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BLAINES BOOK. The first volume of Mr. Blaine's long Omaha Office, No. 916 Farnam 8t. expoeoted book was issuad in Boston last. OCounoll Blaffs OMce, No. 7 Pearl|week. Long extracts frem it are pub; Wereet, Near Hirohdway. lished, giving the opinions of the disti guished writer on the most promiuent men and moasures of his time. These extracts are sufficient to show that the work will prove a great disappointment 1% |to tho public It had been expected that Mr. Blaine would give his own views on the important passages of Am erican history covered by his work, and ey $ [ ths mon who took pem In e, He gihmerioan Nows Comapany, Sole Agente Newsdosl | jad given evidenca of ability to express his thoughts in a fircible and telling connmsroxRNoY A Communioationa relating to News and Editoria) | upnop, It was thought that he would wse it in his book. He was well ac- matters should be addressed to the Epiror or Trw qusinted with the ovents of the time and Ban the caus He had taken a prominent stand on many of the questions of the time. It was expected that he would olucidate these things [from his stand- pomnt. On the contrary ho has written a very mild general history, in tonoe half apologetio, without force or vigor. It seems to be such a book as any well in- formed gentleman might have written, and is not much more valuable than some scores of histories that have gone before it, 8o far as the events whicn it relates are concerned, it seems to be reliable. Many of the reminiscences are no doubt quite interesting. The whole is very . . f readable, like any other well written ac- :‘uu“" b i e d T S inu{renting period. As for 1 S——— giving Mr. Blaine's own views on any Ir is not now. likely that Nebraska will | matter, it does nothing of the kind. + send any pledged delegates to the uation-| Mr. Blaine . appears in his al republican convention. book holding a vessel of tafly in one hand — while he deftly ladles out the contente Mz, Morrison i in the ring with | with strict impartality with the other. his bill, looking a trifle banged up, but|Friends and foes come in alike for an atill game, Ho saya that he will contin- [ equal share of his swectness. Kvery- ue to force it to the end, whatever it may | thing about them tarns to sugar at his be, with undiminished energy- magic touch, He praises those whom he S—— has always bitterly opposed snd adores Somx persons are troubling themselves | those whom he is known to hate. In his about the strike of the Bxe's printers|hook Grant figuren as the greatest sol- wmore than the Bes iteelf is. Tho BER is | gier of tho world, who haa richly deserv- getting alung very woll under(the ciroum- | oq the greatest rewards of his couutry- stances, and will soon have a new force | ;nen, Conkling is & noble patriot, whose ot nien, name is never mentioned without having OwiNG to the decline in Union Favific | little sugar plum of compliment thrown stook, Auditor Young han put his veto on | after it. Logan 1s a self-sacrificing hero, base ball for this season, and the Union | who has never done anything unworthy Pacific club has accordingly disbanded. |of the highest praise. Hayes is an able Mr. Young has made a serious mistake, |statesman, whoso picture done in steel a8 tho only thing that could give the Un. | plate, is worthy to stand among the effi- ion Pacific stock an upward tendency |gios tho greatest of his time. No bad would be series of brillant victories by | man has lived in the country during all its base ball club. the time treated of. No bad action has been done. Everything is pure and A."'“’ every senator who voted |yyoet and good and lovely. Even old against the bankruptey law on Mondsy, | jiy Buohanan is pictured as a good was & demoorat and a southerner. These |4, glightly different in will. OF course enlightened gentlemen opposed the act|yy. Blaine does not believe what he Las on the gl:ound.thnt it was interfering | itten. He has mot given his own with tho rights Jof states, Apparently, | o inions, but concealed them. The only there is only one kind of lhll.l which the question is, why has he so ably strived averago southean democrat in congress |, keep his own thoughts ki He DAL does mnot beliove will interfere with the ground? rights of states. That is a bill appro- — priating & good fat sum for a useless levee| Tue second congressional convention, or an impossible harbor, although electing two delegates who pre- for Blaine as the presidential nominee, adopted resolutions strongly endoraing President Arthur’s official course. The delegates are left free to support Arthur, or any available man, but they are in st ucted to labor for the adoption of a platform which shall include an anti-mo- nopoly plank, The resolutions are as follows: Pablished _evers 1o only Monday morning dail s 1Y WATL 0.00 | Throe Months . 560 | One Month, ... Ones Year.. Bix Monbs. WKLY NN, PURLISHRD NVERY WEDNWADAT, TRRMS PORTFAID, wUBOSS GaTTRRA | All Bustness Tetwors and Remittances should"be addremed bo Tia BN PUNLINUING COMPANT, QUANA- Drafts, Chooks and Postotfioe orders to be made pay ablo to the order of the corapany. THR BEE PUBLISHING C0., PROPS R ROSEWATER, Bditor. A. F. Fitch. Manager Daily Ciroulation, P. 0. Box 83 n Nab PRINTERS WANTED. At the office of Tur Omama Darny Ben competent printers can find employ- ment at the regular going wages Perm- anent situations guaranteed to competent mon-union men. Dr. Miuiee is happy now, Sammy — e Ex-INtenNar Revenue Collector Raum is anothor man on whose tender toes the Illinois republicans trod heavily. He wauted to be adelecate, but was left out in thecold. He and Emery Storrs will nurse #ore heads uutil the convention meets, when both will try to do what harm they oan to those who have disappointed them, Besides hurting their enemies as much as £ they could, the Illinois republicans seem Itualyed, iRaavga (hanchily erkiomo ¥ the ofticial course of Chester A. Arthur, €0 have had a pretty good idea of hurting | as president, because of h nd i independent action and that his conserv- ative and impartial administral raYuhliun commands our cordial appro- elected as an independent last year, says: | V2 %My observation in Washington and else- where, ?onvjnosl me that thereis a larger | 4]] honorable means to procure the adop- proportion of men who are sound on pub- | tion of a platform which will leave no lio questions in the republican than in |doubt upon m"[;lfl“fii“:) “:;‘ the “P“hfli i se | o ety is g1 0 passage of the democratio party, and there.fore. It l.npf.or{ha r':-gulnion of railroads and dne or }hs other of them must wilt, the | e].graph companies, to the end that un- republican party would be the better.” | just Oh.:;%" and discrimination shall be Mr. Lyman must be credited with having | prehibited. 5 . & large head, and the faculty of using his Resolved, That President Arthuris en- ; titled to great credit for establishing a nb“""f,m" to an_excellent purpose. praooden% showing that a republican pres- idont dare urge the necessity of suchlaws QuinNy BomaNNox, the desperado and n his message to congress. penitentiary bird who shot and killed a £ young man named Cook,in a disputo aria:| Ar [ast the **Sage of Grammeroy Fark” ing over thespoellingof the word ‘pedd] has shown his hand, has been convicted of mvrder in. the|gemocratic presidential nomination, and #irst degeae. The jury hasdono its daty, | yants it bad. In his three columy appeal end now let the governor perform his by | to the country ho rehoarses the campaign ®ecing that the death sentonoe is excout- | ¢ 1876, and dwells at great length upon ed. It was a cold-blooded and unpro- |y “wrongs wbich he claims were perpe- vokoed murder, Nevertheless we suppose | yrated upon him, He denounces the #hat the usual methods will be empliyed | iiglecioral frand,” and the “‘mothods ro- €0 securo a commutation to lifo imprison- | y,rted to by the coturning boards and ey 0 AT S S S ocarpet-baggers to reverse the popular ‘Wa should like to commend the testi: | verdiot,” and describes t:odi:::;umon?. mony of two Oalifornian congressmen, in the great crime rewarde . publio who were of the party who recently visi- | office by Mr. Hayes. The phmngu Times, #ed the sage of Greystone, to the prayer- | which publishes Mr. Titden's appeal, ful consideration of the editor of the|saya: Herald, sud the rest of the Tilden| ‘Al the signs of the times making atriki . | it clearly evident that Samuel J. Tilden pcr hace 1o the wesh. _ Thase, 000 is to be the next democratic nominee for Thia H:;‘ hmwn;,hmd °°h: ':.‘“;: pmidanti:llnmlc:o:uu of t‘l':a un‘lpnigx} of their we oug of 1876, which he was the B:‘uuipl taken as gospel by their follow partizava | figure, are being put in ciroulation once v :Iun 'l“l:'.y .:, ln. '.h: most im- IIIRDI". and old aud oft-refuted slanders on . A takabl that | Mr. Tilden are beiug re mped. Hence peradve and unmistakal . FRRGRAR, the neocessity of a true statement of the the *‘old man tremulous,” is a mere phy- | faoty relating to that campaign, and of sical wreok. When the party had been | correot history of the events following it. _ mshered into his house, he was brought —— in by attendants and passed hurriedly|, It seems very strange that after all the ‘down the line, feobly grasping the hand |flood of light that has been poured on of esch. Hespoke no word except to|the Tewksbury almshouso, that infamous whisper in the ear of one of the congress- | institution should continue to be ss bad men that he wished ho could head oft |as ever, Suoch, however, seems to be the those “tariff idiots” st Washington, | fact. A committee of the Massachusetts vanished. Heis 6o far gone |atate board of health, has been visiting ‘Then be runs constantly from | the place, and dsscribes it as full of un. an attendant. In the opinion of these | ing manne: witneases it is nonsense to talk of - nomi- | negleot of patients In tho hospital ward mating such & tottering wreok for any |are given, which rival say of the dreadful Tu viow of for this oxista fristont . It|gogue Butler used the horrors of Tewkass explpuations, Either bury as a stepping stone to the governor- fools, or the barrel;ship, vhe mismanagement of the institu- » long distance on its | tionexisted only in his robust imagination. The fact that the committee recomamend He wanta the |t the destruction of the entire institution s the best way of ocuring its rottenness, ought yto dissipate this hallucination. Tue house committee on Pacifice rail- ronds has at last decided upon the hon- o8t course to be pursued toward the aided railroads that have repudiated their bonds All of these roads are to bs required by an amendment to the Thurman act, to pay 33} per centof theirnetearnings, and make a sinking fund to liquidate the debt they owe the government. All the aidei ronds are to be included, which will take in the Kansas Pacifio, contral branch of the Union Pacific, and Rioux City & Pa cific, which were not mentioned in the Thurman act, Now let both houses makao this just proposition a law, and put an end to the outrageous imposition which these roads have practiced on the government so long. Mr, “Mike” Cregan and Mr, ‘“‘John- ny"” O'Brien, of New York, are swearing to have revenge upon President Arthur and will go to the Chicago convention to get it. These eminent gentlemen are ward strikers in the metropolis, and un- fortunately possess more power than charactor. Their particular grievance against the President is that he persisted in administering his office for the good of the country, instead of for the purticular like them. He has not thrown any loaves benefit of themselves and those and fishes to them, but, on the contrary, has shown a constant disposition to fol- low out the absurd ideas of certain vis- ionary and impracticable persons known They are therefore resolved that in their own ele- gant phraseology, they will “‘put the knife into him” if they can, by prevent- as oivil service reformers. re-nomination. A WASHINGTON SOANDAI. —— A Retired Msjor General Abandons His Family for the Charms of a Notorlous Woman, WasuineroN, April 23.—The troubles in a family occupying a high local sta- and which have been on the tion, tongue of the gossips tor some time, to-day took tangible form in the shape of a suit for divorce brought by Helen Marshall Oarroll against Samuel S. Car- roll, major general on the retired list of the United States army. « The charge is adultery with a notorious woman of this city. The petitionstates that they wers mar- ried at St. Louis, September 3, 1856, by Rov. Dr. Schuyler, boing Helon Bennett; that since the dis- covery of these offenses, for the sake (f her children, and in the hepe that he would abandon his vicious habits, she re- mained with him, but his conduct has daily been growing worse, therefore she seoks the protection of the law. The parties to the suit ure well known in military circles throughout the country, General Uarroll having reached a high rank during the war, and Mrs. Carroll being closely related to some of the moat distinguished officers in the servioce. It Was a Painter. Three orfour passengerastruck up a con- versation in a smoking car on the Balti- more & Ohio, and, of course each man had to tell a story. They were relating how badly they had ever been scared, when an old Vermont Yankee, with an elongated jaw and accent, took his turn. *Neow, I'm goin' to tellye a true story, and 80 ye needn't ask me if I manyfac- tured it out o’ the hull cloth. It was up in old Vairmont, 'bout seven year ago. 1 was a-kegpin' a sugar bush them days, eout 'bout four mule from Rutland, One night the boys left me eout in the camp all alone to mind the kittles. Guess it ware nigh moanin’ when I waked up out o’ a cat nap, and, by gosh, up ina tree, not more'n twenty feet from me, was the two shinin’ eyes of a whoppin’ big peinter. Ao’ I could see his tail a- whiskin’ reound as if he was just ready to apring at me. Wall, I was too old a camper to run from a painter, so I got eout my old gun and give him one right between the eyes. But I'll be gosh darned if he ever rred, but kept on whiskin' his tail, er oool like, I give him another in’ that would fix hum. But two eyes a-glistnin in the dark same a3 ever, Th f begun to git a leotle kind o’ skeered, but I kept on pogperin‘ him with lead, an’ dog my skin af he didn’t keep on glairin® at me, Arter Ihad wasted 'bout two shillin’s’ wath of ammanition my wder wrun out, an’ 80 I lied down by the fire, with that alr cuse's eyes a-shinin’ at me. The longer I II-Id :lun the more excited and afeared got. Aboout that time 'd a-given allthe in Valrmont to hev been at hum, But the curiousest thing was, when daylight came that air panther disap:earad so wysterious like I didn't see him move.” ‘I guess there wnen't any animal shere at all,” suggested a listener, ‘Just what the boys sald nexs day, replied the Vermonter. *‘Bat ef they'd seen thom cyes o' his'n, they wouldn's said so. Old Hea Johnson o 80 much fun of me we had a fuss about it, though we do belong to the same church duwn to Rutland. He snid he wan% afraid of no such painter, and so hestayed to the kitrles that night. But beout dark he run home a hollerin' and scresmin’—he had seen the painter, too, an' waan's laughin’ at me just then,” 8o it wae really o panther?” “Wall, no; yo see there wasa dead tree nigh the camp, an' a woodpecker had bored a pair of holes beout three inches apart into the old trunk, an' had exposed tho phosphorus. That mede the two shinin’ eyes, an’ I #'pose 8 branch wavin | Bronchi T Bed solned e sy v the boys solved the myatery ' o t through with t.h!i.r oodding of me, ut 1 didn't let on. 1 Inaisted it was a painter, 'osuse I wanted that alr gol- darned Hes Johuson to hev & shance to show hia bravery, Thon the joke was on m, an' I allowed how I 't boew skeored at all, but had put up the j.b on os, Tt made him w0 “all fired mad b won't pray at class meetin'.” e ——— A Youug Wite's Rscapade. New York Sun, her maiden name on say ‘Amen’ any more when 1 s o e P e blonde-haired young woman with a nar. sing baby in her arms, applied for lodging at Cook’s hotel, in East New York, late on Thursday night. They suid they were performers ata show given by an Indian Doctor to sell his medicines. They had intended to go to Paterson, where they resided, but it was to lato to catch the train. The man registered the party as James Morton, wife and child, and the only nneccupied room in the house was eesigned to them, On Friday Morton made arrangemants for atopping & week at the hote. tor him- and the party. About b o'clock yesterday morning Rbert Dickerson, a manufacturer ot torpedoes at 40 Jay street, entered the East Now York police station. He was in search of his daughter, he said to Sergt Cartwright. She had gone away, he added, with a performer. T thought the girl was visiting some friends in New York,” the father added, *‘until I wont home last night and found my wife had gone away too, I thought that strange, and went back to New York w find her, About two hours afterward [ saw my wife enter the Chambers street forry house. This was about 2o'clock Saturday morning . “I had got on the ferry boat with her whenI discovered that she had our davghter's #ix months old baby with her.” “‘What has become of Alice,” I asked. “‘She is at our reiatives’ in New York,’ my wife replied. Alice said the baby an- noyed her, aud asked me to take it home, saying she would be hume to-morrow.’ “Isaid to my wife,” Mr. Dickerson continued, ‘‘that unless she truly told me where my daughter was I would throw her and the biby into the river, and I would have done it, too, for we were on the front of the boat. She begsed me to do no harm, snd told me that Alice was in East New York with Harry Morton.” *‘Your daughter must be the blonde girl with the littlo baby that everybody admires at the show,” Sergt. Cartwright said, *‘She told me Morton was her hus- band. I saw her give her baby last night to an older woman, who she said was her mother, and say she would follow her to } atterson.” Mr. Dickerson and a policeman aroused Justice Sherlock, and Mr. Dickerson re- peated hia story. Justice Sherlock issued the varrant The policeman and Mr, Dickerson were admitted to the hotel, whence Morton and the young woman were taken to the police station. They were locked in separate cells. Justice Sherlock’s court-room was crowded whien the two prisoners were ar- raigned. ickerson said his daughter was but sixteen years old, and was the wife of Orrin Crowell. Mr. Orowell, he said went to Palestine, Tex.,last winter, leaving his wife in his (Mr. Dickerson's) charge. She was to have gone on to her hus- band on April 1, and when she left home it waa with the intention «f meeting him in Texas. Morton, Mr. Dickerson said, was her oousin. Justice Sherlock told Mrs. Crowell that if heshould follow the letter of the law he would sentence her to the penitentiary for six months as a disorderly person. As, however, her father asked him to be merciful, he would give her into his custody, with the understanding that if she returned to East New York she would be rearrested and imprisioned. Morton was told that he might go. Morton performed on the trapeze in tyhe Iindlnn show last night in East New ork, The case had been noised about, and bis appearance was the signal for ap- plause. > On Monday evening Miss Nellie A. Brown, of Albany, New York, gave one of her pleasing readings in the Y. M. O. A. Hall in this city. Mies Brown is an elocutionist of no mean ability and gave an entertainment of rare merit. She first appeared in full evening dress and gave a selection which at once placed her audience 1n deep sympathy with her. She then read *‘The Maniac,” ‘‘The Sioux Chief's Daughter” and ‘‘Widow Bedott,"” in full costume. Her rendition of the above selections were very fine. Her costumes are very beautiful and ex- pensive, Miss Brown is a very pleasing little lady, both on the stage and off, and is entitled to & warm reception wherever she goes. i Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The grentent medical wonder of the world, Warranted to spesdily eure Burns, Outa, Ul oers, Salt Rheum, Fever Cahoars, Plles, Ohillblains, Corns, Tetter, Ghapped hands. and all skin eruption, garanteed to eure in - {nstanoe, oy refunded. 256 te ml or money ‘cen! —— e An Unsatisfactory Contest. The final trialat the skating rink last man, but it may be said without the least disparagement to that lady that the verdict did not meet with the ap- It was the almost universal expression that Miss Canfield was justly entitled to the prize, and should the ladies meet again, there will be more of an effort made to have the voting done in a propermmnner. Allow Us To Say That & good deal of the suffering In this world can be avolded by purchasing Dr. Thomas' A clectric i, and nstng it sa per direoti ns. It is an tafalliblo care for all achos, spraine, aud palns, W.©.T. U. Notice, 80 bullt we the wall, * * For the people had a mind to work,”—Nehe- miah 4:6. The temperance wall will be built when the ‘‘people have a mind to work.” Lot us have many builders at the meeting of the W, C. T, U., in the parlor of the 1st M, E. Charch, on-Dav- enport 8., between 17th and 18th, on Thursday, April 24, at 2:30 r. u. L. G. Ouarurox, Sec’y. A Startling Discovery. My, W, Johason, of Huron, Dak., writes that his wife had been troubled with acute tia for many years, and tht all reme- dies tried gave no permanent relief, until he procured & bottle of Dr. Kwng's New Discov- ory for Gonsumption. Goughs, wud Colds wl hiad & magical ffeot, Aud produced RS JAIOY Tk el et of Thsoat, Losnge, or Bron ‘Tubes. Trial bottles Free at O, ¥, Goodwan's Deug Store. Larwe size $1,00, e ——— J. D. Dillenbeck, mansger of the braneh of tht Western Nowspaper Union at Denver,has been in this city for a few days, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Upton, of Debr it, Migh., are the gueasts of thair daughter in this dvy, Mre. Milos D, Houck, an Bherman ave- A derk-haired young msn snd [nue, P D . - SHOT IN HIS SALOON. B. Bierbach is Fired Upon in His Place of Businessand Severely Wounded in the Tuigh, Liast Night.! “‘Hold up you hands,” eaid one of two men who had entered B. Bierbach's sa- loon on Tenth and Castellar sts, Thursday night at 9 o'clock, and asked him for a cigaf. Bierbach, who had taken a box of cigars from the shelf, was horrified to see a revolver pointed at himself, On the impulse of the moment he threw the box with its contents at the stranger holding the pistol, and then ran round to the end of the bar to catch hold of his antagonist, Before he had reached the end of the counter, tho stranger fired a shot at him without effect. A second one was fired, the ball hitting Bierbach in the right thigh, and coming out just below the gromn. The wounded man then ran out night resulted in favor of Miss Ship- % proval of a majority of those present. | s | SEGER & TONER of the rear door, and the stranger and his pal by the front one, Coming aound the corner, one of the strange men seeing Bieroach, fired a third shot at him with- out effect, They then ran down the street toward the old Bellevue road and escaped in the darkness. The wounded man was placed on a bed and a surgeon sent for. Dr. Hyde arriv- od in a short time, and after examining the wound pronounced it not dangsrous, Bierbach says he never saw these men but once before, having come into hia sa- loon just a few moments previous and taken drinks, They were quite accurately de- wcribed by Bierbach, who says he could identify them in case he should see them They undoubtedly came there to rob him, but were frightened away without getting anything. SO At Saratoga. The Easter concert at Saratoga last Sunday evening was a success in every particular. It was under the auspices of the Union Sunday-school. Rev. Geo. Pelton, of the Third Congregational church, was present and made some very instructive and pleasing remarks on the subject, ‘‘Easter.” Good reci- tations were given by a number of the young ladies. 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CANNON BRO'S & CO. aper iy n_your gods honght by ome who will work for our interost and nok truvk at who hay Omething hois snxivus #o beridof. Ws will also . n to selling an /thing entrusted caretully & toloronces —Omaha Natlo .1l Bany, MoCague PLEULER & HINZ, PRACTICAL Carpenters and Builders Address 1214 South 13th Street, DREXEL & MAUL, (BUCOESSORS IO JOHN G. JACOES) UNDERTAKERS ! # the old atand 1417 ¥arnam strees. Ordors by tels #1apb sollalted ana prumptly att: tod 0. H, K. BURKET FUNERKL DIRECTOR AND ENBALME 11 North 10th Steeet Omada MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN HARNESS, SADDLES WuiPs, Ero. Wo makeaver; fmo 11/ harnos, and have al- ways on hasd & full hns of Horwe Ulothing, Curry i Combs, b, {¥0, 116 N, 161 8L - - Omata Ne C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints 0ils Varnishes and Window Glas OMAHA NEBRASKA , I DOSTIQeIS RIAGE FACTORY 1409 and 1411 Dodge St.. { s OMAHA, NEB A. HE. DATI.EBY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Gugoies Carriaoes and Spring Wagows ®v Rovoritor isonmently filled with.s sslech siook, Best Workmanship gusmntcod, Office and Factory S, W. Cor. 16th and Capitel Avenue, Omaha,MNeb. OMAHA NATIONAL BANK U. S. DEPOSITORY. J. H. MILLARD, President. WM. WALLACE Cashier. Capital and Surplus, $450.000. OMAHA SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTSI Fire ar.d Burglar Proof Bafes for Rent at from 86 to $50 per sannum. G. H WoOD & Co, BUCCESSORS TO WESTERN STRAM HEATING CO., PLUMBERS, SBTEAM AND GAS FITTERS, 216 North 16th Btreet, bet. Capltol Ave, and OMAHA NEB Da-epport Street. Telophone No, 495,