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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1883)
THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA MO > DA1' ' JANUARY 30 Omaha Bee. every morning , , except Sun- ly. Tlio only Alondny tnorntng dally. TKUMS BY MAIL I > ae Year. . . . $10 OD I Tliren Months. $3.00 8lx Month * . . B.OO | One Month. . . . 1.00 . 'IIi : WKKKLY BUK , published eviry Wilncxday. TBUMS POST PAID One tfear . $2.00 I Throe Months. W ) Sir Monthn . . . . 1.00 | One Month . . . . 20 AMERICAN NKWH COMPANY , Hole Agents \ewnlealor ( In the United States , COnilKSrONDKNCK All Oommunl- atfons relating to NOWH and Kclltorlal mntterH nhould bo n < IdrcFfled to the KIHTOR OF THK BKK. I1USINKSS LKTTKltS-All 15j Ine Iietlera nnd ItrinlttnnreH nlinuld bo 1 Ircfft-d to THK ! ! EK 1'unuHHi.sa COSIPANV ) MAIIA. Drafts , Chooka Dil I'ostolllco JrderH to be made payable to the order of the Co'npnny , The BEE PDBMSiiB 00 , , Props , K. UOSEWATJER Editor. TUB crow la n caw-cum. BEN BUTLEK'M prcaldontinl boom haa potcred out. AN Infant in Arkansas has been born with thrco tongues. It is needless - loss to rumatk that ft Is a female Nature made no mistake in regard to the BOX that time. THE railroads at the beginning of the session charged that the anti- monopolists were on sale but the transfers have failed to show up in some sixteen ballots. TOM BOVTEN has boon olcotod sena tor from Colorado. Governor Tabor's vote at the supreme moment deserted htm oven more thoroughly than ( ho governor deserted his wife. THE 1st of April has boon Grod upan in Germany us the date when all barons will bo required to justify their titles. It might bo a good time to have the list of Amciican colonels investigated. FOOD is likely to bo dearer 'for the next six months than for the laat four. The dear prices cf last year are not at hand , but Europe has had -a bad spell of weather from Rusiia to Scot land , certain to make it a good buyer for the next year to camo. THK Sunday Kcpnblkan in a prolty fair llbinry. litjntblican. IT is for a fact of ancient history. Ono of the mcst charming novelties yesterday was n reproduction of that familiar aud mesa covered ballad , "Old Grimes is Daad. " Still Old Grimes isn't any raoro dead than the circulation and influence of the lit- publican MK McSiUNn'H bill which provides against the sale of oleomargarine ns I- * h butter ought to pass. A majority of our tntcB have tilremly IIUTO regula ting its munufucturu und onto Oloo- ! uurpurliiu H no worsa Uuvn a gotd deal of the stnlf that is piaaed ti\ \ ' an battur , but it uuijht to bo sold ou ita mo : i H na mi imltnlion , and not . a thu geuuino articlu. Ti' Senator Windom ia defeated in Mtnneuota the aitti monopolists will loou a strong friend in the Bonato. Mr. Windom ia ono of the few remaining - ing FiMiators ho voled f jr the Thur- mail act to compel the Pr.oiflc com panies to pciform their obligations lo tlutKOveinnieut. Since that vote Mr. Windom hits put himtolf on record in n very graphic letter , denouncing the ei cro&chments of railroad morfopulic.- ) aud ( .uxgcaling moana of reaiaUnco , 3t is barely possible that the ii.llacinu ; of the rallroadu docs not retch up quite m high aa Ihe Minnesota leglela- turo , hut it is certain that his defeat would remove another man who dared rmiit them on the floor of the United States Bunntc. THK Milyruuki'o tire has stimu lated congrcsn to deal with the quot- tiju of lire protection , and Air. lilund haa introduced a bill for the regula tion of hotels lathe Dlatriatof Oolutu- bin. One of the provisions requires n knotted rope or rope ladder , lorg enough to ro-tch the ground , to be securely tastoiied at the window ol of every upper room. Another clause provides thu * . la the cane of high build' Ingu , perminont btvlconlrs , nith utair vra > B onnuctii ) } ' them , shall be main tahit'd. Both rcquiroaoati ) are ex cellcnt. Iu Now York twelve hotel have been notified to provide in created meuns cf fire escape , Ouiahi ULfortunately has no building Inepcc tor to de'xl with the question , and un less a law Is pueod by the loisla [ ; turn , the present intercut in th subject la like y to coon die oul Kmi with a Irgislatiyo enaolmei : who is to BCD that the law Is on forced There is no reason to believe tht the police will take any more Intorci In preferring complaints agalntt o fending hotel kceprs than they c against a half a dcz n other clagsos i lawbreakers who go sot free althoui notorioutly defiant of the statute What is needed in every city of tl first class is an inspector cf building whoso fitHt business will bo to see th hotels and other structures are plaun with some- regard for public safe ! and who , in caas of Infractions of tl law , will t ke care that offenders a promptly punished. THE SUPREME COURT OPIN ION. The Omaha railroad organ with a republican label miken a ukulk- Ing Bnsnult on the supreme court for tholr opinion relative - tivo to the unconstitutionally of a railroad commission , It pronounces the decision flippant , illrg.il and on a par with an ordinary stump speech and charges that It was "presumedly prepared to answorn political demand. " Too cowardly to openly charge that Judge Like and his associates sold tholr opinion for political applanso , it places the remark in the mouth of outsiders ard then mildly saya that the charge is "of course , unjust. " The object cf the entire article In to discredit our highest elate tribunal to slur its judges and to cast discredit ou its work , Now the fact ia that there wai > no pressing demand from thn legislature for an unfavorable opinion upon the commissioner system. Many of the members , notably General Connor among the anti-monopolists believed it to bo unconstitutional , but fully an many others who desired honest regu lation tf railroads thought a board of commissioners tlio most feasible plan of dealing with the corporations. THK BKE has hold from the time the com missioner system was first agitated that It conflicted with Article V , of our state constitution. But scores of able and honest men * disagreed with us. Where did "the political demand" which th.9 Iteinillican says influenced the supreme court to write tholr opin ion como from 1 Did it onmo from the republican majority In the House ? How many cf the republicans were opposed to the creation of a commis sion , or had over studied the question snfliolently to know whether the pro posed law would or would not conflict with the constitution 1 Everyone at Lincoln knows that a largo number of the anli-monopolists came to the leg islature prepared to vote for bills mod elled after the Illinois law , and that the question of the uncoiihtitutlonnl- ity of Huch a measure wan not dis- cutsod until bftor the cession began. The truth is that the railroads had sot tholr hearts up-n a board of rail road commissioners and are chagrined because such a bosrd cannot bo created. Several ef the corporation attorneya , before the legislature be gan , declared that the acts ef a rail road commission could never bo enforced - forced under our constitution. Others hoped to control the board in case the law stood thn test of the courts. Every railroad organ , headed by the Republican , howled themselves hoarse for a commission. The supreme court opinion baa balked their plans. The "derisive comment , " which the dcc'slon ia said to provoke , is confined to the disappointed corpo ration attorneys and tools. It has not yet shown itself among the mem bers of the legislature , who are workIng - Ing to secnro an operative railroad law , which will stand the teats of the courts. No fair minded citizen doubts the honcnty c f the court in rendering tholr deoleion. It is a common Eonso opinion , whoso truth ia borne out by the plain language of the constitution. And no one honestly believes that there was any prossurn of public de mand or political li.lluonco brought to boor upon the court which framed it. THK BKK atjain riaoa to remark that there arc too mtinjf cost mill justieo courts in Oinshi , aud that tholr num ber or gilt to bo decreased by an act of the legislature fixiug the number nt not moro thau ouo justtco for every 8,109 puoplo iu cities c f the tint-class. Omaha has now tvrolvu justices of thu poaof , or two for each ward. There is not enough legitimate business to support moro than half the number. Tfto couecquonco is that business which Is not legitimate Is hunted up to roll up the foe-H by which our jus tices make their living. SeverJ ol these justice pedlars are notoriously lr.09inpetcnt and dishonest. Theii opinion Is always given against the side which la able to pay the costs , Coats are what thcso logd sharks an cftor , and justice is a secondary con < sldm-atlou. The conuequonco is lhal litigation is encouraged ruthor thnr discouraged , and thoao who are toe poor to transfer their c.wea are madi the victims of tholr poverty. It in a utandlug scandal that in man ] of our ] ustico courts no ropoctnblo at torney ; an win his cuso against eoni etUfojjgor , who "haa the oar of th ourt , " aud who thrown all his case nto that particular judicial grist -nil u return for the judge's favor , The plain remedy far this shainofi condition of affairs , in the opinion c ho bust lawyers , in to out down tl lumber tf jnstica's courts in larfi cities. The positions will then t worth enough to command rospootab aud honust candidates. Men of abl ity will gladly compote for an * o worth 2COO , a year , honestly admit latorod when they vrlll refuse to BOI an i llico where the scanty foes mu bo worked up by disreputable method is ho THK French chamber of deputies b gin to day the discussion of the e ta pulsion bills leveled against all pi 01 tenders and occasioned by Frln l'lon-1'lon'a revolutionary manlfoe ho of tea days ago , There nto thr ire measures before that body. Floquo resolution which proposes to expel dynastic prcicndern includu ; the Orleans piincrsi , the uovornmont aeuni nhich gi es the pmvnr to the mltiisttji to i jdln a pretender when ever thry think him danycroun and a compromise between the two which degrades ull princely eflicors of the army and grants the government dis cretionary powers of cxpnltion when the needs of the state seem to require It. The ondof the crisis will probably bo the dissolution cf the ministry which has been at best a makeshift affair since it succeeded Gambottn'a cabinet. It Is discredited by the country and powerless to originate or Influence legislation. The pinlc into which it was thrown by I'rmco Napoleon's escapade shows its utter lack of force or character. If the chamber succeeds in carrying through its radical measure over the heads of M. DaClorc and his associitos It will afford the best oppor turily possible for the resignation cf the whole body. Any ministry would ba moro acceptable to Franco than the present ono whether chosen from the radical or conservative wings cf the deputies. BOTH branches of congress are now wrangling over the tariff and the de bate promises to bo n long and fruit less ono Those who are In a position to know doubt whether any bill will pass , and others claim that no meas ure which makes any substantial re duction in the present duties can stand the fire of the lobbies which crowd the corridors of the capital. The senate has boon engaged for ever a week in the attempt to pass a bill which will do something toward meeting the popular demand for tax reduction , It has reduced the tariff on iron rails from $28 a ton to 817. CO , placed lumber on the free list , and made some excellent changes in the duties on wool , metals and pottery. But the senate's right to originate a revenue bill will bo challenged in the house , and there is no hope of the measure passing the lower body. In the houao of representatives the waya and moans comraittoo'a bill , which increases instead of decreasing the present , tariff is now under discussion , cham pioned by Fig Iron Kelly and backed by the strongest lobby of protected interests which has ever been in Washington. The prospects of Its poasigo In a form which will be acceptable coptable to the senate , or on which a conference committee can work with any hopes of success , are not ta all bright. The indications that any general reduction will bo made on the articles from which industrial mo nopolies now derive the heaviest profits and which the people are most op- prosively taxed upon are hopeless. Ia other words It looks aa if there Is to bo a great deal of talk and very few results of public benefit in the present debate Wo shall hoar plenty of spread eagle oratory on American in dustry , and amendment after amendment mont will bo tacked on the bill report ed from the oommlttoo until it * ia smothered to death. After this con- groca will probably adjourn and leave the work of revising the tariff to ita successor. THKIIK Is n good deal ( f padded out nonaenuo being telegraphed from Lin coln to eastern papers about the nc-na- tnrial contest , und especially regarding the republican caucuses. The truth of the matter ia that no candidate who la boliuved to bo a favorite of the railro&ds , oven if nominated by a cau cus , can aocnro his election in the joint convention. There are enough republicans who know that their con stituents wiU not permit them to ukulk behind the dictates of a caucus to defeat auy such a sohemo. And candidates who are depending on the caucus boom to foist them Into the seat now occupied by Alvin Sounders are likely to discover this fact to their Borioua disappointment. People are getting tired ever the length of the contest , but they would ghtdly see it protracted to the last day of the BCH- aion if by that means au honest , able und equaro-toed senator could bo so- cured. Iu that event the railroads would bo n good deal moro tired than the people. 0 DONOVAN UOSSA. appeals for a con > tribution of ? 2.500 with which "te atriko England In five or &ii places al once. " If somebody would on1) strike Ilossa live or six times in OIK plaoo with a heavy club the Iriol cause would bo n great gainer. It Up. Unoln Democrat. lleproiontativo Armltago has Intro duccd a bill In the house which pro vidcs that the money that is approprl 5 ° atod , or nuy bo appropriated , shall bi JO moro evenly divided between tin officers aud noldlura of the Kebrask' II- militia. The bill does not propose ti IICO appropriate any more than is at proa CO out nxpended , but it looks toward i fairer division. Aa the ht\r now stand ek the illicors Imvo nil the honor am ist draw all pay , and the privates do al Is. the drudgery nnd wear the pee . clothes. Any ono who doubts thl statement can take a look ever the ap propriatlons that were made at th extra session for expenses Ir IX- currod at "Camp Damp" at Omalu re- By this it will bo soon tht ice while the cllicora could a ( lord luxurle ito of every kind , including wines an late support , the toidlurs , for two e roe three weeks' hard work and expocnri ' it's receive but $0 If the officers ha\ all all the honor , U Is bat fair that tl : soldiers should lure a reasonable portion of the pay. Militia officers ire hero in ftrce lighting this proposi tion , but many of the members of this legislature have carried n mucket and know that the diviiion n mani festly unjust. Unless great offoatH are made this bill will bo killed iu the committee room , but it is n merito rious measure atd fihonld receive the support of all who are in fiver of oven handed justice. Rorloua Mlfctmp at a Birthday Party. Falli City Journal. List Saturday being little Johnnie Wherry's birthday , the event w n celebrated - ebrated by a pleasant little party , his young fdonda being invited , and bringing auch presents as the fancied. Among the presents was a 22 calibre revolver , which instrument came nour ending the phasuro of the day in a sad tragedy , No ono supposing the revolver ver to bo loaded , Johnnie snapped it , in play , when it wont off , dischrrg- Ing two bullets from the ono cham ber. Ono passed through little Emma ilolts hair and the other hit little Kelin in the cheek , wounding him quite severely , though not dan * gerously. Ibo manufacture of that pernicious little infernal ma chine , the 22 calibre revolver , ought to bo abolished. Fence the Track. Fall * City Journal. With ever ICO bills already intro duced In the senate and 200 In the house it may bo foolish to propose any additional legislation , but wo do think that a bill ought to bo introduced by some one and passed compelling rail road companies to fence their tracks , as it seems they will not do this with out compulsion. There are two excel lent reasons why this should bo done , for safety to trams and to eave the owners of the lands through which the roads run from an ondlosa amount of trouble in keeping their stock of ! the tracks , and In getting pay for whal is killed. Such a law is noeaed very much. Give the News. CrcU Union , During the past ten days , or more , a committee of the legislature has boon examining varioua'and sundry parties concerning the management , political and otherwise , of railroads. So far , THE OMAHA BEK la the only daily pa per we have aeon with vigor and en terprise enough to publish even a syn opsis if the testimony. Does the tes timony hurt the Journal and Rcpub lican ? If not , why deut they pub lish it ? An Old Timer , rawnco Republican. It may surprise many cf our citizens to bo informed that slavery oxised in thia ntato twenty-five years ago , am we conversed with a gentleman in Lincoln who saw throe negroes from the block at Nebraska City. O. F. Maaon was the plaintiffs attcrnej and superintended the sale. At that time there were from fifteen to twenty slaves In the territory. Olalm Atrenta Will Find Him. QahotonNeHg. The one eyed soldier , who did no have his other eye affected , will be the man who is not discovered by a claim agent. There are none so dea aa these who can not hear very we ! for $25-a-numth pension , except jus tlco , which haa been deaf for man ; years. Certain Indications. SI. I.ouls Pest-Dispatch , There are indications that at the close of the ptoaorit sestuou cf tin legislature the people of Missouri wil bo in favor of holding seasiona nbuu once iu twelve years. Or Out on a Prairie. Pblhde'phln 1'rcsi. There io a great growing conviction that the only Bife rooms in the average erago western ho ol are to bo found ii the collar or in the next town. The Wuy Doruey Folt. lVtt-Dsrotch. ) ! The cable informs ua that the elates men of Franoj are beginning to "do spalr of the republic. " That's the way Dorcey felt when they indictet him. A Very LcwcU ( .Itlion.J A wiitor in Darper'a commences poem with the line , 'Some el y uhall bo dead. " It is indeed a boauli tiful thought. NEBRASKA KA- Friday , January 20 , 1803. The following named gentlemoc were admitted to practice : G. llol lenbcck , of Dodge county ; Goorga E , Waldo , of Butler county. State ex rol Bonk vs. Gotpor coun ty. Writ denied. Opinion by th < court. 1. County warrants having beer drawn on u fund in the treasury 01 tax levied for tholr payment , count ] commissioners have no authority t < include in tholr estimates nnd lovj taxoa 111 excess of the maximum fixoi by law an additional sum for the pay raont tf such warrants aa have no been paid out of former levies. It such case wheio the ordinary taxei are Insufficient to pay the claim th < remedy provided by statute is to fum the debt. 2. In a proper case county commie siouoM will be compelled to includi iu their estimates of taxes for the our rout your a sufl'nlont amount , wlthli vho limits fixed by law to pay claim against the county. Ilawley vs. Ilobeson. Motion to eup proaa overruled. Traver vs. Merrick county. Sub mittod. McOathrou vs. MeCathron. Con tiuuod. Castle va. Iladdov. Motion to quaa overruled. Aullmtm vs. Patterson. Motion t quash sustained. Mareh vs. Snydor. Motion ovei ruled , ' LUWNQTON , Mich. , Feb. 2 , 1880. I have sold Hop Bitters for tot years and therb ia no mediclno tht surpasses thorn for bilious attacki kidney complaints aud many dleooei Incident to this malarial ellmatu. H. T , ALEXANDER , STATE JOiTINGB. ! ' M. DavJp , of WooplngVnlcr , n r- nwly ric.ti > d f rei IDK ! to death on the Otb. Ho changed curs at Loulsvillo , re- , urniDg from Llncclu , and there belcg no- I. 1' , links he started fur Weeping Vatcr on foot. Whoa he reached the louce of a fanner about eight uillej iHs- < tint , his toes , fiugcrt , enrsand none were ladly friz n. Mr. Wllber , living a few miles out of ptlDKHeld , lutd n leg broken the other uy. liu waahaullug a heavy log ou a oil , whtn the conveyance wa overturned md the leg rolled on hiu > . He wan unv > lo t' > get IOCBO and remained till th ° chod teacher jimst-d , who recurcd an- Ifitnt.ie and leleaecil the unfortunate lull , A inn in Dry Cwk , Thoyer county , is hi ( > . nited ly bU firat wife from wlioin e Heparrtted seine yearn ago , aud married not h < - r woman froir whom lie aUo t-epar- ted , I . 'uokd ' now r.s if the old love would e revived , and another wedditit ; taka lace. Ur. G W. David , one of Harvard' * en rgetlc farmers , set out ( several hundred oda of Oiiige crania hedge a year ago last prlng , and notwithstanding tlia dry spell hut , tolloweo , ho noire ly lost u single il ni , and now baa u tplendid growing live JDCf. JamosMalloy was found dead under the adroi.d bridge noir Atkinson on the ! 2ith. la loft Atkinson a few rfoya before t > walk to his claim , and it is Biifi.osed got under the bridge to keep warm , and be * came drowsy and fell asleep and froze , A republican county convolution la to be leld in Colfax to nominate n county judge , o till the vccincy the nominee lo booted /oted for if an election la called , or It not lia name will be recommended to the com- nisaioners to appoint. A Central City man whose office la con nected with Iiis residence by telephone ays that when the weather it juat right 10 can tfll every time what they are dong - ng at homo by the smell getting din ner , etc. A Hastings newspaper man ate a water melon last week. An Adams county far- nerkept it over and kept it to well that he fruit tasted aa good au.if freihly picked md stolen , A St. Louis concein want" all the old mlfiilo bones to be foiled I-i Nebra > kattnd will pay $ ' 25 a ton. They want to make "rult jelllea out of them "tUs eeodon'ti : rult. " The dwelling of Fred. Merwln , near 'nlmyra , was burned on the 2d. The family navel much furniture , but lost n arge quantity of provision * stored in the Ctllar. A young man teaching school a few miles west > f Atkinson baa not been seen ince the 18th , i > nd id supposed to have imehed in trying to reach a dwelling louse. Anuio Schmidt , a 13-year old Lincoln r ) , developed into a brat elaea thief , tealing n lut of wearing upparel and jew elry , and win sent to the reform tchool. Gen. O. O. Howard , the commander of the department < I the 1'lattr , id delivering > number of addressee in the state , under Congregational auspice ? . The Krauary of Jonas Fox , near Wood River , was burned onthe22d , with ita con sents , 1,000 bushels of corn and 175 of oata. An Incendiary did it. A twenty-five pound catamount was filled by afarmet'd dog up inJLMerue county ribt werk. The animal wus caught in a trap set f jr wolvo1' , To insure k'ood weights , the villuge boaul of Wood Rivet1 has purchased scales und placed u weigher in charge. It coMn the patrons nothing. There is a club of citizens in Tierce organized - ganized for the purpose of making fires ( or the tchnolnia'rim , each member t&king a week'd duty. A very a Ik I forger succedcd in getting a numuer of check a cashed at Fremont last week , the name forged being W. R. Wilton. Lew Cropeey , of Lincoln , is laid up with a broken arm , received by falling on the sidewalk in front of the Commercial a few days ago , While the mercury was at 20 below , Te- cumsfh made the discovery that there waan't a pound cf hard coal ou sale in the town. On account of rn advance in freight rattj , hrd coil , in Bentiicr , * hot up n dol- lat ft ton , aud lumber it dollar a thousand. iV cow owned by Mr. Hume , of Grant predict , Colf.x county , crave birth to three heifer ciuven ou the 12th. An O'Nt ill saloon keeper is pelliap liquor to minors , and their consequent int xici- tion ia causing rtjui.li tionblf. Mr' . KmilvlUving.'of .T beyvillo. III. , contributed 830 toward tuildiug ihe 1'reu- byterian church at Wayne , An elTort is being made in Phttsmouth to organize it company to make the Thomp son patent opera chairs , Flllmore county bus less than $ jCCO in- btodueRs , but wi.rraaia hue : tj bo die- counted IU ( } 15 per cent. Money ij btisf ; raised by e jbacription at Freuwater. Harlan county , to build a Congregational church. Two moro blacVfiiiith Huopa have been stinted in Crete iu the past few weeks. Crete ix growing. Hon. 6 U. Slocumb , progenitor of No- braBkit liquor law , is said to be dying ol cotuuflption. A ' 'onpregatioral church will undoubt edly b. > built at Alma in the upriog. Cost , about $2,000. Tlu Union racitic ! i about to put II f grazing lands in woote.-u Nebraska ou the The Springfield ladled gave n dlnnei laat Fi iday to raleo funds to atart n public library. A U'ymore mout market was burglarized on the 12ili , and 45 ceuta and an old razoi The lidics of York have organized a re lief society to care fur the destitute in thai town , A CO. ) Ib. hog raised in Buffalo county was slapped fium Kearney last week. A farmers' inatitme will be held at V'.m Springs u.xt Thursday and Friday. It takes nliro t half n ton of coal a da ; to kiep the Kearney school warm , The contract has bean let for bulldinj jkdale 1'reibyterian church. Central City is holding publh meeting to disousa the creiraery question , W. W. Hcntou.of York county , lost 12i icop iu the recent cold spell , 1'ahnyra hasn't got houeca enough ti nccoinuiodato-iis people. The Methodist church at Bennett wa ledicated > csterday. A county building to cost ? 3f , 00 ia to b erected nt Wayne. The Mothorilnt church at Stella is almos ready for services. Hard coal Is only § 14 a tan at Ncligb It uso-i to bo SIC. Alma ia talking of organizing a hook am ladder company. Hook agents have to take cut a llccns In Tocumseb , Walcetield la snro of a creamery In th spring. Several cases of email pox nro raging n Blair. There Is talk of n new cluster atScrib ner , 1'icrce Lad a o al famine Uat week. True to hop Tru t- . Too much cannot ba said of the eve faithful wife and mother , constantl watchlm ; aud caring for her dear one * never noclecting a fin lij duty In their bt half. When they are availed by diseiwe nnd the sjstem should have a thornug ir cleansing , the htotnacU and l owel < re v lattd , blortl piuifieil , nnd malarial poi o cxtermiuate.l . , ch jnust k ow the thj Klectrlcllitteraare the only aare remedj They are the Jusst aud purest medicine I the world nnd only cott fifty ceuU , Sol by 0.1" , Goodman. t-'OWER AND HAND Bi Steam Pumps , Engine Trimmings , UACniNKRT , BKI.TINO , HOSE. BKA5I1 AND IRON FITTINUH tirS , PACKING , AT WUOLKflALE AND UCTAIL. HMD-MILS eHUBCMBA ! QH8Ql Cor. Farnam aud 10th Streets Omaha , Neb. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR It is the beat and cheapest food for Block of any kind. Ono pound ia equal to throe pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the fall nnd winter - tor , instead of running down , will increase in weight and bo iu good market able condition iu the spring. Dairymen as well as others who use it can tes tify to ita 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 , Nob. McMAHON , ABEET & CO , , Wholesale Druggists , 315 DOUGLAS STREET , OMAHA , NEB. The Original and Only Regular SEED HOUSE in Nebraska. o. WHOLESALE AND HETAIL DEALERS IN Agricultural y.\V. Cat. 14th Vegetable , : on'i orest , How or , Dodge atrecU , Grass , Hedge , Omaha , Neb. We m kc a tpeclaltj of Onion Seeds , Onion Sets , nioo Oias , T mothy , lied Alfalfa and Whit Clover , OaaRuami Honey Locuit. Uialcrj and Market Gardcncri will xa\o money by liuvlntr of ua. iT-enJ for Ca a'ocue ' , KllEE. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE m 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA , NEB. BERQUIST BROS. MANUFACTURERS OF CARRHES | , BUGGIES epairin in all Branohep S. THTRTBENTa STBKKI WILLIAM SNYDER , MANUFACTURKK OF * "RTTHnT .a. la-jo- Firs-Iass ( ! Paining and Trimminfi , Repairing Promptly Bono TRIP H TH > T. rSnr. 1-ttli. OmniM _ _ Association , FOR ITSELF , Orders from any part of the State or the Entire West will be promptly shipped. All Our Coeds arc Made to the Slaudard ol' our Guarantee. GEORGE MEANING , Sole Agent for Omaha and the "West. Office Oomer 13th and Harney Streets , Omaha , Net ) , ESTABLISHED ; ! ! * D. H. McDANELD & GO. , IES , TALLOW , 204 North 16th St. , Masonic Block. Main Houuo10 , 48 and 52 Dear- bsn ? avenue , Chicago. Refer1 by permission to Hide aud Notional Bnnk , Chlcaco. MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter's Materials ALSO SASH , DOORS , BLINDS , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. v Fint-cl&M Ucllitlee for -Muiufactnre of all kinds * of Mouldings , Piloting md * matching Specialty , Orders from the country will b promptly executed. KldreaMOlcommunlcitlcnsto A. MOYEB , ProprUt