Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 2, 1882, Page 6

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4 g The -O>rrlah_a Bee WOMAN SUFFRA! The Nebraska woman sutfrage as- sociation will hold its annual moeting Published every moming, except Sunday. | |\ 1o 1n next week, and the secre- The oniy Monday morning datly. TEKMS BY MATL:— One Year.. MHE WEEKLY BEE, published ev TERMS POST PAID:— One Year.... Bix Months, 1.00 | One CORRESPUNDEN( eations relating to News and ers chould be addressed to the Getters and Remittances should be dressed to THE OMAHA PUBLISHING (“nw i s, Checks and Post- [ tom of ‘government the voter, in his office Orders to be made payable to the PANY, OMAHA, Dra order of the Company. OMAHA PUBLISHING 00., Prop'rs €1 ROSEWATER, Editor. Tur anti-monopoly league done good service in New £10.00 | Three Months, & .07 Six Months, 500 | One . 1.00 | constitution of ..82.00 | ThreeMonthes. . !;? w N Jommuni | like life and liborty tary of the association invites, from the state press, a declaration of views on the proposed amendment to the Nebraska to confer upon women the right to vote and “| hold office. Our response to this re- quest is, that we are opposed to the woman suffrage amendment. The right to vote is not inherent but it is a priv- rinslmat: |ilage conferred under certain condi DITOR OF A tions to which woman cannot conform FR. N INESS LETTERS—AIl Business | The first of these conditions is indi vidual independence. Under our sys. primary capacity, is a sovereign whose action is controlled by his own will. A majority of women are depend ent, and their political acts would not express theirindividual will. In Utah, have | where women have the right to vote, York | the wives and daughters of Mormons through John Kelley, and there is|vote the tickets which their husbands music in the air at Albany. and fathers put in their hands, The woman who would vote contrary to Wisconsim has decided to repeal | the advice ana wish of her husband the no treat law, which is a dead let- |anywhere would be the exception, be- ter there as in Nebraska, but they |cause a womanly woman concurs with have also decided to follow Nebras- ka's example with a license law modeled after Slooumb. Tue Pullman palace car monopoly has made arrangements for injecting two millions and a half of water into their stock, and we presume the in- flated concern will still continue to pay handsome dividends. That shows how much the traffic will bear. Tae Omaha Herald makes a frantic appeal to the Nebraska democrats to stand firm and hold fast to the old bourbon wreck. Dr. Miller scents great danger from entangling alliances which are liable to deprive him of the stock in trade which induces Sammy Tilden to tap his barr’l every four years, and furnishes a pretext for pat- ronage from the U. P. JonN KeLLey has triumphed in his efforts to prevent the monopolies from gaining control of the New York leg- islature. With his handful of Tam- many braves he dictates the chair- mainship and composition of raiiway committees, and defeats the monopoly candidate for speaker. This is a very important victory, and markes a new departure in New York legislation. Tae conflicting propositions to sewer North Omaha should be decided by the council on their merits, and not on mere clamor from this or that fac- tion. The outlay of $45,000 for sewerage should be made where it will do the most good. All such pub: lic improvements ought to be carried on under advice of the engineer, who ought to know what is most desirable under the present circumstances. Tt is natural that property owners are more or less influenced by selfish con- siderations, and their views vary with their personal interest: AN animated controversy has been carried on through the New York newapapers between the opponents of vaccination, headed by Henry Bergh, and eminent physicians, who insist that vaccination has been the means of preventing the spread of small pox. Mr. Bergh, who has achieved world wide reputation as an opponent of cruelty to animals, enters into every crusade with enthusiasm, and some- times fanal m, and he has attacked vaccination with as much fury as he would a wretch beating an overloaded horse. On the other side the doctors have furnished statistics to show that be- fore the great discovery of Jenner the small pox was one of the most dread- ful scourges of the world, and that since that time it has ceased to be a scourge; that the death registers show that 6} per cent. is the average death rate of the vaoccinated attacked by small pox, while the death-rate of the unvaccinated is 36 per cent. Dr. Henry Tompkins, the medical super- intendent of the fever hospital of the Manchester Royal Infiemary of Mon- sale, recently read a paper on small pox and vaccination, in which he said: The most 'm“nfi of all evidence is, perhaps, that derived from the small pox hospitals themselves. Here 1the protective intluence uf vaccination is proved in a manner beyond all cavil. At Highgate, during an expe- rience of forty years, no nurse or ser- «vant having been revaccinated has ever contracted the disease, and evi- dence of the same character 1 can myself bring forward, for during the whole time that I had charge of the fever hospital more than a thousand «cases of small pox have passed under uny care, yet no servant, nurse, por- iter, or other person engaged there thas, after reyaccination ever taken it, though exposed daily to infection in its most concentrated form, Again, among all the students who, during the past two gears, have attended the hospital for dlinical instructions, not one has suffered, all having been vac- cinated before being permitted to en- ter the small pox wards; and in their case the false argument which Dp'po- nents of vaccination have brought for- ward to explain the munity enjoyed b{ununa and others io attendance on the sick—viz: that censtant inter- course and exposure to kafection ren- ders $hem proof against it by the sys- ::m bmh.mmul‘in:;'red to the poison, plied, as these men attend mficplld only a few hours once 8 week, the man to whom she looks for coun- sel, advice and support. The right of voting carries with it certain duties which Jwomen cannot fulfill. The right to vote carries with it the right to hold office and the duty to sit on juries. Women in their married state cannot discharge the duties of office when they are bearing or rearing children, and women whether mar- ried or single are nearly at all times unfit for jury duty. * Very few respectable women would sit on juries with half a dozen or inore men of all grades and conditions of life, even if they could endure being locked up in jury rooms for days and weeks. How many of the women that clamor for suffrage would have stood the ordeal of the Guiteau jury? The right Yo vote includes the abil- ity to support the verdict of the bal- lot box with the cartridge box. If the voters that exercise the privilege of electing our presidents were not able to sustain their decision by the power of arms in case of revolt or in- surrection this government would fall to pieces. Women being unable to defend or uphcld the government by the power of arms, cannot consistently control the choice of those who must do the fighting. Women are barred from gervice in the army and navy by physical disabilities, and being unable to share with men the hardships of war cannot justly demand a surrender by men of the privilege of voting for men or measures that may plunge the country into war, Before men can consent to a change of the organic law of the land they have a right to demand some valid reasons, coupled with proof that the change will increase the sum of human happiness. It behooves the cham- pions of woman suffrage to show that the proposed change of our organic law will give us better government or atleastimprovethecondition of women. This they have utterly failed to do. They fail to show why the husbands, brothers, sons and fathers of women should not be trusted with the con- duct of political affairs of the state. They fail to show what advantage the state would derive from adding to its sum total of votes a new class that is no better morally asa whole than are their own fathers, husbands, brothers and sons. Until women can change the laws of nature and abolish the disabilities of their sex they should be content to leave to men the duties and responsibilities imposed by the right to vote. S— THE CONTINGENT BACK PAY GRAB. At the request of a large majorit; of the voters of the state, Hon, T, J., Majors has proceeded to Washington for three successive terms and de- manded admission as an additional congressman on account of the errors of the census of 1870, which resulted in depriving us of a representative to which we were in right entitled. He spent his time and his money in a cause that both parties in this stato have declared to be just, because both parties have nominated and voted for & contingent member of congress sev- oral timies, Col. Majors was a republican, and a presidential contest was coming on in 1880. he had been admitted ber fore that time there would have been another electoral vote for the republican ticket. Hence, though the majority of the judic- iary committee of the house of 1878 9 dae!_nrod that he was by right entitled to his seat, the democrats have t- oned action upon the bill and kept im out Our congressman, Mr. Valentine, has introduced a bill in congress for the admission of Col. Majors to a seat to which he has again been elected as & ‘“‘member of congress contingent.” If the house es the bill, it decides that Col, Majors was entitled to hws seat in the last congress, in accordance with the report of the judiciary com- mittee thereof. If he was entitled to his seat, he has been wrongfully de- prived of his salary, and certainly in view of the fact that he was at as much expense of money and time in prosecuting Nebraska’s claim to the seat as though he had been admitted to it, there is equity in that portion of Mr. Valentine's bill that provides that he shall receive pay for that time. [Lincoln Juurnnr.‘ This is simply a tissue of falsehoods in apology for a barefaced back pay steal. Mr. Thomas Majors is not knocking st the doors of congress for majority but he has gone thel i count to push a bogus claim for & 000 back pay through congress, for which he has not rendered a day's ser- vice. It is true that the returns of the election held November 6th, 1880, show that about 74,000 votes were cast for Thomas Majors for the imag a8 inary office of contingent cong man. The persons who voted for Mr Majors for that office were Republi cans, and they so voted because the party had printed Mr Majors’ name on each ticket. 1f Mr. Majors’ name had been printed on the ticket for the office of contingent governor they would it just as readiiy, Lecause a strict par- tisan will not scratch his tic The pretense that there were errors in the census of 1870 which deprive managers have voted for et. Nebraska of an additional congress- man is baseless. The census of 1870 credited Nebraska with a population of 122,000, and we venture to assert that if there was any crror in these figures it was in crediting us with urtore people than we really had at the time the census of 1870 was taken, Every well informed person that the census returns are always more or less inflated. The claim for a contingent congressman was an afverthought, and its only basis was the increase of population since 1870, which, however, congress could not take into account, because the national constitution expressly directs that representation in congress shall be ap- portioned according to population as given in the census returns every ten years. It is not true that both par- ties in this state have declared the claim for an additional congressman on the census of 1870 to be just. The democrats have ignored the bogus oftice and made no nominations tor it in 1874-76-78 or '80. If Mr. Majors has spent his time and his money in this cause, he has done no more nor as much as Pat O. Hawes, who put in more solid work and fur- nished the whole facts and figures Majors has been using in his briefs before congress. If there was merit and justice in the claim which demccrats refused to concede for partizan reasons, why didn't congress admit Pat 0. Hawes tingent in 1874, and had just as good credentials as Majors. Congress was overwhelm- ingly republican then, and the admis- sion of Hawos would have given the party an additional electoral vote in 1876, and additional representation for at least five years. The truth is Pat O. Hawes was tricked out of a renomination in 1876 to give Majors some cheap notoriety, and that paved the way for his nomination for the unexpired term of Frank Welch in 1878. Majors drew full salary for part of the term, but we presume Valentine and others who favor the 815,000 back pay grab would vote him double pay for that time. Although Tur Bee approved Mr. Majors’ brief career in congress in the main, it never has endorsed his claim as contingent; hence the charge that our objections to the $15,000 back pay grab are inspired by malice toward Valentine is untrue. We op- pose this bogus claim for an additional congressman just as we oppose all other.fraudulent claims, and it is re- markable that the politicians and pa- pers who are always up to their neck in jobbery are the foremost in sup. port of this impudent back pay steal knows who was elected e Ir the claim for,an additional c gressman on account of an error in the eensus of 1870 is well founded we shall have to elect another conting, congressman this year on the ground that there must be an error in the census of 1880, Our claims for a fourth congressman in 1882 are cer- tainly as just as our claim for an ad- ditional congressman under the cen- sus of 1870, 1In 1871 the apportion- ment was on a basis of 136,000 peo- ple and the census returns of 1870 only gave Nebraska 122,000 or about 14,000 less than the full quota. Un- der the apportionment of 1882 the quota will be about 165,000 for each congressman and the census returns for Nebraska show a population of 452,000, or about 13,000 less than the full quota for three congressmen, The growth of Nebraska since the census of 1880 is greater than it was during the same period ten years ago, In view of the rapid increase of po. litical patriots who insist upon being booked for seats in congress where only three can represent Nebraska for the next ten years, some eminent statosman will doubtless file & new claim for a contingent seat in con- gress at an carly day. There will be no trouble in finding proofs that an error was made in the census returns of 1880. Brad Slaughter's returns from the cowboy county were said to be slightly erroneou: —_— STATE JOTTINGS. The total indabtedness of Custer county is §2,888,56, Boone county will require $25,190 to mset all expense for 1663, Furnas county s flush with divorce cascw, four beiug already on the docket. The citzons of Milsouville, Ouser gounty, have organi 4 company to Balld » town hall ol The Sicux Oity & Pacific railroad ‘s Tre B “ e family of thieves and their (*nra-‘wmpullm{ln Nebraska « ity last weelk, The plunder of countles raids was recoveted, Tk OManA Bre, figuratively talking, has moved over into Towa, =) folkJonr nal, Metaphorically straddling the Mis wourd, 5o to speak. Wheeler connty wants & creamery George N. Bishop offer« an acre of ground to any one who will start one at the town f Wheeler. Cold springtwater within a few rods off can be earried into tanks, John Brambile, brakeman on th M., was_killed west of Culbertson 1 week. While attemnpting to uncouple ine feom the train, while in motion, he slipped and fell, sixteen cars passing over his body and m ng¢ling it beyond recognition, A new cattle diseasc it reported in Cuass county, The cow or steer attacked by ies from twelve to twenty The first &ymptoms no- ticed of the disease is the neryous twitch- g of the hide and is followed by a great desire to scratch. The Custer County L:ader is on the warpath, vyelling for t scalpe of the ) mahas o any other band of half-naked, thieving and begging Indians, scattering themselves over the f f the country n their ‘annual hunt' after the chickens and pigs of the settlers Blue Springs is so elated over the re. cent purchase there of mill property by the Union Pacific comp.ny that the in- habitants are_ warbling “‘Hail Columbia, Happy Land,” The Motor shrieks: “Threo times three, hi -, hip, hurrah to Jay Gould and the T, I, railroan,” A sanctimonious old fraud named John P. Chenoworth iy preaching salvation to the ungodly and bilking the residents along the line of the Union Pacific. The Columbus Demoerat describes him as * very highly developed ‘ministerial tramp,’ of all trimips the most dctestable, He is a man of medium height, with grayish blue eyes and smoothly shaven face, His suit of black was worse for wear and recking with filth, Ho ix about 50 years of age, and has a large leather valise,” The first number of the Pioneer Alli- ance, published by Dorseyiat Hebron, Thayer cou ven received, It signalizes the initial number with a ringing ealutation to the farmers of the | state, particularly of Th: have allied themselves together in the struggle against corporate eucroachments iustate and national affnirs, The strug- gle mav require years of labor, but ' nity, perseverance and eternal vigilance and votes will soon secure victory and justice for the masses. The Pioneer is a welcome addition to the ranks of the an nopoly army. RAILROAD NOTES, St. Louis capitaliste are talking of es- tablishing locomotive works in that city. The Union Pacific is slowly, but surely freeziug out the Denver, Longmont & Northwestern, Th+ Kansas Pacific rond has recently issued an order compelling freight conduc- tors to pay all extra cl s out of their waes for freight carri t its destina. tion. The Northern Pac built next year over ti tary to the with Tong. It is said th t ground is being located beyond Salt 1 ake City for the continu- tion of the track of the Guunison & Utah extension of the Denver & Rio Grande railroad. Tt is claimed by eastern railroad au- thorities that the Wabash, in the pasten. ger war of the season pa-t, has marketed at least £300 000 worth of cheap unlimited tiekets. The stockholders of the Pullman com- pary met on the 1st and suthorized the issue of $2,500,000 of mew stock at par, This money is to be used inthe construe- tion of 115 Pallman cars, The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad has its track laid within one and & half miles of the Chicago & Northwestin at Theldabl, Towa. ‘The latter company has the crossing ready for the former to pass over, A party of Sioux City & Pacific engi- neers arrived in Onawa’ last wek, It is understood that a survey of the Decatur bridge site is to be made, and also a line run from Onawi to Decatur. Furiher de- velopments are looked for soon.—[Onawa (Ia ) Gazette It is rep. rted in Dubuque that V. .J, will of that city, will. be appointed by Gov. Sherman to su:ceed M. C. Wood- ruff as one of three railroad commissioners of Towa. Tt is well known that the gov- ernor and Mr. Woodruff are on untriendly terms, and that he will not be reappoint- ed, The Southern Pacific railroad has been advan for the last few days at the rate of three miles per day. The grading forces keep about half a mile ahead of the track-layers, There are about 3,000 men employed grading and track-laying. 1tis expected that the road will be” completed to New Orleans by next August. No grades of any consequence will be encoun- tred on the remaindor of the route. Railways in the southorn states show a remarkably good capital zation, as com. pared with thos othe ts. The cost and equipment of the 13,548 miles of rail- way in - those states North Carolina, South Carolina, G , Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Tenn: essee, and Kentucky—staud at an average of 834,500 per w T'he 15,881 m les of nplw..e« operated in the Middle states— New York, New Jer ey, Pennsylvania, Deluware, Maryland and West Virg stand at a cost vf $83,500 per mile. The Pullmn company has commenced work on large repair shops at St. Louis, to cost $50,000, These xhops are situated on Scott avenue and Twenty-first strect, the building is two hundred and twenty feet long by one hundred and twenty-five feet wide. *On the block adjoining the shops are fifteen dwelling house for the em. pl'uf-eu of the company to reside in. There will be employed from one bundred and fifty to two hundred men constantly, The Fontaine engine No. 2, which it is expected by the inventor will be able to muke ninety miles an hour, has been transferred from the Pennsylvania riil- road to the New York Cential. The en- Ll soon be put to a practical trial y driwing the Contral's fast teain be- tween New York and Alvany. The aver- age running time of the train between New York and Chicago is fifty-one miles an hour, and, countivg stops, the engine will be required to run at a much higher rate of speed. The engine will be kept on the Hudson river division of the Central for some time, to make a series of teats for speed,\power and economy in fuel. bridge, to 'e 1) er tribu- olumbia, at Ainsworth, will, < approaches, be nearly half a mile — In Good Spirits T. Walker, Cleveland, 0., writes: *‘For the last twelve months I have suffered with lumbago and general debility, 1 commenced taking Burdock Blood Bitters about six weeks ago, and now have great pleasure in stating that 1 haye recovered my appetite, mr complexion has grown ruddy, and feel better altogether. Price $1.00, trial size 10 cents, 30-1w — THE BEE ANNUAL “Commendable Enterprise.” Indianola Courier;: TuE OMAHA Bk, with its usual commendable en- terprise, sent out an illustrated edi- tion, showing the principal new build- ings erected in that thriving city dur- ing 1881 “'A Progressive Paper.” Tecumseh Chieftain: We acknowl- edge the receipt of the annual illus- 'tmed edition of Tug OmaNA Bex. shows great thrift and enlerpn, “One of the Best in the United States, Kearney Nonpariel: Tur Omana Ber issued a splendid eight page sup- plement for its New Years' edition, containing engravings of some of the best buildings in their city. Tue Bek is one of the best papere in the United States. Its editor is bold and independent on all questions, aiming always to be right. While on some points we do not agree with Tur Ber we recommend it to our readers as one of the best family papers we know of “Progress, Success and Strength.” Dorchester Star: Tur OvaHA Bee's Mlustrated annual is a condensed compendium of the progress, <uccess and strength, financially, of our met ropolis in '81. ALMOST CRAZY. How often do we see the hard-w« ing father straining every nerve and muscle, and doing his utmost to suvp- port his family, Tmagine his feelings when returning home froth a hard day's labor, to find his family pros- trate with disease, conscious of unpaid doctors’ bills and debts on every hand. 1t must be enough to drive one almoat crazy. All this unhappiness could be avoided by using Electric Bitters, which expel every disease from the system, bringing joy and happiness to thousands. Sold at fifty cents a bot tle. Ish & McMahon. 8) BOYD'S OPERA HOUSE | JAMESE BOYD, Proprietor. R. L. MARSH, Business Manager. Two Nights Only and 8aturday Matinee. conumNCING Friday Evering February 3rd. “The Funniest Play on Record,” JARRRET &RICE'S FUN ON THE BRISTOL ! Or, A NIGHT ON THE SOUND. JOHN F, SHERIDAN us tho Widow O'Bricn, supported by twelve acknowledged Musi- cal and Dramatic Artists, This Famious Comie Oddity has been performed over 700 TINMES 700 From Maine to Louisiana! From Boston to San Francisco! From New York to British Columbia! From Gulf to Guit, and from Oceaa to Ocean! Prices as usual. Sale of seats commence Wednesday morning at 9 o'clock. tu-th-tri United States Depository rrmaT NationalBank ——OF OMAHA.— H Oor, 13th and Farnam Sts. OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT [N OMAHA. BUCCEBBORS TO KOUNTZE BROTHERS.) ATAGLISIED 1856, Organized as & National Bank August 20, 1868, ®300 000 CAPITAL AND PROF OPPICKRS AND DIRRCTORA 3 AunAx KoUNTan, President. AvausTus KoUNTag, Vice President. H. W. Yatss, Caal A. J. PoprLrTON, Attorpe) Jom A. CRRIGHTON, F. H. Davis, Asst. Cashler, Thi bank receives deposita withon vezard o amounts, Tusuos time certificatos bearing interest. Draws drafta on San Franciseo and principal citloa of the United States, also London, Dublln Edinburgh and ‘tho principal citles o the conti nent of Kurope, Solls passonger tickota for emigrantsfby the fo man line mavidst The Oldest kstarbshed BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., BADNECEIIRS. Business transucted same e that of au lncor- porated pank. Accounts kept In currency or gold subject to sivht check without notico Certificates of duposit ssued payable in threc, aix and twolve months, searing Intorost, or or demand without interest, Advances mnde to customers on approved secu rities at market ratos of Interost. Buy and sell gold, bille of cxchange, govern ment, state, county and dty bonds. Draw signt drafts on England, Ireland, Scot- land, and all parts of Europe. Bell European passuge tickots. COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MA LK sueldt BOSTON MARKET, Cuming Street. 1. J. NOBES, Propr. Fresh and Salt Meats of all Kinds, Poultry, Fish, &c., in Season. coMEB AND SEE DexterL. Thomas&Bro. WILL BUY AND SELL RBEAIL BSTATE AND ALL TRANBACTION CONNBOTED THEREWITH, Pay Taxes, Rent Houses, "IF YOU WANT 70 BUY OF SNLL Call af Oftice, Room 8, Crelyhon o<, ?_x‘h. AWNINGS ! Made to Order on Short Notice —AT— GRUENWALD & SCHROEDER'S Harness Store. 1508 FARNHAM STREET. {an18-dsm SMOKERS' HEADQUARTERS. Joe Beckman has removed to No, 216 South Thirteenth street, between Farnham and Douglas. He now hasa fine, roomy store with an extensive cigar manufactory in re Jan2i-dm. DR. F. SCHERER, Physician and Surgeon. CHRONIC DISEASES, RHEUMATISM, Etc., A SPECIALTY. Office. No. 1412 Farnham St., between 14th and h, Omaha, Neb. j28codsm , Plaintiff, vs. Henry H. Woolt Defendant. Court of Douglas County, Ne- In fthe Count braaka, A M. Chadwick, County Judge. On the 22 day of Deceuiber, A" D. 1851, the maid Court issucd an order of attachment iu the llg: action for the sum of sixty dollars. aha, Dec. 30th, 1881, Dec. 30, 184, seravomLiy 18 eve tu 5t ‘Attornev for Plalutler, WESTERN CORNICE WORKS ! C. SPECHT, Proprietor, 1213 Harney Street, OMAHA, - - - NEB —~MANUFACTURERS OF— GALVANIZED IRON Cornices, Dormer Windows, Finials, TIN, IRON % SLATE ROOFING. Specht’s Patent Metalic Sky- light. Patent Adjustable Ratchet Bar and BRACKET SHELVING 1am the yeneral State Agent for the Above line of goods. IRON FENCING, Orestings, Balustrades, Verandas,jOffice and Bank Railings, Wind| uard: GENERAL AG: Peerson and Hill Patent Inside Blind. novddtt 1880. SHORT LINE. 1880, KANSAS CITY, St. Joe & Council Bluffs RAILROAD ™ THE ONLY Direct Line to ST. LOUIS AND THE EAST From Omaha and the West. No change of cars between Omaha and as. wouls and but one between OMAHA and NEW_YORK s 5 X3 £ Daily Passenger Trains REACHING ALL EASTERN AND WESTERN OITTES with LES® CHARGES and IN ADVANCE of ALL OTHER LINES, This entire line 18 oquipped with Pullman's Palace Sleoping Cars, Palace bay Coaches, Miller's Safoty Platiorm and Coupler, and the colebrated Wostlnghouse Alr-brake. gArsee that your ticket reads VIA nANSAS CITY, ST, JOSEPH & COUNCIL BLUFFS Rail road, 'via 8¢. Joseph and St. Louls. Tickets for ealo at all coupon stations in the F. BARNARD, §t. Josoph, Moy t. Joseph, Mo, ANDY BorDKN, Ticket Age 1020 Farnham street A. B, Bausarp General Agent, ROMAHA.'NE GUARDIAN'S SALE. In the matter of the guardianship of Henry F. ‘yman and William T. Wyman, minor heirs rrict F. Wyman, decease A s hereby given that under and by vir- tuc of an order and license of the District Court, within and for Douglas county, Nebraska, und r the hand of J mos W. Savage, Judge, sitting in chambers this day, ordering the real estate hereinafter described to be gold for the benefit of said minors, the under-igned guardian of said minors will, 'on the 16th day of 1 at 2 o'clock 1n the afterncon of s uth door of the Court Honse of s y of Douglas, at Omaha in said county, offer for sale and sell at public auction the following real estate, situate in said county of Dougias ard state of Nebraska, and described as follows, to wit: The half of sontheast one-fourth of scction 21, toanship 15, clusive of all s a'oresuid, Sale to be open for one hour, and the terms thereof to be ) art cash and such other terms ahd time a8 said guardian may agree upon at the time of salo, within the legal requirementsin sucn case provided . U WYMAN Guardian. THE KENDALL jaugbev w 4t PLAITING MACHINE!:% DRESS-MAKERS' COMPANION. It plaits and presscs perfectly one yard per minute, 1t plaits from 116 of an inch to11-4 inches in width in the coarsest felts or finest silks. 1t does all kinds and styles of plaiting in use. No lady that docs her own dress-making can gord to do without one—as nice plaiting is rout of fashion, if seen it sells itself, For hines, Circulars or Agent’s terms address CONGAR & Co., 113 Adams St., Chicago, T Dissolution of Partnership Notice. Notice is hereby given that the firm of Woslley & Davis, stationers and paper dealers of Omaha, Nebraska, is this day dissolved by mutual con sent. The business of the late firm will be set- tled by Gilman K. Davis, who alone is suthoriz- od to use the firm name’ for that purpose, and who assumes all liabilities of the ‘ate firm, A. C, WooLLEY, GILMAX R. DAYIS, Omaha, Jan, 31st, 1882, [ herereby give notice that I have purchased the stock of goods of the late firm { Woolley & Davls, and will continue the same line of b ness at the old stand, 105 8. 16th 8t., Opp. P. O. 81 8t GiLuaN R. DAVIS. THOROUGHBRED JERSEY COWS & HEIFERS Iy NG For Sale By GRAHAM P. BROWNE, omMAama wmm FAST TIME! Chicago & Northwest- Traine leave Omahs 8:40 p. m. and 7:40 & m, For full information call oo H. P. DUEL, Ticket Agent, 14th and Faroham Sts J. BELL, U, P, Rallway Depot, or at JAMES T. CLARK, Gener. Agemq, Omaba . JalTwse tf HOUSES Lots, FARMS, Lands. For Sale By BEMIS, FIFTEENTH AND DOUGLAS 818., No. ‘ull ot fenced and with small buila ing on Capitol Avenue near 25th stroet, 8700, No. 257, Large lot or block 295 by 270 feet on Hamilton, near Irene street, 82,500, No, 266, Full corner lot on Jones, near 1oth street, 83,000, No. 258, Two lots on Center street, noar Cum- ingg street, $900, 0. 262, Lot on Spruce street, near 6th street, $650. No. 261, Two lots on Seward, near King street, 50. o0 21 Loton Seward, near King stoosd, 50. . 249, Half lot on Dodge, near 11th street No. 247, Four beautiful residence lots, near Creighton College (or will sell scparate), §8,000. No, 246, Two lots on Charles, near Cuming streot, $400 each, No.'246}, Lot on Idaho, near Cuming street, $100. No. 245, One acre lot on Cuming, near Dutton street, $750 No.'244, Lot on Farnham, near 18th street, . 243, 1ot 66 by 183 fect on College Mary’s Avenue, $660. ey , Lot on Douglas, near 26th stroet, 37! No 240, Lot on Farnham, near 26th street, No. 240, Lot 60 by 09 feet on South Avenue, won strect, $650. 239, Corner It on Burt, near 22 atrect, 238, 120x132 feot on Harncy, near 24th (will cut it up), 32,400, . 235, 71x310 feet on Sherman Avenue rect), near Grace, 81,000, 64, Lot on Douglas strect, near 23d, $760. Lot on Pier sireet, near Seward, 8600, 31, Lot 40260 fect, near Cipitol Avenue street, $1,000. No. 227, Two lots on Decatur, nearIrene street 8200 and $175 cach. N , Lot 143 30-110 by 441 feet on Sherman Avenue (16th street), near Grace, $2,400, No. 220, Lot 23x66 fect on Dodge, near 18th make an offer. 17, Lot on 23d street, near Clark, $600. 16, Lot on Hamiltor, near King, $5800. %, Lot on 15th, néar Nicholas stieet, /7, Two lots on 16 h, near Pacific strect, 204, beautiful residence lot on Division near Cuming, $850, Lot on' Saunders, near Hamilton , $850. No.1994, Lot 16th street, near Pacific, $600. No. 1983, Three lots on Saunders street, near Sewnrd, $1,300. m::;'& 193}, Lot on 20th :treet, near Sherman - 1041, Two lots on 22d, near Graco strost e ch. No. 1913, two lots on King, near Hamilt street, 81,200, . No.'192}, two lota on 17th street, near Whit Lead Works, $1,050. No. 1884, one ull block, ten lots, near the bar racks, $400. No. 191, lot on Parker, near Irene stroot, $300. No. 183, two lots on Cass, near 21st strees, (gilt edge;) 6,000, 3 No. 181, lot on Center, near Cuming street, No. 180, lot on Pier, near Seward street, $650. No. 176, lot on Shérman avenue, near Izard street, $1,400. No.'174}, lot on_Cass, near 14th, $1,000. No. 170, lot on Pacific, near 14th strect; make offers, No. 166, six lots on Farrham, near 24th street 81 450 to 82,000 each. No. 163, full block on 26th strcet, nes race coursé, and three lots in Gisc's addition near Sauncers and Cassius streets, $2,000. No. 129, lot on Callfornia street, near Creigh on college, $425. No. 127, ncre lot, near the head of St. Mary's avenue, $3,000, bout two acres, near the head of St Mary's avenue, §1,000, No. 126, lot n 18th street, near White Lead Works, 8526, No. , sixteen lots, near shot tower on the road, §75 per ot. No. 122, 182x18% feet (2 lots) on 18th street, ear Poppleton’s, $1,600. No. 110, thirty half-acre lotain Millard and Caldwell's additions on Sherman avenue, Spring and Swratoga strects, near tho end of groen street car track, $50) to 1,200 each. 0. 89, lot on Chicago, neas stroet, 81,600 ). 88, 1ot on Caldweil, near Sauuders stroot . 86, corner lot on Charles, near Saunders No.'8%, lot on Izard, near 21st, with two sm nonses, $2,400. o110 88, two lots on 10th, near Pierco stree 1 82,000, No. 76, 90x182 feet on 9th street, near Leaven- wortn strect, $3,000, No. 75, 66x82 feet, on Pacific, near Sth street, 3,000, . 78, three lots on Harney, near 19th strees, 9, 66x182 fect, on Douglas street, near 500, , cighteen lots on 21st, 22d, 234 snd Saunders streets, near Grace and Saunders stree bth , $400 each, No. 6, one-fourth block (180x185 feet), nearuiae Convent of Poor Claire on Hamilton street, nre the end of red stree car track, $850. No. 5, lot on Marcy, near 9th_stroet, $1,200, No'3, ot on Califcrris, near 21st, $1,600; No. 3, lot on Casw, near 22d street, $2,600. No. 1, lot «n Harney, near 18th, §2,000. Lots in Harbach's firtt and second_additions also in Parker's, Shinn's, Nelson's, Terrace, E. V. Smith's, Redick's, Gise's, Lake's, and all other adgitions, it any prices d terms, 302 lots in Hanscom Place, near Hanscom Park; prices from $300 to $800 each. 220 choice business lota in all the principal buniiess streets of Omaha, varying from $600 to 7,000 each. 'wo hundred houses and ots ranging from 9500 to $16,000, aud located in every part of the city. Large number of excellent farms in Douglas Sarpy, Saunders, Dodge, Washington, Burt. and ther good counties in Eastern Nebraska, acres best lands in Douclas, 7,000 acres best'lands in rarpy county, and large tracts in all the eastern tiers of counties, Over 900,000 acres f the best lands in Nebras- ka for sale’by this sgency Very large smounts of suburban property in oneto ten, twenty, forty acre piccos located four or five milés of the some very cheap piccos KET MAPS 0¥ OMAILA, published by G. ten (10) cents each. v " Money lo/ned on improved farms; also on im- proved city property, ‘st the lowest rates of in- rest. Houses, stores, hotels, farms, lots, lands offices, rooms, &«., to rent or lease, Bemis’ ReaL Estare Acency 16th and Dc 1g!a Street, O XTANEA - NEBS. \

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