Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 11, 1883, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

A DISQRACE 70 TiTE STATE. Samue! Aughey, Who signs himeelf The | “Professor of Natral 8eionces i the University of Nebraska," is'a disgrace t the college in which he holds a a source of digcredit to the state which is taxed to pny his salary. For years this T L scientific monntebank has furnished his One Year 82,00 | Three Months r Six Montha. 2100 | Ono Month ., ... % | professional endorsement to every nos e arny’ Bole MEents Newsdeal:| burm, whowe dwnors aotight hia aid in put ting their goods on the market, | FCORRRSTONDRNOY All Communications relating to News and Editorial | and his testimony as an “‘expert piently on hand to bolster up imattors should Be addressed to the Eprron or Tuk | Publiehed evert momir, Xeopt Sundag anly Monday morning dafly W #y AL $10.00 | Three Moths ®00 00| One Mbwth..,... [ 100 air and One_Vear Six Months IR WREKLY W, PURLISITED HURRY WEDNRSDAY, | TrAID, | has | Bre ¢ be somxa LarTas All Business Totters and Remittances should be addrossed to Tir Bre PURLISIING CONPANY, OMAHA., Drafts, Checks and Postofice orders to be made pay Able t6 the order of the company THE BEE BUBLISHING CO., PROPS, E. ROSEWATER, Editor. —_— cony the schemes of jobbers, and to assist in gulling a Mr. | Aughey was, like many other so-called | scientists, a “professor by brevet only, | his conduet would call for no comment on the part of the self-advertised charlatans the can protect itself. The no institution of learning name of mised by their conduct. mon scn credulous public. If press. Against public roputation of and the good no commonwealth is compro. | People of com- | othe endorsements and re Dox' you go, Tommy; don't g 0. Cto T. F. Hall, Wiks the Omaha council tire of beer they hrace up on brown Stout. Ihere are too many unmuled and un. | commendations of such quacks for what tagged dogs running at large on our h and:the papor and print- ing ink - which is spent in advertising their flattering testimonials, are wasted on the intelligent portion of the public. The case is different where a man whose position gives him an official standing | in the community and issupposed to vouch for his professional ability and | personal integrity uses his position to as sist quacks and swindlers, streets, biii— Tk only happy men as they read the reports of the ravages of the cholera are the undertakers, civil wservice about as woll M. Hanu's first dose of reform sits on his stomach as o first class emetic. Professor Aughey for the past five years has been prostituting his chair in the University of Nebranka and abusing his title profensional endorser of patent medicines and bogus inventions, He miserable as an artificial stone of perpetual dura- bility and great value; he signed his name as professor of the Univer- sity of Nebraska to a testimonial to the curative qualities of a Cheap John hog cholera cure; hé pronounces Bill Stout’s soft and shaly Colorado sandstone a paving material of wonderful import- ance, and stands ready to-day to furnish his professional endorsement of any- thing from a hair restorer to a cancer cure. The Iatost and worst exhibition of quackery on the purt of Prof. Aughey is the following testimonial, which appears in a late number of a Lincoln paper; READ AND BE SATISFIED, UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA, DEPART- MENT OF NATURAYL ScreNces, Lin- ¢ coLN, JuNe 26, 1883, I am well acquainted with the constit- uents of E. lhuuell'u great rheumatic compound. The elements of which it is composed of are among the most power- ful remedial agents known. In all the cases where I have seen or known it to be tried, it has produced a cure of rheu- matism, chronic or acute. The above compound can be had at 136 South Elev- enth streot, room 8, Lincoln, Neb. SAMUEL AUOHEY, » Miller's influence ought to be unable to prevent an investigation of the railway postal service in parts these endorsed a I'nx. English house of lords which is composed chiefly of landlords reports that the land act works badly. The ten ints tell a different stor) tixture of cement and yr: M, HarLcand imself exclusively M Cape Cod and He will not. this summer to fishir running his Idaho saw mill. be disturbed by official cares. Now that the postoffice mattor hus been settled, there are several other portions of the civil service here or heroabouts that are as badly in need of reformation. Tsk political atmosphere is. thickening and the voice of the: enstorn campaign orator is heard from the stump. Glo- rious recordsand glowing promises will not draw as many votes as usual this fall. Waar is wanted in Omaha at the pres- ent time is a city marshal with a good nose for smells, Will Mr. Guthrie kind- Ty keep up the work of notifying proper- ty owners that their alleys and back door yards need cleaning? Tk stockholders of the Keeley motor are raving with indignation because the Professor of Natural Sciences, machine refused to start on the th of | This of itself i sufficient to brand Mr. July as positively advertised by the in- [Aughey either as an ignorant quack or ventor, The Keeley motor must be some |88 & venal fraud. The people of Nebras- relation to the Tilden boom. ka have every reason to blush that a pro- \rrm—————— fensor in the State University should use UnTesssome of the sandstone gubter-| his official title 46 endorse in such tern ing on Fiftcenth street is put undercover | <t cure- of . -cheumatism, . chron soon it will falllto pieces from the effects | or gouto,” /Evéry repntable’ physician of the'sun, The contractors to'guarantee | will laugh in ' his sleevd’ when'he learns its permanency will have to furnisha par-{ that g cortain kun- Tihs been found for asol for every length of their curbing, there AT | town that | begin without justice and therefore can- | 1. When earning from $2, winter other strikes not suce: workmen who are to £4a day, rainor| shine, and summer, strike for | higher wages during a dull season when the labor market is glut e and hundreds of men stand ready to take their places, | | sht of folly if noth such action is the he ing worse, on labor, organized labor led by hot | d men may be equally unjust in its | demands upon [ heac apital Our position is now and has always been, this: that il diffe employer and employed should be ad- | ces between justed by arbitration and mutual conces | firmly upon an_anti-monopolyplatform it | 4,000 peaceful Apaches whe have ¢ sions where mutual concessions can be | If the striking printers had fol- lowed out this idea in the first place we | have no doubt that there w been no strike, made, 1ld have y embarked | tifiable war and they | outsct the | As it was th rashly in an unj have failed because from the scheme was ill advised THE NEW POSTMASTE | Mr. €. K. Coutant has been appointed postmaster of Omah upon his duties. Mr of Se Coutant is purely tor Manderson, to | the choice whom, in accordance with old established | ¢ . the department concedes the right to select the postmaster in his own | In inaking this choice, Senator Manderson har acted without refer- ence to outside personal or politi- cal influences It well known | that in polities Mr. Coutant has never | been allied with the anti-monopoly wing | of the republican party. We have often | fought him in political conventions, op. posed him as acandidate and_ eriticised | | ! ; | It is on this account | that we hail the change in the Omaha him as a logislator. At the same time, we e conceded his sterling qualities as a business man, THE DAI1L BEE. ~OMAHA WEDNES of & thousand paupers to one million aire What should the anti-monopolists do to promote the reforms which they advo ¢’ Two cotrses are open to them They can cither endeavor to establish a distinctive political paity, or they can aim to wield the balanceof power between the two old parties, The latler policy is manifestly the mor ble and practi cal one, The National anti-monopoly While capital often imposes | convention should not attempt to organ- | ize a third party. the utter defeat of whichwould be assured in advan but should seck to impress its own views upon one or both of the great partics al ready in existence. This was the course pursiied in Now York state, and it was prolific of good results, 1f the demo cratic party in 1884 does not plant itself will deserve to be beaten, — The Labor of Children, Philadelphia Record This we New Jersey. It is designated to regu e the labor of children, and prohibits the employment of boys under 12 and girls under 14 years of age in factories and mines, It also limits the daily labor | that may be required of children under | treatment How it will work re At first thought there 14 to ten hours, mains to be seen. law is in force in this state and \usetts, with the difference, how- in the latter state that it likewise limits to ten hours the work required of women. Like limitations exist in Eng land. Russin has a law prohibiting the employment of children under 12 ye age under any pretense, and fixing the time of labor at 8 hours for children un- der 16, The Russian law further pro vides that these children must attend school at least three hours a day. The regulation of the emple young children in workshops and fac- tories is a matter of grave concern, The practice of making young children work steadily at one thing, without the chance of proper relaxation, has been con- demned by physicians and philanthrop- ists, who que that they are thus de- frauded of their right to t, sleep and grow.” Certain it is that although the yment of postoffice as a velief. Tuk Bre is the | work required of children in factories is largest i of flice 1| generally not of the sort which calls for .“‘"‘] i “‘“] R ‘_‘"‘kyu xpenditure of much physical it has nothing more toaskigroneth it is very monotonous and soon of the postmaster than an|wearies both mind and body. Children onergetic and business-like conduct of | require va of thought and occupa- the office. The retiving postmaster has | tion more th people. For this been a failure in this respect and should | have been removed long ago for neglect | of duty. We arc assured that Mr. | Coutant intends to devote his entire time to the affairs of the Omaha post- oftice. If he does so he will have our cordial support and good wil}, whether we agree with him in politics or not. Biswarck, Dakota, is finding out that those who dance must pay the piper and that deferred payments are very expen- When that town bid for the loca- tion of the capital, it offerred in addition to u large amount of land (valued at | £300,000), $100,000 cash, for which it was said a eash-on-presentation check would be given as soon as the question of the location of the capital was settled. Bismarck got the capital, and immediate ly the town was given an immense boom, sive. ' keep them at one lesson very long at a time, but give them frequent change. To offset these reasons why the law putting restraint upon the overwork of young children should become popular, it must be borne in mind that the parents do not take kindly to any law which they consider an interference with their par- ental rights. For this natural reason the rule of compulsor {:recintwl by the class it was designed to enefit. Moreover, it is often necessary for the children of very poor parents to begin early in life to earn the bread which they put in their mouths. Self- preservation is the first law of nature. To live and grow all these children must work, even though they do not live so long or grow so well as they would under more favorable hygienic circumstances. It is a nice question to settle, in all mat- ters where the family is concerned, at what point to begin and where to leave fi. The law in this state is practically a eud lotter. the real cstate sales of a few wecks| amounting to several million dollars. 1t | seems strango that the capital commis- | son did not usk for | land at an immense figure have no particular interest in the have sold their the £100,000 at | aneed g once, but it didn't, an@ now those who | one of the two first Senators from Io | —— Neglected Studies, Chicago Herald. The Des Moines Register relates an te of General George W. Jones, which, though old, is vich: President Pierce notificd Jones by telegraph of his appointment as Minister at Bogota. The ST a a new law goes into effect in | education i8 not ap- | 1, 1883, DAY JULY 1 shadowed in his mother, are beginning tc burst out in full blossom in his own case That this grandson of the Duke of Nar vaes, a kitchen hand,’and thisson of Mar- hal Prim, a mere military h insulted the proud and ancic house of Hapshurg as to neglect his wife for a common woman of infamous charac ter, is regarded here by our social phil Paris a8 an expression of in disputable logic of human natures C— | Fortunate all A | N, V. Times At last it has been decided that the Chricahua Apaches are to go upon the San Carlos reservation, but tl fed and cared for by the war ¢ and the same department is to have tire police control of them and of the adventurer, ophers ind, e to be the reservation for several yem | war department is to administe | punish’ the re y 1 prote | Indian agent. It is said that this settle ment of the question is satisfactory to though the confinement of the Chiricahuas in some corner of [the reservation apart from the peaceful Apaches | will hardly he | in accordance with his de that would make them con [ tented. They are, however, to be under | his supervision, and a knowledge of this Gen. Crook, | appears to be no very good reason why it | fact will give the inhabitants of the fron and will soon enter | ghould not have a wholesome influence. | tier a feeling of security. The result of Crook's campaign seems to show that the interior department is capable of taking care of Indians only when they are peace | ful, and is not able to guard or feed those | who have been on the war-path. It is fortunate for the people of Arizona and New Mexico that we © a war depart- ment, and that the war department has , intelligent and sensible an officer as Gen. Crook. —m— Postal Matters, Postoflice changes in Nebraska duving the week ending July 7, 1883, furnished by Win. Van Vieck, of the postoft de- | purtment: Discontinued —Bethel, Merrick county. PostmastersAppointed.--Duncan, Platet county,( Webster; Webster, Dodge county mes Ferguson, Postoftice changes in Towa during the week ending July 7, 1883 Established-— Chesterfield, Polk coun- ty, Joab B. Hicrominus, postmaster. Discontinues Dodge,Guthrie count ames Changed mstrong Grove, Emmetcounty, to Armstrong; Avon Sta- tion, Polk county, to Avon; Golden Praivie, Delaware county, to Golden; Hickory Grove, Monroe county, to Hick- ory; Locust Lane, Winnesheck county, to Locnst; Mackey Grove, Boone county, to Mackey; Manley Junction, Worth county, to Manley; Panther Croek, Dal- Ias county, to Panther; Polk City, Polk county, to Polk; Sargeant Bluffs, Wood- ury county, to Sargeant; Swan Lake City, Emmet county, to Swan Lake; land Centre, Muscatine county, to Swetland. Postmaster Appointed - Hanover, Al- lamakee county, John Ward. LA GentLeMeEN—Your Hop Bitters have been of great value to me. 1 was laid up with typhoid fever for over two monthsand could get no relief until I tried your Hop Bitters. To those suffer- ing with debility or any ome in feeble health, 1 cordially recommend them, J. C. STOETZEL, 683 Fulton st., Chicago, 1. Schenck's Special to the Boston Herald, Wasnixaros, July Gen. Bob Schenck left yesterday for Cobourg, greatly regretting that his engagements prevented his awaiting the of Gen. Crook, whom he sent to West Pointwhen a boy from near Dayton, O. Talking to a reporter, just before leaving, about | Crook and his appointment, he said: I | had looked ¢ the district.to find a late to West Point. 1 iption of the | | H. WESTERMANN & CO, IMPORTERS OF QUEENSWARE! China and Glass, (608 WASHINGTON “AVENUE AND 609 ST. St. Louis, Mo WHOLESATLHR Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, ST. LOUIS. MO, STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS 1N FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOJS, ND ALL GROCERS’ SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lath, Shingles, Piekets SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, OMAHA, NEB, STREET mee-3m C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass, OMAHA. NEBRASKA. P. BOYER & CO. DEALERS IN and Lock Comp'y. ‘Ha,ll’s Safe < | chronic r"l“t;“*"?"!" and that it stands | check, whilo those who bought feel that | General replicd: ept; but, Frank, | bright lad to nou FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF g S s Howams hom Timaat vised q | endovsed Byteprofessor of the Wniversity | yey haye invested so much money that |where in h—1is Bogota?” The General’s | nally remembored that Squire Crook, | i e Y gl it boe] of Nebruska over his official bitleg And [ they can't afford it A meoting of the | Eeographical studies had been neglected, |1 fine eld Wh | Bjinsurrcetion in army: headquarters by | Tl T o Sberests of A | Tut as that was before the of the |had some boy | : ! s damsge | iotod of abottisig wrong in upholding | Range supposed all the time had been is | e Oasia Bre has boen enl The following deeds were filed for rec- cansed by high water in‘the Mississippi : | oyuanized labor as a check upon organ- | homestead. — For twelve years he had | gyotly improved in appearance. 1t came | ord in the county clerk’s office July 7th e rivor i now Talling, and unloss thel i cipital braved thing to secure this his | qut on the 19th with an entire new ¢ 1! sending around a circular forbidding all work -in - the. headquarters on the Sab- bath, and prohibiting the use of any of the rooms for sooial converse between the oua chief institution of learning at heart will be “justly indignant that one of its faculty is permitted to disgrace its name by trading on his title of professir of stail. The General evidently believes 4 , Ol one-fifth of the amount' needed. Therc | h, Omaha Brr celebrated its 13th| He did so, The boy sent was exc — - —_— I o P i R natural sciencess We "'“‘fi‘“ "f“““"'“im no doubt that somehody made money | birthday with a handsome new dress and | ingly non-communicative, He hadn’t a of the bowrd of regents, which'is' now in | ¢ Bignurek, and there is no doubt also & considerable enlargement. As a news- | stupid look, Iut he was quiet to veticence. | A M, Cantisie of Kentucky says his chaunces for the Speakership of the next House of Representatives are as good as Mr. Randall's and that the latter cannot count up more than sixty votes, Mr. Zandall is too old a campuigner to show his hand just yet but there are strong suspicions that he holds four kings with an ace lurrking semeplace in the back- ground. sewsion, to this matter. It is' a public| scandal which ought not tobéoverlooked, | inasmuch as the good name of the uni- versity and the common sense of the board are both seriously compromiscd by | the quackery of Professor Aughey. STRIKFES AND STRIK IS, Some of the political cnemies of this paper who never can approve anything that the Beg may say or do have made the discovery that the recent striko| served us right. They imagine that this | strike has shown y that all strikes are wrong and unjustifiable, and therefore that the Ber stands self-con- 'k horse has already been stolen, but it is evident that the S7. Louis Post thinks it advisable to look out for horses tha' may be in the stable hereafter, when it thus satirically refers to the shiftloss. nexs responsible for, much of the damage conclusiv Juine rise comes Aowr there " will' be™ no i Now there are strikes and strikes, wnd necessity for taking any protective meas- supposed wealthy men of Bismarck was | held last week for the purpose of raising the £100,000, d after a ll('NlH'rH(\' effort | the uuhscl‘l[luulm amounted to §20,000- | that a good many put it in a hole where | it will stay a long while, towns in the territory who bid for the pitol, and whos toars at their Those growing | izens shed bitter | s to get it, gratulating themselves over their loss, Bl Cicle Standard, | Yosterday morning O, Range, an honest, | hard working man, came to the P, 0. | and asked for his mail, which was handed him, opening a certain letter he fuiled to read it readily and handed the, same to us to read for him. 1t was u polite re quest of J. D, MeFarland, of the B, & M. land office to come inand pay that Comp- | any five hundred dollars for what My. inh section, we, 1t seems he got on an odd He provod up, got fiual reccipt An Outrage. | Civil Service Commission that obstacle to his appointment S as not an You Call the Sutton Register. paper the Bee holds a full hand, while in the political game, whenits enemies think they are about to euchreit, up comes the ittle joker and rakes in the tr Mr. Rosewat nd his BEE s make their presence felt, Logan Valley Herald, Tae Omana Beg on Monday came out in a new dress, and slightly enlarged by the widening of the columns to stand- ard measure. Despite its idios in following after strange politic the fact is patent to all that Tur Ber the Lest NEws-paper in the state, or for that matter, west of the Missouri river. o The Handsomest of All, York Tines. dress, and is now the hendsomest daily west of the Mississippi. The WrEKLY [awhile, he said he didwt know buf he [had. T suggested that he send him in. | He didn’t seem to have the slightest in- | terest or ansiety about my proposal. 1 explained to him the requitements and | labors of a wilitary school, and finally ked hini, ‘Do you think you rall that! His monosy y | was, ‘I'll try,” and so 1 sent him, and he | | Tt seems impossible that a reme | made of such common, simple plants | Hops, Mandrake, Dandelion, &c., should make so many and such g Hop Bitters do: but when old and young, ) | vich and poor, pastorand doctor, lawy 1 testify to having been ¢ must believe aud try rd doubt no longer, — them yourself, Real Estate Transfers. reported for Tup Bk by Ames' r estate agency iz farmerand friend of mine, | nd I sent word for him | | to come to town. He camein, and I en- | quired if he had @ spare boy le'd like_to send off to West Pomnt. After studying ] [ ) [] 1020 Farnam Stroat. Omaha. | JOBBER OF | Wl Paper and Window Shates. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, - L M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA NEB. the same general principles apply to all. [and everything but his patent. An ! By has also oo o ho same| P. Wilcox to M, H. Wilcox, w. d., pt. | ¢ 5 : E ures until the next flood comes. — Levees | hig paper hus been the conmstent adyo- [ Outvageous lnequitable ~ discussion o MR R BERT T s Dl iy MAHA; § NEBRASK are of no use during low wates f the courts confirm thes| - Plat of Hawver subdivision 811513, |7 = = - cate of organized labor us the only means | to protect that portion of society that | Gambling in metals will be the rage for some time in New York an exchhnge having been estabiished where futures can be bought and sold, The New York Metal Exchange may prove of value to cannot protect itself in any ther way. We have never encouraged and only have | sustained them when they became the Inst resort of overworked and underpuid sum reproseuting actual transfors of | 14t In every instance where g ey M7 Strikes have been forced by starvation e e wages they huve recoived md and comfort from the public. For instance, there is at present a strike of miners at Ely, had not Junce THURMA s s0n has been goaded by Hoadley's Cincinna tti newspaper into waying of the Ohio campaign, that *‘as it where workingmen Veront, 3 . . R the historie charter of liberties w! 6 | rad nacktia ant ARt This NH T staade it s simply & choioo bebwaen a po-| boen paid | off . for many weeks | S35 sioNe SRALLL of Tbaten wich we | sl nooktio and luvendor pusts, his in KHECMATISY, o oy Incoaas iy AL 8 plccs o B . (L \ publican and a political gymnast, whose |and where their wives and ohil-|;gver more than now did we need 1o in- | his aministration. | Soiatico, Lumbago, | Office and Factory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmaha i olction moaus eorganition of theold [ dren were wffring for foodand| par vt orce o ths Cheorcs ormuiatd e BaCKACHE, | ' 1 i - ol s The mi 1t ok |17 that immortal syllabus of political Not Only For Man, " ——— - democrativ party and the new democra- | elothing, ¢ miners refused to work R A A ian L) HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, — - 4 cy (1 believe Judge Hoadley calls it) on @ basis us unstablg as the candidate him- amy louger, and in their desperation sacked, grocery stores to get bréad for lands in the company notwithstanding | the righteous entry, proof and everything necesary for the receiving of the patent Mr, Rauge with tears in his oyes justly remarked you have no government which | will permit such an out a8 this upon apoor man, M. | declared 1) And-Monopoly. | New York Star Independence Day was apps chosen for the meeting of the National Anti-Monopoly convention in Chicago. | The mission of the unti-monopolists is to give effoct to the principles laid down in iately When tavored corporations are seizing upon millions of acres of the public do- | —t— A Qualified Compliment. Fairbury Guzette, Tk Ovaua BEE appears in a dress, and looks as bright as a silver dol- lar. Politically, Tur BEg is unreliable, | bt as a nowspaper it ranks among the | mtine and Van Wyck--Vice and Virtue —If Manderson knew the public sentimont of Nebraska, he would hitch up with tother hoss, - A Heavy Oh Philadelphia Press, President Arthur, it is said, wews a Horsemen, turfmen, St. Jacobs Ojl in horse ailments 1 new | H. Jackson et al to Bates w. d. | parcel see 20-16-12. 00, i G, P. Boemis and wife A. M. Unitt 1., lot 3 blk “H", Prospect Place. Ainsworth to John I Redicks w. 1613 THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relleves nnd cures SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS. GATE CITY PLANING MILLS! L > arc b £8000, : . like |1abor. We have held thut the laborer is [ would shoot the fivst man who set foot o | "5t i1 the state. Clark et al to H. H, Delong, « MANUFACT KNS OF | Legitimate business, and be followed, like — H. R, Clark g q ! other exchanges, by loss violent fluctua. | Worthy of ‘his hire' and that an able(his land. Cortuinly the aggravation is A Flue Apneazance. o 1and 2, bk 18, ¥ 0. 81,00 anges, by le 3 . f LohRerd great, but not sufticient to justify sueh a | «yurd oo C. Briggs and wife to Pomy and Selke 5 = | i tions in prico after it is opened than bo. |bodied and industrious working man | ETULS YR IRERE Fagl McFarland | ™7n" Heporter. w. d. part lots5 and 6, blk, 250, —£2000. ar ente rs 1 fore but the necessity for elaborate ma- | 2Ught to enrn enough to support himself |y thip B, & M. can afford to lot. these | (o 11 OMANA Bak celobrabed ifs thir-| ™ r\Ge D0 N ifo to W, Selke | ria s, chinery for dealing in small quantitios of 0 family, ~ When white labor | poor people off cails. Wo call tho - ai. | eor*h bitthday u fow dayssinee by s | ') ' o, art lot 6, b 250, &L.00. | ALso e s ~|is put upon the lovel of the Chinaman | tention of our delegates in Congress to| §v% & DO reN L R W’ and A. Sogelke to G. Pomy, 1 ¢, | ; ; b . { e various motals on margin s ok | A TR G TR o o | Uho handahips upon. Nobraak-csona 1" 4 Proseta 00 SPDSAIIIGC. | o o 7 aid , bk 250, 82000 Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Sfair Railings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, &, { parent, and it is certain to add to the v IR i ps and ask them to see that something be The Proper (. P, Bemis and wife to J. R Norvis, | First-cluss facilitics for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings,” Planing and Matching a specialty i gewbling transactions, whose nominal ':"’ e ““l' it %9 spitiec~to l‘ul o ';) Iu]fm- done to recompense such men | Nebraska Signal [w.'d. 20t T, bik G, Lowes 1st. add,— | Oniess tron the couatey wil be promptly exeouted =~ e H value is new enormously.in excess of the [thy and support in its struggle for —— | i | #12 PYER, Fropuistor, A.EK. DATL.F Y MANUFACTURER OF FINE 4 Buggies, Carriages and Spring Wagans, SPECIAL NOTICE TO | . " 8 kills pain. ANNS, | i self, 1 will vote for Ju Foraker, not | their familios. In spite of this resort to | main, and when the drift of federal leg e— SPR. h TOWers Bacame ] baliate. id. r::f:bli:un inet. | faroe, public’ sympathy was with them, | ilation tends steadily o build up V.| Taintea Pedigreo of Spain's King. Soreness, Cuts, Br G ers of Live Stock and Others. ¥ 3 norseless monopolies, it certainly is time | From o Paris Letter. FUANEIE ples, but beeause T believe that the d feat|and for our part we should regard such a | of Judgo Hoadloy will preserye those of atrike, as & royolt aguimst tyranny, the domocratic party by putting » quietus There have been strikes iu Omaha where in the future on expediency candidates | underpaid men refused to work at starva- who have no political principles.” There | tion wages. These men had our active is still room for a good deal of harmony | sympathy and that of the public, and 0 that the thoughtful judgment of the country should put on record, deliber- ately and emphatically, in opposition to such tendencies. During the lust twenty years the federal government has been uniformly manipulated in the interest of favored corporations, and the result has awong the Ohio bourbons, they will always have it. But been a phenominally rapid production Meusurgd by - the standard of the American slave States, Alfonso is a royal quadroon —doubly removed by the vicious iances of his , ther and of the queen who bore him from the real success to the crown. The qualities which he has undeniably inherited compel him to the coarseness and effrontry which, fore- BURNS, SCALDS, And all other bodily aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. i g langunges. [ The Charles A. Vogeler Co. Chuessos o 4. TORELER & €0.) Baltimers, Nd., 0. 8. & WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our CGround Oil Cake. It is the best aud cheapest food for stock of any kind. (4 oG Stook fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall s Wiater, nstead of rhmming ot 0 iree Pounds of corn, 4 be i pogd marketable condition in the apring.” Daievinen, us ol s ke, Who o 1 e tesis oo s merie, ey 1 and Judge for yourelrc. " Frise 8880 per on: o el v ek, Addreas : e WOODMAN LINSEED OLL COMPANY, Omaba, Neb

Other pages from this issue: