Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 19, 1890, Part One, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE OMAHA DALLY BEE , SGTNDM' , OCTOBER 1O , IflOQ-SIXrUEN" PAGES.
BEE ,
Dnlljr mid Sunday , One Vuiir. . . . . . , , . $10 DO
Mxtnnnthi.i . . r IX )
Tlirro tnonllit . . 2 W
FtiiKhy H < c , One Vi-nr. . . . . . . . . . . . . JJOO
Weekly Itu > , Olio Vonr , . -SO
orriCESl
Oiniilii. TliC nrollulMltii ? .
houtliOinnhti. Corner N niidttth Etrcclv
Cniinrll Jllnffs , 121'rnrl Street.
Chicago oniu' , Ilirchnmtiurnf Commerce.
Now ynrk.lloonu 13,11 and ttTrlliuno UulldlnK
Washington , filillourtcuiitliHtruct.
ronunsi'ONDKNor
AH comtiiiinlcntloiu rnliilliiu to n w nna
rtlltorliil inattor Hlioiild bo addressed to the
Mltorlul D
MrrTniH. , . ,
AlllnmtniM IrllorHBiuI ri'MilUnncp hotild
fro aildiu-wiltoTlioHio Publishing Oomtmnjr ,
Ouiiili'i. limftH , chocks ntiil nostofllco orders
to bomadupuvablo to the onlor of tlio coin
.
The Bee Fobllsbing Company , Proprietors ,
' ' mid \cntounth Hti
Tlio lieu H'ld'tr , Pimmm \
? \v lir fcTATiiTiE : : < T or CIUUULATION
Btntoof Xclirnnlia. I _ ,
County of Douslnir B "
Oonrec II , T/sclmck. secretary of The Bee
riibllMilns' ' rompinv. does solemnly wc r
ttiattlin iictnnl circulation of Tw I > Ait.r lire
for tlic w cut ending Oct. 18 , IbOO. was M fol-
V. Oct. 12 . - ' . ( !
JlondnV.Oct 1.1 . 'M.-M
Tupsdny.Oct. 14 . SO/SI
NVclnrsdny. Oct. 15 . -.SI ?
TlitirMliiv.Oct.il ) . ' -l < 1
lrld ) r.Oit.lT . 20.-M
Buturday. OcU 18 . . 'MMl
AvcraBO . _ > < ) .H < ) _
Gr.owir. M.T/tRitt'UK.
F vnrn to before mo und miimcribnd In my
prrpinro tnislHtmlnvof Octolirr. A. D..13W
IKKU..I N I1. 1'r.iu Notary I'ublla.
Btutcof Nrbrn-tlci , I .
County of 1)miRln ) < I
Ooorpo II T/.scluieh. liolns duly sworn , tic-
tionrsiiiid snys that lie Is socrotury of Tlio IHo
I'libllslilns-'Conipinv. ( lint tint nctmil nvnnieo
liilly cliiMilntloti of Tin : I Mi iv ltt. for
the inoiilli of Oetoltr. W > , 18,097 cnplcii
fop Novcnilicr , lfcM > . RDIO coplis ; for Ie-
rotnliir. IWi. 10,048 conies ; for Jnniuiry ,
MM. l' ' > . .Vr > copl ( j for 1 olirunrv , 18'fl , 1H-
701 om'i's ' : for Miirch. 1MO , 10.815 conlf ? ;
for April. ! ( ' , WM copies : for Mny. 1R'flio.lSO '
copl(8i forJniip , WO , 'JO.POI ( oplii ! for July ,
WO. arw ) enplos ! for Allirust , IK 't..10,7S Jioilo9 | :
for fcciitoinlor , 18CO , 20.STO mplos
( HOPOK II. TVsoiiuCK.
Hwnrn to loforo mo. nnil mitmurllicd In tny
presence , this Oth any of Octobrr. A. I ) , IBM
N P. I'm.
Notary Public.
Tun orl Iiuxl pnukn o Blill po acssos a
melancholy interest for prohibitionists.
Tun mortal remains oof Samuel P.
Miller sloop in the soil of. hla beloved
Iowa.
Tun business outlook of the country
continues to improve , und the republi
can ji.irty fetill roigm
Mil. B i.rouu's tongue pictures ol
nffuiis in Ireland easily gives him first
place us tlio Munchnuscn of the empire.
K will bo no need of election
fniuels to lend emphasis to the voice of
Dougliis county on the subject of prohi
bition.
Evnuv able-bodied republican should
evidence the faith th.it is in liliu by lit-
tending the meeting nt the Coliseum to-
mortovv o\enii ) { , ' .
ONR of the lumber barons of Michi
gan faifed for ( i few millions , but con
siderately loft Bufllciont timber in sig-ht
to box the assets.
Tin ; piohibltionlsts will discover
when the iotas arc counted that slander
nnd falboliood are no mutch for truth
und lijfhtoousness inNebuiska.
rfejf Bultlln ot Zan/lbar knows n good
thrngwhen te Si5 HIn exchanging
his boicrclgn rlglitafSJI nnitllioii dollai-B
of German money ho display oU an abnoi-
uiallj lovcl head.
Tin : gfo.it Stanford university of Cali
fornia is designed , according to the
founder , toufToii stich an education ns
will equip students to earn a living1 as
Boon as they graduate. Evidently base
ball h on the threshold of a great re
vival In tlio golden state.
Oxn of the attractions of the Texas
Btato fair Is the hoot with which Con
gressman Kilgoro kicked a hole In the
baize door of the house. The booU.which
Kicked the democratic minority through
nhole , however , could not bo secured. It
is nctlvoly engaged in similar work in
On la
Till ! fact that flvo handled dollars
was paid for the falsehoods and slanders
of a ( Irunlton bc.ila\vijf la well calculated
to prove that the prohibition campaign
miintigers jiobsoss more boodle tliun
brains and at-o not particularly choice
In their methods of boosting u , great
"moial" question.
Iliiuit MOST is going to Hnglnnd to
t , vo up his poiimmcnt leaidenco. It is
ivuch on England , but is a sweet boon
to Xcw Vorlc. The United States olTors
a poor Hold for unnruhlsts. There are
flvo llttlo graves in Chicago whioh will
over stand as a monument to American
opinion on the bubject of Imported anar
chists.
Tin : noston lIcrtM notes the depart
ure fioiu , that port of a steamer bound
for Afriui with a cargo of civllUing
agencies. Tlioro wore fouitcon mis-
Monmius on board , four hundred and
sixty tons of gunjiowdef and ton thou
sand casks of Now Cnglimd rum. The
progress of uhillzation In the dark con
tinent needs no additional proof.
TUB career of Justice Miller holds out
nmplo encouragement to men who find
it impossible to follow the profession of
their choice early In llfo. Ho never
studied law until lie was thirty years old
and never presided over a court until ho
was elected to the supreme court. Vet
oryfow of. all who hiuo sit upon tluit
high tribunal served longer than liodid ,
nnd ho leaves a fame as a constitutional
lawyer and jurist hlchls scarcely sur-
pnbsod by any of tlio great mimes ot the
Biiprenio court.
Prut' lias onjojed the refreshing
novelty of limuguruling a now president
without inaugurating a now civil war.
This fact gives promise of prosperity for
a country which enjoys every natural
advantage and needs only a period of
peace under a government that will not
steal too licnvlly from the national re
sources. Chill was a cruel and remorse
less enemy of Peru and is btill u menac
ing neighbor , but Peru can learn much
by a study of Chill's commercial spirit ,
Ills to bo hoped that the now president
who has just titkoii his scat ( it Linn will
bo equal to his opportunity and to his
country's need.
A CAMPAIGN OV FMtSKUOOD.
The prohibition campaign In No-
Imiska lnus boon almost unparalleled In
the history of tlio country In the slander ,
misrepresentation ivnd downright false-
liood tlmt liuvo characterized it. The
party which profo&scs to stand for soelnl
morality , for the purification of the
liomo nnd for the rcgonorntlonof man
kind , has bliown itself caputilo of cm-
ploying methods which would put to
shame the lenst scrupulous' machlno
IwliticlntiH , who believe that nil things
nro fair in politics undthntthocnd justi
fies the means. Under the counsel und
leadership of the imported characterless
mercenaries who advocate prohibition
for the rovuiiuo there Is in it , the prohi
bitionists of this Btsitovery generally
cltlzens who desire to bo loynl to Ne
braska , nnd to see her material intoiests
grow nnd prosper hnvo peimlttcd them
selves lo bo committed to slanderous tit-
tackb upon tlio cluiractor of the state ,
mid pirtlculnrlyto misrepresentation re-
gitrding her piinclpal cities , which , if
they vent out to the weild unconlro-
verted , would bo only less disastrous to
tlio future prosperity of Is'cbraska tluiti
the success of prohibition.
The bcaniUloui nature of the nssaults
made upon the cluiractor of our people
by the hired advocates of prohibition
ought to aronso the Indignant resent
ment of eveiy citl/.en who lins the honor
and welfare OB tlio stale nt heart , and
the bnso and unscrupulous methods em
ployed nt the instigation of these mer
cenaries ought to lead all fair-minded
prohibitionists to btrlously ask them
selves whether it Is not their duty us
honest men and ( food citizens to ro-
pudlatoritich methods.Vhon forgery
and falsehood become the chief iiisttu-
monts of a party , as they have of the
prohibitionists In tills campaign , it is
tlmo for people who have regard for
honesty , fairness nnd truth to refuse to
countenance such a party. By employ
ing such means it abandons every claim
to popular respect nnd confidence , and
no man can gives it support without sac
rificing his duty as a citizen.
THK BKK has from tlmo to time shown
up and denounced numoious forgeries
and misrepresentations emanating ftom
the prohibitionists iti the ponding- cam
paign. Thcso luvo boon of the most
during and reckless character , poipe-
tiatcd mainly by woithle s scamps who
are veil paid for this dishonorable
service. But the exposures have hud
little effect upon the unscrupulous pto-
hihition manuRaii ) , and the hired reform
ers of Nebraska and its people are still
at work. The falsehoods regarding
Omrha and the other leading cities ,
although repeatedly lofulcd hy indis
putable and conclusive record evidence ,
continue a prominent feature of the
harangues of prohibition speakers and
the diatribes of piohibltion organs. The
f net that no other community of equal
numbers in tlio country is moro orderly
and law-abiding than that of Omaha ,
and that In pioportion to population
there Is less intemperance in Omaha
than In cities of Kansas and
Iowa , has been shown hy testimony that
no fair-minded man ivill question , does
not prevent the Itlrodadvocatosot prohi
bition from adhering to the calumny
that Omaha Is seothiiiglwith immorality
and diimkennesj. Tlio effort of these
people to prejudice the moral popula
tion against the commercial metropolis
of the state , vvith the incidental oireet of
of the whole country , calls for the lopio-
bationof every citiy.enof Nebraska who
has the into'ligenco to understand that
the prosperity of the state is inseparable
from the prosperity of its chief city tlmt
if the husines's interests and property
values of Omaha suffer injury tlieT oflcet
willbogoner.il. A. Mow struck at the
industiios , the enterprise and the linan-
clal forces centered in this city must in-
ovittibly bo felt to the remotest quarter
of the Btutc.
The reprehensible course of the pro
hibition party in Nebraska in the
wanton defamation of the character of
our people , In the poisistcnt adherence
to falsehoods repeatedly refuted , in the
practice of forgery , in the slander of In
dividuals , in the employment of con-
cIcncolesB scamps who are paid to lie
and traduce , nnd in tlio general unfair
and unscrupulous methods adopted , con
stitutes it iccord of reckless and un-
piinciplod methods for which it would
boilinicult to lindti parallel. It ought
to insure the defeat of the paity "by a
majority bo overwhelming as to bo a
momoi.iblo rebuke tobiiuh tlisioputable
nnd indefensible practices.
AS r.iTiiKn MA-'nn : ir s.i ir IT.
Father Mathew was proliably the most
successM and useful temperance agitator
who o\cr li\od. Ho is doubtless the only
0110 who could command a woild-\\ldo \
celebration of his virtues ono hundred
years after his blith. such ns during the
last few days hns everywhere been ac-
coidod his memory. As Nebraska is at
this moment engaged in an effort to
faolve , so far as human wisdom can do so ,
the very problem to which Father
Nalhow devoted his life , it Is worth
while to retail the character and \\ork
of this marvelous moiul reformer.
Born a century ago In the better class
of Irish society and carefully educated
at home and abroad , Theobald Mathew
found hlnibcll at middle life ono of the
most beloved and Influential of Irish
priests. At that time the masses of the
people were deep In the evils of drunic
ennossand apparently going from bad
to worse. The heart of tlio priest was
touched , and ho responded to urgent ap
peals to load the way for reform in the
habits of the peoplo.
It was an instance \vhoro the heart and
brain of a great and good man vroro
brought to boar upon the evil of intem
perance at its worst. In the light of the
present situation in Nebraska it is both
interesting and valuable to note the
methods which ho chose for the most
succostul crusade against Intemperance
recorded in the annals of moral reform.
Ho called a mooting at Cork In April ,
1838 , and pieaontod his plan fora move
ment designed to regenerate the Irish
people. His plan was total abstinence ,
which ho had adopted after a careful
consideration of all tlio social and moral
questions involved. Ho slgaod his own
nanio first to the pledge and then and
there began a crusade which never ended
until rather Mathew hud traversed Iro-
lund , England and America and with.
his own hand given the pledge to over
flvo millions of people. .Among his
converts wore Daniel O'Connoll and
many other notable men. It was the
most magnificent revival of morality In
the habits of the people over behold ,
It vas the most tolling hlow at the de
grading featuica of the liquor tralllc
over struck. Nearly forty jears after
his death the Father Matthew societies
of this country nlono contain over ono
hundred thousand iictivu young men
dedicated to total abstinence.
But the methods of the greatest tem
perance reformer who o\er lived aio not
the methods of the Nebraska prohibit
hltlonists of this generation. They
secKto drive whore ho aimed to lead.
They appeal to hate , where ho won five
million converts with eloquence that
went stialght to tlio heart. Ho re
formed men by argument and example.
They propose to do It by legislation , in
the RAino practical way that we lay a
tariff on Imports.
IM the influence of rather Mnthow
will go marching on lonp after the fal
lacy of prohibition has faded from the
memory of mankind ,
OJ/l/M'S / ri'TUttE ,
The result of the eleventh census
forms a group of five vigorous western
cities actively compotiug for supremacy.
Ton joars ago Omaha stood at the foot
of tills gioup , buing outranked in popu
lation by Kansas City , .Minneapolis , St.
Paul and Denver in the order named.
Today the city stands second In the list ,
having met and passed Kansas City , St.
Paul and Denver.
The position of the city in the next
census depends bololyoii the activity and
enterprise of the people. The conditions
contributing to the commercial nnd Indus
trial development of the past ton joars
wore largely duo to the vast inllux of
settlers to the state. Millions of acres
have been added to tlio cultivated aroi ,
creating now markets foi'inanufaeturecl
as veil us raw products. While Omilui
kept abro ist of the development of tbo
state , groitor efforts are iiejessa. ! ' ) ' in
tlio future if the city is to maintain the
ratio of the past. -
The fast cannot bo concealed that
greater cnorfyy and unityare essential to
keoppaco with the rival cities in the
group. The dlsappointmont over tha
lesult of the census served to stir up
latent prldo and infuaa activity in the
veins of those content to lot well enough
alone , Eich is now striving for manu
factories. Inducing the locitio.i of job
bing and retail houses , projecting new
lailto.idsmd other public enterprises.
Tlioro Is no lack of opportunities for
Omaha to improve und strengthen her
industrial and commercial position.
Foremost among her noodsaroa railionti
to the northern section of tlio state and
through the Dakotas , to seciuo the ex
panding tr.ido of that section and at the
sumo time furnish a market for its stock
and grain. Old and now roids pene
trating Iowa can bo induced to extend to
this city , if piopor efforts are made. A.
competing bridge over the Missouri is a
vital necessity. Now factories muU bo
established to uliluo the raw material
at our doors and furnish pormmont em
ployment to labor. More elevators must
ho built and operated to mike the city a
permanent , reliable grain market for the
surrounding country.
All thcso are essential -tio'"futuro !
prosperity ofjlip-citj. . it will not do to
. } 3--8nrtno achievements of the past , or
aitMicavvbci-liko for something toturn
p. The bubincss men and capitalists
f Omaha must put their shoulders to
lie wheels and pubh the interests of the
ity in every direction. Their faith
must be shown by works , and their con-
denco and ontorpilso sueh as will nt-
-racl - the city's full share of the capital
coking investment in the west.
DECLIKK OP T1W VIRTU HATE ,
The latest figures from the census
lureau of the population of the country
makes the total a little over sixty-three
million , a reduction from the earlier es-
imates of sixtj-fouror sixty-four and a
uilf millions that is very disappointing1
o tlio country. The reduced figures ,
lovtover , will not giently surprise those
tatlsticinns who have becnfollowing the
otmns for separate states as they have
) eon given out from time to timo. If the
lopulation of the country had been
hewn to bo sixty-four millions , the in-
crenso would have boon about twenty-
eight per cent for the last ton years , and
since the group of Mates comprising Now
York , Ohio , Indiana , Illinois , Michigan ,
! owaGooigiu , , West Virginia and Massa
chusetts , containing twenty-four nnd n
.uilf . million people , made a not gain of
only a little over four million , or loss
than twenty per cent , it has
xen a pu/lo to know -where
iho remaining ton millions of
increase would como from. It appears
probable that the final count will show n
gain in the last decade of only about
twenty-live per cent , or live per cent
loss than for the previous ton jcars.
The fact that immigration to this
country amounted to live million during
the lost ton years against less than three
million in the previous decade suggests
a perplexing question ns to why the rate
of increase from 1880 to 18DO should have
been loss than from 1870 to IbSO. And
the only explanation appears to bo that
in the fonuor dccado the increase from
the surplus of births ever deaths was
about the same as in the latter , in spite
of the fact that the population from
which the growth was derived was thirty
percent larger in the former poiiod.
Tbis implies a decrease of about ono-
third in the fertility of the American
neoplo nnd an astonishing decline in the
birth rate. It is difficult to believe
that the change In the direction
of smaller families has been BO rapid
nnd sudden. Tlioro has unquestionably
been a great difference , but it UUH come
on Imoro gradually than the census fig' '
ures indicate.
It is piobably the case that the trouble
IB not with the last census , but with the
ono taken twenty years ogo. The in
crease in population between I860 and
1870 was undoubtedly much under-stated
by the census in the latter year , os
peclally In the south. This made the
apparent growth from 1S70 to 1880 un
duly largo , and now the rate ol gain
seems ) to have dropped heavily nil at
once , when it has doubtless been falling
steadily but slowly for thirty joara. Tlio
one thing certain is that the rate of nat
ural increase ntncfig the American people
ple Is only about jlno-hntt as grant n It
was during tluv fiRl sixty ycnrs uftor the
organl7nllon otuij' federal government ,
And it Is a fact which from sovoi.il
points of view Is highly Inteiestiiuj.
IX TTIK nvsr. ;
The problem. , of the complete and
Bplond id iievok/pjctit | ot the west of tlio
trans-Missouri is the pioblem of gcttinp
manufactures. 3\griculturowo already
have in eitriJ/Jlnarj / advancement ,
but agriculture aumo , cvtn inthisvoliip-
tuous soil and sunny climate , tan not
make a people symmetrically grcit ami
prosperous.
The chain of thriving county seals ,
stictciilng along the lines of our tlnough
railways , should he Eometlilng moro
than a terles of trading points for their
sun otuidlng1 territory. They should la
trnnsfoimod Into a chain of manufactur
ing cities , turning the law products of
the soil Into the finished products of tlio
mills nnd factories and maintaining
populous communities of opciativos and
workmen. This -would brlnfj money and
people into tlio west , widen the fanner's
borne imiflvct and give an Irresistible
impulse to tlio giovvtb of our towns ,
cities and states.
Take Nebraska for instance. On the
mala line of the Union 1'acillc. between
Omaha and the Colorado boundary , me
the following county seats : Fremont ,
Sohuylor , C'olum bus , Central City , Grand
Island , Kearney , Lexington , North
Pintle , Ogalalla' , Sidney and Klinball ,
Tlio seat of Duel 1 Is still In controversy.
Of those cloven llttlo i-illcs , langlng in
population from llvo hundred to eight
thousand , thiee have sihoady awakened
to the possibllltiesof manufacturing and
have taken Hist steps in that direction.
Kc'irney 1ms a water power and the
promise of substantial industries. Grand
Island has a beet biigur factoty , tlio
smoke of vvho-o chlmnojs hns been seen
around the world. Fromonthns a num
ber of small Industries. Others haio
made beginnings , Imt Jill are yet IIICMO
infants in the arms of gicnl mituial re
sources. The problem is to hasten their
growth to a spkndid and beneficent
manhood ,
1'irst in the order of Industrial devel
opment como the pioducts of the homo
soil. Xcbrask.i , in spite of her present
scant progress In this direction , is pe
culiarly lieh In these opportunities. To
attempt lo imko a list of tilings tint can
be mamifactui'"d fiom ruw matoihl ob-
tainca in Xebi irka Is doubtless to Invite
the suggestion pf many things which the
writer overlook . And such amend
ments vlll bo welcomed. Hut , In the
Ih-dt phuc , there intom that faccptercd
monarch * uf the IS'cbraskn yi.ilries. A
most promifciiiur Hold for corn is offered
by the jjiowing importance of the glu
cose industry. This is a very profitable
enterprise in othereountiicb nnd foioign
capitalists have ottered to assist In the
establishment of a largofnctoiy in an in-
te t lot1 Nebraska iity. . Tlioro ! > also au
incicobiiujdcinihd for corn Hour , which
is now used b.v ii'p.itent iiroccss , in con
nection with Mieit Hour , to make a MI-
peiior quilltyof Inoad. It Is said that
the present capacity o'f mills producing
*
corn Hour iswh > ll ) inadeqxiito to the
demand. C'oinstaich isnnothorvariety
of the inanufaclurcl product of oui load
ing ter'e-a ! . ' " ' *
lext in importance to the old staple ,
( is a manufacturing possibility in K"e-
brnska , will ranlc the Hitgar luot. The
suctcbb of the Grnnl Island experiment
has fully awakened the public to IU op-
poitunity in this direction , and beet
biig.ir factories will go upas fast as cap-
italcan bo comainnded for the purpose.
Flax is another promising crop , with its
suggestions of linen mills and linseed oil
factories. Staich , oatmeal , cercalino ,
canning creeds , coin biooms and other
things which now receive but little at
tention , are samples ofwhat can bo man
ufactured from the products of our boil.
Flour mills , vhlch are already common
to most pnits of the state , ho.'so
been crippled "by exorbitant rail
road charges. Legislative relief from
th is evil will enable them to cultivate a
wider mm kot. The deposits of jollovr
ocluo and of sillcati that exists in
sonio sections of the stnte , now neg
lected , should form the bisinot prospei-
ous industries , The capital at Lincoln
is built of a beautiful Nebraska , stone
that is not now woiKedbut ought to be.
In the making of brick fiom tuisiii'pisscd
natural clay the state nib done bettoi ,
but has jot inn cli to develop.
AVheiiNebiaskahas b.-guii to develop
her possibilities as n manufacturing
state nor output will not be limited to
goods wholly composed of her
own raw materials. ' She will mike an
infinite variety of things no\v \
brought from fur east ot
the Mississippi and ti.uisportcd
far west of the Rockies. Situated In the
very heart of a gront continent , with
converging lines of railways from all di
rections , she will BUI pass in the products
of the shop and the mill , as she now does
in the products of the farm , such states
as Ohio , Indiana und Illinois
The cloven Nebraska cities we ha-vo
named aio only jv iw of the points that
could and should bo building up manu
facturing establishments , 0110 after an
other , and moro twd more each yom ,
Already the cont9fs of largo funning
dlstilcts , they vvhnld vastly enhance the
prosperity of thbir patrons , by utilizing
their products In the uiannov described.
When the stnto is full of mills and fac-
toiles Chicago cmin speculators will
cense to regulate the priio of corn. .
There vlll bo § 11010 people to feed at
homo and moro Interests bidding for tlio
surplus product , "
In the problem of establishing manu
factures lies thoVMv to the future of tlio
west. It is a problem that must 1x >
woiked out "by individuals anl commun
ities. Itis a matter which demands tlie
serious attention of enterprising men
ll\ing in the scores of piospcrous towns
along the lines of the great railway b > s-
tcins.
And when wo begin in earnest to solve
that problem vvo shall bo moving tovvaid
the realization of as gtoat a destiny a3
over walled upon the energy and e'ntcr-
prise of men.
THIS efforts of kindred orders to
bring about a federation of lallwny
employes is likely lo full. Dispatches
from Plttsburg indicate that the con
vention of locomotive onginours will pro-
nounto against the Bchomo. "While
western members ol the order favor
federation , eastern influence etwtuhis
Chief Artlmr In holding the brotherhood
nloof from "ontnngllng alliances' " The
policj adopted at the Denver convention
last year will probibly bo followed tit
Fit tsburp to refer the question to n
committee , which U equivalent lo its
defeat. Such notion will servo to widen
the blench between hbor organizations
whoso interests are common. The
magnificent support given the brother
hood In Its battle with the liurlington
reid promised for a time to unite all
trainmen. Dut the engineers are
determined to stand nlone , ar least while
Arthur influence dominates , and will
allllInto with kindred ciders only when
their assistance is ncodcdto help them
out ola bcilousdifliculty ,
T.HK movements among the masses in
irojio at this time , and p.uticiilarly
among tholabororffimizallons.aro boinj ;
unaided by statesmen with profound
interest. Mr. John Swinton , who hus
just returned from uu extended visit to
lluropo duilntr which ho made himsoll
un-y fully nequnlntcd with the popular
fooling , sujs that ho over ) where saw the
evidence of rewirgont life among the
sses of the people , liven in Italj
and Rome ho heard ideas that surpilsod
lilm fiom men with whom lie conversed ,
The social question was particularly
prominent In the attention of the people
of Franco , vvhilo in England a great
change has tal < on place within
n fet ? jcars in the thought
of the common people logardui"
social questions Mr. Svlnton viewed
the situation abroad ns portcntuous of a
treat upheaval before ninny years , and
although In his eass the wish tnav bo
filhei to the thought , thcio isioason to
beliovotluit the rulers and statesmen of
T.uroiioarenotvithoutnpprehenslonlhat
the time nuy bo near at lutid when tlio
popular demand for a radical change in
KOVO run lentil policies and in the social
and indtiHtilnl ouler can not longer bo
bifcly disregarded.
JAA Got'l.D is again skurrying1 mound
the country In search of health to cope
vvith an income of ono million a month ,
.And Tct , ho&puin * the seivlces of thou-
Hinds icnd ) and anxious to rcllovo hlai
of the load
IN' THE SWIM.
" \Vlipn Charley Van Camp vis In the
council" snUu member of that body , "ho
attended only ubojt ono meeting in eight on
an average. A. nun who only trcts nround
oiicc 111 two months can't ' do much damage ,
jiud in this light his election to tlio oQUo of
commissioner wouldn't be such a calamity
alter all"
The cohesive poivor ofpublli1 pap is finely
illustrated in the meetings of the city council.
rly la the yew vtlisn all the vaiious
lunds woi-o Hush the meetings wore
all attended by a full icprcscntatlou ot the
city's iolons , and nitjotirnniciitm seldom
reached before midnight. Nov all h charged.
Iho vniious funds lire piacticallj" exhausted
and it h seldom tint u quorum is on hand
promptly at the meetinghoui , TliescHslons ,
too , that used to last four hours now barolj *
liist logger thm oue.
Sanitary Inspector Morrissoj- has not yet
rfcoveicd from a surprise ho experienced ut
the democratic county convention. Ho per-
( ] fI ufrjcmt to namohiin as o senatorial
candidate midiiictuied In KlowinR colors the
bnist of applause that \ voulu1KO up from the
Simosct braves at tlio mcro mention of the
name ofMotnssuy , Tlionuinevvasprcscntctl ,
and wliciithccngrosshisclorltrcailtbo result
oltne ballot Moirlsse 's inmo had n lone
some fipiro ono after It. Hie friend hnd
proved faithful. Morrissey attributed the
shortness of votes to a mist.ndewtandiug and
vailcil ui n his friend to namohim again
when the ofllco of reprcseatattvo out on
u still limit for candidates. Affain the name
ofMorrisseyvvus presoiited and produced the
same support that had followed bis for.uncs
in the seuatotial contest
Monlssoj'can't undcKtund It.
Among the many exciting Incidents of this
campaign of prejudice and passion , " the spec
tacle of tuo Hon. Gcoreo W. E.
Eorsoy In tto net of address
ing hh aboripinal constitueuts descr\'os
to be remembered. Itwould mulco a IHtii
subject for a great historical painting. Stand
ing in the midst of the adtnlrlnpr redskins and
naking his host stags bow , tlio Fremont
statesman tjegm Ms speech , "Gentlemen of
tlio Onuiu tribe. " In. tlint simple snliita-
tioa , soeoniwoiiplacc under ordinary olrcuin-
st UIL-OS , the Third district conKrossinan told
the wlwlo stoiy oflho ptodiglous strides of
civilisation in the west. 1C ho Lul under
taken the same fe it at the same spot nnd in
the presence of tlio saino audience , thirty
years jyo , the response would Imvo been u
\vlld viarwlioop , ntiulckllftin ? of the hair ,
nnd a courier to Thomson and Kem , ttllti
them tlmt they might flslit out the
jwlltical squabble without ftutliei
x-ofercico to the geaLleinon from. Fremont.
But it istliojcnr of ourLonl 1890 , and Mr.
Doi-seycscapeil with the assur.uico that ho
\vouM have the suuportof "tbo gentlemen of
thoOiiuiuti tnbe"if tlicv could venture to
liopo for the postonlco npoliituieiitj | Inter.
Out In Red Willow county the republican
members of the alliance nro lopoitod to bo
withdrawing from the org.inization In largo
timnbeis because of the too nppavcnt enthu-
hlasm of their democratic brethren for lloyd
anil Mdvelgh m. TUo "non-partisan1' aspect
olthe lllaiiiols vearltigofC ns election day
approaches.
The republican campaign In the interior of
tkostatols warming up , The Custor count >
papers contain announcements of tiulessthni
thirty-five republican rallies niraugoa for the
next tuo weeks in that county. Dut , then ,
Custerls as bis ossomfcor the Now Hngland
states.
What Sliikes firovor Grant.
IVilii > ( rjila ) I'nii.
Chatincoy Dopew calls G rover Cleveland
the "greatest oxumplo of an American cltl
yen. " Ho cannot have seca a pamnraph tlui
is ( 'olni ? nround the novvsp.ipors about a man
cut west wtio weighs UK ) ixiunds , Tint In
llvldual is about twice as great us Mr
Cleveland.
Too Clufwlo lor Cnnville.
A'tic Voik.Smi
ICnnias Citj * ia much nutated over the
question wliethcr the annual puiade ot th
I'rlestsof ' 1'ulliis shull be continued. "Sluil
Talltus Athene die1 ! ush our esteemed con
temporary , the Kansas City Times , In nvolco
full ofheartbicaV Our own opinion Is tha
the glaucous eyed goddess Is altogether too
staid and trim for the brash nnd lunyuu
soutli-viest. Pullaitlicno may do vvel
enough for IJoston , nnd It , in fact , th
tutelary divinity In joint iiartiicrshlp wit
the codflsli-of that AmeniWo settlement
Hut Kansas City needs a high Itlckor and
lilgh roller , atuorry , bustllug , ntulcxuberan
noddess , leaiiliiB fiav'ly frum boom to boom
Decidedly , the Kansas City i oplo ihoulil lo
I'.illua ' Athene die or aoiil her buck to
Boston , wlilch Is worse ,
ASP1L GRAND CINE RUSH
Cto State "University SopLomorcs
the Amlltioiis Freihuieiii
BOLD BURGLARS THREATEN TO SHOOT ,
Tlio 1/liuliui ; of n Jllirderoiis Itcllo
IVtnshor llleknnl Cnuglit nml
Wire Gets n Divorce
-A. Terr I Mo Itlilo.
LINCOIV , Kob. , Oct. IS. ( Special to Tin
3Er. ] Toilny the students of the stntc tini-
vcisity owned the town. It win the time
cliosen for the nnnull grand cnuo rush be-
. \veoti the frcthtnnn nnd sophomore classes ,
uid tlio celebrjitloti of thlstrudltloniilchiss
struggle Is dear to every college mini's heart
uidcutins prominent 11 figure In , the curri-
ciihiiu IB do Hunt c.xaiiilnatlous niul grud-
intltifr day. An immense- crowd of students
from the various colleges nuil also hundreds
ofdtlzims turned out to witness tlio great
struggle , The hour chosjnfor the exciting
spectacle wtuD n. in. , but the work of select-
lift the four strongest mon In the ol for
cano holders at tlio comnionioinont ol tlio
ush consumed an hour ntid n half. Jleuii-
while the students nmusoil tnonnclvcs by
'tossing" the various PIHOUS of note pres
ent. Chief oll'olko Mcltelc , 1'ollco Juilgo
louston nnd oven tlio nevvspipor men
were subjoctcil to tlio ordeal of being
tlirowti three times each nbout n
do/en feel Ititothonlr. A rush was made to
rrib some of the digiilfled profcssoi-s and
rive them n triple aerial lilght. Hut nearly
nllof them had Uilieu the precaution to loelc
thcitoorslusidliig into tlielr reeitallon rooms
nnd they gilinly stood at their windows
safely , vuittng to sec the ero.ib struggle of
.ho dayeomincncc , L rof. Hunt , Instructor
nihetorlo nnd a powerful inati vvoighltiK
over two hundred pounds , neglected to loctc
iisdoo > . , andwas astoiilslied to llml himself
the prisoner of nnnrmjof stitdeuti. lliey
carried him down two or tluco HlghH of
stalls bj main force , but Jubtuoforo reaching
the campus lie managed to hrealf awuj and
cseaDO Ills puisuera. The professor bee line
vcrv niipv.
rinullvtho contestants appeared , clad iti
: tiOoldest giiTincuU in their possession , nnd
win ) ereotcil with ohccrs. The Ircsnmoti
wcro escorted bv the ftluinni , while the
soiihomoresvcro heniledvvith u Ijand. Tlio
four heul iinhcis cliosen to grip tliu
cano for the fru.shmonveio Will
Jochr.uiVill Crrpcntcr , John Love nnd
Leon id m Miller , 'ilioso ' for the sophomores
weio WVolfe \ , D. Woitli , If B. Daui-
uulA M.ncletsou The ' 'cano" ' In ( iucs-
tiou was merely symbolic , being in icality a
stout hickory pole four feet long- .
'Iho fieshiitan contcstiints iiumbcreil tlnrty-
. oand the sophomores twtnty-Jlvo. 'llioy
stooil drawn ii | > in bittloiirraj about a lun-
di-od ynrils apart , and at a' gi\ui shmal
rushed to the center , vhei-o the c.ino-D'iip-
icrs btoocl. Two kni nis Inn tournament
could not have como together with a grciter
shock. 'Jlieu ' such 11 s > ( iauiblo onsuednslb
vilnossed onlv m n cwno lush or n ilot.
\Viestling , pulling , jerking ill mud con fusion
mill tlieclothlng' of oci'3" oontcsUnt was
.0111 almost Into tatton I'oi tun Uclj no
joni/ . wire ViroUon The contest lasted just
line minutes , nncl when the Judges called
inieitvis discovcted that there werojust
.winty-Hvo . lunds on the cane Thirteen oC
.hcso . Ixiloiigod to sophomores nnd twelve to
'rcshtncn 'Jho sophs were dochrod the
vinnci-s , and they innuhed triumphnntly
> mk to the main bulldinttsiiiKing 'IFoelAs '
riwugb I Thought I Jhtl. " This accords
liun tlio oxclusUo prlvilogo of carrjlug
canes throughout tlio your.
ATTiiuioivror Tin : HLVOIA-III.
Tuesday iilRlit t\vo burglars entered the
louse of W. II McC'ieerj , .1-41 H street , by
iiintng the kcj in the front iloor. Ono mil-
sacked the house while tlio other stooil guird.
\Iis AltUtootr hoard u noise , .uid Kcttiugup
it the gas in tuo hallway -At she tunica
around \vascoufiontcd by a nun who
oinpellcUierat the point of a revolver to
urn it out.All ttio money In the house ,
soiiio&lfiwastikotitho , , thieves Iiilinn to
itidtwoRold watches , whicli tlio intmtos
ivorrcd were at the icpair shop
Tjnst night tlio house of Mr. J.
" \Vmigh , manager of the Lincoln pilnt
indLoloicompanj-at 111J H stix-ot , wason-
toiwl in a hltemanner Mii.Viiugh \voko
ip Just us the fillov wns stmiUIng in.
thodoorlushinj ( ( his daiklatitcrn nrouuJto
gcthis bo.irings. She rosoupln lied iiwik-
eniug her husband , but the burglar drew his
over ready revolver ntid compelled both to lie
down while ho went through the house. Ho
secured H or $5 inmomy und $2i'i worth of
watches and jcvvelrj. The police arc ; work-
tig on a clue.
AMtninEllP.It'S ' WKll'OJf FOUND.
Iho ( run withvv hi oh John Taylor Itlllod
3ob Woods in April. 18 11 , was found today
11 .ipomlnt Hand Vourthstreets , aiio pool
wns formerly a largo one , but hns been dry-
nj , ' up , and at presout Is rather stmllow.
rhis inoininftthonvlly loaded team bolong-
; iiRto the street commissioner's g.mg w.ia
driven through the pond. Ono wheel struck
tlio stock of tlio long hidden pun and the Im
pact forced up the otlierrnd. 'J'nylor , vhilo
in Jill , confessed tokillinK Woodsmid slid
tliatUhailus Curtis , who bad been intiinito
\vitli Mrs. Voods , had loaned him the
gun und gave him $ M to do the
Iced He pewtstently rofuwcl , however ,
to tell whit ho hnl done with
thogim and all the ponds , including thoonn
wlieio it was found , \viro drngKd. ( Soy-
niour , tlio mind reader , aho uttcmptid l > ylus
nrtor huinbiiRKCi-.v to Icaiu vylicio it wns ,
but failed , although ho .said it VMS under
water. Curtis denied litvmg the pun , of
course , and guvo as an o < : tuso forlLsnot
boincr in his iwssegslon that ho had sold It to
n. nuui whose name * ho Old not know. The
gun has been idcntillod by ccrtiilu mirks
upon it in the one fonueily oxvncu bj Curtis.
Taj lor is at prose-lit serving n life ioutcnce
ia'the psniunti.iiy , iilthouRh his attorneys
Imvo appealed tlio case to the supreme court
Mrs Woods and Cuitis. who wore cnulined
fora yeji awaitingtiiul , nro still in the city.
niCK.Min cvnoriT ,
"When the case of W. H. Kiekiud , who is
cbnrKedwlth committing a ciiiniiinl assiult
on fourtom-ycnr-oldMiiud Ross , -\vns cilled
fern hcuring at Wilbur , the lecherous follow
failed to appear Ills bull was declared for
feited and his arrest ordered. A.ftcr comlcl-
orabio tdogrnrihitiK ami other Hlcuth hound
work lievvui tllscoverud by Doputj Hlieriff
J 0 , Dome , secreted In a iwx car passing
th rough Lincoln. Wokaul wns taken l ack to
\Vilhur wheroho nttemptcd to L plaiu his
liisht. Ho wns also nriaigncd for contempt
of eoiu-t In attempting to turn per with u wit
ness , but this could not bo positively proven.
Thowltntss nfurridto was JVlack lloss , ivlio
after Uickardhad n pnvnto tilk with her.
attempted to commit an idde. Botli Uifkuii
und the Uoss girl nro In ttio ousted ) of the
blicrlfT >
Yesterdny Ulrs. Wckaitl secured n divorce
from hui husband in ttio district couit of Ha-
linofount ) ' . The re.i-sotis for hei actions
need no enumeration ,
A KlllCllll'Ll , HUB ,
Jlrs. V , J. Bush , mother oC Councilman G.
A. Hush , had nil exciting adventure last
night from which she luckily escaped with
out In jury hho lind Just returned lo town
on the lOo'clouc train : icd entered hack No.
I i to bo diivcn to K C. 1'uller's at Twentieth
ami R. U'liilotiii-iilnir tha hack fm her to
alight , the holies took flight at u piece of
papjr and they ditshnd west on U street ,
throwing the driver from his seat nud knock-
itiKhiiusonsclKis. Mr a Uusli , astonished at
theiratoof Hpi\d ! at which the vehicle wiw
going , looked out nnd dbooured that the
lioroei 1ml no driver amlwf'rJfiiniilng uvvuy.
Tire trifjhtonvd niilinals rau lo H , tuniud
south on UlcM'ut'.i , iiKiiiii turiial on N , nnd
again u block west unit tioadod for the HCiiUi
on Tenth , Thtoughout the toiTltlo Hue
Mw , limh piwurvwl her proscnoo of mind
and fluttcr il her handkerchief from tlio
window of thovuhldo IMA signal of dUtrtss.
Several pmtliMneni hlivd hue Us and ttiirtedlii
pursuit , whUolntiratlo/in ( others luiiipixloa
hortcss and attempted to liad oltthonin-
n\vuy , Aftortlie liorseshml inn oycruinilo
Mis Hush bciinnualuriiiwl and , opi'iilng tlio
dooi , she leaped to Iho proiuid IVortmulfly
sliduscupocl unhurt Jho ruuaxvays were
finally stopped near the homo for the friend
less uftor running iidUUuce of twoialloj.
llItltGKI ) WITH tOKSHICirV.
0. A. Ilush. Hied A petltlouln tlio district
court ( his afternoon , fhnrulng that D. 0.
Spencer ntid tj. Glluinphriiy. the Inttor A
banker of Uiliclty. witheotnmrlnirto defraud
him of twciitr-clnt lot ) In North 1'nrk ml el I-
tlon. llusli luiel entered Into ntruelo with
r , gUing these lots ns putt tmvnieut ,
and IciriiiK the ilcoelln < * KVO\\ with Hum *
nhroy until Ilush could satisfy lilmsolf that
ccrlaiu roiircsontjitloiia of Sjietuxir wow true.
13um chnrgcs that unknown lo him ttio doud
vv llled for recoitl. nnd on Thursday Inst
lluinphroy also put on renxird n pretended
tended mortgnfo for J1J,000 , exe
cuted on t l.c lots by S ) > eiicor. Tlmt ? Si < cnvor
is about to deed these lots to ft third purty ,
nnd it * ho I1 * n ucn-resldcnt and Insolvent ,
Phlutlffvvill ho without mleenuto remedy *
unless Spoiieor Is ctijolnotl. Juilgo Field
grantoela Uiinpornry Initinctlon und set the
hearing for next Saturday , l lilntllt also
asks tohnvollio deed set ivsldo and the mort-
pniro ilvrliircil null and void.
'I ' lilt afternoon In the dlslrlot court Tlova
A. , UaleMnsUed for ft divorce from her hus *
baud , .Alfred. Slio pleads non-siippoit , al
though her husband is suflleloutly ublo to
maintain her
Tom Mulvlhllt nml II , D. 1'lorscn , pmtnori
lusblll iiosteji1 * . hnvo fallen out utiil Atiilvlhlll
hiu roiilcvlunl thccntiro bill-posting outllt ,
consisting of a horse , 3XK , ( ) feet of bill boards
a ud other etceteras.
John M. Mlm re ton liv liecn engaged tent
nt Norfolk on the th ,
1 > AVII ) ' SIIDU or TIlCSTOIir.
DdvlelGilU-rt today flled n cross bill to the
jvctltlonof his wlfo Laiini for n dlvone , nml
ho declare" ? therein that slio Is the onu on - - - -I
whom nil blame Blioulcl full , find ho Is the onu
who should ho grunted tlio < tlvorce Ilesays
tlial he provided Ms wife and chiMrcii with'
comfortable } homo und plenty of food and
elothliianel ( ! was In cverv ivsjiect innoelcl
husband Dcspito this fuel , Iti April , 1SS7 ,
IVIrs , Gilbert , utterly retrarelliss of her marl-
UililuLiis and without her husband's consuiU
wilfully deserted him nnd has persistently
rein.iiniHl avva ) , although ho has lepciteelly
asked her to rctUm for the sake of the chil
dren.
SJOOXA.X AOINXHEM > .
Aftcrhnving his saloon taken nwny from
him for Iho second llnio in tno cln.fs by legal
process , Toiiiiny IS'ooiian again came out on
tontoiluyby uMciiiKtho district court lor an
Injunction restraining the slicrilt from hold-
inghls ( joods Tomnivdninu that lilsBtocI ;
isortli \ \ less Ibtin fr'iOO , nnd us hols the head
of a family nnd has no other property than
hisstookof liiior ( | , those goous nro excintit
according to section f > ! i ! oT the civil i-oele.
Tommy says further tliat the sheriff thro it-
ens to con tt two to innlio lcvlc of the pretended
tended execution of sueh slock nsho may rej-
co'io ' fi-oui time to tlmo and Hint thereby lii't
business will bo entirely prohibited Ho
theii-foio asb for a jiorpctual Injunction.
Thocouit giMiited a toinornrj injunction anel
Tommy Is still doitiR business nt tlui old
stjind. The trouble has been mused liy the
tVestcrn invcsttnont coiiipnny insisting on
Tommy p lying fern lethe eloes not want.
I1EAOII ANO ritATTCOMIIlOMHK.
Chainhers 1) ) I3oic.li and SdnoyA. ) 1'ratt.
who ha o been ill Iho throes of an nttcmiitoel
dissolution of pnrllioi-bhip , nnd have been
freely nliinp tboiropltiionn of each otlicr In
the nowspaperj , luvo Iliiatlj declileii to llg-
urcativolj kiss and innke up. Aicnrilingly
tlio enso was dismissed in the district coni't
this morning and no rccoiver vlll bo ap-
pointuil. It iisnidtlmtsotnokitidof a com-
promlsu luis been eltectcd between thopait-
ODD ) AXIIKNIU.
-A petition is being circulated by the members -
bors of the L.iuc.istcr buthit the pivse-nt
term of the distilct court bo neljouinod
soon , as the time for commencing the No
vember tennis rapidly approaching ,
Uho West Sidollusiiiess Men's union eC
South Sioux City hns liled articles of Incor
poration withtlio following persons as mem
bers of the association : U. U Sinllny , 0 , D.
Shrcve. Louis Jeep , 7 . M. Balm , J M.
Moon , \VilliamS. UlilUK 0 II niilton , A.
Li H eker leucl Doiinlcl Blcl oun.rlhe objenit
of the comp.iny is the liandltug of real estate
and the building up of SoutU Sioux City.
The caplui stock is $1 .OOO.OOO
VOICE or sr.vria . \
Frcwnit Unit.
Ecrtiollitc-licoc'lcls a filluro.nndho . slioulel
bo ailed In , in the Interest oflho Aiueru.iu
stump. _
Jlltolicoulc's niontly Hhlrt. -
rremont 'frllmne
Mr. Ilitchcock exhibited lust uiglit some
rod woolen nnlorgjiiincnts njou vhluh hci
claimed tlio nrleo must boralsod 011 account
of the MclCialcy bill Thl * thbiR of the dmn-
ocrate winiiiRtho UlooJyslilrtlsa now plnso
of a novel situation
The Tier or l'rihililtlon ,
The narrowness of i > ioliibltlon ilocs not
comport vvith the genius of a fao people , who
object naturally to hiving their hnblts suli-
Jeetcil to the ccn'-or-ship ' of the state. Tlio
vicoof prohibition lloslnthoassuniptifnth.it
the tcmpcrato use of liquor U an impossi
bility. _
JVIarkcd in I'lnln
God played no confidence gimo vvhon ho
made Bill McKclghtn. Ho wrote the char
acter of the nan onhis faoobo plainly tlmt
a wayfaring mm , though a fool , nooa uot
ore therein. Jf you want to vote for a born
shLbtcr , JIcKciglian Is the man , but don't at-
tcrwareis blaiuo God Almighty.
Nil K A | ) jnmiiolg.
Congressman Council will ho ro elected.
Thedcmocrjts arc endeavoring to elect a
'ounp : man who cunio In Nebraska n fovv
cars ago nnd who bus confined himself to
pulling tne leg" of the democrats , but ho
cannot bo elected. Hie votor.s ot the 1'irst
district Itnow that Mr. Council hw spout
mobtof the tlmo in Washington'worklnp for
hespeoploof his elistrlctand the people will
si'iidhiuilmekas a. congi-essinan. Wo don't
vantto trv any oKperiments with a youny
nan . - .
_ _
nierooiinry
As evidence that the imported prohibition
speakers are "refoniicrsfor revenue onlj , "
tinny boinciitlonodthatnt the late mucilng
it AVriL'ht's ' CJiovo , Mra. IlufCnuu ilcmandod
icr flfi nnd rofntoil to speik until tlio amount
WJ3 paid. AVhorcupon the nudleueso was
conipollod lowait until tlio amount was then
andthcror.iitjcd by contribution and paid. . -
over to her. after which she proceeded vvith
n rhmlsslonnrj" work. A.t1castthls is thu
version of nflnlrs as given l > y cno who was nn
oyciwltticsb of the proceedings ,
lhe Dinner Or4te > r.
Tribune , , " '
In the matter of post prandial clon.uonco
lu'itlco has no\er been done the professional
trump. He can always inako his most olo-
qucnt speech when ho is aftordiuncr ,
K < ; 'ir > rjolty. )
Fossils are fioo. The house was bound to
gctevuii vvith the scuatosomeihow.
OMA.HA
LOAN A.ND TRUST
COMPANY.
andauaraiit ed Oapttal.KVW.OOO
Buuwrltacd > , . . . .
1'a.ldln Capltnl OiOOOO
Uuyu und hulls stock * and bonds ; ncs tltot
coiiimorclal riperrocclve - und oxoculm
trusts- nets ns tran ter njctnfc and tru tfoof
o-irixiratloris , takes churgu of proiicrty , oul-
leuti tuxes.
OmahaLoan&Trust Co
N
SAVINGS BA.JNK1.
S. E. Cor. lOt.li and Doualns Sta.
ratdln Cupltnl . . . . . * 5V03
BuUcrUwl aiiiiaumantud Oupltal . . 100,007
LluWHt ofKlooUIieililorH. 15)0,000 )
6 I'erUcntlntnrrHt I'alrt on Do limits.
flCAMCJ IA.MiK.L'.iahler.
OOlcira : A U. Wyinin , prcsldtnt. J.J. lirown.
dooiiruHldcntVT. . Wymnn. trciisurtr ,
Dlicitoti : A.U. WjmanJ. ll.Mlllard. J , J.
Urovrn.Uuy 0. Uurton , K. W. Haul , T
UblluiCiiU. Qeur&oU. lake.