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8 THE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS A Number of Abuses Which the Board Will Reotify. A VERY FLY COUNTRYMAN. The Delay In the Curbing Contracts— Matters About the Courts — Claims to Have Been Robbed=City News. The Board of Commissioners. The county commissioners have an- other grievance which they propose to remedy and that is the matter of paying attorneys who are appointed to defend penniless criminals. Said one of the com- missions yesterday morning: *‘There is alimost a daily procession to the county juil of certain Iawycrs in this city, and the result is that when the prisoncrs ure brought in to trial, they selcet one or an- other of the number to defend them. The cases as a rule do not amount to a row of peag, and sometimes [ have seen a man ‘defend’ a prisoner by taking about half and hour at the most to tell him to plead guilty and then send in a bill to'the county for #40. We cannot, of course, appoint an attorney to act for all these indigent prisoners, because the court recognizes the right of the meanest criminal to se- lect his own attorne And the criminal enerally avails himself of his preroga- tive. Butso far as I am concerned, and Ithink my colleagues are with me, I shall not sign to pay more than $25 to any of these men for their work of de- fense. It's an awful expense upon the county and it ought to be chan, HEADING OFF UNDERTAKERS. The commissioners have adopted a res- olution the effect of which is that requests for county burial must hereatter be made to the board by the nearest relatives or friends of the deceased party. During the present summer, the commissioners have been in receipt of 80 many requests for county burial by undertakers that they came to the conclusion some of the mortuary gentlemen were profiting by a laxrule to have the county aid in ennbfing people to make funereal purchases whicl were beyond those of the county's style. The number of these requests was un- usual, Hereafter they must come from the nearest friend or relative of the de- ccased and vroof must be made that the dead person was in indigent circum- stances at the time of his death. RALS The commissioners have decided that there shall be no county allowance for the burial of paupers. Formerly the cost to the county for burial was i:x per subje Sice the removal of the poor cenietery to Forest lawn, the undertakers have expressed and unwillingness to do the county burying for less thun $11 per subject, for the reason that the distance of the cemetery would require a man and a team nearly a whole day to make the journey. At this rate, the commissioners estimate the burying of paupers would cost the county about three thousand dollars & year. This expense they vpro- rmu to avoid, by having the farm carpen- er make the cofling, and one of the farm hands and teams convey the remains to the 0“"“‘[(‘!‘{. The work can be done at but little, if any expense over that in- curred at present, $200,000 IN LAND, The work of the commissioners as a board of equal ion has been a labori- ous one, yet 1t w. alously carried out by Messrs. Timme, O'Keefe and Mount. Among the beneticial results which haye been discovered have been the finding of 200,000 worth of land which had been eft off the lists. This has already been replaced, and will represent considera- ble 1n the way of taxes. SAVED 230 ACRES. The result of the inquiries made by the county commissioners into the school lands purchased by private people in this countv, which have avoided taxation, has been the discovery of 230 acres. which will hereafter appear on the tax lists. Tne deeds to these acres were never re- corded, and as a consequence the owners fora time were enabled to elude the watchfulness of the commissioners. DISTRICTING THE COUNTY. The commissioners, between this and the 1st of September, must divide the county into five commissioner districts. Each of these districts must, according to the law, contain as nearly a8 ])ussible the sume number of voters. This will probably have the effect of doing away with the commissioners designated as being from the county and city, and re- quire of each oflicer that he revresent a part of each. In other words, it is thought that to divide the county into districts, each of which will have the same voting population, each of these divisions must comprise a section of the city and the outlying country. As a con- sequence, when the equitable re-district- ing tukes place, the commissioners already anticipate that they will have a ditlicult job on their hands. A JOB. Who is Accused Forgery. Albert Bezezecha is a very ordinary, commonplace looking German country- man, and the keenest judge of humanity would never suspect him of being any- thing other than he looks. However, it is such an old suying as to be a proverb almost, appeazances aro vory deceiving, and you should go slow in judginga man by the rament he supports or the contour of the nose of him. Albert Be- zezecha fully exemplities this oid saying. Heis either a very deep and shrewd crook or is in the hauds of a very deep and shrewd party. Tuesday afternoon he dropped in at the R, C. Patterson loan and real estate oflice, corner Fifteenth and Harney, and made the fact known to Mr. Alex. Mclntosh, the ab- stractor and official clerk of the house, that he wanted to bor- 00, Of course Mr. McIntosh's ation was for security, and M: cha promptly satisfied him by in- forming him that he owned 200 acres within three-quarters of a mile of Papill- ion, at the same time handing him two deeds tor said land made to Frederick D. Trumbull, whom he claimed to be. Mr. Mclntosh examined the deeds—one for 160 acres, ana the other for 40 acres— cuuvufiuz the property to Frederick 1. Trumbull, and which had been regu- larly filed in the office of the recorder of Barpy county and certified to as recorded. Satistied as to their legality, MclIntosh began to propound the usual stereotyped questions relative to buildings,stock, ete., and took his application, to which the mansigned, ina small, crumped hand the names of Fred D. Trumbull and his wife, Elizabeth Trumbull, This much of the work successfully transacted, Bezezecha presumably though the money must imwmediately forthcom- in, sud he informed Mr. M&utosh that he would take it right with hiw, as he had & couple of mort- gages on his farm, one for $400 and the other for $600, which he was anxious to redeem, as both were due. Ho added that the balance, $1,000, he inteaded to put into new barns, corn cribs and other improvements on the place. He was _manifestedly disappointed when Mr. Mclntosh told him that ke could not have the cash until he had visited the Sarpy county courts and made an ab- gtract and established the validity of his title, and told hum to eall again this morn- iy (oxethor with his wife, when ever‘yA thing would ve in readiness for him. Up o this time there had not been the slight- it suspicion of luylhm*fiwronfi. ‘There a8 the man with the oflicial deeds for propesty specified, and everytting up. A German of to date had been transacted carefully and systematically in all of the minutest de- tails, and everything had been found as siraight as a string The alleged Mr, Trumbull had satisfactorily answered all the numerous auestions embraced in the application, and had exhibited a familiar- ity with the lands about to be vledged, the stock and buildings, and even to Trumbull's private household affairs, that would have deluded and blinded the slickest real estate agent or money loaner in the world. Mr. Mclntosh, together with an agent of the loan oftice, proceeded to Papillion Tucsday afternoon, and while the was engaged drawing oft an ab- , the' latter went out to inspect the Here the explosion took place echa’s great suap was com- pletely g away. Mr. Trumbull him- self metthe loan agent, and in very blunt terms demanded to know what he was nosing about his place for. The matter was soon elucidated, and Mr, Trumbull couldn’t have been much hotter had he sat down on red hot stove. Bezezecha, he snid use to work for him, and he ex- pressed a soulful desire to meet him, re- marking that he would make matters so interesting for him that he wouldn't ! ,mrhnr additional fi he loan time but_hiec Mr. MclIntosh of the astounding turn affairs had taken, and together the two returned post haste to the city, and lud their ropes for the bagging of the slick Mr. Bezezecha, This morning, according to the precon- certed programme, he again dropped in at Patterson’s oflice, Mr. Patterson, him- self, Mr. Townsend, the bookkeeper, and Meclntosh, the abstractor, being there to receive him, The pseudo Mr. Trumbull, drn{ylped 1n, as stated above, but there was no Mrs, Trumbull with him and 1n expla- nation he said that while going ovt to milk last evening she had run a nail in her foot and couldn’t bear her weight upon it. He wsaid that he would {ust take the papers out and have her sign them and got back by o'clock. Ere this Mclntosh had tipped the wink to Townsend and Townsend had slipped out and summoned the patrol, which arrived with commendable promptitude in charge of Officer ‘L'urn- bull, who clapped the bracelets upon Mr. Bezzecha and loading him into the wagon whirled off for the station house. En route, Mr. Mclntosh, who accom- panied the officer and prisoner, enquired ot the latter what he had done with Trumbull’s deeds, and he jed: “1 gif dem to de oder “What other fellows "’ ““Why,does fellers what hired me to do this fur dem.’” “You had it down pretty fine, didn't you?” pressed MelIntosh. “Ididn't,” he quickly replied; “does oder fellers gif me 10 to get de mort- gages and make the applieation They doled me what to say to all the * questions you put to me and eferytin, else. I use to lhive with Trumbull, and knowed his place and business as well as he did.”’ Arriving at the station Bezezecha was searched and two checks on Frederick D. Trumbull, one for $2i6 ana the other for $200, payable to John Gray, also a com- mon business card, on the back of which he had been practising the irography of Mr. Trumbull and Mr. Gray, showing that he still nhad other work in prospect, were found upon him. The supposition is that he has a number of very skillful and accomplished accomplices, "but the chances are, as was casually remarked in tho preface, that appearances are deceiving, that it is only a pieco of Bezezecha's own handiwork. He isno fool by a long shot. However, be that as it may, whoever is at the bottom of this job is well conver- sant with the loan business as is sub- stantiated by the unerring way in which Bezezecha answered the innumerable uestions contained in the apntication or loans. He answered every question concisely and properly with the excep- tion of one or two of minor importance. It was a well planned piece of work, and came well nigh being successfully exe- cuted, the prescience or ingenuity of u0 one man preventing it. Lot J. McDonnell. F, A. 1. A,, Architect, N. E. cor. 15th and Dodge. e ———— LIVE STOCK SHIPPERS. Discussion of Various Interests, and an Amondment of the By-Laws. A meeting of the Live Stock Shippers’ ociation of Nebraska, was held at the shange hotel, South Omaha, yesterday afternoon, Owing to the extremely warm weather and several other circumstances, the attendance was hght. 1n the absence of President Dibble, Vice President An- derson ealled the meeting to order. Sec- retary Wiggins read the minutes of the previous meeting, which were approved. The following gentlemen were elected members of the association: C. B. Wil- son, Ulysses; I, M. Sackett, Albion; Wm. Bays, Valparaiso; W. H, Cone, Gibbon; E. H. Cowles, Gibbon. Th e excessivecharge on transportation oflive stock from Omaha to Council Bluffs was discussed and referred to a committee that should wait upon the Union Pacific. A motion was passed pledging the association to give all their patronage to the railroad which turnishes the best facilities for transportation, which handles the stock in the best shape and which shows an inclination to meet just losses. The motion made at a previous meet- ing that the words “in the state’’ in arti. cle 8 of the by-laws b unan- imously passed. v regular shipper of six montis’ standing eligible for election to membership. There are a good many lowa shippers who are shipping to th ards who are anxious to join the association, I'ne following resoulution passed: Resolved, That this association will not patronize any commission firm whieh in any way furnishes market reports to any other than regular shippers. A motion passed to adjourn to the second Wednesday in August. In addition to” the regular business transacted there was a | ighly interesting discussion of various questions of interest. The meeting was by all odds the most successful and most interesting of any yet held. As the association becomes stronger, it is better able to accomplish good results, The question eame up among the mem- bers bc}qrn the mceting was called to order as to what good had been done by the association or us to what benefit the members had recerved. Said one mem- ber, “Myself and competitor ure both members of the association and have found it o great beneflit. We used to buck each other and loose & good deal of money in that way, but now we keep the market even and ay uniform prices. It is a good deal Ertlor for the farmer, because when we were bucking each other we used to pay too much forone load and then in order to even up we would be compelled to buy the uext load at less than it was worth,” “Why," said another member, ‘‘the other day I went over to a neighboring town after some cattle. The buyer there met me and told me I could use his yards, scales or anything else, but before we joined the associntion we never ex- changed such courtesies.” In the way of adjusting rates and exacting fair treat- ment from railroads, it will be a great advautage. The association bids fair to embrace in the list of its m mborvll the promiuent shippers to this marketin a very few months, llers!” s A shattered frame may be reinvgor- atea by that wonderful tonie, Dr. J. H. an's Strengthening Cordial and Blood Purifler. . It enriches the blood, ;u:’l vitalizes and strengtbens the whole ody, fHE OMAHA DAILY BEE: THURS A SCIENTIFIC FACT. *“Royal” the only Baking Powder Free from Lime and Absolutely Pure. Lime is the serious defect found in most of the cream of tartar baking powders. As a matter of fact, chemical analysis has found it in all such powders except the *Royal.” Its presence is caused by the use of adulterated cream of tartar in the effort to reduce their cost of production. Lime adds to the weight, while it detracts from the strength of the baking powder. It also renders the food less wholesome, giving rise to dyspepsia and kindred ailments. Baking powders containing lime produce less leavening gas, and therefore in uso are more expensive than a first-class, pure article. The Royal Baking Powder is made from cream of tartar that is first specially refined and made chemically pure. No tartrate of lime or other impurity can find its way into the “Royal,” and to this fact its great superiority in strength, whole- someness and keeping quality is due. All this adds greatly to the cost of manufacturing the Royal Baking Powder, but as all its ingredients are selected and prepared with the same precise care and regardless of labor or expense, an article is produced that is free from every extraneous substance—“absolutely pure.” Nor does it contain any ingredi- ents except those necessary to make a pure, wholesome and per- fect baking powder. Prof. McMurtrie, late chemist in chief to the U. S. Depart- ment of Agriculture, after analyzing the crcam of tartar used by the various baking powders of the market, reported as follows: “I have examined the cream of tartar manufactured for and used by the Royal Baking Powder Company in their baking powder, and find it to be perfectly pure and free from lime in any form.” Prof. Love, who made the analyses of baking powders for the N. Y. State Board of Health, as well as for the Government, certifies to the purity and wholesomeness of the Royal. Dr. E. H. Bartley, chemist of the Brooklyn, N. Y., Depart- ment of Health, says: “I have recently analyzed samples of the Royal Baking Powder purchased by myself in the stores of this city, and find it free from lime in any form.” Bread, cake, biscuits, etc., prepared with Royal Baking Powder, will be lighter, swecter and more wholesome than if made with any other baking powder or leavening agent. PUBLIC WORKS, Another Phase of the Woodworth Curbing Stone Delay. A reporter for the BEE yesterday morn- ing sought Contractor Woodworth to as- certain what he had to say withreference to the complaints made against his non- delivery of curbing stone according to contract, but Mr. Woodworth could not be found. Notwithstanding his assertions to the contrary; the contrac- tors unhesitatingly assert that Mr. Wood- worth cannot supply them with the stone which they require to be enabled to keep their contract with the ecity. Woop- worth's contract calls for 80,000 fe f curbing or nearly sixteen miles, wh eighty-Tive cents per foot represent y $70,000. Contractor Brennan told a Be reporter that it was impos- sible for Woodworth to supply the mate- rial in the time or quantities mentioned. Reagan Brothers, he knew, had more than forty carloads of material piled up in their and with which to begin paving ‘but they could not touch a block 0 long as the mn'hil.F was not Inid. This was a delay which also showed that the Union Pacific did not know how to run its road. It also showed the monopoly which that corpo- ration seemed to exercise in the control of material ential to the progress of this city. He did not believe Woodworth could supply the stone as required and that fact was shown in several other ways. Woodworth bad not only been unable to supply the stone for cut- ting purposes, but hé had also been un- able to supply it for the city hall. The Union Pacitic had received Mr.Brennan’s order for the stone for the foundation last October,and had not been able to sup- ply half of what was needed up to the present time. It would take possibly until next Christmas before the required supply could be farnished. To-day,notwithstanding the strike of five or six days, Mr. Brennan said he was compelled to lay off about forty of his men, simply because of the failure of the stone supply. He was consequently under expense of greater or less amount while this delay lasted and the city hall was vlaced so far beyond the possibility of immediate completion. Mr. Brennan did not think, howeyer, that Woodworth's contract could not be cancelled, The only thing that could be done would be to have the city finish the work contracted for, provided it could secure the same material, which Mr, Brennan holds to be out of the case. COURT HOUSE WALK. After considerable delay the Berea stone for the walk on Farham street in front of the court house has commenced to arrive, and is now being del ed 1n front of the structure mentioned. Jon- tractor Brennan says the tlags will be laid 1 position in a few days. ELI 'H STREET VIADUCT. The work of paving the southern ap- proach to the Eleventh street viaduct is now being carried on and develops a strange approach indeed, Between the retaining walls the street will be paved with stone. The retaining walls are surmounted by a _ stone about three feet wide, This is about two and a half feet above the pave- ment, and is the only walk pedestrians can use in roncl\in{; the viaduct. Itis hardly wide enough for two people to walk abreast, and in case of a crowd, some of the pedestrians will be com- pelled to walk in the strect, in the face of approaching teams. On the east and west sides of these retaining walls the street slopes to the north, so that there is no chance of widening the walk upon each of them. It seemed to have Lecn the original intent to have continued upon these walls the guard- rail which separates the — walk from the roadway on the viaduet, but it 18 alleged” that one of the members of the council cut off the con- necting rods which pierced the stones and thus made the fastening impossible unless by means of again cutting holes into the stone. Liquor Law Violator. Frank Kitenmark, who runs the booze oint opposite the entrange to Fort maha, Was brought in yesterday mora- ing to answer to the charge of selling li- quor after midnight, He pleaded guilty, and was assessed a fine of $100 and costs. AN EDUCATED KID. And One to Puzzle Connoisseurs in Depravity. Herman Albretch, the promising youth who was arrested Tuesday charged with grand larceny and embezzlement at S. P. Morse’s dry goods store, waivea cxamination this morning and was bound over to the distriot court. The peculations and stealings of thi; rogue turn out to_be much more exten~ sive than was at first supposed, and have been systemat ly carried on for a period of tive or six months. The non- chalance and boldness with which the kid exocuted all his crooked work, the ingenuity and cleverness he ecvinced in originating schemes and devices by which he (‘(mlfi beat the firm out of money and goods, and the wonderfully successful culmina- tion of all his plans and proje issome- thing to tax the credulity of rdinary, every day citizen. ‘L'here wasn’tanything mall about young Albreteh but his con- ience and his honesty; he wasn’t sati fied with oceasionally }mrloininz a base bali or a bat, a pair_of shoes or a toy of some kind, or the nipping of a half dol- iar or & quarter once in a while, to main- tain him in ginger ale and cigarettes, but he hocus-pocused gonds of all kinds and values, diminutive and bulky, and when he wished a little wherewithal he would work the pneumatic tube, inform- ing the cashier, Miss Hall, that Mr. Morse wanted $30, and on two or three different occasions this snug little sum was forthcoming, twice within the last fortnight. When Herman felt any doubt about the pneumatic tube racket’ failing to connect, he resorted to forgery or rais ing figures'in the cush out slips, clapping the autograph of each and every floor- walker as the particular instance demand- ed, a skill that orders, with Ins fa these demonstrated with the peculiar all. For a boy but fourteen yi age this is an accomplishment to veled at, and indeed young Albretch is & real phenomenon. The physiognomist would have a tough time reading or an- alyizing the ingredients of hismake up from the immobile lineaments of his very singular face. What the boy has done with ali the money he has got hold of and what disposition he has made of the large quantities of goods he has filched and carried off, is something it seems impossible to find out. He says he hasn't spent over $20 in the last month, and his stealings amount to ten times that much. He also claims that he has neither hidden nor given away the swag, but is immovable in his determination not to throw any enlightenment upon the whereabouts of the plunder, persistently declaring that he can’t for the hfe of him tell what be- came of it, Itis pretty nearly a case of total depravity, and the young scoundrel is entitled to a very large and juicy slice of justice, in the fullest sense of the ex- pression, to Nick Notolia and Sandy Merietta, two sons of sunny italy, ot into a wrangle over a bunch of bananas down in Dago alley, yesterday morning, that finally merged into u fisticuff, and Notolin was vcrf’ thoroughly knocked out. They were poth run in and will have a hearing in the morning. e Recovering. Al Sorenson, managing editor of the BEE, made his first visit at the office in sey- eral wecks, for the first time, yeatedday He has almost entirely recavered from the etlects of his painful and dungerous injury. Uh ned. The case of August Uhtof, the Douglas street saloonkeeper, arrested for keeping his establishment open after 12 o'clock, came up before Judge Berka yesterday afternoon, and he was tned $100 and costs. He appealed the case, giving $300 security, DAY. JULY 14, l 1887.' FOR PARENTS. The axe has fallen among our Boys’ and Childrens’ Clothing and g making havoc with the prices of some of them. Those who visited us during the past season must have noticed that since the enlargement ot our store, we carried in this line a muchlarger stock than formerly. Naturally, of such a big assortment, we have more left, especially of the better grades, and we are determined to close them all out before the opening of our new juvenile department, which next season will be on the second floor of our building. A large line of Boys’ and Chil+ drens’ suits of all sizes—some very fine goods and elegantly made—also alot of knee pants and long pants are marked down to one-half their EHXTRX. A manufacturer who heard that we are doing a large business, and though that we could dispose of most any quantity of goods, sent us last week a big lot of striped summer coats—Mens’ and Boys’—with instructions to sell them for his account. We did not want to accept them, as the lot is too large and the season late, and told him so, but he wired us to dispose of them at any price we pleased, so we have de- cided to mark them 15¢ APIECE. It is almost giving them away, but> value. it is not our loss. They are new patterns and all sizes. All goods marked in plain figures and at strioctlv one price at Nebraska Clothing Company Cor. Douglas and 14th sts., Omaha. OMAHA MEDICAL & SURGICAL INSTITUTE. ELECTRIC ¥ Cor, 13th 8t. and Capltol Ave., OMAHA, NEB. FOR THE TREATMENT OF ALL CHRONIC = SURGICAL DISEASES ! BRACES AND APPLIANCES FOR DEFOAMITIES, TRUSSES, At THE New VARICOCELE SUSPENSORY CLAMP CoMPRESS. remedies for successtil treatment of ‘Madical o & . Clul Peot, Tirouchitia, Only Reliable MEDICAL INSTITUTE MAKING A SPECIALTY OF PRIVATE, SPECIAL and NERVOUS DISEASES, CAL INSTITU" |, or Dr. McMenamy, Cor. 13th st. & Capitol Av.,0mena, Ned. Medical Books or Papers Free. The proprietor of the Omuha Medi and Surgle cnl Indttito has published a valuable so Books upon ehron ical dis &nd the' m re putati t. " Papers yals, fits. b for home niik s do not cons s with flctitious numes and initi atkind, but are pluin desc dew discoveries in_mi and nre well worth the pe: frea by addressing the stitute, 1ith stree rasku. DRS. 8. &D. DAVIESON 1707 Olive St., St. Louis Mo. Of the Missouri State Museum of Anatomy, St. Louis, Mo., University College Hospi- tal, London, Giesen, Germany and New York. Having devoted their attention SPECIALLY TO g;‘lE TREATMENT Nervous, Chronic and Blood DISEASES, More especiaily thse arising from impru- dence, mvite all so suffering to correspond without delay, Diseases of infection and contagion cured safely and speedily with- out detention from business, and without the use of dangerous drugs. Pa- tients whose cases have been neglected, badly treated or pronounced incurable, should not fail to write us concerning their symptoms. Al letters receive immediate attention JUST PUBLISHED, And will be muiled FREE to any address on receipt of one 2 cent stamp. *Practical Observations on Nervous Debility and Physical Exhaustion,” to which is added an “Essay on Marriage,’ with important chap- ters on Diseases of the Reproductive Or- gans, the whole forming a valuable medical treatise which should be read by all young men. Address, DRS. 8. & D. DAVIESON, 1707 Olive St.,St, Louis, Mo. HOPKINS' Large Seale Real Fstate Atlas OF OMAHA NEB, PRICE $26 A COPY. Address, G. B. VANDERVOORT, 1516 Dodge St.,, Omaha, Neb, New Model Lawn Mower any othe Has noequal for simplicity, durebility and ease of operation. This is the latest Improved Mas chine in the Market. Low Prices. Send for circulars. % PHIL STIMMEL & CO. OMAHA, NEBEASKA. State Agents for Porter’s Haying Took and Jobbers of Binding Twine. Display at their warerooms, 1305 and 1307 Farnam Street, the largest assortment of Pianos and Organs to be found at any establishment west of Chicago. The stock embraces the highest class and medium grades, Including STEINWAY, W FISCHER, LYON & HEALY BURDETT, STANDARD, MLYON&HEALY Prices, quality and durability considered, are placed at the lowest living rates for cash or time payments, while the long established reputation of the house, coupled with their most liberal Interpretation of the guarantee on their goods, affords the purchaser an absolute safeguard against loss by possible defects in materials and workmanship. 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