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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1882)
THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA. THURSDAY , OCTOBER 10 The Omaha Bee. FnbUthsd every morning , except ' .8tmd ] r Cbe only Momlsy umtntng d\\r- \ \ IK1O1S BV MAIL Y ar . $10.00 I Three Mmith .OS.OO Months n.OolOno . . LOO THE WKEKLY 1JBB. pnblkhed CT- cy Woduoinlfty. TEr-MS POST 1'AID _ One Year . 52.00 I Three Month * . . CO liMe tlw. . 1.00 1 Ono . . 20 AMRMOAN NISKB COMPANT , Sole AgcnU or KewMleftlera in the ITnlt d State * . COHHKSPONDKNCE All Oommnnl. latlou ? rtlfttini ? to Nnw < andKciltorIalinat- in i-honH bo addrewwl to the Kniion or B17S1VES3 LKTTBIW-All etters ntnl KcinltUnce nhonld bo nd- re * e < t to Tun Ben PrauaniKJ COM- ABT , OUAHA Drafts , Chocks ntd l' < nt- lh ae OnJera to 1)8 made payable to the idar of Uin Cmapany IhB BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props Ei UOSEWATER , Editor. THE CAMPAIGN. Wo are authorized to announce Senator Van Wyck to address thq oiticons of the Third dintrict on the Uauos of the hour at the following named places : Blair , Friday , October 20. Tokamah , Saturday , October 21. O'Ncil , Monday , Oatobor 23. Norfolk , Tuesday , Ostobor 21. Gon. A. II. Connor will ipoak at Central City , Thursday , October 19 ] Each ftt7-.no p. m. HonM. . K. Tnrnor will speak with General Connor nt Arlington , and with Senator Van- Wyck nt eaoh of hia appolntinonts. Additional appointments will bo made in n few dayo. CAPITAL has its rights , nnd Icbor should huvo a voice in framing our lawi , Iv n man Bella his musolo to n corporation - poration , ho does not aioo part with his coul. Our. workiugmen have nn Interest in the coraim ; election , and they mnnt assort themselvoi. UMTKU wo stand , divided wo fall should bo the motto of our working men and farmers ut the coining clue tion. fuiti-inonofoljr record i.1 ' ' in congress of which ho ia talking in H aubduod tonoa , li uroB down to a vote for the river and harbor steal , Thia ia an anti-monopoly record which lost the republicans five congroaaiuun in 4 Ohio. TUB Union 1'aoilic still exacts fifty cents bridge toll from oaah pasaonger who ia compelled to cross the Min- souri river ut Omaha , and buys his ticket at n way station on their road. This is an impudent swindle on the people living in the interior of the atato , because they could buy their bridge ticket at Omaha fram Iho U. P. ticket agent for twenty-fivo oontn. AN item is going the rounds of aomo badly informed pipers of the elate that the editor of TIIK Bin has bcun nomi nated by Iho anti-monopolists , of the First district for congress. This is a startling piece of news which wo wore before unaware of. It is needless to Bay that there is not a grain of truth in the report , The edil r of thg most in fluontlil daily west of Chicago Imft M\ office inoro exalted than any so\t in I ) congress and it is an ollho that he c.in hold for life. MILS. COLDY , the head and front in Nebraska of the woman suffrugo move ment , complains in n letter to her name paper in Beatrice , that Tin : Hr.i : did not give fair play to the suffra gists in publishing the debate between Miss Anthony and the editor of thin paper. The fact ia tliivj , Mi'aa Anthony first requested that her speech bu published in condensed form , which was done with her opening re marks. Her reply to Mr. Hosowatur was given verbatim in the daily. But wo had also taken u short-hand report , and the woman suffrage supple ment of TIIK WEEKLY BKI ; contains every word epokon in the debate on both sides. The re port of Miss Anthony's speeches was submitted to her foi approval before it wont in print. Wu have gone to much expense in pub lishing this deb to , and the woman BufCragistB have the benefit of the best argument their foremost champion in America haa presented in support ol their claims. Wo have given it a wide circulation without uhirge , Gould nioro liberal treatment be asked or given 1 As to the treatment by thu othot aide , everybody present at the debate knows that die woman suffrage people appointed their own chairman to pro- Bide , and that chairman took undue advantage of the position by joining in the debate and interrupting and citcchiaing Miss Anthony's opponent. Had a mau occupied the chair , BUOU a thing would not have b'een aubmittod to without protest. A GouUy Vindication. blcitfO T tnei. KEimi'fl recent "vindication" in Ohio catno nearly killing him. With euch another vindication he would go to meet thu Ohio temperance dem- cent , THE SECOND DIMTHICT. At the election of 1880 the Second congressional district of Nebraska polled n fraction over 7,000 votes for General Hancock , as against over 'JO- 000 for General Gnrfiold. In 1881 Samuel Maxwell , thoVepublican can didate for supreme judge , received 19,131 votesagixinst 4,8lOfor Mungor , his democratic opponent , It is sefd to sy that the democrats cannot poll over 7,000 votes for any candidate on their state ticket in that district this year if every democrat in the district should vote the demo cratic ticket. Hut it is a i-otorious fact that the Hacond district is intense ly anti-monopoly , and thut n large majority of the democrats in the dis trict have cut IOOHO forever from their party and become staunch tuppurtcrs of the atiti iinniipoly party and its candi dates. Now every intelligent person can see that the democrats have no earthly show to ulect n congressman ia the Second district even if they could' hive cantered their full vote on one nun. Divide the 20,000 republicans between Liitd and Moore nnd ono or the other will receive over 10,000 votes no ngainet the 7,000 democrats. In the fnco of this fact the democrats under the load of the B. &M. lobbjiftt , J. Sterling Morton have placed F. A. Harmon , of Franklin county , on the con- groaai'jual race track in the Second district , Whut ia the object of this notnina- ton ? It is simply an attempt to decoy - coy ani-monopoly democrats to throw away their votes on Harmon for the benefit of Jim Laird. Are mrti mon opoly democrats stupid enough to bo caught playing catspaw for the rail roads ? Will they throw away their votes on n straw man who has no possible chance of election , nnd help to elect n notorious monopoly attorney when they hava it in their power to elect a staunch outspoken anti-monopoliatt On the other hand will anti-monopoly republicans allow themselves to bo bulldozed into the nuppnrt of a railroad candidate by the party lash , or will thry take any stock in the pledges of u m-.in who is plastered all over with political morU'tigoj to the railroad munop-jliin ? Till ! Amoriutn association of the gas manufacturers opened its session yesterday in I'lttobtug. Ono of the principal topica of discussion was the rapid progroes of electric lighting and th probable ell'jct of the new light upon the production and price of gas The remarkable Hucoena of electric lighting gives ground enough for nnxiety on thu part of thu aon com panies. The Brush electric lighting company , with nn aggregate capital or $7,000,000 , lights In iifty cities , street contraolH in littoon nnd has 18,000 lights in operation. Edison L'l)98 , ! ) lamps already burning in the United States alone , outside of New York city , nud 11,311 , lam pi ready .for light ing in Now York. The Now York Electric Liiliiim ( ; company , which hold the Maxim , Wostou , lloikcl nnd Fuller patents , is setting up phnta throughout the country nnl ; is already largely used for Interior lighting in n larfjo number of f ictoricH nnd public building ! . In every instance- the coat as compared with lighting by gas shows a great decrease. Cheaper gas must came. Pu-jlio prutcaU have not brought it but thu iie'.ive completion of the itleotriot light in forcing the gas managers to teriuu. "Tun leopard"said Arlomus Ward , "ian curious ntiimal. I : is tiuo that he cannot chiuigu hia spots , but you cjn change 'cm for him with n paint brush , an 1 oncu did to u leopard in my show who wasn't naturally spotted in an attractive manner. " K , K. Valentino nnd Jim Laird have buen busily engaged for enmo time past with bruihua and anti-monopoly paint , nnd they now appear before the public with their monopoly spots carefully covered with a mixture nf self-applied whitewash , "If you talk of antimonopoly nopoly , " remarked Laird in a recent speech , "I have always boon an anti- monopolist. " "My vote for the river end harbor bill , " says Valentine , "was a vote agains * gigantic monopo lies , " "Hold the fort , anti-monopoly forever" is the chorus which both are lustily singing with nil the power of now converU nt a camp meeting , The public will not bu deceived by these latter day saints of antimonopoly opoly , The paint is too fresh , nnd the leopard spots show clearly under the thin covering of whitowath , Yulon- tino'tt record and companions have stamped him from hia first entrance into cot i rois n n pliant tocl of the monoiiis. | . What has been douo to wards ECO irini ; Inwb regulating the rail- roadu ? What we.iviro 1ms ho intro duced looking towards thu taxation ot thu lartrj land grunts on which thu monopoly managers refuse to take out piteiUt ) Isn't it u fact that his throa nominations for congress worot > ocurcd largely through thu kindly cilices of the railroad attorneys and is there anyone ono no blind as not to sou that every ellort of the corporation muiagers is to-day being used to make certain his , election in the Third district. Mr Valentino's anti-monopoly is of a kin 1 which is not distasteful at Union It . - cifio headquarters. The paint fails to hide the spots. It'is the height of oheekincM in Jim Laird to ask an election to congress from the Second district on the ground of his anti monopoly sentiments. For years ho has been nn active political attorney of the Burling ton and Missouri River railroad com pany. IIo may deny , if ho pleases , that the managers of the road ever approached him on the subject of pol itics , it makes very little diffdrcnce who gave him his.instructions , whether it was A. K Touzalin or T. M. Mar- q'Kitto. The fact remains that Mr. Liird has done nctivo political work for the corporation which ho torvcd both in preventing obnoxious and in forwarding friendly legislation. The leopards spots of monopoly control are too plain to bo concealed , The paint wont ntick. HENRY GEOROE'S THEORY. Mr. Henry George , whoso book "Progress and Poverty , " ntamped him as an original and powerful think er , as well as n bold and radical econ omical agitator , has returned from England , and is to bo made thu re cipient of a complimentary dinner in New York , at the hands of n number of prominent merchants in that city. The doctrine which Mr. George ia now preaching in that private ownership in land is the cauHo of the great disparity in wealth now existing , und that it's abolition can only bo accomplished by making nil Und the property of the government. He arguua his point with remarkable vigor and plausibility nnd brings to the do- fenceof his theory n style which at once rivets the nttontion of the render nnd compels a respectful hearing , if not a conversion to hii peculiar ideas. Bat whatever may or nny not bo the force of Mr. Georges argument his doctrine will bo looked upon with distrust as being un-Auior- ican if not chimerical " The ruling passion of every American citizen ia to own the land hu tills , oif ho owns it already to' own more nnd to have enough to give each of his children n farm apiece , the larger the better. The idea , of making us a nation of renters will not meet with uuy encouragement while every mothrr'a son of us cherishes the hope of owning nome day n landed estate , or nt lenat n country scat with orohardo , vineyards , gardens and ample lawns. Take away the hope and incentive of ultimately owning land , nnd the renters would bo much fewer than they are. As solo land lord the government would find the proportion of farmers in our popula tion disantrously reduced from what it now ia and the roiults anything but economical. The wholesale confisca tion of the lands now held by private owners is impossible whore the owners or persons interested in landed estates nro a ma jority of the voters , and to acquire this land by purchase would pile up n dubt on which all the rents received by the government would not pay the iitoruat , to say nothing of the cost of improvement , topaira nnd the salary of the great army of stewards who would have to bo employed to manage the tenants , collect the rents and look after the properly generally. Wo have made the government give awny vast bodies of land it already hold , and wo arc unwilling thiU it should retiiu n ninglu aero to the exclusion of n private citizen , who is willing to assume ownership nnd cultivation. In the Indian territory we cm see how land held in common remains unimproved and uncultivated , while nil around Texas , Nebraska nnd Kansas farm houses , orchards , villages and culti vated fields nro rapidly covering the whole face of the country. The no are a few of the objections which moat readily suggest themselves to Mr. Goorgo'a theory of land ownership. Individual proprietorship may bo thu cause of the great class distinctions which now exist , but the public must bo much more intelligent than they nro nt present , nnd must tink present self-interest , before they can be in duced to gonumlly accept such a radi cal tmd revolutionary theory an that so boldly advanced by the eloquent Cali fornia agitator. TIIK good old republican dhip which has done such excellent service to the country has become unruly. She re fuses to mind her rudder. Her Bourns is leaking baddly and there ia n gen eral belief that collision with the rocks has damaged her sheathing and torn several holes in her planking. Some political prophets are predicting that she cannot bo piloted safely past the reefs in which she is wet king towards another presidential election and thojo interested in rival vessels declare her fit only to bo beached and broken uj by the waves. The old ship is still seaworthy , but she needs repairs and new pilots. She wants the political barnacles to buj scraped off her bottom and a change in the olliera , who nro too busily engaged - gaged iu quarrelling on her decks to attend to the legitimate duties of di recting the movements of the vessel , lln- sails are all right , but they are i > tt directed ao us to catch thu breeze ' .f public opinion. Her rudder chains are unbroken , but the pilota turn the wheel in the wrong direction. Her scams can easily bo caulked and the leak stopped. But A change in com- rounder and pilots are essential. With that nnd a little judicious dry docking the old party ship ill bo Round enough to weather many a democratic gale and roach the harbor of public commendation safe and secure. ONE of thu most important offices to bo filled by the electors of Douglas county this fall , is that of county com missioner. To the tax payers of thin city nnd county this ollicc is In fact more important than any they will bo called on to fill at the coining election. Our county commissioner ) ! handle and cxponr1 vast sums of money every year , wid they have it in their power to squander or pocket thousands upon thousands of dollars every year. Ther is H general , and wo believe u well formed impression that tluro is n commicBloners ring in this county that docs pretty much ' as it p'eiscs with the vast interests en trusted to the care of the commis- aioncrH. Whether thii belief is well Founded or not public safety demands that the next commisiioncr shall bo n man honest enough nud with backbone cnouqh to check any scheme of plun der or jobbery that may bo proposed or nttemptcd. The wealthiest and most populous county In the state cannot nffjrd to have its affairs man aged by n cloflrf corporal inn ling. Tbo Independent Spirit. The indications ore incrcnmnc ; thnt in independent political spirit is abroad among the people , Thia is nt all timca a hopeful sign , because it means nctivity Instead of stagnation , md n thorough canvass of the merits of men and of measures , in place of n reluctant acquiescence in thu dictates of the interested minorities who dom inate caucuses nnd conventions. An Obliging Postmaster. The postmaster nt Garwood , PA. , lias tacked up on his office the follow ing bulletin : "Hereafter the postoflico will boopcnfrom 5 n. ro. to 12 m. , and from 1 p. in. until 0 p. m. All per sona requiring any further accommo dations will confer n favor upon the puotmastcr \ > j getting their mail at seine other office , or by taking meas ures to have the poBtmaster removed. " THE BIUEFJUESS B1LLIARDIST * * - , - Valeuttno'd Reputation for BualnofH Honor Bnai.-uthfulnoea. , - ' J-'juitlorn , Oct. 18,1S82. To thu Kafior ol TilKluV Your ( luosljcno jn * to Mi Valentino tine in > iMcrday'a : ixiue are mi/it of , hcni very pertinoul. nnd are easy * o jo answered to an honest , truthsaVk- ng nudlonco that desires to put" a rood man into the house of represent atives to do honor to Nebraska. But .hero are a good many others of equal : orco that might bo asked this monopoly ely candidate , who has not ono single qualification for the cilico that he had disgraced for two tcrmo. Those who liavo met him in Washington have found only a gt & overgrown boy , who has gained no influence nor landing during his two terms boynnd the regular routine of promotion that iu accorded to thu state and not to him. Ho is a fine billiard player , ao it is said , nnd in this and "going nbout" he is said to occupy most of his precious time by thoeo who ought to know and who do know. Let us nek him if ho has the first grent qualification for his honor able office integrity. His associates say , nnd many people 'of the state who try to do business with him also say , that "his promises are meaningless - loss , hia contracts made to bo broken , nnd his word of no possible account. " Ilia friends , when they arc npproacho'd and ho is charged with ( heap things and won't1 in h's ' avery day life , only reply , ' 'lutcgriij ? Wonovorknoivho claimed to have any , but ho is ono of thu boys and nu hope to elect him. " A leading ci'izan nnd gentleman visited a numb.-r of the growing towna of hia district n few wcckj since nnd convoreatlonna'urnlly turned on the election , and nlmoot unanimously they gave utterance to the opinion that "Valont uu'a word was worth nothing in politics or in business , " und puuh had an illuitrttion to givu of his utter untruthfulncssa nd wimt of com mon sincerity and business honor. Thu truth ia , the people of thu Third district have had enouu'h of this jump ing jack in politics nnd business , nnd if loll to themselves , with no outside itJInonceo , they would drop him nt oncu nud leave him to hia low , depraved tastes , and his briciless office in the city of West Point , that ho boasts of carrying in his breeches' pocket. It is just such barnacles as Valentine , all over the country , that are threatening to disrupt the repub lican party. The puoplo are rising against corrupt convention * , packed by political shysters and dead-boats , who find time when honest men are at work for their families , to do all the dirty work , and use all the low tricks of dishonest knaves to nom inate thtso men nnd then in holy her * ror cry out against "bolters" and "soreheads" who will not Lack up their nefarious prtoticcfl. The election of Valentine with his character and record will do more to break up the party hero than n hun dred defeats of sunn a shyster could no- oomiilUh. Men are beginning to think and in- ji ro why tuc1 ! mou ahould bo forced on them when there are plenty of good men to fiil their plates. Let the voters of the Third district vote for Mr. Turner , an able and honest man , and thus rubuko there rump conven tions , ami givn "our Yal , " an oppor tunity to rtlbct in diegraco on his uselcisneea in his present office nsseun in thu verdict of the people , A VOTEIU The "Hawthorn Centennial Ez- coUior Hoof Paint , " was patented May 24th , 1881 , and ottera patent num ber 241 , 803. Any person found or known to tamper with the manu facture of raid paint will bo punish ed to the full extent of law. No per son haa any authority whatever to sell receipts. UAWTHOUN & Duo. , Lancaster Pa , POINTS FROM POLK. Prosperity , Pietv anfl Politics the Chief Topics , The Bar lioom L jio of Laird too Spiritual to Stick. Past Glorio * nml Smutty Storlon His Only Arfjnmont- Co ic t > otiJtneGf Timlin * . OSCEOM , Polk county , Nob. , Oslo- ber 17. Oaceola is making some per manent improvements this jear ; busi ness men with plenty of capital find it profitable to atop here , nnd con- aiquont competition haa given them nn immense trade in all dcpirttnonts. But to fully appreciate the develop ment of our county ono must travel over the country and talk with the farmers ; there is scarcely a vacant quarter section to bo found. What wore considered waste landa on the bluff , or on the Platte river bottom are now furnishing pasture for horda of cattle and flocks of sheep. Seventy thousand acres of corn now ripening in Polk county will yield two million bushels. Alter paying the railroads ono third for the privilege of living iu Nebraska , our farmers will still have hnlf n million dollars left for incident al expenses. Iii Uaccola iho now pastor E J. Willis has taken nossession of the newly rotitted M. E parson n go and charge of the flock ; he socma to bo a Christian gentleman and tine scr- monizer. The Congregational flock uas also n now shepherd , Rov. that- man , ho ia a regular "Moody" in the work ia establishing n monthly re ligious paper , holding cottage prayer meetings semi-weekly , and in fact seems to bo determined to drlvo his Satanic Majesty entirely from our country. The most annoying thing that Oecoola and other stations along the line huyo just now is the late mails , the train ia duo hero at 9 p. m and seldom gets hero on time ; it leaves huro nt six n. m. leaving the business men no time to answer correspon dence. When wo have ankod for n change in the time we have been put off with good promisee , and yet wo nro told the pay received for carrying the mail ia enough to defray the expense - ponso of running a mail train. Mrs. Campbell , the suffragist , has spent eoniu time in our county with good < lloct. A school housu campaign has been organized and n strong tffurt will bo made to carry the amendment in the county which we btlievo will bo i'olitica are brjomiug. Dr. Mnoro .as billed for an address on last Wed- jeuJay afternoon , but the weather being unfavorable no crowd cimo to hoar him. The " "silver-tongued or ator , 'Jim Ljjrd , was billed for the eveviuy , ' Dut'ng the afternoon , palmar SfcOuna v joting under author ity , fts hi\ stated ) challenged Dr. filooro for a joint cxacusaiou with Mr. Laird on.Uho > poliUcal iouea of the day. Dr. Mooi'Qacrjptod , And now McOuno , IJT-thc ? 4x.t. issue of The Record goe& on Ut , say that when he visited the doctor ttp complete the ar rangements "tiicT1 doctor proved himself to Vu > ' the moot obatrepeious nTonopoUat , de manding two brjaecb.8 * * < > 'Mr. Liird'a ono opening and u'if clcai.ig. Thia the committcQ vtcuHl "Jot accede to , and the debate wi ) > 'de.ela'red "off.1 TJiis-is an out and > ut mlaitatoniL-nt of the fa'ota , and McOvlno knows it. Mr , Liird stated to McCf unc , in the pres ence of oevoral witnioeaes "Wluttver arrangcmento you ipaVo , remember I am to have the opening and closing. " Mr. Moore eaid " 4" lakis to make as muny speeches asM.r. \ . Liird. " The debate din not como jpff. A fair audi- ere * , o.nsidonng itbe 'hreatenins ' ; clouda , f including a nlumber of ladiw ) , gathcrca In the cent { house to hear the republican nomiuep fur congress from the Second dis'.riat JIBCUJB the politicil iasucs jf tt ) e diTo say that the nudieiica uaa disappointed would Btuto the f lot vt ry mi dly. Many were absolutely Jisgitcd. \ . His rpeeoh abounded m amatty J'arna uoh as no gantlcman wou d UJl in t loproacnco ot ladies who wireinlited 10 hear him speak , und before Ji a Ihnd rpoken half nn hour nearly half to ; aulionco had Keno homo. Ho euloAied in beauti ful phratoology tiiv t"wc record of the repuDlioan party. T/o acoworcd in bar-room oratory bWJ9f f the accusj- tions of J. Sterling Jlc-rton , but this was not what tha 1 * ? w Ire expect ing to Haten to.Tliti into ligent people - plo of the second trict are as well acquainted with the 5 hiatory of the republican parf w W' . Laird. No ono questions th'o , ichiovenonts of the party ; they have buen grmd , but as the good people By Jo thnr pray ers , "past blossini ; * wJUnot luflico. " There are as manj pooj lo in Bondage to monopoly pow ir n-id g eed to day oa there wro to tao slave power iu ISl'O. JH v ask is equal rights , "a governm mt I J tt 4 people and for the people. ' If o * ' we asked to vote fcr'tho roiinbli > vn irmciples in their origiiml purity if the ulat- forms which wo are aak < (1 ( t endorse had the soundness m Ui' ' jn w ichthoy had ot old , then Polk . > m y would scarcely cast a dui entm ; vi nr But toboaskod toauppirtpo ] tict ajhemca and jobbers uudor Uie pi t r republicanism - canism is too much Pe haj t when a fotr moro grand ok ropv vlic Ji itatea like Ohio repudiu e rej ib | can'jjb- bory , then our par y Jot In will ro- peut nnd rccugmzj the w Ut thupeo- plo. Until then w voli an i mouop oly. FORTHEPERMArlflTCU EOF CONQTBP , riofv' . Ho olher dl eu } | wllci \ In UiU coiuitry M Countlpfv * f , fun reoiedy kVWUA" MP KU V. \ < N * w . . . s uiwvvcr oUUnato jif H-v , thu rv a will overcome 1C. c PiL.Eo > uiliai Uirr < v"to"b < " 3 cotapllcatodfltb . . - , Kidney. . is Wort Btrenstb n UM * K4 part * * -M o e oiUcUr core U klndi of It ct evca when 1 G pbyddao * and WBdloM ' l ve before fkll- K - cd. t yif yo < * li0 Pl t5 u"otr ° uo ' ' nicETl US wm Oiyr ATT A COFFEE AND SPICE E011LS. Boasters and Grinders of Coffees and Spices. Manufacturers of IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER I Clark's Double Extracts of BLUEINQ , INKS , ETC. H. G. OLA UK it CO , Proprietors , 1403 Dmiplas S'rpit. ' Omalm. McMAHON , AEE11T & CO , , L i C Q 1315 DOUGLAS STREET , GMAUft , KEB. 1108 and 1110 Haraey ! t. , OM&H& , NEB. L. C. HUNTINGTON- & SON , DEALERS IN ; S , FURS , WOOL PELTS & TALLOW 204 Forth Sixteenth St. . - - OMAHA , NEB. B , f X | J005 Farnam St. , Omaha. A.ra acknowledged to bu the best by all "who have put them to a praotic il test. AUAPTKIJ TO HiED & SOI T GOAL , COKE OR WOOD. UANUKACTUIIED IY BUCK'S STOVE GO. , SAIHT LOUIS. Piercy & Bradford , SOLK AGKNTS FOR OMAHA , THE CITF STEAM LAUMBRY inakeH u ei > eciiiHy nf Collars & Guffs , AT TUB IUTK or Three Gents Each , Work Bollcitud fromnll over the country. The charge * and return pottage must ac company the package , Special rated to large club.s or aKcncIen , aSl.tf we \ \ ILK INS k KVANB. fi V7 i ) P wA < .v . SIDBSl'KINU ATTAOHMSNT-NOT PATKNT UD. A. J. SIMPSON LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY ilOO nd 1411 DoIKC Stieot , uug 7-mo 6m OMAUA , NEB. NOTii > HUT UST1TH3II TVOJUAN. H'Yom tl > o Boston Globe. ] Jlettn. ErUtorn i Thenbove is a food JUencai of Mrs. Lj-dlaK. Pink- tam , of J.ynn , Jla s. , ho above all other hunwii belnci mylw truthfully callulthe' JiiMU-rUcndonVoman , " oscmno of ln-r correspondents lovotocoll lur. Slw U K alousljr devoted to IK r v > ork , hjch U IIio outcome of a llfo-Etudy , nnd U olill cil to keep FI lady ajwMantu , to helji her OIISK er the Innjo correspondent * Inch dailj i > ouri iu upon her , i oth bearing its epeclal liurden of snTc-rinir , or Joy ct rcca ofrom it. Her \t-KCtaljI * Compound iinruodlclr.c for peed nnd not t-vil purjxwc-i. I IJITO ixr on ly Investigated Hand am satlhflcd of thu truth of thii. Oaaccount of IN iirotojiinPiltK.il | j n-ooramended nd jircwrllH'dliythelM-st plijTiIelaiu In the country. Ono wjsi "It winlis lllo a c-liarra tnd non-a much ) ( Un. H will euro tntln-ly the on.t form of falling of the uleru' , Li-iicorrlio > a , Irn-eular end lulnful Sl.nj'.ruati.jn.all Ovarian TruuMo , Innajmiiallon and UlCL-rotlan , llnodtn , nil Dhiiltti-cmenti uniUliocon- eo-iai-utspiralwojlno awl Li itiKieuUlyadapted to the Chance of IJr. . " It pinntat-sotrj-portion of the nyrtein , an-lBiv < new life and > I0'or. It nmutis faiutnem , tlutulen < - - } . ilu-troys all eravlnir for rflninlant" . nnd n llevt-s wu k. Bs of ( hestniivuh. It cun-a Ilhmllns , llendachiti , KtrvouitVostnitlon , doniRil DebilitysUtplusne- , DeprewJon tin J Imllit t Imu Tli/it In ling of beai iof do npau.lngpalnwulnht and backache , in ol ar > permanently curnl by lt uwx It will at all HOICK , and und r all clniitni-Uuu e + , art In liannony n ith th law thatfc-oviniithefemnli Kjrtrin. It conn only JI.r | U.ttlr or nil for $3. , and Is Bold by niRRlntH. Any advUr iuln l aa tu sp lal rv > ! < , tuul thnninia of ni'ui > wlioloUHl.viiri-itunicl to j.T/oct hilthbythouse < pf the VereUlle Compound , ran b obtained bynddn-Jn Mni.1. , with ktampfor reply , at hir homu In I.ynn , Sta.iii. ror Kldny Complaint of rttlttrH * this eonipoond \ n urrwd BI abundant t.-HtlmoulaUi h w. Mn , Ilnkhaui'uIJxiirrills 'Miyscii l-tit In tkc imrlil forthn furu nt , JllUoo < n.iHi nnd lorjildll/ ti llvr. . Ht-r Hloo.1 J"url i rwnrlM wini Inn lit It i f.iiAl llnxaiul IJJl f lr Inujual thw C.niif .un.l In IU popularity. All niun nwpMt In ru Min Atiictl of Uen-y who * Mia mbltl- I * to doI-IKcl ii t.tli-n. PhlUlolpliin , l-o. 00 ilr A. M. H. "HEAT YOUR'HOUSES" FURNACES ( N TH * WORLD- MADI : iiy RIOHAliDS'WB03WTON ) & CO CHIOA'GO./LLS / , Embody new 1882 l-Jw-weunsnti. Mor. ° ,1 ( SurS.Cft ; less to ku.pln ? idcr uio loss fuel t i)1' ) ' ive ' more I boat end a larger volume " ( > uro air ' " > u ny. furnace made. / SoW by 1'JEKCEV fc B DFORDOio&aaNeli. / jj-21-UJm i