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4 THE Pablihed every moriing, except Sunday. The only Monday morning daily. RS BY WATL. One_Year #1190 ; Three Months £3.00 ix Months. .. % | One Month 1.00 IR WRRKLY S, PURLISITED RVRRY WRDNESDAY TRRNS TOSTAAID, One Year ... £2.00 | Three Manths. ... . Bix Months.... 1.00 | One Month R Ametioan News Company, Sole Agents Newsdeal ors in the United States. [ — A Oommunications relating to News and Editorial matters should be addrossed to the Eniton oy Tin BUSINEAS LETTERS, All Businoss Tettors and Remittances should be Mddressed to Tig Brs PURLISING CONPANT, OMAWA. Drafts, Cheoks and Postoffice orders to be made pay- able ta the order of the company. THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS, E. ROSEWATER, Editor. in the injunction suit have been continued until next Friday. ——— PRrOCEEDING DesmocraTs complain that it is too warm to howl for Tilden, Hendricks and the old Ticket. SeweriNg has Sixteenth street, and the Union Pacific nine are virtuously indignant that they can’t stop that contract also., begun on Mr. Baker assured the council that he was in favor of the immediate paving of 16th street, but—, And he recorded his vote with Hascall to postpone. Mr. Mureay hasn't a word to say, but he votes every time with the railroad cappers and robbers. Mr. Murphy will have to explain to the workingmen. Rerorrs from all the western ranges show that cattle are in excellent condi- tion and the indications are that the drive will be the lgrgest ever known. ——— Bucker shop keepers and “‘corner” crokers are the worst worried men over the strike on which the operators do not yet show any dispositionto send in “30.” Missourr’s new high license act will increase the revenue of that state nearly a million dollars a year, without any in- orease in the price of her favorite beverage. Surrosina the paving suits are carried to the supreme court, as they will be, if the tax-payers who ask protection from robbery are driven to it, will the U, P. nine in the council stop all improvements until the supreme court has rendered a decision, just to spite the tax-payers of Omaha! lowa is to be enlivened this year by an unueual political canvas. The two candi- dates for governor are to hold a series of OMAHA BEE.| | A PUBLIC NUISANCE. | From the day that Champion 8. Chase | was re-elected mayor of Omaha, the bet | tor class of our citizens have felt them Before he could take his oath of office, he was prostrated from | selves disgraced |the drunken debauch with which he colebrated his election, No sooner {had he gotten over his spring fever, a mild attack of the he began a carcer that has made him not jim jam, than | | | | only a public disgrace but a common nui- sance. Instead of profiting by the gen erous reprosfs of his friends, he has gone from bad to worse until now there is a universal demand for his resignation or removal. From morning until night he tramps from saloon to saloon and in the | intervals between drinking he makes life miserable for every one with whom he comes in contact. As insolent as he is ogotistic, he has insulted and abused every city officer from the treasurer to the police judge, and from the police judge [to the city clerk. Ho has assumed powers and authority that no one ever expected a mayor to and in his demented ravings has demoralized the whole muni- cipal machine. He has taken upon him- self t. be both the author and cutor of the law. exe- In his dranken ramb- lings about the streets he has assaulte private citizens who were | Jly con- ducting their business and officiously meddled with matters that do not concern him. His associates and boon compan- ions are the bummers and beats who congregate at the resorts he fro- quents and loaf around the street cor- ners, Worst of all, common report charges him with blackmailing gamblers and at- tempting to bleed keepers of disorderly houses. These reports have taken the shape of specific charges in the pross, and yet this man has not taken the first step to vindicate himself. Withan unexpired torm of twenty months, such an execu- tive is even more dangerous to the public interests than he is to himself. Unless he resigns or is deposed by the council, one of two things will have to be done. His relatives and friends will have to organize a committee of safety to keep his worst enemy, rum, out of his reach, and prevent raids upon officials, gamblers and other victims, or a commis- sion of lunacy must consign him to an asylum for the cure of inebriates and lunatics. BRAIN REST. Herbert Spencer’s warning to Ameri- can business and professional men against what he termed the national vice of overwork is daily receiving new illus- trations. Every foreigner who comes over to the United States is struck with THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1883, But if a fow thousand operatives form an associa- with it on terms of equality. tion against its despotic acts, its officers denounce them as conspirators, rebels against the peace of society, enemies of trade. Th viduals who are utterly powerless in its grip. | This is a point that the people ought y will deal only with indi- to understand, Every trades union, every organization of laborers, every as | sociation of operatives, has been necessi- tated by the aggressions and tyranny of capitalists to combine in corporations for their advantage, it is right for laborers to organize for their own protection and that of their families. The stronger they make their orgar ion, the better. Their only hope is the solidity of their union, the perfection of its discipline ot until the tyranny of capital is confronted and the wisdom of its management. by a mightie force than capital will the people recover their rights and securc | freedom and justice to all classes, T fearful ravages of cholera in the East, continue and the discase has ap- peared at Alexandrin and Snez, two points where the quarantine has been of the strictest kind. day, the deaths from the cholers gated 500. Tt is high time tha government should proclaim a quarantine At Cairo, on Tues- gainst all vossels from Meditorrancan ports as Canada has already done, follow ing the example of the countries on the continent, Breakers Ahead of Gould, Chi News. The present strike may be more disas trous to Mr. Gould than he imagines or desives. The telograph men are not the only ones who complain of their treat- ment in the matter of wages, The em- ployes on the Wabash system are often unpaid for from two to five months, and the amount of hardship entailed is sim- ply incaleulable. It is snid, with how much truth cannot bo told, that a strike on the Wabash and Southwestern system is quite likely to be inaugurated. At all events, it is beyond question that the telographers’ strike is being watched by organized bands of operators all over the country, and if successful, we are likely to have organized labor revolts that will greatly intorfere with the prosperity of the country. Gove ent Control ot the Tele- graph, Philadelphis Pross. The strike of the telegraphers has brought to light a committee, appointed under a resolution of congress, to report what laws may be necessary to adjust the differences between labor and capital. Senator Blair is chairman of the commit- tee, and he has summoned the members to assemble at once in New York. The committee will have a most favorable op- portunity to investigate a most important phase of a complicated subject. If the inv estigation would lead to a report rec- omuending the government to establish which cannot be delivered. This ena talists, who, getting control of the com- plex machinery of the highly organized modern exchange, use their and buyer. These corners used to be effected once in a year or twoi now they are of monthly, and somotimes of week- 1y, occurrence. “One of the methods by which the corner is brought about, is to get control of the railroads, or other means of transportation, and so make it impossible for the “futures” to be deliv- ered. The syndicate makes the perform- ance of contracts impossible, and then scalps its victims for failure to fulfill their obligations. And the syndicates thus far have succeeded in secur ing decisions from the making it impossible their vic tims to obtain redress. During the wheat corner of 1879, three out of every four flouring mills in the country were o for over two months, That y , by not g, by not letting others sell, by fleecing those who had been inveigled into dealing with them, and by the injury done to the millers, the shippers, the exporters and consuin- ers of flour, caused an estimated loss to the country of not less than 300,000,000, for at a loss, when it was wanted here, in order to force wup the price in 4 market twenty cents a 8 One of the New York operators sold corn to go to Europe twenty-five cents less than he would sell it for consumption here, in order to sweat the penalty out of our buyers. he operations in pork are equally ruinous to the country. In 1879 a company began buying pork at $8a barrel in July, and forced the price up to 814 a barrel in December, when they sold out, real g a profit of §2,000,000. Last April the same firm began buying at 810 a barrel, and bought up 350,000 barrels and 1,250,000 futures. Then it sold out at prices ranging from $16 to £18.50, clearing over 87,000,000 by this gigantic deal. The robber baron cuts a contemptible o with the bandits of capital who effect such stupendous ste 5 A Brilliant Wattersonian View. Louisville Courier-Journal. It is true that M den is in_excel] lent health. He d not cut down a forest tree every morning before break- fast, because, to tell the truth, there is a need of more, not fewer, forest trees at Greystone. Neither does ke churn the butter at midday, nor milk the cows in the evening, being happily emancipated from this sort ef drungery by a frugal youth and a saving, capable and prosper- ous manhood. But he is the livess, brightest and sost companionable of men; no vital point disordered, no manly taste impaired, his intellect more scintil- Iating for repose, and his interest in af- fairs incesse nt and absorbing. Sharper than a Serpent’s Footh. Louisville Courier-Journal. sists in getting the promise of futures bles the syndicate to fix its own penalty | as damnges, and it is done in prices | which everybody has to pay. The result is that the price of food is not determin ed by its plenty or scarcity, but by syndicates of unscrupulous capis power to smite down and rob both seller | courts | Wheat was shipped to Europe which was | | not wanted there, and had to be stored D! THOMAS ECLECTRIC 2IL#z A Cures Rheumatism, Lum- bago, Lame Back, Sprains and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh, Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Diphtheria, Burns, Frost Bites, Tooth, Ear, and Head- ache, and all pains and aches. The best Internal and external world. medy in the by medicine dealers everywhere, Directions in elght languages, Every bottle gusranteed. Price go cents and $r.oo. FOSTER, MILBURN & CO., Prop'rs, BUFFALO, N. Y., U. 5. A. 1 e held an Anti-Monopol L the city of Grand Island, N the Gth of Sept. 1883 at 10 n the following state ¢ ( | 1 Justic onts m. ¢ | 'l'i(.(-} Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - | H. WESTERMANN & CO, | IMPORTERS OF QUEENSWARE! | China and Glass, ‘6‘08 WASHING1ON AVENUE AND 609 ST. STREET St. Louis, Mo. menm Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, | | | | | | the Un v, 1 Kogent to fill v ST. LOUIS. Mo, | several counties of the state will itled to | | the following delegates upon_tho basis of the | —————————————————————————————————————— | entive of the counties, This basis is ndopt- | with th have heretofe relief can be had th ction and no_justice secur reatic 1o opportunity is re a just and s to party suc ich instruments of their |f iplo eo hoss, delegates b, COUNTY, pounties to wit: DELEGATE Adams Antelope Boone Buffalo Burt Butler Jass Dodge. Red Willow Douglas. ... ... 18 Ri Dundy...... 2 Fillmore. ... .. .10 Franklin, .| [ Frontier .. .. 3 Furnas. ... .. 6 Sherman . Gage. . 11 Stanton.. Greeley ... .8 Sioux Gosper. . .3 Tha Hall. 4 Hamilton. .. farlan. ... .. Hay, Wheeler. . . York..... Total....... 121 Holt . % Jefferson ... BRS! In locals ly organization that will act it will be proper county. that fact very many | good men have become throughly disgusted | aties with which they " Wholesale Grocers ! rnment | which means | ption, fraud, to join in clocting TR s | FJ0UR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED G007 for the alliance to elect a delegate from that STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., AND JOBBERS IN ND ALL GROCERS’ SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. i EIGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO : Nuckolls i Dakota, : Al H WHOLESALRE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Dawson . . Platte Dixon .. Polk Lmber, Lal, Sumoles, Piekes, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - 3 - OMANA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! s where there is no_anti-monopo- AND DEALER IN ¢ 4 i o ic servi o k.| If Judge Thurman were to read one-| The time hascome in which all f | 3 3 3 it dissnised e " f |tho foverish oxcitement and intenso | telographic sorvice, tho prosent blotk- |, G 08 H1olun things said by the |chis. state shinld join in ons common case to | joint discussions, beginning on the 20th / hich iog |20 of telograms may bo the long step bout hi h L feel how | wrench from the hand of corporate power the | . of August at Independence. Prohibi- 'A“’“m “"““l ud" ¥, i CCOMPATIIES | toyards o sweeping solution of a perplex- 1’,:?;‘6‘: e ::e:';:m“: e | Abuses that they huve now fostered upon every | r 4 sy Sk, : merican methods of transacting |ing problem, 44 T ' | specie of productiveindustry. No people or :::r“ to be the "“i;m ':";8 D e | teieiossy) 1 MTlivee:quaktare "ol ouF| & e a Democrat and have a Republican child. | e %1 long Jrosper oF even long cxist that OMAHA. NEBRASKA. are confiden! s = = stematics t i - ooy w0 ondent of gining many |l S L pinal man | Making Desed D = PR el i i = 3 P oo | New York Star. 4 . to the ions ¢ by ible ex- | that the solid German vote will be thrown | "™ Utterly incapablo of taking | "imyq cony of living is the first obstaclo ; B L R e s D P. BOIT ER & co-, Kl g any rational recreation. In their hasty [to tho muecoss of Amorican industry | Tdden and MoDonald is & new Indiana | g tipon humanity agaln assertsd ita tighta 1. us | e trips to the seaside, the mountain or the |abroad and the prosperity of American gaissire; join and if powsible avert the coming storm DEALERS IN S i Jaborerniabbikne. - AndA 1 tg | Secretary Lincolnis not worrying himself | that is so mueh wider in its reach aud more - " 4 | el Borint Encth to in his sta: | ®UmeT ruyfllmflwy are followed b;" the 94 :"m:-l “"p Mu:. m'“"-"""r; ;‘;"’E’;]d about the tremury. o u.:{m a Mcuum«mm&t‘:m. % i Ha'n s Safe and Lock com ) tiatios. VLo is ow u’m“‘"w' for hi, | Mail and tho telegraph. Tho stock ticker |4 LN o R et Fon ™ sonde | Tiayard is tho first.choico of the Texus dew- | ALtex Roor. 103, Kinnnes, 5 | task is tells them daily of the rise and fall of 'y pe, people | serats for president. ecretary. Ch'mn Cen. Com, | wemark that our foreign born citizend fought the battles of the war. The re- -cords show that 74.48 per cent. of southern soldiers were natives of the Un- ited States, 8.76 per cent. were Germans, 4.14 per cent were Irish, etc. His ex- cellency assumes that the naturalized voter constitutes a large majority of the country. prices. Business associates whom they meet, though distant from the great are obliged to pay such exorbitant prices for it that the cost of every article man- ufactured in the country is artificially in- cities, maintain business associations in the midst of their very pleasures, and the mind burdened with the worries and cares of their occupation, finds 10 relaxa- tion of the high strung tension which is wearing out its force and slowly sapping ita vitality. creased, while the laboring-class has a hard struggle to live. While bread is wing dearer every year in the sea- E;;nl cikies th> farmers of Minnesota and Nebraska burn corn for fuel, and heef and pork are raised into the list of luxuries in which poor peaple can only occasionally indulge. An article on the The New York democrats are wrangling over the next state ticket. Forty-eight of the fonrtwn counties in Gawrgin have declared for local optien. Henry Watterson has been dubbed *‘Presi~ dent 'l'i{don'u Secretary of the Exterior.” McDonald claims to have elexen states solid for hiwself already, aud expects several oth- ors. John C. New, of Indiana, says that state fi!l present no republican candidate for presi- nt. already THE TRADE memss I Chicago Hesald, Philip Armc FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF IN FROZEN MEATS. e SRS, TS TO0KS e 1020 Farnam Street. Omaha. our was asked to-day for causes of this ermluxicnl condition of things in the North Amesican Review, by Henry D. Lloyd, presents a number of important and suggestive facts for con- his views regarding the trade in frozen meats, particularly in mutton, between Great Britain and her Australian colo- | nies, now going forward by regular and | “The Minnesota deinocrats will hold their state convention in St. Paul on the 2ud of Au- gust. i TR Unlike other people, our merchants cstoN which will intevest the la- | anq speculators and money earners make HENRY LEHMANN dies, but which shows the male prejudice against “pull back” dresses, has been rendered by Justice Miller of the Su- preme court. Some time ago a Minne- sota girl arrayed in one of these garbs attempted te alight from a railroad train, but the garb “‘catching onto” some object “pulled back” the young lady, and she fell between the depot platform and sus- tained quite severe injuries. She brought suit against the railroad cempa- ny, but the hard-hearted justice ruled that she could not recover, on the ground of contributing negligence on the part of the ‘‘pull back.” ———— Dana’s textof “Turn the rascpls out” work an end and not a means towards leisure. The accumulation of wealth be- comes a ruling passion, which cannot bo lnid aside when a competence has been secured, though shattered nerves and a failing constitution give warning of the sacrifice of all the best powers to the modern Molach. In a late funeral ser- mon Dr. John Hall, of New York, gave this sound and practical bit of advice to New York business men: No financial success can atone for the stupidity and wrong doing of the man who, already possessed of a competence, risks health, reason and life itself in the pursuit of that which he cannot makeuse or in this world nor carry into the next. Money is made for man, not man for sideration,’ What makes bread dear is not merely the price of freights on the railroads. The railroads have helped develop a power greater than themsclves. The modern exchange is a price manufactory. 1t is the organization of middle-men to reduce the price paid for arti to the producer and increase the price to the consumer. It is in commerce what the machine isin politics, And every kind of trade is now organized and has its ex- change. Mr. Lloyd says the concentra- tion of news, capital and middle-men in a focus; steam, electricity and credit; the modern means of finding out the statisti- cal situation; the growth of corporations; the multiplication of huge private for- tunes and their union in syndi- cates, together with the low standard Someof the Ohio prohibitionists join hands with the whisky sellers in denounciug the Scott law. Indiana republicans say that Dorsey's story about the holp he gave them in 1880 is grossly exaggerated. Ex-Governor St. John, of Kausas, lectures for prohibition and 850 a. might, wherever the people can raise the money. Blaine's friends in Kansas say he could have the delegation from that state to the national convention if he wants it, Southern papers have revived the rumor that ex-Senator John B. Gordon, of Georgis, is abous to re-enter pollties. Sunset Cox fntimatos that he will retire from polifics if he is beaten for speaker, T'hus he places & premium upon defeat. Gov. Waller, of Connecticut, is reported as wishing to bo vice-president, and hence will not be a candidate for re-election, John Kelley says Tammany Hull won't go kol for admission to first steamer, which is, like the others, provided with refrigerating apparatus, applications for vessels to a meat is stored being kept at 20 degrees, coal per hour. Mr. Armour redlied: that they will be able of the shipment of frozen sheep's meat. Mr. Banks, of Banks & C: thirty direct service from New Zealand o the mother country, the applications for the f reaching over twenty thousand sheep (or W P ] doule the capacity of the vessel) and . ive filling in for 50,000, the chambers in which the with a consumption of 500 pounds of *I have ne doubt » make a success Tu canned goods they cm't compote with us. A gentleman from New Zealand— and have been established for eurs—was here the other day, 4 JOBBER OF EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, . M. HELLMAN & CO., OMAHA NEB. " " down upon its kuses to beg i i : , man T of- “huginess morality, make the |y v and told me of their success in sheep Journal takes it and sermonizes as fol- lows; ““The statistics of the varions adminis- | trations are readily accessible. From them we learn that under the patron saint of democracy, Andrew Jackson, the stealings of the office-holders were on such & magnificent scale that of every $1,000 received $5.68 clung to the fingers which should have turned it into the treasury, and of every $1,000 paid out $10.30 was similarly absorbed. The Van Buren administration followed in the same line on even a larger scale, for of every §1,000 of disbursement $21.15 o it. M Aguin rest is the great need of Ameri- can brain workers, In the majority of cases its necessity isnot admitted until the physician is summoned or the services of the undertaker are required. The lesson is learned, to quote the words of Dr.Hall, only by “‘getting inside a coffin to do it.” And then tho accumulated wealth cannot be made use of in this world or carried into the next. 1t is right,” says the New York Star, in a powerful editorial on the telegraph strike, “for men to organize to protect dented in history. These exchanges are cosmopolitan legislatures, Their enact- ments are prices. Their jurisdiction ex- tends beyond that of congresses, parlia- ments or assemblies. The strong men of to-day build corners instead of castles, and collect tribute at the end of a tele- graph wire instead of a chain stretched across the Rhine. Such appliances as ours for exchange never existed before. The control of the machinery of the ex- changes is the control of prices, and the control of prices is the control of proper- ty. When the cotton and wheat crops and the hog product of the whole country can be turned over a dozen times a year, it is easy for a combination to get hold of the marketable surplus and dictate its price. And the few men who haye learned the politics grown excited as the time for holding the bourbon democratic state convention draws near, The republicans of Pennsylvania are once more united, and thero is s feir prospect that they will work together in the canvass of the present year, Congressman Henley, of California, warns his fellow democrats that the wine growers of his state will not support auy party shat advo- cates (ree trade, Goveruor Foster, of Ohlo, denics that Giar- field over offered Doraoy a place in the cabi- net. He says the latter's recont statemont is shrowdly mado up, but not in sccordauce with the facks, Blackburn claims that & majority of the Kentucky delegation is pledged to” him for speaker, aud frisnd says that in case he sues he caunot make he ‘will cast his entire strength to Kandall, have no way of marketing their cuts, and huve to put all in their cans, ceuld beat us on that. cattle sold by this fri good as anything we have in this country, they are high-bred and thoroughbred.” THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relleves and cures cannied beef, becauso we can_dispose of the fresh meats that we don’t put into the cans, at pretty cheap prices, and they When it comes to marketing the entire bullocks fresh I would not bo surprised if they The quality of nd of ours is as OMAHA, - p & NEBRASK Anheuser-Busch ., BREWING ASSOCIATION: | This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt, were B ¥ their capital, but a crime for men to or- 3 N Tecumseh Sherman decsn't seens disposed to UM y S SOY V Dinwl:ld :‘m Ornu;). uu,:r h::"l' m‘de; ganizo to |.r.',mu'. themselves against the | Magic art of manufacturing prices are | put bis boou into sotion, but if he were there llll:"lurilmalbhl. with o temptations an Y I wasters of the situation, and are shifting | s no doubt it would silefice & good wab N . Y ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE opportunities incident to the general de- |#§3ressions and tyranny of capital. the property of other men into their own | the small butterics thit aro raistug such Sciatica, Lumbago, STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST. moralization attendant upon war, and This assumption is at the bottom of all | hands, ~ It is the Exchange that has made tering fire awong the underbrush, BACKAUIE, ! v 4 the handling of vast sums of money, the average loss for $1,000 of receipts and disbursements was only seventy-six cents; under Grant it was twenty-four cents, and under Hayes, whom the democrats gencrally have made the target for their most virulent abuse, it was reduced to of a mill. From the eight- tenths of a will under Hayes to the $10.31 under Jackson, and the $21.16 under Van Buren, is s long step, which represents, in effect the distance between extreme accurscy and conscientiousncss on the one hand, and extreme profligacy on the other. When the voters of this country are asked to exchange the systoum of administration represented by the for- mer for that symbolized by the latter, thoy are likely to demand a good deal of tie for cousideration. the grasping corporations in their deal- ings with their employes. Money las levery right, and manhood none. | For men without money to organize, is a dangerous conspiracy against publicorder. But men in this country refuse to yield to such an assumption as this. Juy Gould is reported to have 875,000, 000, Tho average property of the tele- graph operators is not over §500. It would take an organized body of 150,000 men to balance Gould in the financial scale. But if 15,000 men organize in a body for their mutual protection against this financial giant, he denounces the body as a pack of wolves bent on de- struction, The capital of the Western Union is $80,000,000. It would take an army of 160,000 operators to meet that *‘corners” possible. The Chicago board of trade, the greatost speculative market in the world, received and paid for last year $382,000,000 worth of farm pro- ducts, and the total of its transactions was not less than three thousand million dollars. Yet thirty years ago its thirty- eight members were scouring the whole northwest to persusde the farmers to send their stuff to Chicago for sale. Now it is the greatest price manufactory in the world, Al the world goes to that mar- ket to buy its food. Its warehouses hold two day's rations for every person in Europe and America. It s through the concentration of force in ugreat exchange that a ‘‘corner” be- comes possible, The busy farmer, in too much hurry to carry his grain to market, sells for future delivery. The miller buys for future delivery. ~ A syn- dicate buys these ‘‘futures.” Every ‘‘fu- ture’ must be delivered when called for, and must be paid for when delivered, no gigantic corporation and ke able to deal matter what results: The corner con- The house of representatives that meets in December next will be composed of 828 mem- bers, divided politically as follows: Democrats 191, republicaus 119, readjusters 6, independ. ents b, greenbackens 2, ‘Ahe democrats have amajonty of 5 over the combined opposi- tion. Senator Harris says that if the National Democratic Couvention ware held uow McDo- uald would be nominated for president, but that s ay chiauge by next year. Arthur, ho thinks, will be the Republican caudi- date, unless crowded off the track by John herman, The Lowa campaign is getting under head- way in good season snd will be unusually live- Iy and perhaps exciting, The declaration of the Republican Convention in favor of prohibition has made a good deal of & storm, but whether this will increase or subside with time rewmains to b seen. S—————— First Rate Evidence, *0ften unable to attend to business, being subjeet to serious disorders of the kidneys After & long series of illness tried Burdock Flood Hitters and was relioved by half a bot- tle,” Mr. B, Turner, of Rochester, N. ¥, takes the pains to write, HEADACHE, T00THACHE, SORE THROAT QUINSY, SWEL FLOSTBITES, BURNS, SCALDS, And all othor hodily aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Sold by all Drugglats and Dealers. Directions i 11 Tanunges. The Charles A. Vogeler Co. Umewaners 10 A, YOUELKR & €0.) Maltimore. Md, U, 8 A ~ J.E.HOUSE, SURVEYOR, Special atteution to Surveying Town Addit ars wna Furnlshes Estinates D&xl‘“flulfl. Making | 8¢ Lote m Plaws, &o, aad be in good I0E OVEHR JTHE FIRST NATIONALJ BANK, | its merits, y udge y oursely 1 R MA NEb 9 d L e o Consufting and Ciil Engineer and | | LouIs,M Will be Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE T0 THESTANDARD OfOurG-ruarantee. GEORGE HENNING, _ Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. Oftice Corner 13th and Harney Streots “SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our CGround Oil Cake. 1t is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Oune pound is equal to three pounds of cora, ook fed with Ground Ol Cake ih the Full and Wintet, lnead of runaing down, will incrsase i weight. marketable condition in the spring. Dairymen, as well as others, who use it can testify 40 el $25.00 par fon: no cliarge for smcks. Addreas WOODMAN TANSERD OIL COMPANY, 0mss, Neby