Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 01, 1882, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA , WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER I
The Omaha Bee
Fab'.Uhtd every morningexcept .Gundt
ffae only MonJar morning dally ,
JTEKMB B7 MAIL - „ _
TM 810.001 Throe Month * . * .u
Monthi. o.OO | One . . l.OC
WKKKLY BKE , published er
TE.MS POST 1'AID- _
One Year. . . . . .J2f/ ) 1 ThreoMonlhi. ,
liMcnths. . . . 1.00 I One . .
AMERICAN NEWS COMPAXT , Sole Agent *
ot Newsdealers In the 1TnItcd States.
COKnK3i'ONDKNOK All Uommnnl
IHtlonn rcUtlnK to Newt- and KdltorlMm t
ir i > houH be uddrcBnod to the EDITOR or
rru USB.
BU8I VES3 nUTTERS-All nn ! ne
Ctten and KcmllUncos should bo ftd
w e'l ' > PHI HEE PrnumuHO COM
AST , OMAHA. Drnft * , Cliock * nd Post-
Bice Onierfl to lie made paynbla to the
der of the Oompftnyl
f be BEE PUBLISHING CO , , Props
El ROSEWATEH. E.Wor.
ANTI - MONOPOLY , TICKET ,
S'nto-
IV Guvcrnnr ,
13.1' . INOKHSOLL , of Johnnon County.
For Ij'putenanl'Governor ,
D. P. UKYNOLD , ol Hamilton County.
F r Secrrttnry i > f Ss to ,
THOS. MUTI EY , of Franklin County.
For Treasurer ,
P. D. STUDEVANT , of Fillmore Co.
F > r Audltur ,
JOHN B1JA1TY , of Whoe'er County.
For Attoinej-fJancral ,
JOHN 1UKND , of lluftMo County.
Jf r Commissioner i f Public Linda and
CHARLES IH MADLEY , of Adams Co.
For Superintendent of I'ublla Instruction ,
J. J , POINTS , of D .uglfts 0 unty.
For Hfffent f the Uulvenlty ,
J. 61. IJUKKS , of Lonctstcr.
For Onureioman , First Dktrht ,
J. W. GILBERT , of Cans County.
For CoDKroBinan , So 'rm I District ,
S. V. MOOIIE , of York O tmty.
For ConRre mau , Tolrd Dlttrlct ,
II. K. TURNER , of Platte County.
TUB cry of iho nonatarinl quintette
was for "harmony , harmony , " but
jaat where the hirraony comoa in is
not psrceptiblo to the unaided visions
Mn. TIMMK is singing , ' 'Oat
cold world , out In the street. " The
< Jirman voters of J.ll'srson prccinc
have been gulled long enough by hi
rascality.
Hit W. J. OoKNiai.ii an anti-mo
nopjly man vrhon ho has a damag
suit against the corporation , and a
railroad man when ho ia running fo
offici.
AND now the nominees of the Doug
las county republican convention wi )
discover that a nomination oven it
Mebra ki is not alwsya equivalent to
an election.
A NEBRASKA du > patci ! published in si
thp , Ohio igo Timct says that the roit
ault in the Third district is gi log to
be very cloio , and that if Yalontino is o
elected it will bo a biro scratch. Tno
principal scratching trill bo in favor of
M. K Turner.
TUB legislature of Vermont has just >
pusod a bill prohibiting the sivlo of
cigaiH , cigarettes , smoking and chowtl
lag tubiojo to any person law than S
fifteen years of a o. Carrying canes
or weating toothpick shoos will bo the
next point of attack. tli
>
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11
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f
:
as
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TICKET.
After the most ditgrucoful row that
has over taken ploca in nny conven
tion in Om hnn ticksvhffl boon pro.
Bonled to the repablicntu of Douglas
county which reprcosnts boss rule in
its most ff-nsl\o form. Instead of
expressing the will of the republican
muss , it ia the product of corporate
monopoly combined with a eclfuli ten-
ntorial pool , An a whole the ticket is
rcspoalablo , eo far as Iho individuals
who comp > soit nro concrrr.cd But
tlicso individuals throtiqh their pscu-
linr relation to Iho corporations do
not and cannot represent the people.
Tha very inothodn by which they
wcro nominated ought to make their
election itnpostiblo. The delegates to
the primiries were for the most part
diet it ed by the bosses. Tha convert *
was the moat shameless cxhibi-
tion of bulldozing and truto foroo that
we have over had hero. The ticket
wna forced through with a fatal disre
gard cf nil dr.corum und decency ,
trampling under foot the right
of ever ten thousand
the citizins of Djuglas county who reside
side oulsido cf the city limits.
Four ( if the candidates , Messrs
Djwey , Gray , Oolpetzar and Droatc
nro hem y ehippora whoso nucnces as bus
inots mondoponds entirely on the goo
will of the ruilroado. They dare no
register the will of the people in th
legislature if by DO doing they woul
run the ritk of losing patronage or o
receiving their rebates.
Another candidate , Mr. Ohristo
phcrson , has for y cars been in the pos
tal sorvica acting in conjunction wit
the railroad faction in primaries an
conventions. If he resigns his plac
and goes to Lincoln , ho goes thcro t
do the bidding cf the same partie
with whom ho has been allied and t
whom ho looks either for promotion i
the Borneo or for something bettor.
Mr. L. M. Bennett , is the Pullman
palaca car superintendent , and tha
fnot speaks for itself.
Mr. J. II. Olnrkson is a young ant
rising lawyer of marked abilities
against whom wo have not u word t
eny personally , except that ho ia in
bad company and must naturally gi
where his friends direct ,
Mr. Susoiibivi , nominated to catcl
the Gorman vole , in in the employ o
Ilor Ci > , , .md Her & Co. nro an tnucl
under the dominion of the railroads n
any firm in Omih.t. Besides this , hi
was put on aa the delegate for Joi
Millnrd , who is t.ho preferred candi
data of the U. P. for the senate.
Mr. John Taylor , of West Omaha
who is euppcsod to represent all there
is of the cloven country precincts , is
like Mr. OJarkson , a better man than
we like to see in such company.
Mr. W. J. Ojnnoll has ability
enough to Gil & position in the state
senate. But his ability overleaps
itself , and iu his atmaty to obtain
jffio ho has deserted principles anc
nonviotionn for the sake of success ,
i Summing it up , the ticket may rep
rosonttho aristocratic and autocratic
iid j-lovo clement ol O.rmho , but it
Jttcrly fatln to respond to the wishes
f the body of our people who have
nero at stake in the ntxt legislature
him any candidate in the United
states soiiatn
THE PAVINQ QUE TION. >
Th o rtvisod city cutrcur , creating
ho baatd of public works , placed that
ody unaor the direction and control
f the city council. It restricted its
clion in niuking all pub'io improve'
lents by the express provision that
U work projected must bo approved
y the council nnd put into operation
nly by its mandate. It gave inaddi-
ion tlid power of vote to the council
ver any notion of the boaid. In
ther words tho'boaid of public woiki '
ran made thu executive of the council
matters pertaining to public im-
rovcments within the city limits.
At the last seiaton of the city coun-
the following resolution was
dopted : 3
, That the board of public
Da und lie-ruby are instructed to
t the contract to the Joirost bidder
jr the pavement of Touch street with
ioux Falls atone.
Messrs. Birker and Wilson seem-
to have puffjd thenistilvos up with
10 idea that they are superior not
nly to the mandate of the council
ut to the expressed will of the olti-
ins of Omaha. Their action in balk- f
ig the immediate paving of Tenth
troot is a bold defunoo ef public
jntirnont and is iu arrogant eon- '
jtnpt i f the orders of the council
It lays the board upon to the grav
it auspicioDs of private interest in
ont.-aota which they aotk to enforce ,
nd in the use of materials
rhioh have been repudiated by those
lojtly interested. The ailly quibbles
Muwra Birkor and Wilson will '
ilind no one , while their frequent
rips to Uuion PaeiQo headquarters
re , tusay the lea t , iuijiciou . If
lie Tenth a'.roat properly owners had
onirod Fort Ojllins landatono they
ould hava so tpucified in their poti-
ions. If they wantol Patto river or o
jllot lltuojtono , they would uudoubt-
lly luvo BO exj.rjssod tbomaelvci.
he fiots of the matter is
lat the owners of prop- n
rty abutting 011 Tenth street
now enough to know that the
eat pavement is the cheapest and tlo |
t will ba added to the valua of the
topuriy cf rrhioh they are the owner * ,
.nd they do not propose , nor will
ley qubmit , to havu an fofotior arti.
o foiated on them to suit the indi >
vidual tnstcs or intrrceta of officia1
chosen to cirry out under IVla
their cxprccaod wishes.
As to the relations of the board an
the citticil , they nro too claarly do
fincdto admit cf diacutsion. And i
the members of the board of r
woika imagine fornn irslMit that the
can Afford to continuo their attitud
of dtOanco they had hotter try it on
There la a remedy forthcoming whic
will bo promptly applied.
THE SECOND DISTRICT.
The monopoly nowspipcrs wh
slrangoly enough are bravely sopporl
ing that bold and ouUpoken ant
monopolist JamcnLiird , prtfois them
Bclvc.i certain of Dr. Moore
defeat , They are countin
up n very largo brood of mo
noply chickens which they hop
to ace hatched from anli-monopol
egga bcoiuao the railroad attornry
havo-boen warning the neat. There !
no reaaon why Dr. S. V. Moor
should not bo elected by over 3,00
mojurityif the alliances do the wor
which their friends have u righ
to expect of them. At the iast prcsi
dontial oteotion the vote in the Boo
end district ntood : Garfiuld , 18 CCO
Hancock , 7 460. Weaver , 1,204 ; o
nearly thrco republicans for over ,
democratic voto. Of the republican
voters more than half were profeaao
anti-monopolists , and to-day a large
proportion are members of the nllt
nto J nnd nnti-monopoly leagues. T
thcao may be added fully one-third o
the democratic voto. Dr. Moor
onghtto Bwoi'phis distr.ct in spite o
Jim laird's nuddon convornion to th
anti-monopoly ranks.
MR. VALKNTINE has never been
given to blotting hia own trumpet
and has never , until thin campaign
attempted to tell the farmora what h
has been doing for them. In the aec
end place , the char no that the rail
roads nro clamoring for him ia a lie
They have not been agninat him , anc
they nro against Turner. That is nil
The railroads nnd the people are very
much in sympathy on this propoM
tion. Omaha Republican.
Of courao not. The court records
blow Vul'o trumpet for him with
blaat which ia echoing inovrry count ]
in hia district to this day , and which
ho ia forced to hear oven when ho
stops hia oara to shut out the sound. .
Ho never attempted to tell the farm
era what ho had been doing for them
fjr two reasons. Firat nnd for
most , because ho never die
anything for them ; and ace
end , because ho never supposed
it wonld bo necessary for him to make
a campaign in a district where ho
boasted that ho had n walkaway. Ic
is moro true than gospel truth that
the railroads "have not been agiinat
lim and they are against Turner. '
No resident of the Third diatrtct needs
to bo told of that fact. The monopo
ies have the best of reasons for their
support of Valentino and their oppo
sition to Turner , and their reasons are
the very ones which will induce the
loncst voters of the district to cast
their rotea for M , K..Turner. '
SINOE Blanche Douglass hoa tostl
iod that oho broke throe boor classes
n aucocation ever the head of a com
anion , there can bo nodcubt thatahe
akca kindly to "mashing. "
Mit. T. J. BELL , of Otoo , having
oolinod the nomination for regent elbe
bo atato univoraity on the anti-mo-
inpoly ticket , Mr. J. M. Burks , of
jincastor , a gentleman of culture and
bility has boon substituted.
IN the opt worda of a recent cam-
nign apeakf r the Gvo conatonal can-
idatoa from Douglas cast lota for the
'nrmontu of this cruoiOod community.
t looks &i if they might bo coitly
poila.
IN Judge James \V , Savage and
3nas. II , Brown the democrats of
mglaa county have made two ex
nil cut Boleotiot.H for the atato senate.
Neither lie open to the charge of
ruckling to the corporal ions ,
"PO potaul Motion-
w York Jler.la.
A Yale college man anuouncca that
10 has discovered u perpetual motion
aaohino. Ilia gia meter wont ahead
egiatoring all eummor , although the
oem was locked up at the beginning
vac ition. But a multitude of other
oople are ahead of him in the dis-
every of theaamn ftot.
U < efol to NAVM A round.
'iineer-Preaa , to
J.y Hubbell ia a useful person to
aye about to keep up the general
pirits of the campaign. He can fig-
ro out iifty republican majority in
lie next
Ho Oouin Bxpmln.
m Hre tN.w .
A Coniuotlont. merchant who ap >
'ied to a New York hou o for gooda
n credit was met by the reply that
a had tailed and paid only ton cents
n the dollar.
"V ry true , " ho replied , "but I am
bo only merchant in the town who
verv paid ever six. "
' 'Didn't you allow your paper to go
protest laat winte1
"Yte ; hut the dro'ors anid I cnuld
ot live 24 hourn just then , and 1 wa
ot thlnkiiii ; of earthly thii gi " In
"Haven't you put nil your property
ynur wifu'a natntj1'
' Well , yo-jbu'aho knowa more at
bout buaineoa in live minutes than I
o In half a day , "
He waa eiven credit for 9200.
Sr-IIooda , ecarla , ribbons and any
aucy articles can bo made auy color
ranted with/th.e Diamond Dyed. All
he popular colors.
'SPECIAL ' ORDER m. 220.
Keep It Before the People of I lie
Third District-
Valentino's Discharge from th
Army for Swindling.
The XMdtmoo of III * Guilt Tahen
from Govirmnoot Ucoordi.
In the last issue of the Columbu
Journal , n paper published by Hon. M
K , Turner , there appeared ft oharg
that a gentleman residing in Col urn
bus had in his possession a scrap boo ]
containing the following extract :
nisoiunan ) .
Tlii war dipartmotit h a ordered tha
the f ) llnwlnif naiiO'l olliccn lie dlthonir
b y muitcru 1 < ut of the nervlce f ir fraud
ulcot practices against the United Statu
"Among the names appearing
twenty-two in number , is that of FIM
Lieutenant and Adjutant E. K. Vul
cutiuo. "
Now , Mr. Valentino in his speed
at Fremont ou Thursday , denounce !
this extract us tin infamous slander
and most emphatically denied tha
there was any foundation whatever
for the charge. The Omaha Ktjntl
lican , tha organ of the Union Pacific
and the mouthpiece of Mr. Valentine
tine , has issued a defunt challenge to
any man or journal to produce the
proof that Valontino'a army recon
had the ( slightest spot upon it. They
also published a letter from Captain
Cramer who , as Captain of company
0 , Seventh Iowa cavalry , vouches for
Valontino'a fidelity and integrity
while in the oorvico.
Now , wo have in our possession an
official transcript from the records o :
the MVar Department , which eflec
tnally nnila Mr. Valentino aa an irn
pester who is trying to cover a matter
of record that shoulu forever retire
him to private life.
SPECIAL ORDER NO. 220.
WAB DupARTUB
ADJCTAM QKNKKAL'H IFKICE , >
May 11 , 1800 . J
By direction of the president the
following named ( .fibers are hereby
dishonorably muatorod out of the ser
vice of the United States for fraudu
lent practices in connection with the
nppraital and sale of horses , the prop
erty of the United 3a < o > :
Brevet Brigadier General H. H.
Heath , Colonel Seventh Iowa Cavalry
Major J. B. David , Seventh Iowa
Cavalry.
Captain E. B. Murphy , Savonth
Iowa Cavalry.
First Lieutenant E. K. VALES-
TINE , Adjutant Soveuth Iowa Cav
alry.
Second Lieutenant Thoa. J , Potter ,
Seventh Iowa Cavalry ,
Lieutenant Q. P. Beldon , Seventh
Iowa Cavalry.
Lieutenant L 8. Brewer , Savonth
Iowa Cavalry.
Lieutenant W. II. Northrap ,
Seventh Iowa Cavalry.
Lieutenants Ormsby and Loworoy ,
Seventh Iowa Cavalry.
By order of the Secretary of War.
E. D. TOWNBBND ,
Assistant Adjutant Central.
The facts in the ciso are that E. K.
Valentino , with others , was implicated
in frauds upon the government in the
appraisal aud ailo of horses. The
Seventh Iwacivalry were doing ser
vice on the plains against the Indians ,
and also guarding the surveyors and
construction corps of the Union Pa
cific. The adjutant of the regiment
was iu , collusion with the speculators
who were buying aud selling army
horaes. The conspiracy was discov
ered by the secret service department
of the government , and the result waa
special order 220 , issued by order of
E. M. Stanton , secretary of war.
When the regiment was about to be
mustered out throe months later , five
of the officers implicated in the fraud
including Valentino , were whitewash
ed and the chief mustering officer was
authorised by SpecUl Order No. 322
furnish them with an "honorableJ ( )
discharge. " The o fiber ehitfl/ instru
mental in saving Valentine from per
petual disgrace was Major Geo. M.
O'Brien , of this city , who was later
bruvottod brigadier general. Yet ac
cording to Captain 11 , W. Cramer ,
dealer in railway supplies ,
Valentino had as fiao a mili
tary record as any man iu
Lhe regiment , and the captain , with r.
his wonderful memory , toll * us that
Valentino was muttered out with his
regiment at Fort Leavenwortb , Kas ,
1RGG , The war department records
ihow that Valentine was mattered out
Davenport , Iowa , August 10th ,
18GC , several months before tha-regl-
ment was dubindod ,
This is the truth of history , which ,
within itself , stamps Valentine aa ut
terly unfit to be the representative of
any respectable class of chitons , least
of all cf the RjOhnt soldiers wh
tmme he disgraced.
MASON'S OUOHUTJi KXCORD
B9 | Swindling Operations in Oto
County.
LIVOOLV , Neb. , Oil. 30 , 1882.
Thethelill or if 1m Br.K.
I see that Judge Maton IB iihuki
his gory loiki throuuh the Third die
trict at the rate of $100 a shako tad i
devoting a nreat part of hia attention
to Senator Van Wyck'a record. Th
charges revamped for the fifih lim
by Judge Mason hnve been five time
annttered and need no further du
proval , But Bprakinp about "ricorda
no public tflijial in Nobraaka hns ;
moro "sweot ncented one" than O. P
P. Mninit Kli' ) ia norr howling abou
railruad bnnda ni d ( .ur junior eeuator
Judge Moon's vetialiiy ns a lnwyt
and judge luvo i f en bueiicmumuitiei
upnn by the bar ol thia ntato.
Some years ngo , after bonds wen
Uaued to the MidUnd Pacific railroad
there was dungur that they would b
contested in the courts. Mnaoti , ntil
on the bench , made a prnpoeition to
fn'nnd of the road that if ho waa pal
$10.000 ho would insure thu legality
of the bonds. That prnposi
tion waa carried to Fran !
Wnitc , of Otoo county , presiden
of the rnnrl , and hjr him njected
About 1870 or 1871 Maacm and
Shambrougli made a contract in writ
ini ; with the conmiisMonero of Oto
county to receive $25,000 , $5,001
paid in cash or warrants , the n mam
dcr to ba paid when the final decision
waa obtained as tn thp validity of th
bonds issued by Otoo county to th
Kunsaa City road ; a > no tqjtho.Oblcaeo
Burlington * and Qiincy railfdad
After that Mason and Shambrough
by aomo trick , received two coup-inn
one to each road , which had been filet
for piyment. They then managed
with another attorney at Nebraska
City , to bring auits on these cnuponp
in the name of Milton E. Pinney
against Otoo county , and were to give
the said attorney $1,000 to allow
them , M. and 8 , to auccued and ob
tain jud raont , thus securing the ro
maiumg $20,000. Tim ault waa
brought in the county court , and ap
pealed to the district court
and carried to the tupromo court
whpro the decision waa. : > flirmoc
When Mr. Wool worth appeared on
behalf cf the Chic io , Burlington &
Q lincy railroad aud ruado a otatemcn
ut the above conspiracy , the cour
iesnod a rulo-why Masun and Sham
brough ohould not bo disbarred foi
improper proceeding. In the meantime
time Shame-rough luft the state anc
the matter was hushed np. Judge
Maeon did not attempt to got from the
county the benefit of th t. d c f-ion ,
neither did ho peek the $ 0,000 or
py back the $5.000 ho plundered
from the county.
Meser * . Sweet , Hawley , White ,
Bdimet , Fdlton and Rulfo commenced
tuit to have a receiver appointed for
the Midland Railroad company. At
that time Miaon was on the bpiich.
Ha made a contract with Mr. Woolworth -
worth , the plaintiffs attorney in that
suit , to aid and assist him aud to re
ceive a certain percentage of the
amount of fees paid Wboiwortb.
Mason made atid out cat ed hia con
tract in writing whilb on the bench
and actually made an order in thu
case while acting as jadgo after sign *
mi ; thu contract to act aa attrriiey
Mr. Wood worth had that contract and
and probably has it yet. After that
time ho made a contract with J. N.
Converse & Co. , the defendants iu the
lib > ve euit , to defend and actually re
cii/ed $1,250 from them to appear
ind dtfei.d the same Ctae , after Big i-
rig a contract to appear f.ir plaintiff
When these fccta became known , thu
awyers of d ffdront parts of the atato
and the Otoo county bar were about to
uk that Maaon should bo diobarrod
'or ' allowing himst-If to be retained on
Doth aides. He himself piteoualy
Bupp'icated the Jawyera of Nobrnaktt
Dity , and his wifd , ( inu of the uullsst
if women that ovtr adorned the atato ,
alco made tearful appeals aud the mat
er was not further pressed
This ia the man who is talking about
railroad bonds and rucorda and attimp
ng a district not Ilia own lor S1CO a
ninlit in behalf of a corrupt j ibber
rtiid diegracud public ofluial
PoutuOicu UDitngeb
n Nebraska and Iow. % during the
week ending October 28 , 1882. F
uiahed by Wm. Van Vleok , ot the
wstciiice department , for the BEE :
NF.Blta.KKA.
Eitabliahed North. Side Wayne
Rnuuiy , Eugene L Joner , pontra&atu ;
Jarouviilu , Clay CDunty , Juhn F
Cerm , piiaimuatbr ,
Diacoutii'iiod Elmore , Richardson
county ; Flowerdalo , Richardson
sonnty.
Postmaster appointed Cedar Hil's ,
Saundera county , Uiinford Brownell.
IOWA.
Dlaooutinued Enmot , Emmet
30 unty.
Name changed Tarko , Page coun-
y , to Norwich.
P , atmostora appointed Blainburgb ,
limilton county , Mrs Dm Jonas ;
irownvillo , Mitcaell county ; Thoa M ,
i'ullortown ; E lenvillr , Mrahallcnun-
y , Jarppn D. Mtrgan ; Linn Grove ,
iiena Vi ta county , O. L Wood ;
Prairie Hill , H " " ominty , O. Hnytr ,
Hertford' * A old Pboipuate
tlN UVBI'tP-IA.
FIUffOlB U. A. KINSA. A. Sur-
eon , 0. ti. A , B ja : "Fur dy pptia ,
vhoihtr in the lean or corpulent , in
ervou * dnbllity and in night ntvca'sof
onuump'ion , it han commonly qiven
poedy benefit , and some of my army
liHiidsttru q ute onthutiaatio about
. "
c FOR THE PERMANENT CURE OF
S CONSTBPATION.
Ifo other ilUeito i * BO prevalent ia tiili
p country a * Constipation , and no rcmody
O tiu ever equalled Via celebrated KIDNEY-
c WOr.T iu a cure. Wbatcvor the cauco ,
B however obstinate Ui C M , " ' - -
u wiU ovei-oone It ,
5 PILES * plaint u very pt to l > c
{ . oompllcatod vith oonttip Uon. KkUwy-
C Worttr iyrUienithoukencUp n < scd
( juieklT cure * all kind * ot Mlo * ercairtien
t ) phjmlcUni and medicine * tukTCbcfortdU-
< ed. t-ylty
PRICEOI.I USE
KIDNEY-WORT
COFFEE ANO ; SPIOE MILLS.
Roasters and Grinders of Coffees end f pices , Manufuoturers of
IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER I
Clark's Double Extracts of
BLUEING , INKS , ETG.
J2. G. CLARK. & 00 , Proprietors ,
1403 D < ui Inn S rw t. Omaha , Nob.
1108 and 1110 Haraey St. , OMAHA , NEB.
McMAHON , ABERT & CO , ,
Wholesale
1315 DOUGLAS STREET , OMAHA , NEB ,
L. C. HUJSTTINGTON & SON ,
DEALERS IN
HIDES , FURS , WOOL. P LTS & TALLOW
204 North Sixteenth St. .
- - OMAHA , NEB. .
1005 Farnam St. , Omaha.
M. Hellman < fc Co.
WHOLESALE
oO
1301 and 1803 Farnam St. Cor. 13th
OMAH-A , NEB.
BOOK-KlfiEPINO. . BUSINESS FORMS ,
BANKING1 COMMERCIAL LAW ,
PENMANSHIP , POLITICAL ECONOMY ,
COMMERCIAL ARirflMETIO , ENGLISH LANGUAGES
Taught by gentlemen of business experience end broad ncholaruhip at the
WYiASi GOMMERGIAL COLLEGE.
A nov institution basiid on the hii bo.it ntindard'of oxcitllence. Duy and
and evening scssionn are nnw hi ( iuc3 iBfr.l operation.
For clicnlnra ur Hpeclal Informatioa apply to or uddrena
A , Ti
HIMEBAUGH , HERRI AM &
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Wheat Screenings , Etc.
MILLS SUPPLIED WITH
CHOICE VARIETIES OF MILLIM WHEAT. .
WraVrn tnula lupp'ed with catiacd corn t loirtvt quoUtloni , with prompt iblpn enlj.
< VWrit ti r pr'cjv
T"iii f i ffT 1111 * " r
IHt uLiJinltK
May & Bleumle ,
ALL KINDS OF
Metallic and Wood Coffins ,
OoVaTANFLY OX HAND. ' CCTi
3rdors by Mill or Telephone Promptly ' Atteaded to ,
No , 213 12 kh Street , batwuon Faraasn and