IHE OMAHA DAILY BEE : MONDAY , DECEMBER 12 188) ) The Omaha Bee. Published ( very morning , except Snndny , Th only Monday morning dally. TKUMS MY MAIL : One YeAr 810.00 I Three Monlhs.S3.00 Six Months. fi.OO | Ono . . 1.00 IKE WKKKLY BKB , published ov TiKiiMS TOST PAID. Ono Year. § 2.00 I ThrcoMonllw. . M Bis Month * . . . . 1.00 | Ono " . . VO COUUKSPONDKNOB All Comtmmt. actions reUtlriK to News nnd Kdltorialmnt- tern fhould be nddres ed to tlio KDITOli or THE Hi F. BUSINESS LKTTERS-AH Umlnwn Iicttew and RcinUtniiPM should bo ad dressed to TIIK OMAHA , 1'oiaiiiiiNO COM- FANT , OMAHA. DrnftH , Check * nnd Post- office Onlom to l > o tiiftdo pnynble to tlio order of tlio Company. QMAIA PUBLISHING 00 , , Frop'rs ' E , ROSE WATER , Editor. Edwin Dnvlii , Miumcor of City Circulation. John II. rierco h In Chatro of the Mall ClrcuAtlon of THK DAILY 13EE. I. 1) . Chamberlain correspondent nnd Bollcltor. GUITCAU'S latest inspiration lins forced him to overdo the insanity dodge. . OMAHA wants a frco commerce ho- fore she will bo ready for a Chamber of Commurco. IE the experts are to bo believed the stop from insanity to erimo in n Tory small one. INDIANA IIM nearly 15,000 school teachers "Hoosior illiteracy" will-soon become a thing of the past. about to l > o liifhtod by electricity. Insnrnnco rates may at once bo expected to advance. THK readjustment the country is most in favor of is a readjustment of the arrears of pensions swindle. . WYOMING complains that no industry - , try can live in the territory unless the 'Union ' Pacific is taken in us n special partner. THE special meeting of the Farmers Alliance will bo a business meeting. The producers of this state will votu as they talk. SKNATOK VEST seems to bo all wool and a yard widy on the river ques tion. That sort of Vest fits nxactly the ideas of tlio people of thu Missouri Valley. _ . . . . . --.T _ . { Burns is rapidly making good her claim aa the liveliest mining contro in tho'woat. A telephone exchange with onojhundrod subscribers is aeon to bo completed. " * $ ' . = A BIIILK has just Leon sold in Lon don for $8,000. Tlio enterprising book sellers of Denver succeeded in soiling three last year for twenty-five ccnta each , j OUR exchanges are devoting a great deal of attention to "Tho Work of Congress , " more attention in fact than congress itself scums to bo giving to the subject. ' THK Herald boasts of ita Plaits- ; mouth report , half of which was de liberately stolen from THE BLE. The Herald's unearthly cheek would be appalling if it were not ridiculous. If there are any other Nebraska journals whoso feelings have boor hurt by Tun BEK'H anti-monopol } aonlimonla let them speak right out. The people are anxious to hoar thoii gentle voices. f TDu. = Du. MILLER responded at Plaits- _ jtuoulh to the toast of "tho Union Pa- WW * * f j ' cifio railrond. " A statement of com missions for professional service ! . -would have boon highly intonating in that connection. ONE of the most mournful sights ol modern times ia the grief of the No brasku monopolies over the oppres flion which the Doano law causes ti * the people o this state. It is all tin imdder because it is BO genuine am disinterested , GKNEHAL KIM TUIUK'S death wil \m \ assist in straightening out the Soutl American diplomatic snarl. Now lu Minister Hurlbut'a recall mid the ap pointmcnt of now and 'experience ) in on follow. Hot headed politician rarely make good diplomats. A t'HAMiiKB of commerce .waul doubtless bo an improvement to on ( rcity , And just ns noon ns corporntio discrimination ngainst the grain an cattlp interests of this city ceases i will bo forthcoming. The domnn for such an institution will at one create a supply , GOULD has captured the New Yor and Now England railroad ntul pn poses at once to water its stock in tl interests of "an enlightened jmbl policy. " "An enlightened public pol cy" will shortly bo compelled to It humls on the railroad robbera wl force the producers of the country pay dividends on millions of della f 'fictitious capital , MAMWV tv THE NEW SECRETARY OF STATE- Tlio name of ox-Sunator Frederick T. Krclinghuyncii of Now Jcmoy will in nil probability bo . t lo Iho son- ale to-day ns Iho successor of Mr. Hlaino in Iho stale cloparlmont. In nmny rospocli Iho nomination will prove nccoptablo lo llio counlry. Jlr. Frolinghnyscn ii a jnnii of largo ex perience in public lifo , of Rcholnrly aUaiinncnU nnd of unblemished reputation. Ho comes from i family of prominence in national polilics and of higli distinction in thuir nalivo stale. His grandfather was n tlulo- gate to Iho continental congress , an ofllcor in Iho Ilovolulionary war , a ( { ( moral in the army , and a United Slates senator in J71K ) . His son , Jlon. Theodore Frclinghuyacn , the undo of the coming secretary , was also in the Unilcd Slates Honatc , boint ? olcclod in 182 ! ) . In 18 U ho was the whig candidate for vice president on the tlokut with Henry Clay. The present Mr. Frclinghuyscn was horn in 1817 , was attorney general of Now Jersey for five years , and in 1800 was appointed lo fill a vacancy in Iho son- ale for the full term of.six years , end ing March ! , 1877. Mr. Frclinghuyson is a lawyer of eminence and a largo properly owner near Somerville , Now Jersey. Ho has always been prominently identified with the republican party nnd an ear nest worker in a state of strongly democratic tendencies. Ho is an ar- donl admirer of General Grant and was n strong supportdr of his candi dacy at Chicago. II is understood that President Garfield had his name under consideration In forming hia cabinet but finally decided not to ap point him on the ground that Now Jersey having gone democratic he could not ignore the republican states in order to give her representation in his cabinet. When Wayne MaoVoogh retired rumor has it that President Arthur offered Mr. Frolinghuysen the attorney-generalship which ho de clined to accept. No ono credits Mr. Frelinghuyson with the abilities of Mr. Jilnine. Hi is nol so nggrcssivo and is not likclj to make n brilliant record for the do partment. Still , no very great bril liancy is necessary in a secretary ol state in the present pcacotul state o ; our diplomatic relations with othoi countries , and Mr. Frclinghuyson with his largo experience in public uf fairs , will prob.ibly do .as well aa nnj other honest man of ordinary abilities who could Imvo been selected. THE VIENNA HORROR. The latest dispatches from "Vioiim place the loss of lifo from the burnini f tlio Ring Theatre on TTriday a nearly one thousand souls. Th calamity in the most appalling o modern times. Four hundred person perished in the burning of the Brook lyn Theatre in 1670 , nnd two hundrei and fifty' were lost last year in tli conflagration at the Nice Opor Douse. Tho'victims of the Victin holocaust number moro than those c both Brooklyn and Nice .combined The cablegrams giyo a frightful ) ; graphic picture x of tlio scene attending the dreadful disaster An audience of nearly two thousam persona , mostly of the poorer clnssca were seated in the building awaitin the rising of the curtain. The gr. had just boon turned on the atag when the ilainqs were soon burstin through the proconium. A torribl panic ensued , during which , to add I the horror of the ncono , the gas won out , leaving the long windin staircases and passages which fui mailed the only ogres/i from the ga lories in perfect darkness. In a mi monttho whole auditorium was ablazi The doors wore choked by n mass < shrieking and praying humanitj vainly beseeching n help which coul never reach them , Hundreds wei trampled to death. Mothers strangle their children to nave Ihum from tl ; agonies of a horrible death and tlui throw themselves over the gallery I the lloor bulow. Tlio erica of the po ; iahing could bo hoard in the utrvol amid the roar of the ll.uncs and tii craih of Iho limbers. Kvory ocuupai of the galleries wiis burned to deatl ntul of thoao who cscapo'd from tli iloor below nmny vero HO mangled an burned dial doalh soon relieved tliei from their suflbriiigs. As usual i such cases the disaster soema to hav been the roaitlt of criminal circles : ness. Reports are coiimotiii as to the immediate ciuso < 1 'the tiro. By some it is attribute to the negligence of a workmen in tl handling of a spirit lamp. Others In the blame to snarks from the olcotri al lighting apparatus. But if the rul proscribed by the city authorities fi the safety of audiences had boon , fc lowed every lifo could have boon savi oven had it proved impossible to o tinguish the fire on the stage. Tl theatre had an iron curtain to cut < communication between the stage at the auditorium hut it , was not nmi mo of in the panic. The thealio w also required to have oil lamps aloi the exit BO that the way could bo d corned in the event of the failure the gas , but this hud not been doi At the first alarm the nttomlui escaped aa rapidly as possil the iron curtain was left unused , n nnd the audience loft to panic a death. A rigid olllcial invostigati is to bo made , and the responsibility will doubtless bo placed where it be longs. But no placing of responsi bility or punishment of 6irondcrs ccn bring to lifo the souls which perished on Friday evening. All Vienna is in mourning , nnd the light has gone out never to bo relighted in hundreds of homes in the Austrian capital. 01 course no'amount of regulations will prevent disaslor where a panic has once taken possession of an audience but the knowledge that such rules exist and will bo carefully en forced is the greatest of nil prevent ives against panic. Omaha is behind other cities in not having any law regulating her places ol amunomcnt. Now York has n law prohibiting any management from selling any moro tickets than Ihoy have seals , and pro viding rigidly ns lo the meant ) of exit. Chicago has very slrict regulations ns to doors , ( ire plugs , hoie , and ob structions in aisles. Omalia has none of UICBO. Ono of her theatres is a fire-trap of the worst kind , That Boyd's opera house i.H nniply protected against fire and panic is duo entirely to the generosity of its construclor and the wisdom of its architect. Such disasters to struc tures as the recent Philadelphia mill ditnstor and Iho Vienna theatre horror should teach our council to enact nt once a rigid protective law , not only for places of amusement bill for build ings of all classes where human life can bo endangered. TIIEUE has scarcely been an issue ol THK OMAHA BKF. for months which hm not contained moro or less abuse of Congressman Valentino. If onyono'e acquaintance with llosowator is sc limited as to lead thorn to believe thai this arises from pure motive , wo wisli to remind them of the manner ir which this man treated Mr. Vnlenlino1' prcdocestor during the lifo time ol that gentleman , If there was any thing vile and abusive that llosi1 water did not say of Frank Welch , ij was because his demoniac ingenuity die not happen to conjure it up. After hi had assisted in hounding the lamontec Welch into a premature grave , h < was ono of the first to gather arounc his bier and pronounce extravagatv eulogies upon the life and character o the uaceascd. During the lifo of P W. Hitchcock there was no crime ii the calendar that this wholesale defamer famor of character did not accuse bin of. The funeral rites were scarcoli over when THE BEE began and kop up a series of eulogies that would havi led the uninitiated to think that tin two had been not only co-workora bu warm friends. Ilcnco wo see hov empty are the present outbursts o the little automatic volcanic down a Omaha. [ West Point Republican. THE BK.K has never hositalcd to expose pose and hold up to public inspcctloi the corrupt practices and failures ii official duties of Nebraska's publi representatives. Such exposures i has made regardless of consequence and in spite of the threats of th newspapers and the attempted bull dozing of the corporations. Ever charge which THE BEE has mnd against such men it has substantiate by facts and figures which were neve answered and could not bo ovui thrown. When corrupt cappers c the monopolies , like the cd tor of the West Point Jt < publican , assort that TH BEE has over retracted ono word < the criticism which it has mad ' against certain public men , they utlc a deliberate falsehood. It is an ol proverb that criticism should bosilor over the dead. Words of praise fc the good points of a man's charaoterca never bo pervorlcd into apologies fc failings whoso mention would bu 01 of place beside an open grave. The certainly can never bo twisted int retractions of previously prove charges ngainst either his public c private lifo. Tint IKE ! has no war to make upa the dead. It has no desire to rake u unpleasant memories of the past. Bi it stands by every charge which inndo against the public career of me who have undergone its criticism i the interests of u pure govoriunci and abused constituencies. SPKAKKU KKiKiiU is juat at just i present bcsofhy a loljhy componcd i representatives of Iho railroads an those interested in claims nnd publ grounds and buildings , who are urgit the appointment on certain commitle of members who aru known to bu opt to corrupting overtures. It is etalt that the commiiti'us on claime , Pacil railroads , territories and publ o grounds and building1) aru those whi < oiler the most inviting liold for tl lobby It is highly important th unscrupulous men should bo careful neglected in the composite of these committoa. 1'ho , ret work of congress is iloi in the commitloo. The power of tl committees in smothering or fucilitn ing legislation is so well known that largo part of the importance- tl spoakorship , in a party sense , is d rived from his duty in their nppoiu inont. Mr. Koifor is known to bo legislator of l.irgo enough oxpcrien to understand the necessity of the i most caution in his selection of mui bcra for committee work. lie is mil ciontly well versed in Iho ways of t house to undorritand lobliy inlluonc when ho sues them , No congregant who ia suspected of bt > ini { cither e < rupt or weak should Jiml his way on nd Tut : prospective jwstnmaler brlga ud has inviidt'd Washington. There 11 on 300 vacancies and 1,500 applicants. WESTERN RAILROAD PRO- ORESS. The Denver extension of the Bur lington through the Colorado "desert" ia being pushed as fast as muscle and weather will admit. Gangs of graders cover every fifly miles of Iho road. Tlio company has cn'oredinto a trafiic contract with the Denver and llio Grande company , which insures a pay ing business from the opening. Den ver business iticn watch the progress of the road with great intorcsl and will give it a traflio boost of considera ble dimensions. The liberal prices paid for right of' way and city privi leges has also tended to place the company in a high altitude with the people. The completion of the branch of Iho B. & M. from Ncmalm Cily to \Vymoro will secure to that company almost every strnlcgctic point in southern Nebraska. "Hold the Ter ritory" has been Iho secret motto of the management and a glance nt the map will show how suc cessfully it has been accomplished. The first train ran over the road last Monday. Connccction is made nt Table Ilock with the A. ifcN trains for Lincoln. Pawnee City gushes over the advent of thij cars and Ihe county swells the chorus of thankp- giving. The Wabash strikers have secured their five per cent , in ono township for the proposed Shenandoah , Sidney & Pacific branch , through soulhwosl- cm Iowa to the Missouri river oppo site or near Nebraska City. Three moro townships remain to bo heard from before work is commenced. A mild form of bulldozing has boon re sorted to by threatening to change the roulo if these three townships Benton - ton , Prairie and Walnut refuse the blood money. This fact establishes the truth of TUB BEE'H assertion thai the road will bo built , bonds or nc bonds. U. P. surveyors are foraging bo twcon Lincoln and Beatrice for a suit' ' able route and five per cent aid. Judge Maguire is fooling the finan cial pulse of the Black Hills people ir favor of a Black Hills and Bozomar road. As yet the symptoms nro nol very alarming ; in fact his success if limited to resolutions and whoreascs , of which article Deadwood reccnllj donaled an extravagant amount , Lawrence county , of which Doadwoot r is the sent , is already sweating undei t a blanket mortgage of half a million With the Chicago and Northwesterr and Iho Milwaukee and St. Paul head ing for Iho Hills through the heart o Dakota , and the Sioux City and Paci fie nnd the Omaha and' ' Black Hill branch of the Union Pacific througl Northern Nebraska , Ihcro seems m special need of haslo * in building i local road llirough territory which thi eastern trunk lines will cover in a fo\ ycars.i Branch linosaro only profit able to the builders who sell at th first opportunity. The Denver & llio Grande is th pot railroad of Colorado. It is con trolled by citizens of the state , wh refuse to qoll or pool their fortune with eastern roads. Gould is said t control one-third of the stock , and hi disreputable bull methods hnvo boo brought to bear upon the stock to dc prociato its value , with the eviden intention of securing a controlling ir torcst. In this ho has failed. Th South Park narrow gauge was buil as a competitor , supported by th trunk lines , but its success is limlto lo the enormous number of engineers firemen and employes killed by th ditching of trains. Now comes th Denver it Now Orleans company , cor trolled by Evans nnd Loveland , two t Gould'H mountain mossbacks , whic proposes to build a line southwar parallel with the llio Orando , as fn as Pueblo , but the people of Denvi determinedly refuse granting th company any aid or favors of anykiiu believing that its ultimalu inleiilior nro inimical lo the interests of tli city and stato. The mainspring < 1 this'opposition is the fear that Oinnli 1 and Kansas City merchants woul control a largo share of the trade < tlio state. The Republican nsser that "if the llio'Grnmlo were run < a p.iit of the Union Pacific system would ho to Iho inlerost of that ron " to carry merchandise from Omaha ( Kansas City to Loadvillo , or any otlu local point , at u lower rate than tl goods could bo carried to the sun 10 poilit if reshipped jit Denver. " Tl value of the Rio Grande as an a oi in the development of the minor wealth of the state is obviou It taps the ' mines on tl Gunnison , Lcadvillo , Elk Mom tain , San Juan , Rod Cliff , HI the coal fields at El Moro , and mak < possible the working of low grae mines in those regions. The rot will soon form a part of three throuf lines. A third rail between Donv nnd Pueblo , 120 miles , completes connection between Denver and tl east by the Atchison it Santa 1 route. The second is boowocn Sr Lake city and oust , when its Gunnisi lie line is built through the canon of t ! cs Grand river into Utah and to the ci in first named. The third is from De ir- ver and the heart of Colorado to Me u ice nnd Now Orleans , over its li now completed to Espanoln , within ilo miles of Santa Fo , but ultimately TO bo extended to El Paso. Its' El Mo brunch will bo extended in tii through the Pan Handle of Toxaa to Fort Worth , and connecting Ihoro with all parts tof Toxaa. The onliro _ energies of the company are now turned to Iho Salt Lake extension. The grading in Utah county is finished and ready for the iron. The heaviest part of the work between Salt Lake and Provo is bridging Iho river. Tlio company has purchased dcpol grounds in Salt Lake cily equal to forty acres and an outlet southward forly rods wide , in all ninety acres. The com pany makes friends of all with whom it comes in contact with by promptly meeting all obligations and paying liberal wages. . The contest against the issuance of Lancaster county bonds to Daley's , Lincoln and Fremont roads goes to the supreme court on the question of jurisdiction. The county court sus tained the motion to dismiss. The business of the U. P. road ia now so great as to require an average of n train every hour. Everything on wheels ia being employed to move the enormous tratlio of llio road and yet the supply of cars is inadcqunlo. The Denver abort line ia proving a most important feeder. Passenger and freight traflio are increasing steadily. The Missouri Pacific is moving to wards the Nebraska metropolis at the rate of two miles a day. The contin ued favorable weather has enabled contractors to push rapidly through the country and a junction of the gradera nnd spikers ia expected early in January. This road will bo 108 milea long and in crease Gould's Southwestern system to 5,340 miles. Other branches and trunk lines of this system now under way will foot upn tolalof 5,655 miles. Gould and his associate have also filed charters in Kansas for a railroad from Salina to the northern line of the state. Dispatches intimate that the Santa Fo company have relin quished their charter for a line in lhat direction , leaving Gould an open field in Northwestern Kansas. Sioux City is the unfortunate pos sessor of n railroad Hunchauson. In fact , ho ia a Munchauson , a Vennor nnd a Tics rolled into one. He ia the only authenticated speci men of the class in the country , and his observations of prospective railroads and mammoth combinations are only limited by Iho boundary of the continent. The northweslern corner of Iowa is en tirely too small for hia comprehensive range of vision ; ho reaches out for the great beyond and behind and pub lishes to the world his "inspirations,11 illustrated with a map of Sioux City. Last week ho observed a dark cloud in the , northern horizon nnd a frown on the face of YanHorno- the Mil waukee road. This formed the basis of a union of the latter road with the Canadian Pacific. Anon his massive eyeballs swept southward and piorccc the land of the shotgun and magnolia Hero a giant corporation waa abom to overshadow the land with an annj of graders and tracklayers , who woulc merely tip their beavers to Kov Orleans and pass on to i part forty miles beyond , when the cereal wealth of California wouli bo transferred direct to Eurcpeai steamers. The authorities shouh t disarm him or Iho Deity will soon b charged with another crime. Yankton is aroused on the railroai question. The prospect of securin ; the Central Pacific branch has forcei 0 d the citizens to bestir themselves , am already a company has been organizei o to build the connecting link betwcei Lemar's and Yankton. The Pros 0 says the Illinois Central will iron am operate the road if it is graded. Thi would prove a great boon to the city giving it direct connection with Chic ago and the cast superior tu any exist ing route. The Utah & Northern is within 80 feet of Iho city limits of Bulto , Man tana. A deep ravine of several bun drod feet yet remains to bo bridgei before trains c.ui roach Iho depot i city. Sapt. Clark waa up there re cently and informed the citi/ons Ihn the company would enter into th coal business at an early day nn furnish the "black diamonds" at $1 per ton. Dozens of Nebraska town are shivering for a ton or two nm can't get it any price. Regular trains on the Missouri Pi citic will bo 'in running into Full City next Wednesday. The now dc pot will bo completed by that time , The B. & M. charges iivo cents milo for passengers between Culbcrt aon and Collinsvillo on the Den ver ox tension. The winter bridge over the Mif souri at Sioux City will bo opened fo tralliu this week , l- Correct. The leisure moments of cx-Spcakc Randall are now devoted to invontin a policy for the democratic mmorit , in the next house of representative : ; U So far , Mr , Randall has not mot wit very flattering success. Omaha Bet Guess you're right. Philadolphi 10 Press. Choke Him Off. Itm Kuneai Clt ; Journal. m With congress nnd Guiteau bol 10 holding forth at the same tim iy Washington is really taking nn undt share of the attention of the countr ; nx - Ono , at least , should do choked oil' . ' x- 110 One and Only , rhllxdo'pliln 1'rtt.d. 23 In the senate there are two IXxvise to two Camorons , two Hills , two Miller ro two Joneses , There ia only 01 no David Basis. IOWA BOILED DOWN , Cedar lUpul.i will goon hn\e o woolen mill. , Smallpox in said to Imvo appeared nt Orinncll The city < > f DCS Molncs has ocr 513,000 in IU IreMiiry , Tanner * near LctUtillo nnd ( ! rand\lew nrc tlll plnwlng , The S'orm ' T nko Creamery t cndi butter direct to Hugland. A now Methodls' church at Aurclla will he dedicated Christinas. Otlumwa houses of 111 fnme have bean closed by order of the mayor. Itnd Oak , Imvlnp water workH , ha * a chemical ciigine to nl < ixHeof. Diibnqnc lias plxtv-five ImslneM lieu cs with a caiiit d of S 10,000 and unwnrdn. The valuation of Sac county Is § 2,282- ! )21 ) , ou whlcu the tax lo\y in S83 030.80. There are 201' , caien before the ftato su preme court now in session at DCS Moincs , Vubu'rue'a building improvements c'ur- Ing 1881 were worth over a million drllnrs. The First National hank of Storm Lake has been authorized to commence busi ness , J'orcit City feclg \ crv well satisfied over having improved 520,000 worth the past The total amount of tax loIfd In 1'nlk ounty for the year 1831 amounts to § 150- 7138. The butter exhibited at the recent con dition at the Cedar Knnida was valued at i26,000. Mr * . S. C. Johnson has been ndmtt'cd o the bnr nt Knoxvllle. Htr husband Use so a lawyer. The recent grand _ Jury in Sioux county mnd seventeen indictments against saloon iien and druggints. There has been no now cases of smnllpox , t lielloMio for nearly two weeks and it is ow hoped the worttt Is over. The artesian well at Sioux City lins lached a depth of 57u feet. Water rises ithln fifty feet of the surface. Curing 1881 845,238.23 were roljed in 'eilur ' Kapids in the form of taxes , of which erronal property amounted to 8411,052. The executive committee of the Rtntc .ntt-prohlbitlon society-will meet at Iowa /ity on the 14 th to outline a'plan for self lefense. In excavating for. building at Keokuk fewdnj-8 since , a nule stone rcpulchre was unearthed , containing a portion of a lumnn skeleton. R , D. Stephens , of Cedar Rapids , offers o put 31,000 into each of ten new mtinu- 'acturing enterprises , just to give the place k boom in that line. The grape sugar works at Iowa City con- nine 1,500 bushels of corn d-iily. The : aptal ! ? tock of the company was lately ncrojeed to § 200,100. Two men have been arrested nt Glen- oed charged with ntenling a sack of mail 'rom the depot last Wednesday. The Back and contents were recovered. A gentleman seeks to locate in Cedar tapida with n paper and card-board mill. le suggests a stock company with n cap- talofS20000 , of which he offers to take me-half. In 1849 there were only 349 frame and 5 brick and stone school hou es in the itate. To-day there are 10,210 frame , 701 rick , 237 atouo and 73 log institutes of earning. Henry Lamir , of Muscatine , will be 10. c.ir < * old if ho lues to the 2Gth of Mnrch. His health is excellent and his spirits ; ood. It is thought ha ia the oldest man n the state. When the national dairy convent ! ' n at /edar llnm'd * adjourned , the Businessmen f Iowa City had a special train waiting 'or them , in which they were tiken to thai ilnr-e , where they were entertained. Oriin liodgers , aged 17 , while walking n the top of a frajght train at North Me- iregor , stub ! cd hia toe , stumble. ' ! , fell I c- .ween . the cari nnd ' as killed. Both legs were ruu over and mashed out of all Bern lance. A brace of burglars wna takcu in al Sioux City Friday. An amateur cracks man was shot at in Gee way's store and ar- estcd nt Griffin's. Another tenderfoo lame to sell a watch where he had' stoler t , a 'id was taken in. At the close of the Cedar Rapids dairj convention upwards of 00,000 pounds o butter waa sold nt prices ranging from 3 ! to 00 cents ver pound. Some of the ex iiibitors , adding premiums to sales , re ceived ns high aa $1.50 per pound for thei : butter. In the spring of 1879 , nt Sidney , Fro inont county , Wilber Howell under stronj prevention struck another young mm named lirainard on the head with a chair nnd from the f ffects of the blow Brainarc died. Howell had just had his trial been convictedof _ manslaughter nnd Ben tcuced to impiiaonment in the penitentiar ; one day and to payn fine of & 300 , togethe' with the co'ts. About a year nco Howel married , and his wife presented him witl u babe on the day of his conviction. Citi zens of Sidney have petitioned Uoyorno Gear to rem't thn fine on payment of tb costs. STATE JOTTINGS. Oakland ha ? organized a land league. Pierce wants a bick layer and plnsterei A Grand Island will ships feed to Der ver. liie Springs is to ha\e a new brie yard. The prospect hole nt Decatur li dowi 01 ! ) feet. Albiim lias orgi ni/ed n hook and ladde company. The round hoiic at Culbc'lRoa looms u [ rumen uly. iV t-tcnm gri t mill N to ho built a \ \ neil Itiver. "Jilack lees' t > re\ail8 among cattle I I'auneu county. Nrligh'H Improvements for the past ycai will foot up SIU.OOO. James Boll , of ] ) a\d ! City , will 0001 Lmllil mi uleator there. Culbertinn neeila n bank ia which t nto t- her surplus hliekeln. The ladies ol Fnlls city contemplat starting n public library. A gentleman from Illinois was relicvei of ! ? "li iH the Linvol'i depot. Meutn Vrey ana Olto Probno are ii jail nt West Point for bleating timber. 11. II Stimrt , of flrand Inland , ha nrrungod for the mnnufaUure of his paten Whither strip. The first child born in the new town o Wnyue was a daughter lo Air. and Mw Jmnuxlirltton. A bnlter famine in prevailing ; in Nc Hgli. No butter tit to eat can be had fo love or money. Mr.'Van Horn lion sold the Cllfto house , Nebraska City , and gnei into bual nen in Lincoln , Isaac Crable of York him Borne 25 acre of corn that is turning out ilxty-fiv bushels to the acre. Iraao Cost , aged twelve , of Antclu [ county , playfully perforated the heart ( hia brother with a pinto ! , A dojtruclivo prnlrlo fire passed throng Ihecounlry in Ihe vicinity of Went Point mining several fanners. The brother of the Suns of Gem * hi been started in onjmsition to the Bonn i Liherty In liraim Island. 8 n tor Van WycV has tiken JI'H en rlago team to Washington , and with It carload of Nebraska hay. The 1'remont foundry has during tli past ycnr manufactured seventeen ougliii from 1J to10 horbo power. The apparatus for the Fremont t li phone exchange has urrUed mid will I put in place imiuediately , Pawnee comity turned over f 7&.MW I the Republican Vnl'ey rnllroud , Tliw boud < run for a period of fifteen year * an re to be u cd only In payment of thi com- any'g taxcn In the county. " The Decatur ( Hurt "county ) Herald bobs , tpvo before the public. It is a neat , , Kty an I noway local | ftper. The piles for the Finite bridge at Frc- -out are in place and a large portion of lie suiKirotructnre put in place. The experimental welt water at Lincoln been analyzed. The lluld If suitable r domestic and temperance purposes. There ! * a great fcnrcity of laborers In * ork c .unty. farmer * ( lnillnt it out of thc- iiMtlon to obtain help , even at advanced age.- . A Lincoln tf'rl nnmed Annlo Spechti- ( nnpUU-ly crank on religious eubje la hcwMeent to Iho home of her biolher- n Syracntf , Nefr WakcfielJ i * booming. It has twenty vo building * and more going tip , Among , ew cnt n'ri'es are a ste.un flouring mill' nd woolen factory. The now dct > ot at Pawnee is being built , t Is 20x40 , Iwo plnricp , giulng fi\e re l. ence rooms on Iho xccoud floor for tbe > , ? ont and his family. ! The Farmers Alliance , oreamVetl onlv n. .tile over nyear ago in Xchroskn , now jumbcrs three hundred local lodges , and is till rapidly increasing. Tlio vinegar works of Nebraaka City- .ill bo removed next -Unroll to tlio new mlldlng to bo ctected near tlio foot of ill street near the railroad track. Mr. Thomas Collins , n fanner n few miles southwest of Urowmillc , had one of lis arm1 * brokm by the kick of a horse , rom the effects of which he died. It i * said the State Supreme Court has endercd a decision that no license can be psued under the Slocum law for less than ? r > 00 , co matter for how short a time. The authorities of Lincoln has called an ilection for December 2"th to vote on Iho uestion of issuing 810,000 water works ends to solve the water works problem. Quartermaster-General C. II. Baird has ishursed S75 to each company of the atlonal guurds in the stiito of Nebraska or atmory rent for the year coaimcncine rune 1,1881. S. T. Corbett and Frank Deln , two em- iloycn at the B. & M. rhons at Platlii- noulh , were severely bmlsed by timbers 'rom a car falling upon Ihem. Corbelt's ihoulder was dislocaled and his thigh iroken. Hastings enjoyed an elopement sensa- , ion last week. LillleVooster Mt the omlc'lo ' of her dnd and went east on a tour with Jim Fathropp. She took the old man's purse along and left several milliner 'jills ' behind as souvenirs. The supreme court last week disposed he insurance fee caeo in which ex-Audi- or and exiled Leidtko was intereeted. The court held that "all fees earned or iollected by Iho auditor of public accounts leloag to the state , and are payable in advance into Ihe state treasury. " T. .T. Smith , late of the O'Ne 1 Record , , ' s soon to start n paper _ at Long Pine. The- ilace , young as It is , has already a popula- ion of 300 , contains five saloons , lumber- md coal y nl , three stores , one medicine ihop , two livery stablct ) , hotels , meat mar ket , f ed store , blacksmith shop , etc. At lost accounts , Deputy Marshal Me- lains w ns still after Stanton ( for the kill. ng of Myers , mentioned last week ) , hiv- nn traced him to Atchisnn. There he oupht a ticket for the south or southwest , t could not definitely be discovered which * , t is probable that ho has made his way to New Mexico ere this. It must be con- 'cssed our people are not anxious about his capture. [ Pawnee Enterprise. A sad and fatal ncci 'ent ' happened at Covington on Wednesday morning. F. W. Cor'iin ' , a carpenter , at work on the St. Paul winter bridge , nii-l who resides at Blair , had occasion to go near the ma chinery that raises the large hammer to the pile driver , when the coat tail of Iris overcoat was caught in some manner , drawing him upward. His left side was torn open and his left t-houlder torn from lis body. _ Corbln w : > s 35 years of age and ieavea a wife. Mr. K. M. Tridges , of York , writes to correct a statement mailo in THE LEE : 'We boast of most excellent ichools , and in tin various erodes , from the MnJergnr- tej to Iho seminary , ve en > ell nearly s'x hundred pupil * . Our enrollment In the primary department i < 104 , but on accoint of the prevalence of whooping cough the attei dance ran down to 05. Your state ment gives these figures as the aggregate of all the schools. I do not ask space , but imply o correction in tlvj 'jo'ting * , ' which I feel you w II quite willirgly give , as the statement reflects upon our schools and does injustice to our city Your daily is nn fi'e and i < oaily consulted by our ad vance 1 | .upil , numbering in our grammar s heels more than yi u have given us on , the full reg stcr. " ORLEANS NEWS. For the two past seasons this part of Nebraska has nnthadas bnunt fill crops n& some other sections. Nevertheless our tuwnH and conn'y _ ire gaining some good and permanent improvement- ' , among which is the Sentinel office , wLich is re ceiving the finishing touch , and will be ready for occupation soon. The building is cf i-o d size and will be commodious , and in a good addition to the south Bide of the square. O. K. Olmstead't ) flouring mill will noon be teady for worlr. The machinery is being put In place.f This n.ill is titunted on the Itepub- lican river and has no of the best water- powers in the t-tate. This mill will Add material lo the business of our town when- it < nee gels in running order. C. Boebl is also building a four run mi 1 two miles , west of town on the Aupa. This mill will be equipped with all of the late improved machinery and will be second to none in the Btatc. Such improvements as these are a benefit to Iho county and are gooit property for the owners. Several biib- btmtial residences uro bcicg built in the town , which wo are glad to note , fvirgo quantities of broom corn was raised in thin county , which ia finding a ready market hero at SSO per ton. Vast herds of sheep are being brought to the valley and there are several large flocks owned in the vicinity f Orleans , J , 11. Kenne dy , our fellow townsman , at the present time has a flock of oyer 1 , ' 00 , all high grade' . I shall have more to nay of the sheep business in a future letter. I am sorry to chronicle the failure ot Manning Dros. , of our city , one of Iho "Id reliable grocery and dry good" firms. They made an assignment in favor of C. Coutc. TllAVEI.Kn. OHI.CA.VS , Neb , . December 8 , 1881. Found at JJnfct What every one should have , and never bo without , It THOWAH' KiiECTinq OIL. It is thorough and aifo in iti tifecU , produ cing the most wondrous cures of rheuuiv- li-mi , neuralgia , burns , bruinesnnd wounils of every k ind. dl -eodlw I To Nervous Sufferers THE GREAT EUROPEAN REMEDY. Dr , J. B. Simpson's Specific II ti jK ] tit ocuro lor Bpermatoirbea , Bcraln * Wvoknuu. Imjotancy , Mid all dlsoaso resulting Iroui tJul'-AtuHo , an Mental Anxiety , Loeai Memory , 1'tlm In the Back or Slilo , Mid diseases- that load to- Consumption Insanity an tarh grave- The Specific Medicine 1s- boln ; uxxl with wonder ful success. , _ _ Pamphlet * ( nut Irwj to all. Write lor them and gut full par- tk'ulnri. 1'rlcc , Hnedflc , tl.OO fet package , or lk pack- igon ( or to 00 , Addruw all order * to It. HIMSON J1KDIUI.VE CO. No. . 101 anil 104 Main bt. lluOalo , K. T. HM In Unuhiv liv C. V. Uoodruxn , J. W. Hell. J , K Uh. and all D. S. BENTON , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW AKIIACII BLOCK ,