Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1883)
TW F THE OMAB \ DAILY BEE-MONDAY JUNE 11 1883. The Omaha Bee. Pnbllnht-d evorjr mornlnp , eicept Han ky , The only Monday morning dally , BY MAIL Ona Year. . . .810.00 1 Thrco Months. 83.00 Biz Months. . 5.00 | One Month. . . . 1.00 CHE W15EXLY BEE , published every Wednesday. TERMS POST PAID- Oao year. . . . ; . $2.00 I Throa Months. K ) li Months. . . . LCO I OnoMonth. . . . 20 AMKBIOAN NEWS COUFANT , Sole Agents _ Kowsdealors In the United States , | CORRESPONDENCE- Oommunl- ca'fons relating to Nowa Mid Editorial m tters should be addressed to the KDITOU r TIIK BKI. BUSINESS LETTERS All Buslnois Ciottera and Remittance * theuld be ad Irewed to THE Bus 1'uBLinniiio COMPANY OMAHA. Drafts , Chocks nnd Postoffico Orders to bo made payable to the order of the Company , the BEE PUBLISHING 00 , , Props , . ROSEWATEH Editor Mn. MEKHICK has exhausted his wind In the ttar route trial nnd the case will go to the jury next week. Ir Fjtrn&m and Harnoy atroota are to bo oat down below the present oetab- llshod grade it IB tlmo nomothlng was done In the matter. GENERAL OUOOE has been found. Ho Is still looking for the Apachce , who have not yet been discovered , in the Sierra Madra mountains. THE Barber boys were lynched in Iowa yesterday by nn Infuriated mob. DIatrnst of the ofllcloncy of the law was responsible for this barbarous \ measure. THIEVES In Kearney exhibited their contempt of court by burglarizing the house of Judge Savldgc. Contempt \ for courts Is becoming general in Nc- braska. Hu. HKNDIUCKS waa dying to bo vlco-preuldont in 1870 , ha rejected the nomination contemptuously In 1880 , and ho hankers after it again In 1883. Mr , Hondrlcks is too rlpo to bo picked. A TIIIEF in Philadelphia haa stolen ovoral shares of Keoloy motor stock. If the ontlro amount of nharoa could have been stolen before they were issued many stockholders In the Keoloy fraud wo aid now bo happier man , MAJOR NICKEHSON haa disappeared , Captain Walker of the Third cavalry is wandering somewhere in Mexico , Major Morrow baa quitoly dropped out of [ right with his duplicated pty accounts and Payma&tor Wasnon Is the only ouo of the eovoral ( jflij lately mentioned in the press who seems to bo corralled by the court martial. THE transcontinental rail way a , o ; whbb. the third Is now about com pleted , a fourth , with an unormoua capital , is being built across British America , and two more era noarlng the Rooky mountains , will not como Into that degree of acilvo competition which Is generally onpj-osod. The through traflio which they will divide is not nu impor tant Item. If they are to provo paying Investments It will Increase with wonderful rapidity an the west ern country settles up and branch roads are built. The Union one Central PaciQo roads derlvo their lifo from their local trtflio. With thla bus iness the Southern Pacific , which Is moro than a thousand miles distant throughout nearly its cntlto longthcan never latorfero , The ronto of the Northern PaolGo is almost equally remote mote , and the proposed Atlantic & Pacific will have a greater width o : country to draw Itajraflb fjom than all five of the trunk lines loading from Cincinnati to Now York. In the un settled west it is not buslneis that makes the railways , but the railways that make the business. Each now line that is projected means that noon another broad bolt of country will bo opened up , and its hidden wealth rap Idly developed. WB believe that Senator Van Wyck Is making a serious mistake in his op position to the Nebraska stage route to the Black Hills. The sentiment 01 Northern Nebraskasooms to bo strong ly in Its favor , and those who have much bettor moans of judging than General Van Wyok , declare that It will not only prOTO of great benefit to the Hills , but will materially advance the Interests of our settlers on the northern frontier. Within the last twelve months settlement tlemont has pushed rapidly boyoni the line of the Sioux City & Pacliio road along the proposed route , and a dally mall and stage line will greatly benefit that part of Nebraska throngh which It pastes. The necessity for the mill service should not ba conaldoroc alone in rcforonoB to the terminus the route. That la what Sanator Van Wyck neoms to overlook. If the es tabllshment of the new line will has ten the settlement of the northwestern part of our state , Bud at the came time aocuroto Pine Rldgo and the Black Hills a quick ana euro service , $13 , 000 a year Is a small sum to pay fo the benefit. The senator Is quite right liowovor , In entering a protest agalns tir routers as mall contractorc In thl or any other routo. " " " r YV 'MH. FOPPI-ETOS'a BRIEF. Mr. Popploton Is nn able lawyer and a good citizen. Ho is eminently qualified for the position of general ttornoy of ths greatest corporation n the American continent. When 10 appears at the bar as the champion nd defender of his employers ho Is ho right man in the rl ht place. But when ho stops out of the arena of the ourt into the arena of the press to ofond the wrongs and robberies com mitted upon the people of Nebraska nd the United States by the laud rant railroads In general and the Jalon Pacliio in particular , ho belittles himself both ns a man and cltlzsn , Time was whun Mr. Pop- loton declared publicly in his famous ndlanapolls address that the liberties f thii country are in greater danger rom the aggressions of corporate monopoly , and the reckless disregard f private rights by thn railway magnates thau they over were rom robots at homo or In- aslon from abroad. And If Mr. 'opploton were to give volco to htn lonost opinion to-day , unfettered by his salary cf $12.000 a year ho would mphaslza with greater force all ho nald at Indianapolis and elsewhere. Either is a matter of policy , or under instrno * Ions from higher authority , Mr. Pop- ileton has undertaken the thankless atk of setting Juigo Dandy right bo- ore the people of Nebraska and at ho same tlmo defending the outrag- ons exemption from taxes of the argent landowner in this state. Wo hall take occasion hereafter to point nt In detail the inconsistencies and also assumptions which constltnto Mr. 'opploton'o elaborate plea on behalf f the railroad tax ahlrknrs. Barring ils attempt to befog the Isano by urnlng Incocso before Judge Dandy , ho evident aim of his plea Is to im- ircas county cflhurs in this state and Isowhoro with the utter uaolotsncss of rylng to levy taxes upon the ailroad lands or to roopnn the [ ucstlon of their liability to taxation > eforo the United Siatoa supreme court. With this end In view , ho muorlngly recounts the several at- ompta made ton years ago by this end other counties to compel the railroads o bear their aharo of the pnbllo burdens - dons , adds up the thousands of dol- ata squandered by the people In aool- ng redress from a gravu wrong , cud .llnatratcs . , by hla own admission , how the railroads are willing to eqaander thousands of dollars in defending ; helr robborion even when they bo le vo that the highest courts will not sustain them. Mr , Popploton admits ; hat ho ballovod Secretary Scharz was right when ho decided in 1877 that the unsold Union PitclGo aud Kansas Pa- olfio lands were subject to homestead and pro-omptlon entry. Ho nays fur ther that this view was hold by throi out of the eight members of the en- promo court. But for all thut ho confesses that ho himself advised Wm. Platt "as a friend of the road" to make the contest , which ho boliovct would rcault in taking out of the control of the Uulon Paolfis eovora million acres of land. Right hero lot us ask , why was it , if Mr. Popplo ton mmanlf and three of the judges of the Bupromo court sustained the position ot Secretary Sohurz lu favor of the people , that Judge Dundy unstained the railroad in preference If there was a doubt , and there seems to have boon a very grave one , why should not a Nebraska jndgo have glvon the benefit of that doubt to his own state rather than to a giant corporation ? On Mr. Popploton's own confession Jndgo Dundy should have thrown the case out of court. Lst us quote Mr. Poppleton : It ii charged that the Platt Halt was a collusive c ie , smuggled through the courts. Nothing furtbir from the truth. The facts are tbece : The company , fore seeing the Importance of Grand Island , had reserved a tract of its granted lands adjoining the city far railway usa. When Secretary 8huiz announced the Dude motto decision , holding all Pacific railway lands subject to pre-emption at one dollar and twenty-five cents per acrr , thii tract waa worth a large sum of money. A tquattnr having noprotious Interest in or occupunsy of the land , immediately put up n shanty and claimed it by pre emption. I.go happened that Hon. W II. 1'latt , of Grand Island , had built hit dwelling house on a corner of this tract. Thla fact coming to iny knowledge , I BCD' for him at once , and after stating the f acU said to him : The compiny muit meet thl > . question. At the best it Is a clote one The Schuix dscldon may be unstained , In which cate thla lund , which Is worth fatty dollars per acre , will go to name pre -euiptor You arc in a petition to pre-empt if Seore lary Bchntz is right , and if we must lone the land , we prefer to have It go into the hands of our friends rather than our ene mies. If 'yon think it Is worth a tight to you , RO ahead. ' What does Jndgo Dandy think ol this dead give away ? Does it not show that this was a pn up case in which plaintiff and defendant dant were ouo and the enrap part } Platt was the Union Pacific lam agent at Grand Island aud Judg Dandy know It. Why did ho allow his court to bo nsod to defeat jnstic through n bogus suit ? If a test can was to bo made why didn't the honor able jadgu allow the Arndt ejection cato to go to the supreme court ? Arud was a boua fide settler and not a rail road cgont. Mr.Popploton oaya the Platt cae has nothing to do with the I3nffil < county tax Injunction. Technically thl la true , But Inasmuch as Judg Dandy hold iu tin Platt case tha the Union Pacific Imvo absolute own enhlp In their lands , docs it not nat nrally follow that they are to pay their taxes ] To n plain man It woult seem that' Judge Dandy holds tha ho railroad owns the lands enough to mortgage or sell them , but that they lon't own thorn enough to pay taxes n them. The McShano decision may or may ot govern in this question of railroad oxitian. Ton years ago the Union 'aclfio ' had not been accepted as com- letod , and had not , tharefore , earned boir patents , To-d y they Imvo an baolato title , and their refusal to payer or surveying , in order to evade their nst responsibilities as property wnora , Is a monstrous wrong that no onorablo man can afford to defend or U8ilfy < - lit THE NORTH. Wo hoar nothing but good gnows rom northern Nebraska. The rail- oadi are carrying in hundreds of now ottlors every day to locate on her ortilo lands , the crop prospects are xcollont , farms are rapidly rising in alae , ana immigration Is pushing .long the northern valleys and spread- ag Itself across the hills which skirt ho Niobrara and Minnocadnsa. In ho older counties such as Stantou nd Gmnlng and Madison aud Pierce nd Wayne the steady growth In pop- latlon and the rapid appreciation in andaaro as gratifying as the bast rlends of the state oould desire. This is as it should be , and as It onld have baon years ago if this BOO- Ion of our ntato , which is second to one other iu fertility and promliio , ad received Its just deserts. There as boon inly ono reason why North- rn Nebraska has failed to advance as apldly as the South Platte country , 'hat reason la found in the coltish reed of a railroad corporation which referred to hold its laud rjrant as a peculatlvo ontorprho rather than to iaposo of it to Bottlers at a fair vain- tlon , in accordance with the intcu- Ion tf the congress which gave It , The good times for Northern Ne- iraskanro now at hand. Her pcoplu ro wldo awake to their opportunity , nd an excellent country press Is doing good Bcrvlco for thalr towns and ouutlos Omaha will help along the > oem by sending a now line of rail- oad up the Elkhorn , and TIIK BEE promises to do its share in advertising ho advantages of that portion of God's country which lies uorth of the Platto. The compliment paid to Omaha by Theodora Thomaa , in his riqatst that i grand chorus might bo organized lore to supplement his orchestra in his ) maha oonccrta , thna dignifying this joint Into onu of the few at which jro t orohcutral and choral fentlvnls ire hold , is ono which has mot with a quick response. Mr. Thum&a will bo uratlfiod uliko at the character and the pontaniotv of the answer he haa re ceived. JItrald. Theodora Thomas la on a money making , not a missionary tour. Ilia request for n chorus to assist him in jiving his concerts in Omahn was no ( paitisalarly complimentary except no tar as the slugeri render gratuitous services to Mr. Thomaa , and enable him to draw larger houses througl their presence. The request for a chorus two weeks before the proponed festival la tihrowd scheme to obtain free am cheap advertising. It worked well in Mlnncbpolis and Is to bo tried on In Omaha. That is the plain truth in a Few words. Mr. Thomas gave hi chorus months of careful training in return for their tender of their oorvi cos. In Omaha ho souda his agent a Fowdays before the concert and gathers up the best available slugera at a mo merit's notice , to fill up a gap in his company and add to the interest o. what ho calls a festival. It is no losi an iu justice to Omaha slugora than i will bo to the audlonco which ho wll attract through hla shrewd advertising dodge. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Tun Harper high license bill ha passed the lower house of the Illlnol legislature and goes to the Bonati where its friends are in a heavy ma jorlty. The bill fixes license at $500 a year for liquor aud $150 for beer. GKNKHAL GUANT declares that bo 1 out of the race for the next presi dential campaign. There IB no necos ally for this burst of confidence on the part of the general. That Ilttl matter was Beetled at Chicago in 1880 THE civil service rules , according t the latest report , wlll'mlo ' out women cloiks from the departments. A heart rending wall from Pfccebo Oouzlns an Mrs. Gongar will soon bo floating on the western broczja. EVEN wet weather can't dampen Omaha's boom. LITERARY NOTES. Uirr YET A WOMAN A novel by A. H Hardy. Houghtou , Milllln & Cp , , Boa too , $1.25. Since "Mr. Isaacs' " wo have hn uothlng RO good in fiction thh EOJCO as Mr. Hardy's story. The intoros of this tale , Its freshness , Us purltj the manly vigor with which it Is written ton , Its tenderness of feeling , Its big ! and sacred mohj/ , all combine to mak It the most notable novel of the year It Is a French story , simple in plot but charmingly told , Tno heroine are lovely and natural women ; th lever Is a good , manly , but not re markabla young physician. The oh uncle ; his friend , a violinist who ha taken all the rough things lu Hf serenely ; Father LaBlano , th wise , kind , tender , helpful pries without a touch of asoentlolsm , with c. keen enjoyment of tho.plcatant trifle n lifoandn profound belief in human ionoiuo ; Ursulo , the devoted and ingle-hearted Sitter ot Mercy ; the mlnontly respectable and elegant Dd tlatzio , a count nnd a journalist , whose outside show of virtue almost ccelvod his own conscience ; the Has Ian patriot , betrayed by hla ftlond nd unconsciously avenged by his widow ; the Spiuish courier , with his althful eervlio and his silent cngeauco ; all the subordl- ftto characters , oven the orvants , nro clearly brought out and rawn. Every touch Is both strong nd delicate. The conversations are dmlrablo , the style is often brilliant nd the epigrams keen and sparkling ; tie anther touches tenderly Bud noughtfnlly the deep things in na- man llfo aud the mysteries of sorrow nd death. There Is ono short opl- ode that gives a vivid glimpse of the ) onnt do Chambord and the restless cgltlmatcs who would have placed ilm on the throne ; there are ketches of travels In Spain , and f the quiet , domestic llfo to bo ound even In Paris ; and through IIOBO Interacting ecanun the love atory moves or , and the yonnt ; girl cuines weotly , Hnd wIMuui * tn < nblu Into the lapplnoea to wbii.i anu han n ighc while tin ) older and tronger womau , who is the rno heroine of the story , la devsl- > pod by sorrow. Ono woman grows ovoly by the simple acceptance of lappiuonE ; the other growa noble by nlf-sacritico and renunciation. Yet 10 book Is not a sermon , Is not in the east Bolomn ; ills only a thoughtful nd very Interesting novel. 'OEMS or PASHION Bjr Ella Wheeler , 1 vol. , 12mo. , pp , ICO. SI 25 : Bnford , Clark & Co. For sale by W. F. Seaman. The present collection of poems by lijs Wheeler haa oliloted the same Inns of criticism in certain quarters s that which followed the appearance f Swlnburno's Poems and Ballads , iu' with much less reason Miss Vnooler is a verso-maker of no moan alonts. She not only possesses a trong power of rhymlcal expression , ut her ideas , clothed in poetical dross , ro often strikingly poetical. In Poems f Pasnlon ohe deals with burning tiemos that inrthor lianda might give oed cause for offense to her readers , 'ho book la chiefly noticeable for the ntinomont , by the author , In treating f the physical nido of love , a consld- rablo versatility ) a the nso of metre ? , evoral of v.h'oii bro , however , bor- owed fr in Mr Swinburne , and a Igor of Mintiniont , which never , how- vcr , digenerates into CXCEBB. The olumo is handsomely printed on tinted taper and neatly bound. Approval of High Licenso. Chicago Tilbuno. When the reform license bill now now pending before the Illinois logK atnro was amended a few weeks r.go n aucb manner as to make a wide dls- inotlon butwcon a tax on the ealo of jcor and a tax on the nalo of all kinds f liquor , the Stants-Zjltung came out with a distinct approval of the bill , notwithstanding the figure proposed of that tlmo for the baer tlseneeVAB 5250 , or $100 moro than the present rdtoin the hill. The Staata-Zjltung iai Indicatad on mora than erie occa sion that the license bill iu this shape nonld bo acceptable to the Germans if ' 'local option" wore done away with , which It regards aa false iu principle baciuao It threatens "personal ftoO' dom" wherever It leads 10 local pro blbhion , Th-'o theory has called oul a statement from the Slants-Arzily rt Gdrmau paper publfahod in Lincoln , Nub. , roltvtive to the operation of the Nebraska law. In that otato the law exacts a licence foe of $ lCOOfrom saloons in cltloj coutatulnf ; moro thau 10 000 inhabitanto and $500 iu the smaller cittoj nnd towns , uud It makes no distinction between baor anc vrhlaky oaloons ; there is alee a local option low which enables every locti community to dooldo for itoclf wheth er or not it shall attempt prohibition of the Dale and consumption of liquor , and the the Staats-Anzaiger of Liu coin bears toatlmony that the high- license law has taken the wind out ol tha salh of prohibltlonlstr , and that the communities which formerly pro hlbitud , or tried to , the Bile of liquor altogether have decided , slncotho pna sego of the high license law , that the trafl'n can bo regulated batter under that law than by an attempt at pro hibition , which really never prohibit ed , and that they have , almost with out exception , availed themselves ol the lioenso tax , which In Nebraska Is sot aside for the benefit of the schools. The Nebraska German newspaper then goes on to give a favorable ac count of the practical operation of the high-license law , and to ahoir thai the Garmaus of that state who at first wera opposed are now included among Its staunchest friends and supporters. It saya that during the consideration of the bill by iho legislature , the brewers were its principal opponents , but that these same men have since found the law to bo advantageoua to them. Too sale of boor has not baon diminished , but the saloons have passed Into the hands of moro re sponsible people , and the breweries do a safer business than over boforo. The Auzelgor then aurna up the nd vantages by ootuil experience In Na braska tc be : (1) ( ) A large ro duotlon in the number of irro spocstblo and disreputable aalooni , which In some places hac become formidable in extent and evl character ; ( ' - ' ) vastly better saloons and moro responsible keepers ; (3) ( ) the sale of bettor articles of drink ; (4 ( great diminution of drunkouess , be CAUSO the saloonkeeper Is not now tempted to take the last nickel of the drinker or to seek the patronage o : sots and loafers ; (6) ( ) largo reduction of local taxation on all other citizens. To this the Garrnan papar adds that the prlco of beer remains nt five cents that the eizaof the glass is thu cumoas before , and that there has boon no re straint upon personal freedom of th drinker. It concludes by saying thi "it ins become convinced by aetna oxperlanco that high Hcsnso aa nul voraally practiced in Nebraska is beno ficlal and popular. " This testimony is the moro valuable bocausa it cornea from a German authority In a statu where no effort was made to conciliate- Gorman sentiment by a discrimination Ir. favor of beer. A Four-ply Elopement. Special Diliutch to THI Oil. WASHI.VMJN , la. Juno 10 Wash- iugton waa awakened Friday by the re- pjrt of a doable elopement , which was somewhat as follows : Sanfnrd B. Campbell , a well-to-do farmer llv- ' ng ono nnd one-half miles north cf hla city , was surprised ot the sudden Isappenrnnoo of hla wife , and upon aarch btlng made It was found that a > arty of four , consisting of Mrs. Campbell , a young single man by the name of Woolbort , Mrs. OimpbeH'e 'irothor , and a young girl by the name f Lulu Bonrqutn , aged 1C yrars , hnd ilred a team from ono of the livery tables and driven In the dirt cUon of Grooiiloaf , where they were all found luring the night comfortably qn r- orod at the Pomoroy bongo by pairs , n the arms of Morpheua. They had driven to Grconlosf with the Intention f taking the train west from there , mt were late , and wcro therefore lompelled to stop over night. They were arrested and brought back to this ity by Sheriff Dolan , where they are now awaiting trial , Jt'KRHONAL. W. K. Jones , Chicago ; J. W. Pickering , ilarsbaltown , Iowa ; Miss Sophia Wai- jerif. St. Leu's ' ; W. A. llendrlcks , bt. j'.uls : and Marsh McLean , Tekamah , were among the arrivals at the Grand Pa- ifio Saturday night. W , 1) , Ilibbard , formerly superinten dent of the Western Union Talegraph lompany in this city , and now a resi dent cf Kocheiter , Now York , Is in the : Ity. Ity.Mr. Mr. end Mrs. M , B. Snsder , Mr. aud Mrs. Kuseell Bastett , Miss Ida Belgrade , John L. Ashton , cf the "Black Flag" troupe , are gncsta of the Grand PrclEc. Hon. C F. Catltn , who is well known n former resident of Omaha , and now a citlr.jn of Chicago , i in the city on a visit , the first in thrco years' tlmo. B. Beer , of Forth PJatte , 0. W. Phelps , of Clew Ureok ; H , E. Lswls , of Lincoln , and K. G. King , are among tha Nebraskans - kans at the Pnxton. Miss Manderscn , a niece of our junior senator , returned to Philadelphia last evening , after a visit to her relations In .hla ciy. : Mra. J. D. Van Dyke , mother-in-law of 3het ! Engineer Butler , left last evening lor her home in Fredonia , Iowa. Edward F. Thornoand wifennd Henry Woodruff , of the "Black Flsg" o omblna- , Ion , are guests of the Millard. Dr. V. G. McGUIIcuddy , of Pine Ridge , Is In the city , having returned from Yankton last night. Thomas J. B. Khodes , W. K. Green and II. BI. Houck of , Boyertowu , Pa. , are at the Millard. * F. 0. Roger ? , of Lodge Pole , a brother of Dr. Ilogers , of this city , regiated at the Millard yoaterdny. S. L. Smith , general superintendent of the Kansas division , U. P. railwuy , Iain the city. A. A. Egbert , general superintendent ol the ColoraJo system of the U. P. , Is in town , Mr. Hypes , of Chicago , and E. P. HUB- soy , of Mondon , Ohio , are nt the Granc Pacific. Jahn Wib-D , cf the board of public work ; , was a west bound passenger yostcr day. day.E. E. Dickinson , superintendent rf the Larauiio division of the U. P. , Is in town. lion. Daniel H. Wheeler and M. K. Wheeler , of Platlcmoutb , are in town. W. A. Dtuel , superintendent of the U P. nt Choyeune , Is at the Millard. Henry Schlndler , of the Leavenworth Times , 13 at the Grand Pacific. Gee , W. llvberts , Eeq , came in from Salt Lake City last night. J. D. Moore , U. P. ngont at Grant Island , ia a guest of the Millard. Mis. Goo. P. Bemis was among the east bound passengers yesterday. Mrs. Hansell and Mrs. Clark , of Jersey City , are at the Milhrd. II. M. Flagler and wife , of New York are at the Paxton. Col. Iloyall nnd wife , of the army , are at the Paxton. airs , Frank Walters left for Chicago last night. Wm. Petit , of Haley , Idaho , is at the Millaid. H. G. Kockafellow , of Cheyenne , Is at the Millard. Jacob Ojr , cf Wohoo , ia at the Grand Pacific. C. E , Vurtelle , of Evansville , Ia at the Paxt. n. W. B. Luring , of Wyoming. Is in the city. If yan are not married , write the Mar rUgo Fund Mutual Trust Association , Cedar Kapids , Iowa , for circulars explain e plan. dme County OommlBHionera. SATURDAY , Juno 8 , 1883 Board met pursuant to adjournment. Present , Commissioners Corlles , Knight and O'Keefo. The following accounts were al lowed : GENERAL O. Keneh , care of child . 9 3 00 F. K , Moores , ticket for poor . 6 25 Amly Horden , ticket for poor . 3 1C J. S , Caulfiold , books for poor . 0 i URIDOll FUND. J. Wnlsb , work on bridge . 818 60 H. Avery , work on bridge . 87 50 H E. Flunle , work on bridge . 16 0 ( II. Gunderson , work on road . 25 M P. lloevei , work on bridge . G 00 Adjourned. JOHN BADIIEK , County Clerk. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Haherei tnd curet Neuralgia , Sciitlcj , Lumbago , IIACKACIIE. EI1D1CHI , IOOIEK1I , SOHE THROAT , QflXST , flWELLI.SQS , SI'IIAIXS , Scrtnui , Ca < i , Eru.iu , rnOSTDITE3 , IIITIINN , NCAI.Q9 , inj > U ether nm CBIS i Botni BoUtr nmulm ml n.tleri. DlrwUeui U 11 ! ii.n.i.iiii ; : ntu * * " * H'Ufiiti " Ilillliun , B * , C , 8.1. I H. WESTERMANN & CO. , i OX" China and 608 WASHINGTON AND 609 ST , CHARLES ST. St. ' Louis , Mo. may 2 ? > 3m i Gfvr o SAM'L O. DAVIS & CO. , Washington Avenue untf Fifth Street , - ivaro. FELKEB , BATJDEE & CO , , COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND PRODUCE DEALERS 1622 Capitol Avenue , Omaha , Nebraska , _ _ _ Qugtatloni sent on application. Consignments ollcted ! anil remittances promptly mado. M This Flour is made at Salem , Richardson county , Neb. , In the combln roller nnd atone ayatom. Wo glvo EXOLtmvE sale of our flour to ono firm In plaoo. We have opened a branch at 1C18 Oapltol avenue , Omaha. Write for Prices. W A I FNTINP" R , RFPPY Silem or Omaba , Neb Address tlther V M L.CIN I HV C , Ot. rtCr'r'Y , mln-flm SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others , WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR It Ia the best and cheapest food for otock of any kind. Ono pound la equal to throe pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the fall and win ter , instead of running down , will Increase in weight and be iu good market able condition in the spring. Dairymen on well as others who use it can tes tify to Its morlto. Try it and judge for yourselves. Prlco $25.00 per ton ; no charge for sncks. Address o-i-eod-mo WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO. , Omaha , Nob. \ AND JOBBERS IN Flour , 8aSi , Sugars , Canned Goods , anr All Grocers' Supplies ; A Full Line of the Best Brands of OKIES MB IMPACT TOBACCO , ( gouts foe SSHWOOD MILS ADD LAFL..H . POWDEE G Hellman & Co , WHOLESALE 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. OMAHA , NEB. PERFECTION ( .V HEATIHG1 u- ia only attained by using un Stoves and WITH WIRE IfAUZE OVER DOOBS , For oalo by MiLTOH ROGERS & SOM8 . laU.au MANUFACTUREU 01' FINE BUGOiES , CARRIAGES & SPRiNG WAGONS BIy Repository IB Constantly filled with a Seleot Stock. Boat Office aud Factory. 3 , W , Oor. iota ana uapnoi Avenue , m 2 mie-lyl mielylJ. . j ffUOLESAI.E AND tETAil , liBtLK ? II ! Lath , Shingless , Picketss SASH , DOORS , BUNDS , ffiflLDiKHS , LififiE , &E88EK \ AQSKf TOB UILWADKEE CSUSI. ! Near Union Pacific DepotOMAHA , EBB ,