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4 THE OthnA BEE:I__ “THE 1Yll,lflzflfl FPETICH" Published every morni only Monday morning dally. NS BT MATL. £10.00 | Three Months One_Year 5.00 | One Month Six Months THE WERKLY BRE, PUBLISITRD KVERY WEDNESDAY. ..88.00 TRRNS FOSTPATD, One Yoar €2.00 | Threo Menths, ... Six Month. 1.00 | One Month .. American Nows Company, Solo AgehtaZfNewsdoal- o in the United States., PCORRRSFONDRNCR. A Communications relating to News and Rditorial matters should bo addressed to the Eprron or Tk Bred 8 50 .0 BUSTYRSS “LETTERS, All Businoss Letters and Remittances shouldisbe addrossed to Tuk BR PUBLISHING CONPANY, OMATIA. Drafts, Chooks and Postoffice ordors to be made pay- able to the onder of the company. THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS, E. ROSEWATER, Editor. Tue corn king laughs at the drenching swmmer rains, OMATA must either clean its alleys and back yards or else enlarge her cemoteries. RAILROAD earnings are dropping, but railroad stock watering is not appreciated by heat or force. —_— New York will invest 54,000,000 in new buildings this year. Wall stroet has already felt the loss. Arrer August 20th Dr. Miller's European address will be ‘ Windsor Castle England care of Queen Victoria.” TrAT part of the public which receives its despatches through the mails is not yet entirely convinced that the strike is a failure. Mr. Roacn has sent 1,000 to help Bill Chandler out of his senatorial scrape, but the legislature of the Granite state still ask to be excused: Tue Western Union claims that their aftices are not much _inconvenienced by the strike. Eli Perkins has evidently @ntered the service of the company. Cuarvary Meserig, of the army, has been court martialed for desertion and duplication of his pay accounts, Evil g, excopt ;Sounday. J The The attack of Charles Fraflcis Adams on the abuses of a classical edueation has been distorted by a class of newspaper ig noramuses into an assault upon all colle ginte training, Most of theso oritics and show it in the narrowness of their views upon every great topic of current intorest, and in the absence of that which ought to be the marks of a well educated man—culture and refinement. They are found with scarcely an exception on the country press or connected with nowspa- pers in cities whose editors have jumped ies to the control of from rural weel small and uninfluential metropolitan Jjournals, It is unnecessary to say Adams’ remarks were dire that Mr. 1 against a real abuse in collegiate training, and not against a collegiate training itself. His criticisms, directed chiefly against the course of study in Harvard college thirty years ago, find a much more restricted application to tho great educational insti- tutions of to-day. The college curricul- um has broadened with the advance in educational theories and the increasing uses to which scientific studies can bo put. To compare the well equipped university of to-day, with its hundred professors and lecturers on a score of sub- jects with the college of thirty years ago, is hardly less to the advantage of the former than a comparison of the news- paper of 1883 with the journal of half a cantury since. That the majority of our smaller col- leges still pay too much attention to the classics, and especially to Greek, will not be denied. But the best of our castern universities, such as: Harvard, Yale, Princeton and Columbia, long ago strengenod their course of study by mak- ing the study of the classies optional after the second yecar, and substitut- ing the modern languages or physi- cal weionces s clectives, Their cxample has been followed by a score of smaller institutions, and the ‘eol- lege fetich’ of .which Mr. Adams com- plains, is slowly disappearing from sight. Within the past ten years the catalogues of our great colleges show that the num- ber of instructors in the phy al sciences éommunications frequently corrupt. £ood | has more than fquadrupled,; while few ad- manners, Mg, PorrLer for the jobbers in the 1 council but Mr. Pappleton will be the Iast man to sign for Fort Collins stone when his property happehs to be at stake, Ix spite of protest and denial the opin- own ion is steadily gaining ground that Ben Butler may yet be the new democratic Moses to lead the party to the promised land of patronage, plunder and power. There has not been organization than at the present moment. And Omaha cannot afford to let the call go by unheeded. . mfidg{an_d:n;h the m;g suits ar- gmflyon technicalities but even the Union Pacific attorneys dure not. de- fend the action of the council in brazenly and corruptly defying the wishes of the property owners and tax payers of the city. £ E - » W publish elsewhere a camnmunication from a local physician upon the subject of sanitary reform in Orhaha, ~The arti- ¢le is a timely one. 'Whether its sugges- tions as to a local organization for the in- spection of our city is carried out or not, a discussion of the question may lead to That vesnlt is the prompt beginning of some method for making our city less of a feeding ground for fevers, and a nest for any the result we all desire. scourge that may put in its appearance, in many years a time when the great cities of the earth had a louder call for an eflicient sanitary ditions have been made - to the humber of professorships of the classics. This ad- vance has been entirely in ‘the line of those studies on which human comfort, power and progress more and more de- pend., No greater tribute to the value 6f the improved training given by the average American college can be found than the success which is attending college gradu- ates in the various walks of life which they ave called upon to tread! ago Horace Greely's romark was quoted with geueral approval by metropolitan journalists, To-day the staffs of all the prominent enstern news- papers contain a large majority of cel- lege men and the value of o collegiate training is admitted in the preference position in the newspaper corps. In the learned professions, the college man still holds his* old pre-eminence and will al- ways be at a premium; while the ranks of successful morchants aro daily being recruited from men who have found it learning whéke they were put abrealitiof the to think cléadly and to decido rapidly. two boys without a collegiate education,” said a prominent New York banker to the writer. ‘‘They are quicker to learn they are taught. My stock exchange year after graduation, and cight of my most faithful men are gentlemen of col- never saw the inside of a college lmll,‘ Twenty about “horned cattle” and college graduates S given to applicants for even the humblest not ab all ‘to their disadvantage to have passed four years in an institution of current of the world's thought and taught “Give me a college boy in preference to and readior in thewr application of what partner came into my office as a clerk the No rational man who reads the papers and who has studied the history of for- mer epidemics, doubts the certain arrival of cholera in the United States within ‘the next twelve months. Yenrs ago, the cholera was three years in making the march from India. But the Suez Canal s restoredte Egypt its old distinction as the center of the world, and increased means of communication brings it many. months nearer to us than it was o half a Canitary ago. ‘A Washington dispatch places Indian _Commissioner Price in the position of being the party who started the recent canard about General Crook.. Mr, Price admits that Ceneral Crook did not say frankly that ho had not dared to_disarm the captive Apaches, but he thought that Crook answered questions on that point in » manner that left the impression that he had not achieved that vietory which allowed him to dictate what should be done with the captive Indians. It ap. pears from this' statement that Price is lege training and drawing the salaries which their rapid advancement has merit- I can take you down Wall street and show you'a dozen other prominent baukers and brokers who will agree with my statement and opinion.” The man who decries education either a fool or o knave, Mr, Adam's oration can distort it into an attack npon the undeniable benefits of a collegiate training, Even if the short sighted view is ‘taken that no education is valuable whieh cannot bo turned into dollars and collegiate ground, some higher aim than the mere accumu- |firm the news of the deathof Cetowayo, lation of wealth regardloss of the capa- u_m Vtulu chioftain who was restored to city for its enjoyment, find satisfaction |Dis kingdom last year, after three years in the mere possesion of knowledge captivity in Cape Town and London. asido from the pecuniary profits result- Cetewayo was the son of Panda, and the ing tharefrom. They take an ever in- nephew of Chaka, who in 1812 reorgan- croasing delight in an enlargement of ized the Zulu nation. Panda, the father the sympathies and a breadening of the|°f Cetewayo, who ruled from 1840 to mental vision which the Vanderbilts and | 1872 was & man of much administrative the Goulds and the Mackays and ability, who consolidated the Zulu nation od. a the have the only member of the Conference with Orook who placed such a peculiar con- struction on the latter's full and free ac- count of his campaign, and it is hinted that it ways a malicious feeling out of fear of the transfer of the Indian bureau from the interior to the war department that induced Mr. Price to furnish material for the injuri- ous despatches that have recently been published about Crook. ' Orook's friends in Washington say that Price’s statement will not convince the _public that Crook lied about his cam- and, as between Commissioner s present statement and that of Becretary Lincoln, who said that nothing ‘passed at the cenference to give color to Price's accusation, the public ls likely te “believe Mr. Lincoln, An officer in the ww’n oflie said that if what says is true, he should prefer iarges against Orook, But this Price is not to do. His explanation of the canard is looked upon there as very weak. O'Briens with all their millions may well envy. And they decline to weigh in pounds sterling or dollars and cents that pleasure which they daily derive from a companionship which the wealth of Midias itself could not purchase, — THE WHEAT CROP. Harvesting has begun in several sec- period of the growing wheat crop is near- ly over. The next fow days will put an end to all suspense as well as speculation with referenco to the quality and quanti- ty of the grain. Hradstrect's has advices from all the winter and spring wheat producing states and territories, and esti- mates the aggregate yield at 441,560,000 bushels, which is something over 60,000,- 000, bushels less than the splendid crop of last year. This estimate, however, is only preliminary, and may be modified or increased by subsequent returns. For instance the yield of Colorado, Nebraska, tions of the country and the critical | to THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA; MONDAY "JULY' 30, 1883. and six of the territories is estimated at 7,000,000 of bushels, but the probabili- ties favor an actual aggregate of at least acouple of millions more. In this calcula | tion Ohio is put down for 26,000,000 bush- | els, which is a decrease of 40 per ceit on the crop of lnst year. In New York, In- | diana, Tllinois, Michigan, Kansas, Mis- souri, Kentucky and Tennessce the esti mate shows a falling off, compared with the final crop report of 1882, ranging from 16 to 51 per cent. The smallest decreaso is in Michigan and the highest look the together with in Illinois. As matters now New England Pennaylvania, ware, will produce crops quite equal to those of Nevada, Idaho, states, New Jersey and Dela- one Colorado, Utah, Ari- zona and New Mexico are credited with year ago. Montana, an aggregate increase of 33 per cont. and Dakota with 50 per cent. Oregon and Washington Territory are California, credited with an aggregate of 65,000,000 Twelve southern states, including West Virginia, as against 50,625,000 last year. aro estimated in the aggregate, the crop being set down at 45,000,000 bushels, about 4,600,000 These are all July estimates and, as al- ready said, may be changed one way or the other according to the weather, and the difficulties or success in gathering the crops. Bradstreet’s exhibit shows a probable decrease in the current year of something over 69,000,000 bushels of winter, and an increase of more than 8,000,000 bushels of spring wheat as compared with the output of 1882, a loss of more than 18 per cent. of winter, and a gain of 7 per cent. of spring wheat, a decline of about 61,000,000 bushels in The crop of last year, however, was an extra- ordinary one, and for that reason the comparison is scarcely a fair one. There still remains 60,000,000 bushels of the old crop on hand, and if the present a gain of bushels. production, or over 82 per cent. yield comes up to the estimated 441,360, 000 bushels, there will be enough to sup- ply all domestic requirements and meet the foreign demand, as it was one year ago. THE INJUNCTION HEARING, 1t is understood that, in the injunction suits now in progress,in the district court, Judge Noville will deliver the opinion. As the papers were oviginally filed with him during the absense of his colleague, Judge Wakely decided to actmerely as an advisory justico and to leave the decision, except 8o far as it might be modified by his suggestions, entirely in the hands of Judge Neville. Wehave no intention of criticising the court before the close of the case, or of influencing in any way the decisions of the bench. The case of the plaintiffs has been clearly and in our opinion unan- bly st forth by their attornoys. The question whether the asscssing of the lot owners in an entire paving dis- trict for improvements made in a portion of that district is constitutional is an im- portant one which seews already to have been answered in the case of Hanscom vs. The City of Omaha. The further whether the has yet determined and established under the statute the ratio of property t0 be assessed for paving® is no less important, ¢ These ‘are points which Judgo Novillo must_pass upon prior to any consideration of the sufficiency of the petitions presented or the powers of the council in determining upon the material to o used. ¥ We do not believe that the attempt of the Union Pacific railroad to bulldoze our courts into endorsing their wholesale jobbery and corruptic though backed by logal technicalitios andj sup- ported by a phalanx of able corporation attorneys, will succeed. question council even But whatever the result, our citizens propose to satisfy themselves thoroughly of the justice of their cause before surrendering their rights and submitting to the arrogant betrayal of public trust which has marked the conduct of the city council. Should the court refuse to grant the prayer of the petitioners for an injunction restraining the sandstone is | buzzards from swooping down upon the No analysis of property of our citizens, the judges on the supremo bench will be called upon to finally decide the question whether tax payers have any rights that corporations and corporation councilmen are bound to espoct. THE DEAD ZULU KING. Reports from South Africa fully con- and made friends with the Dutch and English, After Panda's death Cetewayo was formally crowned by Sir Theophilus Shepstone, in the presence of 10,000 warriors, He had acted as regent dur- ing the closing years of his father's life. In October, 1876, when the English gov- ernor of Natal sent Cotewayo a remon- strance agamst the of his subjects who had refused obey the marriage laws, the Zulu wonarch returned a haughty reply. “Why,” said he, *doos the goy ornor of Natal speak to wme about my laws? Do Igoto Natal and dictate to him about his?" In the war which fol- lowed, Cotawayo was driven from his throne and his power broken. Finally, on August 28, 1879, he was captured by British troops, He behaved with great dignity and calmness. On September 16, he was removed to Cape Town, and remained in captivity at Castle Barracks for two years. During this time he dictated a history of his people to Cap- execution tain Poole, the officer in charge of him. In 1881 he was temoved to a farm near Rondebosch, whete his captivity was merely nominal. On August 1, 1882, Cetewnyo arrived ‘in England. It was intimated by the government that the visit would be a prelude to his restoration to his kingdom, for which he had lon, been pining. Lady Florence Dixie anc Bishop Colenso were ¢ for his restoration. sHe was a lion in Eugland during his stay, and was, after a fow months, sent back to his kingdom, where he was reinstated with great honor, In pergonalappearance Cetewayo is described by one who saw him in Eng land s & ‘‘huge, powerful-looking, strongly-built man., His head scems a little too small in proportion to his body; perhaps it is from its being set on a pair of fl\l(i‘l broad shoulders. There is a sort of kingly look about him, and he pre- served this dignity of manner throughout the interview. He is about forty-four or forty-five years of age. He is very dark in color, not far removed from black. He has a short, straight nose, not dumpy or flat, and his lips, though thick, are not #0 thick as are usually found on negroes. He has a beard on his chin and a slight moustache. His eyes have an unquiet look, and we all noticed a tired, de- pressed air about hin —_— Count Dr Lessers has reported to Paris stockholders that he will complete the canal across the Isthmus of Panama by the end of the year 1888 Junae Neviuie acted, to say the least with considerable impropriety this morn- ing in the District Court when he virtu- ally announced in advance of the closing argument for the plaintiffs, the extraordi- nary opinion that a majority of the prop- erty owners in the paving districts must petition for and designate the material to be used in order to comply with the char- ter. Inithe view of many prominent at- torneys this was not Judge Noville'sopin ion yesterday afternoon. Tue Sprinfield Republican gives the following freminiscences of Captain Webb, whose battered body has been found floating below the fatal Niagara whirl- pool, whose billows he vainly attempted to stem: Capt Webb began life by sav- ing a younger member of his family from drowning; he ended it by throwing him- sclf away as one wi worthless penny. He once jumped from a Cunar- der in a gle to save a common seaman, and medals and honors were showered upon him. But now he will get no mon- ument. Women wept on the shore Tues- day, when he threw up his hand before that maddening maelstrom of water und thunder; they did not weep because he Was a ), but because he was a fool. “How much have you made by swim- ming exhibitions?” asked the only water- man who had courage to row him out to his starting place. Webb replied, “Twenty-five thousand dollars.” **And howsmuch have you got left?” “About $15,000.” *“Then you had betterlet me pull you ashore, and go on a $15,000 spree rather than try to go through that. It is sure death.” The swimmer smiled and said, ‘“Meet me with the clothes and blankets at the Swiss (ilen, below the whirlpool, as I wish to go to Boston to-morrow.” He did not know the dif- feroence between an Ida Lewis and a Sam Patch, Men called his wonderful endurance and daring in past years, how e swam in the English channel from Dover to Calais in 24 lggrs in rough weather, how he could remain 128 hours master waves that would almost founder 2 yacht, and yet theso stories lose their charm in view of the foolhardiness of his taking-off. When he plunged into the Ningara river there probably was not a man living to match him in the art of riding the breakers, for he had put him- self through a severe course of training at Nuntasket beach and was in good con dition, but, like many men in many de- hartments of activity, he drcmuul{ that he could astonish the public by doing what the public believes cannot be done and ought not to be done if it could be. Sentimental Obstacles to an Adjust- ment. Springfield Republican. The strike has got to that point where all that separates the antagonists is a point of sentiment or principle, which- ever one chooses to call it It is the same kind of a point that the Western Union officers made when they clamed that they did not know whether the Brotherhood delegates, who waited on them, repres- ented the operators or not. That was a very foolish assumption. Suppose some New York bank cashier ulmufd refuse to cash a draft signed by the treasurer of the Western Union™ company on the ground that he had no evidence that there was any such company;. still less that the person whose signature was be- fore him had any authority to make drafts upon it,~-and would the presenter of the draft kindly attach to it a list of stock- holders? Well, it turned out that the Brother- hood's committae were neither false pre- tenders, fools nor lunatics, but were what they claimed to be, representatives of the great majority of the employes of the telegraphic service. Now, if it is not too late, let us have a little sense dis- played in repairing the severed relations, Apparently the Western Union are going on to treat the Brotherhood, as they did in the beginning, and as thsy would treat no other association of business men on the l::: u:u (.h‘;. earth. It &l infinlnkd now that it separates the employer and the employe is the refusal of the former to treat with the Brotherhood as a Brotherhood. They will take back the individual strickersat increased wages,but th;y will not recognize the aasociation, and they deny the right of the men to combine to affect wages. This is certain- ly not business. e Western Union has dealt with a good many rival associa- tions in ita day, but we doubt if it has ever denied the right of men to combine for lawful purposes. It is not only not business, but it is not principle, or if it is & wrong principle, and one which the ex- istance of the Western Union itself con- sistantly violates. *But are you going to allow an irre- sponsible set of men to come into m oftice and dlctate what wages 1 shall pay,” is the knock-down argument of Jay Gould and of wany other people. Wo cannot surrender, say the Western Union people, the business of this great compa- ny to the control of these men. Suppose the men reply: “We cannot surrender the control of our bread and butter to the dictation of a man sitting in an easy chair in New York City. We have done 80 too long and have rubmitted without remonstrance or protest to successive reductions of wages, while stockholders have suffered no reduction of profits, As men standing on the same plane contracti ies to an nent of employment, one of these positions is in pleading | a week in the water, and how he could |4 just as sensible and just as tolerable as the other. Nobody hires a laborer in any field without econceding to him the right to accept or refuse the terms offered, nor does this concession expire when the laborer acts in a mass and moves in a bow A denial of the right of assocrat ed action comes with ill grace from an employer who has acquired a monopoly of one field to such an extent as prac tically to control wages in that field. It offends some business men that the erators did not go directly to tne com ny without the intervention of a broth erhood. How could they? The Brother- hood is merely an organization of some 12,000 or 13,000 men, employed at some thousands of points over the whole coun try. How could these men act orexpress themselves with unity and harmony ex cept through a trade-union. The Broth- erhood committee is asnecessary of 1 and expression to the o as General Eckert or the board of diree tors is to the company. In short, the whole difference is such as would bo adjusted between two com mittees of business men in an hour's con- ference. Let us hope that the whole obstacle to such a settlement will not to ve the offended pride of the employer, us regards the laborer, Horein lies the value of an arbitration that it brings men together upon the same plane in fact and brushes away the feeling and sentiment which intrusts the relation- ships of hive in erlv of all the leveling influences of modern democracy. rove CATARRH OF THE BLADDER, Stinging irritation, imflammation, all kidney and urinary complaints, cured by “Buchu-paiba.” §1 Limited Earnings. Cleveland Leader, 1tis proposed to build a new Suez canal parallel with the one already con structed, both works to be owned and operated by one company. The draft of agreement between M. Le Lesseps and the representatives of the British govern- ment provides that the profits of the en- larged worlk shall not exceed 21 per cent. it is believed, is sufficient to pay dividends and the interest on a fixed cap- ital. Whatever accrues beyond the lim- ited profits is to be divided among the vessels using the canal, the di- vision to be made through & veduction of tolls. This proposition is in [ broad contrast to the course usually pur- { sued by corporations chartered to serve the public. It is deemed the right thing, particularly in the United States, for corporations not to consider the public interest but to grasp all that comes within reach. Railway companies resort to all manner of ks, such asstock watering, and bonding equal to the capital stock, to wring double and treble profits from the | public. The hundred thousand miles of now in operation in this country nts a capital in stock and bonds in excess of $6,000,000,000, and if the en- tire plant should be suddenly destroyed it could be replaced ata cost not exceed- ing one-half the sum mentioned. So,too with our telegraph system. It is esti- mated that fifteen or twenty millions of dollars would furnish all the telegraphic accommodaiton required by the people of this country and yet the capital stock of Western Union alone stands at eighty million of dollars. These figures show to what extent corporations identified with public interest have carried their impositions. In the light of the present it is easy to sce that a grave mistake has been made in not limiting the earnings of corporations created to serve the pub- lic as common carriers and transmitters of messages. While there is more or ess unproductive railrond property, the gate earnis 1881 amount- ed to 9, and doubt- less to @ greater sum last year. Had the carnings been limited by law to twen- ty per cent, on the capital actually in- vested the aggregate could not have exceeded $600,000,000. As the population rows and production and commerce wcrense the disparity between just earnings on real cost and those wrung from the public through chicanery and fraud will be increased. While it is all too late to remedy the evils attaching to our present railway and telegraphic systems, yet it is plain that stock water- ig and the creation of false capital should have been made penal offenses. 1f there is good reason for regulating banks and insurance companies by law, and sub- jecting them to supervision by federal and state officials, there is equally good reason for protecting the public against the impositions of railway and telegraph corporations If a national bank were to attempt to increase its capital stock by watering or by an issue of.fraudulent bonds its charter would soon be taken away; but corporations identified with every business interest in the coun- try are permitted to pursue a career of downright dishonesty and public robbery. Unless the corporations make up their minds to deal more fairly with the public in the future than they have done in the past the time will come when that same public will take the rectification of the evils complained of into its own hands. There is a growing sentiment in the country against monopolies, and the pre- present mutterings are but the prelude to a storm which may prove destructive if not averted by uprightness and square dealing, ——— Pure blood helps to make a clear con- science. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies the blood. Enough said. Send us a big bottle. —— Not a Blind Pool. N. Y. Star, Reducing the wages of telegraph oper- ators cannot be a blind pool enterprise; else Jay Gould and Alonzo B. Cornell would not be embarked together in it. — Waking Up to a Fact. Philadelphia Prevs. The telegraph monopoly is graduall, waking up to the fact that it doesn't uwl); the earth. I A ) 3 S A THE GREAT BERMaN REMED FOR PAIN. 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Ome pound is equal to three pounds ¢ Stock fed with Ground Ol Cake v the Fall and Winter, instead of running down, will increase in and be in good marketable condition in the spring. Dairymon, as well as others, who wse it can ta merita. Try it and Judge (or yourseivee Prioe -e0d-ine .00 per ton; no charge for scks. Address %obhrl LINSEED OIL COMPANY, (w | f e vy soas A