Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 2, 1892, Page 19

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE SUNDAY, OUTOBER 2, 1892—TWENTY PAGE: TRAINING FOR THE TRADES Growing Popularity of Trade Sohools Throughout the Country. OF AN EXAMPLE PROFIT-SHARING Description ot Progress in panding 1 from t tries — Gleanings ¢ Labor Fleld, Ono of the most encouraging signs of the times is the growing vopularity of trade sohools, whore city youth may be educated as skilled workmen. Under the present conditions the demand for mechanical training far exceeds the op- portunities. The vast majority seeking a training in the old way are practically shut out. Trades unions discourage ap- prenticeship by limiting the number. Consequently, the greater number of boys, barred from the trades, are obliged to choose between the profes- sions and common labor, Colonel Richard 7. Auchmuty, the founder of the N York trade schools, has gathered statistics to show that out of $23,000,000 paid annually for mechan- ics in tho building trades of New Yerk city less than ) goes to men born in this country. e further shows that the trades unions are controlled by foreign born mechanics, and that much of this large sum paid annually for ekilled labor goes to “harvesters’ or workmen who come from Europe every spring, work through the scason and v turn to their homes on the other side of the Atlantic in the fall with vheir save ings. : The demand for skitled workmen is over on the increuse in this country, but the number of new journeymen trained 1n America is not even suiticient to fill the vacancies, much less to supply the growing demands. Practieally, ~says the Chicago Inter Ocean, the only places where the American boy may learn a trade ave in the country where the unions canvot dictate, and in the few trade schools The unions do not say explicitly that the boys shall not have a chance, but they i limit on the number of that not onc-tenth of boys who would may enter the trades as learners. The one who secures this privilege is fortunate and envied by a dozen who woula be glad of the sime opportunity. Last winter J. Pierpont Mor, $500,000 to the New York trade established eleven years ago by Colonel Auchmuty. Chicago has its Manual Training school, and Mr. Crane has provided for a_training department in one of the West Side public schools. Boston, Phily bhia and Brooklyn Lave such sc and a number of nor mal schools establisbed for the educn- tion of the colored youth in tho south have their trade departments where the boys, and the girls too, go into the shops and learn to become skilled me- chanics. The old apprentice system has gone never to return, because civil ization now recognizes that the parvent alone has direction of his children and they can not be bound out to task- masters. The labor unions shut out fully nine-tenths of the boys who want this education. The only way for theso to become skilled mechanics to attend & tradeschool where they may be edu- cated in the use of tools and turned out as completely equipped for work as gkilled workmen as the professional schools equip their graduates. Limitted Profit-Sharing. The Carnegie troubles with the labor- ing men have brought the labor problem to the front in the minds of all. The only solution lies in the divinely given Golden Rule, **As ye would that men should do to you, do ye also unto them,” This has been strikingly illustrated by the millionaire merchant prince ana evangelist, Mr. Charles N. Crittenton, who has taken into partnership five of tho heads of dopurtmonts in_his great iosalo houso in New York, pro- “pro- the world.” The is full of praise for this lmtuh\(‘ Alnml The New York H d says: - *‘On its face the transaction was simply the reovganization of the house of Charles N. Crittenton as an incorpor- ated company.’ As a matter u[ fact it was a \'uluul‘lr\' surrendor by Mr. Crittenton of a consid- erable intorest in his very prosperous business to five of his old employes, Many employers have adopted one means or another of making theiwr employes sharers in the profits of their business and thereby securing their hearty co- operation. But tne voluntary transfer h\ v maun of large means of a large in- to his employos T A payment of a peany is unique. Mr. Crittenton is himself devoting his entire time to evangelistic work his fortune to founding Florence tenton missions for the rescus of er girls, A Monster monster speed cently constructed by the New York Central - weighs 100" tons and meas ures fifteen feet from the rail to the top of tho dome. o the ordinary per- son appronching it there is somothing weird about its looks, with the hu‘.., boiler perched nearly seven feet in the air and supported by massive steel open- work, 5o high is this boiler that o man of ordinary helght ean walk under it from one side of the track to the othe Usually & man can’t seo another who Btunds on the other side of o locomotive, ‘With the new machine one eun. ‘The huge driving wheels, the largest ever made, are seven feet two 1nches in dinm- eter and wman standing boside one looks liko a pigmy. The s no - attempt av elegant finish. Bvervthing is what is known as “doad” finish. There is very little brass about the muchinery, The fire box is placed above the frame and the steel tives of tho big wheels ure de of stufl similar to that used in the isers’ armor plate. The oil cups are solid and cust with the main rod. The cylinders are mineteen inches in diameter and “twenty-four in the stroke,” as ongineers say. The weizht of tho drivers s ten tons apiece, or 80, 000 pounds on the four. The driving axles are unusually large. Tho new locomotive, it will develop incressed speed and will bo used on the mpire State ]\|l|n~u,' the fastest train in tho world, The New York Central is now Liying rails which weigh 100 pounds to the yard and steel Vios, Geomotive, The locomotiye et is expected, otrienl Notes, Haullour railways run by electricity. Our electric industries represent $5800,- w)il(lfl Jupan has taken very kindly to teie- phones and are lights and two electric railways are soon likely to be built there mensuring twelve aud seventeon miles respoctively. Curling irons are the lutest things heated electricully, They ure manu- [aetured so as to be adjusted by means of a silk cord and a plug toa lamp socket in a dressing room. Five lwportaut palents on storage Dbatteries, battery plutes and cells have just been issued to E. P. Usher, the in- ventor of the system of storage battery traction running between Milford and Hopedale, Mnss. The War department will exhibit at the World's faira war télephone service, the wire boing pald out of the knapsack as the soldier goes to the front. There will also be observation balloons with telephone wires hidden in the ropes. Knife-edge cigar-cuttera and alcohol lamps are to be done away with in cigar stores. A small electrically operated machine has just beon brought out which will automatically cut and light a cigar and then hand it politely to its owner. The balance sheet of the Fronch tele- phones for 1891 shows gross receipts amounting to 00, the length of line at the endof \)l'\v yenr being nearly 0 miles, and the number of gub- bers 18,101, to which total Paris con U ibutes no less than One of the latost applications of elec- tricity to mining operations is seen in the Metternich lead mine in Belgium. Ench bucket a ng at the top of the shalt makes an_electric contact, and a needle in the office indicates by a red line upon a revolving drum the number of buckets brought up. An English railroad has just con- tracted for 10,000 incandescent electric lamps to be placed in their cars, The lamps ave in a box pluced over each pas- senger, and by dropping a penny in the slot the light will burn for half an hour ho passonger’s shoulder. It then out automatically. The pas: through the S grows shorter cvery year. to the latest veports the tion i3 23 hours 31 minutes, some minutes less than twelve months ago. The improvement is aue to the electric light enabling the vessels to continue their voyago at night. The latest invention self-lubricating gea canal ceording in trolley is a , whicih enables the maximum efliciency to be secured from existing devices. The value of the im- proved arrangement is shown by the ro- sult ol a test in which a troliey fitted with it ran for two months without be- ing oiled and then showed neither the fects of friction nor the sign of the necessity for lubrication beyond that automatically supplied. The question of lighting the city of Buffulo by electricity generated” as agarn Falls has brought out a novel suggestion. Instead of running wires over the distance it is proposed to erect high steel towers at the falls and pluce reflector lights of enormous candle- vower upon them. The rays of thess lights, it is said, can be made to illy mir ate Buffalo and the cost of copper s to and about the city and return wiil be aved. St. Louis has recently broken the re cord in electrical illumination. Trans- neios of the presidents of the United tes, of Columbus and Do Soto,n mam- volving globe lighted by 200 in- candescent lamps of various colors. an olectrical portrait of Goorge Washing- ton, astatue of the Godc of Liberty, besides numerous bri n illuminated arches, formed the chief points of inter- est. The spectacle was witnessed by 80,000 peovle. An exhibit that oxcited much com- ment at the Crystal Pals Electrica! ex- hibition was that of the glass tanks of un- precedented size for accumulutor cells, Hitherto it has been impossible to geva solid glass tank of greater capacity than about two and one-half cubic feet, owing to the limited means of manufacture, This is now entirely obviated by fusing the plates of glass together, whoreby al- most any size of tank can easily be con- struc Some of the taiks exbibited were four feet six inchoes long, cortainly the lurgest solid glass tanks over manu- factured. Points on The bulk of the world’s fruit is canned here. A nailless ented. Louisville leads the bacco sales. In Germany ongravers harden tools with sealing wax. Connecticut people than those of any other state. There 1s & machine whicn automatic- ally turns out completed screws of any horseshoe has been pat- country in to- ot moro patents In proportion to its size Ingla cight times as many wiles of the United Stat The drive well, one of inventions, has yielded 000,000 in royalties, A trial of speed between English and American locomotives will be an in- toresting and novel feature of the World’s fair. The famous Trendwell mine in Alaska, which has yielded more than 3,000,000 in gold bullion, was man for whom it was numed for $ Inone of the Comstock mines n new water wheel is to be placed, which is to run 1,150 revolution: winute and have a speed at its periphery of 10,805 feet per minute, An estimate has been made by oxperts that the Pennsylvania Railroad com- pany will build a locomotive out of twenty tons of ore and four tons of coul. The ore in the rth is not worth over $5—that is a liberal valuntion, as is the coal at another dollar, ‘The man who patented the idea of at- taching rubber tips to lead pencils real- ized over $200,000 hy his invention. The miner who first attuched a metal rivet ut wach end of tho mouth of the trousers pockets, to resist the strain of heavy bits of ore, mado more money than if ho had found n gold wine, while he who first devised the 1 motal plates to pro- teet shoc realized $250,000 in a few you s beils to hung over gas protect the ceiliag from smoke, made a laree fortune for their inventor, while the inventorof the rolier slkate mado over 31,000,000, The copper 1ips to shoes made theiv inventor a mil- lionaire, and the gimlet screw has piled up a dozen fortunes fov its propr Iiven toys have made their invent rich, and fortunes have been reali from the dolls that close theireyes, dolls that ery, balls with return string, and puzzles—in fact, almost any device that sells in great quantities, however 11 nificant it may seem, is certain to bring very large returns to its owner. ind has ulway ag the si its In the Field of Labor, Soven Kunsas papers huve negro edi- tors, Chicago cattle yards have 25,000 em- ployes, America’s 23,000 papers have 200,000 employ Boston hasa woman undertaker, and 50 has Philadelphia. In 1876 there were but thirty-si cations open Lo women, Now there are over 4,000, Negotiations for a settlement of the granite workers’ strike in Now England are progressing satisfacvorily. A man can hire a house in Japan, keep two seevants and live on the fat of the land on a little over $4 & month, The last census shows that while ,163 lawyers recoive $35,000,000 every year in fees, 37,000 ministers get only 5,000,000, The lon the Kansas City Journal and the Typo graphical union have been satisfactorily settled. The union now controls the oftice, having admitted into the union all former ewployes whodesired to join. tanding differences betweon | GRAND ARMY DEPARTMENT The Great National Encampment and Its Significance. THE REVIEW OF 1865 AND THAT OF 1892 hership Reaches the High Water pliments Harrison ment, The twentv-sixth national encamp- ment of the Grand Army of the Repub- lic in Washington was a momorable gathering. [t was undoubtedly the groatost rounion in the history of the organization, exceeding all others in the number of veterans in attondance. One hundred thousand is a moderate esti- mate of the number present. Of this number 60,000 participated in the grand telumphal march and 10,000 were obliged, through old age or the infirmities contracted on the field, to content themselves with wit- nessing the march of their comrades from points of vant; vong the route. It was an imposing spectacle that will never be witnessed again, Theve will doubtless be other parades, but not in such numbers over the streots mado his- by the memc ow of the ous armi i T'here was a special voteran who had the strength turned out at the Washington meeting and made the par- ade from the capitol down Pennsylvanin avenuo to the white house. One-half of thoso in line made that same march twenty-seven years ago in the two days’ v of the torious armies of ( als Grant and Sherman by President Johnson and his eabinet, esident Lin- coln being in his grave. The war was —the great rebellion was quelled. They were ready to be mustered out and irn home, It was meet they should make a final review in the capital of the nation their valor had saved ere thoy sed to their last homes boyond the o Iistoric Review, Grant’s Army of the East had finished its work and Lee haa surrendered the remnants of his army. The eastern wen, the old Army of the Potomac, wer arrayed for the occasion in new uni- torms. They were ready for inspection. Uhey had laid aside their fighting clothes, ecleaned up their flags, bur- nished up theiv avms, and were on dress parade. On the fivst day they marched down Pennsylvania avenue with waving flags and to the patriotic musle of the bands with full company front, in close ordor, and in lively step, General Grant and hisstaff at their head. and vyet it took those 85,000 men, with fifty bat- terics of artillery and 10,000 cavairy, from 8a. m. until 6 p. m. before the last man had passed the reviewing stand. On the second day Sherman’s *‘bum- 70,000 strong, nine-tenths of them western men, marched over the same route. They wore the uniforms they had wern when they made the march to the sea from Atlanta. They wore tough, hard looking, bronzed fel- lows. They were not pretty to the eve. Their shoes were torn and soiled, their conts ragged, their guns black with powder, their flags shredded with bul- lets and many of them almost bare- footed. It was an army of westorn fighters. Old Tecumseh, to whom Gen- oral Joe Johnston had just surrendered, rodo at their head, proud of his tough looking western ‘‘bummers.” They went past the president all day with the long, strong, swinging step to which they were accustomed in their thousand- mile march, and when the last man, with his ragged overcoat and camp ket~ tle on his back, had passed the presi- dent's stand the great review of the two union armies had passed into history. Agaln in Review. Alcer twenty-seven vears the rem- nants of the old armies for the first time have held their reunion in Washington, and as many of those who were present at the original review as could get there rallied to make the march once more. The best count reports 60,000 old vets in line, and they marched twelve front from S a. m. until 7 p. m. as fast as they could pass the reviewing stand. About half of those in the march probably made the same march twenty-seven Time had grizzled their ickened their gait, but it chilled the enthusiasm, Thousands more, worn and crippled and unable to take the long tramp,stood and looked on. Probably 40,000 of the old were compulsory spectators of the march of the other 60,000, The greut turnout was the nearest approach to the pagennt of 1865 the country will ever sce, tho last and only reminiscence of the great event which commomorated the close of the four years’ bloody strug- glo and the collapse of the revellion the world has was an_army of peace—a gigantic col- umn with bannurs, but not with bayo- nets. It will not be seen again, Its ranks cannot be recruited. It was a joyous oceasion, doubtless, to veterans and spoctators alike, and yet the jov was mingled with sadness, Crowded as the streets of Washington were with the living, every soldiar who marched, and evory spectator who looked on thought more of the dead than of the living., All the great load- , Grant, Sherm n, She Thomas, Hancoek, MceClellan, nd hundreds of others whose names will rise unbidden are numbered with the dead, while of the minor ofi- cersand privates who marched home from tho wuvr twenty-seven yoearsago probibly more than half haveboen ear- vied to soldiors’ graves since that time, The living soldiers were attended in their march by memovies of the dead, d it is safe to ussume that at no future eunion in Washington or elsewhere will there be as many survivors Lo an- swer rolleall and take up the line of march, The High Water Mark, The report of the adjutant general of the Grand Army of the Republic shows that the membership of the organiza- tion now aggregates 407,781, In the na- ture of things this may be considered its highest point of strangth. It does not include all of the veterans in the coun- try, but the future additions to its rolls are likely w fall short of making good the losses that are certain to ensue from natural causes. There were 6,440 deaths last year, equal to the fatalities of a year during the war; and the rate ‘will steadily increase from this time for- ward. A large majority of those who served in the union army are now over A0, it is to bo considered, and not a few of them have reached 60 All of their leading commanders are gone, and they aro admonished in other ways that there can not be much more lengthening of days for them, The adjutant general expressed the belief that the ranks of the army will remain for some time about as well filled as they are at present, but sorrowfully added thatafter a few years its decrease will be very rapid. In the nature of things this truly nd army cannot survive much longer to keep alive the memories of the fateful days when the republic wrombled in the balance of fate and so nearly ceased to exist amon vations. After a time the anoual deu.lfx rate will not be 6,000 0r 20,000, but will be at tho fearful rate of 50,000, and when these swiftiy succeeding passings of the heroes who went to battle with the dawn of youth upon their cheoks thin the ranks of grayhaired, broken men, the country that owes them so much will begin again to look with reverent affection upon the vetorans as it did when the troops came marching home with the lauveis of victory green upon their brows, Sickles to farrison. The reunion of the Third Army corps hrnu-vm. the noted veteran, General Dan Sick to the front. The ovation ho racelved woe nspl ing. 1lomadean in- formal speech which has since caused a commotion in politie circles. The name of President Harrison had necess- arily been mentioned mors than once during the reunion, and in fact General Sickles himself had secured the pass: of a touching resolution of condolence with the prmldvm but this did not suf fice to fully express: General Sickles’ feeling .nn-l turning to his comrades he said: *'Now that.we have formally voted our sympathy T want to say to you personally that I esteem Benjumin Har- rison both as Aman and a comrade. I have seen him at Resaca and eolsewhere unflinchingly leading his rogiment into the thickest of tho fight. He did not sond a substitute when the fight was on, he went himself, and moreover, in the midst of all his high duties he always finds time to look after the wants of neody comrades and to sign their pen sion bills,” Skoteh of the New Com nde: The new commander-in-chief, General A. G. Weissert,was born August 7, 1844, at Canton, Stark county, Ohio, and res moved to Wisconsin in 1840, He graduated at the High school at Racine and the Univer of Michigan, the last named conferring tho degree of LL. B. He enlisted early in September,1861, inthe Eighth Wisconsin (Live agle) regiment volunteer infantry, and parti cipated inall tho many battles of that regiment up to the time of his discharge, serving over four vears, He was bro- vetted for meritorious conduet in battle, and was soverely wounded at the battle of Nashville, Tenn. His wounds have never henled. They are constantly open and at times painful, the bullet still ining in his log. Several sur- geons ve operated on his wound or neen consulted thereto. He joined the Grand Army in 1866, and is a member of E. B. Walcott post, Milwaukee. He at- tends all the meetings when at home and takes an active interestin all its atfairs, has represented his post and deo- artment at numerous state and national mpments, was elected department commander of the department of Wis- consin in 1888 and unanimeusly re- elected to succeed himself in 1889, but after his election as senior vice com- mander-in-chief at Milwaukee he re- signed the commandership, believing that the honors should go roun is o member of the leg: has a large practice. Tncidents of the Encampment. Perhaps the most romar esting, and popular old soldier in the Grand Army celebration in Washington was Ben Butier of Massachusetts. The veteran general must have felt very proud and looked very gay as he rode along Pennsylvania avenue in his car- riage, wolcomed by the acclamation of his marching comrades and the multi- tude of spectators. Another distin- guished, heroic, and i soldier in the par Sickles of New battered patriot! Stili another festive old soldier of historic fame was General Palmer of Iliinois, and his soul must have swelled as he held aloft the floral wreath whi i whom he k General Slocum was one of the nota- bles for whom mauny, inquiries were made at New York headquarters. When General Benjamin I, Butler camo in the first question he asked was, “*“Where is Slocum?” One of the pleasantestincidents of the reunion was the presentation of the sword of honor to Colonel Edward M. Knox of Lafayette post No. 140, of New York city. The sword was given to Colorel Knox as the most popular com- rade of the Grand Army of the Repub- lic. When the union ex-prisoners of war met the inquiry was made: **Ave any of the Belle Island prisoners here who hvlpr-dlu eat the lieutenant’s dog in 7 Comrades E L. Oviott of Tate, and W. H. Baker of Oklahoma clasped each other and told the story once again. Mother Bickerdyke, heroic nurses dur! Ach, one of the most ig the war, now aged 75, and M wwa Barton, president of the Ited Cross society, addressed the convention of the Women’s Relief corps. M unders, president of the orde was presented with a silver service, The association of **Minute Men of 617 perfected their organization by the el tion of the following officors: President, Colonel Henry Walker of Boston; vice presidont-ut-large, O. C. Bosbyshell of w..m.x first vico dent, . Brown of Washington; second A W. Reeder of luun- vary and adjutant, C. K, \]u\\mlkLu It was u-wnlvud that each state association hold its nnnuul I'\!\Illiflll April 15, and that the nati its annuul meet- ing at e e encampment of the Grand Army of the Republie. The Union Veterans union committee anpointed to consider the question of es- tablishing a schoo! for children of vet- erans hus reported in favor of the estab- lishment of & techuological school and the appointment of a committee tosecure a tract of not less than 1,000 ncres of land containing and timber and adapted to age ‘o and grazing on which a proposed school ghall be located. The committeo also reported sugges: tions with reference to the methods of obtaining monoy for the proposed school. Pier of The Boys In Biue, The union soldiers and sailors are now veterans of time as well as war, The parallels of age have approached close to the citadels of life, and the end, for each, of a brave and honorable struggle is not remote. Increasing in- firmity and years give the minor tones of sudness and pathos to the mighty ap- peal of service and suffering. The ear that does not listen with simpathy and the heart that does not respond with generosity are the ear and heart of an ahen and not of an American. Now 8oon again the surviving veterans are to parade upon the great avenue of the national capital, and ev tribute of honor and love should attend the march. A comrade in the coiumn of the victors’ parade in 1865, 1 am not less a comrade now. JAMIN HARRISON, ——rr— Wrerixa WATEr, Nen. Ock. 25, *0).—Dr. Moore: My Dear Sir—I have just bought the thira bottle of your''ree of Life. It is indeed @ “*Troe of i.fe.?” Doctor, when you 50 kindly gave me that fst bottie my right side was so lame and sore wud my liver en- larged so much that L could not lie upon my right side at all. There was a soreness over wy kidneys all of the time, but now that trouble is all over. I sloep just as well on oneside as on the other, and my aleap rests and refreshes me, and ['fosl the best I've felt in fifteen years.and I kmow that it is all dus to your Tree of kife. Yours very truly, - D. F. Dupiex. For sale by all druggists. — A sbirred hat of darl-colored orepe over gold wire bas & trimwing of lace, wizgs and aigrottos, Pears’ Soap It is a wonderful soap that takes hold quick and does no harm, No harm! It leaves the skin soft like a baby’s; no alkaliin it, nothing but soap. The harm is done by al- kali. Still more harm is done, by not washing, So, bad soap is better than none. Whatis bad soap? Imper- fectly made; the fat and al- kali not well balanced or not combined, What is good soap? Pears’. All sorts of stores sell it especially druggists; all sorts of people use it. v aplo Orogon, Mo, Wetght Duforo treat- 01bs.; atter troatme i, 163 b FAT FQLKS REDUCED DR. SNYDER, THe SuccESSFUL OBESITY SPECIALIST The following porsons have taken treatment of Dr. Suyder, with losa of wolght s iven below. y will cheerfully answer all Inquirios (f stamps aro Touicied: Wolght Heforo, Welght Afer Loss. MINSON, Towa 325 1bs. 147 1bs. 178 Ibs 152 1354 126 MG, BARAN BANNGEH, 108 1311 So. Fifth Leavenworth, Kas 105" PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. No starving, no inconvenianos, harmless and 1o bad wuects, Strictly idential. " For circulars sad tes timonials addross h 6o, in stamps, DR. O. W. F. SNYDER, HoVicker’s Theatre Bldg., Chicago, lik == Your Mother TO USE NO OTHER SOAP FOR LAUNDRY AND HOUSEHOLP PURPOSES, T ISFAR SUPERIOR TO ANY OTHER IN THE MARKET AND IS MADE. ONLY BY N-K:FAIRBANK&CO. CHICAGO. PRVL S L P BVESBVLBBIBIVDIBDRV T E v v o v SR howale purify the blood, are always effcctual, on the Face, Bright's Disease, Ca nd pleasant to take, safe ana A reliable remedy for_ Biliousness, Blotches rf\, Colic, Constipation, Chronic Diarrhaa, Chronic Liver Trouble, Diabetes, Disordered Stomach, Di ress, Dysentery, Dyspcpsia, zema, Flatulence, Female Complaints, Foul Breath, Headache, Heartburn, Hives, Jaundice, Kidney Complaints, Liver Troubles, Loss of Appetite, Mental Depression, Painful Digestion, Pim- the Head, Sallow Com- Scald Head, Scrofula, Dis cases, Sour Stome Torpid Liver, Ulcers, other symptom or dis- impure blood or a failure in the proper performance of their functions to over-¢ meal. ating ar by the stomdch, liver and intestines. e benefi Nausca, Nettle Rash, ples, Rush of Blood to plexion, Salt Rheum, Sick Headache, Skin ach, Tired Feeling, Water Brash and every ease that results from Persons given ted by taking one tabule after each A wuunmd use of the Ripans Tabules is the surest cure for obstinate constipation. They contain nothing that can be injurious to the most delicate. Price: One gross $ \ ,sample bottle 15 cents. For sale by Druggists, or sent by m postage paid. Address THE RIPANS CHEMICAL COMPANY, New York. VBY AN AANSNDAVODO DA AN PIRGENT | SE ot s g REST PAID ON DEPOSITS T .ML L \ THE RIPANS TABULES regulate the stomach, liver G C APITAL ‘?"ld’d 0 W:fi% BANK ShToN, AuwWY AN, EWNASH GBLAKE 'bo IHMILLARD THOS & KIMBALL ) Cholera Stays Away oo g Glean Mou ol hy Digestion Which can only be obtained by caring for the teeth and stomach. Teecth Filled Without Pain by a New Process, the Latest and Best, Used Only by Dr. Bailey, l.eading Dentist, Office, Third Floor Paxton Block, 16th and Farnam Streets. STR Read a few of the many testimonials we have received from those who have had their teeth filled by this new method: OMAILA, Sept. 2, 180°.~This 1s to cortify that Dr. Balley filled efght very sensitive teeth for me, four With gold, the operation was without the siightost pain, and T ean heartily seccommend 1t to sl who desiro teoth filled. 3. 1L JACKSON OMAIA, Sept. 5th Several tooth were filed for me In Dr. Balley's oftice, tho fillings were mostly wold,m hhiave usually hurt me 0 much in got- Ung fi11ing done, but those filed by the now process used by Dr. Batloy did not causo me the least pain, 3. R CneReniL, Resldence Counetl Blufls LINCOLY, Neb., Sept. 15, 1892~ Dr. . W. Batley, Dear Sir: 1 gladly add’ my tostimon. ve: regarding your pain ling teeth 1t Is o grand su ENTRANCE ON SIXTEENTI uld print others, but it would only bo s repetition of the sentiments above. Come and try for yoursolf. it patn, and with the Uil muking thoso fine sets of tecth for £.00, a it warranted. Also the Thin Klastic Morris Plate and the teeth without plates, found only at this oflice. Nitros oxlde, laughing gas, vitalized alr, ete constantly on hand. Don't forget location, * Farnam, kept Paxton Bloek," Cut this add out for a guide 16th and RONZ By Purchasing Goods Made at the l‘ollu\vmnr Nebraska Factories, HOME INDUSTRIES TerernoNe No. 1085, If you cannot find what you want, communicate with the mainfacturers a3 to what dealers handle their goods, AWNING OMATIA TENT AND AwWNING Co. Flags, hammocks, olland rubberelothing Catalogue. FREDKRUG BREW- | OMAH, ING Co, Our bottled cabinet besr Guaranteed to equsl out- delivered Lo uny part of the xport boltled beas, 1007 J; delivered o famiiie — BOXES. lOMAnA Box Fac TORY, anddovetailea OVEEALLB, R | PRINTERS, = | REep Jos PRriny Karz-Nevins Co. Na Co., 202-4 Douglas Stresk Beo Bulldiny CIGARS. MOK Omaha Menufreture Jucob Juskalok. FURNI TURE. CI7AS, SHIVERICK | &Co., Furniture, Carpets and 1 rrapories 1203 Farnam. FLOUR DYE WDB.:{B DYE WORKS, Cloaning and dyoing of overy dosoription 1621 Howard Streos. e MATTRESSES, WHITE LEAD, Canrer Wi LEAD Co. and gutters: ulte foad Tue O\IAIIA MAl‘ foathor pll- uloriors. To 102'44 Nicholus st Corrode Btrietl pu East Omabia, —_— BUBHER GOODS. ‘ SADDLERY ONAHA RUBBERCO | MARKS BROS' Manufasturing and o | SADDLERY Co. 11" kinds” of | Stock saddles and 1L ; i} rubber harnoss b speciaity. sh Brand” 8 F. GILMAN. 1018-16-1 16th, C. E. Black, Manazor. IRON WORKS, PAaxTON & VieR- | LING TRON WORKS. Wronght and cast iron | Mfg. aud bullding work, eoglaes, | Kads w Lrass work. 14eh 5e. IRON WORKS, Safes, voults. Jall wark, iron ‘shuitors’ snd fré Andreen , 1050884 Jackod INDUST WoRKs. |OMAAMILLINGCO | Oftice and will, 1813 Norih Lith Strest. B — RIAL el 11 koods, 1630 Farnawm Bt. | 1uraey stroet. TFARRELL&CO, | elilos, Presorves, M Mouiand Applo Buiter Eyruj Pl SR e ren it - PAGE 50AP CO. InoN BTOVE All kiuds of slove repairs on hand, Gusoling slovos repaired and Bloves slored. Jawos Mugaas 103 5 Ldw3e REPAIRS. e SRUNES. H. . MARWOFE pors trynka, s B0 1614 Dougl

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