Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1883)
THE DAILY BEJR. OMAIJA , N'KIXN'ESDAV rJTNK 20 , IH8H. THE OMAHA BEE. I'uMWied every inornlnc , except .Sunday. Tliu only Mundiy mornlnjr ilally. TERM * HV MUI. One Year Jiaui I Tlirvo Month * yt.M 8lt Month * 6.00 i due Month l.OD TIIK wErxLf nr.K , rfRUnKii KVKSV wKDimmr. TKRVS One Year . $2.00 . Three Moulin . $ fie Six Month . 1.00 I One Month . . . 20 Aincrlran Newi OoinpAti.T , Solo Ajfcntf Novmleiit- ersln the United StAtcs. All Commimlratlom relating to New * ami K'lltnrlal nutters shoiilJ lie ailJrcwoil to the KniTOR or Tim BRK. BI-HISM1 LKTTKII * . All Btnlnen tetter ) and HeinltUnfM ulionld l > o Jdrc d toTm HSK I'l-ni.umxu Covr-Asr , Ov.uu. Drifts , Check * and I'oitoilire orders tn be mailo pay able to the order of the company. THE BEE BUBLISHING CO , , PROPS , E. ROSEWATER , Editor. TliK cable says tli.tt tlio rainy season has begun in Cuba. It has boon on hand right along in Nebraska. BKTWKK.V Bismarck in Oerniany and lard fninds in Chicago the American hog seems to bo pretty well disgraced. T K stenograiihuM in the star rotito trial have presented bills of 840,000 for taking and transcribing testimony. Next. TIIK pope and the propaganda have not attracted much attention during the past week , but the 1'arnell fund gees right on. . WE have added arson to the list of Crimea and misdemeanors that go unpun ished in this eity. Omaha needs vigilantes law badly. A CYCI.OXK has Btruck Ohio. The re publican ratification meetings over Foraker's nomination must bear their share of the blamo. Carter proposes to nullify the High License bill by making April 1st the date on which licenses are granted in that city. The best legal lights in Chicago declare that the plan will not work. A KTKU issuing hia order against ollicial absenteeism , Postmaster General Ore- sliani started for Indianapolis 'for rest and recreation. Sauce for the subordi natc gooflu is not dressing for the superior gander. GK.NKKAI. MANHKIWOM is submitting gracefully to interviews on the Deadwood mail route. The senator starts out by saying that ho known nothing about the matter , and proves it conclusively before he finishes his atatemont. IT is reported that Major Niekerson is secretly making his way towards the Pacific coast. If the major can hit some of our Nebraska district courts just right he can get that little divorce matter fixed 1 up at nix months notice and no questions asked. Tun Chicago cable road recorded its thirteenth victim yesterday. Cable roa.de are necessary where Btoep hills like thosi in Kan Francisco and Cincinnati tunst hi traversed by street railroads ; but on lovu and heavily travelled streets they ough never to be allowed. Mie. Bi.AKKMi.r , the trainer of tin chorus for the Thomas concert , oxprcsaoi himself greatly pleased with our hoini talent. The members of the Ilarmonii society and the Glee club , who will fern tig the Ufftkhonoof the Thomas chorus , havi had ah excellent training as a prcparatioi for the festival before Mr. Blakealy' arrival. From the present outlook th concerts bid fair to be an artistic as wel as a tinanci.il success. Tup. Mississippi river improvemen committee of the St. Louis Merchant Exchange proposes to call a committe of all similar committees in the grun valley to devise a plan for securing th "necessary appropriation" next winti for the improvement of the rivor. Tli shameful river and harbor steal for eas crn creeks and frog ponds has set back f < fully five years the great work of in proving the Mississippi and Minsou rivers. A I'ittsburg jury gave a , verdict again A railroad company fort the amount muny stolen from a passenger iii n sle ing car. "Since the defendant , " sa tlio judge , "sold n , ticket for two della in addition to the regular rates of pn sage , and offered the facilities for slee ing as an inducement to pay the ext money , it bound itself to protect i patrons while they were asleep and f the time being helpless. " BKTWKKN the eastern and western di\ \ sions of the Northern Pacific railroa there is now a gap of only I'M miles. T eastern' division extends in within twel miles of Helena , while the western dii sion in now within twenty miles of M : Boula. Tlio whole line will be open f business by the first of September. Ti opening will bo appropriately celebrate and each person on the first trip will presented with a badge of white si which he can preserve as a souvenir the event. Ac < iUMT BKLHONT , the banker , has tained a verdict of criminal libel in i suit against John Devoy , the editor the Irish JTallon , which charged JV ! Belmont with misappropriating Irish i tional fundrt in hia possession. Dnri tlio trial a sensational scene occurr when Mr. Dovoy's counsels question Mr. Bolmont'a right to his own nani thus reviving the old scandal that Hi niont is a natural son of Meyer ' Ilotlischild. Mr. lielmont indignant denied the insinuation with tears in 1 eyes , protesting Uiat ho was honoral born , and bore the name of his fath and Jiia'father before him. : \ When Boss Tweed was faceil with the proofs of his jobbery ho insolently asked his accusers , "What are you going to do about it ? " Tweed's example is now being followed by the apologists for tax ahirk- ing land grant robbers. Mr. Popploton's cautions defeimo of Judge Dundy and the United States courts in their peculiar .decisions on the land grant cases has made bold the small organists of the con federated monopolies to a brazen defiance that would have done credit to Bill Tweed himself. Mr. Poppleton simply sought to show that Judge Dundy's tax injunction was issued in conformity with decisions of the supreme court and the general attorney of the Union Pacific waa at great pains to show that the Platt case was not a put up job and the final decis ion was reached after a full and fair pre sentment of all the facts. To be sure , Mr. Popploton's effort in this direction was not very successful since ho was forced to admit that Platt acted upon hif personal advice "as a friend of the road" in .squatting on the Union Pacific lands. But now comes the Lincoln JouriKtl and assorts that it makes no difference whether Platt was a bona fide settler or not or whether he waa acting a part aa an agent of the Union Pacific road and mak ing use of the machinery of Judge Dun- dy's court to secure decisions that would deprive settlers of millions of acres of public lands that were legally subject to preemption. Now we apprehend that it makes nome difference whether a case iff presented by honest litigants fighting for what they believe to bo their rights , or whether by collusion between the contestants a one sided presentment isskillfullygotton up to conceal the real facts to befog the courts and make use of them to doteat justice. This was what waa done in the Platt case , which waa made the baaia for the rule that a mortgage given by the land grant roada debarred the government from from taking possession of the unsold lands and disposing of thorn for homestead entry. Although this im- porant case , involving an empire in pub lie lands , waa brought before the supreme court by collusive action , three out o eight of the supreme judges refused to Concur in the decision of the majority- - Had the case been presented in all ita phases a majority of the court would doubtless have sustained Secretary Schurz , aa Mr. Popploton admits that ho did himself before the case was brought. What was the plain intent of con gress in making this royal land grant ? First and foremost to aid in the construction of a Pacific railnmd ; and second to people , the conn- try through which the railroad passed with a thrifty agricultural population. Before the Pacific roads were built the public lands were on sale for $ ! . ' _ ' 5 an acre. When the alternate Hections were donated to the railroads , the remainder was raised to $ 'J.r > 0. The grantor very naturally expected that the railroads would make energetic ellorta to/Imposts of their lands to Bottlers in order to build o up a local tralHc and thus insure eventually the repayment of tlu > vast sum advanced by the government to build tin road. In order to clinch the compact ho tweon the railroad and the government and mainly to prevent speculation thai would withhold the lands from actua settlers , Congress expressly reserved tc the government the right to take contro of the lands not sold or disposed of with n in three years after the railroad wai completed , and made them .sub joct to pre-emption and homestead stead entry. The proceeds o 10 such sales were to go to the railroads which shows that aid given , for huildinj the road was ensured beyond forfeiture Up to 1870 all the land grant roada hoh nts' that this part of the charter would b s' ! enforced the strictly by government am L'O sustained by the courts. The Burlingtoi at it Missouri disposed of their lands by sal lie to an inside ring to avoid reversion. Thi or compelled thorn to take out their patent he and theirlandshavoboon paying taxes eve since. The Union and Central Pacifi erin roads devised a scheme to dispose of thoi unsold land grants , back to the goven in niont , and bills were introduced in cor gross to consummate this villainous dif posal of "mortgaged " first int property , r of $5 and Inter at $2.50 an acre. Congress p. however , refused to pass such n bill , nn tid thus virtually declared in favor of enforcing \rs forcing the original clause of the Pncifi railroad charter , that subjected thee as- lands to homestead entry. Throng tra Judge Dundy's court the acl : iU of congress havu boon nullified and tli for vast domain that would to-day hnve bee peopled by industrious tax paying farn ore still remains a wilderness. And whe VI- the aamo court is asked to stop in an nd , assist thd land grant robbers in evadin 'ho their taxes the plea is brought forwai Ivo that it is only carrying out well estal vi- Halted principles. The Lincoln Jonrnn fis- as an apologist for the court and for mouthpiece for tliu road , asks what t ! 'ho people are going to dp about it ? To th i od , wo answer , reopen the tight , denouni be land grant tax shirking a gra\ lilk wrong , petition congress , remonstral lilkof of against jug handle decisions , make no eases in every county whore railroad lam aru uutaxcd , employ competent lawyei and appeal from tie ) decision of the lowi a court through a test case in which all tl of facts shall bo brought out. Mr. Poppli llr- ton wnrns the outraged people agaim lining J squandering more money on litigatid ing and paternally admonishes the people t red grin and bear it. Mr. Popploton's advit lu" can scarcely bo considered disintorcstoi no , and it would hardly bo given if hia con ' teldo puny did not fear a reopening of the eaa do on a fair presental of the actual facts. tly his TIIAT was n cruel suggestion of Hen bly Wattorson in connection with the comii ler undertakers' convention at Cincinnat Tlio Into discoverer of Mr. Tildun'a heal ! suggests that these gentlemen combine business with pleasure by waiting for a year and meeting in conjunction with the Hepublican National Convention. Wo venture to suggest to Mr. Watterson that the corpse may not bo ready at the time he intimates , r//jA' TIIK City Physician Leisenring , who had some experience last year with a small- ] H > X epidemic , calls the attention of the council to the dirty and pestilential con dition of the alloys in this city and urges that immediate steps bu taken to havu them cleaned. Thia is a timely warning. Summer seems to havu come at last , and hot weather and garbage heaps combine to breed disease. If typhoid fever be comes epidemic in Omaha this summer , it will bo easy to fix the blame whore it belongs. Many of our alleys and especially those in the business portion of the city aru in a fearful condition. Putrefying vegetable and animal matter , ruts filled with slimy ooze and piles of filthy store sweepings and kitchen refuse are steaming in the HUH and Konding out death dealing odors. The alloy between Farnam ifc Douglas , from Tenth toSixteeithstreets , is particu larly obnoxious , but there are a dozen others to which the attention of the po lice ought to bo at once directed. Our city ordinances forbid the abuse of the alleys as places to dump garbage and refuse , and provide severe penalties for their infraction. Marshal Guthrie should take the matter at once in hand and en force the law upon all violators , no mat ter who they may be , or whore they may happen to live. Thia is a case that in volves the public health , and there should bo no delay in investigating and remedy ing it. Physicians toll us that there are already too many cases of malarial dis ease in the city. Unless Omaha is pre pared for an epidemic of low fevers , she must promptly remove the possiblocauses of infection. Tun republican state central committee will meet at the Paxton house in Omaha on the 'J8th inst. The object of the meeting is doubtless to issue calls for the nominating conventions that are to elect eleven district judges , ono supreme judge and ono member of the board of regents. Whether the committee will fool disposed to look back and compare republican promises with republican performance wo cannot tell. It will bo remembered that the last republican state convention was in such a hurry that they could not digest the platform but bolted the whole. That was plainly the reason why so many re publicans bolted the convention nomina tions later in tliu fall. Tliu committee has not met in full forcu since the latu cyclone. Perhaps this will bo a good time for a sober second end thought over the causes which have brought about the election of a republi can governor in Nebraska by a plurality vote and the election of a democratic state treasurer in a state that gave the last republican state treasurer 20,000 ma , jority. i ! The committee need not delude thorn- Helves into the belief that last yearV storm was a more local cloud burst , whicli ia not likely to happen again. Bofon the men who have loft the republican fold will return to their former party allegiance legianco , they will want better atiauranci of good government than mere plat Corn professions and empty promises. Tin la last legislature allowed the cloven hoe and the record made by the party wil first have to bo undone by strong antimonopoly ti-monopoly legislation before antimonopoly opoly republicans will coalesce with tints party organization. IT is now almost rt foregone ) cnnclumoi that tliu donincrnttt uf Ohio will noiniimh Jiulgu Hoailloy , of Cincinimti , for gover nor. Ho w uuoldor inun than tliu ropuh lican iaiulilate ; ( , .ludgu Forakur , and j > cr litips n .stronger ono ; the latter point wil ts lie liuttur ilctorininoil after a test of Juilgt or Fontker's ( piality in the approaching can VIIHH. Hoadloy 1ms boon the .syinpiithiziiu nr couiwol of the lip.ior intoresta in their at toinptH to ovatlo all forms of rognlatioi n- and taxation , and ho will , of courao , In warmly supported by them. In julditioi at to thia ho will havu the aid of an alum , dant Hiipply of funds , so that ho cnnno id fnil to inako a strong allowing in HO clos n- a stvto. 1'lunty of liquor and plenty o nlie lie cash will warm up the democratic part ; in Ohio any day , and the snmo may b Raid of Homo other statea. ts liu llenl estate transfers still boom. Th un most gratifying fact is that the Inrgea iii- number of sales are madu to mechanics iii011 011 clerks and laborers who intend to buili 011ml ml on the lota they purchase. Thia is th class of citizens , the savings from whoa nl wages and salaries , the price of hones labor , do more to build up a city than score of land speculators and heavy mort gage fiends who shirk their taxes aiv lie try to growl down every public improve is ment. COve vo SKNATOK UOI.MNS has been re-electei to the United States senate from Noi Hamtmhiro. The republican side i JW that body retains its ciphers. Oinn/n ds TH If any ono is qualified to apeak abon or "ciphers , " Dr. Aliller is the man. Th hole odor of the Cronin business still lo- around the Jfcrald oflico. * TIIK proposition to erect a ? f ,000 or ginu house on the corner of Farnam an _ Kith streets is , to say the least , ill cot , siderod. There is no need of a lire ei ' ginu house on the principal businot thoroughfare of Omaha , and it would reckless waste to spoil the most valuabl lot the eity owns by such a structure. DKCLINK OF MAN. ° Nervous Weakness , Dyspepsia , Imix " tonco , Sexual debility cured l > y "Well ith Health Renewer. " $1. IjlTKUAIlVUKVlKlV. IIAUI'llU'.H M.UJA7.ISK FHIl .U l . Kulogy has almost u.xhntmted itself in respect to the greatest of our magazine * , and yet each succeeding month brings us Harper's with new features of interest and now claims to praise. The July num ber , in matter and manner , ia equal to any of its predecessors , and that is high praise. The illustrations are of an order in design and execution in keeping with the now traditional fame of the firm in that regard , while in the letter-press every taste ia provided for , "from grave to gay. " "A Famous London Suburb" will recall .to the tourist memories of Hampstead Heath and givea vividaketch to the of of those stay-at-homes one great pleasure resorts dear to the dwellers nf the great metropolis. "Convention al Art" is treated _ _ of in a familiar manner by A. F. Oakey. Mr. Sutherland Edwards contributes * a second paper on "The Uomnolls , " a ftuli- ject now particularly interesting. Colonel nel Iligginson'a chapter of American his tory entitled "The Second Generation of Kngliahmen in America , " gives in short space much of interesting information. Olive Logan's paper on Cincinnati is one of the features of the number , and Wil liam L. Stone discloses some novel facts in his paper , "Tho Declaration of Inde pendence in n Now Light. " The depart ment of fiction ia well supplied in serial chapters and complete stories and sketches , and , of course , Mr. Oeorge W. Curtis discoiiraea from Kany Chair in his familiar and informing style. There are poems and short akctehes , the attestation of the merits of which is their admission to the pages of Harper's. Hut what need to particularise , Harper's is Harper's. In The North American Review for July , President .Julius P. Seelyo writes of "Dynamite as a Factor in Civilization , " taking of the subject the reassuring view that dynamitimu being merely a symptom of present discontent , is neces sarily a transient social phenomenon , which will quickly disappear as the insti tutions of government are brought more into harmony with the interests and aspirations of the masses of the people. In "Tho Last Days of the Rebellion" Lioutenant-Oeneral 1' . H. Sheridan re counts the operations of the cavalry divi siena under hia command during theweek preceding the surrender of Leo , and oilers a highly important contribution to the history of the late war. William S. Hoi- man , M. C. , makes a striking exhibit of "Tho Increase of Public Expenditures , " and insists upon the necessity for unceas ing vigilance on the part of the people ple , lest the burdeiiH of governmen tal administration become intolerable. "Democracy and Moral Progress , " by O. H. Frothingham , is a philosophic fore cast of the probable outcome of "govern ment by the people themselves. " / . R. Hrockway , superintendent of the reform atory at Elmira , N. Y. , points out some "Needed Reforms in Prison Manage ment ; " Thomas Sargeant Perry writes of "Science and the Immigration ; " fen. ! E. Waring , .Jr. , of "Sanitary Drainage ; ' Elbridge T. Gerry of "Cruelty to Children - dren ; " and finally there is a symposiun on "Church Attendance" the questioi whether the churches are growing to bo less of a power for good now than ii former times the symposiasts being "A Non-Church-Goer , " Rev. Dr. Win. Haye. Ward , Ilov. Dr. James M. Pullman , am Rev. Dr. J. H. Rylance. Published a . ' 10 Lafayette Place , New York. The July number of The Modern Ag is the first issue of its second volume , and accompanying it is an index to the numbers from January to June. The number opens with an excellent com panion piece .to Jialovy's "Love Mar - riage" ( printed in the Juno nunibor ) , entitled "A Rrilliant Match. " Mr. Ko- gan Paul's article on the "Production of Hooks , " should bo read by every literary man in the country. The first half of \ van Tourgonioirs latest story , "After Death. " ia a timely selection , and ia a good speci men of that famous writer's strange talent. "Tho Man of the Future" presents an uncomplimentary picture of what poor humanity is drifting tothroiighthoprocess of evolution. "A Scribbler's Apology is good reading , and "A Curious Case of Boycotting" is an entertaining bit of fan cy. "The Weathercock"which might have come from the pen of Edgar Poe , s < vivid ami blood-curdling is it two poems and the editorial departments make iii what ia altogether an excellent number of the magazine. ( The Modern Ago Pub lishing Co. , New York City , Sl.liO pot annum. ) "HKCOI.LKCTIOXS or TUB Joii.v BHOWN RAID" is the title of an illustrated papei to appear in the July CKNTUKY the con tribution of the Hon. Alexander U. 11 Botoler , of Virginia , a member of con gress at the time of the raid , and an eye witness of the fight. Mr. Boteler looks upon the work of John Brown from tlu southern side , and Mr. Frank B. San born , in the papur that follows , eontrib utes a few pages of "Comment by a rad ical Abolitionist ; " so the reader mtij sou the Harper's -Ferry affair Iron two points of view in the perspective o twenty years. The frontispiece of thii number of The Century ia n finely en graved portrait of John Browr showing him with a clean-shaven face instead of with a long beard , as ho i usually pictured. Ilia wonderful strengtl of character is apparent in the firm moutl and square-cut chin. John G. Whittie says of this portrait : "It is the man , not only the physical man , but his inne self also. " "Tlio Mnnlinttun. " The Manhattan certainly means to dc servo success and ia in a fair way to wil it. Tlio July number , just issued , is i model in its way. It is more than taste fill in appearance , and it has a variet ; of interesting and timely articles , witl stories and poems and facotite , and al from clover writers. Tliu illustrate ! paper on Princeton College is itsel worth the price of the number. It is b ; Henry.I. Van Dyke , Jr. , 'and not enl ; 'gives a historical sketch of this ancion college , but a graphic account of its pros Ml out condition and work its professor Mlof and students and its interior life. It i of not generally known that Princeton wa lit the fourth college established in th United States. It was founded in 17-tli a hundred and tun yearn after Harvard eighty-six yearn after William and Mar ; 10 and forty-live years after Vale. It wii the same year that the legislature of No\ York granted permission to raise Tnnd by lottery to found what is mn Columbia College , which actually date id from 1754. F. B. Sturgi explains in a very lucid article the inetl ical code question , which is making s much agitation among the doctors. Th iss rattlesnake is not exactly an interostin object , but the paper on the rattlosnak by Ernest Ingersoil is both entertainin and valuable. Philip Bourke Marstor the blind poet of London , has the lira part of what promises to bo a capit ; story , entitled "Her Price. " Claronc Gordon points out the .objections t 1's George Holyoak's guide l > ook for em grants ; a great deal bettor work than h proposes is tli-sired. Mr Gordon thinks it ought lo be provided by Congressional j iction. And for the rest there is a story legun by .hiliati Hawthorne , a charming ) loom by Nora Perry and n more ninlii- ' ions one by O. E. Montgomery , and i ithor clever lectures , making a most cadahlo and pleasing publication , with j Kipularity and success stamped on eveiy ige. Tlic I'aclllf Kailrouil Monopoly. an Franciiuo t'hrnUHc. The freight charges on wheat and corn > y rail from St. Louis , St. Paul or Chica- ago to New York , Baltimore or Boston , n average distance of more than 1,000 uiles , have not been on the average bovo 85 a ton or 850 a carload for the ast four years. The frieght on oranges rom Los Angeles to Chicago says The Tribune of ! ! 1 is ' ' Chicago May - $ 2'2 > per carload. The orange and nut crop is a nucha | staple crop at Los Angeles as vheat and com in Illinois , Iowa and Mis- ouri , and as easy of shipment by rail , The distance by the southern route ia about two and a quarter time * the dia- aneo from Chicago to Boston , but the reight charge on oranges is four and a lalf times aa much its the freight charged > y Eastern roads on wheat and corn or m flour and pork. Oranges should bo carried by railroad from Los Angeles to Chicago for 8125 a carload , while the monopoly rates are $ ± . ' 5. The extortion is just 8100 on every carload , and , sis The Tribune points out , it makes thia luxury of California production too expensive to be enjoyed jy the majority of the people of Chicago. Granges from Jalapa , in Mexico , can bo aid down in the Chicago and St. Louis narketw cheaper than oranges from Los Angeles , and English walnuts duty on , 'an ' be .shipped from the Meditteranean : o New York , lioston , Philadelphia and Now Orleans at rates that rule our Cali fornia walnuts out of the market , because ) f this Central Pacific railway extortion if 8100 on over } ' carload shipped from : liis state. All California faults arc put under the same ban of exclusion from eastern markets. We produce the be t iprieots , peaches , pears , plums and table rapea in the world , and there is a de mand in eastern eitiea for all we can pro duce , but thia transportation monopoly charges rates so high as practically to ex clude them from those markets. OIK ; K.vjiorifm'o IVoni Many. I have been sick and miserable so long and had caused my hnsband so much trouble and expense , no one seemed to know what ailed me , that I was com pletely disheartened and discouraged. In this frame of mind I got a bottle of Hop Bitters and used them unknown to my family. I soon began to improve , and gained ao fast that my husband and fam ily thought it strange and unnatural , but when I told them what had helped mo , they said , "Hurrah for Hop Bitters ! long may they prosper , for they have made mother well and us happy. ' The Moth er. You Arc. Lincoln Journal. TIIK OMAHA Bun has widened its nar row columns and put on a new dress. It ia now the same si/.o as The Journal , and looks exceedingly natty. We congratu late it upon this evidence of success. NVhatovor may bo said of THE BIK : to its disadvantage , it cannot be denied that it ia a newspaper. . . RheurnatismCNeRuralgia , Sciatica , Lumbago , Dackache , Headache , Toolhacho , S oreTliront.Mwelllnin.S | riili ; , Ilriil e , lluriin , Srulil * . * rout liltr * . iM ) AM , IITIir.lt UOIIILY I'AINS AMI A111KS. BoMbr DrugjUUnnl It ltr eTer ; btre. Fltlf Cenli * botUt. i DlrKlloni tn 11 I. uU ifl. TIIP. CIIAUI.E8 A. VOHK1.KU CO. ( SuMtiiucil < A. TOUELl'RtCO ) ll lllm rr , Mil. , 1.8. . IlovtetterS Stomach llltten * metts the re quirements ( if the ra tional medical phllov opli } which at prcs- cut i rcMiilx. It isu perfectly imre iete- table remedycmbrac- . ItiK the three proper- _ tie" of a preventive , a Atonic and nn ultera- " live. It fortincs the Imlxonite * find re- \ltnllzes the torpid Hoinach and liter , and cfleetH a military ohnnxe In the entire system. For s.ilc by linifratNts and Dealers generally. mlOm&v.cod&w ; BENZON & COLLIN : REAL : ESTATE AGENTS. 211 South Thirteenth st , Opp , Omaha National Bank. 1 Lot MxlOO , 6th street ? 3M J 5 room house , lot'&i\ir > o , 9th street 1 OOi 3 0 room house , lot 60\140. luth street . . . 2 UX 4 Broom home , lot b2JxBI. l"th "treet. . . ' . ' ( XX i 0 room house , lot s'Ji\l ) , Doreat street. . 1 MX 7 0 room houie , lot ( WxlM , MontAiu t > truct 1 ! * 5 5 room home , lot 'WxllO , 10th htivtt 'J 'toi 12 S room IIOIIIK nn leasul ground , Cuit H. . . " - 15 Iot MxSM , fnltfiirnlA street WX 10 Iot 4K13-J , 10th htreet 8 OOi 17 Lot CJ\132 , Tenth street 5 WX 18 ' . ' bt.iry ttore ImllJInlofJJxKli ; , l > ou-l.vs street 5 OtX 19 3 room hutue , lot tUxllf' , ' 'Oth street 1 : ) ( JO 5 room homo on Ieo e < l itround , Cumlni ; street . f > " - -M 0 room houte , lot Mxl60 , ISth ttreet 4 ( XH J3 4 riwm hou e , lot 60x140 , iMth street . 2 ax 20 House and lot , 25xluo , Charles street . . CHX ' . ' ? Houto and lot , 66x13CaiiltoUtenne . . . 2 ( VX JS House and lot , 33\12- ' , L'ulKornla street. . SO " 0 House and lot SOxtti ) , boilKi > 'treet 3 6X 10 30 Houte and lot , 64x132 , l > atcnnort street. . - 6m 31 T u lot * , 00x125 eaeh , Scward street ; . . . 7u Faiming Land For Sale Houses FofRenl 1 CO BENZON & COLLIN. 10 H , WESTERMANN & CO. , IMI'OUTF.I'.i ' < > ! ' u w E ! China and Glass , 608 WASHINGTON AVENUE AND 609 ST. STREET. St. Louis , Mo. m22-rtiu Goods ! SAM L C. DAVIS & CO. , Washington Avenue and Eifth Street , ST. LOUIS. MO , Felker , Bauder & Co. , Commission Merchants and Produce Dealers , 1622 Capitol Avenue , - - OMAHA , NEB. ; MfQuov > tlon9 ? enl on application. ConsiKtimcntu sollcltal % ud remittance * prompt y nude.jf/ SALEM FLOUR. ThU Klour Ij made at Salem , Illchardson Her , Nebraska . , In the Combined Holler Stone Hjstem. We Klvc KXCIil'SIVK . Kale of our Hour to one Qrm in n plai-e. We havu opened a branch nt 1018 Capitol avenue . Omaha. Wrltu for 1'ricci. Address cither cfc . . ml9m&c-6in S.ilem or Omaha , Jfeb. STEELE , JOHNSON & CO. , Wholesale Grocers ! . AXI ) .JOIIBKltS IX FLOUR , SALT , SUGARS , CANNED GOOI' . ND ALL GROCERS' ' SUPPLIES ; A FL'LL LINE ( IF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO. M. HELLMAN & CO. , Wholesale Clothiers ! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET , COR. 13TH , OMAHA. - NEBRASKA. J. A. WAKEFIELD , . . . WUOl.ESAU : AND IlKTAII. ItKAI.KK IS ' 5 SASH , DOORS , BLINDS , MOULDINGS , LIME , CEMENT , PLASTER , &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot , - . - OMAHA , NEB , C. F. GOODMAN , Wholesale Druggist ! AND DEALER IN OMAHA , NEBRASKA. GATE CITY PLANING MILLS ! MA.VL'r'ACT KIIS-OK Carpenters' Materials , -ALSO- Sash , Doors , Blinds , Stairs , Stair Railings , Balnsters , Window & Door Frames , &c. Flnt-chu facllltlwi for the manufacture of all kind . * of Mouldings. Planing and Matching a specialty. Order * from the country will be promptly executed. Address all communications tn A. MOYKU , Proprietor. MANUFACTUBEK OF KINK aM My lieiioiltory U constant ! } tilled with select utoek. flcst Workmanship xinraiitecd. Office and Factory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue , Qmaha. E. R CHAPMAN & CO. , t 1213 Farnam St. , OmahaNeb. . OCX , DEALERS IN Halls Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIKE AND BURGLAK PROOF , 1OS3O