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1 1HE DAILY Biviv-=OMAHA, FRIDAY, I' 17, 1883, ALGU! et . i - T e — — e ) % MR ; ROGUL'S COUN soduction cut down, and ere y ) ling lls, and the STATE JOTTINGS HE OM AHA BEE. THE ROGL UNCTIL production eut down, and credita cur- | for the rollin mills, Published every morning, Yexcept Sunday. The do and a rogue a rogie. And | touched in everythin the effect widely felt le same | 1oup City has contracted for 81,600 school only Monday morning daily ERVS BY WAL One_Year #10.00 { Three Months ... #2m | what it says, nothing more and nothing d securities have been hammered | production and overtrading in other di-|eompleted. e wA Nl loss. Whon Dr. Cushing dined the city |down fiftoen por cent below the | rections 4\]»« mattor of fact, iy have | Fred Dag, ot Humphrey, ncckdoutally ifled W WRRKLY KR, PURLIIIKD KVARY WXDKPDAT. 4 . , v | been going through the consequent roac- | himself with a pisto w v-n-'.'.»,.-v:..,. council ot thelr way to Burlington, thres) e €5 I“;( )," # b Sovoral | Jo00 B0 loast 'a yoar, but favorabla| Eflorta are being made to establish a furni One Year £2.00 | Three Months ¢ so | Years ago, and the council on their re """‘ of “stoc IRy been Kept | orops and the recuperative power of the | ture factory at € olumbus, - / Six Months. 1,00 | One Month..., 2 | turn undertook to perpetuate a bare-|up only by the strenuous exertions | country have prevented it from being | —Plattsmouth's ¢ y council has let the con American Nows Company, Sole] Agonts Newsdeal | tract for grading Main street. om in the United States, CORRRSFONDRNCE. A Communications relating to News and Editorial | matters should be addressed to the Eptron or Tie SRUSINRSASLITTARS, Al Business Tetters and Remittancos should’zbe addressed to Tim BRR PURLISITNG COMPANY, OMATIA Dratts, Checks and Postoffice orders to be made pay #blo o the order of the company. spade a & when it ealls a man a rogue it means just faced swindle payers, | this paper did not ters, It upon our tax mince mat Hascall a8 | denounced a rascal and Kaufman no better ohmx}um Hascall. Tt went further than that. the risk of losing the city printing which | had been virtually awarded to it at that | but speculative se curities. Even on the stock market of great capitalists. The props have fi nally been withdrawn with the result of a flurry on Wall street, three or four fail to stake their capital on the proposition | that lithographs were as good as gold, and speculative movement which incited rail road building two years ago caused over violent, Of late there has been little ulative activity, and the process of reaction may be rogarded as substantial- ly completed. O utstanding indebtedness s on ;'Change, and a great fright |is not large, and trade and prices are on At | among investors who were foolish enough | an unusually firm basis at present. The crop prospects of the present year suring Already the | are ospecially re of the Northwest are railroad earnin, honse | The bridge across the Blue near Wymore ix A company ani has been_organized in Fremont of 820,000 to manufacture gas is chipping in for the construction of hotse of large size and approved pat. Sixty-four houses are wanted at Nelson, Nuckolls county, to house the surplus popula: | tion, | for IMPORTERS OF | China and Glass, 1608 WASHING1ON AVENUE AND 609 ST. STREET " A h The Platte county fair will be held at St. LOI."S, Mo. m22-3m 'HE BEE BUBL[SHING Cfi PRUPS time, it boldly took the jobbers|that water furnishes a sound basis for | showing a substantial increase, not only | Columbus, September 18th, 19th, 20th and - 7 —ee ecmamten X “Iby the throat and mnever let go|dividends over the previous receipts of the present | 21st ] e e, ita hold until they were routed, horso,| There is no renson for the belief that a | Year but over those of tho corresponding | wentys tes are “‘in the hands _W—HO I E:S é | = Howes for her workingmen Omaha's greatest needs. is one of Goon crops will not bury antimonopoly sentiment in this state as some of the re- publican exchanges assume. StxTEEN per cent of the population of | the United States are doctors, and sixty | per cent of the docte are quacks. | Suxser Cox still bobs up and dowr serenely for the speakership, but Sam { Randall smiles sweetly as he glances over the latest advices from the congressional | seat of war. Tue council is going through the farce of inviting proposals for tho legal adver- tising of the city. Tur Ber will be | oue for its rascality. foot and dragoons. It was an eight| | month’s fight beginning in the council, continuing through the courts and finally ending in the complete overthrow of the rogues at the polls lost the printing, but it retained the pub. lic confidence and saved the city several | hundred thousand dollars, The council three years ago was a dis- | grace to the city but it only undertook | one big job in defiance of decency and protest. The started out with very fair promise and than the council of three years ago that was kicked | | ublic present council turns out a good deal worse It isn’t content with one big job but it begets little and big | steals at every meeting. [ When the Bee in the interest of the property owners and tax payers de- again a bidder, just to make the rogues {nounced the sandstone contract as a fraud Of course Ture Ber | £ panic is approaching. All reports agree in pronouncing the tone of trade healthy. | current The banks ar: lden I'r stream through the Ae has been taught a lesson during country the past year, and it has profited by it. | of the ¢ howls of Wall st the country in its present condition, few discomfited speculators in to precipitate a panic AvEWW o it was standstone and now it is sand that troubles some mem sceure, and returns from | general p the harvests will shortly be flowing in a | Tailroads (Tt will take womething more than the | they will tide us over upon |, Teriod & yoar ago. Tho movement is late, but ‘it gives promise of a healthy soon. CGood crops mean yerity for this country, The re the first to feel the effect, trade very soon shares in it. While our financial condition would be very critical were it not for the promise rops, there is every prospect that the perils of de ve but gen pression. The ups and downs of the stock market d the raid on the Gould and theVi interests have no necessary with the production and traftic on which the prosperity of the country depends. No doubt the general condition of the market and the opportunities of the bers of the city council who are interested | speculators depend in some measure on in selling that article to contractors from | the san their private sandbanks. One city in- spector is said to have been relieved from his position on account of his rofusal to aceept an inferic the interests of a councilman’s pocket. sos which affect other inter- W stocks, like cverything else, been working down from inflated But a4 the same time the pro- s and risks of the great operators are osts figu jo quality of sand against | n & measure independent of * the indus- | trial and commercial situation, and these connection | show their hand once more, Possibly we |and expressly charged what it can estab- may ask the courts to say whother the tax | lish to-day that a thousand dollars had | payers have any rights, even in such a | boen offered to at least one councilman to | furnish the chief opportunities for the = | tussles of bulls and bears on Bra I¥ the Buffalo county plan i to be fol- | With money plenty and ok lowed throughout the state, the railroad casy terms, and plentiful crops just be- little matter. WE call the attention of the board of | and public works, the city engmeer and the [swindle the tax city inspectors to the fact that thd grad- |ing to ing contractors on Thirteenth and Six- toenth streots aro selling dirt to-private in filling in a lot belonging to one of our merchants, The dirt belongs to the city yard to carry it to the portions of the streets specified by the city engineer. Last year the city was obliged to pur- chase earth for street filling at a cost of 10 cents a yard. city. Every yard sold to private parties in deliberate,robbery. On Thirteenth street several teams are also employed in carting city earth from the street and filling in private lots which front on the street. The Thirteenth street contract was let at 16 conts a yard. By selling the dirt to privato parties and robbing the city the contractors hope to make themselves oven We call upon the board of pnblic works to take prompt steps to put a stop to this thievery. On the basis of the |Coupled with this the * taking|hands it to the voter, who proceeds «.l‘“‘.‘,'“" ltl;;;: tll'u\] would have been asked :“)tvu‘,r).fl‘.:».‘_x:‘."kin.im“-:lam ;.’»:‘:f:m‘(‘i“\‘;l{ll\;?‘ DEALERS IN grades already ostablished, the city will [away of the ivpootors from the |another aflixes the mark required by law | Rl REEE 16 other day o gentlo- | well populated with un enterprising and God- need every yard of dirt which it now |control of the bourd of |oposito the name of the candidate of his fearing people.” owns. To complete the necessary filling it must, in the future, be a heavy pur- chaser of carth. But meantime those of o re) i The Mystery of a Honeymoon. our officials who are not in collusion with | has become & mere puppet of Hascall. | tho process is complote, The candida "'"’-..,,,f,\ff,','f{“l":,’,‘;chmtfi”;':ffi’;. ¢ l{’fi:"y" s e e e t00 4o 11 bliat Ul | T canlt take a atep) 0x' broatho without | a8 nothingito do with the tioket or thel city is not robbed by the men whom it pays to perform its work, The contract- ors must stick to their contracts even at a loss or they must go. And their bonds- men can bo held linblo for evory dollar's | of the council, Baker, has become a mere | u1f of 4ll the votes befere they can be acted upon, but said | ple this year. The affair is, however, | = —— — = = — ; > stes polled. If not, only | ; 2 e i e maatiacl e iaalonlate B Gita | My, T [ g @ dacisions in the chair are dictated by the | turned. Constituencies are small in Can- | y,¢ ¢ ml.d at present was valueless to | Mr. Bangs is 48 years ..i.ll. and sup- | t. TeLER is absent from the capital, | but the attorneys of the Southern Pacific are laboring hard in Washington during his absence to complete their case, which calls for the turning over of the forfeited | land grant of the Texas Pacific to Mr. Huntington's company. 1t remaina to be seen whether this magniticent domain of 22,600,000 acres of government land in New Mexico, Arizons and Southern California is to be wantonly sacrificed to corporate rtapacity. The 0t was never earned by the Texas Pacific, whose successor the Southern Pacific proposes to be. The act of congress which author- ized the grant, made it conditional upon the construction of a road from a point in Texas to San Diego, Californin. Not D surfaco ! ) only @ couple of months ago at Kansas |debta acquired by an unprosperous a mile of road outside of Toxas was built|days have aroused fears of u ponsiblo| Cia! afirs which creato u slight fooling of | Gity. “atarring” tour, ~Tho marriago was a | 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, by the Texas Pacific, and thoy theroforo | panio in omo quarters which find their | larmn, - Tho muin fotures of tho situ | qepny Fseer b now fust comploting tho | rather pompous i, Henry Ward | oyapa, . . . EBRASK forfeited every shadow of right to possos- | expression in several of our exchanges. | tion have boen the troublo with two | \ill ko trouble in the cattlo business, | was followed by o T e sion of the grant now claimed by the | It is remembered that the break in tho ‘lml‘lk':llu'."M"“i“‘;l"‘ L ;"~ ;}'b"m and | o ] am mistaken. It is a concentration |ceptions in various cities, But Mr. A Anheuser-B h E Southorn Pacific. The San Francisco |stock market in 1873 and dhe failure of | 10 OShers at Induanapolls, Eho Wispen:fof cpital of great strongth, and aims| Bangs claims to have made some dis- | I\, n se usc Qhroniole recalls that it was. ouly|Jay Cuoko & Co, prooipitatd tho groat|on o soniuuber ofleathor ime In, Bos:|at the “exclusive control’ of " luso | covary which shocked lin, aud within a| M lobbying that Tom Scott’s|of the conditions which preceded the "\ll'lmu ”llll'l-lul.t't b ko The St. | New York and London as well as T What this discovery was iy not stated. | (an0® Map, : agents succveded in forcing | great depression of ten yours ago seem to | (VA8 dificulty was local “atli, the | ita memborship, numbering at present | Mrs. Bangs has beon married once be- el the measuro through congress. Atovery | bo now present. There is a goneral fool- | huving. browght it upon® thomaoves | L0t 10, ineludes sme of the wealthicst { fore - souio 10 years ago to u Frenchuan | o stage of their efforts thoy wore mot by |ing that railroad construction has ad- | through their connection with Bradloy | ¢y’ Ind_and satde avmers in XSz pamed Lagrove, and be, fao, left oy @ ik a powerful and corrupt lobby, headed by support that job, we knew well enough that the rogues with Hascallat theirhead their tail would |can party must go. We knew that no matter how low our bid would be they would vent their personal . partios along the line of the grade. spite by refusing to award it. On Sixteenth street botween Jackson |them up in their true light we mule a bid and Leavenworth, two teams are engagod | 50 por cont. below the Republican and considerably lower than the little dishrag that is being circulated in our strects as and the contractors are paid 18 cents a | a newspaper. pected. Tue Brr and awarded the registration lists to an irresponsible and readerless concern The contracts for the|that had run barely six weeks, at three present grading are let on the expross | cents per line, for which the Bik under condition that the dirt belongs to the|its bid could only charge 1} cents per line. against the tax-payers, but it shows what attended faitbfully to matters of more Kaufman at payers by rofus- award us the printing. It turned out as we ex- without giving any reason This is not only petit larceny small pattern pickpockets we have in the Tt is not a very surprising fact that the same follows who voted for sand- stone voted for this little printing fraud. | The | business end of the rogues in council lias council, This was merely spite work. | profit. The manner and methods by which contracts were held back and con- tractors were bulldozed shows plainly on its face what these fellows ate aftor. public works and their appointment by the mayor and council gives a cue of what is to be done. The mayor himself Hascall's permission, because Hascall and Kaufman have him by the throat, while they are swinging the club of im- peachment over his head. The president | Hencoforth and un- til the people kick the rogues out once more, our public works will afford o field for spoils, and contractors will have to chief of the rogues. be paid extravagant work, Instead of a Merchants' Polico the tax- payers must organize safoty, as was done in prices for poor a comnittee of Philadelphia and San Francisco, where rogues werc in charge of the municipal machine, A fow indictments of tho public thieves would have a very wholesome offect. UNGROUNDED FEAR The steady decline of all speculative seourities and tho flurry which has pre- vailed on Wall street for the past th To show | Water were tried on the trip. The council rejected the bid of | day. All adopt Mr. Dana’s war cry, “The republi- WyominG wator does not agree with the presidential party. It is safo to say that vory few oxperiments with Wyoming A poor ex- cuse is better than none, How the Ballot is Cast in the Domin- fon. Consular Bulletin General election days appear like places selling intoxi drinks are closed. The law on this sub- ject in very stringent. Any person violating it"is fined heavily and jailed. Any person who has attained the age of 21 years, and has an income of $400 in a city, 8300 in o town, $200 in a yillage, and'$200 in u township may vote, pro- vided he is o Buitish subject. Any per- son, meaning u_male, owning proporty in one or more election districts, can vote in ench district in which his property is located, provided it amounts to the figure in vither of the places named abe uoting is by ballot, and only one voter is allowed in the poll at a time. Tho re- turning _ofticer is supposed to have the tickets printed with tho names of the opposing candidates ‘hereon, who supplies each of the deputics with the number required at their respective poles on the morning of election, The tickets numbered by the deputy returning officer who, as voter presents himsclf, initals the ti Sun- ng h t. choice, returns to the pole, hands the ticket to the returning officer, who ex- amines it on the outside to see that his initials are there, places it in the box and proparation. Indeed, it is unlawful that he should. Ench candidate must deposit $200 with the proper authority before ho wm bo recognized as such, This sum roturned _in each case should the de- feated candidato receive more than one and majorities ave frequently as low as one, two or three. Two or three hun- dred is considered o large majority i most electorial districts. In this connec- tion, and in conclusion, it may be proper the dominon house of commons, 1t has a fixed ropresentation of 65 members, and the representation of the other provin- ces i8 1 proportion to the number of their respective populations, as the num- ber of G5 bears to the populution of Quobec, This is dotermined and adjusted decennially, Financial Now York Times. pects, on_the surface of strikers in Nebraska may as well at once | The |, ada compared with the United States, | o T ians to add that the province of Quebc is the | pivotal provines as to representaiotns in | Thero have been some ripples of Jate | ca Tand and nancial and_commer- | " | City, ginning to make their way to market, the | give no oceasion for general uneasiness, | much less for alarm or panic. — THE CATTLE BUSINESS, Concentration of Capital—=Ranches of 500,000 Acres, Cheyenne Letter to Philadelphia Press, One thing is plain; the method of forming combinations and consolidating separate interests into a few hands which has characterized railroad and manufas- turing interests has taken almost en- til possession of the stock business here. ince the opening of the season the num- ber of ranches sold out to a few power- ful buyers is cstimated at over 200. Such great corporations as the Swan Bros., Gilchrist & Windsor, Rand & Co., and the Powder River Cattle company have absorbed a great many ranches, | some of which have been regarded as very large and prosperous. Foreign cap- ital is largely concerned in these trans- fers. For instance, it is well known that Swan, of the company first named »een but temporary man; possessing immense capi- dinburg, which has pur- chased all the Swan Bros.’ cattle for $2,- 500,000 The Powder River company as well, with & capital of £300,000, has a directory composed of the dwke of Manchester, Lord Neville, Messrs, Sartoris and Kemp, and other Englishmen of wealth. These people have pgid 50 per cent. more for their man retwning through here from Laramio who, I was informed, repre- sented g large accretion of capital in the cast. He had been to the Cheyenne enne and Arrapahoe Indians 500,000 wof grass land from each, with the rivilego of fencing. He was in some doubt about interference from the gov- ernment, us the leases have yet to he ap- proved by the secretary of ‘the interior and his purchase would give {almost every Indian inhabitant of the eservation an annual income of $10 apicee. Even while I am writing I am informed anthoritatively by a friend of the Swan Bros., whom I mentioned just now as aviny sold out to the wealthy company from Edinburg and Dundee, Scotland, that they, the brothers, have formed the Swan Land and Cattle company, in which ‘hicago and Milwaukee capital is largely interested, Then there are the Stand- ard Stock company in North Cheyenne, with a capital of at least §560,000; Pratt & Farris, on the North Platt worth about the same or more; the company just formed at the head of | Running Water, in Wyoming, with an immense capital, and, finally, the Ameri tle syndicate, organized Both the United Stat. sel slight disturbances of the last two weeks | | " | tho outure prospects of Pawnee county, de- | af their friends” county six offices in Sherman The passengers or at Ashland rai it to the widow, the train which killed 1a purse of £120 and sent | The campaign in the counties of th | getting warm, and the newspapers ¢ the nineties in the shade. the Mi ¢ to The hell mi | Tt is oxpected traing will be rannir | Tecumseh line of the B, & M., betw braska City and Beatrico, by The order to re herson through the il Octobe ate is roady ourd, near Platts- 1d, the site of coming Maori o Ne stember 1 ove settlers from the M servition has been suspended, fforts of Senator Manderson, un- | Vows says the cr ity will be much les are alinost than lust year wholly free from bl The boys who bu ison iast week were about worth, wer for some reason, were not arrested. The annual camp-meeting of the Methodist | church of north Nebraska will be held on the | old nds, five m south of mes, in | unty, beginning on the 23d inst., and | continuing ten d ey is agitating a railroad from the south, and & meeting has been held to see what inducements wore necessary to conx the B. & 1t was also decided "to put the bridge over the Platte in passable condition. Richardson has been officiated, according to the Sentinel, of Humboldt, with a “‘confessed forger and thief,” named A. Pool, who has heretofore cscaped punishment, He has just skipped with a young wi d a store in Mad- | cted and the goods, | The boys nd 82500, the pro- ceeds of 300 hogs stolen from farmers. At North Bend, on the night of tl three masked men entered the lnmber offic C. Cnsack and compelled a clerk who was sleeping there to opon the safe, which /'the rifled of $100 in cash, a gold watch and revol- ver. They then gagged and bound the clerk and departed. A Mr. V. Clarno started out from Doniphan the other day with & pound and a half of powder, some shot and a box of matches in a box on the buggy seat. He dropped his pipe into tho box and soon after was landed on the road side, minus a portion of one hand and the fat of his thigh, The box and buggy seat disappeared. J. €, Thompson, editor of the Brownville Republican, two weeks ago published some- thing about tho town claiming the laziest man in the state. After thinking it over for a fort- night, Tom Enbright decided that it meant him, and on Thursday struck the editor man on the nose. The paste-brush artist thereupon | knocked Tom through a window and pounded | him good. The Table Rock Argus, ina glowing review | of the past privations, present prosperity, and | o the handful of pioneers laid | 1w to be found & population | of nearly ten thousand souls, possessed of | 75,000 acres of cultivated land, niue-tenths of | ich is in a high state of improvement, | reaching in value over amilion dollars, Where in th ¢ day buffalos, deer and antelope | were the solo denizens of the plains, a total of 61,000 head of domesticated animuls is now | found, aggregating in value over a million and,| a quarter of dollars, Where at first was to be' found the rude store, grass-grown streets and | DISAPPOINTME! BANGS { The brief boneymoon of F. C. Bangs, the actor, though the subject of curious and lively gossip in theatrical c i 80 far free from such seandalous circum- | stances as have attended the public airing | of the drawatic affairs of many stage peo- | posed to be a contented and doomed | bachelor, when he suddenly married, in | the latter part of June, Alice Singer | Lagrove, a daughter of Singer the s | ing-machine man, the inheritor of a la 'u§ | | property from him, and an unsuccessful aspirant for theatrical glory under the name of Agnes Leonard. The story told | by Mr. Bangs’ friends is that she fell in | love with Lim a few months ago upon seeing him play Chateau-Renaud in “The Corsican Brothers,” and sent hin & note begging him to call upon her, He did so after some hesitation and soon lost his Dbachelor head, if not his heart, for the good-looking Mrs, Lagrove did not hesitate to show her love. Very soon she asked him to marry her, and he consented, being impelled | thereto probably by her promise to give | him 87000 with which to pay off the within n week. It is only within a y ol Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - SAFES, VATLTS, LOCKS, & Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, ST. LOUIS. Mo, STEELE, JOHNSON & CO, Wholesale Grocers ! - AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOTE. ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES! A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER €O J. A, WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Laih, Shingles, Piokets SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - - OMAHA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints, Ols, Varnishes and Windew Glass » OMAHA. NEBRASKA. P. BOYER & CO., Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF 1020 Farnam Street. Omahna. JOBBER OF Wall Paer and Window Shades. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, 5 “ M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! OMAHA NEB. vanced too rapidly, that immense quanti. | Barlow's Southeastorn, railsond specula-| frow Kansas and the governor of the |that she has_ obtained a divorce. CELEBRATED ©. P, Huntington in person, who at-|ties of floating capital have been ab- |fions: ,"{'f}“l"'; meaning ‘)'l',;“ reforonco | ate aro mombers, T A A T tempted by every means in their power | sorbed in non-productive enterprises and s ks 1 ) I the far southwest it s just the ja divorce, and the present suit brought polis_bank troublo was an after-clap of | , u to head off the Texas & P The chief argument used by Huntington and his strikers was that the South Pacific that the printing presses have turned out too much paper in the form of stocks and bonds for the good of the country. With | the failures connected with the recent wild speculations in lard and pork in Chicago. In both theso cases the cap o, The largest transactions in cattle ovor made in this country, barring one, have just been made in Fort Worth and Gaincsville, Texas, aggregating by his wife is to recover part of the 7000, which she says was a loan and not a gift. Dressed beef men declare the rumored i 4z Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt, % X A ; hidg) talists wost intimately concerned 0 p R e R A R o o o 3 ctivel, r through its road 1 doc h o o4 i A e are | 29 500,000, But I am not attempt- | vecent discovery of beef at Scranton, Pa.y was actively pushing through its road fa general decline in the pricos of staples | eyyagod in straightening out affaivs, with {0 0™ S ™ catalomno. | alive with animaleulo was a ¢ [ \5 { FROM ANY PART OF THE without asking for aid, aud that congress | and complaints of dullness from all the [ fair prospect of success. The leather |nife 0 show e A 'E OR THE ENTIRE WEST, would therefor not bo justified in giving | commercivl centers those who look only | failures were belated and consequently |y a0 it is the most natural one in J i 58 il ) away subsidies of land or loaning its credit to any road. The Texas & Pacific company based its cluim for aid on the | fact that it would be a vival road to the | at surface indications are naturally | alarmed at the prospect and prodict the | approach of another panic. There are no grounds for such foars, | special line, and if the banks of Boston escape embarrassment in consequence of them they are not likely to have any gen- eral effect The other failures, which intensitied incident of over-trading in a |, s world. **What's the use of our small ranches?” asked a drover, with the air of a questioner who can answer his conun drums best himself. It costs but little Will be Promptly Shipped. o ¢ ST ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD ’ Fk { more to protect u large lot of eattle than | R TloOfour Guarantee. | Central Pacific system and it was on the | The country was ripe for panic in 1873, [b# ""‘" "\‘i‘l‘l"\""‘-"‘-‘ pumerousy Dt |ig dooy o little one; 900 hewd will scatter strength of this claim that the chairman [and it came as the natural consoquence | el i pracess. o Tiquidation whicl, | §rang s far as 10,000, Yow've got b T rosult of a p of liquidation which | ¢, Tave about as many horses and sad consideration measures affecting trans- continental roads, recommended the pas- sage of the bill, How, in the face of these facts, Huntington can have the as- surance to ask for lands which were never earned by the Texas & Pac road, and which could only have been earned by building a rival road to his, passes all comprehension. If his claim is ever ac- ceded to the public may depend wpon it that the officials who acknowledge the claim have boen bought body and soul by the monopoly. having under | of an inflation which, taking its root in the currency of the country, extended in to every line of businesss The Jay Cooke failure pricked the bubble, and it | collapsed; and six years were necessary to bring values to their normal level, Bince that time we have planted our. selves on the solid basis of a sound cur- fency. There has been, no doubt, over- production in several lines of dustry, and & great deal of wild speculation in stocks, For nearly a year past we have seen trade adjusting itself to the changed has boe ng r @ year or two, The overproduction and overtrading which per im‘lu-u]ly force a reaction and a process of liquidation in which the weaker concerns give way were, in fact, a matter of one and two years ago. in railroad building in 1881 and the part of 1882 absorbed a lary funds and stimulated not only the iron business but to some extent other indus tries, The unhealthy basis on which the iron and steel trade has long rested made any considerable Zfalling off in the d mand for its products necessarily di trous. The cessation of ivity in ra road construction caused such a fall conditions. Values have been equalized, | amount of [ as a blow at the Catholic chwi | branding. T i vound-up and lere’s no proportion at all in the profits.” Idles and \u?n for m——— Great consternation has been occa- The activity |sioned in Mexico by the proposal of a general divorce law. It is look: od upon The attorney general of New York says the trial of Senator L. B. Sessions for bribery in the senatorial election two years ago will surely come off this fall. The Panama canal will pay Columbia’s government 880,000 year for a police force of 300 men stationed along the line ing off, and there was troublo at once |of the canal. | \ BERMAN REMED! FOR PATN. ' Rheumausml,efle':::;lg'a,'zcimca, | Sore Throut, Aw » i on WODILY ¥ALNN AND AUMES. oy whore. ¥iy Ceatas bottle. ‘ GEORGE HENNING, | Sole Azent for Omaha and the West. Oftice Corner 18th and Harney Strects SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Cround Oil Cake. It is the best aud cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, instoad of running down, will incréase in weigh .nnd be Iamu# n:ll’.:dhl‘x‘l&wndmun in the spring. Dairymen, as nnllju om'-n, \-i‘x‘o Mg- can tostify e morits. it for yourselves. = Price $25.00 per fon; uo charge for sacks, ross obsodms sy 'WOODMAN LINSELD ®IL COMPANY, Omaka