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

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4 \ = THE DAILY BEE':',QM;‘\ HA THURSDAY, AUGUST 24 The Omaha Bee Published every morning, except Sunday ®he on.y Monlay woming daily, TRERMS BY MAIL — .$10.00 | Three Months, 83,00 0,00 | One . 1 THE WREKLY BEE, publisked ov. vy Wedn.eaday. TERMS POST PAID:~ $2,00 | ThreeMonths,, 60 1,00 | One “w 0 AuEricax Nrws Conpany, Sole Agents or Newsdealers in the T'nited States, ‘QOKRESPONDENCE—AN Communi @ations relating to New: and Editorial mat- ors shiould e addressed to the EDITOR oF BUSINASS LETTERS—AIl Busines Bevters and Remittances should be ad- dressed to Tue DBre Popusuine Cox. eANY, OmAHA. Drafts, Ohecks and Post- fice Orders to be made payable to the per of the Uompany | T BER PUBLISHING C0., Props. € ROSEWATER. Editor. THE ANII-MONOPOLY LEAGUE CextrAL Cr1v, August 14, "To the Fditor of Tur Bar. The State Anti-Monopoly league will meet at Hastings, September 27, 1882, in connection with the State Farmers’ alliance, for the purposs of putting befura the voters of the state of Nebraska an independent state anti-monopoly ticket, All anti-mo- nopoly leagues are requested to call special meetings to elect delegates to attend the convention. By order of tne executive com- mittee, H. C. Osrernovr, Pes. State Anti-Monopoly League. WasnINGTON quiet as a soldiers cemetery 1n time of peace. Fox the first time in history the “‘raging canal” plays an important part in modern warfare, As a doublo headed districts the Third walks away with the prize. Millie Christine is nowhere, Granite blocks for Tenth streef. The sooner it is Jaid down the better for merchants and their teams, Our schools under a new super- intendent will soon be claiming the attention of parents and children. Tur Alma Herald announces Judgoe William Gaslin, Jr., as a candidate for congress in the Second distr ct. Judge Gaslin has made an efficient judge aund will doubtless come to the convention with a strong backing. ANONG other candidates for lieu- tenant governor is John ¥. Coulter, THE FARMERS WEALTH. Warm dags and occasional rains have given assurance of a magnificent orop of corn in Nebraska. Advices from various portions of the state are ot the most satisfactory description, 00 | Oar wheat barvest will be unusually lorge. Small grains have withou: cx- coption done remarkably well. Oats, rye and barley ara all that could be desired, The aame news comes from nearly every section of thd coun- try, and foreign dispatches show that our surplus will find a ready market abroad. TIn England the wheat crop is much below the average, France will have ouly a medium crop. Pro tracted wet weather has damaged the erops of Belgium, and the Belgian farmers can only hope for a half erop of whe In Germany the wheat crop has beon detoriorated by rains, but Russia and Austria each promise an average crop, Hungary gives bet- ter promise, the crop being estimated at fifteen per cent, above the average. The foreign hop crop is also reported a failure, and that of the United States will fall below the average. The de- partment of agriculture at Washing- ton, basing its estimate upon reports from all parts of the United States, reports this year’s product of Ameri- can wheat at five hundred millions of bushele. Other authorities place the yield at 525,000,000 bushels, and still others rate it as high as 550,000,000 bushels, The latier estimates are <doubtless exvravagant, and can have no other effect than to reduce the prico of wheat in the hands of the farmers, Daring the past two years the consumption of wheat in this country hes averaged about 320,000,000 bushels, and if this averago continues to hold good our farmers will have not less than 180,000,000 bushels for ex- port, Corn is still a matter of guess work, but the probable yreld is vari- ously estimated at frem § 500,000, 000 to 1,600,000,000 bushels. The August report of the department fixes the condition of the crop at 83, as against 77 at tho same period last year, The same report says that cir- cumstances favor a further improve- ment in several of the states, and that the averages of the southern states are nearly all above 100. The general re- port shows that rye, potato, and hay crops will bo above the general average. Kverything looks fair for the cotton and tobacco crops at this time, and if the weather holds good during the present month the value of the corn and cotton crops will be greatly improved. It is only in parts of New York that complaints huyo | from Fillmore county. Mr. Coulter's record in the last legislaturo was an excellent one, which he need not be ashamed to show to*his constituents, — GenEraL Orook has arrived but it looks as if his services would not be required at Pine Ridge Agency. This will be bad news to the Arizona Apachos who have had some little ex- perience with the best Indian fighter in the army. StupenTs of statistics will be filled with consternation to learn that the ceneus of 1880 is to be published in thirty volumes containing eighteen thousand pages. They are likely to be in great demand for shaving paper and bustles. —me Doxsey claims to have been offered the secretaryship of the interior by President Garfild, The St. Paul Pioneer-Press thinks that he ought to Y0 offered the secrotaryship of the in- " erior of some states prison, and hws sceptance of the favor insisted upon, Oor. Josepn Tavior is now on lcourt martial at Newport barrack, Ky., because he invoked the aid of two senators and a congressman from Kentucky to secure the revocation of an order transferring him from New- port to Omahs, in transgression of a musty order of Gen. SBherman for- been made of drouth, Where it has prevailed the corn has been injured as well as the fruit crop and (he pas- ture, but in the great plenteousness which prevails the loss by drouth will not be felt excopt in a pecuniary way by those whose crops have been atfected. VALENTINE'S strikers have been de- feated in Holt county, but following out the plan which they mapped out at the beginning of the campaign they will come to the convention with a double header engineered by Mat. thews, the postmaster at O'Neill City. From the beginning of the contest in Holt county there has been a sys- tematic attempt on the part of Valen- tine's friends to suppress public senti- ment, The state central committe in every instance based its apportion- ment on the vote cast for Regent Powors at the last state electipn, This precedent was followed by the county central committees of every other county with the exception of Holt, With a view of giving greater repre- sentation to Atkinson precinct, in which Valentine was supposed to have more strength, the ayportionment was based on the vole given for Swmith, a county oflicial. By this pieco of political trickery Atkinson received two more delegates than he was entitled to, and four other precincts opposed to Val were cheated out of six delogates. As a matter of fact on the basis of appor- bidding such action, No man 1s bet- ter acquainted with the use of politi- oal influence in army matters than Gen, Sherman, and he has doubtless proved by his own experience that the practice is demoralizing, — Prorre weem to differ as to what $igood wages” are. At the Harmony mills in Cohoes, N. Y., the superin- tendent in expressing astonishment a' the action of operators in striking, #aid that good weavers in the employ of the company could readily earn from six to seven dollars 8 week while on wide goods they might earn eight or nine dollars weekly, This mangaer is too liberal to remain long in his po- sition. He allows skilled weavers to earn almost as much as common la- borers are able to make, EEp—— Qov, Tiasu, chief of the bureau of printing and engraving, is to retire from office on October lst, his place being takén by an Ohio man named Childs, The grouud given for M, Irish's removal is a mistake made in the printing of the new three per cent. bonds, by Which several thousande of dollars lows was ogcasioned to the gov- nment, The real reason was prob- ably that his place was wanted for ALLO . During his incumbency of the office, Col, Irish has had the rep- utation of being a capable and ef. ficient official, ment selected by the committes, Holt county would only be entitled to four delegates instead of five, as is the case on the vote of Powers, Not- withstanding the shameless piece of legerdormain the county, which is solid for Judge Orounse, elected their delegation and Val's strikers will come down to the district and state convention to contest the county, It remains to be seen whether the honest voters of the Third district will endorse suchjugglery, Or cousse the democratic organ at Fremont wants Valentine renom- inated, The democrats are always graiping at straws, They foel sure that they can elect a democrat from the Third district if Val is nominated. But tho trouble is the railroads can buy a great muny democrats and make good any defection from repvb- lican ranks, If Nuobraska demcerats really wanted good government in stead of simply desiring to supersede republicans by democrats where they are 80 hopelessly in the minority, they might contribute a litle oward improving the condition of tho people. As it is thewr pig-headed and selfish policy of sym- pathizing with the corrupt railroad faction of the republican party only helps to keep them down in the mi- nority and makes their party s laugh- ing stock. There are, of course, thou- sands of demosrats in the state who sincerely desire honest government by the people, but they are disgusted, as they should be, with their leaders and their organs, who are either in collusion with the railroads and job bera ot haven'’t brains and patriotism enough to give their party sound advice, CROWING TOO SOON. very lustily. They have already nom ina*ed theirman, He is almost as good as elegted, Every county hus already declared for him, His op- ponents are dead ducks, The people are jubilant over his triumph. The boys at the corner groceries are splic ting their throats. Kegs of beer and flasks of sour mash are running like water, The victory is already won without & blow, Now what is all this crowing about? Ouly eleven out of the thirty.one counties in the diserict have held their primaries, namely, Boone, Buffaio, Burt, Cheyenne, Colfax, Cuming, Holt, Knox, Lincoln, Nance and Stan- ton. Out of these only seven have held couventions and elected dele. gates, namely, Burt, Cheyenne, Cum- ing, Holt, Knox, Liocoln and Stan- ton. Only eight out of the thirty-one counties have elected delegates with the following result: Burt county, two delegates for Crounse and the eighth delegate, Par- rish, pledged to go with his delegation ; Cheyenne, two for Valen- tine, Cuming, four for Valentine; Knox, Lincoln und Holt, double- headers ; Staaton, two for Valentine, Sum total, seven tor Crounse with one pledged to go with the rest, eight for Valentine and fifteen delegates from threo counties, double-headers, Oat of these, four profess to be for Taffe. What an immense thing to jubilate over. True, eome of the counties where primaries havo been held will elect Valentine delegates, but others are cqually sure against him. And twen.y out of the thirty-one countie have held no primaries and hence the Valentine crew are counting chickens before they are hatched. It is safe to say that Val will not carry over one- third of the delegates yet to be heard from. And the crowing is done more- ly to influence timid time-servers who despiso Valentine but want to bo on the winning side, That was the tectics of the third termers in 1880. They crowed loudly and carried everything beforo them until the Columbus convention proved that their noisy jubilations were very premature. Nearny a million and a half of dol- lars are every day pouring into the tress ury department and the receipts for the current month are estimated at $60,000,000, The disbursements average a million a day for the single item of private claims and deficiencies, while nine million five hundred thousand dollars will be expended his month in pensions. It is stated that the outstanding calls for bonds matur- ing September 13 and punsion and interest payments will bring from $35,000,000 to $40,000,600 out of tho treasury in the ficst half of September. It is only the presenco of such an en- ormous surplus arising from excessive taxation which permits the rapid re- duction of our national debt. Whother that reduction is not too rapid for the interests of the country is be- coming o serious question. People are beginning to ask whether posterity for whose benefit in common with that of the present generation the great war debt, was contracted ought not be compelled to bear a share of in its re- duction, At tho close of the war of the rebellion when our national credic was down as compared with that of other na- tions, there was a necessity for prov- ing that the United States was a dobt- paying people. The policy which was then inaugurated of maintaining war taxes and applying a war rovenuo to the payment of our national obliga- tions was doubtless a wise and a sound ono. It resulted precisely as auticipated in building up our credit a8 a nation, until in the place of sev- en por cent bonds the government found capitalists eager to loan their money at five, four and finally at three per cent. The annual interest charge was reduced at the same time that the principal of the debt was it- self rapidly placed in process of ex- tinetion, The spectaclo of an enormou the treasury, appropriations gress, and of an increasingly rapid re- our debt are f the oppressive national tax- | attracts the advortiser, and the ad- ation imposed upon the country. In a|vertiser furnishes the sinews of war. are bearing the [To get the advertiser you must first ouly evi- : . burdens of war, and the cowardice of Valentine's roosters are crowing | break in the Towa pool, owing to the activity of the Chicago, Milwaukeo & St Paul road in picking up freight at | wise would be filled with mat- their western terminus, 1If the break jter which woull aid in building results in lower tariffs it can’t come too econ for Nebraska, which will Tk timo for repairing fencen in the Third district has passed by, Valentine will ploase take notice, Turer great sales of Minnesota lands have recently been made by the Chicago, Milwaukeo & St. Paul road, the first comprising 110,000 acres at |its valuable space—a trit, but true ex- £4.50 an acre; the second 40 000 acres at §5 per acre; and the third 55,000 acres at tho same price, Ex-Prestpest Fiuumore shortly be- foro his death visited Earope, and, as related by Colonel Ramsey in his | many cases their paid advertisements had the following |are inserted for much less than the experionce with the American consul | Fegular rates. “I was much amused by the consul's turning abruptly to | tables on the railroads, which may go me, apropos of nothing tn particular, and asking me if I knew why their [ t0 the public, though they are of ad- of | antage in every instance to the road at Barcelona: army ran away at Bull Run? course I said no; and looked properly | the preliminary puffs of playe, notices grave in the preeence of a distinguish- | of the improvements along “the line, ed cx-president and an official of the | etc., which are never paid for, which United States. Ho then informed mo that a telegram had been received at the headquarters of the army, to the|do the newspapers submit to this im- effect that a valuable appointment | position] Clearly, the aflair is in in the postoflico was then vacant at Now York. and that every ono bolted | 1yilroad and the theatre men? They to try and secure it.” Vualgar Fractions Insufficient. Luffio Fxpress(lep,, The Kuglish languago hawn't figures | tho ~ shect of the bold jourr small enough to represent the capital | Thero are a certain order of advertise- mado by the stalwarts in publishing | ments which some. nowssemors o g e apers cannot Dorsey’s letter to Garficld, s Adhering to His Own Religion, G. W. Childs, very anxious to get his particular friend, Gen. Grant, in the Episcopal But he does not seem to be progressing much, for the general says that while the Methodist church ser- vice is short and the sermon long, the Episcopal church servics is long and the sermon short, which, as he presaes it, makes six of one and half o dozen of the other, what he is to gain by a change. the general does not go to church now | ( as much as he did when he was in| War in Egypt,” criticises as follows itis eaid, is ex. The Presldent's Flag, The ruler over free _Should know no other flag but theirs, The trus: which they repose must be jealously of France and By the assumption of despotic airs,j Haul down that fl Inyention of Boss Chandle Keepex of Robber Ropeson’s rotten stuff; It brings ao profit to the thoughtlcss han- Haul down that flag! We heed its note of warning; 1t speaks in no uncertain tone As it fortells the approach of that dark |to drift on from bad to worse, now Wanted an Understanding. Wall Street Nows, A ceuntry merchant who was taking [to be contemptuously disregarded. baking powder in bulk from a city [ But, unlike the practice of KEngland tirm called at headquarters the other|in former times, it was not day to say that there was something [ promptly followed by a resort to the wrong with the goods, “I'don’t think so,” was the reply:|and puny foe unnaturally concluded “‘womake the best article sold in the | that it never would be. Then came before you send to 1 “What do you mean{” ““Why suppose you put in 10 per | prompt action; but it was allowed to cent of chalk; then I pui in 20 per | pass, and Arabi Pcontinued fortifying cent of whiting; then the retailer | the harbor, Certainly, it was now the favor that they once were. The | volved in its preparation, no article is people demand & reanction of tax-[80 cheaply supplied as the news- o | Paper. Its cost to its readers is as near nothing as it could well be, and of [ 5 make a living profit, to its owners con- | it must look elsewhere for a revenue than to its subscription list. That, in many establishments, is a positive loss regarded by itself, but the circulation wet the circulation, and to get the cir- culation you must give the people a political parties refuses to lighten the | panor that will please and intorest them, Every line which & news. paper publishes for auy other reason Tuere are renewed prospects of a|than that its editor thinks it contains something the people wish to know, is more or less an injury to him, be- cause it occupies space Which other- up or retaining the popularity of his journal. To this must ba added the cost of putting the “pufl” in typo and have an enormous erop for transporta- | the other outlays it requires, The tion during the coming fall and winter, wito newspaper prepriefor limits the number of columus to which he will admit advertisements, or increase his columns to accommodate a rush, knowimng that to crowd the reailing matter though it may temporarly make happy the heart of his cashier, means speedy and permanent ruin, Yet thete is not a newspaper in the country which does not give away in the couree of a year many columns of pressi n—and more than that, places the gratis notices in positions which the money of the legitimate advertis- The chief in- | er paid down over the counter, could terest to the public in this announce- |not buy. The people who ask these ment is the fact that they will at oneo be thrown upon the market, and | slgs approaches ' anywhero near tho o olements in the productive [ rapacity of the railroads and theatres. industries of a great state, notices, and who are offended if they do not get them, are legion, but no If other newspaper advertisers re- ceived free notice in the same propor- tion as do railroads and theatres, there would be room for nothing else. And not only are the railroads and thea- tres granted these free notices, but in Tdonot refer to the so-called criticism of playsand the “at- tention called” to the change of time- under the head of matters of interest or house of which they speak, but to are a source of expense in the news- papers, and oftentimes necessitate the omission of news. Why, you may ask, their own hands. Ah, gentle reader, you do not know the ways of -the must be petted and coddled more than auny other advertiser ever dreamed of, It one newspaper denies what thoy ask, anclher one will grant it, and away may go tho advertise sfford to be without, and among these are the cards of railroads and thea- tres, and this, not because of the money they bring in, but because they are supposed to establish in the minds of other advertisers, from whom fair prices can be had, that the circulation is of some pccount. Those who con- trol these advertisements are of course aware of this, and presums upon it to compel acquiescence in their deinands for the free insertion of this, that and the other. So he cannot sse | Gen. McClellan on the Lyyptian War. But| In the September Cenwry, Gen. B. McCiellan, writing on ‘% he the war measures of the Huglish: The first mutiny of Arabi, his first insolence to his mester, should have been promptly and decisively rebuked, even had it been necessary to land a force for the purpose, 1i the mutual land pre- vented their nipping this difficulty in the bud by combined action, it would have been better for England had she boldly taken the matter in hand, and acted promptly on her own account, taking the ground that her Tadian in- And one term may for him be quite | terests and the free use of the Suez canal rendered such a course impera- tive. Buta temporizing policy pre- vailed, and, closing her eyes against the future, Kngland allowed matters and again uttering futile protests, but Whien all oue liberties will be dead and | oing nothing to guard against the in- evitable result. At length an English fleet was gathered in the harbor of Alexandria, and an ultimatum sent to the Egyptian authorities, only ultima ratio regum, and her ignorant the bloody massacro in tho streets of “I think we ought to have a more | Alexandra, the history of which we perfect understanding,” continued the |do not fully know as yet—either you adulterate | how it commenced or who suffered ; then I adul- | most frcm it. Statements have been terate before I ship; then the retailer | published that it was commenced by adulterates before he sells, and the [ Europeans, But the probabilities are consumer can't bs blamed for growl- [that the riot was incited by natives I wanted to see if we couldn’t|actuated by fanatjcsm and love of agren on some echedule to be fol- | plunder—motives not always entirely distinet, i Here again was an occasion for But why, it might be pertinent to|Puts in 30 per cent of flour; that |clear that Arabi meant to fight, the ask, should this process of debt reduc- tion be continued at the same rapid rate, now that the necessity which called it into existence has passed awayj Our national credit is on a par with that of England as the highest in the world, Our bonded debt has been reduced to a point where its ab- golute extinetion is only a matter of a fow years. Tho bonds of the offer a safe means of investment for ita citizons aro floated at 8 per cent. government which and find ® ready market. Meantime our war taxes continue, They increase the price of every box of matches, they add to the cost of all druggists sundries; they increase the expense of drawing deposits from the banks while through a patched up tariff they maintain the prices of the commonest necessities of life at a war figure, This is one reason why the monthly debt statements are not received with perfoctly satisfied, Fornev's Progress: called ‘‘deadheads, gives the consumer 40 per cent of |only question being the extent to baking powder, and unless he's a born | which his men would stand by him, You | By this time the English mvst have ulterate 50 per cent on [determined to demand the surrender the start, and I adulterate s much | of the forts, and, in case of refusal, to more, and the retailer adulterates as|openfire, Their guns could destroy it's | the forts and burn the town—one very mighty hard for the consumer to tell |likely to follow from the other, If whether he's investing in baking pow- | the garrison retired—as would no We must give him [doubt be the case when the forts were something for his money, it it's only |silenced—it was certain that the spirit displayed during the recent massacre would lead to further scenes of mur- der, plunder, and destruction, which The following just remarks on the |the guns of the fleet could prevent | subject of deadheads are taken from |only by the destruciion of the \'rliy what are |objects it was desirable to save. It in general, over | was very clear, then, that the attack the railroads and at thetheatre, I have | by the flset once being determined uothing to do, the present purpose |upon, common sense demanded that being to prove, if possible—the truth | there should be present and available of two propositions: 1st. That no other business when it commenced a sufficient body is 80| ot troopa to be landed as soon as the pre)‘ell upon by ‘“‘deadheads” as that | forts were silenced, to protect the city of journalism, and 20, That the most accomplished and | ing garrison, so as to destroy the pres- successful of the deadheads, which |tige ot Arabi, and prevent the rising afilict the newspaper offices, are the |[from becoming a general, national, or rauroads and then the theatres, In proportion to the expeuse in. and immediately follow up the retreat- religlous movement, . 'fiw dilemma is unpleasant for any admirer of England and her institu- tions; either she is unable—through defective organization, mal-adminis tration, lack of energy, or too full oc- cupation of her resources nearer home—either, we say, she is unable to eollect upon reason- able notice an expeditionary force of ten or fifteen thousand men, or her government lacked the wisdom to anticipate the inevitable necessity | for such a force at a given time, and | proed their incompetency to direct military expeditions abroad, The ex- cuso that the exigencies of diplomacy tied their hands is not a good one, for in this {nsianco there was at wtake whatever of importance tho Suez canal and peace in Egypt mag havo for Eng- land, and it was one of those cases where a strong nation is fully justified in ru.ning risks and incurring respon- sibility on'the side of safety for its most vital interests, — .Suilivap s a Star. Now Y urie 8pecial t3 Chicago Times. Are acknowledged to ba the best by all who have put them to a practioal test. ADAPTED TO John L _Sullivan, the prizs fighter, HAED & SUFP GUA.L, Tuesday, signed articles of agrecment with Harry I. Sargent to spar with “Billy” Madden in the principal citics of the country. The terms are that Sullivan and Madden shall spar COKE OR WwooD. MANUFACTURED BY ey it o peid 8500 2 anehe. was: | BUCK'S STOVE GO., den Inst night said: *‘Oh, yes, John and I went down to ex-Judge Ditten- hoefer’s office to-day and signed the SAINT LOUIS. aged Mme., Modjeska for a while. He is going to run a ‘“bang-up” variety SOLE AGENTS FOR OMAHA. y, with John and 1 o . Ho psid up a wosk'a sslaty 1o sd:| D), M. WELTY, vance. He pays John and John pays me. I got tired of being manager, 80 I turned star. We go out on (Suocessor to D.T. Mount.) Manufacturer and Dealer in September 4th, show f ' wepkrn o {t and show for twonty | 8o 4dleg, Harness, Whips, The reporter remarked that it was a large sum to receive for fifteen or FANCY HORSE CLOTHING t t i ' work ght, d f Madden aid: That's nothine, ¢ |Bobos, Dusters and Turf Goods the rate that Sargent is paying us it'll take over three weeks to make what wo made in one night at Madison Square garden.” *“The opening point has not yet been decided apon,’ said Manager Sargent, “‘but either Boston or Philadelphia is a good place to draw in,” A Versatile Statesman. Deaver Tribune, Thomas H. Hendricks now appears in the role of a temperance man. This is all right. Tom has danced about on the platform at a liveiior rate than a piece of popcorn in a red- hot skillet. The only plank he hasn’t touched is that which justifics the husband of a deceased wite’s sister in marrying his mother-in-law. TEE BAD AND WURTHLESS of ALL DESCRIPTIONS, Agentfo: Jas, . OIS D i & Co's CONGOHD HARNESS “‘The Best in The World.” Are never imitated or counterfeited, | RRAZR E R IN.OIVE £757, This 13 especially true of a family medicine, al t is positive proof that the remedy imitated is of the highest value. As soon as it had been tested and proved by the whole world that Hop Bitters was the purest, best and most valuable family medicine on earth, many imitations sprung up and began to steal the notices in which the press and people of the country had expressed the merits of H. B., and in every way trying to induce suf- fering invalids to use their stuff in. stead, expecting to make money on the credit and good name of H. B, Many others started nostrums put up insimilar style to H. B., with vari- ously devised names in which the word *““Hop” or ‘‘Hops” were used in a way to induce people to believe they were the same as Hop Bitters. All such pretended remedies or cures, no matter what their style or name is, and espicially those with the word ““Hop” or “‘Hops” in their name or in any way connected with them or their name, are imitations or counterfeits. Beware of them. Touch none of them. Use nothlng but genuine Hop Bitters, with a bunch or cluster of green Hops on the white label, Trust nothing else. Druggists and dealers t Base Ball Club. Orders Sollcited. ) > and daalors | o only Corsct pronounced by our Jeading physiclang - % n o the wearer, endorsed i are warned against dealing in imita. fi,'.,'“"x'-,:'m"&m(uruma ‘and’perfect Atting Corset ever ns or counterfeits e, RS, b P Palds = alth Py A TUNION FPACIELC | it crin ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION | ™ Fressuins (e co OMAHA, NEB me ly N\ ORSETS Every Corset is warrantod satis- factory to its wearer in every way, or the money will be retunded by tho person from whom it was bought. CHICAGO CORSET CO,, Chicago, Il u12e0d&sowly Standards of St Louis $5. 000 ° 9 v SATURDAY, AUGUST 26TH, 3:30 », M, o futur e all games will commence at 8:30 1 To Saie Experts BOYD/S‘OPERA HOUSE. w P nr JAMES L EOYD, Proprictor, 4 L ‘; f‘! Thursday ‘Evening, August 24, + GRAND CONCERT BY THE MENDELSSHON Quintette Club, of Boston, AND Miss Cora R. Miller. This renowned club, whose record of more than THIUTY YEARS of succrsive triumphs is known to lovers of music -hroughout the land, 8 the most perfect ¢ mbination of its character on th s continent, atd is in the front cans of siw- CHOIGE CICARS. Imported and Domestio. Finest Selection in Town. Prices to Suit Everybody. From Half a Dollar Dowa to Bo: | love the said sum to be placed within Fafo and 0 be forfelted tothe pirty operati: Schroter & Becht's |mismiiob ot DexterL. ThomaséBro, WILL BUY AND SELL Pay Taxes, Rert Houesea, Hte, Call at office, #com 8, Creighton Llock, Owaha, NOTICE, LL partics are hercty cautior ¥ credit to my wife, Stel' she ¢ left wy bed and board. Iwil not pay l1s of her contracting v wBe GEO, 0. BURR. 'JAGOB KAUFMAN, REMOVED TO NO. 611 16TH ST, DEALER IN ALL 'KINDS OF WINES. Has purchased Co,, of Provid antoed in writing proaf for a period of thirty-six hours continuous and udisturbed attack with the use of such tools and apyplicances as a burglar can employ,’ and ina practica ly unconditionai way. This bank desires » thorough test made upon this safe, and in case of failure to & bank will be at liborty to purchaso any other saf- and may roturn this o the manufacturers, Any party is ot liberty to undertake the atback who will furnish satisfactory bond to pay al damage to the safe, in case it is not entorcd in tho ety o in writ #5,000.00, upon the stractod ANTIQUARIAi BOOKSTORE NEW AND SECOND-X list of the graduates for the past thelr positious; also ¢ -urs of tudy, require THE NEBRASKA NATIONAL B.A NI Of Omaha. the Corlies Hafe Manufacturing o, R. I, 86fc whih 18 gaar- to b’ “absolutely burglar d_it, the The Corliss Company sgreo ng 10 deposit with this bank the sum of cuing of an agresment 1420 DOUGLAS STLEET Headquarters of tho Literati, The Choapeat, Larsest and cholcest coll tion of AND BOOKS in the West SOHOOL BOOKS A SPECIALTY Cash puid for Scoond-Hand Book inst | or exchanged for new. PEOPRIETOR NIVIL, ~ECH NICAL ANG MInING EN- ) GINEERING, at the Rensselaer Polytech- r- Institute, Troy, N. Y. The ol est e school in America. Next terw beging ber 14th. The registor ‘or 1352 coutains & years, with Address x RAYID MIGRERNE A Dt e £ b el bl b b b o B bt S A Y A 74 physiclans Belf-Adjusting, $1.60 everywheres

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