. SSArAXATraW * " ! i IM lyummyj.w * * y " * J'T - " t * * / * , * JZtinl rfy f ! SV'i g'ACTWiftlw THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : FRIDAY , JULY 26 , 1889. THE DAILY BEE. U HOBt3\YATian. Editor. FUBLIBHRD 12VI3HY MOUNINO. TKHMB OP ! D nlly ( Morning Edition ) Including Sunday lire , Una Year. . . . . . . . . . . . . .110 00 ForSlX Month * . . .ROD ForTlir ea Monttit. . . , 3 K Thn Omaha Bnmlay Uee , mailed to any _ address , One Year 300 Weekly i ! o. On * Year 2 00 Omnrm omco , Itee Imlldlnjr. N. W. Corner Berctitcomh and Putnam Streets. . Cnlcacro omco. raj llootery nnlldlntf. Nf r York OQlce , Itooras U ana 14 Tribune WMbwgton Omco. No. MS FourUenUi 8tr t. All communication * relating to n w nnd edi torial matter should be addressed to the Editor of tha lice. lice.BUSINESS LBTTKltS. All DtiMnens letters and remittance * ahonld bo nrttirosscd to Tno Hoe Publishing Company. Omalm. Urafts. checks and postolllce orilirs to bsmadopnyablo to the order ot tbo company. The BGcPnWisliingCiipany , Proprietors. .DKB Hulldlng Farnnm nnd Sovcntconth Sta. 1'JIK JjAILiV U1SE. Sworn Rtntnmcnt of Circulation. Btftto of Ncbrnskn , I County of Uouglaa. f08' OeorRo II , TzHchuck. secretary of Tlio nee Publishing Company , docs solemnly swcur thut the actual circulation of TUB DAILY IKK ! for the wccfc ending July 20th , lisy , wns ns follows : Sunday. July 14 , 18.FC3 Monday , July 15 18.573 Tuesday , July 1(1 ( 18.684 Wednpsilay. July IT . " 1H.WH Thursday , July 18 IK.noo Friday. July lil L.lS.fiTa Catunuiy , July m 18.G83 Avcrngo 18,011 OEOliaR n. TZSOHUOK. Sworn to before mo and subscribed to In my proscnro tills SOin day of July , A. I ) . 18W. IScnl. ] li. P. 1'Ri L , Notary 1'ubllo. Btftto of Nebraska , i County ot DoUKlas. fBBr QeorRo IJ. TzscUuck , bolus duly sworn , clo- POBO > ( and says that ho is secretary of The 1106 I'ubllshlnR company , that tha actual average dully circulation otTut : D.vtr.v UKR for the inonth'ot Juhn , 1888 , ly.za copies ; for July , lfWl .Kncopies : for AllKUsUSSB. 18.1KJcopies ; for September , 1888,1H.1M copies ; for October , 188S. IS.ft'W copies : for November. 188X , 1S.OSO copies ; for Uoco-nber , 188H , 1B.223 copies ; for Jnnunry , IHfft ] 8ri7tcoplos ; for February , 1880 , " . "MIcopies ; for March , 1WW , m&5 copies ; for April. IbSfl , 18,669 copies ; Tor May , 1SSII , 18,039 copies , OEOHQK II.T2&UIIUCJC. Sworn to dnfore mo and mibscrlbed In my ' I8ealpresence ] this Ura day of Juno , A. D. 1RH9 1RH9N. P. FBIU Notary Pnbllc. Tim Union Pacific oniclala nro erad- ually learning whnt kind at a union depot Omiilm wants. IFWE can have our streets lighted an cheaply with electricity as with gas , the plcctrlo lights .should by all means ho" given , proforoncoi Si'EAKiNoof boodling atato ofllcors , it is said that every word of all the laws onactodby the late Colorado lo/jisla- / turo'cost that state ten dollars. SOUTH OMAHA will not bo invaded by cattle affected with Texas fovor. Gov ernor Thayor's iprompt proclamation 'stops them1 at the borders of Nebraska' . IT ISN'T advisable to give the Omaha druRtrfan' the wink those days i ! he has not complied with the law requiring' a register of nlLtho liquor sold or given away. , Tins seat of war betWeen the rival street 'car- companies has neon trans ferred to South Qraaha. At last ac counts Gouoral Mercer is still in the saddle ; . . , . - -A .I'KOOitAJmE for the merchants' week carnival should -prepared with out u'mi accessary delay. The "commit tees should know what they are going to do and should bo getting ready to 'do It. . , THEatrawbqard makers of the coun try have ugroed to form n trust for the purpose of controlling the trade and satisfying itself with a reasonable profit ! This last statement , however , contains considerable chatT. OP course when Minneapolis and not St. Paul takes whirl at the census fig ures , of Ih'o Flour city , we muat take it for granted that the increase in popula tion during , the past year has been more rapid than the rise of the ther- . rngmolSr under a-boiling July sun. IDAHO .vill not prohibit railroad pool- ' ingj.n'or forbid her stuto olllcials from " nctipatlugj roe railroad passes if admit ted' into' .tho union. Dut aa Idaho is 'only playinqrat drafting a state consti tution , those things will' ' not bo taken seriously. _ _ _ _ _ „ _ _ „ _ _ _ TITB Braidwood mining region of Illinois must bo in a terrible condition If the famished populace is compelled to subsist on the carcasses of dead horses. .Tho industrial relation of those minors to their employers should bo' immediately Inquired info and a speedy sottlflmont of ther long pro tracted slrilto ordered. parties who havcf just made a tour of South Dakota contradict the report oi poor crops there , liovor Iv , before in the history of that great young commonwealth were the proa- poets as'good for nn abundant harvest. The farming sett' * ttenta of South Da kota are aa dense as those of Kantms , and this year's crop of small grain promises to be as abundant as ever it has boon in that section. THK bank clearings , thorallroad earn- h-l ingB and the foreign commerce of the country indicate that a larger volume of business is being done this year than at the corresponding period a year ago. Nevertheless there is a universal com plaint that in many departments of trade the margin of profit continues at the minimum. This probably explains why largo amounts of capital still re main in the hands of investors waiting an opportune moment to go into that industry which promises an adequate return. „ „ _ - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ THE Attempt ot Union Pacific agents to bulldoze and frighten parties who hava settled near Cut-oft lake , on what may bo termed No-Mun'a ' laud , should not bo countenanced by anybody. The Union Pacific begins at or near the transfer depot on the Iowa side. 11 has no legal existence In Omaha excepting on the tracks loading to and from the Union Pacific shops. Its right of way does not extend to Cut off lake , and the only object it can have in taking possession would bo to hold the entire river front from Florence to South Omaha agalnntull comers. What oleo could they want with the land neat Cut-oft lake. WAITFOn THE INVESTIGATION. According to the most trustworthy authority the investigation of affairs in the pension bureau ordered by the sec retary of the interior was requested by Commissioner Tanner. Undoubtedly it is made with the full approval , if not by direction , of the president. In all such matters , whore honesty nnd thorough ness nro evidently iutahdod , justice to all concerned requires that public criticism ntid opinion bo hold In nboyanco until the investigation is completed and the result offi cially announced. But this fair and proper principle is not being re garded in the present case. The nous- ' papers which fool called'upon to cast odium upon the administration under any and all circumstances , whether there bo justification or not'aro , intimat ing that there is no sincerity in the investigation , and that it will bo n whitewashing affair. It is alleged that the president is not in sympathy with it , that the officials who nro conducting the investigation are weak men who will bo easily influenced , that the sec retary of the interior Is not in earnest , and that it will bo easy enough to find a few scapegoats on whom to load the blame and lot Tanner down onsy. All this is absolutely gratuitous. Not only is it without warrant in anything that hna occurred , but the entire coin-so of the secretary ot the Interior since the reported condition of affairs in the pen sion office came to his knowledge has proved beyond question the doslro of the administration to ascertain the whole truth as to what has boon going on , and to purge the office of these who are shown to have failed of their duty or boon dishonest. Before the in vestigation was ordered the secretary - rotary had directed the dis missal ot a number of pen sion bureau officials of whoso mis conduct there waa no question , and it is to bo presumed that this was dona with the full knowledge and concurrence of the president. A matter of such im portance as 'this would certainly be a subject of cabinet deliberation , so that the proceedings taken may safely bo supposed to have the approval ot the entire administration. The scandal necessarily involved the head of the bu reau and most others connected with it , and the only proper way to roach the truth was through an investigation. It would doubtlosn hrwo been agrea- ble to the opponents of the administration if the commis sioner of pensions had been ruth lessly dismissed without being given an opportunity to vindicate himself , but all fair-minded men will approve the course that has boon pursued. It may bo'granted that Commissioner Tanner has not in all respects shown the wisest discretion.Ho has undoubt edly made mistakes , and his unneces sarily open nnd-yfgorous manifestations of zeal in the matter of securing what ho believed to be just to pensioners may have encouraged certain ofllciula in his bureau to do unwarrantable things 'for the benefit of thouisplvos-and their friends. But'we doubt i'f even His bit terest personal and political enemies believe him to have boon dishonest , or that he pfavo any countenance to the abuses in his office forwhich some have already boon punished by dismissal from service and others are likely to be. The pension bureau is the most oxto'nsivo under the government , and its opera tions more various and complicated thau that of any other. It must bo qulto imposssiblo for the commissioner to bo familiar with all the de tails of tha vast work. A great deal must necessarily bo confided to subordinates , and collusion among these might easily result in abuses which the commissioner could not at once discover. The investigation now being prosecuted , there is every fair reason to believe , will probe to the bottom tom the alleged-abuses , and justice re quires that Commissioner Tanner bo not condemned , cither as incompetent or dishoncat , pending the result of the Investigation. It is undoubtedly the purpose of the administration that no guilty man shall escape. THE EXTENT OF IT. Mr. Richard J. Hinton , who has been assigned to the senate committee on ir rigation to assist in the worlc of organ izing the inquiry and other details , eays that the question of irrigation means the reclamation from aridity to fertility of an area out of which eight etatos , each as largo as Indiana , can bo raado. At least one hundred and twenty-five million acres of land out of over eight hundred million acres can bo , within a few years , brought under cultivation at no great cost. This would moun taking the generally accepted fact that twenty- five acres of irrigated > land , properly lo cated , is equal to one hundred acres of ordinary farming land , twenty-five million farms , sufficient to support one hundred millions of people. In the opinion of Mr. Hinton the expense of nuoh reclamation , which la quite within the bounds of possibility , need amount to no more than fifty million dollars. "It is not necessary to more than sug gest , " ho observes , "thut thin agricul tural population and cultivation would bring un equal population in towns and manufacturing and raining centers. Thus practical irrigation will more than double the present pppu- latod area ot the United States. Tne area which the senate committee is soon to examine is almost wholly the property of the Unltod Stiites , With out irrigation it must rdmutn largely a region of a. few great cattle ranches and fewer mlnos , and sparsely settled , having no great material valus as com pared with tbo balance of the country. On the other hand , every irrigated aero will be worth from five to fifty times aa much aa ordinary farm ing land elsewhere. This has al ready boon demonstrated in California and Colorado , and in fact wherever irrigation is practiced. The experience is uniform that land watered in this way is far more valuable than the aver age of ordinary fanninglands. . „ Of course tha. estimated possibilities from Irrigating the arid regions of the west may bn somewhat exaggerated , and oven if they bo unquoationingly con- codedit would bo n mutter of generations of tlino before tboy were fully realized But allowing a considerable margin for overestimates of what may ultimately bo accomplished , nnd properly omitting from consideration the matter ot tlmo , the plan still command's itself as ono of the very greatest importance to the n * v- tion. A project that contemplates turning arid wastes into fertile regions capable of supporting a population but halt as largo as that now In the country can bo said to bo inferior In Importance tonono other asking the serious atten tion of the American people. With abundant moans at command , wo need notioavo this task to bo performed by n succeeding generation ) if wo shall find it n practicable undertaking- . A COSTLY EXP8UIENOE. It has been given out time nnd again by the city council that no street would bo graded nnd paved the sumo season , nnd that all water and sewer connec tions to the property line must bo laid within a specified time before paving operations began. The recent action of that body in ordering certain streets to bo graded and thirty days later ordering the same to bo paved , would indicate that the city fathers had swallowed their good intentions and precepts regardless of consequences. This is , however , n serious matter , and ono which should receive serious consideration. The rule as laid down should have been strenuously enforced. The experience with undermined streets and the testimony of the board of public works , the city engineer and paving exports should have taught the council that a permanent pavement can not safely bo laid on n owly graded streets. Depressions that have been filled with earth nro spongy and yielding and it is the height of folly to lay a pavement in such places until the earth shall have boon allowed time to pack solidly. The honeycombed condition 'of many of our streets can bo traced to this very defect. Whore a base of concrete has boon laid on newly filled earth , the soil set tles leaving pockets and air chambers. During heavy rains water finds its way under the spongy soil and following sewer nnd water trenches gouges out deep depressions. In this way pave ments have been undermined , sewer and wntorpipes displaced , and the city is constantly called upon to expend thousands of dollars annually in making expensive repairs. By using proper precaution , the coun cil could remedy this condition in the future. It is therefore foolhardy to order the laying of pavement on newly made streets that will have to bo re paired nearly every time a rain occurs , nt great cost to the taxpayers of the city. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ TUB Now England trip of President Harrison has boon arranged , nnd ho will take it early in August , his des tination being Bar Harbor , where it is understood ho will remain some time. Apart from the fact that Washington is not a desirable place in which to live in summer , under the most favorable conditions , is the consideration that the residence of the president is ono of the most uncomfortable and un desirable in the national capital. Congress , it Is said , will bo asked to provide a bettor homo for the president , either by an addition to the white house or apart from it , leaving the old executive mansion for purely official business. This great country ought to comforta bly house its executive , and a reasona ble expenditure for this purpose would not bo disapproved by anybody. The white house is unfitted for a residence , rind money expended on it for this pur pose is wasted. Bar Harbor is ono of the most healthful resorts on the At lantic coast , and a soujourn there will doubtless prepare the president for the more arduous duties that will confront him a few months hence. OiWKCTiONS are being raised to the proposed scheme to build storage reser voirs for irrigation in the mountains of Colorado , on the ground that they would bo a constant menace to the cities and farms in that vicinity. While the danger > may mnr bo email , It is claimed that within a few years the country is likely to become thickly populated and a disaster similar to the Conomaugh flood would create terrible havoc. There is evidently something in this , although the system contemplated aims to pro vide many small rather than ono or two largo storage reservoirs in the mountain defiles. No matter how scientifically constructed and strongly built they may bo , there ia a subtle power in the pressure and erosion of water which will weaken any dam , unless constantly in spected and'carefully repaired. THK telegram sent to the con stitutional conventions of the now states by Mr. Elliott F. Shepherd , pre sident of the American Sabbath union , asking them to incorporate in th'o on- atitutionaa clause providing for Sabbath observance , appears likely to receive very little attontloa. The Washington convention gave it the courtesy of a reference to a committee , whore it will undoubtedly bo burled , and so far as reported th'o North Dakota and Montana conventions hayo paid no attention to it. It would not bo sur prising it it were regarded as an im pertinence rather than Jho expression of a kindly interest ia the people of the new states. BOTH the republican national com mittee and the democratic 'national ' committee are going to make a hard fight to capture the four now states. That much is already Bottled. While the brunt of the battle is to take place in Washington and Montana , , which the democrats claim to bo disputed ground , they do not propose to lot the . fall election in the two Dakotas go by default. The npoctaclo to the rest of the country will bo highly Inspiring , and the battle ot the giants will bo a mill which for absorbing interest will throw the Sullivan-Kilruin match far in the shade. Tnis largest cities in this country , no tably Now York , Philadelphia and Chicago , still light their streets with gan. And they are well lighted , too. This may bo partly duo to the quality of the gas , but itia very largely duo to the fact thntthB glass of tholr lamps IB clear , nnd thoihunps are kept very clean nil the time , ( in this city the lamps on the principal thoroughfares are ot an nnclont , village pattern , and the light is 6carcolylOvfslblo through panes ot glass that nfo'"either smoked up or cov ered with the dust of ngog. OstAnA wlU.bo' visited to-day by a largo delegation of Iowa school teachers. They will hiW'o ' the opportunity of seeing n number of rinbdcl school houses nnd public bulldTrlgs that have boon ad- mlrod by potted from all parts of the union. They will , as a matter of course , visit the largest and most elegantly fitted newspaper building in America. All these sights can not fall to impress them with the marvelous growth of this city , and inspire tbom with prldoin the nohiavomontsortho metropolis of the Missouri valloy. Ann these city hall plans over going to bo completed ? It has boon throe weeks , ' and ngnln throe weeks , and again throe weeks , since they were promised. And hero we nro near the 11 rat day of August still waiting cheer fully. _ lien's IJiul Form. Chicago AViM. General Bon Duller snllgJ to Bar Harbor In his yacht the other day , wont to Mr. Ulninn's house , loft his card , nnd then put to sea ngnln. The general should have known that It isn't good form to go culling In a yacht. Ho ought to tmvo hired a hack. Shall It be the Sunflower ? A'eto lei k Sun. \Vo aver that the sunflower is historically the oldest nnd In slzo the largest of American flowers ; In color the most brilliant nnd typi cal of our clour and favored sides ; white In economic Importance it has no equal among flowors. Hcnco , wo cast our vote often nnd unrcservcillv for the sunflower as the floral emblem most suitable to represent the Unltod States of North America. Tlio Pcoplo unit the Trusts. St. Xiouh Ololie-Deniiicrat , The newly organized British paper trust , oven more than did the copper pool of .1 year ago or than docs tno salt "combine" now being organized , shows that commercial con spiracies are independent of revenue laws. All are against the i ubllu Interest , though , and must bo dealt with by the people by the methods which promise to bo readiest and most effective. The Innocent Rnle Trust. PUMntro DtunUJi. The salt trust's announcement that it Is no trust , because any ono can buy the shares who will put up the money , Is a raoro than ordinary violent ofTort of the combination logic. Numerous other trusts have shown an entire willingness to unload ou the ueo- plo who are deceived by the nromlso of monopoly profits into paying § 3 or $4 cash for one of actual investment and the rest of paper. * Tbo Dloflcst Prohibitionists. Ifannnf Cltu Journal. The prohibitionists have nominated n can didate for governor of Now Jersey. When the high license , republican .candidate is de feated nnd a lowsUcenso democratic candi date elected by a , plurality just about equal to the prohi bition vote , the prohibition orators tors will point * out how the republicans might hav.o won n victory for temperance by throwing all tlioir-votcs to the prohibition nominco. Give Him n Fair Show. liipiisfd ( On. ) Chmntcle. While the brother in black has been In the midnight of Ignornnco from the time when the memory of man runneth not to the con trary , hi this country atloastho has emerged into the sunlight of liberty. This is nn in stance where the statute of limitations does not apply whore neither caste or previous conditions can operate us a bar , and where wo should be willing to concede perfect equality to the mental evolutions of the sons of Ham. A Liylnc Report. Lemnrs ( fa. ) Sentinel. If the Omaha Herald has a correspondent here ho can work up a big boom for himself handing In his name for publication , or by printing it in that connection in his own paper. Ho is In great demand. Ho sent a great special to his paper , tolling how the farmers of Plymouth county were all ruined by the bail storm , and thatoutsldo aid would have to be asked for the sufferers. It woulu bavoboon an Important piece of news If true ; but the facts are that the farmers of Ply mouth county can stand on their own bottom. They are a good deal better able to pay their bills than the Herald. There , are over 500,000 acres of farming land In Plymouth county , and at most only about 23.000 to 30,000 , acres foil the storm , and some of that only slightly. "What object a man could have in sanding out over the country a , lying report that would do Iho county and city so mucli harm is hard to understand. It was mora wanton sensationalism. Such a reporter ought to bo blacklisted. Tun OMAHA BED printed the truth about the storm on Monday. TUG INDUSTRIAL FIGljD. St. Paul worklngmon will buy a tract of land and build a village. At Newport , II. I. , masons and bricklayers work nlno hours and get 13.50 , In Kngland tbo wood-carvers are enjoying good times. There Is plenty of worlc and wages are increasing. There nro more Idle man In London now than wcro In It at the same time of the year for the past ton years , Tbo profit-sharing ! , principle is beginning to bo looked upou , with favor by some Eng lish employers iu.thiir ( , ) dealings with work men. j , . t About fifty large pulp mllls.glvlng employ- to from one hundred to four hundred pcoplo each , are bdlng built In dlfluront parts " ' of Sweden. , 1 The women are 'crowding out the men in a number of largo slloo factories in England , Tliolr wages are a lrd ) loss , and they turn out vorv neat wor n Tno Swiss government has Inaugurated a movement looking toward a universal re duction of hours ( jfja.tior for workers In fac tories and on farrai.i The miners fnu , Westphalia , Germany , have formed a nrutflal protection society , and are about to star ( a newspaper in sup port of their IntorosU. A project for extending the Irrigated areas of Egypt by 200,000 square miles is boint ; considered. It will glvo employment to many thousands of people. The prollt-sharniK Idea is gaining ground In BO 010 of tha largo cities of the west. They say It Is inoro satisfactory for employer and employe If tbo latter feela he has a small in terest In the business. Complaints continue to raaoh this city of terrible destitution In Panama since tbo canal works have boon stoopua. Thousands of idle paoplo have been taken away , but there era thousands remaining who are on the verge of starvation. Juannotto ( Pa. ) claims tha largest window glass Uuk. It l 120 feel in length and SO feet In width. It baa a capacity of 070 tons of melted glass. The weekly production of the tank Is ozpoctod to ba 0,102 boxes. The number ot men employed on the tank is 43. The noport Of the Manufacturers' Record on the Industrial development of the south for the first six months ot 1SSO , shows the total number of now enterprises organized to bo 2,015. representing $108,033,000 of capi tal , as against 3,023 now enterprises , invest ing (31,503 during the first six months ot 18SS. In Samoa the building ot houses Is dona without uny contract. The houses are of wood , nnd the oarpontcr , when employed starts In and , after ho has the house n llttlo way up , demands a present. If It Is .not forthcoming ho threatens to stop the work. After It proceeds n llttlo further ho makes another demand , using the same throat. Thus the contributions go on until too building Is finished , and the em ploye has the advantage ot the employer all the timo. 8TATI3 AND TRUUITOItY. Nnbriiskn. The pcoplo of Harrison want n park. A forty-aero addition has boon made to the Galloway town slto. Fifty gullible Wymoro people have formed n club to buck a lottery. The city marshal of Norfolk hai ordered lot owners to cut their weeds. The Ulysses pchool house has bcon sold , nnd will bo converted Into n hotel. Two cars of patients will bo sent to the Hastings Insane asylum August 1. A Ncllph man who tried to ship a box of prairie chickens only escaped by flight. A stock company U being formed to operate the Norfolk foundry to its full capacity. The flax crop around Starling Is being threshed and yields from eleven to fourteen bushels an aero. Prof. D. E. Uooso. of Ashland , ha been engaged as principal of the Poncu school fur the coming year. A brick store , 80x120 foot , is to bo erected at York this season. It will ba the largest block in the city. A Strntton firm is generously giving cano and millet socd free to farmers who lost tholr crops by hall. Chase county has no bonded Indebted ness and the farmers aru almost a unit against bondinc the county for any purpose. „ J. M. Roderick , a well knoxvn citizen of Gage county , died nt his homo near Holmes- vlllo of brain fever , aged ilfty years. The Blue Springs Motor has changed hands and hns passed into the control ofV. . D. Clark , a former attache of the Wymoro Union. A Fremont boy named FYahm stubbed his too a wool ; ago , injuring his foot so severely that lockjaw resulted , from which ho bus Just died. The Kwing Democrat says that little Bert Gordon , a boy eleven years old , living three miles trom that place , whoso father commit ted suicide lust spring , is probably tha youngest farmer in the state. Ho has put in and cultivated thirty acres of corn , which is looking flno , doinc all the work hiinsolf. loxvn Itomo. A lire department has bcon orgunlzcdjat Eagle Grove. Fooling with a soao press cost Walter Mitchell , of Dubunue , three flnpers. The prospective wagon bridge at Musca- tlno furnishes nn excuse for landlords to raise their rents. A Clinton saloonkeeper who paid $1 for directions how to sell moro beur , received in return , "Don't soil so much froth. " A Muscatmc man is a popcorn monopolist , having three stands in Uurllngton , two In Kuokuk and a number in other Iowa towns. The Jefferson Bco , which is publishing the essays of the high school graduates ono at a tlmo , bos enough on hand to last all summer. Davenport's saw mills- have on hand 40,000,000 feet of lumber , of which 83,000,000 feet have boon cut this year. About seven hundred men are employed in thf mills. There is on exhibition in the oillco of the treasurer of thu state a collection of paper fractional currency which embraces a sample of every issno since the formation of the government. Perry Johnson , of KcoKuk , has brought two suits in the superior court for W.SOO damages against William Clay and Feliz Gremmlngcr and Caroline Black. The plain tiff claims that Clay sold Johnson's olovon- year-oldson liquor on Gremmingcr's ' proo- orty , nnd Caroline Black sold liquor to the .same minor. "Wyoming. A building association has been incor porated at Evanstori with a capital stock of Mrs. Curloy Coleman , wife of the well itnown Cho.vcnne pioneer freighter , has lost her reason. Judge Corn has ordered the commissioners of Fremont county to declare the town of Land or incorporated. A prominent cattle man came to Rock Springs from his ranch a few davs aeo and declared that ho had not heard of the Johns town disaster. Stevenson , the man who killed ono Fronchy with a neck-yoke , near Otto flvo years ago , has been discharged from Jollet and Is again In Cheyonne. \Vyoming has 3,500 miles of ditches with an aggregate length of 3.833 miles and covering an acreage of 7,413,404. Four-filths of these ditches have boon completed within the past flvo years. Rov. Reginald Plant , nrchdeacon of the Episcopal diocese of Wyotnincr and Idaho , will resign his position September 1 , to bo- coino principal of the Episcopalian schools of Salt LaKe City. The Chcyonno land office was $17,000 richer Wednesday by the payment made by the Union Pacific for 10,000 acres of coal lands , which it has purchased in the vicinity of Chimney Springs. At Roclc Springs Sarah W. Smith , the oldest daughter of O. C. Smith , was thrown out of her carriage and run over by the horse and vehicle , and died In half an hour alter receiving the Injuries. Mrs. James Amctor , of Boulder , recently died from the effects of an accident in North Park. Riding on a heavily loaded wagon , she lost her balance trying to hold her full- Ing child and herself fell under the wheels , The wagon passed over her hips and tha Injury inflicted caused tier doath. The Bothwcll Chiaf reports a novel and strictly Wyoming feature of the celebration of tha Fourth at that place , It was the ugroomont of the young Indies , who were to nice for the premium , that they would ride unknown horses that were to be caught out of a bunch of horses from tha 71 ranch that wcro on the road to the round-up. Ac cordingly thrco horses wore roped and the race made. John Lewis , a saloon keeper of Fossil , has been in the habit of maltreating his dcllcato wife. The other d.iy a party of women se verely chastised the brute with blacksnake whips and threatened to hang him , Lowls' friends came to his assistance and soverai shots were llrcd. Ono man had a fthouldor shattered , another was wounded In the arm , und a bullet passed through thu Iilghculfluro of un Amazonian regulator. The woman is prostrated and In n critical condition , WANTI'JlV Cl HUMAN TI3AOJII5U. Mrfl. WclnluiKon Udaluna Her Position In thn Illuli Holiool. Mrs. A. L. Wolnlmson , for three years past teacher of German In the high.ichodl , has tendered her resignation and will leave- on Monday next for JHoattlo , where nho will rejoin her husband , who is located and engaged - gagod In tno Insurance business at thai placo. Mrs. Woinhagen has boon warmly compli mented by Superintendent. James for her work In German , which has also boon generally admitted to have been among the llnest the high ncbool has ovtir experienced. This oommoiidation has boon earned notwithstanding that at times the class has comprised ISf ! scholars. Mrs. Wolnhagen'i imUtanl has boon Miss Dora LucUo , who of course assisted la the good work. Thu latter Is an applicant for Mrs. Wcln- hagcn'a position , aa is also Prof. Borndrueck , who is now boldlug classes In Gormauia ball , The. best regulator of the digestive organs , also best appetizer known , is Angostura Hitters , the genuine of Dr. J. G. B. Blegert & Bonn. At all drug- A QUEER COINCIDENCE. Two Ynril Foremen oftJio Iturllngton nt the Point of Dontti. Two yard foremen ot the Burlington at this point nro lying at the point of death at St. Joseph hospital. 12. W. Shearer , who la foreman ot the tip * per yards , was some time ago aflllotod with malarial fovor. Ho bid fair to rooovor , but ho has had a relapse and the attending physicians announce that ttio affliction has developed typhoid fovor. Shearer has a wlfo and child residing la this olty , who are being eared for by sympathizing friends. Wednesday the BurllnRton employes raised n purse ot $50 nnd presented it to the wlfa. The latest reports from the aflltctod man nro to the effect that ho is gradually sinking and that his recovery Is very doubtful. The second case Is that of Thomas Carey , foreman of the lower yards. About two weeks ago la coupling cars , ho had his hand crushed between the bumpors. Ho paid but llttlo attention to his injuries , thinking that ho would bo abla to resume work In a few days. For the past few dnya the linud ami arm bo- Ran to swell nnd gave him much pain. Ho repaired to the oompany physician , who dis covered that gangrene had sot In. The , case has gone that far that the physician will amputate the arm near the elbow , but is of the opinion that death cannot bo averted. Carey's parents rostdo at Minburn , Ia. , and being Informed of the condition of tholr son , arrived in Omaha yesterday. Soott Goes to KnnROH Olty. John W. Scott , ni present chlot olork in the general paisongor department ot tha Union Pacific ut this place , was yesterday au- poluted division pasaongor ngont of the Union Paclllo at Kansas City. In ohargo of the passcngor business of the Kansas divi siontho appointment to tuko effect August 1. Mr. Scott will bo associated with F. B. Wbilnoy who , nt present and for some time back , hn looked after the freight nnd pas- nonger business. The trafllo nt that point having increased to such an extant that asststanco became- necessary , the department hns boon sub-divided nnd Mr. Scott will take charge of the passenger and Mr. Whitney the freight department. The new appointed hni numerous friends here who will bo pleased to hear of his pro motion. Uoorgo Haler , at present noting chief clerk , will , In all probability , succeed Mr. Scott. On ; ami Bullion Raton. Thcro is trouble brewing between the Union Pacific and the Denver & Rio Grande , which , It is said , may result In a serious cut In Irnus-Mlssourl rates from Denver oast. The principal point of contention Is in con nection with the ore and bullion trafllo. Some tlmo ago the Rio Gnmda threatened to reduce the rates on this commodity nnd was only prevented , m doing so by the Union Pacific making Important concessions. Sub sequently the Uio Gnuido discovered that it was not getting its share of the business nnd since that time the trouble hns been brow- uig. uig.Jt has grown to that extent that Vice Presi dent Holcomb , of the Union Pacific , has been compelled to give the matter his attention , and yesterday loft for Denver , wnero ho will toke the matter up with the oQicials of the Rio Grande to-day. Appointed Division I'nssontrcr Atront. F. B. Sompte , wcll.kuown in railroad circles In Omaha , wasyeiterday appointed division passenger agent of the Colorado division ot the Union Paolllc with hcadquarto rs at Den ver. The appointment will take o ftect Au gust 1. Rnllrond Notes. Paymaster Floyd , ot the B. . & M. , ha ra turned from a trip ever the lines of that com * pany. H. C. Cheynoy , assistant general pasaongnr agent of the Elkhorn , hns gone to Chicago to attend u mooting of western passenger njicnts. O. W. Whittlesey , general batrgago apcnt of the Elkhorn & Missouri Valley , is In Omaha. The matter of transferring him to Omaha is bolnc considered. Superintendent Rcssoguie , Trainmaster Baxter and Division Engineer Schimmor horn , of the Union Pnclllc , have gone to Choycnno ou u trip of inspection. I.OGIE'S FIUK IjQSS. Insurance Companies Intend to Kx- nmino Into It. It was a prominent /Iro insurance agent who said yesterday -that the various compan ies interested propose to vindicate themselves bofuro this community by bringing suit to ascertain whnt methods A. R. Loglo pursued in obtaining the award recently made to him on his loss by tlio burning of the old Lehman store on Farnam street. "Certain papers bnvo announced , " ho said , "that the Now York board of arbitration gave him mord than bo was entitled to. I want to inform you that there is no such board. At the tlmo Logio was burned out many comments were made not altogether favorable cither , uoout. his loss after the adjusters had fulled to arrive at n settlement , arbitration was resorted to rather than a court of Justice , Wo agreed that tbo matter should bo submitted to two disinterested men. Mr. Logio selected an intimate personal friend from Now York , while the companies chose a Chicago man , in whom tboy had conllucnco. You can road- lly understand that these selections worn rondo for obvious roasonm But they camq no nonror reaching on ngroomontlthnn did th principals , therefore , it was decided to call In a third party. Here was where tha real trouble commenced. Of all tbo Omaha business mon. Logic could not consent to accept any other than M. B. Smith , who wn disqualified because ho had boon n a creditor. The companies unmcd W. V. Morse , S. P. Morse , David Honnlson , D. J. O'Donnhoo , Charles Coo , Mr. Koch , Mr. Chapman , J. H. Dumont nnd others , but all these declined to norvo. Why should ho refuse - fuse such mont In ordinary eases , the com panies fear local sympathy for the claimant. Afterwards , Loplo rofiifiod any man from Chicago , nnd by shroml manipulation finally got the case Into his own circle of business acquaintances In Now York. There ho got nn award , but the companies fcol that they have boon wronged and propose to 11 nd out how ho ROt It. They wore willing to pay upnn a fair and liberal basis , but rotuso to admit that ho could mnko from 83 to 50 per cent profits on his business. " * puooiiEas opriua ouuuoii. Klsliop Hnro'd Sermon nt Trinity Cn- thoilral Lmst Nlclit. "Thoro Is a door opened before us , and with the opening of the door comes added strength to work Ia tbo Holds that Ho beyond , and greater success also. " So spoke Bishop Hare from the pulpit of Trinity cathedral last night. The bishop re viewed thn standing of the church to-day In all parts of the world , and found food for In finite satisfaction In the wonderful progress made during the last century. Instead of porsccutlng'to death every min ister of Christ who dared enter his dominion , the emperor of China thirty years ago signed a treaty , by whoso terms It was admitted that the Christian religion elevates and Improves all mon who accept it , nnd which also provided - vided that no professor of the faith ot Christ , foreign or native converts , should bo molested on account of his religion. A cofltury ago India was tlghtlv were loss wplcorao than as many devils would have boon , nnd every obstnulo to suc cess was put in tholr way. But they psrsu- vurod , and to-day It is the national secretary who writes : "To no other power does the British gov ern mont owe so much In Indian enlighten ment nnd progress than to the mission aries. " And so the way Is thrown open. Thus It Is in every land. The way Is open nnd the church is going on triumphantly to the end. There was but a small number present in the pews , owing porhnps to the plain ImUerv- tions of rain. Among the distinguished per sons on the pulpit platform was Bishop Worthlngton. DOWRY'S INC'ONSISTEXOY. The Ovor-HoiiBltlvo KfTcrvosocuoo ot the nilsslstUitpl Governor. Nonin PI.ATTE , Neb. , July 34. To the Editor of TUB BIB : Governor Lowry , of Mississippi , In an Interview telegraphed from Jackson , declares that ho Is "taking such steps us will in the end bring nil tha parties , principals and attendants of thu Sulllvan-Kilraln prize fight to Justice. " Governor Lowry BCCIUS to have taken It very much to heart , that ho was overreached and outwitted not only by the bruisers , but by the railroad company that so thoroughly did their part In transporting tha sluggers to and from the battle ground , The governor denounces in the strongest terms the part played by the Northeastern railroad company , and proposes to Institute proceed ings for the forfcituro of the charter of that road. "In all my oxpononco as a publla man , " says the governor -"and I have had considerable experience , having served In both branches of the legislature and am serv ing the last year of my second term as governor ornor I hnvo never known such an utter dis regard of duty , such a defiance of law ami morals. " This extra-sensitive offorcsconco of Gov ernor Lowry would bo ludicrous us com pared with tlio indifference , "tho utter dis regard of duty" nnd "dofluuca of law nnd morals" accorded by him to tha doings of tha bulldozing , ballot-box-stuflln ? "ulgner" slayers of Mississippi , if ono could forgot the horrible , blood-stained scones enacted right under his nose- during tlio public li'o of this virtuous governor. At the risk of being acimsod of swaying the bloody shirt. 1 would Ilka to ask Governor Lowry If , as a member of the Mississippi legislature , ho asked for an liivustitrating committee on the Cuisholm mastincro n few yoarsugot Aa governor , did ho talio nay action iii the case , or maku any effort to arrest the perpetrators of the outrage near Arcoln , Miss. , lust De cember , when ROVOII colored servants of Colonel Paxton were strung up and killed without ovuu legal investi gation , because it was thought ono or two of thom had set the house ou tire , and It could not bo ascertained which were tlio guilty ones , if , indeed , any of thorn wore guilty ? Has Governor Lowry Investigated tlio "nlggor hunt" Oy the nnnod bands of white gontlamcnI ( ) at Wnhnlok , Miss. , a few weeks later , where n score of-noirroca were shot down m cold blood ! How about the suppression of tno negro vote In Missis sippi , and the nooro4 of poopio , white and black , murdorcd because of their political opinions since 18751 Porhnps , afU.i all , the governor don't moan Just what ha says ; and in any case it U some satisfaction to know thut hn is making it lively for tha prlxa lighters and their f rlonds. But the loss ho say about "disregard of duty , dellanca of law and morals , " etc. , the better ho will fool six months from now. XX. The Makers of a Well Known Churn write : "We have been often asked by dairymen : 'What ia the very best soap to use to properly cleanse dairy utensils ? ' We have invariably replied , the 'Ivory , ' but as for giving specific directions for washing dairy utensils , it is really summed up in making them thoroughly clean. Boiling water must be used , and that , in con nection with IVORY SOAP , will thoroughly cleanse and deodorize the wood , leaving it clean and sweet for further use. Any dairy utensils half cleaned will spoil the delicate aroma of 'gilt ' edge butter/ which may be perfect in other respects. " A WORD OF WARNING , There are many white soaps , each represented to be' lust as good as Ihe 'Ivory' ) " they ARE NOT , but like all counterfeits , lack tlio peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine , Ask for "Ivory" Soap and insist upon getting Id Copyright , ItW , IT f toctor dt GaiuUt.