Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 26, 1884, Page 4

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. s 4 THE DAILY BEE ¢ York Office, 1toom € "y 1in o o111 : . ROSEWATER, Fditor DESVE v ] ) men 3 t dens 1 di Our 1 ! it was found bottles of wix e? 13y it dead or onl sloepingl Meantime the property th was condemned is taken out of the juris diction of the assessor. Waex Uncle Rofus Hatch said that among the sont national cattleme Lou nave politicians in that convention. Lyaay TRUMBULL i3 montioned s o possible senator from lllinois in the ovent of tho democrats scouring the I islatare, which now seewms quite likely 1t will bo remembared 1} left the ropublican party the democrats in 1872 He was elected to the United Statea seuate in 1867, 10 of his opponents was John ner, who followed Teambull into th demacratic party. 10 i quite likely that t other. Mansuan Cosvises in - doing good work in weeding out the polico foren, but some of the members are la the habit of loafing ahout the Buckingh variety theatr saloons, and gambling placee, when they aro eupposed to bo on their beats. Sach men o not fiv 1o be tion of Marshal Cummings in promptly 1 the police force, and the ac- @ 1spending fivo policemen, whom he duty and loafing found neglecting th in such places, is to bo commended. Tuy St. Louis Republican says thet if Gabriel does not blow his horn protty scon the people of Pennsylvania will re- fuse to enter paradise when they aro in- vited to go inand walk the golden streets. It is led to this couclusion by the fact ral gas which has been that the nat “struck” in western Penusylvania not only furnishos light and heat, fuel and power, but two zeniuses have discovered methods which will tu juid s and convert the whisky, exsollont butter. It now turus out that the meeting be- tween Tum. Hoendricks and Grover Cleve. land was not £0 harmoniouy asthe former goutleman g in an authorizod interview. lustead of ico tlmo,"” as Mr. Hendricks having ¢ suid, the fact is that they b vow," & soct of monkey u ble, in which the parrot lost sll hia fenth- ear. When Hendricks prosumed to ad- viso the presidenteleot as to how he o, he was promptly shouald form his cab and effcctually set down upon, Itis evis dent that Cleveland hae no for the ladiana stat man. Roswenr Prrrinone Wi iast been heard from. H has been in terviewed, and among other things he says that it is well known that Cleveland was not his choice as a candidate but ho promises to do all he can to make his administration a succese. Mr, Cleveland ought to take a great deal of comfort in that assurance. fnoidentally, Mr. Flower 0 mentioned for a cabinet position, but that he hes no weans of knowing Mr. Cleveland's pur- poses or wishes at preseut. This is & po- lito way of intimating that Mr. Flower stands ready to aceapt a cabinet position. We would suggest that Mr, Cleveland glve him & position in the White House the tender house «ays that his name has bes conservatory amo; plants, Ax sttempt on the part of s telephone company to erect a biz pole in front of Beautor Edmunds’ residence in Washing- ton caused that gentlemun to raise the question whother the comminsioners had the right to grant such privileges, and the result was that the United States dis. trict attorney decided that they bad not such suthority, as that power restedelono with congies o far as Washington is concerned, Thsd geaph ni telephons compunies & black eye in the natioual cipital. They will erect no u.ore poliossnd will be compelied to put their wires undergeonn’, Itis now liksly tla% eoveral suits wll be brou Lt tu gaus: the removal of poiss alrea’ly erccted god eowe partics may sue for daw yvh ir ntally ern delegatos to the convention at St. there were a large number who owned a bull or a cow, ho told the truth, He might have added that there wero .altogether too many played-out at Mr. Trumbull ud joined y will again bo pitted againet cach sio n the tluid into a mewhat hatter than old Monon- siduum zave the public to understand La “fine old arrob socia- at affection wer has ot HOIST BY H's VN PETARD Ha our N R WA « 1 Li Iff Blaine « W l ul 1 Iial | caus | nd argumen [t Bla on M- R Al o s of from him, (hnaha ho Hatton-Clarkac roached us by tele graph. Ouly a very small fragment o M Hatton's coutroversy, ai lidont Arthur and his cabinet, right bof Blaine's defeat. tho 1 belittlo ey 3 is only surpassed by his idio cryatal and his readerle culation was limited toa f dred, and outside of sha i only renched the country woeklic a3 an exchange, We know thet the | m: and markec 1680 with laudatory lette the editor of the Brr, whe was makin the fight f. never wrote a liy b to Blaine or wont b a single copy of this paper. Ia the fizh in th y, which determined the re elect a delogate to the county convention He was a non-cnil the slightest attention to him, either in side or outside of politics, Bnt profes good memories Oa May 22, lm‘-\, the diy alter the slate convention that sont a solid deley tion for Blaine to Chicago, the Ot Republican, which was then for Giran mado tho following editorial commont the result at Columbu; Me Edward Rosewater - and not its Chair man, Col. Champim 8. Chaso- was th and kept tho animals inthe traces thro ing anti Grant organ of the of any *“kicking” aguinst the ca topi voution like littlo men and by theie votes 1 corded th by their chiof, M Bdward 1t water was ho anti-Grant majority in the ¢ my He refused to say, when dicect!y and fuence, or endeavor to influcnce the repu minority alono who, as Mr, 1 it, hoard “the crack of tha leader's whip t ent of & revolt from Mr. Edward Ros wate Mr, Edwad | cimion gives the teles pably that in ca for by ballo®, the cauc wou'd be elected majority in favor of a compromise on an un ant delegation, with such instincted Bluioe G Blaine men as Millard, Mitchell and Baroe and such Grant men as Laird, W e, Had 4 ized a comprewisn v ould I iltso or Re allot been author & pronoun * * Boall thisasit may, it romainy t conclude as wo began, Mr. Fdward Rosewater ran the Columbus cony again and again boen set ¢ foll swo p," precipitat party, with Mr. L. Crounse and Mr. Jame W, Lrawen ue his licut f tha Platts river How do theso frank admissions made oly filowing the state canver o victary 10 1880 1 Does the e ! tho Jegublican propose to diser s for conve yws how eac h me; who can bring the great into the railroad drag-net. an effort to set Pres in Omaha wo Union Pacific politiciana of both parties ropublicans who were disposed to charge | who are still figuring qaite extensively on thom with the responaibility of Mr. | the street corners, in the city hall, in and around the Douglas county court house, and about the United States court house The jury fixersand political bull dozera have not retired and they will not until General Manager Calloway, of the Union Pacific, adopts his new policy to practi- was nothing in that letter to any honorable repub lican could fnke exception. The nddle-headed pigmy, whom Providence has for somo Inscrutablo reanon, inflict- cal enda vy retiring them pay rolls of the company, and utterly re- Ttisn fagt also od upon Nebraska republicans, reminds us forcibly of the ciydy fly that imogined that ho was tive power of the wheel upon which ho revolved. His insane desiro to nome of theso political dead beata, who have been dropped erything connected with the [are making peoplo bolievo that they am- | yet in somo myaterious way and connequently thoy g about the same tluence that they formerly did. bition to magnify his own acts* It wos Fred Nyo with hia defunct News that 1 the DBlaine sentiment in this submit to the extortion until cap are exercisi stato, when in fact that brainless editor ¢ Lineoln Journal is always Ithcugh itis loca'ed at the state seted no more iufluenco vpon x‘.u».u‘m.mn‘ ans than the Deaj Mute Journal. Yo Omaha its|capital and within cusy reach of ation concerning state sflai hun- members of badiy mixed up and lamer natance it shows ihat 13 true th enormous profits another | built alongside of it and blacknail it into and defeated by W ault in Nobraska, Fred Nyo did not even and Wilbar ¥, and nobody paid | was the democratic nominee, constitutional amendmenta According to the Journal liars ought to have at least a t for and acainat the tive article, and 80 contruetion, and for the cutthroat competltion that precedes a consolidation, Lo theond it is satisfac and rguinst tho executivo nrticlo, 1sha [ cle by Jess than 1,500 votes, whereas it i wore doubtless loas than 70,000 cast obvions that they who voted amondment v spokesmnan of the Donglas county delogation He carried it votes in his pocket; he held thy reing in bis hand withont any cutanglemont 10 vordict of a jury has cauged nation throug n Itwasinn i the wholo race, Mr. Fiward Rosowater wiv lso tho ger factotum of the wnti Gran caniens, Hisiotimations of what a .y might expect of him and his paper ul st —in ths event hiof ) hiof Justice Col proved all suflicient. Thoe auti-Grant repub. 0/Blsown » Yicans camo vight up to the eerateh in the con- [ 67 10 poison hor mind against / Her father ob ms bocause ho was s b the master spiit dircoted his son to writo the which the y shed to say that he would vote or use his in Auranco that she true to him, Lord Coleridge disinherited his danghter, and expelled her from his house cans of the state to vote for Geno Grang jury returned s chould ha ba the nominee of (o republican party. But this made no difference; th anti Grast majority stood right by him from be gluning to end, was his rne th Judge Manisty, probably out of respe {l ral enssian” alono, ) he Gran moral siasia alon 1t was not Giran ThatiootOdlarids promptly overruled the vordict for the defendant, 1 oxpressd The anti-Grant wojority heard it, and they wore made to teel a lively sense of its stivg in | versally denounced as an outrage and an jury ayetem, Tho case will be brought to the attention of the house mmons, and no doubt the judge who has daroed to act contrary to law, de ceucy and justice will be properly dealt The affair also puts Chief Justi Coloridigo and his son in a very unpless- ant attitudo In the eyes of the public. insult to the ' dictation, In moro than one of his speoches, on the resolution that the vote for dolegates bo by ballot on district eandidatos, tor walked right out inte ainle, turoed round and faced his follow 1 threatencd with nowspuper exposures and denunciations any man who had partici pated in the caucus, who should east his bal lot for any republican except the caudidate uamed by Dictator Caucus, Tha close vote on the question of & ballot demonstrated pul LPioncer Press the wheat outlook as more northern states, and says: *Low as is the price of wheat in this region, it is consicerably higher, relatiye other western due, of course, to the suporior quality of the hard epring Dakota, and partly to the competltion, for this hard wheat supply botween the Minneapolis mills and the short haul to Daluth these reasons higher relative prices pre sail over this northern iywhers else in the Unitod States the results, tho®gh temporarily embar assing, aro not ruinous to the wheat grow delogates should be voted sslate would bo broken and two and parhaps theeo Grant delegatos ore was o pronounced Thin in partly o and heen ratitied by od wajoiity of the convention. n, Aiter having wa fupon by the 1 hinwell upon the ections of the o aging to tho w ute noréb sod south ta in the cxisting state u bear out the malicious arsertion that 6 ) 1k was entitled to o credit for the northwestern wheat belt will act A oty Argument Denver ‘1 The oppone f ot points, They % tha al 18 cheaper undor t Al monoy It a tith rough n trumentality 1 monopolics, Then they r that the dm § not fr monopoly but from over-competition. They also free aud investmont free no inveatment can ba called & monopoly. This a beauti- ful fabric of argument, but it can b b ut on every side. Coal and oil » chesper than in nd rail- and transportation a than in the early roading. partly “because and partly because of the working of com- petition beforo the attempts at monopoly made any progres ty if by 8o dotng it can Increase consump tion and make a large demand and profit. But it will not make reluctions below this point, no matter how great its pro- fita. The oil monopoly could essily raise the price of oil until people would all use gae. It does not make oil cheaper than gas from the principle of benevolence, uor becauas of competition, but simply for the reason that it pays. In short ev ery monopoly can be relied upon to charge “‘all the traflic will bear,” which often ylelds cutrageous profits on the cost of production, “'he assertion that there is no monopoly where capital and investment are free 1s correct 1 theory only. The man who has the only bakery in a village ts practi- cally possessed of a monopoly. The labores who has to pay double a reason- able profit on the bakiog of his loaf is free to start a bakery of his own. But he has no money with which to do an ching of the kind, and if he has he does not understand the business. He must | comes with competition or until the state regulates the price and weight of bread, a thing, by the way, which is actually done in many countries, Whoever owns the only railroad sup- plying a community has a practical wonopoly, and it is o farce to argue that if the paople do not like the chargen they can walk or baild a road of Ilu-lr own, As a matter of fact they can do neither, Tho claim that capital competes with capit ud that monopolies are contini - wting monopolies is true, but tie of « r competiiion 1§ rroat Very fow roads in this country are sctu ally i) aily varnlng less than a fair return apon pital really invested in them. It ¢ when a road 1 paying 20 will bs a cmsoliuation, This 1sa bad state of aflirs, but iz is likely to go on until the roads join the people in appealing for wernmental regulation of rates ou the ne hend aud of the building of competirg lines that are not neeaed on the other, The people now welcome the advent of a parallel to a trunk lme. They gt somo temporar; benefit from the money disbursed by ie hile thay onjoy tion to them to feel that the monopoly hich has oppressed them has besn con lled v give up a large portion of ita u just gaivs in order to buy in the paral- plo are the suf- ol Of course, tho pe: forors In the long run, for the consoli dated monopoly at once goes 1o work tc sot ovon. ALl such comptition does not at all, und it may be maid that no twe lines of road uro nocessary bety pointa. 1t i3 far becter to have ono roa with two, three, four or six tracks, Upon it & given amoun cost lese. But this will never be em sented to by the people until the roads plo, through are willing 10 have the pe the govirnmert, regul the ralcs When the roads allow the government to do this the government will protoct them igminal untecessary paralleling, Until some such arrangement as this 18 reached Will perpotually recur, and the paralleling of paying lines will grow into great pro- porticng, Guos Versus Armor, New York Times, Tho 1ecent experiments made at Spezia tho | to ancertain the pencirative power of 120-ton gun have shown that no armor yet mado e projectile thrown by this movster gun Targets representivg the armor of the d consisting of thirty- ironclad Italia o six inches of solid iron with a heavy wooden backing wero complotely piercod, the projoctile passing beyond the target and burying itself deeply in the sand. Lt is true that the Italian officers belicve that the angle at which the casemate armor of the Ltalia is placed would enable it to deflect the shot of even the 120-ten gun, and they can console themselves at present with the fact that they possess the only guns of that size that are atlat Still, the fact remains that artillery has won another victory over armor, and that the groat Italian iron-clads can no longer | be held to be invulnerable. It seems perfectly clear that the gun \\ must always conquer the armor, There is & practical limit to the thickness of \ armor which any vessel can be made to carry, while there is no such limit to the 29 of guus armor may bo placed on & man is evidently coming when armor will be abandoned as usclcss, und the navies of tho world will coneist of unarmored vos sels, any one of which can be destroyed by a sivgle shell from the enormous guns that will be in use by all nations When that day comes no man-of-war will risk & naval battle if it can be avoided, for the only chance of safety i such a battle will be to plant a shot in tho enemy’s hull bofore he is ready to fieo, Tho wholo duty of & man-of-war will ba to destroy merchant vessels and to keep out of the reach of the enemy's mon-of-war. Speed will be the chief werit of a naval vessel, and a crack ship will not bo one which fights su battles, but ove which is most successful in running eway. Salors will point proudly to the Victory or the Constitu- tiop of the futuse, and claim that she has CHAPPED mora capital | WITH GOOD RESULTS . A monopoly wnl wven put down the prices of its commodi- Mrs, 8. G, Stovenson, WORKS LIKE 1y who hay had r Cuticura Scap ! proscribe 34 nddition, nice anid rotail dry g ,.u\‘u”.n.r)‘- with@ r. H WHITING, M. 14 Central Mus! Two rooms turnish W. cor. Sthand Howard. 170 tf For kale overywhere n corner of 17th and Grace Ste Situation by alady POTTER DRUG AND CHENICAL. ¢ AP M0 € BEAUTY the ¢ UNITED STATES Na innal Ban S, DEPOSITORY, S. W. Cor. Farnam and 12th §fs.| store 10th an: Py two German g First-ciass throo etory brick, metal NT—A new store room and offices uy-stalr n 18h betweo V. 3. Kasper 9.0-4¢ v v Fo ¥ s pet n hiuse § 1 tor light houre eloval roto iroad track to door. Baraur & Mayne, 926-t W illiams . HAMILTON, W desrab o ¢ . BARLOW, Cashier M. T. BarLow, C. Wirt HamiLros, ter and ko to represent us i Accounts gall jact to sight c! Bortifleates of Doposit lesuod avplicationfor Houee 7 rooms good lozality by C. T. Taylor, cornor Lith and Douglas, 1 nd with ..‘d: intorost, ar en do . customers ar | approved sacuritios at market rate clintorost. Sts of Custormers ar 00) neres good School racts aud upwa Bt indi, Bootiand, and all p e Eurapean Passa e Tickets tes .Depust:ory atiou 213‘ 1 Fth &'JO. ¥ari DOR SALE OR TRADE in Eacte The Oldest Banking Esiallis wn Omalic, 70 EOUNTZE £ANITOA 1n 1808, , Piers, ne Organized a8 a Natic n two Jf transporstion would COLLECTIO! SPECIAL PROMYTLY NOTICES | pools will form and dissolve, rate wars INEY TO LOAN In_sums of #4300 an/) and Co., Keal . tat 1606 Farvam St bougiit and sold 0 resist the new steel MATA Finwncinl Exchang m wiv on approved socurity week days. 10 10 1Sun, 1603 Fari: Stroot, lub hall, powly ) retiring frot ith Tanth stroct YELP WANTED A very do-irable room, i ouo delivery w rlat 2214 Dougly o * 1414 Calitornin st oet and part “-A\m. A wows Tooms foF rent. 4 botweun 16th and ¢ St Barnabas ro tory 0th htreeta. - Dle e Te corncr 10th and Califoruin, Ar atadvaty: P\ul'.hl.h‘l’ Pleasaut furnished room,f s furuished or unfirnished UP—0n October on second for, Furnished rcoms fn Luildinz House miaid at 1 A girl to do general houss work one milch ¢ yws at strect, 3. W, Penny ar Lots Wil to cionge of L Pafit, Gae 701 iy 1ok of gencral mer. or wil ek will in care of 1195t Poorloss Stean ess opportu . tin the city; 1 ex d hizh top gz Faztory, Dolize 250-tf 10thiiz, Duote A MISCELLANEOUS. ¥ on Dayeny 25, o light 1 noree, white st in forchead and & whits vt just above Eiliott, one milo weat of the barracks UBBER STAMPS—On y manufacturers in Oniaha §02-tf turnisted cotrage on Lea RIVY vaults, sinks and compc shortast 1otico and at any thme of the Uy, fn an rloss way without the least molot or ncighbore, with our improve au A kvans & Co., 1008 Canit pposite Post ot A larze turn'shed front room Addiess Nobrax ('t Ausoiation, Fren 110 - oms, and & ) matter how thick the f-war guns will be wade o pierce it. The time Naunders steeet nuar 1 cleanod it thr w4 DREXEL & MADL, UN’DE”’TAKERS ! JHN @. JACOHS COLLAPS #° CUFFS BEARING THIE WA ARE ThiE FINEST GGODS EVER MADE orwa All Linen, sors Linings ao Exteriors. Ask for the s tor Umang s S

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