Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Tet Him Define Himself Mr. H. H. Shedd is up ngain asking a renomination at the hauds of the repub- in DArty n( Nebrasks 1 r the office of TIIE DAILY PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. sht with Mr. Shedd, endorseme nl which the peoplo of Nebraska would like to know what he proposes to do with the nate committees in case dled upon to preside over that hody sl upon naming the THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPAXY, PROPRIETO . ROSEWATE! laws wnich the 3 never saw the Kght of day nt of Circulation. & own committe: i issue <ome County "of Im. cretary of the Bee Pub- | years ago in jhis state § Shedd was the nd is the method Shedd shall this question before the convention mects If railroad lobbyists sters under the control of the mouopolics n given a chance legiglation through the Saturday, 28th Average........ . Subscribed and_sworn 1o 4th day of Sept., If the senate is tobe pernutted in accord- anee with a proj its own committe distinetly st Blundering IIr‘]mrlmvuv e statement that t has blundered wgain is not surpris- It has been doing that opvortunity under its present :Uhnmiv tration, and thereis no reason to suppose that it will not blunder Mr. Whitney Geo. B, Trschuck, s wni says that he is secr pany, that the daily cireulation of ‘the montl of January, 155 (mrmrum : TH conies: 3 15386, wtmmpm for August, lxw. Bobseribed and sworn to before me, this 4th day of Sept., A. D, 1886 nereafter waile remaing at the head of 1t. A Washington correspondent has found > of the long de i onlls for proposals P new war ve! be built by congress. Notary Pubile. mstraction of Is authorized to Two of them were ONLY o few more unblanketing of horses for torial race. Entries must be made quickly or not at all. ys remain for the displacement; two were to be gunboats of about tons and 870 tons respe constructed of steel. tors are in town, but rapidly that her Ay streets looks like fuir week in THOUSANDS of vi Omaha is growing so vely, all to be Work upon the de- ¢ was entered upon constraction of Crurcr Howe may seoure the nomi- i niiicsatad Ui gl , as every democrat hopes, but if he does the republicans will lose a con- gressman from Nebraska, to supervise the plans approved those for end of last May, and those for the cruigers were approy OmAnA merchants and business men about two months ago. Omaha ndust sented at the expositio rama of Omaha’ Ir is the lll‘!"'hl of nonsense in the responsible scribblers of Omaha papers to ory ~‘job” in the city hall matre the young men who are mism sheets in the editor’s been in Omaha longer they would know It is now cighteen months si the location of the o upon after a long canvas of public opin- It is nearly twelye since the people of this city, by an overwhelming ity, ratified that choi the board of education to set aside their portion for the commencement of the At every stage in the contro- versy the public has been consulted has supported and commended the course taken by this paper, and earried out by There cannot be the as to where the re their public located, on what spot they want 1t built or how The petty cabal of jaundiced politicians and disgru owners, who are yelping at the heels of the Bee and the city council, represent only envy and spleen. ) backing, no respectable following and no basis for their personal ass: 08 are well Ivis a pano- o A at Britain for the Japanese government had i great speed, ne determined American eruisers the plans of the Japanese v revision of the plans, and with it that the bureau ade a boteh of the des bourd had allowed ssary to design and draw a new set of lines, and this was certain oxtent by patching up is having been advertisement for proposals was prepared, but before it received the y another blun- The board on addi- the discovery struetion had which the supery absence had hall was decided and authori: signature of th der was discovered. tional vessels, probably in the law which required that boats should be built proved designs for the construction of one of the gunboats of composite mate- that is, of wood and iron. than $25,000 had been expended in pay- ment of dranghtsmen, and the result was sign condemned, one found defec- tive and patched up, and a third that may be found wanting. men of cours the city council. shadow of a question people of this city de od real estate The dranghts- : simply obeyed orders,and the inefliciency of the construction bu- reau, for which Mr, Whitney is measur- ably respons stupidity or cavelessness of the saper- i But wherever ought justly to be laid, and we can se son why the Ins share of it, the sion from such tment is still and Governor 1 n consulting garding the political situati quirements in New York out that there was an entively harmon ous understanding between them ssumed from this that the and the governor sre on cordial terms, and that they will be found work- artily for the unity and emocracy of New York. The Hill machine has recently been very it will take some nd s given unavoidable conelu- boasted reform might able reformation with ady n ntage to the vice and profit to the government, ing together h harmony of the d Rtecounting the The discovery that the Indians at Pine are drawing too many ra led Commissioner Atkins to order a re- count of all the Sioux on all the agencies on September 2! counting the Indians will aceurately cide how many of the drawing double rations from Uncle Sam'’s storehouses, It has been a fayvorite pastime of the wily savage to have self registered at several agencies and days at all. census hus shown nothing because of the of the tribes. badly shattered, time to repair and restore it. likely that the shrewd go his somewhat erippled situation, expedient to fly low for a while New York go demoo nothing is more certain credit of the result would be given most largely to Hill, and to develop new men in s interest, ean then reorganize tho machine with reference to his personal ad with improved material. two yoars before the national democratic Tt is thought that the N York state demoeratio committec, which will meet on the 21st of this decide not to hold a state convention. atic in November, ving used the time antage, and It is still nearly census time, returned the favor by swelling the cen- sus at Rosebud. By counting all the In- ians on the same day agencies this swapping of families in order to incrense the rations will ENvVOY SEDGWICK ente not guilty to the charge of gross miscon- duct in the City of Mexico proferred ally and otherwiso against him, and ofters nn array of statements in support This makes a question of veracity botwoen Consul Poreh 1 con- junction with the newspaper correspond- ents and the envo, have had no conceivable venting and eireul; ing the special country in every consideration and of self-respeet would have induced correspondents of Awmorican nowspapers to cover up if pos- siblo uny breach of decorum or doecncy on the part of the envoy. the consul to the state department was explicit in the terms and ch: allegntions, and was apparcntly not mado on hearsay. The oflense of Mr. Sedgwick was 5o glaring and palpable that conceal- ment was impossible. been at the Joekey ult of the count se in the number of What then? No doubt the re; show a heavy de Sioux entitled to rations. Shall the surplus food supply be cut off? i d observers like o cuddy declare that a decroase in rations will certainly ca use trouble. ent Indian ration is too small, fixed when game was plenty and buffalo meat abundant. of his plea, The former o ng ascandal v representative On the eontrary Now there the consul and insuflicient tion by drawing he is entitled to. down in number digsatisfaction 1s sure to A hungry Indian is a bad Indian. Commissioner Atkins should look over the ground carefully before he decreases the food supply of the Sionx. is vitally interested that peace should be preserved on her northern border. single month of Indian outbreak would cost the government and the state more lives and money than could be balanced oy a dozen yearly ration issues of the prosent amount. e ——— Tae Mayflowor bloomed in the fog and left ber Euglish competitor cut of sight iu the second race. The report of rations are cut ractor of its He admits having Clab banquet and made a night of it, but claims to' have gone quictly to his room at the hotel. offors only Mexican testimouy, under the cirenmstances is at least of ques- We suspect that a wa- Jority of poople will not regard the denial of tho envey, with the enaracter of the ovidence supporting it, »s quite satisfuc- tionabio value. The wial must be made over again, however, becanse the course was not ecovered within the seven hour's time stipulated. No one after seeing the sailing of the Yankee skimmer donbts what the outcome of the next heat will be rittania does not rule the waves, so far as yachting is concerned, COrowds at the Exposition. managers of the cxposition are justly congratulating themselves upon the swecess of their enterprise, Ti merry click of the turnstiles through which great throngs passed this week is music to their ears. Last night Lundreds turned away. Every sleand available inch of space was ted with s A fine display has drawn attendance and every dollar invested by exhibitors be returned with fourfold mterest | first inter-state exhibition held at Omaha is n sueec It is a success becaunse it has had an able, brainy and cflicient | mn ks of the hardest kind of work have paved the way for a | week of ample returns, Public patron- go has foliowed public appreciation, a matter of course The BeE would sng thounsands of our p ind visitors would receive botter satistaction m &ight secing if they would scleer the day instead of the even- ing for making their tour of the exhibits, e immense crowds at night would be avorded and more time and opportuni would be afforded for a ful and i terested study ot the disp The ve crow It seors \zement ple Tiv Knights of Labor endorse Senator n Wyck's senatorial record. The po- litical Knights of Leisure under the rail- road employ think it shockingly bad. PRINCE ALEXANDER has returned to Germany after having returned his crown to Rus; Alexander is to bo congratulated he brings his head back with him. that Other L Bulguria is one control. sneceeded 1s Than Ours, more under Russian The intrigucs of Muscovy have Alexander has signed his formal abdication and left the country, and the election of w new ruler in full sympathy with Russin’s ambition will be t t move on the diplomatic chess board. The consent of the great powers to the downfall of Alexandor 15 now apparent. England alone was uncon- sulted in the negotiations by which Europe agreed to support the Rus position, and England betrays no indica- tion of an intention to resist the proseeu- tion of Ru s the kans. This fact is o most puzzling in connection with many and grave complications of the situation, for while it was easy to understand that England conld not for a moment contemplate gong to war solely in betalf of Prince Alexander, whatever his fate, it becomes diflicult to comprehend how the British government can mamtain an attitude of apparently listless indifference to circumstances which plainly poinu to Russian purpose to dommate Bulg: So grave & menace to her pow few years ago would have aroused Englwd to prompt and enorgetic action. What tremendons in- rce s it that now restrains her? ander personified the strugele be- tween the independence of Bulgaria and its Russinnization. So longas he should remain in power there would be a guaran- tee of the checkmating of Russian de- signs in the Balking, such as could be hoped for in no other way short of war. With his departure that gus moved. May we not ved in some form the strugzsle of gland and Russin at Coustantinople for paramount influence over the porte, and when that struggle begins may it not be the signal for the grea conflict medern Europe has known? of lln the y e The salient fact of the political situa- tion in England is the faiiure of the efforts to effect a compromise between the Salisbury government and Mr. Parnell. The ministry declines to support Mr. Parnell’'s measure for the conditional suspension of evietions in cer- tain cases, and is fully determined that there shall be no Irish legislation of any kind until next year, The decision of the government to this effect is principally due ta the attitude of Lord Harrington, wihio resolutely opposes any concession to the nationalists and pledges Lord Salis- bury the undivided support of the unionists in resistance to Mr. Par- neli’s bill. The coalition remains in abso- lute control of the situation, and the up position is powerless to ac: thing so long 1 Hartington and (?lmmhurlnm remain in control, The Gladstonean leaders have inownced that they will not countenance & policy of obstruetion, and Mr. reell has 1ged himself publicly not to resort to ctics. There scems no reason, efore, to doubt that the ministerial programme, which contemplates an im- s passage of the bills and Jjournment as ¢ 25th in- stant, will be earried out to the letter, * **x It is not a matter of surprise thata sentiment of uneasiness should prevail throughout Europe as to the mainten- ance of peace. On the other hand, the wonder is that the treaty of Berlin should have survived so long. The prin- cipal business of the different govern- ments has been for years the training of soldiers. It is estimated that there are now with the colors of Europe very nearly four millions of men, rather more than 5 per cent of the adult male popu tion® This tremendous armament fore- bodes war, Recent estimates show that Russia is spend ,000,000 a year on he a a ance, §200,000,000; Great Britain, $150,000,000; Ger- many, $100,000,000; 000,000; Ita $50,000,000; $30,000,000; Spain, §350,000,000. powers spend together the enormous sum of $845,000,000 annually in prepar- ing for war. Can any one believe that a faith manifesting itself by such works as these can be mistaken? There are 800~ 000,000 arguments advanced each year in support of the thesis that a great Kuro- pean struggle is imminent, Who can doubt it in the face of such reasoning? ‘This is the logic that gives such signal significance to the closing of the port of Batoum, to the intrigues in Bulgaria and to the differences about the Afghan frontier, The Old World is simply await- ing the touch of the torck to burst into a conflagration the like of which has not been seen sinee the era of Bonaparte. ‘The nations have been making ready the materials for the bonfire long enough; the BEE: SATURDAY SEPTEMBEKR 11 when the blazo will the continents. time impont and roll ovel roar * It is claimed that the present house of commons will establish woman sufirage Of its 684 membgrs, 320 are sud to be pledged to suppogt the measure, while of the remainder onfy 115 < avow ponents. The copservatives are more in favor of the change than the libe! more than half the that side. Thes son to believe that the extension of the sufirag in this direction avould strengthen the hands of the tories The natural tend- ency to conservitism is stronger in women than in men, and the average of education and intelligence is lower. The church influence is more nd the attachment to s more decided conservative reform on. very good re: social inequalities It would be a A very bitter feeling exists at present in Denmark between the government and liouse of reprosentatives. The prime munister, it is claimed, rides rough-shod over both parliament and constitution, and has been sustwmed by King Christ ian. When parlinment meets next month there will most likely be conside tation of questions treated in a manner contrary to the will of the people; and as the socialistic cle ment is quietly spreading its doctrines in northern Europe, there may before long be developed in Scandinavian countries a fierce resistance to everything that is anti-constitutional or unparliamentary. * «*x There has been no stronger illustration afforded lately for the variableness of the wind of popularity than the sudden aownfall of General Boulanger, French minister of war. From having been the object of public favor he has become the buttof ridicule, and will, it is said, be 1 moved from the cabinet by M. De Fre cinct. Like some other well known men in this country, he was guilty of writing too many compromising letters and neg- lecting to see that they were afterwards burned. * **x Tur Corcan peninsula threatens again to be a disturbing factor in Oriental politics, the Chinese government as ing that it is an integral part of its coun- try. Russia has lately been casting a covetous eye on Corea, and the occupa- tion of Port Lazaroff' by that power is a menace the outcome of which China is evidently determined to be prepared for. PROMINENT PERSONS, Senator Evarts sleeps well. eats light food, suffers little pain from his injured ankle,and, it is hoped, will soon have entirely recovered from the effects of the accident. Cornelins and William K. Vanderbilt get s many as one hundred begging latters every Wiiliam K. Vanderbilt has removed the Timit of $500,000 orizinally placed upon the cost of his vacht, and is sailing in with a de- termination to have the largest and most gor- geous eraft of the kind afloat. Then he will have little difticulty in working off hissurplus ineome. _Pat Sh er of Sul- e edy, the gambler and ba educated for the pr and-out prohibitionist. Thompson, the widow who runs the Louisville postofiice, has written a work treating of official life: While lecturing in this country n terJustin McCarthy will avoid all pa controversial subjeets, Mr. George Vandenhoff, well known as an actor and reader, died recently in England. Mrs. Whitmore, of Bar Harbor, dress- maker, is credited with havinz fallen heiress to a tritle of $100,000.000. The next gentle- man will please add another 000. Andrew Law, of Savannah,§ Ga,, who has left nearly four millions, was a blockade- runner during the war - The Revised Version, Peoria Transeript. We believe that when Mr. Cleveland wrote, in 1884, “No man ought to hold the office of vresident more than one term,” he meant, of , 'no unmarried man.” o Fond of Abdicating, hicago Times. Prince Alexander appears to be fond of ab- dicating. One abdication would have an- swered the purpose as well as & dozen, but after abdieating once he returns to Sofia to o through the same performances again, S Van Wyck's Popularity -in Oass, Cass County Journal. If we were to judgze of Van Wyck’s popu- larity thronzhout the state by what the farm- ers of Cass countp in general think o him, we should say he would be elected by a tre- mendons majority. xt win- rty and - Cool C olation. Nehraska City Nei “Phe anti-Van Wyek republicans will please © notice that alinost every republican con- vention yet held has instructed for Van Wyck, This 18 eool consolation—consider- ing thewarm weather—for those who are so vigorously fighting the old man. The Administration and the Uolored Man. Chicago Tribun Mr. Grover Cleveland in the woods says: M]: great respecet for the eolored people. Again and again 1 have told the delegations whieh have visited me that they must have econvictions of their own and act on them. Appointments of colored men by the Cleve- land administration, one. Removals of col- ored men by the same, in the treasury de- partmenc alone, sixty-iwo, e A Typographical Error. Washiyyfom Critie. One day in the senate cloak-room Se Vance was readinga newspaper whe item struck him. “How’s this?” he asked, apovealed to the threa or four statesmen dis- tributed around the room in assorted pos- tures, and reading ag follows: snator In- galls is the handsomest man in the senate.” “What's that™ asked Van Wyek 1n surprise, “‘Really, replied Vayee seriously, “l can't say what 1t s, but 1 hiuk itis a fypographi- cal error,” Waiting, Hollis W. Pisld in Detroit Free Press, They have gone throtgh life together, They have firu\ml ispstormy weather, Many a year Pime has filched from beauty's treasures, But Love scorns the horde lie measures With a leer. *Mid the world’s turmoil and fretting, Tuey'd no tears and vain rexreiting For the past And their troubles irmly breasting, They have found the tinie for resting Bweet, at last. ‘There are graves upon the meadow— Baby forms that lic t shadow, An! they felt life's fountain drying When they logked on baby. dying, But—"Thy will?” w, with pulses throbbing steady, 1 I hahd, they'te waiting, ready; Not a sigh For the time t wiftly fleeting, ‘There will be us nieeting— By and ¢ number being on | | cyclone struck the and | | celieney, Politics in_Boone Oounty. Avsion, Neb., Sept. 4.—To the Editor of the Bee: The heated term has not been over favorable to the scheming of the would be party leaders about the cap- 1tal of Boone county. Time was, and not very remote either, when two or three men residing at the county seatcontrolled the entire political machine for the county. But the power of these men has been steadily on the wane ever since the aspirations of Loran Clark for the treasurership, four years However, along in the cool of even- g, notwithstanding the heat, there has been a good deal of slate-making by the old party hacks, which 1 fear will be badly rubbed out when the farmers get done threshing and have a little time to look after their political wants, Itis given out very quictly that Clark is fig urging for Hon Dorsey’s place in the Third district, or the shoes of his ex Governor Dawes. Not that he expects to have the ghost of a show for cither, but mpross the delegates from other parts of the state, and especially the railway managors, that he is still t} great republican leader of this county.* Vhereas the real trath is, he could not be elected to_any office in the county, even ghould he wish it. One J. C. Mann ngo. Geo | has been chairman of tne_county central committee, but under his ma sment the purty has steadily lost ground, and it isthought wise {o chunge the’programme for the fall campuign, and Clark " is to be the power behind the' throne to try and down Van Wyck, They are now easting about to find & man to send as represen- tative to the legislature who will be pop ular enough at home to pull_the wool over the mers’ eyes and at the samoe time do their bidding, it clected, when he gets to Lincoln. For some time they thought they had such an one n .Inlm Peters, a man who has served the county for a number of terms as county clerk, who has made what he is_worth in the service of the B, & M. as agent for their lands. John is quite pop- ular 1n the county, and very acceptable ulln-mllm d crowd, as they knvw that no “man can serve two masters.” He has not declured himself upon the sena- torinl question, but it is ver; v to un- derstand where his position is upon that, as the News favors his candidaoy, and it never loses an oppertunity to ulnm- our senior senator. The papers in Cedar Rapids, upon the west side of the county, are trying to get up a_little boom for Dennis Tracy, an_outspoken gentle mn‘n talk- of Irish decent. But Denis, by He has de- 2, has put himself in a box, clared for Van Wycek, which kills him dead with the railfogie gang. The Van Wyck people can not trost him since his sell-out of the people’s cause three years ngo. So there seems nothing left for him but to go over to the pu;h\lutmuhh Within a few days past, the railrogue crowd have been falking up Fred Smith for their representativ Frod holds down a stool as_cashier of the Boone County bank. He w the monopolist candidate for county judge three years ago, and got baudly snowed under, Whether he perienced a change of heart since that time, your correspondent bl to say. However, the business sh he is engaged seldom akes a tto the o ) <'s return to the senate, on depended upon the direct pu)v\l]:n' vote there is not a doubt of his suceess. But the old party dodge will be rked with all the vigor the leaders of ng ean master. Every republican will Iu-hnm-xl to abide by king caucus. if he listens to the 1k must vote_his par There is a little very iroad democrats this county, of running n_straight party ticket. With the rank and_ file_of the democracy m the county, Van Wyck 18 perfectly acceptable. An independent candidate by them would be to give th whole battlé to the raidroad erowd v ing the republican label. With a union of the elements in faver of Van Wye representative favorable to his return easily be elected from Boone count VERITAS. quiet talk by the e cin An Independent Farmer. NELIGH, Neb., Sept. 7.—Editor of BEE; Local papers and some articles in the Omaha Republican are using my name quite freely of late for the reason that I am outspoken in favor of General Van Wyeck for re-election. It is claimed that I should stick closely 1o my farm and not create such a disturbance when I come into town. A farmer has no voice in the selection of candidates, The railrond rings, the bank rings, the court house rings, can fix up the proper ticke label them republican or demo the case may be, and we ticket thus formed, or be g or some other epithet they may choose to use. Now I would urge overy farmer and every laboring man = in Ne- brask: to vote your honest convictions the coming election. Do not let three or four ringsters control your county conventions, For once a your manhood and give these gentry understand that you hold the powi These town fellows promise every office to the country precincts, then sell and take them themselves, Let every wage worker, of whatever occupation wheel into line. Be politician enough to vote against those you know wio are not in sympathy with you. See to it that you are’ properly represented. Soldicrs f Nebraska, vote for those men who represent your interest. Vote as you fought at the coming election. Fight at the polls as valiantly for your rights as you did on a hundred pattle fields for the preservation of this glorions union S. F. Mernirr, ——— Sensations of an Aeronaut When More Than a Mile High, The Century: As nearly as could be judged, T was more than a mile high, and all sounds from the earth had ceased. ‘There waga death-lika silence which was simply awful. It scemed to my ove iined nerves to forlode disaster. Th ticking of the wateh in iy pocket sound- ed like a trip-hammer. 1 could fecl the blood as it shot through the veins of my head and arms. My straw hat and the willow ear snapped and cr; being contracted by the evaporation of the moisture in them and by the fast-cooling temperature. 1 was compelled to breathe a little quicker than usual on account, of the rarity of the atmosphere. | ho- came scisible of a loud, monotonous hum jn my ars, pitched about on middle of the piano, whieh seemed to bore in w my head from each side, meeting in the center with a_pop; then for an in stant my head would b elear, whon the same experience would be repeatea. By throwing out small pieces of tissne paper L saw that the batloon was still rapidly ascending, While debating with myself as to the advisability of pulling the valve rope (I was afraid ' to touch it for L rat would break) and diseharging some gus, sight of, and the cox vietion sed upon me that this must be the elounds! It mad dizzy to think of it. Above, below and upon all sides was'a dense, damp, chilly fog. Upon looking eloser, large drops of rain could be seen, silently falling down ont of sight into' what seemed bottomiess space. 2 I was alone, a mile from the rth, in loud and the silenc grave. over, 1 had solc e of the baloon; if it had not been is fact 1 could have taken a little comfort, as [ had no confidence in my ability to manage it. A rain-siorm upon the earth is accompanied by uoise: the of the char, for thi patter of the rain upon the he walks always while here, large, they conid not be luvurul falling spoken of by Dr l\nnv ar r| otl explorers as existing yns was a hubbub beside More tissue paper w that 1t seemed to ascend, apparatus was slowly descendin brought down by S thrown out; secing I knew that the the e ght w' T aiately the whistling could be heard Now mountains could bo from valleys, ussed immediately 200 people enjoying the y o First, the Orlatnnl .....y Only starch that s I conld plainiy hear o the Iaundry profes | sides toward the and the grapnel, with 100 feet struck the ground, one wall all out of lity of an introductior Ateh on to that s With s woe-he and stop the Nerous Prostration, Physical Weakness : Moreurial and other Aflec. » twitched along ne tions of Throat, skmu-suun Blood Poisoning, fell upon it, and my Tes Bty Peivamery rlaing from Indiscretion, Excest Note and Comment. s Exposure or Indulgence, which yrodn About two wecks i NEiive meery biiepy groat dr\ goods mercl hant, left and and took her children to New Y, nl k 1d - attompted her served with a summons in Inh. hirs, but she and the chil- it was belic Among the A anlvn wmnn Guarantee ¢iv corpus proceed dren disappe MARRIAGE GUlDE had gone to' Europe passengors who were transf nh\v o Queenstown the steamship |hlll'\|w‘ “hh h arrived from New York,wer her four children and a also accompaniod by m»u over, a Chicag was on board the n-mh yer b) the throat and thre A struggle ensued, wyer suceeeded steam-tender caught the law- him to the Bl mul\ln-mx overcoming nis Ferry had been in Queens- town geveral days awaiting the Britannic The lnwyor said that he the lady to consult with her father, “lm is at present in London. clined to s P At verter mosemstully iy _Na, 174 Exiun Strac! 21,829,850 ) ansnll‘sPunchBlgars #hipped during the past two yoars, withont o dr or i cur'emplov, ¢ anything to hor husband submitted to The (‘mn Prupl‘rl yesterday uo..rp W, Shleids ro ing arzuments in the matter of Croft_property, on the Sh This_proberty compr seventeen acres of land worth "The heirs by whom it is claimed Crott, John Crofi and young C: \||hhw|l~-m a of Gussic Croft. "I other ereditors are trying UCh AHOWIDR, the partition R.W.TANSILL&CO..55 Stata St. l‘mrwo DR. IMPEY. 1502 F.ARITAM ST, EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT, . Shields did not c any deeision, would favor the partition. Glagres fittod for all fo Vision. Artilicial Eyes Inserted. KE&?ST‘@NE WHISKEY specinlly Distilie Medicinal Us THE BEST TONIC) UNEQUALED for CONSUMPTION WASTING DISEASES and GENERAL DEBILITY. PERFECTS DIGESTION Roor in Cliief, National Guarc s of defactive EV RYBODY‘IS'SUBJECI' 10 MP[A!NTS GFIsKIND* ’“‘"NOTE\M]L 15 SAPE- Winiadr HAVIN({A BOTTLE OF WIBIN FASY-REAGY: ., IT-15-A-SAFE- & SPEEDY W2, ‘CURE e e Au DRUGGISISSELL Bid v articn in my practl Pac-stail of Beth. EISNEH & MENEELSDH ulllr~‘ Golde WOODBRIDGE BRO'S,, State Agents DeckerBro'sPianos Omaha, Neb. LINGOLR BUSINESS DIRECTORY The Tremont, ZGEIRALD & SO nowledge of the KUHN & €0, 181k & Cuming S8, Uminhiis NebS 10 THE TRADE itomplnte #de ot hnala the HAWKINS, Archltcot ovator on 11t Diest points of As proot of thi g WARDS 01t FO) cr oy Crrrug A A LXV(‘ btoo‘{ Avcmor eor Farm Lnans 'nd‘ Insi card to 1onns_sol Riw:rs‘de Short Horns 2‘*9 N‘”'th ]6“‘ S"" Agency for Nebraska wnd "iiat Crook Young 00L OF SCIENCE, Bzies Vilbert, J KN 0. GREE Address, CHAS, When 1 Lincoh stop at National Hotel, And get & good ainner fus JA Huh,uul iom PU’I‘S AND CALL 3 and Saoit T chiotmy 220 whank.