Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
— e e e— OMAHA DAILY BEE--TH URSDAY MAY 1 5. 1884, THE Omaha Office, No. 916 Farnam St. Couneil Bluffs OMce, No. 7 Pear Btreet, Near Brondway. New York Office, Room 65 Tribune wuilding. Pablished every morning,” exoept Sunday® ool Monday morning daily. WS BY WAL OMAHA BEE. The THE WALL STREET PANIC, Yosterday was one of the most excit: ing daya that Wall street has witnessed since the famous Black Friday. The suspension of the Moetropolitan bank, Hatch & Foote, and several other well krown bankers and brokers inaugurated » panio, and the financial and speculative center of the country became the scene One Yoar. <. 410.00 | Threo Months, ... 43091 of the wildest excitemont, which contin- BRMONIN. il Wook, 2t Cante. " | ued up to the close of business hours. RN Vi The situation is decidedly panicky, and Tanus ronteAID. further failures aro looked for. The Qoo Fear..o... 800 | Throe Mone.... ¥ 80| banks of New York will to-day no doubt Amorioan News Company, Sole Agente Kewsdeal 8 fn the United States CORRRSPONDRNON, A Oommunioations relating to Newn and Edltorial wattors should bo addrossed to the Bwirom or Tuw Bn BUSINESS LNTTRRA, All Businoss Lottors and Romittances shouldfbo addrossod to Tan BrR PURLISHING CORPANT, QMATIA Dratés, Chooks and Postoffioe orders to be made pay ablo to tho ordor of the company. {HE BEE PUBLISHING:CO, PROPS E.ZROSEWATER, !'Editor. A. T, Fitch, Manager Daily Circulation, P. 0. Box | The probability is, however, | bg confined to Now How many special midnight prize- fighting trains will have to bo chartered by the Union Pacific to enable it to de- 483" Omaha_Neb, clare dividenda? Howuay, the great objector, is in groat danger of not being renominated This relieves the democrats of that part of Indiana of the suspicion of insanity from which they have suffer- this year od for many years. Bex Burer which heart. He wants to haveall the internal revenue receipts devoted to pensions for all soldiers of the late war, whether un- ion or confederate. Nothing is now wanting to make this old fraud the idol of every Aemagogue in tho country. Tre Nebraska state medical socioty has conferred a merited compliment on Dr, A. T. O. Mansfield, of Ashland, in mak- ing him its permanent secretary. Dr, Mansfield has rendered invaluable service to the medical society and the profession in the position which he now fills by his faithful and efficient labors and it must has announced a scheme he thinks will ire the southern .| have to stand a heavy run from deposi- tors who have become alarmed at the 1| numerous failures and who know where it will end or what bank will be the next to go under. The banks that are at all weak ornot prepared for an emergency will very likely be weeded out, one afteranother. Whether tho panic will extend beyond New York and become general remains to be seen. that it will York, and will in- volve only such banks and brokers that aroof a reckless speculative character It is claimed that the New York banks that have failed aro what are known as “speculation banks,” and their failure should have no material effect upon con- servative banks, even of the metropolis. Such is the opinion of the leading bank- ers in Chicago, whero tho markets, not- withstanding the break in New York, showed great steadiness. Secretary Folgor, of the trensury, who isin New York, is making every possible effort to avert a general panic. He ascribes the break to reckless speculation on the part of a few men. The situation, ho claims, is not inherently weak, as there is plenty of money in the country. Furthermore, he assures the public that ho does mot anticipate any extensive panic. This assurance, coming fromsuch an able financier as Secretary Folger, will no doubt have a qdieting effect. The probability is that the panic will be of short duration, and not extend beyond the limits of the metropolis. It will principally affoct those who have do not be highly gratifying to him as it is to his | been speculating in stocks in which the friends that his efforts are appreciated. shrinkage has been so constant and rapid for the last two months. There has been Mavor Ciaask expressed the opinionat | o, much water injected into stocks, and the council meeting that the popular agi- now tho reaction is taking place. It will tation relative to his appointments was [ oontinue until tho water is noarly all principally about the chief of the fire de- Ho, therefore, sent in the name of Chief Butler, which was very But partment, properly confirmed by acclamatien. Mayor Chase must be defective in his hearing when he ignores the popular de- mand for a change in the office of chief of police. Tue Union Pacific is largely responsi- ble for the disgrace that has beon inflict- ed upon thiscity and state by the recent It the roughs and toughs prize-fight. want to have a picnic and pound and shoot each other lot them walk to the picnic grounds. Had the Union Pacific refused to let the prize-fightinggang have a special train it wouid have commanded the respect of the community. The offi- cers of the road who permitted tho spe- eial train to be chartered have virtually made themselves accessorios to the crimes which were committed by the ‘‘exour- sionists,” The city council is doing some very good work. It has passed several ordi- nances and resolutions which are of vital importance to the public welfare, One of these ordinances prohibits the jstorage of petroleum, naptha and other explo- sives, in large quantities, within the city limits. Another ordinance requires the cutting of trenches or excavations on paved streets to be done under the imme- diate supervision of the board of public works. By rosolution the board of pub- lic works has been directed to advertise for bids to clean the paved streots. Sev- eral ordinances were also passed providing for the opening of new streets betweea mportant points, and leveling and im- proving the grade on some of the princi- pal thoroughfares. These changes of grades must be made before payements aro laid down, and they may as well be made now while the damage to property is comparatively light. Mayor Cuask insists that complaints about Marshal Guthrio shall bo put in writing. T'here have boen several com- plaints about him in writing and in print, but the mayor has turned a deaf ear to them all. If he wants any proof, let him look around for himself. Why is it that the low dives, where the crooks and sluggers congregate, are allowed to bellio down while the Blaine kept open! Why is it that the marshal | over him. Sabin was elcdted chairman roughs to start has failed to report between 200 and $00|f the national republican committee, [ morningt *women of the town" to the police court, Who gets the money which these sbandoned women |interest of pay from time to time to lescape arcest? Perhapy the mayor wants theso black- 8 he is in duty bound? mailed women to make complaint in writing, Why is it that the most {hoffen sive persons are arrested and lodged in jail a8 vagrants, while cut-throats, slug. wrung out, and until the fictitious values give place to actual values. When this is done, and all tho *‘speculation banks” hove been cleaned out, thera will bo a steady and healthy recuperation in bank- ing circles and in the stock market. The result of the panic, we believe, will be beneficial to Wall street and the country gonerally, Tt will have a tendency to check reckless speculation, and operations in the future will be conducted on a sounder basis. If, kowever, the panic should spread to other cities, we believe that the banks of Omaha would pass through the storm uuaffected as they did in the memorable panic of 1873, when many of the soundest banks in the coun- try went down in the crash. There are no safer banks in tho country than those in Omaha. They are managed by careful and conservative bankers of life-time ex- perience, and who do not engage in any- thing but legitimate business. There is plenty of money in Omaha, and the city is betcer prepared to stand a panic than it haa ever been at any time in its tory. POLITICAL FICTION. We must always go away from home to hear the news, Hereis the Washing- ton correpondent of the Chicago Tribune who has made a wonderful discovery about politics in the west—a discovery that is just amazement itself. He says that last fall while the prosident was in the west, “‘the nucleus of an administra. tion party in half a dozen states was was sought to be formed with United States senators 'to manago it and control patronage.” The members of this sen- torial syndicate were Sabin of Minneso- ta, Wilson of Iowa, Manderson of Nebras- ka and Conger of Michigan, These men were to secure Arthur delegations to the national convention in their own states, federal patronage for the next four yoars, Says the correspondent: ly, and the Arthur people in Chicago and Washington received uniformly fav- orablo reporta, into a row over the collectorships at Do- troit and Port Huron and was forced to and at once took an important attitude, though the Arthur people charged bl on, Senator Mandersor, found that Postmaster-General Gresh- ;E'n maou} of l}’nul Vandervoort 4 position in the railway mail service had played the Nubl‘nklypolh ‘of the -|Grand Army of the Republic into the hands of Logan, Between this and the overwhelming Blaine sentiment of the state he found he could make no head- gers, thieves, confidence men, and other| way on hehalf of the adwinistration. crooks are allowed to run at large? | eeeee—— Suerrfr Minukk and the county com- Even Frank Hatton tould do nothing in Iowa. The sum totsl of the senatorial combination of eight months ago, which missioners are to ke congratulated upon | Was to prepare the western soil for a crop having selocted eminently respectable grand and petit jurors, Itishoped that the court will compel every man drawn on the grand jury to serve. It isone of city, and if it does have considerable important work to do, | Se One reason why the criminals are sllowed | a friend of Blaine. His influence in Min to go uawhipped of justice is that the |nesota was thrown in the direction of his good men that are drawn are generally |friendship. If Jim Wilson over was an excused, and their places are filled by | Arthur man, he has taken very good care professional grand jurors who can be | to let nc one know it. tampered with by interested parties. | never exerted a particle of influence for |tomake in their favor, and we await ‘The people‘all over the country have|Arthur in Iowa. As to Senstor Mander- | fUther proceedings been aroused by the Cineinnati riot, and |son, the story is simply ludicrous. Sena- there is & general demaud for a ‘reform { tor Manderson may have been put out by in the workings of juries and courts, | the summary dismissal of | Vandervoort, particularly with reference to the grimi- | but Vandervoorts dismissal had no mere effect on the campaign in Nebrasks than ! in a southern paper several days ago. of Arthur délegates will be seen by a lance at th preferences of the states of ichigan, 'Wisconsin, Minnesota, lowa and Nebradka, f| A reputable paper ought to have more the best grand luries ever selected in this | senso thau to publish such rubbish. The whole duly it will | wholestory| is to thelast degreeridiculous. r Sabin has been and is notoriously For a whilo things went on swimming- | y, G with setting up the sub-committee in thel The Paptll Inst year's comet. Senator Manderson made no effort for Arthurin Nebraska either before orafter Vandervort was dis miseed. His personal preferance as faras could be ascertamned was John A, Logan, but the Logan boom in Nebraska collapsed in the arma of Senator Manderson's man Friday, Patrick O. Hawes. Theseare cold facts and the Washington fable writer of the Chicago 7Tribune in respectfully i vited to revise his story for the next edi- ion. Oxce and for all time we brand the statement thatthe editor of The Beroffer- ed his services to the Western Union Tele- graph company during the telegrapher's strike of last year, as an unmitigated falsehood. The charge is on a par with the exploded canard that the editor of The Ber was actually at work in tho Western Union office during the strike. Superin- tendent Dicky and Manager Rheem will bear us out in the statement that our only tender of services was an offer to handle and take press veport for The Bex if the company would run a wiro into The Bee office. In other words, rather than leave the patrons of The Bre without telegraphic news its editor offered to take dispatches from the West- ern Union wires in his own office. This was perfectly legitimate but Mr, Dickey for various reasons, known only to himself and his company, declined to place a wire at our disposal. This is all there was to the offer to work for the Western Union. It was fully understood at the time by the operators brotherhood, and no exceptions were taken by them. On the contrary they and their officers expressed the most cordial feeling toward the Bex, for the generous treatment it had accorded to them. The ‘‘operator at large,” who pretends to have discoy- cred in the Ber an enemy of telegra- phers, is either a man of straw created by malignant slanderers who desiro to justify their bushwhacking warfare, or he is a natural born fabricator, Tre democrats in the Fourth Iowa district are going to renominate and try to re-elect that old orank, Calamity Wellor. If the republicans of that dis- triot cannot name some man who will put “‘Calamity” down and walk over him, they had batter get out of politics alto- gother. The case fs a very plain one. Waoller hias made the very worst repre- sentative in congross that Iowa has sent there for many yoars. country store-keeper in the most remote region of Allamakee county who would not make a better one. the laughing stock and nuisauce in the house ever since he entered it. ambition has been to procure notoriety, and in that direction he has w onderfully succeedod. He has been His one In every other he has failed. The whole state of Towa ought to ris up to keep him forevermore at home, ExcEPT as matter of sentimens, it is not important to the farmers of Nebraska or to the people of the country generally, whother the owner of fifty thousand or o hundred thousand acres of Iand on our frontiers or elsewhere resides in London or New York.—ZLincoln Journal. Of course it is not. matter of sentimeut it is not important to the people of Nebraska that the peo- ple of any other part of the country are racked or robbed by any monopoly. But when it comes to saving the greater por- tion of the national domain for the peo- " | ple to whom it rightfully belongs, *‘sen- timent”’ becomes a vital matter. Oppo- sition to monopolies may be mere senti- ment, but it is a sentiment that is be- coming contagious and widespread. GENErAL HANCOCK has been heard from onco more. He has opened his mouth to utter more words of wisdom on the tariff, The tariff is General Hancock’s bost hold. In 1880 ho made himself im- mortal by the brilliant remark that tho tariff was ** only a local question,” In 1884 ho ropeats that profound observa tion, and adds that *“it ought to be seitlod outside of politics.” General Hancock soems to bo the only man in the democratic party able to grapple with the tariff question in a manner, statesmanlike Why don't the domocrats re- and bo rawardod witk: tho control of the [©061° his ability in this direction by nomivating h for president | ONE of the reasons why Auditor oung, of tho Union Pacific, sat down on the Union Pacific base ball club was But before the time for | that it had two games scheduled for Sun- electing delegates came the Arthur boom day during the coming season. began to flatten out. Senator Conger got |dows Auditor Young think of a railroad company that will, for the sake vf g few paltry dollars, oharter & men walked | u gung of p What X il train to fightera nnd murderous out at 2 o'clockin the 1gantic Frauds, lion Times of recent date ‘says one u!pum most gigantic frauds ever perpetrated in this section has been going 2rom | on in Gosper county, for the past three months, the ring leader and chief con- spirator being J. N. Reynolds,of Omaha, and who, it is alleged, has been assisted by R. G. King, who is connected with him in the land business, and A. N. Ward, 8. A. Fisk and G. T, Webater, of Homerville. The swindle was conducted in the following manner: Reynolds own- od several thousand acres of land in the neighborhood of the devil's gap, which, us 18 well known, is very poor land. He would offer it for sale to parti in the east by rermauting itin a plaus. able manner, and when they came out here tolook at their intended purchase thls would be shown some very fine land, The bulk of ‘biters” on this scheme have been from Red Oak, lowa, but they have dropped onto the game of Reynolds & Co., and propose to make it Means will be taken to warm for them, arrest all parties concerned if what has been stated against them is true. No Indian Massacre, Dexves, May 14 —There is no founda- tion whatever for the report sent out by special dispatches of the Indian massacre other than the sensational story published There is not a And except as a — ~ SOLID FOR SELF. The Condition of the inwa Delegation 10 the Natioual Conveation, The Blaine Men Blowing Loud to Keep Their Courage Up. A Strong ‘Minority Take a Share of the Fruits of Viotory. Congressional Aspirants Ripen= ingin the Different Distriots. An Interesting and Racy Review of Towa's Political Field. TOWA'S CAPITAL. Special Correspondence of The Bee Des MoiNes, Iowa, May 13.—The home hive may be in Nebraska, but Tuk Brg extonds its journeys into lowa and all around, gathering the material which will please the tastes of all. And now for a fow running comments upon things po- litical and otherwise in Towa. Since the holding of the two state con- ventions there is an apparent lull in po- litical affairs, though some of the papers are devoting much time to proving what has been 8o often stated and admitted, that “Towa is solid for Blaine.” Even the Register has to keep repeating in each issue that ‘“Iowa i# solid for Blaine,” for fear, apparently, that unless this is done some one might doubt the fact, so oft proclaimed. What are the facts any- how? There can be no doubt that the Blaine boom was energetically and per- sistently worked up in this state for months preceding the convention, and that a large majority of the delegates to the convention were in favor of the no- mination of the man from Maine. Butit is equally certain that a large minority were and are to-day OPPOSED TO THE NOMINATION of Blaine at Chicage, and this minority includes many of the most inflnential and hardest working Republicans in the state. They knew it was useless to try to stop this boom at present ; they could only check its force to some extent and endea- vor to turn it aside. Did they meot with any success in this! It must be confessed they met with a little The convention by a close vote, declared against positive instruc- tions. While the four delegates at large are all declared to be in favor of Blaine, yet others laugh and say there is only one, Clarkson, of the Register, who is a simon-pure, out-and-out Blaine man. The four will vote for Blame of course, but given a chance Hubbard, Stone and Donnan, as good judges say, would glad- ly break away and throw their votes for some other ‘‘coming man,” and there are at least half a dozen out of the twenty- two district delegates whom the Blaine managers ate even now regarding with SUSPICION AND DOUBT, Having no positive instructions to obey it is found theso delegates might quickly decide after a ballot or two that they had discharged themselves of all further obli- gations to vote for Blaine. And when Mr. Clarkson gives orders for another grand charge to save the day for his candidate, he may discover to his sorrow and disgust that some of his command have not only charged the enemy, but stayed there. Hon. John A. Kasson and Assistant Postmaster General Hatton were in at- tendance upon the convention, and though they did not obtain all they may have desired, yot it is understood_ they went away not altogether displeased with the results, Mr. Kasson was made per- manent chairman of the convention, de- livered the speech he desired to make, and more than this had the pleasure of hearing the committee report the resolu- tions, “written by himself, eudorsing President Arthur and his administra- tion, and declaring in favor of the high- est and stiffest kind of a protective tariff. Bemg thus persovally lcomplimented by being made the presiding officer, secur- ing the endorsement of the administra- tion, helping by resolution his friends, the manufacturers of the east, Mr. Kas- son may woll bo content without being sent as a delegate to Chicago. Here it should be said that Mr. Kagson will not be a_candidate for re-election to congress, and it is intimated that it need surprise no ono if after the Chicago con- vention he should resign his present seat in congress, for the purpose of accepting the high post of U. 8. Minister to Ber- L. Ho served several years in Vienna aud might desirve to try Berlin, Mr, Hatton also cluims to have done very well, and in boih his newspapers is claim- ing that lowa is NOT SOLID FOR BLAINE, "I'he state nominating conventions will not be held until August, giving the nu- merous candidates for state snd other of- fices plenty of time in which to work up their respective booms, There are plenty of them and there will be some hard fights before the nomiuations made. Iu the congressional districts it is surpris- ing how few republican candidates can now be named. In the first the under- standing has been that Mr, McCoid will retire, but there are at least one half dozen candidates for his succession, and more may spring up almost any day. B. J. Hall, if he wants it, will no doubt be the democratic nominee, ond district Murphy, the present mem- ber, will bea hard man to defeat. Speaker Wolf, of Cedar, can try his hand at it 1f he so desires, but it is said he is not anxious for that fight. In the third of course the gallant Col. Henderson will be a candidate for re-election and will be elected, though the democrats are claim- ing that they will run him hard with Jas. H. Shields, of Dubuque. In the fourth THE IRREPRESSIBLE will try for a re-election, but he should be easily defeated this time by some ood repablican, Senator Wm. Larra- o, of Fayetto, is mentioned, but he will not be acandidate this year; holding back to run for governor next year, and no better man or candidate could be CALAMITY WELLEK This | named aocount! is as reported to us by parties who claim to know, however, the other Certhinly he has | side may have statements of justification In the fifth district *‘it depends'” If the republicad, Wilson, is unseated and the democrat, Fredericks, is seated, then Wilson will claim & renomination and may get it. But the chances are that an- other wan will get the nomination, sud should there be & long wrangle in the convention it need surprise no one if Gov. Sherman was put’ forward as the republi- oan candidate, Fredericks will be the democratic candidate, if he so desirer, The sixth district is the home of Gen. Weaver, and the understanding is {hat Cook, the present member, must give way for Weaver, who will receive the sup,rt of greenbackers and democrats, S me of the latter may kick, but the bargan i made, and most of the goods will be de livered. Ex-Lieutenant Gov. Campbell, of Jasper,a good man and enervetic wotker, wants the republican nemination and would make it hot for Weaver. Other good men would take it and try to down the doughty greenback general. In this, the capital district, Kasson re- tires from the field, and the three prom- inent candidates for the republican nom- ination are Senator Smith, of Polk, State Treasurer Conger, of Dallas, and Dr. Bevington, of Madison, THE OUTCOME 1S DOUBTPUL, but it now looks as if the dootor may come out ahead in this very pretty aud interesting race. Congressman Hepburn is now serving his second term, and from appearances will have but little trouble in serving a third. His friends are con- fident that with him a re-nomination means a ro-election, The opposition aro talking much of what they will do by fusion and nnion, and Senator Gault, of Appanoose, is named as the man to lead the motley crew. And who is the republican who can and beat Congressman Pusy in: the Ninth? Wil it be Sapp, or Wright, or Chapman of Council Blutfs! Can Lafe Young, of Atlantic? John Y. Stone, of Mills is a fighter, Platt Wicks,of Shelby, is strong, Senator Logan, of Harrison, has frionds, and Major Andersen, of Fremont, stands before the public to-day in a different light than_ he did two years agor W ho is the winning congressman from the Ninth? In the Tenth and Eleventh the present members, Holmes and Struble will be re-uomineted and re-elected a8 a matter of course. There is little doubt the democrats and greenbackers will FUSE UPON AN ELECTORAL .TICKET, and perhaps upon a state ticket and make some arrangements of & mutually satis- factory character regarding their candi- dates for congress. The democratic and Double and Single Acting Power ano Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMPS Engine Trimmlugs, Mining Machinery,! Belting, Hose, Brass and Tron Fitting Steam Packing at wholesalo and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, OHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb. C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints Oils Varnishes and Window Glag OMAHA NEBRASKA. 6. A, Lindquesté& Co, IMPORTIN TAILORS, 1206 Farnam Street, FINE TAILORINE AT NODERATE PRICES Without exception we have this spring one of the finest lines of greenback leaders made this agreement months ago and both parties are carrying it out in good faith. There may be some growling and a few hitches, but republi- cans may as woll now as_hereafter make up their minds to face what is certatn to come. The opposition to the republican party in Towa will this year bo subsian- tially united upon state, congressional and county tickets, Wise men make preparation to meet and as far as possible control coming events; fools don't. What effect the _prohibitory laws going into effect in July will have upon the voies at the election following remains to b scen. Many good republicans ccntend the party has already lost all it can, or nearly all, from this cause. Let us hope they were right in their judgment, but at tho same time other republicansare frank in thoir expressions of fear that the end is not yet of this prohibitihn trouble. It is fortunate this is u presidential year, when the national affirs swallow up local aflairs, but the fact remains that many men care more about their beer and wine than_about presidents, cabinets, congress or office. WiNa. Sprine Woolens QB g m 4 | fi' - ———— A FIEND ARRESTED. b / How He Choked His Victim and Hung In the sec- | M Him Up—His Wife Informs on Him —Arrested in Nebraska, Tl LiNcoLN, May 14.—The mystery of what was known as *‘Sheatsley suicide,” which occurred at Tee Garden, Indiana, Dec. 13th, was unravelled tc-day by the arrest of Charles E. Lertz at Unadilla, TUME TRIED AND FIRE TESTE Sold with an Ahs_lut&o Gman_- Neb., by Dr. R. Neville, it 2 - e T i i b e dstecs t@fioi bm! g the Finest and hung the body in a barn, and, getting on § the coroner’s jury, so shaped matters as : 0 to get a verdict of suicide. His wife, 3 whom he told of the murder, went crazy LAN G E & FO IT l C K, 318-320 S. 13th St., near Farnam. for a time, and told the story on her re- Manufactured by the Michigan Stove 00., Detroit and Chicago. covery. His siater also told it, Neville went east with the prisoner to-day. SOLE AGE} STEINWAY, WEBER AND HARDMA B A W O & AND PACKARD AND SMITH American Organs! LARGEST AND BEST STOCK OF SHEET MUSIC Foreign and Domestic, in the City o 5o bOUNSESBLOCK 13th 8t JAMES Y. CRAIG, Landscape Gardener A Pool in Quids. SeriarieL, Mass.,, May 13.—Offi- cers of the New England Tobacco-growers' Association inaugurated a movement to secure the repeal of all internal revenue taxes on tobacco. The growers, packers, and the trade throughout the country are to unite in its favor, with assurance of co-operation from the New York Tobacco Board of Trade, and the movemennt started for coalition with southern and western politicians and tobacco men, Horxible Boiler Explosion. ALTooNA, Pa,, May 14.—This after- noon the boilers in" the Pennsylvania railroad machine shops exploded. ~ Hay- den O'Harra, one of the firemen, was blown to atoms, The other has not yet been found, Nine other persons were injured, R Utah and lowa in Marriage. Sarr Laxe, May 14 —Nellie D. Hun- ter, daughter of Chiof Justice John A. Hunter, was married to Casper L. Rob ertson, & banker of Arcolu, Lowa, to-day. They went east this evening. - Sanford’s Radical Cure, Hoad Colds, Watery Discharges trom the Noge aud Eyes, Rin n the tead, Nervous Head: h d utly relieved, *Choki meuibrane cleansed and swell, taste and bearing into the Throat, rostored, and ray N Coughis, Bronchitis, Droppi Pain in the Chest, Dyspepaia, Wasting of Strength and Flosh, Loss of sm&;m. cured. One bottle Radical Cure, ono box Catarrhal Sol- vent and one Dr. Sanford’s {nhaler, in one_ package, of all druggista, for §1. Ask for SANFORD' RADICAL Cuks, pure distillation of Witch Hazel, Am. Pine, Ca. Fir, Marigold, Clover Blossoms, elc. Porrss DRUG AND CHEMICAL C0.. Boston. (iCollius’ Voltale Electrio Plaster A instantly affoots the Nervous ystem and banishes Pain. A rtect Electrio Rattery com- Imported Beer All frin Ko Bolery o IN BOTTLES. 18 THE CRY 95 conts It annihilates Pain, 2 q or 3 Vitalizes Weak aud Worn Oub /¥ Erlanger,..... Bavaria, sul A REave M‘i Itdunnhenl |’Hnd um L o ‘f”') F‘LO}UST. Culmbacher, .. . Bavana. clos, soase, and docs more in one pecifications and estimates of cost of | il 7 time other’ plaster 1n the world. Boid | out new or semodelink ol lawne, prediont o Pilsner . ... Bohemian. overywher ste. will be furaishe | on app Kaiger. , «..Bremen. dealer 1 all kinds of Flowers, Snrubs, and Shade Trees. Just the thing for Lawn Decoration. Green House and Nurse: McCARTHY & BURKE, DOMESTIC. i Street, uear Fort Omabs. Cu Flowers avd Fi . : ing Plants (s poss for salo at all seasons, a1d sny | Bud weiser. . . ..8t, Louis. F1'ral Designs or Bouquets made up on the shortest i .St. Louis. il waukee. chlitz-Pilsner. Milwaukee. Krue's esias s iaasaDmahie Ale, Porter, Domestic and Rhine | Wine. ED, MAURER _ 1214 Farnan St. To those suffering from the “ [Sfecto "of youthial errorts Jsominal weakooess. ‘Ul = £, lost inanhood, etc., Twillsand you particy our address t0 V. simple and certaid m aoi'fi'v‘\r'l:fi?.' h Sodus, Conie Auhauser. ... BT 8440 notico. Ordors by wail hrompily atiended to. 218 14TH STREET, BET, FARNAM | dress P 0. Hox 695 Omaha, Neb. AND DOUGLAS, DREXEL & MAUL, UNDERTAKERS ! » the old stand 1417 Farnam stroet. Orders by tele Bieph solicited and promptly atte ted to. GEORGE J. ARMBRUST, S. B orner 22d and Cuming 8t, \TIN ROOFING GUTTERING, SPOUTING ETC, Onders will be promptly attended to.