Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 5, 1883)
THEOMABA BAILY E" OESDAYJUNE 5 1883. The Omaha See. HnbllnhoJ erciy morning , except Son. tj , Tbe calf Alonchy morning dally. WHIMS Una Year. . . . 510. 00 I Three Months. C.3.00 BU Months. . 6.00 | One Month. . . . 1.00 M CHE WEEKLY ttKE"publl hod every Wilnosdajr. TERMS 1'OST I'AID- Ono Year . $2.00 I Tliroo Months. 50 Bli Month . 1.00 I One Month. . . . JJO AUXRICAK NKVTB COMPANY , Solo Agents Sfewidenlors In the United SUtei , OOKUESPONDENOE- Oominunl. | * , fens relntlni ; to Newa &nd Editorial btttnrn nhoulci be addrcsaod to the KDITOU or THE BEK. BUSINESS LETTERS-A11 lliulnm Eiattrrs and Itcmlttaccog ahonld bo ad drci < ; ed to TiiK BEE L'OBUHHINO COMPANY OMAHA , Drafts , Chocks nnd I'oatolFico Orders to bo made payable to the order of tha Company. Ihe BEE PUBLISHING CO , , Props , . UO3EWATER Editor- MORRISON of Illinois IB for hlmuolf for spcakor nnd Incidental protection for AtnorlctD IndnatrlcB. TOM OOIIILTREE has aallud for En- ropo. EopUnd will cow correct Its old slnndor that America Laa no Im agination. _ WINTERSET , Iowa , had a necktie Boclablo youtorday , In which the coun ty was saved the trouble of hanging a mardoror. The lawyers are the only ones who are mourning over the event. grand jury haa Indicted twenty members of the legislature for gamblings. General Sherman ahonld nso every effort to Import the panel to Washington. THE capital of Dakota fats boon located at liiamarck for Ions than forty-eight hoar ? , but land haa risen twenty per cent , and singularly enough several of the commissioners who fixed the location have blossomed ont In now suits of clothes nni plug hats , BAT-TON la atlll at It. Ooplos of the National llcpullican nro being mailed by the anslsUnt postmas ter general , wrapped np In agricul tural reports. On the wrapper , enclosing - closing both report and specimen copy , la an Injunction forbidding any one using It for any other than official business , under penalty of $300 fine. If civil service reform could ntrlko the poatoflico department , Hatton would be shortly packing his trunk tor Bur lington , where ho got his first lift as a capper for the 0. , B. & Q railroad. LOUD OIIAHLEH BEKKSPOUD , an Eng lish nobleman , haj mot Jem MHCO without gloves in the prlza ring and polished the old veteran oil until ho cried quits. Lord Charles then chal lenged Slado who declined the chal lenge. B jth Mace < .nd Slado are said to bo greatly dispirited over the result as their boxing exhibitions have boon a fAlInro ever slnco the sot-to irlth thu scion of aristocracy. Feoplo whc think an English nobleman of no use will now bo called on to revise their opinion. THE New York Star thluko , on per- Imps proity good grounds , thnt the Harvard mnpnatoa have not forgotten a hard hit Ben Butler gave them once. Ho was conducting a case at Eiot Cambridge , soon after the execution of Prof. Webster for the murder of Dr. Parkman , and cross questioned a Harvard professor with unusual se verity. Ho was Interrupted by the opposing counsel , who asked Butler If he was quite aware whom ho was dealing with. "Perfectly , sir , " said Butler. "Wo hung ono of these Har vard fellows the other day. " UNDEU the heading of "A Great Young State , " the Springfield , Mass. , Republican compliments our eastern eastern sister In state the follow terms : "Iowa , with a population of over 1,600,000 , celebrated the semi-cen tenary of ito settlement at Burlington yesterday , by oeremonlea and literary oxeiclsos common to occasions of the kind , It was the anniversary of the first legitimate civilized settlement from which the stale began Its roa' ' growth that was marked. So far bad as 1788 Jullon Dnbnqno got a cjranl of land from the Fox Indiana and the Spanish government , Including the alto of the present city bearing hL name , erected a fort and began leac mining. A little settlement grow uj and continued until 1810 , when Da buqno died. The Indiana thoi drove the whites off , trading post followed , and when after a while semi squatters tried to nolzo the eld mines our army Interfered , and so the grea territory lay idle until Juno 1 , 1832 when the treaty between our government mont and the Sao and Fox Indian went into effect. Then for the fire tlino It was possible to acquire title t land , a very few men already with ! the boundaries at once took homoi and during the summer there came very considerable Influx. Thogrowt from that beginning was wonderful ! rapid , the population tunning to 43 112 In 1840 and 1,194,000 in 1870 , am like that of Wisconsin , remarkable f ( being yory largely from northern No England. Among the great westoi eUtua Iowa stood almost exactly wll Michigan In 1880 , with only Illlnol Missouri and Indiana above , and It yet but child. PRUSSIA AND THE VATICAN. Diplomatic relations between Prus sia and the Vatican have again been broken off ; the Gorman minister will return from llsino nnd the Falk laws are to remain unropoalod. Bismarck has once moro gamed his political point without making the journey to Oanocsa. In thcjllght of the triple al llanco , the secret of the recant nego tiations with the Vatican sfands ro- voalod. Italy and Austria , two Oath- olio countries , were temporarily con ciliated by the ovorturce which the German chancellor made to the pa pacy. It is now very plain that Ble- tnarck's attempt to restore relations with Rome was made with no other purpose than that of lightening the task of enlisting Austria and Italy. The May laws are still in operation , bishops and priosta must bo approved by the government before entering upon their duties , the education of the clergy rcmaiua under government control and the broach between Prus sia and Rome which haa twice boon ' partially bridged over by the chancel lor for polltlcil purposes has been wi dened. In this connection a brief history of the memorable conflict between Bis marck and the Vatican will bo inter esting. The struggle began with the proclamation of the dogma of papal Infallibility. As early as 1871 King William announced his intention of protecting in their benefices such of the Gorman clergy as refused to bo bound by the , decree , on the ground that the existence of the modern atato was incompatible with the In fallibility of the pope. Through * ( ts chancellor , Prussia declared that it would neither recognize the dogma or permit the removal of these of the clergy who refused to accept , but that ia aolf-dofcnso it would fool com pelled to protect such clergymen In the exercise of their injunction and the enjoyment of their privileges. The position of Prussia was vigor ously combattod by Pine IX. The conflict , which was inevitable from the ontcot , came to an issue July 8 , 1871 , when the Prussian government decreed the abolition of the Roman ( Mliollo department In the ministry of public worship and education , ( the knl- tus ministryand ) thus Inaugurated the now famous "Knltus Kampf. " Three months later the Prussian parliament took awny from the church the Inspec tion of schools and expelling Mr. Muller - lor , nominated Herr Falk as his suc cessor. In Jane the Jesuits and their affiliated orders wore expelled from Germany , and in December , 1872 , the Prussian embassy quitted the Vati can. Early In the year following Minister Falk laid before the Prussian parlia ment four church lawa which have since boon known by hia name. Those required a gymnasium and university education as a prerequisite to holding clerical office , prohibited the conver sion of religions pnniahmont into i social and civil penalty and provldoc for the manner of leaving the church and the establishment of a royal oourl for the settlement of ecclesiastical questions. These were supplemented In 1874 by aatn requiring the approval of the government in the np polntmont of all ecclesiastical func tionaries , and a year later an im perial law was Introduced making civil marriage obligatory and providing that Roman Catholic clergy and mom bora of religious orders might contraol legal marriages. The Vatican mot these attacks by wholesale excommunications. In at encyclical letter , the pope declared al the now church lawn invalid , and for bade all Roman Catholics to rondo : obedience to them. Eipoolal favoi was shown by Rome to a number o clergymen , who had been Imprlsonoi for refusing to obey the May lawa and Archbishop Lodoohowskl wa made a cardinal while confined in i Prussian prison. The heaviest ordnance - nanco of the chancellor was nov brought to boar upon the church. Ot March 4 , 1875 , a bill was introduce ! by Minister Falk , and passed by th landtag , which forbade all payments o money on the part of the state i bishops and clergy who were unwlllln to pledge themselves in writing to obo ; thol&wiand on the same date all rollg Ions orders were abolished in the klnq doin. "Of this yan may bo snro,1 shouted the chancellor , In the face o the enraged clericals , "wo will not g to Oanossa , either in our ecclesiastics or political relations. " The death of Pope Pins IX. and th election of his successor marked turning point in the great conflict. Th severity with which the church ha been treated was already creating reaction , Out of twelve diocese only four were filled , a thousand par Ishes were vacant , all the Roma Catholic chairs in the nulvorsltlc were empty and Catholic chlldro were without education in the publ ! , schools. n Within a few months after 11 ; k assumption of the tiara , Leo XII began negotiations with a view I the establishment of political rclc j tions with Prussia. These woi jy temporarily interrupted owing to tl donth cf ( hrdlnal Fronohl , but we : resumed In 1881 , with the result of i L armed truce , which waa shortly fc lowed by the bjglnnlng of a dip ! " < matio correspondence for the modi Is cation of the obnoxious laws. Tl necessities of Blsmarok'a foreign p < Icy were such thnt ho waa farced to niftko concessions and to turn his face towards that Ganoesa which ho so emphatically declared that ho would not approach. Two of the vacant bishoprics were lilted , with the con sent of the chancellor , bills wore In troduced and passed granting the gov ernment discretionary powers In en forcing the May lawa , the clergy were allowed to parliilly resume their old Influence in the schools and Dr. Schloczsr waa sent as the Prnatlan ambassador to the Vatican. For nearly three years pa&t , the cables have brought us news of the progress of the negotiations which Bismarck has been carrying on with Rome In the trno spirit of diplomacy , amid thn encouragement of the Bav arian press , the protests of the evan gelical journals and to the surprise and wonder of his adversaries. A portion of the corrcopondonco pub lished Bovoral months slnco indicated that the final hitch In the parley was 'approaching through the refusal of the chancellor to abrogate the "anzal gopflloht , " or the obligation of bishops to report all nominations to the gov ernment. That the correspondence was artfully led up to this point by the chancellor there IB no reasonable doubt. Ho had accomplished his ends by skillfully using the sontlmont of religions loyalty aa a shield against the attacks of his opponents. In 1880 Bismarck needed the assistance of the roichatag to carry through his reaction ary economic measures , Hla over tures to the Vatican resulted in the formation of the clorlco-con- sorvatlvo alllano3 with which ho defeated the radicals and the socialist wlngn. A second object of the chancellor was the desire to Germanize Alsace and Lorraine , which are strongly Catholic , and ro- nontod the anti-Human policy of the Ferry ministry. But the grand aim of the man of blood and Iron la impe rial centralization. To this ho has for years bent all the energies of his nature , trimmed his political eails in the Prussian landtag and the imperial parliament. Snccosslvcly radical and conservative , ho haa allied himself with every political faction which would enable him to gain his ends with an Inconsistency worthy of Ma- chiavolli. The negotiations with the Vatican , artfully carried on for moro than twelve years , will now bo laid aside until the chancellor haa some now point to gilu by their reanmp- tlon. Nov overtnrca will probably then bo made , followed by another political coup d'etat like that which ia now so thoroughly agitating Europe. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION. A recent report of the national bureau ot education directs public at tention anew to the question of indus trial education , No principle of edu cational reform la better designed tc meet a national want. With all oui boantod advantages as a land of free schools wo are far behind Franco. . England and Germany in the advant ages that wo offer to children desiring toiit themselves to bo first class artlsam and mechanic ; . The decline in the old eystom of apprenticeship hat long operated to the disadvantage of trades in our country. As a con sequence of the lack of natlvo artisans many of our lines of industry whlcl are the most lucrative are filled wltl Imported workmen. The opinion li constantly gaining ground that Bchoo children whoso tastes Ho in the ellrco tiin of manual training should rocolvi the instruction * most fitted to maki them useful in life , It is in ao cordanco with this vein that St. Louis Boston and Now York have establish ed such institutions and that ono 1 soon to bo opened in Chicago. The report says that the worktoj of these schools has been aatlsfac tory In the highest degree. It Boston the use of carpenters' tooli waa taught , and the progrosa mad waa very gratifying and in aomo case quite surprising. The bureau of edti cation declares that the best provisloi that cm bo made in this dlreotioi "would bo to establish In larg cltlos , at some central point , en manual training school , to equip 1 thoroughly for It , and to admit to II nndor suitable restrictions , boys fron all parts of the city. " The BUCC38S of Industrial oducatlo in the great cities will doubtless bo fol lowed by its Introduction elsowhorc The education of children in such manner as will make them producers and enable them to support themselves solves after they leave ichool Is matter of the highest importance The complaint often made agalm our public school system that It work In the higher grades lies In th line of professional pursuits , whil It ( a of little uao to the mass c children , has a basis of truth bohin It. If it is well worth while to toao such brancha In our high cchools c will be of use to the lawyer and th doctor , It is of oven greater necosslt tint the schools should afford sou ) Instructions to the multitude when h . lives are to bo devoted to manni ' labor. ro GENERAL Grant , when Intorvlowc 10 by n Louisville reporter on Saturdaj ro expressed the opinion that Blalno an m Logan will both bo strong candidate for the presidential nomination I * g . 1881. Just at proaont the general ! tie A bettor authority on Mexican ral roads than ho is on American politic AN INFAMOUS DECISION. The "United States district court , Judge Dandy presiding , hun lusnod a perpetual Injunction or joining the county comraleslonora and treasurer of Bnffilo county from c-llootitg the taxes of 1870 on unpatrntcd Janda owned by the Union PaclEc railway company In this county ; also restrain' ing them from Issuing deeds for ory of those unpatcnted lands that may have boon sold for taxes. The county treasurer Is also ordered to strike all nnpatented lands for 1870 from the tax list. Tbo Injnnatlon was nerved yesterday. Kearney lira Judge Dandy is a very handy man for the Union Pacific to have on the United States boncb. In the jug handled case of Bill Platte vs. the Union Pacific , which Judge Dundy had a ohanco to knoir ns well as any man In the United Stateswns a job put np by the road to evade ita charter obligations and rob the homesteaders of their right to settle on unoold lauds , his honor hold that although the hinds were not patented they belonged to the Union Pacific road , and now ho enjoins the collection of taxes because the railroad has not a re corded ownership to them , The first decision Involving millions of acres of lands was monstrous enough , but thla capa the climax , Judge Dandy nays that the Union Pacific owns the lands and has the riqht to sell them , and he follows this decision by deciding that they don't own the lands enough to pay taxes on the m , There is only ono other decision that boats this for absurdity and that Is the ono that Sidney Dillon's nephew , now consulting attorney for the Union Pacific , rendered when ho waa en the circuit bench and which defined the peculiar relations of the U. P. bridge. That concern wan pro nounced a part of the main line of the Union Pacific and had to bo operated aa such , but at the same time It waa a private ontorprtso which could tax the people by extortionate tolls. In the 0330 of Judge Dillon , who re tired from a life position on the bench to a moro lacratl- place , U was man ifest that the Union Pacific paid for its law by the year. Judge Dillon , however , was In the first place an Iowa appointment and hia relations to the president of the U. P. naturally weakened hia spinal marrow , Bat why a Nebraska judgn should Issuoa perpetual Injnotion to re strain the railroads from paying taxes on the lands that they own , passes understanding. SENATOR JOHN SHEUMAN says ho "reasonably looks" for Judge For- aker'a election aa the next governor of Ohio by a strong country vote , Mr. Sherman was always a sanguine poli tician , but ho needs all his cheerful ness to taca the coming campaign In Ohio. An insane forcing of the liquor itano by the republicans haa lost the German vote , while It has failed to gain now strength from the ranks of the prohlbltionlsto. There is every reason to believe that the overwhelm ing republican defeats of last fall will bo repeated in the coming campaign , in aplto of the continual whistling of Mr. Sherman and hia friends to keep np the party cournee. THE pension list will ba published about the 1st of July. It will fill two largo volumes of f > 00 pages each , giv ing the name , address , disability and amount of pension of the 300,000 pen sions now on the roll ? . THE FACTS IN THB CASE. To Iho Editor of the BM. lu Saturday's BEE you have an item on anti-German spirit in Bo homla , and point out that the bishop of Koenlggralz , by a recent decree , ordered Borvlcoa In the Bohemian lan guage in Trontenau , whore four- fiftha it the population are Germans , From this you infer that it is a porso cutlon of the Germans. Now , I wist to state that the whole article is a gross ploco of misinfor mation , coming from untrnthfn Gorman sources , and I propose tc give yon the facts In the case. There Is , as yon truly state , a Bohemian population of about ono fiftt or one-fourth In Trautouau , but there never waa any ser vice In the Bohemian language Lately the bishop decreed that at cer tain times there ahonld ba also Boho mlan service , continuing the Gernmt sorvlco , as it alwaya baa boon. DC yon see any wrong in that ? You cor talnly will not , aa will not any fair mlndod man. But the great trnu bio is that the Germans in Boho mla are not fair-minded , and because one-fourth of the populatlot in Trantenan la doqroed to have a certain tlmea spiritual service in theli own language , the same as the Gor- maus enjoy , they raise a terrible howl misrepresenting the facts In the case In Prague , where there Is a Gormat population of hardly ono-tonth , there are several churches with Gormat sorvlco , and you do not hear any com plaint from the remaining nluo-tonthi of the Bohemian population , but th < Germans of Trautonau can not boai the thought that Bohemians llvln ; among them should have any rlghti at al ) , Youra for truth , J. ROSIOKY. Mr. llosnlcky has our thanks fo : setting ui right lu the matter. Thi greater portion of all eastern European poan news reaches England and th United States through Gorman chan nets of information and la more o Iocs colored by the medium throngl which It travels. The antagonism between tweon Czech and Gorman tends to In crease the difficulty in arriving at un biased conclusions. Pattl has to ting * whole opera to ear her $1,000 , while Mr. Sullivan walke awfty with $5,800 for a little cavatlna wit Mitchell accompaniment St. Loul S. | Poat-DUpatch. PERSON ILITIHS. Oen , Crook 10 a straight man. The hair of ex-Etnpreaa Kagenle ( A al most white , It IB xnlri tint Mr. Tildcn feclj the death of Mr * . 1'inkhrun very keenly. 1'ope TJOO XIII. haa an annual Income of $1,600,000 , but it i ) ealil thnt Ills ox- peusea fur food are but fifty cents per dar- darAn An awful New York man slapped Freddy Gibhnrdl' * cheek Saturday night , but no Impro'Blon was made on the cheek. Cincinnati Tlinoa-Star. It is n tnr.t'er of wide-spread re gret thit the Kev. Joe Cook wbou he ob- jec > odlti a public dinlnp-room to n com mercial trarjler ordering raw beefsteak did not foon afterwntd have occasion to order one hhnaolf for his eye. Cincinnati Knqulrer. Tab oldest living graduate of the mili tary aondemy at west 1'olnt la Genornl Jcxhua liakcr , now of Louisiana. Duiinc ; the war he wua on General .inckijon'ssUtr. He was grftdnatnd from Wett Point in 1813. when twenty-four years of age , and U Btill hule nnd hearty. Chief Justice Wai to owns nCno building lot in Washington , nnd IOUK ago planned to build u homo upon It. Fioin thin ho is detcrted , however , by his wife , who , It la said , ban an unaccountable but not-to-be- got-rid-of fancy thnt tihould ho do so he -ould notlivo to occupy It. Itev. Ur. J. P. Nowmftu. of New YorV- , lotted liu lust Sundity eermon in these ; oidt : "Thy Holy Ghost H a divine tele- hone , giving us the fiwect voice oflosua. . rVhat n sham life to nek etipremo huppi- leas In the npern , the ball and the uocie'y if other Udtcs thau your wife , " Undo Diwfl Gnge has got to vrearini ; . scull cap in the theatre nowadays. It ivea him the appearance of n touriat nuil jinkeg him look ever so much younger. tVith hh broyl cxpinso of baldness cov ired anil bis n'erco m'de wh'akorH ' brought into cjnBpicucu nc6d , Uncle lave looka learer 30 thsu 03. Whatever clue may be Bald of Brewster , ittornoy general , bis hat and overcoat do icrvo totaku ivnk among our moat nota- lie institutions , In dimensions , color nnd , oueral originality , the hat l us great n jwryel us the Brooklyn bridge iteelf. Wo 1o nt classify Urew ter among the dudes , mt he ia fearful and wonderful to 1 ok ipon. Justice Gray , who expects to accompany General Shsrman in a horseback ride eev- : ral bun Jred miles next summer , a a very iciTV man , He pridua himself , however , in his equestrian skill , nnd was quite in- lignant a day or two since when an old iririy officer suggested thnt ho should pro- juren pairof atout Kentucky mules , tid ing ono one day and the other the next. Gebbardt baa another mash , A young womnu , pretty , Blender and modest , : alled at the hotel Lafayette , Philadelphia tud Beat up her card. Freddie very un- ; alantly ) tent word back that ho did not : now tha party nnd was engaged. The isitor Boomed to bo very much offended me ! promleoJ to call agnln. Freddie la ery cautious. She might have been one if the ladles upon whom Sanford was ; oinp to call , nnd called for satisfaction , Mr . Emily C. Kimball , of Riley , Mich leservuH to go on record ns n model Amor [ can woman She is eighty-three years if nge , nnd Imd , within the last two years , knitted twenty-four pairs of socks nnd -stocking nnd four pairs of mittens , nni made nnd quilted nine patch-work quilts , " : omo of which were of very minute pieces md intricate patterns , boitdes assisting in ; be housework and- doing general sewing for the family. The old lady ia a better louackesner nt eighty-three than many of .he candidates for matrimony nt sweet ilxteen are. LITER&BY NOTES CBEATOH AND COSH H , by Kobort Shaw , M. A. Second Kevblon WITH KNLAHQE- SIKNT. Sun 2'ublisMng Co. , St. Louis , This work , which has already passed through nine editions , now ap pears in now and revised form , com prising a valuable appendix , and endIng - Ing with two Academy of Science lectures , which constitute a commen tary to the whdle work. The subjects treated are the weightiest and iruat mportant which can engage human attention. Part 1 is replete with information regarding the Gjsinos ter ritorial and universal ; branches of natural history and science ; a history of the various tribes of mankind scattered over the earth their laws , customs , manners , etc. This part also contains a complete treat- iao on light and astronomy. Part 11 examines into the Hebraic ac counts of the cosmogony and the Ideas of Deity entertained in the ancient re ligions generally. It gives a complete analysis and eynthoaia of the Gospels and the Acts , thereby showing their literary character and wherein their nnlty consists ; a complete demonstra tion of the fulfillment of prophecy In history , and a series of brief discourses which tend to simplify the most im portant doctrines of Christianity. * 'Creator and Cosmos" will form a valuable addition to any library. Bucklon's Arnica Salye. The greatest medical wonder of the world , Warranted to speedily cure Burns , Bruises , Cuts , Ulcers , Salt Rheum , 1'ever Sores , Cancers , Piles , Chilblains , Corns , Tetter , Chapped Hands , nnd all skin erup tions , guaranteed to cure in every instance , or money refunded , 2 > cents per tax , For eftlo by 0. F. Goodman. The Blue and tuo Gray. The war is Indeed far behind us. At the recent annual reunion of the Now Orleans Washington artillery , the first tonnt drunk was to the president of the United States , and the second to the army and navy of the United States. At the same gathering Gen. Beanrbgard presented to the artillery the first rebel battle flag. It was made by Miss Hetty Oarey , a Balti more hello , then a refagoo In Richmond mend , who toro up ono of her silk drosses. She married Gen. Pegram , of the Ootfodorato army , who was killed three day's cftur the wedding. The flag accompanied Gen. iicanre- gnrd , who at the clnso of the war eout it to Havana for safety , whence it was lately returned. CURES RheumatismNeuralgia , Sciatica , Lumbigo , Backache , HeadacheToothache , Bar * Throat , Bwtlllnai I'pnlna , Ilrulict , Uurnt , Hcalil * . Fr t lltlr * . 15D ILL OTHUl BODILY FilkS 1JD iCIICJ. Sold DmifliU ted Dttltrt tmyvhtr * . riftr C au twill * . VlnotloBila II Ltncuilti. THE V1IAIII.EH A. VOllEI.EIl CO. H. WESTERMANN & CO. , yu L China and Glass , * 608 WASHINGTON AND 609 ST , CHARLES ST , St. Louis , Mo. may 22-3m 223mW'HIOILiIE W'HIOILiIE ! S- GOODS SAM'L O. DAVIS & CO. , Washington Avenue and Firth Street , JC. 3COTJX > , 3VEO. FELKEB , BAUDER & CO , , COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND PRODUCE DEALERS 1622 Capitol Avenue , Omaha , Nebraska , Quotation * gent on application. Consignments solicited and remittance ) promptly mule. lALEM FLOUR. This Floar is made at Salem , Richardson county , Neb. , in the combin roller and atone system.Vo give EXGLTT IVE sale of oar floar to ono firm in place. Wo ha o opened a branch at 1018 Capitol avenue , Omaha. Wtlto for Prices. \ / A I . PNTIMCT . J ? , SMern or Omaha , Neb Address ilther V ML. C. IN I I IN G Ot C. F. GOODMAN , DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PAINTS.OILSVARNISHES And Window Glass. OMAHA . . . _ _ . NEBRASKA. . Hellman & Co. \ WHOLESALE TRIERS. 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA , NEB. AND JOBBERS IN Flour , Salt , Sugars , Canned Coeds , ana All Grocers' Supplies. A Fall Line of the Best Brands of GIGAES AMD IAMACTDRED TOBACCO. 28llt3 for BENWOOD RAILS AND LAFLiN ft BAND POWDER GO ( JKAJTIEj OXTTtT PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS Ol Carpenter's Materials ALSO SASH BOORS BLINDS , , , STAIRS , Stair Railings , Balusters , Window and Door Frames , Etc. facilities for the Manufacture of nil kinds of Moulding * , Flatting aea matching . a Btvolalty. . Order . ? from tha country will bo promptly executed. < \H.U < i ' < inn.W tlnn.rn \TnVlW P n'ti A. M. OLAR K PaiatBr&PapBrflsngBT fflBNWBHBRftDBOnttATDB. WHOLESALE < fc RETAIL WALL PAPEE i Window Shades awl Ourtaino , \ OORN10E3 CURTAIN POLES AND FIXTURES. Pain " , Oils & Brushes. I'TSouthlUtfa. ' Street OMAHA. NEBRASKA