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i H { —t | THE DAILY BEE---FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1885 —_————— — -5 TAE POWER OF MONEY. ment will probably not be accepted by that| MAackix, the Chieago election orook, he had already sufficlont N o " utraged pub. THE DAILY BIE. The acquittaliof young Spreckles is a|gentleman.—Omala Herold, who has made sach a desperate fight to A SCH‘P UF H'SIDHY‘ Il opinion, n’.l he was nV’r;:d, :fi:t ar;nha STRANGE THINGS Owana Orrion No. 914 Axp 016 Fanwax 1. ead commentary on Oallfornia justice, It Juage Snvu;'ga has not been made|escape punishment, has sgsln been con L e Fnla when he tried to nlw‘“"‘" 1t by eacrl- —— Naw Youx Orvias, Roox 8 Tarsowe Borto. | will be remsmbered that he walked Into|government director of railroads, but|victed upon his second trisl, snd sen- | THg PETfdions Treachery of JAMES J. [iimes'de tite oF Albier fyed at the |Told By the Passengers on tho At- TE— the San Francisco (Virouicle office and de- | simply a government dlrector of the |tenced to five years Imprisonment, He 5 the life of Alexander Hamilton, lantic Express of Wednesday. Most respectfally, Par O. Hawes, Bayard to Aaron Barr, Published every m"‘i_n', swaday. “he | iberately shot the proprietor, M. H. De Unlon Paclfic rallway. The attempt to|isn't in the penitentlary yet, however, Saly Monday Morsiog Sally Skhostate. | yvoung, who was unarmed and off his|construe the compliments paid to Judge |although he onght to be there, :n-"vm. guard, Das Young had no reason to sus- [ Savage by the Bek as a flattering Invita- — - eyt A t psot that young Spreckles came with |tlon to him to make war on the Union| Tiuerels a demand for suburban prop- The Weekly M:.Mr:h:d_"mwiflmd" Lm,,,m, Intent, .f the Chronicle had | Paclfic railroad s far-fotched. This paper ;erty close to the olty limits of onlnh: One Year, with premins. 9200 [not in any way aseailed him personally. is not In the habit of flattering anybody | The purchasers are principally gardeners .".’;‘.{,‘,:.'g:‘.‘.?&?‘;':';:':',;m ‘:: It had slmply attacked the the glant |very much, Judge Savage Is the last|—beer-gardeners, With them a thousand ©One Month, on trial,.. 10| yugar monopoly in Ita usual bold and In- | man we would attempt to flatter for the | dollar license saved is a thousand dollars All Oommnnlu;:::::::l::,: Newsand Editortat | dependent stylo, and had exposed its|purpose of carrylng out any pollcy which | earned. mathers should be addressed %o the Evitos of tis | methods to the public view. For tkl:h, :.Oel nn'; commondb' {tself to A Pitnoe of the Pratvies and this alone, the son of the sugar king|his consclence as ing right. d All Bustness lm‘?n:mmu should be attempted toklll De Young. His assault |If, on the other hand, the Herald im- Lt U At bl 3 about the tale of L. L. Smith, of Omshs, paroned i “Tun Wi Pomamizs CoAT VALY | iih o doadly weapon was without | jasti-| aglnen that Judgo Savage osn be used | whose ambition it was to bo’ known The patsengers on the Atlantic express - on the U, P. which arrived here Wednes 'S CAREER. |day morning tell of a sorios of fatal acoidents which ocsurred In the passege The Bingnlar Reoord of the Abscond- | from the west. ing Dry Goods Man of Omaha, Elected as a Supporter of Burr He Betrays Him for Jefterson—The Primary Uause of the Ham- fiton-Barr Duel, A GREAT £CB The first ono was of elngular wlerd- Tho roport from Omata, Neb , of tho [y el el R fallure of L. L Smlith, who ran a larce d A gt b L Ll L dry goods store in that city. and who loft | l00king, well-dressed Fronchman, whote suddenly for parts unknown, leaving|baggage Indloated that he was a man of debts to the amount of $150,000 unset- | means, While the train Iay at Groen tled, recalls to the mind of several Olicsgs ~ Jawyess ot bustness River he walked about and took In the To the Fditor of the Brk, In the assoclated press dispatches a fow days ago I read about half of a col- umn contalnlng an Interview of Hon. Thor. F. Bayard, secretary of state, con- cerning what Impartial history written at Able to the ordet of the company. fioatlon or reasonable provooation. like some of his prodecessors to play the | ‘‘The Merchant Prince of the Pralries,” " men his career is this clty durlng grand acenery, which at length seems to THE BER PUBLISHING CO, Pl'flllS The _trial has been in progress several | stool-plgeon for the Unlon Paclfic man- but rh"l"‘» :“ ':Cl,f ktlllol';;lon” l""““ ;l::fit:;m Lislabce Ao ol ";°‘ ':h"‘ hm“-';\“k He W?ldfim heard :flv?i‘&"‘ld hl]l }‘f;:n-h He :ilfld“‘y on- \ A, . _|evaslve lnsolvent o hi Iseourl valley. . of, to the chagrin of several dozen coun- | tere 0 oar, left his hat, vallse, etc., on R ROSEWATER, Eprron wooks, and has rosulted in & burlesque [agers because his appolntment was fa-|(mghy isa breezy and_progrossive cap-| The Hon. Thos. F. Bayard must oer- |try marchnnls% as a doaler in butter and | the seat ho had occupled, and leaving the ager Daily Oircul A. H. Fitch, on justice, The elder Spreckles, In or- | vored by one of their organists it under- |ital, even though Mr, Hayes no longer der to eave his son from the penitentiary, | rates the callbre of the man, Nobody ;‘lkl!l part in h:hlwmlme'lcm nnllvi‘t‘leu. ¢ has “‘sugared” everybody whom It was | wants Judge Savage to make war on the [ “1¢1® something fu 1its atmosphe i ”m necessary to sweeten. Kven the news- | Unlon Pacific and he could not do It if he ;:::h BRIUFLLY SIRhpLION FOTARUY S pios 3 Fourth of |papers were purchased, and durlng the would a8 a government director. The| To most men who had suddenly ao- J T“: <t ::Irl':al;::::'l:: uou“:unl.t course cf the trlal they did everything|functlons of government directors are qulred §75,000 and who had no practioal A npp__g— in thelr power to mold public|lmited to an excursion over the road once | knowledge of the dry goods business it — — would not occur to embatk the money at Proresson Kurrie, of Fremont, fs[opinlon and prepare it for theja yearand a report about lts conditlon | Gpghq in that precarious branch of traf- expected verdict-—mot guilty. The|and its relations to Its principal creditor, |fls. This, however, ls what L. L. Smith ;z:l?::cv::;l‘:;:fi::; bg,:m: izl spoeches of tho defendant’s eminent{Uncle Sam. In fact, the government|did, and glven L l:‘Smith. 75,000, and : —————— counsel were printed In full In all the|directors have for years been mere super- | this dl!PDll'-{on 0: lmlnf, I:I‘lu -nlbt!tquelnb Ir Omaha had a man like tho late Mr, | San Franclsco papers, except the Cron. fnumerarlee, and of no more uso than a :;‘;:;l:‘:;:fl:'!h::l‘;'!'m:h ik b Bl; Springer, of Cinolnpatl, we would have icle, lndwsrenccompn.meflbylngenlomly» fi.flh wheel to & wagon. At the same|{n advertising. There Is no evidence and had » fountain in Jefferson equare long worded and Inslnuating editorlal com- |time It Is igrltllylug that at least one of ll}tle'.]_)rohhll[tylhnl eingle dollar of 850, ments, For their mercenary part in this [ the new directors has mind and abllity his §75,000 was Invested in prossic dry W — burlexque these papars recolved a total of [ enough to compose his own reports in- checse at 84 and 86 LaSalle atreet, Tho | traln bareheaded struck off on a dead run firm failed under iclous clrcum- | for the lofty hills which rise almost per- stances, and after a vain endeavor of the |pendloularly from the city, crowned by creditors to collect their dues, the name |summits of pecallar rocks. He was pur- of L. L. Smith was forgotten, Smith [sued for some dlstance by the rallway subsequently started a commiesion houee | employes, but was seen to reach the sum- on tho west slde under the name of W, |mlt of the highest ridges, throw his arms T. Johnson & Co. The scheme alleged [above his head wildly and leaping from to have been worked was to recelve con- | the cralg disavpeared. slgnments of flour from firms in the AT POINT OF ROCKS northwest, ship it to New York, and |the second sensational occurrence took socure advances on It. When tho bllls|place, A man by the name ot Pat Hop- MlAd;: thkunfimlx hll:fl.w Fulldn & 0 kins, dwhu camo from County Galway, 'm known as ¥. W, Pullen & Co, |Irelan i 146 East Kinzie street, was another of |[about f:.u:n:opl:-:,d :.".enm:“gh‘.},":r.fif."::g Smith's qentures. In this instance a [hlis slster, both bound for the old country, large firm of flour manufacturers in Min- |intending to eall from Now York July 1 neapolls was “‘worked” for a car-load of [ Pat was about thirty-two years of age, flour, but the house became susplclous, | and his stater, a handsome young 1.3 0 and escaped the fate of othors who gave |was apparently a fow yeara younger. credencs to the representations of Puallen [ Tha lady eaid that = her brother & Co. The Minneapolls fiem sont on |had slways been in good health letters that ahowed the modus operandi [and was sound in mind, but of Smith, and they are now in the pos- | that In making the trlp across the moun- seesion of a well known lawyer In this|tains ho tosmed uneasy and expressed city. A Daily Nows reporter was per-|hls fears that some calamity was pending mitted to look at them. In every "in-|over him. Tho traln reached Polnt of stance in which Pullen & Co. asked for [ Rocks about dusk, and, just before it ar- credit they roferred to Mr. A. Good- [rived there Monday night Hopkins told rich, banker, 124 Doarborn street, | his sister that he was going to scea frlend who, upon the receipt of a letter from the [in the resr of the train. He passed out manufacturer, would wiite an answer on [on the platform, and that is the last the a sheet of paper, witha heading printed (gister ever saw of him. When the traln 111;"13(!3@" h|1ntc‘k lt:;lu:n.h “ll‘\. Ganirl‘c‘l;, bad run about thirty miles, search was or, ~ stating that he knew I + |made for him and he was not to Pullen fntimately, and would have no[found on the traln. The co:? hesltancy in granting him a reasonable | ductor Is reported to have secen a man credlt, “In the event of the flour belng|creeping up one of the steep de- recelved by Pallen & Co, and thelr sub- | clvities which line the road hero, and sequent failore, which followed in due|hence it is supposed that the man jumped course, Mr. Goodrich was invarlably |or fell off, and has wandered away into found to have loned money on the stock | the desert, where he must soon dle of }nfl:u]p:], A;xd 31“! hn&l‘: lien on it that|thirst and hunger unless rercued. A eft little for the creditors. large amount ¢f telegraphin RIS T (i ol it e e el R G street, was the third firm started by |nufortunate fellow, but without success. Smith, By means of lstters of indorse- | His sister contlnued on her journey alore, ment from 8. H. Gage & Co., who had a | not seoming to realiza the gravity of the loan office l; 150 f‘mh avenue, and used | sitnation. a note hea esignating themselves as e e ealahatc Mt Homualyed oy 1€ to round up the borrars o tho “ q rip, Frank Thomas, of Thomastown, signment of 1,300 barrels of flour from . 5 Me., breathed his last about daylight Gordon, Barker & Co.,of St Louls. [pggigny morning, the dlsease carryin oo radormarded Mol Ospantary | itin off being comumption. _ An Inquens Kildoff & Co., of Tew York, and an ad- | o0 90 bel® Sonatmpon, A vanco of $5,000 was obtained from them. | ¥ e fo i 10 AUOCY, A as turned over to the rallway company, After thirty days Gordon, Barker & Co. |4 "y 2 ahirnud on to the destinatl 1led sent in thelr bill, and 1t was found that | fop e b ltioit, The domensed had Iot French & Co.. allas L. L. Smith, |{CF ¢n the tlcket. e deceased had let- IR rANG AN A BRI B st hepani|eralon his person, from which it was e, G D A °§.“: learned that he had a brother, Bartley u{owed Ahatith bml‘:mns had bn‘r’nlcn J. Thomas, living in Thomastown, who fraud all through. Gordon & Co, pro- “'51?_';‘},’{:&"’,'1,”“:,,?? STl of fimilar E‘“gd (t;h: :“&f"éa"‘i::‘;“:’;:‘;"::'::L‘:a"l‘;‘:‘ sensatbonal occurrences have rarely or D] Cumne never been noted before In any other run ter withdrawing thelr indorsement, but, | J¢" 2] Jongth In the *‘far west.” by u:iurl;ul c;iw!dencu that had also oc- : 8 e ot curred where Mr. Goodrich, banker, had sorved as referouce, the conslgnment of The Last Days ,or the Democratie flour kad already arrived and boen ship- : Pasty. ped to New York before the bankers' | \Yashiogton Letter to Cleveland Leader. repudiation of the Smith firms was re-| ‘‘These ars the last days of the domo- celved. The New York firm showed at |cratic party,” sald a leading democratic the trial that st had pald nearly the fall |statesman to me last night. *Grover value of the 1,300 barrels of flour, and tne | Cleveland is ruining the old line democ- balance due Krench & Co. was just 8290, | 180¥s and four years of his demoralizln which sum was all the creditcra got in [ policy will leave ua In chaos, and we will satlsfaction of claims sggregating $7,000, |all go down In the wreck which he will Among other firms who lost sums rang- | make of himself and of us. He doubt- tng from 4,000 to $6,000 on business |less thinks he can found a new party by done with French & Co. were Clement & | his present plan, but he will fail, as every %nn, Neenah, Wis., and Carpenter & Co , gm;dan; wh; g-s,‘,ml-dflt‘}'; ;?Pegm"‘ ushford, Minn, as fatled. John Tyler trisd it. Hewas Smith s sald to have had about $60,000 beaten Into oblivicn, and he s now the in bank here when he decided less than a | laughing stock of the men of to-day, Hls year g0 to engage In the dry goods busl- [support in congress was so small that it ness in Omaha, He succeeded In getting [ was called the corporal’s guard, and his credit here, and afterward in the east, At |nominations were rejected time sfter firat he bought cautlously, but sfter hts|tme. Fillmore tried 1t with Danlel credlt was establlsed esst he ap- Webster to back him, and who talks of pears to have been an ex-|Fillmore as one of the great presidents cellent customer for the drummers, |BoW! He falled as a president and bis His recklessness soon oxclted sus.|porly dled with him, Johnson fafled In piolon. Some local firng refused his | his fight against his party and narrowly patronage, and others were chary toward | escaped impeachment. And Cleveland the last. 'The amount Smith owes in |will surely fail if he persists In his pres- Chicago Is estimated at $60,000. Among | ent action, It takes great occaslons and his creditors are J. V. Karewell & Co,, |a long tmo to build up a new party. The $15,000; A. 8. Gage & Co., £5,000; O, |principles of colvil service reform are too Jalte & Plakur, $4,000; “and’ Mancel weak o, form ctho ~fonndstioninel ros,, LoBaron, Holt & Co., Carson, 8 new parly, an eve- Pirle, Scott & Co., J. H. Walker & Co,|land ~will galn nothlng by hls and Bullock Bros,, for smaller amounta. [ 8acrificos to the mugwumps. It e, after His indebtedneess to eastern houses is|8ll, the machine element which runs the placed at $80,000 in_Phiiadclphia, §40,-|party. 1f he slights thls element, it will 000 in Boston, and £150,000 in New [knife him at the polle, and you will see York, The total liabllities to merchants | from the results in Ohlo and Now York foot up about §300,000. 1t is thought |that the president will be frowned upon Smlth took with him from Omaha over|Dby hls own party. Oleveland may be talnly know the history of the memorable contest that took place In the house of ropresentatives in February, 1801, when on the 7th day and thirty-fifth ballot his grand father, James J. Bayard, was gullty of treason to the federal party and became a traitor to bis frlend and patron, Aaron Burr, He certainly is not ignor- ant of the untirlng efforts of his father and his uncle which ceased only with their death, to change public oplnlen concerning this most perfidious act of his grandfather, There have bsen but two presldentlal eloctlons when no candidate received a majorlty of the votes of the electoral college, the first was In the fall of 1800, and the recond In the fall of 1824, Thoe. Jefforson was elected In the first Instance and John Qulncy Adams In the second. The facts about the election of Jeffor- son are as I glve them below, from all the sources obtainable—from the files of old newspapers of that date and from the books and psmphlets that were writ- ten at that time. f the Hon, Thos. F. Bayard desires, or any other person in search of the facts wlill go to the con- gressional library, read the newspapers of that date, and will call upon Mr Spofford for Vol. XVIIL, miscellaneous documents, he will, after reading them, become thoroughly satisfied and con- vincea that James J. Bayard was the first man that proposed to desert Mr. Burr for Jefferzon, and did 8o on the thirty-fifth ballot. It was justly de— nounced as an tet of basenees that clung to him all his life, & piece of Ingratitude and perfidy that after hls death his two sons labored for years (by obtalning and publishing testimonlals), in thelr vain effort to clear away the lasting stigma, In addltion to this act, there are those that belleve that James J, Bayard’s con duct in that affalr when public opinion was g0 severe, that in order to mollify the feeling, blamed Alexander Hamilton for his condact, that Hamilton had poi- soned hls (Bayard’s) mind, which was the real beginning of the quarrel which resulted in the duel between Barr and Hamilton, when Hamilton was killed near Hoboken, N. J., in 1804, Now as to the facts. In the presiden— tlal election of 1800 there were sixteen states In the unlon. New Hampshire and Kentucky came in 1797 and Tennea- see & year or two sfterwards. There were four candidates for president. At that time no candldates were before the pegple for vice presldent, but the candi- date having the next highest vote to the president elect, was declared the vice president by the jolnt conventlon of the two houses of congress, The four candi- dates were Thomas Jefferson, of Vir- ginls, Aaron Barr, ¢f New York, John Adams, of Maesachusetts, and Charles Pinckney, of South Carolina. At the electlon Jefferson recelved seventy-five votes, Asron Burr seventy-four votes, John Adams six'y-five votes and Charles Pinckney sixty-four votes. There was no election by the people. Under arlicle XII, which s the twelfth ameniment to the constltution, it Is provided in such an emergency that the house of representatives shall elect from the three ocandidates having the highest number of votes a president, each state being entitled to one vote. For thirty-four ballots in the house of represcntatives Jeffersou had elght votes, Burr slx votes and John Adams two votes. Burr was the candidate of the federal party, and had been the friend of James J. Bayard, of Deleware, who was also looked upon as a staunch federalist, Mr. Burr had Induced James J. Bayard to become a caudidate for congress, and when he was hefore the people of Dele- ware as a cand 'date at that same election, Barr 2arried the electoral vote of Dale- ware, and Jamon J. Bayard was elected to congress on the same iseues and on the same ticket. For thirty—four ballots in the house James J, Bayard catt the vote of that state for Aaron Burr for president. After the thirty-fourth ballot James J. Bayard went to one of the Maryland del- egatlon and proposed that they chango to Jefferson; Maryland had six members and they wera equally divided between 'l‘mt’ sldewalk nulsance still remains a goods. A nucleus of dry goods wss in- deed necessary to hia nebulous commer- Ir isan ill wind that blows nobody any | $25,000. Having thus thoroughly paved [stead of having them written out for him | ial comet, but he seems to have procared good. The recent dry goods smash up | the way for an acquittal and made 1t easy by John F. Dillon, Andrew J. Poppleton | the nucleus on credlt at Chleago. His is proving a fat take, as tho printers|for the jury to return a verdict of not|or Charles Francls Adams. ;a;gfl n.?“{;?fi mve-::d fh; ahuylnz the i verf 5 of new: ra— wouid call it, for the lawyera. quilty, we are not surprlsed that young 5 -“@—F - A__ & prosadis whlgnhpl:: tatitws :VP:\FX; G e T Spreckles 1s to.day a free man, HARLES FRANCIS ADAMS, nenlo.r, be understood rashly to condemn—in Tag Intornal rovenue receipts in Ne- | The verdict was not in accordance with | Whoso serlous {llness at his home in | ‘“‘organizing mammoth excurslons,” in braska for tho year ending Jane 30, were | tho evldence, whish proved ccnclusively | Qulncy, Maseachusetts, will probably E‘“"S:O"c"“ to the poor, In poker, and 1,971,276, This is n healthy incroass of | to an Impartial and unpurchassble mind [rerult In his death, ls sovonty-eight yoars |10 Bucking bls horotcope of the Chicago $455,479 over the previous year, and | that 8preckles did the shooting, and did old. He comes of an lllastrions famlly. | = 55 one of these diversions, if pursued shows that we are growing 1t with maliclous intant and withont just [ Hlis grandfather, John Adame, was the|upon a generous snd L. L. Smith scale, - provocation, Tho only concluslon is that second president of the United States, wlllén nl n:ort ;}mfl;b:(vr? 1573.030‘ k’rhe § . ow Smith contrives Wiy don't such outspoken and inde- | Spreckles’ money not only purchased the whll:ahhls _f-::ar, J;;:n nga;;c, gs..:,., :'1?'3{11 ;m g‘v)v‘ng it onfm ‘::l nngor :;;; pendent papers as the Herald and Re- |newspspers but the jury. Had he been (was tho sixth president. Mr. Charles | highegt prossuro for a perlod of eight p ublican have something to ssy with re- [# poor man he would to-day be inslde the Francls Adams was a graduate of Har-|months before he came to a pyrotech-— gard to the lotter of Charles Francla|walls of tho state penitentlary. So far|vard, anda lawyer by profession. In nical smath. He must have frequently Adams on Omaha viaducts? It may be - | 1848 i 5 sat behind insuperable hands of poker, or as DeYoung s concerned the) vordist o SR SIRIOEL A Hoo R0 bave forecasted his graln market wlth‘oc» that in thelr case sllence s gold—en. simply Is “‘Sprecklos scrved him right,” | vice-president by the froe-sollers, | oasional success. 1f he had been bleed- R According to these twelve honest jurors, ':"’ "’Pl;"““"l Mr. Van Buren for ing .lt fl"l'yhll’fl; of his numerous and 'C .|the presidency. Having jolmed the|ample pores his $75,000 could not have Tur New York Zlerald says t};lc DeYoung hasno right to conduct an in. 4 Cy. N KIJ '? 1iBt52 oY o} T Raslods Hleak Tt ¢uotil Andrew Jackson’s tlme office- [dependent newspaper in the Interest of [repa 'cnn.parly o was elected to con diy goods probably gave him liitlo holders were not permitted to see the [the public welfare. He must not criti-|8reis in 18.)8: and agaln In 1860. In the|¢roublo, He permitted his credu- & robably mesnt to eay | clse the wealthy monopollsts of Califor- |spring of 1861 he was appolnted minister |lous creditors n Chicago to do the president.” It pi y y y P 5 u 2 office-seckers, as men after they are ap- |nla for their mlsdesds and thelr grinding to England, the duties of which posltion ;hmkll;g lbbfltf l:hl(- Perll?lp!, h!xzdeed, polnted to offics do not as a rule care to |exactions upon the people. It he does [ Were, durlng the American clvil war, c:e:i‘: m!::_(; ‘t)ha {‘u‘lgfi l;};g f.‘e‘:[ th?. g]:g 800 the president. he must take the consequences, and be [ very arduousand critical. Ho performed | yion of painting Omaha and its viclnily lable to be shot down at any moment, | these dutles with much ablility and pru-|red. This mission he seems to have tho- James D. Fism, the swindliog bank |The monopollsts have no use for a free [dence, and raturned home in 1868. In rnughly‘leg?mp]uhcd. He ;nhncl!ed an presldent of New York, who has been|and untrammeled press. Mr. De Young, 1871 Mr. Adams was appointed one of f:&:n‘gai:d'iognulv“ several dogrees of % 5 - N gltude, and In the seclu- sent to prison for ten years, will be|if he desires to malntain his anti-monop- the arbitrators on the Alabama claims, sion to which he is for a time condemned soventy-two years old when he is re-|ollstic course, will hereafter have to go He Is the only living member of that|he may solace himselfwith the conscious- loased. It is hoped that the young man [armed an: d accompanled by an eacort, | tribunal of arbitration, unless the Brazll- t, though other men may have by that time will have learned a lesson, [and be prepared for any emergency. The ian viscount d’Itajuba survives in hls a “"m‘;g;'r;"g::;gti'; 8:;‘:;"““1‘:" g:;g: and that he will turn over a new leaf. |only way for him to get justice in such elghtyfirat year. 1) man, since the distant dsys of George 1t 18 never too late to mend. cases as that of Spreckles s to take the — Francis Traln and the Cradit Foncier has St AT law into his own hands and meet tho as- Trzzma 1s & mistaken notlon among the ;;:'rlmnde that capital for a season eo to Wi s the reason that the board of |sassins with their own weapons and In :::a%r:z?:e.:Sl1::?“;:’::?:1:";’“;: Iv must be a_ wild local rumor which public works does not push the work of thalr own cowardly manner. PP’ Ol srace, declares that the merchant prince of the grading the city hall lota? The contract — our oplnlon the market will do no|prajries has absconded with $100.000. e e e (i il e POLITICS IN NEW YORK such thing., Usnally in citles of our|Patting $75,000 {ntoa business which ap- . population market days are limited to |Pears to have conslsted almost exclusively runoat. There are plenty of men who| With the president and two members |4y oo q e oo 00 those dags the | OF Usbillties, and running tho same on a want to go to work, and the contractor, | of the cablnet coming from New York, J 3 y scale of unequaled grandeur for elght 2 7 | butchers, bakers, and vegetable gardener: who appoars to be 1n no hurry, should b | and the immense patronago b their dls. )y s g e gardeners | y;onthe, would not as a rale produce that e Deein et i) ng the immenso, pi 8 will compete in open market, but this|or any other balance on the right side. EiRoP posal, the democrats ought to be able to| ;o hatition will mot serlously Interfere | Betides, 1t Is not in the nature of L. L. S I A X carry that state next fall. The plns are| oy grocers who supply patrons all over Smiths to abandon so exciting a game Ix the oplnion of General Sheridan|now belng set with that object in view. e L h ol before it Is played out, so long aa there there will be no serlous {roublo with the | The recont appointments in Now York | o, 7 throush free delivery, Pur-|is s stakeleft. When things become des- i chasers at the market will have to carr) te, and when the advent: fe, in his Cheyennes in the Indlan territory. They i “ 3| sty iandsm; yensuxer.s, ye g ) ':. Y |are a rafwgmtlon of the ‘‘ county demoo- | )1 vond home whatever they buy, and in |own expressive Iangusge. *'flat broke,” are diseatlsfied with the leases that h"“’ racy” in New York olty, as against|ipo pain the only advantage will be a then only he gathers what fragments can been made to cattle men, and the mill- | Tammany hall. Cleveland owed nothing varlad|and fresh aupply of meats, vege be Iaid hold upon and abeconds. Itis 5 5 tary authorities belleve that the abroga-|t; Tammany, but from a democratlc ; extremely unlikely that L. L. Smith has tlon of tho leases and the fssuanco of or | standpolnt it ‘wonld s neira i tables, and fruits. This Is desirable for |gathered $100,000 as the fragments of all cl. f citl but 1, the §75,000 which he invested in the red ders requiriog the owners of passing|er of policy to unite the two factions. sgesictictiizany AbutHespeciallyjtor llnt’now bleaching upon the fen 8 ':)l the working peaple. To farmers and |P! giup) ences herds to pay a nominal sum for the grass perhaps this was trled, and, Tammany | ;o deners the market will prov 4| the Northwest. Apparently he did re- consumed would remove all oxlsiing | wanting the bst of everything, it was 8 Prove a great | o¢ivg gome money from the persons who difficaltics. declded e th‘t e convenfence, and Its establishment will | bought out his businees, and his lfabill- eclded to reward the Iactlon thatstuck|.,,p1g them to dispore of thelr products[ties he seems to have bequeathed e falthfully to Oleveland. Notwlthstand- |4 0onenimers direotly with very littlo loss | 10 an tmpartial dlvition between them Tuere are several emlinent lawyers ing the discontent among the Tammany- | ¢ 411 and his creditors In Chicago. These latter who believe that, under recent supreme |itoy, who really had no right to 4 persons seem to be rather worse off than court decislons, this clty can compel rail- expect anything, it ls maintained that| It will bo entirely unnecessary for ;';y‘:gd‘yh:h;;x:tjT:::L':w:‘:;flffia‘:‘::: road companles to construct and maintaln | ¢he appointments so far made will [Judge Savage to disclalm any obligation | for smartness, Not very long ago a visduots over thelr "_‘Ck" at their own | tond to strengthen the democracy. How- |to the Bk for his sppolntment as gov- | Chicago newspaper contalned an affect- expense, whenover a railroad crossing en- | ever, tho republicans are preparing for a | ernment cirector ¢f the Unlon Paclfic, | 2% recital ‘;f the horrors of Lud- dangers the lives of persons who are com- | gallant fight, While the democrats expect The suggestloos on the part of certaln t;z B:::fi:ig:' ‘m:‘:ll'rg:l: e{:un.t:-“c;?:rd- pelled to traverss the tracks. If the cily [ ¢o retaln the majority of the mugwumps, | railroad organists in both pariies that the | chants who wished to swlndley their councll should see it to exercize its au- | 4o republicans hope to secure a great [judge shounld make such a éisclaimer are | creditors without undergolng these In- thorlty In thls directlon wo may be ablo(any votes from Tammany, On the |as Impertinent as they are superflaous. conveniencien and indignitles shonld to get several vladucts without the con-|other hand the democratic bosses will [ The Bk lays no clalm to any Influence a:;'cigNoE';’;fi:;:‘:lr;yut;?: %.\l:?x‘rl; ifl sent of the rallroads probably make a great effort to hold | with Presldent Cloveland’s administra- [, Smiths have arlsen In the retall trado e Tammany In check by a falr distribation | tlon, and it would not exercise it even |llke rockets and come down like sticks, Mu, Hawes reents the Insinuatlon|of the great number of minor offices |if We belleved we had full sway with the thetwhnlcnla ms{cl‘;nntl; l:f t‘hbe wo‘:l(lexl;n that he will drop his opposition to the among the two factione, Secretarles [powers that ba. , We don’t propore to go :’:;‘n::’c?l'uyc:;,f:.a‘:m;. pln.;r::d“on :h‘; Farnaw strect location of the clty hall| whitnoy and Mannlng, amisted by |into the office-broking business. The | goncral lines of Ludlow stroet jall might | Jeflerson and Burr, which change was [$100,000 in cash, right In theory and he may be, as I be- for twenty-five dollars, He esys that | Hubert O, Thompson, who ls virtaally | glory and profit of that kind of traftic will | have a soberlng effect upon the Imagina- | made and Jefferson elected. L — ltl:}'u heis, M:] htiuu_tt;mn. 11(’\:' P\?“'I;C! in the Farnam street folks will have to be cheerfull; ded to the b tions of amblitious retailers, Now, as to the duel that was fought Blaine and Logan, is country deal with realitles and not conceded to be the actual dispenser of cheerfully conceded to the bestes who botween Bure and Hamiltop, Th%ue Washington Speclal, with Ideas. 'We must take the world as spend $25,000 before he lets up. We/| fodoral patronage in New York, will no|run the democratic machine. suggest that a committee be sppointed to | doubt endeavor to devise some satisfac- s wn.t on Mr, Hawes and see if he can't tory plan of desling out the government| IN last week’s statement of the clear- be m‘ducad to glve a permit for bullding | pap, The followlng is a partial state- | Ing house cities, Omsha holds the four- thecity hall on Farnam etreet. As we|ment of the plunder yet to ba dlstributed | teenth place among the thirty cltles re- havosald previously, a heavy property | and it would be strange If they could not [ ported. Her clearings wore $2,498,303, | |/ rossfon to 1ts monopoly feellngs by abus- owner l}ks Mr, Hawes should not be|do a great desl of **harmonlizing” with it: | and she ranks ahead of Detrolt, Minne- |ing our senior senator VanWyck, Van trifled with, The clerk of customs receives 5,000 per|apolis, Cleveland, Indianspolis, Hart-| Wyckis too O’d_""“ these corporation = | ,u0um salary, with two clerks at §2,200 and | ford, Columbus, Memphis and Syracuse, | t201e) they want bim ‘ito throw the bur- W are informed by a reliable citizen [$2,000 respectively, The auditor receives | and fs close upon Milwaukee, Loulsville den on ’°""’5"1' 'hd"“lm"" who aze will- of Holdroge that the list of twenty-two [85,000; asstant auditor, $3,500; two clork, | s'0 Drovldonse. Nearly oll of those | obtcac s e oo corporation contributors to the Omaha Kepublican's | $2,500; one at $2,100, and two at §2,000. The ! 7 v m“‘luy’n“:m'lll g’le&‘:fl’gnezm lml.e five-cent fund was a fraud, Not one. |Cashier's salary is §5,000. wm: -nvarur.elexk. at he (VanWyck) 1s puru;on half of the persons whose names were | ™ *laries ravglog from 82,700 to 82,000 . - | the shelf so high, that he wiil no longer ublished in that list in Ph The ten deputy collectors reveive $3,000, and | HEREls a hint to Omahe cabmen: {pooq nsive to the nostrils of a long-suf- P (TR o f“h '1'1.“ In Phelps | .o vora) clorks’ salsries in each division range | Improved cabs in Fogland are now pro- fering and paslent constituency untll county at the time of the burning of the | from $3,600 to 82,000, Then there are weigh- | vided with eleotrlc bells to signal the|the end of time.” By “constituency” court house, and our Informant Is of the [ers, gaugers and other employes in the col-|drlver. A new hansom has & receptacle [ these R. R. papers of course mean 31« opinfon that they never saw the Brr's |lector’s office with fat pay and emoluments, for an umbrella (presamabl; web one) R R. magoates and thelr dependenoy, editorial in relation to the fire, The list |not to mention Inspectors almost without ."h 78 who are in the hablt of electing sena- was 5o doubb gotten up by some sbyater, [ it Theaval oficer bas aix clerks ot | 00ialde $he door; the owaer, moreover, |ars for the people, a0d who hate Van > | $2,500, 2,200, 0 will not forget it, because he must raise | Wyck, because, all his “‘old age” not- ,600, eight at $2,200, and twenty at $2,000, ¥ who probably obialned most of the(my ooty ditor at $5,000 the umbrella In order to open the door to | withstanding, he was young and names by false representations, rayorhas che suditorab W00 sad e " . b, to defeat slngle-handed one deputy at $2,500, The general appraiser | get out. vigorous enough, san S—— has one cler] 0 and one at $2,000, the whole railroad gang cf the United REC— d t fi Tuege ls a great deal of complalnt|The appraiser has ten assistants at $3,000,| Tue fame of Sinith, *'the merchant i'fiff:nzno?::',:: of ‘;.;!é'_e.;:a;h:ol::p}:r about the wretched mail facilitios betwoen [ chief clerk at 2,500, twenty examiners at|prince of the prairles,” has extended |the railroad kings had already In their Missourl Valley and Omaha, A letter 82,000, one at 2,300, six at $2,200, fifteen | throughout the length and breadth of [rapacious mouth, trylog to rob the people mallod at Mistourl Valley in the morn- |8 32000, and three at $2000. Thero aro|(hg jand Tho people of Omaha will no [of them. To such an old man' they ina goss to O il ope and packers at per diem from $3.75 4 would greatly prefer 8 youngster, broke g B ouncil Bluffs and remalns to §3; firemen, messengers, porters, watch: doubt be entertained by the editorlal artl- | 1" 3,6 time to the bit and harnees of the there till evenlug, when it comes 0ver 0 f oy und what not, constitutiog » patronage | ol on Smith, from the New York Times, | corporations, & man like thoss, who are Oaaha, bat is not delivered untll the | fur in excess of any one of the departments | which we republish fn another column, |oconsidered good enough for Nebraska next morning, It ls elmply an outrage |of the government mot protected by civil rallroad _commlssioners, The rallroad that it should require over twenty-four |service regulation Ty ARie Aind iR st Ra el D ini o sanob bosses will make, and are now already hours for a letter to travel twenty-four a making a great effort to defeat Van 5] k longer the summer resorts will not draw | Wyck, and they will spend not only thelr miles, Itis hopad that Postmastes Cou.| THE appointment of Judge Savage as gov wany persons from Omaha this season, ow’:monsy lurythll pnl:pon. but thyuy are tant will oall the attention of the poat- j<roment director of railways is universally ap- h t their hands into S Sy o plauded as the best that bas been made for | VO 1AV® hioard a good deal about *‘cool :‘;;“.’;z?;au&au:q“sproa:tlng‘lol their office department to this matter, and|, ¥ Aegary . Minnesota,” but we queslion whether 1 oo O T b years, Flatteringiavitations to him to make " 1 hirelings $2,000 salarles, In order to get urge that immedlafc steps ba taken {o|\aron the Usion Pacific raillway, coming |the summer resorts of that stato are any |rld of the only senstor who defends the have 1t rectified, from those who had no hand in hislsppoint- | cooler than Omahas, people, inda —— Van wWyck's Enemies, Grand Island Independent, The Lincoln Journal, ‘‘the paper of Gere, the new R. R. com,” with great gusto reprints an article of the Bradshaw Gazette, in which that paper gives ex- Gen. Logau Is usually as silent as an (it 1s. Itis neceasary to our existerce ogster, whenever o newspaper man fs | that we have two great partles in thls near, but |t seems that he lost a little of [°0Untry, and It is ouly fale that thoso his exclusiveness when a representative | Who do the work of sustaining the parties of the Sunday Gazette called upon him, should hold lllch‘ of the oflices as they Ho was asked relative to the truth of | 8re fitted for, Since the world began no certaln newapaper regorts of s coolness [#OVernment of the people and no busi- that had sprung up between himeelf and | D€88 elther pational or private, has suc Mr. Blalne, *They are not trae,” Gen. ceeded on sny other ground than self. Logen sald, *‘Lhave a very warm ad- Interest; and any party or man who at- wiration for Mr. Blaine, and_ both Mre, | tempts to govern or mansge on any other Logan and myself cherlsh the kindest principle will fall. It ls all very nice to Teellngs and the highest respeot for Mr. | Prate about love for your fellow-man and wnd Bos, Blatne, | T'regard b 1a one | charity, bat these elements go for lttle of the greatest men the country can in the world of money, and they are boast of, and personally he is one of the | Worth no more in the world of polltios. most charming and estimable gentlemen | Cleveland s tryng to manage this gov- living, There is & warm friendshlp ex- | érnment upon them, but he will find the Isting between Mr. Blalue and myself, | foundation very thin Indeed, and I wonld and our rspective families, The friend. [0 be surprited at the close of his term ship hss never been disturbed in the |t0 see him rantivg agalnst humanity In slightest degree, and you may rest assured [ Worse torms than those used by Timon of that It never will boif I can help it, | Athens after the loas of his fortune. Any report or rumor to the contrary s ————— untrue and absurd.” The Kind He Wanted. to politiclans were rivals In the state of New York, ; they probably were the high- est men of their dsy not excepting Tom Jefferson or John Adams, Hamilton was 8 much younger man than Barr, and thelr rivalry was accompanied by much vindictiveness by thelr respestive partisans. During the contest alove re- clted, a celebrated attorney by the name of George Ogden, who had been a law partner of Burr, managed the campaign on the part of that geotleman. After the election of Jefferson, Mr, Ogden took ocasion to denounce the conduct of James J, Bayard, and then It was, that 1t was first Intlmated by Mr. Bayard that Alexander Hamilton had told him that Burr was & rake, a debauchee, and by no means a man to trust with the eafety and perpetuity of the country, In fact that he was unfit to be pretident of the United States, It 1s true that the deed did not take place until nearly four years after wards, and that it arose from a law sult where they were opposing attorneys, but the fact remains, that Hamilton did se- cretly polson the mind of Bayard sgalnet Burr, and that Bayard did not have the manhood to keep the confidence, but violated it to excuse his conduct, and the further fact rcmalns that Barr killed Hamllton {n the duel. T do not cften undertake to aroute the liviog by disturbing the repose of the dead, but Thomas F. Bayard /s a public man, bas been in public cflice many years a copperhead durlog the war, and is premler to the democratic accldent now In the white house. We have a right to put the truth before the publie, clties are much larger than Omaha, —e——— Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph. Idlo Mills, “Prigoner,” eald bis honor, *‘the evi- Creverann, 0., July2,—The men employed | dence s conflicting, but you were evi- in the wire department of the Oleveland | dently drunk and I fine you $25." rolling milly joined the other strikers this [ «Thanks, your honor,” replled the g)urnbng,;nd Thero aro now 1,600 mlqu...uln].u AN R el & favan f Fauti N Y cers of the mills tele- | PF{ " 4 A ,.fiist’fi,, pollc: protection, but no violencs| ‘What ls 1ti" sald the judge, good 18 feared, ln":m-edlyl.:l I 5 Ao B The Koot of the Kvil, ul wou e some tobaoco before To thoroughly cure sorofula it 18 )™ The judge was taken aback, but said sary to strike directly at the root of | with 4 smile: Do you prefer any par- the evil. Thls ls exactly what Hood's|¢jcular kind?” {lla dces, by actingupon the “Yes, your honor,” retorted the pris- thoroughly cleansing 1t of all 1m-[oner with a grin. *'I would like my fine even If over elghty years have passed |pu: and leaving not even & talnt of | gy since bis grandfather scld out Aaron fecrofulain the vital flald, Thousands | His honor saw the polnt and made it Burr, Mr. Bayard sald that his grand- | who bave been cured of sorofuls by[g10, father declined the French miesion for | Hood's Sarsaparilla, testify to its wonder: e — 4 reasons based upon purity of purpose. | fal blood-purifying ualittes, Solibyall] Smoke Seal of North Cacolias To. The real reason is presumed to be that | dragglats, bacco, % -