Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 27, 1883, Page 4, Image 4
TflBDAILi BEE-OMAHA TUESDAY ] \IARCH \ 2 ; The Omaha Bee. PnblUhed everr morning , except Ban. f. Tbo enly Monday morning dally. TERMS BY MAIL Ono Year..810.00 I Three Months.83.00 Sis Months. . 6.00 | Ono Month. . . . 1,00 VHB WEEKLY BEE , pnblUhod every Welncaday. TERMS POST PAID- One Year $2.00 I Three Months. 50 gii Month 1.00 I Ono Month. . . . 20 AUKBIOAN NKWB COMPANY , Bolo Agents Newsdealers in the United States , CORRESPONDENCE Oommnnl- ( fttfonn relating to News fcnd Editorial matters should bo addressed to the KDITOB OT THE BEE. BUSINESS LETTERS All Busines Letters and Remlttnneen nhonld bo od itemed to THE BIB POBLWIIINO COMPART JUA11A. DraftB , Chocks and FoatofBeo Jrders to be made payable to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props , E. BOSEWATER Editor. AN atneeaor In Omaha U an official who does not know that the world moves. SEOKETABY FOLOKK Is said to be greatly Injuring him by'ovorwork. In the eyes of the department clerks thrco hours a day la hard labor and fonr hours Is overwork. THE shrewdness of Thomas Scott , the Pennsylvania railroad king , does not scorn to have boon transmlttod to bis son. Young Tom Soatt and fonr qneonn ran against Jack Taokcr and a straight flash in Philadelphia the other night. Mr. Scott's bank account Is jnst $54.000 smaller than it was bo- f ere the game began. Two buokotB full of sloppy flunkey- lam were poured over one or two old settlers by Dr. Miller in his sickening decoction of ogotlsm In Sunday's- Herald. The recipients of such lion wash arc not to bo envied by those who came after them , It is almost enough in the language of Beechor to make every old settler with ho wore dead. Ouu navy costs the government $11,800 a day , the largest proportion of which sum goes to sadeoa dogs on pleasant shore duty. With 2,000 offi cers to 8OCO , men It looka aa if a bill reducing the staff and line of the navy was very much in order. Five now vessels will give bunks for some of the anpeifluoua c flu jot s , but if the entire list were out down a half the country would still bo aafo. "HOME GOSSIP" reverts with deep emotion to his bosDin friend , General Nathaniel Lyon. The most singular reminiscence la , however , omitted , When that dear frlord , General Lyon , was pouring oat his life blood for his country on the bloody field of Wilson Greek , his dlcloyal bosom frlond , the Doctor , was down In Missouri onraing the onion soldiers and urging the robots to receive them with open arms to hospitable graves. TUB poetponoment of the party pri maries and conventions until late in the week is causing general dtatatli- faction. Some voters can bo more oatity led than driven , and others can not bo oven led to endorse the nets of self constituted party loaders , which -ihoy do not bollevo for the best inter' iaVn cf the community. There will bo moro Independent voting in Omaha at the coming election than ever before , caucus , primary and convention to the contrary notwithstanding. O , YES ; Ganeral Harnoy was thoro. The old veteran will doubtless remem ber that the country owes a debt of gratitude to the ex-post sutler of Kearney for diverting the channels of trade in the matter of corn from the south of the Platte to the north. That was done out of pnro patriotism , and the old settlers who became well-to-do out of government corn contracts wil have to build a cob monument aomi day to keep green the memory of tholi benefactor. Wu. PUT EEU.OUO at lost comes t the front in the star route cases. Prlo baa made an affidavit that he pal Kellogg $25,000 to Induce him to re commend expedition of service In th aoathwest for the benefit of th ring. This hits the Louisiana states man hard , and will prove a bonanza for Bliss and the other assistant coun sel. If much moro new evidence Is adduced In the utar 'route trial , the coat of the prosecution promises to discount the pension list in making a hole in the treasury. TiiEiin' is another change in the Chemnitz consulate. This time Mr. Flinn retires because Chemnitz does not agree with him. His successor , -who was lately a member of the Illinois legislature , Is willing to chanct the malaria. Wo knor an other party who would have been willing to have chanced it. Hla mme la Grlggs , of the state of Beatrice - withstood the hard , rice , who bravely hip of the American consulate and -.w anxious to die for hia country In that position If necessary. Grigga -.might have staid , but President Arthur thought that Nebrwluk didn't have a perpetual title to the Chemnitz consulate , . lii lU A NON-PAIITISAN SCHOOL BO AKD. Only a week remains now until election. As yet nobody has oven boon mentioned as a proper person to represent this city in the board of education. The only eflort so far has boon among a certain class of political roustoqouts who make a polltloal.pro- feadon , and aspire to become mem bers of the board for purely personal ends. Every friend of our free schools must admit that the political conven tions ore not the proper places for selecting candidates for the boards of education. As things are and have boon , the party conventions , composed mainly of ward bummer ? , will seek to force upon us designing ochomors and Incompetent men just because they hippon to bo active democrats or active republicans , As usual the nom { nations will not bo made by the whole convention but by each ward delegation tion choosing one man , the convon < tloti aa a moro matter of form ratify ing the choice. This will result in presenting inferior men , and naturally where two or three good men resldo in a particular locality they will all bo cut out because some particular hack from the aamo ward gets the prefer ence. Such a deplorable blunder should not bo countenanced , The schools of Omaha have nothing whatever to do with party politics , and the choice of members should bo made from a strict ly non-partisan and non-sootarlan standpoint. The names of candidates for the aohool board are printed on a separate ticket deposited in a separate ballot box. It is therefore eaay to avoid the mixing of politics with the Echool board. ' There is no doubt , too , that the great mass of our voters would prufor to sup port a non-partisan ticket. What wo need is concerted action by those who desire to keep our achools out of poli tics. If thlo largo class of our citizona would call a public mooting and put a good ticket for aohool board in the field THE BEE will give it a cordial and vigorous support. Such a mooting dan bo hold within three daya , Wo need not wait until the politicians have made up their slate. If the party conventions BCD fit to indorse some of the candidates named by the mass mooting , well and good. If not , the non-partisan school ticket will bo elected without their support. BOGUS WORIUNGMEN. The loafers and bummers who claim to represent the worklngmon of Omaha , have been hanging around the street corners and tatoonp for the past week , doing a land office business in promises of votes to bo delivered , Notable among them is Ed , Walsh , who last fall transferred himself and a few laboring men to the monopoly rlngstors by getting up a bogus work- Ingraon'a ticket , Walsh has been long ago repudiated by all respectable Worklngmon , and can deliver nothing more than hla own vote. There are other ao called "leading worklngmon'a not a whit bolter than Walsh who do1 Impose upon a few laboring men by their loud talk , while In fact they drive a lively business in their votes. Last fall those sharks wont from ono candidate to another on all the tick eta demanding blood money and In some cases they were successful. Such men bring disgrace upon all working- en who are , through them , classed as otlng cattle , In the coming election these sham orklngmon ought to bo shunned and ado harmless. If the laboring men if Omaha propose to take an active iart in the coming election they hould do so in an honorable way and n dead earnest. There should bo no ell outs. If workingmen have an dentloal interest and certainly they ro aa much Interested In city affairs as they are Jn any state election they honld pursue a consistent manly lourse. Their votes are a sacred rust , and they should exorcise , bo privilege of citizenship In flnonood only by a desire or good govornment. The men whose votoa can bo had for money are unworthy of citizenship and those who can bo Influenced by boor or whisky are not much bettor than brutes. The great mass of Omiha worklngmon are sober , Industrious and thrifty , Many of them own their little homos on which they pay taxes , and all of them ought to take pride In being able to name the men who are to conduct nur city affairs. If they take the proper course they will name them , But they must take no stock In the sham laborers who do moat of their work with their months on the street corners. NEW YOUK la to have a heresy trial , which is likely to create as much Inter est as the famous trial of Dr. Swing In Chicago several years ago. The offen der Is Dr. Ilobor Newton , of All Souls church , and the basis of arraignment his recently delivered course of ser mons on "The Right and Wrong Uses of the Bible. " No member of his own denomination sooma to question the tlncoro , earnest , conscientious piety oi Dr. Newton , No scholar question ! hit learning. The discourses , which .fiord the basis for hla expulsion from the church , contain a great deal ol evangelical truth mixed with state menta of a critical and historical character actor which differ from the ordlnarj orthodox teachings. Unfortunately for Dr , Newton , ho happens to follow the latest researches of modern criti cism which do not ogroo with the vlowa of commentators of a hundred years ago , The expulsion or retention of Dr. Newton in the Episcopal church will bo moro a question of ecclesiastical pollry than of biblical scholarship. In England the liberality of Archbishop Talt permitted a very wide latitude in the opinions of the clergy and a largo body of men exist In the ostabliihcd church who hold osoontlally the same views as Dr. Newton. Daan Stanley was a notable example. The question is whether the Eplccopil ohnroh in America ia prepared to allow the same broad church la in which recognizes and oven honora independence ) in religious thought within certain vaguely defined limits. If not heresy hunting is likely to bo rather a prolonged occupation as the number of clergymen who are insisting upon keeping their concjro g&tion abreast of the latest research and criticism , seems to bo alarmingly on the in or ease. GENERAL DIAZ The distinguished honors which are bolng oo freely accorded to General Portfiro Dlaa in this country may Boom remarkable and uncalled for to people unacquainted with the record of the Mexican hero. General Diaz la not only ox-president of the ropnb lie , but ho is Ita greatest soldlor , its first cltizon and Its most Influential loader. Scarcely 50 yoara of ago ho has held every Important position within the gift of the Mexican people , and to-day has a personal following la the republic which make him arbiter of its dostlny. General Diaz began bis career when only twonty-threo years of ago. A young law student ho enlisted in the revolutionary war against Santa Anna in 1855 , and won snob distinction that ho was made brigadier general. When Napoleon sent the nnf ortunato Llaxi- mllllanto Mexico an Emperor , Diaz was promptly in the field as a rebel and fought a number of battles with the Trench. Ho was treacher ously captured by Marshal Bazalno under n flag of truce sent as a prisoner to Mexico end pending ing the decision of his fate escaped , Ho at once organized an army of 6COO , men and began the nlega of the city of Moxloa , which surrendered on July 1C , 18GG , closing the war and reinstating the republic. Diaz then became a candidate for president but was defeated by Juarez , who forced him to rotlro to private life. Ho at ouco organized another revolution which failed of success. Escaping with the greatest difficulty ho came to the United Utatos but returned In 1871 to contest once moro for the presidency in the election of that year. Ho waa again defeated-by Juarez who , dying the following year , was sue- ooodod by the chief justice , DonLerdo" : , This was Diaz's opportunity. Lerdb lacked all the qualifications of a popu lar loader , and the revolt in 1870 was quickly followed by the seizure of the reins of government by the popular favorite , Diaz was promptly declared president , and at the first election was chosen by an overwhelming majority of the popular vote to fill that office which ho would have hold long before if the army and the voting machinery had not boon in the hands of his ene mies. The accession of General Diaz marked the turning point in the his tory of the Mexican republic. What ever may bo thought of his irregular manner of getting into office , no ono questions that ho made an efficient ruler. Lawlessness waa suppressed , and the raids across the border stopped. The country at once began to prosper. Within five yoara the valno of landed property increased nearly ton fold , Railroad building at once bo- gau cud business enterprises flourished ishod as they never had bo foro. Friendly relations with our country were cultivated , ono of the very first acts of the new government bolng the payment of a largo sum of money wtiloh Mexico owed to the United States. Thrco yoara ago General Diaz's term of office expired , and , aa the constitution of Mexico does not per mlt a president to servo two full con secutive terms , ho turned ever the office to his intimate personal friend and companion in arms , Gonr loa. Another election occurs In 1884 , when everybody expects that Diaz will bo again elected. , Hla visit to the United States h for the purpose o ! familiarizing himself with our ways and with a reciprocal free trade treaty in view , Diaz has beet termed the Gonornl Grant of Mex loo. He possesses the full confidence of her people and Is destined to play a very Important part yet in the politi cal and economical development o that country. THE long fight which the citizens o San Francisco have made In favor o good government and against corporate porato abuses la drawing to a close The new charter IB In a f lr way to become a law and the Spring Valley Water company having been defeatei In the courts In their efforts to tl the foot of a whole city , two member of the present board of supervisors are bold onongh to state publicly tha money was cfljrcd them to act official- y In favor of the company. It is also toted that a former ordinance cost ho company $100,000. ST. Louis medical men ore predict ng a visitation of Asiastio cholera next nmrnor. In the present filthy condl- Ion of St. Louis streets and alloys the oourgo would bo difficult to check. THE Apaches are raising hair ngain n ArJzsna , and General Crook's peace commissioners , armed with carbines , mvo gone to pacify them. AN assessor in Omaha like the in- olHtjont juror is the man whenever 'oads ' the newspapers. TO THE HULLS BY RAIL. A ( Jlmnco for Omaha to Mortgacto the Wealth or the Northwest. ' 0 the Editor of Tun linn. While contemplating the wonderful growth of Omaha for the past few 'oars , and the causes thereof , it oc- urs to mo that one thing , at least , las boon loft nndono which ought to ) o done , and that speedily , to-wlt : A connection secured by rail with the Slack Hills of Dakota. Many proa perous people of that region are ormor residents of Omaha , and the eyes of the people are naturally di rected hither as the nearest depot of inppllea , but without railroad connec- Ion it cannot of course bo reached. A road from hero up the Missouri river o Pierre , thence acroes that por- Ion of'tho great Slonx reservation now bolng treated for , to Fort Meade nd Stnrgis , thence to the coal fields of the Little Missouri , and thence to ho National park , would bo ono of ho best pay Ing roads on the continent , .t ' should have a branch from Stnrgls la Boar Butte canyonfand Daad- wood to Control and Lead cities and mother via Dcadwood Crock to Ga- onn. Such a road would oinpty ha wealth of the Block Hills mine ! ) with their output of nearly fire mill ona annually , of the Immense cattle ranges beyond , of the coal fields above tamed , equal In quality to Rock Springs and Inexhaustible in extent , and of all the rich agricultural river aunties of southeastern Dakota , llrcctly into the lap of Omaha. It rould furnish coal to the mines , to 'Jorro , Yank ton , Slonx City , and all 'atermndiato points , which with the hlpmonta of cattle would furnish am- ilo freight business for the road this ray , while the pleasure-seeking pub- lo of the entire south and southeast n its way to the National park would > aes over Us line , and by the time the oad could bo built the local bnalneea on the entire line between hero and tha Black Hills would pay running expenses , ? ho distance by this route to Stnrgls Jlty would bo a trifle- ever six hundred miles , or a few miles longer than some thor routes , but the advantage in thor respects would much mora than ompensato. It Is perhaps a little re markable that Omaha , with a popula- ion of 60,000 , with Its railroad con nections amounting to thousands of miles , with a score or so oi'capltallsts , who count their money by millions d with brains and energy that have eoome proverbial , * baa not a single od of railroads built by Omaha capl- nl and operated by Omaha men. Hero Is the golden opportunity , The "tide in the affairs of men which akon at Ita flood loads on to fortune. " at it bo considered. J. 0. WILCOX. Women's Bights. Philadelphia Record , March 23 , Every day now branches of industry ro entered by adventurous women. 'i is to bo hoped , however , that the ihoson field of Mrs. Klelno , of Now fork , will not bo ( .invaded at once by courageous Imitators. The lady mar led a hard-working artisan , who inrncd ever to her all of his earnings. 3ho took a few boarders , and finding hia business profitable nhe coolly told ho husband to leave the house , which 10 accordingly did. The boarding louse came to grief by reason of the departure of Us Inmates , and the on- orgetio woman at once hunted up her Id liege lord and secured his arrest on a charge of desertion. Wanted in the West. Duiango Record. A distinguished platform speaker used to deliver a very earnest lootnro on the subject of "What shall wo do with our glrh ? " It was a hard ques tion by the lady lecturer. But her inswor has now come. At leant there s a chance for the girls. Ho ia the jathetioploa of thoDurangoOolorado ) Ltooord : "Wo want girls ! Girls who can got themselves up in good shapo\o 50 to a dance. The boys are getting ; lred of receiving Invitations with a request that they "bring ladtea. " They are like oranges and apples very icarco. Wo want girls who will go : o church and Bible class on Sundays , and that kind who can draw a congregation of the other sex , and who will take a buggy ride after the lesson is over. This will help the liv ery business , and will also haaton the sale of residence lota , for buggloa are the vehicles in which homos are first thought of many people. We want girls who can wait on the table , and who can smllo us Into an appetite when stomach bitters are impotent , and who will make the boarders regu lar to their moala. Wo wont girls for sweethearts , BO that when wo gef an arm shot off , or are kicked by a mule , or are thrown by a bucking horse , and are laid away for repairs , wo may hear a gentle volco , and BOO the glitter of > a crystal tear , spoken and dropped in unconscious sympathy for our pain. Wo wont fat and funny girls to make us ainilo all ever , and lean and fragile ones to hang upon our arms , and petite blondes who show themselves on sunny days , and stately brunettes , so beauti ful in the twilight. Wo have mineral enough , and plenty of coal and oxide of iron. The only lack or our resources - sources is those potent clvlllzera of their pioneer brothers. " It Did Ita "Work. Mr. S. S. Walker , 6 Coral street , Lowell , Mass. , says : "I have used St. Jacobs Oil for the immediate re lief and onra of ohllblalna , and It ac complished both , FLIGHTS OP ACROBATS. ho Perpendicular Leap , the Shot from a Cannon , aud Other Cir cus Trlcke. 'hllaJolphln Times. Tbo following is the explanation jiveu by Lulu , tht > famous gymnast , of ho way in which ho made his perpen- licnlar losp , It was done , ho apicl , by moans of a mechanical device , "I teed in full vlow of the spectators on > n Iron plate about a foot in diameter , which was attached to a spindle run- ling down through a framework. This pliidlo was thrown up n distance of oven feet above the stage by moans of nbbor oprlngs , carrying the plato with " ; . The springs were powerful enough B Bend my body through the air ko a chot. Another eot cf rub- er bands jerked the spindle buck a quickly as it shot out , so that ho motion both ways was tco quick 'or sight. On reaching ray distance ' . caught hold of the ropes , It was necessary to pose my body go that It would bo exactly in line with the median line of the oplndle. One ight at Dublin the mcchlno was 1m- orfect and the spring became ro- eased before I was ready , throning mo on my head and shoulders in the irchestra circle. I fcol an if the earth tad suddenly fallen from under mo. But there is really no time for rhought , I am at the ropes in an in- itant. I gave np this performance > ocauso I grew too stout. Ono day my bcdy was almost telescoped by ho shock. I then act to work to do- iso a machine that would enable- mo o distribute the iorco ever my whole tody. The result was a catapult , ftor several months spent in making xperimunts. This machine la very simple in Its onstrnotion. An iron piano about ifteen foot long in suspended oa an ixlo at a alight angle. Rubber springs re made to act ao as to throw the ilano forward suddenly into a posl- Ion nearly perpendicular. This movement throws my body , which Is "ylng at full length at the upper end > f the clanc , so that I describe and arc , nd alight in a not about sixty foot rrom the machine. I wai nearly kill- d to owr thrco tlnus. The first time was thrown , I lost all eonso of what was doing or where I was going. I tras utterly helpless , and came down nto the not on my head aud face. My oad wan ao cut r.nd bruised that my air canlo out In bunches. "In London I made the experi ment cf using a machine much the mrno us the catapult , but suspended in mid air. The springs were co adjusted hat the iron beam on which I lay , trhon released , described almost a emi-circle , so that whan my body loft ' I was underneath instead of on top it. This machine throw ma a dis- anco of two hundred feet in almost a traight line. My movement was BO tralght end so BIT if t that it was imost Impossible for mo to turn my > ody oven onco. In f * ct , I did not ocover consciousness until my force raa nearly spent. The principle of ho cannon from which gymnasia are ometlmes hurled Is the same , the only lifferenco bolng that the body is sent n an oblique line upward , instead of orpendicnlarly in the air. Aa the > erformor can get hla position with erfect safety , this feat la not attended 1th much danger. The spring ia re- laaed in this instrument by means of trigger set off by the explosion of iowder. " THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. R li T i md care i KHEUMATISJr , Neuralgia , Sciatica , Lumbago , BACKACHE , nziDiCHZ , Toonicii , SORE THROAT , QUINSY , SWELLINGS , SPBAINS , Screnui , Call , Brulsti , FnoSTDITES. BURNS , SCAX.U9 , .And all other tallltcbef aod ptloi. nm CISTS i Boini Bold bj all Dmcclitf and Dealeri. Direction ! in 11 Ua akiei. ThiChuIeiA.TogolerCo. ( BttHMiort to A. Yeil.r A Co. ) BtlUmon , HI , C. S. i. WOOD FOR SALE. Three hundred cordaof woo * cow piled In Itnscom 1'arK , ill be told In lota to tutt pur- clnsers , ten cords or upwards. Tha cost and terraa of rur hase will bo furnished by Hon. P. Dcllonc , Chairman of the commltleo on 1'ubllc property arvl Improvements. . marSMw J. J. L. 0. JEW TT. JOHN D , PEABODY , H. D , , PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON , : OFFICK noons. 3 as umFARNAM ST. lletldeoce 1714 Pouglas Strtet. Omaha , Neb. ALMA E. KEITH , Removed from 1222 Farnam 8t to IOO Co. Fifteenth St. , oppptlte Postofflce. Will opou on March 10th , a fins lot ol pattern ionneti and hats , rilitmni , etc. Alto l < rge addl- Ion * to the stock ol Halt Uoo.'s. cnmprl.lng ; all .be . novelties ol tbe season. 'Iho only tie tile lent mllllniry store In Omaha. DR , M. A , REBERT , OFFICE : 1308 Farnam St. , Omaha , Not ) , Day and Nigbt Calls Promptly At tended m22-lm FRANK D. MEAD , CARPENTER AND CABINET IVT Repairing of all Kinds Prompt ly Done. 1C05 Douglas Street , Omaha , Neb. mar 17-Coi DR. M.J.GAHAN , OMAHA , NEBRASKA. Office over Omaha Savings Bank. COU , 13TH AND DOUOU8. mS-lm DR , AMELIA BURROUGHS , OFFICE AND RESIDENCE , 1017 Doflfie St. , - Omaha , Keh , Office houn Items to lo . m. , S to 5p. m. Telephone No , HI. QU 8-1 m POWER AND HAND Stearn Pumps , Engine Trimmings , mngng , flf HALLADAY WIHD-B9ILLS CHURCH AHO SCHOOL BELLS Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha , Neb. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR fl i k * /ds * a t Ground Oil Cake. It la the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Ono ponnd IB equal to three poaada of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the fall and winter - tor , Instead of running down , will increase in weight and bo in good marketable - able condition in the opring.- Dairymen na well as others who uao it can tes tify to its merits. Try it and judge for youraolvcs. Price $25.00 per ton ; no charge for aaoks. Address ol-cod-mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob. Hellman < fe Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA'NEB. MoMAHON , ABERT & CO , , Wholesale 315 DOUGLAS STREET OMAHA NEB , McNAMARA & DUNCAN. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN KENTUCKY AND PENNSYLVANIA WhiskieS ! in Bond or Free. Also direct Importers of WINES , BRANDIES AND ALES , Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine IR , S. Agents for Jos. Schlitz' Milwaukee Beerr Bottled and in Kegs. 214 & 216 S. 14TH STREET , - - - OMAHA , HEB , C. F. GOODMAN. DRUGGIST 'AND DEALER IN PAINTSOILSVARNISHBS And Window Glass. . . OMAHA. - NEBRASKA BROOM AND 'BRUSH ' WORKS. Cor , of Fifteenth an i'Pacific ' Streets. | R. E. COPSON & 00 , , Proprietors. Will commence operations abont April I. m2C m&o 1m OITTT PLANINGOITTT . MANITFAOTrjBURS OF Carpenter's Materials ALSO SASH , DOORS , BLINDS , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. Hint-class inollIHoe for the Mtnufncturo of all klndes of Mouldings , PUnlne nd matchlnK . . a Spsclnlty. Orders from tbb country will b promptly executed. Mrf ll pnmmnnlratl n t A. MOYRR. PmnrU A. M. OLARK , Painter&PaperHanger SIBHWBITEB& DECORATOR , WHOLESALE & RETAIL WALL PAPER T Window Shades aiifl Curtains , OORNIOES CURTAIN POLES AND FIXTURES. Faints. Oils & Brushes , 107 BoMtk 14th Street , NEBRASKA