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About Nebraska advertiser. (Brownville, Nemaha County, N.T. [Neb.]) 1856-1882 | View Entire Issue (April 29, 1880)
THE ADVERTISER THURSDAY,. APBH, 29, 1880., PnJliaJiesa NoUeu. The AsrKETiR is on sale aVthe DrasandBook Store if A. W. Nickeli. Lpcal, Notices, set as ordinary reading m&ttAr willbecfcargsdten cents per line, each Insertion Sctjndispl&y type. fifteen cents aline. Authorized Agents. Titcs Bros are our authortecd agents, at Iferaa haCltyto receive and xeceint. for monies due us TnpHA.8 B7aR.EP9i3.our authorised agent In Glen Bcqk precinct to receive and receipt fo; monies due us on subscription. , J. Hitter, atSt.DehOln,IfOuranthorUcdagent at that riace.toyecelvc subscriptions and adver" thing, and to collect and receipt for monies due Tile Advertiser. J W.GavittIh our anthorized acent In Benton precinct to roeeiveand receipt forrnonlesdue ns an subscription. T&'m.Tidbow, at Asplnwalllsouranthorlzedagent to receive and receipt for monies due us. FAXRBKOTIIEK. & UACKEK, 1'ublisbera Advertiser. Under False Colors. They were making a railroad from a certain citj- no matter where. Suf fice it that it was somewhere in that boundless "out west," and it ran through i wild Indian-infested coun try, where fever and ague and raids from the savages were uncomfortably familiar evils. Among the small army of employes was John Marshall a civil engineer, in charge of a section in one of the wildest portions of the line. But he was young, fresh from college, and hard work and terrors had no dan gers for him. John Marshall sat one day in the rude log hut which constituted his "office," oxa mining plans, making out requisi tions, etc., when a shadow across his paper caused him to look up. In the doorway stood a boyish fellow of ap parently eighteen or twenty with a smooth face, fresh complexion, curly hair, and somewhat effeminate in.form a,nd figure. In respouse to Marshall's inquiring look, he said, "I have called upon you, sir, hoping to get work." "Well, we are full just now in the section," was the discouraging reply. "What can you do?'1- "I can. write, keep accounts, or do something of that kind better than auything;olse but I will do anything thai " "I see. 1 ou haven't been used to very hard work, as your hands show." "Xo.sir; but if you will only try me. I am sure you will find nie willing. I am very anxious to -get work."- "But, what sent you.to this outland jish placo to find it?" The young man colored, but made no reply. "AYcll," continued Marshall., "of course that's your own affair, not mine. X can't offer you anything in the way of work, because you don't seem quali fied' for severe manual labor. I want a clerk an assistant bad enough; but the companv wouldn't pay you if I should engage you." "That doesn't matter," said the young applicant. "If you could onlv givo roe board and lodging for a few months I would gladly stay." "Very well. On, those terms I en gage you. But what is your name?" "Prank Burroughs, sir-." So-Prank was engaged to assist John Marshall, and ho soon proved himself a valuable aid. Educated, quick and ready, he soon made himself indispen sable in various ways. Months passed, and that portion of the railroad drew near completion. In Hie meantime Frank and John had be come fast friends. They were insepar able companions and a deeper than or dinary likingseemed to have sprung up be tween them. "Frank," said John Marshall one day, "our section will be completed this week, and then our employment here will be at an end. What do you propose doing?" "I don't know," and the youth hung f ins iieaa sorrowiuiiy. "As for me." continued John, "I am going home for a month's vacation, and I would be more than pleased to have you go with me. In fact I must insist upon it, for, in spit of your al most girlish ways, I should "be lost without your society." Frank remained silent, seemingly op pressed with a sorrow of some kind. "1 ou don u seem in. good spirits lo day,,Ksaid John ralryingly. "Xo; I am very sad indeed." ' "Will you tell me why?" "It would involve a long story, and a confession ; one that requires a- sacri fice of self-respect to make." "But we-are friends." "Yes, and! feel you have a right to know. So listen with all the patience you can. Away down- in- one of the lonely vallej's that dot our beautiful Xew York stale, situated near the head-waters of the Mohawk, there lived, a few years ago, a man named Lamport, with a family consisting of a wife and one child, a girl. Mr. Lam port had once been a prominent mer chant of Xew York; but meeting with heavy losses in business through wild speculations, he had sold out, and with the remnant of his fortune had settled in the valley I have just mentioned. Here he resolved to begin the world anew. Possessed of a wife who sym pathized with him in all his trials, he never despaired as many have done. "But one child had blessed their un ion, little Fannie, at this, time- about eleven years of age. In her all the-pa rents' love was centered. Mr. Lam port had been at his new vocation about three years, and was in a fair way to retrieve- the losses he had met with in his mercantile career. "The little valley was but a few miles in length, and but little more than a mile in width, surrounded on all sides by high mountains, thickly wooded. But few other families had their residence in the valley. The scarcity of neighbors, however, did not eause Mrs. Lamport to have any vain Jonghigs. for the society in which she had been reared. Her nature was not of an ambitious turn. While her family possessed health, and the wolf was kept from, the door, she would never complain, but would always be a loving and fitting helpmate to her hus band. Mr. Lamport was full con scious or tne treasure no possesses in his wife, and-they were happy indeed. "Thus things went well for a time? and then calamity came. Both Mr. and Mrs. Lamport suddenly died, leav ing Fanny alone, and almost penniless. Paralyzed" with grief the poor girl knew'not what to do. The neighbors kindlv came forward to assist her, and a hundred dollars in her pocket, she -went to a relative in Xew York a widow lady named Plessly. bhe was not a handsome woman ; she was not particularly rich; she was certainly over- thirty. Those who merely saw her wondered at the Immense popular itv she enjoyed; but those who know her intimately perfectly understood her fascinations. Mrs. Plessly possessed a most brilliant intellect, spoke several innmiarrpq. had read everything that this fnhP. rfind. and talk on any subject iri'tKe world, from the most obtuse the- olcScal creed to the slightest pirouette of the Black Crook dance. She was j themo3t amusing woman in New York. Her conversation was like the corrus cations of brilliant lire works, so daz zling that it was almost impossible to analyze it; but those who had self-possession enough to close their eyes against the flashing light, saw in her thoughtlessness and carelessness for the feelings of others, and a thorough absence of heart in herself; sho was as brilliant as a rainbow, but as cold. "Fanny was taken into society, after only a few months, by Mrs. Plessly, who took every care to display what ever beauty or accomplishment her young relative possessed. Fanny soon made up her mind that Mrs. Plessly was using her for a speculative pur pose, the desired end being a rich hus band. While the widow was not par ticularly anxious to exchange her free dom for the matrimonial yoke, she schemed to gain for herself fortiuie and position by marrying Fanny ad vantageously. The waited-for man came at last. lie was a millionaire and was infatuated with Fannie, and was sixty years old. The girl recoiled from the proposed match with disgust; the venerable suitor pleaded; Mrs. Plessly commanded. Upon Fanny's final refusal, the widow ordered her to leave the house, never to enter again. With the remainder of the money she had originally brought with her, and which she had kept because she had found no need to spend it, she went out into the world." Here the speaker hesitated as if loth to go on. "Is the storv finished?" asked John. "Xo." "Well, go on, then. I should, of course, like to know what became of Fanny." "Xot knowing where to go or what to do, but with a vague idea of getting work somewhere or somehow, she ap plied to numerous warehouses and shops, but she was in every instance obliged to confess ignorance of the work in question. In some places her good looks subjected her to insult, and she went to bed at night in a cheap lodging, thoroughly discouraged. The next day she went through about the same experience with the same result. " 'If 1 were only a man,' she said to herself, 'I could.get on better; I would at least be free from insult, and I could seek my fortune much more comforta bly.' "This jset her thinking, and by morn juig-she-had resolved upon a novel mas querade. Very early she set out, and a short walk brought her to a- clothing ware house. She entered and thus ad dressed the shopman : 'Have you ready-made suits for boys or young men?" " 'Yes,' was the reply. " 'Please show, me some?' "She selected a suit of clothes which she thought would answer thenurpose. had them put in a bundle, took them to her room together with a cap which she bought on the way. Half an hour afterward she look in the mirror, and saw a smart young fellow of eighteen but with her hair reaching to the waist. A pair of scissors, skillfully used, soon brought the nair into a propper condition, and then she scarcely knew herself. "With the next train she started for the west, stopping at Buffalo, where she obtained a situation in a ware house to fill a temporary vacancy; but that job lasted but a few weeks, and then she went to Chicago. There she looked for work in- vain until her money was almost exhausted, and she found that being a man did not insure complete success. Her slender and youthful appearance-debarred her from work of a heavy nature; and lighter situations, such as book-keepers, clerks, etc., were scarce. "At last finding that starvation was her only prospect in the city, Fanny resolved to try the country. By chance she read in a newspaper of a "railroad being in course of construction, and so she came here." Came here!" ejaculated John Mar shall. "Then vou are " I am Fannv Lamport," was the blushing reply. Jolin started back in amazement. He was naturally a bashful fellow, un accustomed to- female society ; and the idea that he had been associating with a young lady unawares was startling. Then he wondered that he had not sus pected the truth before; that he had not particularly noticed his clerk's ef feminacy, girlish blushes, and pretty ways. And, now he thought of it, he did not relish the idea of parting with that same prettv clerk. A silence of some length ensued at the completion of Fanny's story, brok en finally by John Marshall. "I suppose," he said, "that we need not part just because you have changed your sex ; but then, you see, it would n't be exactly proper for you to stay here with me, now that I know you're a girl."- Fanny was silent. She was think ing of the bitterness of leaving the man she had learned to love. The months she had spent in his society had been the happiest since her parents' death. "Do you wish to leave me?" asked John. "Xo, indeed," Teplied Fanny, quickly. "Please do not make me go away. Xo body but you knows of my sex." "I see but one way for you to do as you desire." "Xame it" "By marrying me." It was settled with a hug and a kiss. John Marshall went home to spend his vacation, which resolved it into a honey-mooh. When his friends asked him where he found his lovely wife, he always replies that there is a funny story connected with his courtship; but Fanny blushes at this point, and he never tells the story. The. Growth of Life. InterOcean. The Rev. Dr. II. TY. Thomas lectur ed last evening for the Ladies' Societv of St. Paul's Reformed Enisconal Church in the cIiutcIi edifice, corner of "West "Washington and Carpenter streets. There was a good audience in attendance. Dr. Thomas took for his subject the "Growth of Life," and-gave an interesting disquisition upon the evolution theories of Huxley, Darwin, Haeckel, and other scientists. The speaker drew comparisons showing the advance of life from the mollusk to the vertebrate form, and from the creeping reptiles to the unricht biDeds. Science, the speaker said, had traced, by well-defined connections, the rise of the race of animals from those that burrowed with downcast faces, in the darkness of the earth, to the superior orders whose forms and faces were erect, as if striving tarise to-intelligence in the clear air of creation. Science professed to trace the change from the dead and expressionless mouth and eyes of the fish to the intelligent ex pression in the features of the horse and dog, and thence to human beings whose mouths could express love and tenderness, and their eyes more than Avoids could say. Human beings, the highest order-or life, embodied all that was perfect physically and mentally. The power of memory was found both, in human beings and' in animals. "Why shoirld themore intelligent animals not have other mental powers common human beings, such as imagniatic to ion? There were horses in this city more in telligent than their drivers. All were created physically alike, of the same dust, end the love and faith of animals was often stronger than that of their masters. A modem Diogenes might hsive to hunt a good ways before he coukllind a man as true, loving and faithful as a common dog. It seemed to the speaker that the differance be tvroon the animal and human creation was something finer, more subtle, and indefinable than the broad difference of mind, with its attributes of reason, memory, imagination, and other feat ures. There seemed to be in men a "spirit" which was not possessed by the lower forms of life, a something which created the emotions of good ness, hope, and a far-reaching soulful ness, so to speak. What the speaker did not understand he always regarded with composure. He believed that the soul was what lifted mankind above all other forms of life ; that when he reached the per fect type when mind took on its ma ture form of reason, intelligence, and' all the emotions of hope, fear, good ness, generosity, and faith, he assumed something of the spirit and form of his creator. To Our Girls. New York Qrnphlc. Xow that you are being courted, you, of course, think it is all very well, and that it will be nicer when you get mar ried. But it won't. He thinks he's go ing to keep on this high pitch of love sill the time. But he won't. He doesn't know himself, and you don't know him. It can't last. It must cool down. When he sees you as many times a day as he wants to, and maybe more ; when he sees your head done up regularly every morn ing in curl papers, and the bloom is all off the eye; when your house contains a good deal of wash-tub, cradle, and cook stove, he won't stand for one hour in front of the house out in the cold, watching the light in your window. He'll be thinking rather of getting out of the house. Young woman, pro tract this courtship as long as you can. Let well enough alone. A courtship jn hand is worth two marriages in the hush, Don't marry till Christmas after next. i Mm ' In the Dominion of Canada there is a wide-spread and influential effort be ing made to popularise the temperance movement. Cabinet Ministers and .othprs cordially support this; and it is now well known, by statistics carefully tabulated.and, widely circulated, that the maiHifacture of intoxicating drinks employs comparatively few persons. The last census shows that, in the year previous, $0,270,372 worth ;of liq uors in their manufacture only gave employment to 1,493 persons. But ma chine shops, and kindred places to produce an equal value employed 0,500 persons; boot and shoe manu factories 7,300 persons; and shipyards, 8,544. The distillers, brewers, and cider-makers paid 1? per cent, of the value of their produce in wages; boot and shoe manufacturers 25 per cent; machine shops, etc., 33J per cent. So the liquor traffic is no friend to labor A Good Cement. A good cement for mending all most anything may be made by mixing together litharge "and glycerine to the consistency of thick cream or fresh putty. This cement is useful for mending stone jars or any coarse earthen ware, stopping leaks in seams of tin pans and wash boilers, cracks and holes in iron tea kettles, etc. Holes an inch in diameter in kettles can be filled and used the same in boiling water and food. It may be also used in fastening on lamp tops, to tighten loose nuts, and in many other ways. In all cases the article mended should not be used until the cement is har dened, which will require from one day to a week, according to the quantity used. This cement will resist the ac tion of water, hot or cold, acids and almost any degree of heat. A very rich old man had married a young wife, and died suddenly, on which the wife raved like a maniac, and exclaimed to the doctor, who stood by the bedside of the departed, "Oh I'll not believe that my partner is dead; he could not die, and leave me! Xo, no! he's alive I'm sure he's alive! Tell me doctor, don't you think so ?" "Madame," replied the medical man, with much gravity, "I confess that it is possible that he may be revived. I will apply the galvanic battery." "Oh, no, no!" exclaimod the grief-stricken widow, "Hard as it is to bear my fate, I will have no experiments against the laws of Xature; let him rest in peace." "When the young man of the period, the pay matinee-masher, desires to ex press his sense of admiration he faintly ejaculates; "Say, look at her! Isn't she a daisy ? She breaks me all up, par alyzes me and makes me tired." The durndest clodhopper will concede that this is infinitely more elegant-than the old style: "Gosh, ain't she some pun- kens ? Knocks me stiff er than a corpse, by gol busts the wind clean out o' me!" It does not require the evidence of sta tistics to assert the rapid mental im provement of our youth. A Rochester Physician's Expe rience. R. CaulkiriB, M. D., of Rochester, N. Y., certifies Oct. 6th, 1879, that he has used the Safe Kidney and Liver Cure in his practice for diseases of the kidneys and liver, and the result has been satisfactory in the extreme. He says: "I would now prescribe the same remedy to all similarly afllioted, and you are at liberty to so state in your testimonials." 34moB3 A young lady will nestle her head on the shoulder of v young man who is burning cheap tobacco rolled up in a piece of white paper and disguised as a f cigarette, but later in life will shrink from him and turn up her nose simply because he happens to be consuming the same material in a highly colored clay pipe. And yet the smell is pre cisely the same in both cases. It is- a great injustice to the time-honored clay pipe to make this discrimination. Gate CM- STOP THAT COUGH. By going to the reliable and well known Drug Stand of J. J. Bender Nemaha City and buying a $1. bottle of Gkeen Mountain Cough Bat&am. If, after UBing two-thirds you get no relief, return the balance and get youT money back. See advertisement in this paper. 39ru3 A snilor, a giant of known bravery, who was in in a boat at the siege of Copenhagen bent down his head while a shot was flying over the boat "For shame z hold up your head!" thunder ed the officer in' the stem.. "I will. sir. when tliere's room laugliing response. for rtr"" was the A yonng gentlemam somewhat nu merous in social circles took his sister, a wee miss, to see a family the other day in which he is a regular caller. The little girl made herself quite at home and exhibited great fondness for one of the young ladies, hugging her heartily. "How affectionate she is," said the lady of the house. "Yes : just like her brother," responded the young ladv, unthinkingly. Paterfamilias looked up sternly over his spectacles, the young gentleman blushed, and there was consternation in the family circle. New York World. The examioneris trying to explain to the flatheaded listeners the character of a miracle. He asks a scholar, "What is a miracle?" "I don't know, sir." "If all at once the sun appeared in tho heavens at night, what would you say it was?" "The moon." But if vou were told it was the sun, what would you say ?" "I'd say it was a lie," "Xow, I never lie. Suppose I told you it was the sun ?" The scholar, after a moment's deep reflection, bob bed his -head. "Please, sir, I'd say you were drunk." Montreal Heard From. R. L. Mosely, of Montreal, Canada, certified Sept. 27, 1879, that he had suffered terribly from dyspepsia, and was completely cured by taking War ner's Safe Bitters. He saya: "My appetite is good, and I now Buffer no Inconvenience from eating hearty meals. ' These Bitters are also a spe cific for all skin diseases. 34m3 Fon Catakrh. Dried mullein leaves are an excellent article for ca tarrh. Dry them first by the sun, then by the fire; powder fine; put into a clean clay pipe and smoke, blowing the same through the nostrils, but being careful not to swallow into the lungs. Soft Molasses Cake. One cup of sugar, three cups of fiour, one-half cup of butter, one-half cup of buttermilk, two eggs, one teaspoonful of soda, a pinch of salt, half a teaspoonful each of cloves, cinnamon and ginger. Bake very slowly. U II 1 After dinner take one of Carter's Little Liver Pills and yoa will find tliey are a pos itive cure for Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and distress from Too Hearty Eating. A single pill gives prompt relief, and tbelr continned ose greatly improves the digestion and appe tite. Carter's Little Liver Pills are a most excellent Dinner Pill. Every one speaks woll oftiiem. Apr. "Yis, yer riverence, all thim names he allied me, an, sis I, 'I wouldn't de mane raeself to lose me timper wid such a low blackguard,' so I just knocked him oner wid this stick and came away." One of the sweetest moments in this beautiful world to some people is when they can beat down the price of a ten cent article to nine cents. Oil Ctiy Derrick. Show Cards, Business Cards, Wedding Cards, Letter Heads, IlllI Heads, Monthly Statements, Envelopes,, Dan po Invitations. Programmes, Posters, Sale Bills, Horse Bills, or anything In the printing lino, neatly and promptly done at THE ADVERTISER JOB OFFICE. COOK COOK COOK STQVES,STOVES,STOES, CHARTER HOT BLAST Ts the best Stove pver made. Call on the "REGULATOR" for prices and be sure that you buy if you want "general satisfaction," Thos. Richards. SEED POTATOES. Peerless, Early Rose and Peachblow, for sale by MeGee & Moore. Xow Get Your Nursery Stock. Fresh From the Ground. Full Assortment. Hedge Plants. FURJV.4S FRUIT FARM, BROWiWILLE. Xo Sale Yard in town this spring-. Call at the Kursery and get stock fresh. 41 w3 PLOW BOYS. McGee & Moore will sell you a good Plow Shoe for 50 cents a pair. Breaking Plows ! Breaking Plows ! CENTENNIAL is tlie lightest draft plow that ever cut sod. For sale by DAVID CAMPBELL. STOCK To a limited number -will be received at the Pasture on Monday April 26th, and on ev ery Monday thereafter during the season of 1SSO. and on no other day. Apply to JTno. I. Carson or E. II. Burchess. 44-Gt Hoo Will Care For Moth er Now. Cheap Sam sells goods cheaper than any other house in town. Country produce oil all kinds wanted by McGee & Moore. Silks and satins at McGee & Moore's. Youths' Clothing. Double the Largest Stock of YOUTHS' and BOYS' CLOTHING to lie found In the County. Call and see me before yu buy. LOUIS LOWMAN. If you want good flour. try one sack of Queen of Harvest. CJieap Sam will sell you one and warrant it. Try it Carpets, Oilcloth, Door mats and Hugs. Ingrain, Brussels, ilemp, and a Fine Stock, of Oil-Cloths 20 pieces to select from. LOUIS LOWMAS. I will sell you hats for 50 cents, cheaper than you canbuy any where else in town. CHEAP SAM. PATBIOK'S Breaking Plows and Cultivators FOR S-A.IE B"Z- D. E. DOUGLAS & CO. ffW to STOMACH 0 Fever and A.gue. The trite antidote to the effect ot miasma is Ilostetter's Stomach Bitters. This medicine Is on e of the most popular remedies of an ace of suc cessful proprietary sjeclflce. and is In immenso demand wherever, on this Continent, fever and aeue exists. A wlneglassful three time a day Is the pest possible preparative for encountering a malarious atmosphere, regulating the liver, and Invigorating the stomach. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. O.K. BARBER SHOP The old Barbershop, No. 47 Is now owned and rnn by HAWKINS & BERLIN. It Is the best fitted shop in tho city, and the placo'Is generally patronized by the people. This Arm keep only Experienced Workmen, and gentlemanly and accommodating their condnct. All kinds of In T0NS0RIAL WORK done promptly and satisfaction guaranteed. THE BEST DYES made are always in preparation. A Fine Stock of always on hnndV Cigars CHARLES BODY Hereby calls the attention of the people of Brownvllle and vicinity to tho fact that he keeps a full line of the best FAMIL"ST GROCERIES, PIIOVISIONS, ELOUJi, CONFECTIONS, etc. And sell at the very Lowejt Living Rates. He also has a RESTAURANnp Where 31eals at all Honrs arc fnrnshed upon the shortest notice People from the country are Invited to cnll and get r "square meal" for only 25 CEWTS Aaron Palmar. Hobt. Johnson TAURANT. Palmer & Johnson. First Door IVest of the Old Building. National Banl This Arm, having fitted up tliese rooms w!l ran a first clas reslnurnnt, where good warm meals enn bo had at all honrs. Tbey give their customers the best viands In the market, lncludlns fresh oysters served in any manner called for. Try the New Restaurant All Orders for nn Express Left ttHIi inem ttiii oe A'ronipuy attended to o a KB SSI 5 CQ SS K W e a W m H P O to M S co P n h 8H O H 0 o S 9 mm a s k cs a tofe 525fe o CO H i3g5s I- a mSs C3 Bj ff W ! Hsb1 & IJK 3 nuuti is s - 1-3 Cf a" e & g Z2 I C-? T. A. Bath. Joseph' Body. BATH BODY proprietors CITY IDT MARKET. are now prepared to accommodate the public with Good, Sweet, Fresh i MEAT. Highest market price paid for Beef Hides AND TALLOW. First door est of P.O. Brownvllle. ABBOTT & EMERY Workers In "Wood andiron, nt the old place, foot of COLLEGE ST. WAGONS, MACHINERY, PLOWS, ETC., promptly repaired. All kinds of LACKSMITHING done to order, and Satisfaction Guarantied. J L. JEbOT', Undertaker Keeps afullllneof BURl&LCaSES&CASKETS Ornamented and Plain. Also Shronds for men, ladles and Infants. All orders left at his farm three miles west ot Brownvllle, on the Tecnmseh road will receive prompt attention. 49 Bodies Preserved and Embalmed. 1880. HARPER'S MAGAZINE ILLUSTRATED. "StndylDK the subject objectively and from the educational point of view seeking to provide that which, taken al together, will be of the most service to the largest number I long ago concluded that, It I could have but one work for a public library, I would select a complete set of Harper" JfontAlu." Charles Francis Adams. Jr. Its contents are contributed by the most eminent authors and artists of Europe and America, while the Iodr expstience of It publtibers has made them thoroughly conversant with thedehlresofthe public, which they will spare no effort t( gratify. The volumes of ihellagazlne begin with the num bers for June and Decemborof each year. When notlrne Is specified. It will be understood that the subscriber wishes to begin with the current dum ber. Efarper's Periodicals. Harper's Magazine, one Year 3 4 00 Harper's Weekly, " " 4 00 Harper's Bazar, " M 4 00 The Three aoove'samod pub lications, one Year 10 00 Any'Two above named 1 Year 1 00 Harper's Young People 1 Year. 150 POSTAGE PREB To alLsubscrlbers In tho Dnited;states or Canada. A complete set of Harper' Magazine, comprising 59 volumes. In neat cloth binding, will be sent by express, ireigut ui uxpnsoi purchaser. on receipt of 2 25 per volume. Single volumes, by mail, post paid. 3 00. Cloth cases, for binding, 38 cents, by mail, postpaid. Remittances should be madefy Postofnce Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Xewtpapcrslarr not to eopv this adcertltement icitft oitt the txprest order of Jtarper t Brother. Address HARPER S BROTHERS, -YEW YORK. 188a ANNOUNCEMENT 1880. THE ST. JOSEPrpERALB The Oldest Paper in St. Josopli axlltlleJL.eacLing Paper In. tlie Great West. Now In ltsTwenty-flrst volume theHernlil has been a Buccessfhl 'und influential paper from the day It was founded, anil its publishers are deter mined to maintain its established reputation as Trie ablest advocate of good morals and correot principles. The most rellnble IVewspaper. Tli most desirable business naner for business men. And the best Newspaper for all olass es. The Dnlly TTernld having been recently enlarg ed and being printed on clear, new type, and our facilities for obtaining news being constantly In creased. It will continue to maintain Its position among the best and ablest papers In the country, and the LEADINGPAPER DT THE WEST One of the important features of the Herald and tbat which makes It especially valuable. If not In dispensable to business men. is the full, complete and Reliable Market Reports, which are every day found In its columns, and which largely govern the transactions of merchants anddealersin.stock.gralnand produceof all kinds. The business man who docs not avail himself of the knowledge contained In these dallvcommerclal reports, and who does not keep posted In the dally uuciuBuousui memarneu 11 at me mercy or ine more enterprising traders. In many cases hun dreds of dollars are lost tbat mlcht behaved by In- THE ST. JOSEPH Dollar Herald, as Its name Indicates, Is published at the low price of ONE DOLLAR a year and Is mailed to sub scribers without additional cost for postage. It Is the best and cheapest Weekly Paper published In All tbe Important Pfews of the week. Pure and Interesting Llteratmre. And a Complete Review of the Gen eral Markets. Xo other Paper ts so Desirable, so Sat isfactory and Cheap. Subscriptions to theDOI.LAR. HERALD must be paid Invarably in advance, and the paper will be promptly discontinued at the expiration of the time paid for. One dollar for one year. Fifty cen tsfo r s isc m ontlis All Postmasters ere our authorized agents to re celve and forward iutv:riptlon. Address FRANK M. TRACY, Manager, ST. JOSEPH. MO. A. MONTH guaranteed. 1R aday at home made by the Industrious. Cap ital not required . we will start you Mem Women. Boys and Girls make money faster at work for ns than-as anything else. The work Is light and nleasant. and such as anvon can go richt at. Those who are wise who see this notioe will tend us their addresses at once and see for themselves. Costly outfit and terms frea. Sn Is the time. Those already at work are laying np I large sums of money. Ad3r6iTBUE&CO.. Aa- larsetuc gilt He, ;iyi ' !M THE WEEKLY Nebraska Stats Journal. CAMPAIGN OF 18SO Darinp the coming yexr the political affairs of the Jfatlon.and the discussion growing oat 01 mem will assume an Importance rarely eqaaleddn our history. THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN will be a more able contest, second, perhaps. In magnitude and bitterness, to none that have pre ceded It. The CENSUS OF THE UNITED STATES will be taken. Including the reapportionment of Congressional Representatives, and the shifting" of the balance of power, and the re-odjustment of itve influence of sections. THE NATIONAL CONVENTIONS ol all narties will precede the Presidential Election. and the Platforms will determine the course of Legislation and the Policy of the Government for anomer lour years. OUR STATE ELECTIONS forHembers of both branches of the Legislature Involving the election of a U.S. Senator, and for fall Executive Ticket, will occur. CONGRESS CONVENES In December, forthe"Iong sfcssion," and questions of vital Importance to the people. Including the Iodlnn and the Mormon Problems, and the new attempt to assert the so veielgnty of the States as bupertor to the power or the nation, in tne matter of protecting the franchise, and providing for the parity of National Elections, will be developed and deoaiea ny me leaning spirits or the i ouniry. Thn Wecklr Xcbrnka. State Inurnnl will he a faithful epltomeof these events, and will fully nrcsent tne menu or tne discussions provozea thereby, while at the same time it will give con cisely and fully, all the Current. Foreign, and Do mestic news, inn ana latest aiarxet neporis. kci as wen as xrom .Eastern commercial centers, run reports of the proceedings of all IMtemry. So- clnl.KeHciousand Kducntinnnl Conventions ana mate societies, anaoi inentnieiecisia tare. TELEGRAPHIC SUMMARY of Congressional Proceedings, and will be in fact a weeKiy nistoryor tne worw in general, ana 01 tne Ration, and the State In particular. The WeeklrN'cbrnakaStateJournnllsnot only tne iargeat wccKly published in the esr.out It contains much more reading matter. In propor tion to its size, than can be fonnd in any of its con temporaries on this side of the Mionrl. and com mends ttielf to every Jfebraskan as the StnU paper, to be taken In addition to thr local papers cf the several counties, for Its general and State news. Republican In politics. It discusses public affairs, not from a partisan, but from s broad, national ntandnolnt. crltlclslnGT nubile men and measures upon tneir merits.inaepenueui ot iacuonausm or prejudice. I?o o better medium of the news that Is wanted in Nebraska for the enllgbtmcnt of the heads of the family, or for a liberal education of the rising gen eration, can be found than the Stnte Journal. TEXS31S, Single Copy, per year ...... 9 3.00 Five Coplcsrnt one.tline... .... S.75 Ten " " ... . 15.00 3 The Money (registered letter or money-order) must Invariably be sent with the names. Address, STATE JOUKXAL CO.. LINCOLN NEBRASKA. TO JSCOO A YEAR, or to I2XT8 day ro your own locality. 2To- rlsk. women do as well as men Many make more than the am ount stated'above. lioonecaa fail to make money fust. Any one can do the work. Von can mii-i frnm Sflpt . to 82 an hourbydevoting yourov- entngs a d snare time to thobusiness. It costs noth ing tn t r. t ho hneinpsa. Nothing like It for money making ever offered bafore. Business pleasant and. strictly honoraoic. tic"". )u m iu uo oll about the best paying business before the wMIc send us your address and we will send you fon par ticulars and private terms free ; sample worth 15 also free: you can then make up 3our mind for yourself. Address OEOROK STLNSON fc CO, Portland, Me. 21yl BESTIR THE WORLD'! impure iTjnre KlrrT RsJa U ef a lightly dirty white color; it may appear tvnlt. examined by it- eir, Bnt a COMPARISON- 'GTITXZ CHtJRCH &. CO.IS "AKlrT AND HAJIITIEH'' BBANJ will the difference. BhOYF See that your Baklnar ! SoTa 1m " m1 TITTT-!? . - Ta a v w SIItXIIiAS SUBSTANCES Hsed tor food. A BirnplA but savero test of the cosipSntiTr ts1u ot different brands of Soda is to dissolve a dessert spoonful of each kind with about a pint of water (hot preferred) in clear glasses, itirriag nnta all is thoroughly dissolved. The delete rious insoluble matter in the inferior Soda will be shown after settling some twenty minutes or sooner, by the milky appearance of the solution1 and tho quantity of iloaticg flocky auttUr o cording to quality. Be sure and ask for Chnreh & Co.'s Soda and see that their name is on the packag? and 70a will get the purest and whitest made. The hm of this with sour milk, in preference to Sottas Powder, es twenty times ita cost. See one pound package for valuable iafom. tioa and read earcfully. SHOW THIS TO YOUR 8R0CER.. A WEKKln yonr own town, and no capital risked. You can give the biutness a trial without ex pense. The best opportunity ever offered for those willing to work. You should try nothing cUe until you see for yourself what you can o at the business we offer. Xo room to explain ere. You can devote all your time or only your pare time to the business, and make urea pay for very hour that j ou work. "Women make as much as men. Send for special private terms and partlc nlars, which we mall free. .' Outfit free. Don't complain of bard times while you have, such Z chance. Addrcsslf. ILVLLETTiCo., portl nd, ai Warner" Safe Pills are an Immediate stimulus for a Torpid Liver, and cure Costlve ness. Dyspepsia. Biliousness, Billons Diarrheas, Malaria. Feve? and A true, and aro useful at times in nparly all Diseases to canse a free and regular action of the Bowels. The test anti dote for all ilalarial Poison. Price, 25c a box. Warner's SafcXerTTne quickly gives Itest and Sleep to the suffering, cures Headache and Jeuralgla. Prevents Epileptic Fits, and Is the best remedy for ervous Prostration brought on by excessive drinking, over-work, mtntal shocks and other causes. It relieves the Pains of all Diseases, and Is never Injurious to tho system. The best of all Nervines. Bottles of tao 6lzes; prices, 50c. and Jl.no. Warner's Safe Remedies are sold byDrncrsists and Sealers in .Medicine every where. H.H.WAMR&C0., Proprietors. Bochwler, X.TT. 3Send for Pamphlet and Testimonials. iT?1 ""cn'ne is fruaranteed In its present com ?m!f ?"' ,0eetthcwant ot every househod fb either domestic or fancy work ; Is simple anddara ble In construction. easily kept In repair and wir a 2!io W" w!ih fc MFtoeBeonpleto to ftow ?Ma,,r..terIa!aoeea3llJ'aa' cnfckly Jtnltor rf5t22-. !?? " warranted to he la .Vh ra?a to 3 JU!t Trh" ,s represented. rf 2.PvQ,ne ls accompanied by a book of FxUl it luitroted Intrusion by which any onVcan leara to operate thm. OOOD AGZX17 WANTED & whom the best terms will be made. AH ort ersanrf communnlcatlons should be addressed to ff A?fA BfcKFOBDVPrestwdOen'lAgt. "71 Broadway, Xew Verk, WANTED w st batten nutaei -e,i,p4a or iwBS, w.rth'xa,-l tTZL. b. a. ra nit n. 11 s? jgSKT8 n KR inia v 2p M v.4 9 SE Rfil 1 riMii ' ff. lgra Xiirtn ZRZBXA3KUU. "3. tinSsCeLuZTi - a.c 'Vti- last Will Mft. MPVM.- - ft.AA Jh. iSa PIANOS "AT -Ajsrio RGANS Ther CeleBrafed: JMCtisic House or "W". "W. Kimbatt Or Chicago, Keep in stock a falHixxe of PIANOS and ORGANS. For full particulars, terms & price? call on or address, J. E. DYE, Local Agent, OR E. M. Lippitt PIANO and VOCAL TEACttfcK, Broicnvitta, - Nefrrasfca'. yl PERMANENTLY CURES I KIDNEY DISEASES, LSVER COMPLA8NTS, Constipation and Piles. DR. It. n. CLARK. 8mrtb lTrm.Vt- te "In crnsc ofXTDXET TEOClttXa tl has aetrd llko a eharxn. It has cured many very j badeaMasrPIIXS, and has never failed to I act efaelently." If ELSO.f FAIRCTTILD. of Bt-AItans. Vt 3 sayo, "!ti of priceless -raluev After slx3rai J j years oi crcat attScrta fram Plica and Cos-1 j trrese It coapletely cnrnl me." O. a. IIOC AJIOKt ofEerkthtre, says. 'oe I Ipaekacehaadoue woadora for me la ootaj pletcly curiae n aerrro Liver and KIdaey j Complaint." !T HAS H71 WONDERFUL ff J rvncH BECAUSE IT ACTS ON TUB UVER,TIXB BOiyKLS AND SUM NEYS AT THE 8AJUS TIME. Beeausa It cleanses the system off the poisonous humors that daveiopo In Xldney and urinary diseases. Bil iousness. Jaundice. Constipation. Piles, or In Rhoumatlsm, Neuralgia j and Female disorders. KIDXET-WOET la a dry vegetable cos pound and eaa be sent by nn prepaid. One package nlll make six its of medicine. Buy It at tb Prn lt. Price, 81.00. WZIX3. 2ICEA2S301I & CO.. Pntrist. $ Sarllastoa, YC "you are a maa or buslne, weakened by the strain ot m yonr dutlas, avoid stimttlanu and cao 0. If yoa are a men of letters, toOlns over your tsidntth work to restore brain nerve and waite,nsi "SS5?.l5?: L?r anyfadlscrcUoa f Viwot. JmSli. 'Jf uuuTiea or arftje, ow or yoangsuaerlDzfrom poor health or lanxnlih- n ca wttcvisz log on 1 aDeaor slctne3,relycn m Whoesryoa are, wherever yon are; wbearvcryca fwt that yoormtea needs cfcaasSyrtoateir or a stlmnlartufy without intoxiexiiinff, taio W yss wrests! Ha-re you dytpntta, Irtdney or urinary mmplatnt, din. T esse cl the iwF6ot6joort,hW,orow Toa will be cored If yon we IfyoaaresImpryweskandloirspIrited,trritt Boyit. inslstuponlt. Yonrdruirgist keeps it. , It auy save year life. It aes saved hadreds. I KrpCmcSCanlitkanrMttitjiirMtuKllmt. XiVcMUrtn. j TttHo?FircrStCTEicb,tlTn-i2!i XUaTi,!ttip,rirtoarr' cUwrt. CarMbyibtcrpttoo. ItliptrftcL Aikdnliu. j 1LC.Ii u ibrtiti ladimtftti&l cm for draaltncM. cm at BJSSBBI cptan.totacMarcarolln. BBBSBB.. Aim kU y dnrUu.Kop BltUn Mf, Co., (Uchnur, . . I CRAY'S TRADE MARK. SPECIF C HFn. Tin Ktnl'nKH TRaQc. . nmeilrt, ,-- s. Stibwt S? ? l&atfotMvisate. .... . ..-. 31 lt.- .t i " ora- noiBii.inc. Xfcwe: m U,. r trT.tio'. ftt'Qm' 3'"!M,'r' OV ' r t,.r ,hS Crrull JTUUr, 1, ,rrBrhlet .to,,,,. ,,. -!fMetrm.!lt8..T7.. 33-T.r9yiaeHHKll "14 !y U drstsU,, M f t f- fwl.. r .U rKk.. f . er iu t Mat tn. T Kis .. tt.,t rf ta. mo-, w 44rtui3C - ' IflT GBAT JirDICttK CO- -Sold In Bro-WEvHle and Terrtrbcro by all druggists. g-rj - e -r f