Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 28, 1882, Page 4

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4 THE DAILY BEE-~OMAHA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 12182 —— The Omaha Bee Pab’lebed every morning, sxoept ‘Bonday Whe oniy Monlay worning daily, TERMSB BY MAIL ~ One Toar..... 800,00 | Thres Months,83.00 Wix Monthe, 5,00 | Ove . 1.00 fHE WEEKLY BER, publisked ev. vy Weduenday, TERMS POST PAID:~ Auerioan Nrws Conrany, Scle A or Newsdeslers in the T'nited States. E OORRESPONDENCE—AIl Com:onni @stions relating to News and Editorial n ers shonld he addresed to the ¢ Wax Drr, BUSINESS LETTERS8~AIl Busines Betters and Remittances should be ad @reseed to Trr Bre Poputanive Cow- wawy, Omana, Drafts, Checks and Port fioe Orders to be made payablo to the wder of the CompanyY fho BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props Ei ROSEWATER. Editor. No candidate who is not pledged to enti-monopoly should find a seat in the state legislature this winter. TexTH street property holders are stili for stone block pavements. The best is always the cheapest in the long run. [ Tae tariff commission haven't been heard o. for several days. The rumor that its members have been driven to .commit suicide by press criticiem is unconfirmed. Dorsey has engaged Ben Butler to detend him in his next trial. Ben will be remembered as the lawyer who saved a client by helping him out of the window of a consultation room, Wnise the suffering sisters aro howling over woman's rights on tho stump and on the platforin, the cradle and the home might story of family wrongs. toll another Manaokr TALWAGE has come to an understanding with the engineers on the Gould roads by conceding three and a half cents aile to passenger four cents a mile to freight engi. neers, 100 miles to constitutoa day’s work, Eaver, with a population of 6,000,- 000, with 5,000,000 acres of tillable land, with a tax revenuo of $40,000,- 000, half of which goes to pay interest on the public debt, has had to expend $400,000 per annum for many years on foreign offici ONE of our contemporaries throws a new light on the prayer test question. Announcing the illness of its editor it piously adds: “‘All good paying sub- acribers are requested to mention him in their prayers. Tho others need not, as the prayers of the wicked avail nothing.” — The Cinctonati Commercial thinks ‘that Mr. Blaine is a aomewhat prom- igent public man, . He has had in two M republican éonventions a ma- . Jfity & those whorepresonted repub- lican atates. That may hsppen again, the stalwarts are doing all they can for him, ——— At the .rate at which machine ringsters are reading all republicans out of the party who dare oppose ring methods, we shall soon have a cor- Tupted party organization on one side and nothing within the party ranks on the other. Two can play at the Rame of reading out of party. Tur advocates of woman suffraye who are stumping the .country for their favorite *‘ism” announce them- «selves as unusuaily happy in their home relations. The husbanas and .children who are left behind are yet to be heard from on the other side of the story. Sweer Birr Manoss, of Vieginia, /is alarmed at Blaine's vigorous denun- ciation of his readjuster party and is after the soalp of every political sym- pathizer of the plumed knight who holds office in Virginia, Mr. Mahone has had his day. Like hundreds of other congressmen who have con- foundel patriotism with plunder he has lost public sympathy, Repuiia- tion and office brokerage are not planks which ought to find & place in republican platforms and recognition of repudiators and office brokers by republicans is equally as objootion- able. —— Ty Tuk edior of THe Bee has been re- quested by Miss Susen B. Anthoeny to meet her in joint debate on the sub- Jeot of woman suffrage at ar. early day in Omaha, The ohallenge has boen accepied and Mepday evening named as the date conditional upon #eccuring a woiteble place in which it can be held, Ib is Miss Anthony's desive that &ll Omaba work- ingmen who ean be present, will attend, as a large portion of her argument will be directed to them es- pecially, The question of granting the right of suffeage to women in Ne- braska is to be determined at’ the comiog election, and the pro’s and con's of the subject ought to be care- fully considered, The opinious of this paper on the expediency of giving women the ballot are too well known to render any state- ment of the position which its editor will waintsin in the coming dis oussion, . MR TURNER'S CANDIDACY. If Hon. M. K. Tuarner represents nothing in his candidacy for econgress in the Third district he has no claim upon republioan voters, Thia ls con- oeded. If Charles Woife, in Pennaylvania, had represented no principle he could not have reasonably expected the votes of the 50,000 republicans which he received for state treasurer. What does Mr. Tarner’s candidacy repreeont? What are the grounds .| upon which he acks the support of the the Third district? Thin is & question which every voter republicans of has a right to ask, and upon its an- Mr. Tarner will receive. And first, Hon, M. H. Turner rep resents thousands of staunch republi cans in Nebraska who desire to remain within the party rauks, if the varty ean bo purged of the corporation in- fluences which ure now weakening its strongth throughout our state. As a ropublican who has voted the ropublican ticket since he obtained the right to vote, and who fought for re- publican principles in the war of the rebellion, Mr. Turner refuses to be read out of the republican party be- causo his views upon the relations of corporations to political organizations do not meet with the approval of Ne- braska monopoly managers, He represents a large and a grow- ing claga of our citizens who have pro- teated against the barefaced control of the party in Nebraska by the rail- roads, and who are dingusted with monopoly domination, but who prefer an appeal to tho honesty and good senwo of republicans to remedy the evil bafore going outside of the party linen to seek a cure for the disease. Mr. Turner'scandidacy is based on the belief that a majority of republicans in the Third district have been mis- represented by a railroad minority through the nomination of E. K. Val- The irrogular proceedings of the railroaa convention at Fremont, the outrageous methods used to nom- inate a notorious monopoly tool, and thoe ellicient means put into operation to atriflo all expression on the popular sentiment of the snti-monopoly issue —combined to make Mr. Turners nomination a party neccessity in order to provent party defeat. Mr. Turner's candidacy voices a platform which pledges him to work and vote for republican principles and w0 lahor on the side of the people against the aggressions of the mo- nopolies, It pledges him on behalf of the producers of this state to efforts against the evasion of taxes by the monopolies through the reten- tion of thousands of acres of unpat- ented lands, Through its de~lara- tions he binds himself, on behalf of Nobreska and the voters of the Third distrioct to use all efforts to secure the regulation and restrictio n by law of corporate monopolies, The demands of the platform upon which Mr. Turner stands are themselves suffic- ent reason for his candidacy. The monopoly republican candidate does not aud cannot voice them. Finally Mr. Turner's candicacy finds its justification in the encouragement and support which it 1s receiving. That encouragement and support is based on a feeling that the people and the party must find representation outside of the representatives of the railtoads. The revolt which is re- sponsible for Me. Turner's position is a revolt for the individual liberty of republicans against the arrogant dio- tation of the monopolies. And as such it ought to, and will receivo, the support which it deserves, entioe, Twkne are two ways to reform a party. One is to purify it by ousting the ringsters and corrupt men who run the party machinery. The other is to defeat ring candidates by a party vote given to independent or opposi- tion candidatea. Tho lasc wmethod is uow being attempted in Penusylvania and New York, In the first state, in- dependent candidates have been nom- inated by republicans who are opposed to the Cameron dynusty. In New York thousands of republicans will vote for the democratic nominees, to express their disgust ut the methods which secured Folger's nomination for governor, There are tiwes when the only way to purifly & party machinery is through the defeat of its cundidate. When designing and corrupt politicians capture the party orgenization and entrench themselves in its Ppogsession by the power of plunder snd office brokerage the obligation of honest voters to support the pariy nomina. tions ceases, As is well said by the Buftalo Eepress, *“The voluntary obli- gation which holds political parties together is one of mutual honor and confidence. When thet confidence is botrayed and the known wishes of the members of the party overborne by wmeans the wmoet foyl snd dis. bonorable, what becowes of the obligations! Men go into parties ay_ into _other partnerships to forward their mutual desires and in- teresta, But if a wan catches his pariner beating him by falee balances or forged telegrams, does he any longer recoguize an obligation to trust that partuer and co-operate with him for their rautual advantage? The unwritten code of party obli. gation biuds each member of a party, if he intends to continue his party re- swar must depend the support which | lations, to acquiesce in the will of the majority when fairly expressed. But there is no code, written or unwritten, expressed or implied, which binds the majority to bend to the will of the minority, because tho minority has by fraud obtained control of the party machine. “Fraud vibrates everything, Can there be any obligation to accept a The peo- who are not professional join & party because they hope by doing %0 to ald in for- ol purposes and prinei But if y find that by fraud the party is verdict cbtained by frand ! ple at largs office-hunters warding p ples in wh th they believe je to represent purposea and prin- o> not only disep o8 any fair obliga- e b they ples w prove bu spon ¢ ¥ tion rest oat party man to lend his voice and vote to make WOMAN AND WAGES. There are some grounds for the complaint that women's wages are often lower proporticnately than men’s, When women perform the same quality and quantity of work as men they deserve the same wages, Many of the women clerks in the gov- ernment employ are underjaid, be- cause they receive less than men who do no more and no better work than they do, 8o, too, in our schools there is no doubt that quite frequently women are paid less than the amount for which men of the mame qualifications would fill the position Still, as a rule, in the olasses of employment open to women, their wages are regulated by exactly the same laws which govern the wages of men. One of these is the law of supply and demand. An- that vile fraud effective | Does not, on the contrary, every obligation of honor and truth and good faith urge him to the work of rebuking that fraud and robbing it of the effcct which its perpetrators intended MILITARY ATAR GAZING. After the roaring farce of the Tay- lor court martial, the colonel was gravely reprimanded for presuming to enlist political influence in bebalf of bis retention of station at Newport Barracks. If Generals Drum and Shermsn are in earnest, every briga- dier general in the army ought at once to be placed under arrest for vi- olation of general orders, and eight colonels should be called to the front to keep them company. The trouble 18 all about a vacaut major general- ship which will be filled after Oc- tober 14th by the promotion of a brigadier general. On that date Gen. McDowell is retired cn scoount of age under the provisions of the new retirement bill, Pope, Howard, Terry, Augur, Crook and Miles are all eager applicants for the porition, and the political wires are being pulled with a vigor which can only bo aroused by the prospect of a §2,000 a yoar increase in salary and a soft servico station at some division headquartera. If precedence on the listis to be strictly observed Gen. Pope will take the prize. But as the rule of senority has not always Generals been observed in appointments above the coloneley all of the other candidates entertain hopes that their military records and the active influ- ence of political friends will push them through. For all this, General Pope will secare the commission. He has the political backing, and is not afraid of a court martial in using it. When seniority and General Grant combine to pull an officer through the war department competitors may as well hang their harps on the weeping willows, and wait for another chance at the politicians, The promotion of abrigadier general will leave & vucancy in the ranks of the brigadiers, and a still livelier scramble than that for the double star of the major general is now in progress among the ranking colonels, The ap- plicants are Cols. H J. Hunt and Geo. W, Getty, artillery; R. 8. Mo- Kenzie, Edw. Hatch, Benjamin H. Grieraon and Wesley Merritt, cavalry, and Davids Stanley and John Gibbon, infantry. Itis known that McKen- zie, Getty, Stanley and Grierson are particularly favorites of Gen, Sher- man, and it is thought that one of those four will be selected for promo- tion, although many think that the splendid record of Col. Wesley Mer- ritt will give the desired position to him, The promotion which will fol- low will be made in regular order from the branch of the service to which tbe promoted colonel belongs, either cavalry, infantry or artillery. Btill wo hear no news of coming court martials or ofticial reprimands. Gen- eral Sherman and Adjutant General Drum complacently look upon the button-holing of politicians and the efforts of congressional delegations to pull through their wilitary favorites, A court-martialed brigadier would be & curiosity nowadays. —_— Ix rospovse to a newspaper attack on the railway system in Californis ox-Governor Leland Stanford, presi dent of the Southern Pacific, has writton a letter discussing -in detail tho charges made, That the railway facilities of the state can be called a monopoly Lo dentes, bocause Le says the great volume of California ral- way busineas is subject to compatition by water.— St. Louis Republican, Leland Stanford is a scoundrelly hypoerite. His special contract sys- tem, which advances the prices by rail to all merchants who dare use the wator route to the east, has stifled competition by water to San Francisco and whipped the business men into patronage of the monopolies, — It is somewhat odd that from Wagh- ington, the seat of that government which is based upon the principle that all men are created froe and equal, should come news of indignation among the parents of the scholars of & certain public achool to which two colored children have been admitted, The circumstance is the more note- worthy because the colored children are emineatly respectable, one of them being the son of no less & per- sonage thav a professor in the How. ard universit SEp——— Bommes is grflumy slipping off the lap of sutumn, other is the law of physical strength. A false pride in women has contracted the field of employment which they might otherwise occupy. For instance there is a consteut demand for domes- tic servants, Thoe wages paid to ser- vant girls in America are higher than those of six-tenths of the average workingmen, They are greater than those which could be commanded in Europe by experienced housekeepers. But the mass of American girls prefer a pittance in a store or factory to a home and hundred and fifty dollars a year a8 a domestic servant. In con- sequence an overwhelming majority ef our servants are foreign born and the woman’s labor market 18 gutted by the great numters who seck em- ployment in other occupations, This in largely the caune of the low wages, Employera have a habit of securing help as cheaply as thoy can, and where five women applicants for one place the prico of labor is cer- tain to be lower than where tive posi- tions are bidding for one woman, Contraction of the number of occu- pations in which they can earn wages is also due to the physical con- stitution of women. All trades which require severe and continuous physi- cal exertion arys great majority of women cannot com- pete with men for the wages which they offer. It is not becauze men are prejudiced against women thatjwe find our foundries, our blacksmith and machine shops, and every other branch of trade which requires brawny arme and broad backs, closed to women, It is simply because women have not the broad backs or the brawny arms required to fill these positionsthatthey fail to find employment in them. The same cause acts in barring women from a number of the professions re- quiring sustained mental effort joined to a atrong physical constitution, There is no reason now why women should not enter the law and medi- cine. But the number of female lawyers and physicians will always be small because, except in isolated instances, women will prove physic- ally incapacitated for the arduous duties of these professions. These are the causes which operate to contract what the . clamorers after woman suffrage cal ‘‘the sphere of woman,’’ and the contraction ot that sphere by natural causes, not by are closed because the “‘man’s tyranny,” glutting the female labor market, reduces at the same time the wages which women can earn, Let us suggest that the first step towards enlarging ‘‘woman’s sphere’ is the development of 8 more robust type of American womanhood. The pale faces and lymphatic tempera- ments of the girls of the United States have created a distinctively American type of woman. The ‘‘sphere” of a clear complexion, of ruddy cheeks, of glowing health, is too much neglected, and the result s a state of health which as- sists in rendering womon unfit for many ot the occupations and pro- fession in which they, at present, can find employment, Prejudice cannot win the day against energy. A physi- cal and a mental torce which can be transformed into wealth production will always command employwent, It is a marketable commodity, which whether possessed by man or woman can be turned into dollars and centa, No amount of argument can expluin away the great fact that in the struggle for existence, which is only another nawe for life, the weakest must go to the wall when they enter into com- petition with the strong., If this is “tyranny” it is the tyranny of a natural la Toombs Coming Out. Philadeldhia Press, Robert Toombs, of Georgis, is about to join the church, Is this merely the way of announcing that he has left the democratic party? ——r And It Will Keep Him on the Alert. Phitidelphia Tmes, It will now be well enough for Mr, Chester A. Arthur to keop his eye op Mr. Jumes (i. Blaine for the next two years, eem— Volces ¥rom Antiquity 8t. Louls Globe-Democrat, The democrats have got Ben Butler back again in their party. He has been absent without leave for twenty- two years, When last heurd from in that orgenization hp. was casting his fifty-seventh votefor Jefl D, presidential neminee of the Charleston convention. EET— His Famlly Success. #) Louls Gl be- Democrat. The Boston Traunscript says the nomination of Oliver Ames for lieu- tenant governor by the Massachusetts republicans ‘‘deservedly izes & family whose own sucoess in business have carried prosperity and comfort to hundreds of other households.” This, doubtless, refers to the historic practice of the family in putting its money ‘‘where it will do the most good.” Or perhaps it relates to the family ‘‘success” in counterfeiting its rival’s trade marks, —_—— Stand up. Custer Leader, From now until the election in No- vember we may look for a surfeit of falscme adulation of the Great Valen- tine from the Omaha Republican and ita echoes in the Third district. “‘Statesmanship” will be their stand- ing head for the next forty days, when referring in any manner to the great West Pointer. And worst of all, Val must evffor it all in silence. As the elegant and flowery Hazlott would say: “Stand up, E. K., and take your ‘hog wash.’"” M. K. Turner for Congress. Custer Leader, sentiments of a large majority of the voters of Custer county, as it most em- phatically does that of its editor, when it places at the head of its colums, as its preferred candidate for congress, the name of M. K. Turner, ot Platte county. Ot the gentleman himself we know bat little. But he is nominated upon a platform which the republicans of this district can indorse as voicing their views with no uncertain soupd. For years the young state of Ne- braska has been working for home rule, for a ‘‘government of tho people, by the people and for the people,” and for years she has worked and watched in vain. Reformation, when it does come, as come it will, must come through the republican party. No third party can ever gain the con- fiddence of the people and hope to succeed. The grand old party of pro- gress has not yet fulfilled its mission in this land of ours, and although it may become the prey of factions and plundorers for a time, we believe the honest masses of it voters will event- ually bring it back to its duty—advo- cacy of the most advanced ideas of the American people. Conventions, like legislatures, do not always voice the sentiments of the people they are presumed to repre. sent, and judgiag from the character of many of the delegates to the con- vention that nominated E. K. Valen. tine, we know thoy did not represent the wishes of their constituents. The msn who nominated him touched on uo vital issue that is agitating tho state io-day. They did not, because they dare not. The dictum had gone forth that they should not agitate these sub- jeces, and they dare not dizobey their bosses. They may consider that they represented the republican party of Nebraska, but to-day that party is al- most a unit on the anti-monopoly question, were the people given a fair chance, inside the party organization, to exprors their views, Mr. Tuarner is nominated on the only true republican platform. Re- sistance to tyranny and oppression of whatever kind and in whatever shape is the very zssence of its principles. Not blind submission, the many to the few, but resistance to and removal of every obstacle to the advancement of the best interests of all. We know very well what this break from the dictation of the railroad ring will call forth., The brain of every Valentine editor, in the district and out of it, will be ransacked for expletives of scorn, comtempt and ridicule to hurl at those who dare as- sert that they think more of republi- can principles than they do of the so- called party organization as it exista in this state at the present time. But what they say matters little, as abuse from such sources is generally proof positive of the honesty of the recip- ient, Every effort will be made to defeat Mr. Turner. Money will be poured out like water, lies concocted, Valen- tine represented as the Messiah of Nebraska republicaus and Turner as their Judas Iscartot. But in the face of all this we believe the latter gen- tleman represents the sentiments of a majority of the voters of this distriot, and shall work and fight and pray for his success. *We are persuaded that the ancient | g; Hermes with all the subtle art and natural resources of the Alchemists, was a very poor doctor compared with | g4,7 N Mrs. Lydia E :hokham, of Lynn, Mass. Hermes may have been after all only a clever practitioner of the Black Art; but we know there is no humbug in the pharmaceutical chom- istry of Mrs Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. — Fatal Riotin a Church. Special Dispatoh to The Bee, WyrnerviLLg, Va., Soptember 27, — Daring tho seesion of the Baptist as- sociation at Hampton cross-roads yes- terday, two young men wunder the in- fluence of liquor began a pistol com- bat in the church, causing a panic smong the worshippers, Levi Bryson was fatally shot by Jerry Cox, but he succoeded in fatally shooting Cox, Both died in church, - e L Household Woxrds, James Pearson, 28 Sixth street, Buff ilo, fays: *I have uced your SPRING BLOSSOM for myself and fawily, and thiok it inval- uable us & household remedy, for regulat. ing the bowels, liver and kidneys. 1 thall never be without it,” Price 50 cents, trial bottles 10 cents. KIDNEY-WOR’ HAS BEEN PROVED ) The SUREST CURK for KIDNEY: DISEASES. urinel Dooi i lamo back or @ disordered indicate .hat you aro a vie o 2 & me time o at the e: a7 Aalthy sotion 1o all taeor, For tos Ladies. ; #land weakuosses, K1. EY-WORT is unsur-| fipnased, a6 it will act promptly and safely Either Sex. Incontinence. retention off urine, brick dust or ropy deposits, and dull) dragging pains, all speedily yield toite our-| SILD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Pricosl. KIDNEY-WORT GALVANIZED IRON Cornices, &o.Blganufwtnnd T. SINHOLD 15th8t., 4 Ombha. aNeb Prosr feler BEMIS’ Real Eistate COLUMN, Offices 16th and Douglas Streets, No, 397. Beautitul_resldence lot on Serman stroet, near head of St, Mary's avenuo, §2 700. No,'314. Kull lston 19th itrcet, near Popple- (on's, §850. No. 816, Fu'l acro cn Burt st of Sacred Henrs 1,200, . Fuillot on Californ’s, ar Convent o. T 215t lreet, $1,9 No. 818, Twa lots en Eoward, near Saunders etreet, $1,500- No.'819. Two lots on Charles, £1,600. near Saunders 8tx beautiul residence lots, flne vicw, on Mt. Fleasint avenue, uear Haoscom Pars, California street, near Two lois on cy stroet, near 18th 07, > Tiwolots on Dodge, near Grove streot, Swith's addition, 5. Kour acro blo.k in West Omaha, Choice 4 acro block In Smith's addition at west end of Farnam stroat—will give any length of time required at 7 per cont {ntercst. Also splondi 1 10 acro block in Smith's addl- tion on same iiberal teyms a3 tae foreguing. = No, 805, Halt lot on I3urd near 20th strect, 100 No 804, Lot on 18th rtrest near Paul, §1200. No 302, Lot 80x280 feet on 15th sireet, near Kicholus $500. No 299, Une quarter acre on Burt street, near Dutton $600. No 297, Two lots on Blondo near Irene street, 250 and §300 each. No 206, Two lots on Georgla near Michigan stroot, §1200, No$95, Twelve choloe restdence lota on Hamil. ton street in Shinu's addition, fine and elghtly. 350 to 9500 each, No 294, Beautiful half lot on St. Mary's av. enuc, 80x180 feck, near Bishop Clarkson's and Wth $1600. tro 3 No 202, Two_cholce lots on Park avenue, 60x 160 each, on strect railway, $500 each, No 201,8ix lots in Millard & Caidweli's addition on sherman Avenue near Poppletoo’s, $800to $16) eacn No 285, Four lots on Doeca'ur and Trene streets, near Saunders strcut, §375 to $450 each. No £52, Lot on 19th uear Paul stroet, No 281, Lot 65x180 fect near 8t. Mury" and 20th street, $1600. No 279, Lot on Decatur near Irene stroet, §32t No 278, Four lota on Caluwell, near Saunders stroot, $6500 each, No 276, Loton Clinton street, near ahot tower, aus, 126, No 275, Four lots on McLellan strest, near Blondo, 's addition, 3 No 274, Threo lots n offers, No 268, Beautiful corner acre lot on California atreet, opposite and adjoining Sacred Heart Con. vent grounds, $1000. No 260, Lot on Mason, near 15°h strect, §1,850. 100 lots in *‘Credit Poncier”and “Grand View' sdditions, just south-east of U. P and B. & M. +ailroad Lepots, ranging from §160 to §1000 each and on easy terms, Besutiful Residence Lots at a hargaln—very handy toshopa ¥123 to 5260 exch, b per cent down and{6 per eent per month, Call and get plat and 1ull particuiars, No 266, Fuil corour lot on Jones, Near 16th Btroot, $3,000. No 263, I'wo lotw on Center street, near Cum- ing street, $900 {or both or 8600 each, ’ai'n 2513, Lot on Bewsrd, near King street, 50. No 249, i)t 1ot on Dodge, near 11th stroet, 100 wvach, raco course: make No 247, Four beautitul residence lote near Creighton College (or will separate) $8,000. No 246, Two lota on_Genter, near Cuming stroet, $625 and 3400 each. No ‘246}, Lot on [daho, near Cuming stroet 26 No 48, Bosutitul corner acre lot on Cuming, near Dutton strect, uear new Convens of Sacred Heart, 81,500 No. 244, Lot on Farnam, uear 15th etreet, 0241, Lot on Farnam, near 20th etroet, , corner iot on Burt, ncar 22d street 300. No. 238, 120x182 feet 2 Harney, near S4th, street, (will cut it up)#§2,400. No, 234, Lot on uglas street, near 26th, $1,000. No. 227, Two lote on Decatur, near Lrene ehevet, cach, o 223, Lot 143 by 441 feeh on_ Shoraian ave pue, (16th sticet), nea Grace, §4,000, will divide, No 220, Lot 23x66 feet on Lodge, near 18th stroet; make an cffer. No 217, Lot on 28rd_near Clark, 8500, No 216, Lot on_Haumilton near King, $300. No 200, Lot on 18th strect, Doar Nich olas 0 207, Two lots on 16th, near Paciflc strest, ) $900. 16th streot, mear Plerce, 8600 No 108}, Lots on Sauuders sircet, nesr Sow. ard 8600, }, Two lote on 17th stroet, near white Ono full block ten lots, mear the 00, No 191, Lot on Parker, street, near lrene J 201 0. NO188' Two lots on Cass, near Zsb etrost (11t odice), #6000 50 160, Lot on Pior near Seward, $150. No 170,Lot on Pacille street, near 14th; make offer, 0166, 81x 1ots on Faruam, nesr 24th street $2,400 10 82,850 cach, No 168, Fiull block on 25th strece, nea race Gises a’dition, near treets, 82,000, strect, near white ead works, §625. No 122, 192x152 feeb (2 lots, on 18th street, near Poppleton's, 0. No119, Thirty half acre lots in Millard & O dwell additions on Sherman svenue, Sprinand Saratogs strocts, near the end of green street car track, §000 to §1,500 each No 89, Lot on Chicago 81,500 088, Lot on Onldwell street, near Ssunders, #:00. No 76, 8052 fect on Pa 9,000, Not0, Eighteon lots on glst 224 Saunders streets, near Grace and, bridge, $500 ca h . No 6, Onefourth block (180x185 feet), nesr the Convent of Poor Claire, ou Hamilton street near the end of the rod stroet car tracs. §1,060 Nol, Lot on H , near 15th, §2,500. Lots'in Harbac and 24 additions, aiso lots in Parker's, Shun's, Nelson's, Bedick's, Gise's, Lake's, and all the ether additions at any pri.es sad terms. BEMIS' Real Estate Agency, 16th ana Louigas Btreets. near 224 stacet, 16 c, near 8th stgest 284 and ors etroe . /R ;{‘/Afl/c‘?"a«{{fi,r ret LYDIA E FINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND A Bure Care for nil ¥ NESSES, Including Leucorvhen, Ire regular and Painfal Menstruation, Inflammation and Uleeration of tho Womb, Fiooding, PItO~ LAPSUS UTERI, &e. £ Poasant to the taste, efficacious and fmmediate 1n its effect. 1t fs n greathelpin pregnancy, and re- lioves pain during labor and at regular periocs. PHYSICIANS USE IT AND PRESCRIDE IT FREVLY. FFFOR ALL WEARXPRSTS of tho generativo organs of either sex, it ds second tono remedy that has ever been before the public; and for all dlscases of the KID¥ETS it s the Greatest Remedy {n the 2 KIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Either Sex Find Great Relief in Its Use. LYDIA E. PINKITA il ate by Ve Tiood, at the sane time will gve tono wnd ¢t TRt A e rvoionain resuiio aa tho ¢ @ Both the Componnd and Blood P'u pared at 223 and 2% Western Avenv Price of elther, 81, 8ix bottles for 85, Th issent by mafl in the form of pills, or of loze recolpt of price, 81 per box {or either, Mrs, T freely answers all letters of inquiry, Enaloso s cout stamp, Bend for pampil ntion this Paper. : s Tven s curn Conatipa- S BT mirs and ArHIdT oF o T3ver, 5 comie A& Sold by all Druggists. w8 ® Are acknowledged to be the best by all who have put them to a practical test. ADAPTED TO HARD & SUFT COAL, COKE OR WooD. MANUFACTURED BY BUCK'S STOVE C0., SAINT LOUIS. Piercy & Bradford, SOLE AGENTS FOR OMAHA, $500 REWARD. The above reward will be paid to any person who will produce » Paint that will equal the Pennsylvania Patent Rubber Paint, for preserving Shingles, Tin and Gravel Roofs. Warranted to be Fire und Water Proof. Al ordory promptly attended to. Cheaper and be- ter than any other paint now in use TEW A1T & STEPHENSON, etors, Oinabia House, Umaha, Neb, REFERINCES. Officer & Pusey, Dr.Rice, r, Pinney, Council Buffs, lowa Brx office, Omaha, Neb, PIPER HEIDSIECK CICARS, CHAMPASNE FLAVOR, A FINE SMOESE The best in the country; for the money. M. A. McNamara, SOLE AGENT No. 214 &. Fourweenth 3east McCARTHEY & BURKE, General Undertakers, 218 14TH ST., BET. FARNAM AND DOUGLAS, Metalic, Wood and Cloth Covered CASKETS, COFFINS, ROBES SHROUDS, CRAPE, ETO., constantly on band. Orders «ttende coun try solicited, xnd premptlyfrom thed to. MRS. MATILDA BOEHME, TNACX 0 X ECIED, Removed N0, 115 Howara sireet, between {1th 12th, first docr weat of Woetern Ne e nion 126- Sole P Fuller, JINO. CANE. JOHN HAMMOND, Elephant Corrall 13th AND LEAVENWORTH ST. ( orthct Wyomlng Coal Yard,) FEEDAND BOARDING S STABLE Stock Auctlon, 50 and O i’ Huy, Ete. Farmer's zum.m‘fé‘:‘.’l';: il g CANE & HAM ¥OND, Proprio 1 ANTI%UARIANBDOKSTORE 1420 DOUGLAS STREET Hoadquarters of the Literati, Tho Cheapost, Lar;ent ar ol tow NEW AND SEO( )-HAND BOO¥S SOHOOL BOOKS A SPECIALTY Cash paid for Becond-Hand Book or oxchanged for new, H. EGHONFELD, 2 i 22.1y PROPRIETOR SEGER & TONER Manufacturcrs and Dealers in HARNESS AND SADDLERY, WHIPS, CURRY-COMBS, B o8 e, ete,, ligl NO. 116, 16TH ST, SetweenDod ve aad Us ital ave, Omabs Neb,

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