OMAHA DAILY BEE-MONDAY , MAY 19 , 1884 , THE OMAHA BEE Otnnlia Ofllco.JNo. fllO Ffirnnm St. Council IHitflTn Onleo , No. 1 Pom Street , Ncnr JJrontlivAy. Now York Ofllcc , Iloom 05 Trlbun PaMlithcd ercry trornlnff , ' eiocpt Snndaj' Tt OD ! ) Monday mornlDR dally , JIRMS BT MAIL. One Tcar$10.00IThrooMonthi . . $3. ( BIzMontna . fi.OO | Ono Month . l. ( I'cr Week , 25 Cents. BKLT BID , rOBLlBIIID HTBRTTIDKUDlT. . TRRMS rOSTTAlD. One Year . J2.00 1 Three Month . f ( Elx Months. . 1.00 1 Ono Month. . . . S American News Company , Solo Agent ; Nowxlca rs In the United States. CORRRsrOXDlUCS , A Communttntlonfl routing to Newt and Editor ) ; matkrs should bo addressed to the EoirOH or Til DH. KCSLNKM LUTTKtd. ' ] All tuslno5M Letters and lloinlttanoos houldl | > ddrewcdtoTniiDiiH PciitUBinxa CXjMpisi , nxAiu Drafts , Checks and Postoineo orders to bo mads paj a > blo to the order of the companr. THE BEE PUBLISHING CO , , PROP ! E. ROSBWATBR , Editor. A. n.Fltch. Maniifrcr Dally Circulation , P. 0. Boi < 83 Omaha , Nob. THERK was no picnic in Omnlm yostof. day. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ WHAT will Father Mnrlin do now with the hero of his everlasting story , since Hon. John D. llinvo has been pro. meted to bo general solicitor of a groal railroad ] Tin ; next Douglas grand jury will liavc a great deal of work to do , and it is hoped that the judges will notallow professional jurymen to come in as substitutes for the regular panel. The Union Pacific claims that the B. A 1 M. has dealt it a foul blow na it has struck it below the Belt. If the Union Pacific would keep out of prizo-fights it wouldn't have to yell "foul. " JUDOE NKVIU.I : , upon the petition of the B. it M. , has granted another in junction against the Union 1'icificinclud ing the Bolt lino. This no dcubt was ne cessitated by the return of General Man ager Ilanlon. TIIUKF of the fourdolcgatcs-nt'largo to the national greenback convention which Iowa sends , are J. B. Weaver , "Heifer- calf" Gillette , and "Calamity" Wollor. It is almost needless to say that these great mon are a unit for Bon Butlor. SENATOR CAMERON , of Pennsylvania , who has been in Europe for moro than a year was expected homo yesterday , and a good many Pennsylvanians who have boon trying to run the machine , in hia absence , are getting ready to take to the woods. Gnu AT care ought to bo exorcised on jTarnam street in digging the trenches for gas , water and uowor connections. 1'ho earth ought to bo properly tamped , otherwise the now pavement will bo auro to settle , and much of it will have to bo rolaid within twelve months. THE Herald ventures to nominate the Honorable Pat Ford aa a candidate for 1 < delegate to the democratic state conven tion. InasmuchaaDr.Millorhasdoolinod to bo a delegate to the national convention , THE BEIS ventures to nominate the Hon orable Pat Ford for that position. JAY GOULD has appeared on the scene to give hia explanation of the Now York panic. Ho says it was caused by the bears. There is , on the other hand , however , arido spread belief that if Mr. Gould had kept his watering pot at homo there never would have boon any trouble. Tun Now York Jlcrald has boon ob taining the 'viowa ' of various otato gov ernors , on the burning questions of the day. Gov. Sherman's ' viowA as to whore the now Iowa insane usyluji should bo located , have not yet boon given. If the Jlcrald has a pump utrong enough to bring out this , wo should like to BOO it. A FEW days ago Postmaster Boardsloy , of Itock Island , sent out n story that an attempt had boon made to rob his ollico , which ho had prevented at great personal risk. Recent developments , however , tend to show that no such event as ho do- ecribod over occurred , Has Mr. Boards- ley been imitating Wliittakor's oxploita on his cars , or has ho had n cano of Illi nois jim jams ? WHENEVER a lawyer graduates from mediocrity into the rank of recognized ability , ho is sure to got a goodborth with some railroad. The BBB congratulatce Mr. John D. Howe upon his appointmonl as general ( solicitor of the Chicago , Minne apolis , St. Paul & Omaha railway sys. h tern. Mr. Howe enjoys an oxcollonl reputation and the people of Omaha and Nebraska will regret his departure. , IT had boon hoped by hia friends thai norno ariangemont could bo made bj which Henry Ward Beocher could bo s delegate to the national republican convention > vontion , but it now appears that there csnbenone. There will bo no proxies , and substitutes for delegates cm only be made by the convention itself. There will still bo a good chunco left for Honrj to pray for the convention , however , if hi wants to bo of service. RIOIIT after the defeat of the Morriaor bill it was announced that Morrison'i friends would iesuo a flaming address 01 the tariff question which would fire thi democrats all over thu country. Ncarl ; ' two weeks have passed but the addrcs' 1 1 has not appeared. It is now explainei that tlio scheme ia dead. None but th immediate followero of Morrison couli bo induced to sign it. It waa oxpeeUx that it would read Ilandall and his riii ; entirely out of the party. Apparontlj Mr , MorrUon ia finding out that it L much emier for the dog to wag the tai than for the tail to wtg the dog. Tllti ANTI-MONOPOLISTS AS In the winter of 1883 n call was issue for n national anti-monopoly conforonc for the purpose of devising concerto measures that would check the aggrcssio of corporate monopolies upon the Anicti can people. The conference wns to moe at Chicago on the Fourth of July to prc mulgftto a second declaration of indc pendcnco nnd arouse a spirit of rosistanc to the despotic rule and greed of organi zed monopoly. The head nnd front c this movement was n political adventure by the name of Post , who occupied room in the attic of n third rate Cliicng hotel , from which ho had boon bombard ing thonational bankBpulvomingthorut potrcr , and preaching spiritualism , woma sulTrngo and other "iatns" through roadorloss wookly. At the time this national conference c anti-monopolists was called , there ha boon no distinct anti-monopoly party 01 jnimcd in any stnto or territory , oxcopl Ing ftlono in Nebraska. And up to th ! day Nebraska is the only state in th union that has an organized anti monopoly party which has fought cam paigns as tnich. California had its anti monopoly constitutional party , but i dissolved as soon as the main objec which had called it into life had been accomplished complishod by the adoption of the nov constitution. Now York 1ms its anti monopoly league , with F. B. Thurbor a its acknowledged loader , but it ha simply sought to defeat monopoly candi dates , on whatever party ticket they won nominated , by massing votes agains them. Anti-monopoly leagues and farmcra alliances exist in Now Jersey , Kansas [ owa , Minnesota and other states , bu .hoy never have attempted to act as ai ndopondont party , oven in local cam laigns When the conference mot at Chicagi n July , it was , as might have boon ox looted , a motley crowd , llko Macbeth' witches , of black spirits and white , gra ; pirita and blue. There wore a largi lumber of groonbackors , intent only upoi the demolition of national banks. Then wore rampant froo-traders and rank pro octionists. There werowoman-BuU'ragists ) rohibitionists , personal liberty mon , Bol Ingorsoll atheists and mon wh < vanted God in the constitution. Last > ut not leant , there was DennisKoarnoy with his running mate , who had como al ho way from California to drive the Chinese out and advocate the right of tin railroads to charge what they ploaao ai eng as they pay good wages to thoii workingmon. Then there wore cranki of both sexes who wore moro fit for t unatic asylum than for n political con. vontion. No wonder that the conference was a perfect babel , where everybody wanted to talk and nobody could make limsolf understood. After an angry debate bate , Kearney and his pals wore kickoi out by common consent as hireling dis .urbors . , This was about the onlyaonaibli hing that the conference did. The res olutions which were adopted and pub ( shod as the sense of the conference wen n fact moro stereotyped platitudes , with out an oricinnl r tangible idea upon anj vital issue. The only substantial poinl ; aiuod was a scheme to merge the defuncl groonbackors and anti-monopolists into t now party that was to bo called into lift during the presidential year. About sixty daya ago another call wai asuod for a national anti-monopoly convention vontion to put a presidential ticket ii .ho field. It waa an open aocrot , whoi Una call waa issued , that it was nothing moro nor loss thanaschomo to put up Boi Butler aa the combination candidate o anti-monopoly , groonbackHin , labor ro. brm , woman suffrage , protection , rove ino reform , prohibition , free whiskey and democracy. The anti-monopoly con vcntion , Bo-callod , was purposely no iho.id of all other national convention ! no aa to force the nomination of Butlei upon the democracy as the only candidati upon whom all elements in opposition ti horopublicans could combine. Meanlimi ho audacious demagogue had himsol elected as a dolcgato at largo from Mas. achusotts to the national democratic con volition. The so-called national anti-mo lopoly convention was a great deal mon of a fraud than n farce. The delegate : did not represent one-half the states ii the union. Moat of them had no otho credentials than their own statement or appointments made by themselves So primary olcctionaoro called , or conventions vontions hold anywhere to oloot them delegates. In many instances their onlj claim to being anti'inouopoliata was tha they were opposed to the existing orde of things. Even in Nobrnskn , where tin party has an organization nnd a largo uni rcnpoctablo following , the delegates won appointed by some half-dozen mombon of the state committee. To the credit o Nebraska delegates , bo it said , thny dii not clamor for Butlor. The cut and dried programme whicl Ben Butler's henchmen have forced upoi the convention , arouaod a great deal o indignation , but the convention had booi packed and the gagged delegates had in other recourse than n bolt. The fao that the convention did not nominate i candidate for vico-preeidont shows on it toco that this waa merely a put-up job ii the interest of Ben Butlor. That wil ; schemer oxpock to trade the vioo-prcai doncy for all it ia worth in the nationn democratic convention. Thoanti-monorj oliats are to bo uicd simply as a cat'a-pai to pull his chestnuts out of the firo. Thi is certainly a humiliating position for tru anti-monopolists to occupy , but nothin bolter could have been expected from movement gotten up prematurely b ; designing mon who have nothing in coni mou with thocauso of onti-monopoly. Ben Butler himself la the last man that cai l y any claims io the suppmt oi moi who oppose the encroachments of corpor atomonopoly. Ho has atnoaaed millions a a corporation lawyer and haa never don anything in congress to rcliovo the pro ducora. On the contrary , ho waa alway on hand to vote a subsidy , or to grant ; charter. True , ho haa of late pretondci to bo a convert to the greenback nni labor reform doctrine , but his convcrsioi ia a moro slmm. With him it haa boon i rule through life , that the end justific the means , and the end with him ia i ho president , no matter how or by wha methods. _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ WHO IS HESVONSlnLF. ! Omaha ia juat now being donouncc < far and wide for the brtital prize figh that waa originated in thia city. Ncarl ; every paper in this state ia pointing t Omaha aa the headquarters of rowdyian nnd depravity , nnd most of them chargi the roaponaibility for the prlzo-fight am subsequent shooting affray directly npor the city and county authorities. Some o the papers , however , fltriko the nail 01 the head by making the managom of tin Union Pacific railroad equally culpabli with the ollicors of the law. The Fro mon Tribune indulge-j in the following pointci comment on this disgraceful nfluir ; The prize fight which occurred noai Vitlloy the other day between Fell ani Ilnnly ! _ wns certainly the most disgrace fnl affair that over occurud in Nebraska Not only did the two contestants figh until they vrnro bloody , bniiscd nnt beastly , but nfter the nffnir broke up tin crowd of roughs present to witness tin "mill" indulged in u free for all fight Whiskey ( lowed freely nnd revolver ! were flourished conspicously. On thi train going back to Omaha thrco met were shot and several fighta indulged ii making n spectacle which disgraces tin fair nnino of Nebraska and is a travoat ; upon civilization and decency. Thi' affair waa advertised to taki place at Omaha but for once the author ! ties of that city were vigilant enough t < prevent its occurrence there. This , however over , did not put a stop to it. The man ngors chartered n Union Pacific train nm ran out in the country by night. Thi railroad company , therefore , should b < held responsible for this disgrncp. The ] must have known just what their oxcur nion train was wanted for at that untitno ly hour and they made it possible for tin bloody work to go on they were j > arli ccpa cnniiniH How long are wo to bi reproached for these disgraces ? Hov long are decent pcoplo to suffer sue ! igtionrny. Our Fremont cotomporary is ominotl ; correct. There could have boon no prize fight in Saunders county without tin connivance of the railroad managers , The people of that county are now goinf to bo put to the expense of crimina trials which will burden thorn witl needless tnxos. It was well onoDgl understood among the pugilistic eloinoir bhat the prize-light ahould not tnko place in thia county if the railroads would ac comodato them. Now that Messrs. Ames and Adam : liavo como all the way from Boston te inaugurate railway aorvlco reform it wil ! bo eminently proper for them to ascertain tain who among their local officials allowcc hia sympathy with prize-ring bullies ti go so far aa to equip a special train ti carry the bruisora. Whoever that mai may bo ho certainly has placed the roac in n very unenviable light , and haa showr himaolf unfit for the responsible positloi which ho holds. THAT Omaha is sound financially to tin core has again been shown during tin past week by the atability of our banki and business houses in the fnco of a finau cial crash that proved moro or less dians troua in many other citlea. Kunaaa Citj nnd St. Joe , for instance , have boaatct of the solidity of their capitalists , but now , aa in 18711 , they were unable t ( stand the severe strain. St. Joe lind embank bank failure , and Kansas City banks won on the verge of going under , onlj escaping suspension by offering to jiaj depositors twenty cents on the dollar nne giving certified checks for the balance. HAH anybody heard from General How nrd ? Wo would like to know whether hi has reached Khartoum yet nnd roliovec Ohinoso Gordon. LlXtiUAKY NOTES. Juumi TOUUOKI : will contribute a noon on Decoration Day to the laauo of hii mnpozino , The Continent , whioJi will ap pear on that anniversary. Tin : Juno Century will contain two very timely editorials , ono on thu Cincin natt riot and the other on our militia Speaking of the editorial "Mob or Mag istrato , " which nppoarod in The Conturj just provioua to the Cincinnati riot , tin London Spectator says : "Tho Ceuturj may fairly claim to bo reckoned nmon ( the prophets. " Tun Continent's now form of the liter nry connundruin , with an award of prlzoi for the successful gueajnra na to the nutor ahip of the coveral uhort stories by lead ing American authors , now appearing ii the nutjuzlno niidor the general title ol "Too True for friction , " ia anid to bo ex oiling considerable interest nmong and readers as nro disposed lo try their ham at literary diacriminationao far aa may l > judged from the number who are outer ing the competition. The monthly cditioi for Juno contains the tirat tliroo of those atorioa , which arn worth reading , wholh or or not the reader attempts to dccidi whether Ihoyaro wrilton by Mrs. Stowo " 11. 11 , , " or otliera of the galaxy of atari writers who contrlbuto lo tlio aerica' Tin ; North American lloviow for Juiu opona with nn urliclo on "Unrborinj Conspiracy , " by Prof , llonry Wadi llodgors , who oxKininoa in the light o international laiv , the diplomatic history of the United States nnd the nationu constitution , the < iuoation na to how fai our government tuny nnd muatgo in sup pressing plota against governments witl which wo are at peace , llonry D Lloyd in the eaiuo number of the Hoviuw ahowa how uvory brach of jroduoHon IE coming under the control of' "Loida ol Industry , " corporations and monopolies Elizabeth Stuart Phelps has an urtioli marked by rare philosophic force upoi : the "StruKglo for Immortality. " Othei articles of not leas importance nro 'Sociological Fallacies , " by Prof. W. G , Summer ; ' 'Tho Kiso and Fall of Author ity , " by President J. C. Welling ; "Wai Whitman , " by Walter Kennndy ; and f aymposium on "Export Tcatimony , " bj lloaaiter Johnaon , Dr , W , W. Godding T. O'Conor Sloano and Dr. Charles I Dana , lUitrKii's MAOAZINK for Juno , begin ning the sixty-ninth volume , promises , foretaste of summer in two papers th ono of Eurnpoanandthootherof Atnoricai travel , Mrs. Lillie will write of tin famous French watciing place , Biarritz with illustrations from Mr. Iloinhart'i clover pencil , nnd Mr. John A. Butler , o "Tho North Shoro" of Lake Superior which Mr. Ohna , Graham illustrates fron sketches made last summer. Two pappn of much commercial and industrial in. . tercst will bo n careful nnd comprohon Bivo article on the organization and war ) of the Now York custom house , by ] { Whcatlny , and ono on Sheflloli and _ its trades , by W. H llidoing , both illustrated. Col. HigRinson'i paper will describe "Tho Great Wcston March" of population during the adminia ( ration of John Quincy Adams , and wil have fine portraits of that president ant John C. Calhoun. There will bo moroo William Sharp's charming i.ooms , "Trans cripts from Nature , " with Alfred Pnrson'i illustrations , na well na further install munta of William Black's and E. P. lloo'i novels , with pictures by Abbey , Diolmni and Gibson. The short stories will bi "Tho I.ig or , " ntolo of uld Homo , bj John MuiMullon , with illuatrationa bj Frcdoricka. nnd "A Ilumblo Ilomonce,1 by Mary J3 , Wilkins. Among the mia collanooua papers will bo an account o Virginia's ono witch , Grace Sherwood and a reminiscence of Abraham Lincoli at Cincinnati , by W. M. Dickaon. THE long-promised now cover appoan on the Juno number of The Manhattan which may now congratulate itaolf 01 having ns beautiful n cover aa magnzini over had. The design , simple and artia tic , is printed in a rich carnation on at old-gold paper. The contonta of tin number are worthy of the cover. Tlu frontispiece is nn airy Cguro-pioce , on. titled "Spring , " drawn by Mcllhcnnoj and engraved by Juonglinj ; , illustrating some lines of Willis Gaylord Clark. Ai American painter , Henry Roderick Now. man , who has long lived in Florence , i : the subject of the opening article , writtoi by II. Buxton Forman , the editor o ! Koata nnd Sholloy. Loiters from Mr , Ituokm oxprosa hia high opinion of New man's work , nnd the article is ilhntrnted with n portrait nnd n number of illustra lions. Another profusely and brilliantly illustrated article is a second paper or "Tho Gunnison Country , " by Erncai Ingorsoll , who haa horajuirpasscd all hit provioua offorto in graphic description , There are four portraits , illustrating th < first part of "Retrospections of tin American Stage , " by John Bonard , i theatrical malinger at Boston , in the caily part of Una century. Of "Trajan,1 the now novel , there ia n second striking instalment. Edgar Fawcott's "Tinklinj. Cymbals , * ' is concluded , and there nn two short stories , ono "A Boston Man,1 by Nora Perry. The other short ntory , "Flonbcl , " is aa amusing sketch. There arn two purely literary papers , ono or "Tho Brownings , " by Miss Kato M , Rowland , of Baltimore , The other liter nry paper , by J. Heard , is a singularly cogent argument argument to show "Whj Women Should Study Shakeapearo. " Tin poetry comprises such names aa Coli : Thaxtor , John Vance Chonny and Louiai Chandler Moulton. The "Rocont Liter aturo" haa some nblo notices of nov books. In the "Town Talk" there is i solution of the vexed question na to win ia "Obormnnn , " made fnmous by th Now York Tribune hoax , and there nr Bomo laughing things in "Salmagundi. " ART NOTES. Miss GIIEATOIIKX , whoso talents no painter of Jlowora are fully recognized haa recently completed a study of Chrj sanlhomums for Mr. L. Prang , aa con ; panion to the Hollyhocks which ho pui chased after the last water color oxhi bition. They nro specially adapted fo studies for advanced students. THE late A. F. Bellows excelled ii landscape , and the value of his produc tions has doubled since hia lamontoi death laat year. Four charming land acnpea from hia brush aio among Prang' forthcoming publications. They are ii his happieat manner , with the tcndc pootio treatment that especially distin guiahcd hia work. Essentially Amcricai in fooling , his choice of subjects waa al ways of quiet homo scenes , nnd ho i without n rival in the delineation of land acapo , Booking his theme among quip meadows nnd in paatoral districts , ii preference to the wilder mountain view which tempt so many of our Atnoricai artists. CITY WALKS AND TALKS. "I am glad to hoar that Mr. I'axto l.roi > osos to put up an elegant building at tin southeast corner of Faruani nud Fiftcontl streets , " remarked n prominent clti/.on. " undoratnnd It Is to bs a live story structure , ' said a bystander , "nnd ono of the finest build ings in Omiihs. Itt \ to bo built of ClucnR pressed brick , with Btilv.inlzod iron anil tarr , cotta trimm3. ! It will cast nbout $50,000 The upper utorioa may bo ilovoted to otlices , n Mr. 1'itxtun already 1ms applicants enough t \\iirrauthlmiuimilitug It nil ollico buildlny with tlio exception uf the lirat etorv. Th < building is to bo completed thia year. " "I wish wo han moro tnou In Omnli Ilka BUI Fa\tou"aatd an old settlor. "I remember member \vh n ho emu ) to Omilia oirly in 1857 from Minnouri , Ila waa then only nbou twenty yo.ua uld. Ho didn't htvo a dollar The tint work that ha did wai fur Mr. Ko.igan who employed him ai foronun in tha oon. Btiucttim of military bridgoi batwoon Omaha and Shell Creak. In 1H38 ho returned t < Mbflourl , c t mnrrlod , nnd went to funning In 1800 hocumnlmck to Oumhn nlono and wen to work twain for Itea au at 810 per month it building tlio Western Union telegraph line ti Salt JjiUo , which waa thou botug coiutructot by Kdward Crofchton. In December , IStil ho returned to Missouri attain , nnd In 180' ho brought hia wlfu to Omaha. All the mouej that ha had accumulated up to this lima win $135. 1'or uovon or eight months ho Imi clmrgo of Wllhor ft Collimm'a livery stublo which stood where Joyd' ! < i opera housa now is , lie next took clmrgo of Dick nud Finn McCur mlck'd freight trains , nnd eomluctod thnn through to Dnnvor. JIu ran thesa trains mill the full of 1 SCO. The next > priug ho want t < railroad building. Ha took uub-contraota oi the Unlou 1'acitic , nud continued in thli busiucHK until December , 1SGS , 1'axton thoi couutud up hia ca h on hand nud found thai ha had § 14.500. HU uuxt buslucwa venture waa the handllntr uf two drovca of cat1 tlo , which ho brought up from Ablloiu nnd sold iu the summer of ISG'J. ' In tha fall of that veir ho secured the contract with Jack Morrow and lioalt'r for furuhhiuM beef to the Indian ucouclea. nud ho contlnuoc in this bubincod till 1870. Meautimo , in 187d , h star to ; I his cuttle ranch. Ho iiow has 1'L1 , . 030 head of uuttlo , ulthough lost fall ho uolil ubout that ninny otttlo to the Ogallala land nnd cuttlo company , in which company lie own SliiJ.OOO of utock. 1'ivo yearn nin he Htartml the wholcsole grocery firm of l'n\tmi ! i Ciallagher , which ii now ono of tlio largest houses in the west Ha U prculd lit and tioa * . urer f the Union btock-yimU company , nnd e ill roc tor iu the Ogollala land and cattle ctin. pauy. Tlio organization uf the etock yatdj company , and the South Omaha boom pentr ally , 1 < largely duo to hid jwrsonal elforte , Tlio men luijodatod In thtxo enterprise * coir trol thrco fourths of tha cattle iu the wait , and cuuBoquontly the cattle biulueb of tha west may bo aid to bo tributary U Omaha. lieaUta nil thin , l'.xtou has apcul cousldjrablo money In building iuiproveuiout ! nnd will upend great deal more. 1 cnlmnt li ! wonlth ftt n little over $ SMHM ) , nnd know what I nm speaking nbou' . The nccti initiation of money In the handi of such pub llo spirited ontcrptl. liiK nnd liberal men tui h is.li n good thing for Oma'i.i. There are tw or throe other manlike him In Otnah' , but whhvo had moro of them. M.onoy his no ! spoiled Hill 1'nxton. " "When Grant came to Washington nfte being oloctocl president , " said n prominon tiollticlaa , who n now n resident of Omaha ' 'ho brought with him ns hit secretaries nni contldonUal clorkii , Porter , IJ bcock , Bndoai nnd Loot , liuloau wai aont to Liverpool coniut-goncrnl. Loot wai given the bondd wnrohouso btulnosi In Jfow York. H tool Stocking In na n partner , nnd hold the bus ! ness , worth Sl"fi,000 n year , from 1803 to 1872 Uabcock nnd 1'ortor remained ns Grant's pr ! vato secretaries tintll 1'tillman took 1'ortc Into the Pullman car business , nnd the Unite States marshal took liabcock to St. Louis t bo tried for complicity in robbing the govern tuont in the whUky tax ntujl. Whathai fine become of these men ? Tlio last hoard of Lee was that ho was driving n Btroot-car in No\ \ York , ho having gone to ruin by gambling spocnlatlon/iml dissipation Porter lately fnilo In the West Shore railroad. Uadoau recontl ; resigned the conRul-gonornlshlp at Havana uri dor a dark cloud. JUbcock , who escaped th penitentiary through Grant's Inllucnco , ha turned out better than any of thorn , llo ha boon promoted to bo lioutcnant-colonol of on gineors. " ' -Tho death of .Tmlah 1' . Honjatnln rn calls a Httlo incident that occurred during th ttmo I wni operating In the south during th war , " said nn old telegraph operator. "Bon jamln wai piealng through Alabama on hi way homo from Washington , over the old Vlr glularoad. toMotnphia. At Stevenson , whor I was nt work , I wont into the train to deliver liver him n tolcgratn. I found him cngngoi in n big poker game with n pile of twenty dnl lar gold piocca In front of each player. H wns rather n- dark comploxloued man , \vitl mnsalvo head nud broad Bhouldors , and wa about five feet nnd cif lit inches in height. Ii tho.io days ho was coualdorod the best debate In the Unltoil States. Win. L. Ynnotty , i liro-oatitij ( southerner from Alabama , was nls on the tram. I had imagined from his roputatioi that ho wan n lierco looking giant. I wa ? therefore , coiisldtrably surprised to find hin small in alntuto , not moro lluu live feet am five inches in height , and a very mild maueroi man. Ha was regarded u.i the most fiery o the fire-eaters. " "Tho refusal of Uarl Schurz to accept jift of SIOO/UO , doni not surptiso mo iu th least , " aaid an old friend of bin , "as ho ha made It the rule of his Ufa not to accept proa onts. When ho waa scuator from Missouri some CallfornianB sent his wife n boautlfu and costly casket of jewels ns n token of the ! appreciation of the Ronator'H vote on some im portatit mnasuro iu which they \vcro intcrea tod. Ho immediately told his wife ti rotun it as ho could not receive any gift while ii office , nnd the casket was accordingly re turnoJ. I know of other similar instances. " * I ' 'In 187(51 ( attended the national ropub licau convention at Cincinnati , " said n wol known politician the other day , "aud I walkec up with Carl Schuiz from the liurnet houao t < tboMusIohall , where the convention wns being ing hold. I was n lllaino man. I said ti Schurz everything looked favorable for lUatuo.iand I thought ho wan going to bo nomi nated. 'I hope not , ' said Shurz 'Why ? ' J nskod. 'That man , ' said ho , 'is the wreck o : tlie republican party. The pcoplo of the United od states will never elect n man who is kuowr to bo BO thoroughly identified with corpora tion influences and with all tha monopolies at lilaino is. ' lUaina was not nominated bu Ha } os was , nud when Carl Schurz wai named for a place iu the cabinet there was a grnat deal oi opposition to him. I called oi Schurz iu Washington aud said , ' 'It looks in it you were going to have n hard time to pul through , lilaiu is opposing you , so also an Morton , Conkling anil Logan. " "You are mis taken m ouo of the men , " said ho ; "lilnino Coukl'tig nm ! Logan , it is true , are opposin | mo , but Motton is all right. " The uoiiat finnly confirmed Schurz. A suuatrtr , who was Httlo moro leaky than was norhaps rustc mury , lot the cat out of the bag. Morto turned in and made a fight in the oxecutiv session in favor of Si-hutx , Kvarts aud Key * who were objected to very strongly. 131am was most bitter in his opposition , but th majority overruled him. It will also bo re membjred that Blaluo's first speech on th floor of the fonato wns an assault on Hayci udi" ) istrntion. This explains the prcsen opiniMtiou of buch indopciidonts as .Kvarts am Sciiui/ Blaino. "During the nuxc republican nations convention , which was hold in Chicago , " sal the same politician , "I was in the parlors c the Grand Pacific ; hotel , where the Conklin nnd Grant mon were assembled. While I wn talking with Senator Jones in n corner of parlo No. 7ho said , 'If I had the nominating spooc ! to innko for Grant , I would have a very fo\ words to eay. I would start out aud any : When asked where ho hails from My solo reply shall no , Ho halls from Appomattox Aud that grmul old apple < reo. ' And then Senator Jonp.s wont on and recite n five mltiutcH Breech , eulogizing Gouorii Grant. Two davs nflnrwarilj , when the nom inatinns wcro called for in the convention , t mvpeat hiirpii o Conkling arosu nnd mad tin idoatin.,1 Hpooch th it .lories had lohoarsoi to mo. 1 took it for t-iantcd that Conklin ; hid bnp.ii nlioiidiiig the speo'li ' to .Tones , nni that .TOUCH , who had a pplondid memory , hai simply recited it to ma eocoml-handbut later oi I found out thai. .Tounx had really originate that epcoch , nnd that Coukllng who happenei to ho.ir it , appropriated it and got the credi for it. " Holler Suli-Iji't tlio . ! ol > . Kearney County G a tto. Omaha has a new paper called the Loy cotter , and ita mission Booms to bo ti bust lloaowator wide open. Our advici is to sub lot the job , as lifo is too short fo ono little two-for-a-ponny shoot to di it. COMPLETE TREATMENT , $1 , A clnglo iloso of Banford's Radical euro In. Bluntly rtllou'athj luoit violent Snuezin or Head ColJa , clmatho head a by niaxlc , etojj watery dU' char.ro9 | from the Nona and Kyua , proients Hindi C N'olsiD In thu head , Oirm Nvrvoui Ilualache and juUliiw ) ChllU and Feu'r , In Chronlo Catarrh it : lcin i.'J the null jiusi cs of foul mucus , riintorci 10 sciisoj of imiolf , tutu and hearlni ; when affected , 'rocs ' the head , throat and bronchial tube * of olton- l\o matter , sweetens and i > urifled the bruath , stops , he rouh and nrrvdts thu piogreu of Catarrh to nardi C'ouiuc'iitlan , Ono bottle lUdlcul Cure , one IK > X Catarrhal Sol. tent and Sauford'a Inhaler , all In ono package , of at IrurcUUfor * 1 , Auk lar .Stxronu'u IUUIMI , CURL 1'onut Dni'o AM ) CIIBUICAL Co. . IJoaton Collins' Volta'o ' Klootrlo Pl ! itei Instantly advctstho Nvrtoui Klrctrio lUtU'ry com- 'llne ' < 1 ltn a 1 > or > u * " t" " " 25 mU HannlhllatBs t'sin- NltMbixWoik and Worn Out 1'fttU. tlti-intliuis Tiro.1 Jin. ; clcs , prevent illicajo , and dwid mete in oiic-h li Iliuothan a v rittiur plaster III the world. BolJ o cr ) licro , Pioneer jurug Store ! B. r. con. ism AND JONES sre. DE. P. S. LEWIS , - Prop'r , AOEKl rjK Ohio Oil Co.'a Wuat Virpinla , Oplind and other Oilr conitiutlv on hand. The Largest Stock in Omaha and Makes the Lowest Prices DRAPERIES AND MIRRORS , Juat received an assortment far ( surpassing anything in this market , comprising the latest and most tasty designs manufacturodjfor this spring's trade and covering n range of prices from the Cheapest to the most Expensive. Parlor Goods Draperies. Now ready for the inspection of cus Complete stock of nil the latcat tomers , the newest noveltifs in styles iu Turcoman. Madras nud Suits nud Odd Pieces. Lace Curtains , Etc. , Etc. Eloeant Passenger Elevator to all Floors. 1206,1208 nnd 1210 Faruaru Street , - - - - OMMIA , NEB CU 1024 North Eighteenth Street , Omaha , on Street Car Line , Grades and prices as sooil and low as any in the city. Please try me. TJ , S. DEPOSITORY. J. H. MILLARD , President. WM. WALLACE Cashier. Capital and Surplus , S45O.OOO , Firn and IJurplnr Proof Safra for Tlnnt n.r. f m Sn to S50per annum G. H. WOOD & CO. , SUCCESSORS TO WESTERN STKAJI MATING CO. , IPLTJIMIIBIEIRS , STEAM AND GAS FITTERS , 215 North 10th Street , bet. Capitol Ave. and ( \ ft/I A LI A M IE C Darpuport Street. Telephone No. 495. U IVI H Tl , 8 i L e/3 TOrtD to * "fr * I T ? * S " 3 . * 0 j .55 T < rt u &Q O3 O 13 rt W c3 ± j a CQ rf R O .S 43 W I IS CQ o 03 OTTMIMGS AND 20TH ST. , OMAHA , NEB. THEBESTTHREADFORSEWSMG MACHINES 333. Willimautic Spool Cotton is entirely the product of Home Industry , and is pronounced by experts to ho the best sewing machine thread intlie world. FULL ASSORTMENT CONSTANTLY ON HAND , an for sale by HENLEY , HAYNES & VAN ARSDEL , Omuhn. Nek ijiwimwarwfWmfiMnfftwtafrfMKKfMi This cut shows a sectional view of our New Polar Air Dry Refrigerator , manufac tured in the most perfect manner of Kiln-Dry lumber Charcoal Killed , Zinc Lined Galvanized Iron Shelves Black Enameled Trim niings Handsomely paneled , and dfsigned for the wants of a class of trade that re quires the best class of f goods that can bo made. Vfo sha hell thesu Re frigerators nL manufactur er's prices , with freight ad c'eil. ' You are respectfully invited to examine them. Compare prices before buy- ! ' .i $ ? $ & ! r Restiectfullv. is ? v- > ' V' . L , \ \ RIGHT . si Manufacturer's jgent. 317 S13th St. , OMAHA , 'NEBRASKA. MANUFACTUKKll 0V Fine Buggies , Carriages , & Spring Wagons , Uy UepOEltory ta oonetanlty filled with * Select Stock , BEST WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEED. OFFICE AND FACTORY , H W inj-wly Cor. Sixteenth and Capitol Avenun. TI1 ? a loicmont | of the trcUment of Cancer with Swifts Sneclllo ceuia so wonderful , that all ao Mills. led Boould wrlto us. CAhCBR FOR U YEAR ? Spartanburir , S. 0. , Match 14,188) . I have for H yi > ara been autferer from a lunnlnz ere on my ( tog that oerybody called * C nc r. I ha > o used o cr $300 worth ol * cdlclue and found no r l. l. About lour injrtlu ae Iujht I \ ono Lottie of blft'4S | > cinofiom Dr. II. T. IlelnlUli , and iluce ha\o boutflit flva othois , ImoUVo 1and tliev ho cur d me sound and uvll ) Mv face U as frcofmn * Brtro ai anj u-xlj-1-and my health It p ' 'i tly r . jtorcd. I 1 llko forty jo r had Iwon llfed oil mi- head. Yours thankfully , KI.IZA ' 11NSLKV , ' ! ' ) " 1 lakfii"o b'ottloa ' havM . ' . ' ' . ! > o ofSvUft'a S cciflo for a or' on m > tei pie-said to 1 a canrer. Ihjva booiiHonder/ully / litnelltcil aud vllUoon to a man. ' i'1' ' , " " ' ' " "W"1" ! H xUli"ro n , , nrltcii. um'er lr. e J n. S. 1 4 : "I am relllne on tlncly , tHe ult-r It ctlu llv Healinc , I feel that S 1tf Hpcrlflo will Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. THEBWIrTSPECIFlO TO N V. Offloc. 159W.WJ Bt , IRON AND SLATJ ! KOOFINO. till DouIi3 St Onuha , Neb. MANUFAirrUllEtt 0V Gnlvamzea Iron Cornices iirDormir Wlndoa , Klnta'n , Tin , Iron and Hlato ' " " : ' ' , "vchf 1-atont Jktalllo 8k light intciit adjusted lUtchct Hir aud IlracUtt Mieltlni. I am too Kcuiiral a.fc.it . for the nboto line of . Iron i'n " 5 V"lla'l" , ' ' > < " ' . V.randw. Iron Ilink i u- H8UliiK . \ Ilinrf \Jludm , Cailir ( Jiurds ; iU general ajeut tor 1'tereon i Illlfii 1'atent InsIHe Illlnd SOIIMELING & UBLSCI1NER , DKAUHS : 621 South 13th , between Jackion and Jones Sts. Job Woik n Booflnif. Outtcruij , Etc. , i > rooij.tly . oono *