Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1883)
THE DAHA BEE-OM.A.HA WEDNESDAY APRIL 11 ' "he Omaha Bee. Pnbllshod erenr morning , except Sun. ay , Tbo only Monday morning dally. TERMS BYIMAIL > 'ne Year. . . . $10 00 I Three Monthi.t3.00 8 ii Months . . 6.00 | One Month . . . . 1.00 VHE WKEXLY BBE , published every Wednesday. TKRM8 POST PAID- One Year . $2.00 I Throe Monthi. M ) Biz Month . 1.00 I One Month. . . . 20 A vim CAN N WB COMPANY , Bole Agents Newsdealers in the United States. CORRESPONDENCE Ooihmnnl. ifttfons relating to News and Editorial ittters should be addressed to the KUITOB & TUB BM. BUSlNEfS LETTERS All Buslnes Letters and Remittances should be ad dressed to THE UK PDBLIBHINO COMPANY JMAIIA. Drafts , Checks and I'ostoffico Jrders to be made payable to the order of the Company. The BBE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props , E. ROBEWATER Editor Aha ! The dynamite npootro ii bant ing John Ball's American minister at Washington. THE old council went out aa mo ok aa a lamb , and Hasoill matched In aa bold a * a Hon. REPUBLIC. ' ! may bo ungrateful , bat republicans nro alwuyi magnanl- mom. This was strikingly Illustrated by the olootlon of city olork. A TRIFLE over a hundred votes were east against the sewer bond proposi tion. Ono out of every four readers of the Omaha lit raid aapptrtod at the polls Dr. Miller's vlowf. IT was a compliment to Jawott , bnt not very encouraging to republican "workers" to see a democrat elected city olork by a council that has ten republicm members to two lonesome democrats. AKD now Qaneral Pope comes In with a modest claim for five years' bMfc pay as mijor-genoral , while he only held acommiajlon aa brigadier. For maidenly modesty commend us to Pope John. TUB Northern Pacific has leased the Oregon and California railroad for ninety-nine years , and has thus filled the last gap In the line whloh will give It the control of the North PaolGo ooast from Sn Francisco to Puget Sound. Tun contractors are preparing for paring on Tenth street and before the leaves are out Omaha will begin to see her first atone pavement. Aa Tenth tioot Is tbo Grit It mast not bo the last of our thoroughfares paved with nbstantial granite. TIIKBI are renewed attempt ! to boom the name of Senator Edmonds M a presidential candidate. The New York Timtt claim * that "ho la the V only man In the Ualted States who Is conspicuously fit for the presidency and does not denlro It" TUKRK ii a nuUoeoble decline in peculation In ajl the great bnilneia centres , as well in futures on provi sions ai In atooks and bonds. This la healthy tign , and acaounta for the decraaie in clearings In several of the largest eastern cities. Bx PAUL is greatly la need of a firsc-olasi hotel and several capitalists aUnd raady to erect a $750,000 build ing If the citizens will give them a oouple of hundred thousand dollars as a banus. O-naha is bettor provided with hotel facilities than any other town of her alia in the west. Two .years ago she was worio off than the smallest of her nolghbnrs. SOUEDODY lus undo luouoy oat ol the new state capitol at Albany , Non York. Four years ago the commit- elonor * In charge estimated the cost ol completing it at $3,600,000. Since that time $1,000,000 have been spent on the pile , and now the commlialon un think about (5.000.000 more wll finish It. Naturally the people an growing very weary , and Incline t < the opinion that Architect * , are deceit fnl In all things 'and desperately ex travagant. QBNUAL OBOOK haa reached th front In Arlajna , and la stralnln very effort to capture the imall bam of Apaches who are Calling hair am hell la the territory , Tae rumors c the outbreak annng the 'Ban Carlo Apaches have proved unfounded i was predicted. General Orook saj that the raid during whloh Judge Mi Comas and wife aod ten other person were murdered was mida by enl fifteen bucks , with a faw iqaawi These were Ohlrlohua Apaohei , wb came up from Mexico , made a clrou of coniiderablo extent , and retnrnc to Mexico again by another rout They were members of the very wor family of | Apiohes , whloh Inolnd about 100 fighting men. They wei wholly untncumberod , stole frei bones when they needed them , an . traveled from 75 to 100 miles a da ; ' These Indians , General Crook tali are the bait toDuts In the west , ai well armed , know the country , an * * -'wlll never be quieted nntll they ai killed off one by one. The soouc they are exterminated the better fc 0 all concerned. OMAH&'A NEXT RAILnOAD. An attempt Is being made to manu facture a boom for a railroad from Omaha to the Elkhnrn country. Wo arc told that tbo matter la being dis cussed by local capitalists and the maps have already been drawn of an "air lino" to Antelope county. Wo arc afraid that as matters now look the " * ir lino" will bo a wind lino. Omaha wants all the railroad connec tions she can secure with tbo adjicont territory. This city has always been a good deal moro in fivorof railroads than the railroads have been In favor of the town. In hot her Interest has even extended to the Iowa side and bonds have boon voted by onr citizens to assist In the building of a line to Council Bluffi. Any now railroad enterprise which la organized on a bails of bond , lander or aubaldy begging from the citizens of Omaha will hang fire for a long time. Wo are paying enough Interest already on railroad bonds. The occu pation of our entire river front , by the railroads and the mammoth cow abed fraud of a depot , are continual remind * ers to cur people of what they have done for railroad corporations. The tlmo has gene by when railroad bond propositions will carry In Omaha , or when Its citizens will donate lands and money to baild road * for capitalists to uao as profitable spnoalatlons. Wo want a railroad to the Elkhorn valley , if such a railroad can bo hon estly built , with the capital of Its projectors and managed in the Inter ests of the section through whloh It passes. But our cltizana do not yearn to assist in cons ti not ing a stub line whloh will be passed over within a few months to some other system unfriendly to onr city. Omaha has had enough of corporation bonds and subsidies. She Is decidedly opposed to taxing heraelf any farther In this lino. Bonds for necessary pnb'io Improvements will bo gladly voted by our people , beuauso every dollar will go towards developing the city. In a majority of oisos railroad bonds atalst chiefly In developing the bank accounts of railroad directors. For these reasons Omaha's next rail road will probably bo built by its pro jectors. FAUISOF INTEREST. In emigration ii Betting In with tremendous - mondous volnrae towards the fields of western Minnesota and Dakota. K n- aa also la receiving a large InQax of now aottlon. Nebraska ts far bahlnd both of her neighbors. Where thou- oanda are seeking Dakota , hundreds are crossing the Mlsionrl into our atato , There ia no good reaion why this should bo BO. la the diversity of Ita productions , Nebraska far excel i Dikota and cqaali Kansas. It Ii the greatest corn producing state ia the anlon. Ita landi are not surpassed by any for fertility. The trouble is that oar state haa not been suffi ciently advortiied. Oataldo of the railroad land offices llttla or no cffjiti have been made to plaoo the advan tages of Nebraska as a homo for new settlers before the people of the east , Oar country prois have done tholr fall share In bnildlng op the various towns and villages within the state , and their inQaanoa hat been felt to some extent beyond the state. Bit there haa been no organlzad , sys tematic and persistent effort on the part of our people to attract immigra tion and to attract attention to the davolopraent of resources and possi bilities of Nebraska. This is why other states are now being built ap at the expanse of oar own. The compendium of the census jast published , glvos some interesting statistics of oar development. la 1880 wo had G3 337 farms , computing nearly 10,000 000 of acres , cf whtct only 4,4000JO was in nntmprovoc . lands. Thiiir total value WAS oitima ted at S10G.932.GH , an incraase o 3)0 par cant ever the last'consus year f Ia cultivating thorn wa nmd farm ma ohlnery worth $7820,917. lu 187 ! t wo raised 65,450135 bushels o ' corn , 424318 bushels of fcwhoat and 0 555.878 bushels of oats. Oai wool production was more than a mil lion pounds. We harvested 78541 ! tans of hay , dog 2.160,893 bushels o potatoes and sent to muket 1,744,08 * bushels of barley and 17,663 ol book wheat. This ia a rcoird of whloh i state with nearly 53,000,000 , aorea o public lands yet undisposed of cat well affjrd to be proud. In the value of her live stock stock Nebraska took a leading place amen , western states. The census credits c with cattle valued at $33,440.205 with 204.864 heroes , 19,999 males am horaes and 7,234 working cattle. W Imported 200 COD sheep , 1 241 72 awlneand 101.187 mtloh cows. Oa s. farm produce sold or consumed la th 10 year In whloh the oansus wa tiken lit tour years ago , was $31708914 nd Those are a faw ot the m > st impjrtan .e fasts relating to Nebraska which ough st to have been available In pimphlot es and eastern newspapers long ago fc ro Immigration purposes. If wo do no sh advertise ourselves wj cannot oxpoc id other and rival states to do it for ui AJ-BOPOB of the Apaoho outbroil re aa Item ii going the rounds of th id press that the Ohiraonhtu'a are th ro band with whom General Howar er cone laded a treaty In 1872 , and tbi * the conclusion of that treaty aton I prevented Job's band from beln thrashed Into submission by General Crook. The facts of the case appear slraply to bo these : In 1872 General Howard wont to Arizona by txprecs orders from General Grant , than pres ident of the United States , and car ried letters to the ootnmindor of the division of the Picifio and the department of Arizona , writ ten In the president's own hand , He bore In addition Instructions from the secretary of the Interior , to whom ho was ordered to report. In General Howard's own words , he simply car ried oul. his instructions in making peace with the Indiana , and In no case exceeded them. As the chief qialifi- ciMon of a good officer is to obey orders dors , it Isdiflbalt to see how General Howard can bo In any sense responsi ble for the outcome of the treaty which ho contracted for the president. BUILDING ASSOCIATION * A movcmant la at last on foot to or- ganlzo a Loan and Building Associa tion In Omaha. Such an association haa long boon needed In oar city to assist onf woiklngmen in saving their earnings and teeming homes for them selves and their families. The Build ing Associations tf Pnlladolphla have erected 3G.OCO bouses and cottages since 1857 , and those of Baltimore have been scarcely less successful. Chicago to dy has fifteen Bach organizations In active operation , and there is no city of Omaha's aza ! In the west of which wo have any knowledge whloh does not count two or three as sociations in successful operation. The principle tf building associations is the accumulation of a fund b/small monthly assessments on the members , whloh fund la loaned to borrowing stockholders , the association securing by inorigago on the land upon which the building is erected. By the policy of monthly payments up on the borrowed capital , share holders both pay up their shares and meet the interest on their loans. The association closes when the value cf the shares become par , which in western associations is usu ally within cijht years. At the end of that tlmo each borrowing share holder has his mortgage cancelled and finds himself In possession of an unencumbered homo , which has been paid for at a cost loss than the sum that would have boon expended in house rent during the time in which he was contributing to the association. In other worda Interest and principal are paid by such small Installmen that the money Is scarcely felt. Six years ajo such an association was started at North Plattn , which recent ly closed operations. During its exis tenoa (72,000 of worklngmen's sav ings wore expended In building np the city and providing homes for Its mem bars , la Dabcqae and Ortumwa , in Grand Island ani Denver , the success of Building and Loan Associations haa been long ataured aa the cheap est and safest method of saving and Investing money in buildings' . The great advantage of the system is that little or no money Is deverted to high salaried officers. The profits all accrue directly to members and the plan of monthly payments enablea a . rapid oomponcding of interest whloh battens the close of the atsoclatlon and the approach of Ita shares to a par value There are many working men , mo- ohanlos and clerks lu Omaha who orn little lota wholly or partly paid for , but who have no means to erect buildings - ings up.in them , To thosn a building association will offer the brat induce meats for the construction of a home which they can soon call their own with no more ( ffjrt than la now neces sary f r the paymant o ! their monthly rent In houses owned by their land1 S lords , In conclusion , as THE BEE has of tor urged the formation of auoh an or ganlzttion , it sees no reason why i building anJ loan aisoci&tion or sev B vor l should not prove successful Properly nunagod , with men of gooc business ability as t fibers , and dlrcc ' tors in whom onr working people hav oonfideiiob , there la a large and Invlt ing field open for just auoh orgmira tions In onr city. 3 Ay extra session of congress 1 called for by some parties In behalf o the workiogmen of America. Fo goodness sake don't. We can stan another epltoo epidemic , Atlatl cholera , yellow fever , tha bine glaa crsta , drouth , grasshoppers , chore' ' scandals , hailstorms , and almost an ; other providential iflLotlon , bat ai extra session of congress in the do days would be a calamity this oonntr cannot face. a TIIE skeleton of tbe dafnnct green back party delights in parading aroan in its shnud , and exhibiting what I loft of Its mortal remains. The latos freak la a call f > r a state greenbac ! convention In NJW York next Sep tember. Lot tha jetd rest. HEUDBBT SrcNOEu'it gospel of ovei work Is not received with enthusiast in this country. Americans are th hardest working people In the world bat tboy break down early beciosa the ; live at high pressure , outside of thel bailneis , not because they work them selves to death daring business hours The Now York Sun hits the ual squarely on the bead when it says " We know a good deal abcut work- honest , square , steady , cff otlr woik > at about overwork wo have a great deal of doubt. Generally speaking , when a rain is said to bo overworked , ho truth Is that he baa boon guilty of omo excess which breaks down his trength. Taero may bo cases in which there ii an excess of work , bnt of these cases there are very few in- leed , Too excess is in eating , in Irlnking , in neglect of exorcise , or in omo other mysterious way. A man of ordinary health can stand all the oal work that ho haa to do , bnt the additional strain which ro puts upon limielf ontsldo cf work is more than 10 can boar. " There Is no dotation moro frqientor moro absnrb than his delusion of overwork. There is always excess in the ease no doubt , > nt not an excess of labor. It ii an XCOBB of some othnr kind. THEUE is no dependence a yocng man ought so studiously to avoid an d'-poi dniconponcffijaholdiug. Si'Atx lily Journal , Thejeditorof TJO Sioux Oily Jownal who happens , as it were , to be United States marshal f jr the northern dis trict of Iowa knows how it is himself. Tbo Apicho Outbreak. 8m FracltoChr nlcle. The mstiug Apaoho outbreak , ex ending from Ar.z > na to New Mexico itid Soiioru , is a surprise to the coun- if. When General Orook was sent ; j the command of that department it was confidently expected Inn * Apache depredations would cease. Tiey did oeasu for a tlmo. Daring the fall and winter months the Indians remained qulot on the reservations , and the tag" system enforced at San 0 tries , as tbo invention of the now com mander , was balleved to have solved the problem. By and by some inquiring persons discovered , or thought they discovered , oei- ; an frauds In practice under Agent Wilcox , of a character leading to dis satisfaction and revolt. Among tbe charges against Wiloox was mlssappro- prlation of Indian supplies and viola- Jon of the law prohibiting any em ploye of an agency from being directly or indirectly Interested In any trade with the Indians. These charges were forwarded to the secretary of the In terlor. General Orook wrote to tbo secretary that they were false ; that they were originated by "the vilest bummer of the old Indian ring , " aud that Agent Wiloox WAS worthy ot the fullest confidence of the department. This letter the secretary caused to be published throughout Arizona One passage of Orook s letter readsstrange'y ' enough in tha light of the recent out break and many murders by Willcix'a dusky wards. It says : "All reports of discontent among the Apaches for the past six months have come from irresponsible hangers on at the agency. 1 assert that the Apaches of the Sin Oirlos reservation tion , alnce my conference with them In September , October and November , last year (1882) ( ) ! have been as well behaved aud wull displayed as any equal number of aborigines in the west. " Tals was written in Fdbru ary at tbe reservation. It was written to counteract statements aa well against Agent Wlllcux , aa to the effect of serious and .threatening discontent among the Indiana on account of abort applter ; whloh discontent , H was , hen predioti d by those making these statements , would in the spring break out Into organ * Bid and bloody raids. A letter fromUlobeOlty , A. T. , dated March lli.b , to the 8s. Louis Etepubllean of Maroh 28 b , makea this unwelcome prediction , which wltbin eta than a fortclght thereafter came true. It took note of the fiot that the Apaches ' 'have alwaya been do olle In the winter , " bacause they can not move about at that season. And it reiterated substantially the charges made against the auonoy management. Tae ' ' here the writer says ; 'Poople on frontier hive learntda great deal from sitter experience aud personal obser- atlon if the conduct < f Indian ff ira and they f ally believe that the a ffi inlty ii not so muob ia tha inherent cuised- ness of the Apschts , or inability tc keep them In their bounds , as it Is lu the tact that , as no * organlzjd and ruu , there is too much money to be made out of the Indues and ontii governm m > . " For once G merit Orook has been mistaken in his judgment , and those whom his letter to the secretary of the Interior , In defense of Agent Wilcox etigruit is d aa "hangers on" and the "vilest bummer * of the old Indian ling , " If they were tbo ones who made the charges , have been oorreos it their prediction of an outbreak In tht spring. It Is now in order for tht secretary to take notiojof thechargei sgnlnst the agency management auc luva them investigated. Moro thai three-fourths < ' ll the Indian raldi aud wars since 186 J are directly tracea b e to genoy frauds and malprao doe. The pnvernment generally appro prlates sifliilent money to aapportthi reservation Indian decently. If thi supplies are stolen by agents rue em ployts , pinching want , inscffiilonl clothing and starvation ensue. Tnesc wonld drive any tribe , however dls posed Jo peace on fair conditions , tc raids and wars and desertion of thi reservation. It la charged by gioc citizens that the Ban Carlos reserve tion Apiohes have been abased it some such way aa this. Those wht made the ehargra predicted an out break , and It has oomo aa predicted probably a fortnight sooner than wa tn'nlpated. Tauro Is enough In al this t > m k * investigation not merel ] jattifiable , bat a positive doty of th department. If these bloody raH continue fron year to year , if nelthe the agencies iv > r the army can preven them , the cinz > ns of Arieonn , drivel to it in difdiiso of their lives , thel wives , their children , their homes ra ; be expco id to take the remedy ti their own hands , lu which oiso th Mexican method of killing all age aud both sexes would probib'y b adopted , to the dirgraoo of America ] civihzUlon. New Yoik'd ureatneea. Cor. 0 mlnoMl E-.qulr r. New Y irk state hta a tenth of al the American people , an eighth of al the whites , and nearly a fourth of al the city or urban people. It Is thi second tgrlcaltural atate , or only see end to Illinois In f am products , lead Ing Ohio 120 000,000. New Yorl firms yield f 10 an acre , Illinois ft It Is the second barley state , the third oata and rye a ate , the first buckwheat and hty state , and it raises one fifth of all the potatoes and four fifths cf all the hops. It ralaeo one-sixth of all the frnlt , one-third of all the cheese , one seventh of all the batter. It Is the manufacturing ntate in the union , paying moro than a tilth of the total wigop. Its manu facturers aggregate nearly $1,100 000- 000 It still leads In ship bulldlnp , and owns a third of onr marine. It hold a third of the registered national bands. It produces n sixth of the agricultural instrument ? , one third of all the bikory products , one halt of the men's clothing aud two-thirds of the women's clothing , one-fifth of the foundry and machine shop pro ducts , one fifth cf the furniture , one- third of the hosiery and knit goods , a quarter of the jawely , one third of the beer and ale , half of the millinery and lace goods , two-thirds of the pianos , ono half of tbo paints , half of the perfumery and cosmetic ] , ono- third of the books and periodicals , one- quarter of the soap and candle ? , ono- ha f of the eng r and molasses , ono- sixth of the cbewing and smoking tobacco and sncfF , and half of the cigars. TnoNow Colorado Booanaa. From the Idaho Springs Mlnlrg ( Hzett * There are several reasons f jr plac ing faith In the new gold discoveries These reasons are the qutntity uf gold bearing qian z , tbe extent of unbroken territory , the unmborof veins and the astonishing rlchnota of the ore. Above all , the plaoars at the month of Soda creek and Grass valley must have been fed from a chief source somewhere , why not on the slrpjs of the Big Chief mountain and wby not hence forth let the old monarch wear a crown of gold ? Old gold miners and prospectors , Oiliforuia forty-niners and Gilpln county forty-nln ra admit that they never saw richer mineral In fissures than this. In the mlnda of the prospectors there seems to be no doubt that these veins are well denned fissures and jas tlfy the belief that the narrow pay streaks will widen out as depth is at tained The finest showing Is in the Ham ilton , from wbish chunks are tskjn out covered with gold like filigree work. The Glasgow haa been traced by opening for GCO feet , and all along the quartz has been panned with the tame astonishing results. The Sin- didge lodge , belonging to Mr. Kino , and the Lexington Extension , owned by Mr. Fishand Drs. Hoop and Meade , show similar rich mineral. Most ol the.lodes thus far located belong to Messrs Sindldge , Tarbot and With row. Oolonel Sincilge , to whom the credit for these discoveries Is chit fly due , has shown that in his composl tion of which the first sylable of his name is significant. During the first two diys after this strike became public several hundred visited the camp , and now many pros pectors are swarming over the maun taiaand are oxtordlug their operations for twoor more mllra in throe direc tions from the Saudidge property. It the auguries gathered from every Indication are verified this must prove a valuable and lasting addition to the mining interests of the neighborhood and one that will rejoice all who rise above the party prejudice of indivldna Interest and reoognlza In each new strllio a benefit to all. Moderation , however , must be ob served in order not to awaken too Ban gulne expectations. The wisdom < : this policv Is shown In the slpendlc hold that U.e Creek dlitrlot haa taken In the estimation of mining men. This-favor Is hour d to grow. With U e , Oaicade aid Sida oreek aa new and rich camping grounds , with the impetus thereby given to tbe mining m the older districts around Freeland In the Hukill belt , up Spring gulch and on Beaten mountain , and with the systematic development , and im raenso regular outlay of the E iglish 0' mpany , a polden harvest Is surely In atore for Idaho Sprlngr as the cente of all thuiio thrlvli g THE GREAT GZR REMEDY FOR PAIN. IbhtTM and ouni RHEUMATISM , Nouraltf.a , ScUltci , Lumbigo , UACKAC1IC , , BIIDICES , TOOTB1CH1 , SORE THROAT , QUI.SST. SB rLLlNOS , SPBAIKS , Scri&os , Cats , Bnutet , mOSTDITES. nonif s , scAL'.ts , ABi all olh r bodllj Ktti aoil paliu. nm cum i BOTUV Bold b ; ill Draidiu > D tu ) . DlTMlleoi ia 11 T Ji CUiUi A.Vogtlir Co. ( S HUA.T , U0 . ) B lU on. , 0. S. A. GOLD 11KDA' * FAR 8 , 1871 BAKER'S BREAKFAST COCOA , WMTUted Absolutely pun Ooooa. from whlc < th * XM ol oi b s b n i > mOTA. Hhti thr * tlmt * th ttrvnath o Ooooamlxid lia Bluch , Ar row Bool or Scjw.md li turn for * t' * n or * onnmkmL It I de'klod , nourishing ; , itrenrth enW.fuUj dlfwtod , a'dad BlnMy ad'pt < f lor IDT * Ids a. wtU M ( or persons la heilth. Sold by QroonlEv irywhri W , BAKER & Co , .Dorchester. . Hasi NOTICE TO CATTLE MES. 1,000 , HEAD OF YOUNG OATTLI FOR SALE. 603 Hc < ui ot Y rllf jr Stotri in < ] Heiftn , SCO Haul ol Two-jcw-cll Steer' , nd 100 Hud ol Twj yeir old Helton Ire cit la r ll vord. striijht , tbill'y ca't'e n'0.1 ' j grided llttla For § ' - n ire th r or I. loUtifulttle | Hir < .hii > rf. For further r'rtlc u r cill on or dJi < * U. t Pctttr , Water j Biowucoiutjr , Kw . Al 1m DR , AMELIA BURROUGHS , OFFICE AND RESIDENCE , 1617 Dodge St. , - Omaha , Neb , Otto * hours frame to W a. m. , t to p. m. 7 l phoo No. 1U. COM ( -Us POWER AND HAND Steam Pumps , Engine Trimmings , israa MAoniNtBT , BELTING , nosie. BRASS AND IRON rrnraao PIT ITXAV PAOKIHO , AT WHOLE3ALK AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS CHURCH AND 801160 , ® BX * Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha , Neb. O. F. GOODMAN. KOXriEU DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PAINTSOILSVARNISHES And Window Glass. MAHA . . . - _ . NEBRASKA. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. n WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. It is the beat and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Ono poand IB equal ,0 three pounds of com. Stock fed with Ground Oil Oako in the fall and win- or , Instead of running down , will Increase in weight and be in good market * iblo condition in the spring. Dairymen as well aa others who OBO it can tea * tfy to its morita. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $25.00 per ton ; no charge for Backs. Address 04-eod.mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob. M. Hellman < fc Co. WHOLESALE 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA , NEB. MoMAHON , ABERT & CO , , Wholesale Druggists , 1315 DOUGLAS STREET - - OMAHA NEB McNAMARA & DUNCAN. WHOLES. * LE DEALERS IN KENTUCKY AND PENNSYLVANIA WhiskieS ! in Bond or Free. Also direct Importers of WINES , BRANDIES AND ALES , Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine A , Agents for Jos. Schlitz' Milwaukee Beer , Bottled and in Kegs , 214 fe 216 S. 14TH STPET , - - - OMAHA , NEB , ( JKAJTIE PLANING M MANUFAOTUBKRS OF Carpenter's Materials ALSO SASH , DOORS , BLINDS , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Bal.usterS . , Window and Door Frames , Etc , ' PinVolAM facilities ( or Uu Manufacture of all Idads of Moulding * . Planing aax ! matchlmr a Specialty. . Orders from tha 'country will b promptly executed. m.wnnl s > H _ _ A M A. M. CLARK PaMer&PaperHanger 8IBH WRITER feDEOOBATOR. WHOLESALE & RETAIL WALL PAPER . Window 8taulB8 and Onrtams , CORNICES CURTAIN POLE& AND FIXTURES. Paints , Oils & Ernsiies. 107 Sontti 14th Street OMAHANEBRASKA BROOM AND BRUSH WORKS. Cor. of Fifteenth and Pacific Streets. WMI . , . RE , OOPSON & 00 , , Proprietors. V. . Will commence operattoni about April 1 ; m2 .mD 1m. >