THJS DAILY BEE FRIDAY , JULY 31 1885 THE DAILY BEE , OMAHA OrnnXo. Ptl ANI > 91C FATSAM ST. NKW Yoittc OU-ICK , HOOJI 65 TniHCiw UCII.D- INC. rn1.l hfA every rrorntn < r , etrept Stfi.Uy. Tht wilr Monaiy mornlnc rtilly publUhriKnthc Utc. TPRM ? BY MMf , One Yttr J10.M I Three Menllw $ 2 to SIxMonllu 5.00 I Ono Month , , . . . . . . 1.00 The Weekly Ucrtiblis > iel every Wednesday . OneTcur , with premium . 2 JO One Ve r , wlM-outJiremtam . 1 J * Bin Months , Without tiremmw . j > \ > ne Month , on trial . All Comrr.inlcatlotuTcUtlnij to Ncwiuntl BlltortM -fnMUts sboiiM bo fcSilrcsseJ to tli KwtOB or III * 'Bis. All niHirtem Ixstlcra kml Hemllttnccn iliouM rio < ldrc ol to TUB Kri ! 1'rnt.um CrtiM-sT.OMAiu. . Inft , aicckii Mil Voit olllco orders to bemade | .a- able to4ho orihr ot the compan } . THE BEE PUBLISHING GO , , PfODS , K. KOSnWATKH , Kmion , A. II. 1'itcM , Manager Daily Circulation , Omaha , NebrMkn. MOST of the lawyers of Omaha are now engaged In addrtsiing open lottora to Loyal \i. Smith , non-roaldcnt dofon- WE are In favor of constructing Ore- proof distilleries for copper-distilled lightning-rod whisky , which usually re- qniros the consuniar to have a casi-lron stomach. DK. MILIEU and Mayor Boyd have had a falling out. It is not about political matters , however , but upon the railroad question. They still pull together In the political harness. Ir the plan ot the city engineer foi naming the s'.roola is adopted every fol low will luvo to carry a nntnorlcil index in'his vest pocket , and a photo-Htho- graphic plat. PERHAPS if the editor of the Bcpubli can will uio his inflaouca with Manager Galloway ho cm supply O.naha with n bran-new s'.ar-apanglod depot , with break' fast-table attachment. Ir the streets of Omaha are to bo re named lot it bo done on a plain buslnca : principle. DJ away with all duplicate names , and have no avenues in ono par ! of town baarlng the oarna or similar natnoa of straoU in another part of the city. secretary , tried for treason and felony , ha : boon acquitted on the ground of insanity. The eurno plot will bo saint In Riel'a defense , and the chances am just favorable that it trill win for him as it did for his secretary. Had the ro- bolllon Buccecdoi , however , nobadj would have thought that Kiel waaluaino. TUB English house of lords on TQOB day refused to take up the bill providing for woman suffrage. The woman suffrage movement la not making any inoro head way ia England than It is in the United States. The leaders in the auso , how' over , keep hammering away with a per slotoncy that makes the average legls later a very weary person at times. THERE is altogether too mush ssionco in the scheme of the city engineer for renaming - . naming our streets. It is hard enough for a stranger who comes to Omaha to bo compelled to meander the Miwonrl river to hunt up First , Second , Third and -Fourth streets , but It would bo a great deal moro annoying to look for Second Twenty-third street and . .Fifth Twenty- K seventh street. Wo want more common Bonao and loss sclenca in the earning of our streets. AciTKB.i , writes to the BEE for Infer- . matlon as to why Mr. Adams' last letter haa not been published aj well as the tifirat. Jf the citizen Trill take the trouble i to read the proceedings of the lait coun cil .mooting ho will discover that a reso lution was adopted requesting the mayor lie transmit that letter to the council. When that la done next Tuesday the letter - tor will bo made publlo. The reason Rtvon by Mayor Bjyd for withholding It is that Mr. Adams expressed a desire to have no further nubile controversy. MAYQU BOYU'S card in reply to 'Dr. MlUor'a ' open letter is torso and to the paint. Ho ahonrs that the doctor has a vary poor manor/ with regard to dates andifacta bearing on Union Pacific mat ters. Mr. Bpyd voices the soatlmont of the .community whoa he says thtt there is no hostility towards the Union PaalOc railroad or its managers on the part of our cltkans , but simply a desire to have ihat company rcapcoi our rlgh'a , live up to Its obligation ) , and altjrd the public proper ( facilities. Ir da jifljt about as wo expected and predicted. Qalto anumbor of 4he liquor dealers. , c wo are informed , era lu or- * rears for their second installment of license manay. If thej are allowed to run -to the nut .Quarter the chancoa are that most of tko delinquents will retire .from { "business aud tko school lund will be out several thotmnd dollars. It ought ia be apado the duty of the oocratary of.th hoard of edacatlan to check off the ll < juo dealers' ' list wick the city treasurer every quarter , aud ace that no dellnquonoias are permitted , ia this mttior all should be treated nliko. s of tha democrats point with pride to the fact that un.lor the admlcistration of P/aaldout Olorolacd the Mormon polygauiJata are being pigorousljprojo outod.7fillo the prefect admlnltira'.lon Is entitled t ) some creditfor the otand Uiat it has taken in rjgard to polygamy tha domocraU should not forgot that .the law under trUtoh polygamiita are bolag punUhcd was drawn by Senator Kimanda and pcased by tko vitoj ot ropubUcaai. The adailnlitratloa is eimpl/ doing its duty In ocforiag a good Jaw which was in oiUtonuo bo'pjro it Aauio int3 po of , end under which tha proatxuti-m of polrgtmltti had bson begua before the TTCPt oqt of ppwer , INDIAN CRIMES. The pnnls'jment of Indians for the commission of crimes , moro especially committed Ihem- or the crimes among lolves , has always been attended with -great dlflionUy , owing to a ack of jurisdiction of the courts , whether state or territorial. By reason of this defect it has boon no nnusu l thing for an Indian who had murdered another Indian to go entirely free. A case of this kind occurred in Nevada in 1872 , An Indian who had murdered another was captured by aomo of the members of his own tribe and turned over to the civil authorities with the request that ho bo tried and punished like a whlto man. The sheriff , acting under the advice of the district attorney , declined to take any atepi to bring the prisoner forward for trial or indictment , as the murder had been committed on a reservation over which the court had no jurlndlction. The prisoner , who was confined in the military guard honso at Camp MoDarmlt , was' , finally sot-free , aa no olHclals either state , federal or mili tary would proBoonto him owing to the doubt existing upon the matter of the proper jurisdiction. The commander of the department of California , Gen. Soho. field , expressed his opinion , in an official order , that this was n cao fairly coming under the laws of the state of "Nevada , and that the accniod could bo indicted and tried , and furthermore that thle seemed to bo a case especially deserving attention , aa the Indians themselves had delivered up ono of their number foi trial , thus virtually claiming the protec tion of the law. In another case he expressed n somonhat similar opln Ion to the eliect that individna Indians arrested for crimes by the military , should bo turned over to the civil authorities and dealt with by then in the aamo manner as whlta men. This defect in our lawa aa to jurisdic tion has bacn the means of allowing man ] Indian criminals to go unpunished , nni it has given rlso to considerable com plaint at times not only among the pao plo of the Treat , who wera moro directly interested , but among the eastern phllan thropiata who are so anxious for the welfare < faro of the Indians. It haa froqaentlj baon urged that oangrcos ahonld pass e law providing a remedy for this defect in jurisdiction so tlut crlmo amonp the Indians canld bo pun Iflhod. That such a law WQE finally pnaaod by the last cougraaa is t fact known to but very few parsons. It will be found in the concluding section , No. 9 , page 315 , chapter 'HI , of the fed eral statute ] passed at the second session of the forty-eighth congress , and ap < proved March 31 , 1835. Thla clausowae tacked on to the Indian appropriation act , and is ai follows : SECTION 9. That immediately upon am after the data of ths nissa o of this act nl Indians , committing against tha peraon or property of nny othar Indian or ether parson nny if the following crimes , namely , murder , manslaughter , raps , aasault with intent to kill , nrson , burglary , and larceny , within any territory of the United State ? , and cither within or without nn Indian reservation , shall 1 > 3 subject therefor in the same courts and in the same manner and shall ba subject to the eamo Dan- allies a3 are all other persons charged with the commission of a aid crimtn respectively ; and tha laid courts ara luroby civou juris diction in all such cues ; and all such Indians committing any of the nlnvo crlnna against the person or property of another Indian or person within any state of the United States , and within the limits of any Indian reserva tion , shall be subject to the earn i lawa , tried in the aamo courts , and in the same manner , and subject to tha same panilties as art all other persons committing any oE the abore crimes witnln the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States. This law certainly remedies all the de- footo as to jurisdiction , and provides for the speedy prosecution of criminal acta committed by Indiana either against each other or against the whites. Aa we have already shown , the Indiana have had up to this tlmo no way of panlshlng crime committed among themselves , owing to the fact that the federal government re garded the various tribes as independent powers , so far as having jurisdiction and punishment of crimes against each other was concerned , and loft it to them selves to bring such offender. } to justice In any manner they thought boat. A case in paint is that of Grow Dog , who killed Spotted Tail , in 1881 , on the Sions reservation. His prosecution fell to the ground owing to a lack of jurisdiction. Ho was finally turned loose , and his own people took no steps to punish him. Had the law passed by the last congress been In effect at that tlmo , Crow Dog wocrld fcavo been tried , convicted aud punished for murder. WATERWAYS OF THE NORTH- WEST. T < o Improvement of the waterways is a lufcbtor of great importance to the people ple oC our .country as they tend moro than other auso to prevent extortionate 'roight charges and disrlmin 'Joiu o ho part of the railways. The proton and futccro prosperlt- the vrester : tales , ccastitiitlng the great prodncln heart of ILo continent-depends largely upon the ftsllltloa-and the cost of ( cans , portation of their producteto the market of the world. The west is fortunate In bolng penetrated by numerous watci routes , which with proper Incprovemou would afford unlimited facilities for transporting its enormous product , at a remarkably low coit , to every mart. Tha policy of the national rjOTorn ment hai teen to improve all vrntertvaya of the country in the interest of com merce , both foreign and domestic , It it istiiualod ihat thorn has been expended ibout the cum of $150,000,000 in the approvement of ( La rivera and hsrbors > f our CDDiitry , but the greater portion if tLto money his hfeu spent in the ildor itatos and blong the coast line , however , la raott needed in the west , and that Is whcto the nppropria- lens should In the future bo made to ap- > ly. The Improvements shonld bo made upon the waterways In the region where ho bulk of the commerce originates , and hat is In the center of the continent. The people of the upper Mississippi and Mlsaonrl valleys , comprising the states of Illinois , Missouri , Kansas , Ne braska , Iowa , Wisconsin , Minnesota and the territories of Dakota and Montana stand pre-eminently In need of immedi ate relief from exorbitant transportation charges , which render production un profitable and the fruits of industry ex- pciislvo to the eastern and foreign con sumer. The governor of Minnesota hai accord ingly Isimd n circular embodying thoao ideas , and calling a northwestern water ways convention to ba hold in St. Paul on the 3d of September. The governors of the states and territories named are invited to attend in person , end are urged to aid In securing a full roprcsntatlon of their states , commercial bodies and cities. The senator * and representatives in con gress of these states and territories ore aho Invited to bo present and assist in the work of the convention. Each atat and territory will bo onttlod to ton delegates at largo , each congressional district to tnroo delegates , each commer cial organization to five , and each munici pality to five. The object of the sonvon- tlon la to discuss the Internal commerce and the waterways of the northwest , and to formulate a most earnest demand upon congress for such appropriations as maybe bo required to insure at the earliest day practicable the opening of our rivers to an nntramolod commerce to tide water. It Is to bo hoped that every state named in the call will send a full delegation tc this convention , the importance of which cannot bo overestimated. The people ol the Mhsaurl and Upper Mississippi val leys by united action in this matter ought to bo abe ! to accomplish the de sired re a nit. A STRIKING illustration of tax-shirking on the part of corporations la a Herded in the case of the Pullman palace car com pany , which owns the creator part of the town of Pullman , near Chicago. The company owns 120 acres of land , which is covered by over five hundred dwelling houses , a church , a school , a hotel , eav- oral stores and business houses , and ether bulldliigr , all of which are the property of the company. The ground and buildings , not including the extensive shops of the company , are really wortb over § 2,000,000 , but the total assessment last year was only $35,000. The assets- mont was raised by the townihi/i equal ization board to § 214.000 , a little mora than one-tenth of the actual value , and yet the company makes a protest against the raise. Is it ar > y wonder that cor porations grow rich , when they so suc cessfully evade their just proportion oi taxes ? GENERAL SHERIDAN could not have se lected a moro competent man than Captain - tain Lee to take charge of tbo Cheyenne and Arapahoa agency in the Indian terri tory. These Indians , who had become uncontrollable under Agent Dyer , will be easily managed by Captain Lao , who haa had considerable experience of that char acter and thoroughly nndoratanda the po- oullRr traits of the rod man. He waa the military agent of the Spotted Tall Sioux In dians , some six thousand in number , In 1877 , and superintended their removal late In the fall of that year from Camp Sheridan , in Nebraska , to the Missouri rlvoJ , in Dakota , and finally to their present location , some distance back from the river. MICHAEL McGrAMAN , of the nlgnal Bcrvlcj corps , at Pensacola , Flori da , has been putting on altogether too msny aristocratic bourbon a Ira. Ho snubbed a colored soldier who had been detailed to assist him , and would not ra- calve him or allow him to perform the dntloi rcqalred of him. General Elazon has very properly preferred charges against the swell Hjrgoaut , who will prob ably bo tried by court martial. Sergeant Mike may have < to spend a few months in the gnaed homo , with the possibility of being nndor the surveillance of a col ored guard , IN Alaska in midsummer , acsordlng io an interesting letter , tha almost continu ous light of day shlnoi upon bright green alopes , shaded here and there wdth dark timber baits , rising up from the dark blue waters , An ondloaa variety of bright-hnod flowers , the hum of Insects and melodious song * of birdi , together Ith a degree of heal 'dispensed by the solar orb , which ti our thickened blood appears oppressive , would caaia a ctranger suddenly transplanted there to kink himself in any country but Alwka , Tim apeooh of Smator Voorheea , o ndlana , for the dofeiua ic tlu rocan aaeatlonal { Johnson-Henry murder trla it GrcenvlUo , Tennessee , hae been iasuec In panplot form by his private secretary It makes a pamphlet of about seventy five pages , and the present demand indl catos thai the acla will yield a profit o several thousand dollars. Senator Voor. hoes regarded the speech as the .ablest effort of lid Hfo , and the larga aalo.of the pimphlet will confirm that Improedon. Te has loit none of his o/i / tirna doqnenc ? . Kn UAZKN aiiurcs a suffering people t.'iat the baokbino of the hot spoil will bo broken within the next forty-eight lours by a cold wave from Manitoba , Let it roU. It can't come auy too soon , CUOLKUA still continues Its deadly rurch throughout Spain with ua&bated Igor. It fittt appeared In tint county n March i'li , and up to July * tj ! tha number of cases reported was 28,044 , of which 12,317 proved f tal. Since the 4th it this month the total numlnr of dea'hs has Increased to nearly 16,000. Fur. HUGH LEE , the well known ox confederate , has boon nominated for governor of Virginia by the democrats , while the republicans have nominated John S. Wise , son of the governor who hanged John Drawn. This Is ono of the curious phrasss of p lltiss , especially In old Virginia. Kdltors ami KclltttiK. hicago Newi , It is a little remarkable and slightly ridiculous that the magazine editor does not do editing. lie merely arranges and selects matter for publication which in great nowtpapor cilices is Intruded to subordinate ! . Thla want of editing is painfully apparent In every lasuo of the magazines , where solocismt , mistakes of fact , and blemishes mulling from sloven ly editing are only too common. The systems of newspaper and magazine editing If the IBS' deserves to bo called editing are radically different. The newspaper editor , armed with a rolont- leas heart , on unflinching hand , and a blue pencil , goes through manuscript like a surgeon with a dissecting knife. Ho haa , beside , his literary reputation'at stake , like a magazine editor his busi ness and political interests also for now- pipers are slrlctly business enterprises , which magazines are not always ; there la moro than ono prominent magaa'no In the country run by a grjnt publishing firm as an advert'ssmont ' , and ono or two aa literary pastimes , very much as ether cipltaHsts keep yachts and trotter : . There IB , of conrec , a very great differ * once in the manner of the two sorts of editors The newspaper editor must bo brief sometimes ho muat bo brusque. Ho is always pellto if ho is it first-class editor , but his eye often wanderi to the big brazon-faced clock hanging some where In the oflico , by which everything ia run , aud when he says his tlma Is limi ted ho is telling the truth ; ho knows the very minute when the clang of the proases In the sub-collar of tbo printing ollho mast begin. The magazine editor , on the contrary , Is disposed to bo conver sational. Ho can aft"rd to. Ho hai a whole month before him to arrange the mat'ur ' fcr a publication about as the Sunday edition of a great New York daily , and as many months BS ho chooEca to deliberate where the pictures shall go la on article on "Tho Probable Shape of the Sea Cow'a Tail in the Paloc/olc Period , " or "Operations Before Tripoli lu 180C , by Captain Halyard and Commander - mandor L\nyard , U. S. N. , " and other subjects of contemporaneous human In terest. Tbo newspaper editor , on the contrary , has abjut twenty-four hours to edit nti article on the Spanish tiuaty , for example , going over tbo whole ground of commercial treaties , the constitutional rights of the Jiouso and Senate ; In irctty- making , its effect on the tariff , its status in different sections of the country , the nholo thing to be compiosod Into three- quarters of a column , with the certainty that , if ho slips up once , every ono of his esteemed contemporaries will bo baund- int ; him next morning , and that ho will never ba able to write another line en the subject of commercial treaties with out bdng reminded In a printed chorns , with the charming frankness of news paper men , that he is a monumental John- donkey , and this continual grind goln on every day Jn iln week , and every week in the year , and a thonaend other things of as much Importance aa the Span ish treaty pressing him ; itith literature and art demanding to bo heard ni ranch in a norrspaper as in a magazine , verily the newspaper editor ia born to ink and mlecry. I must again repeat that this typical editor belongs to a great arid powerful daily. Imnil-ttrnbbing lu Dn.lc.-ita , St. Paul Globe. The census enumerators in Dakota re port that in nearly all the towns they find a great many people who refuse to bo enrolled - rolled DS citizens of the towns because they hold claims in the county , often in other counties , and in proving up these It is necessary to establish a legal resi dence on them. In many caiea they have lived in the towns for years , own the houses they live in , are engaged in busi ness , belocg to churchej , and look nnd act like residents. The Mitchell Repub lican , In noting this matter as regards that city , says : "Servant cirls who have not been absent from the city two weeks In the past six months ; young men who are engacod In mechanical and other par- sul's , and whoao faces have been familiar for a year past , are not citizens for tha reason that they have a claim. ' " This fact will largely account for the small fig- urea in many placca. Of course , theao parties have pretty tough swearing to dote to make ont residence on their clalmi , which in nine caees out of ton they hold simply for speculative purposes , but they generally pull through- Under the now instructions of the land oflio it Is becom ing moro difficult , however. Mr , ITaycH has No ChlckiiH for Halo. Brooklyn Union. The publication of the ( statement that ox-President Iluthoford D. Hayes had engaged in the business of raising poul try an a 15,000 acre farm in Ohio , and that ho Vr-ai the possessor of some very choice breeds of fowlt , haa led many leas fortunate poultry men to write to the ox-president for specimens o his stock. Among tbo applicants for some of the fowls wan Valentino Schramm , of Collega Point , Long l-.hnd , who U not only a largo ralaor of fowls , but an enthuslas ic aimirer of the Fremont statesman. Mr Sohramra rccjn ly wrote to Mr. Hayes , requesting him to ahlp at once 1,000 head of his choicest fowla and draw at sigh for the amount. In reply Mr. Schramm received the following plihy epistle , which is a mild contradiction of the state ments that the ox president is raising poultry for speculative purposes. The 'otter read as follows : FBKMOMT , 0 , July 17 , 1885 , DEAU Siu : I a in sorry not to be able to comply with year request. Wo raise only enough for our own use not any for sale. Sin cerely , H , B. HAYES , Mr. Valentino Sohramm , College Point , Lang Island. Tdo Dlitillnry Fire. "Yes , " said Mr. Her to a reporter yesterday "tho lots on the distillery will amount to About f 50,000. This amaunt Is almost oavorod by insurance , " The distillery is of course not running low , and about 125 men are thrown out > f employment. The vork of rebuilding * il ( commence at once , The still house iropor Id almost intact , whlii ) the alcohol louse , fermenting house , aud-rectifyluv ud refining houcu under th .came rocf ro a toUl bar.- Seal of North Carolina Smoking To * CCQ ii the best , THE TIDE OF WEALTH Development of ibo North- weslernConnliesofNttola ( , Thriving Towiis and Cultivated Farms Succeed Desolate Prairie Progress of the Northwestern Itnll- roail The Mlnek Hills 11 ranch anil the AVrnmln Scheme. ON TO OI1&U11ON. COMPLETION OF THE KAU.11OAI1 TO THE TOWS. Special Correspondence of The USE , GiiAimoN , Daivcs Co , July 27. The virtual completion of the extension of the Fremont , Missouri Valley & Elkhoru railroad to this point marks another long stride In the development of Northern Nebraska Yesterday construction trains ran Into the newly located town of Chad- ron , five miles southeast of whore this letter is written , and within two weeks tlmo through Pullman sleepers will un load paaicngors for the Black Hilla and the northwest 125 miles nearer their des tination than by any existing ronto. From early in April , gradew , tracklayers and telegraph corps have haon badly engaged - gaged in pushing forward this splendid now road through sand hill and canyon across creeks and gulches Into the fine valley of the Whlto river which they have now reached , and the progress has been followed , nay , anticipated by euch a stream of Immigration as Nebraska has not known for years. It ia the Intention of the writer who haa recently spent some tlmo In the country and along the line of the railroad extension to give a few of many passing impressions which this most newly settled portion of our state has made upon him. The vlaitor to the White River country takes the Sioux City nnd Pacific's leased line , the Fremont , Elkhorn & Missouri Vulley railroad at1 Blair. The rldo to Norfolk alone ; the beautiful valleys of the Logan aud Elkhorn , In familiar to many of your ruadors. No portion of our beantifal state has boon moro bountifully endowed by nature. No section Is poa- sceaod of moro fertile uplands , of richer lowlands , of a greater variety of contrast ing country senery , or of an amnlor sup' ply of water. The black soil , as woglldo past flourishing towns and villages , ovl- iiuncinH the thrift and prosperity of their inhablthtite , ohowa throagh long avenues of green corn , wlioto waving tieaels and nllky ears bespeak a crop greater1 then has bean known for yuare. Long and wide patches of yellow fields are dotted with sheaves or echoing with the choorfulclatter of the reaper and binder. Farm after farm in a high state of cultivation , and the absence of continuous stretches of unimproved land , make a commentary on the benefit of "FHEE LANDS FOII THE MILLION , " the motto of the railroad , which needs no explanation. It la worthy of note that Northern Nebraska haa boon built up by actual settlers on government land. There haa boon no railroad grant of al ternate sections to bar its progress or to encourage speculators and shark ; . The men who have had the nervp to press for ward In advance of civilization and steam , or to follow cloae In its footsteps , with little or no capital except honesty , thrift and iudomitabla energy , have ta ken up their pro-emptione , homoatoada and tree claims , and have secured the land directly from the government through the Improvements required by the law. The result is apparent at a glance In the fine groves which pass us by in rapid succession and in the well worked farms and substantial buildings which adorn them. It needs no examination of tbo state census to toll the travelers np the Elkhnrn valley of the wonderful growth of Northern Ne braska in the past live years. Now build ings , old sod houses and dug outs replaced by neat residences , sheds and fields with bright new agricnltur.il implements of laatest make , towns and villages whose streets are busy with a commercial ac tivity which gains now impetus every month all are proofs which appear to oven the passing vlaitor. From Fremont to Nellgh through the old counties of Dodge and Cumlng and the newer moa of Stanton - ton , Mad la on and Antelope much of the beat land Is occupied and HELD AT man FHIUKES. Settlement capoclally directly along the line of the railroad ia almost continuous and cities and townalikoFremontScribner ) Weat Point , Stanton , Oakdalo , Norfolk and Neligh. draw trade from and assist in supplying a market to a largo section of ndjicent country. From Nelijjh west to Valentino wo pass through the still newer coun'iea of Holt , Broirn and Cherry , with O'Neill , Stuart , Lon Pine , Alnaworth and Valentino , as their loadIng - Ing towns. There is still a heavy immi gration Into this section which promises soon to eqnal its abler country east ia the abundance of its cropa and the prot- perlty of its paople , Valentino , the county seat of Chorr ; . county , has bscn for eeveral years pas the terminus of the Elkhorn Valley line It la from this point that the great Imml gratlou which for tbe past twelve month haa been pouring Into the Whlto Illve valley his started. Thousands of Imml grants and hundreds of carloads of house Jiola goods have hero been transferred t the prairie schooner en Its western trip towards the future terminus of the rail road. And Valentino has reaped In ful measure tbo benefits of the great inrush Her merchants have supplied the country west fcr nearly a hundred and fifty miles , and , the town bat grown In proper tlon to too demands made upon its ro sources. While Cherry county has ye much of Its territory to bo settled and much that probably never can ba utilized for farming purposes It still contains many thoneauda of acres of excellent land which la jet unbroken and untakon , The success of last year and the almoat certain prospects of HUCCCBS this year which the heavy rainfall acorns to aasuro Is most encouraging to now settlers , and la inducing many who expected to looato further west to stop east of Valentine. TJIK KAILHOAI ) EXT NBON , The immediate extension of the Slonx City tt Pacific , or mora properly tha Chicago cage & Northwestern both the Sioux Uiiy and Elkhorn valley line are leased or controlled by that read was decided upon early hat year , Several preliminary mrveys had been maio Ion ? previous ind the route practically decided : jpon before the road reached Val- > Dtiue ( o mike Its temporary tcr- ulnua in Cherry county. But the ub- lonce of funds and poiilllctlng interests on ho PJcrro route to tbo Black Hills , t l- Removed TELE OZEsTETS" 1119FABNAMST. , 1119 I Formerly of 1312 Douglas Street , ready owned by the Northwestern , to gether with the extremely limited settle ment to the wcat , In old Sioux county operated t ] prevent further construction , and fostered delay on the part of the ofli- clals. The oatontiblo object of extension westward was to open n route by rail to the Black Hills. Any further construc tion by way of Fort Plnrro was effectually blocked by the great Sioux reserve across which no franchlio was obtainable Ex tension northwest by way of Valentino waa also impracticable for the eamo rna- ton. Nothing therefore remained lor the company but to push west , skirting the Dakota line until the western boundary of the reservation , nearly 150 miles dis tant from Valentino , was reached when a north and south branch Hue to the hills would find easy accois to Rapid City. This Is what has bson accomplished by the present extension , ana so far their plans have been carried out. But thoeo who watched the numerous parties of surveyors trailing their chains and pack ing their tranalin farwost of tbo proposed junction of the Black Hilla line at White rlvor , eaw n wider and moro comprehen sive sshomo of western railroad aovclop- ment than was indicated in reptr.ed in terviews with the management or in the declarations of the onqinocM. There were symptoms of tha coming of railroads from the south and southeast northwards acrcsi the Wyoming line into the CDS ! 1 mdp , aud rich grazing country around Fort Fcttorraan. 1J AM ) It. SUUVEYOUS had been running preliminary lines along the North Plttto totvarda Fort Lirfimlc , ana there were rumors that the Union Pacific would not partnit ether cattle shipping territory to bo occupied by an other company without n struggle. Those facts decided the railroad to make ns little tlo halt as possible In pushing forward a main Hue which in time would become a through trunk line bstwoon the Paclfia covat and the lakes , and which in its pro- proas would enter the coal fields of Wy oming and iap the rich ranges of that territory. It ia now believed that by this tlmo next year the mauapumont will be shipping cattle from a paint 135 miles west of Ohadron and only twelve miles to the east of old Fort Fettorman , in Wyoming , while bef ore the expiration of another twelve months they will have through connections over their own or friendly lines with Salt Like city aud the Central Pacific Donbtlojs it Is with this in view that their newly constructed line Into the White river has boon built in Its present substantial manner. Road bed , sleepers , rails , bridges all ere of the beet , and the constrnctlon train , on tbo roar of which wo an > winding through the sand hills west of Valentino carries ua aa smoothly as if wo were riding on the section ont of Fremont. Sixty- pound steel rails on a well settled bed and a finely ballasted road give assurance of PLEASANT JOUKNEYS ANI EAHY TUAVEL , while the neat station houses aud build- in s for employee , built In the moat durable msnnor and with every conven ience for patrons , ara an earnest /or the fatnro treatment of the Inhabitants of a rapidly settling country. It ia a fact to bo noted that the railroad cimpiny has raised few antagonlsma In Its progress , and that the boat of feeling exists bs- tproen It and the people which It is about to servo. Not a dollar's worth of bjnds has baon voted or naked. There lias been no systematized blackmailing In view of favors to coma. Right of way has been purchased In every Instanca and liberally paid foriucish. Within a few miles from Valentino the ra'lroad ' otrikes the sandhills. This formation ia peculiar to a largo extent of territory in Northern Nebraska and opinions still dlll'jr whether it can over bo utilized for farming purposes. Thorn la , however , no question of the value of the sand hills for a range. Cattle subsist and crow fat upon the nutritious grasses which covers rbo loir hummocka and find shelter and nutriment in winter behind the protection which they nfl'jrd. The stretch of nearly eighty mtlos which ex tends to within a few sections of Gordon is accordingly very sparooly ocsnpled by anything but ringe citllo and their own- era who sincerely hope that they may not ba dlatnrbod by the rush cf immigration which la now passing beyond. A few miles from Gordo'n we pasa from out the siud hills and enter Sheridan county. The soil begins to blacken and deepen , and the sod honso and settler to put In an appearanca. Gordon , ninety miles weet of Valentino , la a city of little moro than a year's growth and is now the moat thilvlng settlement In Sheridan county , the caitormost of the three counties into which old Sioux was divided by tbo last legislature. Largo and handsome freight and station houses , water tanks and yards have been constructed hero by the rail road company and the town is alroidy putting of ! its early frontier appearance , and boasts of hotels , btnks , pluto glass fronts and largo agricultural implement warehouses. AN EXCELLENT FAHMINO ItEOION lies to the wort and south cf Gordon and it is believed that moat of the supplies for Pine Ridge agency will ba shipped from this point. By act of tha governor Sheridan county haa just received a tem porary organization and the people of Gordon , as the largest iown in the Cbiiaty , are putting in an earnest pica ' for the permanent location of the county neat at this point. This claim will bo reiiitod by Rush- I'llle , fourteen rnlloi cast , and 104 miles Frcm Valentine. Unahvlllo ia expert * imclng a rapid growth and claims n larger : outtituoncy of actual aotthra and a iino mrrouudlng country of tbo bzst farming a nil a , waturod by Rush crock and Its ribut rics , It lias a postollice , ton or ifteon business bonnes , good hotels and cstaurantB , and it bound to hnomlf the > luck and energy of Its people and am- > ltj natural rtcourcos can nmitu U , From IluahviUo the road etfikoj north- 0 aatcrly towards the valley of the Whllo river , ntsilug along the foothills cf the Pine Utdgo chain of blufla , through a country well watered and with n largo per cent of excellent farming Innda , which ia receiving now accessions of set tlers dally. There ar j occasional patches of sand but few In number. Sjuth of Hay Springs , the next station west of Kushville , the country Btrotshes In a fertile table land for miles toward the Nlobrara river , a section which Is said to bo the mcsi fertile In Sheridan county. Four miles west along the line of the road wo enter Dawes county and cross the divide of the P/na / ll'tlgo ' At. Bor deaux aiding , 124 miles from Valentino and twenty from Knalivlllo etjges are awaiting us to cany ua Into Chadron thirteen miles distant though the smoke of the construction train Is not passed un til wo have covered more than seven miles by the stage. W. E. A. ThoGrowlli uf Luimlon , The Builder. The view of the growth of London which wai recently presented by Mr. Price Williams to the statistical society covers ground familiar to many of our rcadoH. For the meat forcible appeal to the imagination nclliing can exceed the mnte uloqnonco of the figures of this preliminary report of the cenaua of 1885. There wo loam that at the beginning o the century out of ten Inhabitants of. England and Walea ono lived in London , the proportion haa risen to one in savon. The greater London of the register gpnor- al's weekly returns contained in 1881 015,818 inhabited houses , built over an area of 097 equaro miles , The growth of the population over this dnnsnly peopled area has boon from 3,222,720 In 1801 47.8 per cent in twenty years , and of 22 0 per cent In the last ducado. Inti mately connected wlh } the growth of the population of London , and with the house room provided for tholr ac commodation ; Is the yet moro porten tous growth of the rental , and of the ratable valoo of the house * . lu 1871 the metropolis , then containing , according to the report of the local government board. 417,707 houses , was rated nt 19- 830,051 In 18S1 the corresponding num ber of houses was 480,280 , and the rata ble valua 27,541,440 , allowing on ad vance In the Utter of from . 47 5 to 50 ( J per houae. The increate lu the total value was thus 38.0 per cent. In ton years , against a growth of 71.23 par cent , of the population. A comparison of this kind shows where lies the nucleus of the diffi culty attending on the question of the housing of the working classoa. And not of the working claques alone , far unices a corresponding activity In trade and man ufacture companies this apparently irre sistible Increase in ono of the main ar ticles of necessary cxpondlturo , pDvorty must bo on the Increase. Over the whole of England , after dcdncling the metropolis , the Increase of ratable vnluo haa been 28 per cont. In the decide , agalnat III 84 growth in population. It Is conceivable that as this fact becomes known it may tend to apply some check to the enormous growth of this great realm of brick and mortar. Prof. lUlcj'u ] Ijouunt Bancjuor. Prof , lllley , the entomologist , ins had to fltaud n good deal of dialling upon his cicada diet , but the agrkultnrlats who wore in Washington the other day took the palm for guying from the nowapaper men. The visitors wura given a dinner at the Ebbltt by Commissioner Counan and his staff. There the conspiracy cul minated. "You may give mo a locust stow in milk , to commence with , " ono of the gueata said gravely , In a full , firm volca to the waiter at his elbow. The darky looked mystified , but passed to the npxt and asked , "What'll you have , best ? ' "I'll take deviled locusts , " wan the sol emn reply. "Scolloped locuatn , " aald Number Throe. . "A HtHo locust Ihvorod with roach , " was the fourth order , and still not a smile. The waiter hesitated. "Bi j , " ho asked "Is all this " , on the bill ? "Certainly , " was the reap-jiiso. ' Boar , pleaao call mo thin In plain Eaultah , BO I can ax thncook. " So the perplexed African was Bonfc back to the kitchen to find out If the Eh- bett lirdor contained any cicada sopton- doclm or trodclm. Ho returned in H few mlnnto * announced with nluborato flour- lahea that "do cicadas had been out two weoke , tab. " By this limo the whole body of agri culturists was thoroughly allvo to the iltnation. Prof. lllley could hold in no longer , "This tiling has pone far } nough"ho almost shouted , "Gentle * HOD , I'll set up the wine and you'll take to cat boaldes locauat. " PVOJL l FOR SALE , 'OOL , BIKTH AND OTHHH I'HIVI- LKGJJS KOU SALK ON Till ; GHOUNUS Off T1IK Off AHA , NEBRASKA , FAIR. All Mill must 1)0 on fll > In the Bccictirj'H lianila i or liofu-u Aut ' , . 1C. Tliu rlijlit u imruil to ru < ( tall liUa. 1'ureed and other prcinluina offered , S10- , Hl. \\JH \ HELD KKJ'T. 41/t ( o llth. Address , DAN , , Hi-orcmry , 1 , CrclKhton U uk , Orcclii , Nt1' ' .