'THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 22 , 1880. , THE DAILY BEE. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TTJIMS Of sunscnrrriox 1 Dally ( Mocnl.isr Edition ) I ncludlng Sundfir DEE. Ono Year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1001 ForBlxMonthi . 6O For TJirt.fi Months . 260 Tlio Ornnlin SmHlny llr.n , mulled to any iulilro < w , Oue Year. . . . 200 Orrtrr , JJo. MI AND ail F.4nvw STBIIKT. Nrw VOHK Office , HWI\I cA. rntmrvR IIIIILIHNO. W.ASIIIXUTOX urriCK , Nu. 513 FoiHiTCK.-mi sriitnt. /II comtnunlo.itioiH rolntlnir to news nn < ln < ll- tortnl mnttor * houM bo addressed to the KM- Tim or THE HUB. HIBISCUS i.rnrnsi Mtiii \ lnr ; s letters nnil rcinlttanconahniild bo a > 1llrOMOl ( tO TlIK ItKK I'l'III.INIIIMI COMPANY , OM MIA. Drnrts , ohocks ! unit po tolflro order * to bo made payable to tlio ord r of tliu company , TH [ BE ( POBLISHlpm , PBOPRIEIOHS , E. UOSEWATKH. RniToiu T1IK DAIIjY BKB. Hwofn Htntcincnt ofGtroulntlon. State ot Nebraska , ) County of Douiclns. Ca'8' < 5eo. 1) ) . T/ficlmcksecretary ot the BPO Pub- llshlnn company , does solemnly swear lli.it tlio nrlunl circulation of tlio Dnllv Heo for tlic week ending Sept. 17th , IWJ , was as follows : Totnl Saturday , llth AHO Sunday. 12th Rioo Monday. 13th 1B.SX ) Tuesday. Hlh 1H.O.V ) Wednesday , 15th M/M 'I'lmrMlay. Ifilh l2wn ! Friday , 17th W.OOO Avernfro 13.1.73 Subscribed nnd sworn to before nio this eilli day of Sept. , 1SSO. N. I1. Knit. , ISKAL.I Notary Public. ( .ieo. B. Tzschticlc , bclncfir.'tduly sworn.rto- poses and says that ho Is secretary of the lleo I'nljllsliliifr company , thnttho notual nvenwe dally circulation of thn Daily Hoe for the month of January , 1RSO. was 10,378 copies ; for February , ISSrt , 10,603 copies ; for March , ISM , 11.637 copies ; for April , ISSfl. 13,191 copies ; tor May , 1SSO , 12,4.7J copies ; for June , I8h6,12,20a copfos ; for July , 1b80,12y 14 copies ; for August , lt0 , 12,401 copies. ( .Ji'.o. J ) . TZSCIIUCK. Subscribed nnd sworn to before mo , this 4th tiny ol Sept. , A. D. 1880. N. P. Fnir , , fBEAr , . | Notary Public. JlEl'UUUCAN COUNTV TICKET. For Henntor.H : OKO. W. LINiNGEU , JJUUNO TJ5SC11UCK. For IluprcsontnUves : W. ( } . W1HTMOUE , F. B I1IUUAKD , OKO. IIEIMJIOU , II. S. HALL , JOHN JIATTniESON , JAMES 11. YOUNG. T. W. DLAUKUUUN , M. O. mCKETTS. For County Attorney : KDWA111J W. SIMEUAL. For County Commissioner : ISAAC N. PIERCE. Six weeks will afford Douglas county republicans ample tiino to dismiss candidates - dates and plan for victoiy. Jui PAUL'S candidacy for the gover norship cannot bo discovered with the argcst sized telescope. It has floated oil' in space. TOJI KENNAKD'S ' "boodlo" seems to have carried the day in Lancaster , but it will not 1)0 powerful enough to control the First district. WITH both republican nnd democratic conventions endorsing the public record of Charles 11. Van Wyok , Nebraska has rousou to feel proud of her senator. Tni : anti-Van Wyck faction of the re publican party in Nebraska is daily grow ing weaker. At the present rate they will scarcely muster a corporal's guard by the time tlio legislature meets , " Gioitrn : : GOULD dodged the reporters on Ills wedding trip by taking no wed ding trip at all. lie was as hard at work nt hid desk the day after his marriage us If the event was of no more importance than a decline of an eighth in Wabash. THK people have been winning against the politicians in a do/.on conventions during the past ton days. Senator Van Wyck's appeal for a direct vote of conli- denee at the polls has been reinforced by direct votes of endorsement in the con ventions. OSIAIIA democrats will bo astonished to learn on the authority of their organ that Senator A. S Paddock is seeking their suffrages for the olllco of county commissioner , "Mr. A. S. Paddook" is vouched for by the Ikruhl "as a sound domoorata , man of sterling integrity and lurgo business capacity. " Residents of Beatrice will bo equally astonished at the information that "there could bn no ob jection to him on the ground of resi dence. " As Senator Paddock lives nearly a hundred and twenty miles distant from Omaha nn the crow lllos , wo imagine thnttho Herald lias boon mlslnlormod when it says that ho "is being urged for the plaoo by many prominent citizens ot Omaha as well as many living bovond the corporation Hues. " THK ait congress district of Ohio , which includes most uf thn populous and wealthy manufacturing city of Cleve land , is at present represented by a demo crat , although the district Is republican by a good round majority whenever piuty Hues are strintly drawn. Several conditions have during the past four years operated to divide the republicans In thu congressional contests , but this year noun of the conditions unfavorable to harmony appear lobe present , and an the democratic representative 1ms not grown in popular favor , there is very good promise that ths | Ohio district will send a republican member to tlio fiftieth congress. Another reassuring fact is in the nomination of Hon. Amos Townsend - send , who represented the district for six years from 1877 to 13S3 , and as a work ing member made a most creditable record , haviugaccomplished more for the material interest. . * of tlio district than nny representative before or since , Mr. Townsend is a successful business man , nnd his practical judgment was highly C3tr.oir.cd by tlio committees of which lie wjii a member when in uongrcsi. As a poli'.Ician ho is able , shrewd , active ami 8tr.\lghlftirward ; , while his republicanism 13 thorough and whole-hearted. It is l.-ruUy .sn'o to predict Unit with Mr , Town- scud as their tumlldatu the republican * of | h .lit Ohio district will reduce by on * tlu domowulic majority in cougre * . HO" . Uruno Tzschtiok. The name of Ilruno-Tzschuck will bo a tower of strciigth to the republican ticket which with Mr. Liningor ho loads as a candidate for state senator. Kruno T/.schuck is one of the oldest residents of Nebraska and one of the most sterling of her German citizens. For years a farmer in Sarpyconnty , ho is well known throughout the state as nn earnest repub lican , a good citl7.cn , an honest man and an elllclent public .servant. Mr. Tzschuek has occupied u number of positions of public trust , lie has been sec- rolnry of state of Nebraska and later the Rllicicnt consul of thu United States at Vcra Crux in Mexico. His in tegrity no olio lias over dared to question. With G. W. Lininjrer and Uruno 'JV.selmck heading their legislative ticket , Douglas county republicans can enter the light > vith ovcry assurance of success. Mr. Tzschuek , like Mr , Liningcr , stands squarely on llio Van Wyck plank of the platform , „ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Keep Tlinin nt Homo. The people of Nebraska owe it to them selves to retire to private lito every can didate for the legislature whoso record is not straight and dean on the issues of tlio day. They owe it to their parties to rebuke by a vote of lack of confidence every trickster , sell-out and traitor to his constituents who proved himself in the last legislature unworthy of eonlidonce and recreant to the trusts committed tn his care. Two years ago this fall the people of Nebraska were nailed upon to give the verdict of approval or dissent on the constitutional amendments - monts providing for a railroad commis sion. 15y an overwhelming majority at the polls they rejected the proposition to turn over their power of regulating the railroads to a body of men who wore certain to be controlled by the corpora tions. The verdict of the people waa sharp and decisive. There was no grounds for dispute as to what it meant , It was a clear and conclusive victory over the railroad brijrade of corporate hench men. But before the legislature ad journed the railroads succeeded in securing enough votc.s of re publicans to accomplish in the state capital what they had failed to secure at tlio polls. The infamous commissioner bill was passed in out rageous defiance of popular sentiment and individual pledges. On the linal passage of the bill the following mem bers of the legislature voted in its favor : In the senate Drown , Ihiokworth , Burr , Cherry , Clark , Day , Dolan , Durland , Einsel , Filson , Goohnnr , lloebol , Howe , Howell , Hyers , Lewis , McAllister , Moik- eljohn , Met ? ; , Norrls , Paul , Putnam , Skinner , Smith of Fillmore , Smith of Lancaster , Snell , Sewers and Spencer. In the house Adams , Aikiu , Bailey , Blaco , Booth , Brandt , Brtmnor. Burn- ham , Callahan , Conger , Capo , Corr , Cox , Dempster , Emerson , Glenn , Hall , Haxen , H'iimrich ' , Henry , llockncll , Holmes. Holt , Johnston , Kivloy , Kuony , Leo ( of Furmis ) , Leu ( of Mcrrick ) , Liosveld , Luce , M'Ardle , Mulvahil ) , Nowmyor , Neweom- bor , Olmstead , Osgood , Peterson , Rice , Kiley , Kobortson , Robinson , Root , Hus- sell , Smith , Seoville , Stover , Taggart , Taylor , Thomas ( of Cass ) , Thompson , Troiii ) , Varnor , Waitt , White , Williams , Wright , Mr , Speaker. The above arc the names of the men who dared to defy public sentiment and I he vole of tlio people in fastening upon Nebraskans a commission which they had expressly de clined to endorse. Should -any of the members of the last legislature who voted for the creation of the odious railroad commission present themselves as can didates for renomination , they should bo confronted with their record. It will bo safe to keep them all at homo. 11 cur I a j ; From Home , The apparent indlU'eronce of President Cleveland regarding tlio condition of af fairs at Charleston is beginning to bo eritieised in the house of his friends , the south , and it would not bo surprising to find that there is a great deal of indigna tion In that quarter whloh has been kept under control for reasons not dillleult to interpret. The simple truth is , that the president's course in this matter has the appearance of cold-blooded heartlcssncss , and there is no apparent ground on which it can bo excused. Tlio fact that ho has no lawful authority to use gov ernment supplies in aid of the Charleston suflerors does not acquit him of the duty of exerting himself in such direction as ho may for the relief of those unfortunate people , although ho apparently assumes that it does. The limitation upon his ex- poutlvo powers doesn't all'ect his privi lege as a citi/.oo or put nt-y constraint upon his humanity. As citizen and man ho might have with entire propriety ap pealed to his fellow-citizens in behalf of the sutforcrs and glvon an earnest of his sympathy In substantial form. The example - ample would have been an incentive to others , and undoubtedly would have caused a very material dif ference in tlio amount subscribed. But lie did nothing of the sort. Ho kept right along with his hunting and fishing , seemingly without the least thought or care as to how the people of Charleston were faring or likely to faro. And un doubtedly in this conduct there is illus trated a prominent quality of Mr , Cleve land's character , lie is not a man of active and strong .sympathies , and in view of the exceptional nature of the Charleston culastrophy it is not easy to conceive what extent of calamity to other people would win his serious eon- corn to the temporary abandonment of his pursuit of pleasure. It cannot bo agn-oablo to any citizen , and must bo humiliating to many , to think of the ox- ocutlvo ot tlio nation as a man who is in capable of being utiectod by the misfor tune nnd distress of a large number of his follow citizens , duo to a cause beyond thuir control , whnn the question of his individual enjoyment is involved , though only for a brief time. Vet i't is quite nn- posslbloto candidly have any othur opin ion ot Mr. ( . 'lovoland since his failure to show tlio least coneorn respecting the Charleston calamity , which promptly touched the sympathies of England' * queen , and is now eliciting substantial tokens of sympathy in othur hnds. But your "man of destiny" is rarely troubled with much heart. AccoituiNO to the Herald , Mr. A. S. Pr.dJock is a candidate on the demo cratic side for the oflice of county commissioner - missioner of Douglas county , This ji a genuine piece of now * . Has the senator resigned hie place on the UUxh commis sion , with lu comfortublo salary aud grave responsibilities to mingle onca more with his Omaha frionda and old time neighbors for $3 a day and milonge ! A I'romlsc front lloth Sides. The now democratic campaign book , issued by the national congressional com- mitttc , declares it to bd the policy of the administration , and therefore inferentially - entially of the party , to open up foreign markets for our products. U claims that the desire is to extend the trade of thq United States into countries to tlio south of us , whoso commerce is steadily grow ing , in some directions with wonderful rapidity , and much the greater part of which Ls now controlled by England , Franco nnd Germany. It hns not been generally supposed that the democratic party was very much concerned regard ing this trade or in fact nny other. Its course hitherto hascertainlv boon such as to warrant the opinion that it was wholly indifferent respecting the foreign com merce of thu country. It has generally been found in pretty solid opposition to every measure of a practical character the object of which was to improve our trade relations with other lands , and par ticularly with the southern countries. To effect this has been a leading fcaturo of republican effort for years , but It has .never failed to meet obstruction at the hands of the democracy. However , any evidence of enlighten ment and progress in the ideas and policy of that party will bo heartily welcomed , and if in this matter it is really disposed to adopt the policy which the republicans have been urging for years , and in sup port of which they have piled up fauts and arguments mountain high , there is nothing to do but to commend the demo crats for the awakening that lias thus tardily come to them , aud to encourage them in their conversion. This question of extending our foreign commerce is getting to be of such pressing impor tance to the welfare of the country that it ought not to bo affected by party differ ences. The country ncuds the great and growing markets of the southern half of the hemisphere , and it will need thorn more and more as the productiveness of the nation increases. Our future pros perity Is in no small degree contingent upon securing these markets. The matter - tor is ono which touches the welfare of a'l ' sections and all interests. It should not bo embarrassed by making It a. subject of party controversy with a view to party capital. The democrats have the popular branch of congress and the president. Whatever practical mea sures they sincerely bring forward for the promotion of the foreign commerce of the nation , parlicnlarlv with the coun tries soul h of us , wo do not hesitate to predict will receive the hearty support of the republican senate. They will have an opportunity this winter to show how much sincerity there is in their campaign promises in this uarticular. The Outbreak at. Madrid. The revolt or mutiny of a few hundred soldiers at Madrid on Sunday night ap pears to have been ono of thosu ill-con sidered and ill-timed movements of which Spanish history affords several examples , though wo do not recall one which was quite so clumsy and complete a fiasco as this lust alleged attempt to inaugurate revolution. Whether or not the influ ences that produced Sunday's outbreak can be safely measured by the character and extent of this "revolt" is uncertain. If they can , then they are manifestly in significant , and need not bo seriously re garded as in the slightest degree menac ing the peace of the kingdom or the per manence of the regency. The dispatches indicate that the men who engaged in the uprising and went through tlio streets of Madrid shouting "Live the republic ! " did so in the belief that they had a largo part of the army with them , and that it WHS only necessary to apply the torch in order to light the fires of revolution in every direction. It must have boon a crushing disclosure when they encountered at the Prado two thousand soldiers loyal to the government whom they had supposed wore their friends and would join the re volt , and when later they found the bar racks and arsenal , instead of being-thrown open to admit thorn , so vigorously de fended that they wore compelled to retire from the ofloi't to got possession. The government , it is however evident , was taken by surprise , and had the revolt boon more skillfully planned the authori ties might have had a ereat deal of trou ble in suppressing it , but a few hours suf ficed to enable the government to under stand the situation and then suppression of the outbreak became easy , though not without loss of life. The uprising was professedly in the interest of republicanism , but it is moro than probable that it was duo chiefly to the machinations of that chronic dis turber , Don Carlos , who is ready to play any sort of a game to further his ends. This supposition finds warrant in tlio fact that this pretender , who is understood to be continually hutching conspiracies , re cently issued a manifesto in which ho held out llatteriiig promises of what he would do for the nation were the control of the. govnrnment committed.to his hands. That his agents have boon tam pering with the army , with the result ot winning over thu handful of soldiers who made tlio outbreak of Sunday , is more than llkuly. Assuming this to bo so , the o.xtout of the uprising demon strates the insignificance of the Carli.st inllucnce , though perhaps the wonder ought to bo that the party has any inllu- once tit all outside the ranks of adventur ers nuil freebooters who have every thing to gain and nothing to lose from civil strife and disorder. An effect of this movement will bo to , render the government moro vigilant , It had probably grown over-confident from tlio expressions of loyalty and patriotism that were drawn out by the death of King Alfonso , and which wore doubtless very generally sincere. But in relaxing the discipline nnd watchfulness which must be continually maintained in a govern ment like that of Spain , opportunity was given to the ambitious malcontents to carry on their insidious work , of which Sunday's episode was the fruit. The wholn affair the iusignilioanoo of the uprising and the enso with which it was sup pressed showed that the present govern ment of Spain , so lonir as it maintains the policy under which It has proceeded thus far , ought not to have anything to four from the schemes of the worthless con spirator who is responsible for most of the political trouble occurring from time to time in that country. The government as showing an enlightened and progress ive Apirit in most directions , and the peo'plo are doubtless on the whole quite as prosperous nnd happy us they have been at any other time within at least the past quarter of a century. Tlio Time Hns Canto. Last fall , under the Inllucnce of the ex posures made by this paper , the board of trade started the ball a-rollinp for a rail road controlled by Omaha capital and conducted in the interests of thlsclty and its trade territory. The freight bureau lias now taken the matter up and the combined action of these two organiza tion ? should bo suilleiont to float the en terprise into nn actual existence. Tlio time lias arrived when Omaha can no longer afford to lie on her oars and entrust her transportation interests to corporations whoso terminals are in un friendly cltios. Jf our merchants are to keep this city abreast of the development of territory which Is ours by the right ol nearness and our ability to supply it , we must have free aud open access to our neighbors. For years this paper has been pointing out the dangers which threatened the commercial supremacy of our city. Through fair and foul weather and gooi1 and evil report , against the opposition ol cowards who believed that blind submis sion to force would in time remedy the evils of oppression , and in antagonism to dishonest tools whose business it was to throw dust in the eyes of their dupes , the BKK has urged the construction of roads originating in this city , controlled by Omaha capital and in active competition with unfriendly rivals. It was so with the narrow guago road that was slaugh tered by treachery in the house of its friends. It was so witli the Omaha and Northern until that scheme was developed into a plan to secure local aid for a northern extension of the Missouri Pa cific. To any honest project to build a road from this city into trailo territory now controlled by corporations which are knifing this city in the interests of its rivals , the BKE will give an honest and unllmchingsupport. While it still be lieves that Omaha is the best commercial point on the Missouri river and that her merchants are not yet as seriously in jured a * some of our contemporaries in sist , itsoes clearly the dangers menacing the jobbing tnidc. The time to apply remedies is when the symptoms first ap pear. Omaha cannot afford to wait until the damage is done. THE Republican is still unable In its dazed condition to understand that con vention and its results. It proposes to leave the unravelling of the mystery to thn now management , which it , however , declines to pledge to the support of the republican ticket. THE Union Pacific cannot afford to dis criminate againt Omaha in ttie interests of Kansas City. In the prcsont relations of that road with the government , policy alone should dictate a course of fairness. THEKK seems to ba a genuine anti monopoly sentimant porvadinir the Omaha Freight bureau. Mr. Barker voiced it fairly in his plea for inter-state railway regulation. SATUKUAY'S political editorials in the columns of the esteemed contemporaries madastrango reading on Sunday morn ing. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ A KAIUIOAU of her own to the north west means a doubling of Omaha's pop ulation within ton years. KINGS AND QUKKNS. Emperor William is very partial to shell fish and lobsters. The king o Portugal Isoirendingthe tastes of tlio Britishers by wearing unfashionable and antiquated garments. The queen regent of Spain has conferred uioii her prospective subject , Mine. Nllsson , the Grand Cross of the Order of Benevo lence. The czar of Kussla , In addition to all tlm real nnd Imaginary dangers which surround his path , Is a victim to an abnormal fear of hydrophobia. The Queen of Spain Is said to bo suffering from .pulmonary disease , which Is making alarming progress. The affection is siinlhir to that which caused the death of King Alfonso. Princess Louise , ono of the daughters of thouticen , says that slio Is "always out of money. " She Is paid S : ,000 a year out of the pockets of. the British people , but there are many ways In wliich a princess can get rid of gold. Queen Uoim Maria 1'la , ot Portugal , shares with her sistor-ln-law , the Queen o Italy , the distinction of holm. ' regarded as "the best dressed woman in Europe. " Queen I'iu Is a patroness of the hire-Saving society o Portugal tugal , and received some years airo a gold medal from the Paris branch of that society. Alfonso's widow has had to banish from Madrid an olllcer who was continually on duly about the royal palace , lln full.violently In love with hU sovereign , and , making no concealment of his passion , revealed It In various ways. Ono day ho niailo his way to the queen's boudoir , and throwing himself at hur nmjesty'rt feet poured forth his tale of passion. The gentleman bitloncs to a powerful aristocratic family. Nevertheless , he Is likely to have a warm time In the regi ment , which , In conseiiuonco of his escapade , lias been ordered Into virtual exile. Itoyival of BiiHl/iOfls in St. Louis. A few moro loads of pumpkins than usual were brought Into Sj. Lonls ono day tnls week , and tlio papers ofethat old village are blowing about a "revival of business. The Passing of ( tie Queen. Journal of ttdiicatfnn. A flavor In the air ot 'Hptf ' September ; A ciispncss In the griiHaibonuatli the feet ; A bracing freshnessIn the broezti thiil tarries , An tviitum odor , racfr , rare , and sweet , I A premonition , delicate mid ( under , Of gentle softness Jii Qiieun Nature's fnce. When Kiimmer slum have Hpunt her royal ' ' ' ' fiplundor , Andlefther crownl'but ' kept the queenly grace , i / 1 O toy to count the jewels tmo forgettuth I Tney lie with IiivUli wealth o'er hill and doll , The token that her presence nllll must linger When all around may seem to say farewell. The waysldo vines are glittering with rubles ; The ferns are pearls beneath the goalie hand ; And amber glows among the gracious tree- tops. That bow to hear her footsteps through the laud. Dear heart , tint seukest for some sign of summer To cirry with thee , spite of time and care , And keep amulet In wintry weather A token for thee too , dotli autumn boar. Thou shall not dread the withering hand of winter , Nor shrink with shivering awe from pttlu and death , Since doslnt- life shall bo thy coronation , And bc'uedlctlun bo thy parting breath. TIIU HOT CHKKIC BA81.V. A Koulon of Womlronn nc.inty ami Fortuity OrdauUlitK Sioux County. BODAHO , Sioux Co. , Nob. , Sapt. 17. [ Correspondence of the BEK. ] This town is located in what is known ns Hot Creek lasina ! region of wondrous beauty aud fertility mid but n few years ngo of the the favorite haunts of the savage and n so I ess red man , This region is but little known to the outside world , all the historical and geographical works of our slate scarce mention it , or if thuy do they dismiss the subject with a few words re garding its geological formation. Terms such as pliocene , mloeene , cretaceous , etc. , comprise about all that the writers have given us. His true the geological formation Is of especial interest to tlio scientists ; it la no pract'cal ' value to us settlers and cow men. Talk to us of scimico in Greek nnd Latin if you please , and we will listen with profound respect , but como hero and ga/.o upon our sleek cattle , our bounteous crops of grain , especially corn and vegetables , and you will express your admiration and surprise in good old plain English that all can understand. ' This is the first season crops have boon put in here , and they have been put In on soil , and tlio result has oven in this rude manner of cultivation been to estab lish tlm fuel that crops of nil kinds can be raised in that creek basin in quality and quantity not to bo excelled in any portion tion of the state. Now that 1 have given you a rude in troduction to the fittlo domain , I would like to toll you and your readers nbont the trials ami tribulations in our at tempts to pltOANIXK SIOUX COUNTY. Last winter a petition was drawn up in porpcr form , sijrnod by some fifty actual residents ot the county , most of whom had lived lioro for years , and acquired some property which is subject to tax ation. Tins petition was accompanied by affidavits from thoofllcials of Cheyenne countj * . stating the number of tax pay ers in the coiiutv ami O. , and forwarded through C. C. MoNish , of Wisner. to the governor. Two months rolled away and no tidings reached us as to the fate of our petition. At length we wrote to our attorney , who wrote to the governor. In answer his excellency stilted there was another petition on file in his oilier ! , praying for the organization of Sioux county. After making diligent in quiry wo wore unable to find a man In the county that had ever scon , signed or heard of any other petition for organization but one forwarded by Mr. Me.Nish. Wo then wrote the governor what wo considered a very rospeotfu. letter , renuestinc him to take some action in tlio matter. This met the sanu fate as the petition. Wo have heart from it , however , ia a seini-olllcial way to the effect that the governor stated to some of his friends that bo should payne no attention to a gang of cowboys am : clodhoppers , but should simply consign their documents to the waste basket Ho may not have said this , but ho ha acted this sentiment out to tlio life. It is true there area number of cowboys in the settlement , but they are men in every sense of the word. Most of them are actual settlers , and when the tiini comes to round ut > their votes you'll fint nono'of them bearing the Dawcs brand , The 700 settlers in this bsisin are a powei that Governor Dawcs cannot afford to slight. A few days since anotiier pe tition in tlio interest of the railroad company and swearing the sicnatiires of twenty-eight persons was forwur'dod'to ' the governor praying for the organization of the county. Some of the signers of that petition are nol residents of the county , not having lo caled a claim in the county. The peti tion was returned because the petitioners failed sending nny allidavits stating the number of tax-payers in the county. On Saturday last a commissioner , or a some thing inside of line clothes , was sent or imported from Hay Springs to swear some ono to their documents. This com missioner or something else struggled a long time in vain with an honest granger to induce him to swear to something "ho know nothing about. Next they lit down on an old timer hero just as the old moon came peering over the blull's and induced him in the uncertain light of an old ranch stable to sign their allidavit. Wo are as eager as any of our fellow citi/.ens for tlm organization of the county but wo must bo allowed to enter our pro test against its being done in the interest of a railroad ring oven if there is a governor in tlio middle of it. H. Clonru-ator'H Boom. Cr-EAinvATKu , Neb. , Sept. 19. [ Cor rcspondenco of the BEE. " ] Clearwater , for some lime past known as a "way sta tion" and generally advertised as such by her rival towns , Noligh to the east and Ew ing to the west , has just takonu boom and bids fair to become the metropo is of Antelope county in the not distant future. Within the last two weeks a newspaper has been established hero , a building for which is under construction ; ground has been purchased for an olc valor by Fremont parties who expect to bo ready to receive grain inside of forty five days. A gentleman from Iowa has been looking over the town and county with u view to establishing a bank here , and will probably commence tlio erec tion of his building next week ; ground for a now meat market has has boon pur chased and work commenced on the building ; another doctor , late of Albion , has opened an oflico here , also an attorney - tornoy from Creighton. A jeweler has arranged to opnn a store hero besides quite a number of oilier minor institu tions which add to the lifo and business interests of a now town. The now grist mill is nearly completed and will com mence grinding wheat about October 1st , Trade in all branches is brisk and mer chants aru moro hopofnl than o\iir before. In the writer's opinion Clearwntor will ere Ion ; ; bo recognized as the commercial center of this section , Her business men are all enterprising and carry largo slocks. The town 19 sur rounded on all sides by a fertile and pro ductive country , peoulud by a thrifiy and comparatively wealthy class of farmers , which always insures u permanent ami lucrative patronage to all who engage in business in the natural "hub" of Antelope - lope county. Wo have at present three general stores , one implement store , ono drii" store , one hardware store , one meal market , two blacksmith whops , two hotels , ono livery stable , one lumberyard , one newspaper , one harness shop , and there is room for moro business houses of nil kinds , IIH the town is many years behind the country. Persons seolclng locations for business houses cannot hud a better place in the ntatn lhan Clearwutcr at present. Those who come in now will reap the harvest in store for all enter prising mt.n with suilleiont means to * ilarl a business of any character. The ( ifciit Issuti. Kiinm * Cltu Time * . The country need not nurse the delusion that the railroad corporations of fren America will not if theycun control slate and milUimil governments , and dominate every publlo Interest. Their iiiliiieneo in the last ten years in legislation leaver no room for exception in favor of this coun- , ry. Their absolute domination of the ntornal commerce , their milliiifation or the law of supply and demand .nnd thuif substitution of thu law of thu pool for Um regulation of prices have already demon strated readiness of arbitrary power to substitute its forces for' ' those sanctioned by the people. The railway cor 'orations here are not restrained by the principles of civil lib erty any moro than similar corporations in aristocratic or despotic governments. The same rules npply to the organiza tion and management of pools , nnd the same objects In Auioricrt as In England , France , Germany or Hussla. England , it is said , has now cloven great railroad corporations , formed out of what woraonco yd ? companies. Franco has six great companies , formed out o forty-eight original companies. How llko'tho absorption in free America is the process across llio wnteiyl The same strugulo against the power of the railroad consolidations has arisen in the old world thatjnow agitates America. Bismarck lias tried the commission plan without success , and says , in his direct way : "The imperial railway olllco has become a council wliich gives good ad vice ami prefaces its requests with : 'if you please. ' It writes a great deal and makes much tulo , but no ono heeds "its bohi-sts. " Bismarck could not better have described tlio Missouri railroad commis sion had it been the subject of his criti cism. Tlio Prussian plan hai been in opera tion several years , and is n pronounced success. In Prussia the slate now owns nit thu railroads and conducts the trans portation business of the country , it may como to that hero , but not until every other has been tried. Such an extension of the power of the national government is not to ho contemplated without a sluul dor , but \yould it not bo bolter lhan llio irresponsible power of a national pool ? The French idea is morn applicable lo American institutions. The French pro ceed upon our theory that railroads are public highways , and as such are umcna- blu to regulation and control by the gov ernment. They have a railway depart ment of trovornuietit with Its head like our comptroller of the currency , who supervises the railway management with the power to conform it to the policy of the policy of the government. In this country such an alfair would bo a part of the administration probably belong lo llio cabinet and lnivo supervision over the transportation interests of the coun try. Is there not n suggestion in this plan worthy of the consideration of the congressional candidates of Doth great political parties ? Jacob Coaster , Emperor. I'hthidrlvMn Tlmet , Jacob Coaster is an Englishman who has just been sent to the lunatic asylum at Washington in consequence of an at tempt to enforce his hallucination that ho is tlio emperor of all America. This is severe on Jacob. His country woman , Queen Victoria , imagines she is empress of India , but nobody thinks of sending her lo a lunatic asylum for enforcing her hallucination. The Czar Alexander im agines he is emperor of Asia , but nobody trios to look him up because of his delu sion. Neither the empress of Iidia ; nor the emperor of Asia is what she or he claims to be , but they both act as if they wore , and thuir claim is allowed , wherein is the difference between them and Jacob Coaster. While Jacob Coaster's delusion is shared by many potentates , there is only one just now to whom the delusion o being n ruler brought disaster as sorrow fill in its way as Coaster's. This is Alex ander of Battunburg , lately of Bulgaria. Ilo imagined that to feign was to rule , nnd the result was that ho wns compelled to bid adieu to all his greatness. The Uus sians thanglit ho should have been con < tent lo roijrn and let the czar do the ruling while the Turks thought the sumo thing except that they snbtilntcd'tho sultan fo , the czar. The only difference bctweoi Alexander , of Battenburg , and Coaster , of Washington is that Alexander is free to look for his own asylum. Delusions Jike Jacob Coaster's are by no means uncommon. A number of gentlemen of moro or less rcspectabilitv imagine they ought to bo an emperor o" king of France. Don Carlos is a nanu that has long been associated with ! claim to the throne of Spain. It happen : every few months that a deluded English man goes to Windsor castle to claim his birthright to the throne occupied by ; descendant of a , Gorman emigrant. Bui it is only at Windsor and the white house that the claimants are at once marclici' off to a mad-house that the claim ilsol , is considered proof of insanity. But as : matterof right the claim of Coaster it- only a dcgreu moro absurd than those o the others , from the emperor of Asia to thu heir of the Bonnpartos. for Conversation. San Francisco Post : Dr. Older , dentist of this city , has a well-earned reputation , not alone for skillful dentis try , but for u charge of marvelous capacity. One day tills week a patient of the doctor got his bill. Of course , ho fell back , stupefied. All Oldor's patients do. until they get used to it. "Ho has charged $15 an hour , " cried the wretched man , "and when I call or him ho talks for twenty minutes nboui the weather , and politics , and his lasi now girl , and 1 am paying for that al the time. " Ho called on the dentist and expressed his opinion that it was not right , and that his time should nol bo charged when so much of it wiis consumed in conversation. Dr. Older heard him gravely to the end. "You remember , " he said , when thu indignant protest wns concluded , "that 1 told you upon my preliminary ex amination that thn nerve of thu toolli was affected. You do ? Good. Now , know ; my business. So I soothe your nerves and cast you into n pleasant frame of mind before touching an instrument. Do you understand now ? " "But , great heavens I am I to pay you $7.50 lo hear you talk about Miss'B's bangs , and thin actress , and thatctudino ? " "It hail the proper effect , " s.nld the denlist , calmly , "il quieted your nerves , and 1 must say , " he added , with some plquo ; "that you are the first of my palicnls who over considered my coii- vorsation dearat the price. " The patient sighed deeply , and signed tlio chock. O. "W. Cnrtln nH n AVrlter. Boston Herald ; In the multitude of hooks that hnvu been mudu from thn magazines it is strungc Hint the material In the "Kiwy Chair" of Harper's Maga zine has been lU'gltieted. Wo venture to express tint opinion that some of thu best writing of our era ' * to bo found thoro. ThoriMH a little descriptive account of the rural New England Sabbath in the September number which for its grace ful and felicitous loneh cnn Imruiy be over-praised. Not u number appears to which in this department Mr. Curtis failfl lo contribute nomutliiiitf worth pro- serving. U'o have axxigiicd the oKKays'of Addison and of Stcoht the position of nlasscfi In our literal lire. Tlmy repre sent the iKannurs arid tlio thought of their limn in a style that makes tnenv worthy of it. Do we mllrct that Mr. Curtii ! is coing the name thine ; for our day , miii after ti metlind that will bear comparison with the work of thc.se nil- thors enshrined in early literaturn ? George V/illlam Curtis is an American writer who , with all his popularity , has not had u estimation that exceeded his deserts , utid who , after more than a quar ter of a cnntury nt notivu communication with the publlu through the press , is as fresh and intonating in his composition ind , if poa.sl bin , more grucefrl than when lie first begun hi * literary career. \VIiy Dlilii'i tlid Colonel Think ufTliUV /nilt < l'l ! < Conr ( < r-J-Jiii : ( ( , ( 'ul. Uihler'n jirctlc hleU.'ij ) i > r only clsh- uf n feet long. 1C ) : trios to bring hnmo ilie 101 Ui pole on unij of ( .h'Ji'e he will liud'.Umt It A Orrnt On toll. Chicago IteraM , Since most of the noble dukes and oil > r lords of creation who have mrmv i American girls are regarded as fortin hunters , it is a matter of some won. : r thai the royal families of the old wo' i i would let a young follow like Gcoiv , Gould throw himself away on a pin > American girl without first making nn effort to interest him in some fair huh ' rank who could givohlm the social pn i.i ineiico in Europe which the heir to sn , , great wealth could easily aspire to. ' ( \ \ impoverished houses wliich have bi i congratulating themselves on their n ! ! > aiH-e with some of the rich Amcrifin families would have something to IUM about if they had been able to take your 1 Gould in out of the moisture , Gould the elder is probably tli > - wealthiest man in the coilntry. Ho o\ hiblted on ono occasion not long njo bonds nnd stocks to the value of mon' than sixty millions , Ilo controls corpoi ale wealth to Hie amount of throe or lour hundred millions , and , as ho is yet com paratively youiiff , it would bo useless ! > put an estimate unon the sum of his final accumulations. Of the Immense fortttiu- ho will leave , the young man who hns just been married will inherit the great * r part. Ho is handsome , modest , amiable and capable. As an addition to nnv uoblo house ho would bu an acquisition not to bo despised. Ills inheri tance would lift the whole im poverished aristocracy of the old world out of the slough of despond into which extravagance and other excesses have plunged it. To have lot him go withoitUi struggle is the greatest mistake that their lordships have made in many a year. U will bo some time before anollicr opportunity of this kind will occur. The largo number of American holr- essurt who have in recent years married into the British aristocracy will exert nn inllueiieo upon that order which cannot bo measured at this time. Several of them are the mothers of young men who will , in the course ot a fuw years , be peers of the empire. Onlv one of those personages is now descended from an Amoiican. Lord Asabuatou's grandmother was an American. But the bevy of beautiful and American women who now hover about the throne will presently bo the proud dowagers whoso sons and daughters will show the effete aristocracy of a decaying empire how to lord it over the groundlings. Iteertiitud by a few members of the oilier sex , who , in this country , as in England , have mo t of the wealth , the old nobility would thrive as never before. The dlllieultv about titles could bo easily arranged. The same power which conferred these baubles on the prates and cut-throats of could give them to Ihu eminently respec table young men of America , so that in matters of precedence there would be no trouble. The extra wealth to be secured by interesting the American youth in this scheme could bo depended upon ( o com pensate the country for all the wear and tear that its institutions would suffer by reason of an irregularity that might at tend the bestowal of titles. The first departure in this line is to bo made this month in Colorado , whore a daughter of the otirl of Airlu is to marry tin unassuming American citizen , whose name is not now recalled. Several of the brothers and sisters of llio bride are to bo at the wcuding , and the aflair is certain to bo as recherche as the circumstances will permit of. George Gould , however , ia irrotriovarjly lost. Nice as are the Hchomus which the aristocrats of the old world have fixed for the despoiling ol the "lower classes , " they cannot com pare in productiveness with the arrange ments which the Goulds have made in this country. Perhaps by thu time George Gould has an heir who contemplates marriage the desirability of going abroad to sctllo down in luxnrv will be moro pronounced than it is now. Itoynl Academy Scandals. Magazine of Art for October : Tlio very first scandal of nny moment occurred very shortly after the incorporation of the Academy in 1773. This was the case of Sir Kobert Strange , which has boon touched upon in an earlier nrticlu. In Sir ( then Mr. ) Hobnrt St range's pamphlet , "An Enquiry into the lliso of tno Koyal Academj' , 'i is inserted a letter to the earl of Bute he who was burned in cfligy nt Temple Bar. Although this letter has no apparent connection witli tlio sarcas tic little history of the origin of the Academy which follows , it details - tails certain happenings that wore probably closely as.snckited with the writer's squabble with ono of the earliest hanging committees. Ramsey , who had pamlod a portrait of the Prince of Wales , afterwards George IV. , requested Strange to engrave it , on the plea that thn prince and the earl of Bute would both bo gratified by his doing so. Strange was at the time preparing to stiirt for Italy , and not wishing to delay - lay his journey for the two years required for tlio engraving of a full-length portrait trait , ho declined iinlet-8 it could ho shown to him that it was thu prince's own particular wish that lie should com ply. Shortly afterwards William Cham bers , the architect ho whoso aombro Tlmmo.i'Sidupilo is in its stony acreage : not unslatoly when its pilasters catch thu crimson gleam of the evening snn- brought Strange a message that the Prince of U'alcs was anxious lie should engrave not only his higluioss's own portrait , but likewise that of Lord Hutu. It was requested that he should lay nsido every other engagement nnd engrave Lord Huto'a picture first. In return for this his royal highness , In his princely generosity , would make the engraver a present of a hundred guineas , and pat ronize a Mibscription for copies of thu engraving * . This did not sound very promising ; but tit range was not angry , attributing thn meanness of tlio odor to tlio prlnuo'fl ignorance of the length of time required for oiigrnv * ing two largo pictures. C'lmmhwH ' repre sented the position to the prince , who remarked that Slrangu'.s reasons were "both natural and just. " "But how great was my surpriuu , " oxchiimod the indignant engraver , "whnn a day or two afterwards a Iriend of iiimii told mu that IK * had seen Mr. Knnmy , who informed him that hu had met Lord Hutu , who had said thai the prince was so provoked at my refusal that hu could not bear to hoar my name mentioned. " Evonlnally Mr. Ityland engraved the portraits , wliich occupied him four years. liu was paid a hundred guineas for making the ilrnwincs , nnd' ! . ' > 0 a piarlor ilurinj' thu whole of the four I'piir.H , nnd received in addition the pro- iceils of the sal" of tint prints. Strange i several attempts not. very dlgni- led purliups , but eminently natural on ho part of a man who feared to ho tanned In hid profession by what was u.-rliaps a mere myritili'iiition to obtain in explanation from Lord Bute ; but thu hu door was always shut upun him , and : vcn the presentation of a nut of iniprns- ions from some of thn plates Strnngu en- rraved did not procure him an interview. i A Uoniitlful J'rosnut. The Virgin Silt : Co. , of Hew Haven , ? omito introduce Virgin Salt into every amity nro making thu grand offer ; A i ; r.v/.y Patchwork Block , enameled in wtilv'H beautiful oolors. and containing : ha j.'itcKt Fancy StltehcH.oii a large LUti- igraphnd Curd having u beautiful gold nonuted ideal Portrait iu the con lor , ; ivon sway with every 10-cunt pnokxge > f Virgin .Salt , Virgin Salt box uo equal or lionKotiold puri/ose-i. / it Id the clean- st , purnst and whitest Suit over roan or ied , Kumcmber tbnt A Ifir o package ofli only 10 ccnti. with the above pros- ut. Ask your rocor for il. CrJohtoa & Whitney Beit hard nnd soft o.ulrlBUi uud Jzard aud 416 S. 13tlt