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e, THE DAILY BEE. THE POLIOE FOROCE. Owmana Orrrir No, 914 Axn 916 Fansau Sr, | ness Niw YOk Orrice, Roos 65 Trisose Briuo: | force, and Marshal Cummings is to be |annually collected. o commended for his effort to weed out the [ stance, has twenty more saloons than drunkards and habltual deinkers. Buthe|when a $200 license was exacted, while| does not recelve from the olty councll such endorsement and encouragement as he is entitled to, and which he naturally expected from the officlals who are sup- posed to protect and guard the Interests of the olty. The relnstatement of two policemen who were proven to have fre- quently visited saloons for the purpose of drinking, and who were shown to have been more or lees under the Inflaence of Is certainly a ques- tlonable proceeding | sond the part of the clty councll The | of saloons and decrease the publle rev-|, only punlshment Inflicted upon these|enue. The consequence is that the move- two officers was the loss of pay daring|ment In favor of repealing the prohibl- except Sunday. The blished in the state MAIL ned_every morni naay morning dsil RN ar Six Months The Weekly Bee, Published e TRRNS, POSTE One Year, with premium.. One Year, without preminm Bix M 8, with One Month, on tri all of the places from which statistics have been gathered the attempts to enforoe prohibition have proved unsucoessfal. 200 19 10 ows and Editorial All Communicat g to to the EOITOR OF TI1% fuatters should be Bar censes in order to obtaln a revenue, The evidence that has gatherad goes to show that prohibltion |} BUSINESS LETTRRS, All Businoss Tetters and Remittances should be addressed to Tix Brr PunLisiise CoMPANY, OMATIA, Drafta,Checks and Post s to bo made pay able to the order of the company THE BEE PUBLISHING (0., Props. 5. ROSEWATER, Eprton A. H. T Manager Daily Circulation, Omaha, Nebraska, 1lquor, no punishment at all. At the same time | dally galning ground, This question, of Trar Ogallala Indlan scare seema to have boen located more In the imaglna- tion of an excltable reporter than any- where else. As usual the eastern papers will probably take It for granted that the Choyennes are about to swoop down on ‘Omaha, 1r Mr. John Roach could only ‘‘stand in” with Dr. Miller and J. N. H, Pat- ricks in that torpedo boat scheme, he might yet be able, with the services of those two eminent patrlots, to pull his Dolphin through, notwithstanding the objectlons of Messrs, Whitney and Gar- land. Tue city councll evidently belleves in arbitration, It propores to settle the differences exlsting between that body and the mayor, In regard to the offices and other matters, by submltting the whole business to a committee of confer- ence. It now remalns to be seen whether the non-partisan mayor Is willing to meet that commlttee and arbltrate. acknowledge the charge of drunkenness | settled. and direlectlon of duty., Had he made the samo kind of fight for retention on | IN his firat Interview In Denver Mr. the force as was made by the other two Charles Francis Adams sald that no such men, been refnatated. in repard 1o the two men already men- | moval, but on accouat of the then exlst- tloned, the councll wlll very likely re-|ing labor troubles the matter was aban- inatate him and punish by depriving him of hls dleclpline In the police force, where it|Was merely an apologetic sop thrown to has generally boen supposed some dlaci- | the people of Denver. pline Is needed. It Is certainly high time ——— that some example be made by the dis-| Tme Councll Bluffs Nonpareil g missal from the force of men who are fre- | ““The Omaha Republican declares that it quenting ealoons and who neglect thelr | costs a great deal to keep the Jee up to duty owlng to the fact that they are Inca- | the standard of a first-class morning pacitated by carrying too heavy a load of | newspaper.” OF course It does and the mixed drlnks—whisky and beer. A po- publishers of the Bee propose to keep on lceman has no buslness to go Into a sa- [ tpending money as liberally In the future loon unlees he goes there to arrest some |88 they have In the past to keep this oneor to perform some other official|paper in the front rank of journallsm, We belleve there is such a rule in [ No paper between Chicago and San Mr. Grant has had an extended exper- | Fegard to the police, and 1t ought to bo| Francisco spends as much money as the {ence as official Inspector of pavements in |strlctly enforced. It Is pretty safe to Owyana Ber, and it has its reward in the ‘Washington and other cltles, and he has [ 58Ys however, that so long as appoint. | largest clrculation of any dally in Iowa, superlntended the laylng of the entire [™eON! asphalt pavement system In Omaha, political *“inflocence,” sny effort to re- form and improve the force {will be time . Couscrimaxy Fuxay has put himeelf [ wasted. What Is needed isa thoroughre. [ more in bekalf of John Roach and his on record as the author of the longest | organization of the forceon a clvil service | Dolphin. If Mr. Chandler keeps this rosolatlon ever Introduced In the clty |reform basis, under which men shall be | thing up, we shall begin to belleve the counctl, Notwithstanding its Jength it [selected for thelr competency, age, sobrl- | recently-clrculated report that he has is well worth reading, and wlll prove |ety and physical and mental quallfica- | been employed by Mr. Roach to act as particularly Interesting to the ‘‘cltizens” | tlons, and to hold thelr places during hlis attorney In all matters in connection who helped to elect a non-partisan mayor. [good behavior. Politics should have | With the navy department, Mr. Chandler Asawrler of resolutions Mr. Furay is | nothing whatever to do with the appolnt- | talks just like a man who fan’t working likely to acquire a reputatlon equal to |ments, which ehould be made by & board | for nothing. the fame of Mr. Boyd as a letter-writer. | of police commissloners. Tue appointment by - the city councll of Mr. John Grant as Inspector of as- phalt pavements will meet the approval of our cltizens, who know him to be an honest man and an expart on asphalt. | 40t¥- “BiLLee” CHANDLER strikes back once — Tue deficit in the postoffice department Tue city council unanimously con- The cltizons of Cheyenne have been at the end of the present fiscal year will firmed Mr. J. E, House as chairman of led to belleve by Mr. Adams that the be about $6,000,000. This will be owing the board of publlc works. Hls profas- | yyp100 paclfic not only proposes to build principally to a reductlon in postage and slonal experlenco as a clvll engineer fits [ ¢ o depot In that olty, but to construct | *® increase In expenditures. It is ulso him for the posilion, and In many re- a railroad northward from that point. claimed that the general depression in spects ho s one of the best men that |y congratulate Cheyenne upon it business has had its effact upon the postal could have been selected. The new bright prospects. Now let Mr. Adams | Fovenues. chalrman will find plenty of work for| w0 +0 Omaha and tell us that the the next slx m.““!" to take up his “f“m Unlon Paclfic not only Intends to erect a time. The offico is by no means a sine- |, vonient and substantial depot, but to care: build a road from Omaha Into northern AN Houyax's Indian Inves | Nebraska, We shall then fesl liko con- | 18 more amusement than hard cash In'run- 1If it | ning & weekly paper In Denver. He Isa ad | Polished and forcible writer, and It is understood that he will connect himself with the eastern press. I 18 not often that an edltor sells his opinlon, but Mr, Rothaker has sold [his Denver Upinion, He has found that there ConGRe: tigating committee will first proceed to [ gratulating the people of Omsha. Pine Ridge agency to Investigate Agent [wlll pay the Unlon Paclfic vo bulld a ro: McGllltcudy and Chlef Red Cloud. [ from Cheyenne north, it will pay it ten McGillicudy s the best investigated agent | times more to construct a road from in the service, and In the wrestle with | Omaha Into therlch agrlcultural and live the Investigators he always comes out on | stock region of northera Nebraska, top. We look for the usual result in the = contest with the Holman committee, the | AN Amerlcan exposition {8 to bs opened members of which, if current rumor can{in London on the 1st of next May. be relied upon, are out on a tour of [ Among other things It is proposed to ex- pleasure rather than of buslness, hiblt a tobacco factory in operation, and — full representations of gold minlng, log- Tue thowing of loose paper In the|ging, cotton growing and manufacture of streets to be whirled hither and thither |the product In its several stages. All by the slightest wind Is a practice that | sorts of industrles are to have a place, should ke stopped, These flylng papers | and the government at Washington will causo frequent runaway accidents. We [send a collection contributed by the notlce that tho bill-posters particularly |bureaus cof its several departmenta. are very careless about thls matter.|The object will be to give vlsltorsa Whenever they cloan thelr bill-boards | thorough knowledge of the United States they tear off the old blils and let them |and its belonglngs. The grounds for the remaln on the ground, The firat wind | oxhibition, contalning twenty-two acres, | that Omaha and Lincoln seem very jeal- that arises carrlos them In every dlrec- | haye already been selected, and the work | U of each other. There must be some tion through the streets. They should | of grading, tree planting, and building mistake about this, Omaha Is certainly be made to gather up thelr waste paper, | will soon be commenced, not jealous of L'ncoln, She has no and either burn it or depozit it In a place reason to be. of eafety. am— ‘Waire the English people are all read- ing the Pall Mall Gazette exposures of London vice, the Russlans are stealing a march on the Afghans, It Is the old story of the Rueslans promlsing to keep the peace, while they are quletly advanc- ing all the tlme upon dlsputed territory. THE celebration at Niagara Falls in honor of the formal surrender of the park reservation to the state of New York was an enthuslastic affalr. The applause was a constant roar. It was furnished by old Niagara itself, Tur Grand Island Tndependent says Presipext Porrer, of Yale college, is spending his summer vacation in sup- ervising a revision of Webster’s diction- | thet he was misrepresonted by a Denver ary for its publishers, He Is being as- Zribune reporter., The reporter, whom slatod by meveral learned gontlomen, | he threatened to have shot full of holes if he was not reported correcily, still P ——— Cuaries Fra Apavs now claims Our Lincoln correspondent credits Mr, Gere, chief of the rallroad commls. slon, with ependlng two hours each day in looking after the Interests of the rail- of major-general of volunteers, & postmaster at a salary of $242 per year. So also have the attempts to exact Il- |yt poats are to be rewarded with postof- fices, we hope Ella Wheeler Wilcox, who been | jailg from Wisconstn, will not be over- has only served to Increase the pumber bouncing bog, and onght to know some- the time of suspension, which Is really [tory law and sustalning high license Is pound ordinance, prohiblting the run- ning at large or herding of anlmals with. the councll accopted the reslgnation of a fcourse, will be one of the princlpal lssues | i, the city limits, It is to be hopsd that policeman who had the manhood to|in Iowa politice untll 1t s definitely | Magor Boyd will not be able to find any reasonable objections to approving this ordinance. he would Inall probability have thing as the removal of the Unlon Paclfic | been fined $40 for whipping a boy whom There is still another |#hops from Omaha to Denver had been | he canght throwing stones at the birds on policeman whom Marehal Cummings has thought of. In his second Interview he | his premises. The payment of this fine suspended for drunkenness and sleeplng admlitted that last fall 1t was the Inten- | will require the writing of an eight.col- while on duty, but in view of the action tlon of the company to make such a re- [umn story by Mr. Hawthorne. him |doned. Now we would llke to know [tends Dr. Satherland’s church he may pay | which of these two Intervlews is correct ! | expect to hear a discouree on the fourth during the tlme of his suspension.|We are Inclined to the bellef that the | commandment. A president who goes This Is Indeed & queer way of enforcing|first one was the truth, and the latter fishing on Sunday should expect noth- population figures it is likely to be a very there Is an aggregate of 150 more saloons | yervice, which he entered as a captain in There is altogether too much drunken- | In these places than when legal llcense |the Twenty-tecond Massschusetts in among the members of the pollce [was granted and a revenue of $200,000 fantry, September Oth, 1861. At the |, e . Davenport, for In- | eloo of the war he had rlsen to the rank | 13 S6C01d Visit to Denver---He is Pre- sented With a Book---His Apol- 0gy to the Denverites, In July, 865, he became colonel of the Fortigth Burlington has forty-one more, Clinton | fnfantry In the regular army, and In 1880 thirteen, Councll Bluffs twenty-five, and | he was made a brigadler-general. Since Ottumwa, whero the license was £1,000, | the clvil war ho has distinguished himself has an addition of ninety-four. Inneatly|as an Indlan fighter, » A Wisconsiy poet has been appolnted ooked. She s now the mother of a hing about handling tho malls, THE olty councll has passed another Interesting Reading Matter for Oma JuuiaNx Hawraonrse, the novelist, has Wuey Preeident Cleveland next at- Ing else. Kansas Crry is to have an elevated railroad. 1f It 18 to be as elevated as its high road, with balloon connections with the ground statlons, THE DAILY BEE--THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1885 eald: “‘Well, gentlemen, It does seem to me that wherever I have a particnlar Bim" Thl arded shg maier, i the oftcer was not removed. - (His ALSWer to That 014 Land-Grabbing Daring the war complalnt was made S[OI‘Y CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS. —_— SENATOR VAN WYCK — that Mr, Lincoln was too lenfent In en- forolng disclpline In the army, by direot- Ing the executlons of the judgments of courts for.the trial of military offsnses. It was clalmed that he would not ap. prove of the death sentence of a soldler for densrtlon If he could find any possl- ble excuse for his rejecting {t. This, It was clalmed by many, tended to weaken the dlacipline of the army, and to en courage desertion, as there seemed to be no chance of enforolog the decrees of the courts punishing that high military orlme. Yet this clamor agalnst the pres- ident by many ofticers high command made no Im preesion upon him. One day In the summer of 1863, I think, I called on him on business, and as 1 entered hls room Mr, Lincoln said: “1 have here some papera [putting his hand upon a Inrgo file of papers] which I started this morning to carefully examine. They contaln the entire procecdings of a mllt- tary court for the trial of a young sol- dler for desertion. And they contaln minutes of the testimony taken on the trial, together with tho conviction and sentence to death of the boy. 1 have read just throo pages of the testimony and have found thls: ‘The boy sald when first arrested that he was going home to see his mother.” 1 don’t think I can allow a boy to be shot who trled to g0 home to see hls mother, 1 guess I don't went to read any more of this” The sentence of the court was dlsap- proved without further investigation. lLlllt vluu‘t{mf tandorllympathy which Mr. ncoln felt for the Inexperlencad young SonICeRtT | eh whio) wilkibhit Aty dea o €46, HkEa ships of army life had volunteered to da- fend the union, that rendered him 8o popular with the private soldlera of the army. They all felt that they had a friend In the president. e —— LORD AND LADY SALISBURY. A Plain Statemont of F'acts Bhowing that the Libel is Without Any ha People, Foundation or Excuse, ‘‘The charges of the Omaha Republican and kindred papers In regard to my lande In Otoe county are not only wlithout foundation but without excuse,” eald Senator Van Wyck at the Paxton hotel yesterday to a represontative of the Brr, who spoko to him aboat an artlcle In the Republlcan In which the old land.grab- bingstory was revamped. “‘Theso samo charges have been dis- proved and exploded In Otos coanty years ago, They were first made In the campalgn elght or nine years ago, and the tribunal of the people pronounced them false,” continued the senator. “‘The latter-day authors of the same storles must have known that In thelr statements they were without excusa or palliation,” ‘‘When and how did you acqulre those lands?” ‘‘Nearly thirty yoare ago I camo to Nebratka on a visit. Thaero ware hardly any settlements in this part of the coun- try at that time. Thers was only one trame house where Nebraska City now stands and I elopt in that house over night. When I returned to New York Itold » fow frlends of tho beautiful country I had seen and described its ad- vantsgoes, I then came back to Nebraska with Capt, Anderson and his son, Mr, Rose- crans, Robert Davis, Mr, Travis, and a fow others, all of whom sold their little property In New York on tfme, and came here with the sole intentlon of mak- ing their permanent homes in Nebraska. I advanced most of them money with which to purchase land, lumber, plows, cattle, snd other necessaries. We came through lowa with a team which I purchased for the outfit at Davenport. They lccated thelr land in Otoe county, Denver Nowe, July 14, At the Windsor hotel last evening, by appolntment with the Hon, R. W. Wood bury, president of the chamber of com- merce, the Hon. Charles Francls Adams, president of the Unlon Paclfio, met some thirty members of that body for the pur- pose of diecussing Informally the relations of Denver to the Union Paclfic road, The chamber of c:mmerce committes presented a statement of the views of that body on the tople In hand, which Prerident Adams recelved and promised to conslder. In his pleasant half-hour's talk to the committes of business men, President Adams adverted to a certain garbled re. portof an Interview between himeelf and a reporter of the Telbune-Republican, which appeared the other day, denounc- Ing it as utterly false in 8o far as it pre- tended to represent his views on Colorado In general and Denver in particalar, or the relations of elther to the Unlon Pa- cific. He also stated that while the Unlon Paclfic company had purchased largo tracts of land near Denver for the purpose of erecting extensive shope, the labor problem had assumed such an aspect here that the company had abandoned the project. President Adams epoke of the bright fature before this clty an state, In which the Unlon Paclfic is largely Intorested, and stated that the company would do all In its power to make Denver a leading point for the dls- tribution of supplies. Frem the Denver 7ribunc- Republican of the 14th, we also learn the following: The following Is a list of the contents|The Courtahip and Marriage of the of the book: ‘‘Introductory,” R. W. Present Premier of Iingland. ‘Woodbury; “Live Stock,” L. It. Rhodes, “Agrlcalture,” William N. Byers; “‘Ores [ London Letter in the Hartford Timos, the Gem of the Missouri Valley, Omahs, Chicago News. Our salaclous contemporary, the Chi- cago Tribune, would not be apt to sneer at Omaha if it really knew what it was talking about. At the present time Omsaha is the handsomest city In the Missouri valley. It has, perhaps, not more thau half the population that Kan- san City enjoys, but 1t is better laid out than Kaneas Clty, has better paved streets and more of them, has finer ho- tels, has a finer opera house, has finer public buildings generally, and much more substantial business blocks. Inthe particular of soclety Omaha 1s an far ahead of Kaneas Clty as K ansas Clty Is ahead of Grasshopper Falls. Omaha s unques— tionably the gem of the Missourl valley; her progrees durlng the past two years has been marvelous, her growth has been healthy, and her prodigious improve- ments have all been of a permanent char- acter. It Is foollshly unfair to rall at Omaha as a ragged border town; other weatern cltios may be in Mother Hub- bard attlre, but not Omaha—she is riggea out in allk and eatin and Is as chipper a body as you could hope to meet im many a day’s journey. e — STATE JOTTINGS. Fairmont has contracted for water works. Steps are being taken to organize a county fair in Phelps county, There are 92,000 acres of land under culti- vation in Fillmore county, Grand Island has been officially proclaimed a city of the second class, The first election of county officors for Lo~ gan county will be held on the 25th, The editor of the St, Paul Free Prees has been rewarded with a postoffice commission. The town of Phillips is steadily growing. Chocran & Tighe are building & very fine ele- vator. The servant girl of a wealthy farmer living near Fremont has sued the old Lothario for 85,000 damages, The B, & M. branch from Holdrege to Oga- lala is being fast completed, The track lay- ers began work last week, The eight-year-old son of J. F. Furgeson, a farmer living near Syracuse, had his foot cut off Wednesday by a mower, The Plattemouth canning factory started up with a supply of beans last week, and didn’t make any noise about it either, The Towa snd Nebraska packing company of Nebraska City, propose to erect a group of twenty five to thirty cottages to ront to its employes. The Jackson genius who advertised to un- fold his winge and grazed the blue dome, hss yet failed to unfurl, and is content to linger with the rest of mankind on terra firma, TLocal politics in Phelps county are lively and the office seeker shaketh the horny hand of the honest granger and tells him how he loves him, Thereis to bo a lively scramble for the loaves of fishes this fall, A Fremont gospel exhorter is highly in- censed becaute, after paying $124 80 to ap- pease the wrath of a man who wife the al- eged clergiman had insulted, the husband gave the snap away, Could base ingratitude go farther? The biscnit shooters and the hash heaversof rival hotels in Fremont propose to run for or- ders and glory on the diamond this weel, The lithe and airy biscuit boys back their claims to the championship with cash, and propose to dough up their masticated oppo- nents, roads, This ast what we expeoted of The work will require several months, Mr, Gere, but it he will put in the rest of | ©W1Bg to the many new words that have the day, or even two hours, fn looklng | recently come iato use, among which Is after the interests of the people, the tax- “‘mugwump.” Amerlcan students of po- poyers and patrons of the rallroads will litical acience will awalt with considerable notbe aptto find so much fault with | Interest the publication of this revised him, What surprlses us is that Mr, | €dition wh'ch no doubt wlll give the ex- Gere Is not devoting his entire time to | At derlvation and correct definition of the rallrond Interests, If the rallroads | ‘‘mUgWump,” aword that has come into required 1t, It is safe to say that he |OPiversal uze in this country, and about would do s0, even to the detrlment of the | Which there has been so much discusslon. mutusl ineurance business in which he ls Interested. TaE letter of Msyor Boyd to Oharles —ee Francls Adams has glven more satisfac— Onaxces Fraxcis| Avams hes again | tion to the people of Omaha than auy. visited Denver. Upon the occaslon of thing that has appeared In print in the this second vislt he met & ‘number of |interest of the olty for soveral years, A the business men of Denver, The meet- | general inquiry on the part of the Bee Ing was a very harmonfous onc. The|smong the property owners, jobbers and buslness men told Mr. Adams what Den- | ghippers and other buslness men, without ver wanted of the Union Paclfic, and|regard to party or occapatlon, shows Presldent Woodbury, of the board of | that they all with one accord most em- trade, addreseed the rallway magnate. | phatically endorse the stand taken by “‘At the close of his remarks,” says the | Mayor Boyd. 1t s indeed gratifying to Tribune-Republican, **Mr. Woodbury | gee this community at last united vpon a presented Mr. Adams with & bound vol- | matter of such great interest. 1f therels ume containiog & number of arguments | any divided sentiment on thlsquestion we from the business men, which they de- | have falled to discover it. slred to have Mr, Adams read at his ——— leisure. These arguments; were all bound.” We would suggest to Mayor | that prohibition does not prohlblt, and Boyd that when Charles Francls Adams |that a license law for the regulation of returns to Omaha he should present him [the lquor trafiic such as Nebraska has {s | Augur in the command of the department | or, at the bes with & bound and printed copy of his | far preferable, The reports from tweaty- | of the Mlasour], 1s not a graduate of West nine citleyand towns show that at present ' Point, anywhere. thet attempts to tear down one clty by ArtEk a year's trial in Iowa, tho people false threats and to bulld up another city written with a type-writer and afterwards | of that state are coming to the conclusion by false promise: ‘Work on the uew flouring mill at Creighton — is being pushed with » vim by the enterpris ing firm of Messrs Koncher & Packard, The Tue deadly toy plstol got In Its work | building 1s to bs 40x40, four stories high, with protty effectiyely In Chleago on the | twenty two set of rollers, with a capacity of hty barrels per day. Itis the f Fourth of July, Ten deaths occurred on :)';Bg,fi!m wuvlflha?;iu ln‘o'pulliop: l'z);o(. fatz- Taesday In that clty from lock-jaw aa the | ber 1st. result of celebrating with toy platols. Ives, Married at the residence of Dr, and Mrs, W, J, Bonsteel, in Creighton, by Re S Thomas A. Kent, Mr, G, L, Wilson and M TarE three electrle light companies of linllio 'l'z plz;_ou K 'clock P, M., T}zn;rpdud, the 10t} & company of {riends Boston have consolidated. If the Hub-] ud'sctuatntances wore pretent to help tho ites, however, expect the electrlo llu.|fair and charming young couple launch out nilnstion to be three times stronger than upon the sea of matrimonial bliss, Numerous costly presents were made on the occasion, formerly they will be mistaken, Mary Ellen Haskios, daughter of Henry Miller of Rook Blufls, Cass county, aged 2 yeurn b ben ad judged nsano s will asent o A to the asylum, e has been deaf an um| Garland In regard to the/Dolphin has had | since she was v years oldy cauned by care bral-spinal mengingitis, Her inganity is sup- a rather aingular effect upon Mr, Roach. | FO8 %000 CUoEi by Vrooding over the de- 1t has made him dumb, He absolutely | eertion of her husband, whic loncurrud two Tonth after her marrlage several years since, rofusen fo talk, She sita in her delirium and fondles & photo- — geaph of her truant husband, Tue Munster baok in Dublin has sus-| Gile's ngfregiliun of jugglers, & circus with pended, with liabilitles smounting to|a wealth of attractions on paper, has left 8 750,000, That | a trail of confidence games and swindled $8,750,000. That Is a pretty respectable | greenics on through the fallure, and would be a credit almost |state. From points came reports of outlawry vergiog on peniten tiary offences. At Siduey, last sweek, & farmer named Malcolm was taken in Tor but the money was afterwards recovered by the sheriff, A favorite trick, and the one that was ths indirect cause of Keyo's death at Avoca {s the “‘upper and under box” game, Tue actlon of Meesrs, Whitney and Waar kind of a railroad policy is it sell the contemplated yictim at & ruinous rate, It the deal is made the money is paid over, and, by a ¢! Gey, Mites, who has succeeded Gen, of what he has bought. - makes » fuss about it the gang rush topether He is a graduate of the voluntecr land do him up, each man taking a quarter sectlon, with the expsctation of makling it his home. Mr. Parker, one of the land officers at Omsha, transacted the buslness, and acled as my attorney In the matter of receiving the money which I had ad- vanced. The customary method at that time, as I remember it, was to secure the money by a deed In the nature of fa mortgage, and glving back a bond to re- convey. ““What became of all theee men and thelr lands " “‘The men all located upon thelr lands, some of them staying there a long time, and eome of them belng there yet. When any ono of them who was in my debt left the country, I took his land ae repayment for the money I had advanced. I did not always get my money back. For example, take the case of Rosecrane. He improved his claim, and I continued to advance money to him until I had let him have nearly $1,400. He then sold his farm to Mr. Woolsey, who now lives upon It. I lost every dollar which I had advanced to Rosecrans, because I had and Mining,” James S. Matthews; ‘‘Dis-| One gray morning In the mld-epring of Govornor John. Evans; “Dianufactures,” | Boe. Al Lordon bener the balaor ot R W. Wondbury;“lral’;}?lnut Furnaces,” u,“ 5 g;n %n“ nuv; \\? : e tor J. W, Nesmith. " |for three yoara tho bonatious wonder of A general conversation followed, durlng | goclety, Gaorglana Alderson was the which Mr. Adams took occasion to apolo- | brightest and falrest of the ladies of th glze for the statements which he made Cmfi.g Bat sh. A |Et: E“; h g concerning Colorado In un Interview pub- | drawn many lovers by the silken charm lished In the Tribune-Republican on the [ well discovered by witchery and blue seventh Instant by saylrg that he balleved eyes and sunny lnlr.y Many x\ywoour had his remarks were misunderatood and a|wooed in valn, for the dsughter of Sir eonE é:"i':&“&‘,%“n gg:to f?:llt’ln:h;:: el;e Edlvlmxd ubnu Alderson was an_ helress ay . - [ well as a beauty, and estats of land Is the fli‘,fi?;‘fi:, :'fhtl;eh Hlen?:;.lsilgxgcludafl 1t gnm a;ttlngf That estato of beauty can t 0 emand. Of some of the most selfish of thln”n(flexrri,ncamto the cgmlnmfilon Of | the admirers it could have been sald that M: A%::: ::ldih‘::flv‘:;:z h: '.:“l‘;'::‘v! they were brilllant men and worthy of Tast fall hn’wn shocked at the condition e montievsted Jlioporglob(roymliysjand of the shops In this city, and that at that :&;0:‘;?1f.h':;ztzfigfifim:fhsh?" mlhr- time 1t was the Intentlon to remove tho |know man as man desorves to be known. Omaha shops to this clty, but on account | Miss Ople, the queen of socisty of ten or . Tl er's aunt and chaperone, an: 83 Ople company would nelther build in this ‘i"y knew batter umnl most other wolnanpof or any other placo until the labor prob |the time how to dlatingnish between |falled to resord my papers.” lem was dafinitely settled. He eald that|heart and pretense. She had kept the| ‘‘How long did these parties live upon ho had glven orders to cat down|moths from her nloce, bt while she was | theso lande?” the force ~as much a3 pos-|goeking an ideally eliglble man her charge| ‘“Some of them became dissatisfiod sible and as far as practlcable to buy|had given her hand to Robert Cecil. with the country, and when they left whatever was necessary instead of mak-| " Miss [Ople was dismayed. Cecil was | from time to time I came into possesston Ing It. He said he was entirely opposed | not a man after her liking. Though the |of thelr claims in the manner I have :o the pollcy of the Unlon Pacific o jaon of an earl he was a youngor son, and |describad, - Nono of these mon came to dmn]fi ll:ereto{vra. and sald that he w?n anything but popular with his family. | Nebraska in my Interest In 0 all he could to encourage mauufact- | There had been a quarrel and a fraternal [any way whatever, but with ovres. He did not believe In the theory |scandal, and, to the horror of the family [the —honest intention of making of charging more for frelght on raw ma- |, Hatfield house he had had to earn his | thelr homes hera, Capt. Anderson and terial than on the manufactured article. [own llving. Beglnning as a journallst, | his son, ffom that time until now, have He further eald that he thought Denver|pe had shown marked abllity till he was | bsen living upon thelr clalms, and have would be a good place for a beef canning| s regular contributor to the Quarterly. |made fine farms out of them. They and factory, and hoped such an enterprise | Wor three years he had been In parlia- |all the other men were respectable and would be started. ment for Stamford, where he continued [honest, both in New York and Nebraska, to sit for fifteen years, but where he made | and they were not and are not by any no consequential mark., It was no won- | means Vagrants, or outlaws, or'perjurers, PR O der that Miss Opie was displessed |as they have been characterized by the How wincoln Allayed Irish Hostility | with the matoh. With but few redeem- |Omaha Republican, I did not bring in New York—Other Anecdotes ing features soclally, the young man was | them to Nebraska with any Intentlon of —_— at best a bookworm and so serlous and [having them secure claims for me, Every From W. S. Wilkinson’s Lotter to the New | qulet that he was esteemed dull. Bat |one of them now living will bear evidence York Tribune, the nleca had felt the braln of the Cecils, [to the truth of this statewent. In Another fact might be clted {llustrai- and, though nine out of ten thought as)order that the matter may be placed fng the president’s remarkablo tact .and did the aunt, the nlece and theaunt came | beyond all doubt I propose to prepare a skill In smoothing over diffisultles which to wlitness the ceremony. 4 detalled statement, verified by the afii- were likely to culminate ln pecullar It was a matter-of-fact wedding, as|davits of the men thewsslves, and those trouble. At one tlme thero was a great English coantry-side weddings are apt to | who were present and knew the purpose dlscontont smong the laboring classes in be.” There was the gay company filling | of their coming. ~ At the time they came th clty of New York, espoctally among the chapel, and the white rlbbon that |here land was §1 25 per acre anywhere, the Irlsh, which was brightened by the kept the commop herd of acqualntances |and if they became dissatisfied they could draft recently ordered for the prompt from the chosea many of the family. | go elsewhere and locate other claims, It filllng up of our depleted ranks. This There was at ten o'clock the soft low|was no benefit to mo to have any of them discontent had atsumed such proportions | 20tes of the wedding march from Lohen- [go away, as they left their property on 88 to throaten the people of the clty and grin, the quartette of able bodied ushers | my hands as securlty formoney advanced. fmperil the cause of the country, In passing up the center aiclo, and parting|Capt. Anderson, who has been called a this extremity Mr. Lincola conceived the the silken barrler. There wero two little | vagrant by the Republican and other notion of raising an Irish brigade in New glr's strowlng the alele with white flow- |euch papers, was a member of the Ne York, to be officered cxclusiyely by |®r® from their aprons, and four brides. [ braska leglslatare in the early days. Irlshmen. The difficult question was|Malds behind thom. Thore was the how to organiz it, and who sould bo got | PFIde on her father's armwith the queen’a to do 1t successfully. After thinking the | P0uquet In her hand. Thore was tho matter over Mr. Lincoln wrote to James | 5FO0m meetlog them at the chancel rall, T. Brady, the brilllant end Influcntial Ther was the ceremony and the blessing Teleh lawyer, asking him to]®nd the congratulations. come to Washington on o ————— REMARKABLE TACT, e —em— MK, KEILEY'S CASE, An Austrian Journal's Explanation of Ir, ity b \'|;’;ml(mmx‘i‘lr l\gv'nu b ??mam-. 8 otween Austrla-Hungary and the matter of publlc ~ business, Mr, A Bard Ong fo Handle, United States of Amerlea the most cor- Brady promptly obeyed the summonsand | Officer Bloom had a llttle experlence | dial diplomatic relatlons exlat, and in Vi- was dumbfounded when he was Infonmed | Taeaday ovening that will always remain | enna, as well as in Washington no mecans that the mission was to be {mposed on | green in hls memory. A large man, |8 left unexerciced to Insure thelr contin- him to raise and officer an Irish brigade filled to the neck with diverse and sun- | U3hce: This lends a epectal importance in New York city, He protested earn- d o to the fact that Mr, Kelley, the new em- estly that he knew nothing of military | dry Intoxicants was found by him on [pagsador of the United States, recontly matters, such things belng entlrely out- [ Douglas strest, making sn Indecent ex- |appolnted by President Cleveland, will o b o e FONRE GF e tiaon 0 oring Lanab [ 116218, TAS W7 AL Bt AT A [ enna, work at such an organization, and no to ladles who passed by. - Bloom went The gau in question, hulmvgr, 1s not ofa confidence in his own judgment in the|®P to thls large man, who is known only | nature to endanger the good relatons at appolntment of officere. a8 John Dos, and admonlshed him to be- | present existing between Austria-Hun- ; The president's shrewd reply was: | have himself or he would be arrested. ?-rh and the starry republic. Mr, Kef- *You know plenty of Irlshmen who do| xp it this time the officer received a |i6Y» While nlll-Inonemg lawyer in The fakir has 8 watch in a small box, two of | two otbers called on Mr, Lincoln and|fiolated and pronounced the ceremony. which be has in his hand, which he cffers to [ asked for the re official ia ght of haud trick, the purchaser | Washington, is banded the lower box, containing notbing, | charges with much vehemence the pree- t, a miserable oreide immitation | (dent llstened attentively, with his 1 the individual | o | with a sorrowful expresslon of face and know all about such matters, and as to o Virginia, dellvered before a Cathollc the appolntment of officers—did you ever John L, Sullivan jolt at the side of his maagtlng, a vlolent know an Irlshman who would decline an |head, which toppled him over, and|Kiog Victor Emmanuel, In which office or refuse a palr of epaulets, or do|the blg man chuckled. The|the liberator and unifier of anything but fight gallantly after he had | officer come sgaln, and that time made a | Italy was described In the most fujurlous them?’ clab play, that caused his adversary to terms, When Mr, Arthur, the late pres- The upshot of the conference was that | bite the dust. He was put Into & cab [dent of the United States—elther be- Brady undertook the mission, returned |and started to headquarters. Before go- [cause he was ignorsnt of Mr. Kelly's to New York, and ralsed the brigade|ing very far, however, he threw the of- [specch, ordid not attach sufficlent fm- without difficulty, officered by Irlshmen, | ficer out, Officer Bloom then called Of- [ portance to it—named Mr, Kelley minis- as Mr, Lincoln had suggested. When | ficer Harrlgan to his asslstance, and to- | ter to the Roman court, the latter w magpificent body of 5,000 Irlshmen | gether they succeeded In landing the ob- | promptly rejected by the quirinal on marched down Broadway, en route to the | streperous rooster in the cooler. When [count of his unfriendly expressions re- seat of war, the smouldering dlscontent | heing locked up, and for several minutes [ garding Victor Emmsnuel, A year has among the 1rish which had threatened to | afterwards, he roared, and bellowed, and |since elapsed, and Mr. Cleveland, the break Into flame, was replaced by an ar- [ Lowled like some mad animal, new president of the United States, has dent enthuslasm which made the alr ricg e — now appointed Mr. Keiley ambassador to lwlth :l!:ouu b-nd bnzml.' "Mr, filnsohll)‘- Quietly Married, the court of Vienna, ;zmbngly becaue he mmediate object was fully realized by . i o wad unaware of the fact that his candl- that koen, practical insight sud knowl| 4 ver¥ “:"’&"“"’?‘"g Mxnum: ot | bisanelf, by his spoech on the Lalisn edge of humsn natare which shons so | evening st the Kountz memorlal church, [yyn, ‘hag precluded the porsibllity of be- conspleuously in him, I have glven the | corner of Harney and Sixteenth streets. | ing recelved in a diplomatic capaclty in above fact exactly as It was related to me | Mr, Augustus B, Bosleman, of Papillion, | any state In Europe. Mr, Kelley s not by Mr, Brady at the time. and Miss Carrie E. Huff, of this city, [considered a fit person In Vienna, first, I was present on one occaslon when{ were the contracting parties, The Rev. [because we belleve that our duty to the Messrs, Sumner and Wade, and one or|J, §, Detweller, pastor of the church, of~ | Italian court makes it incumbent cn us to \ reject # man who so severely aspersed moval of a prominent{Mr, Arthur Campbell and Mlss Gertie | the memory of the father of the reign- one of the departments in | Huff acted the part of attendant, About |Ing king of Italy, and, eecondly, bacausa While urglog thelr | one hundred friends of the young couple [ we believe that Mr. Kelley, jadglng from were present, After the ceremony the | his condact, is not a man caloulated to head | party returned to the residence of the | preserve the good relations exleting be- At the conclusion he looked wup |bride's parents where s recepion was |tween Austria-Hungary aud the Usited held, Btates, speech on