1-4 , , Y"SiT. . . -V rarvJ-L'P THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA TUESDAY FEBRUABY,20 The Omaha Bee. Published every morning , except Snn- y. The only Monday morning dully , ! MAIL One Year.$10.00 I Three Months.eS.OO Qlz Months. . 5.00 | One Month. . . . 1.00 CHE WEEXLY BEE , published every Weincsday. TEUMS POST PAID Ono fear $2.00 I Three Months. 50 qii Month LOO I Ono Month. . . . 20 AMKBIOAN NKWB COMPANI , Bole Agents Newsdealers In the United States. ) CORRESPONDENCE Oommunl- ( atfons relating to News and Editorial matters should bo addressed to the Ecnon or THE BEE. BUSINESS LETTERS All Buslnes Letters and Remlttancoa should bo nd Iroseed to THE BEE POBLIHHINO COMPANI OMAHA. Drafts , Cheeks and PoatofBco Jrdors to be made payable to the order of the Company. BIB BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props , E. KOSEWATER Editor AND now Ohio is thinking of pass ing a constitutional amendment against water , TIIERE is nothing private about the private bills now before the legisla ture. They are all publio plunder. MB. FERRY has lost both his property - orty and his seat in the senate. Jay Hnbboll assisted with his little assess ment. SIIELDY thinks with Jay Gould that it Is caster to Influence a legislature after it is elected than to elect a rail road legislature at the polls , The session closes this week and the records of the members will close with the session. Same of them will bo in teresting reading for constituents. ONLY four more days remain for claimants to urge their llttlo bills upon the attention of the legislature. Grabs on the treasury stop after Fri day next. EVERY bit of railroad legislation was killed in the Colorado legislature before its adjournment. Suppers and "soap" were the arguments that car ried the day. ' TUB disasters of the present year are attributed to the great prevalence of un spots. Sullivan or Mace's Maori ought to bo hired to "knock the spots" out of the sun , TIIE legislature ia eager enough to consider and pass bills for the rellei of every jobber who has a bogus claim gainst the state , but bill * for the re < lies of the people of Nebraska hang fire in the committee room and it .both housfs , THE senate voted on Friday to In definitely postpone the oonsldoratiot of a woman suffrage amendment There really was ro necessity for the voto. The subject waa ludefinitolj postponed by the people of Nobraskt at the last election. . SEVERAL editors ere racking tuoli brains to discover how long a tlmc must olapeo before the United Statci becomes overpopnlatod. It ortMnlj will not bo within the lives of any uov living or of their Children. The ro Bonrcos of our country are in the in fancy of their development. Wi have hundreds cf millions o acres of unsettled lands , and othe : hundreds of millions of acrca whlcl will support twenty times the popula tlon which now subsists from them The overpopulation bugbear ma ] possibly frighten the fifth or slxtl generation yet to come , bu It can be of llttlo interest to us of to day. When the time comes that th population is greater than the ro aouroes of our country will warrant the United Slates will probably fim relief as other countries have done b ; pouring Its surplus into other land for the building up of now empires Immigration usually comes to the nl < of a surplus population , and until th whole world la ovorpopulatcda romod always be fonnd for the evil. TARIFF tinkering goes on in bet the house and senate. The only coi tainty seems to bo that the rednotlo In taxes , if any reduction is madi will bo so slight that it will bo of II tlo practical benefit to anybody. Tr ontlro tariff debate his been an oxh bllion of selfish greed on the part i pampered interests. It has boon 01 gineered by the tactics ol barter at aalo and a swopping of votes betwei representatives of various protect ) industries. The selfishness of the ta Id-tinkers was revealed In the eons when Mr , Farley moved to reduce t ! duty on bituminous coal to 50 cot per ton in order to inflict a less b' ' donsomo tax on tho.people of Callfi nia. Mr. Davla , of West Virgin Indignantly denounced the motion "aiming to destroy our coal-mini Industry. " After giving an afllrn tlvo answer to the question , "J you largely interested in mines ? " Davis declined to continue BO persoi colloquy. A llttlo later Mr. Vac frankly explained one of bis votes " the principle that it there must be division ot the plunder of the peep North Carolina U entitled to 1 bue. " THE EASTERN FLOODS. The damage cauiod by the flood in the Ohio river and its tributaries can not bo estimated until the river his subsided and full reports como in from the submerged country , Enough has boon told to show that the dlstrots and destruction done by the watota can scarcely bo exaggerated. Clnciii natl and Louisville have boon cut off from the rest of the world , their streets turned Into rivers , and their food supplies diminished with hun dreds of homeless citizens confronted with hunger. For several days famine waa serious ly dreaded , The railroads were un der water , the atoamors did not run for want of a landing and supplies could not bo sent to the anfforore. Fortunately the river is now rapidly subsiding and the worst of the flood along the Ohio is probably over. There Is , however , every reason to believe that both the Mississippi and Missouri will bo greatly swollen this spring. The anew on the nppar Mle- sonrl is reported aa , very deep on the level and ita molting will add an enor mous volume of walor to the river when the ice begins to break np. Residents of towns along the lower Mississippi are already anxious over the increasing height of the rlvor which ia rising daily aa it receives the overflow from the Ohio. It looks aa If the entire basin of the Mississippi between the Missouri and the Alleghanlea ia thont to experience a series of inundations equal at least to thoao of two years ago. Com mon prudence will dictate the greatest care on the part of those who have property on the rlvor bet toms. toms.Meanwhile Meanwhile the country will bo call ed upon to respond liberally to the cries of distress from the sufforora from the Ohio dolugo. Ninety thons- r. A workmen have been thrown out of employment and five thousand fam ilies are homeless. The great oltles will bo able to take care of themselves but there will bo many in the flooded agricultural districts who will need aa- alatanco. TUB nowa from the western ranges makes it certain that the loss on cat' tlo and sheep is much greater than al first repoitod. There is no donbl that in some portions of Wyoming especially in the eastern part of the * territory it will foot up five per cent The ranges on the Swootwator anc upper Flatto escaped with a loss of ] per cent , on cattle , and 2 per cent. 01 sheep , according to the stookmon'i report , but men who have no inter est In concealing the facts claim tha double the figures will come muol nearer to the truth , In Texaa thi losses will be much more severe A subscriber of the St. Louis lie publican writes that journal for ai explanation of the term "stock wa torlng" and geta it in the followln clear and emphatic largnnge : "Stock watering la a process of Increasing th stock of a corporation without in creasing its property or franchises. Ai example is afforded inthomanagomon of the Western Union telegraph com pany , which la Blocked at $80,000,00 and has property not worth more , poi hapa , than $30,000,000. "When a coi poratlon which dopouds upon the pah Ho for Its profits finds that Ita slate monts of business show too largo ai income on its capital the process o watering is sometimes resorted to t cover extortion or the abuse of it franchises. Without increasing th invoitmont the stock U doubled , trebled led , and so on , and , while makln the same profits , apparently small dividends idonds are declared on atock the fac \alne of which la only nominal , " A NEW YORK dispatch ttyt : The report of the government dlrci tors of tbo Union Paclflo railroad wl bo conveyed to Washington by Mi Bromley on Monday , and will not b made public until after its prosonti tlon to the interior department. On of the directors stated that the ropoi would probably be somewhat of a dii appointment to thnt portion of tt public ' -who expect n wholesome dc nunclatlou of the present managi mont , "as there has not , boon ao vex much fonnd that calls for criticism. " Of oonrso not , There never hi been a board of government dlreotoi who have discovered much "that cal for criticism" in the management i the road. The grossest extortion an ( discrimination , the most shamof watering of stock and evasion of the charter duties have all boon warm approved by those champagi frizzling ofllcials appointed by tl president to protect the interests of t ! government iu 5 road built and oqui ped ont of the people's money , < all farcical investigations , the aunc examination of the Union PaolQo ro by the so-called government dlrectc is the worst. No one expects a : criticism of the road from these fi puts and free lunch fiends whoso ropoi each year are revised and approved the railroads before thalr submission as the interior department. Jg IB * OAKEH AMES' family nro bosiegl TO the Massachusetts legislature to i punge the vote of censure which i placed on the records ton yean aj 00 The resolution roads as follows : on RESOLVED , That the house absolut condemns the conduct of Oakca Am a member of the house from Mai le , chnietU , in seeking to procure c IK greulonal attention to the afflrs o corporation In which he was inter * cd , and whoso affairs directly depend * od upon the legislation of congress , by inducing members of congress to in * vest in the stocks of said corporation. The effort ought to fall. Cakes Ames waa a confoieod corrnptionist and bribe-giver , whoso successful at * tompta todebauch | congrcsatncn were rosponalblo for the shameless jobbery In connection with the building of the Union Pacific rallr6ad. The people of the country have been forced to pay for hlu legerdemain in extortionate tolls , and the methods which ho adop ted hnvo been the policy of his Ha officials over since. If Oakcs Amos had gotten hit lawful deserts ho would have nsod ono of the shovels manufac tured by his firm , in hard labor in some eastern ponotontlary. THE appointment of Frank Hatton to the office of assistant postmaster general was notoriously an unfit.ono ( Hatton's only claim to the office waa the fact that he had paid several dollars lars a week postage to the government as publisher of the Burlington Haw. ktye. Bob Burdett gave him his repu tation , and the railroad his backbone Blnoo hlfl removal to Washington , Hatton has become a public nuisance. Eyery few weeks some new ex posure of his questionable methods In endeavoring to bolster up the Na tional Republican by government in fluence is brought to light. The Springfield litpublican tolls of the failnro of Mr. Hatton's latest effort to got his band in the treasury : Frank Hatton , managing editor of the postofllco department , and assist ant postmaster general of the National Repullican newspaper , long ago de generated into a public nuisance. Congressman Robinson of this district is credited with blocking one of Hat- ton's schemes for turning a lot of pub lic money into his newspaper. Representative- Van Horn of Missouri reported a resolution Monday from the printing committee - too that hereafter executive proclama tions and treaties required by law to bo published , and all advertisements , notices or proposals for contracts and supplies for any-department of the government should bo published in two dally newspapers in the District of Columbia , one of each political party to be designated by the president ; also that all court advertising in the Dis trict should bo published In one paper in the District , to bo designated by the president. The first and second reading of this remarkable proposition had boon dispensed with when Mr. Robinson cimo into the chamber and demanded that the bill should bo read a third time. Ho then sharply - challenged lenged this proposition by which two newspapers at Washington would bo given a monopoly of needless adver- vising , involving a useless expenditure of publio money. The members saw the point , and so many Inquiries were leveled at Mr. Van Horn that ho asked and obtained unanimous consent for the withdrawal of his resolution. SmcB Rerdoll'a confession It is about time for Dorsey to publish another batch of letters , showing his Inval uable services to the republican party , Baundere , the Shirker. Chicago Tribune. ( One of the senators from the tree less state of Nebraska Mr. Sanndorc failed to vote on the question ol passing the $2 lumber tax on his aon < stltnonts. Was ho paired against the rax ? If * o , with whom ? Or did he dodge ? Why is ho not on the record' There is not a family In all the state he partly rcprosonta tut Is Injured b > the lumber tux. It Is n tax that ha : not ono redeeming feature. It Is nol wanted or retained for revenue , bul for robbery. It protects none but s syndicate of monopolists who have bought up the remnants of the north western pluo foresta and ro now over charging the people for their lumber , As the matter stands , Senator Saun dera hao boon duroilot of duty to hi : constituent ! ) , whom ho has failed tc protect by hla vote. Perhaps he oat explain why ho failed to vote. Torrtb'y ' Exorcised. Llntoln Duncxrat. The Stole Journal and Omaha Re publican are terribly exercised at thi growing popularity achieved in thi bold and fearless stand taken by Sena tor Van Wyck in relation to the taril question , and having the duty on luin ber diminished for the beneht of thi homesteaders of our state. They become come alarmed at the unanimity of thi present legislature in endorsing thi course of the senator , and the compll monta received all over the state With 11 their vituperation and abuse ho follows the dictates of his con science , and labors for what ho con celvcs to bo for the good of the pee pie , without regard to party dictation and the disposition manifested by th publio to sustain him , la wormwoo and gall to the journals. A Dooorved Compliment. Scliujlor9 n. The Nebraska legislature did a noa thing in passing by a unanimous vet 10 n resolution endorsing Senator Va Wyck for hia effort to have the tarl removed from lumber. There are few papers in the state that have a lowed their political and personal at tagonlsm to Van Wyck to load thei into making unjust criticisms of h attitude on the tariff bill , but U popular santimont finds fair illnatr tratlon lii the vote of the legislator It is a question upon which there DOte practically no division in Nobrask and Van Wyok'a vote recorded tl sentiment of his constituency. to HUB Never Hurt. B 'In County Union. Whatever else may bo laid at tl door of the Omaha BEE , it has tl " 8 nerve , or honesty , or both , to publii IX- newa that hurts itself. It pnbllshi the testimony In full , of T. L. Kli ball , concerning the alleged blaokuu ing scheme , the day before it publls ed the testimony of Rosewater in i ply. The Journal and. Republic ; " published the testimony of Klmba and did not give a synopsis , even , in- the testimony of Rosewater , Lo ina ' , a give Rosewater one credit mark , it- least. PERSONALITIES. William K. Dodgo's citato It laid to be worth 615,000,000 , Jnlln Wftnl IIowo It laid to hnvo Aban doned the ptlnclpls of woman suffrage. Alexander II. Stephen * U seventy-one yean old and weigh ) neventy-ono pounds. Ooneral Grant bis had to let the tucVi out of hi * pantaloon- . Gained twenty- one poundt this winter. If David David thould croai the ocean the ( towards might not avoid him , but they would be apt to give him a wide berth , Mr- . John Jacob Aetor Is mid to be the only lady In New York or any other city whone earthly pouosnions Include a dinner tervlce of solid gold. The proceeJi of a sale of the real catate of SIgnor Blitz , the magician , have just been paid over to his heirs In Pennsylva nia. They amounted to 53-1,013. George KdwarJs , of Goldaboro , N , 0 , . on a wager , ate n quart of oysters and "washed them down" with a quart of whisky. They burled George the next day. day.Tho The lain ex-Congressman Lewis Solye , ol Kobhciter , N , Y. , bean , llfo as a com mon blacksmith , but coon rose to ho the leading manufacturer there of edged tools and engines. Mr. Gladstone , silting over ; Sunday in his uncushlonod pew , listens "with head thrown back and closed eyes" to the ser mon. Hit snore probably resemble i the drowsy hum of the shard-borne beetle , General Fitzhugh Lee says that after Appomattox an qld Virginian remarked tea a party ef returning soldiers : "Oh , It's that 1'ltz Leo who surrendered ; old General Lee never surrenders. " At her christening in Freehold , N. J. , Mr. Ivln's baby girl wore around her neck some lace that had decorated her great * great-groet-grandmother , M . Margaret McGall Swift , of rhlladelphla , in 17CO. Oscar Wilde is writing a drama for Mary Anderson. In which she will appear aa A duchess and a murderess. If ho will only east stepfather Griffin as the man to be murdered , how happy some folks would be. be.The The dying words of young Commander Rawion , leader of the Highland brigade , to Sir Garnet Wolseloy after the victory at Tel-el-Kehlr. deserve a place in history. They were : ' 'General , did I lead them straight ? ' Ingoreoll says plug hati and suspenders are needed in the south before she will make much headway , as no people who wear slouch hats and let their Irons ars hang slovenly on their hips can ever be come really civilized. Samuel J. Browne , a wealthy Clncin- natlan who died several years ago. left a large part of his estate to found a "Browne University. " The heirs , to whom small sums were left have succeeaded in breaking the will , and now by agreement , 3 ICO GOO from the estate pees , one-third to Lane seminary and two-thirds to the city of Cincinnati for university purposes. Mr. Kallocb , the preacher who was once mayor of San Francisco , and who then cast a very dark shadow , la la further trouble. His congregation has decided to give him a year's vacation , without pay , because he let the church for a Sunday evening sparring match that was attended by a crowd of hoodlums for whom the re gular organUt played sacred music before the sparring began. "BUI" Nye , of The Laramie Boomerang - ang , bas been seriously 111 for two months , and U not yet able to leave his room , As soon as he gets well he is coming to New York on a visit People here will find him , says The Fioe Press of Bodie , C l , "a tall , well-shaped fellow , about 38 years of age. with regular features , a close-crop ped brown beard , sharp brown eyea , a fine forehead , and a bald head with a fringe ol brown hair. He dresses simply and in good taste. It is only occasionally that his humor crops ont in conversation , and hlu manners are otherwise mild. He ap preciates a good story , a well made cock tail , a mild cigar , and plug tobacco. " LITEBARY NOTES. The March number ot Harper'i Magazine Is a beautiful and entertain ing number. The frontispiece en graving IB from Qoorge H. Bonghton'j picture , "The Bnrgomaater'a Dangh tor. " William Henry Bishop contrib ntos a paper entitled ' 'Across Arizo na , " which la attractively illustrated George H Bonghton continues hli Holland papers. Oolonol Hlgginson't fifth paper on hia American Jfllstor ; eorioa is entitled "Tho French Voya qeurn , " utid treats of thu early at tompta made by the French to oatab Hah French colonies in this country Ono of the mout valuable tmd Inter eating of the illustrated articles ii Mrs. M. G. Van BauBBolaor'spaporot "Parsifal1 atBalrouth. " Not the low entertaining portion of the paper li that devoted to a description of thi master's home life. The Illustration ! for the article Include drawings b ; Oarl Marr , representing the mos striking scenes in "Prtrsifal , " a nov portrait of Wagner , aud a beautifa full page portrait of the soprano , F Thoreee Malton. William Black's "Shandon Bells , ' and Miss Woolson's "For the Major' ' are continued ; and Rood short storlc are contributed by M . H. P. Spcf ford and M , Howland. Among the poems in the nnmbe the most striking is Miss Jewett' ' "The Eagle Trees , " the subject boin associated with the poet Whtttler , an dedicated to him. Charles L. Hllc droth's "Frost" treats an old snbjec with much freshness and extreme do ! loaoy of fancy. 8. 13. Oonant contrl butea a charming Valentino poem ; an Mies Mary A. Burr's "Lathe" is beautiful song-motivo. The North American Review fc March opens with an article o "Money iu Elections , " by Hoar , Goortjo , who brings to the discussion < 3 that hackneyed subject a cnntribntlo 1 full of originality , freshness and kee insight. Ho points out with adml able clearness ono source of our poll leal ills , and proposed a remedy thi seems both eminently practicable 'on efficient , llobort S. Taylor writes < the "Subjugation of the Mississippi , a work which , in his opinion , and thief of the Mlsslsiippl commission , which ho is a member , can bo accon pllshed only by employing , for tl purpose of deepening and straighte ) ing the channel , the forces develop ! by the river Itself. Moncnre D. Coi way contrlbntos a very striking ctuc of Gladstone as a men and a state man , showing how oven tl more or IOM sinister moral and it tellectual traits of his natun quite as much as his pro-en Inont native foroo and olov ; tlon of character , conspire to mal him the foremost Euellahman of h time. Hon. Geo. W Julian's "Ral way Influence in the Land Office" Is grave , judicial exposure of the pro tlcos wbiob , against the manifest li tent of the law and the determln tlons ot the highest courts , have wi for corporations millions upon milllo of acres of the publio domain. Rio ard A , Proctor writes of the "Pyi raids of Cheops"Prof. . Wm. ( Snmner of "Pro otlve Taxoa ai " of "Soi Wages" ; Ellznr Wright Aspect ! of Life Insurance" : and final there is a symposium on "Kdusatlot Needs , " by Prof. G. Stanley Hi 'rof. Follx Adler , President Thomas luntor , nnd Dr. Mory Putnam Jaoobl. 'ubllshod ot 30 Lafayottrt Place , Now York , and for sale by booksellers gen erally , Too Murch Century will have t bi ographical sketch of the late Dr. j .oaard Bacon , by hlu son , Leonard iVoohioy Bixoon , of Norwich , Conn. , n which Dr. Bacon's position In oppo sition to the Boston extremists in the mtl-slavory question U defended. On his , as on every other public ques- ion of his generation , Dr. Bacon was n good fighter , and the paper Is appro- irlatoly entitled "A Good Fight Fin- shod. " An excellent portrait accom panies the paper. Fast Trains. Through trains on the Belgian roads run at. the rate of 42 miles per hour. Switz3rlandand RuBoiahavonorai'- ' way trains that run faster than 27 miles per hour. The Short Line oxproasfromBoaton , o Stonlngton makes over 40 miles per horr. A train from Now York to Boston , via Springfield , takes , Including elope , 3 hours and three minutes to run the 234 mlloa , the running time being 42 G miles per hour. On the Borlin-Podsdam-Magdoburg railroad part of the through line bo- iwoon Berlin and Paris , 24 j miles have been run in 30 minutes , and 50 miles in 1 hour 9 minutes. In Italy the only fast train is the mall which goes from Bologna to Brlndisl , 472 miles , in 14 hours 50 minutes , which , including three i tops , la at the rate of 31 5 miles per lion ; . In Germany the fastest train is from Berlin to Hanover on the Magdeburg- Halberatadt railroad. It makes 158 } miles in 3 honra 48 minutes , including three stops The actual running time 44 2 miles per hour. Somo.mllea are run at the rate of 52 miles per hour. On the Orleans line , from Paris to Bordeaux , 359 miles are run in 9 honrs 10 minutes , including 17 stops , being an average of over 39 miles per hour. From Paris to Marseilles the distance of 53G miles is covered in 15 hours. m Calais to Paris on the Northern railroad trains run at over 39 mlloa per fionr. Ono run of 27 miles is made at the rate of 45 5 miles per hour. Probably th fastest train in this country is the New York and Phlla- delphia express on the Pennsylvania railroad , which makeo the run of 88.4 miles in 1 hour and 52 minutes , in cluding three stops , or at the rate of 47 8 milea per hour. From Jersey City to Germantown Junction , 84 2 mlleo , the run is made in 1 hour 41 minutes , including one stop , or at the rates of 50 5 miles per hour. The train known as the "Flying Datchman" of the Great Western rail road runs from London to Bristol , a distance of 118 | miles , in 2 hours 20 minutes , or at tno rate cf 45 3 miles per hour , including two stops amount ing to 11 minntea. Excluding those stops the apeed ia 49 milea per hour. The distance from London to Swlu- don , 77i miles , is made in 1 hour and 27 minute ? , without stopping , or at the rate of 53 3 miles per hour. I had severe attacks of gravel and kidney trouble ; waa unable to get a medicine or doctor to cure me until I used Hop Bitters , and they cured me in a short time. A Dlsgulshed Law yer of Wayne Co. . N. Y. That Commission Humbug. SchtijlerSun. Notwithstanding the dcciiion of the supreme court , there will be a strong effort to paas n railroad commisalonlaw by the present legislature. The sys tem was decided to be unconstitutional on the ground that to invest a board of commissioners with authority to xecuto the law would be to create an xocntlvo cilice In violation of the con- tltutlon. The frionda of the com- miaeion system contend that the bjectlonablo features of the bill ave bwen eliminated. The ex- cutlve functions vested by the rklnnl measure in the uoinmis- Bora oru given to the governor. 'his ' will leave the cituation , so far as ellcf to the people figures , unchanged , t is merely a plea of continuance tie commlEsipncts will ba a committee n statistics an annual expense of 15,000 or more to ascertain what ? Vhatevor the value of the information erlved thpy have no authority to act ipon it. They must report to the jwernor and he to the legislature , rhlch takes.the nh&lo enbjtct back to ho original staitlng piuut. It merely ) ula the matter over two years and by hat time some other scheme will be lovhed. Jt t1 CURES' t1if Rheumatism , Neuralgia , Sciatica L' ' t.umbago , Backache , HeadacheToothache , Bart Throat , Bwclllnc * . Sprmlnt , liruliot , 0 liurn * . BeuMi. Froit llllrt , 1- ISO ALL OTIIU BODILT FUNS iSD AC1II8. Sell kr DraiiUU J D l n rtrrnhira. Tlflj Ctnli twltli. UlnetUDi la It LinUi | . THE CIIAIU.KH A , VOOELKU CO. ' " ' " i. u foutuTrao. ) B iT "ai ; C. S. J y i0 Qeo , P * . Bernis Real Estate Agency 6th and Douglai 8 . , Omaha agency do itrlctly a brokerage butlnce not ipoculate. anil therefore an > bolanc of our book * are Insured acalnit lot . ) - l- km lk G-en'l ' Insurance Agen 11i 3KEiaE 3Ets3i6jaEixja- e 11a Pbosnli AMuranca Co. , ol London , 1.fTertcheswr , h. T. , 0 plUl _ _ _ 1,000,000.1 i A th UerchtnlB , ol Newark , N. ' " CtplUl 1,171,004.1 flUrd rti , PhlUdilphl * . C plUl _ , . 1,100,000. j Office , BoYd'a Ooera House , oarrtraas in POWHR AND HAND Steam Pumps , Engine Trimmings , , HKt/nwi , noss. miAtH AHU IRON FrniNoa rirc , STB-- ' . PACKUil } , AT V/HOLESALR AND BKTAIL. riALLADAY WIHD-MILLS C31W ! ANO SCHOOL BELLS 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 la the beat and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Ono ponnd Is equal to three pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Coke in the fall and winter - tor , instead of running down , will increase in weight and bo in good market able condition in the spring. Dairymen ua well aa othera who uao it can tea- tify to its morita Try it and judge for youraelves. Price $25.00 per ton ; no charge for sucks. Address o4-ood-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob. $ L Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS , 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I3t OMAHA , NEB. McMAHON , ABERT & CO , , Wholesale Druggists , 315 DOUGLAS STREET - - OMAHA NEB. ANHEUSER-BUSCH Brewing Association , CELEBRATED KEG & BOTTLED BEER , THIS EXCELLENT BEER SPEAKS FOR ITSELF , Orders from any part of the State or the Entire West will be promptly shipped : 111 Our Co HS ! arc Made to the Standard of our Guarantee. GEORGE HENNING , Sole Agent for Omaha and the "West. J' ' Office Comer 13th and Barney Streets , .Omaha , Neb , M c N A M A R A & DUNCAN. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN KENTUCKY ANO PMNSYLViNIA WhiskieS ! in Bond or Free , Also direct Importers of WINES , BRANDIES AND ALES , Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine Agents for Jos. Schlitz1 Milwaukee Beer , Bottled and in Kegs. 214 & 216 S , 14TH STEEET , - - - OMAHA , HEB , GK-A-TIE PLACING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OP Carpenter's Materials AISO SASH DOORS BLINDS , , , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. First-class facilltlee for the Manufacture of all kindea of Moulding * . Fainting and matching a Specialty. Orders from the country will l-tpromptly executed. addreasall communications to A. MOYER , Proprfeto WILLIAM SNYDER , UANUFAOTUBSH 0 ? | CARRIAGES , BUGGIES , JNTX > aoo jD Dcrj .a-oaa-8. Ftrs-UlasB 'Paining ' and Trimming , Repairing Promptly Dona 1319'S 'S