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4 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1835, r 3 4 D Ixposing r Seorets, red s of Omaha The pr Wimar wealthy man, to whon \.J«. pro‘anity attached to .—Nileago Jours | have been filed with the scerefary © county, hereby eertify rl ‘”E ])A\‘L\ ],[4‘]4“ Fxposing Thelr Secre ~‘ : l\m‘nh' .nulv- out of Omahis xvy. m, & wealthy mafl, to w 1 ho ap- | M ty R L T reieTs towwye W L T ited With the fndlvidanlsand 0° Ah ng up from th vailing impression that this was simply | pealed for wse by con « Bt Davota has | boon landed at Grand Istand read » wve signed the above and fore W AKHINGTON OFF No. W ForntrEsTH | S8 118 S0l « | 1 at Sherid Mille Towa Ttems, e ———e ler v . ) ot bod of ho i Phrsty. ¢ Gy 1 W. PEC 1to t ; ¢ - £100,000 from his ) ' . 4 J THE WOOD RIVER VALLEY Wh 1 must by 1 from t t n that a bad bo y ttich Agricultural Region he Herald. Dr. Miller has return ——— \ ‘ Prosperome People, New York where he has been in conf ‘\'.” of the state b W t 1 . S 4 tor !u. Nob,, Des, 21 tion at the hands of the ence with Jay Gould. Hois doubtless in | themselves in fix r trerigo TRy ot sthion! toad) 1 o 1 It may 1 v hat this locali 1 wd | slates for 1886, This is o por month is $ 4219 fo 1 known One Year, with 1 . 2 : One M Up to the timoe when G 1 tion to speak by the card with r | to Gould's designs, which as usual, » early in the geason fo) i i for female } Wood River Valley, in the above e Ayl sl ¥ ess of the manageme urely benevolent. Omaha, as we have \ 4 A ) me of the 1 n f the m. n pu l 1 1 ] POINTED PARAGIRAPIHS, by piece of eat dn 1 ) L \r was to prosent, for | said onoe or twice before, wants a rail 1 was 55 yoars ol ) N Lup with a nsof the t 1 be ¢ e road up the Elkhorn valley with inci Cincinbati has a paper ealled The Eartl is projecting 3 \ kiddy wirls _of Gate City L mostly f OMAmA. Drafte, che nd & o d as to conceal t n dental branches through the tier of | Jay Gould wants it INPASS—=0n paper gur va‘w s Keokik 10 be miado puyable (o the order of tho company of the men who wor the | northeastern counties south ot the Dakota | Never let an opportunit ing upto the fact that her | wekwell Clty ha ) i vacant | parts of TEE BEE PUSLISHING COMPAKY, PROPRIETOR s on Wall street for their own | line, We do not care who builds the [ andoutof the window I nart bitld & track 5000 fect long 8o In Most of the count o fine s s vvidy U] rivate benefit. For mearly twenty | road, specially if the owners build it with Pilmake a good point o Sty L s L it i to run & tobogan ata speed-of hall | of cultivation. The people are all in cars the public no | than | their own money. Sueh a road, when [ itorsaid when he sharpened his poncil. prostigeas the metropo K tl vernment has found it | built, will receive very liberal patrongo George W. T ared £100,000 on his nj le t re any reliable informa- | the union army and Is now abotit 43 Years oldl Nebraska may come into d 1 1 revenues | comes to the question of giving away X munieation with its port of entry, and there Wh ek editor was out of |t Why it shotil £ th 1 4 X S was much botter than beiug hanged in - New - ; 0 datitagos for keeping hor lusbin E. ROSEWATER. Enrron tlie business which 18 tributary us to ho city on the pe finay 11y, y The Leader hopes that er . North twesn Sty Lo nd St P 3 t modern n itha i Ao of 11 i oa ywin wd pour wea ) hier o W eotfers T'iis isnot orthodox Christma At but it will do, i ——— tion regarding the operation Dagora 15 bonnd to g hearing and management of these subsidy eaters Yerson square and voting a big mort doesn't g 1 = Tor the same length of time, scerct | gage upon the county that is another L manipulation, stock watering, false | matter. Tt will bear a good deal of ean- po (i ey or | cheaper food for | balances and lying statements have been | vassing. If the Missouri Pa Wnly I e b e 1t ol 9 of drunien Wt Omsha must have | freely used to swell the futuresof the | wishes to extond its main line to the [ o =00 R0 E e, te | ‘Miiotols Wb Taw: W b 1 d a corporate tr north a few miles back of Omaha, it will # very e agreat manufac- | men who have o 1any of gentlemen b . L ¥ to advanee personal ends. The Ames, | hardly be pradent to ace Goulds, the Dillons and Stan much needed substitute for a dircet rail An AL in New York the Lup th n o rond up the Elkhorn vall Da i two great invention, ive use of s B et oth ends it s time to propound the ¥ g yonr seems quite ¢ <of lving his nwme in us the | gverybods's nouth. of liled States senators, but wnta tan is dying from oy amule. When amule becomes da we we drifting A v X ; an to his memory | tieit h would forev will illume the dall prison life of SIS, t [ r you e e impossibls for them or their s | Quin Bolannon when he receives the news 2 . ; ARKS 8§ Lasa va o repeat the performances of th that Justice Miller of the United States su- [ “Thi enough b's breath oreign mission. Every land- | two deeades. Mr. Gould's neat deal in | DIt urt hias granted a writof error in thie conr E chewed | the celebrated case. 1t is safe to say a large ter swallowin pof “eold majority of the Nebraska publie will share i . Boliannon’s hope that this stay of pr ydy erop is nnmsual operator was n “business seeret’ which | fore the date set for his legal assassination, | the back towns of that state announce the ay give out Present Cleveland will have a | would have been very disastrous for the | may mean a final postponement of that ter- | pearance of wild cats of cnovmous size in tho | . - 5 Under Two Flags. tew more hundred nominations for the | y,ocsessor’s pocket book if it had been | ribie event.—Herald. woos. Still Hammoring Away. g ? Itk (G Cons Fhe eivil consideration of the senate about the | givulged in'time to prevent the consum Quin Bohannon has good reason 1o | A California man hasa defect in his oyes Gustor County Lk . alt silice o - such t lasted so time that cougress reconvencs. mation of the nefarious transaction. The | congratuiate himself upon the extension | which eauses him 1o sce every object multi thic corporations! Shimble B 1/ SWoninn it nd covered such a Apanse of state are still hamaering a A ¢ 1 { Was an eus for for a Van Wyek, who minds it o as PR 4 1 $ fitin hoth armies, and eseapoe penses” and “expense acconnt” about tho | the United States, but we sce no reason | ties of those oplics under the intiuence of | 0 0200 8 TR i f V X v and punishmen the Jersey fluid. : bty 3 cfore Geor a the Teader of Jhe demoeratic house by his | gy of the adjournment of congress and | for public rejoicing over the event. Bo! & seing editors has a X ! those far-seeing editors has a st ) X igght N settlod in ' miah," will ¢ ler thoy prot Botannon's Case. conundruin, “Wiit L state, e e pr i \ an it the state w procecdings, or it may Propose wall 1o may be said tobe in the | A coam wan funily it i it bher in the country will rise to sec- | Kansas Pacilic when that road was ul the nomination absorbed by the Union Pacitic and T the white he stationery doesn’t | sy, its ambition is in th gress | fowls in the = publication of the ttemized *Jegal ex- | of his life lease by the supreme court of | plicd nineteen times, Imagine the possibil T, Monnisox, of 1llinois, is hailed as enthusiastic followers. When Sam Ran- | 1,0 vavious legislatures would xlso expose | hannon is a noted desperado who mur- | A bronze statue of Bacchus, the itorial note on Van, o nei s w dail starts in to dispute the colonels su- | Govopal “husiness secrets,” which would | dered a man in a quarrel of his own seck- | Wine, was recently wnearthed in the “Fiber |50 el that Van Wyek p orhood of the eapitol Areport, ns required, of the freight re- | lic expense and has been adjudged guilty | g 928 18 Qe i whehe “’(“kl]‘: ke, | Somebody or some measure, as the case may K et out in = th ———————— bies given tornilront favorites: ntlpos | of murdor/in tho fivst dosroo, Tho conctin bl e e be. Lt those orzans wonld only bring forth n i 1| ey s e sentiments than he : | ey tow hiorn and the | somethinng Lungible aziinst o senatot, by ¢ t L . wler other eircum: ¥ A o startling fact that a Ke ‘kian's n Wil | which they co uld prove that heis as great | e { nees, The state went ont of the union posure of another “business sccret,” but | tenced him to bo banged. This _judicial | axaetly 1it the bung hole of a bat 356 | SSRGHIHB ey HFB P O g 16 e s 1 : & i e LR, the damage done would be less to the tion is the penalty wh plain facts reveal the more signiieant fact | have some effect in changing public senti v " e companies hegan (o organize N B e ba i Bt Wb e yal stockholders than - io the managements. | imposcs as a protection for society. To that his moutl is the feature most 1ikely to | ment, but until sueh eharges are made and ed. This ¢ i e | 0 10 the front. Onr New England 1 2 Mr. Charles Francis Adams, the presi- | eallit legal assassination is making a | do it. proven the people w mply consider the | 1 $ 180, chool houses SIS.000, resi- | nd felt that the pressure of publie b paying one in the bargain, dentof the Union Pacific railrond, not | martyr ont of a murderer. Humanity OHR ISTITAS BTORINS sourco from which the slurs emunato and | wanuiacinring plants &6 iyt | e L T “‘;‘?'“i,‘"f' : long ago urged as the first ste receives no benefit fre stuch maudlin ern themselves accordingly, public work . S140.0. Bearrice and Fremont want federal & N30 WHE P S ITE SPOKE 1110 EXPEIIENCE Y 2 A if he did not become n confederate. sol ) al | olution of the railroad problem, sentimentalism. Capital punishment X et . ey ik i St dier, le weto linblo in hour Duilding: braska is s et $hid SChristmas s the happicst season of the | Classical Scholars of the Omaha nt i (1% ) g Rl L Bt ,X“rlv“,] ol |\l i is i g u]p \‘\‘Illl | widest publicity of the details of railroad | muy be brutal, but it is the only sa hristmas is the happiest season of t Tassical 1olars of the Omaha i " and prosperous intand cities s 5 i n o1 of mad ex to lyneh him. — So_he ; : VonT AR DPTOLE SIRTAY ‘€O ODLLSRCHEE Kansas City Ti in 1l alkin f m nt to lyn | management. ~ Commissioner Johnston | guard against assassination. If impris- | 55 s e PTEUY Sy seasit tech it SR Al t ymned snit of gray and 1 off to has taken him at his word. The rules | onment for life would serve the same | and put his dnzor in his mouth and | ha pres gozed i a sant eont l Ul kel LR el which he proposes to enforee, if given to | purpose it would perhaps be preferable. | answerd Yes'm.” *And do you kunow | versy. br. > of the 11 Tl Go Dakota, ; i T e Incaligots With the | iy many a skirmish a ttle, and in the course of time was made a licutenant, PaviNG, viaducts, boulevards and public buildings form the programme which Omaha has laid out for herself for litical eappers, would cortainly b an ex- | earrying ont the mandute of the law sen- e coming year. Itis ttractive one whose just cliims for such accommoda tious, If gianted, would save the govern- ment a good many thousand doliars for ront in the years to come the publie, will sccure under oath the | But under our system of reprieves and | why Chiristmas is the happicst scason of Gioi to say “Li Status Qo prom i fullest ex posure of every projected moye | pardons the average murderer who is | year?” she eontinued, when she tw taken to task by the gifted Mr, Nye of DrOits ready-uade n railrond management. Under their | sentenced for life is given an opportunity | the hymn, “When Shepherds Watehed Their | republican, who ob I nd 1 sweetly upon him. | ablativealways Prepo- | pwo YoKied | Gihout aspot on his record, butin & fa liave filled the rocords of the land grant | he zets to the end of his rope. The pas- | (Yos', Liess i bes o | plomented by the traism that | e hinself and his uniform rouds in the pust would be impossible. | sion for killing is in most casos an inher- | pid W 809 B8 B B8 e e b O LW [ wi ise | sa cold wet day in April, 18 I'he fact that every reader of the reports | ent vice. We shoot down mad dogs not ot Know what arbiteary power i . itenant had become separated would huve the sume knowledge as | somuchto punish vicious animals asto | IRISTAAS 1N g the Latin ablative in’ Omahn s command “on - thy mrch. *lle tl 8 6 managers revent th rible cor wes of | L th Lnonwed 1 A himself on the would pre ud floos - | hydrophobin. We hang murderers not | (& i &S0 S e : sunty. <sed hismind, of despon ApAM BADEAU is writing in the York press on “Preeedence in Aristocraey.” General 1t Schenck is operation such disgraceful swindles as | to commit several other murders before the best anthority extant on that subject. The general taught the budding scions of | the British peerage the precedence of a royal flush over four aces and enforeed his les<on so that it will never be for- gotten vestment nside ring only to punish erimo already com I T Y e Yo el T And thi reason why the railroad | but to prevent its recurrence. In th HGbigintinl 1w tarke | 2 : < rushed b 2 | : who 3 | 1 Y I ¢ | ) Y i 1 on, the Beg sugwests that the manifesto of | cation of the reports sent in. Yielding to | and if the final sentence of the court is | from that day « s heen the custom Vanvvol b bR ARG 3 : 4 b e the ministers in Zion warning the public | tho solicitation of the ringsters the scere- | earried out there will be no injustice done | to have turkey for dintier on Chiistias d I 2 5 i i At the risk of being ealled a Mormon | stock have prevailed upon Seere- | of Bohannon the cour 5 | for dinner.” dter b sympathizer by the Salt Luke Zribune; | tary Lamar to prohibit the general publi- | afforc uple opportunity for defense, | fast and be against the wicked stories which the Mor- | tary of the interior has issuced orders that | ¢ither to the murderer or to society USEIUL TO TURKEY CAR Senator Van Wyeh 1 st lowing an impulse which scemed mons are ahout to sctf aflont about them | the replics of the subsidized roads to the e e Among tho il Chvistinas presents™ | the rlroad lan obers, S kO | i aro worked b g 11 3 lie rose to his foot 1 "‘,“.‘- liis is, to say the least, premature. How- | questions of the railrond commission Tir senate is likely to spend a large | advertised by a Chi doaler are grind e e g T'wo old Comst i Lo it st obthe G oAl IS ever, “wicked stories” about ministers | shall be the private property of the prosi- | portion of its time for some months to | ones. Purhaps te reuder wio has neyer | ofSEviing hew i, (s bk 1 lole tuica tine 3 e o 3 e stat dent, sceretary of the interior, railroad | come in exeenti ion. No such flood heard a minee pie designated by such a term | ol companics shall pay t t of ust about the present time, commissioner and the clerks who will | of nominations as now demands its atten- | 5 ™ ing Gl wIthin aIXtyngs Frome tho The poor fellow told his stovy afterward with mournful pathos, He said that the | | te Pine 5 necessarily have to handle the manu- | tion has ever before overwhelmed the - Passage of the aet, or in default the land shail | r Ui ) be '\‘\"'" el d Nt I.H"'I""\ o 8pyy | | i Tuk New Yorkand Couneil Blufs rail- | sevipts and ecollate the figures. Mr. | confirming body. The remoyvals and dis TINBLY BUOgIATIONS. et : ; e | desertion ho offercd to_ volunteer us way is not dead by any means. Its voice | Lamar's decision is ill advised and lends | placoments during the eight months | "o to @ive the buby—A sp G o B | Broof of s good fatih, The offor was has made itself heard in the halls of con- | ¢ (efent the object of the rules. The peo- | which intervened botween the close ot | wiat to sive little sistor—Leave fo goout | MU £rant companics neglected 1o tihe st built on diy land ‘a mileor more | vecepted. He gotinto o blue uniform, gress, through Representative Lyman, of | 1o of the United states through congress | the last sossion and the beginning of the when you go to see thebigone, | 1orsurveyingand locating thelr lands i | fore s gis gt iat | and _found himself once more in active fowa, who has introduced bills author- | Lye furnished three-quarters of all the | present is wholly without precedent. | What to give little brother—A drum if the old | 1% £3¢aDe payment of ¢ K i o s i et e 0el R sonvice. Lworldiye latpriGEen D wing the company to_bridge the Tllinois, | capital stock of the lund grant roads, | Even the great orfginator of the spoils T oo taxes o o ; prandbeydiny Anpomastos. i a6 LS Mississippi, Des Moines and Missouri | Thoy are entitled to know how their loan | system would stand aghast at its pre Whiatto give big sister—A promiso Lo pay her | 84 locotion wore clutied as pr . y ! A b rivers, We take it that the bridging of | Jus heen handled and why the corpora- | tions. The duty of the sWhate to weigh | board bills. b B e e i S Gl o Néw England the Missouri by this company means that | gions cannot repay it at the time agreed. | S S What to give big brothor—Vour est cigar s Laone £ : ) J it people there ail knew ho had RiEOhoNos ito iy “"' Nebraska by the | Jfundreds of ~ thousands of our | srtion of nominecs yillchoarssk s sipler and the uonopolie i I ; I tho confuderate army. ,On tho (\“,‘: ‘:: ..\‘.‘- i -l m;y Il\v\-l \hxl;:w“\l ‘\“\‘.\l i““"“j ;.,-‘” \w)“ |..‘._r: from f g -m.~ ....n probably be urge “l, What to give mother—All the work and wor ‘ v vould be d s a spy s ) y bon | ixtortions and diseriminztions but hundreds will bo b opposad e ) : 1 ter. 1 to Boston, long t Y i 1 3 ! ry 50 that ¥t pple can have a AN % i 1 1 coming, but it will prc Y | ticed upon them by the manager wit their own party lines. Adv rood time.” X TORY, s narrowly A gotting Jotting 1 « ) 1lis tonzi into the remi Wt iy lawsand lable to taxation. Herctoiore the nuteri s soon as some cf the many | )¢ nation e is every | from Washington note that in many | Wiat to give tather ) } Nebraska other railroads that are heing builton | oy why they should worm f | states the democratic senato 1L o first of o . y 8 paper and operated by wind in this part | (1,0 met) ! | crapt large part of the entire list we down in 1 t 3 N Boston. The outragec “Business seer E in forcin, the | What to give guand A brakem vie twen t t HIIRTSON, v he con- you something i i aed bnieled iy S Fsition to the provostuarshal, and that uddden HeOllatn in 5 cor sent a file of men to march the New ¥ s the house of John Bur BIES))LONEION wter to his office. The unfortunate : i ceinet, FILIOIe county, wis 7 R EON unbosomed himself to the murshal I know how it m to'b iire st Week, catisiug 2 loss of & t concealing nothing. He admitted using \is publicity, My, Lamar is only playing | This is to be expected. No republican | & nule” sighed a sadcyed marriod m Grand, Iskand 1s siowly roeo ¢ 1t v i o6 TOpbIty ud snid that it this publicity, Mr, Lamar is only playing | This is to pec propublinan | &R BB B R et 5 triond. | pasand, Isiand ts siowly : 5, a, | th e repirted, and s dht 1 into the hanls of the stock jobbers who rosidong hus osor suoceedod in SCCUring | wxothing; T only told iy wito that sho could. | o G rothinseabine biore iin was | 17 ! i ol ue e A S e - 4 . yillainous managzement of the land grant | senatorial confirmation for all his ap- | ) v a seulskin saeque for Christmas it her I L numerons papers througho 1 5 | 3 and thus furnish campaign ammunition, 31 AR PTG It e e DR BB gy wson) qu ipistinas it ) e SR - . hut paer M Jongor, ho could have roturned to Goor- roads has brought them to their present ntments, Mr, cs experienced | yother paid for it. rman named Ky ving mear intes to the effect that ' v with . proud rocord us tried and The publication of twenty-five pages of b i : » 4 Chadron, was iined $% Tor shooting his » " condition, V' el y J Vel e 8¢ o e Q v - fiq ce counnittee 1 o confede wirs hie - IR O 1R o e oL L N i N R e tomlsos ood citizens and \ . If an outeast, with no comntry, no fing, to.convinoo. thom of ono thing st least, The Omala & Northern. tirely asido from any partisanship Mr. | The holiday agony s for o young lady to | Ben Howan is walloping sinners Ly quit the o fow he 1o comrades, nothing but n bisied chir: and that is that the president is doing m o R iy ot £ ! aay: S Y L « 1 1sland, - Lhe: fiold. 15 Ihe Proyost marshal . s ol The Omaha & Northern railroad, a Cle d will diseover that appointing | aecidentaliy spill a little face powder on the © in Grand [sland, N | ni receiven y Ju quite well. Ttalso goes to show that the ¢ \ly reiaAtan A e T R AT (T v ) T e 1ot carpat, and when Ausustus comes In | Commonty lurcoand lusclons one, but Bun s 2 b m. He istened insilence, good old democratic doctrine, *‘to the BT IRy s RA. IGONIENS 2 ing con- | parlor cary i Wit Droad. red wnd wicked 10 o his prisoner ar, and saids victors helong the spoils,” is asserting a paper raiload to head off | firmation of the appointment is quite a | and carelessly stens in it to carefully guard | i, : ¥ oumay zo, bu don't talk that way tself in u very foreible manner of the wild we tlio xon ying of th le subliean obj s for “spoil DinoCRATIC tors object ve such as these need exposure. Their ven- | to make new nominations in much to the publication of presidential | 5% I tion will k o1 Ivantageous to | of the jail birds, and disreputable NO WONDUR HE SIGIIS, nowminntions in tho Congressional Record, | LLrvion will 1eo advantageous t e ja wd disreputabl and they voted solidly against it. They are afraid that the compilations that can be made from the Keecord will show too many violations of the civil service law, kholders and the non-in- rs whose names have found their public. In refusing to secure blue books of the government, John A, Horbael's scheme for a direct | different matter, the impression until he bids her good night, Deocratie editor 5 refute the 3 1pon the y more Bttt e TRlhoir el A when she takes the messure of that sole and | e coutsuisioned (o A metimes this follower of the two em————— 4 ) g uilds & pair of Christinas slippers around it, | fnd prepare for posion F ST SeS ! t 118, 80 s L The incorporators were Union Pacific of- | T width of the streots in Om. Lilidsapairat Gurisuuas sinoem el e | i of b th | ; B ficers ncting in the interests of that com- | shortness of the blocks and the fr A TSP R T T S : i ] Rt e Ueeusions puny. At the time this road was organ- | intersections of twenty-foot cord in order to keep them on, First impres- i ¢ : ; 5 I T A T v swhioko 1, w nees nhe q ilo PEKA Is evidently not a good place for luborers, Aceording to a partial can- ass of the city by the Knights of Labor, Wt of 1,032 luborers and skilled workmen | 17, Jay Gould had full control of the | make it unique among Americ ics. | sions are apt to be larsely erroncous, wed on interviewed, 231 were reported to be en- | Union Pacifie. The immediate effeet of | Tt stands alone as o city which has more BOMETITING THAT WOULD FIT, TR T e o Y k. i tot tirely idle; 933 had worked only a part | the project was to block Horbach's efforts | of its arca devoted to_streets and alleys New Yorik Journal, Do bIe WO [ 5 lon of the 595 were fally employed. | for procuring a subsidy from the upper | than to lot surfuce. Th are advant. “What would you suzzest for a Chrlstmas Five thou ) K H 1\ 8 nob s 182 have stendy employ- | countics and with that the Oma- s and disadyantages in this condition | giftto put iu my girl's stocking?” said a Chi- | Winneno Lidia i b ) the ey o work part of the time, | hs & Northern went into winter | of aflairs, One disadvuntago is that the | cazoman tow St Louis friend. “Does sho | us bech appromiatd tor {1 | ] : L i and 113 ave idle, Of the other trados, | Auarters. Its revival at this tim width of the streets and the frequent | live in Chicago?” Wiy, eortaindy,” =Well, |0 R A5G " . i and o b L gonerally requiting skilled lubor, there | been engincered with a_good deal of o breaks in the lot lines require better ar- | You'd better go to Nuw York and bave the | 7 1 . ! are 206 fully employed, 156 who have | tion. The Union Pacitic had passed into | chitecture than if the streets were nar- 8 (3l G b ity ve in Work part of the time, #nd 103 who aro | BeW bands at least for tho timo being, | rower, to produce the sume effoct of solid Very Tk ki \ ) W of the entirely idle, Some of the enumerators | and Mr, Gould’s Italian hand had to be | construction and satisfactory perspectivo. N, no i . - | ) g A Bt 0 is probable | Worked through the Beltline which was | At the swme time the recur- | A Christmas o use Is worth two the i 1 ich 160 UM that thore e 800 isborers in the eity, | detached from the Un ..;.] Pacific for the | rence of a corner every 264 feot | IB the woods, Rl 40M] 12 % : s SR S and that frow 500 to 400 ST benefit of the Missouri Pacitie. Tuking | affords opportunity for the erection of \ ey QRYINZ R gt Gaa 000 50 400 cn ¥ 4l advantage of the gencral demand for a h.u..L.,u..‘.‘,u-uwmn to break the mono- e t ¥ N V4] ! BN l..ifi ??4! Dit, Pas1EvR, of Parls, is overwhelned | divectroad from Omaba up the Elkhorn | tony of the line of brick rows, which de- | It may be tales ol that nine- | 4o ! : i ) y ¢ : wur hond with hydrophobia patients, Ho has cured | valloy, a fecler was thrown out gita- | tract from the character of the strects | tentls of the g Y four Amcrican chiliron from Newark, | tion in favor of a home road that | as ordinarily laid out in other towns. e N.J., and intiwates that if the Ameriean | could competo with tho Clicago | Omaha in her businss portion cau bo phakimithe? peoplo wish to give him a testimonial, | & Northwestern and which would | made one of the most beautiful of inland Gt (AT o ihey can do so by raising money with sell out. This project was | citics. But to do this she musteall to her | United States there is not a single Swith in whicti to build a hospital in Paris for the | hailed with satisfaction by all classes. | assistance the best of architectural talent. | congress, The couple aocommor of hydvophobia patients. | The only point which seemed to creare | In addition, the owners of valuable - of the town But why should there bo so much hydro- | suspicion as to the design of the leaders | gorners must be willing to fnvestin tall Grest lu Spota. phobia is u question which is being | was tho mystery in which the home cap- | and bandsomo structures, with features | pneonditiont e tn e 1 o reat asked by a great many persons. If there | italists shrouded their identity and the | more distinguishing than red brick fronts | man, but he is not great all over the countr were no dogzs thero would be an end to } persistence with which the Omaha Her 1d galvanized cornices. alike. Mo is great in spots, horrible disense. Wo would sugssst | ald kept dinging the value of the Omaha ; ) - ehat overy dog in the world be killed, | & Northern us the proper source of relief | InprisoNyEeNT for debt still prevails in Nead of Miustonasied at Home. and that th ughter bo begun at once | from discriminations aguinst Omaha up | New York, and a debtor once imprisoned We have always though it & waste of | JU v wae ln nd kept up until the eanine race is anni- | the Elkhorn valley. Finully the home | stands a possible show of remaining in | money to send uissionaries out amons the AL OB 4 hilated. All the dogs in' the world cupitalists, through the Herald, gently | for life, if his croditors pay his bourd. | ponighted heathen and cruel savages avroad | eromid Jusi in | not worth one human life, yet we sup- | broached the subject of their solici- [ Imprisonment for debt, however, can | while there were so many dudes and wife pose the owner of some worthless mon- | tation. They proposed to bond Doug- | only be imposed in cases where fraud is | beaters to reform at how wel cur would object to this proceeding, | las county for §150,000 and’ have | charged. A mannamed Ross, who f: : - : Bt gt st e, oath e | Joorson square dedicated for depot pur- | for §90,000, was imprisoned in this w Whare the Wit was Wasted. and 1 Wian huve his dog killed. We would like | poses to the Omalia & Northern, In re- | six years ago, snd being unable to secure | Dakota proposes to adopt ws @ n oo Byr # know whut uinety nine dogs out of a | turn for this subsidy the company would | any financiul assistance, he remained in | statehood: *By God the people rile, works on Lo Grand L1 aundred are good for anyway? ntee the building of & road one ! prison uatil the other day, when Erastus | statemeut would be just as biuding without 1 talivad. Asended w obelisk sent to her.” it he nigt, Saturda, o e o