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Axxrioan Nrwa Conranty, Sole Agents or Newsdaealers in the United States. €18 BUG Pruliaer AIsDUTseTs, that responsible leadership and fair representation have given place to A Consuanc shower bath by the weather clerk. In September Western Can- ada and the western and southern tle Ground, ‘oo @ vamy ‘o Wiy Wi -bou{30,000 men, was at Mnn'-puu, On our arrival we proceeded to the telegnrh office where General Pope d Arenougn & MIGNT NAYe Deen able to give some important evidence touch. mg the campaign, 1 was not called upon to testify, and as a member of LU 10, R sectious of the United States are to|Pope's Blanders Charged Up o was holding a council of war. Among | the military telegraph corps, I did not OORRESPUNDENOE—AIl Communi | boss rule and packed caucusses and | he visited by heavy s and fliods, Fits John Porter. those presont were Generals Pope, | deem it proper to volunteer. Had I #ations relating to New: and Bditorial ma” | eonventions; that wealth and in- | Pretty much the same sort of thing in Reno, McDowell, Heintzelman, Fitz|been roquested to testify, I might e s flacnce are corruptly used to |0 be kept up through October, varied a John Porter and others, Gan. Pope [have thrown some light on disputed WRCRINEN] FETTRTE AL Bosloen tuste flagrant political and | 7Y €871y cold and snow falls, Navem. |(Beminisences from the Field by the | o the commanding officer to | questions concerning the transmission e | ) [ dg:lu.,:?slkm'itun‘cu Sl by wle [T R (DNSTAHS PONHGE SUC|werist esherin the winter, and Ven- Bditor of the Umaha Bee.) report. Hedid so giving a full ac-[of telegraphic orders and dispatches, Aroased to THE OMAHA PusLisrina Cow. |6conomic abawes, and that nar-| ;o threatens that it will be & winter —_— count of what we had seen and also|although, of course, I could OMARA. Drafts, Cheoks and Post ohoe Orers to be made payable to the order of the Company, OMAHA PUBLISHING 00., Prop'rs. ROSEWATER. Editor. NOTICE TO NEWSDEALERS. The putlishers of Tun BRn have made srrangements with the American Nows Company o supply News Depota in Illi- mois, Towa, Nebrasks, Wyoming and Utah. All dealers who kesp Tam Darvr Bum on ».le shonld hereafter address their orders to the Manager American News Company, Omaha, Neb, KEEP IT BEFORE THE LEGIS- LA row and arbitrary machine methods have supplanted representative gov- ernment snd flourish in brazen de- fiance of an enlightened pubiio senti- ment, The revolt against bossism is spreading with a rapidity which is significant of the locseness with which parcy lines hold together the mass of voters, In Penusylvania the hostility to the rule of the Camerons has devel- oped into a mighty uprising led by a United States senator and comprising the best blooa of the repubiican party. In New York there ave ominous mutterings of & ocom- likely to be memorable on secount of its exceptionably heavy snow storms and extremely cold weather, The whole northern hemisphere is to be treated to this sort of weather, But Vennor, the ill-omened prophet, is not content to force all these upon 1882, but he must vecds jump still farther into the fature aud prociaim that the present year will only typifly the year which is to follow. He says: ““The approaching season will probably be the first of a couple of wet summers, ;nd. as 1882 i, no in 1883 likefy to 0." CORPORATION ARITHMETIO If the vote of one member of the logialature is worth $5,000 to the mon- On the first day of Jaly, 1862, I entered the city of Washington under orders from Major Eokerts, superin- tendent of the United States military telograph, department of the Potomac, to report for duty at the navy yard, then under command of Admiral Dahl- gren. I had come all the way from West Virginia, where I had aceom- panied General Fremont as army tel- egrapher, through his disastrous cam- paign against Stonewall Jackson, My duties at the navy ysrd were very light and monotonous. I had been down wmouth through the exciting telling that the conductor who was with him reported that about 30,000 men of all arms were at Manassas. General Pope dismissed the officer contemptuously with the remark ‘‘Pshaw, it's nothing but an- other cavalry raid like that at Cat- letts.” About 11 a. m., of the 27th and not at seven as stated by Ropes in his army under Pope, General Hooker's division advanced towards Bristow where they had a brisk fight with Ewell's division,whom they finally dislodged. Now for the first time (General Pope was forced (0 admit that Jackson's whole army had gotten ba- tween him and Washiogton. Had he acted promptly when notified by the military telegraph corps that the rebels not divulge the eontents of dispatches that passed through my hands. Two months ago during my visit to Washington I called upon General Ruggles, Pope’s adjutant general in the Virginia campaign and now assist. ant adjutant general in the war de- partment, and compared notes with him about the campaign. General Ruggles had lived in Omaha a number of years, as adjutant general of the Department of the Platte, but I had never vemtured to question him on this point because I had supposed he was personally too partial to Pope. I found General Ruggles even more decided in opinion than T have been these many years. He said most emphatically that Pope had Prospect Place, A new addition to the city just laidjout into TURE. g aSwm WECGH " SHESRSRN', 00 | oty oW mbst walll 54 S0kt ¢0 pre- | soenes of the opening drama of the | were coming into Manassas he could [lost his hesd and all was Shish o Nintates wreck the machine politicians of both vent the ennctment of measures de-|rebellion, and my ective temperament | have prevented Longstraet from mak- | confusion and disorder during the two Borras Oo, '} parties, while in half & score of other |, . Hakk demanded more stirring work than|inz A junction with Jackson's army | days and fiurthermore that Fitz John 9 . fining and prohibiting _exvessive| .1 b had in the sending and re- |which might have been defeated and 1, J. C. Robberts, on my oath say, that T make the following statement of facts upon my most molemn oath, God almighty bearing me witnesa that the same ia true, as follows to- wit: When 1 was in the legislature of Nobraska s member of the 16th ses- sion, from the blst district, E. 0. Oarnes, at the time the lieutenant governor of the state came to me and told me that John M. Thurston sent him.to me with the proposition that if 1 would turn in and help the railroad companies and use my influence and power as a legislator and member of the railroad committee that he, through and for said companies, would give me 5,000 (five thousand states the signs of the times point to & coming movement of the indepen- onts which will disregard all party platforms and base its hopos of success on honest methods in politics operat- ing through the free and unrestrained voice of the people, The issue between the people and the bosses is forcing itaelf upon the voters of Nobraska. There is a grow- ing feeling throughout the state that popular sentiment upon questions of #}je policy has been suppressed long. u-g‘n, and that the time is nearly at hand for the overthrow of the corrapt and unrepublican methods which have been used for years past to register the decreen of the monopolies and fill our offices with the hired tools ohargos on the railroads in Nebraska? An attorney and a lieutenant-gov- ernor and a member of the house of representatives combine to bribe an tuflueutial member of the legislature, Given the amount of sanctimonious cheek of the attorney, the bragen au- dacity of the member, required the sum necessary to induce the lieuten- ant governor to violate his oath and prove traitor to his trust. Two railroads desire to combine to provent obstructive legislation and contribute ¥ a common fund to be dia- tributed judiciously among legislators for a purpose. What is the propor- tionate sum which each ought to pay towards a bribe of §5,000 offered to ceiving of dispatches betwean the navy department and the aimiral's head- quarters. Just then all Washington was agog over the advent of ‘‘the great warrior from the west,” who had whipped Beauregard near Corinth, and boasted that é!(ze hadnearly bagged the whole southwestern rebel army. A new department had been created for him and a magnifieently eqnipped and disciplined army of nearly 50,000 men was placed at his disposal. He assumed eommand with a bombastic proclamation announcing his determi. nation to move on to Richmond by the shortest route, and promised to keep his headquartors in the saddle until the econfederate capital had oapitulated. I was anxions to be a personal witness of the fall of Rich- mond, and applied at the war office to :& detatled to accompany Genemal 'ope. captured. Pope's dilatory and vaeil- aling movements gave Jackson a chance to take up a ecommanding po- sition, destroy $2 000,000 worth of stores after supplying his hungry and ragged confed’s with provisions, clothes and munitions. On the 27th Fitz John Porter was direoted to start at 1 o'clock the next morning from Warrenton Junction to be at Bristow at daylight. Gen. Porter, however, did not move forward until daylight on the morning of the 28th, and his failure to obey the order strictly is the only foundation which Gen. Pope had for having him court-martialed Gen. Porter gives as his reason for not marching at 1 o'clock as he was directed, that it was a very dark night and it would have been impos- sible, owing to the poor roads and their obstruction by immense wagon trains, to move his army forward dur- Portor was utterly blameless of the charge that had been laid against him. He had exereised the discretion that others had exercised at the same time and at one or two points actually checked the advance of the rebels and saved a large portion of the army. In conversation with President Arthur on the same subject during my stay at Washington, the president said that General Rugglea had told him pretty much the same thing nearly four years before, 8o that the change of views recently expressed by Grant does not wntirely influence the pre: dent, who seems to have taken an in- terest in the Porter case years before he had any thought of exercising any authority in the matter. I have been a republican since that party nominated General Fremont as its atandard bearer on the free soil platform, but T am firmly convinced by personal observation that General BEAUTIFUL 0TS, s 200 | tried and insisted |of the corporations. Eyery coun- : o n the 24th of July.l was ordered [ing the might without scattering| Pope himself is largely, if not wholly ::I i) d ;I:::‘:::h:;: m:" 0 t:.aith- ty in Nebraska has felt the 3 m'"rm'.m e :ornmmeo ifa %o report to the general at Warrenton, | them. ~This is literally true. I passed ruzon;nhh; for che disaster that over- To ere an L e o iy infasnoss B roads for hlwlence' which point 1 reached a few days be. [ $1rough that wagon train on horse- | took his army at the second battle of ec Thurston or Church Howes' room U fore the battle of Cedar Mountain, I [back the same day on which Gen. Por- [ Bull Run. It wasa serious blunder aund get part of said money. I also state upon my oath that I refused to ®o to snid room and refased to take said money or any part railroad ring. Caucuses have been packed, conventions maniupulated, and ballot boxes stuffed by the hire- lings of the monopolies, Our legis- THE LAW ON BRIBERY. The statutes of this state provide for the punishment of bribers and bribe takers in the following language, which can be found in sections 176 accompanied the general to the Rapi- dan and was with him on that brilliant retreat from the Rapidan to the Rap- pibanock,iu which the whole army tell back tweuty miles in one night, tak- ter marched forward, and it took me more than six hours to make my way through. As far as the eye could reach the country was covered with wagons; the wagon masters and team- on ons side and good generalship on the other. Had Pope acted promptly when firat notified that the rebels were in his rear at Manassas he could have ained nearly a whole day, and headed sS2 OO thereof, and that he (Carnes)|lature has been debauched by their e ing with itsafely all its supplies, bag- | sters, terror-stricken over the move- [ Stonewall Jackson off with a fair pros- #aid to me that if T refused to take it |8ttorneys. The state capitol has been [ and 176 of the criminal code, page gege, and several wounded men |ments of Stonewall Jackson. who waa | pect of whipping him and eapturing i Iwou'd slways regret it, for that filled with their creatures, Every ave. [ 693 of the compiled statutes of Ne-|who were in the L hospital | now :ntyeetn them nn;l t:n;r “mlyi' his ulgyA flTu dispatch infantry ] 4 throw, " th bl braska: at Culpeper. After the army were trylng to pass each other, yell- [ mounted on at ars Ol & reconnois- when I went home I would be abused :::wn::h{h',::l:;snz:;l:‘lll ‘:; :“::‘: Sk0. 176.—1¢ any person shall di-|h#d fallen back, Gen. Pope was|ing, cursing, howling liks demons and | sance is the height of imbecility, es- EACEKL by the ragged asses anyway, and_that if I accepted it I cculd let them go, and be independent, and have s nice of an honest and eflicient governwent has been blocked by monopoly influ- rectly or indirectly give any sum or sums of money, or any other bribe, present or rewsrd, or any prom- reinforced by four divisions, number- ing some 25,000 men, who had been detached from General McCOlellan’s army on the Peninsula. These troops blockading the roads in their mad haste. It was a perfect babel of con- fusion. It would have been utterly impossible for any large body of peoially if ha/believed they were to check a cavalry raid. Every subse- quent maneuvre made the first blun- der worse, and the end was only the home and be well fixed. ence or closed by sorporation bribes. |ise, contract, obligation or securi- ARy 3 X hei 4 A had y way of Fredricksburg|troops to make their way | outcome of an ill considered and poor- ) I alno swear that I never accepted 'I?h“ press hasbeen oajoled with EUId‘ or z(‘m"y‘" "::‘I:" m?.’r::::d- 0for ::’ and among them ,’mmghg divisions of | through thousands of teams on|ly conducted campaign, for which| Located on Hamllton. one dollar from any source, or in any |#ilenced with threats. Men of rising 2P ! % | Generals Hooker, Kearney, Morrell, |that ~very dark night without | Fitz John Porter was made the scape way from any railroad company since I was elected, or in my whole life, ex- cept a fee of $5.00 (ive dullars) that was paid the Robberts & Steele law firm in 1877 for legal services rendered them, and that I never received any favor from any railroad company, ex- ecpt 8 traveling pass for myself and 80 help me God. J. 0. Ropnarrs, Subscribed in my presence and ewora to before me, this February 427th, 1882, L. G. Berorow, Notary Publie. - The people of Nebraska demand from the legislature now in sesson a viadication of its own integrity. They demand that the senate shall tufilot the wite. influence have been purchased with favors or drawn into the employ of the railroads. Merchants have been bulldozed into inactivity, while whole communities have been virtually disfranchised by meuns of political methods which would have disgraced a South Oarolina election. No town or village has been too small to escape the blighting politi* eal methods of the monopolies. No man of local influence but has beon forced to meot their corrupting advances. . With a political machine, bwckad by enormous wealth, wrung from the producers of the west, and supperted by conscienceless managers, our party organizations have been cap- other thing $o any judge, justice of the peace, sheriff, corener, clerk, con- stable, jailer, prosecuting attoruey, member of the legslative assembly, or other officer, either ministerial or ju- dicial, but such fees as are allowed by law, with intent to induce or influence such oflicer t> appoint or vote for any person for office, or to exscute any of the powers in him vested, or parform any duty of him required with par- tiality or favor or otherwise than is required by law, or in consideration that such officer hath appointed or voted for auy person for oftice or exercined any power in him, vested or performed any duty of him re- quired, with partiality or favor, or otherwise sontrary to law, the person 80 giving, and the officer 8o receiving any money bribe, present, rew: promise, contract, obligatien, or ourity, with iutent or for the pur- Bikes and Fits John Porter. A few days before General Pope had taken up his headquarters at Warrenton Junction, where he was when Jackson made his famous raid, Jeb Stuart made a dash with his Black Horse cavalry and captured a number of ataff officers and all the staff baggage at Caulett’s Station. Unfertunately my bagaage went with the restand with it a diary of the details of the campaign up to that time, which contained some interesting reminiscences. On the 26th of Auguat, while Gen- eral Pope was at Warrenton Janction, planaing a battle with Lue, which was to be fought on the plains near War- renton, the telegraph operator at Manassas announced that a large body of rebel troops was coming in and he would soon be obliged to de- camp. I was at the Instrument when breaking ranks ard scattering along in every direction, and there is no doubt that Gen. Porter made a great deal better time by atarting at day- light than by attempting to march at one o'clock. Cn the evening of the 28th the army fought what was known as the battle of Guinsville, in which several divis- ions on each side were engagea with no very great success. During this battle General King and General Ricketts, two commanders of divis- ions, who were posted in the neigh- borhood of Thoroughfare Gap, with the view of keeping Longstreet out, retreated abruptly from their positions and left the Gsp uncovered. This blander enabled Lee's army to make » junction with Jackson oa the next day, and made Pope’s defeat on the two suoceeding days almost a certain: goat. E. ROSEWATER. Found at Last ‘What every one khould huve, and never be without, is THoMAs' EcLreTRIC O1L. It is thorough and_safe in iw effects, pro- ducing the most wondrous cures of rheu- matim. neuralgia, burns, bruises, and wounds of every kind. ml3dlw PROPOSALS FOR 7 CONSTRUCTION OF SEWERS, orvi oromoumE ) Oxali, May 4th 1582, Sealed proposals wili be recolved at th- offies of the undersigned until Tucsduy, May 16th ad 7;30 o'cloak p m. for the coustruction of sewers in Nor$n ( maha ws follows: 1000 feet more or Loss of 8} foos brick ewer 3 rings thick, 750 faet worn or low of b fert brics as- or 3 rings thick aud 760 teed morv or less uf b3 foos brick sewer § singa thick, located on Izard sircet bebween 1568 and 176k strect, and on 1758 sirost setwoen Isard srd Ni bola $wesn 17th and_31ed Decessary man holes, Iswp boles, catch basina, pips connectlons, pillog concrem and uiber work Charles, and S8eward Sts., and also on 29th, 30th, 31st and 32nd strests. Only 5 or 6 blocks west of the turn-table of the Bed Street Car Line, on Saunders Street, and just west of and adjoining Shinn’s additions. toh i ty. King and Ricketts, who were |as per plans sn icatior.s in the Clty Ras. ssvereat penalty under its authority |tured by the railroad ringsters who gou;ur :mfitnfl‘or‘n’ r?ll;:"“‘dti lll::ll{ ::lo.n dis 1545 t'h:. "::"‘"d “".':': ;mlnly more culpable thaa Porter Mee. ate to be made monthly upon the presiding officer, who has|have suppressed public sentiment b: “'fl‘ Y '5' b’ o . Ty -flhl the | OPen"~that s, the circuit was broken | ould have been, sat on the courtjmar- o of work, . acted as the pald tool and corrup- |through the platforms, and foroed dis- p.m::.:'u'. not' ;:):: ‘"h'lm::;. yu: and commwunication with Washington | tial which tried and cashiered Porter. ,.,.',.:".".' e oul‘ Wn ems, i touist of the corporations, violated |reputable nominess down the throats | nor more that five years. out off. Up to this time we had su General Pope is eminently a man of o {orniabed by the City Englorer, acoom- i posed that the body of Longstreet’s | great promises, and althoagh his army | panie with the slenatares of propoved sure'ies, ¥ his sacred trust and has used his high | of the poople. 830. 176.—Every person who shall and Juikson's o8 were in ouy|Wae badly disorganised, and there was | Faarasiceing that $hey will, with se pmm | offioe as & means for debauching the| It is high time $hat halt should be °""“. ‘l"""‘l" to bribe “:’ member | =\ only 0 other side of the Rappa. | really no order in anything during Gyt t:l’:: o Tt ome e sworn _representatives of the people | eried on behalf of the people of Ne- ;““0: o,"‘l;:“;::“:;:i 'wj";:E:: haouock, A constant artillery bom- | that eventfal umchnn, yob I‘:ip. was ::':; A ;x“:.':,v ] :lfonlum aud eom- of this state. There must be no eva- (braska to these politioal railroad | clerk constable, jailer, pmoe::ntlflfl at- :'dm”::‘:.?hb“n k; t';o;m? .:. 3‘::2:;:' u:zhd“ 1 .nm::a“bur m '-’?e::“u".::."‘u" h:(.l';w:l"flr befcre Juoe 1Mk siou or shirking on the part of the [ bosses, If honest govenment cannot |torney, or other ministesal or judioial | FiYeF an e nelghbor! of the ) 1833 Ak bids 80 bo rwrthor logialature. The house of represent. atives owes it to itself to purge ltselt: of & member who is proved to ha been a prime factor in this infamous couspiracy ageinat the people of Ne- brasks, and who through his entire politioal course has been a consistent eapper of the corporations, 'B'NoUTRAl solernly declares John M. Thurston, who thinks his #potioss charactor as a parliamentary attorney ought to be proof against be secured within party lines be- eause y, machinery /s completely under the éontrol cf the monopolies some other method for thepolitical en- franchisement of the state must be adopted. A fair vote and a free bal- lot are demanded by the voters of the state and will be seoured. Profuse platform protessions mean nothing, Onndldates with records are needed, aod if such candidatos ocannot be placed In regnlar nomination by rea- officer, in any of the cases mentioned in the last preseding section, and overy momber of the lagialative as- sembly, judge, justice of the sheriff, coroner, clerk, constable, jailes, proseeating attorney,or otherminister- ial or jadicial officer, whe shall propose or agree o recelve a bribe in any of the cases mentioned in the said pre- oeding sectlon, shall be fined in a sum not exceeding five hundred dollars, nor less than three hundred dollars. This lsw is now hanging over the head of K. O. Carns, who has been forced by the exposurce of Tus Bae fords and the fimpression was that while McClellan was evacuating the Poninauls, Lee's whole army was pushing forwasd and trying to cross ’|the river that separated us and to (omnnanrgomant before MoClellsn's army ocould make a janoilon with Pope. It was alittle after noon of the 26th when General Pope was noti- fied through an orderly that the enemy was ooming in at Manassas, and that we were out off from oommunication with Washington. Abont 8 o'elock that evenivg Col. SBmith ef Pope's staf came into the office to inquire whether the line was ssill open, and dispatch we transmitted to Washington the night before the second battle of Bull Run, {o which he said he was sure of bagging the whole army. My own impression at the time avas that we were on a wild goose chaan, ing from one corner of the Manassas battle gromnd withont any defioite object, and Adjutant General Ruggles, throogh whom the orders were isened, was as ignorant of what was coming next or any plan of sction as I was when telegraphing the dispatches from Manassss. Daring the two suo ceeding days, the 29:h aud 30th of Avugast, the second battle of Bull |, secoptaice of bid and $0 the sucessstul bidder he fulfllment of she conditiens above ified, ethozwiss Lo be forfeited and placed to creclt of thesewsr rucmericall—. The eV by resers es tha rigbt b rejoet any or all bf making of the cont J J.L C.IEWETT, City Clork. PROPOSALS FOR GRADING CURBING AND GUTTERING. ropreals will,be recalved af ke effice 41 8 o'clock p. ., of Tues 54, for gradl g of Har- o ¥4 abrech Lo the & parate bids for atroed from the n iréh lime of mdto1s ONLY i orocurt il s part of ke abore work {a the 5 PER 'GE"T nnw"' AND \ i son of corrupt monopeiy obstroction when 1 answered yos he said, |Rua was fought, I had ostablished a wuch outrageovs charges. the peeple will find meanus to o to demand an {nvestlgation of bis W, 1 v tfl send uul‘ tewmporal telegraph office at Mun- | RS Liny :‘.ln-?g::;-‘.:::“n:;::&ur-;:.' (] peapl seour o shall have porary (4 per p) opoc ity ; their services through othor ohannels, | 014 80d sudaclous veuality on behalf |y “rusonnoisanco to-ulght towards [sssas, and from thero all the dis. | gioesrsoiics; ais cepsrate bide for tae ourblag 5 PER CENT PER MONTH 5 Tuns Massachusetts houss of repre- “|of the railroad monopolies of this| Mansssas to see what's the | patches mh Wuhingm: wore :r;:m Fm*,‘;;;'; g:"r"g,.' e bekneeo due | i ¥ . 1 " o difio ill have to ac- | mitted. There were thres members |[: sie Oiby Engin Al blde to be ac- sabs ves b ‘fuudu bill to prevens| w0 out with & doleful pre- state. There ought to bun{ diffioulty umlLur'nnc‘l‘uu.;f’.yli: ;v‘ L4 &'v‘:a“o b |of the military telozraph corps on the | compsuled by e \res of proposcd sure- [ disorimination in freight rates on rail- : in securing its prowpt application to[COWpsny. it aud telegrap My 9! Nichol o8 who {u $he oveus of the awardia A diction for the weather for the balance | 5 find out.” It was nearly midnight |ground, myself, J. H. Nichols, now |8 5% tr (00 Voade wit rcads And this s fu the home of | " " yoar. Laat year the orops wero | I8 90FFapt tool of the corporations| uhon T 'was ordered to uccompany a & real estate dealer st Denver and | in oo 4 of $1000 00 grad Call and get Plats CUharles Francis Adam ' who has prostituted his ofice to de- | u 1 inf; beri! bout | Edward Conway, who died near Salt [ o1 curblug and gutterisy cout shorted by 1 I i P reglnent of infantry numbering abou » g The clby exprosaly reserves A ALl ghatiad G long dmvumm_ul PATShing | o oh oue loglelature and shapo the | 400 men that bad beon deailed to re: | Lake somo years ago. Conwsy and |as sessl il i and Full Particulars, Music fostivals are quite in ordor [ 0245 A now Venuor, wa i hel G0N Up to that dey railroad | Nichols did 'w great desl of foraging, | " = - 9. L.G.JRWETE ; J oy e RS T R wanted to breed a fawine, or koep up el it N, ion had been uninterrupt- [snd left mo to do most <:l St Dby AnA Nohaaika's stote” cavital h prices, comos forward to injure| Tz bill to make the department|ed betweon Washington aud War- | the work so that nearly evory d‘“l"f“i" NOTICE TO CONTRACOTORS. | i . fumich penth SAENS Bifiose of tho pressnt year with storms, | of sgricultura an executive depart.| Fenton Junotion, but-on that day no | that was sent by Popo. from tho feld roporals for the krading of the noréh 1€ promises to furvish sowe first-class 1y 3 ¥ train had arrived and the repor: |passed through wy hauds. These o sircet kh %0 148D streens g tion wusio during the prosent and oold, and frost. Luot year tho [ment and to chsage tho tilo of . the reached headquarters that the trains | dispatches were first exultant over a A — — ¢ of the legislature, eountry had not rsin enough, and now, | commissioner to secretary of agricul- | o i been fired into and ditched slong | tremendous victory and finally made fous may b sseh, Kach b — if any faith is to be put in this weather | ture has passed the house of repre- | the road. The troops ordered upon | reluctant admission ‘(hlt dym vllv.ro s Al .."I 00 :'(".I:..d_h' i Tux Chicego Tribune calls atten- |soor, the country is to bo doluged with | sentatives, Thesenate ought promptly | this midnight reconnoisauce was the badir. Deaien.. ,,'f,',‘,‘,’ aont out f b box | B onisr of tne Counky Comunial R, p ¥iou to the ncreass of political assas- | water. He makes no loss than five [to sit down on this echeme, whose :u;:::i,y,}l‘,‘,;rdb N".'z“{.kiu"‘izfi“if:i :n:'e; {.I:m'i. on the track two miles " Ll County Clerk - o " . -y L u wization within the past twonty.five | prodiotions eoncerning the wuw-|object s to provido w few more| S mat upor. the only train thon at|above Manassns station. All that I » Jgarm el claun that ainco tho Or-|imor and - autuan of 1882, all|offioes and dditional and uncalled for | Waronton Junotion, comsstiog of W and heard then and thero eon- CHOICE CICARS. [ ] alui bty xploded undor the car-lof which ho doubtless expeots | patro The business of the de- | four fat and two box csrs. It wasone |vinced me that Pope had mades| yo 000600 and Domestio. skl risgo pleon TIL twonty-five [lo seo sccomplished, The summer | partment of sgriculture is in no sense | ©'¢10ck 8. m., of tha 27th before we |series of blunders ']'”hv,-}’“{"gm ‘:L’ Finest Selsctiun in Town ——— Ko . plished, CR er | pa b agl ) 4 1 tartod. he night was pitch |aster upon our army. hat was the Prices to Suit Everybod i years cfiggo Aucrican prosidonts, a |ia to vary fromeool to cold, and will | executive, 1t consists chiefly in the |50, *terted: - Tho ik compellod o | opinion of some of the best ofloers on | From Half a Dollar Down to Bo. 1 Russis, ¢ *oruvian president, o [be generally wet. There may be a | gathering aund disseminating of infor- | move ver ly i tary ex-[the ground at the time, was or- ’ i s ) @ g and o . y slowly in momentary ex ground ] B Spanish di Genoral Prim —and | fow period of intenso eat, but those | mation, and in supplying the constitu- | peotation of being fired into and | dorgd back to the war dopartument on Schroter & Becht's, i two Rritish cabinet officera have beon { are to form excoptions to the genoral | e1ts of congressmen with fancy gar . | ditehod. Holore Saylight mo roached Aap bk, oL BOPLAIRR AGKE 0 _RE: E. D. McLAUGHLIN, 571 + | yoss J o hbos e bridge C g 'y - 0 ! murdered 1n cold blood, every other |rulo. The scason will be marked by [den seeds, and the presidential man- :‘!:,.‘, “wl‘;:li-'t:l‘ lm‘!‘iun, wlugh Fitz John Porter's court-martial 1 ATTORNEY - AT - LAW BIEall Ebtflwe Agflm}y, i European sovervign shot at at loast | great precipitation and a wugginess of | sion with cut flowers, Tt ought to re. vy found on fire. A | was prosent every day. Much of the T4 I once, Bweden oxceptod, to sy uoth- | atmosphero. ‘This last will be caused [msin just where it is as 8 fancy ap | great firo was also raging at Manassas, igatimony given Hisre. WA vindistive And Notary Fublin i ing of & eultan of Turkey and a by the reeking condition of tho earth | pendage to the g vernment, useful in '“";'""""'l"r ‘h'u"“fulr:;mi‘,ffi:":.'},l :)I‘l., .)‘g:.:er 1'};3'; u;nt‘ma out un-hv; \’ P. ENGL|SH» | viceroy of Lidia, both of which wore | nad the long continuance of clouded | many respects, but by no means noc. | WAd0 88 B o t% | miduight reconnoissance, tostifiad that ATTORNEY- AT --LAW. is comunition whore sasassination is | sky. The result will be extrowo sultri- | sssary to the constitutional ecops and | youse the oporator. At dawn a bat- [ he delivered one of the orders uld:;npu 81 Fouth Thirteeuth 8t., with ; I15TH & DDUGI.AS $TS Greommon, ness, heavy weather, and thunder and | functions of the government, 'ury of rebel artillery came wn sight | to Gen, Porter, whom he regar: at " e | \ | ! I} ! ] i i : . ! !