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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE--SATURDAY NOVEMBER 29, 1884, | e ———— THE DAILY Omaha OMoe, No. ¥16 Farnam 8¢, New York Office, RRoom 05 Tribune | to night. Iadependentsclalming still to be Pablished every mworning, exsept Bundayt saly Monday morntog daily. .#10.00 | Three Months . 5,00 | One Month.. ot Woek, 25 Oente. TR WHERLY H¥R, PURLOSHED EYRRY] WRDNRSDAT, /$2.00 | Three Monihe. 1.00 | One Month . A | Oowmunioations relating 4o News and Editorial mabtors sheuld be addrossed %o the Korron ov Tue B BUSXRRS LwTTHRS, All Business Tottors and Remittances shonld be adirsesed to Tire Bun Purnismne CoMraxy, e - Dratis, Choaks and Postofice orders 10 be miade pay- [ ago if it cannot win back those mem able to the order of the company. THE BEE PUBLISHING CO,, PROPS' E. ROSEWATER, Editor. A. T, Fitch, Managor Daily Circulation, P [ mug-womps the independent republicans 0. Box, 488 Omaha, Neb, Sivor Wiggine has joined the Salvation army he predicts cyclones of righteous wrath and extremely hot woather for Tur son of Rov. Dr. Burchard nbjects to a stage donkey in a New York theater being oalled *‘Barchard.” — e Awoxa the persons mentionod for a |the delegato to a national convention plase in Cleveland's cabinet is Jonas, but | Wa8 not bound to support its nominees if perhaps the democratic whale will swal- low this Jonah, who has been throw £ ‘ overboard by his own comtituency in |Pustained by tho national convention n | choice of the majority. That view was Tur cruel treatment of Lord Chlef Justice Coleridge, of England has lost that eminent man all his friends Shotld he ever again visit the United States he would find that it would be a continually cold day for him., WiiLe the friends of Grover Cleveland deny in a semi-authoritative way the rumors of his engagement to first this belle and then to (*hat one, we have heard no denials from the ladies in ques It is said that silence gives con- wumps Barkls toey are willing. Ben Burise always has at least one vain pursuit of the presidency. Brroke the election P:T. Barnum of- its value in the event of Cleveland's suc- cess. Ho stlll holds his property, how- |stay iu the minority. ever, but his $10,000 giraffo has laid | the republicans controlled both houses | and liberals, which are as yei not con- down and died, probably with grief over | of congreas by a three.fourths majority, | cluded. the result of the election, which, accord- ing to Barnum's figures, depreciated his sgainst General Grant's methods of ad- | publish a rough draft of the government ¥alue one-third, or $3,333}. Tar example sot by_tha New York au- Thanksgiving day atopped a hard-glove fight in a’gymnasium, It is to be hoped Trumbull, Wendell Phillips, thaythiakind 6f evasion of the law will | Grogley, and hosts of other original re- (6lly suppressed in every city in ‘the couifitry, as most of these exhibitions .are nothing “but prire fights, and oer- demoralizing influence, 880, work to find places in his cabinet for al the eminent statosmen that have been |Other leading independent republican: 8o far about twenty- .one secretaries of state, thirty secretaries | " .of the treasurey, fifty secrotaries of the|it aterior, forty secratarles of war, thirty- e seorotaries of the navy, seventy-five | *0 postmaster-generals and thirty-seven at- torneys-general have been named by hi friends, and the returns are mnot all in suggested to him. aro now. A cousrerreiTER who recently es: -oaped from jail at Madison, Wisoonsin, fasa forworded from the lumber reglons | Grant in 1872 and Blaine in 1884, We to theafederal authorities a bond for his | did not join the revolt of twelve years appearance whenover wanted, with the |ago, nor did we pursue the liberal repub- _statement that ho bad to go home to get |licans then, and we do not approve the|land question in a fashion that will arouse | ing the polloy which was based upon If tho | the indignant opposition and resistunce | securing pledges for the payment of the of the paers, and then the people of En-|indomaity. gland wil) have to judge between their |ing to pay the indemnity demanded, the beil. This may be rather an irregular | war upon the mug-wumps now, way of transacting such business and | republioans are to ever recover their lost msy beall right in the end, but we|priestage as a national party, they must|rapre ehould not be surprised if the bond |open their doors wide and lavite every proves to bea counterfeit. In that event | man who has been a republican to come it will be a genunie joke on the authori Tue retirement of Justice Bradley, of the sapreme court of the United States, depends entirely upon his own free will. He is an ardent partisan, and would rather hold on to his office until death rather than to resign his position to a democrat. The probability Is that unless | many of them will be counted for Mr. he vesigns this winter the chance of | Blaine in 18841—Omaha Herald, republican sucoeeding him will be very{ Why was it neceasary for the IHerald slim, It is likely, therefore, that he will | to ask to be retired before President Ar- thar's tecm expires, 80 that a republican | weakest spot and opens up oue of the osn be appointed. In this event it is es- darkest pages in the history of the demo- timated tbat the president will name |cratic party. Juige Gresham for the place. Tusne are two men in Washington | confederate democracy made it fmpossl- who evidently don't caro whether school | ble for republicans One of them is Mr, Marr, chief clerk of the postmaster general, who | crats have suppressed public sentiment very often scts as chief of the department [in this 1n the absence of the beads, and is really | terrorizing, the great factotum, He has been in the | and followed by the harness as a federal officer going on fifty- one years without intermission, through | Ohisholm and Mathews murders in Mi all the changes from whigs to democrats | issippi, .and from demoorats to republicans. The [ South Oarolia, other vetersn office-holder s William | the shotgun and revolver, second assistant reoretary of |armed and masked men tramp through skste, who entered the public service|the country to frighten the negro. ago under (leneral Jackson, and has remained continuous), Howard, Fish WAR ON THE MUGWUMPS New Haves, Conn,, November 26 The republican city primaries were heid republicans but admitting they voted for Cleveland were denied the privilege ot participating in any way whatever in the eaucus. The vote was unanimous for their expulsion,—~dAssociated Press Dis patch, Whom the gods wish to destroy they first make mad. Nothing but rancorous folly and madness could possibly inspire republicans in refosing to allow the so- called mug-wumps to resume party alle- gisnce if so disposed. How is it possible for the republican party ever to win an- other battle against democracy entrench- od within the fortress of federal patron- bors of the party that left it during the recont campalgn? 1t was & very idiotic thing in the first place to denounce as who refused to port Blaine, and it is o party in the minority, The doctrine ostablished at Chicago in 1880, when Garfield made that famous speech which gave him the nomination of the presi- dency. Garfield maintained that even his own conscience did not approve the when it refused to adopt the resolution expelling the delegates who declined to support any man that would be nominated by tho convention, While wo do not propose to defend the course of the inde- pendents who bolted the Blaine move- ment, every rational republican should have accorded to him'the moral right to do with his vote as he thinks best, and for exercising that right in a consclentious manner he does not deserve to bo stigma- tizod as & mugwump, The were republicans The mugwumps of Conneoticut character, and who care nothing for pat- ronage or the emoluments of ofiice. Connecticut has been a close state for fored to sell his property for two-thirds | years, and if the mugwumps are to be|bring on a collision between the two kept out of the party, the party will| houses of In 1872 when | negotiations between the conservatives | nezroen than whites, and it was only fair | to say that they wou'd have voted and car- ried those states for Blaine with the assist- ance they not been inflaenced by fear to atay away party is undoubtedly to state of facts, the right of every man to cast his vote and have it honestly counted. to do this, and hence the resultIn the ‘negroized” south, for any American citizen, white or black, to vote with safety in any state of the union for whom he pleases and belong to whatever party he may see fit, the re- publicans will have an iIncentive to stand togethor and fight the battle over again. 8o long as we do not haven free ballot and a fair count In every part of the country, our republican form s a sham and a farco. thing but maMgnant stupidity to con-|been aesistant clerk of the house of rep- nuo & warfare that must forover keep [resentatives for soveral se nounced as a candidate for chief clerk of . Wk the next house, of the sovereignty of the individual and | W, B, Slaughter, late chief clerk, is a his right to cast his ballot according to | candidate, and if not the promotion of the dictates of his own conscience was|Mr. Zadiker would be In the direct line of clvil service reform, The brief dura- tion of the sitting of the legislature makes it necessary to employ tre best clerical talont, — Lincoln Jouwrnal, We cannot see why it ia necossary to continue this man Slaughter or Zodiker in offico from year to year. We know enongh to know that we cannot have honest legi tlon 80 long aa the clerks of the legi ture are in league with the jobbers and rings that mather around the capital at every session to put up schemes by which they can raid the treasury. that the le: printed nntil a year after the last legisla- ture had conslndad its work? it that they were so imperfectly prepared that even to.day we can not find out many importont things that they ought to have contained, and yet wo are constantly mug- [ told by who | friends wore not in the market with their votes, | this man Slaughter has made. It may and were known among the most respect- | bo a good thing for the State Journal, sent, and the conclusion is that like |able membora of the party. A large ma- | that lives and thrives on state p jority of them had been republicans from | to have the business ¢f the house in the the day tho party Whs organized, and for [ hands of one of its pet strikers, but it is this reason they certainly were entitled | not in the interest of tax payers to give oye to business. He has already started | o fair and honorablo treatment at least|Brad. Slaughter a perpatual lease on the in to make up the money lost in travel- | from that class of republicans who have | ofice of chief clerk. ing ovor the country In a palace car In the | come into the party for the sake of the|that the coming legialature will give him Since | spoils, and never would have been repub- [ 4 much needed rest. the olection he has leased to the senate | licans except to further thelr own ambi- for committee-rooms one of his granite | tion. houses on Capitol hill, Washington, at|are reported to be men of the highest|1gad to ‘Washington. $10,000 per annum, of white republicans, nad from The republican this It should have enforced the polls, blame for It failed Until it is possible J. F. Zadiker, of Franklin, who has ne, is an- Wo have not heard that Why was it journals were not tive Why was certain of what an his admiring excellent clerk ting, It is to be hoped AxoNo the democrats all ronds now OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. The reluctance of Mr. Gladstone to parliament has led to According to the London .| of those who do not esca; is romarkably fair. the Roman, Greek, Lutheran, Swies and Unita: rian churches and the Jews all having representative episcopal, preei dential, or rabbinical magnates. There ate nearly seven hundred and fiffy mem- bers, and one-third of these may, under certain circumstances, be nominated by the king. The Hungarian legislatures, owing to their size, are notoriously noisy. It is proposed that there shall be fewer noblemen entitled to sit in both the sen- ate of Hungary and of Austria, The grand parliament of Austria Hungary is called the delegatione; one house is Hun- garian and the other Austrian. Prince Bismarck's Reichatag is now In session The cortes, the Belgian congrese, and the Datch atates general are also in ses- sion. In another fortnight, probably, every great consultative aud law-making body on earth will be well settled to the winter's or the summer’s labors as the case may be, The interest Prince Bismarck takes in the Congo conference, now in session 1n Berlin, is but a part of the larger interest Germany feels in the matter of securing a toothold in South Africa, as a step to ward colonial extension of the empire, For years past the country has felt the pressure of poverty, and attributes it to over-population, in spite of the large emi. gration of her people to America. Tha truth is that German poverty may be traced to the character of this emigration, and to the causes which lead toit. 1¢ is the military service exacted of young Germans, which is driviog them by myriads to seek a home and citizenship on our side of the Atlantic. It is the strongest and most energetic class which leave the country, while the weaker and more dependent are left at home. And military ser- vise In this way, the country gets no benefit in an indnstrial sense, but finds them a burden. It has tofeed and clothe them in their barracks, through the years when they might have been doing the best work or making the best preparation to serve their country in some peacefal calling. So the country grows poorer and more dissatisfied; eui- cides Increase ; the sceialists poll 650,000 votes at the election of members of the Reichstag, Good people like Dr. Freidrich Fabri and Dr. Heinrich Geficken say Germany must continue poor until her papple find some colonial cutlet, which will give them new fields of labor, and extend the commerce of the empire. But *‘itis a far call” to that reenlt, It will take de- cades before any colonization will reach proportions great enough to make an ap- preciable difference, and it would re- quire facilities for transportation greater than Germany possesses to carry her sur- plus population to Sonth Africa. These German Malthusians, like the English, put the effect for the cause. It i the poverty of a people that loads to over-population, As Dr. Johnson said, it is the people who have nothing to lose by self lndnf’gencu and nothing to gain by self-restraint whose increase embarasses society, It is the French peasantry, owning land and saving money, that sees little or no increase of its numbers. And the mirery that is the root of over-popu- lation in Germany is itself the fruit of the military system. Now that the French chambers have voted the appropriations asked for by the government for active hostilities in Ton- quin and China, the efforts for mediation are likely to be more successful. Recent the libersl republicans who revolted [ S/andard, which was the first paper to|reverses to the French forces had em- ministration were treated after the de- | redistribution bill some weeks ago, it is feat of Greeley with great msgnanimity. |atill por Tl It will be admitted that it would have | promise will fall through, thorities in putting a stop to glove-fights [ oen much more dangerous to the | bury has hitherto held highand confident " ,'l"'d’ having a good efleot l“_°"’“ country and more disastrous to the party | angwage. He has insisted on the dan- «cities. In St. Paul the ohlof of police on [y, haye been overthrown twelve years | gers of passing the franchise bill unac- Lyman | companied by that reallottmexnt of Horace | Which would prevent it from vorking in- |points of the sgreement, which would be justice. He has led the peers into a po viofl from which neither they nor he can The re- | rtrent without some discredit. publican‘leaders at that time, including|courageous, and does not fear the ex- General Grant, did not ask for their ex- when Charles Sumner, publicans deserted the party. pulsion, although they were as active The ropublican leaders, however, did were, the New Tribune, the Ohicago Tribuns, | peers. d the Cincinnati Commsercial, which confederates. These very papers are now making Rome howl with their curses and abuses of the mug-wnmps, tinetlon of the house, restore him to the house of commons, But he is one of those who, though they | France to secure a peaceful settlement. zveLAND will have hard |®nd consplcuous then as such men as|walk boldly to the brink, hesitate before |England will 1| George William Cartis, Carl Schurz and | they jump of. The boldest general |can: s | must atudy the temper of his soldiers: if | the Jormer concord between France and ressed, he may do well [ China, i o to accept any fair conditions of retreat. | before the French chambers on the for- excommunicate,” 88 | There is unquestionably some depression, York {some apprehension, among the n open defeotion if Lord Salisbury per . Thi; nlikely. Butit in- sper desorted the party at a timo when | §aes ,:‘;:',:’:,";‘:‘:_‘:,“ e is[its work was incomplete, and they wero [ ago of the francijise bill as the price for [ The French forces had taken the offen- willing to make common cause with the having & milder echome of redistribution than the liberal ma jority woeld otherwise | tories. compel. many peers will risk a collisions with the |but it was first necessary to establish So far as|commons rather than accept this scheme | peace and order and sestlo the conilict le that the proposed com- Lord Salis- ta He I8 Mapy hold that it wil! lead to and permit the pass- It vemuins to be seen how Tar Bre is concerned, wo supported [of redistribution, back and help to reorganize it and re store it to its original purity and high under the rule of Abraham Lincoln, THE “NEGROIZED" SOUTH, Forty-two electors were given to the negroized south by the republican party that it might hold power forever, sneers! betrays such makes In it indulge point that not secure any of the electors “negroized south?" It was because the with any degree of safoty. The demo- section by & system of white lesgue. ary after the Of course it was not neo to continue the use of or to have The object was schieved. The majority in y in office | some of the southern states for pruden. ever slnce, under Calhoun, Webster, Cass, | tial reasons did not vote. How was it Blaine and Fre- 1o Mississippi, Louisiaua and South Caro- Jiva? In thoss siites there are wmere legis be wisex to face the question at onoe, and better for the lords to have the fight out on this isseue, than on that of their | ter government was trying to pave the position as the land-owning class, moral standard which were maintained | Mr. Gladstone is both a conser a radical, revolution unavoidable. Lo the view of Mr. Chamberlain and other ragizls, a compromise can only postpone collision, not prevent it. now house of commons will take up the | from The utdtives and these The radicals hereditary hink 1t would ors, But ve and nd will do nothing to make Thin is rather an unique year for the upper houses of the various parlisments [and Tamsui for a.period to bo settled in in whose proceedings the world has so | future. fae become partially interested. woes of the house of "lords are the most [ tectorate over Anam and wade a fresh familiar of all these aristovratic sorrows, and need not be dwell upon. are even now busy eating their leek. [ bidden the impoitation of French pro- The The peers The | The French senate, having, through the the | conservative temperament of Premler | provinces, Ferry, preserved its e: of Republican feeling in France, is bound to part entirely with the principle of life | not unlikely to Jead to great changes in Why was it that Blaine did | membership, and becomes more nearly |the land system of Greed Britain. The of the|one part of & duplicate legislature than | first part of the islead to witness an osn be found outside of & Penosylvanis | agitation which mustbear fruit in. logisla or & Massachusetts eit{. it Is declared, will make e to vote down there|occuncill of nobilities, mot & body of | peopls of Skye are 2alf Ocltio and hal men all or any would delight to henor. 0 are still ineligible as well as high military | Oelticized in speech and sosial habits. 11 commanders, Ohanges are also expected [ Skye, as in the Hsghlands, the tribal begioning with the Kuklux, | at Rome, as, B weots, next Thursday, the king will | within she memory of men asill living pame no less than twenty new senators, tence in ihe face The result, the sonate » of whom France The pretenders when the Italian senate The lower house of the Hungarlan wing of that problemstic political structure s snd the Hawburg maseacre in|called Austris-Hungary is now debating |process of Anglicizi, the bill which, it intended, shall re model and sumewhat limit the membar ehip of the Hungarian house of mag uates, or senate, A is hlpylltrm of the idea that religious sects must have sspecial representatives on the senatorial benches, but in Hungary we see the principle flourishiog in its most liberal growth, thougt it is to ba said to the credit of Franz Josef that the division |th g h\-finm The oppeessive exercise of | sorvouny swok bt of these eoclostustioal places of honor conceasions, for it would |sponsibility for the Lang-Son affair, but eign appropriation, admitted that the tory | government had been led on by events. matter in whish the unforseen played so large & part. boldened the Chinese to such an extent that they expected to repoesess them- selves of the territory acquired by France and therefore, t he demands of France were in: & fair way of being rejected. Peace negotiatious are now being con- ducted through Lord Granville, British foreign secretary, which give some prom- ise of & speedy settlement of the dispute between ¥rance and China, The main infactory to China and France, are mown j¢o \both diplomats. Theee indl- cate thas both countries must make large China repudiates all re- will make honorable concerslous to be satlafied means of if she restoring be the Minister Ferry, in his. speech It could not be otherwise in a colenial The French position in make room for large farms after the En glish model, Then large and amall weie swept away to find room for sheep Then sheep and men must both give spot previo &0 inch in lngth. recogit'on splendin for clean-ing the skin, for years nfared from so BEAUTY ./ landlord rights created by English lace 14] defiance of justioe has grown worse with each generation First the small farmers were evicted in considerable numbers to| place to deer foreste. Xsa consequence very much of the country has been strip- ped of ita peopie But now the island is gotting what the Highlands endured and the peoplo have rien in a kind of revolt, Their temper of resistance is none the less formidable because they aro devout and even sombre Calvinists, who open and close their meetings with prayer and vote a Presby- terian minister into the chalr if one is to be had. To suppress the movement by mere brute force will be impossible, for it has enlisted too much sympathy throughout Scotland and even in England for this sort of treatment, The revoluticnary party of Russia has been quiet for the entiro year, giving birth to the hope that the chief difficul- tien wore at an end. Having destroyed the means of publication at the command of the revolutionary committee and im- prisoned a number of leading Nihilists, the government began, at last, to foel a ocertain sense of asecurity, It appears, however, that tho storin of revolution was only temporarily suspended instead of being brought to an end. The past year has only been the caln preceding tho tempeat, for we find that the machin- ery of Nihilism is again in fall blast, The trado of tha ports of the Adriatic Sea hus alresdy been benefited by the new Arlberg tunnel through the Rhefian Alps. Austria profits by the shortness of the railway route to Switzerland and South Bavaria, which brings the traflis of two continents through the sea which no longr pours its wealth Into the lap of venice, but enriches its northorn rival, Egyptian cottons pass by this route to Voralberg and Eistern Switzerland, and American cottons, it is expected, will noon come this way. The nelghboring port of Finne will also share in tho ad- vantages which are insured to Tricate by its favorable situation. A Robber Roped Bartivorg, Nosember 23,—Report renched here that Gieo. Bristoo, colored, was lynched Wednesday night at Newbridge, this state, He wes charged with rol bery and wh le the constanla was conducting him to jail a crowd wayl id him, took Biistos and hung him. He had bean warned proviously t» leave tho country. SPECIAL NOTICES M COUKY O TOAN n o of 800w O.F. Tavis and Co,, Kial Eitate ac Agenta. 1505 Farr am &t '\I« NEY loancd on chattels, Ballroad Tic YL bought and sold. A, Fireman, ()YAnA Fiuan Al Exchanes, m1de on approved security week days. 10 to 1 8undaj s, 141 to Dee. 2 + hes hours 9 to b 1508 Farr = Stroet. _‘ ANTED - One or tw *7 as out door Falesm Iibersi incuce L & g od ooh £ellere Ad D. Apileton & Co. 1d St 8t. Louis Mo, el ‘ & family of tao, N, K corper 19th aad Strects VW ANTED A capable eirl ¢ for srun 1 fan ily where second g at brick recidence c.t. 11th and Plerc D $. Barriger 78 aelt and fron I« opt. Call VWANTED €l for general houro work, 19 h Sticet JANTFD—Tmmediately, four aotive agente ladies or gontlem: n for mision Address G T60-28p VW ANTED. Active canvausers tor an article of merit, Call at550 8. 13th street, up siaire. o 7 WWASTED t0mon tor ratlrond work. 1 Wani weilor, 418 8, 13th St 0724 VWANTED A girl for seneral hovsework in & L S fanily; no children. 104 8. %0th atreet 771-28p W ANTED—-A woman cook at Enmel House, 760-1h WANIED-& gora competent ghl for genoral hourework, 2514 Douglas stroet. €nott ‘OR RENT—Four €oom cottage 8 { Anderson | Moo Southwell YOR RENT city §%0 Capitol ave JOR RENT—F o mmone Yx0 story 1 7OR RE 01 RE 1815 Caes stroet. JOR 1 [0k RENT—Two ro 190 9b. Bar hor & May, Frec 10th ard Daver v's Chiua Store, Apply rovm only, A pIaea nlst ed 10 20th an’ Dosg X {198 REN'2. Elegant 11 room house, 1 ard and soft vater all mad Barker n improvements, best 1ncation in 1%h snd Fars am 829t furnished front rame Stoves in each, 1313 loe-Mp weok. Very b 16th and Mason. Paulsin & Co,, 1618 Farna FEy 1t roomts I Rediok’s block, Pau oo for en 19th St o {OR RENT_Iouse with S robmaand barn. _ Ap: ply to P Wiig, No. 612 soubh 1261h0%. 8ISt 7OR RENT_A ton room oowage, good ok, ith barn, on Pacifio streot, near 11th etre.t. In- quire of . F. Goodioan, P OR RENT OR SALE—A five room House, No.2317 Piorce street. Apply 40 Mra: 8. G. Stsvenson, 200--1 T—In Sbinn's 84 addition, nice south nad east corner lot with 8 room house 918, per 92 Potter & Cobb, 1616 yarnom 8¢, 3 rnishod for light howso- keopiog. 8. W. oor. §th and Howard: 170t O IENT—Room corner of 17th and Graco Ste. LTy VAV ANTED -Agenta to sll in Nebraska a new work by & popuiar author. _Call on or addreus Jones and Hazolrigg, 218 north 17¢h St., Omah sop VW ANTED o buya oty lobto bo pald in weekly oFmosthly Insallinenda. Addresa . 1 tico 216! offl rentlemen to tako nice aint work at theirown homes Werk scnt by m: ght, pl tance 0, ol jectic day can by quiet' dress at once, ulobe M'f'g Co., Eostin, ) 5314, VWAL IED- Ladicsor ke to take nice, lizht and pl own hom es, 82 to 95 & day casil by 0 ail; 0 canvassing; bo stamp for reply Please address Rellable Man't'g Co., Phiiadelpnia, Pa, 6021m 68 OB GENTLEME] ke nlce light ; 82 t0 85 por vy eu: t'by mail; no cany 3 ase addrees Rellablo Mant's O 8 N—in oty d pl Infantile Blo.d Purifiers and Skin Beautifiers. A GROTH OF Halk, Whi'e neing your Cuticura for chapped hands, ft n ocrurred to me to try it for dandruff, from which 1 +uflerod a prest deal,and 1€ not only rpeedily cured the dandruf, but restored the hair to a large bald y entirely destitute of hair, 1t is now JOHN I PARKE, Chase,” Boston Harbor. Mustor ba I *Join F. SORE HANDS, Your Cuticura Renie‘ieaare ju The miners find and Cuticura C. BUDDE CHAPPED HANDS, I'nave boen using the Cutioura Seap for Chapped Hands and find it gives better satis'a tion rates mmero quickly than anyi hing 1 havo Ita clesnsing qualitics aod celicate }ortu in raic Serofield, Cul wend it 88 2 1gst desirablo sovp. W. F. PARK DOING GOOD, R, Charlottesburg, Ky. I wan glc 2 long tima and tried several doctors. They conld 208 d good. then 1 tried they ow Taey are WITH GOOD RESULTS 1 havoted your Cutionra Rornedies with £0ad re- sults for £or92aln and Scalp Dicease for & numbor of K. FAULASER. oars. B Hornel.aville, N. Y. WORKS LIKE MAGIO. You aes Soap T preacribe in &1 eruydtons of e Outi tho siln and it words | ks wagic. T H WHITING, M. D. 14 Contral Ifusical Hall, Chicage, T1l. JAL CO., BOSTON. n Blorusae try S0ap. Tongaln, he contended, was excellent. sive wibh the yesult ef gaining daily. vic Tho retources of the country would inorease under govd government, with ©hiva. Ferry continued that France was perfectly justified in demand ing indemnity tor the Bacle am- buscads and he demanded authrity the chambers for continu If Ohina persisted in refus- resont provisional occupation of the. ls- and of Yormasa by France will become permanent. ¥erry said China had asked the mediation of England, and the lat. way to a friendly ssttlement of tho difiiculty. snid, the latter had: accepted. Knglish mediation, Ferry atated, was upon_ the basis of French osovpation of Kelung Ohina, however, had demanded that France should renounce. her pro- delimitation of Tonquin by, placing the frontier below Oao-Bang, and had for- duots of Tonquin 1nto the Chincse The success of the Iriah land 'vague is tion is the Western Highlanda and ihe adjacent islands, especially Skye. The Noreo. The Norse element in the upper end of the jsland has. been. tharoughly system >i land tenure provailed till The ohieftain had noshing more then ocertain rights of maintenanee or ‘‘boavd- ing round” amosg his elansmen. In the the Highland:, begun in 1748, but atill far from eora- plote, the shieftalmships were wvon- verl i Engl barvnies; and the chiefs were ves with the abaolute ownership of the land s fast as they obiee to accept. this new statue. This ot itself drove weny high. lsnders out vi the countsy to Americs. They would not stay aa tensnts where snd their fathers had been free- That government had offered j/ its good offices to France, which, he|' —+THE MILD POWER CURTS.. o s A AT UNMPHREYS’ 72 ol Divorte o] by [t SlCouans, o Pl in oo Nomdnin h, scute 0oning Comgi\ ol eneral DebILIL, P ey D sea: Norvous Debil rinary Weak Disenscs ot or ters b oy roewipt of pricie—Se amphreys’ A on 151 saaes, rrens Al [LCino €'y 200 15 THEOLD RELIABLE THE BRUNSWICK, BALKE, TOL- LENDER COMPANY, {BUOUKSSOLS TO THE J. M. B, & [x 00.) Tho mosh sxtensive manutachurers Billiard & Poc Tables IN THE WORLD. Gonersl Agwad or Notassks an Westorn Lows. 0 8, Tonth Streeh + + + + OMAHA, NEB @ sdation Billiard and Pool Tables and waterls rloos H. 8. ATWOOD, Plattsmounth, = - = WASASEE 07 YHOAOUOEBREN AXD WeH SRAD AEREFORD AXD JERSEY GATTLE AXD BOROO OW JERENY RED BWENE Joba Hockstrasser cttice, Nevraska Correspondence yollcltrd UATIONS WARYE PV ANTEC - iy woman. o hote'. Addre-s “M. A. D" tion as conk i1 a Bee clice. 784D 7ANTED —Situatica by_young man in wholcsal or retail house only. Nob airaid to work ¥. 7., Bee ( fice, 740 VWANTED=Stuacion by yo one who has bad experine. fiee. 7ANTED -Situation by yonng married man in tomo employment for the winter. Beo office. 70123, )—Situstion to do writing in som 1 Beeothice. 7 7 ANTED—A jo-i-ion as ales lady or cash o dr; N \ Koods or grocery house by one who has ence, Rofer snces fuini . 443 Convent stret. 7 ation by young man of 12 years ds beotsand shoes and experien R10cery stosesy o ntry. Good rf_renco. Addresy o offlve. 738 24p 7 ANTED-A: situstion by a your, a8 clerk Add) LRE P noti e, 3 yeors exporinoe. A.B." T UK et ons Liali Whiiio SIVUALIOD A U @ G koopor, in wholcealo ostablishment [0 Oranus. Addrese 40" caro Bee. 898- @1A0KLLABEOLS WALTH 0 ARD—Fizst-+lass boardiand beds 4 per weck at 1212 Capitol ave. 758-14p A7ANTED—A house of ¢ix rooms and bam on wroen car line. Apply to 1. s1oibnnus, 418 N. 7081 V 16th Street \ 7 ANTED-Te rell trade or. rent biscksmith and wagon -op tocls, Good loeativon business entsblished. Address Geu. W. Lambiing, Weepiog Water, Neb. 7T T—The corner store 10th and Leavon y G. M. Peterson. 103t '—Cottago of five rooms, desirablelo-~ O. F. Davis & Co., 1606 Farmam st. and Hickory threo story brick, metail draulic_elevator]. concrets ckto door, Barker & Mayne,. L2 on January 1st, 1555, on 18th botwoen Inguive at ¥, J. Kaaper. 01 0OMS—With boand, des rab o or winter’ at St Chailes Hetel, JO ke $176 for 7OR SALE ~Tata enst of lners Rri Cottago of five roows. th Gth streat. at acre AMES, 167 ono blcck of the 18th streot ca 5 per lot, cn monthly jayments € Iot, one'qusrter dowr: Farnsm 8t. 793-1 ok sat Judge Redick s,resudence. Reasonal JOR SALE e ti SALE 100 feet byt 247 feet (2 old Tots) good. An Investront-aef -ecsily handled, ¢ st wtuated lots in Plainview, opjosite of the years on batance. Tnese lotz-are ohoice,wilt advance stoadily in value, AMES, 1507 Farnam 'St, 7981 Restaurant; good location. Would me on patt or take tesm. Address D" and 10 p. m Cigar store all wrmish, rent only S16. Iuquire 265 noxth i6th ' St., OR SALE—Thres No .1 mi'ch cows, at first « houso east of Sacred Hoart Academy, Burt bt. 763-2p TOR 83 2 Another lot of (. ene miloh cows ay 1wy yard, on 27th and Buré strect. J. W. Penny. 7810 soene afier death of my caild office. OR SALE—Houre (6 rooma) and four Iofs - Wil woll cheap I order to get.immedicte chonge . B Parfitt, Gee Toldec12 of Leavenworth, went side, terms easy, cer 22d and Lusvenworth strees. OR SALE—Chesp, & mioo on geade, city water 19th rcom cottage full loy eet, half a block B, M. Lee. 7404t fine location. OR SALE OR RENT - Lot 60x383 with new § room house and 4 hurse stable, Pisrce, near Weat ave, Pan aon & Co., 1613 Farnam. 3154 WO Gentisa on can have a large har dsomely fur- nished socond story froms room with exce lent board, 2 Mary'save, 785-080 WA for land adjaining the cisy. To exchauye one of the Jeat retall gro- rics in Dmaha,for rear eststo in tho city or Addhis “A 2.7 Bee 75710 ,000 on fixst-class caty security,for b 9 per ceut. Address Box €0 Pout- WANIEO-2 Will pay §1 tic's store. No 818 South Ftoves sucwarnels on woek y pa ments. waks 540 faod Als snake kil ers }iece far snakes at M K. Mar 8t wko se) & furniture st tomplat ce January 1 t. 1886, wishes to pur- “hase an luterestin & well establishcd morcantie or manufacturi i business, w. uld buy out o small bus- ness, huy 10 000 cash,can furnish riterew.ces ofa bizh g ald cxpeotsams o secu e roply, ad- we and particuls s, “Merchant’ 850-6¢ lowkp dress ¢ care Buo orfle $16.00 por. REN! - Two howre: [yt nth Inguire 3.9 Dod For ok neNE=s uruiohed rooms at 1417 Howard “» AUR HENT- Cne #is rocm howse on 21st aud Har K St. A H. T4t © eligant corner ror i, well fur. NOR RE =t and south, in Odd Block, Inquire #4 0ow No & 0L BENT e yoons turnis! on secund floor, 1815 Chicago St. sland in Platte county 870 acrew in Stanton wtate. will trade ail or o, nold ¥ 1207 Faroem “t., % 77820 om b TOR RANTA 8 rom house ¢ne block south 10th Eta. M. Las, groces 224 and Loaveuworth 77429 Fi and ol w211 '0n 0.8y montaly PayD ou strach. ¢ 7 rocm brick houx, barn, well 10 theright tenant e s AMES, 1107 Farnam 024t "9 roum nouse, fine yard, Pazk ave, u o NOR Kb xr | 7 ¥ornam St. 1t [ AmE T Nice furnished rovm . pyrimate f PRI 70 SOR BENT Splendid house, good Jooation. Feamonth, = R, O, Patterson, oce. 18th Becom: 770 T Furniahed rooms brick zlock, Aaiprovemonts, « ne oluck from +ast oft'e, cotnez 16th s d 0 MUK RET o, Metro | R td aud furnished with sll mydern laprovemonts, Apply to tho (o oare Max Me ¢r & Co, i F.n RENT - A very de.iradlo roou. Ui LENT-— Houns 1414 63 ora f the furnture r sk fooms for 3mk. For BENT—[ossans farolshed 100,006 N 1. OR RENT- Furnished rooms ‘coraer 10th 2ad L enpoit 6.4 JOOR RENT-A beres funshed front xoom wi b P board, 316 per month. 917 Wik wteeet, Lolweon leard sou Cumbuy s T 0 D0 RENT—A nuw bo e of 107 oo, and & basm, bard and #:f¢ wab:i; on Park o, ¢ blooks from Farvaw streel. luquire 913 TOR REN (— Fars i3 107w &b 5008 ok, 31X s Avenus, T8 D OR SALE—Tho best business Jot at the Stock yards South Omaha, 60x160. _ Will be. worth ouble the price asked now inside 12 months. Apply at office New York Dry Goods store, 1310 Farnam. 2711 VOl SALE—1 mausage choppor, borse pow: Iyn Market, cor. 1. rendering kettlo, one lard press. Apply at Ero: b aud Piorco 80241, office. Y PE—A quantity of fob s newspaper typo for salo. Also a good Zither. C. . Bunce, care Boa Tobits JO% SALE-New phaston. Inqolre ol Geo. g ing ot north. oast corner 10th ud Dodge w1 HOEEAL sh and postofi ce. —Oottage of (£ coms, barn, corner lot.in ‘s addition;wnly .5 0;5mall cash puymen | ce monthly, Burgain. McCagu . White Graud island, Ny [ CR BAL . H. Peterson. 804 south Tonth strect. ROR 441E~Two opan seno one delivary wagos, o $10, Lthand ay PRMAKENLP—0no black 0ST—A yours . Jrewasd will be paid for informatl i, or ber 101312 Donglas it 6.000 ouys the bauk b ¢ whict rentw 101 $1 lor proof safe with $1,600, ais0 % very larks bank boos fire roof mate, bank counter, deiss, hird coal stovy, in faot, & com- Pleta bank ouLfit, togetbor vAith Lot 44466 on Lacuse stroct, and two years tie if dasired. Catl b OF au 7litle purfoor, ‘ternus 4 cash, bs an F—Choap & second hand hiih top buggy. luquite at Simpson's Carriage Factory, Douge, ween 14th and 1oub, wio-ul NOK SALE—A whele $ock 0f Clothing, boots an sho uildings st cost, Fetixing trom busuicss. 118-3m camad 5 Deap, 85120 Ham 9, Vel biy an ice dinner # ¢ of flae ware and new stupes at Moody's Chiua »oe, cotneds Bulal Whits fuc 1020 South 11 ¥ manufasturers in Omaba: Loy UBBER STAMPS—On Tices Printin - Co, PR, ot sinka avd [ guidscly onlerlow wog without ts leat i » odorluss apparstus. A kvans & Co,, 1 e, sl cloaned,at thy 1orteat nofice wad at any thae of the cay, in ua. ation and bl o4 d. el cg bore, With. our imun: pAnta oF B DREXEL & MAUL, telog.1aph so Zoited pheas CAM SUOOTHMORS TO JORN U JAO0IS, UNDERTAKERS Y Al the o\ stand 141 Farnaw jsrer s, promptly sttended to Osdare by To'e Now 926 COLLARS o CUFFS BEARNG THIS MATK ARE THE FINEET QOODS EVER MADE, sema All Linen, sor Linings axo Exteriors, Aak for them . BLUN, Ageats tor Unwba i