Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 3, 1884, Page 4

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R ¥ THE DAILY BEE---OMAHA MONDAY, MARCI 3, 1884, THE DELT LINE ANACONDA. ‘dinrn utable and dishonest men under | sensation, not only in Tennessee, but | out were short, and the soldiers’ horses had to 1 i Ak y 3 albipt on oatonwood limba: On Chelstmas STEELE, JOHNSON& CO The operstions of the Union Pacifi | Wy circumstances. Thero are surely | throughout the whole country. dny 1 started on horesbuck for S8, Lows %o t 9 hundreds of republicans in Nebraska| His speculations had been going on fo |ocurry a snge to the quartermaster in that whoso reputation is stainloss, and who | year or more; but so adroitly did he [ Gi3; T,iiving velomtesrad o meko Sho trip. ' are more competent and more deserving | doctor the books of his office that the | City, Missonri, the nearest point at that tunc H that Aloneo H. Churoh, committee of the legislature which exam. | ¥here I could strike a railroad. L took the g N T | tain for St. Louis, and found the quartermas- W : ined tho affairs of the treasury early in |terto whom I dolivered the message. 1he . B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwood & Draper) Chicago, Man~ MONOPOLY RULE IN CALIFORNIA. | 1882 was deceived, and reporred overy- | (uartermaster sont an order to Dr. Miller at| — ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacco Departments. "A full line of S _OVerY | Ormaha, and a German miller at Conncil 1T et Spo o ey For noarly fifteen yoars California has | thing in proper shape. The legislative | luffs to purchnss n bout load of corn and all grades of above; also il and smokers’ articles carried in = a1 THE OMAHA BE Omaha OfMce, No. 916 Farnam St, anaconda, better known as the belt road, Connoll Blnfta OMco N0, 7 Pearl |are decidedly mysterious, but they will Btreet, Near Broadway not mystify the citizens of Omaha much New York Office, Itoom 65 Teivune |y Borors the term of the Bullding. " " N : e extept Bunduyt e | Prosont clty oouncil expires the ana- e conda will swallow up several more'of ©4ly Monday morniog daily. b fotac) our public thoroughfares under the pre- i {aath i o it ready for del y fo irst boat up. stoc 2 S| 3 ) I} i 910,00 Taroe Month....... 880 | 10 oF m right of way, without paying & |been a mero province of the Central|investigating committee found that the | have it realy for deliyery for tho first hoat iy '“:rkl'wlil ! “:“"'1‘ ol fl”’"'-‘"_"“* on application. Open Weok, 25 Conts. dollar to the city or indemnifying the | Pacific railroad kings. They have ruled shortage amounted to $400,000. Polk | the boat for up the river. This was in April ders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention o " ' i i " bha Dr. Miller and his wife came on Satisfaction Guaranteed. THR WRRKLY 8K, FURLISTND TRAY WRONMOAT. | ronorty ownors along thoss atreets for |the land with an iron rod, robbed, op- | immediately went to Texas, but was [\t Oma ifo car property owner: ng ol ee! e la; i ) s OF y board and accompanied us up to Fort Pierce, o ostean, tho damagos sustainod, Tho outrago por- | pressed and taxed its poople to enrich |shortly captured and taken back to Ten- | Whon we raschod Pisrra wofonnd 6.000 Siows | ACENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & *RAND POWDER €O a0 | Ohe toents potrated upon our citizens & fow months | themselves, while they in turn have |nossee. Strong efforts were mado by | Indians, there, with Whom Coneeal Hamey | e —- Amerioan News Oompany, SoleTAgente | ago, when the council gave away Fif- @ in the Unitod States. CORRRAPONDANOR teenth and California streets by an ordi- A Oommunieations relsting to News snd Bditorlal | nance passed at midnight, and a construc- 1 VLN . e Ly v o o O tion gang set at work early Sunday morn- e fitint ing in order to get ahead of an injunction All Buslness Tettors and IRomittances should b $ 4t . i addrossed to Tria Buw Pumtisnivg Cowraxy, ouana- | from the court, is still fresh in the minds Drafts Cooks and, FoetofMoe ordors o be WO PAY | ¢ gur people. In no other city in Amor- ica would such a_ highway robbery have THE BEE PUBLISHING 00, PROPS. | ety submitiad o, but mosry ulation, P. 0. Box | all the people who own property along those streets were employes of the rail road or were in some way dependent shirked the just burdens of taxation. |himself and friends to compromise with [Tail and two or three other noted Indians, . kil ¥ cor | Who had taken part in the massacre of the Exasporated and embittered by the out the state, and although he turned over | =h0 N0 toReL Pare In Lb mossacs OF th N RY I EH MAN N ragoes to which they have boen subjscted, | all his available property to the com- | Hollow fight. The boat soon returned to St. the people of California rose in rebellion |monwealth he had plundered, and |louis. Wotook Spotted Tail and the othor JOBBER OF A " i Indian prisoners down to Fort Leavenworth. against the tyrants five years ago, and [seemed disposed to make all the|Major Howe was also a passenger, or rather ' ondeavored to omancipato themselves|restitution in his power, it was | prisoner, on the boat. To ws chirged with " having sold army rations to the Indiaus, He from the monopoly monatehs, by adopt- |decided that ho must anawer|ives abus maveisledie e Tosts e nety & now constitution, which conforrod upon | for his crimes at tho bar of justice. Ac- |tripu tho river wo louded with lumber and an elective railroad commission the power | cordingly, on the 17th of July last, after v “ n. of which it was used.” to regulate railway tariffs, and prescribe [ consuming more than a week in the selec-| | N X ! 4 ponalties against extortion and discrimi- | tion of a jury, the trial of Pelk on the L 1 LR AL et il EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED N i P . Omaha took place in 1854,” said an old-timer nation. Tho constitution was adopted |indiotment that had been found against | wiio was talking about the early days, “‘A.|1118 FARNAM STREET, i after a desperate fight, but when the|him began at Nashville. The testimony [1), Jones, who, as everybody knows, was one Tax widow of John Brown has climbed [ upon the Union Pacific company. Tak- n h D: o, o, aa everybiody keiows, was otie the golden stair, and her soul goes march- | ing advantage of the dependent condition | people thought they had come to their | throughout was strongly against the de- ‘l‘,m': Taths. v'.-‘:‘"ig'}"""",““;}:; :‘;‘;"‘:’;, wlm'l" 1 Le ing on with that of the old man. of these people the cermorants have|own, Stanford, Huntington & Co.,|fendant, and his conviction was effected | T, I,. Kimbail's residence is now loc: ,le,l\_ c. F. GOODMAN, given thera the choice to abandon their | through their henchmen and cappers, suc- | on the 25th of that month, after the jury | Frenchman named Veunseau, a big « phosdicdin ety v low, e jon of the 1 it Tt ropbiiouns fve given 1WA Dro- | homes or havo their property confiscated | cvedod in defeating tho popular will by [had beon out forty-cight hours. They | fod Jones wd ol sthor clumania. M. ones hibition. It remains to be seen whether | yndor the right-of-way appraisement. s N L3 the nomination and election of a board | fixed his sentence at twenty years in the :lntwh:rimn‘mkt‘er itl'n:r lsfimblrg:;lx‘:-::,cufi:: Wholesa'l ' the prohibitions will give Iowa to tho re-| By this is not the worst fenturo of the [of commissionors, two out of throe of | penitentiary—the full extent of tho law | & o him up Nothing suited Carm. better i publicans. anaconda scheme which the Union Pacific | whom were subservient tools of the|—and assessed a fine of $366,540.10, [and hoseon arrived. When it bacame known has set on foot under the name of the | monopolists. The result was that the|The verdict was unanimous on the first | iy Tieeve? Wit Bolug to cust the AND DEATER [N Tk republicans of Iowa are protec- | helt line railroad. For years people in iy 7 4 Central Pacific syndicate remained un-[ballot, Counsel for Polk entered a mo- ;{ml_ a big cruwnrl fnlluw(e‘ll ::im“](lm',ld 5 N : . \ tionista in everything except tho liquor | nortly Omaha have vainly potitioned the | disturbed in ita highway robberics, and | tion for a now trial on the ground of the |t s the fun. Trewn's forry bost had. to al]l S s al'ms BS afl flw lflss traflic. By enacting prohibition they [souncil to open certain streets west of | the people of California wero powerless | incompetoncy of the jury. The caso was | mako threo trips to transfer the crowd to this sido of tho river. Th crowd, headed by because under the new constitution their not called in the supreme court of the state | Reqvas, proceeded to the disputed piece of land OMAHA, NEBRASKA. logislature had no right to make prohib- |until last Wednesday, when it was|and found the Frenchmau ‘at home,’ ready to ; g Al o Reeves, of whose comi itory extortion and regulating tarifls, | postponed on account of Polk's illrcss, | feseive Heoyts, of whoso coming ho bad Boon that power being vested in the commis. | Polk frequently said that he would [men commenced fighting. Veunsoau soon 3 : v Reeves, d held him do de sion, and when the people appealed to|never go to the penitentiary, and rumors z"'l'l“l“‘m]’ it isavia BELE A ;rf‘l"";“fl'::;’;:’r; J' A' WA-KEFIELD, the courts for redress to compel the of attempted suicide were current every |man outwinded his oppenent aud finally man- WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRALER IN aged to reverse positions, 1teeves now being Central Pacific railroad to pay its taxes |now and then, l’f"‘ } hysicians state most | & top, he punistisd the Frenchman very sb. u . ] the conrts played into the hands of the | positively that his end was from natural \ura{-fi Tl“ln )l"rsi:phmT" at }Mt ps R ‘-}’N | : contest, and breaking loose from -Reeves he monopoly, to whom they felt themselves | causes. : Fil'dowA1¢0, LhB fe¥Fy oAb At {eAoADe €0 th ¢ indebted for favors. Tt is charged openly | Polk was part proprietor of large sil- | Towa sido of tho river. " Ho never camo back, y y y y ! that some of the judges were formerly | ver mines in Mexico, which, it is under. | 40d Jones took possession of the land and hold 5 it without furth tests of that char- ) i sborgs and owethl| it oo oy o' Now Yok e 5,0t o | SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LINE, CENENY, PLASTER, 4 3 g ¥ syndicate for 000. lew days | that t y ttlers, whi appointment to the influenco of Hunting- n’én TR R TR e WLGRL HroHaH e h;"‘.e';m'f\'v",j‘,ig;;"';,},‘,’,(,I;;“;; SAREOHEIE L reDe STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. ton & Lo., while others had borrowed | wealth he would thus acquire, Polk |erty, settled thewr land disputes, and got pos- | Union Pacific Depot, - : dc f valuable tracts of land. I could tell money from members of the Central Pa- | could pay to the state the amount which | iR B SRRECEREMEE Dt o S REEIEY cific ring and wero in their clu‘ches, | he had taken. settled disputesin this way in favor of its 3 Polk was about 50 years old and leaves [ members. Some other day I'll tell you some p B< , Y E = Last weok ono of theso judges rndered |, yigs 4w gonsand two daughters, Ho |of theso pleasant littlo incidenta of ur early L IR & CO.. a decision which gave the Central Pacific | was a graduate of West Point, and was |days. I know all about these old land grab- DEALERS IN over §1,000,000 in back taxes, which were | prominent on the confederate side dur- bers in Omaha.” e ’ : due to the state, and on the top of this |ing the war of the rebellion. Fighting| __«[ wax talking With Herman Kountze H ll s f d L c]‘ c the attorney-general of California entered i‘;’ gfi;:;’::'g:tfi{(i?ltlgh 1’53;;::5{;"‘ ‘v;‘h';:z the other day about real estate in this city,” a s al e aln 0 omp y into s compromise with the great monop- | th limb was amputated. Ho was brougnt | 8 vell known gentleman ¢ the Drrs 3 Y 1t | \fan About Town, “and T found him to b FIRE AND BURG. oly, which would relieve them of another | to Nushville and nursed by Mrs, Presi. | Mo Abaut fown, Vand J found bim to be LAR PROOF million of taxes. As soon as Governor |dent Polle Aftor the war ho published | said that, compared with the price of Ewo years e Bolivar Bulletin, and while editor of | ago, real estate might seem high, but not any Stoneman, whom the monopoly has never | th,+"iournal was eleoted state treasurer, | more so than tho price of two yours ago would boon ablo to corrupt or inflnencé, heard | which office ho held four yoars. seom igh, whn compared with the igures of R . H our_years ago. Ho said there had been a of this infamous compromise he issued a === R —— steady appreciation of property of 83 to 100 ’ ’ , ® A. H. Fitch, Managor Daily O 453 Omaha Neb. . OMAHA NEB, have voted freo trade in rum and bear. | Sixtoenth stroot to give them an outlet ——— to the street railroad. They were always Tar governor of Massachusetts has|i51d that the city could not afford to been asked by a man if Lo can marry his | sondemn the property, as there was no cousin without violating the law. The money in the treasury. A change has governor says that he can, if the coutin|recontly come over the spirit of is willing. their dreams. Mr. Baker, who ————— is eimply in the council as the agent of Tk month of February was rather re- | the Union Pacific, has suddenly becomo markable for its numerous chauges of | gonvinced that it'is an absolute necessity weather. Possibly it was because that| ¢ opon some of those streets, and the month had five Fridays. February will| ity council will, of course, pass an ordi- not again have five Fridays until the|nance accordingly. After the property year 1012, has been condemned by the city to open the street, and the money has been paid Tue battle of Shiloh is being fought | over to the property owners, the anacon- over again in_the columns of the Omaha | dg gang will come in with a petition to Herald. Tt is gratifying to know that | 4]low thom to extend their road through the gallant commander of this ez post | that strect, and the council, under whip Jaclo engagement wasa non-combatant | ang spur, will be log-rolled into perpe- during the war, trating another villaing by giving the belt line the right of way through THE country is safe. Pat. Hawes is|, giroet paid for by the tax coming back to Nebraska to supervite | payers and opened under false pretenses. the presidential campaign, Meantime | When once tho railroad has forced its his name will remain on the pay-roll of | way through the property, which it does the sergoant-at-arms of the United| want to pay for, it will bo very easy to sm:-. .:;m; ];? four dollars a day as | bull-doze the owners of contiguous prop- | proclamation convening the California CITY WALKS AND TALKS. Der caat durlng £he mass year, THs only brop- cler] room, ith : 3 ¢ ¥ . i S i ices wi in the folding . |erty to part with it on the terms offered | Jogislature in special ' session on the 20th | ——"I havo been reading Tnk Bee's City | °f fiflffi:’&'&l’l"’ “'Ta Denver {1;??&1?;‘,’;‘},‘.‘{{; 1020 Farnam Streot. Om akh by the highwaymen who are engaged in Keery and his motor have been left | this plot, not so much for railroad pur- out in the cold. A new motor has been [ poses as for the purpose of acqmiring discovered in Chicago which 18 to sup-|ground which they intend to lease at high plant steam, electricity and all other|rental for warehouses, elevators, coal forces of nature. Bat this is not the | yardsand factories. We are told thatthe motor which has moved the Chicago, | opening of Nicholas street will be the Burlington & Quaincy to run its trains | entering wedge by which * the Belt directly into Omaha. line conspirators propose to acquire —— lands and lots for a mere song, which Scone another one for the junior sen- | il at once become business property in ator from Nebraska, A special dispatch | their hands, The beauty of this cun- from Washington to the Chicago Zimes, | ningly-devised scheme is that all these says that Mr. Evans, of Philadelphia, a | lands taken under the right-of-way pre- nephew of Senator Manderson, has been | text are hereafter to be exempted from appointed assistant keeper of stationery | il taxes. of March, This legislature is called on | Walks and Talks,” said Charles M. Ctln}xmyer lliity per c!n; higher flinn H()mn ha, !;fli(h\lr. next fall constitutional amendments that Y 2 S Y | which is at tho rate of 81,000 per will enablo the peoplo to resume the | hcotcies of Omahaand viawsity. T can give | front foot. Tho highest price paid it Omaha, J. 0 PRESCOTT & 00., a you a sketch or two that might interest your | that I know of, was barely half of this. I power to regulate freight and passenger | readers.” “I should be happy to have you re- | believe tho Merchants’ National bank bought IWholesale and Retail i i i _|lateit. Youare one of the oid-timers hero- | the northeast corner of Farnam and Thir- fares without the intervention of a com- { Wi R0 e B, Sy ChP il ek man, | toenth, at about 8300 per front foot. As to mission, and constitutional provisions for | <-Yes, T have been in this part of the country ;mt;idn lpmpmly inl Omaha I“t_lon'? col\ix(dur i& i 4 ince 1854,” replied Mr. Connoyer, ‘‘In 1855 |high. In Denver they are selling lots, locates haid ““"“ oomailnay ".a““.o"‘ V\.thn fl.‘fl ;"\l::u ml’lplo;alt,l on thorgu\%m;:ent .wceu::xbufm' as far from the business center as Hanscom legislation convenes its first -effort will | «Gray Cloud, as a sort of assistant to the en. [ park is from the Omaha postoffice, at from l bo to take away from the licutenant gov- | gineer and also as messenger boy. I was only [ 3700 to S1,000, which is almost 50 per cent ; : aat AR Gl Tt eagbiTint more than 1 asked for the same kind of pro- - . : e i priviogo sa prosidont. of he | Earioc aeod nlt:rlfil:“;lilflnll‘: fA:h Y porty in O, Denver has tmoro woalty Music, Musical Instruments of all Descriptions. i i A O h three or fo - | men than Omaha,’ continued Mr. Kountze, ginsie ionarpoinyoommiticin iy Tio o e Ot Dliramy | "but Danvor has not fhe country biclc of 16 0 HET{'I APEST A'ND MUST RELI ABLE present lioutenant governor is a Lmb’ c};a SE""{‘d ddmgm’m );:“.h,g sttntedxiur :lni)wlfrom ll:kc“ le:m;llmtl!"”‘ n.(m:)l h;u-o zlsne‘un ual f I eliertts i s - The | to believe that the location of Omaha, the in- prwtoiited w"'p‘f;’"“f" man. L6 s | Oy o board tho, iray Cloud | orease fn her industrial employmenta, and hor In the Stats. singular that California has to fight | anq the sternwheeler ‘George W, Bird,” which | rich sulr'oundln? country guaranteo to her a OATL 42T BEXAM ®% OUR STOCK OR SEN R PRICES. the same battle which was fought|Wwas in chargo of Captain W, P, Wilcox, who much brighter future than Denver can ever S in Nebrasks, when the senate|Mief¥ards located fn Omala and went into jopelice: Mibe K oun foioyidentiyibankilion A BAD APPOINTMENT. ) the dry goods busingss with Mr. Stephens, the | Omaha, for the senate, thus displacing a son of aariing A g ich | firm being Stephens & Wilcox. Just about . Sensor Goory, of Mimisipi. Thib 8| 1 e o the Omahs Bepubiican 100k 48Y from Ason the powor whih | 53 Ll Sephn & Wik, sk S| g o ety i & departure from the established rule. | iio o 4ron Washington to his paper| Cor08 had usurped and abused. tho country, and it broke out among tho sl | gentleman, “rominds mo that Sonator Pad- Mr. Evans has not been a member of the k S—— diers. Dr. Miller, who is now tho editor of | 4ook has just made a good thing in that line. Nebrasks logislatur makes the following reference tothere-| . o ve npers proagmens, | the Herald, was then a young practicing phy- | i et ebraskx legislature. o R e N R 3 4 | sician, and he promptly responded to the sum. | SOme twvo or three years ago ho bought a tract ppointment of the notorious A. HL | o & 00 i Eaypt. and the | mons to sccompany tha expedition tup the rives | of 1and near the west fend of Farnam stroet SR T Qhuirchs e tide has turned in Egypt, and the | mons to accompany tho ex] ‘A great many of | fF 82,000, and tho other day ke sold it to Her- A 1EcTURE by General Howard, one s . i ¢ itis it Kountze for $20,000. ) hat was what I ““The appointment of the Hon, A, H. |Feverses which had ovarn.ken the British | thom were taken sick, and quite a HAaREonn{Ea s (os $A01000, I ha kil paiiL LMPORTERS OF 1 of the heroes of Gettysburg, on the his- { Church, to be register of the land_office | armyhave atlast boonrotrieved by a decis. | number died. Dr. ,hfi“‘,‘::,',,h,g‘j"‘;,‘:;‘ JDis | sy AR R A AR e e tory and incidents of that memorable [at North Platte, which will be made this fight cannot fail to be interesting to thos week, is a victory of straight republicau- At ism, and of d inst inds who, like him, fought for the preserva: | whith it d(:;u :::l;yod“': 'rlx:en:i':ma. “'fii: ive victory under the leadership of Gen. |, Yy i > gant price for it, but Mr. Kountze would A R reatly assinted in his work by his wife, who | K0 TS bought it unlows ho kmew that he Graham. A desperate and bloody battle | accompanied him on this memorable trip. We R e E’w“ At z'“:ee: carried the troops through to Fort Piorre. The | could make money by tho deal. It shows one : Civay Cioud than prossoded down the. river | thing at loast, that Lo has unbounded faith in 2 i n British f A OTAY lgne o e s 1 ro- | Omaha, and that ho thinks that real estate is B ] i e nndasion of e | B0 i ey Sudletiog et o T rops. "0 T a4+ 908 oL oo e AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO it ca i , “ el I q ] with the doaile o oneof the greciot and | Aerupulows, and they. have made s bit | Saman Dign, who had ol recenty do | s tarehoven i mosis i 2 |y tho way,di von know it s is| (JARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES & SMOKERS' ARTICLES J ok deoisixe hatklasiof dhe wae of $ha re; | °F. fight against him. No weapon has | e +o1 Bavor Pasha and captured Tokar, | EORC® Tsland is twenty-five miles below Fort | any truth in the rumor that Ezra Millard has 1) been too mean for them to use. Fora Randall, and twenty miles above Yaukton. Sy T bellion. General Howard's lecture on|time, owing to the misdirection of a let- L' ther (e poihad (hogn| baroupead the moxthanst grner o Douglon ped PEORRIETORS (OF (THEROLLOWING: The engagement is described by the war | We Iaid there all winter. After we had hean | Juree " o SO SO oM G 47 Gettysburg hasreceived the most fluttering | ter, they were like to triumph, but for- | correspondents of the London press as {:.:’1‘(?{,‘,.,2:1, Ak tho Bonea Todiass wars,iua: | Paxton the othor day of the Bi's Man About c E L E B R A T E D B R A N D S: commendation wherover it has been de. | tunately Mr. Church'y vidication full and | yery hotly contested on the part of the |ning to captura and burn the boat, kill the [ Town. *T understand that there's nothing in méflm il dalives i nctare in gomplote camo ultimafoly tohand, and | yobels, who wero armod with Remington | SO, ndstoslthosplion e, stunton | 1, Vo fho B iyt s hiceroe:| Reina Vietorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 8izes from $6 ©l or L me on onday . | rifles, and whose fortified camp was de. |asked the orew. for two velanteers to g6 to | Sainly is” said he, “and I'll give §75,000 for it, to $120 per 1000. It the appointment of *‘Honorable” | %% oamp 3 3 Pnd | Tt is 132 foet s d 1 cousider it f evening at the Baptist church, B} Ltk 4 & riodory ot ‘alesighb zo: fenttl:ez!’l(rnpfhgu;u: y:mhn;m :e‘on fiffié‘{;‘“ fl;}, {,:{a'{;;;!);;g;r; Hamavasd 3‘:‘5‘;";zfi‘:fifitfig,fi".’;&w {‘,;“3:‘:3,.,;;":‘;:1 AND {HE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: i pnbl:lninhm, 'fi‘;. re-i):o;;hla :}:ni loyal | §PU “m:‘;':' % ';;;‘:l-their‘:i::;fl: D e oo el | e, ook at the location; it 1n as near the | COMbination, Grapes, Pfiograss, Nebraska, Wyoming and republicans wil Vo rop the party. e a et five miles, | business center of tho city as any placa I know, peopl. in this country were living in| *Honorable” A, H. Church! When|!® fldr and it is safo to_ entimate | What ws ind orabiod"ahout throo miga D | and throl o oter, corner hat bns mord e dread of the awful tornado that was pre- | did this disreputable fellow become hon- '8 ril t 1 ing it.” The ty refe d to i e Gat e ot e wes| YT e, s ebe L il WE - DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES dicted by Wiggins to devastate the land ble! Wh i wounded, while the loss of the British is | afraid the Indians would get on our truil, as | Leavenworth. lthas been leased A and aweep the sea. In some sections of ::y l:Killnti:enb'n;‘y tl:l:v:;:i:ln;lml:::: roported at 24 killod and 142 wounded. | (103 o ok o 1o U B0 | Ul o ol thah s i vt the country people actually scooped out | even the ahadow of being called honor- led aacapod fron the boat, . Tho erew of the boat | the wooden shells that ¢ , and his rent Genoral Graham's vistory will havo a | heard tho report of " tho rifle, aud they, too, | hus probably nover boon loss than 5300 or caves for places of refuge in case the tor- [able? It is true that three years ago telling effect upon the followers of the [ \ore {lifii‘fififfi'hflf&i&‘f’xfli'%éh° (I)lnlndl:;:: i‘;?. STOME c{:::\‘ ""’.‘.& hu‘v}fl‘» nado should come. But Wiggins proved | Alonza H. Church was nominated for the | {815 ProP et Uatil inow By have re: | foucth 4 {“m 3 gacis upon & emp of (00| 85k st hokion of o cHoE up & Bk fo.bo falsb prophet, sud. although he|legislatars in Lincoln sounty, but.the | 59700 their groat loador s invinciblo, | 0% i hud el tho Amarican urcompany. | D it seme Butio of putkng up o ric e . 4 il e ~ was forgiven he was not entirely forgot- | disgrace which overtook him in that cam- - ten. Liko the ground hog looking after | paign sent him, aud, through him, the ~ his shadow, Mr. Wiggina comes out of |party to ignominious defeat, The ] Rl o bulding on the east half of the property i and it is mainly this provalont beliof that | cold, and. the. cthnmn: whoss boasda o fest | conjuncion with- x-Souator Baunders, who ~ his hole again to make another predic- |charge was publicly made in the press, and fully sustained by the inspired among the Arabs and savaso|Wers, badly frozen, woro actually living | 0Was & lot adjoining, but aa Senator Saunders tion. He says the United States may sworn testimony of reputable residents of on the flash of their dead. companions, | backed out for some’ reason or other, the pro- look for & storm of the most terrible des- tribes {hat inhabit the Soudan a con-|What do you thiuk of that?” “I have hoard | ject was sbandoned. It scems trango that PORTING fidence in the ultimate expulsion of all Z‘ such things before, but could lll‘ndl believe | Byers does not either sell or Luild, as he only cription on March 27th, We shall not | North Platte, that this man Church had ch things be ives ground rent from th i forelguars; What tho ladlvooh affech will | e wee e e e s, | e b ety 0. e surprised if thero is @ storm of some | paid a counterfeit ten doliar bill for his kind in March, but Wiggins can't fright- | board, which he had stolen out of a bible 3 bo upon Genoral Gordon, who is on his | Arosted somo monts vgo" on tho chargo of | proyed: and it 1s distraco t v it covared l 'R I I M e way down the Nile from Khartoum, it is 1’11&'.',’5 :1“3!:!':‘!}:‘1: ".’.‘{{‘.".flml"v‘:“:"ldt::b‘: y those old wooden shells and fire-traps. M- L N & co' ] hard to foresee. He and his small band | 1@ fact, for I saw the bodies of the dead in which it was a marker, by his room mate. The bill had been marked by Dr, Goodwill so that it should not be men, * o ] iy bo masmacrod. i rovongefo the | Eibins o e from whih i i 1 Wholesa,le Clothiers! slaughter of the rebels by the British, or | Besitanoy i acknowledgivg that they had / : ‘wictims of the powder-house explosion, | passed by mistake on an innosent party, > they may be captured and held as host- :ll:::l-flal‘g {fiifi‘v’fif*’.flmflfi‘:’cfifi}?fl agos until a truce is agreed upon, In |, Weleft tho men at the oamp, ag they were not harmonize in their verdiot, but|but it turned up in due time and made ia no doubt that there was culpable | the circuit among North Platte grooers, phce on the part of the owners of | who had received it from the keeper of any event the effect of this signal victory fm‘lfl ;‘fl‘; "‘.‘:mll {1‘: ",0.:‘ iy mv.‘.fl'..&"&f":fx{ - 0 r house, in sllowing it to re- | the boarding house on whom Church had inan unprotected condition, Every | passed it in payment for his board bill, will be felt not only in the remotest part ma‘,“"y“;’“ g'ui“‘:‘f """“‘: ::“ “"‘1’ thew OMANA. of Africa, but in England as well. Tt raached) Yort. Taekons. heving eascid’ 200 will greatly strengthen Gladstone and his A o . maln 4 lance and brought the t into i house and storehouse of explo-| It is truo that Church redoemed it, hut | 2ok of the respoct which she has lost | and put them into tho hoapital, whore thels | Tne reat Baisuio Rokiplion o Wi Easel Bu S Eamag HS flml S“m W “HS near the ity should nut only rest | ho never redeemsd himself from tho dis. % Bome and abroad, by the coatly and | [es Vers wmputated. fhele lives wero | ™ “Amerian Flne, Chnadian e Margola 00d foundation, but should bo sur- | grace. This is a sample of the character | dis8strous camoain in Kevol, of dragoous, a¢ onoe starked off for Ponos | For the Tmmediate Reliet and Pormanent Curo of Wy Bagouitony Py S0 wiih AToelan Bosd Wosxmanably guamatesd: island to reliove the ‘Giray Cloud.” Upon ar- | every for of Catarch, frow & Simylo Head Cold of | Office ractory o, W. Casner 16th and Eopita! dvanus Owmaba Neb i 15 Sy Mo i Ao Teemef A. . DALY, ul by & high and well built fence, | of the man whom the president has been 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR. 13Th cabinet, and will give them a new lease | also of the condition of aifaire at Penca lsland. WANUTACTURES OF NIND of power. It restores to Great Britain | The general Imm.:;ln.:uly sont out an. ambu: Sanford’s Radical Cu 4 . b A NOTABLE DEATH, riviog at the besi boat Py Iufluenza to the Leoss of siell, Tasto, and Hearing, ibhlocked guies. Tt ia not likaly tha induoed 1o appoint s regiater of| The widden desth of Mamball T, it by e T‘L’.’f}.?w“"'ui{'n;}:fi'. o Bt o i by, " M o ienersl o v ' (o oven metl, would clib such an|the North ~Platte laud ofioe. | Polk, the defaulting state treasurer of only * wantad * by et SF T C i Sttt o, s 8 b [SPECIAL NOTICE TO sure to burrow under the build-|The president has evidently been im- _As far as we can learn, however, | posed upon, or he would nover have ap- houses in the same lo- | pointed such a notorious rascal to a po- y» and elsewhere near the city,are in [ sition of honor and trnst. ~ On behalf of Tonnesace, is au ovent of more than |Ponles ‘:’p“l";& g SalkThar humiedly 5 A eI e e ordinary interest. Tho prominenco of|Fiuy gl vor soon o8 tho masch, il min il Growers of Live Stock and Others. the mau, the fact that he was a nephew d'(‘l'w‘l{ :J"‘“" 1‘"'9' that. The Poncas moved | i} i 7+ el 1 of ident Polk, the o e hlu“w‘: boint where their present agency 1 <., Boston. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Aftor the soldiers wrived at the ¢ ) p defalcation, his attempted escape into ‘:;‘:;"’““l' l‘:i‘m«m' Yan 80 low that the rations 3 i ;fi#xnfl‘;oll';‘mf e Norvous H aud the horrible calamity re- | the principals of the party above party | Mexico, where he was interested in silver | That was 11! 5‘;:?.:..‘}“::‘ );".dm:d ) l ‘s’:w“x' L R ou r G ro u n d ol l cake the explosion should be a | spoils, Tuz Bk respectfully calls upon | mines, his recapture and conviction serve | 20k that iu any stylo we pleased. There Fined vitn s Foroun fuasor v . » y lot of Ltali 18 THE CRY 25 conts It annibilates Pain. owners to imwediately | President Arthur to withdraw the nomi- |to make his histor sensational. | fared u itils b vy 4 the . aud they oF & italizes Woak isthe besb aud cheapest food for stock of any kind. O y decidedly K fason boans boat \ ‘and_Worn Uni o o y a0 pound I8 equal to thres pounds of corn m‘! Pprotect | nation of Alouzo H. Ohurch. Let it not| Mr. Polk’s M:lmfion became known | caught “L‘;l‘“ :lgi'zu nflu .'?.".'..?:.“‘;:&“‘3 cles, prevent Jw.wf:flnnuuflm': uu":‘;!"x?.flmmfiyfifi&mfifirfiivfn%én.A':' -u-‘-"m'vfl use fl-hi:fl!:::' : them, ng h [y yoursel X ; besaid that the administration upholds |in January, 1883, and caused a great | epring chickens 1. l:"muuhl:’s;:'y‘uoulg s Wan suy ot piss e yworid. " saig I8 weria:” Try 1 and Jadge for yeurseiven. " Price 36,00 pr (o no chacgo o baaks. s

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