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MAY 12, 1884, OMAHA DAILY BEE MONDAY e e e D e—— THE OMAHA BEE. Omaha Office, No. 010 Farnam 8t Oouncil Bluffs OMce, No. 7 Pearl Btroet, Near Broadway. New York Office, Room 65 Tribune wailding. % 5 Pablished every morning,” exoept Sundayt The only Monday morniog daily. AR KY MATL. §10.00 | Throo Months. ... ' £.00 | One_ Month Por Weok, 2 Conts. RRLY BRW, PUSLIEHAD RYARY WRDNRADAY Ons Yoar... 8ix Monns TRRNS FOLITAID, On0 Year ..........82.00 | Thres Months, Six Months. 1.00 | One Month ... " Am Nows Company, Sole Agente Nowsdeal- re In the United Statos, CORRRSPONDRNON. A Communleations relating to News and Edisorial matters should be addressad to the Koiro or Tis B FUSINRAS LRTTRRS. | tances shouldbe COMPANY, QAIIA o made pay Dratts, Chooks and Posto able to she ordor of the com) PHE BEE PUBLISHINGC0,, PROPS B, .ROBEWATER, 1Editor, A. H. Fitoh, Manager;Daily Circulation, P. 0. Box 488" Omaha, Neb. Artnvr feels confident that he will bacome his own successor. PRESIDENT GENERAL Grant is like Henry Villard, Ho is a much ruined man, with a very comfortable income, Frev, Grant says he is looking for employment. If ho is a mechanic he can find plenty of work in Omaha, Junak Apvocats General Swaim, of the army, is another striking illustration of the fact that military service reform is as much needed as civil service reform, Haviye failed to be elocted as a dele- gate to the national republican conven- tion, the resignation of Surveyor-General Atkinson, of New Mexico, is now loeked for as a matter of course. Tue Union Pacific is weeding out some of its workingmen, but it will never weed out such a necessary and pliant tool as John Quinn, He is solid with the bosses at headquarters. Ir seems that Mr. Chaffee, of Colorado, met with a set-back at the late republi- can convention “which he tried to run, but that isa comparative trifle compared to the set-back given by mon-in-law the junior Ulysses, who confidenced him out of $500,000 in the Grant & Ward bank. Winow Burier’s tea party will bo held at the Briggs house, in Chicago, to- morrow, under the auspices of a mixed crowd of admirers, who labor under all sorts of delusions, and imagine that the Widow Butler isa sort of a national liver-pad that can cure all the ills to which human flesh is heir, Some four or five years ago Mr. Blaine went into a scheme with several other capitalists, notably, with Stephen E. El. kins, of New Mexico, to convert the worthless tow-path of a Virginia canal into the road-bod of & rallroad botween GENERAL GRANT AND JAY GOULD. Now that General Grant has been financially ruined by his reckless stock- jobbing and gambling operations, Jay Gould comes promptly to his relief to make up another purse to give him anin- come upon which he can live in a style comrensurate with his great name, The 3 [ troubls with Grant has always been his great name. Before tho war he got along very well on fifty dollars a month as a | clerk in a tannery. Since he was retired from tho presidency he has boen living like a prince and spending money more lavishly than an emporor. Although ho is a ruined man, he still has an income of 815,000 a year from the $250,000, which was raised a few years ago by his admirers and placed securely boyond his reach, Fifteen thousand dollars a year ought to be enough to keep a plain Amer ican citizon and his wife, whoso children are all provided for, but it is not enouch forla man who insists on sporting in the whirlpool of Wall Street with the gambling millionaires, Itis eminently in accord with the eternal fitness of things that Jay Gould should now offer to make another princely gift to General Gran.. 1t was mainly through theconnivance of Gieneral Grant, when president, that Jay Gould was en- abled to make his first great strike for immense wealth on that memorable “Black Friday"” when thousands of per- sons wero irretrievably ruined and driven into poverty. General Grant has been a very useful man for Jay Gould on several other occasiouns, and at one time Gould declared he would give a million dollars to put Grant again into tho presidential chair, General Grant's name has enabled sould to float stock-gambling schemes of all sorts. Grant was sent down to Mox- ico in great pomp aud glory to gt sub- sididies for Jay Gould’s Mexican railroad enterprises in that country. Grant un- doubtedly has been usoful to Jay Gould in Europe among the great capitalists who regarded the name of the ex-presi- dent as the synonym of honor and reli- ability. To the American poople who have honored Gieneral Grant as no other American ever has been honared, the disgraceful scandal connected with this recent stock jobbing failure must be as shocking as the proposal of Jay Gould to raise another big purse that will put him under new obligations to play the capper for this giant monopolist. Jay Gould could could almost afford to make good the $10,000,000 out of which the creditors of Girant & Ward are said to have been duped and swindled by a gi- gantic confidence game. With General Grant as his trump card, Jay Gould could always play a winning hand in Wall streot. The spactacle of Cisneral Grant being a stool pigeon for agreat railroad gambler iy indeed humiliating to the Amorican people, WHY WEDONTARBITRATE, Tidewater and the great lakes, Charters were procured, the old canal was bought, and stocks were issued in the due course of time. It now transpires through the failure of Grant & Ward that Mr. Blaine and hls partners had secured heavy loans through this firm upon their railroad Eeollaterals, which were a sec- ond {ime pledged by Grant & Ward for mouey which thoy borrowed. This may tend to explain Gonoral Grant's re- cent reconciliation with Mr, Blaine, and Mr. Blaine’s change of mind concerning General Grant. Mr, Blaine will now have an opportunity to write an addition- al chapter to the second volume of his great work, Tue two houses of Congress have sub- ‘Why don’t you arbitrate the trouble between yourselves and the printers? What should we arbitrate and with whom? Only four or five of the men who went on a strike romain in the city, and they are acting more like hoodlums and bummers than like respeccable working men. We did offer to arbitrate, through the highest authority known to the typo- graphical union. Weo made an appeal to Mark L. Crawford, president of the tnter- national printers unton, and requested him to pass upon the claims of the striking printers, We forwarded to Mr, Crawford a complete alphabet of our type, leaving him to decide whether it was standard. Receiving no definite answer from M. Crawford we dispatched Mr, T. J, Fi morris, who is & competent printer and is stantially agreed on a bill to establish a postal telegraph, The managers of the ‘Weatern Union telegraph have substan- tialiy agroed that the postal tolegraph is not desirable. They now proposo to cir- culate petitions among their patrons re- queating mempora of congress to vote against the bill. There will be no more trouble in gotting poople to sign those petitions than there would be to get them to sign petitions to get a murderer hung or pardoned. The factis that petitions are very easy to get for almost anything, The’public sentiment in favor of cheaper telography is universal. The only ques- tion is how to getit in the speediest way. Our ideal of & postal telegraph is the ownership and control of all telegraph lines by the government. That would forozer do away with the abuses which are inherent in the present system, 1t would do away with dlscrimination, ex- tortion, stock-watering, pooling and other devices, which are now common. But congress, after a thorough discussion familiar with the question at issue, to Chicago to procure Mr. Crawford’s final decision. We have received the follow- ing telegram: Cuteao, May 10, E. RosewaTer, Omaha: Crawford refuses to entertain your appeal, claiming that the office was not sirictly union, Mr, Marder, of Mardor, Luse & Co., cos tho typo standard, and tho claiins of tho printers groundless, T, J. Frezvounis. In other words the president of the in- ternational typographical union declines to make an oflicial decision, under the pretext that the Ber oflice befre the strike was not striotly a union oftice, as both union and non-union men worked init. Mr, Crawford naturally dislikes to decide against the union printers, but he could not do otherwise if he made any decision, because it would involve several union newspaper offices now using the same typo as Tur Ber, and measuring in the same way. It would also involve tho Edinburg type foundry, which is & recognized standard in Gréat through its committecs, has reachod the | Britain and Canada, conclusion that it is not prudent to buy out the Western Union and other tele- Mr. Marder, the head of the oldest type foundry in Chioago, pronounces graph companies. It is proposed that|THE Bee's type standard and the claims the telegraph business shall be carried on, just as the mails are, by of the printers ns groundless, Mr. contract | Marder is interested in keoping Scotch awarded to the lowest responsible bid- | type out of America as it competes with der, under proper restrictions, X6 the |bis type, and if he ceuld honestly give Western Union company is willing to ac- |88 opinion against it, it would be to his copt these conditions its wires will be- | manifest interest to do so. If not, its|the trumped up claims of our printers It | Were not any better thun an attempt to come the postal telegraph, lines will not be interfered with, The trath is will simply have to compete with the |btain money under false pretonses. contractors who arewilling to carry on the business for the government and people at a stipulated rate. There will doubt- loas be enough business for both, If the postal telegraph will be taken for what they ave worth by ourcongressmen, They know that the people of this sec- tion of the couutry have not been favor- #hat will give them roliof will be appre- Mz, Joux Quiny comes forward with a letter in the ZKepublican, defending the boycotting supplement to Swoesy's the w-!'lfu Union would only wring the | handbill, and stating that it was publish- watar out of its stock, it could carry on |ed by the authority of the trades-unions. business cheaper than any rival and pay | We know Mr. Quinn to be an audacious good dividends. The petitions against |and infamous liar, If the trades-unions are concontrated in that quintessence of cunning and cheok known as Johu Quinn, then, of course, the supplement was pub- lished *'by authority”—of Quinn, This #d with cheap rates, and any measure | men is nothivg but a trickster, a sell-out, 8 go-between, He is an agitator who ‘wul stir up trouble and strikes, A i oshs L and then stand ready to sell out his Whenever the Union Pacific workingmen are stirred up, whethor over a real or imaginary griev- ance, the Union Pacific managers send for Quinn and endeavor to utilize him in their own interests and have him, if pos- sible, quiet the workingmen. For such services Quinn is well rewarded. The fellow workingmen. most of his fellow-workingmen know his treacherous character and despise him as they would any traitor. In the last Union Pacific strike John Quinn was very bold. The bosses at headquarters were just as sore over the reduction of their own salaries as the men down in the shops, The bosses did not dare to strike #o they gave John Quinn the wink, and ho was a bola leader against the capitalists. It is thet same sneak who talks about the Bre as an organ of the . & M. railroad, when he knows that it has no more to do with the B. & M. than it has with the Union Pacific. It is that same sneak, Quinn, who has sold out the workingmen at nearly every elec- tion, He is 3 nice man togo into print to uphold the villainous course of a gang of tramps, who pretend to act for the trades-unions, and commit all sorts of outrages in their name. It is because just such fellows as John Quinn thrust themselves forward as leaders that the great body of workingmen of Omaha have gone clean back on so-called work- ingmen’s ticketa in the last two elections, A FEW LIES NAILED., Tho bold and audacious attempt to make the various trades-unions of this city responsible for the villainous work that is being done by a half dozen politi- cal bummers and four or five tramp print ors does great injustice to tho masses of mechanics who belong to trades-unions. In the firat place it is a brazen lie that any trades-union, not even excepting the printers, has adopted boycotting resolu- tions against this paper. In every in- stance the cut and dried resolutions pre- pared in the office of Hand- bill Sweesy, were put through under whip and spur by a handful of men under falso protenses and without due consideration or proper notlce to the trades organization in whose namo thay wore published. Thero are scores of respectable union printers who denouncs this whole business as a shameful impo sition and contrary to old established usages of the typographical fraternity. In tho next place tho sclf appointed com- mitteo of hoycotters, have no authority whatover from any union to publish criminal libols in boycotting hand bills Who is this goneral committee! B Walsh represents the bricklayers’ union, which expelled him and published him as ascab and a fraud several times. Walsh is not only a scab bricklayer, but a notor- ious political dead beat, who, as co-part- per with John Quinn, has made a busi- noss of dealing in workingmen’s votes. Bill White represents the molders’ union, Mr. Whito has a grievance against Tur Bee: for rofusing to supporthim for mem- Boston been adopted by any other paper in America. 1t was just as outrageous as it would be for cigar makers, to demand they should count 75 cigars for 100, or a demand from brick makers to count 1000 tricks as 1198, This is why we have re- fused to yield. No honest workingman wauld us to submit to robbery. Rogues and blackguards are respectfully warned not to meddle with the business end of the Bee, expect Mzr. Jons 1. SEAMAN'S home organ at Kearney is laboring under a slight delu- sion, Mr. John D. Seaman has not been appointed receiver of the North Platte land office. A paper has been filed by Valentine and Manderson in the office of the secretary of the interior, recom. mending Seaman for the place made v cant by the death of Hon. John Taf For good and suflicient reasons the pre dent has not made the appointment, and Seuator VanWyck is not holding it. Mr. Seaman’s abuse of Senator VanWyck is is entirely uncalled for, CITY WALKS AND TALKS, ““T saw a paragraph in an eastorn paper the other day,” sald an old-timer of Omal “stating that K. Z. C. Judson, better know as Ned, Buntline, was traveling in a carriago from tho south to his northern home. member soeing Buntling, in Omaha in Jul 1869, Ho had como west in soarch of mats for his sousational stories, Buntline was adventurous character,and had been in soveral scrapes which had nearly cost him his lifo. During the war ho got into some troubl with I re- a bauk cashior’s wife in Nashvillo, and was pursued by a mob into hotel, He madc b escane by jumping from a window in tho th story. He broke his leg, however, and always lame after his recovery, Ho is the man that gave Buffalo Bill his sta ing him into nototiety through a serial story in a onsational woekly. MecPherson he met Bill there upon his retur 1 extonded campaign with tho commy Butlino, who wore al enst, attracted considerab) 1 at the post, and in w fow days wont on an Indian scout with & detachment under Bill. During the scout, which lasted several days, he ‘pumped’ Bill about his_carcer, and then returned east and wrote his alo Bill In February, 1872 Buffalo Bill went to ork on a visit,and was quite a hero in the wolis. Buntline's _story, ‘Buffalo Bill, the Kin of the Border Men," had been dra! matizod by Buntlino and Fred Maeder, and was boing played at the Bowery theatr 1l at-ended the porformance, and when it b cano known that he was in the houso his prosenco creatod qvito o sensation. He way called on for a speech and finally Tt was vory short, and he was so i could never remember exactly what he said on that occasi offerod 8300 a week to play the part of 13 Bill himself, but having no confidonco in_himself at the time lie During the summer and full of 1872, b or, ho_ rec numerous letters from Bui goupon the stage. ‘There’s money in wroto Buntlina, ‘and you will prove a big card, r character is a uovelty on the stago.” Bill finally consented, and, rosigning | his ket in tho Nebrask legislature, to whicl Tie had jnst been elected, thus acqt title of Houorable, he took with hi . B, Omohundro, otherwise kaown as Texas Jack, aud went to Chicago, where he met Buntline by appointment. Buntline rented the Am.| phitheatre for ono week at six hundred dol- lars, paying haltin advance. He then or- ganized a company. This was all done on & ‘Wedneedn_v, and .the opening per- ori ing tho J. B. by bring. | Gie! Going out, to Furc | 1Y, nodded his head, | 1A urging him to como east and |, nce was to be on the mext|> Conkling, however, who is next door neighbor to the rink, heard of the threatened invasion, and intimated that he would get out an in- junctic against the salvationists holding forth in the rink on tho ground that they would distuth the peace and quiet of the immediate neighborhood, He could stand the noise of the rink, but he thinks he couldn’t survive the racket of the Salvation Army,” “I never knew gift but seneral Grant to refuse ce,” said a prominent Omaha pol- atgo, of the Wells- ade a wager th ATRO expross nt wouldn't oumpany, the scraggi I ever saw, and labelling it w welich name, indicat. ing that it was of a rare aud valusble bree ho thippad the animal by expross, C. 0. D, to General Grant at Washir Grant, how- y refused to raceive the « he had to pay the express chu ingly sent back to Fa 1 Was ace who lost his bet. ~“That reminds me,” said another well- known citizen, Chaso once presente of dead ducks, 1t Colonel ; Champion L.t with a pair It was whilo (irant was pre- sident. Io was passing through Omoha in the night, Chase wont to the depot and entered tho prosident's car, determined to present his ducks in psrson, Grant waa in bed, Ho roceived th ducks, but ho wonldn’t receive the colonel, When Chaso was elected mayor the first time ho sent President Girant o barrel of apples, aud ho always thought afterwards that ho had made himself solid with the president He was, therefors, con- sidorably ch 1 when Grant wouldn't gat out of bad to receive him and personally thauk him for thoso dead duc eneral G ——"“Talking about dogs and General Grant reminds me,” said another Omaha man, “‘of an amusing incident that occurred in this city when General Grant returned from his teip around ¢ Tho procossion was mov- ing up Tarnam strect, and upon reaching Eloventh, the atteution of everybody was at- tracted by a fierce figrt hetweon two bull dogs, Jol. Chase, was in all his glory as master romonies, in a loud veice pompously com- manded several men to stop that fight,” Col, Will. Browne, who was a bystander, yellad ong, ‘IL 1, Colonel, let ’em fight it out; rral Grant enjoys a dog fight as well as dy.’ Grant, whose cartiage was near if to say, ‘Right you wre, William Brown, R AR AR ¥ G AR T T S R L W S JAS, H. PEABODY M, v, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, Residence, No., 1407 Jones St. Offics, No. 160 Farnam streot Office hours 12 m. to 1 p. m., an om2¢r5 v. m. e ofloa 7 Roesitenn Health is Wealth’ eIzl s NE sod specific coh prossion, Softer iy and leadioi tg, nee the Brain resulting misery, decay and arronnces, Loss of ac $1.007 b ), senit by mail propaidon rocoipt of price WE GUARANTELD SIX BOXE o cure any caso. With each o oxes, arcompanied sond tho parct fund tho me “or onr w oniy 7 lst Agents for Omaha} M night. That same day, in four hours, Buntline wrote the play, “The Scouts of the Plaing, and hud a forcaof clorks copying off the different parts for the members of the company, That eveuing they began studylog their parts and kept it up until Monday, re- hearsal being held every morning. The rehear- ber of the board of education at the re- cent election, If memory serves us cor- rectly, and wo generally have a very good memory, a person by the name of BillWhiteinformedthe editorof this paper, twoorthree years ago, thathe and others had arranged to blow up the Union Paci- 4o bridge and shops during the riot of 1877. Mr. White is either a great blow- hard and liar, or a dangeroas man, Wi, P. Marrow ropresents the plastorers’ union. He is also a political lunch fiend, who has more money for the gin-mills than ho has for his family, This man Marrow has several times solicited favors trom this office, and has never been re- fused, but now he shows his gratitude by plastering T Bee with mud and filth, The telegraph operators, are said to bo representod by omo H. Johnson, No such operator could be found in Omaha, The telegraphers have not voted | ; to boycott the Ber, The oporators have always found a staunch friend in this pa- per, and its editor is now vice-president tion of the United States, to which posi- tion he was elected by the national con- vention held in Chicago last September, Sam, Mahan, of the printer's commit- tee, is generally too full to know what he is about. Bad whisky has made him for- gotful of the substantial favors he has re- ceived from this sffice. P. Brophy, boiler-maker, H. Wiggins, E. Lundberg, tailor, and E. Aspinwall cigar-maker, who are also said to belong to the com- mittee, are personally unknown to us, They may be gentlemen, but they are in bad company, and should not allow respoctable craftsmen to be used as tools and cat’s-paws in a disreputablo and ille- gal piece of work. In conclusion we nau as a lie the charge that this paper is an enemy to organized labor, It is truo that we em- ploy non-union printers at present, but no union man has boen barred out, When the Ber advertised for non-union printors it was compelled to do so by the reckless course of the leaders of the late strike, They served motice on union printers by telegraph, tele- phono and mail to keep away from Omaha because they would not be al- lowed to work in the Bre office. Had the propriotors of this paper sent for union printers they would have come here on a fool's errand. We were com- pelled to stop publication entirely or im- port non-union printers, This paper has never stopped publication since the first day it was issucd, When the Bk was burned down in 1871 by an incendiary, it appeared in half sheet the same evening and was the first paper to publish the ac- count of the fire, Weo never have missed of the Old-Time Telographers’ associa- |} sals wore anything but successtul. Bill and Tack didn't lnow thele linca, . Howaver, ‘the curtain rose Monday avening before a crowd- od houso. Buffulo Bill, Toxas Jack, and Nod Buntline oppearcd us the stars. Financially the performance was o big succsss; artistically it was a flat failure. In tho fight with tho In- dians, howover, Bill and Jack wero at homo, They blazed away with blauk cartridges, and whilo the scene onded in & desperato hand-to- hand encounter—a general knock down and drag out—Bill and Jack laid out tho Tadian su- pers right and left, and'the sudience went wild with excitement over the gory battlo. The Chicago 7'imes, in criticising the perform- ance, said that if Buntline had actua l{ )i]vm:t ifficu four hours in writing that play, it was t0 5o what he had been doing all th The week's engagement was & fi cess, The troupe then started ¢ tour, visiting all the principal citie partiiers in th enterprise wero Ruffalo Texas Juck, Ned Bunthno, and managor Nixon, of the Chicago Amphithoatra. Tho s of ono weel in Boston amounted 000. The quartetto spent thoiv money very frecly, but nevertheless come out uhmuf)nt the end of the season, Bill's shwme amounted to 6,000, He had expacted to cloar moro than this, and would dono 9o nndor & closer’ managomont. yoar Ned Buntline and Nixon were i combination, and finally Biil and Bill, ns_overybody knows, hus tho tidal wave of prospority. Poor Jack is daad. Buntline i still alive ar I think is tn comfort (blo cireumstances. 1f it 1not been for im Butfalo Bill would p nover have boou a sho , ond oxperionco us scout and hunter would never havo brought him & fortune,” —“T was up at Charley Dewey's: house tho other day to look at his pictures and curiosi. ties which he gathered en his trip around the world,” said a gentleman to Tie Bres Man About Town, “and among other thivgs that I aro ehony ele pl At oylon, "suid he; *'while our steamer waslyiog off the port, & mile or s0 out, a lot of natives swam out_and cane on board to sell their trinkots. Tho follow who had this elophant wt first wantod fifty dollars for it, bub_just as tho stoamor began moving T offered him a ru- poo or about fifty cents, and he took it and put it in hix mouth. = The next momont ho dove into the ocaan and started for the shove with his companions, Avout half an hour befere this oue of the natives, wearing | iy only a breech clout, offered to dive into the ocean hoead foromost, from the vossel, & dis- tanco of about forty feet, for arupos, ' 1 told him I would throw it to him after ho was iu tho water. He mada the dive, and when he cama to thesueface 1 throw the silver w considerabie distance from him, Ho staried for it and made a dive, and 1n & fow minutes reappeared, holding the coin i his right Imvlul‘ ho haviog caught it ws it was slowly wabbling | o downward in the water.” T am willing to bot my pile that Jim Fell will whip Hanley,” said a well-known sportiug man, whilo speaking of the coming Fell-Hanloy mill, “Foll is o conl-miner from Rich Hull, Missourd,”svid he, “'ana is a bruiser of considerable notoriety in_thut part of the country, He fought two mills in that vicinity aud wo both of them, Ho las the reputa- tion of being a terrible slugger. wy information from & newspapsr man who wituowod ono of his fights. Kell ix no wpring chicken, and if he dossn't ‘down’ Hauley, am very much mistaken.” *“Thoy are telliug & good story about & bighly respected citizon, who is. & good church member and a gaod poker player” said a gou- tleman on the Wabash corner the other day “He waa at church last Sunday wmorning as usual, aud foll asleen. Ho was evidently droaming of some littlo game of draw, for when tho wan with the contribution box came along and nudged him, he woke up sudden start and exclainied, ‘Two par! an issue by strikes, and we nover shall, The demands of the printers were un- just and outrageous, because they were (based on downright fraud. It was a + conspiracy to compel this paper to adopt ! | & scale of type msasure, which never h.n' ——“'What are they going to do with _the roller skating rink duriog the summe?, askod & pation of that iustitation, “I give it up,” was tho reply, “but T understand that the Salyation Aray, which intends to invade Oushia this s , wanted to reat it Dr, | ADAMS’ PATENT | Reic CONDUCTOR F. RESERVOIR. A Good Article sold on Bus» iness Principles. In use upon the houses of the best men in Omaha, who unhesi- tatingly recommendit. Endorsed by reliablo scientific men in other places. Manufactured from the best copper—this metal has eight times the conductive power of iron a—having a double scroll so ar- Aranged that it conveys water from the roof to a_reservoir placed in fithe ground below the reach of rost. It is pronounced by good fl suthorities the bestrod ever brought {ilbefore the public, The Adams rod ;318 manufactured and for sale by . H. BALDVIN & MILLER, g 16 and Jackson Sts. 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