Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 15, 1881, Page 3

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] #” want of business capacit " nge to put the redskins on his tri VAN WYCK'S VIEWS. If lumber is becoming scarce and ex pensive, the greater reason why it should be allowed free. Can you im- agine why a tax of so mu r thou eand feet should be imy to fill pookets already overflowing. Thus you will see that all special and favor- ed interests are imposing taxation directly orindirectly. The groat mass of the people are continually made hewers of wood and drawers of water for the few. Hach of those interests specially protected are ready to unite for common defense. When the at- tompt shall be made to remove the tax on lumber - wood —pulp, iron, every moncpoly that the nation has protected through infancy to full grown manhood will unite to prevent any reliof. There is no reason why agricultural industry and ally should be forever ts more wealthy and powerful class terests which the people have already made strong by special legislation 8o that now they seek to dominate and control the policy of the government. Lately has appeared o new combiu: tion m the body politic in the Oflice Holders' Protective Union under the guise of civil service reform, the ob- jec’ being to sre life positions un- dorgovernment. This new dispensa- tion is proclaimed principally by those in office reinforced by occasional out- siders, some bankers who much prefer all matters should run in the rut they have established, importers who know their men in the custom houses, con- tractors, star route and others, who, to a certain extent, own and eontrol the bureaus with which they come in con- tact, others who always for obvious rensons want to be ‘‘let alone.” But where is the evidence that the people endorse or desire this political jug- glery. Constitutions of all the states provide short terms of oftice and some carefully guard the principle in the case of certain offices, notably treas- urer and sheriff, where the officer might exercise great influence by the manipulation of his office for his re-clection by providing that he shall not be eligible to re-election or a term should intervene betweon his holding. The people have em- phatically decided, no matter how strong in their confidence and lovey no mau shall be elected a third term to the presidency. The dogma of theso latter day political saints is the pharasaical assumption that no one except themselves and family and friends are worthy and competent to hold offices and that the present system of office holding is de- moralizing and disgraceful. Why then do they not themselves retire to private life. They ave al- ways more patriotic thun Artemus Ward, who sent hie wife's relavives to the war. These men are willing to sacrifice their blood relatives, even children, by secking and holding of- 1 positions, They are clam- orous that the government should be administered on business principles. Precisely: that is just what we want and what we do not get at the hands of the reformers. What business in this or any country, even England, which is the beau ideal of a government, for those “holier than thou patriots” selects its ofticers, agents and employes after com- petetive examination. The govern- ment is not suffering to-day from Now and then it takes detriment from want of honesty. It might be less objection- able if it would commence higher up; there would be the merit of consis- tency. If a clerk receiving §1,200 per annum can only enter after a se- vere exawination, 1t would seem more important that the one drawing $2,000 should also, yet thatis not requi They leave the higher positions as re- wards for political and partisan service, yet the inferior places must be filled by men of actusl business capucify and education litting them for profes- sorships in cullege. Certainly! Have busimess qualifications, but have them where most needed. The 1idea o committee of school m sters, or meaner still, those not knowing as much as school masters, wh wfter long study, trame seriva of questions having no connection with the ofiice to be filled the length of longest rivers, height of mountans, capitals of foreign countries, about squares, cubes and fractious, questions the ex aminers could not answer, except as they had studied the questions with the view of perplexing men with pos- sibly more husiness qualifications and habits than themselves. Oune state- ment will explain, A person seeking a clerkship in tae interior department was asked the distance of the sun from the earth at the point. He repliod: after leaving school ho could have answered, at present he could rot, although he could assure them it would probably not come near enough to interfers with the discl ) of his duties as clerk in the interior department, So he was correct un- less some Indian tribes inhabited the sun, and then the chances were that the department would somehow man- With the most improved ritlo and a flask of whis! Let reform commence at the top. Have men i charge of depactments and bureaus who have more business qualifications than their employes; who will know whether the clerks are competent and the business prop- erly conducted, Tf the people really desire a change in the policy of the administration, let the unseemly and sometimes disgracetul scramble for office stop with the great states- men of the nation and no more schemes and devices to pack prima- ries, county and state conventions, no more mobs and claquers at national conventions, But if the head of the government must be changed then stop office hunting for cabinet posi- tions, That is as disgraceful as a acramble for clerkships. Seven times seven candidates for each of the seven positions. Petitions, delegations, com- mittees, inundated the president-elect General Garficld was evidently more annoyed in the selection of his cabinet “than by the application of compara- tively few for the remaining 100,000 ) E“i““m" It would be interesting to < know which one of the present cabi- net could inform the people how far distant was the sun from the earth at the nearest point, 1t the gentlemen now filling cabinet 8 aro zealoas civil servico re- why did they not at an earlier and more opportune moment withdraw their friends from raids on | the president for the seats they now [fill?" Why should they strugglo fo | positions and not grant that hizh boon to the humblest citizen. The cabinet ministers say t are worried; why not? The president was worried by the importunities of their friends, The occasion of their worey is princi pally because they euter upon their offics ignorant of the duties, probably more so than the man who 15 seeking a clerkship, and many months of perplexing and arduous labor is re- quired to learn the rudimonts and rules of their departmont, the princpal part of which they must learn from the clerks under thom, and for many months be instructedand dircted by the employes. Will the reformers wake a note of this? Doubtless while this perplexes, the application for po sition isthe last feather, for every molo hill seems like a mountain to a we man, It will be an unfortunate day to the republic when the citizen shall cease to be a politician or indifte as to who shall seck or serve in office It wiil be best for the people to retain the power they possess. No privi leged few should be allowed to make offico seeking or interfering in politics disgusting. Tho basest tyrannical governing power always has been an avistocracy. Venice lost the republic it of conturies when the people were cajoled, and delegated to the grand council of 400 the right of voting ‘for magistrates. Wo ar continually reminded of what En- gland does. We were mot aw: there was much in the English gov- ernment for o republic to copy, although we are aware there was a certain class in the country would monarchy. The liberal and liberty loving Englishman will always find a warm place in the American heart, but the governing class cannot make models for us. This country will send no Yankee clocks run by dynamite to keep time, or end time even for her aristocracy. We remember in our darkest days, when the life of this nation was trembling in the balance the aid and sympathy England’s Lords extended our foes, Weo remember her aristocracy not only allowed, but advanced money to build blockade runners, And we must bo allowed at least to render sympathy for those of her people or under her yoke who feel oppressed, We rejoice that one of the evidences that America has not lived in vain, the moral cffect of our example aud the kindly offices of our sympathy have produced good fruit when parlinment felt compelied to do partial justice to Ireland, to give a ray of hope to her toiling masses, 1o recognize the right of peasantry, to know they have some in- terest in the soil by allowing them what common justico would grant | even to tenants on lands which did not contain the graves of their fathers and had not been ruthlessly taken ay from their ancestors. How unfortunate that our reform- ers did not utilize their business no- tions in that branch of the govera- ment where some benefits might re- sult. Then thousands might not have been wasted on machinery to make sugar from corn stalks, and thousands more in the efforts to grow tea where tea could not possibly grow. No part of the government brings so great re- turns for the money expended as the postal service and the men employed in the railroad branch, toiling by night and day, when disabled or killed in the Line of duty are as de- serving of pensions as svldiers on the field of battle. Yet many of the most meritorious .by reason of the insufliciency of the appropriation by congress has been reduced in salary. Millions for star routes, sums sufficiently large to divide, yet only hundreds for men in railway mail service. The late Post- master General Koy evidently necded some business qualification and a vast deal more honesty in his department. The T.dian bureau is another fine field for gleaning, a splendid opening for a new infusion of business t All the statesmen and all admninistra tions have grappled with the problom and the Indian or the Indian agent and trader have unhor them all. All experiments here have been expensive failures, The Jast placing them under control of the religious societies made no improvement. Sen- timent, ion, poetry gush, if you please, will not subdue the wild Indian. An excuse is made for his outbreak because he has been wronged or rob- bed. Every reading person in Ames ca is cognizant of that facl Do they not know, doesnot the depart- ment know, that nearly every man who is willing to leave a home of com- fort in the castern or middle states to hunt up and by the aid of civil serv ice reform, secure an agency or trader- ship, or contract, does 1t not for the me ary, but in some way to tileh from the Indian, to plunder him of his annuities, and defrand him of his goods. Even though the church sends him, —few men go in the name of the Lord appointing power s dearly 1 by all presidonts is surrendered not to the del tion in congress, who would at least desire to serve their state by appointing the most compe- tent wmen to prevent collizions, and the destruction of prope wnd the massacre of innocent women and children, but the power is surren- dered to the control of the irrespon- sible secretaries of the different soci- eties located in the east, and they rec- ommend, and the Indian commission with becoming modesty approves. The cabinet minister nods cousent and the president appouts. The character of these u,h]luihllllunlfl have done no credit either to the department or to the cliurch, There has been the same inefliciency, the same robbery. The only 1aen who seem to be ignorant of these facts, are the departmenti and the government. They sauander millions without any apparent care or concern and seem not to im- agine any danger until the skies are aglow with burning buildings and the lled with piercing shricks of mur- d sottlers and soldiors massacred. Why will not the nation demand a halt in this villsinous and_ bloody system? For every burning buiding every murdered” mar, woman, and child is but the result of a policy which every administration refuses to let go for no other reason than the patronage enjoyed and the profite to friends, Canby and his comrades av the Lava Beds, Custer and his command; now, part of Carr's com- mand, Will not this suflicel The like to extend the copy and establisha | ¢ THIE OMAHA DAILY BEE ',l,‘,”l'_l.t' [l;\\’ tears of the tender philanthropist will [Tf we are true to ourselves and j flow for the poor Indian: will the same [to all we will continue to be as | eyes weop for the pioncer and his [are now, the pee rof any in family cscaping from the flames of his | grand sisterhood of states. : dwelling only 1o bo bratally murdered | Not only our — great deve or tortured by the malignant domons, [opment_in production and popula All this rests with your government |tion, but — the death roll or rather with the people. Undoubted- [some of the early and promin ly the Indian bureau, the interior de- | citizens is bearing testimony that t \ partment, the administration, could | days ofourinfancyas a state haspassc find honest, judicious, faithful men to | Rogers, a disting ished citizen o Al the positions, but that never has | Dodgo county, Kaley, one of tho systom has been tried with nothing Schick, an honored representative | but failure, in millions of money |from Nemaha, another who held (lu-; squandered and rivers of blood. We |highest position the people of this invito settlers to tho frontior and [state could eonfor, Phineas W. Hitch- | leave them to tho merciless cruelty of [ cock, who had 1 the common | the savage. We plant a little band wealth from its infancy growing to of brave soldiers on the out-post, and | manhood out stripping in population | then arm the most murderous of the [and wealth, many of the original tribes with bettor rifles than thesoldiors | thirteen, since last we met have lain | sacred. Haye we not had full enough? How much more destruction and mur- | the last few weeks the most wonderful | sople will_domand | exhibition_that ever illustrated its placed in | history. No people in ancient or department, [modern times, no form of government | der before the | that this matter bo charge of the war elected to exceute the laws for 50, vut it in charge of men whos 000,000 freemen is stricken down by ence willguide and whose cha n cowardly assassin. Save the mur | De a guaranty of fwir treatment to the [derous wretch scarce another Trom |« red man. Lot us pause a woment with a[gulf, who does not reprobate the more pleasing theme, and prepare to | crime. o o knee that has n ask of tho government to do a sub- [ bowed and stantial blossing for the masses in|vently gone forth in gpen or secret ¢ which nea and population of the nation are|an eye that has deeply interested; that is to improve | ing and pathetic incident dropped the | their. own property, the great |silent tear. Before the mighty calam- water conrse some of the|ity at the bedside of the patient suf- grandest rivers gn the continent — | ferer party strife and personal hat rivers draining empires in extent, in[have been stilled and banished. rdeur, in wealth of production. [anxiety more earnest, no grief more o a small proportion of amounts |sincere than spontaneously came from | g hertofore expended on rivers havitg|the democratic party, against agents and empl , but better stil titho of what has been bestowed on|the generous sympathy like to been done and never will bo, This [ablest from the R«-Yuh]imn Valley, | § command and leave them to be mas- | down the burden of life. | s Teraws, We had given to the world during | CRNTRRS from which radiate | saving the salarics of the vast army of | furnishes a parallel. A president duly |, - FHH K. ocean to ocean, from the lakes to the| - heart that has not for- | fyrsed excolor cue-half the territory | prayer for the dying president. hc:n.; ¢ | waukoo and Missouri River Points; and ol 3 ot during the touch- | nections at all points of intersection with other SEPTEMBER 15, 1881 . : e Dok Iland Rovl!” ctropolis, CTIT ho ' COMMERCIAL EVERY LINE OF ROAD he Cor ) ROCK 1SLAND & PA- CIFIC RATLWAY that penet River to the CHICAC The Kansas, or which, by its own road, reaches the points above namied. No TRANSPERS Y CARRIAGR ! No wissiva coxsecrions! No huddling in 11 ventilated or uncle arried in roomy, clean and ventilated coaches Fast Rap X PULLMAN and ourown world-famous R8s, upon which meals aro served of un at tho low rate of SEVENTY hample time for healthtul njeyment, rongh Cars betwoen Chicago, Peoria, o ticket (do not forgot this) ¢ lace of importance in- Kansas, , Blac lills, Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, N itornin, \\uuh‘. gton Territory, Colorado, Arizona xico. al arrangements rogarding baggage as tly to ovory any other line, and rates of fare alway as. ow as npetitors, who furnish but a tithe of the com. fort. i and tackle of sportsmen free, ets, maps and foldors at all principal little water and no commerce; give a|which he had so long “battled, and |y ({* WL Slaten and o, R. R CAB E. ST. JOUN, heart with whom he had contended on ways to the sea. [ talking for | the field of battle, has accomplished We have been ios, yot to-day they are strongly en-|the reconstruction acts of Congress. trenched, substantially controlling [ Kings and monarchs of Eurove b{ the congress and many of the state legis- [ side of their subjects and serfs, have latures. They do it through you, [uncovered and stood in spirit and sym- through the people, and the men |pathy around tho couch. Another whom you elect. You have the |grand spectacle, a people administer- power, they the money and skill. [ing their own government without a They securc the best legal talent of | ruler, without a president. Nopower the country at the bar, and too often |in the government can give an execu on the bench. Sce the many contests | tive order, all the cabinet combined between railroad land grants and |cannot, while the hand of the c)!ivf the people. Generally the | magistrate is powerless, even to sign citizen is beaten. Will they claim |his name to any decree, yet we can that the law is on their side? Net |say as did Garfield on an equally sol- always. Take a case in our own state in | emn occasion, “‘God reigns and the Thayer and other seuthern counties, | government at W sed lands, obtained patents from . 'spending in_improve- | Ts universal; it affects all the human ’ ily, all animals, and may_be oven ines. ~Some are d to suf- chi governmo ments their last dollar and labor of | family, e themselves and families, and paying | found i patent miof > patient the taxes; then comes a representative of the Denver and St. Joo claiming the lands. The department decides against him, the humble owners still make improvements sustained by patents and decisions of department, —_— The representative of the railroad | GREATEST REMEDY KNOWN. bides his tiwe, confident that in the Dr. King's New Discovery for Con- courts he h: a firm friend and waits | sumption 18 certainly the greatest until the clim is nearly outlawed, | medical remedy ever placed within the then by a species of jugglery|reach of suffering humanity, Thou- well-known to those who | sands of once helpless suflerers, now can utilizo the courts, by a|loudly proclaim their praise for this robbery worse than any English | wonderful discovery to which they landlord would dare perpetrate, seeks | owe their lives, Not only does it posi- to wrest the title from thoso who had | tively cure Consumption, but Coughs, the best possiblo title, a government [ Colds, Asthma, Bronchigis, lgiuy patent, lands improved and taxes paid | Fever, Hoarseness and all affections of for , ten years. And they find a|the Throat, Chest and Lungs yields court ready to obey the infamous de- [ at once to its wonderful curative pow- mands, and by a most outrageous deci- [ er as if by magic. We do not ask you sionorder the land to the robber chief. | to buy a large bottle unless you know Had this villainy been attempted in | what you ase getting. We' therefore nd, a wild cry would have rung [earnestly request you to call on your |/ throughout the land. But the end of | druggists, Isi & McManox, and get a || that drastic, and stinate constipation, dyspepsia, there is no remedy 5o kind, so gentlo in its effcets, and yet so satisfactory as Buk- pock Broop Brrrers, Price $1.00, trial size 10 cents. of its wonder- may be found to keep the|vince the most skeptic: po 4 spoiler from his prey. { ful merits, and show you what a regu- The remedy for this and other|lar one dollar size bottle will do. Yor evils of administration i3 with |sale by Ish & McMahon (4) the people. They may not always - provent abuses, but they can soon check and utterly destroy the authors of th They must haye a greater knowledge, and take P A 4 ) a deeper interost in _ pol- tos from the ward and préoinct ISELTZER caucuses to the election of president. I'wo parties are organized and estab- ‘3& Vo W N fishod ontwelldefinad prinoiples: Sens €R \E\\ timent 1s very well to hold men to a political platform, yet while struggling for the sentiment be careful that the | stomach, or from bilicusness, in cither case n organization does not drift under the | few doses of i : control of men who prefer sclf-| Tarrant’sSeltzer Aperient, interest and dollars to sentiment or | administered according to directions, will sup- even patriotism. Let the people ston | DIk i uppien I long enougn, not to change parties, | cially suitable for warm weather, and but to change leaders occasionally. | ystem strong to do its work of récuperation. The | people generally content them- SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS o selves by making an’ effort to reach e the polls one day in the year and if GRAND OPENING! ember Oth, glory e v i i e haw, Tucsday ey glory enough for him until the next Y b annual clootion. Bo a politician | qis (or Ladies every day in the ye not to the neglect of your business, but the best way to sceure it. Remember there is |1 more in polities than mere oflice hold- [ Tors ing —the policy. of the government | o atthe Dancing Academy or ot the and prosperity of the natiou depends | of the patrous, upon it, Read, think, and above all | ,Frivate orders may bo lott at Mo, things, act, Act in unison. Do as ng Saturd sy a or Families, wil be ablo patrons. Also ction to schol- Private instructions wil ey Jnice eyer & 01 protection, attend the prmary and every caucus, then the county and KANSAS CITY, men, and then the slate now and then, You are an- RAILIRO.AD tagonized by the sharpestand brainiest » TS OMLY wen in the land. They make politics |y . a study, do nothing else; they can run Direct Line to 8T. LOUIS caucuses, conventions and legis- AND THE EAST latures, and the people are like cla From Omaha and the West. vears of danger from monopo- | more in reuniting the sections than all E A S T % , A FAMILY |[TONIC Axp BERVIRAGEH o than the disease; but in | Ja0le Manufacture crime i8 not yet, and we trust a | trial bottle free of cost which will con- [ F&=2rs = NEW YGREK, BOSTON Abad breath may result from acidity of the | VILLE, and il poin PN & Q. PALACE seats in Roclini fitted with tho #cho 1 manipulitors. do, PO : Hiem:mize difterencos, unto for scir: | 1880, SHORT LINE. 1880, | siate conventions. You havo the . Eaxs, B Jower, exerciso it, Nominate good St J & G 11 Blufi S poucr, Nominute wood | 1, J 06 65 UOUIL0 R | ot at all offices in the United States and Canada, other improvements, aud we will[a personal sorrow which came l‘}',',“'"l,:;fl:’l : Gen. Tkt nuu“ "::. open and make permanent these high- | from every southern home and = KENNEDY'S INDIA o ‘3998 AR SNOIIY H04 "WSILVWNIHY ‘VISdIdSA shington still lives.” RIETo matTy 1Al erterBaand ipE: = — B I T T E R S The Law of Kindness. ILER & CO., OMAHA. No Changing Cars BETWIHRN OMAHA & CHICAGO, Whero direct conncetions are made with Through s EEPING CAR LINLS for PHILADELPHIA, BALTIMORE, WASHINGTON AND ALL EASTERN ITIES, The Short Line via. Peoria Eor INDIANAPC CINCINNATI, LOUIS the BOUTH-ELAST. THN BRST LINE For ST. LOUIS, Where direct connections are mado in the Union Depot with the Through Slocping Car Lines for ALL POINTS SOUXTEL. 18 Daciyitis b aacocaatia) \hab i snamal |t e MR Dt B 64 NEW LINE »x DES MOINES THE FAVORITE ROUTE FOR Rock lIsland. Tho un by this line ) PALACE o G, 1 RAWING ROOM CARS, with No extra chargo for The famous C., B, & , Palaco Dining Gars, Gorgeous Smok high-backed rattan revolving xclusive use of first-class passen- valed inducements offe and tourists are as follo PULLMAN (10 whe lorton's Reclining Cha chairy, for ors. Steol Track and superior_equipment combined gh car arrangemient, makos ho favorite route to the Southeast, u will tind’ traveling » luxury fn- mfort. ot 110 this colebrated line for eale All information about rates of fare, Sleeping Car accommodations, Timo Tables, etc., will be cheerfully given by applying to PEKCEVAL LOWELL, General Pagsonger Agent, Chicago, T. J. POTTER, Genoral Manaver (hicago. in their hands. They will tell but they don't really understand poli- % tios any more than they do finance| Daily Passenger Trains REACHING ALL EASTERN AND WESTERN CITIES with LESS CHARGES and IN ADVANCE of ALL{ no treuble 1 finding agreeable, edu- cated gentlemen in the large cities who are willing to take your proxies and attend to your political duties. | This s«;nullo lino o, oau) i L 5 Palace Slocping Palac Remember that you have here more Satety Platloras and Coupler, and the colebrated important dutics to discharge than | Westinghouse Air-brake. o A vhing a i ' ing. c! NI ploughing, ~ planting and reaping, | &8¢ that your Hoget revls VA sANEAD Elect men to the legislaturo who will | road, via t. Joseph and it. Louls. not be bribed by adverse interests, or | T cajoled by tho blandishments of & | X6 Dawes, Gen, Sum slate capital, Gen, Poss, aud Ticket Agt., B, As we stand to-day in the greatest ¥ Axpy Bokors, T A | gren 1020 Farih city of Nebraska and what is destined A. B, BARXARD, Gonoral A to be in wealth, education and refine- | ik oMA ment the largest city in the west, SIBBETIT & FGLLER”_ whose growth and wealth, like that I of the state, seems to increase with s | ATTORNEYS AT LAW, magic more wonderful than that of Aladdin’s lamp. ~We dare not pre- lmhl-?{:amS:ml:P dict the possibilities ef the future, | coves s with Pullman's y Coaches, Millor's | o B S oo BlaCK Diamond Goal Co. You 1n a patronizing manner that tho | ¥O changq of care betwoen Omara and b ol k L d A people are well enough in their way, Nglx\'mun e Pals al fl:fl gency DAVIS & SNYDER, aud transportation, and you will have 1606 Farnham 8t., ... Omaha, Nebraska “400,000 AO0ORES N ADVA Care.ully selected land in Eastern Nobraska for OTHER LINKS, wate. " Great Hargaine (o improved farms, snd o 3 WEBSTER BNYDER. Late Land Com'r U P. ? tpfebtt EWELL, AND THREA, HARD ORASOFT COAL u car lots or in quantities to suit purchasers, Orders Solic Yard, Foot Farnham and Doug- las 8ts,, Omaha, sepdl the most direct, quickest, and \-EARTRRN, ‘SouTii h terminat thoro, yATCRISON, nent from the Missour! owning track Into THIS NIWW AND CORRECT MAP Proyue Jeyond any reasonable question that the CHICAGD & NORTH-WESTERN R'Y 3 by all odds the best road for you to take when iraveling 'n either atrection betwoes Chicago and all of the Principal Polnts in the West, North and Northwest, warefully examine this Map, The Principal Citles of the West and Northwest ar :I“H‘Llly:«v:‘r“‘u i Jis through tralns make close counections with the trains of ail rai'vo inetion points. RN Diltuen. o8 THE CHICACO & NORTH-WESTERN RAILWAY Qverall ot its prineipal lines, runs each way daily Q : 5 o ¥ daily from two to fo o Trains. 1tis the only road west of Chicago that uses the PN The Imperial Palace Dining Cars. It1s the only road that runs Pullman Sleep: N ! Sleeping Cara North or Northwes i hearly 3,000 M I OF ROAD, 1t forms th®following Trflnl‘c‘fl‘x‘nf‘:" LI Counell Blufts, Denver & Callfornia Line.” Centr Nor. (1ino) port & Dubuque Lij iiwankee, Groen Bay & Take Superior e 4 sel Capigeety over this zoad are sold by all Coupon Tickét Agents fn the United States and Remembor to sk for Tickets via this road, bosuro they read over it,and take nono other, MARVIN HUGHITT, Gen'l Manager, Chicago, - W. L. STENNETT, Gen'l Pass, Agent, Chilcage. HARRY P. DUEL, Ticket Agent O. & N. W. Rallway, 14th and Fainham strects, D. K. KIMBALL, Assistant Ticket Agent C. & N, W. Railway, 14th and Farnham streets J. BELL, Ticket'Agent C. & N, W. Kailway, U. P. K. R. Dopot. BAMES . CLARK General Avent. ADVANCE OF THE SEASON! Goods Suitable for the COMING WEATHER ~——JUST RECEIVED AT-— Guild & McInnis’ And will be sold at our usual extremely TOW PRICHESI Bilankets and Comforters, Flan- : nels and Shirtings, Cotton Flan- nels and Sheetings, Muslin and Calicoes, Dress Goods, Silks and Satins, Black Goods and Cash- meres, Hosiery and Underwear, Corsets and Gloves, Ribbons and Ladies’' Neckwear, Cloaks and Dol- mans, Table Linens and Napkins, Gent’s White and Colored Shirts, Waterproofs and Flannel suitings, Denims and Jeans. OurBlue Checked Shirting at 16 2-3¢, Sold Everywhere else ab 20c. You will SAVE MONEY by Buying Your Goods of GUILD & McINNIS, 603 N. 16th St., 2nd door N. oI’Cal.,___E_.Agc_i_e_l Special Attention Is Once More Called to the Fact that DNML.EX I TL.INVC.A N S COD. Rank foremost in the West Prices of CLOTHING, FOR MEN'S, BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S WEAR. in Assortment and ALS0 A COMPLETE LINE OF Furnishing Goods Hats and Caps. We are prepared to meot the demands of the trade in regard to Latest Styles and Pattorns, ¥ine Merchant Tailoring in Connection, RESPECTFULLY, M. HELLMAN & CO,, 300 to 312 13th 8t, Corner Farnha CHARLES McDONALD 1202 "anm STRBET, NOW OFFERING FOR ONE MONTH ONLY DECIDED BARGAINS | Ladies' Suits, [}luikg.zfis_ters, Cireulars, e, 200 Handsome Suits, at $6.00; 300 Stylish [Suits, $10,00; 76 Black Bilk Suius, $1'7.00, Wae have several lots of staple goods which will be offered at SEVENTY-FIVE GENTS ON THE DOLLAR. All ladies should avail themselves of this great eale of] CORSETS AND UNDERWEAR, "LINEN AND MOHAIR ULSTERS, SILK AND LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS, LAWN SUITS AND SACQUES, CHARLES McDONALD, 29-c0d-u

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