THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : FlUDAY , MARCH 25 , 1887 ; THE DAILY BEE. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. nnus or sunscntrriox : Drtrtr ( MornUic Edition ) Including Hundnj- DKH. One Year . $10 OT ForSIx Months . 5(0 VorThrco Month . S W Tbo Omaha Hxnday UEE , mulled to nny tuldrou , Ono Your. . , . " 00 OVAHA Ornn. No. 14 > xr > 911 FAHVAM RTRIZV. NKW YonK orriri. noon , TRIIIITNC IJUII.PINO. umcc , No. 511 f OUIITJCXMTH aruccr. All oommnnlcntionlrelntlnKtoneivfl nndodl- torlftl inaUor should Uo aiMrosgoil to thu Cut- XOll or THK Ilec. DUSINBSA LETTERS I All builness letters and remittance * should bo addressed to Tin UKK PUBLISHING CoMi'Asr , OMAHA. Drafts. chock * nnd po < tolDco orders to bo made payable to tlio orU ref thu company , THE BEE PDBLISBIlTcOMPlklT , FROPfllEIORS , E. KOSEVVATER. EOITOU. THE DA1IAT BEE. Sworn Statement of Circulation. Btntcof Nebraska , I , . County of Douglas. f818 * Oco. H. Tzschuck , secretary of Tlio Bee Publishing company , does nolomnlv swear that the actual circulation of tlio Dally Boo tor the week ending Mar. IStti lbS7 , was as follows : Baturdar.Mar.13 . 14.535 Bandar , Mar. 1:1 : . I3.fi.i0 Monday. Mar. 14 . 14,8.Ti Tuesday , Mar. 15 . 14.005 Wednesday , Mar. 10 . 14.400 Thursday. Mnr. 17 . 14fl80 Friday , Mar. IS . .14.5 Average . 14.474 liEO. 15. TZSCHUCK. Subscribed and sworn to before me thlsSlst day of March A. D. , 1837. N. T. FF.IL. rSEALI Notary Public. Gco. 15. Tzscliuclr , bclnc first duly sworn , deposes and says that he Is secretary of Tlio Bee Publishing company , that the actual av- eraeo dally circulation of the Dally lice for thomonthof March , 1880 , 11.537 copies ; for April , 1BW5 , 12,191 copies : forfor May , 1880.12- 439 copies ; for June , 1880 , 12,298 copies ; for July , 1880 , 13,314 copies ; for Aucust , 1880 , 12,404 copies ; for September. 1880 , 13.030 copies ; for October , 1880. 12,939 copies ; for November , 1880 , 13,348 copies ; for December. 1880. 13,237 copies ; for January , Ib87 , 10,200 copies ; for February , 1887 , 14,193 copies. QRO. H. Tzscmicir. bubscrlbcd nnel swnrn to before mo this 9th day of March , A . I ) . 1887. [ SEA L. I N. P. FKIL. Notary Public. STUEET cleaning in 0 in all a is not what it should bo by any means. OMAHA , is to have n ten-story building. S That's the kind of a story that ought to bo continued. As a country , the native ) mackerel and Canadian warriors arc giving us but little trouble this spring. IT is about time for Mr. Sully to make another deal. His Baltimore & Ohio shufllc was not very successful. THE board of public works should look after the graders nnd make them do their work more systematically. Tun BEE is for sale at 5 cents per copy or $10 a your. It is sold regularly everyday , to over 14,000 purchasers. MISSOURI river water served up the color and density of chocolate is a luxury once a year , but served up as a regular diet , it becomes nauseating. THEIIE nro still many wretched sidewalks - walks on the main business thorough fare ? which should bo repaired at once , or replaced by etono or concrete. IK the board of public works can be roused from its slumbers , wo may possi bly be able to improve the sidewalks on our principal business streets this spring. THE governor of Missouri threatens to call an extra session of the legislature. The applause upon the adjournment oi the statesmen has been mistaken for au 1 encore. IT has been a long time since anything I has been heard from Higsins Higgins , of Washington. Ho is still on deck , and I now wants to be warden of the Balti more jail. JOHN P. ST. JOHN has been hanged again in ofllgy. It will bo a long time until the country is rid of Mr. St. John , if that is the only way indignant Kansas people hang him. OMAHA has 170 saloons and Kansai City has 405. This , however , does noi prove that Kansas City is twice as larg ( as Omaha. It shows that Kansas Citj can get away with more tarantula juice THE only way to make the Omah : boom permanent is to provide steady employment ploymont for laboring men and women Establish factories nnd build up ovorj industry that employs men and woracr at living wages. \ \ HAT has become of the weather bureau roau of the Union Pacific road ? Was ii abandoned like a costly plaything , 01 have the gentle breezes of spring ren dercd it useless ? Full many a scheme like this is "born to blush unseen , am ffitsto its fragrnuco on the desert uir. " TUB Niagara park has been receiving . .attention on both sides of the falls. Tin American commission announces in r triumphant manner that the long con tinned reign of vandalism around the falls , which has rendered the task o beautifying the park one of cousidorabli difliculty , is ollcctually checked. Hack men have boon regulated as have also tin charges , and Niagara will bo a mon pleasant resort than over. IMMIGRATION to the United States frort T Europe continues active. The arrival ; at Castle Garden , Now York , to duto , ex f ? cccil 20,000 , which is about double tin number that arrived during the sarni time last year. The increase commence ! lost fall , and has since been going 01 etcadily. Those ) seeking homes hen have come principally from thu conn tries bordering on the Baltic nnd tli < Mediterranean stus. Of recent arrival it is noted that a much larger numbe were from continental Europe thau fron the British isles. Ono , and perhaps th chief reason for this is to bo found in th menace of war that has prevailed a in on ; the continental nations for a. year o more post , ana which nix months..ago i was generally believed would deyolo into actual hostilities by the prcson prlng. The loss dangerous outlook fo war will probably have the effect to dcto many from leaving their Europeai homes who may have contomulateddoinj o , and It ii not unlikely that in the re xnainlng months of the year the rate o immigration of the paU tliroo will not b maintained. Gniralng the 1'rcss. This legislature of ours is a body fear- ully nnd wonderfully made. It can ruthfully boast that it excels nil other aw-making bodies in the land in thu jroeluctlon of legal monstrosities , The ntcst nnd most extraordinary of its oflbrts is SnolPs criminal libel bill. As amended by the house nny editor , reporter , head line wri er , correspondent or publisher nay be Indicted nnd imprisoned in nny county in Nebraska whore the paper vhich contains a libel written or pub- Ishcd by them may happen to circulate , n other words , if this law is made part of our criminal code Mcdill of the Chicago 2'ribnnc , Pulitzer of the New York World , McCullagh of the St. jouis Globe-Democrat , or Do Young of the San Francisco Chronicle , may be indicted in Cheyenne or Dnwcs county , Nebraska , for criminal libel , and ho governor muy have to issue n requisi tion to bring them for trial. This is not nil , however. Since Nebraska has abol- shed arand juries nny county attorney who may for political reasons desire to damage or cripplu the publisher of n pa- ) or of general circulation , -published uindrcds of miles distant , could ilo an Information for criminal Ibcl in his court and compel attendance of editors , publishers and reporters at an enormous expense and great inconvo- licnco. The palpabto aim of such an dlotlc and unheard of law is to gag the m-ss in the interest of public thieves nnd political shysters. It places a club in the tiands of rogues and deprives the public of the palladium of their liberty a fearless and untrammelled press. The ucn who uro pushing this bill are nota- ily vulnerable and fear that an untram melled press would expose their rascality. This class of lawless lawmakers want to build a barri cade around themselves ngninst public opinion. They want to throttle the press that they may the more freely continue their depredations on the tax payers. If such laws were enacted in every other state of the union the Ameri can press would bo placed on a par with Lhat of Russia , where free speech is un known. Friends or I lie Charter. An nlnrm is sounded from certain quar ters that tlio friends of an honest charter for Omaha must bo on the olcct. Wo nro told by these Pharisees and Publicans that this city cannot afford to have a check placed on its growth by any fool ish or scltish legislation and the "friends of nn honest charter" nro warned that enemies are on the ground , anxious to defeat the demand of the city for such a charter as shall meet the needs of the expansion of territory , and is adequate to the increase of population and volume of business. Who are the friends of the honest char ter , we pray ? Are they the blossom- nosed journalists who went down to Lin coln in the company of paving contrac tors and political jobbers who wanted the charter amended to suit their private in terests ? Are the friends of an honest charter the men who tried to pack the exposition building with roughs and bummers and sought to throttle popular sentiment through a concerted cQ'ort with a chairman who was the loading paving contractor of Omaha ? Are the friends of an honest charter the men who wrenched the charter from the com mittee on cities and put It in the hands of that reprobate , spy Russell , and a com mittee known to bo unfriendly to Omaha , and pliant tools of the gang of oil-room vagabonds and corruptionists led by General Vandorboom and the gambler's boodler , Charley Grcon ? If there is danger that Omaha is t < T bo crippled by a charter which docs not allow a proper expansion of territory nnd is too narrow-gauged for the the wants of Omaha , who is to blame ? Who was it that concocted the outrageous amendments which have been plastered all over that charter by the ju diciary committee ? Who is it that knocked out the provisions to enable Omaha to 6stnblish boulevards and parks around the city ? The editors who con sorted with the rotten and dissolute lobby and sought to cover their tracks by downright nnd barefaced falsehoods con cerning the contents of the charter. Who is to blame for the damaging delay in the passage of the charter ? The railroad lobby , the contractors and irre sponsible blackguards who run papers in which they do not own a dollar. This class of patriots are now very much alarmed about the dangers that beset Omaha by reason of the delay and pos sible defeat of the charter. Had these kind and disinterested friends kept their hands off nnd allowed the Douglas dele gation to do its duty , as they knew it to bo when the charter was introduced , there would now bo no ground for nlnrm , As it is , the mischief done and damage inflicted upon vital interests in Omaha , einn only bo charged where it naturally belongs ; to the men und papers that have no honest purpose to subserve and only personal spite work to do. The G ratline Nuisance. The grading season is upon us and with it has come the annual tearing-ut : of sidewalks by the grading contractors to be followed by the annoying ruuil puddles , broken fences and slushj crossings. If this nuisance would only last a few weeks in eacl : street that is graded , and the work was elono ns rapidly as patent shov els , shovelers and teams can do it , nc sensible person would complain. Bui the way grading has been and is being done in this city under our fast nnd loose system , the improvement becomes an tin bearable nuisance. The graders tear uj : nnd pull down sidewalks , trees ant toncoa right and loft on one street , pul in two or three days at grading and leuvo the unfinished job for months , repeating the same practice on n dozer streets iu order to hold all other con tracts with the least force. The resull is a general tearing up nnd r fearful mud blockade after cverj heavy rain. It scorns to us thai wo bhould start right this season nnd nflbrd the people on graded street ! needed relief by compelling grading contractors to finish one street at a time promptly and replacing the walks ant fences' rapidly as the work is done. .Room for Aloro Hotels. Probably no city of its size in the world is better supplied with hotels thau Sar Francisco. It was twelve years ago thai her present great hotels wore opened and it was then thought that it would be a great many years before they woult provo profitable. But to-day the leading hotels of that city nro ovcr-cro'vr.lod , and there is ample business for several more. This fact lends the San Francisco Cull to urge the building of a mammoth hotel to accommodate at least 3,500 guests. An investment of a million.or more in a first class hotel , suys the Call , would pay n safe and handsome return. What Is true of San Francisco is in a measure true of Omaha in regard to hotels. When our two leading hotels were erected at about the sanio time many timid persons predicted that there \vouldnotforycar3 bo business enough for two such houses , and that neither would pay. But , as In San Francisco , our loading hotels are now crowded , although they have recently been enlarged. The fact is Omaha can support another largo first-class hotel one which can com fortably accommodate in the vicinity of 500 guests. Another hotel , to cost say about $500,000 , would pay in Omaha. There is plenty of room for such a hotel. Let some of our capitalists take the mat ter under consideration. At the time it could bo completed , wo venture to say that the rapid growth of Omaha would warrant oven another hotel still larger and more costly. License In New York. The battle for high license in Now York , which has been waged with crcat vigor , is over so tar as the legislature Is concerned. What is known ns the Crosby bill , providing for high license in the cities of New York niiti Brooklyn , now awaits the signature of the governor to become a law. The conflict over this measure Is one of the most notable in thu history of New York legislation. The friends of the bill had to light the com bined forces of the prohibitionists nnd the liquor interests , the former USIIIK with all the force they could bring to boar the familiar arguments with which they oppose all such legislation , and the latter employing all the political influence nt their command reinforced bv an abun dant supply of money. If the bill be comes a law it is estimated that it will take at least a million dollars from the saloons in addition to what they pay now , hence they had a very powerful incentive to fight it. That it passed against the formidable nnd determined ooposition is porhcps to bo regarded as highly credita ble to the legislators by whoso votes the bill wns ndojted : , some of whom possibly thereby imperilled their political chances for the futura. But the bill has yet to receive the sig nature of the governor in order to be come a law , and its friends are not en tirely sanguine of success in that direc tion. It has been reported that Governor Hill will veto it upon the alleged ground that it applies only to certain parts of the state , and hence is in violation of the principle of homo rule. It is true that the governor has approved other legisla tion more clearly local in character than is the license bill , but in those cases there was-nctso much political influence , or political influence of a different sort , to antagonize. It is significant that the bill encountered a pretty solid democratic opposition in both branches of the legis lature , and it is hardly conceivable that this was maintained contrary to the sym pathies of the governor. Under nil the circumstances , and having in mind thu undoubted desire of Governor Hill to bo on the best possible terms with all the elements , of which the liquor interest is not the least , of his party in Now York and Brooklyn , his approval of this measure would bo surprising. The probable political effect , rather than the principles involved , will in all likelihood determine the action of Governor Hill. But if the bill is killed by the governor , on whatever pretext , the cause of high license will still havo. gained an impor tant and encouraging step. It is some thing that a majority of a New York leg islature has approved it , even for local application. The Irionds of the policy , the soundness of which experience has amply demonstrated , will not abandon it after a single defeat. They will continue the contest , with the certainty of ulti mate victory. American Sympathy With Ireland. The value of the expression of protest made by the mass mooting in New York , on last Monday evening , against the pro posed policy of the English government toward Ireland , is not to be measured by the numerical strength of that assem blage , nor by the public or private rela tions of the individuals most prominently identified with it. It is doubtless quite natural that the English tory press should endeavor to detract from its slg- nificanco by applying thojo methods of estimating its importance , but they will hardly thereby deceive oven their most trustful readers who are intelligently in formed rogardinc American sentiment on the Irish question. Wo will not ven ture to aflirm or deny that Mr. Dana and some of the other gentlemen identified with this meeting may have been urged thereto by political or personal motives. There is very slight probability that they wore. But it can bo unqualifiedly af firmed that the protest of thu assemblage against tlio policy of coercion proposed by the English government , its de claration in favor of Irish homo rule , and its expression of sympathy with Ireland , voice the nearly universal sentiment of the American people. The suggestion of the St. James Gazctia that the ' 'real feelings of real Americans , if they could venture to express them , would bo strongly in favor of throwing three-fourths of the who - persons com posed the meeting into Now York har bor , " is simply a gratuitous insult quite in keeping with the tory spirit and In stinct. If there has ever boon a time in the progress of this great i uo when the wis dom or expediency of intruding Amer ican opinion could properly bo ques tioned , that time is not now. The course proposed by the English government for the treatment of Ireland is a retreat toward barbarism which ought to en counter the protest of all men who are not thu enemies of political progress. It is a policy that can have no honorable or just defense. It is , as Roscoe Conkhng characterized it , might brutal might. It proclaims warfare upon that sentiment of liberty and that sense of justice which are universal , and which will not and should not quietly endure the assault. More than any other , the American people would bo faithless to their character and their duty if in such an uxlgoncy they remained silent and failed to denounce in explicit and un qualified terms policies aud principles re pugnant to the : ago nnd destructive of rights of which this ropublh is thu ex pression and the exponent. THE communities of the seaport cities are beginning to feel apprehensive of a possible visitation of cholera the coming summer , Thdhliscaso is epidemic in South America and Is reported to bo spreading northward. There is reason to fear that it may soon roach Central America , in which case this country would bo In danger , if It Is not now. Now Orleans nnd Now York nro especi ally nccessible , nnd from all accounts both citius are in n condition to give the discaso full course should it make its ap pearance in cither , The demand is ur gent for n prompt nnd thorough cleans ing of both , and in fact of all exposed points. Meanwhile the surgcOn-gcnornl of the marine hospital service Is keeping a close watch on the Infected ports in South America , and on the appearance of the first symptom of danger will take advantage of the law which authorizes the president , upon the report of the sur geon-general of the marine hospital , to place tin embargo upon nny Importation of merchandise into the United States which might convey the cholera mi crobes. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Tin : beauty of low license is shown in Philadelphia. In that city the saloon license is $50 a year. There arc 0,1159 sa loons , or seven saloons to every 100 in habitants. This gives one saloon to about every fittecn persons. Philadcl- phiuns must bo a very thirsty crowd. High license would materially reduce the number of drinking places in that citv nnd produce n large revenue for munici pal purposes. Ill tllO The Coriilitll 3laaaztne. Have all the soims been said ? Aio all thu singers dead' . ' Is nil the music llodi' Tlio sum and aim of llfo Onodre.iry stiuu lc , life With greed aud soidid strife ? Man but a dull machine , Llvlnjra vast loutlno Of nariow pmnoso mean ? Oh ! while ono leaf swings high Against an a iire sky Iu spring time's ecstasy , There breathes yet the sublime , There beats yet living rhyme , 'Tis still the youug world's prime. Nature has high commands , Hears ( 'ifts with lavish hands To him who understands ! THE FIELD OP INDUSTRY. Krupp Is extending his tun factory to fill large orders for the German government. A Itusslan chemlsljhas perfected a method by which pctroleuujf can besolidllied Into bricks for fuel. " * . | A Boston loconiollvo works Is advertising for mechanics. Work is lushing at the Taun- ton Locomotive works. The Iron and steel workers arc divided on the advisability of demanding a sharp ad vance In tlio wares schedule. A dozen strikes and lockouts have been quickly settled In "western Pennsylvania tlnougli tlio services of an aibilrator. Four thousand lonsjof old horse-shoes are to bo exported to Chlpa , where they will bo melted up into sabro'Dlades and knives. The cotton mills of the New England states are all sold up at full prices. Largo orders nro bnlng booked lor China , Africa and South America. A recent purchase of 21,000 , acres of min eral lands , which Is only oue of many , was recently made In Yirpiula.on which turnaces and mills will be erected. The Maine woolen manufacturers want the factory laws so modified as to allow them to run their factories overtime three or four times a year when the rush comes. The southern peoole are chasing northern enterprise In tlieir eagerness to Invest in In dustrial enterprises , and the municipal authorities vlo with each other In extending Inducements in sites , trccdom from taxation , etc. etc.Gas Gas fuel Is gaining ground. A locomotive works and a rolling mill at Patterson , V. J. , will use it Jersey City manufacturers are preparing to introduce It , and In several other cities east the economy oi tbo system Is being carefully studied. The house builders will bo very busily en-i gaged from April 1. A number o largo building operations will bo begun then. Largo contracts are being placed for mate- ilal , but the uncertainty of freight rates Is checking a great deal ot business. Persons Interested In the building up of the south nro lloodinz certain localities ot the north with immigration literature nnd with ( zood results. Colonies have recently conn from the Cumberland valley to North Carolina , where new Industries are spring ing up. The list of employers who are sharlna profits with their employes Is Increasing. The Springfield Foundry company Is the latest addition to the list , rillabury. the Min neapolis flour man , has Inaugurated it with satisfactory results. Five or six other largo concerns have tried It. A scheme Is on foot to utilize the pressure of the fresh water wells of Ploilda lor manu facturing purposes.Vater is tound at a depth of 250 feet , and in many wells there Is a pressure of fourteen pounds to the square- Inch. The theory entertained Is the greater the well tlio greater tha pressure. The advocates of technlchal education and manual training are organizing their forces for a united effort. Tlio Industrial association New York , which has boon devoting - voting attention to this matter , declares it to bo its conclusion that Industrial training must be an Integral part of general educa tion. tion.A A 8500,000 cotton factory Is to bo built at Fort Smith , Aric.a ; 3100,000 onont Char lotte , N , C. ; one at Airy , N. C , : one at Cleve land , Tonn. ; one at Athens , besides numer ous expansions in the way of machinery and additions. A co-operntlvo manufacturing company will erect a S100.000 null at George town , Tex. An immense cotton factory Is to bu erected at Columjab. ) Miss. Architects speak ofteri'of ( he rage for verv high buildings when tlioro Is no urgent need for them. Western cities with plenty of pround nro copying alter Now York city , where high buildings are a necessity. Chicago cage will nave several nine , ten and eleven story ollico buildings. A twelve story hotel is to bo erected In Minneapolis. These high structures uivo wider scope to the genius of ambitious architects. Ulchmond. Va. , Is becoming an Industrial centre. A Bessemer tccl works Is being built on Hello Isle. A gloss works on the co-operative plan will Aim out 13,000 pounds per day. A shoe faciory"\vlll bo started on n large genie. The Albebmrlo Paper company will make paper on August 1. A largo brick works will bo builtto make bricks for northern markets out vi Chesterfield clay. American bridge builders are teaching the rest of the engineering . .world ho\v to con struct bridges of great iMigth , strain , endur ance and permanency. More bridge work Is projected at this date than over In the history of the country. Two are projected across tne Hudson , six across the Mississippi , two across the Missouri , a 810,000,000 bridge across the Potomac. 4,050 feut long , besides a multitude of smaller bridges. The brkke works are consequently overrun with work , aud bridge Iron makers are unable to accept all tlio business offered. Four brlJge-bulld- Ing works are projected , and an expansion ot mill capacity Is going on. Iron and steel makers and manufacturers .who use these products as raw material will , as a rule , be taxed to their fullest capacity between now and midsummer. In every branch of Industry enlargements are In pro gress. Foundries are expanding their limits and facilities : car works must Increase tholr mnchinery : locomotive works nre going long quietly. Makers of all kinds of heavy machinery have very largo contracts on hand. One concern IB preparing to make wrought- Iron plpo twenty-tour Inches in diameter. Mechanics nro surpassing themselves In all Industries with their remarkable achieve ments _ No SueccBsor. ; VilJ < ik/i ( / > M < i 1'rtn. This speculative discussion ns to the suc cessor to Henry Ward IJceclier Is Idle nnd vain. There Is no successor to Henry Ward Becchcr , A Good llrsolvt * . I'MlaMvMii llcconl There Is a whole tempcranco sermon In Air. John Lawrence Sullivan's declaration that ho "won't touch n drop of liquor until ho has laid away $100,000. " Any man , no matter what his station In life , who should make a similar resolve , would find his nest- egg growing \ cry rapidly iu a short tnno. "LOST LOUISIANA. " Mines thnt nro Making Towns In tlic Uoutlicrn Country , BEAK CITV , Ark. , March 18. [ Corres pondence of the 15ir : : . ] From camp to hamlet , to village nnd to town , nud how wo write it Bear City I All in ton days run nnd the quartz mills going on frco mlllinc over discovered. There's some thing of a rush to these scones , with Ne braska parties frequently interspersed and transactions , with them at least , possibly not without interest to many of you readers. New dlscovcrica at the "Lost Louisiana" mines lead to more general exploration and iu them found much general deposit in frco milling ores in gold and the region alive in every in creased activity there's the boom of dynamite , the discharge of giant nnd of black , as the developments go on , while the ringing of the hammer comes chcurly ns drills go deeper nnd rocks , town and mountains boverodin penu- trating the fastness of the treasurers de posit. Free milling gold is found in largely paying quantities with excitement grout nnd the country in much general uproar , consequent to such discovery. Jle e a town is being built as if by mngic. We have telepnono connection with telegraph connections to till the world , the right of railway secured and the work being performed. Buildings nnd improvements are everywhere , busi ness blocks frequent , hotels common , feaw-mills completed , smelters erected , quartz mills active' , transactions m real estate without limit , town lots skyward , values in nil relations rapidly on thu ad vance and all things booming. ( } . \V. Shenpard and C. C. Chapm , of your statu , have bought up tlio town , fairly , thouch S. H. llazeo nnd W. C. Thompson tlio original "Bill" Thomp son , in discovery of Lost Louisiana mines of llivertou , arc sull'urcd to complete saw , Inth and bhinglc mills and carry equal parts in general merchandise , with John 1) . Fulton in ten acre purchase in the northwest corner of the lodge , nnd J. G. Childs to occupy the snme.tmd each from Biverton , while Orson linger , of Bloomington , smokes his pipe from the shaft ot the Lost Louisiana , nud George Burke , C. C. Grove , L. E. Arnold , ami Peter Sclimack , of Franklin , Tom Far mer , from Exeter , and M. S. Murtin , of Stella , whifi' such fragrance ns may bo wafted mid rejoice in the possessions of Arkansas. Nebraska is not only well represented but , perhaps , shows such n body of representative men hero as is difficult to find in any chance assem blage in the world. Bo this ns it may , these individvnls arc up to their eyes in business , nnd if any good is to comb from the condition , each is ticketed for n full share. Indications point to the building of nn important town at Bear City. It is six teen miles west from Hot Springs , in the direct line of all popular transit to Indian territory , the center of the Bear moun tain mining district , surrounded by tlio best defined mineral belt and most cele brated mines of the country , and pos sessed in every first requisite for the pur pose expected. New discoveries are con stantly being made and the locations pronounced in every reasonable promise. That there are mines hero , and good mines , none may doubt. The country will pay to explore and the condition to investigate. Residence aud investment are sure to follow in such instance , nud when the advantages in climate and op portunity are considered it is no marvel. People can work hero the year through ; there are no snow blockades , blizzards or like inclement visitations ; as I write , gardens are being made ; the grass is ns green ns in early May nt homo ; radishes , lettuce nnd onions furnish first relishes in new crops ; there nro no snow banks left in the fence corners , none on sight on the mountains , neither does winter "linger in.tho lap of spring. " It is a good country to come to and Bear City a promisingplr.ee to settle. Houses can bo secured and fortunes made as readily heio as nny other spot on the face of the globe. In all relations there is the most encourasing prospects , but just now the principal excitement relates to the recent discovery in free milling ores in gold , and so abundantly found hero. That the Bear mountain muling district will become a principal attrac tion among circles of such interest is be yond question , Bear Citv being in the center of such a desirable field , cannot help to become an important factor in the more material prosperity of the country. MAUION LEE , Tbo Elder Uooth. Old play-goers have many anecdotes about the older Booth. Ono night ns ho was playing Sir Edward Mortimer in the "Iron Chest , " it became very evident that his potations had been too deep , nnd , to the mnnngor's horror , ho nt length got off the stage into the orchestra and com menced singing an old English song entitled - titled "Poacher , " the burden of which is : It's my delight of nMilny night , In this season ot the year to the great merriment of the audience , who bore with him very good-humorodly , Having succeeded in getting him behind thu scones , ho wns vociferously called for. and after n parley it was agreed ho should finish the piny , On ho wont ngnin , nnd again the manager's fears were intense. "Finish it ns muck ns you can , " said ho in n whisper from tlio wing. On which Sir Edwiivd walked forward and said : "Ladies nnd gentlemen , I have been directed by tlio manager to finish tins as quickly as possible , and so I'll finish it at once hero , Wilford , catch mo ! " saying which , nnd throwing himself into his arms , ho "did the ( lying scene , " and the curtain wns rung down amid roars of laughter. At Pittsburc one evening Mr. 1-orrost was nbout to play Montexuiua , when Mr. Booth camu in aud said he was going to support him by playing the Indian chief , Antenino , for which part ho dressed and maelo up , when , instead of going on the stacu , ho walked out aud took the cars attired us ho wns. In Ivow York ho was arrested , much in the same condition , and as ho refused to give nnv other name than that of Lucius Junius Brutus , ho was sent by Justice Wymans to the old Bridewell. In the course of the day Simpson and Price , the managers , camu in search , stating that ho had suddenly left the theater the night before. Tlio justice , on discovering who ho wns , sent nn order for his release Irom durancu vile , nnd in the afternoon a carl loud of provisions of various sorts , with fruit , wino , etc. , were delivered , together with a letter from Junius , to the gentle- many inmates with whom ho had the honor of spending a few hours in the morning. Ho once played Oronoko with bare fcot , insisting thnt it wns absurd to put shoes on a sluvti. But the most extraor dinary feat , perhaps , was his perform ance of "Ulchard III. " on horseback , which he did at the circus in the York road , Philadelphia. Mnnymmilnr stories nro told of him , some of which nro doubt * less exaggerated , but the above frutka nro undoubtedly correctly Mated. Vnlno of Ijltcrnry Work. Pall Mnll Gnzotto : Mr. Gladstone wns paldi'250 for his article on "Looksloy Hall" and the "Jubileo" hi the current Nineteenth Coiilury. This suggests two sorts of interesting reductions. First , say the nrticlo was nbout twenty pnges , and there tire about llvo hundred words on n page ; In jCSftO tlie-ro nro exactly 60,000 pence , which shows Mr. Knowlo'd ' rate of pn.v to his most eminent contrib utors to bo nbout six pctico n word. Speech , or rather writinjr , is certainly golden In this case , wlinloversllunce tuny bo clsowhoro. Wo wonder nt what rnto the other three distinguished contrib utors were paid. Wo should appraise their contributions ourselves nt some thing like this , keeping to the proportion of Mr. Gladstone's G pence a word ; Mr. John Morley , 13 peuco a word ; Mr. Mathew Arnold , i penuo a word ; Mr. Swinburne , ten words n penny. Apropos of this staggering check , it is interesting to collect a few iigurcs of prices given nnd ncccptcd for literature which well , is less ophnmeral than Mr. Gladstone's golden cloqiionco. Goldsmith received i'OO for the the Vicar of Wuknficld ; John son ! 00 for the Lives of Poets. The Lambs wore paid CO guineas for the Tales from Shakespeare. " Fielding received 000 for Tom Jones. But wo have no space to quote innumerable ) instances of such Grub street prices paid for work which still delights the world. Tnko Thackeray , for instance , who said that ho had never made moro than 5,000 for any of his books. Fancy tlio price of twenty Nineteenth Century articles for Vanity Fairl On the other hand , Scott made in less than two years , 20,000 ; Lord Lytton is said to have made 80,000 by his novels ; Dickcnsis supposed to have cleared 10.000 a year eluriug the publi cation of Nicholas Nicklebv.and 7,000 was to have been paid for Edwin Drood. "Dizzy" is said to have maelo 30,000 by his novcls.whilo George Eliot's profits on Komola wore estimated at 10,000 , and Mr. Wilkio Collins received $10,000 for two novels alone. Byron's gains were about $23,000 ; Moore wns paid s,000 for Lalla Rookh ; " Macaulay received 23.000 on account of three-fourths of His His tory. " These figures would have been doubled [ shall we sayJ but , nlasl thcro was no litirnum of literature in those days. What is a pen without a name ? What is Going on In Slwashtown. Alaska Irco Press : The brilliant enter tainments given in Siwashtown during the past week nro still the theme of much conversation. The dancing academy has been one continuous blaze of light through the holidays , the festivities being conducted under ho auspices of Mayor Kow-co. In those portlv halls were as sembled the beauty and fashion of the place , and many were the gorgeous cos tumes of the moro wealthy class of the fair sex , and on not a few of them nn elaborates displnv of expensive jewelry. Miss Kow-eo-With-a-lting-in-Hcr-Noso , daughter of our much esteemed mayor , leader of Siwashtown soeiety < and heir ess in her own right to two Auk rcsi- dances nnd three canoes , wore a beau tiful crown fashioned from hem lock bark nnd eagle feathers , a bright colored bonded buck skin chemise , high water calico overskirt - skirt , nud n $10 Hudson bay blanket thrown gracefully over her shapely shoulders. For jewelry she displayed fourteen tin bracelets , a silver labrette n la shingle nnil through her upper lip , nnd two brass watch chains cucircleei her brown ankles. Her nose and cheeks were painted black and her arms nud limbs from the knees down were baro. Her elegant costume and graceful evolu tions wore the envy of the fair sex , nnd she was designated the "bollo of the ball. " The old mayor himself wore upon his head , the latest style hat , encircled with euglo feathers , a military dress coat , Hour sack pantaloons , and a pair of rub ber boots , His whole bearing was that of ono born to command , and ho was looked upon with reverence by all. The music , which was furnished bv the Si washtown orchestra , consisting of two drums and five rattles , was rendered in a soul-stirring manner. The Union Pacific pulled out two sec tions of sleepers last night , going west , all crowded. Travel is very heavy and increasing. READY 9IAUCII 25IIi. IU For APRIL. Vol. I. IVo. 4. Containing tlio first Installment oftlio UXFUIiLlSIIED JLE'JTTKKS OF THACKERAY , Illustrated by reproductions from Ills own Unpublished DrawlngR , Fac-siiullcsoflili Letters , cte.ctc. These remarkable Letters are contributions sneh as have never before been made to a knowledge of the personality of the great novelUt , nnd are Iu themselves unquestionably the nioatlntorct- liig nnd clinruetci Utlo addition possible to Thuekcray's Litera ture. 85 Cents a Number. $3.00 a Year. CONTEXTS. Portrait of William Makepeace Thack eray. Frontispiece. Engraved by H. Kruell , after the crayon drawing by Samuel Laurence. A Collection of Unpublished Letters of Thackeray. With an introduction bv Jane Octnvia Brookficld. illustrated by .reproductions of unpublished draw ings by Thackeray. ( To bo coutiuucd in further numbers. ) ' NoHaid Pawn. " ( A Story. ) THOMAS NELSON PAH i : . The Story of a Now York Houso. IV. Illustrated by A. B. Frost. II. C. BUNNKB. Modern Aggressive Torpodoos. Illus trated from photographs and drawings furnished by the author. Lieut. W.S. Huaiins , U. S. Navy. Fortune. ELYOT WKLD. The Residuary Legatee ; on , Tin : POSTHUMOUS JEST or TUB LATK JOHN AUSTIN. Part Third THE AUMIMSTKA- TION. J. S. OK DALE. Remembrance. JUUA C. II. Doint. . Reminiscences of the Siege and Com- numo of Paris. Fourth ( Concluding ) Paper THE DOWNFALL ot1 TUB COM MUNE. Witn illustrations from portraits traits and documents in Mr. Wash- burne's possession , and from drawings by T. do Thulstrup , J. Steopln Davis , and A. M. Tumor. E. B. WASHBUHNK , ox-Minister to Franco. The Quiet Pilgrim. EDITH M. THOMAS. American Elephant Myths. With il lustrations. W. B. SCOIT , Professor in Princeton College. The Old Earth. CHAUI.E& EDWIN MAKK- HAM. Bath's Brother's Wife. Chapters XHI- XVII. HAROLD FKEDKIUO. Tedosco's Rubina , ' ( A Story. ) F. I ) . MILLKT. English in Our Colleges. ADAMS SnHU MAN HILL , Professor in Harvard Uni versity. FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS. \tlemitlances should be. sent by post money order or registered teller to CIIAKLUS SCRIHNUIl'S SO.VS , 743 and 743 Broadway , New York. A CARD. . TO THE PUBLIC "With the approach of spring and the increased interest man. ifeslcd in real estate matters , I am moro than ever consult ed by intending purchasers aa to favorable opportunities for investment , and to all such would say : When putting any Proper ty on the market , and adver tising it as desirable , I have invariably confined myself tea a plain unvarnished statement of facts , never indulging in vague promises for the future , and the result in case every - . ± - 1 has been that the expectations of purchasers -wore moro than realized. I can refer with pleasure to Albright's Annex and Baker Place , as sample il lustrations. Lots in the "Annex" have quadrupled in value and are still advancing , -while a street car line is already building past Baker Place , adding hun dreds of dollars to the value of every lot. Albright's Choice was se lected by mo with the greatest care after a thorough study and with the full knowledge of its value , and I can consci entiously say to those seeking a safe and profitable invest ment that Albright's Choice offers chances not excelled iu , this market for a sure thing. Early investors have already reaped large profits in CASH , and with the many important improvements contemplated , some of which are now under way , every lot in this splen did addition will prove a bo nanza to first buyers. Further information , plats find prices , will bo cheerfully furnished. Buggies ready at all times to show property. Eespectfully , W. G , ALBRIGHT SOLE OWNER , 218 S. 15th Street. Branch office at South Oma- la. N. B. Property for ale iualJ parts of the city