Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 21, 1893, Part Two, Page 16, Image 16

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    ' T
TTTTC ( WATT A HAFT-V RmnAV. MAY ! t T\\T.NTV PAni ?
T1IEWORR OF NIMBLE FINGERS
An Army of Typowrileis Who Mafco a
Living in NOT ? Torki
TWO-THIRDS OF THEM ARE WOMEN
TVcIl Tnia When Competent , Hut Slml of
Them Am Morn Anilom to Slurry
Tlmn to IlcoomA Kxpcrti WAT * *
Trlnl * nml Triumph * .
"When n man comes itihoro with n GO-
ficnt job , " wild the pretty typewriter to
iv Now York Hornlil reporter , "and be
gins business with some remark about
my pretty eyes I charge him 75 cents. "
, She gave a vicious dab at the key
board and tossed her head toward the
door through which her Into customer
had just departed , llcr eyes wore un
deniably bright and darkly beautiful ;
her hair a dead brown so dark It was
almost black and BO flno it fcccincd an
orderly mass of cobweb.
"No wonder a woman In business for
herself doesn't ' care to marry , " she con
tinued. ' 'Men are such foolsl Now
there's a man who never saw mo before
a man who appears to bo a gentleman
who comes in my ofllco a public ofllco
right before my assistants and talks
about my hair and eyes ! Resent It ?
No ; what's the use ? I've ' grown callous.
It used to make mo angry ; now I take
their work iinci compliments and laugh
at them. But supposing that man would
go into the olllco of a male stenographer
and sit down and say : 'How bright and
fresh you look this morning ! I have a
small job hereof you can do It right
nway. Now. please don't look cross be
cause there Isn't more money in it. By
the by , excuse me , but did anybody over
toll you what lovely eyes you have ?
What ! The last fool who was in hero
Bald BO ? Isn't 75 cents pretty steep for
BUeh a letter ? Good morning ! '
"Now that is exactly what I had a mo
ment ago only more of It. Because I'm
a woman I must go through the world
treated like a fool and meekly accepting
the position ! No , I'm not particularly
sensitive about it I. get fun out of it oc
casionally at the expense of my tor
mentors. But think of the interference
with business ! " she added , with such n
matter of fact naivoto that I laughed
more than the occasion would seem to
warrant.
This young lady Is one of three sisters ,
nil stenographers and typewriters and
all engaged in independent business for
themselves. They have three * offices ,
employ about a do/en girls and live to-
gctncp. They do all kinds of work
legal , literary , dramatic , French , Spana
lull , etc. They conduct their business
as a partnership , share and share alike ,
and transact an enormous amount of it.
They furnish stenographers by the week ,
day , hour or job clay or evening. One
of the sisters is the most 'expert and
rapid typewriter I ever saw. In fact.
Until 1 saw hoi ; I would have been loath
to believe that the manipulation of the
machine could bo brought to such a
high state of perfection. .
An Army of Typewriters.
From information obtained of the dif
ferent typewriting machine firms it is
estimated that about 18,000 , persons are
employed as operators of machines in
Now York city alone. From 23,000 to ,
o,000 machines are out of this city. Of
these several thousand are necessarily
idle all of the time. It is probable , how-
pvor , that at least 18,000 machines are in
active use.
Think of this army of operators going
to work every day at the keyboard , if
you would bo reminded of the vast vol
ume of business transacted in the offices
of the metropolis.
Two-thirds of this army arc women.
The extraordinary influx of women in all
the avenues of commercial life of recent
years is particularly marked in' this
calling. The fact is owing to the sur
plus of educated women thrown upon
their own resources and to the peculiar
adaptability of women as amanuenses.
Women learn stenography and the |
manipulation of the machine quicker
hnd are more tractable as office assistants - '
ants than men. They can ufTord to work
for less money than men. In working
lor loss money than men they are fatlll
able to make more money in proportion
to the labor performed than they could .
pot In other walks of life open to them.
A cosy office and a typewriting machine
arc more congenial to the fonuilo mind
than a kitchen , the factory , the counter
or oven teaching. And there is more
money in it than in any of these other
employments. There is room for steady
advancement for the ambitious and
capable woman. There are women in
Now York getting from $20 to $23 and
130 , and oven as high as $40 a week as
stenographers and typewriters. They
ftro worth it , too.
Of course , when wo get above $2o a
week the number grows rapidly smaller ,
but they do make more in several in-
Htnncos. Toll mo , if you please , in what
other line of business women can obtain
higher salaries. I huvo noticed that in any
calling whore a woman becomes espec
ially export the question of sex disappears
Und she commands for her services what
ever a mail would got under the same
circumstances. If BOX lias anything utall
to do with it , the difference is to her ad
vantage. The great drawback to the ad
vancement of women in this line tluf
labor , as it is in other fields , is incom-
wotoncy. Few women euro to oxcol.
Most women look upon this employment
us but temporary , and do not consider it
worth while to do any better than is
accessary to make a living. This IK the
thlof dilleronco botwcon men and women
is stenographers. And this difference
Ihows in the respective salaries paid.
Efficient male stenographers got from
HG to $25 per week. First class male
, Monographers got from $1,500 to $1,800
Mid up to $2,500 per year. The average
falury paid male stenographers in New
York is 514 * per week.
Skill Well Itemuncrntctl.
The average salary paid fomulo stonog
raphors hero Is 811 per week. A larg
and compoUnt class of women get from
115 to $18 per week. This class would
pot bo able to take testimony in court or
report speeches verbatim , but they are
efficient for office work. Many of thorn >
combine a technical knowledge of the
business ofotholr employers with their
cervices as amunuoiibos , Skill in the
preparation of legal forms , preparing
specification * } for architects or speclu
Ability in literary or medlca ;
nomenclature ' or something else ill
render' the woman more or less li
able in addition to her stenographic ft ,
Those of them who earn $25 to $30 per
week are usually valuable for such quali ,
ties. Any woman intelligent enough ,11to
eorvo in any particular line of business
as a stenographer and who is handling
letters concerning the detail ) ) of tha
business every day ought to bo able toed
* inastcr the whole thing within a limited
iinio. It Is alone the feeling of indllTer-
f nee and the euiiposcd temporary char
acter of the worlt that prevents. If the
houo and expectation of finding some
body to maintain her without labor > ro
Completely abandoned there woujd be
to prevent a woman getting as
CTood n salary as n man , everything olfo
being equal. As it IB , and probably
over will bo , the great majority of these
12,000 women who work in "tho Now
York offices got but from $7 to $10 per
week.
Counting those In Jersey City and
Brooklyn thnru are twenty-seven ;
schools , turning out about 1,000 steno
graphic and typewriting students upon
the public every year. The women who
merely operate the machine and make
no pretensions to the stenographic art
are so few that they are scarcely worth (
mentioning. They are nulto ns scarce
M good stenographers. The latter are
of necessity compelled to combine typewriting -
writing with shorthand. These are
often so expert with the machine that
for ordinary business correspondence
they take dictation directly on the machine -
chine without resorting to stenography.
The dealers in typewriting machines
constitute themselves agents for the
placing of applicants for positions , keep
ing a register of those who use their
machines. Those who apply to thorn
are examined as to fitness and graded as
to salary they are able to earn and what
they want. A slnglo linn placed 400
beginners during the past year. At the
same time this firm registered 1,001) )
applicants , 033 of whom were males. Of
the whole number applying 1,387 , were
furnished permanent positions. Tem
porary places were obtained for 1,2CO.
These figures Indicate that many of the
applicants came back again and again ,
either because they were unsatisfactory
to the employers or because they were
dissatisfied with their places.
I am told that out of the whole twenty-
seven schools there are but three whoso
graduated pupils can bo accepted with
any assurance of being what they pro
tend to bo. These three will not take
pupils in stenography unless they can
first pass a satisfactory examination in
general information , the construction of.
the English language and spelling. Of
course some of this kind of pupils get
into tha other schools and come out all
right. They como out all right oven
when they buy text b6oks and teach
themselves.
The 12,000 women of Now York who
spread themselves over the city every
morning save on holidays and Sundays
are driven by necessity to earning their
own living. "They comprise as great a
variety of the sex as can bo found Jn any
walk of life. As a class they are
good , intelligent , industrious and fairly
well educated. In many cases they are
cultured and refined ladles who were
born to bettor things. The instances
whore they are not quito as good as they
might be are not more numerous in pro
portion to the whole number than
among nn equal number of women in
other walks "of business life. There urea
a good many silly young women from
the stenographic schools who regard
the business as a sort of a picnic a
romantic road to matrimony.
\Vuj' and ilublU.
"There are young women , " said an
agent , "who will never stay in a situa
tion ! long unless they think there is an
opening there for a matrimonial connec
tion. They sail around from place to
place on the lookout for a wealthy
'mash. ' And first rate marriages have
been contracted between lady stenog
raphers and their employers , or some
body with whom the amanuensis comes
in control fn the course of business. I
am bound to.say , however , these matrimonial
menial apples do not fall often and
never to my knowledge into the lap of
this 'silly billy' sort/of a girl. "
Ond of the most fruitful sources of
friction between the female stenographer
qnd her employer is the apparent inabil
ity of many women to separate their
personality from their business. If the
bosiTgots "rattled" and speaks sharply
it is received in the light of a personal
iusul't. The man of big affairs has no
time to waste upon preliminaries and is
" frequently abrupt of speech. Some
"women never gel accustomed to this
and some get right up and go and hunt
another job. They nro looking for
somebody who will treat them as if they
were the "lady of the nouse. " As most
business men have to meet'that ' kind of a
woman as soon as they get homo it is
very uatut ally likely to pall upon the
tusto.
Any observant visitor to the lower
town can 'see hundreds of female typewriters -
writers rushing uround'about the lunch
hour and a glance Into any of the cheap
dining rooms of Fulton street or neat
subcellars 'of Broad or Nassau , between
12 and 1 o'clock , will disclose them by
scores. Most of them bring luncheon
to the office , but even these gladly seize
upon that half an hour's liberty to
take the air and indulge in gossip with
some-friend. You can see these young
ladies with their arms around each
other , sauntering along lower Broadway
in the crowd , just as. school girls are
seen walking about the grounds of a
female academy. They are as much at
home beneath the shadows of Trinity
and amid the rush of that financial cul-
dc-pac of Wjill street and the roar of
Broadway as if they were gathering
autumn leaves in a back yard or moon
ing their.llttlo secrets among the vino-
chid mounds of some silent cemetery.
These are the younger sort , the romance
of whoso lives Is not yet of the past.
They are not adverse to the observation
of good looking young men , though as a
rule tholr constant contact with the op
posite sex in business life has made them
IndllVercnt , If not cynical , on this head.
The Hotter .Sort.
But there are women down her o to
whom life is a more borious thing. They
are the support of children and brothers
and sibters and aged parents and invalid
husbands women of culture and social
refinementwho would nomoro bo caught
loafing on Broadway and amusing them
selves among the crowd than they would
bo caught stealing. They carry with
them everywhere the gentle dignity of
pure womanhood and their faces bear
the soulf ulness of intellectual life. Thcco
are the women who are notunfrcquontly
lifted from the position of amanuensis to
dictator of. the domestic fortunes of
their former employer. But whether
they reach that social elevation or not ,
no title an employer could confer would
add to tholr real worth. Wherever
they are employed they bring with thorn
an unmistakable air of refinement , and
all who are brought witliin the range of
business contact with them are Imper
ceptibly drawn under tholr gentle in ?
lluenco. There are inner business of
fices in New York that are moro like
drawing rooms than like the generally
accepted place for the transaction of
business. The quiet supremacy of
feniinlno taste and culture permeates
every department of the office. It Is not
only visible In the boudoirliko sanctum ,
but it Is to bo felt in the politeness of the
low voiced clerks , and oven noted in the
demeanor of tha customers around the
outside ticker ,
There is no escape from the conclusion
that whatever the typewriting machine
has done for women and it has unques
tionably done much It has practically
revolutionized the general conduct of
business and materially improved the
conduct of men.
In a certain Oregon flslicanulng establish
ment there was recently a superintendent ,
who may bo called Smith , whoso loud pro
fessions of religion were not exactly In ac
cordance with Ins life. Two citizens pf the
town were talldtlc of him 0110 day , and one
of them remarked : ' -Well , anyhow , It must
bo-admlttcd that Smith has been successful
hi canning. " "Maybe , " .retorted tlio other ,
"but ho has been much more successful l.n
canting , "
AN INVITATION
To the Fathers and Mothwrs , Workiiigmen and Mechanics , Ladies and Gentlemen of Omaha and Vicinity
by the largest and Most Reliable Cash or Credit House in the World.
CARRY
Complete
Stocks
off.
CARPETS ,
RUGS ,
LACE CURTAINS ,
PARLOR FURNITURE ,
ROCKERS ,
SINGLE LOUNGES ,
BABY CARRIAGES ,
REFRIGERATORS ,
SPRINGS ,
COTS ,
CRIBS ,
MATTRESSES ,
PILLOWS ,
BEDDING ,
GASOLINE STOVES ,
RANGES ,
TINWARE ,
GRANITEWARE ,
WOODENWARE ,
CUTLERY ,
CLOCKS ,
CARPET SWEEPERS ,
EASELS ,
SCREENS ,
CLOCK SHELVES ,
PICTURES.
Send postal or call up Telephone -
phone 727 and your order will receive -
coivo prompt.attcntion.
Try-tho purchasing power of
your dollar at 1316-1317 Farnain
street. You will find that it will
do moro for you at our store than
in any other credit house in the
world.
-THE-
People's Mammoth Installment House
Open Monday and \ Q4 K \ Q'j ' " 7 H ' "
1 "PTH } YY1 Open and
,
Saturday Evenings only iCJJLCLC J JL JL JL OtJLL. . JLOLJL JL X Kjf L-L 0 C2 l Saturday Monday Evenings only.
WARRING FOR THE GROUND
Interesting Controversy Between Schiolds
and Horbach Now in Progress ,
SOME PECULIAR TRANSACTIONS AIRED
Dotnlli of n f.tuul Deal that liecan Awity
Hack In 1803 and U Mot Yet
JCuilocl Somebody U Much
In tlio Wrong.
The Ilorbaeh-Sohields row over the posses
slon of the circus property on North Twen
tieth street still continues , with each side
hanging on to a part of the land in 'con
troversy and trying to got hold of tho"rc-
malndcr. In looking up the story o ( the
dlnlculty , it was found that it dated back
nearly n generation , The following state ,
nient of it was made by J. P. Broeh , wlyj la
Schields'ia.Uorne.v in the case , as It UO\V ap
pears lu the district court.
"This litigation dates back to 1803 , when
Omaha was a moro village , and when the
land now in controversy was wild prairie.
Louis Sohiolas was ut that time engaged in
manufacturing brick at various points in the
village of Oiffahn , and also engaged in
building houses. John A. Horbach was at
that time in active business hero doing
some building , and ho. formed the acquaint
ance of Schields , and they transacted con
siderable business with each other , in the
line of purchasing building material and
oreotlng buildings.
"In 16C1 Mr. Ilorbach sola the land now In
controversy to Schiolds for (1,600 , and gave
him a written contract of purchase. Sohiolas
moved upon the land in the spring of that
year , and erected n dwelling house- upon It.
Schiolds continued to do a great deal of work
for Mr. Horbach , under an agreement thi t
his work and material furntsh'ed should be
applied upon the purchase price ofhis land.
Ho built Mr. Iforbach's present residence ! al
the corner of Seventeenth and Douglas
streets , and never succeeded in obtaining a
full loUlcment for the material which ho
Just clnltnsaiillowcd.
Complaints hocdod.
Courteous treatment
to nil whether they buyer
or not. .
Ono dollar is. enough
to enable you ! to have
an account with us.
Largo , fresh , reliable
stock and bed rock
prices. No charge for
credit.
Farnam St.
Cod rock prices.
No extra charge for
credit.
Small profits nnd
enormous business.
Ono dollar down and
$1 per wool : will buy
$10 worth of any line
of our goods aud will
got moro of thorn than
In any other credit
house in the world.
Farnam St.
LOT IS A HAPPV ONE compared to that of fathers and mothers of otio hundred .
YOUH years ago. Thov loved tholr
boys and girls as dearly as you love yours , but when they wanted to buy Furniture , Carpets , Stores And Household
Goods BO as to make homo attrucUvo for the llttlo ones they hnd to wait until they saved Cash
every cent's worth they got The Credit System was than unknown. In fact , It Is not many years since enough looked to nay for
the asking for credit as they did upon hogging. Of course they were wrong , and it took FAIR DEALING- people Houses upon llko
ours to educate theta out of their orror. when you can got Honest Goods of any kind at Cash Prices without
to pay for the privilege of getting credit then credit is bolng compelled
, a blessing ; but when you got poor goods nt prices nbovo
the
prices of Cosh Houses , then credit Is not the blessing It ought to bo. OUR GOODS are always the VERY away BEST nnd
OUR PRICES are as low as any Cash House In the land. Wo make credit a blessing , nol a curse. In the old times '
a store liJ by 10 was a good sized ono. Our store Is 50 foot wide bv JiOO feet deep , running through to , too ,
four floors , each of that slzo. Every door Is PACKED WITH HONEST GOODS of Harnoy street , with
description nnd
every It Is
necessary to go from under our roof to llnd ANYTHING- , not
ANYTHINGYOU MAY NEED. Our Furniture and Carpet
Departments
CANNOT BE EXCELLED. Lamps of every description. Glassware and China of tasty designs. Stoves
Cradles , Baby Coaches , Parlor Suits , Refrigerators , Gasoline Stoves , etc. , Lounges ,
You can now see how you are hotter off than were these a century ago. You can como to us , select ANYTHING
YOU NEED , and wo will GIVE YOU CREDIT. If your purchase should bo a large one wo will
give you specially ac
commodating terms , nnd for ONE SINGLE DOLLAR wo will an account with . '
There open you. Call in to see' what wo have.
Is a HEARTY WELCOME for all whether they want to buv or not. Those who do wish to buy will find
LARGER , FRESHER , MORE RELIABLE STOCK OF GOODS thnn is carried by any other house in the a
and will save from 25 to 40 per cent by dealing with us. Don't bo afraid to como in. Jt is no trouble to show goods and city ,
polite salespeople take pleasure in making you fool perfectly at homo with us. , our
furnished and the 'abor ' which he performed
upon the house , but has nil nlong claimed
that ho performed enough labor and fur
nished enough material upon that house , for
which ho has never been paid , to pay off the
entire purchase price of the hind. The pa
pers on fllo in the series of suits over this
land allege that about ton years after
Schields moved upon the property under his
contract of purchase , Mr. Ilorbach , while
Schlelds wns intoxicated , got his contract of
purchase nway from him and gave him In
lieu of it n lease for the premises , and that
the following day , when Schlelds recovered
from his drunken stupor , his friends told
him that Horbach had swindled him nnd
that ho shouldrgo bacK and got a now con
tract , or some paper recognizing his title in
the land. This ho did , and Horbach gave
him a paper purporting to glvo him the same
protection and title that his old contract se
cured him , butt instead ot being nn absolute
contract of sale it proved to bo an option to
buy within a certain time. Schiolds , who is
a foreigner neil Illiterate and unable to road
written Kngltiih , did not know but thnt ho
had a pew contract , but thereafter , Hading
that It was an option , ho again
charged Horbach with baa faith , nnd
thereupon Mr. Horbach told him to pay up
n small balance which ho claimed was yet
duo upon the > ; old contract , and ho would
inaUe him a doinl. Relying upon this verbal
arrangement ta carry out the provisions of
the old contract of 160-1. Schiolds paid him
In small installments about $1,000 moro from
1874 up to 1880 , and then stopped nnd wanted
a deed , Ilorbach declared that ho would
not glvo him a deed and told him that ho did
not own the land , and that all ho had been
paying in the years past was rent for the
premises. Soon after the above declaration
open hostilities botwcon the parties com
menced nnd Horbach tried to got physical
possession of the land. In 18SO or 1837
Suhlelds commenced an action for specific
performance of his contract ana asked the
court to give him n deed. That suit was de
cided in favor of Mr. Horbach , but Schlelds
appealed to the supreme court and that
court reversed the decision ana awarded the
land to Schields. A motion , for a new trial
was filed nnd the supreme court reversed Itself -
self , nnd again awarded tholaud to Horbach.
Now difficulties mot Mr. Horbach upon get-
back from the s'upremo court.
.or no found that howould
then have to bring ejectment suits against
Schlelds to put him off the land. Ho com
menced his ejectment proceedings in 1890-01.
but be hero .encountered tew questions and
Our Terms *
$10 worth of goods , $1 per week or $4 per
month.
$25 worth of goods , $1.60 per week or $0
per month.
$50 worth of goods , 82 per week or 88 per
month.
$75 worth of goods , $2.50 per week or $10
per month.
$100 worth of goods , $3 per week or $12
per month.
$200 worth of goods , $3 per week or $20
mouth
Write For We Sell
128-page illustrated GUI loing
catalogue. beds.
Refrigerator logue. cata Poioce folding ueds.
Special baby carriage
Feoiteione
riage catalogue. cariloges ,
Special stove cata
logue.
Special vapor stove MonQrcn
catalogue. Gasoline stoves
Mailed free.
Wo pay freight 100
miles. Peninsular stoves
Satisfaction guaran
teed. low carpels.
now titles In Schiolds ami his family. Mrs.
Schiclds , who was not a party to the su
preme court litigation , now intervened , and
claimed a right to rclltlguto alt the points
litigated by tlio supreme court , and Schlelds
himself sot up u now title to tlio land by nd-
verse possession tor moro than ten years
Upon thcso Issues the title Is now being
litigated lu the district court of this county.
n"Hoccntlj"Mr. Horbauh conceived the Idea
that the process of tlio court In giving him
possession was too slow , and that ho would
take possession by strategy , so lie adopted
the peculiar policy of using the po
llco force to aid him in taking
possession , nnd induced certain police ofllcers
to notify the tenants of Mr. Schields resid
ing on the land to clean up itlio promises
within twenty-four hours under the
penalty of arrest , and to 'remove
from the promises within three
days. ' This notice was served upon the oc-
cuuants of the premises under Mr , Schlclds ,
but instead of removing they tinned the
notice over to mo , and I asked an explanation
from the chief of police concerning the
peculiar phraseology of the notice , nnd
what was meant by ordenng.'peoplo to clean
up and inovo oft the promises. ' I suggested
that I could Dot Had any gr.mt of power in
the city charter lodging lu the police depart
ment the right to give forcible entry and de
tention notices , or to try titles to land , nnd
intimated to the police department that it
was helm ? used by Mr , Horbach and his
agents along improper lines o' conduct. This
put un end to the giving of notice * of this
character , but having failed on this score
Mr. Horbach set his ingenuity ut work to
discover another plan of getting the SchieliU
tenants off , or getting himself Installed in
possession , BO last Mondav ho attempted a
coup by appearing on the ground with m
dozen or moro men and energetically at
tempting to incloso the premises with u liigh
board fence , fencing In the Schiolds tenants
and likewise fencing them out , for some of
the tenants whose teams wore outside dur
ing the day on returning In ttio evening
found their avenue of ingress cut off. But
about this time Schlelds , through his coun
sel , appeared upon the scene with the sheriff ,
aided by a restraining order , and under in
structions from mo Mr. Schiolds knocked
down the greater portion of the now fence.
"But the end was not yet , for that same
night Mr. Horbach's force , who still roosted
on some logs on ( ho premises , renewed the
warfare , and nailed up the fence again , and
in the morning of the 10th Schlelds1 tenants
were again confronted with the fence. This
time their teams were on the inside , but
thrftugh the courtesy of Mr. Horbach and
his agents were allowed to take the working
teams out through a gate which he had con
structed in the fence. Immediately after
thiir qepM-ture h.o securely looked tlio gate
and tola tao tenants that such teams ns had
A building' 60 foot wldo , 800 foot
long ; four floors packed with f rosh
Roods , 19 departments , olllciont
management , and Mr. B. Roacn-
tlml at the head.
Save pennies and you will save
dollars. You can save both by
coinlnp direct to the larpest credit
house in the world.
passed out could not got back unless they
would turn their leiiiohold Interest from
bchiolds over to Horbach , and approached
some of thorn with nn offer of money through
his follow warrior , Victor Lantry , who per
sistently and fur into the night. pJo.-iiled with
the Schlolda tenants to accept Horbach's
lucre and titlco the lease from him , and to
vacate the premises under Schiolds' lease ,
hut money did not seem to have
nny effect upon the manhood of
Schiolds' tenants and they stoutly refused.
"On May 10 Mr. Horbach was again aidea
by the police and nionlticr was detailed to
sit upon some logs upon the northeast corner
of the promises , but his. stay was cut short
by another appearance of the sheriff , armed
with another restraining order from the dis
trict court in broader and bolder terms ,
commanding nil persons to desist from Inter-
forrlng In any manner with the possession
of Louis Sohlulds and his tenants over any
portion of the Schlclds premises. It now
looked as though n conflict was imminent
between the sheriff's forces nnd the police
powers , but good sense prevailed and the
pollco withdrew , nnd Mr. Schields was loft
again In the unrestricted possession of the
property , whereupon ho again Icnoclcod the
fence down , nnd his tenants passed In nnd
out of the promises unmolested. Mr , Hor-
bach , finding tlmt the Injunction writ
scorned to be nn effective } weapon of warfare ,
sought the pollco powers to have Mr.
bchiolds and myself arrested for threats to
demolish property , and through His agent ,
Mr. Uarnum , nnd by himself , applied to the
police court to have Mr. Schields and myself
incarcerated and bound over to keep the
peuco , but his requests nt the pollco head
quarters were refused , and he wns told that
the sheriff and his force seemed to have pos-
Bcssion up there , and thnt no interference
uould bo made with the district court nnd
its orders.
"Nothing daunted , however , Mr. Horbach
applied to the mayor for special pollco
protection from Mr. Sohlolds and his counsel ,
nnd requested that the ilro and police com
missioners bo called together , and that ho be
given a speclnl police guaid against Mr.
bchiolds' and Mr. Brecn's depredations on
the Property. At this critical moment a re
straining order from the district court was
served upon the mayor and the ilro nnd
pollco commissioners , and the plan of getting
a special nolloo guard was nipped In tlio bud.
Finally Mr. Horbach turned to his enemy's
weapon , the district ( court nnd restraining
order , and yesterday wont into the restrain.
Ing order business himself , Ho scoured nn
order restraining Sohieids and his agents
nnd attorneys from committing nny tres
passes upon the laud , but this order was
rather late to be of much effect , because the
fence was already down , and BchieWa and
hit tenants la the unrestricted possession of
WEX
GARRY
Stocks
OF
CHAMBER SUITS , '
BUREAUS ,
WARDROBES ,
CflEFFONIERS ,
COMMODES ,
INFANTS' ' CRIBS ,
BED LOUNGES ,
BEDSTEADS ,
HAT RACKS ,
FOLDING BEDS ,
DESKS ,
BOOK CASES ,
MUSIC CABINETS ,
SECRETARIES , '
WHATNOTS ,
CENTER TABLES ,
LIBRARY TABLES ,
SIDEBOARDS ,
HALL RACKS ,
CHEVAL MIRRORS , '
KITCHEN TABLES ,
DINING TABLES ,
PLUSH ROCKERS ,
CRADLES , '
DRAPERIES ,
WINDOW SHADES ,
WRITING DESKS ,
CHINA CLOSETS ,
the property. Thought promises to bo
bitter ana n long one. " 1
IXDVHTltlAL NO1E3.
The wtiges of certain British coal miner
nro said to have boon cut down 4DJC per con
slnco November , Ib'Jl , mainly on nccount e
the low price of coal.
In 18W there wore 1.758 strikes in thostnt
of Now York of which l.jiM were In pat
successful , hut the loss of wncs to the 23,70
persons striking Is said to have been fa
moro than was gained by striking.
Iron nnd steul workers nt Xanesvlllo , O
though locked out for two ye.irs , nro etil
hoping for victory. They claim , us nlso d
union men ut WcstSupcilor , Wis. , that ur
satisfactory work is uclng done by nonunlo
men ,
It has been discovered thnt numerous di
liiuiuont and expelled members of th
Switchman's Mutual Aid nssociatlon ha\
been using tholr receipt books with forgo
secretary's signatures to establish the !
claim to good standing. The ofllclnls ) mv
warned the lodges to bo on tholr tfugr
against such deception ,
The doadenln ? nature of debt has bee
shown time and again Inthuconl region * t
eastern Pennsylvania , where n miner semi
times works for ton years without rerelvln
nny cai'h ' payment , because some disaatt
has brought him In d bt to tlio compan
store. Mina owner nnd miner share th
financial risks of mining , nnd It sometime
happens that nn accident will place boyon
the miner's roach thousands of tons of coi
which ha 1ms cut with mouths of labor , bti
for which ho could not draw full pay unt
It had hotrn delivered at the breiker , Whll
ho wns thus bulled ho lived upon credit a
the company's store , nnd the disaster let
him deeply in debt. The effect upon man
men has been to make them utterly Indiffei
cut to fliolr future , nnd nt least one rain
owner , recognizing the ovll results of sue
conditions , makes it n rule to discharge-
miner who Is hopelessly In debt. The dli
charge clears his score , and many men tin
relieved of tholr burdens depart from th
coal regions with their llttlo belongings t
begin anew elsewhere , tinned with the coinage
ago that liopo ulotio can glvo.
Busy people have no tune , and scnslbl
people have no inclination to use pills thft
make them sick a day for every dose the
tako. They have learned that the use
Do Witt's Little Karly Ulsera does not it
torfore with their health by cautlng nauee
pain or griping , Those little pills are pet
feet In action and respite , regulating jri
stomach and bowels so that headaches , Alt
zlncssund lassitude are prevented. Tile ,
cleanio the blood , cle&r tha complexion oui
one up the system. It of. lienUti la
httlefcllowi ,