* HArnTTRTIAV. .nTNTTfl 10 "IRSfi. . 1 MO , HATCHER , GADD & CO "C Real Estate Brokers , lie ( Millard Hotel Block , Omaha , Neb. ' " ! ? . dot ? dai laV lift Do a Strictly Commission Business ell1 I . BO. BO.Ot fll fllU IN lid ) Residence and business property in allparts of Omaha. Vacant lots in ili ; all the most desirable suburban additions , on the most favorable df fu . terms. td toni Read a partial list of some of our bargains. th t * 1 Btbi biI BUSINESS PROPERTY. Full lot on Howard st. , $15,000. 8 business lots on Uodgo st , at a bar gain. i : 2 business lots on Douglas st. , u rare "c bargain. Lot 00x133 on Harnoy , $13,000. Several stocks of goods to exchange forOiunhn property or Nebraska lands. vf Lots nnd Houses and Lots. 2 lota S. 8th st. , near Market , $1,000. r , : 8 lots i-atrick's 2d add. , 53,000. 3 lots Foster's add. , $3 , 00. Lot 3 , block , Reed's 4th udd. , on car line ; splendid for business , $1,500. House und lot in Walnut Hill , very de sirable , i2GOO. Residence nud lot , corner Hamilton and Irene sts. , $3,000. 10 lots in Kilby Place , $1,000 each. 8 lots in Wilcox's 1st add. , $500 each. 2 lots , 1 a corner , Kilby Place , $1,250. 2 lots in Kirkwood , $050 each. 3 lots Uimcbangti & Sauudcrs' add. , | 350 each. E } lot 9 Howe's add. , $700. Lot with small house , S. E. Rogo'r add , f2GOO. House and lot. Clarendon add , $3,000. 3 lots , Clarendon add , $1,000 each. Corner , Virginia and Popplcton avc , very desirable , $3,000. Splendid residence corner 13th and Dodge , favorable terms , $23,000. Two lots in Lowe's add , $1,425. First class residence lot on Harnoy , near 20th , $4,500. Splendid residence with two lots , 1 a corner , on Park ave. and Woolworth , $5.000. N. E. corner 23d and Douglas , largo ground , nnd houses.paying good income , a bargain , $12,500. New house and lot in Ilanscom Place , $5,000. 7 room residence nnd good lot.Rcdick's 2d add , $4,500. Hotel Baxter , in Harlan , Iowa , good condition and doing a paying business ; hotel nnd furniture , $0,500. House and lot in Red Cloud , Neb , $1,000 LANDS. Section in Gasper Co. , $0.00 per acre ; easy terms. - Section in Gasper Co. , $7.00 per acre ; easy terms. 100 acres (120 ( under cultivatiou , Furaas Co. , i raj rovcmcnts , 8 miles from rn road , easy terms , $3,000. 100 acres , improved , Hurt Co. , well watered nnd timbered , $27 per acre. 105 acres in Nickels Co. , $13 per acre ; easy terms. 1020 acres in Howard Co. , $5 to $10 per aero. 100 acres , 120 under cultivation , in Grcley Co. . $3,700. 480 acres in Grcclcy Co , $7 per aero ; will exchange. 8 sections in Howard Co. , good for stock ranch and cheap. 900 acres in Webster Co. , 800 acres un der cultivation , will sell or exchange for Omaha property ; worth $20 per acre. Splendid steam roller mill at St. Paul , Howard Co. , Neb. , very complete , on easy terms , $25,000. Steam roller mill fit Scotio , Grecloy Co. , Neb. , $16,000 ; all modern improve ments , $10,000. No 1 water mill , Schuyler , Neb ; nlllato improvement , with 100 acres improved land ; a great bargain. $10,000. List your property with Hatcher , Gadd & Co. , and secure quick sales. BARKE & BARKALOW , Real Estate and Loan Agents > Boom 21 Paxton Building , Cor. 15thand Far nam st. following Very desirable additions. lots on monthly payments of from $10 to $60 in the West Omaha Bark alow Place. Omaha View , Leavenworth Terrace , Orchard Hill , , Bedford Place , Sharen Place and Walnut Hill Also some choice houses and lots on Farnam st , Burt Su. , Leaven- wo rt st , Phil Sheridan and Cuming st. , We have bargains in property in all parts of the cityjeasy payments , Low rates of inte ® st. FARM LANDS FOR SALE , Rents Collected , - - Taxes Paid. CINCINNATI STORE , KANSAS CITY STORE , 200 , Sll nml SIS West OUi Street. 1135 Main Street , OMAHA STORE i , - . , 1317 and 1319 Douglas St. GEORGE LOUIS & COMPANY , Furniture and Carpets. iu Special attention given to furnishing houses , and hotels complete. iu Consistent Opposition to the Encroachments of Land Grant Corporations. BILLIONS OF BOGUS STOCK. Xho Necessity of n General Pension Law nml the Increase of Ton * slons The d.isoofSnlly . VI THE surnnMU COVKT AND inn LAND nr.- PA HTM EXT. The bill grnnliiig lo Iho Loavonworlh , Lawrence & Galvcston railroad Indem nity lands being before the senate , Sena tor Van Wyck submitted n resolution asking the secretary of Iho interior how much laud has been oortiiiod for railroad companies since the decision ot the supreme court of 1875 , as indemnity for anils disposed of prior to the dales of the respective grnnls. The supreme court had expressly adjudicated that nny laud transferred before the dale of Iho granls did not pass to the railroad com pany. The department was administering - ing the law as the supreme court said It was , and then Secretary Schurz found It convenient to nsk the opinion of the attorney-general. That is the favorite way of disposing of such matters. Wo hnvo the supreme court followed when it is convenient for the department todo.so , and when thai will not exactly meet Iho case , Ihun il is convenient for the attor ney-general to review the supreme court. Thnt was the moile of proceeding hero. Carl Schurz clinractomes the decision ns "tho remarks mndo in that case. " Wo now simply nsk if the land department has Ignored the decision of the supreme court , aud continues to ignore it by giving thousands and I know not but millions of acres to railroad corpora tions to which they were not entitled. Strnugo things are taking place as well in the supreme court as in tlio land de partment in regard to this matter of land grants. My friend from Iowa will con- ccdo thnt very strange nnd mysterious doings in the supreme court and the circuit courts and in the lantl department of this government have taken placo. 1 think my friend knows it by the suffer ings of his own pcoplo from tlio adminis tration of the law of railroad grants and by the decisions of the courts. Some of his own pcoplo have suffered the depriva tion of their property , and sonic of them the deprivation of their reason because of the treatment accorded lo them. On the suggestion of senators , Mr. Van Wyck introduced the preamble lo Ins resolution with the words , "Whereas , it is alleged , " und jt wks passed. NECESSITY FOR A GENERAL PENSION LAW. I was happy to hear the senate ; ! ' from Tennessee , when ho stated that if any thing was given to this woman ( Mary P. MncBlnin ) , enough should be given to support her. 1 wns glad to hear him. lay that down as n basis on which pensions should bo granted. The senator from New Hampshire says there are but few such cases. Thcro nre many , if they could reach Washington ; and the great ditii- culty is that we have no general law under which these cases cnbe reached , and I for ono have felt that wo should stop hearing special cases in the com mittee room and bring in some general law which would reach everybody. But most of the special cases are those which como up to us from Washington , where great social and political influences sur round them , so that they can be heard. And when wo can pause long enough to frnmo some general law , the tragedies to which the senator referred so eloquently tlio tragedies , as ho called them , in the pension department will no longer agi tate us. That is whnt I desire. Ono thing is remarkable that in the various cases which como before the committee in great numbers from the city of Wash ington , the wives of rcar-ndmirais , nnd of commodores , and of major-generals are able to secure prompt attenllon. Sometimes in ono year from Ihe time tlio sod covers the body , or in less than a year , the application of the widow will go into nnd come out of the pension ollico. Your widow in New Hampshire cannot enter the pension office and get out in a year ; your widow in Tennessee cannot enter the ollico and get out in one year. It is time that thiug was stopped , and when we have some general law wo shall be able to stop il. I thank Iho sena tor from Tennessee for declaring the doctrine upon which pensions should bo granted , nml I trust that the committee on pensions will soon present a bill that will increase the pension of willows from $8 to at least $12 per month. If you give a pension to those who are poor and necessitous , then give them enough to take them out of their impoverished con dition. Will anybody rise in this cham ber nnd tell melhat $8 n month is enough for the widow who is loft with a family of children to rear , and whoso husband perished on the battle-field , his resting place marked only by the board that records the burial of an "unknown soldier - dior ? " hot us see to it that the last days of every man who fought for the union are mndo happy by the generosity of the government which will give him enough to subsist himself. TENSIONS TO MEXICAN AND UNION SOL- pinits. May 28. 1884 , Mr. Hoar said that it was impossible the bill could bo enacted without soon compelling congress by its logic to take the next stop a stop which : would put upon the covernmonl an an nual burden of from $100,000,000 to IIS,1) ! , . 000,000. Mr. Vau Wyck : I am in favor of the Mexican pension bill. I am also n friend of the soldier of the late war. Whatever princip le the senate chooses to apply to the soldiers of the Mexican war , 1 insist shall bo applicd.to the soldiers of the late war. Wo certainly can at this time put the soldiers of tlmrepublic who served in all wars upon the same basis. Wo have a treasury so full thnt it is n source of an of noyance to gentlemen every tiny in this chamber , and to American statesmen in and out of congress. The great policy of as statesmanship tcf'dav nnd the great merit of legislation is.Claimed to bo the deplet ing process , tlioVxhau&tlon , Iho emptying out of the treasury. The senator from Alabama stated 'thof hardships , the great victory und the greater results springing from the war with Mexico. But 1 would say to him that' they will not compare with the hardships , with the brilliancy of the victory or the /grandeur / of the results sults of the war for the union. When the union soldier followed the Hag of his country , ho inarched against n braver enemy and a better soldiery than our army confronted on the fluids of Mexico : , It id true the victorious legion in the Mexican war brought millions of acres tone of the American republic , but when wo come to the solaiers of the union , wo noM attention to the fact that they secured hoed whole American republic. They added not ono more stripe nor ono more star to the flag , but they rescued the whole flag from the destruction by which it was im periled. The soldiers ot the Mexican war udded a part ; the union soldiers gathered T. and saved the whole. Our attention of bos been called to the fact thai many solen diers of Iho Mexican war have gene olio ci the crave m poverty. I pomt you to the the fact thnt there are to-day union soldiers I ) exile ' , They are exiled In a home which or the' charity of this nation gives , and iu nc which they nro compelled to spend Iho remnant of tholr days under har.sh and cruel military discipline. We give a jail to men who gave the best of their days nnd their blood , not to ndd n portion but to save the whole republic ! not tonddouo moro star , however bripht Us brilliancy , but to preserve the entire constellation. JunoO , 18S1 : I trust wo shall bo able to place this bill upon such n basis as will bo satisfactory when the time como * , if it is not now , for granting not only nets of gratitude , but substantial recognition lo the soldiers who served in the army of the union. This amendment was only intended to roach the soldiers of the union army who nro suffering by reason of disability , no matter whether incurred before or since thu war , nml these who nro dependent. If this money is lo bo taken out of the treasury , it Is far botlor that it should bo given to the poor wid ows who lost tholr husbands in thu war. The pensions must bo increased. Iho republican party has saido ; the demo- cratlo party will say so- , the democratic house has said so : tlio republican senate has said so , Pensions must bo increased , nnrt my friend from Delaware and myself must submit. That is the Judgment of the nation. * * * 1 have found in the committee room that which has excited my admiration , iu regard to pensions on the part of goiitlemou coining Irom an other section of the country , whoso dead were buried , and their widows nnd their children are receiving no pittance from the government. I have admired gcntlo- men on Ibis floor coming from thatsec , tion , who advocated general and indi vidual pension laws with Iho same degree of alacrity and cordiality ns men from the section of the country whoso pcoplo are bcnefilted. TENSION TO SALLY MALLOW ( WIDOW OP A UKVOLUTIONAUV SOLUIKR ) . Mr. Van Wyck saidI could see noth ing iu this case , nuiUier could the com mittee on pensions , to make a precedent which would bo injurious. The com mittee have reported a bill giving her § 30 a month. The senator ( Mr. I'lntt ) says if wo increase the pension of this widow there are hundreds of others whoso pen sions will have to bo increased. Precisely thu sumo argument would have applied with greater force when wo pensioned tiio widows of presidents of the United States. It would apply with greater force when the proposition is made to pension at $50 a mouth the wid ows of officers of high rank in Iho army and navv. This poor woman is asking for this bounty because she has outlived all her natural relations. This old woman to-day has these patents of American nobility : ono by reason of the services of hnr husband in the revolutionary war. where ho served llirco years and six months ; another by reason of his servjco m the war of 1813 : then she has a third patent of nobility in the fact that she lives to-day , the widow of the hero of two wars. She has boon unfortunate to bo poor , and she lias boon thrown by cir cumstances into the frontier state of Ne braska and into one of the frontier counties of that state , aud at her extreme ago she is upon tlio very verge where the Indian nnd the buffalo roam on one side and a rude clvili/ation exists on the other. If there bo another like her , I trust that when she comes to the American con gress she will be received and granted sufficient to give her n support through life. life.Mr. Mr. Allison : Ilo\v old is she ? Mr. Van Wyck : Nearly one hundred years old. A year or two ago congress was liberal in the bestowal of thousands of dollars for n centennial celebration at Nowburgh , where the great army of the revolution was disbanded , anil whore probably the most eloquent document thnt over wont into American literature was circulated among the officers of the Americnn army , wherein it was charged that their government hnd been unjust to them ; that they must go back to tueir homes devastated aud blackened by wari their mere pittance of pay to bo in cur rency which was depreciated. And we recognized the great services of these men ; wo cherished them by bestowing thousands to celebrate Iheir memory. Yet near thnt time was Iho birth of this now aged woman , born in the shock of the revolution ; and she , I trust , may not be nilowed now to repeat whnt her sol dier husband would have said , thnt the government had been unjust to them. Lot it not bo said ono hundrcdycnrs later that when the widow of ono of those sol diers came to the American congress , and looking at us with her bowed form and lusterless eyes , nml stretching out the famished hands asks a pittance for her support , she will bo obliged to repeat whnt her husband declared ono hundred years ngo. The bill passed by a vote of 29 yeas to 14 nays. nays.LANDS LANDS FOB THE LANDLESS. Tha following is from a speech on the claim to a land grant by the Puyallup branch of the Northern Pacific road : 1 say to my friend from Massachusetts ( Mr. Hoar ) , wno lias just mndo n remark which I overheard , that Henry Wilson , in 1870 , when the Union Pacific came hero to ex tort moro land from the government , was uttering sentiments the same ns those I am now expressing. Senator Van Wyck quoted at length from Wilson's speeches nnd said : The position of Mas sachusetts is the position I ma trying to uphold. Henry Wilson would legislate for His country with his sympathies for the settler and the landless , and could propose that the price of the lands granted to the railroad should bo $3.00 an aero. He bid defiance to the power of the railroad company. Yet it has boon grotv ing and increasing from tlut ) day until now. Henry Wilson , right then , would have boon infinitely more right to-day. They ( the rnilroad company ) seized pos session of both political parties ; they seized the executive departments ; then they came nnd seized both branches of congress , nnd they have gone so fnr as to invade the federal courts. The railroad property of the country to-day is ap- praised'at nearly $7.000,000,000 , the actual cost of which has boon only $ . ' 1,000,000,000. In what manner has this immense debt because it is n debt upon the people been built up ? Nero on the JSoston mar ket nro $0,000,000,000 of securities that actually cost" their holders only 83,009- I 000,000. Beyond tlmt nro $ 1,000,000,000 ) held ns mortgages on the states of Michi i- gan , Oregon , Kansas , Nebraska und others , for winch these gentlemen have not paid n farthing , The national debt of wo can pay ; this debt can never bo paid , They hold it forever. For every dollar ; , actual money supplied they have three dollars on which they are drawing in terest. The ? 1,000,000,000 stands to-day a mortgage upon the prosperity , upon the wealth , upon the earnings of tlio people , It was ut n time when they came asking to make the width of their grant 130 miles that a senator from Massa chusetts , in the face of the pecuniary aii terest in liis owu state , was willing iito stand up and declare that ho was for justice to the nation , and justice to tlio landless and to the settlers ou the hinds. rij Keep Quletl vit And take Chamberlain's Colic , ra ami Uiarrha-a Remedy. It euros pain in the stomach almost instantly. ( Jet n 25 cent bottle , tnke nothing else. You will need nothing else to euro the worst case in Dlarrcua , Cholera Morhus or bowel to complaint. This medicine is made erin co bowel complaint only und hut ) boon in mi constant use in the west for nearly 111bo teen years. Its succe * * has been unhit bounded and its nnmo become a houseth ; hold word in thousands of homes. Try it. do it.D. in The first postmaster . of Rapid City , D. wi . , was commissioned April.1 , 1877 , The on oflice then paid $50 pur year. The prosno cut income is $1,000 per year with a dogr cidod < upward tendency. It claims to iebo ab champion community for honesty in cii Dakota ; , Goods of any value can bo left ; we the street unguarded over night , and nnd ono wilt evou wink at them. ca THE HEROES OF THE BORDER , Nine Indians Kept nt BAJ by ft Wounded Man and a Woman , Successful StriiBRlo for Ufa In U CHI or u. Ncbraskn A Story of Days on the Loun. If the heroes nnd heroines of Iho last llftcon years of Indian warfare In the west hail their names nml deeds emblaz oned on the pages of current history the world could furnish no more glorious record of I.orolsm. Hero and there n name is known and a record of thrilling experience Is Riven , but the great ma jority will lire on unknown to the world at large , or sleep their last sloop in graves unmarked and nnhonorod. One forenoon of a May morning n stockman named George Webber wns riding along the south bank of the I oup fork , In western Nobrnskn , In search of stray stock , when ho was fired upon from n grove by Indians who had broken away from ono of the agencies to the west. Half a dozen shots wore lirod In a volley , nud Webber was hit in the calf of the right leg. in the right sido. and raked across the shoulder , and his horse was also wounded. As soon an the shots were llred nine mounted Indians dashed out , and Webber put his horse at the top of its speed and headed for the ranch of Charles Moss , about four miles up the river nml on the same side. For the first mlle Webber had no hope , as the Indians were close enough to use tholr revolvers and arrows , and his horse was n common animal. A s > core or more of bullets were lirod at him , and fully twenty arrows zipped past him , but the wound his animal received , aided by the continued shouting of the red skins.mado him pull out like a born race horso. Ho soon began to widen the distance , and when ho dashed up to the ranch Webbci was a full half mile ahead. His shouts as ho noare.il the place gave the alarm but to his dismay he dashed up to bo in lormcd by Mrs. Moss that she was the only ono a"bout the place , her husband and his man having gone away nn hour before. The cabin stood on a rise of ground about twenty rods from the stream , and could be approached from any side. The Indians halted at long rillc range to see who was about the placo. und this cave Webster time to nn/to explanations and do a little planning. Ho knew his pur suers were "bud" Indians , who nail skulked off the reservation , nml realized that if he could keep them oil'for nn hour or two reinforcements would como to him or the enemy would withdraw for fear of their identity being discovered. "What arms have you got ? " ho asked , after explaining the situation. ' 'A ' ' " Colt's revolver. "I have a Winchester rifle. Wo must holu 'era off until aid comes. Help mo off. " The woman assisted him to alight , and he gave his horse a slap-and sent the ani mal galloping off up the trail. Some of the Indians pursued , but without avail. The Jirst while mun whom the horse encoun tered would understand thut something was wrong , and that his assistance was asked for down the trail. The house was n primitive afl'air , di vided into two rooms , with only a lower sasli in each window. The only point from which tlio Ihdians could approach with shelter to cover them was the east sido. They could approach this side within revolver shot by creeping up n rnvino. Webber realized that if Iho nine ehnrged logcther from thjs ravine , with only the Tire from a single window directed nt them , not more than two or tliree could bo stopped. If the others reached the house the game was up. Ho therefore insisted on taking up liis posi tion outside the house , without even a twig to shelter him. His back wns to the logs nnd the ravine in his. front. For fenr some of the Indians might approach the house singly from another direction , the woman was Instructed to first fasten all the doors and then pass from window to window and maintain an active obser vation. She was n woman of thirty-live , who hnd boon tenderly reared in nn eastern stnto , nnd had been in the west loss than two years. The sight of a snake would have made her scream out in affright on that very morning , nnd Iho thought of nn nttnck by Indians would have been sufficient to chill her blood. Yet , when brought face to face with the terrible menace , she was a heroine. With pale face nnd compressed lips , and stopping not to question the policy of tlio a wounded man's plans to save their lives she promptly obeyed. Tlio Indians must have known thai Webber and the women were alone , am that ho was wounded , but they did nol dnro make n rush. Mucli as they desired scalps and plunder , they did not care to recklcbsly expose themselves. They It crept up the ravino. as was expected , or started to , when Webber saw that thojr ponies had been loft within range of his Winchester. Ho opened flro nt ouco nml dropped three of them to the grass before - fore the redskins discovered what ho was at. This caused a halt in tlio proceedings until they could remove the other six to n place of'safety. Ho counted them as they returned to the ravine and saw that three were missing. The Irio had separ ated from the others lo creep upon Iho house , nnd this fact was announced lo Mrs. Moss. In Iho course of fifteen minutes the six hnd gamed the position sought for opposite , and Webber gave all put his attention to thorn , trusting to the woman to watch nnd defend the house from the others. From the house to the rnviuo wns n gradual slant , the ground being covered with grass nnd entirely clenn. Wobhor sat thcro , ns plain n target ns n man would dcsiro for his pl.stol , the blood from his wounds soaking into the ground , and his eyes watching the ravine with the knowledge that ho was ono to six. No day Indian could flro on him without raising his bond above the bank , and the first ono uj ) got n bullet through il , and one redskin tumbled back n corpse. Thid in was n caution to the others , and instead raising tluiir heads they rested their tlio rifles on the bank and fired blindly. Thirteen bullets struck the log within six a foot of Webber , and others did not miss him except by a shave. It was simply u question of lime , if the firing were kepi dle up when n bullet would hit aud finish him. ers Meanwhile the throe bucks who hud left the main body were creeping toward that the house from different directions. Mrs. MOSJ could see two of them , but the third crept along a doon furrow , and finally gained n point from which he could fire agon upon Webber at fair range. From this point the reds tired nine times nt Webber's ' the right side , which was exposed to his nnd view. Ho either had n poor gun or was from much excited , for not one of his bullets counted , although some of thorn whistled uncomfortably closo. mic "I know whnt was up , " said Webber , modestly telling his story , "but I had trttst to luck. Ho was not where J of could hit him , and if ho happened ( o hit are it would Imye boon no worse than itr ito killed bv the others in front , After first bullet I didn't ' oven turn my head they that way , The woman came to the win ilo i dow near mo and said the other two were sight , nnd I Instructed her lo open flro with the revolver. Hho hnd fired a pisipl ) only n few times , and I did )1d count on anything beyond her giving the bucks something to think about. It must hnyb been entirely by ue cidont thai at her very first lire she wounded ono of the follows in the hip he at once crawled away to take care of himself , The other one sen three bullets through n window nl whlcli she wns standing , but Flic kept f--- nwny at him nud sending so much nroiiud his cars thnt ho dare not vauco. " The fight in front lasted about hnlf nit liour. Whenever Ihero was a lull in " 'o ' llring Webber looked ( the o see Imlni ! * < spring up and nmkc a rush , nml to pre vent this ho liroti at random along the bank , tearing up tlio sod and Ilinglnr dirt over the red skins in hiding , lie hud no idea that help was nt hand.imd was yet depending upon himselfwhen the Indian * suddenly censed lit lug and beat n linn / , retrent , anil ten minutes later Moss i\J his men rode up , having been met on hti open prairin by the riderless horso. fctf retreating from the ravine llio Indian * carried away their dead warrior , but tk ono wounded by Mrs. Moss WHS loft to take cnro of himself. Ho wns found h > the dry furrow nud despatched. The heroism of Webber in taking and main taining his position , severely wounded M ho was , nml of the woman in obeying Id4 orders , hopeless as the defense must havg npponrod to hnr , deserves n place cu tha pngcs of undying history. EARLY DAYS AT KEARNEY. A Circus Man'fl Kxporlenoo rhirliijja lluo m. Chicago Herald : "Circus men havu some qiieoroxpiirionctw. ' ! ! nn ndvaiioy agent , ns lie put his feet upon a sent In front of him lu the smoking ear aiu | lighted another cigar "I'll never for fet the time 1 took a show out to Kcar ney , Nob. It wns about ten yeas ago and Nebraska wasn't as much nottloi then as Ills now , When \vo were lavlu out our route the boss was n little uub ( oils about going any farther west thnn Grand Island , but I showed him tlnil Kearney was ono of the booming towns of the west ; thai 11 bad five daily ue\ys- pnporj , etc. "Thoy claim 8,000 popula tion , " say I , "but , of course , they haven't got as much. Ycl , as thcro nro live daily newspapers there , it must bo a good doa of n town , " So wo decided to go ns fa * west ns Kearney , and 1 went out to make the arrangements and do tha advertising. 1 found there wore livencwsi papers all daily sure enough , but it was the sickest-looking town for oven ono daily newspaper to live iu , lot alone live , that I had over scon. I toll you the- honest truth when I say that 1 mndo a sort of a count of Iho number of pcoplu thcro , and it wasn't above 050. mitt ho leading men told mo Hint Iho country around was rich and thickly settled , nuo\ \ that the farmers and stock men would come in by the thousands If wo billed our' show. There had aoyor been a circus there , they said , and tun whole country would go wild over il. The editors of the five daily paporn talked encouragingly and promised to * do all they could for us , and so I sailetl in. Well , I paid $100 for a city license , I paid each of these fiva newspaper * nn average of $75 , and I pnidf $10 for Die use ot the thousands , of vacant lots. I expected a biji boom from the country , aud the towu men said there weren't more pc9plo ia from the country because it was harvest ? time nntl they wore nil busy. I sent of gang of my mou out south over the 1'hittot to bill the country. In two dnys they returned - * turned , saving they hnd found nothing In stick a bill on but ono sod house And twtj dug-outs , one ruined shanty , a relic ol sti : o coach days , and n few buffalo car1 cashes whitening in the sun. Not another , blessed house could they find. Tlibn I sent thorn north , over toward Wood river , nnd in a couple of days they returned ? with the same kind of a report. Thot had gcen four white men , two etooK- ranchcs. and 400 Indians , who bogged all the whisky and tobacco the men hatj with thorn and then stole most of theit ? ' Qi grub. Bv this lime mailers hud pone sa - far I coufdn't stop "em , and the show came on from Grand Islaud. Wo gavoM nn afternoon performance to just Cti < K pcoplo. I veritably tiojievo every , man , woman nnd child in lowft wns present and that's nil. Whco wo came to count the tickets wo found time 150 had como in on newspaper passes , ton on account of railroad , Iwonty-tlvo on account of city council , forty on account of police , and so on. Our cash receipt * were about $140. That night wo closed our tents , the whole gang of us got drunk , were arrested , nnd the next day f wo had to give up thu $140 and more be sides , and sell four horses in order to pay our lines. Wo wore out of funds , and before wo got through the lowu of Kear ney had just about absorbed our show. ' 'I afterward learned that Kearney wan one of the 'boom' towns , living on hope and sucli suckers as slruyeU that way. Wo helped 'cm out amazingly. Four ol . the daily papers wore printed by land and town lot speculators , anil another by syndicate tliat wns trying to run all ol the politics nnd offices in the county , nnrt doing it , too. I have never since taken a circus as far west ua Kearney Junction. " Reduction in JlourH of Imhor. Uoston Herald : Hand in hand witli increasing earnings has gene a corresponding spending reduction in the liouru of labor. is n positive tnot that the working hours are shortest to-day in countries \i whore wages anil productiveness are highest. While the working week iu England averages Jiffy-four to fifty-nix hours , Germany's and France's week averages seventy-two hours , with many Industries nt seventy-eight hours. Massachusetts has fixed sixty hours by statute without having ex perienced any incursion by comparing neighboring s'tnte.s , which still adhere to longer hours. It has been the common experience , wherever tried , that the shorter hours onublu the workumn to more energy into his work. In the curly part of this century , in Knglisli j cotton factories , the week extended to & * * * seventy-four hours ; from 181K1 it was re duced to sixty-nine Hours. From this it went ' gradually down to sixty , and in 1874 to fifty-six and a half hours , which may bo considered the normal working time of the wiel ; in Great Britain ; al though thori ) nro trades where fifty to fitty-iwo hours is the rule , lu the United States , the oxlont of the working in cotton mills is riuoted by Mr. At kinson ns having boon thirteen hours in 1810 , This WIIH gradually reduced to eleven hours , nnd smco l m Io ten hour * Massachusetts , with other slate.s be * ginning to uiovo in the .sumo direction , fituto of Hhode Island having iiUoi/tetl tan-hour day within n month of thi.i writing , lu NjKMikiug of the building trade and of the normal working day of eight hours in thu latter part of ( do mid ages , Thorold Rogers nays : "Kmploy- were very likely to discover that tlio laborer's resistance to an excessively long day wns not entirejy personal , and the work might suH'nr from thu work man's weariness and uxhaiirttioii , " The excellence of the work , huting through , when more recent constriiotioiia disappeared entirely , is oveu u more eloquent proof of the soundness of economic views of our forefather * the voices which are raised tlio grave of yellow parchment. Germany , Uiiin at the head of Kurope in commerce and manufacture , the econo ruler of the world , thu bunker and trader of Europe , held to the uuiiiu rules during its nigh tide of prosperity. All which shows that reasonable hourd not at al [ incompatible with great activity nnd productiveness ; nay , that , are n necessary condition to their' achievement , , w gar * L r Coitori- , ViTien the'wM * Child , he cried for CutorU , Wlien ibo becune'UUi , > be clung ( o CutorU ,