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i Th e Om aha Bee. l n:::""““ DEMOCRACY. Frslumad that the anti-monop- Pablished olists of Nebraska intend to take po- o e yary moTnind: Sxior* Sundas | Jitical action this fall. 1t so they must — act independently of the republican TERMS BY MAIL — arty. he democratic party of Ne- 810,00 | Three Months,$8,00 | braska is positively, uncompromisingly 0,00 | One . 1.00|and unanimously, acainst the great monopoly, the protectivetariff and the IHE WEEKLY BEE, published ev- | national organization may be called an ry Wednesday. anti-tarift party, though it is not we DERMS POST PAID:~ grieve to say unanimous on this ques- Ono Year,. ...$2.00 | ThreeMonthe.. 60|tion, The democrats of Nebraska are Bix Mc 1tha,. .. 1.00 | One . in favor of every anti-monopoly prin- AxericAN News Company, So'a Agents iple that the anti-monopolists con- or Newadealers in the United States. | by i gressmen and anti-monopolist members of the legislature, if any such should be elected, would as a rule vote on the CORRESPUNDENCE~AIl Communi. o P et b i Botton o | #3mo side as the demoorats on all anti Wue Bex, monopoly issues. If prejudice alone, a8 it almost certainly will, keeps anti- monopolsts who have been republi- caus from joining with the already organized democrats who are working to the same end, they should at least spare themselves the self abasement and self-contradiction of calling them selvos republicans and voting with the democrats whenever an anti monopoly ssuo in involved. If victory counted for more than party prejudice the BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Business Beiters and Remittances should be ad- @reesed to TarE OMAHA PuBrisnine Cou. ®ARY, OMARA, Drafts, Checks and Post- fice Ordors to be made payable to the e der of the Company, The BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props B/ ROSEWATER. Editor. "’l;un tariff commission is a packed THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA TUESDAY, JUNRE 13, 1882. opened his mouth to thank and drop ped the cheese, which the fox picked up and swallowed. The trouble with those demooratic foxes is they would not get the cheese they are hankering after, if the alliance republicans got up a third party. The monopslists in the repub lican party would have a walk away in their nominating conventions, and with the corporation money they would buy encugh demacrats to make sure of their election. Theonly pos sible success of a third party move- ment is the dropping out of the second party, If the democrats make 110 state or congressional nominations, the fight would be between the inde- pendent anti-monopoly republicaus combined with the anti-monopoly democrats, as against the monopoly republicans combined wi h the mon- opoly democrats, In other worde, it would be the people on one side and the monopolists ani their followers on auti-monopolists of Nebraska would this fall elect the ate officers, « : . | control the legislature and Firey railroads report Speing - edsh choose two or three congressmen. ings of fifteen millions over last year. | wryo¢ oo foar is that they will elect The corporations are evidently still | republican state officers, & republican earning enough to pay the salaries of | legislature and thr‘ea repuhlic:n cm‘l- ‘ossmen—a complete monopoly out- O z: The Dzmucn[’t has no E:i’viua to = |offer the so-called anti-monopoly re- Ox5 by one the heads are falling in | jublicans. It only warns them against the basket and the presedential guillo- | a self-contradictory,self-debasing, self- tine seems only warming its work. d“"‘";f"‘"’fl;“l‘lak Ns:’;‘fh d“';flo‘ g ing | Crats have only to keep their stand on New York ofllols'l circlea are expecting |}, i of lleitnde,plor the mastery coming changes in custom house and | of the pacple over all corporations and post office. for the destruction of the most harm. S ful mr;nop ulylin gebrnk’;. that of t:e i oliti N hose are the Tus Johnson County Journal says ::s:u:mng plrilnc‘i‘:l.u and tl?a people it ‘had hoped to seo Church Howe| wi)| ultimately adopt them,- [Lincoln stand by the people and steer clear of | State Democrat. railroad influsnce” but its hopes have| The Nebraska democracy like their vanished. It becomes an object of in- | political brethren in all other parts of terest to know how long the editor of | the union have nothing in common the Journal has resided in Nebraska. | except the desire to get into power. They agree upon no vital issue and have championed no great reform. While the mass of Nebraska demo- crata are at heart opposed to monopo- lies in general, and railroad monopoly in ‘particular, they have mnot so declared in jury. Sr. Louis papers are condoling with the chief of pulice of that city who has gone to the mountains for his health, the trouble being sleeplessness, Thero are many people in Omaha who wish our city marshall could be inocculated any platform since with the same complaint. this state has been ad- — mitted into the Union. Their leading organ, the Omaha Herald, is notoriously the subsidized mouthpiece of the greatest railway monopoly in America. The men who represented Nebraska in the last national convention were avowed monopolists, and the Nebraska Mz, BLaINE is attending to some|member of the national democratic business in Ohio, which leads the|committee, J, Sterling Morton, has editor of the Cincinnati Commercial to | been and is now a labbyist of the Bur remark that James G. Blaine may not | lington railroad. Under the leader- be the next president, but no man|ship of Morton and Miller Nebraska will have more to say about who will | democrats have deliberately marched be President Arthur's successor. to defeat after defeat, and whenever the republicans nominated MissouRt penitentiaries have been | disreputable or unpopular candidates declared unfit for use by the United | the democratio leaders made sure that Btates courts, who have directed the |their own candidates should reap no removal of all prisoners sentenced by | advantage of it. them to Illinois. A home democratic| Two years ago when arevolt was newspaper says that ‘‘a state boasting | breaking out against Valentine in the 80,000 democratic majority ought tofrepublican ranks the democracy put have a decent prison.” There is noino oandidate in the fisld until doubt about it—and a largo vne intho [ten days before the election. bargain. To make doubly sure of e— Valentins felection they nominated Mgz, BRooxs is to go to Europe for | Jim North of Columbus, a man who a few months on & tour to inspect |does not regard himseif as compatent Uncle Sam's consulates, and Fred Nye | for the place, and whose associations is to return from Washington just as|are as close with the monopolies as soon as Val can spare him from his ar- | those of Valentine, When election day duous labors to assume the editorship | came there were counties in which’ gt the Republican. Tt is eminently | the democrats did not even know proper that at least one editor of the |the name of their candidate for con- Union Pacific organ should be kept on | gress, and they voted the ticket blank Unole Sam's pay roll on congressman. The outcome was, that while nearly 4,000 republicans ‘WaEN we said that Douglas county | scratched Valentine's name, his ma- would present no candidate for con- |jority over North was greater than the gress this year, we were not aware|average majorities on the republican that a very dark horse is grooming in | state ticket. é Omaha for the naiional legislature. | The legislative records during the His first name is Paul Vandervooit, [ past ten years make an equally bad and it he can't go to congress, he|showing for the demoorats. While desires to impress the P, M. G. that|they have from time to time elected he is a great gun in these parts, and |some men who could not be bought ought to be promoted to a postal divi- |by the monopolies or corrupted by sion superintendency. jobbers—some of the worst railroad e— cappers and sell-outs were democrats, Ouana should extend her sewerage | Lot us ask, in all candor, whether system, at least through the thickly | anti-monopoly republicans can safely sottled portion of the city, during the|[join such a political party present year, According to reliablo [with any hope of bringing about estimates the expense to the ity itself | the needed reforms for which they are would not exceed $10,000, and the |laboring? What assuranco have they amount levied against private prop- |that the next demooratic convention erty will not be very burdensome, |will present an anti-monopoly plat- The extension of sowers is demanded | form and men whose past record is a for the protection of the public health. | guarantoe that they are true represen- By continuing this work employment | tatives of anti-monopoly principles? will be given to a large number of | But even supposing that such a plat- laboring men, and that will put money | torm would be adopted and such men in circulation ameng our merchants, | nominated, what chance would there - be to elect a democratic anti- I is estimated by the authorities at | onopoly ticket in Nobraska Castlo Garden that 100,000 skilled Would not Miller, Morton and all the workmen have come to this country democrats who are in with them go from abroad this year, The destina. | °¥er bodily to "h;_'sw tions of 47,000 were taken, 70 per publican tioke' the election of that cent., going to the Atlantic states. ticket was desired by the corporation _Buch an inflax of labor naturally op. | managers ! = erates to prevent any goneral advance If H.m great hody of the democratic of wages in the east, Should the party in Nebraska are eufl'xutl,y and protent remarkable immigration con. | !0%¢sty 1o favor of anti-monopoly tinue it will not be wurprising to hear legislation in this state ,nd in congress the ory against the Chinese taken up ;Exair patriotism must rise nboyepucyf‘ against cheap labor from Europe. The 'hey must encourage and assist anti- 4axiff prices may build s wall against monopoly republicans to carry the foreign competition, but it cannot|"" " keop out competition in the labor 'lthl?ut party w%mn. The anxiety of market. Meantimo the manufacturer | t4in democratio leaders and papers while loudly demanding higher ous. |'¢ iduce the republicans in the tom dues to protect American indus- Farmers' Alliance to create 8 third try is filling the places of disatisfied party, reminds us of the fox and mechanios with foreign workmen at "":.,h,h“‘ p's "u'"'.‘ '}‘&‘ ven lower wages and pocksting the in- | of cheose in b h;k.mm‘ali:m ‘oreased profite. tox was giving the raven tafly PHILADELPHIA has notified all com- pantes having occasion to use electric wires that they must find some sub- stitute for poles by January 1, 1885. ‘The warfare against the telegraph pole nuisance is spreading. state. This they can do as individuals | ar; the other side. In such a fight the people would win by an overwhelm ing majority. — Tae bill establishing two judicial districts for Nebraska passed the house of representatives yesterday. This creates a new federal court in our state by the division of the duties now performed by Judge Dandy. In all probability a new judge will be ap- pointed for the northern district which willinclude Omaha, while Judge Dundy will coatiaue to hold conrt for the southern district at Lincoln. The great increase of business in the fed- eral courts is responsible for the change which will bo welcomed by litigants whose cases now drag slowly along on an overcrowded docket. Complaints of the laws' delays are not confined to the federal courts, One of the great needs of Nebraska is an increase and redis:ricting of the state judicial districte, and the subject will force itself prominently upon the attention of the next legislature, The district over which Judge Savage presides ought to be divided into two. The docket of the district court for Dug- las county for the June term contains over 600 cases. Of course it is impos- sible to clear such a docket in a single term, and if every case were ready for trial more than a year would elapse before even the majority were dis posed of. Clients suffer more than lawyers from such a condition of affairs, and the only remedy is more frequent sessions of the court or a prompt division of judicial labor. AvtHOUGH we have been assured by the official organs of the company that the Union Pacific hospital tax- was levied upon the request of the employes of the ruad, and especially those on the western diviston, we find, as & matter of fact, that the head tax is a8 unpopular among the U, P. em- ployes at Rawlins and Ogden as it is at Omaha, The Curbon county (Wyo.) Journal published at Rawlins of last Saturday indulges in the following comment about this imposition: The recent general order from the Union Pacific headquarters, notifying the employes of the company about the hospital tax, is creating s good deal of discussion among the boys, and especially the shop men, many of whom have been in the employ of the company for a number of years, and who, by economy and frugality, have purchased or built little homes for themselves. Upon this class of em- ployes, us well as all who have families, this tax, though small and insignificant as it may seem, is a bur- den, Bix dolla year is certainly a small sum, still §ity is sufficient to pay a year’s taxes upon their prop- erty, buy a ton of coal or pay a month's rent. Many of the men ob- ject because there is not to exceed one married man in twenty who would de- rive any benefit from the hopital, even should he become sick or get injured; also, that there is no provision made whereby they might receive pay for the time they would be compelled to l-z off in case of sickness or accident, while they look upon this money they are compelled to pay into the hospital fund as a dead loss 8o far as they are concerned. —— Tue Denver & Rio Grande will probably be completed to its line of communication with Salt Lake, and the Denver Z'ribune, on behalf of Colorado, is rejoicing over the pros- pect of a new and competing line to Utah. It eays: “This will open a new and independent Colorado route to the Pacific slope, of Colorado origin and for the benefit of Colorado com. werce, Our merchants are bacoming heavy traders in the products of Cali- fornia, The Argo Smelting works have for some years maintained a large trade with the mines of Montana. There being but one open thorvugh fare between Denver, California and the northwest, we are compelled to pay cut-throat rates for everything re- cewved over that road. The freightage on fruits, of which we are heavy con- sumers, is simply outrageous, but we must pay it or go without the supplies, There is ro concession or compromise with this extortionate and inexorable monopoly, nor has there been any prospect of relief until the Rio Grande announced its determination to pro- vide a remedy. This line is now well advanced toward the southern bound- that THE EGYPTIAN CRISIS, of forty Buropeans, and a general ex- odus of the foreign population to the men of war lying in the harbor, indi- oate that affairs in Egypt have reached a orisia, which nothing but armed force can meot. A conflict between Arabi Bey, the leader of the army and the people’s favorite, and the authority of the Sultan seems imminent, Since the arrlval of the Turkish commission under Dervisch Pasha it has become plain that the rule of the cringing Khedive, who is thoroughly hated by the Egyptian nationalists, is to be re- stored and the submission of hw rebellious minister demanded in the name of the Porte. For Arabi Boy nothing remains but exile or armed resistance and he has chosen the latter alternative, Meantime our dispatches report the greatest confusion existing in Alexandria, the streets filled with an armed soldiery and all classes pow- Rioting in Alexandris, the massaore 78 would vote agi late to get the bill through the senate. By the like method of operating on the commi tse for delay, the railway nonopoly here has always defeatcd bil's to rigu'ate the rates of transportation in this state. They have shifted their tac- tics to congross withas good effact. And these are the fellows who essay w control the political destinies of California by a concert of action with thieving ri politicians this year We shail see their satanic tracks in both state conventions; but thanks to a public opinion which has of late sct in heavily againit them, the republi- can party at least cannot afford to be seduced by them. The party that shovels up the ground on which their cloven-footed tracks have besn made and cacts them over the fence, is the party of the people this year and will prevail, The Age of Retirement in Our Army. erless to resist attack. Arabi Bey is supreme, although the Khedive trem. bles in the midst of the guards which surround his palace, anxioualy wait. ing for reinforcemants of Turkish troops which will certainly be imme- diately dispatched from the Bospho- rues, The Egyptian uprising is the re- volt of a tax eaten and oppressed peo- plo against the policy which has made them the slaves of Fronch and Eug- lish banking houses. It was Ismail Pasha the father of the presont Khedive who contracted the enormous debt under which the coun- try now groans, Within four years, $500,000,000 were brrowed of Euro- pean baukers at exorbitant rates of interest, and bonds 1s«ued t» an equal amount, secured by the national rev- euu=s, Failing to pay interest on his loans, he was deposed by Frauce and England, aud his son placed in his stead, while a host of commissioners were appointed to watch over the treasury and secure the rights of the for foreign creditors. The ypurchass by the Euglish governmeut of a large block of Kzyptian securitios assured the control of the country to Great Britain, and since that time she has vertually administered the affiirs of a bankrupt nation for tha bene- fit of the bondholders. Overbur- dened with a most oppressive taxation in the interest of other countries the Egyption peasantry longed for an op- portunity to shake off he foreign yoke. The nationsal feeling which has been slowly but steadily developing finds a voice in Arabi Bey, who s ands to-day dictator of Egypt defying the sultan aud the combined powers, and declaring on behalf of the Egyptian people that he will resist European aggression with his whole strength. Turkey will be forced, if no other resort remains, to take up arms against the rebellious Egyptians and compel Carl Schure, The bill making retirement at the age of sixty-four compulsory in the army passed the senate on Tunsday. All efforts to except Generals Sher- man anl Sherdwn from its operation were unsuccessful, owirg to the fear felt by many that if exceptions were once begun they would be greatly mul- tiplied. It cannot be said that there is any great hardship in the rule. No man of sixty-four can be greatly wronged by being relieved from active work with a pension, six years before the poriod which is for all practical pup.ses the term of human life. Chere is hardly any man who by the age of sixty-four has not begun to feel the weight of years aud the cases are rare indeed in which an offi- cer who has begun to feel the weight of years is tit f)r active servics in the field, and as a rule every officer in the army ought to be fit for active service in the field. As a rule, too, the elderly soldiers have got the worst of it, other things being equal, in cam- paigns againat young opponents, The success of the G:rmans underold gen- erals in the wars of 1866 and 1870, is an exception, but it must be remem- bered that the real work of these two campiigns was done by General Molike years before The greatest achievement of his career was the or- gwiz tion and perfection of the Prus s1an General Staff, probably the most | g complete and effective war ever devised. agunst Austria and France were by it planned lorg before the war broke out, and the army putintoa state of perfect readiness. The blows which fullowed, to», were delivered in close accordance with the programme, aud they fell with such force and regularity that they had almost the air of being struck by the hammer of Fate The result was that the ene- my was destroyed with literally un- precedented specd. The Austrian capital was at the mercy of the Prus- sians and peace concluded in six weeks, The French emperor and his army had been bagged and his capital reduced to extremities in nino months 8o that there was in neither contest the prolonged wear and tear of the sudden aud unforeseen, which are moat trying to elderly nerves. Moltke and Stemnmétz and Vogel von Falkenstein could have stood the weapon of obedience to the authority of the sublime porte. 1t she fails, s dangerous complication will ensue. France and Eog'and are both interested in obtaining control of Egypt. To the one i is the highway to her Indian possessions. To the other it is in the direct line of her African conquests, All the powers would resent the possession of Egypt by either France or Englann, and Turkey, in her appeal to Europe against this, the first step towards the dismemberment of the Turkish empire would find both sympathy and ma- torial assistance. On this account Arabi Bey’s revolt will certainly be suppressed in a manner which will leave the Porte still ruler of the country, Whether this is to be done by Turkish troops or a combined for- eign force events alone can deter- mine, The Blair Pilot, which bas been classed among the so-called anti-mo- nopoly papers of the state, now sees but little use for the organization of an anti-monopoly league at Blair.— North Bend Bulletin. The Blair Pilot may have been classed among anti-monopoly papers years ago, but for the last twelve months it has played capper for the railroads and opposed every move that tends to redress the grievances of shippers and producers, Two thousand republican majority in Oregon open’s the ball for a series of rousing republican victories on the Pacific slope. Look at This. Fan Fransisco 0 ro ice Junse7. The Southern Pucific railroad is car- rying breadstufls —wheat and flour — from this state to New Ocleans at less than $20 per ton, The Central Pacific is at the same time, in partnership with the Union Pucific, charging $134.40 a ton for hardware and all iron goods, fast freight from New York to this city, Prior to May 24th the rate was $89.60 per ton, The ad- vance is $44.60, or b0 per cent, And yet the old rate was over four times as high as the charges on wheat from here to New Orleaus, Either they are shipping wheat east at a heavy loss for the purpose of driving off the ocean freight from this port, or they are ex torting on iron goods in a most brutal mavner, Such charges are little bet- ter than robbery; and it is no wonder that under such a depletion the state of Utah, and, as already stated, il:mn down and languishing in its ::t}:i‘: t;:.p‘:»l::gn:r;::, " h Lake The Reagan bill, to regulate inter: E— A memoek of the New York stock exchange has been expelled from the board for defrauding a fellow opera- tor, The brokers must draw the line somewhere and their customers seem he | to be about the proper point. state charges on transportation, may not be a remedy for #ll railway abuses, but it certainly would put an end to such gross brutality as these revised rales on iron goods imply. But it is t that the Reagan bill f:n‘;ugww hia wnaru.m Alter being held six months in com- mitteo by raillway influsnoces, the house vicissitudes of a protracted struggle like our civil war is not likely. Our mi itary policy is a very simple one. We do not need a large army, but we do need a considerable body of trained officers, ready to take the command of a large army whenever we sep fit to raise ene, knowing weil that the emergency which calls for one is, if it ever occur, pretty sure to be sudden. It should, therefore, be our object to encourage officers to en- ter the service and remain long enough to learn its business thoroughly, and then to leave it, 80 as to have a steady stream passing through the process of training. Whatever 1n our system of promotion or retirement affords this encouragement is desirable; whatever diminishes it, perniclcus, And it must not be forgotten that creating a military organization it is the probable effeot on the imagina- on Mondsy refused to take it up for consideration out of the regu'ar order hy a vote of ayes 113, noes 78 The nst the bill, the 113 for it; but it is next to certain that no vote will be reached till it s too The campaigns | , N That | BARGAINS, LOTS! Houses, Farms, Lands. BEMIS’ FIFTEENTH ARD DOUGLAS 818, Berut!fal building sites on Sherman avenue (16th strect) acuth of Poopleton's and J. J. Brown's r.siden ce—the tract belongi g to Sona- tor Paddock for 80 many years—being 854 foe. west irontage cn the avenur, by frm 80 to 650 feet in depth, runping enstward 10 tho « maha & 8k, Paul k. B Wil sell in strips of G0 feot or more f-ontage on the aveuue with full dip'h to the railron, will sell ti e above unabou. any terms ihat purcha-er may desire. To parties who will agreoto build houses co ting #120 and up vard. will sel with- cut any payment dcwa for one year, and 5 to 10 +qual anuuul piynents thireufter 187 per cent iut £ 8 To parties wac do not intead improv- ing immedia ely will .11 for « ne sixth down and 5 equal a.nual puyments theresit r at 7 per cent interess, Ghoi -6 4 acre bluck In Smith's addition at west end of Farnom _ etroot—will give any length of timo requir-dat 7 per con’ inters.t. Also s splendi 10 acre block In Smith's aldi- tion on_eawe fiberal terms as the foreg ing. No, 305, Haf lot on izard near 20ih sireet, 00. 0 304, Lot on 18th strest noar Paal, $1200. o Lot 80x250 feet on 15th s.rect, near One quarter acre on Burt strect, near 00, No 207, Two lots on Blondo near Irene street, 200 and §300 each. No 293, Two luts cn Georzia near Michigan stroct, $120), No205, Twelse choice re:Adence lots on Hamil- ton street in Shinu's addition, fne and sightly 82,0 t0 850 each, No 234, Beaut'ful half lot on St. Mary's av- enuc, 80x'8) icet, Lear Bishop Clarkson's and Oth street, 81510 No 292, Five c olce lots on_Park avenus, 50x 150 each, ou stroet ruiiway, $300 eich. No201,8ix lot in Millard & Ca dwli’s addition on ~herman Avenue uear Poppletou's, $3.0t0 $160 each N 259, Cholce loaon Park avenue and street car line on r ad to Park, $450 to §10.0 each. Mo 285, Elevin los on Deca ur and Irene ttrects, near Sa.nders street, ¥3/5 to $150 each. No 82, Lot on 19th near Faul strect, ¥750. No 281, Lo 55x140 foet near St. Mary's aveaue, anc 20th street, §1600. No 219, Lot on Decatur vear Irene street, §325. No 278, Fuur lots on Caluwell, near Sauaders stre.t, 8500 each, Mo 276, Lotoa Clinton streed, near shot tower, 95, No 275, Four lots on McLellan street, near Blondo, Kagan's sddition. $225 esch, No 274, Toree lots near race course: make offers, No 268, Beautiful corner acre lot on California & reet, oppimite aud adjuing Bacsed Hoart Coa- vent grounds, $10 0. No b0, 1,08 on Mason, near 15h.strect, §1,360 100 lo\ain “‘Credit Foncler”and *Gran1 View' additio s, just south-east of U, P and B. & M. ailroad * epots, ranging from 3150 to §1000 eaca any o easy ternis. Beautiful Hesidence Lots at a bargain—very handy to shops 100 to 4260 caen, b per cent down nd u per cent per month, Cail and get plat and tull particu ars. No 266, Fuil corner lot on Joues, !Near 16th stroct, §,000. No#53, ') wo lots on Center streot, near Cum- ing steoct, §00 for both or §500 eack. 5 - 02514, Lot on Beward, near King street, 0. N0 249, Hall loton Dodge, near 11th strect, 00 No 217, Four beautiful residence lots near Creighton Coliege (or will separate) $3,000. No 246, Iwo lois on Center, near Cuming st oet, $400 each. No 246}, Lot on Idsho, near Cuming stroot, 1 No %45, Beautltul corner acrs lot on Cuming, ear D. £t m street, ncar new Convens of Sacrod Beart, $1,600. No.'244, Lot on Farnam, near 18th etreot, tions of the young we have mainly to bear in mind. The period of retire- No 243, Lo} 66 by 133 fet on College strset, near 8t. Mary's avenue, §700, No241, Loy on Faiam, near 20th street, ment, for instance, should be fixed so | ¢1,000. a8 not to make the young men think promotion likely to be slow, and not to make middled:. themselves likely to hardly * dealt with, It is these two classes whose views should settle the matter. general rule a man of 65, who prances about, and fancies he can sit on a horse as well as ever, and is as good in a | ¥ campaign as any one, is a foolish old fellow whose powers of mind as well a8 of body are failing. Some of the most shocking disasters 1n the history of war are caused by this class of of- ficers. The memorable panic of the British cavalry at Caillianwallah was largely causod by the presence in com- mand of an aged brigadier who had to be lLifted into his saddle, and the earlier and still more frightful disaster of Cabul, iu 1841, was directly due to the age and rmuity of E phinstore, the general in nmand, The Omahs Denver Tribune, The Omaba Herald says that unless the Tribune ceases its spiteful attacks, the Union Pacific will be apt to go out of business, This would be a mighty good thing for Colorado and Denver, but it would be powerful rough on the Omaha Herald and other flibberter- gibbets that hang to the Union Pa- cific like cockleburrs to a sheep's tail. ‘Worthy ot Praise- As a rule we do not recommend Patent Medicines, but when we know of one that really is & public benefactor. and does puultivel{ cu e, then we consider it our duty to impart that information to all. Electric Bitters are truly a most valuable medicine, and will surely cure Biliousness, Fe er and Ague, Stomach, Liver and Kidney Complain s, ev.n were all other remedics fail. We know wereof wespeak, and can freely recommend them to all.— Exch.—old at fifty centsa bottle, by O. ¥ Goodman, McCARTHY & BULKE, General Undertakers, ais 1 4 T EX =Y Bot. Farnam and Douglas. Motallic, Wood nd Cloth Covered OASKETS, OOFFINS, ROBES, BHROUDS, CRAPE, &e., onstantly on bhand. Orders trom the counts. wolicited, od promphly atbended k0. wsll As a | 800 No 940, Lot 66 by 99 feet on Bouth {avenue, near Mason stroot, 3660, No 289, Corner lot on Burt, near 22d street, ed men think | 2,500 Ne 238, 120x182 feet 01 Harnoy, near 24th, street (will cut it up) §2,400, No 234, Lot on Douglas street, near 25th, No 32, Lok on Pler streot, near Seward, L’\'o‘; 227, Two lots on Decatur, near Ireno street, N 723, Lot 143 by 441 foet on Shorman nue (16th st.ect). nea Grace, 32 400, will di vide, No 2.0, Lot #8x6ret on 'Dodge, near 13ih strect; mako n ofer, No 217, Lot on 23rd_near Clark, $500. No 216, Lot on Hamllion near King, $502. No 205, Lot un 18th street, near Nicholas No 207, Two lots on 16th, near Pacific strest, No 04, Beautitul resi ‘ence lot on Division strect, near Cuming, 8 00 10/ Lots on 16th street, near Pierce, 309°4, Lota on Sauuders strcot, nesr Sow- ard . NO 14}, Two lots on 22, near Grace street, 51 N0 192}, Two lots on 17th street, near white lcad orke, 81,050, No1sg}; One tull block ten lots, near the barrack 8, 400, No1vl, Lots on Parker, strect, near lrene $300. No153' Two lots on Cags, near 2lst street (xilt edgs), 6,00, No 150, Lot'on Pier near Seward, 8050, No17, Lo: on Paclicstrect, near 1dch; make offer, No 168, Six lots on Farnam, near 2ith street, 10 §2,550 eac I block on 25th strreet, near race cd three lots in ¢ ition, near and Cassiug etreet 000. of on lstn suect, near whige lead ect (2 lote) on 18th street, 601 ,600. No 110, Thirty half acre lote in Millard & Cal. dwell » additions on Sherman avenue, Spring and aratoga strects, near the end of green street car track, $550 o §1,800 each, No 59, Lot on Chicago, near 22d stieet, #1,8 No 88, Lot on Caldwell street, near, Saunders, No 86, Corner lob on Chasles, Jacar Saund. deis street, §100. No 75, 66x52 fect on Pacific, near Bth street , 000. No60, Eighteen lots on 2Ist, 22d, 234 and Bau- dera stroets, near Grace and Saun lers strect bridge, §500 cach No 6, One-fourth block (180x135 feet), near the Convent of Poor Claire, on Hamilton ttreet, near the ead of the red sireet car track, §1,060. BEMIS Rea. EsTATeE Acency 16th and Douglas Street, OMRANA - PP P - N 2 THE McCALLU WACON BOX RACKS. ~ Can Be Hand'ed By a Boy. The box need never be taken off the wagon and all the Melled Grain, and Grass Seed Is Saved | Tt conta loss than ths ol 1 stvle racks, Every standard wagon is +old with our rack comple ¢ BUY NONE WITHOUT IT. Or buy the attachments a~d app'v thom te sour old wagon box. For salo in Nebraska by J. C. CLALK, L neoln, MANNING & ilkss On'aha, Frep roos, Geand [s and, HAGOLETT & GREES, Hast nzs CHlARY & EPANOOLN & ted C.oud. . H, CRANB & C0., Red Oak, Towa, L. W. Rossky , Gienwoo ', fow s And every first cla-s doalcr in the west, Ak them for descriptive circular or send direot to us, J, McCallum Bros. Manuf'g Co., Office, 24 West Lake Stros', Chlcago, _maye3dw umbus. 75,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW IN USE. They rurpa 8 a'l other vehicles for exsy riding. style and durability, 5 SPRINGS, GEAR? & BODIES For sale by Henry Timken, Patentce and Builder of Fino Carriag s, 1006, 10%8and 1010 St. Charles St., St. Lous. ' Cata- logues turnished. J1-6m Patent removablennd taterehnns ey rend Kl our burrers i One VAl s Ruen' r on two New Bar-ty Reservolr, lo Ne: 0% W ¥ Summer nse theeo Stoves aro {ndispensable These ,celebrated Stova4 forsale bv D. A, P ersy Omaha Neh A231m-mie vw' MONITOR 0ILSTOVE ONLY ABSOLUTELY SAFE OIL STOVE IN THE WORLD. Every housekeeper feels the want of something that will cook the daily food andavoid the excessive heat, dust, litter and ashes of a coal or wood stove. THE MONITOR OIL STOVE WILL DO IT, better, quicker and cheaper than anyothermeans, It isthe ONLY OIL STOVE made with the OIL RESERVOIR ELEVATED at the back of the stove, awayfrom the heat; by which arrangement ABSOLUTE SAFETY is secured; as no gas can be generated, fully twenty per cent more heat is obtained, the wicks are pre- served twice as long, thus saving the trouble of constant trimming and the expense of new ones. EXAMINE THE MONITOR and you will buy no other, Manufactured only by thy Monitor 0il Stove Co. Cleveland 0, Send tor descriptive circular or call on M., Rogers & Son, agents for Ne- M. WELTY, D. (Suocessor to D.'T. Mount.) Manufacturer and Dealer in Saddles, Harness, Whips, FANOY HORSE CLOTHING Robes, Dusters and Tarf Goods Agentfor Jas. R. Hill & Co.'s OELDEBRATERID CONCORD HARNESS *‘The Best in The World,” 1413 FARN.ADM ST, Ordengollied. OMAHA, NER - ly