Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 9, 1880, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY BE e B. ROSEWATER, EDITOR TO CORRESPONDENTS. Oun Couwmay Frumsos we will lways bo pleased o bear frum, on all matters connected with rops, country politcs, and on suy subject hatever, of general Interest o the penple of sur Biate. Ans Information conn=-ted with the elections, and relating to floods, cidents, will be gladly received. All such communica- tions however, must be as bricf as possible; and they must in sl cases be Written on one side of the shest only. e Naxs of Wirrar, In full, must In each and every case sccompany any communicaticn of ‘what nature soever. This is nct intenced for publication, but for our own ssfaction and s proot o good faith. PoumcaL. ARNOUNCRMENTS of candidutes for Ofice—wheth. er made by sell o friends, and whether as no- tioes or communications to the Editor, are until nominations are made) simply personal, ad will be charged for a8 advertisements. w0 wor desire contributions of & poetical character; and ve will fo prosense or reserve the same In awy caso whatever. ~.ur stafl s sufficiently lare more than supply our limited space. All communicstions should be sorressed to . RISEWATER, Bilitor. —e e THE COUNTRY WILL BREATHE FRESR. The wires have flsshod victory for Gerfield, and poace for the couatry The ditg g third term eloment, for which there was 1o tangible resson, isout of the fidd. Toe fact too is thur.t ssde thatany two or three “statesman” can sufliciently * any candidate as to make him satie factory to the American peo, 1:! We lock upon the result st Chicago as & victory for the peopls. Geveral Garfield in a scldier of chivabric re- <ord; as states man be is the peer of ths beat, and bis friends can go futo the contest withcut having to do battle with issues that ought never fo have birth. The country will breathe freerthat the third term has recoived a squietus. We have but time to mike ovr readess joy, and ery bo.rah fir Garfield!! “Hou on is thehorse who is bound 10 win. Toe “Spontaneous boom” tock a Tong time fo come to & besd. Tue brewers’ nations] cenvention was in seesion last week at Buffulo, N. Y., with Henory H. Reuter as jrusi- d.nt and Covrad Seipp, of Chicag:, vice-president. Tho number of dele- gates in about 400. The brewirg es tablishments of the country num «ver 3,000, which sonually consume 35,000,000 bushels of barley au 00,000 of hoys. Juvee Baxter’ 83 of the Adums Espress company aainst the Louisville and Nashviile railroad, is a'tracting wide epread and diwenting comment in the west. He rules that a railroad company canuot es Lo any express company, being as much bourd to fa- cilitate the basiness of express com- pan‘es s of private individuals, and that a rai'road corperation, unless it is expressly permitted by ite charter, cannot do an express business on its wwn accoun Trx public debt was reduced by the immense sum of $15,928,033 in My msking the whole reduction since Juns 30,1879, $74,820,536. The sesretary has been buying §3,000,000 a weck of the 5's and 6's, and the former are now down to $488,848,700, aud the latter to $22,901,900. The reduc- tion is of course atiributable to the great income from duties and the inter- pal revenue consequent upon the re- vival of business. 4nother month as favorable as May would carry the gain on our indebtedness up to $90,000,C00 for the Gscal year. Tur annual meetings of the various trunk lines heli Gurinz the past few wooks have reportsd a year of ramark- eb'e prowperity for the railroads. The cedit side of the balance shyt is heavily in favor of the corporations and the usual dividends having been declared, a large surplus is left in the treasory. This is erpecially the case with the rcads which are engaged in transport- ing the agricultural wealth of oer wes- tera states to the distributing points of the east. The incresss of earnings in the case of all the trans-Mississippi roads sre remarkably lurge, whi'e all the eastern railways, excepting the c0al roads in the increase. Ex-CostroLLer CosNoLry, the fa- mous member of the Tweed ring, died last week in Parie. The members of that cnce flourisnig organization are fat dissppaaring. Tweed died in joil; Connolly, as we hiave seen, died in exile: Watson was kilied; Oakey Hall for a time lost his reason, and is now working hard for a modest living in New York; Woodward and Prince Harry Genet disgorged most of what they stole and are in obscurity, while Peler B. Sweeney, who was accounted the brains of the ring, having also pur- chased relief from fhe law, is now li ing in Paris in wealth and infamy. Al- though jastice has been very thor- oughly avenged, there is nothing in the career of these men to stimulate i-i‘M‘= Taz conflict in the Chicago conven- tion has been onc of unexampled bit- terness. This was to bave been ex- pected. For the first time in the his- tory of the Republic the people through their chosen representatives were brought face to face with the question of & third term and the prob- sbility of overturning one of the most ancient unwritten laws of our nation. The leaders of the third term move- ment had exhausted every expedient 10 increase the strength of their can- didate and their opponents wero equally determined to leave no lawful stone unturned to defeat what they firmly believed +would “be » dangerous and uncalled for innova- jion. This was the first point on which there culd be o compromise. With | taon pr THE INDEBTEDNESS OF CITIES. The Supreme Court of the State of New Jersey aflifined 4 gment rendered against the city of Elizabeth in the suits of the Singer Sewing Ma- the former wes fur rome £750,000; that of the latte tivety small auount. The city defend ed the actious on the plex that the council had no suthoriiy to issue the was fora compara- to pry property wataring bords. ners of ha¥e ~argued azainst " Qefuids trg”the suits, - but ‘the cily council backd by minywho have o sroperty in the city have interposcd possible defenccs. . The. Singer company, whese principal factory isat , owe abuut a quart st of the sess of the ity, and they yroperiy in the elly amounting veral millions_of ¢ The company wly tLi another has b: the debt The 1»ge the city al the dcht. Colonel Kean, of the la owncrs, But the defaulting d, and the rosult «f the senti- bheen disgraeed Ly her cendust; the city has suflered in preperty to the full am d:Dt, and after all the courts direct the city to be hensst and pay up, whrch the city ought (o have betn done witkout the intervention of the courts. couniry over; the judiciary of the state, appointed by the governor, have All kept the ermive clean, +t ruling for bonssty by the e court brings fresh laurels to tate at large. Econ was overl abeth. ies may just as bear in mind that pay-day dozs come for bonds, and tht the obligstion of acity cann t be thrust aside at the whim of diehenest cfficials. The debt of th city is about §6,000,000. The £12,000,000, but this amouht is arrived at by a very low valuation. Reiroad Transportation end Cot- gressione] Legislation. yT one and a aud this t Eliz- well ratables is Kanas ©; The commission appo'nted by con- geees under the joint reso'ution of both houscs, tr covsider ond Teport what is'ation is needed for the bstter re- gulation: of commerce, 131se8 & ques- im of rationl interost. The resolu- wides for acommittee of three s nators, to be appointed by the pre sident, anl threo represenmtatives, t» bs appointed by the speaker of the house, and three. com- missioners, to be appointed by the gresident, wh) shall 5t duriog recess and_inguire genirally into the eondi tions relating to ths transportation of commerco by lani and water router, with a visw to securing the required facilities at the lowest charges, with the grestest ecinomy of timo and without any ujust d'scrimination. The recommendations are to be re- ported by the commissicn t congross at its next session, #nlan cffort will movement to secure tuch legislation pra tical business quo and the careful diag indicste tho neede scripion. State legislation reach the evils complained of, becaus. it 18 neccssarily boundaries, while the interests upon which its bears have grown into na In short, the question is ono of inter state commeree, and railroads come, \mdnr lhl-. c«xuu’o\ of the ra‘jonal nt,” 80 far of Sogulationis cemosrnod, Tho steide mude by grost railrord_corporatio; -oss the country to different com- prove the furtility of singl dependent control over a system s sified in its connections. We hav eighty thoussud miles of railriads i in building up states, stimulating de- shown by the rapidity with whic they are being duplicated. But thi them from and their abiliy to fix their own tion contend for. of riilroad monopoiy in a manve which shows that ~th kave no protection a; bination excpt their own views o self-interest. Al ¢ rperations ar greedy of power and pro a corporation ceases to be & publi benefit—it is st perity. The country looks to the presen iog. Congress must act, capablo of acting, che socmer the fac is determined the better, leaving thy they may. domestic corporations. Forgotten Treasures. brought to light_ bean long lost g} owners. to which was in_the bank, wero dis. bonds_of the Pennsylvania railroad, fifteen years attached, ascertained, belongs Hamilton is now the president chant Hagerstown bank, James Dixon Bo- man, died; the cashier was superseded and that bank lost traces of the tzans- action. diupvpnunu of the bonds, however, al: ained an unplessantmystery, whigh isnow lip- %M up. and the bank ad 000 more to its surplus. other valuable packsga found tho vault of the Morchants’ byok was - -uu tmnk, »onuuaflnz papers sod valued st chine Company and the mutual benefit Life Insurance Company. The suit of | bonds, which were made in rencwal or for the city t)'do was en in favor of fall payme.t of ter is that Elizsbeth has ciation of her nt of her New Jersey justice is famous all the then be made by the friends of the as shall best acocmpliah tho aims.of "Thio question s one of th greatest ons of the day s propesed will leg s'ative pre- camnot restricted to stite tional proportions and importance. in'er-state states sttempting seperats and in- far reahing in its extentand 8o diver- the United States and their pow.r velopment and crea‘ing wealth is abuses of their gigantic powers de- mand logislative restriction; such re- strictions a3 shall_effectaally resteain urbing the currents of business and importance of localities; tes should be curtailed or placed within proper limits, which is essentially all that the advocates of anti-diccrimina- ansas City has felt the iron hand community inst the en- croachments of the stupendous com- and when menopoly becomes cppressive—when uation, if not death to business interests and public proa- covgress for theso essential reforms There ought £ bs nomore temporiz- or if in- states each in its own sphere, to deal with these giant monopolies as bost The Amcrican people did shake off a foreign despotiem to be tyrannized over and robbed by pretty An examination of old packagos in one of the vaults of the Merchants’ National Bank, of Baltimore, where they had been lock up years ago, has roperty which had it by tho origioal Ta one of the boxes, the key covered $10,000 in first mortgage with the interest coupons for the past —Fiem making the sggregate value of the property about $20,000. These bonds, it has been to the Hagers- town (Md.) bank, of which Governor In dealings between the two banks these bonds were deposited with the Mer- * bank fifteen years ago as col- lateral. The then president of the bank By &'Spaniard for safe ieepmg, B Y Gusiter ot soeat Osie @l ltiers was sigueid fith o nume of Robert A. Fisher, now pres- ident of the board of trade f Balti more, who, on invetigation, found he had at the date named, re- here, deposited the trunk with the bank, as was the custom in th safe- keeping of valuables at that period of time. The trunk was neser calledfor, the gentleman is dead, and his heirs will get the property throuzh theSpan- ish cona INDUSTRIAL NOTES. All the iron mills in Allegheny, Pa., have closed. The quantity of cotton consumed 8 wes bd-times greater than in M. ro thaa twenty elluloid compan- ieain this couutry ste doing a succass- ful business, for a tlut furnace in South Chest r, £300,000. ST A £400,000 per mont". Tmmense q vow raised in bett tities of iron are cr plight than sho Very nearly arrived from waek last month. lhe whaling bark, Alas reached New Dedford on Frilay last, afour y pounds of whal.l rgest cateh of sporm oil roperied for thirty years. Vineland, N. J, will shorily add the f.l'owing: An extensive iron foundry and mach'no shop, hy parties from New York. the rouud-heuse of of the Vinelend Ruilway purchased for the pur,os hiat manufact ry dirsct fro the proprictor of which w bs michinery and best hands foom acd a large clothing factory sewing machines of which w.ll be run by steam. Cteney Brothers, silk manvfactur- ers, are building another new factory at Manches er, Conn., to accomodate their increasing businers, and will | ut in another 200 horse power engive and new washivery. They have on d 300 tows of w, probibly use the ve it cavm ot bo used as sawing xilk, from the daily mavufac turs of their products. RAILWAY NOTES. An everago of 2640 ties sr2 required to each mile of ralroad As a result of the changs (f gauge of the New York, Pennsylvania and road, 100 lccomctives will have of tha Lake Ontario and Southern raifroad have now neir. ly five men'h’s pay dus them, and a strike is threatened unlests: me money is farthcoming very soon. The Vandalia railroad compeny is suod for §10,000 by a woman who, though she had bought a sleeting ticket,could not get a berth Sho o that a night irwvelin an crdinary pas- seuger car rui.ed her health. The Pullman h_t | car, ‘Brevoor, reeenly ran from Qhicago to St Francisco over the Chicago, Burling- The emp'o; L journey of 2,369 miles without chang ing cre. at complete the sutscript’on necessary t) ineure the commenc:ment of wirk on the projected railroad from tha city ) Butler, Ind Ths project is in & precarious shape, and it 1s extremely doubtful wheth:r the $30,000 can be raised. N i me of the earli st locome ever built have run over a mile a mia- ute in this country, and seven y eight miles an hour has been made in Eng liwd, and, in one case, ninety-three miles per hour was attained for a fow miles. The Irovsides, one of M. W. Buldwin's ficst evgines, was run fifty years ago at the rate of sixty-two miles an hour on the Philadelphia and Germantown railroad. Mr. Pent, who was for years connected with Measrs. Buldwin & Co.’s establishment, ran the engine at that time, and her speed was_cirefully noted by Mr. Frank Pgalesnd others who to-k part in the trisl. The old Rocket, built by Rob- «rt Stephenson in 1829 for the Liver- pool and Manchester railroad, was run ©on one occation at the rate of sixty miles an heur; and an engine, the Liv- erpool, built in 1830 by Bury, Curtis & Kemnedy, of Liverpool, wes run miles an hour with a train of the short wagons of that e o © n h e i - OUR GOODLY HERITAGE. The foondstion is beivg prepared 1 worhe, and goods spain—v hich is in a has l-ruu lnr n cre ' cruise, revorted @ car ton and Quincy ard Pacific roads— well filled with passenzers—a long The pe ple of Detroit are sc-a‘ching nd for 330,000, the sum necded to has been given away 10 si arailroad tystem which has united the Atlantic with the Pacific, the northern Jakes with the gulf, and proved a bon1 of union between the esstern and western states, clingiog affectionately to the coast, and awatting the advent of that army .of friendly invaders The populaticn of half a century ago knew 1 ttle of the extent of the g odly heritage t> which they were boru, ard had not explored the fertile lands cf the great northwest, which are fast making America to the world what Africa was to ancifnt Romo—its granary and its store house. Having ascertatned the distribution and general movement of our crops, it way be well to take a glauce ‘at their growth and present extent. To this end the following tible, which I have carcfolly prepared from cources, may prove of interest: 3 A careful study of this exhlbfl. will | give some idea of the Uvited States Cf tr-day compared with the United States at the close of the war; the gress and development which' may as thesubject clisely. In fifteeu years the production «f wheat and barley in the United States has trebled, corn, cotton and tobacco more than doubled, oats increased nearly 140,000,00U bushels, potatoes nowrly doubl.d, and Iy increassd more than one-third. The Use of Money. New Yo k Times. When pocr Jobn Broughawm, the acter, was in great pain, and believed to ba very near his end, tha other day id his was willing encugh to eur- or te bad bal agood deal @« it, and had enjoyed it thorougbly. o spoke the tcu'h He has always .da good time, though not in a self. ish way. Indeed, selfishn 83 forms no part of the actor's nature; raher the reverso of it He has ever beea quick to help whoever has needed help; his time and purse have ever beeu at the command «f cthers. Often, when re- monstra‘ed with by his friecds for his over-gonerosily, ke would say: “Per- hape you aro right; but whit's the of h ving money if you cau’t give it to sometody worce off than yourseli?” Very few men of bis meas hive probably distributed their substsnce more freely upon the worthy and unworthy than Joln Brougham. He has lived well in an epicu ian and benevolent sovse. Fre- quently, when suffering from twinges of the govt, he bas said: “Well, I ought not to complain; I've earned ths pain by yeas of assiduous ap; lice- tion,” Several years #g>, while con- fined to his room from an attack of & ut, a sympathetic frend callel, and obsorving a handsome portrait of the comedian in his younger days at tte foct of the bed remarked: “There was no gout at that time, Uncle Joho, b1’ “No,” was the reply; ‘4t tado’t appaared then, but I was lay ing a superb foundat on for it,though.” Brougham might easily have been rich had he beenso mindcd. He has made money readi'y, aud has speat it with equal readiness. Heo has never tried to accamulate anything, and, in fact, with all his cleverncss and versatility, has been lacking in practicality. A Runaway Husbsnd. Detroit Free Press. Oue day last week weck a man resi- ding in East Toledo, 0., skipped from his family and brought up in Detrcit. His wife got a clue to his whereabouts aud cawe after him, and yesterday she bad an interview with him at the cen- tral station, whero he had been run in for the purpse. She had n» tears toshed. On the contrary, her bair had a fighting bang, and as £oon asshe could get her breath she bezan: “So, you miserabls apclogy for a human being, ycu tkipped out, did youl” No reply. “‘Alfter I hal wasbe), and scrubbed cu1d leadon figures tell a story of pro- || Tonish thoso who havo not watched |, P, Neusaedur & On, Bex S04, Yore Al sol aigist. evorywheres Price $100 pir bo e © is attracting much sttent showing itself in local option laws, societies, crusades, and restrictions upon liquor production; but with all thess ef- forts, the consumption s enormous, and undoubtedly, the reason is, because thers is nothing strenuously advocated toie lieve and destroy the craving for stimue Lants. Bul: if the disease was trub!':lln; S arn i Rgulabsthe i pirited deunkard would find his cravings soon dissipated, and with cleared Lead and active Liver, he would not want lxquw Ask the recov- ervd dyspoption,bil- Tious sufferers, ‘vic- offictal | diseased o, ] how they recovered health,” " cherful apirita’ and good Lppetite; they will il you by tak- g St uoxs® Liven [y REGULATOR) The Cheapont, Purct and Best Family Mod the in the World. For DYSPE PSIA, CONSTIPATION, Jlundln Billious Attacks, SICK HEADACHE, Do!la presion of :;;‘Ew. SOUR STOMACH, Heart Tuls unrivalled Southern Remed ot o o e o M any injurious mineral su warranted MERCURY, OF o, bat i Purely Vegetable. contalaing thoee Southern Roots and Herbe, which an_ all-wise Providenco has placed in countries where Liver Dineaso mst prevall. It S ) itk cuv o Dormngemint o und Bows " § (HPTONS ot Liver Complaint are s ke or Dad tate in, the mouth; Pain in th ok s o Jota,oton rlpakersforRhetma: Bowsls hevosymptoms attend y few;hut the Liver, the. zan in the mxy. s gonerally the Soat f not regulated in time,great 59 and death will ensue. viftues, 1ersonally, snd Billiousness, * and Throbbing Head: icine world_ever saw. We have tried forty other remedics beforo Simmon’ Liver Regiator, but hone of them gava us more than temporary 1 o valator mot only refleved, b " Editor Tel-graph and Messenger, i ANUPACTORRD ONLY BT o J. H. ZEILIN & 00., PHIUADELPHIA, PA. Sutd by all Drugeista. septdeodawly Price, 1100 always Cures and never disap= points. The world's great Pain= Reliever for Man and Beast. Cheap, quick and reliable. PITCHER’S CASTORIA is not Narcotic. Children grow fat upon, Mothers like, and Physicians recommend CASTORIA. It regulates the , cures Wind Colie, Feverishness, and de- stroys Worms. WEI DE MEYER'S CA- TARRH Cure, a Constitutional Antidote for this terrible mala= dy, by Absorption. Tho most Important Discovery sinoe Vac= cination. Other remedies may relieve Catarrh, this cures at any stage before Consumption sets i | TSR Ll 3 ooxm yourown town. Termenad §$onith Otcen drves . Aalleitd O, Pottiand. Be INVYALIDS AND OTHERS SBEEKIEG HEALTH, STRENGTH and EIIERGY WITHOUT THE USE OF DRUGS, ARE ke QUESTED TO SEND FOK THE ELECTRIC REVIEW, AN ILLUSTRATED JOUR- NAL, WHICH 1S PUBLISHED FOR FREE DISTRIBUTION. Innnem HEALTH, HGUE wod by e aiog shd Faiofal D u o d human happines, s L s pagee: g S e ed, and valusble infor Sbjeet or Bl e and ome_ questions of ~(al o sufforing huwasily, are dul) onsi Shi xplained. Younc MEN bR ""7"’:;:.':“;:;‘::: R z :; o 15 Teaithe y £ sddrens ol woets thomakats il be L iiress e pablishe PUlVE!HAGIIER GALVANIC CO., HTH and VINE STS.. CINCINNATI. O AYEII'S CATHARTIC PILLS, For all the purposes of & FAMILY PEISIC, N CURING Costiveness, Jaundics Dympopeia, 1 o, Bysent Stomachan: hy Teadache, Erysipelas, Dites, Rheumatinm, iptions_and_Skin Dies Billiuness Liver Complaint Drepey Tetter, Tomors s«u heun, ural” as & Dinner il and Purgiing e Blood, o cst ‘congenial purkative et perfocted. biindantly show how much they ‘xcol all othor Fil's. Taey 10 take, but powertul b cure. the foul humors from the blood ; th ihe sluggish or disordered organs into tion; 10 thy fmpart it and tone to o whole ey ucre not oniy the every dsy com- o danger: gia, ‘aro sato and plea ant The parge out ulato o easy to take; they'are entlroly harmices. PREPARED BY DR. J. C. AYER & €O, LOWEEL, MASS. Practical and Analytical Chemists Sold by all Druggists and Dealors in Medicine. e ATTENTION, BUILDERS AND CON TRACTORS. The owner of the celebrated Kaolin Banks, near TOUTSVILLE, NEB now seady at the depot o & 3L railroad, wnx'x'a BRLIOX to il any onler reasonable pricos v tles desiring » white front v ornamental brick will do well to give us a call or send for asmple. 3. T. A. HOOVER, I'rop.. sville, on 'FOWLER & SCOTT, ARCHITEGTS. for bulldings ot any dexcription o exihibition at our office. INTER - OCEAN HOTEL, Cheyenne, Wyoming. First-closs, Fine large Symple Hioek o depote Traina scp from 3 minutes to3 hoars for dinser, Free Bus tosad from Depot, Hates $200,§2 50 and $3.00, according ereio meal 76 centa. BALCOM, Propritor, ANDREW BORDEN. Crief Cleh BXOCBLSIOR Machine Works, OoOMAXEA, NEI. J. F. Hammond, Prop & Manager The mort the sppetated and o oron and, compet oy doscipion panuiaciured. lwlnn;dfnmu and evory class 0 machinery attentlon giveh to Well Anxn Pnll = Hangers, rons.Gecr l‘,’ut ting, etc. w Machinery, Meachanical Draught- g, odei, ey notly Ehtcrind. 9868 Harnev 8t. Hat. 14+ _and 16th NOTICE. Jennie A Atcheson, Clvda Clark and Char'es L, Clark, non-resident defendaats, Will take cotice that the Omaha National Bank aid on the 2nd day LA e s ttion 1 the District Court, -m.h. a for the County opias, Siate of Nebruk o Cark and Charles;L. Cla and sewed for nearly twenty years to support you, you got tired of your family, did you! Our style of Living wam't tony enough to suit you, and you wantad a diamond pin and & cane!” --s.y. Lucy, I'm sorry,” he mum- "\\’ell Tan't!” she snapped. “No, ! On'tho contrary, I'm glad of it} You've chewed tobacco, and drank whiskey, and whittled shingles, and Loafod on the corners st my_cxpenso just as long as you ever will!” ““What do you want of me, then!” “Want of you! Why, I wantto MILLIJNS OF EMIGEANTS-VAST INCREASE OF TRANSPORTATION FACILITIES END AGEICULTUKAL PRODUCTS. Kobert P. Porter in Internatioa-1 for Juae. Within half a cantury ten millicn emigrants have landed on our shores. They have come from British isles, from the ccntinent of Europe =) from distaut China—racing to get fiest to the land of plent Huddled te- gether and half-starved in the steerage of leaky veeselr, encountering the per- ils of the ccean, peuetrating a region inhsbited only by red men, struggling over the forest-capped mouutuns of the middlo states, spreadig over tho praitics of the west, confronting the malaria of the s ush; and crossing the scorching eands of the plaine, the bold army of the world’s adventurers has kept up a ceascless march. Instesd of destroying this army, ten million strong, has cuanged the whole face of a continent. At the outset of its march a water- way was built which formed a con- nectiog link in the highway of com- merce between the Atlantic seabosrd and the vast territorizs bordering on the great lakes; and with this advaat- age the northern cities bezan a wor derful career of prosperity, and New Yok became the metropolis of the western world. Spreading toward the iutsrior of the country, the population has pushed on to the agricultural re- gicns, and the center of population has moved westward four hundred miles. The centers of production have close- ly followed, until now the eastern, nerth-midd’e and .ouumn roups of states do not supply their home de- mand for wheat T{ha south-middle states have a small surplus. The Ohio valley has a surplus of nearly hal crep, and the more western groups 3 i c t v e their home demand. The wheat crop of thirty yearsago was about 100,000,- 000 bushels, dividedinto equal volume by the 81st degree west from Green- wich; in 1859 the center of production had adsanced to the 85th degree; in 1869 to the 85th degree, azd last year, afe Lo say, the encrmous crop of vided equally by the 90:h degree of lnnmt;& s erritory- onl; 0000 ) A £quars inles lew | r0 sren of those atated en produce nearly fourfo'd more than | of it presaive - 500000 verson all stages and varieti s of withou: ,000,000 tushels of wheat was di- | remedy the The thirteen otiginal atates have ex- | {2 ¢" tended into anempire 3o veat that a mn‘w pn. o fll "lll!'ll‘ “':‘h"‘t&m ) = clear my char cter! Allour neighbors sy that you ran away from me, and some pity me and some laugh. = Yoi run away from me! Why, you low- down corncr losfer, you couldn’t 1un away from anything but a spade or ¥n ax! I tfollowed you to get this matter stiaight. I've got to live there, and I'm not going 10 be either pitied cr laugned at!” “What do you want!” he asked. “Here's what I want!” she seiz>d his collar and t around. Now, you take that—and that—and that—and T'll have these officers sign a paper that I found you ked you cut to take care of yourseli! Now you git! Don't ever write to me; don’t ever dara to come back to me! Even if I hear that you ever tell anybody that you were marri»d to meI'll buy ashotzua and hunt for you!” The husband sueked out-doors and down the street, and the wife, having the “docs” in her pocket, walked the other way, muttering to herself: “Skipped out! run away from his family. Wel, his old shirts will mske a mop woith twice the value of his whele body. Now, I want to see some oue grin in the face of this testimonial that I raised him right off his heels.” GUILTY OF WRONG. Some people have a fashion of confusing ex- cellent revedics with the large mas of “patent medtcines.” 40d i this they aro guily of s wrong. There aro som) adtertised remedies Tully worth al that i asked. for them.'and ons atlewt we kpow of—Hop Bitters, The writdt has had occasion to use toe Bitters in just such o5 we have most of the year in Kuy d has alwaye found them to be frs:-class and relisble, doing all that s claimed for them. ~{Tribune. AN INFALLIBLE REMEDY Nolo-gerlike Job neod the flited millions ery ou': ““Oh, that my griet wer = my calamity aid in tre alance! 3¢ arof i physiciana of vo vatue.” and has been /Bmdl by Dr- Slavee. e with i e tetity o the virtues rseit i benefit. It has been pronounced the Dappiest medical d scovery of the Age,” and Dr. erienced and scientifiz &. D. of 4 nd ject and prayer of which i to_exclude said de- fendants from any Interest in and to an undivid- e one-ight 1) nteret i uhe olowiog decrib- townsblp 15 north, range 1 Yest corcer of landamned By Torner hones novth % chaina ‘scd 13 Boks the south bountaty of land owned by Eace Lowe, thence south 357 degrees west slong sid * south boundsry 12 ‘chains snd 65 ks, thence south 1 chains and o oo <3 Chaing and 54 Heke b the place, bedming, containing teeatyfre () acres moré or less, and that a commissioner. appointed to convey said real estate to faid plam 4l and fer general rolief, and you, the syid inic A, Atcheson, Clauda Clark and_Charles ri are requirel to appear and suewee jon on or b fore the 14th day ¢t June, A. 1550, THE OMANA NATIONAL BANK. T. . T. BicuARis, e ‘mtevymon Catafrha‘l POISON ;. TUBES while asleep, follow brane, and POISON THE ENTIRE SYSTEM. Sufierers know how OBSTINATE tbe disease Tho acion of Catarrhal Virus, like that of small. pox has beon FINALLY DISCOVERED. Cetarrh A ucxmn. R R'd Pres., 33 Broad “WEI DE MEVER'S CREARRR CURKS won: Sy | Mereh o Bece Meckaoh 39 b 1. ¥. & Becamicr, e, Jewsler, 87 N. Y. i oty " Cares o CHRONTO CAFARRE. G. L Buosn, 443 AT, 43 Browtmay, Y. Y., CATARRR ‘yoice by Catarrh, tli have h-l cur- ‘Hrxomison, 156 Nowsrk Ave., Jersey Siy. Worls Woovs, 437 Broadway, N, Y., cured o ronic Catarrh. Lam rehant, 305 Palton Bt., Brook Given” up by “Tiost my vo Ewaa, M iyn CHRONIG CATARRH. ysicians. Cured. AR Tuonxy, Tosurnce 188 Montague 8¢, Brookiyn. " Eelf aad svn cured of CATARRE. 3. D McDox; § e Ry o B DR Wit F MEYERS PAMPHLET with the NEW TIME TABLE or o OMAHA AND FORT OMAWA OMNIBUS LINE. LaAVES PT. OMATA. EVERY TWO HOURS. A 35 Conts. A F. RAFERT & C0. ‘| Gontractors and Builders, 1310 Dnd.n 8t., Omahs, MARTIN THE TAILOR Hsa just received a lot of Spri g goods. You To fnvited to call gnd ges prices, which he arantocs thelowest i the ity NUAM STREET. FRUNTIER R HOTEL, yoming, Laramis, W, The miner's reeort, go w.i accommodations, large mmple room, chlmu Feasonabie. Bpecial i fvn on e HILLIARD, Proprietor, MEAT MARKET . P, Block. 16th St. Trshaulgel Meats o ul) Kinds constant rossouable. Vegetables in seas u:v--amnnmoims N T “UPTON HOUSE, Schuyler, Neb. Fistclass Houss, Good Meals, Good Beds ‘and’ kind and_accommodating a2 Sohuyler, Neb. M. R. RISDON, General Insurance Agent, . REPRESENTS PHENIX ASSURANCE CO., of Lou- o Coat riREiEN BRITISH AMERICA ASSURBARGE NEWARK FIRE INS. CO., Atscts. AMERICAP CENTRAL, Awets. St.. mensdly OMAHA, NeB. ESTIMATE OF ANNUAL EXPENSES OF DOUCLAS CO.,FOR THE YEAR 1880. lenl. Jnm- and Court ex~' 20000 1856. 1880, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. A COMPLETE SIOCK FOR SPRING=SUMMER STYLISH AND 600D, NOBBY AND CHEAP. Wo have all the Latest Styles of Spring _Suitings, an Elegant Stook of Ready-Mads ClotLing'ia Latest Styles. Gent’s Furnish- ing Goods Stock Complete. HATS, CAPS, TRUNKS AND VALISES, In fact the Stock 1s complate in all Departmuats. Don’t Fail to see our Castom Department in chargo of Mr. Thomas Tallon. M. HELLMAN & CO. 1301 & 1303 Farnham %treet. THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED BANKING HOUSE IN NFBRASKA. CALOWELL, HAMILTONGCO. BANKERS. Business transacted same 8s that of an Incorporated Bank. Accounta kept i Currency or gold Dot ro M chock Witbout nonee. Certificaios of deposit lasued pay- able In six and twelve mont beariag interess, or on demand with- out interost Advances made o CUStOMErs On ab- roved securities At ma-ket rates of nterost. Buy and se gold, Govarnment, State, County and Bonds. 1s of exchange 2 Draw S Drafis on England, Ire- 1ana, Scotinn: &1l parts of Kurope ‘Sell Buropenn, Pascage Ticketa. COLLECTINHS PROMPTLY MADE. aagldtt U S. DEPOSITUEY Finst Nationa Bank OF OMABA, Cor, Farnbam and Thirteenth Sta, OLDEST BAKKING ESTABLISHMENT MAHA. (JUCCESSORS Zr;;wllflTtl BROS., srmanianes 1568 Orgautzod aa & National Bank August 30, 1868 Oapital and Profits 0 Over $300,000 Spactay sathortzod b e Secrotary o Tovaery o to receivc Sabscriptions to the U. 8. & PER CENT. FUNDED LOAN. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS Hsnuax Kounras, Prosident. Ko, Vics Prosdent Caution. AWORD TO THOSE WII0 USE POROUS PLASTE<8, ~Jt isa univesal'y ackowiodged fact that BENSON'S CAPCINE POROUS PLASTERS ARE SUPERIOR TO ALL OTHERS. The great demand for them has caused a n >r of unscrupu- lous rtles to make and eell worth-ess imitations under similar soun&ang names. As the market is flooded with inferior p'as- ters selling at any prics it is important for the consumer to koow Which is ths best. It is well kaown that some of the cheap plastersa have been examived and fouod to contain in- jurious ingredients which make them dangerous to use, causing paralysis and other diseases. SEABURY & JOHN: :‘kl; :irmlctlllkal Chemist, New York, (CAUTION- Sce tlat the word CAPCINE on ench p'aster 14 eorrectly 50,000 DOLLARS CHEAP ! CHEAPER! GHEAPEST ! MAX MEYER & BRO. Propose for the next ninety (90) days to sell their entire stock of This bak recsives depostta without regard 10 ""1;"’ o tcne certificatos boasing ues ticae ce i lrfin om San,_Franclico and pm;: e ca of the Usttl States, a0 London, Eifiboagh and he priocipal it of the cont oent of Solla pasmage tickets tor emigraate in the Ia- wan line. tad: REAL ESTATE lllll!l Geo. P. Bemis' ReaL ESTATE AcENCY. 15th & Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb. This agency does sTRICTLY & brokerage busl- nom. Docs notspeculate, and therofore ro'sny bar- kains on its books are insured to ita_ patrons, in Atead of being gobbl-d up by the agent _ Boggs and Hill REAL ESTATE BROKERS No. 260 Farnham Street >MAHA NEBRASKA. Grand_Central Hote Nebraska Land Agency DAVIS & SNYDER, 1605 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. 400,000 ACRES carcfuily selected land Eastorn Nebraska tor eala. ‘Groat Bargalns In Improvod farms, and Oma dty property = o o.F. Lnsm Lato Land Com'r U. ety Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Clocks, Silver-Ware, Pianos & Organ, AND CENERAL MUSICAL MERCHANDISE At Manufacturing Prices, Which is fiom 15 to 20 per cent. below any Eastern Wholesale House, preparatory to moving into their New Store, Cor. Ilth & Farnham We Mean Business, Come and be Convineed. DOUBLE AND SINGLE ACTING POWER AND HAND PUMPS Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machint BELTING HIISE, IIASS AHD llfll FIT"III!, FI". STEAM Pmllfi. HALLADAY VIIHIJ-IMLLS, BIIIIRGI! AID SGIIDIJI. BELLS STRANG, 205 Farnham Street Omaha, Neb® HENRY HORNBERGER, STATEH AGENT FOXR V. BLATZ'S MILWAUKEE BEER I In Kegs and Bottles. Special Figures to the Trade. Families Supplied at Reasonable Prices. Office, 239 Douglas Street, Omaha. |. L SLEDZIANOSKI-=CO., MANUFAOTURERS OF MOULDINGS! AND DEALERS IN PICTURE FRAMES, CHROMOS AND ENGRAVINGS 922 Douglas St., Near 10th, Omaha, Neb. = OMAHA FENGE 2 BOX GO. We Manufacture to Order OFFIGE | lIAII.IHGS AND FINE G COUNTERS Iron and Wood Fences, Brackets and Mouldhgs, Improved Ice Boxes furnished on short notice. @UST, FRIES & CO.. Prop’ s-. 1231 Harney St., Omaha, Neb. LANGE & FOITICK, stRoN axmD. Laws 8. nxm> Byron Reed & Co., OLpRsT mstASLISEED REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NEDRASKA. THE ORIGINAL BRIGGS HOUSE | Cor. Randolph St. & 5th Ave., CHICAGO, ILL. PRICES REDUCED T0 82 00 AND $2.50 PER IIAY Located In the business e.nm.mmnm amusement. mun modern ""m avun OGDEN HOUSE, Cor. MARKET ST. & BROADWAY Council lllufls. lown On line of Strees Rallway, from all trains. RATES—Parlor Imr lflfl pe day;secomd oo, $260 pr day; besk urniahed and moet commedious bow o e s - PHELPS, Prov. _ METRI]FI]LITAN Omana, NEs. IRA WILSON, - PROPRIETOR. The Metropolitan le contrlly located s firwt-clase in cvery renpect, rocently bee anialy ronovated. The pnblt:vfll find ¥ ‘comortable sud homolfke house. NEW GROCERY ! 16th and Cuming Sts. ‘We propose supplying the people of North Omaha with CHOICE CROCERIES at mod- erate prices. Give us a call. . J.8. BERGEN. 7#-Cash,_paid_for Country Pro- duce. Goods delivered free to any [pactofithoicity: SANTA CLAUS FOUND. Greatest iscovery of the Age. Jondertldscmeriesint et iy whers Sriaren e makes goods oF not, Traly B i oy o s et yeut an oxcunion miled cloa to the Pole Ko iy o hervwoni 1291 Farnham Street, 1st Door East First National Bank. mat WHOLESALE GROGER! 1213 Farnham St FEVER A DA(,UE. , Omaha. TUE SWLY_PLAGE WHERE YOU BOOTS AND SHOES el mEren P. LANG'S, 236 FARNHAM 8T. LADIES’ & GENTPy SHOES MADE TB OIIIlEI . peiect 88 suamnieed. Prc JNO. G. JACOBS, (Formerly of Glah 8 Jacobe) UNDERTAKER | Bo fatr o ot 01d Stand of R Y TRLACRAH snucm Yl ey lks binga There were munhml like ours, besutiful righver skies than cver were seen, Birds with the hies of a rainbow wers foand, i e ‘exquisite fragrance were grow aronnd. ot kg were ihey Ieft to wondr n doutt ‘A being soon came th ‘much ai Twss Santa Claus’slf and thisthey all my He leoked like the picturev _eseecvery day. drove up team that looked eruu-t. ‘instead o Hedr of grasshc reindeer, B rode o she nsead of B he ook them on bourd trove. them He showed them ol over his wondertul restm, d factories making goods for women and men, B workine on hats great and wlly’ To Bunce's thev said they were sending them Kris Kingle, the Glove -m-v.u.m them at once, Al vur Gioves we aro sends ng to Bunce, Santa showed them saspenders snd masy things iz 1 alse took these to fiiend Bunos's store. i‘:’.’:‘ummn. hispered a secret he'd tell, He thersfore Haowing ni friends will ket the fall Now recember yo dwellers in Omaba tows, All who want presents to Funce's go For shirts, collars, or gloves great 3 Bend your sister or unt one and al ‘Bunce, Champion Hatter of the Wet, Douglas gtroet, Omaha B. BEEMER, commssmn MERGHANT .....nn_.__w_ 'lllflm.fll aly e Bours, | cflu.r BRSO S, e

Other pages from this issue: