Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 22, 1881, Page 4

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v . D T 4 i3 e / . : A : : finjuries are riddles which the boest of| i 3 A Tbaghs & o huadeadd will soon be entirely taken up. e u w;(th .hun. gl}: l::_ould hulrdl kill froquontly fails to unravel andfthe people than all else besids, Mas. nlmhigh::{nr:ccnmmmlnun,; forty or fift; hnl\\e ;L:: x:;:l:u:::rl:ltl;,::?vlmt‘:: lviv:::fu BESIDENGE LOT the only tbm::re in :}:yc:untr‘;"wl::«-l o fill tie position, ptn call the son Jjrerled by the dissecting knife. _I" the plan works well there, why. not ul:euzf:h{:::g:‘rl w{}lfi;‘n l.:f.‘:‘:“{"f cf,’,‘,,;:‘&’,‘;“,g;’ B:Jt.:l‘:"?flr:r“;';;:rll '-tl‘l)');‘lfir.fifv‘"lh:%( ‘xml&d ilLocated on 27th, 28th, 20th ined during the day folBate in oxtraordinary acssion for tholfth® Present case the most distinguish-gelsowhero? But the real diflioulty[within thirty days from dato, e completely at the merey of a_heartlowfp 100850, 08 TV, 2BED, 20th remaineG open during the day fol b b R A ed surgeons proved their skill only inglies with the corporate managers. Tnf§ In the progress of the tic drive from thef@@omopoly. ~______ ~ iFarnham, Donglas and the pro- lowing the death of Promdent Gar-Bpurpose of rectifying what ho now emporarily sustaining life in a man en-| [New York, for instance, the com-f ‘i"»';’"' e of ”(‘f w‘"}‘"'i’:‘“"g“f“l Pt Hr AT EiDosed axt‘ensmgx:x of Dodge 1350 ol f . i fon it ran into a den of rattlesnakes jusf . E - ! feld, Ak soposdoimay 8 gravelblunder, owed with an iron constitution fasrcial and - produclog, cammuni i low whero the river runs into Natches James r-mf‘:ifi;flflrflffl Buffalo, § 52 to 14 Blocks from Court. DAY SEPTEMBER 22, 1831, character of Napoleon, that onc isfipvrchased thirty acres, two miles and o pt to feel alittle shock of surprise to@half from Lehion the Utah Central, for oarn that it was only thirty yearsfR(4Pot purposes. : o that Mr. John 8. C. ° AbJfl, A Salt Lake man has signified his inten: Woott's picturesque romance waslton of Putting up six saw-mills in Monta-§ in course of publication. Thirteen§ yoars ngo was published the flrst vol 4 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: THURS ~—fl -'rhe O’naha Bee NO EXTRA SESSION. aftorded the opportunity to testily in Shall congress bo convened in extrallly sreon the love and esteem which they@to pay. They say they are ablo to . This is the first important® o rs to their dead president, the dayfowe a good deal more than a paltryj Published wvery morning, except Sunday | The only M onday morning daily. does not seem very much in a hurry] bycasion? Juestion which President Arthur will alled upon to decide when ho assume: will be observed throughout the landfthree millions. s a day of sorrow and mourning. — ; Business will be suspended and thefll Wiar wilk Arthur do? That is o d by the miners of Park flie nslve duties of Be presldeney, 1 hick 1 fedorJfime of “History of Napoloon,” byBCit thevs i, if ¢ AlLm 4 e : i i e h e ) irfconundrum which a good many feder-@ime o s of Napoleon,” byBCity that Pinvon Hill, if the present sui TERMS BY MATL fifsonator Ingalls, of Kanss, is repre-Wwhoels of trade stopped in theirg LT gy ey anvions t WPicrre Lanfrey—tho first {o tear the 1he 'the liveliest spot in 00Rsented as saying that an extra sessionfo,urse. Fifty millions of people,@nl office-holders are very b mask from the great French idol, and| s full of ore from base i ar.....810,00 'l’l\rfm\h:Mlfl stli Months... 500 | One ) rolve, to show, by a prosentation of facts, is absolutely necessary to preventlliowod down with the grief of a com- e o il 4 . o AttR Y ] Qthe political crimes and evil nature off The Denver and Rio Grande railroad . 4 inarchy and revolution in this coun-gon sorrow, will stop for the time in) Doyl . ey § bomdany fow liave a » A RENE- iR oubiidiel i L E 2 ohasm of out-of-door life isl v Sovo! . mdany now have upwards of 8,000 Ia: THE WEEKLY BEE, pulliched ev tho whirl and hurry of their daily] R s ie boloved Little Oorporal. TheseRiorery emmploped i the Gannison asntey) ve hundred of {hese t work in theld ry in the event of the death of Presi ent Arthur, before provision is madd) ihades in Lanfrey’s picture the recont n , before fimaking itself known to more peoplel published memoirs & Mme, de ovory year, and the books that treatgdl ry Wednesday vocations to recall the noble life and] canyon of the Gunnison on thell TERMS POST PATD:—~ r ; Y the he } h One Year......§2.00 | Three Months for the presidential sucoession by thefoharacter of the nation's dead to ren- ot naturo o life in tho open air ard mulyu\t, lnl{o,:.lmd, and others havefuninline to Utal, : 8ix Months.... 100 | One .. election of apresident pro tem. of the@ier a tribute to departed worth, and| b omly deepened. In summing up the - foti consequently becoming more andBeaction, Mr. Burlingamo accords t MONTANA,. = B e . BUnited States senate. from the depth of a great affliction te b b RHRTaTRey (hio LASA6N B L8 Kew A . CORRESPONDENCE—AI Communi It 1 that thel + and renowed 0T povular. To meet this growing@Tanfrey the burden of the new move If this is the only reason *Raather strength, courage and renewe taste, tho Messrs. Harper have pre-@ment, giving an extended sketch offdo. « eations relating to News and Editorial mat, 4 L B ®ers should be addressed to the Ep1ToR o me is plentiful throughout the terri Tae Brr, (80is life and paying this Jhigh tribute 0 bis genius: *“Regarded merely as an historian, Lanfrey deserves the greatest pogsible) wdmiration, His work shows that he| possessed in a rare degree all thosq Hnumerous qualities demanded from a man who undertakes to give us o truek nd clear account of a particularlyf onfused and exciting period in th Blife of a great nation. The patience) with which he has collected his mate- ial is scarcely less wonderful than thel fiudgment and still he displays in| threshing out this vast mass, and oparating the wheat from the chaff. As for the Tanguage in which he em| bodies his results, it is almost abovel raise, In clearness, vigor, and beau- y it rivals that of Macaulay; in ertain unconscious brilliancy — which, if wo aro to believe M. 'Taine, nc Saxon writer ever entirely possesses— it even surpasses that of the great [English master. Lanfroy collects hi facts like a German, judges them like an Englishman and presents them) like a Frenchman. TIn other words,| he brings to his work three great] qualities, the possession of any two of which would be sufficient {o place him in the first rank of historians,” hope for the stability of a republid which is greater than any one mang #1110 whoso onward march not even th Beicath of her noblest sons can hinde ot destroy- THE AUTOPSY ON THE PRES-{ IDENT. The long illness of General Garfield will be handed down as one of the most remarkable in the aunals of} medical history. For cighty-two daya the patient suffererer sustained lif under circumstances which the postg nortem examination proved to be un-| paralelled in surgical records. The| fautopsy revealed a physical condition, s the result of the wound, which| makes the survival of the victim fo such a period almost a miracle. I appears that the bullet entered the Bback and, striking the eleventh rib, was deflected to the backbone and odged two inches to the left of th pine, where it had becomo encysted. A large abscess was found nea the gall bladder while the iver and a portion of the ir testines were strongly adherent, 'he long channel which has been so carefully attended as the track of the ball was discovered to be due to the] burrowing of pus from the wound.| With mortal injuries that were unde ordinary circumstances certain to [cause. speedy death, the long " and| heroic struggle of the president be- comes a matter of the greatest sur-Wices of the people. In this matte prise. A magnificent constitution tof@Mr. Jewett seems to be in harmon; which excess was unknown, a will with the more prominent of thos which had never quailed before the [who are demanding a reform in the} N ) management of our railway system. reatest obstacles, General Gartield @A fow months ago he gave expression| was able to sustain vitality throughfto his views ina public letter, from| eleven long weeks. which we reproduce the following ex. Another thought which must haveltract: advocates of an extra session can ad-§ vance in favor such an important stepfd BUSINESS LETTERS—All BusinesSgWwe should deem it very imprudent fo; Leotters and Remittances should be ad. President Arthur to call an extr dressed to Tie OMAHA PUBLISHING CoM-Mscasion wANY, OvAHA. Drafts, Checks and Post Bl Thq agsumption that only one life office Oners to be made payable to thef, o venos botween the preservation) i o of the public peace and anarchy i UHAHA PUBLISHING Gflu Pl‘flp'l'fl utterly unfounded. This country has literally beon without a president since E.ROSEWATER, Editor. he second day of July, when the lat President Garfield was disabled from| f@the active discharge of presidentiall functions. During this entire period he country has been as peaceable and| ranquil as during any .other period| ince this republic was founded. Inf§ country where every citizen is a sov- oreign, where the government is con-| ucted by the people for the people’ presidents are merely public servants,| hero is very little danger that a tem-| porary vacancy in the presidential ftice will produce anarchy or revolu- tion, It is very doubtfulif any serious dis-| urbance of the wheels of government would have occurred at a more crit- ical period of our history, had An-| drow Johnson shared the fate of Abra ] ham Lincoln on the samo day. No intelligent man will assert thal President Arthur will be more ex| pr)m;d to assassination during th two months that precede the regulai Bession of congress than he will be af. er tho senate has elected a president] Ipro tem, In fact the incentive to assassina| iion would be greater witha prospec tive democratic president pro tem han there is now with the presiden- tial succession unprovided for. Undery he constitution the emergency thal ight arise in case of the death of| President Arthur, would be readily| met. The secretary of state or the rank-| ing member of the cabinet would issu a proclamation calling for a special election of president by the people, and the government at Washington would move on until the people in) heir sovereign capacity filled the va-| cancy. iewed from this common sense tandpoint, the convening of congress extra session for the sole purpose pared a new addition of ‘“‘Camp Life; or, The Tricks of Trapping and Trap Making,” with illustrations by W. [Hamilton Gibson, which they wil oon publish, tory. Rich discoveries of gold are reported from (lendive, | The Benton jail will cost in the neieh iborhood of £15,000, B Towists are returning home from Gey serland at all points, Tt is definitely decided that the Utah &] Northern will ndt build this year to Butte, A new quartz lead has been discovered} jon the road hetween Belmont and Mountgy [Pleasant, ] The two Alice mills consume annually| t It, on which the frieght| me is worth 87,600, @ Bullion shipments trom Butte for the) week endi eptember 8d, aggregaty B4,180 pounds, valued at 266,880, The freight ta from San ¥ Railway Management. (Cloveland Leader. A feeling prevails throughout thel ountry that the present management of our railways is inimical to'the best Binterests of the people. This feelin, has begotten a dissatisfaction which is constantly increasing in intensity, and may eventually provokeaconflict which) will end disastrously in more] ways| than one. The main charges against lthe corporations are watered stocks,)| iscrimination in tariff rates agains individuals and localities, and a_dis| position to evade taxation. Thes @wnd other matters of minor impor-| tance have led to anti-railway organ izations in the east and west, and] foven on the Pacific slope. These or-} anizations, under the name of anti- monopoly leagues, farmers’ alliances, lotc,, have been formed with the lavowed purpose of fighting the rail ways, and the cry everywhere pre- vails, ‘‘Down with monopolies.” In the midst of the heated discus-| Ision going on it is pleasant to notice} that there is one prominent railway| official who is able to suggest a plan,) which, if put into operation, woul allay all controversy, and bring abou better order of things. Among alll the railway magnates of the country, Hugh J. Jewett, president of the Erig railway company, appears to stand| lone in the opinion that there should} be a more direct supervision of raild way management by the representa| Edwin Davis, Manager of Ci Oironlation. John H. Pierce is in Charee of the Mail Oircuation of THE DAILY BE Proclamation by Gov. Nance. Exrovrive OrricE, } Lixcory, NEs,, Sept. 20, 1881, The terrible tragedy which occurred in the city of Washingtan on the 2d of July Tast, When tho chiof magistrato of {he nation became tho. object of an ssasein's wnprovoked nnd. desperate assault—has Fnally culiminated in & nattonl disaster £00 mournful in character to be announced in the onlinary Ianguage of sorrow. Ou honored and belovel president, James A, Garfield, died at Long Branch, N, J., a 10390 p. . yesterday.~ After many weoks of \intense suffering, the strong,! brave Heart in still, and’ the feiends of ~law and order ~and ood governmenty Shroughout, the world are bowsd wit geiet w5 thows who feel the weight of Peraonal beyeavement, The na'ioa’s Salamity_brings sorrow to every houte hold in Nebraska, and awakens the ten. dorest feo inge of sympathy for the ) filoted compunion and fatherless children) of the lato president. The:e emotions o el ympachy will find appropria expransions in every city, v xural home. Tn harmony therewith 1t o muggestd that on the day set apart for i obscqnies, All | publio . offices and Other. "places Tof . business b olosel T 'in also _recommended that the pacple assemblo throughou tho state In their rospective places o worship and_with appropriate religions exerciss participate in the, nation's mem orial nervioes on that oosasion ns further] Thanifeatation of the sorrow that is telt by all, and as & mark of respect for tho ex. alted charaster of our Inte chief magis trate, It is ordered that the national flag bo| lisplayed at half-mast on the capitol] bllddfln); at Lincoln, and that the several] state departments bedraped with emblem: of mourning for the period of thirty days, In witness whereof I have hereunto af-} fixed my hand, this 20th day of Septem] ber, 1881, By the governor (¢ AvLBINUS NANGE, igned) 8. J. ALeXANDER, Secretary of State. Silver Bow will be the banner county in§ B Montana this year in point of assessable propercy. Tho assessment of this county i Bwill run considerably over $4,000,000. WYOMING. Laramie is discussing a wool n mill, Governor Hoyt is making s tour in th northern part of the territory. Green River is brund to have an avail-f fable road to t Thornbnrgh, An effort is being made to organize 2§ o1t zen’s brass band in Cheyenne, _ Surveyors tre coriecting the boundary ine between Wyoming and Montana, Hod carricrs are getting three dollars Boer day in Cheyenne, and are scarce at that, Ten tons of Green Mountain Boy orel has arrived at Cheyenne and will be shijs ped to the Golden smelting works to-day. |8 Jimtown is the name Mille- gives to a new mmm;" camp, lately discovered be| ween Sabile can' n and the head of Horse] creek. The new stamp mill for Cummins City] fhas arrived at Laramie and wil be sent mmediately to cnmmins «nd set up. Men Iaccomp nying it for that purpose. The Rawlins Journal says that o trike has been made at Hahn’s Peak Hampton & Company have found graveifl paying fifty-four cents to the pan, an Nelson & Reader have struck about theBy kame, Nelson sold a small strip o thej§ Hhn's Peak conpany and_in five shifts| fthey cleaned up §1,100, Nelson sold far B$300. He won't sell any more, althongh offered $400 per day for a two week's run) by the same comy any COLORADO. d There are 870,000 cattle in Colorado, valued at $14,060,000. [« Denver is using uantities of Cali-$ fornia red wood in huilding. 3 There is a vein of twenty foet of pay ore] in the Silver King at Montazuma. This year's assessment of county, Col., foots up $28,805, Denver is now supplying ice for all of [the southern towns as far as Trinidad, 1 The present Colorado stute fair is thusjid ar pronounced the most successful of - all,§ The old Fifteenth street Presbyterian) hurch, of Denver, is to be used for a ket, At present it is used as carriage Ever Offered OCCIDE’N”I"AL JOTTINUS. CAl ORNIA. Sixty-one acres of hops near Healds urg, Cal., give employment to 300 per ns. The assessed valuation of all . property] n Sacramento county, Cal,, is given af $22,267,249. Extensive fires are raging in the woods| in Mendocino county, and much damage has been done, It is said that thirty-fie families from) he Oneida community, New York, ave purchased lands near Santa Ana, Cal, + During August there were shipped from| t?. Helena and Krug'sstation, 123,380 gal. tRlons of wine and over a thousand gallons) Jof brandy. A fruit grower living on the American§ river, above Sacramento, sold $10,0 Mworth of truit from twenty acres orch s entire profits from the season's crop a little over $7,000. About 2,000 wild goats have been killed on Santo Catalina island, off the coast o (California, this season. They are hunted] for their pelts which sell for ‘twenty-seven§l cents a pound, 3 estimated that there] s still abont 4,000 on the island. The taking out of great quantities off fold at Kalamath river, together with suc- cessful quartz, placer and hydraulic min- ling operations promises to make times) hnore prosperous in Siskiyou this fall than| ver before, and especially in Yreka. in to Build. | Tz last bulletin offered no occasio: for concealment or duplicity on the part of the president’s physicians. PER MONTH. Two valiant Virginians yesterd et on the field of honor. It is pain ful to be forced to chronicle that bot! escaped uninjured. — Maxy of our citizens are already drinking the water from the ne water works. It is clear, pure and i) every way satisfactory. ry power vested in the president to| convene congress in extraordinary| smergencies should not be exercised| ithout sufficient cause, Quite apart| from all these considerations, Presi- ent Arthur could not convene con-| in extra session without stulti- fying himself. It is a historic fac hat the responsibility for ths failure of the senate to elect a president pro) tempore at its session last spring| Cheyenne divisions, disburses $50,000, monthly among its employes at the Den ver station. WASHINGTON TERRITORY" ioldendale has a Presbyterian church, Colfax is to be lighted at tbe city’s ex- pense, : The Umatilla Indians have raised 20,000 bushels of wheat this year. Klickitat _county shows a decrease in population sincelast year, Cord wood is retailing in Dayton for 84 Ja cord.Some fow lots have been sold asfg ow as 83.50. An addition has been built to the Pen- dleton school house, which will make i ey o) ARIZONA, There are only ninety-four graves in theff ‘ombstone cemetery, The Southern Pacific company has pur Ichased one hundred stand of arms for use) of the employes of the Arizona division. A regnlar organized band of horse thieves is operating in San Joaquin and ad-} oining counties. - Their efforts seem su.-J cessful in some instances, as several horses| ! - “My exporience has led me to th 1 d of ol beon uppermost in the mind of everyfloonclusion that a great deal of thel me who has followed the president's®apparent hostility on the part of thel ase will bo intensified by the resultipeople to the railways proceeds from| of the autopsy. The physicians, at-Jjg* Want of information with regard to) pey- Y 2 their management and their necessi-| ondant aud consulting, havelios T have, therofore, long thought been at sea from the veryMit advisable that in cach state therd) outset. Their conjectures as to thefishould be either a board of commis ocation of the ball, the track of thefsioners, or soma state officer, whosel 5 £ the injuri uty it should be to act as the medi] wound and the extent of the injuriesly, " of " communication between the have all been disproved. Fiom thefipeople and their representatives and] moment when tho assassin’s bullet L:e milwaysf; and that, if it was made] ! B ¢ kafli the duty of some such officer, orfstormsin Arizona will reach $2,000,000, nfictod that fearful wound thero has 70 §'0P e 1380 familiasizo. themJfin one Terpoot tho. sonthern rte’ ha not been an instant when the slight- Privie, ey ~ ‘Bproved o great disappointment. It wag jselves with the necessitics of railwayftieies o STebt, CRapPO KERE e At Al est hope of recovery was warranted Bmanagement, to listen to the com: ;:.o‘;,. .ndc ‘;:, pee?’a;fl;e' of the gl.:zlfi: 1:: by the condition of the patient. Dr.g@plaints of the people, tv inquirefion thus saved the annoying delays that Bell’s clectric indicator was no lessflWhether or not M:lch complaints wer hnvta ever been incident” to the Central i g 1l founded, and if well founded togroute. nreliable than the diagnosis of Dr, :'“ (: i it 2 1 ire wherein they could be law-| Bliss, which placed the locationiully remedied, and to take such step of the bullet in the anteriorfas might by law be authorized to rem. portion of the abdomen when in factjiedy them, the principal cause of fric-§ 3 ¢ : . tion now apparently existing would it lay in close proximity to the spinall entirely pass away.” column, A channel of suppuration® 1y this expression of opinion Mr, was treated by the surgeons as thefJewett has fairly hit the nail on th) ltrack of the ball head. An {wueat and competen f : ;Jboard &f railway commissioners in Of courso all lno.dlcul scmn.co 188each of the states would do more to largely based on conjecture. Hidden| Poor crops are reported from Ger- many. This means increased emigra: tion to America. Our public domai | ties have sought for years t jhave the railways put unde supervision, as has been done with| banking corporations and insurance) [RRFETHS Garfiold’s i ompanies. But the wishes of thel§ n President Garfiold’s caso will se-Bu05010 in this matter have invariably Jriously impair popular confidence infbeen thwarted by the New York Cen-| octors and surgoons. 1f such emi-§@tral and Hudson River Railroad Com-} : pany. The Vanderbilt organization,) with its fifty millions of walered RS stock and overgrown influence, has} uess about internal injuries from@heon able to exercise a power ove pistol balls, not much reliance can beflegislation whizh has placed at defi laced on the most skilled of doctors, fiance any and all attempts at railroad reform. As.a result, the question,of] o p : curbing the railroads will enter large-| Ir is foreshadowed that Senator@lly into tho politics of the state this [Bayard will be the choice of the demiffall, and be hotly contested. The| crats as president pro temporo of thefgsame is true of Now Jersey and othe i No man in the'{% i United States senate. Kkl 1t is time that something were don gsenato on tho democratio side wouldto settlo the questions at issue, The Il the position with more dignity and@public does not and will not regard ability, and no democrat in this coun-fWith favor the it uld bo safer in the exccutiveloPital Yy wa ember of the current year $671,000, [ohair in caso of an emergency. Em—— fHouse and Post Office, (PRICES ranging from hey killed 142, There are sixty-nine acres in hops in Ya-| hama va'ley., The yield this year, it 1s claimed, will average 1,600 pounds to thel cre, giving @ total of 110,400 pounds. This is an increase of 84,000 pounds over last} year. The building of the Oregon Railwa: Navigation company’s bridge over What- tone hollow, W, 'I', is a gigantic pieco of work, It will be 850 feet long, ninety feef high, and will be what is known as a three:] tory trestle. ys: “‘I have used your Sp or myself and family, and think it uable as a household remedy, for ing the bowels, liver and kidueys, never bLe without IY rial bottles 10 cen Black Diamond Coal Co. : A W, H LO()H. hy J. 8. NEWELL, s, SKC. AND TREAS, L L. MILLER, Aokx?. HARD OR SOFT COAL nd an indomitable will. Viewe rom the unprofessional standpoin{ he result of the post mortem finding: Guiteau wants a fair and impartia trial. He ought to have it. When the trial is over an impartial judge will pronounce the sentenco that hel bo hung by themeck until dead. PRESIDENT'S FUNERAL., The homely and unassuming nature] f the heroic wife of General Garfield| fis seen in her fixed determination that} here shall be no unnecessary display| n the funeral obsequies of the la-| ented president. The people o ew York, through whose magniticen horoughfares the body of the mar] yred Lincoln was borne in solemn) pomp sixteen years ago, earnestly de- sived that the route of the funeral might pass through their city, in order to afford them| he opportunity of payin heir respects to the dead, 'lhis i ot to be. Mrs. Garfield has very| eluctantly consented to a lying in| tate at Washington and a public funeral in Cleveland, where the in-| erment will take place. To-day and lo-morrow the body cf he lamented president will lie in| tate in the rotunda of the capitol on) he same catafalque under whose mur- Payment of $5 to $10. jnent physicians and surgeons can,)| fter a careful study, make no bette Jupae CLiNtoN BRIgGs comes in fos a share of the Herald's personal abuse, One of Mr. Briggs strongestclaims fo; popularity is that he has nothing ir common with the editor of the Omaha Herald, OREGON. Burglara infest Portland, Another steam fire engine has been pur- chased in Portland, Beautiful eleotrical been observed in the I outhern Oregon, The total number of } s of salmon put! p this season along the Columbia river is lostimated at 133,000, The Northern Pacific railroad company, in view of the largo business expected on he opening of the through line across the| continent line on the north side of the ‘olumbia river, from Ainsworthto Dallas, Phe work in to commence on this division once. i Improving. enomenn havel ens lately from B1NCE the opera has departed, Den.| ver will have more time to bestow on| the very necessary duty of preventing ‘her buildings from falling down, T . isn’t 80 much of a leap from art to architecture, Mx. ConkuiNe's declaration that he was out of politics was probably in tended only to apply to politics in th United States Senato. At least poople might infer from his work af the Utica primaries. Yard, Foot Farnham and Doug:-§ las Sts., Omaha. plete their Building, Geo. P. Bemis ReaL Estate Acency, 16th and Dodge &ts,, Omaha, Neb ! I 00 has been issued, in nominal value,) pf securities for the construction of rail ways in this country, and that onl; fifty per cont of the whole sum is bona ide capital. If the corporations wer o not speculate, and therefore any bargain i its books are 'Insured to its patrous, instow o being gohbled up by the asent DexterL, Thomas&Bro. WILL BUY AND SELL REAXL EST.ATE AND ALL TRANACTION CONNEOTED THRRRWITH, Puy Taxes, Rent Houses, Btc IF YOU WANT 70 BUY OK HRLL all at Office, Room &, Creighton Block, Omahs. anfid Nebrdskafifidlgency DAVIS & SNYDER, 1606 Farnham 8t., Omaha, Nobraska “A00, 000 AOFES ro.ully solocted land In Fastern Nebraska for le, Groat Hargalny in nproved farms, and| [Ouiaba eity proporty ). F. DAVIH. WELSTER SNYDER Late Laiud Cow's U.P. " ‘welebtd DRS. CAOM!:FMAN TIHOMPSON, hysicians and Burgeons, Ovricw, Over Crulckahank, 16th 84, Bt Faruiam wnd Dovglas, azh lm 3 'NEVADA. Pioche has a mining boom, The new Safford district is booming. Royal City boasts of & Sunday school. About 400 gradors are _employed on the Nevada and Oregon railroad, The August bullion product of the) Northern Belle mine was 8107,200, | The flow of water from Sutro's tunnel s now 6,000,000 gallons in- twenty-fou jhours, of which the hydraulic pumps send The grading of the Oregon and _ Nevada) railrond has been completed twenty miles rom Reno, Ten miles of rails have heen| , and as soon as the iron arrivesa mile} of track will be laid daily. "The Consolidated Vinginia mining co bany was in debt 892,057 on the st An assessment of $102,000 is now, ollected to pay off that indebted. ess and to provide for future wants, SPECULATORS in suburban lots will darive a good deal of encouragement rom the fact that land has been sold| 19 § ¢ | o pontent to earn dividends on genuine fin London at the rate , of $5,000,0008pital, thore would be no trouble. n acre, in New York at $8,000,8'0,@But, when 1t is proposed floating paragraph says, and in Pariglitax commerce and production, o 82 h : ather the consumers of pro t $2,810,000 in a sale in August, uotion, to pay their dividends. on watered stock, there the objection) omes in on the part of the public,| nd resistanco becomes determined i averw 1o lond persictent. The New York Cen) Ho was our sheet anchor in every in. ral l)! paying eight per cent. on fifty] tance when all other sources of nowsRuuillions of stock, which nover cost aft ailed and our reporters were on the@dollar except for printing the corti- vergo of desperation for items to fillffficates. s (Oghq: ‘cumlpunel nf“ en-| ™ e couraged to imitate the example, and heir quota of dispatoho the results is that the pul:lin’ are) windled out of millions and million | Tuk star routo crooks are movinggper nnlmilin "l‘lu- matter should b n Washington, 1t they oan bringllllh 0 01 7t e esianiures pressure enough to oust Postmastor-Bof Mr. Jewett ought to recoive thej General James and Attorney-General®most serious consideration, McVeagh they will escapo the dis- NE— [agreeable prospect of wearing stripe the city that is very ¥ short time, Srupy thoe autopsy, Dr. Miller, andji zeport your famous declaration tha] Mr, Blaino was trying to magnify the injuries of the president, in order t dmpose upon the sympathies of the Ppublic for political ends. Ee———— Tue consideration of tho Kan City, 8t. Joe & Council Bluffs with the OChicago, Burlington & Quincy adds another link to a system which is becoming one of the mos powertul as well as one of the mos prosperous in the west. lots, especially on 30th Street countrymen, The remains will be uarded by deputations from the var- Dr. Buss will be very sadly| issed from our telegraphic celumns, government and by officers of thog enate and house. Tnvitations) been issued to members) hoth branches of congre: o attend the funeral servic payments, sheul We are ready to show th persons wishing to pur BOGGS & HILL, UTAH. Telephones are in operation in Park! ity. Bullionville's smelter has shut down on, jaccount of the exorbitant demands of char- coal burners, A big strike was made in the seventh ovel of the Great Basin mine last week. 1t was five feet of solid galena, An average of two wagon loads of cop- ill be transferred to a special train| on the Pennsylvania railroad, which| ill arrive in Cleveland tho next day, where the body will remain until Mon Tk New Puase or NAPOLEONIC Hisrory” is the subject of a paper in| A the forthcoming (€ Jctober) SCRIBNER, PeNNsvLvania has a littlo bill offgby Walter A. Burlingame, son of the over three million dollars ia delin 0 Anson Burlingame, and a close Jquent taxes against the Btandard O tudent of modern political ovents, ¥ Bo complete has been the revolution eompany. That wighty monopolyMin public opinion concerning theld amns in mourning. In Chicago the Times was a notable exception, and in) 8t. Louis the democratic Republican) displayed more feeling in turning it's columu rules than the republican) Globe-Demoorat, ] 1408 cemetery, a spot previously selected y the president as his last restin, k per watter arrive every day at Milford rom the Graud Guleh copper mines. The California Central company have Although the nation will not be OMAHA, NEB, §THE BEST BARGAINS IN THIS CITY. NO CASH PAYMENTS Required of Persons Desir- "Th Union Pacific,on e Cotorsito VIO N QY AdVanced Assist Purchasers in Building. HWe Now dfi‘er For Sale 85 Splendid $300 to $400 heir Value, on Sm«1l Monthly Parties desiring to Build and ¥ Improve Need Not Mhke any j Payment for one or two years, but can use all their Means for- Persons having $100 or $200 In car lota or in quantities to suit purchasers §Of their own, But not Enough Ordery Soliclted. Kto Build such a house as they want, can take a lot and we fwill Loan them enough to com- These lots are located between the MAIN BUSINESS STREETS of the city, within 12 minutes walk of the Business Center. Good Sidewalks ex: tend the Entire Distance on Dodge Streot, and the lots can be reached by This agency does sTRicTLYa brokerage busines fEway of either Farnham, Douglas or Ooos Dodge Streets. 'Fhu{aliu in a part of gldly Tmproy- ing and consequently Increasing in Value, and purchasers may reasonably. hope to Double their Money within & Some of the most Sightly Locations in the city may be selected from these We will build houses on a Smal Cash Payment of $150 or $200, and sell house and lot on small monthly 1t is_expected that (hese lots]will be rapidly sold on these liberal terms, and Ecruunu wishing to purchase call at our office and secure their lots at the earliest moment. Real Estate Brokers, North Side of Farnham Btreet, Opp. Girand Central Hotel, -

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