Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 1, 1885, Page 4

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THE DAILY BEE. @uana Orvien Mo, 014 axp 918 Fannax Ba. | & ¥ww Yorx on::. Roou 6 Tamows Bomo- | which Is as full THE SPONTANEOUS OANDIDATE. | 000 a year, snd here there Is conse- Mr. Boyd delivered himself of aquently compulsor v militery service, speech to the demoeratic comvention |together with & burdensome taxation? 1 of egotism as an egg is of | Bismarck's tron rule l;ll been opposed meat. Mr, Boyd takes credit to himself | to the advancement of Mberal ideas and “".atw‘n MOSSBICKS. forr the_Soudan missfon, the alsion to Paris, to Patagonia and—" ‘‘What Pat. A, Goner! I don't know ~‘ e Quakifications of Southern Offce: | .o msypmnaerstood. 1ead Pat movement so far has not In any way been commended or endorsed by other natiors. On the contrary it has gener. ally been consideredas an andaclons ple of Impudence on the part of Fres — R i onis, ey’ k ie oments and en- | inatitutions, and his grievous military |Should she conelude to ar i anloe connte o 4 mrmmmhmmy‘r :::‘p‘:‘ll:: :hvl‘:blln:’n: :l'p:: 'bem undertaken | system has naturally interfersd with In.|tlnue the war she wil on- hnm“‘s S"I ann m nfllal]' 8outh pole, l\k"B P‘fl:;{fli‘h::‘.t “:".(fin:i‘l'; Your o000 | Fires Months 28 | iy Omahs, Without him we would have | dustrlal progress and domestic happiness. [plunge herself frretrievably « only : 4 lcu'::“'“ . dTl:‘" ':“"' ':; "h’u‘nfl Is- Lok Lot bl d;u;.:. had no water works,no sewerage,no pave- | Instead of elevating the people and light |and very likely lose thousand tn debt,| The Union Flag Flying at Half|\ico: S0 Ritie 10, 8% fnere the Oam: The Weakly Bes, Publihned every W 7 |ments, no stosk yards, no smelting |ening their burdens he has really op-|ands of her best soldlors, 4 upon thous- Mast for a Rebel Brigadier, “Cam'rons, Osm’rons,’ 1 tho't they THRMS, PORTTAID. oar, with premium Do Your, witnous Months, withoul Month, on brial works, and no first-class hotels, ~ While pressed them for the sole purpos wo concede that Mr, Boyd has done his | gratifying aristocratic and Imperial share, and porhaps more than his share, | bitions, and hence 1t is that there Is SR 00 'lll " " conas o8 inieations relating to it hoold be addresed ¥ B should be Al Bustnom Letters and Remittances rossed Y0 Tin Ban PUBLIsHING COMPAXT, OMARA. o s ad PR oMos orders o be made PAT: , Ohecks #ble 40 the order of the eompany. THE BEE PUBLISHING CO, Props. B ROSEWATER, anl l.‘d.w:g:' unn:(er ee.ul' Ciroulation, to clalm credlt for everything, Thls at- |spread of soclallsm and anarchism. tempt togverrate his own publle enter- prise is, however, ona par with the [and the people ara tired of it. to accept” the democratlo nomination. |can at the most bo only a few years He tells the peopls of Omaha|tant, there will comea change tor tRat he consented to become mayor for a|better in their condition. second tline, although it is well known — Tue threo B's have parted company. | that he has all slong refused to be a can- —— didate tor the position, He has consent- Tre spontaneous candidate slopy over |ed, not because he seeks political prefer- ment, but becanee called upon by & ma- jorlty of the electors he cannot well offord to rafuse to serve them, Now, Inasmuch| o iqe of the cabinet, ho hr goat of the doublo-barrelled ring, a8 1t has been an open secret for the Iast |\t 1y the antediluvisns e— three months that Mr. Boyd wanted to |, o demosracy, ‘out br.’ Grover Cueverasn ls bringing the | 1o magor for a sesond time this attempt confederato brigadicrs to the front)in{ts make the people of Omaha 1,,]‘“,,-, that pretty rapid suscession, thie candidacy was forced upon him s, E———————— to say the lemt, decidedly Iogenious. Mr. Buck will be unanimously elected. | Haying set the machinery in motion Ho is the only citizons’ candidate wko is | thrqugh his intimate friends for the spon. eure of an cleoiion. taneous outburst of cllizens, Mr. Bogd e now flatters himself with being the “‘¥,pon- BARNEY SHANNON was given w0 8hoW | tanooms” choice. of & majority of the by the high-toned dudes who ran the | glectors. One would almost suppo'se thats.n democratlo convention. clection was unnecessary. The only obiect ST of holding an electlon, according to Mr. Tex Ohloago News calls ex-Oongress- | Boyd, {s merely to make the choloe. legal den'l: ;:.“" ected from the man Roswell G. Horr the blighted feg- | and unanimous. y gra dy of. hom of the Michigan peach distrlct, At the last election nearly elg'at thou- PORSH e——————— sand’ votes were ¢sst In Om Aba, and ‘We liave have been warned not (o put | more than ten thowsand names; were rog- #he letter B In ouz politioal alphabet dur- | {stered. Mr. Boyd assumes t'hat he has ng this campalgn because it stamds for | heen called by a majority of. the voters. ““‘bayonets.” Where is the proof? It hius beem glven = ont that three thousand v sters had slgned Tare Herald says that ‘‘Omalm cannot | 5 petition requesting }im to become afford to perpetuate ring rulers.” This mayor. Wo venture to way that there is the reason why that Omaha will nottare not two thousand. names on that The appolntments of Grover Cleve conlinue to create surprise, not among the democrats but among h, Yoo muc! ple generally, In selectlog his S——————— Jim STEPHENSON (has e & sape- 4 pk of [thy ing the fact that t'ag sgo v ¢ Al Thor nan was virgedasa br ;o ‘Uleveland } ,as selected m yn of still most 1o,portant positl )ns, It woul forty and fifty years sgo have be most of the ve time the confederate brigadiers forgotten. The minister to Rus: placa powe:, pitronage andrprestige in{paper, and probably wmot more the handa o the Bogd-Mller Hug. ;b“ m::? ,hnl':d"‘d‘ We bllnndyf althongh educated at West Point, be- - [0¥; SIUREAD O L a trayed his couniry, and became a Taw ‘Pimes-Digoatch has suddenly |republicans were humbugged into Nobody' hardly lever dlscovered that Mz, Boyd is the right |sigalog that paper wador falso pretonsss | C™htS, Prigadler: man in‘the right place. Mr. Boyd has |and the names of many of them were probably subecribed for £ame stock, but [slgned to the pe'itthen without authority. the workingmen will take no stock In the | Such spontane/yas evelution in politics efforts of that paper. looks altogethe £ tov much like the work of the machin s, and ~very naturally re- Ter Boston Advertieer thinks thatthe | puklicans who, heve been imposed on will appointment o7 8. S, Cox to be minister [ be apt to repadiate it at the ballot box. to Turkey ls “nelther very good nor very | Se much for eelf-flattery and egotism. bad.” Among its geod aspects is the| Now for a few facts. Mr. Boyd, in e b .¢hance that “‘one of these days we shall [his geli-laudatory speech, wants lie “’ e B Taw | tof .get a frosh and readable book abeut that |0 alarm tke tax-payers about the o Bhnnch country.” fnancial conditlon of the clty. i p— ‘He points to the fact that our debt has Tug inside history of the B. & M. jincreased very largely since he went out ‘dump troubles throws a new light on}of office two years ago, and dwells with rthat subject. 1t shows tliat J im Stephen /| emphasls upon the alleged fact that the son was not responsible for keeping the | bonded debt of the city is $1,200,000 and men at starvation wages, and had notk- | the floating debt §100,000. ing whatever to do wi th the celticg oil| Mr, Boyd le given to exaggeration. It Csrolin for slx years, Jutsen, -of the troops. is well-knowa that one-third of the antire bonded debt of this city Is not a debt of [ gohyyy, Tue double-barreled, plan to'beat Boyd | the city, but simply represents an obll- list. for mayor does not se im toget along very | gation due from property on streets that “fast up to the present writing.—Her&d. [y oo poon paved. We have only in- The double-barrele d spontaneous plan | o5y the bonded debt of the city about to make Boyd meyor by gulling ra;?n|;ll- $150,000 sinoe Mr. Boyd went out of of- <ans Into the cltizens’ movement willnot fioe, pan out on the day o f election, called tothe front by Mr. Cle Kelly, the minister to Italy, Is mond, Virginla, of which city been mayor. All that anybody that he is while Bell, who goes to the of Lcgansport, Indlana, and the of Joe McDonald. sin state univer:ity. And s0 on through the Among the whole lot there ones and haye hitherto been Aill and we have value recelved for Y it in-over seven miles of pavement and Neyaswasithersamorelunknoyn twenty miles of sewerage. ‘We have Increased the debt $150,000, and bave added to the value of property officials selected by avy [president United States. Tar next thing ttat would be In good order are the Bze's 0ld pralsss of Mr. Baydabsicandidate forimayoroh Omalay et o e W We have no objections whetever. Let | equal to an Increase of nearly $2,000,000 i them produce the piralees of the'Ber be- [ on our assessed valuation, and four times | has thrown all Parls iato a fever fors e was mayor of Omaha, and then [ that amount on’the real valuation, in|cltement. AN INGLORIOUS WAR. let them prodece what the Bex said about | tWo years, Itisnot true that the float- | eignaffairs, who Is Jargely held responsi- ble for the blunders in Tonquin, has re- ing debt of Omaha Is $100,000, but Mr. his official conduct when he wa: mayor. ° quin, Boyd knows no more about this matter | signed. together with the minority, Ty only real recogaition that bas yet | than he does about the amount of over- |new French ministry will ba formed. ; The French people have evidently be- come tired of the expensive campaign that has been carrled on so far without been given to the ludependent clvll sery- 1#ps when he went out of office, ice reform elerent is the re-appointment of ‘Postmaster Pesrson, ot New York. ' This Is the only departure that Cleveland hastaken from the regular programme, The exception in Pearson’s case is very |Pire, BISMARCK’S BIRTHDAY. To-day 1s the seventieth birthday of |accomplishing any real tangible likel founded onthe presumption, backed | With great enthuslasm throughout King | being covered with glory, as was expected % Bismarck s to-day|when the campalgn was inaugurated, | began firing on the town, but by conslderable testimony, that he wae [ Willlam's domain, : not very much of a republican duriog the | the most successful statesman of Europe. | The French are fighting the Chin -war. It was through his efforts that the Ger-|their own ground, and they find Tue Lincoln Journal and the Omaha | of discordant states. German unity was|numbers, and determined to ,~IEcpubiiiean [vover miss s day without|ihe one great des of hls life, and to ac- | themselves to the last. showing thelr {diotic venom sSenator Van Wyck, If they expect to|energy and abllity to the task. ~dofeat him by attacks which everybody | was too bold nor any Intrigue too crafty | France, which she is not will .acan seo are purely personal and maliclous, ‘they are very much mistaken. Unless | of the problem of German unity, Under aduty as soxator orithat he has Inany way | has been at times, the German contedera- Fhetrayed a trust which the peaple reposed | tion has attained an inflaence which|rise to the invasion of Tonquin %in him honestly asa public servant, they | proves his wisdom In having organized 1t|amounts to nothing when compared to sro not likely to dothim much damage. ——— power. The German states, embraced in | the vast sums of money that ewer to Uncle §am’s protest against his|rank among European nations, and|arms. The indemnity demand p roposed scheme of uniling the five cen- [ have Increased in wealth and prosperity. tr.sl Amerioan republics under one gov-|In war and in peace Blamarck has in- errunent, He has invaded San Salvador, | variably triumphed in all that he the purpose of glviog the French and it may just be possible that the jundertaken, whether right or wrong, He |something to do. To use a forcible ex- Unii ed Btates will take a hand inthe | has given to Germany frontiers that she|preesion the originators and promoters of little vow that he has precipitated His|needed, and although they had to be ac- | this really causeless war now find that |and Mill bold a. tion encourages the belief that he | quired by high-hauded robberies hedid not | they have bitten off more than they can s backed by some forelgn power, prob- | scraple to commit them. By setting other | chew, and now that they have been over- | Th, chagrin, ably Fiuwnce, sz has previously been |European natlons sgsinst each other he|whelmed with defeat and ewaand Batersl | toward building up Omaha, it would have | Germany to-dsy a_spielt of dangerous tho EDITon oF THS |4 o o Jittle more becomlng In him not |discontent, as Is evidenced by the wide hss ruled Germany with an iron hand, They no reasons Mr. Boydassigns for *‘consenting | doubt expect that with his death, which MOSSBACKS AND UNKNGWNS. & peo- Appcintees | wish -8 bre,ught for- ward a 1ot of unkn® v pe, Nfl';hi‘uhmb Po'ntment t, 'a cabinet *position, Mr. ago but v,uch less abllit,y for some of the | yicket for the saks of their gitators. that the dead have rome to life, and that thir, 1s the politicA) milleniam, Themoss- bucks who wer's gomewhat prominent Beneke, he Is a political Having revived and dis- mossbacks, who had been forgotten by thlr, generation, Grover Cleveland, the excellent nominations on thé repub- mountains of North Ke’rliny. I've had in pur'sulng his polioy of surprises, turns |jioan tioket. But it strlkos us that igW.. his o'ttention to the unknowns. His last [, ,¢ necessary to plek three out of the six batch of appointments to represent this co'antry.abroad is compoted principally | Unjon Pacific pay-roll, of men who are not known outslde of |4on of My, Clark, the candidates for the | the people, and to look arter 'Merloans thelr county or state, and at the same | ohoo) board are men unknown to the lawyer named Lawton, of Savannah, who, | sume that those who snt to elect only heard of him uatil he was suddenly lawyec of some local reputation in Rich— aboat Lewls, the minlster to Portugal, is e a relative of Bayard, e introduced to the pub- MoGee, who goes to Sweden _and Norway, s a local politician Anderson, minister to Denmark, is a professor in the Wiscon- Jarvls, nominated as minister to Brazll, served in the con- federate army and was governor of North general to Vienna, isa brother-intaw of aman of national reputation, notwith- standing the posttions sre all important persons of more than merely local fame. The defeat of the French at Langson [ were led by Rev. J. Buchanan, of Ulysses, Jules Ferry, minister of for- | the evening were made by Rev, M. A. Gault, the-great chancellor of the German em-]|The French arms have recently met |the government yesterday. Aiz-Puraentered 1 and the event will be celebrated | with reverse after reverse, instead of | Panama at five this morning and firing was | any fighter man in Bunkam county, man empire was organized by the unlon | not only good fighters, but superior in i ; 0 B i IE tho war In|inquest this afternoon on the body of Alice | wide ‘nuff to swaller @ small baby's rock- towards | complish it he devoted his entire time, | continued additional relnforcements and Kirk, aged 25, of Pottsville, who died in the | in’-hoss, and makin’ the yung 'uos gigle | ;¢ bad,” bad as Tom. Hendricks wanted No step | further credit wlll be required from |house of M for him to undertake In the workiog out |give unless the troops now in Tonquin should unexpectedly retrieve thelr dlsas- #they can show he has falled to do his| Blsmarck’s direction, unscrupulous as it | ters by several successive and telling vic- torles, The whole trouble which gave for the purpose of extending national|the lives that have been sacrificed and | tol have boen | await the action of the district attorney, Mg. Banzsos paysmo attention what- | the empire, bave advanced to the first|spent in trylng to settle it by an fssue at French was based upon an imaginary grievance, which was Invented solely for o of am- in i addition to 4 given up their .6 Ohinese, 1t should Jake Thompson's Oarecr as a Traitor . fightlng in defonse of | —O'1 Faces in New Omoes—In- Jroperty, upon thelr own teresting Remintscences, araln every way better ¢ determined to carry on a |Special Correspondence to TE Ber. ‘‘Any amount of it; make it there. -ong perlod than the French| Wasmixaroy, D. C., March 27.—|When you have decided which mission to men tc .oy can put In the ficld twenty | Walking along G stroet near the interlor | take, go to the white house and send forlt » France's one, and when the super- | department, yesterday, I was accosted by 7“:""8”::‘:“:; "|}",“. president and— st In nambers is taken into considor- |a long, gaugling, uncouth figurs, with| Your oard, a piecs of paper with your ‘. .on, that alons ought to be enough to |long, unkempt, inflammable hair and a|pname on it.” ause the French to withdraw. grizzly beard’of the same color, dressed Il‘.l'hv you mean keerd, that’s what we = — ina coarse homespun, with heavy bro. [l it our way. g, s When you get before Oleveland, THE DEMOCRATIO TICKET. [gans, abont No. 14, a kick from which | o\ o' 1itt13 apeceh to bim: tell i gou #nd [ The democratic clty convention was a | Would shame a Kentucky kloking mule. [aro in favor of improving clvil eorvice, + only | st and dried affair, and went off accord. | *'Stranger,” sald he, “I've jest come |and that s why you have cffered g 8 A y ¥ i B fnter this'ere place this mornlug, and I|your servicos; — tell ~ him ing to the programme of the bosses. W ¢ Grover Cloveland has | YOU 219 where you come from, and state the exception of the with. |Want ter know of Grover Cloveland has | ¢, i, i) these signs of democtacy which drawal of Judge Beneke, who dld not | beev 'augerated inter office yit. you have glven to ~ me, then tell him you propoge to allow his name to be ueed to , make up the threo B's, the slate, ds made | *8°; Ukl late '"""’S l,""e' by Miller, Boyd & Co., romalned un- | ‘‘Y#s, I'm late glttin’ here, up and offer yoursclf. Now, Cleveland’s len G.|goratohed, The nominatlon of Dr, Free- |reck'n I'm in tlmo for my bus'ncss, but I faihor was ‘a minister, and his grand- his ap- don’t 'xactly know what to do; I want a|father, and his great.grand father were P y 8 those that have alresd- lives In Tonquin, Th be remembered, arr thelr homes and + territory, and able and mor war fora | are. Th owned Pennsylvania, black ’publicans, I'm blowed if I'll be mintster to them.” *‘Oh, you have misunderstood me agatn. I sald the Oammaroons, meaning a peo- ple and distriot in Afriea.” “‘Allrite, d'ye 'spose they have ANY BUG JUICE THAR ! He dis- the ‘ked up moss- ¥ want to send some ministors to foreign born 8. Lewlafor auditor waa a sop thrown | to the workingmen, who are expected to | little galp down the balance of the demoorati | feller a little, by showin’ him i WHAT COURSE TO TAKE, August Welss was nominated for police| Ireplied, ‘‘certainly, certainly, I will|on the Fijl ielands, Good-bye."” judge, not becapse he was fit for that oz |90 my best; and it will give me much any other office, but because, like Gustay pleasure to be of service to a fellow German, mortal In a strange and wicked city. Tt goes without saying that the Ger- | ‘State your case.’ mans will repudiate him, Inthe main| ‘‘Wal, ssdt ssoms as how you look like the nominees for conncllmen will average ‘,P‘"ty good, clever kind of a critter, uerable | botter than those of last year. Thts|L'll tell yo what I want. choice was forced upon the demoorats by |down In my kentry; down thar In the greater ministers, 1d seem struck you?! Good-bye; but say, stran gor,” and putting his lips towards my ear, in a half whispar, said, ‘‘halnt you got a bottle of en sud- THE ILE OF LIFE ’an he told the truth ta.” ““I never carry the article, but there Is a church thar for twenty years. I'm a|Dan Manning, the new secretary of the reg'ler hickory, hardshell, ingra’n'd Bap- | treasury; he has enough to float all the tist, dyed in the wool. I've hearn’t tell | baseball clubs in the country, with sev- that the gover'ment sends ministers|eral roller skating rinks thrown in, if With the excep- | abroad to teach democracy to enlighten | they wera only aboard ships—he is st the head of all the whisky in the United States; you go and try him. ‘‘Blazes, 1 wander if I couldn't git 'n offis under him. 1'd like to ssrve thar?” “Try him,” and he went on his way in booming spirlts, Dropping into the Hazen court mar. tial the other day, my ears were greeted with the sound of a voice which I recog- nized before I saw the owner thereof; 1t came sounding along through the shadows of twenty-five years as distinctly as of yesterday; have often thought how strange it {s that the sound of one's voice can be retalned so long in memory when it has not been heard in twenty-five, thirty, or forty years, The opening and shutting of the outside door of the old homestead, the lifting ard falling of the latch, which has not been heard since boyhood, comes back now, falling upon my ear with all the familiar distinctness, as if actually heard only yesterday, a reminder of days that come never again, Rogers gave us the “‘Pleasures of Memo- ry,” but he did not think it incumbent upon him to describe its miseries, rightly believing the world knew them without a remindor. 'But, halt, I am ofl' the track —it was candidates for the councll out of the cast ashore in furrin parts. My people t thought I had given um preachin’ enuf 8re ot | public, They are all vouched for as equare | lately to last um & couple a yoars or so, sla 1 8 | 40ed democrats, however, and we pre- [and 1'd go abroad, while they's du with- out preachin’ an’save expense; fact is, I've been giv'n is to um right smart rafly lately, CASE THEY HA'INT PAID ME UP. B e “Now I tell ye, my pre'chin’ ’s worth THE opening of the Santee Sloux|suthtn. 1'm no muggins. Well, they Indian reservation, in Kuox county, in |tho’t I'd better try to git to go abro’d, so northern Nebraska, Is looked forward to | here I am now, pleaso be 8o good as'to itha great doal of Intorest by a large | */o5mS WheE €2 du. 1o Fithinsigre y E@| «Well, my frlend, your narrative is number of persons who are expecting to | interesting,” I replied; ‘‘you have en- secure a home either by homestead, tim- | listed my ;nmiclbls feelings, and T will e i advlee you.” i oFj pre;emption fenty 8 Tho i ad whiat 1 anid o) with a{look (of Neth. reservation, containing 120,000 acres of astonlshment, o [land, will bo restored to the publlc| «Why, my smicable feelings; fricndly domalnon the 15th of Aprll, and wil! | feelings.” i be subject to settlement and entry on| .'Op, now I understand. and after Moy 1oth. For farming pur-| iiygs, i1 ® 800d demecrat, are you! poses these lands cannot be excelled.| ¢Got all the signs and symptoms? is." democrats to the achool board will ba sat- confed- |jsfieq with them. veland. also a he has knows James frlond They are close to railroad connections| ‘Y and within easy reach of the markets of Omaha and Sioux City. — “Take a little tanglefoot now and then?” “You bet. D’ye a’pose I've livea all this time and never tasted the fust Tue mugwomps have at last been |principle of democracy?! I can glt out- rocogniged. The brothor-In-lav of Schary | id more mean whisky than any man or ¢ i has been appointed consul-general to] o on i Y s 5 engaged in surveying in Nebraska in (the Vi SOME PURTY HARD SOAKERS IN IT. year is forgotten, bat some time before T “Thsr s a still over in the timber 'bout | the war ) The writer remembers hearing half er mile from my meetin’ house, and | him describe a large tract of valuable 1 allers go to it Sundays mornins’ on my | pine timber tn the Niobrara country, way to church. and take a good swig. I|which he predicted would supply the ken allers pre’ch better when I've a good | whole Missouri valley reglon with “pice stiff horn aboard.” lumber, but the writer does not remem- CoLuxnrs, March 31.—We had two run-| ™ wFor whom did you vote last fall?’ |ber to have heard of it since. He ro- aways in town yestorday. One of them threw| ¢Ginural Jackson; dldn't hear uv|turned to South Carclina before the war, a young man, Polander, out breaking his arm, | Cleveland till srter ’lectlon.” Stince the war he has bsen a republican; There is talk of the democrats and republi-| ““Were you in the confederate service [served as judge in his state, and has been oans ‘luuin]g ig lhehsle%l‘.ilndn. T\h prohibition | 1n the late war?" S : 131 col;greku, and is now prectising law in icket is already in the field, e congrega-| ¢‘Yig—wall, not 'zactly in the reg’lar | this city. .‘wmlt-l:)mchfi was well firlhdh““" gven. | sarvis, but me aud & lot of other fellers p.,ul’}.g through the corridors of the in- ol cm’l"’,ml{:; ’5131':1:‘}6:0";"2:1 e';:&_‘;g:a ekirmished round a good deal, stealin’ | terior department and looking Into the : mules and hessas from the Union men and | ante-room, prompted by curiority, to take a slight survey of the raw material of T, J, MACKEYE, senior couns2l for Gen. Hazan, to whom 1 refer, whom the old eettlers at Nebras. ka Olty and Omaha will recall. He was consul- whole 1s not COLUMBUS, A YEW ITEMS FROM OUR SPECIAL CORRES- PONDENT, led by Correspondence of the BEk. set of of the ev. J. W. Littlesang a fine tong; Miss | feds whenever we got a chance.” urner acted as organist, “‘Guerrillas, I suppose.” which the hunters for the spolls are com- “Yis, I belleve that's what they called | posed, as well as of the resurrected us,” democracy, there passed before me a “Did yon use to wallop the niggers|form snd face that were once fimiliar, r and which carried me in memory back in the years that are gone, th'rty, or thereabouts. It was John A. Parker, (think his name was Johu A.), who went out from Virginia as the FIRST REGISTRAR OF THE LAND OFFICE of ex-|m The_addresses of of Towa, and Rev. E. B, Graham, of Omaha, A crowded house is expected this evening, when Rev. D. A, Bloss, of Fremont, and ul Rev. R. B, Wilson, of Schuyler, will speak | before the war? ] on prohibition, D.s. “‘Oh, yis, lots a times; lota er fun, “Ever kill a nigger?”’ “Killed only seven.” “Why did you kill them?”’ , and & AFFAIRS AT COLON, Paxaya, March 81, via Galveston,—The greatest indigoation fs expressed in Colon and [ ‘T many “publican voters.” Panama at the iniquity of the men of war of [ *‘Ever in any brawle or fights with 3 those places. Buena Ventura surrendered to wbi!fi folks,” G . 4‘\:“"2:1!‘1:, ‘:'E-]l&:l:mblglcl:sh; i?IB:: “tll‘:’l"’!;: [ ne; I ken lick the spota’ off | W2 ) 9 S0, 589 cam oounty. - |him. I had boenunder the impretsion he passcd over the range long 829, into the silent country; if he did, he is back on a furlough, for my eyes cectalnly eaw him in the flesh a few days ago. And ¢ rite o thelihy should he not come? Was not the datfer o SOl middle of the solomest psrc ¢f my des- | glection of Cleveland the tignal for the couree. Death From abortiun, there I saw two of deekins fast as'eep, |had PHILADELPHIA, March 31, —The coroner’s | noddin’ backard, and their mouths open with result, kept up all day, The rebels apparently cap- | wiry THREE YALLER WILD CATS THROWN tured Cuartel as at about one b, m. Buyaca 2, aftera dozen A A shots desisted, At four p. m, all firing had |1 oncy wallopad two of my deekias rite ceased and Panama remained in the hands of | atore the hull congregashio, them | A1z-Pura. ese on lald for twenty-five yesrs covered the mildew cf the grave? Mr Parker wants something, and he ‘‘wants defend who “Oh, yes,” I replied, “‘several days|are a minister, and as you heard he would but 1 |countrles, you thought you wonld come ‘vlce; now, couldn’t you help a|ministers, and his brother is a minister, Wt IO V. P ®land he nitorally haes sympathy with So your chance is good for getting what you want; get to Patagonia I'm a preacher about ye? I'm thirsty; didn’t somebody say we demecrats are hungry and thirsty? 1 happened to look down aad|regurrection of defanct democrats who | 5 the confederates to gather up olothi Infected with yellow fever In thpe Impl;‘, take It around through Oanada to the border, and then send it into Now Eng- land and New York, to spread the se of postllence and death among the women and childr#h and non.combatants there. ~ And for thls man and his mem- ory, the flag of glory fa doing duty at half mast! and on "this sad occasion double msorrow s expressed by running up an extra 1|-Y; never have scen but one on the Interior building before. Well, what next? Though this half mast buosiness tor Thompson ought not to surpriss any one, for did not Secretary Sawan, who ordered the flags to half mast yesterday, say [in the senate \ast winter, thatJefl Davis was a patrlot and & martyr, or words to that effectl And this leads me to re- mark, that Jefforson Davis was sccretary of war under Prasigent Pierce. Now supposing he should dfe, would Presi- dent Cleveland's sacretary of war judge Endleott, feel constralned to order tha natlonal colors at half mast over the war department and the mlilitary pos'a and' arsenals of the Unlted States? and why not? Was he, Davis, more guilty than Jake Thompson, except that he occupled a more conspicuous position? And Secre- tary Lamar HAS ONLY BEEN CONSISTENT in degrading the Amerlean flag to to do mourning duty over an ex-socretary who was guilty of treason the most damn- ing, for Lamar, balloves Daws and Thompson were good patrlotic, citlzens, The inauguration commitice did an uogallant thing which, though late, ought to be chronicled, Beva Lockwood, (ever hear of heri) sent a letter to the committee requesting to be assigned a position in the proces- slon, as one of the lats presidontial can- ‘I am a thousand times Obl?('gfid to ye | dates, the committee took no notice of for yer 'dvice; wasn't I fortunit, when Ilit exceptto lay it upon the tablo with expressive sllence, and Belva’s name has not appeared In print slnce; maybe she is In a comatose state, Credit where credit is duc, This ad- minlstration scores one for the removal of the cattle syndicates from the Oklaho- ma lands, which ought to have been done by the last administration, JonN M. THAYER. He Got It, Detroit Free Pross, ‘‘Boss,” he whispered, as ho leaned over the counter, ‘‘de ole woman wanta eome tea mighty bad, an’ I hawn’t got any money."” *‘Can’tghelp that, slr,” was the reply. “I'm glving away more than 1 can afford to wirhout ing any new applica- tions.” “‘Zactly, boss—[ presume so, pleage glve me your full name,” ‘‘John Y. Blank.” “‘An’ dat of yor pardner.” “‘His name 1s Willlam J. Jones, What do you want of our names?”’ “‘Wall, I didn’t get de tea, but you ueed me like & gem’len, an’ bein’ as we bas got twins in our family I'ze gwine to name 'em arter you an’ ycur pardner!”’ *‘Oh! you sald tea, eh? Why, yes, I'll be happy to put you up halta pound. Green or Japan? Twins, eh? Hope the mother is doing well, Say, if you want them boys to be smart men give ’‘em smart names, If I were yoa I would call ’em Washington and Jeffsrson.” (iticura Now is the Time to Cleanse the Blood and Beautify the skin. Boss, Wm. T. Totten, 672 North Tenth Street, Phila- delphia, reports that one of his customers stated to him incidentally that he was feeling so well and had gained twenty-seven pounds in the last year, all of which he attributed to a systematic course of the Cuticura Resolvent, 'h has proved effectual when all other remedies fa SORES ON NECK. Chas, Brady, Somerville, Mass , who refers to Dr. - J. Wood, druggist, of this city, certifics to n wi e riul cure of running sores, on the neck which been treatod by hospital physicians without c n:;d which yielded oompletely to the Cuticura Kem: edics, CURED BY CUTIOURA. esistod several popula advised by physicians, ha been cured by your Cutioura Remedies. They furpassed my most sangulae expectations id- Iy effocted a cure. J.C. ARENTR Vinoenz es, Ind. KNOWITS VALUE, aticura Remedies give very good sat Cuticura 1 especially roocmmend for whichitis used. 1 know from exper- All of yo istaction. T the diseases f ience its value. DR. L. J PRATT, Montcllo, Wis. CUTICURA ABROAD. Through a home returncd Norweglan, I have learned to know your Cuticura, which has ina short time oured me'of an Kywoma that my physician's medicines could not hesl CHR. HELTZEN, Bergen, Norwa; Agenturforretaing. THE POET POWERS, A feeling of gratitude Impe's me to acknowledgo the great merits of your O , and 1 cordially reo- omuicud it 10 the | valuablo remedy. 4 t, Conn. POTTER DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO., BOSTON/ YE Q" F CURA BOAP an exulsite Toil CURT SN0 St Marie M. Hoepfner, of this | rite out in teetin’; my dander was dis- | yotes, ing to | city, have shown that the deceased came to|turb'd then an’ I jost walked rlte down | Notfcirg two flags at half mast on the her house in perfect health, and Mrs, Hoepf- | and seized each by the collar, yanked |interlor department yesterdsy prompted ner pfl'(ormoglctimlnnl operation, causing |um to the door, and arter poundin' 'um | the question what 1t meant? *“Mourning :&zgi‘;‘;&?‘fi:fi&:’:&‘ifiswe?fl w:‘zina: rn'e smart kivckad um both rite out doors; | for Jacoh Thompson,” was the reply. them, and it was also shown. that children | ¢ Detter bllieve they nevor snoozed | Ah,yes, Jacob Thompson, ho was secre- born 'in the house had mysteriously disap- | WBEN I was prechin’ arter that. tary of the interior, I believe under James peared. Twins born healthy were found dead | *'Can you cusaf .| Buchanan; and that started memory jog- an hour later, One witness swore that the| *‘I should say so; why I ken caes till 1 glog back through twenty four years. d"(fl‘m of ‘h;""l'l""“'- now ‘gr"‘:’d‘{"‘“- spit sulphur. I can make this a'r turn|During all the winter of '60 and '61 aaF thek the infants ware burmed. 1o the :‘“5 in t’hue minits, Do you want to|Jacob Thompson was actively engaged in ear me!” launing and plottin, *Oh no, no, no, I take your word for 5 & U ¥ Mrs, Hoepfner was committed to E DESTRUCTION OF THIS GOVERNMENT it. Can you play seven up, w to|™ yourself four aces, and rake in the jack | whose sworn officer he was, He attended pot?” all the meetings of the cabinet, partici- I reck'n you'd think so, ef yon should | pated in its disoussions; and kept his co- see me at it; that's the way I ralsed the | coneplrators here and in the south well spoudullios to get here with, I'vej'urned |advised of all that was golog on; kept prayer meetin’ thar many a tlme so's to|them informed of the doiogs and inten- 2'over to the stl)l and have a gawme with [ tions of the administrationin regard to the boys," the civil war which tad already begun, *‘Ever belong to the Kuklux?" He met in council with the officers of the “I was chaplin to our post; at our|government and then went directly to midnight meeten’ I'd preach to the boys, | the conclave of the conspiratcra, Whim sn' then we'd mount our hosses an’ ride | Buchanan and & majority of hi really furnace. —— A Raise in Lumber Freights, 8r, Pavt, Minn,, March 3L, —The Omaba rallroad has lassued the following schedule of prices on lumber to Missouri river polnts: tro0ps | ¥rom St. Paul and Minnespolis and Minne- sota trapsfer, 19 cents; from Stillwater and Hudson, 20; from Menomines, Eau Claire, Chippews Falls and Mernlan, 22§; Niellsville , 24; Superior City, 25; Cum. berland, : Bhed Lake and Barronnetteville 24; Hayward, Drunmond snd Ashland, 25. 686 rates are an advance of several cents and will be maintained If competing roads of the cabinet fntimated. has by Ml‘ntrifiue protected Germany, | the people of Franee who are only en- watsla mm‘_______ to the darkles’ :nbim. call um out, whip lu: de:i‘:ed “t un;iI n;‘ppllu SE— and sho has become respected and feared | thustastic under the Influence of brilliant | &1, G, Dun & Co,'s Quarterly Report, ‘”'“"“:"’u‘x“;';::y BERANE A :;",. ':e‘l’;;‘m‘:‘:; . ey, ““'}i:a Tae Cleveland Leader makes haste to | by all her mighty nelghbors, He has left|and dashing victory, have become dis- sssure the people of Ohlo that ‘‘there Is |mothing undone to centralize and |gusted and refuse any longer to s no foundation whatever for the ltem golug | strengthen the government, While it is | the policy that Is being pursued with re. the rounds of the democratic prees that|true that the great and wily diplomat|gard to Topquin. Under the clroum- Hon, J, Warren Kelffor will be a candl- | will to-day receive the congratulatious of | stances the best thing that France can do date for governor ivext fall, subject to the | the Germans, yet it should not be forgot- | is to settle the frontler question with the Chinese by letting It drop enttrely or by Mr. Kelffer s strictlyr ocoupied with his|a great nation he has not altogether|leaving to arbitratore, To continue the own business, and, whi'e he will do all in [ made the German people contented and | campalgn, especially In view of the fact be | that a large number of lives bave already state ropublioan ticket, be will not be a J#o in & country whore standiog army of | boen loat, the sum of $60,000,000 wasted, §;1q4us, ran into the bauk at the goverament |about four days onger Hll Grover gets action of the republiean state convention, | ten that a'though he has made Germany his power tosecure the eleotion of the | happy, - for how can they candidate for any office,” Tids ls evidently [ half & milllon men s kept, together with|and $40,000,000 more asked for, » case of sour grepes with Mr. Keificr, Ja large navy, at an expense of §86,000,-"seem to be the helght of folly. York, March 81,—The mercantile i “ » |1t was who went direct from the coun- upport | failures for the quarter ended today reparted | *Do 1ee spoll natlon with a small 07" |5 y2h1e 1o the telegraph office and in- by R. G. Dun& Co, number 8,658, which| “Spell what! Never he'erd er such a| formed the confederate leader at Oharlet- compared with the corresponding quarter last [ thing; we've got no pashun dows in our [, that the Star of the West was com- year sliows an Increase of 362 failuresor about | KeBtR ing with supplies and men for Sumpter; 11 per cent. Liabilities for the quarter just 1 eaid natlon, meaning the whole peo- | ;4 whon the Star of the West appeared closed foot up to §16,181,951, sgainst $40,186,- | ple of the country.” in the roadstesd off Charleston harbor, {75 the correspondiug period. The lucrcaso| = ¢‘Ob, that's what you mean; wal, I the rebels were walting her coming, with is nearly $6,000,000, never spalt 1t v;f‘t,l: alittlo n or s big o Iy ooP0n I dined upon her, and she —_2 —— - never spelt nothin’,” back, Wi g YO Dlaumar Ruak: ““Well, my friend, I think you have all | 14 YOI ‘m‘;ih:,‘:““f,“ tack, Ha way ATERFORT, La,, March 81 —The steam: | the slgns and symptoms of s sound demo- f - i i lioa B. Soeluge frow : Olnsinnatl for Naw PSR D AT A s ministration—Iits worst evil genlus. - ¥y PAM., SON, 31 THOMFSON WAS ONE OF THE AGENTS, would | 1ight at the mouth of the Cartoff, just below | well settled in bis office, and in the mean | together with Luke P. Blaskburn, re- The ' here yesterdsy morning, under full head-way. | time declde what mission you will ssk | cently governor of Kentucky, sent by Proposals for Grading. Soalod proposals will be received st tho offics of the secretary of the board of Education until § o'clock p m" Tues Iay March 81st, 1585, for the grad. ing of lots 1 and 2 in block 10 in McCormick's add., and lots 7 and 8 ia block 11 in Iwprovement Asas: ciation addition. The board rescrves the right to reje t say or all bids, OMARL 48 CONOYER, Omaba, March 20th, 1646, Becretary. mee-ot UNITED STATES National Bank! U, 8, DEFOSITORY, $S. W. Cor. Farnam and 12th Sts Capital, - $100,000.00 0. W, HAMILTON, Prest ' M. T, BARLOW, Caahin! DIBECTORS: . H, M, OaLpweLL, B, ¥. Burrh, 0. W, Hamiuron, M, T, BakLov, 0. Wit Hawiirow, Accounts solicited and kept subfect o sight chagk, Certifi ‘ates of Deposit lsaed Layable in 3, 6 and 12 months, bearing Interest, or on de- mand without interest, Advances made to customers or approved securities at market rates of interest. The interests of customers are closely guard- ed and every facility compatible with princi- ples of sound banking freely exteaded, Draw sight drafts on Fugland, Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of Europe. Sell European paeeago tickets, Collections Promptly Made, -

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