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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY JUNE 26, 1850, HATCHER, GADD & CO, Real Estate Brokers Millard Hotel Block, Omaha, N ¢h. Do a Strictly Commission Business. Residence and business property in all parts of all the most desirable subwrban additions, terms. Read a partial list of some of owr bargains. Clarendon add, $3,000. 1d, $1,000 each. Corner, and Poppleton ave, very desi )00, Splendid residence corner | Dodge, favorable terms, $25,000 id, $1,425. nce lot on Harney, Touse and lot 3 lots, Clarendon Virginia able, 358 PROPERTY. , $15,000. at BUSIN Full lot on Howard st 2 business lots on Dodgoe st, gain, 2 business bargain. Lot 66x132 on Harney, $13,000. goods to exchange | for Omaha property or Nebraska lands, Lots and Houses and Lots. 2 lots 8. 8th st., near Mavket, $1,000. 8lots | 1 $3,000. 8 lots Foster $3,300. Lot 3, block, ith add., on ¢ Jine; splendid for business, $1,500. House and lot in Walnut Hill, very sirable, $2,500. Residence and Jot, and Irene sts., §3,500. 10 lots in Kilby Place, $1,000 cach 8lotsin Wilcox's 1st add., $500 each. 2 lots, 1 a corner, Kilby Place, $1 2 lots in Kirkwood, $630 cach, 8 lots Himebangh & Saunders’ #3850 each, E} lot 9 tHowe's add., $700. Lot with small house, S. £. Roge'r add, $2,600. a bar- 13th and lots on Douglas st., a rare Two lots in Lowe First class resid r 20th, $4,500. plendid residence with two lots, 1 a ner, on Park and Woolworth, £5,000. N. E. corner 230 and Douglas, large ground, and houses,paying good income, a bargain, $12,500. New house and lot $,000, 7room residence and good lot,Redick's 20 add, £4,500. Iotel Baxter, in Harlan condition and doing a paying busine hotel and furniture, £6,500. House andlot in Red Cloud, Neb, $4,000 1200. LANDS Section in Gasper Co. easy terms. Sectionin Gasper Co., casy terms. 160 acres (120 under cultivation, CINCINNATI STORE, 209, 211 and 213 West 5ih Street. Several stocks of Reed's in Hanscom Place, corner Hamilton 00 per acre; add., 00 per acre; Furnas Omaha. Vacant lotsin on the most favorabl Co., improvements miles from belt road, casy terms, § 160 acres, improve watered and timbered Burt Co., 7 per acre. well 105 easy te 1920 per 160 neres, Greley Co.. §2,700. 480 a in Greeley Co, $7 per acre; will exchange. acres in Nickols Co., ns. $12 per acre; acres in $5 to $10 acre. Howard Co., 120 under cultivation, in 8 sections in Howard stock ranch and cheap. 960 acres in Webster Co., 800 acres un- der cultivation, will sell or exchange for Omaha property; worth $20 per acre. Splendid steam roller mill at St. Paul, Howuard Co., Neb., very complete, on asy terms, §25,000, Steam roller mill Co,, Neb., £16,000; all ments, $16,000. No 1 water mill, Schuyler, Neb; alllate improvement, with 160 acres improved land; a great bargain. $16,000. List your property with Hatcher, (xadd & Co., and secure quick sal Co., good for § Scotio, (irecley modern improve at KANSAS CITY STORE, 1123 Main Street. OMAHA STORE, 1317 and 1819 Douglas St. GEORGE LOUIS & GOMP BARKE & BARKALOW, eal Estate and Loan Agents Room 21 Paxton Building ,Cor, 15thand Far nam st. . Very desirable lots on monthly payments of lowing additions, West Omaha Barkalow Place.’ Leavenworth Terrace, ‘Bedford Place, from $10 to $60 in the Omaha View, Orchard Hill, Sharen Placé and Walnut Hill _Also some choice houses and lots on Farnam st, Burt st., Leaven- rort st, Phil Sheridan and Cuming st., We have bargains in propertyin all parts of the city; v rates of interest. FARM LANDS FOR Rents Collected, easy payments, SALE, Taxes Paid. l " Arkansas, that we ll(‘IX SENATOR VAN WYER'S RECORD ] A Vigorous Auuk on the Feo 8 Judicial Salary Grabbers, VENTILATING POOLING PLANS om and | The Telegraph Monopely and the New s & Pacific Land Grab nmmary His W in the 418th Congress, Vi THE SALARTES OF DISTRICT JUDGES Mr. Van Wyck opposed the advance of salaries 5,000, In the My fr vard) conld s hardship w0 case of family of Jud, who was poor Does my friend from De other distinguished lawyers who are the beneh, whose familios o poor? Gentlemen point to our overflow ing treasury as an evidence of the great enjoyment it furnishes the Ameriean people to fillit. My friend does not go | down to the thousands of families who not only dic but live poor; the thonsands from whose pockets are ex tracted the dollars that go into our over- flowing treasury. The proposition is first to fill up, and then to depicte. ‘Ther various wavs of doing this. One 1s the case with which public offices are filled, and the next the apparent ease with which salaries are made and inereased Aft colloquy with Senator Hour, Senator Van Wycek said: It would scem from all the Iships that are men tioned. as if there were some sort of draft or conseription into the eivil ser- viee of this country. It is very remarka ble, when any position which ean be filled by the profession to which my friend belongs, and also the senator from g0 much of the st sacrifices which gentlemen who come from the bar nul\.- to serve their There is no competition, theve raft that will take a man outof the legal profession and put him on the dis trict bench or the supreme court. There is no power on earth that can take a dis tinguished lawyer from his remunerative practice and place him in a seat in ths chamber or in the other house. When there is a district judgeship vacant, the whole state is torn up and every lawyer of prominent vosition isanxious to fill that chair. If there is a v ney in a circuit judgeship, half a dozen states a torn up—DMinnesota, Iowa, K s, Ne- braska and Colorado. Each has dis tingushed lawyers, the ablest lawyers, to fill the vacant juageship. When gentle- men aceept the office at §8,500 a year, i is in the nature of a contract, and why should we be asked to in tion while they hs bill passed the senate, but did not pass the house. BILL AGAINST POLYGANY. The people ot this nation d you should blot out polygimy. Three- fourths ot the people demand it. Still the Mormons have grown steadily in numbers and political power. Your com- mission has had 8 ot §£5,000, with personal expenses paid, und have done nothing. That same evil comes here and defies your national legisluture. It mildly stalks into the senate chumber and into the house and defies the legislation of the American’ congress. You. retain this commission, when a board of army ofii- cers would discharge its duties a tis- i to the people. I say to my rom Massachusetts, that it is a crime that is growing and growing, be- cause it is unchecked. PRIVATE LAND CLAIMS. Van W) in all eases course of from Delawa much of nd the laware eall up | not on re also re that Mr. b nd grant s lo I very much prefer that the inten- tions of the act should not be buried under a word which the supreme court ans one thing or the other, or becuuse if ©s n thing xlu-y would ha and lll".\“! having subsequently ente xu-‘l into a dis- cussion of the word *‘respectively,” Mr., Van Wyck said that the very fi two_gentlemen so eminent in the le profession disagree upon the interp reta tion of that word, makes it almost e rim inal1if we do not stop to ni tion so plain and expli be misunderstood. The very fact that 1t admits of discussion here, places us where we dare not vote for this bill, unless it be made so certa 1d sostrong that there shall be no trouble when it gets to the Jand departiment SANS & PACIFIC RAIL) PANY., ckoffered a_ resolution y of the interior suspend -nl~ for land to this com- Il determine the tion. He said he this matter should and now at the 3 question of forfeited lands, arent that the railroad in- 2 the position that be- se the attorney-g 1 had decided the matter, thercfore congress was ex- cluded from the power that belonged to it. When it was assumed by the railvoad company that this maiter'was not only res adjudicata, but that the power was taken fr congress, then it beeame necessary ke a flat denial of that position, thut this matter should be .Im therefore 1 desirved it stood that there should be no certificates issued, and no patents granted to this 1y, whose only foundation for m is the opinion of the The resolution was SYSTEM OF BANK The old bankruptey 1 self-sustaining, when the r's got all operty of the debtors and none of h went into the pockets of the creditors, If this bill passes into a law, it will be worse in that respect. Here it is at the discretion of the court to say what shall be reasonabie ecompensation, when it should be the business of con- gress to fix asum in the bill, that the courts may havenoopportunity by pr dice or favor to aflect the compens: of the ofli NSOLID ATION OAD COM- Van W, the secr s of the corpor d felt desirous that iht here general ned to be OF TELEGRAPII COMPA NIES, Senator Van Wyck offered a resolution inquiring m regird to roported negotia tions for consolidation between the West ern Union and Baltimore. & Ohio tele ¥ a\ph companies. He said: The Western ion know, as does the elder Garrett,that new lines mean millions more of ficti tious stock to be divided between their companie: It means also greater bur- dens to the people and larger dividends 1o be taken )lmu them. The proposition for the government to build is the only theme that strikes tervor to the Western | Union. Both these companies deny the vower of congress, which created them, to examine their contr cts, and arro- gantly insist that eongroess, hnnuu ated them, has no power left to protect the veople and build other hnes. in reply to statements by Mr. Morgan, Mr. Van Wyck said that it has b, roposed that the government shall take under its charge to a certai the matter of postal tele 1o usce » necessities of tl people and as to the aropriety of the gov ernment entering upoun that enterpris- lhnl the whole mattep wae sent to the committee, The Baltimore & Ouio say that they ,-m,m-.- to do that thing them- w{\ ne, and jt becomes important to know whalt Sere the relations of that company to the Western Union.. The resolution was referred to the committee on post offices PAY OF TF TORIAL OTFICERS Senator Van Wyck offered an amend ment to the Alaska bill, that territorial officers shall not receive fees, but a sal 1y ty for reformation uly acknowledged ywhere in which jvernment to add to t amount of In the west honest been dragged from s under the vretense of having K of timber f firewood, in v marshal might have fees for and 1 attorney for Ihis has beconie an torney -general says ery dollar added to Uhe componsa - officer costs the government When you submit the 400 whit 00 half-breads and the 30,000 In dians of Alaska 1nto the hands of a fed cral ring of six or ¢ men, with noth ing to hold them in ¢ but their own cupidity, you are doing that people an ustice. The amendment was adopted MEAT EXPORTATION The object of Senator Anthony's reso fution is to strike at governments which restrict the introdietion of meats from this country. This is a matter which affects the producers of_the soil throng! out all this country, While the gre majority of our productions here, their price is flixed Engiand, France lish the price of r, of our pork and this 1 I'here citizens by rea oific thei liome their ho cut order th subjectod fity of g Ve our beef, not nnl\ in wrkets but inours—notonly on the n the banks of the Mis sissippi and Missouri. L offer the amend ment in order to recognize the right of other governments to do what we are ng the power to do. I am willing ¢ to other nations the ht to 1y the same spirit of retalia- sl it our duty to insiston for oursclves SUBSIDIZING THE PACIFIC STEAMSIIP COM- PANIES Senator Van Wyck offered an amend ment to the postoilice appropriation bill, that no money shall be paid to any steamship company which has been pay. ing dwvidends. 1 the proposed appro ve the putting on of reater part of iny which for s dividends Aft tion between the I'he ralroad cor- from the Missouri are determined that I be cheeked. They sub- Mail moreliberally than your government can do, by taking a milhon of doll a from their treasury, and the P: Mail surren- dered. " Huntington smd that, in order to have a hold on these men, they must have their ~(|-.||||~I|v|Nun the Pacilic, and the Oceidental and the Oriental lines put them there; and thus the Pacific Mail forced to be one of their instruments fetter commerce, binding it to four men 'who control our al trade, who seek the con little_ we have left in the and they w steamship line: it should not o to ing the whole is to prevenEl Al .'un\)wlnmn 5 sidize the in transcontinen H.r] of what lantic and come here to $300,000 stolen from the treasury to e to this wealthy cor- poration. 'The only objeet is to take still more to place in the pockets of those who have o rdened ‘this people and our commeree with taxation too grievous to be borne. OF CATILE. This measure furmshes 1o protection .n(lw herds of the west. After all that ml about_pleuro-pneumonia, all it is confined to small if you would gl\u(hv(-um culture power to compel better ventilation for your cattle, and feed them better than the refuse of dis- tilleries, we should probably have very much less of lung discase. It has been said that the disease does not exist west of the .\Iu ghemes, and that the danger wrving eattle to the west nu- rried. 1 YELLOWSTONE a long discussion, Senator Van 'k expressed the opinion that there should be a limi n to the rates whieh this road should charge. He desired that there should be some benefit to the people by allowi ary of war to fix wion, T pre branch of the Union road. ‘The country will rejoice tha is beginning to break on the senate.” 1t would not be <o strong it some senator had not seen and felt the power of those grasping |1|u|\0|m1|v~ Senators who have visited the Yellowstone park have seen it and felt it, and what they have seen and felt, the citizens of the republic have seen and felt in all the territories of this union ALARY OF MAJOR LLEWE Major Llewcllyn was appointed to the Mescelleras agency beeause of his known wracter for br. . judgment and d on, and he ed the dep ment g0 well that they themselves that his salary aised to $2,000. The commanding s have been profuse in their expressions of admiration for the itry and bravery of the man who has the management of these Indians. He has shown his ability in the Vi and he is not only faithful and brave, but intelligent and diseriminati SPECIAL ATTORNEYS IN TH OF JUSTICE, Senator Van Wyck offered a resolution for information as for special cases, Ner r Hoar having asked modification of tne ..-mmuun as imply- ing improper conduct Wyék tor will r .|.| ly see that LYN DEPARTMENT saidl: by o the nbe in the language no reflection on the attorney-gen: has been stated that the compensation 1 by the head ot the department us 100 high, but beyond his power to modify, 5 wu tinly ent for the ' n this body, y be properly ck, however, and his resolu- modified accepted the \llu-’nhun tion was adopted. MISSISSIPPL RIVER IMPROVEMENT, Senator Van Wyck reported the joint resolution for the immediate appropria. tion of $1,000,000, in accordance with the urgent request of the Mississippi river commission, for the improvement of that In response to suggestions by or Hoar, Mr. Van Wyck said that propriation is count of the fact that the w such a position that the works and machinery dy in use are endangered, while the approaching wet season would have a tendency to do more injury than the amount’it is proposed to appropriate, T'he bill Iv:uwlf ISSUE OF UNION PACIFIC OBLIGATION The senate, Februa a solution offered by etary of the interior the Union inform 2 senate whether Pacitic Railvoad company has issued any new | or made any new mortgage, loan, running arrangement or traflic contract since March, 1853 OTHER SPEECHES Van Wyck also made spe the Iowa Indian shraska and Kansas; on the diplo. ppropriation bill; on the District of Columbia appropriation bill; on the bill to prohibit land entries by forc on the amendment to the Mexican sion bill, fixing the rates for widows the amendment to a relief bill bill declarinz a forfeiture of corta granted to wd in the construction of a that she ate it all, Mr ches on ryation ers in | railroad in Orcgon: on & bill for ixing the rate of pensions to widows and minor children; on the unlawfui occupane: ¥ (by fencing) of the public lands; on the {m- provement of the Miccouri river at Ne- praska City; on the Indian appropriation bill; on the payment of Charles H. Reed as counsel, and on clerks for senate com- mittees SUMMARY OF 1112 OTIER LARORS, He offered amendments to twenty-three b all of great importance, He in troduced forty bills and joint re<olutions, which were in the main of great impor tance. He offered thirty-two motions and resolutions. He renorted cases from the committee on and four fr m o the lands; also bills from the improvement of th THE VALLEY OF THE “NOW." W / Among the Wind westorn stroam traver valley, and stream and valley bear the queer name of the “Now,” and this is the way the name came to be bestowed In the fall of 1865, at the broken gate of a broad and neglected avenue, which led up to th d mansion of a Mis sissipp homestead: on one of those days of that time made doubly melancholy by the season and the sorvows which had fallen upon the region from the war there stood asweet ) vears She wore a look of settled and hopeless dness, and her | ,dark eyes bore the pleading expression of @ hunted fawn The sound of horse's hoofs startled the | manden, and in aimost the same moment horse and rider were before her, and the vider had flung himself from the saddle, and was presenting the compliments of the oceasion in courtly manner. e was Captain Bulstrade, tall, strong, erect, ind bronzed ¢ » Uhe had been one ol For rest's bold alers For years the man had before him, Trene Singletor loved Arthur Dinwiddie. The th been playmates in childhood and com pamions in youth, Their station in life had always™ been the same, bat the war had scparated them, and Dimwiddie, 1 gallant and handsome fellow v the fatlen in_the trenche s of V Bulstrade had never ceased his endeavors to win the heart of Trene Singleton and now that Dinwiddic was dead he pressed his suit with allthe tenacity of his n Hure, but the giel’s love was buried with lover at Vieksburg blufis Repulsed but not beaten Bulsteade stiil hoped, and now eum in to urge his claims This time the answer was decisive and Buistrade knew that Irene would never love him. Indeed she shrank from him, With rage m his heart he rode and shortly afterward Ieft the conn It was said that he had gone to the wes Col. Singleton, Irvne's father, mined also to leave the devastated ~U||(ll and to seek anew home toward the set- ting sun. In the spring of 1867 he start latter tof the summer camp at the Swoetwater Himself, his wife and Irer composed the party As the shades of evening fell a hor min came and halte ! committee on public the committce on Missouri river, o river mo Wyoming, tile itains, in beautiful N os o f und i que both loved the girl . with several farther west, neigiborhood suw He remained and travoing in the the camp and rode to it. with the emigrants t night, and next morning accompanied them on their Of course he took early occasion re- the second night party were sur- L gang of moun numerous t once. SWeetw BriBnUT tain bandits je ter the ptured by « 1 with their goods to the camp of the bandits in the mountain fustnesses of a Wind rivi tributary. Mounted on a swift horse, which the rob- bers had allowed him to retain on the way to their camp, made a dash for liberty and wped, Inalittle while with a troop of United States from Fort St: nnhm rh, and told I The ofiice > of the wl«lwn cagerly accepted Mul~lx wle's offer to lead the troop to the robber den, and on_ the way the oflicer accepted the proposition of Bulstrade to allow himself to be re captured, and white in the hands of the | bandits to arrange signals which he would | give to the soldiers in_order that the rob- bers might be surprised and captured \\nll()ul too much loss on the p: aval Then w lnh xlu amp w. (~|\ Ity R otithe ]rrlvnnvrs in o squad apart from the robbers, and his signal for fir 1o begin upon the bandits shouid be keen yell of the word **Now!” Prowling abont the camvp as if devising a scheme for helping the prisonc to escape, Bulstrade suceeeded in his plan 1z recaptured and in the night the le of the soldiers was laid. During the night Bulstrade told of s scheme and how he had nged for the r pture of her 8 gratitude for de- n her to him. Hul was mistuken, She was immov; Then in the early morning, in the ve midst of the bandus, he canght Irene in ms his clear 11 of |Iw one word ) g through the crisp morning al a deadly volley from the soldiers concentrated its h‘ulul rk upon the assembled rohbers and prisoners, and at the first fire more than half of the party fell dead, among them Bulstrade and Irene, The father and mother were seriously “ullnlh-(l and afterward died, though nursed at Fort Stambaugh, whe were removed in ambulances which we sent for, Those of the robbers who we not killed or wounded were nade pris- oners and afterward served their country in l»( |I||l ntinries, dead were buried by the stres seen to this day “Ihe Valley of the WiLL Visscnen, Florida Cooks. Evening Washington: The highest bition of the colo male persunsion in Florida is to pos the title of “*cook,” From seamstre f they invariably sp Mrs, So-und-So's id last) “eook” posses romantie cognomen of Violet Love. let appeared”one morning dressed pale blue Mother Hub | Hn r by Irene pre: fathe ‘IIIII lln this Now grave »Tegend of am- uml‘ placi “Violet, ean you cook?" thum.” n you make bread ‘um. “Can you broil steak “No'wm. I kin done fry bacon “Can you make cake?'! Yathum." \\ hat km x olet, what else can you a heap of things. Ikinm nd hominy, and solicious Hop- John.” “And what is that, pray? Weil, Missy, you jes done take riee and peas and bacon, and put 'm in 4 pot and cook 'm 1 told Violet that | dinner, und hungrily fter suflicien she might get the aited the result, to prepare an elab- orate meal had clapsed, dinner was ar nounced and we repaired to the tabl But for a huge watermelon that | had propue (, and the contents of a tin can t 1w own bountiful and enterpris we should have sorly for our dinner--ull ex o0 hearty an apprecin v ol the pot of Hop-aud-John I furnished ty-scyen | d individual of the fe- ' me | nuture | FROM HELENE SEEGER, 718 Lexington Aves Nu Y. City, the Celebrated and Gifted Artist in Pastel and Crayon Portraits, Tam of a vory nervous, sensitive temparfe ment. Pressure of orders kept me in & ners vous flurry, and in my anxiety to complete my orders ere the advent of the heated season, § overworked mysclf. T wra completely prosd had nerve unstrung: and broken- down digestion, LIEBIG CO.'S COCA BEEF TONIC trated nervous sick headaches, Ameriean Homwopathic Obgerver saysy LIEBIG CO.'S COCA BEEF TONIC is fully deserving of the praise it fa receiving fro 1t is vastly to the beef tonfes and estracts whiclh} aro 80 assiduously puffod. medieal men of all schools. The LIEBIG CO.'S COCA BEEF TONIC preparations havo attained a world-wide ropus tution, We would especiatly recoms mend the Coea Beef Tonie with Tron and Qui The bitter taste of the Quinine 18 coms pletely covered, and it makes the most palatas ble preparation of Quinine for adminisiering to delicate women and children that we are noe quainted with, We have usol it in the cases of children extensively, and alwiys to our entire satisfaction, ~LEONARD'S MEDICAL JOUIRe NAL nine Maryland Lying-in-Asylum, Baltimore. We use LIEBIG CO.'S COCA BEEF TONIC with the most gratifying su 8. BIT coin. ING, M. D., Puysiclan in Chief. To childven with e decided benefit. nus T have given it with It is of great utility i dyspoep also n most powerful and agreenble stimulant to the VOus system, brain and wer- WAL €. RICHARDSEON, M. D., LL. D., Clinie of Midwifery and and Childven, [ e nt e o =) Her Majesty’s Favorite Cosmetic GLYCERINE. Prepared enly by the Royal British Company of Chemists and Pe LIEBIG COM- PANY, Fole Aw New Yorl Depot, 98 Murray St For the complexion Patronized by royuity quisite” s the m.nu gifted netress. Octo- A POSITIYE S the most obtinate caso in luur-lnvg orloess. Alan'sSoluble Medicatad Bougies No nauseous doses of cubebs, copiba ot o1l of Bnduiwood thut ar Bln by dostroying the ¥ Solt by all ciptof price. For furt forcirenlur. P, 0. Box 1533, J.C. ALLAN CO., &John st., New York. wthsutly i &e ""Lmdon” TIOUSBI' Stretcher. entod in Burope wd U ©s fn UNiri President of St Loui Discases of Wor umers, the an Agents, 1 toliet and the of the One Dollar Shxe beautitul and Care withont atentod modi- Tukes barging out rostores puntulsons o frintod 4o ov BABY CARRIAGES A ‘et Lo stanp for filustrated o L. 6. SPENG 221 W. MADISON ST., CHICAGO. I{EYSTON E WHISKEY specinlly Distll Nedicinui Us i THE BEST TORIC! | UEQUALED (o1 CONSUMPTION ASTING DISEASES and GENERAL, DE B LITY. | PERFECTS DIGESTION DR, EDW. L WALLING, e B Mr. Lalor, Diuggist, of T and 1 lisve used & fow bottles ] BEWARE OF l!hls‘ll‘l‘i 07" The Genutuo b , FISNEL & MY m.fl.\ ou the Lat EISNEH & MENDELSON, for the U 8.) 816,318 aud 20 Tace St Philadelis, Pa. by C. K. Omala, r mlt Goodman,