Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 20, 1890, Page 4

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Al ™ ke e 4 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE, SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1800.~-SIXTEEN PAGES e e e e e e | THE DAILY BEE | NO DISTRESS IN NEBRASKA. not be necessary to address any argu- | millionaires )\_? wra in nctive control | blue, according to the time of day, has beon | hands, Tt is complimontary to the good sense | sent to him last week by C. 8, Jensen who : - * | Whoever resided in Nebraska during | ment to these gentlemen by way of im- | started as pofefisoys, and were trained in | found on the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. It is | of Judge Groff that he expresses no wish at | picked it up forty miles east of Rapid City, E. ROSEWATER, Editor. X shopper yearsof 1874 | prossing them with fhe importance of | that sternest-but most oficiont of all | Just too late. The golden rod has the certifi- | present to assent to the use of his name in one Dak. In United States the thing would bo ~ and 1875 will doubtless remambar what | having the association come here and | schools—poveriy. Most of the head | cateof election as the national Hower of the latest, political schemes to beat a gov- | call | asnail. . While the petrification is pere i - — - | ernor and senator and bring down two offees | fect, the most curvious as well as astonishing PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. | qiqistrous effect u v \ Lttt disastrous effect upon the growth of the | the benefits reasonably to be expected | officers in tith* banking institutions of v satiire " 3 < N N v . » L ke . ith one good man, feature 1s its enormous size. Speuk of TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. state was produced by highly colored ap- | should it hold a session here, It may | New York bogun ns clerks, and doubt- """k':“’l’:"l,"‘l":”“, ,.;l.‘.'.'l Out Withrone goou mat, e six peuking i b Have Neglected Thele Opportunities, | i Sundny, Ohe Yone #1000 | peals for velief for the poople of the | safely be taken for granted | less this is true fz.'n.\rull\ If the mummy of Cleopatra oxists, and if, Koatiion. Hoporow | worm about three fnches long with two horns, i t snails one's mind instantly pictures a small 850 | grasshopper swourged districts, While f they fully understand d Mr. Carne observes that the | asalleged, itis to be brought to the United Farmers aro the most numerous of the pro- | 11 curled up in a funny looking shell no big 2% | there was a great deal of distress and | appreciate this, and assuming | total absence the college gradu- | States for exhibition, then we shull sce how | quctive classes, They cast votes cnough | 8OF around than an old-fashioned copper cent destitution in Nebraska in those days | that they have no other reason | ate in every department of affairs !I’h‘r]y mistaken snukm_u re was in declar- | geone four yoars to oloct the prosident and a | Plece. This particular fnsect, how ‘flw'flrrihhv|:Ix‘lu|'u< drawn by exhorters | for opposition than the belief that we | should bo deeply weighed. He [ in® that age could not wither her nor custom | yujoviiy of the congressmen and state legis- | ©Ver, moasures six feet —in - cir Connell s, 19 P | like the notorious Tibbles und otl could not accommodate so large a num- | had been ableite find scarcely a trace of | 10M stale her infinite variety Iators. They own and represenent but ono. | cumference. It must have been great Washington nih street i of Nebraska than voracious grass- | lief Is not well founded warrants the ex- ing, for the reason that the prize-takers Homer Herald, fourths of the nati tax burdens. They | $mooth edge und is perfectly round CORRER INCH, hoppers that ever prayed upon her grain | pectation that they will withdraw oppo- | have too mutfy _years tho start of the | Servies at the ehurch wero allthat coutd | foutths of the nationts tax busdens. B A CHRRA Slov VL PHi: Block HHilts Al communications and | fields and orchards. | sition and give their influenco in favor | graduate. *While the college student | bo anticipated. The day and evening scomod | Prodiice nie-tonths of the wonlth culled Fne | 0 o R of wonderful curiositics. 1o e b A0 The false impression recently | of Omaha. There aro excollent rensons | has been learning a little about the bar- | made to ordor for the occasion and overy- | yuSiEREN ERTIE TEREIRIR TR SR e o skeloton mot o ago at Chidro, of | ereated by distorted and base- | 1o he given why the association should | barous and petty squabbles of a far- | thing was pleasant except the howling of tho | 060 CURIEEETIATE B TG | the pre-historic horse, dug up somewliere in ss lottors less veports concerning the alleged | como here, and if these are backed by | distant pust, or trying to master lan- | cheapJohn orzau and a miserable 10-cent |y o oivos, If any business man would | Uhat vicinity. It shows that the aniwal nust fhe Bee Pubiishing Company, | f At ) chich fo tts (vay THto the ohurel e S ; : ¢ S und_postoflice ore distress among the farming population | the unanimous endorsement of our phy- | guages which are dead, such knowledge | PUP Which found its way into the church. noglect his business as have the farmers to | Bave been very much dwarfed in Ity :4; '.n‘wumh payuble to the order of the Com- | of Nohpraska has done incalculable dam- | gicians the chance of Omaha being se- | us seoms adapted for life upon another “_’rw“*hy ““" watch their interests there would not be one ""::"lh“‘lin;::l\‘":"l six inches long and cach ichi 9 < | nge to this state and coupled with the | Jee v it is confidently belie anet the I8, a& {4y iness af- ’ 2 . left to tell the tax. gatherer what had hap- | 10 e toos, The Bee Publishing Company, Proprictors, | “#® fo this state I he | lected would, it is confidently believed, | planet than this, as far as business af Weeping Water Republican. héiiomtadbome il e : — - T ahd Sovonteonth 8ts, | cioud of prohibition that now hangs over | bo among the hest. fuivs ure concerned, the future eaptain | Mes, McArthur, sister of Mrs. William | Poned during his short absence, IN THE ROTUNDA. e He bl ) : | us has absolutely stopped all immigra- of industry is hotly engaged in the school | Hambleton, s now the proud parent of twins, Sced Congressmen Not Wanted, e ’,'a;"y!';[; e tion. A well informed and prominent THE CONFERENCE ADJOURNS. of perience, obtaining the ver, Mr, and Mrs, Me commenced to live apart a Phelps County Herald, 4 e braskan now traveling in the east, in The final adjournment of the Pan- | knowledge requived for his future tri- | little less than five years ago, but after try- Nebraska ought to have representatives in )\'d*‘"' the Paxton yesterday, The governor relgn 2 a letter to the editor of THE BEE calls | American conference took place at noon | umphs,” In the opinion of Mr. Carne- ing it in that style for four years they doubled | congress who could do something more than | :N} lll "n| h:“f‘,“;" of the largest and best attontion to the existing misapprehen- | yostorday, This notable body, the valuoe | gie, and he says tho facts prove it, the | 1e4ms aguin, besides doubling thei numbers. ;“I‘.',“" o f"“"'" i "r}"‘v ”"';" i “':;'."""‘r | Mirtoatts oo ,‘,_‘,"r,'_"-“l'_ "',": ";"}"'"“ e it I A i NS s DRG IO WIRE | e R R AT 4 AR : > : 3 4 e A — 1o people are not suffering for anything o o o of feet of any man liv- | sion regarding Nebraska. The following of whose deliberations time will deter- | gradute has not the slightest chunco, A Man of Deeds, Not Words. that kind. The favmers of the west have | g in Pawnce coun ty FTETaRT T GE] 't is worthy of serious considera- | mine, was in session nearly five months, | entoring at twenty, against the boy who | St. Louis Globe-Democrat, | bon exporimenting in_agrlculturo ss, | L have just been over to Chicago with five Fnd s P S A and although its labors were little | swept the offico or who begins as ship- [ Land Commissioner Groffl has not done any | and so far as the seed is concerncd thei cars of cattle, said he in reply to the rotunda County of s, {88 i n perhaps gained some idea yourself | known to the publie, they w never- | ping clerk at fourtecn. The ulmost total | talking about the affairs of his office, but he | poriments have proven very successful, | talker, “but really T haven't got a bit of anity swenr | While n Philadelphia and New Yovk recontly | g olags comprehensive and avduous. It | absence of the graduate from high posi- | 10s been performing a great deal of useful | There fs nothing the matter with the erops | Bews—don't know o blessed thing," ho ion of Tiv DALY B | of the offoct of tho extravagant roports abont | o ch L 3 Sommatidne | HOR L Lo Blinifase WoRlTRESIE to Justity | 2o That is to say, his policy has dif- | thoy raise, but there is something wrong | added. ding April 16, 180, wus as fol- | distress in Nebraska. In scores of papers in Hstranin ry subj HeRadn | LIS aontIdeoN EHAL ullunuhuniiun 1x | feved entirely from that of the party of the | vith the prices they got. Will our congress | “Why don't you switeh those cattle oft v.April 13 it ...2a407 | the cast Nok o hus been placed on a par i A s i otataT ¥ > name of Sparks who held the place during | men endeavor to do something which will be [ down toSouth Omaha? April 14 . 2 with Kunsas and the Dakotas as poverty the act which authorized it, and doubt- | it exists is fatal to success in that do- | go Cleveland administration, of real benefit to their constituents, orwill | *“Well, L don't know," the governor replied ) Aprit st s stricken, plastered over with farm mortzages, | less all was accomplished that could | main, But there is coming forward PSS VoY COUEIRHG L5 a1t SBUNEIE: Latinonea; dvawe | withiw iy “Perhaps 1 was a trifie un- Py, April 17 % | groaning under thousands of foreclosures and | reasonably have been expected. | the scientifically educated young The Czar a Revolutionist, {Hialt: Salii¥es A send out garden seeds 1 | patriotic to the mavket hevo right in our own g.:{'”,-“""{‘,,,.',} s s | s acterrible mple of the too generous | Where agreomont on details man, the graduate of the polytech- New g SUtoL Y% : ¢ | '"'““]'.V"f "'"‘ ast in ";vl]"i"!";""".'“"”*"' impossible, general yecommendations | nic and scientific school, and these | .“"' 'I"“'"l'”“"'": y mov L : AL ',',‘ Government Control. | [ have visited the South Omahu « AVCHIES, o5ed AT ol sl TLELCIN bl dsd were made which leave to the sevi are already demonstrating their useful- | 1°d to the demoralization of the universities, s e e S | three or four times and consider that they are fuvested this sidaof the Alleghenya; bl ]" SRR r‘ e 05 bt ; ll"“ e e | and now we learn that @ grand_ duke, o rol Leglslation may do something in controlting | i @ 4TI Commten (it thes o Sworn to before mo and subserlbed to {0 1y |y New York last week and was confident. | SOvOrnments tho tusk of urranging de- | ness, it the wholo histony of DUsiioss | ijve of tho czar, has been arrested for his pro- | and fixing railroad rates, but it will never re- | 3 (5 - SECEETT SERIE 0 LR LI | ially informed at Bradstreet's that cn the | UtlS: Such recommendations relate to | shows that it is the poor office boy Who | s youinst the status quo, It begins tolook | move public dissatisaction, If one sou LT s e i S At Vi | Saturday previous twenty-two hundrsd calls a uniform system of weights and meas us proved to be the merchant prince in | 4 czar himself might yot bo | itritation is removed today another will vise | 4o oy e b e T | for special information rogarding western | ures, uniform port duties, uniform cu uise, it is the poor clerk and the | “jugged for his revolutionary tendencies, tomorrow, and thus will each sty - | the United States,” % i sworn, de- | business men had come to that office_in N toms regulations, and the establishment g mechanic who rule in every . tween the public and railroads repeat them- Pine talk, governor, but why don't ey ”m-«T.':'.'f York from wholesalors and importer: y | of an international buveau of statistics. | branch of affairs, without capital, with- Mr. Armour and Providence. selves until the entire railroad interest of the | ng your cattle to the South Omaha yard DALY BEE | formant said: ‘Most of thesc ure the d' These mensures will smooth the way for | out family influence and without college 3 47':?"1!” Times, i \\'hnl:: country shall be under government SWeIl came the reply, with great | Fosults of the statements printed thronghout | grade without large expense or unduo | education. It is they who have risen to | ““"'j“(l.“‘”‘::' e (s oty el AHE T eration, “it certainly isw't becanse _ ST, k51 | the cast that Nebraska, Kausas, lowa | 4o ce by governmonts with pri- | the top and taken command. Neither more than the same pork at 11 o'clock of HERE AND ° 308 Omaha is further away from us than is Chi fu am| """“:.'Jn" and Dakota were poverty stricken, and A Al e paRla AL SR NaETiupe i Sarhe the same day, it would certainly seem that cago, for the fa moare more than e Do M gptoc; | that the small business men, and through | LTIl il A et i G0 80 8! the law of supply and demand have about as | The causes through which obseure though | four hundred mil i thin Chicago. Tho for Janunry, 180, 1, f sty $HiBHm th wholesalers in those states, | these reasons they will be more likely ing, nora (}'umlum‘(l. have proved able | much to do with the market price as has the | ambitious country boys become great men ave | trifile htter f S G 1 coples; for .\I:nnh.|:~<.:;. 81D e - | must certainly be affected.’ He added: | be adopted by all the powers than the | to contend successfully against the en- | nebular hypothesis. Mr. Avmour evidently | sometimes novel aswell as interesting. While South Omaha doesn't count much either i | “I'ho eredit of the west has received during | recommendations for subsidies, an inter- | ergy and indomitable will which spri could give Providence cards and spade and | talking with Vice President Holcomb of the | Wiy, the Pawnee county peoplo give Chicago | e o ! ous blow s ; still win the game l';linn m.{n.r recently u\:flul G |.-; .mil | theie',500 or- e v han any since I have been connected with | nations, The qualities e; i suee are, e why some farmers succeed vegardless of il | jnstead of | AT HOre (5 L ADE v . ! ] o o i5e ithei Dooalo: W ic suc a istead of bringing them is, T suppos R IR AT fit Bhows tho | commercial agencles, ; The metric system has already heen | thrift, the exevcise of one's best ability, T ltsbirg Dispatels, rowd tarifts, the writer happened to mention | e accounted for by but two reasous. One of yeserve has inerensed 572,000, The | i seems tme s tho landing and wost | aqopted by the South American nations | and the manifestation at all times of an | The assertion of Huntington that the | ™A1l Was borm and rerwod o farm, | these is important and the other don't smount Danks now hold $1.326000 0 excess of | whet won can 1o oemose the failotos ot thoss | A1d it will becoms necessary for Ameri- | earnest and active interest in the busi- | money of the Southern Pacific was “used in e el e Holeomb. It 1 o shucks. The important reason is thut the ) Ptk what you can to expose the fallacies of these Men who do this | Stanford’s bohalf’ promises some disclos- chicfly because my father's estate | puuning arrangement of the B. & M. road be chunced to be located on the line of & big | tyween Pawnee county and South Omaha is legal requirements, | roports which avo still coming forward. If | crchants to use it in measuring | ness of an employ wo aira to have any further material develop- | 20005 for export. The recommendation | will not fail of preferment and promo- | Ures which would come under the late Horace | o that T went into this business, When T e e m i =T i . i | ti S s Rilhe Greeley's definition of “mighty intevesting | I'ne winter cholera is lingering be- | ment during the coming y t must come | port dues be consoli- | tion. One great cause of failure of reading.” When people ',,(].{.-.fu’-:'ui‘n e " @ boy I was compelled to et out and hoe corn | youd don’t care, 1t knows that our cattle | or chop wood or look after the before | must o where it wants to take them and it hind in Omaha until after the five sale | latzely through the expenditure of forcign | dated into one charge to be -‘"“”‘13““"’“i" business is lnckc of concen= | /0 ¢" honost people’have' a chance of g ! . pital in our state, The stream of mon »dues it is thought will atly fa tratlon. The re prone to seck outside | i 4yair own agai daylight every morning, and work hard until | proises the Burlington to take them to Chics ¢ dollar of capital after dark of an evening. Every time a train | g, Phe other reason is that wo have alwiys ved nosed tramp who has been jn | from the east to the west, for the past five | vogse)s of all nations in the South Amier- | and eredit, every business thought, went by and 1 could sce the braleman sitting | heen in the hubit of going to Chicago, I will training 0 play the role of reformed | Y5 Whet once divested into new channels | o ports, Good results are expected | should be concentrated upon the o e o hon Lali i iRy Iy SULGH D Voorin o [ frankly ackuowlege that the South Omiahi AR 5 T resaptiir e i d baclk in many years. 5 AT LE IS L e R oL ; fould announces that he is pleased | brakemun grew strou Pinally the farm | gtockyards should get every head of our cate drunkard is now _preparing to move ‘his is not the flest time that/Tie Brs | [om uniform vogulations in regavd to | one business upon ~which a man | C2e® KL B outlook In Toxas, and that | life bocaniesuch & burdon tome thit I packed | tlo but that it don't I hardly consider tl westward, On to Nebraska. [ has been enlled upon to contradict tho | UStoms. The proposition to establish . | has emburked, It fsa poor business s et e At D e v i i e pi i | AL AU By ol s been ealle « o > T £ TR 5 A iz rross | wha ud, struck out fc | fa e men who hem. But th ] untruthful roports whout destitution and | Stotistical bureau which shall deal | which will not iyield better veturns for | joqpitality manifested everywi xico. | lington and got a job on the railroad. That | present rn of things won't continte much iBAontly) hoar Tiom|Georgs | qiatress in Nobralkn which: have! baon h the commerce and development of | inereased capital than any outside in- | was the proudest day of my 1i | fohger) T Bl GATi D postive 16 wowidait, TFrancis \n'when‘he interviews the: 5 ‘“_" DUBLISlY faviina wide by BpALEnE all the republics of the west is one of the | vestment. Mr. Carnegie concludes with | mind, and it cannot be ver there was mor a rustle on the matter nte) Maharaju of Punjauband the mayorof | 5t Bt Iwanipors | MOst important made and if cavvied into | the encouraging assurance that in eyery | wires will bring news of M absorp- | | @S O o 1| this ond of the line, Bagdad” on his psycho sixty-day tour | o o s S TPONS | aftect will have v ! ntages, | quarter of tho budiness world, aveiues | tion of u few thousand miles of southern rail | have of writing and committing - theiv | i 0 Dolities, governor, is thers L ) |fune s Ran oy tubout s oulturall | eRt oy cel Koty Hise OXbasaBon et e e e o | vaye) specchies hefore making them, General 0. B, | ISP iaiatenliis | depression never would have been raised | 1 ' greater probloms considered by the | & T e S : Hawloy suld yesterday that upon gencral | “iyy italy nothing whatever, I can toll | if we wero not on the eve of u state olec- | conference, as arbitration and subsidies, | € than. ever, befol X What is Cleveland's Influence? principles he did not be TG R | e e ALO ST Lo ORE s Missouri | gion. While it 16 frae that farmers (| G4mm0t bo solved without the action of | isted, stand open ‘to the sober, St. Louis Globe-Democrat., how far most of them wander nway from | So hewever, that th e b e iy : ) s 16 ot C b i snergetic and able mechanic, to the sei- | If Mr, Cleveland hus any influence with his | what they have written. The gre an | Prosperous down our - wother viver i this section is seriously at~ | Nobraska. bave boon buining com in | the diferent governmonts, and it is not | energetic and able mechanic, \ ) nee with his | what they have written, The greatest man [ fsbEFO0 GO BRSO | 2. possible to say with any degree of cer- | entifically edueatéd youth, to the oftice | pi n New York he would have induced | for this I r knew was Sunset Cox. He | ToTRE v oRin g . ‘”‘m. 5 \.”'“ l“n““_ | BEx-Governor David Butler of Pawnee City paper L3 AL day o LA, | the past three months a more serious blow | national coin, and arbitration between | fromall-conquering pov of spring overcouts. Y which has been flowing in & rapid cureent ate the entrance and elearanc investments. Every In discussing the cistom some public men | tompted, provision should be made to | 1co of o e s ; { ve anchor the sand bars and snags a fo M:‘l:, “““:“" ”“. .h'l‘.h“ ‘llmdr,' ']‘ tainty what may be done regavdi boy and to the elerk—avenues through | ten or twelve of the members of it whoare | always propared his specches, had them | & s i Ry L B which they can, panp, grenter successes | 11 e logislatire to vote forthe Sixton billot | printed wid dis amonge members of 2 | rutes and>low pricos of corn mado it | 8 REGEREE BEE RELNEE e iniwotd evar Hefofd withi tho rench | TeTorm ill whicl i in line with the doctrino | congress in 0. When he delivered : cheaper for Nehr farmers to burn | ! : ¢ those classes in the histors of the | Which he professes to hold dear. Halfa | them, how one who took the trouble | OuR double-decker —eontemporary | ot it B R e nonns the | international bank depend upon | of these classes in the history of the | goson democratic votes in the upper branch | to follow him with the. printed. copy woul now wants the Alliance to proceed right | 4. time that corn hus been madea sub. | e future for their — realization. | world. of the legislature and a dozen o fifteen in the | hardly recognize it as being the same speech away to build that barge line down tho | g T 5E S8 S T e, 1o | The railvoad schemo may ShlRGE L L xchanze. lie the | lower branch would, with the republicans, | This used 1o creato big laughs in which M Missourl, That's as easy as volling off & | 50 vito the contrary upin tho Dalkotas, | Pushed forward by pr board of trade, has altogether too many |yt capred T measure over Governor | Cox always joiued as heartily as any ody.” | 413 guy. Dho papors here don't seom to log if young Mr. Hitchcock will only ad- | o)y fapemors by reason of drought have | SUrVey to oy ernments | 4.,n0'4n tho five,. Some of the projects | ol e [ Sk [ what miht strictly b called ,verhating e vance them the money at one per cent [ 1" EEE ey with | Shows it to A Intar e Al At vty bey ond Beaten Again by John Bull. Not many: yoars agoiW. O. Coup, \who hasil 0.6y o the s held by the Omaha per annum, e i national coin isa possibility, but itis | - D Louisville Courier-Journal, | been sojourning & few days in Omaha, was | o0 co brethren—do they ! and the gov: which to buy conl. The most relinble : 2088 b its scope and consequently doomed. Such . ol B e St S AT ) ) 5 not likely to be lized in the near fu- 53 B ) | A Lima letter in the N York Tribune | wner and proprictor of the greatest ¢ I8 ol {1y 18 ho/dddods (A ve the reports that reach us from all scetions of | T e R 0l for instance, us the steamboat line down | tolls how Peru has been turned over to the | and traveling menagerie ever seen on this | et VLTSS bisgor | the state show that whilo there is great | "':'_'r'\"u'lf““"m;l" Sushom. oo 'I ‘I““l" | the Missouri. Suppose the Missouri | Iuglish bondholders in payment of the continent. He so outvivaled and disturbed | oo P00 SEEHERE 18 B O sontent among farmers about prey R OnS LY WSO 10 yjver was as navigable as is the Missis- | debt of that republic, which amounted to | Bavnam thit an offer of £25,000 i year for the 2 vl AT e e b T b pedient the adoption of most | i Jow mueh business would steam- | £205,000,000, The Couricr-Journal b simple use of his name was made to him by | A gentleman well kuown in Towa politics est charged by local money lende s iy : 1 of the recommendations of the con- 1z up the river, even if they | occusion bofore to comment on this finaucial | that famous old_showman, oncoudition, of | and a vesident of Des Moines was found i lutlons “enforced by the commissloners | yy,o iy 1o distress among tho agricul- | had full eargoes to go down with, How transaction as one of the most extraordinury | course, that he would sell and trausfer his at- | the Millard rotunda yestenday. Ho is a afford ample protection for producers The conference had no authori IO e A e i e traction to the Barnum concern. During the | vepublican and is considered to be well and shippers against the machinations copt to suggest and advise, and this it il s havelboon cavicdout. As Petu has scarcely: |l coursoolun. interestingiohat hadswithEMr. i posted. JEAEL (tam S heral o’ in f atill of the corporations, has done, Time will show to what ¢ lowa, Illinois and Minnesotaare shipped | o) viyine of value oxeopt her railways and | Coup one day last week, he related some | business huut,” suid he, when approached tont its labors have value, and whether | (¢ down the Mississippi to St Louis? | o guano beds, sho practically gives the | v connected with his carc for a chat, “and that is the same s saying e e e percentage of Nebras E Londholders the entire counts eu will | Spea Barnum offer, said he that 1 do not want my name in the paper, sl ‘l & 1{ ”“ e “;‘ L] :1 Y | plus grain and cattle are shipped | be owned as absolutely in England as Egypt | We were oxhibiting at Atlanta, “The latest thing that T know of,” he con- last year, is not satisfied with the in gresand gusciuljbody. © stand 100 | qowy to St. Louis by rail? But the Mis- | is. Under theso A tan Lea WA L, when I agreed to mccept it | tinued, “is that the democrats are assuming ronaed duts sronesed by the MoKialoy | This is especinlly true of the farmors in | HOAr o 1ts work, as was snid by Mr. | (oui viver between Omaha and St, | merchants ave likely to lose thelr footing | mnd loft immediately for Birmingham | they can carey the Ninth conressionul dis- Lm *';ll "‘.I;\”I’I';"P"-‘“"";;‘ I‘i:‘im; ‘l}““l‘l: the older sottled counties, which com- Blaine, to properly estimate it. there entirely. \\-m»n_»ml;.- ady: ”V“l‘l ,_,: |I.\»l'lljuh':lulh; me been [ :;z.: ..|r l!n\\ul T: ffiH l\'m. \\’H'I‘ smonmber ; ohes compol Nl sl 2 G o franss % % P : promised an cighth interest in the show, was | that Judge . Read was sent to congress thront even in Canada and gobbles the | Prise by far the greater povtion of - the HOW 10 WIN FORTUNE. mgnihain ‘l“‘ year ““;11 s amtile Freo "'\'_‘1_‘:"}’""“ cotions, to meet me and make out the papers. He re- | with little or no effort onhis part, two yoars twine factovies of Ontavio, If the twine ""{‘\,‘;":""; "'I" l““““ state, i ; '"l‘“’",‘l” S (“ o L | B o e suftvag | 10500 10 i thom and that onded the negoti | aso, s cloction Deioe wbout. all Unit i man S PR e oy e e wlesale dealers vepresent that col- han it would to build a double trac QERoYSASlauLession, o suffrage | i [ could ask in the way of votes, - Last your AT TR it | lections in the interior of the state have railvoad from here to St. Touis, If we | NoW practiced in open deflance of the ffteenth | g0y afor that a train wreck near Cairo, | Hutehison had less thian a thousand mjority in shall we find a fully developed industey? | : SR A 4 o i amendwent of the constitution in the south- | d : f | very materially improved and trade is want competition the most 5 UL, destroyed my property and rained me. | the counties composing the judge's district. us brisk as it ever b at thi feasible and useful projec Ralleapalt|dorataiesiholzony i path UY | Piis ended my briof, brilliant caveer as a | It is this last fact which the democrats try to il Ottaws government hus under | M Prisk a8 it evor hus boen ut this sou- easible and useful project is the canal | hoired ‘to black and white eitizens alik s end ) lant caveer s a | 1415 this st fact which U ats tr Fetiaanien Ni g s son of the year. 'There is no distross in between the Mississippi and the R A Ta v st AR e o P e b reus manage A\tl the time we were en | make abasis upon which to vest hopes of side a gigantic scheme of co- | (o e ; f The ‘i it i i ! ) route to Detroit, and upon our avrival thero a | getting a man into Reod's seat. So far as ) 5 2 Nebraska and there never can be in a That canal will be built in the near | lican congre: e L IoUL ! K orative insurance si : at | 1 i CABLCONgro8s 10,3, 1OPUGL 9B DITSIGClL oAt or of leading citizens made up a purse . 5 concerned [ haye heard that he op Eurhnoes it ito sthobif future. But beyond rvip-rapping for the | fulfill it. But five months of thesession have | M1iber of ! E oltizons ) mitep s put 1isioongered & naveeant il drafted by Prince Bismarck two y Rl i e B e R B2 formniponh IO1thoyiix me to accept | has said he hud enough of Washington life ago. The main idea is to enable work- | H 18 to sponk from porsonal exporience, | PXORPTAE O K18 FAMORE, BEICEER A e ity 0 SUbSHINUAL Progress |, gov on my feet again, | 1f this be a fact, or, however it may be, I ing people to securo for themselves a :{""‘l"" gning politicians l“lu SenSA | which is of course the most valuable for | ":;‘“ \"'i‘l';‘“ ‘; Misgout "“.""",'""":f‘ BTCL A et S H o | “BUL RO desiving to b under obl S | think Eean namo a few republicans who ars A g fonal newspapers may say to the con- ol i b sy | ation will produce no material benefits S to them or anybody else I refused it, em- | quite certain to be candidates for the place. mpetence in old age, view 2 & ) those who wounld impart instruction, i s Ty ay be the best & ) ) | 9 i Sdkngteuceniold age il lewlal. the I | to anybody, excopting alone the members : ted may be the bestund | )0 00q " non M. Dickinson and commenced | Th ato Auditor Lyons of Guthrio financial condition of the Canadian gov- most expedient and the most easily to be en- | POVed D0 e wionel W. F. Sai souncil Bluff R B — A i3 i suit for £250,000 ngainst the vailvoad company. | county, Colonel W. K. Supp of Council Blufs, ernment, it is very doubtful whether the | AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCLATION. | study of practical affairs, for while project will matevialize. This year ssion of the Amerl winning fortune Mr. Carnegie has not of the river commission, St : : der clection law will be gladly | pp o T L the ense. two years and | whom everybody almost both i Towa and e Medical association will be hoid in N noglected to store his mind with the | s not a single saloon in Pawnee City, wd where that sort of a temperance ms one is apt to notice it more than you probubly would in Omaha. Still, T hear 1 [ the temperance people have hived the bi | hall in Omaba—that of ghe Exposition | ing—and are holding meetings there night Tz mutilation of the Towa railroad Taw cannot produce the results the man- agers joyfully hope for, The maximum rates apready established and the regu- | A very large percontage of our sur- plus grain erop hns beon profitubly fed Tie binding twine trust, which suc- MLCag Nt et who have cessfully bled the farmers of the country ! ly:Wpiley ave bl to mapat 3 gations without diflicult; Louis is only navigable about three There is perhaps no one better quali fied to give wise counsel as to how for- tune muy be won than Me. Andrew Car- | negie. He is one of the very successful men of this age who commenced the | practical duties of life with no other cap- ’ ital than good common sense, industr, stute thut alwags vaises abundant crops. | und self relinnee, Ho is therefore abl This is the true state of facts, no matter trary. as well as from an intelligent v the suppressed voters; a nar- < | Nel o Il udge Carson THE government is actively pushing | s o il ot A A finally got. judzmient for the full amount but, | Nebraska, is -'*'l'l-l.v.lfl\-l‘\\xm\\ ud ; arian Q ; ey s i A 9 i 3 the work of education among the Indiun | publicans of the country: aud congress asldo/and T aovor're- ok thaidistrlaticonrt, RUns I¥ilson. e ACCORDING t0 Major €. P. Birkett, | ville, Tenn., and the association will | troasures of ipformation which undoubt- | ¢G50y oo B CERR G GE | PR e Per hould [RORRIY:F AVCAKRL (DY S \GUIKIES 0L, IOWSE $there is o bristling sentiment in the | then scleet the place of meeting in 1891, | edly are far more gratifying to him than | { A0 [ pirhich seeigailahave delivaditealong, sould In 1576 Mr. Coup built in New York city | housc of this | : S : s il forty schools of all grades are now in | atonce proceed to the performunce of u pur- ; | KRR town south of the viaducts about the lo- | The elaims of Omuha will be presen his mutovial possessions, At any vatel| 0¥ o S T B R ean | amount und sacrod duty the fiest aquavium ever established on this | man, formerly cal taxation of wsmall district immedi- | and it is the intention to make a vigor: | they have given him a fame which as [ (P WL et i Sl - continent. Iu thathe had fish from every | Blus Nowps il i g ately avound the Tenth street viaduct | ous effort to sceure the solection of this | simply the owner of millions he could el 4 YOIOR OMIBHEISTATDRRISS. | | ovalononsihe globe; sntameng tho eollechiom |l HEoMA R 8 THeH ; e Jocation, to pay damages b setive | city. A lar, jority of the physi ! ve socured, sund over last ye A large number of — . somo rare specimens that cost him immense | think they could d S ltn e Bt R n .':"1? MR DY JeeRbsaYa | olby: A lae ority of the physicins JRCEMEEL . Sl et Indian gchools are to be built and muin- | Culbertwon Sun ) sums of money to get. Among other vi « | Bolter of Haveison county, Tom Bowumn benof his is lamentable state of | he rnestly in favor of the move- |} " o has recently contri H\h‘ul oinelont atithaitinds tecentlsivealisad The Slocum law the crystalization of | 1101 what is known bs the kin o | of the Council Bluffs Glob 5 afMaivs, but this is a wicked, wicked | ment, but thereareafow who ave hostile Now York Zribune an article in [ g0t rvitions. Al | #00d, common sense treutment for the liquor | giied il found only in Jupan, 1t was the | Cleveland of Shely count world, Major Birkett, and we musten- | to it, basing their opposition on | h he prescats the encourvaging | TR ARt o '”M"” '| e ;l ;)w question. Tt should be vi enforced. Ttis | o’ hiiative of all the finny tribe, its de- | Gronewig of Council Bluffs duro it if we eannot curo it. the ground that Omaha can not | opinion thut fortune may b won now as | K L At the duty of the citizens in general and the of- | ¢ojgment of silken-like tail being the result | plain, unvarnished fact of > " | i i | young of both sexes, thus cquipping | figials in particular to see that its provisions ¢ is thut the republicans of the Ni = — accommodate the twenty-five hundred | readily as ever, It is a very com- | i e | ebia 1 : L of decades and possibly ful | is the | kY . > 9 L { them for the struggle which will follow | are complied with. ’ 1y have a hard fight on ther ha TiE rejoicings of the people of Grand | doctors who attend the sessions of the [ mon view among young men that " = Iit) selection and culture. When ed | i : 3 s " £ . o | the abundonment of tribal relations and ) o fist longer | ocratic energy there and everyw Tsland over the avrival of machinery for | association. This objection, however, | the time has gone by for wchiev- | ot ERE B 0 B The Kearney Gait After Dovsey. at the wequarium this single fish, no longer | the beet sugar plant, is shared in by the | will not stand. Investigation shows that | ing great suceess and attuining wealth | D08 SLRAVCIRIINNG i S e L than hand, ot . pntive state, The energy and enterprise ore are ol accommodations in | i 088, th o opportunitics for i AR here will be an election in Nobraska next Mr. Coup told the story of how he once ‘f"_' ta I'ho onergy mln_n_( rprise | there are l{nl 1 _aecomm adutions in | in business, that the opportuniti 8 for COUNTVRY BREIZ fall, and if tho Fromont Statesman contem- | trausported n whale through Vermont on which demonstrated the possibilities of | Omaha and Couneil Blufts, nto | splendid triumphs in trade and indus- I - Dlates pussing his plate again he should strike | Sunday that was very oxciting, The monster | another two yea Nebraska as a boet sugar state, and se- | account only the botter elass of hotels, | trial enterprises huve been exhausted, or Lasr ey ')"Nmt RO Fe A hoY Catt \PIt g farol oo £0 that mukiia | et Sibisad wwastup Dn Bifalo: biy: aul! | bireasanotthot cured the location of an expensive fae- | for about three thousand ut least ave far loss numorous and much | o o eeRrt ddvocate building. There will bo a congressman from | brought down ta Quebec, landing there Sar. | that in spite of Bo tory, ave worthy of all praise. THE BEE | these hotels have housed over thivty-fi mora It to obtain than formerly. e SRS the Big Third next time who can do some- | urday night iy delay in gotting it to New | leve the republicay congratulates Grand Island and the | hundred. The average number of guests ‘ Mr, Car) o has no sympathy with this A Lucky Youth, thing for his conntry. Dorsey has yet a little | York by Monday morning meant, under the state on what gives . omise of becom- | daily is about fourteen hundved, so that | i o ndmits that the concente ation Frantdin Republican. | time left n which to sh vhethor it is to bo | circumstanecs, much annoyance and lows of | ing one of the most important industries | from eighteen hundred to two tho T apital in manufacturing and We know a young/man who received a slip- | him or some other man money. Thea ) wus alaw in Vermont | = aug! od i ) we: | iti ainl 4 . sial cone v A PR per instead of a mitten the other night. - agninsl running ad trains on Sundoy, | OMAHA inaugurated in the west. | of the visiting physicians could be ac | commercial concerns may make the vace | ¥ tten th nig Benton asa Coup tologrophed * tho govornox, also | —_— | ated i » hotels > ities. | o industr siness g Ayttt oup tele o 0 o or, ulsc i i i - | modated in the hotels of the two eities. | in the industr nd busine A Coupe b Absurdities, i A SRR the general of the vermmt | LOAN AND TRUST WORK on the city hall has now reached | As it is probable that from five to | world somwhat = harder to win, Kt City (Flobe Putting-this and that togethor, 1t beglns to | o)) o To 0 & (RS (R 4 3 & stage at which steps should be taken | eight hundred would receive private | but the difficulties are not in- The idea of Jugge, Peffer succeeding Ingall "i".'klnl"'lvlnful\l‘!}l;;_lrlnll‘:h'lilhvy-l“fl ;':;Ih‘:\‘r‘ ing for p snocial’ prociamation. granting him COMPANY. for the intovior finish of the building. | entertainment, it Is plain that there | suporable. They are not such as to | is like Vest's claia shat he Is the successor of | ecided to fot My Thowas Beaton sufl o0 The contract with Mr. Coots simply pro- | would be no difficulty in providing all | discourage, but only such as to stimu- | Thomas Hart Benton ¥ 8 vides for the superstructure,” but while | the hotel accommodations that would be | late the ambitions, and it is always to e ——__ the superstructure is going up the | reguired. | be considered that the prize is infinitely ' h‘."m_“:",_”';",'I',“W“' her, window frames must be sot, drainage | The lowa State medical association at | greater than formerly. 16 {nemntb i i tian ERt SN o eI AN ARG AR B0 pipes must be laid and put in position, | its lust meeting passed a resolution in | Mr. Carnegie names a number of the | Stanford or Creed Haymond will be the next [ down on the slate fora R N In most fire proof buildings the fire | favor of Omaha as the place for th most extensive industrial establishments | republican senator from California. Call- | ffies on rapld wing, the whirlighehas begun to G0 0 S FE LR a0 R e | Omahal.oan & TrustCo tile urches aro sot before the roof is on, | meeting of the national association next | in the country, every one of which was | foruia will be represented by a railvoad boss | Whirl, and protty soon we shu stato of Vermont at the rate of sixty miles an 3 R S R Y 11 [P Y Y Ay o v g HENE A R schanics, | in either case. Tommy, ulus! we will not see him any more : ek 1 Aol Sl SAVINGS BANK Cuking it for granted that the building | year, and instructing its delegates to | founded and managed by mechanics, it i oy, wlas! e will ot soe Bl Wiy WO | 1our, *You see wo hud u frvo trak SA H will be under roof before the end of the | this year’s session to support Omaha, | men who served their apprenticeship, | Brios Back Eheb B atohot. Kkh o bt ) inge, and such raolug o8 that wis 1 never | o N T your, work on the interior can pe carried | The ‘promoters of tho movement in | while in the mercantile, commercial Gordon Republican S experiencod boforc or since s on next winter without interruption if | behalf of this city have rveceived | and financial branches of busiy The person or persons who carried off two | Judge All Right, e % il 1 9nd Guerantasd Cuplia e contracts for the plumbing, gas fitting, | favorblo lottors from other points. It | the men whose names are known | hatchets from this ofiice some time ago will i muu«*d’ll“\:;/vln}u‘ln\-‘ll"-"‘ e P H«'_I'; Buchana i i P4 o SN Cont Tt Pagd ) Do stewm heating, five tilo, cuvponter work | is to he hoped the opposing physi- | and honoved throughout tho world | pleasemistio up enough gall to bring thom oy ! e Fremont, Elkbhorn & v FAUANE 4. LANGE Cushlore ] and plastoring are lotat an early day. | clans will change their minds, o that | of trade were all poor boys who na cleks | ek Woare ot uuder obligations to fue- | by UL per time. The | sour i the matt N tiee o Wyman it was st ceived st logislature, and Mr. Stead pro the Council | out the state hus been greatly st the election of a goveruor, wnd t prohibition W | vetuen their mu ¢ | Judge Reed or som privilege to transport his whale, They 1w 1 & Guaranteed Capital 500,000 s but [t il anager intimated i ) ), 000 auditor expires, There is an apparent neces- | 1 ok Al Ipaug lls stocks and bondsi negotiates | sity for a living sacrifice, and our Tommy can | "; \T\)l.“‘~“.l ALY A MOre: that W ey and vty | be thrown to the lions of veform and neyep | 07 SUIE i@ 4 ¢ L Inton O missed. Steen and Cowdory arve, howey ST knew what that hint meant,” said My ) kes eharke ot property; cols socond term. Time and from that to United States sennt AT oA TR s oy p : icorn & U Wik b farion, K W, Nash, Thonas . Kiuball 3T T Brown, It will tuke at least sixty days to udy Omaha’s claims can go before the com- | obtained their knowledge of business bii; o judge is dolng splendidl BT UL Ghice | L 5 1 i tiso for proposals and awavd - the con- | ing sossion of nn-_ American association | and found the opport mi(.\.ln use it. Can't Beat the Golden sioner, and while there is a crying dema ansoum for 8 f f 4 teacts. By that thme some of the in- | with the unanimous support of the | Ail the great captains in finunce and Philadetphia Record torior work must be begun. wodical fraternity of tho city, It can- |industey came frow the ranks. The A flower that is alternutely ved, white, Raciasot e (b Wha gubsrapiarie) to Mr. Bug Wh v P, y, and on Collutersl securily, ut Lows the senatorship secius to be in vory ) rifl uitcub

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