Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 6, 1884, Page 4

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- dangerous crooks. ~dosigned i OMATTA I’ATLY PEE SATURDAY, = = THE OMAHA BFE Omaha Offioe, No, 916 Farnam St Oouncil Blufts OMee, No 7 Pearl St Btrect, Near Broadway. New York Office, Room 65 Tribune Building. Published every morning, except Sunday' only Monday moruing daily. WRMS PY MATIL 0.00 | Throe Montha . 5.0 | One Month..... Por Woek, 26 Cents. 1R WREKLY BN, PURLISIND NVERY WRDNWSDAY. The 88,00 . L00 TERMA POSTPAID. .00 | Throe Months. ®ix Months......... 1.00 | One Month ... Con Amorioan News Company, Sole Agonte, Nowsdeal or1 In the United States. CORRRSPONDENCE, A Oommunioations relating to News and Editorial matters should be addrossed to the Korron or Tim BURINRSS LATTERS, All Business Tetvors and_ Remittances should be nddressed to Tim Ban PURLISITING COMPANY, QMAMNA. Drntte, Chocks and Postoffice orders to bo made pay- ablo to the order of the company. THE BEE PUBLISHING C0, PROPS’ E. ROSEWATE,R Editor. A. H. Fitch, Manager Daily Circulation, P, 0. Box, 488 Omaha, Neb, Maise votes next Monday. Maines so goes the union. As goes “Free grass” is the main issue in Texas. In some states it is free whisky." ‘Tne Nebraska state fair begins with a clear sky and prospects of fair weather for the entire week. CoxaressmaN Pusey thinks this is the ear of jubilee for the democrats of i)wn»—()malm Herald. We venture to predict that this will net be a year of jubilea for Mr. Pusey. HAVE we not a statesman and finan- cier in Nebraska who could fill Secretary Folger’s seat in Mr. Arthur's cabinet? Perhaps Mr. Church Howe can find us the man. Omana people had a very fortunate es cape from injury at the Fremont break-- down, Although there were over a thousand persons from Omaha in attend- ance upon the soldiers’ re-union, not one of them was hurt. Mz, CoNNovER, secretary of the board of education, says that the Bre is mis- taken in charging that President Long, of the board, signed for Colorado sand- atone for the paving of Dodge street in front of the Third Ward school house, Mr. Connoyer says that Mr. Long signed for sandstone for the alley by authority of the board, and for Dodge street he signed for asphalt. We cheerfully make the correction, Tue people ot California and the whole SECRETARY FOLGIR, The not altogether unexpected death of Hon. Charles J. Iolger, secretary of the treasury, is an event that will be sin- cerely lamented not only at the national capital, where Mr., Folger was highly estoemed, but among the people of the empire state whom he had so faithfully served in somo of the most important po- sitions within their gift. Secretary Folger was in no sense an ordin- ary man, Huw career from the time ho cntered the arena of public lite stamped him as one of the most noted men among the galaxy of distinguished citizens of the great state of New York. Judge Folger was a native of Massachu- sotts, whose parents located in Geneva, New York, in 1830, when he was twelve years old. He received a liberal educa- tlon, graduating from Hobart College (Gieneva) at the age of 18 at the head of his class. Admitted to the bar in 1839, ho 8oon took a prominent position in his profession. In 1844 he was appcinted by the governor Judge of the Ontario court of common pleas, & position which he held one year. Ho was also master and examiner in chancery until the chancery court was abolished by the constitution of 1846, Ho was electod county judge of Ontario county in 1851, holding that office four years. At that time he was known as a Silas Wright democrat, but, with a coneiderable number of his party who disagreed on the slavery quetion, he allied himself with the republi- cans soon after the formation of the party, identifying him- self with them in the most pronounced manner. In 1861 he was elected to the stato senate, and re-clected successively until he had served eight years in that body. In the senate he obtained a posi- tion of commanding influence by his nat- ural ability for political leadership. Ho was the uncompromising enemy of all jobbery and corruption, while at the same time he was an able advocate and defender of all plans of relief for union soldiers and their families, In 1867 he was a member of the constitutional con- vention, acting in that body as chairman of the judiciary committeo. His last term as state senator expired in the summer of 1800, Judge Folger was appointed sub-treas- urer at New York in 1869 by President Grant, In 1870 he was appointed mem- Der of the court of appeals, and became chief justice of this court in 1880. Iu tho spring of 1880 Judge Folger was strongly urped for the secrotaryship of the treasury under Garfield, the advo- cates of this nomination being Conklin, Arthur, Dorsey, and the New York stal- wart faction generally. 1t is belioved that Garfield at one time seriously con- country are to be congratulated upon the renomination of Hon, Charles A. Sum- ner,of that state, for congress. Mr. Sum- ner has made an unexceptionable record in the national legislature, He is a rep- resentative of the people not only in name but in fact, and in opposing mo- nopolies and favoring the regulation of railroads by legislation, he has struck a sympathetic chord, especially among the monopoly-ridden people of California, Tur Honorable Mr. Neville wants the people of Cass County to send him to the legislature once more. Mr. Neville was one of the democratic members in the last legislature who voted first, last and all the time with the monopolists and jobbers, If a man cheats you once you are not to blams for trusting him, but if you trust him the second time you are .entitled to no sympathy. Mr, Noville may be a very straight business man, but in the legislature he is one of, the most Wi inventions ever stop or wonders ever cease! Klisha E, Everett, a cabi- net maker and inventor, of Philadelphia, who has taken out twenty or thirty difi- ent patents for mechanical appliances, in- cluding folding bedsteads, desks, wash- stands and 8o on, is now at work on an dnvention that, if successful, may com- plotely revolutionize ocean and railway travel. This is nothing elso than the ro- duplication of steam vower, He has steamboat which, by meaus of @ succession of paddles beneath the wator, may attain a speed of thirty knots an hour and accomplish a trip to Burope in three or four days. Tur Ber has for 50 many years been the only paper in Omaha that has made local improvments and questions in which ‘Omaha tax payers are vitally interested a leading feature in its editorial columns that it is decidedly amusing to see Z%he Republican for once take up the matter of pavements and paving contractors, Be- cause it 80 happened that this paper has omitted to mention the substitution of templated making Folger his secrotary of the treasury, but he was doterred from 80 doivg by the tact that he had a claim against the treasury then pending in the United States supreme court, but after- wards disallowed. Iolger wos not nomi- nated by Garlield, but thirty-cight days aftor the president's death Mr. Arthur made the nomination which Mr. Garfield refused to make. Judge Folger was nominated and confirmed as secretary of the treasury under President Arthur, Oct. 27, 1881, He wasin oflice two years and nine months, CAN SOLDIERS VOTE? onr OMAILA, September Gth, Eviror Ozmana Bee: Will you please answer through your paper this question, “Is a soldier in" the the United States army entitled to a vote in the presidential election?” and if there anything in the statates respecting it] There are several hero who have been told that they can, and intend doing so at the coming election. W. B. Overron, Fourth Infantry Bandu-- Section 3 of article IV of the constitu tion of Nebraska, says that *‘livery elec- tor in the actusl militery pervice f the United States, or of this state, and not in the regular army, may exerciso the right of sufltage av such place, and undor such regulations as may be provided by law,” and section 4 says that *no soldior, seaman, or marine in the army and navy of the United States, shall be deemed a resident of the atato in consequonco of being stationed therein.” This shows conclusively that the regular soldiers cannot vote in Nebraslg. If soldiors of the regular army have built or torn down and when this is done ] which has been modified but hardly im proved, as the ohjectionable theory that only possessors of lands or goods of pre scribed value are worthy the franchise still remains With only five men out of seventeen able to vote elections must be of small value as means of delegating power from the people to the legislators But the wholesale distranchisement is only one weakness of the parliamentary systom against which Englishmen are lifting their v Such is the distri bution of members of commons among the beroughs and counties that one fifth of the voters, representing only one-sev- enteenth of the population, elect one- half ¢f the house, the plans can be made to conform with the elevation of the viaduct. Ninth streot is already closed and will at best be used only for heavy traffic. A viaduct on that atrect beginning somewhere near Howard would not materially damage the adjacent property north of the depot, as it would do if located on Tenth street. Viewing the matter from this stand- point we can see no serious objection to the experiment of a narrow viaduct on Eleventh street. We have recently heard a good deal about the Hon. Edgar Apgar, of New The final rather reluctant decision to York, through the columns of the Oma- |send Lord Wolsely to the Soudan coun g try seoms to have complotely changed ha Herald. Dr. Miller has given us his | 0 “taco” of the Fgyptian ~ situation, opinion of Mr, Apgar, and here is the | Months ago the sending of him was talked opinion of thejsame gentloman by John |of and partially resolved on, but it is Kelly, who is a8 good a demorat as Dr+ |38id that Mr. Gladstone shrank from q sending him becauso Wolseley is a too Miller : thorough kind of man and does not un- Fddy Apgar has caused himself to be |derstand war conducted on Midlothian interviewed to the extent of a couple of principlea, The ministerial foolishness, columns in Mr. Manning's Argus, and |however, so muddled aftairs by throwing it is only with hesitancy that he concedes [up the Saukin-Berber route and plant Maine, Vermont and Massachusetts to | and launching violently into the Nile the Republicans. Eddy is a bright little | project, though it was strongly protested fellow,but like, Bristow's postmaster, *'too | against, that the only way remaining to blanked unanimous.” Ho ought either [ cut the gordian knot was to cut it with to attend to the business for which the | Lord Wolseley's sword. It is said that stato pays him a salary, or elso become a weather prophet. On the stump he is always liable to make votes for the sides ho talks against. i — Every time a member of the last leg- islature, who voted with jobbers and mo- nopollsts, comes up as a candidate for re- election, the Ber will show him up and ask for his defeat, no matter what party the general refused point blank to accept the command until he was given far more independence of action than was original- ly proposed and a carte blanche in the matter of expenses, The appointment of Wolsely to lead the expedition will probably make it a better pill for the Tories and all the military conservatives, although they have been long clamoring for the reecue. He does not conceal his high estimate of his own talents, been allowed to vote here it was done under & wrong hoprossion, sad thein votes wore illegal. Duving the civil war the volunteens were allowed to vote, their votes being taken in camp and sent to their homes whore:they were counted just the same asif they were voting at homes, They were eitizen soldiors, and were regarded as belng only temporarily away frem home, Prauars it is best the viiduet on ssphalt for granite block on tha outer edge of the Sixteenth street rail- xoad tracks, Zhe Republican intimates that Tue Bee is under the control of of the asphalt contractors. Now, if the Republican can show that we have re- fused to publish any complaint concern- 4ing this change or have evaded it after attention had been called to it, there will e sume ground for its malicious innuen. does. Tux Bk defies any man or paper to show wherein it has inany way counte- nanced fraud on the part of contractors or fn any way has sought toshield them from compliance with their just obligations, In’ the matter referred to, as in oll things in which taxpayers and citizens of Omsha are being imposed upon, the Bee will cheerfully join with any other paper to enforce the obliga- tlons of contractors, whether it be for paving, grading or work on public bu ld- fngs, or gas or water supply. 1f the council has released the contractors from dolng the work as originally designed the blame is more upon the council than wpon the contractors. Eloventhstrestshould be buils first. Wien completed it may demonstrato that after all its main advantage will be to affore a roadway for the people onSouth Kleventh street and others in that neighborhood. As the principal thoroughfare for traflic to and from the depot the viaduct is in our opinion altogether too narrow- gauged. A broad-gague viaduect on Ninth streots the full width of the strest, and double tracks for streot railways and ample accommodations for carriagos and wogons, and & separate aisle for foot-passengers, will sooner or later be. come & necessity, Such a viaduct would accommodate travel the entire length of Farnam street, and give us access to the Union Pacific and B, & M, depots, as well as to all classes of vehicles and travel. Such a viaduct would be very expensive and it might mar the beauty of the cow-shed or the Union Pacific trans- for, but the day is coming when the cutlay will be justifiable and seconomic, The present struoture known iu the Union Pacific depot will be re- which rritating enough, bat what is more irritating is that it has beenin a measurefjustified by his performances. He has conducted to a succossful issue the three most difficult military expedi- tions which Great Britain has undertaken since the Crimean war, excopt the Abys- Although no formal declaration of war | sinian —viz , the expedition to the Red rivec in Canada, the Ashantee expedi- has as yot boon made by Ohina against| ()"0 the oooupation of Egypt, He I'rance, tho bombardment of Foo Chow |4 surrounded, morever, by a body of in- and other aggressive operations on the | timates, whom he puts on his staff when Chiness coast has done away with all |in active service, and whose reiterated 5 e success excito n good deal of jealousy, MR L Tho position of | ") oy procured for them in tho army France with {regard to Chinais very |yhq sobriquet of the *‘Ashanteo Ring.” much like that of England after the [ Then heis an Irishman with some pat- bombardment of Alexandria, whon the | rivtic sentiments, to which he gave vent British ministry assured the world that |7 assiguing what was considered undue i to th loits of the Royal Eogland had mno other intentions than }','&',,"{'a‘.}?fi‘;e,z i.e, :fig Di‘igl;; n'mTul‘y,fi. simply to protect her intorests and citi- | Keber, with the view, his friends said, zons in Bgypt. Prime Minister Forry, | of helping to soothe Irish political dis- in reply to an inquiry made by the content, There is reason to believe that o g 2 the expedition will succeed in the rescue British foreign secretary sinco the bom-| ot Gioneral Gordon, which is its im- bardment of Foo Chow, renewed his as- mediate object, It may have far surance that France desires to limit her [ more important reuulltu in establishing oporations in tho cast to those of hor | British power in the Soudan and bring- \ Mini ¥ " ) Int | 108 that entire region under the influence flset, Minister Forry makes the polnt| o puropean civilization. Beforo long that when the English bombarded Alex- | the waters of the Blue Nile may be filled andria the French press manifested no | with the commerce of the fertile region such feoling as now marks the English | through which it flows. But great es sy Hona in okt Pro. | Fould be these results, they cannot re- acoounts of operations in_ China. Pro- | degm tho vacillating policy of the Glad- bably it would have been botter for the |stone government in regard to HKeyptian world at largo if the press everywhere, |affairs, nor compensate for the blood with in Europo and America, had been moro [ Which the African deserts have been b a needlessly drenched. outspoken in condemnation of the attack il on Alexandria. In their colonization | Tf anybody had predicted twelve schemes both England and France are monl'-;u ago that I"ran:e t;lndd(iqrmnnv working on the principle that might [Would warm up to cach other during the A = i Iife of Bismarck he ' would have been makes right. The English had no bual- 150103 out of countenancs. The war nass in Egypt which justified the sacrifice [ hatween China and France has brought of the people who inhabit the country;|about this wonderful change. The feel- uneither has France in Anam—a semi-in- | ing in official circles at Berlin is warmly dependent kingdom which holds about | favorable to France. 1In Chins, as well the same relation to China that Egypt [as in Egypt, Germany will see that the did to Turkey. 1In seeking to establish | French ambition has not only fair play, new channels for commerce the rights | but the fullest scope for action, so as to and wolfare of weaker natione should be | divert her thonghts from the lost prov- respected, otherwise the invading nation |inces. Crermany does this not from fear, bocomes a froebooter on a large scale, | but simply fzom a firm resolve to main- Tho only rigat which England possesses | tain peace. Nobody here believes in in Kgypt, or I'rance in Chins, is the | China’s war intentions. Cnina has no right to go whero they can, and take | vessels, no soldiery, no money. The re- what cannot be denied them. sult of the French minister’s (Baron de Courcel’s) trip to Varsin is that imme- diately atter the meeting of the three emperors the Egyptian question wiil be again to the front, but with quite a new face and under auspices by no means favorable to Xn- gand. M, De €ourcel leaves for Paris on Sunday, and is well satistied with his visit to Varsin. In the case of a French occupation of Formoss, i'rance will agree to give the greatest libsrty with Gorman commercs, but Germany, as a nation, have ouly small interesss in Chinese mat- he belongs to. The rogues and cappers may as well stand from under. No quar- ter will bo shown them OTHIR LANDS THAN OURS. formalities. One of the most significant signs of the times is the intensely hostile foeling grow- ing up between France and HNagland, Never since the battle of Waterloo has the pubiic opinion of France been more savagely hostile to England than at the present moment. The papers of all creeds haveunited}in tranaferringall their hatred from Germany to- England, sud are constantly recalling tho fact that “‘when France has wept or France has bled perfidious Albion Has rojoiced.” ‘The fact is, France and England do not | ters, and feel thatthe interest of civiliza. like one another, and they never have | tion would have.a botter guarrantee for liked ons snother, They have fought |the future by the increase of French side by side, as in Crimes, but never [rather than wnglish influence in the far heurtily, Phey will not, and cannot join | east. 'The chancellor lus expressed his cordially together, any more than oil [ bost wishes to M. De Courcel for the suc- and water san mix and maks homogenous | cess of all Frenoh undextakings in Asia fluid. Franee and England dislike one |[and AZnica, another instinctively, just zs the Chinsse | 1t i3 now certain that at the begianing and Japanese have always disliked each | of the Franco-Chinese hostilities naarly a other. ~ Besides this, thero are too maay | year ago,secrat stipulations had becn fixcd past a8 well us present jealousies bet ween | betweon 1'ran o and Giermany for the them, Wranco has never yet forgiven |mutual protection cf Hrench and Gur- England for Waterloo, or the exile of her | man aitizens and property, France agree- | ing to gnard and protest Germaa inter- | emperor to St. Helena; but what, per haps, rankles most flercely in the feelings | ests es her owr. whencrer (Gercaan ves- of the Fzenoh s the thoughtof England's | sels were not ca hand. cold-blooded neutrality dusing the Fran- s co-Gierman war. Ceble dispatehes from South Amerioa At the present moment, while Engiand | describe very violens measures which is threatening French intezests in E.ypt, [ Iglesias Is tading to fortify himself is France would, by a long wr with Clina, | postession of the Peruvian ~capital, A cortainly interfere with the interests of [ general disarraament sfithe native inhab. Eoglish trade, A serious.quarrel, t'sere- | tanis is decroed, and the number of par- fore, between France and Kogland, aris- | tirons of Caseres in arrest reaches. five ing out of their conflicting interesin, is | huadred, 14 1s evident that a large part by no means an impossiulity, and may | of the populstion, perhaps & majority, is break forth sconer than one expects. in sympathy with W@aceres, and that his —— dneh Into Tima last Wednesday was not The agitation against she Britisks house | a foolhardy trick, but was a. courageous of lords still continues. Mr. Gladstone's | eaterprise planned with reasonable ex- recons specch at Edinburg was an, index | pectation, of popular sapport, His of the policy, which’tho[British -winistry | (siends elso would appesr to include Propeses to pursue in ite eflort to carry [ Popresen atives of she very highess social the faancise bill. While this agitation | classes, if the withdrawal of the muy not result in abolition of the upper | 0xequatax of the. consul genezad of the house of parliament, uinhhfl! to bring [ Netherlands is insended, as seoxis proba- on ab no distant day wuch needed reformes,| ble, to strip Sence OCanevaro of the for- in sha eleatorial franahise and in the sys- | €ign paotection against arrest. No tres- tom of the parliamerdary representation thyoughout the united kingdom., Eog lishmen have the right to selsct their rep- rosentatives in commons, it is true, laut this right is 80 restricted and the benelits it confers ave 80 unequally distribused that popular electlons i England are sfill largely farcical. Ia England, Scots land and Ireland thore are 8,500,000 males of voting age, and yet ouly 2,600,000 of them can vote at par- lismentary olection, Six millions are without franchise. Thia dus- franchisement s caused by prop- erty qualification The opera: tion of these qualification laws is such that in Bogland there is an average of one voter to about ten inhabitants; in Scotland one to 11}, and in ireland but one in 23, In the United States the av- orage is one voter to 5} inhabitants, The ouly state in which possession of property is a necessary qualification of au elector is Rhode Island. The law in Eogland is a relig of the past century, pass wpon the liberty or propesty of any citizon of the Wnited States is yet ro- ported, and it is. not likely that trouble will aziso from any cause of that kind, Wo are well represented theve diplomati- cally; and as Chile has dismantled the torts of Callas.and efe no navy to Peru, o¥en our two or three clumey old wooden crvettes in the South Facific would be ! eflicient for the protection of our people in case of need, At the impending conference between Bismarck and the Austrian premier oue of the most important subjects under dis- ocussion will be the German colonial poli- oy. Iismarck opposes the Tconsiantly increasing tide of emigration t0 America, American institution., he eays, are not in haxmony with those of Germany, and the emigration to tat country adds ,pothing to Germany's wealth, while it | tends to uadermine the traditions of the monarchy, Bismarck hopes to opena| | hew field for colonial enterpiise and eo SEPTEMBER 6, 1884, [pre Saxon el the ultra-independent Anglo- ment from absorbing the Ger- man element. Themerchants of Hamburg who are en- geged in taade with China have decided to prevent a petltion to Prince Bisr k atking him to use his inflaence I'rance to prevent a blockade of treaty ports, Russia Presents no Beauties of Nature except in the Ural mountains and on tho Caucasus. The country along the great railroad lines is as monotonous as a west. ern prairie, but less fertile. The citios of St. Petersburg, Moscow, Warsaw, Kiof and Odessa, especially the first two, contain all that is interesting to a trav. oler, St. Petersburg represents new Russia, Moscow old Russia, The princi- pal sights in both are palaces and churches. These are filled to overflow- ing with treasures of silver and gold and precious jowels, The winter palace and hermitage at St. Petersburg, the suinmer palace at Peterhof, the palaces of the Kremlin in Moscow are bewildering and oppressive by the treasures which unlimited power has accumulated for centuries. The churches, too, are overloaded with glittering and precious gold. The finest churches are St. Isaac’s in 8t, Petersburg, built by Nicholas I, the church of the Lady of Kazan, mod- eled after St. Peter's, in Rome, and the churchof the Redeemer in Moscow, built in commemoration of the deliverance from the French in 1812, completed and consecrated in 1883 at enormous cost. with the worship. ligious people in the observance of out- ward forms. Their religion consists chiefly in lighting candles, blessing holy images, bowing to the floor and making the sign of the cross over and over again. Tho worship of tho Virgin Mary and of saints is carried fully as far as and even farther than in the Roman church. Holy images are found not only in the church- e¢, butin houses, on public placesin railroad stations and telegraph offices, and no devout Rlussian passes them with out bowing and making the sign of the cross, The chief service is the maes, which is performed with morn mystery and dramatic display than in the church of Rome, confined to the priests, deacons and trained choristers; the people listen passively. The ever-repeated reaponae, upon us, is excoedingly touching and will long resound in my memery. ———— Angostura Bitters is all over the world. For ove advertisod itself by its merits, 1t s now ad- vortized to v 1blic against counter- feits, The ge icle is manufactured by Dr J. G. B, Sievert & Sons. PILLS TORPID BOWELS, DISORDERED LIVER. o household word indicato tl Bowels y ness attor tion of body or s before the eycs, highly ONSTIPATION, nind inoe 1Skin engors of the systom,” pr tite, sound digestion, r B e S uTT’S GRAY HIAIN " 2 stantly toa ( plication o crsent by exp vtiice, 41 Murray Strect, New Yorl., FUNTS MANUAL OF USEFUL RECEIPTS FREE T, SEINELOXID. MANUFACTURER OF GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES. WINDOWE CAPS, FINIALS, ETC. AL n3th troot,! OXAHA, 2 NEBRASK TR/ ILL he paidto any one who will find o panticle ¥Y ot czoary, Fotaih, lodie, Avsunic, oy Poi . v j $ 1,000.00 1 “Ihave cured Slood T Speciile a ter | enry and it s of Swift's n tho Mer- ont. OOMEL, M. D, Usrry, Ga, has cured of 8 vofula of 12 p $10,00050, w0 cudre 1o of Rhcamutism oavaed by medari ARCHIE THOMAS, Sprioglol Our Treatlio on Blood and Skin Discrsos matled free appiicats to THE SWIFT SPECIFIC €Ay Drawor 3, Atlanta, Ga, N. Y. Office, 150 W. 220.5¢.,” betwaeen 6ih aid 7th Avoraes. Phisdelubia oics' 100 Chestuut t. STRCK PLAND HAS NO UPERIOR. ‘The Steck is a Durable Piano. THE SPECK BAS SINGING QUALITY OF TONE FOUND KO OTHER PIANO, SOLD NLY BY WOODBRIDG® BROS., 215 OPERA HOUSE, OMAHA NEB, RURAL NEBRASKA ! The Leading Agricultural and Live Stock Jimrnal of the West. 20 Pages {= H.S. SMITE & C0., ) 1NORS AND FUBLISINRS, HON BOBT. W. FURNAS of Agrisult SUBSCRIPTION PRI S4FAGENTS WANTED @3 100 and 108 8, 14th Stroeh. ~ .« OMAHA, NEE, Wemko M Sts Board g I CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000 ts¢ educational and ohar} 3 5 n'® T {1y dmipany, Acvaby eertify nat we euperove ihe o) % for all the Monthly and Semi-Annua of the Lowisiana State Lottery Company, evion manage and con'rol the Drawing) es, and that the same are conducted s Jairness, we anthori with fac-pimiies of our NGNGtres attache 1§24 advertisement in good faith toward all par the company to use this s Comuiastoxne Incorporated In 1988 for 25 yearn by tho leglslatue: blo prrposcs—wi o resorve fund o of over od, By an ovorwholming populsr vote 18 franchis waa made a part of the adoptod Docomber 24, A. resent gtate conrdlintion . 1670, The only Lottery ever voted on and doraed by the people of any State, -ue tnover goales or poaspiads Ite grand single number drawings take place monthly. A splendid opportunity to wina Fortune Ninth Grand Drawing The churches are crowded at the timo of [ omy of Musi The Russians are a very re- | %th, 1884— Class 1, in the Acad- New Orloans, Tueeday, Sept, 2d Monthly drawing, CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000. 100,000 Tickets at Five Dollars Each, tions, in Fifths in proportion, 1 o 1_do do 8§ FIIZES OF §0000 5 do 2000 10 do 100 2 do 100 do 20 do 600 do 1000 do 9 do do The einging i3 beautiful, but | 1687 Prive awounting to. lication tor zaton,to niubs should bo rasde 02l; VI ReW OrBkas v the For further inforat; addross, Postal Notos aud or! PITAL PRIZE do d 9 Approximation yrizos of §75¢ do d LIST OF PKI APPROXTMATION FRLINS, o §285,500 0 of tho Com Make P. O, ney O ] Tottors to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAT BANK, New Orivans, L lottors by Mall or B the Kyrie Eleison, or Lord, have mercy | sddress Registorod press (o)l suma of 85 sud upwarda by Exproos at ot sxpeny 50 years it has [ orif, &, DAUPHIN, 007 Beven Duh A rie it [ o i that flech i office, and ha N¢ garForalont 0. F. Goodman's Drug Store’ | Anam 8t , On Orders filied C. to KU @ L Doctor Horne avoid Rheumati M, 8t., Wash ngi Frredow ) DAUPBIK, w Orleans La, dnoy troubles and other ills 3 helr 100. Do not delav, but call at_our examisie tho belts, 1422 Douglas § o'p Hortheas: Neraska ALONG THE LINE OF THE Chicago St Paul, Minneapalls and To new BEAUTIFUL VALLEY of tha OMAHA RAILWAY. cxtension of this line fzom Walefield up GAN through Concord snd Colerldye TO EXAITVXTN G ITOIN, Roaches the best portlon of the State, Speotal ex cursion rates for land eeekers over this line Wayno, Norfolk and Harbiugton, and via Blair to principal poluts on the SIOUX Tralos ovor tht C., 8¢, P, 3. & 0. Kallway ngton, Sioux City, Ponca, Hartington, Norfolk, CITY & PACIFIC RAILROAD to Cov. ayno and CTonnoct at FEielixr o Fremont, Oakda.e, Nelih, and through to Val- entine, £ar ¥or rates and all information call on ¥ P. WHITNEY, Gonors Agend mives N IN THOUSAWDS OF CASES cured whero all alse had fa cient, C| N ¥ cus in a1l casce, 19t cleansca the ileod and Strengtho: tie body, Thio natural action of tho Kidn rostared, Tho Lives s cleansed of all dise 6ad tho’ Bowels move freely and healthfull Tu this Way the worst diseascs 830 eradicated from tho eystem. __ s PRICE, $1.00 LIQUID 0% DLY, 604D BY DRVGGISTS. W ELLS, RICITABDSON & 00, Burlirgton Vt. (THE SURE CURE FOR KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, A my wifo after tiwo years Summerlin, $un 111, Ga. ow Lifo to all tho important or Dry can boront by n useas 1§ Colums| 10 wa. Yomen, (. R. 19, Toves] Have You a Daughter i f0r Catalagua of Callanan Colloge, Des Weinus, i study antages In Music, 0iern Langua Aduruss 2 D. D, Pree. D ora from “Avvars snd slief wnd - e EDUCATE ? ool exclusive'y for the eluation g Norml and E A Bellevue, - M. A SHIPMAN. DRUGGIST | sampre von o *| Each month there SALT R e et And Every Species of Itching and | Burning Diseases Positively Cured. ZEMA, ot Ealt heum, with 1ts agoniziog itehs cation_of bach with Caticura 30ap, and & single Ap . This e ery ly Tun of the Sealp and Skin, when the bost physicians and all kncwn rem; Will McDonald, 242 Dearborn Strect, Chicago, gratefully acknowledgos curo of Eczems, or Sals Khetm, on head face neck, arms and legs for sever ears- not able to move, except hands and kne It for eight_yenrs; rs pronounced his ¥ cured by the Cuticurs ronlly, and Cutiours skin cures) extornal Chas. Houghton, Esq., lawy ton, report of Salt R vation for . which covered the patien body and I nd to which all_known methods of treatment had been applied without_benefit, which was completely cured solely by the Cuticura’ Keme- dies, leaving o clean and healthy skin. F. 1. Drake, Esq., Dotroit Mich., suffered untold tortures from & Salt' Rheum which appe his hands, head and face, and nearly destroyed bis eyes. After nost careful docts nd a_consultation ans failed to relic , he used the Cu. Remodics, and was cured, and has remained ol, Wilkesberre, Pa., writos: —1 have sulfered from Salt’ Rheum for over eighy titmes, so that 1 covll not attend to my bu: wooks atn timo. Throo boxes of Cuticuraand four bottles Rewlvent, have entirely cured me for this dreadiul ists. Cuticura, 50 cents; sl Portur Drue AND Cumyi. Send for ‘How bz Curs Skin Diroasea. cuTI CURA SOAP. An exquisite Toilet, Bath Nursery Sinative. Flows from the Maximum Mineral Fountain of Sara and is the epinion of the most eminent Nature's Sovercign Cure for Consti- pation, Dispepsia, Torpid Liver, Inactive Conditions of the Kidneys, acd a most salutary aiterative in scrotulous affoctions, With ladics nen, and bon very standard of dietary expedients, ve functions and enabling frec. wurity ot table. The world of wealth, e and refinement testifies to ita sparkling, nat- pure, and d mpatablo, diest sour vors 1 hotels, and o o mer Marts and_ocers dr nggists, v B ALYON & HEALY, State & Monroo St alvzue of chokse Uand music Risiled Srce, SRS E ./\SSP%@”’- CS W% OF ALT, DISEASES OF Fomeos n ke by £ HIFIG fin, 28 LX BO Ale, Porter, Wine, * Bl TURER, 3 Farnam St. Il COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT, anship, Enge . Read ng, =polling, Core and Writing, Comple'e Cours: copted. ., Complete Covirso Com' leto Cours , (short hand ex ket ey 1wo mionths . 5 Completo Course, thr Thirty Lessois | Tho shove course, (book-he month.. The above ¢ months Bend for cireular. (book-k e ug wa Aldress y GEO. It RATUBUR, Prin m & LIQUID GLUE D LARGEST NANUFACT SHIPMAN, M. D, Nebraska, 1OFFICE WITH v UNEQUALLED SRR S e GOLD MEDAL. o4 0 Wi Bl a1 MANCYACTURD O N RUSSIA CEMEN AN unru .T'C&,Aflllzu'ce.sl:rblrl: | &5 A o

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