THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : FRIDAY , MAY 12 , The Omaha Be < Published atery morning , except Stmc Vbe only Monday morning dally. THUMB BY MAIL- One Vsar. . . . . 810.00 I ThreeMonths. & x Months. o.OO I One . . 1 IKE WEEKLY BEE , published ry Wednesday. BERMSP08T PAIDt- Ono Year. . . . . . (2.00 I Three Mocth . . Blx Month * . . . . 1.00 I One t AMERICAS Nr.wa Coiir-AMr , Sole Ago for Newsdealers lu the United States. OOttllESPONDKNOE All Oommt fttloiurrlatlni ; to Nowsimd Editorial tr era should bo addressed to the EDIIOJI Eta Ben. BUSINESS LETTERS All Buslr Kitten nnd RcmlttAnce * should be dressed to Tns OMAHA FunuaniNO C FAST , OMAHA. Draft * , Chocks and Pi office Orders to bo made payable to erder ot the Company. PUBLISHING 00 , , Prop' ] El ROSEWATER , Editor. NOTICE TO NEWSDEALERS The publishers of Tim BRR have ma Arrangements with the American No Company to supply News' Dspots in II note , Iowa , Nebraska , Wyoming ai Utah. All dealers who keep TUB DAI BiiBon silo should hereafter address th < orders to the .Manager American No' Company , Omaha , Neb. WVCK haa left "Was ington for a abort visit to his const ! nonts. ATTENTION is called to the filtl alleys which disgrace many parts the city. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ IK promptly confirming Mr. HOT as city attorney , the city council a cured an honest man and an nb lawyer. THERE ia one industry that is n < likely to need protection in this coui try for some time to coino and that the industry of spoooh making. CIIICAOO assessments have bee raised twenty per cent. Property i Omaha has advanced nearly forty pi "Xcont in value during the past year. JL . A SESSION of the Nebraska logial r ; turo without a fight in the Dougl county delegation would bo like tl play of Hamlet with Hamlet loft ou r , ONE hundred and twenty-five the iandCanadians emigrated lout year the United States. Canada seems . . _ fco B good country to got , away froti Fiwm.tho very general tone of tl 'foaa the conviction forces i ! &Mlf pfon'tho public that the "plurm 'knight" is about to reappear in publ life. municipal government ca - : only'bo necarod by individual r oponaibility of every office holder , at - ' a.rigid accountability to tha goner r -public. ' A WASHINGTON dispatch aaya th : ' . "the abipa oi the future will probabl . , bo built of ateol. " The ships of tl present have been alinont entirely coi , < tructedof "atoal. " THE United States has 45,700 posl offices , and the number is incroasin at the rate of ono thousand a yoai SHenco the political importance of th .patriots who are postmasters. SINCE the Jeannette and Rogoi episodes , the impression ia gainin ground that oongroes has somethin better to do than to encourage su oido by lending aid to Arctic expod tions. LOUIBIANIANS rejoice once more i the possession of their old capital I'or the first time since Bon Butler day the legislation i in nensbn i Baton Rouge , the old capitol hayin ' been rebuilt. * DON OAHBRON * haa vaulto into the Pennsylvania ring wit a cheerful smile , and the old famtlia Oamoroniau "hoop la. " But th Philadelphia independents declare tin the circus haa hardly began. at the late extr aeulon coat Missouri $20,000. It too two weeks for the construction of political map of Miaaouri , which look like the blackboard * * ol * countr , choolhoua * after the recess. THE Arizona outbreak ia about ovoi General John Pope haa been too bua planning his campaign after a briga dier generalthip , which ho will neve g t | to pay rnnch attention to th operations of his subordinates in th feld. feld.TUB TUB president will soon send a met age to congress , asking an approprli tion of f 00,000 for deficiency in th census appropriation. This ia necet awry to continue the reduced force fo the remainder of the fiscal yeai Strong hopes are entertained that th census of 1880 will bo nearly cor eluded before the time arrives for th enumeration of 1890. . _ IJv uy once in awhile a demo , to editor turns up who has not hai all his common sense aoaked out b , Bourbonism and bourbon , Stilaoi Hutcnins , in a recent letter iron Washington to a New Hampshire pa i p r , remarks : "I find there'is dirt ; Ylineu enough to wash in my owi party without setting up a Jaundry fo : my neighion. " Mr. Hutchiiu U toi a4did for his clothe * . EQUITY AND THE R A1LRO A It haa como to us that Blair o Fremont reooivo bettor rates r treatment than Omaha at the hai of the Iowa pool , because they nro i "pooling points" and Omahn is. this riqht by any principle of comm comity and equity ? Republican. When commercial comity and equ are ruling principles in railroad mi ngomcnt the monopolies will have further use for subsidized notrapap of the Republican stamp. The d crimination which the organ of t Union Pacific charges has been pr ticcd by the Iowa part against Omn is n feature of the policy the Union Pacific itself throug out its entire system. And t editorial pages of The Republic have time and again been pressed hi the service to defend and ozcuso tl : policy when the producers of ft braska have protested against : disastrous operation. The combir tion of the two Croat railroad corpoi tions of thin state to pool cumin and maintain rates at all cnmpetiti points has found no opponent in Tl Republican which has suddenly di covered that the same policy whi practised by the Iowa lines ia contra : to every principle of "commorci comity and equity. " No candid person who has studii the history of railroading in tl United States believes that railroai are governed by legitimate buainc principles. The greatest stimulus mercantile business is compotitioi It is at the Bamo time the chief pr tcction to the people who deal wil our merchants. Competition itsel in every day commercial transaction is regulated by tho'law of supply ar demand. But the monopolies plai themselves above all laws. The strangle competition by consolidate of competing lines , or combinatioi of opposing interests , and enter inl agreement to maintain rates in ord < to aecuro by a division' of their plut dor a larger share of the spoil * wluc they extort from thp'p'ublic. Tfioi is no ouch thing as "commercial con ity" between the railroads and tl people. The relation has been that i the robber towards his victim , < organized brigands to helpless con munitica. And the only "comity rccoganizcd by the monopoly manage has boon that "comity" which hi yielded to the demands of other co poratioua in parcelling out territory i which they might ply unmolested I competition their outrageous .systoi of legalized extortion. , The railroad empire in this counti haa been built up and comontcd by a entire disregard of the1 principle which operate and maintain in con tnorcial 'transactions. No morchati who would aoll continually at a lowc rate to ono customer than to nnotlu could long continun in buainens afti the practice was discovered. H merchant who made a practice o'f pu chasing fayorablo decisions. from ill courts when hiabuaineas methods woi called into question and boasted < his success in bribing courts' and si borning witnesses would bo pormitto , o retain the public _ patronage. An 10 business men or private carport ions which persistently and dofiantl riofated their contracts could main ; ain their standing in the community From the moment of their 01 { anizatiqn the railroads have placed D lofianco every principle o ( commorcit > quSty and comity. Oonstructio ings composed of their promote : Hoh the paid-up capital , and incroai , ho indebtedness of the concerns. Oi icon are paid salaries twice , three an 'our times the amount which indivit tola would pay for like services. Con : joting organizations are abaorbe .hrough schemes and devices to ro ind defraud their owners" and who mde secured they are capitalized i uany time'tjieir value d the BOC iMcollod out to the juauagors an .heir . frienda. < The moat flagrant , dii iriminationa , of which 'that con gained of by The Republican ia on ! t single instance , are practiced in fa ror of individuals and communitie ind against others. No busince louse in the world which comrniUo luch iniquities could stand for a yoai It ia the knowledge of those factt b knowledge which haa slowly dawno ipon the producers of thia coun rj rhich ia cauaing the universal doman or state and government regulatlo if the railways. Our highest courl tare decided that discriminations ar Contrary to public policy and illegal , ud that the aggrieved parties hav heir recourse at law. They have lal lown the broad doctrine that the aoi 'ice of the railroads must be impai tally rendered to all patrons withou avoritiam for or against individual ! lorporations or communities. I hort , they have decided that the rail x > ads must ba governed by the sam awa which rule in the transaction c irivato business , and have afllrmo he power of the people to make law md provide adequate punishments ii taso of their infraction. The time ha : omo when the people are dotormlno < hat the teat bo made. They have in losuo to crush out of existence th ; reat system of railways which form , not-work of tteol all over the coun ry. They do not envy any accumu itiou of wealth which results from ai lonoat npd impartial railway manage aout. But they are determined tha ho reign of robbery an-1 plunder rhich has disgraced the operation o orporate monopolies in this country sh'nil cease , and that "corporatloi the creation of the state shall bo cc trolled by the state , " and shorn their unbridled powers to plunder their own will and pleasure by exh tionato charges , and outrageous d criminations. In other words th are resolved that principles of "co mcrcial equity and comity" shall forced down the throats of t monopolies if they refuse to take t wholesome dose in any other way. SOONER or later railroads will lea that passengers have some rigl which corporations are bound to i sped. A auit has just boon docid in Now York in which ono Willis Pease sued the Delaware , Lackawan : ft Western railroad company f $5,000 damages for having boi ejected from ono of the companj trains while a passenger from Nc York to Montclair , N. J. , whore 1 resides. The plaintiff testified on tl trial that , desiring to RO to Now Yor ho purchased an excursion ticket Montclair and handed it to the co : duotor upon the trip to Now Yorl and that the conductor toro off 01 portion , handing back what romainoi On the return trip ho handed tl conductor this part of the ticket , bi the conductor refused to take it , sa ; ing it was a ticket for Now York fro : Montclair , and informed Mr. Peai ho must pay hia faro. This Mr. Peai refused to do , and , when the trai stopped at the station beyond tl Hudson river tunnel , the conducto assisted by a brakcmon and baggagi master , ejected the plaintiff from tl train , inflicting severe bodily injur While they were about to put him of but before they had done BO , M : Pease offered to pay his faro. Judg Van Hoeson charged the jury tha if the plaintiff offered to pay hb fai before ho was removed from the trail the conductor1 was bound to rccoh it , and the ejection was an illegal nc Iho jury gave plaintiff a verdict fc 63,000 , to which the court added a allowance of D per cent. THERE ia a general imprcssio among Omaha merchants and taxpaj era that true economy in paving i this city requires that none but dui able , material shall bo used for pavin purposes. Macadam has been trie in almost every city in the Missoui valley , and has proved a failure. Woo block is losing ground in public con Sdonco wherever it is laid down Stone block pavamonts of granite o Medina sandstone are the only pave nonta which have stood a long tee 'or streets on which the traffic i icavy. In a number of citie \Bplmltum black pavement ha Doen introduced with good ouccose Fho value of the pavements dcpon wry largely upon the care used in it manufacture. The subject of. aaphal turn pavements ia now being agitate in St. Louis. The Republican of tha ) ity haa the following to say of soni recent discoveries of asphaltum depoc ta in Missouri as bearing upon th paving question : The increasing indications that th Jarton county asphaltum is a gooi quality of the real article will bo wel somod by everybody interested in tin lolution of the street pavinv question Dho important part in making a gooi isphaltum pavement is to use Hborall ; ho best quality ot asphaltum , ani nest of the failures have rosultei rom the efforts to economize in thii ) articular. A natural compound o. isphaltum and rook from Yal do Tro rers ia used in Paris , but in the Uni od States the only successful asphal urn pavements have boon made o : Trinidad asphaltum. This is ia vcr ; ixpensivo , however , and the cost hai nit serious limitations upon the wide iso ot pavements constructed of it , [ f , however , it shall turn out thai ho Barton county deposit , which ii 10 near to us , ba good quality of the ight article , it should bo feasible tc Deliver it in this city cheap enough U > errnit iU free usp , in street pave" npnta. It Is well determined that m iort of asphaltum pavement will d < in atroeta used by heavy wagons , buj hero ore streets used only by iigh'1 rohlcloa who'ro the asphaltum pave' nont in various forms could bo uset ery great advantage , if not too ox icnsivo. It will bo better than i ; old mine if the Barton county de > oait realizes all that ia promised. AH ANNOUNOKU in yesterday's Bui mprovomonta of n generoua and sub itantial nature are contemplated a fort Omaha , which will greatly en arge the capacity of the post and in ireoso ita importance as a military ata ion. It ia intended that the govern nont purchase that portion of the res jrvation formerly loosed for military purposes , that a number of now pm permanent quarters bo erected , am .hat provision be made for a full regi uent of infantry. Those contemplate ! approvements will require an expen lituro of § 100,000 in Onnha .ho coming year. FITZ JOHN PORTKU'S appeal to con ; reaa is the plea of a cruelly wrongec nan , confident of hia integrity am ho justice of hia cause. The oditoi if THE BHK was in a position in 180 ! o understand just why and whor General Pope waa convinced that Fit ; 'olm Porter waa a dangerous anc raitorous character , and ho will hortly explain hia reasons for urpint hat congrcaa give a speedy hearing tc ho man who haa boon made the scape oat for the inoompotonoy and pig- oadodnoaa of General Popn , whoa i eadquartors waa in the saddle all brough the Mauaasas campaign. THAT MARE'S WEST. There may or there may not be a wool in the howl of The Om Hnrald over what it calla the Plat mouth land surveying steal. So f not particle of proof of any fraud 1 been shown. There ia no evidence the long-winded editorials of 1 democratic organ of Jay Gould tl the government has lost a ( dollar the distribution of the surveying c < tracts in Nebraska , or that the we has not boon done in accordance wi the contracts as lot by the survoj general. It is n well-known fact U aurvoya of public lands are do by private contract under fixed appi priations. Those contracts are ! through the surveyor general , the d trict in which the surveys are to made , and the amount to bo paid i the prosecution of the work boi ; clearly specified. The appropriati for the present year for the district Iowa and Nebraska waa § 20,000 , whi was to bo expended in our own stal It makoa no difference , so far as t government ia concerned to whom t : contracts are let , BO long as they a taken by competent men , and are ca riod out in accordance with the ten of the contracts. It ia of as little ii portanco to the government who a partners in the contracts. Few county surveyors are able - provide the necessary outfit for a su \roy \ without calling on outaido partii und if they wiah to share their profi with the men who furnish the rcac money it is no one's business. Th they do so ia certainly no evidence fraud. If Mr. Graham , having B : ured a contract to survey corta lands , chooses to divide hia profi prithMr. Tefftthat is hia pwnconcor Fho interest of the government at the people ia only jeopardized wh ( it is shown that Mr. Graham h 'ailed to survey in accordance with tl terms of his contract. Nor ii it ar. mdencoof "fraud" on the part of M 3raham that he happened to vote ft Senator Van Wyck at the last legisl ire. Hia vote probably made hi : loither more nor loss able to fulfil h : ontract. Thia paper was the first I ixposo the gigantic steals in the syi em of public surveys in the stal vhen $150,000 appropriated for tl : > urposo went into the pockets of ; ang of thieves , against whom Tli ) maha Herald didn't dare to ope : ts mouth. That celebrated "meat lertng of the Platte , " whic oat the government $75,00 ( nd which waa skilfully mi lipulatod by ; Chauncoy Wilts indor the patronage of Senator Hitcl ock does not need to bo .recalled the ho recollection of Dr. Miller , who i low howling so loudly over thoPlatti nouth mare's neat. The frauds i ho contracts under the old aurroyin ing.consisted in the fact that the BUI 'oys were not made ns required b aw , and the contract * were violate it every point where a dollar could b ; obbled by the Bos Cunninghar ; ang. If Dr. Miller can furnish th iroof that the present contracts ar tot being carried out in accordanc fith the terms of agreement betwee : ho land office and the contractors Ic tint produce them and ho will have learty support fijoni every resnoctabl ournal in the state. In the absenc f such proof ho is pumping his papo nil of wind , and doing himself u ; ood. TUB Boston Htar is of the , opinioi hat the Peruvian investigation boar strong resemblance to' the nlmos irgotton Credit Mobolier sensation Tow as then everybody ia innocent obody remembers anything distinct ! ; nd when anybody doea tell any new imobody contradicts him. TUB senate bill to open to settle lent and , entry a portion of'the mill iry , reservation at Ft : Niobrara hoi asabd. By a former act of congres. lie old reservation was' largely ox 3nded for the purpose of aecorinj imbor. Prior to the extension i umber of settlers filed on the land ftorwards withdrawn from ontr ; rom the government. It appear bat in extending the lines of thi e&ervation a largo area of uplant soleaa for the purposes of the govern lent waa taken in including a nura or of homesteads. The land hi not oloaaod by the bill , and settlers wile o allowed to perfect their titles. Tin ill ia aa follows ; A. BILL o restore certain portions of the For Niobrara military reservation , ii the state of Nebruka , to the publii domain , and for other purposes. SEC. 1. That the secretary of wa : 10 , and hereby ia , directed to reaton o the secretary of the interior thi ustody , control and disposition of thi Dllowlvg doacribei parcels and tract * f liuui umbract'd within the limita o bo Furt Niobrara military rosorva Ion , in the state of Nebraska , as de larod in executive order of Dacemboi 0 , 1879 , and enlarged by executive rder of Juno 0 , 1881 , to wit ; All ol jctioiis numbered 20 , SO , 31 and 33 , nd the west half of section numbered 3 , all in township 34 north , of range umbered 2 ? west , and all tnatpart ol action numbered 8 , in to mishit umbered 33 north , of raugo Hum- erod 27 west , within the said limits E the reservation. SEO. 2. That the secretary of the ttorior shall dispose of said tracts and arcola of land under the public land , ws in the Bamo manner aa if said acta and parcels had never been em- raced within the limita of said mill- iry reservation ; and suoh persons ae no Bottled or made improvements icrcon prior to December 10 , 1881 , shall have priority of claim there unde.r the public land laws : Provide That they file their respective claii according to law at the proper lai oflico within throe months after tl said lands become subject to dispoi tion under the public land law * . THK Juno Atlantic will have an u published poem on Decoration D ; by Longfellow ; a stool portrait of tl poet ; a poem on Longfellow 1 Holmes , and an estimate of hia cha actcr and genius by 0. B. Frothin ham. Among other interesting p pors will bo ono on "Tho Now Eae orn Question , " containing person reminiscences of General Skobeloff. A Long Felt Want , liurlington Hawkeyc. Guttenborg invented printing , bi who ia the genius whe will rise v and invent a proof reader. A Feeling Spoooh. Kansas City Journal , St. John made n feeling speech i Loavonwprth on Sunday feeling ft the condition of a public pulse on tt question of his own nomination. Every Way Qualified. Now Orleaans Picayune. Barnum ia in every way qualified 1 take charge of the politics of No York. Ho has made a good canvasi and controls three largo rings. Mot Explicit ; . Louisville Courier-Journal , President Arthur's first card rccej tion took placa Tuesday * night , but ute to thia writinp it is not roporto whether it waa poker , euchre , whiner or Boven-np. The dispatches shoul bo more explicit. What There Must Bo. Denver Tribune. Jay Gould saya that there should I no anti-railroad legislation , or ole there may como a panic. There oughl however , to bo some anti-Gould legii lation , or there is sure to bo ono. Can't Bo Trusted. Kansas City Journal. There will bo a total eclipse of th Bun on the 17th instant , but it wii not bo visible in America. It woul bo a bad time to trust the democrat ! party of Missouri in the dark , so BOOI after its endorsement of the late J W. James. Recall the .Passes. Denver Tribune. The Oheyonno Loader never dii bave much use for the Wyoming leg Blature , but it was hardly justified it writing a poem to the memory of tha lugust body. No , that was positively : ruelty. The Union Pacific railway ihould immediately call in the Load sr'a free passes. ' Regulation Must Come , ililford Democrat. Petitions have boon presented it .ho senates from thirty-throe states , isking that they do something in ro ; ard to the rates charged by railroad ; or passenger and freight transporta ions , This alone Is evidence thai [ pmething ought' ' to bo done , and' ' the ; imo is near at hand when the people vill not bo ovprrun by the railroad nonupoly.vln no part of the United StateB is thia felt so strongly ns ir heso western states , nnd ; the votore ihould BOO that no man is chosen tc issiat in making the laws that govern .hem unless he be an anti- monopolist , m the side of the peopla arid reform , Why Is Thia Thus ? Tndge Agiiew of Pennsylvania. A remarkable fact attending all the ; reat railroads of the United States it ho immense wealth of their leading officials. It is confined to no state , , nd is exceptional to all other employ- nonts. The grandest talent and Creator learning , in law , physics , and ithor learned avocations , accumulate D ow thousands in a lifetime ; but rail- oad officials , often rising from mere lorkships , 'roundsmen ' , ticket and ithor agents , with salaries running rom hundreds to a few thousands , ivontuato as possessors of'manj ailliona. It us no uncommon hing to see a railroad presi dent , rising from the hum- iloat station , in the course of fifteen r twenty years , become the owner of 12,000,000. flO,000,000 , or even 120,000,000 at a salary which would of average for the whole time over 112,000. These are mysteries that ho common people cannot under- land , The Old'Q'ame. [ istloc * G alette-Journal. The fight between the U. P. and ho B. & M. railroad for congressmen nd state officers haa already begun , 'hia ia an old game and hero ia the rick. Neitherof the partita care ery much which succeeds , usually hero is a compromise. In the auccess t either faction a railroad man ia hoion and that ia all they care about. ? his course ia pursued to prevent the leoplo from stepping in and choosing , man who ia independent of railroads nd who would owe hia election to hem rather than to corporations , a it possible thia year for the votora o be led into the old trick ud be deceived Into supposing hat they are having anything to Bay a regard to the selection of officers , ithor state or national ? It ia loudly rodicted that ono of the railroad ompaniea ia going to be able to ma- ipulato the Farmer's Alliance into a upport of their mou for office , on tha IOA that the opposing cindidato ia wned , body and soul , by the other arporation. We finally believe that fiuold trick will will not do forlSS'J , nd that unless men who are fret ) rom the control of corporation ? , are omiuated for office there will be an idependont movement that will mtvko 10 old ringleaders and railroad poli- cians tremble in their boots. Even republican nomination will not save loin. Lot the party bo wiao and note o blindly into the jawd of death. Advertising Cheats , tovidenoo Adveitlser. It has become so common to write 10 beginning of an elegant , interest- ig article and then run It ir.to some Ivertiaomont , that wo avoid all ouch leata and simply call attention to the icrita of Hop Bitten in as plain , onoat tornis a possible , to induce oplo to give them on9 trial , as none no who knows their value will ever 10 anything else. STATE JOTTINGS. A $1,000 hotel Is to be built at Wayi The Tecumseh Torchlight is A year o A bank is to ba eitabllshed at Hoop Beatrice has a new bank , the Peopli Meailes nnd mumps In Thayer coun David City has that down , on I ealooni. Mil ford's Masonic lull will be dedlcat In June. Another brass band has been organiz nt Beatrice. North Platte's Chinaman had his life 1 sured last week , A lodge of Odd Fellows has been Ins lutod at Fullerton. A counoil of the Lcplon of Honor Is bo organized at Fremont. A North Flatte Chinaman has donn the pants of civilization. There are CO c-ues of email pox In precinct , Sewnrd county. The Scotia Tribune and "Old Buck"a to bo moved to North Loup. The new billiard hall in Creighton is t largest building In the town. N. It. Comly was killed by falling tli her at Long Fine on the 1st. TheSldn > y fir * department will ce ! braie the coming 4th of July , The Humboldt Sentinel hits put on nc clotbcsand looks neat and nice. Liquor licenie In Tecutmeh Is (90 There are three saloons that pay it , Jasper Roberta , of Ulysiea , lost week i ceived by express a 39.pound catfish. The Columbus o ; crn house was sold u ler n writ of foreclosure for $1,485.50 , A brick business block to cost ever 311 XX ) is to be built iramedlatelyut Falrbur 0. Dili was found guilty of killing Sa Ksmnn , at Arnpahoe , and goes up for Hf Kearney Is having trouble over tl license business. None have bean IFBUI jr t. Preston Barnes , n B. & M. brnkomn "oa run over and killed at Wymoro on tl ; th. th.The The Oberfelder boys , of Sidney , have log nnmed "Chub" that has killed thi , otn cats. The rival Nemnha county towns , Sher Ian and Calvert , have consolidated undi , ho name of Auburn. The Gandy brothers , of York count ; lave laid out a town in the geographic ; : enter ef Ouster county. A Furnns county man , whose shce vero kilbd by dogg , baa recovered $1 ( udgmcnt againstthe owners of the purp A B. & M , freight conductor name Dsborne wns killed at Endicott on the 4t > y being crushed between the 'bumper U ; G. Miller , oi Bioomington.-JH. , hi tarted a horse ranche In the western imi if Dawson county and will stook'it ' wit ,200 Texas animals. , Somebody scattered a quantity of po oned meat In the streets'of Columbus an here was great mortality among the dog nd vrath among their owners. On the 4th , Jim Doyle , of Culbertson ran killed by lightning while gatheiln attle , A man named Boothby was alsi illed during the same ktorm near Indian la. la.A A Phun Creek desperado namedl W. H lead got full of whisky one night las reek and took posseasion of the depot hooting at a c. nductor who stepped in To one dared to interfere and when Heat ot rendyiho departed. State School Kotos. The G ration public school building. I early completed. , On'the 29th nit. , Indianola voted Sl',70 ( > r a school house : s , Mre. Lawson , of Columbus , teaches th Ulysses intermediate. , . An additional teacher Is to bo hired fo : 10 Arapahoe , school , , A Keokuk lady has organized a writinj ihool at Dorchester. The Congregational collegs building a is about completed , - The averaa pay of teachers in Cumin ; ) unty Is from § 35'to § 15. , , , . Tha contra't ' 'haa boon let for a nov : heel buiding at Wood River. The , Central Nebraska Teachers' associa on incets at Button on the 13th. Mjss Jo Ie Keith , superintendent o ublic instruction , Thayer county. Nob. , us resigned that office that she nmj : cept a position iu the Hebron publti : hooh. Our district school boar1 have done ; aod thing thi * spring in ' the way 0 ! laoting trees nround the 'outside schoo ouses in this district. 1C. Smith and Mr hearer planted 1308 treoi for the dlstricl at week. Harvard Journal. Nebraska Farm Notes. The Schnyler creamery has the promise F milk from tOO cowa. O , C. Clenrett , of Adams county , exnci i gather 500 bushels of peaches this fall. H. C. Church , of Madison county , Dished planting i)5 ) acres of com on thi it. it.L. L. C. Blaunt , of Hastings , will soot oclc n ranche on tha Frenchman with 4X ( sad. sad.A A man named Chenny , from Iowa , but irchased 400 ' acres near Ulysaess for a ock farm. < H. A. MusicJc , of Aurora , rccentlj lught a couple of thoroughbred cattle at sale 'ot Creston , Ia , Willie Mlcherier , a l2-year ) ldloy ol r yland , planted 1,2001 goftonwoodft witfi ' pade on Arbor day. * " " . Saturday , Ki rl Sagl cold , car of , hogs i Gund & Allen'for $1,807. ThreV.year : oMr. Sag ] shipped a car of hogs and're- W8. Wllber Opposition. Thr farmers are jubilant over tha splen- d stand of wheat this spring , that cereal kvln atoiled out nicely. The cool weath. Is not quite so favorable for corn , but aa is dry it will not'rot. . Hastings Gaz < U-Journal , Wra. Dally , of Nemalia county , apeak * g from experience , udvlsoj Nebraska uck ralsera to need down their land to me grasses. Ti-uothy , cloyer and blue MS , he thinks more 'economical to feed an com. Small ttraln never looked better at this ne of year. Fanners are all busy using ery hand tool to be bad , In planting rn. The largest acreage of corn will be anted in 8 aline this spring ever known , rote Standard. Twice as much corn and half as much beat U the sensible conclusion of the But- r county farmer , Twice as many hogs id three times the number < f cattle Is an- her good motto If adopted and carried it. David City Hepubllcan. Small Krain in 1'helps county never look- , so well at this time of year as It does iw , A great deal of corn is already anted and the ground la nearly all plow- and wll ( lie planted this week. It has en a urj.nl upritu for woik , plenty of iu and jnit cool enough to ityuu work easant. Nugget , 0. Nelson , the potato kinir of Colfax unty , has planted thirty acres to that up. He plants by drilling Instead of in 11s , and does the work with a horse inter of bis own devising. It is a hopper th a spout , attached to a riding cultiva- r , and ( be seed b deposited in the track the forward shovel and covered by the o Kb o vela following. With this planter ha put in eight acres a day , Scliuyler in. Jacob MarUoIf. of Lancaster , [ N. Y , , rs your Si'iUNG BLOSSOM works we 1 for erytbmg vou reoommend it ; tuyeelf , fa and chlldreu have all used Ii. anil you n't find u healthier family In New York , te. Oct. S. 1880. mS dlw MOUNT ARBOR NURSERY. Ht-dgo plants 75c. per thousand lolcsalo or retail. T. E. B , Mocon , lonandoah , Ia. d-2t CHEAP LOTS , -IIM A new addition to the city just laidout ; into BEAUTIFUL LOTS , Located on Hamilton , Charles , and Seward Sts. , ind also on 29th , 30th , list and 32nd streets. Only 5 or 6 blocks west f tfce turn-table of the led Street Oar Line , on launders Street , and just rest of and adjoining ihinn's additions. lakelonrOwn Terms , - ' . * ' , . > > .M ' . . * ' , * - . . . . ; , ' . , ; ' ' - ' : ONLY ' ' i PER'CENT ' DOWN , AND PER GENT PER.MONTH Call and get Plats nd Full Particulars , tBE BE MIS , eal Estate Agency , I5TH