Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 19, 1877, Page 2

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> z THE DAILY BEE £. ROSEWATER. Eoiros axp PROPRIFTOR. s ——————— ROSEWAIER JUNIOR'S COMPLI- MENTS TO MILLER. GREAT LtaR MILLER. who swin- dled «cores of poor workingmen in Omaha, who sold out his party every time he had a chance, who would swindle his own father if he could gain wny political advantaze by it, talks about reform. The oaly way he ever can reform 18 by aterm of service in the penitentiary. Nowewater names from such & CAUGHT AT LAST. The sudden snd extraordinary disclosures revealed by the legizla- tive investigatiog committee yes- terday, at length reveal in an un- mistakeable mauner the character and desperation of the most cor rupt ring of publiz plunderers that ever infested a Btate. New York has had & Tweed, Kansas a Pome- roy, and Nebraska will n the fature poiut to the records that she has had a Hitchoock. The boldness and shamelessness of & scheme un- questionably gotten up in consulta- tion with Miller to serve as & thun- source tall flat upon the ears of the public. We came to Omaha when a boy only fifteen years of age, earned our money by hard work, aud turned over every dollar of 1t to help an aged father in his declining health, and began at twenty- one without auy resource but our own haods and brains. Miller, on the contrary, after secaring his property from his father, has been charged, and not falsely, with faithlessness to his father; and the time was when Lorin Miller slept and lived under » strange roof, while his son George was living upon the luxury trans- ferred tc him and the ill-gotten gain acquired by repudisting honest la- borers their honest pay. This isall we have to say in answerto Milier's compliments t» Rosewater Junior. | to overcome the — MILLER'S PROPOSED SELL OUT, Tae Bezisnot in the habit of msking a serious chare against a Journalist or & public official with- out the evidence to prove 1ts as<er- tion When we wrote our charges against Milier that he had procu & letter from Bamusl J. Tilden, ad- vising Democrats to vote cock we knew what we were talk- ingsbout An scquaintance with that prince of knaves, Dr. Miller, 1ed us to expect this and more from that bribe taker and unscrupulous traitor. He had made public charges of bribery and corruption against the Republican party. He had de- nounced Senator Hitchcock as a thief, bribe giver, Point cadetships, merely as & bi to be bought off. He was bought off. He exposed Cunninghsm for his fraudulent surveys and then sold out to him by retractiog all be uad said. He Loasted he would ex- derboit wherewith to drive men like sheep to Hitchcock’s support when in a fever state of excitement, Las, thanks to & conscienoe-stricken abbettor in crime, been thwarted, and tne public are permitted to gaze upon the true inwardness of this high handed scheme. The revela tions develop the fact that, presum iog thatthe B & M. railroad com- pany was, like himself, using money toadvance the interests of some par- ticular candidate, Senator Hitch. cock determined to get some au- thentic clue in order to useit as evi- dence whereby he might turn the public in the important moment from his own terrible record, mask his own bribery resorts, create a sudden sentimient in his favor before it would be too late shock. To saocomplish this he set his hirelings to work with money to bribe & puor clerk with sufficien inducement to betray his trust and to steal & sup- posed document for the furtherance of corrupt euds. Unfortunately, and to the credit of the company, no wod such effort bad been made, and no such documents were in existence. “or Hitcl:. | Wit the inducement of a thousand dollars, however, before him the young man gave way to its euticing allurements and committed the louble crime of forgery and perjury. That he could not !.ave been entire- Ivlost tos sense of honor, 15 evi- denced by his confession which be | sent to be delivered to Buperinten- dent Trving, sfter be considered dealer in West | Bimself sxfe on his journey. This d | confession” was the thunderbit that struck back with doudle force at theconspirators. Mr. Irving, recog- nizing the importance of quick ac tion in the matter, took the bearer of the clerk’s message on a special plode & bombsball n U. 8. court | ain for the scene where the trage- frauds, but again it was merely to besilenced. He has deplored the immorality exi-ting in the politics of the country and insisted upon re- form and Tildea. dy was to be consummated, With truth as r:is weapon it did not tuke long to upset the sudden aisclosures of the purchased forger es. It was now the opportunity for the oppo- nents of corruption 1o turn the tide. His first act afler the election was | With scarcely a moment’s notice a corrupt coalition with the most| g, jpvestigation was ordered, the corrapt Senator that ever disgraced | Senator's private secretary forced to & sovereign Biate. His last plot is | the witness stand, sud before he to force upom the people of Nebras- | hud an opportunity to betbii k him- ke this infamous seuator by the al- lurements of aletter from s Deino- sell, his testimony was secured from bim. Its purport as cratic presidential candidate. He | ghown by the dispatchex was a sur- kuows that 8 mau who would sell prise to even the senutor’s most san- out his party, as he says Hitehcock | guine opponents. It was the direct has sgreed to de. will be faithless | evigence of the senstor’s guilt and to his pledge to those” who pur- chased it by their disgrace Aud this is the Democratic leader proved him to be & most shameless villsin How any one can support this man in the .ace of such a dis who proposes to lead the overbur- | closure passes our comprebension. dened taxpayers out of the sloughs | No man who will do 1t can be pos of corruption. Democrats of Doug- sessed of the faintest spark of i.on- las county, does it not make your | esty or self respect, b3 he Republi- eheeks turn erimson with the blush | oen or Democrat, and deserves the of shame to think of it? And you, eternal execration of all honorable Republicaus, who have listened 10 | oitjzens, We hope the records will the hypocritical appeals of this dem- produce no evideuce of such de- agogue, to rise svove partizanship | Loy o araoters, in the interests of honesty and jus- tice, what do you think of this in- famous scoundréi ? e — COME ON wITH YOUR PHOOF. The two organs of plunderers and apologists of perjurezs, liars, thieves ANY journalist who would delib- | and villains, in this eiy,charge that erately prostitute himself and nis | Edward Rosewater, editor of the journal in upholding bribery, per- Beg, has been drawing a stipend of jury and forgery, is a fit subject for | $100 per montn from the B. & M. tbe penitentiary. We mean you, Mr. George L. Miller. —_— WHAT would the public think ot a firm who would offer & bribe to the book-keeper of & competing house for the vetrayal of his em- ployer's truste? This—only m & tenfold degree—is what Nenator Bitcheack is guilty of. IF it seems uncharitable in & young man 1 resurrect from tbe bitter past the relics of family feuds presamed to be buried, all we ha to say in Justification s that Miller csn thank Hitcheock with being the author of their resurrection. It was made fa the Aepublican less than three years ago when Mller, still possessed of some degree of msnhood, exposed that corrupt o clal and gave his pledgeas a man of honor to prove his charges bsfore a legislature or & court of justice. ARE Democrats willing to have their candidate for the highest ot- fice in the it of the American peo- ple placed in the attitcde of secur- ing judzment on his election by the bribery of = corrupt Senator. 1f not, then they must repudiate ren- egade Miller, who has for 3 prom- ised consideration sgreed Lo use the Tilden emerxency as & whip-lash to dnive Democrats into the support of s back-pay thief, a liar, a bribe- giver, a_bribe-taker, and a co-part- nor with perjurers and forgers. MiLLER bhes the shameless ef- froutery to upheld & United States Senator in an effort to tribe a man _ to steal documents belonging to his employers. Tuis same man public- 1y denouneed as & fit subject for 1m- prisoument an operator who be- | trayed a trust by exposing & corrupt effort to coerce workingmen to vote against the dictates of their ocon- science. In this case, however, while the eflort was made to induce by bribery & man to commit a theft, it turned out, from the non-existence of & supposea document, to be an inducement to the commussion of forgery and perjury. A:d this crimmal act is applanded by a man i ‘who pretends 0 tea:h morsls 10 the of our schools, and who ralrosd company. The BEE, un- like these subsidized jouraals,throws down the gauntiet and dares them to the proof. The charges are as false as are the forged documents on the B. & M. officials. The only money drawn on the B. & M. by the BEEin the past year was for job work and advertising. The figures are produced elsewhere in this issue with amdavits attached. On part of the work done we have had, at times, advances from that compa. Dy, as we have from the Union Pa- afic company, and individuals with whom we do business. Only two days ago we drew $100 in money from the Union Pacific Land De- partment as part advance psy- ment on work not yet fully completed and delivered. On the same ground that the other charge is made, it could therefore be charged that the BEE has been bribed by the Union Pacific railroad. Miller, Ritcheock, and their host of accomplices farther allege, as evi- dence that the BEE is bribed, the fact that the BEE received an order for 1,000 copies sbout the time of the primaries. Now it so happened that the Union Pacific company also ordered 1,000 copies of the BEE last fall when the BE published a commuuication from =« Lone Tree correspondent Was the Big bribed by the Union Pacific company because it niled their or- ders? The charge would come with the same consistency from that source, and yet the BEk Is cslied by them an enemy of tue Un- ion Pacific railroad. Having thus disposed of the cbarge in relation to the BEE, let us see how it is with Dr. Miller and Mi. Brooks: Miller is proven to have been subuidized by the Union Pacific road by the records which show his interest n the railroad eating-houses, his sudden somer- szult on the narrow-gauge, and countless other instances. Brooks has been proven to have drawn $125.00 per m uth from the Union Pacific company. The fact that his name was on the pay-roll in the Auditor's books has been proven, aud one of the alleged charges agaivst a clerk who wa« dismissed from the services of that company last fall was that he had divulged the secret, the truth of which was _enes Democracy and Keform | thus admitted. The Brains of Criminals. Says the British Medical Journal: In our last issue we published & very interresting letter from our Vienna correspondent, in which a brief summary was was given of Prof. Beuedict’s researches on the brains and skulls of criminals. The subject is an important ope, both from the phpsiogical and psy- chologieal point of view, and it is to be hoped that more extended and more precise inquiry will be made upon it, for the results which Mr. Benedict bas obtained, though very important. are not suficiently nu merous to warrant any large induction. Up to the pres- ent time Dr. Benedict has ex amined the brains of sixteen crimin- als, all of which, on comparison with tne bealtby brain, he finds to be abnormal. Not only has he found that these brains deviate from the normal type, and approach toward that of lower animals, but he has been able to clasaify them, and with them the skulls in which they were contained, in three cate- gories. These consist in: Kirst, absence of symmely between the two halves of the brain ; second, an obliquity of the interior part of the bran or skull—in fact, u continus- tion upward of wha! we term & slopit:¢ forehead ; third, s distinct lessening of the poterior cere- bal lobes, so thai as in tne lower animals, tiey are ot large enough to hide the cerebel- lum. In all these peculiarities the eriminal's brain are distiuctly of & lower type than tho-e o uormal men, and the inter:- . question arises, how far are 1! « cvil acts of the criminal to be att ibured 1o this retrogade developmeni ? Dr. Watts can pardon the vicious provensities of *bears and lions,” on the ground that ‘God had made them so.” If he had foreseen these new inquiries be might have felt less hopeful when he baae his little readers not not to *let their angry passions rise.” The result of Dr. ssenedict’s researches, 1f eonfirmed by further examinations, will do much to f RECIPES FOR THE TABLE. Piain Soup, 1.—A plece of beef which you can buy for 14 or 15 cents; put it on six hours before you intend to use1t; cover the meat with two quarts of cold water, and let it simmer slowly ; one bour before tak- ing it off add one carrot, one turnip, one small onion, and a 11 tle celery, all entup tine; drain and serve; add salt and pepper.—Campbell. Plain Boup, 2.—Save your beef- steak and roast beef bopes; cover with hot water, and let them boil slowly all day; ii the water boils away, add more boiling water; you can have s pint or a quart of soup from this,zccording to the amount of bones; any tough pieces of the beef can beboiled with the bones; at night strain and set in cool place; an hour before dinner next dsy remove the fat from thesurface; add a small on- fon sliced fine, a pinch of thyme, ,aalt aud pepper, and let boil half an hour; then add two sticks of maca- roni and boil till done. Leave out the macaroni, add vermicalli,which reqnires ouly ten minutes for cook- ing, and you have another soup; put in stewed tomatoes—a few spoonfuls—with half a teaspoonful sugar, and you have anoter soup. Sometimes the soup will be a jelly, when cold. Do not add water to pressed yeast cake; dissolve the yeast in another cupful luke-warm water, and stir all together tnor- oughly ; set at 8 o’clock in the morn- ing on two sticks or a bnick placed on he cool part of the range, and they will be ready to bake at 7:30. This plan only works well when the fire is kept all night. Buckwheat Cskes, 2. - TWo parts of buckwheat flour, one part Gra- ham flour, sali, good veast stirzed up in warm water over night in a thin batter. Two bolled potatoes added will make them brown nice- Buckwheat Cakes, 3 —One quart buckwheat flour, one half piut of Indian meal, two teaspoon‘uls salt, one-half tea cup of molasses; sti. into rather a stift batter with tepid water. When they are very light, if too stiff, thin thew with a little tepid water. A raw vellow turnip cut in balf is very niceto grate the griddle with, saving all the strong odor of frying fat, Currant Loaf Bread. — Make a batter of one quart of flour and one pint of warm sweet milk, two tea- spoonfuls sult, ana balf a cake of compressed yeast dissolved in & lit- tle water ; cover and set in & warm place until very ight. Tien rub to a cream one cupful granulated this, it will melt. Mutton Soup.—Take the bone left_from a leg of roast mutton; crack it once or twice; add any bits of meat that a2 left, and boil all iay, first cov.ring with bot water. You cau have three piuts of soup from these boues At uignt, or at- ter it has boyfeu at least eight hours, stram and set it iu & cool place ; the next day remove the fat, add one onion, half a carrot, one turnip, some parsley, a little celery, or cel- ery salt, a pinch of thyme, falt and pepper; chop the vegetablea very fine, and let boil half an hour by themselves, then turn Into the stock and boil balt an hour longer A little tomato, or tomato catsup, is sn improvement. If you | choose, thick.n with three table- spoonfuls of flour, mixed quite shake many beliefs now firmly fixed. The Fashionable Doctor. London Examiner, One can tolerate & fashionabie Iawyer, or even & fashionavle bard, ora fashionable reviewer, whose chief sin against nature and good manners is his fondness for making Jokes In quaint laugusge concern- ing his digestion; the fashionable actor is equally bearale—he no longer swears or gets truculently drunk, he dresses well, and if he does absorb an unreasonable amount of attention from the girls, he bewrs the fatigue of their attertions with # grace that steals ail artfulnessfrom his art_and_ we like him because, although acting all the time, he acts s0 well _ssut your fashionable doc- tor is different. Time was when men and women trembied iu the presence of a priest; grew pale on being brought into coutact with a lawyer; lost their wits in shaking hands witli a bard, but grew merry in hobnobbing with & player. Enter the fashion- able doc or iuto a drawing-room of to-day, snd there is a general exit of all hexlthy humao emotion. He Knows everybody’s insice, and they koow that he knows, and thi mu- tual knowledge hus a depressing eflect. Kverybody’s mouth is shut —his alone is open—everybody in that room of torture acknowledges hersel? in the plainest manner to bea Iame duck, or himself to bea screw, and &0 long as this medicine mau remains in that asemblage of crip- ples, so long is every one kept under the ‘spell of disease, and—what is the siugular part of the performance —anxion, at the earliest moment to oblain & prescription; to go for advice; to beg, sfter long walting inacrowed room of anxious in- quirers, the exailted privilege of paying a heavy iee for being al- lowed to talk in private of his or ber own liver, or his or her own mucous membrene For the pleasure of having this baptizea imposier look down her throat for one single second, or for the pleasure it will give her friends, a lovely girl who has nothing on earth the matter with her that the summer’s b-eath could not heal, or Mother Nature's own embrace could not cure, will go through an ordeal s> intense, rearching and ap- palling s an examination used to smoothly 1n a lttle water.—k. M. N. | Tomato Boup.—Take the thin part of acan of tomatoes; stew half au hour; season with butter, salt, pep- per aud sugar; bave ready one pint of milk thickened with two table- spoonfuls of flour, or eaough to make it like drawn butter; salt; at dinner time pour both through a colander, stirring them 1 the tu- reen; be careful to have it served hot; 'tureen should be heated —E. M N Pea Soup —Oue quart of split peas soaked over might; in the morning ake oue pound and a half of fresh beef snd half a pound of salt pork ; draln the peas well and put on the fire with four quarts of wa- ter, and the meat sud a tablespoon- ful'of dried aud powdered mint, sna two heads of celery ; simmer slowly until the peas are all boiled to a soft pulp; have some Bread tcasted very brown and cut 1n dice in the tureen ; straiu the soup and send to tableat once; must be stirred just as you serve It; sesson with pepper and : celery sait.—Aunt Addie. | Economieal Soup.—Take what re- ' mains of a cold goose or turkey, and put to boil in sufficient cold water j W cover all the bones and boil stead- { ily four hours; season with salt and | pepper, and add a few vegetables, as for other soups ; thicken with a lit- tle rice and it makes & relishable dish. A Wedding Dinner. — F rst course, raw oysters on shell ; sec- ond, soup; tnird, fisn; fourth, oyster parties; fifth, tenderloin of beef with potato ercquettes; sixth, roast chi kens; seventh, canvas- back ducizs ; eighth, salads; niuth, 1ce-creams and jellies ; tenth, fruits ;.e.ld nute; eleventh, coffee. - [Camp- I An.Economic Breakfast Dish.— Small pieces of meat, one teacupful milk put iu the frying-pan with a little sait and pepper, small table spoontul butter, six eggs beaten up and stewed in with the meat. Pork Cake—One cup of chopped pork, one cupful of r«isins, the same of molasse~ and milk, one teaspoon- ful each of salt aud sods, and four cuptuls of flour PLAIN MINCE-MEAT—Procure & good piece of beer without bone, and cover with boiling water; | let simmer until tender and the wa- | be to high-born women 1n the pres- ence of the brutal Christians who formed the sec et conclave of the holy ofice Once confess to your fasiiouable doctor that you have gat a head, a coest, a stomach, a spize, and an auricle, and it is all up with you. You get possessed; and once possessed of a fashionable doctor, there is no power on earth to bring deliverance. Nor is deliverance desired. «Come and see me sgain on Fri- day,” aud the victim goes; again 18 let fall & golden tear, which the sun himself might have shed, which the fashionable docior care- fully puts into his bottle, tacetiousty labeled ¢ Solution of New Guinea,” and the game once begun it is car- ried on by means of an ingenuity which is a8 cunning as it is devilish —_— Hydrophobia Panic in Glasgow. At Giasgow a terrible panic has lately arisen, due to a widespread popular belief that hydrophdbia had broken out there in something like an epidemic, or perhaps we shomd say, epizootic form. Btraightway the police p-oceeded to slay all dogs they found 1n the streets unmuzzled and without responsible guardians It would appear, however, that the alarm has ben somewhat exazger. ated. Dr. G. H. B Maclzod, the profes- sor f surgery in the University of Glasgow, bas done rond g-rvica by. exploding this fact. [n s popular lecture he dlivered the other night st Crosshill he took occasion to say that agreat desl of the hydrophobis about which they were mourning in Glasgow was simply the creation of terror. In fact, it would seem that, just as by homeopa hic doses of drugs ome can sometimes cure diseases by acting ou them through the imagination, so a fearful mala dy may be generated by the opera- tions of overwrought fancy. In this way people, when they read de scriptions of the horrors of hydro phobia, which is an extremely rare disease, imagine whenever a dog seratohes them that they are doom- ed to perish from foasming maduess. Now, as Dr. McLeod wisely eug- gests, there isx lhittle reslly to fear from the bite of u dog in most cases; for even, he remarked 11 a mad dog bit him through the clothes, he would not care, because the ani- mal’s teeth would be cleaned from pot=on by rubbing through the cloth, and there would be no fear of bad reults. If persons were bitten by » dog lit wss foolish to destroy the snimal there and then, for more than once he had known of cases where men recovered from what was thought to be hydrophobia merely by being shown the dog that had bitten them all sound and clotlied in its right mind. ter nearly exhausted ; do not let it | brown ; when cold mince fine, re- jectiug all fat; save the water, and | ‘when cold, take the fat from it and put the water on the meat. To one | bowlful of meat add two bowlfuls | mineed, juicy appies, one bowifal raixins, one half bowlful currants, aud one teacupiul minced suet ; su- gar and spice to taste, a pinch of salt, and cider sufficient to molsten. , BAKED INDIAN PUDDING-One cupful “granulated” yellow meal, one-half cupful wheat flour; mix with these enough culd water to thoroughly moisten; stir into one pint boilng milk ; put into a pud- diog dish, ana= small piece of but- ter, oue beaten egg, one small tea- cupful molasees, one tablespoonful sugar, one piat cold milk, salt and ginger, to taste; bake three hours. The ‘“granulaied” isby far better than the finely-ground meal Indian Meal Pudding, 1.—The meal may be prevented from sett- ling at toe bottom of the dish by stirring the pudding several times during the first hour it 1s put in the oven. It the Indian meal used for pud- ding is scalded and steeped for two hours, eggs are used, the meal will not sink to the bottom of the pud- ding dish. Miuce Pie, 1 Five pounds o: beet boiled and chupp d finely, four pounds of suet boiled and chopped, five pounds of sugar, one pound o. citron, eight firmly pounded crack- ers, two lemons chopped finely, one pintof cider, the same of wine and brandy, one guince boiled aud chop- ped, two table spoons full of salt; one teaspoonfull of black pepper, ape ounce esch of cloves, cinnamon and mace; grate nutmeg on top; aleo bits of butter and sugar before baking; m'x molasses and cider to- gether with the crackers, heat to & seaid; then mix them with-the re- mainder of the ingredients; mix thesugar with the wine. Mince Pie, 2.—Seven pounds of meat chopped fiLe, three pounds of sugar, three pounds of raisins, one pound of currant Jelly, two ouncesof mixed spices; add stewed apples when ready to make the pies, as the meat keeps better without them; make a crust of two-thirds of the usual quantity of lard ard one-third of finely-chopped fat sait pork ; rub well into the flur and wet with cold water,and bake in & slow oven for one hour. Mince Pie, 5.—Oné pint finely- chopped beef; two pints finely- chopped apples; cinnamon, nut. meg, and clives finely pulverized, (l'to-lhlmd :un.mon) one-third nutmeg and eloves, m. cider, / 0lasses, 3 Buckwheat Cakes, 1.—Four cup- fuls buckwheat, one of Indian meal, sugar aud a piece of utter the size of an egg; add this to the sponge and one teaspoonful powdered cin- namon and the half o a small nut- meg grated. Have one-balf pound of currants; rub through them a little flour and put in the dough; mold up very soft aud place in the pan or dish you intend bakiugitin; cover warm and let it get quite light. Graham Bread,:1 —One cupful of flour, twd cupfulsof Graham tlour, one cupful warm water, half a cup- ful of bakers’ yeast, a little molasses and salt, balf teaspoonful of sods dissolved in the water ; let rise over night; this qusntity’ makes one loaf. Graham Bread, 2—One pint sponge, one pint warm water, one teaspooniul molusses, salt, oe-halt teaspoontul sods; stir i Graham flour; arise and bake. Grabam Biead, 8. —Onequart fine flour, two quarts Graham flour, one tablespoontul salt, one gill molasses, | one-half cup compressed yeast, dis- solved in a teacupful warm water; make into a stiff sponge and cover warmly. Let it get very light; then knead Into & soft dough, with fine and Graham flour mixed i the proportion of one-th rd fine and two- thirds Graham. Let it raise again, and mold out very soft; place in pans; let stand s few momeatsin & warm place. Soda Grabam Biead.—One pint sweet milk, two teaspoonfuls cream tartar, one teaspoonul soda, two ta blespoon uls molasses, one quart flour, half teaspoonful salt. Choco'ate Cske. —One cupful but- ter, two cupfuls sugar, three cup- fuls milk, one-half teaspoonful soda, one teaspeonful cream tartar, five eggs, leaving cut two of the whites, three and a balf cupfuls flour ; bage in a large sheet iron pan. The oake should be about one and a balf inches thick when baked For frostiug, two whites of eggs, one and a half cupfuls pulver- 1zed sugar, two teaspoonfuls vanilia six teaspoontuls grated chocolate ; spread on bottom side of cake when taken from the oven —Eva. Lemon Cake--One and a halfl cuptuls sugar, three fourths cupful butter, one teaspoonful cream tartar, one-half teespoonful sods, one- fourth milk, one and three-fourths cupfals sifted flour, two eggs; squeeze in_the juice of two lemoun ; bake in jelly tins; grate the riud of tha lemon off, mix with powdered sugar and the white of an egg; wot very stiff; when the cake 1s cold spread this between tle leaves as in jelly cake. Boiled Custard.—Onequart boil- ed milk, four eggs, one cupul sugar, oneeven tablespoonful corn starch; beat the whites separate, and stir in when cold. Bnow Pancakes —One quart snow- water (0 about one pint sifted flour, orsufficieat to make a nice batter ; one teaspoonful salt ; one egg would improve 1t, though not altoge‘her necessary. Beat until very light and smooth. Fry on a quick fire in lard, drippings, or “butter scrap- ings.” Muffins—One quart sour milk, one even teaspoouful soda, a little salt, flour to thicken sufficient to drop. One Egg Tes cake—One cupful sugar, butter the sizs ofa black wal- nut, rubbed together to & cream ; one-half teacupful milk, one and a haif of fl .ur, pinch of salt. one tea- spoonful of vanills, one teaspoon- ful of yeast powder ; bake in & thin cake ; before putting in oven sift . wdered sugar over it. Ginger Snaps, 1.—Mu1x together in a deep pan one pint of West india molacses, one-half pound butter or lard, one quarter pound brown su- gar; two iarge tablespoonfule ginger, one teaspoonful cinuamon, a little cayenne pepper, also a littie salt if lard i1s used, one teaspoonful soda dissolved in warm water, sufficient flour toroll out conveniently; let the whole be well mcorporated into s large lump; knead 1t tllit leaves the hands clean, then beat hard with a rolling-pin, which will make it crisp when baked; roll out in thin cakes Ginger Bnaps, 2 —Puttwo cup‘uls molasses and one of butter in a tin pan; bol five minutes, then let it cnol; dissolve two teaspoonfuls soda ina little warm water, and pour - to the molassesand butter; two tea- spoonfuls ginger, one of cinoamon, flour enouzh to roll without stick- ing; roll very thin. Gioger Bnaps, 8.—Two coffee- cups full of vew Orleans molasses, one teacupfull eugar, one-halt cup full larder butter, three hesping ta blespoons full of Jamsaica ginget, one heaping tablespoonful sods ; dissolve in one-half cupfuli warm water; tablespoonfull vinegar; make quite stiff, roll very thin; bake brown in a hot oven Ginger Snaps, 4—One quart sifted flower, one pint of molasses, one half pound melted butter, two tablespoons full of ginger, one-half teaspoonfull cloves, one teaspoonfull cinnamon, one wine glassfull milk, quarter pound light brown sugar, two heaping tablespoons full of bak- ing powder, or two teaspoons full of saieratus dissolved in the milk ; roll very thin and bake in quick oven More flour must be added to make the dougn stiff enough to mold. For Frying Seallops, 1.—Roll so- da crackers fine, dip the seallops in well-beaten. eyg, then in the crack- er crumby; fry with lard and but- ter; requires considerable cooking Tomato Balsd—One can of toma- toes, same quantity of chopped cel- ery, three egga beaten light ; season with salt and pepper; boil tomatoes and celery together until they are thick, take off fire and stir in the egge, and when nearly enld sdd one one: teaspoonful ealt, four cupfuls luke-warm water, one 2 cent com- tablespoonful of mixed Eoglixh ) mustard. Falling In Love. There is nothing—no moral or intellectual henomena — more strange than ‘alling in love What itis; whence it origiuates; how it is brought about ; these things are among the hidden mysteries of our nature. A girl has reached the age of eighteen; a young mau hat of twenty-one. They have lived at home; traveled a little; pursued their studies ; attended parties, and been & good deal in the society of otner young people ; yet they never took & very deep interest in any- thing in particular ; neither of them ever cared very much for any other person. They met, and lo!of a sudden, all is changed ! Each sees the oth- er in a different light from what any other was ever.seen in: the whole world seems changed. Life itself is changed: their whole being 18 changed, to be like what it was, a.ain, nevermore! Love 18 often s sudden as this, but not always. Sometimes it is of very slow growth. Persons have known each other for years, and been much in each other’s society and been intimate ali this time, but never thinking of a tie stronger than friendship; when some incideut or event—a temporary parting, or the interven- tion between them of & third per- son, friend or w.ranger—reveals to them, for the first time, the great truth that they are mutuaily 1n love, Yet this love, springing up grad- ually and imperceptibly, is uo less mysterious and unfathomsble than that which is sudden and at first sight. 1tis not mere friendship grown strong; it is a more absorbing, more wviolent, more un ‘outrollable senti- ment. Whether a person can fall in love more than once is 8 mooted ques- tion. Bome people appear to fall in love many times. It 18 not unusual to see widowers, who hava been very devoted hus- bands, marry again and seem to love the second wife just as well as the first. —— A Vicious Horse. From the Knoxville (Iowa) Demoerat. A few duys since s 14 year-old son of Mr. John Caue, living in Per- ry township, this county, proceeded to hitch up a team of norses for the purpose of drawing wood, and, while engaged, was furicusly at- tacked by one of the horses, & ridgling, wiich bad been owned by the family for some time, and of kuown viciousness. The horse jumped upsn the boy, threw him down, sud, with instiuct almost bLuman, knelt upon 1t knees, the better to bite its victim One tuumb o: the boy was entirely bitten off, one of his ears was torn trom his head, and a piece bitten oft, one of his fiugers wasnearly bitten off, and his arm above the ¢i- bow was horribly mangled Ly the teeth of the beast. Besides, the boy’s clothes were toru from his person, and nis body badly brused. The boy’s mother and sister, knowing the dangerous character of the horse, were watehing out of & window, and seeing the attack, hastened to the child’s reliet. Each of the women grasp:d clubs, and with them actually knocked the horse eatirely down before 1t would cease 1ts attack upon the boy, and when it did so, jt with great fury turned 1ts attention to them, and in the fight the clothes of both the women were sadly demoralized. The horse some time before had attacked and nearly killed a former owner, and it is said once upon a time it bit and crushed to death a man near Des Moines. NEBRASKA LEGH List of Sianding Committees. SENATE. Judiciary—Chapman, Brown, Uol- by, Powers, Hinman, Gilham, Craw- ford, Thummel aud Covell. Finance, Ways aud seaas—Am- brose, Kenuard, Biauchard, Holt, Thummel, Howe Accovnts snd Expenditures— Birkhauser, Calkins, Dawes, Baird, Aten. ATURE. Agriculture—Aten, Carnes, Wal- | ton, North, Van Wyeck, Crawford, Pepoon. Highways, Bridges, Etc.— Gar- field, Pepoon, Holt. Military ~Van Wyck, North, Colby, Hayes. Public Lands and Bumldings— Kennard, Thummel, Covell, Dawes, Ferguson, Wilcox and Carnes. Internal Improvements—Knapp, Powers, Birkhauser. Federal Relations - Calkins, Wil- cox. Walton, Hinman, Gilham. Engrossed and fnrolled Bills— kerguson, Thummel, Howe. Counties—Hinman, Knapp, Van Wyek. Railroads — Powers, Hinman, Chapman, Thummel, Howe, Birk- hauver, Kennard. Privileges and Elections—Howe, Wilcox, Carns, Chapman, Crawford. State Prisons — Blauciard, Am brose, Howe, Garfleld, Covell. Miscellaneous Coporations — Gil- ham, ¥erguson, Colby. Library—Pepoon, Brown, Bryant. Claims—Crawford, Hayes, North, Holt and Pepoon. Education — Bryant, Pepoon, Chapman, Hayes, Crawford. Printing—Brown, Bianchard and Knapp. Mines and Minerals — Hayes, Covel, Garfield Behool Funds aud School Lands —Colby, Bryant, Holt, Thummel, Birknauser. Banks and Currency—Colby, Hin- man, Aten. Constitutiousd Amendments— Carns, Crawiford, Wilcox. Immigration—Walton, Kennard, Bryant. Municipal Affairs—Ferguson, Cal- kins, Chapman, Van Wyck, Baird. Public_Charities—Covell, Baird, Dawes. Gilham, Holt, Ferguson. Live Btock—North, Aten, Howe. HOUSE. Judiciary — Northrup, Carns, Swiszer, Pritchett, ¥. M. Johnson, Doolittle, | stability to th Chase and Boggs. Ways and Means—Anoan, Fitch. patrick, Phillis, Baker, Schminke, Caldwell and Hefferman. Agnicultar—Nicodemus, Heffer- man, Elliott. Kwan, Page, Harri- son and McVick: rs. Roads and Bridges—Elliott, ush, Hall, Mevers, Caldwell, Allen and T. B, Johnson. Militia—Paul Gilmore, Freiricks, Shelby, Hulliban, Belder and Lam- bert. —— —— Small, Phillips, Mc- Fee, Gibswon, Beardsley, Anyan and Nicodemus, Internal fmprovements—Gilman, Cadman, Jordsn, Heatey, Halde: men, Gercae and Rohb. Federal Relations—Cadman, Ba- ker, Selden, Seelvy, Robbutt, Chase and Eiseley. Evrolled and Engrossed Billi— McCall, Baruum, Eisley, Healey, Bush, Love and Freirichs. Acsounts and Expenditures— Beadsley, McKee, Lnve Watters, Whelplay. Small and Blackmore. Constitutional -Ameddments — Switzer, Ewan, Barnum, Harvey, Whelpl'y, Beardsley and Halde man. ! County Boundaries, &c.—Sadler, | Pane, Bobbitt, Miils, Harvey, ! Small and 8t. Clair. - Railroads—Clark, Gilman, Pol- | lock, Fitehpatrick, Wells, Griffith | 7 and Creighton. | Privileges and Elections—Chase, Swith, Crelghton, Brown, Cald- | well, Jury, Pricchett. Btate Penitentiary—Phillips. Wal- ters, Elliott, Burtch, Barker, Mills, Champlin. Corporations — F. M. Johnson, | Reis, Mercer, Spicknall, Spellmau, | { McCreedv, Whitcomb. Asylums —Bear, Allen, Sadler, McKee, Smith, Wileox, Gilmau. Library —Bruno, Burich, Thos. B. Johnson, Mengel, Moore McCreedy, Haullihen. Cities and Towns—Gibson, Me- Call, Scuminke, Sprick, Meyers, Rels Baoks and Currency— Pollock, Runyan, Champion, Selden,Creigh- ton, Spellman, Schminke. Common Schools—Frady, F. u. Johus m, Wileox, Mcors, Meyers, W hitcomb, Smith. University and Normal behools— Boggs. Wielpley, Robb, Switzer, | It ¢ Parker, Bear, Wolte. Public Printing -Wolfe, Barker, Burteh, Love, Halderman, Spick nell, Speliman. Mines and Minerals—Blackmore, Cadman, Bonbitt, Barker, Sprick, Doolittle, Frady Inimigration—Keis, Belden, Men- gel, Mills, McVicker, Harrison, Clark, Miscellaneous Subjects—neville, 8pnick, Champlin, Jury Whitcomb, Ewan, Healey. Manufaciures and Commerce— Runyan, Griftith, Selden, Hullihao, | Mercer, Clark, Gerdis. School Lands —Doolittle, Eiseley, Lamvert, Jordan, Paul, Sadler, Fitchpatrick. Claims—Jordan, Spicknall, Hall, Page, Wilcox, Jury, Nicodemus. Rules—Mr. Speaker, Neville, Fra- | dy, Northrup, Lamvert, Gilmore, Anyan. Live Stock, &e.—St. Clair, Baker, McCall, Moore, Page, Robb, Har- vey. For throat. lungs_asthma and kidneys. REST TAR SOLUTION, or inhalation for catarrh, consumption, | bronchitis and asthma. IOREST TAR TROCHES, | or sore throat. horseness, tickling cough and purifying the breath. IOREAT TAR SALVE. or healing indolent sores, wicers, cuts burns, and for piles. REST TAR SOAP, or chapred bandz, sult #houm, skin dis- ases. tho toilet and bath. OR ST TAR INHALE] or_inhaling for catarrh, consumption, asthma. FOE SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. sep2s dsa Is the Iife, but bad blood is the abomira- cion. From it and derangement of the ki neys and urinary organs, come most of { s and aches and all diseases of the ski edy that i the root of this trouble, acuant in cases of and all disehsos of t fcts on the stomach t moderately accelerates the gently encournges the action of and powerfully augments the urinary secretion—purifies and cleanses the blood, thus removing the cause of boils scrofala. an eruptive an uta iseases : reduces inflammatory, rheumatic and neuralgic pains and ach aliays infimmation of thalkldness,slandsand fibrous tisues and joints, softens and carries off gravel and other calculus depos urinary organs ; cures Diabutes, ftorder of the urh d Hapure fsorder of the uriny orsans and. lmpure state of the blood, and especially adsbtad to RA'LR0ADS. C.& N W. LINES. TH? & NORTH WESTERN RA LWAY. Embraces under one manag. m-nt the Gr.at Trunk Railway lines of the Westand Nortb west, and, wi'h its numerons branches and ons. forms the sh rtest and quickest 1oute berween *'tic_g» and all pints in Ii inois, Wisconsin. Northern Michigan. Mis Desota, fows Nebrasks, Callifornia and the Western erri ories. Its OMAMNA AND CALIFORNIA LINE Is the shortest and best route between Chi- ST. PAUL & MINNSAPOLIS shortest line between Chicago aud all pois m_ Northern Wi d Minnesota, and for Madi neapolis, Dul: Northweat. LA CROSE, WINONA &ST. PETERLINE 1s the best routs between Chicago and La Crosse, W nona. Rochester./ watonna Man- ato. St. Peter, New [lm “and all points in Southern and Central esota. Its GREEN BAY AND MARQUETTE LINE Is the only line between Chicago and Janes wille, Watertown, Fond du Lae, Oshkosh, Appleton. Green fay, Escaraby. Negaunes, Marquets Houghton. Hanecck, and the Lake Superior Countre. Its FREEPORT AND DUGUQUE LINE In the only route between Chies Rockford. Lake Shore Route. as is the assing between Chicazo_ane o " Forest. Hich-and Park. cine. Kenosha an Milwau. 2 Waukegan, keo. PULLMAX PALACE DRAWING BOOX CaRS 11t ough traing o ths roud. onlyfine running these ¢ rs between Chicagoand Rt. Pai and Minneap. clis, Chicag and Wilwaukee, Chicago and Winona or Chicago and Green Bay. Closs sonnectio with the Lake Shor ichigan Central, H South. = Close connections are ziso made with the Union Pacific K. R, at Omaha for West points. b rous poi Tickets over this route are sold byall Coupon _icket Agents in the Uni ed States and Canada. Remember, you ak for your tickets via the Chicago & North Western Railway, and take none other. New Y ork Office, No. /15 Broadw, ton Office. No. 5 State s'reet : i 265 Farnham : Chicago Tick 82 Clark Strect. under Sherman H C corner ‘Madison Street ; . comer W, Kinsie and C Weil: Street Depot, corner Wells ie Stree . For rates or information not ate from your home ticket agents, apyly to WO E Fiss Ack. Chicago. L H. Srevsirr Gon. Mizvix Hunr 7. Gen Mang’r Chicago fans- y ouss K ST. PAUL & BIOU CITY. 5 —AND— Sioux City & Pacific Railroads, 100 Mile: Shortest Rou e toSt Paul, Minneapolls, And the most dire°t route to Sioux fity d all points in Northern Iowa, ..innesota nd Dakota. NOCHAN3EOF CARS. Will run elegant Drawing Room snd Steening Coaches, owned and controlled by the Company, throug . withoutchange be- tween *MAHA, COUNCIL BLUFF? AND 8T PAUL. Trains will leave the a0 OMANA acd Union Pacific Depot m., and_.OUN it 5:45 p. m.: rem .m., and ST VAUL at11a. urs making | TRN 1 OUES IN ADVANCE OF ALL OTHER ROTTES. Returning—Will_lea; m.. arriving at SIOU. 2/d OMAHA at 10 #2~Tickets for sale in Chicago and North- western Kailway offices Counril Bluffs; Un- ion Pacific Depot ; and Grand Central Ho- tol, Omaha. #a-Be sure that your tickets read ~S8.C. &P.R.R” L BUKNETI. Superintendent, Miseouri Valley. F. C Hil . Sioux City. Souths may20). ST. PAUL s *p. CITY a5 m.. J.H, O'BRYAN, mestern Freight and Phssenger Agt. Omaha. MISCELLANEOU: THE NEW YOR female complaints. a safe and pleas- ant alterative, and cures without depleting the staenath of the organs or the tone.of the genert system. _In other countries ita rep- was 80 high that it gai King’s Cure.” A ost cases prevent, and in all cas the attack of the diseases for vl nded. It is benefici s ro- washing for discharges on the skin ; but for run- ning sores, or severe pains in the joints use Dr, Green's Crimean Linament, for man and beast. For sale by J. K. and by C.F. Goodman. ‘moh17-1teSthd BLACKBERRIES Are one of the most valuable of our na- tive fruits. Cooling and astringent, they form when eompounded and medicated the very best and safest remedy known for Diarrhea, Dysentery, Flux, and what is commonly called the Summer Complaints. ese are always troublesome and sometimes "niM( fatal, u[;’zci ly among children; Many lives might be seved by glving them rompt attention, and care.” Un the other $and, many lives are sacrificed by the. wse of preparations contatning laudanum and other iates. Dr. Green’s Blackberry Cordis just what it represents to > medica- ted compound containing nothing injurions to the system, yet prompt and effective to d‘curo theto diseases in men and TRIBUNE. ~The | eaiing Amercan Newspaper.” Largest Circulat on. AMONG THE BEST PEOPLE. es all the news The ser- man and the slave of no party it afford to and dces tell the t:ut+ ab ut LTt artial and indepandent, Be- inein inlelligent snffeage. i+ aims o far- nish voters the fullest and fair st informa- tion. to qualify them fot the wisest discharge f their responsibility. as it alwayes was, essentially o Tt may quar el in " the futare, afit has done in the past with errors of Re- publican leaders or corruptions in the Re- publican party : butit can never cease to be trae to Republican princivles. and e ecial- iy lo those gol o 1den doctrines of civil service money, the senctity of the ana ‘eqral justice to ai s at the Suth. which formed the cor- nertones of Gov. Haye’s admirable letter of accebtance. V.—Its moral tone is pure an_elevtaed. X ned by ai ec women. Being made without alcobol, it is the very best and safest remedy for children. ‘After this disease is checked the body is bilitated. A daily neraily left worn and dei 20 mod ‘of D gist does not keep Dr. Green’ d to the proprietors, E. T. Burlington, Iowa, and they will mples, as well as circular For saleby J. K. Ish. and by C. F. Good- man. ‘meh20-ethdly EXPECTORATION. If the act of discharging trom the throat and chest matter that arises. from colds, in- stead of scattering and distributing_it through the blood. and goisonine . *By thus assisting the Lungs, Throat and Chest, Dr. Green’s Expectorant cures Colds, Coughs, "Asthma, Bronehitis, Croup. therin, Whoopink Ceush and all affect of the Lungs, Throat and Chest, and_the "o Consumption sed Toghol ities are Expootora: loogening the cough the lungs and throat to throw and assistin off the offending matter, which causes the thus scientifically making the curs Itat once alleviates the mast dis- of er ure. No better cathar- Goodman and J, K. Ish. iences of this life, o siiver lining. _ T-oubl ok the body s vieoroase 1o A o o o, mfigh is dfl? and roug 176 at best s short o sron " f¥still unsolved. Life. howeveP. can be o what induced. instead of being a burden to. dispeptic and debilitated bnd!‘;l‘ can be made an en- during pleasure : but how ? Simply by the d.!l*nd moderate use of Dr. Green’s Bit teo Tonic. This truly - medicinal prepara- tion not & cheap and trasl ic tended simply to stimulate an the second state of the Sirsts but it gently relaxes the bowels. stime ulates the liyer, making it work off the poi- sonous humor of the blood, controls and regu- Iates digestion, thereby femoving the eaase of aches [and low spirits, ves flata- engy and“foul stomach, iving tons and 2t argan with 5o in Bealthy appetite; regulates ; mals weakness prevents fever and ague and malarious di rotects the system fron unwholesome impure water. and vitalizes and tones the whole body against all attrcks of disease. Tey it und you will 8nd it plessant to the taste and healing to the body. In sudden or severe cases of Liver Com- pisint or in conatipation of the Towele, & few doses of Dr. Green’s Liver Pills sist the Tonie in & cure, and if are shak i ith the ague, Dr. Green’s A, il il drive itaway, - Creen's e Bl For sale by C. F. Good: K. Lh. oA B ARy Throat, i The family cirels is never profas - thing which avpoars In the colums of the Tribune. choicest standard and current lit- re of the day is presented in its col- cla talented ling correspondence, fows fromh the most vei_pablithed. B2t “Gohe moro-to make good farmers than any other influence which ever existed. V'l - The t reports of the Tribune are indispensible to ev: ry buyer, and seller in the comntry. " Quotations are given, daily and weeklv of almost every articlo bought and sold in the markets of the world, and yith_unvarving and infallibio se. curacy. Its cat enesse, an other markets are thd recognised standard. VIIL—More copies of the Tribune are paid for and read by the American han of any other newspaper of lilp;olr:: i3 e couniry-_a Tact which s the. best oo interest who vane. of science, fon, will find their demands me% by The roval and prospsrity have .‘Kmmunxmimu course of The'Tribune. It has a larger and ltmnx:r corp3 Of earnest w rkers among its friend ceivee ' from old and new readers wo Shcouragement. TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE. (Postage free to the subsoiber,) Daily—(By mail) one year. tban ever before. and constantiy re of 1 en copies. Twenty copi ihirty copies. one yerr Each ‘T clereymen the Woekly Tribune will be sent one year for $1 50 ; The Simi-Weekly for $2.50. ano tte Daily for 8. ‘we- Specimen copios iree. - Arenis andcaovissers wanted i wn. w n ments will bo made " o e % All remmittances at sender’s ri unless by draft on New York, poatal ords orin registered letter. ‘Address simply THE TR'BT N, TR Notk. LEGAL NOTICE. State of Nebrasks, Douslas county, ss.: At a county court held at the county court or said”county, January tth | coun Fesent, C. 1. ck. In"the atier of the ado cho' Benton a minor child of by John H. MeAl and n. On reading and filing_the verified state- ments of Flora Beaton. John MeAlvin and at decree of this on of said migor Blanche id John MeAivin and Hat- . in_and fo cause why the mot be granted : dency of said petition and sereof. be given to all perso int said matter, by publishing a cops of this order inTaE Ouama WrkKLY BER, a news- ceounty, for throe sue- to said_day of hearing. A EDGWICK, County Judge. paper in cessive weeks. prior. (A trus copy. § copy.) OMAHA HOTEL COMPANY. The avnual meeting of the stock holders of the ‘Gmuha Hotel Company will bs held on the 5th day of Dthrlllr‘. 1877, at the of- fice of Caldwell, Hamlton & Co. at 3 o’ciock p, m,, for the purpo i o L R nsacting such o - broaght before theim. . Ouatis HOTEL Co. By 8. 8. 0“—"5:. PUBLICAT'ONS. WHAT PAYS? It pass overy Manufacturer, Merel Mechaic, Taven or. Farmer. of Profess al ma, 6 kee- nan, he im- mily to in- i inarructive. " e investization s for . and promotes thought and encourages discussion among the mebers. THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN which has been published weekly for the last thirty-one years, doesthin. ¢ a0 ettast d th ¢ of any rther publication: in it aly»-uumm published in s to Manufactares, 3 cs, Inventors and new Discoverie: in the Arrs'and Sciences, _ Every nvmber is pro‘usely illustrat-d_an its contenss emb-ace the lai [ teresting infuru.ati dustrial ‘ ‘suggestions writers. for workmen and the varic tory of new inventioms and d e ini record Dot enly of the scoveries and of engi eering. trated yaper devoted to engineering. chanibs. chemistry. new inventions. ence and industrial progress. published in the world. The practical recipes are well worth ten times the prescriptfon price, and for the house and shop will save many times the cogt of subscription. “Me farmers, meshanics,engineors. vers fam 7, office and counting room: Toom. collegs and school. new volume commences fanuary lst. Ayear’s numbers contain 32 pages and severa: hundred engravings. Thousands of volumed are preserved for binding and ref- erence.” Terms, $3.2) a year by mai eluding postay circulars, givh . Sin- le copies mailed on receint of I cents. behad of all news dealers. PATENTS.. -In connection with the Sei- entific American. 5 & Co. are solicitors of American and foreign patents, establishment in the spolica- rough and have the largest world, More than fifty thousand tions have besn made for patents their agency. te rough this agency, wif and residence of tne pat ientific Ameriean Kefer nc: ‘ume bound in eloth and gilt, Patent Lavs, Census of the d 142 en- fravines of mechanical movements. Price. cen| Addrvas for the paper, or_concerni enta. MUNN & CO.. 51 Park How. Kew ork. Branch Office, Cor. ¥ and 7th' Sta., ‘Washiseton, D. C. T that has just passed. The daily on week days be a sheet of four s, t of eight pages, bilethe weekly cdiion i cight pages of the same dimen- Hons and character that ave alreads famil- iar th our friends. TumBox will continue to be the strenuous advoeate of reform and retrenchment, and of the substitation of statesmanship. wis dom. and integrity for hollow pretense, im- d fraud in_the administration of 52 Lt will contend for the gor- : and . o755 broad il be trastworthy sccounts . and will emaploy for this a numerous and carefully selocted staff of reporters and correspondents, Ita rts from Washingtou, espocially, will be fal; pocurste, and fos ls:_ snd T i oubtless continue to enjoy the hatred of those who thi plunderiog he Treasury or by us t the lay does not give them, while it will sndeavor to merit. the conidence of the publie by de- tthe fending t: e rights of the i eneronshments of wniustifed powers. wiil ba5 oents “Thoprice of the daily tun a month or $5.50 a 38 r, post paid or with he Sunday edition $7 70 & ear Tue “unday edition -alon Pi) The weskly columna. wil be furnished during 1677 rate of i A year. pout paid. ‘The benedt of this large reduction from the provious raie for the okly can be ear. cight pages, ht pages of 56 broad at the Becessity of makine up clubs. 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