THE DAILY BEE-MONDAY JANUARY 8 he Omaha Bee Published every morning , except Sun- Ay , The only Monday niotnlug dally , TKRMS DY MAIL One Year. . . .510 03 I Three Months. ? 3 00 Six Month * . . 5.00 | Ono Month. . . . 1.00 ' 'IIK WKKKLY 1JKB , published orery \Ve1no lay. TKKMS POST PAID One kenr . $2 ( K ) I Three Months. H ) Sir Months. . . . 1 00 | Ono Month. . . . 20 AMKHICAN NEWS CosirAsr , Solo Amenta \etrn1ealcrrt In the United States. COUnESrONDKNCK All Onmmnnl. ntfncs relating to News nmt Editorial , nntter riiould bo addressed to the Knrron or Tut : UKK. I5USIMfS LETTI5KS-A11 llJil Letter * and Itciiilltonres should bo < 1 drecccd to TUB HKE PuiiusiiiNo COMPANY OMAHA. DrafU , CliecltH nml 1'n-tollico Orders to be made payable to the order of tbo Company. The BEE PUBLISHING 00 , .Props . , E. ROSEWATER Editor A iiEPcnur.vx caucns is the forlorn hope ot the monopolies. Ir history oponku the troth , it was Joseph who was Bold by his brothrou. KESTIUUTIVK but not dcatruotivo railway legislation ii demanded by the pooplo. IK faro binklng the player runs the greatest risks , in political banking the banker. SLF.IQII riding at two dollars an hour Is the destruction of the poor , but the bonanza of the livery atablo keeper. A DEMOOIIATIU volcofr6ra Uumboldt nominates Dr. Malony for the United States senate. Dr. 3Ilony la to-day as sound as the soundest democrat on the antl-mpnopoly issuo. THE man who can throw a club in any of thn Lincoln hotels without knocking down half a dozen railroad nntl-uionopolists , will draw the lirat prize in the political lottery. CONOUKHH is dlflcuiBing the ahlpplng laws. A law which would ship ovcry lobbyist who Is now working in Wash ington for John Iliaoh'a monopoly would moot with general favor. WHILE the oust is shuddering over the proipttots of a panic , western farm ers uro looking with satisfaction on their well filled barns and corn cribs. In hard times the farmer always holds the winning hand. TUP. Philadelphia J'rcm says that there is no opposition in Nobraika to Senator Baundura' return. The 1'rcu knows \noro about the habits of the Pennsylvania Bearer than It does About Nebraska politic ! . EVKUY railroad attorney is in favor of the commission system , because every railroad attorney knows that it would bo knocked Jhlgher than' , Gil- toys klto by a docUion of the supreme court declaring it unconstitutional. EDIHON has invented a now light ning arrester. The man who oin devise - vise a contrivance for the arrest of political lightning can make his for tune by the sale of his royalty to a ecoro of senatorial candidates at Lin coln. IT may bo that Oapt. Humphrey was the candidate of the straight re publicans , but the railroad attorneys who think that they have struck a bouanzi in the now speaker , have a solid chunk of disappointment in store for them. MIBHOUUI Is about to pass a law taxing the gross earnings of corpora tlons. . There is no room for a state board of equalization under ny anoh method of compelling corporations to boar their share of the burden of gov eminent. SEVKIUL of the state papers have announced that Vac Itanda has boon conQrinod as register of the Nlobrata land oflioo. Hindu's nomlnalion till pending in the senate. IIo has not been confirmed , and there is no likelihood that ho will bo. EVERY shyster lawyer and blood sucker justice in Omaha is opposed tea a roduction'of Itho number of juatlc courts In this city. In the interests of the poor , who am the chief victim of Injustice , the legislature cannot affjrd to delay reform on the question. JOHN LOGAN says that his spoouh against Fitz John Porter was the greatest tifjrt of his life. A greater effort will be his attempt to secure the nomination for the presidency on the capital which he Imagines ho has worked up by defaming a gallant and unjustly stlgmitir.sd iioldior. SKNATOU SHERMAN h working every wlro to i > ot the period of bonding foi whisky extended. It was only n few years uga that the manufacturers de clared , ai they now do , that if the bonded period was not intended the ) would bo ruined. When they secured cured the extension , they went on overproducing until whisky OH whieb $70,000,000 of taxes are duo the gov. eminent now lies in the warehouses , Still greater overproduction would certainly follow any further extension , THE INFLUENCE OF ANTI- MONOPOI/Y. The opening tt the present legisla ture ha0 shown , In the clearest man ner , the iiiliienco of ami-monopoly prim "pits " in Nebraska. Ton years ago , to bo an anti-monopolist In Neb raska was to bj n political outcast. Both the leading pirties wcro con trolled body and soul by tHe corpora tions. The prots was bound hand and foot by the railroad managers , and its editors cither bribed with fa vors or bulldozed with threats. No man who atpirod to poliiical advance ment dared to openly ral o his volco against the taskmasters who plun dered the public uncnticised and re warded their favorites with pllbgo and patronage. The beginnings of the movement to bring the railroad corporations under the control of the laws wcro small and attended with the most bitter dis couragements. A venal press de nounced every advocate of of corpor ate restriction 111 an oncmy to society and a dangerous element in the state. The farmers who first dec larcd themselves - solves on the issue were characterized as impractical reformers and hayseed grangers. The speakers who sought to Inlluonco party counsels in favor of recognition of the principles of antimonopoly - monopoly were denounced as dema gogues. Every producer , of whatever class or condition who dared to iden tify himself with the movement was slandered and ridiciled , and the effort to shako off the Monopoly Man of the Sea was declared to bo a movement which would die out before half the .people of the state know .of its exis tence. The battle which the producers of this state have fought so long against the abuses of corporate monopoly is drawing to - \ close. Both political parties have been forced by an over powering public sentiment to rooognizo the demand for railroad legislation by incorporating strong anti-monopoly planks in their platformu , The late campaign In Nebraska indicated that the people are at last fully aroused to the importance of the vital isauu of the day. Eighteen thousand voters cast their ballots for the a'.raiglit antimonopoly - monopoly ticket. Every candidate of other parties who was endorsed by the anti-mouopollats secured his elec tion , while a trill'ng ' change of votea would have sent to congress two antimonopoly - monopoly republicans.For the first time in the history of Nebraska the railroads find themselves in a strong minority in the legislature. The sen- aio has boon taken mU of their hands , and the house hasboon , organized with a speaker who cannot bo controlled by the monopoly managers. Every Indi cation points to the election of n United States senator whoso record and standing will bo a strong guarantee of his fidelity to the wishes of his constituents and who can bo depended upon to stand like a rock against the corrupt ing overtures of the raiiroad lobby. On the streets , In the hctols and lob bies of the state capital , antimonopoly ely Is the ono topic of dlecumion. Where ton years ago no man dared to profess it , to-day no candidate dare deny adherence to its principles. The anti-monopolists have won a great victory , in educating public sen timent to a clear understanding of the rolationa which at present exist be tween the corporations and the pee plo. Oaro is now uo ° dod that the fruits of that victory shall not bo thrown away. The battle is not en tirely won when the enemy holds out a il kg ot ttuce. The people of Ne braska now hold the reins of power for the first time in many years , They must oxerolso it in securing to them selves results which will bo lasting. F ARJ OF Some of the cmtorn papers are ox- rossing fears that another great ianlo in Impending , They base their pinion upon the increase of failures , ho stringency of the ironey market , ho speculative fever in stocks and ha amount of money which has been unk in railroad 'construction and ox- onslon during the past throe years , 'ho ' history of the panlo of 1873 and ho causes which preceded ft are re- erred to in support of the current road ot an impending financial crisis , nd business men as well aa specula- ; ors are warned that they are landing upon a smouldering volcano which Is likely to burst at any mo ment Into a dostrnctlh.ruptlon. . While it cannot bo denied that there are good grounds for caution when tbo signs of thotlmosaro examinedtho best financial authorities are not at all agreed that the condition of trade and the stock market furnish a sufficient bails for the near approach of another financial collapso. The record of fail ures itself , when scaBtiod closely , Is au assurance that the general course of trade U running smoothly ou u sounder bam than might have been expected Most of the assignment ! noted have boon msdo by firms who either ventured outside of legitimate trade methods or sought to increase their business unduly at the exponsi of their capital : The wholesale con traction of credits by the largni houses , and the tendency to stop tin practice ot post dating time bills which haa sprung up in the courseo heavy competition , are favorable to i postponement of the crash which s < many expect. BpoauUtlon In stocks has fallen ver much more largely than ever before into a few hands. There are no evi dences that the fever haa infected business men generally. A compari son of the Hat with that of a year ago shows , that tbo market is lower and thattho securities of purely speculative enterprises are going bogging for in vestors. So Ion : ; as speculation cm bo confined to the great speculators , and the general business public do not concern themselves with it , Wall street will not norloinly disturb the financial condition of the country. Provided also that good crops afford sulllciont trullij for the railroads to tarn Interest on their indebtedness and to declare dividends on their watered stocks. The recklobsnoM of much of the railroad building during the past year is admitted. There is , however , this difference between the construction of the past twelve months and that pre ceding the panic of 1873 , that a largo portion of the lines lately built will bocorno immediately productive , either M cxtoneions to or as feeders of existing dividend paying properties , It Is not BO much the heavy extension as it Is the dishonest construction of railroads that Is tap ping the surplus wealth of the coun try , and turning the money of inves- toin and the earnings of the people Into the pockets of the construction ringj. Ono element of the present strin gency of the times must not bo for gotten , and that is the exorbitant national taxation , which is piling up a disastrous surplus of millions of dollars monthly in the national treas ury. Prompt and radical action by congress on the question of tariff re form will do much to relieve the country from the weight under which it is now staggering , and to postpone to a late day the panic which oomo are now so much dreading. A COUIIESPONDKNT referring to THK BEE'S comments upon the udvanco in prices at the opera house when the bust class of singers and actors appear on its boards , calls attention to the fact that the sale of prices at Bnyd'a is loss than that charged at any other first-el 083 theater in the country , lie says that at Wallacks , the Union Square and the Standard ih New York , at Ilaverly'a and McVickcr'o in Chicago , and at Baldwin's in San Francisco the universal price for the best seats is $1.50 , while at our own theater $100 is the highest sum ordinarily charged , THE BEE has no intention of doing Mayor Boyd or any ono else any injustice in this mat- tor. It expressly stated in its discus sion of the question that the increased cost of seats was n matter which lay outaido of the provinoa of the Iccil managers and that in every instance where a contract was under considera tion the matter simply resolved itself into the question whether the attrac tion should appear at the increased prices or whether they should past Omaha by and play elsewhere. So long as people are willing to pay the advanced rates theatrical agents will continue to charge them , and local managements will have no alternative but to accept the situation or refuse the company. Omaha Is a liberal patron ot the drama , and Mr. Boya's enterprise in erecting and maintain ing ono of the handsomest houses i.i the country has afforded her the op portunity during the past six months of seeing many of the finest stars on the American stage , with a llbaral sprinkling of foroigu singers. Duui.NU 1882 the immigration to the United States from all countries at all points amounted to 738,0'JO against 719,000 for 1881 , an Incroaro of 10,000 ever the previous year. Germany contributed 232,000 ; Eng land and Wales , 81,000 ; Ireland , 70- 000 ; Scotland ; 17,000 ; Sweden , 59- , 000 ; Norway , 27,000 ; Canada , 89- , 000. and all the other contributing countries 160,000. During the last three months of the past year the Im migration fell whort of that of the pre vious year and in the judgment ol those who have observed the fluctua tions of the tide , Immigration has reached Its maximum. The influx ol Qarimns was considerably less than that of 1881. Mil. VAMIEUIHLT wants to fount an art gallery. The art which Van derbilt seems to have studied mos successfully is the art of d ning th public. Gaa Proof , llrooklyn UiRle , A guest at ono of tha Washington hotels blow out the gts before retiring to bed , and olnsod the window tihtl | ; to exclude the iniasmatlo ntmosphera of the capital The next morning IK arose , dressed himself , and walkoc forth feeling ns fresh aud vigorous a usual , llo had boon accustomed ti sitting In the gallery of the hocsa o representative ) , aud was g.xs proof , A Fnrcu Everywhere. I'-Ula I'.tj Jourrul Twenty states have the rallroai commission system , with the test ! irony that it works well , while no ono has such a scheme as the Oiuah BEE wishes to inaugurate. Hasting Nebraskiau. Not so. The railroad commissio system is a farce everywhere , am 10 Unru is no geuuiuo testimony to th contrary from any state in the union There Is no state which has a satlsfao tory railroad law. THE EUROPEAN FLOODS- ' The close of the year 1882 aud the poning of the present year have been endorod memorable by a succession f remarkable inundations unprcco- ontod in the 'history of Europe , lardly an European country hns been tivioited by the universal deluge beginning in the latter part of Novom- er by heavy rains and tremendous noda in Baden and other parts of armany , the ntormy weather csntln- cd unbroken until the close of the ear. Early in December Franco was aid under a rushing torrent of water. The Seine wts so svnllon lat boats were prevented from aeeing un ter the principal bridges f Piirla. A largo part of the cl'y 'aa ' fbodod , the aoweratjo pystom be amo practically inoperative and the rhole sabioil of the city was com- lotoly aoakod. The llhino and Ihono also overflowed their banks nd great destitution and distresi pro- ailed among the poorer classes many f whom were driven from their omca to euifer in depsndonco upon rangers , On the rest of the conti- ont rain continued to fall until abaut week before Christmas when n gen- ral deluge sot in. Torrents of rain oscondod in Germany , Austria and antorn Franco. The rivers com menced to rise gradually at first , but eon with a rapidity that uwa- onod widespread alarm. In 'ranee ' the eastern and southern rovincos were ( boded. Lyons and nsancon were seriously damaged , and ovoral small towns along the Rhone were inundated. The floods in Ger many and Austria were phenomenal , 'ho ' Rhino and Danube rose to an as- onishlug height , and with a rapidity which ono can scarcely conceive. At Cologne it rose two metrepormorothan oven foot in a day and one-half , and nrlng a single night , ninety centime- roeor throe foot. The Danube flooded argo part of Upper Austria , and so- lous alarm was felt at Vienna , loat hat city should have to pass through 10 disagreeable experience of Paris , 'ho ' Nockar rose higher than in No- ember , and reached its highest oint during this century. In Baden bridge was swept away , carrying ith it twenty psraons. Altogether , is estimated that fifty lives were est by the fl > ods. Meantime in Dj- omborEnglandvras completely buried i snow , and the storm ia described as lolont almost beyond belief. Travel f all kind was impeded , the Scotch xprossoa were abandoned , the coast aa ravaged with a fnrioua hnr- icano , and the ports were rowdod with dismantled shipping , n Wales a railway train was com lotoly buried under the snow. An it Id not arrive at Its destination a arty of honomon with shovels and thor implements wcro sent to hunt it. t was found under a drift sixteen eot deep. The passengers had been onfinod t wonty-fonr hours without re , air or food , aud when 'released were almost dead from cold. Another rain was blocked in uo of the moun- ain regions of Scotland , and work men were obliged to clear the tracker or a distance of five miles before it ould proceed. All authorities agree n sajing that such a series of storms ibd floods has not baon known in the icntury. In Monoooly'd Path , icrjmcr.to Equity. The republican press seem never to Ire of baying at the heels of Senator Van Wyck. lie seems to bo a foeman worthy of their steel , and as his war- are is against monopoly in all its orms , and no public act of his ban ihown him to bo nuy other than the armors' friend , they should support urn and bo careful how they read the malignancy of republican papers , for monopolies will strike hardest where ho fen la thickest. They know Sen ator Van Wyck always stands in the way of monopoly rule , and as they cannot buy nor force htm to their urn , they resort to the weapons o malice. What It Reprodouta. Sioux Clly Journal. The Omaha Herald says that any man elected to the Nebraska state leg .alaturo as a democrat who shall vote [ or other than a straight democrat for United States senator , desorvea to bo kicked out of the democratic party lint represents the bulldozing elomon iif the Ilerald's party. The Omaha Herald also says that n respectable re pnblican for United States senator 1 preferable to a half-brood ot any party , wo suppose. That represent the trading element of The Herald' party. The Omaha Herald is mud llko the proverbial Irishman's flea And so is The Herald's party. Ho Ueoognlzad Her. lloJern Aiyo. An old man would not believe hi cauld hear his wife talk a distance o five milca by telephone. His botto half was m a country store sovora miles away , where there was a telephone phone , aud the skeptic wa alee in place hsro there was a similar tnstru meut , and ou being told how t ( operate it , ho walked boldly up am shouted : "Hello , Sarahl" At tha Instan' . lightning struck the telephou wire and knocked thu man down , au as ho scrambled to his feet ho excitedly citodly cried , "That'a Sarah , over time ! " The DlHRUhftng Iluttou. Itqiubllcin. The dtsgujtiug Hatton who edit The National Republican at Washing ton and holds n high place in th postdllho department besides , think the civil sorvlco commissioners wl sell olorkthlpj for § 200 apiece. "Th business will all be dune , " says th paper , "without a word passed be tween the giver aud taker. Commit eionors will sell appointments to teach era of oivjl ( ervloo schools. Any ma bio enough to bo a commissioner willet ot lack the ingonlty to devise n undrcd plans to effect this , and needy - ody will bo the wiser , " Mr. Hatton s a fool of unusual magnitude , Fighting the New Bridge. irtlnlltowi. , It , Tlmu-IleUbIlcaa. | The Union Pacific railroad is all orn up over the project now being IsciiBsod In congress providing for the ulldjng of another bridge across the IlsBouri river at Conucil Blnffj , I'ti- or tha law as it is now the Uni'-n 'ocifio is alleged not to bo longer en- tied to make any charges for the ueo f the bridge except Mich as will cover 10 cost of maintaining it. But the lonopoly which it has ia put to the ory practical purpose of perpetuating s leaao of the grant frcm the public , y that mysterious moMia which , iu onrcaa [ , is so potent and yet eo .lent. It is just barely possible that rhou there ia u law pissed that any ) bbjl t caught in Wellington or ritmg to or conversing with a mem- or of congress or government bill- lal , shall suiter the penalty of death nd have all of his property scqucn- ered ; there may bo some attention aid to the desires of the public in 'iy matter of legislation regarding icso plethoric corporations that make lemaelvcs so numerous around con- rcsa for the good of thomaolvos and 10 everlasting damnation of the OHtitry , The notion suggests teolf to us as the result of the iufor- nation that the Union Pacific lobby 3 on hand fighting the now bridge reject with all its might and main , t Is extremely probable that the loatod corporations will como out bead , although there will not bo a nan in the country who will bo able o see why capitalists who BO desire lionld not be authorized to put their noney into a now bridge * But if they ave to invest as much money in get- inn the matter through congress us it rill cost to build the bridge , the robalillty ia that they will not be ikoly to invest. A Fatal Accident. [ Kearney Nocparcll. ) A shocking accident occurred on ueaday last at the homo of Mr. A , .1 Orossloy , living about seven or eight miles north-oast of this city. Mrs. froalsy , a fleshy woman of about -40 ears of ago , was sitting on her chair nitting , with the right foot resting n a small stool , and her son , a young lan , sitting in a fronting obi q 10 irectlon about six or eight feet aw.iy with a double barrel muzzle loading hot gun lying across his kuees , and nfortunatoly pointiag toward Mrs. Crossly , which ho waa wiping off. A ounger con having seen the action of jreaohloading guca , remarked the gun would break like a breechloader , and ho older brother replied that it would iot , and proceeded to illustrate his oply by raising the hammers , &c. , aa ho gun lay across his knees. The ammer of ono barrel slipped from is fingers and discharged the con- ontsof the barrel , a load of 18 or 20 0. 2 shot , the whole charge trlking Mrs. Grossly square- y in front of the right eg about six inches bslow the knee , battering both bones of the leg and earing a ghastly wound about two nches in diameter , then passing out ward lodging in the fleshy part of the upper third of the thigh. The aun was so close that the chugo of shot lid not scatter but lodged in a mau. ? hla occurred about 8 o'clock In the morning and about ! ) o'clock of the vonlng of the enmo diy Mrs. Greenly ras delivered of a perfectly or rued child. Then abaut noon of the next day the operation of itnputating the wounded limb was per- 'orraod by unjolnting it at the knee joint leaving the thigh bone entire. Thus in the short spice of about wonty-eight hours Mrs. Crassly went through a combination of occurrences which altogether make up a case with out a parallel In surgical history. At aat reports she was doing aa well as could be expected ; her health the past rear has boon of rather doliauto na- , uro. Drs. Dildino and Northruo , of ; his city , were in attend nce. Since writing the above the report comes that Mrs , Crossly died to-day at 1) ) a. m. * * " 0no man's * meat Is another man's poison. " Kidney-Wort expels the poisonous humors. The first thing to do in the Spring is to clean tioueo. For internal cleansing and renovating , no other medicine ia equal to Kidney-Wort , In either dry or liquid form it cures headache , bilious attacks , constipation and deranged FIRW INSURANCE McKOON & STURGES , Successor to M. O. McKOON CO. , Room 1 , Oreigliton Blook , Represent tbo Following Companies 0 ntlneuUl ol Now York $ 4,200,000 00 Commercial Union of London 1 ,100,000 CK t'lro Associat'on ol riilltuiclpqfo. . . . 4,400,000 W German American ol Now York. . . . 3,400,000 (0 Imperial and .V. ithernol Holland. 2,0-10,090 00 > atlonol of Hartford 1,700OuO UO Orient o IllalUoril 1,400,00000 Plidtolx of Brooklyn 2,800,00000 fennsjlvanlaof rhlli < leli > hU 2,200 , JO 00 Kov l of Liverpool M 25,800,000 00 tl-igfieU o ! M\d acliu ctt 2,200 000 00 mlHtviU Iv Matter of Application of Fred Wiith for Liquor License. NOTICE. Notice Is hereby given thit J'tod Wlrih illd upon the 27th day cf Dec. A. D US. ! , fit hl pptcit ! on to thoMnorand Ulty Council o ( in aha , for licence is n ll M&t ! , Spliltuoui ant Vlnoui Lluor4 , at coiner luth and ilarno Direct , Srd ward , Omaha , Neb , , ( ram the lO'l davol Juiuiry. 183 , to Uie llth ilaj ol April 1 81. 81.K thcr , ) be nj objection , remonstrance or pro test ( lieu whlnt | ! o weeks from Dec. .Till A l > 1832 , the said llconno will b > crtn'cil. FftKPSHIuK WIHTII , Applicant. THK OKAIK I ! " ri\\i > paper will puUI-h th abe > iiDll'Ooqeo ' uirhiek ( or two week * tt the opontc of I lie upnl c nt. The city of Oma ha Ii not tj lo charrftd Ih row Ith. J J L.C. J m. J6-21 Uty Clerk. Matter of Application of Henry Horn terser for Liquor Lleena'c. NOTICK. Notice U hereby x\\c \ > \ tint Ilonry lotnb-r dl.l upon Ibo iTih im > ot Dec , A. I ) 1 S2 , fl o In amUauoT : < t tlio iU rrindU t > Councilor Oma b , lor UCIMHJ'.O * 1I Mtlt , t-plntu maud Vlnou l.liiuora , at No UU l iKl < " iticet , 3l l wir.i Omaha , Nib. , from the loth day ot January lt& ! to I hoi 1th d y of April , 18j3. II there bo n > objection , leiuonitrance or pro test Hied within t o wi'eVs from ' . ' 7th ol Dec , A U , Ittb2 , the laid II eisrwlll he printed. ItriNUY IIOn.MlSrtOER , Applicant. Tui Omnv Dm newrpiper will publlth th U > M > nolle- ) once etcn i k tor two trceki a the tipente of the app'Ica-1 , The city ol Oman U cot to be chanrod therewith , an But J. J. L. C.JKVrtTr , CU CUrk COFFEE AND SPIGE US. Konsters nnri Grinders of Coffees and Spices. Manufacturers of MPERIAL BAKING POWDER .Clark's Double Extracts of BLUEING , INKS , ETC . G. CIjAllKifc CO. .Proprietor , 1403 Donclna Stront , Omaha , , 1108 and 1110 Harney t. , OMAHA , NEB. MoMAHON , ABERT & CO , , * Wholesale Druggists , 315 DOUGLAS STREET , OMAHA , HEB. L. C. HUNtoTGTOJSI & SON , DEALERS IN HIDES , FURS , WOOL. PELTS & TALLOW 204 JTorth Sixteenth St. , ' - - OMAHA , HEB. OMAN/ 1005 Farnam St. , Omaha. HIMEBAUGH , MEREIAM & CO , , Proprietors , "Wholesale Dealers in Mills Supplied With Choica Varieties of Milling Wheat , Western Trade { Supplied with Oats and Corn at Lowest Quotations , with prompt ahlpmouta. Write for prices. M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE' HIE 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA , NEB. Gr-A-TIE PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OP Carpenter's Materials ALSO SASH , DOORS , BUNDS , STAIRS , Stair -Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. FJrst-clMi tacllttipe for the Manufacture of all kimlei of Moulding , Palntinc and matchluR a SxclnUy. | Orders from the country will be promptly executed Bdilregj U coiumnnlcatl ins to A. MO YUH , I'roprieto ESTABLISHED IH 1808. D. H. McDANELD & CO. , HIDES TALLOW GREASE , , , PELTS . /xstno Jb * iu jLt.a , 2M North 16th St. , Mnsonlo Block. Main Douse , 40 , 48 and 62 Dear- bore avenue , Chicago , liefer by perraiMlon to Hide and Lonthor National Bank , Chicago ,