I 4 THE OMAHA DAILY BEIflfr , fflllDAY , DECEMBER 27. 1889. jK M _ . THE DAILY BEE H ] B ? RQ3BWATEB , Editor B PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING K THUMB OK BUH8CMPTI0N V > Jiallr and Sunday , Ono Year IPW H Fix Months BOO H 'lliree Months . . . . 2 > i mmday Ike , One Tear S 00 H 'Wcefcly lice , One Year with Premium . . . S 00 , OITICIIS H Omaha , Dee Dulidlng 1 rhtcnpo Office TdT Hootcry.tlulldln ? H | New York , Kooras II and 15 Tribune Build Ht Washington No Gil Fourteenth Street H Counetimuir * , No 12 Pearl Street H Lincoln lft p stioet , • H South Omaha , Corner N and 20th Streets H COUURSIOKOnNCG H All communication * relating to news anil odl- m torlnl matter should bo addrosscd to the editor H Ul Department H uusinis3 ; i.irrrr.it H All lmf-lnei > s letters nnd remittances should B tie addressed to The Ilea Publishing Company , B Omalm llrnfts thecksftiiclpoHtollfco oruers to m bo made payable te the order ot the company , - Tlic Bee PnWisMnj Company , Proprietors H jIee llullcllng l'arnam and Seventeenth Streets H i , | The Boo on the Trains m Tliere Is no excuse forafftllurotosctTm : I1 R H on the trains All new saealcra have been not ! • B tied to enrry a full hupnly Itn\-elers wno want 1 Tin : IlKB and cant R t It on trains where other m OmahnDnnen uro carried are requested to neB - B tlfyTiiK lit u. . . . . , i. ) l'lense bo pellicular to give In all cases full _ _ K Information as to date , railway ar.d number ot H Gh ' t ns your name , not for publication or tin t necessary n o. but as a guaranty of eood faltli Hj iaTT itAfiTylTiIiI B tunrn Statement of Circulation H Etttc of Nebraska , lB , H County ot Douglas I • . _ , H Oenrco ll Tzschucte , secretary of The Tic ; H rubllKhlnir Company , does solemnly swear that B HieBCtunlcliiulstionofTiir Daily IIkk fortho H weex enillnc December21. 1W3. was as follows : H Hunday , Dec T > Sj.TO M JlomhivIlec Ifl JMJ' - Tuesday Dec IT HfUM H Wednesday Dec 18 > .010 M Thursday Dec 13 S0.WI M rrldav iiocUl 1 > ' . 0 M baturday , II8C2I. . . ,19.aiJ B Avcrago 20Jl4 GKOUUKII.TZSOI1UCIC. H Swonilo botoroinoand Bubsrrlbed to in my H presence tilts -ItU day ot December , A. D. 1839. [ Seal I NP FBtU B Notary Public Etato ot Nebraska , I. . J County or llouRlas , f ticoico II Tzschnck belnt , ' duly sworn , da- H poses and sa > s that be Is secretary ot The Uee H j-ubllsblUK Company , that the actual avorugo B dally circulation ot Tub Daily Dee for the pa mouth ot December , 1XS3 , 18.2:1 copies ; for January , lW.i , ] ? ,574 copies ; for February , itt-V , 38.V90 copies : for March lbfO , IS.BSi copies : M lor April , 1AS , 1BKS > copiesfor ; May , 1 > X ) , len copies : for June , Itkw lH.avi copies ; for July ln . iau ; copies ; tor August ; lbS9 , 19.- Wt copies ; for September , lt < W , 18,710 copies ; for October ItiD ' lJ7 copies ; for Norcmber , Jf8i , li ! . ' ) ! 0 copies GEnnoR II TrscuuCK Sworn to before mo and tmbacrlbod In ray presence thuSJth day of November A. D. , 1SSJ. ISeal ] N. P. Feu . To the cyclone harrassed oiiHt : Como west mid cbunpo the ilcstructivo clo- BKwJ incnts Pomtfcai alato tnukitig is ono of the HI tltri vinpr industries of the town at pres- out livery councilman hits a factory In full blast _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ H Tub city hall comraittcoships will H play no small part in the organization H of the council All combines tend in H that direction H Dr.NVKit goes into ecstacios ever the H euccoss ot its first electric strcot , rall- B Nvay The example and enterprise of B Omaha set the progressive pace of the • west _ _ H _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . H II' Chicago insists on fleecing the H farmers of the tvost in elevator rates , B the farmers will find other markets for H _ thoif Droducts Chicago has not yet H ( inuexod the earth Southern statisticians declare that H f the growth of the white population since J 1SS0 is greater than that of the colored H element The information is important H ns it condrms the value and vigor of the H tthotgun in the hands of the superior _ _ H' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ H TliK elevators controlled by the En- H' ghali syndlcato in Chicago have ad- H vancod storage rates from nine to ton H cents a year per bushel It is now in H order for the Windy city to rise up and W make a whiskbroom out of the lions M toll B Tin : loading papers of the country H are indulging in a good deal of specula H tion as to why the southern blacks do H not migrate north Wo imagine it is H becaut-o they find the climate a little too H chilly and uncongenial to their temper H atnents _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ B Scxatou Moody of South Dakota H thinks that it is a mistake to send In- H ( linns oust to bo educated Ho assorts H that the most good could bo accom- H plishod by establishing Indian schools H- on the reservations Senator Moody is - eminently correct _ _ H ; ' _ _ H r The annual report of the state trcas- _ _ _ | . : ' uror of Minnesota shows a snug balance .in the various funds aggregating ono H * million ono liundrod and six thousand H , dollars It is only necessary toudd that ' Minnesota is a republican state , nian- Hv nged by ropubllcau ofUolals H H , . England's injunction to a newly H churtored South African company was _ _ H' " " put down rum and slavery " There H is no doubt that the jolly jack tars will H obey the llrst half of the order to the _ _ _ f loiter As to slavery , much depends B on the nationality of those engaged in ' the bubinos3. H' Tiir Bell Tolophouo company is ono | * of the rlchost monopolies in the couu- H try Thirty-two thousaud instruments _ _ B- . vroro turned out during the year ending H December 21 , an increnso of twenty H two hundroa over the corresponding H period of 1687-88. UnliUo all ether moB - B , ' iiopolles , the Bell makes its profits by _ _ H * * ii ° _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ H BuoATOu's political freebooters are H rtotorinlned to rue or ruin Thofol- H lowers of the defunct mayor in the H .j council stand ready to combine with H ' the democrats to organize the council Hi nnd praventtho eloetiou of a republican H _ vresldlng olllcor To thu credit of the Hv ilomocratiu tnombors , their overtures H' linvo so far boon fruitless Hc Nkw Youk mugwump circles are H ngitalod over the recent action of Gov- H- ortior Hill , who topic the state printing H > , " " from the Albany Arqus and gave it to H the Albany Pimes The former is sup B yvosod to bo u Cleveland organ and the H latter a Hill organ , and so the governor H ' has bocorao' a bold , bad man to the H mugwump mind , a bugaboo held up to H Brighton its political children after • HIV CAMPAIGN IS OiV The prohibitionists are organizing nnd perfecting plans to enpturo No- brnekn They nro flooding the Btnto with circulars and tracts , rallying hero and there in little groups and laying the foundation for a campaign of emo tional insanity such as has never boon witnessed in the west The Bie : has boon favored with an outline of the prohibition plan of cam paign , in which we nro informed thnt the notional third party will do all jn their power to fight outln Nebraska the battle of the homo against the high ltconso delusion and snare " "Wo must conoontrato In Nebraska , " says Miss Wlllnrd , nil the work possible In 1800 , for that dates , as wo hope , the doom of the legalized liquor trafllc in the state that opened upon the nation the Pandora's box of high license " Nebraska must bo punished for origi nating nnd putting into cIToct the best system of regulating and restrict ing the liquor trafllc devised by man High license was the dawn ot true temperance reform It reduced the ovlls of the tratllc , swept nwny the groggories breeding spots of vlco forced the business into responsible hands nnd surrounded it will , safe guards The Slocumb law was an in spiration The author never dreamed that the hill which ho drafted in his quiet country homo was destined to become - como n shield to ward off the blight ot prohibition Nor did the most sancrtilno friend of the measure imagine that It would swoop the country nnd bo in dorsed by every conservative friend of temperance reform , both lay and clorl- cal Its adoption by Massachusetts , Hhodo Island , Connecticut , Pennsyl vania and Vermont was ti comnllmont to its worth and bonoflconeo Evan in the west it has become the standard method of regulation Minnesota , Illinois and Missouri have grafted the principles of high license upon their statute and its suc cess has extorted from gonornl Fisko , the prohibition candidate for president last yoartho compliment that it was the only effective measure of temperance poranco reform short of national prohi bition But the third party is determined to change the signs and supplant the sa loon by the drug store It is a change ot name , not of character The advo cates of prohibition and free whisky do not stop to count the cost , nor will they listen to reason and common seuso They are in league with the bootleggers - gors , and care not what disaster they caiiDO to the business interests of the state so long as they abolish high license and regulation and substitute outlawry and frco rum MEXICAX ItAILItOADB The Mexicans , whoso motto has hith erto been never do today what can bo put off until tomorrow , " seem to bo waking up They certainly have como to a realizing sense of the economic valtio of railways in the domain of com merce The government is negotiating a large loan to bo used in enlarging and improving tlvb Mexican , railroad system In the northern part of the republic there arc already four lines that connect with the American border Two of these extend to the cap ital and the ether two to interior points These lines Have nu merous lntoral branches and the Pacillo coast is also connected with the City of Mexico The northern half ot the country is quite well provided with railways Nearly all these roads have been built during the last decade But in southern Mexico the locomotive and railway train are unknown and n rail way to the boundary line of Guatemala has boon projected This will bo ati important undertaking not alone for Mexico , but for the United States as well A large and rich country will bo opened up to industrial and commercial development The road would also form tin important link in the railway communication between the United States and South America , which will doubtless be ono of the de velopments of the near future But the moie immediate results of better trans portation facilities would bo the in creased commercial activities between that country and ours Too much of Mexico's trndo gees to Europe Wo Import much moro from Mexico than wo expert to that country , showing a trade balance on the wrong side of the lodger With moro railroads and iucronscd facilities for intercommunication - tor-communication this state of things might bo reversed It la to the interest of this nation to encourngo railroad construction in Mexico , nnd American capital should bo In the field to compote with the Europonn and espcotnlly Eng lish capital , which has monopolized all the arouuos of commerce and industry in Mexico for many years MR SUEPAIID'S KULL HAND There is at lonst ono eminent jour nalist In America who pays tribute to the railroad kings with an unstinted hand Wo refer to Editor Shepard of the Now York Mail and jGjrjic6s. As sample bricks ot the flattering com ' pliments which Mr Shepard regularly bestows upon his royal railroad patrons , wo quota the following from a recant issue of the Express ; Our complimentsto Marvin Huetiltt , the brainy and bravo prcsldont of the Chicago & | Northwestern railroad Lontt may you wield your great power for the advantage of tbo northwest and the interests of sound railroading To that courteous and accomplished gentle man and calcient president of the Michigan Central , Henry li , Lodyanl , wo send cordial greetings and tbo compliments ho deserves Wo salute that well-balanced , clodded and always reliable railroad president , John Newell of the Lake Sboro line , Long lifo and prosporlty to you T , 11. Ulncbstono ot Chicago li not the author of lllackstoue's commentaries , but the admirable condition of the Chicago & Alton railroad company is itself a splendid eommoutary on the executive audlty and in tegrity of Ulackstona To that universally cstcomod head of a great system , President Roberts of the Pennsylvania railroad , we louder the renewal of our high regard for an ofuclal as modest as ho is able , and with a heart as big as his bond May that distinguished descendant of the Puritans , Prcsldont Choato , who please , thu stockholders and the patrons ot the Old Colony road , continue to add to the fuuio and reputation of a distinguished family To the sagacious , Arm , resolute and expo rloncod Nester among railroad presidents , Samuel Sloan , of the Dthvwaro , Lacka wanna Ss Western rnllroa d , wo extend our hoartlest compliments and congratulations President Charles P. Clark ot the Now York Si New Hampshlro railroad has had n great dent of varied oxperlcnco and great success within the past decade , nnd Is still a growing man , Long llfo nnd continued prosperity to him To that distinguished yachtsman , Mr J. 11. Maxwell , the cfllclrnt and onorgotlo prcsl dent of the Now Jersey Central , wocxtond our warmest hopes that his successes on land will never bo loss than his triumphs at sea soa.Thoro There Is no ono among the younger genera tion of railroad mon who nftor winning fame os a lawyer has ulsplaycd mora signnl ability than President M. 13. Iu alls , whoso bril liant success In bringing out ot bankruptcy and putting on a dividend basis the old Cin cinnati , Indlanapolli , St Louis & Chicago has already made him president of two greater corporations , the Cleveland , Cincin nati , Chicago & St Louis and the Chosa- psakn Sc Ohio What a galaxy of kings nttd jacks ! But in his worship of these lords tem poral Mr Shopnrd never censes to bo a devout worshlppor of tbo lord spirit ual The top of his editorial column bears the following significant scriptur al text : O , praise the Lord all yo nations J pralso Him nllyo people This reminds , us-vory much of Gcorgo Francis Traill's quotation of the late Emperor Williams inossngo to Qucon Augusta after the battle of Sedan : Uloss the Lord , my dear Augusta , Napoleons leon's army is on n buslor Ton thousand Pronchmon Imvo cone boloiv Praise God from whom nil blessings How KEEP OUT OV TIW PAUKS The strcot railway company Is asking altogether too much when it seeks to encroach upon our park syntom , which at best is very limited Ilnnscom park was dedicated for park purporses only Not an inch of that ground should bo given up to street railway tracks or stations The approaches to the park nro ample for street railway tracks , and thcro is no valid excuse for appro priating any part of the park for the strcot railway Even if the park covered eight hundred - drod acres instead of eighty it would bo very questionable policy to allow any part of the grounds to bo cut up by rail way tracks It would sot a bad prece dent : Sooneror later motor linescablo rends street and steam railways would wedge their tracks into our parks and not only mar the beauty of the uarks but ultimately rob the public of the pleasure-grounds designed as resorts for popular recreation CoitPOKATiONS are so rarely afflicted with enlargement of the heart thutovl- donco tending to show that they pos sess that organ , even in contracted form , partakes of the miraculous For this reason the action of the Louisville & Nashville railroadtlesorvcs to bo hold up us an OMimpleof voluntary corporate generosity Last September Conductor Lemon wa3 killed on that road by a ruffian whom ho had ejected from the train Christmas eve Mrs Lemon re ceived a package direct from the presi dent of the company containing two thousand dollars worth of stock and a morocco bound memorial containing resolutions of respect to the memory of the deceased The value of the gift as well as the time choseji for its prosontalion are an earn est of the company's appreciation of faithful servlcos , as well as a purpose to provide for the families of employes who lese their lives in the line of duty This notion is in marked contrast to the narrow gauged policy of railroad corporations in this section Comparisons nro odious The court dockets toll of the struggles for justlco oftwldowa and orphuus and of crippled mon Voluntary settlements nro rare The corporations prefer to play n game of freeze out in the courts Tnoy take advantage of the poverty and helpless ness of omploycs' families when human ity dictates fair dealing and conoroiiB provision for the victims of unavoidable accident i Tutnti : is not much danger of a strike of locoinotlvo cnginoor.i on the Erie sys tem Reports to that effect are over drawn The o'igineora cannot dcclaro a strike directly If the regular grievance - anco commltteo fails to effect a settle ment , the chief cugincor must bo called iu to negotiate In case ho also fails , then a majority vote ot every brother hood ledge directly intoro3tod is necessary - sary to order a strike These proceed ings require from sixty to ninety days a period sufficient to cool down the hot bonds The dispute folates to a system of examination Into the ability and ofllcioncy of the engineers As similar examinations nro in vogue on western roadsbonoilttlng the men and the com panies , the eastern onginocrs cannot se cure popular support in resisting a proper test of their capacity and trust worthiness Railroad development has reached a stage which makes it irapora- tlvo on the mnnngomont to employ the best ability obtalnablo , and that ability cannot bo dotormlnod without n thorough examination ot the applicant The iron market shows signs of un usual aoIvlty During the last throe months prices have stondily advuncod and It is generally oxnectod that by tlio mlddlo of January bar iron will com mand forty dollurs a ton at the mills The rise is ascribed to various causes , ohiotot which lean iucroasoot orders for railroad and huildors' iron for 1S00. The decreased production of iron ere under the manipulations of the trust also stimulated the market But con servative mnnufacturors doubt the per lnnnonoy of the ndvanoo Exorbitant prices are Invariably tollawod by dis astrous reaction Purchasers will hold off when they see that the market is manipulated by a combine , Every thing points to a year of ttn 'cpmulon activity In the country , but if the mills force prlcos beyond a reasonable limit they will puncture the boom It is a foregone conclusion that the Pacific railroad funding bill will bo pushed through both houses of congress during the present session All the lubricating maehinory that can bo brought into play has boon provided nnd placed whore It will bo most effect ivo The committees ot both houses are friendly to the schema In other words , the comjrjltloes have boon packed In the lnto$3Mof the 8ub3ldlzod mo nopolies tlpHbrcssman Dalzoll , the chnlrman otoj uo liousQ commltteo , Is ono of the nUrtttioys of tbo Pennsylvan ia railroad , arijlr the sonnto committee is headed by another out and out rail reader With the committees organ ized In thoirjfnxor the Pacific railroad magnates oxnqqt very smooth sailing Tnrc Chlcacojpapors nro still ham morlng nwnjCot the obstlnnto twelfth juryman in * Yfit > Cronlu trial They want him Indicted for perjury nnd If the courts could only comply with their request they would retry the whole Cronin case and keep up the Cronin solvation for nnothor year or two But even Chicago is beginning to tire of the ovorlnstlng Cronin racket Unless the anarchists break loose again , or McGlnty gets on his muscle , the Chicago cage papers will have to dig up sorao now dynninito This North Dakota legislators nro en joying the hospitality and right of way of the Northern Pacific Or course the members nro out for their health So is the company The influence of the Farmers alliance on the legislative nf- fnlrs of the ncwutato is so strong that a showing of liborallty in the commis sary department was necessary to delay "hoslilo" legislation Tlio junket Is a repetition ot the old game worked so oftoctivoly In these parts years ago SlNCKtho appearance ot la grippe any number of homo romodlos have boon recommended by peonlo who always know a euro for every ill to which human flesh is heir But there is ono simple proscription that few seem to romombcr : Keep your head cool nnd your feet warm Just now Now York is very much worked up over the fact that a very big flow ot com continues to drift into the port of Baltimore Baltimore has always boon a big corn market and ono of the reasons thorofor is that she is favored by the trutik lines with differ entials _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ NliWs 0O3IUI3.ST. The plumber and the coal dealer did not have n merry Christmas this year Dom Pedro cannot join the rnnks of royal paupers The new rcpubliu refuses to pay him the annuity promised A now Congregational church was dedi cated at Milwaukee lust Sundnv , constructeil very closely on the model of the cnurch de scribed in Robcrtrblsmero Ono hundred and twelve conuts have been found against Siluott but not one of his whereabouts has been discovered A New York Chinaman 1ms embezzled $20,000 and gone to parts unknown A toucli of evil make3 the whole world kin Eastern burl-lars have begun to carry away thu safesitiaw cannot crack for aubso- quent investigation , fho buildings and vaults nro left Ocbjiid , however Connecticut lias a beggar who fascinates the dogs Ho is.usually followed by n crowd of from ten to Ywtjnty curB who have for saken comfortable Glomes to revel in the wild luxuriance of tramp llfo California is iraxloTTs to havoftbo Pan Americans maico aTlslt to the Pacific coast after they have finished their arduous labors at Washington If they are not too much exhausted they will probably go A resolution has been introduced into the house of representatives providing for an investigation of the civil service commission , and now Teddy Roosevelt shouts In sten torian tones : Bring on your investiga tion " All the inhabitants of tbo town ot Sbo- shong , in South Africa , to tbo number of 20,000. have left in a Dody and settled in anew now place about ono hundred miles north west from bhoshong Scarcity of walor was the cause of the stampede South Carolina has a colored girl named Daisy Robinson who has the mysterious uowor'of breaking all crockery m a room without touching it She is evidently capable - blo of glvingpointors to the average servant girl girl.Mr. Mr McGinty exerts an evil and wide spread Influence from bis seclusion at the bottom of the son Lnst week u murder In his nuino was committed near Now York City and a Boston citizen was arrested for assaulting u letter carrier who had sprung a McGlnty joke on hlin .IffT DuvNntul Grady St Piinl I'fcmw Presi The death that plunged tbo south In mourning a short tlmo ngo was merely the passing of an unhuulthful romlnisccnce The death of Grady Is a sorrow and a loss in which her peoule may feel that the regret and tbo sympathy of tbo north are Joined with tholrs _ * Grady on Lincoln , St Ijoult aiotie-Demoerat. It was the late Henry \V. Grady who characterized Abraham Lincoln as "tbo first typical American , the first who com prehended within himself all the strength and gentleness , all tne majesty and gruco of this ropubllc " Tlimilo ? to Senator Mnnderson . SI Lnutt Ulobe-Dtmocrat. Tbo farmers of the country who cannot sell their corn for as much as It cost them to produce It , will bo thankful , wo presume , for the fact that congress has ordered the pub lication of 400,000 copies of the agricultural report for their comfort and ainusomont For tlio GAo 'il ' or the Indian jwnrcr Tdnes Tbo members ofVtho Indian ltights asso ciation are doubtless , as a rule , honest , sln- core men , who nro , working disinterestedly to promote the goodiot the Indian and to so * cure his advancement But the loaders ot that organlzation.iiayo not all been ot that kind There boyo-dicon among them men who sought only personal ends , and who on Indian reservations onasted the dolightf ul part of maliciousmeddlers , These , whllo professing the most earnest devotion to the cause of Indian eiJueatlon , have given their sympathy and sthJriort to the disturbing ola- ment among the Indians that Is opposed to education and hoslilo to the schools Thus they have done what they could to embar rass the government In Its efforts to estab lish schools among the Indians In this the members generally ot the asso ciation have unwittingly given to the dis turbers their moral support They bayc done so because they have blindly assumed In every controversy between the Indians and the government that ( ho latter was in fault They have especially been certain , whoa over there was any trouble between the In dians and an agent , that the former wore abused innocontJ and that the latter was a cruel oppressor or a wicked swindler They have believed that the Indians were all truth tellers and the frontier whites all liars In fact , In considering the Indian question the eastern people manifest an in tense passloa for thinking the worst , the crnolost nnd the wickedest things passible ot their OwnTaoo , and their own particular ola- mont of the race , too Thus it has hnpponod thnt the Indian Rights association has hindered rather thou helped thn object for which it was organ izod It has sent no teachers among the Indians , hns contributed no money for their boneflt The association Is nowwth , ! Its usual per versity , opposlug the removal ot the South ern Utos from Colorado , ltdoos so simply on the ecnernl principle that every chtingo fortho Indians desired by the frontlor whites must bo wrong , must have a docp , dark , wiCKCd purpose , must bo a swindle upon the Indians and a cruelty to him They do so oven against the expressed wishes ot the Indians thomsolvcs Tbo leaders of tbo Indian Rights associa tion are trying to enpturo Indian Commis sioner Morgan , as they have tried to capture nil his predecessors Uo should profit by their oxnmplo of wisdom and refuse to bo captured STATE AND T13IUUTOHY. Nobrnika Jottings Mrs D. O. Wright , a resident of YorK died at Anaheim , Cal , rccontly of paralysis Ibrco Nebraska City gentlemen roturnlng from u dnnro saw n burelnr attempting to enter J. G. Ilochstotlcr's rcsidonco nnd gave chase , capturing the thief and landing him In Jail Martin Prokcs , a Schuyler butcher , while returnluc homo Christinas ere with a load of presents for his children was thrown from tils buggy and received injuries from which ho died tbo next morning Joseph llnnfck , a Schuyler constable , wont lo lov.v on Auton Malacok's goods Tues day The Utter shot the constable In the arm with a shotgun Mnlacck then returned to his house and uftor dolloenttoly consider ing the matter took his own llfo by shooting himself York hns a system of flags In operation on the high school building When the first bell rings a white ling Is hung out ; with the second boll a blue flag nppears , and when the last bell Is sounded the stnrs and stripes are flung to the brcczo , wbora they float until school closes The coroners jury which Investigated the recent wreck nt Hastings in which a ilreman lost his llfo has returned a verdict of man slaughter against Hnginccr Stetson and also holding the olllclals Of tbo road rcsponstblo for tbo accident Stetson has been placed under urrost Michael Abts , who nttomptod to secure Eniina B. S.mkoy for a bride uy instituting habeas corpus proceedings nt Columbus , bas nb.wdoncd the case , the youngladj's pnicnts having sent her out of the stutc Mlko says ho proposes to have Emma , but ho will not call on the courts to secure her Thostudouts of Gntes college , Ncllgh , re cently devoted a fund of theirs , which was intended for porno recreation , und applied it toward the payment of a " per cent note which ono of their number had been obliged to give , nnd which wns about to overthrow all his bright prospects of the immediate future The Loup City Canal , Water Power and Improvement company , with a capital stock -5150,000 , was organized December 21. The live directors elected uru C. S Drake , C. J. Oduudabl A. P. Culloy , J. It bcolt and C. M. B. Heath The dircctois nt once mot and elected C. S. Drake president , A. P. Culley treasurer and W. EI Conger Recrctary This enterprise contemplates the building of a canal three miles long , tapping the Middle Loup river at n point near Arcadia nnd ex tending down the valley to a point near Loup Citv , wharo it cuts through a divide and en ters a deep canyon , where a lal.o will be fur nished two nnd one-half miles long and ono balf mile wldo , with n direct fall of 10 foot , making one of the best water powers in the west and the .Unest body of water , either natural or artificial The people of Loup City are in earnest about this matter and will push it to completion early next spring lowu Item . There arn seven creameries in Webster county Many Marion county farmers are prospect , iugior coal ontheir , lands Two of the largest wholesale houses in Dubuque have consolidated Henry W. Meyers , of the ICookuk packing house , has n record of killing 300,000 hogs Electric light poles are being set out at Ottumwn and the city will soon bo illumi nated Rev G. F. Farr of South Dcnd , Ind , has accepted a call to the pastorate of the Du buque Baptist church The Buchanan county poultry and pot stock association will hold its annual exhibi tion at Independence February 10 to 13. Thcro are only three natives of Iown in the now 9tato senate Gobble of Muscatine , Schmidt of Davenport , und Dodge of Bur lington Joe Kodig , a thlrtoen-yoar-old Crestonboy , was probably fatally injured by the borso which ho was riding rearing and falling backward upon him II G. McCollura , a * horse dealer of West Liberty , hns paid the farmers of Muscatine county this year ? ri3,000 for horses Ho shipped a car load to Philadelphia last week Spotted Welt , the crack shot of an Indian medicine company , qntorcd a turkey shooting contest at Marion in disguise and bankrupted thn projectors of the scheme by killing all the birds Two brothers named Rood woio arrested nt Now London for burglarizing Pnco & Sons hardwuro store at that place about two \veoUs airo Ono of the Heeds , to save him self , Informed on his brother and disclosed the place where the goods were concealed Henry Koesters , a Marshalltown boy , about ten weeks ngo had both legs broken by a rope giving nwuy whllo working on a piledrivnr near Oskaloosa Ho had almost recovered nnd was so anxious to bo out thnt the other day ho got a young friend mimed Bach to carry him ever to a neighbors to spend tbo afternoon On the way homo young Bach slipped and fell heavily on Koestor , brouking his loft leg Just above tbo old fracture aim wrenching and bruising bis right ankle The bono was reset and the patient is doing as well ns could bo ex pected , but he suffers terribly and is greatly discouraged The Two Dukotna There nro sixty-two wells in Yankton county Rapid City has a population of 5,000 and is ouly ten years old Blunt has n real estate boom caused by prospective railroads Farmers In the vicinity of Harrold are tnllcing of building a creamery at that place A number of artesian wells wilt be sunk In Hand county next year B. M. Coatcs of Yankton has brought suit against the Standard Oil company for 110,000 damuges for appropriating his tank cars to their own use Specimens of ere have been forwarded from Alaska to the Rapid City school of mines to bo assayed , a dispute having arisen as to its value Prof O. E. Balloy of the school will act as referee A savage animal , dog and wolf , mixed , bit littlcPcnrl Sedgowick of Kimball In a ter rible manner lost week The brute bit off a portion of the child's scalp and a chunk out of her arm The animal was shot , A mountain lion Jumped on a Day named MuAulcy near his homo at Galena , and but for the timely arrival of a party of wood haulers , who were attracted by the boys cries , would have made short work of Mm A decision was rendered in Justlco J ow- ott's court at Sturgis the other day whloh did not exactly suit ono of the young lawyers In the case and in the argument which fol lowed ho insulted the Justice , who very promptly Jumped down from the bench and knocked the legal light out in ono very short but decisive round Thu St Lawrcnco board ot aldermen has passed a series of resolutions thanking the cities of Huron and Milter for so promptly responding to the call for help issued at tbo recent lire The resolutions also thank the Chicago k Northwestern road and its em ployes for their efforts in securing the quick transportation ot the Huron tire depart ment E. P , Wanzer , teacher of the pubho schools at Armour , is bavlrtg a circus with the bad boys of thnt town Last week he had oc casion toulisclphne ono of thn youngsters , who Immediately formed an aggressive alll- anco with his fellow bad boys aud procured a largo quantity ot doubtful eggs , They then proceeded to Mr Wauzor's house and while one urchin called him to the door the others gave him the eggs , The school board upheld the teacher , but so far the parents ot the young scamps have don * nothing toward punishing them THE OXKARD SUGAR FACTORY PromlsliiK I'uturo for the Su nr Boot Iuduatry In Nobraslca AS STATISTICIAN JENKINS SEES Itnpltl Work on the Gront Building at Grand Islnntt Stnto nmt City News of Ooneral interest Lincoln Bt'itEtjor Tits Ouuu Use , 1 lOJiPSTanKT , J- Lincoln , Neb , Dec 20. ) "Citlzons of Nebraska nro deeply Inter ested In the Oxnard sugar beet factory , going up nt Grand Island , " suggested The Ukr roprosontntlve to Deputy Labor Com missioner Jenktns , this morning , and ns jou have just roturncd from there the sltua- atlon ns vou sco It would bo road with inter est What is the promise , Mr Jenkins , and what effect will the vast oiitcrprlso have upon the comparatively undeveloped part of the state In which It Is located ! " It certainly will cause a great deal of land which now nsmuitis td' .o to bo devoted to tbo culture of the sugar boot , for the profltB nrlslng from this farming industry nro so much above any otiiors that farmers will naturally sco the necessity of devoting their nttontion to it , consequently it will have the immediate result of enhancing the value of lands And , moreover It will lead to a moro rnpld settle ment of the country The ex periments that have been carried on by the bureau in rotation to the culture ot beets , leave no uoobt whutover as to the fitness ot the soil to produce a flrst-clnss quality of suirar boots Speculation as to tbo question whether sugar can bo manufactured trom boots has n issod , nnd it is now a com mercial fact When wo take into considera tion that Germany supports her vnst armies from the revenue derived from thnt Industry , together with the rovonucs that Franco nnd Belgium derivetho matter Is outotqucstion In my oplnitn a bright day has dawned for the Btato " How is wortt progressing on the building , and what is itlilicl" The work Is progressing very rapidly In fnct It progresses as though by tnnglc The material used in thu building is first-class , and in keeping with the industry to which it is devoted On or about the 15th of January , 1800 , the cltizous of Grand Island are going to have n n jolliflratlon The corner stone will bo laid on that day State ofllcluls and prominent citizens from all parts of the stuto will bo In vited The length of the main building is ! ! 92 feet aud the width S5 leot , and with tbo fact kept iu mind that it is to to bo four stories in height somu Idea of its magnitude enn bo obtained , in addition to the main building there will bo nn englno aud boiler house together with a numborof small build lncs as necessary adjuncts At least 150 woikmen are engaged on tbo building , nnd it Is n caution the way they nro pushing thu w ork A sand pit close tn the building keeps two teams und two two-wheeled Bcrnpers binding out sand all thu tlmo This must give some impiession ot the activity and bustle manifest on every hand Tlio machinery is expected hero npxt month , and there will 9 bo about * forty men sent from the tactoiy to put it in shape My word for it Nebraska will have one oC thu Unest sugar lactones in the world before the close of 1M)0. ) " How about Willfleet , and what are the prospects for a factory there " "I know very little about the prospects for a factory at that place But citizens thcro have sugar boots on the bruin ns much as tliny have at Grand Island While there I noted the soil carefully and think it emi nently adopted to the cultivation of RUgar beets In my judgment , however , tbo Grand Island enterprise Will be watched nnd upon its success may depend the erection of a factory at that place 1 can say this , ulso , of other points in the state Schuyler nnd Nellgh are growing anxious upon the ques tion Last week I received correspondence from both points relating to the subject Inquiries chiefly , mo directed to the cost of production in the manufacturing of sugar These points I urn investigating with great care and will report upon them at length la the near future " Wants n O iiiniiHilon Back John C. Williams complains In the district court that some months slnco ho gave the agency of a piece of property on South Twenty-sixth street to A. W. Jensen and W. L. Murphy to be sold for $ .1,030 , they to re ceive f 100 for doing so Soon after they sold the property nnd rcturnod the proceeds less the commission , ever to him Ho now dis covers that they bought the property Miom- Hclves and wants the commission back , bringing suit in the district court to recover the same Ktntc House Jottings Articles incorporating tlio Bank of Vor- digro were li led in tbo secretary of states ofllco this morning Verdigro Knox county , is fixed upou as the principal place for the transaction of business Capital stock , SJjOJO ' Incorporator , H. E. Johnson , J. II Hoihwoil and E. D. Johnson Amended articles of tbo First Bank of Ulysaea woio ulso filed for record The capital stock of tbo institution is increased to $50,000. Signed , G. H. Lord , president , nt.d C. M. Rico , secrotnry Walter A. Lcese , clerk of the supreme court , spent Christmas at Seward , Ho re turned homo this morning and was busy at his desk durum : the day Secretary Gilchrist states that the state board of transportation is in rccolpt of a letter from Mr Holdrogo , general manager of tbo Burlington railroad company , stating thnt nn agreement had been outurod into between the company and thn county com missioners of Johnson county which insures an overhead crossing at Crab Orchard , ouu mile west of the viliago This settles tlio complaint from that place It will be re membered thnt ono man was Uillod und another seriously injured at this point , and because of u bad crossing ever the Burling ton truck there New Notaries Iubllo Tbo governor today made the following notarial appointments : T. P. Young , At lanta , Pliulps county ; Frank McCartney , Nebraska City , Otoe county ; Gcorgs A. Brooks , Bnzilo Mills , Knox county ; J , H Blakcsloy , Lomn , Koyn Puha county : M. D. Long , O'Neill , Holt county ; Nclllo Watts , Grand Island , Hull county ; Jason C. Sparks , Concord , Dixon county 1 Gcorgo Jeffrey , Omaha , Douglas county ; William A. Hamp ton , David City , Butler county ; Eli Hodgins , Omaha Douglas county Henry McICondry , South Omaha , Douglas county , City News nnd Notes A meeting of East Lincoln Oddfellows wns held this evening at Baker & Smiths hall and final arrangements made for the in stitution of the contemplated lodge , which takes place on the first Thursday in January , , Fittoen now members will bo initiated und with the twenty charter tnombors of the third degree thu state Is most promising Invitations are out at last for the charity ball It takes place Junuary 14 , 1890 , at the state house Representative hall will bo used by the dancers aud it ncccssrytho senate chamber It is said that the commit tee on printing is kicking hard on the Job pawned off upon it by the Journal publishing company Tlio invitations were to have been lithographed , instead they wcro portly printed Joba E. Dye ot Concordia , Kan , aged sixty , and Miss Sarah L. Aby of this city , aged thirty , wcro united in inarriago last evening by Judge W. E. Stewart They go to Kansas lo make their future homo Prof Elton Fulmor of the state university was married ut 10:30 : yesterday morning to Mis * Helen , daughter ot Prof , Angboy , at the rcsidonco of ; the brldo's parents , Thirtieth nnd Vine streets The young couple took the afternoon train for Gibbon on a short wedding tour John S. Allen , a flroman at the F street engtno house , was tried before Judge Hous ton this morning on the charge of maliciously destroying property As stated by Tub Heb today ho was arrested on the complaint of Harry Bell After bearing thu tottlmony , pro and con , Judge Houston sentenced him to thirty days In the county jail An appeal t ] ! _ H. whs instantly filed nnd the customary stay M _ _ _ _ of sentence given j V Mary Lynch celebrated Christmas by | _ V threshing her husband , Thomas L > ncli , J H nftcr thn most tpproved fashion As usual S B Thomas celebrated tbo day by getting drunk , | 9 _ B nnd becoming abusive She went at him | _ _ B with fist nnd tongs'1 and compelled him to l ! _ _ _ cry for mercy Ho caused her arrest for i' _ _ H assault and battery und Judge Houston gave JH , her W and costs tor the pastime il _ _ _ l OMAHA AND VANICTON * & _ _ _ _ A Mnctlnc of Citizens ol" tlio New j _ _ K' ' States to Consider tlin Project v _ _ H Frank A. Everts , editor of the .tournnl nt lj [ _ _ Oulda , S. D. , is spending n few days In the 4 _ _ ft city Oulda Is on the line ot the proposed V _ _ K Omahn Si South Dakota railroad , nnd Mr I _ H [ Everts asserted that n lively interest was E { _ _ being taken in the road in his section A _ H mooting was held nt Oulda Monday nftcr i l > _ _ noon , presided ever by N. W , Porter , regis I _ _ B tcr of deeds of Sully county Consldornblo SH Interest Was manifested , ns Ouldn will bo on a _ H the direct line of the road It built ns pro diH posed to Forest City It was thought host VV | to thoroughly orgnnbo and bo ready lo aid K _ _ B the project ns much ns possible , nnd nccord- ' _ _ H ingly D. Q. Jordnn was appointed chairman mH of a commltteo to oxanuno the route nnd nut 1 HH the surveying party 10 secure n feasible line , \ fl H with power to appoint two additional mem- [ _ H hers to assist Charles H A car , ox-county | _ H | treasurer ; John II GropengFosor editor of , B tlio Watchman and James Otis wore suloctod ! H ns n committee to sccuro right of way _ H through Sully county W. N. Mcloon a • H banker ; John F. Cole , merchant ; H , E. Kim h _ _ _ mcl , county auditor , and G. W. Fisher nnd ' ' _ _ fl David Hall selected us a commltteo on dona- , H tlons , and William Toomuy , county trons- * _ _ _ _ _ urcr ; D. Q. Jordan and N. W. Porter wcro ! _ _ _ _ _ empowered to correspond with patties along S _ _ H the line of railroad and nscortuiu what as- i _ _ H sistunco might bo required Dakota pcoplo are j _ _ H anxious to have a southern outlet , as nearly ( r _ _ H nil lines of traffic are now directly with the M _ _ _ _ cast Nearly all the business of central Da- il H kota Is now done with Chicago , St Paul , i _ H Sioux City and Duluth , and if Omalm desires l H a portion ot tbo trade of the great artesian ' _ H state , she must have alrcct connection by b _ _ _ rail Dakota people are willing to give nil r _ _ H the nsslstnnco iu their power , but much of i H the cost , us well as the benefit , devolves ) H upon the shoulders of tbo people ot Omaha , _ H GUATtMALA _ H The City or that Nnmo 200 Years Old H Cllninto nnd I'i-oiIuoih , _ H San Francisco Call : The city of Gua- l' ' _ _ | temaln was founded moro than _ 00 years i H ago by the missionaries , nnd the pre h _ fl vailing Btyln of architecture is of the i _ _ H old Spanish typo The houses open , | directly upon the streets by wldo pus ! l _ _ fl - or driveways , that into sngo-wnys open _ _ _ _ gardens or patties These nro flllod M _ _ | with flowing fountains , statuary und < 1 _ _ H flowers , largo bushes of roses and hoi ! H liotropo mingling their sweets with * H these of the orange , banana and pine ' _ _ | apple The windows nro barred ns was H the custom of years ngo when it was * ! _ _ fl nccc&sary to have protection front the ' ( _ _ H watvliko Indians The streets of thu H city nro paved w ith largo blocks of ] H stone of n porous nature , and nro kept f H scrupulously clean under the govern t H meat sanitary regulations , which arc ! H very exacting The stones are arranged ' ' _ _ | in u concave form , forming gullies iu ! ! _ _ H the center of the streets , down which ' , _ _ _ _ ! the water rushes during thu rainy sea } _ _ _ | son with u mighty roar , forming v orita- c _ _ | bio rivers in the center of the streets , ! , _ H during which time everyone remains < _ _ _ | indoors , but should they have occasion | to go out they will lind nntive Indians | on the strcot corners who for a small | | sum will carry thctn ucross _ _ _ _ _ The climate is semitropical , varying | from TOte SO the year round , and as | a daric or cloudy thtj is a thing unknown , | it makes lifo ono perpetual day of buii- l' ' _ _ | shine A peculiar fuel of the rainy scit _ . _ ' ' | sous which facetiously is said to begin I B at " o'clock iu the afternoon ot May , is ' - _ _ | that it never ruins during the forenoons " ' _ H The mornings are ns bright and picas 1 _ | ant as possible and the bky of the deep i > _ _ i est blue , until early in the afternoons , v H when the first sign of a coming storm IM H makes itself known by the light , fleecy i H clouds that como drifting in over the " H mountains These tire followed by > H streaks of lightning and the deep roll of j H distant thunder , and it is then that the ! _ _ | inhabitants scok Bholtor from the do- _ H ( lugo which quickly follows , the ( list > H drops to fall being very larcro ones , ! ' _ H leaving marks on the stone blocks two _ _ fl and throe inches in dinmotor , but In a j H very short liitio ono would think the l _ H heavens had broken lose ; this lasts fora vfl H short time , when the Bun shines out | again and all nature comes fortn In its J H most beautiful robes The trocs and i _ _ i shrubs nro of the brightest green , and ' _ | the beautiful pltimaged birds fairly 'i ' _ _ i burst tbetr little throats with their K _ H songs of gladness ; the pcoplo como out llfl H from their homes and pursue their ij H tasks as though nothing had happened ; ' ' ' _ | the streets dry up In a few minutes , l H nnd such thing as mud in the city is H unknown H A mistaken idea szems to prevail > > _ | throughout the United States ns regards j'M _ | the stability of the government ot Gua- 0 _ _ | tonmla , and the common belief that ? i _ fl riots and revolutions are frequent _ | should bo corrected , the one ol a few ' H weeks since being scarcely moro than a , | small sized riot nnd not ntuinitig the - H dignity of a rovolutlon It was ocensj j M slouod by a disagreement with soiiio H students of the polytouhnle school , . H together with a misunderstanding in j H rogurd to the tonus and conditions of a j H contemplated loan by a French syudl- ' _ H cute It was quelled in three days by i _ H the government under the direction of 'HI ' > President Manuel Brillns , who prluos l l himself upon his military ability in jf l putting 0,000 troops in the Hold and ef- I'M H fcctually wiping out all signs of dig ! _ _ | content IH Its population is in the neighborhood ( 'B l of 70,000 person , the gruator number of f B whom are nutivo Indians a most Intel jl | ligont and industrious people mon \ll women and childrou performing nil ' ' | kinds of lubor They are very cleanly , i H | religious and nlTectlnnnto , and it Is an • ( | imposing sight to see the little children [ l l file into church at vospars mid hear khH thorn ohnnt their little hyms of praise hH The upper classes are very highly cdu- ' 1 cittcil and polished in their manners , so | _ _ much so that our own nation could loam tiH a great donl from thorn with advantage vl Guatemala is plentifully blessed with il l almost everything in the agricultural ! ' _ | ana mineral line , but at present nearly 1 _ H nil attention is glvon to coffee , sugar , hH _ rubber chocolate and tropical fruita , f' ' H ot the latter there being 178 varlotlos , H H many of which are unknown in this t H The chief product and grontoslsotirco M of wealth in Guatemala is its coffee , M The greater part of the crop gees to I H Euroio | , principally to Broinou and M Hamburg Guatomnluii colfoo is usually H sold in tbo market under the nnmo of J H Mocha , as it resembles closely the gen 3H uino Arabian berry , which is no longer H produced in any quantity H Fir it Iln Must Bo a Dnmoornt 1 M .iugutla { ( la ) Chronicle H The Interest of the negro must Ho with tba M interest of the whlto man In politics ha M should not antagonize tbo people among M whom ho works and upon whom , Ir a certain M sense , bo Is Oepondont Let the negro divide M at the polls , as tbo Chronicle has always ad * M vised ; let him show that he cannot be driven | by the north and can not bo bought by ihu M south , and his condition will Improve at M once _ _ ' H Not a Huiitlaii Malady , H IttimtapuUt Juurnul M A great many congressmen are sufficing \ t _ | from attacks of the InQuenco , t H HI