Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DANGEROUS MEN. New York contains a communist who exults in the slaughter of the late C: Russia, and openly declares that cerlain, men inthis country are liable to the tame fate, When press- THE DAILY BEE. £. ROSEW ATER: EDITOR Every dollar saved 1n the transpor- tation of producs is a dollar in the pocket of the farmer. — Nepraska contains 355,043 native ed to indicate who was meant, he said “‘the heads «f ®American monopolies have csuse to tremble.” ~ This lan- guage s used openly in an_American city by a man who daresto incite crazy fugitives from Kuropean justice to in- avgurate assassination as a means for the redress of real or fancied grievances and he goes to the extent of indicating the mep, by vaming two, whom he would destro; This monstrovs threat includes euch men as Vander- bilt, Gould, Scott, Garrejt, Dillon and their associstes who are at the of American railways, and goes 80 far as to say 8o in terms which but born Americsus and 97,390 foreign born citizens. So ssys the census burean. Tae number of patriotic citizens who ace willing to ride frec at the gov- e-ument’s expense, behind (ieveral Garficld's team, is legion T woman soffcage fiends should | for pis gowardice would. be i, emigrate to Verdiont. About s quar- | Schwab it probsblf st the head au terof the fowns in tha state have |in the secret pouncils of the murder- ous conclaves that idfest the me- tropolis, . Hedoon.mot apeak morely hir own atrocious sentimente, but the elected women a> superintendents of Ancrntsnor MoCass, of Dubliu, hss issued another fulmination sgainet the Lavd Lesgne. Tie imare the Archbishop goes of the faster the organization of the League goes on. Ciitcang, baviog beaten Clncinuatt fn her hog produst, now comes to the front s & claimant for literary honors. Daring the past year 1,506,000 of; Chicago books were 80ld in the Gar- den City, and Porkopolis again takes back seat. WaEs the numerous candidates for city offices are weeded out by public scratiny it will be fonod that our cit- izens won't take inio sccouat the elsc- toral ticket which they supported at the late election. PosTyasTER-GENERAL J AMES Tefused tosiga the papers of Mr. Pestson, for postmaster of New York, beosuse he was hisson-in-law, but themerchents of the grest metropolis were euscessful in haviog the former able coadjutor of the postmaster genersl sppointed Axemicans are righteously indig- nant over Eaglish tyranny in Ireland and the suspension of the constitu- tion, but they are ealled upon to sympathise over the death of a mon- arch who wielded most cruel aud des- potic power over sixty millions of subjects and executed and exiled thousands of humai beings at pleas- ure. Dg. Micer pats it into the mooth of Justur Schwab that Sidney Dillon {# in danger of being cxploded. There isno such danger. Sidney Dillon ds culy « figure head whom Gould is using on acount of his stately personal presence. Dillgn never «as and never will be an origioator ¢f great echemes of plun. der. He is simply sn sutomaton with the strings in tke hands of Jay Gould. Tz railroad lines are becoming slarmed over the prospects of the river route and the transportation of miliions of bushcls of grain by way of the Missouri sod Mirsiesipyi vis New Oclosns to Earope. Wihen the barge line becomes a fact those remackably - wheap rates of the monopolies will ‘have to drop at least fifty per cent., in order to compete with this formids T blorival. Tre juvenile editor of the Repub lican fel: compeiled to telegraph to Sonator Van Wyck for information eoncérning the apportionment bill Nt this little idiot had a thimbleful of i bfaing he would have known two ! “weeks ago that the apportionment bill in congress failed. But he wants to repeat his ridiculous performances with Paddook aud Blaine by making people think that he is on intimate terms with Van Wyck. Asa friend to Senator Saunders and Postmnster Hall in all ways personal, s & political friend to their every worthy act, and &s & mouth-plece of republicanism, we demaud from the editor of Tue BEE on explanstion.—— [Fred. Nye. . When you procure from Senator Sasunders and Thomas F. Hall an en- dorsement that you are their friend, ‘and they are your friends, personal- Iy, politioslly or otherwire, tho editor of e Bsz will eheerfully farnish the All we want is desired explanation. that Messts Ssunders and Hall, who owenll they ate in politics to this pa- b6 ‘and its editor, men whom gou Bave blackguarded and traduded over since old man Nye weso’t strock by c¢hamn lightning, when you denounsed Nicodemus LTI Y ““betrayer of his constitmenis” in voting for Hitoheotk, shall now vol- unteer to acknowledge you as their friend. Postmastor Hall may possi- bly do thissort of thing and exhibit sentiments of the boards of eriminal refugees, . whose _orimes. and savage license have exiled_them from their own coustry, to become revolticg wlcers upon society here. 1t ia ucedless to say that men who would make asssssinstion a remedsy for any evil in government are ot ouly dangerous, but they are so_drngerous +hat they ought to be got rid of, even #f it requires examination to do it.— [Herald. Bixtesn years 830, when Abrabam Lincoln was sssassinated by & fanatic who believed in the divine right of slavery, the man who wrote the above arbisle wmultvd ver kot LETHIDIE crime. Within the hearing of the editor of this paper and in the streets of the city of Omahs, men whoicecupy high aocial positions and stand as models of piety in the church, openly rejoiced at that dastardly crime. The American president died a martyr to liberty and national unity. THE DEFUNCT DESPOT. The Exiles of the Bloody Monarch Pay Tribute to His Memory. A Choice Collection of “Glorions Deeds” to Cheer His Ameri- can Mourners. A Licentious and Corrupt Court and an Aristocracy Rotten to the Core, While a Million of Men and Women Lie Buried in Siberian Tombs. Revolutions at Home and Des- sructive Foreign Wars Fore-Shadowed. “Ye That Have Tears to Shed, Prepare and Shed them Now.” THE CZAR'S MURDEK. 105 PROBABLE EFFECT ON THE POLITICAL DESTINIES OF EUROPE. 8t. Louis Globe-Dcmocrat. March 15. The news from Russia yesterdsy caused intense excitement everywhere, but perticularly emong the German reeidents of the city, who see in it portentous signs of the distarbance of peace in Burope. Below is a report of the statements of one of the lead- ing Garman journalists of the city: DR. PREETORIUS, The Russisn emperor was a victim of his own crimes against the fresdom of wav. It is & remarkable commeatary upon the consistescy of the ‘mouth-pleces of American monopolists when they clamor for the exter- mination of what they term dangerous men—like Justus Schwab—be- cause they had the moral courage to express what millions of independent men in this country think with refer enoe to the frrepressivle conflict be- tween American sutocrats like Gould, Vavderbilt, etc., and the common peo- Ple over whom they are tyrannizing. Ia a country, where a horso thief is sent to the penitentiary or hung to a teiegraph pole, while men who steal railroads awd rob millions of producers of their honest earnings with impunity go unpunished, there will sooner or later be a readjustment that will mete out the same punish- ment to all classes of criminals. The dangerous men of this country arenot those who demand fair treatment for the tollers of America; not those who foreshadow the dangers to which we are drifting; but the men who are driving thousands of their fellow men into bankruptey by Black Fridsys, and the criminals whose conspiracies have sent thou- sands into & suicide’s grave by their 'wold and reckiess confiscations of property. Free specch aud a free press will never endanger the Ameri- can republic or undermine the founda- tions ©f our government. - The dapgerous men of thie country are the cormorants who, under the guise of chartered rights regulate the price of the products ef this country by the abselute control of the public high- ways, who hold commerce in thelr grasp by controlling our telograph m, who degrade American free- men and rob them of their sacred franchise by throttling the honest voloe of their employes at every elec- tion. The dangerous men in America the men who corruptly manipulate our state and nationa! legislatures and invade the sanctity of the courts with their tools and cappers. What is the difference between our boasted free government, when it possess under the domination of three or four irre- «pousible and abeolute autocrats, who can, ot their will, make or unmake presidents, nominate his cabinet, and grant chartered privileges to them- selves by legislatares and congresses made up of thsir attorneys and stool- pigeons. These are, of all others, the most dangerous men In America, and mext to them are the mercenary wretches who prostitute their talents as editors of subsidized papers If ever this coustry is deloged la blood and scourged with fire it will by chargeable directly to the scoundrels who have helped to river the chains of dependeuse upon the producing and laboring masses of this conntay, and have upheld robberles which even the aatocrat of all Russia would not have dared to perpetrate. his base ingratitude by eourting your | These men, instead of resisting such feieudship, but wo don't believe Sen- atorSaundets has got down quite 80 Jow. Tue Omaba Herald is showing commendable bogus enterprise in Its mews dspartment by filling its tele- graph columos with clippings from the eastern papers, changing the dates of stale dispatches and attempting te impose editorials deliberately scissored from the New York papers ay special telegrame to the Omaha Herald. Thia is the most shameful amd outrageous Titerary piracy,worthy oaly of a patent bowelled eountry sheet. In ite dast issne the Herald appropriated eight dispatches from the Ghicsgo Times, one from the New York Sun,an in- terview with Archibald Forbes which appeared over a week ago in- eastern journale, a portion of an editorial on the caar's assassination from Sunday's ©8un, two semsations from the Ohicago Tribune, and » number of smaller telegraphic items from other journals. Each and all of these items, smounting in the aggregate to pearly two oolumns of stale news, were bodily stolen, the dates changed to the 16th inet., and the whole nuse lifted into the pages of the Herald as news matter tele- graphed to that sheet. A journal which makes metropolitan pretensions should be ashamed of such wholesale robbery, sud it's resders are ninnies if they permit themselves to be im- posed mpon by such a bare-faced sham. tyrannies are clamoring for the suppression o free speech and advo- cating the extermination of men who dare to utter their protest against the prosent legalized system of rapineand plunder, If Justus Schwab, the so cialist, is » dangerous man for point- ing Gould and Vanderbilt to the hand- writing on the wall as reflected by the fate of the Emperor of Rassia,and im- ploring ttem to temper their avarc- ious career, the editor of the Omaha Herald, who advocates the extermina- tion of socialists like Schwab, for dar- ing to utter this timely warning, is more dangerous to the welfare of the country. Such & man has no feslings forthesufferings of humanity. Such wor- shippers of Mammon can’t comprehend that governments are instituted to make the masses happy and not mere- ly for the benefit of a few nabobs and seltish aristocrats. They have no sympathy with the thoussnds and thousands of men and womwen exiled by the Russian tyrant to Siberia; or butchered without mercy by his satraps; but shed an ocean of tears for Alexander II, whose ancestors were, for the most parricidesand prostitutes. From eter the Great down to the tyrant, Nicholas, almost every member of thie imperial family was engaged in conspiracies to murder thore who hap- pened to be 3 n;:.m:on.. Almost every one wperial famil, met. desth vi ! and the onl ‘wonder is that the Emperor was not dispatched by his relatives before this time. 1f | battle. the Omaha Herald and the aritocratic sunflower t.st edits it could be trans- ted in St. , it Is poas that the new Ozar w.uld soon ex- editcr of The Westliche Post, was called upon. Tae doctor was just engaged in conversation with s gentleman on the very subject of the reporter's inquiry. In anawer to a previous question Dr. Preetorias said : ““Complications; yes, there will be complications everywhere. The Ori- ental question will ba complicated, snd the relations of all the European nations will be complicated.” “How will it affect the relstions be- tween Russia and Germany?” “To be enabled toanswer that ques- tion intelligibly one must go back toa brief description of the relations as they of late yeard existed between the two nations. There is, and always has been, since the German provinces of Lirland (Livonia), Esthonia and Coorland were snnexed to is, a lively feeling of jealousy between the peoples.” “:Germans mad at the annexation?” “No; the provinces named are the richest in the Ruesian empire, and the German families from thosa provinces have furnished the Russian govern- ment all the highest and best officers, both local and impeafal, for a long time. Every magistrate in Russia s a German; all their highest engineer- ing officers are German; their public works, both civil and military, are de- signed and constructed by Germans; in St. Petersburg and ail large trading towns from Riga, on the White Sea, to Odessa, on the Black, are Germans. The German families represent nearly all the wealth and intelligence of the country, and it (with an expressive shrag of the shoulders) eeems quite natural for the masses, who are prac- tically governed by an alien race, to be embittered and jealous of the one groat tanglble expression of German- ism—t’.e German Empire. “Suppose Alexander bad died a natural death instead by the haud of an assassin, Would that have af- fected the European condition 50 much?” 3 “Certainly not. You sec, there is something behind all this. The desd emperor married a dsughter of the Duke of Hesse Darmstadt, snd {rom her got a leaning favorably to Ger- many. Their eldest son, Nicholas, who died in 1868, was undef the in fluence of his mother, and grew up with a feeling of respect for German ideas, He died, as was currently be- lieved in the much-mystified social circles of Russia, from a kick in the breast given by his younger brother Alexander, the new emperor, but of course these stories must be tsken cum grano salis. Everything in Russia where court affairs are surrounded by all possible safeguards from publicity, gots talked of in a mpysterious, subterranean sort of way. Any way the Czirowitch Nicholas died, and was succeoded in his honors and heirship by the Casrowitch Alexander, now Alexander IIL It is no secret, and there is mo mystery mbout it, that Alexander, the son, became bitterly hostile, in his conceptions of the true Russian policy, to Alexander, the father.. He became identified with both wings of the Panslavs—the old and the new Russians—and became their acknswledged chief and leader. Now, the main idea of Panslavism may be set forth in a single phruse— hostility to everything German. They seek to make of the Slav the govern- ing race of the world, and while they have been making a tool of Alexander, the Nihilists have been making tools 5f both of them. The Nihilists have 2o thought but hostility to the present government, whatever that may be, and they have not hesitated to use the Czarowiteh’s protection to urge their plots against the life of his father. It is not to be supposed that he was a party to the conspiracy, though cir- cumstances may suggest it to some minds, bat the fact remains that he has been the acknowledged chiof and leader of all the people who sought to destroy the policy pursued by the late emperor. “‘Avd in what direction will the new policy tendl” “It must be hostile to Germany, and the Russian government will be supported in that hostility by the Russian e people. “‘But what can Russia dof” “Alone, very little. Thero Is even some danger fi‘ a :kivfl war, which wight prevent her taking any 3 e action lnywhu;. Bat if t;fig:::r mperor possasses the energy of char- acter which people credit him with, he will not sllew time for a civil war to be organized; he wil declare war to the south or west, and so band his peo- ple together in the great union of patriotism. Then tbe nihilists will not dare lift a band; they xuat follow to the war, though they may ay to themselves and secretly, ‘After the war we will settle with you.' " “But sbout Princess Dagmar's in- fluence?” “She is the daughter of Christian, of Denmark, from whom Germany took the province of Schleswig-Hol stein. She hates Germany aad every- thing German. _ Her brother George is the king of Greece, and he shares her feelings. The new emperor will probably make a cats-paw of Greace %o pull the great prize of Constantino- ple out of the fire. A war again: Tarkey will be most_popular ia Ru sia, especially with Greece pushed to the front to take the first dint of the . France, who ordinarily would be oppsted to such & movement caase of her claims that the Mediter- ranean is and should be » French lake, would join on this ocoasion for an terminate allthe people, then he would Bave s Russian empire all to himeelf, equivalent. Her equivalent would be awar with Germany in slliance with Russls, and possibly Denmark, where- by ahe might hope to recover Alssce ande Lorraine, while hoping also to humiliste the Germsn arms and thus avenge Sedan.” “What are the relations betwesn Germany and Russial” ‘Blamarck has_brought about an slliance between the two countries Itis troe that the mews of the czar’s assassinatidn will, in all likelihood, kill the old Emperor cf Germany, who is now 84 years of age. If it does not kill him it will be likely to 80 fer weaken him that he will lose control of the government, In either case the known hostility of the crown prince to Bismarck and his policy will nullify all influence of the latter. He, as a controller of the policy of Germsny, will cease to ex- ist. however, will not effect the cordial relations between. Austria and Germany. The Austro Germans and tho Germans of the empire are one family and one people, whils the Magyars, or Hungarians, are more bitterly hoatile to the Slavs than the Trish to the English. So there is no chance of any separation or hoatility between the two great Germanic em pires. - They will fight together if the war_oomes.” “Then it will be Russia and France agaiost all Garmany?” - Yes.? “How about Eagland?” ““Well, she stands in a worss posi- tion than all. W]’ilh her miliiom of orly paid people paying tribute out B? their earnings to the 2,000 families who own the entire country; with these millions educated as they are, and thoroughly awake to the oppres- sions they suffer, and with the loss of prestige she has encountered at the hands of Bismarck during the last few years, it is hard to see what ¢he will do. She will probably try and keep out of the fighi—try to kesp neutral. Baut that will be impossible. The disturbance in her own borders will compel her to enter the fight to distract the attention of her people. Moreover, there is her iraditional policy of either keeping control of Constantinople, or, at least, not lowing Ruseia to control it. No; I believe that we shall see the great war that has been predicted for a centary st “Then it would bo a good time to buy wheat now!” “Yes,” laughing, “‘any way itiis & good time to be in America. And an- other point: you will see an immense influx of immigration growing out of this affair.” A NIHILIST'S STATEMENT. Chicago Times Telegram. New Yorx, March 14.—The promi- uent nihilist, John Baker, makes & long statement, which, if ac:urate, is important as showing some of the immediate causes which preecipitated another attempt upo the czar's life. Baker {8 a refugee from Poland, and he belongs not to the radical and reck- Tess but to the conttitutional wing of the revolutionists, who have adopted the name of nihilist, He epeaks sove:al languages, claims to have prompt and accurate information about all socialistic movements in Earope, and in many letters to The Springfield Republican, The Brooklyn Eagle, and other papers, he has undertaken to throw light upon the subject of nihi- lism in Russia. “Three wecks 8go,” said Baker, ‘‘the czar received infor- matlon that a committee of leaders of the secret revelutionary party in Rus- sia DESIRED A CONFERENCE with him for the purpose of giving him information regarding the condi- tion of affairs in his own empire, and Taying beforo him proofs and proposi. u They guaranteed his personal Toyuosted only n similar 2 on his part. The czar wss pleased to accept the proposition,and, accompanied by three of his most trusted officers, met the committee, The rendezvous was in St. Petersburg, The committee 1aid before the czar ev- idence of the most convincing chara ter of the atrecities and regueries of cfficlale, the wronzs of the peoplo and the real state of affairs. The czar wa3 astonished at what he learned, and demanded to know what remedy the committee had in view. Taoy de- clared that A CONSTITGTION was the only possible remedy for the evils that were ea'ing out the heart of Rustia’s prosperity. The czar re- plied: “No constitution during my lifetime.” The court of St. Peters- is underatood everywhere but , is the most LICENTIOUS AND CORRTPT, notwithstanding the disivity of its head, in the world; and the church iteelt is no better. The entire Amer- ican system of religlous liberty and oducation were urged upon them, and i B "'Naconnituf(nn Rep—What steps did tho secret rov- olutionary government take? Mr. B.—Thoughtful and pairiotic men abhor assassination. Nihilism in Russia ia tho slaug name for two_par- ties, one the desperats, vindictive party of wholesalo slavghter, and the other the conservative and constitu- tional party of revolutionists. The lat- ter is the stronger, and really contrcls the former. Tt has kept the hands of the nibilists off the czir and his ofli- clals. He has owed his life to the con- stitutional revolutionists and his death to himeelf. His answer, **No consti- tation during my Jifetime,” deprived the committeoand the goverzment of all hopo of reform at his hands The czarowitz has been declared emperor. Every czar before he ascends the throne is a liberal. Alexander was a liberal; even Nicholas was a liberal., THIS NEW CZAR. was a liberal. Lot us see if his liber- alism is genulne. If he lives tp to his promises to the revolutionists, we shall have a constitution; if he does not, without the lesst doubt in the world he will suffer his father’s fate. Rep.—Did you observe in to-day's dispatch that the troops were ordered, officers and men, to remain in their barracks. What sigaificance do you attach to that? Mr. B.—That the government can not rely upon the loyalty of its troops. Rep.—About what proportion of the troops do you count upon as favoring the revolationary canse? Mr. B —At least one-third, Rep.—And the officerst Mr. B.—Among the officers the pro- portion is greater. The grievances of the people from whom they are draft- od, the misery they see all rouad them, the aotivo propagandiem of the cevolutionists and the myriad plots that are going on under the noscs of the authorities, show that the army as well as society is HONEYCOMBED WITH REVOLUTIONARY DISCONTENT. Ttis placed to the credit of the lato czar that he_emancipated 23,000,000. serfs. He did nothing of the kind. The serf to-day is as (completely a avess ho ever was. He has changed s master; that is all. Before emanci- pation he was in the thrall of the noble; to-day he is equally ac the mercy of the head man of the command. The infamies practised undsr such a sys- tem are almost tco shocking for a newspaper to narrate. But let ma tell you that during the last five do. cades not more than two-thirds of the people of Ruasia are the children of thelr reputed fathers. That damnable unwritten law which the Eoglish Jan- gu vides no modest equisalent for, as the French put it, le droit du seigneur, prevaile. Let wme tell you that every officisl, no matter what his the father of a virtuous maiden, is | compelled to surrender her, upon de- mand, to any petty office-holder, un- der penalty of being sent to_Siberia. There s no remedy. To whom can the outraged victim appeal for ven- geancel To mobody. All this was laid before the czar in detail, three weeka ago, and his reply was: *No constiiution during my lifetime.” - Tn May, 1874, I published i The Spring- field Republican what was an actnal occarrence, and what has never been gen(f‘d. Upon the “‘emperor’s name's A FESTIVAL more generally regarded than a birth- day, in the town of Lask, in Poland, requested to illumin- nd turn out in thelr best attire to witnessa raview. Such a request in Russia is & command, Whilo they eat looking at the review they found themselves elowly sur- rounded aud hemmed in by the Ja Kusk infaatry regiment. The colonel of this regiment suddenly gave the word of and: “Children, amuse yourselyes.” Threo hundred of the maids and wives were seized and outraged by the soldiers. A fonght for the were killed in ims. The number of men who honor of ths women the pres:nca of the townsmen sought an the governor, to lay their wrongs be- fors him, and were refused. A peti- tion was sent to the emperor fer an inquiry. It probably never reached him. It was announced that the czar himself would surely be present at a review in that town, and a com- plaint was dg;m upby the citizens to be handed o the “liitle father” in person. Afthe Iast moment it was announc:d that the review would be hela at Kieff instead. A few weeks later the colonel commanding_the Ja Kusk infantry was made a major gen- eral. Such outrages are not common. MANY OUTRAGES ocour that are mever heard of; but bear in mind that what goes out in one commune is scarcely known .in the next one. Rep.—Do tha people of Rassia hold the superior responsiblel Mr. B —They are too superstitious, I myself regrot the taking of the life of this man as a man, but asan em- peror Ido not. As the father of his people, conscions of what was going on and making no effort to prevent it, I think he deserved his fate, I ask the American people to be falr aud re- serve a little of the odium which at- taches to nihilism for the causes that have called it Into existence. I ask little pity for the thousands and thor sands who have been sent to Siberia for committing no crime at all. In proof of the tales of horror and mis- ery I refer to an article in The Fort- nightly Review of May 4, 1874, writ- ten by Mr. Ashton W. Dilke, brother of Sir Charles Dilke, himsel a mem- ber of parliament. Since 1830 no less than one million peoplo have been SENT To SIBERIA, including Poles, for political offenses. One-fourth of theso woro sent to the salt mines, and I defy any living apoli- gist of (he system to point out half a dozen who havs outlived six years of their sentence. Aa there is scarcely a family of high birth that has not representatives in Siberia, as in Russia when aman disappesrs nobody ven- tures t> inquire after him as we do here, as all classes live in a'moredread- ful ‘slavery than ever, vengeance against the czar, who assumos re- sponsibility for theeo crimes, is only uataral, Rep.—What will the gain, If anything? M-, B.—A constitution. We can- not hope for a republic yet, and do not sk ii; but the czar’a death haa tought his saccossor that if ho is_sn cbatacle to the expansion and deliver- ance of Russia, he will die. It has taught the wretched peasantry, upon whose ignorance depotism is fonnded, that all his divinity cannot protect him against the penalty of tpranny. It the new czar is wise ho will under- stand that a constitution which is worth shedding Russian blood to gain for Bulgaria is worthshedding despotic blood to win for Rassia, revolution AN EXILE'S OPINION. A Russian exilo named Mirgan,gon- erally supposeii to be o nihiitst, who has boen in St. Louis some months, was asked for information about his order. His reply was: “Iknow noth- ing sbout them, sir. I was not a mem- ber of the order, and although I thought it beat to leave St. Peters- burgh, it was not because I was an in- mate of a secret society.” “Have you read the account of the sasassination of the czarl” are many dissatisfied, who are not ni- hiliats, in Ruesia.” “Did you expect this new:?" “Everybody who knows Russia bas- expected it. I have expected it now for yoars. When Gen, Melikoff as- sumed control of the empre I thought then, mere then ever, that THE BUBST WOULD COME. But no. You Americans do not know Russia. I wasa student in the Uni- versity of Moscow when sixty-elght young men, most of whom were inno cont, wero torn away into Siberian exile. My poor father and sister are now in Siberia. T will never sce them again, The péor people became at Tast tired of all this. The house of Romanoff has baen ten thonsand times worse than the kouse of Bourbon. The day comes now, and Russia will be frec—freer than yoar America.” “If the Nihilisis have not done this, who hss?” “How do I know! Perhaps some one whoss family are in the mince, and whe care not any longer to live. They will now WAIT UPON THE CZAROWITZ, “If he koeps his word, there mey be nothing more happen for a long time; but unless Russia Is given a coustitution, blood and fron will not eave the Romanoffs. The white czar is & very strong man, and a very great man. He has_regiments of eavage Cossacka around him, asleep or awake; but the Orsini bomb can get through the cordon. “‘Has the czarowitch promised a con- stitution to the empire?” “So it is ssid.” ““Will that etcp the nihilist move- ment?” “I: will for time. The nihilists are only atronz because the paople are ground down, and the only_relief of- fored is this radical one. We do not want to go into the excessesof liberty, but they are better than the excesses of despotiem.” “But the dead czar was a liberal, the emancipator of the ser “‘That is the most misanderstood thing in Russia. To beeure, that was g00d for the serfs. Why did he not, t00, emancipate those who wero not serfs, but who were pround under as badly as they—the burghers! You Americans do not know what tyranny is, how it is to be dependent on the whim of a ruler and on the humors of a petty tyrent under him. RUSSIA 1S ON A VOLCANO, and if the czarowitch recallsthe exiles, abolishea the censorship which rules over every condition of life, snd gives us & conatitation, the eruption will not come.” “And if he does not?” In a recent inerview with dr. Jo- seph Gramer, one of the proprietors of the Emerson Piano Company, Boston, Maas., that gentloman remarked: I have used that splendid remedy, St. Jacobs Oil, iu my family, and found it BAHKING HOUSES. THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED. BANKING HOUSE to’ be so very beneficial that I will never be without it. It has cured me of a severe case of rheumatism, after. other remedies had failed. IN NEBRASKA. CAEDWELL, HAMILTON2CO ENVIED BEAUTY. What is more handsome than a nice, bright, clear complexion, showing the benaties of perfect health? All can enjoy theso advantages by using Electric Bitters. Impure blood, and all disesses of the Stomach, Liver, Kidueys and Urinary Organs, are speedily cured. For nervousness and all attendent ailments, they are a never failing remedy, and positively cnre where all othor fail. Try the Electric Bittcrs, and be convinced of their wonderful merits. For sale by all druggists, at fif'y cents a buuze.) 1) TEE "TBANKERS. Bustoss transacted sume s that o an Incor- porated Baak. Accounts kept in Currency or gold subject to sight check withoat notice. Certificates of deposit tasucd payable in thrse, six and tweive months, bearing interost, or on demand without interest. Advauces made to customers on aporoved sc curitios at market rates of iutereat Buy andsel gold, bills of exchanze Govern- meut, State, County and City Bond: Draw Sight Drafta on Enzland, Ireland, Scot- Iaud, and all parts of Europe. Sell Earopesn Passage Tickets. GOLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. angldt U. 8 DEPGSITORY. “Then goclety in Rusels will crum- ble to picces. The French relgn of terror will be as nothing to the blood- flow of the Sclav aristocracy. They ool s in this respect a selgneur, and , are all rotten, aud some time they hat ‘the husband of a pretty woman, 1 will all go, Great German il REMEDY § REEVATISK, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, GOoUuT, SORENESS CHEST, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS SPRAINS, FROSTED FEET EARS, First Nationa Baxk OF OMAHA, Cor. 18th and Farnham Streets, ~ OLDEST BANKIKC ESTABLISHMENT IN OMAHA. (SUCCESSORS T0 KOUNTZE BRO.,) RTABLISEED 1N 1656, Organtzed 3 & National Bank. Augnst 30, 1563. Capital and Profits Over$300,000 Spectally suthortsed by the Secretary or Treagury to receive Sabscription 10 the U.8.4 PER CENT. FUHDED LOAN. CFFICERS AND DIRECTORS Hxawix Keumyaz, Preelient, ‘Avevsres Koowras, Vico Prosidont. . Casiler, Thid bank recsivasdeposit without ragand to cants. Tastica tima certificatos baasing tntarst. Draws drafts o0 San Francisco and principal citioa of the United States, alss London, Dabiin, Edinburgh and the princlpal clies of the conttt neat of Europo, Sells passage Heketa for Emigranta In the Tn- man ne. mylatt SCALDS, HOBLY PN TOOTH, EAR ax0 HEADACHE, HOTELS: THE JRIGINAL, BRIGGS HOUSE | oz, Randolph St, & bth Ave., OHICAGO ILL. 8B S ovey ane meriag Wik el caa hcap and positive proofof 1s i, DIRECTIONS IN ELKVEN LANGUAGES. SOLD BY ALL DRUGBISTS AND DEALERS I8 MEDICINE, . VOGELER & CO. Baltim 4 Geo. P. Bemis ReaL ESTATE AcENcy. 155 & Donglas 8ts., Omaha, Neb, This sgency doos STRIOTLY & brokerago busl ness. Dooa notspoculate, and therofore any ar- gaing on 1ts books are fnstired to its patrons, In stead of being up by the agent BOGGS & HILL. REAL ESTATE BROKERS No 1408 Farnhawm Strect OMAHA - NEBRASKA., O SHCEE K al opp Granc ComtsabIStol 2 Nebraska Land Agency. DAVIS & SNYDER, 1605 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. 400,000 ACRES carefully selocted Iand in Eaatern Hehriata or e (Great Bargains In improved farms, snd Omsha ity proper . oF WELATER SN¥DER, 7 PRICES REDUCED TO $2.00 AND $2.50 PER DAY Located Iu the business centrs, convnient %o places of smusement. Elogantly furnishod, containing all modern improvements, " olevator, &e. H. CUMMINGS, Froprietor. i OGDEN HOUSE, COor. MARKET ST. & BROADWAY Council Blufls, Jowa: Onlinc o Strest Rallway, Omnlbus fo 2nd from all trains. RATES—Parlor floor, $3.00 per day: second floor, 82.60 per day ; thifd floor, $2.00. commodions honse GEO. T. PHELPS Prop. FRONTIER HOTEL, Laramie, Wyoming, The miner's resort, good accommodations, o 8am plo room, chargca reasonable. - Special atiention given to traveling men. 14 K. 6 HILLIARD Proprietor. INTER - OCEAN HOTEL, Cheyenne, Wyoming. First-class, Fine srgo Sample Eooms, one Mook from depot. Trains stop from 90 mizutes to2hours for dinner, Free Bus toand from Dopot. Eates 8200, $2.60 aud #3.00, according to room; stngle meal 75 ce: BALOOM, Fre . Colef Clerk. DAVIS, Land Com’ n the city. LIS sEwD, Byron Reed & Co., OLDNST RSTABLINID REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEBRASKA. Keop a completo abstract of titls to ail Real Estato o Omaha aud Dousias County. _mayltt AGENTS WANTED EO! fhe Fastest Solling Book of ths Age! Foundations of Success. BUSINESS AND SOUIAL FORMS. The laws of trade, legal forms, how to frans- act business, valuble tables, social etiquette, pariismentary usage, how to conduct publ'c § to Gu'de to all classes. A family necessi v. Adire Tars and spocial terms, ANGHOR PUB- ). St. Louis, 3o T oW OoELSIOR Machine Works, oM AXA, WNERS. elotor. mi LEAVE OMATL FIRE! FIREDE FIREB The Popular Clothing Houseffof M. HELLMAN & CO. Find, on account of ‘the Season so. far advanced, and having a very large Stock of Suits, Overcoats and Gents’ Furnishing Goods left, They Have REDUCED PRICGES that cannotfail to pleaseeverybody REMEMBER THE ONE PRICE CLOTHING HOUSE, 1301 and 1303 Farnham St.,, Cormer 13th. GOODS MADE TO ORDER ON SHORT NOTICE. PIANOS = ORGANS. " CHICKERING PIANO, FOR And Sole Agent for Hallet Davis & Co., James & Holmstrom, and J. & C. Fischer’s Pianos, also Sole Agent for the Estey, Burdett, and the Fort Wayne Organ Co’s. Organs. Iideal in Pianos and Organs exclusively. Have had years experience in the Business, and handle only the Best. J. S. WRIGHT, 218 16th Street, City Hall Building, Omaha, Neb. HALSEY V. FITCH. Tune: J. F. SHEELY & CO, PORK AND BEEF PACKERS Wholesale and Retail in FRESH MEATS& PROVISIONS, GAME, POULTRY, F) - GITY AND COUNTY ORDERS SOLICITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET—1415 Douglas St. Packing House, Opposite Omaha Stock Yards, U. P. R. R. TELBEPFON® OONNEOTIONSS. ETC. DOUBLE AND SINGLE AOTING POWER AND HAND PUMPS Pumps, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, BELTING HOSE, fiuss AlDaIlfil FITTINGS, HPE,%I’EA. M;{. AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WIHD-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS A, L. STRANG, 205 Farnham Strest Omaha, Neb J. Hammond, Prop. & Manager. i 45 p. m. “Tho most <horough appointed and_complete b0, P Mechine Shops and Founiry In thestate. 17 0w run, loaving gmaha, and the Gostings of every description manutactad, o ln;_‘cl_fi o ?fl;fl:u."::i\:’mn\y it ead e e ectine T s i et e ecial attantion given to oroer of Dodgo wad 16th s, " * Well Augurs, Pulleys, Hangers, TR Shafting,Bridge Irons,Geer Uatting, etc Planator now Machinery, Moachanical Draught ag, Hodels, EENNEBDI'S EAST i Any ono having dead aaimals T hem frec of oharge. Leave orders southeast com £ of Harney and 14th St., second door. CHARLES SPLITT. AGENTS WANTED FUR CREATIVE SCIENCE and Sexual Philosophy. Profusely illustrsted, The most important an best book published.” Every family wantat Estraorlinacy indacements ofered Agen ‘Address Aorwts’ Pusuisiixa Co . St AGENTS WANTED FOR. EW BOOK, “Bible for the Young,” Being the story of the Seript lexander Crook, D. D.. in simp'e and attra languago for oid and young. Profusel illostrated, waking & mo.t iate-eetiog and im presstve youth's instructor. Every pareat will secure tifs Pieacters, jou shoald cir- calatolr, Price $3 00. & Sen” for ci TONIG ‘NOULJAWABNOD ‘squomeSueIe(] SO wanvmeny ‘ecedsda 104 AND I NI IR . R s s A FamiLy ¢k BITTERS! ILER & G0, SOLH MANUFAOTURERS, OMAHA, Neb. h extr terms. o BU; ESS COLLEGE, | PROPOSALS FOR SUPPLIES. 'HEADQUARTERS DrrancEs® 0¥ i mvu,} MILITARY OFYCE OF CHIKF QUARTERMASTER, Foxr Ouaus, New, March 11, 1881, Sealed proposals, in tripltcate, sabject to the usual con- itions will be recetved at. this office until 12 g'clock nogn_on Tuesday, Aprit 19, 1581, the s hou ing for the n time) at the offiecs of the quate at the fol owing mamed station: THE CREAT .WESTERN Geo.R. Kathbun, Principa’s Oreighton Block, - as may be required at Omaha Desot, 1, Eort Siovrars, For Sidnay, Choy: eane Depor,’ Fort Kuwell, Fort Sanders, Fort Steale, ort iail, Fort Dusiias, ort._ Bl OMAHA | which piaces and time they will e soam | Dresenco. of bidders, for furnishing and de | Siitary Sutphemdaring 1he 5 Send for Circular. = " » ot wov 2048w | M. B. RISDON, General Insurance Agent, e, of eight thousand tums of coal, of 2340 pounds toth ¢ Also for the delivery at the Omaha Depot, cr st stations on the Union Pacifie Kailroad, east frm Kearney Juction, of two milllon._pouncs eorn, and ona milllon pounds osts. B Id state the rate per 100 pound Proposals for eftlier clazs of tioned, the stores men- for quastities less than tho whele re. I be received. Each propossl should te, seperate for cach article at each station, and must beacoompanied by & bond e’ tnousand doliars, (31000), i accordance with the printed Instract'ons, an | upon the biank form furnished under this advertisement, guarantesing that ihe | party makivg the propowsl ehall not withdraw MORE POPULAR THAN EVER The Genuine SINGER NEW FAMILY SEWING MACHINE, The popular Jemand for the GENUINESINGER in 1879 exceeded that of any previous year during the Quarter of a Century in which this “Old v Teliable” Machine has boen befors the pabita” " 014 In 1878 we sold 356,422 Machines. In 1879 Machines Excess over any previous year 74,755 st Our salss last year were at the rate of over 1400 Sewing Machines a Day | For every business day In the year, REMOMEE® The “0ld Reliab'e” Tral Hvey READL Singer is the Strongest, Singer Sewing Ma- Q. O\\the Simplest, the Moest Durable Sewing Ma- chine ever yet Con- bedded in the Arm of the Machine, structed, chins & this Tradej Mark cast into thelf Iron Stand and em- ahove mentoued), accept th i pod and sallcicit, srsties 3t oncc, for the oty of G 5 faithful performomes of the contrac’. ety of G 8005 ' he government reserves the right to reject UNDERTAKER [Es o o 1017 Parnbam 8., 00 s o Jncob Gl | B0k PEOBCRs S prnied i ORDERS BY TELEGRAP 118 REED'S “ALLTIME,” " he by Al-xander's “Abdal Idemith’ Mald;” s est.maced quantit Fequired at cach st fall ‘instsuctions a8 to the ma 8 10 boobserved by bidcers and pplication ay 8% home. Samp é8 woF Addroes, Stizes 8 Go $2,250,000 ROYAL HAVANA LOTTERY. acd Vet Penmie oty 0" | b TRAOMBINARY DRAWING, APRIL 111, il e v yacs o4 | 15000 TIOKETS ONLY, 7 2 PRIZES. Ay Kl SMALLEST PRIZE, §1 000 o e aeon comtimen.o: Apei vt and i 1 Prizs $1.060,0:0 1 P 525,000 Sept. st Afier t tme M serviee wi A frize Z.v.'fimg f;’r vJA"v"‘:ue: ‘agfig ut at &85 7 mare that i cted in |1 Prz> 100, iz, 5,000eah 40, B0 yerva yups, 7 e (et hw brolted n' [ PET (10000 722 Prisaamit 102,250,060 . Whoie ks, S0 sl 8 Quuters, 40 ; : Tat tho,ais; Tweu s Bordiaths, $4. tD. REED, Fropietor. Hayana is governed. entircly by the e i, Stable Corner 11¢h and Howard | *) . 36.000 723 Prizes, 816,110, THE SINGER MANUFACTURING CO. Principal Office: =4 Tnion Square, New York. 1,500 Subordinate Offices, in the U nited States and 'anada, and 3,000 Offices inthe Old ‘World and South America, sepl6-déwtf o 2, atveas 51, ROMAN & CO0. Suecessors o TATLOR & Co., New York. I o 45 money MAN & CO.. Genorsl Agoay Rag i Steests, Now Hiven, Conn, O 2% 23, Charel Streats. . mart odim A R 3 e I ek your oa s, lerme aad mwnn':.. adiress d. Gailest & Co., e