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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1883)
4 THEDA1IA BEE-OMAHA THUESDAY MAY 3 The Omaha Bee. Published everr morning , eicqit Ban * 7. The only Monday morning dally. " rKRMS ISYIMAIL tint Ye r. . . . 10.00 I Three Monthi.93.00 Biz MonUu. . 6.00 | One Month. . . . 1.00 CIIK WEEKLY BKK , published erery TEKM8 POST PAID Oat Year $3.00 I Three Monthi. M ) lr Month LOO | One Month. . . . 20 AXXRIOAN NEWS COHPAKT , Bole AgenU Newsdealers In the United States. , COimESPONDKNCK- Ootnmnnt. atfons relating to News and Editorial matters should bo addressed to the EDITOB or Tin Bu. BUSINESS LETTEKS-A1I Buslncs Lettert and Kcmlttnncca should be d liessed to TIIK Hit PcBLiaiiiNo OOMPANT JUAJIA. Draft * , Checks and PostolHoe Jrders to be made payable to the order of the Company , the BEE PUBLISHINB 00 , .Props . , E. RO8EWATER Editor THE mayor scorns to have como out on lop , SKVEIUL of Mayor Gaaio'a appoint ments still hang tiro. THE fatlnro of the Waring lyateu Booms to bo another Mayor's nest. THE American hog will ihnrlah and multiply after Bismarck is in hli 8ravo < _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ANOELL baa aproad his wings and will look out after hla real oatate iu- veattnonta. It la Marshal Quthrle now. _ _ _ _ _ TUK Indiana olectiona are not cheerIng - Ing for the ropabllcans. Heavy denv ooratio majorities are reported In a majority of the towna. THE bureau of statistics reports thai "tho Tennoaooo whuat crop la aafo. ' Ex-Trcaiuror Polk mnat bo locked u [ or out of the atato. Mu OAUEY , the informer , will prob ably bo hung for crimes committee prior to the Phoenix Park trials Many Irishman will help to eaao Mr Chroy's path to the gallowa , A oneal and aaaasain combined la a little wore * than a murderer. IN the Installment of Mr. Ho well' new atory In the Juno Century he wll have a deacriptlon of a Bhlpwrocl which , it la pr dieted , will astonlal ; thoaa who think ho can do nothin ] bat analjzj the thoughts of Net England womon. THE St. Lonla board of public Ira pruvomonta have let coutracta fo $195,085 worth of sheet aaphalt pave monts. The Birbor company receive the contracts and will bo required t maintain the stroeta as paved In goo repair for a certain length of time. A FLORAL design presented to a actor during the progress of a play 1 Denver , Colorado , the other ni hl "with the compliments of Mrs. II A. Tabor , " weighed thlrty-fivopoucd and ia eald to have coat $125. Th Tabor family are bound to keep b : torn the public "if It taken a leg " BLISS has begun again , and "whe the cpurt adjourned had not conclude his argument. " Ofconrsonot. Wh should he ? A hundred dollara a da and perquisites are sufficient induct monta for long-wlndodueaa. Bile argumonta promise to be aa nnmorot as Dr. Bliss' bulletins. LAST week General McOIellan et tered Richmond for the first time 1 hla Ufa. Twenty-one years ago i was near It on several oocaalona , bi the eudden "change of base" whlc took him away from the army of tl Potomac prevented hia military enti Into the capital of the confederacy , TUB more the ( allure of the Augui tenlan society at Lawrence la invest gated the worao it looks for the re\ erond bankers who managed to fall ft the neat sum of $500,000 , Next 1 to political banking , religions mom Investing ia the moat nncertaln of sn ceia , and the moat cercaln of ultima failure. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Tux first acquittal In the Dnbl trials took place yesterday , the fort nate prlaoner being Fllzharria , tl cab man who drove the assassins Phcenlx park on the evening of tl murder , Fltzharrla , however , la bo tried on the charge of conaplra to murder , the penalty of which la t years penal servitude. IT la known that the cyclone la windy affair , and that when a m comes up againat one of them he very likely to be In the condition John Hay's hero , when "snbaeqno i proceedings interested him no more Republican. The Republican la always poor f crediting Items. "Tho fight up the Stanlalan" was ] written by Bri Harte and not by John Hay oa c literary contemporary intimates. . TUE Douglas connty doctors ht finally concluded to clasp hands acr the bloody chasm by organizing county medical society. This la a gc move. For the paat ten years h the doctors of Douglai connty ht . postponed all other business to cut I throats of the other half If a com society will heal the wounds lit ouj to bo made a howling success. REACH ! HO FORTHE PLUNDER Attorney General Urewator'i dccli * Ion In the cue of the Now Orleans' ' and Pacific road , vie : that the assign ment of the rights of a railroad cor poration carries with It whatever rights that corporation nay have to unearned land grants , has been promptly taken advantage of by the Sinthoru Pacific railroad. Mr. Iluntlngtou through his attorneys has made application to the Interior department that commissioners bo appointed to examine and report upon what was once Texas Pacific. There is a vast unearned land grant of 25,000,000 acres connected with the old Texas Paclfis that Mr. HuntIngton - Ington and his partners have long cov eted , and which they now claim as the assignee of that road. It la true that the construction of the Texas Pacific was scarcely begun , that the road norcr earned an aero of the land lalmed by their successors , and the ; rant of oongroas waa made upon the xpress condition of the construction jf a transcontinental line by the par ies to whom the land waa granted. But these are trifling objections to ho cormorants of the Pacific coast , who by a heartlets blooding of Oali- ornla and Nevada , and by diverting rom the government treasury the noney long stnoo due to pay their in- erc'at obligations , have boon enabled o build the Southern Pacific along ho line once surveyed by the Texas Pticlfh company , and now claim all ho benefits granted by congress to ho latter company. In this case the people are power- ess. A strong tITjrt was made In the aat congress to secure the forfeiture of the Texas Pacific land grant , but it was blocked by Speaker Kaifer and his corporation henchmen. Since congresa had closed , Attorney General Browster has rendered his decision on the rights of the assignees of the franchises of a dead corporation to an unearned land grant , provided only that congress shall not have fdi-ma- lively declared It foifdlted. If the decision of the Ualted States conrte in the Sohulonborg case Is to bo a guide -If the Secretary of the Interior Is to consider that ho ia simply an executive ofliiccr acting under a judi cial mandateas construed by the Attor ney General of the Ualted States II Is probable that this vast domain granted to a defunct corporation l | which failed utterly to carry out the _ condition under which It was to be acquired , may be , before cou groaa shall convene , declared tc belong to the Southern Pacific. Ojmmont upon such a ahamolesi perversion of justice la unnecessary The acqnlnltion of this onormoui atrotoh of the public domain by thi Southern Pacific would bo a glgantii steal Indefensible. frm _ at y point o view. Every such jib only thaateni the day of retribution which la a hanJ whim corporate monopolies wil find their pow ro of vented rights cob wcbi for protection ngainst n jaa public Indignation imd bultrarka whicl nill bo ewept away by an outragcc nubile burning to redress the wrong which they have eo loug endured a the hands of organizsd wealth am conaclonaoleas corruption. THE SEWER SYSTEM. If Mayor Ohasu would take thi trouble to .inform himself about pub lic matters he would bo los likely ti go off at half cock as often aa ho does First we were Informed that the clt ; had an overlap of $40,000 , when thi fact Is that there are funds In the clt ; treasury. And now the city councl Is Informed on the same authority that the Warning sewer system ha proved a failure. It Is true that there have boon twi sewer stoppages In the sewers wlthli the last month. BDth have been In vestigated and remedied. In each cas the came of the obstruction was fonm fo have resulted from careless tappln if the mains. When plnmbera pei 1st In pormlttlcg bricks and stones t 'all Into our sewers while connoctln hem with houses and stores , the fatil les not with the system but with care ess workmen. Bat the fact Is tha ust as long as the city refuses to a [ point an Inspector of sewers thea stoppages are likely to occui Such an officer has bee repeatedly requested. No clt with a sewer system can afford to b without one. And every largo citj with the exception of Omaha , omploj one or more of thoao officials to snpoi Intend every connection with tl sewer mains. a swers all the requirements for whlc an It was constructed. It lathe boat an li the cheapest system for sanitary sevo of mt age that has been yet devised. On' ' two things are needed to complete 1 efficiency. One la a competent li at spector. The other la a series of mai on holoa along the Hues of pipe whit 3tO will permit the occasional passage cf > ur swab through the sewers as a prcca , tlon against any obstruction or for tl , removal of auch obstructions aamayl the roanlt of caroloaaneas on the pa of citizens whoso homos and stor connect with the sower. Any Intlra , . tlons that the system , aa a system , defective , arise either from Ignoran IVO or malice , the _ ity IT has been discovered that the di { hi sot for the opening of the Brookl ; bridge happens to be the queei birthday , and several patriotic Irish man arejumping up and down with r go at what they call an insult to the Irish race. Whore U the Insult. It would bo a pretty difficult job to fix B < y date that would not correspond * ith the birthday of tome foreign potentate , prince or power. Queen Victoria's birthday la of no more consequence - sequence than the wedding anniver saries of King Ootowayo with his fifty wives. It is giving undue im portance to a very unimportant event to take any notice of anch a coinci dence. GERMAN FARMERS. The St. Louis Republican notes the rapid Inoroaao of Gorman farmers in Missouri , and pays a well deserved tribute to their Industry and success as agriculturists. It says twenty years ago thu Manchester road , a fine broad turnplko leading from the city of St. Lonls , a distance of nearly thirty miles through St. Louis county , wis Inhabited on both sldoj almost ex lu sh-dy by American farmers. Now nearly all the farm ) on the road have passed out of the hands of Americana into the handa of Germans , and it la now a Gorman highway from ouo end to the other. The farms are not as largo as they were under the old regime , but are more neat nnd tidy , and evidently moro thriftily managed. A similar change has taken place on nearly all the great hiyhwaysjln the earro county , until throe-fourths , probably , of the farms In tno connty are now In the hands of the Germans. And something llko this is going on In many of the best counties iu the state. The Republican attributes this change to the growing impatience of American youth of the farmer's monotonous and unexciting lifo. They prefer the attractions of the towns , or the atill greater and moro dangerous facluatloni of the largo cities , where Ufa Is supposed to present - sent all that is worth living for. The Germans , In addition to an innate and affectionate- love of the soil , possess qualities which are sure to win It and retain it , They are patient , plodding and methodical in their habits aud economical In their lUiag ; they are prudontand careful husbandmen , and possess the faculty of securing the very beat yields from the ground , and they resolutely avoid the extrav- ginca nnd debt which sooner or later rob so many Americana of their old homesteads , Wherever a cnnv munlty of German farmers la fouud in the west and there are many of them iti Nebraska - it may bo taker for granted they are there forever and they effectually disprove thoassar- tion that "farming doesn't pay" by growing Independent out of the sol which their fast-living American pre decessors failed to muko a living on , THE BUSINESS SITUATION. The tlownesa with which trade U adjusting itself to the ndvanco of the season in a rtmirkablo feature of thi bualncaj equation. Spiiig bneinnji is moro backward than spring itself and merchants who have waited loug for the expected boom ara tie ginning to grumble loudly that thi wheels do not move as fast aa ex pected. Industry is atill fooling the cffecti of a heavy overproduction and manu faoturlng centers are Buffering fron the dopreaalon resulting from a sur plus of last year's stocks. Trade un doubtedly feels the absence of thi farmers from the stores. Seedinj and planting are progressing rapidly encouragement for handsonn croj returns In the autumn. It Is wel known that an unusual proportion o last year's crops still remain to b moved. The rapidity with whiol surplus Is thrown upon the marko e . will depend to a great degree npot | the nature of the season aa It pro grosses. The latest reports upoi the growing grain are mon satisfactory and the deficit in wlnte 8 wheat Is likely to be moro than mad | np by the Increased acreage devote to spring wheat. The wholesale trad reports a fair demand for staples an greater ease in collections , but a con servatlvo disposition on the part c country trade to venture outside c narrow lines In the making of par chases. Retail dealers are still com plaining of the backwardness of th season. The depression in the stock marko still continues. The outside pnbll refuse to bo baited by the fancy stock and the strongest stocks on the Hi feel the influence of dull times 01 'change. This condition of aflaira ! regarded by the mass of the bnsinei mon of the country with Indifferent or absolute satisfaction. Speculatlo In stocks la detrimental to legltlmal business and hlndera the real domanc of trade by fluctuations and fictltiot prices , which discourage and curta I consumption. a ' WATEU routes of transportation a : a perpetual check on railroad line . Nothing illustrates this better than recent occurrence in the upper Mls.il sippl valley , During the winter , rs . charges have been "what the trad would bear. " But navigation la no open , and the railroad managers g together last week to establish low rates. Competition by the river line ( hey admitted , compelled them to r dace their ( barges very much for t ! summer , The situation In the upper Mlsalulppl country , however , ia pe culiar. Railroad competition , for ono thing , Is In some rcspocta lots keen there than In the central states of. the valley ; and then , too , the water routes there are nearly parallel with ho prlnolpd rail linos. SULLIVAN'S sudden oollapa has occa aloncd no surprise among aportlng mon. Brutal ruffians of his atamp have with few exceptions como to the aamo end. A writer In a Now York paper glvea the following page from history : Morrtasy loft uochlog and waa sat urated win dlseMO. Iloonan knocked himself out of tlmo In early manhood. Elliott waa a thief aud convict , nnd died In hl boots while arrogating to himself the empty "championship of America. " In the rebellion prlzo fighters proved to have neither cndnr iwcu nor ordinary preservative eouao. Kuikln , the bully giant nf Phlladel- uiila , waa always in disgrace at the head of hja company. Bradley , who boat him , never roae above a low aal'- ' ora' gregory , Tom Hyer went around consumptive- and supeilljous all hla closing years. Bat the | tavoru and dance-house keepers who are the back- era of those prize-fighters aud pot them forward from puppydnm to btutodom , often live well und have their country places aud bowers and stand In good credit with tradeamen , These are the men who ought to be sent to prison. When Joe Ooburn came out of Auburn jail ho repentant ly said : "Liquor haa been my misery. I'll never dnuk It again ; I'll keep a saloon. " Woman The annual maaa convention cf the Nebraska Woman Suffrage associa tion will be held at Grand Island May 9 and 10 , Mrs. Goutgar , of In diana , aud Miss Hlndman , of Penn sylvania , will address the convention. Visitors will b3 entertained by the Grand Island VV. S. A Cjrtlb'catea for reduced rites on the railroads may be obtained from Ida E. Edaou , Oma ha. Letters and contributions for the convention should be addressed to Mrs. Lizzie Abbott , cor. sec. N. W. S. A. Grand Island. By order of Executive committee , JENNIE F. HOLMK , Chairman. ( Exchanges pinnae copy ) Buying American Lands. Kan y City Time ) . The Investment of English capital in American enterprises and Ameri can lands continues to increase , and wo believe that a remarkable amount f English capital will como to thli : onntry dntiog the next five years , The English fondness for land cannel ba overcome , and now that lands Ic he United States are found to yield e good income on the money Invested , ud alsa piaicas a largo speculative value , they are eagerly sought. Met : who cannot afford to own land In Groal Britain can possess thousands of acrei u the United States. , the diaturbance tn England produced by A constant agitation ol he land tenure question causea cnpl al to seek Investment In thia country , The Englishmen ara now aatitficc hat thla nation is not an expurimeul itthor politically or economilly , and ii plto of their allegations that wo an louatantly making ourselves poorer bj oluaiug tree trade they are quite wili ng to risk their money under the af eots of our so-called illogical cconomti lyatem. Mr. Hampden Whalloy , M. P. , 1 : now in thia country as the represtmia Ivo of a tyndlcato cf members of j.ar lament to investigate the south anc west and report the moat favorable aec ions for land investments. As at udlcatlon of the fouling In Eaglanc wo quote from Mr. Whalloy as fol- "OCTB : "Mr , Whalley says there ia scarelj Anything else talked of In the Londoi itock exchange than the purchase ol American landa , and already aboul twenty ranch companion have beet 'armed. A very largo amount ol British capital is deatlned to bo invcat ed In thla manner , but It Is not Amor ca alone that la to be benofitted , foi p these Investors have as well turnoc their attention to Mexico , tnd com panics are forming to buy land there None of these companies , Mr. Whallo ; thinks , have a capital of less than 1 , 000,000 , and they are represented b ] such men as Baring Bros. , bankers Mr. L < kbonchere , of Truth ; SirThoma Brassey , civil lord of the admiralty and many of the banking houses am numbers of Urge country landlords as well as members of parlla ment. The reason of this , ho Bays , li largely the lack ol opportunity for th utilization of capital at home , Euor mons amounts of money are lying idli e In England , and men who have It wil not Invest In land , bacanso there Is ni profit from It. Farm land eapeclall ; la at a discount. The importation o American beef has depreciated th value of grazing laud. Mr. Whalle ; farther nays that these land companle will , to a certain extent , do somethln In the way of promoting emlgratlo : from England. Young , enterprlsln and competent farmers will bo en conraged to go out to the Unltei States. The system to be ontero Into will , to a certain extent , bo ca operative , In which small farmers wit moderate capital will bo welcomed Subsequently the rents are to bo regt lated by the percentage of profits. ' Work of tno Pension Office. CltreUatl LxiJer. ° The pension office gives omploj ment to about sixteen hundred clerk and full uao Is found for the entli force. The work Increases instead c dlmlnlahlng , and vcryfowporaons on side of the offica understand th amount of labor required on behalf c the government beneficiaries. ] will bo remembered that juat prior t adjournment congreaa paaaod an ai Increasing the pensions of those wli had lost u leg above the knee or a arm above the elbow from $24 to $ per month , and alao Increasing th pensions of thoao who had loat a han or foot In the service of the conntr from $18 to $24 per month. Tl law authorizing thia Increaao ni not passed until the 3d of March las and fllnoo then , as wo learn from tl National llepubllcan , of Waahlngtoi 11 400 applications have already bcc filed In the Pension Office by those f < wboao benefit the 'law waa passei Nearly four thouiand of such applica tions have boon conald rod and now certificates Issued thereon. Boaldes thla extra work , much of which waa performed In March , 4,500 olaltna for original Invalid pensions wore filed for examination In the name- mouth , nnd 1,400 widows' claims. Those 5,000 claims were totally distinct from those filed under the aat of March 111. All claims have to ba mlnntoly examined , and the rejections for this year alone The Republican esti mate * at forty thonaand. In addition to the fortgotue there waa received during March 32,600 pieces cf evi dence , 10 000 reports from the adju tant general , 0,000 reports from the surgeon general , 17,500 repoils from examining surguous , 1,000 reports encases cases from special cx mlnersand 0 000 dally reports from the sumo , Each of the papers received had to bo classified aud applied to the proper cises. There were also received 17,000 miscellan eous letters , 7,000 , congressional , and 22,600 other lettera of Inquiry concern ing claims. All of these require an examination of the papers con nected with the Inquiry before answer ia made. The number of l"t- tora aud circulars mulled by the cffico during Murch waa 133,500. No leas thnn 18,700 callo wore made on the adjutant general for information , and fully 10,000 on the surgeon general , While everything possible h done to expedite bualuuta , the greatest care la taken to pi event an allowance of Im proper claims. Tao facts end figures presented will servo to convoy to our readers an ( doit nf the immenee amount of work connected with the pension oflho aside from the largo dla- b moment cf money called for by the ponalon rolls , The NbW South President Garrett , of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad company , has jaat re turned homo to Baltimore from a trip to the south , Hoaaye : "Rich in i'n ' resources ana facilities , the sou li is developing moro rapidly than ouir before the war. Indeed , I waa most favorably Impressed with the proaporous appearance ef the coun try through which I traveled , I talked with prominent business men at Charleston , Richmond and other points , and they apoko iu the most OL- conraglng manner of the present busi ness aud the future outlook. There wao one marked feeling I noticed among the southern people , and that waa their great friendship and inter- eat for Baltimore. They regard us with pride and look npou no as the southern metropolis , and always have the deepest concern far the welfare aud prosperity of thla city. All traces of the war are gone , and all bitterness of foollrg has disappeared. Northern and southern mon now mingle togeth er In business Intoroato. Tnoro la also n moro friendly feeling oxiitlng be tween the white and colored people , and southern men now are manifest ing considerable Interest in the educa tion and progress of the colored race. I was particularly impressed with this , and learned that every opportunity waa being aff irded the colored people to Improve themselves. The rights of the colored people are thoroughly recogulzad , and they are treated with the same respect as hero or In the north. " Tnat Ola Fraud Lincoln Democrat. That old fraud of n M j. ( ? ) Psar- man is ufrald thut Senator Van Wjck will got aumo credit for the hard work ho I'an expended iu getting 'ho ' Otoo roaervntio-i into market. The facts nro th nif j ir hud laid a little plan by which ho and a knot of "filands" were to make a nice little pile at the expense cf the settlors. But Senator Vun Wyck did not propose to nlow ! the old fool to go about the country tnnkiug on his ability to control United Sia'03 senator. ] cud BO kicked the kettle over , and now Pearmau is writing lettnrs and the Onaha Repub lican Is publishing them trying to placa Senator Van Wyck In a false light. Recommending a Pastor. Wascca Radical. The ll ° v. D. Morgan la ono of the utato executive committEa of the now party , David ia a good one , and will make things warm for all the other parties. He loves politics , some think as well as , If not bettor than , salvation. Drop the Dry Bonee. Bos ton Hf raid ( Ind. ) A shake up and a new deal are greatly needed In our politics. The old names have lost or changed their meaning , New issues Invite a now division. Better Than Throwing Mud. Now Orleans Picojuno ( Ccin. ) The people of Nebraska are plant ing troco. It la much moro profitable than talking politics. Tariff on ten Tapis. Boston Poet ( Dem , ) The party that wins In 1884 will be the party that vigorously fights agalnsl excessive taxation. CURES Rheumatism , Neuralgia , Sciatica f.umbago , Backache , Headache , Toothache , Bor Throat , HwcllliiB" , Nprnltn , Ilrulto , llurnt. Hc ll . fruit llllii , iflD ilL OTIIEI1 11UIIILY I'llMi AMI ifllFS. Sold bDrut tfiU ftnd Dealers erervwhert. Fifty Ctutl I boult. . VlrectloDi la 11 Ltniuitei. TIIK CIIAKI.KH A. VOUKI.KIt CO. < UUlnn > . JU..C.S.1 ALMA E. KEITH , DKAIEKIN , Fine Millinery DAIR GOODS , WAVES , BANGS , ETu Stook Entirely Fjosh and Now 109 15th Street , Opp , Poatoffico , POWER AND HAND Steam Pumps , Engine Trimmings , I ) HINIHH MAoniMKnr , DKLTINO , noaic. muss AND IKON rrrriMOn rir ITBAI PACKING , AT ITUOLKSALK AND UKrAtL. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha. Neb. C. F. GOODMAN , DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PAINTSOILSVARNISHES And Window Glass. MAHA NEBRASKA. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE GALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. It IB the boat and cheapest food for atock of any kind. Ono pound la oqnal to throe ponnda of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Oako in the fall and winter - tor , Instead of running down , will Incroaeo in weight and bo in good market able condition In the spring. Dairymen aa well an others who neo it can tea * tify to Its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Prlco $25.00 per ton ; no charge for Backs. Address 04-ood-mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob. M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE TRIERS 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. 13th OMAHA , NEB. PLANING Ml 5 MANOTACTUKKUH OF Carpenter's Materials ALSO Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. Ifirst-clasi facilities for the Manufacture of nil binds of Mouldmgn , Placing * aJ matching : a Specialty , Orcivn from the country wl ) be promptly executed. A. MOYEIt , FroprI MANUFACTUREIl OK FINE BUGGIES , CARRIAGES & SPRING WAGONS My Repository IB Constantly filled with a Select Stock. Beat Office and Faotoiy. S. W , dor. 16th and Capitol Avenue. ngle Brooch Loading Shot Dons , from $5 to 818 , ' ouble Broocli Loading Shot duns , from $18 to 875 , Mmle Loading Shot Bnns , From $6 to 825,1 Fishing Tackei , Base Balls and all kinds of Fancy Qoodi , Full Stook of Show Gases Always on hand , Imported and Key West Cigars a large line of Meerschaum and Wood Pipes and everything re quired in a first-class Cigar , Tobacco and./ / Notion Store , Cigars from $15 per 1,000 upwards Send ior Price List and Samples WILLIAM SNYDER , MANDrAOTUEEn OF CARRIAGES , BUGGIES , First-Class Painting and Trimming , Repairing Promptly Done , 1321 and 1323 Harnoy street , corner A. M. OLARK Paintfir&PapBpHaMBP SIQH WRITER & DKUORATOk WHOLESALE & RETAIL WALL PAPEH $ Window Shades aiid Curtains , OORNIOES CURTAIN POLKS * yK FCXTURKS. Paints , Oils & Brushos. 107 Booth Uth Rtreet OMAHA. . NEBRAPK.4