THE DAILY BSE : WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 6 The Omaha Bee. Published every morning , oieqrt Son y. The only Monday mmnlijg dally. TERMS BY MAIL- One Year. . . . 810 00 I Three Months. $3 ( X 8li Months. . 5 , CO | One Month . . . . l.W CUB WEEKLY BBK , pnblMied everj POST PA1D- One ffcar . $2.00 I Thmo Montlu. W Sir MWhn. . . . 1.001 OnoMnnth. . . . 2C AMERICAN NEWS COMPART , Role Agenti for Newsdealers In the United States. CORUESrONDKNCK All Oommnnl. ntfonR relating to Ken * and Editorial .natters chcmld be ftddrc MC < | to the EDlTon o THE BEE. ' BUSINESS LETTK11S All Bunfaes Letters and Ilemlttnnces ihould be cd drcnned to TUP. BER PonLiBniNa COMPART OMAHA. Drafts , Checks and 1'ostodico Orders to lia made pajrablo to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING DO , , Props , K. ROSEWATKH Editor A ORISAT many Poles acorn 16 , bo immigrating to Omaha telegraph polo's. IT ia a wico remark that the record of a party does not conolituto its future. NEXT to cheap food , cheap fuel , cheap gas will bo moat nocoptr.blo to the poodle of Oiniha. SUHAN B ANTHONY will pass the I I winter in Washington. Mrr. Cougar will bo too busy with libtl suits to apply for that so at In the senate. TIIK report of the tariff commission woo presented yesterday to congress. The items of tfiat $0,000 Long Branch holol hill were probably omlttod , FonuiaK comment on the president's message ia said to bo unfavorable , What foreign journaliBta do not know about American politico would fill & largo encyclopedia. Tm : proaidont rocommondo a largo Increase in the iron clad * float.J Mr. Robonon know what ho was about whan ho spent $70,000 to cccuro a reelection - election to congress , A MINIBTKIl ( ) f the gOflpol who chnmplonn the star-mute robberies from the pulpit , in in a fair way of bccomiu.tr nn r.pologist for jobbery and common thblt. TUB railroado iu Nebraska may be one of politics , ua their organs assort , bat the practical uttornoyu of the rail roads are nkirrniahiug around throughout - out the otivto in a way which indicates that somebody in in politics deeper than over. MK POOR who u piid by the rail- 'roads for publishing a manual is out with n latter to the Jj'wntnj Post in ( which ho staten that the railroad Vkiugs are governed by publie opinion. ' bo " Mr Van- 'Tfao public , was - aukbiU'u cmphntia remark on the eamo object. WmtK Attorney G-moral Browotor it wrestling over Barney's expedition of the niuilo in New Mexico many Omaha merchants are praying for aouio nzpadition of the minis in Una city which will enable them to aoouro their correspondence within thrco bourn after the arrival of trains on the other olda of the rivrr. 'iHS TItANSIX' OF VENUS Thu transit of vonun over tha face of the ouu , which begins at thirty-live minutes pant aovon thiu morning , ia the moat interesting astronomical event of the century. It will bo ob served all over the world by the most skilled "of ccicntiats , furnished with Atbojj est appliances which money can procure. In North and South America , in Africa and Australia eager oyoa will bo scanning the nun to-day to catch the exact second of the planet' * contact with its disc and to photo graph its progress acrota the great luminary. ff The importance of observation ! ol the transit of Vcnua arises from the / fact that they fjivo us the most certain menus of determining the distanced o ! thu rucmbero of the nolar system froir the earth , As the position of Yonui on the eunut the BUUIO moment appoart different to observers at different per tlons tif the earth , it become ! possible to determine how grea a displacement of Venus omen for si many miles of distance between tin observern on the earth. And this 1 exactly equivalent todetcrraning tin diatanou of Venus from the earth , jus as A iiurveycr can detorminu distance by observations ftont a meaauiod baa Hue , When the dlstaiaoa of Venus i thus uecettainud it becomes on ecu mutter by using Koplcr'a Third Liw to determine the diatonoa of the othe planets , mid in faot the scale of th entire solar system , This Is the roaeou why such earnot hopes for clear weather have been C3 pressed. Another December trans ] of Vcnua will not occur for 213 j care and it nill bo iaoro ihun 130 years be fore th * phenomena will bo aaaii wltnittcd. Oar government hr.s ap i proprifttfl $85,000 for purposes o \ observation and eight parties will as ' slat Jin the work , Any ono with i common opera glass can observe th phenomena of the trantit. A X.A.TE CONVERT. K. K , Valentino h been in con * grcss three roam and nine months. Daring nil this period ho has never discovered that the vast land grant of the Union Pdcifio , embracing several million of ncresln Nebraska has never paid ono dime of any kind of tax. The recent campaign , nnd especially hia ambition to play anti-monopolist during the coming session of the leg ? islaturo , has brought to hia notice the fact that the ponplo of his state bear a heavy burden of taxation which has been shifted on them from the shout- dors of the corporations , So Mr. Valentino has introduoad a bill to compel the U. P. to take out its pat ents. This is , to eay the least , some what late in the ccason. As far back as 1874 a convention before which Mr Valentino was ncandrlato for secreta ry of state , embodied in its platform n resolution ondortiiig what was then known as Orounuo'n bill , to compel the land grant railroada to pay their taxes. That bill had passed the house but had been pigeon-holed in the senate. But Mr. Valentino never hoard of that measure , and ho who had been receiver of a land office wr.a not aware that the railroads did not take out patents for their Linda until they dispose poseof thorn to settlers or speculators and that as long aa no patent is tanned the lands are not entered for taxation. Moro than twelve months ago Uon- oral Von Wyck introduced a bill which is now pending that will compel the land grant roads to tnko out patents on their subsidy lands , Mr. Valentino tine could nnd should have followed that up in the homo but ho hadn't hoard of it , Congressman Anderson , of Kansas , rnoro than eighteen months ago introduced such n bill in the house and there was a good deal of a strug gle over it. But the chairman of the committee on agriculture was as deaf as a post. Ho hadn't ono word to say in favor of the measure. During the campaign when ho denied his collusion with monopolies , ho was asked why ho had not taken some atop to compel the railroads to pay and ho very innocent ly declared that ho had never hoard * that their lands were untaxed , that nobody had sent him a petition on that subject and that ho was amszad to find that people were no excited ever the matter. Ho was probably just us much amazed when the Elkhorn Val ley railroad named its terminus near Fort Niobrara , Valentiuo. Such com- plimonta are always paid by railroads to champion , nnti-nionopslista. But , perhaps , it is bettor Isto than nevor. Now converts are generally very zoalous. Wo shall , however , in sist that Valontlno'o probation bo ex tended bayond his preaont term before wo take much stock in him as an anti- monopolist. His bill , of course , is amore moro sop. There are already more than a thousand billa on the calendar that take prccodonco , and congress must adjourn on the 1th of March. If it takes action at all on this subject during this session It will bo either on the Van Wyok or on the Anderson bill , and no credit will bo attached to Valentino for bringing up a subject that hai boon pending so long , and which baa even forced its way into the prcaidont'u moasagc. THE BUSINESS SITUATION. Colder weather has already hod ita effect iu atimulating trade in a number of lines. Although the financial sit uation is slilKfar from satisfactory , tha market in much easier than it was a week ago. The farmers ars still holding back their grain for better prices. This tends to render collec tions slonr. But as wo have said before - fore , at the bottom , there is assurance in the very fact that the formers are able to hold their grain Under such circumstances , thoao who are iix debt to local , mcr chuuto will bo likely to pay , and the situation whllo calling for the exorcise of a conservative temper is not such as to nivo ground for exciting alarm , A distinct halt has been called in railway construction , When the methods pursued by the loading rail road promoters shall have boon brought more clearly into relief , the salient feature will ba the extent to which corporate abuses Imvo served to iullito the stock and bond capital of American railroads. The construction company may bo an excellent device for enriching the railway promoters , but it ia equally powerful in depleting the profits of stockholders and in forcing the public to earn interest on fixed charges The wild speculation iu shares which hai made the Now York stock matkot the oat'upur of the millionairemanagerc has exercised a most depretting elloct upon general trade and increased the financial stringency throughout the country The iron and steel industries com plain of hard times , and soy-oral worki have already shut down , Thu fact ii that the ntoel rail makers of the ociuu try nro resting stoaro on their uoou mutated profits and think that then ia no time so uppropihtu as Iho present ont to impress congress with the fao ha > any reduction in the tariff 01 steel miaua the destruction of the iroi industry , which has boon paying ii thu past two years only a trifle o from 50 par cent to 80 per cent on thi investment. Taken as a whole , tradi is moro cheerful than it was u weel nio. Apart from the floating of ex coseive railroad securities the genera situation Is not thought to bo danger ously strained , There may bo need of a somewhat closer scrutiny of mer cantile credit , but none for rofndntt it to traders whoso condition is mani festly sound , THE 01AIM AGENTS BONANZA The San Francisco Chronicle callo attention to a scheme sot on foot in Washington by claim agents to have the Soldiers' and Sailors' Homestead law amended ostensibly in the inter * cat of the soldiers and sailors who fought in the late civil war , but really in the interest of the speculators in land claims. The Soldiers' and Sail ors' Homestead Act aa It now stands Is all that could bo wished by any ono entitled to its benefits. Persons who have not nerved in the army or navy are required to take immediate pos session cf the land filed on for a homestead , after filing. The soldier need not enter on his homestead till six months after filing. Ninety days' active service in the army or navy entitles him to a homestead , and ho need not bo a citizen , If ho served for three or tour years , or for any shorter time , no much time is deduct ed from the term of five years' actual rcaidotico and cultivation of the land which is required of any other person taking a homestead. The reading of the section on this head is : The time which the homestead sot * tlor had served in the army or marine corps nhall bn deducted from the time heretofore required to perfect title ; or if discharged on account of wounds received or disabilities incurred in the line of duty , then the terms of onlistuient shall bo deducted from bho time heretofore required to per fect title , without reference to the length of time ho may have served ; but no patent shall itsuo to any homestead - stead settler who has not resided upon , Improved and cultivated his home stead for a period of at least ono year after ho shall have commenced his Improvement * , If ho served four years ho need anly reside on and cultivate the land ano year till ho is entitled to his pa tent ; if three years , only two years' residence la required , and if enlisted for four years-and was honorably dis- ; harged for wounds or other disability : ontractcd in war ho is entitled to a Irawback of thu full term of enlist- nent. His wife and orphan children ire entitled to all his rights in case ho lies before or after filing. Ho may iclect his hoiaoatoad by an agent. Ho nay perfect his title in ono year and , lion sell the land , while the citizen nust wait five years. The wife of a loldior or sailor ia entitled to a credit 'or horacmtoad for her husband'u ser dines during the war. Proof of oul- Jvation , as prescribed in the above juoted section , is required in such sases. The foeo required of soldier ire the at mo as these required > f & citizen at the land office. Che claim agents are operating upon he assumption that soldiers and sail- > ro who are disabled by wounds can- lot comply wi b. the requirements of ictual cultivation and accordingly ask ; hat claims nny bo transferred with out such compliance with the law. Hie f jiot is that disabled soldiers and milers can do bolter. . They can uao the money which they receive aa pen- ilous for their wounds in the employ ment of some ono to work for them. Iho hw deed not moan that the homo- itoader mn&t work himself , but that bho land must bo cultivated so long to poifdct titlo. It is a big job to enable land agents , pension agents and spec ulators to got posaeesion of tons oi thousands of soldiers' and sailors' homesteads for a trifle , and hold them for a rloo in land , which is every year becoming moro and moro valuable as the publio domain drifts away into the hands of railway corporations. CHICAGO and St. Louis are now dis cussing high lioeusQ and point to the operation of the law In Nebraska as a strong argument in Its favor. The general opinion is that it has proved o bolter mode of cheeking the evils ol intemperance than any prohibitorj law trhich would fail in its enforce ment. The only question is at what sum the licauso ought to bo put , so at to do justice to all classes of venders. . Tins is a good year for the Butlers Benjamin waa triumphantly electee governor of Massachusetts , Hamburf Massacre Butler has just been reelected elected aeutttor fiom South Carolina and our own David is about io/o enter publio life nnd is said to hayo ai eye on the senatorial shoos of/Alvh Saundora. Tim .Washington preacher who ha mounted his pulpit to revolutlonlz publio sentiment about the star-rout ring Ins undertaken a mighty bi ( job , Brady , Dartoy and the rest c the rlngitors may tiscapo the ponilon tiary , but they will never beacquittei at Iho bar of publio opinion , ia announced that Senator Win dorn la well assured of his re-olcctio : to the United States sonato. , Mi Wiiidom is a publio man of whom th west has every reason to bo proud , Mu. Pia IHONKELLEY aikscongro ! to abolish all internal duties on toba < co and cigars. Mr , Kclloy evident ! thinks smoking should bo encouraged Vt > nn in the Darli. Bjwclil DUptch to THE UK. NEW YOUK , Dacembor 5 Report from the north and east Indicate no promising weather for satisfactory ol sorvatjons of the trantit of Venus , CHEAP GAS. On the 22d of January , 18C8 , ai ordinance was enacted by the citj council of Omaha granting authority under curtain conditions to the Oranhi Gas Manufacturing company to croc gas works and lay their mains througl the publio streets and alloys. By thii ordinance the company and its sue ccBsors were bound to supply the citj with gas at a price not above $3 poi thousand cubic foot for street lamps. JScclion Gth of the ordlnanco required the gas compauj to "report to the city council statin ; the number of consumers in said citj and until it shall appear that there an two hundred consumers , the said Omaha Oas Manufacturing Company may charge any sum not oxceodinc $3 73J per thousand cubic feet of gas , and alter the number of consumers shall exceed tire hundred and until there are over three hundred conBunv ors , they may charge any sum not ex ceeding three hundred and seventy- two and a half hundrcdtha dollars pot thousandcublcfcotofgasand whenever there are over three hundred consum ers they may charge any sum not ex ceeding thrco and seventy-two and a half hundroths dollars per thousand cubic feet of gas. " This is verbatim the language of the ordinance compiled by John P. Bartlett - lott , city solicitor in 1872. The only inference tint can ba drawn from the above , is that either the compiler waa a knave and changed the language oi the original ordinance , or else that the council that granted this charter waa a sot of idiots. Thic charter was granted fifteen years ago , years before TJIEBKE came into existence - once , but it's editor , who even at that time was intensely opposed to the creation of cbartorod monopolies , well remembers that ho spent two daye fighting the patsago of this ordlnanco , and John H. Kellom , who was ono ol the incorporators of the defunct gae company , recently remarked thai this wan the first ilmo ho discovered the fighting qualities of Rosewatcr. The editor also distinctly remembers that as originally drawn the ordinance fixed a rate at a fraction over $ & per thousand for consumers until the quantity of gas consumed reached 100,000 cubic feet a day , when the price was to bo reduced GO cents per thousand for every additional fifty thousand feet consumed daily until the price touched ยง 3 CO1 There waa also a provision that the gas was to bo of 1& candle power and manufactured from Plttsbarg coal. All these provisions are not now to be found in the revised ordinances. But that doesn't matter. Section 13 pro vides that the company shall forfeit all rights and privileges granted if they shargo any higher rate than that fixed * iy tbo charter. Now the original company went out of exist ence or transferred all ita right * to the present Omaha Gaslight Company and they are subject to all the provisions of the original grant. Everybody who has used gas during the-past two-years knows that that sliding aodo of $3.72 $ per thousand and a half up and down has not been adhered to. The people of Omaha have been made to pay all sorts oi prices ranging from $5 00 down t-s $3 00 par thousand feet. The time has come for cheaper and better gas in Omaha. A responsible company asks the privilege of con structing works and laying down then mains under a guarantee that the ; will furnish gas of double the lighting quality at one-half the price wo no pay. The publio interest demands that such a right shall bo given them , The enormous expense for lighting our streets must be largely Iccreasoc as the area of lighting is enlarged , Wo want lights not only for thret lours a night , but for all night , and il wo oan.got it for loss money than we are nowpiiug , it behooves the mayoi and council tocivo us the benefit of it Out of Politics. Koornoy Press , It is authoritatively announced tha the U , P. road has gone ont of politic and have sold their interest In Thi Omaha Republican to Meters. YOB and Nyo. That this is true wo thinl there ca'h bo no question as it ia pub hshod aa truth in the semioflicia organ of the road , known as Thi Grand Island Independent , edited bj Mr , Both P. Mobloy. Wo are greatly pleased at being ublo. to lay this 1m portant faot before the people , upoi jpthorify soclose toNQ. P. headquarters ' quarters , as $ Mobloy , and'hopo th announcement will have a soothln effect upon the Nebraska publio , 0 course , every ono In Nebraska know Fred Nye , the sou of Thoron a in the father of Boomerang Bill. I is known that the U. P , road starto Nye ia the publishing business o Omaha in an enterprise known o The 0-aaha News , an even in paper , which was to swamp TH UEK , but , which proved to b too expensive an undei taking for the U. P. roa and wna discontinued. Fred , aflc trying to pet a position on THE BKI was placed on the pay roll of the U P. reid , as an assistant editor of th Omaha Republican , to keep his mout shut in regard to certain politic ! transactions of the road , Brooki however , run the paper , as directe from headquarters , and ouococdcd i disrupting the republican party In th state aud electing an opposition legii laturo. The company seeing the n suit , concluded toouat Brooks and Ii stall Nye , and announced a change < programme , which they have doni and thu world gets the significant ii tolllgenco in the columns of Mobley paper. This was as it should h&\ been. But who believes that Nye hi severed hia connection wit Kimball , aeneral manager of tl ; road ? Who believes that tt Republican will not be ru in the interest of the U. P. road an ngnlnst that of the party nnd people ] The U. P. road has not gone out of politics and will not until driven ont by an outraged people. A scapo goat was needed and Brooks WAS sacrificed and Nye is happy. Ho can now con tinue to obuso all good republicans who do not fear his lilipntlan efforts to whip them into admiration of Thurston , Howe , Green and Gere , to bis hearts content. Ho can order the infinitesimal hangers on to tha en * qlno , to announce that the road fins gene out of politics aud Nye has gone in , and will run a paper that is to bo stalwart republican , in politics and in the Interest of the people , and the aforesaid infinitesimal creatures will at once obey , with alacrity , aud shout "long live Fred the great Nye , " and Fred will clip their sayings nnd parade them before > n admiring and eager throng , However , this announcement which wo give to our rendow on the unquestioned authority of Mobley , brings up prominently ono f lot , viz : It was strenuously denied by the Re publican staff that the U. P. nnd had any connection , financial or other wise , with the Republican , and every county paper and anti monopolist who charged to the contrary were de nounced aa soreho.ide , bolting liars > now , Bro. Mobloy admits for Nye and Kimball that they had , but have gene out of the business. This being true , no suggest that Nye is only "plny- I ing 'pptsum" and wishes a little cheap ' notoriety , and that ho is yet in the employ of and political agent of the U. P. company , and ad- viao every anti-monopolist in Central Nebraska , who does tiot wish to con tribute to the support of nVailroad organ , to refuse to longer support in any way , the Omaha Republican. It ia a railroad journal , conducted in the interest of the 17. P. road. Nye has been and wo believe ia , a political agent of theirs , Wo are prepared to prove Iu court , that he has been and will do so if he has enough interest in the matter to como to Kearney on a paas and'attend the December term of our district court. Wo will put him on the stand as our witness aud provo it by himself , or force bin * to commit the crime bf per jury. Wo are titod of seeing life long republicans abused and road out of the party by such up starts and politicil free bootors as Fred Nye , who never had a conscien tious political opinion of his own in his brief existence. Ha occupies the same position to Thomas L Kimball that the first terrier , with its hand some brass colhr occupies toward its master , and has always been ready to do hia bidding , save r.nd except the time when ho wanted Ko&otvator to ; ivo him a position on TUB Bee , and o keep him from barking Kimball ut him on The Republican Oen. Daniel Tyler , a 8on-ln-Law of Gen. Israel Putnum. General Daniel Tyler , whose death n Now York has been announced , waa jorn in Brooklyn , Windoni county , Oonnocticutt , in 1799 Hts lather , Captain Daniel Tyler , a graduate in ' 771 at Harvard college , married for ils first wife the daughter of General arael Putnam , and served ai his aid , t the battle cf Bunker Hill , and for , considerable period during the revo lutionary war. The oecodd wife of Captain Tyler , the mother of General Daniel Tyler , was Sarah Pierpont Edwards , the eldest granddaughter of "onathan Edwards , the theologian. General Tyler graduated at West 'olnc , in 1819' ' , as the second lieuten- nt of artillery. At the time of bis decease he was believed to be the eld est living graduate , and was president if the Alatnni association at that in- ititution. After several years served n the artillery school of practice at Fortress , Mpnroo , and elsewhere , ho was sent , in 182T , on professional "uty to France , where through the riondship of General lafayette , ho mtered the military school at Motz , , nd afterwards at Strasbourg. He jranslated from the French the "Man oeuvres of Artillery , " which laid ho foundation of the light artillery lervico in the American army. Ro- ligning from the army in 1834 , ho on- ored upon civil lite in connection with iron making , railroads and other Internal improvements. Ho was presi dent cuccossivoly of tbo Norwich and Worcester railroad company , the Morris canal and banking company , the Ma con and Western railroad com pany , the Cumberland Valley railroad ompany and of the Mobile and Mont- jomery railroad company , besides having important connection with many other similar enterprises. At the breaking out of the war ho tendered his services to the governor of Connecticut and was appointed colonel of the First Connecticut Volunteers , and afterwards brigadier general of the state forces. In this capacity ho commanded a division in the Manaasaa campaign of 1801 , and was present at Blackford'a Ford and the first battle of Bull , Run. In 18C2 ho was appointed a brigadier goneial of volunteers in the United State ) service , and served iu the Mississippi campaign of 1802 , the Beige of Cor Inth , and wns in command at Harper's Ferry and Maryland Heights when the rebel army invaded Pennsylvania. He was a man of unu ntl vigor of intellect and force of character. In hia old ago , up to within t- few months , ho retained hia faculties , both physical and mental , in the most extraordinary manner. His relations to men and events throughout his long life , in which ho was brought in contact , and knew intimately many of the loading men upon the stage , made him a very interesting personage. Ho was the last survivor of a numoroui family , who were dtsticguishod for their longevity. His wife , wh m ho sur vived several years , was the sitter of the Right lliv. Bishop Le , of Dela ware. His children mrvivhu' are thrco sons and two daughters , sev eral of whom now reside in the south , for nil dloenses of the Kldneya and f LIVERi i It kasBpooifloactiononthtj moot Important organ , enabling tt to throw off torpidity and t inaction , BtlmuUUnff the healthy secretion' of the Bile , und by keeping the bowelt in fret condition , cObcunc ila regular diachargr malaria , havothooiilUj , ) are hUiou * , dytpepUa , or constipated , Kid. ney.Wort will unruly relieve & quickly cure. . InthUuuontocleajuottiQEygtem , every f one should talc * thorough oourco or it. ( II ) 9 SOLO BY PRUQQI8TS. Price S ] glDNEY-WORTl OTVr ATT A COFFEE AND SPICE MILLS. Boasters and Grinders of Ooffosa and Spiooa , Manufacturers of IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER ! Clark's Double Extracts of H. G. OLARK & CO. , Proprietors , 1403 Douglas Street. Omaha. Neb 1108 and 1110 Haraey t. , OMAHA , KEB. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and-Gthers WE GALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Jl It is the bent and cheapest food for otaek of any kind. Ono pound is equal to three pounds of corn. ( Stock fed wlthCfcpund Oil Cake in the foil and win ter , instead of running down , will increase in weight nnd bo in good market able condition in the spring. Dairymen on well as others who tine it can tes tify to its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price 325.00 per ton ; no charge for sacks. Address o4-eod-mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL COi , Omnho , Neb. L. C. HUNTING-TON & SON , DEALERS-IN HIDES , FURS , WOOL PELTS & TALLOW 204 Forth Sixteenth St. , - - OMAHA , HEB. - \ ih \ 1005 Farnam , St. , . Omaha. \h * Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE re 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. 13th OMAHA , NEB. HIMEBAUGH , MEREIAM & CO , , Proprietors , Wholesale Dealers in Mills Supplied With Ohoisa Varieties of Milling Wheat , Western Trad" Supplied with Oatn and Corn at Lowest Quotations , with prompt shipments. Write for prices. J LL8. i LnliillwU . MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter's Materials , ALSO SASH , DOORS. BUNDS , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. for the Manufacture of nil Undoa of Moulding , Pointing and matching a Specialty , Order * from the country will be promptly ex united . ll ronmmnli utnn tn A. MOYKlt. Proprietor ESTABLISHED IN 1868 D. H. McDANELD & CO. , HIDES , TALLOW , GREASE , PELTS , 204 North 16th St. , Masonic Block. Alain House , 40 , 48 and 52 Dear. . be re avouuo , Chicago , liefer by permission to Bide and Tjoather National Bank , Chicago ,