The American. (Omaha, Nebraska) 1891-1899, May 10, 1895, Page 5, Image 5

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    AMERICAN
IX MISSION.
The Supreme Council of the A. P. A. at
Work in Milwaukee
Milwaukee, WU, May ".-Special
Telegram to The American. The
supreme council of the American Pro
tective As-ociatlou convened in Liberty
hall, this city, Wednesday morning at
ten o'clock, with 400 delegates present.
Every ita'.e in the union excepting Mi-
eiesippl U lepresented, and its failure
to send delegates lies in the fact that
the order only last month obtained a
foothold in that state. There are alt-o
a number of delegates from Canada who
will be seated before the council ad
journs, and probably be'ore the el c
tlon of officers takes place, as the com
mittee which was appointed to formu
late plans looking to the formation of
an International ssjociatioo has agreed
upon the details and has submitted i s
report, which has been dUcus-td and
will surely be adopted. Uon it adop
tion the delegation from Cicada will be
admitted, and will be accorded all the
privileges enj tyed by the American
delegates.
Supreme President Traynor delivered
his address today. It was a voluminous
document, but vitally ittereoting to
every member of the association. It
told of the increasing nienibersMp in
the south and east and upon 'he Pacific
slope. It stated thai from reports in
the hands of the gjpreme secretary the
membership was shown to be 3 OOO.OU).
and that it was increasing at a phe
nomenal rate.
Probably the question which will
draw out the greatest amount of dis
cussion will be that touching the forma
tlon of a new party. The supreme
president's message contained proposi
tions or arguments both f r and
against such amove, but left the settle
ment of the case solely with the court
cil. Mr. Traynor said neither of tht
old parties had fulfilled its pledges to
the order, when it had been trustee.
Hence, future political action and af
filiation should receive the most care
ful, thorough and impassioned con
sideration. As he saw it, there were
two courses, one of which must be pur
sued. One was to remain practically as
at present and persistently continue
the effort to purify politics through
the instrumentality of the old parties,
or to encourage) the formation of a new
party, not inside, but outside of the
order, which would embody its princi
ples in a platform and which could be
depended upon to maintain those prla
ciples whenever and wherever it ascend
ed to municipal, state or national con
trol. He advised, in conformity with the
expressed wish of t!ie last supreme coun
cil, that national headquarters be open
ed in Washington, D. C, and that th
work of reformation ba pu-ih.d vigor
ously forward. Hi declared in f tvor of
taxing all property, for the abolition of
contract convict labor, for the inspeo
tion of monastic edifices, and d velt at
length upon the Burtsell labor pr pa
ganda. Headvccites the substitution
of the ballot for strikes, and warns la
borers against papallzed labor organiza
tions. He urged united and positive
action as opposed to negative action in
every move that affects a member of
the order.
The council today sent telegrams of
encouragement and symuathy to the
Manitoba parliament.
Members of the A. P. A., male and
f..-male, are tendering a brilliant recep
tion to the delegates in Liberty hall
this evening.
There has been no election of officers
jet.
Nebraska has but three representa
tives here the state president, state
secretary and W. B. Howard but they
will do some good work before they re
turn. There are no slates being made, and
but little contesting will be noticed
when the election of officers takes place,
as everything is peace and harmoDy
now.
The Natural Rights or Man.
The natural rights of every creature
are paramount to ecclesiastical laws,
ordinances, rules, regulations, usages,
customs, polities, policies, traditions,
mandates, opinions, and requirements.
Mrs. Viola Emery
Indigestn, Cramps
En ths stomach, dyspepsia unit catarrh of th
owels. caused my wifs great suffering. Bhshns
en taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and now baa
Mood'
Sarsa-
one of these symptoms,
km Improved in looks
and weight I hare also
Cures
taken Hood's Sarsapa-
rilla for crfI and Gtunl Debility
with much benefit. I am satisfied Hood's Sarsa
prllla is a splendid tonic and blood purifier.
HlRMAM P. fcMEBT.SrtSHthSt. Portland. Ore,
Hood' Pills cart all Liver Ills, Biliousness.
I have a natural right to air, water,
sunshine, futnl and raiment, life and
liberty, and to reap the fruit of my
nds' n opiwrtunity to attain
i honorable distinction among the sons
of men whether I ba a disciple of Con
fucius, Zoroaster, Plato, Gautama (the
Buddha), Socrates, Jesus, or Mahomet;
whether I be a worshiper of the planets.
of the sun, moon, stars, or fire, or of
plants or animals, or of deified human
beings, or an adorer of images, pictures,
statues, or phantamagoriit; whether 1
be agnostic, atheist, altrurian, gnostic,
deist. Infidel, rationalist, materialist,
thelct, theosophist, trinitsr.ai, unita
rian, utilitarian, parsee, polythelia,
pantheist, or pagan.
I agree with Matthew Arnold, that
"conduct is thro. -fourths of life." A
man should be judged by his conduct,
and not by his creed. The natural man
is amenable to the natural laws of right
and justice. The citizen of the world
is amenable to those laws which have
the Datural rights of man for their
basis. The inhabitant of a free state is
amenable to those statutes which the
people in their sovereign capacity have
adopted and pledged themselves to up
hold. That any foreign king, prince, poten
tate, pope or power should have any
power or authority in American secu
lur affairs is an abridgement of the
liberties and an impairment of the
right? of the sovereign citizens of the
United States. Free man is the glory
of the great republic.
Such a political despotism as that of
Russia is abhorrent to the sons of lib
erty. Neither the Czar of Russia nor
the Pope of Hjine respects the natural
rights of man. The will of the czar is
the supreme law of Muscovy, as the
will of the pope is the supreme law of
the Uoman Catholic world. The the
ory of go .'I nment in Russia is that the
czar reigns by divine right. The czar
is Gjd Almighty's deputy. The papal
theory of government is that all em
perors, kings, princes, potentates, gov
ernors, judges and legislators can legiti
mately txercise their functions only
with the consent, blessing and benedic
tion i f the Pope of Rome.
Pructically a republic may resemble
a monarchy more closely than we are
apt to think. Thus the United States
is not a pure democracy, but a repre
sentative government. We do not vote
in percon upon every law that is en
acted. We delegate certain powers
and concede certain prerogatives to
the President of tie Uaited States dur
ing the space of four years, and iitrust
certain powers uml privileges for fixed
terms to members of Congress, state
judges, legislators, governors aad other
otll ;'-rs, and sutltr United Su es judges
and United States army oflic rs to hold
illi'.ie during life, i.nk-ss lh y shall at
any time prove tbtui -elves recreant to
the irusts reposed in tnem
It was a very wise provision which
oar fathers incorporated in the Const!
tution when they fixed the term of
membei s of the lower horse of Congress
at two years. Recent events and tend
encies have shown that United States
senators, too, should be chosen by a
direct vote of the people, instead of by
the state legislatures.
It behooves the American people to
carefully watch for and guard against.
so far as lies within their purview,
symptoms and manifestations of arbi
trary power and despotic authority
particularly upon the part of alien ofli
cers and alien hierarchs whom we have
quartered upon us. No subject of the
Pope of Rome is fit to hold any office
within the gift of the American people
Unless the loyal people are watchful
and vigilant, an orgiastic and sacer
dotal oligarchy will gradually and
stealthily gain control of the state and
general government, of our Imperial
cities, of the fountains of justice and of
the springs of legislation. Ideal gov.
ernment is not force. Government by
hierarchy is always despotic. Hieroc-
racles and oligarchies have had their
day
If we are to have an aristocracy in
this country, let it be an aristocracy of
brains. Establish the fact that men
shall administer, legislate and judge
by virtue of their imperial intellects,
by virtue of their special fitness to fill
certain posts of honor, trust and respon
sibility. The mental and moral call
ber and quality of loyalty of statesmen
should determine their standing and
fix their place in American history,
The natural and acquired rights of
man are violated every day in this
country. A Kansas City paper notes a
case originating in Chicago. It said:
"We have read nothing from the
bench, or rather from those who occupy
judicial places, with more satisfaction
than the letter of Judge Tuley, of Chi
cago, to the Personal Rights League.
He refers to the caso of a citizen ar
rested and confined for eight days with
out being allowed to see any friend, on
a letter from ar 'unknown party.' That
such a thing could be in our boasted
'free America' would, abroad, be re
sented by an American as an insult to
his country. Do our people understand
the fact that practically there is no
personal liberty in this country outside
the will of the police? Yet such is the
fact. We talk about the common law,
but the dominant common law of this
country Is police law. A man is ar
rested at will; he is clubbed at the
pleasure of the arrester, and he is con
fined when 'wanted' and as long as
'ordered.' "
No Immune alien should be Intrusted
with pol ice power in America. They
are too prone to subject the inoffensive
citizen to disgraceful espionage. No
inhabitant of the republic must lie il
legally arrested, unlawfully confined or
unnecessarily annoyed. Personal lib
erty Is too precious to be jeoparded by
the police. The state is made for man,
not man for the state. This is the
American idea. Kdueato, exalt and
ennoble the individual, and you trans
mew the community of which he is an
integral pari
"America for Am- rican" Is a cry
that has juj-t'.tv, mercy an I truth in it.
Kvery consistent Roman Catholic in
America is an a ien and an enemy of
civil and religious liberty. Therefore,
none tut true Protestants can safely be
clothed with authority.
Liberty and tho Lateran are at vari
ance. Reason and Romanism cannot
coalesce Veracity and Vaticanism do
not harm mlze.
The curule chair should bo reserved
for a truo Protestant.
Put none but Americans on guard
that the natural and acquired rights of
all our people may bo duly respecte
and faithfully preserved.
Adalhert Bkach
Is the Pupal Church a Christian or Pagan
Church!
Before we finish this writing wo will
honestly declare our belief whether the
papal church is a christian or pagan
church.
In the year 32.), Constantino the
Great, haying previously ascended the
throne of tho Uoman Empire, felt him
self called up in to docide what should
be the religion of his empire. Pagan
ism at this time was on the decline and
was not popular, while Christianity,
though it had lost much of its primitive
spirituality, was making groat progress
In spite of its former persecutions, suf
ficiently so to induce Constantino to
give it his imperial function. Conse
quently, at the great council of Nice, of
which he was president, he sided with
the christian fathers, and Christianity
in name, atkast, became the state re
ligion of the Roman Empire, probably
for the reason that by it he could best
govern his subjects; and as a shrewd
manager of his empire he incorporated
into his code of laws very many pagan
rites and usages, which laid the founda
tion for a more rapid decline of morals
and true christian principles, and
practices, which had been increasing
in development all through the cen
turies.
In 850 idolatry was practiced in the
church in the worship of the Virgi
Mary, the saints, images and angels
In 001 worshipping in an urknow
tongue was instituted, which opened
the way for increased corruption in the
church. In (509 the dogma of papal
supremacy was added to the church
which was really tho.beginnlng of papal
rule. In "8(i pagan idolatry was more
fully established in the worship of lm'
ages and relics. In 1000 the celibacy
of the Roman priesthood was instituted
which prepired th way for untold
priestly corruption and licentiousness,
In 1180 the sale of indulgences was
added to the already overloaded super
stitions of the papal church. In 121
the shocking dogm of transubstancia
tion was officially declared, which in'
eluded the very worst form of idolatry
and also a peculiar kind of cannibalism
The priest has his servant girl bake
thin flour cakes, he cuts them 'into little
pieces about an inch square, called
wafers, and at the eucharistic con
secration, by repeating some Latin
phrases, pretends to actually change
them into the literal bones, fljsh, blood
soul and divinity of Jesus Christ, call
Ing him ''the good god," whom he
places In a silver box, carries him in
his pocket wherever needed, compells
him to obey him, and then cats him
Merciful God! Was there ever such
shocking impiety and profane insolence
rendered to Thee as this? Surely He
like cannot be found in all heathenism
If the priest is sincere in, these mock
ceremonies, It only shows the depth
of superstition Into which he has
plunged, and if he is not sincere, he is
then a hypocrite, which explains the
reason why 8 j many priests and bishops
are infidels, and work.onjthis line only
for the power it secures and for the
money there is in it. In 1215 the con
fesslonal was officially established,
which is probably, all things .consit -
ered, the worst and most pernicious in
Its character and influence than any
other papal dogma, and its parallel in
wickedhess and debauchery, cannot re
found in any heathen country. In 1215
the sacramental cup wasjwithheld from
the laity in the papal church. In J430
the Roman purgatory was officially
recognized, which has all along been a
fruitful source of superstition and rob
bery by extorting money under the
false pretense of rescuing t; e souls of
the departed from the flames of purga
tory. In lo40 the traditions of the
papal church were made of equal
authority with the scriptures, and
practically of more impo-tance, for the
priests are required to interpret them
according to the traditions of the
church, and the laity are forbidden to
read the Bible or to have it in their
possession, in 1854 the immaculate
onception was proclaimed from the
Vatican. And in 1870 the dogma of
papal infallibility was officially pro
claimed, which is today a popular
dogma la the papal church, and which
makes any reform hopeless and Impos
sible; and in some resxeU this Is tho
most smselesa and ridiculous of any
dogma that has been aided to the papal
church during all the centuries. And
now we would ask the reader of The
American to read, in connection with
the foregoing statement, the canon
law published weekly in this paper, and
then boo if they wdl not agree with me
In declatirg our firm belief that the
papal church In it government and
usages his ho hyit m ite t ltiim tobtrulUtl
a rm'.-fiitM chuivh.
But the question ariwg, has not tho
papal church rights that all are bound
to reK ct? Wo unhesitatingly answer,
It has; and we cheerfully accord to it
all the rights and privileges, under the
constitution, that we accord to each
and all the Protestant churches, and
the same rights that we accord to all
classes of religionists in tho land, lie
they Jews, pagans or infidels; no differ
ence who; this is fair and honorable,
and the principles of religious freedom
being so plain, we noed not take up
space to further discuss tliU point.
And it is also true that the state or
civil government has rights, too, that
should be equally respected by all its
citizens, and by all aliens residing in
our midst, rights whlct cannot be ig
nored or infringed ujKin without dis
astrous consequences. If any branch
of the Protestant church should so far
forget or overreach its legitimate
ecclesiastical obligations as to att nipt,
by secret or open intrigue, to use tho
state in its legislative or judicial de
partments for selfish purposes, to pro
mote its political influence or power,
the patriotism of tho whole country
would be aroused by speech and ballot
to put down such unconstitutional in
terference with the rights of the state.
The sumo principle would be equally
applicable to all classes of religionists
of the country should they attempt to
thrust their religious or Irreligious
opinions upon the slato for political
purposes.
Now, then, what is the present politi
cal relation of the papal hierarchy to
this country? It ought to bo precisely
tho same as that of other churches,
just referred to, and if this was actually
the case there would be no trouble with
tho p ipists, and there would bo no use
fortho American Protective Associa
tion. But does not the poiw claim by
right to be the Buprome temporal and
spiritual ruler of tho whole world, in
cluding, of course, the United States,
and is ho not shrewdly laying his plans
and prosecuting his work to accomplish
his purpose in this country as soon as
possible? Is not the papal canon law
an eye opener as to Its character, ob
jects and alms? Is not the pa ial hier
archy, bjth secretly and publicly, plot
ting to break up our public schools as
an entering-wedge to the destruction of
the republic? And if space would per
mit, we might raise fifty more ques
tlons equally pertinent.
The general government not only
has the right to protect itself against
the terrible political encroachments of
Rome, but It will enforce that right.
too, by speech, by ballot and by the
sword, if it must be, rather than to sur
render all our civil and religious instl
tutions and submit to the cruel yoke of
papal despotism.
If the Roman Jesuits are so bad that
they could not be endorsed even in
I apal states, but have been expelled a
different times from every country in
Europe and from Mexico, surely the
state should, for self-protection, expell
them from this country as deidly polit
ical foes, plotting and shrewdly work
ing to destroy tho republic.
If the papal nunneries now estab
lished all over the land are conducted
under the false pretense of imparting
educational instruction, but are really
gloomy prisons of immoral practices
as ex-priests and escaped nuns say they
are, then the state not only has the
right, but is in duty bound to open
them to public inspection, or if need be,
suppress them altogether.
If the confessional Is so vicious, so
demoralizing and debiuching to our
jouth; especially to our girls, young
ladies, married women and even to the
priests them selves. as reliable ex-priests
and others believe it to be, then this
infamous dogma of the dark ages, being
so injurious to American civilization
and the best interests of the state, should
no longer be tolerated In this country
And as it is a crime against the state to
extort money from any person under
false pretenses, just so it is a crime
equally injurious to the state for Iioman
priests to extort money from their poor,
ignorant and deluded devotees, under
the false pretense of rescuing the souls
of their dead from the flames of purga
tory, and this robbery of the people
under these pain'ul circumstances.
hould be prohibited by the state.
These great moral and political
rimes against the republic are now
being considered by the thoughtful, and
specially oy me patriotic citizens, as
never before, and may all those who are
loyal to our glorious flag, embrace the
present opportunity of co-operating
with the A. P. A., which has done so
much of late to rescue the nation from
the clutch of Rome, and may all hope
and pray that it may continue to press
forward its work to a finish that it now
as in hand, in the best possible way,
either as a secret order or as an open
political party. ;
(IlltlSlIU KMil.AVOK SOCIKTY.
MemlNT of (lie Amm lull.m In La Crow,
HI., An. r lather I'helun.
La C'UOSSR, W1i., April 30. Editor
ok The Amekican: Will you kindly
publish In your paper the Im-loMx)
nt'WspaH)r clipping and 1U answer?
Mits. A. M. Pa ci..
OUTVIE THE SATURNALIA.
(Vholio Priest Attack Chris Ian En
deavor Conventions.
St. Uh is, April 22.-Kat!u rPh lan,
pastor of a Roman Catholic church in
North St. L nils and editor of the HVxf
crn H'ufc'immi, printed an editorial In
hi paiK-r Saturday attacking theChrl
tlan Endeavor convention, and say Ing,
In part:
"The association of Christian En
deavor and the Epworth League num
Iksi over 100, (MXi young men and women.
Every ono of them exacts, hoio and
labor to get married. They are act
ively engaged in courting when not
most actively busy in singing and pray
ing. These two association go oil from
home thousands of mile and stay weeks
away from the parental roof, with no
one to protect thorn from the wile of
the vicious.
"Tho corrupting tendency of such
helorogt neous gatherings of young peo
ple cannot bo overestimated, and for
downright vlclousnoss and depravity
they have never been equaled since tho
horrid Saturnalia of Greece and Rome.
The history of these general conven
tions will nover lm told, but chapters
without end could bo written la tho
heart's blood of aflllctod mothers."
Sir In a recent issue of your paper
you printed an editorial attack
ing Christian Endeavor conventions.
May I ask you if you knew oven tho
ABC aliout that which you att mpted
to write? Because, let mo inform you,
you don't. You surely lost sight of the
old but truo proverbs: "Evil dojrs are
evil thinkers" and "Do not judge every
body by yourself." In writlngsuch an
article you hut judged Christian En-
deavorors from a Church of Rome stand
point. It isn't worth whllo to arguo
the case in point, nor do I wish you to
understand that It hurts mo any to see
such non-ense in print, for the reason
that any person with even a little com
mon sense (unless it bo one of your own
kind, and he docs not count) J will dis
believe your allegations. I would, how
IF CHRIST
4 JlV
The Most Sensational
H eclipse all otliw BHitle efforts! Thn wlrkdnHiiof the Capital City excised and lu
disorderly bouses mapiied out. lias tmnn read by President ( li vuland and bis Cabinet, and
by Senators, Coinrrcssinen and their families. It la the. boldest exposure of vice and cor
ruption In blub places ever written. Head It and learn about your liluh ottlrlals, your sen.
ators iind eoniiresMin n and their mistresses and the ileteirratlon of our National Capital
Startlinir disclosures made known for the ilrst time! Kend nd learn. Over Vi.) copies
sold III Washington In ,'i weeks. The beat seller out. Now In lis third edition. Prl09 A
Cents. M pKe, Illustrated. Sent poatuxii prepaid upon receipt of pries.
THE HOWARD PUBLISHING CO.,
Sit l'urlc Jfou-, Acw I'orfc City,
xuns rs wt.vm. i.iheical jusrouvr to the trade.
In the Clutch of Rome
BY "GONZALES.'
Itouml In I'Hpnr: l "rioo
bont on Hot .itt of IJrto.
'DM Slor Was I?ubliKlica In
Anicrkant and bad a Ycr W'( (Circulation.
&J?ZrJ.: THE
Notice for Publication.
Notice Id hereby Klven that the under
signed have formed a corporation under the
staluuiHof the male of Nebraska; that the
name of said corporation is "The Admore
Company." The principal place of business
Is the cliy ot Umaha, Doulaa county. .Ne
braska. The irencral nature of the Ims.ness
to tie transacted is the buyum aud selling and
trading In Fuel, Lumber, (irain, Live
Stock, Provisions. I'roduee, Flour, teed,
General .Merchandise and real estate,
either on own account or commission.
To collect rents or money on own ac
count or for others To manufacture any
merchantable article, either for self, on
Commission or royalty. To borrow or loan
money, cither on own account or con, mission.
To build houses or improve lots or lands for
sale or trade, or to hold permanently for In
come Investments. To mortKaiie real estate
hen necessary as well as Dersonal urouertv.
and to make such Invest u enf as will assure
profits to ssld corporation. The amount of
capital slock shall be one hundred thousand
dollars, aud must be fully paid up at ocxin
uliiu of business, aud to have power to in
crease capital stock at any tune to two hun
dred thousand dollars, which must also be
fully paid when capital is Increased. The
t line of t tie commence men t of the business of
said corporation shall lie on M.y 1st. l'.i.Vand
shall continue for lif I v-ti e vears t hereaf u-r.
The highest a', ount of IndeoieUniss to which
said corporation may at any tune subject It
sell shall not exceed sixty per cent, uf the
amount of the paid up capital stock. 1 lie
altairs of said corporation shall be conducted
by the President. Vice-President. ieciviarv
aud Treasurer, and Hoaid of Ihreciors. who
may appoint a l.eneral Manager ai d such
agents or helpers as the business may require.
umaiia, .M-oraska. ,uuy I, !'..
A. WILLSIE.
V. C. I'll I'M AN.
E. A. II AM. MOM).
5-.1-4 Incorporator .
CHRIST. HAMAN
Watcnmaker and Jeweler,
Fin e Watch Repairing a specialti
bVl South 16 Street
- OMAHA. NEB
ever, give you a piece of advice. First
and oreiiuwt, before you attempt to
write about anything, read up on It,
and know whereof you write. You
know you cannot inform other con
cerning those matter of which you
know nothing yourwlf. Second, read
article "History of Endeavor" in paper
which I send you, and print it in your
paper, to give your subscriber a rare)
treat a glimpse of truth, it will also
how them how very far behind a
christian church tho Church of Rome)
I. Thank G.kI, there 1 ni r a ion why
christian endeavor should Im hidden;
and, in fae'. It will not lie hhld ia li!
bind black veils, celibacy, nor high
wall. Another thing: At thoe samo
convention spoken of by you, tho sa
loon are not the headquarter of the
delegate, as they trvre hero in this city
at a Catholic convention some tlmo
ago. God said, when he created man
at tho beginning of the world (I thought
I'd tell you when and where, as I do
not Iwllevo the Church of Romoteachos
even that about religion): "It I not
good for man to bo alone. " So ho ga va
him woman. But of course a Catholic
priest Is not human, nor ovea God
created. In fact, quite tho reverse
an emissary of the devil.
An Endeavorer who was married bo
fore the Society of Christian Endeavor
was born. Mrs. I. S. C. PAUL.
Stati or Ohio, vitr or Toi.kim), ( M
I. iii-hb Comity. I
Fhank J. ('hknkv make! oiilh I lint tin I
Hie M-nl.ir pnruiHrof tliellrm of K. J. CilKNKr
& t o., iIiiIiik huslmsH In U city of Toledo.
County mid Hliilo afori'milil. and Unit, Hiild
flrin will pity IIih mi in of UN K III M'UKII
I 1 1. 1, A KS for ewli and viry eas of
Cat a mot Unit i-iinnot Im euri-d by tlie use of
IIai.i. s ( ATAHIIII I'UIIK.
KHAN K J. CHFSKV.
Hwori to before inn and anlwcrllM-d In inf
prewin-e this (lib day of litcniiilcr. A U. Isstl.
lAi. Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Ih takn Internally
anil act dlrert ly on th blood and iniii'oti
Htirfui'i-Hof lliesysti-ii . Hi'lul tor U'Htlinoiilali).
fr.'. K. J. CIIKNKV & CO., Tulndo, O.
tTHold by llruKKlsts. 7';
Pleasant to Take.
Tho NORTHWESTERN LINK fast
vestibuled Chicago train that glides
oast from tho Union Depot every after
noon at 5:45, and into Chicago at 8:45
next morning, with supper and a la
cate breakfa-it. Every part of this
train is RIGHT.
Other trains at lt:05 a. m. 4.50 anp
ra. dally good, too.
CityTIckotOllioo, 1401 Farnamstroet.
When down town drop in at John
Rudd's and leave your watch, if it Is out
of repair, to bo fixed. 317 north I0 St.
CAME TO CONGRESS?
M. AV. HOWARD.
Book Ever Written!
Serial xorm in Uk Qmalja
AMERICAN,
1615 Howard Street,
OMAHA, XlSll.
Notice to Nnn-ltesidrnt IhTrndiUit.
Caiho A.Tiiimhi.k, Plaintiff,
Koiikht T. Maxwkix. Def )
;ndant. )
In tin' district court of Douglas county,
Nebraska.
To Abel P. Crapser, Non-Kesldent Defend
ant: You are hereby notified that on the .'list
day of December. 1K4. Cairo A. Trimble,
plaintiff herein, lib d her ye til ion In the dis
trict court of Douglas county. Nebraska,
against Robert T. Maxwell and Anna M.
Maxwell, ( has. J. Nobes. Margaret i. Klliott
and John Klllott. the onject and prayer of
which is to foreclose a ci rtain mortgage exe
cuted by the defendants. Robert T. Mix well
ami A n in M. Maxwell, to Daniel 11. Smith,
and by him assigned to plaintiff herein upon
the following described premHcs, to wit: Lot
one Hi. block fifteen (l"n, in the c ty of fouth
Omaha. Douglas coiimy. Nebraska, as sur
veyed, platted and recorded. Said mortgage
was given to secure one promissory note for
the sum of seven hundred dollars i?ii0.uii
dated September IT, Issii. That there Is now
due on said note and mortgage the sum of
seven hundred and sixty-Hve dollars i:ii."i.lli,
with interest on seven hundred dollars i(Tl'J.UU)
at seven (7, p;T cent, per annum, and on
sixty-live dollars ijM.(ii at In per cent, per
annum, all from the l.'uh day of February.
ls'., for which an tin it plaintiff prays for a
decree that said defendants tic required to
pay the same or that said premises may be
sold to satisfy the amount found due; that
said defendants be forever barred of any
and ill equity of redemption in said mort
gaged premises.
You are required to answer said petition
on or before the -7th day of May, ls.i.'i.
Dated Omaha, Neb.. April l.. ISjtt.
CAIRO A. TK1MHI.E.
By H. K. Thomas, her attorney. 4-liM
American Ladies!
When Needing the Assist
ance of a
First-Class Dress Maker
Should not forget to call on
MRS.
JAMES GILLAN,
iii.t Xorth SMth Mfrcer.