Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 25, 1883)
THE IMJLy BEB-OAlAliA THUKSDA * JANUARY 25 Omaha Bee. Fobllnhed every morning , except Sun ny. Thu only Alomhy mnrulng dally. TKHMS BY MAIL- Ono Yeir . . . . 810 00 I Three Months . $3 00 Six Months. . 6.00 | Ono Month. . . . 1.00 'IIE WEEKLY BEK , publUhed every Welne day. TBHMS POST PAID Ono i ar . ? 2 00 I Three Months. M ) SI j Months. . . . 1.00 | One Month. . . . 20 AMKHIOAM NKWH COMPANI , Hole Agenln . " \bWitdealorn In the United States. CORRESPONDENCE All Oommnnl- atfiras relating to News and K'litorUl natter * nhuuld be addressed to the EuiTOii > > or THK HKK. UUBIMCFS LKTTERS-AII Uuslnej Letters nml HcrnlttanccM uliuuld be il irertrd to THK liKr I'um.lHIIINO COMPANY JMAHA. Drafts , Cliockn and 1'o'ti.llice JrtlpM to bo made payable to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props , K. ROSE WATER EiUtoi. IT'H a long hno that bus no ending , bat the quarter-stretch at L ncoln ia not yoi in eight. THE Mirquls of Lorno ia to visit President Arthur. This will afford Rrholicu Robinson nn unexpected op partu-iity to give nnothor twlot to the British lion'a ' tail. THIS Colorado legislatures propcao to rastriat the Pallruau charges. A bill which would locate the Pullman prop erly in some definite plaoo for pur poses of taxation would moot a long f jit want. HEI > OLOOD IB creating qulto n son- aation in NJW England , where bo is exhibiting himself aa the noblest nay- age of them all. A revised voriion of the Ft. Kearney massacre ought to bo printed in the Oonniotlcut papers. "A scitun race botwccn nobodies" la the dUrcspootful manner In which the Olobe Democrat alludes to the Ne braska sunatotial contest. The Globe- Democrat has evidently never hoard of the preferred candidate of the Union f Pacific. QK.VEIUL HAZB.N , General IIxnm , Attorney Ganoral Browator and other prominent cllbhlij in Washington have t i been filed for neglecting to clear the anovr from their sidewalks. All these gentlemen might aivo money by living In Omiha , where a fine for disobeying the snow shoveling ordinance la aa rare as hou'n teeth , and aa unknown as the whereabouts of Howgato. WK arc In receipt of the Tribunt Almanac , fjr many years a standard political manual and Invaluable aa a book of statistical reference to every citir ju. It la edited by Mr. Edward MoPhcrson , clerk of the honso at Washington , which is ecftiolent guar antou of its accuracy BesideH the oluotion re ! urns the Tribune Almanaa C33aius ( abstract i of lawn , financial and oenaus statistic * mid a H'.oro of politic * ! information which cacmot bn BooareJ ulsowhcru. Ic will bo sent , post pa d , on ivoMp * . of 25 ouiitB. IN a little over five weeks congress will ixpiro by limitation Throe or four itpproprihtlon bills are yet to b patted. TAX reduction still remains untouched and general legislation haa been us light aa the boat citizen could wish for. It is evident that the re publican majority propose to give to a dou. uratio congress every chance for making a record on which to cuter the next campaign. If the republican party sulT.rd defeat in 1681 the popu lar verdict at I ho inquest will be , "Killed by the stupidity of ita leaders. " DAVID DAVIS ia being urged aa ono of the civil service commissioners which are aoon to bo appointed by President Arthur. There are some doubts as to Davis' qnalifioitlou for the position. The Ideal civil service examiner under the cot recently pasted , ought to combine the abilities of a country schoolteacher with the shrojvdnets tf a practical politician. Without tbouo qualifications lie will never be able to fill the bill and suit , roau-tintod reformers of the Gartla stamp and stalwart oflho brokers of the Fhiiiiii'tn school. AMLKIOAMI huvo roaaon to bo heart lly ashamed of their treatment of Mrs. Langtry since her arrival in this count ry. Aa an actress she was open to criticism and she received It. AB n professional beauty , discussion of hoi f : nturce mid form was allowable ami the priss and public wore not back , ward in sffordlng It. But as a womnr and a nt ranger to our shores , puraulnf n loijillinato calling upon which tht sunlight of publicity beats mon strongly than nny other , she was entitled titled to u roHjeot and coneidoru tlon which haa boon ahamefnll denied her , and the absence of whicl la a dirgractful communtary on Airier ! can love of sensationalism end wan of chivalry , Mrs. Langtry , boyou allow ing the foolish and open alter tlona of u brainlof a Now York fop , hi conducted herself above crltlctair She has a right to select her ow frinnds. Who they are is no buinci of the public , The eourrllous blacl guardism cf the St. Louis prcis is i disgrace , not only to American joui nftllsm , but to a public sentiineu which approved and sustains the broo of key-bole reporters , who cater to prurient and depraved curiosity. HAILHOAD LEQI3Z.ATION The eupremo court has decided that a railroad commiaai&ncr cystom mod elled after the Illinois 01 Iowa laws wih bo in violation of the Nebraska constitution which prohibits the crea tion of now executive offices. This is the position that was taken months ago by THE BEK and which has been consistently maintained over since. Every railroad attorney know that It was correct. They know that a commlnionor law would have been declared invalid by Iho courts within throe months after it was signed by the governor. And this , as charged by THE BEK , was the true inwird- noes of the howls of the rail- rad organs for regulation by commis sion , which meant no regulation at all for tire years to come. The decision ( f the auprcmo court clears the way for the passage of u iaw which will regulate the railroads nnd which can bo enforced by the courts. It shelves forever the eccro of bills which have been drafted on tbo banb of acommitsion , and imposes upon the legislature the duty of com plying with the conslitu'lonal mandate without dolegatingthoir ) powers and right to others. The railroad com mittees of each house will now bo compelled to draft a bill or to report ono of the bills already introduced which will deal with this important question in accordance with the de mands of the people of the state. Such a bill should contain a provision re ducing passenger faros to n uniform rate of three cents a mile on the Union Pacific and 0. , B. & Q. systems and their blanches in Nebraska , It should provide for maximum charges on the basis of a fair and equitable classifica tion of freight. The subjects of tracks to elevators and industrial works should bo dealt with in a manner that will prevent the out rageous discriminations which , oven under the Doano law , tbo railroads have been practicing in f wor of pra- forrcd patrons. And the penalty for extortion and discriminations against either persons or places ought to bo placed at a sum which will make violation lation of the law an oiponelvo experi ment on the part of the corporation mnnagois Ao the commltsioner sys tem ia declared unconstitutional , the legislature must resolve itself into a commission to formulate a law which will curb the abuses of railroad man agement in Nebraska. A study of the laws which have boon passed in other states In so far as they can bo adopted to our own needs and the mod' ' ifiod circumstances under which rail roads operate in Nebraska , will bo ol great aetistanco In formulating a good railroad bill. But aa the session is almost half over there la no time to bo wasted. ONE of the moat resounding war whoops of tha womati euffrnglsta is the tyranny cf the laws regarding the relations lations of husband and wifj. The platform parudora of the cause never tire of repealing quotation * from Ulnckstono and other common law authorities to show the degradation of woman. The fact ia that in most atatea the common law hai been superseded by dtatutca which glvo to the wit3 rights equal to the husband. On the first day cf this year the rela tions cf husband and wlfn in England underwent a complete chauge , The married woman'a property act of 1882 ia the list ia a sorlea of legisla tion entirely superseding the old com mon law rule that the rights of the wife are merged in her husband. The result is that there are four classes of married women in England having distinct rights and liabilities. First , those mixrriud buforo August 9 , 1870 , are entitled to their wages and earn ings , and to any property the title to which accruca as from to-day. But their husbands are liable lor their dubts before and nftor marriage. These married between 1870 and 1874 are entitled in addition to the , tbovo to all sums coining to thorn EB next of kin under Intestacy , to sums oiming by will or deed up to SICOO , , and to rents of freeholds do- Eccndlng to thoiuaa as helroescr. lias- bands of thi'BJ women are not hablu for debts only to thu extent of the as- seta which the latter have received from their wivoa. Women married after January 1 of thia year may ac quire , hold and dlsposo of real estate and personal property in the eauie manner as if unmarried , without thu . Intervention of trustees. A wife may , now auo her husband , prosecute him criminally , and even make him a bank- HOHF.WATEU H Chicago organ mnst have difcovored something. The 2Vi t/tuie / , the strongest anti-monopoly journal In thu country , oaya : The great bugbear of Nebraska politics lor i\ few yuara pant haa boeti railroads , It has boon certain politi' c l death to any public man to be BUB. - rlnt pected oven of favoring thcao corpora' nt tions , And the Omahtv IttpubUcM saye th&t "tho railroads of tlu - ntato have not In many yeati 1KB bscn no completely divorced fren politics as they era to day. " Ever ] in.wn Mplr.uit for the seiutorehlp who liai wn ehown any strength has bui > n aocutec ss by his enemies ( f being n tool of tin corporations , The demagogues bavi mod the anti-monopoly cry in Ne n briwko for their own odvantrga unti it hai run to eond. IjMican. \ . , The preface of the lirfnillican lose od all KB point when the f.ut i * atatei udP a that the paragraph appended to It appeared poarod ID the political notes cf Phe New York Tribtmr of last vt.k , Jay Mould's organ , and not in ihi cdi'orial columns of the Chicago Tribune , which Bcknowlfdi'eH no rulroad nw- tor. The Hi publican will have o lunt up some other unti monopoly ondorEomont. UNDERGROUND ELECTRIC Sooner or later the telegraph and olcolrio light wires must bo placed un derground. Public opinion will do- nand it , and will voice ita demanda hrough appropriate legislation. In Ohio a bill ia now pending in the ogislaturo which , If passed , will compel all electric wirca in cities to ) o put undorgcund within twiilvo months , and which forbids alter July 1st the i reotion of any additionalpolra n the streets or alluya , Chicago haa already passed an ordinance against .ho polo and wire nutaanor , and in tfow York the Wcatern Union com- piny will ahortly begin la ) ing under ground cables iu advance of the im- iciding removal of thuir polea and wlrea from the streets. Omiha ought not to bo long in fol- offing the lead of her eastern enters , Dur streets are already defaced by a forcot of polos. The eloctrio light company which received permission to erect poles and string wires have abused their permission by the con atructlon of a aeries of frightful gal lows , which discount in ugllnoaa the poles of the telegraph and telephone companies. On Farnam street our principal buiinoss houses are hedged in by a network of fl ires , which will seriously ombaraaa the fire department if their aarvlcos over happen to bo needed. The Milwaukee disaster bore Fatal ovidono to the obstruction offered by the wires to life saving from burn ing buildings. The companies have claimed that the laying of wlrca underground haa never boon proved to bo feaalblo ; that proper insulation la impossible , and that thu loaa from leakage ia oat of all proportion to that which occnra when the wiroa are strung overhead. It is suflblont answer to say that the wirca of the Now York electric light compa nits are all underground , and that there are no complaints of inanfliolont insulation. In Europe teats have proved entirely aatlt factory. The last number cf Mechanic * , a well known sclontiGc paper , contains the following interesting statement relating to thu subject : Postmaster Ganoral Fawcott , ol England , in dwelling upon the ad vances made in underground tele graphy in hia department , states that within a radius of only four miles ol the general postofDca there are 4,388 miles of wire under ground and only 600 above ground. The same district also contains about COO miles of un derground private wires. There are thua nearly 6,100 miles of buried wires within the small area described by a four-mile radios from the London postoflioo , and nbl ono of those systems is said to inter- f jro with another. The local tele graph service of London ia probably iho best in the world , and ita excellence lonco la largely duo to the complete in sulatiou of the wires , The loss from leakage is nominal , and there Is no danger of interruption by tha break ing of wires , which , In New York , may at any motuunt bo caused by u iiroortntho ( winter , as n few years ugo ) by the formation of enormous lo cics dragging the wires to the grounc by their weight. I' may bo of interest to state that a nnmbur of men are now employed li the construction of the undergrouuc telegraphic connection between Mar seilluB and Paris. The cable is Inoloaci in a east iron pipe which is laid nearly BIX feet below the surface cf the ground , and which , at Intervals o about 500 yards , Is provided with caa iron boxes. The latter are ao con atruotcd that they can bo readily in spooled when required , thua present ing no very great dlfliculty in case of f repairs , The coat of the whole work ia estimated at about $8,000,000. PIETY and pilfering seemed to go hand in hand in Now Jersey. If the Philadelphia Record is correct , the ro- oaiver of the Jersey Otty had a right to bo thunderstruck : "President Boico , of the plnndeted Jersey City bank , appoarH to have boon a very plouu man , The receiver relates that when ho took possession c f the bank the first paper hia hands fell upon was a report from Mr. Deice saying to the directors how much Providence had prospered thu bank beyond their most miniiulmi expectations , and thanking God fur showering down blessings on the institution. Every time this good man wont to the bank vault forafroah loud of plunder ho doubtless offered up special thruks for the blessed op portunity. The receiver says ho was so completely taken aback by this pious report of the bank plunderer that ho concluded to 'knock oil' the work of investigation for that day. " SF.NATOK MCPHEKSON , of Now Jer sey , has been io-olcotod and Hon. John McKcnnn , of Wont Virginia , se cures one of the aeati from hia atato in the United States aeuato. In both caeca It ia charged that railroad lob blea had a hand in uocurifg the ryault , The railroad hand in the Nebraska lagielatura has been a blofliag baud from thu start , GOVKRNOK CLICK , of Kvieas , who bs.it St. John on the prohibition iesue , is to hare a schooner i amod after hlu ; bvafirm'of Now York ship bullderj. - Wo suppose it will bo called "Beer. " An Emlircilrr ArrcjteJ- Bp cUDl9i \ tch to Tin Uu. - RociiEHTcn , January 24 Tlrnrj BiruirJ , thu late oishler of the do faact olty bank , hai been arrested. POLITICAL NOTES. S vtral Lllln bftve bcn Introduced In the Indiana leKl'Io'Uco ' makluu It obllg.toiy for hotel keepers to provldd piopor iito oacapci for every rotm. Oen B. M , Cutcheon , whn U the dnrk homo In the rcnttorlal contest In Michl- can , Id ore of the mcBtdcquent and popu lar speakers In that Biate , Governor Waller , of Connecticut , hsn easily settled the nppointrntut uf juilKon of the KUpreme and superior courts hy re- iiiimitia'.ln the jadge * whoso terms expire this jeir. Governor J'cny ' , of Arkansif , In hla In- BUKUM ! int'PBftKt1 , favor * all prncllcn methods to promot ) the came uf public education nuu itrmlfjratlnn , mil n careful stnngtheninK tf the levtime Uw ? . Wllllnm S. Stenecr , whom Govtrnor 1'attlum Ins nominated for fecrctiry of the commonwealth of I'etinttylvania , l 42 ynars of r Ro. He hat for years been tdltor < f the UrHtn'ier.bur ' * VMtev Spirit. In 1870 he wan n defeated candidate fur necie- lury uf the United Statee sennit1. The MaHMchiKettfl mproinn c nrt (3c- cldoi that fa conn cinuot evade the law prohlhltlrij ? the sale of llqniir upon pron i'fi within tOO fiet of a cohoolhuueo by hnardloK up the principal entrance on ttu Htreetreiru fchnolhouke mid innkluK ( C- trtncefl froi" other etrert * . About 150 ISuston dealers hive di.uo tils. Htate Senator I'ond , of Ohio ; hai ano'her llquor-tnx hill , Htrn to be Introduced , tlu.t will excite more interest thap lili funi.er one. It provides for a uulform tax of 82oO for eath saloon in nil parts of th" ntatp , with no houd , and no tax on whole- nlo doa'etp. ' The tax U to be n lien on the Bti ck ot the caloon keepers aad their real estate. The Tenneseoo legislature pawed n rc o- lutiou l.ist weelc in ffvor of atxrilT for rev enue only , i nd The Louisville Ooutjer- iTournnl hilln the declaration as "tho tirt > t forward movement in tariff reform , which , now beginning to take up its line of mar h. will from thin dtt ) grow hourly in velocity and force , tweeping down to the c nveu- tion period , until it bojomej an irresistible co'uinu of united and unterriGed demo- crata " It's unkind to my It , perhaps , hue the country ia not looking to Tennessee for ItR politic > l principles these days. The L'euniylvanla Democrat * are labor- log under the delusion that they can re peat their victory of Ukt fal > this year. They are early iu the tie d with a reorgan ized state committee and nicely arrant ed plitmi for electing an auditor gennrnl and a at > te treasurer in November. They have forgitten , pcrlmpc , tbat political lightning rarely strikes twica in ihi aa ne place. And Gov. 1'attlt'on ha < ien eavored to show hy hia appoiutmenta tha truth of the hoyV fxplm.tlou of that pienouipnon When nfked why lightning tiaver ntruslc twice In the same place , he eafd , ' It doesn't nee < l to. " Reform lightning never need strike Gov , Pattison twice. It does its work coin' pletely th tir t time. Dmw. Maoon Tilcgraph and llcsscng r. Simo liitlo whiio a o n Bohemian hard pimlud fjra luncli or a drink , or perhaps both , furxiahod \icstern journal with a romance about Jitter- son Divia wasting tunuand substance playing draw poker at a frontier forl iu the year 1854. The card wua n 1'nod ono and doubtless brought enough iu the way o money to get meal , a drink and a tivu cent c gar. f jr the proea of a certain section < f this country refuses nothing that con oernu Jiffjrson Davis. If thia Bohe mian had written that Jelf rspn D ivla had done or said something diacredita bio during the revolutionary war , it would have been accep od and pub lished , and thousands cf readers would have read and believed it. Mr. Davis has had occasion to deny the slanders by this Bohemian , which referred to other things than poker playing , but to settle that particular point , he calls attention to the fact that draw poker as a game of cirds waa not known in 1834. And thia haa browght about discussion and Invoati gallon. Thousands of American citi zens religiously bjllevo ono Robert Sohenck , formerly a member of con gress from Ohio , and later on minister to St. James , to be the author of draw poker. It ia aaid that many deluded and plucked Englishmen wil swo'ar to it. Mr. Sohonck is reported to bo the author t f a monologue upon this interesting amuBoment. Bat Mr. Sjhonck WAI not the author of the game. lie merely became enmothing of an adept in cutting , shaming au ' dealing In ouch n wayaato skin the suckers who full in his way. In 1803 btfjro the volunteer ofticura had got ten rid of the loot gathered from th Southern homesteads during the war , Roberta Sahenck piled thia game mos succestfully. Oa Fourteenth stree in Washington , In front of the aide door of Wlllard'a hotel , in n carriage block , n very largo equaro of granite. Eirly ono Sunday morning wp noticed John Logan sitting upon this block , his elbows onlitn kuoufl and his jiwa in his hands. Ho looked like an In- dmu chief , who had sold a territory of western land to an Indian trader for a barrel of fire water , and hid then swallowed the fire water. Upon in quiry ot a friend of his , aa to the cause of his dejected appearance and dis arranged nppirol , it was given in reply that Bob Sohonck , on the night pre vious , had lifted him out of hia bjoto on a email pair ; that John had opened a game of blnif and tmd boon pecuni arily demolished by a master of the art. Bob Sohenck did not oven introduce troduco the game In E gland D.ck Ton Brnrck , the great horseman , took It along with Lvo mptc , Pryor , Pry- orness , Charleston nnd othir bitp of blood , when ho went to Eot-Iand in search of now triumphs on the turf. It la nald thnt bu could ait more gracefully behind a email pair than any man then living , and that no man hal nerve sufthlont to make him lay down and quit. Ills racera wore un fortunate. Not BO with their mnatar. Ho drew the young nobility closw to him in the oluba nnd returned with muoh CQlu of the ronlm. Investiga tion haa developed that the fasciuatii g aino of draw wai invented aumo where about 1810 or ' 47 by n Mr. Klrkhim , of Tonneeneo , n turfman of some note. The game of ttraight or plain poker , if course , dates much further back , Draw may now bo aald to bo the national gauio , and is per haps doing more harm In a quiet and unnoticed way than dealing m futures or any other species of gambling But the other day Mnu . Nilsson had to glvo an indignant denial to a report that Manager Abbey had cheated her at n game uf draw. Sh'i declared that It was not In Abbey to do it If ho do- tired , and flho did not believe ho would hold out on her. Almost everybody knowa a llttlo ao'mothing about the game , which app are simple enough , and yet it lua been gravely considered and adjudged , that the very heisht of human wis dam is to know whei. to lay o hand down , But wo started out to uotic3 a topio'i of public discussion al this time. We cinnot claim that we h vo thrown any light upon it , some years slnco a draw poker aharp { whc oitonalbly traveled for a Baltimore liquor and cigar homo , and who claimed the startling nnd elioty BO- briquot or "Tho Sprckled Yellowhammer - hammer irom North Carolina , " ox bibitol to ua and o couple of Now York commercial tourists how four jacka could be drawn from a pack nnd held up a nleovo , for use during n nuo cession cf games Wo contributed liberally for the information , acd smco then wo bavo not bpon drawing much. To the uninitiated it may be said that they will not loan anything if they should neglect to draw In this wi > y. ThTo nr < < totnoiuica about it I'tniruly ti f j , Nevnr play for money i' ' you cannot conveniently nflbrd to IOBU it. DJII'I p'ay without you under- sta < d the ( ( itmo. Thu men ro all dead who under stand the garni * . A uacrs9 J.'vcry ' ) Iran , Mr. Chns W. L nr , 2400 fowu avomin , Philadelphia , Pt. , jvri'cF ! "I bufHired with very birty ? ftoftid f'ot. I tried St. Jaobi Oil , tid it is thu b"at thing I ever had in Mm house ; halt a bottle cured my feet. " A Lectio More. Detroit Free 1'reii. O.HI of the etockholdera cf n now western railroad was a farmer who 1 ad iccnmulnted hh money by hard toil , and when ho had put in an appear- are at the meeting to elect a Board of Directors ho felt it hia duty to re mark : ' 'Gentlemen ' , SB I understand this ihing wo elect the board and the board olcota the officers " Some ono said that he was right , and In continued. ' 'I don't go a cent on high salaries , nnd I want that understood. I nin in favor of p jing our President a good living salaiy , at.d no morn , " "How much do you cill a good liv ing Balatj 1" asked ono of thu crowd. ' 'Well. * 2 a day i < the going wa os , ' " but * Here th meeting began to rear , and U was two or three minutes before the orator had a chance to conclude : "Bat of course wo want a man who cau run an engine , a witch a train , handle freight , keep books , and lick anybody who won't py fare , and BO I sluill not object to two and a half a d.v" CURES RheumatismNeuralgiaSciatica , Lumbago , Backache , HeadacheToothache , Bor Throat. Swelling * , Pprmlnt , BruUu , lliirni. Scald. , Frott HUM , iRD ALL OTUin HOD1LT PAINS USD AUIKS. Bold DraisliU tnd Dtklcrs tTtrjwbtrc. Flrt ; C aU ft bottl * . Dlrwlloai la II Lftatutei. ( THR OIIAIH.E8 A. VOOELEIl CO. UA.TOU UUI 30) ) Hiltlaon , d. , C.B.A. 8TABL1BUKJ ) 1363. SIDE 8PK1NO ATTAOHMENT-NOr PATENT ED. A. J. SIMPSON. LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY 1 < C9 nd 1411 Dodge Btreat , ariR 7-mii Om OWAUA. NEB. Hynoiwtbii BULBS TtUiDH. Croonnec- AnJdll other ( n FtU Planting ; L'iKe t wtoil metit merehowM In Chlcn o- niuatrattil CaUkirne freo. Send ( or II. Hiram Sibley & Co. , BEEDMEN , It-Iff r.itn . ) | M . - Chic * HEAT YOUR HOUSES FURNACES IN THE WORLD , MADE liY RICHARDSONBOYNTON & 00 ( CHICAGO , li.L.Si Hmbody new 1882 Improvement ! . Uor pr&otloal 'ca < " : Cent lo to keep Ic lidcr ; Uneloiii fnol "ill give morn bnl inJ a larger volume of pare air than in ) ( urnacr made " > ! ' \n \ 1'ieroy and IlrotKonl , Omaha. J. R MRS & UU J FL. . Sommers & Go's CSLK5JRATRJ ) BISOU1TS , OAKEB , JUMBLES AND NOVELTIES. Wholesale Manufacturing 4.ND DEALERS IN Fruits. Nuts and Cigara III S 14th St. OMHA NEB COFFEE AID SPiCE MILLS. Boasters find Grinders of Coffees and Spices , Manufacturers of IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER Clark's Double Extracts of BLUEING , INKS , ETC II. G. OLARK & CO , Proprietors , 1403 IJoiiglsa Stroct , Omaha. POWER AND HAND Steam Pumps , Engine Trimmings , UMNO UAOIllNKUY , DKI/TJKO , HOSE , nnA38 AND I5JOM nTTINOJ PI , SVSAi , AT WUOLESALIC AND HKTAIU fALLADAY YSIHD-MiLlS CHURGH'ANDnSCHOOLiftELILS Oor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha , Neb. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. It Is the beat and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Ono pound ia cqnal to three pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Gako in the fall and win ter , instead of running down , will increase in weight and bo in good market able condition in the spring. Dairymen as well oa others who use it can tes tify to its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $25.00 per ton ; no charge for sacks. Address 04-ood.mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Neb. The Original and Only Regular SEED HOUSE in Nebraska. u. WHOLESALE AND IlETAIL DEALERS IN Agricultural N. W. Cor. lUh ' , Ycfretnb'e and : orcst , H wor , Dodge Streets , Grass , Hedge , Omaha , Neb. We m ke ft tpcchltj of Onion Seeds , Ont'n Sets , IllnoOiiun , Tmothy , Ued Alfalfa end Whit Clover , OsaRcnn" Honij Locust lialena.d Market Gardener ) will KHemonej by buylteof us. ar end for Ca a'0-no ( , KUUi : . M * Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE THIE 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA , NEB. ANHEUSER-BUSCH Brewing Association , * CELEBRATED KEG & BOTTLED BEEE , HS THIS EXOILLEKT BEER SPEAKS FOR ITSELF , Orders from any part of the State or the Entire West will be promptly shipped. All Our Conds arc Made to the Standard of our Guarantee. GEORGE HENNING , Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. Office Corner 13th and Barney Streets. Omaha , Neb , A. M. CLARK , Painter&PaperHanger SIGN WRITER &DHCfRATOL ] WHOLES ILK & RETAIL WALL PAPER ! Window SMdes anil OnrfcainB , OORNIOES CURTAIN POLES AND FIXTURES. Paints , Oils & Brushes. 107 rijuth 114th Street Oil HA. UEBnABKA MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter's Materials ALSO SASH , DOORS , BUNDS , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. Firet-claaa fi.cililiee for the Manufacture of all 1 Indes uf Mouldings , Painting and inatchlns . . . a Specialty. Orders from the country will he promptly executed. -Mr < vl | commiinli- natn A MOYKH. T'rnnrieto ESTABLI3HED3I7I IbOH. D. H. McDANELD & CO. , HIDES , TALLOW , GREASE , PELTS , \KTOOX. 3ETTX&S , 04 North IGth St. , Maaonlo Block. Main House , 4G , 48 sad 52 Deai. be re avenue , Chicago. Refer by permission to nide and Leather National Bank , Chicago ,