THE OMAHA BEE. Omalm OfTloo , No. O1O FArnnm Bt. Council IHuff * omco.aNo. 7 Pearl Street , Near Unmtlwnjr. Now York ONlec , Hoom OR TrUiuno Published every n-nrmnx , oicepl Bund * ) ' Th oni > Uosa ytnornlordMI | ) . MrfS M MitU Oa Yenr . 110.00 I Throe Month ) . 9X00 SltMontns . * M | Ono Month . LOO Per Week , 25 Cants. TDl VIKLT * t , rO U llP XV M WMX1SBIT. nut * rosrf AID. On T r . . $2.W | Three Uonthi . t M 81i Months. . . . . . . . . 1.00 | One Month . 20 American Stir * Company , 8oleJ > gtBtiNew < le l enlnlhsUBlUdSUU * . A Ooramunlattloni r l tlnif to K ws and Kdltorl&l mitttn thould be * ddrr jed to the Eoiroa or Tin mi. ttmiKXM Lirnu. ] All Bu ! ne tiettorl nd llemltUnoos should lie ttdrmMdtoTninn Pctutmiia CoMrmr , OMAHA- Drafts , Chock * and I'ostofflca order * to b ma < le pay bl to the order o ( the company. f HE BEE PUBLISHING GO , , PROPS , B. ROSBWATBB. Editor. A. It Fitch. * t n gcr.D lly Crcul tlon , r. O. IJox -493-Ora h , Neb. SP.XATOU MANPKUSON hai bcon heard from. JAY GOULD has gene to Cuba to intro duce his mouso-trap. INASMUCH na it is proposed to suspend the coinage of silver , wo move to indefin itely poatpono the building of the Omaha biuuh mint. MAJOII Strrp.it aloppod ovnr too much when ho informed congrojn that ho had no use for another bridge between Omaha and Council lilufla. Tin : republican state convention of Iowa , to bo hold at Dos Moincs , April . ' ! 0th , will bo nuito a formidable body. It bo composed of 017 dislocates. TIIK twelve city detectives have not yo t found a clue to the porpotiator of the n ! logod outrage on District Attorney God win , and it ia safe to say that they never will. SKNATOU VJUI\VYOK paid his compli mcnts to Sutor bcforu the committee on commerce in n niuunor which thoroughly exposed the arrant hypocrisy of the rip- rapper in St. Lout ) . SIDNEY DILLON lias boon vindicated by lua old "pards" at the old stand , and the usual quarterly dividend on the watered a took of the old credit mobilor monopoly has boon doolnrod. Tin : Now York independents are worrying a great deal over the "next Chicago cage platform. In the chaeto language of the late General Strickland , it ia nol morals wo are fighting for , but votes. TUB editorial correspondent of the Omaha Jtcpubllcan predicted from Washington that Senator Mandorson'a bridge bill would bo slaughtered in the committee. As uaual ho didn't know what ho was talking about. TAI.I.V one for Senator Mnndorson. His efforts to convince the committee on commerce that a oocond bridge across the Missouri between Omaha and Council Bluffs was necessary for public conven ience have proved eminently successful. Hii. VALKNTINK'H organist may possess hia soul in patience. There were no telegraph operators in the plot to divulge the Valentino dispatch about the circuit judgcahip and senatorial succession. Our informant was a gentleman from No- raaha who parts hia hair in the middle. Perhaps ho invented the dispatch , but wo don't believe ho did. If his employ ers at the Union Pacific headquarters in sist upon discharging him , wo shall bo bo sorry , but wo can't help it. ONLY four wookn remain before the city election , and it is high time for our people to consider the qualifications o ; candidates for tho.city council. Unless the bettor class of citizens exert thorn- Bolvoa and take more interest in munici pal affairs than they usually' do , there will bo no improvement in the organiza tion of the city government. What Omaha needs and must have in the city council arc men who have property in1 toreots , and who are honest and cnpablo and poaaeasod of business qualifications men who will serve the interests of the poor as well as the rich. Wo hope that such men will consent to become candl dates , oven if it requires some personal sacrifice on their part. Unless they dee o , our city politics will continue to be ' run by the ward bummers and hood * lunu. It is about time that some demon stration should bn made in this city to show that the respectable clement ol society ii in the majority. TUEIIB are quite a number of Mexican veterans In Iowa and Nebraska who will be pleasnd to learn that the Moxicanpon- ion bill has pasted the home. The op petition to it in the tonata will arisa from tbtf fact that two-thirds of the Mexican Veterans are ox-confederates. A similar bill passed both hou e in 1877 , but was reconsidered and defeated in the senate , owing to the fact that it put Jefferson 0. Davis on the pension roll It wa during the debate over this bill that Zioh. Chandler mode hU memorable and last oeech. Tbo bill , as it pusvd the homo , will again put the ex-president of the con federacy on the pension roll , but the probability is that ho will noC live long ncu U ia draw his petition , as ho ia now over Mventy-Cvt > years old. BuaiJea , ho i does not iiood the petition , at ho has boon well proridod for by the will of the widow jUeauvoir , who loft him an estate worth . We should not be mrpritud , to a ihe bill defeated by the ualew an amendment is made to Divit ud others who have wet ran After n protracted struggle the sound ? committee on commerce has unanimously ngrcod to report in favor of Senator Man- demon's bill granting n charter for the construction of a railway nnd wngon bridge between Omaha and Councit Bliifl's. This insures the passage of the bill 'through the senate. Unless some unforsoon obstacles are encountered the bill will pass the house and become a law at the present session. Great credit is duo to both of our senators for this al most unexpected success. No atone wan loft unturned by the cmii arieso the existing bridge monopoly to' defeat this competing project. The first effort in that direction was the attempt to smother the bill in the circumlocution office , oth ornriso known ns the wan department. Under the regulations governing the construction of bridges over naviga- bio streams it is customary to sub mit the propositions to the war depart ment for suggestions from the engineers in charge of river improvements. In common with a number of other bills , proposing to charter the construction of several bridges on the Missouri river between twoon St. Louis and Sioux City. Sena tor Mandorson's Omaha bridge bill was referred to the secretary of war nnd by him through the engineer department to Major Sutor , who is in charge of the Mississippi and Missouri river improve ments , with headquarters at St. Louis. Now Major Sutor had made a report less than two years ago on a similar bill , in troduced by Senator Saundorn and ho could have readily reported back his views within n few days. There certain ly had been no great change in the con dition of the river at Omaha since his last report , nor had the navigation of the Missouri assumed such a magnitude as to require a revision of his ideas about the obstruction to navigation and the dimensions which bridges at this point should have in order to moot his approval. But ho kept the bill for weeks nnd months until finally the urgent roquestofournonatorsbroughthimtotimo , When Sutor'a report was finally trans milled to the sonata committee through the war department it was found to bo most outrageously partial. In the first place Major Sutor , who had only two years ago given his approval of the pro posed construction of a second bridge nt Kansas City , had suddenly como to the conclusion it was very improper to grant a charter for n second bridge between Omaha and Council Bluffs , for fear ol obstructing navigation. Major Sutor knows that fifty boats run between St. Louis and Kansas City where ono goes up the river boyand Omaha. * Hut there may bo two bridges ut Kansas City , while Omaha must bo content with ono. In thu next place Major Sutur , who knows very well how impraotfcablo it would bo to construct a high wagon bridge at this point , expressed grave objections to low draw-bridge , nnd then dusirod congress - gross to impose the condition in the charter that the draw should not bo less than tbroo hundred foot in each span Tho.bridgo at Kansas City is only one hundred nnd sixty foot span , nnd Sutur had , at the samn time thai ho required throe hundred feet at Omaha , expressed himself satisfied with two hundred foot spans at Rule , way below Omaha. To impose upon Omaha the condition of putting in a throe hundred foot span was virtually to defeat the whole bridge Bohomo , as no capitalists would venture to construct any such bridgo. It is very seldom that n committee - too of congress overrules the recommendations dations of the army engineers , but Major Sutor'a letters were DO outrageously biased that our senators , after n thorough exposure of the unreasonable and unfair requirements , succeeded in obtaining the unaaimou1 mpport of the committee in faror of the ono hundred nnd sixty foot span draw-bridgo , which Is to bo located one-third of a railo north of the Union Pacific bridge , which will bring the crossing somewhere in the vicinity of the foot of Douglas street. There is no doubt that the construction of this bridjo will provo a great benefit to both Omaha nnd Council Bluffs , us the present facili ties for intercourse between the two cities nro utterly inadequate to the demands ol the public , and the accommodations nro anything but satisfactory. ARK WnOLESALURS JlXEMPTi At its last mooting the board of educa tlon diaeuaaed the propriety of enforcing the collection of 81,000 per annum from the wholesale liquor dealers. A com mi t too was appointed to take this matter under advisement and report at the ncxl mooting. Inasmuch as the efficiency ol our schools must depend upon the moans which the board of education has at its command , it becomes a matter of busi ness with the board to see to it that every dollar which rightfully belongs to the school fund from Guos and licenses shoulc bo collected. Before the high license law went into effect every wholesale liquor dealer was compelled to take out a license and pay ? 100 per annum , just the tame aa any retail dealer. For the past two years and a half those concerns have not paid a dollar , There is no re spectable lawyer , whoso opinions are worth quoting , that will contend for moment that the present law exempts any dealer in liquor from the penalties for failure to take out a liconso. There is not the slightest distinction made in the statute between the man who retails . liquor by the glass and the dealer who sells it by the barrel , If there is any hardship by imposing a tax of 81,000 a year upon li quor dealers , it falls much inoro heavily upon those who have but very small cap iUl with which to carry on their biuinesi , while the wholesale dealer is amply able to pay ( his tax. It is said that a decision has been rendered at some time in one of our lower courts in which it was ruled that the wholesale dealers nro not includ ed in the provisions of the Slocumb law. 3uch n decision would not stand the test in the courts of Judges Neville and Wnkoloy , and much less in the supreme court of this stato. Section 11 of , the law regulating the sale of liquors , roads as follows ! "All persons who shall sollfor give away , upon any pretext , malt , spirituous , or vinous liquors , or any intoxicating drinks ] without first having complied with the t provisions of this act , and obUinod a license 1 as heroin sot forth , hall for each ofTonso bo deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction , shall bo fined or imprisoned - prisoned , tc. ' Now , wo should like to know how any judge i or lyiy court can hold that the sale of liquor without license is legal under any circumstances. As a matter of fact our wholesale dealers have laid themselves liable to n line for every bill of goods that they have sold since the law wont into effect. They have fared very leniently indeed , nn the city author ities have ignored the statutory provi siena in their case , but wo do not believe that it will bo to their intcsost to con tinuo the traffic contrary to law much longer. The board of education has duty to perform in this matter in behalf of the public. The city school fund has already lost fully § 25,000 by the non-en forcement of the law. Twonty.fivo thou sand dollars would have built us two elegant school homos , and the hundreds of children that are now hud died together in overcrowded rooms , or kept away from school entirely for want of accommodations , -would have been very comfoitably provided for. Wo need moro school facilities , nnd yet our taxes nro so high in view of pavements , erago , nnd other public improvements monts , that the council would hardly bo justified in raising the school tax. The trouble in Omaha is that our public officials are too timid when the performance of their duty brings them in conflict with the inter ists ot a rich and influential class like the wholesale liquor dealers , brewers und dis tillers. HOT TJ.VK.I IN HOT SPRINGS. There ore quite n number of people in Omaha and vicinity who have visited the Hot Springs of Arkansas to receive the benefits of the curative powers of the famous springs , for rheumatism and other ills to which human flesh is heir. To those who have resided at the Hot Springs for any length of time the excit ing incidents of that place for the lust few weeks no doubt possess considerable interest. Certain it is that no place in the country has attracted BO much atten tion and occupied so much apace in the telegraphic dispatches. All the trouble Rooms to have originated botwocn two factions of gamblers , ono party beiiij. headed by Flynn , nnd the other by Major Doran , each of whom had "killed his man" several times ovor. Flynn was an old resident of Hot Springs , having lived thorj tan years. lie was n boss gambler , owning a largo establishment , and in addition to his other accomplish ments ho was a shrewd politician and noted desperado. Doran some few months ago had the audacity to como from Now Orleans to Hot Springs , with thd avowed intention of opening tv rival gambling house , but to this enterprise Flynn objected. A division in the ranks of the sporting fraternity was the result , some enrolling themselves under the banner of Flynn , and others entitling under the standard of Doran. Open hostilities were commenced ono day by Dorau firing at Flynn without effect. The next encounter was decidedly moro Borious. Doran and n band of picked followers opened fire with Winchester rifles on Flynn and his inti mate associates as they were driving through the street in a carriage , and killed two or throe of the party , as well as wounding several innocent persons Flynn , however , oacapnd uninjured. The Flynns and Dor&ns were both arrested , and the town , thrown into the most in tense excitement , passed into the control of n law and order committee of citizens. The details of this succession of exciting events of lawlessness nnd bloodshed were given to the country through dispatches sent out by the associated press ngont , Moaoa 0. Harris , who is charged with highly coloring his telegrams in the in terest of the Flynn faction. It tnat Flynn owned the Daiti7orsesir > e , of which Harris was the editor. A prominent citizen of Omaha , who ia now taking daily b iths in the healing waters of Hot Springs , has sent us a copy of the opposition paper , the Hot Springs Dally News , which has for its motto , in big capital letters under its head , the following sentiment : "Speaking as the spirit moves in ; trusting in God , the purity of our intention , the justice of our cause , and our own right arm. " The News is evidently the great religious daily of Hot Springs , and the organ ol the law and order element. In view , however , of the recent occur' ' nmcos , we would suggest a brief er and moro pointed motto for that sheet , namely "Trust in God , nnd keep your powder dry. " The copy ol J the .Al'uu which has boon sent us , is a I 'half ' ! sheet , 5 p , m- edition , " It had been evidently gotten out to fire a parting shot at Mose ( ( arris , Jho unfortunate editor of the uuluoky Jforw Shoo. The .A'cwa exultingly makes the crushing- nouncmmmt : ixw His COUNTUY'H GOOD. Harris , the editor of the Jlorse and the agent of the Associated 1'remi at this plaoo , who lias so wilfully mid maliciously villifiodour boat citizens and misrepresented facts , was escorted to the train tliU afternoon by the chief of police , through orders from the citizens' committee , to go hence and return o more , " Poor Moso U now a frieodlui wander- or upon the face of the earth , and the daily Jlomo Shoe has sus pended publication. Thus has the 'air fame of Hot Springs boon vindi- cntcd , and the ATcwa i * on top by A largo majority. It proceeds to take < ad' vantage of its victory by boldly announ cing that Hot Springs will no longer tolerate erate the presence and avocation of fa- drs , pickpockets , and thugs who have p long made that famons resort n "holy terror. " The Jfcirt charges the Jlorse Shoe with being run in the interest of this class , and that it is owned by thorn. The police authorities , backed by the bott , citizens . , says * ho exultant News , are rid ding the city , quietly but effectively , of fakirs , pimps , bunco atcorors , nnd pick1 pockotfl , but it does not say n word against the gamblers. Under those cir cumstances Hot Springs will bo very materially depopulated for a while at loastbut , in the Inneuago of thojVct/vi , lot the good work of renovating go on un til the end is accomplished , as "these healing waters heaven's host boon to suffering humanity must bo placed at the service of the nations , and those who seek their life-giving influence must bo shielded from demons in human garb , " and following the utterances of thouVetcs the citizens , committee makosthis ) public announcement : "To whom it may con' ' corn : Gambling is prohibited in all its forms. Fakirs and oharpcrs returning after being once run out will bo tarred and feathered. Quack doctors and their drummers will bo treated as fakirs. Vi sitors who have bcon wronged are re quested to report their cases to the committee mittoo , who will son that no harm is done thorn. " The citizens' committee has un doubtcdly hit upon the most effective ro mcdy. Quacks , fakirs and sharpers would ratner take their .ciinncos of mak ing a living elsewhere than to bo tarred and fuathorod. Hot Springs is too hot for thnm. ASOTIIKH cold-blooded murderer has escaped the gallows , owing to the CUB tomary leniency of the jury. Raid , the man tried at Beatrice for the deliberate murder of his wife , has boon let down with a verdict f manslaughter. The in consistency of the vurdict is shown by the fact that nearly everybody expected n conviction in the first degree or an ac quittal on the ground of insanity. The jury , not believing him insane , found him guilty of manslaughter , notwithstanding the fact that the evidence wont to show , that , if ho was sane , the killing of his wife was a dolibcrato murder. KKXNBTII RAYKOU , solicitor of the treasury , died on Wednesday. Ho it was \\lio excited the wrath of the Rlrong minded by delivering an adverse opinion upon the application of Capt. Mury Miller - lor for n license us steamboat master. Ii view of the fact ihat the woman sufirn- } iats have assembled in Washington this week , the death of Raynor is not at nl surprising. The poor man thought it was hotter to die than face their res olutions. Tin : Lincoln Journal is slightly pro premature in its obituary of District At torney Godwin. Mr. Godwin atil lives , and will not bo ready for a post mortem for several days. He may yet outlive the editor of the Journal , unless ho is assaulted were murderously than boforo. Senator Van Wyok Declines. The Nebraska. . City Proas of a recent date contains the following lotlor , which explains itself : U. S. SH.VATI : , WASHINGTON , 1) . 0. , ) l-'ubiuury liUtb , 1881. f Kdltor Vrosa : Dear Sir : By your paper received to day my name b mentioned in connection with the delegation from Nebraska to the national convention at Chicago in J uno. When spoken to heretofore on the same matter I have stated distinctly that' I would not consent that my name should bo used for that purposes , I believe that the delegation should bo made of now men entirely ; that the delegation in congress had been sufticiontly honored ; that there were many men throughout tlio statt ) who had boon candidates for positions in the Uiii ted SUtos senate and house of ropreson. tutivcs who would bo pleased vith the recognition. Besides thea * othora fresh from the people , without any of the prejudices which naturally gather around , the somewhat cloudy atmosphere at the national capital , could bolter give oxi > re sion to the desires of thu republicans cans of the state. Very respectfully yours , 0. H. VAN WYOK. STATE JOTTINGS. LINCOLN. Judge round has abolished tha referee ays. torn in divurca 0003 , ami hereuftor such suiU ill bo tiled lu cuioa court. Secretory of Stuto Kuggen liaa comolete. . rnater of Ohio uuldleni iu Nebraska , which will noun bo printed. It ahowa atotul of 1,000. The Fay brothers , the lait two of a gang of hone thloven. wore captured In Kaunas by ShunU .Mollckuiul brouxht back to the caulUI. All l.lnc > ln , except tjio saloonu , now nwar by standard time. The dinpennerd of night cnpa gala t Yunty minutes by tha old reliable. The Ug wutor prospecting hole la under way. It U thirty feet In diameter nud will IHI finished with u nlxtoen inch brick wall. It will be tiuUii d lu a month. Thin U one of thei wells which the Uty U constructing with \Iow of Bbcuriug u permanent water supply , p I'M Slger , clerk of the district court , lias in- > anted an anti "Jury fixer. " It cunoUta of three little boxes , for the reception of cards " Doariug the uawM of the juror * . The numoa ol the entlro panel , twenty-four iu number , are put in the center box , which U supplied - with a gpring , which throw * the card * ono by J ono , ami lti < Imjmaulblt . ) . . to tall . . how . they are ' Inn * Whouit f. - t. - I cymlugout juryik wanted twelve 01 Uieae cards ura tlrnwu ut random nnd put "nV1 H'fl ' elda bux < w > w'llcl ' I * k I' locked uutll thu jury hw completed it * duties. The nfiuos . on thu card * u-MutUuto the jury , lu o.uottJuryUwHiitodbtiforetho . . previous onu u.boHU.Ii.i.hMgod the third box U utilized In like inauiior. > hoxe ' * CrUt ( de"1&uj for taucmcnt houiej MSinVirofti'lll ? n to gl * ° * * * Burlington & him till 8 A Vf W1y throush * he slre " 1111 a AWely .led petition has been on More tlun nlnoteon.twentletfc of our leg l voters petitioned the Union I'dclfie council to trant the light of wny to the Burlington fc Mlnnonrl road Into our cttv , but the nnlucoun * :11 utterly Ignored the will of the people , KO : vo ably oxpro iod. [ Independent. Grand Itlind points with juit pride ( o thu incut opera houno , the Ix-st school facilities , .ho larxost and best utoitm Untiring tnllli , the Inoit machine Miopfi , thu l > eat Ma enc ! tem ple , the fincftt law ttlicet , the fmett and bo.it ? itdpiod | | pwtitllico , and three of the bent unkn to bo found In any town of Ita tire in Nebraika , UK.umcr : . Thorn nro now nix dally trains carrying pas sengers Iratwcon Beatrice and Umaha , Water works nro again talked of. Hmoral plant are being considered by the board of trade. The Woman's Trlbmio has established a de partment for bahic . Tint's what will catch the girls. Mr. Hclsey , n Mud crook farmer , attempted aulcldo With n razor , laat Sunday , but It was too dull. It was a doaporato effort to got rid of his debts. The officials of the B. & M. and IT. 1 . have Miurcd the buslnons men that their petition fi-r n reduction of freight rates will bo favor ably entertained. The board of trade has appointed a committee - too to confer uith Superintendent Dickey , of the Western Union , In regard to establishing nn tip-town telegraph olfico. IT.ATTS > IOUTII. The locomotive nsb pan Invented bylM. Biguell , a ilstantmaator | mechanic of the li. & 51 , la being Introduced on eastern roads and promisei to provo n botmu/.a for the pro prietor ? . Ono of the druggists of this city , who sollx whisky without license or prescriptions , is about to bo sued for 81,000 damages Indicted mi a poor Woman by the sale of liquor to her husb nd. Ho also tried to boat this R.imo woman out of a Si wash bill. SharllT Ilyora and the reporter of The He rald made u count of the imasongers on No. 1 Tuooday uioinlng the train as It loft for the west having 503 paasongerH on board , 85 , of whom were babes In anni. If this Is not a fair amp1o of the Immigration to Nebraska we would like to eco a better ono cited. The election Wednesday to determine the question as to wh'jthcr , or not ( ij par cunt bonds running ii ! ) yearn , to the amount of 9111,000 , should bo Issued to Mr. C , It. blssol , of New York , to compromise the clty'd pros- out Indebtedness to him on high school bonds and intercut , resulted In thu defeat of the pro- po-itlon by a vote of 10s3 for to 141 against. Evidently the voteix are not roadjustcra. fllKMONT. The last cent of the debt on the St. .Tamos I'plscopal Church has boon wiped out. Emigrants In largo numbers are passing through hero bound for the KIkhorn and NIo- braru vidleys. The Tribune ) IIBH boon greatly improved lately , both iuthonlM of the pupor and quality of content * . It keeps pace with the steady growth of the "prettiest. " The 1m o < tgatioii ! of the books of ex-County Clerk Korknw showed that otlicor had not ro- tulnud any fees to which ho was not legally entitled. Thu foe's for four years amounted -57,500.10. . The business men here who subscribed and paid In advance for advertisements in a pro- JHiiied book dofcrlptivo of Fremont und Dodge county , about a year ago , mo beginning to feel that they ha\o been taken in. Itsenos them right. Books nf that clas ? , no matter how gurgoous in daeciiptho nnd pictorial effects , nro not worth u five-inch "ud" In a homo pnper. They tickle the vanity of the subscriber aucoidlngto the si/.e of his purge , und soon find u place lu the junk shop. THE STATK IN ( IENEIIAI. . Dakota City l-'roo Masons sent 575 to the tlood MilTererH. About SL'OOO has been subscribed foraMeth odist church ut 1'onca. The Catholics ut 1'oiica prnpeae to build i largo church tha present j ear. The PreSbyterlans will probably build nn edifice at Niobrara this seaoon. The people of the Loup country ore orgnti Izing untt-horso thief aSbOciations. Ayer'a store in Dakota City was burglarized the other night to the tune of $ . ! 10. Kearney's building operations since the 1st of March , 18SJ , amounts to $170,000. Hans Yager , Ihliu ; two miles from St. Helena , solil his farm of00 aero * thu other day for § 2,000. A six'j ear-old daughter of Mr. and Sin" , 1 * . W. Dale , of York county , dropped dead of liourtxJi.set.so a few days ago. Holt county is In debt S22.457.-I7. The books of Cedar county stand about that much on the other lido of the lodger. Cedar county Is termed the ' stock man's paradise , " probably on account of itsoxcnllont grazing land-i. The couuty contains -107,000 acres. , One hundred and forty-eight cars of emi grants , aggregating nearly ! ) JO persons , were landed iu Nebraska by thu Burllngum road , last week , Thohorso thieves of Brown county , lately in prison iu Fremont , were promptly convicted on their return to Alnsworih. They will bo sent to the penitentiary. The Button Register sugeoits to the author ities of Columbus and Fremont that the only way to exterminate the social evil is to "put the ax tOjtho loots and cut 'em out. " A fraud by the name of I'arker. alias Low- rey , wh was operating on the Odd Fellows of North 1'latto , has been arrested by the U. S. Inspector for obtaining money through the mails by forgery. Senator 0. II. Van Wyck , under date of March 3d , telegraphs the jKislmaster of Ne braska City that a bill fo-tho appropriation of 87 ,000 , for the ernctiou of a postoflico in that city has pasted the donate. The pioiuiscuous use of derringers by beardless - less boys iu Sidney is curtain to produce a few moro''kida'1 to oriiamuut whittling posts. A vigorous application of "ihottr.ipa of our dad dies" would afford temporary relief. The Iiidiiuolu Cornier presents Red Wil low county "Thu land of cheap homes , good health uiiil low tuxes" lu such fiivor.ible light tint ono is tempted to pack his grip and "btoer" outhwukt. lloo lor quarter section. Commissioner Ariidiir , of the Tripartite IKKI ! hus decided that "in older to prevent the thipmunt ot frtlght from Loup City , Neb. , via thu C. , B. & V , rallioad line to Kearney , oil freight from that city should bo contracted and billed to St. 1'nul. Neb. , at the Kearney rates. " The two year old child of Wm. Frost , of West 1'olnt. met with a painful accident last week. It slipped and fell on a elate pencil In biiclt a way us to diho it into its head , at the corner of tha right eye , to a depth of nearly two inchon. Iho little sutTerer had to bo chloioforinod to extract the pencil. No per manent iujury to the child In expected. A funuy Incident occurred In a house of worship in Nebraska City the other Sunday A zealous pillar of ( he church was leading the elnylw , and in an effort to catch a very high note with proper cuVt , his falao teeth iluw out of hU mouth. Of cou o there WAS a gonerul Utter on the prt of the congrega tion , and tha minister , unable to coutiolhls risibilities , said , -Well , let's all laugh. " And they did , They roared. The Hartlngton Herald thus pictures the growth of the new burft ; "Bfcfora five months bave expiied tuU town will havotbree elegant churches uud H lurgfl , well arranged , ttylUL. two-story school himae. A school house will bo needed of uufllcieut tire to hold 203 scholars. That U larger than U really needed at thU time , b'lt this town of COO Inhabitants will , within a few months , contain 1,000 In habitants. ' Iu a year Its population will not bo leas tbau 1,600. " riiospimto , Specific Virtues In Dyspepsia. Du. A. JENKINS , Great Fulls , N. II. , stye : "I can testify to its sceuiingly almost specific virtues in ewes of dys pepsia , nervousness and morbid vigilance " r wakefulness. Senator Fhllntus Sawyer , of Michigan , is a jhort , thick-set man having the apixuu-auce of micoc * ful grocer , lie alwayn stands with its hands lu his | M > ckotn and hU head cocked ono Mo like a muter deliberating which worm htt thall eat. Senator Sawyer is , how. * e\or , ald to bo one of tha best-hearted meu In he SeuaU. STEELE , JOHNSON& CO. , Wholesale Grocers ! H. 13. LOCKWOOD ( formerly of Lockwood & Draper ) Chicngp , Man- nger of the Ten , Cignr nnd Tobncco Departments. A full line of all grades of above ; also pipes and smokers1 articles carried in stock. Prices and samples furnished on application. Open orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guaranteed. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & 'RAND POWDER CO HENRY LEHIY1ANN JOBBER OF OFi r 1 EASTER * PRICED DUPLICATED ] 1118 FARNAM STREET , . . OMAHA NEB. in.111 rim A..nrrin THE BESTTHREAD FOR SEWING MACHINES t W 1 1 U Willimnntic Spool , Cotton isentiiely the product of Home Industry , nnd is pronounced by exports to bo the bcst-sewiiis ? machine thread in the world. . PULL ASSORTMENT CONSTANTLY ON HAND , I for Halo by HENLEY , HAYNES & VAN AllSDEL , m&e Onitihn , Neb. Double and Single Acting Power and Hand Engine Trimmings , Mining Machinery , ? Bolting , Hose , Brass and Iron Fittlnge Steam Packing at wholesale and retail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS , CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam St. , Omaha Neb. MAX MEYER & CO. , IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS ! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC GIGABS , TOBAGGOS.PIPES s SMOM'1ETIGLES ' PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS : Reina Victorias , Especiales , Roses in 7. Sizes from $6 to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS : Combination , Grapes , Progress" , Nebraska , Wyoming and Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES. C. F. GOODMAN , Wholesale Druggist ! AND DEALEB IN Rita VnrnidiPQ and Pflintc ullo ftullMuS mill OMAHA , NEBRASKA. J. A. WAKEFIELD . . , .5 WHOLESALE AND IlETAJL DEALER IN MlllltS , , SASH , DOORS , BLINDS , MOULDINGS , LIME , CEMENT , PLASTER ; &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Union Pacific Depot , DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Gomp'y FIRE AND BDEOLAE PROOF XOSO 3 gM.x > xa.Azxx M . HELLMAN & CO. , Wholesale Clothiers ! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 can. 13TH , ISPEOIAL NOTICE TO i i ft Growers of Live Stock and Others , WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake * It lithe JMt and cheapjrt food lor ttook ot nr klsi One pound U wjuM to thrw rx > und ol corn tihk | pd with OiounJ OU Cake In the K ll ma'W'.iwr , m.ieM ol runnlair down , will Iccreaso to nelgbt md b la . good markoUble condition In tea . npnoir , DalryuMa , u well u otliera , who a U c&u twUty tn U UKrita. Try II ud Judjt lor yountlrM. rVIc 25 00 per too ; no clurgo ( or eactj. Acldres WOODMAN LINUKU ) OIL COJU'ANV Om h