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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1885)
THE OMAHA DAILY BEJjj , .fPHUHSDAY. OCTOBER 15. 1885. THE DAILY BEE. OMAHA. Ornrc , No. Oil \sn in VAIINAM B NRW VOIIK OITHT. . UOIIM Hi II.HI.M ; . mm iiliix.c.u-ctitSiiiiiliiy. The only MomlHy nioinmir piipui' puljlljliuel 111 tlio pinto. II.IIMC nv J.MU i Onti Vein- . -Jiei/iO/niriv Mnnlli * . f3.M BixMonti ) : > . .Yll'niinMotilli ' . UM Till : Wi.r.Ki.r lll.i : , 1'nhlHie-el Kvtny WciliiMiluj' . TRUMP , I'll SI I11. 1 II. Om > Vfiir , willi inrinlitlii . ( Slf ) One Vc''ir , wit hunt | iiftilluttl . ! . * Fix Moulin , without ) in liihim . 75 Olio Montli , on Irlnl . 10 roiiiuy < riiM > lMK : ! All ( fiimtiiinliiitfum ichilliiK In mmsiuiil fill * ttirlnl iimlti > r < . lioull ( bo iulcin'"i'l to Dili Hni- ion or-fllt : Illl. : . i li'tti-rt ml rviiiltlnnnis nliemM lie nd lrosMjtl < > 'Inn llr.K I'I.-IH.ISIIIMI I'OMI-ANV , OMAHA. Dtiill * . e-liitk * and | wiilllcti | orders lo ho niiiiliinjraliti < loilin < inli < rortti ( > < iiniiuix | * THE BE ( PUBLISniNE COMPW , PROPRIETORS , U KlttKU A'JTlt , KIIITOII. Mit. Uid'.NNUr Kol thereiiflnr till thu racket iitul open li'tlor fiisilade. TAMHAVV Hall ! H dielatlng terms totho Now York tlcnmcnioy. Tills is reform witli 11 vengeance. Tin : ropulille-nu vle-lory in Ohio will no doubt have u healthy etYoot upon tlui re publicans in New Vork. THAT wuterweirk.- . item of ovnr $7,009 looks nrctly muddy. It will bo n very difficult matter to clarify it. Kvr.ti Ilii't ' vigorous shako nf. Thur- man's old fed bandanna /tilled to ward of'thu ) republican storm in Ohio. 'n breeches will now take : their phico in Ohio's idyls with ( Jarlinld'.s tow lioiil. and Thurmun'.s turkey-rod hanelkor- chicf. Tin : lllair educational bill will l > o via oroiiHly pushoel in congress next winter. The southern members will vote to ! i man for it. , appointed naval ollieor at Philadelphia , is worth about $ . ' ( ,000,000. This IH enily a moderate * fortunu for n plumber. Massachusetts has n surplus of 70,000 women. Dakota has a majority of uO,00 ( ) men. Dakota should alonuu hotulmitted to thu union. Tun National Undertakers' convention iieljourncd lee .soon. It should liavu wailed until after the Ohio election. Tlio corpse is ready. ACPOHIHNO to the Philadelphia Record , Omaha has only MJVIMI policeman , all thu re.st boin either sick or drunk. We had not noticed tlio number on the sick re port. _ _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ _ TIUJ polygamistH will be given a brief vest. There will be no more trials in Salt LaK'O for unlawful cohabitation until next February. Tin : governor of Ontario , Canada , has act iislilo November "as a day of general thanksgiving. This is another victory for the American , turkey. ANU now Nellie Clraut is seeking a divorce from a brutal English husband. Misfortunes in thu case of the Grant fumily never seem lo come singly. EUGRNK Hindus is irrepressible. He 5s tired of Manning's ; snubs , ami ho pro poses lo better his condition by capturing tlio eloorkooporrihip of l.lio liou.se , if pos- niblo. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ IP Hismarck were to take 1'rine.o Alex ander by one ear and King Milan by the , othur , so to speak , and bump some sense. into their royal heads , Europe would breathe easier. IT will take sflWO.OOO more to remove tlio obstructions at Hell Onto. More than tea times that sum is contributed an nually in the United States for the pur lioso of putting thorn there. TUB record of failures is not always in teresting reading , but the least interestIng - Ing of all is the record of failures on the part of Oiimlm to soi/.o thu various , oppor tunities which have presented themselves for advancing her commercial interests , It should not bo made longer. iHiH'B big iiluphanl , Km proas , killed her fourth victim hist week in Philadelphia. Sonus one ought to retali ate-by killing Kmpress. The advertise- nioiit for thu .showman in such an exploit wouldn't ho as great but thu publie would bo much mom interested in thu announcement. JKIISKY has just finished Its census. and roportH 1,278,0W ! inhabitants , of , which 77 nor cunt , are white native born , followed by thu colored people , ( lormans and Irish in thu order named. Since thu luut eonsn.s ( ho increase in population is only M jier cent. What between the mottquitos and applejack. New Jersey is fulling rapidly behind her sister states in Uiu race for advancement. THU Klkhorn Valley route will run an oxoiu > lon to Chadron , Duwe.s county , Nebraska , on the 27th lust. This will af ford Omaha merchants , and others , who wo ignorant of this newest part of No- briiskti , an opportunity to learn some thing of tin ) Burprising development of thu northwestern suction of our state from which they are now excluded , coin- inurclally speaking , through no fault of their own , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ DISPATCHES fioin It.Vtnhnkio ; an- lunmou the ajipearanco of 'Vuvural him- ( lrt > d liereeHloux on the Wind river ros- . " This fearful cavalwidu ( irvution. eon- ? til8 of ninety ImPks and 200 wonuui and oliildren , who arc , as a matter of fact , oil' th ir rusurvation on a friendly begging iixpcililioii to thu Arajiahoe , accompa- iiiml by Indian pollen and passes from Uiu agent. TliriMi vo ks ago they left bn- bind them the usual trail of dirt and profanityin Northern Nebraska. juMuuoitl the kind of cloth that nf tlio Imllanscares are made out of in thu dcparuuKnt of llm 1'lnlte It is uviddiil thatlhu reservation alluded lo In llm duspiitch do-'s not ivi < urvo all thu \WHii u \ \ extern Wyomin c. The New Ilnllrond. Interviews with our nuHt prominent business men and capitalist * bring out tlio gratifying fact that the general feel ing throughout Omaha is strongly in favor of a railroad from this city into northwestern Nebraska. It is also pleas ant to record the universal expression that such a road can and must be started with local capital under a homo organiz ation of men strong enough and shrewd enough to , co that OniahaV interests will bo thoroughly protected both in and after its construction. Now that the ball has bcou started , let It bo kept in motion. The subject cannot be too much discussed in all Its bearings. The more it is looked into the more urgent immediate action become. " . Kvery busi ness man in our city who is interested in forcing to the front Omaha's commercial Importance ) is vitally interested in the success of this movement. Day by day trade which ought to como to Omaha , which wants to como to Omaha , and which would eomo to Omaha if it could , is diverted from this c.ity and hurried over the Missouri on to Chicago by the Northwestern. Merchants throughout the entire northwest write us that thu trouble is not with Omaha prices but with freight rates , which bar our whole salers out from legitimate competition with other cities. It is high lime that Omaha should take Ihis railroad bull by the horns. There is only ono method of relief. That is construction of a direct line of our own. No one who knows thu territory to bo traversed by Hitch a line will doubt that it will be a profitable investment to the. constructors. It will Iravol a thickly .set- lied country now dependent almost ex clusively on a single line of road , and anxious for additional rail facililies and will assist in the further development of one of thu richest agricultural sections in our state , populated by more than 125,000 inhabitant- ) . Wo bespeak for tins committee of the board of trade which has this matter in hand u generous and encouraging recep tion on the part of our people. The time has come when Omaha must protect its own interests without waiting for foreign enterprise and foreign capital to boost its boom. The Omaha & .Northern rail road must bo something more than a line on paper. Before winter sets in it ought to be organi/.i'.d for business on a .sound basis , ready lo make the. dirt 11 y as soon spring opens. Tlio Wntorworlc" ) Claim. Mayor Hoyd'a veto of the claim of the city waterworks , for $7,00 ! ) expenses in curred in laying out their mains on streets where grades have been changed was very properly sustained by the unan imous vote of the council. It goes with out saying that it meets the approval of the tax-payers. Months ago when this claim was presented , city 'attorney Cou ncil advised against its payment on the ground that it was unreasonable. The waterworks company has a valuable franchise which gfves it practically a monopoly of the water .supply for tliia city for twenty years , with ten chances to ono that it will bo perpet ual. This privilege does not , however , convey to it the ownership of our streets. If , as it claims , the city were responsible for the expense incurred in lowering or raising their water mains whenever tlio grade of a Ktreut is chang'ed.tho city could not legally change a grade without their permission. In other words , tlio waterworks company would occupy the sumo relations to the city with regard to change of grade as those which are recognized in law as existing between the city and the owners of property adjacent to the streets. If the wat.orwor.ts company is entitled to any damages for a change of grade , involv ing rt disturbance of water mains or hydruntH , no change of grade could bo made until they waived damages or the appraised amount was tendered to it. Whenever a changu of grade was proposed on a street , the appraisers of damages would have to also apprni.su the damages to the water and gas compan ies , the street railways and the telegraph and telephone companies. This is on its face preposterous. No corporation which procures a right of way over or under our streets acquires any property right in the street itself. It must conform lethe the changes which thu city may see lit to make in the grading , sewerage , pavo- incuts and other improvements , How the rejected claim of the water works company was smuggled Into the appropriation ordination is another ques tion which the investigating committee of the council mustsolvo. Wo do not buliovo thatanycourt in this state will sustain the extraordinary claims of the watur works company. TUB Chicago Tribune in commenting upon our ruaunt article describing thu oattlo feeding ostablislimonts at Gllm rein in this state , calls nttuntio't to the wa to of manure by such institutions. Four snub .establishments , says thu Tribune , would annually doplotu of fortuity bOOJ Nebraska acres whoso soil would bo ru- invigorated with thu rufu.su wnslud. Tnis is a point well taitun and which i.s brought to th attention not only of cor porate * feeders but snnllur farmurs throughout this statu. Manure is money , and wnPtu in forlill/.orsi.sasshoi't-bighted as wttnto in any other commodity. Hun- elrcelsof Ihousamlsof dollars are annually thrown away in this ono article ) by No- braskn farmers. KASTRIIN lawyers who hnvo nddeel to their othnr duties the pushing of imag inary claims to Kngllsh estates on behalf of American heirs , have received a blaok eye from Minister I'helps. Mr. Phe-lps has issued a circular warning eruditions heirs in thu United States that theiso pro- tendml claims are "utter impostures and delusions. " Hu adds ( nut this species of rascality has been pushed with such per sistency and ingenuity that ho almost despairs of being able to make the vic tims umlfirstand what a fraud the whole business is , Mr. I'holps Is to bo com- munduel for branding so emphatically this wholu miserable busine'ss. Thoru Is probably no branch e > f swindling moro lucrative than Hint of thu claim agents who ellbcovur grunt fortunes Jylug iu the Hank of Kugland for licdrs in this conn try , and who biro I the prckots of foolish clients under promise's of securing fet them fortunes which hnvo no existence in fact. Kvery few months the daily press contains a milieu of le-gal measured being tnkon by some family gathering to establish their tjtl" to the great estate of souio long defunct ICngllsh nobleman whoso tiamo has never appimrcel in Hurko's peerage. Largo wans of money are raised and plaeeel in the hands of un scrupulous lawyers who pocket the funels ami year by year "report progress , " un til the whole mutter i.s quietly elroppud on a final report that no lltlo can bo found to substantiate the claim. Tlio Ohio Klcotlon. The Ohiei dmnoorue'.y were knockeel down in Teiosilny's olootiem by the prohi billon boomerang , which they launched against the republicans so early in the late disastrous campaign. Thu figures of republican victory wore still rolling up into the tons of thousands , at last re ports. Kvery section of Iho slate shows heavy republican gains. The Western Heiserve piled up an old time majority. Hamilton county , that bloody battlefield of many a campaign , joined the proces sion In opposition to McLean and his gang of spoilsmen , and Cleveland swung into line wUli'r > , ( Ki ) ) majority for t'oraker and his ticket. The party at lurgu , while not sharing in thei enthusiasm which is agitating Ohio to.day , will receive the news e > f the result with quiet cemlcnt , not lews on no- count of its future promise than for its present achievement. The republican party has evidently not yet disbaneleel in the Utickoye stato. Its past campaign was splendidly waged , under elei.se > or ganization. To this , joined to the un natural alliance of the eleniooracy with the prohibitionists , elisgitst at McLean's openly corrupt political methods , vig ilant supe'rvision of thu registration anil watchful care at the polls , is eluo the .splcneliel victory of Iho Ohio republicans. Factional difference : ) wore settlcel , ami the old party wheel horses joined with the younger accessions to tlio republican ranks in presenting a soliel ami invinci ble front. The assurance that Jeilm Sherman will bo his own miccussor in the senate i.s also grateful news. There is no one of its leaders whoso services the parly could spare as little just at the present time. No senator is so fully equipped to eleul with tlio iinancial questions which will form ; i largo part. e > f the important debates of the next .session. The man who planned resumption methods , and assisted more than any ono man in mak ing it possible , and whose voice and vote have always boon cast on the sielo of honest money , will still remain in his senatorial seat , to give Iho benefit of Id 4 lemg experience and clear-sighted vicw.s to tlio ne'xt congress. Another gratifying result of the elec tion in Ohio is the assurance that the ' republican legislation will enact such a liquor law as will remove Iho vex atious question of prohibition from party politico in that state. Thu humbugs who have made prohibition a lover to ad vance their own interests ami the .sell outs , who have deceived honest ; men and women with promises which they never coulel fulfill , in order to line their own pockets at the expense ol the regular parties , will bo relegated to a back seat. Whether it is called by the memo of li cense or tax , Ohio is now certain to se cure a liquor law which just in pro portion to its efficiency will decrease the rapidly waning strength of the prohibi tionists. The supreme court reliovcel from the fesar of the cold water club , will doubtless bo able to suggest a bill that will stand the te < st of the courts. With a good license law In operation , the prohi bition arm } ' in Ohio will fall rapidly to scarcely a corporal's guard. EIOHT largo milling concerns in Den ver iinel Greely have consolidated , with a capital of § 1,01)0,033. ) Colorado , with a wheat crop insignificant in comparison with Nebraska , boasts of nearly five times Iho capital invested in flouring mills by this stato. Denver has five largo mills , Omaha has none. There i.s a good deal of food for sober reflection on this simple statement. The composure with which our people neglect such op portunities for profitable- investment as those afforded by a good mill in our oily is , to say tlio least , surprising. TUB Omaha Republican rises to remark that "tho Omaha banks are getting a little too numiu'ou ! ) in our polities. " Com ing from that quarter of the wind , this i.s a remark which i.s some what amusing. For years anil yours , that paper has boon the mam support of bank rings in their raids on state and local treasuries. Its light for Lonui Clark is still within the memory of man , and wo cannot recall u convention in which the .strikers con- ncotod with that paper haven't fought and bled for some bank ring. Mit. Horn scorns to bo the only elomo- crat in Omaha who has a fight on his hands in the parly. The position of the editor \\wJlerHlil\s \ \ \ ono of cheerful impartiality. Like Artomus Ward , who was willing te > sacrifice ) all his wife's re lations on the altar of his bleeding conn- try , Dr. Miller i.s willing lo push all his friends to the front of the battle which is now waging in the democratic ranks of this overwhelmingly republican state. HON. T. C. liuuNNKU ban reason to fool gratified over his confirmation by thu council after a long ami bitter light. Mr. llruuuor is tin energetic and wideawake ) business man , and lakes a great deal of prielo in the eluvolopnient and material welfare of Omaha. Hu is now in a posi tion whuro Im can assist in pushing the Omaha boom. F.I.KCTIIIC motors are lo supplant locomotives - motives on the Now York olovatuel rail ways. This Is a serious bleiw at the coat- cleaning profession in tlio metropolis whoso business has bvon materially as sisted by tlio groa.so , dropped through thn tracks wl'h great Impartiality on the shoulders of thu walking public in that city. TIIK proclamation of Mayor IJoyd sub mitting the ) question of approving the lo cation and proposed erection of a city hall on I < 'arnam Mtoht , and also the sub mission of a proposition to vote ? 50iOOO in paving bonds.up | oarrt in this Issue. Uoth propositon ! 'will iloubtles.s carry by a largo majority. ' ln. Mtt.MiU , ov0r thu .shoulders of Mr. Uoyel , fouiiH lo iyS dMng his bust to split wiele open thei t niijcravy of Omaha by attacks on the miiioril v party in tlio last primaries. Whether ho will find It. as easy lei join the fragments by next No- ve-mber's elcotioii is , tiother question. Till' Chicago & Hock Island railroad company hns bcceime u prohibitionist. It prohibits its Iowa employes from entering a saloon or drinking. This is : i commendable ordnr , for If sobriety i.s needed anywhere it is in the railway eorvie'o. reports with their eyes shut Ke'.em.s lo bo a favorite occupation e > f Omaha ceiuucilmen. At least this is the favorite excuse whenever any bogus claim pops into public notice , Tun next thing we ) shall hear of in corporation check is n claim from the slivi't railway , telegraph anil telephone ) com panics for eiumngos arising fron changes of grade. TT is Olllcially announced that the Omaha licjmlilican is not. for sale. Tin i.s no surprise to its advertising patron ami utMysdealer.s. It has not boon sale able for many years. M.vvoit Hovi ) comes up smiling will his little veto. It was approved as "tin animously , " as Ihu Jlfrnbl insists llie Het-yd-Miller ticket was at Tuesday's , convention. Oille ) whouleet into the re-publican line ! in k'eiod xhapo iiuel now lot New York folleiw suit. That will bo cnouu'h for the republicans in an offyeur. TIIK VlKllt OK IXJ > irsTKY. The labor organizations nrc gaining nuinrr- icidly. There is conslileirahlo nilhoail building in Knglnml , but ship building i.s dull. Sroel-e-astlnij vveuks are to bo ercc-te.il at Cliie-iicei , with a capital of S2.7)K)0. ) ( ) Machinists complain of leiw wage1 : ! in lioth eastern and western Industrial cu'ntres. The Now Vork steam-tittcis have1 won their strike for ? ! l. . " > 0 per elay , and helpers z\i. \ The industrial siluiUion I.s Improving , Inking Iho whole country Into tie-count. Tim liimherelealcrs in eastern markets are pivp.eriii } ; for a busy winter e > f liihielu work. Maniii'ietnrnn : ! towns tire sprinirimj tii | in the smith. The liitt-rftj birth u Tenne.-suo City. [ The worklngtaeiiinf South Norwalk , Coiyi. , swept the e-iti/.on.s't.ickeil out ot siglit at the recent , ele-e-tion. . , Three years ago tlio nvcrapo w.i e-s jiaiel lo ostrich feather workoraworo , S15 to S'JO ; now theyarerjiiloSr. TheOldhiim ( Kne. ) Hpinncrs tifter hiildln eiiita lenn ; timo. totiK a ivoto ami m'reiml li tiiiht it out to the end. The hut nnel eap'makers itnvo hael a very busy season iinel are now guttlm ; out work for late winter oreli-i-s. * ChicnKo Kninhts hitve resolved to not pal- li/.e ; ( hiiu'se ) Itiniielrie-H - or elcal with any body who i.s knnwiito | do so. The boot and tOme niaimfnetuiers report urgent demand fdrall kinds of stuck , ami fac tories are pretty .well . HUH ! up. ' The two large foundry employers at Albany , N. Y. , are making overtures to the munlelers , and a resumption Is probable' . Foreign hardware manufacturers every- wltete sjH\ik ot' improvement. Heavy orders are coming in for some products. The western nailers expect a general re sumption of work en tlieir own terms. The advances made in nails are encouraging them tohnltl out. Edward Atkinson figures out that the de cline in the cost of living .since 1WJ has lie-on 1'J pen" eicnt , anil tlio elccline in the rate of wages 0 per eon I. Co-operation serins to have taken rnnt In Minnoapoli ! ' , Minn. , where them are ( -even associations tiding n business amounting to over S 1,000,01X1 per year. Tliei lialtimoro A Ohio Cumberland rail mill is to bo renrrangi'il fur structural Iron , and will start up in thrco months with orders enough to run it a year. The long-con tinned strike In the Poplar Creek coal mines at Chattanooga , Tumi. , has been ended , the strikers accenting mi advance of 5 per cent in waffcs. An unusually largo number of manufactur ing companies haves been organized within thirty days. There are opportunltlt'H for en terprise In almnelanue ele-spite the dullness. A St. Louis mill has re-reived an order for 1,000 tons of reillcel plate , the largest ever giv en. Another hit. Louis iiiamu'ai'tnrer has just taken a contract feir six miles o cast- iton pipe fora Texas town. Tlio Central Trades and Labor union of Huston has Inaugurated a system of fort nightly meetings lor intellectual Improve ment. Trailes-unliinlsat Is nourishing thure and nearly all crafts are orgaiii/.e-il. American manufactures Import largo quan tities ofcrap I rem every year , turn'it into sail eir laundry Irons and export them back to England. There i.s not a ceirner in Kurojie where American hardware Is not bold. Thu anthracite minors are preparing for action by instructing a cnmmltte-u to prepare a htateinent for presentation to employers to corn-el evils growing out of the altered con dition of things between now ami when the ) basis of wages was S'3.50. Tito ICnights eif Labor huvo ro-ele'ded T. V. I'owderly , of Scranton , I'ennsvlvanla , grand master workman for the ensuing year , ami Ulchard CJillllths , of Chlcagei , grand worthy foreman. The next general I assembly will beheld held at Klclunonel , Virginia. Many employers insist that a secret ballot would preivcnt strikes in nine case's In ten. and terminate as many If it were allowed. The recent secret balloting at Iho Cleveland rolling mill does not carry outthis view ; only six were in favor of going to work , and ! ! i" were against It , Wnnte > Iu Corporate l < 'ooillii . Chie'iigo Tribune' * ! Tondenole-rt in ag riculture are constantly growiii { * toward great enterprises. " / ' i.jilmoro.Ts'eb. , for Instance , afoedingvslahle HOIK800 foot has been e-onstrucled , continuing ! ) ,7r)0 hop- unite stalls. Thrco seitnlif catflu are lei bo fattened every yoai , 11J50 , cattle in all. nil-valors , facilities for cooking feed , tramways for carryjiig.foed , ami other modern improvements in feeding are iu iiite. Twenty-live nfem are employed In the stable , ay high 5',0)'J ' ) . ) bitshol.s of corn ami 7,000 tons l > f hay will bit feul in a year , and the mqnurc , instead of being - ing cleaned out in the tisiuil way , will bo tlu.shed with watui : iulo an adjacent stream. / -j A company whichwujtlel ruthlessly so waste manure , uvun in-Nebraska a statu of comparatively virgiit soil should bo conMilereel a publio ' "lomy. It is prob able , however , that tlmcompiuiy i.s look ing to present , prolits. Similar establishments monts are said to be under wi\y \ at Blair , ( iratid Island anil 1'loivneo in the same state. When all four establishments are in operation the manure eiarned into the htroams will annually elopletu of fertility bO.OOO Nebraska acres. The necessity of those gigantic feeding establishments Is said to bo the inability to produce woll-fiittoneel catllu on the range. Some years ago , at Iho boot-sugar farm at Chatsworth , stables for the feud- jug of WM ) sloorn were erected , with facil ities as stated above , for fattening bul locks on the rufusei of the factory in con nection with ooni-tneal. The manure , however , was carefully saved ami aji- plied to thu land. Whatever the loss in manufacturing beet sugar , thu fat stears made prollt , and one Benson 450 Tcxans were turned out fat enough to bring thu best jirico In IhoNcw Y"rk ) imirkol. and with only one carload mil eeinsiele-red good enough to grade' as extra fat but * leioks. Clmli-nmn Wuri-oii'H Vtexv. liufl'iilei C'ommeroial : The best we e-an lieipe feir this year Is a unite-el party veilei. Hut Iho elemoornts will also bo unite-el ami solidly against us , iindllio nut-'li'Volnud ! ( element will bo enlhusi.-i.stio for the Hill lieke-t Admitting therefore- that Daven port will win back the entire republican vole that bolted last fall , the fight will bn a pqimro ono between the two parlies , with the chances about eivon.v may as we-ll leiok jhe facts iu the faro. _ lf the ) republican ticket Is sucee.xsful this year it will bn the result of hard and system- alii ; work. There is no time lo bo hut. Let , HID work of organi/Uion : bo begun at once. A CHECKIERED C'AREER. A r rose , of n Notorious Criminal A Uriel'History ol'Ills II To. Nashville ) Union : Oil hist I'ridaya neat ly-attired Mranger of pleasing aildres.s tind aHaDlemuinners arrivcel in this city upon erne1 e > f the > moniingninsnnd ( ! ivgis- lercd at llm Nicholson IIouso as u e-eiin- merclal trave-ler. Shortly after lii.s arri val hu sent , ti te-lejiholio message1 te ) Clileif Kerrigan of the Aiotropolitnn pollen fore-o , tutel tlio two-helel a consultation in the gentleman's room. The. gentleman , whose ) miino is by special renui-.st with held , stilted that no was fho special ilcteu- live ) eif a we.sle-rn railrutid sinel produced his/Tiulontinl.s as such. Ho was on the trail of it yelling min : who feirme-d one of ti parly that attempted to rob a pns.sen- ge-r train ami hail traced him tei Kashvillo. A ele-.scription ef ) the man was give-n to the Chief anil the matter placed in the hands eif eletective-s 1'eirter and Custccn. In less than iiu hour from thotimotho information - formation was given n man Miiswi-ring llio. eli-seriplieiu was iu the station hou.so awaiting idontifiealion by llm .stranger. He preiyed le > bo the mail wauled and hu was iiuielly oonveyed to jail. Albert Waller , the man who is charged with the e-rime , is _ n young man of S'J years , elnrk comph-xieini-el , live fee-t eight inches high and propeissossing iu appear ance. Hollas been in tlio e-ily leir Iho past. nine memt'is ' iinel was omploved at llm livery stablei of H. L. Waller , No. iT : ! Ninth Market street , at willed ! phieei ho was working vylii-n arre.ste-el by thedetee - lives. The e-ireuinstnueies surrounding the atloinptcel robbery are briefly as fol lows : On the night , of the 2Jd : eif Oe-tober , 1881 ! . the west bound passenger train on the Union Pacific railroael st | iped at u small station in Hamilton county , Kan sas , known as Barclay. Scarce ! v had it slacked up when a man jumped in the engineer's eab and , presenting cocked rcveilvers : tt the head of the engiiiee-r and liroman , ordered them te throw up their hands. At the same lime- two men hotudcil the express car , with theinlen - lion of capturing : in < i going through the safe. As ono of thorn leaped in tin ; door his pistol was acoiilentally discharged , which awiikouoel tlio messenger and bag gage-master , and si lively fusilado at oiico coinnioneie-el. Tiui man em the en gine , hearing the roort ] eif the tirenrms in the eixprcss car , ordered the engineer to jMtll eiit of Iho station. Ho rofiiseel te > elo it and was shot eload in his tracks. The- fireman was also shot , but live-el for Homo time. In the meantime the men on tin ) express car hail been elrivem out by the plucky mes.sfiiiger and baggago-mns- ter and t'ho half-awakoneil pa. songe-rs be-gan te > pourout of the coaehos. Iu the exe-itestneiit thes three men escaped into tin ) woods , louvitifj ne ) eluo : is to the-ir iihmtity. The neighboring woods were scouroel the next elny by n mounted posse iu the hopeof ovur'tuk'ing the fugitives , but without , avail. The imittor wa.s then placed in Iho hands eif the special detectives of tlio company , anil since them has constantly claimed theiir attention. Numerous ar rests hnvo boon maelo em suspicion , but aftcrwarel rulottsud. Six inoiillis after tlio tragr-ely : i oluo was eliscovercel , which was epiiotly worked , anil the names of the three perpetrators of the. eiutrago learned. Then be-gun the work of fullowing thorn stop by stop , ono de-teclivo taking each man. The murderers , itvis : also eliscovored , belonged to tin organi/.eel band of heir.se- thiovi-s iinel liighwaymen. which eijioratcel Kansas , Nebraska'Missouri and tlio In- elian Nation , numbering among its mem bers seime of the most noted tuu daring purloiuorsejf horsollesh that esvorinfe-ste-el the. iionntry , and wore eqnsttintly on the move from the ) hirge.r citie-s eif the east tei the we.storn plains. It was loarncel alsei that Albert Waller was a native of West Tennessee , but that his pe.oplo removed to Arkansas ye-ars ago. lloro the young man fell in with bad company anil he-gan the life which will cause him to spmiel the remainder of his days in prison , if In- escapes the gallows. I In joinoel the band of horse thieves in Kansas and was soon noted for bis oxpleiits an a woodsman. Ho would steal a heirso in ono state , rielo it into another , dispense of it , steial another ill the place whore the last , was sold tinel , re-turning , .sell that animal at the pliie-o from which the first wasstolon. Ho Imally came to grief in Qiiallatown , in the ) Indian Nation , being caught with several Kansas thoroiighbreels to which ho could not show a porfiict title , and was loelguii in jail. Knowing that in Kansas thei piiiiisliniiinl for horso-stoiiling was npt to bo a bailer around the nock , ho was shrewd enough te > plond guilt.y of theft in tlio Nation and was tried by the feele-ral authorities and sent to the peni- teiutiary for eightcesn months. Ho sorveel sixteen months , getting the biilanoo good time , and upon his relca.so startoel for now fiolels of labeir. Since then ho has travolcel promiscuously , ami after the attempt to rob the train migrated south , Ho spent some time in Memphis and afterwards trnvolod through dilVeront parts of Tonnesoo , winding up in Nash- villo. The evidence against him the dn- Icctivo eloo1 ! iiid to elisclei.so , but the tin- dorstanding is that it is protly strong , Tlio I'leiimor "Uoo'ts. " Die I'ionuur Hook and Ladder company iod ! a mooting at Ihu police court room Tuesday evening , about liftv mumbeu'.s joing pretsont. A report was ruael by thei ru.sloiis showing a balance of nearly fi,000 : in the treasury to bo divided among ho seventy mombors. The report was tccopled , and the si'crotaiy will draw warrants for tlio amoiiiits elite thei ineli * vidual nmnb'n'.s. Tli' ' < report also gave very favor.i'Mo mention to the oflicurs of the organisation in genera ! and the Hi'oretary , R. ( J. llyh-y , ami treasurer. I , I'uiiilt , iu particular , for thu faithful lorformaiiee ef ollicial ilnlius. An n I- ei'irnmunt was taken to nest Tuesday light lo hear the final reports of mli- iirs , ili.sband , and adjourn sine elio. The jooks and ] iain < r.s of the company will bo ntoreel aw.iy iu the vault of Iho county ilerk for future roforenco. . r , Cluirlod Marvin , in eihargo of ( Jov. Staudford's car of fast horses , pas.suel ) nmhu bound for California , yesterday. lo said that ho mot with bud luck this uasun , us some of the bn.st horses ho hail entered for rnee.s wuro unublo to eom- : oto , owing to sioknei.ss. For a few sea- ions in the past ho lias gonu lunn with a m.shel of mono.v. Thu luiluro of emu s iv- on will probably not bankrupt tingov iraor. It is underload that no makes a ittlo mbuety on the outsielo. Coughs , Colels ami Sore-Throat oailily to li. H Douglas. ! & Sons' Capsl- uui Cough Dropa. BANQUET HALLS DESERTED , A Oatutio Nobmkan Viowa the Rtiina of Liming Towns iu Colorado. Denver's Ccmvlh lln > ItcsiiK of a Sorles oT Aooteleiil-t HpeC aiiel tiullloti Crnelually ( ! : > Ing Down. DINVIU : : , Col , , Oct. I ! ) . [ Ceirrespond mice of tlio HHU.J A rne.enl trip Ilirougl Colorado with some ) time .spent in the oily of Denver- , reveals a * very iliflerenl stale of things there than what , existed ! few years ago , or during and Immeelt- alely sucoeeeUng the great Leadvlllo sll ve-r dlseoverle's. Thu phenomenal growtl of Iho oily of Denver ts aneitlmr illuslra lion of Iho peculiar vie-issitudeslhat char ncte > rixe mining eountrlevs aiiel towns tin world over. In.Colorado ami all over the mining regions of the Heioky moun tains the ! traveler is shown the1 site's o emcei thriving mining rumps and tenvus where thousands e > f people ) once fouuel business and fortune , per Imps , but where now a singh decaying cabin e > r a fi'W stakes stie-kinj , iu the sand are the only oviele'iie-cs Ilia the foot of civilix.i'd ' nnin ever trod tlui grouuel. Mining camps grow intobns.\ marts iu : i few months , with inhabitant' numbered liv the thousands , ami : i fe\\ months latorlhi ) Irave'le-r will require tin services of an "eild settlor" or a skillet guide te > find the situ e > f the late "grea city. " Diinve-r i.s the only city eif fifty o sixty thousand pcopluuvor built up wilhii the1 Unileel Stales tit least , solely upoi the.strength of a mining boom ; ami i tin-to is : in\ , reason why it shall not share the ! lain of all oilier towns and camps ci > n tnieted under M mi lareireiinthlance-s it is not niiite apparent to the casual oil .server. I'lie e-ity owns itspre'Sont elimen sions and importance teA A .siin : : : . > roisri'N'ATK ACMMPKNTS. l-'irsl aiimng them was act of eongress in IHH ri-etiiring | thu trotiitiry to bu.vsfj ) , 000,000 of silver bullion every y * ar am ceiin it inte > bn/.xard dollar1) . Next wa.s the dihs-eivcry a fe-w months laler < > f llie vast and phe-uomoiial silver deposits ai Leaelvillc. The net eif cejngress fur nished the : markeit for silver and an im pecitmoits prospe-ctor by ! iee'iel"nt slum- ojed upon a intiss of siVve'roro that. ex- ; cile'd the whole worlel beeaiiso of its rielmess aud epiatitily. Capital poiireil iu from all quarters. Thousands and millions - lions of elollars were shippeel teiColorado for investment. Men that be'ggee ! : i bre-akfast. were milliomures before dinner. Hundreds of men staked eill't : few acres of barren ground and a few lieiur.s laler sold out I'm money enough to build n mansion ami retire anil liveat ease upon the pnici'i'ds of their honest ( ? ) toil. Loaelvillo wa.s high ii | ) amid the clouds , whore wiulcr prevnih'd te-u months of the yetar , ami thu remajning tw.i months created the ) im pression ilia ! it was yc.r.y late in thu fall , so the ! men whe ivnli/e'd their fortunes at Leaelvilleent elown into the. plains at Denver ami built costly resiliences ami stores and opera houses , etc. The thousands of people who Hocked to tlio slate in search of silver wen ; sell eaters and hael to wear clothes , and hero the ! ranehenian's chancooccurroel. It was f > 00 to 1,00.1 miles to any farming country , where femil was abundant , and the fe-w railroiuls then in operation between the ! mountains and thu Missouri rive-r charge-el exorbitant rates e > n all fooel supplies. These ! rates orr.imr.i ) AS < v i-itOTr.errivi ; TAKIKK for the Colorado raiiehiniiii , so ho re- donbleid his ellbrts , plowe'el more ground , look out new irrigating ditches anil slretchi'el every nerve to rai.su moro i'ooel , for which he-.got tin exorbitant price , anei cejusequently heaped up nelie-s. Machin- e'ry was wantuel tei eiovolop the ) silver mines , ami bunco shops were ! erected for its manufacture , ami some in that way accumulated fortunes. Grocers , dry goods men , clothing muu , ami nil the1 ac cessories eit a large ami uctifc population planted themselves in Denver and grew anil thrived. What was a fewyearssince tin obscure , elull ami .struggling town thus grow in a short , time into a thriving city with metropolitan airs. But a change is evidently in store for that great city , and it appears probable that the ebb tielu has already sut in. It , will be a sad thing for Ihu sanguine ! people of the "Centennial State , "and no right thin kilur oitwiu of iinv oilier state will feed at all elispewctl to gloat over her misfortunes. Thu progress of her decay will be very analogems te > Ihei process of her pros perity. Her prosperity was based upon silver , and silver will have much te > elo with the processes of her ele'cay. It be gan with silver and it will end with silver. The iie\t ! congress w.ll bo very apt te > repeal thu Blanel law anil as otheir nations tire elisposcel more ami morei toward the single golel stand ard , and to the use of hilvur only feir small change ) , it is very probable that the value of that metal will sink in a very few years TO O.VK-1I.U.K WHAT IT NOW I.S. The mines eif Mexico alone , where men are satislnul te > work fe > r a few cents a day , can more than supply-the world w.th all thu silver required for small change. Thoru is no double standard sentiment to speak of in thu United States outside of n tetw eleiolr.naircs like 1'rof. Walker , of Massachusetts , and semio others ; and the Blanel bill is entirely too expensive as a means of furnishing the people with changu. There is no propri ety whatever in requiring the sec retary eif the treasury tei buy $ i 1,000,000 a year of silver bullion to coin into eleiHurs which answer no oilier purpose , whatever , In emr money .system , than that which isnlroaelyHorve-d liy tiiu half elollars and epmrlurs. and bank notes nnelothorelevicu.s.ull of which arc alike ! used to dice ; ! ; ot ) ' and transfer golel value * . The only thing Unit could hayu thu fatei of silver ami that of our bright hi-stur btato on the "crest of the continent , " would bo the institution of thu elemlilo standard of value in thu United Status ; but as I re-marked before the ruling sontimunt of thu strong finan cial mun of both political parties nru against it. lint I had not yet finished Ihu epitaph I commenced to writn. The people of Denver and eif Colorado are plucky anil will elio hard. Their /.oal to csuapo a fate ) which many of them fomxr.o , in corn- meiiiililo , anil I mu.it say , i.s ninii | batten- t.ian theirlejy.io. riiiiv AIM : sTitivixo fo build up manufactures , but' what use can you make of manufactured goexls wlie-ru Ihoro is nobody to buy and use ) them * When this silver mine * aru shut down , and thuru is no inducement to prospect and spend labor anil money in seuruh of now onus , and Iho tliou.snmU of men now engage i In tli-il buMm ss como out of the mountain * and mu-k homes ill lower altitudes and in either calling * , who i.s going to buy machinery find other manufacture. ) ? Whoa thes miners and pro.ipeclors are gonu , and Hie thousands who eloponiled upon them In emu way or another as merchant * , oto. , tire gonu with them. wliei is the ranchman going to sell his stuff lo ? Ho can only nttord to rai.su food for u home market , for llio cost eif irrigaliem ami trunoporlution to e > jw > ti > ru mark b > absolutely lorlml him to enicr into com jie'iitleiii with tl > Kansas , N'-brie-ska , low.i and Illinois fiiniu'r C.oloradonuu'h man must gei buck lo llm conditions bi < fore thu boom -from vegetables and hay and grain , to eu-ttlu and hhcop And so throughefiit Iho list e > f Iho Co'e ' ndo indus tries whiuli leuw. m-nspured to phonomc- LSN The Great Invention , For EASY WASHING , IN HARD OR SOPT , HOT OR COLD WATER. irfMoiif Harm to FA Illtiror HAA'DS , niuli'nrtlriilnrtyneiaiittHtlo ll'ii rmCHmnfe * . No Mniily , rloli .r jicor. Khntiid IJD without IU t-eild by nil llre-vom. but. / > ittrnotvllo Inil- l.itlons. I'Jtttttiilxn U manutactuiixl only liy JAMES PYLE , NEW YORSCj nally within a few years past. 1 eanuot e-M-apu the convletion that Ihej'owu their existence lo tin acolelnul. Yon can't nx- De-el. the > lightning lo strike Iwlco in the H 'lue pliiee year after year. So when the. "Queen cilv of the plains , " which name the,1 people e > f De-uver elelight to bi'slew upon their pet , is deprived of her silver crown , shu will cease te > bo a epteon and gradually sink le ) tlui degreeof u very e'oiiimoii person indeed. TIIK MOII.M. OK AM , THIS i.s that Omaha is the natural emporium tor all the northwest trims-Missouri eiHintn , ami the foundation of hetr pres ent and future groutui'.ss e'iin never bei uneleriniue-d noreleslreiyeel by an accident of public opinion en4 ah act of congress. No thief bo ho " " " , "gold-bug , "bond- holder. " eir what-not , can steal away the mud-sill of her prei > pcrity. With tlio silver mining iniliiMr.v close-el out , there is no apparent reason why Denver should ho anything moro than a bivouac for a f ; w In n Ired cow boys. lint yon may cloc all the silver mines of llie world , and the fertile valleys ef tlio Missouri and 1'lattc rivorsoffer hospilablo ami happy home1 * , and preililablo busi ness for countless ihousiinds. OlISKKVlIR. ISitte-e-.i elo not only dlstln- Kiil.sli theiiiM-lves liy their Haver and arnttiiitlc eielortihiive nil others teiiera.ly iise-d , lint Ihey are also a sure iircvenitlve of all diseases ori-iimitlnjr from the eliitu.-Ivu ! organs. He- ware of counterfeits. Ask your Kioceiror iliiiu'itist tor the ci miino article , matiufae- tiiie.d liy Dr. . ) . ( ' , . 15. Me-irorl .fcSun.s. I'lie Original .ieaii Vnleun. | In pulilie : c. , lim.-iton ! , "LesMisorablos , " iiiiiiuig the proHu works here enumerated , lias taken so much thu lead that it is necelh'ss lo speak much eif it hero. Its great .scope , its iniineiiso pity , its sccne.s of tumuli , its lovuand its peaces , its noble , its humorous and its soreliel e-lmracters tr'-all known now tliroiighotit Kurope. K\cn translation cannot mar its beauty , and many men and women of our own working e-lasst-s , exjie-cially in mining di.stvicts , pri/.e it very elearly. An in- cielent which excited general com ment when the "Miscrnblei.s" first ap peared , the theft eif the archbishop's sil ver candlesticks by the unhappy man to whom hu had given shi'ltor when ho found him hunted elown after his release ) from the prison li ) wliiedi hu had bcou ejonsigned for having stolen a loaf for bin little ; .starving brother , was probably sug gested to the poet by an anecdote ( 'old in the "Memoirs of St. . Simon. " Here is thu anecdote translated anil abridged for those who chance not to have re'ael llm "Memoirs : " M. d'Orleuns added many secret charities the public ones , whicn consumed the whole rove-nue of the Dish- oprice. Amongst these private grants was an annual pension which ho he-Mowed upon a poor ruined nobleman who had no either help ; ho was alone in the world and he ! elim-d daily at the bishop's table. One morning the ! servants missed two massive silver ornaments from their mas ter's room , and having observcel that thij poor genlle-niiiii had paid special atten tion to them they Mispi'cteiil him ol huv- ing purloined them , and communicated this suspicion tei M. d 'Orleans. Thn bishop would iwl believe it , yet was shaken by Iho fact that this 'habitual guest , all : it emco ceaseel to fivquunt his table. Presently he sent for him and in n private- interview exlniete-el from li'm a full omfixsion. Th MI M : l 'Orleans saiel to htm that ho must hnvo been in great want indeed to commit such an action , and taking from his purse WO , pre-souted thesm lo him , reproiichjng ! ijm for. his want of confhjencei , bogging Idm to resume his elnily visits , to forgot what hael passcel , as ho himself meant lode do , but never to do thu likei of it again. Phe story came lei bo known , not threiugh the bishop , but through the unhappy gentleman himse-lf , who told it out of rntittulu to show what manner eif man was M. d 'Orleans. Ltuly I'ollouk in I'emple liar. _ _ Itrllllant as Day. The beauty of woman is tlio tinliinil ami worthy admiration of the Morner sex , and to heighten it by all such le-gili- niiitii moans as are not inimical to health or subversive eif good morals should bei ono aim of female existence. The skin s ono of theiso parts upon which thn nest improvement can bo made , anil by thu iiHD of I'o/.zoni's "Medioatcel Com plexion Powder1' laelie-.s may overcome ) my want eif that peachy pulpiness , that icnrly brilliiinoy anil velvety Htnoothncsii ivhich are its greatest , clmrin. Unlihu oo many preparations this Is porfonllj larmlcss , anil can bo used without Ilia slighlest fear of detee-tlon , sind \ylll neve'i' esxoite any of theiso diseases wliioli renelor sallow or cause the appcarancn if unsightly pimples It. is twee ! e-xtim- sively by llm stars of opera nml elrama , end no fashionable ! lady's teiilbt tiiblo h completely furnished without it. Di-iTiieirr , Ot-l. l.l ! DnrliiB the lust if Iho le-Kisliitiiri' , u law was pasM'd ) iroilhIU ! UK the iiiiimifaelnro eii' olcomnrKarinc. Te > lay IhuVii > nu coiinly ennt decided the \u\\ \ ineoiiKtltiitioiml fur ( Vrlmii'id leiisons , nml li'i'ansii 11 pri'vciits mi'ii liemi t-n iKljij ; Iu itiliiiilc Imsiiifss , Complete Treatment , with Inhaler for Everj Form of Catarrh , $1 , As' ' * for SAN- FORD'S I1ADJCAL CURE. Hi-mi folds , Wateirj ) i rlmiWH iriim tin 'u- < t ; in < l K.ii' + .lllnxltif .Noi-o.i in llm llciul I Ndi-.imi , lliimiu'hpim | < ro Clioltliiif mucus ( Hi I od co d , ini-iiilii'ieiii i'lcin. n/l loul lie , ili'il lue'iilli Mr i * i > t i n oil iiiiicll. lu > ii , nihl lie-ar nml ravii'/O' i'lircli'i ( ) . iu'iiiiM , liio ipln ti nun Un T'li'iiiet In iho CliiMl , ) , ' ) | /slii. \Vi im o , nun Klenli , Ixisaeil hlc ( | i , IMII .cmo'l. liotilu Ilieillcnl f'uiei. mill ho * I I'lnn'lui i mill ono llr SaulonrH Inlmli-r. 'n ' mil . 'l I'll ' llniKHNlrt , 41. ; \ > -li KM4 H\N oiin' HMHCII , c'l'iin , it iiuie' > ll-.tlllieiieiii o VnHi lla/.i'l. ' /\ni. I'lmi. he l''ir , M 'ln\ ( . ! 'oiler Drug and Chemical Company , Boston KI1 - J3V I'AINS and ilmt i.'li aln/ii i vcr.v | iiC' < iill intlt UIIMIMI l.iiliu.-yy , uuiili lnix'kii , eiter \MiiMlu ; Oi'lni | c-U'ini-inurlilni',1 , . . . * m " III' LITie'flll AMI"I' IX I'lMfl'KII , . ninv , orlxlli'1 ! . I'lt-inim , nml | ie > e lr imlmnli.1 u iiielii nml milimiimitloii Al UriiKHltlrt ) * > * > \ ' " ' < inr l. Mielluilliuu. 1'OTJHii.1 . CAUto. , ;