Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 9, 1890, Page 4

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1HE UMAHA VDAILLY BEE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1890. ];E CANADIAN RAILROAD PRIVILEGE London press is tho generally friendly | thousand. These figures are paraded as OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. but it isnot a part of the programme of the LOBSTER SALAD. AS o enate adopted a reso- | spird vhic! o hject i g yrolfbiti s 0 success as ™ " - il s, g — ‘ Last month the s e o pted a(n . spirlt In which th ‘l‘"!.‘ ‘” - I;”]""\” t projfibition sa success a8 8 |y petjet provails among weil-informed | Fdical Omata's claims as o summer rosort 1080 no E. ROSEWATER, Editor, uHen S P 1R b y of the | considered, and the evident desire that | debt destroyogg It would puzzle an im- | yugongin Euroe that Bulgarin will forn | | whaterer the trith of the mamor that | Srensth intho faco of the fact that Omaha c treasury for information regarding cer | nothing more serious thana diplomatic | ported coloniltor a reformed major the chief subject of discussion at the coming | g 4 A policemen batter down doors to arrest wife, STTas YR 11T o 0 13 Ay P ) _ 4 st B o4 T s L £ | England and Italy are considering a plan for | st AL 4 PUBLISUED LVERY MORNING, | tain privileges accorded to Canadian | controversy shall grow out of the qu discover thd¥ connection. Bub if | meoting of the ciar and Kaisor William. 1f | gjoint campafgn to reconquer the Soudan | Detters ) oo i) {lronds fn the matter of transpor tion. “Anything is better,” observes | their condjudion is tee how | the German emperor will acquiesco in the su- | quping tho coming autumn, thore can bs no Corpulency has its ifterall. In addis TENME OF S LTPTION, merchandise in bond to points in the | one of them, “than a fratricidal war | comes it § that county indebted- | persession of Prince Fordinaud by a protoge | doult that the time is more favorablo for | tion tosweliing tailor bills, a wellrounded il nd 10 ™ i y 4 . . i such a schome now than in the past. Italy ) front ncts as a species of lifo proserver in L',“"‘ -ty IR v reby endangered, The | flect the sentiment of all. Sinco the de- | quarter milllofis in 1880 to thirteen and ="“" “';‘ ‘”‘v ure -"" e years longer. | hug settled her troubles in Abyssinia, and | certain emergencies, The experience of an Weekly oo, One Year 't of the se wry has just been s | sire on the part of the people of the | a quarter millions in 18887 Township If, on the ‘_‘r'!‘”“; ‘h‘“‘ 'r ¢ l-‘l'w‘“v“‘ l"“; lias a firm ally in the present Negus, who fuflated New Yorker afloat on the Atiantio OFFICES, senate, and it will not be ctor) United States for anamicable settlement | debts incresged:from two to seven mil e yie Y e o | Would probably furnish a large contingent for | proves him to be one of the buoy On Bee Butldir by it 14 0 ", t 3 ) public opinion to take active measureson | guchan entorprise, The Abyssinians and . 1 9th Stroots, the Canadian roads. Withou is equally earnest, the danger of a rup- | Hons in thesaimo time 1 y debts 1¢ of sartisan: alg who, | ¥ r Ci ads 3 1 ang behalf of his partisans in Bulgaria, Who, | Arabs aro froquently ab war with each othier, ¢ our in ¢ p e specifically what is intended to be done, | ture of the friendly relations between | from two to'fivd and a quar millions. | gince the execution of Major Panitua, feol | and it was insuch hostilities that King John New Yor ) ¢isullding | the obvious inference is that it is the | thetwo governments from this cause | The cost of the machinery of prohibition t they have everything to dread from tho | pavished, Religious and raco animosity Wushingt 4 voonti Stre purpose of the tressury department | would seem to be very remote. does not come out of the state treasury i ve Stambuloff. The latter is the real | conld also be relied on to securo tho partici v that war has been dec CORRESION DEN( to change the existing method of It istaxed up to counties and towns, | of Sophia, Prince Ferdinand by pation of the Abyssinians in the -proposed the Omaba Guards s ations relnting to news and | inspecting and sealing cars at EXPLODED BOOM This burden, coupled with the deprecia. | 8mere figurehead, as was shown by his pusil- | campaign, Another favoring element is the [ Gatling gun ittor shouid o addressed 10 the | Vandouver and not to permit the United al estato boom which swept over | tion of values and the paralysis ol busi- n\‘ mos \‘n'v»h\ il H]w |<I“M';\l a It | Sen gl bl T tom agent there to hereafter in 1886, in many ca left in | ness following prohibitio laing why | 18 Stambuloff who has brought thing Soudan, which has not only set bounds upon | one of the candidates for BUSINESS LETTER n lowing prohibition, explains why [ [ FFf a peremptory demand that the sul- | g0 ext ket ref y | required amount to d pr Shetk 11 | his campaign. It is said that ¢ or treasury seal. It is | finally surrender, and yield to the law of | thirty-one millions in 1888, ix montl nited States, and whether the revenue | about sealskins,” anl this appoars o re- | ness swelled from seven and o | of Russia, the maintenance of peace in T A hackman at Council Bluffshas b &0, No matter what for, or how about. The law is finally avenged ssi movement in the western and central | There is talk of trouble nsion of Mahdi thas almost | the vepubiican t tan shall recognize Prince Ferdinand as rul threatened it v Ttis hardl . not only of Bulgaria prope: probable that t R R ensod from fourteen millions in 1880 to | of Bastern 1t county and municipal indebtedness, rep LIt | vesented in bonds and warrants, in to he mnde payable yrder of the Con { s in the cars of the Cana- it titious values must pany ness letterstand remittan ul 1 merchandise imported from China il refal desolation and proved u Senussi wou rrangement | ingsloy and Colonel Charloy " aatd " e - - violation of the 1 \with the English and Hanss v | that should be filled, and the The Bee Publishing Company, Proprietors, n of the scerctary | demand, Wichita, Kansas, furnished an informed the p s do woul nono tho loss Aighting the buttios of | tho ]y ; vl ',. h ks totaw The Ve | 1 Seventeenth Sta y toforbid the use of the | illustrationof inflate Lues, and spec THERE room for argument on the | rejected, Bulgari { CIRCULATION the latter. Still, in viewof the mewmorie ) st follow @ revel and s any mor- | bought blindly, expecting necessity udditional clevators in | lated teibute to the porto, ¢ ally thof Hi ssha's Kordofan campa h Col nload at ¢ y ndvan vo left | Omaha. 1 vast grain traffic of the | declare itself independent ! 1Lovd W T L iy 4 e L Tapan, or from any | ho! sack. “‘Sunnys me | territory butary to this city offers Nebraska City Thursaay bt such a8 can be | other addition, which was t to be | profitabi fucements to eapitalists, | P Mk “‘ ; M ' ver pause long bof taken from this that country to the | developed 1 “Australian improy ould be cstablished with | \ ment and sompany,’® with its nty of success, ‘The suc f The Reo ¥ b arthat “On to Khartou N vlis u the matter of En lia, ear that his a J v miles from tho mnearest houso, | both the Omuh Council Bluifs ele es. The Athens govorr 3 2 i countless and the gentlemen who made the first | vators {s totally insufficient to meet the | ¥ ed the porte t it ofilcral | x distributed, v‘ A s country, and { pr payment have long ago willingly sur- | demand. The opportunity is therefore | the annexation om Rour ) AL it extend to ¢ ng mer- | rendered ivclaim and interest. In | a most inviting one, especially gavia, Greeee will et additional territ ti . on its no: sutier, and Sevvia has de ing the ballroom clared that ) would require a consider- | a narroy s were worn by many of the chandise landed in the s coun- | Atchison, 1508, just now the sheriff is | the change of ownership of the existir try for trans-shipment through it to the | selling acre property lying round wt, | elevators. T'he one great ob- Unitéd States, In o ws the | which in 1887 was staked off and given | stacle to inde pendent clevators. patriots, and the scutiment was many newspapers her southern boundarics. | hadalready killed sov i b : A et general verdict is that th ards, but there is nothi 1 in the proposition claiming: “Dispatch me, traitors, assa - 1 ooplos: tor Sepe | | for direct importation into the | teen acres, wassold in 1857 for cleven |longer withstand the demand of the | Prince would be follow FE6 tlioh Talll to LS ook And People who want to pay for and or, T4s0, 10110 copies it tesin bond, This will be a | thousand dollars, two thousand five hun- | producers for relief and legal vegulation, | demand ! f the arrcurs of pived; but whether ho was poisoned or assas. | Havan eigars will be delighted to hos bl ¥ AR 3 \ iy 3 1Y ndema owes to ssi int * thothor his doat vas the Cuban manufacturers of these rare man- T it the Canadian road, and it | dred dollars down and the balance on | With the freadom of shipmunts pra Wil wes to Rtussin, or | sinated, or whether his death was cau ] L Sl fa i 1 i to ks inequivalent cession of tevritory in Armenia. | excitement, has not been authoritatiy ufactured goods hiave adopted a Jabel which rApril od that whatever loss it | time. The balance long since came due, | cally established. and discrimination re- | o St owever, rojoet the |t will attest their genninencss and which to r duly sworn, de- | Answer of the secrotary, the Canadiun seductive names in the guise of an add that of railroad control of shipments rolury of The Beo | 1 company will no longor be per- | tion, to the idder for cash, One | removed by th commerce ¢ X if the Russian Y T o the d to o freight from China and | piece of property, embracing some fif- | nor can the clovator combine much | hadn +0 him that th rn afavorable answe Crazed caused \\\‘4 Wl suil 10 ain of the Amer- | and to satisfy a judgment was sold the | moved, independentelovators have eqt crivedin my 1t competition. Tho pr of which and five dollars, some nine thou- | importan s afactor in t oI, gud th \he was a S andenlipHEons counterfeit will be rather a risky business, avored concerns, T tho tren It is o rveproduction of the great swl of Ldier s 5 Spain, and it is predicted that the cabbago TEIL. Notary Publie. it is proposed B roion | sand doilaes less than the original pu commerci 3 ¢ of Omaha calls had arded and bofri \ market will be glutted from this on, % corporations h tionably been of |.chase price. - o prc 0 ot on the wdon o way, The circumstane New Hamp: Il LE § to become o Thisin no way argues, as the world | part of busin ren to troble the pres ean | s t L \ of President. Mencude ten years AMID the conflicting current of opin- luge of m lin sentiment | might think, that real estate values In [ ent elevator capacity, an Wblish in e i 2 8 3 Atchison have deprecinted so greatly, | thecity a reliable home narket for the Wbl Thessaly 101d Ser- | franght with consequenc ordered ai but simply proves that thero must be | producers of the state, that revolt »ounpunished, and that welfare of Central erica. o the United | some legitimate value belind property thing was v Lto sccure indepadenc * 4 Vi ¥ § I A .. | vut to bol the ox by Last There has been a failure of the rice crop in Rl s, loss of this pat of its ore it is worth what the iutgination tic state central commit- | g o AR »1tHO| t-" || Tajii and at et iooounYs FoniTokid atarvad kbt 15 be u serious matter to the L greedy real estate dealer 3 ) recently got together, | sult of yielding to Stambu o know Kemmler onomo witne highe 1y un- | tion had become the cause of mang booii e e e 0 ) and finding the party inn deplorably | derstood by the Ulemns and Softasin Con- | deaths. Why an enlightened and progressive L R et i B b tod 1 by the American t Omaha during the hoom because back of | peal for suc The jact that republi- | mit the ‘”T Lz e e s v oL A Ll bR It ALY ML v by Ix“ e fi IR Rt ] & | lines, whose business has | it there were commercial and industrial | cans are flouvishiog in office inspi e shubl L enl pimbebly, o ustenarioe 1t whani ey tallBtioms toyy| apouolive LB SARcI glitclyh ol romb . i AR T A w the | interests, anda demand for homes to ac- | the pat 5 lo \stworl his throne i even his life, Such bei are reduced to starvalios 1 only be can alliance me the war w CONGRESSMAN BrAND of Missouri of the Canadian Pa- | co imMate thousands coming in to dwell | with uncommon looseness of tong sccured renomination by acclamation. e it has enjoyed the | amongus. The boom price hocame the | several large fragments of mutilated | cyrggto its habitual policy of procrast The men of educationadyance, but the masses | not make a much botter congressman th The result places the Globe- Deimocrat in of tragsporting merchan- | commercial value, and instead of the | United States were fired at the voters | tion,in the hopo that something favorable | of the population remain in thue old roads | the flat money preacier who captured the a position to appreciate condolences. m foreign® countries into the | bottom dropping out, a steady increase |as punishment for failing to may turn up before it is forced to commit | which their forefathers time out of mind | convention by the aid of Dave Butler —— United States, but whether the change | has been the result. democracy a turn at the ofticial trough. | itselfto eitherof two equally unwelcome d have traveled before them, dilernma in which the porte has been pla plained by bearing in mind the intense con. | over, are wondering if ), whose recor by Stumbulof’s altimatum, it has had re- | servatism characteristie of all Asiatic people, | s an anti-monopolist is unquestioned, would » ’ it : 4 Theadvice of Thomas C. Platt of Ix ten yoars the floating debt of Mis- | would prove to the interest of the public | Water will seek itslevel, and ficti- | In the interest of politieal competi cisions. But the time allowed it for delit ways enough food produced each year £or the | youc o all young men to go into politic souri incronsed from fifly thousand to | is at least adebatable question, It is | tious values go for naught when the ex- |is to be hoped some distinguished bour- ‘Alln.nm this yw:il.u\x.vv!\\lll; -'nwf\mll."' :f the :“"j“‘:_ il R i EDpox ‘;“""l should be carefully studied by Orlando Teft ovar thres millioms. Demooracy comes | claimed that this compotition hos ro- | cltoment of speculation prses mway. | bon leator will bo singled outfor pro- and wishos of his Austelan alty, declines, fn | countey so Ehnt It Fay ago §ood e JoRcit | COUNT'Y HOSPTIAT FORNISHINGS, high, but the Missourians will have it | sulted to the beneflt of consumers from | The fact thatthoreal estate transfers fmolion—te the office of constable, for in- | 3. o iow with the car, t0 support a | of another have beon sccured there will b Russian candidate for Bulgaria, the sultan | no famines in Japan because the rice crop has CU'“'HINHH::\N'! (*;u.-;m.‘:‘-':xn‘n in Com- NI s hronose | Will haveto take sidesat once cither with | failed orin India because the yield of wheat | mittee of the Whol DOUGLAS qpunty ropublican '""’,;?qu' the Hapsburgs or the Romanoffs. In the [ is short. The problem of feeding the nations At 20clock yesterday afternoon the county i former event he will lose Tastern Roumelia | is a problem of distribution, and Americans | commissioners met and at once resolved gl forthwith, and the restof his Furopean pos~ | have done more toward solving it than any | themselves intoa committee of the w THE interest of Congressngn Butt shown at the organization of a county | saggions piecemeal: in the latter e will sink | other peaple. with Mr. 0'Keeffe in the chair, worth in the cause of Camadian reci- | club furnish the best evidence of their | mpidly into complete dependence on the czar. 6 S LS TG dn Y WaR 1ar ;L purpose procity does not diminish, despite the |determination to unite and poll the full | In either case he will have, like Abdul Aziz, of considering the bids that lad been pre- e e T ssible to the | (At that so few others of the statesmen | party strength in November. ani to veckon with the wrath of Moslem fanatics. Roger Q. Mills, in assuming that Missouri N‘j'}":\l‘;'l"\l' ol fl"”"‘:l."v-:l_w'.‘ B et Cantdion eailronds DR EOHC ot the country can be induced to take a | tion is half tho battle. > will o o vory doublul state this: your, s | . Loobld ot N.B. Falooner for fornhing shakon upin o railway collislon yester- | CoRA31an railron very doep concern In it. Without dis- | ganization with auxilavies i Allthat France has so far reatly got s her | “sizing up” the situation pretty corrcotly. | pineio, shades was raud. hos agreed & day, are doubtless in favor of reducing e paraging the policy of reciprocal trals | precinot, insures aconcert of action [ share in the African partition is the pro- R T T A T . Corrican tHought the bid was low the local of specd. « 2 ¢l with other American countries, Mr. | which cannot fail to make itself felt at | tectorateover Madugascar, and some conce: 3 Lt b bl o b s EeoraR Il aReos b0l Extended oxtracts are published from | g 4tarworth believes it to be move im- [ the ballot box. With an carly and ef- | $ionsin the Niger country, Whatshewants | o0y dore PR AT e in Washe | Mr, Berlin thought that as there was only JAY Goutp hus bought o Moxican | the comments of the leading London | 1o ant 1o effect reciprocity with Can- | fective union, officcred by reputablo, | it dHtisnis the contienation of hextitlo to | 4 o1 ican, over w meteor. 1t fell on Miss [ one bidder, ALt s T pulace for u winter homo, paying the | journulson the Behring sed corespon- | ygy than with any country or psrhaps | energetic men, tho rapublicans of Doug- | sncant to this, Italy would not, Crispl has | K€i5ey’s farm, and a hived man numed Jan- | SEIERUERE NGOG thit ho was mak! teifling sum of five million dollars for it. | dence, of which the abstracts furnished | 441 (ha countries of South Amer las county propose to give “our friends, | yotified Germany and Austria that their con- | U2LY) Who saw it fall, duw it out. He thousht aked, “If any ——— fool put ina bid Mr, McKinley recently stated in tho | the enemy,” tho most vigorous thresh- | snt to the auncxation of Tums by France | Metcors a profitable crop, bought it from | for carpets you would not accept it.” t thereis al ot an) the lower rates of transportation it has | of Thursday in this city reached close to | stance, brought about, and if such isthe fact the | the two hundred thousand dollar line, withdrawal of the privilage will doubt- | shows that investments in Omaha realty e to set the pace for the campaign. loss soon show it. So far ns the revenue | are safe, sccure and desirable, bl poniahow 1 {al A8 ihe tevenic S uttendance, as well s the enthusinsm TuE chronic assailants of the west are ificantly silent, now that the statis- tics are at hand to prove the falsity of their assertions regarding public and private debts, is concerned, it does not appear that the secretary of the treasury rogards it as being endangered. It would clearly seem Roger 18 Right. to be the purpose of the administration St. Louis Globe-Demosrat. Messns, Leesg and Cowdrey of the state board of transportation, who were If there i< anything else in Moxico that | by telegraph were very meagre. For y B o b b . it bint TTage TMa ek vadars axe 2 H 5 4 5 i Miss Kelse ent fo d sold it to the iis capt he committee, o bid Mr. Gould desires, hewillplease nameit, | the wost part these English papers ex- | 15046 of reprosentatives that under the | ing they have yet experienced would disturb the harmony of the triple | Miss Kelseys cent for i soldibto the | 0 eiociod, but it dld nob 8tay reioated, s PR -ty press their views cautiously and con- o 3 Stebn VTR s Ielsey was | 0 on was reconsideced. : away from home when the thing wassold, | “Phaother bids were opened, and when tho and now comes back and clims that her | committee repor s following agent had no right to dispose of it. She pro i to furnish material o tho poses if necessary to bring suit for it on the RGO T Wi 3 il ground that in Knasas meteors come prop: SRR, MU B Rt o reciprocity treaty between the United e alliance. Italy would be apt to resist such States and Canala the advan- | WHEN itis romembored that it costs | annexation, bocause there is a lirge Italian tage was all with Canada—that we | but forty-nine cents per one hundred | PoPulation iu Tunis, who have never submit- o = CA ¢ ted to tho Frguch rule, it is only a couple bought of them twice as much as we sold | pounds to ship packing house products | Ui 10 110 HERICH TG W 18 O & coube tothem. Mr, Butterworth takes issue [ from Omaha to Liverpool, England, and b : ) g volved in a hot dispute over the attempt to 1) each; cotton felt matresses, & each; feathe with his statement and asserts that the | seventy-five cents per one hundred | substituto the French language for Italian | W00er the general headof furm products, | yillows, 50 cents per pound; wooden —chairs, balance of trade was on our side during | pounds to ship the same gools to Den- | in the schoolsat Tunis. The Italians resisted *“-‘l“"“w '\' as e just and due meteor right, | 10 ce B A the existence of the treaty, the common | ver, Colo., from Omula, it is time that | the change, aund Franco yieled. It will not | 500 SPle ____ 5 H el A bltns 75 onaits DaR dnemt.s impression to the contrary being due to | a readjustment of r: s were demanded, | be easy to dislo cither nation from Tunis, Wild bemands., The majority of the mbers of the com. the fact that account is ordinarily taken | The Denver rate is plainly exorbitant. cortainly not France. Sho has her army Fe Chicago Trivune, :ylultmi i Il report :‘.:1.;‘\.".\.;;:..'.‘.‘1 sak chi of the trade of only two provinees, those ——— thereand controls the government, her min e Farmers' Alliance of Ncbraska de ALe Lo oD o, e 3 Mr. Berlin will turn ina minority T discovery of a bunch of land |servatively, and allof them voice a de- swindlers in Minneapolis made the | 8ire to have thedispute amicably settled, text for o sensation, doubtless to conv though none of them manifest any con- the impression that rscality is an un- | fidonce that this is likely to be speedily known quantity in that inflated burg. accomplished. — The T0mes remarks e . that the last word in the contro- THERE is no longer any doubt that |vevsy is far from reassuring, yet the growing crops of Kansns have heen |it thinks things have gone better seriously injured by drought, intonso |then could be predicted from stifly heatand hot winds. The state board of | worded dispatches and proclamation, agriculture reports that the corn and it suggests that circumstances neve will not exceed seventy-five milli more favored asettlement if only ex bushels, less than half the amount pro- | trancousinfluences could be excluded and duced in 1883, The crop of wheat and | lobbyists and party leadors could be com- outs exceeds expectations, pelled to stand aside. The (vlobe says e e Lord Salishury is pevfectly justifiod in THE official report of the financial | taking m and decided tone, and of Ontario and Quebec. Mr. Butte THE democratic state convention | isterresident being pragtically supreme, sub- | inan "'f our financlal system should be r A tiheh that during the last | which meets in Omaha the 14th inst, has | tonly to the foreign office at Paris. The | formed by the restc of silverto its old- | oiving as his rc for 50 doing worth further says nl.';‘ ing the last iy 3 T s : il courts are presided over by Irench judges, | time place in the currency and its free and | board has no rieht to award forty years, the balancelof trade between | already caused more Richmonds {0 g0t | 4 tho bey and the minor native oficors ave | unlimited coinage on an equality with gold, | but one bid has been received Canada and the United States s been In\h_ field l_h:m ever before, Demo- | subsidized with French money. Morveover | and by the increase of the money cireulation . 4 PP in favor of this country to an amount | craticlightning rods are almost as num- | Punis is too near the French province of | until it reaches 0 per capita, and that all < Death of a Fe g over one hundred and fifty ‘million | erous as weve those of the dominant | Aigiers to have 1t the possession of arivalna- | Paper issues necessary to sccure that amount | Paw -~ [Special Cablegram to . dollars. In short, the balance of | party. And what is refreshing about it | tion. At the same time the Prench told upon | Should be made by the governmentaloue and | Tiue B v irrion, " tho Ja td condition of the Panama ennal shows | wh be matter for regret it an | ymde hos, with the exception of a vory | is, tho Omaha democrats are growing | Tunis is so far precarious that its stability | be full logal tender for all debts, public and | woman of Hourdenlles, s dicd from habi that the enormous sum of two hundred | ear anding cannot be como to, | fow yvoars, always been in our favor, | ambitious. lepends upon the consent of England and ate, ity to di »vd od. She had abstained for id sixty-two million six hundred thou- | the fa ill not rest with the British hcdel 2 ~ Italy. By treaty oblizutions with the bey, to | This means simply an_overwlhelming flood | iviy-thive days. dnd dollars has been squandered on | government, The Chronicl regrets that THE squatter war on Cut-Off island | which these other nations are parties, France | 0f paper money. The prosent cireulation is at work, the bulk of which was draw o spute 4 od. in . ¢ : emphasizes the growing value of prop- | must coase hor oce X A 3 K Bl e | deadlock, ut ays it cannot | ¢y, illion dollars during the last dae, l'. ‘ in Dbitter- | 1oeal governm ble of maintaining | tion asked for by the farmers would be 3,8 e oletogptoancg ;gama Was nove denicd that the tslh | forty years. In this statoment, does not 020U al 00 W order.” 1t is not at all likely that this agree- | 000,000, 0r nearly three times the pr sz I 0 1 Mr. Butterworth make out a stronger ment will be reached so long as the local gov- | quantity. If the entive silver product of the The Steike at € course which ovents h vo taken, | cuse in favor of elking reciprocity with Loxpo: 1'“ .‘.l‘x f‘ :” i ablegram to e : “The provoking thing for us,” says that | the southern countries than with Can- Tuw Brej—A dispateh from Cardiff dated all within their power, relinble reports | journal, *is that Mr. Blaino in un en- Inight says the strike will probably end claim, to suppress information concern- | counter with Lord shury happens t i 5 f 4 tod: 3 4 ing the cholora opidemic in that ¢ R T hle i A OMATA’S junketing councilmen have | jnstead nd is clinglug to Egypt in | favmens are driving at. They think that if s ) try. he disease is unquestion ihonch ha habt the Imiraelcasa vat th been heard from. They were at Chey- | spitoof Fronch protosts, aud balf Europo is | there were more carrency in the comtey, | \ SRLHOER ‘"1".‘ R spreading vapidly, and it is thought that Pt s B R cnne Thursday, and from the fact that | botlered to know how it will all end, Whethar t4fath or not, they would iave more;i{ ~IOYDON ADgUS {Epaciol Catlaguvn. 10 dly i ) diplomatic controversy the representa- they *closely examined the underground v that if there were more there would b Tine: Br dward DeBaucrnfeld, the poet, a ge era of Furope \\}\} I:.-)f)h cted be- ves of this country seem to belike | thing should be done to reduce the great ‘.A ..u'm an__ A L5 : e ter demand for thelr cre ‘and thabam £ is deaa. He was born in Viennain 1502, fore frost. It mey visit this ¢ 3 mere babies in his hands.” It thinks it | guneal balar S Aol XE lhulu system of waterworks,” there is a grave The general election which ey e iR et - re ba ¥ Ads, iinks annus dance against us our trad e 1 arallandas # AR Al £ and precautionary measures against the | ohyvious that Lord Salisbury early in the ’_]L‘I‘(‘l _’ "i‘y“ KR s R ap O 088 | suapision that their several cases of beer | Japan last month was the first attompt by an | porele because of an expansion of t ; disease und its ravagos will bo timely, | aiseussion becume sonsible of Lis own in. | 1D LRenation f the Rio Grande. | nave been exhausted. oriental u""""]”‘“ ostablish re i""““:-“'\l’l‘ rency. Such would not bo the case, however, | g 4 AT A . ’ < B government, The nes) parilament wi and the farmers' condition would not be bet- TR feriority in dialectic skill to his oppo- IN an elaborate defense of the railways e A SR ¢ magni- | °Pen on November 1. The emperor in 1851 | yorq. 1f the c e ? the Positively cured Dy} ¢ lesalo desertic nent, beeause he very soon lost his tem- | and their charges the New York Tribune kit b il g promised the people that at the end of cig 4 ik s these Little Pilis, SRR S Aokl b et T Lo I tom- | and their chargos the Now YorkTribune | ¢35 nrg rapidly developing on tho |Promised ther that at theend of cight h ills. i . 1 per, and falling into a furious passion in- | lays down this startling proposition: | ; -4 3 W oo | yoars he would give them aconstitu s it The ) relteve DI the difliculty of securing a full comple= | 51" 5 Vi, Biai 10k 186 The | e thea o ot enaa e e |ldsland, . TThe maudgers of Omaha's In- | i o ronise baa boen b mado in 1565 : oy tress from Dyspepsta, 1n- B ment of men for the new cruisers ve- | o NNE ot Bthie s B 000 BT ey SR B O | Auktrlal annas are. 1 ubating several | und again In 1574 and 1875, But this timo 1t A nebably whit (I Qigoation and Toa 1) contly put in commission, seriously im- pended negotiations not in the interests | freight from New York to Duflalo, op | iPOortantsurprises for the public, was fuliilled, and in February of last year a Eatlng. A perfe pairs the efficiency of the new navy. If it : = etrea) present conditions continue, th - : . ! uld d edyfor Diz; ' e constitution was promulgated, to take effcet | L of his coun but of his political party. | about 20 cents per ton per mile. At that b 3 WAS ¥ e B U] appear. Tho prices ent will soon find itsell overburdened with vessels and officers, but without v P oy 3 BrADST 1's report of the popula- | in 1 The el m took place on July hat The Zelegraph regards the position of he transportation ac Roariad FOROL MoK ! | goup, but ¥hat th privates to do the hard wor while in our trade with the nations south of the Rio Grande the balance has boen - — The French Uress Approves, ation whenj “the French | about 31,42 its proper increase is Panis, August 8.—[Special Cablogram to The French pross Is 105t imous in approving the agreement played on o confiding people senment is somowhat to blar i ness. The contest suggests the ne sity, 85 a measuve of peace, that steps be 0 ¢, tha crnmentexists only gn name us atpresont. | World wero bought and coined by the United en to secure police jurisdiction on the hage. In the meantime France is trying to get Eng- [ States it would take ”»:‘ oel ye --{";" ) male any policy that would seriously disturh y or disarrange our trade relations with our northern neighbors, but they are equally useful as evidence that some- THiE authovities in Spain are doing legitimate dem of trade it would drop . Drow > . B A tion of Omaha, asshown by the sched- | Allthe m 5 of the house of vepresenta- | 1010 Finds Wi e . Blaine as very verly taken, but year would huve cost $18,600,000,000, | wiog fu tho consus office, provoked a so- | tives were vot S R A o) PR A iinks the dispute should be ref 3 h as all the farms in the coun- members of nobles, In the | gud the s ) ! o 4o arbitration, thereby indicatinga convic- th.” This is doubtless true, | 1 upper hou > 3 the right of s h i )l - r‘flmm‘i; ion ;l o ‘IY \vil\rl»”:;“-‘ n‘rli: Il ‘.., X fully settled otherwise, If there were no railways there would be The Japanese have g business l.r*:\‘.:- (r\ co for one month has T T T A TR ST < 4 : 1 5 : None of these London papers show a | but little transportation compared with Chicago News aking o consti L character- | granted Cap ohn Simpson, tu of Ransus huve ordered n sweoplng ve- | J088 O LURE FHIEHS PIDCTE IS | b ALK it RAHE Tl Brof. Goodwin Bt th istic enthusiasm. Already many parties | quarter , United States army, Omaba, duction of local rates, bringing them to ke . o B sho vaab yolume ¢ A28y, GO0 question, and his rens P g LR o larero | £ist, does not thinkthat Be y has solved | have risen and va but something | Neb, permission to apy g OMAHA the lovsl ‘of tho Iown schedulo, The | duestion, aud for this rousan or from a | telegraph, me vico costalarge | 1m0 the tdefilove Dr. Smith | like a score now remain. The history of theso | headquarters division of the M want-of candor one or two ¢ @ o | s of mon an ere i ot for the 4 no ] r 2T Nebraskn board continues to stunber in | W41t 9f ¢ Gl ot i“' i “;‘ sum of piEnaY, 2 7000 Akin0s f I’l“{ imay assuro bimsclPshat ho I enillod to say, | paties s apparently b that fow per- | estonsion of oo morth, o LOAN' AND TRUST . 4 0! ate position of | telegraph the news of today would be | . e sous get together about a léader who has es. n completion of their s at tho Bel the cooling bowers of the corporatio v s ! " ) with the bishop «of Southwell; “Ifeel a L I\'uh:u-»h ‘sounds u:"u »! -n‘ rl,ul K|ln (‘1‘; _ | the o government, though | limited to about whatsit was before the | gecling whicn I fécl you all feel,” poused some opinion. The party grows and | vue ritle range, n with the COMPANY. LIS BLAdE \l_ ! iable [ in @ny event they may be pardoned | invention of teiegraphy, Labor saving i et increases with the mpidity of & mushroom, | cavaly and department viflo competitions, | 7 . turh or distract it, and 1t is queetionable |, 411 ) { the # they | machinas g 6 F S Yar but in the course of a few months the leader | the following named officers will proceed to | Bubseribed and Guuranteed Capital s . o . bty for this in view of the fact that they | maclinery and man’s inventions have robable Yarn. | 1 Paid in Capital whether a toot from Gabriel's trumpet 5 O R i W S L R s TN S ¢ A ey Toulsvtlla Crirtor-Journal. or his adherents tire of their occuput d | join their respoctive stations: First Licu will reach the members six months [0 HRd wir b A [-TORNIRGMA0 CORY OF, . MOk - CTOFY ATl | | i ries of painful spasms in Ka ty and A |09 R e Tnclo | the party disappears as quickly us it has | tenant Joln Pitclier, First cavalry, Fort | o uys and sclls stooks and bor ao hence. whish. certaln. . Ameyian . newspapard [ Whatiho rellropds of the couptry must | o x'\"’?{‘u}\k Was wear t‘ .‘“»u e '..ll.m x[..v'v vl.- fn-:.xl‘,” Bt thase many shadee of w[‘m} w | Custer, Mont.; First L it s Ohnriget] TR ORI A p AL Hiom T L itan o e have misrepresented the attitude and | do is to demand buta reasonabl rge | orEY s WA g & o wrapping of | have mow spparently crystallizod lnto three | T Tylor, Sixtenth infantry, Fort Du | 00Fporathns, takes charge of properiy, sol- ROEloetaol Baupie who Lavo |ioonianiion of B KTarimant oBYISidn BRI s LIRSk ol paTiNOn of the | G sort, just to encourage the cocoon busi- | or four divisions of ~public * sentiment. | Cliosie, Ul Fiest Lieutenant, Robert W T g wrostled with the juto trust for years, | journals muy reasonably be expected to | manner of doing business before the | ness smons our denecssed favmers, but he | Tho new parliament will have ¢ Wy | Dowdy, Seventoonth infantry, Fort D. A. i % . 8 and finally von, have discarded the use | ndopt opinions cxpressed hove favorable | food should not enter into the thrift and | would never do it to merely orament his sidor throo groat questions of | Mumsall, Wyot it Liewtetan” doha, & | Omaha Loan & Trust Co of jute, and this year’s crop of cotton | to their side of the controversy, whether | enterprise of the nineteenth century, already graceful figure.} hese @ duction of taxation, which is | woy, 1 Licuten r SAVINGS BANK. will be entirely covered with cotton b upe weful investigation they find | —— : : v s | rasmith, 5 fantry, § ; e g 3 ging. Thisis the most effcetive way to | such o 18 to bo justified or not, and [ IT 15 s0 seldom that prohibitionists se- The Passing of the Boyeott, » ho quos! o _‘1;"‘ Cuse 1.17,,\""‘{«\[,]””; Bize S ‘l:‘(ww“:"v 16ih and Douglas § A fight & trust—find some substitute for | e in the glish' | cure a lonesome fact to sustain their Chicaan 1 s that of treaty | $0/o "3 dnrivk L Palmor, Twenty fir Paid in Capital $,00.000 its warcs. But it is seldom that a | papers from Amevican journals un- | cause, that thoy may be pardoned for ) substituto can be found. Jute ischeaper | friendly to the sdministration show | the hilarity indulged in over the debt than the bugging, but by the use of the wce came the influence that in part, | statement of Kansas, In 1850 the stato For it's staying down there yet; peclal tr th any forcign power | J Byron, Lighth cavalry, Fort | Omcors: A, U, Wyn latter the farmers seo @ new use for | and porhaps very largely directed their | debtof Kansas amounted to one and & | it scif-same boycott that was sturtod with | by which she cun socure privileges for her- | Jedeit S Des Second Tloutenant Fdivard vice-presidont, W. T Wy man, iroa thele cotton, and a home demand judgment. The prominent fact, how- | half millions. Advance census tables a vhoop. solf in consideration of special grauts, Treaty | Second’ Licutenant Jamoes W. Medndrew. | Pirectom:—a, U J . Millard L | ) i ). Bar Nush, Thom | ‘ong been dosivuble, |even im whe comments of the | pluco tho prescut debt of nine huudred Dropped with a dull sickening thud evlslon s nsisted wpou by the woderates, | Twenty-List lafantsy, Fort Siday, Nob. | SRS s N u { Bubsoribed und Guiirantoed Capita . 1 Liability of stoekhe E Ninth cav 5 Per Cent Intere soup, lictions in Jupan. She is ' And it must be very w nation clause the wigh Kobinson Sécond L i ¥l Down went the boyeott ) > | v ¢ s have extra-ter

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