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4 [ i OMAHA DAILY BEE--- v WEDN ISDAY JULY 23 1884 e —————— { CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000 o Tickets only 85, Shares in Proportion X Deld ki Lonisiana State Lottery Company. “ We do Nereby aortify that e superviee the oo men m”-,u tlv”'tmllfly gnd Semi Annua : the Lowisiana State Lottery Company eon Serion 8 nd control the Drawingy ame are conducted 14tk ood faith toward all par Aonesty, /i ties, and e avthorize the company to use tAa cer riflcate, with fac-similes of our ignatures attached omnents.” W ita adver: Cowmansronmg Tncorporated In 1808 for 25 yoars by the I for educational and chariiable purposes—wilh ¢ cap. X d of over $560,000 has sinoe beon added. By an nnr-h-lmln: popular vole Ite franchise ‘was made a part of the present state constitubion adopted Deoember 24, A. D, 1879. The only Lottery ever voted on and en- dorsed by the people of any State. Tt never scales or postpones. Ita grand single number drawings take place monthly. A splendid opportunity to win a Fortune Eighth Grand &)r-wlnu Class H, in the Acad- emy of Music, New Orloans, Tuesday, Aug, 12th, 1884—-171st Monthly drawing. OAPITAL PRIZE, §75,000. 100,000 Tickets at Five Dol Each, Frac sions, n Fifths in proportion, LIST OF P) ++ 875,000 . 98, 1067 Prises, amounting to. .. cation for rates to olubs should be made only o office of the Company In New Orleana. For furiher information write oloarly giving fal addross. Make P. O. Money Orders payabie nc address red Lottors to HEW ORLEANS NATIONAT, BAN New Orloans, Postal Notes and ordinary lotters by Mall or Ex proas (all sunis of 5 aad upwarda by Kxpress at ous expenso) 4o M A DAUPHIN, orM. A. DAUPHIN, Now Otloans. La, 607 Seventh 8t., Wash'ngton, D. C. i Summer Resort Of the Northwest, Detroit, Minn. A country of WOODS AND LAKES, 200 miles west of 8. Paul. Tareo trains daily on tho N. P. R. with 30 Day Excursion. Tickets at about one-haif rates. 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Bend af diress Wide-Awake Agents Wanted Everywhere for NOTED WOMEN 3 Madison Bt., Ouicago | in earnest that he would, 1f president, THEONLYTRUE | IRON Vi SR Byw | composed, ws was admitted, of the best i UTH, B :,u-:i-n-"hufi'x s, tuscics an font At LA 10 el six wil 16 sato wad exlon. 1d rigiual, Do ot experis ND BEST. r. Hartar Med " C.A. POTTER, LAW REPORTER ! i wok Omaha, Neb, ew Dictations, Eto., prowptly stten A CREAT SPEECH. Senator Hoar’s Address at the Repub- lican Ratification in Boston, July 15, The Southern Shotgun Method the Main Prop of Demooracy: TheWages of American Workmen Under the Republican Tariff. A Soathing Review of the Eco- nomics of Alleged Reformers and Independents, The Great Achievements of Blaine and Logan in Civil and Military Lite, In accepting your invitation I am con- scious of no personal interest or personal desire other than to give to the people of Massachusetts honest and faithful coun- sel. I am here to utter no party cry—1 bring no sneer at those whose judgment a8 to their duty may differ from my own. You are about to perform a great part, possibly a decisive part, in a groat act, with great and far-reaching consequences. You come of a great race, from which you have inherited the sense of duty and the instinot of honor, The men of Mas. sachusetts now for nearly three centuries have been builders of states, rulers of states, proservers of states. They have been wont to be governed by considera- tion, no% only of what is petty or per- 9% | yonal or temporary, but of what guides great currents of history and determines the well-being of generations and masser of men. Who, as he looks backward, cares now for the petty criticism and scandal which have followed the steps of the great leaders of past generations. The Puritans had their faults, enough of them, as the explorers of the abandoned sowers of old times are ready the tell you, but all we care to know to-day is that they builded their commonwealth on foundations which have sustained an em- pife. The men of the revolution had their sins, in measure quite as abundant r3 any of thelr successors, But we think of them only as men who mamtained the independence of their country. It is said that Mr. Jefferson was AN AMBITIOUS PARTY LEADER. But he comes down in history with the Declaration ot Independence in one hand and the title deed of Louisianain the other. We are a people of fifty-seven millions, We occupy a domain about as largo as all Europe. ~ It is natural that there should be many questions about which even a majority do not think alike, But we stand with that party with whom we are agreed as to the great essential matters upon which the welfare of our csuntry depends. The question, compared to which every other is petty and trifling, is that of the supremacy of the constitution it- self. 1 know net what others may thiuk, but I cannot stand in Faneuil hall in honor, when I know that in great states the right of suffrage is practically denied o age. tions, to my countrymen, 1 donot think my own right to vote for president is of much value if the man of my choice i be defeated by such proceesses as preva at the South. There are three states, Mississippi, Louisiana and South Caro- lina, to say nothing of others, in which beyond all question, the electoral vote recorded at the coming election will have no relation whatever to the will of their people. Unless the brave and gallant white men who are acting with Mahone can win justice from the fears of the democrats, we must add to these states Virginia. Theso three states cast 20 electoral votes; with Virginia they cast 40. Now, giving to Gov. Cleveland all the states that his most enthusiastic sup- porters can hope for, he fall far short of election unless the votes of these states, wrested from their republican majori- ties BY CRIME AND FRAUD be counted in his favor. The young ro- former who votes for Gov. Oleveland cannot help to eloct him, Ho oan only help to mako possible the sucoessful ac- complishment of the crime by which & minority shall usurp the government of the country. The pracess is very simplo and familiar. It is known as the Mississippi plan. Vio- lence and muzder are made use of until the minority get the election offices into their hands, thenceforth the ascendency is maintained by the easlor way of tissuo ballots and fraudulent counting. Thess things will scarcely bo denied by a south. orn democrat in private. The leading democratic papers in each of theso statos 1 have named, the Charleston News, in South Carolina, the Now Orleans Picay- une in Louisiana, the, Richmond State in Virginia, the Vicksburg Post in Missi ippi, have in substance admitted these facts, and all but the last have vindicat- od them as a necossity. You tell me Gov. Cloveland {s not responsible for these things, You know very well that he is seeking to obtaln the presidency at with two sons in college, and two grown daughters in his house. He was gener ous, brave and a liberal benefactor of schools and charches. No man ever asked him for a favor and was refuse The demooratic witnesses testified that evorybody liked him if it were not for his politics. ~They drew up in the road near his gate and sent bim a demand in writ- ing that he should tain from voting the next day. He answered the messen- ger: “It soems to mo thisisa very strange thing in a republicangovernment. T have tried to be useful to zociety every way that I could. I have nevar done any of you any harm. I admit it is in your power to murder me, but I am go- ing to vote to-morrow unless you do kill me.” Matthows went to the polls and cast the first vote in the morning. As he placed it in the box, Wheeler, who was the democratic ohallenger, SHOT HIM DEAD with the charge of one barrel in the heart and another just below the throat. The sound of the gun was heard by Mat- thews' wife and daughter as they sat in the porch of their home. There was a mass-moeting the next day, in which exultant resolutions were nassed declar- ing that if any attempt were made to revenge Matthew's death, his relatives should be held responsible, warning his family to keep out of politics in future, declaring that *‘Copiah shakes hands with Yazoo,” and adjourning to meet at the call of the chairman of the demo- cratic committee, Yazoo is the county 80 notorious for election frauds and crimes, where Dixon was shot in the back a fow years ago. These resolu- tions were in the handwritting of the democratic district attorney. Bailey, the second in command, made a boast- ful speech, describing the method by which they had carried the county. He drew a pistol and said, **We took along something like this. It is the best method of electioneering I have ever seen, If those men who have left us do not come back to us, 1 believe you will kill them out without my advice.” Wheeler, the murderer, was made city marshal of Hazlehurst a fow weeks after, and Bailey, his lieutenant, is, I am told, the democratic candidate for prestdential elector, Such, my innocent college president and venerable doctor of divinity, is the way your democratic allies treat inde- pondgnt movements in Mississippl. But they 8ay, ““What are you to do about it? These things are incurable.” I know thero are difficulties in punishing theso offenders without interfering with local welf-government. But if you give us both houses of congress again we will find a remedy. But you can at least re- fuse to join the mob. You can at least make the power of your moral disapprob- ation felt. You can at least refuse to reward the authors of these crimes with the supreme power. You can see that the democratic doctrine *‘to the victors belong the spoils” is not applied on a national scale where the victory is of Mississippi shotguns and the spoils is the prosidency. Another question, next in dignity, is that of the WAGES OF THE AMERICAN WORKMAN. We do not accept the teachings of that political economy with its tidings of de- spair, which tells us that it is the lot of the workman forever to toil for bare life, Wa believe this country is governed, is to bo governed and ought to be governed by the men who work with their hands on the farms and in the shops. Unless theso men shall have a return for their labor, which shall bring them leisure, comfort, education for their children, they cannot preserve the qualities needed for citizenship, and the republic must fall, There may boa great and power- ful nation on this continent on other terms, but there cannot be a great repub- lic. This end can only be secured by the maintenance of the American system. The price of many other shings, the rates of exchange, are, in the artificial ar- rangements of commerce, determined in (ireat Britain. We do not propose to annex American labor to that market. We believe that by a judiclous system of protection, framed for that purpose, this result can be and is secured, and that ag- riculture, manufacture and commerce will alike be benefited. In that belief Hamilton, Madison, Jetterson, Webster, Clay, Lincoln, almost every American tatesman whose fame has survived the sound of the earth on his coffin, in that bolief almost overy employer of labor and almost every man who labors him- self, concur with us, A few theoretic economists, a few college professors and the great bulk of the owners of planta- tions and slave labor differ with us, We propose to debate that question with them and take the verdict of the Ameri- can people. The republican party has nominated its candidates and framed its platform. Your delegates, in obedience to what they bolieved to be the wishes of their constituents, voted for a distinguished statesman from Vermont. But we are bound to say that there was never a nomination made under circum- stances more entitled to respect. The unit rule, which formerly threatened to trammel the free choice of the peopie, was overthrown. The holders of office were in almost solid column for another candidate. I do not believe that until within a few days Mr. Blaine either songht or oxpected the result. 1t was THE IRREPRESSIBLE ACT OF THE PEOPLE who *‘had eyes and chose him,” Look at the states and the communities who have made this choice, They are the the price of these things. If he were to declare in a manner that showed he was use the powers vested in him for their suppression, or if he should declare, as an honest man should do, that he would not take an office gained by such means, he could not get a democratic vote south of Magon and Dixon's line, My trionds, I know whereof I speak, 1 was charged a fow months ago with the duty of investigating the election meth. ods in tho state of Mississippi. It was not a question of negro supremacy. Some 600 or 700 white men IIICF GOT TIRED OF THE DEMOCKACY and had joined the republicans, to form an independent party in Copiah county, Miss. A band of 160 men, all democrats armed with rifles and shot guns- , rode about that county for a fortnight before election, They visited the dwellings of large number of republi- cans in the night time. Some they mur. very flower of America. You have thought that an educated poople was fit to choose its own rulers. Maine and Iowa standing at the head of civilized commu- nities in this respect, led the column for this nomination. The states of the great froe Northwest, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, the first born of our freedom, Kansas and Nebraska, fruits of your later confliot with the slave power, the agricultural portions of New York and Pennsylvania, doing. Mr, Blaine, if we except our groatest soldiers, has been for nearly 20 yoars the most conspicuous personal bresonce in the country. He has dwelt in his simple American home in Augasta aud Washington with wife and children. Into the inmost recesses of his life s blazing light has bean conatantly povred. He is the chofoe of what is best in charac- ter and what is most progressive in opinion throughou® the whole cmmtrg_ Gentlomon tell us that he has done noth- ing of memorable public service. T had thought otherwise. 1 had thought him one of the very greatest of the great leaders who had conducted the American people along the difficult pathway of danger and of glory which they have travelod for the past 20 years. I had thought his hand was found in the fram. ing of the 14th and 15th amendments. I had thought, indeed I had known, that ho was in the very inmost councils when the resumption act was framed, and that his influence carried it through the house over which he presided. I had thought that he had been speaker of the House of Representatives during six crowded and eventful years. 1 had thought that among the great orators of the country he had been of the very groatast and most persuasive in the debate which satisfied the American people to take up theheavy burden of the debt to keep its currency undepressed and its credit safe. I h thought that when, In Maine, the am- bitious larceny of the democratic party undertook to pilfer a whole state govern- menh at once, it was his leadership that by peaceful and lawful methods, bafiled the couspiracy and saved the state. I remomber, too, the next year when the republicans had the temptation to re- wliate in kind and excludo Goyv. Plaisted by technical objections, it was Mr, Blaine who said, *‘One majority for Mr. Plaisted shall beo as good as a thousand.” They say Mr. Blaine is a “jingo.” He is just such a ‘jingo” as was John Quincy Adame, THE MA OF HIS DETROCT )88 brings against his personal integrity a single charge which is supported by no prosf and refuted by every witnsss who knows the facts, and a single | hase in a letter which is fully susceptible of an honest construction. Tt is said that the president of the United stated ought to be like Cmsar's wife, above suspecion. I have one thing to say about Ciesar, Cwesar did many base things; among thom was the destruction of the liberties of his country; but he never did a baser thing than when he abandoned his wife besause somebody slandered her. I wish to say a word concerning Mr. Blane’s associate on the ticket, whom for 15 years I have had abundant opportuni- ty of knowing,Gen. Logan’s opinions and character have been a constant growth from the time he entered public life as a democratic representative srom Egy{;t 30 years ago. I havanot explored, but I have no doubt if you were to look back among forgotten record, you would find many opinions that he exnressed and many votes that he gave with which you and I should have little sympathy. But what of that! He was born azain in the day of the great regeneration. He went through that baptism of fire and blood, and ever since has been true as steel on every question of patriotism and free- dom. He is the type and representative of the American voluateer soldier, He entered the war a private. He came out the highest in rank and the most famous of all the men who enlisted from private life. Ever since the people of his great state have kept him in public service in House and Senate, until the other day she presented him at Chicago as her can- didate for the highest oftice. 1f anybody questions Gen, Logan's civil capacity, 1 should like to have him try hiehand aten- countering him in debate. There is ONE ACT IN GEN. LOGAN’S HISTORY which if there were no other, would en- title him to the very highest place in our admiration and reverence. You remember when Sherman started for the sea, Hood, with a large rebel army was in the rear. George H. Thomas, the rock of Chicamauga, commanding the army of the Cumberland, was ordered to attack. The prudent general delayed and “delayed, until the authorities at Washington got out of all patience and ordered Logan to repair to Thomas’ head- quarters and supercede him in his com- mand. Logan, when he came to the scone of action and examined Thomas's ispositions found that the great fabius was right and wise. You know the in- tensity of the passion for military glory. Gen. Logan could have carried out his orders, taken advantage of Thomas's dis- position and won hims 1£ one of the most brilliant victories of the war, which would have had a double lustre from the seeming lukewarmness of his prodecessor. But bis generous nature disdained the injustice, He postponed the execution of his orders, and left Thomas in his com- mand, The result was the battle of Nashville, and the annihilation of Hood. Where in military story wili you find a brighter page than that! That one act of magnanimous self-denial gave to Am.- erican history two of its brightest names —the name of Thomas and the name of Logan, - I'see the president of Havard tells his neighbors that the platform 18 IMMOBAL AND DEMAGOGICAL, Well, I .ffer with the worthy presi- dent. 1 hope every citizen of Massa- chusetts will make himself familiar with the platforms of both parties. The re- publioan platfora states squarely and cleanly what o majority of republicans think. It cannot be expected that the representatives of a continent should not diffor on some important questions. But the platform declares the henest belief of honest men, The eivil-sorvice plank was drawn by George William Ourtis, and that about the surplus by Cabot Lodge. President Eliot thinks the civil- service resolution is not honest. Waell, I would rather stand for civil-service roform with the men who passed the law of last year, with Edmuads and Bowley Oregon and Washington, the larger New England which is coming into line on the Pacific, It is these whose free voices have spoken, Lot me read to you where the votes came from: California 16 nols 34, Indiana 30, Towa 24, K as 18, Maine 42, Michigan 26, Minnesota 14, Nobraska 10,2New Jersey 17, Ohio 40, Oregon 6, Pennsylvaniadl, Rhode Island 7, Wisconsi , New York 32; total 365, These are 860 of the 411 votes which made & choice. Fellow cttizens, this i *he nominatian of what is best in human society the round world over, It is the nomination of the great free states, It is dered in their homes. Others were flog- yed and otherwise abused. From many they extorted plodges that they would vote the democratic ticket. The broke up republican meetings, They made night hideous with cannon, This went ou till the republican votersin large num- bers fled to the woods, and the demo- cratio minority had an easy victory at the election, The commander of this band was one Wheeler and his licutenant one Dailey. The day before the election the armed company waited upon Print Matthews, the leading republican of the county, Matthews was the principal ociti- zen of the county, s wealthy merchant the nomination of the church and of the sohool house, It is the nomination of the men who own and till their own farms. It is the nomination of the sol- dier, of the men who went to the war and stayed all through, It is the nomination of the men who saved the nation's honor. It is the nomination of the men who SAVED THE COUNTRY IN WAR and who have made it worth living i oace, This, fellow citizens, is the ** eifls James G. Blaine,” and John Sherman and Dorman B. Eaton, than with the men who retired Pendle: ton to private life, President Eliot does not like the Chinese resolution, 1 quite agree with him, I like the declaration of independence better, But 1 am sOrry to say that the polily of Chinese exclusion is in accordance with the opinion of & largo majority of the American people of both parties, We must submit to it till we can convert them, President Eliot expresses the sentiment of a little body of men about Cambridge —I am happy to believe he does not re- present the college—whose influence, in my judgmwent, has tended lnfinitely to degrade the public lifo of the common- wealth. These men have taught our educated youth to be ashamed of their n history. They have told them that “since” the clese of the war there has been no time when a young man knew how he could honorably serve his ~ountry.” They ‘were preaching in the samo strain during the war, and before in | the war. THEIR EYES ARE MICROSCOPES P rail'of the republican party that surcounds | which can see a blemish on the skin, but cannot take in a fair landscape ora The people knew well what they were (healthy human figure, They can find no statesmanship and no public virtue in the payment of the debt, in the settle- ment of the currency, in the return to apecio paymont, in the sublime clomency that dealt with the conquered after the war, in the great self-restraint of the Alabaina treaty. in the miraculous de- velopment of our manufacture, in the creation of our great domestic commerce. in the peaceful settlement of the dis- puted presidential succession. There is hardly a man who has taken any of the rosponsibilities of public life who has not been compelled to undergo the contempt- uous oriticism of these gentle hermits of Cambridge. It has been so from the beginning. Even the men whom they are now most eager to praise, and whose examples they cite to show the decay of modern statesmanship—they dealt the same measure to in their time—John Adams and his illustrious son, Sumner, Andrew, Wilson. As they erect their maunsoleum to each, they should write over it the inscription, ‘‘Our fathers stoned this prophet and we build his sepulchre.” ut President Eliot has been REFLECTING UPON THE TARIFF. 1 think I ought to detain you a moment more to give you his contribution to that disoussion. Ho says to his Cambridge audience : — ‘Then this platform says a great many wrong things for the sake of trapping votes in Ohio and elsewhere, about tariff legislation, That is a ticklish subject, gentlemon, and perhaps you wish I would not say anything about it. It is disputed question, and for that very reason I beliove that a political party which is undertaking to have a profound interest in the country hes got to commit itself on that ques- tion claarly and distinctly [applause], and I am perfectly sure that the young men of this country are going to divide into two camps on that question. [Applause.] And they are going to divide with ardor in the spirit of a strong intellectual combat, The young men are determined to have a clear is-ue on that subject. I dare say it is not yet time to make a clear statement of that subjact, but there is one principle which T believe in, namely, that the tariff ehould be so treated that the im- posts which now proyent American industry from entering on like torms into competition with the rest of the world shall be gradually removed. [Applause.] We have here, right here in Cambridge, plenty of illustrations of the prejudical effects of these imposts which provent our people from competing on_equal terms with other nations of the world, learned from a merchant friend of nins that Mr. Ivers had a valuable trade with Australia in Wazons, and shortly after I went up to Mr, Ivers and congratulated him on his trade with Australia. *‘Well, that is all stopped,” said he. Isaid: ““What's the matter? Didn't the wagons suit them? , ves, they liked them so well that that the lishmen got all the patterns, and now supply the wagons to Australia.” That is to say, the imposts on Mr, Iver's raw materials used in his manufac- ture Jost him the trade, Our imposts made here by American legislation lost him business he would otherwise have commanded. 4 here are thousands of similar crses. THIS IS A VERY SERIOUS MATTER and T have taken pains to search it to the bottom. Mr. Ivers made for export two kinds of buggy wagon, ono open_costing 8175, one covered costing $350. The only imported articles entering into it are two yards of cloth for trimming, the best costing §3 per yard; 55 pounds Swedish iron, costing four or five cents a pound; the duty on the cloth would be $2 30; the duty on the iron, 50 cents: outside limit of duty $2.80. For both these American material is frequently substi- tuted. On both I have stated the out- side limit. On both he can get his draw- back. But let us deal with President Elliot with entire candor. The other stock entering into the buggy is as fol- 1ows: 44 pounds of steel tires cost four cents per pound; iron axles 60 pounds for a sot; wood, hickory for spokes and rim, elm tor hub, white oak for body and shaft —all of domestic productton, $30; paint, a pound for a carriage, 35c; one quart of varnish; leather for open buggy, £10; covered buggy, $20. 1Itis barely possi. ble that the price of the iron axies and steel tires, though of domestic manufac- sure, may be increased by the duty on the corresponding foreign article. This duty, all told, would amount to but 8130, so that the Cambridge wagon maker has to pay $2.80 he can draw oack, and possibly $1-36 that he doesn’t getback on $175 or $3.50 buggy. But what is the real difference between him and his British competitor? He pays his workmen in Cambridze all the year round: Blacksmiths, $15 ger week; trim- mers; 815 per week; hand painters, $3 per day; all other hands average $14 por week, while his English competitor pays none of his workmen more than $1 por ay. President Eliot is right in saying that there is a difficulty in competing with England for the Australian market, but he doesn’t venture to state the re son. It is true the workman in Cam- brldge, sovereign and ruler of this realm, receives for his compensation two and a half and three times as much as the En- glishman. A gentleman in whom I have full confidence, said to Mr. Ivers the other day: ‘Do you know you only pay 2.80 duty on the material for one of your wagons?” M. Ivers replied: *I don't pay that,for I sometimes use Amer- ican sloth and American iron, which are as good. But President Eliot is all wrong about what I said to him. When 1 said L was prevented from selling carriages in Australia by the duties, [ did not mean our duties, but Australian duties, For- merly thero were no duties on carriages. Thduy have put on a duty of 33 per cent, an GONE TO MAKING CARRIAGES THEMSELY. What is it that the Massachusetts wagon-builder gets in exchange for the slight iaterruption to his foreign trade caused by our tarift? Under our policies every 10 years of our life adds 30 per cent. to our population. In 12 years from this hour a new nation of 20,000,000, more than six Australias, will be added to our number, These men are not as they are abroad, consumers only of the bare necessaries of life. They will be- come customers, with no foreign middle- man or British shipper to consume the profit, for the farmer's wagon, and many of them for the carriage for the man of wealth, Every morning that the sun rises the American people lays up as an addition to its? accumulated wealth 82 500,000, one-chird of the daily acumula- tion of the entire globe, The value of our existing capital exceeds that ot every other country except Great Britain, who exceeds us by & quarter, and our income equals hers, The incresse of our wealth sinco 1850 is enough to buy the whole German empire, with all its farms, shopg, facvories and palaces Every 10 yoars addsto our wealth a sum equal to the whole oapital value of Spain or Italy. This income is not only larger in its ageregate, but it is mere evenly distribu- ted than elsewhere. It is not commerce and manufacture alone, but agriculture, labor, manhood, that reaps the harvest. _No, fellow-citizens, it it not safe to give these interests into the solid south and its hungry northern allies. It is not party that appeals to yoa. It is reason. It is the Itis duwy. "I s couniry. right to fre election. It ia the comfurt and diguity of the workman's home, ‘100 Doses One Doliar" is true only of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and it is an uu answerable argument as to strength and economy. Vital Questionsj Ask the most eminent phymeran < (] Of any school, what is the best thing in the world for quieting and allaying all ifntation d curing all forma of nervous ng natural, childlike refresh- ing sloep alway And they will tell y “Some form of Hopa ! CHAPTER 1. Ask any or all of the most eminent phys- cinnat “What i the bost and only remedy that can be reliad on to cure all discases of the kid neys and urinary organs; such as Bright's dis- oase, diabetes, retention, o inability to retain nrine, and all’ the diseases and ailments pe- culiar to Women"— “And they will tell you explicity and em. phatically ** Buchu’//" Ask the ssme physicians “What is the most reliable and surest cure for alll Tiver diseases or dyspapsin; constipation indigostion, billiousness, malaria, fever, ague, &c.," and they will tell 'vou: Mandrake! or Dandelion!/11" Henoe, whon these remedies are combined with others e qually valuable. And compounded into "nr Bitters, such a won. Aerful and mysterious curative power is developed, which is so varied in its operations that no disease or ill health can possibly exist or rosist its power, and yot it i Harmloss for the most frail woman, woakest inva- lid or smallest child to use. CHAPTER 11, “Patients “Almost dead or nearly dying” For years, and given up by physicians, of Bright's and other kidney diseases, liver com- olaints, severe coughs, called consumption, ave boen cured. Women gone nearly orozy! 1111 From agony of neuralgia, nervonsness, wake fulness,and various,discases peculiar to women. People drawn out of shape from excruciating pangs of rheumatism, inflammatory and chronic or suffer- g from scrofuls. Erysipelas “Saltrheum, blood poisoning, dyspopsia,’ indiges- tion, and in fact, almost ali diseases frail” Nature is heir to Have beed cured by Hop Bitters, proot of which can be found in every nelghborhood in the known world. —_— £4"None genuine without a_bunch of green Hops on the white label Shun all the vile, poisonous stuff with “Hop” or *'Hops" in their name, nhesitatingly [ Statistics show that the A [mortality among chil- \[dren is far greater in 4P is neutral in_its action, B 11" renoily ok on by the littl ones, occa- E jsions no tax upon th A=z diestive orgavs, and is awtmilated when tho stormacn rejcots ll el by all Droggists, put up ia cans. four sizes, 85e. §1.25 and 8175 Send to WOOLRICH & CO.,'F Mass. for Phamphlot. $11950 IN CASH GIVEN AWAY Smokers of Blackwell's Gennino Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco will receive Premiums as follows on terms and conditions here specified: Ist PREMIUM. $5,000 2d © $2,000 3ad “ $1,000 22 other Prem1ums 88 hereshown, ‘The 2 premfums will be awarded December 2, 1834, Ist Premium F0es to the person from whom we re. aberof our empty ceive the largest BEDFOR & SOUER Owing tothe increase in our business we’ve admitted to the firm Mr Edwin Davis,who is well and favorably known in Omaha.This tobaceo baws prior (o Dec. 15, 2d will e iven for i largest number ,and thus, in the order of the number of empty bayn received from each, to the twenty-five enccessful con. testants. _ Each bag must bear onr oriinal Bull Durham label, U. 8. Revenuo stamp, and Caution Notice, Bags must be dono up securely in a package, with namo and addrees of Soe our next annonneement, To the needs” of th ourist, commercia traveler and new set CELEBRATED tler, Hostetter'sSto- mach Btters ispeca- it digestive orgavs,and braces the physleal ergies to uuhealth fol fufluences, Ttre. moves and prevents malarial fever, con- stipation, dyspepeia, healthfully stimo- Iates the kidneys and bladder and enriches a8 well as purifios blood. When over STOMACH come by fa whether me l physical, the weary and debili a reltable source of renewed strength and cowfort, or sale by all drugglsts and dealers generally. VIGOR & fo. Book fres, New York, To those ru eifocts of RED STAR LINE Belgian Boyal and U.S, Mail|Steamers SAILING EVERY SATURDAY, ] . BETWEEN HEW YORK AND ANTWERP The Rhine, Germany, Italy, Holland and France 188 Stoerage Outw Excursion . P K wabis; D, K. Kiw e eod 1y ldwell. Hamilton & 0o, ¢ & Co., 208 N. 16t Blreot, Oumahadyeute. alod #ARE00D RESTORED v g ot il Wl RVl Now Yo O Amelia Buroughs, OFFIOK AND RESIDENCE? 1617 Dodges 8t, = Omaba TELEPHONE No. 144 will enable us to han- dle an increased list of property. We ask those who' have desi- rable property for sale,to placethe same with us, The new firm will be & Davis REAL ESTATE BROKERS. 213 South 14th St. eficsia |