Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 27, 1882, Page 4, Image 4

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THE DAILY BEE : TUESDAY NOVEMBER 28
The Omaha Bee.
Published every morning , except Snn-
ay. The only Monday morning dally.
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.tailors should bo addressed to the EotTon
or THK BEE.
BUSINESS LETrEHS-All Buslncs
Letters and Remittance * should be nd
dressed to THR BEK PonLiHiiiNQ CostrANr
OMAHA. Drafts , Checks and Postoffleo
Orders to ba made payable to the order of
the Company.
The BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props ,
E. HO BE WATER. Editor
JOB MILLA.ED has got a now bank
bat it isn't largo enough to hold th
money which will bo nooossary to capture
turo that neat in the United Stnto
aonato.
"WiLt , you walk into my parlor" i
the Bcdnctivo song of the railroad
apidor to the anti-monopoly flics ,
The invitation will not bo accepted
this session of the legislature.
RAIN haa damaged the cofloo crop
of Baazil. The corn crop of Nebraska
Is aafo , nnd the price of bug juice wil
not bo effected by the scarcity of
coffee.
VALKNTINB'H own nt West Point
hoists the name of that eminent war
rior as its candidate for U. 8 , senator.
That would bo a safe way of getting
Into congress without taking chances
on having his Beat contested.
TUB death of Tariff Commissioner
SloMahon takes away from the com
mission the only member who was
practically acquainted with the work
ings of the present tariff , and the
waya and moans committee has given
up expecting anything tangible from
the report for a month to como.
ONCE in a great while n democrat
tolls a political truth. "Tho people
did not vote the democratic ticket be
cause they loved the party"aaid Abram
S. Hewitt , "but to punish the men
who had bson faithless to them. " This
remark is respectfully commended to
those editorial roosters which have
boon giving vent to spasmodic crows
over fcinco the iato political cyclone.
THE reports oorao from Waahing-
I ton that Secretary Folgor has handed
in bia resignation , and that the treas
ury portfolio will be offered to Rich
ard Orowley , of Now York. Probably
no ono regrets moro than Mr. Folgor
that ho resigned a year ago his honor
able and lucrative position as judge of
tbo New York court of appeals , with
--itH'inUtoolPyoar'Jonuro of oflloo.
Ouu Val. will run for the aonato
about aa well na hla bosom friend ,
N'L-ran Clark , did for the atnto trons
nrorahip , but there is no danger from
that quarter. Republican ! are not
quite roudy yet to bury what there ia
loft of the party in Nebraska. A man
who has been in congress two terms
\rn \ and cannot even carry the precinct ho
1 livoa in can hardly commend himself
for n senatorial raco.
Two TiuiiDS of the defeated mom-
born of oongrosu nro politicallydoad
and they know it. Several of the
senators will also retire to private 11 fu
with the cloto of the present cession
A veteran lobbyict inootiuno thca
facts , aud predicts thnt the coming
session will bu one of riot and revelry
for the lobby. Ho prophecies tlmt
these retiring statesmen will pay lees
attention to the buiincso of the coun
try than to their own private affairs ,
and thnt money will flow freely Into
their pookola us they advocate bogus
ciainm imd atnint iu rushing through
various highly flavored raids on the
trcutury. There is probably moro
' truth than fiction in the prcdiotlou.
The coming winter will ba a busy ono
for the Washington lobby , Hippie
Mitchell will put ia hla retiring .iuks
for the Northern PaciQo. Hoboson
will make another energetic attempt ,
baoknd by John Roach , to nocuro the
expenditure of n few more milUonijoii
the rotting hulka ia the Loa uo Island
navy yard , A score of politically
dead congressmen will franticKlIy at
tempt to push forward buiiness on
the privatu calendar and Balino nnd
awamp land schemes will bob serenely
on the surface like Ohio npples in n
tub of water. The consciences of fho
retiring statesmen will not bo uonti-
live to means and mothoda , but their
pockets wll | be keenly sensitive to the
Boduotlvo touch of the lobbylit. They
, have faced defeat nt the polls and
in&uy of them will face dishonor in
the congressional corridors before they
leave the capital to make room for
their successors. It will bo a rood
seosion for the people to watch the
votea of f ( > lr senators &ud represen
tatives. I.tpeditod legislation of a
auspicious n uro will bear the dissec
tion of a oauaid criticism and so will
the votea of the men who are paid
f 5,000 A yec > r to protect the interaato
of the people.
_
THE HAILWAY WAR AND
POOLING.
i The flcht ; between the railroads in
the northwest is drawing to a close ,
It hai boon n short nnd bitter one ,
Both ptuaongcr mid freight rates have
been liberally cut from St. Paul , Mm
noapolis and Chicago , and the war has
oven extended to several minor points
on the Missouri river. The whole
difficulty is a good example of one ol
the certain results of the pool
ing 'policy now practiced BO
generally by the railroads a *
competing points. The fight
arose from the demand of the Rock
Island's now road , to bo admitted on
equal terms to n pool with the two
other roads which , until recently , had
n monopoly of t'ho business. The
concessions of the Milwaukee and the
Northwestern to the Rook Island wore
not satiifaotory to that company , and
upon their demand of a full third
share in the business being refused , it
at once put prices at a point where all
three must bo rained if they are con
tinned , with the object of forcing
the ether roads to terms. The
fight has continued for over
two weeks , and the managers
nro ready to cry a halt and arbitrate
differences. In a low days a trucn
will , in all likelihood , bo patched tip
on a now basis of friendship conceded
coded , aud the Rock Island will bo
admitted to a larger share in the
northwestern business than the two
roads vrero at first disposed to concede
it. Rates will again bo rcatorod , par
haps increased , and the public will of
course pay in the long run for the
losses of the belligerent corporatione.
It is a serious question v bother
pooling will not kill itaolf oven if the
people do not dispose of it before it
dies a natural death. Every now and
competing road vroakona the strength
of the pool. A pool cannot freeze out
a reasonably strong competitor. It
ntu.at cither buy his property or admit
him to partnership and then make
enough money out of iho people to
support the arrangement. A point
must bo reached sooner or later when
the pools will fall to pieces of their
own weight Freight charges can
not bo placed unreasonably high for
any considerable length of time.
The people will interfere , and the
moment that interference is put into
effect the pools will die an unnatural
death. The railroad confederacy will
then bo forced to depend onllrely
upon consolidation of rival lines to
protect thomoolvo ? from competition.
Now , pooling and consolidation are
their two ahlolcb against opposition.
But the pooling outrage muat bo sup
pressed ooonor or later , aa now roads
are built paralleling old lines and cut
ting into their business , and consolida
tion itself cannot bo carried on much
farther before the national govern
ment will bo forced by an overpower
ing public demand to deal with the
question of national railway regula
tion.
TUB census bureau has published on
interesting table of statistics showing
the capital Invested In manufactures ,
the number of hands employed , the
amount of wages paid , the value of
materials used nnd the value ot the
products for all the establishment ! ) ol
manufacturing * industry in each of the
States and territories. Now Yok
loads the hat of otatoa with 42,739 co
tablishmonts , followed by Pennsylva
nia with 31,225. Nebraska ia credit ,
od with 1,403 , manufacturing Indus-
rloa in which $4,881,150 of capital i
iiY'L-stud. Those establishments give
employment to 4,404 mon ( > 120 womor
aud 209 children nnd youths.
The total amount paid in wages for
the year is ttated to bo $1,742,311
or on iivorngo of $1.13 a day. Tlicso
figures uro probably slightly below
the mark. Over eight million * ! o
dollars worth of material were con
aum d , and more that 12,500,000 o
manufactured articles produced. Thi
ia nn excellent showing for n ntato enl >
fourteen years old , It aurpascos tha
of three of the southern states , am
scarcely falls buhind several of more
than double its population ,
A UAH ) upon oangnm by the envelope
volopo raamifaotnrun may ba confi
dently expected at the next Deeuion
The potitnu8torgcnoral | has concluded
with contract Mr. Ehrllchof St. Louis
for the use of hh combination lette
shoot , envelope nnd stamp. The device
vice does away entirely with the ordi
nary envelope , nnd also with tlio nc
cosslty of ntarnp cancellation. Th
sheet is manufactured with gummec
flip. , which , when the shoot is foldoc
lap over the open edges and scour
the letter. The poslngo stamp is cm
bussed on ono of theoo flaps , thn
bringing the stamp on the back of th
Jotter , \vhcro the old wrapper am
seal utod to bo. The cntir
package Is licked , sealed am
ntatnpod with ono motion. Both th
public and government wi !
profit by the Invention. It will cos
only a tnilo more than the ordinar
stamped envelope aud will aavo nbou
CO per coat , in time aud expense t
the business man who writes his lol
tera on ono aide of a sheet. The goy
ornment gains In saving the time ox
poudod in stamp cancellation , Th
Ehrlich device , when adopted by th
poitoflloa department , will material !
cheapen postage by roduolng the cos
of the paper and envelopes on whic
letters are written , It will only b
available for short correspondence ,
but Sin use la likely to provo greater
than either its inventor or the post
master-general anticipates.
THR annual banquet of the Omaha
stenographer ? , draws attenliin to
the increasing demand in all quarters
for experienced short-hand reporters
and clerks. Six years ago only two
stenographers were located in our
city , Mr. John T , Boll , the present
reporter of the district court , and Mr.
Homer Btull , recently reporter for the
United Stales courts. There are now
nearly thirty short-hand reporters in
Omaha , of whom twenty nro employed
n the railroad offices of our city , nnd
ho demand always exceeds the sup
ply. Ten yearn ugo n stenog
rapher outside of the attaches of
ho press wa"j a rarity. Modern
mslncsa activity has revolutionized
ho slow methods of the past. The
ncreasing USD of the malls and tele-
; raph nnd the consolidation of smaller
luaincas concerns into largo establish
ments have called into existence htm-
[ rods of clerks to whom a knowledge
of shorthand has brought etoady and
well paid employment. Every great
corporation now counts its ecorea of
phouographorB , who enable heads of
departments to transact with eauo
n two or three hours ten
imcs the amount of business which
omo years ago would have boon con-
idorod a good day's work. And a
irofosslon which a few years
go was looked upon an n
pocica of logordomnin is to-day ro >
ognlzed as a calling open to nil who
lave the energy and perseverance to
> rosoouto its ceaseless practioo to pro
oloncy. The Nobraskn stenographic
ssooiatlon which was organized lesa
tan three years ago ia ono of the
lionoor associations in the country ,
to efforts wore largely instrumental
n securing the organization of the
ational asooclation , and the influence
nd standing of Its members is now re-
ognized throughout the country. No
> rofcssion BO much as journalism ap-
irociatou the work of the otonogrnphor ,
nd no profession imposes nuoh teaks
pen the export phonographor.
WE hear a coed deal about rooldoaa
xtravaganco in the conduct of city
; ovornmunts , but the city of Wash-
ngton can beat any city on the glebe
n the matter of tax-eating. An csti-
mate haa just boon publiohod of the
xponoea of governing tbo city of
Yaahinglon during the next fiscal
roar. Among the items wo find the
ollowinp :
xocutivo office , $21,601.50 ; assessor's
( Dee , $19,400 ; attorney'o office , $8-
12 ; engineer's office , $43,128 ; mar-
cots , $7,000 ; park commission , $2-
00 ; institutions of charity , reforma-
lous nnd prisons , grand total , $238-
214 ; etroot cleaning , repairing sewers ,
lavements and bridges , utreot aprink-
ing , atreot lighting and incidents
surveying , $709,935.01 ; metropolitan
lolioo foroo , officers , privates and de-
octivea , rent , fuel , etc. , $307,020 ; nro
department , $103,040 ; telegraph nnd
elophone , $13,190 ; public schools ,
my of teachers and officers , $395,450 ,
urnlturo , otationary , books aud ro-
) aire , $75,000 ; school buildings and
nitcs , $80,000 ; health department ,
$30,000 ; water department , $106,452 ;
making a total exclusive of water de
partment , $3,443,847.08. [ Ono-half
of this enormous sum h to bo paid by
Undo Sam , the ether half is taxed
against privuto property. "What do
our Omaha grumblers think aboul
thcso figure * ?
PROMINENT merchants and manu
facturers in Germany have started a
movement for the foundation of Ger
man colonies. The first mooting wil
bo held at Frankfort-on-tho-Rhino
- - - on
the Oth of December. The main
spring of thla scheme is a deslro to
build up foreign commerce through
those colonies as England haa done
through hero. The Germane
are disposed to found in
dependent colonies of their own
on the English plan , but where it
not stated , Bismarck Is said to be
opposed to the colonial noheruo , bu
the popular fooling in Germany i
very much in favor of it , nnd in rap
idly growing. Evidently the purpose
ia to found those colonies in BOIUO par
of tbo world where they could become
provinces of Germany. The problem
will bo to find u spot roomy onongl
for such n scheme that is not alrendj
under somebody's flag.
THE Council Bluffa board of trad
haa appointed n committee to oonfe
with the Omaha board of trade on th
proponed bridge across the Missouri
There ( icoius-to ba n wide difference o
opinion whether it is to bo simply i
wagon bridge or n bridge that wil
accommodate railway traffic and vo
hides. Now what sense is there ir
quarrelling about these details at thl
time ? First got your charter fron
congress , and let it bo broad cnougl
to cover any future contingency. I
a wagon bridge will satisfy present de
manda , nnd the outlay is warranted
build n wagon bridgo. But by nl
means got the charter and talk up th
plans after the bill has passed con
Kress.
They are Fast Disappearing ,
At' nU Constitution.
"Have you noticed , " said Gen
Hoko , of North 0 rolina , the othe
day , "the rapid dltappearanco of one
armed nnd one-legged men ? At th
lose of the war , in Iho south , oa
Imost every southerner was in the
rmy , men without nn arm or leg
wore to bo seen everywhere nnd on
11 occasions. Within the last few
caw they have b > on growing scarcer
apidly. In a few more years it will
0 n rare thing to see ono. "
"It is impossible for mo to realize , "
aid an old soldier sitting near by ,
'that it has boon more than seven-
eon years since liio surrendered.
Vhon I think of that day it seems tome
mo that it was only yesterday. And
ot nearly a generation haa passed
inco the confederate flag was floated
or the last time. "
"You will appreciate this still
moro , " said Gen. Hoko , "if you no-
ice the next asiomblago ; of soldiers at
1 reunion or in procession on some ,
iccaoion. It Is pitiful to BOO how old
nd grizzled they look. The young-
st of them nro middlo-agod men.
Vhy , the day I surrendered I could
lace my hand on my saddlo-horn and
anlt over my horse's back. Now
bout nil I care to do is to climb up
no aide of him. "
Whore , O Where ?
clmylor Sun.
By the way , what haa become of
Jhurph Howe 1 Isn't it nearly time
or him to bo run away with nnd Borl-
usly injured again 1
From Spent Land
.lOuljvllla Courier-Journal.
The spirit of Xacharirih Chandler
was interviewed a few nights ago as
o recent events in .this country. Mr.
Ohnndlor snid :
rdsl" There were moro
Mr. Ohnudler'a remarks , but no
ender caroa to go over two or three
olumna of dashes.
The Railroad building Mama.
'Irmnclal Aitlclo N. T. Sun.
Over railroading aud over capital- !
; ation are nt the bottom of all those
roubles. The country haa boon
building of late at the rate of 1,00 (
miles per mouth. Taking the cost ol
very mile at $50,000 and this is a
ow estimate , aa there are roads capl-
alized nt nearly twice that amount
some $000,000,000 have thus beenox-
> ondcd for no better purpose than on-
lohing the promoters of the companies ,
or moat of the newly bnilt roads run
hrough wild regions which not as
yet warrant thotexistenco of any rail
road at nil. That sum makoa n per
capita contribution of over $11 for
every man , woman and child living in
tHs country. The British Orown
costs the United Kingdom about four
cento par capita a year. Now , what
s cheaper for the people to support
v Queen Victoria or to support n blind
pool of railroad achernora llko Gould ,
Vaudorbilt , Villurd , Sidney Dillon ,
Palmer and one or two other patriotic
and benevolent gentlemen ?
Presidential Probabilities.
Utlc ( N.Y. ) Herald.
The Now York Sun , by way of on-
: ouraglng the democrata upon the pro
bability of the election of their candi
date for president in 1884 , prints a
table allowing how the electoral votes
will otand , if all the states vote in thnt
year as they have voted in the recent
election. The table has historic value ,
and we therefore publiah It :
DEMOOBATIC JILECTOIIAL VOTKS.
Alabama 10
Arkansas / , 7 Mississippi 9
California. . . . > , Mltsonrl 10
Connecticut . . .A 6 Nevada. 3
Delaware. . ! 3 New Jersey 9
Florida 4 Now York SO
Georgia 12 North Carolina. . 11
Indiana 15 Ohio 23
Kentucky. . . , . . . 13 Pennsylvania. . . , 30
Louisiana 8 South Carolina. . 9
Maryland C Tennetsee , . 11
MftsHpchusettJ. . . 14 Texas 13
Michigan 13 West Virginia. . G
Total 298
KLBOTOHAL VOTE.
Colorado 3
Illinois 22 New Hampshire. 4
Iowa 13 Orfgon 3
Kansas 9 Rhode Island , . , 4
Maine 0 Vermont. . . . . . . . 4
Minnesota 7 Virginia 12
Nebraska 5 Wisconsin 11
Total 103
8CMUAUY.
Total electoral votes . * . .401
Majority 201
Democratic electoral votes 293
.Republican cUctoral votes 103
There ia nometbing beaidoa n his
torical value to this tablo. Its figures
are full of prmiso for a republican vic
tory in 1884. Let ua subject it to n
bit of analysis. Nobody doubts that
with a proper candidate , properly
nominntod , on a ringing platform of
advanced republicanism , the republi
can party 0.111 carry in 1884 the states
of Ohio , PcnnBylvanio , Michigan and
Maess&ohuaetts , which are here as
signed to the Democratic column ,
Batwoon them , under the now appoint
ment , which the Bun uses aa the bauin
of calculation , theeo four otatos will
posBcsa eighty votcw in the next elec
toral college. Subtracting these
eighty votoa from the democratic col
umn , the totals are changed to 218
democratic votea nnd 183 rcpubliau
votes.
Under like circumstance , the republicans
publicans will have , at least , nn oven
chance in the elates of Indiana , Opn <
necticut , and , as the late election
there uhows , North Carolina , Sub-
straotlng the thirty-three votes pi
those throu states from the column in
which they appear above nnd adding
them to the other , wo find the posi
tions of the two political parties re
versed , the republicans having 210
votoa and the democrats 185 , 201 be.
ing a majority of tbo college. Notice
further , shut the republioins cm lose
either of these three atues , gaining
the ether two , nnd still have n major
ity in the college. This ia Hiving New
Xork , Nevada , California nnd Now
Jersey to the democrats in everyone
ono of which atntea the republican *
can win a victory in 1084 , if they pre
viously provo that they deserve to win
it. On the whole , the outlook ia nol
BO discouraging as some of the good
people who thought before the election
that everything depended on the sue
cess of Judge Tolgor would have ui
believe. The reappolntinent has made
it possible to elect a republican presl
dent without the aid of New York'i
thisty-aix votes. On the other hand ,
the defeat of Judge Folgor , acopnv
plished na it was , haa made it possible
to control there thlrty-aix New YorV
votes for the right kind of republican
presidential candidate ,
PERSONAL I PIES.
"Longtry" Is tha way Mrs. Inngtry pro-
nounceB It.
General Bntler hat gone to a Providence
tailor to hare hh Inauguration unit made.
On December 13 Gladstone will have
been fifty \oars in parliament Gladstone
must have Ohio blood In his veins.
Tom Oehlltrce's friends are still confi
dent that bo will beat the record as n con
gressional liar , but they admit It will be n
big feat.
Gov , Stephens wants to be called "Mis
ter. " Thorars Jefferson wanted to be
called "Tom. " Ex-Mlnl tcr Schenck
wanted to be called when holme' three aces.
Heroert Spencer considers the wearing
of polnlod-toed shoes and skin-tight trou
sers a well defined mark of mental Im
becility. Herbert evidently hai A Tllden
log.
Sullivan , the prize fighter , Bays that In
training he relies much on the salt hath.
Ho also eats three or four bunches of cel
ery a day for the benefit of his nerves and
respiration ,
When Mrs. MoElroy , the prenldent'ii Is-
ter , wna nsked why she did not become
mistress of the white house , she replied
that she owed her time , first of all , to her
husband nnd five children.
A corrosoondont describes M. De
Brazzt , the Fioncli explorer of Africa , its
"a tall , angular man , with Intensely black
hair and whiskers , ills features are Jew
ish , and the exaggerated emphasis of
his gestures l Italian. He Is skillful nnd
alert. "
Clara Belle has been sizing up the Jer :
soy Lily , aud she says thu old girl is
"bony , largo jointed , big mouthed , uliolo-
Rome , healthy and clean looking. " This Is
tha highest type f beauty nnd attractive-
nets that Clara Belle ever recognized In
ono of her own BOX.
Mr. Snooks , for many years sexton of
the Wnnhlncton Heights Presbyterian
church. Now York , has just died Accord-
lag to The Times of that city , when about
twenty years of ago , hs fell ninety feet
from the dome of a house upon a marble
pavement , and fully recovered from his
terrible Injuries.
Charles Ulricb , , f Newark , N. J , , has
been sentenced to six months of hard labor
in the penitentiary for tickling the soles of
two young ladles' feet. Ho was a lodger in
the house where the young ladles lived ,
and chose that way of amusing himself nt
night when the others of the household
were wrapt In sleep.
Proctor Knott ia said to be ono of the
most convivial spirits In Kentucky , and is
described as a florid , portly Southern man ,
with n stubble , eray mustache , a bat
pushed knowingly over his left eye , with n
comical look , mingled with such shrewd-
nest as tells the poorest reader of charac
er that he is a born wit.
It is said that the first announcement
, hat ox-Gov. 'Hcndrlcka would recover
vas made by a rough old shell-bark doctor
rom the country who ca led to pay his
llustrious f i lend a farewell visit. When
> ermitted to sea tbo "senile gangrene"
vhich the great aurfloons had pronounced
fatal , imstiued at it u moment , aud then
with a decisive runt and an Indignant
.humping . oath , roaicd oat : "Nothing but
aboil ! "
Col. Forncquct , who at the age of 83
ia the sprightllcat citizen of Summit ,
, was a personal friend of Alexander
Hamilton and knew Aaron Burr * inti
mately. Col. Fornequot saw Bonaparte
at the head of 30,000 men in Paria in 1811 ,
and four years later was with Gen. Jack
son at New Orleans ,
Tbo following story is told of a Georgia
egiftlutor. "Senator Pilro left : the joint
session the other day pending tha roll on
; ho election of Judge Lawson , to ECO the
: ircus uroccsalon that was passing the cap-
tol. He was BO impressed with 'Bolivar , '
; ho big elephant , that when he rushed back
nto the hall he cried out : 'I change my
vote from Bolivar to Laweon ! ' "
Uopend Upon XT-
Mother Shipton's prophesies and Louis'
ana election * are very uncertain things ,
jut Thomas' Eclectric Oil cm be depended
upon always. It cures aches and pains of
every description.
FOR THE PERMANENT CjURE OF
CONSTIPATION.
ICe other disease la BO prevalent In this
oountry na Constipation , aud no remedy
O baa over equalled the celebrated ETONEY-
WOHT 03 a euro. Whatever the cause , '
C However olatlnate the COBO , this remedy
* wilt overcome It.
o FJ3BD K'SS THIS dktro tlnz com
6""DlaifliC ! > n plaint la vtry apt to b
H crrnpUcatcd vrltli"conBtlpatiorT. . JUtluoy-
E VcrntMnsthcns the weakened parta and
SquiclUy euros all kin da of riles ovea IT hen
t pliyalciuna and medicines have before ftll-
tf. od. t TIfyculuxvocllherofthesotroublca
Send 91 , 32 , $3 , or $5 for a re-
tall box by Express of the best
Candles In America , put up in
H , alegant boxer , nnd strictly pure.
Snitable for presents. KxpreiB
3 charges light. Refers to all Chi
cago. Try it once.
O o. P. GUNTHER :
Coiifectlonflr , Chicago.
n S3 Cm
= AMUSEMENTS.
BOND'S OPJSBA HOUBE ,
Monday , Nov. 27th.
| Grand Combination in
Oper t and Conoer
Introducing fllrtt and rourlli Acts
TROVATOREI
Wi'li ttiefolloumcniti ;
MI83FANvir. KliLLOao , MIcb J. DIOKKU-
EO.V. BION i U > K1NOU. Mil. ICJ. .
UAIISCIIAKLK. MU. At Ol.VU
QI.OSK.
Mr.TJJIOTIir.K AD\MON6KV , the Celebr td
Violinist , Director
The tale ol sc tu commences 1'iUliy morning ,
ThUMEimon !
LEGAL NOTICE.
In tha DUtrlct Couit la urul ( or Douglas county ,
Nebraska ,
Ellen linuh ,
Ucnjamjn 1' . llraJy ,
TO TUB SAID
You archer l > v notified that the plaintiff here
In dIJ on Ilio 'Till day ot Noumbcr. A , 1 > . le 2
Die her petition In did Court against jouj the ob
Jeotentl prarr or whichpctltl nU that the bond
o ( initrlin iiy now uxUtlnj ; between ) ou and tali
l > laliUHI ba ulseolt oil and u ho ly ti t a eldo. Tha
th ) ( { rounds of huch dltorcoarc habitual drunk
ennuis extreme cruelty and ( r relnslng aud nvg
lcctiU to suppirt sild pUlntlll.
You are lurch ) required to appear and answer
on or before the 8th day of Januaiy A , l > . 188J
a default will bo entered ajaiiut J on an4 the l > e
tltlou taken as true. / . 0. TKOtT ,
vuilt Attornc ) for 1'lalutm ,
MCCARTHY & BURKE ,
Undertakers ,
218 UTH ST. , BET. FARNAM AND
DOUGLAS
DUFUENE & MEHDELSSHON.
ARCHITECTS ,
ORE.IQIITON BLOCK , OMAHA
Architects ol ( ha Omaha KatlonU Dank , N *
brukk NMl nil lUnk , Paxtaa A. Qtlleifher1
Block. ActiUmr clothe fccre-l ilcort , iillUri1
UoteJ , KU.
COFFEE AND SPICE MILLS.
Boasters nnd Grinders of Ooffoes and Spicea. Mnnnfaotorors of
IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER I
Clark's Double Extracts of
BLUEING , INKS , ETC.
II. G. CLARK & CO. , Proprietors ,
1403 Douglas Street , Omaha , Nob.
3EH3ES3ES. ,
HARDWA
1108 and 1110 Haraey , f , t. , OMAHA , 3SEB.
.SPECIAL . NOTICE TO
Growers of Live Stock and Others ,
WE GALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR
It ia the beat and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One po'und is equal
, o three poundo of corn. IStock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the fall and win-
; er , Instead of running down , will increase in weight nnd bo in good marketable -
able condition in the spring. Dairymen as well na others who uao it can tes
tify to its merits. Try it nnd judge for yourselves. Price § 25.00 porton ; no
charge for sacks. Address
o4-eod-mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Neb.
L. C. RUNTINGTON & SON ,
DEALERS IN .
HIDES , FURS , WOOL , PELTS & TALLOW
204 North Sixteenth St. , - - OMAHA , NEB.
1005 Farnanrij St. , Omaha.
M. Hellmaii & Co.
WHOLESALE
HIE
/
1301 and COS Farnam St. Cor. 13th
OMAHA , NEB.
HIMEBAUGH , MEBEIAM & CO , ,
Proprietors , Wholesale Dealers in
Mills Supplied With Clioico Varieties of Milling Whpat ,
Western Trad < Supplied with Oats nnd Oorn at Lowent Quotations , \rith
prompt nhlpmonta. Write for prices , g
oiarsr
MANUFACTURERS OF
Carpenter's Materials ,
ALSO
SASH , D60RS9 BLINDS , STAIRS ,
Stair Railings , Balusters , Window
and Door Frames , Etc.
First-claw tacilitlee for the Mouufactwe of nil ktnilca of Moulding * . Pointing anil
matching n , Specialty. Orders from the oountry will bo promptly executed ,
nddretuall communications to A. MOVER , Proprietor.
ESTABLISHED IN 1808.
D. H. McDANELD & CO. ,
HIDES , TALLOW viroox. , GREASE , PELTS ,
204 North 16th St. , Mnionio Block , Main Houno , 40 , 48 and 52 Doat-
born avenue , Chicago , llofor by permission to Hide and
Luathor National Bank , Chicago ,
\