THE DAILY BEE : .FRIDAY NOVEMBER 17 The Omaha Bee. Pnbltthed every morning , except Sun day. The only Monday morning dully. TERMS BY MAIL- CM Yew..510 OD 1 Three Monlh . $3.00 Biz Months. . 5.00 | Ono Month. . . . 1.00 THK WEUKLY BBK , published every Wednesday. TKHMS POST 1'AID- Ono Your S2.00 I Throe Months. BO Blx Months. . . . 1.00 | One Month. . . . 20 AJIKUICAK NKWS COMTANV , Solo Agonla ( or Newadoalora in the United States. Communt- GOUUESrONDKNcK-All - cntfons relating to News and Editorial mutton Mumld bo nddremd to the Eniron OF THK HKK. BUSINESS LETTERS All B.wlncn Letters and HemitUncefi should bo ad dreucd to THK UEE 1'unLisniNn COMPANY OMAHA. Drnftn , Checks and I'oitoflico Orders to bo made payable to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLMING 00 , , Props , K. ROSE WATER , Editor. MONDAY'S snow la referred to as the first anew storm of the oonaon. It wan the second ; the first took plaoo on November 7th. WE have yet to toad an item in n domoorfttio paper since the late elec tions which roforo to Bon Butler ao "that beaut. " "Politics makca strange bed follows " Tun Boston Star notoa that Senator Hoar toro hi political pantaloons on the great aplko of the river and harbor bill. Sixty-ono other rlror nud harbor statesmen keep htm company , WITH only eight counties to hoar from P. D. Bturdovant'a majority over Loran Olark is oflicially reported as something over 2,500. It looks us if the edges of the late cyclone lapsed over into Nebraska. TUEUE isn't much cunsoiation for the senatorial qaintotto in the legislative tivo returns do far as they have been received. The Millard inaro ought to bo "scratched" at once for the raco. She will break bbforo she roachca the quarter stretch. Foil a pauper corporation which can't pay ita debts , and will not pay its taxes the Union Pacific seems to bo doing very well. Its not earnings for the first nine months of the year are officially reported as $10,401,783 , an increase of $812,057 over the oatnu period in 1881. A CIRCULAR has boon issued by Gommisflionor of Pensions Dudley giving notice to all clerks under his employ that they must work at least six and a half hours a day in the de partment. Herbert Spencer's allusions to overworked Americans evidently had no application to the pension do partmont. THE 0/naha Jlcpublhan , which was "Valentino's own" in the late cam paign , is frightened. Reports are coming in from various sources that the true inwardness of the election in the Third district will bo thoroughly ventilated for the benefit of Nebraska voters and the next congress. It calls Up6n 0 , ? lorl'S ! : Merion and , tbn United States grand jury to demand the proofs , and raves about counter charges of fraud and democratic bull dozing and bravado. If Valentino's ? C a day clerk will keep cool the proofs will doubtless bo forthcoming. It may take a little time to put thorn in shape for presentation. Statements and ailidavits are not secured in a day. There are several hundred Ne braska farmers whoso votes have boon r overridden by barefaced fraud who iu will have something to say on the question. There are a number of othar witnesses on the frontier who also dcsiro to bo hoard for the public benefit. Meantime there Is no special hurry. A year will yet elapse before the Forty-eighth congress moots , when the subject , if reports are to bo believed - lioved , will oomo before it for settle ment. At that tfrno , if not before , some interesting developments may bo expected. TUB report comes from Washington that the promotion of Generals Pope and McKenzie will make too rear rangements of the military depart ments. General Pope desires to re main where ho is. There is no division for him to command , and in order to supply it a now one would have to bo created by reconstruction of the de partments , as was done for Bchofiold whou ho was first removed from West Point , As General Schofiold has suc ceeded McDowell at San Francisco , there is no division left for Popp without cutting off n slice from the territory of General Bhoridaii. There is as little ueo pf n now department foi Mr. Kendo as there is for a now divi sion for Pope , It may bo considered , therefore , that the military Hues will remain in etatu quo'.for another year , General McKenzle will remain it : charge of the district of Now Mexico , and will have for his superior ottlcei General Pope , in whoso dopartmenl he will teryo. Next year Genera' Sherman jrlll retire , find Genera ! Sherfi1" ' will corno to Washington ai head v. < ao'army. Thou there will b < i : three o lions to correspond will three inur , generals , and probably Popa will succeed Shoridatt at Obi > o go. McKcnzio will then stop InU ' " ' command of Popo'a department , when lie will prefer to remain. EXCESSIVE RAILROAD CON STRUCTION. The enormous amount of miles of railroad constructed during the past nine months in this country is exciting wldo comment among financial jour nals. And deservedly no. During September , 1CG8 miles of now road were added on 71 lines , and the total for the year up to that date amounted to 9,143 miles. At the present rate January 1st will witness an addition in tnrclvo months of not less than 12,000 miles of railroad to our various railway systems. The need of n railroad i measured by its capacity to earn a fair interest on iki cost. There is no question that many of the roads constrnctcd last yonr and this are not complying with that condition. Many were inaugura ted simply to pour profits into the coffaro of construction rinpe. They have been loaded down wiih fixed charges out of all proportion to the capital actually invested in thornwhilo the evidences of indebtedness created have boon made the instruments ot unscrupulous rpocnlatiou. Our ex changes are flooded with securities that are far from secure and an immense- amount of capital that could have found profitable employment in ordinary business has boon wasted in the whirlpool of stock gambling. This is viewing the cnso purely from the side of the investor. From the public standpoint excessive- railroad conattuotion is no loss to bo feared , Of the thousands of miles of now road which have boon added to our railroad system , a very largo proportion tion merely parallel lines which are already straining themselves to pay interest on their watered stock. Pooling and consolidation must be resorted to to prevent cuts in rates batwoon roads which would otherwise bo rivals. The only chance for the public so far as the lowering of tar iffs is concerned and aside from legis lation , must como from the increase of profits on the linos. In consequence the unnecessary so-called , competing lines become iho greatest obstacle to the public interest and shippers are compelled , to support three roads where two are ample to handle the business. If competition is fore stalled by purchase as was the cano with the "Nioklo Plato" the caao is no different. Several millions of indobtednoas.aro added to the al ready oxiuting debts of the corpora tion and the people are called upon , as usual , to pay the interest in in creased tariff. Finally , the excessive construction of railroads stimulates speculation , unsettles values and disturbs the rela tions of capital and labor. Capital Is turned from safer channels , labor is unduly employed temporarily , credit ia extravagantly extended and the no- euro and orderly operation of finan cial institutions is interrupted , prevented - vented and exposed to vorious era- barra&gmoiits. The reaction is sure to follow , as it did in 1873 , and when it doca and the panic la upon na , the railway magnates are found to have quietly crawled from under , and , hav ing disposed of their wild-cat securi ties b < 339 * the storm , placidly look down upon the ruin which they brought about. OVERWORKED AMERICANS. Mr. Herbert Spencer , the English philosopher , in his little speeches at the complimentary dinners given him in Now York , delivered himself of two expressions of opinion with re spect to the American people. The first is a criticism upon our principal political weakness , and the aoc6nd one is upon our business and industrial en ergy , Ho tolls us that wo are over working ourselves , and that we have developed too fast and too far in one excellent direction that of pow- r of application to labor. Ho says ; "Everywhere I have been struck with the number of faces which told n strong lines of the burdens that tad to bo borne. I have boon struck , oo , with the largo proportion of gray- laired monnnd inquiries have brought iut the fact that with you tbo hair omrnonly begins to turn some ton 'oars ' earlier than with us. Moro- ivor , in every circle I have mot men who had themselves suffered from nervous collapses , duo to a stress of business , or named friends who either killed themselves by overwork or had boon permanently iucapaclated or had wasted long periods in endeavors to recover health , " The truth of thoao propositions will bo recognised at once , As n people , wo live too fast. Wo burn Iho caudles at both ends at onoo. Our minds are kept at too great a strain. Our relax ations , so called , are scarcely relaxa tions at all. Competition is so fierce , the struggle for existence so eager , that success in most instances can only bo gained by the utmost nervous tension. This is the American style , There can bo no doubt that it shor tens our days and diminishes our hap- plnoiB. But under the conditions of our national 'ifa , what can bo done to provout iff Most of ua wcrk nurd bo- oauku wo must , not from choice. We are slaves to business , not uccessorlly becauta wo enjoy the servitude , but bcoiusb wo imut , If Mr Spencer can inform us how wo can make u liv ing without working so hoid , ho will confer a favor upon thousands of over worked Americans. AMTI-MONOPOLY bait is all tbo gc now-a-daya and the senatorial fisher men are heavy purchasers. The legIslative Islativo fish recently elected , know i fly from a grasshopper ovcry time , and there will bo a qood deal of angling before the members elected by the alliance are hooked and landed , WR are indebted to Chairman Dor soy , of the republican itato control committee , with a list of the legisla ture-elect , as returned by the chair man ot thef.various county committees. According to this list the republicans will control the lower house by a good working majority , with a sur plus of six votes on joint ballot. The list is , however , by no means correct. The classification credits totho republicans all the Independents ( pendents elected In Nomnhncouaty and snvornl members who were nominated by the antl-monopoliits and endorsed by republicans. As a matter of fact there is no margin for the republicans in the liouan , nor can they reckon on a straight republican majority on joint ballot , oven if a division on strict party lines was possible or probable. LEADING democratic politicians are already taking an inventory of the white house for the democratic preai dent whom they propose to elect two years hence. Never count your chickens before they are hatched. Monopoly. Rov. T. DoWitt Talmago says things sometimes in a strong way. The following from his sermon on monopoly will bo thought by most people none too strong : I announce an my text this , from Isaiah Ixii , 4 "Thy land shall bo married. " Now , since our republic , oar land is , to bo married , it is well to inspect the levers who court her. I propose to name some .of the suitors who are claiming- the hand of this republic. In the first place- there is a greedy , all- grasping monster who comes as a suitor , seeking the hand of this re public , and thatmoustor , is monopoly. His scepter in made of the iron of the rail track and the iron of telegraphy. Ho does everything for his own advan tage and for the robbery of the people. Things have gene on off from bad to worse , until in the three legislatures of Now York , Now Jersey and Penn sylvania , for iho moat part monopoly decides everything. If monopoly favors a law it is passed ; if monopoly opposes a law it is rejected. Monopoly ely stands in the railroad depot pat ting into its pocket in a year $200,000- 000 in excess of all rc.tHonablo ohargeo for service. Monopoly holds in ita ono hand the steam power of locomo tion , and in the other electricity of swift communication. Monopoly has the republican party in ono pocket and the democratic par ty in the othtr. Monopoly decides nomination ! ! and elections city elec tions , state elections , national elec tions. With bribes it takes the votes of legislators , giving thorn free passes , giving appointments to needy rela tives of lucrative positions , employing thorn as attorneys if they are lawyers , carrying their goods at a largo per centage less if they are merchants , and if it finds a case very stubborn as noli ae very important , puts down be fore him the hard cash of bribery. I toll you that the overshadowing curse of the United States to-day is monop oly. It puts ita hand on every bushel of wheat , upon every sack of Bait , up on every ton of coal , and every man , woman and child in the United States feels the touch of that moneyed des potism. I rejoice that in twenty-four states of tbo Union already antimonopoly nopoly leagues have boon established. God speed them in the work of liber ation ! I wish this question might bo the question of the next presidential election , for between this nnd that tiuio wo can compel the political par ties to recognize it in their platforms. 1 iiavo nothing to say against capital ists , A man has the right to make all the money ho can make honestly. I have nothing to say against cor porations as such. Without them no grout enterprise would bo possible ; but what I do say ia that the same principles are to bo applied to capi talists and corporations that are ap plied to the poorest man and the plainest laborer. What is wrong for mo Is wrong for the Vandorbilts and ' .ho Goulds and the elevated railway : ompauicB of New York and Brook lyn , Monopoly in England has ground hundreds of thousands of her best people into apmi-atarvation and in Ireland has driven multitudinous tenants almost to madness , and In the United States proposes to take the wealth of fifty or sixty millions of people and put it in a few silken wal lets. Monopoly , brazan-faced , iron- fingered , vultured-honrted monopoly , proposes his hand , odors his hand to this republic. Lot the millions of the people north and south , east and west forbid the banns of that mar riage , forbid them at the ballot box , forbid them by great organizations , forbid them by the overwhelming sentiment of an outraged nation , for bid them by the protest of the church of God , forbid them by the prayer to high heaven , that Herod shall not have ibis Abigail. A Confederate Orulaer In Time of Peace , Now Orliani Pica ) u tie. The steamship Scandinavia , Captain William A. Miller commanding , of the Anchor line , arrived at her wharf last evening , Lead of Jackson street , bringing us cabin passenger from Nipfea Antonio Kxposlto and lit ! I in the ntojruno. The Scandinavia was formerly the cenfoil- uratu cruiser Georgia , a tender to the Alabama , She was purchased by Messrs , Henderson Brothers , of Glasgow , proprietors of the Anchor line , who lengthened and put her on the regular Mediterranean lino. As u cruiser eho tnado fourteen or fifteen milon an hour , TJiu present speed oi the Scandinavia is about ton miles an hour. Horaforil'ii Acid Phosphate In Ice. briety. Dn. 0. S. ELLIS , Wubash , Ind , , says ; "I proscribed it for a man who had used intoxicants to excess foi fifteen years , but during the last twc ' ) years has entirely abstained , HE i thinks the Acid Phosphate is of much ijbimufit to him , " NEWS FBOM DOLT , Ignomnious Defeat of the Val entino Brigade In the Banner - ner County. A foul Gang of Political Vnlturen Burled Ont of Sight Corretpondenca ol Tin linn. ONziLL CITY , November 15. "Ilavo you hoard the news from Holt , " I understand from Tun BEE of the 10th inst. that W. D. Mat- thowo , who publishes The Fiontior at this place , wont to the trouble oi making the above inquiry of you by telegraph , and in order that you maybe bo able to enlighten him a little , I give you all the facts. Holt county govo M. K. Turner a majority of twenty-two over E. K. Valentino. Turner , it is well known , was the republican anti-monopoly candidate for congress in the Third district , and received his support from a class of republicans who scorned to bo boesod by the , putrid mats of cor- ruptionists who undertook to trample on the rights of the honest voters of this congressional district. The re publicans of this county endorsed Turnornnd despised that man of many frauds , Valentine , and his tool , Mat thews. There are some men whom it it is better not to have on your side , and Matthews , the politician of many creeds , is ono of those. In proof of this proposition I submit the following facts : The last time Valentino competed for the vote of this county ho carried it by 180 majority out of a vote of 323 , running adoad of tha state ticket several votes. In these days the poli tics of this country was carried on FAIIILY AND SQUARELY , no bulldozing , no choking nor sup pression of opinions , every ono was allowed that to which he was entitled a right to bo heard. But that was not the way in which the rotten basswood - wood of tbo Elkhorn valley wanted things done. Ho was not used to that kind of busincts , honesty. Ho in- stinotly loves fraud. For him the stolen apples are the sweetest. Val entino must have the primaries stolen. So ho hires Mathews , the pilferer , to steal them. Val paid the pricn in ad vance by giving the postofiho to Mathews , itho ingrate mendicant , against the earnest protestations of every citizen of this place. Mathews was to deliver the county nt this last election to his patron. How well the party of the second part fulfilled his part of the contract remains now to bo soon. Like the evil ono on the moun tain , ho offered to deliver things which ho did not possoes. Ho and his tools STOLE THE CAUCU8SES and the convention , but they could not steal the votes of the pooplo. Yes , Mathews , the blackleg , stole the pri maries. That they actually did. But what was the result ! What ? Thp'rosult ' was that the people , the sovereign people , rose in their might , and at the ballot-box adminis tered such a scathing rebuke to these would-bo traffickers of their rights of suffrage , that if they were not the moat abandoned characters they would bury themselves from the sight of the honest suffragists whom they tried to betray. Now , what docs the rotten basswood of the Elkhorn valley think ? Has ho reason to rejoice over his bar gain with the rum-suckers ? LOOK AT THE FIGURES and seo. Out of a vote of 1,000 or thereabouts for the entire state repub lican ticket , Valentino got 415 votes. I do not take the unorganized terri tory west of us into account as the citfzann of that country hwo peti tioned for an organization , which is likely to bo granted by the next legis lature , and , betides , that territory figured but little in elections previous to last year , and hence could not be consistently used in instituting a com parison between the vetos of Holt county two or three years ago and the present year ; but oven if I did take that country into account , the result would bo little varied. But to re turns. Out of a vote of about 1,000 for the state ticket at this fall's elec tions Val got 415 votes , wherein pre vious to his purchase of Mathews , the gambler , ho ( Val ) ran ahead of the state ticket. This result ought to make anyone fool joyful. Who ought not to feel satisfied .with such a largo gain ? The vote of this county stood this 'all as follows : For republican state Jokot , except Clark , 1,000 ; for Turner - ner , 437 ; for Valentino , 415 ; tor Mungor , 180. Thus you see Val. falls about 500 votes behind the state ticket , and twenty-two votes behind Turner. The county ticket put in the field by the Matthews outfit was also most IQNOMINIOUHLY BURIED. B. 8 Gillespio , who received the nomination , for member of the legishv turo at the Matthews rump convcn tlon , experienced such a severe chastisement that ho , too , is ingloriously - gloriously buried with the vile gang that tried to foist him on the pooplo. When the honest voters of this county learned of the villainy perpetrated by the Matthews outfit a''iha com ty con vention , they oillod u inaas coav.on- tlcn , nominated a county ticket and , although they had but three weeks in which to make a canvass , yet carried the county by huch a sweeping majority that the corrupt ignoramusoa tha * aped control of tlio county were entirely bewildered. Buth Vnl uud Gillcspe may well any , "Oh , deliver us from our friondb. " Lot us ECO what the nnti-eorruptionista of this county have dono. They HAVE WIPED OUT ouo of the foulest gangs of political vultures that over cursed a county ; they have taught the trafficera in men's suffrages that it is ono thing to bargain away the votes of a county , but quito a different thing to deliver the L'oodsj they have elected a senator , M , P , Kiukald , and a representative , Henry Gordon , who , instead of being the pliant tool of the corporations , will go down to Lincoln and help to elect a United States senator , who will be in oympathy with the people one of the Von Wyck stripe. Theao and many other things , which , if it were not that I have already taken up too much of your valuable space , I would mention , they have dono. But they have given corruption a decisive ex pulsion , and with such effect that the Mathews outfit is completely anni hilated. Mathews is so utterly detested tested by the respectable people of this county that when they moot him on the street they put their hands to their noses and spit as If they were in the presence of n decaying carcass. Tlicse are facts tlwt'mado the dishon est imbecile Mathews frantically inquire , "Havo you hoard the news from Holt county ? " X Tbo Census Reports on Wages. New York Times. Ono of the assertions which the ad vocates of the existing high tariff in the United States are never weary of affirming and reiterating Is that the laborers in the protected industries have boon thereby greatly benefited through the permanency of employ ment ( the stagnation of industry from 1873 to 1878 and the strikes any lock outs of 1882 to the contrary not withstanding ) and through the receipt of extremely nigh wage ? , by reason of which the iron workers of Pennsyl vania , according to the Hon. W. D. Kelley , are enabled and accustomed to adorn the walls of their residences "with chromes and find engrav ings , " and otherwise to faro sumptu ously. Heretofore in the absence of any collection of statistics which all interested were willing or constrained to accept as authoritative , the discus sions which have taken place between the advocates of "tariff reductions" and "high protection" is respect to labor , wages , prices and profits , have been ina great degree unsatisfactory , these on cither side who did not want to bo convinced being generally strengthened in their preconceived opinions , while others , fairly open to conviction , fonud themselves utterly confused by a conflict of assertion and inference which did not admit pf any complete refutation or verification. The recent publication of the ro- aulta of the census of 1880 have , bow- over , at last , in many departments of domestic industry , placed matters upon a now ana different footing , and given to the public a revelation of positive facts which cannot bo hereafter - after cither ignored or denied. Thus , in a series of articles on our "Iron and Stool Industries , " published some weeks since in our columnsit was conclusively clusivoly demonstrated from an analy sis of the census returns that in place of the receipt of exceptionally high wages by the laborers em ployed in thoao highly protected in dustries tbo average wage paid them was only about $1.16 per diem , or $315 per annum , n rate about the average paid to the commonest and least skilled labor in most parts of the country ; and , also , that the laborers in thcuo industries in the United States derive no benefit whatever from the greatly enhanced prices which the oxisiting tariff permits the owners of coal and iron lands and of the iron and stool furnaces and roll ing mills in this country to charge to the general public as consumers , Similar striking and interesting con clusions are now dednciblo from the [ statistics of the manufactures of twenty of the principal cities of the United States as set forth in one of Iho most recent of the bulletins of the census bureau. In these manufactures , which include all Iho more especially protected industries , the number of employes is returned at 948,404 , com prising 663,827 men , 224,100 women , and 60,507 children. The acgrogato annual wages paid to the came were $379,384,031 , which , assuming 300 working days Li the year , would show a disbursement of $1,251,283 for each day , ana an avcrago of $1,33 per day for each person employed. Se lecting Philadelphia from the list of the twenty cities as the ono which may be fairly regarded as having done the most to impose the high protective tariff system upon the country , the analysis of the census returns affords the following mult : Number of employes 173,012 Annual aggregate wages. . . .500,000,237 00 Dally disbursement for 300 daya 292,02100 Average wages per hand per day 110 It will thus ba seen that in this cen tra of protection the average wages paid to labor are 17 cents per day less than the general average paid in the twenty selected cities located all over the continent , or , leaving Philadelphia out of the list , the average paid to manufacturing labor rues from $1.33 to $1 37 per day. These figures are hard nuts to crack for that class of people who have been assuring the working men and women of the country that high protection inevitably assures them high wages. With the prices of com modities at normal rates , $9 per week is little enough to enable the laborer in the manufactories of our largo cities to provide himself with food , fuel , clothing , and shelter more especially if he has others de pendent on him and every advance n commodity prices means reduction of wages through diminished pur chasing power. Since 1879 the ad vance in prices of commodities has been at least 20 per cent. , and there has boon no general increase of wages in consequence , Hence the rea sonable discontent of labor everywhere. Hence the con tinual strikes and local disturbances. Now , in what way is the laborer ti look for relief , with from HOVCU hundred thousand to a million r cruits to the labor market pouring in annually ] Not by denouncing om players , * ho , in all but exceptional instances , pay the average market prlco for labor , but rather by denounc ing all men uAd measures which are instrumental in unnecessarily aug menting the ooat o'living byoxcosnivo taxation , waste fal expenditures , and the continuance of a policy which prevents the expansion of the markets for the prod- uots of our varied industries. Let these desirous of relief and a better state of things oak themselves , Why ahould this land , BO produotlvo of a'-jundanca that wo araable to con tribute largely to the food supply of almost all nathim , bo at the eatno time the most costly of all I&nd to live Inl And when they have once fully comprehended what la involved in this aakiug they will have made some pro gress iu determining a solution of the problem. MoiiTGOMEitr , Ala. . November 1C. The boiler of the Bteoiu gioulng mill of N. G. McGehea , twelve rnllos from this city ex ploded yesterday , iuatautly killing tbree negro men. COFFEE AND SPICE IV3ILLS. Roasters and Grinders of Coffees and Spices , Manufacturers of IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER I Clark's Double Extracts of BLUEING , INKS , ETC. H. G. OLARK & CO. , Proprietors , 1403 Douglas Street , Omabo , Neb. HARDWA 1108 and 1110 Harney 11. , OMAHA , NEB , MoMAHON , ABERT & CO , , Wholesale Druggists 1315 DOUGLAS STREET , OMAHA , NEB. L. C. HUNTIKaTON & SON , DEALERS IN HIDES , FURS , WOOL PELTS & TALLOW 204 North Sixteenth St. , - - OMAHA , NEB. 1005 Farnam St. , Omaha. . Hellmaii < fc Co. WHOLESALE 1301 and 1803 Farnam St. Cor. 13th OMAHA , NEB. HIMEBAUGH , MERRIAM & CO , , Proprietors , Wholesale Dealers in _ _ y MJ'H g Pgg- * * * * * jr ± * - Hr rrjmji i i a - Mills Supplied With Choice Varieties of Milling Wheat , Western Trade [ Supplied with Oata and Corn at Lowest Quotations , with prompt shipmonta. Write for prices. Gr-A-TIE GIT PLAI MILL MANUFACTUHKHS OF er's ffiaterials ALSO ,8H , , D003S , BLINDS , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. Iflrut-clasa tacllltiea for the Manufacture of nil kinds of Moulding * . l'Ja ! > il ; and atching a Specialty. Orderj from the country will ba promptly . Meouto , 1. . dilrenaall communications A. AlOYliU iVonr tjr. ESTABLISHED IK 18G8 D. H. McDANELD & CO. , HIDES , TALLOW , GREASE , PELTS , 204 North 16th St. , Masonio Block. Main Houuo , 40 , 48 and 52 Dear born avenue , Chicago. Itefor by permission to llldo and Leather National Bank , Chicago.