Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 22, 1884, Page 4

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1 THE OMAHA BEE. Omaha Office, No, 916 Farnam St. Council Bluffs OfficejiNo. 7 Pea: Btroet, Near Broadway. PRISON REFORM IN OHIO. The convict labor oo ntract wystem, THE DAILY BE OTHER LANDS 'HAN OURS. Y et fhe 1 e A o gave ons why 1t was quite ¢ The discussions in the British cabinet [ i1 kim o acced to this propossl. - Th h The which prevails in the pr.{sons of many of { sver the Fgyptian policy and the pro- | form of the motion was one to which the gov- the atates, is fast becoming unpopulat, | nosed extension of the franchise, coupled and the day is not far distant when con- ernment could not agree. How would it stand inthe face of the country that even if they also with the illness of Premior (lad. |had arrived at the stago at which they should ‘New York Office, {Room 68 Tribune | it labor will no tonger bo allowed t | stone, have given rise to the opinion that | STomSr haw to syl the local principle, they Building. Pablished evers mworning, except Sunday' The only Menday morning dadly WA BY NATTL 10.00 | Three Montha £.00 | One Month Week, 26 Conts. Ome_Vear... Six Honena. Dratts, Chrookn and Postoffice orders to be made pay able to ke order of the company. fHE BEE PUBLISHING CO0., PROPS. 8. ROSEWATER, Editor, A. K. Fitch, Manager Dxily Circulation, . 0. Box 488 Omaha Neb Irin ovident that Bismarck has be- come converted to the Jowish croed, as ho is making sush a fuss about pork. T Towa legislature is badly demoral- ized. The house has defeated a bill for tho protection of stallions, jacks and bulls, ——— Tur annual report of the Omaha board of trade, just issued, reminds ene of Richard 1T It has come into the world half made up. T autobiography of Fred. Douglass has just been published. The reviewers of the volume, who pronounce it an in- teresting and ably written book, do not state whether Mr. Douglass says anything about his recent marringe. Rurus Haren's Yellowstone Park im- provement company has gone into the hande of a receiver. Rufus invaded Mon- tana in quest of Ja bonanza, and he has come out $80,000 short. He has found that Yellowstone geysers are not very profitable. Senator Bius, of lowa, struck the the nail on head, when, in support of his proposition to tax all church preperty devoted to private use, as residences or for business purposes, he said that “‘when Jesus of Nazareth was born he had not where to lay his head, but his puny followers on earth to-day soek to dwell in palaces and escape taxation.” Tue case of the board of education against the wholesalo liquor dealers to compel them to pay $1,000 license, the same a8 rotail dealers, has beon brought before the supreme court. The proceed- ing is by a mandamus against the city marshal to compel that oflicer to arrest the wholesalers for not complying with the high license law. (Goop business men rofuse to become candidates for the city council, and after the election they spend the rest of the year in complaining about “‘the worst council Omaha ever had.” They scem to forget that they are responsible for the lamentable condition of affairs. Let them for once turn out and take an active part in our local politics, and see what they can accoplish by a united effort. Tur Herald is glad to learn from the Brr, whose authority canuot bo ques- compote with honest labor. York, where there are confined more con- | jnevitable, victs that in any other state, the system | yor, that such a crisis will not occur. haa virtually been abolished, and now the | There are undoubtedly differences in the | tune time, and in a somewhat modified logislature of Ohio has passed a bill re- | minigtry as rogards the length to which | form, it will be accepted by the British In New the prisoners sentenced thereto shall be veated in a board of managers, to consist of five members, at least two of whom shall be practical and skilled mechanics, and not more than three members of said board shall belong to the same pelitical party, to be appointed by the governor by and with the advice and consent of the senate. After designating a routine way of doing work by the managera the law says in reference to the abolition of the con vict contract system: “The contract system of employing convicts shall not exist in any form in the Ohio penitentiary, but the prisoners shall be employed by the state and in such way as to in the least possible manner in ¢ with or aflect free labor, and the gers shall use every effort to so dis pose of all merchandise as to avoid in- jurious competition with any business of citizens of the state. All prisoners un der 22 years shall be employed at hand work exclusively for the purpose of ac- quiring a trade, Tho managers are re- quired to employ all the prisoners that are necessary in making all articles for the various state insiitutions, as far as practicable, and the institutions shall pay to the penitentiary the market prico for all of such articles furnished.” The law provides that the warden of the penitentiary shall place to the credit of each prisoner (excopt those serving life sentences) such amount ot his earn- ings as may be deemed equitable and just, but in no case shall the crédit ex- ceed 20 por cont of the prisoner's earn- ings. This fund isto be p: to the prisoner on his restoration to citizenship, but 25 per cent of the fund that has ac- crued to the benefit of the prisoner can be paid to his family if he has one. It is the intention of this law that the board of managers shall maintain such control over all prisoners committed to their custody as shall prevent them from committing crime, best secure their self- support, and accomplish their reforma- tion. A cororen convention will assemblo in Pittsburg noxt month for the purpose of discussing the question of civil rights. Mr. Fortune. the editor of the New York @lobe, a colored man's paper, serves notice upon thoe republican party that in future *‘it cannot count upon the allegi- anco of our peoplo without giving in ro- turn the measure of consideration to which we are entitled as co-equal allies.” Here is the long looked-for opportunity for the democrats to capture the colored vote. Tuere may be some people who think Omaha has a superabundanco of scoret nociotios and fraternal grips, but com- pared with San Francisco we havo only made a fair start. San Francisco is the should apply it to Irelan 4 exclusively, Tt was in | quite plain that the claim of Scotland would be as undeniable as the claim of Ireland. This is equivalent to a promise that if the resolution is introduced at an oppor- an oarly dissolution of parliament Latest advices indicate, how- The proposal was not rejected on its merits, as a radicel journal says, but on its practicability at the present The Irish members are not dissatisfied on of parlia- | With the reception which their motion met. Mr. O'Brien, an extrome Purnell- ite momber for Mallow, writing to his United lreland, says that Mr. General Graham has withdrawn his re- | (ladstone in his speech “‘conceded Mr. ward for the head of Osman Digna, and | Parnells whole caso for the separate con- b s sideration of Irish business by Irishmen.” his operations for the present will con- | {5 Sornarkable fact, and it isone of fine him to the defensive- General Gra-|the most hopeful signs of recent Irish ham'’s orders are not to operate beyond | politics, that the advocacy of this scheme a cortain district of the Red sea littoral [ Was not wholly confined to the Parnellite ¢ i membor. Mr. Russell, a prominent lib- uu]ul he can make a push for Berier and eral, seconded the resolution, which was Khartoum. moved by Mr. Molloy, a Parnellite. Mr. The, London Times in an editorial | Gibson, the leading” Trish tory, mildly points out that tho porations which have | eriticised the proposal, but did not vore A " | against it, and all the Ulster liberals who alrendy taken placo are but tho more | Wt 1 B R e ke, Englih work to be done: that | |iberal journals see ®o objection to it to Berber is open |save in afew unimportant details. Its unfinished, It |adoption would relivve parlament. Scot- lsnd, in effect, already has the ad b v vantages of such a system as that pro- alive to the necessity of keeping this posed, for thero has been a tacit undor- areat channel of trade free and open as [ standing that Scotch measures shall be allowed to pass without opposition. 3 \ith WERKLY W8, FUBLIBIND RVRRY WWOXWOAY. | quiring the abolition of the contract|(ireat Britain should goin the Soudan |liberals. 001 TSon s system and the employment of the con-}war, but not enough to cause a split. g L ] Ly =l % | victs directly for the state, the products | [ eading liberals are also confident that, | tima. b American Newn Company, Sole Agente Newsdeal. | of their labor to be disposed of among | pappen what may, Mr. Gladstone will G o In the United States. " " " A ™ N X 4 CORRRAFONDRNCR. the various state institutions. ~ The bill |jnigt upon the final d i b Sommmioitions roltag be Homs Mol B pus | conform to the promises made by both | png on the county franchise «uestion. 3 ‘nllflminuldr [ political parties during the late campaign, | {/nder instructions from the war office, | paper, i it ot 14 o |and provides that the government and ' A Burtnem Loters e eeas, quana: | control of the Ohio penitentiary and of fringe of the until the road Graham's task is still also points out that other nations are as they are, and that some other nation (¢ dently meaning France), recognizing the ! b Prince Bismarck's greatest failure is value of the Eastern Soudan, may step | his inability to restore the equilibrium of in as they step out. The details of Gen- | European politics by establishing the eral Graham's latest victory show that | basis of international confidence on which ted. Since he came to the control N 5 man aflairs, no country has felt British squares was for a time successful. | secure of peace for six months at a tiwe. The square was broken notwithstanding [ The continent has been groaning under the heavy fire of Gatling guns and long | the burden of armics whoso cost ycar o THUGIow OLithiE after year exceeds the disastera of pro- b 4 " longed but not endless war. Were this fact the British loss of only 250 men is | 4 indispensable result of any of the re- comparatively light. The fact that the [ally great achievements of his life, it Arabs roached the squares at all, how- | might be said that he could not help it. But it is not. (ireat armies are not kept y bk *'1 up because the integrity of Germany and credit on them as fighting men, and ovi- | the gafety of the empire demand them. dently calls for some revision of the re- [ They are kept up for the sako of keeging coived opinion about the powers of the | Within the empire little slices of territory breoch-loader. It waa, and we believe cut from the frontiers of Denmark and of S 7 b : France, whose people cry aloud for thyir is still the judgment of all continental | regtoration to the rule of those countriex, military critics, that the fire of the Brit- | For the sake of these petty districts, the ish line is the most effective in the :hflluulmpfi !ull)l'..»r!. '1:'11 Lo ; 3 omoralized by barrack life, its industria world, owing to the superior coolness of oWt mpgm“ Ay Ie A st tBRYGE the men. It has been generally laid |jiy people from the pursuits of peace, its down, too, of late years, that neither | people are driven in myriads from a land cavalry nor infantry can approach any | they love and are proud of. ~Those three ; load. | proviness have cost Germany more than Bodyjciftroonsfarineciwittfbrenshionslioata buy.tho feo simplo of all their ers, who are not themselves under fire. | jands; and if matters go on as at present That the Arabs should have charged with | their cost will bo great enough to cover such impetuosity, therefore, as to leave | them with broad pieces of silver. The end will come from other quarters, 3 p ¥ It may be by an uprising of the working- cortainly an extraordinary exploit, unless | mn in a socialistic revolution. 1t may the British soldier has greatly fallon off | be by a general war that the people will in tho use of the musket. He never |force as a better state than a peacearmod shot with procision at long range, but he | {0 (he teeth. ~ But whatover tho end may Lon fico which wea stwich. | D0 the great chancellor has eroctod a has always made a fire which was “with- | gructure whichis incapable of perma- ering” within three hundred yards. | nence. Ability to run rapidly on oll fours| qy, roward offered for Osman Digna’s has probably had a good deal to with | pend, though a new feature in English the Arab success, and it is a bit of drill [ warfare, is quite in harmony with tho which might perhaps be profitably intro- | customs of Turkey and Arabia, where a duced into othor armics, It would bo | contest is hardly thought to bo properly ) : ended unless the vanquished leader's very amusing at roviows, head has been carried away as a trophy. e That of Ali Pasha, the famous Arabian The spirit of Osman Digna and some |rebel of 1821, who held out so long of his fanatical adherents is far from |8g8inst the sultan at Janina in Epirus : "M | wag sot up over the principal gate of broken. Heo has roturned with as many | (5, gtantinople, with the inscription, a8 2,000 followers to the neighborhood | *“This is the head of Ali Tebellin, pasha of his former encampment. He adopts [of Jani The chief of the Yemen in- b SR ith L | surrection of 1870 71 was killed by the he same tono ereourse With M8 | murkish soldiors, and his head, salted and sewed up in & bag, was sent home by a He as- | Turkish dispatch boat. The church the charge of the Arabs on one of the ! range breech-loaders. ever, in considerable force reflects great heaps of dead just outside the square is people as before the last disaster, and is exhorting them to religious war. tioned in such a_matter, that Dr. Miller | place where secrot societios multiply and |#uros them that in tho third battle suc- | tower of Cottinje, the capital of Mon- has taken the railroads with him out of politics, We quito agree with it that 1 a “sad” state of affairs for the B flourish. Bosides tho Masons, 0dd Fel- lows, Knights of Pythias, Knights of tenegro, was hung with Turkish skulls as thickly as an apple tree with fruit till the reigning prince, Nikita Petrovitch, for- coss will bo theirs, but tho tribes are much demoralizod s they reflect upon amendment was a step towards home rule; hut | states have gone, over a question of OMAHA, SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1884 money, and, having fairly beaten their STEELE, JOHNSON& CO., enemy, they determined to pay them- selves for their trouble in the plain old way of taking a slice of their neighbor's o es e rocers territory, as_we did with Mexico, and H Germany did with France. They have consequently greatly added to_their rev-| jf B, L,OCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwood & Draper) Chicago, Man« ::.‘;,n:é '{'{‘g‘,',f,‘il‘v’;fi":f,‘fi'“{,‘:' ::::n‘,";‘ ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacco Departments. A full line of paying their debt, and enter now upon & all grades of above; also Yipes and smokers’ articles carried in stock. Prices and samples furnished on application. Open carcer which bids fair to be as marked by d h ( prosperity and success south of the equa- orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guaranteed. tor as that of the United States did a hundred years ago at the close of our iy T AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & ‘RAND POWDER CO It is, of course, & great pity that the| ———————————————————————————— war should leave the United States and this new power on the terms which now exist between them. C —— 1f people continue to suffer “‘without know- ing what ails them,” it is their own fault. All the obscure maladies are clearly set forth in the invaluabla new medical work, published this year, entitled ‘‘The Science of Life,” fully descrived in the advertisement in an. Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMES, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,{ Beltinz, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings" Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb. ' C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN camis Qs Varmishes and Window Fass OMAHA, NEBRASKA. dJ. A WAKEFIELD; WIHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN y reller an , VIGor and Maxio ouce for Ilusirated Murahall, Mich 1., 160 Falton S. H. ATWOOD, Plattsmouth, - - - - - HEREFORD AND JERSEY CATTLE ) ) ) SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Union Pacific Depot, - AND DUROC OR JKRSKY RKD BWINR & Young stook for sale. Correspondence solloftad MANHOOD RESTORED. victim of early imprudence, causing nervous debility, prematuro vain overy known rem Ble oo S ffarers: “A SHREEVES) having “tried in coverod a simplo sond FREE to Atham St.. New York Weak {SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Cround Oil Cake. It iatho best and cheapest food ror ‘stock of any kind. Gne pound ia equal to three pounds of corn stock fod with Gronnd Oil Cake 1 tho Fall ana Wintor, fnstead of rinning down, will inoreaso.in et and be 1n good marketabls couc.tion in the spring. Dairymen, a2 #oll a8 others, who use it can teetify to its merits, Try 1t and judvs for yourselves. - Price $26.00 per i< ho charge for sacks. Addross WOO"W ., LINSEED O 0OMPANY Omaha Neb waiformly suce wangnosts, new n woiate thoronghne: ~*ARSTON REMF 3Y :d "Trontise fres. JAUR S, Now Yok, DOANES Real Estate AGENCY. S. W. Cor. 156th and Dou las, Offer for sale the most desnvable lots on he market, and ean prove it. Our list embraces property in all ters of the RICHARDS & CLARKE, l W. A. CLARK®, Proprietors. Superintendne Omabha Iron Works U. P. RAILWAY, - - - 179TH & 18TH STREETS qu ik, —Omaha Herald, Honor and A. O, U, W., that city has | the full significance of their crushing de- | bado the practice. Nor must it bo for- ‘We hear it whispered that Dr. Miller | the Druids, Improved Order of Red Men, feat. gotten that there are a fow mon still liv- intends to follow in the footsteps of the |Mutual Companions, United Order of Omaha Republican and join the anti- | Hunor, Native Sons of the (iolden West, monopoly ranks, in order to increase the | Independent Order of Chosen Kriends, circulation of the Herald, Ancient Order of Forresters, and a hun- o _] dred others. Henry Warp Beecner made hi W = ol with Trah Asoriouns when ho paid | 17 8 cortainly not vory roditable to them the following, compliment in hia Ohio th{t !t has spent all the government addross on St. Patrick's day: “Whon 1 lpproprllum.l and the contributions for st e ohic anind aver A ©'Amarie the flood sufferers, and proposes to return and I peroeive how they work and toil, | 10,410 state treasury the money appro. spending the least and wearing tho least griated by thet leglalature, th'c e haring that they may sct the stream of gold to besn BY) noed 'of ks a.ndmg i Foneye fowine acrom the seas 1o father or moth: The Ohio appropriation was kept in re er. and to bring brother or sister to this serve, to be drawn on only when other ide, 1 A tafficiantlc L » | sources of supply failed. There may bs b ot suflicienily - honor ‘thom. another flood in Ohio some day, and the people of the country will not forget Ohio’s economy of its own funds and the ::: :::gl:"::"‘h:h:’ d(;u’;“ taHoLirr::lollld liberal use of the contributions of gener- LGS B AT R h: ous persons all over the United States. struct Senator Van Wyck to confirm i Alonzo H. Church as register of the Tuere is nothing like a good square North Platte land office. Would it not | meal to settle a differcnce of opinion. be a great deal more prudent for Judge |Alex. McClure gave a dinner to Hamer to leave such matters to those | Carlisle, Morrison and Watterson, and whom they concern? 1t is very singular | followed it up with a breakfast to Mr. that such an anti-monopoly republican | Randall and his friends. As a result of as Judge Hamer professes to be, should his diplomacy it is now reported that Junae Hamer seems to ‘h—nvel great ing whoso fathers could remember seeing The troubles of France in Tonquin | the skulls of executed Jacobitds molder- have a certain family resemblance to|ing under the arch of Temple Bar in the those of England in Egypt. Bacninh |caPital of Great E itaelf, was not taken until after three| The income of the czar from possess- months, and the Chinese have not ions attached to the crown and other g " | sources is enormous . The Altai estaton been beaten but have simply retir-|, 1oy cover an area of over 170,000 ed to a definite part of the Tonquinese [ square miles, being about three times olta. In a fortnight the rainy season be- | the size of England aid Wales, Tle gins and the French troops must bo [ Nertchinks estates, in Kastern Siberia, quist for six months. Thero ure, bo. |20 8b0ut 76,000 square miles. In the w5 © be | Altai eatates are situated the gold and sidos in France, the same four diflicul [ ilyor mines of Rarnaul, Paulov, Smjov ties which exist in England. A smali|and Lokptjepp, the copper foundry at enterprise has grown into a large and ap. | Sasoum and the great iron works at Gav- parontly ondloas ono. Thero is an ab. | oV, in the Salagirov district. Tho ro- =S 4 ipts fram these enormous estates are aenco of all definite return for hard fight- | §u'h ridiculous pitiful ratio to their ex- ing and large expenditure; there is a|tent. In theyear 1882 they amounted ministry with broken pledges aud a par- | to 150,000 roubles, or a little more than lisment hostile and divided. Now tho | $475,000, while for 18- the revenue was 0 b e hich estimated at leas than half this sum, or rainy season has commenced, Which | ahout 400,000 roubles. The rents, etc., means that the war operations nust rest | gave a surplus over expenses of adminis- for six months, Meanwhile the French | tration of about 1,600,000 roubles. On government will now be obliged to ask | the other hand, the workings of the for anothar credit of 85,000,000 france | ™i0%® showed a deficit of over a millions. ($5,000,000) and eventually for 100,000,- An appeal has been made by a large 000 francs (820,000,000), It will have to | number of noblomen in Russian Polsud send still more troops and vessels when thelr countrymon, enjoining thom to 8 # thall. Th practice self-denial and economy, without A rosuces oparaiions nex tail, @ War | which the greedy foreigners will soon with China has been going on for two |own their country. The Kurier Pozman- years and yot China has taken no part in | ski, published in Posen, states that the mount of land in the hands of Germans Business&Residence parts of the city proper, as well WHY MANUFACTURERS OF AND ])EALE{{S N Steam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, ReNT?(Mill and Grain :Elevator Machinery MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE ‘We will build you a house cheaper Celebrated 'Anchor Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth! than you can buy the material and STEAM PUMPS, STEAM' WATER AND GAS PIPE, L contract for the labor, and sell house 4 v and lot on BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, MONTALY PAYMENTS, ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON. No more than equal to rent. Dovt wa! travel night and day to put monopoly ?Jooluro has brought about a beiter foel- | 1 cappers into office, ing betwoen the two factions of dem-|ogm of Anamese, Chineso rebels, —— ocracy, In all probability the dinner, at [ and pirates. 1If it l:;l ukozs F'rance two O e e which Minister Sargent and Bismarck | years to overcome these odds and ends, R st in:nr:nud in good l:::hl:)‘;u will st down together, will result ina ‘"g t':ndvu‘mr lrartnh.fluit&)lo _}lwmnh, e e PR R on better feeling towards the American hog, | o aill- o} ey R, tow The opposition has been entirely | is 3,008,400 acres, while the native born own onl; gles of the Poles are, however, hopeless. They have been losing the control of their family estates year by year and the entire provinoe is rapidly slipping out of their 2,872,600 acres. The strug-|a small payment will secure a bar- of municipal affairs frightens capital, and consequently checks the investment ifitis properly served up. 8o it seems that the dinner-table is hereafter to play long will the war endure when China 9 ro;fi Possession. y takes the field! If she has spent between fifteen and twenty millions of dollars already, what will it cost her by The ratification of the peace botween of money in various enterprises that an important part in politics and diplo- > b - " k. would give employment mu;pundud.n of | macy—8 sort uf peace-maker, as it wero. g:fl’:“::::;fl‘:&m o u“;‘i:oymtx,m:‘l:: mechanics and laborers, Under a good - ’l‘imuui:‘n&t far uu: of fl:i}:py wh'an {:a city government the city’s. money is| TeulasiSpanishiconspiracy,liketheout. says (et the Daxb oxpediMon of the honestly and judiciously expendad, taxes | break of a fow months ago, springs in 5.:.1“:‘ ‘.‘:,g“ :‘5 336".'...:" Fl:t:rlu:mu.‘;?:{, are reasonable, capitalists feel safe in in- | nearly equal shares from the designs of | whose uponne.a exceed those of any their money in new buyildings, | speculators and army intrigue. A Span. |other in Europe this is protty costly bu- factories and industrial enterpkises of | ish officer has no future except in an out. | *108: all kinds, and hence mechanics and la- [break, and speculations which supply| Though the resolution of tha Irish borers have :.l‘onby of work, and money | the money which conspiracies and public mfl{“" ‘4"0“'"!' all A ::‘ilh P‘l_'lltl}““"; circulates freely. Thus it will be|adventurers need in return for early NN 10 & SOMIN 008 SoRMAVIE seen that the industrial ) chuu—t{u news of their operatious, are each year :‘,‘:mf:l:.‘ ’::ol: tle‘:{i I;‘.l:ugnj:::&d'li’: wage workers—are deeply interested in [casting a larger shadow in Europe. the British commons recently hy a vote the election of good men to the city of 160 to 40, Mr. Gladstone in opposing council. We call upon them to takean| Tur voice of Mr. Nance is heard in the | it Practically adumitted that its ‘a":fl:’l-" active paitin tho spring oloction and as-|and. He speaks through his Polk coun- | asiy b ety an ™, 8% 1o barly duy, sist in the effort to secure a city council 'ty organ in favor of the railroad commis- | He said: 8 that will give us an honest administration | sion. It scemn to us that we have heard | This fs not the time whon it Is powiblo to ~ of aflairs, which will protect the intgrests | that voice before in favor of the monopo- conslder a reconrideration or a full develop. mont of the princigle of grand commitéeos. lies, Ho did not mk: the objection that the China and Peru by the Inglesias congress took place last week, It is an eveut of more than ordinary interest, for it really marks the secure establishment of a mod- ern American state, and the downfall of a very old one, whoso history has boen filled ever since the settlement of ihe continent with romantic and picturesque incidents, The war has now produced for South Awerica what she has never before had, a0 energetio, thrifty and war-like state, RE AL capable of taking & very important part in South American affail d ready 1o 0id defiance to any other nation that in- terforos with her,” ‘Ihe Chilians werenot at the beginniug of the war & rich peo- ple; they had a large territory, scantily populated, and a considerable debt; but ey had the qualities which from the { ble abroad, They went to war in the plain matter- ‘0“.1“ way that so many other larger 0. F. DAVIS & GO Prices are steadily advancing, and gain, (=] 100000 | % Acres Farm Lands throughout the E =] o d4TI0N TTIIAO0 State. NEBRASKA LAND AGENCY . . I s / A We are prepared to furnish pl V|the erection of Flouring Mills Flouring Mill un‘mi xald eshinlates, and will contract for 1 and Grain Elevators, or for changi fremStoue to the Roller Sysw‘m. g b b d) ; u;tu-utlémfgan ) fu{;;ishing Power Plants for any pur- pose, and estimates made for same, ene in oy i DORR. AR AL M ToA e eneral machin «y repaira attended RICHARDS & CLARKE. Om-ha, Non (SUQCESSORS TO DAVIS & SNYDER ) AGeoorsi Dealers o} ESTATF 1605 FARNAN ST, .+ . OMAHA, MANUFACTUKER OF ¥INE ourct timaa R BB anly s Bmm g (ami i iest times have made states prosper- | o Bastern prios and ou easy terma e arl‘lagfls a]l nl'"l oub a0 powerfa) af home nd. forada: | sllie pma. anie: miale Do N St raxes pald n all By Bepository 3 onstanty flled with & seleot whock. Bosd Workmanebln FoanB Oftice ractcr 3 W. Corcer 16th and Cants! 8veous Qwivho Ne Mouey loaned on lmproved farms. Notas ¢ Fublic Alwave is ofios. Correspouderc !

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