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= TAE DAILY BEE-<OMATIA SATURDAY, MARCH 1. 18, D STEELE, JOHNSUN& CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! Sy e - 0 y OPENING THE SIOUX RESERVATION. |depot accommodations at railway oross- |terror is liablo to b€eak out most any An Inportant Crisis, All obstacles to the opening of the |ings where passengers have to change :;vnu, The czar Iu;w ut‘]!vull-:yln:w;-.\.; h Brutevuor, Febraary, 1884, % ) he superior council on of Marel § sditor of T Beg: Omaha Office Sioux Indian reservation have been re-|from one road to another. Such a bill 'urcml‘“dBm‘““ of sooia list qents To the Editor of Tn Bex The period has arri*sd for mmch need- ed rudical reforms, fur the establishment waa defeated by the Nebraskn senato last year through the railroad lobby. Connell Blaffs OMcejNo. 7 Pearl Btreet, Near Broad Now York Oice, moved, and the bill will probably be The council will be comp ed of re passed somotime during the present ses- sentatives of the ruling classes. Wheth, toom 65 Tribune i o ———— this superior council will devise somo [upon a basis of justice of ¥he state’s re- ¥ & A » ey Daw o Litien .T:“ m'nm:-ta.."( :n",fl. b i o g acheme o amlioriato tho cointition of |lutions with tho railronds, as affscting the | L. B, LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwoud & Draper) Chican, ™ Ma% e T i Hag heon approved by M, Holan, who | been bufore pactismests sinos Gladstone's | bs bee. Pt lators will be wstouished at the vast ull grades of aboye; ulso pipes and entokers’ articles carried in Ons, Yoar o o Montha,......6838 | 18 L0 TPOT l{ul::lu.npprnpri.;‘innu yoseskion L4 Vis phemionbip 1 s bl : = «., [smoint of wonk to be done, and the dis- *('"'kl', el ""”Il i ““"f”,‘-"fd o ?"'l'(”;m,':'j ,-(‘)"m e For Wook, SR Oeme. 0t V0 (o i i Ations | ncoe y o Russia has taken advantage of E'a*- |eovery of such a large mass of iniquity, orders intrusted to us shall receive our carsful attention in the house. This is indeod geatifying | for the extonsion of tho franchise, which land’s weakness in the present Esyptior Satisfaction Guaranteed. [npe———— that the people of Nebraska havo foolish- nows to the people of Dakota as well as | the great liberal leader introduced in the |revolt by extenaing her boundaties i . - 5 : R to large number of people from other |house of commons with ‘a powerful | Central Asia. She has boldly pushed'[L* bome for so long & time. The ques. AGENTS 1708 BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & SRAND FOIFDER ;0 Due Yoar ) | Throe Months, 3 Pt forward and seized upon Merv, 8o that ton arises, “Are we to romain blind, | msesmsssmemm ————— S —————— ] 8ix Month 00 | One Month states who are anxious to secure home- |gpoech. This bill proposes to extend the . Solet Roiadend 4 ey i o . a, now her frontier outposta alinost touch | when abwolute danger stalks right before qeSietion Hews O pany, SolofAgents, Nowsdoal: | ypends in the Sioux reservation. That |right of suffrage to over two milions of |ypon Herat, Merv is deseribed by tray- ¢ At B5 deat; it z e —— portion which is to be thrown open to [men in the United Kingdom who have |elers asan onsis. The region round about | °®* ‘;”Yr"y"“l i ‘”';‘"’_‘;‘“"' Lb I A Gommunioations relating to News and Editorlal | sat(loment is said to be for the most part | never before enjoyed political priviloges. | i well watered and fortile and capable of | a0 ds of perils il the air] Aro wo to { matters should be addrossed to the Korror or Tw Bas svsrvrsn LTS vaiuable agricultural lands, which, under the provisionsof the bill, will be disposed The bill is warmly su the liberals and orted not only by radicals, but by the sustaining a large force, in truth a position which Russia has long coveted as an ex- remsing duu duties Is it vaen a thousand impe! us to raise the cry of alarm? THE BEST THR All Buslnoss Lotters and Romittances should be . . collent base of supplies. It can be thus . Sy 5 Skt " i< 3 adronsd to Tow o Povasva Oowraxty QuanA: | of oniy to actunl settlors, Tho settling |Scotch membors and the Parnellite fac- | seen ¥hat with an act vo enemy upon the (2" IGCH more '}“‘_’"“ et L =\ O\ ks Postoffive of o y t N N v D We 2 L C 2 r; Drafts, Chooks and Fostofioo ordors to be mude PAY | | of tho Sioux reservation will provea|tion. Its passago through the house of |immediate borders of a sullen and venge- lowest whisper which breathes intention THE BEE PUBLISHING CO0., PROPS, 8. ROSEWATER, EBditor great benefit to western Dakota and Ne- braska. Tt is to be hoped that congroes commons by an overwhelming majority is insured, but it remains to be seen ful foe, the position of the British in In- dia isnot enviable. The teeming popu- lation of that country will hail with ill- or purpose of encroachment on the public rights,and give our voice breath and utter- Willimantic Spoel Cotton is entirely the product of Home Industry, and is pronounced by ex perts to be the best sewing machire thread in the A Jt, R Managr Dy Gislation, . . Bo | wil paan the bl t an aarly day, 80 that | whother the lords oan bo indused |concoalod dalight the news of Rusian ';;“l‘:‘I“‘J:':_““j’(‘l‘:'t‘;"::fi::r"]‘;“:‘:n:e;:‘:':“ world.. FULL AS80RTMENT CONSTANTLY ON HAND, mnd sottlers can secure the land this spring. | to atill further increase the political pow- ;sf’xfl:);n&u k i:‘m:hu ”x{,‘;?..u“gn:z(r.'n:'u‘ui whole horizon with the clear and eat.like | £OF fale By HENLEY, HAYNES & VAN ARSDEL, Waex Goneral Howard returns from It the roservation is opened in the spring the result wiliin a great measuro bo due er of the massos of Groat Britain, That there will be strong opposition to the bill was forced to a step which, under the pleasanter name of *‘volunteer forces,” visien of an unhooded hawk, detecting, through all disguises, every enemy ad- mée Omaha, Neb, Earope ho will have plenty of material [to the efforts of tho deputations of |ty the torios, both in the commons and |is neithor more nor loss than the con. |VANCing in any form toward the citadel ’ for a new locture. Dakotains who havo beon in Washington | houso of lords, i a foregono conclusion, |#cription. 1t was thus that this was |of our Iibortics, 'Now it is neknowledged H EN RY I EH M AN N all winter fighting for this object. and it is safo to anticipate the most in. | ATected. g Peruars some of the Nebraska politi- cians can induce Senator Manderson to take the Russian mission, if McCrary’s place has been promised to another man, Tue seed-corn department of the Ze- publican is a sort of political weather bureau in charge of a lightning rod can- didate for the United States senate, who expects in this way to rope in the seedy granger. GoverNor Crirrenpen, of Missouri, has added to his fame by snatching a kiss from Patti, and giving her a gubernato- rial hug. Nicolini, her alteged husband, must have been out on the rear platform of the car at the time. ACCORDING to the congressional direc- tory James Laird, congressman from the | 390 acres of land, and each of his minor sons 80 acres; all damages resulting from o reavrangement of reservation bounda- ries, which shall leave an Indian’s house or other improvements on public land, Third Nebraska distriot, was a presiden- tial elector from Michigan m 1880. Peo- ple of Michigan will probably be sur- prised to learn that Mr, Laird cast their vote for president. Wirn the beginning of spriag the gen- tie Apache of Arizona, who has lived all dians, consisting of Senators Dawes, Lo- and desires for an amendment of the of the Sioux, the government hiring herd- The present Sioux reservation was formed under a treaty made in 1868, With a view of opening a large portion of it to the public, in response to an ur- gent cemand, a commission, with Gov- ernor Newlon Edmunds as chairman,was appointed to make a new treaty with the Indians. A majority of the tribes con- sented, but it was afterwards found that under the treaty of 1808, the con- sent of two-thirds of the male adult Indians had to be obtained. This was accordingly done, and last sum- mer the spocial senate committee on In- gan, and Cameron of Wiaconsin, visited the tribes and heard their complaints, proposed treaty. The revised treaty gives to each Indian will be indemnified; and 25,000 cowsand 1,000 bulls are to be the tribal property tense and bitter contest over this great reform that has been waged within the last fifty years. The extension of the franchise is, of ail the measures, regard- ed as the surest means for pacifying Ire- land and solving the Irish problem. During the last six or eight months Ireland has been more free from agrarian and polivical crime than for a long time bofore. Whether owing to the benefits excended to the tenants by the Land Act of 1881, or to the terror inspired by the Prevention of Orimes Act of 1882, or to the reaction which naturally followed upon the violent agitation which pre- vailed from the establishment of the Land league until the passing of the latter measure, or to all these causes taken to- gother, there have been singularly few murders or other outrages, and also, through the three most frequently dis- turbed provinces, singularly few conflists between the police and any kind of peo- ple, or between different factions. Novertheless the Irish problem has not become Jess menacing. , The massacre of Hicks Pasha and his brave band has been followed by what Upon the outbreak of the Afghan war the local authorities invited every Buro- pean and Eurasian, not a government employe, to join the volunteer move- ment; the services of those in its employ were ordered, not asked for. In plain words, the government desired a local white army as a garrison force in order to overawe the native population; no surer sign that the authorities were, to use a slang expreasion once in the mouth of every Anglo-Indian in a *‘blue funk.” And this ‘‘blue funk” must now be pret- ty general throughout the far away com- munity, and it may not be exaggeration to say that ere the lapse of another five years English and Russian officers will have the chance to cross their swords upon the bank of the Oxus, for the pres- ent Russian occupation has long been de- clared by English writors as naught bnt a declaration of war. Whether England will care, under the present conditions, to acceptthe gage, remains te be proven: but there is no doubt that the Russians have more plainly than ever shown their intentions of making a movement toward the conquest of British Russia, The condition of Peru, either political- ly or commercially speaking, does not im- prove., The ministers of General Igle- sias have found it necessary to hold con- ferences with the Chilean plenipotentia- ry, Senor Novoa, at Chorillos, to demon- strate the impossibility on the part of Peru of paying the 300,000 silver dollars coming on. It will be a confliet to de- termine who shall remain supreme—the railrords on the one hand or the majority of the peoplo on the other. It is a crisis of vast importance and consequence (o every freeman of Nebraska, and no man who has the welfare of his state at heart will abandon principle for the mere ac- quisition of money and the long line of favors that come free as water, through a channel I need not mention. Every day comes the news of this method or that means to be employed by the rail rouds in order to gain ascendency, 80 as v overrule the will of the people, and override the charter of their power under any contigency whatsoever. There isno question but what the people of Nebraska, who are not bound up by moss-back: theories, have long ago dis covered that the labor and struggles of ‘Tue Bee have not been in vain. It has been in the field for years; leaning to- wards the people in every instance where extortion and railroad discrimination have been concerned. Its cause is to be commended and deserves our mutual support. We only hope it will buzz with renewed energy and will shine forth with. undoubted splendor when placed on the same level with The Omaha Re publican and Lincoln Journal, in their purchased affinity towards the raiiroads as also in their: advocacy of dirty and un- clean jobs, that hope to now and then, like a thief in the dark do wrong right Wall Pape JOBBER OF EASTER® PR'CES DUPLICATED] 1118 FARNAM STREET, . C. F. GO\DDMAN, AND DEAL/'R IN OMAHA; NEBRASKA. dud Window Shades. OMAHA NEB. Wholesale Druggist! Paints Oils Varnistes and Window Glass J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER 11} ers and caring for the stock for ten years, The treaty as left by Governor Edmunds only certified land to the Indians. As ameonded by Senator Dawes, titles in fee seems to be an endless succession of dis- asters. The fall of Tokar has given El Mahdi and the rebellious Arabs and Egyptians control of almost the entire monthly to the Chilean army of occupa- tion, it having become disagreeably evi- dent that the limited resources av the command of General Iglesias were not winter on goverment rations, takes to the warpath and amuses himself by killing Then they have all the assumption and essay they are the the settlers and stealing cattle and horaes. their guilt, ones that mould the political sentiment of this state, that seek to alleviate dis- General Crook, no doubt, will have his hands full during the coming saason, It is evident that he has not yet solved the Indian problem in Arizona. Wr have been asked to suggest the name of some man who would accepta- bly serve the people of the first ward in the city council. The Ber has no advice to give on that point, but we know of no man at present who would fill the posi- tion with greater fidelity than Mr, Thrane, whote term expires in April, He is lionest, straightforward and reliable 80 far as we have been able to observe. will be granted. THE ANNUAL ASSSSMENT. The annual work of the assessors will soon begin, and the question again pre- sents itself whether our people will con- tinue to submit to the repatition to the outrageous and discriminating manner in which the assessments of property are made. It is a subject worthy to the most serious consideration, and our peo- ple should awaken to the importance of putting an end to unfair assessments. They should no longer sllow the work to go by default owing to their neglect in Soudan. - The latest advices from Khar- toum indicate that Gieneral Gordon, con- vinced of the danger of attempting to hold that important city, has determined to evacuate the place at once, owing to the rebellious spirit displayed by the re- bellious sheikhs who so warmly received him on his entrance into Khartoum, He has destroyed all the military stores and spiked all the guns which would be liable to encumber a retreat from the town, so as to prevent them from falling into the hands of the Mahdi.. The report that El Mahdi was marching toward Khartoum is confirmed. He liberated twelve mera- sufficient to carry on even his own gov- ernment organization on half pay. From Valparaiso large amounts of money have been sent up from time to time since the evacuation of Lima to provide the com- missaries of the Chilean troops with the means of covering the pay rolls, and Senor Novoa, in view of the state of the Poruvian exchequer, consented to sign tress and call back all those independent republicans, to_go to_them for. counsel and advice. Now, sir, it isa profound and perilous mistake made by many of our first citizens that they must remain adhernts and supporters of the republi- can party under all circumstauces, lest the party should lose ground and be de- feated, when a. defeat would prove the an agreement, by which, for the present, no demands would be made on the conquered republic for the stipulated sum, but at the same time constituting a Chilean lien on the Peruvian custom house at Mollendo, the port of Arequipa, from which heavy re- ceipts have been obtained by the Chilean authorities still occupying that port. 1t 18 an alleged fact that from the 23d of best possible event that could overtake the republican party in Nebraska, We must remember under our present sys- tem of primaries, conventions and the usual presence of Thurston and Greene, that our predilection and right of suf- frage has been continually misrepre- sented in their hands. We kuow that the polley of the republican party for SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LINE, STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE C: Union Pacific Depot, - ENY; PLASTER, &6 NT COMPANY. DEALERS IN FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF P. BO Y ER & CO. Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y SAEES, VAULTS, LOCKS, &. not taking a personal interest in the |bers of the Catholic mission betore leav. | October last, when Lima was handed m::l Y;;::“g;“ h':;wl:*;:'; fo';ndefl;; i matter. ing El Obeid, receiving a ransom of £2, [over to the Iglesias government, only 3 e B T e O saaoaioa Hive; yoar,aftor yoar, | 800 through the Austrian consul st Khat- | 73,000 have been pad to tho Chileans on |Rortion of our - population; a_total e e e rise and explain how it happened that a copy of the Sun, containing his dyna- mite editorials on ““Turn the rascals out” was found in a valise containing a dyna- mite machine that was to blow up Charing Crces station in the heart of London, It ian't the first time that a a piece of paper has furnished a clue to a terriblo plot. —— Tue name of Hon, James M. Tyner ia being mentioned in connection with the governorship of Dakota, after Gov- i ernor Ordway's term expires. If we remember right the Hon. James M. Tyner rotired from ofice just about the time of the star-route investigations. He retired because Postmaster James thought he was too familiar with Dorsey. Possibly, his idea of bsing transplant ed in Dakota is to go to the United States senate from Dakota when it becomes a ed as & moat welcome addition to Gen-| hibita. the gold cup from which the late BORSES,CATILE SHFER: D 098 008 state, ccuntablo reason they do not seem to | ral Graham's forces. As they are vet. | king uf 4nam drank poison by order of | _FoX TWENTY YEATS Humphreys' Homeo, i realize that property is constantly in.|erans, they will give steadinessand in- | the present regent. This is a delightful .nml‘L ry Binble IMPORTERS OF Rkl creasing in value, and that the assess. |crease of confidence to the younger sol- |littlo trinket for ths amusement of the IFopds, Mapuihojuters: "Tag Californians have been made hap- diers, populace who are outraged at Tricou's oo py at last by the house committee on for- een in the habit of exempting the property of the rich, and discriminat- ing against the poor. They have assessed city lots, owned by the wealthy, at ridic- ulously low figures, and millions of prop- erty leased by the railroads for elevators, warehouses, shops, etc , have been ex- empted under the pretense that the prop- erty is held by the railronds as right of way. Last year, after months of agita- tion, we finally succeeded in having the assessment raised about §1,600,000, but it is & matter of fact that the improve- ments of the previous year more than covered this increased assossment. We know that real estate in Omahu has gone up from 15 to 60 per cent , and in some instances more than 200 per cent., but the assessors still keep on valuing it at the old valuation of 1880 and previous years, ¥or somo unac- ment figures of ono year will not answer toum. El Mahdi’'s inaction after his victory at El Obeid is explained by the fact that, finding that the sheikhs of the principal tribes wished to go home with their spoils in order to attend to the har- vest, he proclaimed a holy truce during the months of Moharrem and Bafar, end- ing on the date of the anniversary of the birth of the prophet. That time having expired, the campaign has been resumed. Dotermined to retrieve the disasters which have overtaken the British arms General Graham and the fleet under Ad- miral Hewitt have been ordered upon an advance up the Nile toward Tokar, and o desperate engagement between these forces and Osman Digna is expected overy hour. General Graham has his forces well in hand, andis not likely % be surprised or overpowered. All the soldiers who were returning to Eogland on the troopship Jumna have volunteered their services ashore, both those whose time had already expired and the others. They have been accept- assertod in Constaati- account of the 300,000 stipulated as a monthly maintenance. The movement along the Peruvian coast, where the national flag is restored, is, financially speaking, far below the expectations entertained. The new du- ties ordered by the Iglesias government on the exportation of silver ore, sugar and wool ace considered ‘ruinous by the producers. Even in the great centres, such as Lima, Oallao and Trujillo, ordi- nary business is at a standstill, Buyers from the interior, upoa whom the whole- sale merchants depend, are either afraid to trust their persons or money on the coast or are fearful that the era of tran- quility has not yet arrived, There is absolutely nothing new irom the Franco-Chinese war. The belliger- ents seem to have gone to sleep in the vicinity of Bacninh, and nobody knows when they will awake. M. Tricou, formerly French minister to China, has arrived at Paris, and ex- statemont that the black flags put Chin- isregard of the principles embraced in the state constitution. and farthermore of public honor. No state government 1s practically safe, our property is not safe, nothing is safe in the hands of men whe are supposed to do the bidding of rail- way managers. We blush to name the crimes, .that deserve a.just rebuke at the hands of the people, for the utter de- testation the party has betrayed their wants, in such an infamous way, deliber- ately violated the sentiment it was: ex- pected to sustain, broke a plighted faith and established a precedent which is a perilous one; in Some states such ac- tion would hurl any party from power. AGRARIAN GAB SBInEYS VETEBINATS TOR TIIl; CURE OF ALL DISEASES OF J* 0. PRESCOTY IWholesale and Rotail PIANOS & ORGAN Music, Musical Instruments of all Descriptions. CEEAPEST AND MOST RELIABLE HOUSE In thhe Staio, NATL 1T BEXAM N® OUR STOOK ORISEN N. P J. 0 PRESCOTIT & CO, CURTICE, ¥ R PRICES: MAX MEYER & CO., Tt is positivel, rood to| 17 the following year. Tho assess- noplo that the Mabdi and King John of | cso in front of them in bati . “ g John of | ese in front of them in tle and massa s algnrl:fi;i.m 'l;hl. ‘;:::IS{'“ h'"'gb lw ment should be increased every [ Abyssinia have signed a convention to |cred them if they refused to fight. But| HUMPHREYS HOMEOPATHIC MED.CO, : report favorably tho bill prepared by the| o\ 1" b ohomion to the in. |the effect that King John shall remain |the regent who gave the king a eup of 209 Fulton Street, New ¥oslia AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO Pacifio coast delegation for the prevention i value of property. The uneutral, and in return shall receive a |poison and put on *the throne a stripling of Chinese immigration. The bill as originally prepared required Chinese students to have cortificates and roturn to China within ninety days after gradua- pretext that the raising of our taxes will raise the state taxes is based ona wrong impression. The laws expressly give us the right to have our state taxes port on the Red Sea and a large acces- sion of territory. The assembling of the German reich- stag within & fow days is look- infused witha desire to refain the friend- ahip of Frauce,is a great favorite in Paris, A Port au Prince dispatch says that > . '’ Vital Weakness and Pros- discretion, 1s radlieally Beon In use 2 years, m G PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING HAVANA CIGARS! CIGARS, T0BACGOS, PIPES: SHOKERS' ARTICLES CELEBRATED BRANDS: tion, and also that the United States shall | . i d - forward ith ¢ deal | President Seloman in passing through [ ifemesyinowa. pri H¥fal K i ) i S ooy ol sxpensos of tho. reburn of any |MJusted sucording to the ratio of taxa-|0p INAL [ VGo A 8 (e Sarcinia oourtmartialod scveral high | B et wom |Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roges in 7 Sizes from $8 B o whion pecwmisalon. to/land tion, For instance, if property in Dou- | ypoculation is indulged in over the course | *fficials. and had a majority of them to $120'p01‘ 1000. from any vessel was refused under the law, . These two clauses were stricken ————— Ix anawer to many inquiries it gives us much pleasure to asy, as it will give his multitude of friends in this part of the west much pleasure to hear, that the health of Hon, 8. J. Tilden has been much improved in the last two or three . weeks, ‘@ received information yester- o '1.‘1“!' which is entirely reliable, that Mr. on rides out and takes long drives as Ky ML habit, which means that he is again in his usual comfortable condition, Herald, This ofticial aunouncement from the for the last two or three sbandoned, and the be tapped to rally under the rag-tag and bob- be revived and the H icks 18 well, glas county is assessed at one third and in other countios at one-fouth or'one-sixth of its value, the state taxes will be pro- portioned accordingly. What we want and must have is uni- formn taxation, The property of the rich must be taxed just the same as the prop- erty of the poor, We tax the laboring man's bed, cook stove, and cow, but the man of wealth has his money loaned out on mortgages which are untaxed, and his elegant and costly furniture is thrown in as & more bagatelle. Reform in assoss- ment aud taxation is what the people de- mand, and the assessors should this year insugurate an honest system of assese- went, SexaTor PeNpLEroN has introduced a bill for the settlement and development of Alaska. It is very liberal to howo- steaders. Heads of families are to boal- lowed G40 acres of land, and unmarried males or females,over 21 years of age, can take up 320 acres. We do not apprehend, however, that there will be any gieat rush of homesteaders to Alaska. —— Now raey have formed a syndicato in Penusylvania that will raise the price of coke. What next ? peSe—e—— which the liberals and socialists.will pur- sue in formulaing their censure of Bis- marck for returning to the United States the Lasker resolution passed by the house of representatives, History ean scarcely furnish an exam- ample of a country completely losing lib- erty after oven 80 short a taste of it as Germany enjoyed thirty-five yesrs ago; yet practically Prince Bismanck is now a despotic autocrat who can crush whomso- over he will. He hounded poor Arnim to his grave; he has kicked cardinals and prelates off their episcopal thrones. As for the press, an editor who ventures on a comment unpalatable to the autocrat of Varain is soon behind the walls of a jail, The editor of The Volksssitung, for ex« ample, has just been consigned to one for nine months *for offenses against Prince Bismarck,” Lnsker died heartbroken, his friends say, at seeing the country he loved under despotism and his efforts all unavailog, and Benpigsen has withdrawn frow polititics in despair. of the German em peror and the Russian csar has been agreed upon for next spring. The expla- nations made by the Russian am| or regarding the concentration of troops on the froutier provinces are pronounced satiafactory, and Bismarck has counter- wanded the order to increase the forces iu the Duchy of Posen, but maintains the present garvisons at their full ‘-Lnn(th. Another moeti The condition of affairs in Ruesia does old ticket| Tur Lowa senate has passed a bill that !nnt seem to be much improved. Nihil- requires railroad companies to byild 'latio plots still continue I:nd the reign of | 3.{.:1, rostores all lost vigor; it never fails, shot, It will be remembered that last summer whew Jevemie and many of the government troops joined the rebels, and the province of Jacmel declared for Gen, Bazchias, the rule of Salomon was thought at about an end. His recent successes. have evidently embittered his aged heart, and i v always had the reputation of being a very severe wan, Pne last revolt was occasioned by his cruelties to the mulattoes. Tho pope is endeavoring through the papal nuncios to interest the European powers against the Italian goverument’s propused eonversion of the real property of the congregation of the Propaganda into Italian rentes. All the religious orders at Rome have been convoked to rnpus a statement which shall show the loes of property under the conversian, re- sulting from the conditions of a fo salo, the payment in exchange by bonds whoso interest is guaranteed by the doubtful security of the Italiaa exche- quer, and the laying of a heavy tax equa) to one-third the interest upon the pro- oceds. The poeals against the pro- coeding s robbery of the church, that is uxwdfl what it looks like. The roperty of the Propaganda has not been derived from the state, as we understand it, but by voluntary contributions from all over the world, from Americans as well as from Itahans, —— Of the many remedios betore the public f Nervous Debility and weakness of Nen {ienerative Systom, there is none equal to Al- ki, 0 for 85, At drugvists {len’s Brain Food, which promptly aud perma- | on ey s b itigation Is unauthorized Taken in Hot Water CURES AIDS CMTIVENESS, DIGESTION. — R RELIEVES REGULATES HEADACHK, THE BOWELS, NOTICE. Notioe is hereby given that tie partnership bers tofore existiug between Williaw 'F. Mainiog o Goo. H. Hess under 1he firm tame of Manving & this day dissc 1 40 kive further hat 1 will not b t4 contracted by any persc or will 1 pay” any attor wny litigation "ot any redit the lnte @ 10 carr faws us cola 10 ¢ i w Al & Hoss, and the use of ty by e WILLIAM MANNING. Omaba, Nvb, Feb, 16 N4 Fob I8 AND fHE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Brigands. e Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES, ALEL. DATILLENY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Boggies Carriaces and Suring Wagons My Bepostiory onstantly filled with a"seloct, stook. Bost Workmanablp guartnmed. Omce ractory 3, W. Corner 16th and Eopia' dvenus Gmaha Neb, M. HELLMAN & CO., Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 CQR. 13Th OMAHA, L] {