Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 11, 1883)
I1 11 THE DAILBEEOMAHA FRIDAY MAY 11 The Omaha Bee. , I'nbllibod everr morning , except San- y. The only Monday morning dally. VKRM8 BY.MAIL- Uno Year..810.00 I Thrco Months.$3.00 BU Months. . 5.00 | One Month. . . . 1.00 " 'HE WEEKLY BEE , published every Wslnosday. TERMS POST 1'AIU- Oae Year 82.00 I Three Months. N ) flliMonths. . . . 1.10 | OnoMonth. . . . 20 AMERICAN NKWB COMFANT , Bole Agcntt Newsdealers In the United Statoi , | A < # CORRESPONDENCE- Oommunl. latfoni relating to News and Editorial matters should bo addressed to the EDITOB or THE UK. BUSINKBS LETTEHS All Buslnes Letters and Ucmlttances should tie nd irewcd to THE BIK I'UBLISIIINO COHFANT OMAHA , Draft * , Checks and 1'ostoffioe Jrdera to bo made payable to the order of the Company. file BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props , E. ROSEWATER Editor- MEMPHIS has closed all Its gambling booses nudcr a law making gambling a folony. So FAB as prodlotloDB and obsctva- tlons In the weal are coucornod , the Ignal sotvlco Booms to bo a signal fatlnro. A FKEK trade in epolla with cfllce * for revenue only , Is a plank upon which all fictions of the democracy can agree. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Mu PAHNELL ia opposed to Itieh emigration , bat evicted Irishmen keep coming to America by hundreds tu'd thousands. THE Venezuela cow tree yields a llqaid with the fltvor of cream. Oma ha milkmen should nt once set oat a few thousand. THK Btorm has tompurarlly delayed paving , bnt paving will perma nently step damaged to our streets like those committed by the late storms. MK. VAHDEituiLTdrow a million out of the Chemical bank on the day of his dopnttoro for Earopo and the Paris podlers of chronics are anxiously awaiting his arrival. LIOIITNINO etrook the Standird Oil works at Jersey City und destroyed ft million dollars worth of properly. The company will inaUo It up In their next years' rebates from the ralroads. Now that the supreme court ha * decided that states have the puwir to fix freight and passenger charges un the railroads we shall hear losi of the vested rights of the companies to i-x- tortlou nt the pleaauro of their maiu- THE only influx of capital ia Irclnnd about the pruscnt tlniu Booms to lu capital punishment. Timothy Kelly on his third trial has boon cjnvlctoc and will hang Tilth the rent of the Ptusalx Park aeaagaino. THERE is great commotion among the men with wrought iron check in Germany. Bismarck's latest scheme Booms to bo to orueh out the Insurance companies ID Germauy so as to glvo the government the insurance busi ness. . IN the recent division of spoils by the Nebraska delegation , Senator Van Wyok secured the appointment of whisky granger for Datna Brooks who is presumed to represent the anil monopoly element of the ropubllcar party. TALKING In Boston last week , An thony Comitock declared that at a re cent trial In the United States clrcnl court , "tho court was turned Into free love meeting. " Mr. Oomstock 1 a reformer who frequently permits hi bllo to got the better of his brains. THE Htpullican is of the profonn opinion that THE BEE has aggravate its libel against Mr. Rela. No donb It is very aggravating to Mr. Rela t discover that TUB BEE didn't sweet when it hoard of his flO.OQO libel sul and the phalanx of lawyers who ro talnod themaolvoa to prosecute it. A FEW moro speeches by Rosoo Oonkllng would restore harmony li Now York. There would only bo on faction and Mr. Oonkllng could dovot his attention to hli law practice. Th 213,000 republican voters In Not York state last fall know the difforenc between a "boas" and a leader In spit of Mr. Oonkllng's declaration that n such distinction exists. DUBINQ last month New York cltj had 150 fires whore $10,000 or mor was destroyed. The aggregate loaae foot up nearly five millions and a haler or about $34,000 as the average dls truction by each fire. In addition tc these the aggregate loss by emalle firei ii estimated at $1,000,000. Tnu we have $0.600,000 aa the month * contribution toward the annlhllatloi of Individual and national wealt through this ono means. With abso lute lota of patlonal wealth amountln nearly 090 hundred million dollars year from this cause , It Is strange tha better methods of building and mor 'conservative plans of iniuranco mak their way 10 slowly , CROP PROSPECTS. There are always two extrc > mo parties whoso estimates of the grow ng crops must bo taken with a grtat deal of allowance. Thoao are the > nlls and the bears on the ChljJgo ward of trado. The first are intoruut- od In predicting a failure of the crops n order to ralso prices , the latter in overeatlmatlng the future product , with a vlow of depressing prcunt quotations. The truth will generally > o found to Ho between those two ox- romcs. From the best sources of nformatlou there Is every reason to jollovo that wo shall have a good aver * go crops this fall , although compared with last year's crop there will bo omewhat of a falling off. The avor- o condition of the winter wheat crop s said to compare with last years as fol- owa : Ohio , 65 ; Indiana , 70 ; Illinois , 5 : Missouri , 80 ; Kan an , 70 : Michl- an , 90 ; Kentucky , 75 , Tonnes- oo , 90 ; Woat Virginia , 80. These ignros Indicate an aggregate possible ield of a hundred and ninety-four millions bushels , against two hundred nd sixty-six millions , throe hundred nd ninety-six thousand. Taking into ho estimate the PacIGo slope and the middle and southern ntatcs , there Is a robabllity that this year's crop of winter wheat will bo eighty-four mil- ions and a half bushels Icis than last xar. xar.Tho The advices from spring wheat are not as full but a slight falling cfT In ondltlon is noted with a somewhat ncrcaned acreage , Estimates place bo deficiency nt some eight million nahols * bnt the statistics may bo roatly changed by future reports. Corn is late In planting bnt a largely noroaaod acreage Is everwhero report- d and with average weather there will bo an Immense crop. ATTACKING THE SEWERS- The premature attempt to improve he natural sewer to carry off the ntorm-water of North Omaha creek , iud also certain pieces and parcels of > ersoiial real estate , ban turned out to > o a aomowhat damaging experiment. Judge IIoecall'B South Omaha sewers stand the rnckot very well In the com- p&tiaou.Herald. . The experiment of putting anything to a nao for which It was not intended Is always risky. The cower in North Jmaha will bo largo enough and strong enough for every emergency when It ia completed and the old crook is filled up as intended. Any ialf fitilahod job Is snbjcut to damages from uiiforoocn ouiorgonclco like the storm of Monday , and no precautions in the prcaeut state of the old crack Bed would have prevented the over- low. Under the circumstances the fl'jwcr did roumrkably well. It carried oil' moro water than Mr. Phillips dceignod and iu addition took a largo amount cf surplus drainage which ought to have found itn way Into the earth and along thnntiu3t , BO It will do whim thu creek bed ts put lute con dition. The trUmag ) done to the Woodman oil mill was lurpcy ! If not entirely owing it oarcleasiietB on the part of its bulldura. They had been repeatedly warned that there was danger in cast ) of an extraordinary rainfall. In spite of the warnings they ncgleotot to kcop their overflow plpo open am permitted stagnant water to back Itself up to the dop h ot twelve foe adjoining their property. When the heavy rain came of course the wall o earth gave way. The storm water eoffers in the north and south sides of town are sufficiently largo to do their worl just aa soon &s they are completed There Is no theory about the matter It Is a simple question of experience lint during such rare occasions as tba on Mouday evening , when the rain fell In torrents for hours at a time the streets and gutters must bo ex pooled to do their share of the work as they do In every other city. Noth Ing but a gigantic tunnel could drain 4,100 acres under such circumstances unless aided by other re sources , What the council ongh to do at onoo Is to order the fillllng In of the creeks where they are crossed by the streets.Vhon that Is done private property owners should bo compolloc to have their lots brought up to grade That will effectually prevent any more such strains on the sewer as the ono to which wo have been referring. I will alto close the months of the chronic grumblers who are anxious to find a ohanco to run down Omaha am decry all public ImprovomoatH , Senator Mandorson should tak warning from the example of Senate Harrison who la rapidly losing cast a n public man by his nover-ending grcoc as a spoilsman. Got all the oflloea yet can for your friends , general , bnt keo your right hand under oovor unles you expect the horrors of a riotous ro aoutment long before that long torn : In the senate expires. Herald. The fltrald must have forgotto General Mondorson's speech of acopt auoo at Lincoln , In which ho laid dow his vlowa upon the patronage quea tlon In the following language : " bollvo there Is something higher an nobler In the position rf a senator o the United States than that of th simple medium through which th patronage of thii government aha bo dispensed , I certainly do not de sire that this high office should be come a mere broker shop for the dls trlbutlou of offices. I see somothin higher than that and I will sot my ale Ighor. " There certainly has boon a onsldcrablo amount of patronage dls- lenslng by removals since that mom- rablo speech bnt Senator Mondcraon must bo entirely guiltless of the largo or olao have ho has 'aot his Im' lower than ho first Intended , OMAHA needs an ordinance provld- ng for the width of tires on trucks. Vith our now pavements , this matter must not bo delayed , The narrow read of the majority of our trucks will chip the stone out and cut up the aphalt In a very effective way. In 11 largo cities the width of truck res is regulated by ordinance. It tight to be so regulated in Omaha as eon as possible. An ordinance should o framed prohibiting after a certain ate tires of less than a certain width , ay two and three-quarter or three nches on all double trucks or express wagons. Three or four months might > o given before the ordinance went nlo effect , in order to allow ample Imo for changes and repairs. Some f our delivery men are already hav- ng the wheels of their carte changed n advance of the passage of any ordl- anco by the council , but It should bo made obligatory on all , THE Now York World has boon pur- haeed by Mr. Pulitzer , of the St. jouls Fott-Ditpatch. With Its trans- or ceases Mr. Gould's connection with ho paper , in which ho Is said to have unk nearly a quarter of a million ollara. No journal that Is saddled by monopoly control can retain Its In- nonce with the people , and a short- geof the subscriptions lists makes the per worthless KB a naefnl medium for monopolists ACOOBUINO to the Yankton proas ovoral members of the Dakota logla- atnro have baon indicted by the rand jury for alleged bribery In the passage of thu capltol bill. They lon't do things that way down In ilncoln. FORFEITED LAND GRANTS. Senator Van Wyckls recent letter o Secretary Teller calling attention o the unearned grant of lands to the w Orleans it Pacific railroad calls orth the following comment from the "ionter-Preui Senator Van Wyck , of Nebraska , who is fond of posing aa a champion of the people against thu land gran I railroads , has written a long letter to ho secretary of the interior in rola- ion to the unearned grant of the New ) rlcMs & Pacific. Tnia is south * eat- ru road which was Incorporated and uscivod a land grant in 1871 , and has done nothing tlnco except to put bondi upon the market and undergo severe ! corporate metamorphoses. Of course ho lands granted hsvo not boor mtonted to the company , ant hero is no proapuot of its earning ; hcm , but they remain wlthdrawr. 'rotn the public domain and cloeucl ; o settlement , ( pending cjngrcnulona ruiolaUnn declaring thorn torfi < ltoc and restored. What Snator Van Wyok want/ , apparently , though ho u not very luotu in putting hla coao B coiiio diolarution by the secretary of the Interior , iu anticipation of con- jrcaslonal aatiou , which nhall glvo public uotlco that the company hac no title to the lauds and prevent the negotiation of any incro bonds upon [ hem as a basis , The oaao Is Interest ing as a typo of several unearned lane jrant oases , which will probably bo jomo the subject of legislation- next Eotslon. Judicial rulings the action of the executive do partmenta and the tacit con sent of congress have estab llahod the principle that the right of a railroad to earn Ita laud grant does no explro with the limit of time fixed fo Its completion , without addltlona legislation ; that la to say , a road ma ; earn and obtain title to lands grantee to It oven after the limit of time fixei for Its completion had expired , unless in the meantime congress , by statute has declared the lands restored to the public domain. Congress has not ye taken this action In any case , and I not likely to take It in the case o roads like the Northern Pacific , which have built a considerable part of the ! lines , and are rapldlly pushlni them to completion. Bnt stops will certainly bo taken before long and probably at the next session o congress , to declare fortoited the grants of roads which have novc built a mile of line or spent a dollar o : money , except In lobbying and stock jobbing , and whoso lauds lie Idle au < closed to public entry , without for warding In the smallest degree the ob ieot for which they wore granted There is a largo number of such paper land grants In the south and south west , and some in the northwest , ant the amount of land withdrawn ! from the public domain in enormous These lands would probably hav boon declared forfeited long ago , hat they not been confused In the publl and oongroialonal mind with a numbe of halfoomplotod ; roads which hav established a moral right to thol laud grants by honestly making efforts to earn them. The revival of rail road building within the laat two years has stimulated every oompan ; with any vitality at all to earn It lands , however , and those which stll remain Inactive are sharply separated and are a fair mark for oongroialona legislation , The Bout Poatmnator-Qoneral. The Ur : Jw y Lounger In The Tribune , Q1 Ex-Postmastor-Gonoral James asy that Montgomery Blair was the boa poatmaster-gonoral this country ha had , judging by the results accoin pllshed nnd r his administration Hut It was ho who overshadowed b the war. Bnt It was ho who tstab llahod the money order system an registered letter system , lie got rl of the old brown paper package an letter bill absurdity and substitute account keeping by stamp * . Next t Montgomery Blair , who was a vor cloar-ho&dod man , Mr. James wonl rank Marshall Jewell , who strangle the straw-bid monster and placed th department upon an honest an trlctly business bull. Governor owoll , ho thinks , was a very superior justness man. Mr. Oreswoll should lave credit for the part he took in totting the franking privilege abol- shed , Amos Kendall also made a allsnt fight during his term against Virginia mail route ring , STATE JOTTING3 , Will T. lUckler , of OolumbuK , while looping to take hold of a halter , was licked In tha face by a hone , Tbo blow " roko the upper Jaw In in several places , jlltting it under the note , and mashing It at the lde. Three teeth were knocked out , one of them being pushed upward near tu the eye , and was ro tightly wedged among the fonte , tbit it was about as diffi- nit to extract as the ordinary large ooth Is. At Beatrice , John Marlon h a been ounri guilty of murder. The killing oc curred in 1872 , and Marlon was arrested ecently In Kansas for horae stealing , i'wo murder cases remain to be tried in the anie court. Ed. Bllllk , a partially reformed cowboy if BUIr , tried to run th < 9 tow a tha o'.hir light , among other amusement * Hhootin < n lole in the pant ? of a policeman. He I * n the cju cr in default of money to piy bis fine. fine.A A subterronean river has be n dltcov- ered on the farm of Dr. L-mK'oy. ' three tulles south of North 1'lntle. It IK about hirty feet below the eurfco of th.9 cart ! ) , an.d b&B a depth of about uluo feet of water. It Is said that not over one-tlilrd of the amount of wheat sown In Merrick county "ast year will be town this. O.UB are tjlt g its place , an Immen e crop of which will be rnlscd thU year. Frank Bill , of Sidney , trio * to commit ulci.lo by taking a dosa of morphine ono d y last week , but restoratives were ap plied and he will have a chance to try some other method , 3 he cloth peddlm who were selling [ ooda to Dakota county farmari , taking lotea due In fifteen montbi , wore arrested or selling without Haense , and ona was iced $50 and coeti- Manager Drake , of the Nebraska Tele , ihono company , expresses the opinion that n less than a fear the Nebraska cities will iave direct telephone connection with Chic - c go. go.Friecds Friecds of the Butler county prisoners ire seeking to release them , and the sher- ff has made a requisition on the governor 'or ammunition with which to defend the all. all.A A colony of two hundred families ! have ocated In Holt county on what is known a the "unorganized strip" lying between he Nlobrara and Koyapaha rivers. NIobrara Is said to be the center of ravel for emigrants going north , Num- } era of teams pass through the town daily on the way to new settlements. The wool erowcra of Franklin county soon hold a convention for the purpose of lelectlng a sheep Innpector to bo appointed the county commissioners. The first number of a new paper , The Reporter , hts been issued at Valentino , a ittlo town ut the present terminus of the Sioux City & Pacific road. One hundred and ninety women In the vicinity of Springfield hare signed a re- monntranco against grantlnc a license to a saloon In that town. The country round about North 1'latto is to be Irrigated , a company having been irganlzed for that purpose , Work will aegin in a few days. The Aurora Kepnbllcan saya half ol Hamilton county's lands have changed mnds this spring. Farms bring from 1C ; o $25 per acre. The location of the Presbyterian synodl- : al college has been definitely fixed al Bollovno. The cost of the college is esti mated at (7 ,000. From the number of prairie schooners on the move in various parts of Nebraska , It la concluded that immigration Ia boom- lug , The Central City Courier claims the population ot that place - Hthow \ up over 1,100 by the aseessor'd couat. The corner etcno of tbo new Mueonlc temple at Lincoln was IaU on the lit with imposing ceremonies. High wind recently moved the front o the Glen Koclc Catholic church a foot of the foundation. Upwrrds of 5.000.0CO forest troca have been planted by the people of Nebraska this spring. An Kadlcott roan recently caught C ! pounds of Jiah with a hook and lido In one evening. The population of Tbayer county ha Increased nearly 17i per cent , during th past year. The Clmeron Oattle company has bough 13,000 acres of land In MadiaonandBoonc countiei. The Nebraska spring races will befiir at Lincoln on May 1C and continue fiv days. days.The The Missouri Pacific paid 8J.920.14 tax ea for 1882 into the Nemaha county tret sury , A drove of antelope wta seen grazing near Atkinson , Holt county , a few day since , Tha conrt house of Gage connty ha been condemned as unsafe by the gran jury. Senator Van Wyck is Inflicting package of garden seeds upon the country edltorr Grand Island will soon have an oper house second only to two In the state. The dam at West Point has been rebull nd the paper mill is tunning again. The taxes against the B. & M. road Ir Webster county are $11,631.50. A new brick bloik will be built in Cen tral City during the present season , The Masons in Norrla are talking abou organizing a lodge In tbrt city. Leu Howctr , of Blair , aged 13 , la in jal for assaulting a lady with a club. From five to twenty home-seekers go on the tra n at Valentine daily , A large number of emigrants are said t be settling In Wayne county. The school for Indian pupila at Genoa I to accommodate 600 children. There are thirty boyaand eleven girls a the reform school at Kearney. Genoa , Nance connty , has organized company to prospect for coal. Wilbur ihowa great evidence of pro gresg ana tnrist this spring. Kearney's is an educational boom. Sh wants more school house ? , Daring the pait month the state leasec 57,120 acres of school lands. Some fast horses will be Iu attendance a the Columbus June racea. Water works and a fire department ar talked of In ICed CIcud. The town of Wilbur Is out of debt ant h&a money in the treasury , Ltncaln is yet toiling her big drive wo ] put In for fire purposes. Decoration Day preparations are beln made all over thu scat * . A parsnip 3 feet 4 Inches long hai bee dug at Cumlng City. A G. A. U. post is to be started at Lib erty , Gage county. The Nebraska City gas works have bee sold for 125,000. The crop croaker has taken a back tea in Nebraika. There are 1-17 poiU ol the G. A. 11. t Nebraika. A "bucket shop" baa been opened a Lincoln. The ipilng racei at Jackson come off o the 18th. Button has organized a building asaocli tlon. tlon.The The hones of Unadilla have the ptnl eye , A Urge amount of young stock li com ng Into the itate from Missouri and Kan- M , The city debt ot PlatUmonth is $90,000. Lincoln has a ten-year-old horse thief , Uumboldt city warrants are at par. One of the Cattle Kings of Texas tltnU Conitltutlcn. Henry 11. Harris , jr. , lately back rom a trip to Texas , where ho baa omo extensive landed intorcats , told mo how ho found things In tbo Lone tar state. Ho said : "I saw In Fort Worth an old follow that didn't look aa If ho had a dollar that was ono of ho cattle kings of Texas. He had ately sold his herds to a company of < pltallsta for 81,600,000. They had not yet made the payment and were Iroady offered $2,000,000 , for the amo herds by a London company , lo did not own an acre of laud , bnt Imply sold his cattlu mark. The eudoncy Is for outildo capital to con- rol thu business. I rods over with e. rTobllo capitalist who waa carrying 'SOO.OOO ' , wi.h which ho was going to et his son up In c&ttlr. tin estimated hat the motiny that If , the herds- won A dnnblo uvrry three yearn , and hat ia abaut the nntlmatu of the bust attlo tnon of T < xi8 Call for a Uaiiv utlun tor tbo First CoDKrosaiomil District of Mebrucka. WHEREAS , A cp.ll h\ibeonirmdofora : national conferanco of all anti-monopolists n meet at Chicago on the 4th of July , 883 , und that tbo state of Nebraska WAS omnoat in raising her roice against the elentleFB grip ol corporate power. It is mt right and proper the tUte should act 'igorously ' in furtherance of thU matter. Therefore , I , aa chairman of the committee or the Fir t Congressional district , issue his call for a district convention at the Academy nl Music , In the city of Lincoln , in the 13th day of June , at 2 o'clock p. m , , or the purpose of electing four delegates o represent tbla congressional district In he said national conference , and the rantactlon of such other business as m y iroperly como before It. Tbo several counties comprising said . [ strict will be entitled to the following olegites : Delegates. ; B 14 ) ouRlns 18 lage 11 ohnsoa 9 jincaster 1C Nemaha 0 Hoe 13 'awneo 8 Hchardson 13 larpy 5 Saundera 1C Total 129 In localities where there is no other anti- nonopoly organization that will act it will > e proper for the Alliance to elect dele- atea to said district contention. It is time that the people individually hould inquire into the alleged vested rights > l corporations , and see if rights that are now claimed are not in themselves inalien able EO that no legiolatlve enactment can > llenate or court decision transfer , and see urther if corporate power has Bccuted by rarchaee corruption n d fraud righta that > elnng to the people in their sovereign ca- mcity. They should bo compelled todit- ; rge and surrender those rights to the icoplo to whom they belong. This can bo done through the cheap and peaceful instrumentality of the ballot , in- lead of the costly conflict of the bullet , ALLEN ROOT , Chairman District Com. il THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. RelitTet and curei RHEUMATISM , Neuralgia , Sciatica , Lumbago , BACKACHE , EZlDiCnE , TOOTH1CIB , SORE THROAT , QUINSr , BWELL1X03 , SPRAINS , Screatis , Cuti , Braisei , ritOSTBITES , IJIIH.NH , SCAL.US , And fclt othfr bodllj Mhc * nni CISTJ i Bonn RolJ by > ll DnKgliti ina De 1jn. Ulrectloat la 11 Ihs Cbitlti AVjo'.c : C : . to A. VoiclirACo. ) Unon. lid , C. 8. A. Upholsterer AND MATRES3 MAHUFACTUEER , All kinds of Upholtterlog done to order 01 short nutice , Furnlturo repaired. Chairs reseated - seated , etc. , etc. No. 206 Noith ICth rieei. MGNITOROILSTpVE Tha only OIL STOVE that will bhm l ( trades of Kerosene with "ABSOCtf\ni SAFETY. " Send for descriptive clttu Ur , or call and enmlna It , Addreaa MILTON KOGEBS&S 1321 and 1S23 Farnam Street. § at-mcn-wfl'-2m DexterL.Tnomas&Bro , WILL BUY AND SELL. AXD ALL TBANftACmoKH OCXXXCTHt Pay THXOB , Rent , UonpeB , Et ? . BOOM 8 . _ _ . .CRKGHTON BLOOI PASK , B. HAAS , FLORIST , DKALEK IN Flowers , Plants aufl Bonpets Flower betliprepared lor any oce lathe cltjr i reasonable prlcei. J. E. HOUSE , Oonsultlng and Civil Engines AND SURVEYOR. Speclil attention to Suncylne Town Addltki and Lt . Furnliblng Hetluutu ol ExcaratloQ Making lUpi , Plant , tc. OFFICF. OVER FIRST NATIONAL DANI m ID-fin OMAHA , NED. DRY GOODS SAM'L O. DAVIS & CO. Washington Avenue and Fifth Strict , X.OTTXS , 3MCO. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR round Oil Cake. It is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Ono pound Is equal to three pounds 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 market able condition in the spring. Dairymen as well aa others who nao it can tes tify to its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $26.00 per ton ; no charge for sacks , Address o4-ood-mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob. C. F. GOODMAN. DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PAINTSOILSVABNISHES And Window Glass. MAH A NEBRASKA. M. Hellman & Co * i WHOLESALE i 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA , NEB. OMAHACORNIOEWO RKS RTJEMPING & BOLTE , Proprietors Tin , Iron and Slate Roofers MANUFACTURERS OF. Ornamental Galvanized lion Cornices , Iron Sky Lights , Eto , 310 South Twelfth Street , OMAHA , NEB 7-mon-wcd-frl-m ay AND SB"fflnr - mfr * * $ % & 2fi rdbks-a&K&r&ffl 3ifc ? . e SftasiacBU' > ' Steam Purnps , Er.glne Trimmmngs , UIKIHB ajLOEtlNKriT. nai/Tl'iC , J3GBR , DKpS AiJ'O ' 11101 * rffJVXIN'ja VIP iTSAfe. HALLADAY WINDIZLUI SKUgGB AND BCKGOiL 8ELI.fi Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha , Neb. Single Breech Loading Shot Bnns , from 95 to $18- $ Double Breech Loading Shot Guns , from $18 to $75 $ , Muzzle Loading Shot duns , From $0 to 825,1 Fishing Tackol , Base Balls and all kinds of Fancy Goods , Full Stock of Show Oases 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 npwards Send for Price List andSamples ( Jr-AJTIEi CXT1T PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS 01 arpenter's Materials ALSO SASH DOORS BONOS , , , STAIRS , S'tair ' Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. . to * y Manufftcture o ! all kinda of Mouldings , Planing anu a Specialty. Orders from tha country.will te promptly executed , communications to A. MOVER , Proprietor > WILLIAM SNYDER , fr lUANUrAOTCEEB OT 04ERIAGEB , i Painting and Trimming , Repairing Promptly Done , 27 * id 1323 Harney treet , corner Fourteenth Bt ,