OMAHA BAILS' BEE-SATURDAY MAY 10. I8H4. THE OMAHA JBEE , Oinnlm OfIlco.No. Council Blairs Olllco , No. 7 I'carl Street , Ncnr Uroatlwny. Now'York OINco , lloom 05 TrlliutH PaMlstiod cTcry rrprnlntr , ' eioopt Bundaj' The enl > Uonilajr motntng dftlly. K H RT M1IU Ono . VCAT . $10,00 I Thro * Month . 83.1X1 . . . _ _ . . _ . SlrMonms. . . . . . . f < W | One Month I.I D I'er Week , ES CenK [ inn , niKUMlID ITKBT TIDKUDAT. OniTcar 2.001 Thrco Month I BO Slxllcnllis. 1.00 | Onc'Month. SO American New * Company , Sole ARont * N w Jc l en In the United fltAtcs. . t A CoroimmloAllons relating to News and KJIlorUI matters thoulil bo ftdUrowod to the KDITO * Of Tin _ MTMU.1) ) AllDmtnon r/otton And IknnltUneM houldfl' tddrcaxj to Tin Dim PUIIUIIIIIVO OOIIPAKT , OMAHA DrttiJ , Chock * Mid Postotllco ordcrj to bo made pay ntle to the order ol the company. THE BEE PIMISHINOO , , PROPS r.K03EWATER , JEdltor. A. II. Filch. Manager Iily ! Circulation , P. 0. Box 433 Omaha , Neb. Wn wonder whether Marshal Gulhrio will whack up with the mayor pro tern. Ex-Au > nnstAN I < ITZOKUAU > , of Now York , is one of the few men who would rather walk than ride. Gr.xr.HAi. OiiANT will now bo put on the retired list. His presidential boom lias collapsed with the Horse Marino I ) ink. TUB Amoricin onglo will bu eproad nil over Chicago when the two great mayors , Ghasc , of Omnha , and Harrison , of Chicago > cage , moot. Do the respectable mombora tf the Omaha typographical union ondorao the viloiinil slanderous shoot which is publish ed in the nnmo of the union as a stipple- inent to Sfveosy'a hand-hill ? WHEN Mayor Ohaso , of Omaha , moots Mayor Harrison , of Chicago , ho will Bay to him what the governor of North Carolina lina waul to the governor of South Carolina lina , nnd the Chicago mayor will liavo to jot the bill , of course. Tun last time Butler wai a delegate tea a democratic national convention WUH nt Charleston , in 1800 , when ho voted 57 times for Jell' Davis , and then broke up the convention because it would not go his way. Now that wo uro to have a Missouri river commission Nebraska ought to bo represented in that bady by soracono tylio will see that wo gut our share of tlio appropriation of $500,000 , which in to bo oxpo'idod on the river from the mouth tote to Sioux Citv. WHILE Dr. Miller titill pleads for the lives of condoiir.itid murderers , Governor Cleveland , of Now York , ia becoming convitt''o.l thai hanging is not too good for tlicm , It appo.\rj that Governor Glovnlaud hon baou nhamcfully imposed upon in the can.1 of the wicked Mrs. Haight. By parsuading him that her hair had turned white with romoroo and topontanco , oho secured a commutation of her death sentence whereupon she removed a wig and disclosed a head of hair of the richest and most authentic brown. lion. P. F. Muiu'iiv is now mayor of Omaha. In that capacity ho can render the city a great and lasting service. TJioro has been much looseness in the city government ornment owing to the failure of Mayor I Ohnso to fill the appointive positions. Mayor Murphy in now in position1 to make theao appointments and have them confirmed by the city council. Lot him fitop forward and do hid duty fearlessly and the council will doubtlcas give him 1 its cordial support. To begin with , let jMayor Murphy appoint a now marshal. That will not only provo advantageous to .tho community at largo , but it will relieve Muyor Ohasa hiinnolf from a voiy awk * iTRrd'dilemma. : are some business men in Oma ha who ought to bo heartily ashamed of ' then : lves. They have ullowod their names to bo used in the advertising columns of Jn filthy vile and libellous supplement to 8 o 'a hand-bill. They cannot plead tin Vft > y not because they were told in advauou by tlio disreputable concern that priutH thoeo coarse and vuljjiv libels jint what the object of .its boycotting supplement was. Tt in very natural that the proprietors of low dives and dons , who sell rot-gut to the tramps who make their living l > y uponging from honest labor ing men , should return the compliment. But wo cannot understand how any ro- . epcctablo business man can lend his name to euli infamous and lawless work. Sup pose , for instance , that a prominent dry goods man , whoso card appears in tlio vile supplement , should for good reasons refueo the demands of his clorka.nnd they should assail kirn in slanderous and filthy handbills. Suppose furthorthat a would bo rival in business should huvo these hand- trills printed and circulated. What would be thought by the community of any busi ness man who would countenance such BU outrage ? What would bo thought of the man who would solicit trade through euoh a modiumt The publication of a newspaper ia as much a business enterprise as soiling groesriea , dry geode or hardwaro. Everybody h s a right tote ( to into the newspaper business and so licit patronage. But no community would tolento any attempt on the part of r dealer ia groceries or dry goods to hire c lot of tramps and vagabond * for the pur JKWO of villifying and slandering anothei doilcr. Wo pay this much not becaux ivohavo sustained the least injury t < r nu.tation or busioost , but became wf /eel that common decency should bo ob nerved by all no 3 who have rcputatioi fit slake in their ovm bueincss. w 101 * " * * * * - " ,1 DISGRACE TO WO IT has boon the boast of our city that the workingmcn of Omnha , who form it * backbone , nro nu honest , intelligent , in dustrious , law-abiding class of people. Many of them nro excellent mechanic ! * , who pride themselves upon their mem bership in trndcs-uninns nnd other socle- lies intended to clotalo nnd protect the interests cf labor. They mean io bo right in nil lln'ir dealiiiRa and are as anxious no any other clnsa to keep up the ( rood name of their craft. The conduct of a handful of tramps , who misrepresent the Omaha typographi cal union , Undn to bring the good name of the sober and respectable workingmcn of Omaha into dUroputo and disgrace. These audacious acalawngs have tnkcn it upon themselves to use the name of half n dozen trades-unions as endorsers and co-publishers of a boycotting sheet , which is to vile nnd filthy that it is unfit to go into any decent family. Now wo aak in nil fairness whether any rospccuiblo workingman wants his union to father such infamous libels ? Wo know that the moulders , the boiler makers , ' bricklayers , ' carpenters' ' and tailors' unions arc , for the most partcom- posed of fair , decent and honorablojncn Will they eay to Una community that they approve and countenance the rcsoit to malicious defamation , coawo and vu'- gar libels ns a moans of obtaining redress forany real or imaginary grievance ? If so the labor unions of Omaha will bro.ik up uf their own weight. Good , true and res pectable men will ho ashamed tohavo any fellowship with them , nnd the communi ty nt largo will feel compelled to stamp them out ns a matter of self protection Is it neb high time then that the trades unions of Omaha should repudiate this shameful business ? Do they not aeo tha their good name is being used to pul Railroad-Eating llouao Swoesy'a chest nuts out of the fire ? Are the boycotting printers carrying on this war aa n matter of principle ? It ia notorious that only four or five of ttho men who struck in TUB Br.B olH"o remain in Omaha , and they , having hired themselves out to do dirty work , are lining the names of 10 various trades unions for their nofari- usonda. The BIK : makes no appeal for sympathy o its patrons. It has Blood the brunt of huso and slander for thirteen years , and ns grown prosperous through the vile itncka of rogues and blackguards. It an morn workiiigmon on its subscription at today than it had before the prin- ors' striko. But the workiiigmon of malm , whoso cause it has championed lirough good nnd ill report , cannot allow boir good name to bo used as a mask for uor'lla warfare which would make a Hottentot blush with shame. THE FENCES MUST OO. The case of the United vStatos vs. the Brighton ranch company to compel tlio lefondant to take down its fences , is now n trial in the United States courts in his city. The defendant is a trespasser in the public domain , having fenced in i2,000 acres. Its fence is 57 miles in ongth. When this case was brought to ho attention' of United States Die- riot Attorney Lamborteon , ho laid the natter before the interior department , sklng for instruction nnd nt the same imo recommending that an the Brighton anch company was n trespasser , its oncoa should bo taken down immediately iy n United States posse. The interior department , however , .dopted the polite , technical and long- : lrvvm method of procedure in equity , bus treating the trespassing company as f it actually had snmo right in the prom- sea. An equity case was accordingly nstitutcd , nnd the defendant actually liad the presumption to put in an answer with the intention of making n dotermin- id fight. It wns not aati&fiod with hav ng the benefit of free grass for its tnous- finds of cattle. Inasmuch as the frro rats has nnido the company thousands nnd thousands cif dollars it certainly is in inconsistent plea that the lands are rtlilcEs. Ewn if they wore nothing but a lot of cnud hills , they belong to the > coplo and no one has a right to fence .hem. Thuro can b but ono just decision in uch n case aud that is the fences must [ o. The Brighton ranch company , however - over , is not the only trespasser on the p blo ! domain in Nobrnska. There nro about u hundred others on a smaller scnlo nnd it is about time that they should bo taught that the people have some rights which they are bound to respect. Cattle men have raised cattle for years withou fences nnd have grown rich , nnd then ) is no reason why they cannot continue to do ao without being trcapaisera. They ought to bo satisfied with the privilege o free grass and free water. It is intiniatet that the cattle men , all of whom are in torcstud in the result , brought inlluuncu to bear on the interior department io have the Brighton case disposed of ii court , instead of in n summary manne by n United States posse tearing dowi the fences. Had the United States mar Bh l , however , removed the fences by force the question would have bcci settled once laid for all , nnd withou expense , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Mil , BLaiixr.'H bKOin in Colorado is no jmt wlut it 8 ems on the surface. Tli Denver Tftbuna , a loiuing republics papur of Onlorado , indulges in the follow ing coihmont : ' 'Them never wai such a sham as tin alleged B'atno ' boom. It is OMily tx pi vincd. Tha eUss of men tvho come tt aintu conventions the local polU < ci.'iui > 'ilinoat ' nil belong to the following ot fim hormn/ uopirmus f > r tlio senate. 120 of thwa following * ligurod to eocur | ) reull < o for ita cliiuf by veleetlng u dolu K.-itioii which ho could control mid upo Inch 1m cmld Irade fi r vantag i groun in the bonutorml battle , which is uln-ail rauing beneath 1lio aurfacn. Knell Btart * * with the presumption that lha poop ! wore for Blaine and they all cnpouacd ' CUISP , not becau o they cared for im , bu' in the hope of winning for licnuulvo.i Ilcnco wo had the absmd | ) cctacio of four hostile political factions eying to out shout onch other for one tlaino man , when each of th m was will- ig to desert him in a moment in order > flcciiro control of the conven- ion. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ O Til Ell LA NlS T7l. IN 0 UltS. The cry for municipal rtfornt haa at nat reached the great metropolis of the rorld. A bill has been introduced in nrliamont to consolidate all the hide- ondont municipal bodies that now make ip the cliy of London into ono hoad. it present London ia composed of no lvn * hnn 03 ! ) local inunicip.il bodies , of which lie city of London , no-called , is the sin nil at in area and population , In the raiual growth of the vast metropolis , larish has been added to parish , and > oroughto borough ; but this addition aa boon geographical , and not municipil r political. Around what is technically ailed "the city , " as a centre , have clua- orcd from century to century an over ndotiing circle of oottlomonta , which ave acquired and preserved each ita own oculiar iiyatcn of local administration. Icnnwhilo the "city" itself , once the Imo of residence of nobles and mor- lianta , haa , in process of time , been rnnsformcd into an almost exclusively commercial and financial quarter , t haa retained it ) ancient municipil pntom , by which the "liverymen" have looted the common council , the trade- uilds the aldermen , and tlicso two iguthor the lord mayor. At the present mo the "city , " covonng a modest urea [ only one rquaro mile , does not contain bovo 50,000 resident inhabitanta. The measure of the hpmosecretary pro- _ oaoa to mnrgo the "city , " the veatrica , lie boroughs , and the board of works ito n single municipal body It makrs lie corporation of the city the nucleus of lie now system. Tlio Lord mayor ia still o rule , and to rule over four millions in tend of fifty thousand citizens , that la , , ia powers are to run throughout the wolvo equaro miloa of the rnotwpolis. 'ho board of aldermen in to bo abolished , 'ho new common council will bo chosen rionially , and will be composed of tno undred ana forty mombura , of whom orty-six will bo contributed by the Met- opolitan board of works , and the reston baais of equal ull'rnfo { , by all motropoli- an London. The electorate will consist , f all citizens who , in a borough , are unlificd to bo burgeaaoa. The exclusive irivilogo of the "liverymen" ia to bo Wi'pt away forever. To the now common council will bo ao- ordod all municipal powers , except thoao elating to the police , the schools , and no or two minor bodies. Tlio motropol- MII police will otillremnin under the con- rol > < f the home ofllco ; and the London chool board will atill bo elected soparatc- y , and bo independent of the municipal ody. ody.Mr. Mr. Gladstone has a confidence as to lie safety of Colonel Gordon in Khar- oum which his following in the British arliamont and in the English press do tot share or understand. Ho meota ov- : ry demand for fuller explanations with a 'uforonce to the neccfaity for secrecy in n the execution of the plans of the gov irnmont , and censures the natural curies- ly , not to sajr anxiety , of his country- non aa unpatriotic and obolxuctivo. He udmits that Berber ia in danger from the mtivo tribes which have revolted all round it , but assures his hearers that hay need have no apprehensions what ever as to the fate of the moro distant and not leas threatened Khartoum. .Such ofty confidence must have some ground if assurance unknown to ordinary mor als , for Mr. Gladstone is not a fool , and lonovorhna been characterized by ox- coaaivo audacity or an overestimate of his oaourcca. The worst symptom in the lituatum ia the fact that Colonel Gordon does not shn.ro in this feeling that Khar- oum ia safe. If ho be nut misrepresent ed by what professes to bo dispatches 'rom Khartoum itself , ho is very much annoyed by the failure of the British ; ovornmcnt to send himself roinforce- nonts , and is contemplating Jan uvacua- .lon of the fortress as a ncceaaity. A confarenco to determine the many iloubtful points in the politic ) and finun- CCH of Egypt will convene in London in ) lino. Only Franco has objected to thia [ imposed oonferonco , and her objection kvas not to the principle ) of the confer ence , but to the claim of England to iniit the scope of the deliberations Ingla'id wiHlus the powers to confer nly upcn Egypt's fmnncial diflicullics franco would only accept an intition up- ) n thu condition that the conference .mould bo considered free to take up an } xutof thoc.ise. Apparently this dilli- uulty hits been overcome in thu true tyli > of tweedlvdtio diplomacy that is. Eng- and has nccepUd Franco's demand as to the rights of thu conference upon thu undi'ratauding that Franco will not make any dilllniiltien for England under pro- tunco of assorting those rightr. In a recent dobntu in the British com mons , on the Iiiah magistracy , Justin McCarthy allowed the injustice of the prcaoiit arrangement. Iruliuul , having n population four-fifths C.itholic . , has 80 ! ) Catholic magistrates to it(59 ! ( I'rotputant magistrates. The point made by McOir- thy waa that nearly all the magistrates TO carefully talion out of ono rdlifiioup organization and from a class hostile to the will of the Irish people. No people desirous of fuir dealim ; and impartiality In the administration of . justice can p.-t- tiontly acquiesce in such a ono-sided ar rangement as this. It is ono of those IDngllsh devices to keep the Irish under , which will before many years bo abel ished. The occupation of the most stratogeti- oal points in Central Asia by thu Iliusinn forces is caiuirg a good deal of agitation among British statesmen , more especially among those who itru opposed to the Oladstono policy. Thu wily Riminni are firmly established nt the Aforv ossiw , within 250 milts of Herat , the "Kny tu fiulin , " us it is sometimes called ; rrr- t.ilnly the key to Afghanistan Thr Rritish are fully 500 milin from Herat , at Quutta on the Eonttunst ; HI the Knssiium IIHVU the ooiiinuiiiliin ; iulv.intni.'iH At Merv tlioj'havo Potfi'i nnd Afghanietnu orrtctioilly a * thuir merry , and they will in.d ubtodly , in ho emrsnof time , s curt ! Unra. and nun x tVroin , leaving , proba bly , the Hludii Kuli mountains to be hu southern boiimUrv of tlmir Asittio unipiro Biucu 1077 ( hn Russlann ha\o brim steadily ] iu hii | ? Iliuir w. y in Cen tral AHia , At nv > 'ry frt'sli aKmuition , Prlnc ( lottacbaki If u i-d t i atnuro th IJrit'uli ' gnvcriununt tlmt no tori-1 r a' ' aqilinitlonwmiintuid.fi ; hutyor < f o ytwr groit Mm-ka > ( TurV o i n havn b o > niuiuxu'l ; the Ofiis has boi'ii paiscd , ait to-day thu I'aropowitus and the Hindu [ Cush nro the real southern boundaries of .ho cfcar's Central Asia ioasc sion . Af- hanistnn will ono day become n bnno of contention between Britniu and Kuftsia I'ho British government , n few years ng > , secured the control of lUbochi tau. If the toriea were in power in England , to day , there would bo n war in progress for the possession tf Afghanistan. iMthough Bismarck has withdrawn from ; ho I'rutniiAn Ministry \\hero ho was con- atantly nagged and irritated by factional Hnpulca and the boldness of liberalism , 10 will bo none the lees restless when giving hii whole attention to the duties of the Chancellery , where , lit ) Bays , ho has , o watch til ! ) cliofs-board of the world. Indcod , ho haa now armed himself for a low conflict with the clerical party and n renewal of the Vatican negotiations with reference to tlio repeal or further modifi citionoftho stern vccleMiistical Inwa of en years ngo. is just now out of question. The Prussian bishops will not got back to their sees ; The church will not gut her subsidy back , nnd the stnto will still con trol oduoition ; thnl is , unlcsi the Cleri cal 3 submit to Bismarck and vote fiubmm- lively for the iixtensiun of the anti-social- at law , and for the essentially sociuliuic neasuros. which the chancellor , to beguile , ho workingman , has formulated , carry- "iif out the nocialiitic idea of strict pater- lalism. Bismnrck'e last days are to belays lays of hard struggling to prop up the lystcm ho has reared. Iliiiaia is nutinualy Bounding the pow- irs ns to their disposition to form n cnRiio of common protection against anarchists This ia , perhaps , prelimina ry to the imperial interviews which nro set do.vn for Juno , fimmiiuch na there ia not n country in Europe wluro nnar- chiom has not recently shown u > mo for midable signs of life nnd drctructivo in tent , the fair's "fi-olor" is likely to moot with n consentient c'/iorm. Such n com bination of crowned heads , however , will tend rather to encourage than dia may the ommiaaarioa of chaos , who will btiu.-t tmd thut they have inspired real terror in the pnliiccs. The mo it cftac- bivo measures which the sovereigns could tike to root out this dread evil would b to sati fy their subjects with equal jus tice nnd liberty. Affairs in Cuba are alill very rebellious , pince the last elections in Spain the Cubani are moro than over disposed to revolt. The result 01 the Into eloctiona 'or members of the Spanish Cortca by no means represents the opinion of the country. The best proof cf this ia that , ho uutonoinists vrcro triiimtihant at the : a t olcetion for provincial deputies in the province of llavanna , the moat important of the whole island , nnd in which the olooti iia are subject to laws much more I'quitabio than those for the election to tlio cortta. The triumph of the liberal conservatives haa thes foio exasperated the Cubans and everyone eho who ia opposed to the Spanish mismanagement. Tlio triumph of the conservatives waa brought about by tno influence of the ROV eminent oxarted in their favor na well aa liy ooveral despicable tricks to which the conservatives resorted and nn intrigue which offended the Cubans very much. Under Count Tolstory's TWO year's cen sorship helms killed nine Russian journ- ils. All f.noisn papers , with the excep tion of the Danish , Norwegian , Hungar ian and Siuuiiali , have to pass the ontoal of the censorship , and some of them , mostly FrciiCii. ro nltogothor prohibited in Ilussia.i , l2ditors { of newspapers and foreign correspondents appealing to the Ministry , nro allowed to receive their paper. } unmutilatcd but only on con dition of promising noror to Bhoflr these papers < o any ether mortal. Newspapers o'o not lloml-ih in lltHtia , as may bo un tlorstood fwrni the fact that in St. Peters burg , with ita million inhabitants , there nro , bosiduB the two olliciul pipers , on ] } three lluBsian and two German journals. The latter content themselves with re peating what their Kusaian contemporar- ica aay. Senor Xorila , the Spanish rnvolu- tloniat. is constantly being told to "movi > on. " Like Noah's dove , ho cannot find n resting place. A little while ngo tlm SWIBH politely suggeatiKl to him that ho Inavvi thuir hordorB , and now it occur that Franco told the unfortunnio ugitatoi lie must ' 'skip" if ho would avoid expulsion - sion from the Grovy nnd Ferry republic. Of course , Xurilht "skippid , " nnd unless hit agitation agitntua n little moro than has been the case of late , he will have to keep on "skipping1' indefinitely. Europi has no uao fpr a nnolutioniat , especially un unsuccessful one. The next French cibinet council will bo called up'in to deeidu the question with regard to the retention of the French troops at Toiiquin until the Chinese gov- ormnmit pnyu tno imlomnity demanded by Franco. Vice Admiral Poyron ii strongly opposed to the withdrawal of u fiint-lo eoldicr until 1 ho rrquiremonts of the French government nru completely satibtied. The dutch are growing daily moro hos- lilo to ward H Porlnjrnl bre.uno of ita as- aumption t-f control of the lower Congo coast , onvlach there nro many dutch Hottlemcnts : The pnipn-siiion of Portu gal to establish cuatom hoiura at thu months of Cmigo and collect duty from Dntph vessels that trade along tlio river , has boon duVuttvd upon with much bit- torni'fs durinij the past week in thn Dutch cliambura , and it is believed that Holland will aecido toreaiat these Portu gucfto pretentious oven to the point of war. r P , J JuJah P. Benjamin , who haa just died in Paris , wns in many respects ono of t' > n most remarkable men of our times , In his lifo there is much which reminds one of the career of Boaconsfield. Mr , Ben jamin never achieved the qroatuosa of statosmanshp which his other nbilitie * would seem to warrant , but .w a lawyer and advocate ho Ind few uuporiors in the world. Whan Doujtuiin first c mo to Naw Orloam ho wai mot by very much the a imo jmrow foolinjj which Uraemia field once int ro-l whan ont riiii { jiolitic * in EuglHiid ; ho was taunted with beinc a .low and looked down upon a unworthy of the o HiBi'denitioa which hia abihtica Til Now OrlouMH lien junta's llfn wa a combination nf tha Imnl working lawjer vith that of the pond natund , tmny going leisurely K'-ntlemiiii II v ) would go along the s'wtji Muuturin : ? wi'h ' an aimless air iboiit huil. greeting hia friends hero and them in tlm mtxit cf-Minl and kindly manner - nor Suyill of otiituto , itnd rather -tout nnd hnvng ii"thin f that 1-ok of ( i'irli'fijliu-ss which indicated the ilo | > , . thinker. Ithu rasunl observer w < uld never nl imo MKijn him f > r a great lawy-r Hut 'this ' lnvoof dimplioity dunlaywl in a'l hi 1 I notions nwi owned into the irUl and ar- iitnont of his case and made tlio \ cry ofTectivo part which stamped him ns h nan of L'onius. Some of the surviving judges of the mipromo court of Luiitsinim , before whom ho argued many questions of iin- loitanco , nil concur that the mostdilli- cull , complex propositions of law , thu most voluminous rtcords , wore disrobed ol their mysticism and of their confusion after Bcnjimin had concluded an argu ment. Ho unraveled o\ cry thing no beautifully , made everything appear so limpid , that the court always foil that a great burden had been taken fnnu them iftor ha had finished speaking. That WAS hia f > rte as a lawyer , Ins 1 uiguago was always very simple ; ho spoke tluontly wid with a peculiar gtaco which c > m- lled n respectful nttcntion. Quo day nt n largo joint mooting of whiga nnd democrats , Itandall Hunt , nn nldor brother of our l.itu minister to St. Poteraburg , taunted him publicly with bning a .low. Mr. Hunt always boasted ) f hia ancestry and was supposed to have been of Sweuish descent. He had been very severe in the dubato and had charged Bonjamino trith being n Jew , It was then that Bonjimiu rising in hia usual eimplo but earnest manner opened hia ipocch by saying , that "tho gentleman ! nd called him n Jew , it was true and ho wns proud of it. " Then in a burst of in dignant oratory ho said : "While my an- costora were battling with the Maccabees against the imperial mistress of the world for their lib rlus , hUancestors ( pointing to Hunt ) wore feeding snitio in the wilds of Scandinavia and vroro no better than the brutes they fed. " Thia was received with much applause nnd no one from that 'o ventured into personalities. Bnnjimin , in the height of his practice wua supposed to make in New Orleans from sixty to seventy thousand dollars njcnr. He had few enemies. Every body that met him loved him , and the only serious antagonist , it is said , that ho had was a civilian named lloaolius , itgainst whom Benjamin , nt times , dis played feelings of jealousy. There ia n story told that one day , while walking down the street with John 11. Grimes , ono of the greatest lawyoia of that period , and who , by the way , originated the fn- moua Guinea suit , moro than fifty ycaia ago , n noiao wua h"ard in the cjurt room us though some ono was making n great nrgumont. Colonel Grimes inquired _ of Benjamin who it was that was making uio Bpoech , and said , "there must bo some great question involved. " "Oli , . " auya Berjuiiun , "that sounds like the voice of llusolius , ho is taking a judgment by default. " Benjamin wns looked upon in his social iclutiona na a man of a kindly heart , nnd ho was liberal with hia hand to the pour to the poor and needy and to the chatita bio institutions of the city , oven to his own detriment. Tlio moat remarkable feature in Benj man'a career wna after the collapse ot the confederate government of which he had been latterly ita atcrotary of atato when ho made his escape from this conn try to England , Those who wore intim utely acquainted with him any that he arrived in England without any money He began to practice law in a country where the system waa totally different from the slate in which ho haul boon rear ed. Ho had not lived long in Eiiglnnd when through the influence of Lord Cairnb and others , he waa admitted to the far and subsequently bec&mu Queen's coun sel. It was said that thia was the flrat instance of a stranger having that honor conferred upon him ; but a great deal oF hia success must bo attribut ed to the fact that the Roshchild'a and BeaconsGeld must have also helped him in hia advancement. In New Orleans Benjamin had been for many yom& iho Itwyor of the great bankcis , mid wns known to them by reputation Ho had also been unquestionably in com munication with the English government which all through our civil war sympn thiacd with the confedercy nnd being aoc rotary of state , of course Bnaconfield hud often hoard of him. So when he went to London ho waa not as friendless as many would have baen. His great abili ties combined with the assistance of these friends gave him immediate position ivhicli few ran hope to obtain. Then he had been born in an English possession and the ugh always considering himsull an American yet , etill ho remained a BUD- | t-ct of Great. Britiun under the doctrine 'once nnd Englishmen nlwnys an Eng lishmen. " With his great aucccssin London e ery ono is fnmibar. Ho became a very great lawyer theio nnd ia aaid to have locuivod ono of the largest feea on record , uuiount- iiifj to over n milliui of dollars. _ lt ia not because Americans nrn partial to him that ho Utamod so much of a reputa- Mon but his intrinsic abilitita woio no- < > < ; iii7ed by the members of the English liar univuiHaliy. A\ hen the lain Judp' Clinton Brills wa in London ho uas told the same thing for on hia return to Omaha when asked us to how Boinjamiri otoud in England , auaworod ho heard him .itguo a C.ISD before the privy council and had made inquiries among the law ) ITS an to hia pibjiijn there and they all con currcd that ho was nt the head of thu Ei > f.'IUh bar. Whun wo think that a sti auger might go to thut vaat eity and live thuro for jor- ty years and attempt to practice law with out going through the difi'erent degiada- tions which lliti hvwcra of thu place nro accustomed to nnd that one might remain there , it may be , n lifo time und yet be unheard of , though possessing at rene abilities , his wonderful success can well bo appreciated. Bdiijumin never wrote much , _ but hia later yeara a work on saloi which ia mi authority used universally by the pro- feeaion , waa given to thu public. The JOWB of this generation can feel proud of the fact that in the uepartmenta of statesmanship , law and finances they have produced the greatest characters of tht ) a [ jo Thu natnua of Bcaconefiold , Btnjiimin and" Rothschild will be the central figures of those branches , whdn the historian records tlm salient events of the cantury. CHAULE.S OODEN. STATK. J01 TINGS. Fremont howls for water works. 1 Vrimy nra fiahluK for anckua with rakea nt I'lorcts. Heluiyler Colfax loi-turoa at 1'awneo City ou tlm 11 ill. Ktrdiii'burg mpnoU to double tlio number uf licr reftliinuaa tills yiur. UfliiiiVtti fiom hfluvy rHiiu lacouiplalued of In tHVt-rjl | iarU uf ilia ttjto. Tha truck nt t 1'romimt fair grounda in t-i ba tucil n | > for driving purpose * . Tlm Kikhorn mul Alaplo creek ro to lilgh th.t faiallii.4 llvlnu i.loiiK their bunks Imvu UUHII In iUii 'T < if b iDVbWjptnwny , Th i Osallal * Hi ( lector I * tha ratal of tlio la- Uvt i'nuiro on ths H mmy > um < > i Nebraska journalism. It U Koltti county's limt An KnylUliinw nuincd Honrv Tluuniwon juiiijieil i-ff u wivluK trulu on the Uulim l'"cl- hi- near Cli iwi > n u fuw ri.lils ; K.I. Ho W B I Ifku'l ' up In an iinuviiuLi < Mii > iviuutiim mid caninl tu ( ira'ul liltnil , whoio ho dletl , AVUIitw Croi > k wiw very lil ( : ' < at I'larro Ii t I week. O olir ljja a parly can led a uv kiul uUicr > njn.tcreil u ' . .tu. ( u HUUO plaoes tit w tr oM'itl'iweH ' ilioniail * null rnultreil trnv l hui | < im > lhla There will be n lu-nvy til of cam gi > f r VJerco touuty to jmy. The Largest Stock in Omaha and Makes the Lowest Prices' ' DRAPERIES AND MIRRORS , Just received nn assortment far surpassing anything in Una market , comprising the latest mid most tasty doaigns manufactured for this spring's trndo and covering \ rnngo of prices from the Ohcapoat to the most Expensive. Parlor Goods Draperies. Nowrently for the inspection o cus Complete stock of nil tlio Most tomer ; ' , tlio luwest novclti' a in styles in Turcoman. Mndras nnd Suits nnd Odd Pieces. Luce Gurtniiis , Etc. , Etc. Eleaant Passenger Bbvatoi1 to all Floors. CHARLES SHIVEEICK. , 1 S0 , 1808 imd 1310 Fnrimm Struct , - - - - OMAHA , NEB Double and Single Acting Power ar o Hand ' 5 Engine' Trimmings , Alining Machinery , Bolting , Hose , Braas and Iron Steam Packing nt. wholesale and wail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS , OI1UUCF AND SOIIOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam St. , Omalia Neb. ' . F AND DEALER IN PQ uo OMAHA NEBRASKA. Milwaukee , Wisconsin. , GUNTHER & CO , , Sole Bottlers- * * * * * P * ffiO * A TVt1 O Vl f ± . HELLMAN < & CO. , 1301AHD 1303 FARNAM STREE'l COR. TdTh "MAHA. \ WLW The Palnco Uotel of Denver. Ocr , Seventeenth and Lawrence Sts llooma 76c to 82.00 per ilay. SjiccUl Hatrg by Ilia Month. THE FINEST TABLE IN THE WEST. Conducted on the Amoricin and Europaan Plans. Day Board § 7 per week , . -1 P , S , CONDON , - - PEOPEIETOR , PROPRIETOR ICO and 103 South 14th Street , Onnlia , Ncliriska. "Corresrondeueo Sollcl'cd. " 0. M. LEIGHTON. H. T. CLARKK. LEZGHTON & OLAEKE , " HUCCKSSOHS TO KKNNAUD BHOS. ft CO. ) Q QB DEALERS 1N O7.TAM . H. WOOD & CO. , faUCOESSOUS TO WESTEHN 8TKAM IIKATINO CO. , TT IM : E s s STEAM AND GAS FITTERS , North 10th Street , bet. Capitol Avo. and / % K/J A LJ A . ' ET D Darppport Stieet. Telephone No. 495. * J 1 V { M > 1 M , f X t D AND TWO V/KSBL OAETS. U1B aiit IW > lUraat * MttoH tad 11) iSrK > n < MANUFACTURER OP Fine Buggies , Carriages , & Spring Wagon * | My lUponltory Ii comUnlty CUwl ith tfclect Stoc * BEST V 'ORKMANSIUP ( JUARAXTEED. OFFIOK AND FACTORY S. f\ I mg-wly Cor. Sixteenth and Capitol Avenue. ' '