THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 22 , 1831. The Omaha , Bee. Tublfohcd'evory morning , except Sumlny. Wie only V.ondnj" morning ilnily. BY MAIL- v-ivr 510.00 I TlircoJronthi.e3.00 Months. . . C.OOOno | 1.00 Till : WKUKLY BUlv , pul-HsJicd cv ty Wednesday. 01KUMS TOST PAID. XnoY ir. 82.00 Tlirco Months. . fiO 8 Ix Months. . . . 1.00 OMO " . . 20 , COnUUSPONOKXOK All Communi Cations relating to News and I'dllorlnl lnt > l- tors should bo nddrcMod to tlio KuiTOU of Tun I3t.K. BUSINKSS LKTTKRS All Burfitcis Iiottcrs nnd KcmiUmiccs should bo ml- dressed to Tfcn OMAHA i-unuHtiiNa Con- SPANV , "OMAHA. DrnftK , Checks ntni Pott- office Onltra to bo made payable to the ' order of UM Company. DMAHA PUBLISHING 00 , , Prop'rsl E.ROSE WATER , Editor. Ztltrln DnvU , Manager of City ] Circulation- Tohn H. Fierce Is tn Chnrpo of the Mail Circulation of THE DAILY 1JKK. Proclamation by GOT. Nanco. KxKcuTivr. Omar 1 LINCOLN , NKII , , Sept. 20,1881. f Tlie terrlbfo tragedy which occurred in the city of Washington nn tlic 3d of July last , when the chief magistrate of the nation became the object of an aisasi ' unprovoked and desperate assault has finally culminated In n national disaster , too mournful in character to be announced in the ordinary language of Borrow. Our' ' honored and beloved president , James A Garfield , died at Lone Branch , N , J. , at' ' 10:30 p. in. yesterday. After many weeks o ! [ .intense Buffering , the strong , I brave ! heart in still , and the friend * of law , and order and peed govcrnmcn throughout the woild ace bowed with ; grief en these who feel the weight of a ] personal bereavement. The na'iou's ' calamity brings Borrow to every bouse ] ield in Nebraska , and awakens the ten < Iorcbt fee ings of sympathy for tlio af < illcted companion and fatherless children , of the late president. The > o emotions of ] Kilef and sympathy will find appropriate ! eipnmfous in cvety city , village and ] rural home. In haimony thorowlth it ii Mi pe tcl that on the day set apart for ( no tin al obscqiioi , all public offices and other place ? of business be close. ! It IR also recommended , that the pacplo assemble throughout ! the otato in their respective places of worship and with appropriate religious exercises participate iu the nation's mem orial services on that occasion us a further manifestation of the sorrow that ia tclt by all , and as a mark of respect for the ex alted character of our late chief inngis trato. ' It is ordered that the national flag boB displayed at half-mast nn the capltol building at Lincoln , and that the several ntato departments bodrapcd with emblems ] ot mourning for the period of thirty days. In witness whereof I have hereunto af fixed my hand , this 20th day of Sentom Lor , 1881. By the governor ( Signed ) AUIINUH NAXOK. S. J. ALKXANUKK , Secretary of Stato. TUB last bulletin offered no occasion for concealment or duplicity on the part of the president's physicians. Two valiant Virginians yesterday ; met on the field of honor. It is pain' ' ful to bo forced to chronicle that both oacnpod uninjured. MANY of our citizens are already drinking the water from the now vatcr works. It is clear , pure and in every way satisfactory. ; POOH crops are reported from Ger many. This moans increased emigr.v ! tion to America. Our public domain ; soon bo entirely taken up. THK Omaha Academy of Music was ; the only theatre in the country whinhj remained open during the day fol lowing the death of President Gar-j .field. GVITEAU wants a fair and impartial trial. Bo ought to have it. When the trial is over an impartial judge will pronounce the sentence that ho bo hung by the nock until dead. JUIKJE CLINTON BKJGOH comes in for a share of the Herald's personal abuao. Olio of Mr. Briggs strongostclaims for popularity is that ho has nothing in , common with the editor of the Omaha Herald. BINOE the opera has departed , Denver ver will have- more time to bestow on the very necessary .duty of preventing lior buildings from falling down , It isn't so much of a leap from art to architecture. MK. CONKLINO'B declaration that ho was out of politics was probably i tended only to , apply to politics in the United States Senate. At least so people might infer from his work at the Utica primaries. STUDY th'o autopsy , Dr. Miller , and .report your famous declaration that Mr. Blaine was trying to magnify thoj injuries of the president , iu order to aniposo upon the oympathioa of the public for political ends. THE consideration of tlio KansasCh City , St. Joe & Council I31uff roadlol with tlio Chicago , Burlington &ftc Quinoy adds another link to a syBtemVin i which ia becoming ono of the moatlin i powerful as well oa ono of the mostluf ' prosperous in tJio west. wi 01 i : FEW of the leading papers of the ] wl country neglected to drape their col oimna in mourning. In Chicago the da , Timu was a notable exception , and in1 un i St. Louis the democratic Ittpullicun fcci displayed more fouling in turning it's by ooluinu rules than the republican NO EXTRA SESSION , , Shall congress1 bo convened in extra Jicssion ? This ia tlio first important question whichPresidpnt Arthur willbcj called upon to decide when ho assumes ! the active duties of the presidency. ! iBonalor ] Ingalls , of Kansas , is rej > ro-l icntcd as Baying that nn extra ttcssion ia absolutely necessary to prevent inarchy and revolution in this coun try in the event of the death of Prcsi dent Arthur , before provision ia made for the presidential succession by the election of n president pro tern , of the lUnitcd States senate. If this ia the only reason that the advocates of nn extra session can ad' vance tn favor nuch an important stq wo should doom it very imprudent forj rrcsidont Arthur to call an extra session , The assumption that only ono life nlcrvonus between the preservation ! of the public peace and anarchy i : utterly unfounded. This country linn Iterally boon without a president since the second day of July , when tlio late President Garfield was disabled from , ho active discharge of presidential unctions. During this entire period ho country has been aa pcacuablo nnd ramniil as durinu nny.otlior period iinco this republic was founded. In i country where every citizen is a BOV ircign , where the government ia con luctod by the pcoplo for the people' residents are merely public servants. Micro is very little dimmer that n tern iorary vacancy in the presidential Hico will pro juco anarchy or rovolu ion. ion.It It is very doubtful if any serious dis-j urbanco of the wheels of government ould have occurred at a moro crit- : al period of our history , had An row Johnson shared the fate of Abra am Lincoln on the same day. No intelligent man will assort that resident Arthur will bo moro ex posed to assassination during the two months that prccodo tlio rcgula : session of congress than ho will bo af tcr the senate 1ms elected a president pro torn , In fact the incentive to asstmina iion would bo greater with a prospective tivo democratic president pro torn than there is now with the presidential , tial succession unprovided for. Undo the constitution the emergency thatj might arise in caao of the death ol President Arthur , would bo readily mot. The secretary of state or the rank ing member of tlio cabinet would issue : v proclamation calling for a special election of president by the people , md the government at Washington rvould inovo on until the people in their sovereign capacity filled the va- jancy. Viewed from this common sense itandpoint , the convening of congress n extra session for the solo purpose ) f providing for an improbable con- ingoncy , seems decidedly frivolous. It seems to ua that the discretion- iry power vested in the president to sonvono congress in extraordinary miorgoncics should not bo exorcised rithout sufliciont cause. Quito apart rom all these considerations , Pri _ . lout Arthur could not convene con- | ross in extra seasion without stu ying himself. It is a historic fact ! " hat the responsibility' for thu failure ! f the sonata to elect n president proF omporo at its session last spring ] eats with him. It would liardl ) * in keeping with liis record of1 , flocking the attempt of the sonata to ! D fill the position , to call the son lr to in extraordinary aossion for the urposo of rectifying what ho now lust concodo'waa a grave blunder. ti * PRESIDENT'S FUNERAL.1 The homely and unassuming nature ] ; f the heroic wife of General Qarfioldr j seen in her fixed determination that ! hero shall bo no unnecessary display ! 11 the funeral obsequies of the la-l icntcd president. The people ! ' How York , through whoso magnilicontjP * horoughfuroa the body of the mar' ' yrod Lincoln was borne in solemn omp sixteen years ago , earnestly do ired that the route of the funeral ] light pass through their city , n order to afford them 110 opportunity of paying heir respects to the dead. This is ] iot to bo. Mrs. Garfield has voryKsc oluctantly consented to a lying in ! tate at Washington nnd a public,11 , unoral in Cleveland , where the in orment will take place. To-day and Co-morrow the body cfj lie lamented president will ho in tate in the rotunda of the capitol on , lie eamo catafalque under whoso mur-l. y canopy the body of Abraham ! < > , . oln reposed and was viewed by liun-J undrcdsof thousands of his bereaved ! , ountrymen. Tlio remains will be ! ' , uardod by deputations from the var-l jus executive departments of the ! ovornment and by officers of thoj' " 3imto and house. Invitations ! ave boon issued to members * ! ! ! f both branches of congress ! > attend the funeral services ! , Washinton , which will take place ! ' the rotunda at 3 o'clock on Fridaya 'tornoon. At D o'clock the remains ! . 111 bo transferred to n special train4" i the Pennsylvania railroad , whichPr 111 arrive in Cleveland the next day , ! ( bore the body will remain until Mon ! y. Tlio interment will take placonS Monday morning in Lake ViowJ8U mctory , n spot previously selected ! the president'as hia last rus'thiglrovi ice. Kqu Although the nation will , not bojcoi ( afforded the opportunity to testily inj n-arson the love nnd esteem whicli they f'ooro to their dead president , the day ] will bo observed throughout the land , ia a day of sorrow and mourning Business will bo suspended and the' ' wheels of trudo stopped in thoiij [ course. Fifty millions of people , ' bowed down with the grief of n com mon norrow , will stop for the time in the whirl nnd hurry of their daily vocations to recall the noble lifo and ] character of the nation's dead to ren der n tribute to departed worth , and ! from llio depth of a great nflliction to iillier strength , courage and renewed jhopo for the stability of n republic which ia greater than any ono man land whoso onward march not oven the ; .oath . of her noblest sons can hindc : or destroy- THE AUTOPSY ON THE PRES IDENT. Tlio lonij illness of General Garfield will bo handed down ns ono of the most remarkable in the annals of nodical history. For eighty-two days the patient BufTererer sustained life ] under circumstances which the post norlom examination proved to bo un paralcllod in surgical records. The autopsy revealed n physical condition , is the result of the wound , whicli nakcs the survival of the victim fo uch n period almost n miraclo. It tppcars that the bullet entered the jack and , striking the eleventh rib , deflected to the backbone and edged two inches to the loft of th ipino , whore it had bccomo encysted , largo abscess was found nca ! ho gall bladder while the ] liver and a portion of the in testincs were strongly adherent. Tlio long channel which has been s carefully attended aa the track of the ] ball waa discovered to bo duo to tin burrowing of pua from the wound. With mortal injuries that were under Drdinary circumstances certain to : auso. speedy death , the long ' and licroic struggle of the president bo- monies a matter of tlio greatest sur prise. A magnificent , constitution to ivhich excess was unknown , a will which had never quailed before the ] rreatcst obstacles , General Gartiold vaa able to sustain vitality throuijlij jlovon long wceks. _ Another thought which must havcj icon uppermost in the mind of every > no who has followed the president's aso will bo intensified by tlio result ) f the autopsy. The physicians , nt- ondant"nnd consulting , have icon at sea from the vei lutsct. Their conjectures as to the ] ocation of the ball , the track of th round and the extent of the injuries' ' iavo all been disproved. Fiona theL nomont when the assassin's bullet nflictod that fearful wound there has _ iot bcon an instant when the slight- ist hope of recovery was warranted ly the condition of the patient. Dr. Jell's electric indicator was no less inreliablo than the diagnosis of Or. Jliss , which placed the location f the bullet in the anterior lortion of the abdomen when in fact k lay in close proximity to the spinal olunin , A channel of suppuration ros treated by the surgeons as the rack of the ball. Of cqutso all medical science isP irg'oly based on conjecture. HiddonL ( i juries are riddles which the best ofli kill frequently fails to unravel and ! ' 'hoso true signillcanco are only rc-lj cnlod by the dissecting knifo. I"It lie present case the most distinguish- d surgeons proved their skill only nil jmporarily sustaining lifo in a man on-l owed with an iron constitution ! nd an indomitable will. YiowcdF om the unprofessional standpoint ! 10 result of the post mortem llndingsaj'- ' i President Garfiold's case will se-E. oualy impair popular confidence octors and surgoons. If such cmi-Ht out physicians and surgeons canPJl' [ tor a careful study , inuko no better uosa about internal injuries from ? istol balls , not much reliance can bej laced on the most skilled of doctors , I IT ia foreshadowed that Senator ! ayurd will So the choice of the dcm | | : rats na president pro tempore of the ] nited States senate. Ko man in the mate on the democratic eido II the position with moro dignity andlp jility , and no democrat in this coun-H y would bo safer in the executive lairin case of nn omergoncy. in suburban lots willlri irivo a good deal of cncouragomontljj om the fact that land has bcon soldi , i London nt the rate.of $ o,000,000j , i ncro , in Now York nt $8,000,8 0,1 , floating paragraph eaya , nnd in $2,810,000 in n sala in August. Dii. HUSH will bo very sadlylc ( issod from our telegraphic columns.111 o was our shout anchor in every > ! ! ' [ Mice when all other sources of nowslL , iled and our reporters were on thojd ] [ ( rgu of desperation for items to eir quota of dispatches. sw THK star route crooks are movingnlC Washington. If they can bring ! ' " esauro enough to oust Postmastor-lLf mcral James and Attornoy-GoncrulAmi oVoagh they will escape tlio h's-j rceablo prospect of wearing striped ) _ PiNK.n'LVANi.i : 1ms TV little bill ofBuy or three million dollars in delin- ontjaxca agaijiut the - Hfandurd pil jipniiy. That mighty * Yno'n'opbr ) docs not Boom very much in v hurry * to pay. They Bay they are nblo to owe n good deal more than n paltry thrco millions. . WHAT wilr Arthur do ? That is n conundrum which n good many feder 1 al ofllco-holders nro very nnxiotts to solve , Tin ; charm of out-of-door life is ' ( making itself known to moro people ] novory year , nnd the books that treat Bof nature or lifo in the open nir arc Econacqucntly bcoming more nnd Emoro popular. To meet this growing ] { taste , the Messrs. Harper have pro Ipared a now addition of "Camp Life ; for , The Tricks of Trapping nnd Trap ( Making , " with illustrations by W. jtlnmiltou Gibson , which they will Csooii publish. Rnilway Mimngomont. [ Cleveland Leader. A fooling prevails throughout the ] country that the present management of our railways is inimical to'tho best interests of the poopjo. This fcolin , has begotten a dissatisfaction which ia | constantly increasing in intensity , and : may eventually provoke n , conflict which will end disastrously in moro ) ways ] than ono. The main charges against the corporations are watered stocks , discrimination in tariff rates against individuals and localities , nnd a dis position to evade taxation. Thost 'and ' other matters of minor impor- | tauco hnvo led to anti-railwny organ izations in the cast and west , and oven on the Pacific slope. These or ganizations , under the name of antimonopoly - monopoly leagues , farmers' ' alliances , etc. , have been formed with the avowed purpose of fighting the railways - [ ways , mid the cry everywhere prevails vails , "Down with monopolies. " In the midst of the heated discus sion going on it is pleasant to notice that thcro is ono prominent railway official who is able to suggest a plan , which , if put into operation , would ul lay all controversy , and bring about A bettor order of tilings. Among all the railway magnates of the country , Hugh J. Jowett , president of the Eric railway company , appears to stand alone in the opinion that there should bo a moro direct supervision of rail way management by the represonta lives of the people. In this mattei Mr. Jowett seems to bo in harmony with the more prominent of thos who are demanding n reform in th management of our railway system. A few months ago he gave expression to his views in a public letter , from which wo reproduce the following ex tract : "My experience has led mo to th conclusion that a great deal of th , apparent hostility on the part of th people to the railways proceeds froni a want of information with regard tolf , their management and their neccssi-Jc ties , I hnvo , therefore , long thought it advisable that in each state there should bo cither n board of commissioners - sionors , or seine state officer , whoscK ? duty it should bo to act as the medi-F1 um of communication between the' ' people and their representatives and the railways ; and that , if it was made ' the duty of some such officer , or board of officers , to familiuri/.o themL selves with the'necessitics of railwayKj. ' management , to listen to the com-KL plaints of the people , to inqnireHg whether or not such complaints wercjjh well founded , and if well founded to inquire wherein they could bo law fully remedied , and to take such steps is might by law bo authorized to rom- ' jdy them , the principal cause of fric- lion now apparently existing would jntircly pass away. " | bi In this expression of opinion Mr.H Jcwett has fairly hit the nail on thclpi icad.An honest and competontH xiard of railway commissioners injla iach of the states would do moro toR10 : uro existing evils and promote har- [ nony between the corporations andj ho people than nil else beside. Mas- lachusotts has such a board , and weL icard of no conflict in that stato. Ifjjte ho plan works well there , why notjJT ilsowhero ? But the real dillicultyw : ics with the corporate managers. In | tfow York , for instance , the com-jfiTi nercial and producing communi jjj ics have sought for years ti iavo the railways put undo : upcrviaion , as has been dpno witl milking corporations and insuraiiceircli Companies. But the wishes of thcHac > coplo in this matter have invariably " icon thwarted by the Now York Ceii' ral and Hudson River Railroad Com-oiT ( any. The Vaiidorbilt organization , ! , nth its fifty millions of watered w , tuck and overgrown influence , lias hi ; icon nblo to pxorciso n power over Bgislation win ill has placed at dcfi- nco any and all attempts nt railroad eform. As.a result , the quostion.ofi urbing the railroads will outer large-ifcu y into the politics of the state thisF nil , and bo hotly contested. Tlu'Bjbe amo is true of Now Jersey mid othorpsoi tutcs. I It is time that something were done i o Bottle the questions nt issue. The ] ublio does not and will not regard rith favor the In ; systematic watering of th iipital. It is shown that up to Sop IO1 ! amber of the current year § 071,000 , ' On 00 has been issued , in nominal value , , Tli f securities for the construction of | at lilwnys in this country , nnd that only fty per cent of the whole sum is bona do capital. If the corporations were intent to earn dividends on genuine ipitnl , there would bo no trouble. lut , when it is proposed to ix commerce and production , or r ttlier the consumers of pro- No notion , to nay their dividends on 1 ntorod Block , there the objection [ in I MUCH in on tlio part of the public , ul resistance becomes iloterininedl'-,0 id poraictent. The Now York Con-B 1 al is paying eight per cent , on fiftjlM illiona of stock , which never cost ulif1/ ) llar except for printing the corti-iof , : atcs. Other companies nro on-B rj iiiragod to imitate the example , andjia , iu results is thut the public nrel ta rind led out of millions and millionslboi sr annum. The matter should bol"c8 ken hold of by the state legislatures , id tlio hints contained in the letter Mr. Jowett ought to receive the ! 1 est serious eonsidoration. Kcit KW PlIASUOF IKTOUV" { s the subject of a paper in i ) forthcoming ( October ) SCUIUKKU. Walter A. liurlingaiuo , non of tholu v o Ansoii Uurlingami ) , and n close ! . itjent of modern political ovonto. Bntr complete hn'i boon rovolutiouB0" public opinion concerning the ' - T character of Napoleon , that ono is'f , 'apt ' to feel n little shock of nurpriso tot iloarn that it was only thirty years ! ijago tmt ! _ Mr. John H. U. Ab-S ' bolt's picturesque ) romance in course of publication. Tliirtccns lyoars ago was published the first volume - ! umo of "History of Napoleon , " by Pierre Lanfroy the first lo tear the mask from the great French idol , nnd to show , by .1 presentation of facts , tlio political ciimes nnd evil imturo of tlio beloved Little Corpornl. These .hades . in Lanfrcy's picture the recent- jly published memoirs ol Mine. ( U lUemusat , Talloyrand , and othor.i have only deepened. In summing up the reaction , Mr. Burlingnmo accords to Tiiinfroy the burden of the now move ment , giving nn extended sketch of his lifo nnd paying this yhigh tribute to bis genius : [ "Regarded merely ns an historian , L-uifrey deserves the greatest possible . ulmiration. His work shows that he | possessed in n rnro deqrco nil those lumcrouH qualities demanded from : > nan who undertakes to give us a true Mid clear account of n particularly : onfuscd and exciting period in thr lifo of n great nation. The patience ivith whicli ho 1ms collected his mato- rinl is scarcely less wonderful than the ( judgment nnd still ho displays in threshing out this vnst mass , nnd separating the wheat from the chatF. As for the lancungp in which ho cm- bodies his results , it is almost above praise. In clearness , vigor , and beau ty it rivals that of Mncnulay ; in n [ certain unconscious brilliancy which , , if wo are to believe M. Tnino , no Saxon writer ever entirely possesses it oven surpasses that of the great Emjlish master. Lanfroy collects his facts like n German , judges them like in Englishman nnd presents them like a Frenchman. In other words , ho brings to his work three great qualities , the possession of any two of which would bo sufliciont to place him in the first rank of historians. " : OCCIDENTAL JOTTINtrS. CALIFORNIA. Sixtv-ono ncrcs of hopi near H alds-L mrg , Gal. , give employment to 300 Der-jj ions. ions.The assessed valuotion of all ; property ! n Sacramento county , Cal. , i ? given at * ICxtensivo fireii nro raging in the woods ! n Mendocino county , and much damagej ms been done , * It is naid that thirty-flva famile.4 ! fronil ho Oncida community , Now York , ! lave purchased lands near Kantn Ana , | Jal. i " During August there were shipped fronij itt.Helcna nnd Kruff'sstation , 123,380pl-l ; nns of wino aud over n thousand K' f brandy. A fruit grower living nn the American iver , nbovc Sacramento , sold § 10,000 rorth of fniit from twenty ncres orchiml. Us entire pioliti from the season's crop if little over $7,000. About 2.000 wild poats have been killed ' u Santo Catalina island , off the const of 'J ! nlifornia , this peason. They are huntedjj or their pelts which sell for twenty-seven ! cuts a pound. It ii estimated that there" 3 still about 4,000 on'tho island. VI The taking out of great quantities of old at Kalamath river , together with sue- fein essful qunitz , placer nd hydraulic inin- ig operations promises to nialco times in lore prosperous in Siakiyou this fall than ver before , nnd especially in Yrekn. CO It is estimated that the damage to the 'Outhern Pacific railroad by the late tonns in Arizona will reach $2,000,000.1 th n one respect the southern route has ! roved a great disappointment. It wa.4 fa liought it could easily be kept open at all ] jasons and the people of the Pacific re- eh ion thus saved the annoying delayn that ehke ave ever been incident to the Central ! kePC uite. _ PCCl WASHINGTON TERRITORY- Cl ( joldendale has a Presbyterian church. nn ve Colfax is to be lighted at the city's ex- ] Bnse. , The Umatilla Indians have raised 20,000 ] ushels of wheat this year. Klickitat county shows a decrease in ipulation fince lost year. chef Cord wood is retailing in Jayton for 84 of cord. Some few lots have been sold as w as S3.50. th An addition has been built to the Pen joi eton school house , which will niuko I ce ipablc of accommodating forty or fift ; ha ore scholars. . Stepx have been taken to org.i nize a chap- in ; r of Itoynl.Arch Masons in Spokane , tal lie chanter will be able to confer degree : ! en ithin thirty days from date. beu In the progress of the tie drive from the ] u icton , some of the workmen engaged upi - i it ran into a den of rattlesnakes jmt ] ilow where the river runs into Natchez. ' lioy killad 142. There nre sixtv-nino acres in hops inYo- _ ] 01 una va'loy. ' The yield thU year , it is 01a itimod , will average 1,1)00 pounds to the' ' inj re , ( 'iving a total of 110,100 pounds. Thin no nn increase of 81,000 pounds over last tri The iar. building of the Oregon Railway & triB igation company's bridge over Whot- B sno hollow. W. T. , is a gigantic piece of jrk. It will bo 850 feet long , ninety feet ) jli , nnd will bo what is known nsa three- ] 3ry trestlo. _ _ _ _ _ N OREQON. Hurglarj infest Portland , Another t team tire engine has been pur- used in Portland. ' " Iloautiful electrical iihenotriena have en observed in the hoaveud lately from nthern Orogon. \ The total number of coWa of ualmon p > it this season along the Columbia river i * iimated at 133,000. rhe Northern Pacific railroad company , view of the largo business expected on a opening of the through line acrosH the attnent a line on the north unto of the R ilumblit river , from Alnsworthto Dalian. le work in to comm nco on thU division onco. . Doc NEVADA. Im I'iocho has n mining boom. I ifh Pho new Safford dltitiict is booming. ifhD Itoyal City boasts of n Sunday school. D ! \ bout100 graders are employed on the ivada nud Oregon railroad I'lio Augiut bullion product of the irtheru Hullo mine was $107,200. I'lie flow of water from Sutro'n tunnel low 0,000,000 gallons in twenty-four PH ir.H , of which the hydraulic pumpa send 00,000. I'ho grading of the Oregon nnd Nevada Iroad has been completed twenty miles m Keno , Ten miles of rails have been I , and as soon as the iron arrives a mile ; rack will bo laid dally , 'ho Consolidated Virginia mining com- ly wai in debt $92,087 on the Ibt in- nt. An nsrtecsmcnt of ? 102,000 in now ng collected to pay oif that Indebted .1 nnd to provide for future want * . UTAH. VIephoiies are In operation ( n Park ! y. lullloiuillo'a Miicltcr has nluit down onj mint of the cxorbltantdeinnmU of char- I burnera. . big btriko was made In the novci > th ! il nf the ( i rent ltat.Ii ] mine lnut week. ! fas tivo feet of B lld galena , .11 average of two wagon loaila of cop- , nmtter iinh'o every clay ut .Mllfordfj n the Grand ( itilch copper mlnea. I ho California Central company ha > oj ipurchnecd thirty fierce , two miles nnd . . Ilialf from I/ehl , on the Utnh Central , fora rdoKt piirposcs. f j A Salt Lake man 1ms ( .ignlfied hi * intcn- itlon nf putting up fix caw-mills In Monta- inn next spring. He thinks the demand for [ lumber will jns'lfylt. 3 His conceded by the miners of Park [ City that rinvon Hill , if tlm present suit "WAS settled , would be tlio liveliest spot in [ Utah. They say It it full of ore from base ctu summit. j The Denver and liu ! ( ti-ando railroad f ! | cotiulaiiy now have upwards of ,1,000 la-S borers employed In the (5iiimifloncomitry. | jl 'ivo hundred of Ilicie are at work in thcg [ Dlark canyon ol tlio ( lUtmison on ttiej ' 'ii.iilnlinc to Ut.ilL MONTANA. Jlulldern are bn y and have all they canjj . . . [ Game h plentiful throughout the tcrri- lory. Jllich discoveries of gold are reported .from ( rlemllvo. The 33cnt < m jail will out In the ncii-h- boihood of $15,0(10. ( Tourists are returning home from ( Joy- icrland at all points. It U definitely decided that the Utah A Northern will nut build this year to lluttc. A now quartz lend has been discovered on the reid hctuceti lltlmont and Mount Pleasant. The two Allco mills consume annually 2,01'0 tons of Fait , on which the frietrht alone Is worth $ Sr , < ,00. llullbn f-hlpmcnts from Butte for tlic week ending September ltd , aggregate 4.1SO pounds , valued at 00,880. The freight tariff on a barrel of whisky from San Francisco to Ogden Is 9-V81 , and from Ogdcn to Melrose about one-third the distance it is § ( W.SO. / Silver ] 5ow will bo the banner county in Montana thin year in point of assessable property. The assessment of this county ivill run considerably over $1,000,000. . * * WYOMINQ. , Laramie is discus-ing n wool n mill. Governor Hoyt i.s making n tour in the lorthern part of the territory. Green Khcr is iKtmd to have an avail- ible road to 1'oit Thornbnrgh. An effort is being made to organize a lt ZCII'H brass band in Cheyenne. Surveyors ere coriectin ? the boimdar } ine between Wyoming and Montana. Hod carriers are getting three dcllart icr day in Cheyenne , and arc scarce at hat. hat.Ten Ten tons of ( Jrccn Alountain Boy ore ios arrived at Cheyenne nnd will bo sliip- icd to the Golden emelting works to-day. Jimto\yn is the natuo Millogive.s to n ew mining camp , lately discovered bo- ween Sabile can' n and .the head of llor.-e reek. The new stamp mill for Cumminx City as arrived at Laratnie and wi > l bo Rent j-i nmediatcly to _ cummins md set up. Men I ccomp inymg it for that purpose. 1 The Rawlin.s Journal Baya that a big rike has been made at Halm's Peal ; , [ anipton & Company have found gravel aying fifty-fi.nr . cents to the pan , nn < 'elson & Header have htruclc about Ilu line. Ntilson sold a small btrip to tin [ ilm'n Peak coii'pany ' and in five shifts- ley cleaned up $1,100. Nelson sold ffli KX ) . He wont sell any more , .although Fercd100 per day for a two week'i ) run r tht same company. COLORADO. There ara Sf'0,000 ' cattle in Colorado , lined at SU.ICO.OOO. Denver is nsin largo quantities of Call- rnia red wood in building. There is a vein of twenty feet of pay on the Silver King nt Montazuma. This year's asse 3inent of Arapahot iunty , Col. , foots tip 828,803.253. , Denver is now supplying ice for all ol e southern towns as far as Trinidad , The present Colorado state fair is tluitj r pronounced the most successful of all.R The old Fifteenth street Presbyterian ] lurch , of Denver , is to bo used for a nnr-l it. At present it is used as carriage re-l isitory. H A The Union Pacific , on the Colorado aiidH 11 deyenne division.s , disburses S50,000f" onthly araoug its employes at the Den-j r station. _ ARIZONA. There are only ninety-four graves in the ! nnbstone cemetery , I The Southern Pacific company has pnr-J used ono hundred stand of armx for u the employes of the Arizona division. A regular organized band of horse- ieves ia operating in San Joaquin and ad- inlng counties. Their efforts seem SIK- ssful in some instances , as several horses ve been stolen during the past six weeks Arizona , through her newspapers , ! , ! * cry- 7 for railway competition. Local capi- lists are afraid to engage in industrial. terprisea when they know thov wouldigr . completely at the mercy of a ncartlestgoi. Hoosohold Worda- Jame.s Pearson , 28 Sixth street , PmfTalo , f'B : "I have used your SrniNC } ! i.o.-i.sosi myself and family , and think it inval- ble an a household remedy , for rcgulat- I the bowel * , liver nnd kiduoyj , I nhall vcr bo without it. " Prieu 50 cents , al bottles 10 ccntsi. I'J-cod-lw. th M Diamond Coal Co , H LOOJHS , j , s. NKWIMJ : , I'RM. BF.C. * SD TllHAS. I. J * JIILI.KU , AOMT. HARD OR SOFT COAL j car lot ) or In nuantltic * to suit purUiascrs of Orcitra Sollvitoa. [ to ird , Foot Farnham and Dougvri ( las Sts , , Omaha. iwi Geo. P. Bern is EAL ESTATE AGENCY , ,1JU 'ten I6th and Oodce titi. , Omaha , Neb ; Str hl ? cner doei naicrtTa lroltcrj-o ( , Inuln ii not ( peculate , ml therefore any Its books are Insured to Its patrous , ointr roliMeil uii liv ( tin ( wen * tllQ i iny 3xterLTlioinas&Bro , Vu WILL DUV AND SKLL E33C JFIS CT l.'aCTEl fiiho AND ALL TRANUACTION | hit t I..I. COXMrCf/n TnKRKWITII. _ lota i y Taxes , Bent Houses , Bto.lj . IF rou WAxrTOiuroiiiiiLb at Office , Ilootn B , Crt'l-liton Dlock , Omnh& sell pay payI raji DAVIS & SNYDER , iWld iFornhamCt. , . . . Omaha , Nobraika I thoi 'Wo 3too.oooA.ar'Wo 3too.ooo-A.ar- .ullyifitoclttt l n > l In lUitcrn Great llart'alm In tinpruvuil / tin , and ! . DAVIH.VUJliiTKU HNVUIIll ] te Unil Com'r U. 1' " . Vlcktl RS. COFFMAN AND THOMPSON" , ysiciano and SurgoonsNo' ' men , Oter ( 'rnUli li iilf , 1Mb Bt. , Hot , P Kornluiii anJ IJoyxlun , aVI Im A NEW -TO- BEST BARGIIIS Ever Offered IN THIS CITY. JO CASH PilMHfK Eequired of Persons Desir- in to Build. . , OTS ON BSTOS1O PER MONTH. /loney / Advanced fQ aslst Purchasers in Building. . 7e Now Offer For Sale * S5 Splendid ' ESIDENCE LOTS , . ocated on 27tli , 28th , 29th t id 30th Streets , between , irnham , Donglas and the pro- / > sed extension of Dodge St. , I to 14- Blocks from Courth ouse and Post Office , , A'i' ' RICES ranging from $300 to $400 t hich is nbout Two-Thirds of eir Value , on Sm ll Monthly lyment of $5 to $1O. Parties desmng to'Build and. iprove Need Mot Mkke any tyment for one or two years , it can use all their Means for- iproving. Persons having $100 or $200- their own , But not Enough. Build such a house as they int , can take a lot and we II Loan them enough to com- _ . * -i ate their Building. -C" fhoso lots are located between the- UN BUSINESS STREETS of the. . y , within 12 minutes walk of the sinoss Center. Good Sidewalks ox id the Entire Distance on Dodges , , , cot , and the lots can bo reached by y of either Farnhain , Douglas or dge Streets. They lie in a part of' city that is very Hapidly Iniproy- and consequently Increasing in , luo , nnd purchasers may reasonably > o to Double their Money within & > rt timo. 1 lomo of the most Sightly Locations - * .ho city may bo selected from thcscn , especially on ( JOth Street. f ' Vo will build houses on n Sinai h Payment of § 150 or § 200 , and- house and lot on small monthly , inonts. t is.expeetcd that UICBO lolsjwill ba ldly sold on these liberal terms , , persona wishing to purchase iila call at our oillco and secure- ir lota at the earliest moment. 11 ro ready to show thcso lots to all ions wishing to purchase. BOGGS & HILL , ial Estate Brokers , : th Side of Parnbam Street , ) pp , Grand -Control Hotel , OMAHA , NEB.