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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1887)
P" THE OMAHA DAILY BEE ; .THURSDAY , OCTOBER 27 , 1887. LEGAL BARRIERS SWEPT AW AY The Supreme Court's Opinion On tbo Registration Law. ALL ITS PROVISIONS VOID. Judge Kccsc Says It Is So Crudely Ptatrn Up That It Knfl > rccinent Would Hare Ilccn Impractic able District Court. [ FROM THE BEE'S LINCOLN Tha long-lookcd-for decision oa the regis tration law was handed down yesterday by Judge Reese. The opinion , which Is very voluminous , is in effect that the entire regis tration law is unconstitutional and that all acts under its provisions are void. The sub stance of the decision is clearly stated in the following syllabus prepared by the court : State ex reL Stearns vs O'Connor. Quo war- ranto. Judgment of Custer. Opinion by Reese , J. 1. Under the constitution ot the state of Nebraska which prescribes the qualifications of voters , and provides that all ejections shall be free , aniMhcre shall bo no hindrance or Impediment to the right of a qualified voter to exercise the elective franchise , a registra tion law which absolutely deprives an elector of Uif richt to vote unless registered on one of four "days , the last one being ten days prior to the election , Ss void. 2. A registry law , so far as it provides for a register of qualified electors to bo made , and which constitutes such registration one mode of proof of the elector's right , and so far us it might require an elector.whosename is not upon such rcgisUrtto : make any other reasonable proof of his right to the judges of election at the time of offering his vote , would be valid ; but where it absolutely deprives the elector of his vote unless previously regis tered upon certain days named in the law it is void. 3. A registry law , to be valid , must be rea sonable and impartial and calculated to facili tate and secure the constitutional right of suffrage , and not to subvert or injuriously , unreasonably , or unnecessarily restrain , or iin | > ede theright. . Vide Daggett vs. Huston , 43 Ohio St. , 543. 4. The cct to amend the election laws for metropolitan cities and cities of the flirt class in the state of Nebraska ( Laws of lbb , 314) ) , being in contravention of that clause of tbo constitution that * * Xo bill shall contain more than one subject , which shall be clearly ex pressed in its title , and no law shall bo amended unless the new act contains tbo sec tion. or sections , so amended * and the section or sections K > amended shall be repealed , " Is void. void.Tho The following decisions were also filed : Delaney vs Lander , error from Lancaster county , amrmed ; opinion by Cobb. J. 1. The contract sued on examined and con strued. 2. Where a contract has been reduced to writim : , as a general rule of law , verbal evi dence is not allowed to bo given of what passed between the parties , either before the written Instrument was made , or during the time of its preparation , so as to add to or subtract from , or in any manner to vary or qualify the written contract , 3. After a contract has been reduced to writing it is competent for the parties at any time before breach of it , by a new contract not in writing , either altogether to waive , dissolve , or annul the former agreement , erin in any manner to add to , subtract from , or vary or qualify the terms of it ; which is to bo proved partly by the written agreement , and partly by the > ub * < 2quent verbal terms enrrafted uj-on what will be thus left of the written agreement. Driscoll vs Troughton. Error from Douglas county. Affirmed. Opinion by Maxwell , Ch. J. 1. Wierfl there is a conflict in the testi mony and it is equally balanced , a verdict will not bo set aside as being against the weight of evidence. 2. Instructions sot forth in the opinion , Held , to be predicated ujon the testimony and not erroneous. stabrook vs Hatberoth. Ijror from Doug las county. ReverH-d. Opinion by Max well , Ch , J. The action of forcible entry and detainer Wider the statute , being a civil remedy to recover - . cover the possession of premises unlawfully and with force withheld from the plaintiff , it will bo sufficient to sustain the charge of forcible detainer , that the party unlawfully in ixjsjesslon refuses to vacate the premises on lawful notice so. to do. Campbell vs Coonradt , 22 Kas. , 7&S , approved and fol lowed. Myers vs Koenig , 5 Neb. , 419. D. M. Strong , of Dodge county , and W A. McAllister , of Platte county , were admitted to practice. The following causes were ar- rued and submit U1 : Sturtevant vs 'Wino- fand , motion to dismiss ; ICeeler vs Elston ; Singer Manufacturing comjuny vs McAllis- lar : Sioux City & Pacific railway company vs Smith ; Omaha & . Republican Valley roil- way company vs Brown. * IX D13TUICT COUttT. In district court yesterday. Judge Chap man , who returned from Kearney in the morning , resumed Jury trials , while Judgts field heard the cases which were tried with out a Jury. The disc on trial the day before was given to the Jury at 10 o'clock and an other Jury was at once impaneled in the libel suit brought by Leonard II. King against the State Journal company. In this case , as stated heretofore , Mr. King sues the Journal for (5,000 for the publication of an alleged defamatory article against his character. The article in question was sent by the Jour nal's correspondent at the Bennett camp meeting to the Journal a year ago. The communication alleges that Mr. King was drunk and riotous and was forcibly ejected from the meeting. A trial shortly after in the county court cleared Mr. King from bad actions at the meeting and this suit for dam ages was shortly after instituted. The talc- Ing of evidence was commenced in the case yesterday. The trial promises to be of no remarkable interest. KlicninntlMn. is undoubtedly caused by Inctid acid in the blood. This acid attacks tbo llbrous tissues , and causes the pains and aches in the back , shoulders , knees , ankles , hips , and wrists. Thousands of people kave found in Hood's Sarsaparilla a positive cure for rheumatism. This Bedicinc by its purifying1 action neutra lizes the aciditv of the blood and also builds up and strengthens the whole body. Heal KMatc Transfers. Daniel Kendall and wife to James F Uyan , lot 2 , blkT in Kendall's add to Omaha , wd . $ 1,200 Kills L Bierbowcr , marshal , to James M Woolworth , lot 2 , blk C , In Shull's add to Omaha , marshal docd . 1 Arthur O Wakeley to Alexander Lemm , lot 14 in Barker's sub of the ne of the K of sec 04 , tp5 ! , not r 13 , wd . 375 Jacob Leah Kcndleto C. II. Walworth , lots 11 and I'.1 , blk 2 , in Hush & Scl- by's add to South Omaha. . 9.V ) Lucius D Moore to Charles Wilson Higgins , beginning at a point 27 f t n of the s Ijne of lot 23 in Himebaugh Place , running thence n 34 ft , thence ICO ft , thence s 34 ft , thence w 100 ft to place of beginning , being 34x160 r ftwd . 2,000 Allen A Koch and Oriama A Koch , husband and wife , to James E An derson. the undivied K interest of lot 4 , blk 1 , m the sub div of J I Kedick to the city of Omaha , w d. . . 2,000 Charles C Hou&cl und Maria J Housel , husband and wife , to F M Couners , w K of lot 7 in A II Saunders add to Omaha.v 0 . SOO Samuel E Kopers and Martha Uoirers , husband and wife , to James M Itoss , that part of lots 5 and fi , bik 10 , in tbo Improvement assoclotlon's odd to Omaha , beginning at the south- writ corner of said lot Sand running thence north along- cast line of IStb fct , 47 ft , thence east 103 ft , thence K > uth47ft , thence west lltS ft to place of beginning ; , w d . . . . . 300 Jacob Kocherthol and wife and Mows Kochmhal and wife to Sarah Hern- stein. n ' } ft of the s 44 ft of the e 35 ft of loll , blk 121 , In the city of Omahi.cq . . . . . . . William A Shermand wife and Jesse S Sherman uud wife to Henry BU-ck , the w of the 127 ft of lot 66 t Glse * ' addtoOmkha , wd . 2,000 Goorso E Bertrand and wife to Henry Kick , strip of land 7 ft wide along the n side of the w ff of the 1 127 ft of lot 68 , Gwea' add to Omaha , wd , . 1 H Nelson ( single ) to Edward M Fairfie'.d , lot 0. b.k 3 , la McCor- raick'c 2nd add to Omaha , q c 400 rhomas B Norris and Bertha L Mor ris to Johu Carmody , lots 4 and > , blk , In Dwight & Lyman's add to Omaha , w d 1,300 Thomas HVing and > vifo to Mrs. Mary S Wells , w H of lot 13 , blk 11 , in Keod's l t add to Omaha , wd. . . . l.MO Harry I ! Millcrfsmgle ) to Harvo M Trimb.e and Charles G Gushing , lot 5 , in King's add to Omaha , w d 900 H I ! Mulcr ( single ) to Harvey M Trimble and George W Howard , lot 10 in King's odd to city of Omaha , wd : WO Edwin H Sherwood and wife to the Irvington Congregational society , for church porjioscs only , beg. at a point S13 feet south and 83 feet cast of the quarter section cor on the north line of section 3i in 116 north ol range 12cast ; thenceeost ISOfeet ; thence south 330 feet ; thence west ISO fe > t ; thence north 330 feet to place of beginning containing 93-100 of an acre , q c , 3 David H Stewart and wife to Fred erick Rath , east } { of lot 6 blk 343 wd 5 Frederick Rath ( single ) to Maria Stewart , east K ° f l ° t 0 in blk 849 , w d. . . . . . - . C Elmer E Finney ( slncle ) to Charles F Goodman , lot 20 hi Tuttles tub dir , q c i jeorgo W E Dorsey and wife to Charles F Goodman , lot 20 in Tut- tlessubdlr , qc. . . . . 1 Henry B St John and wife to Charles V Goodman , lot 20 in Tuttles sub div. q c 1 A II Pouer and wife to William Clark , ct nl , undivided 1-12 of 119 , 20-100 , in the sw quarter of 30,13 , 13 , deed , C,000 Total sales $21,703 Iliiildins Permits. The following bulldine permits were issued by Superintendent Whitlock yesterday : Joseph Steiger , 1-story and basement dwelling , Williams , between Four teenth and Fifteenth , to cost. $ COO John Idokner , cottage , Blonde , be tween Thirty-sixth "and Thirty-sev enth , to cost 200 Third Congregational church , brick church with basement. Spencer , near Twentieth , to cost. 13,000 A C Troup. double 2-story frame store and flat , Twenty-fourth and Cassius , to cost 0,000 Thomas Lund , 1-story frame dwelling , Twenty-eighth near Grant , to cost. . SOO Mary C Beechcr , brick basement to dwelling , 1313 Leavenworth , to cost 200 W H Morehoue , 3-story frame resi dence and barn. Sivncer between Twentieth and Twenty-first , to cost 4,500 P B Bcldcn , lV-story frame barn , Thlny-fourth near Frances , to cost 200 Lares Johnson , IJvstory frame dwell ing , Blonde , between Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth , to cost 1,000 Eight permits , aggregating . t24,400 An Ungrateful Son. According to the story of Mrs. Dorsey , who lives in a little cottage on the corner of Thirty-first and Franklin streets , her step son , Wyman Dorsey , Is anything but an ex- exemplary young man. Mrs. Dorsey is a widow lady and a cripple , having to walk with a-crutch. She has two little children whom she has had to support by going out and doing day's work. Wyman , although enjoying the comforts of her home , has failed to do anything to help support her , and has made it a habit periodically to come home drunk and make things disairreeable for her. Sunday morning he came home in his u ual intoxicated condition and drove her from home , and refusing her admittance until a late hour that night. Meanwhile he tore the furniture to pieces and thrust the fragments into the stove. The bedding also met with the same fate. She therefore swore out a warrant for his arrest last evening and he was locked up. "Wreck on the Union Pacific. A wreck occurred on the Union Pacific near the Twentieth street crossing , about 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon , but fortunately nobody was hurt , The trackmen had re moved a rail from the main track and had posted a flagman to warn all approaching trains. Tim Monyhan , the engineer of en gine No. 516 with an extra from the west , saw the fingman , but the train was under such headway that he was unable to stop be fore he was off the track. After leaving the rail the engine turned to the richt and stopped right across the second track south. The tender became detached , and it with six cars went into the ditch to the left , two of them being totally wrecked. One of these was loaded with fruit * , but these were dam aged but slightly. Fifteen cars were more or less broken but $3,000 will probably cover everything. A hundred dollars will pat the locomotive in good trim again. A Xoichbor Quarrel in Court. John Benson is lying in a cell at the cen tral police station charged with stealing a couple of sections of stovepipe from Mrs. Kitty Hart. The two are neighbors , and during the summer John has kept a stove standing Just across the line on the lot of Mrs. Hnrt. When ho came out to get his stove a day or two ago , she demanded pay for storage. Benson refused to give her any thing , but , waiting until she had disappeared , carried the stove into his house. There hap pened to be two pieces of stovepipe with it that belonged to Mrs. Hart , and she speedily bunted up the city attorney and swore out a charge of larceny against Benson. It was served on him yesterday and he will be tried to-day. Siting a Railroad. x Hans P. Jensen , according to a petition filed with the clerk of the district court this morning , asks that the B. Sc. M , railroad com pany pay to him the sum'of 3,000 for injuries received under the following conditions : About the middle of last September Jensen purchased a ticket for Central City , and after riding several miles was Informed that the train went only as far as Aurora. Jensen then asked that the train be stopped at Hamp ton where he had friends. The train slacked up at this station and Jensen Jumped , his foot being caught in tha wheels and crushed so badly that amputation was necessary. "Wants Her Baby's Father. A Swedish young lady named Lizzie Swanson - son has sworn out a warrant for the arrest of Ferdinand Hanscn , whom she claims is the father of her baby girl , aged nine months. At the time of the birth of the child Hansen - sen skipped for unknown parts , but has lately returned. Ho now refuseto do anything for her. although he promised faithfully to marry her before he accomplished her ruin. All that she asks for Is proper maintenance for her child. _ Unequalled Dr. Sage's Catarrh Rem- Veterans Secure Mark Twain. A committee appointed by the Custer post , G. A. R. , met yesterday afternoon in Major Kent's office and made arrangements for an entertainment to be given under the auspices of the post on Thanksgiving evening at Boyd's opera housft , if that place can t se cured , The drawing card will be Mark Twain , That dread terror of mothers suffo cating croup , is speedily subdued by using Dr. J. H. McLean s Tar Wine Lung Balm. 25 cc-nts a bottle. Mattle Wood Hound Over. The preliminary examination of Mattle Wood , tba colored womaa who stabbed Charles Green last Friday evening , was held yesterday in the police court. She wa * put under t3WX ) to appear before the district court. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Wtan Baby vu tick. care her Cutorift. When six , wu ttlU , she critU f ex C tlori , Wlen | L txvaicB MUa , be clunj to CuMrtt , VTbeo tboUJ ChlUrea , the f ro them Castori * . A SPLENDID BRIDAL GIFT , Ono Million Dollars in Government Bonds. A BACHELOR'S SERIOUS ERROR. Cornnlbn The Dansensc The New Order of AVomcn New Eves In the Commercial Garden Clara Kclle'8 Letter. Yor.K , Oct. IS. [ Correspond ence of the BEE. ] A hundred bridal gifts lay on a table in a parlor. Tbcy were a variety of articles from silver ware to fans , from screens to diamonds , and guesta were pa&singfrom * ono to an other in a critical examination. On one stand was a low , oval glass case , and it was observable that close by ftood two men who never stirred from their stations. They were guardians of that onu present. Was there some thing in that glass receptacle alive and that would fly off if uncovered ? Possi bly , for "wealth takes wings. " Gazing into the case the visitors saw a loose heap of government bonds. Their value was a million dollars. That was the bridal gift of Morris , the Croesus of lottery men , to his daughter on her marriage to Thurlow Weed Barnes , nephew of the late Thurlow Weed. The wedding was elegantly plain in other respects , and even bonds arc common in aspect , but what a quantity of eager interest did center in the mill- ioned eventl And were they not re garded as truly "the holy bonds of wedlock ? " I went with a girl friend yesterday to ECO her beautified. The place was no factory of hair colorings or complexion washes , but the highly professional New _ York ho-spital , ono of our great public benefactions , and the beautifier was staid and orthodox Dr. Bull. The maiden was already pretty , pave that she had the disfiguration known as harelip. The improvement will make her entirely kissable. Too few parents are willing , through false kindness to their children or through ignorance , to submit their little ones to the knife of the surgeon at an early age , and as a result we have around us unsightly persons who might have had their features moulded into these of good- looking men and women. The case in point was that of a girl about seven teen who had a single harelip with pro trusion of the teeth of the upper jaw. There was also acleft in that jaw which , of course complicated the deformity. Had the operation been performed in infancy , the chances are that the woman would have shown very slight , if any traces of THE SUKGEOX'S tVOUK. but as it is a more or less plain scar will always bo visible. She was put under ether , and a small slice cut off one side of the fissure in the lip and a slice off the other side , nearly , but not quite to the bottom of the lip. Then these two raw edges were brought to gether and stitched ; and the piece of fiesh that remained from the second in cision was carried along the base of the lip so that no indentation should bo afterwards observed. The surgeon's plastic hand now went to work to fash ion the disfigured member into one that should serve her well for the remainder of her days. This then completed the lip and there was left only the protrud ing teeth to remedy. With two or three sharp blows of the mallet upon the chisel the top part of the two sides of the jaw were separated , brought into opposition by depressing them and secured - cured in place. Then the operation ended and it showed immediate signs of great and lasting improvement in appeara'nco , one which cannot fail to be of vast ben efit to her as a woman. She has never voluntarily smiled since she was old enough to known of her disfiguration , so fearful was she of displaying it. A month hence she can begin a life of smiles. A tasse for the grotesque and horrible that leads men to wear skulls for scarf pins and coffins for sleeve buttons , that induces a dainty girl to choose a dress with snakes outlined on it , and a metal spider perched at her throat , has got into architecture. I went to call , and. mounting the steps , laid my hand carelessly on the iron rail that meandered up the stone stoop. To my horror it fell on the head of a bronze and realistic snake that was coiled round the balustrade. I stood aghast and looked. The whole row of fine houses had the same sort of approach , and twisting about all the hand-rails was the vile -eerpent with battered head and baleful eyes natural and hideous enough to make ono afraid to enter or leave the house. It's to be hoped old Major Jim Jams never rents one of 'em ; he'll come some night from the club and break his neck in a fit at his own door. It is a bad practice to write several letters at one job , enclose them in en velopes and address the batch. Many accidents occur. A gentleman who uses a pencil for his correspondence , but makes the superscriptions in ink , wrote the three following epistles , secured them in envelopes and laid them in order on his deslc. The first was to his prospective mother-in-law , the second to his latest and best girl , and the last to his tailor. Discovering that the ink was absent in the stand , ho left his desk for a moment. A clerk in search of a ruler took up the top letter that lay upon the article , and put it below the the missive intended for the tailor. Back came the com- letter-writer. Ho addressed Elete jtter first in the row to his coming mother-in-law , the next to Maude , nnd the misplaced epistle to the _ tailor. At 4 o'clock that afternoon a military look ing female , sitting beside an invalid daughter , got black in the face as she read on the stamped paper of the dis covered son-in-law : ' 'Baby-mine Your pet will be able after all to get away. Have sprung the tallest kind of a stall on the Varapiro , which I will tell you about when we meet. Take a car to Vesey street , and get there at sharp S with a big appetite for a good supper. YOU SWEET LITTLE TOAD , it will be a long day for your old man , but 8 o'clock will have to make a land ing , and then hurrah ! " That was the way the lightning struck in ono place. Up town in a gorgeous flat Maude Tricot puzzled over this mystic epistle : "You old fraud , that cheviot was the worst job that ever was done. 1 thought the checks beat the world giving me fits , but here you are worse than ever. I shall certainly have to try some ono else , and I don t want to , but you are certainly getting infernally careless. Will let you have sorao money during the month , but I'm beaotly hard up just now. " At the moment 'that Maud was imagining her sweetheart was gone completely mad , and that an infuriated middle-Bged woman was making her toilette to go down town , George's tailor studied this document with a dazed expression : "Kindest of friends , break to my httlo one this unpleasant news. No Georgie to-night. The bank has , a meeting that THE NEW YORK AND OMAHA CLOTHING CO Are very busy this week unpacking new winter goods , and placing them before their custc- mers , who are confident of getting the best when purchased at THE NEW YORK AND OMAHA. They are having a great run on their NOBBY CHEVIOT SUITS AT $10 to $16.50. These suit : ; have no equal either in style or price in this city. You can buy a good WORSTED OVERGOAL1 FOR $6.50 , or an EXTRA FINE ONE FOR $15 to $25. As to UNDERWEAR , you can get a suit all the way from $1 to $3.50 , and higher , including the very best importations. If your boy needs a hat 25c will buy one at the NEW YORE ANP OMAHA , and 100 other styles ranging in price from 50c up to $5. 13O8 Farnam Street. will no doubt necessitate a run from hero to Boston ; will wire you in the morning if that should be the case. How sad that this parting can't bo avoided , but business id busi ness , and it's for both vour dear sakes that I must attend to this little matter. With my love and a kiss , your troubled lad. " At S a cab containing a lady stood in Vessey street writing for a gentleman , who bounced the door open and blurted out to the driver the name of a restaurant. "Now , my little girl , tell mo all the news. " he added , as he sprang in ; and his blood froze and his hair rose as his mother-in-law said : ' 'You villain , I will. " Cornalba is ono of the three or four premier danseuses who , for a number of years , have led the ballots in grand operas and other pretentious stage en tertainments. 12 you can recall her at nil , you will do so as a little woman of thirty-five , with an intellectual face , willowy figure and iron toes. Dp you over think of these dancers as ordinary women , in the garb of their sex , and as doing anything else than whirling and tip-toeing in a theatre ? Morello is an Italian who keeps one of the numerous table d'hote restaurants in New York. Like the rest , ho sells to you for a dollar lar a dinner composed of maccaroni , grease and some other things. I ate there yesterday. Into the room came a woman who first attracted my attention by the fact that she wore neither hat nor wrap , and was therefore manifestly a lodger. When 1 looked again her face became familiar. "Who is she ? " I asked of Morello. "I recognize her face well enough , but I can't place her. " "That is my wife , " said the caterer. 'tThen probably I have not teen her. I was mistaken. " "O , no ; SUE IS COUXALBA , the danseuse. " Thus are our stage fairies shockingly related to humdrum life. The largest assemblages of feminine beauty in America are at what are " " " ' " "authors' called "professional" or ma tinees in this city. On these occasions the house is practically free to ac tresses at a time of disengagement. One of them occurred this week. At least six hundred women werethereand the majority were young ac tresses , ranging from Mrs. Lang- try and Mrs. Potter in beauteous fame to exhibits from the burlesques and comic opera choruses. Langtrysat between a girl from the mute but lovely rear row of a current travesty and a pupil from a school of acting , either of whom was handsomer than sho. When it is considered that physical beauty is the most important element in the selec tion of actresses , and that New York is the market for histrionic aspirants , it can be believed that an audience to largely composed of actresses was mar vellously handsome. A good "photograph of that crowd with their vast variety of beautiful faces , and their actresy pic- turesqueness of attire , would be a pic ture to never tire of looking at. A woman somewhat distinguished in social lifo said to me : "I liave been greatly edified with a description in a series of articles on the effect upon women of n"1 THE NEW OnDEB OF TmXGS. in New Yqrkwhich brings several thou sands of girls into relation with men in pusinessr The articles were filled with interviews with men , who all declared that if anything was needed to make the fair sex perfect , it was to set them side by side with male clerks and em- plea in the offices and counting-rooms down town. These gentlemen forgot what all the great writers of this mor tal world have declared , that woman is a mystery past finding out ; and all leap into the subject boldly only to find it over their depth and to be put to the necessity of swimming out ungracefully. The manager of a telegraph office - fice remarks that the girls in his employ pick out the best opera tors for husbands , as if that was a proof of their smartness , whereas if they were so wonderfully keen they would not marry any telegraph operators at all , not oven the best. Ho declares that this now race ol women ; the type writers , clerks , cashiers and errand girls , are never insulted by the men , do not lese their femininity in the least , dress just as well as other women left at home , knit and t-ew during the lunch eon hour , develop their minds so as to read oven the financial columns in the newspapers , take home the magazines , beautify the commonest rooms in the meanest tenements , and never are known lobe concerned in a single scan dal , such as are found in the churches and the parlors of upper-tcndom. "Such nonsense ! " the woman ex claimed ; "such delicious dreaming ! Why , when I read about these new Eves in the now commercial Garden of Eden , I was positively on the verge of forgetting that these could possibly be the same maidens 1 ride up and down town with in the cars occasionally ; the same that I am forever meeting on the streets. But there is no mistake about it. They are the same. And yet men will believe that series of discoveries about our sex. They are certain to do so. For two reason : first , because half the male sex has a capacity for being stuiTed with romance about women , the limit of which no one has yet reached ; second , because the other half who employ women on starvation wages will , after reading of the good they are doing our sex , salvo their consciences with thoughts of the philanthropy of substituting girls for men at half pay , and will discharge more men , and still1 further reduce the wa es of their girls. "As proof of the sudden elevation of womanhood itis announced that tba cashier of the largest ladies' shopping store in town is a young girl. But she is paid only one-half what a competent man would get. Another notable in stance of the wonders of the female revolution is that all the clerical work of a certain largo concern on Broadway is performed by beautiful young ladies in fashionable gowns. I sincerely trust that the reference is not to the estab lishment that is pointed to by all its neighborhood with a very RIGID FIXGEH OF SUSriCION because the employer nnd the beautiful young girls are known to go into the country together over Sundays ono this Sunday and another the next and to lunch with him one at a time , and to quit work and stroll uptown with him. and I know not what the merchants of the district do not say. But no woman with an v gump tion or judgment would dwell upon cases like that as representative of female working life , for it does not take much experience or penetration to know that women who drudge and toil for the wages the sex get in this city must bo made of tough-fibred virtue" Shame and hard work are not friendly. One is not often caught in the society of the other. But it is a wee little trifle too much to read of elevating the young woman by putting her at work at men s work just when they are in the midst of a ten years' spell of wonder ing what can bo done to rescue your sex from the injury this life is doing to it. For that is exactly my case. For years I have been perplexing my self with wonder when the world would wake up this abuse of women.I would rather have the the stage reformed , the ballot purified , the pulpit unsexcd , the laws invoked against women's work in shops and factories or any hundred of a thousand awfully radical things done to release my sex from this yoke of man's greed , than have the present state of things continue. " That is bitter talk , truly , and yet it came from a woman who has philanthropically - thropically studied the subject. CLARA BELLE. CREAM lAKlH ? Its superior excellence proven in millions of homes tor more than a quarter of a century. It is used by the United States Government. En dorsed by the heads of the great universities , as the Strongest. Purest and Most HeathfnL Dr. Price's the only Baking Powder that does not contain Ammonia , Lime or Alum. Sold only in cans. cans.PHICE BAKING POWDER CO , New York. Chicago. St. Louis. The Theatric * ! Profession. Xerit will win and reeelr * pcLlle roeocnltlon and praise. Fact * , wMcb an U > oatcoae of feneral ex- Irlence , trowlzj throat years of critical mad practical tat , become u rooUJ asd Imsorakle at the rock of Gibraltar in publlo opinion , anj Ltn * . f arts need no further raarant o ai to their gena Incawa. Tb l3 < ! Upataba ! fact that Swift's Sp cl e b th. b t blood partner In the world , li one of theta ImmOTible Gibraltar rock facts cf whlea wttar. t ; tenand .very Clj'i exp ri nca roou tali eon- TicUon deeper and dtrwr In puclle optzttm. T TT elm of our people la jLmrrica ana In Earot L eTerr trade , calling and protrulon. Lcciudlnr th. medical profeailon , car. bom. TOlnctarr t * U- mony to u > e nnutkaol. Tina * * or s. a. a. and lu InZaUlbls eOcacj In rartcc all dJ * aMa of tha bJon.1. Tceta teittmootalj are en SI. by tb. thou- aanda , acd open to the ininecUon of all. Now coma. nntoUcltmi. two ( iUUn ul'cal mecton or the theat rical profruum. who cratef ully tettlfjr to the Y-ouder- fal eumiT. cutini * cf tha Srocmc jn thrlr tcdl. TWntl caict. Their tfttimonlali are herewith iab- Qlttov ] to tb publlo without further comment let them l peak for thczruelTea. Tb lidUa memtxrct the famoui Thalia Theatre Company , ot New York. andfora rljof tfteErtUrare Theatre , Berlin , Otr- many.and of UeVlcker'iStock Comi-uiT.c.rCUcaiO. The * ntlem n U a well knows member of to. > w York Thalia Tbeatr. Company. Bxh are well knowa la theatrical drclt * la tfcl * country and la uropa. Charlotte Handuw' . Te.tlraeoy. lirw Yea * . MmS , int. Swift Sptclflc Coicpa&y. Atlanta. Ga. : Gentlemen H Tlnz been annoi * ! with plmplea. eroptlODi and roujhneai cf IL * akin , from biirt con- atucn of my bKoi , for more than a year , I uw4 a leading pre ( > aritlon c f tanapanila other adrer- Ufed rem dl < - to no effect. Tbeo I eouulted a prom * lnnt phjrilcian. aad from hla treatment received no benefit. 1 then conelDdkd la try th. B. E. a. rera- * } J for the LJooJ and n . or all packacea. by a thorough eradication ot my trouble and reitortng moothoeti to my lain. h e made ma happy , and 1 cheerfully glte you ikl * UaUmonJil for uch UM andpubUcltya youwlhto3iaeofit. i. ATOOW. U } Bower/ , near Canal Stfoat. Data Hankerl'i Teiljmoiy. Th * Swift Cc dfie Company , Atlanta Ga t G < rntIrBen-rr two yean I had a terer eauef fxfm * . luted iartoapa , > ulphurioaiaaiMlTart9aB other rente-Sir * , and wu precrtttt forbr n urn ben of phTtlclaei. but found no relief. At lau I deter * mined to try the S. S. S. rem dy. aaj a ren or .teat bottle. haTe thoroughly relieve * ! xno , and you r n UM thli cortlScata In any mannar you lah. Hpoo lUfcauu , " * Ttml" T"t" > .ew York. Kay 7rtaU ic Blood and Etta t > Ueaei mall4 f re * . ' T SWIFT 'incinc Co , ° rawer S. > " uu. Oa. Who U WEAK , JTERTOCS. Dmil.ITA- TED.wholnhliKOLl.TRr.rt KJ > HA.\rE has TIIIFLEO away bin VIOOIlof IIUUY , HID and MAJi'HOOn.causing exhumlnc dralni upon the FOUVTA1 > S of LIFE , HEADACHE. BACKACHE , Drradlul Dreamt. WEAKM-SS < , f Memory , ItlSII- FUI.XES.Sin HOCIETY. PIMPLES upon the FACE , and all the EFFECTS lefidlneto EARLY DECAY and perhaps CO.VSUMP. T10X or IXHAXITT , ahonld consult at once the CELEBRATED Dr. CUrVe , Eftabllchcd 1851. Dr. Clarke h . made NERVOL'N DE- BILITT. CHRONIC and all Dkeaset of the OE.VITO URINARY Orrans a Ufa Etudy. It makes XO dlfierenre WHAT you have taken or WHO ha failed to cure yon. * f FEMALES suCerinp from dlteaset pecu liar to their aex can consult with , the assurance of ipeedy relief and cute. Send 2 cents postage for works on your dlseafo * . * -Send t cent * postage for Celebrated Work * on Cbrontr , Xcrvoua and Dell * cat * Disease * . Consultation , personally or by letter. fre > . Consult the old Dortor. Tboavaada enreU. Office * and pnrlor * private.Those contetnplatlnK Marriage end for Dr. Clnrke'a celebrated guide Male and Femnle , each ISc. . loth Sc. ( tamp ) . Before conSdin * your case , consult Dr. CLARKE. A friendly letter or call may save future < u2erinzand thane , and add colden yean to life , WB&ok "I.ll > ' < ( Secret ) Er. rorm , " 60c. ( stamps ) . Medicine and writings eent everywhere , lecnre from oxponure. Uoun , 8 to 6 : Sund&yc. 9 to 12. Address. P. D. CLARKE. M. D. 18Q So. Clark SL. CHICAGO. ILL. A k your retailer for the JAMES MEANS $4 SHOE JAMES MEANS $3 SHOE , according to your needs. CAUTION" t Pwitlrtly nrtie renutne nnleti ncr i rim-and prlot appetrplitalyonthe w > > > . Som * CMlen , In order to mate a lirrrr profit , will recommend the inferior md with which the market 1 , , flooded. JAMKSMEANS : 4 1 Ml OK li UcU and ityhsb. It Ctt like a necking and RE- 1 OUlllKs O " J5KKAK- k r iytheflr > ttlmrttlwcm. It irill MUitj the moit fittidtouiulttitn e-rfry 11tal mprct fqu J to which hare rhlthmo Meant U Shot for Coyi ttfnre- talkdat 7nr * . JAM"ES SrKAN * * 3 SHOE 1 , tl ) ontl- oal S3 Shot and 1 * aowlctrly the only ihn of lu pnc which ha at r l ? n placrd exttnslTtly on th narkrt In which durability U conld r d b'fore ra rt outward apv arinc * . Th < - , ho , re nMJ bj th but rttallfn thraurhoat the United State , , and e Cl place theca eailly within your reach In any tut * or territory If you will tend u , a pnital card , mentioning thl , paper. ' me * Mrana & Co. , tl Lincoln St. , Boiton. llau. Full line of the above Shoes for sale in OMAHA by O. W. Coot , 13TIC Farnam street ; G. S. Miller , 612 North Uth street ; Haj-wanl Bnw. . 4'J7 ' South JUth street. In Cocscii. SlLVrra by Eargent 4 Evans , 412 Broadway. Proprietor Omaha Business College , IN WHICH IS TAUQHT Book-Keeping , Penmansliip , Commercial Law , Shorthand , Telegraphing and Typewriting. Send for Collect JoumaU S. E. Cor. 16th and Caoital Ave. J. B. HAYNES , OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHER , Third Judicial District , 37 CHAMUEE OF COMMEKCE. THE CAPITOL HOTEL LINCOLN. , NEB. The belt known and moit popular Hotel In the Male. I-ocitlon central , appointment ! tintla i. llead uarteri ( or commercial men and all political and public ctlheruio , E.P EOGOEJf Proprietor. DREXEL & HAUL , ( Successors to John G. Jacobs. ) and Emlialmcrs At the old stand. 1 WT Farnam St. Orders by tele graph solicited and promptly att nd a-to. Telelephone Ko. S. _ _ SteekPiano Remarkable for r > yj erful sympa thetic tone. pIlablH action and absolute - solute durability M years record. tha be t cuaratitf e c f the ! - leccecf thfM ! instruments. WOODBRIDGEBROS. W UNDEVELOPED PARTS of tL Uidy enlarf U and > lrecic.thece4. Fell partlo- ftlan.Ucale4) txte. JUttt MJtP. CO-.liciri ! , > . , M. T. THE CHICAGO AND NorthWestern - Western Railway Short Line. Omaha , Council Bluffs And Chicago , The only read to take for DC * Motnea , itarlalltown. Cedar Haplds , Clinton , IHion. Chlraro. Mllwankr. and all poinu enn. To the people -Nebraska , Colorado rado , w jomlns. t'tah , Idaho , Nerada , Oreson , wuh- IngUin and Cnllfornln. It often tupeJlor adrantace * n' I potslale tij an7 other Unn. Araoce a few of the numf ron point * of superiority cnjarfd by the patron * of thli rwid U'tween Omaha and Chlciuo. are It * two train * a day of UAY COACH- K ? * . which are the nnet that humin an and Ingennt * ty can create. It * PALACE fcI.KKl'lMJ CAR > . which an1 models of comfort and cleronce. It * PAR1/3H DllAWlMi WxJ.M OAK" , un urp j > . < -.l by aor , and lt widely celv'jrat * l I'AI.AflAL 1HN1MJ CARS , the ennal of which cannot b found elsewhere. At Coun cil Bluffs the trains of the I'nlon l-jvclnc Hallway , connect - nect In nnlon depot wub thnttt of the Chlcacnjk Northwestern Ily. In Chlcaio the train * of thli Una make clo < connection with the > ol all other ea tern lines. Kor Detroit. Colombo * . Indlanapolli. Cincinnati. Nlacara Kallr. HuTnki , lituaunt , Toronto , Montreal , llotujn. New ork , I'Mla'Irlphla , Baltimore , Wash ington , and all points In the ea t , ak for a ticket Tla "NORTHWESTERN. " If rein wlh the N-st accommodation. All ticket aent M'JI ticket * rla thlt line. li. HUCHITT. E. P. W1I.POX. Genl. Manager , ( jenl. Paas'r Aicent Chlcazo , 111 * . W.M.BABCOCK. I..R.BOU.ES. \N elem A ent. City Paafr. Acent. Omaha , Nehra ka. -THE OFTIIE i Chicago , Milwaukee & St , Paul R'y ' , < * l The Host Route from Omaha and Council Bluffs to - = = THE EAST = = - - TWO TBJUN6 DAILY BEmrKE.V OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUtFS Chicago , AND Jlihiaukee , St , Paul , Minneapolis , Cetl.tr Rapids , Rock Island , Frccport , Rockford , Clinton , * Duluique , Davenport , Elgin , 3I dison , Jancsrille , lleloit , Winona , I.a Crossc , And all other Important point * East , Kortbeait anl Southeast. For through ticket * call on the ticket asent at HOI Farnasi itreel , in Paiton Hotel , or at Union Iaci3a IVpot- Pallman Sleepers and the finest DmlncCaraln th world are run on tbo main line of the Chlexcn , Mil waukee A. SUl'aul Railway , and every attention ta. pald to putencers by couru-out employes of th company. It. MII.LKU. General Manaeer. J. K. TUCK Kit , A"i Utnt ( Jeneral Manaeer. A. V. 1L CAIU'K.STEIU General Pauenrer and Ticket Acent. GKO. K. 11KAFFORD , A iltant General and Ticket A rent. J. T. CLAKIC. Ueneral Superintendent. i. S. & D. 170" Olive Street , St. lenis , M * . Of the Missouri State Mnsum of Anatomy. St. Louis , Mo. , University College Hospital , Lot * don. Qienen. Germany MCI ! New York. Ilarlng derated their attention SPECIALLY TO THE TREATMENT OF DISEASES. More perfallj- the e arising from impru dence , invite allso fcuffertnf to correspond with out deUvy. Diseases of infection und contagion cured Ka.'ely and speedily without Ui s of dan- Kertms drnci. Patients whose case * have been cealected. badly treated or pronounced Incur able , should not fall to write us concerning their tymptoms. All letters receive Immediate atten tion. JUST rUWJSIIED. And will be mailed FIIKE to any address on ra- ceipt of one 2-cent stamp. "Practical Observa tions on Nerrotia Debility and I'hvi'lcal Exhaus tion. " to which Is added an Es. > ay on Marriage - riage , " with Important chapters on diseases of the Heproductlve Org&nt , the whole formlns valuable medical treatU < > which should be read by all young men. Address DRS , S , & D , DAVIESON , 1707 Olive St..St. LwU.Xo. ROOFING. G.W.ROGERS CompoilUon aod Grarel Roofing. A eci fw Warrea'j I'&tural A halt SccEEg. Medal Broad J and 1 fir lle4r KooSag. 12SJl * oa felteet , Omaha , Neb. Nebraska Natl Bank U. S. EETCSITOB7 , OMAHA , KZS. Paid Up Capital , $23,000o Surplus , 42.6OO IL W. YAIES. President. LEWIS S. Itecn. VIce-Presldent. A. E. TOCZJU.IN. Sd % 'ice-l'resldsnt. W. II. S. lie-cuts , Cuhler w. v. MOIUK , JOHN S. COLLINS. 11. W. VATES , Liwis a. KCED , A. E. TOCZA14 * . Banking Office THE IRON BANK. Cor. l th and Karnain Sis. A General Banking Bojlseas Trauactcd