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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 5, 1883)
TEE'DAILY BEE--P.RIUAY JANUARY 5 he Omaha Bee Published every morning , except Sun- ay. The only "Monday morning dally , TKUMS KY MAII < - One Year. . . . 310 OD I Threfl Months. 83.00 8li Month * . . 5. 00 | Ono Month. . . . 1.00 ' .TIi : WEEKLY 1JKB , published every Welnwdny. THUMB 1'OST PAID- One Venr . 82,00 I Thrco Month * , M > Sir Months. . . . 1 00 | Ono Month. . . . 20 AMXHICAS NKWS COMPANY , Hole Agent * 2fow doaleni In the United SUtea. COlUlKSFONUKNi ' 12 All Comtnnnl- tfont relntlufr to New * nnd IvWOTliU nhttcr/i nhnnld bo nddrewicd to the hiMTOB or TDK UKE. IJU8IJCK38 LKTTKKH All IJ.wlnci Letters ami Ilainltlanrcs fliould l > o ud droMed to THE line I'UDMsiiiNa COMPANY OMAHA. Draft * , Chock * ati'l 1'ontullico Orders to bo made payable to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING 00 , .Props . , E. ROSEWATJBR Editor SF.VEKAL oonatorlnl candldatcn v. ill bo talked to death before tlio session is out. JAPAN Is enlarging her nrmy. The mikado will eoon bo irrcatllng with the agony of a retired liat. TUB pnblio debt was decreased by $15,413,000 during December , but taxation atill continues at the old war basis , JOHN M. TUOKBTON will not bo as buiy in tha opening days of the logts lativo eoaalon tta ho was last year. The senate has taken in Ha own hands the appointment of its own committees GEOUOK E. SrENCEiihaa been found at l& t and in an Interview insists that the way in which ho-haat been treated la an outrage. Stoph Doraoy is of the aamo opinion. TIIF. number of congressmen and senators who have boon oxcasod from controls "on important business" Is alarming. In nine cases out of ton the "Importantbotlneaa" will bo found to bo the repair of political fences at the etttto capital. WHO is there to fill Gambotta'a place ? Many nsaoa will attempt to apeak from the lion's Hkin , but the irmntlo of the dead statesman Is not likely BOOH to fnll upon any French man hard enough to hurt him. B'H boom may have burst , but the "Damp on the Carbonate * " oclipaod all previous records last year , rtho output of the district being over . " 14,000,000 greater than over boforo. Oolorado la not yet playing out as a mining state , in tpito of the oroakom. THE buttanhiM at Lincoln is at Ita height and r.'po ' 'tying ' for the son atonal contest \ti \ the ono absorbing business of nearly a score of candi- dator. This ia Iho ti'iio ' when the "hay Bood grangers" become objects of Iv great interest to tlui railroad niaiinQorB * will do well to think * ttrico buioro oattlng off the fast mail Borvloo , as the pnstmnstor general now thinkd nlll bn nocetaary. The fast mail ia ono of the moat economical ex. pondltnrcs of the department , and groittly facilitates bminua tranaao- tlona between the cast and the west. There are other departments in which economy could bo practicad to much greater advantage than iu the railway mall service. RAILKOAU transportation Is always given for a consideration. This ia the decision of the supreme court of Penn sylvania which holds that whnn railroad company parmits n passenger to trayel without paying fare it dooa not avoid its responsibility as a common carrier by giving the passenger a prin ted pans condition that the person oc onpying It asaumns all risk of accident without claim on the corporation This decision is in harmony with many other alrollnr decisions AMONO the many questions which ought to bo considered by the Icgii laturo is an Incroasn of the judicial dletricta of the atato. Many of the districts and notably the Third , com prising Douglas , Barpy , Washington and Durt counties , are snfTjring with un accumulation of business whicl cannot bo disposed of as rapidly as lid gania hare a right to demand. Tin Douglas county district court is al ready two years behind its docko with no prospects of relief except what will como from a division of the district. THE St. Louis Jtrjnibd'am calls attention - tention to the fact that the immense advantage over other routes possessed by the Hitoletippl river as u moans by which the products of Una great val ley can reach tha markets of Karoj.0 has never been more clearly exhibited than during the I act tvumty-two months. From the latter part of Feb ruary , 1881 , vv'-.en Ltr-v.ation to thn couth opened from this pert , to the present tlmo , there hnvo been only eight days during which boa's could not leave St. Louis loaded ; nnd , from present Indjcitiont , it is cafe to eay that no further interruption tonayiija tloa isliablo to occur until next whv tor , Tlio recto by the lakes ant canals , on the other hand , la closet for fully three months each year , and during that tlmo shippers are at the mercy of railroad * . EXIT GOVERNOR NANCE- Governor Nanco has stepped down nnd out and his oflicial shoos have fallen to hit successor. Of his farewell - well message the most that can ho said i * that it will occupy thirty-one pamphlet pBgca of long primer type. Its host portions nro compiled from the ofliolal ropnrla and it weakest are thoBo In which the ox-Boy Governor attempts to make use of hla own ideas. ideas.Mr. Mr. Nonco'o gratuitous insultu offered to the anti-monopoly move ment nnd the men who have been fighting for years just such tools of the corporation * ! f s him- aelf , are not at nllaurprialng. During hla four years' incumbency of the gov ernorship ho played fast and looio with hin professions made before the election , and in every isduu between the railroads and the people toolr lib cues from the monopoly managers , Ills ndministration called for llttlo executive ability. If it had it would havn called in vain. Mr. Nanco eccurcd hin election on ht'n shape and complexion. A "boy governor" was a curiosity four years ago. It lost a good deal of ita interest after two years of exhibition and the people are not likely to demand - mand another specimen. It Ia tlmo that Nobra.ika should hunt for bettor timber than bass wood for her gov ornorn and learn to understand that the local celebrity of n country law yer is not always the best guarantee of a wise and cfllolont oxccntlvo. If Mr. Nance acquired no moro dlstino tion as a Boy attorney than ho has aa a Boy governor ho will have to fall back on hla old friends the railroad managers for remunerative retainers In order to keep up hia end cf the log. IN retiring from oflico , ox-Governor Nanco took occasion to enter into a lengthy and weak apology for the sins of the Btato board of discrimination , of which ha was formerly head center Uo says : "Rillroad property Imo boon Hated for taxation by the various companies under oath , na provided by law , nnd every moans within Iho power of the board has been employed to obtain a ftiir nnd juat valuation of the property so listed. In the judg ment of the board auoh property hue boon nsjcsaod at a valuation corro pending wish that of other property throughout tlio utnto. In fact , if a oompiiison with acsceamcntH of rail road property , nnd of other property , 'madu In other states , may bo taken na a gnido , it will bo found that under the present law the taxation of rail road property has boon higher , comparatively parativoly , in this atato than in most others , " No ono knows batter than ox-Gov. Nanco that his whitewash of the board of equalization la a ruasa of mlaropro oni tion . Tito mauagoio of th.0 rail' ' roada under the prcaont method assoso their own property , which , aa shown by TUB BEE , Is Hated at from ono twelfth to ono-sovonth of Ita market value , while the property of private citizens ia aisecsad on a baals of about one-third. There has boon no attempt made by the board of equalization to obey the mandate of the constitution to assess thp frnnchlaos of corpora tiona. Mr. Nanco says thnt no logia Intlon hen boon passed looking to tlmt end , What legislation was needed moro than the revenue bill defining Iho ilutioa of the board of equalization under the constitutional provision , There WOT no lack of power in the board to perform their sworn tint ) ? But thcro waa a lack of inclination , The information avail nblo regarding the actual vnluo of the corporations wut ) in every rotpcct euf fioiunt for the carrying ut of the law. Either the coat value , market value or incoino valuation would havn nf < forded a reliable basis for a fnlr assess mont. The ntatistics published by Tin : BKI : have shown conclusive ly that none of those methods o determining the valun of corporal property was adopted , and that tin statements of the railroads In every instance determined the action of tin board. The dcmtud of the people o ; Nebraska for the abolition of th state beard of discrimination la duo tc the fact that they know that the evasion sion of taxes by the corporations has boon assisted by the operation of th 3 law In the hands of the board of equal Izttlon , aud the attempt of Mr. Nance to pull the wool over the eyes of the legislature will not bn successful , THKUK la vlolunt Indignation ex. pressed Iu Now York over the taking otV of uight trains on the elevated railroad * . The general unnagor of the roids states that the order wu issued by Jay Gould r.nd the local j pipers mo drying the great monop olist over the coaU of a merciless critichm. Having cleared n cool § 7- OOO.OCO by his famous stock watering operation In Manhattan. Ojuld now proposes to make the publio par in- tarns' on thu water aud la carUllitiJ ! gvery expense to increase profits. The Now York Times uaya that "eo IOIKJ ( aa Jay Gould's ntilro&d operations were confhud to comparatlvoly dis tant fit'lda ' , the people of New Yotk city know very little of hia methods. In a general way ho uae regarded as n species of brigand who extorts prop , orty from its lawful holders by triok and atratogoin , rather than will : bludgeon and horeo pistol. But when , in an evil hour , thu thimblo-riggoi gained potssation of the elevated railway aystom of Now York , wo be gan to have a tiiato of hla quality. Precisely what cmno Gould h&a now in hand it is impossible to toll. Hut thu elevated railway travel is to bo Htjaoczsd "fjr nil it is worth. " "It la aeoumed by Gould and hia associates that the elevated roads , with their valuable and inexpensive franchises , MO to ba run nolcly for the benefit of Gould and company. Hav ing taken posaosnlon of the atrnotc nnd avonupg , and having gained without cost thu right to build iron nulwajB , thisy conteinluously deny that the pab- Ho hac any right which tha corporation la bound to rospoct. Wo must lo'k to the legislature fur rcliif , The tnonopoltsts who control the elevated railroads n umo the right to run trains when and how they pleaeo , with nothing hut their own Bolfiuh Bchemos to conaidor. Equity rccjulrea that a frauohice , to bo hw fully occupied , nhall bo adminiatcrod in the public intore.tt. A railroad muHt bo maintained for the reasonable accommodation of the public. If Mr , Gould thinks that the people of New York have no lights which the man opoly that has aoizr < l upon its streets is bound to observe , the legislature of the otato may undocplvo him. DELAYING THE REFORM. The ways and means committee are still tinkering over the tarif ) , Taking the report of the late commission as a basis , they have boon busily engaged for the past five woeku in trying to plcaso the manufacturers at the expense ponse of the publio by restoring SB far as possible the potty reductions in duties suggested in the report of the tariil commission. The moro that report port is examined the less cauao is soon for congratulation on the part of con- aumora. The additions to the free Hat are few and unimportant. The ro duciioaa on ataploa are . small as compared with what , was expected. The wealthy capitalists whoso concerns have boonbuiltup and thriven through exorbitant duties have been nblo to bring enough ir.flu once to boar upqn both commission nnd committee to prevent any auch decrease in the custom ] taxes as nould substantially lighten the burdens dons of the people by materially diminishing the proQta of their Indus trios. With the universal cry for a reduction of taxes ringing in their oars , Mr. Kelly's committee , organized in the interest of monopolies , and backed by four billions of accumulated < latod capital , are trifling with the do maud for tariff reform , and endeavor Ing , lnt time of peace , to continue and maintain the most extraordinary system of war taxation that has over burdened a government of modern times. Tariff reform waa ono of the issues which entered largely in the late olec tion. Ita importance and the demand for a prompt reduction of the worst itn positions of the tariff were clearly reo ognlzod by the president in his annun moosago and has been steadily insisted upon by every loading journal of botl ; parties in the country. The Morrll taritl * was put into operation at a time when the country was straining every nurvo to rniao revenues to prosecute war for the national existence. It was the boldest , the most couiprchcnsivo nnd wide-reaching acliomo of taxation ovur dinned. Nothing but the ur gent need of moiioy could have justl Jied its adoption. And congress was profuse in ita promises that the con elusion of the war would BSO the removal moval of the greater pirt of its bur dona. Eighteen years have gone and the Merrill tatill' ta still substantial ! ; in operation. Au immense surplu revenue is piling up in the nationa treasury , aud a ccoro of protected in dustries pampered by the govcrnmen into a utrongth which places million of dollars at their disposal , are clamor Ing against any reduction In the taxo which are eating into the prosperity of our people while they are fi ling the coffers of the industrial millionaires Enormeu ) protection has built u ; giant industries but it has failed t rednoo the prices of the manufacture * articles or to incressa the wages o the workmen , The purchasing powo : of a dollar , by which alone the valu of wages can bo estimated , is loss to day than it was before the war. Th benefits of overproduction have all gone Into the pockets of the protoc ed while there is no protection offered the publio from the rapacity of the men who live oil of the conn try's bounty. While there is goo ground for argument over the polio ; of protection to American industry there is no question us to the xll'iHtrous results of un ovt-r taxation auc'i as that from wMoh the country ia now Bulferlng , A policy uhich tends to tnnotiiitrato the wealth of the people in the hands of u fair pampered manufacturers whoso profits are enor mously stimulated by its rparation is iv national curao , So far from bihg industrial protection it ia popnLr rob- Congress cannot afford to do'ap the roform. The country doca no * do- mind the abolition of the ( arid. It do- inands H substantial reduction on all artislos of domeetio consumption and a material ouhrgomont of the free hat by placing on it aucti articl/s of ncoes- ally tu are used nliko by the poor aud the rich , and which can bo relieved of ' duty without crippling industry or de- stroylng values , Popular confidence In the republican administration of national affairs , BO severely shaken during the last few years , cannot bo regained by a weak and vacillating policy ol temporizing with this import ant question , The country demands , and it will bo satiatlcd with nothing else than a radical revision of the whole tariff , the effects of which will bo felt in the cheapening of prices , ntul in the corresponding in- oren-io of wages by the enhancement cf the purchasing poworof Iho labours olhr. KVEKY railroad lobbyist ia in favor if a railroad commission. It Is easier "seu" a caminieaioner than the ma- ority of the legislature. EvriiNOK denounce ! the PAS- Ion play as tending to iujaro public narala. The opinion of Lydia Thomp- on will bj awaited with interest. Congressmen make .cry undesirable > oardora according to a landlady uotod by the Washington correspon- ent of the Philadelphia 27mM. "They cop all aorts of hours , " she complains , 'and want their brcakfaat and dinner honovor they coma in ; they burn moro gas than anybody else , and ro ulro moro attendance from sorvanta. t takes an extra servant to answer ho door boll for them , as for every lenator or mombar there are always at east twenty persons coming every day o BCD them about somothinff , nnd the mncidy boots of their constituents nnd , vet umbrellas in falling weather rein my carpets. The members themaelvca mostly amoko and chow , and don't top to use spittoons. One wtio can't jot board any moro in any house where he's once been I cou'd ' name , who cquirta his tobacco jnico np to the 'ory top of lace curtains in hin room , , nd throws his cigar and pipe ashes all iver the furniture coverings , aa well as ho carpot. Pacific Railroad Robbery. blct > i ; Tribune. Them has been an animated debate n congress covering two whole days upon a proposition that the Pacitic ail ways , built by government subsidy , hall bo paid for their services in trans tlug troops and supplies for the government only 50 pur cent of what hey nra now collecting from private ndividuals for hku services. Tno nembora , of course , soon became lasaud as partisans aud enemies of .he railroads , and the discussion la- ludcd the topics of vested rights , auctity of contracts , the powers of greiis and the consideration of ight , justice and equity. Wo road debate carefully , nnd with the lope and expectation that at least ono erson nmong the representatives of ho people would have courage enough o remind congress of its criminal nog- octin this very business. Congress in 1864 voted to thoao lomplnies $01,000,000 of national bonus as a loan to enable them to uild thoee railways ; tit the uarno Imo it voted to them immense grants f land ; subsequently it voted to heso companies the power to borrow SG4,060.00n ( ldiHnnal and to civo he lion -horofor priority over any debt duo the United States , On thu first loan of $01,000,000 there are 830,000,000 interest pid by the United Suites , which interest u now duo ty ttiesu roadu. The money grant WHS equal to the construction of two road ? ; ono was built , and the rest of ho money stolen ; the owners of the 'Gad nuvur contributed a dollar to y/nrds Un construction , but ever slnco WHS put in operation have boon plundering nnd robbing the pnblio with a remorsolojanosa that would .hamo n ( rang of Bedouins command ing the routes over the detert. Thu cells demanded from freight nd passeuson over the railways from Ounuu to San Francisco are now , and have been for ituuy years , 50 percent greater than would bo tolerated in any other part of thu civiliz < d world where ho government or .ta ollkeru are not sharers of the plunder. Dating thu dubito of the present week mnoh wns said about the power of the govurnmon1 to makothis reduc tion ot 50 per cent on the rutos charged for government freights ; the oxkrtlons made by the P.icitio roada wcro frnnkly conceded. While ) every member of the homo waa fully atraro that congrecs had the unquestioned power to tix peremptorily n unximum rate to bo charged ovnr theao roads for freight and passengers , wo soirchcd in vain for a suggestion or a speech by any member proposing that the rates for thu transportation of freight and pnseoi gora over the rpads between Council Bluff * and Sin Frau- ciaco should during the year 1833 and until altered by law be 50 per cent what they were on the 1st of July , 1882. The proposed reduction in the rates of transportation on government bus iness is a trtltng : aftur , while a like reduction on alt the transportation business over theao roads would bo aomothiug substantial. The people of the whole country would bo benefitted by thu ono reduction , while thu proposed alteration looks very much Ilka an act ot personal apito en the patt of some defeated candidates for nougresa. Wo arw surprised that in the whole homo of 29J mtnubora thure w.vs no : ono man with oour.igo and pitrljtim enough to apply thn Uw anil faota ol the c vuao of the 54OCOCOD , , of people ui.d ID their behulf donmud that ttu Pactfjo railroad robbery slull honoo forth bo reduced 50 per cunt in its Our Junior Houator. Another uesturn man of moans ia Van Wyck , of Nobraski , a rtpubh 0111 53 yturi of a o , originally iron Now Yotk. lie lias made a grea deal of inoiuy iu hnda uud i > thc spcculHtioiis , and liij old Now Yorl frmnds wcnilor at his wealth , Sena tor Y.ui Wjck has u guod working liver and he never guts bilious. 11 h n good fellow , full of funny jeke asd strange wayi. PhsloAlly ) aud muntally ho ia atrikingly angular The Lord made him in corner * , UIK every corner titlcka out , Ono ot hi possessions , I am told , li a wheat fara which runs into the thousands o acres. PERSON DUTIES , Freddy Geblmdt iatntht-ed th t ho U a jl ger tuau thau the prince of Wales. From ill repnrta It I tuppoeil lint Uio-o who know Iterr Mod love him tte cant , Frank T r.iyno rhould RO to Klarara t'ftlU and hoot the rapid ) . [ N , O. I'lcn- P'UIIC , Mn. L-vbou-jhero Is a French lady , but t i < presumed tint the eptuka } ' ! icon Kngllsh. Mr Justice Brmlloy elves notice that bo .n ' . not harbotlnt ; any intention nf creatlnt ; a vacancy on the supreme bench. Iny Gou'il la chanRltii ; hh hablti. He ii now acre , ) Jn invitatints to dlu nnit rml reception ? , aud In frtqt.cntlysoenln New York nueloty. Mr. John K. Oivenc , the actor , whrss ' ins" ij six milis ontsido rf , liultimoro , lind it loverfe iu A'izjjn mining Bpecula- tlun , but letncvfd bis lones In another The Courier Journal hears Mcsoi nay- Ine : "I nny hive made aitne mistaken , hut I dou't remember ever hiving taken fees for defrndii g any of the wilderness Btar-r utera. " "It la more blessed to gvo ! than to re ceive , " 1 the Bphrri'm &du toj by Ameri ca's "best Boc'oty" regarding Mr * . Lang- try. Th ° y give the dollar ? , but do not "receive" the lady. lx-Stato ] Senator Pond , of Masjachu- tt * , whu WES ff-nt ta the penitentiary for tiftren years in 1670 for forgery , hao been patdoned. It ia understood Air Poud will etait a wilting school. K Miss Katb Field is u very blight woman , but thcro nro several iliings that she has managed to pro\e very effectually the lost few ye M. That she can't act , lecture , or keep a store are among tbem. The president has ordered a now plnno for the white house , and it does not stir- prise thinking persons to road that ( luring Ills recent vMt to Washington Mr. Conk- hug did not call on the head of the nation. Kad Cloud his been Interviewed in Washington , and the reporter found it ex ceedingly d tllcult to ft retell the result of lila report over a column in length. Mr. R. Cloud knows only one Knglish word , "How. " Mis * Nellie Ar'hur , who la 12 ye&ra of age. ia n pupil in Mis * Burgosi' school , on Connecticut avenue , Washington. She is petted and ( Uttered by the other school girls till there is danger that aho will lose her sweet naturalness of manner. .Trseph Cook proposes to discuss In his new course of Jecturei in Boston "the most blaz'ns ' and strategic toplci in the political nnd religious world , " lie may Lima with hla strategic columns , but bo can't make any but Boatonlans bend the knee. Kll Perkins and Sojourner Truth mot the other day for the fust time. Kli was quite overcome , and remarked : "I * It pea nbla that ycu have lived to be one bun died yean old nnd never met me before ? Where could I ha\e been ? " "Wanderitp iu pu'liH wherd tiutb is never found , I eckon ! " pointedly loturned the centen rinn , Wben it v/as known that G9vbardt had ecurod rooms In a Chicago lintel during .nugtry' engagement in that city , a local tided ckIf ot the name species bet Sl.GCO lat ha would cut Uobbardt out and take tra. Ijingtry nut riding alone three days fter her arrival. Tre I et was taken and 10 tnonev put up. It's Chicago against few Yoik , Ladies of all agea who suffer from oea of appetite , from imperfect digea- ion , low spirits and nervous debility may have life and health renewed and ndefinitely extended by the uco of Irs. Lydla E Pinkham'a romodl or all complaints incident to the emalo conatitution. Wo have not nly a living faith in Mrs. Pinkham , ut we are assured that her medicines ro at once most agreeable and mcaclous. MOKK people ha\e read THE SUN during he ycar _ just now passing ttmn ever before nco it WUB fir.t printed. No ether newa- aper published on this Me of the earth MB been bought and read in any year bye o many men and women , We are credit ) y informed that people iuy , read , and like TDK SUN forthofo'low iu reaioni" , among other ? : BecaifG ita news columns present in at- ractivo form anil with the greatest ponnblo .cm ° cy whatever h a interBit for humnn Ind ; the cvuiitf , the deeds end inlailecd . he wisdom , the phi o opry , the njtablo I'lly , the culid peuse , the iuit < ruving rinn ell tha nev/a ut the biuiuji world al imontrrv Iving in space , liecuu'iu people have learned that in its rmirka cent > rnni ; pe soni and r.lFaiis uc Sux malieri a trait ! a cf tolling them IIH exiettiuth to the beat of it * ubihty hreo hundred and ixty.fivo diyn in the ear , Iwforo tlection aarell an tftcr , uhoul hu whales as well na about the small full u the face of dit ) ° cnt a ? plainly and f air ly as when supported by Ro * > eral an- val , TUB SUN hta abEolutely uo pur to serve , H tv the Information of iu eadara aud the furtberauuo of the common Because itisrverybodv'snflwspiper. man UHU huinblt ) lint TutSfh' isinlitler ut to hU welfare and his rights. Nun : * HO rich that it can allow injustice to be [ ana him. No man , no association ol nen , in powerful enough to be exemp r un tha etrict application of Its principle ; if right and wrong , 15ecme h politics it his fought for I Irzen jearnvitbvut intermis fun un ( onictiiutn almost alone among uewgpaperi ! lie fight that has resulted in the receai iverwnelmiug popular verdict og.inn1 lobtboninm and for honest gove'iiinnnt S\i mutter what party U In power , Till SUN Htnnda aad will continue to stand like a rock for tbeintereatscf the people again * be ambition of boB o' , the en roaclnnent of monopolists , and the duhoneat ncheine of public rubbers , All this is what we are told almostdail iy our friends , One man holds that Til SON i * the best religious newspaper eve lubliahed , because ita Christianity U un lilutcd with cint. Another holds that it t tbe lies : HapublloAO niwapiper printed , became it bai already whipped hiuf of the raaiaUcut ol that party , and ia proceed ng against tbe other halt with undimin thed vigor. A third believes it to be th ieit * trmyazine of general littrature ia ex- ftence , because > tn totdera misi notbln wor thy nf notice that U current in th wor Id of thought. Ho every f lend of Til SUN discoveis CUB of Its mnuy tddei tha DaiN with particular force to his indf ' ' Hklag. If you alrfntly know TUB B\1K , yon wi'l ' ohtBrvx that In 18b3 It lit it little better dj.vu ever b-f no If you do ti-it already knnwTiiE SIN , you will lind it to boa mirror of nuuun .ctivity , n u'j.retu me of th > clidicejt prodncts f cotumon ROIHO itnd Imngiu tUiu , a inaiiutay for the cau-o nf honest govcrumobt , a sentinel for genuine Jelfer-Mubn democr..cy , : \ scourge for lukoJu > i of nvtry speci'B , nnd , m nn- commonly g od lii ailmcnt tor the coming yoar. Tot mi to Mnil Sabtoribnn , Tha ceveral editicni of THE SUN are tent hy mill , pjHpitd , aa follot : DA1I < V55 ( cnt a month , SG.50 a year ; with dunday edition , $7 70. SUNDAY-Ktght p'geSl 30n ve r. WUKKfA"- year. KighS pages of the ' en mitter ot the dally \stuef \ an agricultural department of unequalled merit , m r > t roporta , and literary , n-ieutifin , nnd domtatloIntelligence m.ike TUB WCKKLY SCN thonawxpaper for the farmer' * uouiebold. To cluta of tan with $10 , an extra oipy free Address I. W. ENGLAND , TublUher , Tm Sun , N. Y. Oily , 7 Boasters and Grinders o ! ' Coffees nnd Spices , Manufacturers of IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER $ Clark's Double Extracts of V BLUEING , INKS , ETC H. Q. CLARK fc CO. , Propilotom , 1403 Douclaa Street. Omihn , 1108 and 1110 Harney 11. , OMAHA , NEB. McMAHON , ABERT & CO , , Whole ; 315 DOUGLAS STREET , OMAHA , NEB. * L. C. HTJNTINGT01SI & SON , DEALERS IN HIDES , FURS , WOOL , PELTS & TALLOW 204 North Sixteenth St. , - - OMAHA , NEB. y 1005 Farnam St. , Omaha. HIMEBAUGH , MEEEIAM & CO , , Proprietors , Wholesale Dealers in . * > ? i _ _ - & - = - * f9i t- < "s = > * 5 fie > w . - * jp * VA'm ; yi. " _ t < zm3v v * * . . V * - , i ! O3 I - , . M $ - ' / ( j si'jjifAtv' Tt- -j jTl.f I * I I 4 * JrV Ue3SS . tg . CO .r X f"x i * " * V il " * * Kiti " " Hwli n ft'M rfUTifSJ * f" * ft ? ' * * A * ff GS " & = K t5 b ea t , as e cp E9 pa S ? Mills Supplietl With Choice Yaiieties of Milling Wheat , Woatern Trar o Suppllud with Data and Corn at Lowest Qaotatione , with prompt ohipmer.tB. Write for prlcca. WHOLESALE n 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA , NEB. MANUFACTUUKHS OP Carpenter's Materials ; ALSO SASH , BB9S3 , BUNDS , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. riwt-eliwa fnellUIeo for the Manufacture cf all UimUs of . matcblnK a Socially. Owor-i fruia tba couutty will boproinntly "xHontwl ? and ESTABLISHED II 1868. D. H. McDANELD & CO. , , GREASE _ , PELTS/ i nX > TT"V ' J u P ' Jl 2W North 16th St. , Maaonio Block. Main House , 40 , ' 48 and 52 Doaj. i bora avenue , Chicago. Refer by permission to Hide and Leather Nations ! Bank , Chicago.