Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 7, 1878, Page 1

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TELEGRAPHIC, _ VERY LATEST. CHINA REARD FROM. ‘ Melican ¥an” a Fraud—Pa- cific Railroad Affairs— Coinage, Etc, Etc. JOHN CHINAMAN SPEAKS. Washington, March 6.— Informa- tion received at the Department of Btate indicates that the attsmpt to proscribe the subjects of the Emper. or of Chita in the United Sutes is ecdving rerfons consideration &t the Tzung Le Yamen. The fact fs well known and apprecinted there, 88 vell 28 here, that there exists in the Burlingame treaty of 1868 & provision recogrizing the ‘inalienable right of man to chauge his home and allegiance,and also/the mutual advantages of the free migration and emigration of their eitizens and subjecis, respect- ively from one country to the other, for the purposes of curiosity, of trade, or 88 permanent residents. ~ Citizens of the United Sta‘es visiting or re- #ld:dg in Chiva are gasranteed the privileges, immunities, or exemp. tiows In respect to travel or residence 3 sy there be enjoyed by the cit- zemms or subjects of the MOST FAVERED NATIONS, aud reciprocally Chinese subjec's visting or residing in the United Stales are guarantced the same privileges, immunities and exemp- 1008 83 may there be enjoyed by the citizens and subjects of the mast favored nation. Itis intimea. ted that the Government of China will bold this Goverument to a strict fulfiment of the slipulations af the Burlingame treaty so long as it shall remain in foree. The result of this agitation will- be the send- ing of an suthorized envoy o FROM THE EMPIRE to the United States, to reside here, end to look after the interests ot Chinese swbjects n this country. It wae stated at the Department that the large, valuable and increasing trade between the United States and China wonld receive a disastrous blow skould any ill considered legi lation be sdopted concerning Ca zese subjdele. Judge Buckner, Chairman of the Committee on Banking and Cur rency, says that the modifleation of the bill to issue Treasury notes in place of National Bank notes wil meei the coin obligations of the government, that $15,000.000 will be saved annually, aud that after the payment of one third interest of all the dutles in notes, the government will still realize 89,000,000 per an- num, THE RIVER AND HARROR BILL. The house committee on com merce to day eompleted the prelim. wary covsideration of the riverand harbor bill. The aggregate 1s up. wards of 6,000,000. Ins revision it is proposed to reduce the amouat to avout $6,000,000. The reduction will be about 50 per cent upon the estimates made by the Secretary of the Treasury. CONGRESSIONAL. SPNATE PKOUEEEINGS, Washington, March 6, — Mr. Paddock, from the committee on public lanps, submitted a resolution authoriziug the committee consid ering the memorial of William Me- Garraban to send for persons or pa- pers, to take testimony aud employ stenographers. Agreed to. Mr. Piumb, from the committee on public lands, reported with amendment the senste bill defining the mauner in which certain land scrip may be assigned aod located orapplied by actual settlers, and providing for the issue of patents in the name of locater or his legal rep- rdusnnhllve. Placed on the cilen ar. Senate bill to authorize the Wor- thington aud Sioux Falls raiiroad company to extend its rosd into the territory of Dakots to the valley of Bioux Falls, passed. Consideration was resumed of the Jong bond bill. After & long debate the bul was amended and passed without roll call. The following is & full text of the bill us it passed : Be it enacted by the Benate and House of Representatives of the Uaited States of America in Con- gress assembled, That in lien of that amount of 4 per cent. bouds of the United States authorized to be issued by the act of July 14, 1870, the Becretary of the Treasury is hereby suthonizad and cirected to is<ue a sum not exceeding $100,000 000 cou ¥on bonds of the United Btates of denominations of $25, $50 snd $100, and of equal sums of esch of said denominatious, rcdecmabie in coin fitty years from the date of their is- sue, bearing inlerest, payable semi. aunually. at the 1ate of four per cent per aunum, and said bonds shall be exempt from taxation in like man- ner as those In place of which they are issued. Seotion 2. That eaid coupon bonds shall be made payavle to the order of the person wir shall pay the money therefor, and the name of such person or his or her assignee or of any subsequent assignee, and his or her residence, shail be regis tered as the owner of such bond, in liks manner as 1if the same was a Tegistered boud, and suct coupon bouds shall be trausferrable oaly by assigument, daly acknowiedzed before and certified under seal of the state cobrt of record or federal court, or United sStates coramissioner, which assignment shall also be exe. cutea in the presence of two sub- scribiag witnesses, and such assign- ment may also be made leaving the name of the assignee blank, and when so made in blank end execut. ed as provided, said coupon bond sball be transferavle by d-livery in like manner as if payable to the bearer. Sec. 8. That coupons attached to said bonds shall be payable either in United States legal tender notes or iu coin at the option of the United States, and the .same suall be paid at any of the sub. treacuries or money depositories of the United States, or at any na- tlonal bank, and it is hersby made the duty of each of said national to pay said coupou upon pre- sentation, without charges, and re. turn the same to the treasury forre. demption ; but said nauonal banks shall only be required to do so upon uction. of the. proper bond to which the coupon presented shsll have been attached. Bec. 4 That the secretary shall keep said bonds for ssle at different sub-treasuries, national banks and morey depositories of the United States, and shall dispose of thesame at par and accrued interest for coin or United States l«@al teuder notes at their nominal value, and such la. ral tender notes shall be reissued and the proceeds and coiu receiyed for such bonds ebail be avplied to re- demption of outstanding bonds of the United Btates which are re deemable and bear the highest rate of interest of such bonds. mec. 5. That provision of seztions 3,704 aud 3,705 of revised stat. utes of the United BStates authorizing issu¢ of another boud in room of auvy register- ed bond lost or destroyed sre nercly made applicable to bouds to be issucd under this statute, but only in case of loss or destruction thereof be‘ore expiration of rssignment 1n bank thercof. The secretary of the tressury is authorized to make such rules and orders as msy bs neceesary to carry out the provisions of this at. On mstion of Mr. Sargent the joint resolution recently submitted by him in regard o Chine se immi- «ration, was taken up so as to be unfinished busizess business to- morrow, when he will address the #enate iu regard thereto. fler exccative session adjourned. HOUSE PROCEEDINGS. The fortification appropriation biil, considered yesterday 1n com. mittee of the whole, passed. Mr. Young, from the public bufld~ 1ngs committee, reported back the bill appropriating $259,000 for a fire proof building for the national mu- seum. Referred to the committee of the whole After the morning hour thespeak. er laid be‘ore the house a message from ths president, returning with- out approval the house bill suthoriz ing a specisl term of the circuit court of the United States for the north- ern district of Mississippi, to bs held at the city of Scranton the second Monday in March. Toe message stated that there was not sufficient time time o give notice of the holding of the said speclal term, and the government could not prepare for trial at said term becanse no funds could be available for that purpose. Referred. U MAKKET KEPOR NEW YORK MONEY. New Yonx, 1. 403, coupons..._. s, currencies. Western Union. Pacific Mail New York CHICAGO PRODUCE Ci1caco, March 6. Wheat—Fairly active but lower; Nal, 106al 073; No 2 gilt edge, 1.08{a1 06§, closed at 106} bid; reg- ular, 105 cash; 1 06a1 073, closed at 106 for Marcti; 105§al 07}, closed at105] for Aprll; May 1jc above April; No 3, 100l 003; rejected, 85; No 2 Minnesots, 107§. Corn—Moderately sctive but un- settled, and a shade lower; regular No 2, 424nd2} cash; 41in42%} for March and April; 42}a42], closed at 42§ byd May; rejecied, 35 Uats—Dull; regular No 2, 23§ bid cash; 233a2d for March; 244 for April; 26§a26] for May. Rye—Unchanged; No 2, 55c. Barley—46c for Aprtl, 45§ for March. Pork—Fuirly active but weak and 5 7759 85 cash: 9 8049 82§ for 9974 for May Lard—r'air demand, but weak and lower; 7 00s7 024 cashi; 7 00 for Marcb; 70587 074 for April; 7 15a 717} for May. ulk Meats—Boxed shoulders, 375 short rib, 500; short clear, 52 NEW YORK PRODUCE. NEW Youk, March 6. Wieat—Heavy; No 2 Milwaukee the hissing of & venomous Gopper- head. Regarding resumption he said, with $66,000,000 in the treas ury, with none in the handsof the people, aud $700,600,000 to be proposition of in- sanity. It is already driving the people to pauperism, lunacy and suicide, and creating a moneyed oli- garchy greater than thatof Kng- land, of proportion. He coacluded as foliows : Instead of business re. viving prices continue to shrink. Employment for labor, skilled or uaskilled, is dificult, and the nation 19 appailed by profounder gloom than has overshadowed it since the gentleman’s otlier prosperous yesr of 1860. 'Lhis sad eounditlon will coutinue, and wiil from month to month intensify until tuat menace to confidence, the resumption act, shall be repealed. It caunot be otherwise. T.e silver bill was an act of juslice, not of relicf. Its good influence cannot be felt appreciably unddl restored confidenca will justify an eunlargement of circulation of mouey ard credit. Bonds have not fallen for gold risen since ils pawsage over the president’s important veto. Its enemies have been confounded by ex- perience, and 86, too, will its friends be 1f the resumption act e per- mitted to disgrace our statute books. Mr. Gartield rose to reply to him and 1 to have an hour for that pur- pose when the house again goes into commitise on the bill. The com- mittee rose and Mr. Fort introduced a bill to authorize preparation of fine or standard siiver bars of the value of $101,000, deposit of the samo in the United Siates treasury and issue of cerlificates thereon. Refer- red. Adjourned. — . — Pro Rate il ARGUMENT AGAINST ITS ADOPTION. Washington, March 6.—The Chi- cago and Northwestern, and Chi 80, Hock Island & Pacific Railroad Companies bave submitted argu ments to the House Comuittee on Pacific Railroads, in the so-called ?jmnte controversy betw:en the nion Pacific and Kansas Pacific Rallroad Companles. The argu- ment 1s that the pill will operate to discriminate against Chlcago in fa- vorof Bt. Lowis. Under the present arrangement, thers is a difference of fi'ty milesin favor of 8t. Louis from Omahs, aud, if the same rates are secured to all comers from the Union Pacific and Central Pacific raiiways from Omaha west, St. Louis has at least equal advantages with Chicago. If Congress, there- fore, places restrictions upon lines passing through Coun cl Buffs in suoh a man- ver as to prevent competition the Kansas City rates may ba es- tablished at Omsha, and an advan. tage equal to 210 miles in distance be therefore secured to St. Louis This explaius the reason why the latter city is so active in behalf of this legislation. There is no dis- crimination at Umata, aud neither St. Louis nor Chicago can secure any considerable advantage over the other. The Union Pacific Company denies that the has ever been the slightest dis- crimination between lines converg ing at Council Bluff: It is masin- tained that the Chicago & Alton Road, which forms pertof the Kan- 8a8 Pacific line for Paciticelope traf- fic, is the only road terminating in Chiesgo which could nct be wjured by the prorate bill. It isa! ed that diserimination agai cago and every raroad baving a terminus at Council Blufls will uot only be the effect of the bill, but 15 the purpose of its promoters. e — NATIONAL CubitaL NOES. Washington, March 6.—When- ever the Texas Pacitic billis report SWEDISH SCENES. The Swedislt Habits, Religious and Social Life. St. Paul Pieneer-Press, In my lotter to the Chicago Post Igave & hasty sketch of sceneries, eustoms aud peoples in the northetn half of Bweden. In spite of my |sway over the minds of the people, admiration for the renowned trav | although they have changea the elers Taylor and DuCliaillu, and | form of an actual religious belief to notwithsiauding my native mdes- ty, I feel inclined to think that if I attempt any descriptions at all, they | ride in compsny with a female will, because of certain good reasons, be decidedly more reliable than theirs O, DuChailla! how could | landers and stepped iuto one of their thou, for instauce, “inform” me | tents, made of reindeer robes. In aad the rest of thy audience in New | the middle of the tent we found a York, neaily four years ago, that the | brisk fire blazing away, over which Laplanders had a rsmarkably fair | hong a keitieful of reindeer beef. complexion? Let me humbly sug- | We opened conversation with an gest one reason : because thou never | 0ld woman—the only occupant of resentative of this | the room at that Lour—who, upon nomades. bdomebody must have | being informed that 1 had come piayed a cruel trick on thee, exactly | from America, told us that some reversiug the facts, and if so, thy [ twenty years ago two traveling case remiuds me of thatof a French- | Americans had staid with her fami- man employed as a teacher in the [ 1y all night, who gave very glowing French language at the academy of | deccriptions of their native country Carlberg, nexr Stockho'm. He was | —80 glowingly, indeed, that they a greater expert in telling yains | created an frresistible desire with than in teaching, often resorting to | one of her sons to yisist America, pewerfnl oaths to strengthen (he | which desire ripened into a plan, faith of his sometimes skegtic pn- | which finally was accomplished. pils. Being only imperfectly ac-|The boy left his home three years quainted with the Swedish totigue, | 8fterwards, furnished with constd- he onee asked one of {hem tue |e€rable money, for his parents were meaning of the word om (if ), aud | well off. He kept up a regular cor- and was told it was used to desote | respondence with them for s couple didst see a T formed by the surounding seeneries —eawfal and stupenduous as they are, especially along the coast—and the peculiarilies of the climate, created in the uncultivated, but robust, minds of their ancestors the monatrous ideas constituting the northern mytnology. After the in- troduction of Christianity those ideas hava still exercised a powerful that of poetry. The other day 1 took a pleasant TELEGRAPHIC. TERMS OF PEACE. A Full Statement of the Terms of Peace as Signed by Russla and Turkey. Special Dispa ch to the Bee. TERMS OF PEACE. Constantinople, March 6.—The friend—a beauti‘ul Swedish lady. | treaty contains 29 articles. The We rode to the camp of some Lap- agree to abandon Pirate Bulgaria and Servia includes Bienetzs, Novi Bazar, and Vranja Montenegro ircludes Antisari, Spaz, Podgoriiz and Njcesies. All the Bulgarian fortresses are to be razed and the Turkish troops withdrawn. A military road wilt be established opeuing article relates to Montene— Bro, Servia, Bulgaria. 'Lhe indem- nity isfixed at 1,400,000 roubles, but 100,000 are canceled by territo. rial cessions. Nothingis fixed con- |- cerning term3 or period of the payment of the 10,000,000. No guarantee is sfipulated nor is there any mention of Egyptian or Bul- gaian tributes of the lurkish fieet. The treaty simply states tbat RUSSIA AND TURKEY SHALL payment, something absolutely certain. T'his | of years. In the letter they receiv- | for the Ottoman troops, which, how- eavod him repeatedly from perjur- | ed from him at the close of the sec- | o ing himself, a0 he ever afierwards, | ond year he informed them that he to the great delight of his listeners, | bad become disgusted with work- finished his yarns thusly: -4 will [ 1 ng as a farm hand ; that he longed ver, must not make any CONSIDERA BLE HALY in going through Turkish terri- be d—d if that is true.” to return home; that he had|tory. All Mussulmen may re- Tt DuChaillu was sitting on this [ been sick aud spent his| iy o Turkey. Any property of chair, 1l comple: landers sre t alongside me, at this [ money, and finally that he was very moment, 1 would point out to | just going to jun tne Union army, him more than a dozen of individ- | because he wanted to fight the rob- nais of said race (they are just|elsere heleft America. From an- passing by my window driviug a | Other letter they learned that he great reindeer herd) whose hair and [ had taken part in several bloody are as dark as the In | engagements against the Confeder. tellows represent their | ates The next letter was written | orphans’ fund. Arrears of taxes Fair complected Lap- [ in English. It contained a curl of | in Bosnia ana Herzegovnia are much more excaptional | his black hair. Tue writer informed cases than very datk complected | them that he had supported the Bwedes. How is it to be accounted | head of their beloved son in his lap for, since a cold climate bas a ten- [ during the young Laplander’s dy- Mnssulmans who have not returned which they leave undisposed of, will be sold AFTER TWO YEARS for tho benefit of the widows’ and to be remitted; revenue until 1550 is to be appif#i to the indemnity for suflerers by insurrection and pro- dency to produce light hairaud skin | Ing gaspsat the battle of Gettysburg. | vide for local needs. is more than I can affirm with any positiveness Some historians fa vor the thoory that the Laplanders ara descendants of a tribe which emi grated from Asia, via North. Rnssia; | Witl Meet at Berlin With Bismarek but since the latter are generally conceded to have occupied the Scan- dinavian peninsula at the time of the immigration of the Asar inio n ers, the immigration of the ancestors of the Laplanders|Pesce. The mouey indemnity has must have taken place at a very re. | been reauced 10,000,000, and, al- mote period of huwan history. | though Kars, Bayazid, and Batoum Again, the Asar, themselves, came | are ceded to Russia, Erzeroum and from the neighborhood of the Black | the greater portion of Armenis will sea, and were, Lience, 83 much lia- | remain under Turkish rule, As NEPIUNE TREE. THE CONFERENCE in the Chair. THE OUTLOOK HOPEFUL. Austrian and Russian commis- sioners will arbitrate on all disputed claims. Navigation of the straits is DECLARED FREE for merchant vessels during peace London, March 6—Little has|or war. Six divisions of Ruseian that country, centuries before the | pocy, joarned about the terma of | mfantry and two of cavalry will nc- cupy Bulgaria until the formation of Bulgarian militia, the strength of which shall be fixed by Russia and Turkey, The Russian army of occupation will preserve its com- able a3 (he others to have a dark | telegraphed yesterday, neither So. | MuRications both through Rou- complexion, on account of asouth | lonica nor Adrianople is included in | mania and the Black Sea. The ex- ernorigin. ‘Their descendants—the | New Bulgaria, but the seaport of Kavala, on the Fgean Sea, and 'r,sho Verna on the Black Hes, are within > their neighbors, the Fin- | jts limits. Swedes, Danes, and Norwegians donot, however,show tuat tenden neither Ianders, whose forefathers—so lato researchers ssy—iubabited the for- ests of Indis, whick seem probable, from the fa't thatin lodia tribes are found spesking a language hav- g & elose resemblance to the Finch tougue. 1In regard to the story about Odin and his followers, the t distingulshoed sutbor of “~Norse My thology” and *Viking Tales,” Prof. Anderson, of Wisconsin, expressed in & conversation with the corres pondent the opinion that the “ac- counts of the immigration of Odin and the Asar were probably simply amyth.” But the currentaccounts puts their immigration at a muen iater date than that of the immi- grants who_are supposed to have wended ed the Southern Pacific people will move their bill asa substitute The Texas Pacitio lobby is confident of the passage of the measure. Al though the bill may possibly pass the House, it cannot become law at this session. The ways and means committee to-day fixed the duties upon & large number of articles. The more prom- inent and important are these: Tess, 40 ad valorem ; almonds, 6 cents per pound ; shelled, 12 cents ; bonnets of palm-leaf aud like mate- rials, 30 per cent ad valoremw ; black- ing, 30 per cent ad valorem ; bralds or like materials made of straw or vegetable substance, and material used in the manufacture of straw goods, 10 per cent ad valorem. Collector Harvey ia here for a day ortwo. He is to be ealled before 2581 25}; No 2 red witer 132); No 2 spring 1 22a1 223. Rye—Steaay; No 2 western 7le. Barley—Unchanged. Corn—About steady; ungraded western mixed 43a 54c; yellow west- ern 52 Oats—Firm; mixed western 351 35}; No 2 Chicago 35 Kggs—Steady; western 10a15c. Mess Pork—Heavy; 10 2510 50, Lard—steady; prime steam 7 20a 725 Butter—Unchangeil. Witisky—Dall sud heavy; 1063} BT. LOUS PRODUCE 8. Louss, March 6 Wheat —Unsettled and lower ; No 8 red 114} cash; 114 March; spring lower, No 2, 1 14. Cora—Lawer; 493adlc for March ; 41§ for April. Uats—Easier for buyers; 26}a26jc cesh; 253¢ for March, Rye—Lower; 54c cash. Whisky—Steady; 1 03. Pork—Dull and’ lower; 1025 cash or April Bulk Mea{s—Nomiual. Bacon —Dull ; simost blank. Lard—Entirely nominal. CHICAGO LIVE STOCK. CHICAGO, March 6. Hoga—Keceipts 3,100; mixed packing closed weak, lower, and slow at 3 3533 66; light, slow, 3 60a 870; choice heavy, unchanged 3 65a 3 90. Cattle—Receipts 1,500; but few choice cattle on the market; ship- ping stecra 3 7gad 60; feeders and stockers active and unchanged at 27043 75; butchers’ stuff in falr request; steers, 3 25s3 85; cows 3 30 363; bulls, 2 00a3 25. Steep—Receipts 500; shipments 500; good eity demsnd; good sales 37504 25. ST LOUIS LIVE £TOCK. St Louls, March 6. Cattle—Dull and wesk, ana withe out quotable change in prices. Hogs—Blow, and very dull on Ppacking grades ; fair shipping de- mand for light; light 3 3323 50 ; packing 3 4083 50; buchers’ to fancy 350a3 65, Receipts 4,600, Bheep—Good demsud for fat at steady prices ; common to cholce 3 00ad 35; extra heavy shipping 4 50 8475, Recelpts 480, the Carter Harrison Committee on Sivil Service to give an opinion ns to whether the expenses of the rev- enue service could not be decreased. Collector Harvey thinks fully on third of the present expenditures might be saved by abolishing a great many blanks and techniealities, which only serve to annoy distillers without producing any good. e — FOREIGN BR1EFS. Constantinople, March 6.—Lay- ard, British Minister, gave a soireo last night in honor of Gen. Grant. Paris, March 6.—Several supple- mentary elections, held yesterday for Daputies, resulted in_the return of ten Republicans and four Con- servatives. A correspondent at Rome learns on good authority that the Pope has caused the notification of s euc— cession to Humbert to be addressed to the King of Sardinia. London, March 6 —In the house of commons, Mr. Hardy, secretary for war, in answer to a question, said the matter of the defense of the commercial ports of England was being carefully considered st the present momeat. A Paris telegram eays an Italian statesman pessing through Lere re- marked : “Italy cannot extend her protection to the Vatican if it main- tains an attitude of hostility. It the Pope persists in_this policy the first consequence will be the abro- gation of the law of Papal guaran- tees. Coustantinople, March 6. — Previ. 0ous to the signature of the treaty of peace, General Ignatiefl aemanded that Turkey should unite with Rua. sia in defending all its stipulations before the conference. Bavet Pasha refused. General Ignatieff then telegraphed to t. Petersburg for in- structions. It is not known how the question was settled. ELONOMIC ABPECT. The economic aspect is a strong point in favor of Dr. Price’s Fiavor- ing Extracts, Vanilla, Orange, Rose, Almond, Lemon, ete. They are three times the strength of the ordinary extracts; the bottles hold nearly twice as much as those eold for the rame size. mytt-ry couneot Christians. In the distance rises a mot habitauts sometimes epend their mudsummer nights, to watch the [ 102 Bosniaand Herzegovina, Ihave sun asicsinks at 12 o'clock, to rise | R00d authority for believing that 8giu in a few mmutes This mid- | England will clum Egypt as her summer nigh’s scenery ie, howev. | & er, notwithstanding its singularity, ;eriwsly opposed by France and not at li adapted to inspire the ad miration so brilliantly expressed in Toguer’s “Soug (o the Sun,” trans- | will be made by the Congress to the glish by Axon. Here| English occupation of Alexandria stands the Latheran tewple, a lzrge | and a protectorate over Egypt. lated to E and besutiful structure; yonder is the pleasant town, eonsisting of seversl rows of small_houses, built by the farmers for the purpose of being oceupied only on Saturday nights, when tho owners mesn to| | atiend religious service on Sanday. These houses are, of course, only used by those who llve far from pute. burg correspondents agreo in stating that the project of & Kuropean con gress of foreign miuisters, to_mest at Berlin instend of Baden-Baden has been revived, with every prob- ability thatit will meet in the com- ing fortniznt. ¢ way througn northern | in that case, wili preside. Tt is be. Rusiia. | Anyhow, there isa great | lieved that, although Prince Gorie. o with their bis- | chakoft and Count Andrassy will toiy—a mystery as impenetrable | attend the Congress, England will a3 the one surrounding the celestial. [ R0t be represented by her foreign ized heroes of the Hindoos, Jews or | Minister, Lord Derby, but by Lord Lyons, now ambasssdor to Frauce, tain | He is expected In London this even- chain, on the top of which the in- | g which, however difficult, will not be likely fo draw Englsnd into war for its soluiion. If the (reaty of | rabia. The question of the Turco- Paris with regard (o the straits has NO TURKISH WAR SH.FS lement of all the questions in dis— Berlin, Vienna and 8t. Peters. PRINCE BISMARCK, hare of Turkey, and that unless penses of Russian occupation are to be borne by Bulgaris. Roumsnia is authorized to make her demand for indemnity are ceded to Rusvia, nor will the | direct to the Porte and make direct Egypiiau tribute be required to pay the indemui y. It would seem im possible for Bogland to make the least objection, and - there is genersl | is stipulated for Servia or Montene- coufidence in the finat peacetul set- | gro. Russian, Turkish and Bulga- rian commissioners will determine the Bulgarian tribute. Reform pro- xramme of the Conatantinople con. ference will be apphied to Bosnia and Herzegovinia. An organiza- tion similsr to that granted to Crete in 1565 1s stipulated for Thessaly and Epirus. No mention 18 made of Greece orCrete. Batoum, Arda- hao, Kars and Bayazd are ceded to Russia, Erzeroum and Frebizind are not mentioned except that treaty. No INDEMNITY RUSSIA MAY EMBARK at Frebizind on therr return home, Asiatic Tarkey is to be evacuated in six months. The evacuation In the event of Austria occupy- | of European Turkey is to begin immedistely fo be completed wilh- in three months. The European Danubs commission retains its for- mer rights. The Porte undertaki taly, the expense of re establishing navi- LITTLE OBJECTION n THE GREEK PROBLEM, heen observed in the terms of peace, Eugland has nothing whatever to "do with the questions gationon the Danube, and indem- ifyiug piratic losses, the amount of which are to be deducted by the Danube Commission from: the sums it owes the porte. Rugsia receives Dobrudscha ni exchange for Béssa- Russtan frontier shall be SPEEDILY SET1LED. The treaty is to be ratified withia the church and couldn’t gef there in | WDICB may come before the |5 gays, but its provisions become proper time if they left their homes at an ordinary hour on Bunday morning Ia this “bond-stad”’they are generally having a gay time| previous to attending worship. It is a lively place to pass through on Saturdsy nights. Whisky plays an importsnt part In the excitement which generally prevails there. Now they trade horses or watches ; now they discuss and_hair split re- ligious issues, (s.y Waldenstrom’s doctrine that Cbrist came to recon- cile men with God, not Goa with men, which is_just a3 good as Has selquist’s or Monteu’s teachings, who mamtam that God was mad like.) It is clear that the organ ot combatativeness is well developed in these Northlanders, although it generally tzkes the war whoop of King Alcohol to arouse it so s to| | mske it express iteelf in |} physical altercations Otherwise their veneration and philcprogeni— tiveness (you may laugh when I mention the latter quality, but Fow. | ler says that’s the one which makes “sweet woman” sweet as she is) counteract it Bpirituality is aleo large with them. Of course they i feuding theThames are being hurried and hence apt to be imposed upon by frauds pretending to be great re- ligious lights. Dootrines like Rob- conference. Buch 1 & summary of pesentatives of the peace party with whom correspondents talked on yes- says now that peace has been de clared, must be withdrawn from Turkish waters. Every day that 1t remains will be looked on as & menance and inientional insult to Russia. cavalry and artillery horses arrive at Woolwich daily ready for ship- ment. The plates for the forts de- on the flour milis sud bukeries by the royal vietualing department Vessels for the coast defense are be- 8 dozen turret ships at Devenport have been ordered to be ready for service by the last of the present are” superstitions and prejudioial, ;nnnlh. In short, it looks as if Eng- he views of several prominent re- erday. A telegram from St. Petersburg 1HE BRITISH FLEET obligatory immediately. Nothing is said about ratification by a con- gress, or a Russia-Turkish alliance. The details concerning the payment of the idemnity which were to have been arranged at ban Stefano, have been postponed, and the ne- gotiations have arrived at Constan- tinoplo unchavged. The porteissaid to have sanctioned the stay of Rus- War preparations_continue with- | sian troops at San Stefano, so long out Interruption. Vast numbers of orce of men have just been made a3 the British fleet remains in the Bea of Marmora. ————e— forward. At the forts defending | Special Dimpaich to The Bee. the Cbatham dockyard heavy gin3 have been mounted. Demande for hree mouths’ provisious for a large | Pacific rallroad company to day elected the following board of direc- tors for 1878: Elisha Atkins, Sid- ney Dillon, F. tiordon Dexter, Fred- ng prepared for commission. Half | erick Nickerson, Fred. L Ames, Wm. L. Beott, David Dows, Henry H. Porter, Jay Gould, E. H. Baker, 8. H. H. Clark, J. Richardson, Jno. and were preparing for an offensive | Sharp, G. M. Dodge, W. A. Hoag- | &4 and defensive war of the most co- 4 i g 1 lossal magnitude. —_— U. P. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. Boston, March 6.—The Union land. ert lngerscll's stand & poor show here. But a conceited fanatic and audacious fool hke Eric Johnson, the founder of the swedish colony at Bishop Hill, 111 , will seldom fail doubted in the least. The- trouble with them is that they are twe | 1¢3Ked.out, and we hasten to giveit “faithful”’ to once accepted doc- | {0 ourrexders. An investigation at trines. Luthier's pet theory that | the freight office reyeals the fact reason should be kept under the| thatthis firm buy their goods by the obeyance of faith,“is with them a maxim. This is, however, no ex. | °%" [0ad, and we have aleo learned clusive Scandinavian feature—En- | through a relisble source tbat by glishmen, cScotchmen, in fact all | payimg cash on delivery, they secure European nations are similarly pre- large discounts, which small dealers Judiced. The belief in personal “pirits and ghosts has always. heey | WBO buY on credit caunot get. We vrofounaly rooted to the Sean |Print their price list on sur local d'navians, whieh, together with the balf sombre, half wild impression | jt, mystery to the people of tiis Btate to impress them with the idea that | 1OW J. B. French & Co, the Relia- bo is a dem1 god. That a deep re. | ble Grocers of Omaha, could sell ligious feeling pervades the charac- | goods twenty-five per cent. below ter of the Scandinavians canmot be | other dealers: hat 11 MYSTERIOUS. PROBATE NOTICE. For munths past it has been a EL:I: of Nebraska, Douglas county, ss page, and it will pay you to examine febS 1y1p 10 o’clock: . #aid vetition. wl said matter, by pul in the Omal kly Bee. s newspa printed in said county, for three suscessive reoks, prior to said .{'? A grus cory.| WM. Wit B e e, Putnes " iegitimate. Particulars free. Ad county court held at the county court {nand for ssid_county, Febraary 13, D, 1875 : Presont. Wan. ‘m. 0. Bartholomew. Gounty Julgs, in the matter of the sstate of ‘Samuel Gre; locease: On reading and on filing the petition of LD, Gregg. praging that the las will and testament of secret consed. ed in said court, by e b | batnt.ailowed amit posrded: stk testamentary issus to her as Exeo- utnx «f the estate of said decessed. Ordered, that Masch Z3rd, A, D, 1678, at is_assizned for hoaring n 211 poraons interested in ter may appear at a county court 1d in and for said county, and show why the praer of petitioner should ca: ot be granted : and that notice of the pen- ing £aid petition and the hearing there- /| to all persons interested io) Wee! f hearing. . BARTHOLOMEW (cb?7 County Judge Jdrese . Wortt. & Co.St.Lowis, Mo DPRY GOODS. MERCHA T TAILORING. Ig 4o 30; aduey y 09 $9 B-H1p] il Il 'sp0 Ji 1 PLEVNA HAS FALLEN| ——AT LAST, AND S0 HAS—— Frank J.Ramge IN PRICES. I WILL SELL, FOR THE NEXT SIXTY DAYS, Woollens at a Lower Profit THAN ANY OTHER HOUSE IN THE WEST, AND AILSO A Full Line of Gents' Furnishing Goods CONSISTING OF Underwear, Hosery, Supenders, FINE SILK HANDKERCHIEFS, SILK AND MARINO MUFFLERS, SCARFS, SATCHELS, Silk and Alvaca Umbrellas, WALKING CANES, STREET & PARTY GLQVES &e.. &Ke.,” &e. i | illl Lno HNISOTO Isa1ealq (o Shld AR Y 4R i 53/ Jniyueg 1l I il Yioj Hay o l\ietz & Brother, NHEHBRASKA BREWRY AND HMALT-HOUSE. Corner Sixth & Leavenworth Streets, Omaha, Nebraska. 5~ Orders Solicited and Fromptly Atiended to. D.T. MOUNT, (Successor to A. KELLY) janl 1y H arness, saootes & W uies And a Full Line of Horse Equippage. 254 FARNHAMST REET, (opp. Grand Central Hotel) OMAHA. fobl 1yr M. HELLMAN & CO.. MERCHANT TAILORS. ufacturers of Clothifié' ——ANP DEALERS IN— Gents’ Furnishing Goods, &c.. &c- Man -+ One Price.---Goods Marked in Plain Figures. 221-22 Farnham St., cor. 13th. KENNARD & FORSYTH, (Suecessors to Martin & Kennard.), WHOLESALE ' DRUGGISTS, —- AND JOBBERS IN — PAINTS, OILS, COLORS & GLASS. — PRoPRIETORS OF — THE TRIUMPH DRUG AND SPICE MILLS, — AND MANUPACTURERS OF PURE SPICFS AND PURE MUSTARDS, g U0 T Jo jyo0}g jdnayueq | . "SNVITHSAE P ais the most pe plexing of =l Its symptoms are almost infinitein their variety, and and despondent victims of the disease often fancy themselyes the pre; and i 'nce of the diges- ive fane ion necosarily disorders th the bowels and the nervous sy gliccts to ome extent, the quality kel’s Bitter Wine of Iron a sure s not a new preparation. to be !r'ribcn! duily for many of eminont. physic 1 is ot expected or Tntoned fesere s and low epirits. T medy and be convinced of its ine. Take only Kun- CLOTE £ND PAPER WINDOW Tronand b convine. "A.dvice at Dpot and Store th Ninth Street, Removed alive. Tave Worm removed h - ,:ihn Pootor never fails to remove Tape. Pin Sent, and Stomach Worms. K" akels Worm Syrup. prion 81 aile; o » Norts Ninth Strest. Philadsl i instractions, by enciosirg 3 cont stsmp for retarn of same. Worm Syrup is used for children or adults with perfect satety, as Bay it, and try it. Ady and store free, No, 239 North Ni 209 Farnham St.. - 3 Tprs-as Tortures that need not be endured, Poople suffer a great de: of pain uaneo- Among tortares that need not be > those is ficted by the rheuma- o the acrid element in tho uces them by contact with o covering of the muscles ana ints the matchless depurant, Hostetter’s Stomach tters. befors the inflamitory symtoms are to auy greit extent. When it is what excruciating tortures rheu- matism inficts, and wha when fally doveloped, to af the advisability of «n early use of such a re Jiable antedote becom #at once apparent. sumatio virus is exvelled which act as strainers- produ tors, and the sufferer will find, this'supreme defensive agent, be protected againsta retarn of are also cured by WORK FOR ALL, In their own localities canvasing for the initor Monthly, Lareest paer in the worl mammoth Chromos Free. Big commission ‘orms and outft fras, \ | | . Augusta, Mai: 10) Omaha, - Nebraska. - O.F,. COODNMA WHOLESALE DRUGGIST. AND DEALSR IN Paints, Oils, and Window Glass. ALSO GENERAL WHOLBSALE AGENT FOR Kennedy's Hemlock Sheep Dip, Kennedy's Hemlock Liniment, Kecnedy's Extract ‘an: adensis. Rawlins’ Metallic Paint. 233 Douglas and 180 FARNHAM ST., OMAHA, ll[!;‘ Double and Single Acting, Power and Hand Pumps, Steam Pumps, Engine Trinmiogs Belti MINING MACHINERY. Hose. Brass & Iro.: T ' ¢ings, Pipe, Steam Packing at Wholesale & . .- Halladay Wind Miils, Churcn and Schocl Bells A.L.STRANG. 205 Farnham St.. Omaha, Neb. - JOHNS.CAULFIHELD, —WHOLESALE AND RETAIL <= Bookseller and S tationer! ~——DBALNR IN— WALL PAPHRS, Neo. 233 FARNHANM STREET, oMAHA. - - - - NEERASKAs MORGAN & GALLAGHER' (Buccessors to Creighton & Morgan.) WHOLESALE GROCERS AGENTS FOR HAZARD POWDER COMPANY' Omaha. Nek* PFUND & GROCKRS, AND WHOLESALE DEALEKS IN FOREIGN & DOMESTIC CHEESE No. 519 13¢h STREET BETWEEN FARNHAM & DOUGLAS. OMAHA. - - - - - NEBRASEA: CREAM Baking - Powder. The Most Perfect Made. Eminent Chomists and Physicians corfify that this Powdor is richer in Carbonia Asid Gas freer from adulteration, stronger, more effective, producing a grester quantity of and meve delicious arficles than any other in the market. It is prepared by Dr. V. Claresse Prive. ‘most successful physicien sad chemist, as well ag his, - 9Q Special Fiavoring Unequsied. ol Dr. PRICE'S "ty s STEELE & PRICE. Mnfrs.. I 3 10 streot. Chica« - STEELE & PRIOF’S LUPULIN YBAST @I aug 2Lwed fri mon &w lyr

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