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[ 13 1 THE DAILY BEE =0 THE GMAHA BEE.| Published evers morning, oxcept Sunday. The #aly Monday morning daily. WRNA BT MATL. ...#10.00 | Three Months ......$8.00 .. 5.00 | One Month 1.0 YHR WRRKLY BN, PUBLISIED RVERY WEDNESDAT. TRRMASPORTTAID. One Year +...82.00 | Three Months.......8 b0 Bix Months......... 1.00 | One Month o Amerioan News Oompany, Sole} Agents Newsdosl- ors in the United States. CORRESPONDRNCR. A Communications relating to News and Editorial matters should be addressed to the Epiror or Tux =% SRS LETTRRS, All Business Lottors and Rernittances ‘should be addressed to Tur Ben Puitismine Coupaxy, OMANA. Dratts, Checks and Postoffice orders o be made pay Wble to the order of the company. THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER,ZEditor. Crrax the city or enlarge the grave yard is the mild suzgestion of the Chica- go News. Wiiar Champion S, Chase doesn’t know hout sewerage would fill several vol- umes, Mavor Ciase has sobered up a little during the last fow days, but he still ex- hibits unmistakable symptoms of a crank. How are the mighty fallen. Tom Mur- phy, ex-colloctor of tho port of New York, who was a mighty power during the Grant administration, has been ar- rested for obtaining §500 on a fraudulent draft. J. Steruixa Morrox pulled the demo- ratic platform out of his vest pocket, and it was adopted with a hurrah, Storling has a happy faculty for platform building, but he was never known to awallow his own prescrip NERRASKA expects every democrat to do his duty to-day.—Herald, What duty are Nebraska Bourbons ex- pected to perform! Were they all e pected to take a hand in the democratic state convention? Tur lost has been found again. Miss Phewbe Couzins escaped from the terrible Rochester cyclone all right, and she has the gratification of creating a sensation that has evoked much sympathy all over he country. A Kaxsas Crry sharpshooter fires a minnie ball from a smooth bore repeating rifle in the following paragraph: . Phil Sheridan will succeed Gen, Sher- man, October 1st. The two cent stamp succeeds the three cent stamp on the samo day. A MicaioaN man claims to have in- vented a telephonoe by means of which a conversation can be carried on for a dis- tance of 1,000 miles. The crying demand of the hour is for a telephone that can be effoctively used for a distance of ten or twenty rods.—Chicago Herald, That's about the size of it in Omaha. five artesian wells have been sunkin Denver, each of which is flowing pure water. Their average depth is 325 feet. And still the good people of Denver are thirsty and in want of a supply of water that will meet the ordinary wants. A couNcriMAN who runs a wurking- man's saloon in one of the lower wards wants an order issued for the wholesale removal of prostitutes. He should by all means be accommodated if the or- dor includes males that are harlotting with every jobber that wants to buy them. Mavor Cuase proposes to demolish the Waring sower system just to undo what Mayor Boyd has done during the preceding term, To replace the Waring system with brick sewors would involve an outlay of from §300,000 to half a mil- lion, but we presume Mayor Chase is ready to plank down half a million to gratify his idiotic spleen. OH10AGO is liable to be abandoned as headquarters of the military division of the Missouri, after General Sheridan takos up his headquarters at Washington, It is not necessary that there should be such a division after the lieutenant gen- eral will have taken his new field, and it really isn't'material to the well-being of Chicago that'military headquarters should have an existence there, Irisanill wind that blows nobody rood. The steamship companies appear to have struck a good thing. They bring over *‘assisted emigrants” and the United THE NLW SOUTH, Fighteen years have clapsed since the close of the war. The states that were dovastated by four years of a most bloody conflict have recovered from the drain of men and money. A new generation has sprung up, more thrifty, active and en- terprising than the shiftless old chivalry. that subsisted on the toil of four million The new south is beginning to emulate the enterprise and industry of the north in the number and extent of bondsmen. their manufactures. There are already scores of cotton mills scattered throngh Tennessee, South and Alabama, in a ofore the Carolina, Georgia, highly favored region, where, war, there twere scarcely half a dozen. Woolen mills are springing up here and there, and in certain districts there are iron furnaces and mills which are so im- portant that they powerfully incline the states in which they are toward a protec- tive policy. All the states mentioned, as well as Arkansas and Texas, offer every facility for the manufacturer. The South Atlantic and Gulf States and Ten- nessee aro intersected by the Cumber- land range of mountains, which is the source of hundreds of streams, furnish- ing ample and inexpensive motive power. Western Arkansas and northern and northwestern Texas are similar in physi- cal characteristics. The whole region thus diversified is elevated, healthy and w0 mild in climato as to offer no impedi- ment to manufacturers at any scason of the year. Tren and coal are abundant, railroads are evetywhere, and as the country is fertile and well developed, the cost of living is moderate. It is, there. fore, not strange to hear that the cotton mills in South Carolina have already realized more than 10 per cent on their investment. There are advantages in this extension of manufactures at the south not entire- ly material, Common interests are de- veloped that produce similarity of opin- ion, and bring the north and south nearer together. When the south had the patrincchal system of slavery and was ex- clusively agricultural, it had little sym- pathy except with thoso who bought its cotton and wool. The north and south had few points of contact,and those were aristocratic. Now every new manufactory opened in the south takes skilled work- men and operatives from the north, brings experienced mechanics from the samo soction and makes the country more desirable to northern merchantsand immigrants from all classes who desiro legitimate investment. With these varied interests and with other regions the south will become less provincial and more disposed to re- gard as friends those who hitherto scemed mere aliens. Thus in the process of time sectional resentments will be displaced by common interests and sympathies, and that highly colored bit of political ora- tory, **No North, no South, no East, no West,” will cewse to be rhetorical and becomo a sinplo matter of fact. Tunee out of five of the democratic platform committes were doctors. Two doctors were nominated for the board of regents and it looks now as if the case was very desporate. Tars time the democratic bird is out early. POLITIOAL NOTES., Ex-Senator Chaffes, of Colorado, says he is out of politics. Now York_has eloven molice judges, and thoy cach draw an annual sulary of $8,- 000. ireenbackers are aiding the democrati ticket in Iowa as the prohibitionists are in Ohio. chance. for governor. ono domocrat only. Massachusetts will be the first state in the Union to choose delegates to the democratic national convention. Sunset Cox claims to have as man; pledged to him for speaker as Randall, Le produces no figures, Critioudon s injurlog thn party by his firm position in favor of the high liconse law, Indiana democrats say their state will not ticket. unless McDonald and Hendricks wrangling. Emory Storrs, of Chicago, rather expects to win in 1880, Mr. Thurman is no small, cold potato in States government pays them for carrying them back. Another steamship brings over again to another port, whence, in turn, they aresent back. 'In this way the government has paid $1,000,000. The law forbids the landing of these unfor- tunates, but provides mo penalties for punishment. It orders that they be sent back, which is done at the cost of the government. We love dearly to encour- age foreign commerce. —— Tux Denver exposition has proved a dismal failure. It is now admitted on all hands that Denver has undertaken more than she could sustain. The Denver Tvibune makes the following comment on the collapse: “‘The four proprietors had better shut up the exposition. + 1t is an honor neither to themselves nor to the state. We are rather | inclined t respect their intentions, but the execution has been a failure. There should never be auother expo- sition here until the merchants take some interest in it and run it. The present experiment has proven an utter failure. The thirg most to be regretted is that the Thave been used for what has been purely s privato enterprise, The mineral ex- | A4 hibit may be fair, but the fact remains that, to stranger, the exposition seems to bo & vast emptiness. It has dnn.n amuch more harm than good to Colorado. AR the affections of the older class of to run for president. A Texan paper advocates holding the next onal convention in Galveston, pleading that for nearly quarter of a century 1o party has held a national convention in a democratic n: southern eity. Tilden stock is boomi Democrats, Editor Munford, of City Times, Who opposed the old Ciucinnati, in 1880, the uat by the republican aud democratic state com mittees have been published, ublicans, The democratic ¢ 9,20 majority for the democr Three public officials in the of New York have incomes fiom” their of dent of the United States, county clerk from fees rau #150,000 a year. The register of deods every yoar abont 8200,000. The sherit's offi of not lews than 81 —— PERSONALITIES, Jorsey. over he can. 6 kingdowm on the Congo. st Rolling rosultod in » Pike against him England's call, Oscar, fl;h'c Bt e liosse ekl roddie Gebhard's m'e friends try to ex- uzhlnby‘:qh‘ !:ln‘; the youth was de- increased communication | eloction of Arthur, He says Blaine has no Lioutenant-Governor Ames, of Massachu- wolts, s in tho race as » republican candidats “Thore have been 21 holdover senators of the ropublioan persusion {n the Town sonate, aud votes But Missouri democrats complain that Governor bo_reprosented on tho national democratio top seo the ticket of Arthur and Foster elected in 1884, He was confident that Grant would oastern democruts, and many of them would like him among the Missouri Kausas an at a1 boon visiting Now York, and is now anxious. t seo him nomi- The results of the canvasses of Ohio made The republican canvass claims o majority of 20,85 for the ro- vass claims iy and county s amounting to double the salary of tho presi- | little schemo ready to propose as soon as The profits of the from $100,000 Lo | |, ko paid by foos, aud squeezes out of the offics oo is another gold e, ielding a yoarly income Col. Fred Grant has settled down in New Evangelist Moody drives & fast horse when- Stanloy Africanus seems to be building up s names of Denver and Colorado should | littl Bo it seems that Bill Chandler's pique evidently on this prived of the care of a father when he was a wnall bo Judge Field, of the United States Supreme Court, talks politics too much for & man in his position, Field Marshal Von Moltke was taken for & tramp recently and ordered out of one of the German inland villagos, Emory A Storrs wore a monster sunflower in his lapel the other ovening, and wona wager of box of cigars, The emperor of Austria and the king of Servia aro about to meet Hungary, The king of Servia is probably looking for another place. Mr. Conkling roared to the engineer of the Yellowstone geysers to turn on cold water, Jor wis not obeyed. Hence the dis- Mr. Slade and Mr. Mitchell will punch each other with their ba sts. This will be more watisfactory to all of us, The next best thing they could do would be to use clubs. The Duke of this country a4 a barte and sold mixe ers at high pri The three oldest living compositors in Penn- sylvania reside in Harrisburg. They are Gen. eral Simon Cameron, aged 86 years; Geo. W, cot, aged 85 years, and Jacob Babb, aged Arinks to distinguished drink- Mr. Sullivan, the gentleman who punched fr. Slade, has taken the pledge of total absti He did #o at his mother's an may yet turn out to be as nice a man as Ben. Hogan, amberlaine, the American beanty whom all England is crazy o has refused five lords and seven dukes for the hand of the man who took the_first prize in the lawn-ten- nis tournament. What are lords and duke when compared with a champion lawn-tennis r, anyhow? Mrs. Russell Greene is a smart old lady living on Clifford street, in Providence, R. I. She ix eight; years old, does all her own work, and y she whitewashed a long board en her own and a neighbor- ing garden, Sh s every merning at 4 o'clock, and gets her work done before most people are up for the day. s at her ‘m. much of the 11, and under y. She is the eld- , Who live and keep post from 6 a. m, timo, Sho iy rospec stands her duties thoro estof four orphan gir house together, Mr. Aristide Mari in probably the richest man of color_in Am To was a large slave owner before the and_his income from the rents of his property in New Orleans i not less than 260 ¥ Besides this stato, consisting of M. Marie s a man of omplishments, a graduate of eue «f tho best institutions of France, and lives abroad about half of cach year. GOULD AND VILLARD* One Seeks to Trick Uncle S8am, and the Other German Visitors, New Yonk. Aug. 27.—In the course of the remarks concerning affuirs “in and out of Wall street,” The Sun says this morning: It is the general belief, as it is the genoral talk, that Wall street is pass- ing through a period of liquidation, but that is not €o. The process which’ it is passing throush is merely that of mark- ing down prices and selling out in some instances below cost. Wall strect is nothing but a big shap of fancy and adul- terated goods of which it is trying to get rid of now. It isa forced sale, but there is no actual liquidation yet. Mr. Villard is trying to remedy the evil (at least as far a8 his stocks are concerned) by bring- ing over a cargo of Germans, whom he is taking out to the far northwest with a view of iatroddcing them to the enex- haustible resources of that wonderland. But as he brought” over mostiy doctors, professors, and journalists,. 'there is not much chance that the expedition will re sult in any influx of German money into the ‘blind-pool’ treasury. The Germans aro very fond of free lunches, free ex- cursions, and everything free, but they are still more_found of _ the thalers and marks, and the intellectual and dis- tinguished company now at Bismarck dous ot represent any large amount of this kind of coin. They will probably re- ciprocate the courtesy of Mr. Villard and write glowing articles on _the beauties of American scenery, but _they won't make anybody buy a sharo of Villard's stock. “Soveral parties of intelligent Wall street men have recently taken vacation trips to the Northern Pacitic region, and all of them agree in the opinion that it will take yoars and years to populate it and give business to the S o of them remarked: “There aro too many Ex-Senator Ogleaby, of Tllinois, Is the lead- | square acres to the inhabitants at pres- ing republican candidate for governor of that [ent.” If Mr. Villard is to leave Now state. York _to-morrow (it would be very ap- Pinchback, of Louisiana, favors tho re- | propriate on his part before leaving to answer the question which has so often been put to him, privately and publicly, and which is said to be now in the pro- coss of being put to him through the courts. Tho question is a very simple one: ‘Are the bonds and stocks consti- tuting the property of the Oregon & Transcontinental company in the treasury of that company, or are they pawned, and if 8o, to what extent? “‘Gioulds latest scheme may not succeed, but it is, nevertheless, one of the smartest ho ever conceived. = For the past two years ho has been working hard to starta public discussion on the subject of the government going into the telegraph busi- ness, J. G. Bennett, who hates Gould, has fallen into the trap, and is now crying that the government ought to build a new system of lines, This t what Gould wants, for he knows t while Bennett is seeking to ruin the Western Union, his cry, if successful, can result only in the purchase of the existing lines, Gould knows it would take the government ten years to build 400,000 miles of poles and,wires, for 40, Then again, the government could not make itself a party toa confiscation scheme by placing itself in connegtion with private or corporate enterprises. Apart from Gould’s interest in the West- orn Union, there are probably over §50,- 000,000 invested all over the country in telegraph enterprises, and that capital could not be attacked by government competition without a howl of public in- diguation, Of course the only "complete system which the government could purchase and make any immediate use of would be Western Union, and Gould appears to have a neat the public discussion of the subject has become ripe enough. He intonds to offer to give up to the government the whole of the Western Union property upon the basis of yearly paymonts of the surplus earnings for twenty years to come. The payment is to be made in bonds or cash, as the government prefers, This now plan e give the immediate possession of the hnes for nothing, since the yearly payments would consist only of the money earned over and above the expenses of running the cencern upon the basis of existing rates for messages. It is by & sunilar arrangement that the British government purel the telegraphs, and Gould scos there a very acceptable procedent. The effort, if successful, would give him' and his associates i twunl{ywrfl something like §160,-000, 000, for the net earnings are estim- sted at $7,600,000 & year. It would 000 miles a year would be'fast building. | be a very fine piece of business to scoop in $150,000,000 for what cannot be scld in the market for one-third that prica. A strong lobby is said to be getting ready, and friends of Gould’s aver that the fight between him and Bennett is on the surface and that things have been 0 arranged that the Herald will help roll the ball if once set in motion. ™ GRATIC Influx of Euro- The Tremendous peans to the United States— A New Nation Every Ten Years, The London Times, in discussing the emigration problem, says: Extraordinary as has been the American power of assim- ilating European elements, they exert an influence in turn. Whatever the fabric of American society and character is, it would have been something very dissimi- Jar except for the European immigration of the past fifty years. ~ Within the fifty years from 1830 to 1880, nearly ten mil- lions of Europeans have swelled the pop- ulation of the United States. Immigrants multiply faster than native Americans, Much more than their apparent propor- tion of the increase of the American population from the seventeen mil- lions to which it had risen in 1840 to the fifty millions of 1880 may be set down to them. ch successsve decade a whole nation in numbers is transplant- ed across the Atlantic. To this tremend- ous influx is to be traced the difficulty of fixing t ties of American nation- ality. The characteristics would be still ticular ingredients did not regularly predominate in the human imports, © Germany and the United Kingdom furnish the bulk, and the rest arequietlyabsorbed. By the United States statistics England is deprived of its prior- ity in favor of Gemany. But when, in conformity with ordinary rules, British immisrants are reckoned together, they are seen to outnumber those from any other state. They naturally amalgamate more readily with” the native population of the same extraction, and help to keep the general current of national life in its existing channel. The United States suffer dangers and inconveniences from the heterogencous- ness of their population. They have, however, grown to their actual grandeur in virtue of accepting that condition of national development. They would be committing an injustice to the world were they to close their territory to im- migration. They are its trustees for the benefit of redundant humanity elsewhere. In fairness to them it must be admitted that they have shown no reluctance to comply with the terms on which they hold their vast possessions. For the late outcries against a foew poor passengers the American people must not be held a countable. ~ It does not claim any cap ious right to pick and choose. Provided the immigrants reasonably represent the reperabundant population of their native loss stable if p country, America is content to give them hospitality, and finds its ad- vantage in _ them according to their various degrees of strength and capacity. Europe materially is almost as intimately concerned as America in the constant flow of American immigration. A complete appropriation of fertile Amer- ican soil by human labor is as important to the world at large as to the owners of the domain. The American people can make no loss or gain in the application of its enormous natural resources in which Europe will not rateably share. From a point of view higher though less abstract, the. huge dimensions of North American immigration regard Europe as closely as the United States. Much as the Euro- pean emigant carries with him he sur- renders indefinitely more. The old emi- grants shuddered at emigration as a tear- ing asunder of body and scul. Knowl- edge that hundreds of thousands and millions of their relatives have borne the operation and survived mitigates the personal horror rather than lessens the extent of the personal revolution. an English or Trish laborer of German peasant to be uprooted from the soil of which he forms a portion, and to be transferred to circumstances utterly diff- erent morally and physically, remains as it was, something between a new birth and death, The experiment is so violent that the enhancement of the earth’s stock of availablo riches by emigation would hardly justify it were not the benefit to its individual subjects manifest and in- disputable, By the great mass of emi- grants their gain is confessed and vaunted with absolute conviction, A voluntary return to their previous state is inconceivable to them. Their life is not generally easy. Toll in a new country is way and long. Had they been disposed to work as strenuously and intelligently in their old country as in the new, they often need never have moved from their quarters. But it is to bo reckoned among the foremost advan- tages of emigration that it both produces exertion and supplies opportunities for using it. A farmer or plowman whose soul has been stagnating in Brandenburg or Connaught discovers himself to be a distinct, being in Minnesota, or Texas, or Manitoba. Active spivits resolute to create a career need not quit Europo for the purpose. Europe in its most dense- ly occupied districts, keeps a place for anyone determined not to be left un- provided, A new country like America possesses means which Europe has no longer of stimulating men endowed with the power to work and not the enorgy or will to seek it. Human nature is of three sorts in respect of its capacity for the full application of its fac- ulties, Besides the few who can be pre- vented from their fruitful exercise, there are many who wait to have the work brought to them. America suits them as itand Europe equally suit the former. For the thmrulun, the men who neither look forward nor accept it, Europe and America are equally barren. They are as much paupers and casuals, with the choice millions ot square miles of virgin s0il, a8 in th Seven Dial; Various Oaths. Cleveland Herald, It was a customary thing in what are called the dark ages for a swearer to lay his hand on a crucifix as a sagred symbol, or touch the altar while ho swore by the God te whom it was dedicated. Soon he came to swear by the crucifix itself or *‘by the rood.” Of kindred origin is the oath “*by the mass,” *‘by the wounds,” hence “swounds,” and “zounds.” The sacred wafer was to the vulgar mind a part of God's corporeut nature, hence *‘God's bodkin,” a favorite oath of the Eliza- bethan age. The custom of placing the right hand upon some sacred object was _considered of the utmost importance, and there was quite a difference in the degree of the solemnity of the oath according as the object sworn by was more or less sacred. Wilen Harold of England swore to Wil- liam the Conqueror that he would not push his claim to the crown, he supposed that he was only swearing on & ) or prayer-book which was lying on thechest, and hence could do so with a mental re- servation, but the oath was veally the For | g, MAHA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1883. A NOVEL SIGHT. “Pass in genflemen, pass in," shouted & tall, red facetl man the other evenine. A dense orowd of people had gathered in front of Smith's drug store, and all were struggling with might and main to et within hearing of the speaker's volce. Thelatter was twisting him. selt imckward and forward with the celerity of & jack rabbit, and ex- claiming with much unction and many gestures, “Push ahead gen tlemen! Crowd in! Jam yourselves through the door! The bigger the rush the better 1 1ikeit." We finally fell into line and purchased one of the packages he was handing out. It was & neat little bottle labelled + Thomas' Eclectric Oil, which we have since discovered s a quick, sateand powerful remedy for sprains and paing, and a cortaln cure for rheumatism Peter Keiffer, cor. Clinton and Bennett streots, But. falo, was badly bitten by & horse, and apjlied Thomas® Eclectric Oil, which immediately relieved the pain, and in four days the wound was h [Thomas' Eclectric Oil sold eve gista.) where by drug- most binding possible, as was afterward disclosed, when William re- moved the cloth with which the chest was covered and disclosed the authentic relics of a saint. Tt was claimed at one time in the Irish troubles, in James IL's time that the oath upon the euchar- ist of an Irish Catholic could not be re lied upon in the court, unless the priest who consecrated it was in sympathy with the English government. For it was said that the transubstantiation depended en. tirely upon the will of the priest, and if he did not wish the bread of the wafer to be changed into the body and blood it would be nothing but a bit of baked dough, which everyone could swear false- ly upon without committing perjury. An Abyssinian chief, who had sworn an oath_he disliked, was seen to scrape it off his tongie with his knife and spit it out. And in Germany, to this day, there are place where the witness when he wants to tell a lie or swear falsely, crooks his finger, as if to indicate to his conscience that his oath was crooked. EW GI THE ND MASTER. A Sketch of His Somewhat Eventful Lifte San Francisco Chronicle, Robert E. Withers, the newly elected (irand Master, has, in his own state, Vir. ginia, held every position both in M sonry and Knight Templarism, having been Grand Master of Masons and Grand Commander of the state of Virginia of the Knights Temylar. In public life Mr. Withers has held equally high positions, having been licutenant governor and United States senator. In the army he also was very prominent on the confed- erate side, Grand Master Withers was born in Campbell county, Va., September 18, 1821, and is therefore almost 62 years of age. He received a good education and entered the medical department oi the University of Virginia, where he gradu- ated in 1841. For seventeen years he practiced his profession in his native county, and then in 1858, removed to Dunsville, Va., where he resumed his practice as a physician until the com- mencement of the war. He was a Whig in politics and a Union man until the passage of the ordinance of secession by Virginia, and took his stand by his fel- low men, and in April, 61, entered the confederate army as major of infantry, and during the same year was promoted to the colonelcy of the Righteenth Vir- giria regiment, which he commanded with great credit > himsclf, until he was compelled to retire in consequence of nu- merous disabling wounds, He then was appointed to command the fort at Dan- ville, Virginia, at which position he con- tinued until the close of the war. Inthe early part of 1866 he removed to Lynch- burg and established there a_daily paper voted to the interests of the conserva- tive party, and he continued to edit it until 1868, when he was nominated for governer of Virginia by the conservative party at the convention held at Rich- mond. He then canvassed the state in opposition to the Underwood constitu- tion, which the military authorities re- fused to submit to a vate of the people. In 1869 he withdrew from the guberna- torial race in favor of Gilbert C. Walker, nominated for governor by the liberal republicans. In 1872 he was appointed elector -for the state at large on the seley ticket, and the following year elected lieutenant-governor, as a con- servative, by a majority of 27,546 over his republican competitor, C. P. Rams- dell, and ‘he following year he was elected United States senator from Vlr- ginia as a conservative, to succeed John. F, Lewis, republican, and took his seat March 4, 18 His term of service expired in 1881, when William Mahone, the readjuster, succeeded him in the senate. Since then Mr. Withers has led a retired life, having withdrawn for the present from politics. At the last triennial conclave, held at Chicago in 1880, Mr. Withers, who then held the position of grand senior Warden, was elected to the position of deputy |\ grand master, which position he has filled with much credit for the past three years, His election as grand master is but a just recognition of the many services he had rendered for and the effective work he had done in the order, THE GREAT GERMAN 1 REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relleves and cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralglg, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE HEADACHE, TOOTHACHR SORE THROAT QUINSY, 8W ovee. oGS, SPRAINN, Soreness, Cuts, Brulses, FLONTIITES, BURNN, NCALDS, Aud all other bodlly ehes id s, FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE ity wnG 1 T e, The Charles A. Vogeler Co scoapers 1c A, VOUELER & 00.) Maldmorn. ¥d.. NOTICE! To the Traveling Public! ~THE COMMERCIAL HOTEL ! —AT— Omscoola, Nek., Is now undergolng throrough repairs, both within and without, and the proprietor inteuds it shall be SEC- OND TG NONE in the State, next to Omaba. E. K. BLACKWELL, oug 21-tm WProprietor. Dry Goods! SAMYL C. DAVIS & CO,, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. MO, STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOT{, 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, WIHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lath, Shingles, P SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY, Near Union Pacific Depot, - 3 - OMAHA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale :Druggist ! AND DEALER IN Pajnls,_ 0ils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA. NEBRASKA. P. BOYER & CO., DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFEY, VAULTS, LOCKS, &. 1020 Farnam Stroceot. Omaha. 'HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wil Pamer i Window Shaes EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, o o P M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA, - OMAHA NEB, o SIC ., BAEWING. ASSOCIATION:| CELEBRATED 'Keg and Bottled Beer 1 This Excellent Boer speaks for itsolt. Y ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, { stousmo> | Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD OfoOurG-ruarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Sole‘Agent for Omaha and the West. Office Corner 13th and Harney Streets. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake. It Is the best aud cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn Btock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the F Wiater, instead of ranuing down, will incréase in veigh and be In good marketable condition in the s . Diirymen, as well as others, who use it can testity it merita. " Try it and jude for yoursolves Price #2500 per ton: no charge for kacks, Addross VOODMA WOIT COMP New Furniture Store! CHAMBERLAIN & HOWE. Call and get Our Eastern Prices before purchasing elsewhere. VISITORS & PURCHASERS EQUALLY WELCOME. ¢ (. ‘l d | {