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T0 CORRESPONDENTS. ©ue CounTay Frizxpe we will always be plessed ¥ bear frcm, on all matters conpected with ‘evops, country politics, and op any subject Swte. Ans information coup-+ted with i ast miting o oot iiosn, | 5778 suid WaVeyoRs W g0 T anT out ‘wil be gladly received. All such communici~35f the vity and seldom can be fouad at thoda bowever, must 1o se briel S PO | home. Cther bundreds are scattered RS Sy st about the city in private ro.ms ¥ide of the shset only. = 253 Waxn op Wizeen, in full, must fn eachand | which the enumerator knows nothing about ualess he 3 every ease accompany any communication of ature soover, This ot ntenced 3 ] B e facton st | SCCIABEEITLy " stumables acrosa ¥he par ties. The rame may be ssid of drum- Jublication, but for our own. sstiefaction and 28 proot o good taith. o Oton vnts, | WE® of business houses, and working or cavadtes for Offco— pecple who have mo fixed, place of icads, aud whether 3 b el iysant from day to day as bust they cav. A tices or commupications to the Editor, are ‘umtl] porsinations are made) simply personal, auwber of factory hands boardirg out aro not steady in theif placss of res- wnd will be charged for as advertisemente. ~0 woT desire contributions of & litorary or poctical character; and ve will not undertake ple idence. Many of our citizens do not realize the importsnce of & correct and complete census,and theirneglectto as- 10 proserse or ressrvo the sme in any case sist the cnumerators may prove detri- of whatevar. Our stafl is sufciently lrge to ‘more than supply our Himited space. All communications should be acdressed to E. ROSEWATER, Editor. mental tc this city uwless they NATICNAL REPUBLICAN TICKET. |promptly join the officials s e in pefccting their work. Notices have been posted by the enu- meratcrs that they, will rit for the cor- rection and reviricn of their work at the court houze on tho 20¢h and 30tb, and it behooves every mian and woman Joux Kty and his Temmany | i0 this city that has not been enum- . o sz a2 ted, or bas reaton to believe he or ‘braves left Cincionatiin high dudgeoa | ¢r8td, g ard we look for ' very lively scalp | She hes not been booked, to come for ward and foroish the desiced inform- Sance when £idy gat Bt ation, cither in person on the days —_— inois bourbons wers decid- i td;l::v:l;l:":anhr“; o Dlorsison in | 8¢, place of birth: and Tesidence to asting isor for insertion—if found il id vote of that state for tae supervisor for I?Ilbrt’Dh o e h.,?i: ':h e un David Davis, | omitted from the lit. Tois is highly JAMES A. GARFIELD, of Ohio. FOR VICE-PRESIDEST, CHESTER A. ARTHUR, of New York. Tuar pertizan decirion of the In-|ed to. Sisna supreme court improvised by the Hendaicks boomers is sure to prove a boomerang in October. HANCOCK. Winfield Scott Hancock has been 7 — vominated for the persidency by the Tre cosmopolitan quality cf the | democratic natioal convention. On tnagazines of the present day is a cu-|the whole this is perHisps ricus and noteworthy fact. In Scrib-|as strong a momination ss the ver for July, for instance, we notice | democracy ~ could have made. peper on the “‘Norwegian post and | General Hancock is a soldier whose dramatist, Bjornstjerne Bjornson,” | loyalty no republican will call in ques- by his former countryman, Hjalmer | tion, and who, being without a polit- ¥jorth Boyesen; an article descrip- | cal record, has no political blunders to tive of an excursion to “The Heart of | apologize for. the California Alpe,” by John Muir; | General Hancock, the loyal soldier, *To Covey falsnd,” by Wiilism H. |as the stsndard bearer of the solid Bishop; Russia is treated of in Eu- { south-—of the party roled by the rebel gene Bchuyler's “Peter the Great;” | brigadiers—will cat almost as sorry a & the soene of “The Grandissimes” is | figure ns Horace Greeley eight years bid in Loyisisns; General Mo-|ago, 3 Olellan gives sn account of | The nomination of General Han- Bs trip to Sicily; George Parsons | cock may eliminate the blcody shirt Latbrop, in ““The Sorcery of Mad- | out cf the preeent campaign, but it joon,” writes of the curse of Cbina— | cannot wipe out the fact that his opium eating; the megro element is | election means the control touched on in Mies Hopkin's amusing | this goverament by - the men dittle sketoh; Gleorge M. Grant does | who drenched this country in blood in full yustios to ““Canads,” Ernest Inger- | their endeaver to destroy the Union. w0l writes interestingly of Denver, | Gencral Hancock elevated to the pres- Culorado, snd Charles F. Thwing |igency of the Unlted States by the wives an acount of the experience of | yolid south would, of mecessity, be & the “Japaness and Ohinese Students |were fgare-hesd carrying out the In America,” while Mes. Laura Win- | edicts of his party, and that pacty is theop Johoson travels all over Earope | abyclutely under the contral » ‘‘La Scunambula. of the confederate i — Tn other words theissue of the cam- paign of 1880 is not morely onobe- tween the two gallant soldiers who are the standard besrers of the republi- can and demoeratic parties but between the two great parties, or rarher between the solid south and the solid north. In such a contest General Hancock canuot reasonsbly hope to become our next president. ———— om— oi Brrosx the war, negro slaves were hired out in the southern states by their masters to the railroad com- ponies who employed them in section @ngs and train hands. Thete laborers were let at an averaze of §100 a year and their board and clothing and doc- torbills. Their food being mainly corn bread snd bacon snd their clothes coars jeans, the expense for the mecesearies of life was not very hoavy. In the main these negro railroadets were not ovorworked or maltreated. Tt was the interest of the company to kesp them in good working condition | sad their owners were interested that their slaves should not be mal- treated. Since the close of the war thysouthera railroad managers have su'stituted negro convicts for their former slave labor and the reports that raach us from that scction, give most revolting accounts of the wretched condition of these negroes. These convicts are let out to contrac- %ors at 80 much per month. They are let st very low rates; much lees than bey could have been hired for when they wore slaves. Unfortunately the ‘sta‘e - which hires them now has no money invested ifi them, and it is to ita fiterest, as we'l as to the contrac- trcctor's, that the largost amount of work shall be got out of thew, and AND now there is te be a pool of the water wransportation companies. Ac- Chicago Times the priocipal water traneportation companies have just made a pocling combination 5 in- crease and maintain rates. -Thers are threo companies in the combinstion, and those, it is alleged, are: eithsr owned or controlled by the railroad tronk lines, namely: The Western {ransportation compauy, controlled by the New York Central; the Upion steamboat _company and canal line, owned by the Erie, and the West- ern States line, owned the Peunsylvania railroad company. These companies have ageeed to main- tain a fixed schedule of charges. In justification of this polioy they ssy they are simply doing now what ought to havo been done longago, that is, to placo their business on a self-support- »..er‘,m- e e :,k that the cost of keoping them shall be | ing basis. They allegs that the er. 49 pushod down toas low a notch as pos- | chants heratofore have had their goods s wble. Their sicknass or death in-| caried for next to mothiog, ang are S velves o loss to anybody. The supply | now complaining because transporte. gt of convicts for publio works is sy | ion ates fsve becn put up o patnt kept up. Negroes havo been sen- tenced for life in Georgia for stealing a patr of chickens; while a seatence of years is common for any trifling theft. Whea the wretched darkey is onoe chaiged and at work, whose interest ds it to remember that his sentence | has expired? Not the contractor's, | mor the state’s, assuredly. i ‘onoce fairly at work, too, the oruelty of his trestment surpasses kiiown in the daysof slavery. that will leave a margin of profit to the companies. The scheduls prices will ba nearly as much as are charged by the railroads, and the merchants aro complaining that the pool is sim- ply another move on the part of the trunk lines to cut off all competition. There are some lines outside of the combination which compete for the business but are not extensive, and the mansgers of the pool affect to regard their competition as of little account. s aroképt npon. starvation | There is very naturally genoral indig- bogsad in stockades or | nation at this new combination among , whick i filth and foul air | New York merchants and wo shall not d_peus of Ao- | be surprised if this water live pool was They dled | followed up by afiother advance in freight rates by the railroad pool. —_— . white convicts, shoot| A Russtax magazine, in & recent owa disorotion on"the | Botice of “‘Peter the Grest,” paid a first sign; of {nsubordination, and are | high compliment to Scribmer's Monthy, § asible to- nobody. The ‘‘dead | in which that historiesl serial is now nigger’, is dropped-into & hole® dug by | 3Ppearing, and remarked incidentally = § tho side of the road whore the gangis | that “the number of subscribers ty at work, ‘axd that s the end of it. that journal reaches two hundred and 1 any one doubts this, says a gor eighty thousand.” Although the of the New York 7y Soribner has gaited i circulation Bow through the#ection of | twenty thousand copics during the past ‘Georgia or the Oxrolines | year, andin Englana alone has added these mon. - Thoy 'orowd | five thousand subscribers o islist it has begging for. fpod with | hardly sttained the circulation which Hranges-biften faces; and | our Russian friend hscribes to i, byt the pennies | is content with a modest figure esting it like famich- | of one hundred and twelve thousand, §%_Their ‘kespors permit them | and one. hundred and twenty-five e | cording to a epecial dispateh to the INDUSTRIAL NOTES. The Chicago and #tove works, the latter plags, have been en: zed to accommodate | business. " The Apaffo rolli Jias boen pat in opsration. At a meeting of in Pitt-burg last week, all but two of the fastories agreed to suspend work for two weeks. ceesful operaticn at Maninotte, just acrass the river from Monominee, wentint> blast at- Dunbar, nesr Con nellaville, Pa. their new mill of 660 looms. creasing demand for their goods. wool. North Adams, M orcase the capaci wills by building an addition: mill 1350x40 feet in size. , are about to in- by September next. Many of the mills and factcries important, and we hope will be a'tend- | throughout, the New England states are being enlirged ard new ones erected. The acgregats capacity will be very largely increased during the ear. The Tadianapolis rolling mill com- pany have established duriag the pres ent tcel rail mill, on a capi ital 250 tons per day. the Bessemer ttecl works at Home. stead, Pa. are going forward rapidly. The B furnace of te Edgar Thomp- over 685 tons of iron. week. The Chemical Paper Co., Holyoke, Mass., is to engrga in the mauufac. x30 feet. employing 500 hands, their maoufacture pure. coke, N. Y., employ 450 hands, with several foreigu countries. The Kennebec Fibre Co., of Ben- board. The New York Man of Saca, Me., immense cotton mill in that city. ot stone aud brick. at Lockport, I1L., has been put in bet. suaw, acd another paper machine, any in the west., tract of land on the Klats, and will the largest rolling mill in the country. The enterprise of Mr. William Chis. holm, late of the Union Rolling Mill company, of Chicago, is making itself spparent in the Cleveland establish- mont. year, and send them not only to all parts of this country, but to Austra- lia, the East Indius, South America, urope. extensive addition to Eddy’s weolen tended to furnish the extra room needed, beidos increasing the capaci- ty of the mill. There are twelve firms in the city wmanufacture of morocco, which em- hands. They have a capital invested of some $2,000,000, and tura out a total of about 800 dozen finishod skins per day. This leather is made exclusively of goat skins, which are procured from ail parts of the country. The Orange, Mass., industries, it is said, aré enjoying an unexampled boom,” and 700 employesare happy, with more than £30,000 disbarsed every month. The Gold Medal Sew- ing Machine company- is wonderfully prospering. - Tho same is to be said of the Oravgo iron foundry, while the Rodney Hunt Mochine company and the Ohsso' Tarbine Manufacturing company are doing » prosperous busi- ness. The preprietors of the new positive motion looms, Messrs. A. F. Cox & Go., of Portland, Me., it is ssid, have made the firet web of silk ever woven upon a power loom in that state. These gantlemon and tho Haskell silk compavy have demonstrated the fact that eilk can be sucoessfully and prof- itably manufactured in Maine. 'The loom' is vsed tor the manufacture of Bareow article, as ribbons, necktier, o The Pacificmill of Lawronce, Mass. manufactured last year 80,000,000 yards of fabric. They emplny‘og(;’om ranging from 5300 o 5400 perso s, a0d had as high as 5770 names on the pay rolls not long since. Al the de. tails of manufacture are carried on at these mills. . In Ergland it takes & nuaber of concerns to put the raw material into thupe. The wool is washed and serted by cne ‘concérn, dessens the cost of keep- | thousund for extra” issuee. It 1s me-instance of the in. impossible to determinethe number of o réaders reached by such & magazine, s ganeral achemo by which | but estimating five $o.essh copy gives “Ia Wept H'worse bondage it a constituency of mors than half a proclamation million—perhaps a million would be mearor the ocorrect figure, carded and spun_by enother, woven by another, baled end cased and marked by another, and to on. In the variovs paring goods the raw material has to Ppass through some fifteen hands before increasiog ‘mill at Pittsburg glass asanciation A paper pulp manufactory isin suc- s, A new blast furnace, said to be one of the finest in the_country, recently The Eurcka Manufactaring Co., of Zock Fals, IlL, has recently com- pleted a large buildicg near their worke, to be used as a storshouse for Tumber. The Lancaster Co., of ton, Mass , are building extensions to their factory, which will hold 400 looms. The Burlington (Vt.) Cotton Mills Co. bas ordered 42,000 ring spinning bobbins, of tho Waltars patent, for The Lemb Kuitting Machine Co , Chicopee Falls, Mass., aro incressing their facilities to meot. the greatly in- The Schaghticoke (N. Y.) Woolen mills employ 180 operatives and turn out 155,000 yards 6 qr. cassimares per year, using half a million pounds of The Johnson Manufacturing Co., of 7 of their gingham 4-story he Lawrence (Mass.) Duck Co. ; fheic names; | have & new weavirg mill under way, 0 A e e o Tos & sory bullitag 2302 60 fect in size. It is 0 bo completed 750,000, with a capacity of Work is progresting favorably on Tracks have been laid and the excavations for the foundations son steel company, nesr Pittsburg, in the four days ending May 20 made This is at the rate of 1151} tons of 2240 pounds per ture of tissue pager in addition to its tegular buainess, which will neceesi- tate the puttiog up of a building 104 The Writing Paper Co , of Holyoke, Mase., manufacture writing paper at the rate of about 12 tons per day, The water for rawn from two artesian wells, and is exceptionelly The Cable Flax Mills, at Schaghti- a monthly pay roll of over §8000; use 150 tons of stcck per month, in man- ufacturiog hundreds of grades of goods from flax produced in this and ton, Me., are hurrying up the come pletion of _their new pulp mill. The mill when completed will contain elght ran of stones aud will be fitted with the best of machinery for the manufacture of wood pulp and box ufsoturing Co., are about to erect an Several buldings are being taken down to prepare the way for the new structure, which will be 600 feet in Length, five stories in height, znd built The paper mill'of Norion & Co., ter condition than ever before, and 1ts capacity largely ivcreared, by the ad- tion of another boiler for cooking which will give it a capacity oqual to The Cleveland (Ohio) Roliing Mill company.has recently purchased the entire titlo to s five-eighths of & mile proceed at once toerect what will be The E. Horton & Son company, of Windsor Locke, Coun., have a_trade in their lathe chucks of $100,000 per Obina, Japan and ‘every country in Work has deen commenced on an mill, Fall River, Mase., which is to b 122 feet long by 50 feet wide, four storles bigh. Four eets will be ad- ded to the present capacity, making & 12-set will, and the addition is in- of Wilmington, Del., engaged in the ploy in the aggregate about 1,000 another, dyed by [The faokory it is cased for market, withsamples and all complete. e silk industry of Paterson, N. J., is assuming immense o There ars now sighty establishménts there engaged i e manufacture of silk goods, giviog employment to 15,- 000 operatives, & mejority of whom are women, The produsts of those eighty mills, which vary iu sizs from half a dozen to 400 looms, consist of fancy silks, silk watoh chains, dress goods, handkerchiefs, satins, and brocades, sewing silks, silk and mohair braids, fringa silke, broad silks,serges, bndings, eto. The entire product in Paterson from silk alone s estimated now at from twenty to twénty-five million dollars aunually, being about two-thirds of the whole amount manu- factured in this country. The rawsilk now used In Paterson and other places in this country is imported from Eoropo and Asia. The smount im ported in 1870 was 738,381 pounds, which has_increased to 1,590,663 pounds in 1878. —_— NASBY. HOW THE NEWS OF THE KOMINATION OF GARFIELD WAS RECEIVED AT THE COBNERS. Toledo Blade. Coxrepeir X Roaes (wich isin the State uv Kentucky) Joon 14, 1880.— The noozs uv the nominashen uv the liberty-cruehin, freedom-stranglin Gar- field wuz receeved at the Corners yes- terday afternoon, with profound sur- prize. Not ope uv us had antissipa- ted it. We hed expected it wood be either Grant, Blaine or Bhermav, and I hed spent two days in Looisville gittin together the tecessary abocza to be yoozed in the deestrick agin them three men, but Garfield’s nomin- ashen makes that laber all in vane. I can't beet Garfiell by eayiog that Grant wuz a hoss thief, or that Shermon was a baok robber; and Blamme a talerode wrecker. shel hev to either wait till our com- mittees git up theic skandals on Gar- field, or invent soms myself. I don't keer about it here it Kentucky, for it weod do jest ez well to yooee the Grant matter for Garfield, but when I go over into Tnjeay where some uy the dimocracy at lsest kin reed, it wou'd be difrent. My people here are difficult to baudle, tho not in the same way. When Grant’s name wuz fust perpossd I spoke uv him ez being connected with the whisky rinz. Immejitly the Corners broke out ez one man in cheers for him, snd I hed great_difficulty to keep em from cr- ganizing & grant club oa. the spot. They admire a_man who caa beat the goverument in whisky. Deekin Pogram red uv Gen. Graxt, in Sunday skool: “He who perdooses chesp whisky is greatcr than he who con- quereth & conf.deracy.” The old sold saint is, uv late, dropping into the habit uv mixin his saipter. Suthin he never does with his likker. The nocze stcuck us unfavorable. Deekin Pogram after askin’ why Gar- field wuz, s'ghed, ‘“‘Wat kin be ex- pected uv a Republic where canal-boat drivors and_skool teachers apire to high offices? Wheever the dimocrisy nominatid he wanted s gentleman,” aod drawin a longer sighand remarkin that the day for good old suthern gontility wuz gove aud that the government hed gore into the bands uvgrovelin mekanika and skoolmasters be asked Bascom to give him credit for drinks allaround, wich Basoom prompt- ly declined to do, and Deekin eot down dry-lipped and discontentid. Issaker Gavitt wuz uv the opinion that when aparty recklessly nominated 80 corrupt & msn 8 Garfeld (I imme- jiately correoted him) well, Garfield, there was no hope f r the republik. A candidate tor tte presidency shocd recewe it from the bands of the peo- ple with pure hande. It must come to him onbought, and Irsaker, pullin’ out the last $5 of the $25 he had re- ceived from Tilden to kerry our daes- ik, askt the deekin up to take suthin. The toast wuz, “Tilden and his bar'l. May the one last jist ez long ez the other.” Capt. McPelter, wich was a lain on his bick on Batcom’s long table, re- markt that the eleckshun of Garfield meant reoin. It would be a extin- guisher to enterprise, a crusher to honist labor and squelcher uy indus- try. The captain wocd hev gons on, but fetchin a friteful yawn he remarkt that hus corn_was suffrin for want of Iabor to hoa it, and turned over and went to sleep, the flies settlin one by one on his nose. Ez he hadn’t any money we let bim slumber. Capt. Pcdgers remarkt that if ther wuz cne thing above another that he worshipped it wuz a kentry in wich all men had ckal rites. It woz the corner stun of the republic and the founda- shuo uv the dimekratic party. Ez for hisself— The Captin, seein snthin in tho street, rushed out in the middle uv his speech. He returned in a few minits and washed his hsnds in Bas- com’s s'nk. ““Wat wuz it, Captin?” I asked. “‘Ob, nothin. It wuz that nigger from Linkenville, wich hed the au- dassity to claima riteto vote here las eleckshun. I sworeI'd kill him if he ever put his nose into this place agin. 1'd a dene it, too, only Jo Bigler kim up afore I hed time to finish him. But he won't never offe> a vote at these poles o more.” Focling that some formal expression was neceseary from the Corners, we organized a meetin and I proposed some resolocshens, orally. resolooshens Idenountt the republikin ?my ez cne that was sappin the very ouudsshens uv American liberty, and that the safety of the kentry demand- be intrusted to the virchoo and intelli- gence of the dimekratic party, uy wich the Cross Roads Was a shinin pait. I sketched these rofily with a pencil and sct down to draw ’em ou in fall, when the cussid chair broke under me —Bascom’s chairs are aliuz breakin— and Tepramed my wrist so that I cood not write. EzIam the only Dimekrat in the Corners ez kin write, an ez no proud and hawty Caucashen wood ever ask assistance from the Inferior Afrikin, raolooshens waznot put upon paper, and aro lost to the party forever. It wuz pervokin, but my lifo hez bin a sticcession uv disappointments, Ez 8000 ez the nsshnel dimekratic committy shel send me the n :l:‘ckem::u concernin Gacfield, I shel ke the stump agin him, provided alluz that they send the singos gv way. For wat kin a dimekrat do without money! I snuff the battle efar off, and am glad the fray is at hand. I shel liv in cloves November, anghow. PerroLEum V. Nassy, (Champion ) P. 8.—A cold chill struck the Cor- ners last nite when the news reached us that Tilden wozn't a goin to ruo. *“Wat kin we do in the Corners with- oot his ‘bar'il” asked Issaker. And Bascom, wich know'd he'd git all that wuz_sppropristed for this eeckshun, was in such a state of disgust that he thretened to shet upat 8 o'clock. Confidencs was restored, Fowever, by subsequent noose that he shood hev, Payne, uv Ohio, nominated, and that’ Payoe hed even a bigger bar’l than Tilden. Then Bascom smiled agin, and hope wunat mora illumined our noses. he Corners don't keer wich gets the dimocratic nomiination so'that he hez a barland ow to youse it. | Possib’y Payns wouid bs better than P Tiddea, for he is & new man and would hev to buy usall over. Bich uv us ez of us. £ e | 1 ed that the goverament of the kentry | & but T hev reseeved money from Tilden held s mteu'n'q and n’nulvad wat Tilden hed paid us shood not count for any other man. The new man must com- mence at the beginain, jist as Tilden d. prospec] cheers f all around. Saharah oassiszes. scom wui 80 elated at this that ho called for thres or Payne, and set up drinks Thus in the general uv my life there is occasional P. § —No. 2.—The Corners is wild ith eggcitement. A man from Loois- villoarrived lact night, snd sed that it hed bin determined to nominate Payne, uv Ohio, and that he wuz wuth not a cent less than five millions uv dollars, aud wuz more liberal even than Til den. The Corners is neerly crozy. We only wish the convenshun wor fortl time for her off, that there mite be still snother change. Clevoland Leader, The truth is often unpalatable, and it seems particularly 80 to many poor but prou: d communities that aspita to millions of population, if not at this census taklog, at the next. Cleveland falin short of the general expectations ia the matter of popul on, though the feeling of disappointment is pe haps not 50 great here as in 8t. Lou: Peoria, Dayton and some St. Louis and Peori e other place: ow copsider- able temper. ot the subjeot and blame the federal enumietators for mnot coming up to their great expectation, but as th, ez officials aro paid by the number of names taken of actual per- sonsin their districts the natural in- ference is that they would have no in- ducemen x few may have been overlooked in com- actly i situatedin out of-the- be avoided, but the census must be sumed to have been slmost as_fairly taken sy stances. t 10 omit avy of many. A abited loaslities, and eome, ay points, mig! ble under the crcum- New York havirg 1,600,000, an ift- ‘tisfed. dred thousand less than Chicago, is frantic. tempt upon St. Loui being credited with 3! more than Cleveland, happy, but evidently secretly at to this 1ot Chi trary to ly. d, an which the From the The sta The system of making i peobotii ity R aoild S ercase of 50 fior cent iti tén years, is St Louis, havitig » htin: ks with oalm con and Cincinnati, 50,000, 90,000 1s octensibl Chicrgo lo approaching more _nearly cago’s 477,000. Dajtot; ste, complains that, con- all expectations, the popula- tion falls below 40,000, being given at 38,751, snd Springfield, Tllinois, has barely 20,000 instead of the confidently looked for. had 17,000 ten years oo, making U increase altogether too small her _ opinion. 5000 people in that place have been mirted, and Quincy feols quite as badl o o & he fy that Sprin to Peoris asserts ths count d if the result falls so far be- law what was expected, 1t may be that the American habit of rashly crediting every other prosperous business man with “millions” aud et ering with *thousands’ uted to failing, leading the way to humiliating disappointments and pitifol miscalou- lations. an “alifired, tarnal big nation” as we thought we were, but we are yet young, and if we stick to hard work and leave the afiaics of other people alone, we will grow and in proper time bo as groat as any other country on the globe. as fast as necess publio gath- contri e exaggeration a nationsl We may not be euch Weare gatning population for the rate at e country's resources are de- velopsd, and our ratio of iacrease in numbers iz greater than that of ln{ other nation esat,wost, north ur sout] Altogether, the tenth census should prove generally satisfacto and doubtlers wi becomes more familiar wi hen everybody h it Four Rich Men, udon Globs, iverpool Courier gives some rather interesting particulars as to the four men who are supposed to be the most wealthy living. Of these the poorest is his grace the Duke of Westminster, whote income down at £800,000 a that sum, the amount whi duke can on his capital is £2,000 a day, £90 an hour, and £1 10s a minute. next man in the ascending scale is Senator Jones, of Nevada, whose in- come is valued at exactly one mil sterling, giving if be likes, £2 & minute out of reve- vue. The head of the Rothachild family comes next, with a yearly come of two millions, and tho ex- penses which he can defray thereout are, of cours those of the ng the pend without intrenching year. The m the right to spend, double as great as ator. At the top of the list comes Mr. J. W. Mackey, with a rovenue of £2,- 750,000 a year,which enables him to disburse £7,000 a day, hour, and £5 a minute. ~The fortunes of the other three are insignificant if comparad for their's is the growth of many years either of successful toil or lucky speculation, or both combined. But Mr. Mackey, as the Courier remarks, was thirty yearaago a penniless bo; in Irelond. ~ Sixteen years ago hews bankrupt; the richest been discovered. There hope for all the pennil “‘ould Ireland.” We commend to them the example of Mr. J. W. Mackey, who, it appears, is now only forty-five years old, and if he same rato as during the Jast sixteen years, will have ample time to treble fortune and possess an income ten times as large as that of the Duke of Westminster. ized value of his property is set down at £55,000,000, sgainet the modest 16,000,000 of the duke. ures aro pleasing to the eye and ear, o regret to add that the Liver- pool Courier does not by any means vouch for the accaracy of the totals ita publis! ATTENTION, BUILDERS AND CON TRACTORS. £300 an iththis gentleman’s wealth, nd now he is the owner of ver mine that has ever is, therefore, s boys in 0es on at the Already the capital- Such fig- The owner of fiu-_eahbnhd Kaolin Baoks, near LOUTS! l::' read; e B. & to fill an) bebg oA * tho depot 14 Lo af xl. railroad, , NEB., has dsvills, on order at ressonable prices. Par. a white front or ornamental brick will do well to give us a call or send for sample. J. T. A. HOOVER, Prop., For England, Frauce and For Passago app'y to C. -1y Loisville, Neb UPTON HOUSE, Schuyler, Neb. Fustclass House, Good eals, Good Beds Airy g o) ireatment, attention paid to Schuyler, Neb. - HAMBURC AMERICAN PACKET CO. {3 Weekly Line of Steamships Leaving New York Every Taursdsy at 2 accommodating, 2good_eample ; ple roome. Specia Germany. B. RICHARD & c9., General Pussenge: Agents, 61 Broadway, New York. REVIEW, NAL, FOR T TREATS wpou: cal Cultate, an informatian for in tions asked by of u cure, are {a volunidered he hundeed and one quesionsof ince T g hamaaly, e daly and expinined. Y e By T ok i Gonter oG ECTRLS REVIEW exposes the unmiliiated The. fra orth thous PULVERMACHE COR. EIGHTH Ask ored dyay ious suf di ient So% they rebovens] e cheertul malth, irits’ snd opl +ppetite; thoy ey ing Stenoxs’ L REOULATOR. The Cheay the in the Wor For DYSPE. Billious Attacks, SICK HEADACHE, Colic, De ‘safferin praciiced by quacks aud med o b o e the recor. bil- S YALIDS N OTHERS SEEKIX. HEALTH, STRENGTH and ENERGY, WITHOUT THE USE OF DRUGS, ARE RE- QUESTED TO SEND FOK THE ELECTRIC AN ILLUSTRATED JOUR- WHICH 1S PUBLISHED FREE DISTRIBUTION. HEALTIL, HYGIEXE, und Phra: ottt aerciommts of s pages: g oo W b i aud Tl et o ieciri s sersue et OUNC MEN ‘suffer from Narvous sad Physical Vigor, Frematnre Exbants o chmscgnences of early 'ats eapectally henefited by con- e, ot Trr £ s th thousanda E R GALVARIC CO., and VINE STS. CINCINNATI, O d for & copy, and e sent you. t, good will tak. AVER Purest and Best Family Medl- PSIA, CONSTIPATION, Janadice grossion of Spiits, SOUR STOMACH, Hear T o not to contatn. any injurious Etc., Etc. ‘nrlvelled Southern Remedy Is warranted of Mxxou 8 wingl ‘mineral e co, but lg Parely Vegetable, Back,~ides or tlam; Son R of Livet Complaint are s e i, o tmoath; Fain fn the 't mistaken forRhetima- ks Lors of Appetie; Bows ur ; Lo's 'tenately costive and lax; He Memory, with 'y sensation of ba 3 ed 10 do'something which ought to have beea dom Debili rita, a thick yellow ap- fa s K & &y Congh o ion, largest organ in the body, is generally thie seat of the dis sase, suftering, wretchedoess iated in time,great and {f not ‘death will ensue. 1 can re ommend as sn efficacious nmedy‘lal diseaso of tho Simmens’ Liv 1625 Mastor Philadelpn's, “We Liver, Heartburn sod a, r Regulator. Lewis G. Wunder, Btreet, Assistant Post Master, e tested lts virtues, tersonally, and Niousness, ' and icine the world ever exv. We bave tried forty other remedies before Eimmons’ Liver none of them gave us more than tem; 1ht: bat the Be; cured us. Regalator, porary re- lator not only reiieved, bu Kditor Teligraph aud Messenger, MAXUPAGTURED OWLY BY Prics, §1.00 J. H. ZEILIN & 00., PHILADELPHIA, PA. 80ld by all Drugeista, : always Cures and never disap= mh. ‘The world' great Pain- for Man and Boeast. Cheap, quick and reliable. PITCHER’S CASTORIA is not Narcotic. grow fat Children upon, Mothers like, and Physicians recommend CASTORIA. It regulates the Bowels, cures Wind Colic, allays Feverishness, and de- stroys Worms. WEI DE MEYER'S CA- TARRH Cure, a Constitutional Antidote for this terrible mala= dy, by Absorption. The most Important Discovery since Vac= cination. relieve C: Othor remedies may atarrh, this cures at any stage hefore Comsumption sets in. AYER For the apeedy rellef of S AGUE GURE ver and Ague, Intermittent Fever, Chill Fever, Remittent Fever,Dumb Ague, Periodical or Billious Fever, &c., and Marsh it, do not. byt do not remedy, and trusted specific, Ague of the weat, and the ¢h 5% south, Ayers Aguo on from th well as before the disease, 8o ‘matiem, the cure. Indeed, wEere and Bowels have o, it removes the cause-of them and they ouly i8 it an effectual ure, Dear. Not atia it wil expelthe from attack. the attack. It Indeed all the Affections i From Malarious, or Missmatic Poisons, Has been 'lda;;y used during the ing success that it has gained the reputation cf being fallible. The shakes, orchills once broken return, until’ the disease is con- This 'has_ mado it an_accepted for the Fever and ills and fevers of Cure eradicates the noxious pois and leaves the patient s ly e that no Liver complaints, Bbou Dyrentery or ollow "Dioriers of the Liver cecurred from Miasmatic Pois- 3 petlents’ exponed o WAl ly ex - 2 Doison ‘and protect.them svelers and temporary revidents in Fever and Ague localities are thus ensbled to defy the disease. 80 apt to exposure BiuaF o Witene,as s spocdier emedy: LIVER BR. J. itisan excellent ‘The General Debilit y which is o from contint to for COMPLAINTS, t remedy. PREPARED BY C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass. Practical snd Analytical Chemists. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN_{EDICINE. NEBRASKA VINEG AR WORKS | Jones, Bet. 9tk and 10th Sta., ONAHA. First quality distilled Wine and e e aod Cider Vinegar prices, and war. > holesale retail, punied Just se £00d st wholemle' nd thor ted and In the state. SEETe order. ‘Special Machine Works, J.F. Hammond, Prop & Manager descri and every ciass o machinery CALDWELL, HAMILTC B.&N'_EEBS. EEsug Accor K in Curre: or sbject to sl s chock Without Bohoe: oSeriiteatos of coposit lasued pey- & Dearing interest, or on demand with: out interest. Advances made Lo customers Tad securitios At macket rates Of Intereat, Buy and g Government, Bonds. L Beat i et ol Pt T Raape Bell European Passage Ticketa. COLLECTINHS PROMPTLY MADE. augldf i3 fi)gr_oTTfin. First Nariona. Banx OF OMAHA, Cor. Farnhem and Thirteenth Bta. OLDEST BANKIHG ESTABLISHMENT N OMAHA. (SUCCESSORS 10 EQUNTSX BROS., ESTABLISHED DN 1858 Organised 2 a Naticnal Eaak August 30, 1868 Oapital and Profits Over $300,000 Spacially suthorised by the Secrotary of Treasury "7 o recetre Bubsatptions to the [ ] U. 8. & PER CEKT. FUNDED LOAN. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS ioid, bius of exch tate, County and VTuI ESTATE BROKER Geo. P. Bemis’ ReaL EsTATE AcENcy. 15th & Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb. This does sTRIOTLY 8 brokerage bust nese. " Doss not spectiate, and therefore any bar. gaing on its books are insured to its patroas, in stead of being gobbled up by the agent Boggs and Hill, REAL ESTATE BROKERS No. 250 Farnkam Sirest OMAHA, - NEBRASKA. Or__jNorth Bide, opp. Grand Oemtral Moke' Nebrasks Land Agenoy DAVIS & SNYDER, 1505 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. 400,000 ACRES carsfully siscted land Berpang s hpeoved far, and Qe Byron Reed & Co., s amanmn REAL ESTATE AGENO! IN NEBRASKA. e e THE ORIGINAL BRIGGS HOUSE I Cor. Randolph St. & bth Ave., CHICAGO, ILL. = J. LEE &0O0. . ; JOBBERS OF RE, CUTLERY, NAILS, " STAMPED AND JAPANNED WARE, TINNERS STOCK, SHEET IRON, TIN STOCK, ETC. 1317 & 1319 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAHA, NHRB. Positively no Goods Sold at Retail. OMAHA FENGE £ BOX'CO. We Manufacture to Order OFFII(EDE aplett RAILINGS AND FINE COUNTERS F PINE AND WALNUT. Iron and Wood Fences, Brackets and Mouldings, Improved Ioe Boxes furnished on short notice. @UST, FRIES & 00., Prop's., 1231 Haraey St., Omabs, Neb. " PAXTON & GALLAGHER, WHOLESALE GROGERS! 1421 and 1423 Farnham, and 221 to 229 16th Sta. KEEP THE LARGEST STOCK MAKE THE LOWEST PRIGES. The Atteation of Cash and Prompt Time Buyers Solicited. AGENTS FOR THE HAZARD POWDER COMPY and the Omaha Iron and Nail Co. GARPETINGS. Carpetings| Carpetings| J. B. DETWILER, Old Reliable Carpet House, 1406 DOUGLAS STREET, BET. 14TH AND 16TH (EBTABLISHED IN 1868.) Carpets, Oil-Cloths, Matting, Window-Shades, Lace Curtains, Etc. MY STOCK I8 THE LARGEST IN THE WEST. I Make a Speclalty of WINDOW-SHADES AND LACE GURTAINS And bave a Full Line of Mats, Rugs, Stair Rods, Carpet- Lining Stair Pads, Crumb Clothes, Cornices, Cornice Poles, Lambrequins, Cords and Tassels; In fact Everything kept in a First-Class Carpet House. Orders from abroad solicited. Satisiaction Guaramteed $2.00 AND $2.50 PER DAY Located In the business centre,conventent ‘amusement. e 0GDEN HOUSE, Oor. MARKET ST. & BROADWAY Council Bluffs, Iowa city. METROPOLITAN Omana, Nx. IRA WILSON, - PROPRIETOR. The Metropolitan is centrally SR bk NEW GROGERY ! 16th and Cuming Sts. ‘We propose supplying the people of North Omaha with CHOICE CROCERIES at mod- erate prices. Give us a call. J. H. BERGEN. ##-Cash paid_for Country Pro- other t Sinta Clas siayed, Chidren oft aak f o makes goodsor non It really bo lives in & mountain of mow. Last year an excursion eailed clear o tho Pole ‘And auddenly dropped nto what seemed ke chole. ‘Whers wonder of wonders they found & bow tad, on each hand. Call, or Address John B. Detwiler, 0ld Reliable Oarpet House, OMAHA, PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY The Only Lithographing Establishment in Nebraska JEROME RACHEK. OMAHA BEE LITHOGRAPHING GOMPARY. Drafts, Cheoks, Letter Bill and Nute Bonds, Qertificates of Stock, Diplomas, eto., done in the best manner, and at Lowest Possible Prices. .r-ao-w‘-.m | B00TS AND SHoES | SePera! Insurance Agent, 42 J0E8 TEULE e | PO AOMASCE Gk L P. LANG’S, 236 FARNHAM §T. SHOES MADE TO ORDER FOWLER & SCOTT, 'ARGHI'I;EGTS; S5 | Gontrastors and. Builders, - 1310 Dadge 8t.. Omabs, | BUSINESS! s | PANTSfor - - - 500 7. O VAFOR.