THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : THURSDAY , JUNE 30 , 1881. The Omaha Bee. Published every morning , except Sunday. The only Monday morning daily. TERMS BY MAIL- One vecxr. $10.00 I Three .NfomMw.83.00 SlxStonUw. . . n.OOlOno " . . 1.00 THE WEKLY BEE , published ov- cry Wednesday. TERMS TOST PAID. One Year $2.00 I Tlirco Months. . 60 Six Months. . . . 1.00 | Ono " . .20 CORRESPONDENCE-All Communl cations rcl.itinc to News nnd Editorial mat ters should bo addressed to the EDITOR OK Tun HER. BUSINESS LETTEUS-AH Letters and Remittances nliould bo ad dressed to THE OMAHA runi.iHiu.va COM PAST , OMAHA. Drafts , Chccbi and PoaU office Orders to Ixs made payable to the order of the Company. OMAHA PUBLISHING 00 , , Prop'rs ' E.ROSEWATEB , Editor. John K. Pierce is in Charge of the Circii' allen of THE DAILY 1JEE. TiiKcomotis "expediting the star routes. IOWA republicans will march to victory with Sherman. BURP.N SHEIIMAX had the longest polo at DCS Moines and knocked the persimmons. MEMPHIS has ono cotton nnd twen ty-eight gin mills. Cotton isn't king in that portion of Tennessee. EX-SKNATOR BLANCHE K. BIIUCK , now register of the treasury , will take the t/hinip / for Governor Foster in Ohiii this fall. Now that the state ticket is chosen the people of Iowa should pool their issues and elect a reliable antimonopoly nopoly legislature. GATII says the profession f n lob byist at Albany is quits as respectable as that of the average Now York leg islator. This is severe on the lob byists. THE "Debt Payer" is the name of anew now paper started in Richmond. The "debt contractor would bo moro ap propriate for a Virginia organ. who desire to find a connection between Senator Conk- ling's defection and the comet will doubtless find it in the trouble about "comity. " THE president is now enjoying at tendance on college commencements. ITo finds thcmngro.it improvement on the average cabinet meetings or calls from congressional delegations , SUIIURZ has boon writing again on the Indian problem. Carl doubtless finds it easier to write than to wrestle with the stern realities of the Indian ofllco and the Boston delegation. TIIKIIE are 45,000 postofllces in the United Stntos employing G5,000 per sons. This force is increasing nt the rate of 5,000 n year. The postofllco in politics controls nearly 100,000 votes. THE government has ordered two billion of postal cards from the manu facturers. Sowed together , the cards would make n string six times the length of Puck's girdle around the world. THE report of Boss Shepherd's death in Mexico is denied. On the contrary , the Boss is repealing his Washington tactics nnd has lobbied through n largo local subsidy for his mining schemes. Mit. PAIINKLL expects to raise § 500 000 from Irish Americans for land league purposes during his coming visit to America. Mr. Pariioll evi dently thinks America is enjoying prosperous times. THE United States raised ever four hundred and seventy millions pounds of tobacco lost year. At a single smoking this amount would make n volume of smoke 18,000 miles long , 13,000 miles high and 10,000 miles wide. WE are all glad to sco the walls o the now opera house go up , but many citizens would bo profoundly grutofu if the planks of its sidewalk would go down. Six months scorns sufliciont time to have the street made im passible. FxKKiaK iui sometimes obtain exaggerated aggoratod views of our educational ad vantages. "There nro two boatinj , associations hero , " wrote a Japanese student homo , "called Yale and liar vard. When it rains , the members read books. " > THE Iowa ropublicaiu have nomi nated Buron II. Sherman for govor nor. Mr. Sherman is a republican o. the Btrongest slainp ; a man of great I I executive ability and will doubtless prove the wisdom of the convention which selected him as the head o Hawkeye government for the uox two years. DOWN WITH PASSENGER TOLLS. Four conta per milo in Nebraska only thrco conta per milo in lowri. Thrco cents per milo on tlio Council Bluffs it Kansas City road in Town , ; our cents per milo on the Burlington & Missouri road which runs parallel and within sight of the Kansas City line on the Nobaaakn side. Why this glaring discrimination against Ne braska ? Simply because lown has enacted a law that fixes thrco cents per milo on first-class roads as the maximum toll. But .Nebraska is not qitito as thickly settled as Iowa , travel is very much lighter in Nebraska , and the roads cannot afford to como down to three cents per mile. Why can't they afford it ? Why can they afford to carry hundreds and thousands of people frco ever their roads who have no tangible thing of value to return for this fruo transpor tation ? Why should the people who nak no favors bo compelled to pay for the transportation of the grand army of dead-heads ? The pica that travel s BO light in Nebraska that the roads can't afford to reduce their passenger 'arcs is all bosh. Look at the B.ilti- nero it Ohio road. The main line 'roin Wheeling to Ballimuro passes .hrough the most Godforsaken en section of America. All hrough West Virginia there s scarcely ono inhabitant to the square milo. With the exception of , ho Fourth of July and Christmas , ho natives of that mountainous region tovor travel by rail , and train after rain passes through from Bcnwood o Cumberland and back , with the rain hands as their only passengers. And yet the local passenger tariff is nly three cents per milo , and wo un- lorstand has lately been reduced to wo contsand a half. It has cost moro to build every milo of that part of the Baltimore & Ohio road than it would cost to build .wonty miles in Nebraska. Why this outrageous imposition on the travel- ng public ? Wo are reminded , however , that owcr rates can bo had for excursions , and limited tickets are issued at lower rates between certain stations. This docs not cover the case. The people nt and will insist on a general re duction. They are not disposed to accept as favors what ought to bo con ceded to them without asking. It itrikcs us that the time has como for ho reduction of passenger fares in Nebraska to th'roo cents per mile to and from any station , lot the distance > o ten miles or four hundred. A PROSPEROUS CITY/ Omaha is enjoying a season of good imea which give no evidence of rolax- ng. For tlirco years past the nuild- ng boom has only , kept pace ufith the lusincss development of the city and ho growth of manufactures within our limits. An unusually hard win- or throughout the state , while it af- octod the volume of the spring trade , could not materially chuck the onward narch of our commercial progress. Iho croakings of a few fossil residents whoso energies in the past have boon devoted to decrying nil public im- > rovcmonts and who have constantly abstained from mak- ng any private improvements on ; heir own property , have been silenced by the onorgolic labor and activity ot our public spirited citizens. A recent journal remarks that deal ers in lumber and brick usually place the duration of the boom of a local town at four years. The first year gets up the niuiio of the place ; the second is best and enriches those established in luminous ; the third is not quite so good , and the fourth brings the drop. This law , however , does not apply to cities located like Omaha , which are entrepot to largo Hoctions of country and centers for wholesale trade. Such need no local pulling to advertise their advantages. Every shipment of goods to other towns , and every or der for merchandise from the oust in dicates their commercial position. Their growing manufactures , heavy banking operations , and the rapid growth of population revealed by the annual school census all place them above the common laws which'govorn the prosperity of rural towns and vil lages. Bat Omaha 1ms entered upon no four years boom. She has experienced no unhealthy growth in any ono di rection. The extensive building operations witnessed by her citizens during the past throe years have failed to fill the pressing demand for moro room for wholesaling , retail business and homes for actual rosi donU. Houses nro in such domain ! that the sign "for rent" is hardly tacked up before it is removed by a now ten ant. Our brick yards are strainini ; every endeavor to supply materials for the now and elegant structures which are rising in every direction along our business thoroughfares , while the smallest cottage loaves the carpenters hands ono day only to be occupied the next by a purchaser or tenant. The steady advance in real estate , and the rapidity with which every eli gible location is taken up by willing purchasers , is another mark of the in creasing prosperity of Omaha. In nearly every instance such transfer * arc made for building purposes , ant not with a view to land speculation. The suburbs of the city nro steadily filling up with n class of small but substantial cottages , each of which contains n homo and family and rep resents A corresponding demand upon the grocer , butcher and dry goods dealer for food and clothing. Omalm's wholesale trade has never been as great for any corresponding period as at the present time. The severe winter and late spring of course affected its volume greatly , but it has since moro than made up the disadvantage , and by the end of the year will show at least n gain of 30 per cent , over lost year's sales. If the clearings of our banks wore only published , the great impor tance of Omaha as a financial center would bo n surprise oven to licr citizens. No city between Chica go and Snn Francisco , if St. Louis is oxccpted , transacts the business done by Omaha's banking institutions , which supply neighboring cities and towns with currency and exchange as iar east as DCS Moincs and as far west as Salt Lake City. To a great degree the prosperity of our city is duo to the growth and pros perity of our state. The rapid exten sion of .spreading railway systems , the promise of good crops , the abundant employment for skilled and un skilled labor , the immigration which is settling our counties and milding up our towns and villages ex viciso a stimulating influence on the notronolis of Nebraska. So long as Jicso continue , a steady growth is guaranteed to our city even with the nest ordinary local effort. But a iumbor of other causes will combine o make our present boom continuous. The advantages of our city as a manu- 'acturing point are just beginning to 30 appreciated. Eastoni capitalists win not be slow to place their idle funds n investments which promise good and speedy returns. With manufac- , urcs will como a manufacturing population which in turn will support now wholesale and retail merchants and call for increased building accom modations. Above all , the ijonuino enterprise of our citizens of moderate means , but moro than moderate public spirit , will not fail us in the future. With such men at the helm Onmha'n boom will cease to bo amatterof com ment and will soon become recognized as the natural increase of a city which at no distant day is destined to bo the metropolis of the Missouri Valley. t THE HOPE OF THE SOUTH. The only hope for the south lies in Iho downfall of bourbonism , by which wo mean that cruel , despotic , and un- American force under the guise of democracy , which now controls that section of the country , and acts as a bar to all political , 'inont.il and ma- erial progress. Every movement which has for its object the over throw of bourbonism , is worthy of all support. The organization of Senator Mahono's party in Virginia was the Irst substantial protest against the methods of southern democracy , TUE BKK did not approve of the protracted - od session of the senate , which md no other object than the recogni tion of Senator Mahono by the up- lointmont of Uiddloborgor sergeant- of-nrms when such action could as well have boon deferred until the December - comber session of congress. In so far , iiowovor , as the position of Senator Mahono and his adherents , was a protest against bourbonism and not n bold finesse tor the trump card of of fice holding , ho received the hearty support of all good ropub- cans throughout the Union , and the confidence that material assis tance would bo afforded to any south erners bold enough to break from the thralls of party slavery has strength ened the indopandent cause through out the south. The latest movement towards an or ganized opposition to Bpuronisii ) | comes from Mississippi. Encouraged by the example of the anti-Hour- bens of Virginia , the liberal ele ments of Mississippi are consid ering a basis of alliance for an assault in force upon the unnatural and unlawful bourbon pow er which dominates n republican state. Kepublicans , liberal democrats , and greonbackors are maturing plans to clear the decks for action. Ex-Sena tor Bruce , register of the treasury , believes that there is a chance not only to reclaim the state legislature , which will send to the United States senate an anti-bourbon in the place of Senator Lamar , If a free ballot wore only assured to Mississippi republicans they eould cosily carry the state without coali tion. There are enough republicans in Mississippi , but unfortuately no republican party. The shameless frauds which gave such men as Chalmers nearly 4,000 majority for congress out of a returned veto of a little ever 14,000 have made Missis sippi a Bourbon state. By throwing out on the flimsiest of technicalities 4,842 votes for Lynch , colored , in six counties , and judiciously intimidating nobody knows how many moro He- publican voters , Chalmers claims his seat in the forty-seventh congress. There are democrats in Mississippi who have had the boldness to denounce this Bourbon triumph in Shoe-airing district us a bare-faced fraud. The eamo method * give the state a solid democratic delegation in both houses of congress. Every candid minded man believes that Mississippi is largely republican. In 1872 , with Oreeloy running atrainst Grant and presumably drawing off some of the republican strength , the republicans polled 82,175 votes , 03.47 per cent , of the whole vote cast , and carried the state by 34,887 majority. In 187G Tilden carried the state auainst Hayes by 49,508 majority , the republicans polling but 5L'C03 votes , 31.93 per cent , of the whole , out of a total vote of 101,778. In 1880 the total vote was but 117,078 , Garfield receiving 34,854 , 29.70 per cent , of the vote cast , against 75,750 for Hancock. In four years 47,000 voters had disappeared , To-day a solid democratic delegation sits in congress from Mississippi. It is as a protest against such outrageous frauds and tyrannical despotism that the in dependents and republicans of the state propose to combine. It is sincerely to bo hoped that they will succeed. The movement once inaugurated in Virginia and Mis sissippi , will spread to other states. The \vliolo south is ripe for it. Every intelligent citizen of liberal tendencies is eager to cast off the blighting curse which has paralyzed every industry of the south , and retarded the growth of a country singularly blessed by na ture. In the downfall and destruc tion of bourbonism lies the hope of the south. THE monetary conference at Paris is soon in reassemble , and it is inti mated that in case it fails to accom plish its purpose the French and American delegates will consider a plan by which bimetallism may bo maintained in Franco and the United States. It is to bo hoped that an in ternational silver union will bo formed. Unless some- plan can bo de vised to keep up the price of silver , Franco and other European countries will suffer serious loss. The coinage by the American government of two million dollars a month has had some thing to do with the comparative steadiness of the silver market for the past two or three years. This demand for coinage , together with the silver consumed in the arts , has been nearly , if not quite , equal to the supply from the American minc.s. The European markets have consequently had some seventy or eighty millions less to dis pose of than if the American govern ment had not resumed the coinage of silver dollars. But if the Monetary conference fails , it is by no means certain that the United States will continue to coin silver dollars. Silver coinage may bo limited to the frac tional coins , which serve merely as token monoy. In that ovcnt , silver would most likely iluprocitvto in the European markets. The amount of silver retained by Germany is estimated at from § 800- , 000,000 to $20,000,000. This largo amount Germany has promised to withhold in case nn International Money Union 'was formed. Should such a union fail it will probably bo thrown upon the market for sale to the highest bidder. V failure of our own government to continue the purchase of bullion for coinage would compel the product of American silver mines to seek the general market and the effect would bo to greatly depress the value of silver. The demand for it will bo shut off , except oa to India and China. What would bo the extent of the dourccia- tion no ono cnn forelell. Franco might bo compelled to demonetize silver , and then to add her immense stores to those of the United States and Germany. , But if Franco and the United States agree to coin silver , and make it legal tender at the true ratio , they may prevent any depreciation of silver below the ratio they ugrco upon For instance , if the ratio agreed upon should bo such as would require 42 ( grains in our American silver dollar , the two countries might coin silver on that basis. But if the French adhere to their present ratio of lute 1 , which would make n lighter coin than our present dollar , equal to a dollar in gold , the probability is that the Ia\\ of demand and supply would event' ually drive both nations from the agreement. 1'jiiLANTiiuoriSTs are not always practical politicians , and Mr. W. W. Corcoran , the venerable benefactor ol Washington , seems least of all. He has written a communication to the Now York Nation proposing an amend ment to tho'constitution of the Uni- tud States oy which it la to be pro vidcd that on the meeting of congress in December , 1884 , and every four years thereafter , the house of repre sentatives shall elect thrco members of the senate , whose names shall bo placed by the tellers in a box and drawn therefrom by the speaker the first drawn to bo president of the United States , the second vice president and the third president j > n tern , of the senate , to succeed cacl other in the saniu order in the oven of a vacancy by death or otherwise This plan , Mr. Corcoran thinkswoul raise the character of the senate , wouh prevent intnguo in the managemon of political conventions and would pu an end to the turmoil of prcsidontia elections. One trial of tmch mi ex ) crimcnt would convince the most oolhardy. The dirty work that would > o perpetrated around that lottery > ox on the clay in which the first prize was announced to bo drawn would iscouiit Patica's famous performance * n Omaha. THE Glcnwood Journal , n demo- ratio paper in Mills county , Iowa , ios the courage to repudiate the state icket recently nominated by its party , n the ground that it does not repro- ont the interests of the people on tha vital problems of the day. The Journal expresses its views in the fol- owing torso language : The democratic party , it is evident rom the composition of its commit- co , is as completely in the power of ho railroad ring as is the republican > arty , and it would bo ns foolish for ho pcoplo to expect reform in railraod legislation from their suggestion as rom a republican committee's. This s the conclusion wo have arrived at rom a scanning of the names. Wo wash our hands of the affair. GKEKNIIACKISM evidently is not pop lar in Michigan. The grand green- jack camp mooting at Lansing opened 'uosday with only fifty persons pros- nt , where 50,000 had been oipectod. verity empty gents , Solon Chase , General Weaver , West and Ingalls vero melancholy witnesses of the fact Imt "fooling with the currency" is at ircscnt not in fashion. THE Elmirn Free Press has been onsulting George Washington hrough a spiritual medium , and rc- > orts the "Father of his Country" as ending the following : "I see that it s proposed to erect a monument to 'Iroquois. ' Give him mine. " The Ute Trouble * . ) cnrcr Rcpuhlfran. The Ute disturbances reported from ho far southwest may develop into omothing generally serious and alarm- ng , and may not. The reports as far .3 received hero , nro so incoherent , disjointed and indefinite that it is a ittlo difficult to determine exactly vhat has occurred and how much larm has been done. It appears that some seven or eight white men have > ccn killed , or wounded. This is , > crhaps , enough of loss of life , and ind has enough of suggestion of sorrow and of desolation to neasurably satisfy the humani tarian Indian admirers of the jast. They have very little to gratify horn since the slaying of poor old Father Meeker and his companions , ind the dark and cruel experiences of lis wife and daughter. But then , on ; ho other hand , they have not been distressed by the spectacle of von- jcanco wreaked OH any of the Ute ihief.s. The only pain inflicted on ; hpm has been caused by the impris- mHonineiit of Chief Douglass. So in ; hp present case they ought to bo sat isfied with the murders already com mitted by the Utes , and not call for the infliction of further punishment upon the settlers on the southwestern frontier. The history of the ( Disturbances , from their cause to their development in desultory battles in the forests and until the mountains , seems to bo , in substance , .about us follows : The Urcs made depredations upon the set tlempnts , murdering ono man and stealing a largo amount of stock , in- eluding about a hundred horses. The settlers , chiefly stockmen too impa tient to wait for the traditionally slow and hesitating methods of the govern ment , took the work of reparation and vengeance into their own hands. They organized into an armed band , well mounted and equipped , and in vaded the Indian country for the double purpose of recovering the stolen Block and avenging the murder of their companion. The result of this movement is indefinitely indicated in the reports that have ap peared in the papers. Some of the stock has , perhaps , been recovered. But whether or not any Indians have been killed still remains u matter ol mere conjecture. The settlers seem determined to continue this work of protecting themselves solves and avenging thpir wrongs ; and they are likely to do it , thorough ly , affectively and promptly. They doubtless have among thorn enough of the old soldier element to sup ply all that is needed of organ ization discipline and method. Too much of those things , as has been learned in dark , sad lessons of dofeal and massacre , are ruinous to the efficiency of troops in fighting the In dians. The aroused and enraged settler tlor may possibly settle the whole business , and also settle most of the Utes before the government gets any troops on the scone of action , or be comes really aware of wlut is gohi { on. on.Who Who in Colorado , or in the wostcan blame the settlers for the course they have taken ? With the story of White river fresh in their recollection , how much of protection or reparationcouli they reasonably expect of the govern nient ? And can strong , courageous men , with arms in their hands , bo ex pected to stand idly by whiledopredat | ing savages are despoiling them o : their property and murdering their companion * * ? The only wonder is that the frontiersmen have not sooner done as those of the far southwest are now doing. The Now Version. Never , probably , in the history o : the world was so much Bible reading done in a brief time as since the ap nearanco of the new version of th < Now Testament. Its sale has beoi immense , far beyond all expectations Nearly 3,000,000 copies were pur chased in England , and The Philadel phia Times relates what the domain has boon for it in that city and else- where. Lippincott & Co. alone say they could have sold half a millioi copies in a week if they ha < them , instead of 100,000 , Clax ton it Co. report the same extraordi nary demand ; Porter & Coates , Join Wanamaker and Holman it Co. con firm their statements. Philadelphia in all , has disposed of over 500XX ( copies. Porter & Coatca have isauec what is known as the comparative edition tion , containing the old. version am , ho now in parallel columns , and al ready report that they have orders in excess of their present supply to the txicnt of four thousand copies. Hub- jard Brothers have also issued _ an American edition , of which they report 40,000 copies or dered inside a week. A list of other houses in Philadelphia and Now fork is given , which have heavy or ders on hand to bo filled when they shall have received further supplies of lie work. Every town and city in his country and England has had , or will have , its proportionate number of lie book , so that it can bo well iniaij- ncd that it has a vast sale , from which ho profits to the publishers will , in ho aggregate , bo very large. SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. Cisterns ami tanks may bo mailo water- Ifjht by painting the inside thickly with a mixture of eight parts of melted glue and our parts of linseed oil. boiled with Ithargc. The cistern may be filled in 48 lours , Algiers possesses a river ol veritable ink ? Two stre.im.i , one starling from a region i-hcre the soil is ferruginous , the other rom n iicat xwamp , tnect and form the ivcr , whose inky constituency is due to lie mixing of the iron and gallic acid ylilch the two tributary streams respec- ively contain. An English nobleman near Newcastle gets the benefit ot the electric ligjit for nl- neat nothing , ns ho gets Ills motive newer rom n brook , nnd so has no engine to cat up money. The slreain turns n turbine water wlieel , that runs a dynamite-electric imchinc , anil enough electricity in secured o keep 37 Swan lamps burning. Fontaine , the Georgia land and immi- , 'rntion commissioner , argues the case of outhern manufactures with Mr. Atkinson. : Ie says Georgia cotton mills have an advantage - vantage of 910 a bale in the cost of cotton , andiot 33 per cent , in the cost of brick and iC per cent , in that of lumber. At Colum- MIS , Ga. , arc mills employing 1800 white operatives. The president of the New Orleans Water company states that in his opinion the fur nishing of water to consumers who desire to connect with the new sewers ought not to 10 made an additional cost to the consum ers , because , in fact , the generaluse of sewer connections will be n benefit rather , ban a disadvantage to the compa ny , as BO much leas water will be used From the fire hydrant * for flushing out the gutters and washing away the slops and filth now thrown into the streets. The number of the plate works in Great Britain is ninety-Mix , with 372 mills. The annual capacity of theao works is placed at 3,213,000 boxes , but an some thirty mills Imve been stopped on account of the strike l > revailing in the tin-making districts , and as about forty other milts have ceased op. eraliung from other causes , the present rate of prpduction iu reduced to 0,1315,500 Ixntes annually. The home.consumption of plates is placed by well-informed Eng lish writera at 2,000,000 boxes annually. The scientific newspapers for the past few months have been explaining the meaning of the different names applied to steel. An exchange sums up M follows : Blister steel ia made by causing the carbon of charcoal to penetrate iron in a heated state. German steel is blister steel rolled lown into bars. Sheet steel is made by hammering blister steel. Double shear Bteel is made by cutting up blister steel and [ nittiug it together and liammering again , pruciblo steel is mode by molting wrought iron and charcoal and scrap. Bessemer iteel is made by blowing air through cast Iron , burning the silicon and carbon out. Open-hearth steel is made by melting pig iron and mixiui ; wrought iron , or scrap steel or iron ore to reduce the silicon and carbon. _ The details of the recent watch compe tition at Melbourne arc calculated to moderate somewhat our pride in Ameri can watches , as they were shown to be in terior as time-keepers to both the Swiss and English. The Loclo watch , which gained the first prize , seems , indeed , to have reached perfection in respect to ac curacy , having -scored COO points in a posiible COO ; a London watch came in second with 405 marks , whil * their best American competitor bcored but 430. AB regards finish , however , and general ap pearance , the American watch leads the world , scoring 445 points out of COO , while the Locle watch had but 403 , and the London wan last but ono in ft list of eight , with only 31 points to its credit. The moralh , that England has paid too much attention to accuracy , and too little to appearance , while America has sacri ficed real merit in a measure to good looks. The new discovery of n method by which electricity may be stored in a box and transmitted from place to place , suggests unlimited possibilities of practical appli cation. Sir William Thomson states that his colleague , Prof. Buchanan , carried away from his laboratory in his carriage one of the lead cells , weighing eighteen pounds , and by Its use was able to per form a surgical operation in one minute which would otherwise have [ occupied ten. The operation was the removal of a tumor from-a boy's tongue. Sir William Thom son hopes that a very short time will be allowed to pa s before the Pauro battery is made to do for the electric light what a water cistern docs fora water supply , lie also foresees another very important ap plication of the "accumulator" for the electric lighting of ships. Altogether we seem to bu on the eve of one more great revolution in the matter of motive forces and artificial liifhts. The great Krupp works at Essen , Ger many , illustrate the immense progress which the metallurgical and mechanical industries have made in the westeni pro. vincca of Prussia within the last thirty years. In 1851 , 250 hands were employee at these works , producing CCO tons of cast steel , or 2.24 tons each hand. In 1861 , the number of hands had increased to 2130 , tbo turn-out being 5000 tons of steel , or 2.3C tons per man per annum. In 1805 , the production ro-e to 50,000 tons , and the number of hands to 8167 , BO that the pro portional production amounted to aboul 0,10 tons a man. ly ! 1872 the quantity ol cast ateel turned out by the ' 'Kanonen- konig , " or "comon king , " had risen at a bound up to 125,000 tons , and the number of workmen up to 12,000 , HO that each man turned out as much as 10.42 tons a year. In 1870 , the proportional production tool a further Htep forward , and the great stee" manufacturer was generally credited wit ) having taken a leaf out ol the book of Herr Camphnuien , the minister of finance , whoi > e notions of political economy were peculiar. In that year the firm kept 8,237 men , nut produced 153,400 tons of btee ] , being at a rate of 18.70 tons of steel per man a year , Thus , in the course of 25 years , the pro duction of steel per man per anunni at Kg sen rose from 2 tons C > cwt. to 18 tons 1 ! cwt , The proportion j > er man since 1870 is not known , but the aggregate produc tion ID supposed to have increased. A Sleniflqant Tact- The cheapest medicine in use is THOMAS ECLECTIUO OIL , because so very little of it is required to effect a cure. For croup , diphtheria , and diseases of the IUII N am throat , whether used for bathing the chester or throat , for taking internally or inhaling it is a matchless compound. , , Proiudioe Kill. . "Eleven years our daughter suf fered on a bed of misery under the care of several of the best ( and some of the worst ) physicians , who gave her disease various names , but no re lief , and now she is restored to us in good health by AS simple a remedy as Hop Hitters , that wo had poohod at for two years before using it. We earnestly hope and pray that no ono else will let their sick suffer as wo did on accouut of prejudice against BO good a medicine as Hop Bitters. " The Parents. [ Telegram , codjy ] CHEAP LAND FOR SALE. 1,000,000 Acres OF THE FINEST LAND EASTERN NEBRASKA. SELECTED IN AN EAIUY DAT NOT HAIL OAU LAND , BDT LAND OWNED nr NON- llESlDKNTSVI1C ARE TlnKt ) PATINO TAXE3 AND ARE OKKEIUNO TIIKIU LANDS AT TUB LOW rniCK OP SO , $3 , AND $10 reit ACHE , ON LONO TIMK AND EAST TKHUS. WE ALSO OFFEIt FOR SALE IMPROVED FARMS IN Douglas , Sarpy and Washington OOU'JWXXIEI. ALSO , AN IMMENSE LIST OF OmahaCityEealEstate Including Elegant Residences , Business ind llcsidcnco Lots , Cheap Houses and [ jots , and n largo number of Lots iu moat of -ho Additions of Omaha. Also , Small Tracts of 5,10 and 20 acrcca n and near the city. Wo have good oppor tunities for making Loans , and in all cases panon.illy examine titles and take every precaution to insure safety of money , BO invested. f Bo ow wo offer n small list of SPECIAL BARGAINS. BOGGS & HILL , Eeal Estate Br okers , 14OS North Side of Farnham Street , Opp. Grand Central Hotel , l OMAHA , NEB ; FOR SALE A beautiful residence lot on California between 22nd and 23d Direct * , $1COO. BOGGS k HILL. CAI C Very nice house and lot . w. . OHLC ouOthand Webster wtrccts , tt Ith barn , coal house , well cistern , uhadc and frulb trees , ever } tiling complete. A desirable piece of property , figures low UGS & HILL. FOR SALE Splendid famines lots S. E. corner of ICth and Capitol Avenue. BOGGS & HILL. House find lotcorncrChlcago FOR SALE and 21st struets , & 000. BOGGS & HILL. OAI C Large house on Daicnport OHLC street between llth and 12th goop location for boarding house. Owner will sell low HOGGS & HILL. CAD CAI C Two new houses on full lot rUIl OHLC in Kountze & Ruth's odtll- tion. This property will be sold very cheap. LOGOS & HILL. T710K SALE A top pheaton. Enquire of Jos. Jj Stephenson. KH-U Comer of two choice lots in FOR SALE Shinn's Addition , request teat at once submit best conh offer. offer.BOGGS BOGGS & HILL. A good an desirable res FOR SALE deuce property , $4000. BOGUS & HILL. RESIDENCE Not hi the market ACIIJC Oner will sell for $0,500. BOGGS & HILL. rnn CAI C 4 food Iot8 > sl > lnn'a 3d ad rUK 9MLC dition 150 each. BOGGS & HILL CAIC A vcry "no residence lot , to OHLC eoiiio party desiring to build a line house , 82,300. UOGGS & HILL. CAIC Abo"t 200 lota in Kountzo & „ OHLC Huth'a addition , just south of St. Mary'e tuenuu , 84M to { 800. These lots are near business , surrounded by fine impro\o racnts and are 40 per cent cheaper than any othe loU in the market. Save money by buying then lois. HOGGS & HILL. CAIC 10 l ° to > suitable for fine red OHLE. ilcnce , on I'ark-Wild avenue 3 blocks S. K. of drpot , all covered nlth fine larg trees. Price extremely low. &COO to $700. BOGGS & HILL. Some very cheap lots In FOR SALE Lake's addition , BOGGS & HILL. FOR SALE Cheap corner lot , corner Vougkut and Jefferson tits. BOGGS & HILL. CAI C 93lots on 20th , 27th , 28th , OHLC 29th and 30th SU. , between Fnriihain , Douglas , and the proioticd ) extension of Dodge street. Pricca range from $200 to 8100. We haxe concluded to glo men ot email means , one more chance to secure a home and will build housas on these loUon email payments , and will sell lota on monthly payments.BOGOS BOGOS & HILL. 100 acres , 0 nnlca troin city , OALt about 30 acres very choice \ulloy , with running water ; balance grutly rolling pirirle , only 3 nilles fiom ruilaoad , $10 cracje. BOGGS Sc HILL. 1 400 acres In one tract twelv FOR SALE uillcn from city ; 40 acroo cu tlvatcd , I.UIng tiprlngof water , boino ulce > a leys. Tbo land la all tint-class rich pi iralrle. Trio * 10p racr . BOGds&IULL. FOR SALE 720 acres In ono body , 7 milca _ _ west of Fremont , ls all level land , producing heavy growth of gratia. In high i alley , rich soil and J mle from railroad ana side track , In good settlement and no better Ian can be found. BOGUS & HILL. CflD CAIC A highly Improved farm of < f ! rUn OHLC 240 acres , 3 inlleu from city. Kino inijiromnenta on this land , owner not a practical farmer , determined to Hell. A good opening for wmo man of means. means.BOGGS & HILL. CflD CAIC 2,000 acres of land ncnr Mil- Tun OHLC land Station , 3.SOO near Elkhorn - horn , 98 to $10 ; 4,000 tu-rea In north part of coun ty , $7 to ? 10 , 3,000 acres 2 to 8 miles from Flor ence , $5 to 410 ; 6,000 acres west of the KlKhorn , 84 to $10 ; 10,000 acres scattered through the coun * ty0to$10. The aboie landi lie near and adjoin nearly e\ cry farm in the county , and can mostly be sold on viuall caah paymtnt. vt ith the balance In 1-2-IS- 4 anil 6 vwir's Umo. BOGGS i ; HILL. CAD CAI C Several fine residences prop HUH OHLC ertles never befrre offered nnd not known In the market as > .oing for tale , I Locations will only bo made known rj purchaser ! "lucaulntr buslncs. BOOGS It HILL. IMPROVED FARMS Improt o farms around Omaha , and In all partH of Douglas , Sarpy and Washington counties. Also faniu In Iowa. For description and prices call ou us. liOGOB & II1LU Business LoU for Sale on Famunand Doug * 10 la streets , from $3,000 to fci.WX ) . isodas & HILL. CCflD CAI C 8 business loU next west CrUn OnLC of Masonic Temple-price advanced of | 2,000 each. BOGGS & HILL S business lots wett of Old FOR SALE Fellowi block , tt COO each. UOGGS & HILL. builncw lota south eide FOR SALE I Douglas street , between lilh and 13th , $3,600 each. BOOGS & HILL. CflD CAIC 1 CO acre * , ocvcred with young rUK OJILC Umber ; llrloy water , ui- rounded by ituprored rmi , only 7 mile * front clt , Cheapen land onhaod. onhaod.DOOOS * HILL.