Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 6, 1881, Page 4

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—— The Omaha Bee. Pablishad svery morning, except Sunday, “The only Monday morning daily. TERMS BY MATL:— One Year..... £10.00 | Three Montha.53.00 Wix Months. 5,00 | One . 1.00 THE WEEKLY BEE, published ev. BERMS POST PAID :— One Year.. $2.00 | ThreoaMontha., 50 Bix Months 1.00 | Ono il LT CORRESPONDENCE—AIl Communi. eations relating to News and Editorial mat tors shonld e addressed to the Eorton o¥ Tie Ve : BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Business Letters and Remittances should be ad dressed to Tir OMARA Punuisning Cox PANY, UMAHA. Drafts, Checks and Post- office Orders % bo made payable to the order of the Company, QMAHA PUBLISHING CO., Prop'rs E.ROSEWATER, Editor, Edwin Davis, Manager of City Circulation. John I, Pierce is in Charee of the Mail Circution of THE DAILY BE! 1. D. Chawberlain correspondent and solicitor. —————————————————— It is the golden season of the year for the congressional lobby Tue readjusters aredoing their best to readjust the dewocratic minority. —_— Davin Davis expressed the opinion under oath in the Guiteau trial that the democratic party had outlived its usefulness. WaEere was that organized opposi- tion to republican control of the com- mittecs that we have been hearing so much about? PRESIDENT ARTHUR is reported to be thoroughly disgusted with the con- duct of the star route trials, and has asked Col. Bliss in future to take charge of the cases, President Arthur's disgust is shared by the whole country. VALENTINE expects to be chairman of the committee on agricultare. That will aflord him an excellent chance for distributing garden sass and flower seeds amony the farmers whose sup- port he is anxious to secure for a third term in congress. Ex-Svrnryis TECT Mur- LET was charged with giving circul tion to a report that John Sherman had furnished his Washington resi- dence out of the treasury funds, hut Mr. Mullet comes forward through the Cincinnati Commereial to deny the soft impeashment, Arter paying the salary and ex- pense bills of November the Omaha board of education has a trifle over $1,000 lett to conduct the public schools for the remainder of the school year. Unless the license fund can be collected our schools will have to close within sixty days. —— Tue shortness of the corn crop will make a scanty pork produce through- out the west. Farmers hesitate to foed corn to hogs when it commands fifty conts a bushel on the cars. Tt is estimated that the falling off in the pork packed this scason will be over 1,000,000 from that of last year. NorwiTHSTANDING the dangers of the ‘electric light the companies in New York are unable to get machine- ry for supplying the light as fast as wanted, James Gordon Bennett has contrateted for GbG lights to be put m the Hevald building, and it is ex- pected that all the theaters will shortly be lighted with electricity. ed Tug Cincinnati browers haye ag that heer shall hereafter be sold uni formly at 8 per bar Agents will not be allowed to solicit trade among the patrons of other broweries, and will be allowed no *“troating” monoey, Omaha brewers will probubly follow suit when they turn over a new leaf on New Year's Day. Now thet the tune is near at hand when the Slocum ordinance goes into effect, the keepers of low dens and hell holes that expect to bo closed by the police because they cannot pro- cure a license under the stringent regulations, are indulging in threats against the class of liquor, deal. ers who propose to abide by the law. If Mayor Boyd and the city authorities do not speedily suppress these outlaws, the respectable and law-abiding citizens will take meas- ures to enforce the laws, — Bisuor O'Coxxor left last evening for the celebration of the Sisters of Mercy's Golden Jubilee, st Pittsburg, Pa. The late Bishop O'Connor, of Pittsburg, a brother of our eminent fellow citizen, introduced Mercy Order Sisters in his diocese nearly forty years ago, and their number in all houses through our states and ter- wilories probably reach three thousand on the occasion of their Golden Jubi lee of their iustitution mn Ireland. Our citizens share in the joys of the good sisters, whoso hospital and achool management have won golden opinions for them wherever they make an aftiliation, PROSTICUTING THE PRESS Tho latest dodge of the railroad monopolies east is to flood the country with pro railroad literature under the thin dis tions of the farmer and the cory This plan has been adopted to so of discussing the rela A tions, counteract the damaging effects of the publications of the anti-monopoly 1 ha ing this end the ablest minds and the usial, the corporations gue. As vo called to their service in further handsomest lotter press which money can purchase. Having gobbled up the Journal of the iean Agricultural they have turned it into a railroad organ, and are busy mailing printed slips made up from its con- so-called Amer Association tents, and sending them to the news. papers throughout the country for publication. In the first issue of this magazine a lengthy and article was published from the pen of ward Atkinson under the title of “The Railroad and the I Mr. Atkinson's principal argument ingenious mer. was that the railroads have in the Jast ten or fifteen years largely reduced through frei means have largely mcreased the value of the annual farm product of the United States. In where they robbed the eastern pro ducers ven years ago of sixty per cent of their profits, they are now satisfied t charges, and by this other words to confiscate only forty per cent on somo classes of goods, while on other classes they are even more lenient in their demands. From the statement which he fortifies by an immense num- ber of statistics which no one is dis- posed to dispute, Mr. Atkinson con- cludes that any legislation to restrain the railroads will be the sheerest folly and will react most unfavorably upon the farmers who are now crying for laws to prohibit the dwcriminations and extortions which aro ensiching the railway kings and impoverishing the producers, Pamphlets containing this article, written by a man 1 the pay of the corporations, have scattered broadeast over the country and sent wherever its influence could operate in favor of the monopolies. been Tn order to make a show of fairness the stool- pigeon editor of the Joarnal of the Awmerican Agricultural ation asked for replies to Mr. Atkinson's ar- ticle. Supposing the request made in good faithy the Hon, L. K. Chitten- den, president of tho National Anti- Monopoly league, sent ananswer un der the same title as Mr, Edward At- kenson’s article, which took the as Associ sertions of that gentleman up point by point, and very effectually dissected the fallacy of his conclusions. We have no intention, at present, of repro- ducing this articlo, but resume of Mr. Chittenden’s arguments will be given to tho readers of Tue Bir at some future tini The strength of his position and the ability of his treatment can be judged from the effects upon the stool-pigeon oditors of the Jowrnal, which pro- fesses to live only for the welfare of the farmers of the country. Thoey at ence publicly through their columns denounce Mr. Crittenden as a dema- gogue and charaltan, apol for pub- lishing his reply. solicited by them and written in the midst of business cares, and in order to take the anti- monopaly flavor from the wouths of their readers, reproduced Mr. Atkinson's original article entire with a preface praising its author its contents to the farmers of the west. This has been followed by a sheet of extracts sent to various journals of the country which contains among other things a iali- ous personal attack upon Mr, Chit- tenden and tho body of men whose sontiments he voices. Tho distribu- tion of this apology for the monopolies is entrusted to the railroad literary burean in New York. and commending A number of journals who have not up to this time professed sympathy with the anti-monopoly movement at once denouncoed this cheeky proceed- ing as a monopoly move very thinly disguised under an Agricultural cloak, Tho Journal of the American Agri tural ul- Association should be issued horeafter undsr the railrcad imprint, One thing is certain, it has lost what- ever influenco it has herotofore pos- sessed as an unbiassed medium for the discussion of matters relating to the Ther stool-pigeons ice for the people of the west to countenance any increase of their number, —— farmers of this country too many newspaper already in exis Axoruer important decision has just been rendered that may prove of material advantage to the people west of the Missouri, and pecially those interested in stock raising and mest packing. The canning of beef and other meats had become a great industrial and commercial interest, and a Chicago house, believing it l wonopoly of the business under cortain patents, brought suit against the St. Louis Meat Canning company and others, to restrain them from further engaging in the business. Several cases coyor- ing this patent claiin were consolidated and tried in the United States dis- trict court of Ilinoie by Judge Drum mond, Judge Blodgett with the decision, coineiding which, in effect, declared that rothing patentable thore i in the canning proce It is an old art to cook | moat by boiling, and it was old, too, to can the meat and o press it into the can 8o as to form a solid cake. The fact that the complainants had built up a large trade was not suf- make the Nor was there any invention in the ficient to patent valid can, in which the meat is pressed and The kind of cans used was a matter of selection, not of inven packed tion. So the defendants marched out of who choose to go into the business to ourt with the right of any one do so established, and no fears of in fringing on a monopoly need be en- tertained AN IMPORTANT VERDICT. Pacific “waked up the wrong passenger” in The Union Company Denver in the person of Judgo Lucivs P. Marsh who has just recovercd by of law §2,000 for the unlawful | tion of his gcods by that corpo proce dete " | ration on aceount of his refusal to pay overcharges on froight from tho east. The every shipper i Nebraska, Wy ase 18 an intercsting one to and Utah who uses the Union Paciic We append from The Den Judge M statement of the facts in the case: railroad. ver Tribune rsh's own In April last I shipped froma point | in Ohio to Denver loail of house | hold goods, and prepaid at that end all the charges that were asked for the carringe of the freight through to| Denver. When the goods arriv liero the Union Pacific company re- fused to deliver them to me unless [ paid an_additional sum for their car- ringe. The sum was small, but they came at me at the wrong end-—they accompanied theic demand with threat, and that I wouldn't stand, so 1 retused to pay the money asked, and they refused to give me possession of my gowds. Thereupon 1 sued the 1y to recover the value of my property which they wero holding un- lawfully and unjustly. 1 claimed that i the railroad company cast had be in the habit of giving rates and taking payment in advance for shipinents from places on their line to points on the Union Pa- cific, and this had been done with the knowledge and acquiescence of the Union Pacific, then such railroad cast wag an agent of the Union Pacific; the public’ were entitled to so treat them: they were such in law their contracts for the can mwade in the regular form by custom afl usage, wero ling upon the Union Pacific. T claimed further, that if no such agen- ¢y existed, and a shipment was made, and such shipment came to the Union Pacific with the knowledge that it had been paid for through to Den- ver, and the Union Pacitic took such shipment and completed the carriage to Denver, thoy had no licn upon the goods, nor right to re- tain them h for a balance which might, in fact, bo due them. Thesc wero my claims and the points wero 1 by the Judge. :Tho case was tried by jury and they gave mo a verdict for $2,000. This was a trifle less than the value of the goods, but it served to show that T was right in my position. This eamo practice is worked by (he Union Pacific every day, Tam told, and if the shippers would fonly take decisive measures, as I did, they might m timo prevent such unlawful and dishonest extor- tion, COMMISSIONE Ravy, of the inter- nal revenue service, has issued his an- nual report of the receipts and dis- bursements of the department for the last year, ftogether with comparative tablos of the receipts for the four years preceding. The very sati tory statement is made that 8602, B10,797 have been collected during the last five years without the loss of a dollar to the governmons by defal- cation, and that the cest of collection has been $21,979,002, or a littlo over per cent. Within the past 8 the receipts of the deartment have been at the average rato of one hundred millions a year, 1f the receipts of the current year arc proportionato to those of the first four months it is estimated that by the 30th of June noxt the entiro receipts for three fiseal y the twelve months will reach the enc mons total of $157,000,000, or 822 000,000 more than those of last year. Commissioner Raum expresses no opinion as to the abolition of the liquor and tobacco tax, as advocated Kelley and men, He by Pig Tron high tarift other however, that as soon as the necessi- ties of the government pernut, in- tornal revenue taxation might be ley- iod exclusively on distilled spirits, malt liquors and tobacco and on deal- ors and manufacturers of those articles, I the hght of Commissioner of Pensions Dudley's report, the govern- ment for some years to come, will re- quive every dollar of their prosent revenue to meet the demands of the arrears of pensions steal which was foisted 1 of the United 5 faced demngogry under the especial cham pionship of Me. Weaver of groenback fame. won - the tax p ates, by the me ——— Have the mombers of the Omaha liquor dealers union considered the position in which they place themselves by their proposed obstruction to th enforcoment of astate law and thecity ordinances passed in conformity there- to? Do they com chend that any d in & conspiracy to pre- man onga; vent the p able enforcement of the law by intimidation and threats is Lble to indictment and punishment us conspirator, Do they imagine that the law-abiding peoplo of Omalw will allow an organization of outlaws 'HE OMATIA DAILY BEE: to close our public schools for want of the license funds Tuat political 1iwad, ww Kev. Gil bert Do La Matyr, will ha for the next session of congroes befor o to wait making another grab) at the clork<hi; of the house of representatives, LITERARY NOTES Cani oF TR ( Wan. No. 1, The Out'ook of the Ii<hellion by Juhn G, Nicolay, privats secrotary of Presi dent Lincoln, 1 vol, 12 mn.220 pp. 81.00, Chas. Seribner's Sons New York Oneof the most important literary undertakings of the present year is the series of works under the title of War," the first two volumes of which have just “*Campaigns of the Civil been issued by Chas, Scribner's Sons, publishers, The serics promises to be o contribution an e cedingly valual to American ‘ll!‘!\\?}. comprising a and exhaustive narrative of the reat rebellion in chronological order from the firing upon Sumter to the disbanding of the couflicting armies ratula It is a matter for gencral e tion that the preparation of the vari- 8 volumes has been entrusted tothe leading actors in and students of America. alone possess the qualities, so essential the civil war in Such men to a military historian, of combiniz and proportioning through intelligent reading the many reports, regimental and document the outgrowth « thecampaigns of the rebellion. Eleven histories, memonr: erial which we yolumes ‘¢ now in preparation carry- ing the record through the Atlanta campaign and Sherman’s march to the sea. A pumber of others will be forthcoming, No writer is better able to portray in a vivid and entertaining manner the scenes attending the outbreak of the rebellion than John (. Nicolay, for a number of years private secretary to President Lincoln. He briags to the work an inmate acquaintance with the purposes and plans of the exceutive aknowledye of war men and measures at the added to extensive research among the No such con- cise and comprehensive history of the scenes guined by a long residence White facilitics for governmont records, House ttending the firing upon Sumter has as yet been pro that givea-by Mr. N cola ssented as The call the troops to arms, the massing o upon the border, the engagement of the war culminating in Bull Run and the retreat upon the capital are pictured with disastrous araphic More d by great care in statement, fairness in conclusion and strict histovical aceu- acy in the geouping of facts, power and dramatic fo than all the volume is character Wak, No. 11 vinth by M. I eral and brevet 1 vl 12 mo, Seribner’s $ons, CAMPALGNS oF THE (vl k Force, late brigadli major general U, S op. 2 4 SLO0, Chas, New York. Gen. Foree's narrative of the cam- paigns on the Cumberland and Tenn- esseo are preceded by a sketch of early operations in the department of the Missouri. Considerable space is de- voted to the organization and arrange- ment of the various forces and unus- ual care scems to have been taken in the collection of statistica relati the actual number of forces engag and the composition of the commands, The Ft. Donaldson campaignis treated at length with much force and vigor The incidents relating to nder of the fort and the re- treat of the disorganized confederacy upon Nashville bear on their face the stamp of freshness and trath, n of style. the sur Force has added to his own personal recollections the statistics vathered from the corps and regimental com- manders who took part in the scries of battles which ended in the feapture of Corinth and the utter Beauregard's army. te of The result is an valuable historical essay, in which the interest is sustained from the begin- ning to the close. NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW, Tho editor and proprietor of the North Amcrican Review announees that the Roview will he hereafter pub. lished at No. 50 Lafayette Place, and will appear under its own iwprin He states that he has found it impo siblo to conduct the publication in the spirit of the motto adopted by its founders, makmg it a forum of inde- pendent thought, and extending, at his discretion, the hospi wlity of jts pages to thinkers and scholars of all creeds and fors of bolief, and at the same time to maintain - relations with a publishing house hay tensive school-book and other inter- ests of ils own to premote, This o of imprint will invelye no alteration whatever in the orga tion orservice of the Review. PERSONALITIES. Whitelaw Roid draws 86,000 por year an editor 4 000 as & husban i, Giuiteau appears to have heen a sort of a Colonel Mulberry Sellers in th g . Von Moltke is ubout to retire. Old a is an enemy th and on both f e attacks in front and rear, wkoitehitzky of the Russsian He attempted to pronounce nee too often | Gieorge Batler, nophew of his uncle, who is now an artist at Rome, lately slashed the nose of another artist in a duel, aker Keifer is a broad shouldered, e headed man with a plentiful suppl of iron gray haic and whiskers, nervous and quick in his wovements, We hope Bill Jones is sober and well acking confidence iy his marksmanship, inot refrain from expressing our sympathy with his intention. Wendell Phillips has less to say of Treland since he was invited over tu wear TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6 1881 e preen, Jam I wn this side.with indi M. Renan in these ks like a omfortable French priest, an occupant of ome quiet village pulpit. He is a all man, thick.s nd heavy in movemeat, King Kalakana has reached hi Hawaiian kin alrendy be al ing n morning. Since Mer, Rid 'lely up for t nited S been discovered he mm. Inthe meantime, the party he is roing to sucesed has wn as homely as sage hen, 8. F. Clock, of Mineola, has Heo onght to have Leen an alarm clock, for then he w uld have been the minute he went off - [ Brookly Argis. He was probably ran dowr eel Give a clock a show.=[vetroit Free Pre ently ac limated t haby withont hav disap ave held it to he I'the advan- young man, that greate t. \We think, {vautag- of leve! head ter, Hollasd had both Mason, the « who hoot Guit au, is described as with very regular feq t attempt Atures i him lo 'k while it bears out the direct The Miss vas for so long a time - ny swdon Beonet, is to be mart She submitted 10 all kin ls of embirrassments and humili s hefore she fired the eccentrie young journalist, and then her big brother Fred loped him and met him on the xo-called field of honor. Now she i tomarry & Mr. il the wedding is to be'a very air. Perhaps the sudden depart- wett for Europe can mow be catisfactorily acconnted for, ‘Brick’ Pome is “‘broke azain.” His wreer has certainly been one of “‘u & and downs.” - Just after the warhe ma ea for- tune, the sales of his Democrat yunning up 0,0 0. He lost his paper and his money, went to New York, made an: ther fortune th and emigrated to Denver witn exactly 2 in his pockets. He went into journa ista and mining pecula nd, with his vsual lu paper running, and_w come of 810,000 a day from his mining speculations, Now both the newspaver and the mines have played out, and “Brick” will have to pro-pect somewhere else Haidee Heller, once the assi:tant of Robert Heller in his second sight perform- ance , is now a cashier in a fashionable London restaurant. Shehas made several attemprs to teach that famous trick to others since Heller's death, with a view to continuing (it in public, but mo one was able t . master it - sufficiently for political parposes. The system is simple, and has frequently heen explained as consisting of the useo” phrases, words, and even the iuitials of words, to de-ignate familisr ob- nd to spell out the names of un- nes; but a wonde fully quick mind is needed to employ it in a4 munner ive andiences. Heller was so clever v, too, and had by twenty years of elaborat-d the dceiom that ikely to equal Lim. [New k, soon had a fine York Sun. THE "BLOODY SHIRT." Is It Out of Politios? Evidences of a Better Feeling in tho South. Chicago Journal, T'here are many pleasing evidences that the temper and spirit of the southern people have undergone a de- cided change for the better since the heated and prolonged pelitical contest of 1876. The defeat of Mr. Tilden in that year, and Gen. Hancock last fall, have dispelled the belief that the solid south can control the nation, and the signal failure of the Bourbon party in Virginia at the late election, on mere local issues as well as the wholly de- moralized condition of that party in Tennessee, Mississippi and other south- ern states, have all pointed 1n the same direction. They see that a solid south makes a sold north, and when it comes to a contest between the sec- tions, the result will be as Tacitus said it was in battle, ‘‘God always favors the heaviest battalions.” When the motive to make the south solid with the hope of national supre- macy is dispellea, of course the chief meentive to intimidation, bulldozing and ballot-box stuffingalso disappears, and the outrages that have been per- petrated upon colored men and re- publicans in the ruder sections of some of those states are likely now to be entirely discontinued. Men of honor in all parties are heartily ashamed of these disrepucable and undemocratic proceedings at the polls, and their influence may confi- dently be counted on to suppress violence, and m favor of fair elections nd an honest count. Any outrage nmitted upon the ballot-hox, as Mr. Garfield used to say, “‘strangled our sovereign in its cradle,” and is danger- ous to the liberty of all alike, Another proof of a botter feeling existing between the two races at the South is the evident abandonment of the intention of the colored peoplo to emigrate to the North and West, The colored exodus that was so threaten- ing two years ago has died out almost entirely, and the matter 18 new too wignificant to longer attract the at- tract the attention of publicists or politicians. It is possible that the scare had a salutary effect upon the property owners in the localitios where it was most popular, because no sec- tion can be prosperous than for any cause drives out its laboning popula- tion, The people of the south are turn- ing their attention to other matters besides politics, which they find much more profitable for their pockets, and more consoling to their temper. Those of them who are old enough remem- ber their fathers us a race of politi- cians, who were ut one time the dom- inating intfluence in the gener ernment, but in the end their pet theory of etate rights ended in seces- sion and its bloady, and erueleivil war, No wonder that common sense and sad experience should teach their children to try and avoid the serious errors of their fathers, The attention that now being paid to agriculture, mining, educa: tion, railroading and internal im- provements, gives earnest of rapid puent and great material and ial and intellectual advancement fow days ago there were a dozen governors present at once at the At- lanta cotton exposition, and in a few days hence all the mayors of all the principal cities of the Union are expected there to give their sanction and encou nent to the enterprise. The delegation of citizens that re- cently went from Chicago to Atlanta, speak in the highest terms of praise of the friendliness of the people with whom they were brought to con- in wafety and hue | , brown taste in his mouth next | tract, Nearly all of them are ardent {and enthusiastic republicans, and every one of them is of the opinion that it is now time to fold up and lay away the “bloody shirt It is not likely that the ‘‘ensan guined garment” will be allowed to cut much a figure in political campaigns | hercafter. In the slang of the day, ‘it is played out. Tt is well. Tt was needed at one time, and served a good | purpose; but the cause that forced it into prominence are now hippily banished, or are rapidly passing [ from sight. Let it sleep in the grave | of Sccession and Rebellion, and all | the unpleasant memories that are con- | nected with sectional hatred, which, however, much some politicians wonld | like to keep them alive, ought to be forgotten forevermore. WHO SPEAKS FOR IOWA? The Republioans of the State Have Done It Heretofore, and May Again. loux City Jovenal. The Journal said, the other day: The Muscatine Journal thinks lowa ought to harmor with the adminis- tration. That will depend upon whether the administration is dispos- ed to harmonize with Towa. . To which the Muscatine paper sponds: Who is authorized to speak for Towa? So far as the public sentiment of this State can be determined by its press, it is now nearly unanimously in harmony with the administration, There are only three disgruntled jour- nals, and our Sioux namesake happens ts be one of them We take it that the Republicans of Towa are authorized to speak for the Republicans of Towa. This they did last ar, very emphatically, in the Des Moines Convention to select del- egates to the Chicago Convention, We do not believe Towa Republican senti- ment, since that time, has been revo- Jutionized. If we are correct in this, then there is ample authority for say- ing that Jowa Kepublicans sentiment is opposed, by a big majorty, to the Grant surroundings as a controlling element in our Republican politics. Now, then, to speak plainly, the republicans of Towa ought not to har- monize with the administration if the policy of the adminjstration is to be in pronounced opposition to this republi- can sentiment of Towa. To the ex- tent thit there is evidence that the republican sentiment of the state “is now nearly unanimously i hannony with the administration,” it comes almost wholly from those who are oppused to the preponderating sen ment of the state last year, or from those who are now on their tip-toes to jump to the patrotage side. The masses of the republicans of the siate have not changed their coats or their one at all mterested in uth may satisfy him- selt upon this point by getiing out among them. They are opposed to making the Grant influence supreme. They are not this because they ishly concerned in the distribu- tion of the patronage, for they an not thus concerned. They arc this because they helieve the tendency is unhealthful for can politics. The signs of the times are tha the administration is to re- verse the order of the Chicago con- vention. The general feeling among Towa Republicans is that none but a Grant man nced apply. Garfield’s policy was to heal the division in the party, and yot preserve the fruits of the Chicago victory. He had no enemies to punish, as individuals. His aim was to build for the repub- lican party and for principle. That was the recogmtion his administra- tion had here in Towa, 1f the Arthur administration shall follow the same policy. Towa republicans will readily and cheerfully harmonize with it; oth- erwise they will not. They are now looking for developments, anxious for the best, as they understa d what is best, but from the pointers already out, suspicious. They know their own ground; they donot know the ground of the administration, except as they can divine it from the current news. Patronage and time may tempt them from their position; we shall see as to that. The policy of the admin- istration, as it develops, may win sup- port upon its merits; we all hope that it may be so. But in advance of the fact it is too early to talk of honest unanimity. Jacob Martzoff, Lancaster, says NG well for yon it; yself, ildren | 't find a bealth k State, - Oct, 5, 1 all ueed it,” and fer family in’ New 880, eud-1w The leading Sciy most discases aro or liver. tists ot to-day agree that ed by disordered kidneys health will he the nkuown a short cred great agony f The discnery ver Cure mirks { these troubles, i without of Warne anow era ade from a kinple itaing just the elements and invigorate both of these safely restore and keep thes Positive Remedy for all the paing in the lower part of the Liver—Headaches - Jaundico Fover— Aguo—Liver and Urlnary Organs, It is an excellent and safe remedy for femalos during Preguancy, 1t wiil coutrol Menstruation and ix in ‘aluable for- Leucorrhy alling the Womb, A il ol As a Klood Puriier it is unequaled, for it cure i orzans that ke tho bivod. .+ {00 it cures ‘This remedy, which has done sich wonder: put up in the LARGEST § BOTRCH of e medicine upon the warket, and is sold hy Dru, sty 1l dealers at per bottle, For Diabet uire for AKNEW'S SAF DIA BETES CURE. It iss POSLIVE Rewedy, H. H. WARNER & CO., Rochester, N. Y. Je18-40-th-sat- SIBBETT & FULLER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, D» VID CITY, NEB, T Houses LOTS For Sale By BEMIS, FIFTEENTH AND DOUGLAS 8T8, No. 1, Newhouse, 7 rooms, ncar Saunders, §1200. No. 2, :story house, 0 rooms, well, cistern and barn, Webste th stroct, §2500. No, 8, Housé of 10 rooms, on Harney, near h strcet, stone foundation, $4000. No. 4, large house of 11'rooms, on Webster street, near Creighton College, 33500, No,'6, House of 7 rooms, on Cass, near 178 stroet 3 No.'7, House of 8 rooms, 3 lots, on 17thstrect near Izard, $3.00. No. 8, House of 5 vooms, on Cass, near 14th, feot lot, $1300. No. 9, House of 8 rooms, kitchen, etc., or Cass, near 13th st-eet, $300. No. 10, House of 3 rooms with lot on Cass, ncar 14th street, $900, No. 11, louse of 6 , on 10th street, neax Douglas,'44x66 feet lot, $4000. g House of 6 rooms, brick foundation, on near 27th street, $1000 1story new house of 6 rooms, brick feundation, off St. Mary's avenue, near convent, 1600, No. 14, House of § rooms and summer kitchem on 20th dtrect, near clark, $2500. No. 15, Houise of 8§ rooms, on Sherman avenue (16tN strect), near Nichols, $2250, No. 16, 1 j-story house of 4 rooms, cellar, stable, ofe,, on Davenport, near 22 streat, No. }-story brick house of 6 room and of rdd strect car turn table, £2350. 22 X132 feet, near No. 15, Hous 2 lots, 4 blocks west of High School, N 1ouse and 3 lots on road to park, neay avenue, $3500, 20, Housc and 11} lots near Hascall’s, South ho, $2500. No. 21, Tlouse and lot on Davenport street near 16tn strect, 86600, port, near 12th street, 81300, Iouse of 4 rooms and 2 lotson 17tk izard, $1200, Touscand } lot on 10th street, 1ca 0. House and } lot on 10th street, neas 1 avenu $1450. houses and lot on Jackson, near 13t S houses and 1 1ot on California, near t, 86000 Th-story brick house of 4 rooms with Tot 60200 fect, on Sherman avenue (16th street), near lzard, 53000, No. 31, 1}-story house and 34 x06 fect, on 13th 000. rooms and two lote n, ncar i5th street, 33000, (35, house avd full lot on Cupite Lith street, $2800. 3 lot 44x t,0n Chicago, near 18th street, § 0 each. 7, House of 7 rooms with 13 1ot Puui car 18th street, §2750. No.'s3, House and fot on 1Sth stroet, near Sherman, $1850. No. 39, House of b rooms with 44x66 fect lot, on 18th strect, near California, 32500 No. 42, Houte of 8 rooms with 106160x150 feet, on Coburn, ucar Colfax street, 3500, No. 43, House and 2 lots on Chicago, near 20th strect, $100). No.'45, Large house of 7 rooms, closets pantry, well and cistern, on 18th, near Clark street, $3600. No. 40, Larze house with full block, near new shott ower, $2000. No, 47 Hlouse of 9 rooms with } lot, on PaciSic, near 11th street, §3000. No. 49, Brick houso of 11 rooms, well, cistern, .out the house, xood bamn, cte., om Farnham, near 17th street, $6000 No, £0, House of 6 room! 10t near Paul strect, 000 6 lar, well, otc., on 0. 6, House of 6 rooms and cellar, lot 33x132, off St. Mary's avenue, near convent, 1600, Nt Four houscs and 8§x120 r 16th street, $5000. 56, House of or 10 rooms, on California, 0. 21t wtreet, €550, No. 67, House of 6 rooms, summer kitchen, cellar, Cistern, well, good' barn, etc., near Si. Mary's avenue and 213t strect, $5000 N New house of 7 rooms, good barn, on Webster, near 22d strect, 2500, No. ), Four houses with § lot, on 12th street, A Cuks ¥2500, , on Daven ¥o. 00, HHouse of 3 rooms on Davenport, neax d street, 00, No. 01, House of 0 or 10 rooms, on Burt stroet, d street, ¥6000, House of 4 rooms, 1 story, porch, cel- istern and well, on Harmey, near 2Lst stroet, Touse of 4 rocms, closots, basemons lar, near White Lead Works, #1600 4, Building onleased lot, on' Dodge stroes, near post officy, store below il roonw abeve, 00 lots with barn and other improve- ments, near street car turn table, 2000, Vi Now houwe of 6 rooms o 17th, near Curing stroet, $1000, No. G, Larze fin house of 12 rooms, every thing complete, 0a 18th, near Chicago, $5000, No. 70, liouse on 18th strect, near Vavenport, bolow and rooms above, barn, ete., $1500, 0 71, Houso of 8 rooms, fine cellar, all com n California, near 21st, $7000. 2, Brick house, 10 or 11 rooius, on Daven T 16th 5000, 3, 1j-story house, 6 rooms, cellar, wel crn, on Jackson, 1 No, 74, Krick house With cte., on 16th, near Capitol ave No. 76, House of 4, by feet, 'on M. ar 7th, 75, No. 76, 1}-story house, Sroouss, on Cass strect, near 16th street, $4500, 77, 2-story house, 11 rooms, closets, fur- ace, frit trees, barn, ‘etc.,, on Faruham, near th stroct 3 No. 51, houses with 9 rooms, and other withs rooms, on Chicago, noar 12th street, X No. 52, 1)-story house, 6 rooms, 4 closets, well anid 100-barrel cistorn godd barn, on Pierce St., near 20th (near new government' corrall), ¥1500; No 83, 2story house, § rooms, coul shod, good l» (latern, on § lot, ou - Capitol avenud, nem story house, § rooms, 4 below and & losets, collar, well and cistern, with & d, on Saunders street, near Barrucks, sorew, hoso on leased § lot, lease s from April 1st, 1551, on Paciil - near U, P, depot, §000, 9 B 0. 80, House, 15 rooms, wcll, cistern, elc., v 15th and Harney strects, 50000 No. 87, 2 story house, 8 rooms, well with 40 f water, with 6 acrisof sround, on Baundery , near U B, Barracks, $2000, No. 85, Large house of 10 rooms, well, cistern, barn, ete., on Cass stroet, near 21st, #7000, No. 80, Largo house, 10 or 12 rooms, on Wi ster street, near 10th, §7600. No. 00, Large 1 ouse and beautiful cormer 16,0 near Dodge and 17th streots, §7000. No. 91, 1-story house, 6 roows, ete., on Fara- hawm, near 10th strect, 1500, GEQ. P. BEMIS’ Real Estate Exchange Special attention glaen o collections in Batler 1840 cnd Maret , o

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