Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 28, 1882, Page 6

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L __——% 'l UMAHA DAILY BE it SA'I‘URpAY JANUARY 28. IM‘Z The Omaha Bee Published every morning, except Sunday, The oniy Monday moming daily, TERMS BY MATL:—~ One Year..... 810,00 | Three Months., l-‘(l’l 8ix Months, 6.00 | One . THE WEEKLY BEE, published ev. BERMS POST PAID: One Year......$2.00 'I'hroe‘vlnmhn 50 Bix Months.. . 1.00 | One o 0 CORRESPONDENCE—AIl Communic eations relating to News and Editorial mat- Qors should be addressed to the Enitor or Tar Bee, BUSINESS_LETTERS—AT Busines ters and Remittances should be ad dressed to Tir OMAHA Poptisnivg Com- PANY, OMAWA. Drafta, Checks and Post- office Orders to be made payable to the order of the Company OMAHA PUBLISHING 00, Prop'rs E1 ROSEWATER, Editor. Tur. free trade cry is very weak in the present congress, Tuk regents of the university have put an end to the factionalism in tho faculty by requesting the resigna- tions of three of the professors op- posed to Chancellor Fairtield's policy. This is a stalwart way of dealing with the difticulty. “Sror this everlasting talk and go to work” was the excited remark of Mr. Briggs to the New Hampshire logislature a few days ago. Mr Briggs ought to be sent to congress. There would be plenty of room for his gospel on the floor of the house of representatives, ScovitLe presents to-day a bill of exceptions, asking for a new trial for Guiteau, on the grounds of lack of jurisdiction in the District of Colum- bia to try the murderer of President Garfield. Tt is safe to say that if pro- ceedings had been begun in New Jersey the gallows scene would have been concluded some weeks ago. New developments of Jay Gould's judicial purchase on the New York bench coutinue to be made by the New York Times. The disclosures are said to be startling the entire state. If they startlo the state logis- lature into enacting suitable laws for the protection of the people against unscrupulous stock gamblers, they will not be thrown away. “T MAKE aspecial appeal to the ladies of America to come to my rescue. Some of them have written me_delightful letters, and I ask each and every one to respond to the ex- tent of their means and see me in per. son, if possible.— (Yuiteau's address to the American people. The ladies that have written those delightful letters ought to respond in person, by all means. Guiteau is just too lovely for anything The February number of The North American Review, Professor George P, Fisher, of the Yale inity school, whose writings on the supernatural origin of Christianity and on ecclesi- astical history are well known, comes to the defense of the Christian relig- ion against the attacks of modern doubt and infidelity. Other articles in The Review are: ‘Do the Spoils Belong to the Victor,” by President Andrew D. White; “A Remedy for Railway Abuses,” by Isaac L. Rice; “Repudiation in Virginia,” by Senator John W. Johnston: and “The Lancet and the Law,” by Henry Bergh. Tue new Brooklyn charter is re- ceiving its first test under the mayor- alty of Mr. Seth Lowe. By it's pro- visions all responsibilty and power is concentrated in the hands of the mayor, and he is the real exccutive head of the city government. Within a fow days Mr. Lowe, who is a young man of excellent commercial educa- tion, elected outside of the party lines, will be called upon to select his lieutenants. He will appoint commi sioners of police, fire, city works, health, buildings and excise, as well as fill other oftices, His success will go far towards proving the merit of & system which certainly requires at its head a man of unusual honesty and executive ability to administer it. Tae howl which a number of our exchanges throughout the country are making over the probable admission of Mr. Cannou as delegate from Utah aeems to be founded on little more Ahan prejudice. BSo far as the fucts dn the case are concerned Mr, Ca Ton appears to have every legal ad- vantage over his opponent, and it is “mot surprising that the committeo on €lections has decided to give him the seat in the houso for which he is the contestant. The contest does not necessarily include the question of polygamy. The claim made |a cheap form of official i ‘WAGON BRIDGE. Omaha and Council Bluffs want, and ought to have, a wagon bridge to con- nect the two towns, but how can they have a wagon bride, unless it be a high bridge, or suspension bridge, across a navigable river like the Mis- souti unloss it can be built in connec- nection with a railroad bridge! A “draw” wagon bridge over such a perilous stream with a shifting bed as i8 the Missouri is one the things which our ignorance of engineering does not enables us to imagine. The first thing is to get another railroad bridge and built a wagon bridge on it, if possible. Even in this case the rail road bridge would have to be a high bridge 8o as not to hinder the passage of boats, and s6 far as our best etfort to get knowledge upon the subject have gone, we know of no railway company which would think of building another high bridee with the necossary approaches at_this point. To know how a low railroad bridge and a wagon bridge could be made to operate together we should be compelled to consult the engin- cors, But the trouble is to get the other railroad bridge, This is the first step. It is not our belief that either the municipal authorities, or the ¢ zens of Omaha, ot both toge ther, will build either a high or low railroad bridge until they can find an Towa railroad company to run its trains over it after it is built, and even were the fact otherwise it is not likely that our good Twin brethren and sistors over the river would join us very heartily in that kind of an undertak- ing.—Omaha Herald, Nobody hereabouts will be sur- prised at the attempt of The Herald to throw cold water on any scheme to build a wagon bridge across the Mis- souri, Well informed people have known for some time past that Dr. Miller has a direct income from the U. P. bridge monopoly as a silent partner, with Mr. Wells, contractor of the bridge transfor, with a third silent partner in The Omaha Republican con- corn. But why should The Herald make the absurd assertion that a wagon bridge between Omaha and Council Bluffs must be a high bridge and a railroad bridge. More than a dozen draw-bridges span the the Mississippi at points where morc steambonts pass in a single week during the season of navigation than pass up and down the Missouri at this point in a whole yeur. There are Jow bridges at Atchison and Leavenworth used both for railway trains and teams, What obstacle will a low bridge encounter at Omaha? During fully nine months of the yeer the draw need not be oponed a single time, and auring May, June and July there will hardly bo an average of more than threo boats up or down in any waook. Asa matterof fact thebridge charter of the Union Pacific requires the con- struction of a wa, m bridge in connec tion with the railroad bridge. but Omaha and Council Bluffs have been patiently waiting for ten years for that bridge to be built.. After submitting to the most outrageous imposition that has ever been practiced on any com- munity in this or any other country, the business men of the two cities have come to the conclusion that the Lord helps those who help themselves. We presume they are sorry their project will intorfere with Dr. Miller’s income, but they would rather pay consequen tial damages than give up the scheme ttacks on the freo passsystem on railroads continue frcm various quarters throughout the country. Tn Towa the lower house of the legisla- ture by a vote of 86 to 40 has passod a resolution, introduced by M 1d- rich, requiring the railway corhmission of the state to report to the houso by February 15th whether free pusses over railronds should be given to any class except paupers, mendicants or other obfects of charity; whother per- sons clected to office, membors of the pross and of politioal conventions should be allowed to accopt theso favors and whether the railroads should bo prohibited from granting thom, In our own state the Farmers’' Alliance has raised its voico agamst this evil in one of thoir strongest rosolutions, Ohio ix moving in the matter through her legislature and the anti monopoly league is bringing strong intluence to boar upon its wmembers in Albany, looking 1o a prohibition of tho prac tico in New York state. Tho freo| pans systom is used by tho vailroads an Whether given to a mem! legislature, a senator or rof the gl under the veil of courtosy cqual valuo is in evory case oxpected iu return OSSN, The mere sen » of personal ot incurred is no small wois zation iLon the bulance whon a single voto may de- cide a matter involviug thousands of dollars for the corporation who has extended the favor. There are no good reasons why state legislators and against Caunon was that he is|federal oflicials should lot pay their ing e by roason of non-|fArOon tho railroads. Mileagh 1wl | (110 wioculative col MMR0N Bnconnt af loe citizenship, It investigation of thin |1oWed theu for the purposy, sot ©oral o e aiie and the aneort eharge proves it groundless he oughg | PFIYAW perauisit t f Gambet pol il to be admitted. Polygawy can bo e Se——— festn L ; denlt. with from anether standpoint BrestneNy Angut s is sMld (080 1o | erowineg digivust in Ko h nnuruly, 1f it is decided that Mr. {hope for (the sonth n the old dine | w b he 1 n( Cannon is a self-confessed offender | xopublicansand advocates eve y rocor | started Ly i ( { against a national statute congress has [ nition of the independont i v 11 | th i 1 the power to debar him from a seat | He is credited with the sealwart v | childs, but it wis y on this ground. But unless (ho tone [mark that “a permanently dofated ts oo o i of Washington society has greatly im- |republican party 15 of licle valn { proved thindllpuull-wnd-luh'lfll bate Mre A""'" Wi lave nyroceudmp applied to the muss of |added that its chier v e |l & ] congrossmen Ay ould: ey Uio hauss i ekt 0 < s ot wh pkid b withi 8 zather scauty quorum i'” republicun co ' o il Titha | real eatate pi orthree of these strong minded fen | two y fenl norvousness. vote of a democratio state counts often | country, where everybody specalates, for more than states that go strongly | a sudden drop in ita stock from 2,400 republican. Take the Chicago conven- | tion for example, where the delega- tions from the south who were ut-| |many most loyal wons of the|killed and injured, while the troops o to furnish a single elec o the candidate of the re- terly un: toral vote publican party and yet were accorded [ a prominent voice in the choice of a|pence w standard bearer for the national cam- | being i paign Tue creation and growth of great is one of the most alarm monopolie ing features of the present age. The| spirit of monopoly does not seem to If to any one line, Tt confine i A8 [ pervaded our railrond and telegraph system, laid its hand on the public preas, tightened its coils around our tending itsclf to the control of large | rties, Among some recent purchases recorded are the fol lowing, the figures meaning acre Sir George Reid (in Florida) Disston (in Florida) 2, 1of Dunraven (in Colorad 61,0.0 Ex-Senator Dorsey (in New Mex 4 500,000 |mk4 of ~.u|)n erlanid 110,000 Maurh 1,008,000 Phi'lips, \InrnlmH & Cayy London d, (in \[mikflp(n .+ 1,300 000 Dianmore 100,000 Colonel Church 180 farms, acren each), Mr. Clark, of ®0,000 Srandard Ol ¢ Somp'¥ (i several states 1,000,000 Ly (in linold) about. .. 4,000 enn (in C 6,000 Tt will be notickd that the above ta- ble makes no moptjopof the encrmous wheat farms of Dakota, amounting to thousands of acrés,” Without these, we find that 11,p acres of land are controlled B “firtecn men and corporations exclyswesof 155,000,000 acres denoted to dailboads. Ir wome of the! dppressed females who are clumoring for political equality with men had been drawn on the Guiteau jury, we should have had & | fair tost of their fitness for the dutics | and responsibilities which they are so | anxious to assume. How would tvo like the priviloge of sitting three | 80 much and 80 nois | financial institutions, and is now ex- | tha it would almost app. | lairds hoped thus to avert the threat- | were re-l from £10 of one fell from £1,600 to £1,000; for another from £520 to £200, mul(hu of a third from £1,500 to of the senate, which has consic out the savings of many thrifty bour- geois and laborers. At Rome church amone the noblemen have been | and police stood quictly under bitten, and it is said that Peter's | without interfering i ly any doubt | panics broke out in sever ted in the shares of the threatened bank. The tayed, Saturday, wpon 1ces from the hated Rothschilds that the ws would come to the relief of the market and offer the Viennese liabilities of the Union | Generale, Land rent reduction pocs forward | ras it the | ened legistation at the comii session of parliament. In Kast Lothiun, whioh is described as the home of high farming, nine farms recently at a reduction in total to £7,634. The rent The Gambetta plan for the revision n under sration by the committee of thirty-three of the chamber of dep- utie vorably to that body, will be the principal topic of discussion in French political circles for some weeks to and has been reported unfa- come, The plan includes the aboli- ien of life senatorships, leaving the existing holders of them untouched, and the substitution of a term of nine years. The life senators are now elected by the senate alone; these new ones are to be clected by the two houses in joint convention on the American plan. He proposes also to tako away from the senate the power of passing ou money bills. The ob- ject of all this reform is to bring the senate into accord with the assembly, or in other words to prevent o | its opposing the assembly. This can hardly fail before long to raise the months on a jury with nine or ten | question. What is the use of the men, and how often would an adjourp- | Senate! The object of a second ment have been asked for! OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. The rovolt in the sonthern Slavoni- an provinees is causing considerablo whem in Burope. The European equilibrium is balameed un such o slend turbance may precipit e point that the slightest dis ate a ger political commotion. lh Austrian ompire contains far more ve thin Germans and Magyars. The proper tions are fifty-hine to forty-one The recent accessions of territory increase their number. Nothing could add to their disgust and i treatment. From Bohemia down to the Montencgrin frontier, the whole of these millions are agitated by op- pression and insolence, the Magyars being far worse to them than the Germans. During the recont strug- glo for the vmaneipation peoplos of their own race, they eaw Viennaand Pesth heartily unitod in the support of the Twkish hond- master. They aremade to focl ab every turn that they aro mothing ad count for nothing in the conneils of | ¥ Gpire, Tho paper currency no } of 105,630 cmigrants 45,177 were un the longer bears its denon iation in Slavonie as well as ( M Groek chureh, an o gyar Where they belong to the paganda is careied on for their con- version o tholicism, the goy ernment gives it evo y support. At Tast, the Slavs of Bosnia Lave br out m re 1, and no one ean tell how far the conflagration may sproad. The Vienna papers speak of it o a thing of no importance; but they eannot to nothing this year, or next; but, sooner or later, Austrin- Ilulwn\ will | lose their Slavonic provinces, and the | Balkan Péeninsulu will e in the hands || of a Slavonic confedoration. That is | ¢hre Russia's progamine. Tho French pamie has proved a ! juprisone serious atter, It began a new speculative hank, the shares A in which all clussos ¢ Now York hiad their 1 the good times came, bus t over i months ago. 7 ernze lastod longer in Papis, and the re is o pondingly violont, sy luablo a stock us Suez falling 340 francs in two days. The excitement at Paris is 1o dou! hastencd by the existing poli re had bees seme ducline in state secuvities bofor [ eh | tive view, to giv age or gomo | represenfation in the leg at least 8o ure delay and deiil enation at their £ oppressed | !tm.al for all countries was 1 |der an and | i | theso emigrants have bouting pro- |and wero from the agri 3 | triets, or helonged to the artisan| ‘\\|H contin engiged. * London " and | programme which b R ber is on the extreme conserva- e either property and wture in ief that it will sometimes take ront view of the public ques- tion from the lower house, and thus ratio 1| But a Senate which was orgunized to | prevont its ever having a different view would, on any theory, bo a fifth wheel 1n the coach. The greatest fect of the now French constitution seoms to be the case with which 1t can bo amended, for there is nothing m politics the Fronch need o much to loarn as the art of diseussing things o | s long while hofore changing them. German oflicial atatistics of emigra- tion during the past ten show that the bulk of emigrants came to the United States, nud the next largor number wentto Brazil. For 187! the ); for 38; For 1877, it had | fallen to 21,964; but by 1880, it hud | ; 1| Tison to 206,190, while for 1881 there as a furthee enormons inerease. Out y Yyears of age, and 60,471 were over. The most of aved monoy, Miural dis- clagzes. Bismarck nseribes this move- | ment to the strong “wandering im- | | pulse’ of the German people. The rie solution is not hard to find Germans know that the condltions of |lifo are hotter in Ameriea than in | Germany, where the kine claims to } cule by inherited rigl That i conceal thoir anxivty. Te may amout | 1¢ by inherited rights. ‘That is the | renson they come. and we hope they Parliament neets this week and the iberal govermment must face it with members of the house under lock and koy, charged with no crime ) for whi, hoy will ever be tried and wind under a law which in- such eould not have touched them had they | i stocks as that of the Union Generale, | 4 din Boglana. Meo Gladsione, for ton months of power, has neither which have been run hi N AAT Cly i Sy R 3,200, Tt oxtondod to all stoeks on | et outrages as they used to be met the hourse, which have Leen highly {at (he south with *more troops,” and [ mflated by a speculative movoment | the only result is more outrages; and, [ which s beon in pr foroverin the face of this ¢ mdition of nffairs, the lihoral government hss lad out a ng with re modoling the busin by introdncing the previons question, and proposes to cid by remodeling Luglish voting by a wholosale crea ion of voters. ‘Lho stovay session of a in likely to look pele by com s oaowith the parlinmentary tem- Pt now browing vou The depth of feelin sia aro sufforin, oppressors showed itselt in nammoth petition presented to th lord wayor of Lo Among the names these of the Lury, the bishops iloucester, Manchester archbishop of Cant of London, and Oxford, Cardinal Manning, and PProfessor Darwin, Professor Ie t, Summuel Morley Matthew tinally Lord Elcho and Jowish pickpockets” panicin the Church of the Holy Cross to 1,305 francs per share must wipe | at Warsaw, in b nd, whereupon riot8 | vied his first” oo thirty-second birt muse t, during which the houses of | Jews were sacked and 1l suffor some reduction from | vie was only | | charged to Jewish | Gaz-tte were th | the bottom of it. The cry wont forth | having cause! [ine mn.-r for their um an oxtension upon | at once that the .| ‘\<Uw”\‘ @ your ye est Tean 10, - interfere | yan contined from Sunday until The military did at all, and the | and | Christians of standing in the esmminn nity,especially Caiho ergetic efforts to protectthe ] wis to wn we i see his Leloved marrie | The weneross offor wa « spirit in h it wa | yonngeat three remaining ay, the third day Jowa formed armed with iron stances beat back the districts principally inhabited by disturbances during those days entire rows of houses ha robbed and demolished, whole streets devastated, and six families reduced losses amounting to over two million Tt is said that several of the instigators and had o senation Jast week in th to beggary, Smith. The young lady lived with brothcr, Charle T) leaders of the ricters were not Poles but Russians, able to epeak the Polish languag Co-operation seems The annual report of Herr Schulze-Delitzsch, the well-known po- shows that at the end of last year there associations, of which 1,8 or credit societios, people’s banks, etc., tiue long, for a day or two later eluded hix vigilance, and the t ran off to a minist tied in the noose matr brother is waid to ha litical economist, wooer on aceount of his 674 industrial socioties Al R the sale of goods und 36 building so- Then there arc cultural ass: several agri- vances to smail hundred *‘stores D Jifzseh con devived from the s TpoTate organization | £4,000,000, (he d 000,000, the a 5 acted by them duving the year + 8100,000,000. EDUCATIONAL NOTHES, Towrd to assist in the nization of 4 techno ogical schosl, 'l'ln- action of the 1 his e -nln\in.;hiu n nlnul L ul the l’“ ent Ailhrioy nve : b | York department never jut on the mune beat e m"\r[ ey, | | more teachers are i weckk the name bor ofpnml § Th Charlotte rose andif he hadn’s w an omalet 16 wonli | nited f ¢ which orensa |vensant prosp et the ueclected At Hele wx gotinto a fight. A twenty tried to part them, wien a fiv come alowg and ‘hot him nos says that th h e in the Univer- | ally and three | arly expenses of By with ¢ Fuserintendeniy, twenty-six three e teac] hun was lost in the School Board, The universi-v of Pennsyly: ours were further ton Coms ses to establish fifiy f:.. pupils of the Philuds ' 1l plot of ;v H\llw] wljoining theiv ine adviking, but we had rather get hold boy i with a boy more thit way. There is always somethi the true Obio wan ~ John Liysle, of Belle Centre, In that commonweath, has been total y'blind for cight years, but the other day ho felt n queer entution in his eyes, and the next thing he » new he could see as well as he ever did in his lite. “in 1..,:@-;11», Kv llwro are al-cady fiv ix instititions | tendeney of such multiplication then all into mere quack factori 1t has be n p oposed board of publ ¢ instruetions to make a ut i Id be d: tained after principals of the var. 1% have held a meeting clared such an action un- 1 that detention was & | fous grammar sch o The Pittsburg Gazette ously negligent and O rany MR BOER, make the best use which they are clothed, powers with Tf some law conld % the standard or quali- *flect up n the to be hencticial. dmhor‘m of the duties of the uihoe More attaution 1s paid to the log offi e ud supplies, and t,im u“hgufplm es {1 friends or favorites, cations of teachers, the it of th ,.up:lu. and their o parlisment | ! henlth and co About 240,000 w yenr are in scholarships loans and_other it e students at Hary it is paid to studenta of theology. t desirable that the of scholar-hips opens to baclelurs of arts be doubled or tl(-lw]mi or twenty endowed scl uld be founded in the Jaw n:lum]| in the medical | f these ,.unnlnrnhipln foreibly romin of an exchange this week from the n rth- ern pnr: of the state, with ane of the st reo temes of natory opt el hottam il Pouple have no i ol the c straln there is on an editor’s brain,- [Peck’s Sun, or seience should against the | theory of aeth lady Of fier Chicago admirer, itinuod outrages which the Jews in | RN £ b within | kno! | wthe abr, steals s dogen oF two Luckwheat cakos the eraity by | four soft-hoiled e.gy und n plate of lash e nivacaley by {QUF Mitledul that s ethet'c enough for the hands “r‘, by LT \-nlni Ihz m_\u\ wking him, | [ productive” labor_outsic CONNUBIALITTES. Ruth Livingsto a rilliant weddit A good many younyg wen dont know | juhed; why w.y when | allowance will yo give bond ty keep the pemco for six | months Young Mayor 1. of Brooklyn, mar. the way. cher of the city and a Rhode 1 and did not fo lan | perquisite of kissing the hri le A North Carolina justice of the peace "* | rec ntly married '8 by mail | thronad in st e on the ek of 4 mule, as | and the animal for once re lized that there er trouble «ing on than he conld and ept his hee's will—[New | at the same time, and wers everywhore | 11even Regicter pickpockets, there v against the Jews The e rinl rooms o cene The C I‘\vn.nu revi fly went to presence of the repottare ‘There are my three other VVYI.V‘U\ ther dav,toay an who anpeared st what he supy 1 marvicd Massack ch a change srinit cler in ny to regard to the d cile of the prrties to be married. The present luw provides that “sll marringes shall be solemnized in the city or town in | which the person solomnizing them resider, | e both of the persims to | d | very soon after the Opera Festival in Cin- Cedar Rapids I bl h an, 1 min Auentt and Mi: h, who bro Aucutt for dent young lov b i an appearan e drove him off at the ¢ The brother’s victory did ot con. and were securely mial. Th PEPPERMINT DRO*S. , fat women often htmares, In uni kb X 1 nit A Versont farmer bet $50 that the dis- v noney the jury sur- 6 feet high, nl won't therd set be bofore it s e | inr pec man ul on hu ing [Stiliw ter T A corporal in b 1 is to be cours ain throngh a br rding to r thi« is the rearon why the New “Ike l A medical certi of the I in her last |I|m-~~. s die 1 inconse (uence thercof.” w ool Teun ., two fiftee commercial trans e ulte He slipped quietly in catching sight of iri the stair ar; conldn’t et full, toc cial Bulletin. An exchange his article hended, t Hold of the Hoy's Heart,” 1 dowell enou hif it isa girl you ollar, with one hand and et with the other, You c. ; happening to Mr. Rugbag was only when his eldest son was born. We remember the day well. We congratulated him. But he didn’t seem very was a fine by '«- a family was no_ hurden to hiw, But e s think of it? ot to begin sett Boston Post. jolly. Not but what it i Righag was wenlthy, “Goud " Lord, “old” friend, just fere at the age of 23 I've good example!”- A wan with a wilve -plated double back tion coin holder caue into the sanctim she other day, and commenced_ explaining the beauties of the article for holding silver hulves, ete., an ! he had got en half throuh before he fonnd ho wus in a print- When ho saw bis wirtake, he wintt he door, sadly fopened it, nd kicked himsell ol down stairs —[ Fvans- ville Argus, The vicisatude: of country journaism are many and vexatious, and ‘s ometimes she heart of the connir. cditor cannot be blawed for sinking under (he tuequal fight it is obliged to inintai of this fact by the arri “Do you beli l(r mson - Aleott’s " asked ul a1 whit Bronson Al ot Hn«l\ .‘! eating is,” but when I'm hungry, e of mutton chops, some p rt-rhoise Pretty Good Bacon, Laporte, Ind., writes: PRING FLossos’ is all you crack he My dyspépsis has al_van. don't you advertise it? What the 1 Shafteabuny that & woman ats fou wake if I take a dozen . by | #he bus fully entered uon bott ith t T could oblige my frien s R weeks w it was veported by G who ! ocensionallyy” Piice W cents, trisl bot. foable thay on Clivistinas l‘ly "Mll?lull’llhll ber l‘“’lll“lla h" beea ze l"'““l "" tles 10 cents, . 11w wy=hix to claim his he wat en: | this e newspaper office nd were warried in | | Pierey, [ ed in the Massa *Bertram L\n»lm-nt Tayyie | |ment, in which ¥ strong wlaw, armed with o ! the honie of his swoetheart to e marvied, it her brot! an 1to the @ about with 0 many “ponies” of brandy will pro- ducer iere wre no pumps where the cocoaunt % which, perhaps, accounts for the wwo office s in that MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC, Salsbury's “Troubadourss” are to play in Booth’s Theatre in March The Greek Play willbe o ffered at Booth's Theatre, on the the 30th inst. John MeCu 'l been brilliantly successful in Phil and Boston, “Mot'er-in-Law"” has_be n sucoessfully produced in the Opera Comique, London, At Memphis the advance sale for Edwin B oth's engigement exceeded Berne hardt’s by It is reported that Miss Minnie Hauk may herd an Eng opera comp ny in nntry next winter, Misa Mary Anderson's engagement at 3ooth’s concludes to-day. Tt kas been a remarkable successful one, Schott & Co., of Mainz, ave repor el to ve bonght the piano score of Wagner's o | “Parsifal’” for 75 000 marks, Mr. Eawin Booth sent a handsome eheck to the mother o the Iata Samnel tied recently of smallpox. Maggie Mitchell seeme {0 have gained & pularity this season. She crowded hooses at the Park John A. Stephens ment of the Acad- Yorl, next season, m ix not giving opera there, e chiief “sensation” incident in Pet ‘s new melodramy, “Taken fron: Life,” is a reproduction of the explosion in Clerkenwell prison. The hero s played by Charles Warner, Arrang ments have heen perrected for nof Italian opera in New York with Madam ti as the prima of the compary. Tt will tegin [ ¢ nn cinnati “Jerome Hopking,” Music says, “‘threatcus Chicag) with a piano tourna- nrietta Markste Blind Tom, Oscar M. Newell and J. Patter-on are to be the principal per- formers,” The rates chazged by the claque in Parls are s follows: Ordinary applause 5 francs, warin applause 15, one recall 25, unlimite recalls 50, grinning 5, laughing 5, involun- tary lwughter 10, expressions of, How fun. ny! How interesting! A, ete, The New York Chorus society will give its first public rehearsal and eoncert on Friday afternoon, January 27, and Satur- éyening, January 28, 'The soloist Wil be the Misses Schell, Wurmb, Win< ant, and the Messrs, Toedt, Tretmann and Remui r —— TAIKE EX No SDranging Qars BxrwERy OMAHA & GMGM@ Whore tirect coanection wro insey with et SLE. SAI LINES for NEW YORX. SRS (1A, BAL 'VMUFr N0 ALL BASTERN TTIF The Bhort Line via. Peoria lfl'lir INDIA APA’\LI,&. CINCINNATI, LOUIS. \4 vaints In BT RS = BN A ST 1asn LOUIS, o Unfoo For ST. Where ditie onnections Tovat ith the Th 1inea for AL nnde In i}3] MOIRES | HEW 1 THis FAVORITE ROUTE Yol Rocx island. s oftcred by tiia lne ol) PALACE on this line B, RUOM CAL: I unoqyaied RS run AWING 2 you will find sreseling & Mxury fo- Scomfort st 10 thlw celebratud iny 1t Unitod Stases aid Cw on aLout mtes of faro, ¥ 4 Tino Tables, ste., Tying ¢ PR severs! engor Ayen I, bork G, gSTETT E_ CELEBRATED | YuHostu of Fy mmo Hostetter's Stomach Litfors i a8 4 houschold neconsity 1y | reason of this is that yeirs of ox) e Proved 1t to he prfact 'y rollable in b emereiiey Wil d propt aid o n b rew dysjepe 1 ver ¥ NEBRASKA Sta.te Gazetteer and Busi- ness Directoy, Containiug n desoription and u list of o busi ess he st il be early in 1 . J, M, WOLFE. P! Bouth Fourtranin N

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