since 1SC1 there has beeu filed 1,24?, 148 iciisiou claims, of which 7f"J,l-,l have been allowed, the amount disburs ed ou account of pensions since 1SC1 be ing 81,05-',213.413. During the past fiscal year 14,2i8 cer tificate were issued, 01,921 being origi nals. At the close of the year there were pending unallowed 470,000 claims of all The commissioner recommend that Congress Im nsl.ed t.) iiuieiid ( he net of June (i, IS74, so as to extend the benefit of all pension laws lo all pensioners whose pensions have been granted by special acts subsequent to the fc'ild date, mid that pensions be granted the widows of soldiers who died, from causes originating iu the service, nrior to lhUl during tune of peace. He further recommends that the net of March 3, 1877, be amended to grant leiisioii8 to those who having partici pated iu Ilia rebellion subsequently en listed iu the army or navy of the United fctites and weie disabled therein. The commissioner lecommends new legislation to rectify Hie inequalities in the rating, and cites instances to show tho unfairness iu the rates now provided bylaw. He thinks this Statute should be amended so as to permit a rate of $72 per month to be proportionately di vided for disabilities shown to be inci dent to the service and the line of duly. Tho injustice and unfairness caused o.V the law of dune 10, 18X0, limiting tho ht of pensioners to receive $72 per month to those who were receiving $'i0 per mouth at tho date of the law, should bo corrected." No provision is made for gra.iiug this rato for persons totally helpless ou that date, but lint receiving $i0 at the limn, and noun for those who have become totally helpless Since that date. The commissioner proposes to pen sion nil soldiers who were disabled. On this point hu says: As tho war period recedes trom ns and age and its attendant infirmities afflict the veterans, it is a serious ques tion whether the government does him justice in limiting the application of the pension laws to those disabilities only which were, contracted in the service. I earnestly recommend that a pension be granted to every honorably dis charged soldier and sailor who is now, or who may hereafter become disabled, and without regard to whether such dis ability is chargeable to the service of the United States or has been contracted since discharged therefrom." Tho commissioner calls attention to what he believes to he the manifestly insufficient stun per month) granted by the act of 1800 to widows for the care and support of minor chihlreu under sixteen years of age l lie commission also favors a pension for army nui-Mes, and makes uu earnest plea iu their behalf. Liquor Impurtullfiii ! Inwa. Des Moines, Ia., Oct. 20. The Iowa supremo court passed upon tho inter state commerce phase of the Iowa pro- nhitory law, and if tho decision is sustained by tho United States supreme court it will have a far reaching effect UKm the importation of liquors in Iowa. Upon a warrant issued before a jus tice, six jugs of whisky wero seized in tho Hock Island freight hoitso and or- rcd condemned. It was billed to Con Creeden, a former saloon keeper, and iu the appeal from the lower court tho road was made a party. .Judge Beck, one of the most inteuso prohibi tionists in the state, prepared the opin ion, which lioiits that the act of inter state, commerce ceases when tho good are lauded at their destination ami that the ruling of the federal court iu the cose ot JJowman vs. the Chicago aud Northwestern railway does not protect them until the charges are paid and de livered to the consignee, lho court holds that commerce is not the use of articles of traffic. When the United States constitution conferred upon congress the power to regulate commerce between thestat.es, it wus not intended that provisions should bo minlo by congress to effect tho use of the subjects of commerce. It surely was not tho intention that laws should lio enacted allcctiiig tho tastes. habits and w ants of the eople, so as Jo increase the demand for articles of traffic. Norcould it have been intended that governments of tho states estab lished bv the People should ha of Hie power to repress the use of such articles of commerco as tlie state deter mines are detrimental to the morals, health, peace and prosperity of the Peo ple. A carrier is a servant of commerce and is protected under constitutional provision for tho rocu atiou nf mm nictce. In the discharge of all the du ties of a carrier recognized by law, tho regulations of commerce reach him while he is in the discharge of duties pertaining to commerce. When be ceases I o be a carrier ho is beyond the protection provided by the regulations ior commerco. J I lie ceases to be carrier ami becomes a warehouseman ne cannot no protected as a Carrier. mere was no dissent from this opinion A F'arlal Mi4a. CiunNSATl. Oct. 16. A rope attached toacsrou n inclined railroad here, broke yesterday, just as the car reached the top, and it went crashing down and ran into the passenger station and office below. The accident occurred U-tween 12 mid 1 o'clock, on the Mount Auburn inclined pluue, which lies at lho head of .Main street and reached lo a height of about three hundred feet, iu a space of per haps two thousand feet Tho cats, two iu number, i.re .Ir iwu up by two steel wiie cables that aie wound iiou a drum at the top of tho hdl by an engine lo cuted there. Nine passengers hml en tered tho car at the foot of the plane, and a number were in the oth r car at tho lop. '1 he passage of the ascending car was all right until it reached tho top, when tho engineer found the ma chinery would not respond, ami that he could not stop the engine. As the en gine continued, all its force was expend ed on Ihecabhs and they snapped like Hire ol. i lieu the car, with the nine passen gers locked WHIiiu. began It frightful descent. Tim crash at tho foot of tUci plane was frightful. A cloud of dust arose that hid tho wreck from view for a moment. When it litied, it was found that the car n as mashed to splinters and scattered far and wide. Ihc truck, lloor and seats of llnicar formed w shapeless wreck, mingled with the bleeding and mangled Podies ol me nine passengers. Two were taken out dead-ouo a mid dle-aged huly. recognized as .Mr. Ives, the other u girl of twenty. Mi-s Lillian Oskiimp, daughter of Henry Oskatnp. Another, Mr. N. Kin i-s, a teacher, died soon afterwards 1 ive others were in jured, pel haps fatally, and one mall es- aped with but slight lliiury. .Mnlge William Dickinson, olio of the injured. seventy veais of age, ami it is uot thought he will survive the shock. Jt is known there wero eight persons in the wrecked car. The following is the correct list of tho dead: fudge William B. Dickson. Michael Kneiss. Mis. Caleb lve. Mrs. Mary (1. Errelt. Joseph McFadden, Sr. Tho wounded are: Mrs. Agnes Hoslelter, Miss Lillian Oskamp, Joseph McFadden, dr. J. (.'Sides the occupants of the car sev eral persons standing on Mulberry street were badly hurt. Oeorgo Miller is beliuved to bo fatally injured. He is still unconscious. J(l Ji net to. aged ourteeii, is badly cut about the legs by Hying fragments. mother st her home, bnt refJ whern her home was. lhe be held to-morrow. No cluJ the apprehension of the i the deed baa been found, (merging from the bouse. reetly across the pontoou bri cily. Altnougb Uie city nui mighty aearchea no trace derer has been found. la Aclaal Wlairraf Bt. Pack Minn., October Trow, formerly a member of soti legislature, but now a Miner county. South Dakotj nt the state capitol solicitiu i Dakota suflerers. irow lei of desolation and want in adjoining counties, and sal cully that unless aid is gi. families must inevitably fr. . before next spring. Thecr. and a jKrtion of Kingsbm born counties wero a coni on account of drouth. An AuIismuhI Avoided. Pkovidkncb, It J., October lo.-Tlie plan of et tension for the Wanrcgan mills aud E. P. Taft, proposed by the creditors' committee, has been screed to by a sufBeient majority of creditors to insure its success and the mills ill mouer i eoutinne rnunlug, thus avoiding au .niral llarirari lirad. NoimiKTowK. l'a., October !!. (len- ral John 1'. Hartraiift died nt his resi dence iu this placu eslerday morning. fJohn 1'redric llnrlraiift was born in Montgomery county, reiinsvlvaiiia. December Hi. 18.1U. At lhe outbreak of the civil war ho was a colonel of mililju and one of (he fust lo lender his ser vices to tin- government. JI" was coin- missioned colonel .liilv 1m;. mid led lis regiment in the utiack on lioaiioko island. 1'ebrinirv 7. and in the battle near Newborn, N. C, .March IS. 18111. In temporary command of a brigade covering the rear of Pope's retreating nrmv, lie was engaged in the second batile of liuil Bun and Chaiitilly and iu the Maryland campaign at South Mountain aud Alitlelam. ill which latter battle lie. led his regiment in the luil liimt charge which carried tho bridge after repeated unsuccessful attempt bv superior uuiiibm. hi the Richmond campaign of 1804 ho commanded a brigade in the buttles of the Wihh rne s and Spotsylvania. He was commis sioned brigadier general May 12, 1804, and engaged in nil lhe army movements up to and at 1 elersbiirg, and whb breveted major-general for conspicuous gallantry in lecapturing Fort SteMd- man, March 2.r. 18. In October. 18IL1 ho was elected auditor-general of I'eitii svlvama ami re-elected in Jn October, 1872, he was elected governor An lows Jack ih ltlirr. Siorx City, Ia., October 18. The town of Coviuglon, Neb., just opposito this city, w hich has been the home of all the thieves and prostitutes that wre driven out of Sioux City, has added an other crime lo its record. Sunday night Ida Kildare, au inmato of Nell John son's notorious resort, was horribly beaten by a visitor to tho house, receiv ing six wounds, from which she died yesterday morning. Tho fads in tho case ns learned by n visit lo Covington uiu unit uu viie uigut in question a stranger of prepossessing appearance. having the air of a merchant, went to tho .lohusoii place and becoming appar ently struck on tho Kildare girl, allowed himself to be led away by tho wiles of the siren and wont to her room. A short timo after the man came down ami went out, but as lhe girl did not appear au investigation followed which lesulled in finding the woman lying iu a pool of Diooil unconscious. Jtjood was gtis hnig from a ghastly wound on the temoln line Her IhmIv was covered with cula more or less severe Upon lieing nrongiii uac.K to consciousness the vic tim told hor story. Sim fallen asleep and while sleeping the au hud Donnd her blind and foot. Jfist as he Had lior securely bound alio Awakened ami attempted an outcry link the stran ger grasped bar by u,e iiroal, then pulling a revolver from Ais pocket, struck her over the head Mi til she be came unconscious. Roblry was tho aim of the man, as lie took)' 1 1 the money in the room, about $7, a dU walch and chain and jewelry, and ef'ii slipped the riugs from the Kihhu girl's hand Medical aid was nt oiicraiimnioiipd but the victim was so wnalfrnm the loss of loou mat ens conm urn revive and died Mils moriiluir. Tho rfri is n well known """i muom uowiKiun resul t n 'y ""out T years of aue. ,) Kildare waa not borenl nam. imte-... wuen flying al.e r-ud lo dttnluo U riiaior raanaaraou a rt-td Washington, October t the Omaha Bee J .Noble says that Jus iu the re-rated pension cas Mandeisou may be reganle a dent iu a number of other s Senator Mauderson, how pied a somewhat different i the majority of peusioueis lated. His case was considJ increased pension allowed I any application ou his part, any knowledge that such done until ho had received from the commissioner o showing that his pension i I creased. As a pension ol remarked to-day: One dil tweeii Senator Mandeisou ail of the re rated pensioners is returned tho money and th Hot." Jt is Said that most who have been re-rated ma.ll cation for it, which he did n J'here are about thirty of ti ol tlie pension omen win have been ro-raled. In som mis re-rating was dune iipoi plication aud III oilier cases without the knowledge of sioiier. Homo of these lowed by Commissioner 1 they were on appeal before t.iry ot tlie interior. ilie present acting cotnl lliriim Smith, wasre raled. derstood that he iniulu an api that ellect and In that pai legal requirements were coni there are others in tho pensi wen ns outside wnose peusiuii rated and who received air irnm so.isKi to vu.nuu, ami if ruling in the Mauderson -:i characterized as being illegal. The question now arises I tent, if any, will Senator M: example bo followed by thosi cupy substantially lhe same it IS thotiglit that the new sinner of pensions will lmvr tion to consoler among the if which ho will be called upon I The commissioner , has the i cover nil money illegally pin count of pensions, and in c the arrearages have alieady ponded tho government can all future payments. So far been UO attempt to recover a money w hich has been paid ilj pensioners. Jt in said to be of the secretary of the intei forco as far as practicable the of lhe money, and that activr w ill be adopted as soon as sioiier of pensioners lias lioeu n Some of the employes of tl ollico whose pensions w ere re left the government service su was taken lit their cases. 1 majority areslill iu govei nmei ami of course it will be coin easy to compel a payment. thev have not soent lliemonei an event the government c upon their salaries as well as slous. . l ira IT I heir lt. ...al Wakiiinoton, Oct. 19. Ml" department has been roUUyL that the southern Uln India'--from their reservation in "! Coloroado and oio wantonly k numbers of deer for their h contrary to the hiwsof lhe stale, ous trouble is feared. Iiah Km tholomow has been instriic that the del! edlll Ions are 1IM1 stopped; that the Indians c hunting to tho territory have a right to go for that pm to kill no gaum not nei-cssar) port their needs. ;i on i; iw 4 6; 1 j: 0 I on l ira; mmvH asi rinii'i " n.fnrl,)t ti( Sr Ytti ti.t'i OMAHA. WllKAT-No. i I 'A o.ni'.l Jt I ! v tr o . Ittit-riir I 'rf.,1 ififtl'V ... 1' 0........f- .Iri.n.-f 1 '1 I i r.iv j j . V.nun Cilmb 1 . ( nn kess Hpriui: I.KMOss f'lioire, per hux Oiunuks l'er box Onions Per Im I1kns Nuvi... Wool. t ine. r Is 1'otjitio.s New Ilr-per ton 4 II. .Vis '' Ilou.-Miiail parkiiei lloua liviivv waiftlil ' '" iiv...i-i..:i....ii.. 4 00 MUV Ulli's. WineT-No. 3 r.l - i " "...liS 1,11 H.AUiJ. Whic&t l'er bnaiial - Cons lr liiiniial tUra f r IiiisihI foHC...... - i.ASD .- Hoot Packing kaniiiiia;. Crri. dioesars fen tear NmMvimi el. j.ubia. Wucit No. 3 rad caa....- Cohn Par buahel - On d'r busnal Hons Mixed packuif CAi-fi.it r-'aadara a! A .SB Art ;i IV W'utfAT Pur buahal........M (t li.M-Parhuahal. -:l Oat Par buahal......... l1 mi k fttiiraarm AlK.lsr. J tSO VI ru.. linnrl ftl fHrtlCA . 4 10 BIOOX CIT', Cini.c MiAu-karaAtTaariara.l lift 31 is Jo 0 G II" 4 0 1 7S :ioii 77 3.H IS 3 7 1 7 -t i correct 'Mlsed 3 8 . ' -"K J- V.l',ss . '.f'" ' ' ,-' ",4 ' ' i r , ' - M bad