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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1882)
THE DAILY BEE OMAHA SATUKDAY , JUNE IT , 1882 The Omaha Bee.l Pablltbederery morning , except Sunday ha only Monday rnorning dally , XBUMS Bit MAIL - One Vear.910.00 I ThreeMonlha.$3.00 x Months. 0.001 One . . 1.00 THE WEBKLY BEE , pnblWieder ty WodnesdAy. milMS POST PAIDt- OnoTear.$2.00 I ThrooMoolbi. . 50 BUMctth * . . . . 1.00 | One . . 20 AMKBICA.S Nnws COMPANT , Solo Agents or Xcwedoalcra In tlio United States. CORRESroNDENOE All Comtnnn ! attona feinting to KewsnndlSdltorliUtnnt * on should bo addressed to the EDITOU or BUSINESS LETTERS-MI Jjottcru and Hcrnlttftnccn should be nd droMod to THE OMAHA 1'cnusmna Con TANT , OMAHA. Drafts , Checks nnd I'oat /ffico Order * to bo made payable to the rdor of the Company , The BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props ErROSEWATEtt. Editor. Mooting of the Republican Btato Cen tral Committee , The members of the Komibltctn Stnto Central Commlttco of Nebraska mo hereby called lo moot nt the Oonimprclu Hotel , in the city of Lincoln , on Ttuirn day , the Cth day of July , 1882 , at 2 o'clock p , in. , for the purpose of completing tlio organization of tlio committee , nnd Iran nnctlnn such other business us may prop crlv coino before the name. The following nro the members of the committee : 1st District , A. 32. Onntt ! 2J John I . Cnraon ; 3d , Jacob S. DowjIth A. 1' . Groutj fith , It. B. Windhamj ( Hh C. E. Yost ; Cth , 1'iiul Vandcrvoort ; 7th 1) . 13 Beadle ; 8th , Vf. E. rceblcaj 9th , H IJ. Col'on ; 10th , .1. A. Erhnrdt ; llih , J U. I'elbcr ; 12th , W. 1) . Mntthcws ; l th M. Whilmoycr ; llth , Abel Hlllj 15th John Hteen ; 1Mb , It. O. rhlllipn ; lUh C. W. Pierce ; 17th , T. I * . Crawford ; 18th J W.T.Scott ; 10th , J.W. Tiice ; 20th , O 't. \V. Baltzley ; 21 t , Walton I'lekcroll ' 2W , J. B. JlcDowcll ; 23d , d. W. Switter 1' 2Jth , J. J ) . Jinyes ; 20th , A. W. Auee 26th , O. . Willnrd ; 27th , Uobort Ken nedy ; 18th , A. L.vipton ; 20th , B. O Hcdlund ; 30th , G. S. Bishop ) 3lRt. 11. J Wyman. jXill S W. D AWES , Chairman. CriKTU , Neb. . Junn 12. 1R82. Jr i o a fair question , How much per line dooa the market house syndicate cato pay lor machine poetry ? WE have almoat forgotten to men tion that the now market house .will carabine the Indianapolis market 'oys ' torn with several elegant and refined incidentals , with tall towers and town clocks thrown in , T the way , can't ' Somebody bo induced ducod to build another town clock for Omaha ? The last man raised over $ ! )00 ) for a town clock on the high school and after pocketing about $500 loft us the balance to bo used whuro it will do the moat good. A NDMIIEN of notorious monopoly organs throughout tjio ntnto are haul ing in their horns and giving taffy to the farmers * , whoso assistance they need in the impending campaign. The "people will not bo deceived. Papers as well aa candidates must stand by their records. Promises are much cheaper than performances. ' Tun Chicago Times says that "cx- Senator Paddock , of Nebraska , is 1't' mentioned for the presidency of the Utah commission , winch will consist of three republicans and two demo crats. If every one of them isn't per verted to polygamous practices within six months , it will bo ono of the mercies. " SEVERAL years ago Brother Jasper , of llichmond , astonished his congre gation and startled the scientific world by the positive announcement that "do sun do move. " For Homo weeks past a curious people known as the Dunkardshavoboonholding n religious convention in Ohio , and attempting to provo that the world stands still The Dunkards are a sect of Gorman- American Baptists , having a voluntary ministry , & distinctive dress and form of worship , and retaining the most primitive notions of self-government. The last days of the convention seem to have boon devoted to-laying down rules for members , muzzling 'the ' press , and coercing all oppo sition to the decisions of the con ference. Several singular queries were put to the conference and answered for the edification of the church. It was decided to discipline nny brother who spoke disrespectfully of the de liberations of the church , to rofuao fellowship with elders who permitted unholy instrumental music in their meetings , and to deal promptly with any brother who advanced the hereti \t' \ cal idea that ministers ought to bo paid for teaching the everlasting gos * pel. It was all plain sailing until the / ! convention struck a snag in a ques tion from Northeastern Ohio , whiuh requested the opinion of the brethren as to whether it was according to the gospel for a member to buy and aoll stock. That there were precedents forsuoh secular occupation could not bo denied , The patriarchs were accomplished stock dealers and Jacob's shrewd plan for varie gating his profits and his herd was a standing instance of a combination of holiness with the oattlo trade. The question wa , bowovor , so puzzling that the conference decided not to act on it and returned the quary unanswered to the church which sent it. Tlio final resolution of the contoronco pro hibited the holding of Sunday school conventions in the church , after which the body adjourned. It is safe to say that Duukardom will never bo popu lar in Nebraska , It may bo the old time religion but it is a little too unprogressive - progressive for enlightened commu nities. t WANTED A. NEW CHAN- CEI.LUR. The action of the board of regents of the atato university in severing the connection of Chancellor Fairfieh with that institution moots with very general approval throughout the state There is less disposition among ou citizens to discusn the causes whicl have led to the radical change than to concratulnto over the brightening prospect for the university cause o higher education in Nebraska. The university was originally founded a the cap stone t } our common echoo system. Liberally endowed with a magnificent land grant , whic ! is yearly incroaiing in value there was every reason to ex pcct that with ordinary com inon sense management and a ju diclous expenditure of intelligence 01 thopartof thoregontsitwouldsoontak it ] place side by side with the leading educational institutions of sister slatcc No ono who baa watched its cours believes that this ha * been tLo case After years of slow decay tbo univor sily to-day consists of n moderate sized preparatory school , a Bp.irsol ; attended literary course avul a weakly oollogo of agriculture. The few graduates who have taken their diplo nina from the university have cost the state moro than t > vice the sum for which they could have been oducatci at state expense at Harvard , Yale or Princeton , vith ten times better ad vantages and a tenfold better course of instruction. This state o affairs in itself shows gross mismanagement. The fault does no Ho alone with the chancellors. I must be shared by the regents , who have the final determination of all itn portant matters relating to the university sity , Tlio pcoplo of the state have no been disposed , up to the late trouble , to take any active hand in the contro vorsics which distracted the faculty and board of regents. They only recognized the fact that the discipline and course of instruction was suffer- ina severely , and refused to extend their patronage to the institution , with the result of making the state university practically a loc-xl day school { for the ( benefit of such cit izens of Lincoln aa chose to avail themselves of its privi < leges. Public confidence once tier iously impaired cm bo regained with diflluulty. la making the swooping changca determined upon at their last meeting , the rogonto hnvo taken the first stop toward thoroughly roorgan 'zing the university and placing it on iv firm basis for future usefulness. It should now bo their aim to select as the successor of Chancellor Fnirfiold inian who will at once inspire the re spect of the faculty and students and oven the conCdcnco of the state for bo institution over which ho presides. Such men are not easy to find. They are in constant demand. A college irosidont ncods to bo a man of excel- out administrative ability , surpassing ; act , strong character and wall cnown mental attainments. Moro than ill bo should ba an experienced cdn- : ator , fully nlivo to the educational jrogrcss of the times , and with no osnolizod notions- which ho is not rilling to lay naida for others which ho advance of thought suggests as im * irovomonto over the old. While No- jroska is anxious that sectarian con- idoration shall have no weight in the administration of her university , she lesiros both its bead and faculty to ) o men of unimpeachable moral char acter. This is tbo only qualification n a religious sense which our poo- pie will insist shall bo enforced. Thonaino of William T. Harris was mentioned as a successor to Chan ollor Fnirfiold. The nomination s an encouraging ono as mowing the bent of mind of the regents in their search for anew now chancellor Mr. Harris is ono of ho most brilliant and accomplished educators of the day. His connoo tion with tbo St , Louis ( schools and bo University of St , Louis has made lis name a household word in that ally , As a philosopher bo Juads the ittlo band of the followers of Hegel n this country , As a solid writer bo oiua solid argument to a lucid style. Such a man us Mr. Harris would in. iood bo an acquisition to our atato university , and wnilo it is hardly pos- iblo that bo will consider the question ) f becoming u candidate for the olllco , is selection by the board of regents s an earnest that they propose to so- uro u first oluss man for the position. IVith a chancellor of this stamp , a re- > rganized faculty and a revised and raprovod course of instruction would ertainly follow , and public confidence ind public patronaqo would como in heir wako. steamer outbound from New fork is carrying a crowded cabin , flio exodus to Europe from Now York ilono this year will amount to over 300,000 passengers , most of whom uo plwsuro seekers. Watering places ind fashionable summer resorts have wcarae moro expensive than the 'grand tour" which can now bo made hrough a four months trip for less ban ? 1,000. This is much below the u-erago taken out by tourists from Now York. Loiters of ciodit the ) resent yuar are said to average fully ? 2oOO per person , and the entire sum ivhijb will bo expended by the UOO.OOO American visitors to foreign shores is jjtirnated at § 4,400,000 , The American abroad is proverbially an extravagant being. Ho loaves all bis native sharp ness with the steamer , and submits cheerfully to the unblushing imposi tions at the hands of hotel-keepers , tradesmen , guides and servants , And so on an average it costs an American tourist twice as much to make an ordinary European trip aa it does n traveler of any other nation ality. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ THE CITY ADVEBTIBINO. At the last mooting of Iho city council a resolution was introduced instructing the clerk to invite propos als for the city advertising during the coming year , and each bid was to bo accompanied by a sworn statement ol the city circulation of the paper. Councilman Dunham is reported BB op- posslng the clause requiring a state ment of circulation , because such a condition was illegal Upon this plea the council pissed a resolution intro duced by Mr. Dunham that the con tract for advertising bo awarded to the West bidder. Mr. Duulmm is evidently laboring under a delusion. Thcro is no law or ordinance that forbids the osorciao of common busincea discretion on the part of the council in choosing itn advertising medium. In fact there is no law re quiring the council to advertise , except copt the Slocumb law , which express ly directs that the advertising shall bo done in the piper having the largest circulation within thu city or county The only other advertising that is compulsory is the publication of reg istrars to the votera and the hot of voters registered , and the public no tices given to electors calling for spe cial elections or authority to issue bonds. Now vrlm' is the plain pur pose of those compulsory publications' ! Is it not to roach , if possible , Iho lar gest number of citizens or tax-payers through the medium of the proaat Is it not the very first duty of the coun cil , before entering into a contract for advertising , to know whether the bidders have a circulating medium ] If circulation is no object , then the council had better give up advertising altogether , and publish their propo sals and public notices on the doors of the city ball and other public buildinco. It is but na tural that the poorest circulating medium commands the lowest market value for its advertising columns , nnd therefore can underbid the paper that lias the larger circulation. Suppose Mr Dunham wanted to pave Parnam street. Would ho direct .ho clerk to advertise for proposals for iaing Fornain utrcot and agree to lethe ho contract to the lowest bidder with out specifying the materials ? In that : aso the bid for granite pavement irould bo higher than asphalt , and as- ) baltperhap3higbcrthanmacadamand macadam higher than wood , but Mr. Dunham would award the contract to ; ho lowest bidder on tlio ground , that t would bo unlawful to require con- ; ractors to specify what materials ; hcy proposed to uso. And yet there s a greater dilteronco in tbo intrinsic value of Omaha dailies as advertising nediums than thcro is between gran- to and limestone , macadam or wood. Omaha io not the only place where hia question of circulation iguros in the awarding of jity advertising. Two or three weeks go tbo Ban Francisco papers were in- ritod to make proposals for city advcr- if ing on the condition that each bid ihould bo accompanied with a sworn statement of circulation. Several prominent dailies refused to give their circulationa under oath and their bids were thrown out and tbo contract was given to a paper that complied with ; ho conditions. Eyon if the council should not decide to require sworn statements ot circulation it la their plain duty under the Slocumb law to dose so as often as there are applications on file for liquor licences. They have no right to take it for granted that the paper that bad tbo argnst circulation last year continues : o have it and will continue it lor years to come. Suppose THE llr.i ; md fallen elf and other papcra were ahead of it in circulation , would it bo ogal to compel applicants to ndvor- tiso in TUB DUB during an indefinite > oriod ? PKAUK between labor and capital will do much to insure the prosperity of the country. Every war liku the > rcsont makes a lasting truce all the moro desirable. OTHER LANDS THAN OURS The bloody riots at Alexandria have irousod Turkey to prompt action. CVo thousand troops uro ou their nay ram Constantinople , Arabi Boy has been notified that the Khedive will bo protected , the government restored , ind that Turkish rule must remain supremo. The total number of casu alties among Europeans resulting from ho late riots is placed at sixty-seven. ? ho British , Greek and Italian consuls iroro seriously wounded and fifty Christians killed by the mob in tbo troot. While this outbreak has tbo ippoaratioa , of being a street riot bo- ween clusscaimbitterod by recent ex iting events , it is undoubtedly raocablo to tbo intrigues of Vrabi Puaha and bis Cuuspiratora igainst the Khedive , and the trouble ff&r , in all likelihood , inaugurated by hojtrcacheroufl war minister , as the Kcliminary scene in a plot to maze are - ro the Egyptian ruler and take pos session of tbo government. Arab Pasha has been engaged for months in A deep laid plot to ftlionato the troops from their allegiance , and by the basest treachery has sought to overthrow the Khcdivo Whllo kissing the hand of his superior , and professing undying loyalty to him , ho was at the same instant distilling the poison that was to destroy him , Dervisch Pasha , the Turkish commis sioner , understands the ambitious in triguer thoroughly. At hia appointee conference Derritch Pasha received him , Arabi Pasha , with a stiff bow , and immediately directed his secreta ry to rehearse the story of the massacre - cro of Mamelukes by Mehomot Ali , an action which expressed more forcibly tban direct words bis opinion that Arabi Boy contemplates the slaughter of tbo Khcdivo and the seizure of the government after the manner of Me hornet Ali. Michael Davitt has announced what ho calls his programme for the perma nent relief of Ireland. This is noth ing less than Henry George's wild theory of the government ownership of land. Mr. Davitt would have the British government purchase outrighl the whole real property of Ireland al an outlay of about seven hundred million dollars. When the land has been purchased ho would have it rented to Irish tenants , the rental to bo paid by handing over a certain percentage on the annual harvest. The proposition baa not been favor ably received by Irishmen generally. Up to this time the Irish fanners have been contending for a personal ownership of the lands they occupy , The avowed object of the Land League has been to bring about such an ownership , but this object Mr. Davitt now repudiates and would have the land made the property of uocioty without the intervention of individ ual land holders , be they largo or Bmall. The experience of mankind is ngainst the principle which underlies Mr. Davitt'a newly adopted theory. The further indfid- uals and societies are removed from government interest ? , and the larger the latitude of personal interest , just so much surer are the safeguards of solf-rulo. The French revolution woo indirectly the result of the cvila which arc crushing Ireland to-day Immense estates were blotted out of existence by the tor- routs of blood which flowed through the kingdom , and every citizen became - came the owner of as much land aa he could pay for or as he could give guar antees to pay for in a reasonable time. Twenty millions of land-owners were created at once out of an equal number bor of tenants , who had been merely serfs. To-day France OWOB bor won derful prosperity to her peasant pro prietorship , and the possession of property in the bauds of the million has oJU'jgred a stability of government \vhicu"iiatcB .her the envy of bor neighbors. Mr. Davitt'a plan will not aland against the old time policy of the land league , and wo are much mis taken if ho gains many supporters for his theory among his host of friends in America. The suit brought by the municipal ity of Marseilles against the ex- empress of the Froncli has been won by the defendant , who "goto a verdict , with costs. Tbo unit was brought in order to recover possession of a large tract of land presented by the city to the emperor in 1854 , as the silo for the construction of an imperial palace. In the papers Eugene was described as "the widow Bonaparte , of no occupa tion. " It was contended that the town gave the land , not to Louis Na poleon personollVi but to him as the chief of the state , and that when the empire fell the contract implied in the gift was at an and. The court decided in Eugenia's favor en the following grounds : The gift and its acceptance constituted u contract , tho' only con dition of which was that his majesty should use the ground and build a palnco upon it. This condition was fulfilled to the letter ; the palace was reared at the emperor's pouonal cost ; it had been inhabited and vas still habitable. It was cited , also , that by the sequestration commission - mission decided that appointed on the fall of the empire Iho lauds and buildings in question were included among the omperor'o per sonal property. Before tbo action was begun , it is auid that the ex- smprcsu ollorod to give the palace and grouuda \ the city of Marseilles pro vided they wore employed as an orphanage - phanago and school for the children jf deceased soldiers. This ollor the sorporation rejected. The progress of German ( . Q'arts to win over frcm their French sympa thies the inhabitants of Alsace-Lor raine appears to bu aa slow ai ever it ivaa and as ineffectual. Ten years lave really done but little with tbo ; rcat moss of the people , whatever > lso it may have done in outward 'orms and appearances. No better sample of this has of late occurred ; han a motion whtob tbo represonta- ion of those Provinces in the Gorman : eiohstag recently gave notice of tbzir ntention to introduce. By tl is mo. ion they declare that in future such if their number who do not speak jcrmau shall ba allowed to address ho reichstag in French. Imagine Prince Bismarck sitting there and bearing his measures opposed in tbo lanpuago of the conquered country ! ThcBo presumptions Alaaco-Lorrainos also ask that tbo dictatorship in their couitry bo now abolished. Vain thought , not while representatives ask to speak French in the roichslag shall Ibis bo done. The official semi-annual statement concerning the Gorman universities furnishes some interesting facts. It shows that the entire teaching staff in the twenty-one universities wilhin tbo limits of the empire number 1,815 persons. In all the universities there are four faculties , of divinity , law , medicine and phylosophy , including literature. There is also a faculty of social and political sciences at Wurz * borg and Munich , of economical science at Munich and Tubingen , of natural Ecionco also at Tubingen , and a faculty of mathematical and physi cal ecioncED at Stmburg. It is also to bo noted that there is n faculty of Protestant divinity at sovonttwn uni versities and of Catholic divinity at seven. The total number of divinity students is 102 , of whom 141 belong to Protestant faculties and 51 to the Catholic. In the strength of the sev eral faculties Berlin stands preeminent nent , except in law , where Munich has the largest body of professors. It is nndcrstood by a leading liber al journal of England that "informa tion of a most serious character , af fecting Iho lives of more than ono well-known politician at present in London , is in the bands of the au thorities , and that renewed vigilance on the part of the police has been de manded. " The same paper adds that it refrains , for obvious reasons , from publishing the names of the persons menaced , but it adds that meanwhile the residence of every minister of the crown in the city is carefully guarded by the police , while the ministers thomaolvca are escorted to and from the houses of parliament by con stables in plain clothes. THE liquor law of Russia is very comprehensive and easily understood. There is no "local option" about it , but the czar decrees that there shall bo no moro tlmj ono drink shop in any Russian village , and where two or three villages are near together , one drink shop shall su co for all. The conductor of the establishment is ap pointed by the common conncil and paid a salary. Ho receives no other pecuniary profit bceides hissalrry , and must also sell food and wares ; ho is liable to a fine , dismissal and oven im prisonment if ho allowB any man or woman to got drunk ou his preinisoo. In the event of the inhabitants be coming notoriously drunken and dis orderly , tbo communal authoritico are to prohibit the ana of liquors entirely in that district or village for as long a time as they cliall ace fit. Thcro is no poor law or work huuso in Germany , and the number of street b egars is on n steady increase. During 1881 no leas than 32,302 beg gars were nrrcBtcd in Berlin , against 27,202 for 1880. Of these beggars 30,040 were malen , and only 1882 fe- malea , and 1003 children were under 12 years of ago. Only < > 25 of these beggars were condemned to imprison ment in a house of correction. A largo number of these are protossional beggars , and it has been estimated by the governor of the house of correction that the minimum collections of such beggars equals 41 cents a day , and the maximum 9G a day. This exceeds the wages of the most skillful mechanics in that country. Beer of Gorman manufacture bca for some time past boon convoyed in largo quantities by steamer from Adriatic ports to Aden and other towns In Arabia , but so fond have the na tives bccomo of the beverage that a temperance movement has boon started in various parts of Southern Arabia. The religious authorities have been prominent in furthering the agitation. At Muscat it is said that all tlio moBquos have publicly condemned Gorman beer , and pronounced dire ful future punishment on all who par take of it. Tbo sultan , however , per mits Jews and Hindustanecs to cell the drink on condition that the object is medicinal. TJu number of the sick lias accordingly increased in very per ceptible proportions. Ltnd in corn-growing parts of Eng land is falling oil' in value. A small Estate in one of the eastern counties , which four years ago was valued at $125,000 , was put up at auction three weeks ago , and the highest price odor- i.d for it was $15,000. It comprises 100 acres , and was bought in by the irua eo" . It is said that in the same part of England much arable land is running to waste for want of capital o pay for the labor which it requires. M'o farming except grazing and dairy 'arming is said now to pay for the jutlays. Opium kills about 160,000 persons mnually in China. Complaints have of late year * been jften made in Germany of the fast in- : reaso of short-siqbtodncss umong , 'ouiif , ' people at school , and similar mes are now beard in France. A com- uitteo appointed to investigate thu inttor have reported that the cause of ho evil lies in the school books , which ira printed in fine typo on white pa- > or. They suggest that larger-facod typo bo employed hereafter , and tha white letters bo printed on tinted pa per. Tchornaielf , who succeeds tha lat General Kauffmnn as governor o Turkestan , is , like him , a good fighter and , besides , a shrewd , diplomatic in triguor. Ho was Russia's representative tivo in Scrvia when she rovoltoc against Turkey in 1877 * and led ho armies against these of the sultan The revolt gave Russia tbo donlree opportunity to interfere , and brough on the war between her and Turkey The number of holidays in Russia io about ICO a year. The holy synot 13 wisely considering a reform by to ducing this largp waite of time , which is really a loss of nearly 200 wokring days in a year. BOURBON BLASPHEMY. A Lincoln Democrat Rises Up to Cuss the Miller-Morton Monopoly. LINCOLN , Nob. , June 15. To the Editor of Tlio lice ! It is well understood hero IhaV th Omaha Herald ia owned , body am breeches , by the Union Pacific rail road and Dr. Miller is ready at al times to fall down and worship at tin foot of Jay Gould and Sidney Dillon and if cither ono of them were nnuff takers the dear old doctor would have long ago sneezed bis bead off. Am it is equally as well understood in this neck o1 woods that J. Starllmr Morton is Iho paid attorney of the B. & M railroad. And between these two great democratic lights the dumocrati party baa been badly sold out , am the party in this county foe that this is B ? and in rank and file are ready to join any anti-monopoly move that promises a success , no matter who loads or where it comes from. The republican party as it now stands is controlled by the railroads , and the democratic party might take advantage of this fact and win a victory this fall if proporlyman aged , but who can expect such a thing wnen the chairman of our state cen tral committee is paid by the year for no other purpose than to defeat our own ticket , and the leading organ of tha party receives from $1,000 to $5- 000 a month from the U. P. railroad for printing , etc. The time has come when the railroad managers cannot arrange for the vote of the party oven though Dr. Miller's Omaha Herald and Mr. Morton , the chairman of our state committoeo. I know that I do not exaggerate when I soy that three fourths of the democratic votn polled for the anti-monopoly ticket ( republi can or democratic ) is n. aquure-tocd ticket as placed in the Afield , and the other one fourth will bo paid riitroad employes or directly under their con trol. I have talked with hundreds 113 ? oed democrats aa over voted for- Seneral Jackson , and I know that they have been led by the nose as long as they will aland it. When Dr. Miller can defend a corrupt republi can lieutenant governor simply bo- cauho ho is a Union Pacific tool , it Is high timn that something was done. Our organization is in the hands of the monopolists , and our only hope ia in a new organization , aud wo look to tbo anh-monopohats , republicans and democrats , for relief. DEMOCRATIC READKR. Hornford's AoldlPhosphato is a ecicntifio preparation of the phoa phate , BO combined as to bo readily taken into and absorbed by the sys tem. Pamphlet sent free. Rumford Chemical Works , Providence , R. I. junol3d&wlw Sherman's Speech. At the closing exorcises at West Point , General Sherman said , in part : "As general I welcome you into the brotherhood. To meet the senator I will say : Don't drink ; don't gamble. Some of us in Now York and Wash ington are inclined to look do.vn on ofhcors way out in Arizona , but they can give us examples of gentlemanly bearing. I have visited nearly all the posts of the army , and I find the olli- cers carry with them refinement , edu cation aud sobriety , and the last is what makes promotion so slow. I am now sixty-two. I am in favor -of giving the young men a cluince , and I am ready to re- tiro. Senator Harrison speaks of otlicera court-martialed and appealing to the senate. I nnd most army ollicors would favor the establishment of a court of appeals to sit on court- martial cases whoBo decision should be final. I notice a now thing in the list of this class that the lirat three or four men came from 'tho west' This shows the growth of this country. You nro hero in the ThermopyJ.u , the gate way of commerce. Tnero will bo plenty of work for you. If there aio no Apaches and Sioux , there are stage robbers and cowboys. Yourwoik will not bo done until all men are broth ers. " Buckling Arnica Salve. The UKST SALVK in the world for Cnti Bruises , Sores , Ulcers , Salt lUieuin , Fa ver Sores , Tetter , Chapped Hands , Chll Maine , Corns , anil all ukln eruptions , and positively cures vilea. It is guurun'eed ' to give Hativfactfon or money refunded. I'rlce , 25 cents per box. For Bale by 0 , F. Goodman LftlPEBISHABLE PERFUME. Murray & Lanman's FLOBIDA WATER _ , n nrriiiiaiMiaiiMMIH mtmmmtm mmmm mMfmmr Best fir.TOILET. BATH and HANDKERCHIEF. CHOICE CIGARS , Imported niid Domestic. < Fiuost Selection in Town. Prices to Salt Everybody. From Half a. Dollar Down to fio. Schroter & Becht's , THE IcCALLUM WAGON BOX RACKS , WEIGHT ONLY 100 IBS , Can Be Handled By a Boy. The l > ax need nc cr lie t\Uen nil the nazon and all the > belled Grain and Grass Seed Is Saved I It csstolcii thin tin oM sl\lo racks. Eicry standard-nagon la told 1th our rack complo.o BUY NONE WITHOUT IT. Or buy tlio attachments and ftpp'v thorn lo j our old wson box. For Bale In Nulirajkaby J. C. CLA\K. I/ncoln. MANKtKoft HRM , 0 < cnha , FRKD WKUPR , ( Irand Island. HAOOLFTT & attiKt , llftit ii n. CIIAIIUH fccimoDrrn , Coltimbui. SPANOULR& FUNK , lied Cloud. fit 0. II. CIUNK & Co. , Hod Oak , lana. tW , Itusspii , ( lomvoa' ! , lo\v And overv first cl 8 dealer In the M cst. A k them for dcaurlptUo circular or cond dlroct tout. J , MoOalhim Bros , Manuf'g ' Do. , Office , 21 AV'est Lalco Street , Chicago. 75,000 TIW1KEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW IjN USE- They rarpa s ail othcM chicles for oisy rldlnir. ttylo and durability , SPEINGS , GEAEl & BODIES For sale by Henry Timken , Patentee nii'lBulldpr of Flno Carrlu a 1003 , 0:8aml 1010 St. CharlM St. , St. LJUS. CaU- ogiioi liir.iNicJ. JlJ'tn MONITOR OILSTOVE Improved lor 1882. THE BEST AND ONLY ABSOLUTELY SAFE OIL STOVU IN THE WORLD. Every housekeeper fools the want of something that will cook the doily rood andavoidtheoxcossivoheat , dust , ilter and ashes of a coalorwoodstovo. IHE MONITOR OIL STOVE WILL DO IT , better , quicker and cheaper -ban any other moans. It is the ON LY OIL STOVE made with the OIL RESERVOIR ELEVATED at the jack of the stove , awayfrom the heat ; jy which arrangement ABSOLUTE SAFETY is secured ; as no gas can ho generated , fully twenty per cent more icat is obtained , the "wicks are pre served twice as long , thus saving the .rouble of constant trimminc and the jxpenso of now ones. EXAMINE HIE MONITOR and you will buy no Hher. Manufactured only by the Honitor Oil Stove Go , Cleveland 0 , Send tor descriptive circular or call > n M. Rogers & Son , agents for No- iraaka. Nebraska National' BANK. OF OMAHA NEBKASKA ( No. 2C05. ) TKIJA UllY DIU'AUTMKNT. } OIHce Cf OOMrtHOLlKR OF TIW CDRRKKCT , V WA-IIINOIOI , Aptll 26th 18U2. ) \VuxRBis , by satluUctory evldoiico presented to the iiiidtrs | fne < l , It i a > brtri inailo to appear hat'TjK " -KlWASKA.VAnO.fAI. HANK OF ) MAIlA"in tha city of Omaha , In the county of Jouglu , and btato of Nebraska , ha ? comullod vltli nil the provisions c.l tliellovlsad Statues of he United htalci required to bo compiled with jefoie an auotlatlon shall bu authorized to com- ucnco the bu tiusn of lUnlilnu ; Now , therefore , / , John J y Knot. Comptroller it thu Currency , do hereby certtlv that "Tho Nebraska Nil loiul Bank ol Omaha , " lu the city if Omaha , In tha c mnty of Douglas , and ctato if Ncbratki , la nuttiorUul to toramenie the mslucsj of UinLin ai worldod In Section Fifty Juo Hundred and blxty-.Mne of tbo Ilevlsod lUtutesot tlio United Btatca. In testimony whereof wltnais my f - ) hand end * eal of otllco tbla 26th SEAL. \ day of April X-82. ( - 1 JOHN JAV KNOX , . Comptroller of the Currency Ins above Dank la now prepared to receive ) uslncbs It commuiitcs with a fully pa d up * ptal of f 250,000.00 , with olucereand directors ( followu : 1. U. JOHNSON , I'aieiDKMT. cf Steele , John. son Co. . Whnlctafe Oroccra. I , K , TOU2ALIN , Vioi'I'BEHBKiiT , of 0. IJ. &Q , 11. II. , IJonton. V. V. MOUSE , ot W. V.Morwand Co , , Whole. eilo Hoots and Hhoco. NO. S. COLLINS , of O , II , i J. a. Colllm. . . . Wholfa le Ijcathwr nd S ddlery. AXIE3 I ! . Woolivorui , Counsellor and Attorney . .EW1S 8. IIBBD , of B > rou need A Co. , Real Iistateloiloi6 1ENUY W. VATES. Cibhler , lata Cashier of thi 1 lr > t National Hank of Omaha , and connected with the active oic.naire- inent of that liauk blnto IU organ' Itatlon In 1HCS. LifoTlmts nd Tronoboroui ITriltn by hW tiionlyllfdauthoilzedbyher , and which willet ot be a "Blood and Thunder" story , luih M bai eenx.nl will uu published , but a true Ue by 10 oaly p rson % ho Is lu p > ( cj > lon ol the facts -a fit hml and UmoJoJ wile. Tiuth li niora itcroitiui ; thaa fiction. Agunta ihould apply ir territory at one Send 75 ct . for earn. loUook. J.H.Oliamljor &Co. , , mauve do 3Ni/An / 3jpu | , oj iiiJi.i3U | jo