OMAHA DAILY JBEE--THURSDAY , AUGUST 7 , 1894 THE OMAHA BFE Onintm Oflloo , No..OlU F rnnni Ef. OniiiiollUliimOjllO'vNi- I'ourl t ntri > oiNwif Urnmlwftjr. t Now YorhCOnieo , Hoora OB Tribal rnbllihod cnsry nrprnlnjr , etoopt Sunday * ' t nnl ) Monday tnutnlag ( Uilj. Qne rc.it . .flO. I Thfw Unnthl . . . . . .PJ Blstfuatn . MO | Olio Month . 1. Per West , 85 Cent * . TIM itir ii , nuns rOftTTJUD. ( "m Tear . . . $2.00 I Throe Uonlhj . , .t HiHaulh . . LOO | On * Month . Auxrlotn Keira Company , Sol Agontf , Kawido rt la the United 8Ut . A 1 Ijanmnnlcitlona relating to New * unl lUltor1 fcialten hoald to addroMoil to the Kotroa or Ti MITHM. Tugftjrj nl Rgmlkttnool honld fMlrMMd toTni n i PO M II ( I conrn.ni , QUAD Pritli , Chocks and Poiiofileo otderi to b made pi bl to the order ot the company , j BEE PDBLISeiNQ CO , , PROP ? B. BOBBWATBR. Editor. A. II. Fitch , Manager IHlly Circulation , P. 0. Bo , Neb. . vn us honest primirioa nud thcr will bo no bolting. Tin : democrats hnvo carried Alab.irni And the Mormons Imvo nwopt Utah. TIIK anti-monopoly national oommittci ccmvono nt Chicago aozb wcok to nt Inch a tail to Ban Hulloi'd kite. SHAW'H "dilver'platol" circus was at tached nt Silt Lake Monday by creditors , The silver pitting must have been enl > n cheap wash. TUB tripartite pool has baon ouoh n dismal failure that it * dissolution will bo mourned only by Pool Coramiaeioner Viuing. Oiuiar.v TANNKU is rattling around li > cly in the second district but wo four ho has taken a heavy contract to pull "Our Jim" through. TiiKKt : will only bo two candidatoa for congress in the third district this time and the republican convention may as well taho notice aud govern itself accord- triRly. aafo for Blaine and Logan in apito of Howe. licatrloo Erprata , Why inopito of Ilowo ? Isn't Church Howe in dead earnest for the national ticket ? Oi.KVitANi > 'a letter of acceptance will not ieach the American people until next week. They can boar the awful suspense but there is no telling what oflbct this terrible uncertainty will have upon John Bull. OAUTKK HAHUISON , the spread caglo re form mayor of Chicago with 12,000 sa loons at his back , has gene to Albany to inject some reform into Cleveland's let ter of acceptance. Carter oxoocts to bo the next governor of Illiaou , but his fig ures arc decidedly imaginary. .So i-Au very little interest is mani fested among republicans in the prim aries that como off Friday afternoon. This Booming indifference is readily no- counted for. Our primaries have be come a more farce. They do not voice the will of the party and are in no aonso an expression of its untram melled eontimont. OIIAUMW FniNoiH AI > ATH is very hopeful that the Union Pacific will again bo able to pay dividends this fall out of the tolls from Nobraaka crops. This is very conaoling to the holders of the watered stock but will hardly bo keeping faith with the gov , orntnimt , which was to have the sur plus earnings uatil the interest on the bonded debt is paid off. Ou iiA is largo enough now to have a lirst-clms telephone service at all hours of the day and nignt. Patrons of the telephone In this city have almost given tip the use of the wires after sundown. They cannot put in a word edgewise while the electric light dynamos are bu/- s'mif , and after midnight the snoring at the telephone exchange is louder than ail the dynamos , AUOOUWNU to the latest advices that have reached the national republican committee from all parts of the state the outlook in Now York U decidedly en- couraging. la the rural districts the republicans - publicans are enthusiastic for Blaine , nnd are receiving largo reinforcements from.tho intelligent Democrats. In the - , cities Dl&ino is the favorite candidate of ! Iho democratic workingmen and antl- rtonopolUU , and several hundred Jllaino i and Logan clubs , whoso membership consists elf won who have hitherto voted | tne dQiumsratio ticket , Lr vo been formed j throughout the atato. In Utica , BufUlo , Troy , Syracuse , Albany , Ogdonsburg and I Rochester , Blaine will receive several f thousand democratic votes. IT Is an ill wind thut blows nobody good. Ono curious effect of the cholera ec ro in Franco has been a marked decrease - crease of drunktmoss in Paris. During the inoulh of June the average number of persons dally taken up by the police for "drunk " being and incapable" was 170. On the 1st of July it declined to 10 * and on tho. 12th it had fallen aa low M.D4tho . emallost number m record einco the police regulations on the uubjoct of street drunkenness have come f ulo force. The day of the national fete SOOjiuclL CMefl wore reported ; but the ttumber VIM COO in 1883 , fiiUla'frfioiirn scare in Ktnsuoud IOWA . .would prove Invaluable , in aiding U o enforcement of prokibittoo.- - TIIK SCHOOL LAND FRAVD Ltnd Commissioner Kendall has hi himself interviewed by the Lincoln Jon tin/ , which is the defender and champic of nil public plunderers and jobbers , coi corning the alleged school land frauds i Keith couiiiy. Kendall's version vin > cites the hud department and plncos tl entire bl.imo upon "ft tjangjol epeculato whoso noses wore put out of joint by th promptness of the action of the commi sioncr in ordering n now appraisement < sshool lands in Keith county. " According to Mr. Kjndall the bm < of public works and buildings decided t lease the lands in Keith county last Ma and the clerk of Keith county was dill notified to have them appraised , Oil th 20tli of Juno this county clsrk notifio Kendall that one of the appraisers , undc improper influences , had retained th list to prevent the disposal of the landi Thereupon a now list wan forwarded an the clerk ordered to appoint a now so of appraisers , Mr. Kendall also entered a virluou protest against the crooked methods c : the drat appraisers by a solemn dcclnra lion that "this department will not couti lonftiioo any improper influence in th natter of nppraimxl or disposition o ichool lands , and will expect your in luonca and the assistance of county oil ! ! ors in protecting the state from such. ' iVhon Esau sold his birthright for a meat if pottngo , the blind patriarch oxclaimct ho voice is the voice of Jacob , but the mnd is the hand of EJIUI. Glen vondall , in the role of an honest man ii i little too mush for ( ho meal rodulous. Had the head of the dqnrt , lent of public lands nnd uilJings boon n man nl haractor nnd integrity this special in- motion against improper influence 'ouldhavo cleared his skirts tut Mr. Kendall protests Itogothor too much. Why ha is voice never boon raised against land iioculatora in his own ofUco and undot 10 shadow of the state capitol. How jines it that ho has never interfered 1th the land sharks down in Lincoln ho have cleared all the way from § 5,000 > ? 10,000 oaoh out of school land trans- irs during the past eighteen months , [ ow comes it that Glen Kendall himself , ho hardly had a rag on his back 'hlch ho could call his own , hen ho came into ufllsa has massed a snug fortune within ICHS than iur years on a salary of § 2,000 a year ? ; ut wo digress. According to Mr. Kon- all , the grounds upon which the Keith > unty injunction suit is brought is b.iso- ss , because Attorney General Powurshas indorod on opinion that the lnuU ap- raised at less than § 7.00 an aero need it bo offered for oalo buforo leasing , and i the Keith county lands are only op- raised at twont-fivo cents an aero they mid bo leased without that formality , ere is the milk in the cocoanut. Ken- ill , smuggled a law through the legisla- ire that can bo interpreted to suit the md grabbers , and then they fortify lomaolves by an opinion from the at- irnoy general. Lands that are worth vonty dollars an aero are appraiaod at Fty cents an acre , and being no ap raised they need not bo offered for sale , ix per cent on an appraisement at half dollar an aero would coat three dollars year for 100 acres , or § 30 a year r 1,000 acres and no taxes. There millions in it' A man with iry small capital can do a land office isiness. How does this honest land mmusionor.rcgard such appraisements ? 'as it in the interest of the otato that ruls in Keith county , which are report I to bo worth three dollars an acre , ould bo leased on an appraisement for ronty-fivo cjants per aero ? Six per cent i twonty.fivo conU an aero and no xes ! "There is one thing which does not era to bo kupt in mind , " eaid Mr. ondall , "and that is that the school nds are re-appraised every five years , ia accordingly better to appraise thorn a reasonable rate and got thorn under use than to appraimi thorn too high nud t no income from them. " What does Kendall understand by a asonablo appraisement ? DJOS not every hool.boy in Lincoln know that when o bars were letdown by allowing ap aisomoutsat any price , u high premium is offered for wholesale perjury and > ud ? What do the land sharks care out roappraisoment five years hence ? icy dent intend to hold the lands five ars. They simply sell out on a bonus and a parties that purchase those leases are t on the track to secure low appraiso- mta the next timo. Meantime the state s boon systematically swindled and mil- us of acres have passed out of its eon- 11 for twonty-fivo years at a moro song , will take a great many interviews in Lincoln orgau of the "forty thieves" explain away and justify these school id frauds. IPJiOVE TJIK 11IQU SCHOOL QllOUNDS. I'ho High School has for years been ) priao of Omaha , not only becaima it ono of the most magnificent school ildinga in America.but because its loca- n makes it the most prominent structure the city and the surrounding grounds Capitol hill are a thing of beauty and oy forever. L'he grading of Twentieth street , which II HOOU be completed , botnoou Dodge \ Davenport streets , will very materi- y improve the approaches to our High tool grounds. An opportunity to put iso grounds in presentable shape is now urded which the school board should all moans improve. [ fur obvious reasons this work should done without delay. Unless the high i bankmont is graded downand walled will endanger the lives and limbs of j ichool attendant * . Now , we do not liovok.lu doing things by halves.Vo not believe in' Cheap John economy and do not approve temporarymakosht w hero the moans arc on hands for BU stantinl and permanent iniprovomnn The high school grounds are always t first place viewed by visitors to Omali whether they are tourists , cxcursionii or business men necking a now hot wont of the Missouri. For our own pc pie these grounds afford all the combin advantages of a public ? < juaru and pat The proper and most economic thi for the board ot education to do is to 01 ploy a lirst- class landscape architect ai lot him draw plans that combine a : group the natural with the artificial , ai lay out the grounds into a beautiful Ian scape. Itwillr.otbo necosasry to complo this work in ono year , but every Improv mnnt of the grounds from now on shou bo made to conform to the plans adoptc The first step in the direction of perm noncy should bo the construction of asu stantial stone wall to protect the su rounding embankment. Thomatorial f < This the wall , should not bo limoston The dismal failure ot the south wt Im Innght a wholcsomo lesso ; Hint wall will require a now sandatoi : ap that can weather storms and BUI iliino. All projects oi wooden copir ron fencing or fencing of any kin iluvo the wall should bo dropped as isulcsinsio of monoy. Omaha is t ongora caw pasture. Cattle are E ongor permitted to run at largo , an oncos around public grounds are ui ightlyovon when they are ornamental fiowed purely from the stand point c conomy , there is no saving in woodo oping , and wooden walks. It wil I ccidodly cheaper in the end to uo dui bio tnntetiah. Whatever is don hould bo well done , and not anothc ollar should bo spent without plan rom a competent landscape architect. WE are not at all aurprued at the prc lounced preference of Miss Susan I Lnlhony for James G. Blaino. A horri Id bachelor like Grover Cleveland , wh irofora a buxum widow to a youthft nd handsome maiden like Siuan , is no it to bo president of the United States II. II. SiiKuu , of Ashland , is a candi ate for lieutenant governor. It appear liat Mr. Sliodd is opposed to the two jrm policy nnd waiua to undermine lit .gee. . Fremont Tribune. Can you undermine a vacuum ? WEST TIlE MISSOURI. The excitement c\ujud : by the diacov y of the "Texas fovor" in a few cattli iiigcs in Nebraska aud K tnias has prao oally subsided. The prompt action o 10 govornora of both statoa aombinod ith the railroad * aud otook association ! factually quarantined the infected cat 9 , preventing the diacaso booom g general and necessarily diaastrou : stockmen. In no instance ha : the of , lioncy of unitfamoag stockmen boor own as in this. Like one nun tdo sav , al associations took hold of the infact I eattto and either slaughtorod-thom 01 it thorn oat of roach of healthy herds ' srned everybody of tho'trails likely tc road the diaoaso , and took every pos < > > lo precaution to confine the contagion the cattle in whom it was first discov < od. The railroad companies seconded ery effjrt of the stookmon , disinfected I cars likely to spread the disease and rofully oxiiminod all stock offered for ipmont , as an additional precaution. 10 total number of cuttlo lost by the tease is ostiinitod at 1000 , of which 5 nucjtimbodat Ox llila. The fdod. ; stations at all important shipping intaon the riilroals have boon re- ired a oansidorabla distance from for ir locations and the latter thoroughly sinfoctcd. Fortunntoly the disoaao did not oxtonc to either Wyominaj or C > l' ' > rado. Thos. urgls , secretary of the Wyoming Stock owera association , cUims the disease is first introduced at Mix well , Neb. , it May , by a bunch of cattle belonging lUukiii & Co. These cattle had buen ippod from Tcxia , and wuro herded in 0 neighborhood of Maxwell , but were : onvard drivuu to the rnngo of Runkiu Co , on tha Middle biup The land which these cattle hud boon herded iS nftorward fjaced in by the owner , to turned his OVTII herd loose there. 10 result is that his cattle have become aroughly imprognitoa witli the fever , d most if not alt of them will dio. A m named Searls owned a bunch of out sixty-five. Of his number forty 1 already dead. The diaoaso , r. Sturges says , is not bred in live cattlo. The germs of the disease nain latent in the systems of oxtr'omo ithorn Texas cattle , likomalaria in the items of acoUmatod Mississippi valley m. A stranger goes to that region 1 is immediately seriously affootod with laria , while thn resident to whom the ease may Invo boon transmitted gpei ng apparently unaUeoted. la a sohso s as true of 1'exas fovor. The Texas tie are apparently in a good atatq of kith , but the germ of the disease- in im , and native cattle following the te trail , and moro especially camping or near the bedding ground occupied the affootod Toxaa stock , are liable to itraot the disease. When they do so iy usually dlu , but native cattle thus mtod cannot communicate the disease other stock. 'he cattle shipping season , which re. rod a temporary sot back by the Texas or scare , is again under full head. j Union Pacific railroad company his io a reduction of five oonti on last r's rates to Om ua and Ohloago on all tie shipped at any station between O - i and North I'latte. The company fur. r ogroos to permit thoshlppnr to sell his : k at Onhi and Council Bluff * if he hei ; i ( not soli to parmlt him to bill stork from either of tUoie poiuU to icigo over any line ha mty select , hout unfavorable discrimination on i part of the Union Pacific. If the ok are sold the Union Pacifio agrees to aaso them , and if in this case a line of 4 is selected over which they do not ke a "through" rate , they agree toao- it the proportion the Union Pacifio uld have received had tbo stock been od through to Chicago. This liberal arrangement , " says a clr- cular issued ly the Wyoming stock gro era' ( xiscciatiin , "voluntarily made I j tlio t nuin Patific , represent a valual C3nco. sion to Iho stockmen of Wyonii and Nebraska , and especially to the met burs of thi ) Msociatun , nnd should 1 1 appreciated by them. It indicAtes the strongest manner , the intention the Union Pacific railway to meet tl needs and wishes of our members , ai expresses their sense of the yalua at : importance of the vast consolidated i torosts wn represent. " Advices from well known stock men i Ogalalla. North Platte and along tl Union Pacific , indicate an unprocodon od general drive to the ranges north nt : west of the Black Hills , says the Dea wood Times. At least 40,000 homl pai od Ogalalla week before last , nearly t under Contract to parties well Ktiown : that vicinity. The principal hard b longed to the Continental cittlo cump ny and numbered 20,000 head. Li wcok , in all probability , brought as mai moro , and an equal number will cro the track this vrook including 9,000 hen for the recently organized Vermont oa tlo company. Tlia immense corn crop which Nobra k'i ' farmers will harvest the coming fall looked upon by western stock men ns providential boon for their special bo efit. It is calculated tint the harvce being very favorable throughout tl country , will reduce thj price of coi somewhat , and make it very profllab when fed to stock. U is estimated thi during the coming winter i5,000 ! head cattle in Wyoming , Nebraska nnd Col r.tdo can bo fed from this present cro It will bo cheap , and stock men the r gion can drive auch cattle as thuy desii to fatten to this state and there fcod the for thu winter market. This corn will i easily and cheaply obtained and the c\ tlo thnreby fattened at a small cost fi the winter market. It will bu beneficii alike to the stockmen and farmers , giviu the tiller n homo market and the profit which usually go to elevator middlemor Bring on your steers. The story of Wyoming territory , n told by the assessment roll , is ono of th most gratifying exhibita of growth an prosperity in western annals. A territc ry yet in her teens , with thousands c acres of land unoccupied , with undeveloped oped mineral deposits , which in variot and extent , are unequalled by any of he noighbora , and with a number of infan industries springing up in the larg towns , plaoo Wyoming in the front ran of prosperous territories. The great am only drawback heretofore has been th lack of transportation facilities , partici .arly a northern ro < td. With this latte now assured , the future of the torritor is brighter than over. Tha figures of the assessor shows thn there are in the territory 648,988 head o oUlle , 44,275 Horses , 357,081 sheep am goats , 1,628 mules and 1,372 hogs , a to tal of 1,153,044 head. Ltramio is th banner county , , with 283.194 head of cattle tlo and 57,978 shooo. Johnson count ; 3om a nnxt , with 160,481 head of cattl j followed by Albany and Carbon counties L'nu total valuation of nil anfmala iu tin territory reaches § 20,718,215. Beside ; this there are 580.112 miles of railroad til owned by tha Union Pacific campany issossod at § 5 219,790 , making tha crane .otal 825,938,041. The citizauii of Laramie are always 01 : holort to ct ch every opportunity dal iulatod to advance ( ho interest of th own and surrounding country. Since ha closing of the Union Pacifio rollinj nills and the. atoppago of , work on thi oda works , the town lost conaiderabli if the vim which had characterized it ! o when Ohas , Francis Adams and othoi Jnion Paclrto olibUls passed througt hero last week" delegation of promln nt citizjns pounced upon them and se ared an hoar's talk on truttKJ pertain * ng to tbo gonaral welfare of Liramio anc ho territory. Mr. Adimi stated among thor things , that the company had chut .own on all extensions of roads for the resent , but tint the oimpiny would loot the people half way ia the matter of oncosslons and inducements to build up ( idustrlos along the line of the road , and hus while helping the community , in- roaso the business of the road. The ay for rolling iron rails had passed and bat portion of the rolling mills must bo bindonod , but the company proposed to ithor opperato the bar mills and increase 10 faoiltiea for the manufacture of mor dant iron , or loiao the mill to parties ho would put thorn in operation. The uilding of the soda works was an cxpori. lout , and as soon as the works were amplotod they would bo leased to other arties. Ia regird to other proposed idustrios Mr. Adams promised that the jmpiny would give every reasonable iducoment ia the matter of rates to mko them ucocsaful and help build up to town and the railroad's business , here would bo no discrimination and ] uitablo freight rates would bo given to 1. The interview seemed to give Mioril satisfaotiou and the Lvamioiws ill now put their nhoulaora to the heels of progress. Denver claims a population of 75,000 , soording to the Tribune. She claims to j a railroad center from the fact that [ ty-two passenger trains arrive and de * urt front the city dally. A bunch of 200,000 bonus were recently huckstered ; the financial marts of the country Ithout a taker until the interest rate ai raised two per oont. The track-ago the state has grown from nothing four , on yeara ago to 3,087 mllos. The Un * n Pacific employes within tha limits of ate , 3,233 men , with aa average month * payroll of § 141,000. T ho Burlington nploys 121 men and ita pay.roll for the lar was $80,000. The pay-rolI of the lo Qrando shops in this city last year aounted to $160,000 , while the pay of o olorks and triimrun of the line ran > to $336,500. The Now Orleans road nployes 79 clerks , trainmen and me- iftiiics. The Circle road curri'i 12',000 < issengors last year. The Tribune ia re- irtod on tha ragged edge of bankruptcy id the Ojiinhn f socking n now barrel tap or go under. Ttmro are other and ere substantial evidence of the relapse om which Denver is now Bullerinp , it the fact is so well lown that mention of them is porlluous. By way of contrast we give few figures of Omaha's growth. Wo lira a population of 60,000 without utiug. Forty.sk trains arrive and do- rt from the depot and transfer daily. The report of the bnard of trade for 188 hews that the Union Pacific employe 3,005 hands in this city along , list yea with n monthly p&y roll of § 175,517 3 Tno B. & M. and other ronda , ono hn that number ; union elevator , 40 hand pay roll § 2,000 ; Boyd's p&ckin ? houn 20U h nd , pay roll § 8,0r.0j Omul Smoltinfj works , 830 hands , pay roll § 2C OOOj Willow Spring * distillery , 100 land payroll § 0,500 ; Whitfl Lead Co.I hands , pay roll § 2,500 ; packing at canning works , 125 hands , pay roll SS 000. Besides thoio there are the maohic shopn and foundries , the nail work and other industries. The now a toe' yards and packing homo wtll give on ploymonl to a large numbar of Jmoi There are fully 2,000 men employed i public works udor contract which wi cost in the neighborhood of ono millic dollars. Our five-year five per cen paving bonds sell readily at par , whi ten and twenty year bonds command premium every timo. The three prim pal newspapers are doing a largely ii creased business , as shown by the ere lion of now ollbo buildings and incro.i ing their machinery phnt. Last ye they employed about J00 hands , with monthly pay-roll of § 15,851. Thono st tistica tell their own story. Oainl takes no stops backward. Her Rrowth steady , substantial , otornnl. The line agricultural country on the continon watered by the reservoirs of huavcn , at peopled with the best of all states at nations , furnish a spinal column for tl metropolis of the Missouri valley superl to the arid plains and mineral wealth Colorado. The Hastings Democrat charges , wil a showing of evidence , that the B. & J railroad company and the merchants i Omaha nnd Lincoln have pooled to pri vent the establishment of wholesale hoi sea in Hastings. The charge of diecrin ination ia not a now ono , but no fir i the merchants are concerned it is witt out foundation. It has always been th policy of railroads , and will doubtlo ! continue to bo , to mtku terminal poiul distributing points , i c. , to concontrat wholesale houses at such points as wi give butter facilities for the transfer c uoods and secure the bonoSt of Ion hauls. Tlio caao cited by the Demount is as follows : "Jttr T. S. Mcnoof Iowa City , lows wafi in thii city t'o or three d , ya tliw wee for thu imrpos ) ot ujtiblUliin a wholesal crrocrry housu at thin point. Arrangement had busix mailo whereby ho could n cure tw rooir.a in the f-tono block , and it w s his in teution to till thorn with pfooda After decid Ing that Umru was not uiiothor point in th state tlut needed ai lintlliit on of this ktiu moro than Hasting , we have all the ajvan tagea hero for maUiiic an enterprise of thi kind u success , Mr McGee went to tha B. I M. U. K. company ac Omaha aud informal them of what ho intgndod ( o do nnd askei them what tlioy conlit do ia the way of ratea Much to hia BUI prise they Informed him tha Lhey ould give him no apscial rate ? , and u ihoaama time advisoi him tJ go to Lincnli if he wUhod to embark : in thu wholesale bna iuo < i < , tlioy assuring him that if ho would gi to that place taoy could oieily RIVO him i rate. Air. McGee informed thorn Hasting AMS tha n est dfcirablo point and that unlci Ihev coulJ givohitn a rats by whhh ho conk . oinpoto with other whol-fl lo houses in th' ' < tate , ho would ba compelled to abaudon thi mtorprluo. The lallrjid gave him uo encour igement nnd he returned c i hit * horn 3. " ' Bo Juttc to liliUno. " From the New York Sun. We deairo that full and exact justice ihall bo done to Mr. Blaine in the mvoa tigatiou of his variegated career in pub lie life. Ho has enough to explain and enough to answer for a.i the 0090 stands , No candid person will countenance anj attempt to make the republican candi iato seem worse than he is by miarep resontation of the record by disingoniout inferences from distorted facts or by headlong , blundering logic. In the New York Times of Mondaj last there appeared a loading editorial irticlo entitled "Tho missing Mulligan letters. " When Mr. Blaine took from Mulligan the lettori which were after ward road by the hard-pressed statesman n the house of rooroaontativea , ho took ilso a memorandum which Mulligan had nade of the dates of the letters in a package with a synopsis of their con- outs. This schedule called for fifteen otters or , to bo exact , fourteen letter * tnd ono paper entered as "contract with Northern Pacific. " The Congressional looord for June 5 , 1870 , shows t'aat Mr. Jlaino road just fifteen letters on thn leer of the house. Ho said at the time : 'Thank God Ahnigh'y , I am not afraid 0 show them. Tiiure they aro. There 1 the very original package. " Acain , ust before sending to the clerk Mr. Mul- gan's memorandum , ho said : "I have ow road those fifteen letters , the wtiolo f thorn. The housp aud the country ow knows all there is in them. They are atod , and they correspond precisely ith Mulligan's memorandum which 1 ave hero. I keep tlii * memorandum 113 protection to myself , for it ia very val- able aa showing the identity of the 1st- jra in every rpipect. " Did Mr. Uiaiuo , in fact , road the lot- > rs , and all of the letters , which ho had ikon from Mulligan , or did ho suppruts jmo of the moro damaging documents i the budget , supplying their places ith comparatively innocuous epistles iii rdor to keep the tally right ? It is nood- iss to cay that this is a very important uestion. The Times endeavors to establish the icts that the fifteen letters submitted to 10 house by Mr Blaine , with so many rotossions of candor and unreserve , were ot the fifteen letters called for by the [ ulllgan memorandum. It prints the lomoraudum itself , and also the dates f the letters actually read in the house , n the strength ot certain apparent dis- ropancteo between the two lists , the imos insinuates that Mr. Blaine oooivod his colleagues in the house hilo pretending to take them into his mfidouoo and to put himself on honor , i it wore. If that was the case no moro Bsplcable trick waa over devised by any uutod rascal. The Times finds that mr letters called for by the momorau iim were not read by Blaine , while ho id read four letters that were not in * udea in the memorandum. It asks : Where were the letters called for by 10 following entries in Mulligan's mum * auduui ? No. 4. July 25,1800 , on tha same ibjoot. No. D September G , 1809 , contract ith different parties. No. 0. Contract with Northern joitic No. 8 October 24 , 1871 , Fisher to l&ine urging settlement of Northern cifio railroad account. And why is it by a most singular coin * loiioa Mulligan's memorandum is silent to four letters read by Mr. Blrine , ariug dates of July 3,1872 ; April 20 , 72 ; April 25 , 1872 , and July 2 , 1809 ? , n it bo that this splendidly audacious ttesmsa substituted some harmless let * ra from his portfolio or manufactured r the ( ooisioh tha four letters on Mul-1 ; an'a list but not.road ? If so , it waa J a fatal , a most terrible blunder not doctor the memorandum before eondi it to the clerk to bo road. It was nudr ity , indeed , to rpraid before 11,000,0 ot hid countrymen on the pages of t ! congressional record to complete a di proof of his soluomn assertion that _ t ! letters ho road "corresponded precise with Mulligan's memorandum. " Wo dislike to break in upon Mr. Wi liam Walter Pholps' vacation , but wo b lipvo that rather moro than 44,000,000 his countrymen would like to hcnrhis e f I mat ion ( f the discrepancy. Lfo h given sorao attention to the matter , t think for in a letter to The Evening Peen en April 23 , Mr. Phelps siid : "Mull gtui'a memorandum of the letters , which ho had numbered and index each ono of them , was produced , ai number and index corresponded exact with the letters read. This ww ful demonstrated on the lloor of the Iron atid ia a part of the record. " Yet Mr. Phelps was substantially rig and the Times has been led into a fnl position by carelessness hardly less o cusablo than deliberate dishonesty. Ti discrepancies which it detects are supc ficiat. A careful analysis of the tv lists would have shown our republic contemporary that it had no ground f this grave charge which it brings agait the republican candidate. The nrrang inont of the loiters in the llccord somewhat confused. Mr. Blaine re : them "quito niiscollancou ly" as ho sai that is , without regard to either chron logical order , or to the order in win they appeared in the Mulligan schcdiil \Vo have , therefore , arranged in ono or umn , the dates of the letters called f by the memorandum , and in another tt dates of thu letters rc.id by Blaine in tl housu. Where the dates correnpond t ] f.ict is noted. Where a letter called f doi-s not appear to have boon road I Blaine it is marked "suppressed ? " Who tt appears that a letter waa read whic had not been included in the momoroi dum , the fact is indicated by the woi "added. " Dates in Dates real memorandum , liy IJla ns. Koto- US May _ ' ( ; , ' 01. . May ' 'it , Vl. .Kighl. : ! -.lunoL'7 , 'G'J. .Juno y , 'OH. .Probably rig ] 1 July 25 , 'C9.Tuno2 , 'o ! ) , . . Probably ril 5-H-ijt. 0 ( C . . . - - | , - - .Supprosaedt 1-Oct. , 'l'J..Oot 4. T ! ) . . light. 2-0 jr. 4. ' < ) it..0ct. , 'GU. . KiBht. 7-RIay 1-1 , 7'I..Miy ' II , 70..Jighl. 10-Oec. 1 , 71. . Oct. 1 , 71. . lUght. ! ) -Oct. 4 , 71. .Oct. 1 , 71..lliBlit. 8Oct. . : M , 71. . - Sniipro 1 -April lit , 7 . .Ap.il 13 , 7..lcislit. 12-Aniil 18 , 7April 18,72. . JJi ht. - . . April j , 72..AdJed. - . . April art , 72. .Added. - . .July a. 7i..AdJud. 13-Aiu. 0 , 72 .Aug. ! ) , 7.UiBlit. 14-A'ig. 31 , 72. .Aug. 81 , 72. .Ki ht. ( i Uoutract. N. L'M. - . .Sm > pre cd. Of the titteon letters doicribod in th nemor.uidum ton appear in the list o ; h ( EO road by Biaine. In tho. case of tw xhors thpro 13 a slight discrepancy in th lato. The letter marked Juna 2 ! ) , 180'J u the Record is evidently that which i narked Juno 27 , 1889 in the momorau lum , for it is thu famom "no deadhead 3pis lo. The identity of the memorandur cw , July 25 , 18IVJ , arid the Ilocon Hterof Jn'y2 , 1878 , is established b ; he'f ict that the lettur answers exactly t ! Mulligan's synopsis of the formeiThosi li'C-0ancug | ara obviously tha result o riflins ; cluriojl orrcrs on his part in trau oribing the dates. Thia disposes of one of the four letter vhich the Times think were supproesei > y Blaino. The second in ita list i tfunber 5 of the memorandum : ' 'Sept i. ' 09 , contract with diU'arent parties ' Phis was omitted by Blaine because i ras written by Fisber to him , not kb urn to Fisher , The Times will find i irintcd on page 3,000 of volume 4 , par t of the Record as "exhibit K. " Th bird document supposed to have booi lupprcssed by Blaine is the "controc vith the Northern Pacifio" of the mom < irandum. ThoTimes will find the miss ng paper on page 3,008 of the same vol imo of the Itucord marked "exhibit J.1 ? he fourth of tha "suppressed" lettora ras that of October 25 , 1871. It wai lot ono of Blaino's letter. It was writ- en by Mr. Fisher , and Blaine explained t the time that he failed to find it in th ( ackage. Wo do not think that any bad } rho has followed our analysis of the ists will doubt the truths of his assertion , Mr. Blaine road three letters whicl roro not included in the indox. The ates are April 22 , April 26 , and July a , 872. For soma reason Mulligan has lilod to note their existence iu the list 'hich ho prepared for his convenience on tie witnecs stand. Blaine certainly amed no advantage by confiding their rmtonts to the public. As they merely dded evidence of his connection with ulroad speculations , and , as they really uro not needed to fill out the number illed for by the accompanying memo- indum , their production by Mr. Bltiuo joms to ua to strengthen tha presump. on that he wont straight through the ickago wrested from Millignn in the f cl ip us interview of Mjy 31 , 1870 , at the .iggs house. Lot us have all the truth about Blaine , nt lot BUino have the benefit of strict id impartial justice in the development ' the case against him. Wo do not ba- ave thnt the Tunes intentionally mis- ( presented the case. It was hurried to inclusions without verifying its facts. OUIIIILU la UUC. ow York Herald. The Concord school of progressive bilosophers has closed for ttio season , id , ai our correspondent intimates , robably forever. It waa moro entirely spendont on the octogonorian Mr. mos Bronson Alcott than was generally luposod , and hia place can hardly belied lied by long haired spiritualists of either ix. The discussion of Emerson disclosed .ore about the personality of the speaks - s than that of the lofty subject which ley failed to comprehend. When it tmo to "Immortality" the philosophers > und themselves immersed .in "a sea of oubles , " from which recourse to B wedon- > rgand other lessor lights in Spiritualism iled to guido them. Boston is riot thens , nor is Miss Elizabeth Peabody Iato or even Aristotle , and so the at- nipt to perpetuate a nineteenth century heel of Concord philosophers will prob- ily go no further. Wo have made a iry much greater success in the way of ingling religion , education , ' the camp oeting and the garden party st Chau urjua Lake. Tha CrunliliiK Oa < U ( tcklund Courier , We have tramped through the mar Inus Mammoth Gave , viewed the Chi- jo waterworks , listened to thu thun- r of Niagara aud beenjtwe struck by the antic proportions of the Brooklyn idye , but really wa do not think any these can bo compared in importance d grandeur to a West Point cadet at me on a brief vacation. That is , not Liu hus his uniform on. Tlio Agitation Ended , ItiKKJi-OKT L. I. . , , July G.-An agitator , italnlnjr 0,000 barrels of cnido oil , t the run f the Urooklyu oil company. New town wk , explwled this aornlng. Theollwiu iiumea and the git tor destroyed. No iw property destroyed. Low $3,000. Anil-MonopolyStnto Convention , The anti-monopoly party of the stHo of Nebraska will hold A sUto convention at the Academy of Musio in Lincoln , Nebraska , on Tuesday , September 9 , 18S4 , at two o'clock r > . m , for the pur pose of placing in nomination five can * didatcs for presidential doctors , and also candidates for the following offices , viz : Governor , lieutenant governor , secretary of state , state treasurer , audi tor of public accounts , commissioner of / \ public lands and buildings , superinten / dent of public instruction ; , and attorney * / general. Also to elect a chairman of the anti-monopoly state contra ! committed , nnd to transact such other business an may properly como before the conven tion. tion.Tho several counties are entitled to representation as follows ; It ia recommended that uo proxies bu admitted to the convention except such aa aru held by persona residing in the counties from which proxies are given. 13y order of the state committee. .T. Bunuows. 0 11. HniAnjtAN , Chairman. Secretary. A Thunderbolt , "Ah , " murmured a Philadelphia Call man , Badly , "if 'twere only d'fisrent.ouly different. " 'JTo what do you refer ! " she gently whispered. "Oh , nothing , nothing ! " ho quickly answered , with affected confusion. < % 1 was only thinking how cruel the world is to aasumo ttvit a poor man is always after the money of aa hoircds when lie is in love with her.1' "I understand , " aho sweetly replied. "But it is n great comfort for mo to know that no one who loves mo need hoaitato on that account , for although I was an heiress when the season opened , all my money was inyeated with Grant it Ward , nnd my guardian writes that riot a penny is loft'- Ho hastily remembered that he had an engagement somewhere else. Foreign Notes. LONDON , August 6. Tha latest advice * from China stain that thu Ohinoto authorities jtortpodthe emiriorijervico bctween.Fee Chow unil the landing place of the cable. P.MIIB , August C. At Versa ! lea to-day the : onuuitteo of conference , of the houses of par. llamenttp which all proposed amendments to Ma constitution were referred , accepted And. rionx' amendment ; declaring nil monarchy pro- taidera were illegible to tbo prenldency. The jom't.ittoaiiitedin tbiamattar ia nouord with Minister Ferry. DunLl.v , Antrnst 6. A trua bill wai found ifraiust Cornwall , French and Fernande/ , for 'olony. VIES-NA. Angusfc 6. The I3oar hotel burned. Incendiary. Tlio Cholera , 1'AltiH , Auiruat C. Three death * at Jttar- "illes , and three at Toulon laat night , Seven turned fufrutive * have BO far died. , MARSEILLE * , AnRust C , nt noon. Two leatha from cholera since 9 o'clock thin morn. "B- "BLONDON LONDON , Augnut p. The outbreak of the Jupliali chdlerti ut Korthhamptoa wan owin ? u the 8c rjciiy nf watdr. An entire family van stricken. No deaths oocui red. SGROFULOU9 , INHERITED. "iV 1H70 H'rofulom Ul'oH broke out on my body uolll mj hrp nt tt&i nnu mn o ( corruption omo ol tho4B Ul"cT were not Icon lhan one and one M lichwiin ilUrni ter , MIJ oogo rough , ragged , aid if'j ry < ! rnd' the Oivlt > ' ppen < o tlio hone and I'u1 wl'h ll > nni\6 ir-a't'T ' llnrythlng I > nounto iemfUI- l dculty wssirird In v ln. Orrdtinlly th one Itbcll bonatnn dlnopol , and the BUDetinx bezan iejm t D no Ulierc U'ptaii to taki the piaoj'l lo-o hlih'tto on Ih' * > irfaco I Lfciimo a mere icck. Four months at ft time ooulil not cettny nds f > mv lie d loauso of eilrcinn soroneaa. ould not t rn In h d. Know not what It van to bu i hour e\cn 'roo ' ttnm pain 'Had icanon to look licnllf lt > Bll anacu'te. In Iho tunjner of l&jO , let ten year * nf this urttchod oxlutcnou , I beifan i UIM > L'utlcura Hemnli < ji , and after two ioa * per- ( tent HBO ol them tba la-t ulcer has hoilud. Tim read dlioa < e Im auocumbud , All over t tic breast , liore once waa a maa ? ol cirroptlon Is no a healtby In. My v eight haa lncrrnod ( rn n one hundred id twenty-three to one hundred and filly-Bit pounia r id the goo i worlt Ii eUilxMni ; on. 1 lei I my eel ( a iw man , and all through Cutlc'nrt Iteme leu. JAUE3K. HJCIIAIIDHON , Cuttom lloime , New Orleans. Hwornto t.elnro United Btatei Comculaaloncr. .T. D , C/UHTIIIID. TO OLEADSE THE BLOOD , 1 Borofuloni , InlicrlUd and OnnUgloua Ilumon , id thus remove tne root t proilSo caui > of human Oorlnir. to clear the Un of dl-fliruilni : blotches , : hlng Torturvi , Humiliating Kruptlona and I/oath- roe ere ian ed liy Inherited SorotnU , to iiurlfv J bt-autlfy thoaklii , andrtntorolhe hair BO that I tricaof. \ > < UKI roinalar , Cutlcura Iteaolnot , the iw Ulood VuriUur , and Cutlcur * nod Cutlcura fnan , 0 grtat Bkln ur and lleauiltfera , am Infallible. ' .Great Blood Modlcmoa. Tbe half IIM not boon told aa to the great curative iwew ol the Cutloura lUmedloa , I havopald hun oda of dollars for piedlclnea to rate ditouca ot tb jcxj nd kln , 'and never found anythin ? yet to ual the Cutlcura llemedlen. . , , CHAB. A. WILLIAMS. I'rotldenoo „ . , It. I I'nco ot Cutlriira , amall boiM , BOo : Urge l > ox i 1 Cutlcurte o ! ont , Ji p r buttle : Cutlcura Boup , a Cutlcur * Bhavtn j U p , Uo. yolJ byall drug. OTIK8 DKUO AKD CHEMIOAI , CO. , BOSTON1. Astern Cornice-Works IU01J AND BLATB UOOFtHO. ! . SPECHT , PROP. 1111 Dgaglu Bt Omh , Neb. Galvanized iron Cornit&s VDormer Windows , FlnUU , Tto , Ina and > llng. Btwiljt/i ratent Uetallio UlrrUgbl , IraUnt uat d lUtchet Bar aad Brack t * BtMilog.i I am goneul agent for thi abort ) Uo odrooda. Ire U 0 1 , toooloif , '