i o 1 THE "WEEKLY HERALD: PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA. (XTPOHER 0, I8i2. YKA. i i 1 BOYD GONE TO CHICAGO. He Goes in His Official Capac ity to Attend the Dedication. THOSE WHO WENT ALONG. William Jennings Bryan's Future Pictured out For Him In a Dream-Old Van Wyck's Good Advice. The Covernor' Pilgrimage. Governor Boyd leaves today for Chicago to attend the World's fair dedication. The governors of thirty-five states will he present on that occasion, so that if the gover nor of North Carolina should lift tip his voice there will be anywhere from one to thirty-four responses. Governor Hoyd in his official ca pacity will represent Nebraska. He will be accompanied by his wife and daughter and attended by Private Secretary Morrissey, to gether with his staff of nine or ten colonels in uniform. Hie party leaves Omaha today at 4:30 over the H. & M. and members of the staff are ordered to report there. The train arrives at Chicago tomorrow morning, giving ample time to pre pare to take part in the great cele bration. Every courtesy will be shown the party, boxes having been reserved for the members at the ball and reception and carriages have been provided for the proces sion of Friday. The governor's staff includes Colonels J. P. Uratt of Bennett, C. J. BillR, J. Heasty, G. L. Prichett and ICE EaldnTSt Pa irbury, It. B. M til ford of Omah, T. J. Hickey of Lin coln, J. S. Lefl-'w of McCook and Captain J. Il Culver of Mil ford, many of whoittj will tbe accompan ied by their Jrfi.'es. The governor may appoint aj a member of his staff one regular' army officer and Lieutenant L.fH- Koehler of the Sixth cavalry, flationed at Xiobrara, will Drobablyltro aa a member of the staff. - - St - ' . Bryi ' Dream. I had a dris in: the otner nigm. when all the rorld wsts still, and the moon ha not yet risen from behind the cajtern hill; I dreamt Van Wyck anitl were out together on a tramp, tcutriving hard to steal a march dsn Morton Field and Shamo. Someliuw the look of old Van Wvck waif foxy, keen and shy and I didn't life the twinkle in his erstwhile wicktd eye, as I told him twnue wicnt'u eyw, aa i wiu mm my plan t ?et 2,000 votes for u, if he in titrn would see that I of him was safely in tfie swim. At last he spoke, and in f'-oice that made my spirit ehrink;"oung man," he said, "I feel that M,Km n earing ruin's brink. I neecUl e votes you pledge to me, but Bryjti, look you here ! say right now Jlc ur -victory ia cost ing you too dokr. I'm getting old and all mv life! Has tilled im? with W a ... , , distress because . like you I v traded my convictions for success I've claimed "to be the people's friend, but wheii I reached a hold upon the pubflc" purse strings have traded tnt:m for irold. I've been a mossbaok democrat and a re publican.and whether one or t'other always first ai d i last for Van But, Bryan, Ijliave had my day mv time has2 :orae this fall on every side I re Id the cold handwrit ing on the will. And I swear to vou in candor,! nat the stars above ; may hear, I woiild give my princely fortune for a conscience once more clear. I say t;70U. my friends, to nicrht vou canl pfford this deal it smacks too sfrongly, Bryan, of congress-hunt&ig tteal; and I, well that has been Any plan of gaining power of old; IP hat have I now? monument ofilroIuti faith and A gold. Yea, ye' ; Tlie fortune still is mine, but wtjen , I quit this earth my last concern will hardly be to estimate its wtb''tlu I made it out of politics, built has cost me high, a conscience sAired all over and my life a living lid And now my race is almost run-the end is full in view when I'll, trade my gorgeous palace for a 'soddy,' six foot-two; and I say as he who speaketh with hi8 best foot itt the grave, you. in stead of those! about you, need a helping hand,; to save.'s Then I woke all perspiration with a wild Comanche Bcrfcim, and I still am some affrighted when I recollect the dream. Lincoln Journal. Work Will Begin Soon. It will now inly be a short time until Sixth street will be paved. The curbing tone that the con tractor has been looking for arrived this morning and in .a few days work will be commenced. The contractor say that after they get to woik it will only take about two weeks to finish. In a short time ' the ' street will be paved and flJien the council should take ud the city hall ques tion and accept; the proposition m:,Hi l,v Parnate and Craiir. With t JIainand Sixth street paved this city would be O Jt of place without an opera house and city hall. Valuable Coins Stolen. Henry Gering has been for a long time past collecting coins of differ ent values and from different countries, and also American coins hat a premium has been offered for. In so doing he has collected over f 100 worth of old coins rauging in value from a one cent piece up to a three dollar gold piece, all of which he prized very highly and which he took great pleasure in showing. For a long time he had the coins exhibited in a show case in the store. Recently, however, he had taken the coins out of the show case and placed them in a writing desk in the back part of the store and when Hnybody called to see them he would take them out of the drawer. Monday night a party called to see them. Ileniy was out of the store at the time and Ernest Pietfer se cured the coins and proceeded to show them, remarking that "Henry must have taken the gold and silver coins and put them in his pocket." When Henry returned he was in formed of the missing cius and an investigation was made but the Coins were not found. The police were notified and started out to find a clew. They started out with the saloons and there they found several of the coins which Henry Gering identi fied as the ones he had once been in possession of. After following the clew still further, they found some of the coins in nearly all the saloons in town. From the saloons it was found out that K. O. Scribner had passed some of them and a warrant was issued for his arrest. The amount of coins taken, Mr. Gering says, amounts to fW, and if the prisoner is convicted it will send him to the peniteniary. Scribner is having his prelimin ary examination oetore judge Archer this afternoon. County Attorney Travis is prosecuting and J. L. Root defending. "Nebraska on Wheels. The exhibition given on the Wa bash rail road last Wednesday after noon by the Business Men's asso ciation of Nebraska, was very line, says the South Whitley, (Indiana) News. The object of this associa tion's yearly visit to the east is to display their agricultural products and thus to keep before the country from year to year this exhibition of their wonderful agricultural re sources. The plan originated three or four years ago and was carried out to couteract the influence of a report circulated by some calamity howlers that Nebraska was a fail ure and that the people were slarv- when at the same time they were harvesting an abundant stock of grain, and producing vegetables in such quantity and' quality as w e have never seen grow in Indiana. They have been making their an nual visits ever since. The exhibit of cereal was unus ually line. Samples of winter wheat that yielded sixty bushels to the acre were shown by the different counties. Vegetables of all de scriptions were to be seen puiii kins, squashes, melons of monstrous proportions. A curiosity some what resembling a pine apple, called a pine apple musk melon, was displayed in the Buffalo county exhibit. The fruit exhibit was es pecially fine. The very finest kind of apples were shown that were grown in orchard only six years old. Nebraska must be a very fine fruit country if this display is a fair sample of their products. The sugar beet was exhibited by sev eral counties, some of them being so rich as to contain one third their weight in pure sugar. Muttalo county came to the front with the exhibit of their cotton mills at Kearney. This is the larg est manufacturing plant in the state an ) is now giving employ ment to l.iO binds and consuming JiM bales of cotton a week. Annual value of output at present capacity, $4,l(K,iHi0, requiring KM horse power, which is furnished by the great Kearney canal. Kearney has a complete electric system, cuipplied with power from the Kearney canal. Indeed Kearney is one of the great industrial points of the state. HKKMEK GI-KMANS PLKASKI. BtEMEK, Neb., Oct. 17 This has been a great day forthe republicans at this place. Hon. C. A. Kobbins and Jacob Honk spoke here this evening. A large crowd of enthus iastic citizens and a uniformed del egation numbering over KM), to' gether with a fine band from West Point, attended, and presented a fine appearance. The large hall was en tirely too small to furnish room and many were disappointed. The first speaker, Jacob Houk, spoke for over two hours in German. He clearly outlined ;the principles of the republican party and told why it was to the interests of the far mer and wage earner to support it He made more republicans out of the German democrats than any speaker that has been here yet. Hon. C. A. Kobbins followed and made one of the most entertaining addresses heard here for some time and created much interest by the manner in which he presented the leading issues of the day, A BIG DAY AT NEHAWKA Field, l.rjnsint; and Pollard Dis ci' the Issues. AYS' WORK. Countv Younar M. r ,. Man V .''.roiiK Talk' ' -kes Votes Lansing. NehnwK.i '. j licanlsm. To the Kili'. : . .'.Nut: Nku.wvkv.N i. 17.-Xehaw- ka put on In r ;- clothes Satur day, in honoi .! .. distinguished orator, Judge Ail , W. Field. Not only were the . do of Nehawka out in force, bin the surrounding country was so well represented that the large tie a1 storage building of Isaac Pollard's would not nearly hold, comfortably, those present. Five hundred would be a low esti mate and in comparison, the Bryan meeting of a few weeks ago was a tame affair. It was tame in every particular in numbers, in enthus iasm and remarkably tame as to speakers. When the seats in the building were all occupied and those who could not be seated were as com fortably located as circumstances would permit, the chairman intro duced Ernest Pollard, a young man who was born and raised here, and who is now completing his education at the Lincoln university. The prolonged applause as Ernest stepped upon the stage caused him a moment of nervousness, but he soon warmed up to his subject, and in a short speech gave a clear and concise statement of the republican faith in a protective tariff and the republican reasons for it. When Judge Field was introduced and stepped upon the stage it was some time before he could be heard, but after the applause hud died away and after the judge had compli mented the band and spoke a few words of encouragement to the Young Men's Republican club, he jumped squarely on the Platts mouth bridge, and I want to say right here that after his explana tion of the case and after citing, as he did, his authority, giving prece dents for the decision, if there was a man in the audience who did not believe the decision was made in good faith, it is because that man is so blinded by partisauism that he can believe no man sincere who is not of his faith. Judge Field's speech throughout was masterly and eloquent and I have heard sev eral democrats, who heard Bryan when he was here, and who have read the World-Herald's brazen re ports of the joint debates, declare that the speech Saturday night usis a surprise to him. I know of fine man who claims to have voted for Bryan before who now declares himself lor Field, and I believe there were other converts made. When Judge Field stepped from the platform Orlando Tefft came forward and remarked that Mr. Lansing of Lincoln was present. This was enough to bring out a demand for Lansing, for while pos siblyfew present had heard the gentleman, all had heard of him, and were anxious to have some fun to take along with the sound logic to which they had been listening. Well, they got it not small doses but in large chunks which, when they got home, could be cut up and distributed among friends, giving each enough In laugh over. A gentleman in the audience tried to enlighten Mr. Lansing as to who was the author of an article from a southern paper, which he was reading, and well, we will simply allow those who know Mr. L. to imagine what followed and how that man felt after he got through with him. Taken all in all, the republican rally here was the grandest political success Nehawka has ever known, and Judge Field Jias left an impression over the people which will be felt at the coming election. Si-ionium Cook. Business at Nebraska Cltyi One of K. O. Dun A Co.'s Nebraska travelers, writing from Nebraska City to the Omaha manager, says: "A majority of the retail merchants- here report this year's business rather smaller than here tofore, due chiefly to the building up of interior villiages in the county along new lines of railway, which have cut off trade. The opinion is general that the retail trade of Nebraska City must more and more depend upon the de velopment of the city itself. Money has been easy all the year. Xhe four banks, with a ccmbined paid up capital of ffrrf),000and a surplus exceeding hw, bad at the close of husines September :), 1802, aggregate deposits of Ssi,717. Last year at the corresponding period the deposits aggregated $X),112, showing an increase for the year approximating 00,000. Eight years ago the total bank depo-its were $I0.407. Fruit has not been a good crop this year, though Otoe county is the banner fruit region of Nebraska In the fall of 1SU1 about 50,000 bar rels were packed and shipped from Nebraska City alone. Thus fur only 500 barrels have been for warded this year. In P.1 fmo . ketsof grapes and 5,0(10 eases of berries were marketed. This year neither grapes nor berries made a good yield. Other crops, however, have been excellent. "The manufacturing iuterests of Nebraska City are of no mean con sequence. The cereal mills, which began business six years ago with a daily capacity of 5iX) bushels of grain, have grown into an institution which em ploys 105 people can handle (i.OlX) bushels daily. The starch factory opened in fehruary of the present) year and has a capacity of (MX) bush els and gives employment to sixty hands. The distillery has a capa city of 2,(.00 bushels. The canning company has enjoyed a profitable season after a period of idleness. Otoe county is one of the best coun ties in the state and Nebraska City is her substantial metropolis. Vacant farms in the county are at most unknown and vacant houses are as few and far between the city. Everybody met here hopeful for the future." in is CUT THIS OUT AM) WAIT Until Tuesday, lOutober 23, at 9 a. m. In consequence of the late fire of the large wholesale clothing house that recently burned, over f-'SS.OOO of men's and boys' fine clothing, hats and other goods, have been saved and removed to the large building known as 1J1U Fariiam street, between 12th and 13th streets Omaha, Neb. The building has been closed for one week to urrange for this great fire insurance sale, and this great fire insurance sale will commence on Tuesday, Octo ber 25, at 9 a. m., in the entire build ing at 121.1 Farnam, between 12th and i:ith. Everything will be sold at retail 50 per cent less than actual cost of manufacture. As the stock must be sold, in five days, every thing will go rapidly. The np praixcr for the insurance company liter carefully examinating the stock of ciothing, concluded it was not so badly damaged as claimed by the assured manufacturers, and, failing to agree as to the actual loss they were forced to take the same and turn it into nionev. Conse quently the goods must be sold at once in order to make a final settle ment. Below we quote a few of the ex traordinary bargins that will be offered, and bear in mind that there are over 10,U00 different articles tve can not mention here. Men's heavy overcoats, 1.71, posi tively worth $ 1 5.1 XI. You may keep the coat home during the sale, and if it is not worth !rl5, return the same, no matter what the cause may be, and we hereby agree to re turn tne .t.i.m. .'leu s Heavy ulsters, $1,411, positively worth Hi.5t,oryour money refunded any time during tins saie. Men s Whitney chin chilla overcoats, $5.25, positively worth $20, or j ou money will be re turned. Men's "Royal" standard kerseys, silk and satin lined overcoats, $7.W, positively worth $28. You may keep this coat home live days, and u not worm return the same' and your "money will be returned, 1 no matter what the cause may be. Men's diagonal suits, $:t.W, worth $15. Men's English worsted cut away suits, $7.!ii; valued at $2i. You have the same privilege on these suits as on the above-mentioned garments. Men's Melton cassimere pants, worth $;i, for OS cents. Mens all wool cheviot pants, 25 styles, $1 40, worth $5. Hoys' cape overcoats $1.00 worth $..'' Boys' pants, .".(XXI at 10 cents a p.iir. Boys' suits. $1.25, worth $l.5': good woolen socks, (i cents per pair worth to cents; line embrodered suspenders, 0 cents worth (10 Cents; line heavy read flannel underwear, III cents per suit, worth $2,50; men's hats, 00 cents, worth $H.75, all shapes; boys' bats, 15 cents, wortli $l.5o, and 30,1 Mi different articles we cannot mention here. I. ...Ml - - - A . .. . . ii win pay you to come km nines to visit this great sale. If you value money, don t miss it. Everything sold as advertised. Now is your chance to get winter clothing for almost nothing. We advise you to cut this out and bring it with you so you get exactly tne goods men tinned here. This sale will posi tively commence 1 uesday, Oct. 25, at 0 a.m., at 1213 Farnam, between 12th and 13th, ath door east from I'm. t i- t . i.un, vMiiana, Aeo. lie sure you mahe no iiiistaxe. N. B. Railroad fare paid to all Purchasers of $25 and over. For Sale-Two desirable res: deuce lots in Orchard Hill addition to I'lattsmouth, within a block of the Missouri Pacific depot. For particulars call on or address The Herald office. When Baby w aa sick, we pave her Otntoria. When abe wan Child, alie cried for Cfttoh When ihe became Mian, he elung to Ctotona, Tlienahf hfwlCt.iMn.D. nl jravcUiein Cuiona I I'rnMrftn Pru fne PitrriA'. Pie,e!i i viiiiuicii vi j ivi i ii,iigi o vajioi ia . . Mn Wliftlit-r 'lis nohlrr in the niliiil to sn (T r 1 ho hlinu't Riul mninn of mil ruinous fortune. Or lo I like nrnu m;Hlii- t neif trnuMos. Ami liy i)nmi ftul tliem, Kor w ho ini J bmr UiowulpH ami leurnii of time, Tin' opproswir't tt-rntiK, the proud nmn'ii con tu nit I v, Tli i.iciu's uf (lt silMl lovr, tho Inw'siti'lity, Tlio liiM-li'iirr of oriciMiriil the Hiurnii Tlint patient merit nf the unworthy takes, Wlirn ho iiiiiist If illicit Ills itiieluti uinko Willi a hure lo.dk In'.' Tims reiiHilied Iliuulet, the nieliltirlinly i liiine, or tliliH iliii'S Pli;iki".peitr? represent , i i in hs having reasoned. And thus Iuin nmny a nolilemiul reasoned from the iIiiwii of civilization unt il now. And the venliet of the Kreiitest rriwuiient litis liy no liieni l been iiniiniimniM. Almost the oldest tradi tion In .liiiiineso literature Is that of "The Seven ltiiimn," who killed themselves in turn because their chief Iwtd been ilis placed, and tho l itest, sensation in New- York is the miicido of ,1. llarhnv Moore- head, who left a mile saying he had killed himself "as per chili," bet lluieold truth he acknowledged. The suicide clnt is 4in unquestionable fact. It h8 Wen known from the dawn of his tory. It Invariably appears In certain ntn;e of each Hiiccesslvo civilization. It exists today not only anions the Japanese and the fanatical rclk'ioUH sects of Russia, lint equally hitioiik the wild Malays and the most cultured citizen!) uf the United States, Finland and Franco. Nor Is it easy to refute the arguments employed. Hamlet decided that ho could not kill himself because the Everlasting hnd fixed ills canon against self (daughter, hut the Russian fanatics say there is mi Knell prohibition inthe Hible, and ilieHguus- tics care not if t here is. Their reasoning Is simple mid in this wise: A man's life is Ids personal property, and his disposal of it is nobody else s concern; if a man falls In business in this country he has a perfect right to k'O to some ot hep country and start again. hy not to some other world If he sees fit f So reasoned the men who organized the much disputed Suicide club of Ilridgeport, Conn., in IHKl. There were nine of them, and they threw ilico for the "first man out," an they phrased It. The lot fell on Max Hctsterhagcn, saloon keeper, and that night he shot himself. A year and four months later William Mickel, sign paint er, of this club, cut his throat. About the name, time another member, Karl Huberts, went .mail, mid today he is in n liiuittjc asylum. Next John ICiiizie, keeper of the saloon where the club was organized, shot himself, and then in turn Oorge Ix'aven worth, journalist, took laudanum; Weu- A snclt'K ( I t'll 1USOIT.T. dell hiiliin. lintel tiinii, cut liin tliroiit, nml William Mnyliie, letter currier, (liil tlie Mline. Hut two iiieinl-.iTS of tlmt nlli";eil club remain siive. aful they refuse eitlier toallirttior deny tin oiiiiuil agreement They (iiuitily wy. ' If I choose to kill my self it is nobody's buxintKSl'' Next toiilirnit at tent ion wn.i the fatnoiM WhitetliHiiel dub of Chicago. Due of ; members committed toiiciile not long ii,;o. and by will left his body to the dub, wliic'u burned it on a pyre at nlylit with at raiiKe, uncanny ceremonies". Ilie cluire la now nuide that irmide. this Wliitethai! dub there Is a suicide dub: that it has a branch in Philadelphia consisting of seventeen membera; that barlow Moore bead was a. member of this branch And killed himself according to previous agreement, the lime determined by lot. Such thins are n)tiuly hard to prove or disprove, bet lis see what history liu tu oHiT 111 kiipiiort of the Mip position. In the troublous tlmtii b Greece and Home filicide wait the leTniC roi;ri out of the, world, find everj mini of mark v. lio ki.ewthat liieni I, ciicmits were on I.i truck curried coliivnlfd poison, Kuinet iii.es ill the jeivi I of a rhiir, someliines in ;i cane or peiistor !:. Deinostheiii'sclieweil 1 1 i -i j it while st'nlvini' Ihe words ( f bis la-l It tier and piiseiitlv f ..-: 1 dead from the poi-mi t litis tak( II. llaliaili.il siickeil lil:.ll releji'O fn.ll) a jeweled liliL'. Seneca tried hliroiiiu in a hot bat ii, and t but failing bud liiioM'lf Fun'ociiled by clmrtoiil funics. Hi ut us mid Cnssius fell on their swords. Hut the Ji5t would fill columns. Kveryonu has rend the story of that noble Komim who K:ive notice in the forum that lie bad n tree on which more ureat men had hanged them ael yen than on any other tree in Ituly, but as he intended to tut it down on the ap proaching calends all persons desirous of availing themselves of the honor of a death thereon must ait at once. It is sometime stated that the religion of the Jews forbade self slalight er, but t her often departed iu that way. Joseplms gives au interesting account of a dub of forty, each of whom was to be killed by the uext, but the last t wo decided to back out. It is a pity Josephus was such a liar, for the etory is very Jewish and good enough to be true. Summing it all up we van sny this: There undoubtedly have been great epidemics of suicide; there certainly have been suicide clubs in past ages, there us certuioly are Miicldal societies in Russia, India and Malaysia today, and there is very strong evidence that such clubs exist in the L'uitcd States. Sells Snakes by the Font. TaxidermUt Martin Hergng, ot Tyrone, Pa., shlpd to a circus at Washington a a blacksnake measuring t) feet-4 inches. Under the terms of his standing com met with this rhovv Mr. Ilerog receives lifty ceuts a foot for all the blackbiiakes he can furnish them. Kecently he sent them a five foot reptile. Decatur, Ala., has one negro alderman, cue negro justice and twohegro policemen. I ce p v h U I i mi men t i .i' ti-. cay s the .ue i.iiliing if will w,i r their I i a lam in the -ideiiti il election. y evenlv Pvided 'I'lies, and are all lo buk their i'i nioiii y The air in .l . i market iiv lelegraph .n.iMiii, bets, v. I'll. ii le- I'owler -1'-. i iheiii on the ei ion. In,vler is a i. mI I'o.iuur is one niKT.it... in town. Ik W nut iter . i . -p.i p.l. 1 on in . IIIU: ,'IM-I Tile -'oiiv i U '.v gene i v Opium, .c'.m i , is .i , , :i I i .,,on.-. and the plu.. ' r J. -V. Co , have a a .11 gtitiel'ii.iloi at i black repuiMic.i of the hesi oe There is $liK in n mr ilu- winner. 1'liere are $Uo 1 nig around on Harrison, mid a man turned up in Kansas City -yesterday who wired in that he was willing lo take il. Two modest men, who don't want people to known they ever bet, have gone deeper. They waxed warm in a discussion the other day and it ended by $1,2( 0 being put up against $l,tHK) that Weaver will carry the st.ite, The fever is spreading fast and ever one Irom .Secretary Nason down to the elevator buy is looking for a dead cinch, ' Has t'.efn Continued. The preliminary examination of K. t ). i cribuer was continued from last night until this morning. Scribner was put on the stand nml he testified that he had received the three dollar gold piece from his father. A telegram was sent to his father who is in the east, regarding the flatter and another continu ance was taken until he could be heard from. TORTURING ECZEMA Editor low a Plain Dealer Cured of In ufrcrable Itching and Pain by the Cutlcura Remedies. No Less Than Five Physlelani Con sulted. Their Combined Wisdom Followed Without lleneflt. t nm ulilvuli Jmri nlil. In Anmut, I'M. M trmililril with the peculiar akin dlM-win to whlrh people nf my sue re lutilrrt, known innoim mi'ili- nl men ccrenis. Il llmt tsiiriim'e m neur the unkli-n. Il rapidly eitended over the lower rxtrrniitlrt until my lrg nrarly one raw iir, from !( th trouble ritemli'il acroM the hip', hnulilem and lha tnllre leniMh of the irmi, th lir and urini iirmtly awullon with tn lulling, tnirnlnij pain, without ci'MHtton. jMlhouxh lha t.i nt mtilldtl (dvlct ttalnalil in imiilciyvd, ni Icm thun tire phyilrlant nf the plar litlng con idled nml the prpurrlnilona M11K the rrnult uf tholr roniMnrd wlnlnin, the dlaeaae, though ai- Iiarently checked, would recur til a few day! aa mil hi ever; during Ita rKreaa my weight fell awny nlioiil twenty five inunda. Aa an aiprrt. frienl I begun Uie ue nf t'CTli cm, following to minplc and plain tnalructlnnt given with In Kihk eir.a, and In four weeka found myaelf well, with akin and and natural Id color, ilie Itching aud puiD entirely relieved. W. It. 1KAI, Kditor Iowa f lain Dealer, Creaoo, la. Cuticura Resolvent Tke new Wood and Hkln Purifier, and greatest of Humor Kenieillea, Internally (to cleanae Ihe Mood el all hnpurlllra and polaouoiii elriiieuta, mill tliua remove the cuuae), and Cl'Tlcl'lu, the great Hkln ( lire, and frm I'll Snp, an eiqulelte p uii pVr mid Ili atitlKer, paternally (lo clenr III. i-tio lied a. iilp, nml ri lore Ihe hitlr), apevdlly cum every liM'nnr noil diaeiiae of the akin, euilp, and bloml, iih loaa nf li.it r, whether lulling, hunting, acnlt . eniiri'v, luid hlolrhy, whether almple, aerofiiloua, I it. iln.'.rv, or roiitiigloua, when plijaiciaua and alt o hi r reiiudiia hill. even-where. Prli e, ClTirt'Ra, SOc.J Hoap, Ithaiii.visT, ft. I'repurcd hy the I'OTTKR In. i ii ami Hti( i. CoiiroRATins, Hoaton. r Send for " How to Cure Skin IMeeaeee." niMI'I.KS, blac k hea.lt, chapped and oily akin In cured hy I 'ctici ra II imciTSO Hoar. FREE FROM RHEUMATISM. In one mlnot the Gutlenna Antl-l'alo Hauler relieve rhtu matlc, actatic, hip, kidney, cheat, and mutrularpainaandweakyeaaea. The hret and only pato kUllbg piaster. DRS.BETT8&BETTS; ?:-!7SIClAHS. .... .-'v AND SPECIALISTS 'ill i': s: r o -'A In tho Scientific Treatrvu-nt and Safe, Sound, Spoody an J Perma nent Curo of nil classed, form, phases and degrees of NERVOUS, CHRONIC. AND PRIVATE DISEASES, Stricture, Hydrocele, Varlco,oel,i Cleet, Spermatorrhea, Syphilli. Conorrhoaa. Lost Manhood, Blood and Skin Diseases, Female Weak ness, Effects of Early Vice, and every form of Sexual Disease. For !m eeiti la rUapi ti jrili letl ni liltrm'.oi book af 123 pjfii. CSS?LTAT!01I rSIZ. :djx, allrm vita ittap, Drs. Betts & Betts, 110 Sontli Htli street, southeast cor. Mill nml HoiikUis Htreets. Omiilia, Nebrtiska Notice of Lease of School Landx. Notice is hereby given thut tlie lease i iiikI coatnicts on the followintf tescrilM-l school IiiikIh have been cancelled by tin lioaril of eiliicntioiiiil lutuN mill funds nml if not reinstated by payment of dclit quetit interest or lenne rentul due, sni ? lands will be offered for lease by tin countv treasurer of Cass county, ut H o'clock ii. in., on the lth dav of oveinhr-. IWNK'a SK 36-10-10 W; ,Wi NV4 l- Dated Lincoln, Xeb., Oct. 3. 1SH2. . , . A. k. Hl MPIIkKV. torn. Tublic LlimNuiut Iiuildini;-. Th.M aroiin i e m"i l i,eaiajaa.aai