The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, September 01, 1892, Image 2

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    THE SIOUX COUNTY JOURNAL
L. . KIMMOXi, ProprteaM.
HARBISON, - - NEBRASKA
This seems to be the year for the
revival of the fiat money craze. It seams
to come about as often as the fifteen
year locusts, and to stay about as long.
Some of the most rectkase or densely
ignorant of the independent speaker
are re-vamping the old greenback argu
ments with as maeh gusto and energy
as though they were new and original.
They say money is simply a decree
(Bat) of the government Admitting
this to be true, the government decreed
long ago that a dollar should be 25.8
grains of gold, nine-tenths ibe, or 412 5
grains of silver, nine-tenths fine. This
Is the money of the land, always has
been and always must be. Bank notes
individual notes and government notes
represent the amount of money stated
on their face, as tang as they are good
but they are not money. The folly of
attempting tft Msasora values with
something that hits no value basso
often been demonstrated that every
man of ordinary judgment fully under
stands it. Money is the measure of all
values. Can yon measute iength or
distance with something that has no
ength? There mast be a basis of
Values as well as ei weights and meas
ures, and in the very beginning these
must be fixed by the government, and
they were fixed by the government of
the United States as soon as it was es
tablished. Suppose the theory of the
tiat money advocates had been fol
lowed, And the government had never
stated what the value of a dollar should
be, but had taken pieces of paper and
declared them dollars, how would you
know what a dollar was worth? You
could not tell whether to take ene orja
thousand of them for a cow or an acre
of land. They might intend that a
dollar should be- equal to an English
penny, or that it 6hould be equal to five
hundred pounds sterling, or any other
amaunt No man could tell what, and
Df course values could not be meas
ured by it Would any farmer be will
ing to exchange his crop of wheat for
auch pieces of paper? He might think
one of them was worth as much as a
load ef wheat, but when he went to
buy a sack of Hour the grocer might
happen to think that theflour was worth
a hundred of them. It is easy to see
the necessity of having the Value of
money established, and it must be
measured by something that has in
trinsic value. The nations of the' world
have selected gold, and the United'
States gold and silver. Iron or lead or
wheat or corn might have been Used.
Instead of saying "a dollar shall consist
of 25.8 grains of gold nine-tenths fine,
or 412.5 grains of silver nine-tenths
fine," congress might ha7e said ua
dollar shall consist of fifty pounds of
iron, or twelve pounds of lead, or a
bushel of wheat, or three bushels of
corn." But a value had te be fixed,
and it had to be based on something of
. value.
rinc DyaamH.
PrrTSBUEG, Pa., Aug. 85 A car
.oaded with steel ingots, eonsigned te
the Carnegie firm at the Thirty-third
itrtet works, was blown up with
iynamite or some other niga explosive
en a aide track of the AHehT Valley
railway at Thirty-fourttt stceet The
body of the car was badly shattered
and the coutents scattered a1
dieections. So far as caa be ascer
tained no one wag injured. A reserve
force of police was summoned and
qtiiikly surrounded the place, but
bo one was captured and no clue to
the perpetrators was found.
Nearly Sufloealad.
New Turk, Aug. 25. Six men em
ployed by the department of public
works were nearly sufrocKieu yesterday
morning by gas while working in the
new sewer along the J-.ast river
between Twenty-third and Twenty
fourth streets. They were all taken in
an unconscious condition to IWUevue
hospital, where tkree of tliehi remained
in a crttcal condition. The remaining
three areraDidlv recoverinc. and one at
least wtil bo able to leave the hospital
Independent agitators would do well
.o suspend their everlasting howling
about the railroads until they can State
iorhe prescribed cause of general com
plaint Such cause may exist, but if
it does they fail to mention it Their
:hief and only complaint is that Jay
Gould and Vanderbilt and Other men
who own large blocks of railroad stocks
are richer than they are. Suck talk is
nonsense, pure and unadulterated.
How muc of Jay Gould's money did he
make out of railroad tariffs? The divi
dends on his stocks, would net amount
jo his fortune in two hundred yeart.
He has male his money trading buying
and selling. A man who buys a horse
:heap, and fits him up and Bells him at
a high price does not make his money
out of tbe horses' work. He may get
the horse very cheap and cbeetsniue
fellow like blazes when he sells him, but
the fact that be gets ridb out ot such
transactions dees not prove that livery
hire is too high. If independent speak
rs would hit upjn some new mare's
aeeta this year it would be a great re
let to the public. ,
There never was so good a system of
banking devised ae the national banking
lyetem of this country. It is the result
f wise, mcttire and patriotic deliber
itioo, and has stood the teat for thirty
fears. The hair brained fellows who
my otherwise attack tbe wisdom of
Salmon P. Chase, Thaddeue Stevens and
Abraham Lincoln. There never was a
poorer or more disaateroue banking
lyetem than the wild ?at state banks
which proceeded the preseut system.
The South however never has been
reconciled to the national banks, and
the statesmen of that section have
always sighed for a return to the state
banks. In obedience to the prejudices
of that pniseant wing of their party,
the democrats in their national plat
form have declared in favor of a return
to state banks.
There is no kind of doubt that Tern
Majors will strengthen the republican
ticket He is one of the few men in
Nebraska who has no enemies and lots
at warm friends.
SOMETniNB has made Oram Cleve
land groggy. It may be the motion of
tbe old democratic ship as ft seals and
tumbles In an effervescent sea.
' Cadt and Tom Cook will lead the
republicans to victory and Cook the
ssostiCfoii toatv tfsgaat stsi brown.
Strike Adjusted.
JtocnESTEit. N. Y.. Aug. 23.
Twentytwo switchmen on the Central
at Last Rochester struck at 4 o'clock
yesterday, but the trouble was of slnrt
duration. The men do set belong to
the union and the strike wa uot so
much sympathy with tlie liuffaie men
as it was because the men here had a
slicht Grievance, in that thsy diU not
get extra pay for Sniiday work, as was
the custom in Iinflalo. Assistant
Superintendent (ionld went to the
yards and talked with the men, adjust
ing th grievance. The men t once
returned to work.
Four Men Murdered
Dex tox, Tex., Aug. 25. Conductor
Uearos Of the Missouri, Kansas &
Texa?, brought information to this city
to the- Affect that a hunting party
composed of four young men, had been
found murdered on the banks ef Caney
creek in the Indian territory, Papers
fonnd eta one of the men indicated that
hjs nave vas Cherrie and that he
traveled for the H'illima'tie Thread
Icompahy of Connecticut There is
nothing to tell who committed lite
deed, but-the purpose evidently was
robbery, as all of their valaa'bles were
missing
Couldn't Stand the Strain;
Nawat'BOH, N. Y. Aug. 25.Ge.orge
Palfner, a sergeant in the Fifth
Separate company, h at his home in
this city, having been brought 1 ere
yesterday by Corporal WTiittmen,
Palfner's mind gave way under the
hardships nnd privation experienced
at Buffalo during the first few days.
His breakbown occurrd Monday
morning.
Lost Hie Leg.
Norfokk, Neb., Aug. 25.-4 framp
giving the name of James C. Uolinoii
of Yacomii, Wash., was rna wer by the
Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Valley
freight going west, this morning
while attempting to get off tie train'
lie was thrown under the ca, the
wheels passing over tire leg. After
some delay in securing medieal attend
ance, owing to a question of where tlie
pay was to come from, the man was
taken to a hotel and his leg amputated
by Dr. Macomber.
. End or the Strike.
Bufealo, N. Y., Aug. 26. A fojii
hour conference was held between
Grand Master Sweeney, Grand Master
Williuson, Grand Master Sirpgent and
Grand Chief Clark. After leaving the
conference Grand Master Sweeney and
Local Master Moriarity, ef the switch
men, called together the cocirr.tlte
that has been conducting Jlie strike
and at 11 o'clock it was reported a
statement would soon he ready. As
early as half past ten there was a
camp of newspaper men -on ths fourth,
floor Of the Geneso hotel before the
door of room 163, the quarters that
liave been the home of tlie switchmen's
chief during his stay in Buffalo. Short
ly before II o'clock the doer was
opened and the waiting throng en
tered. The statement of the end ol
the strike, made verbally by the grand
master, was. in substance as follows:
"Tbe duly authorized committee
bare declared tbestrike off at midnight
and 1 have Sanctioned their dicision.
l ive hundred and fifteen switchmen
cannot cope with twelve big railway
corporations and 8,000 militia and suc
ceed. We have made a strong fight
Mid lost" .
tfreurh Troop l Dahontay.
Pa Rts), Aug. 25. A dispatch, says
a force of 1,800 French troops entered
Dahoroeyan territory on August I? and
bombarded the town of Vakona en
oute. tUPlnoatoLaad.
"oktTowhwnd, Wash., Anj. 25,
The famous smuggling schooner
Hazryeon" baa tailed from Victoria
lib tweaty-five hundred fcKtnds ef
plum sd sixty Chine, (bduttav
wan issued 'noUfyisg tH revenue
rffloers en the Pacific coast to b on
the ales to intercept the vassal, the
:rewis supplied with firearma. Tbe
rapposed destination of the vessel is
ibe Oregon or California eoaet The
ffieers fcave experienced a toed deal
rf troebke frssa tbe law&aess ef
his schooner.
A Blow to the Tory-
Loxdox, Aug. 2H. The election ol
Mr. Morley in New -astle is a sore dis
appointment to the tones, and also to
many of the radicals, for both had
hoped, by defeating Morley, to put
Irish home rule iut- the background.
Ralli is as strong a man as could have
teu nominated ag nst Morley and he
made an earnest . uvass aud a hard
battle. On the other hand the Irish vot
ers of Newcastle, urged on by the Irish
leaiers in parhanieut devoted them
selves with a zeal thy had not before
exhibited to securing Mr. Morley 's re.
election. Nearly every Irish national
ist in Newcastle made himself a ecni
milteeofoue to obtain votes for Mr.
Gladstone's man. There is hardly a
doubt that but for these efforts Mr.
Morley would have bee ti defeated, Mr
Morley owes his reflection to Irish
votes and Irish support, and he will
not be likely to forget this fact in hie
uflke of Irish ehlei secretary.
There is general satisfaction among
the Irish nationalists with Mr. Glad
stone's home role program n placed
before the public this wek. Hie na
tionalists had been apprehensive that
Mr. Gladstone wou;d re fstTor giving
the Irish parliament ci ntrot of the con.
stabulary and of the judiciary. On
this point they are now completely re
;s;ured. With the constabulary at
their co.nmand the members of a home
rule administration would be in a. posi
tion to c Jin e respect for the author
ity and laws of aH lrih parliament
The Irish constabulary is in splendid
condition and undar splendid discipline
and just as ready to serve a home rule
government as any ether ns lontr as the
authority that asks for obedienca U a
lawful authority. The force is like a
machine and would be more effective
than militia for the suppression of in
surrection or disorder.
It is not likely that it would be seri
ously interfered with by a home rule
department, except that some of the
bead officers, who have gone outside
the line of duty to make tliemseDres
obnoxious to the nationalists and the
nationalist cause, would be, probably,
disposed with as soon as possible. The
rank and tlie file are believed to be at
heart friendly to t) ir country and its
cause, while eomp'e ely loyal to the ex
isting rules. The constabulary is re
cruited in Ireland and its members are
fine s. o :imens, as a rule, of Irish
physique.
KU-atnerg Inxpreted.
New Yohk, August 2t. The La
K:iirain arrived from Havre yesterday.
.She was subjected to a rigid inspection
but no indication of cholera infection
was found.' She had no sicknejs
aboard during the entire voyage. The
ve s 1 was allowed to proceed to her
pit r. The steadier Gellert of the Ham
burg American line has arrived below
from Hamburg. The quarantine
officers are putting her throogh a
severe inspection, jno. sicKness was
discovered aboard the Geliert. Man
ager Boas of the Royal Netherlands
line stated yesterday that all steerage
passage between New York and Ham
burg on their 'line had ceased. Out
going trans-Atlantic seamships
carried very small pas? eager lists, which
was due to tire prevalence of the
Cholera in Europe. So thoroughly have
the people become frightened that a
number cancelled passage secured for
yesterday.
K. of l" rireuk tamp,
Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 25. The
Uniform Hank, Knights of lythia
broke camp yesterday, and just before
the final dispersing the divisions that
competed for prices were drawn up on
the parade ground and the judges an
nounced their divisions and General
Caj nahan distributed the prizes as fob
lows: First prize, $1,500, Mystic Qivis
io i No, 12, Girard, Kan., Captain M.
W. Kussell; second prize, $1,200, fjah x;
division No. 43, Pittsburg, Kat., Cap.
tain R. E. L. Van MMnkle; third prize,
$l,0n0, Erie division No. lfl, Erie, Kas.,
Captain C. G. Fletcher; seventh prize,
1400, John Uarr Glenn division No. 10
Eau Clair. VVis.j Captain John Beisang;
ninth prize 8200 Tre Haute division
No. 3, Terre Haute, Ind., Captain A.
D. Duddleston. Numerous other prizes
were also awarded, after which the di
visions remained in line until the re
treat was sounded and the flag at the
headquarters ran down, signifying the
conclusion of the seventeenth biennial
encampment.
Ncwpper Plant nurned.
AcousTA, Ga., Aug. 29. A destruc
tive fire which broke out here early vev
terday morning totally destroyed tl
Augusta Chronicle office and lve biisi
oess houses. The total loss is $400,000.
The entire morning edition of the
Chronicle was worked off while the
uuuuing was in names. The files of
mc pnper iruui inuu 10 a aie and valu
able books were saved. The insurance
ts about 30J,0C0. ufc
Trowe Fatal.
Hamburg, Aug. 29-The numbei
of new cases of cholera reported in
wiiseny yesieraay is 239 and 11w
numoep or deaths 117. There have
Men ftva deaths from cholera at the
suburb of Hammergeton. The weather
.S cooler, the thermometer having
awn tu i uegrees centigrade
Official statistics show that up to yes
terday there were 1,028 cases of cholera
tnd 368 deaths lrom the disease. At
Altoona between Tuesday and Friday
there e slxtyfour eases and twenty,
two- deaths -
rv ;ri. fiholsra Stasia
-v J .l... Tiir
fi:ousdin harope, aiiuau.. a
Westward.
Da la luuaa;
CoLlnscs, Neb., Aug. 2C.-Laa
Tuesday afternoon a young man aboui
Oainins years old, ot complexion anc
ttaiDlDg, ' . flVBr from tht
Jllgtil uuuu, K"1
ARRIVAL OF THE PLAGUE IK ENGLAND
. i.. Il.vre. ure
It W ...
MtMl.tiOeeo tU-'
aud la Spreading.
(.utiuo
. .i .. .a anil n.'HL I II LI1C
ifBtt ai mis "
louse of I. W. Alenanderon Uie out
ikirts of town and asked for the loan
ofagmi. When asked what use he
.d suited to make of it he sam ue
, to kill himself. The lady of the house
iheiig alone, she shut up the house aud
'jam down and informed me poiico
.Asiatic . voune ua was taken to bt
The FrjUu.is- hospital, fctf owing to his per-
ne
r .v- 2T.-The
-v , l,a arrived in Eughmd
. .,,n,n.n from Hamburg, has i . t!rort, , uin a weapon
Sieauir. .v . . . . i . . i.ii J
iJlinvesend, unugins; sr.c.-. , tt;ig laler tateti t ue coumj
!ague. Two women , i;l6 u u coniif fsvre since, lie
.1,0 .....Mi.r have diwirom me cu us t0 u ana ectuinues w MVmy
J . .. m....m in . . f
ill d annllter named J-.nniia .." u il)lue way to creroj "'
'lli Tlie news has caused great ue Ilian constantly anying:
1(11 1-' " 'r" , .. ..
entered
r:iie tf tk
constei nation at
meut in lxdidoii
Cravestud and exctte-
JI wouldn't have killed him if I could
jave heliK-d It. but I could not, I knew
I'arn-The latest regarding cholera ! was my i)rother, but I could not
it i'lam is that trtenty-ei!.t cases an-1 ,je, Kjllil him- ut they can't lynch
peuiedou THursday, aim m,..
were tvn iiis from cholera that day.
llaiiburg-Tfce cholera continues to
fru!ence. i:ight liuuurea
nM i-ause 1 am not a citizeu of the
t'nited States."
From the pajwrs found on him his
grow IB uuieiitc. (, ; -mine is suppuMru iu lt- ,
VrttT reported yesieruav, iu.u.i ; Ulj ,t appears thai ne aiso came imv
- - U'..n
rom i:oiK firing, n jo.
c;ises i
the rtetlw having beiu seized out t
few iiwura before they perished. lhe
total hnmlJfr of deaths was 110. The
atithorities are doing everything possi
ble to stiry the spread of the disease.
The bathing station and public markets
have bwn closed, the school shut up.
nnd All ptUlt ineetiiic, halls, dances
and gatherings, whether for business
oramunnMit,have been prohibited.
Koiriitfherg-The government has or
dered tlie suspension of all Ir idic on
the Russian frontier, except at Mydtku--,
..mi lrAlken. A multitude of in-
tending emigrants have been stojiped (
at nolotg on the frontisr and driven
i .. u p.0i-. In Die two stations nan
fatlier is supposed to live on the
Isle of Man. The board of insanity
"xamined him esterday and fouud
litu.ray, and lie will be taken to the
isyluui at Norfolk.
The opinio! of those who have talked
nost wnh the yunt'K ln:m is that ho has
tilled some fdie, jirohnbly a brother,
ind that brooding over this has caused
lis iiiind to give way.
Hurrllfjr "1 UKii-l .
liru a i.o. N. V.. Aug. 2'i. At about
II o'clock, yetfrd:iy morning a crowd
)f swifclitnen snrruunded Master Work
weedey, demanding that he tie-
l.i... .1 ...... .. V...i. 'mb Inl'lilxi
nam"d tracers and baggage undergo, :ireu..M.. ho.. " .
ri,idinictioii an! disinfection. v Words ensued and -witch.nan tjuiiin
Inden-1 he stetmer Laura, which rf Hie Nickel Mate yards struck
.. o,i. I ri.n.liHcris vestprdav fii Uueeneya ferocious blow, knocking
iiambnrg, had two arsons sj.-k on
board, suspeeted of cholera. The health
'oiKcersat Lyim refused to allow the
steamer to entrr port and compelled it
to put bJck to sea.
London-The North (iernian Lloyd
steamship Itne has given notice that no
(.migrants from Russia will be carried
in the steerage.
St Petersburg Yesterday, according
to the official returns, there were i;,:i22
ue cases of chph i, ag.iinst ii.iiflO on
Wednesday. Yesterday there were
2.IT7 deaths reported, against 2,Ti:i for
W incsday. In I'etersbiu-g there
were reported yesterday luii new casej
aud twejity-four deaths.
ItlKratHude Avangeri.
CAMDKK, N. Aug. 2.. .laui'l
It. Morton, colored, was handed this'
morning at 10:30 o'clock. Tlie crime
for which Morton this monii ig paid
the penalty was tlie murder on May 1)
Df Lydia Ann Wyatt, a 7li year-old
colored woman who had separated from
her husband and who lived at Morton's
house. Mrs. Wyatt owned some property
whrch she 6ofd in May for SSOfj. Im
pressed with the interest which Mbrton
took in her affairs she made a will
leaving one-hilf her estate to him.
Three days later he attacked her with
a hejfvy rosewood cane, fiacluriug her
skull in a dozen places.
Powder Magazines liloirn Vp
Gaini5!V:j.w, Tex., Aug. 37-Three
powder magazines belonging one each
to the DO pout, Rand & McNally and
Hazard companies blew up here yes
terday afternoon. There were about
GOO kege of potfder in tlie magazines.
Lightning hnd been darting through
the skies nil fsrenoon, and at 1 o'clock
a bolt struck cue magazine, which
exploded, a once wiping the, two
others from the face of the earth
The conenssion wa terrilic, and every
house within a mile of the magazines
wag badly damaged, and in many of
them the Umatos were thrown on the
floor and seriously injured. Half a
dozen persons received dangerous
wounds from broken glass and falling
timbers. Thetolalloss will amount to
about 13,000
Eilira)Md lit a Coal I'll.
LoM)0, Aug. 27. An explosion,
which is feared may be attended by
enormoue loss of life, has occured at
Aberkenfvg, near JSrigemi, in ih
couuHf of Glamorgan, Wales. One
hundred and forty-one miners are en
trapped fn a coal pit, owing to an ex
plosion which shattered the galleries
by whi they could have made their
exit, and nothing is known as to their
fate. When the explosion took place
a volume of coal dust arose from the
mouih of the pit and this, along With
the rumbling noise, gave notice to
the inhabitants that something serious
hadoeciued. The scenes at the pit's
mouth were most distressing ,nd
effo.tiM au,.c, ril!l(iet0 reacath
entombed miner's mid ascertain tht
xtentof the calamity.
liin down. lUoed ilowed in a stream
rm Sweeney's nnse. (iiiiiii got his
eader's head aiiainst a t. ..-graph pole
ind punched Mid pounded him until
.oiled away. The men are greatly
xcited.
A visit to tlie various railroad offices
licited tlie information that the ruads
ill not take back the strikers to
hair old places in a body. All must
nake their application as new men,
ind be consideied in the same order as
ither applicants.
The troops have begun to move
lomeward. About I, ."Km will go now
mil the remainder in a few days.
Michael Lroderiik, a 17-year-old boy,
ersisted in throwing stones at the
wldiers of the Twenty second regiment
ind was severely and probably fatally
.hot in the abdomen.
Will .. AMr,a Campalg,
New YcttK, Aug 27.-Tl.e national
.v tlr,niniuee or the proplei
r..7 uomiiin uiat easUru lad
quanrre snan M opened lmniediai.i.
at Uoston. (iwrni Washburn has been
...rcvea 10 prwioe over the lieadquar.
icis. xire? rewived to put up a full
iiaie iv k, rn each of the states repra.
isentd,amry: MHne, New Hamo.
..... uvuuo i.,mIU Connecticut, New
York. New Jersey, Pennsylvania and
Maryland. An aggressive campaign In
I allrond H'rrrk.
(illEE.NVII.I.I pa., ytlg. L'tl.Yes
er.Jay morning iiridge Foreman
'isl'.er of the Pittshurg, llellango
Lake hlrif road, together with several
)er employes of the road, started on
u;iie2;Jto iiisj.mct the bridges along
he line that had been damaged by last
. 'piling's storm. Whiie crossing the
irtdge at Itixonhurg, the structure
ave way and the engine and men were
mrled to the bottom of n deep ravine
'oreinan 1'ieha.- was instHntly killed
iml Conductor lltifeniifer had both
egs crushed and c3.mot live. Others
tre reported dead or dying. A corps
if physicians have gone to the scene
A the i c jident on a special trnin.
Monliwl Btr Fallirr.
Fall Rivs.it, Sfswi.,' Aug. 20,-The
cond district oufltt room was filled
oeverllowirfg wh the case of Miss
l.ifeie A. TiOiMefi, charged with kilHng
ier father with n axe, was called,
vl isn liorden's face gave evidence of au
xtreme strain. She was handed to a
eat fcetwee her two legal advisers
md near a settee, on w h!eh her sister
as seated. The Uo women sat
'lho-.v to elbow, Miss J.lziie at her
lister's light Land. Not a word passed
tweeo them. Medical Ilxarniner
Jolan was the first witness axatntnel
liAMBuiiii, Aug 20.-One hundred
md sixty-nine bodies of cholera vie
imslieawhiiiirg buriiU in this city
o great is the terror caused by the
iboiera that it Is diflicult to get men for
be work of burying the dead, and
nany assistants of undertakers have
eserted their places of employment
iuslness is prostrate and shipping j8
4vmi,8 w utuer ports.
I allrd to Start.
PiTTMirim, pa., Aug. 2fi(m
ccount of the attempt made hy the
.-.,.B,v iiitoi coiu.iailT In mil
xnemy-ninin street milt i
liu.,iilln . '
'i"'"""" n non-union man n..
imployes in the bumrer denrtn..
130 in number, came out Immediateli
ifterward the official. ,. .
.t the mill had beer VmpeT-
Hult ITor Blander.
T AtTIUIri - If .
"-"- AUB. 2fi.A dam
age suit for Woo.ooo has been died by
Monnaci or Columbus, Ind
Mtainst P. II. Sweeney of Jeffersonvllle'
The papers, which were filed by Con-
" cooper, the plaintiri
attorney, allege certain slanderous
.,w isweeney I. accused ol
making concerning McCormlc two
fews ago. Sweeney and McCormick
were formerly partners In an extensive
contracting boaln. , Uie J
po wi out of the settlement of theaflaln
Delvidere has a"ack tLa
Pr.lU nmnl. 1 ...
uai ODiy oi
1 s poor ram.
Ths Rllntln..
,77" . orW'
llolatoin citiiena. A
rneJi.u. u. w. arbuajiMJ
hall at Almaaln.
Gram men with headuiriersiJ
I urn ufwrau) axi etevakics.
Blatee county la attemptiag to
ize a peraameot fair association.
Thirteen thrmbiDC ttacaic
been shipped to Usoken Bo i,
days.
Tbe new Beatrice post-oitie U
is to be built of eVme tastd tfJ
brick. '
The pontoon Bridge acr j,
eoeri at Dakota City True,!?,,
Btructed.
Ooly one teacher in tha k.
codoty institute eoold eorrB, J
The oew Baptiet ootlrg u
Island will open September Uj
eight instructors.
Methodist ladies of .SuperiwJ
aproes rruin rnencie m DearlyevJ
for a church fair.
The youngest enc qf Ayidrewd
near Sbickley, was killed iq ( J
vitb a riding plow.
nimn.M.;(i...i .
-inn time nut tri
building at the depot Un htij
farm products to patetngtrwJ
ThA allianrtA hnainuAA ....-.J
-DiMjcai
Aurora bar lost money, and D
must pay i'2"j a share to aj
''eficit.
he Waterloo ca no ir fiaorj J
converieu into a eeeu liouse ra
latest things In fanning mills J
valors.
Lamont Inlay of f'olatbiK
Leslie Lehman, a largtr'
drowning at oansideritlile mt
own life.
When B hard cltiztMi hf I'atia
Inn n I.A di lrAfl l.A iu,l. L.I
- --I ' ' "yiut
if be returned. He ey t beck J
egged out of town
MB(fi)o lsdlw have "csuffei
the new fac of carrying omi
nrme akimbo with the Luck of '.J
resting on the hip.
I .a mar, Chase county, it
strong effort to have the ri
tended to Lnmor instoaf of
imperial, ae plaooe'I. .
f leorge Carrick of Holdteg,
kcee badly dislocated and fraciiii
getticg it entangled iDtooriff
a threhhiug macrice,
Mie Msy North, datt (A
North of Oolumbup, whohabwn
log for the stage, hiweecuSSis.
ment with Elsie DoWelf,
An eeterpririog youngitet d
broke open a ix;x of itp'y
at the depot and sold tlie botllel M
firm that was about tcump tin
The days of the sod ck! let
Nebraska are nnmbereA Tl
son line caused the deotructioiols'
aod frame ones will repine to
II. .f ll.-man nnd f'jlt AkW
Alma BraM fj.l on. hm tber Viet
their shot nun niimle finl
onto the trigger. 'IhiTobbsrW
M t Nebraska cwsP
take the gold cuee go into tfc 1(
of SSrrting new imrtituts. Tbf
from purely t,hilpthnjpic bi
n ii.nntfht. ikal tliedelI
i
R)ffrentheio near Fremont, Wa
rn It i,t U Lite of v idiom
n Ti.A kenue ehowexierwf
J O " "
ot nfadneea.
A flock of prairie chitaM-M
I. I iruillll til""
r. uim w w
Atkinson. They flew up
ouggy, theoreea took frit
Qates was thrown out.
A twelve'
Camertm
1 - sO.l tu n fJiftltk
d, tiall county, isnwrn
leg.. Whjle ridios; a horn 'l
W. airalnat a barb irt teD'lJ
full oianeled 4he boy
.Li
A laie recruiv
1.,1 Prnotler coutlJ "
tn tears old end weighs" n-rj
t .kal ID
No wonder they weteu m
mrriirihilil nut in sesfep
r , ,
The "tkii. po'" eh; J
. 1 1. ;n or.
.. . .K.vn OU ?
, . l..1 ns or"-
ispeeo. uie i"""
iMiU .ndote fiog'
n. proiiiniu7 -
ilia naauuii . .
tr Kearney Ma
... . 1 tkiil. B a
only or we ru" .
Lions with Ravoooa ano
Elkborn township.
voUiWrWboods for .thji
of roads, the bonds have vJk
by thesuooeeeiui uiw --wi
ana the work mu oov -yard.
BagioeerJohnBeM,',fV
a man near doawweyt Wi
toco oi earn Iw
.j jl i i.i.i. furl'1 .
-nwanoHSlu"- .1"
v . ,t t.;,ta rf".
a handcar at Burchsrd
him ntlnl iJt
baao W.1U of WA
saveoHfinatod.MWJ
eithhsiiflyelnobee D
.. . .. (PkM vers "
STse atgai.
kslstala.