THE DAIIA BEE-OMAHA TUESDAY APRIL 10 The Omaha Bee. Fnbll'bcd ercrjr morning , except San. if. Tbe enljr Monday morning dally. One Year. . . . (10 00 Three Months. $3.00 Biz Months. . 6.00 One Month. . . . 1,00 ' 'FIB WEEKLY BEE , published every Wclneaday. TERMS POST PAID One Year . $2.00 I Three Monthi. fX > < Hx Months. . . . LOO | One Month. . . . 20 AHIBIOAN NEWS OOMPANT , Sole Agents Newsdealers In tbe United States. CORRESPONDENCE Oommnnl- latfons relating to News and Editorial matters ahonld bo addressed to tbo EuiTOB Of TlIK BZE. BUSINESS LETTERS All Baslnca Letters and Remittance * , should be nd dressed to THE U PUDLISIIINO Con PANT OMAHA , Drafts , Cbecka and PostotQco Jrdcrs to be made payable to tbe order of tbo Company , The BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props , E. ROSEWATEB Editor BDHA.N B , ANTUONV la now In Italy. Her vlowi upon the hard fate of American women will probably bo materially changed upon her return. PBEBIDKNT AnTiion'fl trip to the aonth la hailed with enthaelaam by the onthern press which compliments the president by assuring him that a gen tleman la always welcome at the aonth. LILLIE DEVKHKAUX BLAKE Inquirer whether It la a crime to bo a woman. That depends very much. Tj bo a woman of the kind Lilllo trains with , In the words of a oelebratul Eogllah tateiman , " 1s worie than a crime ; It Is a blunder. " JUDGE G ERBIUM la laid to bo a man of energy and ambition. This Is bad news for Mr , Hatton who will no longer rule the roost and dispense postmi.HtcrT.hlp9 , as ho did In the day of the defunct Mr. Howe whose loss he 10 slnoaroly mourned. TUK Now York senate haa killed the bill prohibiting the issue of free passes to atate ( ulcer * , legislators and jadjes. The railroads worked hard to defeat the measure , on the grout d that It Interfered with the generous Impulses of their general manager- . TUB death of Surgeon General , Birnos la pointed to ai an evidence of the strain npon the system of all ol Ganoral Gufield'a medical advliers. Ai Bliss still lives with hla check as monumental aa erer , the argument will not be generally accepted , ME KmrKK , who will bo rotnom bered as the late lamented speaker of the house of representatives , thinks that John Sherman la the strongest man the Ohio republican * , could non Inate for governor. Kelfer's endorse ment is the worst blow Senator Sher man's candldaov h yet received. ' HAWAII haa asked permission for the USD of our mints for the coinage of her money. This la another Illustration of the natural dependence of the Sand wloh Islands npon thii country which U their natural protector. Any ether u powerful a nation In as close proxl mlty to King Ktlaktua'a kingdom would hare swallowed long ago ao tempting a morsol. Americans are atlsQed with filling all the tfflooa and disbursing the revenues of the king dom and paternally guarding It from foreign greed. TUK trial of the Phcailx park assas Ins began yesterday In Dublin before Judge 0 lirlen and a ipecial panel. The separate Indiotment of Brady for the killing of Lord Frederick Caven dish shows that the government In tends to leave no loophole f jr the oa oaoo of the prisoners through any technical defect In the pleadings. All of the prisoners entered the plea ol not gnllty , and the work of the prose cntlon begins * to-day , Oiroy and KaTanangh will bo the principal wit .nttaes. A PETITION ia in oiroalatlon among property owners on Sixteenth stroe ! praying for Its paving f com Farnham to Izird itreot. This la A good move and ought to carry. Sixteenth atro ii rapidly becoming the great rotal thorooghfare of Ooiaha. Within th _ last three yean stores and business hoaaM hare driven nearly all dwell lagi from the "treat , until from Dodge tiMt to the creek there U an almost unbroken line of build ings devoted to trade purposes. The onrblng and gnttering of the stree last year greatly Improved Its appear ance and Inereaaed the value of prop erty along the line , while substantia brick block * and solid stores attcat Ih growing importance of ita trade. Six teenth street ia certain to be the anp ply depot for a largo section of th residence portion of onr ci'.y. It i Ir I already drawing trade from portions t r Omaha , which , until recently , were compelled to deal with down tow business men. In addition i is the great country thorougfu from the north and west. For thei reaiona it should bi paved aa quickly as poulble , The nita who have Im proved it are the men who nro petl. tionlng for paving and their request will receive due consideration. It ia mush more Important that Sixteenth street ahonld be paved at once Ihtn that a pavement should be laid on Ninth street within the next\threo , THE MUNICIPAL CHANGE. To-morrow the city government changes hands. Mayor Boy d w 111 lay down the ofllco which he has admin * istorod for the past two years , and hand over his duties to Mayor ChaaO. In the other executive departments of the city there will bo no change. Durlrg the past year wo have had , for the mcst part , an excellent admin istration , so far as the business affairs of the city have been concerned , There has boon no jobbery , The city officials have been clean handed ; the contracts bavo been well lot , and , ao fir as wo can learn , honestly carried out. The general business has been well administered and the financial in terests df the city cart folly guarded. The only place where there has boon fanlt to find Is in the police depart * mont. It will bo hoped that the change ll bo for the bolter , and that the good work which Mr. Boyd has done , ao far as it relates to the business man agement of onr city sffilr- , will bo continued. Under his administration pnbllo Improvements were inaugurated in Omaha , and the people have pro vided for their continuance. We want all the Improvements that can bo had with the means at hand , but we want to pay for them only what they are worth. Wo want honest measure ments of contracts , tquaro work and substantial materials. And to oniuro all these wo want a city government that will exercise a watchful supervis ion over the expenditure of every dollar lar disbursed from the treasury. The finances cf Omaha are now In a first class condition. Our taxation per capita is lesa than in any city of onr slz ) in the country. Daring the last two years oar bonds have been placed at unusually favorable terms in the eastern markets , and there la every reason to believe that these conditions an bo improved on in the future. Our rodit la now high , Wo want to main- aln tt. The ohangea in the council are more weeping than in any ether deptrt- mont of the oily government. The omlng council promises to be a good working body. The newly elected members are , with scarcely an oxcop- Ion , able and roipected citizens and radical men. Six of the ) Bst members of the old body hold over and the president of he old council haa secured an lection to the now. Wo can con- dontly expect earnest and solid woik rom the now body , and wo believe hat the interests of the city will not offer at tbolr hands. The coming two years of the now dmlnlatratlon are llkoly to bo of nn- omrnon Importance to our city. ) maha gives every promise of being a argo'and substantial metropolis , the utnro distributing point c f the tram atisonrl country. All onr public Im provements must be made upon thia lasts , There must bo no more tern- > orary tinkering with onr atreots. iVo want no more wooden sidewalks aid down in the business portions ol Jmaha. The fire limits ought at once , o be further extended , and the bold ng of frame stores and honsea topped in the contra ! section of onr city. With cities aa with men noth- ng succeeds ao well aa anccotr. And the rapidity of the future growth ol Omaha will bo largely dependent nbon ; ho manner in which her present de velopment la handled. TUB now council ahonld order the Immediate paving of alloys in the bus iness portion of the city. That would include all the alleys between Howard and Djdgo and Ninth and Sixteenth streets. There will bo no use In at tempting to keep our bnilnota atreots clean as long as the alleys rtmain the sloughs which they now aro. Erory oad teamed from the alloys will drag out more mud than a well organ- sod street cloanlug brigade could take care of. B aiac > , there s continued complaint from onr business men of the damsgo to tarses and wagons canted by the filthy and boggy condition of the alleys. It will not cait the city a cent to have the alloys thoroughly and anb * atantlally paved. The coat will fall entirely upon the abutting property. Aa onr alleys are only 20 feet wide and onr lots 22 feet long , the cost wll be trifling. Each property cwnerwll be compelled to pay for something lesa than 25 yards of paving and ho will have five years In whjcl to pay for the improvement Stone la the only material which ahonld bo uied for paving our alleys In the first place the sewer sjatem which will require oooislonal repairs runs dawn them , and a block pave ment Is the most cosily torn up and replaced. In the second plaae there Is more heavy teaming done in the al liyithan on any one portion of on buiinesi streets. Stone is the only ma terlal that will fill the reqnlromeUi THE fight of the Illindi Oantral for a 'mlsilon ' into the Iowa pool has been coessful , and after Mi ; lit Its line b way of Sioux Olty will be accorded its proportion of prtfi a and tr , ffij. In railroading competition does not long compete. TUB new o't/ council will be com posed of the following members. First ward , Thrane and Kaufman Bwond ward , Bjhm and Uaacall ; Third ward , McOackln and Il-dfiold ; Fourth ward , Dunham and Murphy ; Fifth ward , Loedor and Wood worth ; Sixth ward , Biker and Anderson. The first named conncllmen in each ward hold over frnm the last council. THB practical consolidation of the Wnbtsh Pacific with the Missouri Pa cific ia a significant fact to the history of railroad development , and it de serves the careful consideration of these who think that state control is able to distato the conditions of rail road management. Wo take it for granted that all deslro to see the rail roads succeed , and any state legislation which would prevent the ancceiefnl managements of the roads in this state would bo an injury both to the corporations and to the commonwealth. Yet here Is n Klgantlo railroad fljatem , with 3.G03 miles of road , running through fertile districts in four rich and growing states , which no management has been able to tnako a success of , simply bo canto , big as it Is , it is not big enough to hold ltn own In its location against the rivalry of larger and better equipp ed corporations , andlhro was absolu tely no cholon between merging it into the Mlosonri Pacifies ; stem or running iK Into the hands of a receiver. Foil Ditpaidi. There is a oreot deal of practical bosh In these comments upon the con solidation cf the Wabash road with the Missouri Pacific , Every railroad manager knowa why the Wj- bash Pacific has not paid. The road has been worked by gigantic stock jobbing operations , its capital eaten np by constructions rltti , its stock morcolessly watered and ita earnings weighed down by snob nn neceiaary leasing of worthless feeders that all the poollnp and consoliditing over devised cannot redeem It , or make it pay a decent income on Its took. There haa been no lack of money made out of the Wabish sys em. Tao trouble is that it has gone nto the jeans of stock jobbers and not Into the pockets of its stock holders. .1 the minority of the stockholders oi ho road could toil their story through the press it would very soon show how ho most profitable properties can be landicapped by fraud and bled by iharpora. It is the silliest nonsense or any journal to pretend that the Allure of the road to pay on its prea ent basis is an argument against rail road legislation. Tao same principle would condemn all mining as unprofitable because wild cat companies fall to return hand- aome dividends wh'lo ' building up .ho . ptivnto fortunea of their dlshoneal managers. It Is such instances rather which furnish the strongest of argu ments In favor of the legal restriction of railroad management by the passage of laws that will forever forbid the reckless stock joggling which la at onoo the ruin of "Innocent Investors' ' and a burden upon the people , who are taxed to pay for the crimes of the railroad kingr. THE Hon. Ft ink Hatton haa achiev ed distinction a an early age. Ho haa been appointee postmaster general of the Uatted Btatti to act aa such f jr ten days. His term of tflhe will ex pire April 15 , but before that time he may startle the whole nation. Chicago Neics , T jo man of mlgty cheek at the head of the poattffio may startle Ohicago and all the rest of the nation by an other proclamation , but wo will wager a silver dollar against a brass button ho will not startle the country by re signing. PERSON Judge Howe was a Unitarian. Mine. Hlatorl It 65 and utterly broken down lo health. Cockling * ' curl haa been clipped , as well as his poll. leal wings , Mr * . William K. Vanderbilt used to do fancy work tor a living. Jenny Llnd it not afraid to tell her age. Shoaokuowledgra being 00. llevlvallat llmlson cleared $100 a week iutbe DeoUur , III. , vineyard , Mm D.tvH Davis starts married Ufa with twelve dozen pair ol ( ilk Osier , of Vermor , twalbwed leadtn ih t tn cuie him ol bolls , lie now tleepj under the wllluw. Genrge Fracclilram called the Van- dei bill maiqiterad r * "Bogut cbromo * dancing * JU. " Mr' . I'realdent Tyler dresses her hair prcclitly as she did when a young bride in the White House. 8 ven yean ago Mr. Bel ) , of telephone famr. WM a pocr mm. Nuw he Is said to bewoith O.OOJ,0.0. El-Secretary ( 'olumbtu Delano Is ipend- log hit nld age In luxurv on hU Utgsaheep farm In Koox county , O. Tabor says the people art ) getting along very well under tbo operation of the new tantl. Ii COM Into elleot July 1. Americana who have icen Pope Leo XIII. uy that there I. quite striatog N. xmunUnoa between him and Mr. William M Ev.rU. Toe wlitow of the late Capt , De Long , of arollo fame , Ii 18 jeara old , petite , baa light brown hair , hazel ejes , and Is a very pietty w mm. It U not gnr llv known that the Cans. dUa I'rophot WiKKin * , before he let up in t * < e ptvpnecy buiioeuWM a groier la East Oranvr , N. J. Ex Tr aaurtr Spinner , at the hale old ge ul 81 , U enjoying life In Florida. Hn fools the fiitt eveiy time by using bit auto graph to bait bis book. MO. Dingier , the new chief of worVi on the P n m canal , whu ba Ju.it arrived at Mstit | , Ii > aid t < > he receiving a salary of 200,1 0) fran r , ur fMU.COO. Mr * . E la K , Trader , who ipent 6100 . 000 of her own mo. ey In killing the wounded soldier * durlagihe war , uowllvei In poverty at Ashtvillo , N. O. D. O. O. Urn junta , of rh rlotte vlll , Virginia , U the 6r.t person of color to apP - P y for llc nie to practice at tbe bar ia Virginia. The hc ne bun been granted him. him.Mr. Mr. Smith , of Kncsai , fan been ineo si > ful In ft ut agaltut deacon who bid a Id : "brothen and ilstsis , Jet us pray for O M. Smith and make a better roan of him" Herbert Bpeneer Is a very punotoalmin. ID bli boarding house the lidlts set their wiitrhe * by hla comings and rolfifs. OBM n a great while Mr. Spencer smokes a part of a cigarette , Prince Leopold , of Hohen llern , broth er o ! tbe Duchei * of Connaught. bait been apprenticed to learn tbe tr.dn of a lock * em I tb , In acenrdanLe with tbe custom of tbe roy/1 family of PnuiU. Matt Carpenter's son 1'anl , who once dan ) , when B boy In Washington , that when he grew up he would like to be a coachman but supposed he'd Rot to bo a 'niter , Is now grown up and will be a lawyer. Mr. Berdard H'rnert August Adolth Btrwlch wants 810.0CO cf Mis Kebec.a McL-an , a Staten Island helresn. Ilede- o'arni ' that she asked htm to marry her , : h t he consented , and that she alterwardi lilted him. Mm. lUbecca B rni , c lored , of Gam- den , N .T. , claims to bo a granddaughter of the queen i > f Guinea , stolen by slave- traders eighty years aqo , helre-a to the title , and entitled tn a large amount of valuahli * lift wi h a firm of coast traders in Africa. The state department haa been consulted. MrlUe Matcbe * , wbo.e ( kill ai a burplar Ii known all oer the United State- , and whose faces has graced several peniten tiaries , Is handling a mallet and chisel In the marble works of the Juliet ( Ill.pr'on ) ' Matches In bookid for fifteen yean fjr a bank robbery , In which she was the lesd- ing figure , at Qa'iwhorg. ' about a year ago. THE IRISH IN AMERICA. A British Diplomat on the Dynamite War. Bp'.cM to the Chicago Uersld. WABUINOTON , April 0 "Things are gutting pretty hot in England , " suggested the Herald correspondent so bin friend , the diplomat , to-night. "Yes , " was the response , "the sitna tion is becoming decidedly Interesting. It Is taking the shape I expected. 1 told you several weeks ago that this Irish conspiracy was aa dangerous to England as Nihlllim Is to Russia. Yon thought I was an alarmist. Look at Great Bltaln to-day. London is most In a atato of slogo. The Q leen la afraid to leave Windsor. Snipping wharves and railroad depots swarm with detectives. Guards are being doubled at all public places. The police for 03 Is being strengthened throughout the kingdom. Strangers are followed to their hotels and their luggage ransacked. Dynamite facto ries are being discovered on all sld s. The people are thoroughly-scared. la Russia in any worse condition ? I re celved a private cablegram to-day. It contains but few words , but thtir im- pirt Is seriona. It sayi : 'Situation frightful. Ao'.lvo preparations at Horse Guards. Tough times coming ' That mrssago Is from a cool-headed rran. I am disposed to think that the situation is worse than the newspapers Indicate. " "How do yon think it will end ? ' asked your correspondent. "Too Lord only knowa. Arrests will be made until every British prison is filled with suspects. That will not stop the reign of terror. There are desperate men at the head of this movement. They will not turn back. They will scruple at no bloody deed This plot Is not of late origin. It hat been developing for years. There was comparative quiet in the Islands after the passage of the Irish church bill. The Home Rule movement , and and the apparently peaceful agitation of the Land League lulled the -ample iona of the B itlsh government Biaconsfield and Gladstone both mil- understood the temper of the people they were dealing with. They trifled with sharp edged awcrda. English rule in Ireland his never been secure ilnco the Irish obtained a strong foot' ' tng in this country Here they are free to plot against their hereditary foe. They can Issue orders from this point of vantage and find daring hands on the other aide to excoate them. A good supply cf money i at their command here. The wild utte rances of the Irish-American prea'i encourage courage the ignorant peasantry of the old country. Enplane may manage to keep down the spirit of lawlessness and rapine for a time , bat it will keep breaking out aa leas as conspirators can meet safely in tht United States and plan mlaohie ! against a friendly power. Ejg and Is anxious for thia government to take a decided atand on thia question. There are some plain notes in ( Secretary Fro llnghnysen'a handa now. He hardly knowa how to reply to them. One question is whether contributions for ending dynamite to England for the destruction ct public buildings are no violations tf the neutrality law. This Is cf more importance jjst now than the extradition of men like Sheridan and E an. 1 nnderatand there are eminent lawyers in this country , who are of the opinion that the receipt o subscriptions of money f jr anch pur poaoi SB llasa and Fm-rty rave abou render them liable to the neutrally lawj. England realizes that she can never rest easy until there is some way of mczzling Irish Amerlotns. She will exercise every devise of diploma oy to attain this result. " "D > you think there is muohchano tf net succeeding ? " "I am afraid not. Your govern ment haa nn decided policy on aucl questionFrellnghuysen is timor oua. Arthur hesitates on questions o home policy , and can scarcely be ex ptc'ed to take a firm grasp of Inter national qiestlona. It would be dif ferent if flic. BUI no were still aeoro taiy of stale. He would hare an opinion , and will enon-h to exprosi U , and ca-ry the president and thi cabinet with him. That opinion mlgh not be favorable to Eigland , bur I would force a settlement of the matte one way or the othtr It must be settled aome day. Other European powira are Interested In It. None o them feel aaf e while bloodthirsty con splratora can obtain safe refuse on these shores. Your atato departmen will have aa much work aa it can ban die before long. There sr rumors in ImiJo clrclea that tb Foniana are In Ie gno with the anarch Ma of other nations. It is rather Bin that ( hero should be disturb ancei In other oiuntrloj at this par ttcalar time. I have no doubt ther Is a close alliance between the in vluclbles of Ireland and Amerfci , th communists of France , the socialist of Germany , the nihilists tf Rn-ii and the blackhanda nf Spain. Tiey are all active now. T 10 proposed In tornatlonal police system would bo an inmenso thing for the crowned head if Europe " "In a previous interview you appro bended uprisings In the Urge mann factoring towns cf England ? ' ' "That danger U greater to-day than ever before. Eogllah people are worked np to it fretzy of excitement A few more daye may wllneaa scene of bloodshed in the manufactutlng ittrlcts. Watch the cable dispatches. Svonts are exciting now , but there re worse to follow. " The bono of contention among the medical fraternity can no longer bo onriderf d St. Jacobs Oil , slnco drug- ists whoso voracity ia not to bo oubttd , and eminent physicians like A. A. Walte , of Pittafield , Mass.glvo nd cnrroborato their testimony cheer- nlly and without solicitation. This peaks volumes. Providence ( R. I. ) Democrat Sherman' * Trip- pedal Dlspatcn to Tui 11. WAHaiNOTOH , April 'J. Ganoral Sherman , when in Jane ho starts pen his last tour aa commander oi ho army , will not take ladles with ilm , M he has almost Invariably done hitherto , for bla proposed trip will be Itogothor too rough a one for ladles , iomotlmea the party will travel oo lorses , sometimes on mnloa , and omotlmes in rough road wagons , /hlef Joatlca Walte , Jcstico Gray and General Tidbull , and Oolonol Ba con , of the penoral's staff , will be cf he party. They will go first to De * rolt , and thence through the north ern portions of all the territories , In cluding the outposts in Alaska. Re- nrnlng , they will visit California and ho Yellowstone park , They will not start until after Sherman has attended he graduating exercises at West Point. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. i and nm RHEUMATISM , Neuralgia , Sclstlcs , Lumbago , BACKACHE , EI1D1CHI , tOOTUCHl , SORE THROAT , QUINSY , BWKLL1NQS , BPBAIN ! ! , torineu , Call , Braixs , FROSTBITES , Ani til olh-r bodll' uttM and ptjoi. nm cnn i BOTTU. Sold t > 7 til Dncititl tad Dei ! xi. lUrtctloDi In 11 Uo'.ai.ej. Tui Chulii A.Vo 8lor Ce. ( B. . . . .n to i. Vx-I-r 4 Ct. ) Btltln , B * , C. 8. 1. GOLD MEDAX , , PAR 8 , 1878 BAKER'S BREAKFAST COCOA , Warranted Absolutely pure Cocoa , ( rom wble i the exceee ol oil b > l been rrmored. Ithti three times thestrenoth o Cocoa mixed uleb Stircn , Ar row Root or Sogtr , and Is tft-re for * fr rcore e onomlcaj. It li delicious , nourishing , strenrth enloir , eully dlge-ted , ard ad. . mlrsbly adtptcd for Inra Ids at well aa for persons ID health. Sold by Qrocer [ Everywher W , BAKER&Oo. , Dor chaster. Mass GRATEFUX.-OOMFORXIMO. EPPS'S COCOA , BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge of tbe natural lawi hloh govern the operations of digestion and nutrition , and by a careful application of thi Ine properties ol well-s. looted Cocoa , Mr. Ipps has provided our breakfast tables with > lellcately flavored beverage which may save at many heavy doctors' bills It Is by the Jndlclom isa of such articles of diet that a oonstlrnWor may be gradually built np until strong enongr lo resist every tendency to disease. Handredl 3f subtle maladies are floating around rureadj to attack wherever there Is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping onr wlvfswell fortified with pure blood and a prop iriy nourished frame. " Civil Service Oaaeite. Made simply with boiling water or milk Be d n tins only ( | -lb and Ib ) , by Grocers , labeled JAMBS BPPB Ot CO. , Homceopatblo Onemlatr , nt > ' Tjontlon. Plntrlnrd. STABLISUKl ) IBM. IIDK SPRING ATTACHMENT-HOT PATENI ED. A. J. SIMPSON. LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY liOD and 1111 Dodge Street , anir 7-tne 6ro OMAHA. N B Genius Rewarded , Oil , The Story of tan Sawing H anhlr-e A'handumt lltt'e pimphtet , blua anil gold covet will nume out ejgntlntt , will be GIVEN AWAY to a-y adult ponon cilllng ( or It. at any braveb or lub-otfloe o' the Singer Mainfictar nCom. . paajr , or will be Mil t > /mali , poit-paid , to aa/ p > r on llrlng at a d lUnee from our offlee. The Singer Manufacturing Go. , Principal Office , 84 Union Square NEW YORK. J. E. HOUSE , Consulting and Civil Engineer AND SURVEYOR. Breda ! attention to Snrvrilrg Town Addt- t'oos ml LoU. Furn'sh'Dg E tlntatei cf Kxca- Tail' n , Uskl' g M p > , Plaus , In , OTES FIRBT NATIONAL BANK , OMAHA NKB. ALMA E. KEITH , Removed from 1222 Farnam 8t to IOO Eo. Fifteenth St. , opppllte PottofTlce. Will op-o nn Uarc < 10th , a floe lot of pattern b uuetsanilhiis , r b nt , rtc. Also I rgetddt- tlonilo thjsioci of Hair Ooo s. C'tnprl.lnr all th * rove tl'sof tr.e s * > on. 'Ihoohljr ile tile lltfhi mil 1m ry i-cro In Omaha. FRANK D. MEAD , CARPENTER AND CABINET Repairing of all K nda Prompt ly Done. 1C05 Douglas Street , Omaha , Neb. o ar IT'Bm DR. M.J.GAHAN , OMAHA , NEBRASKA. Office over Omaha Savings Bank. COM , 18TU AMD DOUG LA roS-Us POWER AND HAND Steam Pumps , Engine Trimmings , unna MAOIOHKBT , BKLTDTO , HOBK , BRAES AND IRON rrrnHos PIT PACKING , AT VfnOLE8ALK AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha , Neb. C. F. GOODMAN , DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PA1NTSOILSVARNISHES And'Window Glass. MAHA . . . _ _ . NEBRASKA. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE GALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. It la the best and cheapest food for clock of any kind. Ono pound IB equal to throe pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Oake in the fall and winter - tor , instead of running down , will Increase in weight and be in good market * able condition in the spring. Dairymen ao well aa others who use it can tea * tify to its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $25.00 per ton ; no charge for sacks. Address o4-eod-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL 00. , Omaha , Neb. M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS , 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. 13th OMAHA , NEB. MoMAHON , ABERT & CO , , Wholesale Druggists , 1315 DOUGLAS STREET - - OMAHA NEB MCNAMARA& DUNCAN. I WHOLESALE DEALERS IN KENTUCKY AND PENNSYLVA W sij in Pond or Free , Also direct Importers-of WINES , BRANDIES AND ALES , Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine 3E& S. Agents for Jos. Schlitz' Milwaukee Beer. Bottled and in Kegs. 214 & 216 S. 14TH STREET. - - OMAHA , FKB , PLANING MANUFAoraRKna OF Carpenter's Materials ALSO SASH , DOORS , BLINDS , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. M1"'S 'V'ufor ' . e Mw J W0' U kinds of Mouldings , PUnlng a. ] matching addrWloommnnlQAtl * Specialty. Orden from the country will b promptly efecWd MOYKn ! Pr.orh CHERRY GROVE FARM. Frederio , Monroe Co , Iowa , 0. E. MAYNE. * . Proprietor. Has constantly on h td , a large number of Horte * . % Matched Teams & Single Drivers A SPICIALTV re'C'Irtlon M II . irsw and other Inlorm * tlmsnt br mall on a/pllctiloj. WILLIAM SNYDER , UAMUFAOTCBIB Of CARRIAGES , BUGGIES , UsVJWX * IROJsVJD "Wj * . OMB. 1 FJrat-OlasB Painting and Trimming , Repairing Promptly Done. 1319 Harney , Oct. 14th , Omaha ,