Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 17, 1888, Page 4, Image 4

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    TEE OMAHA DAUuY BEE : .SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 17 , 1838 ,
THE DAILY BEE.
) EVUUY MOKNIMG.
TT.IUIS OK HUIISCIII1TION.
t ) llyMonilng ( Million ) Including Su.MUV
Hrr.One Vtar . * I ? < "
ForHlx.Monthn .
Tor Three Months . . . &
TUB OMAHA Ht'Nnvv HKK , mailed to any
tldr ? ss. Ono Vcnr . - . JJJ
WKKKi.rllKF. ono Year . . . . . . . - < "
OMAIIAO HeT..NC \Ml919KAnVVMHTltIfcT. .
CtllOUlO OUICKW.7 HOOKRUV lltflt.WMI.
NKw-YoiiKOmrr , UOOMS 14 ksiilSTiumrsR
Ilfll.IIINII. WAflHINOTON OlHCE , I > O. 613
3TIIEKT.
rOHHKSl'ONDKNTI ? .
AllcommimlcailotH relivtlnn to now and edi
torial mutter should bo addressed to the l.liITdlt
.
, , ,
should no
All buslnns * Idlers nnd remittances
ftcldrpsseil to TUB IK.K 1'um.isiilMi fow-vvr.
OMAIU. DrnftH , checks An < l tiostofflee orders to
bdiiAile payable totlieorderof the company.
The BcePalilisliniE'cipaiiir , Proprietors ,
K. UOSEWATHH. Editor.
THK DAIIjV 11IJK.
Sworn Statement ot Clruulatton.
Btat.-of Nebraska. I ,
County ot DotiRlas. ( " "
< ) porae It. T/sthuck. seriftary nfThe UNJ I'ul > -
llshlmr Compiinr. doi > n Kolvtmily swcnr Hint the
actual circulation f 'Inn DAILY \\vv. \ \ for the
wwk ondlnK November 10 , ISUd wns nt follows :
Sunday , Nov I .
Monday , Nov. 0
Tuesday , : ov. i ! .
Wortni'S'iny. Nov. T
Thursday , Nov. 8 . .
I rlilay , .Vnv o . i.4i
Baturdiij.Nov 10 .
onoitOK ii.T/acin OK.
Bworn to bpforo we and subscribed In my
prehcnco this 10th day of November A. I ) . IKS,1 * .
ti al N. p. Fii : U Notary I'ubllc
Btnto of Nebraska. I , B
Count ) of DoiiKins. f
( li-orgo II. Iriclmck , beltiR duly sworn , dp.
poso-sand says tlmt ho In svcretnry of thn live
I'lilillidilitK company , that the actual avcraifo
dully clrculatlun of 'lilt : luii.v HKK Cor th
month of Not timber. 18H7. was IV tl copies : for
December , W7. 1 V'll ' roplcx ; for January , 1HMS
r > , aXJ copies ; for February , ItW. 1 Lice copies ;
for .March , IKS1 * . HUWU copies ; for April , IMS
1H.744 roplcji ; for -May , IB' * ! * , 17. 1H1 copies ; for
June , IK.SS. IC.un copies ; for July. IHHH , in.o.1.1
copies : for Annual , ISHH , IM.ISS copies ; forfeep
t ember , IW-8 , lif.l&J coploH ; for October. IKSs. was
1H.W4 ( copies. ( UU ) . II TL'IIUCK. .
Sworn to before m and mitnci ibod In my
Presence this 7tli ilay of November , I88S.
_ N. 1' . I'II I , Notary I'ubllc.
Bv TUB WAY , has Attorney General
Thurston niiulu up his oil-room cabinet ?
H.utitisox will be obliged
to organize a postal service of his own
if Ilia duily mail koopn on prowing.
Tun crop of candidates for the
spenkership of the state legislature is
springing out of the ground like mush
rooms after a ruin storm.
CHUUCII Howi : is laying his wires for
the presidency of the state sonnto , but
the Auburn statesman is likely to be
tripped by his own private wire.
Tin : bread eaters of the city prefer to
pay six cents fora loaf of sixteen ounces
rather than pay the bread makers five
cents for a three-quarter loaf of twelve
ounces.
PAUL VAXDKitiiUJr has relieved him
self of a bit of sell laudation in the Re
publican. A marked paper will be sent
to General Harrison. How would it dote
to send Paulas minister-plenipotentiary
to the Fiji Islands ?
IGNATU'S DOXNKMA" telling the
good people of the Black Hills , that
Bacon wrote Shakespeare may excite
some of Doadwood's most cultivated
citizens to run Donnelly out of town at
the muz/.lo of their six-shooters.
No\y that the railroad companies arc
required to pay for the construction of
viaducts within the limits of Omaha ,
no disposition is shown by the council
to construct any viaducts , although
many railroad crossings in the city are
a constant menace to lifo and vehicles.
THE Knights of Labor , in their con
vention , will in all probability inves
tigate the man Gould who invented or
at least circulated the dollar-a-day lie
about General Harrison. It seems that
Gould used the seal of the order upon
his circular with the evident intention
of injuring General Harrison. This
was a flagrant abuse of the constitution
of the Knights of Labor , and in consequence
quence Mr. Gould is in danger of being
Buranuirilv dealt with.
TIIK railroad war of rates on packing
house products , which promised to
yield a rich harvest to the Omaha
packing houses , is about to terminate
in a compromise , the Chicago & North
western having agreed to suspend action
for one month on its proposal to reduce
rates on packing house products and
live stock for one month. In the mean
time the regular monthly meeting of
the association will take place , and lib
the railroads look after their owa inter
ests ilr&t , they will doubtless agree upon
a schedule of rates , and the promised
fat picking for the packing houses will
pass into innocuous desuetude.
A KKVOiitmox in rapid transit be
tween Chicago and San Francisco and
possibly between the Atlantic and Pa
cific coast is imminent. The proposed
fast special train to bo put on the Union
Pacific December C is only one of the
changes that are likely to take place
with the new year. Competition has
spurred on the Union Pacific to outstrip
its rivals , as the Northern Pacific and
the Topeka & Santa lj arc negotiating
to establish fast through trains from
Chicago to California. It is more than
likely , therefore , that the Missouri
lines will co-operate with the Union
Pacific for a solid train from Chicago
wept. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Till' railroad question continues to ho
the burning one. An Oregon farmer
who had iv great harvest of potatoes ,
shipped thorn to Portland by the Oregon
gen lllvor Itailnxul and Steam Naviga
tion company. The proceeds were just
sufllclcnt to pay freight and transfer
charges , for the roulo combines steam
boat and railroad transit ; and yet the
price roall/'ed In Portland was a good
one. The men of Oregon propose to
petition the state to tuku charge of the
Improvements in the Columbia river ,
and to maUc the Cascade canal and clear
u pagsngo through the Dalles as quickly
us possible. The work is bolng done
now by the United States , but so slowly
that twonty-fivo years must elapse be
fore the great rivdr Columbia rollu un-
vexed to its junction with the Willam
ette. CltUens of Portland four that
tholr trade will have disappeared by
that time , bo the local board of trade is
vigorously oudcriln , ? the proposition.
Mil. POn'DEltLV'S atAyiFEST UN
The general report made byPowdcrly
to the Knights of Labor sitting in con
vention at Indianapolis will but con
firm the opinion entertained by a few
friends of labor reform outside of the
order , that ho is a thoroughly incom
petent man. This judgment was passed
U | > oti him at the time of the Missouri
Pacific strike , nnd moro recently the
liurltngton btriko , when it was in his
power to render a great service not only
to his order but to the general cause of
labor. Ho is unlit for a lender , and ho
is unfit for a figure head. Ho has no
tact , ho has no comprehension of cir
cumstances , and ho is utterly unable to
catch the drift of public sentiment , nnd
of the footings of those worklngmen
who are not knights. Like all wonk
men in high position , ho interprets
dissent from his policy to be treachery
to the order. His minimi report id
simply a series of excuses nnd com
plaints for the diminished numbers of
the knights. Nothing could bo in
worse taste or moro foolish.
Mr. Powdorly should bo the last man
to discourage the order because its un
wieldy mass has been shrinking away
from various natural causes. Ho ought
to know enough to know that the
promibcuous recruiting of men of all
grades and finks into the order was
sure to drive out of It the wage-working
class. Any man with a thimbleful of
brains who has kept abreast with labor
movements would have foreseen that
the professional knights who have in
vaded the order for personal and politi
cal ends would form a wedge to split
the order unless they wore excluded by
the reorganization of the order on a
strictly workingman's basis.
Mr. Powderly has shown him
self to bo a man of
shallow mind , ready to embrace and
advocate theories that are utterly im
practicable and at variance with the
natural laws that govern the labor
market as they do the wheat market.
The mission of the luiights is not , and
should not , bo to fight the trades unions ,
nor yat to dominate them , and Powderly
hat. done both. Sufh actions cannot but
bo detrimental to the caiiboof labor , and
naturally have tended to disintegrate
the knights. Their strength lies in the
fact that they by their organisation can
bring into harmonious action with the
trades unions the men , and the women
workers , too , who- labor cannot well bo
organised. Not only can they do thib ,
but they could be a potent factor in as
sisting the trades unions in their disa
greements with non-union men. Noth
ing can bo clearer than that in all con
tests with capital the trades unions are
badly handicapped by the dead
weight of unemployed labor. This
unemployed labor can bo gathered
under the banner of the knights and
might be so handled that capital could
not in future rely upon it. At present ,
whenever there is a strike capital lies
back confidently , and calls this element
to its aid. With a general master work
man in control who understood things ,
matters might bo so managed that the
knights could organize these men in
such a way that they would aet with the
trades unions not against them. Hith
erto the policy of the knights , at least
as far as outiidcrs have been able to
judge , hus boon to ondeivor to utilize
unorgnni/.ed labor to enable them to
dominate the trades unions. Nothing
can be more detrimental to the interests
of the order than such an attempt , which
is diametrically opposed to the common
sense of workingmen , and has been pro
ductive of very bad results. This policy
grew out of the disease of the big head ,
which seems to have been fatal to gen
eral master workmen generally. If any
knight has been taught or has led him
self to believe that his organization was
destined to take the place of the trades
unions ho is deceived , and the truth is
not in him. The trades unions must
ever bo the basis of all labor organiza
tions , and the knights can never bo
moro than a supplementary order ,
which will pass into desuctudo when
the battle has been fought and the vic
tory has been won.
l SMALL
Unless the democratic schemes for
stealing congressional districts in West
Virginia and some other states where
the vote was very close are successful ,
the republicans will have control of the
next house of roprc&ontativcs by a small
majority. The early estimates are found
to have been too sanguine , nnd now oven
Senator Quay , whoso accuracy of judg
ment in sucli matters has been abun
dantly attested , and whose opportuni
ties for obtaining trustworthy informa
tion are the best , does not promise a re
publican majority in the liou&u exceed
ing six. This would be a narrow
margin , but it would bo suflicMunt , for
control , since there will bo in the fifty-
first congress no "balance-of-powor"
men. The next house will be divided
on strict party lines , with no shifters or
so-called independents to give solici
tude to cither side. Regarding the ap
prehended purpose of the democrats to
countout republicans in tliesix or seven
close districts where a recount will
prob.ibly bo made , the mostt-orious dan
ger to the republican dalmants is felt
to bo in West Virginia , where the dom-
crats are in control ot the election ma
chinery. There and elsewhere , how
ever , the republican managers will
maintain a vigilant ana careful guar
dianship of the returns , and the demo
cratic schemers will not find it un easy
matter to accomplish their suspected
purpose of counting out the republican
candidates.
Thcro is a very general impression
that the clerk ot the house of represent
atives , whoso duty it is to proparn thn
roll of the members elect , has it in his
power to arrange the roll to as to do-
prlvo the republicans of a majority , par
ticularly in the event of the majority
not exceeding two or three. This Is a
mistaken Impression , The law gives
the clerk no discretion In preparing Iho
roll of mortibora elect where regular
credentials of election are pre
sented. It provides that "Before
the first meeting of each con
gress the clerk of the next preced
ing hotiso of representatives shall
make a roll of the ronroevntatlves-
elect , and place therein the immcs of
those potMons , and of .such puraon-j only ,
whoso credentials show that they wore
regularly oloctetl in accordance with
the laws of their states respectively , or
the laws of the United States. " The
plain and positive mandate of this law
requires the clerk to place on the roll
the nnmcs of all ropresentntlvcs-clcct
whoso credentials nro presented in due
form and properly attested by the seal
of the state from which elected. In
cases of contest , the man who obtains
the certificate of election Is placed
on the roll regardless of the merits
of the controversy , the clerk hav
ing no authority to go behind the
certificate. If the certificate has
been improperly obtained the claimant
may bo objected to when called up by
the speaker to take the oath of olllco ,
nnd made to stand aside until Iho house
Is fully organised , when the right of
the claimant to admission must bo
passed upon by the house. There is ,
therefore , no ground for apprehension
regarding the prospective action of the
clerk of the house in preparing the roll
of members elect. The eertllleato
being in due form , the clerk is bound
to place the name it contains on the
roll.
roll.But
But while the clerk is powerless to
arrange the roll of members elect to the
disadvantage of the republicans , the
fact remains that all who go UKJII |
the roll , regardless of any question as
to whether tholr certificates were prop
erly obtained or not , participate in thu
election of a speaker , and thus prac
tically in the organi/utioti of the house ,
so that a person presenting a certificate
obtained by fraud is permitted to assist
equally with those respecting whoso
election there is no question , in arrang
ing the machinery by which the fraud
may bo made effective. Thus , if in
West Virginia , for example , the demo
crats count out the republicans in the
congressional districts and receive the
certificates , thereby giving the demo
crats a majority in the next
house , the votes of these men will
elect a speaker who will make
up the committees , nnd this done it is
not doubtful that the holders of IhobO
certificates would bo given their seats.
It is of the greatest importance , there
fore , that the republicans in cloo and
disputed districts shall exercise the ut
most care and vigilance to prevent de
feat by fraud.
FOOT
The scheme to re-locate fort Omaha
never has been favored by any con
siderable number of the citi/ens of
Omaha. Our business men have prac
tically been a unit against the project ,
and so expressed themselves through
the bo.xrd of trade when the bill was
pending in congress two years ago.
Both Generals Howard and Crook wore
most decidedly adverse to re-location
and every commander of the post and
staff olllcor attached to depart
ment headquarters has given
expression to the same views.
General Brooke , the urnsent depart
ment commander , would doubtless op
pose the re-location were it not for the
fact that congress has passed the
bill to establish a new fort within ton
miles of Omaha.
Senator Mnnderson , who has been
chiefly instrumental in the passage of
that bill , has time and again assured
our citizens that this monsuro was in
spired by Gcncr.il Sheridan , who , at
the head of the army , had adopted a
policy of isolating the forts from largo
cities , and refused to approve any fur
ther appropriations for enlarging and
improving the present fort.
It was only because General Sheridan
refused to permit Fort Omaha to be im
proved on its present site that object ions
from leading citi/ens of Omaha were
finally withdrawn , and the bill passed
without remonstrance.
Now that General Scofield is at thn
head of the army , it would seem to us
that the projected removal of the fort is
no longer a military necessity.
If the lending business men and prop
erty owners who regard , the re
moval as a detriment to our city
take prompt steps to stop further
proceedings toward the purchase
of a new bite and enlist Senator Man-
dorson in this effort , wo have no doubt
that the relocating bill can bo promptly
repealed in December and a liberal ap
propriation secured before congress
adjourns to enlarge the old fort and
erect substantial quarters for all the
troops that may bo stationed hero.
THU BUK has from the outset vigor
ously protested against the proposed
change , and wo still believe that such a
change would bo damaging to this city ,
without materially benolitting the gov
ernment.
THE national board of trade in session
at Chicago hud under discussion the
question us to the relative value of the
monthly crop reports issued by the de
partment of agriculture , Itwaselaimod
by the Chicago board of trade that thcbo
monthly crop bulletins wore inaccurate
and for that reason their issuance should
bo discontinued. The prevailing opin
ion of the con volition seemed to bo , how
ever , that the department of agricul
ture should bo given moro funds by
congress in order to iimlco the reports
moro accurate. It is u question whether
the viowfa of the Chicago hoard
of trade wore not on the whole
correct. Crop reports are for
the most part guesses , and often unre
liable at that. It is impossible to ob
tain accurate information us to growing
crops , no matter how painstaking it
may bo. Growing crops are such a
variable quantity nnd subjected to such
daily influences that what may bo true
of the corenla of a particular section ono
day may bo absolutely false within a
week. Reliable monthly crop reports
coiiBi'rjuontly are an impossibility. They
arc misleading and do not serve the
markets of thu world as they should.
Tun increased value of Nebraska
farm land has led the board of educa
tional land and funds to ro-nppraiso the
school lauds in several counties of the
stnto. The board has just approved
the recommendation tq raise the ap
praisement of Tlmyer county school
lands from ono dollar and fifty cunts to
sovcn dollars an acre. The old valua
tion ha.s properly boon recognised as
being altoffflthor too low. Thayer
count ) * is one of the richest and most
desirable agricultural suctions of the
stato. Land is sold in the county from
fifteen to thirty-fho dollars per aero ,
nnd the state was constantly losing the
benefit of the enhanced price on school
lands duo to its low appraisement value.
It is highly probable that n re-appraiso-
montof the school lands in other coun
ties of the state will take place.
IT Is evident that our leading citizens
are giving considerable attention to the
amendments necessary to the charter in
order to secure the best legislation for
the city. The interviews published in
Tin : Br.u from day to day are making
clear where the faults and the dangers
of the present charter Ho. With a full
nnd fnir discussion by our people , the
best means for remedying these defects
will bo found , nnd our delegation will
bo instructed what amendments to pro
pose. That our charter should bo
faulty in spots and need revision as ex
perience should point out , was some
thing which at the time of its passage
was unavoidable. On the whole , the
charter has been acceptable and when
the crooked places in it have boon
straightened , the interests of the city
will bo much better protected.
Tin : board of education has always on
hand a list of substitutes and applicants
from winch It can draw Its teachers for
night schools without making a requisi
tion on the duj force. Of the nine teach
ers now employed in the night schools ,
six teach during the day. Cleurly their
elHcioncy is more or less impaired for
evening work. All things being equal ,
it would certainly bo to the advantage
of the night schools to be taught by
fresh and competent instructors.
OT11VM LAXIJS 'WAX Ol'KS.
An American missionary has given to the
world of America a most graphic and start
ling account of western China , a region of
which \rcll-liiformeil people knew little *
or nothing. The head center of Huddhistlc
worship is Mount Oaici , and ho remained
theie n mouth studying nil the marvels
mound him , examining the trades of the people
ple , noting their lives , nnd the influence of
Buddhism upon them , vUitlng the romantic
places In the neighborhood , wandering
among the deep gorges of the mountains , and
pin ticularlv that through which the Vaiig-tsc'
forces its foaming way , and taking copious
notes of the various ait objects which re
main to testify to-day of a nobler epoch , u
purer talth and a guilder clvili/ation. Some
of these wonders must be better woi th see
ing than the pyramids of llgypt. Ho de
scribes an entire temple of line hard bionze
of great antiquity and many colossal statues
of bronze , ono of which is as largo as the
monstrous one at Niira in Japan. They all
are of Snkynnium. but the Japanese tjpe
of the irod is different from thcso in wcstei n
China. There nro also mountains chiselled
into the forms of idols , but these are not
Huddhistic , relating to Tartar Shintooism ,
and not unlike the immense roclc idols in
Afghanistan.
Recently there have been accounts in the
eastern papers of the nourishing condition of
tobacco cultuie in Cuba , and the people of
the Havana evidently believe that they have
a cinch on the poclcetbooks of wealthy smok
ers all over the world. Turkish and Hun
garian tob.iccos.aia , excellent for the pipe
and the eigaretfe. "but , tha leaf cannot bo
rolled into a ci ar ; &nd as the same thing is
true of the OKiJuisity tob iccoa of Missouri ,
Kentucky anil } Tennessee , it has seemed
hitheuo that thje monopoly enjoyed by the
Havana clear \tn $ not-to be broken. Hut its
day has come ntlasri The island of Sumatra
cither wholly oV in part belongs to the Hol
landers , and they have been steadily culti
vating tobacco there and sa3 ing nothing tor
some years past , and have doubtless been
selling it in thu form of Henry Clayj or Ko
g.ilias , , or some other liistcliss brand of
Havana puios. Hut the American cigar
maker bus obtained news of the fact , and
this year tobacco to the amount of § li , ( ) > 0ll , ( ) ) >
was purchased by them in Sumati.i and nlso
in Amsterdam. Tlio tobacco of the Manilla
islands has enjoyed a high tcputation for a
long time , but that ot Sumatra is quite a new
matter.
Our good devout orthodox chi istiaus are
not quite pleased that progress should have
'
reached Jorusilom , because they imagi'ned
that the vengeance of heaven had blasted it
forever nnd a day. Yet the fact is undoubted
that Jerusalem is Increasing rapidly In popu
lation , and efforts are being made to cieato
manufacturing industries. The chief ele
ment in this surprising renaissance is the
Jewish , but Russians , Greeks mid Armen
ians arc also taking n hand in the rebuilding
of the famous old city. Perhaps the ne\L
thing will bo the rebuilding of the temple ,
though this is doubtful , for the most ad
vanced thinkers among the Hebrewas for
example Einanucl Ueutsch , are oy no means
satislisd tli it their ancestors in remote times
were the pure and loftv minded monotheists
which the Jews are today. Their minus go
out toward a renaisninco of Israel ns well us
of Jciusalem. At piesent Jerusalem is bj ; no
means a place of mouiiiing , and is beginning
to wear quite a bustling look , as if it intended
to be a city of the nineteenth century as well
as of the .i emote past , like Alexandiia and
Cairo.
The Melbourne papers publish thu intelli
gence that the Hritlsh government , that in
satiable old cormorant , has annexed Zululand -
land , and has made the Capo Colony a hand-
somcoffer of Hechuanaland if they c ire to
take it. The scheme of annexing Hoerland ,
or the Kieo Orange Republic , some years ago
did not succeed , for the Knglish veterans al
lowed themselves to ba disgracefully
whipped by the wild Dutch Uoors at Swatz-
kopf. The Iloers who proposed to defend
themselves against the English invaders
formed a camp upon the plateau of the
Swatz kopf. The Hritish troops , intending
to surprise them , climb-Mi up another side of
thu mountain , and gained the crest , with the
humane determination to massacre them as
BOOH as it was daylight and the men were
tested. Hut the Hoeis , inumsidorato followH
that they were , discovered them at ilav-
bieak , and immediately charged up nu al
most precipitous ascent , mid with every dis
advantage of position gained thu crest and
drove the Hritlsfi headlong 1'ho nnglish
also allowed themselves to bo whipped by thu
Zulus , who lighting llko thu ancient Cheniscl
under Arminius , armed only with tholr
assugays , thu odact counterpart of the
Chcrubcan frame.i , surrounded the Hrilish
with a vast Bomt-cjirclp of men , and maidenly
contracting the two Jiorns , massacred two-
thlnm of Lord Chelmsford'H column at
Isandlhwanu. Obviously the English onlv
annex /njulnnd for fear that old Htsmuri'k
might suddenly bcthink , him that the bravo
Uoors were of gi\uulto \ ) Teutonic stock , and
might annex Xnlnland for their benefit. It
may bo that it will bo done yet.
Some American Journalists are losing their
heads uvor the trans Caspian railroad , which
Is now running fnjui Astrubad to Samarkund ,
the capital of HoUiara. One in particular In
a Chicago paper conjures up a vision of rlv
airy to the United States which Is pitiable
for its doiisenoss of ignorance. This writer
assumes that within five years cotton raised
In Central Asia may bo laid down in Liverpool -
pool to compete with Amoiican cotton , and
that Siberian wheat will similarly become u
fierce rival to the product of the northwest
This ia thuincttist bubble blowing that ever
was indulged In. In the first place Hokharu
Is not In Central Asia by a good deal , nnd be
tween the two is a range of mountains cntlc-d
the 1'amlr , upon winch the snow lies for
nlno months in the year. On the eastern
side of this range Is a succession of plateaus
so elevated that it freezes every nignt , even
in summer. In the second place there is no
labor In Hokhara , nor in any of the khanates
north , south and west of It , and these
khanates are only oases in the burning desert
of the Caspian region a saline desert caused
by toe gradual shrinking of the Caspluu ,
which was formerly im ocean connected with
the Arctic wntera. In the third place there
is no population In Siberia amounting to any
thing , nor Is It likely to nttnct immigration 11
the czar would permit It , which ho will not ,
In the fourth plnco the Russian wheat tnlscd
in the Tchornosjom and exported from
Khorsen nnd Ode sa principally by Gorman
settlers , or the descendants of German set
tlers , Is not nblo to compete with American
wheat , nnd Its production 1ms fallen oft In
consequence. Once for till Americans should
understand that Russia Is so thinly popu-
latrd that she is unabla to contend with the
United States in the production of anything.
ovou petroleum. As the present policy of
the country is to permit no Immigration , not
even of Germans , a hundred years must
clapso before Russia competes with us In
anything. Hy that time nil existing condi
tions will have been changed ,
A project Is on foot to connect Snn Diego
in lower California directly by a railroad
with the City of Mexico. There Is In ovist-
snco already n railroad , n branch of the
Southern Pacific , which runs from Tort
Yutim to tlii ? Mexican port of Guaymus on
the Gulf of California , The intention is to
build a road from San Diego to Fort Yuma ,
and then another from Guaymas along the
coast line to Mnrnthui , and thcncn to
Qiiailalnjnrn , which is already in connection
by rail with the capital. There can ho no
doubt that all this will bo accomplished
rapidly and cftlcicntlv , for San Dlogo 1ms
much eastern capital behind it , and none of
the sections afford any dinicultlcs of engineering -
ing liable to iiuiko great outlays Inevitable.
Ono of the chief objects of the line Is un
doubtedly to tup the anthracite coal beds of
Sonora , for San Diego Is In great need of
conl and entirely dependent upon the mercies
of the Southern Pacific railway , which has
conl beds up in Washington territory. If
there was much enterprise in San Diego of
the right kind , coal would bo brought from
Kobe In Japan , which would be cheaper than
hauling It by rail from Souonx nearly soveu
hundred miles nwnv. Hut , this road would
also malto San Diego the market for the
beautiful woods of Mexico..and ' as the govern
ment is willing to innko vain ible concession ! )
to the company , especially of the timber
lands along the Cordilleras , there will bo
great profit in it. The road from Guaymas
to Guadalajara runs parallel with the great
mountain chain on whoso foothills the lincst
tlmbur grows. The company with ordinary
prudence cannot full to make larpo profits ,
because the logs can bo cut nnd placed on
the car xvith very little expense by utill/ing
Hume power along a very great part of the
line.
*
There nre some American Alpine climbers
though not in in } * , and , indeed , the best lady
Alpinist that was over known was Miss lire-
voort , of New York , who ascended the
Mount Pelvoux and the Deux Ecrius But
as a rule Americans do not care particularly
for climbing up precipices and building a
cairn of stones on the summit with a niche
in the center for a bottle containing tno
names of the party making the ascent.
With our English cousin it amounts to a pas
sion , and theie are Englishmen who hunt
ovori where for diflicillt mountains , that they
may come nnd see mid overcome. This sum
mer one of this genus strayed into the Rus
sian mountains in the Caucasus and ascended
to the summit of Elhuiz , which 1ms a trilling
height of 19,3'iO foot. Having accomplished
this feat not only in safety , but in
comparative comfort , ho , iustead of
resting on his laurels and going homo to be
lionl/cd by the Alpine club , ciossed from the
Black sea region of mountains to the Cas
pian mountains on the west side in Daghus-
tau. Oho of these called Kiubclc , is sup
posed to be Mount Ararat , but it is not the
highest , for that honor belongs to the Kosh-
tan Tagh , nnd this mountain was the ono se
lected by the Englishman and a colleague
for their adventure. Tnoy had with them
their SWIMS mountain guides , but no natives
fer the Daghcstnnl mountaineers lufused to
go with them on account of some supersti
tion about the Ivoshtau Tagh , wh.ch , in the
language of the country , bears a nama syn
onimous with Yung Fiati , because the ascent
to the summit has never been made. Tno
British consul at Hatoum , and some. Ameri
can and English gentlemen bade the paiu God
speed , but it has never since been lie.ud of-
The Dughestani mountnineeis declare
that the Virgin of the mountain sent a tcrnllc
storm in which they must have penshed.
The gieatc'it anvietj is felt concerning
them , but it is feared that the.aio . butieil
hundreds of feet under snow , and will only
come to the surface when the neve has be
come n glacier and melts them out in com-
panj with tha cobble stones of its moraine.
Prom the observations of a Gorman scien
tist namc.l Hann it appeals that the b inner
town for uxtremo tempjratiuo is Morcho
jansk. in Siberia Kiom the beginning of
December the mean temperature is flfty-
cight degrees below 7cro , which means that
taking the tlicometrical leadings when the
weather is not so very bad , and the readings
when the cold is abnormal , and adding them
together the mean is fifty-eight degrees below -
low /ere. January and February aio still
colder , and a minimum of seventy six dc-
gi cos below /ero is a common occurrence.
In January , IbSS , the minimum was eighty-
nine degrees below zoro. Yet although
these are terrible figures there is more suffer
ing and death and loss in a little Nebraska
bli/zatd when the mercury only sinks to
twenty uino degrees below zero than in thu
whole winter of Morehojanslc. The thermometer
momotor only tolls part of thu storv. In
tunso cold is not hard to bear when there is
no wind , but nothing that lives can icsist a
cold of twrnty degrees below /ero when it is
hurled onward at n rate of liftj miles an
hour. In Mcrchojansk there is tin absolute
silence of all natural sounds. The winds do
not blow , thu trees do not move , the dogs do
not baric , but when mulllcd up warmly , men
and women do not sillier. Upon the whole
Nebraska and Dakota will contest the pnliii
of supremacy with Morehojanslc.
ii Aitou.
By the persistent work of cigar makers'
union. No. 20 , of Djnvur , teimmont and Chi
nese cii ar making lias been abolished in Col
orado's capital
Eau Claire , \Vis. , 1ms a co-operativo store
that recently dcclni ed a dividend of lOltf per
cent to purchasers It has a patronage of
neatly two hundred families
The olllcials of two street railway compan
ies in Buffalo have beun indicted for exact
ing from their employes moro than ten hours
woik in twelve consecutive hours.
Mrs Lunora M. Hurry has been commis
sioned to Iprtuic- for the Knights of Labor in
addition to her regular worlc of inquiring
into thu condition of female labor tin ougliout
thu country ,
1'ho carpenters and Joiners or Maiden ,
Mass. , have issued a notice to all carpenters
and contractors that on ami after April 1 ,
they will demand nlno hours lor a day's
worlc and on Saturday eight homs.
A blacksmith in Xon Istown.Pa , has made
nlno mlnlaturo horseshoes from a Hllvur
( Uino , The horseshoes nro all perfect , and
tbo holes drilled for the insertion of nulls tire
so binall that thuy will not udmit n sewing
needle.
The Hurlington , Cedar Rapids & Northern
railroad company have purchased u lurgu
tract of land near Sioux Kails , D. T. and n
largo stone quarry will soon bo opened. This
enterprise will give employment to hundreds
of men
At the fifth annual meeting of the Laun-
domctu)1 ) national association , held recently
at Cleveland , the delegates took to them
selves the credit of bringing about the ex-
elusion of the Chmust ) . This was donu by a
memorial sent to congress , which hud a di
rect influence on thu introduction of the hill.
With thu closing of navigation on the great
lal < os , Nov. in , ill ) , ( KM mun will bo thrown out
of omploimeiit There nro0,000 men who
uro sailors , deck hands , fliumcn and cnglu-
001 s. Thu 'longshoremen will number -10,000 ,
and among thorn aru the lumber-shovurs , the
grain-trimmers , the coal-heavers , and the
jro shovelers. Many of thcso men will go
into the picking houses , while somu will go
to the pineries for the winter.
STATI3
.Joltings.
Seward county is badly In need of a now
court house ,
A two-weeks' revival meeting Is in pro
gress at the Presbyterian church at Lyons ,
Charles liailoy , a prominent and oateomed
cill/en of Wilbur , died of diopgy last Wednes
day.
Shoplifters have boon doing n wholesale
, ob of "lifting" goods from Fremont stores
nnd the police have allowed the offenders t (
escape ,
A resident of Elmwftoil during the pnsi
season raised some very finely developed cot
ton pods from seed.
The presence ot a gnmbltng den In thcli
midst is causing the respectable people o !
Tokamnu great grlof.
Some vandal , armed with n bowlo Vnlfd ,
ruined thlrty-llvo hides In a Schuylor slatigh'
tor house the other day.
With the demise of the Hastings Gazette.
Journal , the Hastings Nebraskan changed
from n weekly to n dally.
The North Bond B'lall has mndo n change
of base and in future will bo published nt
i'romont , the county scat.
A purse of $150 has been raised nt Tokn-
mnh for the benefit of Hilly Wilson , who was
shot while trying to capture a burglar.
A man named Coon was cnitclit soiling
whiskey from a keg at the Weeping Water
quarries the other day , and was arrested and
sent to jail to await trial ,
A correspondent writes tlmt marriageable
young ladles are evidently In great demand
at Clarks , judging from the fact that n cer
tain young lady received three proposals in
one week.
Five pirates of the Missouri were nrrcstod
nt Nebraska City Thursday ns they were
floating down the river on a tlutboat stolen
nt Plattsmouth. Other articles of booty
were also ciiptuicd aud held for the proper
owners.
There is n big rumpus in two families at
Tekamnh over election wngers. A man who
has been married but a short time bet Ills
wife's gold watch against a gentleman's sli
ver watch , with the evident intention of
having a watch both for himself nnd his
wife The wife's watch was , of course , lost.
Another man bet his wife's sowing machine
and lost it.
town.
The Sioux City oat meal mill has gone into
a tiust and beun ordered closed.
It is quite common for dogs to suicide by
Jumping oft the high bridge at Dubuquc.
Governor Larraheo Monday made nil in
spection of the state treasury. The cash ou
baud amounted to $5lWO.'i' ( : ( ' ) , and bonds 5Ji" > , -
525.
Sixty-nine licenses for the sale of beverages -
ages , beginning November 1 , have been
taken out In Davenport. About onu hundred
moro dealers are yet expected to come up
nnd deposit their $ - ! . - > .
W. F.Cnrlton , auditor of Dickinson county ,
was the llrst county auditor to forward his
election returns to thu ofllco of the secretary
of stato. This repot t was received the day
after the ofllchl count was made.
An old soldier named Burroughs , from
Wnpello county , has been adjudged insane by
the commissioners , out is held nt Marshall-
town for disposition. The Independence
asylum refuses to receive him , ns ho is not
from its territory , and the Mt Pleasant
asylum demands tlmt Wnpello county pay for
Ins cam bufoio taking him there.
The county auditors will hold a state con
vention in Dos Monies beginning on thu Ultli
ot December. The call is issued by ,1. Q
Rathbono , of Eldora , Hardiu county. It Is
the purpose of the auditors to consider nay
matter of Importance to their woik and to
bring out any needed changes in the laws re
lating to their worlc , so that they may bo
fully discussed befoio the next legislature
meets.
A two-year old child of James Craig , ro
sidini' nt Clinton , was playing in the . \trnl
Mondiiv , whcli it fell into an uncovered cis-
turn. Mrs. Craig saw the child full and
jumped In after it. Fortunately the water
was only up to her arms , nnd , holding the
child up shu succeeded in getting tue water
out of its mouth aud throat. A neighbor who
witnessed the accident rescued the mother
and child , all unhurt , but torrioly frightened.
The Great North went.
Two feet of snow fell at Bullion , Elko
county , Nevada , last Saturday.
The republicans will have txvcnty majority
on joint ballot in the next Wyoming legisla
ture.
ture.Last
Last Satuidny 5150,000 worth of silver
bullion was landed at the Shelby smelting
works.
A Skagit county , Wyoming territory , phy
sician rcpoi ts that of seventeen bliths in his
neighborhood this year sixteen have been
bo.\s.
The Wyoming Stock Growers' association
has been thoroughly rcoignnirud , new by-
liws made and eveii thing put in shape to
get down to work
W. C. Wilson , a LaiMinlo ( Wyo. ) druggist ,
Wheeled Engineer Donovan to Sherman in ti
bairow us the result of tin elcctio.i bet. The
distance traveled was forty-six miles.
A new mining district lias boon discovered
in Missoula county , Montana The ere taker ,
out is said to assay from 110 to 210 ounces of
silver aud will average 50 per cent of lead.
Rev. George II. Cornell , rector of St ,
Matthowr'b Episcopal chuiuh at Laiamio
Wio. , iiiv been forced to iesign on account
of his health uud has accepted a call from
Sioux City , Ii.
A vast bed of boratc of lime has boon dis
co\cied in Curry county , Oregon , near the
coast. The boratc of limo is thu ciudc stnto
of borax. This deposit is said to bo half a
milu lojig , ItOO feet wide and 30 feet deep
It is said that an important discovery , con
sisting of a large deposit of asbetes , lias been
made at Laramlo Peak , Albany county ,
Wyoming. The nsbetes is found in a huge
dyke of soipontnio , of which thu company
has located liiSacres. The quantity , judging
from the surface indications , is very large.
Meagre icports of a shooting scrape on the
Sail Juan river have reached Duiango , Colo.
It appeals that a man by the name of 1 lamb-
let t , who bears u hard icputation , bocamoIn
volved in a quarrel with Edward Adams and
shot him with n Winchester rillo. the hall
passing through Adams' body. No fuithur
paitieulais have been received. Hamblctt
lias skipped out for the hills.
bajs tha Willows Journal There Is a
farmer in this vicinity who offers to furnish
land to anv ono who will put it in fruit and
grapes The purion who takes the land is to
pay the taxes nnd receive all proceeds for
four years. At the end of four years the
land Is to be sold and the money received to
bo equally divided between the original
owner and thu man who has put on the Im
provements
aTHUISHTON'S STUMIMNG TOUK.
It WIIH a Shrewd Kolicmo on thu Part
of Mr. KluiDiill.
Mr Holoombc , first vice picsldcnt of the
Union Pacific , lias been licio long enough to
enable those who arc at all observant to note
tlmt it is his intention to carry out the policy
which T. J. Potter by his deatli loft unlln-
iihcd. Educated in the rnilioau
business under Mr Pottur , patrom/od
albo by him , advanced to exalted
positions in the business , ho was the man
upon whom Pottor'H favor restud as Ins own
siicccsbor. Consistent with these facts Mr.
Holcamb will carry out that policy The
force on tha road will bt ) reduced to its lowest -
est practical llmlt , nsd expenses will bo everywhere
erywhoro curtailed. Mr. Kimball has been
charged with the executive worlc thus outline -
line , ! . None other than absolutely necessary
improvements will bo mudo. Evury
ollort will bo put forth to
got the Outhwaitc bill passed , in which event
some branching out will be undertaken.
It has just come to light that Mr , Kimball
lias donu something which ho thinks will
curry favor with the administration , It will
bo icmumbeied that Thnr.slon , the gen
eral attorney , wont to Indiana to
Htump for Harrison. It will also bo
lomemborcd that ho icturnod unoxpeeledly
His rot urn was on the dlieet order ol Churlus
Francis Adams , who wax hoi o at that time ,
and who could not understand whv a
# 1'JODO attorney was stumping instead of at
tending to his railroad business , Kimhall
insisted that Thiiiston was milking
friends with thu in-coming ndminlHtni
lion which would bo jnvaluablu to the roud-
in the passugo of the Oilthwiuto bill. Adams
relented and Thuiston went to Now Vorlt
uud stumped witli Hlalno.
Chaplain Nave's noply.
Chaplain Nave , of l'"oit ' Omaha , has writ-
ion the following with reference to the sol-
illor criticism made upon his olToits to RCCUIB
by donation books for a library at the post in
this city <
A number of articles , purporting to como
from soldiois at Kort Omaha , have appeared
In THIS UKK rocentlv. critic uing the jirojios.
itlon by people of thn city to establish u li
brary at the post. Who the purlins nro wo do
not know , but they rio not icproscnt the ofll
wrs nor the hotter elastt of soldier * . TJu-so
ire far from doliig or siijlnj } HIIJ thing that
ivould reflect unkindly upon a ajiontuneaus
jxproHon ( of good will. The btafwerjts
mndc by the correspondent nte
nml should be. treated ns sm-li. For Instance
our statement was tlmt f 200 had recently
been appropriated for the purchase of book *
for the post library. I saw onn ot the ofH
ocrs of the board whlih mndo thu nppniprlu *
tion , nnd ho informed cue the sum WHS tJ.V , .
General Wlieaton. romnmmtlng the post ,
authorises mo to s.-ij that the pro | > osllion
wns a Burprlso which ho highly npprwmtps ,
nnd that if the citizens ot Onmlin offer him a
library for the uo of his regiment and thOMi
that succeed him at Koit Omaha , ho will bit
glad to receive it ns n token of good will
from the people with whom ho nnu hit conv *
mand enjoy such pleasant relations , Ho np
predates the InoMlnmbla vnlueof such a gift ,
nnd the public spirit of which it would bo ml
expression. Ho utterly dissents from the
Interpretation given the proposition by the
soldier contributor , If ho was a soldier , that
such n gift to an institution , with an over-
changing iKsrsonnel , would bo in any scnso
charity , but tlmt It would intlier bo n act of
broad philanthropy , nnd would show tha
immediate sympathy between the military
nnd civil communities.
KEKDHAM'S MONDSMKMt
They Strive In Vain to Have ft BotltO *
inont With the CoinnilnNtnncrs.
A somewhat heated Intoi view between tha
county commUslonorft on the ono side , and
Mr , C. P. Nccdham , formerly county clorlt
of this county , ami his bondsmen on the
other , took plnco yesterday afternoon in the
court houso. The cnuso of the discussion
wns about as follows !
Two years ago it became necessary for the
county to have a now set of general Index
books made from the old ones then In tiso In
the county clerk's olllcc , the old books being
in a very dilapidated condition , Mr Need-
ham , who was then county clerk , got the
contract and was to bo allowed nt the rate of
r > cents for each entry made In the now
books. This would amount to about $7HK ( ) .
Ho finished the work mid turned It over to
the commissioners , who accepted it.
Mr , Ncedhiun held several thousand del
lars of the county's money nt that time , auct
on leaving ofllco deducted the $7,000 out ol
thu amount as payment for the work done on
the indices , 'Iho commissioners did not ob <
jeet then , but a short time lifter taking his
olllco Mr. Megeath , the present register of
deeds , ami Necdham's successor , found fault
with the worlc done by the latter and re
ported it to the commissioners. Ono of the
commissioners , who is no friend of Need *
ham's , and another who had recently boon
elected , took the matter under consideration
and notified Need hum tlmt ho must lotuni
the $ rUOO. This ho refused to do , when the
county attorney wns instructed by a resolu
tion of the county board to proceed against
Necdham's bondsmen to recover the
money in dispute. The nrtion Is
now pending in the district court nnd it wns
with the object of arbitration and settlement
that the bondsmen aud commissioners met
yesterday.
Mr. Needliam wants to allow the county to
go on with thu suit. His bondsmen want to
settle and , if necessary , give up part of tha
moimy held by Nc'odham.
Some of the commissioners sny that the
books were returned reasonably correct anil
that Need ham should be paid for the work
done , whilst the other portion of the board
thinks ho Hhoula give back the whole
amount.
How the case will bo settled , future de
velopments will prove.
There is also anotner claim against Need-
ham for something over J400 for foes not rot
turned by him during the lust yuar of hit
term of olllco. _
; LIN1NGKII
Another Visit to the Hxhihit or the
Western Art ARHOcintlon.
"Omaha Is full of people who can appre
ciate a good thing when they BOO it , " said ,
Senator Liningcr , yesterday "and I wish you
would inform them that the exhibition of the
Western Art association loaves the gallery
this week and they must get around. There
is no fear that the thing will not provo a 'go. '
There are 300 people In the association and
this exhibition is a stupendous surprise to
the most enthusiastic of us , but there uro a
number of contributors , young girls and
othois , whoso work is worthy of a place in
most European galleries , who need encour
agement. Another thing , there are excellent
ai lists hero who must live , uud whoso pic-
tuies nro for salo. There nro also rich men
in the city whoso walls need beautifying who
will go to the Old world nnd pay two pricoa
for woik of half the merit. A word to taa
wise is siifllcient. "
Thu attendance at the gallery Thursday
night and yesterday was vuij encouraging ,
though these who can manage it will get tha
best satisfaction from an aftuinoou or moiu.
ing visit.
The china exhibit , ns now arranged , Is
attracting a gieat deal of attention. Mcllona
AI Hutterliuld's Royal Worcester vases and
chocolate pot are beautiful in design and
workmanship , as also aio her pluquus , border
designs and tile woik. Mrs. II. D. Estabroole
has a delicately tinted .sot qf soup plates and
tuieen in sepia and violets. Airs. L. V. Phlli
lips , of Grand Island , also has some exquisite
designs , notably u Alargscnte china plaqua
and a portiait on chma. Miss Almnio Black
burn , Alls Gilbert , Airs. Alorrow , Alra.
Pier -o , Mrs. Wheeler and others , havd
nddud dainty features to tno display. Among1
the water colois , Atis Chaso's Chinese-Ian-
teius is n prettily colored conceit. Alias
Hni net E. Hrown's "Still Llfo" ( : ) is much
admired. Several screens Hliow some coin *
mcndablo work , among them Ethel Aliol *
stone's "Studies from Natuio" is specially
lumarkable. Airs , Alummigh's ' 'Coming1
Homo" shows superior skill in both drawing
and coloiing , anil Airs , bilkwortli's ' copy o
an Ins , is ono of the gems of thu collection.
It can readily bo uuJurstood that out ot
the 370 exhibits , only iWerv limited iiumbcD
can be noticed in a brief visit. Altogether
thu array is decidedly commendable , nml
furnishes matoiiul for houiti of delightful
ciitcitaiiimeiit
IMrn. Gould niiioh Improved.
Nmv YOHK , Nov 10- Mrs , Jay Could spent
a very quiet night and tier condition till *
morning whowed much improvement.
Discuses Cured by CiiUrnra Itrimdics
vtlieii Hot Spring Dorlors mid all
other Medicines Fall.
Having boon n murmur for two jcars find n
Imirrromii dlHuitsu caused by a bruise on I hu
leg , nnd linvlng been c nroil by thu ( I'Tit I HA.
KKMICIIII s nhmi nil ntlicii niiitliO'lH ' nnd rumu- *
dim fulled , I dtttmi It my duty lo it-Loiiimonc !
tiuim , I United ) { ot > i > ilnm to no in all , nml
tried tuncial doUoiH without natcni , and uB
last our principal druggist , Mr. John I' , llnliy
i to whom I Hlmll ovci In.'l lautcfnli. upokn to inn
ibout l'i iiri'iu , mid I consent id to glto Ilirm
i trial with thuiufiilttlml I am perfi'itlv rurud.
I licit ; Is no\v no sate about mo. 1 think I cm
iiiou thu largest tiurfuio whom my null rlng-i
tpiang from of iiny ono In thu stato. 'Jh < t Cun-
UK i llrMiiiiis : uro thu bust blood mid Hkut
unisiminufiictuiud I iofur to driigftlNt John
I' . Klnluy and Dr. I ) I' .Montgomery , both of
[ ilacc , nnd to Dr. Smith , of l.alco lco , MlnH.
AUIXANDIIH IIKACII , ( irnonvlllu. Miss ,
Mr. Heath tiMMl thu OUIUUIIA KIMIIUEH : ; , ut
our leiincat. with lusnltH ns above gtali d ,
A. II. 1'INI.AV Ai CO. , UrUHK
7 Y-IOAKS oumw.
I have berni troubled lth scrofula MBVOII
> oai H , hlUi llrut hl.ii ted on tli top of my bum ! ,
{ Ivlug mo Inlliiltn tioiibln. nllli tuimtunt Itch *
nil. carttinit elf of dry scales , und a watery
liinld uxmluil rri > m nndur lliuHculos , I trtutoj
t tor HCM'ii juuitt unsuccessfully nnd w us un-
inli ) to rln ok It until I round ) om dmti'iiv
( KMI.IIIMi Oil" box CUTUHIIU , OllUCllklU t'Tl-
i ui Hi ni' . and onu bottlu ( JinimuiA li'.siir. ( <
, Kwriomplutuly rurod mi' , myulcln becomuiif
urfectly Ur.u and smooth
H J. DAVIS.
AtteMu , Ios Angeles On , , Col ,
WIN l > 15KAKn nyiOAIlH riHlf ) ; > .
Your GiniciTiiA KKMMHKS did uomleifu ,
lilnits tor nut. They cured my skin dls ( usul
vhlcn liui bucn of Iho ynurit' utiindlnir , aftuc
Minified ot dull irs Inul boon upcnt lu tilii ( ; te
nto It. Nothing did me any iood ; until I corn *
lll'llCLMl tilt ) UHO Ot thu ClirlCUIIA ItUHIIIIIl-S ,
> ui houco will linrcir bu without Ilium.
Mils. ItOKA KKIIV ,
Uocknull City. Callioun Co. , la.
Hold ovci yw hero llir < ) : CuTicuiiA..Vc.SoAi't )
"o. ; Ki.soi.i i.sr : , } l. Vrojiurud by the J'UTTKU
IMIHI AMI ClIHMIOAI. CO. , IIOhTON , MA1H
ftf-Hond for "How to C'uiu Hkli UlxeiMM , " 04
lageu. Ml 1111111/4110111 and IUO tuatlmonlalH.
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