Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 26, 1883, Page 2

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2 THE DAILY BEE --OMAHA, FRIDAY, OCTUBER 26, 1883, THE MORAL OF IT. ‘We may moralize as much as we please about pain; but the fact is, that we don’t like it while it lasts, and that we want to get rid of it as soon as we can, Whether caused by 1 rheumatism, gout, disordered liver, weak nerves, irregular kidneys, bad blood, or anything else that is just the reverse of what it should be, the sooner it is out of the system the happier we are. Whether pain is the result of imprudence or of acci- dent, or is sent as a punishment for our sins, may be a nice question for the philosophers to argue; but peo- ple who are suffering want first to be rid of the pain, after which those who are fimd of argument may argue the matter to their hearts’ content. Above all theory, argument, and philosophy, comes the delightful fact that BROWN's IRON BITTERS drives pain away. Sufferers run no risk in trying this medicine, the only com- pound containing iron which carries no mischief with it. Those who have used it will tell you so; and you can try for ynursclehy buying a bottle of the nearest druggist. 7 fiea.lth is Wealth mn“' el apothe fof T Dieriness,2Conval n o for Hy eainess,20onval Slons, Fita, Nervous Nenralgia, Headacho, Nervous ‘Prostration eaused bx the use of alcohol or tobaoco, Whakofulness, Mental Depressiom, Softening of the Brain, rosulting In insanity and Jesding to misery deoay’ and death 4 Brain Treatment, , Promatire Old Age, Barrennces Tom of power in’either ex, Involuntary Losso orthcea oaused by over exertions >t Drain, solt-abuse or over-indulgence. Each tains one month's trestment. $1.00 a box, or Toxes for $5.00. Rent by mail propaid on recelp WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by ue for six boxes acoompanied with $5.00, we willsend the [rschneee our written Kgusranteo torefund tho moncy tho troatment does not affect & cure. Guaranteer C. F. GOODMAN Druz ist Omaha Nob _ued only by m&e wi AND PREVENTIVE AND CURE. ZJO0R EITHER SEX. This remedv being injected directly to the seat tho_ disease, requires no change of diet or nauscous, mercurial of poissnous medicines o be taken inter. ally. When 180 s a proventive by oither sex, It iv Ampossible to contract any private discase; but I the oMo of those already unfortunately affioted wo guar- antco throo boxes to cure, or we will refund the money. Prics by mal, posge. paid, 82 perbor, on $hroo boxes for WRITTEN GUARANTERS swued by all authorized agents. Dr.Felix Le Brun &Co "0LD TECUMSEH.” His Military Ua}scr Beviewed by the Bratich “Thunderer.” A Glowing Tribni « to His Valor and | The M h the Sea. Capacity 0 srocedents for the compulsory dismiss ‘wrrn[tur of superanunted veterans fi posts they would fain cling to. ( Sherman rade whom he can trust to enforce npor Ametican statesmen the right of the army, in his judgment, to more conside ation and larger expenditure than it ¢ present receives, Gien. Sherman under- stands that the peculiar condition of {he niracts within the na country ee ] opportunitics of the ] for official distinct 1 1o has hud bis turn, and a | oieyand will not grudge his compan: arms his succession, Like the majori'y of his vorsatile fellows in the great civil war, he has learned other trades than gen- cralsbip, and may be presumed, theve- fore, to have imbibed other tastes besidc it. He was abanker and he was a lawyer before he showed himself a consummate stratogist. Although he is not likely to go back to the till or the bar, he can resume the interests which thus found their development. As muck ergamizing power is required to govern an American railway system a8 to map out a campaign. He haa proved in his memoirs that he can writc. His recollections must be far from ex- hausted. It is possible to smoke else- where than in a general-in-chiel’s bureau; and smoking, if rumor has no. calumi- nated him, i8 o serious ocoupation for General Sherman. Were nvvrr other avoeation used up or impracticable, there is always a_course of European travel. All illustrious Americans owe it to the world and themselves to visit and rov sit the hemisphere from which their race sprung. When General Shor- man comes, Europe, it is to be hoped, will be unable to gratily him with the spectacle of blooly buttles and the fall and rise of empires. But its prepara- tions for war are abundanly suflicient for experience and imu%inmiuu such as Ger Sherman’s to reproduce a picture of their application, His welcome, at any rate, is ready for him as soon as he chooses to claim it. Burope will be gratefu! for the rule which eloscs a brilliant profes © 1 SOLE PROPRIETORS F. Goodmav, Druggist, Bole Agent, for Omaha ‘m&o wly HURDIX A I Have Found It ‘Was the oxolamation of & man when ho got & box of Eurska Pile Olntment, which is & simple and warc Sare for Fllos aud all Skin Discasos. ity conta by mail, postpaid. The American Diarrhaa Cure Has stood the test for twenty years. Bure oure for lll.lmhlh- Diarrhaca, Dysentary, and Chole or] Deane's Fever and Azue Tonic & Cordia:. 10 Is impossible to supply the rapid saloof the same | France, the eruption was a singlo act of SURE CUR WARRANTED or Fever and Aguo, sud all Malarial troubles. PRICE, §1.00. W.J.WHITEHOUSE LABORATORY, 10TH ST., OMAHA, NEB. & For Sale by all Druggists’ BAKER'S Brokfast Cocon, Warranted abselutely pur Cocoa, from which the excess o Oil has boen removed, It has three times the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Bugar, and is therefore far more economl- cal. It is deliclous, nouriabing, strengthening, easily digested, and admirably adapted for luvalide ae well as for persons in health, Bold by Grocers everywhere. . BAKER & C0, Dorchstr, Mass MORGANS: AT WILL CLEAN PAINT, MARBLE, OIL CLOTHS, BATH IURS, CROCKERY, KITCHEN UTENSILS, WINDOWS, &0. n’gu. POLISH career if it induces its first 111gsi tim to cross th utie, Ltis asc to see the man whose work the miy republic in it present state is as Ame is curious to srdy those who keep i old world as it has been. The prodigious struggies in wh “»{;‘ 3 present genera! of the United S5 ia army and his successor, and th predecessor, Geueral Great, won the glory is ancient history in ore sc European wars av- lirks inan ¢ chain. They have no adiapt orighyf s thoy are without a conclusion. Pen = but a truce. After a breath'na aj 2o the combatants recommence their conflict at the point at which they left off. In American annals the war of sec wion tands by itself, While it had as deep seated an origin and was as necessary an effect of causesasthe strife of Germany and voleanis social and political forc:r. The mountain it threw up ris-1 e+ solitsy, {irom the plain of American histoi; as Mount Tabor from the plain of Esdrae- Jon. Europe has no power to shut its eyes agaiust its past fucds and battles. «ts business is to endeavor to secure that Vindmarks traced by a horrible expendi- ture of blood and treasure shall not be obliterated The object of American patriotism is to plant over and effuce the scars of civil discord, and to teach the to forget, os far as why the tumult raged and how it was appeased. In anottcr sense, it is natural for Americans to pro- serve green and fresh the memoiy of the one wemendous war they heve known since their national existence bega n int of view, the war of inde- utterly out of date. Its tary moral is chiefly the moral of reciprocal military blunde.s. The war of secession was fought on ¢ scale on which mcdern Euroy = are waged. Ita blunders, w many, were blunders any mcdera armi might fall into, Ity ttiumphs of taci’cs lessons by which the ablest modern caj.- tains might profit. Gen, Sherman bore & pro-eninent part in the execution of the masterly movements to which the oollapse of the south was due. In the world’s military histoiy his fawous 1. gress through the heart of the Confeder- ate States will fill abroader page than the remorseless shock of dead weight huricd by his chief against the insurgent front. Its audacity was a caloulated aud.ioity. Heinfl; cf-murnlwo.mdnmn-d-x tous thanthema erialshock. By hisflauku irch ho shattered the nerve ef the enc v. The absence of resistence on his expeai tion through Georgia to the sea was not o | ¢ happy accident on which his succcss de- pended. He was prepaved to tohtard would have fought and conguered; it , in Georgiata he fought and cuered the pexe y in the Caro'n In him the Unitcd State had the goc! fortune to possces s born general, woo has always undersiood war 21 a game skill as well as a trial of brute str and dogged endurance. Except Leoe, it would be hard to say which com ron either pide committed fows stakes aud eavned victory more vicht fully than Gen. 8herman The United States army has gair much by having at its hewd for o fifteen years an officer of his ol vy and career. For the United Sta.ea, as a country which may, like other countries, ut some time or other agaiy - 1 vea con- siderable army,the memory «f the war of secession and 1ts victorions ysue const’ tutes & “miti\‘u danger. Awer recollect how the nation mobilized itself and wrestled down insur- rection I)X sheer weight and ob stinacy. American opinion is tempted to rely on the same agencies should a iuture emergency threaten, and 15 loo' upon war as a mere collision of wasses the necessity arose, the American people would doubtless be willing to un dergo similar sacrifice The necessity, however, is cruel, and it ought to be K paves in Gen, Sheridan a com-y i 1 descende and strategy inculcate, Iike itr enion | gy - bor went down at the first pop. His part- avordable. Want of scientific knowledae in the oflicers and of organizalion in the war office doabled and trebled the price the nation had to pay for iis eveniual | escape from disrupiion. Gen. Sherman knows with what difficalty te unwieldy | beap of military raw materia! wasmo'd: d into the supple weanon with which he pierced the viials of the south. Through- | out bis tern of supreme command he Fs pei sistently inpressed on the United | Lt vl aweny and Lagisiatore obligaiion to maintin the army, wh 1 a condi { elicienc ever ity size, on from it alone that war is an aii, and | that without discipline an army is a dangerons mob. Gieneral Shevidan mey be expeeted 1) bave discovered (1 ttuth as well as Gereral Shermon But it is an inconvenienl auiihmetical | tainty that the supply of Shermans ard Sheridans can not Jong be available for the Umted States army under the rule by which the former is now retiring. Another inconvenmence, cqaally incidert | to the enviable ot of (he American pec is that, whilo its prosent happy con- | ition continues, no ¢ for re- placing superantii o d comoinders by juniors who have be xpetience, like them, at fivst hand. B The Conflict, n disease and health, i1 often brief and 1t is better to be provided with ¢ o remedies for such common di ths, colds, &c., than to run the ri. k o through ALL'S BAL Betwoeo " tal, loc SAM is asure ar | fo remedy for all diseases of tho Jungs and chest. 1f taken in season it is cortain to cure, nnd tay save you from that terrible disease. msumption, 1t been krown and use | r wany years in America ave i5 is no exa ralion to say that it is the best rewcdy in s world for Coughs, &e. Ask for De. Win, Hall's Balsam for the lungs,and take 110 other, Sold by all druggista. —— noppEns, THE STAG .concu What the Pass er With One Eye There was an army officer, a suttler, a surveyor and two men who might have been mine inspectors tn the stage when it draw up at Durt Hill to take on another passenger. “Howdy,” said the new passen: he crowded in. As he stood for a moment in the | the station lamp ( cye was gone. He wore noshade or patch | to conceal the loss, and those who gave him a second look felt that the fire in his remaining eye was biicht enoush to ans- N r Lwo. t ad to ha f oot of all saw thay b ve By and by the army offi something about road agzen the couversation he Coaches had been st points on the live within | was pretty generally bolie a bad < still vipe for bus | v ith ove eye had vothis Once or twice he raiscd his head and that single eye blazed in the darkuess like a love star, but not a word_escapedhis mouth. The captain had said what he would do The n oné_a bottle of ¢ route ard! somebody tuggested a shake-purse for his hemefit, buv he motioncd us into the coach, bavred the doo* after uvs, ar limboed up to a seai beside the driver. Ais contempt for such a crowd could not be measared., M. Qouan. —— No well regulated household should bo with. | Angostura Bitters, the world renowned appetizer and invigorator re of counterfeits, Ask your grocer o t for the ~enuine article, manufactured J. G, B, egert & Sons, —— A POWERF UL Of CULATOR, London Times. and fitness to morch and fight any whei . Gen. Sherman and the United States | Although he hus alweys asked A Taie Mol s K rsts the Drum secm cqually to suffer a hardshio from [moderaie numo eal 1ease in tha of Her Sweetheard's Bar, | the rule which deprives him of the com- 8 andine arty, he compreherds the P | mand of the army on the 1st of Nov Amcrican public wai'd 1ot sanciton Ul Theaitention of an eminent Cineinn ber, At the age of 64 1a s, though tire fhas noreason " v \ 1 cen 'y 1toa ve peon senjor by two years of Ceneral Grant, jofana iy ¢ In g ) prominc still in the vigor of lio, He_could plan| " no smaller 14 e, the Lie 3 Cncinati a war or head a charge as well as (wenly | ! towd ‘bo adapted to besome [ 1 S0ciely and busnoss tn UHcaies years buck, But rules are not made 10| e perfect vuclcus of an exie 1.]”\. Wk l‘:-! 1’ gt ‘\‘ iy .].”; excoptional cases, though thoy have IEOPOS: A TOHAL BTy O 1 in Upon ex- apoly to them. The obligatory xciire- fmeu. kop. on fook by & naiion of 60,000, | it otind thab: the ment of General Sherman in | 000, occupying an arca of more than |- i 17018 it vhelpull Thee ot November from his _acti d;.u\‘ .fA..m',']wn square miles have the R e i6j00. s, of .‘W]ll‘ 5 nd his removal in sruary from | duty thrown upon it o e toul |1 AR e ltlh‘n( ].'- v lgt farnish \ha bost | and spiri of & huge bulk w 1 loarn | Character that it greatly excited the phy- sician’s interest in the case. He ourse, asked the patient how he came by it, and was much surpriscd to see him stammor and blush, and final'y say that a friend had struck him upon the side of the head. The doctor thought no more abou it but dressed the wound an. told the young man to return the following day for another examination, Alter the young man had loft the oftice it was learncd feom another source what had caused the bursting of the ear- drum. He is engaged to a very handsome and accomplished young lady. Sunday eve ing he spent very delizhtfully in I company, and such had been their ple sure that they were loath to separate, a1 lingered long over the pariing., Suddenly as they stood at the open door, the clook on the church opposite sirack the hour of alizing that thoir 15t be finished in ghort r for that ght, they showercd kies aiter Kiss upon other in quick succession. ('ne of e her most loving and emphatic osculations by some mishap struck the young man in the ear with the foregoing results, As soon as he recovers his heating he intends Laanging a kissing match between his girl nd Emma Abbott e e— Excitement. ““What causes the great rush at Schroter & i's Diag Store?” The free distributi ample bottles of Dr. Bosanko's Couyh 1 Syrup, the most_ popular remedy fou € 13, Consumption, and” Bronchitis now ou (e market, v size 50 cents and 1,00, e — ‘Who Get Divoreed. From Governor Butler's Middleburg Speech. I have obtained as many divoret as m in Massachusetts, and while ro ninety laboring men and women out of every hundred to every ten of t« betier elewent, yet I have obtained e v the “better element” whe 1 bave obtained one for the dirty Irish- man. (Applause.) o and look at the records now, when divorce is made casy under our law, which I think is a gre. wrone to & If T had my way no e should be divorced who had chil- ). They should stard vir own sakes—! 1 scratoh and quarrel like ents and 25+ hut for the sake of the children the State; for while they quarrel will each other, both will love tue children, and the worst lawsuits 1 ever had were to who ghould have the children, whil bated ¢ .ch other. The futher should wlowed to go away and have a eed somovhereand neglect the old 2 a \Faioay lre care { 1 " “Meno b, yund body * is the food, and we » isiied with eithor we lily powers, thisr o wanently strengthen both. §1. in case the coach was balted, aud this brought out the others, It was fin decided to_fight. The passen; woney to fiet for und weapon's o figt wiih, Thio wan with on eye such a time and under id nothing, A h circumstan thero could bo but ove interpretition ) such conduct, A coward has no business travells this route,” said the ecaptan iu & voi ¢ which every man could hear. Tho stranger started up, and that « of his seemcd to showersparks of fire £ after a moment he foli busk again will hayivy replied. T¢ hewasn't ehiclen-hearted, why didn't | he show his ¢ st Ifhe intended t) fisht where wero his weapous!’ I had no Winchester, and g0 far 20 o one had seen as he entored the coa he was without revolvers. Every- body folt a contompt for a man w' ) calculated to hold up Iis hands at 1 order, and permit himsclf to be quic dospoiled. *Pop! pop! halt!” The passengers wero slute of the rvad agents ears, The coach was way to_tumble everybody to loga and bodies were st11 tan kal up when a voice at the door of the coach d e as th ‘No nonsense, now! Yoa gentlemer climb right d: here and up with your bands' The first man who i 'cl will get a bullet throu; We had agreed to fight. ‘Ine Captain Pad agreed to load vs. We were liafon- ing for bis yell of defiance god the chik of bis revolver when Do stepped down and out as humbly as you please. L suttler had been aching to chew up a doz en road agents, and vow he was the tec ovd manout, The surveyor had intimat- vever passed over the route without killing at least three highway wen, but this occasion was to be an ex coption, In three minutes the five vi us ere down and in line and hands uy, 1) ! roud agent hud sa I “Stiwight mattor®of business. Fires o who dropr bia hands wou't | . . Lt burt him!” Where was the man with one eye! 11 ¢ robber appearcd to believe that wo we « ull out, and he was jost app ouch head of the line to begin b's work when a dark form dropped out of the cow b, e wes aye'l as if 1rom & wounded tiyger, ard a revolver began to erack. The rob {ner was jost comin ¢ weoand the rear of conch. H w 000 0 He hrew vhat bad happ bat e was counn thie rescue, Pop! Lop! pop! went ihe revolvers, their flashes lizhted up the night until we could sce the driver in his seat, It didw't take twenty seconds. One of the robbers lay dead in_ fronc of us—the other under the couch, wi the man with ane eye had a lock cut 1om his heed and the graze of a b et acrocs hischeek. Not one of us had v oved a finger. We were five fools in a row. Thove was a poinfal lull aiter the last shot, avd it tasted a full minute betore the enger turned to us and remarked in a quite, cutting wan- ner: “Gentlemen, ye kin drop yer hards!” We dropped. We undertook to thank fiay editor is at present er gists. e A Lakeside Musin:. Trivune, **1s (his the literary editor?” Tne hot-o reporter tooked up and dis- i » young lady standingin the ered “‘the liter- aged in the construetion of an elaborate ¢, ‘que of I'rotting and Pacmg Ro-rd.’ You probabiy see something i ne saper about the idylic love s d S and St Julien, the ton ueo of of Jay-Eye-See, and the sad pathetic story of Early Rose and Aldine Vou can bet that when the 1i ry editor No, wadam,” he replicd of this - gots his taper fingers on a 1 ook be reviews it. I have been told that ! e onze turned himself loose on a vol- ume of defferential caleulus that he br {just issued, and ren ed that, while ¢ frivolous portion of the readi public mighe hoid that et chapters of the work \ somewhat uninteresting, the great me | n inenleated in vegard to the squa £ the hypathenuse should be known to 1ud that to the merchavi, the farmer, or the young mother who wanted some- thing handy to throw at the children when tiy became too fresh, this chaste volume would prove invaluable, = When it comes togiving a calm and dispassionate ), in which the Jurid glare of im- [ e wenius is softened and wellow- 0y the Lambent rays of eaperience, the Peibune's hiterary editor is liable to bes le vecord any minute. 1 sappose you Luve an original story, writcen on white paper and ted with ‘8 blae 1:bbon, con- cealed somewhere about your person, and want the liverary ediior to commune wi o ““Yes, sir,” replied the youvg lady, ©T huve wricten a story, and mam pa thinks it is very good,” “1s theve anything in it about the ves turiing to goliled and the velvety on ot the leaves now looking egere and brown? Because if the is it wou't do, wior brown-mantle-of-October. the-hills--and--leaves ture va 18 about at end. We b Yy ove 1o b QUSON WO le-0f-Ostoby [ thun yc tick at. The-dull-red-glow t [0 b~ yig-embors racker s what we hat' how Che puolie from now until De- comber, (ot auy dying embers in your stor, 7" Mine is a love ctory?” right. The dullred glow s all of 4y o hors works in beauid ully i a love'si hough as & ra'e, young wen wh i love don't huve enoash cu rency o buy a eard of woud to make ev bers of,"” “But why must I wrlte my story in :.hin particular style?” ask: 1 the youny Lady “Because ivs the season for it. Yeu want to atart out by sayiog (hat as Ha- rold Noucsech, the rich banker, satin his magn'¥cenlly 1urnished parlor and gazod thoughifully juto the dall red embers of the dying fire in the graie ther came trooping up row the din visia ofan alwost forgotten past memories—sad. sad memories—that caused the unbidden tear to start. Don't make any misiake about (ho tear business. Bo sure (5 have him, and we wanted to ehake bands, and ouly one tear, becsuse tha's the orih- lat a crack unloss he had plurged up i | Yorker the bi: - donu,” odox s'yle in stories, Of course nobody | but a one-eyed man rould shed one t one of his lachrymal ducts, bui. in nove's it isalways put th i way. And you want to be ain that i.is an unbidden tear, A tear that bos received a cordial invi- {ation to bo pro ent and stari wouldn'y doat o', Then ey that the old man's thouchts wandered back to the heappy duys of his childhood. Be certain t) kave | them wander buch cross Jotr and stopping once ina whicl to pick sand burs out of their toee Tf you were to say thas his thoughts went back th vl would bo spoiled. *‘Wander' is the cov- rect siyle. Th the o'd ien when you g¢ n back to vy boyhood days yoa i 1, L Lucy Perkin hber | blue eyes and golden hair—ihe playmate of his youh that he Jovel 80 dearly always looked upon as| his future wife. Then lug out another | unbidden te ond finally have the| old man break down in a siorm of sobs,” ‘It’s very eaid isn't it?” said the youny lady. “Lucy died, I suppose, and the old man’s he t is breaking, . eaid the horse reporter, cd another man.” n what makes the banker weep?” inquired the maiden. “Sympathy for the other man. ——— “Lincy Hood's Sarsaparilla gives an J and imparis new life and energy toall the functions of the body. Try a bottle and realizo it. The Divorce The Chicago Newsof the 9Oth inst. con- vibutes the follwing chat to the divorce discussion that is now haying a new 1un: The massing of sixty-six divorce cases into one day, as was the case last Sawu day, reminds one of the recent Connec eut imbroglio. Divorce is granted there upon the usual grounds, “‘incompatibil- ity” being one of the most common. In conscquence of this, marringe has become a “six-months-upon-tria” sort of institution. Tu Hebron, Conn., the rich aman of the village is living with his fourth wife, the first and scc- ond being siill living, and at Jeast one of them belongmg to and attending the same church with him, The pastor of the church having lately preached a ser- mon upon “A Polygamist in Hebron,” the rich man has sucd him for 5,000 damages, This also s {he case of a young lady in this city who enjoys the | aost amicable relations with her own | ther and mother and her step-father and step-mother, the divorce court hav- ing mixed these parents up in this com- plicated We do not say that there 15 anything” wrong in all t} But we d» say that it is likely to be rather per- plexing to children of a tender aze. Perhaps a chair of ‘‘social relations” ight properly be added to the already wmerous branches of our public school course, appetit — Want of Faith, uter & Becht,the dvuggists,donot suc- ot tor the want of fuith. They huve Dr. Bosanko's Cough snd” Lung vemedy for Colds, Consmmption, and Lung a 1is, that they W e 2 hottle 6 to each aud every oue who is in need of a wedicine of this kind, Syrap as | — | They Sold Him a Hole, Wall Street News, 1 was t lling the story in_the billiard room of a Denver hotel. Said he: “There were three of us, you see, and Nevada was a cold climate for us. We were dead broke, half starved, and clea discouraged, when along came a Yorker. He wouldn’t play cards not be robbed. and we couldn’t stick hm with forged land patents or bogus pre- ewptions. One day we trailed out and dug a hole into the hill and salted it abit, and rushed back and offered the New discovery for $,000 cash And b b 1ight hold like a pair of pincers, 1y, bo never even stopped to beat us cown. We got a cool thousand apiece and wade for 'Frisco.” “*Purty cool, that was.” “Well, T dunno. If there was anything coo! in thot transaction it was the way that New Yorker hunted up a_pard, set an its o O EL tock f Buguies Garriaoe MyfRepository ia constantly i Cifice and Foctory 8. W. Core Omaba. Write ior Prices. SR, et SALE Tuis Flour is made at Salem, CHARLES SHIVERICK, Furniture! V|Tc., Have just received a large quantity of new M EIR 'SY AND AM OFFERING e P B nlth 3, THEM AT VERY LOW PRICES rassenezr zrevaTor |[HAS, SHIVERICK, To All Fleors. 1210 Farnam St NEE. | 1206, 1208 » OMAH MANUFACTURER OF FINE § Al Suring + stock. Omak wit Best Workm ith and Capito nue, M FLOUR. ardson Cor, Nebraska, fu_the Combinod Rollor Stono Sy w give EXCLUSIVE sale of our flonr to one firm fa a place. We have opened a brauch at 1018 Capitol avenu Addross either VALENTINE & REPEPY. Salem or Owmaha, Meb. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. ed Wi d be fn g merits. -cod-me WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ciound Qil Cake. It js the best and che: ih Ground Ol Ca marketable condition Try it and judze for yourselves. bk of any kind. One pound is cqua’ to thre nd Winter, instend of rannin princ. Dairymen, as well pa Pricc 325.00 per 1o char e for racks, Address WOODMAN LINSEED, 01, COMPANY Oraba ands of corn o jo weigh an testily ke i i the g SAEES, VAULTY, | L] DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF ] % pEI RS ] 0 - / Qflp 1020 ¥Farnam Streot. Omaha miners to work, bought machinery, and tock over $750,000 out of that 'ar lole ingide of eight months! Maybe we've ot over feeling flat, but T guess not.” e — zoni’s medicated com- oueehold treasure, ble to go down town wit' 10 fiest iton. 1f the 8.2 goes f puti-box. If the es howe vofled or chafed, e b fness is dull, &e ad ¥ his tra . ol Poyzo s powde bles. Then el is should be without i, — General Jim Steedman, | James Blair Stecdman, who died at 41 Moledo Thursday, was Major-General of teers in the war of ihe Kebellion. o4 bora in Nor(humberl.nd county, Pennsylvania, in 1818, and removed to Henry county, Ohio, when about twenty- one, and was afterward contractor on ihe Wabash and Erie Canal, member of the State Leuislature for (wo terms, and member of the State Board of Publc Works, In 1857 he was elected Public Printer at Washington, and subscquently went to the Charleston convention as a Douglas Democrat He weny the way at its outset as Colonel of the Four: teenth Ohio, and his wilitary career, in- cluding bis brilliant evements ¢ Chickamauguva, are familiar to the whol: country. At the close of hostilit: Steedman became provisional Governos of (ieorgia, a position distasteful to him, and which he afterward exchanged for the collectorshin of internal revenu: ot New Orleans, After his return to Toledo, which had becowe his bowe before B vate life till 1872, when be was elected a delegate to the State Gonstiutional cou- vension to fill ncy wade by the ap- pointwent of M, I, Waite as Chi [0f the United States, In 187¢ Gen, Steed- wan was chosen S| Seuator from this district, but wus defert in his canvass for a second term, When Tilden was de- ale i erating on_ the nvecessily of taking the Presidency by force, codwan otiered 1o warch our of Ohio wich 110,000 armed men to help do the thing if e were called upon. In Mlay last he was clecied chief of the Toledo police, still continuing his relaiions o+ ed- of The Weekly Noithera Obio Dem- at, of which Fe has latter'y been the nowinal owner. A wi'e sed (wo youny children survive hiwm, The funeral wilil take place in Toledo to-morrow 24 2:20 p. m., under the auspices of Forsyih posi, G.'A. R, Chaplain Deacou, of the post, pastor of the (eniral Congregeitonel church, will ofliciate. The remains will be interred in Woodlawn cemetery. They were to lie in state in the city ha'! build ing from 2 p. m, Friday uniil the hour of the funeral, e — Oorsfird’s Ac.d Phosphaie, Beware of lmitations. Imitations und counterfeits have »ain | appeared. Be sure that the word *Hors- wokp's" is on the wrapper. None geuu- e wiihout it. war, General Steeduwan rewmained in pri- | jef Jusf 3 A RICHARDS & CLARKE, Proprietors. Omaha lron Wo: U. P. RAILWAY, W. A. CLARK | ki G 19TH & I8TH STt MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALLRS IN Stoam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, Mill and Grain Elevaior Machinery! MILL FURNISHINGS O ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Celebrated STEAM PUMPS, STEAM, WATER AND G BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FIrTINGS, ODELL ROLLER MILL. lonriy We are preparcd to furnish plans and e the eection of Flouring Millx 'Anchor Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth. S PIPE. ARCHITECTURAL AND o 108 TIEO imates, and w'll contract f in Elevators, or for changin; Mills from 8 ore to the Rol'er system. 0 Kispe: ol attention given to furnishing Power Plauts for any pur e, and e iimates made for same, General wachinery vepirs attended prowmpily. Address RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Neb, - —— % |y

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