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[e— —_——————————t—————— THE OMAR A DAILY BEE-~TUESDAY MAY 15, 1883. The Omaha Bee. Published every morning, except Sun. 7. The enly Monday morning dadly. AN HONEST GOVERNOR Governor Walker, of Oonvectlont, deserves oredit for his placky vuto of the rallroad tax reduction hill which was passed through the leyi«a- When the creek is levelled much of |embankment at the mill with suffi- that drainage will be distribated. oclent strength to turn its course it would have resulted In the destruc- S0 far as the theory of sewerage ca- tion of Me, Tooser's and Mr, Jack- pacity 1 concerned, englneering s an ) 4o’y houses, and very likely the loss exact sclence and experience Is a safe TERMS BY MAIL— tare by a strong raliroad lobby. T time Year....810.00 | Three Months. 88,00 | message accompanylng the vetoed bill he|guide, Mr. Phillips, who designed our surface sewerage, s a practical L Rl contalns some sound kernols of seuse. |and experlenced man. Cinelnnatl Is HE The governor denounces the bill | & ety whose location is much the same '._HV‘V’I?EXLY AL as objectionable In the v.ry|sa that of Omaha, Smaller sewers in TERMS POST PAID— object It alms at—the reduc-| Cincibnati drain » larger ares. But ......$2.00 | Three Months, 50 d taxes — and |thero are no unfilled creek beds to b, s 10| Ose Mooty WIBE Q0L iFRE, AR AMERIOAN Nuws COMPANTY, Bole ‘Newsdealers in the United States, plish i, aatters should be addressed to the Eprmos or Tux Ben PUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Busines Betters and Remittances should be ad 4reseed to THE B PUBLIBHING COMPANY uana, Drafts, Ohecks and Postoffice Urders to be made payable to the order of the Oompany, fho BRE PUBLISHING CO., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor erty. now taxed on thelr Indebtedness Wi haven't yot heard who i to be | from such obvious oppression. olvil service examiner for Nebrasks, but at the present rate of romovals and appointments there will be no use for his servicss for some years to come, DexvER accloty, it is sald, stadlens- ly Ignores Mrs, Tabor No. 2. Donver soclety must draw the line somewhere, and it fixes it at & womsn who will consent to be married by a justice of the peace. — property Jor Purrizer who has taken the | pendsnt New York World, lssucs his eci orlal | which different the property s at upon such rates, manner new party leaders, throwlog his pearls before awine. est financlal panto in Wall stroct that in the method it proposes to accom- He aseerts that the people of Connectlcut are already paying sn OCORRESPONDENCE. -All Communl. | average tax of about 14 mills on a doi- atfoos relating to, News and Editorial oy on the value of thelr Individual vonverge the body of water and pourit with terrifioc force agalust the mouth of any single sewer. Oar sewer systom is all right, acd will be found suffictent for ever emer— property, while the railroad corpora- | gency when completed. ~And it ought tlons pay only 10 mills on the dollar |to be completed at once. on the value of thelr corporate prop- [bed mast be filled up as soon as possi- The creek ble, not only where it Is crossed by “It 1s olsimed,” the governor con- | streets, but throngh private property tinues, ‘‘that rallroad corporations are | a8 well. Mr. Woodman will then dis- an | cover that a five-foot sewer is as good woll as thelr property, and that this | for the purpose as one three times the bill proposes to partially reltove them | size. This slaim, 8o delusive, is entirely unfound ed. The state imposes tax2s on prop- ercy, but never on lndebtedness. The market value of the property of a rall- road corporation is indicated by the msrket value of its stock and bonds, and the state adopts such value as a rule for the assessment of taxes upon the property such corporation possess- es. The bill, to accomplish its abject, ocontemplates the taxation of the same de- in held programme, which conaists of: Antl, | Such discrimination Is perniclons, It monopoly, progressive democracy, and provides that property, if represented Mce. Pualitzor is | by stock, shall pay one per cent, but it by bonds, only one-half per cent. - Such a policy, if parsued in the taxa- James R Keexelooke for the great- |tlon of indlvidual property, would permit the large portion of the real THe persistency ¢f woman has found & new and a happy illustration through the victory won by Mrs. Myra Clark Gaines in her ault against the clty of New Orleans. Formany years Mrs. Galnes fought her way lnch by inch In the courts, to procure possession and title tocortaln property which the clty wrongfully sold at auc- tlon on March 10, 1837. The sale was some years ago annulled by the Uaited States courts. Mrs. Gaines has lately been muing to re- cover an smount equal to the rent ylelded in all those yoars by the property holding the city responsible not only for all the revenu: which has been actually derlved from the property siuce 1837, but also for all that it might have ylelded under roasonable and proper of a dozen or more of lives, When the water was receding I stood on the bank with Mr. R.N. With- nell till we could see tre mouth of the sewer, and It waa free from obstruc- tlon, It is simply a case of miscaleu tlon In regard to the size of & mewer required to carry off the water from a heavy rainfall, and you cannot find a distnterested man in the city whe will advocate any other theory, 'T'hls same sower was ranning fall yesterday (Sunday) morning, and the water was backed up two feet above Its mionth, with no obstruction in themouth what- ever. Wao were all assurea that the sewer was amply large to carry oft the water from the heaviest storm. Mr. Oleson relled on this assuranceand filled his lot as he had a right to do. The city apprehended no daoger lu bailding the sewer across the creek at Nineteenth street and in filliug on top of It from bank t. bauk When the county commissioners ordered the filling of the creek bed at Sixteenth street and the removal cf the bridge there, they expecied the sower to do its Intended daty. All talk about repoated warnicgs Is simply bosh, and the clty englucer suys 1t orlginated In a reporter's imagiuation ; that he never made any such state- ment to the council, and the president of the council bears him out ia this asssrtion, When tho foundation walls of the mill were put in last fall the city en- gineer suggested the putting in of a sewer plpo through the walls of the mill and under the basemont floor of the mill, to connect with the sewer and terminate in the old creek bed above the mill, This pipe was put In exactly as sug- gested and its mouth was In the bot- r:;n of the creek on Mr. Jackson's ot. Me, Jackson and Mr., Toozer both have houses and live on the bank of the creek at this point, and they were both interested in seelng that this pipe was kept open, and they will bear me out In the assertion that it PERSON ALITIHES, WHOLESATLE Lord Byron was a very fat boy, his lat- oot biographer says, Mr. Gladstone appeared in the honse of lords in sky-blue stockings and gold clocks, C years old, and is said to be worch 84,000, 000, G New Eopl: Mr. rd expects to_be the first through passenger over the Northern Pa« cific railroad in September, Senal: of Michigan, has given his first year's salary, a8 senator, to estab- lish an art museum in Detroit, Patti says music belongs to Heaven. There are no 85,000 salaries there, how- ever, which is why Patti is still with us, Bertba Von Hillern, the young girl who foraook walking to become un wrtist, is sketching along the Baltimore & Obio road. Amone_the eccentric whims of Lady Florence Dixie was ber having herself photographed in the scanty costume of an ancient Hizhlander, “Pater Conper, the grest novelist,” ssys The Appalachicola Tribuue, “has passed away. A man whose memory deserves to be reverad by all civilized uations, ’ President Arthur wrote poetry in his youth, Bearing this point in miud it ap pears that Mr. Arthur is a good deal more of & reformer thau he has been taken tobe. _As beautiful a brunette as is seen in New York is Mrs, Joseph Palitzer, who i & natlve of the upland country near Wask- Ington Chf Her husbaud was presented to her by John B, Clack, s family friend. The actress Katie Patnam hss been elected an honary member of Fire Com- pany No. 8, of Mobile, Probahly the members were fascinated by the way ehe handled her hose, —. n Post, Jem Mace, the pogilist, and Patti, the singer, departed for Europe upon me vessel the other day, The world of “artists” includes a grest variety of people. Mace is considered as much of an artist in his line as Patti in hers, + Marble, the patent cffice commissioner, hss fishy blue eyes, is large and coarse, and ha an intensely red tuft of chin whis. kers, while his bald head is plastered with thatch of the pushed up from the sides, Mies Aona Dickinson is now in New York, the guest of Mrs, Croly, Miss Dickineon is in unusually good health, and is about enteriog on a course of readings from her drama, “Aurelian,” and from a dramatic lecture on ‘“'Jeanne D’Arc,” She will be heard in a number of the the clrons man, is thir'y-three ernor Butler is credited with being que of the most araceful poker players in DRY GCODS SAM’L C. DAVIS & CO,, Washington Avenue and Fifth Street, S8T. TOUIS, - - - - - - - - IMEO. —_— M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I3th i OMAHA, NEB. OMAHA CORNICE Wu RKS RUEMPING & BOLTE, Proprietors Tin, Iron and Slate Roofers MANUFACTURERS OF Ornamental Balvanized Iron Corvices, Iron Sky Lights, Ete.' 3 fRA OMAHA, NEB 310 South Tweltth Street, - 5 7-mon. wed-fri-m WILLIAM SNYDER, MANUFACTURER OF CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, SHNID ROAD WAGONS, oare. For example, neveral of the|Wss open at all times, and that it estate subject to mortgage to escape half the taxation 1t now has to pay. Tt {s urged that the object of this bill that changes the mode of rallroad taxation s to charitably ald the poor corporations. If this were so dis- crimination for such a reason in mat- ters of taxition 1s as obnoxlous be- tween corporate as Individoal tax- payere; but I am advised that the effzot of this bill will beto glve in the Now York has ever seen, and ho pro- poses to stard from under. The pub- lte quite agrees with Mr. Keene in its distrust of Wall street sharks, and proposes to do the same thing. — ATToRNEY GENERAL Brewster will now have an opportanity to conduoct another sult, which need not boas long as the star routetrial. Secretary Tol- lots and equares remained unimproved beoause the validity of the title was in doubt, owlng to her original sult against the clty to gain possesslon of them, She held that the city was bound to pay her the revenue which would have been collected from these squares if they had been improved as other adjolning equares not blighted by litigation were improved. After many dralned the creek bed as low as it was possible to draln it and have it run into the sewer. There s not a man of ordinary intelligenco who has vis. ited the locality and examined the water marks in the viclnity but what is now satisfied that the sewer will not carry off over one-third of the water of a heavy storm, and any effort to defend the caleulations upon which it was constructed will not stand for a moment. A theory as applied to sew- orage engineering in the more level eastern cities duriog the spring. John Bach McMaster, the new historian, who is an iastructor at Prinseton, is small in stature, and his head is very large in proportion with his body, During the yesrs in which he was eugaged in the preparation of history o! the American gsnpla it is said there was but one man esides himeelf who knew of bis labors, First-Class Painting and Trimming, Repairing Promptly Done. 1321 and 1323 Harney Street, corner Fourteenth St. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALEB IN ler has written him rcoommending tho institating of proceedlngs against the | Unlon Paclfis for the sum of §1 727 - 742, due the United Statee, — Ir Senator Edmunde, on hia way to Oregon, shonld happen to stop ac Sait Like he might hear something to his advantage about the operation of his polygamy equelcher which fails to equelch, notwithetandiog a $30,000 a year commission, poor. bill will result, I hope, in the ado comprohensivo schome that will fair the proporty of the state.” equalization, In Comnesiicu’ taxable value of tho property of Ir fa ramored that General Thayer 1s to ba offered the highly remunera- tive position of rallway postal clork in case he can bring ‘‘the uuanimous eu- dorsements of the Hall county delega- tlon” as a credential of his character and standing as a republican, value of its stock and bonds. oally swindled by pormitting tho i perties which thoy control A CORRESPONDENT aeks us to zettle & coutroverey by declding the pro- nunciation of the word dude and its origin, Daude Is pronounced to rhyme with rude, Its origin s as diffioult to trace as that of any alang expresslon, road taxation would be not be adopted. some portion of New Eoglad to de. | B0 matter whether *ho property be soribe a know nothing and pronounced | Bouse and lot or a rallroad. in two syllables. However that may E——— be, the modern dude pronounces his name in one, — ~ ==== |North Omaha sewer. course of a year nearly as much of the proposed reduction to the rich as the The refasal to approve this tlon by the next sssembly cf some distributo the burden of taxatlon on years the master in chancery reported | eastern cities will not apply here, and that the olty owed her 81,604,062 for |if the elty council allow its engineers these revenues and Interest upon mlllb‘l’ K“‘d;d by these °“°;l‘“°"" it them. Jadge Billings chose toin-| oo 2°hy oY CLaiiy LAl G enced that a good deal of observatlon crease this allowance to §1 926 667 |and less theory is what 1s wanted in If the supreme court of the Unlted | this city. CLARE WOODMAN, Siates should suetaln this declsion, — th olty will be foroed to pay noarly | T2e¥ Eeve a Joiiy Time All Together. P ly He has an unlimited capacity for work, and the light in his room at Witherspoon ball is generally the last £ be extinguished in the dormitories. which are fllled with students who aro wo devoted to early ours, ) N R R R, Lath, Shingies, Pickets BA8H, DOORS, BLINGS, MOLDINGE, Li X805 XEINR, I #TBTATE AGENS FOR MILWAULKE OEMENT LOMPANT Noar Union Pacific Denot. SOMAHA, REY SPECIAL NOTICE TO GEMER Cats, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Sal Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilbl and all kinds of Skin Erupti HENRY’S CAKBOLIC S& all othors are but immitations, cents, Price 25 STATE JOTTINGS. We commend the abive to tho at- tention ol the Nebraska state board of the rallroad is indloated by the market In Ne- braska the atato has bsen eystomatl- road manngers to mako their own ap- pralsement of the value of tho jr It the rale which G v.rnor Walker states so conclsely were adopted in our own stato the revenue derlved from rail- doubled. Thare Is no reason, as the Bee has often urged why thls method shouid Property s worth Ttts clalmed that 1t has been used fn | VBN 16 will tell for in the market $2,000.000 to this aged but energetlc woman whose career and sucoess as a litigant, through s period of forty years, must be regarded ss withont " | parallel. Tue suviclde of Amasa Stone, the sensation in New York. 2 | than the shoddy arlstocrats who are left. He was one ot the leading rail- speculating In stocke. Bat hi & less energy was as boundless grasping greed, and his recent reverases deranged hismind, The trouble with rest Frou the fact that General Noyes Cleveland millionaire, caused quite a | ratlroads engage nearly every talented No oclass | legal gentleman in the country, and soemed more unuerved by the rhock | Yhen the people appear with a griey- struggling under loads of immenee | often the judge jolus in the hilarity. wealth. Poor S:one had lost over $2,- | Too many judges 000,000 and bad ouly 84 000,000 more | the railroads in’the way of speclal cars road men and iron manufacturers of | Army Ofticers keured and to Retire. the west, and had attalned the age of | Wishington Spcelal, 65, when he should have bean resting t_'“‘e Army and Navy Reglater con- s bis|8re: The Unlon Paclfic road owes the government a tremendous amount of woney, but the company refuses to pay it, and the government Is wonder- ing what it had better do about it If it will hire a lawyer as talented as the Union Pacific lawyer a way out of the difficulty wiil speedily be found. The ance they laugh the amall lawyers who represont them out of court. Very apt favors from when they trav tl@u,Wiuner the dog tax has bees placed at 82, uunmng hcuses are very soarce in Loup Jity. Nebraska's population is increasing at the rate of 1,000 & day. A big rush and high prices are antici- pated at the opening of lhe O:oe reserve sale, A revivalist is holding meetings at West Point, The Republican speaks of him as being cranky. hundred head ot cattle passed Lincoln lust Friday, bound for county, er 81,000 worth of town lots were sold in Hampton, Hamilton county, in two days last week. It ls expected that within eight weeks ins the first complete Lat of army quietly after a busy life, Instead of | reyirements for the coming ten years, In 1883, the prominent cfficers retired Gen, Iogalls, Aogust 23; Col, James A. Kkin, August 14; Col. Hunt, Fifch artlllery, September 14; Col, Geatty, Fourth artlllery, Octo- We ocheerfully accord Mr. Wood- | the American business man is that he | ber 4 man epice fn our eolumns {0, Privt | peyer knows when he has enough. his version of the late trouble with the His arguments, In 1884, Gen. Sherman, February 8; Gen. V\’rl“ht, chief of engineers, March 6; Col. Reynolds, of en- glneers, March 17; Col. F. T. Dont, Tr was » great mistako on the part | nowever, fail to break dowa In the|was the president of Cincinnati's Iate | Third artiilery, Docerber 17. of congress wheh they plgeonholed the | jeast the common sense position that | dramatio enterprise, the Ohloago Times bill to relleve the supreme ocourt.|an unfinished plece of publio works | begins to suspect that there is some~ Curlog thelr term just olosed the|cannot be expooted to perform the |thing in » name after all. court disposed of twelve loas cases than ( fanotions of & completed system. at thelr last term, and there are 871 undisposed of cases now on the dooket’ | from personal pre)udice Only 365 cases were disposed of durlng | porsonal damages. Here was the past year, which is 22 less than In | gower, or more properly Look at the ocase squarely, aalde Bms for the location of the new and | oapital of Dakota will be opened at 8| Oanton to-day by the Dakota capltal 8| commission, and the good people of 1880. Tae court can never catoh up | snlyert bullt over a oreek which drains | Yankton refase to be consoled. with its arrears, That Is a physioal | some 4,100 acres of our olty. The impossibility, One of the first acts of [ mere ballding of the culvert was only | Mr. Wooaman on the Bewer Question the new congress should be to pass 8 | the beginning of the improvemant in- | To the Editor of the Bee. mexsure for the rellef of the supreme | tended to relleve us of the open creek. | In your issue cf the 11th in an edi- court, The remsinder contemplated was the | torlal headed ‘‘attacking the sewers” — filllog ln of the valley of the creek|you ssy: ‘‘The damage done to the Wirh a cold winter and a wintry | above the arch of the sewer, leaving a | Woodman oll mill was largely, If not spring, the rallroad builders in the |strong culvert of five feet to take sur- | entirely, owing to carelessness on the United States lald down fourteen|face water from the streets of | part of ita bullders. They had been hundred and fifty miles of new track |North Omaha. But before the|repeatedly warned that there was dan- in January, February, March and[plan 1s finlshed, and while|ger in case of an extraordinary rain- April, 1883, This is seven hundred | the natural bed of & large portion of fall. Inspite of the warning they and fifty miles short of the work done the oreek ls still unfilled, we are|neglected to keep thelr overflow pipe in the corresponding months last|visited by a terrific rainfall, which, | open and permitted stagnant water to yoar; but last year was the apogee in |adding additional force to the stag- back itself up to the depth of twelve the circult of rallroad speculation, |nant water already contalned and feet adjoining their property. When when it reached the dlstance limit. It|banked up in the creek, causes it to | the heavy rain came of course the wall will probably be another generation overflow lts boundarlos and does con- | of earth gave way.” of men that will find it necessary in |siderable damage to property. There-| Idonot kuow where you obtatued any year hereafter to bulld rallroads | upon Mr. Woodman and Mr. Corllss | the above information but there ls not enough in this country to reach half | and saveral other gentlemen proclaim |a word -of truth in It. No such ¢! fallure. state of affalrs has ever existed sroond the eaiih, B ImRery & inllne there, The overflow plpe —— This s not common sense, When | yoy unobstracted and open and A DpEsTRUCTIVE cyolone swept over [the oreek is filled, o five- | it has been in this condition ever since Missour] and Kansas Sunday, leaving | foot sower will be amply |it was put fn. No stagoant water ac- cumulated above i's mouth and there wae no bank of earth there to give away, Tho first bank of earth that gavo away was the filling on a lot be- longlog to Mr. Oleson, This lot is sitnated in the old creck bed, near Twentleth street, about three blocks from the ofl mill. The earth that was put Into this lot held the water till it was ten feet above the mouth of the sewer, It then went out and the mass of water and mud rashed down tlll it struck the filling on top of the sewer where the sewer crosses the creek at Nineteenth street. When this latter wall of earth gave away the water and mud rushed down In a volome at least fiftoen foet p, oarrylng ruin and desolation in Its path. The|large enough to oarry off all the water meagre reporis thus far recelved do|that reaches it, The mlistake made nobienable us to form an estimate of the | by Mr. Woodman lies 1n a false eatl- loss of life and property, but from ac | mate of the body of surface water counts that reach us from Kansas City, | which, when the lmprovemoent is com- where the hurricane wrecked many | pleted, will fall into she north Omaha buildings, we should judge that the|culvert. 0 in towas and to damage to dy A large portion of the amount farm houses s the valloy of the many millions. Towa snd Nebrasks | creek will be absorbed by the ground. have #0 far been more fortunate than portion will find its thelr next door neighbors south.|way to the river by the gut- ,Wlunbunvhlhd byheavy [ters, As matters now are, “ ‘thander storms, they have|the usfilled valley of the North Oma- escaped thi terxible visltation of @ oy: |hs ereck is & funnel lnto which all the In 1835, Chaplain Van Horne, July 6; Gen. Angur, July 10, In 1886, C)l. Hatch, Second ocav- alry, Janu 9; Gen. Pope, March 16; Gen. Sackett, April 14; Gen. Stur- 51- June 14; Gan. Newton, engineer, n” 1 In 1888, Gen. Bancock, February 14; Gan, Baird, August 20, e — Look Below the Supreme Court. Occeols Farme:s' Advocate. It seems to us, as we ocarefally look over the field, that the district courts are much more at fault for doing thelr work so bunglingly. Does it not seem toaman up a tree we have elected scheming politicians to preside on the bench of our distrlet courts, and the governor has followed the same cus- tom and appointed some rallroa 1 tools to that position—with one exceptlon at Omsha—instead of selecting men of ability and well skilled in law, who oan command the respect of the peo- ple! Our jury drawing Is a farce, our law making a shaw, aud the selec- tions of the distrlot judges a disgrace, and the whole system rotten and dls- honest, and why shoald we throw all the blame on thesupreme court, which out of ten is right in - The finest mayonase aressing for all kinds of salads, cold meats, raw tomatoes, pickled salmon, cabbage, eto,, is Durkee's Sauap DREssiNG Batter and mare econowmical than home.-made. The Distriot Court. The May term of the distrlot court commonced yesterday, The following members of the grand jary were ex— cused from serving: Eugene Steuffel, A. W. Coffman, H, W. McGinnis and H. W. Blair, The sheriff was ordered to fill the vacancles from among the bystanders, and he selccted R P. Beely, W. L. Briggs, W. Read, N. E, Tyson. The urm§ jury was sworn, and the court made an assignment of cases. The petit jury will be impsn- oled Wednesday, when the Ratizan murder ease will come up for trial. Everybody fs using and everybody is recommending to evel Zod,- friends, Brown's Bitters as a re- %. walls of the mill before it. clone during this stormy season. dralnag 4 00 acres is poured. there 'had been " & heavy liable fron medicine, & true tonlo. trains will be runving from Nebraska Cicy vin Tecumseh to Beatrice, Articles of incorporation for the Platts. mouth & Southwestern havo been filed with the secretary of state. A young man named Rogers, who for- merly lived at Dakota City, was on trial at Lyons on the 10th for larceny. D. L. Bruen, of Platte county, is raising 105 lambe, the product of 106 ewee, the other lamb havicg been accidentally killed, Madison county is looking for a colony of fifty families irom West Virgiuin, ar- rangemente for whote coming are being perfected. Mre, Colby. of Beatrice, is considering the scheme of starting a newspaper for the advancem nt of woman’s suffrage in this state. An effort is being made by the citizns of Furnas, Gosper and_Frontier counties to organize an Agricultural and Fair as- sociation, A large lynx, measuring over three feet, waa recently %illed near Oxford, The ani- ma) had long been raiding on the sheep and fowls of that vici ity In Burt county the other dsy a little Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Qil Cake. It is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn, Stock fed with Ground Qil Cake in the fall and win- ter, lustead of running down, will increase in welght and be in good market- able conditlon in the spring. Dairymon 25 woll cas others who use it can tes- tify to its merits, Try it and jndge for youreolves, Price $26.00 per ton; no charge for sncke, Addvess Eo4-cod-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omahsa, Neb, C. F. GOODMAIN, B O LER LT A X DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PAINTS,OILSVARNISHES And Window Glass. MAHA . . NEBRASKA. GATE CITY PLANING MILLS. girl named Mabel Dooley was helping her brother bura cornatalks, when her clothes caught fire and sho was 5o serionsly burned that she died in & few hours, The busicess men of Ord snd North Loup hiye orgauizd and formed them- eelvas into societies to take undsr adviss. ment matters of public concern, and to promote their interests generally. Tnere was & little disturbance raised at the colored Baptist church in Lincoln Fri. day night. Some of the ungodly coons of the city, who seem to have no respect for the religious elament, attended the church, heir £t up on the seats, equirtad tobacco juice over the floor, threw the bymn books and bibles about, and gave the minister sume sauce, MANUFACTURYRS OF Carpenter’'s Materials SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. First-class tacilities for the Manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings, Planing ama matching & Speoialty, Orders from the country will be promptly executed. sddressall commnniostions to MOYER, Pronrletor THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, § EEADACHZ, TOOTHACHR, Ui§ SORE THROAT, QUINSY, BWELLINGS, Single Breech Loading Shot Guns, from §5 to $18. Double Bregch Loading Shot Guns, from $18 to 875, Mugzle Loading Shot Guns, Prom $6 to §25.° Fishing Tacke!, Base Balls and all kinds of Fancy Goods. Full Stock of Show Cages Always on hand, ) Baltmore, Hd., C. b A McCARTHY & BURKE, Undertakers, 418 14TH 8T., BET, FARNAM AND DOUGLAS Meerschaum and Wood Pipes and evirything re uired in a firsvclags Cigar, Tobacco and Notion tore Cigars from $156 per 1,000 ipwards, Send or Price List and Samples s b 1 i