Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 01, 1883, Page 4, Image 6

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    THE DAIL ? BEE-OMAHA UfUBSDAY MAEOH 1
Omaha Bee.
Published every morning , oiccnt San-
ay , The only Monday morning daily , ]
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matters itbould bo addressed to the Kurron
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the Company ,
The BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props ,
E. ROSEWATEB Editor.
EVEKY candidate for mayor la the
worklngmnu'a frlond.
THE late prosldout cf the Omaha
Labor Protective union has an axb to
grind at the coming city election.
As GKUMANY has prohibited the
Importation of the American hog , con-
groan ought to retaliate by levying a
tariff on L'.mbargcr cheese ,
Tax city election takes place on
April 3d. Ton candidates for mayor
have pat in an appearance , with
Shinn'a addition yet to bo hoard from.
REPUBLICAN professions of antimonopoly -
monopoly in the next campaign will
bo read in the light of the legislative
record , A foir may bo taken bat moro
will bo left.
DAKOTA will not bo allowed to enter
the sisterhood of statoa until after the
next presidential election. The dem
ocrats gambled and lost on Colorado ,
bat tboy will take no chances on
Dakota.
A fogyistn which opposes public
Improvements generally shirks taxes.
\ \ The men who are howjlng mott loudly
in Omaha against draining oar pestlv-
eroas crooks' and paving our boggy
streets , are paying taxes on property
at the rate of $50 an acre , which is In
the market at $30Q a lot.
Ax the coming spring election which
will take place on April 3d the voters
of Omaha will select three additional
members of * the school board. Under
the law as amended t > y the legislature
the school board will comprise ulno
members elected at large. This
amendment together with that per-
milling more latitude In the Invest
ment of the sinking fund will meet
with general approval , .
EVERYBODY in the navy department
is said to have known that the "AsL *
aolot , " lost lest week in Chinese wa
ters , was unttcaworthy. And yet this
vessel , freighted with valuable human
Jives , > ros allowed to founder in for
eign Boas when every report shows
that she ought to have been * broken
up for old Iron yearn ago at the League
Island navy yard. But what are the
lives of eleven sailors to John. Roach ,
Robeson & Co , , who secured a
(692,000 contract for repairs before
the vessel left on her last cruise.
STATE HENATOUS McShano and
Brown return homo with the con *
Bcloasnoes of having done their duty
at Lincoln , Both worked hard and
faithfully in the Interests of Omaha
and stamped their energies on several
mcaeurcs of great importance to our
city. Tbo amendment of the charier
to permit the moro equitable levying
of paving assessments and to enforce
the paving between street railway
tracks , the amendments to our school
lawa and Important aid in several
other bills which directly af
fect our city are Instances
In point. When the record Is made
up the votes of Charley Brown and
John McShano will bo foaud put
down-against every job and steal of
the EOialon , Verifying the nnpartlsin
confidence which the people of Omaha
and Douglas county gave them at the
lut election.
Aiioniuanoi' POEOKLL'B failure la
Duplicated on a smaller scale by the
disastrous failure of the Roman Oath' '
olio Augustlnlan society at Lawrence ,
MOBS. No ono assumes for a moment
that there was any roguery in the
case. > The seven hundred and odd
thousand dollars for which the poor ,
wandering people of Lawrence aio now
looking seems to have been invested
with a stupidity nnd recklessness
Mob was scarcely luss thun criminal
it S30D.OCO , ln R charcl
* hen the books already
of $100,000
very bad finan
rldly banke
qullty
to
.tees
jtrcoly
a to be
THE RESPONSIBILITY.
The people of Nebraska will justly
lold the republican party responsible
for the failure of the legislature to
enact laws that would relieve them
Tom the oppressive exactions of rail
roads and compel these corporate
monopolies to boar tholr proper share
of the burden of taxation , Daring
the late campaign the republican
party and Its candidates made solemn
pledges that the notorious abuses from
which the producers of this state were
anfldrlng at the hanis of the railroads
should bo corrected by restrictive lawa.
When the legislature convened the
republicans assumed the responsibility
or such legislation by orcanlzlng the
louse through the machinery of a re-
lublloan caucus. Upon the speaker
nominated by that body devolved the
Inty of appointing the committees
bat were to formulate railroad log Is-
atlon. How did ho discharge that
duly ? By packing the railroad com
mittee with men who wcro from the
ontsot opposed to railroad regulation ,
through this commltteo every effort
to roduoo railroad faroc , limit freight
ohargoa and revise the preaont system
of taxation , was thwarted and do-
oat od.
In this commltteo every measure
lending to afford relief trom legalized
ilghway robbery was strangled , and
when at last the aonato , where the
republicans were In the minority , did
pass a moderate bill that limited the
passenger rate to three cents per mile
and reduced local freight rates 20 per
cent , the republican honso treated it
with contempt and allowed it to die
without ever taking a square vote on
ts passage.
As if to add Insult to Injury , the
railroad committee , packed by Speaker
Elumphroya with monopolists , Bought
o Impose a costly sham on the people
ple , by attempting to create a com
mission that had no power to regulate
railroads. '
This was vary properly rejected as
an unmitigated fraud by the senate.
Oho outcome la that the people of No-
> raska must for two yeara longer sub
mit to pillage and robbery at the
lands of railroad monopolies. It has
icon the boast of republican loaders
that the republican party was equal
to every emergency. General Mandor-
aon In his , memorable speech before
'ho legislature assured the people of
Nebraska that the republican party had
within it all the elements of prepress
and reform that it wis not only ca
pable of dealing with every great
problem , but determined to solve
hose problems in the Interest of the
masses. In the face of broken prom-
sea and such shameless disregard of
, he known and expressed will of the
people. General Manderao , however
much ho may bo respected , can not
nsplro confidence In the republican
paity.
Howovormuoh men may bo attached
o the republican party on account of
ts past achievements , Its failure to
grtpplo with the vital issues of the
lour , and its coalition with corporate
monopoly , deprlyo it of the confidence
and support of the masses who still
cherish republican principles.
THE COUNTY ATTORNEY BILL
Before its close the legislature pass
ed a bill abolishing the office qf dis
trict attorney and creating that of
county attornoy. This measure , which
was crowded through the last hours of
iho session , was passed without any
opportunity for Its discussion by the
press or Ita consideration by the pee
ple. THE BEE believes it to bo unwise
and extravagant , Injurious to the beat
ntcresto of justice and only adding
new bar dons to the taxpayers of the
state.
Under thla law there will bo ono
prosecuting attorney to oaoh county In
our state , with ealarlos running from
? GOO a year in thi ) smallest to $1,000
n the largest counties. Nebraska has
now sixty-eight counties , including
thdao of Cherry , Lo'up , Brown and
Dawos , added at the last session , As
at present constituted , six district at-
ornoys conduct their prosecutions at
at an annual expense of $1,600
apiece , or $9,000 for the
ontlro state. By the now
judicial rodlatrlotlng the number will
30 Inqreased from six to ton
at a yearly cost of $15,000.
Under this county attorney law sixty-
eight county attorneys will bo elected ,
Their salaries In the aggregate will
bo $43,000 a year , an Increase of $34-
300 over what the state now pays for
her district attorneys , and at least
$28,000 over what she will bo com *
polled to pay under the now district
ing.
ing.If
If it could ba shown that the
pri'sout system of ono attorney for
each judicial district was Inadequate
for the proper dl po al of oases
brought bcforo our courts there mlghl
bo Berne rxcnto ( or the proposec
change. No statistics have been
brought forward to provo that the
work la too heavy , that the crlmloa
dockets are not promptly cleared or
that any Interest whatever has sufferoi
under iho existing plan. The salarj
ranted la not too much to so
are good men. There have boot
complaints that it la too small to at
tract really able lawyers to ( he dutlea
In our own county thu time when OD
ablest attorneys were not ashamed t
accept the place has passed , and here
as elsewhere , the omen 'la re
garded dioro aa a stopping atone t
acratlvo practice than an evidence uf
arpasslng legal abilitios. What ttu-
( Tool would bo If the salary was still
nrthor reduced it is not difficult to
orsoo. '
For those roasowa TUB BEB hoped
lie governor will refuse t6 algn the
)111. It Is sure that the measure willet
ot mbct with the endorsement of the
> ar or of the people of the atato the
moment that the atrong objections to
ta passage into a law are considered
A wo said before , its results are In
ho line of extravagance and of giving
nr counties attorneya of poorer cill-
> ro than they now have. Either
ono of those objections ought to be
atal. T
PABNELL'S POLICY.
Parnoll still remains "tho un
crowned king of Ireland , " and If self-
control , passionless reserve and the
ability to repel assault by refusing to
> o drawn into useless conflict are king
y qualities ho Is monarch by right ,
iho attempt of Mr. Forstor to entice
ho Irish parliamentary leader into
angry debate upon the aims and ro-
sulta of the land league-organization
was a signal failure. Mr Parnell re
used to bo bated for the amusement
of the whigs and lories. He wisely
evaded the trap sprung to malm the
Irish party and draw them into
ho commission of a breach
of rules which would certainly
mvo boon followed by their aucpen-
Ion from the house. 'Instead of connor -
or insults and recriminations his re
ply to the malignant insults of Forstor
was ono of contemptuous Indifference.
Characterizing in a few words the ex- .
ecrotary's speech aa a shamful and
uncalled for exhibition of oplto ho Ira-
proved the occasion to draw the at-
ention of the ministry to the decrease
n crlmo sines Forstor'a withdrawal
and to the increase of waut and sqf-
ering under the operation of the oo-
rclon act. Ho concluded his
pocch by moving an amend
ment to the address to the
crown which Indicited clearly that
whatever the hopes of the ministry ,
ho Iriah question will ( bo no less pro
minent in the pallamentary debates at
hlo session than it was at the last.
Parnoll's policy , as outlined or
ihadowed by his attitude in the open-
ng. debate , la to Ignore the past , ex
cept BO far as it relates to Ireland's
welfare , and to'push and keep in pro-
mlnonso the demand for remedial
ogialatlon for the country. In thia he
shrewdly taking advantage of iho
political situation. Open disaffection
n the liberal ranks is only
prevented by Mr. Gladstone'a
powerful personal liflaenoo. The
[ teat question of electoral reform and
ihangoa in the land tenure In England
and Scotland is dividing more widely
than ever before the whig and radical
loments In the party. Warned by
ho Joss of several of their" moat 1m-
portant parliamentary seats , the lib
ra1 majority moat look outside of
heir own lines for a support which
will prevent disaster. On thla ao-
onnt the Irish party cannot bo Ig-
norod. It could not bo ignored oven
f its strength did not bid fair to bo
; roatly increased in the near future.
? ho addition of thirty-five votes to the
onsorvatlvo minority oven at thii stage
wfuld leave a fearfully narrow marIn -
In for the ministry on any ono of the
racial questions which are to be sub
mitted to parliament at the present
nsslon.
The election of Mr. O'Brien for
ilallow la the handwriting on the
wall. It prophecies that before an-
ither parliamentary session , seventy
rlsh nationalists or homornlera will
> o'seated at Westminister. Such a
ollowlng neither Mr. Gladstone nor
any other liberal loader can afford for
, moment to antagonize.
ParnoU'a attitude ohows very
ilearly that the policy of his following
s to bo an aggressive ono. The
claims of Ireland , whoso jns-
Ice have been admitted
> y the prlmo" minister , are
o bo pushed with all the energy and
zeal possible. Mr. Gladstone's ab *
lonco gave the desired opportunity and
its hot headed lieutenants 'fashioned
boomerang whose evil effecta against
ho ministerial programme .the
iromlor has hurried home from
3arnea to counteract. The Irish
members by restraining .their'passion
lave retained th.eir seats. Foratnr'a
phllllplo failed In Ita end and ParnolTi
policy will demand parliamentary at-
.ention from thla time on to the close
of the seEslon.
PARTIES llko men must bo judgoc
jy their actions rather than tholr pro-
'osslous and promises. The conducl
of the late legitlatnro affords the only
: anglblo proof * of the sincerity of the
republican and democratic leaden in
their pledges to right the wrongs from
which the people of Nebraska have
suffered at the hands of railway mono
pojy. . .
WHEN a party degenerates Into amore
moro engine of oppression and its ma
chiuory Is used to perpetuate tax shirk
ing , extortion and highway robbery 1
forfeits the support of all honest met :
and bocqmes a dangerous enemy o
the public welfare.
THIRTEEN TiiousANr republican
severed tholr connection with IK
party In Nebraska lact year bocans
they were disgusted rod dlahoartone
with theinlsralo of tr a railroad bosses
Twice thirteen thousand will drop the
arty In Nebraska , now that it has
irovcd rooroant to Its trust and failed
o redeem its sacred pledges to protect
10 people from extorllon by railroad
monopolies.
IT is suggested that the missing
'No. 1" is Tom Collins.
The Anti-Monopoly Movement.
CloreUnd Lcaler.
The anti-monopoly excitement la
causing no little uneasiness In some of
bo eastern cities , and papers that
lave in the past given the subject
ttentlon but to ridicule It are now
ovoting to it tholr serious thoughts.
The Naw York Commercial Bulletin ,
headed "Is it Ir-
n a long article an -
eprossiblo Conflict ? " refers to several
ecent events in thii connection which
t regards as of portentous Importance ,
n Now Jersey , says our ootemporary ,
ho restraints of legislation are In
voked npon railroad corporations with-
tut any particular regard for judicial
Imitations or constitutional rostrio-
iona. " The speeches recently made
n the Now Jersey legislature against
he railroads were Intensely bitter and
hey were received with applause
[ ulto unuiual in legislative bodies.
> no speaker predicted innumerable
Us "if the state did not put its font
npon this serpent's egg before the
ronomous brood was hatched.1' A
eadlng senator , in speaking of wealthy
corporations , said :
"Wo have nourished theao powers
n tholr childhood , but thoto corpora-
Ions have turned upon and are op-
iresslug the people who fostered theme
o manhood. They have attempted
0 enrich themselves , yea , have en
riched themselves , by obtaining ,
hrough questionable means , oxemp-
Ions which enrich them and impovor-
sh the people , and If those oxemp-
Ions remain In the statute books
hey will continue to bo a menace to
Iberty and destroy the fortunes of the
ndlvldual who mast pay all Iho taxes.
Phis state enjoys the reputation cf be
ng owned body and soul by corpora-
IODB and of being run by them. It is
a byword in the months cf all men.
FT forty years H has been BO , These
[ rasping companies have corrupted the
ountalna of government , have elect
ed , owned and venallzed our legisla-
uros , and have bought exemptions as
they were marketable commo
dities. "
It la said that the above took the
enato by storm arid was received with
'thunders of applause , which shook
he chamber. " "The railroad com
panies , " aajs the Commercial Bnlle-
in , "woro voted flown , and BO far as
his branch of tho'legislature had the
power , they found * themselves , In a
moment , aa it wefo , dislocated from
1 position In which they had been eo-
uroly entreaohed'for a period of thirty'
'ears. " Wft quote from the New
York Bulletin on this subject.
"While these events are'ln progress
n New Jersey , a similar coufltut of
opinion and Interest is in'progress in
ur own state , and with correspond-
ng results. The awlft processes
whereby the elevated railroad five cent
'are bill was pushed through the at-
lombly the other day , with the per
emptory denial of an appeal from the
corporation for farther time In which
o prepare tholr demurrer , followed
> y a.iiko denlalaubaequently from the
senate committee on railroads , to whom
hey next carried their remonstrance
wo say those are unmistakable man-
fostatlons of the popular temper
which it would bo folly to misinter
pret or belittle. The antecedent
creation of a board cf railway
lomtnlsalonora to watch over the In-
orost of the people , together with .a
refusal to permit a state governor to
name these commissioners , on the bare
uipiclon that ho was friendly to the
corporations , are incidents not less
significant and not leas illustrative of
the resentfal spirit which corporate
rcod and corporate aggression ure
ivoklng , and which threatens to be
come ore long an exceedingly difficult
dement to manage. Pennsylvania la
ollowiug , as if Instinctively , in the
same wake , as wo road in Hanhburp
elegrama only yesterday , that 'a bill
if the most ! Bwoeping character has
icon introduced in the senate ; it
( radically declares war on all railways
within the state , and , if enacted , it
will put those great corporations under
.he popular thumb.
The Century Magazine ) In its lust
number , has an essay on thia subject
"rom which we quote a few lines ;
"Wo are glad that our legislators
are making at least a ahow of Inqalr-
og into the method by which the
) ublio is robbed In the interest of
itockholdera , and they In turn are
robbed by corporate managers ; by
which wholesale robbery la cloaked by
egal forms of 'consolidation , ' 'reor
ganization , ' 'receiverships , ' and
'watered stocks , ' by which a man la
allowed to control rival or double rail
way systems , and with Impunity array
ouo against th6 other , as suits his
varying purpose , thereby despoiling
the public with the ease of a Rambler
who plays with marked cards. "
The President's Burden.
De'roU Free PreM
No ono dreads an 'adjournment ol
congress BO much aa President Arthur.
Owing to certain opinions entertained
of them by their constituents , there U
a steamboat full of congressmen who
will , after the 4th of March , have nc
vlalblo moans ol support. To provide
at the public expenao plaoea and ln <
cornea for thla hungry horde , that etc
conceive of no acheme of the universe
which omits office and salary for their
at the public expense , will add to the
? ray hairs and crowa-foot of the execu
tive countenance.
Tl m n S ottlnoTUlnjj * Even -
UuHalo Einrcss.
The Washington corro pendent o
The Cincinnati Enquirer now , however
General Hancocl
over , jisaerts that
waa right ; that the dlscuosion In congress
gross has ahown clearly that the taril
Is a local IBBOO and nothing clao. I
might , therefore , appear not only tha
General Hancock waa wiser -than any
body else on tariff questions , but tha
ho apoko moro wisely than ho himsel
knew. . .
How natural it la to bo suspicious
Truly this Is an BRO of suspicion
Nevertheless , Oapt. F. M , Howes , o
the steamer William Crane , Merchant
and Minors' Transportation Line be
tween Boston and Baltimore , who sul
foredsevoroly from rheumatism , causei
by the exposure Incident to his profee
alon , was cured by St. Jacobs Oil
Thla ia no suspicion.
POLITICAL. NOTES ,
A bill to establish the whipping host lifts
been defealed In the California legislature.
The Delaware legislature h considering
a bill to prevent tha publication of lottery
advettliemenU.
A measure before the Indiana legislature
propoicsto pay a bounty to farmers for
planting trees along the Ohio river ,
A bill before the legislature of Missouri
proposes to vest In an dicer appointed by
the governor the njlcctlonof all the judges
and clerks of election.
Colonel John Hay will probably be the
nnxt republican candidate for congress Iq
Cleveland. lie will probably bo a candi
date for the United States senate yet
awbllo ,
A bill to create a cUte tiz commission ,
to gather up the looao end * and put upon
property ol all classoj Its fair fiharo of the
huiden of Uxatlon , has passed tbo West
Virginia house of representatives.
Colonel A. M. Swope , of Kentucky , bn >
written a letter declining to bo a candi
date for the nomination for governor en
the republican ticket. But bo ndvlsea a
tralglit nbmlnatlun of the bent man in the
isrty , on an unequivocal republican plat-
ormMeasures
Measures for the relief of the ntate BU-
remo court are occupilng the attention
f thn MisHouri leKialutut' ) . Uno of the
ropoBed bill * divides the state into three
istrlrts , and for each district creates
n Intermediate nppel'ate court , with
urisdictlcn of all appeals takou in the
'iatrlct.
The Texas State Treasury hat n onrplus
f some 82,000,000 , nnd the people Ha
wake nights from fear lent the Treasurer
will run way with It , The legislature has
noTv bef < ra 1' a proposition to iocr ? s.e hli
bond to $500,000 , but oa he could reimburse
his bondsmenand still have $1 500,000left ,
f he choose t > follow the Illustrious exam-
) lo of Polk and Vincent , thla ia not con
ildered much ot a safcguarJ ,
The etory told by a Washington paper
may not ' > e true As it runs , Senator
Beck , of Kentucky , who came a poor boy
' , o thii country trom Scotland , worked on
.he same farm In Livingston county , that
Secretary Teller worked upon. When
' hey met In the senate Mr. Beck said :
Wei ) , Henry , when wo used to drive old
Brown' * oxen we never expected to meet
In the United States senate. " "No , Jim , "
mid Mr. Teller , "we didn't know there
waa such a place. " v
One of the letdlDgcreenbackers of In
dianapolis , Fsya the Journal af that city ,
has become disgusted with bia party and
proposes to abandon it. lie says that It
bus sold ouv. so many times that the organ-
zitlon is demoralized , Last fall he asserts
hat 2,000 greenback votes were fiffeied to
ha republicans nt $2 apiece. When the
opublioina declined the bargain It was
lagerly accepted by the democrats. Hav-
ng worked the greenback dodge for all it
is worth this leader no" proposes to go
nto the nnti-monopoly buslnem for n llv-
ng ,
A towpsman of Judge Thoman , the Ohio
member of the civil service commission ,
lays of him personally : "Tho judge Is
tkcd here. Thera la no dli-nuhin ' this.
He is liked by everybody. He h 3 a wav
that taken. He always had. Ho can hold
his own in any crowd. In the dra ing-
room he U as prim and graceful as Presi
dent Arthur. He la a hail fellow well met
whan out with the boys ; no one can tell a
itory better than he ; a ready converav
ionnllut , ho ia perfectly at homo in what-
ver company he may be thrown. He U
lut 32 years old , nnd ia eminently a self-
ncde man. Hla education waa limited ,
bat he has made excellent use of what he
kuows , " '
Fault-Finding at the Table.
Woe betide the woman married to a
man who systematically growln at the
table. Life brings her neither peace
ncr hiippineas. Throe times a day her
tyrant growls and snarls llko any other
wild animal over his food. I knew a
man nf thia kind once , and how 'I
pitied his wife and danglers. One of
he latter married in haste ono day
oincd her fortunes with those of a
comparatively poor man , not exactly
* n the same set that uho was. acone-
omed to live in- simply to have their
mealo in poaco. It is oald oho made
her faturo husband swear that ho
would never make a fnsa over his din
ner , and I nndereand that to'day they
are the happiest couple living , Hi-
conciliation took plaoo before
, hey woio married , but they
.eft bfforo the nuptial breakfast no
all remarked that and now , though
of course aho vitlts the house , nothing
could ever In'duco her to take a meal
here. She is a woman of spirit. Aa
or the man'a wife poor woman !
Maybe in younger days aho might have
.bought . of possible relief by means of
divorce , nnd they do Bay , but I do not
assert it , that somethiug of this kind
was entertained , but such a plea of
mental insanity , . < n\ only food was
placed before him , could not bo ad-
vanovd , for In every other relation in
life that is to nay , when at table he
wan arntabi'ity ' itnelf. If ho were only
youugor the habit might bo whipped
out of him ; a it is , h cnu only bo
boriiH witn patience [ Hindoo Gas-
: oma.
wondera ot modera.chem-
stry are apparent in th'o boautlful
Diamond Dyes. All klnda and colors
of Ink can bo mad.i from them.
Not Homo to .the Rent Collector.
Texiva fittings.
"la your fjtthor in ? " asked an Ana-
in landlord in search of back rent.
The Httlo boy , who was sitting on the
atopa devastating a largo slice of
bread and butter , replied between
bite :
"No , ho ain't In town. "
"Suppose you go and ask him if he
a not In. "
"Ho ain't up yet. "
THE OREAT GERMAN '
REMEDY
FOR PAIN.
RilUtu tail turtt
RHEUMATISM ,
Neuralgia ,
Sclilict , Lumbigo ,
BACKACHE ,
EI1D1CEZ , TOOTE1CII ,
SORE THROAT ,
QUINS T , SWELUXdS ,
Nl'llAl.VM ,
Scrtneis , Cuti , Bniui ,
FROSTBITES ,
And nil othtr todllttlti
tad pilai.
WIT CUTS 1 BOTTUL
BoU ti ill Druijliti ted
DMteri. UltMtlvai In 11
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ThiChirluA.VcgtltrCo.
( SMMWOT to A. YMtUr A Ct. )
U.lll.or * , Hi , C.8. A.
H. PHILLIPS.
THE LEADING NEW YORK
Call nnd look over my new alore and ae
my new goods.
1207 Fomaia Str * t. 12O7 ,
Under the manaeernent of Mr , Kallsh.
sa ao3ari3 ? >
EOWHB AND
Steam Pumps , Engine Trimmings ,
< tmso MACHINERY. BKUIIKQ , no.it BIIABS AHD IEOH irrnx . /IP
I'ACKINO. AT VYBOLESALR ANI MCTAIL. >
HALLAUAY WIHD-M1LL8 CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS
Cor. Farnanr 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 boot and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Ono pound Is equal
to three pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake In the fall and win
ter , Instead of running down , will Increauo in weight and bo in good market
able condition in the spring. Dairymen no well aa others who use it can tes
tify to its nicrita. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $25.00 per ton ; no
charge for sacks. Address
o4-eod-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob.
* Hellman & Co.
WHOLESALE
CLOTHIERS
,
1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I3t
OMAHA , . NEB.
McMAHON , ABERT & CO , ,
Wholesale
Druggists ,
315 DOUGLAS STREET - - OMAHA NEB.
Me N A MAR A & DUNCAN.
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
KENTUCKY AND
WhiskieS !
in lend or Free. Also diraot Importers of
WINES , BRANDIES AND ALES ,
Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine
Ol GkA-IElS.
Agents for Jos. Schlitz' Milwaukee Beer ,
Bottled and in Kegs. '
214 & 216 S ; 14TH STEEET , - - - OMAHA , REB ,
MORGAN & CHAPMAN ,
1213 Farnarn St. . Omaha.
ANHEUSER-BUSGH
Association ,
OELEBEATED
KEG& BOTTLED BEER ,
THIS EXCELLEST BEER SPEAKS
FOB ITSELF ,
Orders from any part of the State or the
Entire , West will'b'e promptly shipped :
,
AH Our Gonds arc Made to the Standard of our
Guarantee.-
GEORGE HENNING ,
Sole Agent for Omaha and the West.
Offloo Corner 13th ana Barney Streets , Omaha , Neb ,
MANUFACTORIES OF
Carpenter's Materials
ALSO
SASH , DOORS , BUNDS , STAIRS ,
Stair Railings , Balusters , Window
and Door Frames , Etc.
Fint-cUu facilities for the Manufacture of nil kindes of Mouldings , Fainting and
matching a Specialty. Orders from the country'will t promptly executed.
l communlcatl na to A. MOYEH , Ftoprl i