Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 16, 1882, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE DAILY J3EE : THURSDAY NOVEMBER 16
The Omaha Bee.
etl every morning , except Sun-
d y , The only Mondny inDtnlng dally.
TERMS UY MAIL-
Ono Yoar..S10 01 1 Three Months. $3.00
Six Montbn. . R.OO | Ono Mouth. . . . 1.00
THE WEEKLY BEB , puhllihod every
Wednesday.
TKUMS POST PAID-
One Yew $2 CO I Thrco Months. M
SU.Month 100 | OnoMonlh. . . . 20
AMEittcAX NEW a CoMr-ANV , Solo AgtnU
for NewsacMers in the United Stale * .
COIUIKSPONDENPK-AU Communl-
cations relating to News and Liiltoml
matters thould bo addrcwcd to the Emion
or TUB URK.
BUSINESS LKTTlinS-All Bj lne
littler * nd RomUfflnccs nhould be d
OHAHA. DrafK Oheckii and Poetolllce
Order * to be made payable to the order of
the Company.
Tlio BEE PUBLIsilNB 00 , .Props . ,
K. Eiiltor.
STEM are being taken the depart
ment of juntico to stamp out the marriage
riago ineurance buainoss.
TIIEUK is an old motto , ever which
the boaaes arc no * sadly pondering.
It rpads : "Doant mnnkoy with the
bnzz aaw. "
not always to bo relied
on ; at least not the figures of Ohnlr-
man Djraoy oa the political omplox-
ion of the Nobratka legislature.
I < ! Z > MATOR NAVIK , of Adrian , Mich
igan , has boon arrested in Toxaa for
the embezzlement of Adrian city
funds. Money made the mayor go.
Mniui IlAMTRAD thinks that Ben
Bntlo 'a presidential star is in the as
cendant. Ton years ago Murat expressed -
pressed the name opinion about Horace
ace Qreely. ,
THEY are all antl-monopoliats now.
Eroty candidate for the eonato has nn
auti-monop pedigroo. Even Joe Millard -
lard is willing to stop into Saundora'
senatorial brocjans on an antimonopoly
ely platform.
I" ' ' ' If ' WHO struck Billy l ttoraon ? Who
ia responsible for the Binash up ? Bob
lu eraoll thinks it waa general cuaaod-
ncsa. Pope Bob has boon looking
through the political toleacopa , across
inu milky svay into the Star routes.
IS I k
DAMES G , BENNETT , of the Now
\ I "York Herald arrived iu Now York on
.Mondvy and sailed on Wednesday ,
but iu the ehort apace of two days ho
nrrAnged for the laying of an ocean
oahlo which ho promises will not bo
up liyJayOould.
SEWALL writes in the In
dianapolis Journal that the ignorant
foroiga v.ito slaughtered the woman
aulfcAgtf amnndmaut in Nebraska. As
the amendment was defeated moro
than three to one , the preponderance of
the foreign element iu Nobr&ika ia
something alarming.
Man. Colby asks county suffrage
aooiotios to keep up their organizations
and stand ready for action. By all
moans keep up and give > these female
agiutura that hanker after cheap notoriety -
orioty , a chance to sue their names in
print. _ _ _ _ _
THE Philadelphia Ihcnrd riaos to
remark that "tho probable election
of Yaloutino to congress from the
Third district of Nubraaka indicates
that hii constituents do not regard
such an act us defrauding the govern
ment in the matter of homflmh as u
heinous oflbnse. *
GKNEIIAL BIIBUUAN is willing to bo
made the republican candidate foi
president in 1884. General Sherman
will not bo called upon to resign tin
$17,000 , a year salary which ho wil !
continue to draw to the cud of hii
life. A salary of $17,000 iu tin
band is worth moro than $50,000 ii
the bush any day.
IT ia somewhat significant if no
I
amusing to huur George Gorham
i'
stalwart of thontnlwarts , commend t
i'r
r congress , through The National lie
publican , the nupranu neccisity u
speedy Ijglalatum that will iusun
civil eorvioo roforai. The broad an
butter brigade haa suddenly diecovoi
ed that it would bo an outrage to a ;
them to taku an Involuntary vacatio
in 1895.
TUB f.ito of the 122 members c
Congrats who rushed thp liver an
harbor bill ever the veto of Prosidet
Arthur , is a lesson to future jobbori
Of the whole number , 83 ncro r ,
nominated 40 roiiublicine , U ! ) dem <
crats and 1) ) jtidep ° ndontB and i" i
. them havu b on doftuted at the bsllt
bux , viz ; 10 republicjUB , D democrfl
aud 3 Independents. Just 01 rivi
and harbur mombare , or exactly uu
hulf , are therefore elected to tl
Forty-eighth congrcs. Aa this numb
is less than oco-fifth of the who
rfproeuntatton in the next congress
does not constitute a vciy strot
support fur another job of Hko cha
afltcr , but it wjll ba coneidurably r
onforc ' " 7 now members whose oo
etituenv v ke kindly to euch bills
they are . turally treated in the di
tributlon. Of the 64 southern met
bi'H .who voted for the bill 28 we >
r rouomiutttcd , and all of them wore i
elected.
CONFESSION.
THE OMAHA BEE comes to Iho con-
fojsion with th ! :
At. K. Turner reretved n very compl- !
mrnUry vote for the cunvim tniule In his
heh H In the Third dMri't , but n UrRe
number of republicans vtcd directly lor
MiiDgcr , brllovlng that the extent ol Vat-
pnlfne'a d ! Mler would he beit measured
by the the of the democratic plurality.
And thojo republicans voted j-st M
Mr. R'jsowator dof.lrcd thorn to voto.
Mr. Turner's candidacy was for the
purpoBO of makiug a democratic suc
cess pns'iblo , and therefore it is to bo
now , under the proof , ns a
thing cowardly and treacherous ( n
politic ] , The honorable thing for Tim
OMAHA BKB and for Senator Van
Wyck and Jndqo Groanuo , with refer-
ouco to the Third Nebraska district ,
would have been to have bolted their
parly nomination Hko Bolf-rospoottng
mon and to have gene ever in like
manner to the support nf the demo
cratic candidate. A't'otw City Journal.
Mr. Perkins : IB a political prophet
Isn't as "good looking na ho was bo-
toro the election , but ho thinks ho
< news moro about Northern Nebraska -
braska than ho did. Tm : BET an its
roadoro know , was equaroly and hon
estly and in no halMicartod manner
in favor of Mr. Turnor'a election
ever both | E. K. Valentino and Mr.
Mungor. IIow hard it fought for
that roault editorially the files of this
paper will ahow. How caracal were
the pornonal efforts of the editor on
behalf of Mr. Turner no ono knows
batter than Mr. Turner himself. Mr.
Turner's oindidacy was not for the
purpose of making democratic succeta
possible , The solo object was tueccuro
honoat anti-monopoly republican suc
cess in the Third district through the
defeat of a candidate whoso character
and record was a disgrace to our ntato.
On this account and because its editor
ia arid alwuya has boon in full accord
with republican principles on national
issue , THE BEE supported Mr. Tur-
ttor'a candidacy and throw the weight
of its influence towardn ( securing his
election. Senator Yon Wyck has
staled his reasons for supporting the
anti-monopoly republican candidate in
the Third district , and the grounds of
Mr. Crouso's uupport are probably as
good. For .noithor of those gentle
men , however , ia THE BEE authorized
to apeak.
Ao far aa TUB-BEE is concerned , ito
position uooda no explanation. It
will not in the fnturo give its support
to any party fof candidate who re
fuses to represent the iotolligonco of
the country or to voice the wishes of
the pooplo. It will hoist no candi
date's name at the head of its columna
bo he the ohouou representative nf
whatever party , whoso character and
record fit him batter for the peniten
tiary than for public ofiico. It will
prefer an honest democrat to a dis
honest republican every day In the
week and every week in the year , and
an honent republican as against a dis
honest democrat just aa often. It
cannot bo whipped into line by the
broad and butter brigade" df politicians
or coerced by.tho onoera and accusa
tions ot glaoo hunll'ug and pap suckIng -
Ing organ grinders. This .la * THE
BEE'S platform 6f republican indopon
donee. It * ia the platform
on whiolf it stood during
the lust campaign , It is
the platform on which THE BEE will
bo found in every campaign yet to
come. The charge of bolting has lost
its force. A million and a half re
publicans at the late election laughed
it to ecorn. Aud under the same oir-
cumatancca at another time , the num
ber will bo doubled.
So far as Mr Mungor in concerned ,
this paper did not advooato hia elec
tion. Nor did it desire it. But as
botwcen W. H. Mungor , n reputable
and honest man and E. K. Valentino ,
whoso record la so branded with dia-
honotty that there ia scarcely room
for another mark , our choice would
have been made very quickly ,
OMAHA ia to be congratulated that
the first ntep towarda securing stone
block pavomouts hag boon taken. Tin
awarding of the contract for paving
street with granite block will nice
with guucrnl approval. Public opln
it ion imi expressed itself so oiten nut
lt BO Dtrongly or. the subject that thi
o prucsuro uaa too much for the bean
ot public woiks to boar. They guvi
uu the fight for limpstono graci fully
sud , the work will begin early in tin
opnng.
Our city haa ontcrcd upon an era o
public improvements , which will di
much to inorcasa her importance as i
commercial center and to render ho
moro desirable for purpoaos of res !
deuce. The dreadful condition of he
strcolu , in the word * of A. E Toura
lln , haa cost the city half a million
year in frightening away prubpcotiv
invastors , The figurea might cusil ;
eel bo doub'od ' without strewing th
olot truth. Much haa bscn douii with !
ot thu pu t two j'curB to pave the wa
ts lor the iu roh of improvements. W
ere have secured an excellent system ci
oiO walur works for fire protection and dr
iO rucatio iiupply. Our eoworago Byetem I
cr the lit cat and the beit for eanihir
lc purpoowi. Must of our princini
it thojouxhfurua aud
n largn nniubor c
"K our rczideiicoatieolBhuvo been brougli
ir- to . The
ire grado. unsightly and ui
e- healthy north and south Oman
creeks will BOOU bo things of the pasl
if Wo uro now toady for paving , read
ism - for iho oloclrlo light aud ready for
mro eooro o ( other Improvements whio
ro mark the putting on of motropollta
re- airs by a community which has bee
growing BO rapidly that It has hurati
fore had llttlo time to pay attention to
ill personal appearance. The tlmo
for work has como and our people are
disposed to go about it energetically
and systematically. The paving prob-
lo'ro , as wo have said , is in a fair way
to oolvo itself. Our citizens have de
cided that our principal businens
streets must bo pared with stone
blocks , because all experience has
shown that the Belgian pavement IB
the host and the cheapest in the long
run because the best , In loss heavily
traveled streets perhaps ntphalt or
wooodon block may provo advisable.
Ori all grades of ever three degrees norno
other paving material than asphalt
must bo' used , on tocount'of ita'elip-
pcrincss. If neither1 this nor wood
are available wo may bo forced to fall
back on macadam scientifically laid
and properly kept in repair. Another
subject that must como up will bo the
disposal of our surface water through
a system of underground pipes or
BO wore , which will relieve our over
flowing gutters oE the flood which
pours through thorn after each rain
fall. Property owners along cur rcsi-
donco ntrcota are becoming moro and
more favorable to the boulovnrding
plan which has been adopted on portions
tions of Dodge and Uouglaa streets.
Future economy of paving ) and the
improvement of the appuaranco of our
wide streets are both in favor of this
plan.
BXiAINE'S RETIREMENT.
Mr , Blaine forestall all specula
tion oa to hia possible candidacy for
the presidency in 1884 , by the definite
and emphatic announcement that he
has retired from public life , and that
whatever names como before the next
national convention his will not bo
found in the lint. By many of Mr.
Blalno'a poroonal ndmirera , and no
American public man can count to
day as largo a following , this an
nouncement will bo rocoivcd with re
gret. The signs of the time.1 sro not
too encouraging to republicans , and
the party will have need of a strong ,
popular and fearless loader in the next
campaign. Mr.- Blaine has generally
been conceded to posscta several of
these characteristics. Ho certainly
has that ot popularity " "and personal
magnetism. Bul his strength ill this
rcipcct was hia defeat in 1880. His
.ggroaaivonoss which gained him
friends in ono quarter , secured him
onomioa in another. The brillianc
loader of the republican house waa the
bitter antagonist of many of the moat
prominent Htatcsmon in hia own party ,
and the wholoBomo fear which
ho excited iu the .loaders of
the democracy only accumulated
an antagonism which wants for a fit
ting opportunity to wreak its revenge
should ho ever aspire to popular hon
ors. Mr. Blaine hi probably far'
sighted enough to see this. Ho un
doubtedly believes , aa ho says , that
no man who has been prominent as a
presidential candidate for the last ton
years can appear in the capacity before
fore the republican convention in
1884 , Political sentiment ia crys-
talizing along now linos. The
assassination of General Garfield
marked a now opooh in American poli
tico which has boon emphasized by
the result of the late elections. The
coming national issue which both
those evonta have forced to the front ,
Is a reform in the civil service. Two
years will do much to evolve this lasuo
into greater distinctness. On this
issue few of the old school of politi
cians cnn attend. It would bo diffi
cult oven for Mr. Blaine to load a
campaign In which this was the one
pre-eminent issue. Who the earning
man is no ono seems to have political
foresight to predict. Mr. Blaine sug
gests Ben Harrison , of Indiana. It mnj
bo that Mr. Blaine has discovered
the man. But , as has well boon said ,
it does not matter BO much who the
now leader is as what he shall bo. Il
ho hopes to load the party to victor )
ho must bo fully abreast of publii
Boutimont on the great question )
< rhlch have como BO rapidly to tin
front in the laat two yearn. Ho musl
have a broad and national conceptior
ot the executive function. Ho musl
bo above party when party is not
' above the wrong. Ho must bo Ir
advance of political leaders whei :
, political leaders are below the require' '
meats of financial and rconomli
intelligence. Emergencies always fine
men to moot them , Thu emergency
of tlm republican party now suoma tc
bo extreme. But oven though Mr ,
Blaine feula himself unQt to ntatimi
the responsibilities which the oomiii (
candidate must take upon himself , tin
man mill doubtlets bo foiud who
Q through the strength of his own per
Banality and the promise ot hid futun
performance , can call to hia back i
united party , confident in its owi
ability through him to work out th <
problems wh oh uro BBtfnritasolution
Mu. VANJIKIIUILT and eoveral othe
railroad inpgnatca nro caid to bo or
ranging to cnuh the recently initiatec
buiincss of shipping dressed beef frou
Chicago and St. Louis to cnUcri
cities. It will bo a dangerous experi
incut. The St. Loulsr Jtcjnillicai
eays that it may bo they ura riol
enough und powerful enough to sue
ceed in this endeavor , hut oven if the
do it , ia a dangerous experiment t
undertake. Though not formally th
mandate of the railway compauic
against the conduct of n particult
line of buoinesB displeasing to their
managers , that would bo the substan
tial effect of such a movement and it
would bo so recoguizad by the people
of the country. They will not concern -
corn themselves about the details by
which these great magnates wcrk ,
but they wiil bo quick to see * that
Vanderbilt and his associates are
assuming to dictate what kinds of bust-
noBsshall bo and shall not bo done and
such dictatation will hardly be tamely
submitted to. The temper of the
country with respect to the great rail
road corporations ought to bo well
enough understood by these who con
trol them to tnako it apparent that
such an effort at downright despotism
can work nothing but harm to those
who engage In it. They strike directly
at Iho intorosta of the poor , for there
is nothing which BO greatly concerns
the poor as cheap food , and thia
movement of the railway kings will bo
simply an effort to prevent the sale of
cheap food in the cast. They may
succeed in their endeavor , but it will
provo iu the end a success very dearly
bought.
THE Indian bureau has confiscated
several barrels of contraband whisky ,
which Undo Sam'a regulars were Im
porting into the Indian Territory ,
and Oommissaonor Price demands a
voucher that the whisky waa intended
for "medicinal" purposes. Such rod
tape would not bo toioratcd in Neb
raska. The last legislature voted
311C to the militia for druga and
modicinea by the jugful.
CONGRESS will resume work within
thrco wocka , and the river and harbor
statesmen will mnko n sublime ebon
of death-bod repentance.
STATE JOTTING-3.
Fremont figures out a population o
about 4,600.
T blo Hock haa raised over $100 for a
public library.
The Baptist church at .Brock waa dedi
cated on the Gth.
Hustings hag attained the dignity of a
clly directory.
The Fnlrbury opera honso was formally
opened on the llth.
Nuckolla , county pays § 2.25 o week to
support her'paupora.
The O'Connor Democrat haa Metamor
phosed into the Scotia Indicator.
Ord hiH a numbnr of street lamps kept
Illuminated by private enterprise.
Howard will have a cheese factory If
the proprietor is atsured ol 3,000 Iba 'of '
milk.
milk.Hans
Hans Tank and wife , living near .Fre
mont , celebrated their silver wedding on
the 8th.
Of fourteen babies bora in Madison in
the last three or four months , twelve have
been boys.
The firat prize Holt county watermelon
weighed forty-one pounds. It waa raised
by J. S. MoClary.
A saloon keeper at Ord who petitioned
for a licence waa scared out of the idea be
fore it could be granted.
L. Berard , living near Falls City , has a
cow that on the Sth gave birth to three
calves. All are doing well.
W. M. Robortaon'ii little son Sidney was
thrown from a buggy at Madison , on the
7th and badly injured in the head.
The road from Tocnmseh to Beatrice
have assumed definite ihapo. Grade
stakes rniye beeant and/joatracta let.
All-effort Is being made In i'laftsmonth
to secure Mis ; K. E. Poppleton to teach a
class ! n English literature there this win
ter.
ter.The
The grannary of J. W. Dei&hunty , near
Plum ( Jreek , wai destroyed by fire on the
Gth. It contained about COO bushels of
oats.
oats.Mrs.
Mrs. Elias Hartford , of Waterloo , while
returning from church on the fitb , was
thrown from her buggy and had her collar
bone broken.
An 8-year-old daughter of Michael Gal-
lather , of O'Neill , was chocked to death
on the Gth by getting a kernel of corn
lopged in the windpipe.
Ueorgo 0 , and George A. Button , ol
Dawson county , shipped helr broom corn
crop , amounting to about fifteen tons , to
New Orleans on the Gth.
Bowlby , democratic candidate for secre
tary ot state , and another lawyer of Crete
had a stout fight the day before election ,
but before it could ha settled , the poyct
had them.
By the failure of the operator to make
proper reports a collhion occurred at Mc <
I'herson one diyjaet week , in which n
number of cars and a locomotive were
wrecked. No person won injured.
Burglars entered the Norfolk postofficc
on the 8th , and blew open the safe , taking
8200 In btarnpn. $76 in currency and D
number of registered packages. The ;
f then etole a U. P. handcar and left town
on It.
It.Mr. . Croruey , of Plalnfleld , 111. , vl ltlr (
hia grandson , U. B. Cropsey , waa thrown
from a buggy in n runaway at Falrburj
a few days ago and suitatneil revere in
Juries among them being ft broken collai
htiuo. Ilia advanced ago , 80 yearn , makei
the injuries a serlout matter ,
The appraisers of the Otoe reservatloc
have ut last been appointed. They art
George II , lUcttdale , ul lows , nnd D , W ,
Widens , ol Kansas The Indians choet
thclc Mr , liarue.i.
Locturiuti the Politicians
I'ost-PUputch.
In this country the railway manage ]
sometimes complains thithi lot ianol
a happy ono one , and that his besi
dcBiu'a-t to conciliate the press bj
pnaaen and other couifcaiea Are , al
times , wholly ineffectual. But ho li
bettir r.lF thnu hia brother ( jfllcial ir
PruBita , wheio H IB anr.ounued thai
"jutho universities of TJrrllii , Broslav
and Bonn there will bu six months
courno of louurca for the higher rail
way < lliciais. tiuaoonu ry thocjuiot
of lectures extends over tfalvomonths ,
and is not ut all reatrUUd tu Uuci
uulvtmiiaj. Nearly owy nowapapw
has u
sadly in need of a higher moral tone
nnd of the iucMcation of Bounder
principle ! * , and if a coureo of univer
sity lectures would do thorn any good ,
they ought to have it.
Be Wanted a. Llttlo Time.
Dttratt Free Prwu.
A democrat who heard somothinsr
awful good in the city hall yesterday
morning started for Woodward avenue
onuo with his hat in hia hand. Meet
ing a stranger at the ( { ate ho swung
his tile and called out : "Wo'vo nut
eml" "Yes " "And
won a glorious
victory ! " "Yes. " "It is the biggest
tidal wave over heard ofl" "Just BO. "
"And it will sweep the republican
party oir Us feet ! " "It will. " "And
uivo us a democratic president ! " "I
boliovoit. " "Then lot's give throe
cheers ! " "I I-that's a little too
much. " "How whyl Ain't slo
glorious1 ? "Yea , but you sco I was a
republican up to midnight last night ,
and it might not bo in good taste for
me to utter any democratic yells before -
fore to-morrow. I'm with you I'm
all right but rjivo mo a little more
time to got used to the now party. "
* AH ladies who may bo troubled
with nervous prostration ; who suffer
from organic displacement ; who have
a sense of weariness and n feeling of
lassitude ; who nro languid in the
morning : in whom the appetite for
food to capricious and sleep at proper
houriruncertaiu , should have recourse
to Sirs. Pinkham'a Vegetable com-
pouud.
United States Court.
In the United States court , yester
day , Judge HcOrary overruled the
motion to quash the indictment in the
case of the United States vs. D. G.
Hull , and the caaa will probably go to
trial'this term. The Clary case ia not
yet decided.
Released , at Last '
A patient named Mattox , who was
sent to the insane nsylum about two
years ago from Douglas connly , "died
on Tuesday night and was brought up
to Omaha yesterday and taken to
Coroner Jacobs , to await interment.
Notice
The "Hawthorn Centennial Ex
celsior Robf Pairit , " waa patented May
24th , 1881 , and ottcra patent nuru-
ber'241 ' , 803. Any person found or
known to tamper with the manu
facture of caid paint' will bo punish
ed to the full extent of law. No per
son haa any authority whatever to Ball
recoipta. HAWTHORN & Biio. ,
Lancaster Fa
A Newspn-Dor Editor.
Q. M. Holcoml ) , f Blooinville , Ohio ,
rises to explain : "Had that terrible dis
ease catarrh , foi- twenty years ; couldn't
taste or smell , and bearing was failing.
Thomat * Eclcctric Oil cured me. These are
facts voluntarily given against a former
prejudice of patent medicine. "
IS A SURE CURE
for all diseases of the Kidneys and
LIVER
It haa upedflo action on thla moot important
I organ , enabling It to throw off torpidity and
infection , BtlTnulnMng the healthy Bocrction
of the Bllo , nd by keeping the bowels In five
1 condition , oflDotlnff its regular discharge.
lnHln IfyouoroamrtriDcfrom
lein I malaria.JmTothocUllj ,
arp billons , dyipaptlo , or constipated , KM-
' noy-Worfwill surely reliovafi : quickly core.
I . In tnij ecason to clo&naa the Eyatani , every
> one should take n taorouch. oource of it. ( I i )
BOLD BY DRUGGISTS. Price $1.
KIDNEY-WORT5
Nebraska Loan & Trust Company
HASTINGS , NEIt.
Capital Stock , - - $100,000-
JAS.B. HEAimVELL. 1'rcslJent.
A. L. CLAKKK , Vice 1'rcsldcnt.
K. C. WUISTEH , Treasurer
DIUKCTOHS.
Samuel Alexander , Oswald Ollv r ,
A. L ) 0 arke , K. O. Wcbuter ,
Goo , 11. Pratt , Jo * . II. lleartwell ,
P. M.McEUIlnney.
First Mortgage Loans a Specialty
Thti Company furnishes a permanent , homo
Institution where School Honda anil other legally
liuued Municipal eccurl leu of Nibroska can be
be negotiated on the most favorable terms.
Loans made on Iniiro > C'l farms I all w el ecttlcd
counties ot the Btatc , . IlirotiKh ritponalblu local
corrctpondcntH.
THE
ORT LIN
- OK T1IK-
Paul
"RAILWAY
U now running IU FAST KXl'UISS TKAINS
from
OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUFFS
Pullman's ' Magnificent Sleepers
AND TIE ( -
Fim-st lining Oara in tlio World.
I ? YOU ARE GOING EAST
TO
'
CHICAGO , MILWAUKEE ,
Or to any point Icjorwl ; or
IF YOU ABE GOING NORTH
TO
ST. PATJi OK
TaVe the I1EST HOUTE , the
Chicago , Hilwaukee&Sfc.PaulR'y ,
Ticket office located at corner Farnaw and
Fourteenth Urctts and at U. 1' . Pcpot and al
MID * d Hotel , Omaha.
tiJ-Sce TlineTab'e In nnother ialuuiiu
F. A. NASH , General Attut.
C. II. FOOTK , Ticket Ag nt , Omaha.
8. 6 , MKUUIUA. . V , 11. OAUPEXTCR ,
Ocueral Manager. General 1'asa. Agent
J.T.CLAUK. GEO II. HEAFFOUU ,
Otncral Sup't , AM t ticn.
GOFFEE AND SPIGE MILLS.
Boasters and Grinders of Coffeen and Spices , Manufacturers of
IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER I
Clark's Double Extracts of
BLUEING , INKS , ETC.
H. G. CLARK & CO. , Proprietors ,
1403 Douglas Strcrt. Omaha , Nob.
HA
1108 and 1110 Harney ? , t. , OMAHA , -NEB.
iSPEGlAL NOTICE TO ttf
Growers of Live Stock and Others.
WE GALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR
It is the beat and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Ono pound is equal
tothreo pounds of corn. ( Stock fed with Ground Oil O.iko in the full and win
ter , instead of running down , will increase in weight nnd bo in good market
able condition in the Bpring. Dairymen ai well as othora who use it can tes
tify to its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price § 25.00 per ton ; no
charge for Backs. Addresn
o4-eod-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob. , ,
L. C. kuSTINGTON & SON ,
DEALERS IN
HIDES , FURS , W08L , PELTS & TALLOW
20 JJTorth Sixteenth St. , - - OMAHA , NEB.
1006 Farnam St. , Omaha.
Hellman < fe Co.
WHOLESALE
1301 and 1803 Farnam St. Cor. 13th
OMAHA , NEB.
HIMEBAUGEL MERBIAM & CO , , . >
Proprietors , Wholesale Dealers in
Mills Supplied With Choice Varieties of Milling Wheat ,
Western Trade [ Supplied with Onta and Corn at Lowest Quotation ) ! , with
prompt shipments , "Writo for prices.
GkA-TIE
\
MANUFACTURERS OF
Carpenter's Materials1
Ud 9
ALSO
bi 81 AIRS ,
Stair Railings , Balusters , Window
and Door Frasnes , Etc.
ri t-clas tacilitlca for the Manufctura of all kindj of Moulding ? , Plaining ami
a' hiny a Specialty. Unlerj fix in the country will bo prompt v xaotite 1 ,
ddita.all tomninulcatlonj A , MOYKIl , IVoprlator.
ESTABLISHED XV 18G8
D. H. McDANELD & CO. ,
HIDES , TALLOW , GREASE , PELTS ,
- -
204 North ICth St. , Masonic Block. Main House , 40 , 48 and 62
boru avenue , Chicago. Refer ty permission to Qide and
Leather Natiou&l Bank , Chicago ,