Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 21, 1881, Page 4

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY, JUNE 211881, MR. BLANCHARD AND THE way question? Is not he a cheeky | population if over sixteen years old. i " 4 meat and suet in the market, so as to | are greatly afraid the anti-monopolist A N The Omaha Bee. DOANE LAW. | patriot to upbraid and abuse the last | In Prussia the average is from six to mlcrbnno '”(! savings, "fl:(-n ’Ill'(ll'k.fif‘ [ mv»u-nm(m ln\ going tvlv};'::rfl:v‘f:-“\\'-(r':: Mol i ki 5 . b ome of vinces | & benignant government to make him | cases of demagogy th eve Y. And now comes the honorable|jegiglature for making an attempt to | fourteen, but in some of the provinces governor of a territory, which was done | granger movement. George F. Blanchard, trader at the | omply with Pheir oaths of office? the seholastic age is reckoned s high | and the last seen of him he was here Published every morning, except Sunday. | = . o th S Mie Schviol 4 it FOR SALE. 1¢ Monday morning dai | Pine Ridge Indian Agency, with a — A8 SiXteen years, e school popula- | in behalf of said territory, asking ex POLITICAL NOTES. O o A diatribe against the new anti-discrimi- | yiyE EASTERN POOL AND THE tion of the United States is !"‘zrnwv contributions of «;th vt{hm]l-. —e e S BY o ch he asserts RIVER ROUTE. »Ince 000,00 ile | Bibles, peanuts or anything for the | Governor Long of Massachueetts may v TRRMS BY MAIL:- nation railrond law, which he a BT | L 000,000, ~ while | oral hood of the deiuded people of | decline nomination for a third ter 0 A One year. ... 810,00 | Three Month 8800 | g cut him oftfrom specinl favors on | The trunk lines leading east from |the aotaal attendance is less | Tiakota, Cinerd B e, Si 0 ' A cres iz Manth. .., 5,90 | Ono ** 1% the Tnion Pacific, as shown by a let- | Chicago have inaugurated a war of | than 9,500,000, or about three-fifths. | Chandler is quite metropolitan com- [in some quarters s man_whom the — " ter from the assistant gencral agent of | rates and are cutting each other's |In France the school population is | pared to his two associates, He hufini"l"!--4"{""”{?“"4"*1*'”"' for tn 1 1 : ‘ THE WEKLY BEE, published ev-| o000 ™ Mr. Blanchard, while pro- [ throats in the liveliest possible man- | 6 400,000, and the pupils attending clear eye, white teeth, and, when dis- here s neither room nor occasion fur —eOF THE == y Wednesday 2 swed, an agreeable address. His head | bosees in a voluntary association | ery [ PAID fessing to be an anti-monopoly man, [ner. The rates on grain have fallen|4 716,000, a much larger proportion. is clear, CI(;(']\t when, as frequently | £ent men whose purpose concerns the en- One Year.. 82,00 | Three Months.. 50 [makes his complaint through the off 'frnm twenty-five to fifteen cents, and | Thig iy evidently owing to the large [ happens, he works it into a passion “;Iltlv‘ln::flv'l'::\" }’“"‘" i I‘:lln s FINEST LAND | Six Monthe. ... 1.00 | One 0 wo 20| gial monopoly organ, and quotes facts | the roads are making nu-nrn-untrncwllu.m of the school age in our coun-|some point of party disloyalty, other 1"tfrv~'!-|'wl“~ln-~" spenker of the house in the and figures furnished him by Union | at such figures as seem most available. | tre 4 yuch more extended limit than wseln}lmgr‘lhu:]m" '-g_tflu‘ spoils. \ l:; thirty.fonrah congress hag been added to TORRESTP ENCE O, unk | 35 028 ¢ o oly e 1 S > is admired by the politicians on both | th ery of ex-speal A 1 the N ((»I.l\r\!(v\l\\y :\“ l“nl::l'lmv::-‘;nm:;' Pacific agents. ’ 4 vool ns (?ltxr( ly disruy (:.nl is warranted by the facts. Very few | o dag for hi ““,:"“ and pluck. He |reat of the hall of repre tiven, e W i "lhm;":n‘(‘lm ";' 5 r‘ '( ”"‘ Ebttoh or Before we enter upon a discussion | Even the “"‘“l""‘;""' 1”‘ "“‘f““; of the pupils in our public sehools at- | has twice been roughly treated by the l’l‘lxy-’r;\{-'v. fl\'-t l‘h ||.'v\ Grant is \u'r;c‘ t: S I et . 4 | of the grievance which Mr, Blanch- |canal is discounted and most of the | tend them after the age of 17, and the | republican party—first, when Hayes | ¢l with Mr. Jay o e 8 LETTERS—AIl Bissh ard complains of, we must take a brief | grain leaving Chicago for the east is | yotyua) Jimit is nearer 16 than 20 years, :{{:lucd ,lulcun.-ll(xim I\lm (‘[nll'll\fl for ";‘i“v :_’:M“E for the gensral it he shonld “i<|,=.. EASTERN NEBRASKA. BUSINESS L IRS—AIl Business [ Vel e | Yl Srangtetiod by il to he: sow i ing, and, next, when the_republi- | [ S Tand-new anti-monopoly . Tetters and Remittauces should be ad. | Feview of Mr. etk liog )"""“"'f"'””l ko, l,' "t_ The best proof that the actual school | ;¢ the senate assfsted the demc- | party. - [Chicago Tribrne. SELECTED IN AN EARLY DAY—01 RaIL dressed to TiE OwaHA PenLISHING Coy. | lation to the Union Pacific railroad, | board. This sudden decline of rates | gq of gur children is not from 4 to 21| erats to beat his_confirmation for 8oli- | Candidates for places on the Ohio demo- | RoaD LAND, BuT LAND OWNED BY NoN- . PANY, OMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Post- | which will furnish the key to his com- | assures a consequent rise in the price | yoars ig indicated by the statistics, | citor-general There is now lnros\nl\wl-vrutir ticket are not slow to make 1§x_~-ir RESIDENTS WHO ARE TIRED PAYING TAXES office Orders to be made payable to the | plaint. of grain in the markets of the west. | which ghow that only three-fitths gu:.'(- Inllm d‘n(l h.m..g "l;lr-_' (‘:n:u'rnts|i:ll'.l:‘ll’lel"';i.i"’;lt‘(::‘lm’\:‘v:ut;‘ml‘ ml‘_i‘m:fiu;fi AND ARE OFFRRING THRIR LANDS AT THR 1 order of the Company. Tn 1876 Mr. Blanchard was ‘elected | A number of causes are responsible | of the pupils are in actual attendance, [ {1 o thoSe o ot Conosrd westomler. | counties which have h e been ro- (Low PRICR OF $6, 88, AND §10 PER ACKE, ¢ in thestate | for the break in east-bound rates and ;i turn the caucus at Concord yesterday, | urded as hopelessly r an. There is | ON LONG TIME AND EASY TERMS, to represent Dodge county in thestate | for the break in e ates o Most of those over sixteen years of | and adjourned the legislature for two | & seous i 151 he demoe - g = g OMAHA PUBLISHING CO PPUIJ’I'E senate. He was voted forand elected | the present war among the trunk | 406 are engaged in some other employ- | years, in which time it is supposed he | cratic year. nquirer (Dem.) WE ALSO OFFER FOR SALE L4) i« i ines i ace it is obvious hioh N sthor 8o will be able to beat Rollins, who is| The New Orleans (La.) Times advocates X as an outspoken anti-monopolist, His|linos, In the first place it is obvious | nent, which provents further school- he New Otlgans (La.) Times advochies VED FARM n'now_n_' i first vote as senator was given in |that the primal cause for such a move |jng, :"fl':‘f'f“"!\' quite sure of an election m:lf rn{.'l«‘f:‘:\-:‘:l:vf‘;:ur:w!:;:L:N. I(VI‘:“;'\:“'J:_. Jotn 1. Pierce is in Charge of the Cireu. | favor of allowing - Lisutenant-Gover- | on the part of the railroads is the ab- | & comparison botween this and Eu- | . there is & great, element whicl docs not 14 | wation of THE DAILY BEE, nor Carnes to pack the senate com- |senceof freight business and the ne- | yopean countries shows some interest- _ Making a New Party. :.\-u.nt..hf.'ifl.. fi‘-»‘f«h l\:;\:g:r}"“"!:~x:1'llj~l‘;‘:““'";." Speags ‘ s | miittees with railroad cappers. For | cessity of the roads tosecure shipments | ing gtatigtics in our favor. We em- -‘“‘;‘"'H-wwwp.,.: ‘ the material interests of that section would | Dopalag, Sarpy and Washington . 1 Rupearn has Janded in London, |this trewson to the anti-monopoly |and show carnings on the stock bourds. | ploy o much Inrger mumber of tench |y Honit el ;';(:'"',‘i,‘:"“fl‘,‘;:,st}‘(‘,fi ki lon RTINS v ‘ Now look out for a roar from the|cause ;Mr. Blanchard was rewarded | The railroads have all suffered severe- | org in proportion to our school popu- | whether the firensnt ‘quberel Detwoen SoRES oldeh .‘umtxnnut\': 0 e l"piu-d COUNTIES. ‘ British lion. with the position of acting president [ly from the blockades of last winter |jation than any other nation, and pay |the administration and the Grant- fimlm‘.zlm‘r:wn?x: I‘|l-:" ,“.J:;."l}'.:}'.“é'fi} e em— of the senate, in which position he fand the idlencss and heavy expense | them better for their services, In the S"““‘"fl faction “‘"g"‘ ““‘;:f"“}’ in | U oar, “In his lotter he states that, get- ALSO, AN IMMENSE LIST OF T i o - | which i ed, T addition, stocks | nj ito ] o he organization of a new political par- old and feeble, he desires to be re- Mrs, Trito 3ungrmnlnmtl|er, I{y made himself useful to fl_m monopo which it entailed In add 8to United s,“‘,\,..‘(hen is_an average of 9151t 1 EHOMEHELHAGIE. MP.: Conlie | Toce ot ths i o i LThee. AN 26 onb ' a singular coincidence Mr. Beocher is | lies whenever an opportunity offered. | have been heavily inflated on account | only thirty-fiive pupils for every | ling is defeated as a candidate for re- | canbe found willing to take the office for mfl flu 1 Y Bal s al B also a grandfather. Tn the summer of 1878 Mr. Blan-|of the abundance of money and|teachier, whileno other country has iess | election to the senate, he will find | the same compensation, it has been dis- R Py #i —_— chard allowed himself to be made|the pressuro for investment. The|than forty, and the gencral average|himself obliged to look for some po- C""""":";HM.M ot “eematorta | el Elegast Reskdencoes, Busisess Ix making the Doane law “‘odious,” | stool pigeon of the Union Pacific by | present high value of = sccuritics s gixty.five pupils to the teacher. 't‘}f]‘\:"‘llfi';“"v"l‘;{"l“f;';'l‘“:"ll“l‘;;"l‘l‘:"(')'i" :L‘“: xtends to democratic as well as | Lots, and a large num};ero!{ntsin most of the railroads will only be placing their | becoming a sham candidate for Con-|cannot long continue without prospec- | We have twelve-twentieths of our S5 GHAGE ik Sih At E repniblic I‘,r"f?“":”;_',,.,’E,‘:""\:.':',f"{, 't',',',:"“i:::,): the Additions of Omaha, heads in the lion's mouth, gress and drawing somo 25 votes from |tive dividends. Investors will not|gehool population attending school | It cannot be denied that since the | inee should suffice to recur hiy xejection, | Also ‘:‘:;"g}"'ef;fig“"{\Q,}‘&,’;';‘f,fi?(fi‘;;‘;f 5 - = Judge Crounse,which gn\~e|lle nomina | remain fmll:«lll:d with a rise in market | while Span has only eleven-twen- ::'n;‘)'st]uppq:)rm?t nnl:l.exlt-xt}||];l ‘!'“le?tl"t];:s :‘({\tehr‘x:l‘;g:tn‘: ;‘r‘t‘:,']“ci;l’l‘i: l]‘:]»‘v;;\il'i‘:‘ll‘l‘;“t:“:{:i byl m“kipfl-r‘?“m' Ly e & Tue New York Nation thinks that | tion to the U. P, candidate, E. K. Val- | value withouta cnrutupnndmu increase | tjoths, If the scholastic age of our tm‘»cglr::‘x:t ‘[:u:il:;“l]m:-:"Bd‘is‘;;l‘(»;;ruda be given an office,—[ Albany Journal. pmx‘;fl‘l))l; e;:n’:‘r:::r:‘:}‘c(!etnnflfl:‘;nen:w:{ Jim Wilson and Roscoe Conkling are |entine. Itwas mainly this political use- |in the dividend paying power of the | children was placed at the proper fig: | purty allegiance sits very 1 ,mfy upon |, 1 we get at General Grant's meaning it Javested, o o a sweetdscented pair of anti-monopoly | fulness that secured (ur]V!r.lBInnch.ml ntoclks in which they have placed their | yre, 16 years, we would lead every the shouiders of a Jarge number of :;utfi:‘x;nt':c}:&lem;“r‘.‘wn:tl:‘ o | ST 00 e chtea & tesutll et o Spsotas advocates. special fayors from the Union Pacific, | capital. other country in the world in the pro- ;‘ltmt‘llfl- l_:\ grrml infy ;lle.m,lvi-rntulm-c o kupport party nominations or Jured, to BARGAINS, . : Al srlying cause 3 B X e _| heartily disgusted with the flounder-|be true by the promise of ‘'spoils,” the - .| which« they now withdraw under a| Buta deeper, m?du]yuu, cause (n.r portion of actual attandanceto popula: ing oficy and the conatant blunder- | mas of Jw vepublican party fs cotiited on BOGGS & HILL, SarAm BERNHARDT denies, emphati- | false pretext for the purpose of mak- | the break in rates is the new competi- | ¢jop, ing In the management of their party, |10 do its dity without reward. Mr. ] cally that she is to marry M. Angelo, |ing the new railroad law odious. | tion of the Mississippi bargo line, o= and a great many ropublicans are 8o :fl:\;:‘l;y;?':l;'llttxug»“f:fil}!‘r:“‘l:nt“h‘lfi:L‘R'll B,Ba,l Estatfl BPflkGPS her manager. She doesn’t want tobo| In order to arouse prejudice against | which is already making itself felt by | O~ general principles the obstruc- | little edified with what they sce going | [Boston Journal (Rep,) y an Angel, O, the law Mr. Blanchard echoes the fore- | reducing the volume of east bound | tion of sidewalks in the city by build- | oft in fla‘lr own 1)0111{10“1 lhu"wh"ld Wo thin t wise for our state to ylace —_— : SRR The s i o orty rnes v | V8! hey would bear an | jts material interests above those of any i bodings of tho railway managers who | grain. Tho successful ""”"‘f""‘l of |ers or by property owners who are| Joona) defeat of their [ party, and in that view of the case we are I 4:08 Tire conviction of Herr Most, the | 4rg gpposed to all law and want to ride [ 30,000 bushels of grain from St. Paul | building, should not bo tolerated. | party as a corrective medicine with | in favor of giving our members of congress . nihilistic editor of the Freihart, has | youghghod over the peoplo by asserting | to Liverpool has thorotighly alarmed | This nwsance in Omaha has become | great equanimity. Expressions of a | great freedom in their votes, when our in| North Side of Farnham Street, been confirmed by the high court of 4,4 the entire Black Hills traflic in- |the railroad managers, Rates upon simply intolerable, and calls for im- :\“l;‘lll ffn: a ne\v'«firgruz:u?nfi;f1p;n:{:r TR : ,flu... _\u;,;,,;,.]l].i by vot- Opp. g]f‘;zllilgen;l‘ngHote], judiciary at London, i i S Louil iv- | medi s ical forces on the basis of fixed prin- fing with *‘them Towa fello » are in 3 ) Judiciary at Londo cluding grain, hay and provisions | freight from St. Louis to Liv mulmtu.nlmtuuen(. At no less than ¢lp1og K twith w'deARife and’ cleatly)| fAyasior Ehlr Mol [V ioksburg. Her: = heretofore imported by the way of |erpool are nearly the same | three points on Farnam street alone. | intelligibly policy arefrequently heard | ald (Dem.) ; SRR Bon Ixeersons has struck twonty- | Sidney would hereafter go by the way [as those from the Atlantic |travel is absolutely dangerous to|on both sides. There isno doubtthat| First class inpolitics. Teacher—*What FOR SALE. Absautitul residence noton i ines in Ni i Thi i R ) i i in the abs f very i tant and | i¢ & deadlock?” Pupils—Tt is a series of California between 22nd and: one rich mines in New Mexico. his | of Sioux City, Yankton and Fort |seaboard ;Io the same port. The|pedestrians. If the nuisance was only | in the absence of very u?_pur bani ‘.;_n Totes which. elect | mobody." — “Correct, | 234 strocts, 81600. : \ will be a serious blow to the cause of | Piorre; This is all bosh.. The Union | difference if¥ the cost of a shipment of | temporary, our atizens would not exciting issues as sharp lines ot div- | \hero ure deadlocks manufactured?” “In el S religion throughout the country, —_——— CeNTRAL PARK is about to be lighted with the electric light. Hundreds of angry lovers will protest against this sacrilegious invasion of vested rights, D asmmarte ) 2 Tue remarkable rise in real estate|see it to in Omaha is due to the great demands for homes, and not to a demand for |are served alike. Pacific railroad may want to spite Ne- braska for enacting a railroad law, but they will'not cut their own throats by driving profitable {raflic to rival lines, when.as a matter of fact the Doane law does not inierfere with their granting any through rate they make, provided all shippers of the sameclass of freight grain from Missouri to Liverpool by way of New York, and by way of St. Louis and New Orleans, is over 12 cents a bushel, which is sufticient to divert a large portion of the traftic to the river. route. Recognizing this fact, and encouraged by the strong interest of English grain buyers, preparations are being made by American capitalists to enter largely complain so loudly, but when, for months at a time vaults are left open and drive travellers into the gutters in order to pass the obstructions, the question should come before the counciljwhether such a state of affairs is to be permitted. When to this is added the piling of building material along the curb line and on the sidewalk itself, endangering the ision between existing parties, and with a naturally growing tendency to bring mere personal and spoils quar- rels into the foreground, it will re- quire much less of a shock than it would have needed ten years ago, to bring about new crystallizations. Some question of great public interest, not now foreseen, may suddenly spring up, split the old parties, and essen- tially revolutionize all existing politi- cal groupings. Such a thing may come over night, Harrisburg, Washington and Albany.” “Of what use are deadlocks?” *“They turn ‘statesmen’ inside out that the people ma see just what they are made of.” ‘W] are statesmen made of 17 *‘C [New Haven Register. Ve it up."— When lordly Roscoe stoops to folly And in a pet resigns his seat, Platt cannot cure his melancholy, Nor Arthur make his joy complete. “I'he only mode he can discover, o dissipate his deep dejection And hold secure each stalwart jover, -election. FOR SALE 3:% it wewer Stecctor with barn, coal house, well cistern, shade and fruit trees, cverything complete. A desirable. piece of property, figures low GGS & HILL, FOR SALE e tin s eohica tmii Avenue, BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE e = BOGGS & HILL. FOR BALE % i Tuenana Totn goop location for boarding house. Owner wilk 4 . . Is by a speedy re- 4 . sell low BOGGS & HILL. property by speculators and land | But Mr. Blanchard says his special | into the business of barge line trans- | limbs and lives of pedestrians it be-[and it may not come for years. But ~Milwaukee Republican, o men Lo e ek sharks, rate from Fremont to Sidney is abol- | portation, and this affords sufficient | comes absolutely intolerable. In no it is certain that no public man can anpy.l]mmrul m'l J.! Months ago Fon SALE in_Kountze & Ruth's addi- Tue army worm has made its ap- | higher charge for the same class of ished because the law prohibits a cause for alarm to the trunk lines, other city but Omaha would such a bring it on at his pleasure. It will require something of infinitely greater ted that itter time of it the shrewd old gentleman predi the President would have a tion. " This property will bo sold very cheap. BOGGS & HILL. and is largely responsiblo for their | condition of affairs be permitted for |interest to the popular mind than the | ¥ith members of his party, und now, while | ron SALE—A top pheaton. Enquire of Jus, pearance in California, and is destroy- | freight = from = Columbus Grand | desperate scramble for rail freight. |an instant. mere dissatisfaction of one man with | j Full of moaning for the republican dying BEThooRoD: iy I”":'. ang thg.crops, Germany and all con- {Island, North Platte or any point [ It looks as if the country was enter- — :2" (lrfvmg? of “"""l“’l"f"‘i‘l"' "‘éh“lfi’,“‘; and “““ W““"“‘;;‘_“ "l‘f‘:l'b\:‘lfi,,' 1']"‘; ‘;]"‘l““‘ FOR SAL g:m:v,mmg;n,o::qufx o tinental Europe is suffering from the | west of Fremont to Sidney. Is there |ing upon an era in which the principal | GexeraL Graxt thinks if it wasn’t [ ¥ O puronage. 0 ik v I L el Aones sHbnuilibestioomls offer human army worm. WaeeLEr has returned from his fishing excursion and put.in an ap- pearance at Albany. He thinks that one administration and one stalwart senator should be elected. - Proressor Procror says that in Just 15,000,000 years more all the water will have disappeared from the earth, This is another strong argu- ment against the prohibition move- anything wrong in that - Why should the tariff for a car load of hay or grain cost more from Central City or Grand Island to Sidney, than it does from Fremont to Sidney? Although it would be reasonable that the rate for the /shdrter haul be less than the rate for the longer for the same quantity, yet the law permits the charge to be as high for the short haul as for the long haul, but it must not be higher. Mr. Blanchard quotes the business of Sidney in the month of featuro is to be a sharp competition by the railroads” for business and a great depression in rates. Sucha condition of affairs will be hailed with more sat- isfaction by the western producer than by the unfortunate investor in the watered stock of corporations. A prolonged warfare in freight rates cannot but result disastrously to the stock market. The increase of busi- ness at the reduced rates will fail to show a corresponding increase of earn- ings sufficient to maintain dividends for the administration Conkling and Platt would be re-elected without diffi- culty. Very good. Conkling and Platt would return to the senate with the avowed purpose of fighting the ad- ministration, and President Garfield would be a bigger fool than we take him for if he should deliberately play into the hands of his most malicicus enemies, THE railroads in refusing to reduce local rates, and thus comply with the intention of the Doane law, will force or even Gen. Grant, or both together, should ever indulge 1n the delusion that they could divide the American people into political parties upon the question of their personal complaints and ailments, they would find them- selves exposed to a much severer dis- enchantment than Mr. Conkling has experienced already. No man in this country at the present day is strong enough to organize a personal party of respectable strength, and no combina- tion of men is strong enough to organ- ize a party on the ground of personal grievances, All that Mr. Conkling can do, and, we suppose, all that he will succeed in doing, under any cir- Guernseys at” thousands a head. Mr. Til- den is crowning his youth of labor with an age of ease, and is heartily congratulating himself, mayhap, that he isn't an officer of the ship of state.— hicago Times. Real Estate Transfers. The following transters were re- corded yesterday at the county clerk’s office, as reported for this paper by John L. McCague, real estate agent and conveyance: Henry St. Felix and wife, to Isaac Edwards, 206 acres in section 10, town 14, range 12, east q. c. d.,—8$0 Allen Jagua and wife, to D. L. Thomas, lot 73, in Nelson’s Addition, 'BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE fivig v = 3GS ' A FINE.Soaaizis e BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE fitigip FOR SAL A very fine residence lot, to a fine house, §2,300. some party desiring to bulid BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE A 200kcts in Kountze & Ruth's addition, just south of St. Mary's avenue, $450 to §800. These lots are near business, surroundea by fine improve- wents and are 40 per cent cheaper than any other lots in the market. Save money by buying these 1is. oGS & HILL: ment. November as a standard and estimates | on the enormously inflated stocks 6 Gl e e i IV i cumstances, whatever he may attempt, | W, D., 8175, Fon SAL ‘ll?":\o:aOz:ull::»’l((‘xo‘{dfl:a;s; ey = the whole year accordingly, when in|of the monopolies. It looks as|‘'¢ M g I is to go into opposition to the ad-| Heirs of John Q. Lewis to Allen |3 blockss. E. of depot, all covered with fine largé Tae strained diplomatic relations between France and Ttaly, resulting trom the French occupation of Tunis, are manisfesting themselves in riots between the French and Ttalian citi- zens in Marseilles. Tae head chiefs of the Sioux tribe at the Pine Ridge Agency have sent a petitionto Washington praying for the removal of Dr. M'Gillicuddy. They " er ) Addition, W. D.,—8b7c. BOG08 & HILL. claim that he steals their goods and|Doos the law in any way prevent a [large blocks of trunk line stock. It e i o0 TR Wilson. This gentleman has been tor| g, V, Smith and wife, to M. W. Fo“ sAL 100 acroe, 0 mifes from city lies. These are certainly unusual|reduction of rates all along the line? |willbe the crowd of small operators| AFTER the Irish land bill will come | many years the confidential counsel | Kodnedy, lot 1, in block 20, E. Y. | Jllevs with riiming wator; baias crimes in an Indian agent, e——— Tue Nebraska City Press thinks fact he knows that November is one of the busiest months. But suppose his figures were all correct—what does it signity? Does the fact that vast quantities of hay were shipped from the Platte Valley last year to the hills show that the hay can not be shipped this year at the same rates? Why should the rate in hay be more from Schuyler, Grand Island and North Platto this year than it was last year? Are we to ‘infer that this gieat state is to he forever robbed and plundered by railway highway- if Wall street was preparing for a tre- mendous crush. will not be the parties who will suffer from the reaction against the present high valuation of stocks of all kinds which at present exists, They are in actual concert, whatever their pre- tended antagonisms, and it has been well understood for some time past in stock circles that they have been gradually unburdening themiselves of The great operators and the large number of single specu- lators throughout the country who will lose by the crash which now Then we about *‘making the regulating freight tariffs, shall hear less law odious,” Tue Council Bluffs river convention meets to-day for the discussion of the vital question of river improvement and barge line transportation. Ne- braska will be ably represented and Senator Van Wyck is expected to be in attendance. an English land bill and that's what troubles the House of Lords. —_— ministration with other people in the ordinary way, and neither himself nor anybody else knows beforehand where he will stand when a general break-up comes, if it does come. Mr.,Wilson's Strange Views Abroad N. Y. Nation. Mr. Conkling's ability to play the part of an anti-monopolist champion in politics and a monopolist lawyer in the courts hasa counterpart in the west just now, but with the roles re- versed, in the case of Mr. James F. and champion of the railroads. In 18706 he appeared before a_joint com- mittee of the Towa legislature as a representative of the Chicago, Bur- Jagua, lot 73 in Nelson’s Addition, Deed. — $210. z. Kountze and wife, to John Quinlan, parcel in ion 27, Town 15, range 13, east W. D.,—$212. Henry Livesey, to Jennie McAus- land, lot 32, in Nelson’s Addition. q. ¢. d.,—$100. Abner French; to Allen Jagua, lot Nelson’s Addition, q. ¢, d.,— Aug. Kountze to M. W, Kennody, lot 6, block 11, Kountze and Ruth's Smith's Addition, W. D.,—8400. Wm. Pitt Kellog, to H, W. Yates, lots , 8, 9, block 2, in C dition, W. D.,— 81,600, apitol Ad- trees. Pri extremely low. 8600 to §700. BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE i, iifusn ' ™ BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE 55:ih. s ialvesn Seer BOGGS & HILL, E % ota on 2oth, 21th, osth, 29th and 30th Sts., between Farnhani, Douglas, and the proposed extension of Dodge street. Prices range from 200 to $400, We haxe concluded to give men of tmall means, one more chance to secure & home and will build housas on these lots on small payments, and wilk scll lots on monthly payments, prririe, only 8 miles tiom mmuix;- FOR SAL g 400 acres in one tract twelve miles from city; 40 acres cul- i = 6] s T Tkt : A tivated, Living Spring of water, some bice val- “ ! i) v : . - : % 3 1 5 3 t ew Hampshire'sGreat Politicians | lington and Quincy railroad, to oppose g, A, 1 wife, te 0. S, [leys. The land is all first-class rich prai ce that “Omaha is booming.” ~We fmen in order that they may pay mil- | scems inevitable and if they fail to | Tampshis il lhnbmilroml tarift )lnw piy fiylcuuulnd it E. A. Kelsey and wife, to R BOGAS should blush to murmur, All the brick yards are behind orders, the|Are the people to be* forever robbed lions of dividends on watared stocks! heed the signs of the times or neglect to stand from under they will have Theold firm of Rollins & Chandler in New Hampshire has broken up, repeal, and said the reason he had been selected for this duty was that he Stout, parcel in section 10, town 15, range 10, cast, W. D.,—§15, LE 720creain onc bods, 7 miles west of Fremont, is all level ? . - o Thomas Bryant and wife, to Nicho- | land, pioducing heavy growth of grass, in high lumber yards are calling for time, and | to enrich useful . political cappers who [only themselves to blame. In the [ Chandler wanting Rollina' seat in the | was well known to be opposed to such | 14 Ruichen, n w., ‘\‘ section 20, town |}y, ?':‘..?Jé&".flm’m'.’.’f‘..'l Jrom railroad and every enterprise is advertising for | sell out their constituents? But M, |contest between the river and the senate, for which he is altogether more | legislation, and then and there de-| 15 range 11, east, W. D.,—81,500. | can be found. BOGGS & HILL, laborers in the open market. Tax telegraph brings an emphatic | lief the law is supposed to have been denial of the story of a pending con ference between President Garficld and General Grant at Long Branch, There is no reason twhy President Garfield should goufer’ with. General Grant on the political situation, In the legislature shall enact laws to pre- just discrimination, This law discrim- inates against Blanchard kindly tells us that— “Those in Nebraska for wh e re- made will suffer most from its_effects. The constitution wisely provides that vent railroad companies making un- Nebraska and every do.™ v class of her tr: Wo assort boldly and defy contra- rxailronds, the odds ave greatly in favor of the former, NATIONAL EDUCATION. The United States leads the world in the sige of its school population and the number of its public instructors. According to recent: stati now in this country over nine millions ics there are, capable. Rollins is the smallest piece of licorice root out of whish & sgnator has ever been chewed,'or," T may say, chosen, He kept: a Jittle drug store in Concord, with total ence in the front part and whisky in the rear; and thus ussembled’ the two great branches of the rcinhlican un- der his roof and talked moral p 8 and damned the democrats; and, final- ly taking one of his own pills, worked himself to Washington. He seems to livered a discourse against legislative interference with railroad rates which the monopolists printed and circula- ted far and wide as ‘‘a legal and }mw- erful speech that every one ought to ead.” He returned to the subject so late as January, 1880, and delivered another address to the house commit- the against the Reagan inter-state commerce bill, which he denounced as “‘impracticable, unphilosophical, and opposed to the best interests of the —_— The Fasting Lunatic. National Assoclated Pres Cnicaco, June 20,—Griscom has fully recovered trom Saturday’s indis- position, and is to-day pronounced in almost perfect health. Dr. R. A. Gunn, of New York, who superintend- ed the Tanner fast, has made a thorough examination of Griscom, and thinks there is mno doubt he will fast the forty-five or an SALE Aty improved farm ot 240 acres, 8 miles from city. Fine improvements on this land, owner not a practical faruer, determined to scll. A good ‘opening for some man of means. BOGGS & HILL. Fon SAL 2,000 acres of land near Mil- Iand Station, 3,600 near Elk- horu, $8 to §10; 4,000 acres in novth part of toun- 000 acres 2 to 8 wmilcs from Flor- ¢, ,000 acres west of the Elkhorn, $4 1 §10; 10,000 acres scattered throagh the coun® ty, 86 to ¥10. “The above lands lie near and adjoin nearly every fann in the county, and can mostly be sold the first placo General Grant s not | ;i i) 0 B CER S of pupils attending school under the | be one of nature's jack-knives split | country,” and he held up tho exper-[ffty days, Analysis of the | han il R Vith the belance i 123 i the chief executive of the nation, re- LA ARk instruction of 272,700 teachers, while | off, or rather one of the blades of the [ienee of his own state, lowa, 85 & blood reveals ouly 2,100,000 Y T sponsible o the people for his opin- ||, 40115t Nebraskn or any class of |0 0 116,000 pupils. and | 5me with the handle missing. Lean, | warnmg against the principlo of the | corpuscles to the cubic millimetre, in- FQH SALE Saiap) fne remdsnces prop, - I her trade, but the railroads are trying e a pup § lonesome, lost, the greatest effort of | bill, which forbade ‘‘low rates for long | stead of (.500.000 as and not known in the market as being for sale. ions upon the conduct of the govern- : ment. General Grant foels aggrieved because his yomm}al jrl\:ll“ My, Conkling, ' has lost aste in his party, ‘anl President Gaficld is thoroughly in accord with the mass of republicans who refuse to en- dorse Mr. Conkling’s childish and cow- ardly desertion in the senate. My, Garfield is supported by a large ma- jority of the voters of the country, and General Grant is in a minority, which is in opan opposition to the admini- to make the law odious by raising their rates when they nll“hl to lower them, and lhuy are teying to punish Nebraska for attempting to regulate their conduet. MrsBlanchard was a member of ‘the legislature four y ars ago. He had sworn to obey the con- stitution, which-required the Jegisla- ture to. enact laws prohibiting unjust discrimination and provide proper pen alties for their enforcement. Did he ever attempt to comply with his oath Did'ho ever intreduce a bill to pro- 110,000 teachers and Prussia 4,000, 000 scholars and 58,000 instructors. Recent tables published by the bureau of education show that in fifty couns tries, excluding the United States, the scheol _age s from . six [to fourteen . years. In this country it ranges from four to twenty- one years, the shortest being from eight to fourteen years, t The greater langth of time allowed in this country for the scholastic age Lis chiefly responsible for the large his statesmanship is to discover how an infinitesimal drop of aloes dan be put into a vulgar fraction and charged for. He is the amusing cuss of the senate. Aty - Another member [6f "this ' trio was Oxdway, who is as big as a tree, with allthe nots on him and a whole hoard ineach one of his cheeks. He went to congress as sergeant-at-arms to count the money and grease his fry- ing pan, and see what there was in this government, ©ne of his first achemes was to bring ‘old' bricks avound the capitol from torn down houses and put them up into blocks of houses hauls.” He said ‘it had produced evil, and only evil,” in Towa. .In fact, he had advocated the freedom of the companies in the management of their busines as the best thing for all con- cerned. He seoms to be now tived of heing so long out of politics, so he has just boen thundering at the Henuepin canal convention against the “monop- olists,” and laid down the amazi doetrine, which goes far bevond any- thing heard in Towa or Wisconsin in 1870, that when any increase in the value of & railroad takes (lace through increase of traffic, and corresponding inprovement of the road, it properly previously stated, but the sudden change is a }mremly without effect. He slept 1ours continuously last night. This noon examination shows a gain of three quarters of a pound in the past 24 hours, vespiration 15, temperature 08.3, pulse 62 and of good volume, Raised. ational Assoclated Press. Sax Fuaxcisco, June 20.— The steamer Idaho run on a rock and sunk bt has been raised and taken to Port- land, The Cause of Science Locations will only be made known to purchasers “meaning busines, BOGGS & HILL, IMPROVED FARMS !l improve farms around Omaha, and in all parts of Douglas, Sarpy and Washington counties, Also farms in' lowa. Fer description and prices call on 00, LOGGS & HILL. BOGGS & HILL. us. BOGGS & HILL. 10 Busi lus § business lots next west FOR SAI.E 2 business lots south side Douglas strect, between 12tk and 18th, #s Lots for Sale on Fi EFOR SALE !’y cets, from §3,000 to advanced of §2,000 cach, BOGG Fellows block, §2 500 each. 8 business lots west of Odd tration, It is difficult to see what|) ... . ey -1 | number of pupils in proportion to the vl . b B Al nold ho | has received an important addition in 3,500 each. BOGGS & HILL, A X A hibit unjust discrimination by rail- Pug Prog near by, Then he took a whole mar- | belongs not to the stockholders who p [ | good to cither the parties immediately | - ) iote e o1, | Population‘ss pompared With any other | ket housé away from the people of the | ventured their money in the cnter- | the elogant observatory which Mr. H. ooxered with youny | Soonad, ado dhe iy e Jaray | TR, 0 00 LU VOAL Circh m.,.r?" ALY E.,U,,:?w..i.y BE | GRAMRL s waa the. chiak elesk of it, | prise, Bt tg tho poople o tyelion | M, Warnur, propretos o the vausble FOR SALE ::: i vater” o could come from such a conference " | Howe and the other tallway eappers Tt was & popular tradition that after|it and have invested a few faves or'in- | Bafe Kidney' and Liver Cure, hascit. 0 a pupil considered within the school to suppress all legislation on the rail- market hours were over he ate all the considerable freight charges in it. We erected at Rocheater, 'BOGGS & HILL.

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