Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
4 THE OMAHA BEE Omaha Office, No. 916 Farnam 8t. Office, No. ear Btreet, Noar Broadway. New York Office, Room 65 Trit Bailding. Pablished avery morning,” oxcept Sundayt The oaly Monday morning daily. 4 MR KT MATL. $10.00 | Throe Months 5,00 | One Month r Woek, 25 Cents, WELYJSRN, PUFLISIRD'AVARY WRDNNA DAY One_Yoar.... Bix Monns 48.00 . 100 TRRMS POBTPAID, /82.00 | Three Months, . 1,00 | One Month ... Amorioan News Company, Solo Agente Newsdesl w1 in the United States. CORRRSPONDRNOY. v A_Communloations relating to News and Editorial mtters should be addressed 40 the Epiron or T B ) 2 RIS LATTERR ] All Bosiness Letters 4 Rewmittances should!be FANE ATV A TN A PPN aveaen OMAHNA DAILY BEE- WEETATNRC TN A 4w o THURSDAY, MAY 29, 18%4, RAILWAY MONOPOLY IN MAN- 1TOBA. The people of Manitoba, who are being oppressed by that great monopoly, the Canadian Pacific railway, demand some relief from the Dominion government, which, however, is unable to respond as it has given almoat supreme power to the corporation. The settlers threaten either to immigrate to the United States, or bring about a revolution and aecession, unless something is done to force the Oanadian Pacific to adopt a more libera policy. Win nepeg, the capital of Manitoba, is 2,500 miles from the mouth of the St. Lawrence. The Canadian Pacific rail- road covers 1,600 of this distance, and it insists that all the surplus products of addressed to Tin Bxx 11X0 COMPAXY, QMATIA Dratts, Chooks and Postoffico orders to be made pay #ble to the order of the company. THE BEE PUBLISHING CO0, PROPS E. ROSEWATER, Editor. A. H.Fitch, Manager!Dally Ciroulation},P, O, Box 488 Omalia_Neb] Delegates and visitora to the Ohicage convention will find The Daily Bee on sale every day at the Palmer Ho the Grand Pacific House and the Sherman House nows stands,) Nomixe but death or an earthquake will end the Sharon divorce case. Cuna is still in the market at the old stand for the paltry sum of §50,000,000, with no take: Burter will probably capture the groenback presidential nomination. The question is what will he do with it after he gets it?" Tk idea of voting at Chicago for the best man and the man who ean most easily bo elected, is growing in favor with tho Towa republican delegates. | Mayor Chase evidently dares not part with his city marshal, no matter how grave tho charges may be against that of- ficial. United they stand, divided they fall, Tue council took a very proper step in calling upon the board of public works to seo that all contractors carefully barri- cade their work so that life and limb will bo protected. TuE latest story is that the ‘‘old ticket"” craze is only a mask for the Cleveland boom and that at the proper time the old man tremulous will withdraw in favor of the present governor of New York. The Mayor has sent in the names of a 1ot of now policemen, The committeo on police cannot ba too careful in investigat- ing the character of these men None but good men ehould be permitted to perform the important duties of police- men. U. §. Grant, junior, although having been swamped financially, may find some consolation in the fact that his stallion, *‘Linden Tree,” imported from the Sul- tan’s stables, took the second prize at the New York horse show. That stallion may yot be the means of recuperating his fortune, Grorar Avriep TownseND has arriv- ed in Chicago. No man but George Al- fred Townsend has brains enough to fore tell that some very decisive work will be done on Saturday, Sunday and Monday. “Gath” ought to go into business with Wiggins, who predicts that there will be a heavy storm about the 18th of Sep- tomber, when the autumnal equinox begins, TaxiNG it for granted that Sam Tilden will be the democratic nominee for pres- ident, tho man who takes sccond place on the ticket will be like the young wo- man who marries a consumptive or an octogenarian well, kncwing that ho will soon leave her his estate. The fight, therefore, forsecond place promises to be & ltvely one in the democratic conven- #ion, The city council proposes to make Mayor Chase come to time at the next council meeting, He will then have to nominate the heads of departments or give some explanation, We predict that he willnotnominateanew city marshal, but will endeavor to give some reason why Marshal Guthrie should be retained. The main reason, if he will tell the truth, is that he cant afford to part with Guth- rie, and probaly another reason is that he dare not part with him, A decision has been rendered for the plaintiff in the suit of Hall vs, the West- ern Union at Dos Moines. Hall sent a dispatch to his brother in Pittsburg to have him buy 10,000 barrels of petroieum, The telegraph operator neglected to put all the address upon it, and it was not de- livered until after the oil exchange closed, By the time the [oil was bought the price had advanced from $1.17 to $1.35 and the investment proved a losing one. The case is interesting as showing the li- ability of telegraph companies for the eafe delivery of mesaages. . Brwaror Vax Wyok's scheme toa bol- ish pambling in Wall Street by denying the mails to papers that publish the rec- ords of stock transactions is novel and beantiful, bot it won't work, The Sena- tor should turu his hand to some easier refoam-—fer instance, to abolish death by ng ever; ici e o AT m———— Benator Van Wyck is no man's fool, He does not expect the senate to adopt his amendment, but desires in a forcible way to show the absurdity of excluding newspapers from the mails because they conteined the reports of a lottery draw- ing, while other papers, containing re- ports of stock gambling, which is the most disastrous of - all gambling, are al- lowed to circulate through the wmails, Manitoba shall be shipped over this route leaving little or no profit to the producers. ‘I'he Manitobans demand a shorter route to the sea, which can be secured by bullding a railroad only 370 miles long, which would conneot Lake Winnepeg with the navigable waters of the Nelson river, which empties into Hudson’s bay. The point at which the railroad would strike the Nelson river is one hundred miles nearer Liverpool than New York is. This is a practical route and would be the means of giving relief to & monopoly ridden people The building of a railway only 370 miles long would bea mere trifle for the Dominion government; and if undertaken by private parties the government could aid the enterprise by liberal subsidies, as it did in the building of the Canadan Pa- cifie. | But having bound itself to give the Canadian Pacific a monopoly of the rail- way business, it cannot verywell help the peaple of Manitoba in their distress. The Canadian Pacific of course naturally re- fuses to build the desired road, as it would lose the lcng haul of Manitoban produce. It is cortainly a very remarka- ble situation of affairs. Here we see a government virtually in partnership with a giant monopoly, which is oppressing the people of one province to enrich the cities and people of another. The government soems powerless in this matter, and the railway, although having the power, does not propose to take any steps towards adopting a more liberal course. Tho grants made to the Canadian Pacific are something wonderful, and eclipse any- thing in the subsidy line ever granted hy the United States to the Pacific railroads. several states.” But between suppress ing foot and mouth disease in cattle and regulating commerce what reasonable re lation can be found] The suppression of disease among cattle belongs to the health laws and the inspection laws of the states, with which congress has no right to in- terfere, Pennsylvania has exercised this power not only in the inspection of cat- tle, but of flour, leather and other articles of export. Tt is a right that can neither be surrendered nor shared with the fede ral government, The further assumption is made in this law that the states are un- able or unwilling to extirpate disease in eattle, but of this there is no evidence. The law has its origin in_the itch for ex- tending the operations of the federal ma- chine over the entire field of legislation and in_the spirit of paternalism that is never happy except when regulating the affairs of the states and people The proposed market house echeme cannot be carried ‘ou'. Accord- to the opinion of City Attorney Connell a market house cannot be erected on the street and a court of equity would en- join any its erection on any such location. This leaves the market house problem as far from solution as ever. While the proposition to build a market house on a The Dominion government first gave to the Canadian Pacific 712 miles of com- pleted railroad, valued at $28,000,000. This was followed by the magnificent gift of $25,000,000, to be paid by instal- ments, to aid the company in the con- struction of 2,000 miles of road. In ad- dition to this, it gave them $25,000,000 acres of land, valued at $1 per acre, but really worth §5. At the lowest valuation, the land gift is equal to $26,000,000 ; at the five-dollar average it is worth $125,- 000,000, and a good deal of it has been sold in large blocks at from §2 50 to 84 per acre. The actual gifts at the com- pany’s estimate of valuo amount to 878,- 000,000 and at a fair estimate to $178.- 000,000. And still they are not satisfied, but are asking guaranties for further credits, All their railway property, in- cluding depots and rolling stock, and all their land grants are exempt forever from taxation, general and local, and the terms of the contract permit them to seloct their land anywhere they may see fit over an area almost as large as that of all the United States. The large sales have all 8o far been to the English aristocracy, who never intend to live in this country, It is no wonder that the people of Mani- toba, who have been made the subjects of a great and grasping monopoly, should become indignant at the cutrages perpe- trated upon them, and we should not be surprised to see them rebel and bring about a revolution that will result in an independent government. THE ANIMAL INDU REAU, Tae bill to establish a bureau of animal industry, which has finally prased, pro- STRY BU- vides an appropriation of $160,000 to ho used in the extirpation of diseases among domestic animals. This bill is nothing more nor less than an encroachment upon the powers of the states. Thecom- missioner of agriculture, who is to have charge of this bureau, is authorized, among other things, to regulate the use of slaughter pens, a prerogative that naturally belongs to the atates. The states cannot receive the benefit of any portion of the appropriation unless the state authorities co-operate with the fedoral officials in the enforcement of this act. The federal agents can declare that a contagious disease exists in any state, and if the state authoritios do not co-op- erate with the commissioner, the president s authorized 1o arrest the transportation of cattle from the state, The comumissioner has it in his power to throw serious obsticles in the way of one of the most important industries, The president, however, is made’the final ar- biter in any difference arising between the commissioner and the state authori- ties, Incase of any suspected contag- ious disease the commissioner of agricul- ture is empowered to invade the state with his equad of killers and slaugh. ter the infected cattle, If the state authorities co-operatein the slaught- or, all right, but if not the commission- or's killers are to proceed without them. In the bill that passed the house the com- missioner was authorized to make com. pensation to the owners of slaughtered cattle, which on some accounts might have been a good arrangement; but the provision was struck out of the bill that passed finally. The Philadelphia Fecord in comment- ing upon this bill says : This law is based upon that provision of the constitution which authorizes con- gress to regulate commerce ‘‘among the a portion of Fifteenth street, opposite Jeiferson Square, may have been a fairly good one, it was by no means tho best plan, nor was it genarally satisfactory. Tho building was to have been a cheap structure, and would have been an ob- jrctionable obtruction in a street that may at no distant day become an impor- tant thoroughfare. Besides the location was hardly central enough. Under these circumstances it is perhaps fortunate that the plan cannot be carried out, How- over, this is no reason why tho market house enterprise should be allowed to die. Omaha needs and must have a market house, and that, too, at an early day. A central location should be se- lected and suflicient ground be purchased, and a large and substantial brick market house should be builtjthereon. It is hoped that the project will continue to be agitated by the board of trade until some feasible and acceptablo plan is agreed upon, Yesterbav's developments in the Penn bank case at Pittsburg rovealed a state of rottennoss as bad as that which the Grant & Ward failuro showed. Hun- dreds of thousands of dollars have been spirited away or lost. 1t is doubtful if the dopositors can realizo five per cent of their claims. The over-confident per- sons who sought a fow days ago to ward off the bank's failure by making deposits, or allowing deposits to remain, have now littlo more than bank-notes to show for their pains. That ruch a staco of affairs could have existed ¢o long without discoy- ering is very strange, Business must have been conducted in a delightfully easy and careless manner in Pittsburg to permit such things to happen without creating oven suspicion. Now that it is done, however, there will be a pretty loud demand on the part of the public that the swindlers who have perpetrated the fraud shall be punished. ‘There has been tco much of this sort of thing going on inthe last few years. It is time that men who cannot respect the sacredness of a trust should at least be made to respect the law. The whole country is interested in having the Enos, the Fishes, the Brabenders, and the rest of the swindling gang made an examplo of. ONE of the best officials that Iowa bas is State Auditor Brown. Consequently he is the most cordially hated by the class to whose schomes his office might be very serviceable. He is particularly detosted by the bogus insurance companies, whose robberies on the public he has pretty ef- fectually stopped. By protesting to the last against the appuintment of tho rail- road companies’ candidate for commis- sioner he has made himself equally odious to those corporations. A scheme has consequently been formed to defeat his renomination. The anti-monopolists of Towa have now an excellent chance to show their strength and earnestness. If they stand by the anti-monofoly auditor they can secure his renomination and de- feat the corporations and swindlers who aro trying to slaughter him. Ciry Arrorsey CoNNeLL has given to the city council an opinion which has an important bearing on the preeent liquor license muddle., Under the present systom the dealers pay their license money in installments, upon the understanding that when they shall have paid their 81,000 they shall receive their liconse, 1t is the opinion of the city attorney that moncy thus deposited cannot be with- drawn unless liconse is refused This opinion may have the effect of prevent. iIng the return of the money, but the whole system of collecting the license money is illegal as the law distinctly says that the $1,000 must be paid before a license shall be issued. According to the present way of doingbusiness the liquor dealers have no license and are in the attitude of violators of the law. Mgzs, BeLvia Lockwoon, the woman lawyer of Washington, is going about the country lecturing on *‘The Statesman as he is and as he should be,” She takes for examples of what the statesman is, and should not be, Blaine, Edmunds, Sherman and- Logan. She lashes all these men with great violence and can find nothing in any of them to admire. When it is understood that Mrs. Lock- and others asfar from correct were counted for him protests against this land of outrage, it is OF course as #oon s anyone answered that the republicans have done as much of it as the democrats. There is a trite but true adage that two wrongs do not make a right, which is applicable to this case. Itis time for one party to have enough morality and regard for de cency tostop doing it, no matter what the other may do. pr e It is an outrage that the authorities should continue to allow the Third ward school house to b e surrounded by the lowest houses of pros.tution and the vilest dives and dens in the city. The keepers of those places are all subject to indictment, and perhaps if the grand jury should take hold of this matter and indict the whole gang a complete clean- ing out would be the result. It is very likely that this matter will be brought to the attention of the grand juzy, and it it does its duty it cannot help finding a large number of indictments. Some measure of this kind is absolutely neces- sary for the reform of “‘Hell's Half Acre.” Tue tax-payers of Omaha will not find fault with the city council for making liberal appropriations to extend any im- portant thoroughfare, whether it is Farnam, Sixteenth, Cuming, Thirteenth, or any other streot. Wo must have ac- cess to the country, and there is no doubt that the extension of these roads will enhance the value of property and there- by return ten-fold in taxes what is now expended. 1f Omaha is to bo a great city, she cannot expect to remain walled in by a few hills, nor have her business confined to the norrow space between the railroad depots and Capital avenu: Tz Denver News says thatif it rained dynamite the people of Denver would at- tond a circus, Denver people are very much like thoso of Omaha, WESI OF THI MISSOURL, Tuk Ber was among the first papers in the west to raise its voico against the stampede to the Coeur d’Alene mine, manufactured by interested persons and corporations during the past winter and spring. The effurts of this and other conservative newspapors were to a great extent successful. Tho immenso crush of people which the managers of the salted boom confidently anticipated, did not put in an appearance, but it was bal enough. Thousands of adventurous people braved the dangers of a desolate mountain country, all trails buried 1n snow, to find a glittering empty bauble on Pritchard's Creek, surrounded by fleecing boarding houses and saloons. Ninety-nine out of every hundred per- sons who scaled the mountains in search of wealth are now returning, empty in pocket, foot-sore and fagged. An Omaha boy, Will Quinn, who start- ed for the diggings about the 20th of March, writes to friends in this city, un- der date of May 20th, as follows: “You will be surprised at my being here, It wax Gila v\ By sy niteats of ttending strictly to business,my thoughts wero of Coeur d'Alone, and by night it was nothing but dreams of yellow dnst. Detween ourselves, [ don't believe there is enough gold on Quinn's claim to make a riog for Junmie, but 1 have staked all on her (tho claim). and Il stay ith her till they call the turn on me. You would laugh to seo ms now Writing this letter by the light of a waning camp firo, outside of a log palace four by six, where the wind, sighing through the pines, sounds like a zequeim sung o'er buried hopes. Tell ——— ——— not to comewest of Omaha, There are thousands of men who come out to Puget Sound and the gold fields, walking back and starving, They have no money and there is nothing but abuse for the poor tramp. 1 could hire 4000 men on the lineof the Northern Pacific railroad, first class mochanics, to work at $1.25 per day and glad to get it, Men coms in here, spend their few dollars, get out andstart over & country where there is no work of any kind, sparsely inhabited by homesteaders who have to apply to relatives in the east for the means of sup- ing life,” 'his letter was writien at Couer tene City, and presents n picturo that is nct at all overdrawn, In fact it is mild compared with the statements of other men who have thoroughly exam- ined the country, The Cheyeune Sun denounces the stampede us & *murderous boom,” gotten up by and managed in the interest of the Northern Pacific railroad, R Lacoy, o mason of Iowa, who ro- turned to Cheyenne recently, states that the country is absolutely barren of min- eral or other resources.” He also states that of the 10,000 men who were fooled in going thereto dig for gold, fully five thousand have gone away, aud the other five thousand are starving there. They have no way of getting out and have no way of earning the barest subsistence. On the train he rode in, returning from Spokano Falls, there were several men broken down physically by the hardships they had encountered. At every station scores of ragged, emaciated and wild oyed men were waiting to importune passengers, *For God's sake give me a dollar,” In the camps many men had and the sale in parcels, which has already | begun, promises homes for many thou sands of new settlers in that sectior. Within the past fow years the increased great deal of credence to the saying, which has of late become a matter of d continued i d he f ' tracted by human settlement and agricul- ture. T somo portions of the state Inst | IERCIL IR IS A MaXa OEC-. AN year crops were raised almcst without irrigation. The indications now arc equally favorable, Another railroad has been organized, on paper, in Selt Lake City. Tt is called the Utah & Wyoming railroad, with a capital stock of $3,500,000. The com pany is engineered by Eli H, Murray, W. 8. McCormick, Samuel Kohn, 0. J. Hol listor of Salt Lake City and James D. Negus of Ogden. ~ The proposed road | g5Garden Tools a Specialty. takes a northerly direction from the met- ropolis of the saints to the Great Salt Lake which the company propose to navigate EMERION PIANO 00 h Tnstraments and unrivalled for boauty of tone an 1 finish. Allo much observatic noi 0 i8 at- au one an 1 finish, i much observation, that moisture is at- | ol 7 o A. HOSPH, [ENDORSED BY FRANZ LISZT.] BOSTON, March 1st, 1331, crumwry—Your Instramonts, Gran. RECOMMENDS ITSELRF SOLE 1 Uprig 1519 Dodge Streot, PIANOS , aro roally noble / on'on your_sterling / TAVE SATTER, J Omaha, Nah HAS THE LARGEST AND CHEAPEST Stove and Hardware Depot in Nebraska KEROSENE AND GASOLINE STOVES ALWAYS ON HAND. The Cheapest Store in Town. &3 615 and 617 North 16th St., bet. California and Webster, may 23.d eod.w eow-2 by the means of steamboats and barges, to the northern shore in Box Elder coun- ty. From thence the road is to run to a point at or near the city of Corinne, in Box Elder county, thence through the counties of Box. Elder, Cache and Rich to a point on the boundary lino between the territories of Utah and Wyoming at or near the mouths of Twin creeks. The length of the road will be 116 miles. The object of the road is doubtless to se- oming and bring that article within reach of the people and railroads terminating at Salt Lake City. A railroad company with a similar object in yiew was organ- ized about a year ago but its managers soon dropped out of sight together with the road. The} Union Pacific remains monarch of the coal fields. L3 m e e v o W HOlESAlE Druggist ! Bismarck for the seat of government of U Dakota is by no means ended. Although the supreme court of tho territory has ot mtwor o s woios| Daine ()l Varnishes and Window Glas proposes to carry it up to the supreme court of the United States, This will prolong the heartache two years more. Meantime the capitol bailding at Bis- mark is nearing completion, the governor and treasurer have moved there, while the secretary and auditor still hold oftice as Yankton, last resort, tho territory will be divided and tho _southern half erected into a state. This would give both cities the capital prize and diminish lawyors’ fees. The struggle will also be carried into the legislature which meets next January. world. for sal2 by Willimantic Spool Cotton is entirely the product of Home Induste curo au entrance to the ooal flolds of 'Wy. | and is pronounced Tost aowing s i b by experts to be the hest sewing machine thread in the FULL ASSOKTMENT CONSTANTLY ON HAND, an HENLEY, HAYNES & VAN ARSDEL, Omuna, Neh. 'C. F. GOODMAN, AND DEALER IN OMAHA NEBRASKA TIWVOILX. P via bttt e ' The Finest Family Garden IN THE CITY. Music Every Evening, and Efforts will ¢ de by th tendi partios to cither waco or mnction the| EF e AA I CONCEIRT work of the capital commission, and the biggest roll will take the persimmon. |Liquorsa Real estate in Bismarok has taken a bal- Saturdays, if the weathor is pleasans. An elegant tunch will be seeved avar ligars constantly on nand. SN marning, and thotes AURE, Peoprietors and Farnam Strocts. loon leap while that at Yankton remnins at low-ebb, In consequence the feeling n both towns is extremely bitter. Governor Foster, of Ohio, is in Wash- ington, conferring with capitalists, with ' / a view to forming a company to construct i a railroad from St. Louis to Utah. The road to be built will be known as the St. § i Louis, Kansas City and Western, of which Foster is to be president, and H. C. Cross, of Emporia, tho vice-president. The road in to run from St. Louis to Kansas City, through the coal fields of Bates county, HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF EASTERN PRICES ® DUPLICATED) 11 FARNAM STREE - B OMAHA Dy Mo., Emporia, Pueblo, Denver, Lead- ville and toa point between Colorado and Utah. Articles of incorporation have already been filed with the secretary of State of Kansas. The capital stook of the company is $50,000,000. Among the directors are Governor Foster, Senator Amos Townsend, of Cleveland. Nebraska Anti-Monopolists atChicago Fiuiey, Nes., May 16, 1884. Editor of The Bee, In your editorial of the 21st, criticising the national anti-monopolists, I find the following: *‘Fven in Nebraska, where the party has an organization and a large and respectable following, the delegates were appointed by some half-dozen mem- bers of the state committee. To the credit of Nebraska delegates, be it said, they did not clamor for Butler.” This refers to the delegates to the anti- monopoly national convention; and it is 50 much an error that I ask you to make a correction, There were fifteen mem- bers of the state committee present at the meeting which appointed the dele- gates, Tho princ’ple reason which impelled the state comumitteo to appoint instead of calling district conventions was that inost of the activo members of the anti-monep oly party in this state are farmers, and the district conventions would occur in the midst of the planting seas'n, when farmers would not attend. The appoint- [ L] ments were made subject to the approval ] of the district conventions, and tho chair- ] men of those committees and of county ! committees were at once informed of that . WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, v s we oo e M| @nd Grain Elevator Machinerv MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth fact by oircular, Ths action of the state committee was almost uniformly ap- proved. egation for avybody. Eleven gentlemen went from this state as delegates to the national convention, and the delegation Celebrated Anchor added one gentleman from the state who was in Chicago, which made twelve dele- already died and others were rapidly fol- lowing frow starvation and exposure, The Denver Nows bolieves the present year will furnish tangible evidence of the agricultural development of Colorado. The advancement in irrigation and the increase of cultivated land during the last five years has been so great that the progress cannot be fully realized. The partial collapse of mining in the state has forced the people to tura their atten- tion to other and more certain sources of wealth, Irrigation was necessary to make productive the barren plains of the state. In Weld and Larimer counties hundreds of miles of new ditches have been constructed and hundreds of thou- wood’s idea of a statesman as he shonld be is Ben Butler, surprise at her views of | the others entirely subsides. Mrs, Lock wood seems to think that statesman and demagogue mean exactly the same thing, In order to unseat Congressmsn Me. Kinley and make out a majority for Wal- lace, his epponent, 1t was necessary to count for the latter all votes that bore even the remotest likeness to his name. The contestant’s name is Jonathan H. Wallace, Votes for **John H. Wallace, “W. W. Wallace,” *'W. H. Wallace,"{ ‘Woloe,” ‘““Waloo," *Maj. Wollock,"+ sands of acres of new land opened for roduction, Arapahoe county, which itherto has been void of agricultural in- dustry, except in a amall way within the vicinity of Deaver, now opens up square miles of new farms which will be laden with the cereals and all manner of pro- ducts this summer., The Platte or High- line canal alone has been the means of a marvelous advancement. Last year thero were only 3,600 acres krigated by thi canal for cultivation. This year there will be 156,000 acres under cultivation. The High-line will irrigate between | 50,000 and 75,000 acres, In southern | Colorado the outlook is equally cheerful. | The lands i the San Luis valley, sold by the state two years ago, have been amply , supplied with water from the Rio Grande, gates on the tloor from Nebraska. The yote soad e tho Inforwal allot, T BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS | J. Burrows, Chairman A, M, State Com, COMPLETE TREATMENT, §1. A single dose of Sanford’s Radical Cure in- stantly melicveathe most violent Snceaing or Head Colds, leam the head as by magic, stops watery dis- charges from the Nose and Eyes, prevents Ringio Nolses |.."§u head, Cures Ne Hoadache an subdues OMlls and'Fover. In Chronio Catars cly eanses the nasal of foul mucus, restoros o boniea ot simel: tasts aud heasing whe alecked, frees the head, throat and bronchial tubes of offen: alve matter, sweetens and purifios the breath, stops the cough and arcests the progross of Catarrh wards Consumptian. One bottle Hadi oue box Catarrhal Sol- vent and Sanford's l in one package, of al druggists for §1 ¥ BAxPoRD'S RADICAL CURE. Portas Dkve AxD CieMicAL Co., Boston WICHARDS & CLARKE, Proprietors. Omaha qun Miller, of New York, and the Hon.|U. P. RAILWAY, - - MANUFACTURERS OF AN — STEAM PUMPS STEAM WATER AND GAS PIPE. ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON. ‘ ] We are prepared to furnish plans and estimates, and will contract for ! fi E!‘%!‘f“‘““"u‘;f"_'fif“‘."“;‘:“;fm: the erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or g for changing .‘ s System and bauishes Paw. 4 | Flouring Mills, from Stone to the Roller System perfect Electrio Rattery com bined with & Porcus Fiaster fo l IS THE CRY g5certs It w Yen or 4 Vitalizes Weak o Ou SUFTER'RR NERWA Part Tired Nus 4 dicore, 6nd toes moie in ove-hat S obo et ke world mal o8, prv e £nan wize Wer 4~ Kiepecial attention given to furnishing Power Plauts for s se, and estimates made for same, opromptly. Address RICHARDS & CLARKE, Om+ba, Neb W. A. CLARKE, Works 17TH & 18TH STRERIS D DEALERS IN General machinery repairs atteu ¢ Suparinendevt TN ¥FTICY TIIA0 y pur- i