f"jpspsRxf- T f tTt -nrT- r-T -. - TS m r,-? fcWW .. 7"J ,- &1hi&rTTTyi rkJifSfWft J? Fremont, lilkhom & Mo. Valley BAlljROAto. UTOperate Ami con trolt III own crlce betw ccn .. LINCOLN, NEIL, and OMAHA, CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE, SIOUX CITY MINNEAPOLIS AND ST. PAUL. IV TlirmiKli TlckrtB and Hkk"H Clircked to It polnlii In United KlAtiR nml Citnudn. Vratllailo 81ricri Palatial Dining Car Ami Union Depots. CITY TICKKT OFFICE I IIS Fotith 10th Hrrct, . - Lincoln (IKO. N. FOHK8MAN, ARtnt. H.fl. IU'ht, J. H. JU'cnxxAN, Urnernl M'Rpr, (Ifii'l Pass. Ar'I OMAHA, NKll. ON SALE TO ..VXiXi PRINCIPAL POINTS EAST, WEST, NORTH and SOUTH 1044 O STREET. FAST MWL ROOTeI 2 DAILY TRAINS 2 TO Atchison, Leavenworth, St. Joseph.Kansa City, St. Louli nml nil point South, East nnd Wct. The direct line to Ft. Scott, Parson. Wichita, Hutehlmon nnd nil principal point In Kansas. The only road to the Great Hot Spring of Arknnsa. Pullmak Slkkpkrh ani Frkk Rkclinino Chair Cars nn "all train. 8. G. HANNA, R. P. R. MILLAR, City Tkt Agent, Gcn'l Agent. Cor. O and lath St. wefc 'MllWAUKEt 'gZHUt ft Oyrai and operate 5.50O mile of thoroughly Quipped roaa in Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Missouri, M Inncsotn nml Dakotn. It la the licit Direct itoute between all the Principal Point In tho Northwest, Boulhvrcvt md Far West. ror map, time tallies, rate of paisago and freight, etc.. apply to nearest station agent ol CMICAOe, MlLWAUKKK it HT. PAUL It AIL way, or to any ltallroad Agent anywhere la the world. KMILLEIt, A.V.H.CAItrENTEIt, General M'gjr. Oen'l Pass. ATXl Agt. K, It (MTU, GEO. II. UKAFFOIW, Mt,Ocn' Mgr. Awt. O. P. A T. Agt. Milwaukee, Wisconsin. MP For Information In reference to .amU and Town ownetl by the Chicago, Milwau kee A Ht. Paul ltnlhvny Company.wrte to H. O. HAUOAK.LanU ComiulIoner,MlllwaHko Wisconsin. we mm BBh iBpra HEYMN & DEICHES, lM-l520Farnambt.,Wew I'axton Illock, .THE LAMEST CLOAK, SUIT and FUR HOUSE. In The Whst 'Ve nroiiow Introducing- many ncyr novel lot In Hjirliiit nml Hinnirnr wear, und re 11 ipect fully Invite our Lincoln friend to call and eu tho new lino Jnut opened. ARE DIRECT IMPORTERS Ami nn Mich can oiler later styles at lower price than any honso west of Chicago a fact we'll tako pleasure In proving to I.lneolnlte. GALL AMD SEE US WHEN IN OMAHA. Wo can :inw.jnu a lino lino of Cloaks, Drossesnuu Kurt, that lurpas niothlug you tmo over scon In tho entire went. It will pay you to tako it trip to Omaha to see us, If you wnnt anything nice In our line. Mall Orders Recelvo Prompt Attention. WAITED! Everybody to examine the nns and standing of the Un ion Central Life Insurance Company, of Cincinnati, Ohio, before insuring. It has the lowest continuous death rate of any company. Realizes the highest rate of interest on in vested assets which enables it to pay large dividends. Policies incontestibfe a n d non -forfeitable after third vear. The Union Central issues endowment policies at ordi nary life rates; these policies arc now maturing and being paid in from one to two years earlier than time estimated by the company. They protect the family and estate during the younger years of life, and the insured in old age at regu lar life rates. Other desirable policies issued. Call on us or write for plans. J. 31, EDMISTON, State Agent. C. L. MUSHIER, .int. State Agent. 0. T. POMPELLY, City Solicitor. Itoom 3 Ilurr Illock, LINCOLN, NEB. Drayage and Moving QLI.VER, MAGGAUO Delre to inform the public that hi equip ment for moving Household Uoods,Ptano Safe, Marfchandlse, Heavy Machinery etc., U the best. In the city. Special men and wagon are kest for the removal o Pianos and Household Goods, Which are always handled by compctant and experienced help, and the (atet appli ance tued for handling Safes and other heavy good. Call, address or telephone OLIVER MAGGARD Telephone 111 917 O it. CAPITAL filTY COURIER, BILLIONS OF SIGNATURES. THE UNITED STATES TREASURER MUCH SOUGHT AUTOGRAPH. A llllllon nnd a Ititlf of "Spinners" J, N. Huston's Will flmin Adorn Undo Rum's Mniiry It .Mint lln Dona by Machinery. Interesting Aulnjraplis. Wariiinoton. Mny 10. In n few days tho pinto printing 'Jrcsaesof Undo Sam's big money mill will lcgln grinding out crisp, beautiful bank notes nnd silver ccrtlllcntca with n now nnino signed to them. J. N, Huston, tho now treasurer of tho United Unites, will soon tnko pos session of the ofllco to which ho has boon npiolntod by tho president, and then his nnino will lo sent thundering down tho ngca by means of tho signing of his auto graph to all tho paper money used by the pcoplo of this country. Immediately Mr. Huston's autograph will becomo 0110 of tho most vnluablo nnd populnr known to tho common people. It Is for his nnmc, signed at tho lower right hand corner of smnll pieces of pnper, that 03,000,000 of human beings will do mora or less struggling, mako monv sacri fices, and often will thoy mourn becauso they get It not. To accommodate nil tho peoplu who want his nutogrnph Mr. Huston will bo compelled to sign his nnmo n great many times n day, nnd, work ns industriously as ho may, tho chances nro that oven then somo poor mortals will ho dis npKlnted, while others will get much moro than their share. This Is not Mr. Huston's fault, nor Undo Sam's, for theso worthy gentlemen would bo much happier if they could mako enough money so tlm( no ono need go without. Probably if they wcro to print 11 thou sand times as much money ns thoy do print, n fow men would succeed In hog ging tho mnjor sharo nnd in leaving but n smnll portion to bo divided nmong n great many millions of tho loss fortunntc. If you should bo lucky enough to get hold of a fow of Mr. Huston's nutogrnphs and to retain them long enough to mako a study of their nppearnnco, do not Im nglno that Mr. Huston mado them In tho good old way, with pen and Ink. Mr. Huston'Js nn accomplished cnmnn nnd nn industrious sort of person, but if he wero to sot out to sign with pen nnd ink all tho money which Undo Sam puts in circulation, it would tnko him about thirty years, working with nil his might ten hours a day and doing nothing elso, to sign tho now notes thnt go out in a slnglo year. If wo had to wait on Mr. Huston's pen, nirnblo though it is, in about six weeks thero would bo very llt tlo paper currency in tho country, ex cept a lot of old bills, bo worn nnd rot ten as to bo barely ablo to hold together, and such growling about tho scarcity of money as was novcr beforo heard of. Thoro was a tlmo when greenbacks wcro signed by a pen, and what a task it wasl That wns at tho beginning of tho lato war, when tho specie had tun out and something had to bo provided for payment of tho soldiers nnd contractors who wero carrying on tho glgantlo opera tions of civil hostilities. As overybody knows, tho greenback was tho devlco hit upon, and sixty millions of dollars of tho old "domand notes," ,wcro Issued as fast as they wero wanted. Theso notes wero signed by 60veral men, authorized to do so as tho representatives of tho treasurer of tho United States nnd tho register of tho treasury. For nlno months they did nothing elso. Occasionally when tho needs of tho government roso to nearly a million dollars n day they had to work twenty hours out of twenty-four, In order that thero might be funds to pay tho men who wero fighting tho battles and tho commissaries who wero feeding them. Ono of tho men who signed theso notes, J. W. Wholploy, still lives and worka in tho samo ofllco ho then occupied, though now as assistunt treasurer of tho United States, IIo could sign up to flvo thou sand notes a day, and by working lato into tho night could work off as many as soven thousand. Dut thero wns on tho scriveners' forco rt man named Evans John Evans who was tho mainstay of tho soldier as pay day approached. Evans was u phenomenal penman, and when tlio authorities got into tight places, in tho calls mado on them for ready cosh, as they frequently did, thoy would go to Evans and ask him to put on steam. When pushed to it Evans could sign 15,000 notes In twenty-four hours, and get rest enough to enable him to start in again tho following day. Dut in order to do this ho abbreviated his already short namo to "J. Evans," and wrote that with a moro dash of his pen, leaving an autograph which n 6trangcr could never decipher, und yet ono which j nobody.coulu counterfeit. It is a curi ous faclt that although $00,000,000 of theso notes wero Issued and put into cir culation, many millions of them to sol diers in tho field, nil but $50,000 hare been redeemed at tho treasury, showing that not a great deal of currency wns lost or destroyed oven in those troublous times. Of this $80,000 outstanding, a few hun dreds dribble into tho redemption bureau every year old bills which mjujo soldier tvas paid oil with down in Dixie, and which ho has hoarded till this day for tho sake of tlieir associations. The money counters in tho redemption bureau say they occasionally get hold of old "demand notes" of the issuo of 1801, nnd greenbacks of 1803 nnd 1803, which nro discolored by blood, but otherwise almost llko new, Theso notes, say tho clerks, wero sewn in the lining of the uniform of somo soldier who was wounded, and who, on recovering, brought the blood Lffl&w zrhrt&fL SATURDAY, mJtt fa, atalncd greenbacks homo an Hottvcnlnt of his part In tho war, carefully preserving them till compelled by adversity to pay them out for the necessities of Ufa. As tho wnr progressed tho needs of tho government in tho wny of pacr cur rency boenmo so enormous thnt even tho nlmblo Evans nnd his co-workers wcro unnblo to move their pons rapidly enough to keep titi With tho demand for green backs, and tho names of tho treasurer antl register wcro then printed tiKn tho fnco or tlio bills. Mr. Huston is tho seventh man to gain tho honor of having his nnmo printed upon tho paper mouoy of tho country as tho rcsponslblo Issuing olllcer tho man deputed by tho govern ment to sign In Its nnmo its millions upon millions of promissory notes. Tho first of tho soven was F. E. Spinner, general ly known ns "Old Splnnor," who, ns treasurer through tho war, and up to 1870, had tho pleasure of seeing his namo go UK)ii tho most nxtonslvo issue of pa er tnonoy over mado by a government In n similar tlmo. No fewer than ono billion and five hundred millions of dol lars of money went Into circulation In fourteen years, bonrlng tho famous slg naturo of "Old Spinner" that signature which for many yenrs was ono of tho standing jokes of tho country. "Old Spinner," who wns ono of tho XSfcfS&fa WW most fnlthful ofilclnls tho government over had, still lives in Florida, whero it is said ho scrawls his famous autograph In the sand nnd with It frightens nwny tho festive alligators. Yet, even wealth Is not immortal, antl riches tako wings nnd fly away, for of that vast sum of "Spinner money" only $33,000,000 re main "outstanding" at this day proba bly not moro thnn one-half of It in ex istence. Soon Spinner's signature, onco in tho pocket of every man who owned ruwULLf n dollar, or oven a ten cent "shin plaster," will lmvo becomo tt curiosity. Treasury ofilclnls say tho avcrago Hfo of a bank noto of tho denomination of ono dollar or two dollars is only threo years. Though for 11 dollar noto many n poor wrctcl must work from morning till night, it is after nil but n frail pieco of paper, and quickly Iwcomes worn and ragged from usons it goes on Its journey of good or evil through tho world. A flvo dollar noto win last flvo times ns 3col long as n dollar noto, and n ten dollar noto twico ns long as a flvo dollar. Over at tho money mill, as tho bureau of printing and engraving is known, is a hugo vnult filled with tho steel plates on which something llko four billions of dollars of money has been printed. Tlio plates now in uso nro tho silver certifi cates, tho national bank notes, tho inter est checks nnd n fow other minor forms of collateral. Somo of tbeso plates cost a thousand dollars apiece, but every ono 'Xya 0 of them must havo tho now treasuiera namo on it beforo it can bo used in tlio printing of n slnglo dollar nftcr ho takes ofllco. Luckily it is not necessary to do stroy tho old plates and mako,now ones. Shortly nftcr tho appointment of Mr. Huston by tho president tho chief of tho money mill sent to him for his nuto graplu "Bo careful about It," Bald tho chief, "for It is tho signature that will go on millions and millions of money. Mako it to suit you, so that it can bo left undis turbed as long as you remain in tho of fice." Tho now treasurer sat up nights with his nutogrnph making. Though a banker and n business man who has long known tho valuo of an nutogrnph, never before did Mr. Huston 60 fully under stand how much tho simplo signing of n namo might mean. Ho wanted this namo neatly signed, plainly signed, with a handwriting that should Indicato char acter, strength, facility of execution, gracefulness. Mr. Huston didn't keep count of tho number of times he wroto his namo beforo ho found an nutogrnph which in ills modest estimation was fit to certify to tho genuineness of flvo hun dred millions of dollars, but ho will not deny that In his two or threo dnys of practlco ho covered a couplo of quires of piper. When tho autograph was Anally received at tho money mill tho skilled uoikmcn there mado short shift of their part of tho task of making ready for the isttuo of now money. Within a fow days bright and pretty "Huston money" will bo in circulation. In a fow months tho country will be flooded with it. If you havo a friend In tho treasury ask him to get for you n set of ones or twos, or fives If you prefer, bearing tho autographs of all tho treasur ers of tho greenback era, from Spinner down to Huston. Though tho bills look much alike and there nro but seven nines, they represent tho craof marvels in national growth, constitutional recon struction, material prosperity and skill ful publio financiering, Walteh Wellman. When snow falls tho first portions in variably contain greater numbers of bao teria than the subsequent ones. - Dil o9 ckxAWk 0jri 89. - A. M. Davis k Son, UPHOLSTERY DEPARTMENT. Lace and Chenille Curtains Draperies, Etc. A full line at prices lower than ever. FDRNITDRE COVERING, RDGS, ftc, Ac. A. M. Davis & Son, 1 1 1 2 O Street. H 1Mb j BvliBkBvtlBvl 'LmbmBLmbmBLmbMbHVILmbBDi 1!4bbbKE1ibsImbbbbbBmbbbbbR vBrHHQDHHPlKJW iL-IWlHmTWWlfM-nnnilif ml tmwumxm Kates reasonable. Everything now and complete. Prompt ten Ice and tho best menu In Omaha. Hot nnd cold water In every room. Ofllce nnd dining hall on find floor. All mod ern Improvements. Mucolnlte nlwnys receive 11 cordial welcome. Call and see u while in Omaha. You can got Into tho cara at depot and tako 1IAHNEY ST., CAHLE LINE DIIIECT TO THE DOOH. Cor. Hth nnd Harney. InA l'.Hiony. Clerk. Where all 1 " Buggies, Carriages or Saddle Horses, Can be had at anv ue, Day or Night, on short notice, Horses Boarded and w taken care of at Reasonable Rates Call and see us, 102 Q street, or give all orders by Telephone 147. wmrnm A BEAUTIFULLY UPHOLSTERED RECLINING CHAIR that Is the very embodiment of ease nnd luxury;; a friendly game of WliUt, a choice volume from the well Mocked library, a prom enade from car to car (the handsome vestibule excluding all dust, smoke, rain or wind, and thus rendering the promenade n de lightful nnd novel Pastime"). A sumntiinns innnl tlint rnmoa Ir. liilllll IMIIIII the nick of time, and "just strikes the spot." The quiet enjoyment of n fragrant Ha vana in a charmingly decorated nnd gorgeous smoking apartment, and finally a peace ful sleep In a bed of snewy linen and downy softness. Such Is life on the "1JUR LINGTON" ROUTE. What other line or combination of lines can offer ou these advantages? NOT ONE. Please remember this when next you travel. Information of all kinds pertain ing to Railroad or Ocean Steam, ship Tickets promptly answered. G. W. HOLDREGE, Gcn'l Mgr., J. FRANCIS, G. P. and T. A., OMAHA, NEIl. 100 Engraved Calling Cards And Copper Plate, for $2.50. If you have a Plate, we will furnish 100 Cards from same, at $1.50. ,?, WESSEL POINTING CO. Courier Office. Tolephone i s?V kA.tfNf&; I889 LINCOLN BRANCH OF Max Meyer & Bio.. Wholetile and Retail Dealer In PIANOS 0 ORGANS Oencrnt western aconta for tho Htoin v,nv. Iiimttc. ClilckcrliiB, Voc, KmM Oabler, lk-hr Ilroi., Ncwby A. i:nns, and l'liir.o marked In plain nurcs-prlccs always tho lowest for tlio grndu or piano C. M. HANDS, Manager. 142 North lltli Street. THIS MURRAY g Omaha's Leading Hotel. Oreneil Sept. 1, 1SSS. Finest Hotel in the West II. SII.LOWAY, Proprietor. FINEST LIVERY RIGS In the City all come from the Graham Brick Stables 1027 Q STREET, kind of My superior advantages enable me to ticket to nnd from Europe nt the lowest rates nnd to secure desirable cabins In advance of sailings. The generous patronage accorded me by prominent people of Omaha, Lincoln nnd other Nebraska cities attest the popular--Ity of this office. ""'rjo r jt-y cstyUlS City Passenger and Ticket, Act... LINCOLN NED. 253. New Burr Block.. . f . naSs1 tii'i iMtpswpatsUM J MlWiiMafc -a,.,. M"ip"i Vtioimngiw