Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1882)
W" TUB DAILY BEB-SATUKtAY ) DECEMBER 30 Omaha Bee. ,1'ubltsKcU every mornlnp , except Sun- y. The only Mondfty morning daily. TERMS BY MAIL- One Year.$10 011 Tliree Months.$3 00 Blr Months. . 5.00 One Month. . . . 1.00 ' 'HE WEEKLY BEE , pnWMicd erety Wslneedfty. TERMS TOST PAID- One Year $2,00 I Three Months. 6C Six Monti , 100OooMonlh. | . . . 20 A.VXRIOAN NKWS COMPACT , Role Agents "V W8cleftlcrii in the United States. CORRESPONDENCE AU Common- ! tfoDB rcl tln r to News and E'litorial .natter * rhould bo addreucd to the EniTOIl or TIIK HKR. BUSINESS LETTERS All Bislnei Tiettem nml Ilcmltt nrc should b ad dressed to THK DEB I'DDMBIIIHO COMPANY OUAHA. Draft * , Check * and I'ontolHco Order * to bo tn do payable to the order of 'the Company. TliQ BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props , K. UOHEWATER Editor WHAT will bcoomo of the country If the paymaster * nro abolished ? Mn. LAIHD'R homo organ clamors for n republican caucus. 80 docs every railroad orgntt at Omaha nnd Lincoln. LonnlUriEK , ofMugdaln , haaboon appointed n field marshal , but Marshal Angoll of Omaha has no hope of pro motion in or out of the field. TUB propcsad action of the Gorman government to prevent the Importa tion of American puik has no visible effect upon the avoraqn Omahog. WAYNK MoVnAaii In organizing a novr movement on the political ohoas board. Ho wants the poor rod man to become as goud as the rich white man , TIIR Canadian telegraph operator who fell heir to throe quarters of a million the other duy , has had another wind fall. Wo shall soon hoar of him watering his stocks. ' THEY are alrouly beginning to in quire who is to hs mayor of Omaha ncxv. spring. Wo would rather lot 3tncbdy oho puiidor over that con undrum for n while. VALENTINE is scouring the Elkhorn valley with n tolescopa after his sena torial boom. It will never bo visible to the naked eye of the most keen flighted liorso mat in o Tnn cable announced the other day that the bishop of Mel7. haa declined the honor of the Prunaitin iron cross , because ho desires to keep out of poli tic ? . Hla example oupht to bo fol lowed by the Bons&tional preachers In .America , who delivur stump speeches ifrom the pulpit. TUB illustrated Christmas number D ! tho'Sioux ' Oily' ' Times reflects great credit upon the publishers , nnd it is an ovidonoo of onlerpriiio nnd industry that cannot fail to be appreciated , not only by the patrons of that paper , but by every resident of the future me tropolis of the upper Missouri. IT was thought Bomolirao ago that General Grant had lost his Interest en tirely In St. Louis. It now trans- piroa that the general is one of the in- CDrporators of the St. Louis elevated railway , which goes to show that the general still hua aomu affection for , the town where ho used to haul wood to market in the good old days before the war. IT must not bo forgotten by the delegation from Douglas county that their constituents domiud a material raduotlon In the number of jus tices of the peace Twelve juatlooj of the poaoo In Omaha are about nine too many. Throe iirst class men with a fair salary would relieve this com munity of u great deal of Imposition and Injustice. TIIEIIB Is to bo a very warm fight over the U. 8. sonatotahip in Illnois , and the fonoa of the principal con- tostantsrnro alrcudy'mustering for the fray at Sprlugflold. The report that David Davis is to bo the compromise candidate is flatly contradicted. It is oxpaotod that the bitter fouling be tween the loading contestants will ro < nult in the election of a dark horse , butDavld Davis is not among the prob abilities. TUB Milwaukee authorities have decided to begin a legal war on the druggists of that city on. a charge of eelliug liquor without a licence , The diugglsU have been driving a very lucrative trade in liquor n a medi cine which Tins used as a beverage , It will bo pretty hard to prove , however - over , that the patvonu cf the drug ( stores were not t.llliclod with cholera inorbus or eomo other internal dis- < nso of the digestive organs , Ouucity charter needs n number of important nmendraentr , and among these none would be more important for the welfare of the oily than a ma terial advance in the pay of the city marshal. The present anlaty is $1,000 a year. It ought to bo $2,000. With auch a Bihry wo could laduoo a man of nerve and vigor to accapt ( ho oUico , and he would bo lu a position to en force the Iffws , while a low salaried wan It almost certain to take hash money from the criminal clams. ov u A NEW LEAF With the advent of the now jcar it is the custom of rnnny people to turn over n now loaf. The late bird makes up his mind to catch the early worm by breaking off the habit of going to bed after midnight and rising at ton in the morning , The punctilious young man who wears n button-hole bocquot at breakfast , and scowls furi ously at his laundress if his nhirt front is not glossy white , turns over his tobacco Io f and smokes only fragrant Havanas. The mincing miss that would not bo soon at the opera houto without silk slippers is attacked with a spurn of old-fashioned plainness after the Now Year's boll has rung out the change. The chronic grumbler who never miisos a hair in his butter and makes his landlady's lifo wretched , formi a resolution that ho will swallow a cockroach in his gravy without a murmur alter Now Year's. The baggage smasher who playn base tall with Saratoga trunks is struck with remorse and makoa a aolornn pledge that ho will deal ten derly with traveling sample rooms after Now Year's , The swell who travels upon his cheek ia firmly re solved ho will pay his tailor bill after Now Year's. The old reprobate who bos boon a walking distillery resolves that ho will sober up and join the sons of temperance after Now Year's. Nearly every year abuut this time there is commotion in the "best" social circles in favor of a now depart- tnro in the matter of Now Years en tertainments , Those Now Years reso lutions generally begin nnd end in smoke and champagne. An address bus lately boon issued by a number of well known clergymen to the ladies of Now Yorkurging them to put no wine or strong drink npon their tables on Now Years day. These clergymen want the ladies to turn ever a now loaf by substituting tea and coffee for the stronger drinks that are offered to callers on Now Years day. The Now York Pent thinks that tea and coffee will hardly fill the bill for the class of callers who insist on making an old- 'aahioncd festival of the day. This class of visitors will always find the moans of getting fuddled during their rounds. A more effective device would DO for ladles to do away with Now Years receptions. The truth is that the sub stitution of tea and coffee tor wine al ways has the air of casting a reflection upon the habits of the guoste. No caller could fail to notice it or fool that hospitality was to a certain de gree chilled by It. It is far simpler ; o lock up the front door and hang out a card basket. This is becoming ; ho lustom among the "best circles" of the largo cities of the cant , where they have solved the problem of turn- ng ever a now loaf aud saving their champagne for homo consumption. In the language of the late Mr , Thomas , the accomplished editor of a local contemporary , "Lot us bo un- stood that wo do not want to bo un derstood , " that wo are disposed to discourage anybody who desires to urn ever a now leaf next Monday or at any other time. CORPORATIONS AU PEK.3ONS , A very important easels now pond- ng in the supreme court of the United Jtatoo. it involves the right of the states to regulate railways and exact ocal taxes from railway companies In ucoordauoQ with the value of their property and franchises. The case is an appeal from the U. S. circuit of California. The laws of California provide for ho taxation of railroad property by rules not applicable to the property of lorsons. In taxing the property of the latter , debts are deducted from the assessed value , This is done on tbo theory ; hat auoh deduction is necessary to avoid double taxation , as the debts of the property owners are taxable as credits in the hando of the holder. But railroad property is not allowed auoh a deduction , because railroads , being generally built with borrowed capital and covered with mortgages tield.boyond the tax jurisdiction of the state , would , thereby entirely escape taxation , So a state board In Cali fornia assesses a corporation's property - orty as a whole , making no de duction for mortgages , aud apportions the whole valuation among the coun ties in which the property lies. In attempting to oollont its aharo of the taxes of the Southern Pacific rail road the county of Ban Matoowaa beuton in the United States circuit court , and , an appeal having boon taken , to the United States supreme court , Mr. Ooukllng haa made an nblu argument for the railroad company in that court , taking the ground that the California discrimination ia a violation of the fourteenth amendment. That amendment , notoriously framed for the single purpose of de claring the cltizenohip aild securing the equal civil righto of all poisons burn or naturalized In the United States , forbade any state to make or enforce laws abridging the privileges acd Immunities of citizens , or deny ing to "any person within Ita juris diction the equality of tbo laws1 This was obviously , and as everybody knows , intended merely to protect negroes and Union men in their civil rights in the south , where It was feared they would be persecuted with hostile class legislation growing out of race prejudice , otc , The ob ject was to prevent the cnforoomorJ of state laws made applicable to the civil rights of ons class of cilizans ol the Union and not to these of another class. But now comes ex-Senator Conkling , associated with Senator Edmunds as attorney for the road and argues that , as a corporation is a person in the cyo of the law , the fourteenth amendment forbids the enforcement forcemont of any eta to law which de nies to corporations the civil righta and immunities accorded to other per sons or which discriminates ngatns' ' corporationa In methods of taxation or othorwiao by moasnron applied to corporations and not to other persons. This strained construction , wo are told , will , if adopted by the supreme court , put an end to all s'ato regula tion of railroads , and wipe out most of the existing statutes which are , from the necessity of the case , applic able to corporations alono. If the supreme court should take Mr. Conk- ling'a vlow of the matter and aflirm the decision of Mr. Justice Field am the United Stolen circuit judge of Oal iforula , there will ba a loud cry for another amendment , erasing so much of the Fourteenth as mabo susceptible cf the Conkling construe tion. Neither ilo framers nor the legislatures that adopted it over dreamed of any auoh application of its provisions , and it does not seem possible that the supreme court wll so construe it , or that Mr. Conkling himself , if on the bench , would do- cldo in accordance with the argument ho has made as an advocate. An incident that followed the close of the argument of this important case before the supreme court has created quite a scandal at the national capital , and cannot fail to awaken popular distrust in the Integrity of our onpremo tribunal. On the night following the submission of the case to the supreme court a costly dinner was tendered by Lalaud Stanford , prosl denl of the Central Pacific road to the eminent attorneys' that cor poration , nnd that dinner was also attended by Justice Field of the supreme court , who is notoriously ro Curded as a moro tool of the great Pacific corporation. His prcsonco at that dinner has only confirmed the scandal and gives rise to serious apprehensions about tlo boasted im partiality of judges of the t'upremo court. OTHER LANDS THAN OURS- In the midst of universal pease there ia a significant ripple in diplom atic circles of Europe. Ever since the Berlin conference Russia has been dissatisfied ever the way In which she was robbed of the frnlta of her victory in her last war with Turkey. Con stantinople was at her feet , and 'the treaty of San Stefano was about to be consummated when England , Ger many , Austria and Franco * cried : "Hands oft the Ottoman Empire. That must ba kept Intact to preserve the balance of power in Europe. " Russia regarded the tremendous odds there were aqainst her and re linquished her prey , taking only the little that was conceded her. But after being warned that the Otto man Empire must be preserved in the intercuts of peaco. Ruisla has been treated to the sight of Austria virtually absorb ing Turkish provinces in the Balkan , Franco helping herself to a part of the sultan's possessions in Africa , and Encland bjcomlug practically mistrotB of Egypt. Thus three of the parties who informed her that she must leave the Ottoman empire alone for the common good have boon slicing up that empire for themselves as fast as circumstances would allow. The con sequence is that Russia ia indignant. If she can only find that Germany will remain neutral , or if one of them oven will decline to interfere , she would probably risk trying the issue with Austria and contend for the con trolling power in the Balkan With a vlow to this end Russia has boon putting out a feeler to BOO how the land really lies , and if there may not bo a chance for her to do something to give herself a little moro prestige and territory than the is oojoyint. ' . Prestige Is what she needs most , but as territory will have to go with it the two may be considered as inseparable. M. do Glow , a shrewd and trusty diplomat , has been sent by the cztr on his rounds to the various courts , He has came homo with information which will lead Russia to oonoludo thai the time haa not yet como for aqgrosslvo action. Germany pro poses to stick to Austria like a brother , while England is not disposed to further the Russian doulgus , The only fruit of M. DiGlora' mission has been a reconciliation between the czar and the popo. A largo percentage of the Poles are Roman Catholics , aud for some time put the pontiff has not enjoyed the prlvilego of filling the Polish Bees. Opposition to him has boon withdrawn , flo will' appoint to the various BOOS and become thotriend of Russia. Tha reconciliation thus effected , it is supposed , will go far to rdmovo the Polish disjunction and strengthen the Polish power. Bi. Glen' mission , being on the whole a failure , the prcspeot is that the much talked of war batweou Russia and Austria will bo indefinitely delayed. There is ono being in this world who thinks that to bo u king it is just as well to be the dcuco of a king. Wo refer to King Kalakaua , the ruler of the Sandwich islands , According to a letter from an American resident at IIoululu , "Kalakaua seems tohavobeou dazzled by his reception by the crowned heads of Europe , and now only thinks of making a iigure in the world , regardless of the cost to the taxpayers. He has put in office a ministry of no character , which the whole moneyed interest of the islands cannot but oppose. The revenues are being scattered broadcast. The king is very unpopular with the natives , who generally favor Queen Emma , widow of Kamohamoha IV. Ameri cans have the largest interest hero , and have opposed Emma on account o ! her leaning toward England , But , as the king now seems to bo opposed to American interests , the foreigners may hold off and let Emma and her friends take charge of affairs II affairs are not soon got into shape and the treaty of reciprocity is not ro- nowcd , business will ba in a bad way , and wo may find oarsnlves an English colony. If the United States govern ment abrogates the treaty of recipro city with these islands , a move will al onro ho made for a similar treat } with England ( to admit Hawaiian sugars into British Columbia , Aus tralia and Canada fron of duty ) , and this plan is preferred by many of the king's friends. " The concessions England is willing to offer to Franco in her Egyptian provinces may flitter French sulf-lovo , but can certainly present no compen sation for the advnntnpr a which Francs will lose. Tha Paris Temps , the aoml- official oreau of the republic , admits that the English have been careful to place their notions in the leant offensive manner , and holdi that Gladstone , In pronouncing the deposition of Franco In Ejypt , Is merely obeying public opinion. The English are pursuing an egotistical , ambitious and short sighted policy , but the French cham ber encouraged British usurpation when it proclaimed its indiffer ence to the obligations of for eign policy. The Temps ad vises the French nation to swallow the bitter pill without making any grimace ; but declares that the rela tions of Franca with England can scarcely Issue uncoolod from a tran sactlon in which England has mani fested a spirit of rivalry and jealousy which no proceeding on the part oi Franco warrants. Our fooling , it con tinues , must bo tempered by the thought that wo onrselves are half to blame for our discomfiture. All this , the artiolo soys In conclusion , will prove only half an evil if wo profit by it in the future. It is absolutely necessary to convince the French democracy that It must have a forelan policy , and that foreign policy cannot bo made to conform with narrow cal * culations and parliamentary caprices. Lord Derby's echemo of emigration For the Irish is being pushed by the British government with a goo4 deal of vigor. Major Quakel ! ban been in Boston conferring with the Irishmen as to the propriety of establishing a "boarding houBo" or groit caravan sary there for Irish emigrants under the care of a man" to bo procured for $100 or $500 , " whoso dntina would ixlao bo to procure employment 'for bis boarders. A wilder ncheino canld not bo conceived of , and wo do not wonder that the Irish are opposed to it , both hero and in Ireland. It would bo a most shiftless and abort sighted policy of E ngland to ( rather up the poor- : nt communities in Ireland en masse and attempt to transplant them to thla country. Oar state department would most certainly object unless the Brit ish government undertook to bny ! and for thorn and aoe them through to the first harvest , and , if they arc going to do that at all , they might as well do it in the unsettled parts of Ire land. The Irish emigration to thia country haa been of far higher average - ago than wo should get by any such scheme , for we have really drafted off thu young men and women of most ambition and push. To transfer a whole community hero , with its uoual proportion cf aged , decrepit , feeble , pauperized and criminal , would bo an mtorpriso to which our government ivoald objict most strenuously , In 'act ' , immigration from any quarter of ; ho elobo has ceased to bo an object of cultivation by this country , The illness of M. GambotU ia assuming a vary serious aspect. It ia u foot rapidly becoming a political event f grave import. While hia re- mtation has suffered from the col- apao of hia premiership and from hia unfortunate choice of political asso ciates , ho ia recognized on every hand as having two tilings which are very uncommon in Franco at tbo present , { mo original political genlua and > orsonal influence ever the const ! uonoioa as a whole , If ho could sue- Deed in having the electoral system modified as it has been in Italy , hia mrsonal will would at ones b ° couio an ivermastorlng forces In political life. 3ut oven these who deprecate hia methods and his ascendancy cannot ail to recognize what a serious lota lis death would bo to the republic. Government would bo moro unstable ban it now is , parties would bo brown further out of gear , and the uturo [ of democratic Institutions bo ar moro uncertain , if M. Gambetta should be taken away in the prime of ifo. There are two points which indi- mta a storm in Europe Ono is between Germany and Rmala. Prince Bis- mnrck evidently clings closely to the ilual alliance with Austria , a triple mporlal allianoo having been rendered ruporsiblo since Austria showed her > urpose to advance her frontier south- rnrd at the expense of Slavic autono my. As a consequence , Russia is at outa with Germany , and the sansa- lonal newsmongers exaggerate the prospects of a collision by dispatches , nd edltorialo , which have some truth lehind them , although the beat In- ormod persona seem to treat them as canarda. Poaoo negotiations between Pom and Chill still draj ; tholr wuary length along. People of both countries have almost given up the hope of u satis ictory arrangement with the govern ment of Santiago , nnlesa the Peruvian nosidont cornea forward and declared ilmsolf ready to sign the onerous ternia exacted by the oonquooing na- ion. ion.Tho plan of Dr. Logan to make an Apparent exchange of Peruvian terri- ory for the war claims held by Chili Against Peru is the only ono accepta ble that is , aoording to their declar ations. Bolivia has disappointed Chili n the action of her congrusa. It wrs loped by the Chilian government thtt 3ollvia would separate herself defi- nitaly from the Ptraylan alliance , and eave her generous friend to her owu ioor resources , but the resolutions Adopted by both chambers of the Bol ivian legislature simply authorizes tbo lixeoutlvo to make a truce if possible with Chili , asking beforehand the oo operation and consent of Pern , and to omit no opportunity tonard arriving r.t tome pencofu understanding with Chili. Cnmpeco , the president of Bolivia , is a atauncl friend of Peru , and from the genera ! expression of the Chilian journals their discontent and the notional din- appointment are clearly Indicated , There is no qurssion as to the grow ing weariness of Chili with thia pro longed uncertainty , danger and an noyancc. Although a handsome rev enue is derived from the appropriated territory of Peru and Bolivia , where nitrate of sodu t ud guano are found , yet having to maintain n larco ; nrmy , kecplCR the squadron arid ihroo very expensive ironclads , which are the principal factors of the fleet , and at the Barao time sending ofia fcrmldiblo expedition to subdue the hitherto in domitable Arancnniana in the southern part of the ropublio taxes the revenues , energies and patience of Chili to the extreme. It is not eurpiiting that eccli bitter invectives are hurled against the government , Prlnco Krapotkiuo , arrested rcctnt- ly for complicity in revolutionary movements , ia now about thirty-nine years of r.go. Ho is a member of one of the oidrct families of the Rataian empire. Bred in oseoand luxury , ho very aeon broke with all the tr dl- lions of hia caste , and devoted him- coif from his seventeenth year to the otudy of natural sciences. Ilo atudied at various universities in St. Peters burg , Moscow , Khatkoff and in other citier , and noon became an authority in the specialty ho had chcsec geol ogy. Ho undertook , with the help ol the imperial Rneaiau gcccrnpbical so ciety , of which ho was secre tary , variour scientific expeditions throughout Russia. The lifo ho led was so retired and seemed so nt torly ongroaaod by scientific interests that nobody thought of auspoating him of any revolutionary propaganda. When , in 1877 , ho was suddenly ar rested and thrown into a dungeon in St. Petersburg , public opinion was ut terly amazed. It was still moro so when a few months later Krapotklne succeeded in escaping from prison anc disappeared. He went to G oiieva , anc by his ulcquont and ably written arti cles in The Obatchina , contributed greatly to the elucidation and develop ment of the principles and practical policy of tbo party , Ho waa subse quently expelled from Geneva , and settled in Thouon , Savoy. * Dn. S. S. BRITTAK , anya : 'As a rule phyaiciana do not , by their pro fcEalonal methods , build up the female conniitution , while they seldom cure the dia jaaes to which it la always lia ble in our variable climalo and under cur imperfect civilization. Specie ! rcmedico are often required to restore organic harmony and strengthen the cnfeublod ponrora of womanhood ; and for moat of theeo wo are indebted to persons outside of the medical pro- Eeaaion. Amontj the very beat ot these remedies I assign a prominent place to Mra. Lydla E. Pmkhom'a Vegetable Compound. " * * 'Ono man's # moat is another man's poiaon. " Kidney-Wort expels the poisonoua humora. The first thing to do in the spring is to clean houso. For internal cleansing and renovating , ao other medicine is equal tw Kidney- Wort. In either dry or liquid form it cures headache , billons attacks , con- atlpation and deranged kidneys , FORTHE PERMANENTCURE OF COSV5STBPATBOW. No other dljcwio is to prevalent in UiLi r country uu CouaUpatlou , and no remedy 0 lias over equalled the celebrated TrTT1TTITV- TVOIMJ < u a euro. TVliotcvcr the cause , f however obnUnr.to the case , thU remedy w wUl overcame it. Tm9 dlstrowlnc com plaint Is very opt to be earapicated with constipation. Kidney- Wortntreiujtlions the weakened parts and o Quickly curca nil Vlnda of Piles even when O pUynlelana and racdlclnca hnvobeforeftil- _ cd. mfyou have cither of the 83 troubles 31 J Lc > ItDrusRlstoSell BOYD'S OPERA HOUSE Friday and Sa'iirday , AN DM ATI NEK DE3. 29 AND SO. THE STORY OP A WOMAN. BERTHA WELBY In the tbrUllng Amcrlcin pity , "One Woman's ' Life,11 Hy the author ol "Only a Farmer's Daughter , iupprt'd by a company of tfeur York AitltU. iltbcrveJ icati on tale Tfiur.diy morning. tu-wcd-fil Dext-erL.Tlioinas&Bro - . , WILL BUY AND SELL. Alt. TKAN6ACTIONN CCHNIOTEB TUBUEWITH. Pay Tares , Kent HonaoB , Etc. REMOED TO NO. 611 1GTH ST UKAiEU IK ALL KIIJDS OF WINES. TAKE JOOTICE , Martin , The Tailor , 1220 Fnrnliani Utroot. 1220 UM r celvi-J a full and complete stock ot Fall ciij Winter Sjltlt ! { ' auj la uow uakliigaNo' 1 pair cl pacts lor f S 00 , complete eult I2JUIO SM him and > av ° ' a t. ( frrl Gutter of Application ot Samuel Beatty for Liquor I.iceusa. NOTIOK. Xot'cj li hereby given that Simuel Unity did upon thu ITth liar ol December , A I ) . , 18V2. Die hi * application to the Major and City Council ol inaha. ( or lie u > to cell Mill , tpliltcuitudM. nous liquors , M No. SU south 121h stieet , 3J van ) , Omaha , Nebraska , ( r.'ru the H'th ' illy ot January. 1B8. < , lo the llih t'ay 01 Apill , 1-bJ. II there be ro oljjctloii remonstrance or pro- ctt tiled wlthla twj eul Irom Dec. SOih , A' ) . 18:2 , thu tilJ licence will bo gramal. BAUUtUURATTV , Applicant. T ] Omaha Bee newspaper will publlih tha above uo tee once e ch wet k fcr two week * ai plicant. The city cl Omatu d8 Citjrtterk , OIVCAJEC .A. COFFEE AND SPICE MILLS Boasters and Grinders of Coffees nnd Spices , Manufacturers of | IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER Clark's Double Extracts of BLUEING , INKS , ETC n. G. CLARK & CO. , Proprietors , _ _ _ _ _ 1403 Douglas Street , Omaha , 1108 and 1110 Harney 11. , OMAHA , NEB , MoMAHON , ABERT $ CO , , Wholesale Druggists , 315 DOUGLAS STREET , OMAHA , NEB. L. C. HUNTINGTON & SON , DEALERS IN HIDES , FURS , WOOL PELTS & TALLOW 204 fforth Sixteenth Sfr , , - - 'OMAHA , WEB. 1005 Farnam St. , Omaha. , HIMEBAUGH , MERRIAM & CO , , Proprietors , Wholesale Dealers in Mills Supplied With Choice Varieties of Milling Wheat , Weatorn Trad * { Supplied with Oats and .Corn nt Loweat Quotations , with prompt shipments. Write for prices. [ * M * Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA , NEB. T 5 MANUFACTURERS Otf Carpenter's Materials , ALSO I h no. BL DS , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. FitBt-daen f&ctlitleo for tbo Manufacture of nil klndea of Mouldings , Feinting and irmtehlnz n Specialty , Ordera from the country will be promptly executed , adclreuall communications to A , MOVER , Proprleto ESTABLISHED IN 1868 , . D. H. McDANELD & CO. , HIDES , TALLOW , SHEASE , PELTS , 204 North 16th St. , Masoulo Block , Main House , 4G , 48 and 52 Dear. bare aTenue , Chicago. Kefar by permission to Hide and \ Leather National ttonk , Chicago ,