THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : FKIDAY , DECEMBER 8 ; 1880. THE DAILY BEE , PUBLISHED EVERY' ' MORNING. TM1r ) Ofornl.itt Kdltlnn ) Including Buildup Rrr , tlno Vcfcr. . . . . . . . . , . I . 100 Tor Bit Monthi . . . . . . . DO VorThT-no Month * . S& The Oiimlm Sunilny IIUK , hlailod to nur mlJttf.s , Ono Vwir. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . " 0 OMATH nrncc. No. 91 14 MM 611 FAIIVAM Nr.\r xmtcOFrrtr. HIIOM ( ll. Tniin'Nit lli' . All communications rolAtliur to noir i an torlnl matter fllKiuldix ) nddrosswl to tlio Lin "ju Of TUP. Ur.fi. . . AH hut lnr s lottery mid remlttnC"S should li ruMrnfi'cil to Tins HUB rrm.tsitiso COMPAN * OMUIA. J > nilU , cihccks nnd | Ki l fllto order toboiDRdopayftblotothooitltroftlioconipiiuj IHE Bit POBLISHIsTciPHIi PHOPIHITOHS , E. ItOS \VATKH , Knnon. Y BHK. Bxrorn Statement of Circulation. Stnte of Nebraska , 1 „ , . County of DoiiKlas. | ' ( ? ro. n. TVfchtlcK , tpcrclary of The Be Publishing coimmny. 'does solenlnlv 'B\\en I hat the actual ciir.ulntlnn of the Dally He for tliueck muling Nov.ai.th , 1830 , was n follows : Saturday. Nov. CO . ; . , U Bunilixv. Xov. 81 . l--M ' Monday , Xitv. W . ' V. . TiicMdnv. Nov. ss . v . 12.03 W l iicfMUyNo v. U4 , . . , Thursday. Nov. i& Friday , Nov. 'JO Avcrace . , . . .lii.ll Ro. 15. Stib i Ibril nmt sworn to before me tills 27t < 1ny of November , A.U. , IBSfi. N. 1 * . Km , , JSKAhl Notary Public. ( ! eo. H. T/ chuck , bclug fiwl duly swoir deposes nnd says tlmt ho Is hccrct.iiy of th JJco I'nlilMiliiK company , 'that the nclunla\ craL'o ilntly circulation uMho Daily Hco In tlio month of ilimnniy. 1BSO , was 10.)73 ! ) ropic- for Fcbrnan-v lW , > 10,59."i copies ? lor Jlarel IbbO , ll.Mf copies ; for Aiull. 1SN5 , 18,11 ponies : lor May. 1W > , 18i ! ! ! > copies ; for.luix 18K5. lS , iiooni ! ( > : lnr.tily ) , lbvlMflllcnnps | lor Ainrnit , lsv12XVl eopiesjforKrtitctnhPi Ibbo , 1:1,0:10 : : copies ; for October , ISSfi , 13BS ! Copies. UliO. B. T/.HCIll'CK , SyjtACUSE iii Otoo county has strue coal. Tliu mama fqr black diamond seems to spreading in .Nebraska. republicanism' is sound o the turlir. 11 knowS'a tax when it sees i however diwgulsed nndor'liifnlutln nnnic mid concealed In false economic theorie : Mti. AT.USQN is uid to have , decline in advance tlio presidential noiuinaliot Thcro mijjlit bo far worse solcctiou rntidn tlimrtlmt of tlio Iowa filntecmat And there might bo better. SKNATOII VAN WVCK is nUendin strictly to business in Washington. II feels satlsllcd to leave Ins canvass in th hands of his friends , and finiLs no caus for worry over the .situation. IN spite of Mr. Stone's pleading' ? an the tearful romonstrancos of the niiif wuinps , Mr. Cleveland lirnily declines I reinstate the biisncndcd ollicial. Th Miugwuinjs ) huvo been ohking the pros dent for bread and ho gave thorn a Slom Tin : democrats of the District of Colun bia are Druimrinp ; to renew the 1'iRl , ngnlnst Matthews , the colored recordc ot deeds of the district , when hisappoini incut again cocs to the senate for cor 1'irimitiou. Colored men every where wh have democratic tendencies will bo intci estod in this fact. is negoliatnifr another cxtcnsiv Joan , Germany is increasing the size c her standing army , and Turkey i Btrongthoning the fortifications of th Dardanelles. These uro significant sign of an opening overture of hnavy gun somewhere when the snows of spnn leave the sides ol IhcJJalkans. Wir.Lun CJ.H'1'OHD , of Maine , has bee fecommendcd lou the Turkish missio by Secretary Baytird. Mr. Uayard lui nought his latest foreign minister from prohibition state , hoping , probably , I prevent a , renewal of the Manning it .iitunt. Uut is Mr. Bayard awart > tin Neal Dow pronounces prohibition us at ininistorod in Maine a failure ? TUB .Northwestern has surveyed through route from Ioux City to Nort i'latto. Now lot thc Iisboun L'aoilic bull from Omaha to Yankton and tap for thi city the eastern counties of Northern Ni braska , now bound hand and foot to th Northwestern road. Omaha will try t taico care of her western trade. Wlu aho needs are inlets into the northwo ! and southwest portions of tliu stale , noi controlled by lines not overfriendly t her lueruhants. ANOUIKU suit involving thousands t dollars and a ( urge amount ot Omah oity property has bn n decided by tb stiprenie'conrt ndvcrsoly to thctissallanl of a-twenty years * title. Oursnprcm court has adopted a-unlformly conservr tivo course in questions of this charactci Their line of ducubions give cold comfoi for the sharks and harpies who han around every court rqconls waiting t find Haws by which they may prol through the innocent mistakes and Hi misfortunes of others. WITH capital nnd labor engaged i Jicrco conflict the western farmer .stain : bqtwccn and receives the blows of boll lie is taxed'to ' incronao the profits of th eastern capitalist and the eastern worl ingnmn , ' Ho borrows liis money froi the eastern inannfaetiircr and falls victim to combinations of eastern iudu trial monoolists , There is no mono of western farmers seeking castor loans , and no crie-i from western fjirn ors for hjcroascd t riU'd on tholprodin tinns to tax eastern consumer * Ti | luxation is altogether one-aided. Tnn fdoudd of the lleunepin jectdonot despair , although their c : perk'iica Urns far has not justified the hopes. It was understooiUhnt ' n innnbi uf them wcro to wait on the , preside ) tltib week for the purpose of asking hi : to make n favorable reforcnco to tl cauul hi Ills mc nge. It has uot trnu ) > lrcd whether they were successful in so ing his excellency , who lias recently bee somewhat impatient ' interruptions i the preparation of his annual rccoi ; luondatious , and it is possible they coi eluded not to run the canal into his Iii of thought at this vital junptiiro. Hi whether or not the president shall sr nnythin ? on the subject , it is the Into tion of the JrieuiUot the project to agu urge it with increased y.oal and vigo Tito board appointed to examine the sul ject have their report completed , and will bo among the lirst documents pr sonted to cp Not settled. It is a ( arorito cry Of the Railroad OT tfans of Nctrftukn Uial Hie anli-lnonopol' is-ue has been Jollied , Jlpn and paper wlilcn'persist jn voicing the cotupuimt of shippers cniii8t tlic tli crimlnations c the rajlrotvds , of farmers against grai and elevator monopolies , attd pf the slat at largo agaiu&ttlio exorbitant loll which arc a bunlen uixm tlio producer of thl Slate , are ridiculed by' tlio new ; papers whoso biu-kbono consists of rail road patronage , and'whosc editors valu an annual pass more than the hone ; pnil c of their constituents. The antl-mondpoly issue is not selllt in Nebraska. 11 will never be sctlic until the million population of Xebrask arc placed omancquality.so far as rate nnd Inrifli nni conoernod with tlio pc < pics of neighboring slates. It will ooi timio to force iticlf as a subje.ct of pan mount importance upon public consli eration until the wrongs from which tli people of Nebraska have filifl'orod fc years rnd from Mhlch they arc now su fering , nrc rjghtcdi The railroiuU lutmt bo compelled t comply with their ohartcr obligations n eoiulnoti carriers. As long as rajlroa tarifli in Nebraska arc double what the arc'in Iow , as long as n hundred wcigli of'freight nan be transported as cheap ! from Liverpool to Omaha as it is froi Omaha to Hasting thoisRiio between tl ; peojile and the corporations will remai iinscltloll. Fair pay for fair servic from common carriers will eti\l romai the battle cry ol .the producers of tl wcat. 'I'lio .Supreme Court. It in not improbable that befoi tlio expiration of the term i the present administration thci will be several changes In the bone ot the United States Supreme cour There are now lour members who ai eligible to retirement , with full pay , li reason of having attained the ago of ' vears. These are Chief Justice Wait whose seventieth birthday was last \Vc < nosdliy , and Justices Miller , 1'ielil an IJradl&y. Of these Justice Miller has bee longest in service , having been appointc bv Lincoln in ISlW. Next is Justice l-'icli who was appointed in I&GIJ , also by Lii coin. Justice Bradley was appointed i 1870 , and Ohief . .JusticeVallo in 1ST both of thorn by Grant. They wore ai pointed respectively from Iowa , Uallfo nia , New "Jersey " and Ohio : All of the1 distinguished jurists aio in vigoroi health and the full possession of the mental powers , so that there is notliii ! impelling them to retirement unless it I a desire to pass the remaining years i their lives in quiet and leisure , free fro : the demands and constraints of imper live duty. It is generally iindcrstoc. that the labors of a justice of the supren court are not of the most arduous an exacting character. It is undoubted ; possible for the nine lawyers who coi stitutc that great tribunal to arranj their duties from time to lime so that tin shall not bo severely burdensome. The have none of the small details whic annoy and perplex the judges of infori < courts , nor are they doomed to listen 1 so much of tlio wrangling and dispul : tion , of attorneys , which to a liiyma seems the most intolerable requirumor of a judicial career. From their exalte place in the temple of justice they en review with calm and patient dolibe ution the issues that are presented fc their final and unimpeachable jndgmon unlcrrilied by any fears of political coi sequences to themselves or of ill-efl'ecls t their judicial reputations-froui-a revere : of their decrees. StilLtho.supreme . cou : justices have a work and duty to perfori which demands of them most careful a tentiou , exhaustive- research , patient an conscientious deliberation. It may som < times happen , as wasrecontlyoonfessed t one of the jiifiticoH in respect of u decisio rendered a few years ngo.lthatr nil the * conditions are not complied with , bi undoubtedly- examples of itiadequac regarding any of them are extreme ] rare in the history of the court , the nil being that the members of the supren bench devote themselves to their gnu duties with a profound sense of the great importance. Comparing the hi tory of Iho supreme court of the Unite States with that of similar tribunal of other nations and none hn a more honorable record. Every dut imposes some constraint , and it is m unlikely that.somo or all of iho four ju ticcs who may retire on full pay wi within thu. next year or.two elect to i : so , securing a merited and jionorably r lease from further necessary labor whi yet they are pjiysically and mentally i a condition to enjoy life. In their political alllliations the mnjo ity of tlio members of the supreme boiit are republicans. In the uyent of any < Ilium retiring during the term of this U1 ministration rhoy would of coiuvo I succeeded by democrats , and if the foi who are eligible to retirement should a cept their privilege the political cor ploxion of the court would undoubted ! bo rovorsed. It is not improbable th : this fact will have sonio weight in Iiidu ing a part or all of the sop.icnnantm jn tiees to continue on at least until afU the next presidential election , when i any event doubtless all of them will r tiro. It is paid that , Secrelary Huytu would accept a place on the sn'pron bench , as a welcome relcaso from poll ieal perplexities nnd contention , fro : whieh he probnuly uxpecU no further a < vantage. Two. years ago Mr , Uayai could perhaps not have been imluci to give a moment's thoug ! to accepting Midi a positio but his later experience mil luu u convinced him that his ambition bo provident is a hopeless desire.Vn his political future somewhat clouded , is easy to understand that ho might we come the security and seclusion of i honorable judicial position. Anotti gentleman said to be not unwilling wear the ermine is J. Randolph Tuckv of irginhi , who desires to divorce hii self from politics at tbo cud of his prt enl term in congress , and who is a lawy of fine attainments. But the preside would have no dlflioulty in tilling vacai cies , unless perhaps his standard of mei and qualifications should be too high. The justices of the supreme court oth than those above named nrc John I llarlau , of Kentucky , appointed In l&i William B. Woods , of Georgia , n pointed in 1830 ; 'Stanley Matthews , Ohio , and Horace. Uray , of Massachu ctts , appointed in 1831 , and Sarau Blatehford , of New York , appointed 1&S2. Justice Woods has been for son time in lU-henltli , and will uot sit wi his colleagues tins winter. , lie won like 'to retire , but , hss hot te'ort bnough on the bench -nor attained tin totiiUrcd'to sccnrb a' 'ls not fertile gronfid f6r dar ing feats of diplomacy , its tendency it the long run is to mind its business There are enough domestic problems ti claim Its-attention withoutilabbllug -li matters outside of its.confines. Kvcn th French repjtbjt.c in the prca.cnt critiea juncture in' its Intornntlbnftl affairs , 1 developing a gMuihie disposition to llmi iU activities lo its present boundaric- and this , too , with a ministry disposed t < do great and brilliant thing * on forcigi soil. To a French minister , who gets th glory without paying the bills , the temp tation to figure .iu Kuropoan politics I ' .Croat indeed. Do Froyclnet an his histrionic minister of war hav bocn planning great things on p ? per as the handmaid of the Kussians , bu the debate on the budget has produced i very sobering ellcct. The j > ieluru of republic ligiivinc : as qnp-bcarqr to th most powerful and most miserable auto crat in the world is evidently too deprcs sing to the people of France. The chain ber of deputies have ruthlesMy cut dowi the catimalcs. and if signs count fo anything iu Franco the present ttipk inal'i6 union between that republic am HtHiia Is a inerd ( inp'eT out1. If 'there 1 any vitality in It at all , it i.s owing to th hatred .that Franco bcnr.s to Gurmanv Saturday' speech of Preiuict1 dc I'ro.y ctnet is proof enough of the soborin , ell'eetof popular opinion. Il was a thoi oughly | ) acilic speech. "The niaint < nunce of peace , " said thu premier.- " ! the republic's iutcrcH and the govcri incut's study , " and he added that Franc must content herself with organi/iug lie present colonial possessions. His c > pressed belief that the republic woul not allow Kgypt to pass into the hands c another power , was sluiply a ro-slutc ment of an old position. Our It is not our intention to engage in wordy personal encounter with the lit pnlilicwi about the Bii ; : and its' tHliloi Both subjects , to whieh the rejuvenate concern has found it advisablc'tO'ilevot ' considerable attention of laic , liavo ha Hie habit for many years past of speal. ing for themselves through results. The need no advertisement in Iho columuH c their contemporaries. What they ar and what they have done the public b this time has fully determined. Hi ; when that paper assures its readers thn the editor of the BUEdoes not'bcliev that Van Wyck can be ulccted , we fee called upon tostatoonrposition so clear ! that there can be no further conlrovers. . on that point. The JlJuE always roprc sonts the sentiments ol its editor. Jt editorial columns voice his honest view upon the topics which they trcai The editor of the BKI : has n private opinion on private matter which differs from his opinion as openl expressed in the paper over which h presides. Ilo has not learned the lesso of modern journalism which converts paper into an impersonal entity in whic consistency lias no place , and asliiftni ; popularity is the sole object m view. 1 the Br.ihas won any success it has bee through the honest , stratghtforwar course which it has alwaj'H adopted tc wards its constituency. It has advocate' ' measures in which the responsible cdito has earnestly bolievcd , and -has fougli with all tho' weapons at.'its command fo their success. All human judgment i fallible. But they have been honest mh takes of judgment ami not the failure of duplicity. The BII : believes tlui Charles 11. Van Wyck will b his own successor in the nation ; senate. It hasno reason lo believe tl contrary. Uublio sentiment is in .hi favor. A constituency which ho hu honored has pronounced for his earn ! dacy at the ballot .box. If pledges c men are worth anything , General Va Wyck has to-day enough votes to male his calling and election suro. The BK believes that Van Wyek will be electee because , no opponent worthy of choic when compared with the senator has ye been named as a competitor. It has coi tidouce in the sober , common sense c the people of Nebraska'wh have selected members of the legislatur sufllcicnt in number to voic" their sent incuts on the senatorialissue. It doc not bplieve , it has hart -no evidence t make it believe , that enough traitors hav been found by the emissaries sent out fo that purpose to compass Van Wyck'i defeat. Thn UBI : i.s confident of Vai Wyck's ro-oleeti. n. It will workitsbe ? to for.vvanl it. And in adoing it will b backed by the .hearty good will of a nni jority of Nebraska republicans and c the producers of a great state. JT is hjgu time .that the slipshod an expensive system of grade cstublishmut ! under which Omaha has suffered fn years should "bo revised. There is scarcel a slreiit running cast and west over th hills which bus not been cut or filled half a do/.on times on as many diflei'eii proliles. Properly owners have sullen1 inoro in copscqucnco of the repeate changes than they have frqm the result r the crado as finally established , Thur has been absolutely no assurance tin ; the. grade as determined this yen would not bo reversed the next. A a general proposition , the ensiei gradient on main thoroughfares i.s the lie.- for the interests of the eily tjnd the mo ; profitable for the owncr.s of ndjoiuin property. The street which is the mo : nearly level attracts thn travel and draw the trade. Lolls abutting lively tl'orougl fares command the highest prices. Pro ] erly owners , therefore , stand in their ow light when they oppose a radical ehtuig of grade at the outset find force the emu ell to agree on a compromise. A shot experience with the street as change shows the necessity of further gradin and the same process of dismantled doc yanUi impeded travel and general it convenience must bo undergone alsecon or n third time. Cutting ptV u limb b inches is the most painful kind of ampi tation. Where heroic surgery is jicede minor operations are barbarous. TiiK,13riliih postotlice deparltnuut is ci gaged in a contest with tlio steamc lines which Have for years carried th American malls somewhat similar i character to that which our postofllco di partment had with the Pacitic atoamshi company. The three English lines whic have enjoyed a monopoly in the tram Atlantic mail carrying , receiving iiben subsidies therefpr , have hitherto bee able to defeat the attempts of the Brills department tp break iho ely anil give the carrying of the mails t the fastest steamer * . An effort to ai complish this made three 5'enr3 ace b Uio lalo Postmaster Uoncr.il Fawcetl wn unsuccessful. The present head of tli British department , however , seems dc termlned Id carry 'out this poilcy , an has made contracts which exclude two c Iho lines formcrlly employed. The meal re is wholly in the interest of tin cxp < ditcd service , which it seemed impossibl to obtain under the old system. It i gratifying to note lit connection with tli1 matter that the British postmaster got cral justified his course l > y referring I the American mail system as his gind ( of which he spoke a few e.vcnings ago i a public dinner Iu the" most oonipliinci tary terms. This country has moru tint reciprocated the lesions in postal bus nc.is learned of England , and the oldc country may still find some things t learn In this department of the youiigo Wmi u mayor who supports the lav less classes and a police force appointc by his euomics , Marshal Ctnnings placed in an embarrassing posilio -which it i.s hard to lill gracefully , Tli howl ngainsl his retention comes Irom class which has little respect to the lav Tim marshal , with all the obstacli thrown in hi.s path , should read Hie rit act lp tliii gentlemen. Presidential Availabilities. Caii'tho ' republican party afford lo 11011 iimtc as Its next candidate for preside ! cither .Mr. Blainior tionoral Logan ? Ui cent apparently reliable reports she that there is "bail blood" between thof distinguished gentlemen ; that while i thc.&ame hotel in New York they stud onsly avoided e.inh other. In vio.w i tins , and of the strong probability of factional light , should cither bo the n clplout of tlio noniinutiou. would ii I safe for the party to nominate cither ? In the campaign of ' 88 the party shonl not bo handicapped by the personal riva riert and jealousies of Its leaders , Hli less should it espouse by nominating on of the fact ion isl. , , his dido of tho' rev If , on a full uonsiderutioti , il.should at pear ( hat .both have placed thomselvi out of the ring , to whom can me part looic for a satisfactory standard bean torthc coming contests The result of tiie recent elections i Indiana , showing n republie.an pluralit of more than nine thousand votes , givt the party strong grounds for the bwlit that the coming man will bo troin tlu state. Air. IJIaine himself has cxprcsse the opinion that the partv "must " west" for its candidate , ami it has bee intimated that he had in his eye a di , tingiiis-hed citizen of Iowa for the pos tion. If , . however , General Ben Harr HOII should be the man , it is not untimel to consider the strong points in his favo Some of them may be briellv enumerate as follows : Ho is of cootffatnilv miti cedents ; ho was an able lawyer' befoi the war ; he was a very distinguished o ficor during the war ; he became tli ablest lawyer at the Indianapolis b : after the war a -composed of sue ublo men as Hondrioks , McDoi aid. Baker , nnd others ; as a soi ator he has proven himself tl intellectual peer of the ablest state men jn that distinguished body. Ho i.s man of unexceptionable habits an morals ; he is poor in this world's gooi notwithstanding hi.s six years in the soi ale , anil to all these advantages ho is a able orator , a popular slum ) ) speaker , an of the proper ago to give to the ollice tl best efforts of his manhood. Can a bulk showing bo made lor anyone else ? Mori over , Ins candidacy would unite nil "fai lions' 'in the party. T. M. C. TUB V 1 E IiL oV J N I ) U S T U V. An effoit is to bo nmde U > establish a labi bureau in Gcorcla. The volume of inonov teMcinc employmct In the Industrie. * is gi cater than at any tiu pre.vlons. The I'oeahontas coal region will have 1,1 ! coke-ovens turning out coke for eastern uia kets by next spiiiij , ' . .No less than 5,000 cok ovens will bo erected next year. The ureat activity ot the past three montl has given n stimulus to manufacturing ci terprises in neatly every direction. The Chicago Co-Uper.itlvo Pack Ins nn Provision company will shortly stint ini business with a capital of 5100,000. The Illinois prison-labor contractors ai making a vitcoious cll'ort to have Hie recei decision against prison-labor declared ui constitutional. Up to November 1st : t0t buildings woi crecteil in New York at a cost of Soll.OOO.OO an Increase of Sit,000OCO : over the same tin last year. In Michigan , Wisconsin and Minnesota great deal of industrial orjrniiizjvtloi In bccnnllected within : i short time in lumbc Ing , mining anil general nuiniilactiulii ? d rectlpns. Mr. U. Uiffi'ii , utiilcrtlio instniclions.of tli British government. Is dig.'ing out statlstU covering the past live yc.ir.Tln ( Srcat lirltnl sluiwiiiK rates ol wages In all Industrie hours of labor , conditions ot libmci : , and n the facts necesn.iry to unabln paillnmentl legislate Intelllgunlly MIIOII tliu labor mo letn. letn.Tho The liulltlers In several largo cllles have n contly been invited to inuUo c.stIiiinteHo he.ivy cynstrnctlon work next year. The will not rush into new .enterpriser ; until tli probabilities of labor agitations can 1m buttt discounted tlian at present , The present In illc.itlons nv tlmt them will bean tinmen. ' amount of ueneial biilltlliig work to be begn early next sitrlnir. Thciowerojr > ( )0 ) stilkes In "Now York hu year. Tim 18,000 car-drivers In New1 Yur anil Hi ooklyti gained a strike nt a cost < 5HjO,000 ( which Ims aihlcd 52,000,000 to the annual pay-roll , anil which Im.s lessened tl hour * of labor twi'iity-thu'o hours per wcel besides creating iuklitionul employment h Il.OOO men. All of , pun , illli ) ami amnumlllon cstabllKl mi'iils in the cnnntry me busy. Thn Uio woils Imvo just rcci'hcil an order for 6 ( rifles and 100(1 carbines. 'Iho worlcftntKinini licldantlat Ihiitfoid nio very busy , nml n goli.itloiis.it Is nnilii ( > lood. are In pi ogre ; between the nianui'iu'tuier.s there nnd the ie | penttitlvcs-of certain fnielirn powei.- , fur lart supplier of aims and .tiiinuinltlon. Wild AVIlli , lny , Sixty-eight weddings took plncj Iu 8 Iouls Tlmuksglvlng day , Tliu dlrcctoi lann Is wild wlthloy. A' ' Matter of Course. Jfnsfon 'riaiisfrlj ) ( . Lt was natural tlmt Mr , Bishop should con 'to ' Boiton. The mind leader tu rend tl miiid must go where the mlml Is. Mind thn now. ' Thn IIMl Horilc. //huMjWa / ( Crill , Among the ' 'hundred best books" tl pocket-book Kinks Hist , If it is gufliclontl robust , there will bo no illlllculcy in suluetin the other ninety-nine. U AVosn't Van Wyulc. JSmwn Cvitnlii lluul ( . J.es-s than one year ace had Dr. Miller beu disposed lie coulii have caused the romov , of every ofilclal in the Niobrnra ami Xellg laud otticcsby a "simple twist of the wrist , Why did ho not do It ? Au explanation fioi him \yll | be the only convincing thought thi .1m didn't want llruco nmt Butler removed , AValt fur tlio Hi-turns. Lincoln Democrat. Omalia climbed right up Iu the bank Vi Ings last uce ! : il.nt Is , she jwssitil Minntu ] oils , Tjoulsvllle , Milwaukee nnd I'rovldencr thoitgh the did about the same amount o business as Iho week before. When there turns from the conl boom come In she wll warm up Kansas City In real Nebraska slj k Too IJic hoads. Chltago llttalil. The yomiR gentleman In the cltyotMcs Ice who takes pleasure In persundlng Amnt lean diplomats to laUo bicker loads thai llicy can carry is haviuir inoro fun than thi law allows. If this thing keeps on It ina ; become necessary lo send a Mlssourlaii t < Mexico to uphold the honor of Ids country * 'Jit for Tat. JJcalrletVmocinf. . .Mr. Marvin owes Dr. Sillier nothing. Whci Dr. Miller was running about the couutr ; under nn assumed name nnd beirclnc for at ofllco at the opening of Cleveland's ailmlnls tration , he sent a letter for Mr. Marvin t sign asking his appointment. Mr. Marvli signed that letter , and when In turn h wanted Dr. Miller's signature he had n hesitancy In asking for it. lloxlo's Huocessor. Ktt JvitotrinibltniM. / . Mr.S. II. II. Clark , \\lio succeeds Mr. llt\l ) as the manager of the Southwestern system Is a man ot ability nnd long experience h coipoiatlon management. Mr. lloxle's dcntl was a los.s to the system , but under Us theor ; no one man , however poweifnl ornbecount ! for anything mine than a pait of its machln cry. Men may come and men may go , bu the corpotatlon Is arranged to go ou forevei This Lire. . This life is like a troubled sen. \ \ heie helm ii-wallicr or n-1ee The ship will noilhor May nor wear , But drhcs , ol cveiy rock liffuai. All.scnmanship In vain we try , \ \ e cannot Itecp her stcjidilv ; l > ut JiHl as rortune's wind limy blow The esscl's tltlVeii to ami fro. Yet , comobnt I.ove on lioaitl , Our hearts with iilcasnrc stoi'il. No plorin can ovei wlieltn , Kllll blows in vain Tlinlinirlrano While he is i\t the helm. STATK ASt ) TKIMIITORY. Nol > i.islc .lottintq. liuahvillc has a night watchman win never sleeps out of bed. Holt county is struggling with twelv newspapers and Cuslor with fourteen. Columbus is slowly recovering from i deluge of waterworks' enthusiasm. The North Nebraska Fair and Drivinj Park association ha- , been organized "u Norfolk. A bed of white marble has been struci on the Roderick farm near Blue Spring at a depth of 170 feet. The Holt County People has .just closei a prosperous year , and the edilor ex pres-.es a determination to continue at tending strictly to business , to pile it ] 'Toekj'oii a foundation of merit , am court success without tearing oilier down. 'I ho Beatrice council have voted the ! water works a success , but the Kxpres say that at a lire there Friday night tli companies could do nothing toward put ting it out because it was two blocks fron the nwirosL hydrant. Beatrice investci iu Holly. Mrp. Clarissa Bmninis , aged eight' years , residing near Berwick , in GarJieli county , narrowly escaped a fearful fat < by being frozen to death in the highes inry of Uio Into bl'/.zard. She had beci lett without fuel , and in trying to cot toi neighbor's house to keep from freezing became exhausted. Timely discover' ' just saved her. The Oakland Independent points tin finger of pride toward Omaha and call iier "Tho Second Pittsburgh1Vofanc' that wo can see old Kansas City pullini olVher nightcap and ritbbinsr her eyes ii unfeigned astonishment and alarm Never mind ; with coal at $2 ; i ton , lifi will boa softer snap than heretofore. " Iowa items. The farmers of Lucas county have or gaui/ed a mutual lire ; is-sociatibn. Siv divorces were granted by the district ' trict court of Clark county last'week. . Oleomargarine fioizurcs nr bocominj ( ] iiitc common in and around DcsMoincs The jury in the Kelly murder case a Chantoii returned a verdict of guilty am lived his punishment at imprisonment fo life. life.A A prisoner in the Polk eounlyjall madt a break for liberty on Saturday' , but rui against ' 'the bhirsted shotgun of tlu ' " sherill' . The widow of John Hyan , \Vapollo \ has brought suit against H. Ilowoy druggist , lor $10,000 damages , who ? ol < her husband liipior , froni the cflects o which he fell out of his wagon and killci himself. The youngest scion of George John son's family at Cedar Kapids , two year : of age. on i'rhtay pulled the cork of : bottle he had found and tilled his montl with carbolic acid. It didn't kill him but his little mouth is raw , hi.s throat blistered tored , and his stomach intuit ! very tender Typhoid-malaria is becoming a ver.i troublesome disease nl DCS Moines. J ! family named Itccd had live of its mem bers on Saturday down with thU terrible malady. Late in tlio day the wife am ono si-iter died within a few moments o each other. Another sister and two children are not expected to recover. The slalc superintendent of public in slruetion hu : notified teachers to propan themselves for an examination under tin now law concerning the ell'ect of naroot' its and stimulanls on the human system ThoJaw provides that "tho county superintendent intondent shall not alter the llv.it day o July , 18S7 , IPMIO a certilicato to any per son who has not passed a satisfactory ex amination in physiology and hygiene , with special reference to tin * ulleeU o alcoholic lirinl ; ? . stimulants and narcotic : upon the human Kvslem ; and il slinll bi the duly of the county superintendent , a1 provided by section 1771 , lo revoke tin eertilieate of any teacher required by law to have a rorlilicato of qualification fron : the county superintendent , if the salt tcnchcr shall fail or neglect to cninii ] } with section 1 of this net. and siiidteachui shall bo disqualified fur teaching in an.i public school for one year alter siiei revocation , and shall not be permitted U teach without compliance. " Uiikiitn. Bullalo ( iap claims a population of 80.1 , There urn ? G5 childnm enrolled in UK schools of Sionx-l'ulla , I-XpJonpg will ) a diamond drill is out of the novelties of Iron Hill mining. Tim territorial thermometer has taker up purnnnuiit winter quarttr.s below zero. zero.One hundred and llfty new ) > iiildng ! < have been creeled at Aberdeen thu pas season. A miner in the Homcslauc mine fel down the shaft , a distance of MOO feet and lives. The Vermillion university faculty ad vises all young ladies to boycott younj. men who use tobacco , The Farmers' Independent association .of llutchinson county has boon organlziu at Olivet. 1U purpofo is to cncourgi the building of another railroad into the county , to give competing rates or freight. Tli a Good Work of Hl U Mconsi ) In JMtle llMk Oatdle. There Is jio sepurato prohibition partj in this state. An abortive attempt \vu ; made to form ono by conliuing mvu4ber < ship of the Stale Temperance alliance t voters , thus excluding those most can est and unselfish of all worker ? In th lempcrauce cause , the women. But f the recent annual meeting of the nlliunc at Uussollville this dijcr'miuation ' again ! women as members was removed. / each general election llccitso is voted u or down in the counties , Besides , th traHlc can bo driven out of n communit so far ns refusal to license is coneernei by a petition signed bv n majority of th adults residing in a community. This ] the operation of what is known ns II : thico'inllo law. We have "high license in Arkansas , \yhlch close's nn the low. ii responsible doggeries , nndihas proved b far the most otl'eclive of all agencies i reducing the area reached by the liquc tralllc. Its methods are practical * an being eo are , of course , rejected by th visionaries whoso Intemperate 7.e.al an tiller lack of capacity to deal with an question not yielding to froth , empty tli nuticlation nnd gross inisroprvsotitatlo of the motives ol men who ditl'or wit them increase thodiHIculliuscnooiinlrru by the genuine advocates of tumpentnci * MM. ) Local option and high license seem t bo more of a success than total prohlb tion. The Chicago Tribune has reeeutl made an investigation as lo the workin of the system in Illinois , which show that In several counties not an opens : loon can be found , while in twenty-ltv counties the rule is virtually prohibitory license toxvns being the exception , and 1 a largo number of ot-hers tlie pronlbitlo towns are in a majority. Tim Tribun concludes that prohibitory regulation now cover two-thirds of the soil of 11 jnois , while the are.i of such regulation is steadily widening. In the places wltle permit the sale of liquor the taxisusuall vorv high , reaching in some cases ? l,8t or $3,000. and a burden of § 1,000.000 , c $5,000,000 is thus shifted trom the ta > payers lo Ihn saloons. It would scei that any candid prohibitionist must cor code the superiority as a tomperanc measure of such a system to a state -pr < Itlbltory law , whieh could not bo enforce in localities where the majority favo llcensu , and would simply cut oft' thi great revenue. Ticcr Hill. Syracuse Standard : Tiie circus seasc is over , and a number of people who hav been on the road aromakiiigthoir tempt rary headquarters in this city. A few < the guild happened to assemble at Job Claucy's Saturday afternoon , and nntei tained each other with reminiscences c their summer work. "When we were at Olean , " said Tot Dolphin , who was with Pollnmn's circir we picked up a gigantic Inmbormu named William Pike , who had neve been further west than Mithicran W proceeded to bill him as 'Tiger Bill , " noted scout and reformed desperado. U was an awfully big fellow Jmt as tende as a cliiekcn , and wouldn't dare to shoe a cat. At Johnstown we got five or si tame Indians and painted them up t kill. Then we started a Wild West slioi to top oft' the performance. Tiger Bi was announced as the bdt shot , am nltosether , the most remnrkabl cowboy of tlie age. Ilo would com into the ring , snin" , cry , 'ha , smell Injuns , ' and then static stcalthil along mild ho discovered Ihcm lying i ambush , when ho would blaze away an kill all but one or two , whom ho woiil llnish with a kuilo. The audience wa assured that ho obtained his name froi the fact that he once killed three ligei on the plains with one shot. He loved t impress people with the notion that li was a very tough euss. Kvery hotel wo1 go to he'il say to the waitress in a dec voice , which you eoiiltl hear all over th room : " 'Bring two ponniU of raw beef and pint of blood. ' "The girl would reply that she eonldn' get the blood , and he would resigned ! ask lor milk instead. The raw beef h ate right along. 1 don't think he liked il but he worried it down in good styli After a while , in addition to hi Wild West show act , wo gG him to do feats of marksman ship. Ilo would knock the pipe ou of the. mouth of tlie man smoking il o brush the a hes oil'a cigar with his trust revolver.The weapon was loaded will blank cartridges , and the moment h fired the other man would bite the pipe stem in two or bite the cigar so suddeiil , that the ashes would tumbled oil' . On night when Tiger Bill had inspired tli audience inoro than nsuul with a .sense o his ferocity , lie essayed to shoot the asl oil'a cigar in tlie mouth of one of ou boys , who. for the fun of the thine wouldn't ' disturb tbo ash , but kept smok Ing the cigar as cool as before. Tim- Bill fired four or live unsuccessful shots anil then tno audience began to latigi and hiss , and ho ran oil' in a rage. " ( o Promote Alurilor. Detroit J-'reo Press"Jf you don't go out of this alley you'll hear from me1 ! shouted a Spencer street woman to i couple of boy who were pounding on tin fence. "I low ? ' * queried ono "I'll call for a policeman. " "You will , ohy If you arc kind of : woman that wants to sec two or threi poliomnnn hammered to doatli by twi desperate boys who will never be tufoi alivn , blow your whistle ! We wash oui hands of all responsibility " The sober . . .second thought seemed 1 < pievail with her , as she retired and lef lliom masters of Iho field , Tim Mpnvurc of SHCCPKS. James Hiiaso.Il Lowell : 1 urn Hiuldonei when i see our success as a natioi measured by Iho number of acres undei lillagi ) or ot bushels of wheat ox-ported for the real value of a country illicit In weighed iu scales inoro delicate than tlu bulanoo of trade. The garnnM of Sieil\ \ are empty now , but the bees from ai dimes still felch honey from Iho tin.1. garden plot of Theouritus. On a maj > o : the world you may cover Judcawitl your thumb , Athens with a linger tip and neither of thorn figures in the price : current , but thny still lord it In tin thought and action of every civili/.ei man. Did not Dante cover wilh his boot all that was Italy 0011 years iigov And , i we go back a century , where was ( jer many outside of Weimar ? ( irconlawn cemetery , in Indianapolis has a vault in whieh then-are several cot' lins forty years old. In examining OIK of thusu last wei k the sexton came lo tin body of a woman named Mary A. MHN who died in 1810. The body was petri lied , and afler forty \cnra the nye of tin corpse was blue. Old riiMilnnU rwueui ber her aa a comely I'ivnrh girl. The other day Michael O'Brien went U iho cemetery and .spent some time at tending to a new lot that hu had jiiii bought. Then he went down town nix ordered a line monument to bu cut , it. scribed , and erected on the lot. Then hi went home and laughingly said to hi' wile : "Kvcr thing l ruady n w , it I KI-I sick and die. to be burled In Ics- , than an hour he was seized with eongc ot thu bowels and died at midnight. Jr Bcrnayr , , of St. .Louis , last wccl < succe.s-.fuUy performed a gnslrotoinj upon a tailor aged forty , for the uMr.iU' tion of an oidinary silvcr-plnlcd diniiei knife nine and one-half inelnii long which lie had swallowed in Imitation ol the juggler's lent. Joe Domomis , litci-u | years old , nn < ] ( | lauk , went down to tliu landing at Jef- fersonvilhl , Jnd. , to see a steamboat gc out. As lie stood looking sht ) blew in-i whi-stlii viciously , and inunudiuirly tin , boy lost the power of speech und him't : buykuu since. l < imVA 'PI.ATAiVij . , ) Eeccption of a Poinalo Horse Tfcief , Only Sixteen Years. > - Tl o Cotulcniuoit aini-dnror llcllou-i , Vim | to l > e llniiupit Thli Jtontli November Arilvnls , AVAMOSV , In. , Nov. HO. | Correspond * cnee of thn Ilr.n. ] 1'crhap * the youngest erinunal incarcerated In an Iowa peni tentiary lias been received at thn prison in this city , in * the person of Miss Minnie Stone , A rnr.vu ; noitsimttKr , who U but llttlo past her sixteenth birth- day.t Her home is in Vinlon , la. , and at Marion she slole a horse and buggy anil started home , but was soon caught , tried nnd sentenced to one year in tlio pcnltcn- , tlary. She arrived here November 20 She was employed as kitchen girl. She impresses her observer with a feeling of wonder nnd ivpi-et so frequent when in the presence of ladles , one forgetllni ; that when a woman arrives behind the walls they are known no more during their stay there as a lady , but simply as a woman. She is red-headed , wears a No. ! 1J shoe , stands live feet one inch In her stocKing feet , has gray eye * , and ha a fair education , is of the Presbyterian faith , and is intemperate , ilor only liv ing i dative is a sister. ANoimiNOTir : ! , ; > IMSI.SO.NKK and ono that is kept in close confute- ment , is Chester Bellows , iu for safe keeping - ing , and who U now under sentence of death for the murder of Miss \Yutermau , in Hiverton township , Floyd countv. It appear.- , that Bellows was an uuolo of Miss \ > utormanand he desired her to marry bin. She refused on account of their relationship. Bellows pressed his suit but always mot with repulse. Be coming iiosporato ho shot her , but not fatally , bhugoton her knees and begged of her inhuman uuelo t ® snare her Hfo , am ( I her tears ami prayers the brnto took deliberate aim and put a ball through innocent heart , causing death instantly The trial.oamo otV last week at Charles City ami Bellows was con demned lo death , the execution to taku place in Docnmben. Ho was sent here to keep the people from hanging him. Ho is not a bad looking man , is twenty -eight years of age , and has been married , his wife .being dead. His only remaining relative is a mother. His homo is In Charles Citv where hu wnc engaged us a teamster. He was born in Ne"v Vork state. Bellows is not allowed to leave his cell and the closest guard is kept over him. for should he got the opportunity , hi ) would rather ha v Iho guards shoot him than bo hung. The following are the AllUIVALS I'Olt NUVirmiKH. Henry Jackson , alias S. S. Hawkins. home Mason City , aged lorty , sent niiui months for larceny. Joseph Ciroll' , home Independence , is nineteen years old , emit one year for lar ceny. Koberl Benlon ( colored ) , homo in St. l.ouis , Mo. , is a barber and formerly a cabin boy , is a native of Tennessee. twenty years of age , M-nt two years ami siv months for larceny and burglary. Harry Robinson , lo Churo. la. , is a carpenter , twenty-one ynurs old , eighteen months for thieving. Charles Williams , aliases ( Jeorge ( Mine , ( .Jeorge Whaluy. lie is an old criminal and a professional loafer ; home in Wheeling , W. A'a. , age twenty-eight , sent for eight , years tor attempt- 'murder. S. F. Kramer , West Branch , la. , sent one year for adultery. Jack Martin , swindling , scut for two years.aged forty-one , homo in Wisconsin. James Landv , home in Sioux t'ilv , la. , had been residing in South Omaha , 'Neb. , sent live years for manslaughter. BENNETT GOES BACK TO PARIS. Inducements HclU Out to His HUitors anil IkOportvrH. Jame. Gordon Bennett went back to Europe as suddenly and surprising its ho came. His six months of hard work that he promised to devote himself to lusted. len days. But in that time ho revolu tionized the Herald. "I will give $100 to any editor or reporter who will invent anew now way of writing an article , " .said ho. lie promised leaser rewards for slight de partures from conventionality. Belter yet , ho paid them. "l on't write a sen tence that vou over hcaril before , " hn said : "don't express an idea that is not original. Do not do any thing in thu paper like anything yon oversaw in it before.1' Ho fell to and wrote editorials himself and they certain ly were breezy and original. Tlio whole mpur became bright and odd. Thu mil- li ionairc could bo scon ut his desk at four o'clock in the morning day after day. But ho was unused to ( ho strain and soon gave it up and took the French steamer lor 1'aris , where Ho keeps a house and a Hut. Hut.Mr. Mr. Pulitzer ; of thn World , began by giving priy.es for extra good work. As he grew more and inoro successful , ho began mal ing presents to all the om- ployes of thu World. Onu day he guvo away 801) ) orders for bills , larit Christmas ho gave a turkey to each of his ! ! 00 om- pjoyos , next hn look hio compositors on a picnic and raised their wages poveral eents a thousand cms. His last generous act was the purchase of i00 ! uhares in the Building and Loan association started by the men on his paper. 'I hey cost 20 cents a week or $2,7)0 ) a year. U'liiin ho purehaFod them he at oncn divided them among live per sons then seated around him. ' lie has so miieli money ho does not know what lode do with it. Hu is up to IUB neck in it , " wild a socialist writer the other day. "lie asked me to write bomi-lliing for him. 1 wrote a coluinn and a half , and ho sen ! mo a ehuek for * iriii. " Ho has also given Ilin niPinbors of the i'tvss uliib frl , OIK ) erne "lo enjoy ili < iuiHelvc. , ' and bus endowed a licit for . -.ick joiirnallsl.s in line of the hospitals with his saluiy in congress. It was in congnis * that ho miulo | , ; s only failure in recunt yearn He foniiil it did' not rhyiuo to be a cuugrnsHnnn anil thi ) owner of a newspaper. He was eritici/ed for what he did print and what be neglected to print , and lifi bm-ninu u bunion to him. With Amos J. f'mn- will bo dimiront. He reminds his election to < iou/nv / > s as proinol'on ' to Ins biiiincsi. HeiMiiot rcoiiiiblc | > ( or the iit-wh in any paper and so will hue : a plrnsuiil career In Washington "oluiK I Moriiiro > V iit 'il n H Cleveland Lritlur. A. K MuClurp , of tint I'nilii'lclpliia ' 'lmi ( < s , in said to 'JM ' ( ) | ii > of HID kiiiileM-henrtiid , nu > .it intelligent and nio.-.t iruneniiiK of tlie nuLed nicm. of Philailolphia. ; lniHsaidto hcorn small thinito b < ' vnry li\IMi ; with his money. inid t'u hi * not avpron tc a good giimo ot poke.r Not lontr ago , my iiitunii.itit say t , lie had been playing u < inht little gumo w.lh olllli of Inn friends , in whluh thn fctaUos were rathnr high , and had Inft the ti'blo dead broke * . He eanut upon the slrera and walkml iituntily aloi-tr until hu of lii.-i miJiloiiairo "Hnw : ir < - you oil 'or money today ? " Paid he. " 11 n lou late for me lo'gi-t i'nto the bunl > aiid J haxen't a cunt L'iiu you lend me a litljo until to-morrow f' < "Uurlainly1 was , thi ) n-i ly , anil wilh thut thn until handed Mrl-lun : a fOO bill. McClure took Um bill anil loiil.ed con- tcmptiutiixly at It. ( hi then iookr l : > t I ho mail , nnd held up the bill , saying "And do , vou pall "TOO " mi/nuj y 1 call u only au ante. "