Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 29, 1883, Page 4

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e — THE DAILY BEE-: UMAIA, SATURLAY, SEY1 EMBER 29, 183 P— e THE GMAIIA BEE.| Published evors morning, exorpt] Sunday. M wnly Monday morning daily. TRMR BT MATL ne Year 10,00 . Throe Menths ®ix Monen 0 | One Moath... 4 FIR WRRKLY SRR, PUBLISHED RVRRY WE' AwaDAY. 0o 10 [ TR PORTTAID. Qoo Fear......... 4200 Three Mor ahe 50 Bix Montha. 1,00 | One Mon dy AL - American News Company, Sole. Agents’ Newsdoal: ore i the Drlted States. CORRENFONDR® o FA_ Communlentions rolatin g te News and Editorial rflen shoukd be addressed & the Evitor or Tix =N WS wreens, All Business Letwers snd Remittanicos should be wadressed to TR BXx P #itawnxo CoNPANY, ONATIA heckn and Postalihv. orors o bo wade pay e t0 the order of tha vomnyan THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS, L, ROBEWATER, Editor.[ Tur Nebraska campaign promises Lobe whort, sharp and somewhat decisive. R Got. Coruv has beaten Judge David- won on the jadicial race track, but Col. Colby can't “‘beat” his own record. [ Prestorst Axrion is slowly fighting ‘his way through champagne supfiers und privato recoptions to Washington: Waat is the matter with the contrac- tors for curbing and guttering the cross atreots. Paving must not be permitted to wait upon their delays. —— Messes, Hamer asp Coxxkr both pledged themselves to an earnest support of republican” principles in Nebraska. Will Messrs. Hamer and Gonnor please state what republican principles in No- braska are! Mu. Par Q. Hawes has contracted to deliver the solid workinmen's vote to Reoese for Supreme Judge. Mr. Hawes may discover befora he is two menths older that he has taken a much bigger oontract than he can fill. J OxE of the funniest thibgs in politics ¢hin yoar is the attempt to detach Ply- mouth church in a body from supporting Mayor Low for ro-clection in Brooklyn, Vocause Mr. Boocher wasn't asked to talk at the bridge opening and Dr. Storrs was, M. Hamer made an humble speechto the Republicans in conventionassembled, begging them to receive him once more into the fold, and apologizing for his An‘i-Monopoly record, Mr. Hamernever had much of an Anti-Monopoly record to apologize for. THE LABOR COMMITTEE. That the semions of the Senate Com- mittee on Bducation and Labor have par- taken so bargely of a farce has not been a8 to the army of cranks and theouists | who bave sought to enlighten these states men on the labor problem. Some of the witnesses have told some practical truths. When John Roach said that habits of in. dustry and economy among laboring men and mechanics would do much towards | solving the labor problem he spoke a half |a truth, When Mr. Storm, | ployer, stated that fair dealing on the part of employers and an arbitration sys- tem for tho sottloment of disputes would greatly benofit workingmen as well as | the em. | | |same truth. Tho trouble with wmany omployers ho told €he other half of the [ Miring neighbors. ; leld in check, the Russian generals have | due 80 mach to the fault of its membors | might thow himself into the arms of Austria, the Russian venerals at So phin, under orders from St. Petersburg posed ns liberals, had an assembly sum minister of Bulgaria, This ended Aus trin's expectations for the time at least and Russia hoped, while Germany feared that Russian influence would now pre dominate in Bulgaria. DBut the Bulgar intention of being cheated out of t"ei independenco by oither of their too ad that fail to treat their workmen es fellow beings in whose welfare they take a friendly in- | terest. When pains are really taken to put employers and employes into rela tions where a mutual undestanding of thoir interosts may bo arrived at, and when efforts are made to do exact justice, there need be no serious trouble. | Tho complicated question of wages is likely to receive littlo light from the in- vestigations of the committee. A hun dred different elemonts enter into its de- termination. But ono great law, that | employers s they the labor market, and consequently the price of labor, is regulated by the demand and supply, stands out clearly above ali speculation. The rule may be artificially set aside for a fow months in isolated cases, but the law holds good in the end in spite of all assaults against its opera- tion. A good many of tho witnesses before the committee were college professors, who had pet thoories in regard to social quedtions, and who declared that the higher education was the one great thing needed in this country to better the con- dition of the working man. Any one who has studied the labor problem in the most superficial way knows thatthisis far from the truth. The average of edu- cation is good, far bottor than the aver- age of akill in any handicraft. The cry- ing evil in the United States is the large proportion of young people, with fair commen school education, who are unfit, for lack of training, to do any work for their support. . Their education has taught them to despise manual labor; hence many who would make excellent mechanics, do clerical work, which brings them in no more in & week than'a skill- ful mechanic will earn in two days. The direct result ia that the trades aie falling — A Jupce without judicial experience is a little teo risky an experiment for the people of this state toattempt. With the departwie of Judge Lake our supreme bench will be none too strong. James W. Savage would fill a vacancy in which Mr. Reese would rattle around like a small pea in a large pocket. Last year Mr. Gere pocketed the Anti Monopoly resolutions drafted by Senator Van Wyck. This year these resolutions were made the main planks in the plat- form. The storm of last year which played such sad havoc with Loran Clark and nearly wrecked Mr. Gere, seems to have a very healthy effact from a sanitary point of view. PosTyasTER-GENBRAL GRESHAM may as well prepare to capitulate, That bottle- scarred veteran, Paul Vandervoort, who was shedding red ink at Alexandria ns commisgary clerk, while Gresham was fighting in the ranks —has reached Wash- inglon, with blood in his eye and vou- geance in his heart. Tue result of the thunder storm of last year has been in every way bono- ficial, from a sanitary point of view, to the Repub ican party of Nebraska. The ocorporations have taken warning and retired trom tho somewhat prominent position they seemed to hold in politics fi:“ the past fow years.— Lincoln Jour- n Retired from politics have they 1 With Church Howe presiding over the state convention and a horde of their notorious henchmen on tho flcor to do their bid- ding, the corporations have taken warn- ing from last year's thunder storm. From a purely sanitary point of ¥ow it is decidedly refreshing to have such staunch monopoly organs as the Lincoln Journal , who have always “heretofore denied that the corporations were in wolitics, give the lie to their former as. sertions, by tho assuranco that the cor- porations have retired —— Mz. Joux Roack is greatly exercised on behalf of his country and incidentally on account of his own shipyards, because under the eontrol of foreigners, and the American youth awell the large army of men with no regular occupation who in- variably go first to the wall in a time of financial depression. OTH:R LANDS THAN OURS. The week abroad has been a quiet one. The diplomats are still wrastling over the Tonquin difficulty with hopes of its ulti- mato and poaceful sottlement. The Chinese government has replied in & con- congiliatory tone to the French proposals and the answer, it is said, favors a div ion of tho neutral zone of Tonquin. English opinion is that France cannot obtain Tonquin without war, but that she may have Annam with full right to make commercial settlements in Tonquin without any further trouble. The adherents of the Comte de Paris are not pushing his claim to the throne of | the Bourbons, and tho Count himself is | gotting along tou comfortably in France, in his capacity as o private gentloman, to bo lured into any will-o'-the-wisp chaso after a Kingship. Ho is rich and well oducated; he loves country life and owns beautiful country residences, whero he can dig his own arablo fields or hunt in his own forests; ho values leisuro and lit- orature, and is at liberty to court both Ly turns; ho has a nice wife and chil- dren, and horses to ride and ponies for lus wife to drive, and all the socivty he cares for, even to the society of Princes and Princesses, who accoant him as one of themsolves. The great review of the German army which took place this week at Hamburg, has surpiiced all who witnessed it. All accounts agree in suying that the autumn maneuvres at Homburg have shown that Germany has the mest finely equipped and best disciplined army the world has ever known. In numbers and in effvet- iveness it is without a 1ival. Al the mil- itary critics of Europe, the dispatches say, agree that no such illustration ofhu- man training has ever before been wit- nessed as that which extorted admiration six Buropean governments have spent $346,000,000 in ship building during the time the United States has spent but $3,006,000. Mr. Roach tells ouly half the story.. When wo know how much Europe has spent in tinkering up old tubs against the millions spentin the United Statas we shall be able to strice a juster balance. But suppose Europe has expended vastly more in nuvies than we have done. She has more need of ships of war. The six nations referred to maintain standing armies of upwards of four willions of men. Does My, Roach mean to intimate that we must therefore proceed toarm a willion of men 1o keep even with them, The United States has no need of a great standing army. Our present es- 5 tabdishuient is too smiall and ought to he recruited up to 40,000 men, but on Mr. Ropcli's line of mgument it ought to e at laast twenty tines that strength, Nor < do we need a great navy, I half the money that lias been appropriated for the mavy had been put in ships instead of [ Germany to let them over be r ‘being wasted on voracious contracters we would have to-day a navy fully equal to our needs, which ’Q.uu. comprised du ratrolling the igeeans and in giving ©wdet midshipmen an spnual gruise, 1 on the plains of Homburyg last week, and allare in perfect accord in asserting that in methods of mobilization and ex- pertness in using the mechanism of war- fare no army was ever brought to such a state of perfection as that of Germany. The knowledge of this must convince France that her hopes of regaining what sho lost in 1871 must be deferred for many years, and that to provoke a quar- rel with Germany now, or even to give Germany pretext for a quarrel would be suicidal, Tt will also a good effect on who has been restless of late, and whose hand is too plainly visible in the trouble in the Slavie provinees of Austrin, in Bulgarin and Servia, Germany's su- premacy in Europo must be as readily acknowledged now as after the elose of the Franco-Prussian war. Tihe formation of the Balkan prineipal ities by the Berlin eohgress lus proved stroke of wisdom which it anthors scarce ly appreciated at the time. It was not the intention of either Russia, Austiia or ally in- dependent States. Russia and Austria each hoped to get uhead of the other, and at the proper time annex Servia, Bulgaria support. Lord tion. contributed the article on Irelaud to the last Fortnightly Review, is acting as sec- retarv of the commuttee which in urging this project, and has received many let- ters of encouragement and generous ap- proval, possession of some low-lying lands in tigure. reclaimed by those who will be settled on them, and their wages will go toward the been told to go. They are going; and 1\\]u||~ Russia and Austria are foiled, Bul- garia is serene, influence over Servia and Ryumania; but moned and recalled Sarkoff tu be prime ians plainly hava been educated by the | stone was absent in ovents of the last few years, and have no | than the 'eighteen provinces o' China heretofore Russia has had the stongest '"’"PN’;I If the nmlznll;n or other mni i ying dependencies of the empire, and hold on Bulgaria. Recently | g Sy rivinal tribes which axist in very fearing that Prince Alexander | congiderable numbers in the island of Formoss and the provinces of Kuaugsi Yunnam, Kuei Clow, and Szchuan were incladed, he thinks the sum total of China s population would be found in ex- cuss of three hundred millions. The confering by the Queen of the , | Garter made vacant by the death of the | Duke of Marlborough on _her young grandson, Prince Albert Victor, has fallen like a thunderbolt on Boglish so ~|ciety. She sent for him while Mr. Glad- the Northern se | and conferred the blue ribbon of Balmo. ral, the Princess Beatrico alone buing Tl present. 1Itis the first time the highest - | titular order in England has been gran - Prinee Aluxand r is | ed to one so young, and it is absolutely | without precede that the son and 1 | urandson of the sovercign should hold a | blue ||I.lmn‘|||n|hmn ously. On the Jast vicancy the Queen passed over Mr | Gladstone’s nowmination and gave the ribbon to the Duke of Grafton. While the Nationalist party are urging . on their political propaganda the Irish people are preparing to take advan tage of the economical measures passed for their benefit during the last session of Parliament. | already been held to urge on the boards of guardians the necessity of improving | laborers’ dwellings under the O'Connor reported The Limerick board has already commenced to build cottages Companies are act, and oonside; in that direction, ble progress in the rural districts. organizing not only in Ireland but in En and it is intended to test the migration diate direction of Mr. Parnell. has already been pledged to be added te formed. met with the wariestapproval. English members of Parliament, includ- Mayor of Dublin, the Roman Catholic Bishops of Donegal, , and Mayo have pledged co-opera- Dr. Ernest Hart, of Loudon, who An attempt will be made togain Kings county and Galway ata reasonable These lands will be drained and payment for their new holdings, Mr arnell expresses great contidence that this migration scheme will be a complete success, and is gratiied and cncouraged at the support which it is receiving from all quarters, He must be s pleased at the interest manifested in it by many prominent Englishmen. of Ashantee has not brought the looked- led his people to depose him hus, with the help of his foreign tribes, beon too wuch for Koffee, and he hds recently de- ated his troops with great slanghter. King Koffee has fled from Coomassie, the retirement from which he was un- willivgly torn. Nobody can blamo him, but the poor Ashantees are to be pitied. grave, and King Milan is in no hurry ol lave to ment. appoint forty mor thom wut of thei difficulty., excuse for hanging on land-owners, in respect of the fa. frontier, the advantages of our railroad wervice, fit, of transportation are [ creased H the trade in breadstuffs, 3 provisions and petroleum, The English officers who serve as news- paper corcesp prophet, are taking diffarent tone now. depressing. Half the civil offici d under ried on rebels, and have l“pmlltly spread content among the by circulating & the prophet as letter the true wealth to the poor. They claim, too that the Mahdi has 200,000 troops, wel pplied with Remingtons, ammunitior and stores. “But,” they add, Mabdi (unto whom be pe i with, and his connection with the angel. history of Mohammed.” This letter was written before Hicks Pasha began hi advance upon Kordofun, doubt as to the final outeome of thi campaign, but these admissions are inter osting as o tacit admission of the lox suspected fact that the real dif from the world, in China for taxation and Roumanis. Austria, backed by Bis- R~ pu total population of S8/ u“m -nw"r*—'-l;.,dmwol trade and & WA UNI- | Council WY, 1a., Soplomuer 1y, 40w Soveral moctings have gland for construction of light railways under provisions of the tramways act, clauses of that measuro under the imme- Through that gentleman’s exertion over $260,000 the £250,000 of the government grant for the purchase «f lands suitable for set- tlement with tenants from the *‘congest- ed" districts of the North and West of Treland, and a corporation has been The project has everywhere Several Messrs. Rathbone, Slagg, Collings, Caine, | 1 Jacob Bright, Sir Eardly Wilmot, and Baldwin Leighton, have promsed their The Earl of Bessborough, the iinlly King Koffoo's recall to the sovereienty for good fortune to that unhappy coun- try. The blooded King whoso Farbarities his capital, aud will probably return again to Servias crisis is_considored extremely to Belgrado. The Ministors, who beon ropudiated by the people, have only forty ndherents in the Parha- | They, however, have the right to hut this will not get They stay in offico, giving the King's absence as an Thoe Russians are the greatest European The condition of Russia is stwilar to that of the Umted States in the vastness of its landed area as com- pared with 1ts population, but dissimilar lity of transportation from its remoter parts to its Kuropean The neuness of Russia to Eu- ropean markets is counterbalanced by which enable us to market the wheat wrown in distant Dakota at & margin of But more and more as her fucili- «in will become our formidable rival in \donts with Hicks Pasha in the Soudan campaign and have hither- to done little but pooh-pooh at tho false n fact the late accounts of the opera- tions against the Mahdi are not a little , the Loudon Nows correspondent writes from are alrea J partisans of the he passporta of the false prophet trade has been freely car- tween the disturbed districts and those nominally loyal. Twe officers of the regular army have deserted to the Eyyptian troops extolling Mahd, kiud, good and frugal, who gives all his “'the o) trusts to sod only md will prevent fighting hy arms; spears and' swords he fights is well known, ws we woll kuow from the There 18 1o ties of this war have been systeinatically kept The United States minister to China, John Russell Young, undertakes to shed some light on the disputed population of | narrow ribbon on in st that country. He says that according to ofticial report, the census taken last year shows & |the Judicial corruption in Japan is some- | thing extraording according to a story told in & Japan paper. An action wis brought a short time ago in a small town 1 | and tried by the assistantJudge,who gave unmistakable signs that his aecision would be in favor of the plaintiff. On the i to that appointed for de judgment the defendant waited upon the judge. He brought with him a miver kettlo v orth 40 yen and asked the Judgo to buy it, alléging that he had spent much money in h is lawsuit and was hard up. “What is your price!” asked the J‘ud@‘ smiling. “One yen will be enough,” replied the litigant, and the kettle chanced hands for that sum. Next day a de. - on in favor of thede- fendant was givi ., a result which aston- ) |ished the plaintif until he managed to find out about thesale of the kettle. Then he determined toreport the matter to the Procurator, but was prevented by the ) Tho town is fabulously gay, For Autumn, by a charming ruse, Haa routed Summer, aud awny Has fled the heat thav hoils and stews, She put frexh fuces in the pew, And many a sweet and sober gown. And at her call (most welcome news) Clorinda has come back to town. She lenves the meadows, lo! the day Haw lost its warmth, the birds refuse ing their kangs, n dismal gray ‘o veil their grief, the hillsides choose, ‘I he fickle breezos get their dues, And, jilted, xhower luaf-tears down; All Arcadie is in the * blues,” Clorinds has come back to town. In cle ver fields she used to play Narciseus to the mirror dews, But now in some oue's heart she may View her imaga set. But whose? Ah do I see a bluxh suffuse Her duinty, sun kissed cheeks of brown? Or is it with & heart to loso Clorinda has come back to town? ENVOY. Cupid return, nor longer use Nor blunt your arrows on a country clowa, Here there are gentler hearts to hruise, Clorinda has cume back to town. —H. C. Faulkner. e — HONEY FOR THE LADIES. Plain dark velvets are to be much used for ball wraps and opera cloaks, Heavy armure brocades are imported de- signed for outside garments for traveling and the promenade. Underskirts of velveteen will be worn this autumn between tunics and polonaises of tweed and cheviot. The waistcoat collar is made in white or cresm washing silk, and is useful for wearlug under an open budice, It sounds rather- rongh to spenk of a girl winning & man’s love. If she wou it she must have been playiog for it. This cointey produces’ 7,600,000 pins an- nvaily. Cousequently, a young lady is dun- ger s to approach as a porcupine. 1t is wtated that certain gloves worn by Mme. Sara Beruhardt in *‘Fedors” mensured ne less than four und a half feet in length. A 8. Louis girl ran away from home rather thn learn music. She must have been listen- ing to the pluying of some of the other girlx. The; ta a rage this season for the W bonnet und the toque of vel- ing the color aud material of the All tho wsthetic and fancy writing paper is going out of stylo, being replaced by that Which {4 thick, plain and unruled, with a Lig ¥ uare euyelope to wateh. ufortable-looking wrap to lay on a couch or sofa for use in the eariivge o xutunu duys i knicin stripes of uine inches wide, of Ulio wnd wine colored worste. Ths newest shipe in linen collars is o baud of plain linen net less than two inches Bigh, which is lapped in front and buttous in the band, aud ix called by the hackueyed nume of “dude. The English walking coats known as the Newmarket, made of “heather” tweed, huut- ex's vreon, or faucy basket cloth, and fastened with silk cords, are «quite as fashiouable ws ever this season, Fur trimmings are to be exceedingly fash- it in said, wnd the ultra-fashionable will con- sider no out-door costume complete without its glimpse of fur, A Newport woman is trying to get a divorce from her {mul»\mi on the grouud of bad treat. ment—he carried a letter he got out of the postoffico for her from oue Sundav until an- other befors he thought of elvivgit to her. A young man at Tuskegee, Ala., went to 00 his lady love the of ht, and st »0 late that the girl's mother brought dozen eggs aud wsked him te hatch :hew for her. He loft, and declares that he will never call again, Cuffs are again fashionable, but the new shapes are made so small, to fit inside of the nurrow sleeves new worn that they must be buttoned after they are put ou. Later in the season & narrow turned-over cuff will proba- bly be more worn, New gloves for cool weather wear are gener- ally shown made of chiutz cashmers, very fiue u.i soft. They are lung sud buttonless, em- broidered with a spray of silk flowers ut the tops, und mould ;K:'md and wrist us well us any silk glove, New French breakfrat caps are made in the Leonardo de Vinci shape after the style of the velvet riding caps worn last winter. — Sowe of the wost fanciful of these are formed of guy Oriental foulard, run through with long sleu- der gold pius t hold the cap in pluce. 1| Jackets of wll kinds will be seen during the 1 | coming winter, ud fancy vesta for wear uu- der these ure already mude at ull Parisian es- tablishments. Plain straight jackets can he worn with white vests, Ladies also wear with those juckets a kind of puffed chewise of culored wilk, | Draiding us o garviture seems to retain its popularity, having escaped becoming common by the tichiness aud elaborateness of ity pate torus, tho delicacy of its work, the combina. tions of w aud cord, wid the beautiiul effocts of relief which had been uuknown s | hicherto, <| The wife of one of the candidates in Ohio is collecting for her serap-book the press u. of her husband which have appeared sincs his nowination, She will find cut moie in this way than sho could in' any other, wnd will pretty soon be wondering how she could ever bave warried such & wau. Among other protty ways o finish the edge of a silk | unge quilt are these: put & border of ps, make & point on the end of each piece of ribbon, and under thees, allowing it to show a trifle; below them put a rutile olim The other way is to amit o luce and put a tassel or small ball ou each . ari ,000. This, t. warck, has succeeded in obtaining great |however, does not include anything nol:‘ e “You have very sweet lips,” sald & traveler fonuble for gentiemen as well us for ladies, o | ; ALEAR SPRUNG. Publlc opinion has #prung & leak, and & fes facts have erept in that are worth Ins;ection. WEHOLESATE Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, ST. LOU/S. MO Wo can never afford to dewpise & fact when it stare. us in the face p'ain as acloudless sun. The old fallacy that all proprietary medi ines are worthless has been sweyt away, aniinits place stands the incontestible fact that there i4 at loast one remedy Amongst the many adverti-ed cu atives that does its work well —cures th e wick 1t we cannot cor vince you in this brief item that indigestion, dyspe;a'a, nervousness, and general prostiation can be com; letely curel, the u e of Bur. | dock Blood Bitters certainly will This medicine | cannot be equallod as a Llood and stomach ton d ta unexarmy led su-cess s winning for it n grent repu. | Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - tation. For & week stomach, an_iIl-working liver or | = wn enfechled circulation try Burdock Blood Bitters, | quick, certain, and STEELE, JOHNSON & CO.,, ‘Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBRERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOO7§, ‘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 C. F. GOODMAN, ire to relleve. Rev. W. E.G ffod, of Bothwell, Ont , was cured of dys; epria and liver cony lained that rendered his life almost a burden, The cure was completed by three | bot:les of Burdook Blood Bitters | Mrs. [ra Mulholland, Allany N, Y., writes « 1 have suffered from oft recurri s, consumtion, dys;ep ar 1o my sex. Sin era 1 am entirely relieved. and com ity Blood Bitt e using Burdock to the fair dameel at a five-minutes.for-refresh: ment railroad restaurant, as ho laid down a dwich on which he eonld make uo impres. | 1, “but I must xay I can't go your tongie?” Fortui ly the train started when it «id, or tho traveler would have got tnore tungue than | he bargaine for. From Bouche.on, the great manufacturer of Parisian jewslry, hius been received this au- tumn some very heautiful and expensive en- amelled and rolled geld buttons in wonder- fully rich designs, and also buttons in graduated sizos or xets, which are excellont imitations of rubies, emeralds, diamonda, and other prec tones, Many buttons i aud wiver filigree are of exquisitely d te (3 workmanship. With the buttens of ' precions gems formed into leaves and flowers, come sush buckles, belt.clasps, and lace [ins [ to match, Now that the Princess Louise is out of the way the ladies of Canada will probably be permitted to keep warm during the winter remson. Louise had a notion thut low-neck dresses were appropriate to the severe climate of Montreal and Quebec, and this notion was the best friend pulmonury complaints ever had in the Dominion. Lovise seems to have inberited much of her mother's crunkyism. It is quite envuzh tr usk the Canadians to praise her bad paintings, without requiring then to rppeu at her recoptions without undercloth- ug. AND DEALER IN Paints, 0ils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA, NEBRASKA. X SPECIAL NOTICE TO AR TSI ——ry Growers of Live Stock and Others. l WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO To this complexion has your faded satin O u r G rou n d o i I Cake_ With much ill usage come at last, and so You stand in hauehty silence on my mautel, A high-slipper with a pointed toe. Tt inthe best and cheapest food for stock of any kind.. One pound is equal to $hres pounds of cora Stock fed with Ground Of) Cake in the Fall and mnw{ instead of n‘::nhlu d::'n. will lnm‘:‘u in welgh i bo tn good marketable condition in the i Dalrymen, na well a8 others, who use it can-tesity e « Does there still linger in yoar dainty creases For gay young hearts that once beat time so Try it and judge for yourselves. , 00 per fon; no wilidly Watching yon tripping throngh the minuet? What of sweet faces brave in rouge and patchws, And powdered heads und men in smalls ar- rayed, | Half mad with admiration at your glan ing From quilted petticout and stiff brecade? What of aoft eyes, round arms, and burning IMPORTERS OF = HAVANA CIGARS! What of the gallant Tory in nankeen, AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES: SMOKERS' ARTICLES walking PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING Along the Battery to Bowling Green? CELEBRATED BRANDS: ‘What of the catches trolled, the teaasonous ballads, The brilliant wit about the steaming bowl Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $60 to $120 per 1000. Of Chri punch? Ah!surely such bright AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: \{n-'z".un b:'-md in your leather sole. And tell me, was not that the gluddest scene, Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES. SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES. Some fuing, dimn flatterings of s)ft regret NSE1 rge for sacks. Address OIL COMPANY, Oraha Of all the many scenes you rolled ameng— The day that Polly Henderson was warried 10 you, When slipper only he'd its matin tongue? —The Continent. IMPIETIES. The Salvation Arny in Philadelphia wants i istians to_ voto ns they hat would be as often us o it A weatern exchango alludes to o section of country where “the hand of man hud never trol.” ust be the same place where are pluinly discernible the “footpriuts of an Al- ighty h: “Have you heard any bad nows?” asked a minister’s wife of her husband, ns ho | 1o Jooking & ttle d i o-id man replied, T ud the Begley girl is put off At Con , in Wales, there is a monument erected in the church to the memory of a dead worthy, Alderman Hooper. His epitaph con- sists of the following sentence: e was the father of twenty-xeven children, aud was the forcy-first child of his fath A farmer in Yates county, New York,. days since lost the early partner his joys and sorrows, He buried lier in a private etery and erected a marble slub to her m . ry. Ina short time ha married a second wife. o then plowed up his first wife's grave and now uses the tombstone for a stepping-block in front of his house, k,a few Tho Bugle Song. APTER TENNYSON, The darkness falls on villa walls; The family's in the lower story; This is the hour for jewel hauls; “Iho burglar now is in his glory, fow, buriglar, slow! > the tndder hiaing; Answer, whintle, auswer low, Trylug! trying! trying! List slippered awift he creeps alaft; Hix hund is in the casket dipp But list! a footstep's coming! So That hand in hix side pocket's alipping. Shoot, burglar, shoo Down the ladder swift ho's flying. Auswer, victim. Nay, Lie's mute. Dying! dying! dyiug! MANUFACTURER OF OF BTRICTLY FIKST-CLASS LarTianss, Bungies AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. —London Life. A King Kaffee. —Alas, for King Kaffee Kalcalli For he's fled from a fuir, fertile valley; Ho has wkipped from Conpivsie s ragged and “'sassy, And ne'er 4 home run will he tally, e to the King of Ashantee! ell o his “‘jack-pot aud ante;" will live in a hovel, grub he will grovel, And go to th' Inferno of Dante. New York Commercial. e —— ‘The brass band truveling with ‘‘Her Atone- ment” Company is the finest dressed in the world, The play is by Anson Poud, and hus heen nicknamed” *'Pond's Extract,” 1t isa big sucee stmmmm i T HE GHEAT GERMAN REMEDY PAIN r FOR PAI i Sciatica. Lumbago, HACKACH L HEADACIE, 10011ACHE SORE THROAY ERAIAY, Soreness, Culs. Bruises. Low 1118 Wazms 1810 and 130 Hacney Stroot and 403 8. 18th Street, u trated Catalogue furnishod free anon hmioaan T —~0OMAYA, NEB Established in 18358. ] A.H. DAILEY, MANUFACTUKEK OF FINE Tngunges. Tha Charles A. Vogeler ( ¢ rvssaer 4 4. VALK 8K Mellimarn, Bd.. €211 b Buggies Garriages and Spring Wagons y Blled with & select stook. Best Workmauship Kusraoteed. ce and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenve, Qmahe

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