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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1883, STRUGGLING AGAINST - - SIN. The Fierce Battie Necessary to Keep the Heart Pure. AN ALMOST INVULNERABLE FOE Rev. Alfred H. Henry Tells How to Prepare For the Contest With the Assurance of Coming Out Victorious, How to Overcome. Alfred H. Henry preached to a large Audience yesterday morning at Trinity M. E. church. He took for his text Revelations 4:12: “Him that evercometh will I make a pillar 10 the temple of my God, and 1 will write upon him my new name.”” This world, said the speaker, is a battlefield. The con tending forces are good and evil, That it 18 no sham-battle the wrecks upon-every side bear ample evidence, It is a contest in which you and I are interested. There are no mere ¥pectators of the struggle, How long this war has been waged we are not told. When we first opencd our eyes to the light we dis- covered its existence and since then we have found out that we have a part init. 1s it of any interest to us which side shall prevail and finally gain the mastery ¢ When evil be- comes is to silen «the warning voi is to the soul what the body. If the nerves in your hand w you might burn it to a crisp and thus Wwithout knowing it, cripple yourself for life. 1f it were not for the nerves with which God has supplic you would not know when the air was too cold or too hot. and would be in danger of being overpowered by either extreme unless you carried about with you and constautly consulted s ent nerve such as a pocket thermometer. After the nerve of the soul—the conscience hus been successfully deadened there is nothing to warn you of the ravages of evil. » 18 @ sense of relief in most men as : begins to lose her power aud to_die. ading, troubled feeling at doing wrong is gone, and there is a strange feeling of relief, that this is so. Bad acts do not seem 80 bud nor do corrupt thoughts seem. so repugnant. There is no good within that can be repelled by them, the sentinel at the door is asleep, and o they enter, do their nefarious work, and glory in their frecdom, il can grow very rapidly in a heart whose keeper lies in the sleep of death, Al restraint hus been removed. Tt has nothing 1o do now but to feed upon itself and develop its hincous proportions. The door of the heart that opens heavenward is closed, but through the open door t ds to the home of sin, evil thoughts purposes come trooping in and there is high' ro for the that is lost Sin is great enemy of the human race and defeats man everywhere, 1t robs him of his good name, embitters all that he touches and wrests the prize'of happiness from his sp. Sin has brought disease upon the th, dwarfed man's mental capabilities and poisoned his moral nature. Sin, dressed in the garments of pleasure, is the siren singer that lures man away from the path of virtue. It is the murderess that, having en tangled him in her toil y takes away his worthless . It is the hour) xton that digs man a grave and buries him away, even out ¢ htof the angel of hope. And yet this tr 15 foeis the one that has Btolen into your heart, that is putting to flight the guardian angel, and that finally, when he has you at his mel will laugh at your remora¢ and mock you in your dispair. Noone who can appreciate the grandeur of creation 1 who recognizes man as creation’s lor 1 doubt but that there is some grand purpose under it all that the future will disclose. Think, then, of this high purpose, and of how miscrably thwarted it is when sin has done its work. Sin is n serpent that winds his slimy track up and around the fair statue of purity that God had erected in the midst of the garden and leaves it debased und defiled, an object at which devils mock and augels weep. Sin is a leprosy that has spread itself over the fair face of nature, changing its smile of contentment into a_contortion’ of pain, its peach bloom indicative of health into a repul- sive sore. No wonder that God caunot tol- erate sin. 0 wonder that this war of exter- mination is going on. There are many m that come from heave ers here below. And come like strains of marshal music after a long and weary . march, thrilling the soul with renewed pur- poses and giving strength for grande achicyements. God's *fear not” is neve spoken to cowards nor to convinee men that Illlun' is no dunger, “Fear uot for I am with thee. In order to be well fitted for You must ha some knowls strength of your and of the w he uses. Yours is a subtle foe and wary, ex- perienced in - all the arts of war. 1o is unscrupulous, as ready to bribe you on to destruction by gilded "and yet ‘empty Promises, as to set a trap into which your un- wary feet may fall. He is persevering— willing to devote a lifetime if in that time h may find the gate of your heart unguarded and force an entrance He is almost invulnerable, ing so hard to die as sin. Anatom may kil a giant, & word may break the peace of a na tion, & spark may burn up a city, but it r quires carnest and protracted struggle to d sin in the soul. How foolish then, with an enemy to struggle against, to come to the contest 8o carelessly and with so little preparation! So ma n to be w tally wounded befor v realize that the is any real fighting to be done, Why is it that all this struggling and battling against sin is necessary( A pillar of the temple must be strong. There can be no broken or shattered columns. The master workman does not send his men out to a grove of saplings in scarch of the pillars that shall be the temple's support. Phe rugged tree of Lebanon that has grown strang by exposure, and by being buffeted ubout by the wind and the tempest is the one selected as fitting material for this respons ble place. Exposure to storm gives stre and ruggedness 1o character, oft, sunny clime of Spain breeds u race of bog: gars and the storms of New England race of independent heroes, so does the law work also in the spiritual world. There must be struggle and victory here if we expect w fill honored places in the world to come. T think that before the eye of the inspired penmen, a8 he lay upon the rocky isle of 2atmos, there must have come a wondrous vision. He sces before him a deep valley filled with contending multitudes—Dblind!ly, flercely does the battle rage—great blows ven and received on cither side; is one that is fainting from the eat of the strife. Whole ranks and tallions are being cut down, but their places are being filled with new recruits. At times ng enough as the black ban- its folds to the breeze and v like a dark thunder cloud, hovering threateningly over the ne Then indeed does the whole air seem voeal with the eries and groans of anguish. Is there no Pity nor help in heaven! Must this struggle o on forever! Even as ho shudders at the sight the ision fades away and an other takes its place. 1t would tuke a divine artist to ‘ture of those who have comie up through great tribulation, marching in steady column upward to the city of their king. ‘Their is no more dust upon their feet, forthey are upon the mountain of exaltation there is no mqre sorrow in their hearts, for they ave on their journ . aind the light of the daw M s is shining fully in their faces. They bear with them the marks of the battle with sin--not, however in bleeding wounds and unsi in the lines of charae hh their countenances, in the sturdy, sol ar ing that becomes the sons of God tion's song is upon theirlips and all of bends low to hear the praises of the can sometimes funcy how gloriously song will sound as it anght up arches of heaven and echoed back w ld power aud blended with the chor the angels' choir. The temple of our K temple of praise eternal in - the heavens, and SHum that overcometi will Tnake a ).“Y ar in the temple of my God, and ke shall 5 awore out.” 3 How rich and precious ave the promises concerning the “over yonder” that are found inthis sacred word! And the “new name™ indicative of a new nature is oue of the rick- oet. The new name 1s the divinseal of ap- proval na makes the victory com plete. This new name is on- vaved in tho register of heaven and God's estimate of the man, Iere we are Rev, sages of “fear not” purage the toil- the struggle lge of the pons that There is noth- that 1o the the children of men, . heirs of povesty, igno. rance atd shame. The new name marks our adoption into the new family of Ciad, and we become heirs of the promise. Of what o #lorious ‘exaltation. do we here have the promise! 1t fs possible for mah to rise in this world from the lowest depths of igno- rance to the highest intellectual attainments He may exchange his condition of absolut poverty for the exalted state that unboun alth can provide: he can pass from a con- dition of absolute dependence and influcnce the destiny of nations by the power of his word, but a greater cxaltation than the thought of man can conceive is promised to ““Him_that overcometh.” Riches that never fade, knowledge and power that belong to a son of God, and all that can be ncluded in the thought of adoption into the family of the Most High Who, with such a prize before them, would not be faithful unto the end in spite of storin and temptest and the cmpty illurements of sin? —— THE HIGH TARIFF. How It Effccts the Western Farmer. To the Editor of the Brr:—The Evening Post of this city has recently given some ex- tracts from the Bek on the tariff question— now the question of the hour—which are ably written and the matter well reasoned out. I judge your paper addresses many farmers in your section, o I propose to give them a v practical example of how they are dubed Reeently there appeared two letters in the sning Post signed A Republican We Manufacturer,” the tenor of which is th is doing a business of §400,000 yearly, but ¢ make 1o money owing to the tariff taxing his raw materials so heavily, so he proposes that wool, dycstuffs, ete., be put on the free list, and 1f this were done he would be satisfied with a small duty of 40 per cent—now mark his great modesty in asking only 40 per cent, and then work out the results of such a duty to him from the statements he himself furnishies in these two letters. He tells us that he pays $100,000 for labor and %300,000 His labor costs therefore one- percentofhis product. Hefurther adds that he pays one half more for his lubor than does his Enghsh or German com- petitor. On these data T work out the follow- ing results: Foreign labor costs $66,666; add one-half for his better paid labor, 3334, or Si¢ per cent on the amount of his product. Now he proposes that congress will give him a protection duty of 40 per cent or §160,000 on his product, from ch deduct his extra wages leaves him a profit of n $107,000 taken out of the farmer’s pockets as they form nearly one-half of the laboring population. Now this profit is equ cents on every bushel of wheat the farmer has to sell and he cannot get his hands into the pockets of the rest of the people to obtain this 20 cents. You will notice that the manufacturer's profit is S1% per cept taken from their and other's pockets wiic if he can make out of his land 10 per cent he thinks himself well paid. The question, therefore, that should strike @ tarmer is why should the manufacturer get a protection of $107,000 or fully three tiumes what he pays for extra labor, when the far- mer can get nothing but must_compete with the cheapest labor in the world, that of the Pyots of India, in the English where the most of his surply tle go. In other words, were er to go to Liverpool and take w ith him on some steamer 1,000 bushels of wheat, he would, after vaying all expenses, realize #600 or #50. Then suppose he buys £150 worth of clothes, ete., for nis family and 250 worth of ploughs, harness, ete., for his farm in Liver- pool and return to New York with them the first thing he has to do is to take £200 of the cash in his pocket to pay out to the custom house for duty. So what the Englishman gets for $400 costs him $600, and where the difference go, why into the pockets of the povernment which does'nt want the mone; 1f he buys similar goods made here then the into the manufacturers pock- ets as protection for infant industries, the manufacturers declare of course that it is for the benefit of their workmen chictly. I have shown this is not true as a 10 per cent duty will amply repay their workmen extra pay or wages and that 30 per cent is a clear profit out of American pockets for the bencfit wholly and solely of capitalists who happen to invest their money in a mill or factory In this excessive tariff arrangement, where does the farmer come int Why, he has the pleasure of putting his hand in his pocketand paying tribute for having his goous made in the castern states. The heaviest duties are on iron and steel, 50 @ lurge portion of the tribute goes into the pockets of the iron lords of Pennsyl! : I hope th wion will open_the farmer's and show them how they have been made cats paws. You! RT LLOGAN. A SUSPE! Held in Consequence of Several Ate tempts at Burgla Certain portions of North Sixteenth street have been a sou) of much trouble and con- cern to the police for the last thivty days. Merchants have come down to their stores in the morning to find the back doors to their places of business bored full of augur holes, evidently done by thicves who 1n a trying snt had been” scared away. The last to make a complaint of depredations of this discription was the firm of Ferney & Con- olly, boot and shoe deale and the police turned their attention to a saloon in the neighborhood in quest of a pair of suspicious looking chavacters who made it their head- quarters, But they were not to be found at the time, and the ofticers on the beat were warned to keep a sharp lookout for them During the peeping hours of yesterday morn ing Ofticer Brady happened fo spy one of the suspects in the nity of the late field of operations, and promptly ran him to the central stution, where he now reposes, He gives his name as Mickey Johnson, says he is a laborer by occupation, but dazed in his statements as to hi: £ during the intervening ten d: of the at- tempt to burgla Ferne; Conolly’s store and his return without his pal, Personal Paragraphs. F. Robinson, of Kansus City, is at the Mil- lard, J. I, Sullivan, of Colnmbus, Neb,, is at the Paxton. B. idson, of Paxton. C. A. McCat ton. J. L. Baker, of St. Joseph, Mo., is at the Millard. R. W. Barger, of Des Moin Millard. J. M. McFarland, of Columbus, Neb., is at tue Paxton D. W. Herron, of Cedar Rapids, the )’axton B. C. Rezer and wife, of Kausas City, are at the Paxton, homas Hanley and wife, at the Paxton, Horance D. Ranlett und wife, of San Fran- ciseo, Cal e at the Millard, « ge M. Meyers, manager of the Pacific )l company, is at the Millard. Hon. A. C. sbell, United States prose- cuting attorney at Cheyenne, Wyo., is at the Millard. S. Braden, of Helena, Mont., the United States ussay at the Millard. ux City, Ia., is at the ar, of Lincoln, Neb,, is ut the s, Ta.. is at the Neb,, is at of Rollins, Wyo., manager of thit point, is at man, who succeeds W. F. Her- 18 Laveling passe and freight Union 1 and, 0., to who has been for a num- inected with the Omaha oftice of the Wells-1argo express company, Lias been promoted 104 road messenger be- tween McCook and Denver. Mr. Heaf won his promotion by faithfulbiess and atten tion to business, and will wake a good mes. senger bor ul yen Dichold Safes. the lurge stock Meng- huve on haud d. of the this apicte do acros ity to Couneil BB About all the pr re interested in the ime is looked for. el S and hotel, Chicugo, entlemen in ent, and o SOUTH OMAHA NEWS, Frank S. Pr Aurora, Néb,, tered at the Exchange vesterday, The banguet of thie: 3 ka Live Stoek Shippers’ ussociation his beeti postponed for one woek Friends of Al Lempke will regret to learn that his father died at Baltimore yesterday morning: The old gentleman had decided to make South Omaha his future home Councilman Geary is now seriously il hav ing suffered u relapse, The suit of M. J. DeGroff against South Omaha will be tried on Tuesday. He claims back pay and a small amount he overpaid in cashing city warrants, The ¢ ouncil meets to-night. There was a social dance at Woods' hotel, Albright, on Saturday night. The elite of the neighborhood were all there, Dr. C. C. Cangley, nephew of A, J. Cang- ley, of the Hoof and Horn, was married to Miss Mamie Wilsey on Thursday, and both gentlemen are now receiving the usual con- ratulations. Next Sunday the German Lutheran congre gation will open o Sunday school in the school house. regls Successful League Meeting. The Omaha branch of the Irish National league held a highly énjoyable and prolific session at St. Philomena’s hall yesterday afternoon. Mr. Barrett, the president, occu- pied the chair, and after the enrollment of twenty-five new members, an_entertaining lite and musical programme was ren- dered.” Owing to the unexpected call from the city of Mr. M. V. Gannon, who had been delegated to make the principal address, Mr. J. T, Mahoney was substituted and spoke fluently and with considerable force for sev- eral minutes, The Misses Nora and Rose Flannery sang_a couple of selections very sweetly. and Mr. Patrick McCarroll gave an exhibition of his clocutionary gifts. Miss Egan, from whom a solo was cxpected, was detained at her home by illucss, syt~ St Electrical Brevities. An electric belt, containing a dozen electric cells and u battery, for the use of firemen in dark places, is to be tested by the New York fire department. Tt appears likely that the two munic pal royal yachts are to be fitted up with clectric light. Queen Victoria is under stood, however, to desire that the new light shall not be introduced into the state apartments of the Victoria and Al- bert. . From figures given by Dr. Schilling it appears that the number of electr! light installations in the thirteen larg- est cities of Germany has increased during the last two years from 131 to 604, The Great Western railway company of England is to apply to parliament for power to constract a tramway from Ox- ford to Brill, to be worked by electrical or mechanical power. Several rumors have bheer the Western Union Pelegraph company had absorbed the I ‘hl delphia, Read- ing & Pottsville system, but inquiry fails to confirm the st H. S. Foster, superintendent of thé Millville-Schuyler Eleetrie Light com- ny at Newark, N. met with a ous accident on Saturday night at engine-room of the company. His 1s caught in a switch-board and arm and hand were burned-to the bone, the flesh bursting in some places. A ring on his little finger was melted. A special dispatch from Rochester, N. Y., of December 17, says: *‘The exceutive committee of the People's Telephone association decided yesterday to recommend to that organization that annual rates of $43, $52 and $63 for dences, officers and stores, re pect be offered the company by the protest- ing subscribers of this city, who have been striking for a year. The com- mittee refused to accept an offer of 48, 860 and $72 from the company. These rates are for direct lines. The sub- ibers feel that they have achieved a signal victory over the Bell Telephone company in’ causing it to abandon its obnoxious toll system of s in this city, the proposed introduction of which was the cause of all the trouble.’” The proper operations of electric lighting installations requires, o rule, the maintenance of fixed condi: tions of some sort, whether of current or of electromotive force, and incandes cent lighting especially, demands the highest degree of p anence in the latter condition for economy of opera- tion. An indication of the manner in which clectrical power distribution is gaining ground is to be found in the de: of the municipality of Geneva, Switzer land, tosupplementits present hydraulic tem by putting in electric motors, the curredt for which will be generated by the water power of the Rhone. During the month of November the amount of business done by the western office of the Thomson-Houston company figured up $128,000 net. afloat that Notice. given that ¥ December, A and city L spiriLuo No. T South Tith str trom the first duy of JAnuary, 188, to the first Junuary, IS If there. be fied within two w the said license w 1ce or protest Slst, A, D, 187, 1, Applicant a1 application of William Young for Young _did file hls up. ‘Omahu, for MALTER of liquor li otice i 1 the Hth spirituous . Mars's nvenue, Fo ahi, 3t duy OF Junuary, 188, "th the irst traece or pro ber ith, A, D, slockholueru' Meetlns FPHE regular meeting of the stockholders of the Omaha Fair & Exposition Assoclation eld in the Board of Trade huilding, in ha, the second Tuesday of Ju l'lle«lu 10th, 1888, at u boatd of Srve during the ensuing year, and SUCCESSOrs are v elected, and ction of such other business as ma SAry. J. H. MCSHANE, ary. OMAHA, Neb,, Dec, 23, 1887, -39 ) Prope of the 10th material requir: » built in Be s will be received at the und ersiged until Tuesd ay, 1888, kmm-m‘. and oteland theater trice, Neb, for Hon. A. 8. Pad- Drawings and specifications 1 be seen at the office of Andrew Miller Heatr ‘e, Neb,, and at cct any or all bids, ¢ LAWRIE, _Omaa, Neb, S, S, FELKER, GMAHA NEB. 106 N. 13t Street, Dec. TVATED 0001 -~ TAB O VE -WE LEVEL O TAEVALLE Y [ ] ° PUKRE CALIFORNIA W1 from our vineyard, K el Claref ete. San Jose Vaults, wi Salvador and Willlam st ‘alifornia, Je WEA l""‘ STRON Jipped diree ADVICR FREE, HOW T0 AO\‘. ut (re0 00 applicatios Park Place, NowVorky Absolutely Pure. This powder never va ty, strength and wholesomeness, More econom. ical than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be sold in competition with the muititude of low cost, Short welghit alum or phosphate powders, Sold only In cans. Roval Baking Powder Co, 1% Wall 8t., New York, o DIAMONDS, WATCHES, =JEWELRY,= BRONZES! —AT— [ortr's Pri MAX MEYER & BRO. MPORTED BSTALLIONS FORSALE A marvel of purl- ydesdales and Shire, also home very animal guaranteed a b our stock has been gelected with both individual merit and pedi, . these horses have taken first prize at the Ne- braska State Feir; 187, All our horses are ac- climated, and colta of their get can b Prices reasonablemnd easy terms. ssible by the threc leading railroads of the state, 1. & MiF,E &M ViandK.C. &0, RY & FAHRBAH, York, Neb J. B. HAYNES, ~——OFFICIAL— STENOGRAPHER, Third Judicial Distri 97 CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. A SURE CURE : OR NO PAY. Our Magic Remedy WILL POSITIVELY CURE All syphilitic Diseases, of recent or long stanaing.in from tén to fifteen days. We will give written guar- Antees to cure any case or refund your money. And we would suy to those who hnve employed the most Ski Physicians, used y_known remedy and not beer u Are the subjects we are kg for. been to the celebrated 1ot Springs of Arkansas, and bave Jost all hope of recovery, we Will Cure You ormake no charge. Our remedy i3 unknown to any one in the world ‘outside of our Company, and it {s the only remedy in the world that will cure yo will cure most obatin lens than o i, Keven days in re 1, chronic, deep-se ured hundreds who had been abAnd: Dy Phiysiciuns wnd pronounced incurubie, und We Challenge the World tobring us a case that we will not cure in less than u.. history of me True Specific for . Ulcers, mouth, &c., has und until Our Magic Remedy o are justified in 1d ihat will wl works, publishe ywh wuthorties, say there' was hefore, 1k it 18 the ely cure, by the ver m true ‘ated Physicians. WE. Wiy westo patent medicines that or doctor e You that have ay: in the end y Remedy or NEVERT®cover. And you that have been uicted but & short ime should by all means come €0 usnow. Many get help and think theya re free from he discase, ¢ years after, it ppears ngil 2 Investigate our financ thirough the mer- cantile szencies und n e fully responsi- ble and our THE COOK REMEDY (0., Omaha, Neb. Rooms 16 and 17 Hellman Block. Dissolution Notice. sartnership heretofore existing under the & Allison Iy solved by mutnal consel We thank ms for past favors and the continu for Thos, F, Tutt who will continue the busi- ness at the old stand, 211 South Lith street, THOMAS F. Ty TRVING ALLISON Omaha, Neb., January "5l considers ndin every case i Eiven satisfactica, Nrd only by the Aleott & Lisk, azs Chezical Co. A prinoiple of our business not to carry over one dollar’s worth of goods from one season to another if we can help it. much heavier stock and to close it out we know that extraordinary et- forts have to be made. Having taken inventory, we have gone over our entire winter stock, and propose to make a peremtory clearing of thesame, Beginning today, we will inaugurate the grea test clearance sale on record. Cost will not be censidered in this sale, & nd we will cut prices to mere nominal figures, First on the list are heavy overcoats, and we mention for this week the following extraordinary bargains: Onelotgood Ulsters, made of an excellent quality of Frieze,lined with plaid flannel; a perfect storm-defyer, at $9; the coat is fully worth $15. This season we hayve a One lot of elegant cassimere overcoats, cut very long with good astra- chan collar and cuffs, a goad looking as well as a good wearing coat. which could not be bought under ordinary circumstances for less than $16; we have marked it $9.50. A small lot of very fine chinchilla Ulsters, fancy back, collar and cuffs of good fur, elegantly made; a splendid garment and as good as any other house would ask $25 for; we offer them at $12.75. This isde- cidedly the cheapest fur trimmed overcoat ever shown. We are marking suits and all our winter goods in the same propor- tion, and will announce through the daily papers the special bargains we will have for every week. All goods marked in plain figures and at strictly one price. Nebraska Clothing Gompany Corner Douglas and 14th, Streets, Omaha. OMAHA MEDICAL fl SUHBIGAL INSTITUTE, N.W.Cor. I3th & Dodge Sts. Chronic and Sureical Diseases BRACES, APPLIANCES FOR DEFORMITIES AND TRUSSES. Best facilities, apparatus and remedies for suc- cessful treatment of every form of disease requir- ing Medical or Surgical Treatment. FIFTY ROOMS FOR PATIENTS. Board and attendance; best hospital accommo- dations in the west. Vi on Deformities and Braces, Trusses, Club Feet, Curvature of the Spine, Piles, Tumors, Cancer, Catarrh, Bronichiti Inhalation, lepsy, Kid: ) Lin aud Blood, and all 1 Operation’s, Diseases of Women a Specialty. BooK ON Diszaues o» WOMEN FRrE. ONLY RELIABLE MEDICAL INSTITUT® MAKING A BPECIALTY OF PRIVATE DISEASES. All Blood Diseases successfully treated. ilitic Poison removed from the ey mercury. New restorative treatment for loss of Vital Power. Persons unable to visit us may be ted at home by correspondence. Al commu. 1. Medicines or instruments or express, securcly packed, no : contents’ or sender. One ‘per- v preferred. Call and consult us or story of your case, and we will send in pper, our BOOK TO MEN, FREE; pecial or Nervous Di poten yphi Gleet and question list. Address Omaha Medical and Surgical Tnstitute, or DR. MCMENAMY, Cor. 13th and Dodge Sts., - OMAHA, NEB. The 01 Specialist _of many VIS’ experience, treats Wwith wond: S cess all LUNG, vaNck, 11 HUFTURE cured without pain or hindrance from bus- Reliable reats all forms of R Throat, Lung, Ne ) disenses, all diseases and rinad- Those o blood Treatment of any privts st at our Private De cured for oné third the ¢ Dispensary. LADIES e7es and pertect "Rk e Fromptly ‘. G Hieepla Depression O Wrestion. Ovarian troublos, Inffmn + n AR 1 e Tl And Dispincements, Npimal, wowk- e T ey compIaints atd Chanke of Life, Consuit the Old Doctor an EYE AND EAR .2 B T amors of 1 Thiamxt fon of the Ear, Ulcerati TRt S hentnens: or Faraiyai O RUAmng nolses, Thickenod Drom, ete, Diseases, _ Serofula, T Wiperis, Fevcrones Hidtches, nmpies. gorn. Paimain tho Flend and ‘onen: Sy phiihic Sore Iargement By his treatment a Pure, Lovely Com- o from sallowncss, freckl v brilliant rone Inflamma- lobe reh, Singing Iy Cured Wiien Others 1Have Faile PRIVATE DISEAS and strictly co ntial. Mo d 10 1o stumps iphled i DAt of questons upoD PrvALe, spe i Al wnd nervous disenses. seminnl Jmpotency. sy puil N Proprietor Omaha Business Cullege, IN WHICH 1S TAUGHT Book - Keeping, Penmanship, Commercial Law, Shorthand, Telegraphing and Typewriting. Send for Zuiiege Journals S. E. Cor, 16th and Capital Ave. Mention the Omaba Bee, Display at their warerooms, 1305 and 1307 Farnam Street, the largest assortment of Pianos and Organs to be found at any establishment west of Chicago. The stock embraces the highest class and medium grades, inciuding STEINWAY, FISCHER, LYON & HEALY ORGAN BURDETT, STANDARD, LYON&HEALY Prices, quality and durability considered, are placed at the lowest living rates for cash or time payments, while the long established reputation of the house, coupled with their most liberal interpretation of the guarantee on their goods, affords the purchaser an absolute safeguard against loss by possible defects in materials and workmanship. LYON & HEALY, Plows, Markers, Hooks, Grapples, __Slide Iron. MASON'S PATEZT RUNNER ATTAGHMENT Light, Strong and Practical. v their use your vehicle can be ck! transforimed into a comfort- e sleigh, Made at MASON'S CARRIAGE WORKS, DAVENPORT, IOWA. For Sale by Dealers Everywhere. DRS. 8. & D. DAVIESON, 1707 Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo. Of the Missouri State Musenm of A Louis don, ( devoted their attention SPECIALLY 0 THE TREATMENT OF nd New York. Huvi Nervos, Clrotic and Bood DISEASES. More_especially tiig*e aulsing from ] ', luvite all so suffering to o m) Diseases of iufection «dily withou! nts whose ca ated_or pronous ¥ fall o Write s concerning ihe Al letters recelve mmedis impru out e ., shonild 1 symptoms, tion. JUST PUBLISHED, And will be mailed FREE to any address on re. celpt of oue Zcent stamp, “Practical Observi tions on Nervous Debility and Physical Exhaus- e o which is added an “Essay on Mar- riage,” with important chupters on diseases of the Keproductive Organs, the whole forming a valuable medical treatise which should be read by all youug men. Address ORS. S, and D. DAVIESON, 1707 Olive Street St. Louis, Mo, W. 1. GALBRAITH, Surgeon and Ph!sluian. e N. W Corner I4th und Donglas St teleplione, 460; Realdence teleption: ofme Office, ¢, U, 1305 & 1307 FARNAM sTREZTe HIMEBAUGH & TAYLOR, Buffalo Scales, Scale Repair Shop. ;"ll’ NewYorK AND Clasgow via Londonderry, Liverpool via Queenstown. Are Btrictly Fire and amon the Iargest, fastest and finest in-the Euloonweccud class wnd sicerage Passenge Accommodations ver, Fogard for the comfort fveniohce of pag sengers studiously considered nud bracuiced sers every Saturduy for Glasgow. City of Rome Liverboul Octaner 12. 16 18 the a Hates of w as by any othier firat-ciass & on' Uckets At reduced rates. Drafis fox v ent rates. FCT hooke intormation, spely"sa lcagy, or FI. THE CAPITOL HOTEL LINCOLN. NEB. The best kr atate. Local Meadquurters 1 d public gatbe awn and 3 ety e st popular Iotel in the rlbintuments Brst-oiusey ! e Nid” all Doilticad E.P ROGGEN Proprietor | e o0y b m.sun onera "Wy Powartul, Lul viid frag | VU TR POR Bisk i £, IWVENTOR, 191 MABARN WVR. CHIAMS A fa'the worla