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— 1 S =="THE DXILY BUE"SATURDAY;"MXY 15, 1955 The excarslon of Omaha business men | surroundings, comforts, and advan'ages| The pending negotiations between tln . A’nn\lx‘nhtli'\: #uch ":nhmunl - ot :elvillzation, for th ltry sum of | Rusila and England ate & Y on. | deeds. e T L L Ovwren No. 914 awn 518 h—;u B b0 I:;rtlnnf! luiundc‘:lblodly A’vr:'y plobu ;] rco; .u n:;\, h or wthP: :e :.“BM bt mm{(‘ an T‘).: ».ynrfufllv'l::n “;‘g the lifa of the Soudan and entail ng antold Yonx Orrien, Roou 65 Tarsuwn Bord- | urable H‘!p or the excarsdonists, bat 1B yoar, Is something S \l 9. concessions made | pyjeery npon women and children de- e, whether it will In any way prove profit- | ulte understand, by (;ldac; tone -nrl'l is r‘-]{inilatry. wmcllt -:’u r‘v‘r:l\;hli\tur\mh:ho destroysd wells, Lord wrary morning, Sunday. The | ablo to the business interests of thiscity is - regarded as most humlliating to England, olteley or hin officorn (flered rowards m-mu dally published in the slate. questionable, Omaha once had & business COMMEROIAL AGENOIES. have emboldened Russla to make new | for the heads of several natives and for the body of Oliver Pain, the Frenchman —_— e YHE DAILY BEE, [OMAHAS TRADE TERRITORY. Jan Tndlsn teservatlon, remoto from tte| OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. |unmercifally when they objected PR "';':o'l'r'-:tuu- men's trlp to Galvoston when the Mir-| A libel sult of moro than ordinary in:|demands which even Gladstone would Mo .00 ~ supposed to b with the Mahdi, a proceed- B Tuhosd avery Wadneoday | 190 Pacic was comploted to this clty,ftorost has boon tnatitatod in New York fnot dare to yled anless he ia bent on » 5 11 & Teve] WIth tire th81ioe of AVSQUR. ERNS, POSTPAID. and It was generally suppored that we |City by Knox, the haiter, agalnst a com- | peace at any price polloy. Mr. Glad-|Inall the fighta of the two campalgos on ® | ould resp some material advantages | merclal agency, from which he demands |stone s & man of peace, It Is trae, and [tbe Red Soa coast aud the one up the Nile, frem the exeursion, Several years have | 820,000 damages, In his potition he al- | the prosmuro of British oapltalists may bo | i, iitih took eeirocly any prisonors, & passed, the Galveston excuralon has al- [leges that the agency, conducted by |exerted in opposition to s great war, but | on every tield th;y won fl l.hus‘tb-:! Nowsand Blterisl [ most been fcrgotten, and the trade of | Messrs. Brook & Wallace, printed and |even cowards will fight when they are |baritios were In a measurs pilliated by Ak Eoreoa OF T8 | (), s haw not beon benefitted one dollar | circulated a statement that *‘He (Edward | driven to the wall. Tt would certalnly | the desperate nature of the native opposi- thereby. Kansss Olty, however, has |M. Knox)la a fignrehead for his father, | be poor statesmanship for a govornment ::" ‘r‘c“;“f'm‘;;z:':';,:; ';m&th- llr.-vm;-_ tanoss shosid b6 | boilt up a blg trade along the Missourt | who has no standing whatever,” which |to allow itself to be drawn Into a war |fiig to mitgate the I,I,_n;”,“":he 10wt T ems 1o vé madt P | Paclfic and Its sonthern connections | was followed by another publisation that | with all the advantages on the side of the | tack upon a_swall forco of Arabs nosr bl 80 the erder of ¥he empety. reaching clear to Calveston. As it has |“He (Edward M. Knox) is fast, is a poll- |enemy, If war under such conditions | Suakim. The abacdoument of the Son BEE POBLISHING C0., PI0R. fuoen with tho Galveston excursion, |tielan, and is doing businoss on the|conld be avolded or postponod with dan had been practicaly, decded upon ROSEWATER, Eorron w0 1t will bo with the Portland excurslon, [money that should have gone to his|honor. But England wonld fight ;Zgnln; °:°m,";;;“; ‘;:‘f":"",r;:;fi B, Tk, Manager Daily Olroulstion | b 110 iy city noarly aa largo as|fathor's creditors. Ho squandored 40, [under jast thewo conditions In Afghan- It woek. Tho Arabs woro only R = Omaha, and its trade has been captared |000 of his father's money, snd marrled a|istan i war with Ruesis should[s fow hundred strong and woro Trene’s muslo In the alr. The colored |almost entirely by St. Paul, Portland’s | Brooklyn conoert-singer.” The plalntiff be declared to-mcrrow. Morsover, the |powerlets to cause the British] much «¢ | defenses of Russia and the influence of | harm or make serioua resistence, but Gen. people of Omaha propose to give Man- traffic is handled almost wholly by the |asserts that the reference to his wife| u)or Turopean powers would tend to | Graham lod out an overwhelmning force ager Tom Boyd & moonlight serenade | Northern Pacifio rallway. In order tofmeans that he marrled a woman cof low | make Afghanistan tho only battlefisld for | by night, stolo up to the unsuspecting next Monday evening. seoure any portlon of the trade of Port-|oalllng. The defendants answer that the |some tims at leas', The British lronclads [natives and made bis onslaught while — land, and the North Paclfic coast, via the [alleged libels were published without any | ¢2u!d not do much harm on the shores of | they were at their morning prayers, sples — s ) the Baltle, and they might be excluded |giving the rignal. In this way 1t was Ir 1a altogether too harmonious and Union Paclfioand tho Orogon Short line, | matics, and that the papera contalning f fom the Bluck W AR INEUAREER o §“y A 10550 gass 0 Ty unanimous among the paving contractors | the wholesale merchants must compete | them were distributed only among thelr | th, t of Turkey to open the Dar- |natives, but the kililng was of Omahs just at present, and it begins to | with the dealers of St. Paul, who have |subsoribers, Who were bound to keep |danelles or to ofter only feeblo and formal [nearly as contemplible as mue der. 150k ab 1t : pool h‘;d 1,,,:, tormed. the Inside track, We have nelther the |them secret. resistance to the passage of a British floct | Considering that the result ¢f all these might be checked by threats from the | horrors has been only the laying wastecf ——— number of the wholosalo houses nor the| Judging from the character of the|goivinant “Some days go it was reported | wide areas, tho death «f thousands of Assoorare Justice Freip, of the |amount of capital that St. Paul has, and |statements made by the so-oalled com- | that England had already reached a satia. | brave men and the sowlng cf soeds cf Uhlted States supreme court, is about to | therefore we belleve it will be a very dif- | merolal agenoy ons naturally concludes | factory understanding with Tarkey re. | anarchy and feuds throughout the Egyp- begln wrlting his memolrs, It Is hoped [ficult thing for our merchants to bulld | that It is a scrt of a black-malling con- | Berding this important matter, but now | an Soudsn, Gladstone may wall recoil f i b is said that Austrla's int i from the whole Soudan question. It has that he wlil notomlt his recollections of | up a trade in a terrilory controlled by 8t. Jcern. The proprietors certalnly have checked all negotiations in :I:K:Sirlggfi:: boen {ho ourss of ;fi! ld:inistnlion K5 his relations with Huntington and the [ Paul and the Norihern Pacific rallroad. | gone out of the azcustomed and legitimate [ The chances ara, then, that England | has lefta stain upon British arms and Oentral Paclfic syndicate. However, wo do not conslder this a|path of commerclal agencies that are con- | would be forced at the cutsst to do all | British statesmanship which years can- matter much to be regretted, for if our |ducted upon recognized business prinoi- | her fighting in Afghanlstan, not efface. VAR T i 1 From the fi ) i Now that the editor of the Herald has | merchants will tarn thelr attention to|ples, Even If all that is charged Is true, .figfflc: fi‘.f,‘.i“i,‘,”?:"&:'."m‘.'i:.f"': Although attention fs stiil fixed on the undertaken to appoint an adjutant gon- | torritory nearer home they will find all lits publication, although Intended to bo|part (f Afghanistan th. Britigh irces | somewhat Improved but by no moans sot- eral for the army, the secretary of war |the business they can handle. If they|kept secret among the subscribers, csn-|would contend ata grest disidvantage. | tled relations cf Russia and Great Brit- should at once honor the requisition, |can secure the bulk of the trade in Ne-[not be consldered otherwise than a ma- Tho Ruats'an outposts are within ceventy [ain, we should not wholly overlock the Tho servicen of the editor of the Herald |braska alone they would bo well repald, |lelous personal attack. No. respectable| Soce f Horati iho Britieh troops ro 53:3:::“!:1oiiralx:::l:h:h':;:dlgfl;:n‘:O“pr::;cgf in the regular ermy entitle him to a|and could very well got along without | or responsible commerclal sgency would [ Rueslans would find no difficalty in seiz-| ing the tharp ey ol.ngenern\ Z]cc(i,m. commanding position in the assignment |zeaching out into distant states and terri- | pursuo such a course. It savors very|ing Herat, and they would then, in all [ In what way are the prospects of repub— and promotlon of army officors. torles. Nebraska now has a population | much of revenge for a refusal of patron- | Probability, await the slow advance of [ licanlsm in~ general, snd of the modorato — of about 800,000, and will very soon have |age. There 1an limit beyond which com. |t encmy from the south. = Intrenched f or opposition sectin In particular, likely ) o TR upon the northern boundar, f the ectal he ov Tae Bee's littlestory about Senator | gyer a miilion. She is rich in agelcultutal | merclal agencles cannot with any decency cr?uulry that separates the Ylou‘lmian: ;?u:’:y“fi; i?::y:zc;;l;uYgr‘xbc:fm:l;‘: t';xfisahoiz; Manderson rebuking Rutherford B. | resources and live stock. Her cities and | go, and the defendants in this case have|cf the czar feom those <f the queen, |cabinet? Hsyes for allowing one cf his houses In|towns are growlng rapidly, and new vll- | certainly gone beycnd that limit. This |upported by great bodles of troops near| However cfficlent M. Britson may Omaha to be occupled as & saloon, leads | Jages aro everywhere springlng Into ex- |is not the first instance of the kind, how- athand aud well supplied with food, | have been no tho chiof presiding officer 5 they would allow the Anglo-Indi. the Chicago Times to remsrk that the|(stence. In every quarter a wonderful|ever. Othereo-calledcommercial agencles fm-cy“ to work thelr way rgxr:t:wn:: :)hfou:;s'I:("onlbég;fx::‘x?c‘:zt:el:r‘uh;!ctfi:: ;‘n‘ él:: ex-president Is having a hard time of it | developmant is going on. Strange as It [ have done the samothing, and have out of | through a reglon devoid of supplies in |termtnod. in trylng to live up to his temperance msy seem the northern half of |ravengo attempted to ruin merchants by which the Afghans might prove more| The tendency towards resction has un- principles. Tho Times predicts that his|this great state, which is being|the publication of false, damaging snd | Savgerous enemles than ihe Russians. | questionably bren checked, and the causs ; ] : The Russion rallway ls now o far ad- = hens will begln tolay egg-nog protty s20n, | rapidly sottled up, I +most as foreign to | maliolous reports. Such agencles, how- | vanced toward Mory that the evgincers :fl;"{,’:l‘;le"’i“g;f‘3‘L"c’e‘:‘;fi:i“‘:g‘;ofl;fi:{;‘ p rhaps. Omsaha as is the city of Portland and | ever, are generally started and controlled | hope to rel{ch(hlt clty next spring. A|inTonquin, and of the severs draln the etate of Oregon, yet our busiuess|by adventurers, dead-beats and black. | telograph line accompanies it ~The Rus- | which the war causee upon the tressury. . 7 slans could be rapldly reinforced frcm the | The treaty with Apnsm, made some building ordinance, and 1F not, why mot? | Mo €0 08 such distar excursions as that | mallers. The coneequence Is that con- Caspian and alio feom the garritons of |elghteen u?amhu sLoTiEa ey f:rmnlll;v & to Portland before they vislt thelr own |slderable prejudice is thus from time to | Central Asi i i a y el : entral Asia, ratified by the chamer of deputios, and f:‘;o";i't"‘;fi:v:g st 3:;1?:;:::1: immediate and x glected terrltory. | time crested agatnst the entire system. | I tho Afghans were foitiful ollics of | peacs betwoen France and Ohina has mot has been obtalned, Furthermore, we do | C00ld Omaha secura the trade of North- | This 1s unfortunate and unjust, because the British Lo forc:s of the empire could [ont ~ only been slgned, but s talned. 3 riachaor {kemountalns and strike the | likely to’ be undisturbed ' b nov beliove that the loast attentlon is [ Nebraska it would prove more | an honestly and caretully conducted oom- | Ryyglay, on the disputed terrltory. Toe[ond Laugeon. incident. 56 long - s pa'd to the requiraments of the ordinance profitable than an, trade they could pos- | mercial sgency is a businets necessity, | attitude of the Afgbans muet cause mavy | Gen., Campenon remstns minfater of war, ibly obtain by Innumerable excur-|and such an institution, having a repu-|an Englishman to curse now the poli it b t tructing |® y g 14 8! e policy | Moreover, while the Brieeon cabinet has :‘"a‘;“i:‘; “’l‘i :h'::':;;’:n:“ ;’:::t‘“:o bfi sions to points thoussnds cf miles dis- |tatlon for roliabllity and responsibility, | that made them scoretly or openly hos- [ had the good sente to evacuate Formosa tant. We would suggest to them that |should have no difficulty In securing the | te- It must also direot the attention of |and abjure the scheme of extorting a v England to the policy ad i i ins, i tho first important stop to bo taken by | patconage of busiuess men. Naplor, who beld thet Eagland shoutd | o e sione ‘i abmases o pay rors s them if they wish to bufld up Omaha's —_— await the advance of Russia on the banks | cheaply a reputatlon for dignlty and firm- Tae outlook for the wheat crop In |trade is to sscurs what naturally belongs| Tk Iowa democrats are mad. Thelr | of thg}ndus. the northwestern frontier [nees in the matter of the Bosphore Ohlo s not of a very encouragiog|to Jmaha. To do this a personal effort | leaders have been snubbed by the admin- of India, in this way forclng the invader | Eyyptien Notwirhetanding Lord Gran. to fight at a 1 disty i ’ 0 " character. The secretary of the state |must be made among the merchants of |lstration in the appolntment of an un- ocf' a‘:‘x‘ppli‘an,‘nzsgao::pfllfiig’xi:’l‘:: tl::ul?:l?. ::)l;;:ibtla:xr?;:loð:pl;;;g:x}:: :; !n::t board of agriculture, who has made an|the varlous towns. Superlor induce-|known man, Charles L. Williams, asfto the very dlsadvantages which must|newspaper, M. Do Freycinet demanded inspeotlon tour of the southern part of ments must be held out to them, and|United States marshal of the southern |hsmper Evg'aud now if she strives to|and obtalted an apology and reparation. tho state, roports that not a single field of |satlsfactory shipplng “sccommodations | district of Iowa, Mr. Willlams, who has | ™3roh to Herat. Tl:ie u:Agi:v of this ulxcninnel :us fivux; . . . . S slimated In some quarters, cou whest was seen in his travals that prom- |must b» aflorded. To do this we must | bsen appointed In spito of the united| TheGladstono minlstry have escaped Nk p“rpuflle o e ‘I’);“ St ised a full crop, while thousands of acres | have a direct rallroad of our own reach- | efforts of the entire congressional delega- | one of the dangers of the week. Lord|France to side with Russia in the event are ontirely killed and being plowed up. |ing Into northern Nebraska. No more |tion in behalf of Edward Campbell, an [ Goorge F. Hamilton’s motion of amend- | of war, for the government had just The estimates of correspondents of the |important enterprise can be engaged in |old wheel horss of demecracy, Is tald to ment to the war credit bill (practically a | acknowledged In the plainest way the £ motlon of censure) was defeated by a vote | nation’s inability t “ain the t of hoard, 1 bollevod, have not boon ovar- | than such a rallroad, and.the sooner I I | bo “presumably from Towa.” Tt would | o500 to 200, ~ A mext. bier persyens | Leiom s uoil o, to sus ua {hs costof o drawn. Theinjured belt extends further | bullt the better it will bs for this clty. | seom that thero is some doubt as to Mr. |attack was made on Mr. Gladstone, in | No French statesman will commic the north than at fist supposed. | The project should at once be taken up | Willlams belog an Iowan. Judging from | which he was acoused of sacrlficng every- | folly of embroiling his country in a Eu- In varlous other states the prospect is[and carefally considered in a thorough |some of his endorsements the Iowans are | thivg and everybody to save himself. |ropsan quarrel so longas Bismarck’s rather gloomy. This s particularly the |and business-like manner by our board |inclined to think that he hails from Wall Eu: glg::;;n:‘:::;mm:h“ l:nde:eg:::: “Tl,fl,";)‘:,",’efif,iffi;’f:n,";':‘,',‘,','.’,u{"'fi'"fibg’; 28> in Kansas where it {s reported the |of trade. We are confident that enough |street. Among the recommendations|ment had been roached with Russia in|Freyoinet simply meant that };w had whoat orop is almost a total fullure, | capital can be secured to bulld the road, | filed in his benalf are numerous papers regard tothe Afghan boundary which | caught Eogland in a tight place, and was and will not average more than from four |and we belleve that if the right men |from Wall stroet operators and bankers, [ W48 entirely satlsfactory to both Eogland | resolved to make the most of it, having 1o six bushels per acre. In Missour! the |take hold of the enterprise it can be|and rallroad attorneys, as well as from ;:‘;.I:::.:.ah‘,zt;l::yt;‘ t{fi;:g 3;{':;:‘_ g({‘:;.:“’;?:;:;i?o:":?n}gm:e‘}::: 3 :g: condition of the winter wheat crop Is not | started within the next six months or|other prominent men. The probability |sition that a vote of censure might leave operation with cynical approval. 2 any better. According to the report of | within a year at the farthest, and com- |is that all efforts to have the president|them lu the position of having censared a 4 5 nment that had the.l(.mrahl:y of the board of sgriculture | pleted within three years. Meant!me it :-avuka the appointment will prove futile. ‘mfi:&‘;uh tl:e counii?‘;‘;‘.’,l&“.';‘;,‘;ii‘.‘ Austrian diplomacy rejoicos in Eng- the'yield will not be qulte seven bushels | Is to be hoped that our merchants, not- | The only recourse the democrats now |7 had it effoct, as the vote shows, The |8t @ bumillation. "Austrfan statesmen peracre. It Is estimated that 27 per|withstandivg the unfavorable condition |have is to appenl to the republican sena- | Irish members sided with the conserya. |»¢ it & happy feame of mind. They centof the winter wheat acreage has been | of northern railway conneotions, will do | tors, Allison and Wilson, to have Mr. | tives, end the majcrity was entirely made | im#gine that they aloo caused England £ t the 1di f . plowedup. In Nebrasks, however, we |everything In thelr power to attract the| Willisms rejeoted by tho remate. But|fP "fmnl;b‘g:h'rag‘}é::lu s:o';:rm::'!:}z gg.:::xl:‘:yn;:'elv]:ntofialllm;::-to,Tl})l;’éhcrl:n’Z have heard no damaging reports concern- | trade cf northern Nebraska to this clty | the Iowa sepators may refuse to take a (..l by resched in the controversy of occupytog Macedonia and planting the ing the spring wheat crop, a larger acre- — hand In any Kilkenuy cat fight. with Russia It is not probable that ihe|900ble eagls at Salonica, from signing a ago of which has been planted than in|THE INDIANS AND THE WAR DE- prescnt minis'ry can be deposed. They f;’é:;:};‘g;:t“‘t‘;‘:)E:fi!";:ifi’:fi‘;fi‘fig ithe any provious year. PARTMENT. Gov. Wannry, of Wyoming, wlton to| o7 1 [ERERenie 0 he toris slese, |1y Bk S, Amtri i thu ntor- = d—-- = Ere X The secretary of war hss expreesed [the chalrman of the committee on|tvat it have # government, und patriot- faring, as we are informed from Vienna, e oSty onllog ioes | tho opinion that tho trantfer of the | woman's sufliage In the lower house of | iem Induces wany to support it who, if |72 sfmply doiog the host of Priace Bis- i tho second distrit in 1882, callod on the | 1 i " burena to the war departmnont | Masachastts | leatisture bt | Sho const wes cloue, would giadly aualet in | ma1cky who all through tholato unplons- vresident to protest against George H. Tracy [ i 8 tumbling it from power. antness appears to have played a very being appointed postmaster at Wilber, on | i8ht Prove advantagcous on the scoro of | woman suffiage bss not lowered the Afier the $55,000,000 shall have been | 1a¢stionable part against England, April 27, and commissioned the next day, [economy. Thismay be trae, although |grade of public officlals in Wyoming, and | spent for nothing and Rusela, undeterred | . OPe thing Eoglsud must havo learned Harman says Tracy is republican, and asks [we question it. But such a transfer | that ho has yet to hear of the first case of | by bluster or supplicatio, shalt be found | from her recent experiences, and which hat the appointment ba revoked. It is true | would not prove bencficlal to tho Indiaus | domestlo discord growing out of It | t0 have maiotined her poaltion and 1o |#he will doublless bonr ln mind:—Among racy was well indorsed by the republicans, [ The war department once had the con- | Governor Warren, howover, does not my bo, for the time being, in a tractable :u-t :‘e!;,“ralna Mt::‘odpe'a:r eg::ni::lu :Ub]n‘; but as that fs not unusual it did not attract | ¢x.1 of tho I ndlans, and ander its admin- | that woman suffrsge has clovated the | L-00Of mind,a vote of consare may [Pe ® 806 S fFERG [0f Gven LAy wo attention at the time, The presidsnt has J g vate €| havo a very difforcnt ending, ave refused to give her a:sistance be- Martod Inquirion among loading Nobraska | Fation tho conduct of tho Indlan bureau | ge,do of publio cifiolsls. That it basnot | 1t will help to reconcilo Englaud to resce | J01d oscapyiug @ port ot two on the Red damocrats a8 to Tracy's political record,— | a8 not by any maans satlsfsctory. The |lowered the grade ls probably because it |that the annual budget of the year shows ;;nl,ll::‘;!h:::-‘(;,yu:”m](jl E:‘r"’m““‘.""‘ Worse [Washington letter to Omaha Herald, permanent ostablishment cof soldlers [ wag impostiblo to make it any lower than | ® 4fislt of £15,000,000, and that the Ln- | 14 s Jlein oL ; & e atill eapablo of the exercise of common What a lopg tail our cat has got. Har- |In the immediato vicinity of the Tndians (it has boen. So far as domestic disoard | o the mound: besti heavie sebe™e | nenso they will yet como to the cancla: man, democratic candidate for congress, | Will not In any way bs conduclve to thelr |5 corcerned, we imagine that Mr. War-[ale, becr, and whisky, This deficit must [ 2100 that a solid friendship with Russia tndeod! Was there ever such an exhibi- [advancement In clyilization. Tbo ex- | ren knows but very little about what is|be due to the military operations in “'“’l‘; l:,ehl blesslog to herself and the tlon of sublime check, That fellow Har. [smples set by tho poker-playors, the [goiug onin the househoulds of Wyoming, | ES7P! f0F it is 00 soon for the vote o [ World at large. b I z Iy £ i —_ man was put up by the plitical bossos of | whisky-drinkers, aud tho reckleas and lazy [ Tho busbunds of the women Who g0 to | Atamessstes sc enter tet o oerase? | Do coureo of politios in the Dominton the B. & M. nilroad managers |characters that are found in the|the polls and otherwlss particlpate inthe | Paitry eud futile as have been the|ci Cansda the past winter cannot be re- ss a mere dummy to help Jim|regular army could not ba other. politioal broils aud querzels are undonbt- operations on the Upper Nils, they |assuring to the conservative minlstry. Laird through threo years sgo.|wlse than demorallzing upon the|edly m subjugated class of individuals|Baveccst Eoglend heavily, The expenss| Tho struggle over tho franchise blill in g " 1a the fi 1d i o the Domini Usment fn im- Out of the 26,111 votes cast|Indians, Tho regular army acldlers Will| who do not care to ventllste thelr domee- | qaganlt :‘:’.J’Lfi&;;‘"&i‘;.‘.‘:‘é’é':fl i'.’.‘f: ur):h::: with E:Zr;'fifikfi.‘{'nfi x::— Harman reoeived a pitiful 3,000, while | herdly do for morel Instructors, school- |tic differences In the heariog of Govera~ | Bey and the Egyptlan psople, Had he | longed and its c:nscquences threaten to Moore recelved 10,012 against Jim |teschors, and civilizors among the red|or Warren, baen left in control of Egypt, there would | be serlous, The oppoziticn become con- Laird's 12,983, In other words, by be.|men. The experlment has been tried, ——— have baen no English responsibllity for [stautly more determ'ned, and there is comlng tho oat's-paw] of the republioan |and hus proved a failure. 1t should not| T swngorfost that fs to bo held at| (1S Sudan, no cending of Gordon to|no doubt that they have public tenti- . A Khartoum, no expedition under Gen. |mett on thelr side. S» bitter Is the feel- railroad factlon Harman carried off a|be attempted sgain, The regular army | Lincoln next month promises to be one Wolseley to bring Gordon, no waste of |ing in Ontarlo that predictions were frecly fraction over 3,000 railroad democrats (18 not Intended for any euch purpose, [of the mostsucosssful musloal events ever | lives and money in skirmishing with the (made at an Indigoaticn meeting in To- oona) relating b be o o Is THERE any compllance with the enforced we cannot understand why it was passed, and thus gave Jim Laird the election by [ BUE Tor a national police. The great ma- [known n the nistory cf the state, It | Mahdl ronto tho other evening that the province |, i b = would withdraw from the confederation 3 plusallty voto. We do not know any. | jorlty of Indlans are now peaceablo ana | will commence on the 234 cf June and| Tord Wolseley Tas not gained muoh |rather than submlt to such 8 despotiem thing about the merlts of the Wilbur |seml-clvillzed, aud under the present sys- | will continue for five days. The varlous| glory in the Soudan, but unless ho can [as the Tory administration sseks to cs. postofiice equabble, nor do we know any- | tem are gradually {mproving their condi- | mustoal socioties feem the prinolpal cities | shifé the tesponsibility upon his subor- | tablish, But Sir John Macdonald seems thing about Teacy, the new postmaster. |tlon. If the proper ateps are taken thoy | in Nebrasks, Iowa, and Kansas will be in dinates for the atrocities which the British [ as bent as ever upon :‘.mngthenlng lm; ‘Wo do know who and what Harman ls, [ can eventually be made self-supporilng, attendanoe, and he progvamms throughs troops have committed there, he will go|party by placicg the absolute control o A back to Eogiand with the, reputation of the ~ votors' lista in the hando of and if the president s going to mako an | butwe qusation whother the war depart- ous will be one that caunot help belog | being ono of the most oruol and morctloss | “ravisiog harristers,” whom he will bim- fnqulry about Nebraska democratic poll- [ment with the regular army ss its sgent | attractive, The citizens of Lincoln are |eoldiers of u;z age. We take it for|[self lpp;lnt, and ')'ybgllvnghhh’ Ind(u; ticlans he better look up Harman's|could ever accompllsh that desir-|oxerting themselves in eve osalble | granted that the terrible tales told by |sgents the power fo bring the fgnoran record, The idea of a fellow llke Har-|able result. It Is time that way to:nlke it pleasant for z"p'hon.. the correepondents now returning from[red men under thelr direction to the ) . the Soudan are pot exaggerated, for|pells and cast their ballcts ia favor of the man posing as congressional candidate|some of ~the Indian sgents are|ands cf vistiors that will be present dur-|Eoglishmen would h..'ffi‘, elander | government, The premier must consider and would-be patronsge-broker on that|not what they should be, yet there are |ing the fastival. We hope to see a large | thelr own trocps, end the worst |his prospects for the next clection des- account, {a enough to make a horse| amoog them a fow ¢xcollent men. The|atiendance of poople from all parts of [{hat hes leaked out In London is|perate, or he would not venture to pro- laugh. 1f tho csndidate who did run for | experisnced agents who have glven satls- | Nebrasks, and there probably will b as m‘; l-’;.::hl.m 1’,‘?}:,'.' ;:';‘:i' t:‘;"l:{":l:'; Jieos. mlc.ll‘di:n m.".::rl::::, LR s congress on the democratic ticket last fall | factlon shoul d be retained, the poor ones | the railrosd rates will ba reduced for this | British have cut down palm trees and [when (ho rebelllon i the northwest should be consulted It would bo more in |should be removed, and the salarles | occasion, filted up ancient welis parposely to ruin |has atonsed » hostlle feellng toward keeping with political usage. Captain |ehould be fncressed, The requlsites of s ——— ontes and make the deserts they have|the savages. Certalnly there ought to J. H. Btlckls recelved nearly 18,000 | first-class Indian agent are Lonesly, intal- Abiah Hayes, aged 71, of Elizabethtown, [traversed utterly uninbabltable, No|be little chance of Sir John's seoniivg a Indisus, Wae married to Miss Aurelis J.|Arab warior would be gullty of euch | new loase of power in a falr divislon ai |y Not conient with | the polls, for he has brought the govern- |} wvotes in the second dlstrlet, where Har- |igence, business tact, and courage. How | Millon, aged 17, of Harrison, Ths affalr was devastation as that. wan, In 1882, on his bogus run, on'y|lt can be expooted to sesure a man | yery auletly amvavged, aad nata siugle mem |yyj, “tho British even foroed tho natlves |ment ioto deagerato straits, and is forced policd 3,060 votes. potsenslog all these qualitios, to mansgs | Loy orus yrewdly kuew s woed sbout it uatil | S0 the work cf rutn, flogging them ' to seek 8 lcan In England of 860,000,000, which is requirad for immodiate use. Even if he sacceeds in his attempt to push through the franchise bill, there must bs Independence ensugh In the Do- minton to throw off the yoke, e — Black Jack’s Sull Hunt, Tae Chleago News in a fow linos en- tltled “*Logan in Cass County,” tells how “Black Jack” played his quiet game:— 1 seen John Logan t'other day Whilo T was out a plowin’ An’ he oome ridin’ down our way A smilin’ an’ & blowin’; Ha called aside my neighbor Brown, An’ from their careles prattle 1 en!hrrml Logen hed come down Tec Cass ter buy some cattle. At last they got tor talkin' war— OF slavery's cuss'd oppression, An’ what they went ter fightin’ for When we ups joined tecossion; Tt struck me theh a kied o’ queer That they should talk of battle When T.ogan's only business hera Whaa that of buyin’ cattle, Well, then election come along An’ pas'd without much notin’ — Wa thought our candidate so strong, Tha¥ warn't no use o’ votin'. Bu?, goeh! thet day at 4 o'clock, From ont the bresh an’ timber, The radikels begun ter flock An’ knocked our party limber, An’ thar stood Logan at thor polla A’ watched the pot o bilin,’ Encouragin’ them sneskin’ souls With his deceitful smilin’; Wo knew thet we'd been euchred then By his misleadin’ prattle — We saw how he had bluffed us when Ho talked of buyin’ cattle, The democrats of grand old Cass grieved beyond all tellin’, An’ many a bourbon breast, alas! With honest rage is swellin’ We'd oughter guessed the critter's gaine When, jost afore the battle, Thet smilin,’ bowlin’ Logan came Ter Cass ter buy some cattle, ——— War in the Clouds, The war ballon is coming! This terrible en-gine Will cruch our foes to powder, However they combine, ‘When o'er a town it hovers, That town will catch a chill As it screams in air, fir'd by General Thayer, Just like our own ea-gil, This bold balloon will carry Great chunks of dynamite, ‘When tho gallant foe is slesping "Twill swoop right down at mght, One boom will route the enores, Another cloar the town, And the little coon in the big balloon Shall never onca come down, What need, then, for an army, Or for a big navee? Our gods of war shall eail aloft And roost upon a tr When foreign foes cry “havoc,” And send their flosts our way, Cur big balloons ehall ecatter soon Their +pars upon the spray. -~ [Lsm, s o ow Welcome Greeting. Now the farmer gives to spring a welcome Rrecting, And adorns with cout of grcen his garden gate So's the dudo who brin; s hia “‘darter” home from meeting May adorn his Sunday coat, and cogitate On whether tho old man is such a confounded eucker as he takes him to be. —[3t. Paul Herald, ——— Lovely Woman's Melancholy. When a lovely woman would be jolly She very saldom flies to drink, To drive away hor melancholy She ru hos to the roller rink. ——— APER OUTFITS. TO PUBLISHERS. The Western Newspaper Union, at Omaha, in addition to furnishing al} sizes and styles of the best ready printed sheets in the country, makes a specialt; of outfitting country publishers, boti with new or second-hand material, sell- ing at prices that cannot be discounted in any of the eastern cities. We handle about everything needed in a moderate sized printing establishment, and are sole western agents for some of the best makes of Paper Cutters, Presses, Hand and Power, before the public. Parties about to establish journals in Nebraska or elsewhere are invited to correspond with us before making final arrange- ments, as we generally have on hand second-hand material in the way of type, presses, rules, chases, etc., which can be secured at genuine bargains. Send for the Printer's Auziliary, a monthly publication, issued by the Western Newspaper Union, which gives a list of prices of printer’s and pub- lisher’s supplies and publicly proclaims from time to time extraordinary bar- gains in second-hand supplies for news- paper men. WEesTERN NEWSPAPER UNION, Omaha, Neb. —— Neithe Thing Nor Tother. The girls might as well b ip cloisters Who're dreaming love’s rosy-hued dream, For the season’s too late now for oysters, Too early, just yot, for ice cream, —[Eoston Courier, {uticura Universally Commended by Phys- icians, Drugyists and Chem- Y e oK ily, and recommend them bey ond any other remedies for discascs of th skin and 1) The demand for them grows at their merits become knowa, MACMILLAN & CO , Druggists, Latrobs Pa Your Cuti.ura Remodios sell woll, Cuticura Soap. I sell more Cutlcu er three kinds ofshin medicines Icar cura Sosp sell to my best class of c: lady custome:I will buy no oth H. £ SAMUL, Drug Dan Our orintonk ow the subject of the Out dles are foruwe from tho expressions of your o ey, to dotail which would bs to writos volume. T.ey tell mose readily than any oth r Hoo | remedics, BARNABY'S PUARMAU 25 Fulton 5t , Broukiyn, N. Y. Your Cutloura Resolvent is o 8*a 1o arficle with us, ver have | knowa of & s gie instance wherd not give entire itsfaction, Y ticura Bowp speaks for itself, and those take no other, B G Drugglst, Santa Barbar, S0ap can'c bo beat. Wa have been cura Rewmedics for revosml yoars, without then un lor any cosider: L, €, #,JUD: . Tuey have o steady sals the year BOYNTON, ickeigon, Kan, r sale and give Wi ng an oporimous quantity of your Cuti- oura preparativne. 0aCARK LINKEI Drugglet, Greonpoiat, N, Y. every whore. Price, Cut ResoLvest, §10 Fre,aved by the Pouter Drug and Chemical Co, Boston Send for “How to Cure Bkin Diseases:' WARNER’S TiPPECA THE G RLEs o Loorrmentes), BLOOD THE CAMPAIGN TOKEN OF 1840, "SNYIW 11 LVHM S$X104 Q10 THL XSV [oorymanTeo, PURIFIER. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. H. X, WARNER & C0., Rochester, K. Y. FOR SKIN ERUPTIO! AND BAD 800D, $1.00 a Bottle. H. H. Warner« Co., Rochester,N. W. T, Hudwon, of Brownoville, Ala., mikes affidavit that four bottled of w arner's Tippecanos, the best, onred him of & case of blooa poisoniog of twenty years' standing, FOR SPRINC & SUMMER WEAKNE3S $X co ABOTTLE H. H. Warner & Co Rochester, V. V. Rev W, Watson, Ws N. Y., roport: that his wife is tndebted to through toreof the eystam and restoration cf her strength, to Warnar's ippe- can [aetcidanaades L 2 meda i) Seeking perfoet ro ealth, fu manhood and sex r Stomach Drugging, should send for Troa- tiso on the Marston Bolus. Young men and nervons il phy t 3 fited by consulting Diseases of tho Prostate Gland, K . and Bindder offoctually cured. Endorsed by thousands who have been cured. ~ Adopted 18 i Europo and Address REMEDY €0. or Dn. . TRESKOW, 46 West [4th St., Now York. 0. 0APITAL PRIZE,$150,000. “We do hereby certify that we supervise the ar rangements for all the Monthly and Semi-Annua Drawings of the Louisiana State Lettery Company and in_ person manage and control the Drawings themselvés, and_that the same_are conducted with honesty, fairness, and in good Jaith touard all par- ties, and we authorize the company to use this cer- tificate, with fac-similes of our vignatures aitached in its advertisements. _ OOMMISSIONERS, UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION. OVER HALF A MILLION DI TRIBUTED. Louisiana State Lottery Company Incorporated In 1808 fcr 25 years by the legislaturo tor educational and charir purposes—with & capital of 81,000,00~t> whicl esorve fundof over 8650 (000 has since been added. By ar overwhelming popular vote ita franchise was made & part of the proient state constitution adopted Deccmber 2d. A U, 1879, Ita grand single number drawings take place monthly. 18 never aeales or posts ones. Look at the followir g disi ribution, 181st Grand Monthly and tho EXTRAORDINARY SEMI-ANNUAL DRAWING In the Academy of Music, Now Orleans, Tuesday, Jute 16, 1585, under e personal euvorvision and wavagement of Gen. G. T. B AURKGAKI ot Loulsiana, and Gen, JUBAL A KARLN, of Virginla, CAPITAL PRIZE, §150,000 #4rNotice kets are Ten Dollars only, Haves, Fiiths, 7enths, 81, LIST OF PRIZRS, 10APITAL PRIZZ OF... 8160,000 10,060 1GRAND PRIZEOF ...~ 60,000 50,000 20,000 20,000 . 10,000 21,000 6,000 1,000 50 $00 200 000 100 1000 Prizes of 5 50 APPROXIMATION P 100 Approximation Prizes of §2.0 100 do o 100 . do do 5. Prizes, amounting to .8992,6(0 fon tor rites to Clrics £l rid bo madesuly to theoffioa cf 1hs Company in Now Orleaus. For further information write clearly giving fu address, POSTAL 5, Expross Morioy Orders, or New York kxchange in ordinary lotter, Currency by Expross (all suss of 6 and upwards af our ex- pense) addrossed, M. A. DAUPHIN, Or M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orlcans, La. 607 Soventh St., Washington D, C. Mako P 0. Monoy Orders pagable and addros Reglatored Lotters to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK Now Orlcans, H. 8. ATWOOD, Plattswouth, Neb. Breeder of thoroughbred and high grade Hereford and Jersey Cattle, And Duroc and Jersey Red Swine. Seventeen yaars Experience, DR.G. W. PANGLE Resder of Disesses of M, Elechric, d ¢ A correct diswnosis glven wihout frcm the patient, Consultation freo at oftice | Treat the Following Diseases. 1 rvous Debility, Mental Deprossic Diabetes, Bright's Disesre, ~E¢ Vit bance, Kheumat'sm, Poral) White Bwellirg Serofola, Fover Boros o fommoY el without the knife, of of & drop o blood, Woman, with ficr do ic v, Restored to W thout Tappirg, Attention § Ry orshoids o Piles Cured of ot i ate adlickod will eave live aud huns réds wt dotlars by cATlEk on or veleg R A UK. 6. w. Fanorws Horbs| Medicines 110