THE OMAB \ DAILY BEE-WEDNESDAY MAY 16 , 1883. The Omaha Bee. Pnbllihed every morning , except 8nn 7. The onljr Monday morning daily , TERMS BYJMAIL- Une Year.$10.00 I Three Monthi.R3.00 8U Monthi. . 6.00 | One Month. . . . 1,00 CHE WEEKLY DKE , pnblUhcd every WclnewUy. TERMS POST PAID One Ye r ? 2.00 I Three Monthi. W ) iUMonthi. . , . tOO | OneMonth. . . . 90 AvinicAN NIWB COMPANY , Bole Agents New > delers in the United States. COIWESPONDENCE- Oommunl. tfons relating to New * nd Editorial matters thould be addressed to the EDITOB or Tin B . BUSINESS LETTERS AH Bunlnes Letteri and Remittances ihould be ftd droned to THE BEE PUBLISHING OOUFANY OMAHA , Drafts , Checks and Postolfico Jrden to be miule payable to the order of the Ooinpany , f ho BEE PUBLISHING 00 , .Props . , E. RO8EWATER Editor TIIK Fremont Tnbunt under the old and ablomanagemant of the Hammond mend Bros , has boon changed to a dally. A CARD from the city engineer on the sewer question is unavoidably crowded out from our columns , but will appear In our next Issue. THE National Irish league haaia Buod aq appeal for a union of all Irlah Interests In this country , and the sym pathy and oo-oporatlon of American citizens. TEX THODHAND DOLLAHH ( V yflar II pent by the agrlonltrral doparttnont In propagating seeds that will not sprout and In experimenting with pumpkins that fall to make pica. LEO XIII. has forbidden the clergy to take any psrt In political agitation In Ireland , and condomna all collec tions which may bo employed as a means of exalting rebellion against the laws , Mu. SULLIVAN may bo a rapidly falling man , but ho recovered his health yesterday aufliclontly to knock out Mitchell , the British champion , in ihroo rounds , and rake In gate receipts to the amount of 80,000 TIIK first of the Phunix pnrk eseas- alns was hung In Dublin on Monday. A crowd of 100,000 people gathered around the jail during the execution. Daath was ovou more Instantaneous than that of his victim , L > rd Freder ick Cavendish. GEKKUAL HOWAHO has started on a trip to the Yollowutono Park by way of Fort MoKlnnoy. The general's tlmo seems to bo fully occupied with lecturing at $50 a night and making excursions Into the interior In the line of public duty. WE are having a llttla sunshine , just to make us appreciate the ralnful when It happens to put In an appear ance. Our farmers will bo well satis fied to BOO an ending of the April showers , which has been carried too far Into May , ATTOKNKY GENBUAL BUEWBTEU will now have an opportunity to conduct another suit , which need not bo as long as the star route trial. Secretary Tel ler has written him recommending the Instituting of proceedings.against the Union Pacific for the sum of $1,727- 742 , duo the United States. WATER gas , at Pullman , costs $2.2E * thousand for light , and the companj manufacturing It made $18,000 during the first year their works wore In op oration. Water gaa In Omaha bui who knows anything about water gai in Omaha and the company which Mr Jackson announced with such a flour Ish of trumpets. Oun shoddy aristocracy are bu ] making their preparations for a Euro pean trip. Eighty thousand Ameri cans , It Is officially stated , anna all ; cross the ocean to Europe. Of thli number nine-tenths have neve crossed the Missouri river and knoi loss about their own country thai they do of England , Franco and tbj Rhlnoland provinces , AN important decision has booi rendered by the supreme court whlol Involves the validity of the patent 01 what la known aa the now process fo making flour by crushing grain between tween rollers , The court holds tha the patent Is void for want of novelty the process having bean clearly dc crlbod as early as 1847 by an Invento In Lolpalo. This decision will bo o Interest to all millers throughout th west. west.Wx Wx had a ploaaant call yoatorda ; from Mr. Frank R. Morrlsaey , man aging editor of the St. Paul . Dispatch. Mr. Morrltaoy la from the gory field of Yankton , whor General Ordway'a scalp la In great demand mand and capital removal the enl ; theme of conversation. Immlgratlo la ponring Into Dakota at the rate c COO a day and the territory claims tc day B population of 250,000. Aftc the next presidential election D&kot can asplro to statehood , but the elec toral vote and two aonatora are to valuable to bo given to the republics party thla fall by a democratic con gross. REORGANIZING THE ALLI AHOC. Steps are being taken by tbo oflhors of the Nebraska Farmorsa * Alliance towards a complete reorganization of that body. The changoa to ba tnado are in the line of concentration of energy. Inactive Alliancoa are to bo discontinued , weak organizations to bo combined , and all working bodies are to bo rochartored while the field work ia to bo extended Intpovery county in the state , with a view ti increasing - creasing at once the local strength and the general ucofnlnota of the body hi Nebraska. This la aa it ahould bo , and Secretary Barrows has Issued a circular fully explaining the * situation. The Alliance la stronger to-day than it has over boon , Over a dozen now Alliancoa hava boon organized ainco the adjournment of the legislature , whllo the total roll foota np 540 Alli ancoa aa chartered slnco the beginning of the movement. Thla it a record of which every Nebraska anti-monopolist may bo proud. The Ftirmora' Alliance has done excellent work in bringing our farmers to a realizing sense of their wronga and in awakening them to tholr duties , Ita influence aa an edu cating force haa boon greatly felt and its power In uniting anti monopolist ! of all partioa for the common defense of the state from corporate aggretslon and against corporation wronga la not- vemlly admitted. Of tbo 17,000 votes caat for anti-monopolists at the last atato election at least 12,000 came from the Alliance. It waa duo to no fault of the organization that the hopoa of Nebraska producers were not realized in the laat legislature , Through the Influence of the Alliance , anti-monopoly waa made the anpromo lisuo of the oampa'gn. ' A legislature of which a majority of the members were pledged to carry cut thn vlowa formulated In the Alliance platform waa eleotod , The people of Nebraska have learned who were to blame for the failure to accomplish much uoodod legislation. While every member elected ou the antl monopoly ticket remained true to hla principles and stood bravely by his colors , repub licans anddomocrataoomprlslug alarpo majority of the legislature , violated their solemn pledges by a cowardly and corrupt anrronder to the monopo lies agilnat the recurrence of such base treachery the Alliance pro poses to guird In the future With compact forccap and re doubled strength the reorganized Al- liauca will bond every energy to oloat men of principle who will stand by their plodgea. The Interval between election is the tlmo for filling np the ranks and perfecting the organlzitlon. Thla ia what President Raynolda and Secretary BnrrowH are now doing. WHO PAID FOR IT T Mr. Viilttrd haa returned to Now York from hU western trip over the Jino of the Northern Pacific and as- euroa the press that hia road will be open for buainois by the ralddlo of August. Work haa boon progressing rapidly from both of the termini and the raila are now approaching the tunnel near Helena , where they will bo joined , making a continuona line rom the lakea to the Pacific coast. ono ia disposed to deny , hat iho building of the North ern Pacific has boon a great nndortftklng which will bo crowned ) y magnificent success In Ita ooraplc- lon. Jay Oooko pinned hla faith on .ho ontorprlao , and waa bankrupted Ir 1873 beoauso ho failed to understand ; ho beauty of construction rlnga and oar trnsta , by which atockholdora cat bo bankrupted and railroad promoter ) made millionaires. But Mr. Vlllarc la not a man of Mr. Oooko'a atrlpe He haa pnahed the work through wltt til the energy of a young man , am all the shrewdness of a great operator Mr. Vlllard waa ton yeara ago a pee : newipapor correspondent. He ii reputed to-day to bo worth tei millions of dollars. It la plah that ho did not pay for thi construction of the Northern Paclfi road. Who did ? The Northern P * olfio company received from the government ernmont , land granta aggregating 48 , 215,010 acres aa a premium for con structing the road. Thia largo allci from the public domain ia worth li round figurea $125,000,000. In addl tlon local donationa and gilts of bond aggregating nearly a half million mor were aoonred by the company. Thi enormous sum of money furnished b ; the people waa moro than aufl ] clout to construct the entire road It furnished a good basla for hoav ; Issues of atocka and bonds , large pot tlona of which found their way bad into the pookota of managera and direc tora In return for construction con tracts. In other words a conblnatio ; of capitalists engineered the job an own the road whllo the people paid fo it. Railroads are public benefactors brj they are not the only philanthropists Very often the people build them an then pay ton times over tholr aotne coat of construction In the few yoai after they are bulU. NOTHING haa yet boon heard froi General ( Jrook but several ofllooi whose experience In war has bee chiefly gained on the parade groun expreas the belief that the general ha made a mlatake In leading too amall force agalnat the enemy. It may b taken for granted that Qoo. Orook knows what ho la about , do far as can ba learned ho has a full under standing with the commanders of the , Mexican forces who have specific In- ' strnotlons from their government , The campaign Is to bo a joint ono and two thousand Mexican soldiers are co operating with the American general , There does not seem to bo any good ground for uneasiness about the ex pedition. No news Is good news when Orook is In the field. Following his policy in the Ilosobnd campaign ho has cut loose from all communication , and the first nests of him will como by carriers to ono of the American forts , or through the slow Mexican telegraph which is about as rapid as an old-fashioned stage co\ch , When a decisive engagement has boon fought wo shall bo likely to hoar of It very soon. BURGH THE IMPROVEMENTS. On aomo acconnta the scattered population of Omaha la a disadvantage to the city. As addition after addition Is platted , mapped and dedicated , built up In spots and brought Into the corporation now burdens are added which must after ba carried at the expense of the central portion of town. There is a constant call for heavy expenditures In grading and repairing the streets in the outskirts which greatly doorcases the amount available for making the best built and most populous parts of Omaha healthy and respectable. Large de mands are made on the general fund compared with which the amount returned for taxes on real estate and lersonal property la in moat cases mall. If wo intend to permanently improve ) maha wo must go about it in a sys- omatlo manner , The most thickly ottlod and heavily tax paying portions ught to bo first improved. When ho streets In the outskirts and addl- lens are well built np and demand nrgo outlays of money , It will bo tlmo nongh to expend It. But in the meantime the board of public works , nd the city council should devote the rlncipal part of tholr attention to making Improvements In those por- lens of the city where property can ear the expanse of the assess ments. When the section between tflnth and Twenty-second and Jack- on and Izird strops have been horonghly graded and paved , it will jo tlmo to talk about Improving other > ortiona of Omaha. 01 course , oven In the additions , tbo troots ought to bo kept passable , and ho sldowalka maintained. That goes rlthont saying. But concentration if energy In our public works and con- icntratlon of oxpondltnro la what Omaha nouda for the next five years f she hopes to put on the drosn and wear the appearance of a metropolis. THE Increase of the English and Gorman 11 jot a In Chinese waters Is an ndlcatlon that Franco la playing n jamo in Tonquin , which may result n serious consequences to all foreign ers. Tonquin and Annam , the pro- vlnoaa where hostilities nro raging , He on the dividing line between India and Ohlna , The former country having boon seized by the French has been attacked by the Chinese , who wore re pulsed with great loss. It is now an nounced that the French government baa notified the king of Annam thai France Intends to keep poaaesaion ol Tonquin , and offers to protect Annam agalnat Ohlna. This moans moro ter ritorial aggrandizement at the expense of China , and the certainty , sooner 01 later , of a general conflict betweei the Ohlnosa and all the western pow era. Such a war endangera the aafetj of every European in China. Then are already grave fears for tha safet ] of our missionaries , and England am Germany are alarmed Into seeing thi necessity for protecting their subjects The Ohlnoso draw no distinction between twoon the nationality of foreigners and If the French kill Chinamen li Tonquin , the Chinese will bo very ap to retaliate by killing Englishmen Americans and Germans whereve found. THBKK la blood In the eyoa of al the bonanza statesmen. Senate Hill1 of Oolorado , Is busily engaged li preparing documents to back a rose lutlon which ho will Introduce aa BOOI as congroaa moots , providing for ai Investigation ot Secretary Teller's con duct of the Interior department. Mu. GOULD says that ho has neve taken much interest in nowspapon but thinks the Now York Tribune th soundest journal In the country. Takln Into consideration the source fret which it comes , this la a very left handed compliment , SKNATOU SAUNDEUS has returned t 0'iuha in the nick of tlmo. Goners Manderson is aching to explain to bin his now system of civil service reforn as applied to Nebraska politics , ( Jnanged It's Tune. Sioux City Journal. The Omaha Republican is oxtrem in Its condemnation of Mr , Oonkllng' recent speech ; and this remlnda n that The Republican , In 1880 , nnde a somewhat different management , ex erted Itself to count Nebraska on Mt Conkllug'a aide lu the Chicago COD ventlon , THE TRADE AND CROP SITU- ATION. There has been little ohango to note in the trade situation throughout the west during the past week. Unfavor able weather has operated to depress ho retail trade , and wholesalers and obbora naturally fool the effects , perators In nearly all lines have boon t close accordance with actual wants , nd whllo the volume of business has cached fair proportions in some do- artmouts , trade aa a rule has contln- od uniatlsfaotory. The eastern Iron rado Is a llttlo moro satisfactory. It believed that there will bo a general losing down of the Iron mills between 'ittsburg and St. Louis on the 1st of one. In consequence buyers are moro disposed to anticipate require ments , in view of a probable curtail ment of production. Other industries low no changes to note. There have been nd Important do- elopments In the grain trade. At ho close of the week the price of wheat for near delivery cased oif lightly , but options on the now crop , specially August and Saptumber , have son In value. This demonstrates the rowing belief among operators that 10 new crop yield will be considerably mailer than last year The national opartmont of agriculture anticipates decrease of seventy-seven million ushola lu thn yield of winter wheat , 'ho spring wheat outlook is still un- ortaln , and nothing definite as to the robable yield can bo known until the at of June. It la hoped , however , bat a full average yield may be o tr ained in order that the already ancor- ainod shortage of the crop may not be noreaqod. At the close of last week he vhlblo supply of wheat in the Jnlted States showed a further do- reaso of seventy-five thousand bu- hols , leaving the total still above wonty million bnshola. England had supply of five million bushels at ilvorpool and about as much moro t the remaining ontports , and while his In the case her buyers remain very ndlfforent about the crop proapeoUln he United States. MDRAT HALSTKD is still sanguine of opubllcan success in 1884. Ho says : "Several times several persons have aid that the republican party was ilayod out and that the democracy md the future tlod np lu an old silk " > andana handkerchief with a llttlo nuff on It , but several times the prophets of the pasaage of political lower from thoao who bjllovod in the Nation ofjtho United States , have been > roven false. " When General Grant , as president , lad disappointed the expectations of ila beat friends , and became the boss of the bosses , and waa rc-olcctod to ho presidency , notwithstanding hie mistakes , which wore multitudinous and manifest , the people at large , 'ooling that ho was a man whoso ser vices In tlmo of trouble had boon BO great that ho should bo forglvon for raany sins In the batter days ho had iclpod to produce , rebuked the ras cals about him by the election of a democratic honso of representatives and 10 democratic governors in states that had bseu republican. Thla was n pretty heavy blow , and pot the democracy have not come Into , ho unqnallfiad possession of nnlinv ted power. No man has since the war boon elected president who wai lot at once au Ohio man and a ropub' lican. lican.Wo Wo fool warranted , therefore , ir saying to Mr. Ilosooo Conkllng , th ( great lawyer , and Mr. Howard Car roll , tbo celebrated journalist , thai they should not despair of the repub lic. The republican party will carrj the next presidential election , ant public men aa distinguished oven ai Mr. Oonkllng , who think that theli personal notions must prevail or thi republican organization Is played ont are mistaken , The republican part ] Is not a one-man party. An Old Scandal Revived. New York kTlmc . The Massachusetts legislature ha adopted a resolution certifying to thi ability , public services , and Intogrlt ; of the late Oakes Aamea , and askln | the congress of the United States t take similar action. Mr. Ames wa a member of congress during a storm ; period of our national history. Hi waa sincerely and firmly devoted t < the cause of the Union , In the rec orda of the several congresses that sa during his term of public service , hi name will always be found amen ; those who voted not only for th malntonanco of the Union , ita armies and Ita various defenses , but fo the measures doomed radical am extra hazardous by many whi thought that the end of All thing waa near at hand. Mr. Aulea was ; strict censor , too , in all financial mat tera which affected the efficiency of th national treasury. Happening to dla cover the rottenness of a certain arm ; contract , he had an army wagon ( th representative of Ita class ) brought t < Washington and exposed , in all It fraudulent ahoddypalnt , and putty , li front of the Capitol , whore member conld see rfith their own eyes a mor stiiking illustration of the justice o Mr. Amos' abort , sharp donnnclatioi of the thlovea than ho conld have give : in a speech of learned length am thundering sound. Mr. Oakea Ame waa a patriot upon whoso patrlotlan and devotion to country no stain cai rjat. rjat.In In the course of tlmo It befell tha Mr. Oakea Ames became Interested litho the project of building and eqnlpplu a transcontinental railroad. Varlou questions affecting the profits of thos who undertook the road building cam up in congress after the prollmln&r steps in the prosecution oi the enter prise had been taken. The handlln of the vaat contracta for building th Union Pacific railroad waa managed b a concern known aa the Credit Mo blllor company , The profits c this corporation wore enormoui Any man who owned few shares of Credit Mobllier stoc waa sure of a dividend before ho pal for hla aharoa of stock , It was found In course of time , that several sent tora and representatives held th ! I tv * * * r i - stock. These men were likely to be called upon to vote upon questions di rectly or Indirectly afldotlng the valno of the shares they owned , An in vestigation waa ordered , and It was found that Mr , Oakea Amoa had dis tributed nmong members of the senate and house , without regard to party , the shares of Credit Moblllor stock which these gentlemen hold. Aa a rule , the dividends In each case rep resented the unpaid price of the stock , as well aa a amall additional profit , The honso of representatives , of which Mr , Oakea Amea waa a member , pasted a vote censuring him and one or two representatives who had par taken of the profits of the Credit Mobllier transaction It was unquea- tlonably true that Mr. Ames waa an r.rdont and sincere patriot , and that the work of building the transconti nental railway , In which ho waa engaged - gaged , waa one of great national im portance , It WAS , nevertheless , true that members of congress wore bribed , by an allotment of Credit Mobllier shares , to vote for the augmentation of the profits of these engaged in that mighty undertaking. The oxposnro of that bribery mined many reputations before unspotted. Ono gentleman , elegant , polished , scholarly , ar d B contentions und consistent member of the democratic party , never lifted his head after the expoenre of the Credit Mobllier scandal Ho died of a broken heart. Another , who had filled a high office lu the gift of the republican party , and who , at the end ot a term in u federal oflioo , wai about engaging in an enterprise of pith and moment , was laid low by the bolt that fell , and ho disappeared ( whllo yet in the prime of manhood ) from the politics of his country. Others were glad to find In the oh- acnrity of private life that im munity from criticism , that shelter from derlson , which they conld not ask or expoot In the public sorvlco. This is a thrloo-told tale. It la a part of the history of the republic. But , when a new generation * ls almoat oady to enter the stage of political fo , it Is proposed to reverse the ver- lot which congress , supported by an nllghtoned public opinion , passed pou these who were engaged in this Isgracefnl business. The man who laced the atoofc of the Credit Moblllor ssoclation "where It would do the most gooa" la in his grave. How far la moral sense waa blunted by self- ntorost and by the corrupting Influ- nee of a corrupt and money-making go , wo will not now Inquire , nho evil ho did lives after 1m. If his memory la resuscitated nd fumigated , who shall disinfect the men who have courted private 11 fever ver since ho laid before thorn the littering bait ? If there is any later oliberate public sentiment which lolda Dikes Ames In an esteem irreo- ncilablo with his condemnation , who hall issue a clean bill of health to the ivlng and the dead statesman whom b Is charity not to name ? The latest ttompt to gild the reputation of ) akes Ames Is duo to a filial piety which all men must needs admire. It s nn appeal to the easy good nature of generation ready to lot bygones bo Agones. But the inexorable truth of ilstory demands that the lesson of the ) rt'dh Mobillor ecandal ahall remain warning and a menace. Postofflco .Changes n Nebraska and Iowa during the week ending May 12,1883fnrnlshod > y Wra. Van Vleck , of the post office department : NEBRASKA Established Chicago , Antelope county , Chas. T , Galloway , postmaa- or ; Swift , Otoe county , Arthur T. Balfour , postmaster. Name Changed Evergreen , Brown county , to Johnstown ; Myra , Nance county , to Belgrade. Postmasters Appointed Emerson , Dlxon county , Wm. Warnook ; Emmet , [ Iall county , Mrs , Mary C. Malloy ; [ sla , Sanndors county , John B. Brown ; Long Pine , Brown county , Mlsa S. L. King ; Willow Island , Dawson - son county , Arthur White. IOWA. Established Ladoga , Taylor coun ty , Jamea H. Elliott ; Mallard , Palo Alk county , Wm. Haokenbergj Plover , Pocahontaa county , Philip G. HOBS , postmasters Postmasters Appointed Lnzorne , Benton county , E. J. Dltzer ; Sallx , Wocdbnry county , John L. Follanboe Tillage Crenk , AlUmakeo county , Jamea D. Brennan. If You Are Rained in health from any cause , especially from the use of any of the thousand nostrums that promise so largely , with long fictitious testimonials' , have no fear. Resort to Hop Bitten al once , and In a abort tlmo yon will have the moat robust and blooming health A Mido Into tha River. Bpicl&l Dlip tch to Turn Bu. Sioux CITY , May 14. A iand-slldi occurred last night three miles wosto : hero , on the Dakota division of thi 0. , M. & St. P. railway. Six hundred drod feet of track went Into the Mis sourl and disappeared entirely , the huge bluff towering above the trad sinking down and causing an impaasa bio barrier. It will take a week , per haps longer , to repair the break. The amount of land affected by the slide is three or fonr acres , and it was stll settling at lost accounts , the river hav ing undermined It. There la no waj of getting around the break except b ] omnibus or wagon transfer. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. IU1UTCI and curt i RHEUMATISM , Neuralgia , ScUtlct , Lumbago , BACKACHE , EElDlCHt , TOOTHKI1 , SORE THROAT , QCI.VST , SWELLINGS , SI'HAIN.S , Scrmtti , Cuti , Brunei , FROSTBITES , Anil til ethtr bojilr ubu oJ pilai. nm cisn i BOTTU 8oUk ; ! IDnti1ititiitf De l n DUKtlccl la 11 BtlllMtn , 111 , V , S. A W JbiOHiIE B A DRY GOODS / ' SAM'L 0. DAVIS & CO. Washington Avenue and Fifth Street , . X.OXT3CS , IKCO. M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE LOTHIERS , 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I3t OMAHA , NEB. OMAHACORNICEWO RKS BUEMPING & BOLTE , Proprietors Tin , Iron and Slate Roofers MANUFACTURERS OF. Ornamental Galvanized lion Cornices , Iron Sky Lights , Etc,1 310 South Twelfth Street , OMAHA , NEB" 7-mon-wod-frl-m - - - - J. A. WHOLESALE AMD BETAIL DEALEU IN Lath , Shingles , Pickets , SASH , DOORS , BUNDS , ftiOLOiHGS , LIME , fSTSTATB AQENf JOB UILWADKKR OKMEHT OOMPAVT Near Union PacificOMAHA , SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. It la the beat and cheapest food for atock of any kind. Ono pound la oqusl to throe pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake In the fall and win * tor , Instead of running down , will Increase in weight and bo in good market * able condition In the opting. Dairymen aa well as othera who use it can tes tify to ita merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Frlco $25.00 per ton ; no charge for aacka. Address 34.eod.mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob. C. F. GOODMAN. D AND DEALER IN SQILSVARNISHESr And Window Glass. NEBRASKA. Single Breech Loading Shot Bans , from S5 to BIB.1 Double Breech Loading Shot Guns , from 818 to $75 , Muzzle Loading Shot Buns , From $6 to $25 , ' Fishing Tacko ) , Base Balls and all kinds of Fancy Qoods , Full Stock of Show Oases Always on hand , , . , - " - ' > * -feitSZJsP".f- - QBACCQNSTS ; Imported and Key West Cigars a large- line o Meerschaum and Wood Pipes and everything re quired in a firsc- class Cigar , Tobacco and Notion Store Cigars from $15 per 1,000 npwards. Send' or Price List and Samples Thla Flour ia made at Salem , Richardson county , Neb. , In the combined ! roller and atone system. Wo give EXOLTTIIVE aalo of our flour to one firm In au place. Wo ha o opened a branch at 1018 Oapltol avenue , Omaha. "JM.BSr VALENTINE & REPPY , ° . 8vKc1 PLANING MILL MANUFACTURERS OK Carpenter's Materials ALSO SASH DOORS BLINDS STAIRS , , , , , Stair Railings , Balusters , Windo\ and Door Frames , Etc. First-claw facilities for tha Manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings , PUnI j MI matching ; a Specialty. Order * from the country will be promptly executed. jM Moommnnlcatioosto A. MOYBR , Ewpifett