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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1884)
OMABA DAILY BEE SATURDAY , MAY 24 , 1884. THE OMAHA BEE Omaha Ofllce.JNo. 01O Fitrnnm 8t , Council H I tiffs Oflflco , No. oar Street , Near Brontlwn.y. Now York Odlco , Iloom OR Tribune Pnbllihfd mry rjrprnlnfr. , * except Band * ) * Th enl ) Monday morning dally , IKMII * T MAIL. One Tear . $10.00 I Three Months . f3X SlrMonm . R 00 | Ono Month . l.OC 1'er Week , 25 0 nls. nun rcmrrAiD. Oa Tear . ? 2.00 1 Three Months . I & Six Months. . . . . . . . . 1.00 | One Month . , , . M American News Company , Sot Agontf New de l rs In the United States. OORR.uraNDR.1CI. A Communication ! ! rotating to News and Kdltorla matters should. bo addressed to the Kotroa 07 Tni DM. AllIMflnoss Lsturi and Reinlttaioe * ihouldlbe addressed to Tn nun rcnuimifo COMPART , QUAIIA Drifts , Check * and Postofflce ordon to be made pay able to the order ol the company. THE BEE PUBLISHING CO , , PROPS B. ROSEWATBREditor. . A. n.Fltch , Manager Dally ClrouUtlon , P. 0 ; H 463 Omaha , Neb. THE Union Pacific and B. & M. have buried the hatchet until the next time IT is about na difficult somotimoa to harmonize un Episcopal council as it is a political convention. Bi.HMAiioic hasn't been troubled much lately about the American hog , probably because Phil. Armour has cornered the troublesome porkor. Mn. JIM NOUTII was "downed" in the democratic convention. Ho ought to change his name. The north never vras popular with the pnrly of the Solid South. Tun statesman who believes in the manifest dcatiny of the United States to embrace all North America ought to bo florit to Cuba during the reign of yellow fever. QrjEKN VICTORIA is sixty-five years old to-day , and everywhere on British soil the bands will atriko up "God Save the Queen , " while John Brown's body lies mouldering in the grave. ACCOKDINO to the Jfcrald the democratic - cratic state convention actually screamed for Tildon. As the Nebraska democ racy has no electoral votes to give iiim , screaming is about all it could defer for Undo Samuel. IT is with pleasure that wo learn thatU. S. Grant , jr.has not skipped for Canada. The financial ruin of the Grants is bad enough , without any such disgraceful course as running away being added to the humiliating affair. EVER since the 12th day of May the Nebraska utato board of equalization has boon pondering over the table of returns sent in by the railroad managers , and in duo time the farce of assessing the rail roads at ridiculously low figures will bo re-enacted. ropu.blipan state central committee has called the state convention to bo hold at Omaha , on. the 27th of August This will afford ample time for a thorough canvass of candidates , and will give the republican farmers a chance to have a voice in making the nominations. TUB Episcopal council of Nebraska , K" * after twenty-five ballots , decided upon Dr. Worthington as the successor of the late Bishop Olarkson. Dr. Worthing ton is the rector of St. Paul's church , De troit , and is a man of great ability. Ho will probably accept the honor tender ot him. FERDINAND WARD , the high-flyer of Wall atroetis now the ward of Now York city. Ho occupies quarters iu the Lud- low street jail. Ward will now fine it considerably harder to raise $300,000 , the amount required for his bail , than i was during the days that ho was handling millions of other people's money. Tun senate post-ulllco committee's report port on postal telegraph recites , among other things , that it would only require § 24,500,000 , to reproduce a tolcgrapl system equal in every respect to tlto Western Union. The stock of the Western orn Union is § 80,000,000. , This would in dicito that there in nearly sixty million of water in Western Union. The Nebraska delegation to the nation al democratic convention will rank witl the delegations from any other western atato in point of ability and character This is especially true of the delegates al largo. While some of the delegates woulc not pass muster by the standard of anti monopoly , it must bo conceded that the ; are representative men in their vocation ! as well as in their party , TUB democratic platform , adopted a Lincoln , has the merit of being brief Like most platforms it is in the main i compound of glittering generalities , cun ningly strung together to catch gudgeons The tariff plank doubtless expresses th eentimont of the people of Nebraska , re gardlesj of party. Th * reference t Thomas Jefferson and our fathers wa probably put on to satisfy the moss-back who constitute a largo portion of the an cient demosracy , The American people iiad great fcai that Ben. Butler would not accept th nomination for the presidency tondere him by the co-called anti-moi opoly 'greenback-lab o r-roform-woma suffrage , etc , , convention. Mr. Butloi however , has aet all doubts at rest , b formally accepting the honor , which 1 : ays cannot bo too highly apprcciatec He promises , if olectoJ , to carry out a the reforms pointed out in the platforr upon which he haa been nominated , \ \ - - will di KEEP Tim The enormous shrinkage in railway BO- curilios , estimated nt over $300,000,000 within the last thirty days , compels the country to devise some measures that will check , if not entirely prevent those dangerous reactions in the stock market. The secrecy with which the affairs of most of the railroads and Block compan ies of the country are managed ia doubt less largely responsible for the distrust of their securities. The managers of these corporations rofuao to take the stock holders into their cnnfidcnc3 , nnd seldom , if over , lot them know the exact condi tion of affairs , As long as the stock ia kept out of the market secrecy helps or hurts nobody , but when it becomes a marketable commodity the purchaser is entitled to the moat exact and ( reliable information , A striking illustration of the system of fraud and inflation was furnished by the disclosures of the inside management of the Louisville & Nashville railroad. The sudden drop of 15 per cent , in the stocks of that railroad brought about a secret mooting of the directors. The president resigned , nniThis successor was elected but the stockholders and the public Imvo only the consolation of knowing that an inside ring has crippled the company by reckless investments. It also transpires that the prime cause of this disaster has boon the corrupt conduct of the presi dent and the pool formed by the execu tive committee. With our secret and ir responsible system of corporate manage ment , directors' pools liavo como to bo regarded as almost legitimate ; vho harm Jioy do and distrust they produce is { really enhanced by the fact that the on- , ire oxccutivo management of railroads , janka , and all great corporations ia in- trusted nololy to the president. In every one of the corporations which Imvo re cently como to grief , it is the president who turns out to Imvo got it into trouble , and nothing is known of his transactions till the crash comoi. Of course if the di rectors themselves are engaged in a pool they are not likely to bo very curious as to what the president is about ; but it snoms as if there was no reason why stockholders should bo exposed to the double risk of speculative directors who 'ail ' in their duty of directing management , and of presidents who manage in any way that they please. No w the moat cfloctivo remedy against in ido pools , dishonest directors , and default ng olllcors , is publicity. If the railroad cor- lorations of this country were required- a keep their stockholders and the public ully informed about the condition of heir affairs at stated periods , and their > ooks and records were subject to inspec- ion by ofllcors appointed by the national and atato governments , the swindling operations to which investors in railway ocuritios are constantly subjected , would undoubtedly bo very much checked. Wo want more daylight upon the manage ment of railroads , telegraphs , and other orporationa that float millions of worth- ess securities. Stock-jobbers , like bur- lam , flourish boat in the dark. THE KRrUIlLICAN CONVENTION. AB the day for the national ropubli- an convention approaches the public in- .aroat . becomes more intensified and apoo- ilation as to cho duration and outcome > ecomos moro general. The lait re publican national convention was in session a whole week. The average ength of the aix conventions previous ; o 1830 was loss then three days. There was a session of throe days in 185G , and of two daya in 18(10 ( , 18C4,1808 and 1872. The convention of 1870 spent three daya in doing ita work. Everything bjut the convention four years ago , with porhapa the exception of Senator Hoar's address in taking the chair , and General Shoridan't little speech of declination whpr ho received ono vote for the president ! " , nomination , was tedious and noodlessl ) protracted , This year the convention ii not likely to last moro than three days The few contests that are to como bofon the convention are likely to bo nettled before fore the national committee on the firs day and at any rate should not occup ; moro than four to six hours of the con vontion. It is now the prevailing impros aion that there will not bo more thai thrco or four ballots for the nomination o president , and unices a very dark hors a nominated , the vice-presidency will g * Lo Robert Lincoln by acclamation. A otho probable candidate for proaidon there tsstill of couraoajdlvorsity of opinion iut it ia becoming manifest moro an moro every day that the nominee will bi Chester A. Arthur. The friends of Mr. Blaine , who wer so sanguine throe weeks ago , are no longer or oven hopeful. The St. Paul Pionoo J'raii , which oxprcstca a preference fo Edmunds , and has had a strong loanin towards Blaine , publishes the followin special from ita Washington correspondent ont : "Tho Blaine men have about given u ] M hope of nominating their candidate The boom has ended , and the great mas of delegates which they have claimed ho molted away under what Mr. Tildoi would say 'the keen nunlight of publi city. ' Blaine is now looking around fo a candidate ho can bosi , and ho has decided dod upon Harrison of luduim as the inoa available dark horse , and ho will ondua vor to cast his full strength for him Hut ho cannot do it. In the first place Harrison has but twelve of the thirty del egataa from his own state , and that nuir her ia not enough to command attentio ; in the convention. In the second pUcc aa aeon as the Blaine column breaks , th delegates will scatter , Senator Miller c California says that Blaine will rocoiv the votes of that delegation aa long as h in n candidate , but ho cannot tranafo them. The plan of nominating adumm whoso administration ho can control is ai most hopeless , and it is plain that an al tempt to transfer the Blaine delegate will result iu the immediate uomiuutio : of tcme olio of the candidates. " vinrod that ho cannot bo nominatedthere will bo a atampodo to the strongest can didate , and Arthur'a nomination will nat urally follow. The fact is that the fac tional differences are not so marked as they were four years ago , when the change from Blaine to Grant , or Grant to Blaine , would have boon regarded al most as party treason , A majority of the men who go to the Chicago convention desire to vote for the man who can carry Now York , and it is now conceded that among the prominent candidates Chcsloi A. Arthur makes the most favorable showing of strength in the Empire state. Thia ia the unbiased view of the .situation at this day , and there is no probability that it will change materially between now and the 'id of Juno. The great and good Dr. Miller , who claims to edit the only religious daily in his part of the wild west , ia considerably exorcised over the "bull , " as ho calls it , vliich has boon issued against Sunday nowspiipors by thoMothodistgeneral con- orcnco and the Presbyterian general as- ombly. Ho is probably afraid that the Methodist and Presbyterian ministers will discontinue the publication of thoit hurch notices in the Sunday morninp Jfcrald. The fear of the Methodist and 'rcsbytorian bull has BO worked upon the 'roat and good doctor that ho is now try- ng to prove that all the work done on Sunday papers ia done on Saturday night , and that it ia the Monday morning papen hat desecrate the Sabbath. It won't do , octor , to saddle the Sabbath desecration upon the Monday morning BEK. The facl of it ia that Sunday docs not begin witl Dr. Miller until 9 o'clock in the morning HON. A. J. POPPLETON made a ringim anti-monopoly speech at the democrati ! tate convention. If ho was not tin ; neral attorney of the Union Pacific , hi would bo ono of the loading anti-monop olists of Nebraska. No ono knows bottei han ho what monopolies are capable ol [ oing in perverting our political By s to IT and in trampling upon the righto of the icoplo. OIHER LANDS THAN OUJIS. Mr. Gladstone's great reform measure , ho extension of the franchise bill , hat > eon debated in committee of the whole > y the house of commons , and its pass- go by the commons is assured , jord Randolph Churchill surprised hie lolitical friends as well as his enemies > y a vigorous speech against the propoa- d amendment of Mr. Brodorick , con- orvativo , to exclude Ireland from the poration of the bill. Although Lord Undolph objected to aomo features of his bill ho thought the position taken by ho government was statesmanlike. The Brodorick amendment was rejected by n overwhelming vote. Parnollitoa vot- ng solid with the government. It is ow certain , however , that a majority in 10 house of lords will reject the fran- hiao bill and Mr. Gladstone do- ( area that in that event ho will robably dissolve parliament and ppenl to the country. Ho will perhaps > o all the readier to adopt this course jocauso of the loss of strength which the ministry has undoubtedly Buffered in mrliamont owing to the events in the oudan. Ho intimates that ho has a omploto answer to the attacks made on um on Gordon's ' account , but it can mrdly bo made now , while Gordon la till in danger and difficulty , as it will > robably consist in the publication of the ull official correspondence with him. at this correspondence will show that General Gordon has not boon in any way ) otrayod or badly treated , those whc enow anything of it are very confident , [ n the fall it will probably bo possible tc ay the whole case before the public , Moreover , there ia much reason for bo' lioving that it ia in London and not it the country that the ministry has bccouii unpopular , and that it will bo found when the teat ia applied , that little o : nothing ia known in the provinces of tin bitter ohamo and humiliation over tin events in the Soudan which the poopli report themselves aa fooling in the Lon don clubs and at the dinner-tables. Three yeara Ago , when the Gladstoni land bill had been enacted , the prevail ing opinion was tint the effect of the ac would bo the destruction of Irish land lordlsm. Few people , however , wor prepared to believe that the system woul collapse in loss than ton years. The wai of tlio landlords , nnd their appeal fo relief , nll'orda proof that the land lengu has achieved moro than they anticipated There ia n deadlock in the Irish Ian market. Irish landed property cannot b Bold at any price , although it ia offered t 25 to 40 per cent , leas than it could b bought five years ago. The owners hav to pay almost every penny they recoiv in the shape of rents to their creditors t interest , or to relatives as allowance : There is nothing loft for thoinsolve Their condition ia desperate. They ai incapable. They have toiled not n < have they spun in the past , and they ca do neither now , They have assumed tl roll of genteel mendicants , bosocchir alma from the nation. For generation aa Michael Davitt recently said , the have shamelessly robbed a poor and ui fortunate tenantry witli impunit ; Now that they are no longer po mitted to prey on their humbler felloi countrymen na of old they want the Go eminent to aid them to make a goner levy on the whole British and Irish pabl through the medium of the Treaaur ; They cannot got out of the habit of iij pealing for Government aid. la tli days of the crowbar brigade the Sta lent them soldiers and policemen to co lect their rents , the courts of law wet constituted for their special benefit , PI : a State church was maintained at eno inous cost to provide livings for their in * . > -.nunowr on 'hoy wail out petitions now that the pap ystom bo reconstructed , though in n modified form. There never haa boon in any country a lass who deserve loss sympathy in their miafortunes than the Anglo-Irish land- ords. The expedition for General Gordon's ol'of will leave Cairo for Khartuom on or bout Juno 1) ) . The rise in the Nile in paat 'oars ' has been telegraphed from Khar- uom about Juno 18. As this informa- ion will not , of course , bo forthcoming icxt month the authorities will calcu- ate upon the event und employ the nine ays preceding in pushing forward to the load of the present navigable portion of ho stream. By Uns arrangement the dvanco will bo continuous , and the oh- octtvp point of the expedition will bo cached at the earliest possible moment. Various prominent olliccra have been ssigncd to the command by popular ro > ort , but as yet nothing scorns very well ottled about it. The prospects that a trong force will bo sent is greatly trongthonod , not only by the meagre najonty which voted with the govern ment on the resolution of ensure , but also by the abundant ovi- once that popular fooling is atrong in aver of such action. Sir Samuel Baker stimatea that it will tuko 20,000 troops o accomplish anything. In his opinion ho sultan should bo allowed to furnish i,000 men. The remainder should con- iat of 10,000 Indian troops and 5,000 Huropoans. Ho advises that half of this orco march from Suakim and the rpst ascend the Nile valley. For the Nile oxpepition ho Bays there will bo needed htrty steamers , ono hundred Nile b rges and four torpedo boato. The atean.oro nust bo armed aa gunboats Winches nustbo propirod for hauling the crafta up the rapids. The Ivorosko deaurt must bo supplied with immense water tanks at intervals of twenty ivo miles along the route. These lanka nust bo kept filled during the passage of ho troops by the labor of 1,000 camels carrying water. By thia means the pas sage of the desert could bo effected with out riaks by dotatchmonts 1,500 strong. The details of the arrangements for aup- ilying , equipping and transporting such an expeditionary force are certainly very formidable , and the question nat irably arises , What is it to bo done for ? s it simply for the rescue of Gordon ? Evidently Sir Samuel Baker does not hink ao , for ho aaya in hia published lot- er that if Gordon chooses tn leave hia > oat there ia little doubt of his ability to effect a retreat up the Nile to Gondokero and Zanzibar. Germany isstillfaco to face with thoqucs ion asked by the chamber of commerce at ilindon a few years ago : "Has the iorman empire been founded for the lurpoao of driving its citizens forth into xile ! " Lastyoar 200,000 persons left the athorland ; and this year it is estimated hat the number will be increased by at east 20,000. How long Germany can tand thia constant drain of her best and moat productive blood ia ono of the puzz ing questions of the century. So long , lowoyor , aa she maintains her present op- iressivo taxation and military system , ust so long ia the exodus bound to con- inuo. Germany ia determined to main tain her military supremacy. Ev- ry improvement" .in' artillery , amall rms and explosives is immo- iatcly tested by her military commis- ionaand , if approved , ia adapted without oferonce to coat. The noodle gun dom- natrated ita auperiority at Sadowa and lie German artillery proved their officion- y in the war with France. Now a com- loto change in the infantry outfit ia an- lounced. The present breech-loaders ro to bo displaced by a now repeating ifle. In the cartridge factories a still more important change is to take place , wing to the discovery of a now kind of rown powder said to give greater range nd penetration and to make hardly any moke. It ia stated that this powuer vhon ignited in the open air burns with- ut exploding , something aa dynamite oca. This may give some intimation aa o ita composition. The Prussian war epartmont is said to consider the hanges of great importance. It is aup- losed that the now rifle ia adopted to uit the Bmokolot" powder and not be- auao of any serious defect in the guns now iu use. No wonder that the Cubans havn a bit er feeling toward Spain , for never , per- mpa , wore colonials so deeply wronged and oppiossod by the mother country. L'ho Cubans are totally excluded from , ho public service and various civil ca reers , Hordes of employees are being constantly sent from Spain , who fill ev ery government vacancy and costs Cuba an immense amount. The "Evur-Fnitii- ul ifllo" is also compelled to liquidate debts duo from the entire nation , to pay .ho coat of the Spanish legation at Wash- 'tigtou and to sustain numoroua other fi nancial burdens the weight of which dhould not fall upon her shoulders alone. Another and perhaps the greatest grinv- anco of the Cubans is the milttuy form of goyornmont maintained by the mother country. Owing to the dtsperutu coii < dition of affairs in Cuba , Spain haa recently contly promised to institute reforms , and it in thought that though auch prom ises have in the past only been maoo t ( bo broken , aomu of them at least will bt kept now. Still , there is no grounds tc liopo that the Cubins will receive any thing like fu'r treatment. In view o the facts , it ia impossible for thorn tc choke down their patriotiam and indigna tion. Apparently Russia has not yet givoi up her long-cherished idea of bridgin ] Persia with railways , and thus makini hur vassal a stopping stone to freal Eastern conquests. Eleven yoara ago i concession was actually granted by th Shah for the construction of a railwa ; 150 miles in length , from the Persia ) port of Ilcsht , on the Caspian Sea , t the capital , Tuheran , but hia tnajest ; suddenly wriggled out of thia agreemen with true Oriental adroitness. Projuctei lines from Teheran to Ispahan th ancient metropolis and from Ispahan t Shirnz were similarly negatived. Bu Russia , persevering aa over , is mixing u ; with the now domarkation of frontier bt twoon herself and Persia the project of railroad around the southwestern corne of the Caspian , connecting Rfsht wit ! the now petroleum fields at Baku , am with the Russian railway thence to th Black Sea. The Shah is said to lee ] upon thia scheme with anything bu favor , but Russia may bo trusted to carr her point sooner or later , either b bribery or coercion , or both together. The little republic of S < ritzorlan serves as a utrikinj , ' example tothurci of Europe , from year to year , of the IDBJ _ im that "happy am the neoplo that/hov / > no history , ' Ensconscoa in the mi4 tc I rival , collosal , and full-armed pojrcri 'Switrorland pursues the kovea toujjr c icr way , undisturbed by the commotions f Europe , and safe in her republican in stitutions amid the contending ambitions of sovereigns. The olcctiona whicli have list taken place in the mountain republic were not even foreshadowed by cable ; and have proceeded so quietly as to at- ract little or no notice beyond ita bound- tries. The success oftho Swiss conserva- _ ivea is probably duo in the main to the csiro of the people that moro stringent ncaaurcs should bo taken against the oroign agitators and conspirators who iavolong _ awarmid and plotted within her lospitablo borders. Premier Ferry has enormously atongthcned hia power in Franco by the overwhelming success of hia atrugglo wilh China. Everybody admits that ho iaa played the game and the great insight nd splendid courage. The complete uccess along the line confirms the prin- iplo that success in Asia belongs to the ludacious , there being many signs that : China had kept up a bold front and isked war , the poasanta , with radicals , would Imvo put Furrv out of oflico. It is upposod that Franco will soon do away with the native government inAnnam , nd English papers point out that the ovornmont of Siam , with its unwarlike )0jplo , ita aplendid vratorwaya , ita vast psources , and ita entire want of defon- ivo power , is temptingly near , and will irobably aoon attract the Fieiich appc- ito. THE HIGHEST PRAISE. A I'Vw Stncoro nml Kaniest "Words from Licftdlnfr Mlnlhtcrs or the Iiniul. The fact tint a man occupies the responsible post- on of n religious t acher entitles him to uiiiics- ( cncd respect , and gives hlswords and endorsements special power. Tno statement ! which follow , nt. cstcd by "fao slmllo" dlgnltures , are > oluutary In ier ! nature , nnd because the facts they contain are ielle\cd to boot great boreflt to the human racr. 11 who read thoic toktlmomila cannot liutnlinlt iclr sincerity or fa'l ' to ho Impressed with the re- narknblo power of the nrtlo o of which they spoak. roi.JD , C. , Juno 21 , 1E83. leas ir. II. Warner i. Co. : anMLKUKX For moro than three jcars I Imo he- ovcd In the cfllcacy of the retncdj known as War- cr's SAKE CURB I am acqimlntcd with CMOS of ol- mmlnurla , of Acute Iliight'8 Ulsoaso and of grate ) , hlch have iiulckly } loldcd to It. From my kuowl- dgo , also it u a remedy which Issomttlmos r < commended - mended by the most skilful phjstctans. Whllo I bo mo It tj bo perfectly safe to use. I bcllc\c , also , nt In cases where ncurn Is possible Its effect Is to levlnte the great sufferings of the patient. D. D and Pastor Congregatlsnal Church. JritKrn Cur , N. J. , Sep. 20 , 1833. Mesrs. II. H. Warner 4 , CM ( ! r\TLEHKs : 1 ha\o never bcn troubled wlthnny icrlous kidney offo tion rajEclf , but I rocommcud 'arucr's Safe Curu from objcriatl > n of its effect on hers. Several if our anp alntanccs havi * bten so ichr-cnclUed ' > y its uiotnat after c im creation \ \ \ \ cm I b c me satisfied ol its excellence ami nc ended It , feelli g It tobomj duty to do to , I ly ha nicins I might help any ono to find rellel em ullcring. Ibcjo\o | it tab as near all It is re m ended tc bo aa an ) tiling oer offered to the public. Patter St. Paul's M. E. Church. IlAurrov COURT HOIHK , S. 0 , Uay 2 , 1S-3. cssrs. H. II. Warner & Co : I have been suffering for the past Ino jear from the most acute pains In the region I the kldncjs nnd liter , and during that time I ate lookcl forward to nothing leaa then Driglu's Ist-aso. About llarf h 1 , IbSl , I rea-l jour a ver- -emcnt which ophinoii the case of Mr. Inrabce. t tee tdtcry elmllnrt > mv own ca e , n > 'd I sen * or sour bottles < f your Safe Cure I believeit to > o Infallible , and ) ou can obtain th testiminy of 1 my friends and neighbor ) to the fact that Is res- ued mowhcndotth seemed certain. I feel like a oung man again. SANTA CLARA. Cal , May 3 , 18S3. Ucssrs. H. n. Warner & Co. : Or.siLi MKV : I have used jour Sato Cure and found nil jou represented it. UOCUBSTKK , N. Y. , Jan. D. 18S3. essra. II. II. Warner & Co. CKSTI.KMEH : Hating received from thouso of War- or'HH fe Cure very niirkid benefit , I can cordially ecommend it to others. ) , D , Professor of Greek in the Rochester Unlter- ty nud New Testament reviser , ) 03.1 TKS8M.VAMA AVKIDK , ) WAHIMNUTON , D. 0 , Juno 7 , 1883. J lesire. II. II. Warner & Co. : GKSTLKVKS : I hi o known some cares cf Bright'a ) l > ia > u tthxhsicmcd In the last a'.aqcs nnd hail nenglteii up by prtctlonirs of buth schools , 1 > vhljli the Sccilt change wrought by your t-afc Cure seemed hut little 1 es than rniraul us. I noi couth cid In t for III Mil's Uisaeolnnll Mnguino cmcJt horttofuro dUcotered can bo Held for one nomcnt In comparison with this. D. D. and Financial Secretary Ilowird Unlterslty , USHPHRITN OP Ilocursrcn , " ) CllKUICAIi LAUORATOm , } UociiB9Tr.il , N. Y. , Jinuar ) 18th , 1833. ) Mr , II. II. Warner ha plaol In my possession thi ormulte of the tot or 1 inudKlnoii u auulacturid am sola under t"o goneri ! da-lunation uf "W.rner * Ufe Hemrdics " I have lnte ti utii ] this proces o ; t manu'a' turo , which are ondurted with < xtremi care , and nrxonlliiK to thi bo < t method * . I hate ta ten from the laboratory similes of all the artlflt used In the preparation of tluso medicines , as well a .tie s vrra mcd clnci Into which they enter. Ihati aUo i urc ased from diOoruit diuajflnU In this elf Warner's Hcrntdles.ai U upon critical examination find them all rnMroly free from any poUououj or do etcruua 6ulii' 6ulii'df.tt. . ( Ph. D. , LL. D. and Anal ) ft State Board of Health MoMcioMRRr , Ah , , May S3,1383. Masirs H. II. Warner ft Co. : JimnuBs : I have been greatly troubled with m ; . .Jieys and liter for eve t tntv jeare , anddurln , that < nt lie time I was never fnelrom tain. M ; medical bl h were enormous , and I tl > lied both th Hot and White 8irln | s , nut d | or the curative qual Hies of the w ater , I am happy to say I a u now a we ] man , aud entirely ai the remit cf your Sato CUre \ \ Ith such glorious results I am only too glad to to tlly rcfcardiDK the reaedy which has made me s fcappy. Wmri-Asir , MorrlJ Ca , N. J. , July 2 , 1383. Mf f its. II. II. Warner & Co ; ln K Sm-UrtU recently my wile has aultered tei rlblv from aietere attack of acute IntUinatton ol th b'adder. which occured October last , aud kit thronio InRauiuiitlc/n of the ntck of the blaxidei Ihls utoaoe tlelded to no trtatn out until some Um in Match khobrgfi the use of jour SAM Cure , an by the us. ) of U bottlei wascomplettW cundwh < c Houlshtan kn ttlodg * tery tlitukmlly. W hav co mended the cure tn others as we had occaslo aud shall continue to do so t ry cheerfully. I'sr'ksBuna , Va. , Nov. 7,1ES3. , II. II. Warner & Co. : Os\n.euEi I hava uted t\arne > 'i SivB Cure lt escilleut rcfUlt ) and w uld luoommcnd It to all tn feiloi ; from diavac of the kludue ) $ . U. D , Hector St , I'aul' * P. 1Church. . No higher rtralae or.uld be given any article o earth , and It ettabllihei toyond a quettlou the tali of this great > em dy f or all dboaucj of he Udaeyi Uver or uriuwy organs. NEW MARKHAM HOTEL The Pnlnco Hotel o Denver. Cor , Seventeenth and Lawrence Sb ) Ilooms 75o to J2.00 per day. Special IUUs by lha Month. THE FINEST TADLE IN THE WEST. , Conducted on the American and European Plans. 'Day Board § 7 per wook. P , S , CONDON , - - PKOPEIETOR Double and Single Acting Power ano Hand Engine Trimmings , Mining Machinery , ' Bolting , Hose , Brass nnd Iron Fitting Steam Packing nt. wholeealo and rojail , HALLADAY WIND-MILLS , OJIU110 AND SCHOOL BELLS. f < V * * % Corner 10th Farnarn St. , Omaha Neb. GRAND PUBLIC SALE RARE CHANCE FOR IPESTMEiWWAL ! ThoIUlWSTON TOWN SHE COMPANVwIllBOll t pub'lo mctlnta * iDNESDAY , MAY 28th , 1384 400 Residence and Business Lots , In the new unJ promising town ol "KTI 'OT A C51T A JN JfiaiSii JiSIL A , GAGE GQUNTY. sltuaten the O. & It. V Brauchof tho'U. P. Uallnar , about 20 ml'ca Biuth of Bc t- rlco , I cl > , and IDmllea north nl Marjsxlllo , Kan , and In the ctntcr ol tha former Otoo Indian ItescrvivUoD. a trict ol Und oonslitln ? oM3 0 K ) acres of th i finest acrlcultural landa In the United Slatof , nearly every Htmtir section ol whl h ta guttled on nnd Impicncd hv an Industrious , incricclio ivtid Intel ( gent class a cltlzina The tcmnMto Is moit beautifully locatoJ on the banks ol the DU Blue llhcr , nnd Is the Identical trround selected by tl o chiefs ol the Ot o an I Missouri nibta cf Inolans , on account of Ita linvlon and ricauty.nnu with a lilslorj , wnlcli , when written , will have the most Intorcitlnff Icgpndtof n race now rapIdly - Idly nnrnachlrijo\tlnctlon | t Iht 11 K llluo IU\or that runs IhrouRh the town 11 well known to ho the finest tnlHlnt ( stream tn tHe State , and . [ ready ft-puluvo been Ukcii to utilize n part ol th s magnificent power. No btttcr chinco cut bo found anywlicio for business Inxcstmonts , either In trade or manulacturlrR. * . ' , , , " ? ( iuarrl < ' 9 " 'tuato ' In tMs part of the is tate are admitted by ill to bo the best In tlio West , n < I nro unlimited and of ea y access to the town. As n ralln nd rciilcr. Darneston la ilestlied to bo an Important ono. The gap on this tailroid bntwoon Manhattan nud MarjeUl'o ' , Is fa-t h-ing puihed to completion , nnd when llnlnhed will form a through line from Omaha to Kan-ni City and thh towq la nearly central bct centre two iraints. - Will bo run from ST. JOSEPH , MO. . LINCOLN , NEB , and Intermediate points , to BAUNEaTON , at the following \ery low rates , for the KOUNU TUH * . ST , JOSEPH & WESTEEN , Time of Leat'R Faro Time of LeaVff Faro St Joseph OtOam , I 6U Morrlll 843a.ni. 81 < 5 WatVicna o 25 " 2 35 Sabctlu 002 " 180 Troy 847 n 2 20 Oneida , 9 25 " 115 Sctcranco 715 ' 2 00 Seneca DEO " 100 Leona 7 39 1 95 Ballottllio 1002 " SK ) Robinson 7 45 n 1 85 Axtol 1012 " BO Hiawatha 80S " 1 70 Hcattie 1040 " 70 Ilamlln g % $ 1 G5 Marjstille .s 1120 " CO Arrlto at BARNESTW. la COM. UNION PACIFIC , , , , Time of Leat'g Kare Time of Lear'tr Ptro Lincoln 7 ooa.ni. SI EO Vlnkerell 8 39 a m. ! 1 00 Jamaica 723 " 1 M Beatrice 0 02 " 60 Hanlim 731 < i 1 0 Holmestillo 0 27 " CO Cortland 8 12 1 21 Blue Sorines 0 42 " 0 _ , . , , LArrlteatBAHNESTON. . 1000A..M. Tra'ns returning : Icate Datneston In thooicnlmjof same day. lUIlroad firohetwcenany of the above ? Ir.i stBJl ° n8 1'I ' he refunded to persons buvinir lots Lotstvdl bo sold to the highest bidder , . ! , T,9n,3nS"ca8h' oabncoln six months and one \ tar. at8po-o r.t IntLtcst. 10 i or cent oft for cash , . , , , .oLT'I1.51rat ! .Cl Nebraska. H. K. w HAItl VVIQ , St. JosephMo. D VUNE3 & IIAZLS.TT , Barnston , Nebraska. I. N. SPEfcll , Hiawatha , Kansas. AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC \ GHULBS.IOIUOOOB.EIEESt SIOKEES' ' AETICLiS. PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING f ' CELEBRATED BRAND / Beina Victorias , Especiales , Hoses in 7 Sizes from-$60 to-$120 per 1000. & ' ; AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS : Grapes , Thistle , Lawrence Barrett , Caramels. New Stan dard , Good Advice , New Brick. SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES. EASTERN PRICED DUPLICATED 11 KARNAM STREE OMAHA EAU CLAIRE 1024 North Eighteenth Street , Omahn , 'Jon. Street Car Line , WHOLESALE AND IlETAIL Lumber Lime , Lath , Boors , WoisjEtc. Grades and prices as ? oed and low as any in the city. Please try me. UAMUrAOTDIIEB Off 0V BTIUOTIiT AND , TWO WHEEL OAETS. "h rt' 3 Omaha. Web