Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 8, 1884, Page 4

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P OMAHA DALIY REE -TUESDAY. THE REASON WAY. In purauing its bushwhacking policy upon the city engineer the Republican | went 80 far as to charge that officer with being in collusion with contractors, and to give the semblance of veracity to i's enenking aseaults that paper intimated THE DAILY BEE Omaha Office, 916 Farnam Be. Oeuncil Bluffs Offcs, No 7 @troet, Noar Broadway. Now York Office, Room 65 Tribune Suilding. 8t lahed every o , except Bunday' The ouly Monday rmoreivg dais: that the Brg had been subsidized by con- Pt B wATe trastors Into & support of their raids upon " 00 | Threo Months )3.00 y o H2.30 | One Month. #3.00 | the city. When promptly challenged to *"Per Woek, £6 Cents. IR WRRKLY EER, PUTLISHED XVERY. WEDXRSDAY, produce the proofs the Republican has not a scintilla of evidence to offer against s rONTTAID, tho engineer, and only seekn to palliate its b ot .00 | Thres Montta ¥ | vindictive and unmanly attitude by pro- A pany, Solo Agente, pounding some questions to the Ber con- oniinthe U rd to public do not propose s coureo with reg improvements. Now, w to allow the sneaks and bushwhackers to crawl through any loop-hole. We will moet the issues squarely and answor overy question regardicg the course of this paper without reserve. Wo are asked why Tne Bee has “gought to defend the asphalt company in its nefarious transactions, and whether a journal depending upon public support, roceiving no gratuity from unpopular and questionable sources, would voluntarily rush to the defonse ~f a corporation that openly violates its coutract with the peo- ple.” Tue Bee is not aware that the transactions of tho asphalt company havo in any way been nefarious, which accord- ing to Webster means “wicked, inlqui- tous, ovil and unjust.” We have never defended the asphalt company oxcepting, 3 % - when, as we remember, it was assailed Now raar Valentino has endorsed | by Sweesy’s hand-bill for black-mailing Judye Weaver's rocord In congress it|purposes. In that instanco the stroets ought to be satisfactory to his conatitu- ents. CORRNSFONDRNCE. A Communlieations releting to Nows and Edltorial witers pheuld bo addrossod to the Koron or Tam B WUBINESS LETTERS, All Bstncer Totters and Rewittances ehould be Addresserl to Tus Bxs PURLISIING COMPANY, QUATIA. Drafts, Cheoks and Postoffice orders to be rasde pay- ablo to Ahe order of the company. YHR BEE PUBLISHING CO,, PROPY R, ROSTWATSER, tor. A. H. Fitch, Manager Daily Circulation, P, 0. Box, 488 Omaha, Neb, Mn. Gere is still wrestling with the school land frauds. 87, Joux waa evidently not born to be shot, or to be president, M=, BLaINg is not waving the bloody shirt. Ho doesn’t need any such garment to win in this hght. being Jalmost impassable, frost in the winter and melted by thejheat of summer. Tne Bee never did justify a breach of contract by anybody, least of all by paving contractors. We sim- ply pronounced the hue and cry of the Republican about the Sixteenth street pavement as & mere tempest in a tea pot. The contractors were under bonds to Ir Church Howe decides to locate 1n Tenncessee he might eventually repre- sent that state in the Unites States sen- ate. It would be a question of time and a little *‘soap.” h o Tue St. Louis Globe-Democral is a a delphia. Baraby told the people of Fair- mont that the editor of Tre Ber confi- dentially assured him that he would su he atill insis paved with asphalt wero ropresented as |y, 1}, 41q tog.nails for Jim. Close bo- broken up by | ping him comes the sanotimonious old double-ender of the Hastings Gazette- Journal, who wants to impress it on the bourbons that Laird is a better democrat than Fitz John Porter. tdable rival in double-dealing in the e e e e e — and Castellar streets. It a echool house in that part purchase of & achool site in ward, Th carried without any question, probably will b, Omaha is growing very rapidly, and wo must keep school secommodations, So far we have done very , and wo have reason to foel proud of our school houses. The board of education is pursuing the right course in erecting in tho various parts of the city moderately sized school houses of o subatantial character to accommodate the immediate neighborhood, instead of putiing upa fow large and expensive structures and compelling the children to walk long distances, Now that we have the central partsof the city well sup- plied with large buildings, we believe in the erection of numerous smaller school houses in the outskirts, Trr brazen liara that have sprung up in the mecond congressional district to help Laird to a re-clection are as numer- ous as flis around a molasses barrel. At the head of them stands Baraby, the heavy villin, who after loafing around Washington all winter in quest of a con- ulship turned his talents to account for fow weeks in a minstrel show In Phila- Laird for re-election, and pport that VanWyck is working He ha form- eadlight of the Nebraska Signal, which bjects to Captain Stickel because he good republican paper, but it can't swal- ) 73 . |was instrumental in foisting a rail- low a patent-medicine candidate for con- com?lute Uik 'o‘:k l:eflr:mgf Ly ;;:e road lawyer, Judge Savage, wupon gress, Dr. McLean, who is charged with | *Pecifications of tho board of public|y = b fononolists last fall, having pnrchased the nomination, he having a *barl” at his command. had been retained to cover the cost of the stone blocks along the street railway d teack. Hence no loss could possibly en- sue to the city, and there was no occa- sion for pounding the hew-gag and tom- tom. It is oniy four weoks to election, ant it is about time for the local political ma- chinery to be set in motion, but we sup- poso the republizan connty central com 1y 3 mitteo will asusual postponethe calling of | The Zepublican wants to know why the primaries and the convention until the Bez is insanely opposed to the uso of the 1ast moment posaiblo, Colorado sandstone and so energetically supported Sioux Fells granite and asphalt. Trw Republican asks who Stickel is | The BER advocated granitoas tho most and what ho can do? The peoplo of tho desirable pavement for the principal sccond congressional district will answe [Businees steacts of Omaha long befure that queation on the 4th of November by | there was a foot of pavement lai : electing Captain Stickel in placo of Jim [4id not caro whether tho material came Laird. The Republican will then learn | from New Hampshiro or Dakota. ~ We R e never have favored asphalt except for light traflic streots, and eo far that mate- rial seems to give satiefaction on euch Omaha 'ZTerald is in favor of » ‘demo- thoroughfares. We have opposed and cratic corruption fund. He knows some- | Will coutinue to oppose l.ha use of Ool?- thing about “‘soap” in the campaign of radv sandstono for paving purposes in 1876, and ho belioves that a “bar'l” in a | OO mighty good thing for everybody that| Thisis notan insane opposition, but can get & hawad in 1t an opposition based on sound economic principles. Sandstone may be good t J d It 18 no wonder tha;c}:e editor of the Pennsylvania, now employed in the cen- [and curbstones, but it is unfit for paving. sus bureau at Washington, is reported to|It will not tan the heavy |, have declarod for Clevelard. The demo- |wear and tear, and cannot even crats will now serve up Mr, Ogster on be tamped without brulkiqg and split- the half-shell for campaign purposes. On |ting. The intenso oppostion agatnst the 4th of November the republicans | Colorado standstone when it was first in* will pickle that Oyster, troduced was caused by the villainous attempts to nullify the expressed wish of 0 works, and a sufficient amount of money Under seat in congress. We |nious falsifiers put their heads together the people of the second district will can- onize Jim Laird asa saint, and roast Captain Stickel at a barbecue. n with thoso reported for the six months ending July 31, present a formidable list., The goin in the number of failures, as compared with the nine months in pre- ceding years, is more than equaled by the increased indebtedncss. i 4 number of failures from January 1 to|who is Mz, Ovsren, a ropublican worker from [enough for building purposes, sidewalks | 5o ember 30, this yoar, was compared with 7,358 In 1883, a gain of over the preceding year. in the number of failures this year as compared with 1882 is 2,995, a gain of this fllmey pretext the Signal liar signslizos his apostacy to the anti-monop- olists by supporting Jim Laird, a rail- road attorney, for congress. the procession is brought up by an inven- tor of the first magnitude, who edits the Exeter ZFnlerprise, enterprising prevaricator Captain Stickel, The rear of According to that wo years ago, offered to transfer the an- ti-monopoly yotes in the legislature to im Laird tomake him senator on con- ition that Laird would help Stickol to a When all theso inge- Tuk failures reported in Bradstreet's tho past quarter, when incorporated The total 44, or nearly 13 per cent; the record ver 66 per cent, 3 or the nine months this yosr, amounting | 110th birthday. Ik is very singular that whenever Tom, |tho property owners in favor of other {around nnmbers fo#1 3,000,000, show an Hendricks takes a trip some serlous ac- | paving materials, Tho agencies by which |, roago of $73,000,000 in total linbilities cident occurs to the railroad train, 1f | Colorado sandstone has been forced upon Mr. Hendricks could only engago Captain | us on zome of our streets in pite of pop- per cent. Herman to run his train it would meet | ular remonatrance are disreputable in the crease in tho number of failures this year, with less accidents. Bu: Captaln Hor- | extreme. man, notwithstanding his life-time ex- perience as a railroader, would not be|granite company has advertised in the able to provent the teleecoping of Hen-|Brr and o what uso to that company drick’s train on the 4th of November, could such an advertlsement poasibly 1 have been. T at question can best be answered by the Sioux Falls compsny. They doubt- less dosired to have it known far and wido that they had a paving materlal oqual toany in the country, and they naturally used the best advertising medi- um west of Chicago for that purposo. Screnists declare that the hot weather of the past week or two was due to the influence on our atmosphere of a vcloan- ic eruption and an electric storm vn the sun, and we were told by scientizts that the season of heat would be followed by eleotric storms, a cold wave and possibly ancarthquake. Wo havehad the storm and | 12641y We are asked why tho Brk was so the cold wave, and the earthquake is now anxious for tho issuance of bonds provid- Yooked for. ing for the expenditure by this city of Ll 60,000 moro for pavoments, and why Tk time across the Atlantic is being did tho editor of tho Bk exorcise himselj gradually reduced by the recently-built | personally to secure the expenditure of steamers, The Uwmbris, a new Cunarder, [ $70, for this purpose? has shown a speed of twenty-one knots| The Bkr has been a porsistent and an hour on a trial trip, and she will | gonsistent advocate of public improve- The actual assets for arger than the total in nine nonths in This gain Tue Contral Pacific railroad has been comploted for fifteen yoars, and the gov- ernment has just issued to the company | only with tha realities of life, aud whon | ita first patent for lands in Utah. This first patent covers 76,000 acres, and lists for 20,000 acres additional aro being pro- pared, and the company will now pro- ceed steadily to take out patents on all its lands in Utah, The reason that it has not done so before 1s simply because it did not wish to pay taxes on the lands. is alio pro- posed to ask the people to vote £2,500 for the purpose of buying a lot and build- of the city known as Traintown, and £3,000 for the the sixth s0 proponitions ought to be as they reasing our oratic party in Ohio. tio fraud, gotten up to previ legialation, hazards, legislature to declare The woods are full of them. 8,302, as | the greatness of Kansas City. here an unobstructed view is obtained of Independence on the south, and Wyan- dotte on the west, and Liberty on the for 1883 showed a gain of 38 per cent[north, Here resides Christopher Mann, Tho increase | Who is undoubtedly the oldest person i Missouri, and one of the oldest in the United States. ited the sged patriarch recently, the The groes liabilities [ occasion being the celebration of his and o strong wenso of right, many men who firat saw light in *decla- ration days,” he claims no personal ac- 1883, Bradstreet's says that the one re- | quaintando with the father of his coun. deoming foature of the figures is the in. | try, although born within a few miles of creased percentage of assets to liabilitics throughout the United Stato. is wost marked in the southern states. Journal Logan, The Masomb ([llinole) administers a pointed rebuke to the dem ocrate, as follows: Logan's_grammar may be frightfully bad and all that, but we will wager some- thing nico that he never uttered uttered a sentenco in reference to democracy in hie life but every member of the party took in its full gcope and meaning, un- derstood every word of it, to the dotting of the i or the crossing of the t. Accorvixa to the Cleveland Leader, the electrical presencs of Jamos G. Blaine is fast shocking the life out of the demo It doesn't enjoy that sort of magnetism a bit. Keer it before the people that the rail- road commissioner amendment is a gigan- ot railroad It ehould be defeated at all It is about time for candidaten for the thieir intentions, The Party Bigot. Chicago Herald, One of the most curious phenomena of the regular campaign is the party bigot. If hois a republicen he describes with all possible malignancy of epithet the man who fails to carried on the war, he was not asoldier and did not contrib- ute a cont toward sending soldiers {0 the field. lili(ely to be a protectionist and tnsiat that the always form, its platforms from the beginning of the century down to the present time. party bigot always insists that the men of & party should stick to the party for no other reason than that it is the party, but the angels in heaven do not rejoice more over the one recovered sinner than does he over the fellow who leaves the other party. silliest and least rational of all bigot- ries, ble can his faith. of the two parties in search of clearly de- fined opposing principles of government what is the result? agree on all subjects but one—the tariff— and tho tariff plank of the democratic platform is 8o bunglingly constructed that the New York World construes it as pro- tective for the democracy that want pro- support the party that ¥en chances to one If ho isa democrat he is very democratic party Was opposed to revenue re- notwithstanding the array of The Party bigotry is the stupidest, The party bigot is not a valua- man in a party because he rarel; give a reason for hen one reads the platforms They practically tection, and the Louisville Courier- | g Journal conatrues it as freo trade for the south, 1f there had been more courage in the convnetion, and if a clear agsertion of the reduction of al! taxation down to the level of the necessi- ties of the government had been made, party lines might be drawn with equal distinctness, citizen who scrutinizes tho platforms to find reasons for voting for either candi- date will be sorely puzzled, and under such circumstances party bigotry is the height of nonsense. useless in politics and in religion. Under the circumstances a A bigot is cqually o ——— THE OLDEST MAN IN MISSOURI, Reccollections of a Man Who Was Born Beforo the Declaration of ndependence Was Signed, At a point two miles north of Inde- pendence on the Wayne City road stands & one-story weather-beaten frame house formerly owned by Col. Gilpin, the man credited with first prophesying From A Times' reporter vis- | f Sonator Van Wyck camoin daily con- tact with;Brown on the floor of the same “Uncle Chris,” as he is familiarly called by his neighbors and acquaintances, has a mind well-filled with tho happenings of ‘‘other over those in nine months of 1883, or 60 |gone,” and nothing gives Thus, with a 13 per cent in- | pleasure than the presence of a good listener, when there in sixt; ont inorease in the i : We aro askod why the Sioux Falls|iere iixty por o struggling for freedom from a tyrranical days long him more Having besn born at a time the American colonles were his e power, ly training instilled into nine months of the current year, amount | 4is mind a deeper love of independence ing to $108,600,000, are $45,000,000 Unlike the Washington homestoad. Whilo you a boy he removed with his father to Kentucky, aud never tires ro. lating anecdotes ot Daniel Boone, tue great hunter and trapper. He describes Boone as being of medium height, mus- oular build, keen gray eyes, small nose and thin lips, He was & man who dealt he smiled, which was seldom, his face lighted up with & very singular and striking expression. Boone held very little 1ntercourse with the faw white peoplo of that seotion, preferring the solitude of the forest or soclety of his wife to that of the outside world, Mr. Maun claims with pride that he never was whipped ina personal en counter, and cites an incldent in his life start on her first trans-Atlantic trip. | ments., For moro than ten years it has | Wa suppose that it is making arrange. | 1 Kentucky when he had a severe fight from Liverpool to New York, on Novem-: | urged upon the city the prime importance | ments to diepose of all its Utah lands to | ber 1, Itis predicted that she will beat | of the best time of the Alaska by twenty- four hours. Wuex the Greely expedition satled in | were built. 1881, the members of the party of course | and sewerage knew nothing of Captain Howgate' crookedness, and they named lake, a|policy of systematio expenditures cape, and & mountain in his honor, He|for that class of improvements, seems to have monopolized a good share | We have a direct interest not only in the of the new names in the Arctic reglons. | material growth of Omaha but in the ex- General Hazen, however, has directed | tension of the pavement on Farnam the now offensive name to bo erased from | streat. Wo believe that it is essential to the maps and charts, and the names of | the prosperity of this city to borrow other officors substituted, Thus does the | every dollar it can got legally from year whirligig o!’ time bring round its re-|to yoar, for the next five or ten years,and for years before they were Acngen. keep up the work until all the busimess § 0} ——— thoroughfares and all the principal resi- [oarried Douglas county by more than Guear Hoglish fortunes continue t0|dence streots are paved and drained |2,000 majority tde last falltq heirs s Amorlos with the usual | phiy {s why wo favored not only $50,000|which shows how he vogularity, The latest lucky Awmerican (pu( 875,000 for paving next year, and [8% howe, Judge Weaver's organ heir is a Oincinattl ¢igar peddler who has been made t) believethat he s soon tocome into possession of §3,500,000. This English fortune business is one of the bigest humbugs over practiced. There s really mothing in it, except for the |the eleotors of this city at tho coming sbarpers in London who continue to bleed | eleotion & proposition for the erestion of aredulo s fools in America end elsewhers by vaasting from them fees tor lnlormr‘ ion ' concernivg what they called un- elaimed and usadjudicated estates. thera is no other selfishuess in prosper, Tur board of education will subwit to I IBLB.DOO each, Ouae of these buildings keeping pace with other cities in the syndicates of land grabbers, and hence it | oh matter of public works. We fought a|is taking out the necessary patents to [ which fired the blood of the young man, battle for waterworks in Omaha against|enable it to sell them, otherwise it would | #nd te determined to whip~ Lyons on tho moss-backs five yoars boforo thoy [have allowed the lands to remain un. /bt One day Lyons lr:ipru&ched the We advocated pavements patented for another fifteon years in As a tax- begun and we shall continue to urge the | dodger tho Contral Pacific has but few |stripped to the waist and proceeded to order to escape taxation. equals, The workingmen of Omaha, which numbered by the thousand, will their friend and co-worker, The b way to find eounty) Journal, with a noted *‘bully” This man Lyons b named L ons [ on one occasion asiisod Mr, Mann's father in a manner house through ‘the orchard and young Mann met him half way and told him of his purpose. Both men #par in & manner that showed they were well matched, inally Mann struck Lyons a powerful blow in the face, which are | dislocated his thumb, and he was imme- x ‘;(0 solid | diately clinched by Lyons. against Brown, the Omaha candidate for Jexpecting an encounter with congress, but will support Judge Weaver, | giant, had proviousl, 0 est | very short, and h an out is to exawine into | with bear's oil, his standing at home.— Liberty (Gage | Lann could not The bully, the young had his bair cut 1 groased his head making it so slick that could #sin any advantage in that direction, but, getting a hold on his This will bo news to Mr, Brown, who | throat, he soon checked tho breathing of it | grinders are barking up the wrong tree than the desire to ses the city grow and | when they represent the workiog men of Omaha a8 opposed to Brown, and assert his opponent to such an extent that ho readily oonsented to say enough, Daring time | the scufls Maun received a powerful stands | blow in the side, which swelled to such ¥iza that his father produced a lance and performed a surgical operation on his son which caused him to lose considerabls blood but attorded no relief. Later on in life Mr. Maun passed that Weaver is their friend sud their co. | throuzh Indiana on his way to a home in | worker, two additional school houses to cost | Logan’s grammar, and it has become the ) aho sleep on the floor, for which accommoda- fashion for cortain would-be critics, will bo located on Farnam street, and{do not themselves fully understand the l!hs other at the corner of Eighteenth | English lavgusge, to make fun of Mr, Lh the far wost aud stopped one vigth at a tavern kept by General William Henry Harrison, afierward president of tho |y A Goon deal has been said of General | United Stat as . Mr. Maun says the house was crowded and he was compelled to “Nover since thep,” observed M, Maos, ‘have I liked *Bill' Harrison,” He re- OCTOBER 17 1884 HanJs-me farnished rooms distinotly when a single log hut o o Y nite: v 16th &6 Mrs, Muy Spencer, stood on the bank of the White whero now is built the prosperous city of SPECIAL NOTICES erSpecials will Pos|tivel Inserted unless paid in advance. remarked Mr, Mann, an his mind reveried to his favorite topic, “‘and he did whip old Tecumssh powerful bad at the battle of Tippec: 1 distinetly remembers Stonewall Jackson, General Orr, Thomas Benton, and other men of note, romoved to this county in 1840, his recol lections of early times in its settloment form an interesting chapter. hale snd hearty and bias fair to live ten years longer, fighter, though Nicely turnished suite of 2 ros bought aud sold OR_RENT—A furnished room 1606 Farnam 8t. Agenta 1338 Farnam 8 '\"'.\:,n.xvfnm Jng boy 008 8, 18th, N WHEAVER, (O SALE~Fur X tel A Few Pages From Thst Gentleman's 7ANTED—Girl for general housework. Fatis Ciry, October 6, 1884, To the Editor of Tur Dre. Under tho head of special telogram from Falls City, October 2d, appears a garbolled and one sided report of the d here by Senator Van “-.\\‘r...» A seoond giel, 1017 D—Shovelors, wages $1.00 per da, at 7 i1 the morning, south 17th stree Tieavenworth and Jaokson stroets. open buggy,horse Michal, Mail Carrie cond hend base purnor meoting addr Wyck and A. Wyck did not say he endorsed all of Weavers actions, Weaver had on two occasions voted for anti-monopoly measures. ness of the senator's heart, and anxious to compliment his colleague, he in a gen- eral way, said he believed Weaver meant But tho senator Is making & serious mistske in giving any aid or countenance to this man, ‘Weaver has been everything by turns. Raised a democrat, ho has been by turns a republican and greenbacker. is trying to pass himself off, with Van Wyck's assistance, for 2n anti-monopolist, But whatever Mr, Weaver's profession may be, it is utterly devoid of principle. Nominated, according to his own orgen, by Allen Field, seconded by Ohurch Howe, and eulogized by John M. Thura- ton, one a B. & M., the otheran M. P. copper and the third a U. P. attorney and lobbyist. Does any sane man believe that railroad corporations send their po- litical attorneys to assist in nominating We who live here We remember 1 hand leathor seat top 1 lolivery wagon, chieap. " Welshans & Co., Ci %00 teatn of matohod p o Alao grocery connte £, Inquire 1717 Cers but admitted 3 for general house-work in tamily, 1415 north 15th St “,'Ahfl:u Nurso girl 119 south 25th St " In the guod- (VOB SALF—100 pianos and organs, boxcs suitable T T TS r ooal or feed boxes., 24 Dodge street. Good wages, iD—A barber, 7008, 10th streek. LE—A good frame houe, 2 Must bo moved at once the Weitorn Nowspaper Union, cor. 12th and How- _A competent glrl for_gencral house- ork, Two in tamily, Apply 70 8. 16th St. good side bar buggy 217 8 u:u‘ ORt SALE—Wholesa'o n ir] to wait on table, 1318 Jones Sb. ness, all com; lete, ith astablished route in wos. Satislactory ressone for seliing, Inquire Bee o ] ab Fdholm & Erickson's. Must i give good references., 4 OR SAUE—Hotel. The Oxturd housy, t e hest Tocation in this young city. culars, call on or address B Oxtord House, Oxford, Aeb, ror further parti- JANTED—Immediately, a girl to do dining room work at Nebrasks House, North Platte, Neb, M. Oberst, proprieter. OR SALE—100,000 brick at Florence, thousand at kiln. OR BALE—Drus stock in Southera N good town with good trade, Will invol For particulars addross “L. L." care 7ANTED—Laborers to work on Lincoln Water w Richio & Nichole, Lincoln VY ANTED—A good girl s 1621 Capital ave. 454.9p OR SALE—Cheap a second hand high top buggy. Taquiro at Sitpson’s Carrl ? Dodge between 14th and 15th, OR SALE—520 acres land on Middlo Beaver, in Kansas, 250 acre under fence, Good frame house 0 acres in cultivation, halance on time to suit also rell 60 huad cattle if s age Factoiy, Dodge, ANTED—Traycling salesmen to carry samples 280.t8 of staple goods in connection with thoir roguiar line to eell on commi-sion through the wost and northwest. Address “E. B. P.” this office, 43016 anti-monopolista? know Weuver better. when he issued an injunction to the B. & M. R. R. to keep the M P. from get. ting into our town, and then skipped be- ‘Who has not heard his de- cision wherein county treasurers were en- joined from collecting taxes of the B. & M. amounting to hundreds of thousands. In short, here at home Mr. Weaver is talked of as belonging to the B. & M. A nice man to ask anti-mopolists to vote ing water for stoc ith kitchen 12x20, ANTED—A German girl 14 or 15 yoarsold to Tearn the hair trade at A tkinson's, 16th Creighton Block, near postoftico, 3 fore daylight. on & Grove, Riverton, Neb, ANTED—TIinmedist 1y, gocd girl at tho Carey 1 . W. cor, of 11th and Davenport S E—A etock of general merchandise, and store for rent in a thriving Nebraska town Partioulars, address Q. R.” Bee offlce, Omaha, ANTED—German girl for general hougew: 1322 Yarnam stieot. 898-tt E—150,000 brick on cars at Bollsvue, M. ANTED—Agenta to sell Gately's U 284t cator on moathly payments droes W. D. P. Lows Mr. Weaver has received since hia firat entrance into politics in ealary alone, (outsido of plunder), $33,000. He has traveled for years, on railroad passes, worth to him hundreds of dollars per |’ He has sent his family and their families by the scoro on passes over the country, and by so doing made them And what has he done ads for these favors alone, eay nothing of their support in ¥, toom b, 110 north 10th &t., 571-1m only hotol iu town, 10 ro work at their own homes; 32 to 35 per Cay essily and etly mado; work rent'by mail: no car For particulars ing Please address Reliablo Maut's Co., N quire of Joha J. Kirg, Agcnt, West 240- BITUATIONS WANTRD, caalo notion or peddler to repay the ra OR SALE—A whole etoc shoes, buildivgs at cost, reti G. I1. Peterson, 504 south Tentl m: treans as partner in the Notion and A y . Address with psrticulars, “H.” Bee oftice. Two sccond hand_ pisnos, as Edho'in ' Muslc Store on 16th 8¢, 7ANTED—By a sober industrious young man, a family placo or any cther where h himee { genecally usctul.” Address “J. K Bea of Why then theso favors amounting to thousands of dollars to Mr. Weaver from tho railroads? Was it for decisions ren- dered on the bench? Why those favors Is it for expected favors E. new boiler and en; norse power, for sale ch Situation n a drug store by an_expe- Lest of reforences given. Address “M." Beo office. halls of congress? I leave the reader to ponder, and espocially all trae anti-mo- Northeast oorner 20th and Caming ANTED—By a young wan of ploasing address, | | troct, 0, I, Davis & Cory 1605 Fatuatn sireet, His haa experience as clerk in dry Addeces “A.” Bee office. goods and grocery store. asked in regard to Chas, H. Brown, Omaha, Weavor's opponent, and with whom the senator served three sessions in the state senate, s speech in the presonce of Weaver, that OR SALE—Cheap, & nice cottege, full lot, city water b blocks from the cours house, rocer, 224 and Leavenwortn. TANTEN—By & young and well educated man, ged 20 years and of pleacant address an intclligant and wealthy young. ludy, to practice four handed piano, and to en cr into correspondence, object eventually, matrimony strict Addross “A. B." care Beo d in his Falls Cit; y R SALE-Engines new and second hand 10 h. b, p. portablo and staioner; yle. Richard & Clark C. H. Brown was & conslstent anti-mo- nopolist, a man of brains, honor and in- togrity, and that no man in the state was held by him in higher regard than Mr. . Brown, of Omaha, bollers of any size and sf discretion guarantecd, R. Y. bet. 17tn snd 18th §ts. Omaha, OR BALE—A printing offico suitablo ior & smal per or job office. Wil gell for cash or ea XTANTRD—Sitastion by & lady ag b . z: changofor Omaha City property. This i3 more JANTED —A position by @ lady to do chawmber work, sewing or take care of a child, or do housework in a emall family. OR SALE—Two open fesond-asnd buggles snd Apply at the High “agn&dellvuy wagon, cheep, 5.t 1819 Harney £¢, —A_ysung man 21 years of age, with & cein drug business, wants a po- C. A, Hurley, 4000 Girard av 4 BIISCELLANEOUS. room for throe sessions, running through Weaver the eenator knows nothing more than anybody can learn by reading the Congressional Rec- Weaver has tried hard to get up an anti-monopoly boom through Van Wyck, but that one declaration as to Brown's standing lots the wiad out of aud before this carp i over the peoplo of this district wi occasion to hoar RANCIS M. REID, CITY JANITOR—Store, offlc & dono with despatch and . Order Flate nt Crossicy's, 210 south 14th, and at 207 north i6th stiecs, in store by 8 young n “A. E. Bee office, 16 8 v eveuing, October 2d, pair of he fin'er’ will be rewarced by Californis strect. NEOUS WAKTB. private families by an ex; oluruiug the same to \ ton Hotel, room 11 5 o record of Mr. W ver a8 it is, and not as o one-sided o gotten up and delivered by Weaver him his is alveady longe expocted af tho out-set, and 1 omplete history grossional cipher for anothe OARD—Two gent'emen cin hate pleasant rorm with excellent Loard in o priv-to family, Mary’s ave., Lear 20th St. nt, o small furnish 1y fwinished for honsel coping Q%" Bee office, it d been hitched t1 a of FO. Kouuz, brick 1 A furnished room in private f = ‘ould board with family it desired. D OR STO LEN—Sept. 17th light hay wmare v three years old. brand -d on lefe flank a4 Pas & white ep i forchos AEST TOUR BAKING PUWDER 10-DAY! Brands advertised as absolulely puro CONTAIN AMMONIA. Urst-clasa city secu / ANTED —§2,000 0 Address Box 62 years, ut 9 per col A ean top down on a hot stove until heated, tnem FAK N UP-—-Two dark gray horses at Dr. Mercer's 15t will not be re = N. Newcomb is the hoss rag caipes weaver suiteof rooms furaisbed or un 9. furniture for sale 411 noith 14th 8t wen hasremoved his office and rosi- © N. E. corner 15th and Leavenworth DOK RENT—Furnisied ¢ ults, eloks and cermpools oleancd with Satisfaction guarantoed by F. DOR RENT -Good busiuess store room. corner 0th A4 G Abel,(successor to J. M, Smith,) box 878, 972 1m and Jackson sirects. Also well fu atNo. 7.6 N. W. corner 16th and L Apply on premires, J. J, WELSHANS, JI RENT—Pianosand from + MURRAY has good pasturing, Spriug whter. DOR RENT—Pi :;o;m organs from two T. URBA past g Spring NOK KENT—A nice new cottegn on south 10th St. ERSONAL—Partics havi ed - P itien 80 e o ) ‘artics having abandoncd home. Northwest Kaneas, picaw oorrespond a Isano Mulholland, Reab Fetato aud Fivancial agent, Noiton, Kavsas. 16D, for 812 per monih. Bonnetts Grocery store. 0K KENT—Two vo/my, uicely faruished, excelient, 1418 Howard atrech. i ~Nice furnished rooms. with or with out board, 1606 Farnam strect. ENTRAL HOSPITAL—Cor. 14th and Jones, re- ceives patients suflering from any disease Dot contagious. Alo adies in & dolicate condiblon m K RENT—House of seven rooms, south and Leavenworth strects. Cornice Works, 1110 Douglas strcet. Inquire at Western e e sy HENRY SINCERE, DYEING, CLEANING, REPAIRING, % | REPAIRING AND TAILORING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE. SATISFACTIUN GUARANTEED, £a7Spocial oare i taken in Dyelg, Cleaning and Crig of Plumcs anc Tips, - 005 Clesning an 12th and Farnawm, ITS LEALTUFULNESS MAS NEVER BEKN QUESTIONED. nuer's block, 10th 7OR RENT—Two reoms in 1n amillion homes for a quay 0\ of & century 1% has THE TEST OF THE OVEN. POWDER CO., PRICE BAKE Dr, Price’s Special Flavoring Extrac Tho stroug sty most delicious Br. Price’s Lupulin Yeast Bread, The u\un Dry Hop Y GROCERS. L tor place. betwenn 12:80 and 1:30 p. m, e for light house- ud Howard street. Beewer's block, 8 nder Nebraska Naf Bank, FOR SALE B DREXEL & MAU MDERTAKERS | At the old stand| 1417 Farnam Street oh o lisited aou prowptly sitended to PROPOSALS FOoR STRUCTION, SIDEWALK CON- TP R RENT—Derirable furnished rooms, bilck Wik, modiin im; rovements, one block porth 1 Capit .f avenue. Sealrd proposals will ba received by the under 1ih A D 18 4. for thoconstraction of )l plan ouneil durng the quarter 4 £ be furcished QO RENT—S1x room hous tho Fo rd of Fublic ster street, §3..60 yor nonth. and »pocifications on fie i 10 10 Lo scoompanicd s aud bara, §15 per mou hundrd dollas fof the fai bful execution of eal 1 Oftice 16th street, first door north o o Board of Piblio Works reserves the right to tion the landlord charged him full rato. | Farnam in Boyd's opera house. orders at office or Saxo’s drug store. Telophone 160, d additiun, $11, » moutl

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