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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1881)
THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : FJRIDAY OCTOBER 7 , 1881 The Omaha Bee Published very morning , except Sundft > Tlio only Monday morning tlfttly. XKKMSDVMAILs- y ar. . $10.00 I Three Months. $3.0 Months. . . 5,00 | Ono . . 1.0 PUR WKKKLY BEK , published cv cry Wednesday. TOJUMS TOST PAID- One Yenr. $2.00 I ThrooMonths. . 6 Sir Month 1.00 I Ono " , . 2 COnnESPONDENCE All Commun eallona relating to Now * and Editorial ma ton ithould bo addressed , to the EDITOR o THR BF.E. BUSINESS LETTEUS-Alt Buslnes Letters nnd "Remittances should bo IK drosocd to Tun OMAHA ruBUsitiNo COM PAHT , Ol/AHA. Drnfta , Checks nd Po t oDe ( Ordcm to be made payable to th order of the Company. OMAHA PUBLISHING 00 , , Prop'n E.ROSEWATEB , Editor. Edwin Dovfc , Manager of Cltj Oironlatioa- John II. Pierce It In Charro of the M l Oirciutton of THE DAILY BEE. THE GAHXTEUD MONUMENT CLEVELAND , September 27. To the People of the Unittd Siatct : The movement to secure funds for the erection of a monument over Gen. James A. Garfield is being responded to from all sections of the country , cast , west , south nnd north. In order to make it popular , it is desirable for the citizens of all the states to imme diately organize. The committee ro- ipcctfully requests privato'banks and Bankers nnd postmasters to receive contributions to this fund nnd remit the same to the Second National bank of Cleveland which has been desig nated as the trcsuror of this fund. Also send the names and poaloflico ad dresses of contributors. J. H. WADE , H. B. PAYNE , Jos. PKKKINH , Committee. In response to this call THE BEE would earnestly urge upon , al patri otic citizens who desire to perpetuate the memory of the lamented president to contribute their mite to the pro posed national monument. In this city contributions will bo re ceived at the following named bank ing houses : First National bank , Omaha National bank , State bank of Nebraska , nnd Caldwell , Hamilton & Co. Co.Wo Wo would nlso urge the organisa tion of local and state monument as- Donations. Patrons of Tun Br.i' may forward their contributions di rect to this ' ofllco nnd wo shall no- A knowledge the receipt of nil such con tributions , through the columnn of THE BIK. Tin : Douglas county .light i , a free for nil nnd the devil catch the hind- jnost , ] AND now' wo nro to have no more "stalwarts" or half-breeds , but us m times gone by united republicans. TIIK Now York convention wns un usually quiet but by general consent it is prononncou a howling success YOUK has thoroughly reorgan ized her state central committee. No- briwka needs a little New York in hers. HEUEAITEU Judge Maxwell nnd his political friends will tuko no stock in the editorial pufls of the Omaha llc publican. KINO KALAKUA has bankrupted his treasury department for several years to come by purchasing n ticket to San PrnncJBCO over the Union Pacific road. TIIUBSTON is not a very great suc cess as maker of supreme judges. 'His Dilworth boom was , if anything , n greater failure than his Haywanl boom. ABLE senators and representatives to voice the demand of the people for permanent improvement of their great water ways nro one ot the most press ing needs of the West. OIIIO'H brewers nnd liquor dealers have organized to oppose all temperance - anco candidates , It is safe to say thnt the brewers nnd liquor dealers will Hoonor or later bo defeated. WHEN John Kelly hoists up that Tammany Hag with 1)0,000 demo cratic voters emblazoned on its front , Mr. Tilden's cheerful smile fades at once into a solemn melancholy. OJIAHA'H police need n thorough atirring up. There is too much an gelic serenity about the manner in which the diveH and dens of this ciiy arc permitted to carry on their nefar ious practices. JUPOK TOUUCIEK nays thnt the most remarkable thing about President Ar thur ia hia organizing power. Presi dent Arthur has our thanks for his organization of the Now York repub lican convention. VBNNOH may as well hang hia bar ometer out to tiir. Ho predicted for the end of September frosta nnd anew , and lcft _ put entirely the palm leaf farJ2ijvicU [ Voro 'called into general mo throughout the countryt . t , , - THE STATE CONVENTION. In view of the fact thnt this is pre eminently nn oft' year in Nebnwk ; politics , the republican etato conven lion , which met nt Lincoln 01 Wcdncsdny to nominate n miprcnv judge nnd two regents of the ntnt < university , discharged its duty credit ably. Numerically , the convontiot was the largest representative gnthor ing thnt haa over taken place in tin stnto , nnd while some of the countic ; on the frontier were unrepresented nnd n Rrcnt number were roprcscntcc by proxy , the convention contained i fair representation of nil the clement of the party. The Union Pacific railroad element was conspicuous nnd aggressive bill very decidedly in the minority. Uu dor the leadership of J. M. Tliurslor they made n desperate but unsucccss ful attempt to nominate Attorney General Dilworth for the supreme bench. The fact thnt they niiulo Uiif effort nftor they urged the ronomiiu lion of Judge Maxwell in their Unioi Pnoific organ cannot fail to strengthen the Judge with the people. The convention infused now blood nto the university management in nominating lion. Isaac Ton-era foi regent , nnd it ia to bo hoped that Mr. Wield , who has boon honored by n ronominntion , will join Mr. Power * 11 nn effort to roacnur.\to ; the univors- ty which has practically dcgon- orated into n theological semi nary. The action of the convention on the contest in Boone county es tablished n dangerous precedent that hould not nnd must not bo sustained ) y the party in the future. To clothe n county central committee with ho power to appoint del egates to a state convention ia an unwarranted assumption of power hat never can bo delegated to com mittees. It strikes at the very root of mrty representation and would , if arried to a legitimate outcome , em- > ewer the national committee to ap- toint the delegates to national con- entions nnd force upon the party the animation of a president who is not lieir choice. THE NEW YORK CONVENTION. The republicans of the Empire state ml the republican pnrty throughout 10 country inny well congratulate lomsolvcs over the results of the few York Convention. A more har- lonious political gathering in which .wo . strong wings of n party wore rep- csontod has never assembled with less ashing or with n inoro happy outcome F pcacn nnd party unity. From the opening to the close of the ( invention Jiot n single ind ent occurred to which any ro- luhlicnu .could tnko exception , 'hero wns no old tteorcn to bo paid nt lo oxpcnsoofpor8oiial feelings , ' no oadora to bo dethroned in order to iak'o way for , vaulting ambition , no action to bo humbled to tile dotri- nent of party unity. NYitt ponionnl utility nnd factional strife subdued > y the great Borrow under which the ation has been suffering , the Now rork convention resolved that the iiino of republicanism wax broad nough to cover n whole party nnd wept from the political dictionary 10 contemptuous tornm coined n the heat of factional conflict. The > road , conciliatory nnd thoroughly re- mblican sentiments which controlled lie management of the entire gnthcr- ng mnrka a now era in New York > olitic3 nnd given the key note to the mliticnl future , President Arthur will receive duo reclit for a largo share in this happy esult. His dignified , manly nnd minently discrete bearing since fate ailed him to the presidency haa daily ncrcasod the confidence of the people n his ability to fulfil satisfactorily do trying duties of his position. Ho las now declared that ho will be the > resident of no party faction , Hia uccess as a peace maker shows his orco of character no ICBH strongly ion his well known ability as a poli- cal organizer. , In tendering to the > resident their entire confidence and arnost support the republican of 'Tow ' York only voice the sentiment of 10 republican party throughout the ountry. Mr. Conkling'f ) attitude ia worthy f nil praise nnd will bo appreciated ) y his party. Wo nro not disposed to ook upon the result of the orgnniza- 1011 of the convention as any huinili- tion to the ox-senator , nnd there is o doubt that the spirit of the rosolu- ions nnd the tone of the convention : sclf would have boon little dill'eront : Mr. Conkling'a personal following md controlled the gathering nd appointed its commit- cca. In absenting himself rom the list of delegated Mr. Conk ing exhibited n doiuro for harmony nd party unity which will bo appro- iatod nowhere more gratefully than > y his parly iu Now York. If , as scums probable , the factional ontcst in New York him now ended , uch un ending ia one of tliu moat inppy auspices under which President Vrthur begins his ndminiHtnition , and lie first fruiU of James A. Garfiold'a uath are showing themselves in n mrty unity which it was the aim of iis short administrative lift.1 to a'ecom- lish. TUB endeavor * which tiume papers ro making to persuade the public lat a serious breach exists between .TV/ * . [ f , " > . IV " President Arthur and Senator Slier mnti have no basis in fnct. Mr. Ar tliur's friends deny emphatically thn it is the intention of the president t < make nny discrimination against Mr Shornmn in the proper distribution o patronngp , or thnt the now oxccutiv cntcrtnina nny resentment which In will fool called upon to mnki effective in his donlings will Senator Sherman. President Arthn during the short time in which ho ha performed the duties of chief oxccu live lift's shown himself to bo posscssci of nn unusual amount of lact. Ho i hardly likely to antagonize BO power fui n member of the senate and si earnest a worker in the ropttblicni ranks nn Senator Sherman. And 01 the other hand Mr. Shorninn ia na un likely to revive unpleasant momoriei of the Now York colloctorahip or t < cmbarnsa in miy way the proper carry ing out of the republican ] > olicy of : republican president. Tm : majorities in Ohio thin ycai will probably fall greatly below thorn given to the candidatca lost year , This is naturally to bo expected. A full vote nnd General Garfiold'a popu < larity nddod greatly to the strength oi last year's tickei. This year Govern' or Foster's popularity haa somewhat suffered , and the prohibition issue comes to the front as a dividing force. But in spite of those drawbacks and the heavy expenditure of money bj Mr. Bookwnltcr , the state ia almost certain to re-elect its ofliccra by good majorities. Lost year the republican candidate for secretary of state had 19,000 plurality and Governor Fostci 17,000 in 1879. THE BEK acknowledges the receipt of a program of the public services icld in Washington Artillery hall , STew Orleans , in memory of Preaidont jlarfinld. A magnificent oulogyof the deceased was pronounced by the Hon. Charles F. Buck. The vocal music was rendered by the Now Or- cans Liedor-tafol Union , and Jnion nnd ex-confederate sol- iiora marched aide by aide in ho processions. These tokens of our national unity brought out by a com mon grief are inexpressibly touching nd cannot but bind our people closer n the tics of national affection nnd iiitional aspiration. TIIK resignation > of Mr. Foster , linistcr to Russia , has bcon tendered nd accepted. General Garfield ap- ) ointod Mr. Foster minister to Russia hortly before hia illness , and ho had carcoly had time to reach his post be- ore the president's death. Mr. Fos- er's resignation confirms the remark f a Parisian wit that American min sters to Russia always lea"0 their milks in Paris and carry only a trav- ling bag to St. Petersburg. The hortness of their stay nt the Russian apital'makcs this precaution necos- ary in order toiiavocxpcnscu'on ' extra baggage. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ LAST ycnr the people of the United States reduced their national debt by one hundred millions of dollars. In .ho . throe months since July lat $41- 00,000 have been taken oil' from the ncomo bearing debt of the nation ud the payments by the close of the ear promise to exceed by at leant ' 25,000,000 those of last year. It is question whether the people should tot now bo relieved from thu burden f the indirect taxation necessary for uch rapid extinction of our bonded obligations. A COMI-ANY has lately been formed n Now York City for the manufnc- uro of a newly invented and remark- ibly promising style of combined pal- nco and sleeping car. Its construction H very simple nnd it costs not moro hun $1,000 in excess ot nn ordinary lassengor cnr , It is safe to predict hat the cheapness of the ear will not mil down the present extortionate trices of Pullman berths. TIIK Globe-Democrat thinks that yir. Elaine must not hereafter expect o occupy too much space in the re- niblican party. The Globe-Democrat nny bo assured thnt , ns heretofore , lie apace occupied by Mr Bluinu will ) o measured only by his capacity as a trong , earnest nnd able republican , whom the people will not willingly oo shelved. DOUOLAH county farmers will fuel n'oud of the sturdy sons of toil ( hat oprcHonted them at tliolato state con- ention. Chicago precinct was ropro- ontcd by John M. Thurston , U. P. ttonioy ; Valley precint by Frank lanlon , U. P. detective ; Union pro- inet by Bill Umphorson , U. P. yard- mster ; Douglas precinct by Charley Jreen , U. P. assistant attorney ; Elk- lorn by Lee Kstullo , postal clerk with U. 1' , brand , nnd several other pro- ints were represented by U. P. cap- ( era. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ TIIUEK of Denver's pnpora will here- ftor publisli seven issues weekly , and , nstoad of congratulating each other n their enterprise , they are quarrel- ng over which is entitled to the credit or originating the idea. Daily papers vere published before Gov. Tabor truck his minea and erected Denver's pern house. TIIK Denver Tribune rises to romnrl thnt "Senator Jones , of Novndn , win nppenra to be President Arthur's con ( idcntinl adviser , ia the moat sonsibl and conservative of the Conklin ] faction. Ho 1ms n clear head an < dreads extremes. If Arthur follow his ndvico strictly he may nvoi < trouble. " NKW YOHK'S ' tax rate has bcon fixo < for the coming year nt $2. ( 2 on tin $1,000. No statistics are furnished o her probiblo death rnto , but if tin garbage factories on Hunter's Poinl nro permitted to continue their poi sonous work the 40,000 doatha of thi past year will bo more thnn duplien ted. THUKKTON is always good on tin retreat. His motion to make the nomination ef Judge Maxwell unani inoua was a more masterly display o : political generalship thnn his glowin ; oulopfy of Judcco Cobb , nt the meinonv bio convention when Haywanl wai dropped. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ IT will now bo in order for the lie publican to rise and explain to Judge Maxwell why Thurston , Yost nnd tin men who act for the U. P. monopoly organized the movement to beat bin while they wrro making loud profes sions of being for him. THE democrats of New Mexico nrc clamoring'for a Bourbon editor to conduct n rock rooted organ in thai territory. Omaha cheerfully and con fidently puts forward the claims oi Dr. G. L. Miller. Corporation Politics- BAD Knclsco Chronicle. . The people of the United Status- more especially of thu Pacific const wnnt a ship canal through the Central American isthmus. The government and people of Colombia also want it ; and they have given a charter to a jompany composed of American , English , French and German atock- ioldura to construct it. But the great transcontinental railway corporations who enjoy a monopoly of the carrying , mde between thu Pacific and Atlantic do not wish to see created such a com petition for that trade as the canal lompany would be. So they oppose t by nil available methods. First .hey said the stock could note > o taken. It wus taken. Then they said the canal would cost so much hat it could never bo made to pay vithout charging extortionate tollsj and they brought out the Nicaragua 'onto as cheaper nnd better , in the lope of frightening of the Panama iompany. Thnt company refused to jo frightened. And now , as n last esort , these incorporated railway pol- ticiuns are relying on the Monroe loctrino dodge , having twisted it into i shape whicli the original never luul or'eontcmplated. It is un open secret thnt just before Inyes went out of ofllco n protocol vi3 : submitted to the Colombian min uter at Washington for certain iimend- ncnts lo the treaty of 1810 ; one of vhieh is thnt Colombia shall consent hat the United States shall bo the uprcnic judge of what shall consti- , ute ojuat cause for our interference agniiiBt any movement on the part of my nation er nations of Europe to limit itself in any way upon the ter- itoiy of Colombia ; nnd also of ho .stops needful to bo taken in the ( remises. The Colombian minister 10 * not yet presented the reply of his 'ovcriuuent to that insolent paper. Should his government assent to the Icmand , it will bo asked to break up the contract made with the Do Los- sops company , which might bo treated by Franco as a cause of war , and wo should then be in honor bound to de fend Colombia. Should the Colom bian government not consent to the terms of the protocol , but insist on her right , ns a sovereign power under the Inw of nations , to dispose of her territorial privileges ns she sees fit , appealing from a false construction of the Monroe doctrine to the universal judgment of all nations , what then ? Either wo shall have to give up the maintenance of the Monroe doctrine or forcibly occupy the territory of our weak neighbor nnd dragoon her into acquiescence. Thn' , nlso , would give Franco , nnd possibly other European Powers just cause of war against us. In case such a war should happen , the United States eould not reasonably hope for u single ally unions nil the Spanish American States. For everyone ono of them would share the in sult offered to Columbia nn in sult thnt plainly says to her nnd all the rest of them , you shall not do as you please , but as wo please. If Do Lessepa cannot build a canal at Panama by means rained in Europe , then Ends cannot build his ship mil- way at Tehunntopco by foreign sub scriptions unless the United States consents. The slap that flattens Co lumbia's face also gives Mexico n bbiok eye , nnd Nicaraugua , nnd warns Chile nnd the Argentines thnt their time will come as soon as wo got ready for it. The absurdity of the American pretension - tension ia visible nt n glance. Wo are snying that foreigners ahull notcontrol the stock of mi-isthmian rnodway for ships ; yet wo admit the necessity of Biich n niadwny or our own commerce , and nlso admit that the stock cannot bo taken nnd controlled by Ameri cana. Let us suppose that an Ameri can company gets a charter from Nica ragua or Mexico for such a road , but thnt in five years after it has gone into operation the major ity of the stock drifts , us it probably would , into the hands of Englishmen , Frenchmen nnd dor- mans. Would it not , then , be man aged in the interest of those foreign ers , quito ns much as Do Lcssops' canal could bo ) It certainly would bo. Wo are convinced thnt a canal run by u foreign company would bo better for the Pacific states than ono under the control of the transconti nental railway corporations , .And we are moro and more of this opinion na wo ace the hand of these Corpora tions manipulating the opposition to nny such roadway. If these manipu lators briu ? the country into n war on this subject , it is on San Francisco and the Pacific coast towns that the brunt of it must fall ; and it would deal a crushing blow to our prosperity , OCCIDENTAL JOTTINGS. CALIFORNIA. Mining in llio southern counties of Cnlt1 fornln i * over for tlic fcnsoii , A corner in Imrley lini been manipulated In ixia Angeloi county , nnd the price .ol the nrticlc is goin tip rapidly. Slixtn In found in largo qunntltiticit nlong Rlnto Crcok , Tehntia county , nnd Is being quarlrd. It tnnkof fmo siclownlks. The /all choiring hni begun in the up per end of Sonoma county. The fleeces nro reported of average weight nnd in Rood condition. The wheat crop of Dr. Olccn < > f Cahm. Cftl. , this year was tmly one hundred tliMiiKand Back * , ftsftli > ' < t four hundred thotiiixnd t < ackfl lout ycnr. Of this ycnr'a crop the doctor will hivvo to nave 3T > 0,000 ACK8 for Heed , so that ho has only 05,000 nocks In market. At linchannn , In Frcsho county , one day last week , n violent rain storm canio up , and during its progress hailfltoncs fell as largo HA ( iiinll's cgge. Over three and ono-hnlf Inches t rain fell In the upoce of nn hour , nnd every llltlo gullcy WM trans formed Into a torrent. Ono gentleman averts thnt n atone weighing MK ) pound * wm wonheu U | > on tils porch. The mountain into which the llhift Dank Company of Mooro's Flat , Novodn coun ty , is working , took n slide Saturday night. The nlldo extended 300 feet buck from the face. Three monitors , winter- pipe nnd tools were burled , but no men were caught. The loss of property is es timated nt alxwt 820,000. The IJoston mine , adjoining the Jiluc Bank , loses about § 10,000 worth of proi > crty by the Rlitlc. Some pay it will tike nn cxpensio of $200,000 to restore the mine * to tneir for mer condition. _ MONTANA , plenty in the Judith ba iu. The Helena schools have over 400 pupils. Hntto lawyers ha\c organized a bar asso ciation. Miles City has no clergyman located within her limit ! ) . IIolciiu has 250 Chinese , of which twen- ty-tivo are women. 1'Iety Flat , or Graveyard Bottom , Is lo cated near Miles City. The nH'cssincnt in Iewin and Clnrko county amount ! ) to over < " 3,30. > .409. The Ileoton public schools have between eighty nnd ninety children enrolled. The three-mile Diggings up Bitter Hoot pay from § J to 88 per dny per man. COLORADO. Mount Gat field is 11,125 feet high. Ounnison City has n new postofHcc. Tiinldad is to have ft street railroad. Colorado College nt Colorado Springs is joomtng. Work on the Colorado Springs now hotel : s being pushed. There is a stagnation in the theatrical jusincKS in Central. Two new smelters will be erected in Sllverton next year. Development oHnterests around Silver- , on progresses rapidly. Denver's grand jury is going for the rot- .en foundations of her buildings. South Pueblo has notified the vags. nnd and bunko men to leave the city. The Nova Scotia lode on Fletcher nioun- ain is yielding considerable mineral , vhich is being tacked for nliipment. The LivinRsto e mine , Chaffeo county , las been Bold to Philadelphia parties for ono hundred and twcuty-tivo thousand : ollurs. Itcport has it that Senator Plainly of Canaan , has cleare4 nearly three million lollare from mining investments during , ho two years past. WASHINGTON. The Ynkama river is lower , so old resi- lents nay , than has been known for many 'ear * . The culture'of buckwheat has been tried iciirlDtiep'Creek Va\lt with great success his Heason. The contracts have been let for the Cath olic church and school house oil Alain treet nt Spokane ViMs. During the month of August between i7,000 and 88,000 have b-en collected on reight received ut Spokane Falls. One individual in Claekamas county , ) regon , ships to San Francisco from 7 V 100 to 123,000 hoop poles every year. A letter from the Assotin F'at reports .hat "the poorest wheat threshed on the lat so far thia year yielded over twenty- ivo bushels to the acre. " When the primacy buildings are com peted 350 pupils can be accommodated in , ho public Mshoolf ) of Dayton , and it is ex acted that nearly every heat will be oc- upied this winter. OREGON. The saw mills on Meacham creek are destroying nil the fish in that strvain by .hrowuiK their Haw dust into it. A porcupine measuring four feet from ip to tip wns killed in Croy'a Gulch , about a mile Irom Yrckn , the other day. The right of way through the Umatilla ndiau reservation han been granted to the allroad company and thu amount of noney asked for by the Indians as dr.m- gos has been deposited with the govern ment for their -use. The onion crop in Clackaman county , las been stricken by blight this year. On mny farms the tops of the onions have led down before they came to maturity , 'hero is noticeable a fungus growth upon Item , and a minute insect may be found which seems to feed ou the stalks. Work on the Oregon Pacific railroad ocs steadily forward. Grading on the rst ten miles of the section is completed. There nre now about 900 men at work on he road , the majority between CorwvallU ud Philomath , but tnnall forces nre dU- rilmtcd clear through to Yiuiulna. NEVADA. Beach mining is in lull blast below Cres- cnt City , Nevada. The burnt district at Austin Is to bo ro- milt with atouo and brick. It is chimed that the recent rise in SI- rra Nevada was n swindling deal of the vorst kind. The brick work for the first story of the ew Nevada insane asylum , at Keno , is oinplcted , The Humbolt reduction work * , " \Vimie- nucca , nr < - being prepared with a view of tarting them up directly. The Shoo FIv minu on 1'rospcct moun- alii , Kureka district , has been Bold to n lotion company. The ore noways $ X > in cold and $40 In hllver. Seven acres of wheat , at Lake View , tear Iteno , Nevada , yielded MO bushels of ; raln , lacking ono bushel of being seventy- hrco bushels to the acre. The potato crop In the valleys of Ne- ada In-this season the finest that haa been cen for yearn. The tubers are unusually arge , smooth and perfect. The expert who was appointed to Inves- Igate the oillcei of the clerk nd recorder of Storey county , Nevada , reported that he dally labor of each employe only aver aged thu recording or copying ( if 850 words > er day. _ _ _ _ _ UTAH. Salt LUO'H ! fair was a great tuccc-as. llailrooil building In progrcsblng In every llrection , The supply of vegetable * In Utah Is un- ibually large. The production of thu Horn Silver in August wns 82411,000. The San 1'eto railrosd will tap Rome of hn moat valuable inineM in the territory. ThereUco-ulilerablotnlk of u largo iron naiuifacturiiiR city viirincliitf up In the coal ami iron fields of southern Utah , Al ready three imiwrtfint railroads nre point Ing in tlml direction. The Chrlfty , UUh , ha declarctl an oth r dlvldcmf of $0,000) ) tolnl to dite 812,000 , Salt Lnko ill bo crowdcil this wlntc with inlncra from Montana nnd Idaho v.'hi have made good ftlakcf. Stnrmont Silver mining company hav resumed the payment of dividends am paid one of five cents per share , on Octo her 1st , ntfgre atliig 810.000. Total of foui dividend * § 115,000. At IiOgati Canon , Utah , last week Abraham Hodges was instantly killed hi n blow on the head from n piece of woo < t His step-brother had the stick in his hand when It cnnio in contact with n clrculai saw , which suddenly whirled it througl the air with irrcnt violence , utrikliif Hodges with fatal effect. IDAHO. Jlenrs svra numerous on Hood rirer. Yankee Fork Is swarming with prospee tow. tow.The The Kinnikinlc district Is Knowing sign : of improvement. Bellevue bent Hallcy for the county sea' ' of Alhtirai county by one vote. Several now strikes of mineral are re ported from the Sawtooth district. Its owners claim that the Kam's Hon mine ia the greatest bonanza in the west WYOMING. I ruinio Catholics hold n fair next week Cheyenne Methodists will rebuild thcii church. The Y. M , C. A. have oj > oncd n rcadlnf room in Laramio. New mineral discoveries are rcportec from the Muddy. Fears Are entertained of another upris ing of the White Uiver Utes. Numerous parties of Englishmen art hunting in the Dig Horn mountains. Nearly 5,000 settlers have gone Into Crook and Johnson c .unties this season , Scrvicei In memory of the late presidcnl were generally held throughout the terri tory. tory.Work Work nn the artesian well nt liawlim has been temporarily suspended until one of the wells up the road is completed. A stabbing affray occurred last week or Little Powder river , in whicli an old BO ! dlcr named Stewart wn severely cut and robbed ofglHO. Sins of the Fathnr * Vtalted on the Children- Physicians say that scrofulous taint can. not be cracicated ; we deny it "in toto. " II you go through a thorough course of BUR. DOCK Br.oon BITTKKS , your blood will get as pure as you can wisn. Price $1.00 , trial size 10 cents. Sodlw FREE OF COST. DR. KINO'S NEW DiscoVKIIY foi Consumption , Coughs nnd Gelds Asthma , Bronchitis , etc.- isgiven awny'in trial bottles free , of cost to the afflicted. If you have a bad cough , cold , difficulty of breathing , hoarseness or nny affection of the throat or lungs by all means give this wonderful remedy a trial. As you vnluo your existence you cannot nfi'ord to let this opportunity pass. "Wo could not afford , nnd would not give this remedy nwny unless wo know it would accomplish what wo claim for it. Thousands of hopeless cases hnvo already been completely cured by it. Thpro is no mcdicino in the world that will euro ono half the cases that Du. Kijra's Ifmv DiscoVKKY will cure. For sale by G ) Isn & MoMAiiox , Omaha. FOR RHIU1ATM , Neuralgia , Sciatica , Lumbago , Bacfache , Soreness of the Chest , Gout , Quinsy , Sere Throat , Su/eff- inps and Sprains , Burns and * * Scalds , General Bodily Pains , Tooth , Ear and Headache , Frosted Feet and Ears , and alt other Pains and Aches. Cfc Pr p raHon on rth cquali ST. Jxroit Oil M a fafe , turf , ilinpl * ted chrnp External Hmedjr. A trial entalU but Ili comparatlYcl ; titling outlay of 60 Centi , and erarjr one luffer- ( * C with pain can bar * cheap anil potltir * wool at It * claim * Ja , TJIrectloni In Zltrtn LanfnagM " r WLDBYALLDEDa&IBTS AITDDEALEBB IN MEDICINE. A. VOGZLER tfc CO. , Xaltimn-r- _ . OTRAYED From Slcrt's Diablo , fmaha , one O block mart ) , color toniculmt ( ailed , eight or mnoycarsoldnulili8 ; about elcen hur.ilrod , ImU on saildlu and brldlo A rew anl w ill bu paid ( or her return or Information leading to her recovery. W. K. CATJIEY. Fort Calhoun , Nch 793t COIU'OUATION NOTICE. 1. Notlca Is hereby civ en that I ) . IJurr , E. D. Van Curt ami I ) I * . Ilurrliare Inconwratcd themselves under tlio nainu ol the "Ouialm Im plement Company. " 2. The principal plan of transacting the Intel- IICM of lalil lncor | rution u ' 'niula , Kub. 3. The imturv of the bUBlntss of mill Incornor * ntlon U tlio gala of general farm Mai'lilnery , ling- Sin mid Wnjon . 4. The amount of cnpltal stock auihorlzeil Is ? M > , GOO.(0 ot which ttf.WU.OO uuibt bo suliscrlhcd unif ono half of eaU lut inentloiiuJ sum bu paid In bcforu Bald company thall commence builncB * , said Block to bo divided Into nharcs of 81001 ftoli. C. The hl licet amount of InJulitcJness lhat can bo lncurrcdbyBaldlncorK > rutloiilatuo-third | § 31 the capital ttock mill In , and tliero Bhall bo no [ ndUldual liability on the part of the stock hold er * thereof. ( J. The affairs of eald corporation nro to bo con- .1 uctod by a president , seerctaty and treasurer , ulio ihall constitnto a lioard of directors. 7. Kaldcorp ration tluill commenccoii the 13th layof Hoptvmlier , 1831 , and shall terminate on the Utdayof Beptvmljfr , A. D. 1800. I ) . Ili'Hit. K 1) . VAN Coi'iiT. D. 1' . Hum Omaha , Nub. , Oct. 3,1881. o3 cv 111011 4t W. J , OONNELL , ATTORNEY - AT - LAW , Orrica Front Itoomi ( up stairs ) In Ilantconi'i now brick building , M , W. corner Kltccnlb oil arnhatu Street * . D. S. BENTON , ATTORNEY - AT - LAW AIlBAClt liLOCK , UthSti. Um&h Net p . CHEAP 'X \1 LOTS. . * * . / } A NEW f ADDITION ! -TO- % \ , Omaha. . n il TM BEST BAEBADJS Ever Offered IN THIS CITY. 10 CASH PATflEHTS Required of Persons Desir- in to Build. LOTS ON PATIEUTS ox * S5.TO S1O Money Advanced -TO- Aesist Purchasers in Building. We Now Offer For Sale SB Splendid RESEDENGE LOTS , Located on 27th , 28th , 29th ind 30th Streets , between ETarnham , Douglas and the pro- 3osed extension of Dodge St. , L2 to 14 Blocks from Court EEouse and Post Office , AT PBIOBS ranging from $300 to $400 which is about Two-Thirds oi ; heir Value , on Small Monthly Payment of $5 to $1O. Parties desinng to'Build and .mprove Need Not Make any Payment for one or two years , put can use all their Means for improving. Persons having $100 or $20G of their own , But not Enough ; o Build such a house as they want , can take a lot and we will Loan them enough to com plete their Building. These lots are located between the MAIN BUSINESS STREETS of the ity , within 12 minutes walk of tin Justness Center. Good Sidewalks ox end the Entire Distance on Dodge Street , and the lots can bo reached by vay of either Farnlmm , Douglas or ) edge Streets. They lie in a part ot ho city that is very Rapidly Iinprov- ng nnd consequently Increasing in Value , and purchasers may reasonably tope to Double their Money within n hort time. Some of the most Sightly Location ! n the city may bo selected , from these ots , especially on 20th Street Wo will build houses on a Stnal Cash Payment of $150 or $200 , and ell house and lot on small monthly mynients. It is expected that thcso lotsjwill bo rapidly sold on these liberal terms , nd persons wishing to purchase lieuld call at our ollico ana secure lieir lots at the earliest moment. Vo are ready to show these lots to all lorsons wishing to purchase. BOGGS & HILL , Real Estate Brokers , North Side of Farnham Street , Ocp , Grand Central Hotel , OMAHA NEB ,