rr THIS OMAHA DAILY B KIM ( MONDAY , FEBRUARY 20. 1803. MINIDISK OF THE PACIFIC ut of Life ou Land and Son About the Sandwich Islands. A CLIMATE OF PERPETUAL SUMMER Tropical f.tmirlnnco In Mountain nniln \ - lojAVoinlrif.il Crntnrtof II IM All Ills- tor y of tlio liilnniU nnil Character- lltlci of the Nutlroi. Ksito Field' * Wellington : From the Australian colonlos I pulled across tlio Pnulflu ocean to the Sandwich Islands. Twenty-oiio days journey from Sydney , N. S. W. , landed mo at Honolulu the residence of the qticon and the capital of the islands. Tlio city I found occupied by natives ) , Chinese , Portuguese , Ameri cans nnd other nationalities. It contains , of all races , 30,000 Inhabitants. The principal Inlands are Oahu , Mmii , Mole knl , NUmu , Kiutai , Lanal and Hawaii. They contain about 00,000 people , and arc situated 2,100 mile" ) west of San Frnnvittco. Located south of the tropic line , they have n climate of perpetual Bummer. No frosts or snows appear on this group except on the high elevations of the mountains , but on the higher of the lofty craters the everlasting snows arc found. The craters on Hawaii are over 14,000 feet high , and present peaks of scenic grandeur. The Islands are green throughout the year , and rips fruit can bo gathered and bouquets plucked every day. The vegetation is exceedingly beautiful and variegated , and charms the eye of all visitors with Its novelty and diversity. The fruits compriho oranges , lemons , mangoes , pineapples , bananas , limes , apples , ligs , ] > cachcs and native apples , all of which grow in great abundance. In all the valleys and on every moun tain slope can bo seen tropical fruits growing wild in the forest. The cocoanut - nut trees grow along the sea , and their stately groves fringe almost every beach with a line of green. The mountains are , njmostall of them , covered with trees , and rise up out of the ocean like pyra mids of emerald. Captain Cook called the group the Sandwich islands. The natives called the archipelago the Hawaiian islands , and they are most generally known to the world by that name. A hundred years ago the Islands wore ruled by chiefs and petty kings. Each island had a king of it own. Kamaham- aha the great , called In Sandwich island hlstorv tlio Napoleon of the Pa cific , king of Hawaii , in 1705 , with his army crowed the channels in a lleot of canoes , conquered all tlio islands , and brought them under one dominion. Ho established what has been recognized for years as ono ot the monarchies of the world. His government was called the Hawaiian Kingdom. The foreign powers bent ministers and consuls to the court at the Sandwich islands and the Kam- almmahns long ruled the kingdom through a succession of kings. "When the Kamahamaha dyilasty became ex tinct it devolved on the Hawaiian par liament to choose a ruler. Kalakaua was elected in 1874 through the influence of an American missionary. Ho admin istered his government in sympathy with the American republic , and visited the United States soon after ho ascended the throne , effecting treaties with this government for the admission of Haw aiian sugars into American ports free of ditty. His reign was of unexampled prosperity , commercial and Industrial activity. The resources of the kingdom wore , developed , capital was attracted to the islands , and the products quadrupled. The production of sugar attained enor mous proportions. The king died two years ago in Cali fornia when on a visit to this country to have the Hawaiian treaties renewed with this government. Ills slstor , the Princess Liliu , suc ceeded him to the Hawaiian throno. Her afllliations are with the British em pire , and her government has been ad ministered in sympathy with Queen Victoria's realm. The industries of the kingdom are conducted by foreign capi tal. " The labor is performed by Chinese. The principal property holders and the predominating foreign residents on the islands are Americans. The property- holders direct the votes of the kingdom , Tlio tcntimont of a majority of tlio people on the islands has been for years In favor of a republic. The queen re ceived a salary of $15,000 n year , and the form of a monarchy was extravagant and expensive. As the foreign residents pay the taxes , employ nnd influence the labor vote , a parliament can be elected and in structed to change the form of govern ment from a monarchy to a miniature re public with a president and congress , or ask annexation to the United States. DTho Sandwich islanders are Malays. They came over the Pacific ocean , from islands beyond , long ago. They have an olive complexion , straight black hair nnd lustrous brown eyes. Many have pleasant faces and handsome forms. They wear linen clothing all the year. The ladles attire themselves in the holoku. The warm , tropical climuto makes loose , flowing gowns a necessity. The young girls wear wreaths of wild ( lowers around their brows , and decorate their bodies with chaplets of green leaves. They do not use gold Jewelry , but ornament their tollot with the floral beauty of the tropics. They are fond of outdoor Hfo and live most of the time in the groves. They sleep In hammocks under the trees and have their dunces nnd feasts in the grottoes of the forests. They have little huts in which they dwell during storms , but are rarely found in their cottages except in rainy weather. They build grass-thatched houses and cover the roofs with rushes , nnd have wide porches in front of their doors to kcop olT the heat of the sun. They like to bo near the sea so they can bathe in the waters of the ocean. They become expert surfridors and can scale the breakers in the wildest storms. Like bcugulls they rldo the tossing rollers , and smile at the ocean's maddest winds. In ttiolr little boats they sail over the blue bosom of the Pacific , and cruise many miles away from their island shores. Their little crafts cross the channels from Island to island and visit all the ports in the archipelago. They are not afraid of the ocean soli tudes , but are at homo on its watery wastes , and find delight In Its oxpau&o of blue. Their * ongs of the sea are very sweet and poetic ; and during their voy ages they sing their ocean melodies with entrancing power. At night , " when the sun has gene beneath the western waves , and tlio tropic moon has soared among the twinkling stars and bathed the ocean in floods of silver , the island navigators from their little hulls , floating on the moonlit sen , f-ond forth their Malayan Bongs with charming fervor. Those brown children of the sea have soft and musical voices , and rival the Italians hi the smoothness of their melody. Next to listening to the boom of the breakers falling on the Island shores when night has mantled the occnn and mountains with moon beams , the tourist loves to hear the dis tant harmonica of the bulling mariners floating from the passing barks. The iBluudora liuvo muiiy national songs , in which th'-y recount their famous epochs of history and embalm thodi'cds of their WAiTlors and horoos. The story of their lives and the hlstorj of their past is pro- forved In songs , traditions ana mytholo gies. Around their camp circles they recount their myths nnd ti millions to their cnildren , nnd record on their memories the annals of their people. At .tho a.mlvorfnrloa of their noted charac- 'tors they sing their national and historic songs , and the young are trained in a knowledge ) of the vocal record of their race. In after ycais the children sing the tame bongs to the rising youth ; and as the ages roll on the oceanic story of the natives is perpetuated and the career of the hca rOvers is handed down from gen eration to generation. The islanders arc also fond of dancing. They practice dancing when they are young and when they become grown thny are accom plished in the art and dance with great case and grace , moving their handsome forms with captivating precision and regularity. On the sands of the seashores , under the palm trees , they have their dances where the breezes from the ocean fan their sylvan ballrooms and the roar of the surf dashing on the reefs nuikes music to their fcsttvo joys , and the fire flies Illuminate the twilight. They often gather the nuts of the candle tree when the moon Ls on Its wane and place the nuts on the limbo of the shrubs and around the roots of the trees ; they Ignlto the oily nuts and the tiny lamps burn with a brilliant glow and cast a ruddy light over the ocean. The dancers can bo seen , on moon light nights , by the flames of these lit tle nuts whirling around each other in wnltx.t's under the shadows of the lofty palms nnd beneath the boughs of the wide-spreading banyans. Until late in the night they enjoy their glco on the sands , and after a bath in the surf seek their hummocks among the trces.Morn- _ Ing finds them ready for their boats and fora cruise over the waves or a voyage to other island shores. They are monarchs - archs of all they survey : the sea Is their homo and all the islands their camping ground. The trees belong to them , and naturo's first temples , the groves , fur nish them with airy and gorgeous pavil ions. The forests are in perpetual bloom , and the flowers of eternal summer perfume - fume their atmosphere. The glory of - the trophies Is seen in the blossoms of every bush , and floral beauty dangles In every swaying \ inc. The woods are re dolent with everlasting flowers , and the rich breath of the orange trees mixes with the fainter odors of the lemon groves. The grottoes are hung with viny curtains and the arbors festooned with gaudy streamers. Apertures among the boughs open windows into the blue overhead and load in vistas out to the lolling sea. The tree-walled caverns in the island forest with their tropical tapestry form boudoirs of fairy beuutv that surpass palaces of marble. J. N. INQRAM. SumnuT Trmporuttirc. "Norn-it OALVHSTOX , Tex. , Feb. 18. Not n cnlll of the northern blizzards reaches this .sun-kissed region. Hero roses arc blooming , strawberries are ripening and fruit trees ; ire In bud. The delightful sill tho-ycur-urouml climate makes this a splendid health resort , and the boundless industrial resources which are drawing hither , investing capitalists from all over the land make it a wealth resort as well. North Galvcston is destined to become the leading industrial city of the fruit. o IlOVfilHWI.lt A pleasing effect in homo decoration now resorted to by ingenious women is that of covering discolored or old- fashioned wall paper with cheese cloth in any of the pretty shades to bo found at the shops. The material is drawn tightly over the walls to bo tlecorated and lacked hero and there , each breadth lapping in a single plait. The pattern of the wall paper underneath is thrown out upon the cheese cloth , producing as rich an olTeet as if costly damask or the most elegant paper had been used , while the actual expense is the merest trifle. A novelty in lire screens is painted on ground glass , which has a milky effect , with a design of ferns , dogwood blossoms and sunflowers , framed in bamboo. A rule sometimes used by decorators when the woodwork in a room Is used as a guide to the color scheme is to make the walls what Is called a "holf-har- mony. " That is , If the woodwork is pine , which naturally has n yellow cast , muko the walls or shades of brown ; or , if of ash , a deep gray blue. Satin wood and maple wood harmonize with ivory yellow and mahogany with a silvery green. The newest forks and spoons are of gold with Dresden china handles. They are so pretty that the admiring house wife finds an excuse for placing odd ones upon her table in addition to putting ono at every plato. Bon bon dishes , filled with cream pep permints , are now dinner adjuncts. If the color scheme is pink , then pink pep permints , and so on. An aid to diges tion and a fashionable fad two things certain to elevate the 'mint in popular favor. In selecting rope linen for embroidery take a bit of the thread between the thumb and fingers of both hands and rub It gently ; then draw the lingers over it lengthwise. If it splits or breaks or frays with any degree of roughness , dis card it as entirely worthless. Most of the cheap threads are nothing more or less than jute and are designed only to hell. More tha ono person has tried ton worl. linen and found It so lumpy and rough and disagreeable looking that it was given up In dispair , sometimes without finishing the piece. First-class linen may bo tested in the way described and will remain almost entirely smooth. The liner grades may bo scraped repeat edly with the thumb null without produc ing any roughness. ' If you have piles Do Witt's Witch Hazel salvo will burcly euro you. A Chimp Toll-phono. There Is n largo manufacturing es tablishment in New York city in which the oflico is separated from the repair shop by a whole block. The two are connected by what seems to bo a tele phone , except that a jingle boll worked by a string Is substituted for a crank and gong. As a matter of fact there is no electricity about this affair. The sound conductor is merely a line , strong twine , knotted at o icli end into a little sheep skin diaphragm that is stretched like a drum head over a tin cylinder not so largo as a man's list. Toy "telephones" of a similar description are sold in the streets , but this is perhaps the first in stance of their adoption for practical business purposes. Iti'form hi Coiiiii'L-tlcut. A member of the Connecticut legisla ture has introduced a bill , in his own writing , which-proposes that it shall bo made a misdemeanor for "anny person to alow his dorg to chase the waggon of anny other person under iionulty of $7 line or thirday days In jalo or both , mony ponulty to go town in which crime occurs , jalo penulty to bee workud out in county jalo. " The proposition or , as the dispatch terms It , the composition was almost unanimously rejected. Evi dently homo strange , unreasoning preju dice against phonetic spoiling still lingers in the state whose chief pride is it "steady habits. " Uoasoal Uooo ham's Pills act llko maglo . COMMERCIAL AND FINANCIAL Considerable Fresh Eiport Business Eoported from the Seaboard. WHEAT AT THE OPENING WAS LOWER After llullinr rirm for n AVhllo Tlmt Ccrcnl Drcllnril nnil daunt n Trac tion I.nuer fur Mny nnil CIIICAOO , III. , 1'ob. 18. It wns found today Unit most of the puts on wheat sold yesterday hud n profit In thotn. 1'nrdrldgo received per haps 1,000,000 bushels In that way , from 7f > < ic to 7G4j. ? ( Tlioro was some fresh export husl- ness reported from the seahoard.helnjtu change- fiom the recent comparative weakness of that trade , Tlioro was very nominal heaviness. Wheat , corn , oats and provisions wore consld- crulily lower at tlio eloso than on the day before. The respective declines are In wheat and corn , each ? ic. oats ? e , pork l7Jc ! ! , lard from 2Mc to Cc , nnd ribs 7iu. ! Wheat at the oponlns was about ' { o lower than yesterday's dosing , held flrm and then declined "ic for May and 4c for July , mled steady , and the clo-tlnx was ic lower for May and Ic for July. Tlieiu was free unloading of long property , Including a number of Im portant lines from supposed clique souices. The weakness was accounted for by Iho fi-cl- IIIR developed by the snow storm , while cables worn weak and lower and the prospects \\oro- tliatlhu visible supply might show an In- crfaKo of from aoo.ooo 1m. -100,000 bu. Tlio stock situation In Wall striu't and the general financial outlook tiKe created some distrust and wore Important boar factors. Corn was heavy through lack of support. It seemed to bo a day of general lliiuulatlon. Operators were talking about the big vlslblo HUiiply , whlcb far uxcoeds that of last year at tills time , and pointed to the ImlllTcicnt cash demand , the falily llbeial movement from llrst hands and the small export Imslnut * . Shorts were fair bnyeis at Urn decllnu and Caused a slight reaction. Oats were also slow and weak and followed corn. Hog products wore very sparingly dealt in and , for lack of assistance fiom thu usual sup porters , sagged almost steadily and closed near the bottom llgurus. Kstlniated receipts for Monday : Wheat , 170 cats ; corn , 325 cars ; oats , ICOcars ; hogs , JO.OOO head. The leading futures ranged as follows : AIITICI.ES. JOI'E.V. J IIIUII. | Mitt' . | CLOSE. ! 1 M Wheat No 2 February 73 Mny. . . . July | Wl 70 ! { Corn No. 2 I February 4U < 40W Mny. . . . 4 < 1 44H July. . . . 4S (13I5JS Ontt No. 2 - 4Smi Kcbrunry mi 30VC 30 sow SOX Mny 33W J3H McBBl'ork Mny 1970 10 70 1D4JK 19 ! < 0 1977 I.nrd .May 13 'JO 12 [ I2H 1SS7H 12 9TV 12 ra July 12 60 12 60 12 'M 12 .VI 12 & 24 ! Hopt 12 27K 12 274 12 15 12 2J 1225 Short lllbs- Mny. . 1035 10 M 10 m 10 4214 ( 'nsh quotations wore ns follows ) 1'i.oim Dull and unchanged. WllBAT No. 2 spring , 72JjQ,73c ; No. 3 spring , nominally 6020-lc ; > 'o. 2 red , 7U540 73c. 73c.COIIN COIIN No. 2 , 41c ; No. 3. cash. 30B3Q',5c ; No. 2 yellow. 41Hc : No. 3 yellow , 30ffi.19'ic. OATS-No. 2 , 304Sl30'Ac ; No. 2 white , f. o. b , , 35Vjc ; No. 3 white , f. o. b. , 3'J < B34'ic. IlVK-No. 2. 02c. HAIH.KY No. 2 , 6-lc ; No. 4 , f. o. b. , 43 < 2G8e ; No. 4 , f. o. b. , 37 < & 41c- . ri.AxSmii-No. : 1,11.24. TlMOTHVSur.il-I'rlmi1 , $4.455i4r > 0. I'OIIK Moss , per bill. , J18.90O19.00 : lard , per 100 Ibs. . S12.b7"f ; shoit ribs sides , ( loose ) , J10.30iiilO.40 : dry salted shoulders , ( boxed ) , $ ! > .97'10.00 ; short clear sides ( boxed ) , S10.00 C4.0.9& . WHISKY Distiller * ' finished goods , par gal. , SUOAUS rnclmnucd ; cut loaf , 0 ! 35'icj granulated , G'ac ; standaid "A , " 5c. Thu following were the receipts und bhlp- im.'iits for todav : Oiniilm drain Market. The week closed with a rutlior quiet market and the attendance on call was light. The following prices aio for delhery at Mississippi river points : WIIKAT No. 2 spring , 70c bid ; No. 3 spring , ( iOo bid ; No. 2 Imrd , G3'c bid. OATS No. 2 white , Louisville terms , 32c ! } bid : No. 3 white , 32c bid. Cons No. 2 , April shipment. 38c ; No. 3 or hotter , March shipment , 38c ; No. 3 or bolter , Kuhruiiir or March , 37c ! , St. Louis terms ; No. 2 white , 39ic ! bid , St. Louis terms. Among the sales weio : OOcaisNo. 2 corn , April shipment , Omaha terms , 38c ; 25 cars No. 3 or bettor , Maich nh.lpr.ient , 3bc ; 10 cats No. 3 or bettor , Fobi nary or March shipment , St. Louis terms , 37Jc. ! noAiiu iminKS. Pcriator North of Columbus was a visitor on the board. Charles Tower , representing Erwln , Oieen ft Co. of ChliMigo , was looking over thu Oniahu. market. Omalin Produce .Market. The week closed with the market fairly active for the day and Reason. In the way of changes there will bo noted a weakening In the butter market , whllo eggs and hay ha\o ad vanced. jViu'i.KS Stocks aio held at f3.50&l,00 { for fair to cholco stock. IIANANAS Quoted at $2.00212.50 per bunch HBANS Choice navy. 62.25. llUTTKii The arrivals are considerably larger than they were n few days ago and there Is an easier feeling In the maiket. Packing stock sells down to about 18c , whllo good country roll goes largely at 1020c. An occasional package of o.xtta cholcu roll brings 2022c. GAMFOIINIA CAIIIIAOK I'or lb. , 2Jic. Cm liiiv 1'er doz. , 40c. CiUMiintKiES Hell and bugle , $10.50 ; Jer- sev Capo Cod , $9.50. Runs Tlio iccolpts were again very light , and as a consequence tlio market advanced , thu majority of the sales bolng reported at 22 ( ij,23c. A goo-l many dealers are anticipating a heavy run the early pai t of no.xt week and a consequent break In thu markot. AMB Small labblls , 81.50 ; Jack rabbits , { 3.50. HAY Prices were a little stronger and sales ranged from iG.Ooao.50. dry"hint" , SfflVVi'c1NoTa ; dry"nint Vasvjc : No" 1 diy salted , GftOc ; part cuied hldc.s ! i pot-cent per pound loss than fully cured. HOSEY Cholcu to fancy white clover. 18 © 20c ; fair to good , IGdilBc. IISIONS : Choice , J3.mWW.75 ! fancy , t4.00. M.u.AdA OilAl'KS Good shipping stock , $8.50. Nr.w VKOCTAin.r.8 Lettuce , ladlshes and parsley , 45c per doz ; green onions 40o. NUTS Largo hickory , $1.60 ; black walnuts , 81.00ai.25. ONIONS Homo grown , J1.20&1.25 per bushel ; Spanish uor orate , $1.9032.0u. COliANir.s ( I'loilda fancy , per bo$3.50 ; IIvo to tun box lots , (3.25 ; russutts , J3.003 3.25 ; Mexican orangessingle boxes , $3.25 ; IIvu to ten box lots , $3.00 ; California mountain Granges , $2.50 ; navels , $4.00. OvsTKlls Oysteiisalt ) 1mlng offered at IftJl 3Hc per can. which Is a reduction of 4c nerean. 1'oill.TiiY Thu receipts of chickens weio rather moio liberal than tbc'y have been of late and as thu demand was not very large sellers weio a llttlo weak. Whllo It was possl- blotoget lie for fancy small chluUuns thuro weioisry fuwsales at that price. Somu very good stock went at loc , but strictly choice and light weight chickens weiu not plenty. Prices on other kinds of poultry remain un changed. Cholcu and small chickens , H > S He ; largo and lough , U3UM ; cholcu turkeys , 14ill5c * ; lough anil poor , 12j13c ; gwA ) and ducks , choice , llfttl c ; poor , ui 10c. 1'OTATtiKS only small lots moving from store. Western Nebraska slock Is quoted at U5e ; Utah and Colorado , Jl.UUiil.iU ; cJiolcu native. . 75 sio. HWKKT POTATOES Tlioro are a fuw In the market which are soiling at 81.50. TANWIIH.NBS In half boxes , $3,00. VBAI/ Choice and small fat veals , 7Q9c ; largu and thin , 3&Go. ( I'ruilucu I'cilnti'rs. A shipper of nniQ in the country writes asking Tin : UKK to warn nil hunters and trappers against shipping to a certain Nuw York commission house on the pround that they are swindlers , Now York is-n loiifr way off , and it Is not always easy to prow that a llrm is swindling shippers. The best way for NobrasUn shippers to nvold these linns is to consign their KUUIO and produce to some-p > od Omaha commission housothat will sell it In Omaha or ship it wherever there happens to be the best market. The life of the commission man in Minne apolis is not a happy life always. One of the llrms of that city la threatened with prose cution by a customer who claims ilmt the imburger cticcso that ho purchased from the firm " 8tlnUV" The legislature has nmclo It an offence } to sail cigarettes In that utato hero Is a Titmice for them to prohibit the sale of llmtnrfscr with a strong nmcll. Perhaps It woulkl ( better to follow the plan proHisod | in the Missouri IrgiMaturo to solve the buttcrlno cpuostion , color it pink. It Is said that tl flcmon crop Is only three- fourth ! ) of last swixiAi , says Ur.moh's , Hut wo nro told that thW country tfds the better grades nnd othl'rii7 are scattered mainly through Europe. jt ( is about this tune , as the almanacs si } * } , tiat the wise fruit men begin to lay in the better goods for the spring trade. ThW'lrfrger ' retailers commence to stock up this in&itlh nnil next. lemons at imiwrtcrs' sales tir bringing fully ns much ns n year ago for' lto | fancy grades nnd wo thlnlc in the Omaha market they are likely to rule about where they are now till warm weather Increases the demand. It would bo well for shippers to remember that the firm that quotes the highest prices Is usually the llrm that sells at the lowest point. When it commission firm begins to claim that they have some mysterious way of selling consignments several cents above the market it is high time for the shipper to bo cautious. Good reliable houses consider that a man is doing well who gets the mar ket nnd when some one claims that ho can get more it is n sure sign that either ho does not understand the business or else is trying to Induce consignments through misrepre sentation , The following from the Minneapolis Bul letin would tndicato that the tirodueo com mission dealers of that city are wide awake. Why cannot sometintr of .ho same kind bo undertaken in Omaha : "Tho commission houses at the Central market have decided to estabHsh n produce exchange , the object of which is to create harmony In prices nnd assist in making quotations from day to day. They held their tlrst meeting yesterday afternoon and there was a good deal of in terest exhibited. The exchange Is open tonny Jobber in the city , nnd there are no rules governing transactions. It is merely n scheme to bring buyer nnd seller together nt a certain tlnio and place each day. At the meeting this morning held at 10 o'clock , the ll.xed hour for holdliuftho daily meeting , ! ! 0 cases of eggs were sold nt UOc. The ex change is to be known as the Central Mar- kul Produce exchange. " The commission business has for a good many years been cursed by a class of ad venturers who tire not business men , says the Minneapolis Produce Bulletin. They have no capital , experience or anything that ilts them to do a legitimate commission business. Such men enter the business , make a failure of it , and do up country shippers , or else plan a deliberate steal. ns has been done in this market several times during the past two years. The legitimate commission men have been helpless against this evil. They have not had power to combat it. Anything they might do was looked upon by country ship pers ns an act of Jealousy of a business com petitor and carried no weight. All they could do , therefore , was to stand asldo and see their shippers swindled by these adven turers and lot their own credit and business suffer through the rascality of this class of men. _ New York Murltnts. NEW YOIIK , Teh. 18. Pi.otiu Uecelpts , 24- 839 pkgs. ; exports , 8.80H bills. , 9.275 .s.iCKs ; sales , 0,700 pkgs.j market dull , weak ; winter wheat , low grades , $2.102,55 ; winter wheat fair to fancy , $2.55IJ2.75 ; winter wheat pat ents , $3.HXi4.25 ! ? ; Minnesota clear , J2.iO3.50 ! ; Minnesota stialts , $3.0024.00 ; Minnesota patents , f4.2535.00 , ' Co'iN MfiAr < - Dull , steady ; yellow western , 82.76 < 32.hO. KYK Nominal ; western , GOftGSr. llAiu.KV Dull , llrm ; western , GOftSOo ; No. 2 Toronto , 8 tfiSSc. , i ItAiti.nv MAI.T Quiet , steady ; western , 05 ® fa5c ; elty made Canada , Jl.OO l.on. WIIKATReceipts , 1,150 1m. ; e.xpoi Is , 40,412 bu. : sales , 780,000 bu. futures , 40.000 bu. of spot. Spot mnik < ? t'tlowor , with options moderately - erately actho for exports ; No. 2 led. In store and elevator , 79a7y'4"ei afloat , 79U(3.79'ic ( ; f. o. b. , 781t < > { 80'e : 'No. 1 northern , 84 < 284Hc ; No. 1 hard , 873i < h8c : No. 2 northern , 83 ® 83'c. Options opentd weak at ! Jc decline western cllqno reported as .selling ; advanced ' e and closed steadyiW 1th trading fairly active and entirely locaUwith prices ? e under yes terday ; No. 2 redrMarch.70Tii@7734C , closing at 71'4'c ; May , BOQaojiir1 , closing at 80'Bc ' ; July , HI n-lGitSlO-ijie , closing at 81Uc , COHN Kecclpts < tft744 .bu'.fexport.s , 27,274 bu. ; sales , 250,001) Uu. futures , 21,000 bu. spot. Spots dullvtlrmj Ncf2 , 2a52Ue In elevator , 53'jo alloat ; ' , uliKradcflKrnltol ) , 49@52',4 ( : ; steamer mixed , &lcr o : < 3 , 493 9'ic. Options were dull , } 1@40 lower with the west , and closing weak ; Maich , E1S4&52UC. closing at ll'ic ; May. .61i5451 ! ic.closing' at 51Uc : July. 5151tic , closing at 51ic. OATS Kccelpts , 29,400 bu. ; exports , 2,340 bu. ; sales , 75OQO'oii. futures. 64,000 bu. spot. Spots ( inlet , easier ; options ( lull , lower ; March , 37'ic ; May. 38'jc ' ; spot , No. 2 , white , 38c ; No. 2 Chicago , 3H'o ; No. 3 , 37c : No. 3 white , 40c ; mixed western , 3839c ; whlto western , 11AV I'lrm , fair demand ; shipping , 052.70 ; good to choice , 7585C. HOPS Quiet , easy ; state , common to choice , 216il24e : Paclllc coast , 21&23C. lliuus Moderate demand , steady ; wet salted Now Orleans selected , 45 to GO Ibs. , 4J ! © Go : Texas selected , 50 to GO Ibs. , 57c. CUT .MEATS Quiet , steady ; pickled bellies , ll'/iSll'ic ; pickled shoulders , 1010Uc ; pickled hums , 1414ic ! ; middles , dull , firm ; short clear , ll'se ; lard , quiet , caster ; western steam clo-ed ? 13. 10 bid ; sales , none ; option sales , none ; Maich , $13.10 asked ; May , $13.10 asked ; July , 812.85 ; pork , quiet Una ; old mess , Jfl9.7520.00 ; now mess , $ ' . ' 0.15. llUTTEii Dull , weak ; western creamery , 24 ® 2Uc : western dairy. 1823c ; westein fac tory , 17U3e ; Elgin , 28K29c. Cmxsn Moderately active , steady ; part skims , 4l4'e. ) ? Eons 1'alr demand , steady ; receipts , 0,951 pkgs : western freshi 29 c. TAI.I.OW Wanted , stiongcr ; city ( $2.00 per pkge ) , 8fe. ! COTTON SEED On , Quiet , flrm ; crude. 57i ! ffifi9c ; yellow , G4 < 3G5c. I'KTUoi.r.MM Quiet , steady : crude In bbls. , packers , $5.50 ; packers In bulk , $3.00 : Wash ington In bbls . $5.50 , Washington In bulk , $2.50 : rellned Now York. $5.30 ; Philadelphia and Italtlmore , 85.25 ; United closed at 59ic ! bid for Maich. Tuni'E.NTiNi : Qulot , steady : 35J354c. ! HtCE l'Irm , active demand : fair to e.\tra , 3Gc ; Japan , 4 ® 5e MOI.ASSKS Foreign nominal ; New Orleans open kettle , good to choice , In good doimmd at 2835c. SUOAH Haw , dull , steady ; fair refining centrifugals , 00 test , 3V' 3 7-lGc ; refined quint , steady ; on * A , 4 5-lViJ4 ( ; < ; : mold A , 4'i5 1-lGc ; standard A , 4fi4 13-lGc ; con fectioners A , 444 ! 11-lGu ; cut loaf , 5J. | ® 5 7-lGc ; crushed , 5 > .i5 7-lGe ; powdered. 4' . ® 5 11-1G < : ; granulated , 4 ,4t-l 15-lGu ; cubes , 4 7-lG5 11-lGc. Pie Jiio.vQuint , steady American , 812.75 © 15.50. COPI-EII Quiet , steady ; lake , $12.00. LKAII Inactive ; domestic , 81.00. TIN Quiet ; Straits. $20.15. St. l.mllrt MurkitU. ST. Louts , Mo. , Fob. 18 , FLOUR Weak , but not quotably Inner. WIIKAT Closed © 'ic lower ; cash , G73 c ; Mnieli OHJ.IC ; May , 71 ? © 711ic. Cons Declined steadily and closed ? , © J4i ; under yesterday ; cash , 38c ; March , 38Jici May , 4ova-fovc ; July , 41 , e. OATS Lower ; cash , 32'4e ' bid ; May sold at 33fc. UYE Nothing done. HAHI.EY Small sales ; Minnesota,55c. lliiAN-llottcr ; GM.c. HAV l'nchange , < l t KI.AXSEEH KIrmp 41.20' ' , ' . LiAi > -$4.37. , - COIIN MIAIKlnti' : ; $2,00. WHISKY Steady * l. 17. llAC.iiiMi ANiiCovhiN TIES Unchanged. PIIOVISWNS VoHr"qulct and only a small Jobbing trade doniKSi previous quotations. KcOBll'TU Klourrtt.lHH ) bbls ; wheat , 17,000 bu. ; corn. 139.0UPJW. ; oats. 18.0UO bu. ; rye , none ; barley , iioiie.m Silli'JlENTS rioura 7,000 bbls. ; wheat , 20- 000 bu. ; corn , 142.UOO bu. ; oats , 1-1,000 bu.i rye , 5,000 bu. : baHtvy. l.OOObn. Klllia.lSjO'ty ' Markets. KANSAS OITV. vMo. , Poll. 18. WHEAT .Hvi : ' tunijy : 53u.-i ri i.\SKKl > - ' ( 1.121.13. ItitAN-l-'lnu : U3t3f. MAV--Kiouily ; tlypthy ; , J8.OOao.GO : jirulrle , t7.OlMiO.00. , , - , , , , HiirTEH Light demand and dull ; cieamery , U4'Tt27'ic ' ; dalryo17a.20c. . ' ' 't , 02,000 bu.j corn , 27,000 ' ' ' ' ' 'SIII'I'MK'NTM Wheat , 54,000 bu. ; corn , 14,000 bu. ; oats , none. Cotton M.irkel. ( iAi.vi.STON. TeToll. . 1H.ritm ; iiitdllngs , H 13lGilow ; middling , H7-10cv good ordinary , 7 15-lGo ; nut and gro- toelpls , 4,194 bales , uxiMirttJ to ( In-ill llrltaln , 90 bales ; sales , GOS halt shlo.-k,8-JrHH ; bales. Nnw DiiMiANH. I.- . ? , 1V1A | IHj-I I" " } : coed middling , 9e ; middling , ! > e ; low middling , H'ic ; goodoidlnaiy. H" e ; net receipts , 5,74'J bales : gro s receipts , 5.H01 bales ; exports to Uteat Britain. 4l5-)4 ) bales ; to the continent , 4H3 bales ; salt- ! . , 2,800 bales ; slock , 33,599 "NMV Oiu.HAXS , La. . Peb. IB.-Putnressteady. sales 411,400 : IVbruiiry , W.87 bid ; .March. ? HH7H.8M : April. * H.94BH.I)5 ) ; May. 9.00to 9.01 ; June. JQ.iMW9.O7 : July. HJ.11M9.13 ; August , tU.UtoM3 ! | S-Miu-iiibcr , JS.90 bid. Co IK- > .MurUet. NEW YOIIK , Tub. 18.- Options opened steady. 6 to 10 points up , clo ed Htead v and uncliaiiKcil to 20 yolnU up ; ( .ales , 20,000 bug , including Mnrch. 117.201817301 April llO.OSitn 10 ; Mny , MO.HOftUunn June , * IO 8(1,110 ( & , jiy. | l ( M61J8ftj ( Syilember. 10.B6jll ( 7th ' On MlniiriiiolU | Whrtt Mnrlcrt. , . , . . , . .rAroiis : , Minn , I'd ) . 18. Trailing wns fair on n yrnlplnv binU , riinsro of nrlco * tuir- mwi ounli miirki'l wi'nl.or t'ltw < No. I north- cm , GlW'7f ! 'No. S ! northern , OOAfllc. JJn- ci lltn ) , UH ( cur . I'lo-tP : IVhrunry , Ofict Afny , onvi July. 7U'On irnoki No. I hard , (17HC ( ! No. 1 northern , tiUc ; No. 'J northern , Ic. 03010 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Mtprtool | MnrkcM. t.lVKlll'OOU fob. 18.VllKAT Qulotl holilors nlTorinodcnitoly ; No. 1 CiUlfornlii.iis adUUn Id poroontnlt No. U rod , winter , Oi 0 < idtOs lOKil , COIIN Steady , denmml fair ; mixed westuin , 4 * fi'id per rental for now. lltJTTKll I'liiost Unltcil Hfiites , Gfls Jierotvt. I.INHHKD -'Jisiorc\vt. ! | . AItl\rtul < po ( Irnlii Miirknt. MIMTAUKRK , WN , Peb. IB. WHEAT-Easy ! Muy , OH'li1 ' ! No. 2 spring , CGc. ( 'OIl'N-Qlllot ; No. 3 , 1C. OATH-QuIuti No. U whlto , 35o : No.3 , 3-lc. 3lc.IIAllt.KY C3c. riilluilrlphlu Mriiln MurUot. PHILADELPHIA , Pa. , 1'eb. 18. WIIIIAT Weak and lower ; No. 2 red february , 7GIJ COIIN Weaker ; No. 2 1'ebruary , Maich and April. 49149'c , UATHKali - demand for car lots. Futures neglected and nominal. Italtlinnro ( Irnln Mnrknt. HALTIMOIIK , Md. , 1'eb. 18. WlinAT Easy ; No. 2 red. spot , 76'ic. CoilN Qnlot nnd steady ; mixed , spot and March , 4H'4 481'c. O TS-Quiet and steady ; No. 2 whlto west- em , 41 c. Cliiclniiiitl ( iriilu Market * . CINCINNATI , 0. , Pol ) . 18. WHEAT Steady , No. 2 red. 72.- . COIIN Weaker ; No. 2ml\ed , 42' ! le. OATst Weaker ; No. 2 mixed , 34j,31'iU Toledo drain .MurKet. TOLEDO. O. , I b. 18. WIIIJAT Dull steady No. 2 cash and I ebrnary,72c. COIIN Steady ; No. 2 cash , 42'ic. OATd Quiet ; cash , 3Gc. OMAHA MVi : STOCK .MAIIKKT. I'avornlilix Coiulltlmift In the Cuttlo Trade nt Ihu Close oT the Week , SATUIIDAV , Fob. 18. About tlio only notable featuio to the 10- celpts the past week has been the heavy sup plies of sheep. These show an Increase over the week previous of about 3,500 head , and over the corresponding week last .year of over 7,000 head. The exact llgutes me as follows : Cattle. Hogs. Sheep. Uecelpts thlsweck . 14,755 22,901 0,015 Hecelpts lust week . . .17,485 22.1GH 0,410 Same week last vear . .16,004 29,103 2,771 The cattle nmtket this week started out rather unfavorably. Hecelpts weio not at all heavy heie , but the trade had hardly lecov- en-d from the demoralisation of the week pre vious. Aflor Tuesdiiy , howo\er , thesenttment changed and since then prices Imto steadily luhnnccd until the close of the week llnds pilces fully as high as ten days ago. The situation Is materially unchanged , and with a good demand fiom all souices , prospects meery fiminiblo for u continuance of present high prices , The Cin cinnati Pilce Current , In levlowlng the hog situation , Incidentally lemarkseoncernlng the cattle maiket : "A feature of the geneial out look Is the sttcngtlienlng position of the cattle market. The Indications point to thn fact that the demand Is overtaking the supply and will get beyond It In the near future. Condi tions In recent years ha\o operated to dls- courage cattle growers , as well as hog glowers. Theio hum been changes going on , Inducing the maikotlng of animals at an aeragi ; ago yonngerthan heietofore. Ily this process the oflerlngs liuvo been nut of pio- portton to the actual basis of supply. The surplus has been disposed of , and ere long the cattle grower will bo expeilenclng the same regiot that the hog raiser now does , that ho went out of the business when ho should have done otherwise. The hog supply will bo restored before a plentlfnlness of catilo can bo made available. " The week closes with a heavy run of cattle and a iiutet though generally firm market. Offerings Included an unusually liberal pio- poitlon of exceptionally desirable beef steers , and the gem-ial quality of the sup plies of late has shown decided Impiovemcnt. I'avoiablo advices from eastern markets led to considerable activity on the part of speculative shlpjieis and the good to cholco heavy beeves sold readily at fully steady prices. The same wns tiuo of the handy light , fat steers that suited the dressed beef trade. Coarse heavy Bteeis and half fat stuff was slow sale at rather lower prices. There were several loads of fat 1,300 to 1,450-lb. beeves that sold at from 84.GO to $5.15. Fair to good 1,000 to 1,200-lb. steers changed bunds at from $4.15 to $4.55 , with poor to fair underweight grades at from $4 down to$3.40 : lluslness was not overly active , butn\ory fair clearance was elfected. llutchors' stock and cannors' changed hands freely at good , llrm prices. Sales Included poor , thin cow stun" us low as 81.75 , nnd prime fat 1,200-lbcowsut $4.15. The bulk of the fair good cows sold at fiom $2.00 to $3.50. There was a good demand for rough stock of all kinds nt good stiff urlcos , poor to cholco bulls , oxen and stags selling at from $2.25 to $4. On"cr- Ingsof calves were quite liberal but the In quiry was good and prices ruled fully steady at fiom $2.50 to $5.75. The stocker and feeder trade has been In good shupn all week. Kecelpts huvo Included only a small proportion of stack and feeding cattle , but these have sold freely at the high est prices of the season. The demand from thocountiy even at the present war juices Is far In excess of the demand. Trade Is never overly lively on a Saturday , but the pens weio emptier at thuclose today than for weeks past. lions There Is absolutely nothing now In the hog situation. Consldoinhlo speculation and comment has been caused by the govern ment's repoit of the hog supply , but conclu sions are far from satisfactory. The Cincinnati Price Current In commenting on the report says : The following compilation shows the re ported numbefof hogs In January for the years previous to this season , and the youily nmr- Kotlng of hogs for twelve months ending Octo ber 31 , according to thu Cincinnati Pilco Cur rent's records of western and eastern packing and receipts at Now York , Philadelphia and llultlmore : Number In Marketed January. 12 months. 1883. . , 43,270,000 13,745,000 1884.- -44,201,000 13.815,000 1885 45,142,000 15,845,000 1880 40,092,000 10,000,000 1887 44,013,000 10,920,000 1888 44,310,000 10,125,000 1889 50,301,000 17,575,000 1890 51,503,000 22,014,000 1H91 50,025,000 21.2HG.OOO 1892 52,398,000 21,800,000 1893 40,095,000 The number shown to ha\o been marketed during the period of ten years averaged 37 per cent of the supply In January the percentage being smaller In earlier years , and larger In the Into years. Taking the last live years of the period the aveiugowas nearly 4O per cent. If this wore to bo applied to the num ber now reported to reach conclusions as to thu year's probable total vlslblo marketing , the lesiilt would bo about 18,435,000 hogs , or Ifi'/i ' pur cent decrease , lepresentlng about 3,3ii5,000 hogs less than rorth'jprecedlngjear. This conclusion , howmer , cannot bo accepted as consistent with present gonorul Indications for them has alioudy been a decieuso In west ern packing operations slnco Nut ember 1 of neatly 3,000,000 hogs , while the period hencu to November 1 no.xt will gieatly add to this dellciency , beyond question , to that It Is illf- flciilt If not impossible toieachiellublu deduc tions as to future marketings on the basis of the January estimates of supply of hogs. In this connection the September report of the Department of Agriculture may bo re ferred to. That statement Indicated that the number of stock hogs for fattening on hand was 94 percent In compailson with the preceding - ceding year , for the enllro country , or 91 per cent for the sniplus states. This exhibit , with thu fact that these statements have as n rule understated the tuliitlvu supply so far as sub sequent iccoids of marketing could verify , did much toward setting asldo the accumulating evidences of a tery much greater decrease in marketable supplies than thus suggested. The western packing has fallen shoit 40 pur cunt , and t IKI total visible marketing for the four w Inter tor months , west and east. Is likely to bo fully 81) ) per cent short of the eoricHpondlng purled last year , This result cannot bo ululbutcd to a holding back policy , for It Is oIdent that It Curti Coldi.Coujhi. Sort Throat , Croup , Influ- nra , VTbooplnir ough , BronehltU n4 A thm . A ctrtiln cure for Conimnptlon la &rit nd ture relief in d ne S t r ; . UM : onet. You will > < thi excellent etf t Ukbit tin flrit don. Sold br deiliri rywhtri. Lut bottlti CO uaU aii tl.OO. hopi rmvii liooii nmrhnlcil In atlvnncoof null- nnry conditions tit tiinturlly' , . . Tlio murkot thopiiil ir t'k has been deoldodly uiiiMi'ii tint In the main the tendency of priori Ims been hUlior Tlio shipping denmnd Imn Increased and thetolKii been no lot up In the Imiulry from fresh moat houses but pnrkors still puritio their dealInh tin-tics nnd liny In- eronsn In receipts Is always the slgnul font Htivnuo attack from that timrtor | , Today's nmtkM WHS a ease In point , HO- eelptn nrro the liea\li'-.t * < t fur tiili month , Troih meat denier * and xlihipjrs itarlod In linyltiKprlciMMenily Ion nickel Ion or I linn I'rl- dny. ( food to rholco butcher neUht anil heavy hojri old at from IH.10 to(8.3& . with lUht and mlved xtuir at ts.05 in fH.JU. I'nt'kuM held oir on the early mar ket , but wlwn nvrlpts had been Nwnllcd by Into trains to over 0,000 liond nnil repot Is of n bearish nnluio bo an to eomt < In fiom Iho L'hlciiKo lioj * and provision 'market ' ! * , packers KOI In tliolr line uork after fresh meat and shipping order : * hnd been tilled by bidding on nnd linylnit piettyirood IIOKS of all weluhtt at fiom ( i.U.'i to is. 10 or lUc to 10u lower tlinn the early market. I'rom this on trade ( IraffsnJ and the mnrkot closed e\- trptituly weak 1th about lf > 00 hoiss still un sold , Of the hoi4 sold the. bulk wont at. mound fH.05 tofB.in asiiKiilnst 58.15 lotu.uri 1'rldny nndiJ8.lt ) tnM.iriont'i wceis iitto , SIIIEI' : The bulk of t ho rivet pis were lambs consUnud tlitoinli to Olilravro nnd not of fered on the lam km , Tlioro Is a fair de mand for doslrnhlo muttons nnd feedeis , with steady nt tlio rei'ent decllno. ' 'iilr to Kixnl natives , } : i.7riir > .oOi fair to KOO < ! uestorns , * . ! .502.'l-"i'i ; I'ommon and -stock sheep , $1'J.V/W.7& ! ; ( { oed to cholco-10 to 100-lb. lambs , $4.00ii > . " ) .50. Itcrelpts nnd Dlxpixltlon of Stock. Olllclal rccjlpt-iiut ldU | > nltloi : of slo.-k as shown by the bojksof the UnionSt > e' YanU company for the twenty- four hours ondln ntO o'clock p. m , I'clminiy 1H , ia03 : mrt.ii'r * . Chicago l.hii Stork Mnrkrt , CllKUdo , III. , 1'eb. 18. [ Special Telegram to Tin : IIHK.1 Theio. was enough demand to absorb serb the small supply of cattle In the yards at us good prices as weio paid on 1'rlday Not much else but butchers' und ranneis stock was offered , nor was much else wanted. The range of quot at Ions was from $1.50 iol.2 , * > for poor to extin cow-s , heifers and bulls , $3.10 to $ ( 'i,10 for dressed beef and shipping steers ami from $2.5O to $1.35 for stockers and feeders. Sales of hogs were at a lower lunguof tallies. Although the total number of stale and fresh leeelptsdld not exceed 20.000 head , there was not enough strength In the demand to hold up prices. The aterage was fully fiom Hie to 15e lower thiin for yesterday , the gieater part of the stulV being weighed at fiom { 8 to $8.15 for light , from $8.15 to $8.35 for medium and mixed and fiom $ H.30 to $8.45 for heavy. Clos ing quotations were fiom $7.85 to $815 for iioor Id line diovers , ' averaging from 150 to 95 Ibs. , and fiom $8 to $ d.GO for heavier aveiages. Theio was an unchanged market for sheep and lambs. Quotations ranged fiom $3,25 to $5.35 for the former and from it.25 to $11.30 for the hitler. This week's lei-elpts exceed 58,000 head , thus bc-atlng the lecord , which was 57,083 for the week ended October 4 , 1892. Kecelpts Cattle , 1,500 ; ho h , 8,000 ; sheep , 1,500. The Ktcnlng Journal rcpoits : I'AlTLB Iteeelpts , 3,000 head : market quiet , rices strong ; prlmo steeis , $ . " > .75iiG.10 ( ; ulheis. t3.90I65.50 ; cows , $2.0 3.70. HOGS Kecelpts , 8,000 head : shlpmi nts , 5- 000 bend ; market slow ; closed weakei ; mixed mm packers , $8.00118.30 : prlmo heavy and butchers' weights , $ H.35BM.55 ; prime Hnlits. $8.0038.15 ; other lights , } 0.50Ii.7.60. Slliiisi1 Kecelpt" , 1,500 head : market closed weak ; natives , W.2.jjl5.0O ; Texuns , Jl.bO : westerns , 5.00i65.25 ; lambs $5.25UG.25. Kansas City I.lvii Meek U-irkct. KANSAS OITV , Mo. , Kob. 18. CATrt.K-Ko- colpts , 4,300 head : shipments , 2,000 head : good , steady ; poor cows weak ; closing lOu lower. HolS Receipts , 0,700 head ; shipments. 400 head ; market 5 ( < f.lOc lower ; all grades , $0.25 ® 8.20 ; bulk. $7.90S8.10. Slir.Et' Kecelpts , 20,000 head ; shipments , 1,100 head : market strong and unchanged ; muttons , S4.00S5.00 ; top muttons , $5.25 ; lambs , JO.00. WANTED- Total IIIUM or CITIEti COUNTIES , SCHOOL usfo u w * DISTRICTS , WATER COMPANIES , ST.n.R.COMPANIEStto , Correspondence solicited. N.W.HARRIS & COMPANYBanhers , < 03-I03 Dearborn Street , CHICAGO. IS Wall Street , NEW YORK. 70 Stole St. . BOSTON. Illds will bo received by the State Hoard of Printing at the office of the Secretary of State , on or before 2 o'clock p. in. March 1st , 1893 , fur printing and binding In cloth ono thousand (1,000) ( ) copies of Voliimu V of the transactions and Keports of the Nebraska State Historical s oclcty , to bo delivered complete at thu oflico of the secretary of the soaloty In the State Unltorslty building , Lincoln , To contain 300 pages more or less , Thu sl/o of page , xvolght and duality of paper , style and quality of binding , style of lettering on cover , and In all respects the woik to bu tha samu us Ihu sample to bu seen In tlioofllcoof thuSecretary of State. Also bids will bs received for binding In cloth ono hundred and llfty (150) ( ) unbound volumes of Volume 11 of said society. Work tobo completed within slxtydays from the awarding of the contract. Knell proposal must bo accompanied by a bond In the sum of $500.00. Klghtroerved to reject any and all bids by thu State Printing board. Dated 1'obiuary 18,1893 , JOHN O. AI.T.KN. Seciotary of State. OMAHA AWHINQSAND TENT * Omalia Tent-Awning COMPANY. 1IOI19K COVKI13 , 1111 Karnnm Mt. DAGS AMD TWINES. I B13/QU / ! . Beats Omito Ba3 II. 0. Daxon , COMPANY. Importer * nnd m n-frs. nicyclassolil on raontlilr iaciJ , tmrlapi , Hour Iwlno. pajmund IWN.IMH. BOOTS AMD 8'HO . Morse-Cos Shoe Company , Howard 1'nctorycornerIttu anil DaiijImStraati ain't btiyon , nnl nra Wonro tntiklni ; cloa ] prlois to ulllcu aclum < if icoodt which It very saleable with merchant * , Kirkendall , Jonss & AfflBP , Hand-Sewed COMPANY WholiMtlo BIIOH CO , booH.iho'Ji uocli , UJi- mfra. cixoritj 1 Unto a nnil rubber Hubbor sho3 Co. I1J.1- UlOllarnoy ril. 1IUI-1IO ) ll-trnoy tit. COAl , CQJ DRY GOODS. FURNITURE. Omaha Upholstering Beeb33 & CO. , upholiteroil furnl- KUUNITUIIB CO , Oraco luro.llJJIlOl Nlcliulnt bl. Wholoinloonly , and Ut'i Sti. JE IVJOYO Both the method and results -when Syrup of Figo is taken ; it is plcaaant and rcfrcaliiug to the taste , and nets gently yet promptly on the Kitllioyo , Liver and Bowels , clcnnscs the sys tem clTectunlly , dispels colda , licad- ncliGs and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind over pro duced , pleasing to the taata and nc- ccptahlo to tlio Btnmnch , prompt in its action and truly licncficinl in its cfFccts , prepared only from the most healthy and agrccahlo substances , its many excellent qualities commend it to all and Imvo nmdo it the inogt popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for palo in BOo and 81 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any ono who wishes to try it. Do iiot accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO , CAL , LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. H.t. Architects , Surveyors , Contractors We have a full supply of TVJatric- rnatlcal T-psti-urncptSi Draw- Irig pape-S | Trao'PQ ' Cloth , Traps'tSs ' Pods ! CriaiTiSi Uev- elsj Tapesj Squares- Illus trated Catalogue free. 114 South 15th Streat , to l Scarcely Half A Life i In llveJ by multltiutei For tliuy broatbo bail ulr Ilinl nlr Iiolsoni the blood-ileiuteiu llouioijnorivtor ( BMP. Specific Oxyiicn , inirlllis the blood iinkej It bright- makes hcnUhy tUmio. In brief , mikes yon now Uorm UUo.iso ! " HionoliItU , Catarrb , Aslliuiit , ( onnuniptlon etc. Nprra. Wastu Debility nmlor- Kinlu weakness , nro pruvunloJ nntl coroJ "Oxygen Book" and 4 Trys Free. SPEGiFiB OXVaEl G9l ; Suite 510 Sbcolr BlUf. . Omuun. A. H. DYER , , iiuvutom : , wnrnhuiiHui , factory bullillnKf , nnil nil work rrqiilrlni ; a llim-oiiich uinl liruotlcul kiiinvleilci' < > t coiiHtriictlou unit of iiiutorlulH , u upeciulty. 1' . O. Itox : iil : , rrpinunt , N b. SOUTH OMAHA. - . . - - . , - . . . . . - Union Stock Yards Company , South Ornalia. Beat Cattle llo nnil Shcop market In tuo rrest. COMMISSION HOUSES. Y/ood / Brothers. llvo Stock Conuiilssloa Moroliunti. South Omaha Tclppliono 11.17. Chlcoza JOHN U DAU1SMAN , I . . . . . , . „ „ ° " WAJ.TKIl K. WOOD , fMann Market Iloporti by mull and wlro clieorfulljt Dished upon uppllontlon HARDW\Rc. Rector & Willielray Loi3Ck& Lin COMl'ANV , Doalcra In nariltraro aat Corner 10th and Jncinoi luob.innles' tuol tile mil IlUt DouKlanSt. HATS , En , W. A. L. Gibbon & Co. i Omaha Safe and Iroi Wholoiala WOIIKH. Ilatn , cipi , ntr.t Fi > fo , T ults. Jail work. Hlovcs. inlttoni , Iron itinttori anil tire o * unit llnrnoy st . tnpcj. Alulrejn It. IU * 11 , 14th nnd Jiicnon. LUMBEft. John A. Wakeflald , Charles R. Iii ) | > ortud > Ainorloinl'ort Hnrdnoo.l In Sjr. < TJJ ! laml ajrudfit , .Ull ril- carpoti.li ! pirU | ) ( keo tiotiiunc undtjJtiU/ tlonrliu , wliltollruu. LIQUOR3 , of inllllii.natli Mnll or.ljrj pr oiupt. 1001 KarnnaiHU PAPER. aits. Carpenter Paper Co. Standard Oil Co. , Curly a full neat at prlnllnn , Uorinol and lubrlcatlJJ writing p car.l nnper , ota ell , * ! O , ata. PRQDJ3C3MMI33HI , Branca & CD. , Jas. A. Clark & Co. , I'toduce , frulti ot nil llutlor , chosn , poultry nnd Kani kluiU , nyitori. W , 131 ll , ( . STOVE REPAIR ] , SA3H. 01QR Omaha Stove Repair \V)1IKJ. itoro rep lr ManufK4tumr < of iaib. nnd watar Itaohuiaati duor < , bl I u ill an ] lor any kind of utorj uinutdliui. bntuoh ol ttk Hut , lAll "QlUnd/