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RO The Omaha Bee. Jlishad svery morning, sxcept Sunday. Che on'y Monday moming daily. LERMS BY AL e 00 | [hrce Mouth. 83,00 Monthe .00 | One . LOO ey Welnesday, i One Yaar, 8ix Months, PATD: §2.00 | Throe Months. . 1.00 | One L 20 NDENCE—A ewsand ¥ CORR Communie rial mat- PO eations relating te tors uld be addressed to the EDITOR OF | The Hve | Veagh to assist the prose. BUSINESS LETTERS—All Businees | Letters and 1 w should be ad dressed to Tie OMaHA Pontisiing Cou PANY, OMAMA, Drafts, Cliecks and Post- | office. Orders to be made payable to the | order of the Cowpany. OMAHA PUBLISHING C0., Prop'rs £. ROSEWATER, Editor. Zdwin Davis, Manager of Oity Ciroulation: John H. Pierce is in Charge of the Mail Cirention of THE DAILY BEE. I. D. Chamberlain correspondent and wolicito e e ————— Tie jury that ought to take charge of Guiteau's case is the coroner's jury. — Tue Salt Lake Tribune calls upon congross to make all the terriiorics state. NERRASKA wants hickory statosinen. She is about tired of basswood vepre- sentatives. —— house has made itre of the Mis OMAHA'S New 0D her the amusement souri valley. Tur freezing of our mud slougha must not interfere with the agitation | for substantial pavemsnts for our streots. AN oxchango sonsibly suggosts that | wo know enough about Guiteau's . life and now desire to obtain soms facts about his funeral. Giisos, who made the exhaustive report on the star route frauds, is o S reporter aftor all to get at the facts. ———— It takesa journalist Oun protective tarifl is a gonuine suriosity. Tho range of duties col lectod annually by the Unitod S is from 8162 on mineral oil to $42,- 000,000 on sugar, ] To a small circle of friends, Clara Louise Kellog admittsd recently that she was thirty-nine years old. The rumor of her engagzement to Tom Whitney needs no further confirma- tion. — LELAND, the Albany hotel proprie- tor, has signed a contract to conduct a hotel in London on the American plan. This includes 20-carat dismond breast- pins for the clerks anl mince pies for dinner. _— Mi. VANDERBILT Lus contracted for w stamned glass windows for his new residence which is to cost $125,000. Mr. Vanderbilt is the gentloman whose father made a largo fortune by watering raileoad stock. rolief comumittees still call for more funds. Upwards of 10,000 persons aro under their caro and thero is geoat and prossing need for more toney. The collection box will have to bo passed aronnd aguin, e Ir 15 rumored that Father-in-law Mills has offercd to purchase Jay Gould's interest in the New Rosk Zribnne for Son-in-law Reid, White- law wasu't such an idiot as sowme of his friends imagined when he gave the cold shoulder to Auna Dickinsou. e Geseral BurLen says in a recent lettor that Oakes Ames's “simplo hon- intentions and do- oy and “purity o ings” wore really above question, Wit gets away with Ben is the fact that O kes Ames never believed in that story of New Orleans and tho Apoons. e Ir Jay Gould does not succeod in jus schemo of gobbling up the New York associatod pross it will be be- causo Hugh Hastings of the Commer- cial Advertiser charges too much for his property. As mattors now stand, Gould controls the Tribuue the World and the Express, which has just been purchased by Cyrus W, Field. B Tue aunouncement that Mr. J. uley Wrown, the private secrotary of the late President Garfield, who parts his name in the middle, is about to go into the banking business in Washington, causes the Atlanta Con- stitution to remark that Mr, Brown is a very youug man, but he seems to have acoumulated just enough money to keep him off the lecture platform. —_— At its next session congress should nake immediate provision for the employment of examiners for the examination of national bank ex- aminers. The trouble with the pre ont examiners is that they do not examine and our clearing liouses and crally the first to discover that any- thing is wroug, in great, but shaky, | his u | Gibsen is the Washingto [ Brady & Co.'s dogs of war are pl tuctive tako ETIQUEYTE AND INVESTIGA- TION The check of the gang of star route | gained a strong frothold in Wyoming, | Sage, thieves knowa no limit. After abus ing General Gar their batterics on - Attor neral MacVe nation they b y ( to tho time ow found a new | raport on tho star route frauds was | published a fow diys g through the| eriaso of the ( [HE OMAHA DAILY | fined to Utal, but already holds |ln~: banking honrs the next day Gould had | 4Sir Walter Raleigh in Irelar Russell | “The Last Great Dream of the Cr rado, “International Copyright,” | dral of Liverpool,” | ele balanco of power in Tdaho, and has borrowed Arizona, and southern Colorado. It|and he made many thousands by the |« field until the time of | is not likely that the question will re- | combination. wation, and then turning|ceive much attention from congress. | over sinco been fast friends, but the first opportunity that Gould sees t0| Fanderbilts Appenl to the Publio | his resige | much mixed up in times past to afford | “squecze”’ his former Politics and polygamy have been too | much hops for any more rapid solu 1 I time, education and the natural in medium of the associated press. Mr. | bring to its accomplishment. correspond ent of the New York Sun and was en zaged by Attorney General Mac cution in preparing evidence for the trials of Brady & Co, His report is the most terrible arraignment of the that Brady’s method of increasing the ! bogan as pay of “‘expedited routes soon a8 ho entered the office and was continued until the close, and that his oye was on the plunder from the very beginning. The means by which the government was swindled out of over amillion and a half dollars annually s very clearly exposed by Mr. Gibson in a report which catries convictious to overy candid mind and makes o prosecution of tho cascs an absolute nozonsity And now oflicial etiquette comes in and questions Mr. Gibson's right to call himself n “special attorney” for the United States or to make any re- port atall. Mo iy pompously asked who employed him and by what su- thority he pursued the investigations which have brought more rascality to light than the combined work of all chief clork in the attorney goneral's office addre es him a letter. The acting attorney general adds lis en- dorsoment and the whole pack of ced on his t {tho public by howling loudly against who hag exposed their thiov What differen: what title Mr, Gibson signed his port? - Would the title of “special de- o docs it mako by aunexed to tho document ything from the value of the roport? What connection has the is- suo he has raised in the public mind vith the source from which he has de- rived his auathority? Tsn't it plain that his whip has lashed tho star routo thioves into a very thin defenso for their roguery? Such silly attempts to discredit Mr. Gibson's valuable services will only react on their authors, The public is not yet entirely certain that the alleged government prosecutors are not pros- ocuting the star route criminals for the purposo of letting them get away The conduct of the caees up to tho presont time has net beon very reas- suring. If such is not their intention no amount of red tapeism or depart- ment ctiquette will prevent Gibson's testimony from appearing in couit His conclucions are stated with a tone and vigor which call proof in de.ial, and not for abuse of their author, whose appointment Wayne MacVeagh declares to have been regular and by s special request. The atiempt to ereato the impression that Mr. Gibson was not regularly employed to hunt down the star route thieves appoars to have originated from the fact his hunt was successful, The public can’t be hoolwinked by Brady and his gang of conspirators. A circuran signed by the Episcopal bishop, tho Roman Catholic vicar- goneral, clergymon of different do- nominations, teachers, and others of Salt Lake City, Utah, has beon sent to ministers and others throughout facts, to tho end that they may be in- terestod *‘in securing for us at the ap proaching session of congress, such leg islation as will at once and forever put law of congress so amended that the living tog the proof of bigamy or polygamy, in stead of the ceremony of marriage, of limitatio) equally pun been convicted under it in the eigh financial stibuious, b.ok, M2 i 3 no lo con ) star routo thioves yot made Tt shows | tho other attornoys put togethor. The | and aro trying to mislead | tho “anauthorized action” of the man | indey the land, asking attention to the spread and growing power of Mor- monism in the western territories, and the insufliciency of the United States law against polyzamy to put an end to its ovils, They therefore ask all who receive thy eireular to bring to the no- tico of thoir membera of congross thess o stop to the further spread| of polygamy.” They ask to have tho anti-polygamy law v of partios—or cohalbita- tion, to use a logal term —shall be because the latter is performed in so- cret within the walls of the Endow- ment House, in the presence of faith- ful Mormons only, and no one of theso will bear testimony to the fact; that polygamy shall bo a continuous crime, instead of being allowed (as now) to expiro within threo years, by a statue ; that the women shall be hable with the men for this offonse; that the accessorics to the polygamous marriage shall be equally punishable with the principals; that the jury-list may be increased to 400; and that adullery, seduction, lewed and lascivious cohabitation, and kindred offonses may be punishable a8 in the states and other territories of the Union. They claim that| toon years it has been on the statute Nrw York has one man who is not | afraid to give his opinion of Jay| Gould's latest scheme to force the stock exchange into assisting him in| his Lighway robbory undoer threat of erecting a rival cstablishment Mr. Brayton Ives in referring to the mat- ter says: “The whole causo of this move- ment 18 the refusal of the governing committee to comply with th request of Gould, Field and Sage to force in- nocent stockholders in the Metropoli- tan road to accopt what are known as Cwamped” certifieates. Thoro has never been a more auda- cious and iniquitous schome at- temptod in Wall atreot than this. These borrowed stock bearing a guarantee that ten per cent. dividends should be paid, and one of them, Cyrus Field, is o party to_that guarantco, They then closed the books without notice, voted that the dividends, should bo reduced to six por cent., and then stampsd upon the cortificates they had borrowed the false statemont that the owner of that stock had assonted to the modified agreoment, und consonted to tako eix por cont. Naturally the stock- holders who had been 8o treat- od refured to recoive the stock boaring such an endorsement, and us aturally, the governing com- jnittes, being cemposed of honent men, supported them in their refusal. 1i thoy can carry out this scheme and perfeet the reorganization of tho elo- vated roads without consulting the stockholders, then thore is an abso- lute end of all security in railroad stocks, and any man or party of men who can command a few muliions of dollars can borrow Morris & Issex or any other g anteed stock which may be held by hundreds of investors, y put stock in their own names, close | the books, and by the simple vote of half a de zon men, who do not own o Jundred shares, reduce the rate of in- terst one-half, and then compel the parties who loaned them the stock to take it back at the samo price. The governing committeo are deserving of the thanks of the entire community for doing all in their power to thwart such villainy.” JEPIRII Y ONE of the best instances of what ndence in local politics can ac- complizh is shown by the exposures of gigantic frauds in tho Phladelphia tax-office made by tho noew officers whom the independent reform voters led by the Committee of One Hundred | succeeded after a hard fight in elect. ing last February. accomplished by making out bills for property which the owners had ne- glocted to put on tho list, or for sums larger than appeared on the books. The frauds will run up into the millions. The most com- plote collusion existed between the clerks of the tax offica and the controller, and as there were no filse ontries on the books, detection was apparently impossible. One of the offenders, however, ‘‘squealed” to his new superior, who at once promptly investigated the matter. Had the old gang remained in power the frauds would never have come to light ~ All officors holding posi trust should be replaced at frogquent intervals, and if the party is not able to accomplish this objoct through party organization other means like ssful in Philadelphia those 80 Bus should be adopted. — Missoukt evidently knows more about Nebraska politics than Nebraskans themselves, The old saying that if | one wants to hear the news he must s illustrated by the followi g extract from the Kansas | 0 away from home, City Jowrnal : They have about as much polities to | oan b found in any other state, lections | Pr ) | matie tlie square uere in Nebraska a8 are biennialy but there is el mterval when agitation s not oflices—Unitod erossmen, gOver:H ates sonator, m in such o majority t alone worth considering, § nal genator to succead Hon. Alvin Saun ders. The latter will m for the place with him, A strong ef fort is being made to form a contract between the Farmera’ Alliance and all the odds and ends of opposition to the | olicism, Protestan ) order to defeat them, i republicans but it will scarcely succeed. Tue Now York Times, a fow days ago, published a story of how Gould was nearly forced out of the stock- jobbing business, and was only only saved from financial ruin by Russell Sage. It seems that in 1878 Gould held 200,000 shares ot Union Pacific. A combination was formed between | Koene, Morgan and Scott, to the law as it now stands is| *“‘squoeze’” Gould, and according to a| | practically a dead letter, because of | Now Yoik Zimes informant, they suc- tho confossions of defaulters are gen- | its dofects, ouly two persons having ceeded to the extent of obtaining from him & promise to drop out of Wall street and leave New York, if they Jiveseed b w0 further, Before | winistrative Machinery of Egypt,” (ed to compel uniform justice. €2,000,000 from This tided him over the crisis, y and Gould have|and **A New Love ! | of a fow millions the friendal PHE WEBEKLY BEE, published ev- | apemy in Mr. A, M. Gibson; whose | tion of the queation than that which | ¢ as0 in a hurry. r—— F " ¢ unit Tue trial of the assassin of General | Jation of railroads. If the | searcely to judge, counsel and spectators who | coming more itile population will 1 18 & national dis greet the progress of the case with the murderer of our president should | resomblo a second-claes | cirous performance. m—— Ir life is long enough and timo the unsettled pensions —ce— Gronar Q. UANNON has reached | Washington, loaded and primed, ready | betrsy Ho proposos to rotain his | tently, it is true, but none tho less de soat us delogato from Utah at all haz- | : g acdo, gainst M, Compbetl, whom he | _ *“Thero is no doubtthiat the railread defeated by some 18,000 votes at THE MAGAZINES. Tur Cextury.—The second num- tains, appropriately, material in mem- ery of the late Editor-in-chief, Dr. J. G. Holland. steh | zgleston takes | differenc the first place, usually occupied by an |and Ph Poems in his mer ory are contributed by “I1. H .dman, and Washingten (¢ illustrated paper. adden. affords the first oppe tuaity the magazine has had to make t the death of | ant Garlield. on his |} personal and public qualitie tributed by his friend of many yer Smalley, who make “The story of Tiluess” is told | the prefore by Dr. D. W. Bliss, which will be as|at the same rates. That is not too| sh toask, and it ought to be per- | ! well-rounded study. ly read for tho authenticity it gives to events already reported as oc- | curring as for those which it newly | made the b, Smalley’s paper | may be mad aro two striking portraita—one en-| _All this is the nature of a whine. graved by Colo trom the Sarony pic- Mr. Vanderbilt has probably been jha- ture of August, 1880, and the other engraved by Kruoll after the daguer- | it were not' for the greater future he rotype of *‘Garfield nt sixteon,” now | has outlined for himsclf by breaking in possession of the family. Two other papers of a decided per- sonal interest aro ** The Early Writings of Robert Browning, ’ by ldinund W. Gosse, and “The Life-Mask of Lin- coln and how it was Made,” by Lion- ard W. Volk. Mr. W. D. The stealing was Howell's new wiich begms in this number, is en- titled “A Modern Instance,” evidently going to deal with marriage m New England, her second mstallment of *“Through One Administration,” pique curiosity regarding her heroine, | gut from that which Mr. Vanderbilt whom she secmed to marry off to the wrong man at the conclusion of the Farther glimpses are Burnett, in continues to very first part. given of Washington society. The other material consists of **New | atations, is to mainti in that they have " by Charles Bar-|been intrusted with the administra- sount of the different | tion of a certain 1ailroad or rail of instruction in York Trade Schools, the Maesachu- | businessin their sotts and Stevens Iustitutes of Tech- |side inter nology, and the Worcester Freo - |are in the stitute; ‘‘Buchanan’s Loyalty,” for o short time | jus chiefly | boo! ons of financial nurd, a short u in the cabinet of Buchana ot the Civil W housand 1elands, n postseript re Venus of Me “Phe Lord's | 1 Il‘.:z [fort to_sctile the present difliculties! Gladden’s sor! Conven struction, Photograph ing ience, snd Slow-t on. Although it is nearly » yesr be- foro tho next, election, candidates are | With a pag Loing calked of for all the principal | de down by the Goioty” is omitted for y, and down, | Awong the republicans, who are they aro | ate Senator Dawes is prominently mentioned for wovernor, while Governor Nance and | Hon, C. H. Fere, of the State Jowr- \d Hon. John M. Thuraton aro | suggosted for congress, The legisla- ture choson will elect n United States | Pororar Scieses,—The December | at hand, being one of he contents ar of American Bods,” second papor, by ae follows: Oyster Licutenant al Educa- L. Oswald, M. D.; Palevuta Huxley; Hustrated) uality and . Delauney; Professor F. H. of Vortex-Rings” Ly Adrien Guebbard; “E m Sex,” by ( ntury of Seience,” second paper, by Sir John Lublock; *‘Cath- tism and Suicide,” “A Neap Review Carpenter, C.-E. “North America in the Ice Period,” ‘An Experience | in Science Teaching,” by Stanley M. Ward; “Disease Germs,” by Dr. Wil- liam B, Carpenter; sketch of M Paul (with portrait); correspondence, editor’s table, literary notices, popular miscellany and notes. ko an effort {0 bo returned, and Sonator Paddock, Judge Mason, and others will contest | by Dr. Morsel by Frank D. {Y a remarkable prevailing | be cfticient put Au excellent deseription of | bar “Sheep Hunting in the Mountains,” [ Vander is contributed by the Earl of Dunra-|tem of government arbitration L NUBSDAY, NOVEMBER 29 14l “The Future Cath Order of Corporate Reunion” out | enieago Trivune, will Tt would be rather remarkable if the principal agers of the railroad in- | teresta in this country should finally | in approval of government reau Such an event is iticipated, but it isbe- and more evident every ¢ that the stockholders in the rail- \ corporations, ns well as the gen “much laughter,” were examined by a | gral public, would be the beneficiarics commission of insanity, no doubt rea- | of a proper system of government su- gon would bo found why the trial of | pervision. if men like Vanderbilt, | Gould, Garrett, Jewett, and others in control of rival lines of transportation for governmontal direction of railros refusal is due mainly to their practice of stock-jobbing, and not to any con- to represent. Every onco in awhile thero is somo public utterance from ono of these railway magnates which year will draw nearly 8100,000,000 |indicates a conviction that uniform from the natlonal treasury. management, which can be assured only by government regulation, would bea boon to the railronds as well as the people. Mr. Vanderbilt has just {1 such a couviction —inadver cided on that account. He says: waris o very foolish thing, but it is the | difficult to pick out the fools. Per- Gentiles in Utah | haps T am one of them- -there may b wish Mr. Cannon would go off. others. Thavestudied thisrailroad mat- ter protty thoroughly,and Iamnotsure that the railroad managors should set- tle this question of differential rates be- tween the different cities on tho sea- Maga |board. OF courso the railroads aro con. | vastly intcrosted in the settlements of these 1ates, but what aflects us affeots tho whole communify. We have done what wo could with the railroads, and A fmithful portrait by |the question isnot decided. Why Wyatt Eaton, engraved by Cole, the frontspicce, and well reflects his kindly faco and fine bearing. of his lifo by Edward k | | should not the community, which has doep interest in it, have a voice in determning this problem? 1f the railroads caunot agree upon the farr of rates between Baltimore lelphia «nd New York, let what advantages should be ken. The Central and © fighting bitterly for of this city. Ought the businesz-men, to interest in the strugole? the raileoads cannot pro- forover. They are pay- ing heavily for it now, * * ¥ °I icand an op jection to f road, it you please. Al Iask is that shippers should give a solvent road 1 foctly fair. Ono thing at any rate is certain —that fair, open rates will be s of any agreement that tassed by his stockbolders until he would gladly close the railroad war, if down his rivals, TItis not certain that the war could not be «nded on his own terms. But he undertakes to shift the responsibility for the cutting of rates und the loss of revenue from his own shoulders, and preteuds to think that the ‘‘community,” the “public,” and ‘‘business men’’ ought novel, | to gettle the matter. This isa very big concession for a railrond magnate and i3|to make. It is an admission that the business men and public have some concern and some_ Tights in the man- azenwent of railroadsand the schedule of eharges. This view is very differ- and the railroad men as a class have been accustomed to take, Their usu- al course, when criticised by the news- parers or reproved by public demou- oads, and that they propose to manage the wn way without out- any kind. They habit of contending that by | their business should be *let alone” as much as dry-goods busincss, cure from a man in Vanderbilt's But how does Mr. Vanderbilt sup- pose that the business-men or the mnuunity should proceed in any ef- and s business | There is 1o doubt tl tormination to haul freight as clicaply between the west and the seaboard as the other roads charge, notwithstand- ing the difference in distance from the west to New York, and from the west and is no doubt that the prineipal for which Mr. Vanderbilt is contending is right, for his roadis level and the ad- vantage of grade fully offscts the dis- advantage of the lo distance. But it the Boards of Trade of these two cities should espouse Mr. Vanderbilt's cause openly, this action would give no assurance of & settlement. There is only ono way whereby the public can act efticiently, and that is through government, The city governments and the state governments are powe less in matters of inter state commerce, " |and the national government alone is able to enforce fair, open, and uniform rates, protectiug tho public against the extortion of pools and combinations, and protecting the railroad stockhold ers from the losses incident to recur- ring railroad wars, Mr. Vanderbilt presents only one phase of the rail- voad problem; there are many othera. Disputes and troubles are constantly arising., Inujustice tostockholders and reat B CeNTURY --The | shippers takes on a new shape cvery Ninoteenth Century for November i3 fow months and in diferent sections, contuing | As the watter now stands, there is no Tenuysow's Iatest poem entitlod **Des- |arbiser, and the result is spasmodic pair A Dramatic Manalogue “which is | contention, followed by new extortion re- | aud discrimination, There will never interference nor the rbilt now longs for until a sys nd Ad- | government protection ghall be ad POLLICAL NOTES. nicipul the last There will be » fon in Philadelphia in vote in_Pennag.var 8,00) less than last s e Mississinpi | interesting m sislstore will begin its sunial wession of Tue-day, Junnery 8. t only time Th o here- nd unfit men od on its party tic et va that United ATTID in a foregone con lusion, stary Quay, of the republican state committes of Penuey. vania pronounces in o mighty small potatoes ure being ‘ andidates it Arthur's cal inet, f Ma wichusetts, t ¢ next con- ond district of his state, Nur et FOr Sale By he sinecure positions in City hall and the mutter and rumble of fiendish opposition rise up around hiw. The bourhons in Virgit ia in their rage are threatening to nominate a colored can. ate for the United States «e ate in or- er to draw off the colored rea just rs and t favor of valusa A, Grow for governor. wrexs from th refuso to join in the public demand | d | inanagement and railroad rates, their | ab ligh some of . A ; sideration for the value of the proper- | in Washington may finally bo disposed |ty they control and the interests of Thoro are now 280,000 lying un- | the stockholders whom they purport examined in the pension bureau, and those which can be acted upon next w defeat their candidate. Noges follows in Charley e in showering taffy u on Pres h rnounces e hom he prnownces e | FIFTEENTH AND DOUGLAS 818,, presidential office, i thur will be adopted by Ohio. The lowa eenate epublic s, 2 gre batle that 1l e composed of 44 and 4 demo. | i Wil o BORIONSH T6E,| Bt Aakniar Siohr o o0 UG g Werebt 73 republicabs, ¢ ¥ democrats and 7 gresn-| No. 2, 2st ry backe's and fusionists, n ‘I'he republicans | barn, Webstor, near 15th street, will have a majerity of 84 on joint ballot, | No. 3, House of 10 rooms, on Harney, near r Roberts, of Texns, is a candi- the United St say Judge 1t in_the political crimesof Philadelphin ris s from the dis- at the contents of all th used at the Lt ety Thirteenth w and with | stable, their distructiin ha testi-| No.17, produced in | #nd of Fed stroct car turn table, £2:50. ss-men and the Boards of | ¥ Courtof Appeals, are ot open o fair who st Repub- ican on the Appen s bench, hav ng been | 1 Andrews, of S, Juige Charles 1 Sdwlge Andrew’s 1la o as Associnte-Judge, has been United States dicr, who tuk cre s has_for Hity years boen taught t's real policy not other public utterances, : What the not whethe or the Preside o over a baukrupt road | , hut whether wppe 1 to the trator who offers his advice for w ud refuses to bribe any mm New York Evening Post. PERSONALITIES. Senator Lamas live roofed, one story house at Oxfor Jack Post was recently hangs He is now a genuine post in an ordinary, flat- . 39, Mass, | on 15th e at Dal- Ben Butler say: that squint to his eye has been worth 200,000 to him. °Ye | wel A 2 h During |~ No. 46, Large house with full block, near uew lis legal days it would fetch a fury every | shott ower, §2000. Jim Keene, the millionaire, began busi- str-et peddler in San F lucky strike was Mr. Bookwalter couldn’t get the Ohio norship away from (' DBut he has propelied a byc field to Dayton. By-and-by Mr, Gould will be sett'ng up | no.r 21st strect, 500, Hecint | No 67, House of 6 rooms, summer kitchen, content bimself to be partof anything. He | cellar, cistern, well, gcod barn, otc., near St. wust be all and boss the machine, ator Jones, of Nevada, | webster, nea . nguages perfectly and has | - No. 59, Fonr houses with } lot, on 12th street, Freach works on_finan- B A0, ico Charley, le from Spring. ork all for himself, cl :] istance t+ her husband in looking up auth rities escribed as H1s | tar, cistorn and well, on Harmey, noar 21st strect, ack | 1760 Senator John Sherawan is ire he dies es in | and white of faultless fit, and he still | xid Celiar, near White yish whiskers that clothed | ' No. 64, Buildinz onle sLaby is a prof oy Lily's pictu by in’ her ar sional, is now ¥ on the ional beauties, that the bul.e on them, 1 Frederick Do and shoe business, or any other rstand. correspondence of the writer on the | pursuit of an individual and privato “Among the |character. It is important,therefore, poem by Emma | to s Lazarus, and **The Fountains of the | position an acknowledgement that the Rain,” a sonnet by Eldith M. Thomas; | public has some concern in the man- ding the so-calied |agement of railroads Stillmai; ina_com- d office in Wash- e copious in person Wfiluent in capitid, his f rtune bel over $100,020, 1 t* | and ci-torn, on Jackson, neor 12th, ime. | No. 74, Hrick house with 2 lota. fruit teves, e, 316,000, Mason, the s er who attempt men of both New York and Chicago o | would sustain Mr. Vauderbilt in a ae- His | roous, on Ciic nk. v 1}-8to ¢ you ¢ ear and dis dark blue ¢ P Never Too Lunte to Meud. Thos, J. Arden, Duifalo writes has worked on petite; used to ! it to Philadelphia or Baltimore, There red from kevere BOYD'S OPERA HOUSE JAMES E LOYD, Proprivtor, R L. MANSH, Business Manager. ONE NIGHT ONLY ! F e Monday, November 2Bth. |us sheiathismet iy Nothing | . No. 02, Large, beatitifal, Houses Packed to the Very Doors ! Like it on the Stage | THE JOLLITIES!: “;‘:‘lflfi"fi.“ffi:;fi,'.’i:‘,'.h’:&“fl‘:,..., gty Wik Great Musical Absurdity Our Own Orchestra Our Own Scenery Uproarious Fun! Original aud Char wic! (8. K. CLARKNON, Clarkson & Hunt, Buovesors to Richards & Huot, ATTORNEYE-AT-LAW. wony of management which Mr. | pt- Houses in near Saunders, §1200. uso, § rooma, well, clstorn and h etroot, atone foundation, #4000, No, 4, Large houso of 11'rooms, on Webster strect, near Creighton Coliee, %3500, No.'d, H use of 7 rooms, orl Cass, mear 17th Both have addre-sed them. | strect, $3000. selves to conciliuting the agricultural pop- | No. 7, Houso of 8 roons, 3 lots, on 17th street ulation of the xtate, as it is considered the t most influential. rman Cooper, North Carolina Re. [ No. 0, House of pu lican State Committe-. Settle is nct as aspreant for,cabinct honors, » has not been urged in that b~ 1f tendered he would hardly accept. He would like to have promotion” on the bench, and I think is 1 etty certain 1o get neay faard, & 00 No. 8, House of b rooms, on Cass, 22x152 feor lot, $13 near 14th, rooms, Kitchen, ete Cass, near 13th st et e No. 10, Houso of 8 Fooms with lot 22x162 feet, on Cass, near 14th ktrect, §600, 4 No. 11, House of 6 rooins, on 10th strect, noar 4360 feet Jot, 84000, House of 6 rooms, br ck foundation, on pear 27th strect, § 4 1 wtory new houso of 8 roomns, brick Ary’s venue, near convent, 14, House of § rooms and summer Kibchen hallot | on 20th street, near clark, §2500 No, 15, House of 8 rooms, on Sherman avenue (10t street). noar Nicholas, £2260, 14, 1 J-story house of 4 rooms, on Davon ort, ¥ ory brick house of 0 rooms, near n o, 18, ovse and ¥ lots, 4 ulocks west of Tligh Schodl, $2eK) 0, touee and 8 lota on road to park, near Mary’ 0. 0, House wnd 114 loty o Haseall's, South 2000, , Houso tod lot on Davenp 4 streot, street, 0. 2, 2atory house and 1t 39560 feet, en neat 12th strect, 81300, No. £3, Houso of 4 rooms’ and 2 lotson 17th troet, near Izard, 31200, N iouse and 4 lot on 17th ebret, | o @50, 4, House an } lot on 10th street, near 450, No. 27, 2 houses and lot 0 Juckson, near 13th treet, $4300. No.'2), 5 hou 110t on Califoruia, near ick house of 4 rooma with herman avenuo (10th streot), 1zard, 55000, , 11 story house and ot, near Howard street 2000, L-story house of 6 rooms aid two lots on, ncar 15th strect, 35000, 135, Largo house n d ful. lot oo Capito near 1ith rtroet, §2 2 throo ¥to x06 feet, on 15th . at lot 44x 0 cuch. with 1310t Paul strect, near 15th street, #2750, No, 55, Hous and ot on 18th etreed, ncar , §1850. louse of 5 rooms with 44x60 feot lot, in, $L600 uke of % rooms with 1t 150x160 feet, on Coburn, near Coltax street, §8500. No. 43, Ilouse and 2 lots on Chicagzo, near 208h street, ¥76)). 0.'45, Larze honse of 7 rooms, clogots pantry, and ciatern, on 18th, near Clark utroet, .1 No. 47 Tlousc of 9 rooms with } lot, on Puaisic, near 11th street $3000. No. 40, kirick house of 11 rooms, well, ¢ etern, gas throughout the ho zood barn, ete., on Farnham, near 17th stre 3 No, 50, House of 6 roonis, cellar, wall, ete., om near Paul street, $1000. 8, House of 6 rooms and collar, 10t 33x132, ry's avenue, near convent, 1600, 5, Four hou-cs and 88x120 foet, on Daven- near 16th street, 25000, 56, Hou-¢ of 9 or 10 roows, on California, Mary’s avenue and 215t street, $3000 No. 68, New house of 7 rooms, good barn, on 224 strect, 32000, Cass of Broows on Davenport, near d strcet, $900. No. 61, House of 0 or 10 rooms, on Burt strect, d stroet, §64000. No. 62, 1ouse of 4 rooms, 1story, porch, c No. 63, House of 4 ro-ms, closots, basement d Works, ¥1600. % noar post office, storo below and ¢ Vo. 65, 8 lots with barn and other Improve: ar strect car turn table, 32000, Thus New hou e of 6 roums on 17th, near ing Mtrevt, §10°0, ), Parge fine house of 12 rooms, every- ¢, 0 15th, near Chicago, #6000, a0 on 15th olow and rooms aboye, 71, House of & o o cellar, all com California, newr 214t, 57000, ¢ house, 10 or 11 rooms, on Daven ir 16th §50.0. 1}-story hou \rn, ete., 21500, , 6 rooms, collar, w.l 31800, et on 10th, near Capitol avenue, 316,000, House of 4 roouis, baseront, lov 174x n Mazcy, near 7th, 3675, + house, 5 roois, on Cass strot, to - house, 11 rooms, closcts, fur. ‘ete., on Farnham, near d other with oet, $5000. house, 8 roows, 4 closets, well 1 good burn, on Fieree St., ar now government corrall), §1500. \tory house, § rooms, coal shed, good o § lot, on Capitol avenue, nes , E2U00, 0. 84, 2tory house, B rooms, 3 ar, well and ors st 4 below and 4 crn, with 5 jear Larrecks, aund o B, 2 stores, house on lensed § lot, lease AL il Tat, 1ssl, on Pacific Blo, | near ¢ %00 Jdaad | No. 86, House, 16 rooms, well, clatern, ctc nd | car 15th and Harney strects, $:400 wrind rooms, well with 40 feet of wite ound, on Eaundens street, near U. 8, Batracks, $2000. No. 83, Large house of 10 rooms, well, cistern, £tc., on Cass street, near 21st, 7000, No. §9, Large house, 10 or 12 rooms, on Web. ster sircet, ne 0. No. 87, 2:story house, g o beautiful corer It,0 and 17th stroets, §7000. rick house and , 818,000 soms, with 1ot lots, het ¥ Davenport aud 17th stre No. 97, Large house of 11 rooms, barn, et¢., herthan ayenue, near Clark street, make an offer, No. 99, Large house on Harney strect, nea th street, §9000. lar, welland cistern, '} story house, 8 rooms, ete ., on Soush ar Mason street, §1600. 'S louses of 7 rooms each, cellang, ete brh and Cass strects, §000. No. 104, 1)-story double house, 5 rooms iu cach, on Webster strect, near 17th, $2000 vl GEo. P. BEMI® Real Estate xchangs 16th and Dougl s Fftreet