H'-ate _ _ , - . _ THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA , WEDNESDAY , JANUARY 23 , 1884. THE OMAHA BEE. OntAhn omcc , No.'niO Fnrnnnt 8t , Council lllntTa Ofllco , No. 7 Ponrl Street , Ncnr Mrontlwny. New York Onico , Iloom 05 Xrlbuno IJullillntf. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Piibllahcd vcrjiromlnff , except Sunday. The oal > Monday morning dull- . , KKM8 RT MAIL. Onl Year . $10.00 I Three Month . $3.00 Hjcltomns. . . . . . . . 6.00 | One Month. , . . . . . . . 1.00 rni WMKLT tax , rcnusiiRD XTXRT WXDNUDAY. TURKS roStrAID. One Tear . ( ZOO I Three Month . 9 SO Sli Months. . 1.00 1 Ono Month . 20 American Now-a Company , BoloCAgontfSNewsdcal. e n In the United States. A Communications routine to Now * and Editorial natter * tbould bo addrcincd to the Emroa.or Tin 11 n. BtmiMWS MTTBRS. All Business Letters And llcmlttanoca 'ihoiiM tin ddressed to Tun n > x Pmunntxa Ooxr-ANT , OMAHA Pratt * , Checks and I'ostofflco orders to bo made pay' nWa to the order of the company. THE BEE PUBLISHING CO , , PROPS , E. R03EWATBR , Editor. MAYOH CHASE'S position on the gas It. question is summed up in four words : Ho burns coal oil. Bon LNOEIUSOLL is in Denver on two missions ono being to lecture on "devil try" and the other us the attorney of Dorsoy. Tun executioner's axe has fallen. Corkhill's head is oil" , nnd the ghost of Guitoau is gleefully dancing a jig in lladcs. WHAT 1ms become of the Omnha mint ? St. Louis and Denver are trying hard for it. Why can't Omaha carry off the prize'/ / ST. Louis moves olowly. She is pre paring for nn exposition in 1802. She ought to got up a good ono in eight years. Liu. HuNTixnTOJf defies the govern ment ; , but ho may presently discover that the government is n bigger innn than ho is. ANOTHER civil rights bill has boon re ported , but as long as civil rights cannot bo enforced in the south , it is simply a dead letter. THE average wages of iron ore workers in Pennsylvania are sixty-two cents n day. It strikes us that high protection and high wages do not always go hand in hand. A RAILHOAI > pass for Mrs. Orittondon and "family , " includes the governor of Missouri , who thus evades the constitu tional prohibition of the acceptance of posses by state officials. OMAHA is again being overrun by quackfl. Wo may have to apply a little disinfectant to the impostors of the Mumoy and Aldrich brand who are making themselves numerous hereabouts. AT last another cow field for ofiico seekers is about to bo opened up. A bill has boon introduced in congress to pro vide for the establishment of civil govern ment in Alaska , similar to that in other territories. THE tax'payora of Dodge county will have to pay for their folly in voting bonds for internal improvements in the shape of bridges thnt float down the Platte river. The supreme court of the United States has ordered the commis aionors of Dodge connty to levy the tax. TUB Chinese correspondent of the Omaha Herald has a very elastic imag ination. Ho imagines himself traveling around Canton , Pokin and Shanghai , vrhilo in reality ho is seated in the old Withnoll house , scissoring from the San Francisco Sunday Chronicle. Now THAT the government is talking about establishing a postal telegraph sys tem and buying the existing lines , a now telegraph company is being organized every other day. If the government does not buy up those now lines , it is a pretty sure thing that the Western Union will. h\ \ THERE is a rivalry now among the great American showmen as to who can make the longest will. Barnum recently spread his last will and toRtamont over 700 pages of legal cap , and now comes Adam Foro- paugh with a will of seventy pagos. This is like trying to match Jumbo with n baby elephant. Barnum still has the load. THE Chicago Jfcum pertinently says that with a falling grain market and an advancing railroad grain rate , the farm ers of Illinois , Iowa , Kansas , Nebraska and Miuoun will bo ocarcoly better off in the near future than those of Mani toba. There wheat is soiling at 20 to 2r cenU and oata at 10 conU because of high coat of carriage. HOXOUH seem perfectly easy between Lionel Cornwallia Sackville West , minis i r plenipotentiary of her majesty , Queen Victoria , and the Honorable Abran Hewitt , member of congress , late fron the Rod Boa. The fresh diplomatist o her majesty and the political old tar from "jtfewYorlr , continue widely at variance about the O'Donnoll affair. Unlou China should offer mediation , pistols and nauaagM for two will bo the order. TJAKT winter the-county commissioners gave a half ton of coal per month to cacl de-Htute family. Thia winter they have cut down the allowance to a quarter of a ton per month. It strikes us that this i * altogether too much economy. Ii ' tkeeo cold winter months no family cai kwp warm on 500 pounds of coal per MoaUi , which ii an allowance of only mbo t 10 pounds a day. The county can will afford to take care of tbo destitute , if they guard Against impostors wid pro bvggarc. " SENATOR EDMUNDS' MISTAKK. When the Thunnnn Pacific railroad ) ill was before the senate ilvn years ago , Senator Edmunds was ono of its ablest , iul staunchest supportors. His scathing review of the methods pursued by the . 'acific railroad magnates in their attempt x > evade their just responsibilities aroused ho whole country. Mr. Edmunds > ointed out Jay Gould , Sidney Dillon Mid 0. P. lluntington , in the galleries of the senate , and charged directly that hey were seeking to improperly influ- nco members of the senate. His bold uid fearless denunciation of those cor- norants created such a public sentiment hat many senators who had pledged heir votes to Qould and lluntington wains t the Thurmnn bill did not dare to o upon the record as voting ngainst it when it came up on its final passage. Wo are not n little surprised that Sen ator Edmunds should have fallen into a nn.ro which the Pacific railroad managers mvo laid through the So-called United States commissioner of railroads. It is lotorious that the influences which se cured the appointment of Mr. Armstrong us successor to Mr. French , who had old out to the Central Pacific , were not itch as would commend him as a man vho could bo trusted to protect the in- orcsta of the government in any contro- orsy with the Pacific railroads. On the contrary it was almost notorious that \lv. \ Armstrong was a friend of the rail- oads in nil that the term implies as con- trued by Mr. Huntington. . Ono of the pot schemes of the Pacific ailroad millionaires has boon to stave off ho payment of the debt which the gov ernment assumed for thorn in aid of the construction of their roads. This debt vas originally secured by first mortgage ipon the roads , but the daintod Oakcs Amos nnd his Credit Mnbilior confeder ates , in nnd out of congress , procured an amendment to the Pncllj railroad charter vhich made the government loan a second mortgage , and gave the Credit Mobilior yndicato and Stanford , Huntington & 'o. the first mortgage. The bonded debt > f the Pacific railroads duo to the United States was § 04,028,512 , and the interest accrued on this debt , on the 1st of July , .883 , after deducting repayments in the hnpo of transportation , amounted to < M2,444,71 .2C. In other words , the Pa- liflc railroad debt has accumulated , to ivor $107,000,000 , nnd still continues to ; row. This debt is in the shape of hirty-yoar bonds , bearing six per cent ntorost , payable somi-nnnually. A great portion of this debt will bo duo within light years , and all of it within twelve 'oars. Instead of making provisions to compc ) the Pacific roads to moot their ibligations as they fall duo , a bill has > eon introduced by Senator Edmunds with a view of granting an extension to , hose corporations by issuing a long- imo bond to redeem the out standing dobt. This bill , Mr. Edmunds 'rankly stated , has boon prepared by the Jnitod States railway commissioner , its object , ho adds , being the termination , if ) osaiblo-of the controversy that appears lorpotual between the United States and ho Pacific railroads as to what they ihould pay in. This is decidedly rich , t is as natural for the men who now con trol the Pacific railroads to resist the collection of interest on their debt as it s for them to evade the taxes on the and grants. Their scheme is to trump enough charges for transportation of .roaps , supplies and mails to pay the on- ; ire debt. And as long as congress does not exercise its power to alter , amend or revoke their charter , tint systematic evasion of obligations will continue. It is certainly a humiliating confession of weakness on the part of the government to admit for ono moment that the United States are powerless to enforce their claims against corporate monopoly of their own creation. The impudence of the Pacific railroad syndicate is simply boundless. Two years ago , when it was solf-ovidont on the "face of their charter that their unsold lands would revert to the public domain , Huntington , Dillon & Co. came before congress with a proposition to sell back all their unsold lands to the government at § 2.f > 0 an aero and apply the proceeds to the payment of their debt. Among those lands were millions of acres ol oago brush and ( sand hills , which were not wprth ton cents an acre. A bill embodying this monstrous proposal was actually introduced in the senate and would have boon lobbied through had it not boon for the opposition of Thurman and Edmunds. Unless Mr. Edmunds regards the Pacific railroad debt as be yond recovery the bill which proposes to obligate the government to refunding the outstanding Pacific railroad bonds , in eluding accrued interest , and extending the time of payment to the next genera tion , is contrary to sound public policy The" government had bettor auumo the first mortgage , take possession when the debt is duo , wring the water out of the sleeks , and soil the Pacific railroads for what they are actually wot-th under con ditiona that will perpetually insure to the people cheap transportation and fair treatment. That may involve the abso lute losa of a largo portion of our claims , but it would compensate the whole coun try in solving the problem of cheap transportation across the continent. The bill which Mr. Edmunds has in troduced simply perpetuates a grinding and overbearing monopoly , and gives them an extension of the lease of power which should be exorcised by no corpora tion. THE Burlington was to have given Jofinito answer to the transpartito pool on Now Years , another on the 17th and now on the 23d. Hamlet Vming might exclaim with Shakespeare , "To-morrow , to-morrow , and then again , to-morrow , creeps with itt petty pace from day to . " " . ? V * day until the last trump of recorded time. " In twenty years only two persons have ) ocn loyally hung in Nebraska. During .ho sumo period a dozen murders hnvo > con lynched by an exasperated populace who have no faith in the duo process of .ho law. Unprovoked murderers have > eon committed in nearly every county , jut such murderers as hnvo been con victed escaped the gallows through the ntorposition of the supreme court or the clemency of our governors. As n result some of the assassins hnvo gene scot free while others nro in the penitentiary with a fair chance of being released sooner or ator by some outgoing governor who is nado to believe thnt the convict has suf- 'orcd enough. The prime object of in- licting capital puninhmont is lo protect society by removing assassins. It is n well established fact that a person who commitu ] nwilful murder seldom stops vith ono victim if lie over gets the oppor tunity or provocation. Murder is a sort of mania , and the persons who are nfllictcd vrith the murder mania are dan- ; orous enemies to society. And yet .hero is not ono murderer out of ifty for whom the plon of exe cutive clemency is not invoked under some protoxt. Poor Richard's almanac says a man who will commit a nurdor while drunk should bo hung for t when sober. There is great deal of coal so homely sense in this maxim. Many assassins nerve themselves up with iquor and at the same tinio plead drunk enness ns n bar to justice. The power conferred on the state executive to re prieve criminals was never intended to jo used for the abolition of capital pun- shtnont. When a governor attempts to overrule juries nnd courts he assumes a very grave responsibility. The jury thnt trios a murderer are on their oaths to acquit unless the man is guilty bnyond a reasonable doubt. When twelve impar tial jurors bring n a verdict of guilty , it s presumptuous for outsiders who have no responsibility to ask the governor to overrule the jury and the court. Our laws throw every safeguard around the nccusod , nnd our courts give him the benefit of every Haw in the technical pro ceedings of the trial. The only valid right for the exorcise of executive clem ency must bo the discovery of proof that would go to mitigate the crime. In some states , notably Pennsylvania , iho governor has no power to mrdon or reprieve. The power io review trials nnd grant reprieves , commutations or pardons is vested with a joard which is a quasi judicial body , and s governed by no emotional sentiment. Wo constantly hoar complaints about the axity of our criminal code , and the case with which criminals of the worst stripe manage to go unwhippod of justice. Who is to blame for this state of facts ? The pooplo. No matter how heinous , ho crime , it is no trouble to procure numerously signed petitions for oxocu- ivo clemency. Nine out of ton who sign such petitions do so because they have not the courage to refuse , when in their lonrt they are convinced that the crim inal for whom they are petitioning fully deserves the sentence which the court lias imposed upon him. Just now there are two murderers under sentence to bo dung. Both have boon convicted of murder ifl the first degree after a fair trial. The supreme court has reviewed their coses , and found them without a technical flaw. Both hnvo had extensions sions of time to enable them to make the last appeal through the courts , but now petitions are pouring in upon the gov- ornorsigncdby people out of pure benev olence , and lawyers , doctors and editors have boon enlisted to plead for executive clemency for men who showed no mercy to their victims. Why should the gov ernor interfere and to that extent weaken public confidence in the efficiency of our laws to protect life ) Why should the governor , by overriding the law and the courts of justice , proclaim to the people of this state , in so many words , that the only tribunal in which they can trust for a speedy nnd unfailing punishment of murder is lynch law. Tin : Winnobago Indians , wholivo upon n valuable reservation in this state , have sent a petition to the secretary of the in terior asking that their lands bo allotted to them in severalty , and thnt they bo al lowed to become full-llodgod citizens of the United States , in all that the term im plies. This is a very sensible move on the part of the Winnobagoes , who have for some time boon self-supporting , or nearly so. The aid that .they have received coivod from the government during the lost few years has not amounted to much and they could easily hayo got along without it. They are well advanced in civilization nnd have become quite expert - port in the art of agriculture. Their farms are well cultivated and in _ omein- _ stances yield considerably more than a living. Besides attending to their farms and raising stock , many of them employ their extra time in working for others. The Winnobagoes are intelligent and in dustrious Indians , and the allotment of lands in severally will prove a great ben efit to them. The probability is that their petition will bo granted. Ono of the principal conditions no doubt will be that they shall not for a number of years dispose of their lands. This will bo nec essary to prevent the whites from buying them out , aa the land of their reservation is very valuable and would command a high price. If the allotment is made , however , a portion of the reservation will bo thrown into the market , as it is not likely that the Indians will bo given more than 1GO acres for each family. THE next Nebraska legislature will have to make an inquiry into the pro priety of county treasurers speculating in public funds through local banks in which they have a direct interest. While there may bo reasonable security through the bonds which they give , it is certainly risky , to say the least , to have the public money loaned out , when the law contem plates that public funds should bo ready at any time on call. ACQUITTAL OFJARTES NVTT. The acquittal of James Nutt for the murder of N. L. Dukes , the traducer of liis sister and the murderer of his father , will bo rocoivcd with general satisfaction nil over the country. The case has ex cited the deepest interest , and the pro ceedings have been watched closely. It will bo remembered that Dukes had boon paying attention to Miss Nutt , n charm ing young lady , nnd , becoming tired of her , ho broke off * the engagement , and deliberately blasted her character by charging that she was unchaste. This charge was made in letters to Miss Nutt's father , who , by appointment , called at Dukos' ofiico to confer upon the matter. Dukes deliberately assassinated Colonel Nutt in his ofiico , and so * up the plon thnt the deceased had attempted to kill him. Dukes was tried nnd acquitted , much to the surprise of everybody. Hardly anyone believed the charge made against Miss Nutt , or thnt Colonel Nutt had attempted to kill her trnducor. The [ roncral impression was that Dukes' money had boon used freely to purchase the jury which cleared him. Dukes walked forth from the court room n frou man , but loathed and despised by every man nnd woman. In spite of warning , ho persisted in remaining in Uniontown , in which ho hnd committed his terrible crimes. Ono day young James Nutt mot him on the street and avenged the wrongs of his family by shooting him down. At the trial the defendant's lawyers setup up the plea of emotional insanity. It scorns to us , however , that the plea oi justifiable homicide would have been more manly and sensible for if there over was a case in this country in which ono man was justified in taking the life of another it wna this ono. James Nutt , if endowed with the least spark of man hood , could never have lived in the same city with Dukes without being tempted every time ho mot him to shoot him down. He waited until after justice had failed to bo meted out upon the assassin in the courts , and then ho took justice into his own hands. THE government now pays 8350,000 n year to pension agents _ to disburse the money duo to veterans who are entitled to pensions. A number of these pension agents have amassed considerable wealth from their lucrative employment. It is now proposed that congress shall enact n law to do away with those middle-men by requiring the United States treasury tore mit directly every month in chocks made payable to each pensioner. This may ne cessitate some extra clerical force in the treasury , but it would save $300,000 a year. If the government is bound to squander such a largo sum it can make much better use of it than keeping up n small army of pension agents. THEUE was a sudden drop in real es tate in Chicago on Monday , when , the city council reduced the annual ground rental of the exposition building on the lake front from § 10,000 to $100. The throat had boon made by the owners of the building that they would tear itdown rather than pay $10,000 ground rent , and the hotel-keepers of Chicago , fearing that the national republican convention , which was to bo hold in the building , would go to some other city , prevailed upon the council to knock o ! ! ' the odd ninety-nine hundred dollars. THE Iowa legislature has already had ono adjournment , and ns long as the members have their pockets full of dfmu- als over the railroads , they will find it convenient to adjourn every throe or four days. This ill-digested law-making nnd frequent adjournments are caused by the pass system. If the momburs were com pelled to pay their faro , they would not go homo so often , but would attend to their business. The Ox Team. TeKumuh Ilnrtonlan. The Omaha Republican promises its argument on the railroad extortion ques tion by stating , what in ita eyes is the climax of crime , namely , supporting Judge Savage and Mr. Tumor. What this has to do with railroad abuses no ono but those gifted with extraordinary penetration of mind , can guess. The rest of the argument is an admission that there is extortion , except tliat part which says it is not extortion , because no ono grows rich over the transaction , and the railroad is very willing teams shall com pete to their detriment. The fact that people give bonds , their lands are taken by process of law , they sustain loss by lawsuits in defense of their righU , they pay dearly for the privilege of the bone- hta expected from a railroad because they hope a railroad will be bettor than the ox team , and The Republican saya , in effect , if the people don't like it lot them take loss of it. How generous. | y McOluro Emerges Iroiu tlio.DarknesH. Cincinnati NewWcmnia ! . Aleck McOluro jumps on the last day of the year and shouts , "Thoro nro no freei traders ! " ' That's true , sonny ; now it down and don't disturb ' 'business in terest * " again , /along as the government - mont must raise $200,000,000 per annum by a duty on imports , tliero can be no free trade and no free trader * . But the tariff is going to bo cut down oil the samo. Senatorial denslblllly. New York Journal. urT1 } ° : roaRrcni ! , deal of complaint in Washington because nearly every senator who is the chairman of a committee has been so thoughful as to give ono of his son ? the committee clerkship at a salary of six dollars per day. This pato/nalcon- sideration on their part should , m our opinipn , be commended instead of con- sured. The first duty which every man owoi is to his country. This the grave \nd learned senators discharge by accept ing seats in the highest branch of the legislature , for n modprato compensation , with infinite possibilities. The second duty is to their families. This they per : orm by putting as many of their children ivs possible on the government payrolls , [ t is absurd to expect senators or repre sentatives to give other mon's sons six dollars n day when they hnvo boys of their own who can satisfactorily perform the patriotic work of drawing their sala ries. An Anolcnt , Itollu. I'rotn tlio Nasln I'lo American. At the mooting last night Gen. Thrus ton presented to the Tennessee Historical Society a rare old flint-lock gun. It is probably the oldest gun in the state. It is about six foot in length and handsome ly ornamented with brass mountings. The end of the long barrel , where it has rested against the wall , is worn away with usage. The letters nnd figures "II. M. , 1741 , " nro deeply cut in the brass mounting , verifying its antiquity nnd .showing that it is at least 143 ycnrs old. It was doubt less in use when Daniel Boone was born , nnd "was nn old gun nt the time of Braddock's defeat by the Indians before the revolution. The n was presented to Gen. Thruston by the chief ordnance officer of the Fodornl urmy nt Nashville in 18C5. Ho had se lected it out of 10,000 captured nnd con demned anna ntorod in n wnro house on the Public square , ns the most interest ing veteran of the lot. It was reported to hnvo boon captured in a skirmish nt. Lavorgno , Tonn. , in 1802. The initials "H. M. , " in monogram on the stock , ny y _ enable aomo of our readers in that section to identify it. Its early history would doubtless give it ndditionnl in terest. TORPID BOWELS , DISORDERED LIVER , and MALARIA. . _ , . From tlieso sonrcco nrlso thico-fourths of Iho diseases of the hu-.imn ruco. Thoao symptoms Indicate Uiolrc 1 " " > co:3io ol Appetite , ISiMvclo OP * * - . oclic , fullncsa nftov * exertion of body > T ' -'em of food , Irltalriljt > w cplrltfi , A fcc'.lv.v " lit , U. cil iomotlutv * j > 'r'iosgJ.'lt.i. . . . .Ji utthu Heart. IK-i8" .ioro the eycu.JilclilycoN. orcd tlri. Jf COKSTIPATIO1V , nnd de mand the use of a remedy that ncta directly ontlio Liver. AsaLlvormedlelnoTCTT'S PILLS huvo no equal. Their not Ion on the Ivldiioysuml Skin In also prompt ; removing all impurities through tucsotlueo4' scav enger * of the Byutem , " producing appo- tlto , Eound digestion , rcpulnr stools.a clear SHliuuul a vigorous body. TOTT'S JPHJXJ9 cause no nausea or griping nor intcrfera with dally work and nro n perfect ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA , boklcven''vl"'ri'.arto. Qlllcn.41Murriiy8t.N.Y. GHAT HAIR ore WtnsKrns changed in stantly to n. GLOSST BLACK by a single ap. plication of tliU DTK. Sold by Druggists , or sent by express onrecelptofSl. OfiicoItJlurrny Street , NPW York. T'ifT'S MANUAL OF USEFUL KECEiPTS FREE. Goal. BARKER & MAYNE , WHOLESALE SHIPPERS AND DEALERS IN AND GONNELSVILLE COKE ! HENNSNGS IMPROVED SOFT ELASTIC SECTION la warranted to wear longer , lit itho form neater , and Klre be.tUi rfntltfactlon than any other Conn In the market , or prlco paM will bo refunded. The Indorsement ) ! ol . Chlcairo'g In nt phnlcluia , accom pony each Cmjet. Price , ftt.t Natrca Jt-un , Postage ( repaid , 81.MX Auk your jniTtlmnt for thfnl. ItOTIISCIIlLn. JOHKIMI XCC. . manufacturer ; , iiiU & < ti J llaudolpU SU , Chicago. For sale liy JOHN H , V. J.KHMANN Iho necessity for prompt and efficient household rcmedlea Imparathe , and ol thuo HoBtettcr'a iitomach Biltera Is the chief In mlrlt and the mojst popular. - . Irregularity of the Btomachandbonela , malarial fcienjlvci complaint , debility , rheumatism and minor aliment ) , are thoroughly conquer ed by thlalncompara. ble family restorative and medicinal aae < _ 4k k STOrn AOrf _ gL _ _ guard , and It U just BlTTEl5 ly regarded aa the * purestondmoatcora. prebenah o remedy ol Its digs. For vale by all Druggltta and Dealer * gene rally. GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY. P. . . KKVOUS LUFBS PHYSICAL OeUl UUIU0OBXIT1LLOSS ; | OF MANLY VIUOR , Spermatorf- hoea , eta , when all other reme- 'dlea talL A. curt guaranteed. 91.60 a bottle , Urge bottle , tout tlmea the quantity , 95. By ex. press to any odurctu. Bold by ll druggist * . KNOIJSH MEDI. OAL INSTITUTE , Proprietor * , 718 Olive Street , SL Louli , Mo , "I have ( old Sir Aitley Cooper * ! VIU1 Reatoratirt or years. Every cuatomer ipeaki hlehly of It I oanMitatlnglycndona It u a remedy of true merit " 0. F , OOODMAK , Druggbt. imahij Feb. 1 18S3. v8in&eodlr DR.HORNE'S ELECTRIC BELT . , Calanli , . . . - 'ile. . rpllriwr. llnliotrni ) . Dumb Auuts milaimu * Ulvrl , rtc. Only w le tlnoKlri > tim licit In Amrrlfu llmt mi < Utlip Kluirlt lly uiu ! niuir iietlim thi-nuich HIP bud ) , unit iur I * r lurKril In uii 111' tfoiit by the putltnt. fl OOO Would Not Buy It. DR. HOKMI-I w afflicted with rhoiunitlam , and cured by tuliiir a belt. To anr cue atlllctcd with that dlseate , I wouM aay , buy Homo's Klectrio Belt. Any one can confer with me by writing or calling nt my ( tore , 1120 Douglaa itrcvt , Omaha , Neb. WILLIAM LYONS. MAIN OFFICE Oppo<o noatoffice , Itoora 4 Fren. ter Block * TFor ulo at 0. F. Goodman' * Drug Store , 1110 farnam it'ect , Omaha. Order * filled O.O. l > . CHICAGO SOALE TO * tUUOX BC1U , ttu. > TUX , HO. 14 Toil SOO. llniiii IluK lucluilrd. 240I"ANMER'8 SCALE , * 0 , The "Ldt. . ItHivctTvH , " U i > t. to * f Ib. W. OTIIKUallU. UtduH TltlllfUtlTriUUk FOSSES , TOOLS. &c. T luiiiiK nici Fun IIUIT Stun * , 110 . * Olbor Article * STEELE , JOHNSON& CO. , Wholesale Grocers ! II. B. LOCKWOOD ( formerly of Lockwood & Draper ) Chicago , Man ager of the Tea , Cigar and Tobacco Departments. A full line o all grades of above ; also pipes and smokers1 articles carried in stock.- Prices and samples furnished on application. Open orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guaranteed. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & WAND POWDER CO HENRY LEHTV1ANN JOBBER OF EASTER * PRICED DUPLICATED ] 1118 FARNAM STREET , . . OMAHA NEB. C. F. GOODMAN , Wholesale Druggist ! | AND DEALER IN PQJii OMAHA , NEBRASKA. J. A , WAKEFIELD , WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALEH IN SASH , DOORS , BLINDS , MOULDINGS , LIME , CEMENT , PLASTER , ftC- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Union Pacific Depot , - DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIBE AND BUEGLAEPBOOF xoso [ SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others , WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake , best and cheapest food for stock of any ( kind. Ono pound Is equal to three pounds of with Qround Oil Cake In the Fall and Winter , Instead of running down , will Increase In w good marketable condition In the spring. Dairymen , as ell as others , who use It cm tel Try It and Judge for yourselves.mPrice $25.00 per ton ; no charge for sacks. Address WOODMAN LLNSEID OIL COMPANY MAX MEYER & CO. , IMPORTERS /vra OF HAVANA CIGARS ! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC CIGARSJOBAGGOS.PIPESiSMOIERS1 ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS : Reina Victorias , Especiales , Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 < to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS : Combination , Grapes , Progress , Nebraska , Wyoming and Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES. 4 I Double and Single Acting Power and Hand Engine Trimmings , Mining Machinery , ! Belting , Hose , Brass and Iron Fit . , ! $ # hT ° i ° 8ale and re1' HALLADAY WIND-MILLS , CHURCH AJNil buliUULi I3ISLLS. Corner 10th Farnam St. , Omaha Neb. . SJIUNTHOI MANUFACTUUEll OF alvanized IronCornices , Window CapsFinials , , 0. M. LEIGH10K H. T , CLARKE. LEIGHTON & CLARKE , ( SUCCESSORS TO KENNAHD BBO& ft CO. ) Wholesale Druggists ! DEALERS IN Paints. Oils , Brushes. Class. OMAHA . . . . NEBRASKA