Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 24, 1881, Page 2

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g v, i i | i 2 i “THE DAILY BEE. LR E. ROSEW ATER: EDITOB: Tax most profitable “breeches” for the womsa suffragists—Breaches of promise.” —_— Eprronzaza entitled *Whither are we Drifting!” sre out of order now that the snow has censed to fly. —_—— Axp now Jeator s becoming de- serted and hungry office-seckers are makiog their way towards Washing- ton. Tre Now Y ork Sun speaks of them as “Dr.” Jay Gonld snd his two Bos- wells, the World avd Tribune. Tt wight have added the Republican and Herald. —— Mz Tovzaurs's letter is receiving rough trestment at the hands of Nebraska's farmers who offsct specious arguments with hord facts. Tax passage of the smended char- sor by tha legislstars will give to or ity .:Q.m the opportauity to keep pace with the growth of private interests in our metropolik. —e Tax Hastings Fepubican sud the Brownville Adve $iser still echo feebly $he monopoly cry. The fature in Ne- braska for railroad organs will not be ® cheerfal one. — Wahave reccived four communi- catioris upon “Omshs shush.” Journ- alistic courtesy, avd regard for the editorial columne of the Republican, prevent their publisation. Tax rebuilding of the Grand Cen- tra) hotel should now be a certainty. Under the liberal offers of two of Omaha's most public spirited citiz ms there is mo reason why this greally needed improvement should not be begun within & month fiom the pres- ent time. — Exvor F. Baerarp has been nomi sted to succeed that gallant repub! own B ewart L. Woodfird as Uni‘ed States district attorney for New York. E'iot wou'd lik : to herd that flock of perquisite: very wall. Theold ehep- herd, howevar, still clings to the per- simmons. Tz railrosd -appers at Lincola are playing the prohibition plum and the ocapital appropristion sgainst the chanoes of anti-monopoly legidlstion. A fow days only remsia to our legi Iators tocomplote thelr reecrl of shirk nzand playiog possum. After that they will by dasd coone, CaniNE: speculatic for the last week have all beeu drif ing in one di- rection, It eeems determin-d thut the state portfoli- is to be given to Me. Bluine, the secretaryship of the treaenry to Mr. Ailison of Tows, the war porfolio t2 Lovi P. Morton or Oniof Justice Folzer «f New York, and _the postmaster zemeralship to Postmaster James or some far wes'ern man. The secretaries of the navy, interior and the sttorney general-hip have not yet been decided upon and will probably not be definitely an- nouuced vn il after the inaugaration. Tae Americso flsg waved ov.r the b ir of the president of the Olsre land leagie on Sunday, when M-, Paroell d-livered one of the b avest, mauliest and most outspoken speeches of all chat remarkablsseries which have thrilled the various meetings which he has been called ‘to vddress. Pudlic opluion, biased sud prejudiosd by the lying reports of English corresp nd- eata, is rapidly in America turning to the support of Irelaad’s champion, We predict that bafore six monthsare over the m ral influsnce of Americsn born citigone will be & power which will aff ot and strong'y modify*the co- eroive po'icy of the Buitish goverr- ment and sabstautially aid the land league in their graat and noble sause. ———— THE corrected statement of railway consteustion for the pust year shows s total miieage of 8401 wiles, which is thicty-five miles more than the great- est mileage ever constracted in sny oneyesr. Thetotal railwar mileace in the United States is now 93,897 71 miles. The states and territories constructing the lirgest amount of vosd last year were as followe: Dakota, 738; Texss, 696; New Mexico 536; Ohio, 484; Iowa,436. The states having the grestest mileage at the present time are: Tlinois, 7,915; Pentsylvanis, 6,231; New York, 6,065; Ohio, 6,005; Iowa, 5,216. The only stales in which no new track was lsid last year are New Hampshire and Mississippi. The only territories are: Alasks, Tdsho, Tadian Territory acd Wyoming, T ples of the Republican in favor of the right of railroads to carry aud refuse freight at pleasaré is the most starding aud outrageous dootrine ever brought forward by a monopoly ad- wocate. The Republican has the honor of being the firet paper in the United Bister to declare that a railroad 18 not a common carrisr, but a carpor stion without obligations to the pub- lie, whose power to cerry out sny policy of discrimination ageiost ship- persis only caurtailed by the oaprice of its munagers. The fact that the Uaim Pasifis has ret sed to transport Cme Bee over its lines is only re- murkable as a sample of what ander like circumstences it may do with tte goode aud chattels of otber shippcrs, Tf the Uaion Pac fio can with impan- ity refass tranapor ation onits freight raine ¢ Me. R owater's paprs, be ©ase Mr. R wewater has opposed i's clitiesl Zominstion and denoinced ta extortions, the Univn Pacific may with impunity refase to traneport the editor of Tae Bex orany emsloye counectsd with it on its piwwenger trains, and if it cwnthus discriminate against the edivor of Tuz Bee or bis | assochbos, it can with impanity re. fass W trevaport any merchant or | ‘manutactarar, or fa who deres 10 op0ss is fmpuitions or refases to s neck v 43¢ monpoly yoke. AMERICAN WORKINGMEN No nation can boast of 3o intelligent and of o thoroughly informed a b>dy of mecbanics and laboring men as our own. From Tooguevill down to George Holyoake, every Earopesn traveller o our shores, who has msde the various conditions of American society astady, has praised without stint our working classes and pro- fessed themselves amazed at the ad vance which they exhibit in stability, sobriety and refinement over those of other countriesand especially England. Aod our country hes every reason to be prond of & class which has for years held in their hands the balance of political power, and which has never proved recreant to their trost. It is remarkable fact that every great reform which has agita‘ed American policios hss frund most stalwart champions i the working classes, and in every great political crisis which has threatened tte stability of this natlon, its working- msn have never besn appesled to in vain, A number of reasons com- bine in giving to our work- inz men their present proud pre- emloence. The first is, the constant incentive to better tl condition which is afforded by our republican form of government, a universal fran- chise and an easy ascent from one grade of society to the other. The Amerloan workingman is am- bitlous. He has s perpetual stimulus o nerseverance in the examples of the present and the history of the past. Numbers of the wealthiest, most in- fluential and respactable citizens of our Republic, began life at the bottom of the ladder, s Isborers. The American working man can never forget that Abraham Lincoln was once a Kentacky wood chopper, that Peter Cooper laid the foundation of his fortane as a work- man in a wagon shop, that James G. Fair began life as a day laborer, Cornellus Vanderbilt as a ferry boy, and James O'Brien as a drayman, while acores of men who now count their wealth by the millions once boasted of the title of an American lsborer. Tais belief in the possibility of self-made men is one of the grest incentives to action in American workingmen. i Another axuse for the great super- iority of American workmen over those of other mations ia the educational slvantages which they ejoy. Ouar Americsn workiog men are a reading and thiok- ing class. They ars constantly called upon to perform the highest datiea of free citizanship to voteintelligently to ait on jaties, to direct public opinion, Nosation in the world prinfs as many Ppapers as our own ani a grest portion of their readers is found among Ame- rioan workingmen. As & natural oon- sequence they are better inf rmed vp- on current topios than their fel wa elsewhereand better able to sez s upon epportunities for theirsocial and fasn- cial advancement, It is a singalar fact that although comp-sed «f 80 many nationalitios the American working classes sre the most thorcughly American of all our citizns. They are the back bone of damocra ic in- witations in the Uaited Sties Whether they hail from Girmany, Great Britain ot any o'her ¢ untry under a diffsreat form of govarnment, once onoursul they barome the most ardent advocates of damocracy and the mos: determinad cpponents of centralization. Tt is the same feel ingin onr working clzas which makes them the bitter npponents of & moncp oly of the industries and wealth of the country, as well as a monoply of power by a few shrewd and grasping individuals. In the great war aginst monopoly dom ieation wron which this country is entering, the working classes will be powerfulagents It was & delogation of workingmen which, in 1877, poiot edly out to the direstors of the Pennvylvavia rosd that by thei tem of discrimination they had do: stroyed the basiness of their best cus- tomers, for the purpasa of buildirg u> individudl interest, and had lat to themselves, in one year, $3,500.000 “This smount,” ssid the sddress, would have enabled you to psy us liv— ing wages, instead of seventy.five cents » day.” Finally, Amesican workingmen arenot communisticin the garbled sense of the term. They sre inclined to fair play among themselves and they ask it for others. They be. lieve ina decent remuneration for theit labor and they genorally aue- czed In getting it. They ask no ex- tortionate wages and they do not pro_ pose to see the moaopolies extort them from the public. It is as much from & sense of justios as from a habit of informing themselves upon the is- sues of the day, that cur working olasses ars 80 thoroughly snti-monopo- ly in tendency to-dsy. And it will be fonud that they can beither be threateriel noe bribed from their po- wition, —_— Tax control of the New Jersey Cen- tral railcoad has been secured by Jay Gould and New York is excited over the prospect of s mew truak to S, Louis. The Naw Jsrszy Central owns the most maguifi sent terminal f ties of any of the lines centreing on New York barbor and witn its connec- tions has contr 1 of one-third of the ©0al trade of the east. Azcording to Mr. G uld's programme the road will be made the eastern end of his Ny York, Caicago & St. Louis line, two portions of waich, viz: from Cleve Land 10 Chicags and from Ft. Wagna to 8t. Louis, are already uude: con- trict, Toe comaindar of ths road to Willismsport, P snosylvania,c uld eas- flybe bul: in s'x moaths and a through line completed from New York to St. Louis with connections to the Pcifl : coa I is said that ths ©eapital of thase roads would rep-esent te ac'ual cost more nearly thaa that of any other truak line. — |8 Sexator Maxoxe weighs 150 and | v0id! 25) pranis. Tae “Ta- | ‘".'.*j:d Darid D dep ndent” saw ho83 b beon braced 10 the oxasion, - | secured the remaval of tha capital stands by *‘paternsl goverament”_ap- pesrs to be any government which interferes, in sny-of the ways above indicated, with individual or corporate liberty in the pursuit of happiness; but more particalarly in the pursuit of happiness by the mode oslled “‘water ing stocks” and the liberty of taking from other people’s earnings ten per cent. profiton the private ‘‘property” crested out of nothing by that happy proceas, Stock-wateriog is slmply a method of inflation, cr, more strictly, of dilution, by which the name or dencmination of s commodity Is made %0 expressa lie. If the keeper of a wet. grocery adds to a barrel of whisky a barrel of water, and advertises the compound as whisky, he uttersa false- THE ALLIANCE. ‘QUALIFICATIONS FOR MEMBERSHIP, To the Editor of Tes Bes: Sm—My attention has been called to & communication in Tae Bze, on thesubjact of eligi in the Alliarce, signed by *‘Scribe.” This is sa imporiaut subject, and comes under the attention of the State Alince very often in the for- mation of subordinate Allisnces. Much solicitnde was manifested at the Lincoln meeting, lest men who wers not farmsrs should gain a foot- ing in the Alliance; and that meeting intended to, and supposed it bad, adrped & law which would exclade all who did not gain their livelihood by farming, from becoming members. The mere ownership of land, even though it be improved and lesged does not create eligibility. If it did, baok- ers, lawyers, land agents, middlemen, nd_particularly the land grant rail road companies, would all be eligi- ble. But if m=n eains hil livelibood by farming either as & owner and worker of his own land, a renter or a laborer, he 1s eligible. Nearlyall clases of our psople was directly eneazed in the transportation industry and as much interested in the objects of the alliance as are the farmecs themselves. Bat the danger of the alliavce being m.ade the cat's paw of politicians, and belng in locali- ties subjected as an appendrge of one or the other party, made it impera- tive to oconfine the membership to “practical operative farmers.” Onr friends of ali the other callings will s7on_have an ooportuuity to join the “Anti-Monopoly Lesgue, an organiza- tion which will admit all classes as members; and I trust they will avail themselves of it, and these co-operate heartily in furthering the ends of th® allisnce, Yours truly, J. Burrows, Secrotary State Alliance. sky. he commits a fraud and may be called a ewicdler. If a railroad company, having an act- ual paid-in capital of one miilion dol- Lurs, issnes atook shares of the denom- ination in the aogregate of two millio~s of doilars, it also utters a falsehood, T it exact from its patrons rates made for the purpose of giving to snch shares a market valas «qual to their denomination, does it not also commit a fraud, and may it not als) be prop- arly oal swindler? If an enter— prising pereon in anether line of husi- ness take a silver coin, called a dollar. end dilute ft by adding sn equsl bulk of pewter, and fssue the com pound in two shares, or parts, each of the denomination of one dollar, or in four shares, or parts, esch of the denomination of half a dollar, he does exactly the same thing that the wet grocer does and the railway com pauy does when they water their stocks and pursue methods to make the diluted article sell at the prica of a genuine article. In the last case government interferes, stylos the speculator in diluted goods a cheat, pats him in prison, and thus, instead of sscuring to him liberty in his pur suits of happiness, puts a stop to his pursuit of happiness by depriving him i What right has govern- ment to do that? The proper:y which he diluted was his own private proper- ty. Had he not a right to do with it what he pleased? *‘The essence of property ia control,” eays Mr. San- ford, “‘and the value of property con- sista in profitaderived.” For govern- ment to interfere with a map's control over his own prop:riy, and resirain him, by imprisonment, from doubling its value by the profita hs can get from it by the watering proces only to override the Declaration of Independence, but, from Mr. Stsn- ford's potat of observation, is to prac tice paternalism, which never was in- tended. ‘‘There is no justice in lim- iting earnings,” he says. Therefore, thera is no justice in sending to jail the man who, if his liberty were not thus arbitrarily restrioted, woald make his private property, called a dollar, earn him the value of two dol- lars by the easy process of pewter rg it. “Itis the concern ef the compa nies themselves, snd nobody els busi , whether their capital is creased or not.” By which declara- tion Mr Stanford means that it is no- bod; oapital is ailuted by the watering pro- cees or not. POLITICAL POINTS, Tt is claimed that Malome will vote for republican clerks in he house. E. B. Washburne is ‘““mentioned” a8 a possible candidate for mayor of Chieago. The present Wisconsin senate is said to be the ablest of any in the state since 1870, Senator Allison is said to be hard at work studying the financial history of the country. Fitz Jobn Porter's friends intend to bring up his cas in congress again before the end of the session. The senate of Missouri has rejected, by-a vote of nearly two to one, a bill to +et up the whrpping post for the punishment of petty thieyes. Comp'aints are made that in nearly every s uthern congressional distriot where republicans have given notice of an intentin to contest the intimi- dation of witnesses has beyun. E ght hundred husiness firms con- stituting the New York board of trade sud traveportation, have eent to the seuate judiciary committee- a formal protest against Stanley Matthews, Ben Butler has created ancther seusation, this time «utside of the po litical arena. His first appearanoe in R chmond since the war was counted a1 great an attraction as an_execution or a circus, and he drew full houses in the court room where he appeared. Gen Chester A. Arthur -ias writ'en a letter to a Vermont journahs: thanking him £ r the special effort h- has made to prove that he was born in Fairfield, tha state, but saying that £ 10 democratic schere 10 prove him of f raign birth has been a matter of lit lo inturcat to bim, and he has paid no attention to it. While the uoblushing «fcontery with which Mr. Leland Stanford sets up this exireme theory of corperate Lawnessness shows a boldness not ont «f keepiog with the character of some tnu suddenly-made millionaircs on the t also shows sn otliquity ng awong somo wealthy corporators which teuds more than all ter things to incite the public de maud for governmental corjecrive sure. It 1a fallicy, of courss, which this Califoraia plutoorat toems 0t 10 Te:lize, that there is any such thing, in law or in morality, as a right of contr 1 0ver private croperty in its ssuer which can b ¢xteraad to avy loyment or wee o it injurious to R smp e oaed that owngraw bas, ever | {407 Tihta or *libeetles of " other » J p ple. Noman or norpcration has igaie the quastion o the library, and that the comm which had charge of a subju might hive been disposed of in & fow weeks has wpeat aght years aua $15,000 which his boea approp iate toit. A new tax law, passed at the recent s0«-ion of the legistatura of Vrmont, requires citizens and o Tporations 10 w ke, unier oath, a retura of all their taxsble prop-riy, resl and persoual, aad aleo to state the amount of stocks, boude or orher sec irities hald by them and claimed to be exemp: from taxa tion under the laws of the state or the ware or the Uaited States, Oolonel W. F. Eikin, the last but one of the famous *“long nine,” hesd- ed by Abrahsm Lin-oln, in the Iilin- ois I gulatare in 1839 40, died in De- catar Iast week. Nuian W. Edwards, of Springéicld, sline survives, Toe ag:regate height of the ‘“long mine” was precinely ifty-four feet. Taey “right to use bie private proper'y wy wayor fur any purpoes of fraud The wet-geocarhas no right to water nis whisky with iatent to sell a gallon of water at tho prics of a gallon of whisky. The owner, of a silver no right to dilate it wth a ssor metal with intent to derive the tion has no right t> water its ateck with intent to derive vrofit alike on ita capiral end on the fiotion with vhich it dilut-s ‘ts osp- ral. Ia the assertion of such a right, the moral sense of mankind recognizes & fraudule: t intent—a purpose to dommit injustice and do injury to others, Now, with li possible respect for the deolaration of tudependence and the rather gush ivg parriots who rathered it, the true object for which governments are in sticuted is to execute juiice, pravent men from injuring ‘ome another, to puaish tho-e who do injury, or,as Mr. Carlisle vigorously pufs it, “to expedi. tiously exterminate hy gret roguse,” whether they be railroad managers or only common mortals. To fultill this, its proper function, governmert must lim t, sudin s me degree-regulate, by law, the employmeut of private property by its owners, as well us the personal conduct of individuals. This i what governm:nt has been doing ever siuce property and political so ty came to exist. Mr. Stanford’s de- nial of any right in government to do this sounds like the defiant challenge of the government and law of the land by a ralway company. Does he imagine that the American people will hesitato to accept such a challenge? Or does he think that the Central Pacifio railway company can come out victor in the contest such a challenge lavites? Coming from the president of that particalar company, ths impudence of Mr. Stauford’s deliverance is peca- liarly marked It is a corporation holding and managing & proparty fur- nished to it asa_grauity by the gov- ernment, whose regula:ive pwer over it Mr. 8 aaford den Ths basis of avery atom of the capital invested in that railway -was & grant of the common peoperty of the Americsn_paople ? aloaa of their ¢ is in this fact a b. ot found in the oo of other railways, on which Judge Black’s declaration that railways are pablic property might ba applied to the railway over whioh Mr. Stanford presides. Taereis also in this faot that which stam, . Stanford’s m st irrational lo as also the most. tmpudent deliverance that has lately spyeared on the snbject from Vandalia 1o Sprougfield. Col. E'kin was grandfather of Mes. Gov. Routt, of Colarado, The Monopoly Scaudpoint. Chisago 71 nes. The notions of Mr. L:land Stanford (oresidenc of the Central Pacific rail- way compn, ) concerning tho raiiway question furi-sh the counterpart to the notiors of Jeremish S. Black. The latter took tha extreme ground, tn one direction, thst railway are public bighways and public property, in which the persons wh: ‘“‘talk as if they owned them” have no right of ownership at all. The former takes the extreme grund in opposite direction, that railwa; neither public property, nor patlic highways, mor common carriers, but private properties owned by ““joint partner. skiips of private individuals.” Upon the theory of Black, the government eal with thes “pablic proper- ties” exactly as it pleates, regardless of any objections which' the *pre. tend<c” private owners may set up. Upon tho theory of Stanford, the as sumpti u by goverament of any regu- litive power whatever over railways or raitway traffic is an unwarranted exeriion of pure despotism, Mr. Stantord goes on to an emission of patriotic feeling clled the declara. tion of ind:})sndenu forthe basis of ius juridica no In that instra- ment the politicians who pu their names to it st forth that governments are tued to secare t the people “dlife, liberty and the pursuit of hap- piness ” Auy goverumental rigula t10n of rail waye would be, in sree, a restriction «f be libery «f cailaay compnies; therefore, 1t would be contraryto the declaration of inde. pendence; therefore, it would ‘The Sut er Mem;r;l. ve uuconstituiionsl. More ver, ; $an Francisco Chro.icle. it would pu: an obsacle | Icus fur the pioner mo € this cle in the wav of their pursuic of h therefore, efc., as hef re. the Sanfurd ry will be sean that 1ts Apylica ton mey ve agooddel ex erded An cxer- state to say where the proposed mem orial to the Jeading pioneer «f all, n. Juhn A. Sutter, ¢hill be pl oed, | and what it aball be Whatever they aecide on the pioneer societies of New thm of govermental p .wee waatever, | ¥.rk and other - fF sioota of Califor. ths enciment and execation of iaws | nia as it was m 1849, will assent to, t murder, theft, scault A vingle thft monoment has beea eawaung, polyeamy, rap-, {sugased, » memori.l hall, and lost furth,—a io sune degree s | aud bes, the ristoration of the oid of individusl liberty, and | Swtter fort a®ic sppeared to the eyes if 0t a loniaton, of | of the Arginau's rrom tais city and pursui «f hapyvess by thuss | elsewhers upon their landing ut Now ' P WM Lis - Xseiaof thegov | Hulvt (Low Scrawe t) in 1818 erumest prverxkos a3t Lire- | aud 1849 Fhis, in our piiu, e fors, iy «uh exorion of the gav | the pr por thing to do. Tas oiig nal H fort was built of adote, e croment poweris cn rary t the de ‘aration £ indeps.dence; therefor., romsat '8 aocoustitation: it wnotin duub', as a par: il! remat g, thoagh bu a milpurr, | and that in a sad tar this & te—gay as e.ded that thin Ve -cres—and restors the shoold be a p " ld fork 0 i 8 oif.inal appesrance, bat Mr. Scanford says: Waat be uuder- in larger propcrtions, and subatitate else’s busincss whether their | g ofdey Let ! | buret brick for adobe, and afier this, the whole oast of which need not excead $15,000 to $18,000, let it be thrown into an Incorporation to be controlled by the presidents of the | different pioneer socicties of the state, and dsvoted to the grataitous support of aged, impoverished and disatled vioneers. This would be in some srt a relief to the eocieties them- elves, and a very noble charity, a3 well as jost such A memorial a8 the henevolent old man hirself, if alive would, above all others, prefer to have aswociated with his name and character. The propossl nrged by <ome to make this a state affsir, and have it supsorted by the atate, is not in good taets. Gen. Sutter his claims npon the respect »nd admira ‘ion of the people wider than the state of Californis His charity was sands who for years have been the citizens of many other siates, and his merits are national more than local. If the time comes if such » memorial #8 is above sug geated shall need other sid for its decont maintsnance than ruch es the pioneer sooieties can afford, the influ- ence will not be wanting to induca congrees to lend a belpng hand in honor of the man whose hands in life were open to_ all its citizans, aud in coast a rich and mos: valuable port of the American union PERSONALITIES. Princess Loulse skates charmingly. Alexander H. Stephens has a $30, 000 library. ProudSt is the apt name of & James- town, N. Y., {filoF. Cadet Whittaker has been untiappy siuce the Boyoott on hia eurs. Horbert Spencer, the philosopher, bas dyspepsis, caused by eating peu- nute. The King of Ashantee threa‘ens war. Ho will pall somebody’a house down. Sitting Bull is swinging throug space, howling for & chauca to sur- render. Justin McCarthy, who is really a good-natured man, is uot loved by Gladstone. Orville Grant ran vory much fn debt by building a villa. The villa still pursues him. Artemas Ward is editor of The Philadelphia Grocer, which is by no mesns a fauny paper. Bernhardt has agreed to prolong her stay in this country. There is naturaily more I nzth than breadth to her steya, Senator David Davis is visiting friends in Ohio. If John Sherman's fences get down sgain he. will know the reason. Oarlyle once spoke of Americins as eighteen millions of bores. He judged thy countiy by the ssmples that visited him. Eaterprising farmers are now begin- ning to plant Mr. Le Duc's report for As a mulch for young trees it d to have no superior. J:hn,A. Young, son of Brigham, has been arrested in Denver on a charge of bigamy. Th- disease scems. to huve ran in the family. Mrs. Livermore is lectaring or “‘How Shall we Rach the By’ This question can never bo saticf-8to- torily answered nutil every saloon h s a telephone, The Rev. James Freeman Clarke protends t)kn w tht Moses was nou rneauthor of he Peataten:h, er- haps Mr. Clarse can tell Iigorsoll wlere Moses was wiien tho light went out. —_—_— A TWBNIY VEARS' (ONFLICT. The keeper of the Grors Point licht, M-. C. Bynton, was cured of heu matism of twenty years standing by the use of St. Jacobs Oil, says (he Chicago News it 8dly sh & M~V TEm Great German REMEDY FOR REETNATISY, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, " BACKACHE, GOUT, SORENESS CHEST, fll}sorE TEROAT, f QUINSY, SWELLINGS TOOTH, EAR HEADACHE, # All other Pains -l G A ——— e o 534 o ISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A. VOGELER & CO. > Baltimore, Md., U. JNO. G. JACUBE, So. 1417 Paent nRove. A R = ¥eex in yous own town. lerms | and BAE ol el ERYST KREBS, Manager Ma afacuurer of all kinds of VINEGAR IR TS Ly L NOTICHE. Avy ane hating desd antmals [wll! remose thom free of chrge. Leave orlers southeast ©urn 1 of Harmey and 14th -t.. second door CH R ES SPLI.T. T2 In 1878 we sold 356,422 Machines. In 1879 we sold Machines. Excess over any previous year 74,735 Max Our sales last year were at the rate of over 1400 Sewing Machines a Day | For BEaRMEMBER That Every REAL Singer Sewing Ma- chine hae this Trad: Mark cast into the Tron Stand and em- bedded in the Arm of the Machine, N THE SINGER MANUFA ry business day In the yer, P The “Old Reli Singer is the Strongest. | * Durable Sewing chine ever yet structed. Principal Office: =4 Union Square, New York. 6-ddwsf e ——————— MORE POPULAR THAN EVER. The Genuine SINGER NEW FAMILY SEWING MACHINE. e poprlar demand or the GENUINE SINGER fa 1570 ex s thotof ‘auy previous year during the Quarter of & Cen ury in which rhe o D Fiablo” Machioe has bean before the pabiecs o° Ok 431,167 chines. iab'e” Ma- Con- CTURING CO. 1,500 Subordinate Offices, in the U nited States and Canada, and 3’W1 Offices inthe Uld sep! ‘World and Sonth America. ISH & McMAHON, Succestors to Jas. K. Ish, DRUCGISTS AkD PERFUMERS. Dealers in Fine Imported Jas, K. Ish, Surgical Instruments, Poeket Cases, hemicals used in Dispensing. Proscriptions flled st any hour of the night. Toilet Waters, Colognes, Soaps, Toilet Powders, &o. Trussss and Supporters. Absolutely Pure Lawrence McYahon. T2 TS5 IR INEL A VS TR BT ENRY HORNBERGER, STATH AGERENT XFOR V. BLATZ'S MILWAUKEE BEER | In Kegs and Bottles. Special Figures to the Trade. Families Supplied at Reasonabls Prices. Office, 339 Douglas Rtract. Omaha = NEDY’S EAST INDIA - < §Eg ~og ] TE] ¢ 227 = SR P 2 2% 8 p B £ & ] agE < FF 3§ ! y BITTERS! LER & &0, MaA™M UF‘AC’I‘UP;ERB. "Geo. P. Bemis feay EsvaTe Ackmsy S Wiz, soLA G s, o tolis patrons ir thoagent BOGES & HILL. REAL ESTATE BROKERS No 1,08 Farnh: Nebraska DAVIS & SNYDER, 1605 Farnham St. Omaha, Nebr. 400,000 ACRES carefully selcted lan Fastern Nei ‘or sale. rigains In fmyrrvod farms, and Omaba city property. 0.F DAVIS. WEESTSR SNYDER, ob7t! Lato Land !'lnlli;j:on Reed & Co., REAL ESTATE AGENCY IN NRBRASKA. abstract of title to all ieal d Douclas Connty. mey1tt taws mem Kecp 8 como Estate in Om { CHARLES RIEWE, 3 i k UNDERTAKER! Metallc Cases, Cofins, Caskets, Shrouds, et 0th and 117h, Omana, Nan 6] the Fastest “eling Book of ths Age! Foundations of Suceess, BUSINESS AND SOUIAL FORXS. The laws of trade, ecal forms, how to rans. ness, valuvble tables, focial etiquette, ¢ usage, 10 couduct public bu-ineis; fnf ct it is's com 1t Gu' pm am' run, leavin ~ Gmal :0) p. m ran, leaving Foxt Omaha, ars umally Toailgd to fal) capacity with reular passengers, T 6:17 a. m. run will be made from the poat. office, come of Dodge aud 15th sarshta. Ticketa can bo procured from sireet cardriy- ers, ot trom delvers of hacks. car PR At i sar KALISEL THE WERCHANT TAILOR, Isprepared to make Pants, Smts and cyercosts o Prices, 6t and workmanship gus ranteed One Door West of (rnickshanics. J. . VAPOR, MERGHANT TAILOR Capitol Ave,, Opp. Masonic Hall, OmaRA N Hi FXOBLSIOR Machine Works, ODLAILA, IR J. Hammond, Prop. & Manager. Toa -t noruugh appoute nd_complate Machine Shops and Fuuniry in the state Castings of every descripfion manufactad. Encines, Putaoe nd eve y clase of machinery aado to order Dectal attentten gtven to Well Augurs. Pull- ys. Hangers, Shaftinz, Bridge fron.s,Geer Catt ng. etc Flazafor e S R A 48 Famna ey irmchapion: D oo, Bac 1aeh na 15t AGENTS WANTED FUR CREATIVE SCIENCE and Sexual Philosophy. 1. g SANKING HOUSSS IN NEBRASKA. | porsted Daak. | stetie Gheck: withont sotios. Cortificates of inpost s ragaic demand withont Interest Auvauces mad curitlos at market rates of Interest ment, State, Coanty and City Bonda. tand, and ali parta of Earope. Soll Earopean Passaze Tickets. augldt U. 8 DEPGSITORY. 0F OMAHA, ETABLISHED 18 1858 Organizsd as National Bank. U.S.& PER CENT. FUNBED LOAN. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS Hizuay Kovmas, Prestisnt. AvausTus Kouwess, Vica Presilost. B. W, Varer. Gachler. & 3. PormaTon, Attomoy Jouw A. Cu-ioamos. 2. . Davis, Asa't Cashion. o and pr Tond Sells passage ilciets tor Emicrasta in man e, o ylatl HOTELS THE JRIGINAL. BRIGCS HOUSE | Cor. Randolpt 8t. & 5th Ave UHICAGO ILL. it o R, Ty $2.00 AND $2.50 PER containing all modera improvements, elevator, & Cor. MARKET ST. & BROAD all trains. RATES— Tho best furnished n the city. GEO. T. PHELPS Laramie, Wyoming. are sample room, chargea reasonabl. atiention given %o traveliny Cheyenne, Wyoming lock trom d Traine stcp from 20 %02 hours tor dinner. Schuyler, Neb, Croatment, Twsgood ssmapie rooms. aention patd 1o commercial travalers. o - thont vaard © & tutarest, ipal cltias of the contle '&;" Located in the business cents, convenient to piaces of amusement. Elegancly furniabed, passenzet c J. H. CUMMINGS, Proprietor. OCDEN HOUSE, Council Bluffs, Towa. Ouliveo Street Rallwey, Omulbus ‘0 znd from Puslor floor, 33.00 por day; secoud oor, 32.50 per day ; thifd foor, §2 404 most com inodious hoase The miner's resort, good sccommodations, ‘men. fi¥ . CHILLI\RD Propriotor. INTER - 6CEAN HOTEL, First.clvms, Fine arge Sample Kooms ates | Free Bus toa0d from . Rates 200 #2560 and §8.00, sccording. "UPTON HOUSE, Flustclsss Houss, Good deals, Good Eeds Aty Hooms, and kind and scommodating THE OLDEST £STABLISHED. 'BANXING HOUSE | GALDWELL, HAMILTONSCO BANKERS. Bustiose *raoescied sme 58 that 0 an incor. Acconnta kept In Carrency or old subfect to o three, six aud twelve months, bearing tntorest, or o lo to cusiomors o spproved se- Buy andwell «0'd, billa of exchatge Govern Draw Sight Drafta on Fuciand, Ireland. Scor- GOLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. First Namionar Banx Cor. 13th ana Farnnam Streata, OLDEST ZANKING ESTABLISHMENT IN OMAEA (BUCCESBOKS TO KOUNTZE BROS.,) August 20, 1865, Capital and Profits Over$300,000 Bpociatiy nuthortsed by the Becretary or Trossury to recelve Subscription 10 the rincipat Dubiln, tbe Tn e, DAY WAY Prop Bpectai wio- Bpocia, FIRE FIRE FIRDB The Popular Clothing House of M. HELLMAN & G0.. ho Simpl ! o Simplest, the Most | 22 on account of the Season so far advanced, and having a very large Stock of Suits, Overcoats and Gents’ Furnishing Goods left, They Have REDUCED PRICES that cannotfailto please everybody REMEMBER THE ONE PRICE CLOTHING HOUSE, 1301 and 1303 Farnham St., Corner 13ih. GOODS MADE TO ORDER ON SHORT NOTICE. PIANOS £ ORGANS. J. S. WRIGHT, "o GHICKERING PIANO, FOR And Sole Agent for Hallet Davis & Co., James & Holmstrom, and J. & C.. Fischer’s Pianos, also Sole Agent for the Estey, Burdett, and the Fort Wayne Organ {o's. Organs. I' deal in Pianos and Orga-s exclusively. Have had years experience in the Businees, and handle only the Best. J. 8. WRIZHT, 218 16th Street, City Hall Building, Omaha, Neb. PAL<EY V. FITCH. Tuner. SHEELY BROS. PACKING CO,, PORK AND BEEF PACKERS Wholesale and Retail in FRESHMFATSE PROVISIONS, CARE, POULTRY, FISH, ETC. CITY AND COUNTY ORDERS SOLICITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET—1415 Dougias St. Packing House, Oppostie Omaha Stack Yards, U. P. . R. TELEFHONE OSSN NEBOTIONS. DOUBLE AND SINGLE AOTING® POWER AND HAND PUMPS , Bngire Trim: , Mining Maghinary, SELTINC HOSE, BRASS AND IRON FiTTINGS, PIPE, STEAN PACKING AT WHOLESALE AND RETALL. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH ARD SCHOOL BELLs 4 T, STRANG, 205 Farnhm Steat Ormabee, Nab Remvmov=eI. J. B. DETWILER, THE GARPET MAN, FRONTIER HOTEL, | Has Removed From His Old Stand on Douglas St., to His NEW AND ELECANT STORE, 1813 Farnham Street, Where He Will be Pleased to Mecet all His 0:d Patrons.

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