Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 26, 1883, Page 4, Image 6
I IK THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA MONDA1 FEBRUARY 26 The Omaha Bee. Pnbltuhod every morning , except Gun * jr Tbo enly Monday morning dfclly.J TERMS BY MAIL- One Yc r..810.00 I Three Months.$3.00 Bit Months. . 5.00 | One Month. . . . 1.00 : HE WEEKLY BEE , pubiuhcd every Welneoday. TERMS POST PAID One Year $2.00 I Three Monthi. BO qir Monthi. . . . LOO | One Month. . . . 20 AUIRIOAK N WB OOMPANI , Bole Agents Newsdealers in the United States. ) CORRESPONDENCE Oommunl Iktfona relating to News and Editorial matters nhould bo addressed to the KUITOB or Tin BK. ' BUSINESS LETTEKS-AI1 Buslnes fiettcrs and Remittances should bo ad ireiwed to THE BEZ PoDUSHiNO CoMPANr OMAHA. Drafts. Chocks and Postofflco Jrders to bo made payable to the order ol the Company. Ilio BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props , E. ROSEWATER Editor. THE private lobby makes IU final In Lincoln to-day. TUB crown caunsul are a solGsh crowd. They are still keeping a sharp lookont for' 'Number One.1 ONLY ono more day of the loglnla tare. After to-morrow the people of Nebraska will breath easier. TUB latest reports ol Mr. Vandor dllt's illneis state that ho has paralysis of the right arm caused by clipping coupons. WISCONSIN U economical In the matter - tor of new legislation. Of 723 bills Introduced In the legislature this BOB Ion all but 700 have passed. KINO KALAKAUA was crowned with regal magnificence last week and is now trying to negotiate another mortgage to pay tbo expanses of the -affair. GoYEHNOU FOHTER , Of Ohio , ifl SOt- ting up his pin ; ) to succeed Pondlotou In the senate. The contingency of a democratic majority iu the legislature does not uotm to bo taken Into con- aldcration. F. W. FRITE , the absconding treas urer of Madison county gave a ban quet last fall to Valentino. The ex pense probably catno out of the $20,000 which his bondsmen are now searchIng - Ii : . Ing for , TUB search for Captain Howgato has been given np , and the captain Is reported to be spending the winter rery pleasantly in Florida. There are no "Indications" that the defaulting Ignal service officer has any fears ot being brought to justice. Jomr ROAOH Is to bo given another million to finish Itoboson'a monitors. .After they are completed the next : OIOTO will bo to sell thom'for old Iron. "Even then the purchaser will probably have to search for his property with a diving boll. TUB Iowa railway commissioners have decided that a railroad cannot give a lower rate to an association shipping exclusively over their line than to any Individual shipper of the uamo' ' . class of goods and that all rebates bates given to the ono must bo granted od to the other. A GOOD many of "tho farmers' friends" In the legislature have proved themselves to bo the railroad shoot anchors. There has.been too much nuti- monoply which merat ante monoply. These bogna reformers will bo retired to perpetual private lifo after the close of the session. TBERB are a good many visiting statesmen from Nebraska In Washing ton just now and the post cflieo brig ade has mustered In full force. Every postmaster In the state is enthusiastic enough on the subject of civil service reform to fill Dorman B. Elton's posi . t , tion ata half hour's notice. TIIHKB seems to be some misappre hension as to thn use to which the 450,000 for paving purposes asked for "by the city engineer will be put. There Is already In the city treasury 4100,000 of bonds not yet sld , which were voted at the last election. This urn will be sufficient to pay the olty'i hara of paving the greater portion ol the butinesa center of Omaha. Il will probably cover that portion of th < . city between Douglas and Barney an ; Tenth and Sixteenth , together will Tenth street from Douglas to the de pot. The additional imm recommtmd od by the city engineer ia lulonded I be applied to the ptiTiug ol the Iritct sections of Ninth und Sixtcont streets which cannot bo covered b th * bonds voted last summer. These streets will have to bo pave within the next two years. Nint treot Is filling np rapidly with wart bouses , which call for a good dual c heavy trucking. Sixteenth street hi become ono of our most heavil traveled thoroughfares , and 1 Improvement by paving cannot t much longer delayed , The questlc is whether it Is not wise to prepare i eon as possible for work which wl have to bo done In the nesr future , I Authorising the city to issue the bom when they are required. The com pletion of the north and south Omaha sewers is demanded In the Interests of the health of our cltlioni who live along the line of those crooks. The same arguments which convinced our people of the necessity of their exten sion last year urge them now to com plete the unfinished work. Property will bo sufficiently enhanced in ' the neighborhood to pay the Interest on the bonds. In addition all necessity for bridges will bo done away with and cross streets can bo made to present a respectable appearance. The necessity for the storm water sewers is apparent to every ono. Until suitable provision Is made for the dis posal of the accumulating rainfall the city will bo forced to pay thousands of dollars every year for the repair of streets and culverts and the replacing of the wash from the hillsides. In ad- dltlon our curbs must remain too high for convenience and our crossings too deeply guttered for safety , It will ba a mistaken economy to omit furnishing the city with the moans to carry ont those improve ments which will enhance the value of property , increase the attractions of Omaha as a place for business and residence , and decrease the lists of deaths reported from dipthotia , ague and other zygmotio dlsoatioa. THE BUSIRESS SITUATION. There Is little change in the general condition of industry and trade since last week but reports from the east In dicate an easier fooling in the great markets and indications of an early lifting of the depression which 'has made itself so strangely felt In every line of trade since the opening of the year. The reports of the railroads are generally much more favorable to stockholders than had boon anticipated und although the stock market is yet under boar influences there Is a tend- onoy towards an Increase of legitimate Investments In the securities of the roads which have been most free from purely speculative manipulation , Money remains tight , not so much but that the supply ia inffloiont for the demands of trade and is readily procurable on oed collateral. The close scrutiny which loaners have been making of securities has checked largely the spec ulative fever by restricting- means ivailablo for stock gambling. The inly sufferers on this account are the , brokers , whoso offices are reported as nearly deserted. In all the Industries but those often ton , steel and cotton , the feeling lame mo of increasing confidence. Surplus itocks have been , gradually worked off md manufacturers have learned a les ion from their mistake of the hut pear's over production. The practice } f dating bills ahead of time , which las been practiced so generally by jobbers with a view to stim- ilatlng trade is being great ly curtailed and the manufacturers ire not likely to naffer as In times past from the fictitious demands which It jroates. The iron industry continues jroatly depressed and more failures wo certain to follow thono of last week. The production of railroad Iron especially has been overdone , and a good many furnaces and mills must yet cease producing before the de mand will bo equal to the supply. Wholoaalo merchants throughout the west still complain of slow col lections , but aa the crops are begin ning to move mere rapidly towards the seaboards a more cor.ndunt feeling is manifesting itself In trado. The failures of the past week wore smaller in number and amount than for the preceding seven days , and bank clearings show au increase which Is significant c ! larger exchanges and a greater volume of trade. Taken altogether , the outlook it more oheoiful than for several monthi past. Wo will have a good market for our surplus provlilons and grain Ir Europe next year , as the prospect foi vorago harvests in Enclond and ot 10 continent has never been worst ban at the present time. The osu on which is being exorcised by mer honU in the giving cf credit epeaki ell for the substantial basis upoi hloh business will be conducted , am 'bile ' weak firms are weeded out bj he process business interests will b < gainer in the end. FDLLCU details of the report of thi ; ovornmont directors of the U , F road show that these snpornutnerar ; fUolals were unmercifully snubbed b ; ho railroad management when the attempted to secure information re gardlng the finances and conduct i the affairs of that corporation. Mi Bromley says that when ho callud t the New York cflioo ho wan troatt "with gw t courtesy by the chief to eoutlvo utJkor of the company , urhi however , informed htm , somewhat 1 his surprise , that practically thoi were no functions , that the till : o w ; a "myth , " that the road and equl ] rnout belonged to the stockholder that provision for the payment of tl company's debt to'the govornmo : had bon made b ; the Thurman bl and that , as a matter of fact , the g ] ornmont had no further concern wi the direction' oi 'ho road its management. It was 01 dently his opinion that t government dlreptors had nelth duties , responsibility nor power , a : ( hat , aside fron > making a pleasure trip over the road , nominally for IW purpose of inspection , there was noth ing for them to do. Facilities for making such a trip , ho said , would bo afforded at any time the directors might desire them. " The opinion of the oflhlal evidently coincides with that of the public that the only duty which the directors per- perform with onthunlasm is that of making a jnnkotting trip over the railroad to the accompaniment of clear Havannas and "Mnmm's Extra Dry , " furnished at the expense of the cor poration , The present report Is a great Im provement over Its predecessors in that it draws the attention of the in terior department to the evident intention of the Union Pacific railroad to Ignore the Interest of the government as they have con sistently Ignored the Intarcsts of the people in the conduct and operation of the road. It pronounces its pros- poata as a dividend naming property excellent , and oommonds tbo wis dom cf Us policy in extending a sys tem of feeders into the territory along its route , But as usual , U has not a word to say concerning exorbitant tariffs or discriminations between per sons or places. Those trivial matters soorn to Ho outside the province of a government director of the Union Pacific. Bom houses of the legislature have pissed , and the governor has signed , a bill prohibiting discrimination on the part of telegraph companies towards associations and Individuals In the re ceipt or transmission of dispatches. This Is a stop In the right direction to wards securing a liberty of the press which will never cimo io long as the same facilities in the collection and forwarding of news are not given to every paper and to every association which desires to avail it self of them The monopoly in news is one of the closest and most power ful of any of the great monopolies which nffliot thin country , and it has boon built up and maintained by Ihu Assistance and efforts of tbo telegraph companies. Sooner or later it must end in the Interests of the public. L1TSRA.RY NOTES. Old Ooo&n. By Ernest Ingoraoll. Illustrated. Boston : D. Lothrop & Go. Prioa $1.00. This handsome volnmo forms a com panion to Magna Oharta Stories , re cently issued , and is the second of a series contemplated by the publishers , Intended to fill a gap in popular prac tical literature. Mr. Ingersoll has written much and well for young as well as old readers. In the pretent volume he treats not only of the .out ward appearance and characteristics of the ocean , bnt describes and explains all Its various phenomena the Qulf stream , the action of the waves the tides , the currents , with the accompanying phenomena of the winds iu certain portions of the plobo. Later ho takes np and tolls the stories of the famous voyages of discovery and ad venture which have been made over the ocean , the great battles that have boun fought upon U , Its peril * and dan gers to voyagers , and lastly ho des cribes the wonders of the gmatdeep as displayed in Its various forms of anl- ruul and vegetable life. The book iu fact , brings within a email apace a largo amount of matter ot more than ordinary Intnreat , nnd ono learns from it more In relation to the subject upon which it treats than from uuy other half dczon works coming within the popular rouoh. It la handsomely illus trated. "Loading Men of Japan. " With a historical nummary of the empire. By Charles L-iiimun. Boston : D. Li- throp & Oo. Price $2. During thu past dczan years Japan has lakoii Immense strides in what we are pleased to call civilization. * Mr. Lnnrnan gives an interesting account of the changes made , and of the pros pects of the future , in those sketches of the loading men of the country , The volnmo Is di vided into two parts , the first being devoted to biographical sketches of modern Japanese states men , authors and.soholars , who have contributed In a greater or lew degree to.the bringing- about of the late re forms In the empire. The second part la historical in character , and gives t description not only of the empire proper , but of its dependencies. An exceedingly Interesting chapter is de voted to Oorea , a nation whose powei and Importance are just beginning tt bo properly understood bytheolvUizec world , an account is also given c : the origin of the American expedl'ioi ' to Japan , and there are copious notes and a list of works which have beei written upon the country. The "Magazine of Art" for Hard contains six full p > go wood engraving and thirty smaller wood onto , all c which are Interesting , and some o which are admirable. Perhaps th f most attractive article in the nuinbo Is an Illustratud desorlntlon of th Vauderbllt psUoes in New York b' ' Mr. S. G. W Benjimln. The Slarnet twin house ofV. . II. Vaudurbllt i elaborately described and praised Other ar'lclon relate to hones nm dogs in art , Greek myths , St. Paul' ' Cathedral and the work of the npcoln artist. it is an excellent uumbei Otssoll , Potter , Galpln & Co. The editorial management of Th International Review has pissed int new hands , It is Intended to make I the loading publication of Its kind 1 the United States. In ootmnca wit this intention and the change In mar agomont thu publication day horotftc h will bo the 15th cf each month folio * log. The present la a double nnmb < for February aud March , 188 ! With the April number , which will a ] 10 pear March 16th , will begin seven or new features , which promise to bo i id great interest to its readers. PERSONALITIES. Oambetta's school master uiod to speak of Garomey as "a olity liltle pig. " Baron Nordfnukjold Is ( ? olng to explore the cowl of Greenland next summer , Sulllvnn , the prize fighter , creates aeen- nation when ho appeari upon the streets of I'oston. K' lner Wilhelm had six dootors In at- tendknce during his late illneua and yet be Hied through. The late Wllllan A. Beaver , who edited the old Jokes for Harptr's magMlne , left an estate of (200,000. The greatest talker In the Maine leRlsla- lure i * ReprneenUtivtf Outhee , of Knap county , lie is rightly named. " " the mistakes Since Rcrdell "efjneated , of Dorsey have given Bob Ingersoll more trouble tbnn the mistaken of Motet. A. Benihon , n IVksklll barber , last Sat urday withdrew to a closet and cut hla own thro.it , leaving a lutheied customer half shaved , Wblttler h petitioned to congress to rnlto the duty on books to 25 per cent. The poet evidently holds that poetry is nn Infant lodmtry. Col. McOIure says that the sharks of the not will hide their heads when Jay Gonld sails by , nndthtt if he cboutdmeet a pirate it will be bad for the pirate. Mr. Gehhart 1 * furious becanae a new scarf tiln haa been named the "Freddie. " The design in a little god ! jsckum drawing a onrt en which are spelling and copying books. Secretary Folder Is sick and undergoing homeopliAtlc ircnttmnt formslarU and indigestion - digestion , It was homoophatlo voting that raved him from the New York governor ship last fall. An exchange Ii unible to reconcile Mrs. Linptry'n dliplay of $1'9,000 worth of diamond mend * with tlio story that she came over to thia country to retrieve the broken down fortunes of her husband. The Marquis cf Lome has consented to be the pAtron of the Nllsion concerts in Canada. Why the gifted sloger should need patronage of this kind , or why the marquis should bo troubled to act as sponsor for an artist so much better known tuan the yovernur general , it is difficult to understand , Danuxln was a handsome man , whom Sarah married beoaue several ( other wanted to mirry him. Charming as a lover , ha became A most unmitigated nnl- sauce as soon ta trttnef jrmed into a hut- band. He drove nil of Sarah's old lover's away , and BO ruined her business that she hod to drive him away. Mlsa Catharine Wolfe , for whom the most coatly house at Newport h being built , baa caused two large beech trees to be moved from West Chester , N. Y. , to Ochra 1'olnt. Tlieuo Ireea were planted by Ml. WoHe'8 f.tther many years ago. Une of them U thirty feet high and the other twenty-seven faet , and the weight of each Is about thirteen tens. The c < vt of trans planting is several thousand dollars Dr. Hnwkn , an old time eloquent and popular ilivinu of New York , once asked the vestryman of lii * chinch to increaoe hii salary bccnujo of hU inorea > ed f.imlly czpentes , "Don't trouble ycnn-elf , " H iJ the vestryman , "the Lord atid he would oare for the yonng ravens wheujthay cry. ' "I that ' * said the ' ' know , clergyman , 'but what is said about the young Hawks. " . JOTTINQ3. Bill Temple nnd Mm. Lee had a quarrel cf word * at Blair. Bill went to her bouse and dared her to come out and net licked. She accepted , und , armed with stovewood , drove Bill uQ , He irtd her arrested for nBnanlt nnd battery , but a Jury of six ac quitted her and fave her honorable men tion , E. E. Thompson , nu Alda tcbool teaoher , WM tried at Grand Island on the 16th , pu the cbureo of over1 eating a pupil , but tiie jury disagreed. Mr. Thompson was dis charged by the district , but was Immedi ately hired to teach in an adjoining one. The little Biggins boy , of Blair , whose father andstopinoth r abusedhim so shame fully , was taken to the poor house last week that being the only way to protect him , It i * evident an effort will be made to inn Htggina and wife out of Blair. Gohot DIckman and Amelia Schultz , cf Hull county , determined to marry , and Gchot went to Grand I-land for tha li cense , but while he w s gone another luver persuaded Amelia to run tfl to Hamilton county and marry him , of the ire in the The break-up Repub lican did not carry off any bridge , at the warm rain had rotted it. The fied Cloud bridge waa taken up and the mov ing ice broke o2 some of the piles. Married at the residence of the bride's father in Harvard , on February 20th , 1883 , by Rev. Wilkinson , Mr. William D. Cook of MayVllle , D ikotn , to Miss M ry U. Robinson , of Harvard. The lather of Amelia Church , the Madi son county toucher who disappeared a feu reeks ago , arrived lo t week horn New fork state ai'd has begun a close soarcr r hla daughter. Alma had a narrow escape from a cerl us Qre an tha 16th. Ur. S < .Her'rf diuf tore caught in An unaccountable manuei nd burntd some time before it wna dls overed , * Balding & Blenett , of Fre rnont , will soon begin nhipuing their 17,001 heep to the east , from whence thu Bostot i rtlea who bought them will ship ti urope. Tha ir.rgest man in Nebraska recentlj . toodup and wna counted at Tecunveh His name is Iihmael Htckey , he Is a farm r and he weighed a little over 500 pounds The Y. M. 0. A. of Weeping Wate janv&ssed the town recently and fount .here were 118 adult * who never attende < church , of whom 70 were males. W. S. Sawyer , of LIncob , offers an un ridged dictionary to the pupil of a Ne raska school making the greatest 1m iroveinent in penmanship. DlcklUdgely ( colored ) attempted rap .wice on a white woman at Marquette week before last , and got away , but officer , re looking for him. A mink go } into a Wakefield hen hens me might recently and killed 31 hens ani I ducks. Then tha owner set a trap an < lanRht the animal. i Scull jumped from a movln ; trail at Grand Il t-d , last Tuesday morning and fell under tha wheels. Both feet h to be amputated. A ronnc woman in Arizona , Bart conn ty , got up In her sleep recently and took walk , during which she frcte her hand and feet. Burglars went through the tafe 1 Clark's mill at Waterloo on the 16ti They got very little money and mined tb safe. safe.The Stromeburtr school was closed wee befuro last , nearly all the scholar * beln sick , M a kind of cough is epidemic there An lullau is going about the state se 1 ing stationary uinda of Colorado * oa ] stone. Some of the articles ire unique A Merrlck count/ man has proteatf tha finest young cow in hla Duck to tl Metbndlit church ot Central City , John nauihtauacr.tpentiter , of Ne Albuquerque , New Mexico , was on 01 street * Monday. Folrfiold News. The stovoplpJ Iu the M. E. church i Crete fell down on the morning of tl 18tb , nud put a stop to fet vices. A spelling match at the Rock Cre < ( Lancaster county ) nchool house last We ueuday developed in a free fight. Crete is discussing the advisability running her streets under the railroad trai where crostlnga are neceuary. The builneis men of Crete cf all clan have formed a strong organization f mutual progress and profit. A Waterloo man offers to take S2.000 took and furnirh the milk of 100 cows II creamery i < started there. A 10,000 edition description of Hi county will shortly be Usued. A couple of Columbus men have start a liniment factory , They claim their mod- Iclnn will sure dlptherla. An Atkinson doctor recently rode twen ty-six miles , facincr n stilt nc rthwcst wind , In response to a call. Grain shipment * along the 0 , & R. V , have been large lately , and extra trains have been running , ' York county emigration this year will be divided between Dakota , California r > nd Butler county , The next department encampment of the Grand Army will be held In Fremont next January , Risltg City Is to have a barber shop , to be open at first on Saturday and Sunday of each week. A snetk thief who had been worhlng Clarkevlllo for some time WAI scared out last week. Mr. Meustcn , cf UnadflU , lost a jack on the 18th that cost him $1,000 iu Missouri lait fall. Inland , Clay county , will nut up n 8MM ) echool houte , having voted bonds for the purpose. tit Bernard ha * an animal that h half pig and half coinethlng they don't know wbnt. Two nafes were hlnwn open at Superior on the llth aud 8200 taken from ono of them. Several car loads of potatoes were shipped from Springfitld to St. Louis last wiek. City polities and cindldatss ro begin ning to agitate the larger places of the ttute. The Tullerton university library has among its antlqnltlts a book 150 yenrs old. Two thtunand worth of stock has been subscribe i for the O'Neill eroamery. Capital invested In dwelling houses at Weeping Water would pay largely. ' Nemaha county tears itself all over in the county seat election to morrow. The new school house at Oxford is fin ished , nnd is a creditable building. A Tekamah hotel has a Herdlo to carry its patrons to and from the depot. It Ia now said the Otoe reserve willome Into the market about Juno lat , A movement has been started to hold a county fair at Wirner this fall. The new Methodist church at Gibbon will be dedlo.Ud next Sunday. Blue Springs' new paper , "T Cymro , " will be out in a week or so. A chicken thief Is presiatently making Aihland wrathy. Fhelps ia happy over a butcher shop tc be stalled there. Wayne county reports a big immigration boom this year. Hebron will immediately open a ftw reading room. Material for a democratic paper is nl Red Cloud. Work began on Louisville's new hole ! this week. The Arai-ahoe Baptist church is noarlj finished. Fairfield has the spelling school manic bad. bad.Bennet Bennet , near Linaoln , is to have a pa < per. Imlgranta are pouring into York county , Ainu has organized a fire company. Patent Idiocy. Brcokln E-gle. ' Is it trno father , " said a yonng Jacksonlau , glancing np from a Phila delphia paper , "that the democratic party once took out a patent for being d fools , and are now at Washing ton trying to get a reissue ? " "I can't answer positively , " returned the ld man , bnt my Impression la that iuy sold tno patent to the republicans some time ago. A Widow's Wall. Brooklyn Eagle. "I don't want no rubbish , no fine sentiment , if yon please , " said the widow who was asked what kind of ar epitaph she desired for her late hus band's tombstone. "Let it bo short and simple , something like this : 'William Johnson , aged suventy-fivc years. The good die young.1" The beat euro for diauasoa cf th < nerves , brains and mntclea , is JBrown'i Iron Bitters Cause of Nervousness. Philadelphia New * . The mac who stays ont nntll nfte midnight , raaken hla way home wltl difficulty , goes to bed with bin boot on , and thu next morning takes D en ] of strong cotton at breakfnnt it the oni who is aurc that the cttTjo producoi nervousness. Senator John C. Jacobo , of thi Fourth Senatorial district of Nov York , npcaklng wIth our corroipondtm lately , eaid : "I never w a in botte condition in my life. I am now fre from rheumatism , which troubled mi so Ions ; and I owe my thanks nnd free dom from pain to St. Jacobs Oil.- York Graphic Tabor'a Speech. Ohlctgo Tribune. Senator Tabor has made n speech When the senate passed Its tariff bll he raised his two hands high in at and shouted "Good" It wan th greatest effort of his llt > . THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. RtlliMi nd cam RHEUMATISM , Neuralgia , 8ciitle , Lvmbigo , BACKACUB , Eiiiicii , roomcn , SORE THROAT , QCIX8TBWILL11 < CS ! , SPRAINS , Eomiu , CiU , Bnlwi , FROSTBITES , mmjro , SCALD * Jol ill ctbn boJIIj telii aod ptlai. nm cnn i BOITLI BoMty fcU Droicliti IE Deafen. Dlrtctloul 1& ] Unuiel. . The Ciir'.u A.Yoetltr C 1 I (8 . .n ta A TH.I.I C A UaltlBtin , St. , C. S. . BRIDGE PROPOSALS. Scaled ft jxwa will bo recchoil by Ilio Boa ol Co nt > Coraiulwionrni ol UJKO countv , Nit tor tlio ircctlon ol a bridge across the II u 1)1 river up n Ithor one ot th wagon roods IcaUli cost from tlie lo n ol Wjmor , Gnocoint Not ) . , atider and -cro sa'd ' rher. aldbrlil to lie im hundred and llfty (150) ) feet ionir , ai ( o liar cither | > ilcD , sto o , or Iron p ere. AUo lor th eroo Ion nl a bridge , suitable to t | ila e , acrcws Indian Creek , on the line bctwi bectlo.iM twentninc ( i > J ) nd'thirty (30) ( ) , abe on , mile Bouihucst ol WJIDOIO , Uag counl heb , lav bridal ) at Ill's plire preferred. Also a b Mi ; tcross T , rkuy Creek , Bouihc : ol l > eWnt , Nub. , to repla.o the tlJ one now U30. U30.AU ' r'd ea to be ol wood , Iron or vomblnitlc OS A 11) ds o b * ace ropanl d by plant and spe erIn DO t ons to U > scaled and filed uilli tli i Cone Clrrk on or bcloro 12 o'clock nojn , March 201 1883. Ina Tlio CoiinnlsulonoTH ro-ervc the rltfhtta re ] a ny and all In. S icce.eul ( bidders will be qu r d to gl > o bond lor the latlhlul pciformal il th Ir contract It By order ot the County Cf rumtoloncn. fM A. J. PEI1IOUD. ed j iRAl. I County Uleik I v-r- > I Beatrice , Feb. 2 } , 1883 me-d- KSJCICT < M-2EU POWER AND HAND Steam Pumps , Engine Trimmings , < ! HACrUHKKV , Mggg , " * * * * HP HALLAOAY WIMD-ftlSLlS GHURGH AND SCHOOL BEU8 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 IB the boat r.td cheaprat food for stock of nny kind. Ono ound la oqnal to three pounda of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Oako In the fall and win- tcr , Instead of running down , will Inoroaco in weight and bo In good market * able condition In the spring. Dairymen CB well aa others who HBO it can tes tify to its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $25.00 per ton ; no charge for eacks. Address o4-eod-mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob. M. Hellman < fc Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS , 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA , NEB. McMAHON , ABERT & CO , , Wholesale Druggists , 315 DOUGLAS STREET - - OMAHA NEB , MCNAMARA& DUNCAN. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN KENHJCKY ANI ) PENNSYLVANIA WhiskieS ! in Eond or Free. Also direct Importers of WINES , BRANDIES AND ALES , Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine OZGkA. Agents for Jos. Schlitz1 Milwaukee Beer , Bottled and in Kegs. 214 & 216 S , 14TH STREET , - - - OMAHA , HBB , I GKA-TIE3 PLANING Ml MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter's Materials ALSO SASH , DOORS , BLINDS , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. FIrat-clasa facilities for the Manufacture of all kindes of Mouldings , Fainting and matching a Specialty , Orders from the country will b promptly executed , addresaall cornmnnicatt us to A. MOYER , Proprleto : MORGAN & CHAPMAN , WHOLESALE GROCER 1213 Farnam St. . Omaha. ANHEUSER-BUSCH Association , CELEBRATED KEG& BOTTLED BEER , THIS EXCELLENT BEER SPEAKJ FOR ITSELF , Orders from any part of the State or the Entire West will be promptly shipped : All Our Couds arc Made to the Standard of our Guarantee , GEORGE HENNING , Sole Agent for Omaha and the West , > lw | Office Oorner 13th and Barney Streets , Omaha , Neh ,