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BRI g sy samer e { { 4 THE DA:LY BEE--OMAHA, MONDAY, DECEM SBLR 3. 1383, THE GCMAHA BEE 916 Farnam St. No. 7 Pea Omaha Office, Conncll BlafMs Ofice, Btreet, Near Broadway. New York Office, Room 65 Tribur Bailding. Cublished every rrorning, excopt Sunday. The #nly Monday morniog daily. THE SPEAKERSHIP, In placing John G. Carlisle in the speaker's chair of the national house of platituaes about the glerious achieve ments of the war, themselves with the people and agains rl | representatives the democratic party may have committed a great political blunder, | nious defeat. but it is a blunder in the interest of good From the narrow-minded e CONGR. government, standpoint of the political trimmer it Congress convenes to-day, corporate aggression, or suffer ignomi- For the - | have thé pieces of pavement which have They must array | been laid on Sundays plainly marked, so t | that the members of this congregation can avoid those portions and walk on the week day pavement.. I shall watch this zealous minister and see whetker he ever so far forgets himsel{ as to set his feet on the unholy asphalt pavement. He should set the example to his flock and patronize el schoel seetions, or 2,776,600 acres, which sold at €10 per acte, the rainimum price allowed by the constitution, would pro- duce a fund of $27,776,000. 1t ia pro- videdin the constivution that only one- eighth of this land 1s to be sold immedi- ately, leaving the balance to increase in value. From the sale of this one-eighth £3,472,000 would be realized, which, placed at interest at 4 per cent., would * goon BRMS AT MATL. may have been a fatal blunder to commit ne Year.........$10.00 | Three Months.......88.00 | the democracy to a pronounced policy in s Moncns 6,00 | One Month 100 favor of tariff revision on the eve VIR WAXKLY RS, PURLISITND RVRRY WRDNRAUAT. 5 of a presidential election, but TRRMS POSTPAID, Ons Yoar ... $2.00 | Throe Months 8ix Months. ..71.00 | One Month .. 2 ( American News Company, Sole, Agents, Newsdeal. | oy In the United States. CORRRSPONDRYCR.'S A Communications relating to News and Editorial matters should be addressed 1o the Eoiron or T " that wiil at party to ent voters for manifesting the courage to e lit i a course least commend the independ- For have had no issue to rally under, excepting a differ with the republican party. twenty years or more the democra RUSINRSS LRTTRRS. | ” All Buslnoss Tettors and Remittances should M‘.nhunwr to put the republicans out. Every addressed t) Tun Ban Posiisuiyg CoNPANT, OMANA. | four yoars the national conventions were Dratts, Cheoks and Postol rders to be made pay- ble to the order of the compan held by the democrats to nominate candi- YHE BEE BUBLISHING €0, PROPS. ROSEWATE! Editor. dates for the presidency on a platform which the republicans had constructed = |four yoars before. At this hour there is absolutely ne difference between Sixtoenth street should in the fire limit. The tinder box must go. be included the demooratic and republican parties, bacring their past history, than that the Mr. Poppleton still sings his favorite hymn: This is fhe day we long have sought, And mourned Koonulengva found it not. one is in power and wants to remain there, and the other is out and wants toget there. Both parties have straddled every vital issuo, and have lacked the courage to cut loose and grapple with questions which the present generation is called upon to consider. Mr. Carlisle is not a straddler or a trimmer. Coxaressmax McCorp has interviewed himself, and ke reaches the conclusion that it will be Arthur, Congressman McCord has promised more federal pa- ¥ tronage than the average Towa congress. | Outspoken champion of revenue reform AT ey and o change of policy with —_— regard te the confederated monopolies. Daxa has gone to Kurope to join|[Ho is clean handed and un. Doctor Miller. The godfather of Cronin [trammeled by any ties that would and administrator of Tilden's political | hinder him from an impartial discharge estate will hobnob together among the |of his duties towards every interest. His blooded aristocracy of Europe. principal opponent, Randall, was a very ETRvTE e e ablo man, but he was allied with all that is bad and dangerous in national legisla- tion, Had he been elected speaker, wo could have looked for no legislation in the interests of the producers. Every leading committee would have been packed * with pliant tools of corporate monopoly, from the Pacific railroad down to the Standard oil com- pany. Mr. Randall entered the race very confident of success, with a power- ful backing ef the moneyed interests, the support of Sam. Tilden, the silent influence of the church, and all the agencies and combinations that had twice placed him in the speakers chair. He read his title clear and there is no doubt that he would have been success ful, if he had not overreached himself. The fact that many leading republican papers and politicians were working hard for him aroused grave supicion, and when his fool-friends raised the “‘sec tional” issue against Carlisle because he hailed from Kentucky thay ruined Mr. Randall's chances of success. The southern members constitute a majority of the democratic house, and S = they naturally felt indignant when the; Jis Larkp has gone to Washington to oo ol thas they it tand bask sod make a record. He will introduce some | glect Randall to prevent an outery from bills that will make the hair of monopoly | the republicans that the south had cap- managers stand on end. They.will re-| tyred the capitol. And when General cover from' the right, h'o'enr, yhon the Gordon made his appeal for Randall on bills are pigeon holed in committee and Mr. Laird will feel releived from further responsibility. He is an Tue next time Church Howe comes to Omaha he will keep out of reach of the Belt railway. A reckless fellow like Church Howe is always liable to be caught below the belt and belted until he doesn’t know what struck him Tue Chicago Herald hits the nail squarely on the head when it says that “‘the best way to dispose of the surplus revenue problem is nat to have a surplus revenue, Let the taxesabide in the pockets of the people.” Tir democrats are fighting like cats a7 Ange over what little patronage they live vacough the control of the lower house of congress. What would they do if they had control of all the patron- age Uncle Sam has at his disposal. —— AccorniNG to the Washington Critic the race issue has invaded the National Colloge of Pharmacy, located in Wash- ington. A majority of the students re- tired on the admission of a colored doc- tor. A dose of their own physic would probably benefit them. The college will the ground of policy, the southern con- gressmen only saw in it the effort of a railroad manager to foist a monopolist WasniNoos has resumed its festive |into the speaker’s chair. Many of the airs. Congress is about to convene, the | members from the south who had come hotel lobbies are jammed with political [t0 Washington with the intention of strikers and sportive lunch fiends. The |supporting Randall changed front be- airis laden with the fumes of tobacco |cause they dared not go back to face and bad whisky. Excitement runs high, | their constituents who resented the sec- and the hotel keepers aro up to their | tional cry of Randall's friends as an in- airs thidite sult to thesouth. And they were right. This hue and cry about southern su- premacy is simply the talk of dema- - |gogues. General Gordon, who was & con- federate brigadier cocupied a seat in the United States senate and made laws for the nation. Ho was froquently consult- PENNSYLVANIA has a white elephanton its hands in the form of the Ma pital at Erie, which the state prc got rid of by presenting it to Uncle Sam. “The legislature at its lato regular session appropriated $2,000 for the repair of tho first time since 1876 the democrats con trol the house by a large majority. The election of Carlise as speaker indicates The old fogy democracy and the trimmers and fence- the muddy, unpaved thoroughfares. Belt railway for a simils roason.” o dical depa e ' ik W VeTy FRIGH PRSI *I have severed my southern rail road connections, and am coming north riders liave been outfianked, and the re. | onos more,” was the remark made the form have taken the helm. democra by Col. J What course they will pursue it is diffl s itlet ¥ After the are announced it will be safer to fore. shadow the is safe to it. Col. cult to predict. committees programme, 1t south, and want to get back country again, my permanent home eventually. ways did like Omaha, It is right along, and the many solid bu buildings and the numerous private r say, however, that Morrison, of Illinois, will be the leader of the the Garfield of the democracy, headed, broad house. He is level- minded, and deliberate. Next to Morrison, the men of largest in- fluence on the democratic side will be Randall, Blackburn, Curtin and Cox. The republicans,being largely in the majority, will necessarily pursue the Fabian policy. Keifer and ‘Kelly will be the most promi- nent, It the republicans are well-advised they will give cordial support to every democratic measure that is just and popular. A minority does not always make capital by opposing everything right or wrong. The republicans have the senate, and the senators will doubtless define the policy which the party is to pursue with regard to important legislation in both houses, Senator Edmunds will be the recognized leader of the party. He is intellectually head and shoulders above any man in the present congress, and if his health permits he will lay out the work upon which the republican party can appeal to the country for another lease of power. Tho questions that will be uppermost before the present congress are tariff revision, revenue reform, postal telegraphy, regulation of inter-state com- merce, and disposal of the surplus in the national treasury. Upon these vital issues Nebraska will be heard from in the senate at least, and we should not be rurprised in the house also. With another presidential election before us it is but natural that the proceedings of congress will be watched by the people with more than ordinary interest. prospering here. dwelling houses. The variety and a great deal of originality of design. and wishes.” +* ——T see that Charley Goodrich gave you a little chapter of history concerning the street railway last week,” said Mr. Poppleton to Tuxr Ber Man About Town. ‘1 noticed that he was wrong in his dates. He said that the act chartering the strect railway was passed in 1861 or 1862. The fact is, it was not passed un- til February 18, 1867. It was one of the very last acts of the last territorial legis- lature. I only mention this fact to show how easily persons can make mistakes in the matter of dates when they depend upon their memory. You ought to cor- rect Mr, Goodrich's statement, because it is often the case that such paragraphs are made use of by different writers, and in time they are regarded as correct, and thus mistakes creep into our history. To satisfy myself on this point 1 looked up charter.” “Who were incorporators of the company{” Mr. Poppleton was asked. “They were Alfred Burley, Ezra Millard, George W. Frost, Joel T. Griftin, J. W. Paddock, C. 8. Chase, Geo, M. ('Brien, J. R. Meredith, R. A. Bird, E. B. Chan- dler, John McCormick, Augustus | Kountze, Wm. Ruth, J. Frank Coffman, | A. J. Hanscom and David Butler. OFf > T th not one has now i Grxuat Rossonans who, by the way, | Liose met ot oo bas now any intorest has become a shrewd politician, proposes . 3 % 25 5 to offer the following proposition to] ____“The \Union Pacific is a cunning amend the constitution, to the house of | corporation,” said a railroad man the representatives: other day. *‘In order to learn the move- Amendment 16, section 1—Polygamy, be- [ Ments of another company it sent for a ing incompatible with our _civilization, | granger, named Church Howe, from is forever prohibited in the United States | Nemaha county, to come to Omaha and and all places under its jurisdiction. pump John D. Howe, attorney of the Section ~Congress shiall Eave Povee to 6 | iseg e ilionsapolis, . Bt Panl & fowos thls by appropclatelglutbne | Omaha rosd. The result was that John This is evidently a move on the part | [ plaved quite a joke on the unsuspect- of General Rosecrans to put the d2mo- |ing Church. Inanswer to an inquiry as cracy on record as right on the polygamy | to the alleged amicable settlement of the question. The Springfield Republican| Belt rilway controveray, Mr. John D. : | Howe said to the other Howe, ‘There regards this proposed amendment as a | will be no Belt railway track in the pope's bull against the comet. The jour- E morning, but don't give me away.’ Ten nal in question says: minutes later Chur:‘hd Howe repo;ued is i 5 : 3 i h uarters, and an This is & sign of the growing realiza. | this statement at X 3 tion that polygamy is a dangerous run- S“““""E: '}';d':“d .i’“" mdt.r:?l: guards ning sore on the national life, but such a | 3'°"% FALWAY, were A S 2 R John D. conatitutional amendment will be a good | doubled. Two hours later, ) deal liko a party resolution, proper | Howe, who had leaancd the result of his enough in its way, but settling nothing, nischievous statement, met Church, an with a sober face asked him, ‘You When we fail to enforce the Edmun s & law, the chance of stamping out p«_,l,-g.v»hmntgw«qofi;:?n:-cye on x:l';a; :::‘}v;*;: . s ¢ s | have you? my by amending the Comm“"“"""m‘plied Hip | houkebilgnanger, & who next 80 promising as it might be. Still, such Plied. an amendment will put the aation on re. | MOing learned that ho bad been sold. cord, it ‘would block the wiy of a1Y | really the intention of the Chicago, Min- e e e o toward thons sterner | neapolis, St. Paul & Omaha folks to tear o ) |up the Belt railway track, and that it measurcs that some people have begun | o yiy inormation ths checkmated the to look upon as a final necessity of the |y, verment. He says that John D., when simpdon, | he found that he had been beaten, tried | = m— | to saddle the joke on him. But I know Fraxs Harrox's Washington paper, |John D: too” well to believe that he which has been the organ of the Virginia | Would give away anythinz to Church | readjusters, Howe ”H(g is too well acquainted with Church, nouncement: makes the following an- sther day to the Brr's Man-About-Town M. Eddy, while in Omaha on Eddy, who has been | the forsome time the general superintendent f the M. K. & T. and Texas Pacific rail- roads, said. “I have had all I wanu of the to God's 1 hope to make Omaha | I al- booming It all goes to show thst Omaha | people are becoming more cultured and | J¢¢ - : - refined in their ideas, and this is account. | will furnish a great deal of interesting in- ed for by the accumulation of wealth |formation on the subject. which enables them to gratify their tastes | the records concerning the street railway | institution, and the same act authorized the state to tender tho property to the United States government. The formal proffer of the property was made onMon- day, and in case it is accepted, will be transferred one year from the date of its acoeptance,—Cleveland Leader, Send the marine elephant along to the state of Beatrice, and let it be formally transferred to Kearney. —_— SreNcer, of Alabama-Dakota-Nevada, has landed safely at Washington. And now the question is what will Attorney- General Brewster do with this white ele- phant? Just what use Spencer is mnow, when the cases are disposed of, is not so clear, but they have him. Aud he tells » marvelous story, It is that Garfield promised he should not be called. This seems to tally with Dorsey'sstory that he was not to be tried. The singular part of the aflair is that when called the ex- senator could not be found. Hewasvery busy roaming around jast when needed And when not needed he is captured and brought to Washington, What for? It od and advised with by republican presi- donts. That was all right. Mahone was chief of stafl of Gien. Lee, and when he entered the senate he was embraced like the prodigal son. Longstreet, who was educated aud reared at West Point, turn- ed traitor in 1861, led the codfederates in their onslaughts on Pope at Bull Run, invaded Pennsylvania with Lee's army and mowed down thousands of union soldiers at Gettysburg. Longstreet held a commisslon under Grant, and holds the most lucrative office in Georgia now. Moaby, the guerilly chief, represents this government in China as its accredited consul general. But when Jno.G,Carlisle, who never raised his arm against the government was brought forward for the position of speaker, the cry went forth that he must stand back because ho was born and raised in Kentucky. Would anybody have raised that objection if it had been Judge Harlan, of the supreme court, who was appointed from Ken- tucky. It may have been indiscreet for ““The attitude of General | Mahone in the senate toward the repub- | been that of a friendly ally. This will remain unchanged, and his celleague, Senator Riddleberger, will occupy a simi- lar position.” This means simply that Mahone and Riddleberger will continue as friendly allies as long as they cani ex- change republican patronage and traffic in postoffices and revenue positions. Wen- dell Phillips once said, when speaking -of a compromise with the slave drivers, un- der the constitution, that it was a com- pact with hell. WDAvi» Bureen received only 13,03 votes for regent while J. F. Merrit re- ceived 16,312 which indicatesgthat Butler was scratched thirty three hundred times. There was not a word sud against Butler in the campaign and we may as well admit that nothing could be said for him in view of his record. Tuk generous compliments which have southurn members to resent the insult to «‘i ——“The Ber'shistory concerning the lican party during the past two years has | building of the Union Pacific railroad, which I read in your moming edition,” | remarked an old timer, ‘‘reminds me of many pleasant incidents of the early days before the railroads reached Omaha, 1 remember that Harry Deuel was for a while the clerk of a Missouri river steam- er; I think it was the Denver. He after- wards became steamboat agent of the Hannibal & St. Joe raidroad,the terminus | of which was at St. Joe. His partner was John R. Porter. Porter & Deuel were the first railroad ticket agents in Omaha. In 1868 the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad was completed to the Missour:, and Me. Deuel became the Omaha ticket | agent, and still retams that position John A. Horbach was also engaged in the steamboat ticket business in those days, together with. the freight business. Capt. W. P. Wilcox was one of the early steamboat captains on the Missouri. Captains Rustin and Marsh were cap- tains on the ferzyboats. Dr. Atchison, Platte, was the gemeral agent of the Western Stage company, and in those in this part of the country. Morsman, now the general manager of{ | give Wyoming a start on the high road who died two or three years ago at North | days was one of the wost important men | Mr. E. M. | I | create ans annual income of $138 880 suppose that he will not travel over the | This would give a perpetual fund to edu cate the youth of the new state. Few, if any, new states have been so highly .| favored in the matter of education—-an ) | inestimable blessing to the present and o | coming generations, The enermous frauds practised under homestead and pre-emption laws throughout the west calls for a radical change in these laws to prevent specula- tors from gobbling up the remainder of At the last session of rity the sundry civil- the public domain. congress the house by a large a clause in inserted 8 | % . |service bill repealing the pre-emption dences convince me that everybody is A great deal of taste is | being displayed in the architecture of the | buildings, and particularly so amor.g the | pro architecture of |ommendation of the commissioner of the the last year or two shows a pleasing law, but the clause was stricken out in the senate. Tt is probable that the secre- tary of the interior will approve the rec- general land office governing the repeal |of the law referred to. When the sub- | jeot comes up in congress the land office The practical working of the pre-emp- [ tion law and the timber culture act has | been investigated during the past fow | months by specal agents of the interior | department. Special Agent Bickford, | who has been on duty in the Bismarck land district, in Dakot, during the past | six months, says that probably one-half | ot the public lands disposed of 1n any one | year are irrogularly taken. The lands thus obtained fall into the hands of the settlers, but they are obliged to pay “sweat money” in order to get them, and this puts the poor man at a disadvantage | and retards settlement. | I have found most everywhere,” says Bickford, ‘‘surprising laxity in meeting {the conditions required of settlers, an | this scemed largely due to the misinfor- mation and bad advice from attorneys. So little regard is paid to the legal re- quirements that in my belief a large por- tion of the townships in the Bismarck districts, which aceording to land office plats, are fully settled, but where the lands have not passed out of first hands have,.on the average, not exceeding fifteen actual settlers each.” “The honest _settlers bemoan the con- stant evasions of the law which throw ad- joining lands into the hands of non-resi- dent speculators, hinder settlement and retard the development of the country. The bona fide sottlers want neighbors, achools, churches, bridges and the com- forts and conveniences of civilization, which he cannot have if all the lands in a townshipare held by a score of indi- viduals, the half of whom are non-resi- dents, I supposein. the Bismarck land district thero are about as many lawyers as there are real farmers. A ‘change is taking place in. public sentiment there, however, and the people generally have begun to see that what they. need is far- ‘mers.” The wealth of precious. metals which are hidden beneath the plains and foot- hills of Wyoming is always a fruitful theme for the newspapers of the fodder- land. The hope of an- undiscovered Leadville is ever before them, and they never tire of penetrating the possibilities of the future. Geologist Bailey, the Aughey of the Rockies, has just conclud- ed a laborious essay on the wealth al- ready uncovered, and. figures out the re- sult “as follows: *‘Fhe deposits. of gold | and silver from Wyoming at the various United States mints and assay offices from their organization to Decembasr 31, 1881, was: Gold, $726,681.22; silver, £11,809.29; adding the production of 1882, the total amount positively known is §748,101.17. This dees not look as if nature recognized the twenty-seventh and thirty-fourth meridians, and the forty-first and forty-fifth parallols as the boundaries of her mineral deposits. Wyoming possesses: unusually excellent facilities for mining and for thereduction of ores. Wood and water are abundant and the natural roads. excellent, and coal exists in vast beds in 'y county. We are now where Colorado - was a few years ago. A few mines well developed will to remarkable developments, —— The comptroller of the currency hus suther- ized the First National Bank at Logansport Ind., to commenco- business. on. & oupital of $230,000. A. J. Wilson, alias Harry Layton, one of the men who robbed the Lauk at Kiverton, Iowa, in 1881, and escaped, hus beea cap- tured at Ord, and xas taken ack to Iewa on Saturday. H.B.IREY &CO0., Real ;E\stfiate & \ BN 15th and Farnam Streets. - - - Omaha, Neb. Below will be found a few of our BEST and most DESTRABLE BARGAINS, all of which will undoubtedly be sold within a few weeks as they are exceptionally low and selected from our large list as being unequaled bargains, both for speculators and for those desiring & home. OMAHA CITY PROPERTY. No. B36-—Residonce property, 4 blocks from street car line; neao Hanscom Purk, house of 9 rooms, lot 60x300: 2,000 cash, balance long tiwie. 83,600, No. 47—Warehouse, 66x90, on U. P.'It; R. side track. cation in the city. 815,000. No. 4—4 lots on S. 10th street. Easy terme. Each, $300, No. 102-—House and lot. House, b rooms and basement. _Lot; 60 x140, S. 10th strect, near Charles, 8800 down, balance in 2 yenrs. 81,400, | No. 84— lots, G6x. 4,000, No. 773 houses, 2 brick and 1 frame, on'lot 56x132,! 8. 11th st., 4,900 cash, balance long time. $7,250. No. 101—One acre lot, with house of' 4 rooms, near Hans- com Park. Fasy terms. £3,700. No. 40—One acre lot and house, 4 rooms, 4 blocks, S. St. Mary's avenuo street car line. Very cheap. £3,600. Isiberal terms, No. 11—3 houses and lots, 50x140, 8. 16th st., N of railrond. This ii the best bargain for an invester ever offeretl in the city. $7,500.' No. 90—A good heuse of 5 rooms, with basement and other good improvements. Kot, 50x150. Eruit and evergreeh trees 6 years old, Nice residence property. Easy terms. $3,200. o No. 19—New house and barn. Lot, 132x148. Thisis a very de- sirable residence property, and is offered at a low price. Will ex- change for farm property. 84,500, No. 51—2 lotsin Low’s 2d addition, very cheap and on easy terms. No. 12—100aeres of improved land in Hitchcock: county, Nebraska, ranging in price from $3.50 to 810 per acre. No. 17— 640 acres of good farm land in Dawson aounty. changs for ciy property. $3.50 per acre. No. 20—Au SC:acre farm near Watson, Missouri; Atchison county. 27.00 per acre. Best'lo- 32 each, S. 10th st. Must be sold altogether. Will ex- FARM LANDS. No. 116—Farm of 184 acres, 2§ miles from Delievue, in Sarpy county, 2 houses, barn and other first class improvements, well watered, and has-several acres of timber land. $40 per acre, } cash, balance long time at 8 per cent interest. This is am extra bargain. No. 22—Tle best farm in Nebraska, 7 miles from:Omaha, contains 150 acres, 2 houses, wells, cisterns, barns and all other first class im- provements. Also orchard matured and bearing. Will exohange for city property. No. 107—Several valuable and low-priced tracks of land in Madison county. 16 g;u-mn within:from 2 to 12 wmiles of railroad, and 23 piaces of im- proved lands, near Table Rock, Nebraska, all conveniently near market, and in many instances offered at great bargains. Particulars can be obtained by writing to us, or by calling at our office. In addition to the above we have for sale hundeeds of residence lots in all parts of the city, and resideace and business proporty. Also a number of valuable farms and thousands of: acres of unim- proved lands in all parts of the state. In addition to our Real Estate business proper we rent houses and farms, pay taxes, and loan money on first class real estate »ecurity. Having an agent in nearly every town in the state, land buyers who wish to makae investments in Nebraska will findiour facilities for furnishing discriptions and location of lands, and any information of this character more satisfactory than can be vbtained’ elsewhere. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED: H. B. IREY & C(», Real Estate Agents, southwest corner 15th and Farnam streets, Omaha, Neb, STEELE, JOHNSON& CO., Wholesale Grocers ! AYD JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED G007S, :ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES. A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRAMDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & "RAND POWDER CO Booth’s ‘Oval’ Brand AND FRESH FISH AT WHOLESALE. . B BEEMER, Aeent,Omaha. Agents, is #aid to ba bound over to appear if he should again be wanted! This seemslike very funny justice. Tho ins and outs of justico at, Washington are very singular, their section, but it was manly and hon- orable, What else could they do? So far as southern snpremaoy is concerned there would be ag much objection to a Bersy and the baby have overcome |Southern man for gpeaker twenty years Sergeant Mason's hankering after notori- | henceas thero is now. Nobody protends ety. He has declined all offers from [ that slavery will be restored, No sane theatrical managors to make money out | man 18 ll!‘lid that tho confederate debt of his notoriety, or “‘as & Jumbo,” as he | Will be paid. puts it. He saya he went into the Union| The country at large will certainly army in the war, and fought against four | profit by the selection of Mr, Carlisle. uncles and twenty-two cousins, Heis|The old rings will be broken going to his home, Locust Grove, in Vir-{up, and jobbery will be thwarted. ginia, on the Blue Ridge, and to work, | The southern democrats are now on trial In regard to the offenso for which he was |and will foel the responsibility which at- | delegation can pull through that bill for | tional prohibition or nothing, wade a imprisoned, he says: “‘1f they were to|iaches to their conduct. If they mean been showered upon Tur Brk by its local cotemporaries for the enterprise it displayed in publishing the double-sheet soxteon-page Saturday edition are highly appreciated. 1 the Pacific Express company, then local express sgent. now gen passenger agent of tho Union Pacific, was the manager of the Council Blutls telegraph oftice. The DBer- kalows, now the gclwmldnuun agents of . I Pacisic, carried on a book g Tux death of Judgo Samuel Savidge :l,':“l,,,‘,',':‘,’;,‘ Facil, 8 5 ond leaves o vacancy. Mr. Hamer will now | Capt. Swobe, who is now the boss of that secure his reward—for backsliding on | part of the dummy train used for the ti-monopol! transportation of teams and vehicles, was S ORpRYs a pilot on one of the ferry-boats.” Mg, Keirer has been vindicated by a complimentary vote—but his constitucnts eano very near ldaving him at heme. The new state of Dakota is likely to —— be nursed with a bottle. Now let us see whether the Nebraska | of temperance zealots who scek constitu- WEST OF THE MISSOURD. an Omaha branch mint, was J.'W. Morse, | Thirteenth street. | The epposition | | O ! | L] T Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sc | Lumbago, Backache, Hasdalhe, 1 B AXIN. RES iatica, ch HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC iy Ceata s bottia ™ C.E.MAYNE & CO., put me in the same place again, and the | mischief and wholesale plunder, the peo- sight of sucha mug as that of Guiteau|ple will punish them when their party was to torment me like his did, I couldn't | asks for an exteusion of power in the help blazing away. It's learned thom |presidential election. The election of | said & well-known gentleman, “‘and was | forts and the doors of the union open to army officers one thing, and that is not to | Carlislo raises the issue of tariff reform, | nearly asleep when 1 was sudd ———— TOWN TALK, 1 was at church last Sunday, very insignificant showing in the vuwl against the new constitution. A stroag | {1 R lobby will soon move on Congress md‘\lfim Famam Sheet Onaha, Nebs " | stay with it till victory crowns their ef-| WHOLESALE SHIPPERS AND DEALKRS IN b y arous- | admit & bright young star to the national put brave enlisted men on gusrd over a | and the republicans can no longer remain | ed by an exhortation ef the minister to|diadem. The proposed state will be :;n'.u\‘ U Ua sneaking assassin of a president.” And |upon the fence to put off the settlement | his congregation never to walk upon any | miles long, east and west, and 210 wiles { ho gives his ideas of civil courts and |of this great question to some future day. |of the streets that were paved on Sun- | wide courts martial in this way: ‘A jugy | The republican lepders will be compelled | days. never would have sent me up. No set of | ‘o define the policy of their party. fellsws but army officers would puta|will gointo the next presidential cam-|than walk upon the asphalt pavomeat. 1|become the property of the state upon | man in prison for doing what 1 did.” The econgregation will prabably They | herenfter wado through the mud rather rth and south, 1t will contain | over 2,170 townships. Each township | possesses (40 ucrea set apart by the gen- wral government for schoal purposes, lnl ~—~AND- o for Prices. CON'ELSVILLE COKE "‘ prign with something more than mere | vionld suggest to the contractor that he [sdmission, This gives a total of 4,340 £Z°W CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES: SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands, WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES, < v