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THE DAILY BER ~~OMAHA, MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1883 'HE GMAHA BEE. market if the Union and Central Pacific 's advice to young men | did not charge eight hundred dollars to Pubflshed evers morning, except Sunday. The [i8 often quoted as tho bost that canbe | .. o car load of fruit from San Fran- ‘only Monday morning daily. given to ambitious, uuahmg fellows in | . to Omah F Y AT the east who only lack opportunities to | ¢isco to Omaha, #10.00| Thro Months ... #8.00 | become woalthy. ~Thero is' undoubtedly ture railroasd from north to south of |andshould be treated to a coatof tar and vice versa, and generously saves the ex- pense of preliminary survey by setting feathers, One of the self-announced candidates for sheriff is one of the western counties, looks stakes on the following route: The |out for the possibility defeat by displaying his present§ business on his political piatform. Salina, Fremont & Decatur railrond | Fear him: W HOLESAILHE “Tf elected sheriff 1 propose to 5,00 | One Month. ... 190 |0, i it worth a young man's atten: W EST OF THE MISSOURIL. would bo about 250 miles in lonth. The | colect avery storo bil put inte my ‘handa in- O i o, OO RTRT VHOTMOAT | o, A energotc, persevering, honest| The impetus given to the sottlement | rond i constructed as far as Topeka, and | uyuefto sol groceries lower than over. it [ ] THRNN FOSTPAID. ahd amiable youngster can hardly fail to |4 jovel nt of Montana by the " 1l and get it un- | run on the anti-monopoly ticket this fall and p One Yoar +..82.00 | Three Months # | make his mark in the great west, and Rl o 1/ Mr. Morford will go down and ge ¥ P M . defeated, t 1 shall b ight i3 ontta. 100 | One Month ven if Tho only “igrows up with the | building of the Northern Pacific is & |der headway as woon as possible, The Eonblions, Sud vl all goods ,way, downs b . ) Sole) Agents Newsdeal. republican, and sell all goods way down; but Amerioan Nows Company, Sole] Agent oal- ST. LOUIS. Mo, ors in the United States, country” he does well. The country | counterpart of what has been accom- |whole length of the line will run through | if T run on the republican ticket "this fall and in n J i : Y, & most ri 1 populous country, and | get busted, next spring I shall throw sut » full JURn— grows fast and surely out there. But it | plished by the construction of the Union (™ ’the":'":“‘"l‘m{’ .l‘m = my‘zmlu. edged ani-monopoly. chicken, snd groceries i Cmaton g Vo X 0 Ttk b e et 1o o fruft | d Southern Pacific lines. Thousands | Fieom Fremont the line could be extend. | ¥ilbe weld lower than ver. Having planicd . even the early ripening variety, is : ", . my big feet on this platform 1 will say to the e of wostorn growth lono, 11§ ot nec: [0f people are flocking to the ‘new |ed to Hooper and up the Logan, to Ok- | otars, one and all that the City Grocery is e P S ossary to quit the brovd acres of Penn. [northwest,” and every business and pro- |land, and thence to Decatur. Krom De- {my headquarters, whero syrup and vol (Al usns totiors und Remittanees shnd be | SEU 0 L) SN of Delaware, or | fossion are reprosented in the throng, |C3UF it woula bo but & short distence fcod.fish and proxios are kept on har ’ " 3 3 . | fresh fish and tickets are cut and dried, and I 01 Postof do pay- New Jet d ot across to Spencer, on the Chicago, Mil h & , and ST e i oy, Pu-|the ooty farma of New Jersoy to find [ Now towna are springing up on prospec- ! dates and candidates are sugared and soft: D Fortune.s 1 1 “ waukee & St. Paul line, and this and the | Cate A b oiee,” i YAE BEE BUBLISHING CO, PROPS.| * * * Tndoed, it is questionablo|tive branch railronds, while the old| Minneapolis & Omaha line at Oakland | 8¢t o s WATER SRatsor whother a better return cannot be had | towns—Helena, Bozeman, Butte, Deer |would give us two independent lines to A OivilService Schonl. i R = from intolligant and_ thorough cultiva- | Lodgo and Missoula, are enjoying n ro-|tho north and esst, by the way of Chioago | . b RO BRR o — tion of the small “home farm” than from and the lakes. Such aline and connec- £ g P o L Tur sandstone nine confirmed Mr, |oneof the great prairie ventures in the Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - vival of trade surpassing all expectations. e s | ¢ Wilson without rising from their seats. | " ooe, who buys a farm of 160 acres in Nebras- | of the Missouri, but the railroad has al- Dr Criamporp was baptized in water | ka at the minimum prico of $2.50 per | ready practically destroyed commerco on from the river Jordan, but he died all |acre. His farm costs him $400, and he | the river, and in a fow years steamboats has $600 left for his house, furniture, | will be as much of a curiosity there as stock, farm implements, seed and food | they are in the lower Missouri to-day. until harvest time, Naturally he is| The possibilities of Montana are Tur Union Pacific still retains its grip | obliged to stint himself in his purchases | scarcely known The valley of the Mis- on the board of public works. They |tosuch an extent as to be unablo to |wouri is as fine an agricultural rogion as ewn one member and plow with the|Work more than sixty acres, and that|can bo found. Ex-Scnator Saunders sc- amount only in a shiftless way. Even |cured samples of wheat, barley and oats othor. it ho gots his homestead from the gov- | while there, which, for bulk and perfec- ernment free, ho still has an insufficient | tion of grain is unequalled. One samplo Sexator Prusn, who plumes himself | sum to cultivate the wh;xlunfl hi‘n holding. | is ? mvlou lhu;ulu'd wheat which will yield 4 i vi oo | When his crops are gathered he is at a|a hundred bushels to the acre, is of the x::{:‘;"'h‘“‘!"‘"‘:{: ;;‘v‘v"'t'l"'}";";:; 5:.'.11(1"?.‘.: dliehuite fromrmlls toakata, E16 1o &t thie | lsaidad varioty And latge whita a el mercy of the nearest railroad-station|the exact counterpart of the White strted in his lotter that Plamb was the | grain’ dealer, who frequently hasno com- | Tonse variety, which is a_smooth wheat only senator to whom he appealed in be- | petitors in the trade. andvery popular with the farmers of half of Stanley Matthews. * % % Wheat in Omaha last Thurs- | Montana. The two rowed barley has a day brought 83 conts per bushel, and in | very long head with about 45 grains —— Philadelphia on the same day it brought | each, and White Russian oats that prom- Tk city can't afford to hire an_ inspec- | €1 18, a differcnce of 35 cents per bushel | ise a hundred bushels to the acre. These tor of sewers who would stop people from :x; fi;\'ul; of lihtc‘ Ml‘mm'«‘stgn):vclr‘."“’:('(]vn:“::i :;‘,_clu“nc,l‘: were Lmllu-,n from ttllm farm of f o ih maha brought 36 cents per el, iddle Reeves, whose crop this year is choking the sewer pipes with brushos |j by ijelohin it ronght 0l catits,” THE | valiied at 815,000, ; % briok-bats, cats and dogs, but they can|gigadvintago of the Nebraska farmer dis- | Tho mineral doposits of the torritory aftord to squander 850 a monthfor a|tant from a center like Omana would be fare searcely uncovered. A good article man with brass buttons and blue coat to ‘nlilldgr«inh:xi, w‘f“}“’l _\,vi'ih,iul pua nr“l}w ;:_l’ (:lm}llmn juico. l'fionl found ix; "lf Galla- f hundred miles of Philadelphia the differ- | tin valley, valuable deposits of silver ore stand on dress parade in front of tho | 00 I4'ke rifing Not only doos e | were dingavored in the. Mullan tannel, in TR get more for his produce, but on a small | the very heart of the Rockies, the mines - farm, well tilled, he can get muchheavier | around Helena and Butte are paying and Tux trial of Frank James bogan at |crops to tho acre than on a large tractin- | improving right along, and with better Gallation, Mo., Monda; e interast mnhum_nly cultivated, Thus,on 60 acres | facil s for moving the crude metal, ¢ b Y- 08" | producing 40 busheis to the acre, he|many mines of whatis now considered in tho case is as great now as at the first | would raise exactly the same amount as [low grade ore, will b worked and made term. Tho indictment under which the | on 160 acres producing only 15 bushelsfo | to pay handsomely. As an agricultural famous bandit is on trial is the Winston | the acre, But his selling price in oneand mineral country Montana to-day of- Wkin'xbbeky, whioh Lok Flkod Aboub bwo | Cse would be 42 per cent more than in|fers the best inducements of any region . the other, while correspondingly his liv- | in the west. years ago when conductor Westfull was | ing oxponses would be much” lower.— lilled. It is feared the trial will end in | Philadelphia Record. The Colorado Coal company is to the a farce unless judge lynch steps in to deal| This sounds very plausible but it pre-| Denver and Rio Grande what the Wyo- out even handed justice to the cutthroat. | senis only one side of the picture. There | ming Coal company is to the Union Pa- the same like any other common mortal, _— is no doubt that an ambitious, pushing | cific. : The mines of the former are four Tig, Bk says that the governor is the | clear headed young man will achieve suc- | miles from Trinidad. They have been embodiment of certain fixed political |cess in the ecast as well as in the west. | worked since 1879, yet the veins scem to rinciples, which are usually enunciated [ But how long will it take him to make|increaso and the quality of the coal im- in the llvgrt{ plnpfi&rm upon ';'1"5‘3’ he 8 | g mark if ho only depends on his mus- | prove as greater depth is attained. The :hm;i‘;m o :lg:u‘lfi_ ;;gig;l°l;=;“°c“,';g;qvt clo and brain? How many thousands | thickness of the main coal seam varies .p]m,,ubucan, if not almost millions of young|slightly; in some places it is only six feet, Not in this state. The republican con. {men in the east are crowded in others it is ten and twelve. Tho mine vention that mominated threo supremo|to the rear and kept there|is developed by threo main entrics or judgos at Kearney in 1875 adjourned |n whole lifotune because all the avenues | tunnels, from 3,000 to 4,000 feet in without adopting a platform, and suc- |to wealth are monopolized by men who l'f"“i""f""d fr(um "lmT runs off a laby- sudici o 76 cither capita ) nth of cross tunnels g to rooms, lowed that precedent. their backs? _|long and 20 feet from the adjoining The highway to fame and fortune is | voom, with pillars, 10 feet thick, of solid not only brdader in the west than it is in | coal supporting the roof. the east, but it is not half as crowded. | About 230 men are employed, wages et tho broad hrai. | FAEYING from SL75 to 83 and $4 d\urduy. Thero is elbow room on the broad prai- | goglcutting by machines is done by ries for the ambitious, pushing young contract at 8 cents per ton, each ma- man who would almost be jammed to | chine cutting about 150 tons daily. Cost death in the sharp struggle for existence | of Production is estimated from 63 to 73 ¢ | conts per ton or more, and from 800 to in the older and more populous east. Itis |y 400 ton is the daily output. A rough : truo that tho westorn farmer pays heavy | estimate of profits on 1,000 per day is pounders of liquors, they found comfort | yiy4 to the railronds for carrying his | about $319,375 per annum. ina boliof that thoy could colleot from the | \ oducts to tho scaboard mar- T]le w"iurylm o) !li:fl'iogityl in itwflf« A he company has bui o . who cultivates the fertile soil mainly by | pink of neatnessand comfort. boon the cost of licensos, bub now thoy | 1y ohinery, and raises immenso crops aro confronted by an old decision, made | ik out manure, can double discount the by the first controller of the treasury, in | pyyngylvania, Now Jersey or Delawaro which it is held that a manufacturer of | gpyior on & smaller investment and less such goods, whose tax has been changed, | 11or, This is not all. The pushing has no right to profor a claim of this | y\yng man that comes west to grow up kind. With the country foels sure that every e acro of land he buys will double, treble, T democratic leadors wre looking | yea, quadruplo in value within his own anxiously for the coming man to carry |lifotime. He sees gredt cities building New York. Nine months ago Governor up ol around him, and he Cleveland was regarded as that man, His [ kfiows that the centres of com- veto of the clevated bridge bill and |merce and industry are suro to cre- general subserviency to monopolies has | ato a botter market for his products. knocked him out of the ring. A leading democratic daily the Philadelphia Record, comments on him as follows: Governor Cleveland, of New York, B ———— Tae compounders of patent bitters who were relieved of the stamp tax by the re- vised tarift have discoved that they will not be allowed to shirk all revenue taxes. ‘When the new commissioner proposed to oompel them to take out licenses, upon the ground that they were in reality com- Wyoming is struggling bravely to keep peace with her more fortunate noighbors, Her cnormous plains are not entirely gobbled up by the stock men, though at the present rate of increase it will not be many years before herds of branded beef will foed on the streets of her citics. The Boomerang, of Laramie, a paper noted for its purity of truth, says there is an immenso tract of land lying in Laramie, Albany and Carbon counties, south of and bordering on the Platte river, will one day become the garden spot of the Pounsylvania, New Jersey and Dolaware | west, It is well watered, the altitude is farmers may got rich by raising garden | low enough to permit of the growth of truck on a 10512 garden patch, but the [almost all vegetables and cereals, and the bo 0 " young man who will own a 160 acre M‘"iul;;fl';h" .‘w'l*t- "”l"t'l“““"dlfl 'i{.f“{‘";: ma) ‘a coming man,” 0 came 50 i . vill o ay be located through this bel Bl %o begin. with, aud 8o sensibly |Nebraska farm in 1800, will bo ablo| e it o B0 SN S nd alackenod his pace after ho reached |to buy out a dozen young men who stay | wild gamo dispute for the right to occupy Albany, that his movement is no longer | in the east on 20 acre farms that take up|it. If the emigrants who annually pass apparent. Ho blazed like a comet in | }a)f their time pulling up stumps, digging through this city by hundreds, knew of o bt homestosiol on he day of [UP Took and splitting fenco ruils. | (SN AR DITANGNS, SO e election; but the white heat of that time [ And the young man who follows Horace | would soon be occupied has now all faded away. We are afraid | greeley’s advice, also knows that the time| In the mattes of mineral wealth, Wy- Mr. Cleveland is not “‘a stayer.” must come, sooner or later, when the | oming “points with |ll;i(1(!‘: to the Silver —— great railway monopoly will be restricted | rown, district, near Granite canyon, 20 #25 . Vi . |miles from Laramio. The C Ki Tue high-handed attempt of the rail- | by law, if it is not compelled to give u:inu moul:i. ‘;int:}ic"t. is ,,?ml,::sil:o:,.[ |::‘¢u road monopolists to destroy the beef | cheap transportation to meet competition | tallic copper, which, from the indications ing industry by extortionate tolls on | by rival lines and improved watef ways, | appearing on the surface, is thought to m:‘i“md ASEAEAIBAR S Y FATRL O A mpROY Y™ | bo about 40 feet wide and from 5,000 to . |0,000 feetlong. Th o1 storm of indignation among western pack- | TurrE must be much relief to the dis- d‘upth (:fu 76'?};‘“‘ A“; :]:,‘:f\:"h.:% :';“;5"}‘:“‘: ers. It has long been the policy of the |tressed French nation in the fact that a cross-cut will be run to ascertain the railroad despots to build up any industry |Count de Chambord, a king without a|width of the body of ore in the claim. that yiplds thom heavy revenuo and tear |crown, o ruler by divine right without a T,r;’:rh““f}f :;l‘ll:i!glil":r‘::(l ‘?"'"'Ffit :?:L?.:Z'-‘;; down every industry uu?c does not pay | people, unfl posscasor of l‘l!.ago property l“wly R e Y ‘Cnm) or King are them its full share of tribute. The posi- | sceptre, died without willing away all | yery rich, and indicate that silver will be tion of the railroads on dressed boof ship- | this regal regalia. That will leave allthe | found in considerable quantity, in the ments carries out this policy in its most | claimants to the crown of St. Louis on & :'fil.fé ..fi."'»‘:‘fd’.‘-i&“fi’,’ m)'s;‘afla_fr;::&l‘: y . : e ety 0 o obnoxious form_. ) fair footing for playing “‘King" away |p5 per cent of copper. Within two miles The cattle raisers of the West have the | from home. in & northerly direction isa deposit of advantage of better facilitios for killing — galena, silver and gold, One mile north cattle, tanning hides, using bones and| Ir the vigilant marshal of ldaho had ;:f this “‘k c‘:’" ;’ ol ".’“"‘" of d“““f"] Lodd hoofs than the east, therefore a prohibi- | discovered a horde of Lungry politicians 6;"":;!' :’o‘;_'lx;‘r~ ....'.'1 "‘i‘" t‘;u“‘:}:]‘o:‘u"»‘l‘,‘;; tory tax is laid upon dressed beef by the | on the trail of the president, the country pyl‘itul~0nu‘nf the wchost ores known. railroad task masters to check production | might have felt some uneasiness, but the | All these claims are looking well. The in the wost and_ stimulate it in the east. | roport that » gang of mountain cowboya | dévelopment of theso mines has been con Bocauso the east formerly shippod |haye concocted o plot to lasso tho presi. | Sucted quietly but persistently, and this iy . p district will soon be heard from. hides to Cincinnati, to be tanned, but|dent and hold him for a heavy ransom REES now thes hides are shipped from Chica- | s too proposterous for anything, An inmense amount of litigation is in go,dressed they should pay higher froight prospect in southern Montana, growing rates than live beef! SENSATIONAL canards about the presi- [out of the recent land filings in Beaver- Bocause the railroads, .in sending | dent, scattered broadcast through the|head county. The contentions in the dressed beef, lose the freight on hides, | associated press, may be called enter- | Helena land office lately for precedence both on the live cattle and when trans- | prise, but such enterprise should be left |in covering certain tracts in Beaverhead ported back to the west to be tanned, | to aclass of journalists who live by their vullf.v were many 'mld ‘hvuldv- Theso drossod should pay higher freight rates | wits. The assogiated press should strictly }::.:u'dw‘\’f,"m"fi'.fl'&f.'ufn"’rfl' than live beef. confine its sphere of usefulness to the | to the change in the route of the road. . The patriots of New England started a | transmission of news founded on fact, 'lu‘llw tracts in Madison and Buswrllun:ll revolution oncoagainst Great Britain be- — us reverting to government and openes causo » high tax was exacted on tes, but| Tar Colorsdo pool can't agree upon :n;‘:flsmzz‘;m;;:l'ofl"‘:&xz:fi the poléroons of the west allow corpora- | the division of the traflic, but thoy are in [ setimated to be worth from three to ten tions created by the state to impose bur- | perfect harmony on the high old rates. densome taxes on them that would not dollars an acre. —— w— give us manufactures, and these are th perity. The mineral “booms” of Colorado havi about disappeared. Inflated and over and the business is now being done on legitimato basis. . The salted wild cat are banished Hard, persistent labor i picions of capitalists; the gonuine articl ago sales of mines aggregating million were made by telegraph, The variou camps are gradually losing their surplu principles., Like all westernci Denver is now struggling with a relapse Mining millionaire that flowed toward her have gone dry. The exposition is divided against itsel and cannot stand. Last but not t, the municipal troasu ry is neatly ba nkrupt. The indebted for cash is imperative. The city fath dissatisfaction. vendors of any and all kinds of wares, i goods in the hands of merchants, on th irst of July of each year. The measure will add of the city. STATE JOTTINGS. 240,000, under way, Lincoln on the 50th. Columbus is lishment of a normal school, 5,000 of Dodge county’s money. a cider mill of the hard shell variety. the Elkhorn in the Crowell neighborhood, steel rails on the Pancuke route to Denver. the oldest horse the 13th inst. asafety pin. ry connty in the state is ing petitions asking the connty commis to order o vote on the question of townshi organization. A farmer near Bla for the pick and in his corntield, T aro said to be flattering. amery ending to run’a canning l,n'l,ur)l" in conn tion with their establishment. Thiey will ca corn and tomatoes principally. of & politician, especiall, cian, “is wenerally one-eighth water or w may require.” mothers of the town, and from there by team. The Bluo Springs school house will bo 70x72 feet in size, two stories high, with eight school- roouws, principal's room, and four large hat and clouk roows, Tho bullding will cost when | found near a large body of water, but comploted about $12,000. buckshot in hus face and breast while restin on his own doorstep. It was tho result of fatal. Two men have been arrested and hel, for trial, Two gineer or any brakeman, and costs only small figure, wiles. Bonds at the rate of £25,000 a mi will be issued. county, sud in fact to every count; v grain, is having its effect lxrhll capital in th foreign states.Fairmont Bulletin, 1t says the building committoe *‘were stand i ween the state treasury and a job. selves, Hardy, on the 18th, by the water washin, Some six persons were more or less injure but only ane seriously, who was quite severel, and perhaps fatally hurt. Louisville has procured a stock of tar|-——— foathers to decorate the brutes and bums the town. The Olserver warns ‘‘a certai man who will stoop 80 low as st basis of a city’s growth and pros- |England. He has met with poor e os of sudden growth, | they commen are not as numerous Contributions are ness exceeds $300,000, and the demand eatly to the burdened business [ and he h The new M. E. church at Lincoln will cost Oakland has $20,000 worth of buildings The Baptists of North Bend will invade hibited in the ing steps towards the estab- Tn the absonce of agin mill Vork yoarns for Dodgo county will put a $1,200 bridge over Tho B.& M. are replacing the iron with The North Bend Flail is the Langtry of papers, as bright as & red wagon and i | oflice and addre has abandoned the plow ently delving for coal ications” of success ompany at Schuyler are in- The Gage Connty Democrat thinks the body | storms have this year been most rudely i lemocratic politi- eighths wind and us the occasion Harvard is stirring o wann pot of tar to decorate some unknown malicious vagabond who distributes filthy letters through the streots attacking the character of the wives and North Bond merchants are tired of ‘‘What the trattlc will bear” freight rates of the Union Pacfiic that they have ordered their goods nhl‘qmd via Blair and Sioux City to Fremont J. H. Ishell, of Alma, received a shower of foud, but fortunately the wounds are not at Norfolk, have invented cellent thing in railroading, viz, an ic brake that can be attached to any car, pussenger or Treight, worked by the en- The Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri valley railroad company filed & document with the county clerks of northern counties to securo bonds issued tobuild west from Valentine 150 The immense influx of people of Fillmore ko, is sufficiont and fattering evidence that the abundant yield of wheat and all small | Among the many refreshing comments on the Stout capitol steal, that of The Hardy Horald is equal to 8 Mauitoba on a hot day. but so far apart that Stout and his con- t laborers walked in and helped them- Tho “cannion ball” train was _ditched near BELLEVUE COLLEGE. the track out, and the worst wreck the B. i M. | brasha. Begius September 10th. - | ever had on this division occurred. Three | Sciontific courses with pre) cars and the tender were badly broken ulr Musical and Art Departmont, all open d, ifo o | His institute was modled !after tho: couragement, and yesterday retired in disgust from the field. “The scheme o | commenced all right,” he said, “and I " |had hopes of building up a profitable “|school. There are several large institu- stocked mines have reached their natural | tions of the kind in London, and they all level, many are closed and abandoned, | make money. The people here are not a | educated to that idea yet. I had a large number of applicants at the start, bwt | they expected too much of me, To begin , they wished to be crammed for the s now required to secure pay dirt. Thede- | civil-service examination, and asked me velopment is greatly retarded by the sus. |to get them the official list of questions. o|T could only do this by bribing some of must be shown now where a fow years | the clerks, and not being in the bribery s |business 1 refused todo it. Then they s | thought that I ought to sce to it that they s | were all provided with a fat office if they population” and fictitious growth has giv- [ condescended to take a course at the in- en way to slow but sure permanence. In [stitute. When the applicants found that this way the state is returning to first |1 could only prepare them for the exarn- inations and could not guarantee to get any of them positions in the departments d to drop off, 1 have re- |ceived hundreds of letters from parties " | asking mo to get thom clerkships. It has been the common error to supposo that 1 as of yore, and steady golden streams |kept an office-brokerage shop. I might . | have continued my school, notwithstand- ¢ |ing these draw-backs, but T became con- vinced that the civil service-law i a fraud as it now stands. Nearly all of the of- badly needed to pay off the G. A. R. in- | ficials that I have talked with treat the debtedness, and hundreds of hoascs go |civil-service regulations as alarge joke. begging for tenants in the city to-day. | There is no need of my school To con- | tinue it would only be giving color to the | farce.” California Hoodlums, ers are considering an_ordinance which | New York Times. proposes to tax all classes of business and professions, both permahent and tran- | California as the big trees or the large sient. The measure is an extrardinary | and insipient fruit or the brag about the one, born of necessity and creates much | climate. His name shows that he is a Besides licensing all | new species. If he were simply the rowdy classes of shows, drummers, peddlers and | of the east or the rough of Europe, he The hoodlum is as distinct a product of t | would have been called a rowdy ora levies a tax of one per cent on the capital |rough. But his peculiarities were two of banks and one per cent on the value of | distinct to permit of grouping him in any o | nomenclature that pretended to scienti- e | ic exactness with -either of these species, accordingly been classitied by naturalists among the fauna of California as the species hoodlum, the habitat of which 18 exclusively the Pacific slope of the United States. We have had the opportunity of study- ing the hoodlum in the person of Denis | Kearney, who is vouched for asa remark- ably perfect specimen, and who was e st some years He is now on exhibition again as the preper- ty of the Central Phcific railroad, but since he has come into the possession of The cirous and_diluted lomonade captured | that corporation he has attracted much less attention than he attracted before he was partially domesticated. From obser- vation of Kearney just after he had been caught, it was concluded that the hood- lum bears to the common blackguard very much the same relation that the Tasman- jan devil sustains to the domestic cat. The habits of the rough are nocturnal, Ferdinand Sluka, of Fillmore county, | He is seldom seen in daylight in popu- threshed 1,780 bushels of wheat from 70 acres. The B. & M. company have ordered twenty- | aud seldom attacks man unless the lat- i engines for work on its lines in |ter invades his lair or unless he is actual- lous places where there are any police, ly suffering from hunger. The hoodlum, iage county, | on the other hand has no fear of man, belonging to John Barrett, died of old age on whom he often attacks without provoca- tion, and, so far from shunning human society, he delights to flaunt himself in its face, and may often be seen in the prin- . | cipal city of San Francisco running for ing public meetings. continue at the rate with which they have visited us for the past two years we might as well return to the practices of the cave-dwellers that inhab- ited Burope a million of years or 80 ago. All the supposed laws governing these n and effectually broken, and we are once more at a period when the wisest can only say: *‘I donot know.” That com- passes human knowledge upon the subjec of these storms, A few years ago the were only known in an elliptical-shaped region extending from central -Towa to central 1llinois, and from the Ohio to a point not far from Clinton, Iowa. Lat- terly the ellipse has tilted to the south- west, and extends from near the gulf of Mexico to Manitoba, while the length of its shorter axis has proportionately in- creased. It used to be an infallible law that a cyclone never approached or was that at Racine the present scason shows that that law is no longer obeyed | THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relloves and cures RHEUMATISM, Neuraigia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACITE, HEADACIIE, TOOTHACHE SORE THROAT. QUINSY, BW wpuer. s GB. SPRAINS, Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, FROSTBITES, BURNS, SCALDS, And all other hodily aehes sud palns. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. 1d by all Druggists and Directions in 11 m L L A g a d a lo he Ui he care of the Presbyterian Synod of Ne- e i chu’flxl and ry department; also, both sexes. Tuition low. Location beautifuland healthful. Onl) uine miles from Omaha on the B. & M. R. K. Ad- Y | dress for circulars, PROF. W, J. BOLLMAN "Ballo- vue, Nob. {y18d-00d miekwim i| " JAS, H PEABODY M. D, T in the south part of town who gave bis | PHFYSICIAN & SURGEON, AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOTf. ND ALL GROCERY' SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO tions from the north would give us better | Republican says: ~Early last spring an Benton, for the time being, retains her | ratos from the lumber region and better | nterprising ox-British naval offcer open- Tako the case of a man with £1,000 [supremacy as the commercial metropolis |rates on grain shipments, while the south | £€ & Clvitsery institution in this city. would open to us the conl fields of Kan- | He went to considerable expense in fit- sas. Cheap fuel ahd cheap lumber will [ting up rooms and engaging teachers. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, L, Singles, Pi 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, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA. WNEBRASKA. P. BO Y ER &£ CO., DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTS, LOCKS, &. - 1020 Farnam Streoceot. Omahan. HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Shats. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, - OMAHA NEB. OMAHA, M. HELLMAN & CO,, Wholesale 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, NEBRASK Clothiers! Office Corner 13th and Harney Streets. Anheuser-Busch .. BREWING ASSOCIATION: | CELEBRATED 4 Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itself. 7)) ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THE STANDARD OfOurG-uarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Omaha and.the West. Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, and be in good marketable condition in the spring. its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our CGround Oil Cake. It Is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn' , instead of running down, will increase in welgh § Dairymen, as well as others, Who use it can testify Price $26.00 per ton; WOODMAN)LI CHAMBERLAIN & HOWE. Call and get Our Eastern Prices before purchasing elsewhere. wife n beati Saturda; ¢ st A " o & ng on ywnlfl“mw‘ Residenee, No. 1407 Jones 88 Offios, No. 160" Far I e malks o wtand out of doors the big: | et s Riephone’ (06 Oios . “Kesiieacs Cavirom1a fruit would boa drugin our| The Fromont Herald piotures a fu- | hust iaes Make her shanc o wtobp m o1, be tolorated in Russia or Germany, gest part of the night is no better than a dog | W, VISITORS & PURCHASERS EQUALLY WELCOME, DL et O SN 114 3 1 90 s ) A PR S