Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 19, 1884, Page 4

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THE DAILY BEE-- PO 5 - TS 3 *OMAHA, WEDNE SDAY, g R e e O e s 5 LRIt . ' _——] | | COMMISSIONER | sioner plan in Tennessee has been made | hoalth for a year or more, and had heen | and the s ‘eeporter emiles as he contor- | S F J S a failure by tho railroads them- |traveling in Europe with his father and |1Jo%" ¢ 1} D TEEL “y OHN ON& co" Omatia OMos, No, 016 Farnam 8t | '_"_“u‘ g0 th l L oF | golves, Had the legislaturo of Tenne o | mother ith had everything to | 1 b dinnnd iy She Shwelimon of souncil Blaffs OMcogiNo, 7 Peari | 830 of the o railroad ven-|,acc0d & law establi axitaum | live for that a human being could have, | fheld county for hands to work on ranches. ‘ Beroct, Noar Brondwa, turad to enlighton the farmers of Ne: | ouianger and freight rates, and provi-|but all his groat advantages could not | Sien on s hunior oferiany 5y "aonth. L¥ H Now York Office,iRoom 65 Tribune | |ruska with a true solution of the rail- | b bbbl Building. Pablished evors morning, exoept Sunday' The oty Monday mornivg daily RS BT MATI Ons Year Bix Monna. . Amorioan Nows Company, Sole Agente Newadoal ore In the United Statos. CORRRSPONDANOR. A_Communioations rolating to News and Edltorial matbors should bo addressed 1o the Epiron or Tax Bun BUSINRSS LNTTERS. | All Buslnoss Tsttors and Romittanoes should o addressod 4o Tin Ban PUBLISTING COMPANY, QWAHA: Dratts, Chooks and Postofice orders to be made pay able to the order of the company. fHE BEE PUBLISHING CO0,, PROPS, B. ROSEWATER, Editor. A. H. Fitch. Maoager Daily Circulation, P, 0, Box 483 Omain, Neb. Ir would bea difficult thing just now to convinco o stranger that any of the with Joe's cheek. Tus Herald Morton a3 the nexv demc for governor of Nebraska. will be clected as usual. nominates J. Sterling atic candidate Mr. Morton Uniess we have a_few more sional funerals soon, we do not know what will becomo of the surplus in the United States trensury. congres- Tuw admirers of Sam Tilden will take ded proper penalties for extorfion and road problem. pared by An article carefully pro- | gisorimination by railways within the state, the joined the enforcament of such just and The true policy for those y Gould's literary burcau | jurts would hardly have en- was given wide circulation in a special edition, mainly with a view to pave the for the establishment of a railway commission in Nebraska. Thia bogus anti-monopoly appeal started out with the following declaration: Of all plans for railway regulation, the commismon plan seems most foasible. With the exception of Nebraska, every state which has had trouble with the railroads has resorted to this measure of regulation, and in every instance the commissioner system has boen successful in some cases more ko than in others, but in all cases enough ao to warrant its adoption as an experiment. The commissioner plan, of which the railway monopolists in Nebraska have so high an opinion, only meets with their cordial approval whero the commissioners proper measure who desire to place the railways under legitimate restraint, and protect their pa- trons from abuses which always aro inci- dental to corporate monopolies, is regu- lation by state and national laws, which give each individual redress without the intervention of commissioners. THE SPRING ELECTION, way The spring election is only two weeks distant. Tt is high time that our citizens should canvass the matter of selecting suitablo eandidates for the city council, and not wait until the very last moment. It is of the utmost importance that the council shall b composed of not only are railroad cappors, or where the com- | honest men, but men who possess good Santa | Atchison, ka & Fo railroad took & most der I'ho tax-payers in each ward of the city | ided gtand in [ghould immediately decide upon some on Lo the opposi Kansas raiiroad com- | wte who s in every way qualified mission, when that body un Wk to | for tl by cutt down | Jt No sooner had the | b position of councilmman regulate his railroad Ay bo dif to induce such men to exorbitant charges nd that o, it is 80 cnsy for to carry out the purposes for which they | sscrubs” to be clected to the ¢ o0 by the legislature of that | o than thoy were mab by fierco and | o candidates, is the very Kensas commission shown a disposition | roason why, asar coun- were or [t is the duty of our staunch busi ly make personal perate resistanco on the part of the cos for the publ oaood, and serve railroad companies, who rosorted to their il 1y usual mothods of bull doz aterm or two in the council, g and trick- | they do this the council will continue to much comfort in the fact that the grout ery to defeat tho decree of the commis- | bo largely inade up of men who are in no raiso him above the physical laws which govera life and death, There are things which even millionaires cannot control, and money cannot buy. Health is one of these things, clear conscience are more valuable than untold wealth. The hand of death in- vades the palaces of the rich and the hovels of the poor, treating all alike, Goverxor Irwis, of Idaho, continues the eccentricity of returning his salary to the treasury department. He has just returned 8650, being the amount of his salary for the quarter ending December 31, This makes the third quarter’s sala- ry that he has sent back to the treasury department. The only explanation of his conduct is that being unable to attend to his duties ho cannot conscientiously nccept the salary. The new governor, Mr. Bunn, of Pennsylvania, will see that WESTHIIN NEWS, of 2,000 coal has been discov nd utain rogion, one half per cent., asec-sme There is at prosent about grain in Madison awaiting shi Minuchaha county farms, near Sioux F bo purchasod at eight ‘doliars to ff lars an acre. Body ash, hack Point from 4 to § olm from rry or oak is worth in Elk per cord, cottonwood and Good health and a 3 Black Hills oil company has levied a $30 per month, | Saguacho is maki | ally . It bases loan comi of the contig uous farming la The ranchmen of the Arkansas valley have united with the citizens of Salida in the en- deavor to erect a flonring mill at Salida, and subscriptions have already heen tendered which give proniise of the scheme resulting successtully. During the month of February coal ship. ments o three companies named were as fol- lows: Raton Coal and Coke comjpany, 9,821 tons; Teinidad Coal and Coke company, 10,679 tons; Canon City company, 15,888 tons; coke from the Trinidad works, 832 tons, The success of the borers of the artesian well in getting down to sand rock and water, more than 1,000 feet below the surface, not only helps Gireeley, but will have » miarked fect on northern Colorado, for twenty or rty capitalists, rich farmers, will owners, ckmen, and others, have been anxiously shing the (irceley experiment, Water ai- y rises to the mouth of the well, and flows in cousiderable quantities, It is ex- Mhat a large subterranean stream from otintains will be reached svon, Angeles. The washed away and though the t 1l within its banks, fears are ertlow if the rains contir, y s now es out of th both the r & Nio Girande he exact teiinus has not yet hosi mived upon. When completed ic wil leading western road, wud will eater nto sharp compatition wivh the Central Pacific, MONTANA, Livingston expects to improve $200,600 worth the present year, from Butto for the wesk Bullion sh will r an | . B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwood & Draper) Chicaco, Man- ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacco Departments. A full line of all grades of above; also pipes and smokers’ arvicles carried in stock. Prices and samples furnished on application. Open orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guaranteed. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER €0 Double and Single i;lin_y Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,] Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings® Steam Packing at wholesale and rejsil. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam St., Omaha Neb. ; mission s o moro aop thrown to the | business qualifications, who will attend to | tho malary is heraafter put where it will CALIFOINA C. F. GOODMAN i stroots of Omaha are paved. grangers to prevent railway regulation by | the business of the city with as much care | do the most good. Thore ey in the city treasury at 4 i1 memm— . |1ww. Whon Mr. Touzalin was manager | ax they handls cheir own affsirs. Many R ek sostesomilug weilies HRve 2 i8 Avcornisa to our dispatehos Col. | tho Burlington road, ho was a warm | hundrod of thousands of dollaes aro to bo | Tiis Philadelohin Prossbogs permis- de i Tolimi county during. the 0 esa e l‘u lst |8 Stanley will bo the next brigadior, 10 udyooato of a railiosd commission in No- | wpent, this searon in public improvoments, | sion to reiterato its former opinion that | P4 weelks, T L H succoed Gon. BMeKenrto. On, Stanloy, | braskn on tho Lowa plan, with nothing to the pooplo want to sce this money | Benjamin K. Butler would be just th |y et s s oo, ol i b as | ARD BRATER K i on! do but to gather such railroad etatistics | honestly and judicionsly expended. Tho | man to appoint governor of Utah, The [ $100 each. “The lowest prico | id 210, 4 & T R S ' 2" T as can be procured at any timo in Poor's | people demand that the city shall get its | way he would make the awful Mormons | b Wil n I 1 0 i O8N Droya is vory muoh discour- | ypanual, and to deaw theie sala- [money’s worth from th contractors, and [etand around would bo ciuvion it } 1“ 0” il Ji)s i sged. 1f ho were roinforced by Joo | ios with rogularity and dispatch. |in order to do this the council must bo |snakes : tlement | g i 3 But when Mr. Rouzalin, bavame managor | componed of bus : L i OMAKA, NEBRASKA. e J. A, WAKEFIELD, WHOLESAL AND RETAIL DEALER IN Limber, Lath, Shingles SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Union Pacific Depot, - roformer is youngor than Kmporor Wil- | sion. Finally managorTouzalin succoedod | way qualiied for the place and the ward | - Canton school bouds sild last weole for & ondiug IR gatod 311,01 {SPECIAL NOTICE TO [ liam, William E. Gladstono, or Susan B, |in the overthrow of t e commission, | bummers and hoodlums will, as usual SN L G g d D e The Helena Independent, the demceratic | q y y 8 L y aly | having sold for £10,500 i h, the iute ! i | Authony. e e vaser syt s g ek i e AT AL L e Tt etk Growers of Live Stock and Others. - = show prococdings. Mo the spint in - Campbell e As nerweeN Church Howe and Tom | which the railroad managers in Kansas is the most cantral county spectablo citiz O £ > respon- | spectablo citizons of Omaha are respon- | Grnvbel SRl LGy sible for this condition of affairs. 1f congress, The Concord Cattle Company of Custer WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Jast republican national ¢uvention, lias Kennard ns delegates to tho national re-|accept commissions a¢ a substitute for | publican convention, to reprosont this district, we are for Bill Stout, first, last and all the time. Tur Cincinnati gymnastic socioty sent its regolutions of condolence over the death of Herr Lasker to the German reichstag, and they were presented in due form without a word of protest from Bismarck. The iron duke knows better than to tacklo the German-American Turners, They have too much wmuscle. Doxn'r be in too much of a hurry about reading out of the republican party everybody who docsn't vote Fitz /ohn Porter a traitor. Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts, who was chairmon of the voted for Fitz John Porter twice, and Hoar has been twice elected by Massa- chusetts to fill the secat once occupied by by Charles Sumner. Nenraska will be one of the very fow northern states that will not prosent a “*favorite son” for the republican presi- dential nomination. Connocticut will present the name of Joo Hawley, Maine will probably advance the claims of Blaine, Vermont comes forward with Kd- munds, Now York will stand by Arthur, Ohio has her John Sherman, Wisconsin her Fairchild, Indiana Ben Harrison or Gresham, Other states have favorite sons who will be brought out as dark horsos. AvustriA is a very comfortable country for publishers of political newspapers. Kvery newspapor appearing more than railway rogulation, we will quote from the Troy (Yhicf. ona of tho subsidized or- ogans in that state: I'ie ralroad commissioners have been holding a long controversy with Mr. Tou- zalin, of the Atchison, Topeka and Banta I'e rond, over the rate question. The commissioners seem to regard themselves as the law, insiead of the agents of the law. Some of their decis- ions are not only distasteful to the rail- cond companies, but to the people, who say that they got better terms from the railronds than under the decision of the commissicners, The Santa Fe road has got out an injunction against tho oxecu- tion of one of the decisions, and the com- missioners have boen compelled to back down. Ono issue the commissioners have made is, that the Santa F'o road s making too much monoy. Wed> not think it is any business of the commis- sioners how much money a railroad makes. The IKansas railroad commissioners wero appointed by Governor Glick, a pronounced anti-monopolist, and they wore excoptionally honest, henco their “‘distastoful” to tho rail road companies, but it is very singular that the railroad managors should have applied for injunctions to restrain the commissionera from establishing rates that gave the railroads more than thoy had formerly exacted. Had the gover- nor of Kansas appointed such a commis- sion as the people of Towajnow have,Mr. Touzalin would have pronounced tho commission plan decidedly satisfactory. 1t will ba bornein mind, however, that wo have ateadily opposed the railway commissioner plan upon other grounds than the danger of making railroad regu- lation a farco through commissioners who aro disposod to play cappor for tho rail- decisions were they are too eminently respectable to tako an active pact in pol | not expect ¢s they can anything botter in the future. Is they cannot take tho trouble fo put proper menin the council to protect their intorests, they cortainly canuot expect the bummers and hoodlums to do it for them. THAT VIADUCT SCHEME, The scheme to construct a viaduct over the Union Pacificrailway tracks,originated with property owners who desired to secure roadway from South Omaha that would not imperil life and limb. Their design was to have the viaduct built on Eleventh streot, and several hundred peoplo were induced to sign petitions with an idea that this was purely a scheme in the public interest, Tt now turns out in this matter, ag in nearly every improvement undertakgn here, that the Union Pacific proposes to have a hand m the job, As o matter of justico and equity it was the business of that railroad to build proper approaches to its depot at its own ex- penso. 1t had subjected veople aud the traveling public for years and years to inconvenience and danger. No- body comes nto Omaha or goes out of Omaha that does not damn the railroad managers for building and maintaining a dopot which cannot be approached with- out crossing over a dozen tracks, upon which cars and locomotives are moving at all times of the night and day. Fre- quently the strest is blockaded and pas- sonvers, desirous of leaving the city, misa their trains, posuro could long ago have been done away with i the road were in the hands of men who have any rogard for their dutios and responsi- our All delny and ex- | siblofupon the center of a wap of Dakota and you will have it upon Campbeil county, In view of the great emigration which will this year pour iuto the territory, many of the railronds have added a farge number of freight cars which will ba used exclusively to carry household goods and farm muchinery, Beadle count one hundred and five miles of railw: res miles per township, i s croater than that of any in the territory except Cass, i The ratio grogational church at Chey- onne was dodicated last Weduesday. A diseaso known as the black tongue, is prevailing among the milch stock of Albany county. A party by tho name of B3-own, while flush with budge and lucre, was relioved of 2600 in a Cheyenne shebang. On 8t. Patrick’s day some ladies of Ch enno presented to the Irish Benevolent Asso. cintion a beautiful emblematic flag. The annual ¢ the Wyoming Growers Association will be hel# at ( Tuh, About S0 ek The object rineral and | Cumming, one of the 080 head there i $15,000, was arrested where ho managed A Cheyenue burelar who was canght in the act of robbing a house, had the cheek t) of- fer & policeman for his libe Unfor- tunately for the burglar there wero too miany spectators, Cheyenne parties have secured a patent on what they think will be a valuable discovery. Tt i o mothod of soparating gold from pulver: ixed quartz, by pure cloride, which is made by electricity, Ths Che; ease James gang, on to be a reward of {falo on March 7 th, Leader is out in & new apain ceois. The Leader has beon greatly improved in overy dspart- men’ sines the change of owners, and is now the Leader, not ouly in name but in fact, The National Yellowstone Park Improve. has filed articlos of inc tion with the secretary of the territory capital is 21,000,000." The in - | editor of ‘Tho Black 1tangs'at Chior *1000 und 550000 durivg_Feb uary, "¢ $ county, through its agent, has just purchased Hou cattle m the states. They will he 1ght to Montana in the spring. & creamery which by & stock company having & ),000. Two hundred head of cows will be purchased for a starter. The trusteos of Deer Lodge school district have established a rule that no one who hus had di, & hiia sha'l be admisted tf chool unt s1X Weuns have expired after convalescence, The quantity of ore from the Montana Belle mine, of Neihart. which was shipped to Omaha for reduction, netted vhe shippers 3149 per ton aiter deducting the cost of shipping and working. Tho new system of issuing pay checks from the offices of the division superintendents is suid to be s saving of 7,000 per month to the Northern Paci the cost of running a pay car out from St. Paul. Throughout eastern ing hangers have been posted bearing C d'Alene advertisemens, which the follow- : “Ho! ‘gold fields of North it gold and $100 per man s thonsands of flam- por duy. Tho Western Union tolegraph company h wade a reduction on hoth day and night, suges from Helona o the stavos and te lorado, Culiforn. das, K Moxico, Utah, Wyoming, lowa aud Nebrasks, w0 that the tariff now to those places will be one dollar for ten words and seven cents for wach wdditionul word for duy messages. The night ruts to the same places is seventy-five conts for ten words,and five conts for each ad- ditional word. The Butte Independent thus pictures the bride of o eotom po ity circles in Ago by the d, of Mr. The In- depend, ) hatfy, wnoso youug and untried affuctions ho ©'while visitiog his native heath. The 1o is a blonde with red hair, emerald green s full of liquid tenderness and love, and which would span the Missouri river at b at high water. Hor waist moasures forty inches, and her hands, encasod in_fourteen button kids, are abont the size of a huy fork NEW MENICO, Captain Jack Crawford, the poet scout, is The Bolla wine has produced between $40,- und_the do has yielded $:0,000, “devotod to struighteniog and lovelivg the dritts, QOur CGround Oil Cake. It isthe bost and cheapest food for stock of any kiud. Gne pound {a equal to three ponnds of corn stock ted with Grotnd O)l Cake ) the Fall an Wintor, 1nsiond of raaning down, wil incrisco 1n weight and bo 1n good marketable conr.tion in the spring. Dairymen, &e #oil a4 others, who use it can testify 80 it merits. Try I8 aad judve for yoursalves. - Prico 25,00 por v a: no cnnrge for sacka, - Addrens WOONW=_, LESEED /T 00MPANY Omahs Nob, PERFECTION Heating and Baking Tr only attained by using 7CHARTER OAK Stoves and Ranges, AITH WIRE GAUZE DVER DOORS Fer sale by BEILTON ROGERS & SON3 e GMAHA M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothierst 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREE1 COR. 12Th OMARH P. BOYER & Cd.. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y Tho Buffalo Echo says large cattle own in the uorth, auxious to securo Yand, ars detnanding that thoi FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF roads. Weo have taken the ground that | the creation of a commission by the | twice a month has to deposit caution- money if politics are treated or montion- General Whittleso, Al agent of the Tnduan burean, is traveling theough the south- western part of the ternit, sting Ln- bilities, Thoy have dofiantly continued the outragecus nuisance, because they f uployos file b or Vi inc i | logislature would be in violation of our 4 upon the public domain offering a cortain afful order to asosrta )l con- ol od. !u‘r\.mnun and surroundings this TR AR R thn\h“"’ virtnally owned our council. It is|amount of money for & frandulent filing, and ::uin:”}«xl‘.'(m,“:l: I.‘.YI:I:“:.I‘.ML“” "li‘m‘»\‘k“ut‘l.:“ P deposit s fixed at §0,000; for towns of i | becauso they foel suro of their ownrship | 412churaiui tho cawboys who'refus ommendation of Major Sanchez, thit 180 duty of tho legislature alone to regulate 60,000 inhabitants, at §3,000; for towns the railway trafiic, and this at 30,000 inhabitants, at §2,000, and for s all other places at §1,000; butpapers only the legislature cannot : _dul‘-gntu appearing three times a week need only [ 897 othor body. This was pay half the amount. This system was the unofficial opinion of our supreme evidently modeled after the Nebraska judges, and that opinion is vory sound high license law. notwithstanding the jeers and pooh- - poohing of eminent railroad attorneys. rower | of the council at the present time that | they propose to ruin one of our best busi-1 ness streets, by the construction of a Cheap-John viaduct, for which they ex- pect the city to pay one half the cost. The life of the present council is limited to tareo weeks, and the scheme isto Ir may be some time y:t bofore the | Tho decision in the United States circuit | *Pring this viaduct job and push it Mexican treaty will go into effeot, and it [court at Nashville, rendered with the is possible that it muy yet be defeated. |concurrenco of three federal judges— It is necessary that a bill shouldbo passed | Baxter, circuit judge, and Key and Ham- to carry into effoct the provisions of the | mond, distriot judges-—-wiped out the treaty. This bill must originate in the | Tennessce railway commission by declar- house, inasmuch as it will be in the na- |ing it unconstitutional. o ture of a rovenue measure. 1t must re-| The hirtory of thisimportant case is cite in effect that whenever the presi- |follows: The last Tennessee legislature dent shall have recsivea salisfactory | passed a law creating a railroad commis- evidence that the Mexican congress has |sion, to consist of three member who passed laws to give full effect to the pro- |should be appointed by the governor visions of the treaty, he shall be author- | and serve two years, their successors to ined to issue his proclamation declaring | be elected by the people next November that he has such evidence, and that(and every two years thereafter, The thereupon from the date of the procla- |law provides that the commission should bt i i isdioti i i oner than before, Hon. tion the articles enumerated in the|have jurisdiction over all railroadas | ™ Ninth strest, where it would |seoner ; ; | ! is al-| John Caunon, the wrestlor, wants to wrestle [ 4 ga¢ 1, Al el wtisada treaty, the growth and manufacturo or [now in operation. It was mace 10 tho loasc harm. Niuth atreot is al- | i\l 0 Sireiig Gibb, for any sunn fromh | eatter s Vberims st ivented what | produce of Mexico shall be introduced into the United States freo of duty as long as the treaty shall remain schedule of rates on a just basis and carry them into effoct. The commission the duty of the commission to prepare a | through at the last moment. Tenth street is now one of our moat important business thoroughfares. It was paved last year at an enormous cost. To plant a viaduot in the middle of Penth streer, from Howard to Pierce, would simply make the adjacent prop- orty almost valueless for anything but wholesale trade, and that would also be very seriously damaged. It would be olevated railwaysin New York, only a groat deal worse, Now, we want a vi duct, and the railroad ought to build it at its own cost, and it should be located ready closed by the railrcad depot. There is no retail traftic on that street, and the business now there would not suffer ma- torinlly, Furthermore the viaduot on like tho property along the line of the|Pr in force. A bill containing these or sim ilar provicions must be considered by the ways and mesns committee and be passed by the house aud the senate and signed by the president. The question now is whether such & bill wiii be passed before| The cause way olaborately argued by |10 the middle of Ninth streot could not By \y::'\lfi: e on Junt: | Paul Schmellick, of Philadelphia, was : b l l‘ 2 i r z i sdjournment, or postponed uatil next|eminent counsel, and the court with. | b damaged in any way. There is no ex- | iug rivk, ou tho yround that it is & wuisauce. iy l:}e‘ ll.“::vr’:“" “x’u XUAsR “f; L& . - : % winter, Thoe bill which was passed i | held its ducaion for six wesks. e[ forany hasto o this watter, and |, (i arpops AL it | Sl vy's coutedorute, “Schmetnck | |LTHE BEST THREAD ror SEWING MACHINES 1876 to carry. inio effect the Hawaiian | railroad attorueys asrerted that tho law [if it is attompted tho proporty Leldens Lanced, wuco ita” organization, teu oeats per | pursued, firing a pistol and regaining the : treaty received only fourteen majority in the house. A chavge of seven votes & very close dl'““i.m"i“ltho railroad company, and although an appointed under this law prepared a | schedule of rates, and the Louisville & Nashville railroad company filed suit for & proliminary injunction to restrain the commission from enforcing it. Ninth street would give the entire length of Fainam streot the benelit of street cars, which would necessarily pas over The maguificent cowshed | the viaduet. ereating the commission was in violation | Will Protect themeclves. of several clauses of both the state and The court sus- tained almost all the points presented by Tue only son of ex-Governor Leland Stanford, of Californis, died in Flor- ence, Italy, on March fappeal has been taken to the supreme ® brief illuess, st the age lwnnotdu\lniud Statos, tho commis: sixteen yoars. Ho bad been in il 15th, after| of |8 valuable gold watch taken. sy State Live Stock adquarters iu Boston, has 1econtly consum. wated w purchass from John F. Cond eud Mark Coad, of their large herd of cattle, the price boing $720.000 cash. Sowe time ago the . 8 pur- 000, pany, with d thoy also made othe A ch aggrogated nearly § 000 worth of cattle, COLOBADO, Ore is now shipped from Mexico to Denver for treatment, The police force of Denver has been in- areased for political ettect, The Silverton snow blockade has been broken, It lasted thirty duys. Fort Coliins is urging the Telephone com- pany to connect it with southern cities. Tn reorganizing the First regiment of state militis the colorad company has been left out. The potato crop of Colorado last year wus n excoss of tho demand by at least 200,000 bushels, Lougmont is to have a Presbyterian college, Boyd hax raised $25,000 aud secured a site for that purpose, George C, Bates, s Denver attorney, has suod Brick Pomeroy for §6,827, money loand and legal sorvices, Under the new fast mail arrangemant Den- ver will her eastern wail fourteen hows $250 to $500 a side, LA waterfall near Feaver village, Clear Creck, has 1evealed w six-luch fissuro contain- ing wrich vein of silver. Denver has » new directory containivg o o3, which, it is claimed, reproseuts o population of 75,0, 1ary was o short month, yet Cilpin st have produced upwards of 890,000 of will gold during the tweuty-nine days. The contract for the mew rchool house in Colorado Spriugs s hoou let for §1 the contractor liad to give » boud of & for faithful performance of work. L. V. Boud, of Leadville, was held up on the night of the 9th and 81,800 in money and A paicof 6 shooters were the persuaders used. At ks an ill slide that byings suow body guod; hildren b placed in the sch f and it is pr Imission will soon b issued from the interior departiment, An astesian well company has been organ- izedin Ren The capital stock is £10,000, divided into 2,000 shares. A five horse team loaded with sheep shear- ors has loft Rano for Pyramid Lake aud Warm SAFES, VAULTY, LOCKS, &, 1O/ Farnam Strect. Omab 0. M. LEIGHTON, H. T, CLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, BUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & €0.) Springs valley, where 100,000 head of sheep are to be sheared this spring. The P'ioche Record says: *‘There is nothing in this srction of the country but snow! snow!! snow!!! Snow to the right of us, snow to the left us, snow all around us, piled high and drifting. UTAH, A site for the naw Brigham Young academy at Peuvo hus been selected, and the work of construction begun. \ Governor Murray vetoed the election bill passed by the Utah legislature. The Mormon papers recormend sendivg the bill to Wash- iugton, and asking congress to pass it. “The receipts of bullion in Salt Lake City for the week ending March 12, inclusive, were 8101177 95; of ore, $,600; aggregate, $110,- 777.95 he provious week the aggregate was $120,520,22, of which $111,645,22 was bul- structed that there is no fr ither in tons or in the valve, The latter is so free frow wear and tear that the, steam excapes in stoady columps instoad of in puffs, as iu ordi- nary engin Daring ey—Daring Recov Witaiserox, Del, March 18 —L: evening a valise containivg $3,000, ob. wained from the treasury department by valise. . = = — e —— Autisaloon Wania Wickessakie, Pa., March 18 —The citizens in mass meeting packed the larg- st hall here to-night and adopted a 1 iolution pledging support to judges in courts in reduciog the number of %iquor licenses and enforcing the law. Wholesale Druggists ! —DEALERS IN— Paints. Oils. Brusnes, OMAHA o A Ciasz, fdat 1837 "HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Shaes EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED| 1118 FARNAM STREET, - YRILLIIVIRINIITG Willimantic Spool Cotton is entirel and is pronounced by experts to be the world.. FULL for sale by m&e the product of Home ludustry, st sewing machine thread in ¢ ASSORTMENT CONSTANTLY ON H HENLEY, HAYNES & VAN Alt?s\flgi., s Omaha, Neb,

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