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R mane A MUCH-ENEEEBLED 0UTHIT. | Weaknes of the State Jour to Ride Many Hor ANTI - PROHIBITION An Attempt to the itical te Made German Vot and Other ut Captare News Linco!n, T est la Howe dividaa save tho itis county ousl the don much like the barrel head proclaiming now you sce it and you don't, It will find the Church Howe campaign won't work, for it is well known he wrote the prohibition plank, endorsed and voted for it now trying to make the peo ple believe it is nmitter of local interest and in which lie has no concern. ‘This will not godown with average voters, even in_ the republi can camp, who are feaving him in flocks and droves. Money may capture the machine, but Churcli can't’ raise enough 10 buy up the honest voters in Lancaster, wito will round np a fair majority against the dude legislator who assisted to organ ize scheme to place Jim Paul in the governor's ehair for the benetit of Mil Hurd and Matthewson, in order to cover up a matter which would eause any or individual to hide lis head in In local politics the republi )1 more shaky than they have done before. While there ar reputable men on the ticket they were placed there by Tom Ken- W wnd. lis: followors, Wlio always lieve in using theic dupes to the best advantage and were only thwarted in one ins . that being the nominacion of S Chapman for district judg Ihe voters of this connty can be hoodwinked no longer by the Journal and its strikers, who have always used theirinfluence and power for their own personal uses and benefits. Whil 1 Lancaster oneer who stood on the How and ever s0m AN UNJUST CRITICISM The Journal's eritic on “Mikado™ by our home talent was not only very un kind, but was untruthful in many re speets. Although the audience was com paratively light on_account of the cain, yet the stage people did thew part re- markably well. In fact many pro sional troops which appear here m: many worse mistakes than were made by flome company, yet the Journal critie \ks because they are forcign that they ntitled to an elegant notice. ANTI-PROHIBITION ON SUNDAY. Next Sunday there will be an anti-pro hibition meeting held in the cit While it will be composed largely of Germans, the leaders are prominent republicans ) office holders who intend to capture the meeting and carry the whole ecrowd into the republican camp for the entire republican ticket ex- cept for I M. Raymond and Schamp. They may be able to carry out their scheme, but it is thought the body of Germans will not be captured by any such gauzy deal. WAITING FOR GOULD, “The republicans are anxiously awaiting the arrival of Jay Gould, hoping he may tell them that the election of Church Howe would mect his approbation and pleasure, and possibly his son George would make a wedding present of a few thousand to help his friend and gen- eral striker into the halls of congres: BRIEF LOCAL MENTION. Work will soon begin on the new freight house for the B. & M. in this city. The location is near tho old depot. Hon. John A, McShane, the successor jax Weaver, spent a few hours in the vesterday. He is more confident r of his prospects, Mr. McLaughlin, one of the democratic candidates for the state senate, declined, and the central committee immediately ll]‘.u'ml in nomination Hon. I. Oppen- heimer, one of the leading business men of this city. The independent county central committee endorsed the selection, The defeat of Mr. R, E. Moore, the tem- perance republican caudidate, is more certain now than ever before, even 1if he had not made his talk at Bennett. The following resolutions was adopted by the Sigma Chi society of the univer- sity, of which Mr. Wheeler was a mem- th ar . It has_seemed best that our r, Frank L. Wheeler, should be taken from us; therefore, be it yed, That we, Alpha Epsilon chapter wma Chi_fraternity, tender our sym- pathy to the sorrowing family, whose gt we sharesand in his death we' feel that w have suftered a loss that cannot be repaired, and ~ Resolved, That the balls of Alpha Epsilon chapter be draped, and that the members wear the badge of inourning for thirty days; and that a copy of these solutions be sent tothe family of our deceased brother, and be published’in the eity papers and the Sig- ma Chi. The police court had three plain drunks, who were each fined $3and costs, all of whom refused to pay and were duly committed. The judge threatens to put them to work on the streets in the future, pounding stone and filling up mud holes. Sherift Melick took possession ot the hardware store of Andrew M. Heale to protect a claim of §1,060 1n fayor of a St. Joseph firm. At the close of the session of the Home of the Frienaless the following oflicers were eleeted for the ensuing year: Presi- dent, Mrs. R. C. Manley, fimmulu. re- cording socretary, Mrs. Benjamuin Hill, Hebron; tinancial ary, Mrs, John Doolittle, Lineoln; treasuver, Mr: Anna R. Hall, Lincoln; members of board of dircetors, Mesdames A. M. Davis, H. A. Babeock, 8. M. Benedict, H. W. Hardy, A. C. Rickotts, A, W, Field and H. £ Wilson. The adoption of the following reso- lution terminated the business before the convention: Tesolved, That the visiting delegates of the annual convention tender a vote of thanks to the Iadles of Lincoln for their kind hospital- ity and an expression of appreciation to Miss Elliott for her charming entertainment. After the adjournment of the conven- iion a meeting of the board of directors was held. Mrs. A, B. Slaughter eleoted superintendent’ and Miss Chura Dye matron. o {\'nrk on the salt well with its mew ma- chinery was bogun in earnest ye ay and will continue on until gold weather sets in School distriet bonds on No. 8 of Chey- enne county, $1,000: No. 69 of Nuckolls county, $400; No. b5 of Har county, $215: No. 11 of Hitcheock county, §2,0 0 No. 17 of Brow= county, $300; No. 43 of Antelope counity, §215; No. 30 of Dawson county, $0; No. 106 of Custer county, 877, were registered by the state oflicers The railroad commissioners have de cided that tie people of Wilber have no rights which the B. & M. railroad is bimm" to respect as the B. & M. were t first. W ad country this would be if the government wi the same in regard to the Indisn question. “Thus day by day do the railroad commis- fon onlightou the dear peoplo us to their ivilegos ). Statler, living in the south part of city, thoght he heard someone in- terviewing his chicken roost, and pre- pariug for a reception, he stealthily glided that way. Being somewhat of a nervous disposition le pulled a litde re to hold hat that any r of that class aind if th campaign C} tten before The grand lodge of Odd Fellow jere on the 20th inst. Committe been apoointed by the I 4 in t to make all neeessary preparatio their reception and entertainment Onr citiz el quite proud of th cess of its knights in eapturing the th prizes by the grand lodge at Hustings - King Theebaw's Jewels, Lond Daily News: A late and in voluntary exhibitor at South Kensington is the deposed King of Burmah, a portion of whose treasures, looted from the pal ace of Mandalay, Fave been arranged in nine ¢ to the ovlon court Three lerge wall enses contain objects ¢ clothing, and the memories of Prine Esterhazy’s resplendent uniforsm, with pearl embroidery in licu of silver lace ind dinmond tassels on the gleaming wn boots, are completely eclipsed by t into which emerands, dinmonds nd other precious stones are woven with beaten gold, <o that the weiglit would ne fordid, were eeremonial considera tions of superstitious state wanting, that the ghttering ment shonld be worn oftener than onee a year. Lady Dufferin is said to bave assumed it once, and with diflieculty to have stood upright m it, as her ludyship might have done tor u fow mds in a st of armor. Golden hats of varying shape, some hke helmets of Phrygian bonnets, others of pagoda form, are in this and adjoining The king's state um brella, furled, 15 in the centre wall case. There is talk of mounting it aloft in the centre of the gallery, Spread open to show its jeweled mujniticence. One of the state hats, covered with precious stones, all set in elaborate devic gold, is surmounted by a tapering finial, the base of which is formed of conver. gent diamonds, large, long, but of little value. A lapida or_dealer in ms would discriv te widely betwe the different value of the j property,’’ as the of & monarch retired from Some of the stones of g and others, comparatively speaking, are rubbish. Palm-leaf fans, carried n pro- cession, are formed of thin gold. Bowls, cups, vases, ftlasks, vessels of all shapes but those to which the western world scustomed, occupy six cases, They are all more or less jeweled, some of the stones being uncut. Great signifi- cance, probably of a religious kind, scems to be attached to a group of nine stones, the largest being i the center, On the eireular Tid of asplendidly jeweled betel box, specially devoted to the king own use, is a remarkably costly spec men of the mystie group of nine stones. The middle gem is a_ruby of 30} carat: with only one fault. its value cons quently is very great. Kound it are evenly set a moonstone, a pearl, a dia- mond, a cat's eye, a coril, a erystal, an ald and a sapphire. All these stones are valuable, the diamonds being of Amsterdam cuiting and of the fir water. [t is turned upside down, atter the invariable practice of the Bur- mese jewelers. Ingenuity of goldsmith’s work is pre-eminently ~shown in the adaptation of a lobster§ or similar crustacean to the purpose of a flagon. el 1 Stat of woere | Howe e would “tion m have s city s for cases, business. value, Halford Sauce is caital for dyspeptics. -~ ‘Che Evolution of the Shotgun. Indianapolis Journal: The gun has evoluted marvellously in the past twenty ars. We can remember when the pin i t came in; then the central fire; and old sportsmen patted their long-time friends and scorned the guns that broke in two., Now we have hammerless and zine guns, and, strange to say, we are getting back to the small bores used by our Igrandfathers, for the other day I'held in my hand a twenty which was listed at $355, “'very suitablé for a lady,” 1y number” of sixteens about the same figure. That was an imported gun, but there are some mighty gond weapons made in this country, although the great majority are imported, either finished or in the rough, from the workshops of Bir- mingham and Liege. The cheapest article on the market is wholesaled at $1.50, with a discount of 25 per cent for cash, and is in_high favor among the colored population of the south. The next grades are #4 and §3 25, and you can get a double barrel for $10. ‘These are muzzle londers, The cheapest breech loader 158 musket converted with the Sneider action, This will cost you £2.85, and is a clumsy but strong weapon. There are a number of single breech loaders, side snaps, top snaps, and other snaps, ranging up to $10, but none of whic e of much account, and the double guns which run from $11 up. A warranted gun of American finish can be purchased from $30 to $35, which will do ns good work as any one could ask. But the coming gun is the hammerless, and very handsome ones are finished in this country and wholesaled at from $100 to $125, in the lower grades, to $325 for finest work. Magazine guns are also coming to the front, at about the sume fi es,'and althongh these latter are as yet somewhat of an experiment, the ex- Perience of those who handle their favor. A novelty this ye: duck gun composed of seven 82-bore barrels enclosed in one, which shoots simnltaneously seven long bullet ocar- tridges, and will kill at 200 yards, Other new ideas are combination shot and rifle barrels, side by side and also over and under and a new double gun which is choked and rifled on the choke, so that a bullet is twisted when fired. MOST PERFECT MADE Prepared with strict toParlty, Btrongth, sad ey e () 0O Awwon| um of Phospastes. Dr.Prico' Batracts, Veallls, 04c Avos doliclonsly. THE NGR, CAPEL IN CALIFORNIA. THE MONSIGNOR'S DENIAL Earning an Honorable but Inglovions Livelihood as a Tutor of Woman's Son — In Hard Lines, ' Rich \d of z her vhen Pai el wtho Mgr ol ins headquarte « almost entirely ignored by ( He was not allowed to occupy th pulpit in any ehurch. Many of the most prominent and wealtl y prople at Romanists and Mgr. ¢ made every effort to securce the entree into the charmed cir but was almost entirely unsuceessful, Perhaps — the pubiished statement in the loeal paper that he had come b expecting in some manner to ceure a large amount of money to pay his debts in England may have some ¢ fect in preventing the realization of his ambition Mgr. Capel had not been here iol fore rumors as to his personal hab together incompatible with his religious pretensions, were in cirenlation. A great scandal was caused by the prelate, so it is said on good authority, while under the intluence of a hearty dinner, making his way into a respectable h which he mistook for radically difterent character. The occupants of the honsc were deeply seandalized by the conduet of the monsignor, and, to make matters worse, the lady insulted was prominent u the Catholic ehurch Capel finaily fell in with an Italan count named Valeusing, who had married the danghter of one of the wealthy fami lies of this state named MeCauley. Vale usin owned u beautiful ranchon the Sue- ramento river, and there Capel took up his abode, and from that time was no more heard of i public In a short time, however, strange ru mors were rd beneath the surface, wnd before Tong the courts were appealed to for a settlement of dificrences between Valeusin and his wite, The former made no seeret of the condition of affuirs at his ranch, but said that Cavel had debauched his viife and broken up his home. The story of the prelate’s domgs on the Sac ramento river is a_long one, but th quel is that Mar. Capel and Mrs. Vale sin are now siid to be hiving there alone, The affairs of the estate are m confusion. ne of a The Charzes A San_Francisco Dispateh in York World, Oct, 9: After a long search to-day the World correspondent suce ceeded i getting an interview with Count Valeusin, “the hushand of the woman whose rumored relations with Monsignor Capel have cansed much gossi cently. The count 1sa pleasant ring man, about 35 years old, and was readily induced totalk upon the sub- i wliich the interytew was sought at the outset that from aetual ob- servations concerning the relations of Monsignor Capel with Mrs. Valensin he has little testimony to ofter. Neverthe- less, he had learned much through sources which he implicitly trusted, be- sides hearing a great deal of rumor to which | red little importance, and t care to rep unt Valensin eame to Calitornia, he said, about fifteen years ago, and beeame acquainted with the family of J. C. Me- Cauley, a pioneer and a° wealtiy land proprictor of Sacremento county. ihe count soon became attached to Mr. McCauley’s daughte handsome girl. The young couple were soon en- waged, and'a marriage followed. Count Valensin, to his own words, had plen nd little ex- perien wrehased and improved an extensive tract of land mnear Galt, Sacramento county, and expended in im? !n'muuwnli rge sums in excess of whut ie now sees was necessary, One child, a boy, was born to the couple, and the lad is now thirteen years old. A few year: azo troubles arose between the Valensins, which enlminated in the wife bringing suit for divore crueity as the ground for the petition. The hus- bandfiled a ecross-complaint, charging his wife with adultery with a well known member of the bar. “The case was tried m the United States cirenit court last spring, and as neither allegation was held to have been proved no divoree was granted. Then th brought suit for a diyision of the property, claiming that she had turnished most ot the means for its purchase. She also lost this suit, but other complications in ‘the meantime rose, there being an unpaid mor on the property, and at present it is up so that neither party gets much yme from the valuable ranch count’s share this year has only be procecds of thirty-seven tons of hay After Mrs, Valensin had lost her for a divorce the count took a 1ope, returning last March. Upon his arrival here he heard for the first time that Monsignor Capel had been installed for some months in his house ostensibly as a tutor to the thirteen-y old boy. Other facts were told him of such a com- promising nature that he never went near the ranch, making his home else- where, He says, as a matter of fact,that he has seen Capel so seldom that he would not know him if they met on the street.” When Capel first went _to Mrs. Valensin’s ranch her mother, Mrs. ac Cauley, and a brother and his wife all lived there in harmony, but it was not long before discord sprung up. For some reuson trouble arose between young Me- and his wife, and Monsignor pel, when consulted, gave advice to the husband which finally led to asepara- tion and the departure of both from the ranch. This left the ground clear, with tha exception of the mother, and it was only ashort time before a severe quarrel oceurred between the reverend gentle- man and that lady, which led to the pr late receiving a sound slap in the face. After this quarrel Mrs. McCauley left her daughter’s house and went to Mis sour, accompanied by her son At present the situation is this: Mar Capel, Mrs. Valeusin and young Valeu, sin are living alone at the ranch, with no other company than the servants. Be- sides the ostensible post of tutor, Mzr Capel acts as the manager of Mrs. Valeu- sin's rrup«'rl_\‘. and, as the land isall rented and otherwise tied up, the position is very much of a sinccure. Valeusin has stock on the ranch, and oceasionally is obliged to pay 1t a visit, but he never enters the house, and the monsignor never sees him, When asked by & re vorter if the relations between Mrs Valeusin and Mgr, Capel were of an im- proper nature Valeusin said: ‘I ecannot v that I know it of my own knowledge, but I am as certamn of itas [ can be of nything. Any man of common sense cen judge of the matter for himself by looking at the existing state of am thoroughly od that N has taken my place with Mrs. Valeusin in everything but nam W hen the count was asked 1if he con- templated suing for a divorce, he said he did not know. He did not want to gct married again, and he had his fill of the law courts. Count Valeusin says he had been told that Mgr, Capel had " engaged detectives 10 shadow bim in order 1inst Cape the New tied in The the suit trip to OMAHA DAILY BEE: FRIDAY, testimony application for a be en Mgr ‘ from a Mrs. Valeusin had £ 1,000, but intere k (iroy by ma tel ely false I'ru it Mosst 1 reads as fo son CAPE Mgr. Capel w York Uatholic avidity with which the publishing filthy, fabrications about ( disgrace to the profes: Let some low snipe hand in s Slandere Heral I't daily press of this ssible” ocension of and malicious itholic priests isa n ot journalism. vile, contemptible gutter picee of “copy” “assail ing the character of a priest, and it is gloated over as if no more precions ar ticle of news could possibly be obtaine The latest vietim of this “Police Gazette system is Mgr, Capel, a priest of oxalted lonor, shed' bearing, oxtensive and incorruptible morals. The s engaged in ths fonl work are not fit to tie the latehets of his shoes and if the trath were exposed it would be found that the whole patchwork of lies uttered in his regard was made up by one who has taken this method of repaying » benefactions which he received from apel’s hand positively assert that the statements made against Mgr. Canel are false from beginning to end, We are in a position to say that they are lies wholly and en trely without a seintilla of trath in any one of them, and we call upon the manly portion of the American press to pubiish this, our authoritative denial of the vi slanders uttered inst t and good man. He is sick now, and, while unuble to do battle in his own defens the maggots of a disreputabie press strive to crawl over his noble form. But_were he in condition to face the world in all the wealth of physical strength the m would seek their hilding places, afftighted by the blaze of that genius which tlashed its rays of lnnninous beauty in the eapital of enristendom, and which will once more, with God's help, shine out to earry the conviction of Christ's truth to souls now shadowed in the dark ness of crror. ots Capel's Career. New York dispateh to Philadeiphia Record: New York society is trembling from itsapex to its foundation, and the canse of this trembling is the recent re port about Mer. Capeland the _seandals concerning him which have jnst been brought to light. 1 If ‘New York society had taken the trenble to inform itself about Mgr. Capel it would have learned enough tolet him severely alone; but he was plausible and’attractive, and he was taken into the bodom of more than one family. Friends of mine were written to from the other side to have nothing to do with Capel when he came over hore, as he was in disgrace in his own'Church, and. he A man who, side from his personal fascinations, had very poor reputhtion cameto me very straight—that Capel borrowed the money to come to this country from Henry F. G the American Exchange. 1 d that lie gov_enough_money from _confiding ladies in New York to pay Mr. Gillig back soon after his arri H me over here as a speculation, and it proved asuceessful one. It is strange to me that aman oceupying Capel's position did not cover his tracks knl er. There are men who arc guilty of tho things that be is accused of whom no one ever finds out. But he scems to 2o to work in such a clumsy way t his peceadilloes be- come common seandal. This is only an- other instance of American credulity where foreigners are concerned. To be a foreigner, particularly one of any no- toriety, seems suflicient reason for Amer- 1can familics to throw open their doors nd extend & most hospitable welcome. They seem to think it beneuth them to to make any inquiries, and will bring a man into the most infimate family r tions without knowing anything at all about him. The worst of it 1s that they never appear to learn a lesson from ex- pericnce, but are constantly being taken in by foreign adventurers, est Livelihood as the Tutor of a Rich Woman's Son, SAN Francisco, Oct. 11.—Some slight stir has been caused in certain cireles here by atelegram eriticising the rel. tions of Mgzr. Capel, the prelate, andthe alled Countess Valeusin, Some time o Mar. Capel suddenly disappearcd from San_ Francisco society. {e had beenreccived here with agreat flourish of trumpets by some_notabiy pious peo- ple. His name figured ~prominently in all the public prints, but the author- ities of fhe Catholic church presented a rather frigid aspect toward him. His real troubles began with the delivery of a pro-English speech at an Irish national meeting. Mgr. Capel entering the hall at the conelusion of a fiery assaunlt on the British lion, and ignorant of the extreme views exnoressed, took conservative ground and spoke warmly of the ad- vantage of cultivating “closer and more friendly relations between Ireland and England. Following this proceeding which lost him caste among the Irish residents, be cngaged in a controversy with the Rev. Futber Gleason, a rather spirited seburban clergyman, who wound up a severe roview of the Mon- signor's argament by calling him *The Wandering Prolate of the Vatiean.” The priest received no rebuke from the dignitaries of the chureh for the warmth of his diseussions and the monsignor be- gan to decling in popularity, and, after a vain attempt to sell a large edition of a pamphlet on the “Infallibility of the Pope,” disappeared trom San Francisco, fter awhile it became whispered around San Francisco that the monsig: nor’s financial condition had become sucht the position of the tutor to the young son of Mr. and Mrs, Valeusin, the parties in a sepsational divorse, was found most acceptable. The monsigno cagerness to dispose- of his pamphlet seemed to confirm the rumor of his finan- cial embarrassment. ~ It was even said that the monsignot hidd been reduced to the pxtremity of doing manuul labor, but this was known to be false. Mrs. Valen- sin, at whose house- in the Saers ley the monsignor bad been domiciled s tutor of her young son, is the daugh- ter of John F."MeCauley, an old con- tractor, who was prominent in politics, and died recently. He laid the substan tial foundation of his fortune on 2 state prison contract. OValeusin, the divo known as the “count,” but has no vahd claim to that title. He 15 a dapper joung man-about-town who is neyer so happy when exchanging confidences with a iuc ey or horse trainer or watching the blackboard in a pool room. His wife and her mother, who are the inheritors of McCauley's extensive estate. claim that Valeusin squandered a great deal of their money on turf speculations. Valcusin maintained in the courts that he lost a large patrimony by his matrimonial alll ance Earning an Hc reed husband, is that l ‘The public here is only assured of one OCTOBER 15, 1 | beyond a4 | in F1 188& As to on the wl returned to th y of his “‘horsey ™" com elate is ief G ne 18 n Ho font ling what n: have grown cams It is no ehvir of life drops, no fountain of wl such as that which Ponce De | rida and SieJohn Mandeville drank shores of Malapar, albeit he arthritic gout, the miraculous notwithstanding Dr. Barg aeve's medicine is nothing more re condite than common salt. Eat salt suflicient quantity, and, so far as years are concerned, there is nothing to’ pre vent anyone from becoming Sir Moses Montetiore or an Old Parr, or even from reaching the age of Thomas Damme. who is said to have died at 154, or of Peter Forton, who declared, the h he did not produce a parish register, that he was close on to 184 the year before he made up his mind to go over to the majority Sult, the Ghent ctor aflirms, 1s the great panacen for every ill that flesh is heir to. Good health, it is his opinion, is not a matter of chanee or constitution; the laws which regulate human life are very simj Al that we have to do to take care that they shall develop themselves without ob. strietion. Salt will enable them to do this 1f the blood is too rich, salt will purify it If the blood is too poor, salt will thicken it. Culprits who have been punished by being compelled to eat un wted bread have almost invariably died. The want of salt eaused the outbreak of a terrible epidemie in Saxony, and Rus- sian peasants, when threatened by the plague, have saved themselves by put ting salt in their milk. Cholera will flee before salt. Consumption can be mas by it. Old age is comparatively powerless i the face of two-thirds of an ounce of sodinm ehloride a day. There fore he invites all to swallow this frogal physie, and, if not tived of the world at three score and ten, go on living until centenarians are as common as fools and insurance companies are threatened with msolveney by annuitants who econ tinue on the funds to an age for which the netuaries of the past have made no provision. pro. men rich wvarice )stro's yonth on sought of on th died of drau, is is - H:lford Sauce ma nutritious. es your food more - Marshes in Northern Indiana usually covered with from one to four feet of water have become dry, owing to the continued drought, and sportsmen com plain that hundveds of poisonons snakes haye taken possession, which not only have caten mearly all the young water fowl t as hatched, but make 1t ab- solutely unsafe for any one to walk over the marshes, In making ti srtton that Pozzoni's medicated complexion powder is entire Iy free from injurious or deadly poisons we do it upon the authority of & thorough chemical ana It is one of the oldest face powders in American market, and is used in the famalies of some of our most prominent medical men who have personally acknowledged to the propric tor that they not only consideredit less, | ned it highly beneficial every respect. Sold by all druggists. — , A young Dakotan who lives Manitoba line wanted to marr lived on the parents obje town. So she near the A givl that stood on the Manitoba e, her lover stood in Dakota, the joined hands, and_a preacher with one foot on British soil and one foot in the United States married them, and they are now keeping house in Dakota — Imperfect digestion produce disordered conditions of the system which grow and are confirmed by negleet, Dr. J. H, McLean's Strengthen- ing Cordial and Blood Pumfier by its tonic properties cures indigestion ~ and gives tone to the stomach. Stone that is quarried one day and built into n wall the next dayisin a green state and unfit for durability. Itis'at its wenkest point -of endurance ecither of pressure or of atmospheric influences. Its pores »pen and ready to absorb not only moisture, but all the gaseous and disfiguring influences which tend to its destruction. Every stonemason knows that to zet a polished surface on a stone the same must have luin for some time out of the quarry and exposed to the dry ing influences ‘of the sun and weather This is a suflicient hint to the builder to see to it that the stone of which he wonld rear a permanent structure must be thoroughly seasoned before it is placed into a wall. nd similation Cure of a Sprain, MacEoON CENTRE, WAYNE Co., N.Y, February 28, 1985, Some years ago I badly strained my stomuch picking cherries, and have suff cred greatly ever since. Nothing has been so beneficinl as Allcock’s Plasters, They entirely cured me of that trouble, I have also been afflicted with a lame ankle, but these Plasters soon enabled me to walk. I tecommend them whenever I have an opportunity, as Ihave found them very useful tor over ten years, All coek’s Plasters have always done me the greatest service, and I am every day more and more convinced that no household should be without them, Mus. Suvsie A, Bioes, A drunken man lay on the sidewalk in Norwich, Conn., guarded by his dog, who wouldn't permit a person to touch his master. Two volicemen tried to ¢lub him off, but he dodged and remained. Finally they took a horse blanket, and, after several attempts, threw it over him, caught him and dragged him away, and then took his master to the police station, ———e St. Jacobs Oil grunts onsa of strength and restores to heaith and ae- tivity. e A New York correspondent who has seen Maurice B. Flynn recently, says his once hundsome face now has the tint of wet putty, and is drawn and seamed like the face of an aged dyspeptie- His hair is turning gray, and his formerly light step is heav, - Havpiness is felt colds, Restore your Star Cough Cure. from Red in freedom health with -— There was, it 18 said, admitted to the Harvard, Mass., poor house, the othor day, a man who at one time was partner in’a large manufacturing concern in Bos ton, and subsequently filled the position of cotton buyer for a New York firm at » salary of §18,000 per year. Mitchell York Captain Sala, New came home in with rheamatisn tains, but wife's r of the bark and Havana May, « sapa iy A Lovely Complesion, What a loy exion, ' w hear persons say 1 r what she does for it [n every ¢ the purity | and real love f the complexion de | pends upon Lhose who have sollow, bloteny faces may make their [ skin smooth” and healthy by _taking enotgh of Dr. Pieree’s “'Golden Medical Discovery™ to drive numors lurk ing in the system ten - deal of practical com mon sense in the answer of the old cook in New Orleans when her young mis tress told Ner of Wiggins' coming earth quake. “Go ‘long, I she said, g long, wid yer God-a'mity | don* g0 and what le's gwine ter do; ‘long and do it 1f the gentlemsn whose lips pressed the lady’s snowy brow and thus caught vere cold hid but nsed Dr. BT Congh Syrup, no doctor’s bill would have been necessary Some nonsense! tell anybody he jes' go oning pr to introduce paper shirts. Wearing paver shirts means bearing rheumatism.” With Salvation Oil, however, paper shirts might still be a sue: Price 25 cents Steel rails are being laid on the Utah & prthern rond. coss o/ Prof. Ghas. Ludwig Von Seeger Universit of the Tran Spanish <lan 01 Rion of veraant with nand be not onty tieal wlsoworthy of the high commendstions fved inll parts of tho world. ¢ contains £ Beet, Cocn. Quinine, Ton and, Calisavh, 1 pure ganaine Spanish Imperial product, by e re' 13, Dys. peptic, Billous. Mal or anlcted with weak kid- EEWAIE OF INITATIONS, lity happine, Rong SBIG CO'S Goununo Syrup guininteed usthe best Sarsaparillain Uie market. do & T EIJI-.IEINE' . H " The most comfortable shape for walking. Perfect fit.__No wrinklos. ._Exsy as an ©ld shoe. __Always refain the shape. " Will not tire_the feet in fong walks. Nade in 11 widths and all sizes. Look on Sole for Name and Addross of J. & T. COUSINS, NEW WORIE. For Sale by Hayward Bros., 607 How- ard Street, Omaha. P. BOYER & CO. Hall'sSaies:fi;i};,Tlmelocks and Jai! Work, 1026 Faruam Street, O:uaha. Neb. ,MANUFACTURED BY E\NNARD DINKELMAY STLOUIS == *Co © FOR BALE BY .© Geo. J. Armbrust, 2208 Cum'ing st D. H. Bowman. 1217 Farnam ::.* ohn Hussio, 2497 Cuming st. Herman Kunde, 619 South 0th st. O, Lange, 318 South 13th st, Ison & Mil! 615 North 18 Roy, 508 North 16th st. W. ¥, Stoetzol, 102 Howard st, C. W Sloepet s 107 South 1th at. J. L. WILKIE, Manufucturer of Paper Boxes, 106 5. 14th st. Omaha, Neb. Orders by mail solicited and will re ceive prompt attention, PENNYROVAL PILLS “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH." The Original and Only Genuine, e . vy orthleas Lislistions. i Druwiat 6 " 87 Veturn mall Cleimiea ¢ lson Saare, Ihilbdey Pe. Sold by Druggiets everywhere. Ask for “Chi chester's English Pennyroyai Pills. Take no Other. st HAME PARER. O PUTS AND CALLS, On Wheat, Corn, Oats, Pork, Lard and i R. Stocks, for Long und Short Tinie. Send for Price Circu H. P. HAir & Co., 12 Washington St., Chicazo, 11l Kelerencs: American Fx- chinge National Bank DR. IMPEY, N.W. Cor. 14th and Douglas Sts. Practics limited to Diseases of the EYE, EAR. NOSE AND THROAT, @lassesfitiad for a't forns of defestive Vision. Artid Laser Antoine b | LINCOLN BUSINESS DIRECTORY Nowly ¥ur The Tremont, FITZGERALD & SON, | J. W HAWKINS, _Architect, » « ks CatrLe F.M O WOODS Live Stock Auctioneer S, At fafe o Bilock, | W N 18hort Horn t or salo. B, 0. GOULDING, Farm Loans and Insurance. ! tod, Loom 4, R Riverside Short Horns OF strittly pure Bt Bates Tapped cattle, Herd numbers nbout o head Families ~ rop ted: Filberts, Cragss, Acombs. Renici, Roso of Sharons, Moss Ros nightly Duchesses, Flat Creck Young Marys, Phylliscs, Louans and True Loves thulls forsaid. 1 Puro Bates Fibert, 1 Pure Bates Craggs, | Rosoof Sharon, 1 Young Mary, 1Pue Cruick Shank an Come ai nspret the herl, BRAN: SON, Lineoln, Neb. rogard to loans sol neds 1 . Ne 1 othioes Address, CHAS M Whon in Lineoln stop at National Hotel, And get a good afnner for A FEDAWAY Prop NEBRASKA MAP, In colors, shows all countios, towns, railronds. Mailed for 25¢. Omahu City Map, new addinions, etc Nebraskn State Guzette, Business Directory nd Farmor's List, £ J. M WOLFE & €O 12) 8, 1th St.. Omahn, Neb. vz GHICAGO Ave RIORTH- WESTERN Jmaha, Souncil Bluffs And Chicago. The only rond to take for Dea Moines, Mar- shalltown, ( elar Rapids, Clinton, Dixie, Chica- 0. Milwaikoe and all points cast. To the peo- Dle of Nelraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Tdaho. Nevada, Oregon, Washinzton ana_Cali: fornin, it offers superior AdvANtAZes not possi- Dio by any other Ine. Among A few of the numerous points of su- periority enjoyed by the patrons of this road Lotween Omahin and Chioago, are its two traing adayof DAY COACHES which are the finest tnathuman art And ngenuity can create, 1ta PALACE SLEEPING CARS. ahich are models of eamfort and elogance. 118 PARLOR DRAW- ING ROOM CARS, 1 and its widoly celebrated PALATIAL DINING CARS, the equal of which cannot be foind elgewhere! At Couneil Bluffs the tratns of the Union Lact: 0 Ry. connect in Unon Depot with those of the Chicago & Northwestern Ry. In Chicago tho trains of this line make closo connection with those of all enstern lines, For Detroit, Columbus, Indiunapolis, Cinein nati, Ningara Fulis, Buffnlo, Pittsburg, Toronto, Montreal, Posion. New York, Phimdolphix, Bl timore. Washinzton and all ‘roints in the east, ask the tickot ngent for t in the “NORTHWESTERN.” If you swish the host nccommiodntions. teKet pzenis sell ticke:s vin this line M. HUGHITI. R. 8. HAIR, Goneral Minngor. Pass. Agent. CHICAGO. LIND. Al Red Star Line Carrying the Belgium Royal and United States Mail, sailing every Saturday Between Antwern & New York T0 THE RHINE, GERMANY, ITALY, HOL- LAND AND FRANCE. FALL AND WINTER. 8alon from i to $7%. Excursion trip from 0 to 1. Second Cabin, outward, $45; propuid, #5: excursion. $0. Stocrago passage &t low ‘rates. Poter Wright & Sons, Gonera Agents, 55 Brondway, New York. Punt, 1215 Farnam st.: Paulsen & Co, 8 Farnam st ;1. 0. Frecmun, 1324 Farnam st CHICAGO SHORT LINE —OF [HE— Chicago, Milwaukes & St Paul 'y THE BEST ROUTE from OMAHA and COUNCIL BLUFFS ot THE EAST. TWO TRAINS DAILY HETWEEN OMAHA COUNCIL BLUFF3 Chicago, —AND— Milwaukes, 8t. Paul, Minneapolis, Cedar Rapids, Clinton, Dubuque, Davenport, Rock Island,Freeport, Rockford, Elgin, Madison, Janesville, Beloit, Winoun! La Crosse, And all other ‘mportant points East, Northoast and Bouthonst. For through tiokets call on the Tioket Ayen at 1401 Faru st (in Paxton Hotel), or & Union Paciic 1 1tho fnost Dining Cars world a7e run on the muin lines of the KBE & Bi. PAUL RALLWAY, 1 18 piid to passongers by of the com Ticket Agent. GEO. B, HEAPFORD, Assist: ger and ‘Ticket Agent J. T. Cuauk, General Superintendont, 1t Genoral Passon Nebraska National Bank OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Paid up Capital. . ..$250,000 Burplus . £ 80,000 H. W. Yates, Prosident A. E. Touzalin, Viee Presidont W. H 8. Hughes, Cashier. DiEeTONS: John 8. Collins, H'W . Yutes, Lowis 8. Reod. 'A. E. Touzalin BANKING OFFICE HE IRON BANK, Cor 12th and Farnam Sts A General Banking Busine BANKERS, BONDS U . : office 68 Dovoushise st. suce solicited. W. V. Morse, CHICAGO, Citie it » Tioston. And other i sold. Enster Corsaspol