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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 6, 1881)
THE OMAHA DAILY BEE ; TUESDAY SEPTEMBER (5 ( , The Omaha. Bee. Publishedcvetf morningexcrptSunday. wily Monday morning dully. JL1CUM8 KV MAIL : v ar S10.00 I ThrcoMontln.S3.00 MonOsn. . . C.000iio | " . . 1.00 IHE tfKKKLY llii : : , imbllshcd ev. Vy "WWnwday. OT5KMS TOST PAID- Onc Year. $2.00 I ThrccMonthn. . TO Six Months. . . . 1.001 Ouo " . . E-AU Communl eabions relntln ? to News and Editorial rmt- tors should be nddrewied to U.o KlHTOU or THE UKK. BUSINESS totters nnd Ucimitanccs should bo ad- lro < .wl to TIIU OMAHA rmiLisiuwi COM- CANT , OMAHA. Drafts , Checks id Poit- olflco Onlcm to bo rondo payable to the ] order of the Company. OMAHA PUBLISHING 00. , Prop'-rs E.ROSEWATER , Editor. dwin Davis , Manner of 'City Circnlnttwn- John IL Tierce fc In Chnrro of Iho ! Mall Circiiitlon of THK DAILY BKK. Call for RajnAlloim'Stttto Convon- tion. The Kopubltcan electors of the State of Kcbrnnlamre haroby.crJlcd to oml dele- vnteH from the eovcral counties , ' * " meet in State Convention atl.uieoln , on Wcdnc * . d y , OctoberTith , 1881 , n 3& > o'clock ' , p. in. , for the uurp < ne of placing 'In iiomhift- lion candidate * for tire following named offices vfas One .Tudce of the Supreme Gnurt. Two Urgent * of tlio State lUnlversity. And to transact Mich other bunlncnn M m y properly como before the convention. The several counties are cntUSl to rep- a-eicntatiou in the Htnto convention . .r fol- It in recommended First. That no proxies bo admitted to the convention ex cept Hiich as are held l > y ncrions residing in the counties from which the proxies nro Ifiven. Second. That no dclogato Khali repje- Ment an absent member of hia delegation unless ho bo clothed with authority from the county convention or is In possession of proxies from regularly elected delcgi oa thereof. By order nf the Republican State Cen tral Committee. JAMES W. DAWJ3S , Chm'n. V. J. UKNDKHSIIOT , Seo'y- pro teni. 3-Incoln , Nob. , Auff. 31 , 1881. OMAHA merchants should strike the northern Nebraska iron while it is liot. LOOK out for the primaries and the conventions will take euro of th"iu- solvoa. "WATER-WORKS without nn ofliciont Tire department will bo u useless , luxury. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ IT looks as if scalps would bo Ari zona's greatest product for seine months to como. OMAHA is to have a hominy mill in addition to her pork packing inter- cstc. Hog nnd hominy will go hand in hand. Tin : report that the Union I'auific has agreed to maintain a close trallio arrangement with Iho Denver & Ilio Graudo at Denver is denied. THK man who just now harps most apon the generosity of the railways is the ox-mombor of the legislature wlio holds a grading contract or a right of way job. Now that the council will have iU full quota of members at the mooting to-night , the ordinance regulating the traflic In liquors ought to bo passed without further uccdlnss delay. TUB otoady stream of bad news about crops and harvests on the other bide of thD Atlantic inspires a suspi cion that another corner in grain is forming , or the old one is trying to unload. from San Franeiscothat readied this oIHca at 3 o'clock this morning contain full details of General - oral Carr'a engagement with the Apaches , According to thcso dis patches the reported mossacro of ( ! un- iral Carr is untrue. A bloody fight Jiaa boon itt progress Iwhvcon Qonoral dorr's command and a Land of Apaclics in which BOVOII or eight ofli- cors and soldiora and half a dozen coiita and teams tors have Leon killed. The light is etill progressing in the neighborhood of Fort Apache , but General Carr is holding his owu ( and if the troops § ont to his relief reach there teen Jili command will bo AN INDIAN The nmssacro of Ocnor.il Carr and his command by 1'cd ro's band ol Apache Indians markr. the commence ment of tin Indian var which is likely j last longer , cost more , and involve greater loss o * iifo than any Indian ar during the past twenty years , ntcst ndvicoa from Arizona leave no .nubt that a general rising of the Apaches liar , already taken placo. The , ribo nuiahr.rs nearly 25,000 Indians ividcd into twenty b.inds , scattered .hroufihout. Arizonn , Now Mexico and ho borders of Colorado , and can .ouMlciM , at the present time , muster ie.-u.-ly 1V,000 warriors. Witlu such a force , well armed and niply supplied with atinnunitioit from Jio CApture of Fort Apaclio and sack ng of the settlements the government will find themselves naddlod with campaign to which the Ulc and Sioux , ud Cheyenne outbreaks will prove to iavo boon mere child's play. The nd dilional danger also exists of a junc tion of forces between Iho Colorado Indians and the Southern tribes. The Utos on the Grand river have boon restless over silico their removal has been mooted , and it is feared that the rising of the Apaches may incite horn to insurrection. Should this happen , the S.in Juan and Gunninon region nnd the adjacent country in Southern Colorado bo nt the mercy of the savages. The Apaches occupy a territory s a desert empire in itself , impossa- blo to an invading force and peculiar ly favorable to the methods of Indian warfare. Its rugged crags , pathless wastes , dark ravines and sccludcll canyons afford a battle ground far superior to the lava beds of the Mo- doc warriors and in which the troops will bo forced to fight against fearful odds. The climate , also , will seriously operate orate against a speedy termination of the war. The winters are never se vere in Arizona and food and forage n abundance will bo near nt hand for .ho Indian forces. Tlio plan , so suc cessfully adopted in othot portions of ho west , by which rebellious tribes , cut off from food and water , have been starved into sullen subjection , cannot bo carried out in Arizona. In the words of General Crook , a single squaw can gather enough mcs calplants in a day to provide a family's sustenance for the entire year , while the Apaches , through severe training 1.1 vo learned to live on the scantiest rations of water. Well armed and equipped , with a thorough knowledge of the country , and aided by mem bers of the tribes ncattorcd through two territories , the Apache warriors are likely to provo more than a match for the scant force which at prcsonl can bo hurried forward t the seat ol war. Meantmo ! , the inhabitants of Ari Kona nnd Now Mexico are in u state ol the greatest peril. Ranchers nro abandoning their larnrn and minors their prospect holes in a race for the nearest settlements. Many of the camps are slimly inhabited and scant ily furnished with food and nmmuni tion to withstand a siege. Even the larger towns are poorly prepared to ward off an attack from such a larg body of Indians as could bo mustorot on the San Carlos reservu tion. Troops are being hurriei forward from the Department of th Pacific , but the soldiers at the immediate diato disposal of General McDowol will hardly bo able to cope with sucl a largo force of hostilcs. "Volunteer composed of minors , scoutn and sot tiers may , how.ovor , bo able to hoi the savages at bay until needed rein forcomonta nrrivo. This at prcson seems to bo the only hope of protcc tion from a general massacre of th Arizona Bottlers. all over the country will bo pleased to learn that the no\ law prohibiting the payment of wage in store orders wont into effect ii Pennsylvania last Thursday. In tha state , as in nearly all the manufactur ing roiuons , it had become customary for the corporations employing a largi number of hands to have stores a which the workmen were required t < do most of their trading. Althougl the factory hands were nt liberty ti trade where they pleased , the fact tha their wages wore in part made up o store orders , compelled them to bu ; their goods at the company utoro They had credit to the full amount o their current wages , and the store bil was generally largo enough to cat U ] entire week's wages when pay da ; came. This "truck " " system" or "calico am molasses" plan was expensive to th laboring men , by encouraging extravagance aganco in purchases and keeping u high prices for the morchundiso the most needed , The chief of ( ho bureau of stnto sta tistscs gathered a largo body of iiguroa showing the working of the "true system , " and it was from iiifommtio. . contained in his report that the law that has just gene into effect waa fran. ed at tlui lust session of the legislature The overcharge for goods was foun to average from JO to 25 pur cent Thus at the company's atore in a Westmoreland county village lago the cost of n Back o Hour was $2.JO , and at outsid toroa 81.00 } sugar 12J cents at th. former nisei 7 at the latter ; a pair o woman's shoes 8'2 at on < place nnd L 25 at the other. It v.illibo difficult o prevent workingmrm from buying oods'on credit , providing anybody is villing to soil to them in that way , md the companies may make it un- > rofil blo for anybody eho to sell on credit and so preserve a sort of mo- opoly of the credit tnulo to them- iclvcs , but they will bo required in Jio first instance to pay the entire amount of the men's wages in cash , nnd lot thorn settle their sloro bill of- .orward. The outcome of Iho new law will > o n material reduction in prices nnd a marked increase in savings. journals nro calling atten tion to the condition of Capt. Ends' Mississippi jetties , for which the gov ernment lias already expended nearly 85,000,000. . Cnnt. Ends drew a lar o sum of money two years ngo on the statement that the ship channel es tablished by him at the mouth of the Vlississippi was COO feet wide and HO 'cet deep. During Augustan English steamer drawing only 23 feet of water dragged the bottom of the channel 'or 200 yards , nnd four captains tosli- y that the channel is barely 150 feet n width , instead of 000 feet , as required. There is some talk of a concessional investigation of the matter at the next session. Such nn investigation would doubtless afford an opportunity for an eastern lobby to protest against further expendi ture of money for the improvement of western rivers , on the ground that the Mississippi experiment has not proved a success. If the channel of , ho river has not been maintained at the proper depth the fault lies with ! apt. Ends , who was hnndsomoly paid ; o accomplish that end. No intelligent lorson behoved that the mere location of the jetties without some subsequent dredging would keep the channel in the Middle Pass open to a ilopth of thirty feot. Such subsequent dredging Captain Eads was paid 'to perform , and if jt has not boon accom dished ho should bo huhl to u strict : iccounlability. The improvements at the mouth of the Mississippi have proved far too valuable to bo allowed to lapse at this late day for want of proper attention. They have shown the great influence for good which an open watoiwny in the interior of the continent exorcises over trade in re striding freight tariffs and furnishing n free outlet for the productions of the great west. DAN VOOKIIIS has now been heard from on the question of presidential disability. Dan is n profound ex pounder of constitutional law. A few years ago ho insisted that fiat money was the only legal currency in th land , and his views of the disability problem nro just about as sound as his delusions about irredeemable cur rency. GovEimou HAWKIKS , of Tennessee , has lately pardoned n number of con victs. Within the last three weeks , three of those pardoned have boon arrested for burglary. Another strik ing proof that the free cxcrciso of the pardoning powers is generally less a charity to ttio public than to the prisoner. Tun Denver Tribune fools called upon to remark that' : "Tho regular bulletins as to Dr. Dims' condition nro interesting because of the occasional and incidental references they contain to the president. The president is al most OH much nn object of public anx iety as Dr. EVKK in Franco it is unsafe for two trains going in opposite directions to attempt to pass each ether on the same track. The shocking railroad accident near Lyons doesn't differ very materially from similar disasters on railways in this country. "Wi : IIAVI : not heard that the rail road managers rushed to offer delegates gates to the Purmurs1 Alliance at Lincoln free passes. There is a great difference between n farmer member of the leuislaturo nnd a farmer dele gate to the State Alliance. UKKOUK the street railroad ordinance is put on its final passage , the council should insert a plank that will prevent imposition on the patrons of the road ouch as waa practised last year , in doubling the tariff during the state fair week , THK date set for the holding of the Now York convention , October 5th , is characterized by ( ho Cliittitjo I'riliuiie an "unprccudontly Into. " Mr. Medill evidently is not posted on Nebraska corporation politics. GK.XKIIAL GRANT regrets hm inabil ily to attend the lounion of Nebraska veterans , but General ( / ) Vandcrvoort , who is n good deal bigger man than Grant , will bo there , to describe his daring exploits. "Mn TOO" Platt has Iwoii made chairman of the Now York republican Btnto central committee , in jilnco of Vico-Prosidunt Arthur. Tliia may vindicate Plntt buforo Conkling awl his stalwart committee , but it doesn't laud him In his seat in ( he United States senate. STATE JOTTINGS. CnlbcrtRon boaits of n telephone. Occeoln in now an Incorporated town. Cedar Itnpidi hni n IK I f the ( . } . A , It. Uo.ino colic c opens on Tuesday , Sept. Oth. llnrglars ha\o been operating hi Dm- Chester. Lincoln lm a "Ho s Plasterers' Asso ciation. " Kearnnv'o high xchool has been hunted for 515,000. Clay county ranks 7th in point of wealth In the state. Numerous burglaries are re | > ortcd from Thajcr county. The new town of ( Jrccn Inland Is pro gressing nicely. Crops In the Habile county are icportwl the best over nUetl. Thu cnloom of Kearney are among the things nf the pact. Tli3 bell for Kearney' * new school house weighs 1,000 pounds. Work Is to ho begun at oncoon the Alma high school building. ItmnhohU contributed forty pennies to the Cook penny fund. The foundation for the Polk county court house h completed. l'e < t Cloud lias undergone a performance of the oratorio of Kathcr. About one hundred emigrants nrrlvcd in Sidney during the week. Kalrficld'H steam sugar works have start ed up nnd are ready for cane. A movement In on foot to give North lcnd a HyHtem nf water works. A mountain linn Is roaming on Camp nnd Indian crtck near Culbertson. Weeping AVater Is grading a boulevard nnd ntlnnvlno Impnnlng the town. The amount nf liny which Is being put up throughout the state Is immense. A thirty pound wild cat was caught In n trap near Mudinon , n few days ago , Six hundred people made up the excur sion from Ijiidlcaltto Lincoln last \\cek. Oxford claims to have more dogs than any town of it's i-izo In the United States. The town of Hubliel ! was incorporated by the county commissioners at their last Sportsmen in the southern nnd eastern parts of the state complain of the scarcity of chickens. The Lincoln & Fremont railroad wanti thirty-live thousand dollars in bonds from Fremont. Mr. M. 0. Iterdrll , of Washington , I ) . 0. , lifts purchased 1,000 acres of Nnnce county lands. The election In Lincoln for 850,000 in bonds to the Fremont railroad will bo held September i7tli/ ! A prnirio fire near Schuylor came near destroying the ImildingH on the premises ofl'dward Dame. Some of the farmers of Grcelcy county nro claiming seventy-five to eighty bushels of corn to the acre. The Lincoln pottery folks are building n largo brick chimney to take the place of the old smoke stack. The county commissioners nf Thayer county , allowed at their last session , § 52 an bounties on wolf scalps. The ( -tables and hay of Kmil llcuter , of the West How in Cedar county , were en- thcly destroyed by fire last week. Mrs. Flynn of Fairliold while attempt ing to stop n runaway was caught between the wheels nnd had two ribs broken. The dwelling of Sam ( ! her at Gassey Hollows , Stauton county , was destroyed by fire last week with all its contents. The Prcirbyterhn church at St. Paul has been presented with n line silver commun ion set , of Biii pieces , by .1 New York lady. During a qunrrcl in a saloon nt North Bend , Frank Mizern wnn fatalljr blabbed by A. It , Dawt > nn. Dawiion is under arrest. franklin IJros. ot Jjiueoln have lost within a week thlrty-fivo out of fortj head of the f'meU milch cows in Lancaster county. The .I'tna iron works have sent to the county clerk plan * , estimates nnd propos als for the construction of a jail In Thaycr county , i The H. C. & P. It. II. U now completed to Atkinson 0 miliM ul > o\o O'Neill citv nnd tiauk laving is being pushed tow.uuj , Fort Nlolraw. The tCHldcnco of Mrs. Thos. Turner , in Fremont , was burglai ized the other day during the absence of the family , to tin amount of nearly $200. While attempting to hoard ft " train 01 the Plattsmouth bridge last week Olney Graham fell and waa dragged n distance o two rods , sustaining Kevcro injuries. About 1,1100 have been raised for thu erection of the M. 13. church near McCain cronX Washington county. The building will bo rapidly pushed towards complc tion , , The Presbyterian church society o Firth have now in course of erection whai will bo a handsome little meeting house when finished , costing fiom $1,500 to 81,800. Three children were buried by the cav ing In of n hand bank near Uannebrog last week. Two weio excavated alivo. bu the third , -lullus Wilson , was smotherec to death. A young man of Albion while mirrr > p titlously Uniting a widow of doubtful rep utation was bhot by the damsel throng ! the Hhoulder as ho wns attempting to fore hi the front door. A rcpoit comes from the Dismal river country that two c.vttle men were recently killed by the Indians in that vicinity am that numeious hands of redskins are pass ing through there. The grccubackcni of Hod Willow count ) have called a convention for the purpoii of determining whether or not thtyshal nominate it ticket this fall. Of course thry will non'lnato. Syincnso Is preparing for n brick bulM Ing boom next spring , the brick belli } already contracted for three blocks , am w 111 be manufactured this season BO us U get nn early start. The Kpfocopnl church people nt Centra City expect to have their building com Dieted by the time cold weather up proachcs. It will cost iibont $1,000 txclu blvo of equipments. The Colfa\ county agricultural nocietj has recelvcd n pinposition from the lion Schuyler Colfax to deliver two leetun heio dining the fair for $75. The noaietj will take tlio nmtter tiiulcr considenilioi at the next meeting. Di-iolii. the Otoo interpreter , Informs ut that thu Indians will start for their nov rcsenntion nUuit the 1st to the Ifith o September. T lion -lU.OOO ncicn of the bes land in Nebraska will lie i-ottled in tin twInkliiiL' of nn eye. Two thousantl pee glo will cover It w'ith their hoiues. The Congregational ohurch nt .Sarpy Centro contlnutu to grow. Four pewoni weroudiiiittod to membership on Sumla' hist. At the mcutlng of tlio churcl Thur > d.iy In refoienco to building th church edifice , dccUlon won deferred unti loi-atlouof tliedenot on thu Jllfuouri Panl He. Poppletoii TimcH. A ten year old of Joseph Karel , of Mid laml precinct , was terribly burned by th explosion of a coal oil can , lnt > t TliuiTila.s night. The mother wns filling the lighted lump while the girl was standing uea when the can exploded , Dr. Wood * wa called , but ho has no hojio of the child's ro " * l ' " ciiNcry. : A , < f , Cnrrence , of Driftwood , bniugli Into our otlicu the other day two of th Urgent rattlesnakes wo over saw. On had twenty-tivo rattlea nnd thrco buttoiu thu other filteeti rattles nnd one button The HiuktH were killed on hl ranch , ant measured live and six and onu-half feet ro mwctlvcly. { Oulbertnon Hun. Lost Wcdueajay enlng a dastardly at tempt wn made to llro Henry's corn crll jmt wc t of town , Some young people olng home from n sociable discovered the iw ? , which wan jnt starting and tramp ed it nut. A box of paj > cr raluratcd with gasoline ni.i n bottle which had contained he gasoline \ > TO to ? only traces left by ho wretch who 'tarttd tno fire. The crib contained over SO.Ofn. < * hcls of corn val- ted at about $15,000. Pawnee City Kii- nirlfc. A dastarlly attempt at murder took ) lace on Saturdiyexcnim ? last , at the res- detice of Mr. W. H. Pickcn- the third \ard. A shot was fired from without bv KOIIIO party unknown , nnd the ball came crashing through tlio tide of the house , wsing within a couple of Inches of Mrs. : ' ' face. When search for the pcrpetra- or was instituted , no trace of him could )9 found. U is thought that the initcre- int had n murderous intent on n neighbor- "ng family and had mistaken the house. L'lattsmoilth Herald. INTERESTING LETTERS. Private DalKoll'R Reminiscences of Garflold- 'o tlio IMItor of TlioC'liIcnjto Trlliuno. CAUWKM , , 0. , August 27. Just mo year before ho was shot , almost : o an hour , President Gnrfiold wrote no the following letter : Mi\Ton : , O. . July 2 , 1880. Mr lr\u Yours congratulating mo on he result n Chicago is received , and ihould have been answered sooner but that [ was BO prps ed with calls and corrcspon- lence that I coidd nut find time to do so. [ _ knew jim would rejoice nt my nomina- ; ion , but to me there is something sad about it all that I suppose neither you nor any man In the world can understand but nyself. Hut If any man in the world has .lie support of true friends I think I have , at least my correspondence seems to say so. Aaevervours , J. A. ( tAlinn.1) ) . About ton days before the president ivas shot I wrote him asking him for iiis photograph. It came Friday night July 1 , 1881 , and that very night I had it framed and hung on the wall in my library. Call it foolish if you will , I cannot help it , but I felt : hat I could not sleep that night until I had it framed and hung up beside the pictures of Hayes and Lincoln. I B tu to thcso singular facts and coinci dences familiar to all my neighbors , yet I do not profess to BOO anything in them beyond the facts. When Gen. Garlleld was hero in 1877 and made three speeches in one day , concerning which I have written you fully , wo had several interesting conversations. All that I can now re member of interest at this time was what ho told mo of the attempts that liad been made , or rather threatened , against his lifo and that of President Hayes. President Garfield said that sometime before the close of the Electoral count in ] 877 ( the spring jcforo this conversation ) some of his young friends in Washington came to lim and told that a conspiracy had jcon formed to kill him. The general at first treated the statement lightly , drinking that the report was merely sensational , and grow only out of the morbid state of public feeling there at that crisis ; but when ho came to ex- imino it more closely ho said ho found it was but too true. His young friends armed themselves to the teeth , met him at the Capitol every day ut the close of the session , and took him homo in a covered carriage , and next morning escorted him back to the Capitol in the saino way , until the Electoral Commission finally ad journed. "It was felt , " said the gen eral , "that if I were called , the demo cratic house would never consent to fill the vacancy caused by my death , and so all peaceful methods for set tling the great question of the presi dential succssion would bo at an end. " I told him that I hod watched Gen , Grant nnd Air. Hayes leave the White House on the morning of thu Oth of March , 1877 , and go to the in auguration , and seen him and Sher man riding in the next carriage to them , with no little alarm and appre hension. 'Yes , " said he , quietly , looking at mo solemnly and silently with those two deep blue eyes of kindness , "and there was good cause for apprehension that morning. Do you Icnow that after wo loft 'the White House mes sengers warned President Hayes that ho would bo fired on at Willurd's ? I passed that point with no little appro hension. Then came a message that ho would bo fired on down about Pour and a Half street , but that point was safely passed , and after the in auguration wo all returned to thu White House aafely. " "JJut , General , " I said , "I am sure you yourself were not afraid ? " 'Well , " ho replied with a subdued smile , "I felt a little more comfort able when wo returned to the White House , and I got my overcoat olf. " The only ether time I over heard Gen. Garfield refer to any violence that had been ollercd to him wns in a quiet chat I had with him in Lancas ter , O. , after his return from Boston that year. 1 remember the very words ho used for who that board them in his deep , strong voice , so earnestly uttered , with so little 1111- kindness , so little resentment I mean , could over forget them ? "I had never been in Boston much , at least had nuver had a chance to make a square speech there befoio to those follows. You know how crazy a portion tion of the people down there were just then on the greenback question , Ben. Butler's dumagogary had aroused the worst classes to the highest pitch of anger against tlio Republicans , nnd against mo particularly. 1 was to speak in Fanueil Hall , It wns it great occasion , I was advised that numbers of the best men from Harvard and the literary circles would bo there , nnd I wai > also informed that Ben Butler had hired COO roughs to mob ma ut least to interrupt me. 1 took the stand , and the great hall was packed full , Some of these follows expected mo to put on a pair of glasses , unroll a manuscript , and read off a finely prepared speech. But I did nothing of the sort. I saw these follows of But ler's glaring at mo , and I just rolled up my sleeves nnd pitched into them. Of course there was but ono question the finances and currency. I had not proceeded a minute until one of But ler's men | > opped up nnd put a qucs tion and the rest of them howled. I told them to keep quiet a minute and I should answer him. I did so us well as I could , and then up jumped another ether big ugly folio wand put his ques tion. That I also answered as well as I could. This was kept up for some time an hour or so , covering the whole field of issues made up that fall between the greonbackors , demo crats and republicans. At length , growing tired of it , I stopped short , and told them that I had treated them fairly , and asked them now to bo quiet and interrupt mo no further. Aftora little flutter their sense of fair play induced them to bo qtiioi , nnd they yelled for mo to go on. 1 saw I had them , and I proceeded to finish my speech. " "Do you know , " ho said , "that thai was the bent speech of my llfo ? 1 owe it to J5en Butler to Bay that. Af ter the meeting ROIUU of the old men of Boston come to mo nnd told mo they had heard Webster , Chotvto , nnd Clay there , but , that I had made the best speech they had over heard in the grand old hall. And BO 1 had no reason to feel angry at old Ben , for if it hadn't been for the interruptions of his men , I should scarcely Imvo got stirred up enough to do half as well as I did. " * PIUVATB Physical SuiToriuR. NII ime can rcnlirc , except by personal experience , the miRiiiili of body mid mind endured by Bulfercrs from dyspepsia , indigestion - digestion , constipation and other discuses of the fitnmnuh. Ihirdock Llood Bitters nro n positive euro for this direst of nil Price 51.00 , trial hizc 10 cents , eod-w. FA1UIEUS AND MECHANICS. If you wish to avoid great danger and tumble , bcsidoB n no small bill of oxpenBO , nt this season of the year , you Hliould take prompt steps to keep disease ffom your household. Tlio system should bo cleansed , blood puri fied , stomach nnd bowels regulated , and prevent nnd euro diseases arising from spring malaria. Wo know of nothing that will so perfectly nnd surely do this .is Electiic Bitters , and at the triflng cost of fifty cents n bet tle.Exchange. [ . Sold By Ish & McMnlion. (1) ( ) ' SCHOOL BOOKS ! SCHOOLBOOKS BOOKS ! SCHOOLBOOKS BOOKS I If you want to save money in buying School Books GO TO THE- AflTIQUABIAIf BOOK STORE , 1420 Douglas Street , NEAR IDth STREET , Where you can buy them for NEW AND SECOND HAND School Books for Public and Private Schools in Town and Coun try in large quantities , to be had at * Greatly MucedEates t ' AT THE- ANTIQUARIAN , 1420 Douglas St. , NEAR THE CORNER OF FIFTEENTH 8T. A , G. TROUP , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW J. P. ENGLISH , ATTORNEY - AT - LAW , 810 South Thirteenth Street , with J. M.Woolworth , CHEAP LAND FORSALE. 1,000,000 Acres -OF THE- EASTERN NEBRASKA SKLKCTKD IN AN EABLT DAT NOT lUi UOAD LAND , net LAND OW.NKD BT No.v ItESIDKNTS WHC AUE TIHKI ) PAT1NO TASKS AND AtlE OKKKni.VO THK1I1 LANDS AT TUB tow mien OF SO , R8 , AND 810 run AOBK ON LONO TIME AND EASY TEUMS. WE ALSO OFFEU FOU SALE ' IMPROVED FARMS - IN - Douglas , Sarpy anil Washington ALSO , AN IMMENSE LIST OF OmaliaCityRealEstate Including Elegant Ievidences ! , Busines and Residence Lots , Cheap Houses nnd Lot" , and n large number of Lots in most of the Additions of Omaha. Also , Small Tracts ot 5,10 nnd 20 ncrco in and near the city. Wo have good oppor tunities for making Loans , and in nil case petKonally examine titles and take every precaution to insure safety of money so Invested. , I5o ow we offer a Ern.il list of SPECIAL BAUGAINS. BOGGS & HILL , Real Estate Brokers , 140S North Side of Farnham Street , Opp. Grand Central Hotel , OMAHA , NEB. CflD CAI C A beautiful residence lot rUn OALC California l.ctw ran 2iud anil 23d etrccU , 11(100. BOGGS & HILL. CflD CAI C Very nlco house and lot rUfl OHLI. on Mh and Webster strccta. with tarn , co.il house , well cistern , shade arm fruit tress , c\crj thing complete. A iltblrablo iilne ol property , figures low UGS * HILL. CAI C Splendid bimnea lotsS. E rl vHLC corner of Kith and Capita A\euue. BOGCS & 1IILU QJII C House and lot corner Chicago vALC and ilutHtrcets , 85000. BOGUS ii HILL. CAD C A I C Nelv hoiuc , fi rooms , half lot ; rUIl OflLC 7 bloiks from court house , only HMX ) . BOGUS k HILL. rnn OJII C House of 5 rooms with } lot , . rUIl OnUC near buslncro , good location ; S1D50. BUGUS i HILL. OAI C Corner of two choice lota In vHLC Khinn's Addition , request teat at once submit bent coeh offer. offer.BOGOS BOGOS & HILL. OAI C A good an desirable res OHL.I1 dunce property , etOOO. BOGUS & HILL. RESIDEXCB-Not in the market ) Oner will sell f or , DOO. BOGOS It HILL. rno CAI r * R001' ' lot . stunn's ea rUIl OHLt dltloii 81H ) tach. UOGGS & HILL ITflD QAI C A \ cry flno residence lot , t rUfl OriL C eomc party detlrlnj to liulid- n line houao. 82.300. UOGGS & HILU QAI C About 00 lots In KounUo 0HLC Iluth'a addition , ijibt south ol St. Mary's avenue , $4(0 to { bOO. These lots are near bunlness , gurroumlcd by fine linprovo nient and are 40 pvr cent cheaper than an } otlio Iota In the market. Gave money by billing the * lols. BOGUS i HILL. QAI P 10 lots , suitable for flno res ! OHLk dcnco , on Turk-Wild a\cnuo 3 blocks 8. K. of depot , all covered with fine larg trees. 1'rico extremely low , HOO to $700. 110UGS & HILL. CAI C s ° me 'ery cheap lote OHLC Lake's addition. 1IOCOS & HILL. CAI C Ch fli > oomcr lot , cornet O/iLb Uou.'lao anil Jefferson Bt . liOCJGS & HILL. CAI IT ° SIot 0 . 2"'ht ssfi , W/ll.1. S-Jtli nail 30th fats. , between F.irnlmin , DoujlM , ami Hie ] > roi > o cd extension of Dodgu utnct. 1'rlces mii 'O fiuin r'OO ta flOO. \Vo Imn ( . oncludid to ( , 'Hd men of humll means , onu mora cliinio to secure n home and nlll build liom > i on tlieso latu an stmll paj mints , and will till bUou monthly IKXJ inents.nones nones & HILL. Cft > ? CAI C lco acres , I ) miles trom city , rUn OflLC about30 acres \ery choice \alluy , u Idi running water ; lalrune Rcutly rolling prrirlit , only 3 miles fiom roilaoad , $10 ] > cr acje. BOGOS S HILL. C AI C 40 ° ncrcs"'ono tract ' * -e'ir ' _ _ O/lLE. mllrtr ni city ; 40 acres cu thatrd , LhliiK Hirliiiro ( Mater , foiau nits ML leju. The l.tud In all uiet-vUbU rich urHlrlo. Prio SlOueracrn 110(103 CflD QAI C 720 acres In one body , 7 mlloi rUn OnUt u en of Fremont , lii all lot el Iftinl , luo.lucint ' , fcca\y ( 'rnuthol ( 'rass. In high \alloy , , rich boil and } mien from railroad an xlilo track , In good tcttlcinint and no better Ian can bo found. BOGGS & HILL. CAI C A highly Impro\ed farm ol OHLE. 240 ain , a miles from city. Flno Impro * imcnt on this land , owner not a pructUal tinner , detirmiiieil to eel ) . A good oiwnluk' for noiuo man ol means. means.UOGGS & HILL. CAI C 2.300 acres of land near Mil. OHLC land Station , 3,600 near Elk. horn , & to tlO ; 4,000 a > rin In north mrt of e uu- ty , 97 to * 10 , 3,000 acres 2 to 8 miles from Klor- erne , 85too8,000 ; aircn wtstof the Elkhorn. SI to $10 ; 10,000 acres scattered throu-h the ooun * ty , ? fl to 910. "ITlio abo\o lands Ho neir and aitjoln nearly criry farm In the loiitit } , and can mostly bo told on email cash pajmeiit. ultli the balanio In 1-2-3. 4 and 6 > car's time , UOCC1S i HILL. QAI C KcvrrrJ hne rrntdencci prop OnLE. crtkn iii : > cr tufrre olfered and not kno n in the market M tting for eolo. /nations lll only be made known (3 punhaicn ° mi nlnr buslncs. BOGGS & HILL. IMPROVED FARMS lmpro\o farnu around Omaha , and In all | rf < of Douclas , Sar ) < y and Woahlnu'ton counties. Also fanua In low a. Fer dctcrlptlon and prices rail on n * . llOGUy&HILU If ) Builncsa Lots for Sale on Kani&miuid Doue. IU 1 itreot * , from $3.000 to 8UX ) . IIOGOS & HILL. QAI E 8 lmsl" < 1 ! lot * nextiroa OnUC of Mobonlo Temiilc price odtanccd ol & 000 each. BOGUS i HILL CflD CAI C 3 buslnoa lot * we t of run DAlX c , coo r ch. BOGUS & HILL. ! ! C 2 buxlnem Iota muth iIJo DALE Dou.'las trfct , Ixjtwwn ISIh ( QiTlSth , f3COO each. BOGUS & HILL. CAD QAI C 100nmocmea withyoatjr rUIl OALC tlmUr ; thing Ur. iar rounded by laiurottd nu , only 7 uille * from clt. , Cbeapi it l nd onbaud. UOOGBk.HILL