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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1881)
' TEE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 24 , 1331 The Omaha Bee. Published * very niorntnff.crcopt Sunday , i * Xk only Monday inorninff daily. ' v ar. $10.001 Tlirco Months $3.X ( > Months. . . C.OOlOnrj " . . 1.00 K WBKKLY BEE , puHlahwlsvJ < ry Wednesday. OMAHA PUBLISHING 00 , , Prop'rs S.ROSEWATEB , Editor. Edwin Davis , Mimng-r of City Circulation- John H. Pierce In In Charpn of the Mall Orciutlou of TJIK DAILY BKK. Proclamation by Pro ddont AT- ! thuv. , WASHINGTON , Sent. 22. The following IUM junt b en issued : | By the prc idont of the United Stales of America : | WHKKKAH , In His inscrutable wlmlom It fcM pleaiocl God to remove from us the nitutrious head of the nation , Junior A.1 < J rQeld , late president oftho United OUVfflj and , . . . . I WnxaKAH , It In fitting that the deep grief which fills all hcarti should manifest itself with one accord toward the throne of infinite grace , and that wo should bov before the Almighty and Heck from Hln that connotation in our affliction nml lha ( utnctificAtlon of our loan which Ho is abli and willing t < i vouchsafe now. Tliercforc in obedience to tin nacreJ duty , am iik accordance with tha desire of the pea p o , I , Chester A. Arthur , president o tie United States of America , hereby point Monday next , the 20th day of toml > cr , on which day the icmalns of ou : lontrt-d and beloved dead will be cdn nigned to their lo.it routing place on earth to ho observed throughout the Unitcc Stated as A day of humiliation and moum IKK , and I earnestly recommend all pconl to luwomble on that clay in Iholr rcspectlv plncen of divine worship , there to rcndc alike their tribute of Borrowful Biibirlj idon to the will of Almighty God , am of reverence and love for tno meinorj oiid character of our late chief magistrate In witness whereof I have hereunto sc my hand and caused the f-cal of theUnitct atntoB to be atfixcd. Done in the city o Wjwhingtouon.thuSMdayof September In the year of our Lord , 1881 , mid o the independence of the United States th 105th. 105th.Hlgnod ( ) OIIKBTKH A. Annum. By the president. jAjinrt G. Bt.AWP , Kecretary sf State. Proclamation by Gov. Nanoe. JixKOtmvB Omci : , 1 LINCOLN , Km. , Sept. 'JO , 1881. f The terrible tragedy which occurred Ir the city of Washington on the 2d of July Iwt , when the chief niogidtr.ita of th natiou became the object of an asuaisbi' unprovoked and desperate awiauU haa finally culminated iu a national disaster too mournful In character to bo announcoc in the ordinary language of norrow. Our honored and beloved president , .Tauie A. Qurfield , died At Long Brunch , N" , , T. , at 10:30 p. m. Youtorday. After many weeks of .intense nulTeriiip , the strong-t brave heart in still , and thu friend * of law And order and Rood govornuieul "throughout the wuild mo boT/od with ijjrlef a thoxe who feel tlio weight of n 4 > ersonal boreavetuent. The nnilou'a > Al mitjr brings eorrow to every hoiuC' fcold.in NehrasVa , and awakens the ten detest fee Ingi of oyrupatliy for tlio af. flicted compunlon u > id fnthorlesi ohlldrec of the late president. Tho-o emotions ol Brief and a > nipathy will find apprnp ' " expnailona In evoiy city , va'aje rural home. , , Iu h nnony therewith It Ii absented tint on the day neb np.irt for the fiunl ob ri'iioi , nil public ofllccs and other places of bminm bo cloiod J.I in uliio rocommenilod that the peiplu usAomlilo throughunt rtbii Htatu in their roHpoctivo places of wiirKliip and with appropriate religioiiN lOxerciiea participate In the natiou'u mom- oriil tier * icon on that ucowlun as a further < nunlfcntatlon of the nomnv that In telt hy .all , Sudan ix mark of respect for the ox- /kited character of our late chief magls- trate. It U ordered that th national flag he 'displayed nt half-mast on the capltol Ibullillug nt Lincoln , nnd that tlio vevorol iBUle departments be draped with emblems ot mourning for the period of thirty dayu. Sk vitncHH whereof I have hereunto af fixed my hand , thb 20th day of Soptem- I > * r , 1881. Jjy the povcmor ( Binned ) ALUINUH NANOK. B. f. A.LF.VANI > IR , Secretary of State. for the dead but encourage aud support tlio Hvini ; . QBAKT and Blaine huvo shaken JtuiiLs across the bier of Outfield , Tux BKR will presently have a word or two to nay about local politica. TUP. fnlar route ring derives vorj llttlo comfort from Preaiilont Artltur'i ina\igural. THKBK is nothing like science h Vgery. Dr. Bliss 0111 looato a blue man pill inany | inau's livor-i > ; il ( by th aid of Professor Boll's olootrio indica tor balance. Tun Methodist coumuuicnl councl ! ta Adjourned nnd Government Di rector Frost will noon return frou London , to * attend to those Unio Pacifio oatiog houaos. 'JitH proclamation of tlio prcsidon ' , TiMjomtnoniliny u general oupensiou ofj * * lusncHi ! nn Monday , the day But apart im n day ofjiuouruing for the Into ] prusidunt ahould bu ( juiiorjlly obsorvud' in our city. It is ti simple way of- testifying to our OBtucm ami respcctj for the dead. . Ooa last oxpvrieuco with nu cxtnv , scission of the acnato was not conducive - ' civo to the public welfarq or ( Ivunta-J gcoua to thu republican party. But ] llio shadow of n gru\t sorrow will at ill' Lover over the hind whun thu suimto. moots In October and doubtless will , allay thu pAsaiona of party .and the ; ouvy of faction. "I'jiou tlio genius of our govern- taunt , the patlnnvy to honorable .dis tinction lies open to all. No peat off honor no high but , the poorest boy | limy hope to roach it. It iu tlio pridotj of America tliat many cherished 3 jesy at whose mention our Jicavtuy with n quicker bound , wore wourj by ( ho iwija of l vqily , wio quurcJ cibsoarity ami baoamo fito. . iu our 0rm mont , " Jaiacs THE NATION'S PRAYERS , j For many weeks the prayers of thc ( nation , ami of the world , have boon poured forth inctwantlyfor tlio lifo of mnglo man. Nuvcr bcforo ninci time began has micli a unity of sup plication joined U > o peoples of the oartll. Nationality , religion creed , OVON the absence of nil religion have proved no barriers ; ami from million * lioarts since that fata ) July morning earnest petitions have daily arisen that God would bo pleased to spare the lifo of James A. Garfield and re- him to the nation which loved him no well. And yol the president is dead. In the bitterness of our spirit wo may feel inclined to any that the Almighty has not heard or that Ho haa not an- iwered. Not so. Ho haa hoard anil [ Io haa answered n Boomed best in ac cordance with the laws which Ho hat made to govern His universe , llo has tiiBwored in the highest nnd greatest icnso by briiKfinir the American pco- plo into a grand unity beside the bod- ido ot their dead executive. Tlio wish of man cannot determine tfio "will of God. Thn prayer of the human can not alter an inflexible purpose which runs through ell the ages ; but bottuij ind far moro important than the mere ' gaining of the object of the petitioners has been the effect upon the hearts of the people , Forbearing to clmhgo his lawn , the Creator has prepared our nation foi the change in the afluir.of state b } subduing partisan pasiion and fac tional malice aud by bringing then into a unity of purpose fit for sustain ing the great shock under which the ; suffering. Ho has given to 0111 now president time in which to adapi iimself to the needs of the govern tnotit and has aflordod an opportunity 'or reflection on the part of the people by which they are infinstoly bottoi fitted to sustain their now executive : han if Prcnident Garfield had fallen a victim to his wounds on the day he was shot. It is not for the fin i to to [ juoation the purposes of the infinite. The true ofllcaoy of prayer is to jhango the will of the human into ubmisaion to the will dirino , am' in this the highest and best sense the prayers of the nation have boon truly answered. AT the extra session of the senate jto bo convened on October 10th , " ihoro will bo in their seats according to present appearances thirty-seven democratic senators , thirty-four republicans publicans , ono independent ( David' ' | Davis ) _ and Senator Mnhono. The democrats will have a clear majority , on organization , and from all reports will cheese ono of their own ( membera as president pro torn , who will bo next in succession to the presidency , in case of the death of Vice president ] ' Arthur. There is every reason to bo- liovu that Senators Laplmrn and Miller lor , and the successor to Sona-j tor liurnsido , who is yet to * be ap pointed , will not bo permitted : o take their Beats until after the or ganization of the senate is concluded , [ t is confidently predicted that as ioon as this is dune another organ ! zation will bo immediately attempted with the result of just such a dead , lock as took place last'spring. There is , however , n possibifity that the thirty-soven democrats may not all bo iu their seats on the tenth ] of October. Den Hill , for instance , has recently undergone an operation for cancer and several democratic sen ators are said to have gene abroad. If the republicans take advantage of the ] disability or absence of the democrats 'hey ' may succeed in admitting the two Now York aomvtors and the suc cessor of Burnsido on the first day .ho session , and that will give them the supremacy in organizing thu sun uto. ' It would bu impossible for the democrats , even when all their mum bora aso present , to , reorganize the senate , because the 37 republicans with JIahono would be an oftset to 37 democrats with David Davis. "On ! sir ; there art ) times iu the history of men and nations uhon they itnnd so near the vnil that separates mortals nnd immortals , time from Dtermty , utid men from their God that they can almost hoar the boating .ind feel thu pulsations of the inQnito. Through auch a tihi * has this nation passod.Yhon two hundred and fifty thousand br.xvt upirits passed from the field of honorjj through thtit thin vail to the presence ? > f God , and whoa nt laot ih parting ] folds ndmltted that martyred proai-j to the company of the doiuli of the republic , the nation near thovuil that the whtspurc ' of God were hoard by the children of j mo n. " James A. Garllelil on tlio a.v r-iiuMtiiuition of I'rosHont Lincoln. , General Garfield wr.s elected onaturr ho p.iid n beautiful tribute to ? liis prodccossor , Senator Thurman , before the Ohio logtslnturo , betivooiij jlwhoin and himself n close personal jfriendship oiistod. On this mcmor-1 .ublo occasion the late president aaid : fj"Tho llowors of awootoot fragrance' ' iaro thoao th.xt bloom ncroso party ? vv.lla. " And now that ho has paused WTay from ull putty asaociatioiis thcj 'truth of his metaphor b wonderfully ! .illustrated , for union ; ; the TrreotuM Jthnt nru hung about hU torab by u ! jBDrrinviiif , ' nation there ar ncjno of f&uobtcr f ni ntnco than comu fmm the Si-ther sidu of the party vruil that Ui- ! l w liiui troui part &f hia c . OTHER I.ANDS THAN OURS- Tlio national convention of the Irish Land League , whoso ocmion in Dublin has attracted wiclo and descrv- ! od interest on account of ttio largo' ' jjiiumborA of rcprejsontivo men in the body and the policy outlined by its leader , Mr. Piirnell. Mr. I'arnell bo-f i aii his npccch with the ivssortion that Irbland v/ill never bo prosperous 01 ontoutod until her people enjoy the right of nolf-govcnimont. Ho do- iKjunccd the coercion act m n measure "founded upon fraud , devised in i pirlt of malignant hypocrisy nnd ox [ ccutcd for the gratification of private vindictivonesi. " Ho declared that irhilo ono man is detained in prison under the coercion act the condition the people cannot bo considered a * improved. Ho averred that the land juostion will never bo nt rest until thu landlords are abolished and the tiller owns tlio noil. Ho proposed that the farmer shall sot aoido { portion of his land for the use of the /laborer half an aero of tilled land jjfor each thirty acrca in the farm "pending further legislation tor en abling laborers to become owners of Jand. " Ho urged the people to flonly articles of Irish manufac ture , and purposes to usaist EL- ind encourage homo industries. Of course Mr. Par n ell is about to ap peal to Amuriun for aid in his now ng itation. It may as well bn said that ho will fail to meet the response- which lie anticipates. If there was the slightest possibility that an independent pendent national existence could bu guaranteed to Ireland no people ivould rejoice more greatly than the Americans. But political leaders must look at facts , not dreams. The fact is that Ireland is an important part of n great empire as much aj part of great Britain as South C.iroli-l na is of the United State * . England ! would as soon consent to the mdcpcn-i Jonco of Ireland as America to the ! locossion of South Carolina. This is ) a question that is governed by consld-B orations of high national aa'foty. En-j gland knows that if Inland were free to-morrow aho would become the ally or the tool of any continental powoi that chose to make war upon the crown. She knows that there is a largo portion of the Irish people the thrifty , pious , industrious class in the north espec allp who would regard socessioi : 'rom .England . as an unspeakable calamity and would resist it to the irorgo of civil war. She feels as much irido in the integrity of her empire is wo do in the integrity of our ro public. For Irishmen in America , ; heroforo , to consributc money to sup > ort BO dreamy and . ; hopolcsn MI ui atton is worse than folly. What irishmen should demand ia that they ihould hnvo the same liberty in home iffairs as Now York and South Caro- inn enjoy under our federal constita ion. An agitation for this would be iraclical and sensible. There is no loubt that if. Irishmen patriotically uid zealously press these reforms up- 3ii the attention of the British gor- rnment other beneficent mcasurcb fill follow the passage of the land Dill. The revolt in Eaypt Booms to have oecn occasioned by causes much the mme as those which led to the revolt n Bulgaria and Balkan peninsula. fhoro is a longing desire for Homo tort of representative institutions ; not whut sort none of the eastern aaoplo exactly know or care , but they vant freedom from personal domina ion and something which will give n iart of the rosulta which they sou are wrought about in the west. The ; it outbreak in Egypt is the cul nination of a scries of ovants. It nves its immediate origin to the arbi trary actions of Riius Pasha , the premier mior , in promoting aud reducing army ulh'cora according to whims of the moment. Moreover , there is a strong ifcolint ; against the foreign rulers ol t , nnd , as the Levant Ilorahl wgyosta in n recent number , the im proasion has been created that the Uiaz cabinet consists only of n sot of puppota of which foreigners hold the ? strings. The Egyptian army in itself is of little importance , and any belief iu a general Mohiunmediin uprising in Kgypt in only professed by these who . ro nnxiouH to have Egypt turned over wholly to European rule. The success of Biauurok in the coming doctiono oceino r.vwrod. Ifl the great minuter ia confessedly nv failure .1-1 a political or 'iinteor ho muut bo ncknuwlodgod a champion diaor- anir.ur. Ho Juvi nplit up the oo- ; ; culled libornl party into so many fwg- ; iiionta that they do not know oven ! wlioro to find thouiselvos. I The landed property of religious or- > dora in Franco has just boon dosKj- 1 natod on nnilliunlnntodmapof Franco jj.ind distributed to the press. ThoJ superficial area of Franco is 208,2slS l quaro railos , ot which the ruligiousi wrdew own lb'0 aquuro miles Thos I value of the property is estimated un | SM2B07,70Q , on which they only p.iyE yearly tux of § 31,090 , or at the v ate of two and oiio-fifth cunts eng joioh ? 100. 5 The Ixmdpn Spuctator , whoso tit- Ktenmcea ou CJiiiieaOxqui'stioiio are ox-j Iti-omuly nccuriite , taya that the hist , st'vity I U\vv-o liussi-i and China ovorjf it'iu ' AWjft ] I Sttoil KuviC3lllly C > 1 M Jploloi the last ntcp in the path o ! iivcstcrn aggression in central Asia , | unoii which Chinaontorcd ] seven yean gage , Neither nature , Moslem fanatr Bciam nor Russian discipline has pro Jvcntcd the successful ro-conqucst of a Brogion over which the Chincso power Nhas been extended at intervals during ffeo centuries , The cmpiro has now 5.13:11 : n fcaohcd the national boundaries Ito which it has boon regularly pushed tin every period ot conquest since the jjchmti.in era. The next stop of the tOhincso cabinet , the Spectator says , [ will bo to concentrate a force on the [ Anglo-Indian frontier , in the hope of liecuring the Abolition of the opium Jlradn. i Ex-soldiers are largely employed on Etho railroads in Franco. A return is tsuod by the ministry of public works nhows that 182,933 persons are em- Sployod ou the railways in Franco , of whom 67,579 are men who have boon tin the army , The companies prefer iformor soldiers from their habits of jjdisciplino and punctuality. In the Itotal are 13,534 women. I The fortifications of Paris are , nc- icording to a statement in a Gorman gpaper , such that A complete invest jmcnt of the city would rcquiro a be sieging army thrco times stronger Ithan Uiat of 1870 , and 20,000 French Inioii in the advanced forts would suffice jjt'or its protection. Besides Paris , the utlying towns of St. Dennis , Ver sailles , St. Oloud and Sevres are ef fectually protected. The inodo of conducting election1) in Europe are varied and quito inter- 'jstiiig in their details RJ regards the expenses of contests In Austria the ! expenses o ! elections to the roicliDrathj ire berne entirely by the state , the ] candidates defraying only their per- ! aonal canvassing charges , which arc alight. Voters are not to bo treatec or convoyed to the p'olling places ; am" if the supporters of a candidate choose to bear his expenses these must be confined to such trifling charges as advertising , stationary and'postage. . In Hungary the official expenses arc also berne by the state , and they arc said to bo so insignificant as to be scarcely taken into consideration. Corrupt practices arc , however , said to bo common in apito of a law passed in 1874 for their suppression. In Bel gium the communes bear the expenses , except those of the hustings , which are furnished by the government on the condition of their being maintained and i kept iu repair. In France , on ; ho contrary , the local authorities- put to no expense whatever , the state laying oven for everything that ia published relating to the electoral ista as well as for notices to electors [ n the Gorman empire the general ox jonsea of elections are defrayed by ; ho provinces , municipalities and dis ricts ; but it is understood that olec ions involvt ) expunditure of money > y the candidates , and a general clcc .ion for the rcichstag does not cost less Jian ono million marks for ea-h side , u Italy the expenses of contested slections are paid out of the fund of .ho . chamber of deputies. The two governments whoso heads mot recently at Dantzic have notified heir foreign representatives that the friendly and family relations existing letwoen the czar and the emperor are mfiiciont in themselves to explain the notivo of the interview and define to character , and that the heartinos ; hat characterised the meeting is low assurance of the continuance of ho amicable rolatiousoxisting between ho two countries and of peace throughout Europe. These ofli- : ial notifiations neglect to say n vord about the conversation ook place on the oubjcot of socialism avorywhoro in general and in France mrticular. As almost every large city in either Russia or Germany con ; ains moro determined socialists than can bo found in the whole of France , hia conversation may seem to have jooa unnecessary between two rola ivcs who had not soon each other foi rears and did not have much time ou ; heir h-'iuls > .Un they mot , but even rulers of ( jroat nations may sometimoi ind that the easiest way of avoiding mploasant home topics is to drop into criticinm of their neighbors. King Kahikaua , while in Vieimu lait month , broke out publicly into n of " " to the infinite very estaay "high-jinks , finite gratification of the rollicking jvionueao. Hfa majesty ono nightfc | while making the rounds of the aubur- Iban dancing rooms , accompr.niod bj Vila personal auito , happened io visit u ? famou3 saloon in the "Wurstel Prater. [ Seated in w box , ho for some timu Jcomphicontly watched the \vixltitore , i Uiul Hotonod to the insidious Htr.xhu ! of Strauss. Presently the mode oh ; "o\voo t sounds , bright eyes and lithea jOsures melted his royal reserve , andt * subdued for the time his ecnso of fmonarchial decorum. Al > nt once | rho rose chose himself al ( partner of singular beauty nnd Wlity , doacondcd into Ino ball- foom and began to dance with all thc | ( fervor of a ooulhoru nature. Greeted by ontbuBtiutio shwuts of 'Bnivo , Majesty I" and "Long live Kulakaua , nnd thoru'a Eomothitig like u king for ! y u ! " ho give full I'oin to his long ic- 'pruucd ' tonijcrmiuut nnd danced 'away thr w'h , t'a < J ivmauuler of th- 1 ' al i > ouuimno uuul un earij lliour of the morning. When he nl last loft the saloon nnd entered his' ' [ carriage to return to his hotel ho was' ' choc rod to the echo by * an admiring crowd , and the girls ho leit bohiiu tliim waved their handkerchief en [ thuaiastically as ho drove off. Kinj Ivalakaua will long blossom in th memories of the Kaisorstadtor as b ; far the jollicst and least haughty for cign monarch that ever yet came among them. LINCOLN'S FAVORITE POEM OH , WHT HllOOM ) TOH HP1IUT OF it 01 IT At , Bt rnouul Oh , why should the spirit of mortal hi proudI Like a Hwift Hooting meteor , a fant-flying clou ; ! , A flftsh ot the lightning , a break of the wave , He rmspi from lift ) to his rest in tin grave. fhe leaves of the oak and the willow flhal ! fade , Ro scattered around and together ho laid , Ami the young and the old , and the low aud the high 51ml ! moulder to du t andtogothershall He , Ihc infnnt a mother attended and lav d ; Tin mother that infixnt'n atfectiun who proved ; L'lic husband thnt mother and Infant who blessed , 2aeh , nil , are oway.to their dwellings ol rest. The maid on whoao cheek , ou whoso brow , in whoso eye 51iono"beauty and plusuro her tritunphii are by ; And the memory of those who loved her and praUcd , iV.ro alike from the minds of the living erased. L'ho hand of the king that the scepter hath berne Hie brow of the priest that the mitre hath worn ; Ilie eye ot the sago and the heart of the bravo , 2 hidden and lost in the depths of the grave. I ho peasant , whoao lot WAS to sow and to rcnp ; The herdsman , who climbed withlii * goats up the steep : Hie beggar who wandered in uearcliof hia bread , fftvo faded aw.iy like the grass that we tread. Clio saint who enjoyed the communion o ! heaven , fhe sinner who dared to remain uufor given , Che wise and thu foolish , the guilty aud lave quietly mingled their bones with the dust. io the multitude go , like tlio flower and tha woe d 'list wither away to let others succeed ; the multitude come , oven these we behold , L'o roncnt every tale that ha * often been told. Tor wo arc the r.atne things our fathers hare been ; -Ve - sec the aamo sights our fathers have seen Ve drink the Kaino stream and view the eamo sun Vndrun the a.ime course our fathers have run. 'ho thoughts we are thinking our fathers would think ; from the death we are shrinking they too would shrink ; io the life we nre clinging they also would cling ; Jut it speeds from earth like a bird on the wing. , [ fiey loved , but the story we cannot un fold ; ? hey scorned , but the heart of the haugh ty is cold ; ? hey grieved , but no wall from their slum ber will coins ; 'tiey joyed , but the tongue of thoitj glad ness ia dumb. ? hey died , aye ! they died ; and we things that are now , 'hat walk on the turf that liea over their brow , \ud mnlce in their dwelling ) n transient abode , rteot the Hame changes they met on their pilgrimage road. Tea ! hope and dowpoudency , pleasure nnd pain , ire mingled together in sunshine and rain ; Lnd the Miiile and the tear , the uonsi anil tha dirge , shall follow each other , likemirge upon i-urge. Tin the wink of an eye , 'lia ths draught of n breath ; ' 'rorn the blossom of health to the p.ilc lies i of death , 'roiu the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud ) b , why should the spirit of mortal be proud ! _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Ono of Giirfiold's Old Letton. DCS Molncs Kegtstor. We give below n. letter written by he late President Garfield , and which low appears in print for the first timo. i was addressed to Mr. C. E. Fuller , low of DCS Moines , who had been a 00111 mate of the lamented president vhile nt college , and who was ever vftor a life-long friend. At the time letter was written the future iroaident had just recovered from a Jungerous illness , and his expression ) f gratitude for the love and sympathy of fiionds seeing strangely iruphutie now. It would seem almost , ! mt the sumo letter might have been trritton by the same hand only a nonth ago. Mr. Fuller courteously ) bnnits us to copy the letter as foi- ows : lYiui.vus COO.BOE , August 10 , 1851. ! My Dour Corydon : I have > ocn down near to the gates of the 'Silent Oily" since last I wrote to rou , Perhaps it were bettor had 1 jntorod God knowth. But the risis is passed nnd I in fllowlyiro-g .urnlnt ; now. Your kind , peed lottoij * vis roscivwl to day , and I will re-rj puiid immediately. fc I think I told you in my other tl > nt | ' . hud taken cold nearly every night ] ? linco I ciimu , and had had a scvou- ' icadauho for about ten dnys. Ihow- or kept on &tudying until Friday , ho Itli , when the hot water streamed rom my eyes HO that I could not see , and I was oblijrod to stop mid send for a phyaician. Ho feaied T would Imvoij intlammation ol the brain or brain fever - | ver , gave mo medicine nnd forbid mo | reading at all. Friday , Saturday --1 Sunday I endured the most agoni pain , but on Sunday afternoon it uo-f , gan to nubaido , but I found it hr.d- ivrought ruin with my strength orf ; when I triud to walk I was weak as tifr jchilcl. I have walked but little siuco , & am still weak , though { strength. I Hhall bo quito recovered jbfiforo JijnL' , ' though 1 cannot study an moro thU Hesbion. Kt * Qh , how nuich I oM felt thaubfiico o.f ilonr friunds during M ese long dreary houts of pain ! J jl ' . .uibjmn eomo lint's tlm In u ; n , ' Uirh thn c ! a h > 't * > 1 . . . 'i ' I dj , i't ! . AU the name of the author , yet they possess the elements of immortality. L know that you will love them and fool them. "Commend mo to the friend that conic When I am sad and lone , And makes the nnetiish of my heart The miffcrlng of hN own ; Who coldly shuns the glittering throng At pleasure's Ray levro And oomcs to gild a fombre hour And give his henrt'to me. ' He hears mo count my sorrows o'er , And when the task in done Ho freely gives mo all I ask , A * 5gh for every 'ono. He cnnnot wear n smiling fnco When mine i touched with gloom , But like the violets necks to cheer The midnight with perfume. Csmmend mo to that generous heart Which like the pine on high Uplifts the same unvarying brow To every change of sky ; Whoso friendship does not fniio away When wintry tempests blow , But like the winter's icy crown , Looks greener through the snow. Ho flics not with the flitting stork , Thnt seeks a Southern sky. But lingers where the wounded bird Hath laid him down to die. O , such a friend 1 Ho is in truth Whntc'er his lot may be , A rainbow on the storm of life , An anchor on its sea. " Thank God , I enjoy such friondt is that , though they are not with mo. llutl must stop. * * * I need not say I am , as over , your brother , JAJIES. Can any of the readers of Tlio Reg slcr give us the name of the author sf the beautiful lines quoted above ? They are destined hereafter to hold companionship with Lincoln's favorite poem , "Why Should the Spirit of Mortal Bo Proud. " [ t seems strange almost to prophecy hat Garflcld should quote them in his way in his youth. Thus holding ibovo all value the symyathy and love of friends ho lived to receive years tfter , an'd when his lifo was closing , juch a measure of human love and sympathy as ivas never offered mortal man before. Piosldent G.arflold's Church. The opinion has been expressed that there is something "queer" in the religion of the Christian church to nrhich President Gartield belonged and many people are inclined to adopt this opinion. That there is no cause for luch a belief in evident from the ivords of Alexander Campbell , who in L833 wrote in reply to a question : 'A complete scriptural reformation is irgcd and defined ; having for its ipocified object to inculcate and : educe to practice that simple mginal form of Christianity , ex- grossly exhibited on the sacred ; mce ; ; without attempting to in- : ulcato anything of human authority , ) f private opinion , or inventions of nen , as having any place in the con- ititutipn , faith , or wisdom of the Christian church , or anything as mater - ; or of Christian fait or duty , for which herre cannot bo expressly produced a thus saith the Lord , ' either in ex- ircss terms or bj * approved precedent. " Simplicity , indeed , seems to bo the nain characteristic of the creed of the hurch if such it could bo called. A orrespondont has sent us the follow- ng passage , clipped from a certificate laptism presented to a now convert , rhioh bears out this view : "You iavo this day put on Christ , before ; ho world by-baptism , and by this ict declared your faith in the icath , burial , and resurrection jf our Lord Jesus Christ. As you ire now to walk in newness of lifo , be 'aithful in all the duties which the 3reat Head of the church hath on- oinod upon you and especially those lutics as mentioned in Acts ii , 42. And they continued steadfastly in .ho Apostles' doctrine and fellowship , ind in breaking of bread and of grayer. ' Cultivate friendship and inivcrsal benevolence with all inan-j cind. Speak evil of no ono , but live ] n pcaco with thu world , and you shall inally have a peaceful hour in which .o die , nnd dwell with God and the ingolfl iu the mansions of everlasting ifo. " EDUCATIONAL. NOTES. Youm ; women study architectural and mchimic-al draughting nt Swarthmore , the Juakcr Collugo. The Dai Monies public school * opened with a-i attendance of 1JWFoity.fout eachcru are employed. The Into William Wheelwright haa left 138,000 to found in Nowbnryport , Mass. , i school for instruction in pr.it-tiL-.il biui- icis knowledge , . How woulil it do for nil the young men n our colleijjiw to slop talking iihout boat aas and given year to nolid study. A 'enointion ago they found thUcoun.0 prof- table. It vroula nowat leant , bo uchange or the young men. The Art School of Smith College , nt Northampton , in thU year to bo associated vtth thnt nt Yale , the tenchcrR and pro- esBors of tha latter ( school going to Northampton every week to give instrnc- ion. The new nrt building of Smith Col- ego will not be completed until next HUIU- nor. The school authorities of Portland , ) ret'on , have Miuwn unuommon wisdom n demanding experienced teachei a1 for thu owoat grade of tneir primary departments nd in paying these teachers reasonable alnrios the game amount given for the vork of the third grade , in the grammar chools. The department of mechanical engineer ug iu the Ohio ututo university ia said to e particularly well equipped and ijrosper- ui , Activity iu railixiaa construction andji ron working i * leading many younirnienH t this time to enter upon thu studies pro-Si .ir.itory to taking n sliaio in these in-j > Uslrica. g Tha question nf ndmitting colored chil- { ? Mrcn to tlio public cchooli of Columlnw.M 0.io ! , hai been \iituaUy ccttled in tbe [ ; iiflmiutive. Huvcial of the colored pupiKj ; ' ! u\o decided to otiuiy Cicrnmu. A lewft In-hllo parents have lA-cn thtir childifiiV- lout of bthonl bccauso of thu atlniittiou of , [ colnrcd puU [ ) ! , but general opinion con- jdcms this proceeding . j M . Shiw , the daughter of Profcuoi rA6-ai-fliz and wife of the Uoston million , falrc , Im-j established over , thhtv feeo Kin4 -4 'dur ' irtcn bchools in Hobtnn nnd thonci h-k [ boring f uburhH. She haa bueled heitelf so icnergetle.-illv in the work of founding the * "schools and colU'cting In them the poorf llttb xvjifs of tha city that ht-r health basv Given way and she Is BufTering from ft ncr-ffi | Vous prostration brought ou by her cxer-JJ , .tlone. j The l ndon university Iionors [ which luivo juat been published , ehow that .tho ynnnjf Aiomen who wort ) examined took. : i rcmurktiblu place. The clam t.il.ing ex-f | nmnnt ! { m for innthemntlcal honors h d > tlirao mtmbew , ono being a girl nnd theS , ' lrl bent botlihnr male competitor * . TinA , hn > t hi thn Dngll/Ii honorn ll t for the IHO-L Ihijiiuiy I ) . A. cxnmltmtion was a youngrj wonini : . nd In the German lionow Hit two , of the rint da * * , coiuiathi ! , ' of only four , weia ulbo glib. Onolnnati haa made a ntvdeparture' ' aii I p .il reform In edii atiiiiat n etu < ! i I > y. . 41. < s ' "ia " Ui Iy uf i . - ! > .J 1r > a ft i i-r i u un , L i l ' -'rj t mcntary lesions from the IvnglMi ami American writers mostni > tcd for their Mm- plicity and purity of ttylo. The children will prob.ibly learn ICM nnd understand more under the new pyslcm. Ihcro la absolutely but ono nile in English compo sition , and that I.i good use the tifflgo of the bcit writer * . That ia what the fortu nate Cincinnati children nro no\v to bo taught. [ Buffalo Express. The tendency of girls of tlio present ihiy ; o cultivate the ormcntnl nnd neglect the iicful branches of thcircducatioii In slunvu jy n Philadelphia incident. Atc.ichirof sowing wai wonted in the girls' normal ichool , aud of thirteen candidates who pre sented thcmsclvcatonly two xvero able tea > a s n satisfactory preliminary cxamiim- .ion. Many n young woman can paint n ilafpie , decorate a VMO or pan el , emlnolder H'nutlfully and make angel cake , hut vhcn it comes to fashioning n simple arti cle of dress , darning stockings or mixing a > alch of bread , why , mother , the drees- u.ikcr or tlio cook must bo resorted tn. L'ha ornamental has its place , nnd a high we , but in this matter-of-fact world , vhero every girl cannot marry a million- .Ire , the useful is as essential M nn alloy ia n gold manufactures , thought it is by none no monni tlio baser Ingredient. MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC. Christine Nik on , Clara Louise Kellogg- , r Ha and Thalbcrj ; arc c.\pert banjo play- : rs. rs.John John T. Kaynumd is doing exceedingly veil , in a financial sence , with " 1'rcth" in ho Boston I'ark Theater. "Clarisse , or All for Love. " is the natno f the play with which Miss Knthorino togcrs intends to undertake a tour soon. The New York Times describeMr. . "Mivcr Doud Byron's familiar lurid-drami , 'Across the Continent" ' - as a 'Vtartling- nystury. ' ' Mdllo. Judic , the queen of opera bouffe.x vill appear In this country during the ling season , under the management of tenry 15. Abbey. Mr. Steele Mackny has made n play up- n the basis of the story A Fool's Erraud , nd this will bo produced at thn Arch , 'hiladclphia , on Oct. 21. The rc-entranco of Edwin Booth on the f w York statjoto bo effected upon Oct. , at Booth's theater , under Mr. Abbey' nanagemcnt will benuulo in the char- ctcr of Hichslieu. Mr. Siegel of Richmond , Va.who lathe musical director of the Yorktown centcn- ial , has written to Jr. E. S. Kimball , of Vashington , requesting him to take steps o organize a chorus of male voices to take > art m the exercises on that occasion , Gus Williams has n brother , William , i'ho is shortly tomako his debut in Boston n n Hebrew comedy by Archibald Gordon ailed One of Our People. Is this nn daptatlon of the well known German omedy , Eine Von Unsero Lente ? Mr. Villiams being of the chosen race , would ccm to befell fitted to represent some of .s eccentricities. The field of negro minstrelsy is well oc- upied this season , the roster of companion mbraciug the following : Barlow , Wil- on , 1'rimrose & West's , Brooks , Dickson : Olapham'e , Birch & Backus' , Carncross's Jeorge Thatcher's , Cal , Wagner's , Mcln- yro & Heath's , Duprez & Benedict's Einverley's Mastodons , Havcrlc'y's New Mastodons , Hague's Europeans , Hoy- wood's Mastodons , Leavitt's Gigantean. Madame llentz's , Baird's New Orleans , Hi Henry's 3'remiuni , M orton's Big Four. Household Words- Jainos Pearson , 28 Sixth street , Buffalo , says : " 1 have used your SPRING BLOSSOM for myself and family , and think it inval. , iablo as a household remedy , for regulat ing the bowel. " , liver and'kidneys. I shall neer bo without it. " Price 50 cents , trial bottles 10 cent.19eodlw. cent.- ! . 19-eod-lw. A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. IFor the speedy euro of ConsumpV. : ion and all diseases that lead to it , Vj such as stubboni coughs , neglected ' Colds , Brpncliitis , Hay Fever , Asth ma , pain in the side and chest , dry Slacking cough , tickling in the throat Hoarseness' , Sore Throat , nnd all chronic or lingering diseases of the throat and lungs , Dr. King New Dis covery has no equal and has established or itself a , world-wide roputatiory/ Many leading physicians recommend and UHO itinthcir practice. Tlio forni- ul.i from which it is prepared is high ly recommended by all medical jour nals. The clergy and the press have complimented it in the most glowing terms. Go to your druggist and get a trial bottle free nf cost , or a regular size for $1.00. For Sale by d(5 ( ( ISH & MnMAHoy , Omaha. Special Ordinance No. 268 , evjinpairpfcla ] lax for curbing and eut'erlnjc Karnham struct from tvo nu-t curboflfith ptnct to the center of ISth street. In the city of Omaha. Be It ordained liy the city council of the city of Omaha : HKCTIOS 1. Tliat cpecbl tito the amount of 3M9.40) ) three thoimina nie huiidreil and s x- : y-nlne dollsta and foily cents , nhlih Mns tha iost and e'epciite of curbing- and guttering Farn- inm street from th utst curli of 15tli street to : llu center of JlSth xtrect , ho and the umo in icruliy levied ux > n thu lota thai are boun j'l p i/r .ihuttfns > > ald Improvementacordns ! to Ilyron ltccd's in.ip which correipondo ultli A. D. Jonu'a ! nap r.i tlio Drt-t and original map un j plat of tlio he city of Omaha , tc-wlt ; ISO IM I3D 139 118 118 114 118 140 MO 140 111 117 117 117 117 HI IU : t HI ti i 111 111mi 6 mine 6 no 7 nu 8 11 ! ) SEC. ' - ' . Huch spcchl tax tti.ill lie dun In thirty (30)il ( ) j frou4thu paksafu and Hjijiroial ol till * aidlni lie. I Sic'J Tills ordinance thall t.il.o effect and txi in force from arulalttr Its iisv'u. . Atiut : 'llliti. II. DAir.F.y , I'ntp't City Council 3. J , L. ( X JBWETT , Citj. Icrk. Pastd Sept. rtli , 1381. JUyor , The al > ovc Ux cor.ios ocllnqucnt on tha f tti day of Otobor , 1 > U A ter which datp len 'per ' co t penalty and Interim at th atu of ono ii'.re. it. per nun th , jayahla Iiinh.ince , will bo wUul , S. 0 Mvl.I.im'i ; dlCdit Ulty Truuiiirer. JJU1AL KOTJOK. John JIcFadden will tile retire Hut on Uif lOtli of August , 1 S1 , Charlei llr&ndci , Jmtlcoj tliw I'cncc , ol l > t precinct , I > ou lii Co. , t otj. . I. Huxl an order of ntUehmcnt for l he sum of $ y' & In ail Action iiciullnilicora ( him , ulirreln v\V7\ iCmtz It i > hlntlll and John ikKaJdtn dtfend.-iut > Hut proi.crty consbtliifol ! lK > u > ihald turnltura iml IniplomcnU hat U' n otU lied uidir fald order , batit caiwo u.-vt coutliiucd o ilst ot Stptcmlicr , 15S1 , ID o'clock p. ui , nuglTwat AHNOKHATA t'Wrtlff I7\OU \ SALK A farm of elclity cr \ In neil I1 ri | . tr , ooil lipuso. i30 tl 14x 8 , imall oickinlolb'nrliis tn-c * . 0 olle ( outh of O iwftCity , lo - , n * > .0.fcI1 , . It , > illlt gitun | pnr-rtK l li l. Adilr * i. ; 8 r , ; John Q , Jact T , ( Powerl ) ol UjOiiJuc ' UNDERTA : R : V ui St , ' I S'd > I T fi.