Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 January 1882 — Page 4
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1882.
THE WEEKLY GAZETTE. The attention of all persons into whose BAUDS the Weekly GAZETTE falls is called to its many valuable features as a newspaper. It prints from its daily edition the dispatches of the Western Associated Press, which are the same as those that appear in the best if the metropolitan papers. Its market reports are received daily by telegraph frcm Baltimore, New York, Cincinnati, Chicago and Toledo. It print? each week the Indianapolis live stock market and the local Terro haute market Its court house and local news of Terre Haute and Vigo county is lull and comphte. It contains ail the features of any of its competitors, in better loriu and more fully than any of them, and besides has a number of features which most of them do noi altempt and cannot have viz: ihe telegraphic wsand market reports. An inspection of the GAZETTE and a comparison of its with any other paper published anywhere is earnestly invited. The GAZETTE is essentially a newspaper. For a nsident ol Vigo or any suriounding county it is the best paper attainable, having the local news which outside papers do not have and the telegraphic news which the other papers here, with the single exception of the Exprets, do not and cannot have. The price of the Weekly GAZETTE is -only $1 .SO per year, which is less than 3 cents per copy, delivered postage free. It can be obtained by seuding the money through the mail to the GAZETTE, Terre Haute, Ind., or by calling at tbe publication office. Nos. S3 and 25 south Fifth street.
THERE were 364 divorces, or nearly -one each day, granted at San Francisco during the year just passed, against 315 for the year 1880.
THE Cincinnati Commercial speaks of men gaining office under the present administration as "prize drawers in the lottery of assassination."
A rosTAJj card correspondent asks us to give the population of Cleveland. According to the last census it contained 100,142 people, and stands eleventh in the list of cities.
"A GOOD Old Custom Dying Out" is the headline in one New York paper, .over its report of New Year's Day at the .Metropolis. Ia another the line stands '"New Year's Calls as Popular as Ever.',
PEOPLE who are congratulating themselves over the close of the GCITEAU triaj don't know what is in store for them. The speeches may occupy all of a week and the jury may deliberate half a •week.
HERE she is again. The Chicago 7'iibune tells a slory of a school ma'am, aged twenty, living in l)ikoia, who, starting out. with a capital »t $1 GO, bought a farm and planted walnuts, that!will grow into trees worth $25,000 by the time she is thirty years of nge.
TIIK International Monetary Conference, •which meets again in April, was the subject under consideration at yesterday's cabinet meeting. Another representative will be cent in place of PostmasterGeneral Howe. The best method of adJusting the Indian troubles was also considered.
THE Finance Committee recommend •the adoption of a bill making the term of offioe ot revenue collectors four years, and that the terms of all collectors who shall have held four years more on the 30th oi next June shall expire then. They shall, however, hold over till a successor is appointed.
IT would indeed be a misfortune should the court martial which tried the •case of Cadet Whittaker prove to havo been illegally constructed, as has been intimated in certain quarter*. If this be so the case may drag along year after year, like that of Fitz John Porter, and no one be the wiser in the end.
GOSSIP at Washington again has it that Robert T. Lincoln, Secretary of War, will be the Republican nominee for President in 1884. It is said that he would har. •monize the two factions of the Republican party as no other man could, having •been a member of the Garfield Cabinet .and also friendly to the Stalwarts.
A MEDICAL gentleman has offered $1,•000 for Guiteau's body after the law's exactions have been met. The proposition was submitted to Guiteau and he thought favorably of it, except that, in his opinion, .the body should bring a higher price. If
some one should offer $2,000, he intimated that all his debts could be paid
THERE were imported at New York, in 1880, 1,211 animals of various races, chiefly thoroughbred horseB and Norman draft horses and Shetland ponies, Channel Island cattle, herds from Holstein and medium wooled sheep from the British Isles, valued at 336,237. In 1881 the number was 3,461, and the value $904,687.
A LETTER from Vienna reciting several minor incidents of the late catostrophe there says that a large Newfoundland dog, which accompanied his mastirand mistress to the theatre every night and waited for their return, is still stationed at the door of the buildiag, and cannot be induced to leave th3 spot, or even take food or water. Tbi* is a pretty tough dog story.
THERE was a meeting of delegates from the agricultural colleges of the various States at Washington yesterday. How to induce the graduates ot agricultural colleges to return to tt.eir farm work instead ot drifting into other occupations was a question under discussion, and at its conclusion commissioner Loring gave an address.
THE full bonch of the supreme court of Kansas, irrpassing upon an agreed oase, has made a decision which will invalidate nearly all the laws passed by the legislature of that state in 1877 and 1879. The ground of the decision was that the act was passed with the aid of the vote of four members who were not legally elected Among the laws thus made void is the prohibition constitutional amendment.
THAT is a curious slor/tbc Washington correspondent of a Boston paper tells to the effect that Garfield was prepared to be relieved by the refusal of Robertson to accept the oflicc given him that Robertson was actually prevailed upon to go to Washington, and was prepared to relieve the President in this manner, when the President told him it was "too late. Two hours ago Conkling and Piatt sent in their resignations." 'i ii story may be true, but we doubt it.
TIIE Methodist clergy of Indianapolis, at a meeting the other night, discussed Harrison, "the Boy Evangelist," and the weight of sentiment was strongly against him. One minister accused bim of insincerity, on the ground that, while professing an entire devotion to revivalism, he always demanded high wages, and went where the greatest pecuniary inducement was offered. Harrison replies that his detractors are simply jealous on account of his success in saving souls, and prays for them in an emphatic manner.
CHILI is resolved to make war pay, judging from the slice it has taken from Peru. It was Peru's richest possession. The province of Tarapacca, which Chili has formally annex ed, is the southermost department of Peru, and comperhends the cities of Iquique, Pisagua and Tarapacca. Its population in 1873 was about seventy thousand, and within its limits are found, saltpetre and guano in great quantities. The province commands if itdoesnot comperhend, the rich guano deposits ot the Lobos Islands.
THREE German criminals were arrested in New York in one day this week. Two arrived on one vessel and one on another, aDd all will be returned to Germany. These cases are the exceptions the rule is that English. Germany, French Swiss and Italian paupers,murderers and thieves arc constantly coming to our shores as fugitives, or with Undeliberate connivance of the authorities of the various countries from which they comc. America should hare a special agent in every considerable city and in every seaport in Europe, whose duty it should be to protect us against such outrages.
SENATOR BAYARD'S speech upon the tariff question yesterday is looked upon by many as a getting into the Presidential line for 1884. He takes a sort of middle course. He denounces the pro tective system now in force as unjust oppresaive and oat of place. He did not indicate that he was willing to sacrifice principle to expediency. He said the protective system was born of war, and was perhaps good enough in time of war, but now, in time of peace, it is aa much out of place as an arsenal wonld be where it was proposed to manufacture woolen goods. He denounced the doctrine of tariff for protection with incidental revenue, and declared that the tariff should be Just rnd equitable tax, laid to meet the expenses of the Government.
THERE is but one opinion concerning the extraordinary privileges accorded Guiteau on New Year's day. On every side the opinion seems to be that there can be no defense of this gratuitous insult to the American people in allowing Guiteau to hold aNew Year's reception at the same time that the President of the United States was holding his. There is a demand for the officer or person who permitted this, and the query Why should this man be granted extraordinary priveleges? is very loud indeed. It ia a mistake from whatever point of view it may be regarded. Everybody sees that noth
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
ing could have afforded greater gratification to the murderous vanity of the miscreant than thus to continue his horrible farce of pesing as a public character.
NEWARK has a "Mark Tapley" in its new Mayor. After reminding the Council of the stealing of $52,000 of the city's money in the Mechanics' Bank, the stealing of $125,000 by the City Auditor, and the stealing of an unknown quantity by the Comptroller's chief clerk, he managed to extract this comfort out of it: "When I consider the violent shock felt by the community upoa receiving these astounding revelations I am led to believe that virtue is not dead in our midst, but still sits enthroned in the hearts of our people."
This reminds us of a story told of a hunter who was disgusted over his bad luck, and who replied to a friend who inquired why he was in such a bad humor "I'm told there is plenty of game around here, but I'm Messed if I can find it."
A PENKSYLVANIA court has recently rendered a decision on the subject of baywindows. According this decision the highway belongs to the public up to the skies and down through the earth—just as an individual owns his real estate— and nobody has aright to occupy any part of it. The purpose ahd effect of the decision is to proclaim that a man who wants a bay-window must keep it within his own metes and bounds. He may not build the first story of his house out to the verge of his own land and then project a bay-window in the second story. That, secon 1 story bay-window is in the space belonging to the general public and may not be so occupied and used
NEW YORK has a lawsuit for the possession of a judgeship. It seems that Spier, the recent Judge of the Superior Court, was alleged to have been over the age of seventy years, at which age all judicial officers in New York are retired as superanuated. Taking his chances of being able to prove this to be a fact, Mr. Richard O'Gorman, a prominent Democratic lawyer, rau for the judgeship at the late election, and as he had no opposition, was successful. The Judge later resigned, his retirement to occur December 31st, and Arnoux to fill the vacancy. The matter is now in the courts. If Spier was seventy years of age or more at the late election, O'Gorman is legally judge for the full term of thirteen years if this fact is not established, Arnoux is judge until the next regular election.
THE annual meeting of the stockholders of the Vigo Agricultural society will bo hel3 on Saturday January 14th at 10 A. M. at the City Council Chamber. At a meeting to be held at 2 o'clock in the afternoon there will be an election of directors for the ensuing year. A full attendance of all the stockholders is a matter of moment and the GAZETTE trusts that all stockholders will be in attendance. Upon the results of this meeting will depend in a large measure the success of the next' fair of the society and that is a matter iD whicd every one in this community is deeply interested. It is certainly to bo hoped that alive body of men will be selected by the meeting next Saturday as officers of the association and directors and nothing is so likely to secure that de. sirable result as a full attendance on the part of all the stockholders.
LAFAYETTE is a sister city of Terre Haute in misfortune. Her people are alllicted as are ours. Between them there is a bond of sympathy. Once upon a time it was a question whether the Lafayette belle or her sister of Terre Haute was endowed with the most gifted and the largest pedal extremeties. That rivalry is at an end. The scene ot controversy has changed to the other extremity and the question now is which one of tht.m wears the biggest and most diabolical hat. On the question of abating this nuisance the Latayette Courier
Bays:
The stronger sex tired of the tvranny of the buggy top bats of the ladies in public places, must do something for self protection. Several of our esteemed contemporaries and acquaintances, feel secure enough in the possession of expansive auricular appendage and of course blind men do not complain. But to the unfortunate only normally developed males, the Gainsborough plague is growing daily more abominable. Now the Courier has a remedy to suggest. Let us, in that unanimity which threatened rights alone can give, return to the oid style ot' wearing bill-board collars and occupy seats in front of the big-hat wearing sex. Then, perhaps, they will be glad to declare an armistice and an amicable truce may be arranged in a manner sitisfactory to both parties. Who will lead
OSCAR WILDE, the English apostle of cstheticism, went to see "Patience," that melodious travesty on his creed, at the Standard Theatre, New York, Tnursday night. He entered the room as "Lady Jane" was saying: "In it (love) there ia a transcendentality of delirium, an acute accentuation of supremest ecstacy which the earthy might easily mistake for indigestion." Absorbed with this thought the audience did not notice the entrance of the poet, and he took his seat in the box almost unobserved. Soon, however, a number of opera glasses were turned upon him, and the eyes that peered through them saw a tall man dressed in a heavy ulster, with fur cuffs and collar. His faultless shirt front was relieved by one enormous stud of some colored stone,
while a red silk handkerchief protruded from his waist-coat. At the conclusion of the opera Mr. Wilde went, behind the scenes and extended the same cordiality to the singers that be is said to possess for Messrs. Gilbert and Sullivan. If Mr. Wilde has a love for the marked attention of other people the authors of "Patience" should be bis best friends, for fhey have done not a little to advertise him and his aestheticism. This opera, as much as anything else, has created a popular curiosity to see the apostle of {esthetic ism, and he will see the affects of it in a financial way if be decide? upon a lecturing tour through America, y"'
ATTOdNRT,« GENERAL ~BRE WSTER. The GAZETTE has not been filled with admiration at the Cabinet appointments ot His Accidency, President Arthur. It had seemed as if it was intended to be the restoration of the third term, and'the appointmont of the ancient Howe looked like the resurection. But Brewster seemed different from the rest. Great things were looked for from Brewster. The great things have come, but they are not exactly the great things that were expected. What he is and what he is doing is told in the peculiarly happy style of the St. Louis Evening Post Dispatch as follows:
Our new Attorney-General, Mr. Brewster, is attracting some attention in Washington city by the austere simplicity of his style. According to a correspondent he appeared in public the other day in a large glass-fronted landau drawn by two black horses, and managed by a coachman and footman in light liveries and cockaded hats, wrapped in large fur robes. The spirited black horses were covered with green blankets,on which was set in colored applique, the coat-of-arms of the owner. The dragon, gules and symbols reappeared on the carriage panels, and below them the mottj in quaint old Norman French,
V*rites oyes ma garde." If Thomas Jefferson, mounted on his old sorrel mare, and wearing a dirty pair of woolen "leggins" could have encountered Mr. Brewster's equipage on the avenue on New Years' Day, at a moment when the dragon ooat-ot-arms on the horse-blankets was flapping most ferociously, he would scarcely have gone into ecstacies over the advance made in Republican institutions. There was a time in Mr. Brewster's early career when he would have felt at home in a marketwagon but he is rich now, and there is no folly or luxury of nobility that he is not willing to ape. His 'example in Washington City will disgust sensible people, but the moral effect on the average American fool will be far worse than if be had stolen a million of dollars. When a man ot wealth shows his contempt for Republican institutions he is to some extent guilty of a crime. Mr. Brewster bids fair to be a beautiful jewel in the Stalwart Cabinet.
AN unsuccessful attempt was made to burglarize the residence of Mr.Eppinghousen night before last—[Local item in the GAZETTE of Saturday.
If the burglar had succeeded in effecting an entrance, and had been left for two hours to ply his lawless trade and had used a two horse wagon to haul off his plunder, he would uot have secured booty to the value of $2,500, which is the amount, according to Mr. Eppinghousen, that Mr. Patrick Shannon demanded of him before he would permit him to act as joint architect for the |court house with Mr. Bunting, $2,500 of whose money he then had in his bank. The burg lar at Mr. Eppinghousen's house would have bc3n sent to the penitentiary bad he been caught,and would have been disfranchised. Mr, Patrick Shannon enjoys his liberty and his money/
But he does more than that. He now has in his possession $2,000 of money hat ought be in the treasury of Vigo county—money that is not his aud his possession of which is polluting.
But while Mr. Patrick Shannon has these things lie has also some others which are not so desirable. He has, for he has earned it, the scorn, contempt and hatred of the great body of his fellow citizens for his manifold attempts to overreach them. As he walks the streets averted looks and scornful countenances should greet him. His entrance into public places should be signaled by the hisses of the people whom be has lived among and wronged.
He has much money, but be has the contempt and hatred of hundreds of bone6t and upright citizens, and he is gett'ng along in life and in a few years at the longest must appear before a tribunal where there will be no shuffling. There he must render a true account and suffer the penalty of bis misconduct Hia robbery of tbe county in the matter of the E. & C. railroad stocks his extortion of money from Mi. Bunting and hirftettempt to extort it from Mr. Eppinghousen his grievous wrongs on Mr. Rogers and his attempt to perpetrate an outrage on his fellow bondsmen are all matters for which he must give an account. This life is a short one at the best. It is as nothing compared with eternity.
Mr. Shannon, of bis own volition and at once, should hurry to make reparation. Where he has public money he will be compelled to give it up anyway. That he must understand. The GAZETTE proposes to see that he does. His day for making money in tbe old taahion is at au end. But he might make a virtue of necessity and by proper atonement now seek to save himself from the tortures of the damned in the world to come.
THE prevalence of small-pox in New York and the efforts of the authorities to induce the people to adopt all known
measures (of precaution, revives all the curious beliefs expressed concerning vaccinnatioo. One noted pbilanthopist^having opposed vaccination, he is taken in hand by another gentleman, who goes to the record. The strongest illustration is found in the great epidemic of small-pox in Europe 1871-72, unexampled in the memory of living man for its diffusiveness and mal The starting was in a part of Brittany in France. There shortly before the siege of Pari?, small-pox appeared in a population un. protected by vaocinnation. The exigencies of the Franco-German war brought about a state of things which converted what would otherwise have been an exceptionally severe local outbreak -of smallpox, into a world-dissemination of a malignancy so great as to compel the serious attention of Governments.
Tne French army at the time furnished an abundance of unvaccinated or imperfectly vaccinnated persons for the reception and propagation of the diseases in an unmodified state. As the army moved hither and thither it spread the disorder among the civil population. Paris early received the infection from detachments, of troops having the disease among them who marched into the city before the siege, and there shut in, the pestilence multiplied under circumstances peculiarly favorable to retaining its malignancy. With the rising cf the siege and the resumption of communication between Paris and the outside world, the first outruab of the released inhabitants and foreigners who had had to remain within the city during the investment, scattered the malady broadcast into hitherto unaffected provinces, to adjacent countries, to England, Germany and the United States. Certainly there are enough facts recalled here upon which to base the opinion expressed that the only reasons why we have any small pox at all are: First, that many people neglect or refuse to be vaccinnated second, that the vaccine matter deteriorates in the summer time, and is inoperative if taken after the seventh day.
OODLOVE 8. ORTH.
Ortb, like Indiana Republicans in general, seems to be suffering all the torments of the condemned, to soften down the old version phraseology to match the language of the revision. His complaint is precisely similar to that which affects his fellow Hoosiers of Republican pioclivities. He has uot been appreciated. In tbe distribution of edibles he finds his plate filled with busks and chaff, while his colleagues revel on corn and wheat and are up to their chins in clover.
Mr. Orth is disposed to raise a row over it. In this he shows questionable taste. It is no doubt disagreeable to be underrated oi ignored, but Mr. Orth is not the first individual who has failed to fill his fellows with tee same exalted notion of himself which he has held. The graveyards ot the past are filled with unappreciated village Hampdens, and if all the mule inglorious Miltons of the present were to break into print the rest of us would be compelled to make a business of reading poetry.
There were not enough pies and cakes to go around. If Mr. Orth had been stuffed to satiety with the sweets of official position there would have been other stomach's that would have ached and refused to be comforted because they. were empty. Under those distressing circumstances the slighted Congressman from the Latayette district ought to have brought philosophy to his relief or sought consolation in religion. At any rate he ought to have been above trying to make a national «sue of bis sore to«a. That sort of thing will do among boys, but it is small business for a man.
Youtb finds a dismal and incomprehensible pleasure in the examination of damaged shins and lacerated pedal digits, and it is not an unheard of thing for a boy to give his mate an apple core or a marble, say two whites or a stripe, or, if it an aggravated case with possibilities of gangrene or lockjaw, an alley taw or a crystal for a sight of hia sores. But that is among the boys. Mr. Orth pretends to be firing at nobler game. He aspires to fire the hearts of men. Let him then eschew the methods he pursued forty years ago among the bogs and fens at the headwaters of the Wabash.
That it is unpleasant to be slighted no body wiil deny. It is equally undeniable that Mr. Orth'sdelicatesensibitities have been hurt. Let him however, remember little Johnnie's epitaph, which condensed the philosophy of tbe Stoics into the phrase that in this wicked world "we can't alwaya have things just to please us." If you cannot hunt up your foreign relations, Mr. Orth, you can interest yourself in your home folks, and by as much aa domestic affairs are nearer and dearer than foreign affairs by so much are you the gainer by your losses. V''*-.
Once upon a time, Mr. Orth, there was a big boy trying his skill at jumping with a parcel of, what bethought, little boys. But the little boys were nimble and leaped over incredible distances. The big boy tried to beat them with his coat on, but it was no go. He took off his coat and tried it that way, but still he was behind. Then he stripped himself for the fray. He took off his hat and vest 'he lowered his "galluses he removed his shoes and prepared generally to spread himself. He stood at a distance from the
score line aud shook himself preparatory to his flying leap for—no not the Speakership, but for a point on the dirt ahead [of any of the other boys—a feat which looked to him as big and as glorious as any that ever filled the heart of aspiring politician. After due prelim* inariei he fairly flew to the starling point and made a leap into space. It was a mighty effort, but a treacherous pebble at the score mark gave his foot a twist, and another at his alighting point completed the desolating work of destruction. Ha lit on his toes, then on his knees and next on his nose and, propelled by the force of his herculean effort, that interesting feature of hia face ripped up the fair boeom of the peaceful earth as if it was a plough-share. It was a frightful wreck. Chaos and black night had come. He had lost the contest, had that big boy. More than that, he had nearly lost his nose. His toes were twisted, his knees were sprained, his shins were skinned. In form and feature he was like anything but an angel. He was the very incarnation of dilapidation, but he was grit. He was grit, Mr. Orth. He didn't get up in a hurry, but he got up. Remember that he got up. He didn't stand up straight. He couldn't, but he stood up as straight as he could. He surveyed himseif and then he surveyed the ground and the little boys who were waiting impatiently for the expected opening of navigation or thehowling of the tempest They were disappointed. Thafluxury was not to be added to their other triumphs. The big boy started home for re. pairs and arnica, remarking, more by way of explanation than of apology, that "fhe durned thing hurt too much for him to laugh and he was too big to cry, so he guessed he would go home."
Nobody expects you to laugh Mr. Orth, but everybody thought you were too big' to ery. Dofi't you think you are too big to cry or are you really a smaller boy than even Mr. Speaker Keifer thought Y°U? .'TV"
A NOCTURNAL RAMBLE AND WHAT CAM): OF IT. Some genius—we suspect bim to belong to the jovial order of humanity—has said: "Tbe day to drone and dream, the night to learn and ramble." We do not propose to dispute this worthy's view of the matter, but present herewith the experience of a Philadelphia journalist, Mr. William H. Cunnington, 1712 north Twentieth street, one of whose nocturnal rambles be thus refers to, beginning his narration rather peculiarly, however: "I am net a rheumatic, and have been troubled very little with bodily pains. Last Tuesday morning I experienced a very annoying stiffness of the neck, which grew worse as the day wore cn. Toward evening it became very severe, and I could scarcely turn ray head in any direction. Arriving home at tea time, it was with difficulty that I could eat mv meal. My wife wanted to rub my neck with St. Jacobs Oil. but I refused, saying I thought the affliction would soon pass away. Tea over, against the remonstrances of my lamilv, I left home to ramble toward the new Chestnut-Street Opera House, about two and a-half miles from my residence. I started in the midst of a heavy snow storm, and remained at the theatre until tbe close of the performance, although I could feel my neck getting worse ana becoming very painful. Leaving the play the trouble came to reach home. The storm continued the car in which I was became blocked in nearly every square, a cold current of air swept through the car, and 1 did not reach home until toward 2 A. M., by which time my neck had become absolutely rigid. Then I consented to the use of St. Jacobs Oil, which my wife applied two or three times before I arose, I continued its use ttat day and by evening I was free from pain, and tbe next morning I amused myself by twisting my neck in any direction that suited me', and no vestige of stiffness remained. "-Boston Herald.
Julien F. Scctt, drowned Saturday fording the. river, near Chattanooga, was the original of Mark Twain's "Col. Sellers."
BIG RESULTS FROM LITTLE CAUSES "Doyou know," remarked a man to his friend on Chestnut street, a day or two since, "I believe both Conkling and Piatt had a bad case of skin disease when they resigned!" "What makes you think so?" inquired the listener in astonishment. "Well, you see they acted in such an eruptive manner—so rash-ly as it were. Save. "Ohyes,I save." replied the other, they were boil-ing over and merely resigned to humor themselves. I suppose." If such be the esse, the National difficulty might have been averted by applying Swayne's Ointment for skin diseases.
The Pacific bank of Boston has decided to levy an aasessmentof 100 per cent. Weeks is ready to turn over half a million and Benyon has turned over $100r 000.
In a Cincinnati daily we notice that Mr. Tim Gleeson, ex-member of the Council from the Fourth Ward of that'? city, says he suffered terribly with rheu-( matism all last winter and spring. He' tried all kinds of liniments and medicines without any benefit until he used St. Jacobs Oil, tbe first application of which insured a full nights repose, and its subsequent use entirety cured him. It is a great remedy. —[Akron (Ohto) Beacon.
Persons who thought Guiteau would not be sufficiently punished can now dismiss their fears. Clark Mills, the sculptor, is going to "bust" him.
W. T. Legeett's 75th and 76 th Grand® Excursion to Kansas, Southwestern Mo. Texas, Colorado and Nebraska will leave this city on Jan. 17 and 31st, don't forget that he always accompanies his excursion' and always gives best freight and passenger rates to emigrants office corner Fourth and Ohio, up stairs.
Samuel G. Mallett, city treasurer of Omaha died of epilepsy Saturday.
