THE DAILTL BEE. 4 _ _ _ _ t PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TCHMS or scBscnrpTiox : . T. Dully ( MornlJif Edltlonltncludlrtg Uundajr BKR , Ono Year. ' . . , . $10 00 ForSlxMonth * . . . , . . . . . . ' . . . . . . 6 W Xpr Three Month * . > . . . 2K The Omaha Sirvlnjr lies , mailed to nnjr ' oddraM , Una Year. . . . , . . ,20C OMAHA omen. No. 914 A xn'OM FAHXAV VOBK orric.it. ROOM 81. TninuNi nmt.iuvn , orrici , AH commnnlontioni relntlnirlo news torlnl matter should bo atMrctsod to .the Bui' ' TOII or TUB HKK. nistrtis < utTTxa i' , ' All bulncM letter * andremittance ! ibbuld be aftclrOS'Cll 10 TllR IlKE 1'UDMSIIINO COMMAXr OMAHA. Drafts , checks and pottofflco order to bo inndo pajrabla to ( bo ordtr of Ihe oompnnjr THE m POBLISillTSIPMT , PRDPfllETIHIS. E. KOSEWATEU , KniTon. THE DAILY BtSIt Sworn Statement of Circulation. BUte of Nebraska. I. . County of DoutlM. f" ' " Goo. H. Tzschueic , secretary of Tlie Be < Publishing company , does solemnly sweai that the actual circulation ot the Daily Boc for the week ending Scpt.10 , 18b7 , was ai follows : Saturdav. Sept. lrj t4.51 < Sunday. Sent 11 14.4CK Mondnv. Sept , 13 14,77 ! Tuesday. Sept. 13 M.1W Wednesday. Sept 14 14.2. Thursday. Sept 15 14.10 ; Friday , Sept 10 14,071 A\ craze 14.32 . . GKO. u. T/.SCHUCK. bworn to and subscribed In my presenct this loth day of Kcptcmber , A. D. 18S7. fSEAl . , Notary Pubfic. Btato of Nebraska , I Houulns County , i Geo. B. Tzxchuck , being first duly sworn deposes and gays that ho Is secretary ot Tin Dee Publishing company , that the nctua . average dally circulation of the Dally Bee f o t themonth of Heotembfr , 18B6 , 18.o : ) copies r , for October , 18S6. 12,989 copies ; for Novem : - b r. 1886 , in,34S copies : for Decpmbor , issn f * 15.'S7 ! ! copies : for January 1887. 10,20 copies ; for February , 1887 , 14.19B copies ; fo March. 1887 , 14,400 copies : for April , 18H7 14niOcopies ; for May , 1&7 , 14,227 copies ; fo .lime 1887,14,147 copies ; for July. 1887,14 , OSO copies ; for August , 1837 , 14.151 copies. GEO. B TzBcirocK. Sworn and subscribed In my prcsenci thN r.th day of Sept. A. D. , 1887. f8KAL. | N.lFKIL. . Notary Public. CUT rates for the transportation o drciscd beef are announced. Our castori frlonds may bo able to indulge In a steal again without mortgaging all their prop erty to obtain it. THE way natural gas is coming to tin surface in all parts of the country mus strike the coal brigands with a chill. It use as a substitute for anthracite is rap idly extending in all directions. THE assertion that England and tin United States are growing very friondl. \ is all a mitake. Pugilist Jack Dompse ; has come out with a denial that ho an ! Charlie Mitchell have become friends. CIKVKIANI > anarchists , in protostini against the execution of the .Chicagi Hovon , declared in favor of blood i everything olio failed. Let them hav blood , but may it bo the ruddy gore eSpies Spies and his six companions. JUSTIN McCAiiTiir says that the horn rule question is settJcd and that it enl ; remains to arrange the terms. Mr. Mo Cartliy may bo right , but viewed froi ; this distance it appears that the arrangement mont of terms will bo more dillicult o accomplishment than was the preson settlement. TUB railroads arc greatly interested ii proxies to the state convention and passe to Lincoln , will bo plenty for all wh oppose the return of Judge Maxwell I the bench. Oil room men who have boo out of business recently are rejoicin , over re-employment. TUB very latest monopolistic combin is in salt , and all the largo rnanufacttn era in the country are expected to joi the organization and put up pricui Things may come to suuu a pass thai j will require the best energies of a pee man to earn his salt , and the old sai about a worthless man will lose it moat ing and give place to "not worth his pi and cake. " THK broach in the Plymouth church i Brooklyn made by the Boucher trial wn not honied even by the death of the fi mous divine , but the installation of now pastor is expected to once mot unilo all factions. 11 takes more tha death to end a church quarrel , but if th good book is to be believed there will L no renewal of hostilities on the goldc shore. AGAIN the complaint cornea thatEnj laud is encroaching upon the people < Venezuela. The British government dot not seem to care for arbitration , bt 'brings one of her ponderous mon-of-wr to boar on the dispute. The big Uritia bulldog likes to worry smaller fry , bt he will not succeed in bulldozing an ; thing into subjection on this side of ti walor. All such attempts have been coi eplcuous failures heretofore. THE Indian bureau intends to stand t Its decree that the instruction of the Ii tliaus must bo carried on in iho Englis language. From a practical standpoii this is no doubt best. Some oppositic has been raised by the Indians and t white people who look at the matti from n picturesque point of view. But they are to bo treated as citizens , tl sooner they learn to understand tl "language of the constitution mid ti laws" tlio better. WHKN it is admitted in financial circli that the present money stringency caused by the manipulation of the grei money holdersthoro is not much room lo to stand on for those who argub that tl way to mend financial matters' is to I them tilone. The correct , method < treatment is' to make it a misdotnoam for money kings to put a check upon.bti innss and to create distress throughoi the country in order to obtain.a lilt higher interest. TIIK Inefficiency of the law has hjrai boon xlcmonstrited In Kansas. The pn bate judge of Smith bounty , that stnt has become insane. The governor ca not Till his , place until his insanity Ji : been judicially determined , and that'en only bo done before the unfortunate mti himself in his capacity'of probate judg In other words , until tho' judge pn nouneos himself insane , ho can not 1 disturbed in possession of Ins ofllco. K\ dontly Gilbert & Sullivan did not stroU a point when they manufactured the ' lord high executioner. n lid Protection and Imbor. ' Those people who advocate the policy of.protection on the ground that it is In ( lie intdrost of labor either are not ade quately Informed as to the facts' regard ing the situation of labor or wilfully ig nore thorn.'In the first piano the labor , employed In ilin' protected Industries U only a'very small percontugo of the .total lubor of the country , so that if the policy did secure any direct and positive bcno' Utt to labor , thny would bo enjoyed by. n comparatively few , to improve whose condition the great majority would pay tribute ta protection. 'It is shown , how ever , by the figures of the census , and these can bo verified without very great effort ; , that labor in , the protected Industries , taking the entire range of wages , is not so well paid a : that which is not protected. Carpenters , bricklayers , furniture makers , for exam ple , receive a bettor average of wages than workers in iron and steel , and in woolen and cotton mills , .This wat true seven years ago when the census was taken and has been true ovci since. Nothing Is more clearly es tablished , and the evidence can bo found in abundance , that what can alone prop erly bo called protected labor is , so far iu the vital matter of wages is concerned really.not protected ao all , but iu worse off than other labor which can fairly be compared with it. How is it with reference U the claim that the protcctlor policy gives employment to labor _ During the past ton or twelve years , will the exception of perhaps three of cxccp tional general prosperity , the number o workingmen in enforced idleness in tin country has ranged between one ant three millions. Ten years ago the csti mate was of the latter amount , and dur ing the past twelve months of grca activity and prosperity the number if believed not to have fallen below thi former amount. Another very import ant fact to bo considered is that most o the protected industries do not keep thcii work-people employed more than three fourths of the time. According to th < last report of the Pennsylvania bureau o statistics , out of the ninety-eight chic industries enumerated only twenty-nim kept their men employed 300 days. Tin coal industry , which occupied nearly one third of all the laborers of the state , ken them employed less than 200 days. Oiv industry kent them only 133 days , cm ploying on the average 11,000 laborers Woolen goods , employing 7,000 laborers Kept them busy only 250 days. Uollinj mills , employing 3:3,000 : , could find worl for them only 230 days. A similar result or perhaps one even less favorable , wouli bo found by an investigation of the sit nation in other states , whose Industrie are most largely under the ajgis of pro tection. Nor docs the policy of prolec tion conduce to the peac and contentment of labor. I has never exhibited'greater unrest thai during the past two years , and it will probably bo found when the record i made up that the present year has beei without a parallel in the industrial his tory of the country in the number am extent of labor disturbances. Hvery wheri workingmen , largely of the class allogcc to be protected , have been struggling tt maintain or improve their wages. Uis content has been general , and a groa deal still abounds. This labor has amp ! reason to know that the protected capi tal has prospered , but it justly complain that it has not shared m the benefits o the system. It is seeking its own way o rcdross in organization , social and polit leal , and promises to urge its demand with considerable force. Protectionists may ignore but the ; cannot put down the faets which conful their false claim that labor is protectci by protection. ThO'Unansworablo argument mont of the figures is that the pohc , ewes no benefit in wages to labor , th unprotected faring better than the prc tccted , while of both it makes an exac tion which is but so much tribute to th monopolies , which are the real and th only gainers from protection. JACK DUDOSE , who was recently ni rested on suspicion of murdering tin Woolfolk family at Canton , Georgia , i said to have confessed his guilt. It wil bo remembered that Tom WoolfolK , th only member of the family who escaped was suspected of being the murdorei and at once taken into custody. The in furiated neighbors were determined t < lynch him , and his neck was only save by the strenuous efforts of the coole heads. Tom's wits appear to bo som < what befogged , and being obstinate als < ho could not bo induced t say much about the trap edy , and this reticence wn construed Into an evidence ot guilt II claimed , however , that the murder ha been committed by negroes , and that b had escaped by jumping through n win dow. Doboso's confession confirms th ! story. Since the massacre there lias bee a great deal of comment over youn Woolfolk's inhuman depravity , but th sequel shows that those who judged 1m so severely have done him agreat wronj and that the would-be avengers cam near committing a fearful crime. Agai and again innocent persons have bee lynched. It is time that this relic of bat barism wnro more generally discout tonanccd by public opinion than U i and so done away with. The condition under which this rude form of justic arose no longer exist , and there is n necessity for iVs conttnnanco. The II : of its innocent victims Is a long one an u blot upon our history. ' A 1'nlntcd The democrats of Massachusetts U not cut so largo a figure in. political ca dilations as do those of some otlior.staU ! heuco no very great .significance is give their utterances. ' Truothere , have boo two democratic victories in the state in tl : last ten years , ahd'it cannot'be consid orcd impossible that there , should be ai 'other'bnt no one. seriously expects i and with this feeling general , Mrtssaclu eutts democracy Commands only , a pas ing attention. Fpr a year or , two thei has been a' good deal of dlsailtction i the party administration and auti-admii istratiou elements , and some of it still e : iststhough the organization la probably i somewhat bettor shape now thnn it wn ayer.r'11 0. There is a very ; largo prc portion of .Massachusetts- democrat however-who arc too heartily hostile-I civil service reform ever to feel very col dial toward the administration so lohg' > it 'professes devotion to that Dolicy. .Tho platform adopted at the late coi Tendon was clearly an. effort tongatbl roth elements in the party nnd smooth > vcr factional differences with respect : o .tho administration. Therefore the usual complimentary references were made .as to'honesty In'carrying out promises and pledges , nnd so on. Bui Ihcro was ono pointed .suggestion whlct showed that the clement which has not had the car nnd favor of the administration required to bo placated. Federal ofll- 3ials In Massachusetts have not been able to keep their hands out of politics , nnd their interference has been especially of- Pensive to the unrecognized wing ot the party. A plank in the platform reads that "no ofllcor should bo retained In the public service who has shown himscll an offensive partisan , nnd wo think that a sense of propriety to the administra tion of which these arc n part requires federal ofllco holders representing the administration in.this state to discharge from the public service any of the subor dinates against whom charges of offen sive partisanship can bo substan tiated. " There Is 'of course m sincerity in tins as an avowal o principle. The average Massa chusctts democrat , In common with tin average democrat everywhere , doesn'l believe that any olllcoholdor should havi his political rights curtailed. It is si in ply n warning to the fellows who have got the best of it in the favor of the ad ministration that they must be satisliud with what they Imvo and leave the man inulation of state politics to those win are not recognized at Washington. I remains to be seen how far the pointo < admonition will bo respected. IT is an unpleasant and delicate last for an editor to make n graceful Hop ot any question , and especially onn which has boon hotly contested and strongly supported. Yet when a flop is made ou of respect to the demands of a growing public sentiment it is to say the leasi commendable in any ono to acknowledge the error of his way and fall in with UN majority. Mr. McShane's change ol heart upon the policy of police starvation by the council will meet the approval o nine-tenths of the readers of his paper And it is refreshing to see that shoot giv < expression at this late day to n little com icon sense in the discussion of the polici question. Its advice to the council ti nay the starved policemen is qvidcntl ; forced by the recent movement inatigur atcd in this city by business men to allbn substantial relief to the policemen legall ; appointed , but unrecognized by the council. When the taxpayers of an ; community unitedly back their sentiments ments upon public policy with opci purses , it is enough to set the Oupositioi to thinking. There is absolutely no excuse cuso for the stubborn and illegal actioi of the council with reference to th police , and the pcoplo are determine ) that the cotincilmcn shall not ride rough shod over the wishes of tl.o.so who clcctci them. A JUDICIOUS nnd practicable plan for i public market , that shall bo free from al handicapping conditions , will not lack i very general and hearty support Suel a project is so strongly commended b ; every consideration affecting the inter ests of a largo majority of the people that they need only to bo presented ti unprejudiced attention to secure favo for the project. There is no other wa ; that can bo quite BO effective in solving the problem of cheaper living for th masses of Omaha's population , a matte that has a very important bearing upoi the future progress of thi city , nnd particularly upon th position it shall take as ; manufacturing centre. The danger to bi avoided is ono common to the inreptioi of such enterprises , and that is a ninltl tudo of chimerical and impracticabl schemes in the confusion of which th object sought will bo tossed about hopelessly lossly for an indefinite time. It is an entirely tiroly practical matter about which thcr is nothing experimental. The value o such an institution to a community am also as a source of municipal revenue ha been amply demonstrated by the experience enco of other cities. There is not th slightest reason why this oxporienc should not bo repeated in Omaha. THK council did well in putting uchec upon the over-zealous enterprise of th street railroad constructors which ex hibits itself in tearing up the streets a their pleasure , regardless of time or put lie convenience. The restrictions m posed upon these parties by the resoli tlons adopted by the council on Tucsda evening , as well as the requirements di mandod of them in the prosecution c their work , are entirely reasonable an should bo enforced. The pcoplo will we come the completion of these improve ments , which assure ampler facilities an more expeditious travel , but there doe not appear to bo any rcaso why they should be asked t maUo the sacrifice of every convenionc to themselves in order that the corpora tious may carry on the work wholly wit reference to their own convenience an advantage. The franchises are very va uablo , and thu companies can very we afford to conduct their operations so tlir the public shall suffer thu least possibl annoyance or inconvenienceeven tboug in so doing they will have to somcwlu increase their outlay. THK predictions of a coal famine I one of the robber coal barons , shows tin the grinding monopoly has not boon coi spiring and plotting against the public i vain. That they now try to throw tli odium of the high prlco of coal upon th iuter-stalo commerce bill iho ws that tiiet IE ) no limit to their brazen audacity and n sense of moral shame left in them. Tl scarcity of coal , if it exists as stated , an the high and still rising prices have a been brought about by the coal monop < lies. There can bo no question abet that. The coal is there , the men and tl means for producing it arc at hand , an nothing but the conspiracy of the coi highwaymen can keep 'it locked up i the mines.If such wide-spread distres Is experienced as is1 now ' threatened , a outraged public may rise In its might an crivc tlm monopolists a lesson which the will not soon forget. . - Tim streets of the city were nuvor bi fore- quite so .badly torn up as they a'ro i present , and unless more vigor is shpw than'Is customary in putting them'int condition''tho winter , will'come wit numerous almost impassable places i the thoroughfares that must remain tit cared for until spring , to . the great di tress'of pedestrians .and the 'hardship * travel generally. ' ' The time in wlik favorable wither for stfout wprk'cu I counted upon with any , degree of cor talnty is short , ana none. ot it should b < wasted. Work not- begun which U maj not be practicable" to complete dnrlnf this period hud better bo postponed. TUB English war ship , the Trafalgar , which was launched yesterdaywill prob ably bo the last , of the monster floating batteries built by > Kngland. The money spent in these htigo engines of war bj different nations it about as good a ! wasted. It is not oven known what their practical utility may bo , for wo have nol in recent times had a naval conflict in which they have taken part. The coun tries that own these naval war ships would have boon juat as safe withoul thorn , and the money thus looked ni might , with ninch greater benefit , liavi bocn in circulation among the people. THAT was n terrible accident which happened to the workingmen in Lincolt who became entangled In the telephone wires. It has long been demonstrated that there is great danger in the crossing and recrossing of so many wires charged with strong currents of electricity. St long ns they nro allowed above ground greater care should bo taken to gnart against accidents , and the time seems tc have come when it is necessary for cacli city to enact prccautionaay laws in rela tion to the elr.ctric light and other wires for the welfare ot its cltUons. ATTENTION of interested parties ia called to the manner jn which the vari ous street railways pave between tin rails at crossings. Instead of using tin hard granite blocks , a flat sand or othui stone should bo put in wherever a cross walk is found. This rule should be madi to apply to the old as well as the new companies , and 11 should bo strictly en forced. The board of public work : should order the grttnito blocks to bo re placed with flat stones wherever a ca line crosses a paved street. JAV GOULD has given out that ho in tends to go to Europe to stay a year o so. Now look out for big deals. Hi further takes the public into his confi dcnco and informs us that ho will prob ably not purchase the Baltimore am Ohio .telegraph. This wxnild seem to in dicatb that the transfer is already made Tin : Republican says that the fantiot which has expressed opposition to tin action of the county central commute- - last Saturday "is insignificant in number and without influence. " It won't hi lonz before that paper may see what ai unreliable gucsseriit is. 15v all means lot the republicans o this county select only such moi county commissioners as will bind them selves lo give the Republican all tin county job printing. THE FlUHiDj OK INDUST.K1T. A new steel mill is1 talked nf at i'ittsbiirc Labor Iu the Iron and steel mills Is over taxed. A large lolllng-inill Is to bourccted at Mid dlctown , Pa. One worsted-mill sJn C.ihoes is runnlni n lull t and day. A $40,000 spindle mill Is the latest enter prise at Augusta. ' ' The wonlcn outlook Is much better than t was a month ago. Lnice railroad Iresorks are to be erectei at East St. Louis. Experimental farms are under state centre In South Carolina. Steel sleepers are likely to come into general oral use In Europe. Iron tube makers In Kngland and German j have agreed to put up prices. A Snn Francisco linn is just snipping second quark-mill to China. Hailroad construction is calllns for all thi common labor that ran be had. A machine has been made which make cither a wire nail or a cut nail. Twenty-live tons of wire Is the dally out put of a now Chicago wire mill. Glass works to cover three acres are to b Immediately built at Mimcie , Ind. Maine Is advancing in manufacturing o account of her cheap water power. Kansas farmer * ) are piUl by the sUte ! cents per pound lor all sugar made. Providence woolen and worsted mills wl soon bo obliged to run double time , Two or more plate-class works are coi ; teruplated in western Pennnsylvania. Two thousand men have Just bnon startc making narrow-Kuaxo rails at Caronctele Mo. Mo.Tho The Baltimore Knitting mills are increa : In ? their capacity to 500 dozen stockings pe day. day.Pittsburgh Pittsburgh la the objective point tor a mini berof Europeans interested ID manufactu Ing. Ing.There There is ono bag of coffee In store or I sight for every 120 persons in the Unite States. Moses Marshall , the inventor of the Lam knitting machine , died a few years ag < acred 75. Twenty thousand English rallnmkers ai on a strike for an advance of from SO to i jxrcent. The Lake Superior ore output this you was thirty tons for every twenty-tbioo ton last year. _ _ The Can so of ItinKWornni. A subscriber asks : "What causes rlnp worms' ? " We do not' know positively , bi the chances are that ringworms are cause by the worms going. into politics. Only Mistakes. St. Lmls Fust Dtijmtch. The only mistakes | ) olesseps made In h canal schnmo was an ofrorot about ibO,000K ( In the cost and a slip of about eighteen yeai n the time. Otherwise ho hit thu nail squarel on the head. Lot Va Have IMJy \ } \ The kind ot a political party that th country needs most 1 one embracing a plan which prohibits candidates giving awa cigars that cost lobs than live cents each , c three for a dime. tin In Old ana fort Fur a man \ho was going to die In a fe minutes , Jacob Sharp Is holding out might welt , and for a man who fought so fiercely t evade a trial , ho Is making remarkable c fort to secure a second one. Patriarchal Government. Cincinnati Commoeal. ( .For President Simon Cameron'of Pent gylvanla. . . For Vice Presldont-lUnnibal Ilamhn. c Maine. . ' Platform ( ilvo the otd men a chance. TbnfWaa n Squelcher. . , The Kfititti , ' , ' , Tlip late Dr. Dutliimooncu asked a nutros arid miserly ) an how he was getting alont The man replied : "What business U that o yours ? " Said the doctor : " 0 , sir , 1 am om of these who takes an Interest In oven thi meanestof God's croaturps. ) " 'Actions Speak Louder than Word * . St. PUul I'lonctr VitM. The continued pernicious political nctlvltj ot democratic federal officeholders Is the surest Indication of. the position ot the ad ministration on the subject ot civil servlci reform which can bo given. U speaks much louder than Mr. Cleveland's talks with news paper correspondents. Grant's Exprcsulvo Piir/iscolocjr. JVilltKldpMd Call. Grant elves us "Fight It out on this line , ' "Unconditional surrender , " "I propose tc move Immediately upon your works , " "Dot- tied up" and a hundred other expressions It seems to have escaped notice that Grant I ; responsible for more of these characterizing , elementary crvstnlll/atlons of thought than any other military leader of modern times. Omaha n Great City. McCoolt Dtmrerat. It's a great city 1 We refer to Omaha. And lift week the city showed Itself tatho bcsl advantage. It accommodated the thousands of guests without the least trouble , and furnished the choicest amusements. In ovorj sense Omaha has become a city. Every cltl- 7.0n In the state should appreciate the fact of having such a city In her borders. Omaha did herself proud on the occasion o ( the fall nnd .soldiers' and fullers' reunion. The largest crowd of people ever assembled In the state was ealhcicd there. Omaha is grow ing \vonderfullv , nnd tt Is not a mushroom growth. It will be the greatest coinmorclnl center west of Chicago In a few years. Hiillcts fl > r the Irish. Ill7i < n. Calf. IThe latest dletlnn by the English covern mont Is "Only give the Irish enough bullet : nnd then \veslmll have peace. " Exchange. ] "Onlv give the Irish enough bullets , And thnn wo shall have neace. " Do ye hear , mv lads1. ' The oppressor tells How Eiln's cause shall cease. Have jo heard the storm when it swift came on' . ' The drops , tcioat wrathful ones , Housed the earth to war , and s > ho answered back In pent-up thunder temp * . Ah 1 these drous of rnge , as they fall , aiousc The Justice-loving wet Id. Hear the thunder voice as the answer back JTOIII Freedom's heart Is hurled I Let the Ntorm come on I E'en if bullet bought , Old Ireland shall bo front For the Lord is Uight , and the night Is Lori ! Of e'sn proud tyranny. Is there one , ay ono , who has stood In dotibl That need now waver moiuV Oh , bravo hearts , the grave has a peace pre ferred To home with law-cursed door. Let the eyes that long have love-watched Ihiouch tears Old Erin's bleeding wrong , lie nllamo with tire that will weld the heart , And ! > oul In battle bong. Ity her griefs , more green than the green she wears ; Hy woes of trroanlng years. Uv the children's cries , unheeded pray'rs , Evicted cottars tears , by tlm law burned homes our fathers built Our mother's sirred sod ; lly thutongs old Erin so long has borne , And bv the right I mm < ! ( > < ! . To be free ! \vo raise ev'ry Irish hand , And s\\t > ar each lilsh son , That wn'11 stand together for Ireland's cause Until the \lct'ry's won I W have asked for bread and thov pave .1 stone. Is this a rhrlstlan state , That denies a l/i/trus weiK and poor , A beggar at Hives' gato' . ' Have we bowed enough'.1 Why , the dust ' Is writ In prnv'rs by Irish knees t \\eborneenougii'.1 Oh , the moans are more Than moanlngsof our sons ! And the h.up that hung on t.ilrTaia's wall : How loii'r ' has bcon unstrung ? And thu f-.oncs that rang In our festal halls How loiif have been unsung' . ' Oh. the laugh of childhood In hiingci toned , The smile turns to a sigh. And thn love for homo and Erin , Is all Like jov that does not die. And Its bullets-bullet } tor wounds lll ; < these ! And f i om n Christian queen ! Ah , yet , bullets bullets ! And \vbat tlu crime' ' Homo Itule and bhamrock green I Oh , ( iod help poor Ireland I And move tin hearts That feel fraternal ties , For the struggling weak , when by power op pressed , Where'er they hear theories. For Old Erin's cause Is the cause of all WholovHthe name of "Free , " And who hate the mark of the slave on mat Whatever brand It bo. Let the freeman'- ! heart , nnd the freeman's voice , And freeman's pmso , If need , Uo the Irish cheer and the Irish help , Till Ireland's free. Indeed. OMAHA , riept. 17 IBST. STATE AM ) TKU1UTOIIY. Nchrnska Jottincs. The crack shots of Hastings scooped ii the bulk of thu premiums at the Auror ; tournament , Monday and Tuesday. The presence of n railroad survoyinj corps near Springfield , Sarpy county has deluged the country with rumors. The fall mosquito works a bill n fev yards shorter than an Omaha plumber And his lullaby is just ns sweet to thi victim. The board of trade of Kearney wil meet to-night to discuss ways and mean : to secure the extension of the Elkhor : Valley ror.d to that point. Steve Reynolds , a gay and festive barber bor of Columbus , skipped Monday , luav ing his third wife a widow. Ho was atsi her third husband and neither of them an thirty years old. Mrs. Anna O'Dny , n Hastings victim o weariness , attempted suicide with mor phino. A stem winding emetic inducec her to throw tip her intention , and con sent to remain among the living. The Nsbraaka City Times has just is sued a boom edition of the old town ii fascinating autumn colors. Its location advantages , growth and prospects an handsomely painted , and the whole pro &ents u picture that could bo profitably invested in the crowded cities of tin cast. cast.Tho The pug proft'.sh in Plattsmouth do no hide their talents in backyards , or seel faraway islands to enjoy a thnnipinj match. Thruo light weights full upoi Policeman 1'iUpatnck on Main street ant attempted to lay him out for disturbing ! a littlu hcrap among themselves. Tin ollieor ylinked his billy and plied it dili gently , nnd succeeded in softening tin hard topknots of his opponents. The' were also knocked ihto jail , and the court seized the gate receipts The Norfolk Daily news leaves nc mine of fact or fancy unworkud tha placesttho town' < $ advantages and growtl before thu investing public. During it' ' short career it has given the town prominence nonce and position in the annals of progress ross , nnd its edjtion of Wednesday fort ! ties with statistics of growth its provioui efforts. The record shows that Norfolk' ; building and improvement record for tlu yi'iir will reach the handsome sum o 375,000. Woterworks , suwnrage , streo railway , electric lights nnd telephone crown the list. Considerable interest and anxiety has been caused among the profession by thi rather remarkablu fact that an editor a Urd was whinped out of his boots by i ortvalo citizen. The fraternity will hi surprised to lortrn that the giant wlu perpetrated this astonishtn < ; feat "i : limit on the plan of a cube. . He is ni broad IIB he * is long , ami as thick as ho ii broad. His voico'is thicker , and broadoi and iieavicr than his body , anil ii . bringinc : it to bear on Ins enemies le ha ; defeated thousands.1' Iowa Itninx. The IHtiiiuwa starch mill , after belnf remodeled , has begun operations ngam employing seventy-live hands. The Dos Molncs ilvor ia rising slowly nnd thn people living along Us banks an rejoicing that the marlnrinl taint fron its stagnant waters is being removed from the atmosphere , The Sioux City Journal utters n shorl stilling wail against the correctness ol the school census recently taken in Council lllnfls , assorting that several Omaha wards were scooped in to swell the total. The Journal had bettor keep its eyes on South Sioux City or Ponca Council lilufls has too much'bottom to bt milled by a mosquito bite. As the family of James MoManos , ol Jackson township , was returning from the fair at Kldora , the team became frightened , throwing the occupants out , An eighteen-year-old boy , who had been nllcetcd with enlargement of the brain all his life , his head being twice the nor mal size , struck the ground head first , Ho has since died from the injuries re- ceivcd. Prof. Foster , the Hurllnglon Hawkeye weather prophet , has contracted for the following weather for October ! "Octo ber is a hurricane month but no vorv great storm is u.xpocted. The storms ol greatest force will ocelli ? about the 1st , (1th ( , llth , Mill , 10th or 17th , 2Hli and 28th or ! > ltb. ) The middle of the month will bo warmest mid the first and last ton days coolest. Heavy frost about 8d , Dili , IDth , 25th and 0th. A Burlington widow whoso husband committed suicide was charged by the family of her husband witli being the cause of the bulcide. The widow to vin dicate herself had a spiritualistic seance where departed spirits wore called tc testify in the case , at which the father ol tne suicide was present. The husband who had suicided was called to the stand and testified that there were no unpleas ant relations between himself and wife that film had been n good wife to him , Ho further said ho did not commit sin- cido. He had gone to the stable to clean his revolver , nnd us he stood in the door way the wind suddenly blew the dooi against his arm , causing the pistol to be discharged , thus ending his earthly ex istence. The affair excites not a little comment in Uurlington. Dakota. There is tallof establishing a Metho < ( list college in the Black Hills. Mining operations in nil portions ol the Hills tire in n more healthy state thai : ever before. Track has been laid ton miles on the extension bf the Elkhorn Valley road from Rapid City to Deadwood. Thu Holy Creek coal banks have boon examined by exports nnd pronounced capable of supplying the territory witli a good article of fuel for nil time. Yankton , according to the Press , makes ale and beer , flour , woolun goods , boiler. and engines , furniture , sheet metal arti cles , cigars , blank' books , job printing , combs , tinware , boots and shoes , brooms , w-agons and plows , carriages anil bug' gics , linseed oil nnd oil cakes , brick , tow , rubber stamps , clothing and harness. Il also turns out good Christians , real and chattel loans , and last , but not least , good impressions. A Snd Casn. One Mamie Smith was notified tlu other day by ollieer Clark of tholliimani society that she must change hur con duct towards her cight-montlis-old babe , or be arrested. She promised to do sc nnd leave for Honey Creek , .Nob. , when she claims to reside. This is n very sad case. The woman Smith was in the habit of taking her infant into low dives and force it to drink beer until it was stu nid , all for thu gratification of a lot of drunken loafers. She would then roll it around on the floor and kick it like a football to show its grit. Ollieer Clark was procuring evidence for con viction in the case when thu inhuman mother skipped. An Inccnrtlitry Plro. About 0'JO : Wednesday evening the oil Pacific house at 820 North Tenth was sul on lire by some unknown parties and $ oO ( damage was done. The fire seemed to have started in the basement. The house wai unoccupied at the time , the last tenani Felix Slavin , having vacated about week ago. The building belongs tc George . Gray , and this ia the thin time since last June that the lire depart ment. lias saved the old ehcll from tlu flames. Omurm's IllccuRt Dnlldlnc. The building being eroctej by John A Wnkoliold over his lumber yard betweor Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets , noai Pierce , is about completed and prob.il > ! } covers more ground than any otlioi building in the city , not excepting Ar mour'o mammoth packing house now ii : course of ( 'ruction nt South Omaha. Tlu structure is 950x100 feet and covers con- sideiably over a block. Presentation. A stand of colors will bo presented tc George Crook Post No. 1 , Sons of Veter ans , ou Monday evening next by Senator Mnnderson. The presentation will take place at the headquarters of George A , Ouster No. 7 , on Douglas street. It is expected that the latter organization and Omaha Post No. 110 will bo present. The Career of Ourajr'a Widow. Denver Republican : Among the squaws Accompanying Colorow in hi ; peripatetic journoyings about the White river country is Chipeta , the wife of the lamented On ray , the Into head chief ol the Ute nation. The career of this woman is beyond anything yet written ; even Fonimoro Cooper , in his description ol aboriginal life , falls far short of anything like it in his character sketches. Follow ing Ouray's election to the chieftainship , thu first official act he was united upon ta consider was the advisability of a re moval of his tribe from the mountains ol Colorado to Utah , and in connection with a proposed treaty between the United States and thu Utu nation lie was sum moned to Washington. On his trip he was accompanied by his wife. 15oth hn nnd Chiputa had in a measure adopted the dress of civilized life. They owned tluur own ranch , their herds fed upon their own pastures , and in essentials lived ns white people nnd enjoyed thocoinfoits of civili/.ed liie. These facts preceded thn chief and his consort to Washington , and with all the romance of their moun tain lifo clinging about them , added In the heritage of an ancient and warlike lineage , tnoy were received with open arms by the high social circles of the capital city. Everywhere Ihu.y were feted and the doors of the mansions in thu West End swung inward at their ap proach. Chipotn was idoli/c.d. She was clothed in silk , hur raiment was tlm fancy of the bust eastern dressmakers and the tn\vdj finery associated with u life of savagery was conspicuous by its nbsmicu. The ii- lustrdtcit journal took the cue HIM ! the wife oj Ouray became labelled through out thu breadth of thu land by thu pencil of special artists. She was thu rage foi the season shu was in Washington and the epistolary correspondence from at taches of tlm English legation to tin court journals at London referred to hoi us a "Modern Princess. " and bespoke foi her a hearty reception from thu peeraac of Kngl'ind should she visit that country , which she at that timu actually contum plated. As souvenirs of hur visit -tr Washington , Clupota carried away will : tier miantillus of silver plates a portion of which was presented to hur by the Government through thu interior depart ment , Shortly after his visit to Washington and the conisummatiun of thu treaty Ouray died , Ho was sincerely mourned by his people , and ns nn Indication of thnir criof. nnd in conformity with lone- cstabllshvil custom , the horses of the dead man were led up to the grave nnd ono by ono shot. All that was valuable in earthly oxlstanco was to accompany him to the happy hunting grounds of his race all but Chipeta ; nnd she too , would probably bavo accompanied her llcgo lord had she lived a con pie of cen- tnrlo.s ago. As it was the custom of her tribe , by the greatness of her exalted position , condemned her to a life of per petual widowhood. Any deviation from this unwritten law would draw upon her head the maledictions of the entire nation and she weald become an outcast , n pariah among her people. Hut Chipeta had n will of her own. She had tasted ot the prlvclegus which her Caucasian sisterhood enjoyeU , and when the opportunity occurred to marry n handsome buck she did so , not stopping to consider the great fall thereby in the i ; social scale. As might have been ox- pcctcd , the head men of the nation , with unanimity nud dcoison , condemned both her nnd her husband to ostracism. They had both violated a sacred law of social government they must sillier. With her now alliance she turned her back upon civilized lifo in every form. Hur.sllks nnd satins were discarded , and oven her plate was molted down to make gewgaws for her husband's friends , llui stock was taken from her nnd reverse followed reverse tilt she wa < absolutely forced beyond the line nf tribal kinship , nnd she with her husband became a wanderer. This , doubtless , was hurried by the un fortunate mistake which she made in locating a ranch on thu new reservation , It was an excellent slto. There was plenty of water , and bulfalo.niesqult and gramma grasses gave nourishment to the stock. When the lines were made divid ing Utah from Colorado it was found that Clupota's ranch was on the wrong side ol the line , and not in the reservation. It became , therefore , legitimate plunder for the settlers , who lost no time in di viding the spoils. * Like the renegade of hur tribe. Cninota in her wanderings tended to the White river country. There at least she would be welcomed nnd some respect paid to her tnllen greatness. She and her hns- husband joined'Colorow , and are now with him environed by the military forces which the governor has despatched for protection of the settlers of Garlleld county. Telegraphic advices say that so mo apprehension is felt for Chipeta's safety. She was in n tent which was fired by Sheriff Kendall's party on their first visit to the Indian camp , and she has not been seen since. It is not nt all likely that she has bcon harmed , she has bcon com pelled lo practically take to the bushes. Chipeta is growing' old. Shu must bo in thu neighborhood of fifty. Colorow was once her enomy.as ho was the enemy of the peace-loving Ouray ; but when her white friends turned on hur she sought straits in lifo where she could find friends. It is not now believed that she entertains a warlike spirit toward thu whites , but , being with Colorow , she is in bad com pany. One'O the queen of the nation , who is now leading the lifo of a common squaw. THE "ROBINSON MEDAL. " A Tribute to the Brnvo Mnn Wlio Saved Mr. Sownrd'n Lire. NVashington Critic : In ono of the exhi bition cases near in tluinorthurn entrance to thu National museum , ana a fuw paces from the cases containing the Grant rulics , is n bron/.n medal some four or five inches in diameter , which is : i copy of a gold nicdiil that by votu of the American congress was awarded to the man who heroically saved thu life of Hon. William H. Suward from the hand of the assassin on the day and at the same hour when President Lincoln , in Font's thea tre , on Tenth street , fell beneath the miscreant's bullet. As many objects of universal interest acquire their brilliancy and lustre from their association with men and women of other days , who have been famous for something or other , so this bit of bronze , to casual glance similar to hundreds of other bronxo medals on exhibition , becomes - comes an object of special notice by rea son of the event it commemorates. The obverse of the medal has a fine profile liguru of Secretary Sowaul , the work being finely executed , circled around which uio the words : To ( icprge P. Hohlnson. Awarded by the Congress of the United States , March 1,1871. Across the face of the modal in hori zontal lines , both on the right and left sides of the portrait , is this inscription : For his heroic conduct on the 14th day of April. IbO-'i , In saving the lifo of thu Honorable Win. 11. Howard , then Secretary of State of the United States. The reverse contains a realistic sccno of tiiu desperate encounter between Rob inson and Paine , or Powell , the assassin , thu knifu being visible in the latier'a hand ; while in the background , upon the bed , laytho form ot the wounded and half murdered secretary. There is no inscription upon the reverse of the medal , except the name of thodesigccr. "O. W. Coffin , des , " and the word "PaquotF. " Secretary So ward at this time occupied the fine old mansion on Fifteen-and-a- half street , the east side of Lafayette Square , which is still standing. It waa occupied as a club house for many years previous to its occupancy by Secretary So ward , and it was in front of its door that General Daniel . Sickles in 18,19' shot and killed Phillip liarton Key. The details of thu affair will bo remembered by the older residents of Washington , ns well as thu excitement attending his trial in the District court house and his ac quittal. How t'cmosrn-stninpi Are Mode. Summervillo Journal : In prlntingsteel- plates are used , on which two hundred stamps are engraved. The mun are kept nl work covering thorn wit1' lie colored inks and passing thum to a man and a girl , who nro eaually busy at printing thum with lanro. roll ing hand presses. Three ot these little squads nro employed all the time , although ten presses can bo put into usu in CIHO : of necessity. After the small shoots of paper upon which the two hundred stamps arc engraved have dried eno'igh they are sent into another room nnd gummed. Thn gum used for this purpo.su is n peculiar composition made of ttiu powder of potatoes and other vegetables , mixed with water , which is bolter than any other material , for in stance , gumarabic , which cracks the paper baulv. This paper is also of n pu- cuimr tuxturn , sornowlntt similar to thai ot bank notes. After having ugain , neon dried , this timu on littlu racks which nro fanned by steam powur for about an hour , they are put in luitwcon shouts of pasteboard and pressed in hy draulic presses capable of applyiing a weight of two thousand tons. The next thing is to cut thu sheets in halvus ; cneli fthui't , of course , when cut contains a hundred stani)3. | They are then passed to two oilier squads , who , in as many operations , perforate the shouts between the stamps. Nnxt , limy are pressed oneo more , and then packed and labulml mid stored away in another room , prep aratory to buing pat in mail-bags for dispatching to till orders. If a singla Htuinp is lorn or in any way mutilated the whole sheet of one hundred Is burned. Five hundred thousand nro burned every wcuk from this cause. For the past twenty years'not tv .single sheet has been lost , such cilro hasbmsn tnkun in count ing thum. During the progress of man ufacturing thu sheets are counted ejovca tinioj.