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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 8, 1883)
< * y THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA THURSDAY MARCH 8 The Omaha Bee Published every morning , except Un < y , The only Monday morning dily , , TERMS BY MAIL One Year..810,00 I Tlirco MoDthi.83.0 BU Months. . 6.00 | One Month. . . . LO : HE WEEKLY RKE , published over ; Wfllneaday. TEUMS POST PAID- Ono Year $2.00 I Three Months. tX Itx Month * . . . . LOO | One Month. . . . 21 AMIBIOAN NEWS COMPANT , Sole Agcnti Newsdealers in the United 8tate . | CORRESPONDENCE Communl , tfoni relating to News Mid Edltorin dinttera should be addressed to the Eurroi or TUB BEC. BUSINESS LETTERS All Buelnei TietteM and Itemlttnnccfl should bo nil irc ed to TUB UK * POBLISUINO COMPANI OMAHA. Draft * , Chocks and PoatolOcc Jrdcrs to be made payable to the order ol the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props , E. KOSEWATER Editor ' WIGGINS ntorm fs conveniently neat the equinoxes. DAVID DAVIS la to be married io- morrow , David la a bold man tc jump oat of the oonatorial frying pic into the matrimonial firo. MAYOR BOYD has approved thoordi < nanco of thouclty council for the submission - mission of a band proposition at the coming election. The prospect ol steady public improvements la also the prospect of steady growth for Omaha , TOM KENNAIID'H claim pwsod both houses of the legislature , bat WBS lost Bomowhoro on the way from the house to the executive chamber. Thla ploco of carelessness gates the tax payers several thousand dollars , but poor Tom is mad , MAUOKK and lUddloborger will bo able to tlo the next senate whenever they please. It is nothing to the credit of the country that the repre sentatives of repudiation hold the balance of power in the most Im portant branch of congress. DURING the Meant exhibitions ol S'ado and M&co in Washington the con. gicaalonnl galleries were comparative ly descried. Mace is the first genuine "knocker out" who has put in an ap pearance at the capital oiaca Jim Blulco retired to private life. MRS. BURNETTS novel , "Through Ono Administration , " will bo conclud ed. In the April Century , the Irtst num bar of the present volume. The Cent imj for May , beginning volurm XXIV. , will contain the opening chapters of a novelette by Joel Ohand ler Harris ( "Undo Romus" ) , J" Al Toacuo Poteot'0 , " to bo completedJc the Juno lame. WASHINGTON dispatches itato thai the Grand Island and Brownvlllc nominations were recalled through the inflaonoeof the senators from No. braaka who had not boon sufliolentlj consalted. Thii is an It should bo , The constitution placoa the rosponsl blllty for improper nominations upon the senators and they cm not shift II upon the shoulders of congressmen 1 even If they are so disposed. , CABLEGRAMS from London roporl that the British ministry expects om government to refnio to sarrondci Sheridan. In saoh a refusal thcj would only ba following out a sooro o ! precedents set by England herself ai the asylum for political refugees. Un < , loss Sheridan can bo clearly shown tc have been connected with the Phoenix park murders the demand for bin extradition - tradition must-bo refused. THE increase of poualons to soldiora who lost an arm or a leg datoa from the pusage of the bill. Pensioners under the law should send their certi ficates at once to the commissioner ol pensions when a now certificate drawing - . ing the increased pension will at once bo granted. The commissioner wlshot attention to bo drawn to the fact that the services of a pension agent are not required in this matter. Baslnesi may be done directly with the pension bureau. SPEAKKU KKIFXB says ha don'l "give a d n for tha newspapers. ' Mr. Kelfer came within an ace ol joining 177 members of the Forty , seventh congress who at the lost eleo , tlonwere Ntlrcd to private life be cause they "didn't give a d n for thi newspapers. " Newipapers are success fal or unsuccessful Insofar as they respond spend to public sentiment , and con tempt for the opin&n of the pres means In nine cisSi out of ten a con tempt for the views of the public which In political matters carries trill it its own punishment. ONE of OmabVa greatest needs i cheap homos for her worklugmen Rents are exorbitant and the deman < for small homes always greater thai the supply. Fifteen or twenty dollar a month it too much rent for a four o : , j five room home , but it is diflloult t < secure buildings even at that prici within a reasonable distance from tin center'of town. If our 'worklngmot , . -would.combine , "as la , p her cities , tc "organize' buii'dlng associations on th ( co operative plan the question of cheaj ; jbomes could be satisfactorily settled , OVEnPOPUJjATXON IN QREA' BRITAIN i A sotios of letters which are noi running In one of the Now Yor dallies , calls attention to the low wage and prevalent poverty among th laborers and mechanics In th great industrial towns of Grca Britain. The argument is advancei that the dlstroiB la duo to the absonc of a protective tariff which in ou wn country Is supponod to Incroas the wages and bettor the condltloi of the American mechanic. With out entering upon a ditcuuioi of the question how far a high tori ) boncfila the workingraeu , the bos authorities are practically agreed tha the main causa of the Industrial die Ircss in Great Britain ia'tho overpop alatlon of the conntry. Within ai roa ncarcoly tirlco aa largo on th itato of New York are crowded 30 , 300,009 oi people , the greater portloi A whom are compelled to earn thol living by manual labor , The labor market is overcrowded the trades are overstocked , competl Lion for work is ovorstimalatcd am vrogaa have fallen to'n point below th living rate. A recent writer declare that "tho family has grown too largi lor the house ; in other words tin population has become too great fo the country. Poverty and distress 1 tho' natural conscquonoo. The oami infforiDg la found among the Brltlsl Farm laborers aa among the employe In the factories and minor There are too many applicant for work and the prtco of labor ha iroppod with tho- competition fo miployment. Mills and factories are running a : ull blast , tra.de is good , but the con itant pressure' upon employers fo -vork - crowds down the wages of thooi irho are fortunate enough to obtay jmploymont and increases the profit if the capitalist at the expense of thi jarnlngs of the poor , Thcro Booms to be no remedy fo ; inch n ntato of affairs but irholcsali emigration. The question IB , t < what conntry the emigration shall hi directed. Industrial prosperity la neat at nach a height in the United State , ia to insure steady work at gooc wages to an influx of foreign median lei , Several of oar great Industrie ! are greatly doprensod , owing to over production. The Iron and stool man ufaoturors are ohutllng down Ihcl : tnllla ana furnaces , and thousands o woiklagmon are out of employment mont , many of whom must BOO ! other means of making their living Wagoq In. Arnica RIO dpwr , to i point , which compared with Iho tola tlvo cost of living , loaves our workmei ( oarcely a larger margin of saving thai the English mechanic. .Emigration t America under existing conditions i therefore a risky venture to the Eag llsh worklngman , while It complicate the labor problem In our conntry The only Inducement offered by Amer lea to the European emigrant Is as i tiller of the sail and breeder o Battle. There ii still room for mil lions of thrifty farmers ia tin states and territories west of thi Mleolssippi. Hero Is the great outlo for ovorpopulatcd England , and thi tldaj wave of sturdy and thrifty tellers ors may roll on for many years bofori It will overflow the vast fertile re glen beyond the Mississippi. Mn. WILLIAM J. ARMSTRONG , former inspector of United States con sulatcs In Europe , is advertised in an other column to bo about to deliver ir Omaha a serious of four lectures oi European celobrleties , beginning It Boyd's opera house on the evening o : March 15 , with a lecture on Gam botta. Mr. Armstrong comes witl the very highest recommendations ui in orator aud essayist from these wh ( wo beat able to judge of such matters men like Henry Ward Boochor , llov Dr. Storra , Da Witt Taltnago Dr. Bellows and Abratn Howlt bearing unqualified testimony o Ills Bcholarship and eloquence 1'ho four lectures which the leoturoi has chosen for his course in Omahi have boon recently boon delivered it Lincoln , where they appear to havi been received with enthusiastic kfavo by the leading citizens of the capital [ t Is to bo expected that they will bi listened to by largo audiences and ni less dlstlngulihed attention here. THK contest for thenext spsakonhi ] will be hotly waged during the con. gresilonal vacation. Randsll Is sail to have been setting In a good deal o quiet work , but the friends of Carlisle of Kentucky , claim 125 votes for thol candidate , Including the solid vote o eleven southern states. As 100 vote will bo more than a .majority of th caucus , this looks as If Mr. Oarllsl has sure thing on the seat oaauplei by the late lamented stool pigeon o Iho railroads , lion. J. Warren Kolfor THE way out of the woods on th railroad question seems to have booi retched at last , and there Booms llttl doubt that the proient legislature wll give the people of Kansas what ba been so earnestly demanded , Wo are glad that matters havi finally shaped themselves In such a wa as to show clearly that the Ropubllca ! majority in the legislature istbo frlon ! of the people , and has plaoo'd itself. < J record fairly and squarely on thi * it portant question. tfemrorM 7'imt , , This may ba the recordin KHUK/U but how la It In Nebraska ? What 111 the republican party In the lost lovL lature do to provo Itself the ftionfl c the people and to place itself on rocor fairly and tqirely on the anti-mom poly question ? THE CONDITION OF TRADE , The close of conijregs and the dli posal of the tariff question ia hallo in all quarters as fivorablo to aqnioU and moro stable fooling in gonon tradn. For four months past the aglti tlon of the tariff has ma Jo iteolf felt I every industry. Manufacturers pern ing n final settlement of the limit t protection as applied to their partlct lar buslnoEB have restricted produatio to the demands of the trade , in som balances below them. This polio of caution has , of conno , had 11 effect on business. The unsettle feeling among manufacturers has boo communicated to the general buolno : public with the result of roatriotin purchases and the withdrawal of 03 tended lines of credits. Daring the past week dlspatoht from the great trade centres to Lrai street's toll of increasing confident and an Improved footing in trade , nol withstanding the comparatively larg Increase in the number c failures reported. The downward tot donoy in the grain market receive a chock towards the last of tha week owing to cable roporta of the very ur. favorable aspect of crop prospects i England and Europe , and the marko closed with an advance of nearly om cent a buahol on wheat and from on to two cents on corn. The export c breadstuff ! were largo while import showed a largo increase in volume Wholesalers report that orders for th spring trade are coming in brisk ] ; and Indicate a heavy business. Th demand la far the legitimate re qulromontsof boaincss and over bnyln Is at a discount. ThU is largely du to the close Inspection of credits whic has been practiced since the oponlu of the year and n consequent Bubal donco of speculation. This as prov lously noted is more the result of ovoi production than any fears of nnfavoi able tariff legislation. It la general ! conceded that the only branch v hiol will suffer front the now schedules 1 the rail mills. Other lines of ire ; manufactures are otlll nuflblontly atlm ulatod under the now law. At the nprlng opoua the movemon of buoadstufls from interior point shows the usual increase , and raonc ; must become easier as tha farmers re ccivo payment for the heavy crop uhloh have been held for the ex ncctod rise. It is upon this oxpeola lion that conntry merchants are baaini their hopu of a large trade and groato rapidity of exchanges within the nox two weeks , the effects of which wll be felt especially throughout the entire tire west. _ AFTER a careful Investigation th Uoomerany is forced togconcludo tba the "Number Ono" so badly wanted li Ireland Is none other than E. Rosewater water of THK OiUiiA BEB. The au thorltles are qntto welcome to mak such use of this Information as the ; BOO fit. Laramie Boomerang. The whlrlglg of time brings its re vonges. About twelve month agi while the alleged "Number One" > lounging about the editorial sanotuc of the Ohicago News , a messengo Handed to Managing Editor Stone th following connundrnm : Do you knoi anything about the financial standlni of Bill Nye , of Laramie ? Ho request us to send him a coon skin cap. Oai we trust him ? Mr. Stone , who hai never heard of Boomerang Nye shrugged his shoulders and was abou to return a laconic N. G. , when thi alleged "Number Ono'\interpoaed thi assurance thaVT3111Nyowasgoodenougl [ 'or a coon akin cap if It did not coal moro than a dollar. In duo tlmo thi uithotlo Laramie lampooner donnec the jaunty raccoon , but ho has neve : forgiven the man who sent it 0. 0. D OMAHA'S credit is now so high tha : she can borrow money at five per cent , This is the moat favorable time foi voting bonds , because It Is the meal favorable time for placing them. bovornment Railroad Directors , Chlcigo Tillmno. The government directors of thi Union Paoifio railway company , foui la number , have Bent in their report for 1882. to the secretary of the In terior , apologizing for their latonecs it doing so and assigning as their excun the fact that they experienced not i little difficulty In obtaining the desired sired Information. Shortly after hli appointment , Mr. Bromley , one of thi government directors , called at thi otlioe of the company to learn spoolfi cally what his duties were , and wai somewhat astonished to be informec by the chief executive cflioer tha there wore no functions to speak o : for him to discharge ; that the road be longed to the stockholders ; and tha since the passage of the Thurman bll providing for the payments to bi made by the company/to the government mont , the latter had ao moro concert in its management. About al there was for/ the govcrnmen directors to do'was to take * a tri | over the road to inspect Its condition , and facilities weald bo placed at thin disposal for doing so whenever do sired. Theaot that the government dlroo tors were intended by the laws t < atbond all the meetings of the dlreo { c/ry and take an active put In thi Vmduot of the ntTilrs of the company appeared at thii tlmo to be ontiroh itjuored. The onormoas gifts of lane and the subsidy bonds of the go Torn mcnt counted for nothing The itock holders' representatives had ovi dontly , educated themselves up to thi oellet that they conld ride over th < head of the government in this par ticalar as well ai In the land doptrt ment , as lately Bhown by Mr. Julian But the government directors con eluded that they had a right to asl questions and receive the Informatloi they wnutcd , and BO demands wor raado to that effect , bat it was enl ; after ranch delay that they rocoivoi the duslrcd enlightenment. lu th meantime they were Informed tha statements containing the Intelligent asked had been prepared by tbo om ployoa of the company for the ese o Its attorneys , bat that the latter ob jeotod to copies being famished nntl they had been consulted. This was rather a stunning piece o news to give to men who had as par foot a right to know what was going 01 as anybody connected with the ruid and whoever gave it apparent ) ; thought bettor cf it afterwards , and i gratlfylnqly fall acjount waa produced But , after all , it made of the Government mont Directors only a set of reportera whoso function It was to catry the in formation to the Secretary of thi Interior. They had apparently hai no moro voice in the conduct of thi affairs of the company than the mai In the moon. It la but just to nay however , that thcro Is some indlcatloi that this was partly their own fault , a two of thorn fulled to attend a mooliui that had baen regularly called , and thi other two found out nothing. The ; protest in their report against thi spirit of oxcloslon with f which the ] were treated , and they also critlclsi tha unnecessary contraction cf ovei $10,000,003 of floating indebtedness , i proceeding which it was tholr propoi place to object to in the meeting * o ; the Directory , but which they knew nothing about nntll the fact that it ha ; boon done waa shown in the report. It la evident that if the govornmen is treated with no more respect thai thla there will have to bo a radica changa In the situation bafore it cai take anything like n part in the general oral condact of the railway system o the country. The government dlroo torshlp of the Pacific road has neve boon moro than a farce , and thongl reputable men appointed to sorv have repeatedly testified to the faa no one has seemed to eire very mud about it. The government rights hav been allowed to lapse by default , am though the railroad men have showi a dtctdcdly arrogant disposition i must be said that it is in largo par duo to the free field given them ti develop It In. Bat tlio tlmo ia com ing when there will ba moro popnlai attention given to these mutters thai there ban been. PunlllanlmouB Government Directors Chicago Tribune. Are the government directors of thi Union Pacific qnito sure whether the ; ' are the servants of that corporation o' the representatives of the public ? Thi report they have juot inado IB ono o the most extraordinarily cprvilo pro duotions that have over emanated f ron that source , prolific as it haa been o ! slavish surrender of the interests o the people to the tyrannous avarca o this swindling corporation. The per onnlal capture by this companyol every Installment of directors np pointed to investigate its raaung-imen is discouraging lu the extreme. T < touch pitch Is not more defiling thai contact with the Union Pacific , ti judge from the pitifal collapse of al public spirit on cue part of every government < ernmont director who comes near it If a stern and exciting fulfillment o their duties can bo demanded fron any reprentatlves of the people , It I from the Government directors of thi Union Pacific. If any corporatioi under the jurisdiction of the Unltei States government deserves to bi ness and the coldest determlnatioi that nothing shall ba left nnknown and that no duty shall bo evaded , It 1 the Union Paoifio. Its history fron Its Inception Is one of the ingratitnd for the lavish generosity of the government ornment , betrayal of every trust , re pndlatlon of every obligation , and sys tomatlo oorrnptlon of every depart ment of the government that could tx corrupted , from congressmen downer or up , wo don't know which to gov ernment directors. The government gave this corpora tlon 927,230,512 in bonds and 12,083 , 227 acres of land. It gave up Its firs lien on the property for the paymen of this debt , and lot the company issui Its own mortgages aa a first lion. Thi Investigation made by congrcis lnt < the Credit Mobilier showed that thi read coat the contractors ( the direct ors and tholr friends ) $50,720,058.94 but was charged up to the corporator at $03,540,287 28 , showing a corrnp profit cf $42,825,328.34 In cash stocks and bonds , to the great preja dlco of the government that wn < advancing money and land t < belld the road. For these larjesaei the company made what return' ' [ t systomatlally evaded the fulfillment of its obligation to appropriate a mca- 5re amount of its earnings to the payment mont of its indebtedness to'tho Govern mcnt. It is now disputing iha olalmi of Government undur the Thuruur not , which act set aside 25 per cent o its not earnings to meet them. It payi dividends to ino stockholders but dooi not payitsfntcrtstto the Government and counoiting ron da to tbo amount o 36,375 000 , while it loaves uupud thi $15,320,392 of interest dueitho Gav i-rnmout , beaidei the principal o 127,230.512. . Thii is part of the record of this cor poration. It would take a volume ti recount the methods by which It hsi succeeded in evading tbo payment o ; ta taxes on its landgrants : how It hai Induced the Supreme Court to revern [ is decisions , so that there Is one lai For the poor settler In search of i iiomeitead and another for the rlcl ind powerful Union Pacific ; how I tits corrupted , intimidated , or wheedled led every repress n tat ivo of the peopl that has ever had an ciOciil duty ti exorcise with regard to it , Does i not aound a trifle queer , knowing al thin , to read to the report of the Gov eminent Directors : Wo were ogreeably surprised ti find from all we could learn , that thi management had been prudent nni wise , its affairs honestly and ably ad ministered , Its condition and pros poets good , with nothing to bo galuec Irom concealment or evasion am nothing to be feared from publicity. The government directors wen made by the act of congress that ere < atod the office the especial protocton of the interests of the government One ot them was to bo a member o every standing and special'commltto of the rof.d. It i their duty to soi that the rights of the sov ertiign people are fully guardei In tbo condact of this corporation which owes us $13,000,000 , It is thei duty to BOO that the provisions cf thi Thurman act are religiously observed The ( ilicaoy of that ntntuc depends on tircly uoon the existence of not earn lugs. No net earnings , no payment ! to the United Statoa. Not earning are very elastic when the bocks un skillfully manipulated by Interests parties. The road ] claim * the Unltec States now owes it $0,443,827 02 fo ; the tranpportatlou of troopt , malla am supplies. The rates charged the gov rumont and the vouchers thot an ; service haa been performed needed ti bo most carefully scrutinized. Instead of appearing with the con < nclous authority of men who hold bj delegation the supreme power of thi federal government , and Mimmouinj the managers cf the corporations tc wait on them with all needed ID for matlon , those directors appear to have proceeded with baited breath , and "By your leave , kind sir , " o call ai the office of the company In New Yorl ; and accept humbly such anubs at these swindling debtors of the public chose to administer to the pab < He's representatives. After tak ing "pleasure trips over the road" they composed a oniogj of the company nnd its management that roads like a dollar a-lino adver- tiiomout , There IB no evidence thai those craven mlsreproecntativcs cf the people over asserted their magnificent authority , derived from the power ol the United Slates government itself , nor that they made any intellfgenl effort to ascertain how the road wa : figuring np ita accounts with the gov ornmont. The names of these government dl rectors are G. G. Haven , Isaac Brom ley , W. Parish and Colgate Hoyt They are not fit to bo citizens of n fro ( government. Brown and HcShano. Lincoln Democrat. A democrat that is not a rallronc man finds no friend in Dr. Millor'i Omaha Herald. When. Gon. Hell man made n fight on the railroads twc years The Herald made a fight on him but when the railroads employed bin M their attorney The Herald npolo glzad. Now Hon. Charlie Brown am Hon. John A. McShano huvo got t < take hi vile abuio bocaieo they dii not dance to hia racket. The Horoli claims the right to turn the demo oratlo party over to the U , P. rail road at any time. Kouetora Charlie Brown and Johi A. McShane , of Doughs coanty , cat congratulate themselves upon the fnc that tho" Fort Kearney eutlor and Arkansas cotton emnggler , Dr. Goorgi D. Miller , editor of tlio Union Pacifii Omaha Herald , hua decided that theii Bonatoml career wan a failure. Whet Dr. Miller ia dissatisfied it la gooc evidence that the people have beet well represented and that the railroad ) are displeased. The mayor of Washington , N. J. , Hon. Daniel Beatty , says in roferonci to St. Jacoba Oil : From my knowl edge of its efficacious working I must ray that St. Jacobs Oil is unequalled r n remedial substance. Postofflco Changeb in Nebraska and Iowa during the week ending March 3 , 1883. Fur nlflhod by Wm. Van Yleck , of thi post office department , for the BEE : NEBRASKA Postmasters Appointed Graft , Har Ian county , Mary L. Balls ; Keya Paha Holt cennty , Elza A. Reeves ; Nortl Bend , Dodge county , Ohauncey W , Hyatt ; Pleasant Hill , Salem county , Miltoti Havens ; Reynolds , Jofferaot county , Joseph Sanders ; Steele City Jeffdraon county , Ezra A. Gilbert. Discontinued Mayweed , Harlat county. IOWA. Established Sully , Jasper county Lewis F. Matthews. D'soontinnod German , HancocI countj ; Keg Creek , Pottawattamli county. Postmasters Appointed Andrew Jackson county , Wm. K. Barker ! Draper , Jasper county , Samuel Sben pard ; .Eldrldge , Scott county , E. V Van-Ept ; Elliott , Montgomery county , A. L. Douglass ; Linton , Des Molnei county , .T..8. MoElhlnny , Newtown Marion county , F. W. Hnnerdosse Oakland , Lucas county. Jaa. Ml Mlk sell ; Olivet , Mabaslct concty , Wm. H Samnor ; Sherman , Poweshoek county John 0. Gorsucb ; S rolland Centre MuRcatlno county , John B. Jester. COBS CURES Rheumatism , Neuralgia , Sciatica , Lumbago , Backache , Headache , Toothache , r Throat. BwdllWi Spnlfi. BrmltM , Harm , Bc ld , Prat lilt * * , iKB 1U , OTHIB BODILY tUM 1KD 1CHES. S M r Dnnrf.U u > 4 Duln. tf rywb r . rifij C U bouU. Dlr U o la 11 L m UM. ARLEH A. TOQELEU CO. PROPOSALS FOR SIDEWALKS SMled propoiali will bo received by tha un derilgned until 12o'o'oct noon ot March 24th 1883 it the office of the Boird ol Public Worki for i he contraction of til pltnk IJ walk th m y b' ordnied by the Ctty ouncllfor the quat ler en. In ? Ju > Uk , A. D , 1833. Such sidewalk tobeconitiuued In accirilince with oltni n < .pec'flcntlonitn file IntheofUce of tld bo rd Said proposals tn be made upon pr ct d blank furn shed by laid board and to be tcrompanle < by the el/natures o ( propcs'd suretlei who. It ihoawardlrgo ! > uh contract will n er Into : b-nd with the city of One aha In the ram o tt.OCO for the Mlhful rxncutlon of itld cm- tract. Th i Bianl of I'oblhVarki refcrvfii the tlzhl t } reject anauJ all 'Mr. JAMES CPKIQHTOV. inT-eod 2w Chm'a lloard ol 1'ubilc VNotke , DAVIS & S8YDER. Go5 Farnam St. Omaha Nebraika 0 tellly mlectcJ land In UuUrn Nebraska to ealo. Orett lUiy in In Improved fatnu , Omabi Ittprom-rt v UUEFENE & HKfiUEL HOU ARCHITECTS , REMOVED. TO OMAHA NATIC.VAI , BAH1 I3UILDINQ. , , Atchltfc\i of the Oxaha National Dank. Ke brwk N lloial BanV , faxton & Gallagher' block , Acj.a uy of thi Sacred Heait , Mtlltr ota el. Uc. \ POWER AND HAND Steam Pumps , Engine Trimrnsngs , \ JIKIHO MAonwBsr , niti/Tnia , ur.w ( BRMH AKJJ IRON I'rrmaa . I-IP I'AOKLtlO , AT V/HOLEJALS Ml ) n-JTAJL. HALLADAY WIND-MILL GHURGH A8D SCHOOL Cor. Parnam and 10th Streets Omaha , Neb. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR It la the boat and cheapest food for Block of nny kind. Ono pound late to throe pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the fall and win ter , Instead of running down , will Increase in weight and bo in good market able condition In the spring. Dairymen as well aa others who use it can tes tify to its merits. Try it nnd judge for yourselves. Price § 25.00 per ton ; no A charge for sacko. Address o4.ood.mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob. WHOLESALE 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. 13th OMAHA , NEB. McMAHON , ABBET & CO , , 315 DOUGLAS STREET OMAHA KEB. McNAMARA & DUNOA WHOLESALE DEALERS IN KENTUCKY AND PENNSYLVANIA WhiskieS ! in Bond or Free , Also direct Importers of WINES , BRANDIES AND ALES , , Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine Agents for Jos. Schlitz' Milwaukee Beer , . . Bottled and in Kegs. 214 & 218 S , 14TH STEEET , OMAHA , HEB. ANHEUSER-BUSCH Brewing Association , CELEBRATED KEG & BOTTLED BEER , THIS EXCELLENT BEER SPEAKS- i FOR ITSELF , Orders from any part of the State or tha Entire West will be promptly shipped : All Our Goods afc Made io tlic Standard of our- Guarantee. - GEORGE HENNING , Sole Agent for Omaha and the West Office Corner 13th and Harnoy Streets , Omaha , Neh , * * M * fii > * BB"MBaB * ' > iM * " B'iBai 'B B > Bg B * ' * * ' * B"i i BiMM * * * a > Bgggg B > Bgga > Bg > " * i < > , MORGAN & CHAPMAN , WHOLESALE GROCER 2I3 Farnam St. . Omaha. N < .h MANUI-AOTURBR3 OF Carpenter's Materials ALSO SASH , DOORS , BLINDS , STAIRS , Stair Railings/ Balusters , . and Door Frames , Etc. First-claw facilities for the Manufacture of all kindea of Moulding ! , Painting mi < matching a Specialty. Order * from the country will b promptly executed. addreuiOlcommunlcaU as to A. MOYER , Fro prii