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Know That BRowx'sIrox Brrirrs will cure the worst case of dyspepsia. Will insurea hearty appetite and increased digestion, Cures general debility, and gives a new lease of life Dispels nervous depression and low spirits. Restores an exhausted nurs- ing mother to full strength and gives abundant sus- tenance for her child. Strengthensthe musclesand nerves,enriches the blood. Overecomes weakness, wake- fulness,and lack ofenergy Keeps off all chills, fevers, and other malarial poison. Will infuse with new life the weakest invalid. 37 Walker St., Baltimore, Dec. 1881, or six years | have wufferer (v;{n Blood ll)i , Dys. ia, and Constipation, ecame 2o debllizated that 1 could not retain anythin life ha Finally, when hope ha me, my husband secing Bown's Inow Birrans advertised in th per, induced me to give it a trial. am now taking the third bottl and have not felt 80 well in si years as 1do at the present time. Mrs. L. F. Guirin. Brown's IronN BiaTERS will have a better tonic effect upon any one who needs “bracing up,” than any medicine made, Nebraska Loan & Trust Company HASTINGS, NEB, Oapital Stock, - - $100,000. JAS. B. HE. A. L. CLARKE, E. C. WhBSTE DIRECTORS, Samuol Alexander, . L. Clarke, Goo, H. Pratt, Oswald Olivir, E. C. Webste T, , Jaa. B. Heartwell, D. M. McE] Hinuey. First Mortxage Loans s Fpeoialty This Company furnishes & permanent, home Institution where School Bond and other logally issuod Municipal securitios of Nebraska can bo negotiated on the most. favorable te Loy mado on improved farn “ otntics of the state, through respo ESTADLISHED 1868, SIDE §PRINY Am\r:})u:m”w@r PATENT A. J. SIMPSON. LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY 3 1609 and 1411 Dodge Streot, __8ug 7-mo 6m Omana, Nep, 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW IR UBE They aurpace allothier s for casy riding. eayle d durabliiny, They are for sule by all Leadlug Oar lage Builders and Doalers thronghout he oconntry. SPRINGS OEAR3 & BODIES Poreal b Henry Timken, Patonteo snd Bullder of ¥luo Carriages, B L OUXE, - - R, Samuel 0, Davis & [}n DRY GOODS JOBBERS £ B3I IMPORTERS. Washington® Ave. and Fifth 8, ST. LOUIS Mo. = oldest and wost r DAE &K s L omth Omabs. Vesy cholos Moat, Poultry and Vegetables, ALWAYS ON HAND, 000K & STUEHM, meton L] 20taand Lna Be A GOOD BHOWING York elty and Bmklzfl. That 1t was | that afterno, which makes no men- own TAE DAILY BEE--OMHA FRIDAY, DECEMBER § woll exponded was » by the re- | tion of havli recelved the order to ’ sult—the extraordlnary reduction in|attack, and |ls such & dispatoh s the democratio vote, which alone en-|oconld not bewritten without men- abled the republioans to oarry the | tloning the reipt of that order, it It state, Thewe are all facts commani- | had been relved. There I8 othor cated by prominent republicans who | testimony th makes It entirely satls- had personal knowledge of the trans. | factory to mmind that the order waa| <« " actlons, Though a secret to the gen: | not recelved itll about sandown, or oral publie, the facts are known to|between suncwn and derk. It was qulte & number of the more Impor. |glven, as stafi before, to attack the tant politiolans. It Is quite likely | enemy’s righiand, if poseible, to got that, it Dorsoy should be convicted, | into his rear. This was on the wsup- thess campalgn secrets may not re- | position thatickson was there alone, maln weoret very long. Dorsey has|as Goneral Pie had stated he would bushels of notes and letters received | be until the ening of the next day, by both Garfield and Arthor during | or the mornlt of the day follow- the late campaign. He has an exact|Ing. I belle the court was con- acoount of the money spent In In.|vinced that o the evening 9! dians, showing the amount sent each | the 29th of Arust Jackson with his county. He has also the exact figures | force was ther alone; but now it is of the vast sums of money contributed | proved by testiony better than aworn How the btate Hoard of Agricuiture Stands Financially. — TMattemouth Tournal From Hon. D. H. Wheeler we learn of the condition of the finances of the state fair assooiation. It will be remembered that the sssociation wont Into tho Iaat falr eonsiderable In debt, the exact of which is not jost now at hand. Saffice to say, the fol- lowing includes the indebtednes for Inst yoar, a very favorable showing for the management: RECRIPTS, Money advanced by friends Rent of booths and stand Gate tickets, Wm, O, Lee, ronts evidence of anpersons on the Unlon AXMEYER:BR( WJEWELERS*"MUSIC DEALERS. i voa OMAHA NEB The Oldest Wholesale and W R L1 3 h IN TRE WRST! B all- ovolios i 11 pr0enTal Agenia for VER WARE. OLOOKS, Orens anctastons oo ans manufactured. Rich and Stylich Jewelry, ur prices are as Low as the Latest, Most Artistic, (1Y Bastern Manufacturer License to vehicles to oarry pas- Stall renta and race entri Amphithostre 160 00 1,122 00 18725 1,279 20 R. R e 1L,26050 Fair ticketa nold by C., St, M. & R. R. . Fair tickets sold by 8. 0. & P. R R... y State appropriation Total receipts. EXPENDITURERS, Warranta paid up to Nov, 25...$13,632 72 ON HAN Balance on hand Nov, 25 $3,17273 Against this amount thore are still outstanding warrants sufficient to cat the total net profits down to about one thousand dollars, — —— — DORSEY'S THREATS V¥ VEN- GBEANOE. $16,705 45 The Star Route Leader Ciaims That in Case of Conviction He Wil Btreak the Pale Air With Oampaign Secreta—His Financial Ruln. Joe Pulitzer writos an article to his paper, The St. Louts Post-Dispatch, which bears an air of being *‘inspired” by Steye Dorsey, the champion star router, as follows: The prosecution was In the hands of ‘Attorney General MacVeagh, who was a very hard man indeed to manage, Garfield could not control MacVeagh without great diffi- oculty. He foresaw a break of his ro- lations with his own attorney general, d did not want to compromise him- selt, When it was first known that MacVeagh really intended to have Dorsey indicted and prosecuted, Dor- | @ soy came all the way from his well- advertieed sheep ranch in New Mexico, and went to the white house. Gar- field assured him that he would do all he could fow him. With his usual gush and warmth, he told Dorsey not to give himmelf any uneasiness about the outcome, but to return to his ranch and feel sure that he (Garfield) would be his friend. Bat in spite of all this, Mac- Veagh procesded with his cnse, re- tained detectives and speclal counsel, colleoted testimony, and drew upon promise of immunity from smaller membezs of the ring, a confession of gullt which was sure to convict Dorsey. Alarmed by the reports of MacVeagh' doings, Dorsey returned in the lgrlng of 1881 tothe east. Whilein New York ManVaenb antnalle..osoor=rd.o ‘WAF rant was about to b issued, but cun. ning Dorsey had his secret agents everywhere. He heard of this move by tolegraph. He taw his peril. There was only one man who could eave him. Ho took the next train to Washington, He arrived chere late at night. Ho went from the depot to the whito houvse, He appealed to Garfield to keep his promise and to oave him. Garfield sent for Mao- Veagh, What then cnsued may be inferred from the fact that the war- rant for Dorsey’s arrest was nover sorved, but withdrawn. This Incl- dent is historlcal and known to be truo by Bialne. It has never boen pablished, but it is true, all the same, and MaoVeagh will not dare deny it. By way of digreseion, it may be said that DORSEY 18 PRACTICALLY A RUINED MAN, Not long ago The 8t. Louls Globe- Domcorat contalned a description of Doreey’s allozed princely domain in New Mexico, with its millions of acros of Iand and hundreds of thou- sands of cattle, Dorsey has no such domain. The rauch he actually did have he had to sell to Bosler, the greet Ponnsylvania cattle king, Un. lucky specalations, extravagant habits, and an army of groedy lawyers have mado bim pqor already. He ls broken down, mentally and physically,. He hes a serlous affectlon of his eyesight. Those who kuow all about him sa) that ho lives in Washington, engage in no business, trylng to prevent a worso fate that may bo in store for him, Buot tho most remarkable foa- turo in this coso Is that of Arthur, president of the United States; for it 18 tho ssma Arthar now, by the comiosl irony of fate, directing the yrosscu- tion of Dorsey, who, at brated banquot at Dal- ed tho eulogy stating 7 wore than anybody ed orodit for carrylvg I a aud elocting Giarfield and Ar- thur, It ie perfectly well known, and 0o secrot whatover, that during the last presidential campalgn Arthur as chairman of the New York state com- mittee and Dorsey as secrotary of the pational committee and confident of field were in the closeat lntimacy and coastsut confidental Intercourse, After the Indlana campalgn was over Dorsey and Arthur managed the cam- paignin New York, upon which every- body knew the presidential election actually depended. It is well known that Dorsey alone sud pereonally raised a very large sum of money, which he and Arthur jointly distrl- buted. It is & part of the secret his- tory of that campalgn that the repub- lican finance committee, of which such baunkers as Levi P. Morton Kountze, and Seligman were members, raised over $300,000 and placed it in the hands of Arthur and Dorsey. Jay Gould alone contributed $100,000, The money was actually locked up In the safe of the Fifth Avenue hotel, where the republican sampalgn com wittee had lis headquarters, and the money was paid out in one of the rooms of that hotel by Dorsey upon the personal orders of Chester A. Ar- thur, then chalrman of the republicen state commitiee, The larger part of that woney was expended im New and expended for the purpose of car r{(ng New York, t 1f the mecretary of [slde that by I o'clock a. m. of the o republican matlonal committee | 29th Longstrec was up and to the should go_to the wall in the comin, trlal, 1t is posaible that a great deal of the secret but intensely interesting right of Jackm with a force much reater than (neral Porter’s entire fi»ru. The sack upon Jackson's history of the late presidential cam.|right and resrvas therefore impossi- gnlgn will nown," —_——— METROPOLITAN HOTEL, OMA- HA, NEB. Tables supplied with the best the|eral become pretty widely | ble without firswippin out the force of Lougstreet, The nrgerdld not con- tomplate, elthe a night attack, and to have obeye it, even if Long- street “had nc boen there, Gen- Porter wsould bave been market affords. The traveling public|obliged to mte a night attack. m they get better accommodations | But even asit w I find that General and more general satisfaction here| Porter, notwithanding the late hour, than Rate, $2 per di aug2ltfm Notice. The ‘‘Hawthorn Oentennial any other house in Omaha. | did all e coul Ex- celsior Roof Paint,” was patented May | out a skirmial 0 obey that order, He had previ>uw given a command to General Moil, who commanded the most advamd divislon, or one most fronting th enemy, to throw Elh to engage the ene- 24th, 1881, and etters patent num-|my, or to keep hh occupled, and on ber 241, 803. Any person found or|the recelpt of tls order, although known to tamper with the manu- tacture of sald paint will be punish- per- | it from a skirmishine to a large force od to the full extent of law. No at this late hour, b immediately sent orders to GeneralMorell to increase son has any authority whatever to sell | and that he woul be with him as HawrHORN & Bro., recelpts, Lancaster Pa FITZ JOHN PORTER'S OASE. soon as he could gt there. He did actually o to the front, al- though it was drk, to superintend this movement, ad as far as possible to prevent the enay detaching any- thing from his frot, thus showing a Another Defense by General Grant—| jesire to obey the rder strictly, and A Letter to Senator Cameron Writ- ten Last february—Porter De- clared Innocent of Disobe- dience of Orders and of Disreepect to His Commander, WasHiNaToR, December 3. —The fol. lowing letter, dated February 4, 1882, from General Grant to Senator J. D, Oameron, not heretofore published, has been furnished to the pres ; New York, Feb. 4, 1882, Hop versation with yon and with General Logan on the subject of the Fitz John Porter case; but having now pretty nearly decided not to go to Washing- ton, I have determined to write, and write to you so that you may state my rolltiun to your friends, and particu- ar ly to General Logan, and, if you choose, show this letter to any such people. Vglnn I commenced the examina- tion of the Fitz John Porter case as it now stands, it was with the convio- tlon that his sentence was a just one, aud that his punishment | ight for a0 hidoz— ™2 75 46d"t5"Sxamine It on its merita. I came out of that examination with the firm convlotion that an entfrely innocent man been unjustly punished. T castino censtire upon the court which tried him, because the evidence which now proves his entire {nnocence or dlsobedience of orders it was {mposslble to have before that court, When I comploted the investigation and oame to the concluslon that I did ~—of hls Innocence—my first thonght was to write to General Logan, be- oause I rogard him as my friend, and I am sure I am his, and in had made, rmh.bly. the ablest apeech of his lifo n opposition to the bill for General Porter's restoration to the army, thought, therefore, it was due to him that i should Inform him of the con- D. Cameron, U. 8. Senate, Washington, | and more 80, 0. DEar Sir:—It has been my Inten. tion until within the last few days to visit Washington this winter to spend | j;. some time, and there to have a con- to the best of his ollity., I find the Schofield board aquit him entirely, but throw some cesure upon him for having expressed tlack of confidence in his superlor dicer, many of our best soldiers woul have heen pun- ished. But, In fet, if this was not atated in the sumnng up of the case by the board, I shald not have found that he had expresed any such lack of confidence. O. the countrary, to my mind now, he was zealous in giving a suppor to General Pope, ossibly, for the reason that he knev among his former army sssoclates thee was a good deal tness for his ew place. It must be recollected thatGeneral Pope was selected from a vestern army and brought east to ommand an army here there were . great many gen- erals who had hal experience in a revious war, and tho had, like him- self, a military edication, and there may (improperly) lave been a fecling that it was a reflecion opon them to go out of thelr own command to find & suitable commancer; and it is also very probable tht expression was freely given to tha feeling. Baut it would &e well to wflect what would have boen the sentments in the west been »fcer from fio sastgpn gy had of them aha Yo command them, and whether or not thers might have not been some harsh cdticism, even by men who proved to be among our most gallant and divoted command- ers, Then, too, in re:examining the case my attention was called again to General Pope'’s early order in takin, command of the army of Virginia, send you a copy of this order. You will see that it wai calolulated to make the army to whom it was ad- dressed feel that it was a reflection upon thelr former services and former commanders from that ot a company to the commander of the whole, and that even as amiable people as General Logan and mywelf are would have been very apt to have made some very uncomplimentary remarks if they had been addressed by an eastern officer clualon that I had come to after the | 00t W8t to command over us in our Investigation. Bat as the president waa just about visiting this olty when wmy letter to him was written, and 1t was desired to present {t to him here, I requeated, In leu of a letter to Gen, Logan, to have a copy of my letter to the preaident sent to hrm. This was done, You are aware that when General Logsn made his speech agalnst Gener- al Porter, it wasin opposition toa bill Psndiug In congrees. Ho, like myself, was thoroughly convinced of the gnllt of General Porter, and was therefore opposed to the bill. His In- vestigations therefore were necessarl). to find arguments to sustaln his side of a pending question. I of course have no knowledge of the papers he would refer to, or would examine, to find soch arguments; bot I know that he could have the testimony which was taken before the court-martial which convicted; probahl; arguments of tho officer who soted as prosecutor when the case was before the Bchofield court, and arguments that have been made by lawyers, J, D. Cox und others poseibly, all of which were in opposition to General Porter as much us that ot paid attor- “fi in cases before civil courts ut my Investigation of all the facts that I could bring before me of the occurrence from the 27th of August, 1862, and for some little time prior to the lst of September the same year, show conclusively that the court and some of the witnesses entirely appre- hended the position of the enemy on that day, General Porter was convicted of disobedience of an order of General Pope's, dated at 4:30 p, m, on the 20th of Auguet, to attack the enemy on his right flank, ard fu his rear, if possible, Dispatches of General Pope of that day show that ho knew General Leo was coming to the support of Jackson, whom he thought commanded the only force lu his front at that time, but that he could not arrive until the evening of tho followlng day, or the worning of the day after, It was sworn to before the court that this order of 4:30 p.m. reached Genoral Porter at about b or half-past b in the afternoon, but it must be recollected that this testimony was given from meomory, and unquestionably without any idea at the time of the oocurrence that they were ever to be oalled upon to glve any testimony in the case. Tnvestigation shows a dispatoh from General Porter, dated 6 e'clock of also the|: field of duty, I commenced roading up this oase with the conviction that General Portor had been guilty as found by the court, but came out of the Investigation with a thorough con- viotion that I, and the public general- ly, had done him a fearful injustice, d entirely satiefied that any intelll- nt man, or lawyer, who will throw aslde prejudice and examine the case a8 I have done, will come to the same conclusion, As stated In my letter to the presi- dent, I feel it Incumbent upon me, in view of the position that I have held heretofore, and my failure then to do what I now wish I had done, to do all n my power to place General Portor right before the public and in future history, and to repalr my uniaten- tlonal unjustice, d3ress this letter to you, know- ing that you will have a desire to do juet what your judgment dictates as being right {n the matter, sud that you will state to whomeoever it may seem to yon proper and necessary my present conviction npon this case. 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