-\irittt i \ i T T lone THE DAI1 TKUMS 0V St II cr.11 > TION. Pally Urn ( wllliont Snril iy | Ono Yc.ir. . . . . . * 8 < | 0 inilv nnil Smiii.iy 0 o Venr. . . "J ! . six Moiillin " VJI TlirenMonllt * . a JJ [ ; [ > Sundny lice , One Ye.ir * "x finlitrd-nr lie e One Yenr J { JU Wt kl > 1'ec. dim Yonr l ° ° omens. Oninlin , The lle nnllillne. Saulli Omaha ponierNamn Council UlnlTs lit 1'earl ntrcet niilinto offlee 117 'ii imbe-r of Rommereo. New York nioniH 11 11 nnil Iff. Trlbmiu bnlmlne. W.idlifinrl'in ' 1 I l-'onrleoiilli Rlreol. ( OUI'.KSl'ONDKNCr. . All eoniiiiinileilliins n-tilliKf to n" > v nnjl ll- toiMlninlkrHli'inlil br-aildriHspil : To tbo Editor IltT-dN-KSS TjKTTKHI All biislnewt lelfiM nnd rcnilttinces inonlil tra ndiln siMsl toTlii- e I'lilillslilnc Cntnpitiv.Oiniha. Drnfln. rlierkH mid pustuniiu onlern lo lie mttilo 1 > lyafole it * th * onV-i i of tliecnmpiny. r.-irtlosln-ivliijr the oil } \ for llio Hummer cm liivo THE IlrK HI nt Ift ilirlr uulrt"i liy le.irltiR an onlcr TIIIJ mn : UUHMSHINO COMPANY. I he lie , . In Cble io. Tm : Pui.v nnd Pir.MivvltrK It on s.ilo In Chlrnpo ill tlio folluwlnBpl'ict'i ! I'nlnierlinii e. flrnnd I'nellle hotol. Anilltoiliiin hotel. ( Irent Norllioinhutol florobolul. Icland liniiil. Kilos of Tim HUB cm bn seen nt tbo No- briiRkn biilldbiR and llio Administration build ing , I'xposlllon uroitnils STATIiMKNT OlCIIlCUr.ATlON. . Slnloof Nrbrnskn. I runnty of Di > inlis f ( > i or a II TzsclniPk , socn't.-irv of TIIK nrr. Pnl - llnldne cominny , duos Bolnniily nweir tlill tlio actual clreulnllon r TIIK Iii.v I ) Ilrr fur llio week cndlnirScplPiiibei 1(1. ( ISH'I , was .13 follow s- Siindny , Replemberln snoni Monday. September 11 H't,770 Tuimd.iy. Si'litenibi'r 1'J llHr ! l Tlinnulny. Si > | iliMiilx < r 11 ' . . . . ! ' ! ' ! . . ' . aVs'-'R Friday. HfiilemlHT IB J't,7llO Sitlinlny , btplemlx r 11) ) . 1:13 : ( .foimK It T/SCIHTCK. i -iSwoin to before mo nnil Biihscrllxvl In my < REAL vtireseiiee tlilM llitli d iy off < e | > ieiiil > er. 1803. I , t N. 1' FMl. . Kotarj' Public. O rir < Mllitlmi : fur \iur. , 180.1,31,075 Tun delegate wlio trades Ills proxy for a pass should nnd will bo Hhunncd by the honest members of his own party. THK delegate who gets Into the state convonlion with a proxy in his luind is pretty siiry to have n puss in his pocket. Tin : Hilvor debate has nt least liad the good effect of Hhnlting off the ill-advised talk about annexing the Sandwich isl ands. IT IS somewhat remarkable and also significant that not a single democrat has boon faoriously "inontionud" for the BUpromo court nomination. Tiiuiti : nro very few voters of any , party in Nebraska who will bo willing1 to elevate any man to the supreme bench who has had no judicial experience in the lower courts. A UANK failure in these later summer days ifi a rarity. The comptroller of V' ' i the currency finds his entire time taken up with the banks that are ready to re open their doora. Now LOGIC for vigorous denials in the corporation organs of the telegrams an nouncing the instruction of delegates for Maxwell. The railroads will break down the instructions if such a thing can possibly bo done. ' IP YOU don't believe that the opposi l- tion to Judge .Maxwell comes from the men who are interested in maintaining i T railroad and corporation supremacy in Nebraska , just analy/.o the character of the men who arc doing the most to de feat his ronomination. TIIK scheme to nominate a railroad attorney for judge of the supreme court and then place him on a plat | form mndu up of high sounding but meaningless anti-monopoly planks will fail to catch the voters in Nebraska this year. The man must fit the platform or | ho will bo repudiated at the polls. JUDGE UAYWAKD says in nn inter view that ho is not seeking a nomina 1 tion for the supreme bench , but that ho has succumbed to the entreaties and ( importunities of friends. Will the judge be good enough /to / name his friends ? Ho has been at Lincoln most of this week. Are his friends all in the state house ? THE democrats of Council BI nil's have swallowed the state platform , money plank and all. It oya may not bo so easy oyw matter for Omaha democrats to follow > the example. Fact is , that when the democratic county convention meets in this city there will bo nothing loft of the angelic harmony so often said to prevail - vail hereabouts. THE bill permitting the sale of the state Fallno lands will pass in review ? before the Nebraska supreme court. For that reason the men who are interested in eoonring the lands for a more fraction of their actual value are working to defeat the oiTorts of _ the people who are demanding an able , fearless and un prejudiced supreme bench. TIIK democratic majority in congress cannot bo so very formidable uftor all when the leaders are compelled to apply ' the party lush in order to command hoof attendance of a snlllciont number of votes to overcome the republican minor ity. Tills ban already happened during the pros-out week and it ia likely to be come 0110 of thefeatuics of the special bosslon , IK TIIIJ World'B fair is not a financial success it will not be the fault of the railroad strikers who are manipulating county conventions in Nebiuska against : the interests of Judge Maxwell. Nearly : a coach load of passengers from ono of the interior counties of the state passed through Omaha last evening and every male member of the party had boon i a railroad delegate in a county on that selected an anti-Maxwell ion to the state convention. TIIK democrats in the United States sonata are opposed to oloturo because they Bay that it is contrary to the spirit and traditions of the party , If the demo crats could manage to out loose from their traditions and go to work tlio country might bo spared the clo which now presents Itself daily in the touato. Traditions are all very well in their way , but the party that substitutes Ideas for traditions Is the ono that ren ders the country tbo most oftcoilvo ser- . rlco. ,1 W > n l THAT HK/l.SOV. Thore1 hai boon a great deal said of late about political dictation nnd the duty of thn republican party to resent the nllonipt of ono man to force upon the party hta pet candidate by predict ing disaster for everybody olsi . There has boon no attempt to dictate , there have been no threats of boiling , and there has been no attempt to frighten the parly int-i subjection by imaginary bugbears. When a signal ofllcor fore sees the approach of a storm and hoists the danger flag ho does not invoke the hurricane nor become responsible for the fatalities of the cyclone. When an editor warns his party against an approaching preaching political landslide , is ho sup posed to bo the cause of the disaster ho foresees and predicts ? A political strati- dlcr and trimmer keeps still and waits for the oat to jump before ho opens his month. A courageous man of convic tion will not play the weather cock and lot the party drift upon the rocks. The question that every loyal repub lican asks himself in n close election is , who among Iho candidates is the most available ? Who can poll the heaviest vote ? And when it boeJino ? paiont who this candidate is every man who desires to see his party march to victory falls into line and bolus to place him in front of the column. Now if anybody can name a republican lawyer qualillod for a place on the supreme bench who will poll as largo a vote as Maxwell Tin : BII : : will very cheerfully give him its support. If any man c.in bj named who is sure to draw as largo a support from the great mass of demo cratic and independent voters wo will exert all our Inlluonco to help nominate him. But up to this time no such man has boon proposed. Every candidate so far named i1 * either without any experience on the bench or handicapped by relations to oorpora- lions and Iho malodorous btato house ring that would lose him thousands of republican votes if the party dared to present him for their sulli-ages. This assertion is not an idle threat nor ti reckless draft upon the imagina tion. It is a candid and truthful ptate- ment. The lawyers that present them selves as competitors with Judge Max well in thi' race for the supreme judgeship - ship aio one and all either tainted with railroadism or pushed to the front to vindicate the impeached state olllcers by turning. down Maxwell. With such baneful influences exerted in their favor .they naturally bay tlioinbclvos from popular confidence , and that means sure defeat ut the polls if they succeed in the convention. Under such peculiar circumstances Judge Maxwell's candidacy becomes a political necessity. lie stands as the highest typo of that republicanism which for more than a quarter of a cen tury was entrusted by the people of America with the reins of government. Ho is the embodiment of the principles and pledges enunciated in topublican platforms. IIo is the ideal nonparligan judge who interprets the constitution without fear or favor , regardless of partisan bias or partisan advantage. As judge of the supreme court ho knows no republicans , no democrats , no pro hibitionists , no populists. Ho knows only the American citi/.en , his bill of rights and the constitutional guaranties that ate the bulwark of our free institu tions. With Maxwell at the head of the ticket republicans will have nothing to explain away , nothing to defend - fond or apologise for. His name Is a synonym of integrity and with aim on the ticket no platform pledges will be necessary. Maxwell is the most available candidate the party can name in this emergency. In fact , he is the only can- didato with whom the party could feel assured in advance of victory. His can didacy would not only regenerate the party but strengthen every candidate on a coniUy republican ticket , and for that reason THE Bic : advocates his ro- ' nomination. OF ] it A ix iionnKitr. Two train robberies and ono unsuc cessful attempt at robbery have taken place within the last two weeks , all of them in comparatively pipttlous parts of the country. In ono case , that in Indi ana , \\horo the robbers captured a con siderable sum of money , the exact amount of which has never been publicly stated , the work was BO well done that none of the rascals have boon arrested , or if any of them are in durance the fact has not been rovoalod. ' Sjfaras the public knows they hUi'ceedod in getting - ting away with all their plunder and are Btill at largo. No moro carefully planned robbery ha ? occurred in the his' tory of ' those episodes , as judged by tlio facts made public , and there is ovo-y reason to believe that among those concerned in it were mon in the sortr- ice of the express company and the rall- road , who know all abDtit the conditions which favored n sttceossftil robbery. The robbery of the train in Michigan , in which the robbers carried oil some : $70,000 , it is now known from the ar- rest of most of the parties , was partici pated in by the express messenger who had charge of the money , ono or , vend employes of the railroad ujinpuny and several other parties who were not before ) fore criminals. Tlio last episode )0of this kind , reported iu our columns today , involves a mau who had been in the railroad Horvico as a loader in the projected robbery , which was attempted In a thickly populated portion of the oJtmtry , and but for the courage of the trainmen a fact that cannot bo too strongly emphasized I doubtless would have boon successful. What is to bo done to check this opi- domie of train robbery , peculiar to this country , in a question which 1ms in- doubtedly occurred to nearly everybody , and all must recognize that It is a ques tion ol urgent importance , An adequate , protection must bo provided , nnd the sooner thp bolter. Humiliating as U is to the American people that such a state of affairs exists hero needing legislation , novurtholoss uompthing must bo done > tlmt will roach the ovll and romoyo It. The committco on interstate commerce of the house of representatives has i under consideration a bill aimed at this evil. It provides that In case of the destruction of the lives of passengers and employes by any derailment or attempted - tempted robbery , the penalty on couvlc- I tion of the guilty party or jartlos shall bo death , nnd whore no Itw of life occurs the offenders shall ettlTor im prisonment from one year to twenty years at hard labor. Such a law would undoubtedly have a deterrent influence , but railroad and express companion mint provide bettor moans of protection. The epidemic of train robbery mint bo summarily stopped. , AUJttCIIATlC 8PUARKH * At last the democratic majority In the house of representatives has proclaimed its determination lo throttle the minor ity , regardless of the rights of the lat- tor. In order to do thi- < the speaker , as evidenced in the proceedings of the house on Wednesday , has practically assumed autocratic powers. The ox traordlnnry course of Speaker Crisp on Wednesday should not fall to arrest the earnest attention of the country. It was without precedent and In all essential rnspects it wa revolutionary in its character. To all intonls and pur- poses the speaker refused to give the minority any of the rights which have always boon recognized a ? belonging te > it , and by ml ing j which would not bo sustained by any parlia mentary body in the world not under monarchical domination enabled the majority to carry out its progtam. It is perhaps uniiooossary tt > cjnsldor in detail the character and the p-wslbl o ollccts of the rulings made by Speaker Crisp in order to override the minority , but everybody can understand what is involved in an absolute refusal of the speaker to entertain tin appeal from his decision. When it is conceded that the presiding olllcor of a legislative body can , 113 ojc-Spoakor Rued expressed it , violate the sacred right of appeal as was done on Wednesday , the power of such presiding olllcor becomes practically absolute and , . there ) is no restriction upon his despotic power. ) ( After anoh an exhibition as was made by the democrats * of the house of representatives two days ago , in the eagerness of their dosirn to overcome tlio ! republican opposition to admitting the report in the rpuoal of the federal election laws , they have no right to further : criticise what was done in the Fifty-first congress. Whatever may have been done in the preceding congress tc further the cau o ol legislation , it cannot bo said that a single act ( of the speaker or of tlio cotmnitleo on ] rules went to any such despotic length as did the rulings of Speaker Crisp in refusing to entertain appeals from decisions which the minority believed i- lioved to bo unjust and unsound , and in peremptorily deciding that certain motions were not in order because they militated against the program which the majority had planned to carry out. The country will not fail to notice the arbitrary courtio of the speaker of the house in this matter , nor will it fail to remember the i cason for it. The ques tion of providing rules for the house which would have allowed the majority to carry out its policy without doing any violence to the minority had been con sidered , but in order to avoid any recog nition of the rules of a republican congress - gross , every suggestion in line with the parliamentary policy of the house of representatives of the Fifty-first congress - gross was rejected. Finding their mis 13 take , the majority lias had recourse to amore moro summary policy , and as was paid by ox'-Spoakor Rood , they have under [ taken to "out-Herod Herod , " by allow ing the speaker to assume an arbitrary power unprecedented in the history % tlio eovormnont. Never has the demo cratic party been mor6 defiantly high 01 handed than in this instance , and the American people will not forget it. Farnam street is and doubtless .11 continue to bo the principal business thoroughfare of Omaha. The principal bunlcH , the public buildings , except the pobtofllco , are firmly anchored on the street and so are the most imposing and commodious olllco buildings and princi : i- pal newspaper concerns. It is admitted on all hands that a great blunder was perpetrated in llio establishing the grade of upper Farnam street. With cuts of from five to ton feet on the crest of the hills and corresponding filling in the depressed street levels , a very de cided improvement citild bo made. The change on upper Douglas shows what can bo done for a street b" re ' ducing the grades and readjusting 'fllC levels of abutting lots. Upper Farnam street west of Twenty- third hab becomeoneof our most sightly residence streets , but it Is now almost innecesbiblo to carriages by reason of heavy grades and demoralized wooden block pavement. At the farthest the ! btreot must bo ropavod within two years if it is to bo passable for vehicles. But before repaying is begun the grade should by all muaiis bo reduced. The change may involve the payment of dam : ages to a few property owners , but the property benefited could well afford to boar the oxponao. In fact , the greater part of the property west of Twentieth will bo onormoiibly enhanced in valno by a reduction of grade. bids Whatever doubt existed as regards the trend of business westward when Eighteenth mid Farnam was proposed us the most eligible site for the post- olllco no intelligent observer entertains any doubt that Eighteenth and Farnam will bo the grand crossing of the business Sixt ness cantor of Omaha within the next ton years , whether the McShano hotel materialises or not. The grand hotel Lolof Omaha will bo above Eighteenth street , either on Farnam or Doug las or on bath of those streets. It1 la the natural location for ts.a great hostelry on account of on and because It will bo more accessible to the muss of our population , who already reside west of Eighteenth , in fact west of Twenty-fourth street , It would manifestly 1 > 3 a great detri ment to Omaha to leave upper Farnam street permanently disfigured by deep ravines and heavy grades when the . street can bo converted into a grand boulevard by the expenditure of less than $100,000. Every dollar expended will add 810 totho valtio of every foot of prop erty on the street , and many thousands of dollars to the value of property on streets that cross Farnum west of Twenty-third or terminate In that thor- otighfaro. The prunt trouble hi the past hns boon ? jmt wo do things by halves Instead tf making n thorough job of whnl wo iThflbrtako. This w.ts true of the Farim/n / street grade , as It was of St. Mary's avenue , which could have remained a'horoughfaro instead of looking llko a country road running into a dcsort d'Siiburb. ' It is time Ujat , the people Interested on upper Fat naniishoiild begin to agitate the iinpro\cfnb'lil and repairing of that strnct so that they may bo able to bring the matter butoro the council at an early day. - _ Tut : democratic state central commit . tee ( has a pretty kettle of fish on its hand" . The problem before It just now is how to placate Uryan's free silver followers and secure the endorsement of a financial plank In the state plat- form ' . ' In line with the views of t'rosldcnt Cleveland. Chairman Martin is be fuddled. He fears the result if Bryan puts in an appearance with his silvor- tongued ' appeal , which mr.y prove to bo Irresistible. Tobo Castor in in favor of giving Bryan a complimontry resolu tion and at the sumo time pledging undying fealty to white winged G rover. Secretary Morton has written a few lotlers showing \\horo Tobo gets his in spiration ] and brandishing the party whip' ' over the heads of obstreperous ollico hunters , it is given out cold that any democrat who dares to hurl defiance at the wish of the president will bo forever ' in federal patronage. Wherever this tin cat has been made it has only in censed the faithful and benighted fol lowers of Andrew Jackson , who declare that they will sco Chairman Martin pilloried before they will submit. In the interest of perfect harmony ox-Gov ernor B' > yd has absented himself from the stale. Ho can afford lo lot the other follows kill one another off. IN COUNTIES where the popnlistuhavo made great inroads into the republican ranks and carried olT some of the most active members of that party there is a manifest disposition on the part of re publicans now to profit by past experi ence. They realize that tlio man who runs for supreme judge this yo.ir must have a record that is not in conflict with the platforms of 1800 and 1802 on the restrictions of corporate monopoly and regulation of railroad rates. They realize , moreover , that ho must bo a man who does not owe his nomination to the state house jring and penitentiary gang of bjodlpcS. They recognize in Judge Maxwell the man for this emor- goncy , and they have mot the issue by instructing thotrjdologates to the state convention to support Maxwell. This is notably true "of former republican strongholds lik'o JJurt , Ouster , Buffalo. Fillmore and Washington counties. THK Hon. M. V. Gannon has taken up his abode in Chicago , whore influential men of his party arc thought to Vie moro appreciative and whore carriers of water and hewers of wood stand some little chance of reward. Wo may now look for a renowair ot.hostilitics among ollicors of the Lund league in order that its worthy president may bo properly in troduccd to his now"neighbors. Gannon knows how to advertise. aiobe-Dcmnriat , Wtion Hill found out that Cleveland would not grieve over Neat's dofe.it lie immedi ately announced th it he would take the stump forNcal. The Uptvnril Tendency. Globencmncmt. . Tno nuinbor of business failures is dccrcns- ing nt n rate \\hicli proves that the condi I- tions of trade nro steadllv improving and thut proper action nt Washington is the only thing nccdod to inalco the situation ns good ) ns it was before tbo trouble began. Wustlnq : Knersles nil Oeiiert Air. 31lnneuii > lli 'Jrtliunc. Thcro nro good lands in Minnesota , North t | nnd South Dakota , Nebr.ibkn , Kansas and [ Missouri tlmt can bo obtained as chei.ply .is the desert lands of the Chorokco Strip. The disgusted boomers should pull up stakes nnd point the prous of tholr prairie schooners tovv.uds tbu lich jirairius of the golden northwest. A Montoit iuiiiilltiiont. ; | Mlnneai ltii Tribune The highest conipliiilent yet p.iid to Post master General Wiinaniuker is contributed by Postmaster General IJissoll , who says ho llnus llltle room for Improvement cither in the personnel or tlio working macliltiury of the Postollice Jepartinont. Ana it may bo pamblcd upon that ho would have found de fect H if there had been .my , for that Is wh.it a now administration is for. Tim Sinuiiili Mr. ( iiirmin. Chleaiin l'f t , ( item. ) Mr. Gorman is in favor of compromise ' , of coddling , of olllco bribery , of reaction from the mai.lv platform of President Cleveland , upon which ho accepted a stand a few weeks ago. lie is playing into the hnnds of the sil ver baions ai ho 1ms played into the bunds of the tariff batons. Ho may'succeed in de feating the will of the people , but his own political fortunes \\ill not escape the disas ter that is IKiblo to follow silver victory isin the senate. And th.it is consolation. Hour thin \\.UI itVno. . 1//IMI / / ( CulM fl ! frm. As a domocr.Uie newspaper which star.ds flat-footed on the Chicago platform , on which the party won , and which , as a supporter and defender of democratic principles is not less earnest than any newspaper in America , wo insist , in the ilumo and for the sake of the party , that sombthlng bo none to glvo the peoiilo to understand that the demo- ( ratio platform is tobo , reuoomed , whether Wall street and the protected trusts of Now Kngl.inu favor such notion or not. For God's ' s.iko , do otnuthingl Tlmely Adviro tii thn IVur Lord. .Vru" " Jjjr/t Sun. It is a dull day for AVilll.im the Terrible when ho cannot llud a uhancu to play the part of scarecrow , or to give a lesson In crowing to the Gallic cock anu In glaring to the noi them bear. 'Ills ' lil ii time for his strident majesty , nftar all his harangues titus the autumn maneuvers , to let France , Has- sin and other outside , , conn tiics take a rest. Lot him now keep ; i close mouth , put away ' his little sword , h'nnif up his trumpet , t.ute off his pickolhaub draw a big schooner of boer. order u dish o.rsaiioru'aut. ! rotlro out of sight , ami take U sleep till old Caprlvl tells him It Is tiuio to feed again. Tlio Vlulliint I'orpvcr. The bronco boat hns shown herself n boat of gold n KM I n , nuu so nluo timus eighteen nnd u herd of Hycran Users for the Vigilant , her happy builder : ) and owners , skipper and crow , Mav her bronze uonterboard never grow less , and her sails bo fleeter than the fore hoofs of the llshtnin' ' , ' . Valkyrie and Vigilant , the big \"s ; and every truu Amor- lean citizen who U wicked enough to bet \\ill ha&ml his \"a and peril his plunks on ( lotrcslioll's tauny lllly of the sc.i There is wind enough loft /or use on the ocean wave , in spllo of the vast quantity con. sumod by the silver debata May Vigilant and Valkyrie have a reasonable amount of the same enough to spin and not enough to split. I'hen for a raie that's u uorkor , mil the winner a Now Yorker ) r.it.t or intii'Hrini.t , The Union anil Hlailn intlU nt MniTltlHUn , K 1 , resinned Inn Timvluy Whltninn & Keith itliirtMit llmlr hri"fii tory til Hiocktnn , Muss , lust w-r-et ( fir , umiit sixty cases pur day nnd tu | < i I t > i im full time. tin'I The Everett Glass works nt UiMtfnrel , IM . wh'ch ' Im vo been lillo for the ) wi l three months , start up Monuny , giving tvnrk lo UK ) men. Oior.illvos | in n scoroof Now r.ntrhnd inilln have accepted reduced wages for ranging from two to six inonlhi All llu-ftn mills are now running lull handed and tin full time. fulA Work will bo resumed In all the depart ments of the Htvprsldo Iron and Steel works nt Wheeling , W Va. , today. The works em ploy ne.ii Iy 5,030 men. The ] Moorehrad mills tit Sharpsburg. IM , u 111 start today , Tlio inun uill rolurn lo work al a reduction of 2o per cent on the regular scale of prices , which me ins that puddlers ' will receive $1 nnd laborers $1 15. After a shutdown ot five xveoki. ono-hiuf of tin \\ashliigtou mills at T..IW ronco. Mass , lliolaigest woolen mill in the country , was reopened lor work last Tuesday The schedule of wi'goi show a reduction of about 10 ner cent. The worsted department at Iho Arlington mills started work Wednesday. Kniresoiitntlvps | of Iho II U l.ibbvManu- fiictuiln ? company of Now Yoiknml Chicago and of the Robinson Maiiufiicttitingcompuiy of Oxfoid and Porlland , Me. , lm\o piacli- cally decided to begin woilt at once on anew now \\oolen factory at Wolchvillo , Mo. The mill \\iil bo a large one. probably twelve- set , and e < iulpped with the best modern ma chinery. All the planing mills nt West Chester , Pa. , aie running on full time , the hosiery mill has resumed , and the West Chester Wheel works nro In operation inoiu than half the time. At Spring City a now stock- Ine factory , which is being completed , w 111 open next month with about sixty hands. The Iron mills at Coatcsvlllo nre taking on matti of the employes Vvho werolaldofta few weeks ngo The Moses T. Stevens mills at North AnU" ilovcrand Haverhill , Mass , the Franklin mills at Franklin , N. H. , and the Mat-land mills tit Anilovor are to resume work this week. There w ill bo no reduction in time or \vnges. The Fletcher Manufacturing com pany's wool yarn mill In Providence , H. 1. , will icsumo todnvon full timo. Phillips & Kemhardt's mill In L-iwrenco , Mass. , whicn i has been idle several \\ecks , will resume ; today oa full time. XUIUt.lSKASS. A new grain olovntor is to bo erected at Urokon How by B. W. Ulair. William Barclay has been arrested at Gcnov.i charged with "bootlegging. " Port Davis was run ever by n Kock Island switch engine nt Fail-bury nnd instantly killed. The west Nebraska Mctho list conference is in session nt MuCook ith Bishop Walden presiding. Dodge county republicans will hold n second end convention on October 11 nnd nomlnnlQ n county ticket This Is no "snap. " Forty tons of hay vvero burned bv n prairie lire no.ir Bloonillold. The llamos started fioin a spark from a steam Ihreshor. L.aro iJe.in , for nine years a resident of Custur county , died at his homo near Broken Bow of paralysis , in the sovonty- third vcar of his age. He was a natlvo of Viiginla. Wlulo Willard Wofflo of Grant iirccinct. Daw son county , was cutting corn with a ma chine , ho slipped and foil in front of the knives , which cntight him just above the heel and scvoroil the cords of the leg. Ho will have a stiff ankle the remainder of his life. Footpads held up n Presbyterian minister nt Alliance and demanded his money. When the iiroachcr reached into his hip pocket for his purse , thovoubors thinking hu was about to "pull his gun , " took to their heels and loft the dominie the monarch of all ho sur veyed. The Cass county republicans are evidently not m haimony with the railroads. The Missouri ' Pacific refuses to run a special train from Plattsrnouth to Dim wood on the date of the convention and an effort is being mndo to change the time of the irathcring to conform | witli the date the democrats hnvo se cctcdvhon \ a special train can bo so- cuiod. Maxwell is the favoiito in Cass. A well dressed young man ontoicd the posloflico ntSidnovr.ml introducing himself ns a government postotllco inspector re quested Postmaster Sandcis to show his accounts S indorsiskud for his credentials nnd ns ho failed to produce thorn Deputy United States Marshal Kadi lift placed bim under arrest. IIo gave his name as O. M. W hite. At nil cxaminntion ueforo Commis sioner Noubiur ho wns placed undur bond i" for the United Stales court. The bail was not fin nislicd. imit r H.I ix itomiKitr. Minneapolis Times : After nil train robbers show up pretty respoct-iblu nlongsido of trust tobbcrs. Give the devil his dues. Globe-Democrat : The difference between a train robber nnd nn attorney for the Cnoc- taws is that ono woais a inaslc nnd Iho other does his plundering in n b.uefacod way. New Yoik Sun : Train robberies nro cot- ting too common nnd too ftc < iuent Thei must bo stopped and the robbois must bo Hcvoielv punished. Moan while why should not a\cry train carry n military guaid ? Cleveland Leader : Another train robbery is reported , this time in Michigan , and tlio th loves seemed $75,000. If the thing con- ittlnues it will soon bo nocessiry to equip ovor.v express train with nrmoii guards. Chicago Post : Train robbers arc invaria- bly slight , short mon , according to the news- papers. Wo have nlw.i\s hupposed they were short before the robbery , at tiny rate , but wo fail to see how slight men can hold up a train weighing thousands of tons. Cincinnati Commercial : Train robbery is becoming a popular nnd productive pastime in tie ! oifnto oast. Yesterday's * ' 'hold-up" was as bold as any of JCSRO James' best of- forts. The market for Winchester rifles will experience a great boom if this sort of thing continues , and the railway companies wlll'bo forced , for their own protection , to furnish a pistol to each passenger . ing n ticket. Atlanta Constitution : These despot-ate outlaws must be wiped out and terrorised. Unless wo gr.ipplo with this now danger without delay no state in the union will on exempt Thuto nro localities In the aide/ states where trains can bo robbed or wrecked just as easily n in the west , The only way to make travel sccuto Is lo make tlm captuio nnd punishment of the criminals absolutely certain When the robbers see that death is , their , inevitable fate they will go out of business. Philadelphia Hocord : Piobably summary ( tenth is the only real deterrent for train robbery. To bo effective the killing should bo done nt Iho moment of nssault. FA press companies imrrylng troasuru should send along with It n sulllelcnt force to protect it. A long stop wns put to train io ) > l > ing in Indiana by the lynching of the Ueno gang sonioic.u.s ngo. But ivnuhlng is not to bo commended. Train tobbcrs should In killed on sight ; nnd trains should bu equipped for killing. JUKI. IX HAND IIUII KM 1.1. George W. Smulley , the London corre spondent of the Now York Tribune , who by Iho wny Is a pronounced Tory svmp ithl/or , wires the following to the Now York Trib une from London : At the present stage of thn Irish hoinu rule question , the Bohemian constitutional crisis furnishes n striking object lesson. During fourteen years llmperor Francis Joseph uud his ndvlseis liuvu endeav ored to rule the Czechs upon concilia tory lines , but tuico the tuibulonce of the nationalist section bus compelled the suspension of the constitution. Of late thu .sountr CVech party lias become openly seditious. They not only attacked the emperor , but openly coquetted with Kusslu , whose national hvmn nnd the "Mar- seillalso" have been substituted lor the em peror's hymn. The latest demand of thu Nationalist party Is for the creation of Do- honila ns u separate kingdom , like Hungur\ \ . with Frauds Joseph us sovereign. They al ready possess n separate parliament. In brief their attitude arises out of their anil Teutonics sympathies Conciliation huving fulled the emperor now resorts to resolute government. Thus thU phasn of thu struggle is disconcerting to the advocates of homo rule for li eland 10 m.irn I'tn.irivx , Pity PressDmlgo county re- : iim.v hn of iifllnnrh kind ami en i n rii in nonrirllim , lint past flxpcilenco h n ml jireirnn ihoni n gem ! murcu from icin' In ffrlritnrllilrttm for ntntn tickets , feir " Prick , lie tuny be minted to "Iloino- Prl.-U" or not for nil nn\ body knows I'l-einoiil | Herild- You will nellie tlmt Mitwnll lun enirlml Washington , Unit. C.m , VVityno , Illlimiri' . ( 'lister , BtifTaln nnd ! u fovv f dtlinr cumillo * tlmt Imvo nlte.idy bold mlr eonrmitinns , In fuel , hu hns carried nimi.it ' nvrrUhlritf oxivpt DiKlpe county and 'tadn't wo oiiitlil lo bn proud of ItJ Thn gun ivus limdml v ) leoiiVA lli.il It kicked Hi tlio liaek nnil I Pawned I'rosv Klelnnls is iiutngoul/ltiR . . 'o Maxvvoll by Iho opulillenn si iln e-einviMillou iiresuinubly bo- atue THU lii-n snpiiorlH llio upiK'ht and honornble Judge , who Is not n political tool lorn i.iilroad JurUt 'I hero will bo nothing loft of Uichauls - s-xvo nn - uns-ivoiy nainu when Tin : Br.i : gets IhroiiKh with him Kearney .lournil Thn man on llio Buffalo county deloif.itlon who violates the Instrue- lions of the coinenlloii will bo slcidng his own political death win rani for nil itinn to como. Bunrnlocounti icpublleans slid Max- vvoll , nnd it Is the duty nnd iieremptnrv orders for their delegation to dlo with thnir boots on for MuvviVel , no muter wbnt the result to our county for tlio future. This Is whnt Instiuctlons mean and It will boa ? oed thing for republicans of HulTalo to Icnin the innanlng of such things tint they \\i\l \ not got their llnieis liiirned again. The Strippers nro coming out strapped. Cherokee Strip rovolatious will serve to re stock the exhausted stores of calamity. What the peace of llui-opo needs nt this moment Is seine desperate man to turn the hose on the divine rightuis. Dlogouos did n w iso net when ho blow out the gas anil threw up the fruitless Job of looking for the ofllco w hich sought thu man. rU'coKiing to Missouri's notion of things , the only obat.iclu to booming prosperity is genuine : activity in the decapitation of lopub- Hcnn postmasters. Hon. 1 Pa Id \ Hill piomtscs to mnko a pllgi Imago to Ohio nnd liml n few long r.imro shots at the "Lorrupting inllucnco of public pationago" ns dlsucnscd nt the white house , Joseph S.nnuols of IMge county , Virginia , is' is 511 years nnil his wllo Is b5. They live on a fnrin I on which the founer wns bom , and bo . that they have never jot been obliged to call n doctor. . The state treasury of Texas , nc-ording to late accounts , has been rooted nnd looted nnd the Hoggites nro confronted with a Juicy dollcit of * i,0X,000. ( ) The taxpajcrs nro holding the sack. Governor i Ciounso's nffcctlonalo letter to the Denvoritcs \ % ill gild the gulches with cries of "tieisou. " Nobrasitans should bo prcpaied to do the Aral ) net w bun booted out of the silver union next month. A now species of nnnrchy hns taken hold of Chicago , and the s mitary authorities are preparing heroic measures of suppression. The offenders persist in singing "Wo'll Gnther ' nt the Hlvcr. " Anything but that vociferous subject will bo tolerated in Chi cago. cago.William William H Dowd died last week at Madi son , Conn. , aged S3. Ho was the last of live brothcis who lived happily together , hold aloof from all their neighbors , never mar ried , nnd by strict economy ninasscd a fortune - tune off 100.000. This money will now go to the church. For twenty j oars the fire on their hearthstone had not been extin guished. Dr. Frederick Andros of Mitchell , S. D , , claims to bn the llrst authori/ed practitioner of medicine not only in Dubuque , In. , but also in the immense region west ol the Mis sissippi river to the Pacific and north of the Missouri river. Ho is a nntivo of Massa chusetts , now nearly ! )1 ) years of age , and sottlcd in Dubuque in 183-1. Despite the persistent efforts of Governor Tillm.m to furnish undiluted irrig.mts for his people , ho has boon hauled over the coals oy tlio ohurotKis nnd charges of man aging n saloon preferred against him. The ingratitude of the Carolinians is ample provocation for a repetition of that hospitable - blo remark of ancient vintage. The statue of General James Shields by Volk , now on exhibition in the Illinois state building at the World's fnir , has been bought by the state to bo n gift to the United States government. General bhields once repre sented Illinois in the senate. The statue , which is of heroic size , will bo placed in statuar.v hnll at the capitol. The piico paid the sculptor was $1)000 ) Koswoll A. P.innciitcrof Ttoy , nn old-time dcuioci.itlcloader , who went to Cincinnati to woilc for Tildon's ' nomination , relates this anecdote of the campaign of IblS , when the joung men wanted to nominate Prince John . , Van Buron for president. He was ' > chatting with n crowd of Jovial friends , ono of j whom said"Wo'll nominate .vou sure in " 5i. ! " Ho " replied : "My parlieular fricnus are nil such inveterate drinkers that 1 don't believe enough of them will live till then to nominate mo. " Fraiilem Theiss , n French and German teacher in Hartford , Conn. , sleeps in tbo colmi that is destined to bn her final testing place. So anxious wns she to have a cofllii that would bo thoioughly s itisfnctory that she went to Boston and purchased ono of the very latest and most impioveil fashion H was sent to Hartfoid , and for some time she look gieat piido nnd pie.ism o in her lugu- urloiis acquisition. Ono day bar attention was called to the fact that Hartford was very well equipped in surh grave in.utois. After a visit to several undeitninng estab lishments in Connecticut's capital , the good l-'rnulcln rxi'Itlmml : "Weil. IIOVT Impetuous 1 wnsl I could Imvo olilnlned n coflln lu Hartford just nn cheap nnd fullv as cotnfoi t nblo n the one I got in Itmtoti. " The dllfornln Oemoer.iMo ilolog.ttlon In congiess iiropiwri tnltierenwlhoMuaIlycon | lltlon of the ndnilnliir.itInn unless John Cblmuimn Is driven out of thctiatlou. Nothing short of ) ilo throe tlmos a diiv will nppcain the wr.ith of the Koirnvlreil st.itosmon , 7/ssf ; ; . Slflltifis : Ii yors add llvoi-yinon oiiRht to bo rll piHted on eonvevntu-es I'lilliilelpliln Times1 fllrh , blois thorn , nro so fnlihftil. M'my noiiu has iiul her lieail ou. n youm ; mini's shoulder Jutt before ho lout his own. VPJIIIO' Not-\Vbit \ ! mikes Qrltnns shaped so lll o a corkscrew r I'ol ' "lfi'NcoiiHtniit twisting him nround her littlelinger. . \ \ nshlnalon Ptnr : "Tbern's ono thlnit , " snlil Do Ilioots wife , "In Mhli'h woniiin can novot lioim In bo man's i-qtiil. " 'Anil ulint Is that ? " "In being unru.isoimhlo. " 'R llnin "And how Is your tnblo ? " asked tlio piospoetlvo bnardor. " "lilpiidld , " mild thu 1 itiilluilv.Vhy , It's so rleb ih it ttooplii are dybudf IndlBostlon In my liousunll tbo time. " Utntliler : .Iniilnr ' I'irttinr-WldIo t - was tnk- IliSiUmn lli.it linvei'H miler this nioriilnitl toll ! him of one our fumij slnrlcs JenlotIMrtnei llulii ! Did ho Inush ? ' Junior I'litinor-No , ho cuuiilorin.iiiilcil tlio InillanuiiolU.loiirnal : llunury IllVk'liis-Wuz tbo aiiKoN filkln1 to vou In join sleep last nlu'M ( hat juu VMIS smllln so ? \ \ VuiVViitUlns - > a . \\aslmvlirndrenm I Hint al.uv had ben lussrd that all thnrillroad tnnKs sliould bu tilled v\lt' bour Instead of VMvlur. I'nck : Mrs Henry I'ecl. ilnnklin ; up from bnr - p-iporl-Abl well , poor Hyson Is lid of hU tloilliliiund tnlsiM-y at last. Mr. ' llonry I'eck ( In astonishment ) Why. I didn't Know blswlfo was slckl When did she die ? I'lttsluug Chronicle : Mr < Sn.icps ( rcndliiK ) \ inun In Soillli Duxbiiry , Muss. , bus conitbed upn Ill-cent iih'cn ho muilluncd some time ago Mr "MUiRirs-Yui , rvnnotlcnl othnr Indlu.i- tlons ( but thu hu inline of money Is coming to nn end. Hni pur's 11 17 ir : "Wh.it mnrrnlous vitality Slithers hns ! llo'sbeon 111 six inoiitln now. Any other mm would luvu died " "It Isn't vitality. It's thu times IIo Is so Imril up tluil ho cannot ovun piy Ids hisldubt to imtnro. " diminution. When the sun Is heatln' . MnKes us HWL'nt nn' frown ; When thu r iln cornea hiMtln' . Think wu'ro going to drovsnl Ain't no use Intryln' PolUsdown huto topluaso ; roamln' when thulr frvln' , An' fusslu' when thuy frcozol UXVI.K } > ir.Ai > .IT TUB VAl'lTOI * ll'n-i/ifiufou / Star. ' It t uk or heap o' 11.mil In' Tor git me hero teidnv , Tercolnbi.ito tlio comur-stun Our grnn'slres fought tur luy. 'Tiviw long IIJTO tlmv thought tor mnko A bulldlii' line nnd lit. An' 'tnln' no sin tur nolus that It Ain't Done Ylt. Tim unlvorso Kin sen the ( Ing The ! , friitn It Is unfurled ; The word thet's simKun InlLshalU Is heard nroun' tlio world. It's big an' gloi Ions eit stnnils ; f . ' ' It matters not alill , \ „ Exeoptln' tor Its credit , thot It Ain't Done Ylt. Tlio nation thct It rnppersonts Is veiy lIUo It , too ; It hirlim In Its grunjcr where Htornlly Kin vhnv. Fur power nnd prosperity , Thuro'M rnno cinuuaies ter It ; It hoz dlstiincud all Its uoUlibors An' It Ain't Done Tin : ri'Ai r r Eirojcan ( KtllllnnKew Ynilt lie alii. Fawn cloth capo , with frill nnd crosswny band of the material ; trilled collarotto round the throat ; small fawn velvet bonnet trimmed with silk ribbon bows and black bird's wings powdered with gold. R COL MinufiuturoM vi I ititillari utUluUinulu lu WorU. If it only would , And then form in large , healthy icicles from every roof and tree. How pleas ant \i \ would seem , especially to people in our position who have loaded up with fall and winter clothing1. We've bad sleighing" at our store for some time slay ing1 of prices wo mean Progress in clothing manufacture , to gether with the close times have _ combined to aid us in producing some of the most exquisite garments for men and boys wear ever soon in the western world. Prices were never so low. While you are not in a hurry to buy is a good time to look. Careful , cautious buyers is the class of'peoplo we sell to. BROWNING , KING & CO. , Store opeu voryovenluj till a . JS < aaj