Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 15, 1883, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE OMAB \ DAILY BEE-TUESDAY MAY 15 , 1883.
The Omaha Bee
Pnbll hed every morning , except Snn
y. The only Monday morning daily ,
lEUMS BY.MAIL-
ttne Year.10.00 I Three Month . 3.0
BU Months. . 5.00 | One Month. . . . 1.0
CHE WEEXLY BEE , published over ;
TERMS POST PAID-
CM fear 12.00 I Three Monthi. ft
( Nx Month 1.00 | One Month. . . . S
AMBBIOAK NEWS COMPANY , Sole Agent
Newedealers In the United SUtet.
CORKESPONDENOE Oommunl
tfons reUtlne to Newi and Edltorla
matters should be addressed to the Korroi
0 * Tui 13" .
BUSINESS LETTERS AH Buiino
betters and KemlttancCH should be x
ireseed to THE Bn I'DBLIBHINO OOMPAJC
OMAHA , Drafts , Chocks and 1'ostoffici
Jrdors to be made payable to the order o
the Company.
The BBE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props ,
. ROSE WATER Editor
WB haven't yet hoard who is to b <
otvtl eorvlco examiner for Nebraska
but at the present rate of romovali
and appolnttnonts there will bo no mi
for hli iervlcas foraome yours to como ,
DENVEII accloty , It is said , atndlons
ly Ignores Mrs. Tabor No. 2. Djnvoi
society mast draw the line somewhere
and It fixes it at a woman who wll
consent to bo married by a justice oi
the peace.
JOB PCLITZSU who has taken the
Now York World , issues hia eoi orla
programme , which consists of : Antl
monopoly , progressive democracy , anc
new party leaders. Mr. PuUU'jr li
throwing hla pearls before owino.
KEENKlooka for the groat'
est financial panto in Wall otroc < t thai
Now York has ever econ , and ho pro <
poses to staiid from nndor. The pab
lie qulto agroca with Mr. Kocne It
its distrust of Wall street ahatki , anc
proposes to do the same thing.
ATTOJINET GENEUAL BKBWSTKK wll
now have an oppoitauity to conduo
another suit , which need not bu as lotij
as the ntar route-trial. Secretary Teller
lor has written him noimmondlcc thi
instituting of proceedings agninnt tlu
Union Paolfn for the sum of ? 1 727.-
742 , dao the United State * .
IP Senator Edmunds , on hla way t <
Oregon , should happen to atop nt Sail
Like ho might hear something to hli
advantage about the operation of hii
polygamy ( squelcher which fatla tc
iquolch , notwithstanding a $30OCO i
year commission.
IT la rumored that General Thayci
la to ba offered the highly romuutra
tlvo position of railway pnntal clerk li :
case ho can bring "tha unanimous uu <
dorsotnonta of the Hall county dolega
tlon" as a credential cf hia cbnraotoi
and standing ao a ropablionn.
A c'OUKEHroNUHNT'aeka us to eottli
a controversy by deciding thu pro
nnnclation of the word dude anil iti
origin. Dude is pronounced to rhyrai
with rud.0 , Ito origin Is ai dlfliault tc
Iraco as that of any ulaC" " * expression
It la claimed that It has been used it
aomo portion of New England to do
Bcrlbo a know nothing and pronouncoc
In two syllables. II o if ever that maj
bo , the modern dude pronounces hi
name In one.
IT was a great rnlttbko on the par
of congren when they pigeonholed th
bill to relieve the supreme court
Turing their term just closed th
court dlspo ed of twelve less cases thai
at their last term , and there are 87
undisposed of cases now on the docket
Only 305 cases wore disposed of durln
the past year , which Is 22 leas than I
1880. The court can never catch u
with Ita arrears. That la a physio :
Impossibility. One of the first acts i
the now congrecs should bo to pass
motiBuro for the relief of the snpron
court.
WITH a cold winter and a wlnti
prlng , the railroad builders In tl
United States laid down fonrtoi
hundred and fifty miles ot now trai
In January , February , March at
April , 1883. Thla la loven hnndn
and fifty miles short of the work doi
In the corresponding months li
year ; but last year was the apogee
the circuit of railroad spocnlatlo
when it reached the distance limit ,
will probably bo another genoratl
of men that will find It necessary
any year hereafter to build rallroa
enough In thia country to roach h
around the earth.
A DKSxunoTiVE cyclone swept 01
Missouri and Kansas Sunday , loavl
xnln and desolation in Its path , 1
rnoagro reports thus far received
noTonable us to form an estimate nf I
low of life and property , but from
oonnts that roach us from Kansas 01
where the hurricane wrecked in&
buildings , wo 'should judge that
damage tolTwojTJuBB in towns and
farm honses-WScropa will aggreg
manyk mQUqna. Iowa and Nebra
hare so f r been more fortunate tl
their mxt door neighbors son
uWhllpfboth harp boon visited by hoi
rtli&Baahrindur storm , they' hi
clone daring this stormy season.
AN HONE&T GOVERNOR
Governor Walker , of Connecticut
doaorvca credit for hla plucky vote
of the railroad tax reduction Ml
which was passed through the IcgUta
tare by n strong railroad lobby. Thi
message accompanying the vetoed bll
contains aomo sound kernels of scnso
The governor denounces the bll
aa objectionable In the v , rj
object It alms at the reduc
tion of railroad taxes ant
In the method it proposes to accom
plish It. Ho assorts that the poopli
of Connecticut are ahoady paylnp i
average tax of about 14 mills on a del
IKE on the valno of their indlvldna
property , while the railroad corpora
tlons pay only 10 mills on the della
on the valno of their corporate property
orty ,
"It la claimed , " the governor con
tinues , "that railroad corporations an
now taxed on their Indebtedness a
well as their property , and that thli
bill proposes to partially relieve then
from such obvious .oppression. Th !
olalm , so delusive , is entirely nnfonnd
od. The atato imposes taxas on property
orty , but never on Indebtedness , Thi
market valno of the property of a rail
read corporation is indicated by thi
msrkot valno of Its stock and bonds
and the state adopts such vnluo aa i
rule for the assessment of taxes upot
the property such corporation possess
03. The bill , to accomplish its abject ,
contemplates the taxation of the aarm
property at different rates , dependant
pendant upon the manner it
which such property la hold
Such discrimination la pernicious. II
provides that property , if represented
by stock , shall pay one per cent , bnl
If by bonds , only one-half per cent ,
Such a policy , If pursued in the taxa
tion of individual property , woulc
permit the largo portion of the real
estate subject to mortgage to escape
half the taxation It now has to pay ,
It la urged that the object of this bll
thnt changes the mode of railroad
taxation la to charitably aid the pool
corporations. If this were so dis
crimination for ouch n reason In matters -
tors of taxulon Is as obnoxious between
tweon corporate as Individual tax
payers ; but I am advised that th <
effect of thb bill will bo to glvo in the
course of a year nearly aa much of thi
proposed reduction to the rich as thi
poor. The refusal to approve thli
bill will result , I hope , in the ndop
tlon by the next assembly of BOUK
eomprohcuaivo schamo that will filrlj
distribute the burden of luxation or
the property of the state. "
Wo commend the ubovo to the at
tention oi the Nobraika atato board ol
equalization. In Cjimcsilcut th (
taxable valno of the property o ! n
railroad la Indicated by the mukot
valno of its stock and binds. In Ne
braska the otalo Ins baon eyitomatl
cally dwindled by permitting thu rci -
road mnuDgora to innko their own ap
pratncmont of the vuluo of the j ro
portion which they control , If tht
rnlo which G v.-ni'jr Walker stV.ai nc
concisely were adopted in our owi
atato the roveuno derived from rail
road taxation would bo doubled
Th-jro la no reason , aa the BEE ha ,
often nrged why thin method shook
not bo adopted. Property Is wortl
vrhnt "HI " 11 f ° r 'n the marko
no matter whether * ho property be i
homo and lot or a railroad.
WE cheerfully accord Mr. Wood
man epioo In our columns toj prlo
hla version of the late trouble with thi
North Omaha sower. His arguments
however , fill to break dowa In th
least the common sense position tha
an unfinished piece of public work
cannot bo expected to perform th
functions of a completed system.
Look at the case squarely , asld
from personal prejudice an
personal damages. Hera was
sewer , or more properly
culvert built ever a Crock which dralt :
some 4,100 acres of our city. Th
mere building of the culvert was enl
the beginning of the improvement ii
tended to relieve us of the open creel
The remainder contemplated was tl
filling In of the valley of the croc
above the arch of the sewer , leaving
strong culvert of five feet to take sn
face water from the streets i
North Omaha. But before tl
plan Is finished , and whl
the natural bed of a largo portion
the creek Is still unfilled , wo a
visited by a terrific rainfall , whlc
adding additional force to the sta
nant water already contained ai
banked up In the crook , causes It
overflow Us boundaries and docs oo
slderablo damage to property. Thoi
upon Mr. Woodman and Mr. Cor !
f and several other gentlemen procla
the sewers a failure.
This is not common sense , Wh
the creek is filled , a fiv
foot sewer will bo am ]
largo enough to oairy oil' nil the wa
that roaches it , The rulatako m :
by Mr. Woodman lies In a false o <
mate of the body of surface wa
which , when the Improvement is co
plotod , will fall into the north Omn
culvert.
A largo portion of the amot
which now seeks the valhy of I
creek will be absorbed by the groui
Another portion will find
way to the river by tbo
tern. . As matters now a
the unfilled valley of the North Oi
ha creek is a funnel Into which all
dndiing 4 03 acres' 1s pour
When the crock is levelled much o
that drainage will bo distributed.
So far as the theory of sewerage ca
paclty Is concerned , engineering Is ai
exact science and experience Is a saf
guide. Mr. Phillips , who dostgnoi
our surface sewerage , Is a practica
and experienced man. Cincinnati i
a city whoso location la much the sam
as that cf Omaha. Smaller sewers 1
Cincinnati drain a larger ate . Bu
there are no unfilled creek beds t
converge the body of water nd pour I
with terrific force against the month o
any single sower.
Oar sewer system is all right , am
will bo found sufficient for over emergency
goncy when completed. And it ongh
to bo completed at once. The creel
bed must bo filled up as soon as posal
bio , not only whore It Is crossed b ;
streets , but through private propert
as well. Mr. Woodman will then die
cover that a five-foot sewer la aa gooi
for the purpose aa ono three times th
size.
THE persistency cf woman h
found a now and a happy illnatratlo
through the victory won by Mri
Myra Clark Gaincs In her suit agalns
the city of Now Orleans. For man
years Mrs , Galnes fought her wa
Inch by Inch In the courts , to proonr
possession and title to certain propert
which the city wrongfully oold at anc
tlon on March 10 , 1837. The silo ws
some years ago annulled by th
United States courts. Mrs. Gilne
has lately been suing to re
cover an amonut equal t
the rent yielded in all thos
years by the property holdln ,
the city responsible not only for al
the revenue which has boon actuall
derived from the property since 1837
but alto for all that It might hav
yielded nnder reasonable and prope
oaro. For example , nevcral of th
lots and eqnarcs remained nnimprovo
because the validity of the title wa
in doubt , owing to her original snl
against the city to gain possession c
them. She held that the city wi
bound to pay her the revenue whic !
would have been collected from thes
squires If they had been improved nether
other adjoining equares not blighted b ;
litigation were improved. After man ;
years the master in chancery reports' '
that the city owed her $1,604,062 fo
theao revenues and interest npoi
them. Judge Billings chose to in
croaao this allowance to $1.025,667
If the supreme court of the Unite
Satca should sustain this decision
the city will bo forced to pay noarl
$2,000.000 to this aged but ouorgotl
woman whose career and success aa
litigant , through o period of fort
years , must bo regarded a wlthon
parallel.
THE suicide of Amaaa Stone , th
Cleveland millionaire , caused qulto
aonscvtlon In New York. No clai
.aoomod moro unnerved by the choc
than the ehoddy aristocrats who tu
struggling under load * of immone
wealih.t Poor Stone had lost over $2
000,000 and had only 84 OOD,000 moi
loft. He was ono ot the leading ral
road men and Iron manufacturers c
the west , and had nttulncd the ago c
65 , when ho should have bo < m restin
qulotly after a busy life , Instead <
speculating in stocks. But his res
los ! energy was as boundless as hi
grasping greed , and his recent reverse
deranged his mind , The trouble wit
the American business man li that b
Cover knows when ho has enough.
FROM the fact that General Noyc
was the president of Cincinnati's lat
dramatic enterprise , the Chicago Tim- -
begins to suspect that there Is same
thing In a name after all.
BIDS for the location of the no
capital of Dakota will bo opened i
Canton to-day by the Dakota caplti
commission , and the good people i
Yankton refuse to be consoled.
Mr. Woodman on the Bower Queetlc
To the Editor o ! the lice.
In your lasno cf the llth In an ed
torlal headed "attacking the sowen
you say : "Tho damage done to tl
Woodman oil mill was largely , If n
entirely , owing tu carelessness on tl
part of Its builders. They had boi
repeatedly warned that there was da
ger in case of an extraordinary ral
fall In spite of the warning thi
neglected to keep their overflow pi
open and pormlttod stagnant water
back itself up to the depth of twol
foot adjoining their property. Wh
the heavy rain came of conrso the wi
of earth gave way. "
I do not know where yon obtain
the above information but there is c
a word of truth In It. No su
state of affairs has ever exist
thoro. The overflow pi
wes unobstructed and open a
It has boon In this condition ever sir
It was put In. No stagnant water i
cumulated above its month and th (
was no bink of earth thuro to R :
away , The first tank of earth tl
gave away WAS the filling on a lot 1
longing to Mr. Oloaou , This lol
situated in the old crock bed , ni
Twentieth street , about throe bloi
from the oil mill. The earth that v
put Into this lot hold the water till
was ton foot above the mouth of I
sewer , It then wont out and the m
, of water and mud rushed down till
struck the filling on top ot the soi
where the sewer crosses the creek
Nineteenth street. When this lat
wall of earth gave away the water a
mud rushed down In a volume
least fifteen feet deep , carry
the. . walla of the mill before
IIf th'ero ' bid1 * * been "ihei
embankment at the mill with snfll
clont strength to turn its conrso 1
would have resulted In tbo destruc
tlon of Mr , Toozer'a and Mr , Jack
son's houses , and very likely the lost
of a dozen or moro of lives.
When the water was receding 1
ntood on the bank with Mr. Il.N. With
neil till wo could see the month of thi
sewer , and it was free from obstruo
tlon , It Is simply a case of mlscalcu
tlon In regard to the slzo of a sowoi
required to carry off the water fron
a heavy rainfall , and yon cannot fini
a disinterested man in the city whi
will advocate any other theory. Thi ;
same sewer was running full yostordaj
( Sondaj ) morning , and the water wai
backed up two feet above Its month
with uoobstruction in themonth what
over. Wo were all assured that thi
sewer was amply largo to carry oil thi
water from the heaviest etorm Mr
Oloson rolled on this oseuranca am
filled his lot as ho bad a right to do
The city apprehended no danger li
bnilding thu sewer across tbo creek u
Nineteenth street and in filliui ; on toj
of It from bank U bank
When the county cammiaalonor.
ordered the filling of the creek bid n
Sixteenth street and the removal c
the bridge there , they expected thi
sewer to do Us Intended duty. AI
talk about repeated warulcgi U slmpl ;
bosh , and tuo city engineer nuy t
originated In a reporter's Imagiuniiou
that ho never made any such sUtu
mont to the council , and the president
of the council bears him out ia thi
atsjrtlon.
When the foundation walls of th
mill wore put In last fall the city engineer
gineor suggested the putting in of
sewer plpo through the walls of th
mill and under the basemant floor c
the mill , to connect with the sowo
and terminate in the old creek be
above the mill.
This pipe was pnt in exactly as sng
gested and its month was in the hot
torn of the crook on Mr. Jackson *
lot.
lot.Mr.
Mr. Jackson and Mr. Toozer botl
have houses and llvo on the bank c
the creek at this point , and they wer
both interested in seeing that thi
plpo was kept open , and they wl
bear mo out In the assertion that i
w s open at all times , and that I
drained the creek bed as low as it wa
possible to drain It and have it ru
Into the sower. There Is not a ma :
of ordinary Intelligence who has vie
itod the locality and examined th
water marks in the vicinity but wha
la now satisfied that the sewer wll
not carry off over one-third of th
water of a heavy storm , and any offer
to defend the calculations upon wblct
it waa constructed will not stand for ;
moment. A theory as applied to sewerage
orago engineering in the moro love
eastern cities will not apply here , am
if the city council allow Ifs engineer
to bo guided by these calculations 1
will learn by dearly bought experl
enced that a good deal of obaervatloi
and less theory is what is wanted li
this city. CLARE WOODMAN.
They Hnvo a Jolly Time All Togotuei
Atcblson Clobf.
The Union Pacific road owoa th
government a tremendous amount o
money , but the company refuses t1
pay It , and the government Is wondoi
ing what it had better do about it. I
It will hire n lawyer aa talented ss th
Union Pacific lawyer a say out of th
difficult } will speedily ba found. Th
rallroada engage nearly every talonte
legal gentleman in the country , an
when the people appear with a grievance
anco they laugh the fin all lawyers wh
roprcaont them out of court. Yor
often the judge jolus In the hllaritj
Too many judges accept favors froi
the railroads In the way nf special cai
when they travel.
Army Otllcoru Keilrod and to Rotlr
Wuhlngton Special.
The Army and Navy Register coi
tains the first complete list of arm
retirements for the coming ten year
In 1883 , the prominent officers retire
ara : Gsn. Invalid , August 23 ; Co
James A. Ekin , August 14 ; Oo
Hunt , Fifth artillery , September ! :
Col , Gatty , Fourth artillery , Ooti
ber 4
In 1884. Gen. Sherman , Fobruar
8 ; Gen. Wright , chief of engineer ;
March 6 ; Ool. Reynolds , of ei
glnoors , March 17 ; Col. F. T. Dan
Third artillery , December 17.
In 1835 , Chaplain Van Home , Jnl
6 ; Gen. Auaur , July 10.
In 1886 , Cjl. Hatch , Second ca'
airy , January 9 ; Gen. Pope , Marc
16 ; Gen. Sackett , April 14 ; Gen. Stn
gls , Juno 14 ; Gon. Newton , englnee
July 1.
In 1888 , Gen. Hancock , Febrnai
14 ; Gjn. Baird. August 20.
Below tha Supreme Court.
Oiceolt Funnels' Advocate.
It scorns to us , as we carefully loc
ever the field , that the district conr
are much moro at fault for doing the
work so bnngllngly. Does It not see
to a man up a tree we have electi
scheming politicians to preside on tl
bench of our district courts , and tl
governor haa followed the same CD
torn and appointed some rallroa I toe
to that position with ono oxoaptlc
at Omaha instead of selecting me
of ability and well skilled in law , wl
can command the respect of the po
pie1 ? Our jury drawing Is a f rc
our law making a sham , a'ud the sole
tlons of the district judges a dlsgrac
and the whole system rotten and dl
honest , and why should we throw i
the blame on the supreme court , whli
in nlno cases out of ton Is right
these decisions ?
The finest mayonaiso dressing f
all kinds of salads , cold meats , re
tomatoes , pickled salmon , cabbag
etc , Is DDUKEE'S SALAD DKKSSIN
Bitter and more economical thi
Q
home-made.
The Dlatr lot Court.
The May term of the district coc
o commenced yesterday. Thofollowl :
numbers of the grand jury weroo
cused from serving : Eugene StoulT
A. W. Coffman , H. W. McGlnnls a
U. W. Blair. The sheriff was order
to fill the vacancies from among t
bystanders , and ho selected R
Soely , W. L. Brlggs , W. Read , N.
Tyson. The grand jury was awoi
and the court made an assignment
cases. Tha petit jnry will be impi
oled Wednesday , when the Ritia
murder case will come up for trial ,
Everybody Is using and everybo
-rocommendluK to evorybod
friends , Brown's Iron Bitten as a
y I liable Iron medicine , a true tonic.
PERSON i.LITIB8 ,
Byron w s a very fat boy , his lat
est biographer sayi ,
Mr. Gladntone appeared In the house o
loidi In sky-blue ( lockings and gold clocka
Cole , the circus man. Is thirty-Hire
years old , and Is s U to bo worth § 4CCO ,
000
Governor Butler Is credited with belm
one of the most irracefnl poker players li
Now Eopland.
Mr , Vlilard expects to be the firs
through pnsnf ngor over the Northern 1'a
clfio mllrotd In September.
Senator Palmer , of Michigan , h glvei
hli firit ye r' salary , M senator , to cstsb
lish nn art rniueum fa Detroit ,
Pattl says muilc belongs to Heaven
There are no 85,000 salaries there , how
ever , which Is why 1'atU h still with UK ,
Bertha Von Illllein , the young girl whi
fornook walking to become un Httist , I ,
sketching along the Baltlmoie&Oblorond
Atnone the eccentric whlma of L-vdj
Florence Dixie WAS ber having herself
photographed In tbo scanty costume of ai
ancient Highlander ,
"I''tcr Cooper , thn g'eit novelist , " soyi
The App l chicoltt Tribune , ' 'baa paiitt
awy A mnu whone memory deserves tc
be rem.-d by nil civilized naUons , '
President Arthur wrote poetry ID hli
youth , Bearing thN point In mind It op
pcara that Mr. Arthur Is a good deal mon
of reformer thitu be has been taken tube
As beautiful a brunette na Is eeon it
New York is Mrs. Joseph Pulitzer , who I
a native of the upland country near Wash
luKton City , iler husband wns prestntec
to her by John U. Clark , a family friend
The nctresa Katie Putnam has beei
elected an honary member of Fire Com
pany No. 8 , of Mobile. Probably thi
members were fascinated by the way th
handled ber hose , Boatou JL'oet ,
Jem Mace , the pngUIst , and Pattl , th
opera singer , departed for Europe upoi
the same vessel the other day , The worli
of "artists" includes a great variety o
people. Mace U considered as much of 01
artist In his line as Patti in hers.
Marble , the patent cfflce commisalonei
has fishy blue eye * , li large and coarse
and ha i an Intensely red. tuft of chin whle
ken , while hU bald head Is studious ! ;
plastered with thatch of the same color
pushed up from the Bides.
Mies Anna Dickinson Is now la Net
York , the guest of Mrs. Croly. Mis
Dickinson is in unusually good health , am
'a about entering on a coureo of reading
rom her drama , "Aurelian , " and from i
'ramatio lecture on "Jeanne D'Aro.
ho will be heard in a number of th
laitern cities during the spring ,
John BachMcMaster , the new historian
ho la an instructor at Prlneton , Issmal
in stature , and bin head U very large it
roportion with his body. During the
'ears In which ho was encaged in thi
ircpartion _ of history o ! the America !
ieople it ia said there waa but one mai
esldes biimelf who knew of bia labors
le hi3 ; nn unlimited capacity for work
, nd the light In his room tit Witberapoot
all U generally the last to be txtinguiahe <
the doimitorlea. which are filled will
udentj who are not devoted to carl ;
ours.
Henry's Carbolic Salvo
The BKST SALVE In the world fo
atB , Bruiees , Soree , Ulcer , Salt Kheuin
etter , Chapped Uands , Chilblains , Corns
nil nil kinds of Skin Eruption * , etc Ue
lENKY'S CAUBOLIG SALVE , a
1 others are but immitationa , Price 2 ;
ints.
STATE JOTTINGS.
In Wiener the dog tax haa beta placet
132.
Dwelling hcueea are very ccarco In Loni
! lty.
lty.Nebraska's
Nebraska's population ia increasing a
; he rate of 1,000 n day.
A big rufh nnd high prlccn tire antic !
latcd at the opening of Ibe Ooe : rojerv
isle.
isle.A
A revivalist is holdingmeetinga at Woa
'oint. The Republican upeaVa of him &
eing cranky.
E'.evfu ' hnndred head ot cittle passe
hrough Lincoln list Friday , bound fa
Butler county ,
Over 81,000 worth of town lots wer
lold In Hampton , Hamilton county , I
, wj days labt week.
It U expected that within eight week
lrainn will be running from Nebraska CH
'la Tecumseh to Beatrice.
Article * of incorporation for the Tlattf
mouth & Southwestern h&vo been file
with the secretary of state.
A young man named Ilogera , who for
merly lived at Dakota City , was on tria
, t Lyons on the 10th for larceny.
D. L. Bruen , of Platte county , In raisin
105 Iambs , the product of ICG ewee , th
ither lamb havlcg been accidental !
tilled ,
Madison county ia looking for a colon
if fifty families I rom West Virginia , r
angemente for whose coming are bein
erfected.
Mrs. Colby , of Beatrice , Is ccnildorln
; he scheme of starting a newspaper fo
; he advancem nt of woman's suffrage i
this sUte.
Ao effort Is being made by the citlzn
> l i urnae , Gosper and Frontier couotlc
; o organize an Agricultural and Fair at
lociatlon.
A large lynx , measuring over three feel
WM recently Hilled near Oxford. The an :
mat hid long been raiding on the sheet
-nd fowls of that vicMty.
In Burt county the other day a llttl
girl named Mabel Daoley was helping he
brother burn cornstalks , when her clothe
ciught fire and she waa no seriously burne
' .hat the died In a lew hours.
The builneaa men of Ord end Nort
_ ioup htyo orgtnlzjd and formed theu
: olvaa Into societies tn take und-r advls
ment matter * of public concern , and t
irouiote their interests generally.
Tnere was a little disturbance raised i
the colored Baptist church In Lincoln Fr
d.ty night. Some ol tbo ungodly coons c
the city , who ecem to have no respect fc
the rellgluui element , attended the churcl
cocked th lr f.et up on the seats , iqulrto
tobacco juice over tha floor , threw th
hymn books nnd blhlea about , and ga\
the minister some sauce ,
THE GREAT GERMAt
REMEDY
FOR PAIN.
Tii tad curti
Neuralgia ,
ScUlici , Lumbigo ,
IIACKAG1IE ,
HI1D1CHZ , TOOmCHI ,
SORE THROAT ,
Ql'lNBT , SWELLINGS
NPIIAINH ,
Scrims , Call , Eniset ,
FROSTBITES ,
til othrr Ixvlllteli
nm con i sonti
Bold br til Pmcgtiti ti
tletllri DlncUoui la
! to'iutf
TljCiir'.uA.Vcjo'.ttC
(9 Mtf u 1 VMilirlG
l ) lllnor < , 14 , C. Ik
MCOAETHY& BURKE
Undertakers
318 HTI1 ST. , BET. FARNAM At
DOUGLAS
TTH
DRY GOODS
SAM'L O. DAVIS & CO. ,
Washington Avenue and Fifth Street ,
sntr. JLoxrxs , . _ . . . _ . . noco.
. Hellnian < fc Co *
WHOLESALE
OTHIERS
,
1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. 13th
OMAHA , NEB.
OMAHA CORNICE Wo R KS
RUEMPING & BOLTE , Proprietors
Tin , Iron and Slate Roofers
MANUFACTURERS OF
Ornamental Galvanized Iron Oornices , Iron Sky Lighta , Eto ,
10 South . Twelfth . Street , OMAHA , N ! B
7-mon.wHl.frt-m
WILLIAM SNYDER ,
MANUFACTURER OF
T * Alt " J& 1 AIJT
ftrst-Olass Painting and Trimming , Repairing Promptly Done ,
1321 and 1323 Harney Street , corner Fourteenth St.
J. A.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DKALES IN
Lath , Shingles , Pickets , ,
SASH , DOORS , B 8 , ? OLDH03 ! ; IM19 G
SCTSTATX AGEKI 1TOB UILWAIUVKK GKXEHT COMPANY
Union Pacific DeuotOMAHA , IS E
SPECIAL NOTICE TO
Growers of Live Stock and Others ,
WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR
It Is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound la equal
o three pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake tn the fall and win-
or , Inotead of running down , will Increase in weight and bo in good market-
iblo condition In the spring. Dairymen aa well as others who use it can tes-
ify to its merits. Try it nnd judge for yourselves. Price 525.00 per ton ; no
charge for Backs. Address
34-ood-mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL 00. , Omaha , Neb.
C. F. GOODMAN ,
T
AND DEALER IN
PAINTSOILSVARNISHES
And Window Glass.
MAHA . . . _ _ . NEBRASKA.
PLANING MILLS.
MANUFAOTUKBRB O ?
Carpenter's Materials
ALSO
SASH , DOORS , BUNDS , STAIRS ,
Stair Railings , Balusters , Window
and Door Frames , Etc. -
Fint-claib facilities for the Manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings , Planing aao
matching a Specialty. Order * from the country will be promptly executed.
ill rommnnlonUonR to A. MOYKR. Prrwfetor
Single Brooch Loading Shot Onus , from 85 to S10 , "
Double Breeoh Loading Shot Guns , from 818 to S75 ,
tale Loading Shot Buns , From SB to 825B
Fishing Tackel , 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 firsc class Cigar , Tobacco and Notion
Store Cigars from $15 per 1QOQ upwards , Sender
or Price List and Samples