Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
- ———--anm gy CuauvLL 9, 17 0% {'h; O_rr_iaf_la Bee Prb'ished every morning, except Sanday he -1y Mon ay worning daily 1RKMS BY MAIL - > v8t,., .. §10.00 | Three Months.$8.00 Months. 6,00 | One . 1.00 IHR WEEKLY BER, publisked ov- vy Wednosday. TRRMS PUST PAID:- One_Yoar......$2.00 | ThreeMonthe,, 50 Ix Mcnths.. 100 | One . AurrioaN News Cowpany, Sole Agents or Newsdealers in the T'nited States, CORRESPONDENCE—AIl Commnni- 1ation: relating to News aud Pditorial mat- ere shonld be addressed to the KDITOR OF Tar DER. SINESS LETTERS—AIl Busineer Metiers and Remittances should be ad- dreescd to Trg Bie PUBLISHING CoM- wAKY, OuAHA, Drafts, Checks and Post- fice Orders to be made pnyable to the wder of the Company) Tho DER PUBLISHING C0., Props ¥ ROSEWATER. Editor. Ronnine the people to enrich stock jobbers is nearly played ovtin Ne- braska, Krrp it before the peoplo that fraud vitiates all contracts between party leaders and the rank and file of the party. Ir is remarked that while the price of wheat has gone down considerably, there is no increase in the size of the bakers loaf, —_— Mg, Mooxe is in the field to stay. The farmer’s winter of discontent will be made glorious summer by this son of York. Tuis is the season when the inde- pendent voter flaps his wings and orows. Mr. Folger, just at present, is trilling at what Bill Nye would oall “‘the mellow trill of his bazoo.” —— Tur Ber is asked why it does not hoisl a ticket at the head of its columns, The custom of ticket hoisting is one which has long been ‘‘more honored in the breach than in the observance” by all newspapers of the best class. Not one of the metropolitan dailies in the east follows it. Advocating a ticket by advertising it in this way is uselees, The space so occupied can be used to better political or business purposes. The true place to support a ticket 1s through the editorial columns of a paper, and we promise every reader of this paper that they shall not remain in doubt as to what candidates are the choice and receive sanction of Tue Br Hox. M. K. TurNER received the official endorsement of the anti-mo- nopoliats of the Third district at Hastings, He was called before a eonvention made up of delegates from every county of the district and en- dorsed the anti-monopoly platform. ‘With his splendid recorl as a man and a public officer, Mr. Turner will enter the canvass against Valentine with all the elements which attract tho support of honest voters in his favor. As a staunch republican, who cannot be used by the monopolies or bribed by their tools, he will draw to his candi- dacy the votes of thousands of repub- licans, who will not vote for a demo- orat through fear of changing the relative party strength in congress. As a practical farmer, an unswerving adyocate of anti-monopuly principles and a sterling citizen of the state, Mr, Tarner will poll the full anti-monop- oly vote of his district. Steps are being taken {o organize a thorough oanvass on behalf of the people’s can- didate, in which the issues involved shall be brought clearly before the voters of the Third district. —— Mr GrapsToNk has at last made public his determination in regard to the future of Egypt through the mouth of his postmaster general, Mr, Fawocett, Those who predicted that the premier would be nnable to recon- cile any plan for the settlement of the country with his parliamentary dec. larations are doomed to disappoint- ment. He proclaims that England - will refuse to either annex or control as a roler the conquered territory, but will leave the country Its own people with guarantees foreign intrigue and domentic pillage. The enormous debt at high rates of interest is to be sealed; the joint cons trol is to be replaced by an English resident; the power of the khedive under the suzerainty of the sultan re- affirmed, and army abolished and its place taken by a geudarmie or police which will no longer be a standing menace to civic control, The premier proposes to submit the question of Eogland’s control of the Buez cana to » conference of the powers and to scquiesce in such reasonable limitations as they may suggest. The bugbear of English texritorial aggran- dizements is thus exploded at one strike. Itis made clear that Mr. Gladstone meant exactly what be said when he declared to parliament that the object of the war was the restora- tion of order in Egypt and the secur- ing of guarantees which would in fu- ture protect the country from the an- archy of last spring. Itis a pro- gramme which will meet with cordial approval from the jealous powers. Russia can interpose no objection and Turkey will be too grateful at bes fng permitted to retain her supremacy over the khedivate to reise her voice. to A BUMMERANC. The Dying Struggle of Valen- tine Pictured by His Organs, The Faleehoods of a Beat Fur- nish Powder to the Pensioners, The Animus of the Fillmore Fab- rioation—Valentine's “In« floonoe. RoskwATER offera a rev any lotter that bears his yraonal favor of 15, K. ince he became dares Valentin he lins_ever riqu t at his hands eitho his friends, Produ elee call off_your lying whelps. 3tk oppoeed Valentine two years ago be- ho was & by onage and a capper of ra olies. Onthese grounds, we mountains of proof, we « Brr. fr. Rosewater, do you deny b George M 1of 8100 for nature aeking entine, either A member of to the proof y political ¢t hinvelf or y monop- a'ained by o bim now. way, & Strickland, and cousin of the Iy e a nephew of President Fillmors, t E. K. Valentine last winter in Washing ton, with the following proposal, viz: that if He (Valenti you in a war against Senato your fight upon him and wupport of 11k Lk for 4 e -eloction this fall. Do yon, too, remember the answer our congressman sent hack to you, the purport of which waa, “Tell Mr, Rosewater that I do not care to put my clothes in his trank for fear they will become contaminated,” or has your trescherous memory so soon dismiss. ed all recollection cf the trausaction ? Un. deubtedly you have forgotten all about it, , thank fortune, there are those who have not, and The Journal will soon be in possesion of an affidavit which, perhaps, wmay rerve to more forcibly jog your mem- ory on this particular point. Your eager ne 8 to jumn to the front with a hundred dollar offer ““for any letter that bears his signature asking a personal favor of E. K. Vulentine, either betore or after he became & member of congress,” is :‘ynunlmomvl h your nsual attempts to loceive, fbut 18 altogether “too thin” this time. A very poor politician it would be that would commit hims=1f on paper to any such proposition, and none a but stranger to you, Mr. R , and your ical tricks, would attribute to you Hll."l a Jack of fore. sight. No; no cne has accused you of writing Mr. Valentine su:h a propo- m, but you sant an emis- sacy to make overtures for you, Doyou deny this, Mr, Rosewater? Can you raise your right hand and swear be- fure God and man this is not true? Is your contcience so calloused that you can deny the truth with impunity and defend a lie with a grin? Now, reader, we ask, what would have been the effect of Mr, Valentine forming such an alliancy with Rosewater? We an- swer, it wonld have amounted to a conces. #ion to Rosewater of a number of the fed- cral appointments in the state of Nebraska, aud a complete surrender on the part of our congressman of his v; for what kind of a friend to anyone is Itose- water unless he can compel said friend to toe the mark he chalks off for him,—Nor folk Journal, We have taken tho pains to investi- gave the matter aud find the Journal to be correct. We have it from Con- gressman Valentine himself that the cmissary was sent by Rosewater as stated. He came authorizad to say that if Mr. Valentine would join Rose- water they would inaugurate a fight on Saunders and kill him off. Rose- water stated that he could control Van Wyck, and thus they would have en- tire control of the federal patronage of the state. Mr. Valentine spurned the offer as he had all previous overtures from the same source. This is the ocoasion of Rosowat. hostility to Valentine. There is just as much houesty in this flght as there is in any that he wages. We take it for granted that Rosewater will deny this, bat we call the attention of the republicans of the Third district to the fact that it is Valentine’s word against Roee- water's. This will settle the matter in the minds of people who know both men. Mr. Valentine did not make this statement for publication, He did not even think the matter worthy of mention here, but the Journal ar- ticle brought it to aotice. We called upon our congressman and from him learned the above article was correct In every purticular, In conclusion he said: *‘You newspager fellows better do as I have done and let Rosewater rest. Heo depends upon the notoriety that he gets in the refutation of his mi statements, and he misstates for this very purpose. If Rosewater was not abused by the state press he would be compelled either to run a legitimate business and build up his paper on its real merits, or, like Othello, his ocou- pation would soon be gone.” There . agood deal of truth in this, n doubt. Rosewater would be like a fish out of water if the notice he is re- ceiving from the press should sud- denly vease — West Point Republican, This is & spocimen brick of Valen- tine's campaign lies, About seven years ago, Geueral Strickland asked me as a personal favor to employ a young man by the nawe of George M. Fillmore. He had been in the employ of the Union Pacific, but was out of & job for reasons which I did not then know, He called on me and rapre- sented himsolf as highly connected in the east, being, as he said, a nephew of ex-President Fillmore. I engaged him as travelling agent and correspon. dent, and assigned him to the territory of Utah, After he had been in Utah soveral weeks and failed to report, I directed our local Balt Lake corres- pondent to look him up, and soon learned he was on a big drunk, had squandered every dollar of the sub- scriptions collected and had con- tracted cousiderable debt besides. Thereupon I caused him to be adver- tised in the Salt Lake Herald and Deseret News, and notified all con- cerned to forward their receipts so they could be served with the paper. Four or five years later I met Fillmore banging round the hotels at Washington; but up to this date he not offered to make good the deficit, I was in Washing. tom at the inaugural of Genersl Gar- field and & few days later Fillmore | called on me with & porsonal frieud and then and there suggested that he would be glad to bring about friendly relations between Valentine and the two senators, He claimed to be an especial friend of Valentine and was holding a position in the census bureau at that time through his influence. He proposed to arrange a meeting be- tween Wnyself and Valentine with the view of getting himself indorsed for the position of sccretary of Arizona by the Nebraska delegation. I told him I had nothing to do with Valentine and would not interpose if Valentine should see fit to enter into our arrangements with the senatore, He insisted that he would see Valen- tine and try to bring about a meeting. Whether he did or did not I cannot tell. Suffice it to say that I never have since met him and the state. ! ment that he brought me any message from Valentine is a downright fabri- cation. The story bears evidence of false- hood on the face. The alleged at- tempt to get Valentine to join Van Wyck was made while General Gar- field was president. Val, had little or no influence with him, while both senators were on the very best of terms, and my personal relations with the president were very friendly. I had no patronage to seck then any more than now, but if I had wanted to exert influence I could have done 80 then without Valentine with Gar- field, as I could do =m0 now with Arthur, through friends who are a good deal nearer the throne than he is or ever will be. The idea that Valentine ‘‘spurned the offer as he had all previous overtures from the eame source,” is decidedly rich. When did he have those previous overtures? Waa it when he called at Tue Bee office, just after Frank Welch died, to impose on my credulity with the story that the boys were for him, but Hitchcock and the Union Pacific would fight him, and he might want my support? Or wasit after Hayes gave him the black eye by nominating Crounse collector at my urgenf request aud against his person- al protest. As between my veracity and that ot Valentine, it will take a good many affidavits from George M. Fillmore to prove that I ever made overtures to him for anythin E. RoSEWATER, Tue present state and congressional campaign in Nebraska iz the first in the history of this state in which the people can express their will at the polls by electing candidates for all oftices who are pledged to represent their interests. Both political parties have heen surrendered to the monopo- lies, and through the skillful suppres- sion of popular sentiment and by brazen fraud have succeeded in nomi- nating candidates who, with one or two exceptions, are acceptable the monopolies. In sach a condition of political affairs nothing remains but the nomination of men who could hon- estly appeal to the producers of this state for their votes on platforms pledging them as represontatives of the people, opinions and backed by records which guaranteed their pro- fessions. This has been done and the voters of Nebraska are left to endorse or condemn such action. Party poli- tics should have no place in the pres- ent campaign, There are no national issues involved. The question is whether the people or corporate mon- opolies shall rule our state and repre- sent us in the national legislature. Before this overshadowing issue all minor llnes of difference must be erased. The canvass upon which we have entered is a people’'s campaign, be- cause it is waged in the popular inter- est, and with candidates nominated by the free and unrestricted vote of the people themselve: to Loran CL:IQK, of Boone county, has astate wide reputation. His integrity and ability stand unquestioned and no 0 | better man could have been chosen to hold the keys to the state treasury,— Osceola Record, That comes from the home organ Birds of a feather will flock together. Albinus Nance was a member of the same logislature with Loran Clark. Both sold their votes to the highest bidder, The one was paid a hand- some dividend from a sutlership in which he didn’t invest a dollar; the other, Loran Clark, took his pay out of a surveying contract in which he nover performed any labor. Loran Clark was even more provident than Nance, He got his slice from other ljub- and for years has been the re- tained capper for the U, P, Tueke is a loud call for all halting voters to come down from the fence, Howe's Occupation, Nebraska Signal, As The Bignal predioted, when he was snubbed at the congressional con- vention, Church Howe bobbed up at the state convention as the Union Pa- cific candidate for lieutenant gover- nor; and as The Signal also predicted, he wasn't wanted in any state oftice. Mr. Howe may find occupation as & broker between Thurston and a rail- road committee, but that is the only portion of Carns’ duties he will be called upon to perform. Loran or County Advocate, eran Clark, candidate for state treasurer on the republican ticket, isa man whose best friends would net trust with their funds over night, The anti-monop: lists have up a better man, and we ask you to vote for him, lark. Thay NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL STATISTIOS. The eleventh annual report of the commissioner of education, coveriag the year 1880, has been issued. The commissioner states that the present year has been marked by a great in- crease in the amount and value of the in‘ormation received at the office with reference to the conduct of education in our own and in foreign countriee, and by a corresponding increase in the public demand for the distribu- tion of information. The means allowed the office for carrying on the interchange of intelllgence are en- tirely inadeqaate, whether regard be had to specific inquiries or to informa- tion which should bs published in the general interest of this department of public affaira. Seven circulars of information and six bullotins have published during the year, comprising among others the following subjacts: Coliege libraries as, aids to instruction; rural school architecture, with illustrations; English rural schools, with illustra- tions; a report on the teaching of chemistry and physics ia the United States; vacation colonies for sickly school children; the Indian school at Carlisle barracks; industrial educa- tion in Kurope; medicvl colleges in the United Statea. The number of American correspon- dents of the office, including officers of state and local systems and institu- tions of learning, is 8,231, or more than four times the number at the be- ginning of the present decade To thematerial derived from these sources must be added the foreign matters, reports and periodicals, all of which must be examined and summarized for the report. In introducing the statistical sum- mary the commissioner explains the scope and value of a perfect system of tabularization and points out some of the deficiencies in the plans pursued in various states snd localities. Great improvement in this respect is notice able in the returns and reports receiv- ed at the office, and every year in- creases the value of the figures for purposes of study and generalization. So far as practicable the statistics in the present report include a compura- tive view of education for the decade ending 1879-'80. The total echool population in the state for 1880 is 15,- 3561,875; number enrolled in public schools, 9,680,403; average daily at- tendance, 5,744,188, four states not reporting. The school population of the territoriesis 184,405, Idaho and Wyoming not reporting; enrolment in public schools, 101,118; average daily attendance 61,154, two territories not reporting. The percentages of en- rolment and average daily attendance are highest in Massachusetts and the lowest in Louisiana. Of Nebraska the commissioner says: “Here school population increased during 1879-'80 by 18,937 and public school enrolment by 15,693, the num- ber enrolled being 65 per cent of the school population, against 62 per cent in 1878-'79. Private school attend- ance was not reported. Of 350 new school districts, 8 more had graded schools, 109 more furnished free text books, and 1562 more had terms lasting at six months, while the average term increased by 2 days. Public school houses increased by 212; the value of property, by $254,680; public school income, by $240,486; the average monthly pay of teachers, by $2.87 for men and $2.37 for women, The increase during the ten years has been striking, youth of school age advancing by 101,285, and public school enrolment by 69,284, the en- rolment having gained 16 per cent on school population, an advance of 16 for each year. The average school term increased by 37 days, the num- ber of school houses by 2,143, and value of school property by $1,643,- 831, The only offset to these indica- tions of progress is a decrease in teachers' pay, that for men being $2.38 and that for women $4 08 a month less, whilejtheir qualifications, it is stated, have been much im- proved through the influence of nor- mal echools and teachers’ inatitutes,” ——— Tue Republican erts that Kolger is opposed in New York only by euch popers as the Bugffulo Express. Six- teen prominent republican newspapers have up to date refused to support the nominees of the Saratoga convention, Of these the Express and the dlbany Journal are the most conspicuous, both being leading republican jour- vals outside of New York city. In this connection we reproduce from the Express for the benefit of Nebraska re- publicans the following extract which has a very pertinent application to the political situation in our own state: “‘We cannot help wishing that all of our contemporaries would now, much more powerfully than the E-- press can, make their disapprobation manifost, every day until election, by advocating the election of Mr, Cleveland, in the honest belief, as we most steadfastly entertain it, that only through the wholesome discipline of & humilisting defeat this year can the bosses who usurp all the power of the party be convinced of the necessity of harmonizing the party in order to car- ry the state and elect a republican president two years hence. With the party distrac’ed then by faction- al contentions as it 13 now- with the great majority of its rank and file practically disfranchised, and with all earnest aapirations tor re- form iguored or insulted—it will be impossible to do that. But let the been administration bosses who are respon- sible for the present state of things— who have by fraud and forgery forced improper candidates upon an unwill- ing party—let them learn by rude ex- perience that a nomination does not mean an election and that a boss shall wield but a barren sceptre, and they will immediately begin to get ready to show some respect for those who can- not be ruled by brute force nor swayed by the hope of spoils, and will give us fair caucuses and honest conventions, with candidates as well as declarations to represent the true principles of re- publicanism.” —_— Beginning to Tremble, Fremont Tribune. The knees of the Valentine fellows are beginning to tremble. 8 Ox 18 Gored ? Kearney Nonpareil, When Yost, Colson & Co, assumed the right to seat one set of conatituents who held credentials to the atate con- vention and refuse admission to others, it is all right aud proper, but when Messrs Crounse and Whit- moyer invited delegates to the con. gressional convention to submit their credentials for inspection, it was & monstrous usurpation, which no hon- orable republican would countenance for a moment. A New Way to Beat. Klkhorn Valley News. The Weat Point Reputlican thinks it has discovered a new way of defeat- ing M. K. Turner. It spells the name with a little t. That argument is old and used to be very effective, but in the present day the only man it makes mad is the corupositor, who, from force of habit, will put in a cap T every time, and then swear like blazes because he has to change it. Try something else, Brother Bartlett, if you value your printers’ souls, Jim Laird. Butler County Pross, James Laird, of Hastings, received the republican nomination for congrees at the convention at Hastings on Tuesday. It is the first time in the history of the state that the railroads have dared to put up one of their own attorneys. Itis a burning shame to the people of this monopoly ridden atate. One thoughtadds comfort, and that is the hard crust of partisan prejudice that has so tightly bound the people is giving way before the onflow of political light that is flooding in on the people through the cham- pions of antimonopoly, and, when the prices drop a little lower and money gets a little scarcer, as it will from now on, the effect of the good times in fa- have loat its foroe. Let Us Have a Change, Dakota Argus, The Omana Bee is strongly urging that the state board of equalization be abolished, and we would snggest that the anti-monopolists of the state take that as a part of the issue. In theory, the board and its powers are all right, but the manner 1n which its members have been manipulated by the railroads, make it a disgrace to the state and the cover for a high-hauded thievery of the people’s money. The object in creating the board was to give every county along the line an equal chance, by assessing the round houses, depots, rolling stock, etc., and dividing the whole at so much per mile. Instead, however, the board does not fix the valuation of the road bed alone at half its taxable value, thus unlawfully saving to the railroads of the state thousands of dollars annuaily. No wonder the monopolies can afford to spend money so freely to elect their minions to office, The people have to pay the bills, 1t is because it 18 im- possible to secure the benefite from the system that we advocate that the board be abolished entirely. It would then be left to the assessors along the line, and the roads would find it ex- ceedingly difficult to bribe or influence all of them. A change could not pos- sibly be for the worst, so by all means let us have a change. A Remarkable Production, The leading republican organ of Merrick county, which even now sup- ports the republican ticket, including Valentine, makes the following com- ment on the platform: Central City Courfer. The platform adopted by the repub- lican state convention is a remarkable production, No more meaningless set of resolutions probably were ever dignified with that name. The first plank indorses all those principles which are usually enunciated in re- publican platform, of which the most are endorsed by all parties and the rest by a little more than a majority of republicans, and little less than a majority of democrats. The second plank resolves that the railroads ought to do the square thing by the people, and that the people ought to be very carefal not to infringe on the ri of the vwailroads. It doesn’t go into particulars probably through fear of hurting somebody’'s feelings, The third plauk is an inconsequent one endorsing the policy of the state board of lands and buildings, and the fourth endorses the nomination of Valentine and Weaver, The orators of the con- vention plucked the tail feathers of the proud bird of freedom until it screamed again sbout the brilliant record of the republican party and ita glorious mission, but their plat. form fatls to state a single object for which this glorious party is to work. The democrats have adopted an anti- prohibition plank to catch the whisky republicans, The repblicans would have put themselves in accord with the sentiment of the people of the state and made hundreds of votes by adopting & prohibtion plank, but it dodges the issue. Some: body introduced & resolution that railroad corporations should be compelled to procure paients on their lands so that they coald be taxed, and another endorsing the president’s veto of the river and harbor bill, Both these resolutions involved living ie- suce, The first involves a very prac- tical phase of the monopoly question, and the second a much needed rebuke to the constantly incressing tendency to plunder the public treasury. These resolutions were referred to the com- mittee on resolutions, but they re- fused to report them to the ccnvene tion. Both resolutions would be tvor of old political institutions will i of the state. Bet the adoption of the first would have been a compliment to Van Wyck and the adoption of the seeond a rebuke to Valentine. Chair- man Gere's dislike of Senator Van Wjyck amounts to a mania, while Val- entine is his especial pot, and of course he could never bring himself to report two such resolutions to the conven tion. To these and certain other peculiarities of Chairman Gere the republican platform doubtless owes its remarkable character. Who Runs the Machine? Fremont Herald 1s not the republican party in Ne- braska run by the railroads? The shairman of the republican state com- mittee says unreservedly that the rail- roads beat him for governor and nom ivated Dawes. Now The Contral City Nonpareil, another supporter of Val- entine, says: ‘‘In the state conven- tion the bulk of the U. P. vote was cast for Church Howe, and the B, & M. vote for Azeo. On the second bal- lot a certain political railrond attorney the chairman of which had been was gesil to motion t a certain delogation voting for Howe, and the vote was at once changed to Agee.”” Are not the railroads running the republican party? g Explicit directions for every use are given with the Diamond Dyes. For dyeing Moeses, Grasses, Kgos, |~ As it is for all the painful discases of the SIKIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWELS. | It cloanses the system or the acrid poison Slthat causes the dreadful suffering which (®only the victims of rheumatism can realize. THOUSANDS OF CASES Sltime . 8 PERFECTLY CURED, s; IRICE $1. LIQUID cr DRY, SOLD by DEL (5) Dry can besent by ma WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Vt KIDNEY WORT ALL TRUE FELLOWS Worthily point to the “HUB PUNCH" As an article of such rare and exceeding merit a deserve a place on every sideboard, A Soocial Glass of Hub Panch is a most welcome accessory of friendly intercourse, peculiarly acceptable at parties. Uncork, and tis ready. Punches brewed at request are far behind it in flavor. Gifted oratora never dis lose The real source wh Believe me, it comes, after dinner or linch, From a flowing bowl of GRAVES' HUB PUSC their cloque nee flows 1 Be sure you get the genu with she fac simile of “CHESTER H. GRAVES & SONS” on the capeule over the cork of each bottle. Trade supplicd bys M. A. McNamaia, Omaha. Familics by A, H, Gladstone, THE CITY STEAM LAUNDRY makes a specialty of Collars & Cuffs, AT THE RATE OF Three Cents ‘Each, Work solicited fromall over the country, The charges and return postage must ac- company the package. Special rates to large clubs or. agencies, a24.4f me __ WILKINS & EVANS, CHOICE CICARS. d D mported an omestio. Finest Selection in Towx Prices to Suit Evervbody From Half a Dollar Dowa to So. Schroter Becnt's OMAHA NADTATORIUM SWIMMING SOHOOL, Corner 9th .and Farnam Streets, Running water—experienced teacher-—cooles place in 1he city—sizo of basin, box! wnd 8) foot #5,00; five baths, §1,00: Freo towe's, bathing trinks a; DIECKMAN & WITTE, M. HORWICH & CO,, DEALER IN Paper Stock, Woolen Rags, Iron AND METALS, Highest Prices Paid, Shipments from the country solicited. Nemittaucee OmaHA_ [ Prowptly made, | ANTIQUARIAX BOOKSTORE 1420 DOUGLAS STREET Headquarters of the Literat!, The Cheapest, l-nmn{nu cholcest coll tca of NEW AND SECOND-HAND BUOKS the Wesh. SOHOOL BOOKS A SPECIALTY Qash paid for Second-Hand Book or exchanged for new. H. SCHONFELD, __ 02av PROPRIETOR, GRAND . Woman Suffrage MEETING. BOYD'S OPERA HOUSE. Tuesday, Got 4,0t T4HP, M. Phoebe W. Couzins, | IWill deliver her celebyat 1 Jecture on} "'The Woman Without a Country” P '-4:._» “ HEALTH OF WOMA } D 0 SYMPATHIZE WITHN) 1§ THE HOPE 0! by L, Y WOMAN. 2,4 ¢ 7 < Fica WY ] 74 £ /47«//» Foalt XY e A C, v esitriveter A i [T DIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETAELE COMPOUND. e e iz A Sure Care for all FEMALD WEAK NESSES, Inclading Lewcorrhen, Ire regular and Painful Menstruation, Inflammation nnd Uleeration of the Womb, Flooding, PitO LAPSUS UTERT, &e {9 Pleasant to the taste, efficacious and fmmediata . Ttisagrenthelpin ond re- in during lbor and st 1T AND PRESC 3 and for wl ot Remed in the Vorld. in Xts Uso. S BIA of Lypia B, PINKIZAN'S LIvER PILLS cure Cons b Bloasi6es Ang TOrpIAY of tho TIvCr. & #9-Sold by ell Druggista. <63 Are acknowledged to bs the best by all who have put them to a practical test. ADAPTED TO HARD & SUFT GOAL, COKE OR WOOD. MANUFACTURED BY BUCK'S STOVE (0., SAINT LOUIS. Piercy & Bradford, SOLE AGENTS FOR OMAHA, 12 Every Corsat is warranted s factory to its wearer in every wa: or the money will be refunded by the person from whom it was bought. urlous €0 the wearer, and endorsed meortable and’perfect Atting PRICES, by Mall, Postage Patds Mealth Prescrving, $1.50, Self-Adjust Abdominal (extra heavy) $2.00. Tad Nursing, ulZeod&eow y s, COMPLAINTS of Uither Sex A ) The ouly Corset pronounced by our leading physicians 4 lea a8 ‘orsel ever Health Preserving (fne coutil) 00. Paragon Bkirt-Supporting, For aale by leading Ketall everywheres CHICAGO CORSET CO,, Chicago, Ol Samuel 0, Davis & Co,, DRY GOODS Admiseion, 10 Cents. \euduned by nine-tenths of the voters JOBBERS IMPORTERS, Washington Ave. and Fifth ST. LOUIS Mo. FAST TIME| {thicago & Novthwest: Tralng leave Omana 8:40 p. ull information eall oa }A F ud Faroam ste., J .y Depot, oF as JAMES T. CLd AK, Uener r