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Crops in Enrope. Whoever has watched the late European cablegrams concerning the condition of the crops must be con- vinced that the greater part of them embody mere rumors ciroulated by speculators, principally on this side of water, to raise or depress prices in the interest of their own schemes. The only way to determine the degr of credit that should be accorded these announcements is to compare them with the regular weekly crop reports published in European agricultural papers, True, these usually reach thisside of the Atlantic from ten to fourtoen days later than the cable- grams, but as it is highly improbable than any very material injury or bene- fitshould occur to crops generally in that interval when any greatdifference is reported, it is safer to trust the agricultural papers, which are nearly always honest, than the cablegrams, which' are often ‘‘meant to de- eeive,”” From a careful study of all attainable reliable sources of late information, we have come to the conclusion that Europe this year will be more nearly self-supporting than it has been at any time since the reeent enormous increase in the pro duction and exportation of American cereals, Although the production of breadstuffs in the United Kingdom great as it was before the present era of { agricultural depression, yet it seems now certain that the harvest there will be at least moderately good, The latest reports, both by mail and cable, while still speaking despond. ently of the agricultural condition as a whole, give strong assurance of a condition of crops less unsatisfact than at the corresponding season with- in the last five years. The present _condition of the grow- ing wheat iif France, according to the latest received issue of the Semaine Agricole, is admirable, and still later cablegrams confirm the statement. For the first time sinco America be- gan to supply the deficiencyof French crops, there is a fair prospect that France will produce more than enough of wheat to supply domestic consump- tion, and all other crops, too, seem to be doing fairly. In Germany the wheat and rye crops are likely to turn out an_ave age, and the latest advices, both tele- graphic and'mail, from Austria, Hun- glry, the Spanish Peninsula, Italy, witzerland, Bulgaria, and Roumania, allspeak in enthusiastic or hopeful terms of the outlook for the harvest. Of all European countries, however, the prospect in Russia seems the most favorable. Reports from Ocdessa, Taganrog, Sebastopol, Nicalaieff and Carkow, all unite in prophesying a better wheat crop in Southern Russia this year than in the last twenty. Some time must yet elapse before the European harvest, however splendid, can come into market, and the needs of the various countries must until then, be supplied mostly from this country, f". is, therefore, not im- ry | Sutton Register, THE OMATWA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY' JULY 12 1881 e — tower, which is of sheet iron. But| GEN. GARFIELD'S MAXIMS although the iron pole would be no " Iarger than the wooden pole, jt would | Gathered from His Public Spesches require guide ropes running from thel . ¢ ghis hour the eloquent and im- top of the tower to the four corners of ive sentiments of Gen. Garfield, '11']:”:!:"-; Y ok '.','...f.',;;'iilyy by gathered from his nmnlypub]iclvesc!; fairs at bost, and the self-supporting | ‘They speak of the nobility of charae pole was adopted. From the ground | gar'ot the man, and of his motives to the top of the pole itis one hun-fynq ambitions. Mr. Smalley s 3‘.:?:1"3‘..3?3 ‘f;:"f; Ao "‘f;\:frf}'l""':fi‘]“]' *Thers ib probably o living politiea 0 7 D oratol ose efforts before 7o au- support, 88 originally intended, six OhON e SR e lights of six thousand candle power | ““Nr Thayer, in his book, “From the each. Log Cabin to the White House, " makes a collection of many of these, eloquent e R o e T T and instructive sentences, A number of promunent manufac-| Tnan address on one cocasion, Gen- turers have, within the past few days, | ¥ l'“'"'_' . Yoy Sl closed ‘contracts for large quantities | 1OUNC ""] r"‘_"r""""" for a "‘f I‘ LLi of ingot copper, the total of which |man. I never meet a ragged boy on will reach nearly, if not quite 20,000,- the street without feeling that T owe 000 pounds, The prices were from | him 8. salute, for 1 know notwhat tents to sisteen and n-half | possibilities may be buttoned upunder centa por pound, and tho delivories, | the shubby cost.' = - : it is understood, run during the re- Y FR LR L. VR e e mainder of the year. These purchases [ AN is & great privilege, and the priv conaist outirely of copper produced in | 08¢ of growing up to be an independ- tho Take Superior ragion, and. are | n%,man in middle lifo is greater.”. belioved to_equal nearly the entire| " Whatever you win inlife you must amount that will bo produced during [ conquer by your own efforts, and then the Ist half of the year. The opening | It if JOurs, & pat o yourself, of new mines in various sections of drowill 18 Dbestor thisn —perma: the country has of lato increased the | Nence, and permanent growth is bet- production to an extent considerably “‘T“!]’;un] all.” i in excess of market requirements, there is one thing vpon this and to this i attributed the absence | €arth that mankind loves and admires Max Meyer & Co. OMAZIEIA. Guns,Ammunition,Sporting Goods FISHING TACKLE, BASE BALLS, and a FULL LINE OF NOTIONS AND FANCY GOODS. SERND FOR FPRIOE-LIST. MAX MEYER & CO, Omaha, Ne of any material enhancement of price | Petter ”'}':“ 3““”“' it is & brave man, by the exceptionally large business | man who dares to look the devil in Tty the face apd tell him he is a devil. ] “The sfudent should study himself, his relation to society, to nature and to art, and, above all, in all, and ity o through ail these, he should study the Tho hail storm of Juno 20th, do- | riliticiuy of himself, socioty, naturo, stroyed all of my crop, mowed my (y,d art to God, the author of them rain as though done with a_mower; | a1\’ broke 14 panes of glass and killed cight pigs. The wind storm of the 25th moved my granery eight rods, heavy frame, 12x16 with all of 1600 pounds of things inside, and set it down without disturbing anything; racked my stable badly, and moved it about three feet; blowed the roof off my chicken house and broke it badly, I picked some of the shingles up 39 rods from the place it stood. The hail nearly ruined my apple trees and my grove. 1 moved my granery on the 24th eight rods and stood it east and west but the wind carried it back the place I moved it from and stood it nearly north and south. Georae WiLcox, Sr. Taken By Storms. “‘Great ideas travel slowly, and for a time noiselessly, as the gods whose feet were shod with wool.” “Tdeas are the groal warriors of the world, and a war that has no ideas be- hind 1t is simply brutality.” *T would rather be defeated than make capital out of my religion.” “After all, territory is but the body of a nation. The people who inhabit its hills and its valleys are its soul, its spirit, its life.” “For the noblest man that lives there still remains a conflict.” our banner, Every great record we have made has been vindicated with our blood ‘and with our truth. It ; Elephantafrom Ceylon. :r;;:p.nvu the ground and it touches the Nev g ned sy Tt was not one man who killed An clophantine trado on a heavy | Apraham Lincoln; it was the embod- scale is announced as just springing up betwoen New York and the distant island of Ceylon—that most lovely gem of the Indian Ocean. This is the importation of the elephas Indicus, three splendid specimens of which are now in Boston, awaiting transporta- tion facilities to this city. These ele- phants, which are claimed to be the largest of their species that have ever ied spirit of treason and slavery, in- spired with fearful and despairing hate, that struck him down in the moment of » the nation’s supremest 0y. ““When two hundred and fifty thou- sand brave spirits ed from the field of honor through that thin veil to the presence of God, and when at last its parting folds admitted the probable that the ceming harvest has assumed a brighter hue both from been brought either to Europe or Amerion, feachod Boston on . the | mariyr President fo the company of| 1 sareg an I3ODCHE, the “Come down the glorious steps of EDHOLM & ERICKSON, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL MANUFA€TURING JEWELERS, LARGEST STOCK OF Goldand Silver Watchesand Jewelryin the City ‘Come nnd see our stock, na we will be pleased to show goods, OrrosiTa Postorrice. DIRECTORY OF LEADING HOTELS, UNION PACIFIC HOTEL, PROPRIETORS. MARKEL & SWOBE, U. P. Transfer, Council Bluffs JOHN 8. LEWIS, Dow City, lowa. W. P, HUNTER, West Side, lowa. T. W. BUTLER, Vail, lowa. LEWIS HOUSE, HARTNEY HOUSE, McHENRY HOUSE, BUMMIT HOUSE, BWAN & BECKER, Creston, 1a. JUDKINS HOUSE, JUDKINS & BRO., Red Oak, la. MENDIN HOTEL, ADOLPH WUNDER, Mendin, la. THE CENTRAL HOUSE, JOSEPH SANKEY, Walnut, ta. IVES HOUSE, 0. T. IVES, Hastings, la COMMERCIAL HOTEL, WM, LUTTON, Villisca, la PARK HOTEL, W. J. GARVIN, Corning, la. BELDEN HOTEL, A.W. BELDEN, Woodbine, la. LUSK HOUSE, UAS. A, LUSK, Logan, la. GOMMERCIAL HOTEL, ©. F. CASSADY, Denison, Ia. BURKE'S HOTEL, E. R. BURKE, Carroll, la. GLIDDEN HOUSE, 8. M. LEWIS, Glidden, la, SORANTON HOUSE, ASHLEY HOUSE, HEAD HOUSE, JOS. LUCRAFT, DAN EMBREE, JOS. SHAW & CO,, Scranton, la, Qrand Junction, la Jefferson, la. MERCHANTS' HOTEL, CHENEY & 0O, Sioux City, la. CHENEY'S UNION HOTEL, CHENEY BROS,, Mo. Valley June., OITY RESTAURANT, J.J TUCK, Dunlap, la. OHAPMAN'S SESTAURANT, T.G. CHAPMAN, Stanton, la. FRANKLIN'G RESTAURANT, GEO. FRANKLIN, Shelby, la NEOLA HOTEL, F.SIEVERTZ Neola, la. WOODWORTH HOUSE, W. A, WOODWORTH, Atlantic, la. CENTRAL HOUSE, EMERSON HOUSE, CROMWELL HOUSE, WALTON HOUSE, CITY HOTEL, MARSH HOUSE, GRAND CENTRAL HOTEL, CENTRAL BLOCK HOTEL Hellmuth Ladies’ College. Patroness, H. R. H. PRINCESS LOUISE. Founder and President, The Right Rev. I. HELL: MUTH, D. D,, D. G. L, LORD BISHOP OF HURON!. Fall Term opens Wednesday, September 2ist. Handsome mnd spacious buildings, ! eautitrlly situated in a most healthy localit by rail-fromaLiisgara Falls, and on ene of the principal thromehwoutes hetween the Faxs and West, The GROUNN 8 comprise 140 acres._The aim of the founder of this college is to provids the highest intellectunl o practically usofal edeation. The whole sy-tem s based upon the sonndust PRO- TESTANT juinciples, as the only welitl basis for the right forstion of character. FRENCH s tho language &potan in the college. MUBIC a speeialty- Toard, Lan sy and Tuition Fees, muluding th- wh en Lanjpiage Callisthenics, Drawing otd Painging, uso Medcine, 830 per annum. A tekuc¥ion of one-half "for jt 1ars’” and full pet ticulars address MISS:CLINTON, Lady Pri ONTARIO, CANADA.. Malvern, la. Emmerson, la. Cromwell, la, Onawa, la. Blair, Neb. Brownvile, Neb. Nebraska City, Neb. Plattsmouth, Neb' 8. P. ANDERSON, A. L. S8HELDON, MRS. R. COCHRAN T. C. WALTON CHENEY & CLARK, W. W. BROWNING, E. D. COTTRELL, FRED, STADELMANN, o foar thours of English, the Anciens and Mod- antli Librry® Medical attendunce, snd nughters of Clergymen. Ror “cirn- ipad, Hellmnth Ladies’ College, Lospos, mon&there-2m il - UNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS —O0F THE— BOSTON STORE! 8l6 TENTH STREET. | i | r order to nwet tite wants «of oun rapidly increasing business, we have: leaseditiie: adjoinitig stere-and will throw Both into onu, thus making the “BOSTON STORIE” I —T'HE BARGEST— EDHOLM & ERICKSOM:. contrast with the late gloomy ones |stoamer Hansa, consigned to Messrs. | . ¢ion lt::ff;”:: .:farttll‘:“ {':':r fl“fi’ g:: and from a not unnatural desire to|Charles Reiche & Brother, of New whispers of God were heard by the lower the prices of the breadstuffs | York, who brought them from their| 1i1dren of men.” y that may be wanted from abroad be- | home in the queen of the spicy islands. il Bl & fore the days of plenty, by showing|They were shipped from Ceylon to T g " how slight will be the demand for |to mbmfi' and thence to London, | o 'PMdh“lw 1 ® any foreign surplus when gnce the | where the Hansa received them. They |y, withont. 1) Thosas’ EoLreTRio Ot Tt f home harvest has been gathered. |are reported to be all very large; |is thorough and safe in its effects, produe- After having made all reasonable de- | but the largest of the three is a mag- | ing the most wondrous cures of rheuma- ductions, however, on the score of [ nificent fellow, ten feotin height at | tism, neuralgia, burns, bruises and wounds oxaggeration, it seoms highly probable | the shoulders, and twelve feet over | of every kind. jylleodlw that almost {ho d;)nly European markult all, T‘!m gigt;ntic br&xtus are quite [ == s ——— i for our surplus breadstutls next fall | tame, having long undergone the re- * and wlnlerf will be in the United |pressive influence of a strict training FEENEY & CONNOLLY, Kiugdum, and while the need of [ in Ceylon.” 8o docile are they that foreign l\lehfl will be somewhat |as the word of command they will lay less there than last year, the competi- | down and raise.a huge foot for the tion between foreign surpluses from |keeper to mount. Mr. Froederick Russia, Egypt, India, Australia, New | Ditzel, who is charged with the task Zealand, South America, the United | of bringing these monster quadrupeds NEW STORE States and Canada, will be_keener | from Boston here, says that he ‘may than ever before.—[Rural New |have to march them alithe way, as Yorker. the railroad freight cars could not 0 carry them. Besides this somg of the The German Carp. bridges aro not sufficiently lofty to al- This fish, so well calculated above [low the imposing strangers to pass all others for breeding in ponds, has|under them. Mr. Ditzel will try tc attracted wide attention all over the|get some steamer to find standing United States. It is, too, a most ex- | room for them on her deck. In this cellent food for fish, prolific and har- [ ¢ase the beasts would have to make dy. Tt is better suited than any other | the difficult ocean passage outside of ARE TO-DAX - fish for this l-t_ituc!e, as it likes warm [ Cape Cod. Each of the strangers waters, and_ will live in ponas ' where | is ~ valued at 816,000, but it is 1 DEAL IN PIANOS AND ORGANS EXCLUSIVELY. HAVE /D YEARS EXPERIENGE none but the cat-fish-pouts, chubsand | to be muderstood 'that they are not And will during the ensuing weok offer THE BUSINESS, AND HANDLE ONLY THE BEST; e o vt R W, | il . X G, 918 Sixteenth St., City Hall Building, Omaha. Baird, of the United States fish com- Gen. Merritt's Tin Wed ding. HALSEYV. FITCH, : : : Tuner. s 4 ettty ozt e Special - Inducements J. A. WAKEFIELD, : Dry Goods House Pla-nOS and Org a,ns ;ro‘;:i“ of Chicago, (2xcept Cruickshank & Co.'s.) he people«off Omaha how we appreciate ther liberal support, we: Have decicled to» giye the public a GRAND BENEFIT SALE 1 'J. 8. WRIGHT, i FOE. THE NEXT SEVIIN DAYS. 'The Entire Stock must be aosed out im order to com- THE CHICKERING PIANDS. | o primprmrsttsen | Dhe stock is all new and fres h and will BE SOLD RECARDLESS; OF COST!! An examination of Goods and comparison of prices | will convince every one that this is 0 HUMBUG SALE. This grand benefit sale will commence Saturdiay Evening, July 9th, AND CONTINUE ONE WEERONLY. ALLARE INVITED. P. G. IMLAH, Manager, Leader of Popular Prices. - W'DONALD AND HARRISON, 1408 FARNEATI STrREET, ARE NOW OFFERIN& FOR ONE MONTH ONLY DECIDED BARGAINS Ladies' Smits, Cloaks, Ulsters, Circulars, Ete., AGENT FOR——eee AT THEIR i | | AND SOLE AGENY POR ‘ Hallet, Davis & Co., James & Holmstrom, and J & C. Fischer's Pianos; also Sole Agent for the Estey, Burdett and t e Fort Wayne Organ Co.’s Organs. 512 North Sixteenth Street, (Opposit William Gemtloman's Popular Grocery Store,) this congressional distriot, which will{ ¢ ,ry of Wyoming, is the lonesome give about two each fo the sounty, if s BT et R the propor ponds aro to be found. It| omand of Gen. Merrits, of the will not do to put them in runnng | pifeh United States cavalry, who, do- streams or in ponds _where there aro|y,ite his native modesty, 50 commend- bass, sunhsh, perch, trout or’any|eq himself to “the powers that be’ flesh cating species of fish whateo-|py his judgment and bravery that, BooTs A“D sHoEs ever. A pond say of fifty feot|yfoush’but 26 years old, he was put [] square is large enough for In all thoir various grades of summor styles of 1€ | in cemmand of all the cavalry of the young carp where they can the Poto ; AT COS'T. be kept until three to six months old, ,Alitl:xho' B‘I:fll ] ::wr:::;::: ETC., ETC,, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN when they may be transferred to other | ;¢ those trying: days: Some ten suitable waters, = They will not be| v oury sincdhe led to the altar Miss | Tomake room for their extensive fall purchases. LUMB R sent froim Washington or othor breed ‘Vnrnur, no of the accomplished ' ~ A " ing places until fall or winter, and d.ughunficmmnnm,mdm. many Lath, Shingles, Pickets, when sent will be to some convenient | 1,61 /ds far and near, being mindful of { A Reduction of 156 to 26 SASH, nonns, BLluns, Mol_nl“cs' UME, t:ME"T, SEVENTY.FIVE DENTS 0“ THEnoLLAn‘ railroad point. Applications can be |t ¢o make the oocasion a joyful one, per cent on former =, BTO. All ladics should avail themselves of this great sale of mado to the membors of congress from | yuq to reliove the frontier post of its Pri es. - i I e e, 00RSETS AND UNDERWEAR, 'LINEN AND MOHAIR ULSYERS, this district by those who have suit- "y . able ponds as far as the allotted num- :m‘::::l‘?l:‘ 3 nigbhl:“u &Y. HOM Wi SILK AMND LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS, LAWN SUITS AND SACQUES. bor will go. Wo hope some one in euch £he: gyentiul McDONALD & HARRISON. A. B. HUBERMANN, county of the district will provide for| o RELYAIBILE 200 Handsome Suits, at $5.00; 300 Stglish Suits, $10,00; 75 Blaok Silk Buits, $17.00. ‘We lave several lots of staple goods which will be offsaed at the reception of this valuable fish, as mv‘il—;:‘n‘."::f.::um—mru DUICTOUS | vy carry a full assortment of every kind, and Near Union Pacific Depot, - - - OMAHA, NEB e % o . not only fé , but il - it is better suitod to this locality than | ¢ ornament, Ml 0t only for use, bul respecttully invite their triends to call, BlcchEs s - — —~ - o and OTTO B g |'r II T t:\,l:\b\! m":m P f0r Ow D. . Mo N and price list containing full 9 ) q appropriate and all any of the varieties furnished to our Bvors. Tt e HAk sEAL DRI takp hga | ctul. Fho suce’ motable wag phist information. N. I, D. SOLOMON, iven by a former war comrade. A z= ) Paints,Oils and Glass SADDLES AND HARNESS. of itself when introdueed, ofif in|four sifter was made to subserve the OMAHA, NEB, Jo 20-s0d-tt THEY HAVE ALSO ponds is as vasily grown as chickens, purpose of contrasting the past with RS — tha present in his life. Artisti- | T OTST RBEOBIVED Xlumination of the Squares of New | cally printed upon its side was a York by Electric Light, harvest scene, emblematic of these N. Y, Post. . days of peace, and above were ar- MANUFACTURNR A¥D DEALER [N aconsignment of F AND AND MACHINE SEWED SCOTCH EDGE § { A crowd of persons have, for the last few days, watched with interest the erection of the gigantic pole which is to support the firulh eloctric lamps for the lighting of Union Squaré. The weather-beaten pole of the huge derrick, which now stands in the middle of the square, has been mistaken for'the pole itself by so many persons who characterized it as an atrocity of ugliness and an outrage, that Mr, Hayes, the secretary of the companp, thought of putting up a pla- card on the derrick, informing the public that it is not the pole. The pole itself is now up and speaks for itself. It is @ wagnificent pieoe of m from the North River forests. eo pieces, each two feet in dismetgr by fifty-three fect in length, are used, werful rivets, bolts half an inch thick being used to fasten the pieces to- gether, The first plan l}xuught of was to 'imitate Akron, Ohio, light ) { ¥ r;mgud fi;‘ulf‘(:rkz;, as a reminder lnl that fearful battle in which his valor s somapiounin Atinedaione | OREEDMORE ” wis & card with the inscription: “‘Past—Five Forks, Virginia, April 1, 1805; War and Bloodshed. Fort Laramie, Wyoming, June 13th, 1881; lb'lum:u Mmul Happiness, Goneral and rs. Merritt,” The weddiug enter- i means deficient in the elegances and ewmployoes to call and examine’then, luxuries of refined life. The music e e THEY'RE A BARGAIN A Great Euterprise, Railway Shoes, REMEMBER THE PLACE! 1412 Farn. St. Omaha, Neb. D. S. BENTON, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. ARBACH BLOCK, Cor. Douglas and 15th Bts. Umaha Neb, J.P.ENGLISH, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, 10 South Thirteenth Street, with 08, B. CLARKSON, @. 3. HONT, Clarkson & Hunt, Successors to Richards & Hunt, AGEAT FOR YHN CELEBRATED The Hop Bitters Manufacturing company is one of Rochester's greatest business enterprises. Their Hop Bit- ters have hod a sale beyond all precedent, having from their intrinsic value found their way into almost every housohold in ' the j;‘l'-litb.- All Boods Marked in Plain Figures RENTE ST. Between Cass and Califoruia, [Graphic. Yodes ? ‘ \ JEWELER Cor., Douglas and 13th Streets, GIVES GREAT BARGAINS IN LADIES' AND CENTS' ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, CONCORD HARNESS §. 14thStreet, Om ha Neb. Two Medals and s Diploms of Honor, with the very highest award the judges could bestow was * awarded this harness st the Ceatennial Exhibi- Edward W. 8imeral, s Aasment i Jadt ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Bl " iz o sl xamine 4o send for Rooi 6 Creighton 16th and Dougles strests, | pri ») AMERICANIGOLD AND.SILVER WATCHES, ALL KINDS OF Jewelry, Silverware and Diamonds ‘We Guarantee the Best Goods for the Least Money. s21-stt