Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 8, 1883, Page 4

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4 The Omaha Bee. Poblished evory morning, except Sune ar. The anly Mooday moraing dally, TERMS BY MAIL~ ©ne Year,...$10,00 | Three Months, 83,00 @ix Months,, 5,00 | One Month.... 1.00 ¢HE WEEKLY BEE, published overy Welneaday. TERMS POST PAID— One Year....,.$2.00 | Three Months, 50 §ix Month 1.00 | One Month.... 20 Axrricas Nxws Oompaxy, Sole Agents Newsdealers in the United States, OORRESPONDENCE -All Qommuni. oatfons relsting to News and Editorial «atters should !n addressed to the Eprros or Trx Bz, BUSINESS LETTERS—AU Business Ketters and Remittances should be ad dressed to THE BEk PUBLISHING COMPARY JMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Postoffice Orders to be made payable to the order of the Comipany, Tho BEE PUBLISHING 0., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor Axv still no news from Crook, SeriNe {8 now struggling to catch ap with summer, and the last persons to complain will be our farmers, GEEse——— Wirx summer weather the commer- clal travellers are flocking to our hotels which are orowded from cellar 4o attlo, Tax clty * attorney’s opinion on the paving question is exclting a grest deal of comment and {s generally recelved awrith favor. e—— M=, Carxy, the Informer, has been ordered into oxile. The climate of the Uhited States might prove unhealthy to his delloate constitution, AxormEr newspaper man, Col, John Hay, recelves a bequest of $100,000 from the estate of his father-ln-law, Amasa Stone, while his wife will fail heir to a trifle over $5,000,000. Every ocongressman, just now, is enthusivstic ever the prospects of olvil sorvice reform in every distriot but his own. At home he Is in favor of a Iib- eral {nterprotation of ite prinoiplos, CaALIPORNIA I8 about to prosecute its ralway commission - for selling out to the corporations, The sins of com- misslon on the Pacific alope ought to lead to their smission elsewhere. EEES——— BeNaToR VAN WK fails to see the mecossity of four post roads toDead- wood when three have hsrd work to find enough mall to oarry. That Is whore Senater Manderson and Mr, Walentine seem to disagree with him, EE——— Iae United Presbytcrlans ars no Tlonger unlted on the question of pro- hibiting instrumental muelo in the ohurches and a strong effort was made to forbid the uubiblical organ in the sanctuary, No move was, however, made to abolish the collection plate. Towa democrats have convened and adjourned after adopting the usual platform which® means anything and ovurgthing. J. Sterling Morton turaed up present with hss Inevitable #pucch on the tarlff and Judge Kiune 'was nominated for governor on the Tiest formal ballot, Mrs MeiiEEAM, grandmother of Thomas Jeffarson, to relieve whose destitntion an appeal was made to the «democracy some months ago, has re- celved $420, $200 of which came from Mr. Tilden, The memory of Thomas Jefterson Is valued at less than $500 by his degenerate polltioal descend- ante, S — BroxeTARY TELLER has been warned by Representatives Cobb, Dunm and Roseorans against any issuance of ser- 1:fizates to the Southern Pacifio rail- road company for lands granted to the T xsas & Paclfic road. A ocongross: ‘man's warnieg rarely welghs down the beam as agalnst the seductive smiles of a rallroad lobbyist. E— AnD now lot the pther departments Tollow the example of Mr. Gresham In forbldding offiolal absenteelsm. It is high time that the government should be run by the heads of bureaus and departments, and not by assistants and deputies. For months at a time, the government s practically allowed to ran {teslt, EE— Tuz Christian Boldier comes to the ront with an oplnlon about Gan, Crook’s Indlan campaign. ‘I think,” says Gen Oliver S‘Hunrd. ‘‘as he would think of f I was in his place and he In mine, that he will ot Judiclously.” There can be no doubt that if the cautious pursuer of Chief Joseph was now in Gen. Orook's place very llttle apprehension would be felt reesrding his safety, — New York Sun' What does the Sun mean? Does it mean to charge General Howard was lax in a stern chase which 1s justly re- garded as In many respects the most remarkable Indlan pursuit on record? Or does the editor lmply that General Howard lsacoward, It the latter, he Is the first man who has ever read his. tory who has veuntured the oplnion, Whatever the pecaliarities of the pres- «nt commander of the department of the Platte, he is a brave man from #ole to crown, Buoh * flings as the above are no less unkind than they are undeserved by the ‘‘Chbristian Sol- dor,’ THE OMAH A DAILY BLE~FR l)AYJUNEAB 1883, UNEQUAL AKSESSMENTS, It would be a month's solld work to dig out of the assessors books all the iustances of unequal asscesments in Douglas connty, Nothing more than & hasty glance Is needed to convines any oltizen of the careleasices or crim- inality of the sssessors in making up thelr lists of the real estato valuation, Every charge made by Tux Bex s sustalned by the rccords, The same names which last year appeared npon the rolls as heavy tax shirkers are down once more in black and white as Orcharding has baen tried and deter- miced, 1 buve not seen a crop of whea? of twenty five bushels per acre, have acked old sottlors, aud they have not, Lot year tho department of agricalt. ure made the returns for this county at fourteon bushels, This wae rather light, but the crop was the bess in five years, Forty bushels of oats and thirty five of corn are good crope, and it takes five acres of pralrle charters for the fixlog of fares and freights conld be properly constrned ouly ns one to bs exercised andor the wovercign power of the atate. Other- wise the community would be in the anomalons position of subjectlon to two sovereigntles, the atate a~d thr oorporat! There s ono thing the roverelgn state cannot do, and _that s to create another sovere'g: The sonce of the power of the s it 18 indlvisible. It may be delegated 4 " for & time, but it can never be pnt be- | to pastare a steer through the sum- of runnlng the opera howse will not yond the reach of recall, L4 mer, Flax s onr main market crop, bankrapt the concern, especially In "y, s, bytantially this broad ground | and is faet ruluing lands devoted to view of the fact that every year as our | that the supreme court Las taken. The|it. Many who undertook sheep farm- of any ordinary man. His opera house is self-sustaining, and our olty must deal with thin question parely from a business siandpolnt. The Republican threatena for Me, Boyd that he will clore his opera house if this ordluance passcs, Mr. Boyd will do no such thing. He wiil not cut off his nose to spite his face. One hun- dred dollars o year added to the cost H. WESTERMANN & CO., IMPORTIRS OF QUEENSWARE, China and Glass, 608 WASHINGTON AND 609 ST. CHARLES ST. ovading a falr ascesement. Private corporations, whose property foots up in%o the hundreds of thousands, are agaln assessed at rates varylng from one-sixth to one-tenth of what our smaller property owners are paying. The water works company, which clalm an investment of $350,000 in this clty, is listed at $34,000. The as- sossment of the ges company Is pro- portiopately emall, The banks are rated low enough, bat they are clam. oring for an entire cxemptlon of their real estate from taxatlon on the ground that the value is partly ropresented by their capltal stock which is taxed. Elevators and smelt ing works and nall works are all down at figures way below what they ought to be, while the opera house whioh, with the ground upon which it stands, could readily be sold for $160,000, is astessed for taxation at the ridicalous- ly small sum of $25,000. If we turn to the property of wealthy land own. ers the inequalities and discrimina- tlons are even moro flagrant. The aszensor of the first ward ls elthor too ignorant to perform his datles proper. ly or else he is too corrupt. In spite of the known fact that real estate In South Omaha has Inoreased on an av- orage thirty-three per cent during the past year, the llats of that ward are almost & transcript of last year's assessmont, Property that is hold.at from $700 to $1,000 a lot 1s arsessed at from $260 to $800 an acre, while lots owned by men of small or moder- ato moans are llsted at from one-third to one-fourth of their market value, In the second ward there Is a larger increase in the assessment than was ot first stated, but when it is = oconsldered that all that portion of the S8ccond ward that lles near the park has doubled in value within the past twe years, and that fally two hundred houses have been ballt inside of the same perlod, the additions to the list are trifiing. An Interesting feature of the present assessment is the fact that eight oliy blocks, occupled by the Burlington & Missourl rafllway for thelr depot grounds, entlrely esoape local taxa- tion, Meantime the board of commis- sioners, who are sltting as a board of equalization, express themselves as well satisfied with the assessment, and are rather astoulshed that any one should take the trouble to oritl- olzo It. We are very much mistaken if the critiolsm of our oltizens, to whom the tax shirking of the wealthy property owners means increased tax- atlon for themselves, wlil not make it- selt felt in & more eff:ctive way than through complalnts In the papers, S LICENSING SHOWS. The ordinance introduced by Coun- cllman McGuckin to ralse the lcense on clrouses and ahows that exhibit In Omaha is in the Interest of sound pub- llo policy. Mr. MoGuokin at first only desired an ordinance drawn that would charge each olrous exhibition within our oity limits $500, but Olty Attorney Oonnell found on examining the existing ordinance regulating shews and theatres that It needed thorough revision. He therefore drew an ordinance oovering the whole wubject. At pres- ent Omaha only derives $100 license fee from olrouses. It is notorl- ous that Omaha is the best clrons town on the Missourl river,'and fow of them have loft here with less than $10,000 of the people’s money. Is it unreasonable to ask that our ofty should make them leave at least $5001 Robinson’s suide show that exhibited here last month paid $300 for showing at Oouncll Bluffs, and they could have well afforded to have pald $200 more in Omaha' The hue and ory that these olrouses will exhibit out of the olty limits is absurd. If they do, their recelpta for night shows will fall off about two-thirds. Few people will ventare out to the state falr grounds with women and ohildren on o dark night. The state falr mana- gers made @ fallure of night exhibi- tlous, and Buffalo Bill had thy same experlence with a better attractlon. Bat even 1f some clrouses did go out of the clty limits and cut down the re- ceipts we can afford to etand 1t. The trades people will have just so much more money circulating among them, And now a word about the theatres, As we understand 1t the new ordl- nance slmply tollows the old except as it ralses the annual theatre license from $100 to $200. The llcense population growa his income from his [ court says that the power given to the [ ing have given it up. Oattle busi- theatre will increase rallroads to determine thelr rates is to | neas is the most prcfitable business at be interpreted as sabject to the clear— | prosent, and the men who run the ly eatablished power of the etate to fix | threshing machines grow poor at it. Tar fillog of artioles of lacorpora- [ them {f it mo derires. ‘‘The charter ‘There s & heavy immigration to tlon for the Omaha & Northern rail- mnnlllmhcrlnnmed in the light of this th]l- ‘tnrrlté.;‘y, d muohslof hdhn . | establiched power.” o laad-grabbing nature, x months’ road is the first indloation of & genn- | Ty Uil ion of the publls with |fistitions residence, then prove wp, ine move on the part of several of | thiy viotorlous ondivg of the lopg|morigaga or scll or $300 to §600, thor our ocilizens toward conneciing this|straggle between thom and the cor. |leave Dakota or repe: game, mak- clty with northern Nebraska, We|porations will be very great. The|lug a net gain of perha 200 for the have no doubt a line from Omsha up feeling of popular rellef will be hight- | eix months, isthe programme by thous “ ened by tho recollection of the appre-|ands. And many an honest pioneer the Eikhorn Valley will be a good In- | honslon that the supreme court, since | taken his claim, toils to make a home, vestment for owners If 15 1s honestly | its re-organization, could not be looked | and in & year or so finds himaeif al and economically oconstracted and|Bpon as an anti-corporation bench. | most fsolated from nelghbors and de erated It will bo a paylng in. | Lho fear was widely expressed that |barred from the blessings of rocietyf e & peyiag the Granger cases were about to be| ‘‘If grasshoppers,jorafeilure of crop vestment for Omsha from the day overthrown, all that had been |oocur this year, there will be a bigger on which it is opened. At present|gained by years of ¢ffurt in the atrug. | stampede than followed Moscs of old. our merchants are almost ss much gle ro restraln corporate p‘:wer would| ‘‘Any ;)ne lnlu:‘c:h;g to come w;.)m 9 lost. But the reverse has happen- a territory ought to be prepared to skt el 'm.m FWERIS oL nopilisen ed. The court has rlveted all u.p; accept the regular hardships of pic— Nobraske as if they livedin another | o iong fn favor of the power of the |neor life. Don't bulld your hopes on state, and the poople of tho upper|state to regulate, and has olosed the | enormous crops, Bvery dollar you countles often flad it easlor to|last loophole of escape for the corpora- | earn here is well earned. The buslest transace thelr business with Chlcago | 1008 from submitting to the exercise | man In South Dakosa is Shylock. His B0 of this power, It may be reasonably |grip 18 on some guarter or wore of | ST. LOUIS, - . - bt < it . b h:"‘“l"h‘“ to place thelr orders in hoped now chat the San Mateo case, | nearly every seoiion, and five years + this clty. road to the north will fill & long-felt 8t. Louis, Mo. may 22.3m DRY GOODS SAM’L C. DAVIS & CO,, Washington Avenue and Fifth Street, | NEBRASKA, - STEELE, JJHNSON & ©0., WHOLESALE GROCERS AND JOBBERS IN Flour, 8alt, Sugars, Canned Coods, anr All Grecers’ Supplies. - A Full Line of the Best Brands of (IGARS AND MANUFAGTURED TOBAGCO, Agonts for BENWOOD RAILS AND LAFLK & RAND POWDER 60 e ee— M. Hellman & Co. The Impoztance of the declslon ren. | tion business beenoverworked, the | Special Dispatch to Tun Bua. WHOLESALE dered Monday by the United States | excitement is over, and now comes CiNCINNATI, Ju t G the rela) Dakota is no doubt a |national Typographioal Unfon to-day e ;?::l‘m R.IIZOKT:I ‘:‘.:rn.lt T:.‘”Ol:l.::y:f good pln‘:.‘ for wheat-growing pur |8dopted a resolution requiring sub ‘Burlington and Qainoy rallroad of | poses, and is just the s]na or the | lists to be aholished in all unfon this state oan hardly be overestimated, | poor forelgner from Sweden or Nor. |offices by September 1st next. The 3 way, or other ol n Eo- |effeot of this is that an ni E.?;.’L’:“‘m?fi" m‘l'o:. ‘1:‘;::{:03 ro.fi'o, to‘::,ulemln', bl:s :g:n:ru'n:nf “ls | printer may bo employed b‘y{r; re‘:: |30| an d I 303 Farnam St Cor |3t}. OMAHA, NEB. fort to break the long line of Granger |00 severe for & man who has been | ular employo fu any offie as subati- deolsions make & breach in the power | reared anywhere south of the fortleth [ tute without bsing required to be first ] HENRY LEHMANN S THE GEAT GERNAN A, of the state. The supreme court held | parallel of latltude. As » matter of enrolled as a substitate by the fore- REMEDY JOBBER OF nd relterated that the state had, as | courtesy on the part of the googra.|man. The order was put in force im- bl RPN | W A T.T. PAPHR, an attribate of soverelgnty, the pow- | phers, Dakota is placed In the ‘‘tem.|mediately in The Times-Star office, For those reasonsa direct | which Involves the guestion, will see thousauds of farms in his between the state of Callforni hands,” FBLKEB‘ BAUDER & co" want, and if 1t Is projected as a legiti- mate commerclal enterprise, and not | tjons, and not, as they 1 with milk and h hich AL y ) y st, as per- ml and honoy, which many AND PRODUCE DE ERB le, Mr. Sharpe’s representations are ‘ st A AL L — lbflndlntvrobllcggrlh‘d by others, 1622 Oflp'tOI Avenuer Omahal NebraSkal i |Morale of Army CfHcers. The man who leaves Illinois for Dako- Quotations sent on application. Consignments solicited avd remittances promptly made. 1 Wasbiogton corr. Philadelphis Record. :ll is going away from home, ‘‘and = = E— A cently lecturing on ‘‘Homlolde in the on’t you forget it."” South,” has boen Interviewed on the [ osute & m-nkifl i 4 ogm :h; hr° P SPECIAL NOTICE TO homlolde of presidential candidates, [,s %0 ® Po¥er pinyor. Nor 18 theft|gpouy Digpateh to Tur bxn. 1 th e Wattrson in omphats - hs| 2y 2evtable, mance of “peker| "Ry IS TR iy, o | Growers of Live Stock and Others. denfal that Mr. Tilden will cousent to | players don’t steal. They don't have w Dgf;:i:“sn?“geg:(’k’ v%:;‘e':fl:]n F bo a osndidste under any ciroum-|to. Thero are us good ‘mon In the | o, SJORN"G" Carlialy, Prostor D, stancos. He speaks of Bayard as un. | F0Y nowadaye, and rolatively Kuott, and several other repressnta. roun l a e day, or Soott’s, or in the red hot deys 1i o the question, but thinks that if Ken-|of *he sixties. =Hoere in Washlngton | Lo0ieville, were ente’mlnud D tucky were ,m speak to-morrow Jog | We see a great deol of theso nmygnnd fi’at “OD“J’I“I‘;";;"‘"‘ g"‘}‘)& ;1 by| It Is the best and cheapest food for stook of :inyilldsd& ‘OH&P‘}“E& hdea-‘l‘;l navy cfisers, Wo see some fools and | i3 O. O Baldwin, C. P. Hunt. to three pounds of corn, Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the fall an: . McDonsld would be named without a lom{a Kaveh, sinod they are-All BN ington, and William Butler Duncan. ter, instead of running down, will Increase in weight and be in good market- dlssenting volco, Mr. Watterson 18 | man: bat wo' sce ton times a8 many | tbe hall was tastefally dscorated. | able condition in the spring. Dairymon as well az othera who uso it can tes- not as sanguiue as some of hls fellow | pure, honest, Intelllgent, courageous, “fif'fl ':?3 thu: t.h_’]e.fl anenoh of | tify to its merits. Try it and judge for youraclves. Price $25.00 per ton; no democrats concerning the result in|God-fearlng men. MR kA b U bt ) Md;sl(;OODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb 1884 WIth true bluo grass instinet, :g: ‘1:::":’ ster geueral's branch of (o &) Grant, Commander Gor- 4 b lévngei" G:’nerjl Horace Porter, Cyrus oast & horae race, or the oaprles of & |moro than all his pay for twenty life. | V- ,Ficlds Judges Blatchford “and woman. Ho thinks, however, that a |times. That looks like a damaging g::gykg:;nfil::;kx'g:ré'o‘;,n‘;,?"'n'::l y ) , Ros- square fight on the tarlff issue will :::‘“g:;':‘;e% r“:: d°fth2‘°.$gz:{ coe Conkling, Albert Blerstadt, Perry ™ sure a viotory to his party, whoever|sgnared, But see, he fitted out gfllfionh General Bristow and James may be the candidate. Mr. Watter- | expedition after expedition before, .Th:e t::t “The Presid This Flour is made at Salem, Richardson county, Neb., in the combin )y sident of the y 22] ) son probably knows as much as any roller and stone system. We give ExcLusIvE sale of our flour to qne firm in was {n a dozen towns, and all over the was drunk standing. Mr, Jay, on be- | Place. We have opened a branch at 1618 Capltol avenue, Omaha. Unlted States. As his accounts came % And that is nothing at all, 1n the sharp eyes kopt for the purpose ::'f ‘af ':‘; host ‘:f. thagnflll:& I';l‘l- wilte tor Brics. \VALENTINE & REPPY, Slem or Omata, Neb - In the treasury dopartment deteoted | ::fi b(d.eGg:"- B Lol b TRRAL A {5 %o U T SR A, SR LD S T T peed to such an en- Te1r a board of equallzation or of | every entry that seemed extraordinary torprise as the approaching expost:ion, 0, F, GOODMAN 5 interosted In the question, il::.l;lp p::r:tr;‘c; :5:;:;" T::: ::;:‘:; a lu;:oen. l';r?uk D. Gnlrley, nhnlnn:in WEIOLES.AXLE m—— 2 os the exposition committee, respond- How It Works in Oalifornia. ::::;‘ ;‘: &3’%“2;“:::“ '":gn;fl:fi‘: od to the toast ‘‘Our southern guests,” i . LT lndlzer., Flore Whnis dablt, for Senator Back reeponded to thetoast, t is nearly saven months since the ire; prosent railroad commisaioners were :;:fl;%lélr:l),u:h:;a.tl::fl:ul.l:l[;u:?t'l;:ln pondeciio 1’,'11 o D L eleoted, and five months slnce they |Ttem 'by ftem was oxplained and |SOmmerce.” Speaking to the tonst took tho oath of office. But they seem | alicwed, unill this great mountain of | . CRionism,” Carl Schurz sald that at AND DEALER IN to be 1o nearer o an understanding of | debite hind bren swept away. I asked |10t In the Fistory of our country o ary an. Thoy v lsantd 0 many | o e i, Fo mich, money |anied “sogoier shan a1, prosor.| PAINTS,OILS VARNISHES specifio complaints of the clearest vio- | hursed since ho entersd the servloe, Henry“Wunermn rulponged Fokho latlons of the law aud the constltution | gyme years beforo the war, *‘A hun. | (088t “The New South.” He eaid: And Wi d Gl without & motion toward s dred, millions?’* T saggested. *Two 'As to the sentimont exlsting in the . n INaAacw ass. compluiuauts or stopping | or three hundrod,” mafd my friend; [2004h toward the people of the Two of them -vere eubstantially noml- | itand he'has accounted for every dol- | L0t Why everyone understood what ¢ £ 2 = =d 4 nated and elected by rallway fofla- | jar of ft." that was. Between himself and his [ = extoriion” fa proved. The other Abusl s saster, he sat during the evening) there ex- wants more time for thinklng before | puiladelphia r::." i ‘“a& b“: 0"’; ,P‘E‘S"’““h‘“d that “{“ he will act. Both aro scemingly at| g i on ghe sariil, peeches were also outs with the third, whose !elZXn- Ohn:::y {;flg:p;,l}l ,fi‘fi'}:’%}; %‘fl mado by Charles D _Jagubs, mayor of tlons for a general ~reduction of | [jum H. Vanderbilt's lawyer, to have Loulsyllle, and B, Dapont, president and & maximum of 3 cents a mile for | wh, (y # late hour when the last specch was farcs was tabled yatorday by a major. | Flumer tae; Davasdsy night that Pat; | P40 824 tho compary ceparated. lt‘y of the board, atter the declaration [ ton-headed millionalres would have no| Declined to be a Cazdidate. of one of them that he is ‘‘all- ioflaence on the politios of the future. | Spectal Dispatch to Tux Bxs. solous of a deslre to serve the people. - Prrrssure, June 7.—President hing, and thisisit: That the | New York Star. peoplo aro tirod of belng fooled with; | Lgan 1s one of the stataamon who | haa semai.ofclally ‘samonneed. that b that the majority of this board, like | pratos moat loudly about cqaal rights g r y q g will not be a re-election at the annual the last, are fooling the dpooplo, and in | for all men, irrespective of creed or meeting of ssscolation to be held #0 doing trifilog with dangerous ex- | color; but he draws the line outaide|in Philadelphis next August. The afford rellef to the public by a reduc- . tlon of rates, s rule prohibiting dls- Daikota Not a Paradise. gl:'li:-" 'h:n&::-dgl:l:‘t:;““ g oriminations and an exposure of the Notwithstanding that the emigra- P i - S A outrages of the monopoly, they will | 40, ¢5 Dakota this spring has been so 4 “:"’}‘n ::‘“" bo themselves exposed aud placed in | rort tnat some of the lines of rall- "'f,":ns'.';u bl 7 —The 300 wire than exposure. ‘They will hoar more | 1¢e)y plgokaded, the Ohloago Journal of this way of 8an Jose on Satur- y bl ) . | agal a ten per cent reduction, com- any. oney of the 'sxodus sapoclally oo | Promlsed his aflernoon by sccoptin - the state of Illinols. The story of | wii'be hesnmed tomorrom, | Riveting vhe Granger Decisions, Dakota has been in some respects alto- et s M udelchd LTSS Sub Lists Abolished. Central Pacific, of the powe: It seems from the above that Dako- stato to tax the rallroads corpora- | ta is not the land of promise, flowing O 0 M M I SS I o N M E R O H A N TS as a stock-jobbing operation, it will | sons, will be declded in favor of the | people have been led to believe, and Hexur WarTERsoN, who has been re- It does not always follow that be. Toasting the Southern Exposition. WE OALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR avallable, and Ben Batler as out of SlaCyt o, an 0 W aningibn tives of the eouthern exposition at I know & man in| j5eq. Among others present were | o4-eod-me Lhe says it wouid be as easy to fore- durlog and after the war. He Unitod States,” proposed by Mr. Jay, other man what he i3 talking about. discrimination] Maoy tax payers are | OF @Xcessive ln the least degree, and & | o 4" wil do all in Its power to make it San Fuaucleco Ohronicle “‘Commerce.” Senator Bayard r thelr duty thau in November of Janu- | s man who knows how much money | 23¢ the anlon been moro firmly cem- onces. Oone of the two thinks ‘‘no friend, General Grant, (beside whom 20 per ocent on frelght charges |pbeon gullty of utterlng queer words of the exposition committes. It was V'Vo, too, have an *‘all-oonsciousness Drawing the Line. Jno Jarrett, of the Amalgamated As- plosives; aud that it they do not soon | the Zunl spring duties of the office have overtaxed Mr, Afmlaeot’ perlltofiRommAing [ Worss | copd leadiug thither have been abso- | 4.ivery in Oliver's mill, who struok Chicago Tribune, gether too highly colored; the emigra- er to regulato the tariffs of railroads, | perate zone,” but when wells 20 fest "‘”“hi*' prowulgation was grected But the shrewd lawyers of the corpo+|deep are frozen over, and winter sets with cheors. ratlons seized on the words, almoat |1n about the first of October, with a universal in rallroad charters, glving[coldness that defics the reglstry of the companies the power to fix the | Fahrenhelt, and continnes until May, rates of toll, and claimed that these | it might as well be called a cold sce- words wero an express surrender of [ Won of country. the soverelgnty of the state anda| From aletter written to 'l_‘ht{ Aledo contract with the railroads giving [ (Ill.) Roecord by Mr, Thos. 8 Sharpe, them the prercgative of determining | who has been 8 resident of }Iutch.m- thelr charges, son county, Dokota, for the past five Thelr only ground for expeoting | years, some facts may be gathered that snything from thls arguoment was [ will enlighten those who are contem- that the supreme court, in deciding | plating settling in that terrnnry.‘ We the case of Piok agalnst the North-|quote sums extracts from Sharpe's let- ] S WINDOW SHADE S EASTERN PRICES DUPLIGATED, charged for each performance s net intended to apply to Boyd's opera house or the Taruer hall, 1t only ap- plies to theatrlcal troupes and shows that might come here Independent of the lincensed theatres. The $100 additlonal locense fee for the opera house Is proper. The opera house is uot a publio charity, Mr, Boyd has been complimented upon bis enter- prise suficlently to satisfy the vanity wentern rallroad, has used this phrase: | ter: 'We declded that the state may limit | ‘‘Persons cast will do well toacsept the amount of gharges for fares and | with ceution the reports about Dako- frelghts ‘unless retalned by some con- [ ta, They appear mostly written by tract In thelr obarters.’” If the court | persons who have never ralsed a crop ocould be induced to hold that the por- | or seen one ruised. North Dakota is misslon glven the companies to fix |a wheat reglon, South Dakota lsnot, fares was such & contrack the Granger | and between is debatable land. Thave declalons would go for nothing, for all | lived here five years vn a homestead, the ohnriers contained these potent|There ia plenty of good water, but BACHACHE, EEADACHE, TOOTHAVEN, AL IDATLE S, SORE THROAT, MANUFACTURER OF FINE BUGCIES, CARRIAGES & SPRING WACONS SPRAINS, My Repository is Constantly filled with » Seleot Stock, Beat lI8 FARNAM S7. - - OMAHA Sorezess, Oute, Bruises, FROSTBITES, BURNS, SCALDS, other bodlly ashes aad palus. FIFTY GENTS A BOTTIR 80ld by al Druggists sad pester” Brettons 1a 1 laauages. : WO IVEAN S EX GUARANT & rds. We poloted out at the time | more bad, and some have du ral | I The Charles A, Vogeler 0o, =, a‘}lm 'lr,lrxnod before the wells before they hit pal ubf T, ——-;.v.:-:‘). Office and r“wr’. 8. W, Oor. 101 ana uapitol Avenue, preme court that the provisions in the | A man can raise timber very esslly. 8 ndely]

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