THE OMAB A DAILY I * E WEDNESDAY JUNE 13 1883 The Omaha Bee. Publ ! hed ever/ morning , except Sun jr. The * nly Monday morning dfclly.J TKKMS 1JY MAIL Uae Yew..810.00 I Three Months.I , . , Six Months. . 5.00 | One Month. . . . l.CK VIIK WKEXLY BKK , published cvorj TKKMS POST PAID- ODD Year . 92.00 I Throe Months , N Vbr Months. . . . 1.00 | One Month. . . . 2C AMERICAN NXWB OOMFANT , Sole Agonti Newsdealers in the United SUtci.i COIinKSPONDENOB- Oommunl. CVfoni relating to Nowi and Editorial oiftttora thould bo addrcued to the KDITOB Or Tint UK. DUSINE38 LETTERS Atl Business Letters and Remittances should bo ad ireueed to THE BEE PCBLIBIIINO Cow PANT OMAHA. DrfJti , Chocks and I'ostolfioo Ltrdcra to bo tnado payable to the order of Ito Company. Ihe BEE PUBLISHING 00 , .Props . , . ROSE-WATER Editor. WAKU weather und corn oouio and go together. Fonrr-six democratic papers la In diana are solid for Tlldon and Hen- drloks and a fresh bar'l. GENERAL HOWABD Is elf for the Yellowstone Park. His salary will run light on dating his abnonco from duty. _ MB. MEKRICK has concluded his nlno day speech In the star route trial , and all the jurors are still able to ansTTor roll call. ANOTHEH courier has been hoard from In Arizona. Orook has'corrallod a conplo of hundred Apaches , Includ ing seventy-fire buckaand has reached the boundary. QUEEN VICTORIA la reported as about to abdicate. When Vickoy ( ? ota ready to hand over her official perqilsltos to her son , the court undertaker will bo f . - In active demand. GENERAL SHERIDAN'S friends In Washington have bought a $43,000 house for him. There are compensa tions for the hard knocks that warriors got If they live long enough to find them out , WHATEVER crops may suffer from the long continued moisture the small grain and grass crop.aro reaping the benefit of plenteous rains. Still we would willingly lot the grans crop rest ; | an It la at present and give the earn a chance with a ilttlo annahlno. TUB Onion Paoifia owns nearly a million acres of land In Nebraska. That IB , they own them enough to morgtgage and sell them , according tc Judge Dandy , but not enough to pij taxes on them. Bach ownership In t .sweet boon dented to the producers ol this state , who pay the taxes for i panpor corporation. MA/OR NICKERSON'S disgrace hai boon too mncb for him , nnd ho Is now a fugitive from justice with a military order out for his arrest , A mania foi gamblln g is at the bottom of the MB jor'i trouble , which seems to bo a combiua tlon of moral and financial wrecks fol lowing the promptings of illicit pas sion. PRESIDENT Aimiuula gaining stead ily In popular favor. Ho has boon ar agreeable disappointment to his ont > mlea and a source of sollcltndo to lilt ' A stalward friends.But for a 1 that , af the present rate , the president wil Cad less opposition at the next repnb licau national convention than ho wll at the polls a year from next No vein ber. MR PorrLETON has earned his sal ary and can now retire from the pnblli prints for another year. Slnoo hli memorable election dispatch , order ing the bulldozing of Union Pdcifi employes , Mr. Popploton has not at traotod half as much attention as hi has secured during the last week b ; hls earneit plea for the railroad ta : shirker ? . TUB attention of the street com mlsslonor is called to the condition o Sixteenth street beyond the bridge The avenue is In a dangerous state fo either man or boast. Ono sldo i graded and the other half is in dee ; rutf , while trenches and water pips invlto accident and menace life , llm' and property , It is high time that thread road should bo pnt in a passable con dltlon. predictions ol TIIK BEE re girding the results of General Shorl dan's visit ts Omaha have boon cou finned. Fort Thornburgh is to b abandonedTort Brldgar becomes a el company post and the forces in th department of the Platte are in created by the addition of the Fourteenth toenth infantry , which will make It headquarters at Fort Sidney nut later in the fall. The Ninth lufantr will go to Fort Bridgor , whoi Oolpnol Mason will aaaumo oomman until further orders. There ai rumors .that intensive improvement are to b made at Fork Omaha Vci shortly and that General Sherldai jivQ hlsUte.visit ; , Is raoro generous ! 1 ' W'J'rfk * lipoiod to varda this department tbi \j * > * v * k ' * J * * * < * * ever. - HETfATOn. VnN WYCK AND NEDRABKu- Taking advantage of a orltioUa < of TUB BEE on General Yan Wyck'ii op- poaltlon to the Nlobrara Deadwood atago route , the Omaha ltnMican makoa a vicious attack on the senator which Is as unjnst as It Is uncalled or. Slnco the time when John M. Phayor represented our state in the national senate , Nebraska han had no abler senator than General Van Wyck , Unllko several cf his prcdo- oesors ho has boon a representative f the people , and not a tool of the orporatlons. No railroad has boon bio to boast that they carried the oto of Charles n. Van Wyck in ho\e \ pocket , and no corporate nonopoly haa counted him among bolr paid aponta at the national cap- tal. That Is a great deal to say , when wo consider the past history of Scbrseko , and U la chiefly for this oison that tbo Hepublican , which .vo.1 by railroud patronage , cannct peak of the general without a sneer nd a scoff. TUB BEB is not 'and never has > eon an organ of Senator Van Wyok. t reserves the right an an independent opnbltcan paper publiahed In the In- crests of Nebraska , to crltlso or to ommond the general nololy according o his deserts. It has found muoh to > raleo in the bold ntnnd which ho has akon azalnst the aggcsilons of cor porate monopoly fond in the fearless manner in which ho has arraigned orruptlon regardless of party lines. General Van Wyck is Impetuous ; ho s sometimes eccentric. Bat ho is al ways an honest man. That Is BOUIO- bitig over which Nebraska may con- ratnlato herself , In addition ho is n able and well Informed roprcaoata- Ivo of the interests of the state , with n eye always open to its welfare , BO ar as ho understands it. The senator laa made a record in Washington , of which ho need not bo ashamed , and io people of Nobrr.ska who refuse to ake their cue from the railroad com- lanloB have no reason to be aahamod f their senior aouator. THE BUSINESS SITUATION. Daring the paat week the volume of general trade haa boon moderate. Im proving crop prbspeota and the settlement - mont of labor troubles are largely re- ponslblo for a better fooling in oast- rn trade circles. While the whole- ale markets aa a rule promise to con- Inne quiet for weeks to come , Indus- rial oontrea arc hopeful of the near nturo , and confidence la becoming moro firmly established in general rado between jobboro and retailors. ? here ia a feeling that a clearer nn- oratandlngof cropprospootawill glvoa ) low impulse to business In all branches nd that auificlcnt activity will be de- eloped during the coming fall and winter months to compensate in a rroat mcaauro for the dnllnesa and otsoa of the first half of the year. In the textile trades the condition continues unaatiafaotory. Produo- ion , both in cotton and wool , ia car ailed. Heavy tuspenslons in eastern woolonmlllaaro reported , andadditlon- al oneaaro anticipated. The dullness IE uanufaotnrea has Ita effect on the > rloo of riw matoriala and all claasci of bnyora are moving cautiously In expectation of a further weakening ol values after the lot of July. The grain trade "haa boon fairly active at de clining prices.Influenced by a fraei movement of supplies from couu- ry points and the continuance ef fa vurablo weather for the growing cropa The not result of the woek'i justness up to Saturday in whca a a deollno of Ijj in all de ivories. The stock of wheat In sigh ihowa A further Increaae of abon 140,000 bushels , as the export movement mont haa booh insufficient to take u ] the receipts. The ahipmonta from Nev York , Philadelphia , Baltimore am Boston aggregate about 350,000 bush els for the week. Reports ooncernlnj the condition and prospoota of thi growing crop are generally moro en couraging , and have cauaed a free ling movement , both by farmer and doalera. The foreign demand con tlnuoa light , especially from th United Kingdom , where the larg atooka in eight and the prospects o continued liberal receipts from Indl and the Black Sea porta cause genera IndlfToreice on the part of bnyora. Th decline in priooa for this aide haa beoi fully offset by a reduction In quota tlona in English markets. At th close a better demand is noted at com paratlvoly low rates for the continent Corn values have declined 2 < a2J cent per bushel within the week under th combined influence of larpo receipts a western centres and a better feeling ate to crop prospects , have been coneldoi ably Improved by the warm woathei The close of the week shows n recor cry of abont 1 ooutfrom lowest prlcet The viiiblo supply haa increased abou 350,000 buahela , but the gain la main ly in the west , aa eastern arrivals hav boon taken np by ahippora. The 01 ports from the eastern Atlantic port aggregate l.OOO.COO bushels. Th ! outward movement has baon facll tatod by cheap lake and canal rccolpl from the west and low rates of frelgl by the regular line steamers from Ne York to Europe. The foreign demam however , haa boon well sustained , no withstanding the fact that the reqnlr j menta of the principal feeding dUtrlo i of the United Kingdom have bo < largely supplied by reboot Importalloi of barley from the ports of tbo Black Sea. Late advices to shippers report a lessoning supply of thio competing oareal , and Indicate a better demand in prospect for American corn. SUME PLAIN FACTS. THE BEE is down on the Thomas concerts. THE BKE Is down on the opera honee that's the long and short of it and THE BEE Is down on the opera house because Mr. Boyd refused to pay the concern blackmailing rates for advertising. Itejntblitan , Mr , Tom Boyd may discover that patience aomotlmo will coaoo on the part of Tun BEE to bo a virtue. THE BEB has treated the opera honno with n great deal of consideration , It has treated Its proprietor and manager with even moro. It is a matter of indifToronco to ua whether Mr. Boyd refuses to pat ronise Tun BEE or not. That Is entirely for him to settle on a square business basis , But when ho uses our columns to advertise his concern , ho must pay the same rates aa any other business man , no moro and no lois. TUB BEX Is not running a junk shop. It shut down on free pnffr foi theatrical troupes some months ago. That Is what troubles Mr. Tom Boyd. And now a word about the opera house and Its management , Slnco the day when Mr. Boyd opened what ho calls his "tomplo of amusement" ho has boon flittered and beslobbered by the press of Omaha until the subject has become sickening. No Omaha newspaper has .ventured to criticize the construction of the building or the management of Ita conductor. Six free tickets for each ahow in return for column after column of free pnffe have closed the months of the editors of the HtrM and Republican. It It a notorious fact that no place ol public amusement In any of onr large cities la aa open to criticism aa Boyd'e Opera House , The building ia a good one to look at , but a very bad ono , to got out of In case cf fire or panic. THE BEE haa thrown in Ita waste paper bas ket ccorea of commnnlcatlona from in dignant clttzouBdunomucing the Opera House as dangerous , and pointIng - Ing out just where the danger lies. Last night when the entrance was blocked with a crowd which stood jammed in the narrow passageway that loads fro.v the second story platform , ono of ont prominent business men called ont BO that even Mr. Bjyd might have hoard him : "There is no Omaha newspaper that dares to expose this fire-trap ! " "Fire-trap" is the right word in the right place , Frescoes are pretty , but solid walls , a brick proscenium arch , ground floor entrances and plen ty of exits with doors opening outside are still better when the public safety ia Involved. A large atago la good , but a largo stage sepa- atcd only from the audience by a hall noh plank partition makes an excel- ont flue for flames. Two gallorlec Ivo a theatre a metropolitan appear- nco , but where ono of them la emp led by the same narrow pusagc hrongh which the audience leaves tht arquot and parquet circle the dangoi , o human life ia increased. Those are a low plain facts abon' r. Boyd'a "tomplo of amusement , ' whbh is an ornament to our town , i iourco of profit to Ha owner , but b ] no moans as safe as it might bo for thi ublio who patronize it. TUB Now York Jltruld gives proml nonce to a special dispatch from Rom tatlng that letters have ben lasnei by the propaganda summoning all Am irican bishops to Rome to rccolv papal instructions , and to make pro paratlona for a provincial council o ho whole Raman Oithollo church ii America , to bo held next year 1 : some olty of the United States. The laat council was held In Biltl moro , but it la said by some of th priests who have been Intcrviewe hat a new council Is needed for th enforcement of better dliclpllno i : the church , and for a moro con ploto withdrawal of the priosthoo from political affairs. The tendency t liberalism In action under derrocratl nstltntlons and kflaoncea is to b counteracted , and the bond of all ! anco between the church in Amerlc and Rome ia to be strengthened. None of the priests in New Yotk nor the otrdlnal himself , have bee apprised of snob a pnrposo as is an nounood in the dispatch , or , if the have any knowledge of it , are not dls poaed to communicate It In advance o the official public announcement ; bu there seems to be a unlvonal feolln ouK them that the council would b convened at no distant day , and the there la need for it , , BILL OHANDLKR denies omphat ! cklly that ho ii a candidate for th Now Hampshire senatorial euocessloi : By the time the monitors are con plotod the secretary of the navy ca retire with an oaiy conscience fror politics and business , which , with Mi Chandler , are ono and the same thing Scared at Tholr Shadow. Cluclaiutl Enquirer ( Cem. ) . The czar la not so nervous aa h w s The only really norvona porsot now are the Ohio republicans. A Siren That Lurea the Horo. Glnclnnitl CommercUl. Draw poker stems to be so demo : allzluo ; In the army that it ought to t prohibited In the article * of war. AN IMPORTANT Q JdSTION. Soiitn-LER , Nob. , Juno 11 , 1883. To th * Kljtor of Ihe B . Do kind enough to ask U. P. VIei ino what became of his bill competi ng the railroada to pay their taxer. laving plead Ignorance of the true tate of affairs during hla last can- a : * , ho popped np at the opening of engross and offered a bill , as ab vo tatcd , whereupon The Republican ailed upon the world to behold thereat roat null-monopolist laboring for the ntorestfl of the dear people , etc. , etc. Since then the nilrnco has been pain- nl ; not a leaf stirred ; the star rout- ra are remembered by him with now eals , but hla constituents are for- otten , or turned over to the mercy of ndgo Dandy. If the railroad company IB golnc * to teop him in congress the wji'.or SUR- eatu that progress upon this Valen- lue bill bo reported often. Of course 10 ono expects the bill to pace oven Hr. Valentino never dreamed of It tecomlng a law , nor would he vote or it on the final paeaage ; yet an op- mrcnt eflort waanecessary , as wo now observe , to keep the people In good tnmor. 0. J. M. Senator Cameron haa not gained much nlnoo ho fled to Europe , If Lo lees not got better ho will stay abroad wo or tbreo years , dropping ont of lolltlca altogether. And ho might as roll , for ho has no aptitudes for poll- Ics , little tact and addros * , makes no ignie aa a speaker , and probably CUOWB qnlto aa little abont public af- alra as any man In the senate , not excepting Woodpnlp Miller who , by the way , Is not a fool by a onK shot. It is said that Cameron ua not made a cent of money by his ifiiceo , and is a poorer man to day han when ho was elected senator. He waa elected because hla father wanted ilm elected , which waa reason enough o the Pennsylvania legislature , which IB owned , body and boots , at that true. And old Simon Cameron has > oen one of the nstutoot political man ager * who ever got control of a great tate and made a fortune. Postofflco. , < n Nebraska and Iowa during the week ending Juno 9 , ] 1883 , furnished > y Wm. Van Vleck , of the post ffico department : NEBRASKA Discontinued Wola , Howard connty. Postmasters Appointed Clarion , .ladleon . county , Amos T. Rlogta ; Em met , Holt connty , Augnat Mllenz ; " "orest " City , Sirpy county. Augcstlne ? . McKenua ; Lambert , Holt county , Jasslus P. Tracy ; Newark , Kearney connty , Allen M. Brewer ; Scandi navia , Harlan county , Morris Lsnd- teHs ; Snowflikn. Kearney county , fela 0 Johnson ; Srohl ; , Loupconnty , Edrlok Burch. IOWA. Postmasters Appointed Oottnge 1111 , Dabnqne county , Charles W. Augustine. Gallon , Oaso connty , J , B. Thomason ; 'A .vlnglo , Dubuque county , ) . 0 , Huutlngton. ROM&MOE IN NttW MEXICO. How a Soldier Won tbo Hand the Nleco of Mrs Senator Logan. ipcrJil DL patch to the Globe-Democrat. ALBCQUEIIQUE , N. M. , Juno 8 In 'ortnatlon haa jnat reached her * hroagh one of the gentlemen attend nt ; court that Santa Fe , aoclallj speaking , is just now raked from con : efto circumference. Era Canning urn IB the nleco of Mra. Gen. J. A Ljgan , but it does not appear tha she has a particle of the die crotlon , policy and good jadg mont which IB known to character ! z : the words and acts cf her noble-splrite < junt. The young lady is inoxperloncec In the wava of the world , having booi shut up in a convent all her llto , am never having been permitted to freel ; cultivate- the society of gentlemen Goeslp relates that flirtations wer conducted without reserve from he npstalts window in Paymaster Tuck or'a residence with the aoldlora , untl the matter became generally kuowi and until her charms wore freely dls cusaed among the privates of the Santi Fa post. Sorgt. S. S. Errott , of th 22ud Infantry , soon came to bo rec ognlzsd aa Mra , Logan'a niece' admirer. She made tryst with him , and the ; reel and walked and wo > ed along th banks of the romantic Rio Ohlqnot and in the hills among the cacti , sag brush and scrub cadars. Here the ; must have told their love , while Mra Tucker waa all the time under th Impression that her little eon , Logan waa out for a walk with Miss Onn ninghatn , when in truth and In fac that young lady had left him at pla ; In Major Aallhache'a place and strolloi off alone to meet her lover. Final ! ; it all leaked out , and fearing that th atoim was about to bnrat on thol heads , Sergeant Errott and Miss Cun ulngham slipped quietly away abont week ago , and hunting np a minlstoi were secretly married. The soore waa kept until Tuesday , when th storm came , A council of war wa hold , and the young lady wa called on to explain. Thi she did by confessing her accre marriage. What followed la unknow ; precisely , but thla much ia a fact. Sjn atcr Logan said ho didn't mean to hav any uuoh d d nonsonao arouu him , BO Sergeant Errott waa summoned od , a minister waa called in , audagal : thia time in the presence of th household Mlu Cunningham and he soldier boy lover wore declared hue bani and wife , and ao it all ende There ia nothing very bad about it , a it haa turned out , but the gossips mua talk , yon know , and they are makin the moat of thla , Errott la a clove follow , and ho is in luck. Miss Can ningham will bo a wiser and botto woman a year from now. The ol folka are making the best of it , an that'a all anybody can do. uyater Hatching , Annapolll Dllpatf h I ) the llkltlmoro AmerScii Prof. W. 0. Brooka , of the oynte commission , hai submitted an lufoi mal report to the governor , date from Hampton , Virginia , May 21 ! in which , after statin ? that he Is nc yet prepared to make a formal report aaya : I discovered five years ag hat It la postlblo to rear oyctora in unlimited number from the cgge , and o keep them nllvo for n few daya and or some tlmo after they have devel oped their oholla , If these young oysters could ba roared until largo en ough to handle and plant , the anpply f oysten could bo increased ndefmltoly. There would bo none of the uncertainty which at- undo fish-hatching , for the young yetora would otay where they are > nr , and would bo as tanglblo as pota- oca. The great Importance of the ubjcct has led many naturalists to ex * orltnent nt It within the last five 'earn ; but they have not advanced bo- 'ond the point where 1 left the nab- oot. Thy difficulty which they have net la duo to inability to renew or ro- dace the water without looing nll'tho tytitcra , aa they are so small that no lothod of atralnlng can bo employed. ) arlnc the winter I designed an au- aratus to meet this dlfllonlty , and the ohns Hopkins University allowed mo to construct It at their ex- unso. It la a system of inclined rongho , with ledges in the bot- om , like those uaed in gold washing , and the young oysters are aught llko the pockota formed by the odgus , while the water flown on , A onewal supply of water la poured nto the top ot the trough by a steam mmp. A number of young oysters , onr days old , were put into the ap- laratua on Tuesday noon , and none of hem have escaped , although all the water hai boon replaced over many lines. These oysters , which are now nlno daya old , are ntlll healthful and igoroua , no the experiments are ao far nocessful , The apparatus baa com- iletoly removed the obstacle which ins stopped all iuveatlgations up to hla tlmo , and it will , therefore , allow mo to try other experiments. So far , hen , the now method ia a auc- esa , but the oyotcrs have not ; rowu. Ont of many hundreds I lave now found only three , which are ny largar than they wore on Tuotday , when they wcro put into the machine. ? ho weather np to yesterday haa boon cold and unfavorable , and their failure o grow may bo dnu to this , or to a ack of proper food , or to eomu cause is yet uninspected , I feel , though , hat I have command of the subject , and can now experiment until I find what ia needed. Oapt. Waddcll and I iavo agreed that the importances of ho mattur justifies me In sticking to it 'or the present , nnd wo have decided .hat it will be boat for mo to remain lore , while he reaumea the work of examining the oyster beds of Mary- and. " DECLINE OF MAN. Norvoua Weakness , Dyapepala , Im potence , Sextunl debility cnted by Woll'o Health Renewor. " $1. OOBH BILLINGS. HENRY W. SHAW. A striking Instance of the failure which may attend the efforts of a man , before ho finds his propel phcre , Is found in the Iffo of Henry W. Shaw , bettor known to the world aa Joab BUllnga. That ho ia a man of national inter- ereat , may be inferred from the fact hai his ' 'Farmer'a AllmiuBX , " in its second year , reached the onormoue sale of 127,000 copies , and during ita encceatful career of ten yoara , the author and publisher have each re ceived $30,000 from the profits. Bath hla father and graudfathei were members of congress , the formci acting aa political manager for HOEIJ Clay.From From the time of hla birth , In 1820 , until 1834 , his life waa opcnt at Lanes- bore , Berkshire county , Mass. Going west In 1834 , he led a frontier life and engaged in the various occupations of Blearing steamboats , keeping a country atoro nnd auctioneering. At forty-five years of ago , while editing n small paper in Poughkoopalo , to which place he had come for the purpooo of educating his daughters , ho compared several of his humorous essays with thcEO of Artcmua Ward , and wondered - ed why his own had filled to strike the popular taato. Concluding that the secret of BUG- cesa waa in the phonetic spelling , he adopted it in hla "Ewa on the Muel , ' and disposed of It for $1.50 , hla first earnings in the line of literature. The eosay was extensively copied , and fur ther efforts In thoeamo line soon made hla name a household word. From thla time to tha prenent hia career haa been ono of continual financial suc cess , From The Now York Weekly alone hla Income haa been for mans yean $100 per week , for the hall column which he contributes to eact Issue. Daring the laat seventeen yaara he has delivered a thousand lectures , the serious delivery- his nonsenalcalltlot being , at tlmoa , BO Irrcslstably laugh able that ho aoon bccimopopular wltli the laughter-loving people. Ho ia a man of pnro life , and ia t moral toao'hor in hla way. He love hla homo , and finds hta chief dollphl and proudest moments when with hli Ilttlo grandchildren. In his dallj Walks he anowa none of that cccen trlolty which many attribute to him , but lr , on the contrary , ono of the meal natural of men. His lone hair la nol a literary affectation , but ia ao worn tc hide a physical defect , Underneath the bad apelllrcc of bii proverbs and aphorisms there la , a < times , & depth of wisdom and phlloso py which gives him a higher place U the world than that of a moro humor ist , and which ii often overlooked bj thoao who are amused merely by hli peculiarities of expression. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. rullltei anil euro RHEUMATISM Neuralgia , ScUiici , Lumbago , HACKACIIt : , EHDKHB , TOOTUCn , SORE THROAT , QCINSY , SWELLINGS , UPUAIMt , Soriatu , Cull , Sruixi , FROSTBITES. inl ill otbtr > * lllj uhH and f tlu. nm cnn i BOTTU. Balibj > linrii ( ( < iliin6 Dtttori. Plnclleni U II H. WESTERMAMN & CO , , 1 1" IT &i 0 III Ql UttEidW , China and Glass , , 608 WASHINGTON AND 609 ST , CHARLES ST , St. Louis , Mo. . may 2.3m 2.3mWIHIO WIHIO LIE ! S-A-LIE ! SAM'L O. DAVIS & CO. Washington Avenue and Fifth Street , X.O1TXS , FELKEE , BAUDER & CO , , COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND PRODUCE DEALERS 1622 Capitol Avenue , Omaha , Nebraska , Quotations sjr.t on application. Consignments lollcltej anil .remittance promptly made. lALEM FL This Flour la rrnde at Salem , Rlchardeon connty , Nob. , In the combln roller and otono nyatem. Wo give EXCLUSIVE anle of our flour to oue firm In place. Wo have opened a branch at 1018 Capitol avenue , Omaha. i'K.for ' ! ftlcc9t VALENTINE & REPPY Sllcm or Omaha' i Neb Address cither WAH1 I 1 1 I IIN CX. r G. r r I s mtiMli STEEIE , jiMmoN & oo. ; AND JOBBERS IN Flour , Salt , Sugars , Canned Goods , anr All Grocers' Supplies , A Full Line of the Best Brands of OI&ABS AEB TOBAOOO.\ Agents for BEHVJOOD DHLS AHB LAJL.B . ft BAND FOWDBH G M. Hellinan cfc Co , WHOLESALE 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I3t- OMAHA , NEB. r 5 p" & * " if""Tf" s < v i ERFEGTION IS HEATIHG AND SAW la only attained by tulng Stoves and R WITH WIRE UAUZE OVER DOORS , For sale by MILTON WOOERS & SQHS . lall.cn HO WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DKALEH IS BST5I mmm&SSS&i Lath , Shingles , Pickets , * SA8&I & , DOORS , BLIHDS , MQLDMG8 , LIME , GEM . SET8TATE AGUHt rCR KILWAUEKU CEUSNV CO.VPAST' Near Union PaciJBc Bavct - QMAzrA , " 13 P C. F. GOODMAN , UAND AND DEALER IN And Window Glass. OMAHA NEBRASKA. " MANUFAOTUltEll 01' FINK " * \ BUGGIES , CARRIAGES & SPRING WAGONS ' My Repository is Oonatantly filled ith a Seloot Stock. Beit Office and Faotoiy. 3 , W , Oor. ibm ana uapuol Avenue , -