Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 6, 1882, Page 6

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s P i i 4 THE DAILY BEE- MAHA, FRIDAY!Y, OCTOBER 6, 1282 The Omaha Bee Published evory morning, exospt Sanday #he on:y Mon sy morning daily. IERMSB BY MAIL - 3¢ ++.$10,00 | Threo Months.8°.00 hs, 0,00 | Ono ) THE WEEKLY BER, published ev. oy Weduasday. TERMS POST PATD =~ $2.00 | Taree Montl 1.00 | Ono Avrroar News Coy or Newsdealors In the 7 o rial mate Fraton or ANl Bustnes ! ad- #ho BEE PUBLISHING 0O, Props B RONEWATER, Editar, B — GENERAL VAN WYCK AT FILE- MONT. At the requent of Seustor Vas Wyck the date of the mass mceting to be held at Fremont on Wedneaduy, Octo- ber 10th, is changed to Saturday, Oc- tober 7th. General Connor and Hon, M. K. Tarner huve agreed to address the citizens of Dodgo county at the same meating. Ler every anti-monopolist consti- tute himaelf a campaign eommitteo of one. Victosien are wou by work, not by wind. Numerous cabinet changes are in| pro#pect, General Arthir can work more .wonders in & cabinet than the | Davenport brothers Seraeant MasoN has been rof & writ of habona corpua by tha su court of New York, but General Sror man, a8 acting secretary of recomrusudod hin p dent. Macou b ficiently for his misdo. don by tho presi- a been putished uf- roanor, which consisted in trying to cheat the gal- lows uf the cowardly ussassin of Pros- ident Garlield. Tiw Omaha Republican is koop- ing it before the people that any opposition to corrupl repubii is direct aid to the demc ever comes to & point whore tho plo are compelled to choo: an honest democrat and a dish ropublican voters will not take long to make up their minds as to their choice. Jupce T rY of the Pepneyl- vania supreme court, in a suit involv. ing the obligation of a railroid com- pany to honor a ticket sold by a scalper, has decided that when a rail- road has issued a ticket it must honor it, no matter in whose hande the ticket York, which will result in the election of & demnoratic governor, The same methods have been adopted in Nebrasks, and the same {ontcomo ought to follow. E K. Valentine nominated by the railroad | henehmen, Loran Clark counted in by brazen-faced frand and Jim Laird placed on the ticket in the Second district as the representative of a party majority, shoald each and all nd Folger to the de- in fall awanits candidates v which ) have recored eir nominations 1n opporition te the popalar will, Tho only way to crush out bossism | powerful han the bo Pardon- frand {5 not tho method provent ita recurrence. Protest auy othor manner than at the polls he rule of the will not ho effsctive, | bomses 5inpones o g willing to be raled, Pae diotation of the railroads |is basut on tho refusal of voters to re- volt azaius’ corporato agrassion, 8o [ 1o an party leadors are reliable and 1t e party well they shonld be followed. The moment they arro- gantly attempt to assers thomeelves as mote poworful than tho party itaelf they must ho deposed. VALENTINE ON THE MONOPO- LIES Valentino's addreas before the Val- ley County Agrioultural society is re- markablo chiefly for what it does not contain. Thore is a great desl of tafly given to the garden sass baresu of the government, and a heavy puff for the committes on agriculture, of which tho West Point land shark happens-to bo the chairman, The traneporta | question is handled very gingorly, Tt is net to be expestod that Satan will denvunco Satan, and it was not in the hingy that B, K. Valentine, order of the candi Nebraeka mon- opolies, would daro to raise hia voice very londiy s railroud ians- ters, After i ia- in dirgussions tion, Valentine Tho right to control railroads by nationnl and state legislation is con- cedud by all, but how far that control 1any bo earried i yot un open ques- tion. Tho owners and operators of railroads claim that wo have no more of u ranper or ured bra corp tered by a ociate, They money 18 their own, thol invested to build ti s and that they should be per: d to regulate fares and freight, the same as a merchant does the prico of hig warer, but wilh s gentlomen, I have 1o doubt, mary of you disagree. Thoe uationsl and state govornments have been most libzral and generous toward these corporaticns, dounting Iarge and valuable tracts of land to thot, and there is coarcsly a county in this stato that has & railroad, but what hias aided it more liberally, and thoy have may be and must carry the holdoz the distance stipulated on its face, — - Tur tevival of bows rule, machine appliavves snd federal dictetion in ow York and Penusylvania hava made thoso states the battleground. ‘The republican voters are determinud to strike down the machine politiciins, to repudiate the tricks and frauds of ward polilics, to rebuke the national administration for intermoddiing, and to assert: the rights of the people, even at the coat of republican deteat, The gnrty can well afford to submit to ths eroic treatment. Cauterization is the only effoctivoremody, The demo- crats may carry New York and Ponn- sylvania, and may even gain the con. trol of the next congress, but the ro- publican party will be the stronger in 1884 for the banishment of the machine and hy reason of the new demonstration of its power to reform the abuses which grow up in its own ranks. Itisalso possible thata demo- cratic congress may contribute mate- rially to republican success in 1884, — Chicage Tribune, These are strong words from a staunch republican journal, They ap ply with equal pertivency to the re- publican state of Nebraska, which has been handed over to the tender mer- cies of monopoly boeses who hide be- hind the mask of party logalty, The republican party will ba stronger for their defeat. Parasite like they are sapping its vitality and playing fast and loose with every principle of trus tepublicanism. More democrats are to-aay is being texed to meet theso libesclitica, Lt cocts large sums of monéy to build railrosds, and in our oan slate they have be:n built in sparnely rottled sections, where I pre- sume it does not now pay to operate Shem, | hTHsc T T R R But ruiltoads are nccessary to you, in- dividuslly and as a olags, Your inter- ests and theira are most intricately interwoven; without them you can not reach the marlkets with your pro- duets and your stock; on the other hand thoy cannot prosper without your products and stock to transport, Tt in, therofore, plain that you should bo on most friendly terms. There should bo no antagonism between you, and it is wy opinion that it would be far botter for all concerned if, in fix- ing the rates of fare and freight, the railroad manager could consult with the merchant and the farmer, the pro- ducer and the shipper, aud fix rates 80 that each should be fairly treated; that they should observe the motto, ““Live aud lot live."” “The most aggrossive mauager in Nebraske could find no fault with these statomonts as Valentine well know, The plea for the railroads i very carefully inserted in the state- ment of the least forcible objections against them, Of the extortions and disorimination of the monopolice against their patrons, of their rofusal to pay taxes on their lands, of the undervalaation of their property this tool of the railroads takes good care to say nothing, He has no protest to mako ageinst tho abuse of corporate power in manipulating local | has ver cursed Nobruska, i the pub- made every year in Nobraska by the railroad attornoya than by mny other|,, word of denunciation for iufluence, and vopublioan success in |y purchase of logislators and tho the future can only be assured by the| b kry of our courts, He dared not defeat in the coming elostion of every | ryjg his voico againat the brazen-faced ropublioan candidate who owes his | fryyq t the lato ggnvention in which nomination to the aid and efforis of | 1y attempt to secure the state board corporate monopol; and national polities, He uttors of equalization was made by counting DOWN WITI'H THE BOssEs. | °% the chosen representative of the “Down with the bosses” is the cry people for treasurer, These are phases which is ringing in Pennsylvania and |°f the monopoly which E. K. Valen- New York, where s corrupted party tine passed by insilence and contented organization has attempted to foist | Himself with a fow mildly drawn re. by fraud and force their nowinecs marke against ‘‘stook watering” which upon the voters of the republican he informed his hearers unless stopped s would neceesitato the regulation of h S railroads by law. Of cengressional “Dawn‘ with the bosses” should be | control he rimukml: A the rallying cry of every reputable| Numerous bills have been tntro- citizen of Nebraska who cares more | duced iu congress looking to control for his own self respect & & man and | ©f T2iroads, and as many opinions 0 W% expreasod na there are bills, The one 8 voter than he doos for the selfish in- | whioh seems most popular is the Rea: terests of designing party leaders aud [gan bill. That or some ilar bill the diotation of the managers of cor- | will ba before congress for action dur- 3 ing its next session, and T shall vote P";"“ “‘"1'”‘"’" upon it as T beliove will best serve tho raudulent party methods under|interests nf Nobraska, and I suppose Don Cameron's rule were responsible | members from other states will vote for the great republican revolt in |for such clauses to be iserted as will P yivania, Corruption and bribery bost suit the interests of their own onDy, -y particular sact'on. As the interests of st Baratogs, under Jay Gould and|uections differ so will the votes of the Bleve French, have started a defectlon | men representing those districts, from the republicau ranks in New| If Valentine's past votes in what he onlls the ‘‘interesta of Nebraaka” are any oriterion from which to judee of his future action, his constitunents will pray that he may be foand absent at roll oall. He has been & consistent opponent of every measnre looking ¥oward regulation of the monop- olios. He assisted in strangling the | bill for raiiroad extension in Northern Nebraska, because it confiicted with the interesta of the railroads for which he was retrined, and in every job in which the railroad lobby at Washing. {ton was concerned, E. K. Valentine drow a plom Tt was not to be expected, as we gaid bafore, that this nominee of cor. porate monopoly would dare to plant himself upon an anti-monopoly plat- form, or to deuounce the flagrant abuses committed by his masters, His spoech, as a bid for votes, will fail. It is neither flesh, fish nor fowl, ard wo greatly mistake if the farmers of Northorn Nebraska permit them- nelves to bo taken in by any such meaninglees twaddle, NEBRASKA LAND RINGS. Ever nince Nebraska was adwitted into the union this state has been in- fested by a gang of land sharks who dall’s and the Paal's cut a oonlider‘ able figure In these swindling oper- ations, The statement showing the con- tracts and condition of public surveys under special railroad deposits of $41,438.564 dnring the fiscal year end- ing June 30, 1872, is substantially as follows: Stephenson & Sloctm, April b, 1872, £6,000; Wiltes, Ken. dall & Court, §6,000; Keyes & Jami- won, 858756; Park & Campbell $3,360; Paul & Harvey, $3,000; North & Becker, $6,000; Milner & Roasoner, £5,100; Pollard & Wells, $3,300; P & Stout, $2,400, Stat of contracts under sp prop for fiecal yoar endivg June & , 1873; Richards & Wil- bur, 86,120; Wiltse, Kendall & Court, $13,100; John B Cro £3,000; Sheldon & Fairfield, £5,800; Patrick & Stout, 81, Slocum, Stepheneon & Slocum, $£0,000; Daugherty £6,140; Enos F. G . Hays, 5; N. 1 Pauiaud Roberc Harve La Munyon & Vampboll, § total ,041 in o ending Juane The report of 1, &e., of con- tracts under appropriation for fiscal year ending June 80, 1874, has the tollowing names: Park & Campbell, $4,200; Wiitse & Court, §9,208; Daugherty, Parmales & Campboll, §8,850; Stephonson & Slocum, §9,000; McLiroy & Stophen- son, 87,680; Dorrington & Fairfield, 7,700; buarton & Kendall, $7,500; have sought to rob the people of their patrimony in the public domain, First we had the stato capital ring with Dave Butler and Tom Kenuurd at its head, who engaged in the general land business on a very large tcale. They disposed of thousands upon thousands of acres to air line ratlroads built on paper and thoy managed to traffic away tho ealine lands, penitentiary lands and public improvement lands to land rings and corrupt jobbers, Then we had a swamp land ring under the Furnas regime, which voted to give Tom Kepnard & Co, fifty per cent of all the lands to which Nobraska was entitled from the na- o swamp land act. It was comguted that there tional government under wero millions iu this echemo, Then wo had the land grabbers and home- stend swindlors’ ring, with Valentine, Schwenck & Co. as head centers. This ring infested northern Nebraska and the Elkhorn valley as dealers and jobbers in homesteads, which were re- eorved and “covered up" for tho ring, and gold to settlers oy extravagant premiums, But the most dangerous end rascally ring of land sharks that lic echool land ring, which huz quietly been operating through State Land Commissioner Glen Kendall, 1t is the ir flnence of this ring, act- ing through C. H. Gere, who was silont partoer in the Butler & Ken- nard ring that caused the following plank to bo smuggled into the repub- lican platform: Resolued, "Lhat the policy of the state board of lands and buildivg?, favoring the leasing, for terms of yenrs, of our school, university and agricultural college lands, at a fair rental, in preference to relling the same, under the option given by law, meets with our approval as the best possible means of preserving the heritage of our children, and providing rezular and ever increasing revenues for edusational pur- poses. ‘When this singular plank wes first given to the public Tne Bk regarded 1t as mere bunkum, but we have siuce discovered & very huge darkey in that wood pile. This innocent plank endorsing the action of Glen Kendall in leasing the land on option is designed to cover a stupendous fraud. We have it from ablo authority that the school land ring has already pocketed thousands of doilars out of school land icases, The way they operate is about as follows; The state echool lands are first appraised under the order of tbe board of public lands, of which Glen Kendail is the head and frout. The appraisers are picked from among the ring and the lands aro appraised at a very low rate. Thoy thor forward an application for o twenty yoars' lease to Glen Ken- dall, and they get the use of the lend at six por cont, which is about six cents &n acre per annum, Large tracts of school lands are thus leased to the ring and then eublet to actual rettlers, These leases are granted without notice to anybody and nobody outside of the ring knows anyiking about them, If a farmer wants to pasture cattle or wants to cut hay he has to pay around sum or purchase the lease, Wo have been assured that for a single tract of land in Madison county the ring was offered five hundred dollars bonus for the lease within a week, When the parties who have bought school lands under former contracts fall behind in their payments the lands are declared forfeited by the land commission- er and leased ‘‘at option” to the ring at very low figures, 1t is to endorae this system of robbery and jobbery that the republican party has been imposed upon by that mys- terious plank in the platform. And Glen Kendall is the right man to carry out these swindling operations, @len was up to his ears in the old survey- ing contracts that scandalized the re- publican party for & number of yoars and were the keynote of the revolt ageiust the old dynasty six years ago. As & matter of record we append the following list, which nay throw s)me light upon the political operations of the same old land sharks both in Northern and Southern Nebraska, Nearly every one of these surveylng contracts were wmore or less fraudulent, and the Ken- Ch o & Sanger, $5,760; White & 000, Tirs vep endiu 0, 1875, shows: Wiltse, Cour: & McOlure, §0 800; Do.rington & Fairtinld, §8,880; McBroom & Hull, §0,120; Stephonson & Slocum, §0,000; McEiroy & Stout, £9,000; Dougherty, Parmeleo & Campbell, $7,800; Rich- ards & Richards, $6,400; White & Hull, 83,000 The contrec's for 1875-76 wero as follows: Stephenson, Slocum and Hardin, $11,000; MoElroy and Beech- er, §8,400; Sshiegel and MeBroom, $11,000; Dougherty, Parmalec and Mulior, $8 Kendall Doom, $8,000; ington, Wells and Kuhl- a0, £9,600; Wm. Maxswell, $6,000; ‘ranklin Potter, 813, 4 Schlegel §1,800. Total expendi $106,3 The following additions! contracts were reperied for 1 under e deposita: Wiitss, Cours & McC $9,782 Dorington and Fanfield, MeBrown & Hull, §9, Stephenron & Slocum, §9,9) McElroy & Stout, $9,018 35; Dough erty, Parmaleo & Campbell, $7,80 26; Richards & Richards, $4,795.78. For the year 1876, the following contracts were let cenditional on an appropriation by co: Beaman, $12,000 $8,300; Witlse, C: §11,400: Dorrin £9,000. Slmon Came: Now York Tribune, Not long ago I saw a quaint, briary sort of old man, the iron in the cor- puscles of his blood alumincus and grey, his air constraived yet search- ing like thie smartest old feilow in the township making his snnual peep at New York, and he carried in his hand & sort of rod or rude bough cr shep- berd’s crook with which he picked his way into a Broadway street car with a young fellow who sppeared to by steeriug him around, and ko was gone, He seemed an apparition of Baillie WNicoll Jarvie cr Argyil, come out of the high'ands of Scocland from a past generation. Yet it was Siwon Cam- oron. A darkish shade in the pupil of Fis eye like emoked ham denoted the Peunsylvania Duteh that lay en- wrapt in that clanny, clanuy nature, tor he is of Oaledonisn snow croszod with old Rhine peasant stock, and those who know the peculiarities of the old Susquehsunne Germun race ascribe more of Cameron to his moth- er's type than his father's, That gos- sipping cleverness and insinuating in- quisisiveness into your worldly good sud the hint that e might help you better it; an apparently childish kind- ness and familisrity, a snooking pas- sion for details and close memory of aftronts, slights, opposition or kind- ness, and perfect unideality or iguo- rance that there can be a higher prin- ciple than material gratitude, tell the old peasant soldier stock that has been plowed under the limestone clover tields of Lancaster county for a cen- tury acd a half. Mixed with the Ssotch this blood produces politicians of astonishing tenacity and thickness of cuticle. The Scotch mixed with Holland ch resulted in such colo- nial polit 1s a8 Robery Livingston the -emigran, whoso bonat it was, while absorbing lands, oflices, matri monial slliances, Indian jobs, and what not, that ‘‘ce had rather be called a konave than a poor man,” In the third generation this Batayian stock produced two sons, one of whe made Jefforson president, the ¢ made Jackson 1 & Harvey, & Barton, n & Fairfield, Plctured. Nervous debility, the curse the American people, immediately yiolds to the aotion of Brown'a Iron Bitters, ——s HAS EMMA ABBOTT A BABY? The Vexed Question Settled in an Jnterview with the Frima Donna. The query whicl is exprossed in 192 headline above has, for woeks past, been secretly nursed for openly pro- pounded by tho numberless admirers of the popular prima donna, Kmma Abbott, Floating paragraphs have hinted at the recent arrival in the singer's family of one of those tiny tokens of wedded bliss, in polite society yelept ‘‘babies,” aud in the vernacular of the street referred to as “kids,” The air of secresy and the atmoephere of uncertainly which have envelopad this alleged offspring of the house of Abbott, have been especially exasporating to the public The public says: If Emma Abbott has been required to devote any of her time to learning a cradle song, or aoy of the lullabies which fond mothers tenderly croon over their “tinr messengers from the great unkuewn,” it should be our privilege to know it. Is she not one of the public’s pets, and being such, is it not our r'ght to know whether or not that yoor pet is being perpetuated in the shape of a small scale singer’ And perhaps the publie i+ not un- MoMAHON, ABERT & CO,, reasonable in its demand, Be that as it may, the curiosity exists, snd it remains for Tak Bes to remove the drapery from the family crib and reveal its emptinoes, During the visit of a Bee reporter to Kausas City this week he joined the innumerabie throng which each eveningfilled to the doors the elegant Coates opera house, where the Emma Abbott graud formances. Husivg * beent impeor:-| 1916 DOUCLAS STREET, dent, he had sccurcd no seat in ad- vance and was doing an artistic posing nct_in the lobby when he was invited by Mr. Wheeler, the company's busi- Druggists, OMAHA, REB. ness manager, to make himself com- ness the performance from that point . of vantage, an invitation which was readily acoepted. When Miss Abbott Eoasters and Grinders of Coff2es and Spie . Manufacturers of Gme oweras wim e oniencrs| IMPERIAL BAKING PUOWDER | with her customary cordial welcome what was more natural than to ask, “‘How's the tootsy-ootsy? “The what!” And this was the ex- clamation which came with unmusical vociferousness from the ringer's lips. ““The little 'un, the enfant terrible, the Baby, with a_big B,” explained the reporter, ‘‘It—since I am ina f contracta for the year sa: John W. | state of uncertainty as to the pronoun which would best apply to its sex.” “The Baby 's & myth,” the un- matronly looking Emma emphatically SPECIAL NOTICE —TO— Clark's Double Extracts of BLUEING, INKS, ETC. H. G. CLARK & CO., Proprietore, 140 Dougius Srect, Ocnnly Neh," ¢ asserted. The reporter thought to Growers of Live S‘tock and chel‘s. vefer the labial sound to_a lisp in the singer’s articulation and congratulate her upon being the mother of a little misg; but he had in mind the untime- ly end of several punsters and he contented himeelf with remarking, *Then there is no baby,” “Not in the Abbott household as yet,” the prima donna continued, “I don’t know whether to be annoyed or only amused at that story. It's one of the Munchausen romances that ema- nate from the imagination of that awful Eugene Ficld, of the Denver Tribune, I feel that I must deny the story and sat myself right, and yet 1 know that the deniul will not travel half so fast able condition in the epring. tify to its merits. charge for sacks. Try it and judge for yoursclves, WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground 0il Gake. 1t is the bost and cheapost food for stock of any kind. to threo pounds of corn. ‘Stock fed with Ground Vil Cako in the fall ar ter, inatoad of running down, will increase in weight and be in good markot- Dairymen as well as othors who ure it can tes- One pound is equal win- Price $25.00 per ton; no LINSEED OIL CO, Omaha, Ncb. story itself. The Douver Tribune has harped on that fictitious baby with such pertinacity that nearly every one in that city fully believed it by the tune I arrived there. Then the baby's appearance wos described and all with with such an air of verisimilitude that I was tempted to be half uncertain myself as to the exiatence of the cause he hubbub, Now I appeal to : Do I look motherly?” The reporter “'sized up” the appear- anca of the prima donna and was com- pelled to admit that she had rather mother. *“Aud worse than all” the maligned Emma continued, “my friends are writing to mo blaming me for havi kept it all a seeret. My mother re ligiously believes every thing she reads in the pspers about me—" HAR the appearance of a girl thanof a|1108 and 1110 Harney | t., - [ EHHIT W7 ELOILEIRR L 52 WARE, OM:Ha&, NEB. NTINGTON & SON, DEALERS IN poiares smene eedui” e re-| HIDES, FURS, WOSL, PELTS & TALLOW ‘~—And has written to know what th J : Jittlo darling's name is, aud what's the | 204 North Sixteenth St., color of its hair,” ‘‘And so the thrilling episode in which a woman’s screcams were borne upon the midnight air in the halls of the Denver hotel, and all the hurry- ing to and fro in corridors, and the anxious consultations of eminent phy- sicigns in that alleged case of croup, was but a figment of the Field-ian imsgination,’ queried the reporter. “‘Simply that, and nothing more,” was the response, ‘‘and if you will kindly and suthoritatively deny the existence of this baby which is becom- irg a real ‘enfant terrible,you will be doing me un inestimable service,” The reporter promised that the ser- vice should be done, and 85 the baby is choked off at an early stage in its existence. *#It is impossible for a woman to suffor from weakness after taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound, SEWING FOR CHARITY. A Labor of Love in Which a Number of Lady Fingers Engage. For several days back, in response to the call of the Sisters of St. Francis, published in these columns, a number the new wardsat St. Joseph’s honpital, working a large amount of new ma- terial into pillow-slips, quilts and com- forts for the beds in the recently erected wing of the hospitul. Saveral cowing wmachines, together with a sumber of nimble xud expert flagers, heve made the walls us musice! s they have conduced to making the scene most animated and picturesque, Several dozen pillow slips, & number of comforte and sheets and other es- sentials were the result of this anima- tion and devotion, a result commend- able in itself, and grateful tothe over- worked nistera, who, while careful ot the victima of sickness and misfortune, are not less mindful of the kindness of those who Jend assistance in the hour of need. ‘From them the writer learned that the following ladies had been engaged in the work of charity: Mra. J, W, Gannett, Mra, W. Wallace, Mrs. Grant, Mre, ® C. McShane, Mrs. Becht, Mra. Gerhart, Mrs. Johnson, Mrs. B Gal- Ingher, Mrs. 0. V. Gallagher, Mrs Dr. Stone, M.s, MeGinn, Mrs, ituyer, Mrs. Wagner, Mrs, Schoeider; Mrs, T, Swift, Mrs John 1. Redick, Mrs, Swartzlander, Mre, J. B, Furay, Mrs, O'Ruark and Miss Ella Creighton, Miss Grant, M Herrick, and the Misses Kato and Lizzie Murphy Contirary to the expectatlon of the sisters, oll the material has not yet been worked up, and before it can be done, at least another day will be required, The sisters have, however, decided to leave that till next weck, when they may again call upon their friends. They are doubly sratoful for the generous ~response of our ladies t their call, as the latter are, doubtless, pleased to have been sfforded an opportumity of helping those sacrificing women. The next call of he sisters wiil enable others to avail themselves of a similar oppor- tunity. — Kidney Disease. Pain, Irritation, retention, Incon- tinence, l}epuuiuX Gravel, ete., cured by ‘‘Buchupaibs.” 1005 Farnam 8t., Omabha. OMAHA, NEB. AL TRUE FELLOWS, “HUB PUNCH" of lndies have been occupying one of | s wn wticle of such rare most welcome peeulisrly acceptable at i tsready, Punchos brewed at requmt are far ehind it iu flavor Gifted omtors never is lose Tov re « thelr (1 o Nows Bel w, it ) ftex dinner or lanch From a flowing bowl of GRAVES' MUK 1UACH Be sure you gut the genuiue, with the fac simile of “CHESTER H, GRAVES & SONS" on the capsule over the cork of cach bottle. Trade supplied by M, A, McNawara, Unaha. Foamilics A H, Gladstone, GALVANIZED IK W iOornices, &o, Manufactured BY T. SINHOLD 13thSt.. 4 Omha, aNeb: Fiousieton JINO. CANE. JOUN HAMMOND, Elephant Corrall 13th AND LEAVENWORTH ST, Vorth ct Wyoming Coal Yard.) FEEDAND BOARDING STABLE. Stock Auction, le aod Commission. Ba Hay, Bte. Farnor's torms moderate CANE & HAMMOND, Proprie m THE CIfY STEAM makes a specialty of ICollars & Cuffs, AT THE RATE OoF Three Cents Each. Work solicited fromall over tho country. The charges wnd return postage st nc- company the package. Speci.l rates to large clubs or agenc a2f-tf me WILKINS & EVAN 8, $500 REWARD. The above reward will be paid to any person who will produce u Paint that will equal the Pennsylvania Patent Rubber Paint, %, Tim and ( Howfs. and Water AD i to. Cheaper aid et It now in us EWART & STEPHENS 'N Ousaha House, Uniaha, Neb. REFERKNCES Dr. Rice, Dr. Pinney Fuller 1 ottice, Omaha, Neb, Samuel 0, Davis & 0., | DRY GOODS | JOBBERS N IMPORTER, Washington Ave. and Fifth ~ ST. LOUIS MO. McCARTHY & S8URKE, ‘Undertakers, 218 14TH ST, BET. FARNAM AN/ DOUGLAS,

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