Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 1, 1884, Page 4

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——— —————————————————————— — THE OMAHA Ommha OfMoe, No. 916 Farnam Se. ‘Oonncil Bluffs Offce, No, 7 Pearl St., Btreet, Near Broadway. New York Office, Room 65 Tribune Building. Published every mrorning,” exoept Sunday! only Monday morniog daily. The Ove_Year.. Bix Monns. .. 5.00 | One Month Per Woek, 25 Oonts. THR WRIKLY RNW, PURLISND NVRRY WEDNRSDAT. Ameriosn News Company, Sole Agente, o In the United States. CORRESPONDRNOR. A1l Communloations relating to News and Editoria mattors should be addressed to the Eprrom or Tnx - PUSINRSS LAvTERA, BEE | #40,000 for pontinuatior of the constrac- tion of the post-office at St. Joseph; 810,- 000 for the approaches, fencing and grad- ing connected with the court-house and post-office at Topeka; $10,000 for the construction of a macadamized road from Springfield, Mo., to the National ceme- tery near that city. Ox by one the millionaires, who have fraudulontly aoquired their immense wealth, are throwing up their hands and erying enough. The stocks, which they 8| have been inflating, continue to have a downward tendency, and have not yet reached low water mark. Again comes the report that . P. Huntington, of the Central Pacific, 1s hard pressed, and we should not be surprised to hear at any moment of his failure. Mrs. Colton, All Business Tetwors tand Remittances ‘should b %0 Tin Bun PURLSHING COMPAXY, QMAIA ks and Postoffoe orders 80 becwade PAY able to the order of the company. YHE BEE POBLISHING C0,, PROP'S B. ROSEWATER, Editor. A. HLEitoh, Manager Daily Circulation P. 0., Box 483 Omaha, Neb. Cowoxer Crase is mayor of Omaha no longer, but possibly he may be governor "". —_— Juxe hu-»oo;'o‘nnd gone, but the June rise in the Missouri river failed to put in an appearance. ProuIBITION goes into effect in Towa with » Fourth of July Hurrah, but it is a herrah that will move the tide of im- migration across the Missouri river. CouxciL BLurrers are cordially in- vited to come over to Omaha to get their Fourth of July refreshments. The price of mint julep has not been advanced. Usiox Pactrio stock, which was once quoted at $£1.30, has touched 30jc. ‘This is a worse tumble, in proportion, than that of the Wabash, which has dropped to .04c. 'k demand for fireworks in the wholesale houses has been very extensive this year, which shows that the country propose to celebrate, not- withstanding the financial collapse in ‘Wall street. Tue reports from all parts of our sister state of Towa shows that the crops are in splendid condition. There has never been a better crop prospect in that state, and the same can be said of Ne- braska. These two great states ought to produce enough corn and hogs this year . to feed the world. JounNy McLeax, of the Cincinnat! Enquirer, may be able to handle the democrats of Ohio, but when he at- temps to manipulate the national demo- cracy, he will ind that he has under- taken a contract which he cannot carry out. who is suing for a large amount, pro- poses to apply for a receiver of the stocks and bonds in custody of the Central Pa- clfic, and in her petition she will assert her helief that the Central Pacific is on the verge of bankruptcy, on account of reckless management, and furthermore that a movement is on foot to send out all stocks and bonds involved in litiga- tion. Mra. Colton probably knows what she is talking aboat. Tex summary tal sad conviction of Mayor Chase by the ity council on the charges preterted sgwimat him will be commended by &l ctisms who desire to see Umabs redeer mal-adminis- tration. Had Mayor Chase been pos- sessed of good sense he would have ten- dered his undoaditional resignation when the committee of the council requested him to withdraw. He should have known enough to know that his conduct of late has been such as to totally unfit him for further supervision of our city affairs, There was nothing else for the city coun- cil to do but toact promptly and firmly. Mayor Chase has hlmself alone to blame for the disgrace which has overtaken him. He has been going from bad to worse in his intemperate habits since his last election, and his ill-advised appointment of Guthrie brought with it a train of cor- ruption which planged him to depths of infamy from which there was no escape. When public men lose all self control and become reckless of their reputation re- tributive disgrace is bound to overtake them sooner or Tue fences must go. The sheriff of the Cherokee Nation, in the Indian ter- ritory, with a squad of Indians, is mak- ing a raid on the wire fences which have been put up by the cattle men. The sheriff is taking down and confiscating all fences enclosing more than fifty acres, that being the limit allowed by the Cherokee council. This procedure is eminently proper as the cattle men are trespassers upon the public domain, and have no right to fence it in. They have Brisery s not confused to any par- ticular locality or station. It is a taking disease, The federal grand jury at Madison, Wisconsin, has indicted Ool. George A. Henry, a timber agent, for receiving bribes to the amount of $2,000 ‘from trespassers. The money is said to have been lost at the poker-table. TaE womsn suffragists can obtain some/| ool comfort, during these hot days, from the fact that at n."' tion recently held at Clinton, N. Y.,- to determine whether water works should be estab- lished in tha,place, twenty-two women, who are tax payers, voted. Fifteen oth- ers offered ballots, but were not allowed to vote, as the assessor had left their names off the tax rolls, Counry offices in Colorado must be rather luorative positions. According to the Denver Z'ribune the annual income of the, officials of Arapahoe county, in which Deaver is located, is under the feo system, as follows: Sheriff $26,000; clerk $22,000; treasurer $19,000, Itis no wonder, under such a robbery of the tax-payers, that Arapahoe county cannot dispose of her bonds. Ixalato pumber of tho Cincinnati « Commercial Gazette we find this para- graph: “If the streets could only be done it in Texas, where serious trouble have arisen over the matter. They are doing it in Wyoming and western Nebraska. In Nebraska logal proceedings have been begun againat them, which means an indefiniet postgonement of the removal of the fences. The result will be that the method adopted by the Cherokees will have to be employed, sooner or later, by the white folks. The United States marshal has the authority and power to remove these obstructions from the public domain at any time by force, and we predict that even if the cases now in court should be decided against the cattle men, he will have to be called upon to forcibly remove the fences, which he might as well have done in the first place, The monopoly of large tracts of land by men who have no title to them will not be tolerated, especially in Nebraska, where much of the land now fenced in, in the western and northwes- torn parts of the state, is in demand for agricultural purposes, for which it is adapted. CALLING OUT 1HI MILITIA, The folly of calling out the militia to suppress labor troubles has again been demonstrated, this time in Michigan, The men employed in the lumbering town of Oscoda have been receiving theix matters much worse. Our sheriffl had made no real effort to keep the peace. He did not even summons assistants to his aid from among the citizens. Without exerclsing his power and ascertaining what he really would do in the premises, he called upon the military. Not until the civil power has been overthrown should the military be called out. It was 1o more necessary to summon the mili- tary in Omaha two years ago than it was in Oscoda, Michigan, a fow days ago. Not until the military arrived in O maha was there any actual violence committed, and had not the militia put in an appear- ance the trouble would all have been quietly sottled. THE FARNAM STREET OUI- RAGE, There is no longer any use of mincing matters in regard to Farnam street. The board of public works is mainly re- sponsible for the outrage in allowing Farnam street to be torn up from end to end, and remaining in that condition for weoks to the serious damage of the bus- iness men on that thnmugh?nre. Travel and traffic on that street have boen almost entirely cut of. Mr. Huge Murphy, the paving contractor, appears to be will- ing and anxious to goahead and push the work, but the street car company has ut- terly failed to puton an adequate force to lay its tracks. This company has treated the Farnam street folks shamefully. Instead of going upon another street and laying down a tempo- rary track, it has been allowed to occupy the north half of Farnam street with a double track, and the north half yet re- mains yet untouched by the gradents This will cause another serious delay. Notwithstanding the privileges granted to the company. it has failed in every res- pect to hasten its work, and has entirely ignored the business interests of the streot. What is the plain duty of the board of public workst It is either to compel the street car cowpany to use made sweet and clean, the alleys re-|pay in orders on the storesowned by their lieved of garbage and the gutters and|employers. This systom of course oom- sewers flushed, the poople of Cincinnati | pels the men to trade out their wages, would be willing to take thelr chances of | thus giving the employers the benefit of an attack of cholera.” This applies |their custom at outrageous profits, and equally as well to Omaha. The city mar- | forcing employes to buy goods that per- shal should at once order all the alleys, | haps they have no need of, in order to as well as other places where there is an | get their full pay, The employes pro- accumulation of filth or stagnant water, | tested vigorously against this system be- to be thoroughly cleaned. Even if|ing continued any longer, and finally there was no prospect of cholera this | they struck. It was immediately charged should be done as the city needs a clean- | that they were riotous and ing out at least once or twice a year. made threats against life and. property. — Without waiting to satisfy himself as to Tae sundry civil appropriations bill | whether such was really the case, when whick has passed the house abolishes the | in fact there was really no foundation for fees of United States marshals and pro- |the charge, Governor Begole, in ans. wides adequate fixed salaries for them in | wer to an appeal from the frightened all parts of the country, This action, if | sheriff and some of the employers, sent a it becomes law by the conourrence of the | large body of militia to the scene. Not- senate and the president, removes a|withstanding the fact that almost means of fraud that has been monstrous- | the entire population united ina petition 1y employed in not a few districts, Mar- | showing that there was not the slightest #hals will, under this bill, be obliged to | necessity for the presence of troops, and xeport the foes colleoted by them to the |asking that they be removed, the mi- attorney general, This report must|litia has been retained at Oscoda for tally with that of the clerk of the court, | several days at a heavy expense. How- follow in thirty days or the marshal's |issued for their withdrawal, salary will be withheld. The situation st 6 —— one very much of the ‘WasrERN cities have been liberally pro- | that occurred in the city of wided after all by congress. The sundry |two? years. The sheriff instead of sup- tains an eontinuing the construction ofize and coust-house st Q helfront at once, this i ritating bul not ter- Yilrewsicing the wor and & remittance of the amount must|ever, an order will probably soon be Oscoda reminds trouble Omaha wivil bill which has passed the house con- | pressing tho trouble, as we believe he of §60,000 for the | had the power to do, listened to the ap- of the custom-house and post- | peals of a few eminent but frightened office at Kansas Oity; and 855,000 for | citizens, and called on the governor for the constraction of the court- |troops. The governor without waiting post-ofiice at Lesvenworth; | to investigate the “‘outbresk” and learn 000 for the continuation of the post- | whether the civil authorities were pow- and court-house at Peoria; $40,000 }erless to quiet it, sent the militia to the reasonable diligence or to do the work for it. Something must be done immediately, or there will be a revolt on Farnam street that may cause trouble. People will not allow their business to be ruined much longer. They have stood it for two months, and their patience has been about exhausted. Every business man on the street has lost hundreds and thousands of dollars. They were willing to pay for the improvement of the streot, but they were not willing to sacrifice their business for a whole seas- on. We understand that the paving is tobe bogunat the west end of the street. Then why did not, the “excavating begin there instead of at the east end? And why was the whole street torn up? Why was not the work confined toa block at a time, beginning at the west end? It has been & bungling job from beginning to end, MUNICIPAL REFORM. Omaha is a corporation made up of tax- payers and property owners, and its bus- iness ought to be transacted in a business way. Municipal reform has not come a moment too soon. The work has been begun in the right way, and we should not stop simply with the change of mayor and marshal. There should bea thorough overhauling of the various departments of the city, in order to ascertain if the business is being conducted honestly and efficiently. Every employe should be compelled to attend strictly to busi- ness, and every man should be fully qualified to perform the duties of the place he holds, The first requisites to eniployment should be honesty, compe- tency, sobriety, and industry. No in- terests should be served so faithfully as those of the people. It is notorious that in many of the city departments persons are employed who are utterly unfit for the work assigned them. They have be- come nothing but mere pensioners upon the public orib. Itis about time that the system of pensioning certain persons for political services should be abandon- ed. In the public works department we find tailors, carpenters and shoe-makers endeavoring to perform duties about which they know absolutely nothing. How can they know anything about work which can be done only by stone-masons and brick-layers? Yet we have paving inspectors who domot know any more about paving than a jack rabbit does about book-keeping., There men on the police force who have neither intelligence nor discretion, or any other necessary quality for the important position, The police force is mainly eomposed of men who are supposed to have aided some of the city councilmen by their alleged poli- tioal “‘inflocence.” The same fast and loose system of personal and political favoritism seems to prevail in making the appointments in all the other depart- ments, The people of Omaha demand that, the the rules of civil service reform be ap- plied to our city government. Every competent employe should be retained in service during good behavior, and every drunken or incompetent employe should be at once dismissed, Removals should be made for cause and appoint- ments should be made only on account of qualification and good behavior, OmAHA, proposes to continue public improvements, but she must not pay two prices for them, grading contractors their bids ought to be rejected. Tux broom of reform isfsadly needed in Union Pacific headquarters. —— e General Swalm, WasiiNG 10N, June 30,—The president has ordered a court martial to meot at New York, September 11, for the trial of Judge Advocate eral Swaim, Genera! Schofield w.', be aoon, a0l AaAKiUg | prosiases vi v GOkt ST, 7 OMAHA DAILY B IR Y o POLITIOAL POP CORN, W Campaign sponges can be bought cheap. Dennis Kearnay has come out In favor of Blaine and Logan, The Plumed Knight's message is ripe, but it is not yet ready to be pulled, A California_newspaper. rofors to Biaine aa the “cyclone candidate.” Charles Francis Adams, Jr., calls Butler “Our own monumental mountebank.” Boston has boan famous for bolting ever since it played that tea trick on the Britich. Bob Toombs, of Georgia, is for Cleveland. This makes matters appear graver than ever, 1t i safo to aay that old Senator Brown, of Georgia, will never again monkey with the Kansna buzz-saw. nator Fry wishes he hadn't. Tt will bo some years bofore he gets to be s “bigger man than old Blaine.” Gen, Sherman has nover voted but once in his life and then ho voted wrong, he says. He will not try it again, Ttis now assortod that Logan knows a little Latin and less Greek, I once made the rebols walk Spanish, This man Gray, who has boen set up in In diana against Bill Callins—who is he, and what i ho there for, Soveral booms are now resting with fco bricks on their heads and bottles of champaign rhetoric within reach, Bold, bluff, honest, old Bon Butler is what the Fort Wayne Dispatch calls him, Bold, bluff and old he certainly is, Tho Independent will not bo allowed to wag the democratic dog at Chicago, 1t is to small a tail for that breed of dog. Mr. McDonald is willing that the other boys should have the bar'ls, 5o long as ho has the packing of the convention hall. _Governor Cloveland will pass the first_fort- night of July in the North Woods, N. Y. Atgor that he hopes to be out of the woods. John Kelly says the democratic ticket must be a “barrel and a soldier,” Barrols are plen- ty enough, The trouble is to find the soldier. John Kolley {s industriously whetting his little hatchet upon the doorstep of the capitol and hooting - *“Tam-tam-taminany Clove- land.” A Lodgs of Sorrow haa been n full blast in the St, Louis Republican office over since Samuel Jones Tilden throw up the presidential sponge, Tilden s called the Moses of the democratic party, and Cloveland the Joshus, The first thing Cleveland should do is to cémmand the Sun to stand still, ‘Thero ia one point upon which all the re- publicans agree, and that is that Tom Nast hna become *‘coarse, brutal, and vapid” since he and they rarted company. Yes, on the whole, Massachusetts must be classed s a doubtful state, Tho doubt is whether she will give Blaine and Logan 10,000 or 25,000 majority. We regrot to obsorve that Mr. Samuel J. Randall’s boom is no longer a drug in the market, On the conteaty I 1a. s soarco as tooth in a hon's mouth, or hair in a frogs ear, Governor Hoadly, of Ohio, told the Now York reporters the other night that ho didn’t know anything about politics, The gover- nor's statement seoms to bo fully sustained by history. Dr. Mary Walker has come out in_bold de- nunciation of Blaine and Logan. We aronot such bitter partisans that we would not rather enjoy o 500 the vivacious Miss Gall Hamilton hit her with the rolling-pin. {Thore {1 a growing susplcion, that boforo an- other new mioon rolls around, Mr. Charles A. Dana, the able editor of the New York Sun, will fonther outas a full-fodged G William Curtis of the democratic party. There is revival of the Bookwalter boom in Ohio. This is the natural outcome of the common democratic theory that a man who wears 17 collar aud o 6§ hat mustnecessari- Iy bo a good man for the presidency. If any one has heard anything from the superb Conkling as to his foelings in regard to the nomination of Mr. Blaine we will be grateful for snch information. We have a painful suspicion that Mr. Conkling, has gone ishing. There 18 still an impression in the minds of some good democrats that if the party will grab Tilden by the middl & him on its shouldors, and atart pell or the ' whito house, there will be no interruptions at the head of the procession. 1t is understood that R. B, Hayes s flood- ing the Ohio poultry market with alleged spring chloksus which hyvp, spurs on_their Tegs four inches long." Tif or§ way and anoth- or wo are constantly beltg punished for the great electoral crime of 1876, And now wo are told that James (i, Blaine is not a Catholic, nor a Presbyterian, nor a Methodjst,por » Congregationalist, nor » Bap- tist, nor a Unitarian,nor a Universalist, but o lineal descendant of the lost tribe of Tsrael, and that the Jows will voto for him in a solid body. You ask us why we are sad? Have you read the reports of the proceedings of the, In- diana democratic convention? ~Are you sware that 1,108 sat around in a big hall for ten hours and chewed tobacco and revived old tra- ditions and oalled up tho saintly ghost of Au- drew Jackson and did lots of other thivgs, yet nover onco broathed the name of Georgo' W. ulian? Mr. ———— Senator Van Wyck ot Nebraska, Justice, June 28, The state of Nebraska is to be congrat- ulated upon having such an honest, fearleas and able representative in that stronghold of the monopolists, the Unit- od States senate, Senator Van Wyck is not arraid to call things by their right names and he is able to do it in a parlia- mentary way which can nonplus even such a skilled parliamentary tactician as Senator Edmuns-, who last week under- took to shield the arbitrary action of the senate judiciary committee in arrogating to itself the authority of congress to reg. ulate the relations cxisting between the Union Pacific railroad company and the government, Having] exposed this high-banded piece of business, Senator Van Wyck showed that he had every de- siro to give the judiciary committee & chance to right itself and withdrew the matter, for the time being, from further discuesion, There has been too much star chamber committee work done at Washington for the public good, and the services of such representatives as Sona- tor Van Wyck in exposing them are simply of priceless value to the commuu- ity. If our legislators were all like him there would be fewer hundred million. aires and fower tramps throughout this country, e — TO RUN UNDER WATER, A Little Boat with Fins, and Bearing Torpedoes Fore and Aft, New York Sun, In the boiler room of the Delemater iron works, at the foot of West Thir- teenth street, a dozen men are building an iron steamboat of peculiar design, and have about all the plates riveted in place. 1t is 30 foet long over all, 7} broad, and o deep, The model is very sharp where the water is divided, while the run aft will give solid water to the wheel. It looks much like substantial steam launch, except the side frames are carried up and arched over the top to form the rounded deck, which wholly covers the hold ox- cept at & round hatoh in the ocenter, At this hatch a well is to be constructed, with a door in one side leading into the hold, On each side of the keel enough lead will be placed to load the vessel to the water's edge, after all the machinery, stores, etc, are on board, Thereare a number of small compartments which can be filled with water and emptied at the pleasure of the crow, and by this means the vessel can be sank to any depth below the surface. Over the water-ballast compartments, on each side and beneath the floar, are » | uumber of six iuch wou tabes which will B e N EE--TUESDAY JULY 1, 1884, be filled with compreased air, to be lib- erated as the air grows foul with the boat. % The motive power is electricity, farn. ished by storage batteries which will turn the propeller by a common dynamo, In- candescent Jelectric lamps will furnish light. The boat is steered to port or starboard by a common_rudder, while a horizontal rudder or fin on each side of the stern post will elovate or depress the stern, and thus shove the vessel fur- ther from or nearer to the surface, inde- endent of the action of the water bal. ast pump. The inventor, Mr. J. H, L. Tuck, says that she will attain a speed of eight knots an hour, and can travel a hundred miles with her ordinary storage batteries. A hand crank is also fitted for turning the propeller shaft, by which a slow speed could be obtained. The well hole in the center of the boat is fitted with an air-tight hatch, which can be removed from within, Any one of the crew wishing to go on deck when the boat is below the surface has only to dress in an ordinary diver's suit, with air rubes connecting with the interier of the boat, enter the well, close the door, grad- ually fill the well with water, and then remove the hatch. In the well are suit- able devices for directing the man at the wheel as well as those in charge of the apparatus for elevating, lowering, and proral]in the boat. When leaving the well the hatch is closed, the water runs into the water ballist compartmente, and then the man opens the door and removes his armor, In warfare a large torpedo can be at- tached to each end of the boat, with a * | strong insulated wire connecting the two together, and with an electric battery in the boat. To apply the torpedoes to the bottom of a ship the boat has only to run beneath it. When directly athwartships under her keel, the pilot in the well hole can loosen the torpedoes and allow them to rise under the bilges of the ship. Then he can run his boat ahead a safe distance and explode the torpedoes, 1f desirablo a small cupola, with glass windows and fan electric lamp, can replace the well, and the boat can be operated from within. The boat is designed to remain under water without inconvenience to the crew for forty eight hours, buta rubber-tube device will ba attached by means of which air can be drawn from the surface of the water under ordinary circumstances. A small mercury indicator will show the boat’s distance below the surface. The power of storage batteries to pro-} pel a yacht has been amply demonstrated in a number of experiments, the latest of which was on May 12, On that day Messrs. Farron & Co., of Poplar, En- gland, ran a forty-foot launch at a high speed for six consecutive hours by means of Sieman’s dynames and Fauer-Sellon- Volckmar batteries. As long ago as 1801, Falten, the steambcat inventor, construct- ed a submarine boat, with which he re- mained under water over four hours. In view of these facts, Mr. Tuck asserts that the building of a successful subma- rine hoat involves only matters of details, and these, he believes, he thoroughly un- derstands. A trial trip will bs taken in about six weeks. GENERAL PRENTISS, One of His Auditors Who Thinks “The Boys” Deserve a Word of Praise, Too. To the Editor of Tur Bek. Tecumses, Neb., June 27.—Believing that you are laboring for what is right, true and honorable, sI wish to say that Brigadier General Prentiss was here last night lecturing on the battle of Shiloh, or Pittsburg landing. I listened to his talk attentively, and to the best of my discernment discovered that his chie faim was to establish the fact, that he fought nobly and held the old road till the sun went down, He evidently desires to establish his own bravery. He entirely forgot to say any thing of the bays who stood by his blunders in holding the “‘old road,” wero captured and did not fare so well. I write this in behalf of the G. A. R. boys, who are liable to be taken in'by this fraud, who did not know enough to fall back in line with the bal- ance of the army at the time when it was safe todo so and save about three thousand men from being taken prisoners. My only object in writing this is to save grand army men from being taken in by his “‘royal niba,” A LISTENER, T — Cutting Down Expenses, ‘Vice-Président Caldwell, of the Nickel Plate, said the other day to a Clevelend Leader roporter: “‘One of the hardest things about railroading is the discharging of employes, when business begins to fall off. Ore sees overy fow days notices to the effect that a large number of men from some shop have been discharged, Now, these men have probably worked at one branch of the business so long that they will find it almost impossible to get other work. It has often been suggested that, instead of discharging employes,the hours of work be lessened, but it is a curious fact that the very persons whom this move is intended to benefit are the very first to become restless and dissatisfied, when it is resorted to. The great strikes of 1877 undoubtedly grew out of the cut- ting down of pay and hours of work of the shop and wrack hands of eastern roads. The feeling seemod to be that no bread at all was better than half a loaf. Each man flatters himself that he will not be the only one to go when .a reduction of the working force is ordered. - He de- ends upon the friendship ofsome section gon, or the favor of the foreman in the shop, to retain his position. If his head does happen to drop, he goes, as a rule, nore wllringly than he will submiv to & cut in his wages,” e — She Asked Too Much., Detroit Free Press, As they were leaning over the gate he whispered to her that their married life mmlse be one long honeymoon, He hoped to dio if he would ever say any- thing to eause her one moment’s happi- ness. “We'll live In a cottage?” she asked. “Yos,"” ““With a lawn in front?” ““\ g8, & nice lawn."” “*And we'll play croquet?” “Y.e-8."” “‘And you'll let me beat you every timet" “‘Ho was silent, His breast heaved and he clutched the gate with iron grip. . **Go hence—you do not love me!” she screamed at him, *‘I know you'd move your ball and lie about gding through the arches, Good-night forever.” He looked after her until the front door slammed and then he turned away with the remark: o Sxar or N, O, Tobacoo—finest'in the land, WHAT IS DYSPEPSIA? Among the many symptoms of Dyspepsia or indigestion the most ] prominent are: V. ay, faint, gnawing feeliig at pit of the "‘"‘ stomach, with uneatisfied craving ‘ > for food;heartburn feeling of weight | Fatoyridioe and wind in the stomach, bad breath | fengihen and shorten according o the wela bad taste 1n the n.outh, low spirits, ‘:'fi']“;’ml‘l?""lv}"w's,‘\.}:.':”é'.?‘su general prostration, headache and atent constipation. There is no form of disease more prevalent than dys Timken. Patentes, St. Louls. Ho. Uilkeda aiey ABBOTT BUBGY CO. : SMOKE THE BEST.. sia, and none so peculiar to the high- o~ living and rapid-eating American people. Alchohol and tobacco pro- duce Dyspepsia; also, bad air, rapid eating, ete. BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS will cure the worst case, by regulating the bowelsand toning up the digestive organs. Sold every- where, TIMKEN SPRINC VEHICLESY GOLBEN VIRGINIA, PERI which wo are using in O 1O JUST OUT—-SPORTSMANS CAPORALY | ufuetured by special request, o - LY ~ KINNEY TOBACCO CO.,' Buccessors to Kinney Bros., New X W. A. CLARKE, Superinandent Works 17TH & 18TH STREETS RICHARDS & CLARKE, Proprietors. l Omaha !Fgr] U. P. RAILWAY, - a MANUFACTURERS CF AND DEALERS IN Steam Engines, Boiler WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, Mill and Grain Elevator Machinerv MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Celebrated Anchor Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth STEAM PUMPS STEAM' WATER AND GAS PIPE. BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON. CDELL ROLLER MILL, “TTIN ¥ATT0Y TTIIAO ‘We are prepared to furnish plans and estimates, and will contract for the erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing Flouring Mills, from Stone to the Roller System 457~ Kiepecial attention given to furnishing Power Plants for any pur— pose, and estimates made for same General machinery repairs attend promptly. Address RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omahs, Neb PROPRIETOR OMAHA PAPER BOX FACTORY, 108and 108 South 14th Street, Omaha, Nebraska. *Correspondence Solicited.” HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wil Pager and Window Sha EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED 1118 FARNAM STREET, . . OMAHA, NEB Double and Single Acting FPower ano Hand POMPS, STEAM PUMPS Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings, team Packing at wholesale and retail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCE AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th !’f.rna.m 8t., Omaha Neb. C. ¥. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist ! AND DEALER IN e Tt " 5%, Ef'*"'”!Paims, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass GHAHA, WEGARASKA N D i N &

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