Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 1, 1882, Page 13

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— 4 THE DAILY BEE-MONDAY JANUARY 1 The Omaba Beé “Published every morning, except Sun- ay. The enly Monday morning daily. TERMS BY MAIL~ One Year....810 00 | Threo Months 83 00 Bix Months,. 5,00 | One Month.... 1,00 ¢HE WEEKLY BEE, published overy We inoeday. MS POST PATD— 82.00 | Three Months, 1.00 [ One Month. ... AMERICAN Nxws Conrany, Solo Agents Nowsdealers in the United States, 50 20 CORRESPONDENCE—AIN Communi. atfons relating to News and Edlitorial matters shonld be addressed to the Eprron or Tur Bee, PUSINESS LETTERS—AIl B isines Letters and Remittances should be ad dressed to TiE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY OwmAna. Drafts, Checks and Postottice Orders to be made payable to the order of the Company. Tho BER PUBLISHING 00., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor o e Tar barnacles are all on hand at Lincoln. All they want is $3 a day and mileage, —_— SQUATTER GovERNOR PRARMAN {8 on hand, as usual, looking for a commit- tee clorkship or some other roft job at $3 a day and mileage. —_— Brap SLAvGHTER has the cheek to present himsslf for ro-clection a8 olerk of the house. Brad thinks he s needed again to garble tho legisla- tive records. Timrs have changed. The other day a colored man in Preaties Co., Mis- slssippi with the aid of a good shot- gun captured |two white men while ateallng cotton from his pen. AX Inquiry comes to us all the way from Ariz na concerning Mr. VanAr- man, present [secretary of that terrl- tory, who some years ago made him- self numerous in {Nebraska, Mr. VanArman, when in this state, en- joyed the reputailon of being a bum- mor and a bilk, He may have re- formed since he went out west. A vEAR 8g0 last spring Dr. Cushing, the chief manipulator of the Holly water works project, wrote to his com- pany as follows: “I am going over to Oouncil Bluffs, and will watch opera- tlons from there. Ostensibly we are out of the political fight, but really wo aro in It deep.” Cushing'’s example is being followed by tho ratlroad man- agera, Ostersibly they are out of politics, but in reality they are in politics deepur than ever. —_— Tae first duty of the legislature wiil bs to set down upon the barnacles that infest tho capital every session. Theso professional place Lunters are nearly all stool pigeons of jobbers or spies for the monopoly managers. Thoy take §3 a day from the tax-pay- ers, aud take fees from the outside employers, Tae people demsnd a new deal. Give the barnacles a wide berth, AccorpINa to all accounts there is no possible chunce for the ro-oicction of Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts, Six yoars ago tho sonator was elected im an open fight, after his friends had broken up the caucus system, The example has pines been followed in Massachusetts, and no Republican oaucus will this year be held, although the friends of Mr. Hoar uow feel anxious to restore King Caucus to his old supremacy. The trouble is, how- ever, that tho new method introduced 1y Mr. Hoar six years ago will now be adhered to, mainly bocause each membor desires to maintain his inde- pendence and make his own record. SeNaTOR VAN WyCK has taken the trouble to notify the settlers on the 8t. Joe and Donver lands that were included in the Kuevall's claim which was adjudicated by the supreme court of the United States three weeks ago, to take no action, but await the pas- sage of the bill now pending in con- gress for thelr rellef. Senator Van Wyck's advice is timely and may save hundreds of settlers from making neodless sacrifices of their homesteads. There appears to bea fair prospect that the bill introduced by Senator Van Wyck wiil pass the house before the scenion closes, Like Aloxander of old, Jay Gould will soon sigh for more world's to conquer. He is still extending his southwestern system, and annexing new railroads evory fow days. It is stated on excellent authorlcy that the Galveston, Houston & Henderson road will pass into the hands of Jay Gould to-day, to be operated henecforth as part of the great scuthwestern s tem Before taking 1u the Iron Mountain aud Holens, which adds forty-three miles, the eystem had a mileage of 5,708, The Galveston, Houston & Henderson runs from Gal veston to Houston und is 60 miles in length, There are in process of con struction several short feeders which will scon bring the mileage over 6,000 The purchase of the Galveston, Hous- on & Henderson glves the Gould system s gulf coast outlet of ite own, which advantage it had not enjoyed before. New Ocleans beiog the nearest thing to it. This will give the wman. agoment improved facilitics for hand- ling ootton and other freight criginat. nglo Texas for foreign destination, SUCH MEN AS CONNOR The suggestion is made by a ataunch republican paper, the Satton Register that “if tho ‘straight’ republicans, #o called, In tho legislature, fully ap: preciate the situation, they will treat such antl-monepoly republicans as Jonnor aa though they wero as good ropublicans as themselves which they are the Registsr sayn: There Is no reason why they should divide in the organlzation of the senate, the election of & United States senator, or in the passage of laws regulating railroads.” To this tho Omaha Republican maken the follewing reply: The Register will have a hard time to convince any republican that such men as Connor are as good republioans ay the mon who in the late atate elec: tlon stood for the straight republican ticket, The leaders of the bolt in the Third district had no honest excuse; and tho men who enduored their slan- ders snd their outrageous abuse are not liable to forget soon or to forgive easily. If such men as Connor are good republicans, ell apostates (tempo- rary apostates, if you wish,) are as good christians os the most steadfast. No newspaper can unite the republican patty upon the basis that the men who employed the worst trickory to defeat the wishes of the people procedent to and at the time of the conventlon, and who did their best to destroy the party afier the couvention have been good republi- cann, It simply won't go down, The Rapublican i a3 willing to have peace as anybody, but it woutd rather have war right alongjthan peace purchased at that price: and so wouald the repub- licans of Nebraska—the men who stood their ground in spite of lies and slunder and abuse, and who elected the republican state ticket and sent three honest and straight republicans to represent them in congress. The leaders In the war against the ting the party agaln on ita foet by onabling It te make & record on living iseues which wlll commend it to public approbation, Ono thing is cortaln, the antl-mono polists of this state are in no mood to be frightened or bulldozed into a half- hearted alleglance to the republican machine, They have already done much to renovate the republican or- ganization, and to force it to recog- nize ita duty, ‘‘Such men as Connor” are too strong in thelr own names and records and in the confi dence of their constituents to care much what such rallroad organs as The Republican have to say about their principles or their motives, but the republican party, which will be held respousible for the legialation of the coming sesslon has more than a elight concern as to coadjutors which they may reasonably hope to find in men, who, like Gen. Connor, are of unquestionable abiiity, f unchallenged integrity, and who, in times p2at, have proved the depth of their convia tions by no half-hearted adhesion to repablican princlplr Gon, OMAHA. Omaha hasmade very substantial progress during the year that has just closed. Her commorce has been ex- tonded to distant territories that have become tribatary through the construc tion of the Oregon short line, and her wholesale trade has nearly doubled in the section of country of which ehe s the commercial center, Her manu- facturers ara prosperous, and afford steady, well-paid employment to thousands of working people, Dauring republican party of Nebraska in the Iate elections wore men who had no higher motive than an ambition to boss the politics of the state. They were the devotees of no great oause. They were the promulgators of no great principle. They fought the re- publican party simply because they had been defeated in tho attempt to run it. If these gentlemen desire hereattor to participate in the affairs of republicanism, there is no law of humanlty or of politics that can pre- vent them, But their apostasy has not earned them the right to party leaderehip. ‘They cannot come back and ran the ‘‘machiae,” which, in Ne braska, at lorst, is only another namo for the people. If the ropublican party in Nebraska wants to commit suicide tho quickest way to put an end to its life is to read thoe riot act to men who, like Gen. A. H. Connor, dared to voico the wishes of the people agalnst dishonest party managenment and corporation misrule, The leadors in the war agalnst railroad bossism in the late elections were men whose allegiance to republicanism had never fultered as long as republi- cantem meant the unfettered expres- slon of tho sentiment of the mssses of tho cepublican party. This was par- ticalsrly true of General Connor, whose records as a fighter in the re- publioan ranks was made under that old war hoise, Oliver P, Morton, of Indiaus, and whose voice has rung out loudly in half a dozon campaigns in Nebraska for republican principles, It is to General Connor’s merit that ho dared to rise above party in the late canvaes and to uso his every en- deavors to elect men pledged to the intorests of the people, both republi cans and democrats, as agaiust the pliant tools of corporate wonopoliss. What excuse the leaders of the socalled “‘bolt” in the Third district hiad can bo seen from the returns of the eleetion in which E. K. Valentine had such & narrow escape from politi cal burial. Seven thousand voters in a distriot which prior to last Novem- bor was republican by 10,000 mojority oast their ballots for the independ- ent republican nominee supported by ‘“Buch men as General Connor,” and gave aa thelr excuse the nefarious reputation and the clearly proven chargos against Valentine, With almost no organization, with absolate- ly no money snd with a canvaes which depended for its success upon the personal efforts of half a dozen men who like General Connor could not be bribed, bought or sold, the pampaiga against the rallroads was fought In the Third district and barely fatled. The charges made against Valentine | tage. stand to-day uncontroverted aud clearly proven sud not one of them has been or wlll be retracted because they aro true. Soven thousand republicans belioved them to the extent of voting for Hon, M. K. Tarner and many others teatified to their truth by cast- ing theic ballots for the democratic candidate, ‘I'hat the republican party in Nebraska is to-day hopelossly divided, Is due to the fact that its solf constituted leaders have prosti- tuted thomselves to the embraces of corporute monopoly, sud sold their birthright for s mess of railroad pot- Blinded to the wishes of the paople, aud trusting to a party loyalty which would swallow every insult and ocorrupt co-partnership with the railroad mansgers, they have succeeded in alionating, either tompo- rarily or permapetly, from the repub- lican ranks over 12,000 party voters, composed of men who, like General Oonper, believe in republican prinel- ples, but repudiate monopoly repabli- cau tactics, It is high time when the note of alarm against republican dieintegra- tion is sounding in other states that Noorasks ropublicans should consider whother they can sfford to continue the warfare ageinst men who can, if they wish, oco-operste in put the past year the great network of rallways which converges at this point has been extended in every direction, and Omaha now enjoys faclli- s for ratlway trafic tnat fow other cities in America can bosat of. Omaha now has direct connection with Chioa- go by four trunk railroads, and St. Louis is linked to Omaha by three rallroads, She has a direct line to St. Paul, and several branch lines that traverse central and Northwestern Nebraska, As the headquarters of the two great travrs- continental systems of railcoad, the Ugion Pacific and the Burlington Routo, Omaha is the gateway on the contral beltof travel to the Paclfic const and the great gold and silver producing states and terrivories. The growth of Omaha as a city dur- ing the last year has been marked. Whilo she has not erected as many n ew buildlngs during 1882 as she did during the year previous, the substan- tial charactor of the businets blocks, hote!s, factories, churches, school houses and residences would be a oredit to any city. On> of the great- est improvements ot the year has been the opening of two palatial ho- tels that have added so largely to the advantages of Omaha as a resort for travelers who desire to recreate at a half-way house botween the At lantic and Pacific. Last, but by no means least, are the public improve ments 80 essantial to the well-being of a clty. The completion of the water works has glven Omaha an awmple supply of water for manufacturing, fire pro- tection and ¢ omestio use, Our sewer- ago system, although atill in progress, has reached that etage when it has become practically useful in draining the bueiness center. The extension of tho atreet railway to Hanscom park, the establishaent of a telephonic sys- tem that reaches nearly every village and city in Nobraska and Western Tows, and the inauguration of the era of paving has made the past year memorable In the history of Omaha, With the improvements already pro- jected and under way, Omaha is des- tined to maxe more rapid strides within the next five years than any oity west of Chicago and this side of #an Franclaco, THE G ORDINANCE Every tax payer in Omaha and every consumer of gas, iz vitslly in. terested in the material reduction in the price of gas, An ordinanc grant- ing the right to & Philadelphia gas company to establish works in Omaha on condition that they shall supply the city and ‘private consumers with better gas than wo now have at leas than one-half of the present rate has been pending in tho city council for the last six weoks, The council has had ample time to get all needed information about the right of this city to permit the laying of gas mains in our streets by another company, and the respousibllity of the parties that ask for this privilego, When this proposition was first made it wet with an enthusiastic support at the hauds of nine-tenths of the council as it does from 99 per cent. of all our citizens. At the last councll meeting, how- ever, what would seem to be frivolous objections were rafsed. Tho first question that the council must decide upon is whether the present gas com- pany have an exclusive franchise to whether the grant of this privilege to suother company will in any way de- prive the exlsting company of vested righte for which thelcity stands good, If the city is at liberty to exercise its rights to allow other companies to lay down gas mains, the only risk that it runs in making such a grant is the damage that might be sustained by persons through negligence on the our streets for the supply of gas, or) part of the gas company In digging trenches or fsiling to make good pavements that are torn up in streets where they lay thelr mains 1f the new company can give amplo security for such damages the city can suatain no loss in allowing them the It is true, how- aver, that two gas companies cannot make a living iIn Omaha at the rates proposed, and there is no doubt that a congolidation would have to take later unless the presont_ company ehould diepore of ite works to tho new company. But that does not concern our eity in the loast, What we want is cheaper and better gas, If it can be had through the purchase and enlargement of the existing worke, well and good, but if the new company builds and finally absortes tho other nobody outside of the ownera of the works need to be concerned. In any event, if the " ordinance passes we would have gas at therates established by it, and then we would enjoy the benefitsfof cheap gaa. right to come in, place mooner or —— Tue mayor of Loadville has just issued a peremptory order to the city marshal of that sporting city to dis- arm overy man who carries shooting irons in his pistol pocket. A general search of the inhabitants of Leadville for bowie knives and revolvers s to be made on New Year's day. Open houses will be kept evorywhere to ad- mit the police, who are instructed to call, No mention is made in the mayor's proclamation for arch of the Leadville ladies fer concealed weapona. —_— Murat HaLsteap, of the Cincinnati Commescial lnclines to the opinion that Pendleten’s clvil service reform bill will sleep the sleep that knows no waking on the table of the house. STATB JOTTING3, Red Cloud wants & cigar factory, McCook iv discussing creameries, Hampton wants to be incorporated. "Lhere are 21 * lifers” in the peniteutiary. Arapahoe has the measles numerously. Deer are plenty near the mouth of the Elichorn, ‘rhe small.pox patient at Norfolk died last week. A broom factory is to be started at Kearuey, Franklin has organizad a creamery as- sociation. Valparairo has a gymoasium with twen- ty members. Several new school-houses will s70n adorn Holt covuty, A case of small-pox has appeared at Battle Uzeek. Diphtheria has taken a fresh start at Central City. The Beatrice brewery was destroyed by fire on the 23d. Lincoln capitalists are talking ot a sorg- bum sugar refinery. Aurora struggled bravely through four marriages on Christmas, Up in Nance county the women use ven- ison in their mince pies, Noifolk's improvement boom in the year pest amounted to §140,0,0, Fremont’s new national bank has been authoriaed to begin business, Superior is talking about an opera house to be built the coming season. The McOook photographer couldn’t find business enough, hence he left, The Fremont telephone concern will soon raise it rates @fty cents a month, One Tecumseh merchant sold $450 worth of goods the Saturday before Christmas, Fully 100 car loads of broom corn have heen shipped from Harlem county this fall. Ciiizons of Lincoln presented Mm. Jack Woods, widew of the murdered sheriff, 8110, The Mennonites near Rosebud, Adams connty, occupied their new church on the 2ith, A North Bend man is in jail for selling the same mortgaged property half a dozen times, Union precinot, Butler county, turned out a hog that weighed after being dressed, 520 lbs, The msil carrier between Aurora and Grand Island is 80 years old and makes the trip every day. The cheero factory at Fairmount turn owt about 125 1bs. a day and complain of a searcity of milk. J. 0, Chamberlein, of Lagrange, Ind, i to catablish @ cheese factory at Iaavale, Webster oounty, Hampton has an 8 year old girl weigh- ing 100 pounde, but he cannot come up to the O'Neil baby. A Furnas county minister had a dona- tion visit on the 21st, Result, 835 cash and ten bushels of corn, Osceols had afira on the 27th, in which Hartney's biliard hall and the Joy Bros,” harness ehop were destroyed, Two wen wero recently “held up” by highwaymen on the bridge across the Platte south of Grand Island, The Mothodist church at Beatrice doesn't begin to hold all the people who wont to attend services there, The Stromsburg Republican of last Wedneaday was printed on pink paper, by way of variety for the holidaye, The M, E. society at Unadilla have bought the old_school house for 3350 and will couvert i into & ssnctusry. A. Ellis, a 13-yoar old Adawms connty boy, iscd £4 bushels of corn on an acre this He was competiog for » prize, liver Gaylor, of Gloocos, had s bavd to remembor Christmas, Ho dentally shot off part of it a few days be- fore. Dick Williams, of Fremont, was ad- judged inshue by tha Dodge county board and was taked to the state asylum on the 25th, Velparaiso has had a decided immigra- tion boom, Beott Case has imported nine fine blooded Missouri jackasses aud jen: nies, Two thieves robbed the section house at Hader, Madison_eounty, on the 27th, got- ting away with $300 Lelonging to reotion re Papillion sportsmen had a grand hunt on Christmas, J. E. Campbell’s side beat H. L. Carpenter's by 203to 81, A gawe supper followed, Goldsberry & Baker's slaughter house on the Salem road, cut of Falls Oity, was de- stroyed by fire on the 2ith, with a lot of hides, tallow and lard. George Graves, the ‘‘devil” of The Co. lumbus D¢ t, fell from the top of the soencry ata show there on T y night last and broke bis leg, William Hogg, » Beatrice] chant, ar- rived Thureday, He I relative large sum of money some time ago, waflng itaroturn on _demand, Havirg ill of goods to pay for, aund learning the relative would bo unable to remit, Mr, Hogg became despondeut and fired a bul- let into his head, The residence of Dr. C, M near Wisner, burniel on_the 25th. They lost everything, including the doctor’s library and instroments. The *‘boya * f Wahoo celebrated Christ- mas in & uoique menner. They corralled a number of persons and forced them to Yet 'om up” to the crowd, Geonoa has » bonavza, The $150,000 to be spent in renovating the old Pawnee achool house ant other buildings will stir up busicess in the vicinity, The holiday edition of the Hastings Democrat was handsomely printed on tinted paper, and contained a review of the business personnel of the town, Rey. A. Dresser, financial azent of the Franklin ncademy, raiced £1 000 in three weeks to help the s3hool, They expeet to make the endowment fund 850,000, Farl W. Fry, aged 61, recently from Lincoln county, Dako's, was found dead in Niobrara on the 27th. The corcmer’s jury said it wan appopletic convulsion, About sevenjy-five turkeys were rofflad off in an Kikhorn raloon on Christmas day, and & correspondent says nearly all the lucky men got drunk in the evening, A 10.year-old Swede girl, mame not known, was run over by the cars whils plaging in the Lincoln yards on the 28th, receiving injaries that caused her death, Matt Simmerman, the condemned Min- den murderer, waa visited by his nged parents at the penitentiary last Wednes. day. Toey have no hope of staying the rope, Two more of the Louisville freight rob. bers—Wm, Greek and James Ivgram have been arrested and bound over, Tue railrond people think they have now got allof them, A 9.yesr-old sonof A, R. Hancock, one of the plasterers at work in the State in- sane asylum, fell down the elevator from the third story on Wednesday last, re- ceiving fatal injuries, Nate White, of Gosper county, was hunting rabbits on the 23¢d, He heard the bullet roll in the barrel and put his band to the muzz'e to catch it. The gun weut off accidentally and Nate caught it right through the middle of the hand. A number of 15.year-old boys in Seward were howling druuk on Christmas, They could not ) uy the liquor themeelves on ac- count of their youth, but got some one who was old enough to know better to get it for them. The legislature will be petitioned to change the line between Colfax and Butler counties to the mi‘dle of the Platte, in order that both may bear the bridge ex- penses now paid by Colfsx. On Christmas afternoon. Will Starring, of Albion, accidentally shot a bullet into his hand. It made the seventh accident «f the kind in the county in a short time— one of which was fatal and another being maimed for life, The mammoth packing house started at Nobraska City has braced up the old town and the wholesale bouses there are tegluning to send out & number of travel- ing men. All classes of business fiel the impecus given by the imported captal, A little son of Andraw Garber, of Sarpy conaty, got o kernel of coffee in his wind- pipe one day last week, A coubie of doc- tors tried every way to_dislodge it but could not. They then chloroformed tte boy and cut the windpipe ope.. Lt was a good job and the boy lives. Charles Mathewson, of Hooper, who was released from three years’ servitude in the penitentiary last spring, was arrested at Fremont on Thursday last, for stealing a wagon load of grain from ' Remmelin’s grauary at Jamestown the night before, The value of the stolen property makes the crime grand larceny. Mr. Hardy, school teacher at Stroms- burg, was arrested last week for unduiy chostising & pupil. The jury dissgreed and the case was withdrawn upon pay- ment of cost by the boy's father. Some of the jury thought, from the boy’s testi- mony, that the teacher didn't wive him half enough. Louis Pethoud, of Freeman, was the victim of a singular accident a short time ago. He was turning the oylinder of a half-cocked revolver, when the blamed old thing went off, the bail splitting; one-half went through the barrel, while the other flew up to Pethoud'’s nose, glanced off and went in behind the left eye. Pat O,Brien, arailroad laborer, went to sleep on'the A, & N. track & mile_out of Tecumseh, on the 23d, and was killed by sn eugine He was intoxicated in the afternoon, and the coroner’s jury, beliav- ing that to have been the indirect cause of ©'Brien's death, censured the saloon keep- ers of Tecumseh for relling liquor to men who have no control of their appetite, PR — An Elmira, (N Y) Lady, Mrs, H. L. Clark, 304 . Clinton street declares: Burdock' Bloed Bitters sre a wodicine 1 admire. Bost romedy for dys- pepsin in the world, Kcop houte supplied with it, Sutlief, Knighs of Pytnias, Omaha Lodge No, 6, K. of P., held a meeting at thelr hall Thursday eve- ning ot which oflicers for the ensuing year were elected. The installation of cflicers will tako place next week in Castle hall No, 4, K, of P, Tne fol- lowing are the names of the elect: P. T.—Charles Merkt. O. C.—Michael May. V. 0.—Wm. Charmweher. P.— Henry Jenson, M. F.— Christ Wille, M. E —J. B. Lundt, K. of R, and 8 --Herman Kande Trustee — Henry Eike, Master at Arms, —Augnst Frenzel, — Henry Auderson. n Bluemle, el o L 8t, Georre Literary Social. A union meetingof the St. Gaorge and Vietoria sccieties and Burns club, with their families will bo held at 1314 Douglas, K. of P, hall, Tuesday even- ing, January 23, 1883, The following programme will be carried out; Sone, . Stevens Family . Mrs, Carleton .W, O, Baunders .Stevens Family ..David Knox .George McKenzie W, 0, Saunders ... Mr, Shephard .Mr, Norton Address. Boug. . lecitation., R Mensrs, Hiaddill, Stockdale ‘and Lustromental, ... ........ Henry Recitation. tor Stockdale Song.. evens Family Genoral iat. ... President and others, By order of Comumittee, i Good Eables, “Tis & joly day from Eas: and West, For children thrive and motber's rest, The darling gir's all named Victoria, And with the boys, they have Castoria. 1t is @ fact, there is no “‘may be," A wother's milk can't save the baby; While swoet CASTORIA digests their food, Gives them health aud makes them good. Consumptiyes Consumption is often the result of not curing » cough or cold ut the proper time People seldom realize heir wistake nntil they have fallen victims to this terrible disease, when it often proves too late Take advice, and when troubled with coughe, colds, asthms, whooping cough o nfiuenza, bronckitis, paina in the chest and all diseases of the throat and 1 use Dr, Bosanke's Cough and Lung Syrup an infalliable remedy for the above named. disease, Ask your druggist for it Price 50 cents, Sold by Schroterd Becht, OMAEA ' _GOFFEE AND SPIGE MIL., Roasters and Grinders of Coffees and Spices, Manufacturerss,. IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER Clark’s Double Extracts of BLUEING, INKS, ETC H. @ CLARK & CO., Propristors, 1403 Douglas Street, Omahs, LEER, FRIBED & CO. WEIOLES A X.E HARDWARE, 1108 and 1110 Harney ©t., OMAHA, NEB. McMAHON, ABERT & CG3, Wholesale Druggists, | 315 DOUCLAS STREET, = OMAHA, NEB. L. C. HUNTINGTON & SON, DEALERS IN HIDES, FURS, WOOL. PELTS & TALLOW 204 North Sixteenth St., by 3 JOBBE sg‘ e o % o‘rE'Afl NEB. METCALF - OMAHA, NEB. &BRO. ajf/Bro. TERS f.n Mills Supplied With Choice Varieties of Milling Western Trade §Supplied with Oats snd Corn at Lowest Quotations, with prompt shipments, Write for prices, M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS | 1301 and 1203 Farnam St. Cor. I3th OMAHA, NEB. . GATE CITY PLANING MILLS. MANUFACGTURERS OF Carpenter’s Materials, ALSO SASH, DBORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. Firat-class facilities for the Manufacture of all kindes of Mouldings, Painting an} matching o Specialty. addrensall communicati ns to Orders from the country will be promptly executed, A. MOYER, Propieto ESTABLISHED IN 1868, D. H. McDANELD & CO,, HIDES, TALLOW, GR&&E PELTS, WOoOOL AND 204 North 16th St., Masonic Block, bare avenue, Chicago. Main House, 46, 48 and 52 Deas- Refer by permission to Hide and Leather Natlonal Bank, Chicago, “« )

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