Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 24, 1882, Page 4

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4 e —( with the request that additional bonds be procured. snich request, hence the contract and bond are both on their table to be aysinst Dr. | taken up only on a motion to recon- The ®maha Bee.| Pablished every morning, sxcopt Sunday W3¢ on.y Monday worning daily, TERMS BY MAIL — One Yosr,,...8$10,00 | Three Months,$8.00 Bix Months, 0,00 | Vne o L0 THE WEEKLY BEE, published ev. vy Wednesday. TERMS POST PAID:~ Dne Year, $2.00 | ThreeMonths,, 50 Bix Mcaths 1.00 | One Ve 0 AnERioAN NEws CoMpany, Sole Agents or Newsdealers in the "'nited States. ———— OORRESPONDENCE—AIl Communi. Qitions relating to News and Editorial mat- ors shonld he addressed to the Ep1ror or Taxr Brr, BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Busineas Bettors and Remittances should be ad- drowed to THr OwARA Prruisnine Cou- wANY, OMAHA, Drafts, Cheoks and Post- office’ Orders to be made payable to the der of the Company | The BEE PUBLISHING (0., Props. Ei ROSEWATER, Editor. Republioan state Convention. The republican electors of the state of Nebraska are bereby called to send dele- gates from the several counties to meet, in state convention at Omaha on Wednesday, September 20th, A, D, 1882, at 7 o'clock . m., for the prirpose of placing in nomi. mation candidates for the following named lieutenant-governor, secretary of state, auditor, treasurer, attorney-gen- eral, commissioner of public lands and buildings, superintendent of public instruc- SAnd to transact such otber business as may properly come before the convention, 'l’hu several counties are entitled to rev- ienentatives in the state convention as “ollows, based upon the vote cast for Isano Powers, Jr., in 1881, for regent of the state university: Giving one ( ) delegate to_each one hundred wnd ity (100) votes, and one delegate for the fraction of seventy-five 75) votes or over; also one delegate at Jare for ench orennized con ;: Countiew. ] Counties. 5| r| 10Jefforson 0] C il Cuming Custs Dawson. . Dixon P Franklin, Fron end M THE DAILY!{BEE-~OMAHA MON DAY, JULY &4, 1882 VINDIOATING A ROGUE. Rosewnter says Secretary Teller did not know what he was doing when he! wrote a letter to Congressman Valen- tine informing him that the charges of corruption made The council made no Schewnck when receiver of the Nor- | yqap folk land office were vntrue,— West Point Republicans Secretary Teller haa oertainly beon imposed on or he never would have |, signed a certificate of character for a man who stood self-convicted on the records of his department. To say that Secretary Teller has exonorated such & self-confossed fraud as Schwenck after reading the evidence on file againat him, would be to im- pute to Mr. Tefler equal dishonesty with Sehwenck and Valentine, both of whom are implicated in the land office frauds. simply these: to resign the receivership of the Nor- approve or reject it as a whole, this conatitutional requirement has arisen another practice in congress— the The facts in the oase are [ poi A CHECK TO JOBBERY. The resolution offered by Mr. Fow- ler in the lower house of congress, proposing an amendment to the feon- stitution, allowing the president to veto any item in the general appropri- ation bill, has considerable merit. As it now stands, a bill goes to the He must In president as an entirety. rider, or tacking measures are proceas. tacked Schwenck was forced |, ay a rider to the appropriation bills in the emergency of the session folk lond office two years ago on over- | or of the public service, and the presi- whelming proof of his dishonesty and dent can only veto it at the sacrifice systomatio mvindling of homeateadors. | ¢ 414 wholo appropriation bill. Valentine made a desperate effort to protect hine, but failed in the attempt. When Secretary Kirkwood came in, another effort was made by Valentine to get Schwenk an honorable dis- charge, that would enablo him to pro- care & position in another de- partment, Secrotary Kirkwood was as immovable as Carl Schurz. When Mr, Teller came in he was im- portuned to re-open the case, and Valentine represented that Schwenck was a most honorable and a trust- worthy man who had been forced to resign because he was for Grant du- ring the campaign of 1880. This shallow pretext had its desired effect upon Mr. Teller, who doubtless imagined that Schwenck was a victim of political persecution. Mr. Teller ordered Mr. Bell, the assistant secretary of the interior to look into the charges against Schwenck and Mr. Bell made a report that was calculated to mislead by rep- resonting that a portion of the charges wore mot fully proved while others were based upon current opinion con- cerning Schwenck’s connection with the Norfolk land ring. As a matter of fact Mr. Bell, who had entored tho | i Schwenck was a rogue but he wanted to court the favor of Valentine and pandor to the stalwarts, When Bell's report was handed to Secretary Teller he wrote the lotter which has been extensively published First. That no proxies be admitted to the convention, except such as are held by persons residing in the counties from which the ‘l’mx‘“ are given. Second. That no delegate shall represent. an absent member of his delegation, unless he be clothed with authority from the county convention, or is in possession of proxies from regularly elected delegates thereof. James W. Dawgs, Chairman. Jony Sy, Secrotary. LixcorN, Neb.. July 6, 1852, 1 still live—. Stephens. Tue Kaneas Oity Jowrnal hits the nail on the head when it alludes to Seeloy's back-biting of Senator Van Wyck as a ‘‘viper's venom”, Alock Stephens has recovered sufli- ciently to take the state democratic nomination as governor of Georgia, ‘This disposes of the Georgia revolt for another year or two. If abject submission to the extor- tions of the Union Pacific is the price of the pool, the sooner it breaks the better. We shall have cheaper goods for awhile anyhow.—Denver Tribune, Mr. Valentine's ostrich had better turn his quaker guns on Denver, Rosowater is evidently editing the Colorado papers, Douvaras county has a United States senator, state treasurer, ete. All threo of these counties have candi- dates for the nomination,— Platts- mouth Enterprise, Since when has Douglas county had the stato troasurer? Mr. Bartlott has not been a resident of Douglas county for more than eleven years, He lives and votes at Lincoln, and was nomi- nated as a Lancaster county man, In- cidentally, it may be interesting to mention that Douglas county has not had a state officer since Nebraska has been admitted into the Union, —eee A pECISION has just been rendored under the civil rights acts that will be of interest to our colored population. A hackman in Cleveland, Ohio, who had a colored competitor, has been fined $20 and costs by a police justice for soliciting passengers at the union depot by crying out: “‘Come this way und you can ride with a white man.” ‘““Language,” said Judge Ken- nedy, ‘‘that tends to degrade or in- sult a man who has the misfortune ef being colored, and who is in honest competition, seeking to earn his liv- ing, is an outrege and cannot be tolerated.” — Tue Iowa pool has deeided to make the wheat rate from Omaha to Chi- ©ago the same as from Council Blufls, on account of the completion of the Missouri Pacific. As an offset the Towa pool roads have raised their freight rates twenty-five per cent and admitted the Missouri Pacific to divide the spoils with *hem, They have re- mitted the toll on grain over the Omaha bridge and in the meun time raised the toll on grain from Umaha to Chicago more than double the amount of what the bridge toll was, a8 a complete vindication of Schwenck to assist Valentine in in counteracting public opinion concerning his own complicity in the land office frauds. But vindication does not always vindicate, A man who would call himself doctor when he has never earned the title is capable of almost any other raeculity. An officor who would lavy blackmail on poor home- stoaders, cover up the public Jands, and play into the hands of a lot of and sharks, is no better than a pick- pocket or a burglar, Sohenck’s last performance with tho bogus census certificate is in keeping with his former record, and Valentine is not a bit better than Schwenck, CoUNCILMAN BAKER, who has taken the contract to engineer the city print- ing for the Republican, has taken a new tack, The contract, which the council has refused to approve, is to be brought in again with a new bond and a vote forced upon its acceptance, Now everybody knows that the coun- cil had no objections to the bond, They refused to approve the contract because it was procured under false pretenses, because the committee had deceived thom by fraudulent figures, and a downright misstatement con- cerning the bids, Funthermore, the contract was not approved be- cause its condition differ very mittee, The report of the committee roprosonts the Republican as bidding against Tuk Bek foradvertising on the outside pages of the paper, the local or tolograph page. The contract, as but leaves the Republican the option i to insert the advertising on any page that suits them. oity had advertised for plastering |l a public building, and bids were recolved from one party fin up simply for plastering, leaving the coat job, regarded as in proper form? the council should reject such a con- tract could it be brought in again by |1 changing the names of the bondsmen? The condition of the rejected printing laid upon the table. It can only come up again upon a 1aotion to reconsider the vote by which it was rejected president of the council it cannot be P thirds of the council. The contract and the bond that accompanies it are held for them by the city olerk, The mayor has no right to take it out of the clerk's possession, nor can any- body change the bond without an order from the council. If the con- tract had been rejected on account of the iusufficiency of the bond it would have been referred back to the mayor for three coat plasterings with hard |the farm for oil, h and & coutract should be drawn | plugged to await the arrival of an oil oxpert, who has been sent for to com- contractor the option of doivg a two | plete the well and test the territory, Would such a contract be| What the extent or value of the de- Suppose | posit i has been developed to cause & swarm- No better evidence or instance of this can be given than the way the democrats tacked riders on the appro- priation bills during Hayes' term. Garfield charged them with having tried to shoot the country to death, and having failed, with trying to starve it to death by means of these riders. Now if the president could approve or reject any part ef a bill without ef- fect upon its entirety, then such a pernicious practice could not prevail. There are other obvious arguments in behalf of the proposed amendment to the national constitution which forces ttself upon the attention of the country. Tur wheat harvest in Kansas has been enormous, but the Kansas far- mera are forced to divide with the railroad cormorants, The price of wheat is regulated by the cost of transporting it to the market, and tho railroads have as usual taken advan- tage of the farmers by advancing their ratos as grain shipments begin, With- in the past woek the price of wheat has decreased fourteen cents a bushel the Kansas mark:ts. On the 1st department under Carl Schurz, was|f August another advance of trombling in his boota for fear|five conts por hundred pounds that he would bo displaced by | will take effect. This will make the 2|eome atalwart, Ho know that rate thirty cents por hundred from the Missouri river to Chicago. The new tariff from Chicago to New York is twenty-seven ceuts per hundred, which makes the total cost from the Missouri river to the seaboard fifty- seven cents per hundred. Add to this an average charge of eighteen cents from points in Kansas west of the Missouri river, and you have a total rate of soventy-five cents per hundred pounds. If the average prico of grain in New York is $1.50 per hundred pounds it will yield the farmer 75 cents per hundred in Kan- sas, provided that the elevators make but a nominal charge for handling it. In other words it will take the price of one bushel of wheat in Kansas to carry one bushel to the sea- board. What is true of Kansas will apply with equal if not greater forcs to Nebraska, By com- parison of rates east and west of Chi- oago it will be seen that the west has good reason for demanding relief from the extortions of monopolies, It costs thirty cents per hundred pounds to carry grain 500 miles from the Missouri river to Chicago, and it only costa twenty-seven cents per hundred to carry the grain from Chicago to New York, a distance of 1,000 miles, When shipped from a point 200 miles west of tho Missouri it costs forty- eight cents per hundred to carry the grain 700 miles to Chicago, while it costs only twenty-seven centa to trans- port it 1,000 miles from Chicago to the seaboard. AND now Ohio has struck oil, The materially with the conditions of the |discovery of a fine quality of Meocca or proposal as roprosented by the com- | lubricating oil on the farm of David Waldorf, in East Hubbard township, Mahoning county, has raised a fover of excitement in that vicinity, and spoculation is running high, was tapped at a depth of forty-five drawn up, makes no mention of this, | feet from the surface while prospect- The oil ng for coal. An effort was made to keep the find quiet, but » woman got Supposo that the [ hold of the facts, and the news spread ike a prairio fire, The well is on a coal leaso of Mr., Henry Todd, of Youngstown, who has also released The hole was is yot o mystery, but enough ng of speculators, and to excite the wildest dreams of suddenly acquired wealth on the part of the yeomanry of contract is the same as if it had been | that vicinity. Pror, Urrox, who has been spend- inga few woeks in Nebraska, says it half the money were used for the suf- and according to the ruling of the|frage amendment that state that was used to carry the now pending in prohibitory amendment in this state, reconsidered unless by a vote of two-|the measure would be adopted.— Siow City Journal, This is & rather cool suggestior now in posseesion of the council, and | from a reformer of the morals of poli- tic, The main object of woman suirage according *o its champions and disciples is a desire to elevate the morals of our politics, and put a stop to the corruption incident to the present toward that moral reform it is pro- system. As the first step money to carry the election. That would be elevating the standard of our polities with a vengeance. Too Much Braes Band. Cinclnnati Fnquirer (Dem.) We notice by the dispatches that three brass bands have been engaged for the democratio state convention. One band is too many, if the musi- cians are to be admitted to the hall. The brass band in politics i= a nui- sance. At the state conventionsthe leader of the brass blowers usually turns his back to the chairman, and fills the air with poor music at the times when the convention is franti- cally trying to tranact business, and goes obstinately asleep or across the street for beer when there is nothing to do and the delegates are anxious te be entertained. READY RELIEF. The Russian Refugees Being Pro- vided for in Good Shape. About twenty-five men from the number of Hebrew refugees now in this city left this morning for Smith’s camp, on the Omaha & St. Paul, work on the railroad having been se- cured for them there. Several fam- ilies have been located in Council Bluffs, so that there remains but about one hundred now on the hauds of the Hebrew benevolent society of this city. The committee appointed by this society report the following subscriptions up to date, received by Messrs. Julius Meyer and Ph. Gott- heimer: M. Hellman & Co.,, $40; Max Meyer & Bro., §30; Adler & Heller, 820; A. Polack, $10; Ben Einstein, $10; Schlank & Prince, §10; L. Leh- man, $10; H. M. & M. Peavy, £ M. Levy, 85; John Weber, 85; S Jacobs, $5; A. Altman, $5; J. Rosen- feld, §5; M. Elgutter, $5; A. H Gladstone, §5; John Merritt, $5; Phil Gottheimer, $5; clorks at Max Meyer & Co., $380; C. Schaw, $3; S. Schies- inger, $3; H. Baswitz, 82; S. Arnold, 82; A. Rosewater, $2; A. Schlank, 82; M. Rypinsky, $2; A. Bernstein, $2; A. Martin, $2; J. Brown, 82; E. Straus, $2; L. Brash, $2; H. Berthold, $2; Aron Wepol, $1.50; M. Rotholz, £1.50; B. Kelner, $1; A. Rubin, $1; Motz & Rosenstein, 81; Abraham & Lewis, §1; A. Gold- man, $1; A, Klein, $1; L. Brown, $1; J. Cohn, §1; J. J. Fruehauf, 81; M. Leokowitz, $1; Max Abbey, 50c. ”n Total, $325.3 NEWS. The Whereabouts of Willilam Aust Still a Mystery. The reports recoived late last night as to the fate of William Aust, who jumped from the Deadwood stage at Halfway Hollow and disappeared, were conflicting and nnreliable. A message was received by William Harris, of Harris & Fisher, say- ing: “‘William Aust’s body found near Siduey.” Itis believed the dispatch was _writtene ‘‘not found” and the word ‘‘not”’ was omitted by the trans- mitting operator, Other dispatches indicated that he had been traced sixty miles from the place where ho jumped off the stage, in the direction of Sidney, but if the body had been 80 near as that the Sidney operator would have known numsh{kiug of it, and he sent word that he knew nothing. It would seem likely however that no hope re- mains for the unfortunate man, and the discovery of his remains will only be a matter of time. Mr. Aust left Omaha two weeks ago to-day tor Deadwood, with notes to collect, amounting to §1,600 or $1,800, being due on a car load hams, shoulders an bacon taken to the Hills by his brother two years ago. Ho went to Cheyenne and made a short stay and then returned to Sid- ney and took the stage at that point. Half-way Hollow is seventy-five miles out, and had he wandered back sixty miles it would have brought him so near Sidney that his discovery would soon be known there. On the strength of the Harris dispatch, the Knights of Pythias, of which he is a member, met last night, and determined to send an wescort out to bring the re- mains home, but at last concluded to wait for additional confirma- tion of his finding Mr. Aust’s family consisted of his wifoe and two little girls, aged three aud five years. He was but 37 years of age, of medium height and very fleshy, and the rarified atmos- phere on the frontier probably had more or less influence in bringing the unfortunate attack upon him. - A MUSICAL MASHER. Steps Taken to Oapture the Runaway Lovers from Fort Calboun. The city marshal and his help were busily engaged yesterday in mailing a thousand circulars with photograph enclosed for the apprehension of the man Emil Pepperkorn, who ran oft with the fourteen-year-old girl from Calhoun, The reward for his capture has been increased to $500. The circular reads as follows: £000 REWARD, ““The above reward will be paid for the apprehension of Emil Pepperkorn, & Germun, aged about thirty years, weight about 180 pounds, Koman nose, which has been cut, and shows asort of a pimple on end. Wore, whon he left, a small sandy mous- tache. Think there was a soar on one cheek. By profession he is a civil engineer, but has taught music for a living. He eloped with May Frahm, a dark blonde, aged 14; weight about 120 pounds, also German, but speaks good English, The parties left Omaha for St. Louis on July 13th, 1882, Ar- rost, and write or telegraph all in- formation to D. P, Angell, city mar- shal, Omaha, Neb,” Pepperkorn had been engaged as a music teacher at Ft. Calhoun, where he had gained the counfidence of a great many, as ho had also done in this city, Miss Frahm was one of his pupils and her father is a prominent cizen of Calhoun. On the 12th inst. the professor came to Omaha and was joiued the next day by the mug lady, the two taking the Wa- bash train for St, Louis in the even- ng. posed to enter the political arena with Mr, Poter Goos, of this city, was a patsenger on the train, and recognized and spoke to both parties. Mr. Goos thought it singular that they should be traveling together, but in a further conversation with Miss Frahm she told him that she was going to St. Louis for medical treatment, and had been placed in the professor’s care, and tfim reassured Mr. Goos. The parents of Miss Frahm were not alarm- ed that she did not return Thursday evening, but believed that she was staying over night with relatives, However, on Friday morning she did not appear and her father made in- quiries which deveioped the true state of affairs, Tt is stated that this is not the professor’s first escapade of the kind, and that he has left his wife in Calhoun, Every effort will be made to capture him, Monthly Report of the Young Men's Christian Asseciation. The general secretary of the Y. M 0. A. made the following report of the board of directors at its last meet- ing, and we give it to our readers that they may know, in part at least, what is being done by this society: Visitors and readers at rooms Sunday afternoon meating. . Saturday evening song service Men's meeting. ... . 183 Young men’s meeting 54 Weekly meeting. 56 Other meetings 68 Total at rooms and meetings. ... ..2,499 OTHER NOTES, Family calls made, .. “Yoke fellows™ at work. Directed to boarding houses Directed to roous........ Ewmployment found for Visitations to sick....... The meetings at the Lake addition school house, in charge of Mr. Wm. Morison aud others, and near the Union Pacific freight depot, have been well attended and interesting since their commencement, The R. R. Reading Rooms, south- east corner of Sixteenth and Webster are open every evening except Sun- day. The 7 o'clock Sabbath evening meetings are interesting, and as they become better known both services and reading room will bo better pat- ronized. The uptown assooiation is anxious to securo larger apartments than they have now ero the beginning of their fall work. They have only one room at present, which is open from 8 a. m. to 9:30 p. m., and quite woll supplied with good reading matter. Gospel Trath. He that is surety for a stranger, shall smart for it. But he that trusteth in SrriN Brossoy for curing liver, kidney and complaints of a like tendency, shall never be disappointed, Price 50 cents, trial bottles 10 centn.. julyl7diw A SOCIaL SURPRISE. A Pleasant Gathering at Rev. G. F. Stelling’s Friday Night. Friday a very dehghtful sur- prise party besieged the residence of Rev. G. F. Stelling, corner of Howard and Eleventh streets, with the object of celebrating Miss Minnie Stelling’s eighteenth birthday. It proved to be a genuine surprise to the young lady herself, but, nevertheless, the assein- bled guests managed to pass a very pleasant evening, playing all sorts of innocent games, and the Miszes K eat- ley gave some very fine duects. The evening's entertainment was also agreeably enlivened by some excellent vocal and instrumental performances by several others present and the par- ty broke up at a seasonable hour, Among those present were Misses Emma and Mollie Keatley, Dollte and Elsie Harpster, Fannie and Ida Sex- auer, Flora Young, Etta Bonner, Carrie Foreman and Julia Smith and Messrs. Frank, Willie and George Stelling, Young, Schram, Ingram, Dln_rrell, Marvin, Stephens and Sin- clair. “I have used Buknock B1oon Brrrers with great benefit for indigestion_and con- stipation of the bowels.” Price 81, .. EASTON, julyl7dlw {amilton, Ont,” Board of Trade. A moeting will be held on Monday, July 24, at 8 p. m., at which the re. port of the committee on paving will be received, and other matters of in- terest discussed. H. G. Crark, President. Twos. GissoN, Secretary. Druggist's Testimony. H. ¥, McCarthy, druggist, Ottawa, Ont., states that he was afflicted with chronic bronchitis for some years, and was completely cured by theuse of THoMA® ELecrric O1 julyl7alw ), nd Pics Omana, July 22, 1882, Attention Picnickers and Exoursionista: The old reliable Union Pacifis band gives its annual picnic and excursion to Wahoo on August tho 12th, The greatest attraction of the scason, The biggest preparation for a grand time, Thare will be all sorts of games to suit everybody. Taere will bo also a large platforn for dancing. Lous L Sec'y of the U ——~—— $200.00 REWARD ! u. Will be paid for the detection and con- viction of any person selling or deal- ing in any bogus, counterfeit or imita- tion Hor Birregs, especially Bitters or preparations with the word Hor or Hors in their name or c cted therewith, that is intended to mislead and cheat the public, or auy prepara- tion put in any form, pretending to be | the same as Hor Birrers, The gen- uine have a cluster of Gureex Hors (notice this) printed on the white label, aud are the purest and best medicine on earth, especially for Kid- ney, Liver and Nervous Discases. Be- ware of all others, azd of all pretended formulas or recipes of Hor Brrregs published in papers or for sale, as they are frauds and swindles. Who- ever deals in any but the genuine will be prosecuted. Hor Birrers Mra. Co., jy22-1m Kochester, N, Y, | building sre going up rapidly. | RICHARDSON,BOYNTON & C0 ~ WAH0D." Fine Weather and Crops---A Number of Improvements. Politics and the ickneas of the @. B. Apostle, the Rev, Uil- ber De La Matyr. Victory Finally Rests cn the Banner of the Wahoo Base Ball Club, Correspondence of The Bee, Wanoo, July 21.—The weather is fine, a8 nice as any one could wish. The only criticism that could be ad- vanced would be regarding the cool- ness of the nights. The corn crop in the hail stricken district is coming out wonderfully, many of the tields show- ing but little trace of the hail. Out- side of the hail strip the crops ara very fine, Improvements are still going on rapidly. The brick block of F. M. Stratton is now receiving the tin roof. The walls of the Joseph & Graffe John Biermaker, the pioneer hardware man of Wahoo, is removing the old build- ngs for a brick soon to go up. Smith Bros., have built an addition to their store room, and Eheloy & Carlson contemplate buildsoon soon. Business men report the prospects very flattering tor a big tradethis fall, Politics in Saunders are becoming red hot. Candidates for the various state and county offices are looming up thick and fast and a full orop of lacked-a-few-votes-of-getting-there men may be expected this fall, The Hen. Right Rev. Gilbert De La Matyr will expound the doctrines of the ‘‘fiat money” party here again soon and The Times man (that long, lank, lean, lantern-jawed light of fiat- ism) challenges the republican party to send & man to discuss the question with him. But we, of a few months’ residence in Wahoo, remember when one Hon. Rt. Rev. Gilbert De La Matyr was to speak in Wahoo, and oneJudge Mason, whose otker handle is 0. P., put in an appearance to divide time with the roverend gentleman, but the Rey. Gilbert De La, etc., got sick at Ashland—ah! awful sick, so much so that he threw up almost everything but a hearty dinner, which he ate at a friend’s house a few miles in,the coun- try the same day that he failed to get to Wahoo on account of sickness. Some weeks ago the Wahoo base ball club arranged an excursion to Columbus and played the Keystones of that city, resulting in a victory for the Keystones of 8to 5. Yesterday the Keystones came with a largo ox- cursion and played the Wahoos, re- sulting in a victory for the latter by a score of 10 to 8. The game was closely contested, and some good playing was exhibited. More politics hereafter. T. 0. F. Army Orders. First Lieutenant John J. O’Brien, Fourth infantry, is relicved as a mem- ber of the general court martial con- vened at Fort D. A. Ruseell, Wyom- ing, bv paragraph 3, special orders No. 05, current series, from these headquarters, Upon the recommendation of his company commander, approved by the post commander, one month of the confinement and two months of the forfeiture of pay and allowances awarded private John Roth, compa- ny I, Sixth infantry, as announced 1n general court martial orders No. 10, current series from these headquor- ters, are remitted. D. M. WELTY, (Successor to D.T. Mount.) Manufacturer and Dealer in Saddles, Harness, Whips, FANCY HORSE CLOTHING Robes, Dusters and Turf Goods Agentfo: Jas. R. Hill & Co.'s O LIS IR ATE T CONCURD HARNESS *'The Best in The World,” 1412 FARNAM ST, || Ordern Sollcited, OMAHA, NEB o ly HEAT YOUR HOUSES. [PO0AL30 180D 204) imgviIna FURNACES IN THE WORLD, MADE BY CHICAGO, ILLS, Fubely new 188 apr venien'a, Moy practical fea 1 ost less 2 ke:p in Uracr; Use lega fuel; Will gire morpe heat s & largei Volume of pure adr 2 aoy urnace made Sold by PIERCEY & BRADFORD, Owmakh B LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. 1e a Positive Core For all those Painful Complaint #0 common to our beat female population. A Medicine for Woman, Inventedby a Woman. Prepared by a Woman. The Groateat Medieal Discorvery Sinee the Dawa of Histary. L9t rovives the drooping spirits, Invigorates and harmonizos the onganio functions, gives elasticity and firmness to the step, restores the natural lustre to the ey, and plants on the pale oheck of woman tho fresh rosca of life's spring and early summer time. &~ Physicians Use It and Prescribe It Freely. &8 It romoves faintnoss, flatuloncy, destroys all craving for stimulant, and rolleves weakncss of the stomach. That feeling of boaring down, cansing pain, welght and backache, 18 always pormanently cured by Its usey For the cure of Kiduey Complalnts of elther sex this Compourd 18 unsurpasscd. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S BLOOD PURIFIER will_eradicato ¢ vestigo of Humors from the Tlood, and ivo tono and strength to- the kystem, of man woman or cild. - Lnsist on having it Both the Compound and Blood Purifler are prepared at233and 235 Western Avonue, Lynn, Mass. Price of either, 81, Six bottles for §5. Sent by mail in the form of pills, or of lozonges, on receipt of price, $1 per box for cither, Mrs. Pinkham freely answers all letters of inquiry, EnclosoSct.stamp. Send for pamphlct. No family should b without LYDIA E. PINKHAM'Y LIVER PILLS. They eure constipation, biliousness and torpidify of the liver. 18 per bOT. L) AaSold by all Druggist THE McCALLUM WAGON BOX RAGKS. WEIGHT ONLY 100 LBS, = NTED =~ —, WARRAN 1o geAR Can Be Handled By a Boy. The box need never be t all the off the wagon and ed Grain and Grass Seed Iy Fave Tt costaless than the old etvie eacks. Every standard wagon s rold with our zack comple ¢ BUY NONE WITHOUT IT. Or buy the attacaments an _apply them to your old nbox. For sale i Nebrusice by J.C. 0 Lincoln, rs8, Owsha, nd Is.and, REES, Hastnis DEER, Columbus, Red Clou N first class dealer in the west, A'x them for descriptive circular or sead dirccy to us. J. McOallum Bros. Manuf’g Co., Office, 24 West Lake Strect, Ch [ ago, 31w 100,000 TIMKEN-SPRING VEHICLES NOW IN USE. They surpa:s all other s for e1sy riding. styl and durability, T sl They are for sale by all Loading Car- riage Builders and Dealers throughout the country, SPRINGS, GEAR3 & BODIES For salo by Henry Timken, Patentee and Builder of Fine Carriag s, S'jl' LOUIS, - - MIO. 1-6m Are acknowledged to be the best by all who have put them to a practical test, ADAPTED TO HARD & SOFT GOAL, COKE OR WooD. MANUFACTURED BY BUGK'S STOVE (o, SAINT LOUIS. Pierey & Bradford, SOLE AGENTS FOR OMAH \

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