Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 14, 1882, Page 2

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2 . THE DAILY BEE: FRIDAY, JULY 14 18+2. — — OCCIDENTAL JOTTINGS OALIFORNIA A large fruit cannery has been estab- lished at Santa Clara, The corner.stone of the new military pavillion at Sacramento was Iaid by the Masonic fraternity on July 4th. Tt was Iately discovered that an old tramp in Humboldt county carried in the lining of his vest certificates of bank de- posits amounting to nearly $8,000, Nineteen of the crew «f the burned steamer Rodgers are now in the hospital at Mare island, recovering from the priva- tions and disease incident to their arduous cruise, A Chinaman was caught in the act of rohbing . K. Reeve'sflame at Happy Oamp the_other night, and placed in the lock-up. In the v.wvninf he w.s found dead, with a bullet hole throngh his he.d. 1t is supposed that he was murdered by the ~onfederates to prevent the possibility of his tarning informer. The Woodland Democrat thinks that Yolo county will have as much wheat as isn last year, and Major Freeman, w good judge and ! posted, confirra« that opinion, pu'tin: amount at 60,000 to 65,000 fonr, He wiso thinka that the state at large will not fall behind last year in its wheat On Tuesday evening Santingo Ordines, & Chilean miver, sttempted to elimb upe a hoistivg cage while in motion in Rand.l shaft of the Almaden Quicksilver mine, at San Jose, and fell from the 1,500 to the 1,8 0 foot level, being instantly killed. The coroner’s jury found a verdict of accidental death, attributable to his disoleying orders, NEVADA. Chinamen are snspected of selling liquor secretly to the Indians of Tuscarora., A trout weighing thirty pounds was safely landed at Lake Bigler recently. A largo cionamon bear was rocently seen near Lake Bigler by two botanists, Dr. George Alchison, an old and re- spected resident of the Comstock, died on the Truckee Meadows, of cancer, on the 6th. The coinage at the Carson Mint during the month ot June is as follows: Double englen, 856,420; standard dollars, £76,000; total 131,420, Win, Chant, a carpenter at Reno, put on 3,100 luths in one day recently with five nails to each lath, and considers that a pretty good day’s work. The Reno (Gazette says & man caught a wixteen pound trout at Pyramid Liuke, few vays ago. Inside the trout was a four pound sucker, and in the sucker was a half-pound chu » Lo the chub was noth- ing but worms, 1ckee Republican says: In the hood of 60,0 0 cords of railwood be deliyered on the track be- " Verdi and the Summit the con weason, This will put about $170,000 cireulation here, William F. Grant, a young man receat- ly married, whilo ascending the puuip- shaft of & mine at Virginia, fell from the cago and_was cruhed ngalost the wall. plato. He was carried home in a mangled condition and died 1 a few hours, 4 OREGON. “The Oregon state fair opens A\lmnln{, “Seplember 18th, and continues ono weel The annual address: will be delivered by Hon, John Burnett, and the oration by Hon, J. W, Watts. Governor Thayer pardoned T. W. An- drews, convicted last Docember of arson and sentenced to fifteen years’ imprison- | the taws have beon ovaded, and the away. We hear of thousands on the road to Wood River packing their blankets and begging their way. Better keep out, A man named White went into a saloon at Hailey and bared his breast, defied any one to hit him hard enough to knock him over, James Lowery stepp-d forward and struck White a terrible blow, lmncllns him into & heap on the floor. White die almost instantly and Lowery gave himself up. At the recent term of the district court, held at Challis, Robt, Ireland and L. P. Walker, for the murder of Hugh Kenna, at Bay Horse, on the second day of August last, wore sentenced to fifteer years hard Jabor in the penitentiary, They may still be granted a new trial by the supreme court, when it is p cted” they will stand a good chaace of being set at liberty, The fact appeared plain, judging from part of the evidence, that the prisoners were act. ing upon the defensive when the alleged crome was committed, although the jury tnought otherwi-e, . UTAH. The Salt Lake Tribune has established a branch office in New York City. Utah will be well represented at the Denver exposition Applic tion has b made at Commissiomer Clayton's offic Salt Lake, for space for one solid blo ore weighing about one and a half tons, Chinamen gardeners are fast supplant. ing the Mormon cultivators of tr and are growing wealthy off their little gar- dens, They report their buriness increas- ing eviry year, of Making a Rais John Hayes, Credit P, O., says that for nine months he conld not raise his hand to his head through lameness in the shoul. der, but by the use of THOMAS' ELECTRIC 011 he was entirely cured. jullo-dlw THE PUBLIC LAND. Those Fraudulent Entriea, and the Miserable Laws That Can't Prevent Them. The instructions given to ex-Gov. Marshall, of Minnesota, by the com- missioner of the general land office, in reference to the proposed investi- gation into the affairs of certain land offices in the northweet, are supposed to apply specifically to frauds in en- tering lands under existing pre-smp- tion laws. It is known that these frauds exist to a greater or lesser ex- tent in cvery land district, although the officers may not be directly re sponsible. They are said to exist toa considerable extent in the St. Cloud district, The laws seem to have been complicd with, and the officers duly and pioperly allow the entrics to be made, Yot it is found that the laws, to'all intents and purposes, have been evaded, and thousands of acres are onzered yearly with scarcely any good ovidence of improvement upon the lands. The object of the investiga- tions is to discover the extent to which manner in which it is done. After the investigations haye been com- pleted some method will be recom- mended for preventing the frauds in the future. Under the preseut sys- tem 1t is thought impossible to pre- vent the FRAUDS BEING COMMITTED, 1 have not ;much sympathy with the men who paid the money, and a great deal of sympathy with the uses the other man put it to, He established horse relays to bring news from the Mexican war to the American people. He was one of the firat patrons of tho telegraph and had his own line to bring the ship news First of all things, he considered the desire of the people to hear the news, and put out his money to bring it to them, believing that they would pay him back, and without that example it is quite probable that our newspa- pers to-day would be heavy compila- tions of scissors, paste and sermon, in- stead of flashing in our taces the news of this morning or. last night from any quarter of the earth, THE TELEGRAPH itaelf owes vastly to that press enter- prise which not only set the spirit of rapid intelligence, but compelled wide awake men to be as prompt as the press in sending their advices. Hence the Atlantic cable was laid at last as much from observation of the news- papers as of the improvewent in tele- graphy. In the year 1838 the New York Sun waa sold to Moses Y. Beach for £48,- 000, of which only 830,000 went for the newapaper pr.per, and it circula- tion was then said to be 34,000 copies alday. This sum of money would now be a very moderate income for a New York daly paper, though there are papers here which do not make any- thing. This paper, the Sun, was the founder of the penny prese, and it be- gan in 1833, Mr. Benjamin Day, who started it, had as a boarder in his house Wm. M. Swain, the founder and creator of the Public Ledger, at Philadelphia, a very profitable advertising sheet. But the cheap press has never had much moral weight in the United States, because it does not fulfill the condi- tions demanded by an intelligent pub- lic of complete and thorough informa- tion, The news is not only a fact, but the explanation of a fact; not merely an etching, but a perspective. These same cheap newspapers, when they come to their Sunday editions, which are often of double size, expand and satisfy to a degree unknown in their daily issues, The Sun never had much influence on public affairs till it took the destructive line, when it hurt the feelings of a good many people and spluttered up considerably, yet even then failed to be a power in the truer sense. Journals which are constantly hammering on one thing with a petty pertinacity, and that thing mere personality, are often sus- pected to be seeking their own im- portance rather than the pablic bene- it. HORACE GREELEY filled a great place in the American nation because he was a growth from modest, honest germs. A native of the United States, in love with its genius, passionately de- voted to the country and to right ment, 1t was shown that Andrews’ part- Ter was the perpetrator, and that Andrews at the worat, was only accessory to the act. A woman recently entered a saloon at Portland, at midnight and asked for some Whisky. She then removed some banda- ges f.0m her throat, showin several very severe cuts on her neck, They were the “work of jealous husband, Nocharge was made against him, The Enst Side Narrow Guage roand has opened for traffic an extension of twenty miles w“t}t:" lan: Br:;iwnl-:'llhi to %i’"xl"fit tapping the best ugricultural mectio i Bootoh ‘sompad Erade, v, mpde by the, pleted by Villard's organization. £ the Northern Pacific railroad | should be brought sgainst them and e e Shont Augast 1t, bo combl £ | they should be punished to the utmost 1, on or about A :’x}‘d in operation to fiuuk TIsland, 520 miles enst of Portland, from which poiut their new steamer, now being constructed, will ran thirty-four miles further e a continuous transportation lins of Thompson river—a distance of 560 miles from Portland, From the terminus of the line to Missoula there is an_excellent road. "'he distance is only 100 miles, while from Butts, the terminus of the Utah and Northern to Missoula, the distance iz 130 miles, WASHINGTON. Soth McPhee, o well known logger and hoss « f a camp, fell from the boom, near Port Blakely on the 34, and was drowned. The recent act of Heemmrf Teller, in consolidating Indian agencies in Western Washington, was & startling rurpriso to many in the territory, The agencies aro now reduced to two, Edwin 1ells being appointed to the charge of the Skokomish, Makah, Port Madison, Lumni, Swmni- mish, Tulalip, Puyallup, Nesqually and Chehalis Imlun‘. and Oliver K. Wi od ap- pointed to the charge of the Neah Bay, Quinalt und other coast Indians. There are now upon the Skagit river about twenty logging camps, which are putting into the river from one million to one million and & half feet of logs per month, and new ocamps are constantly being added as trade and settlement pro- rosses up the river, There is an immense gody of tiber on this stream, nwuch of which is still quite easy of # ARIZONA, In & short timo the Atlantic & Pacific will be completed to & poiut sixty-fiva miles north of Prescott. There is a good wagon road from Prescott to 1his junction with the rai'road, but this wi'l be insuffi- cient for the great traffis that will flow in that channel, A railroad is o necomity, and the Prescott Courler is urging its im. mediate construction, Phanix enjoyed a fiesta, which began June 30 and, insted until after the Fourth, The principal attractions on the grounds were saloons, two or three ice cream and fruit stands and shooting galleries, and an area dovoted t ganbliug in overy variety, in which the &um proudly declared, ““fully twenty gawes are runuing,” The Tucson Star's Aravica special says: A few days since & band of Mexican reve- nue officers crossed the line fifteen miles into this territory iu_alleged Jluuult of contraband goods. They raides ranch near Aravica, killing tue 1ancl ond pillaged his property., They tl re- turned to Sonora, alter committing o number of depredations, It 18 believed that while the raid was conducted by reve. cess, nu - fficers, the real object of the iuvasios was pillage. NEW MEXI0O. The Dor ¢ on the Gila for §125,000. change predicts that before next ; -pfi: ihiree yeap old stoers in New Mexi. command $50 €0 wi ast, makivg | @nd result in fewer traudulent entries from | in the future. Portland £ within six miles of the mouth | would oppose any effort to repeal tho With no means of investigating each case the officers must of necessity acoopt the ouths of persona in proving up their entries, In discussing this subject to-day, Gen, Strait, of Min- nesota, expressed the view that too much blame ought not to attach to the officers of the land district. With no authority and means to go hundreds of miles, as they might have to do in some cases, to see for themselves, they are forced to take the oaths of per- sons in proying thetr entrigy that, thay these parties commit perjury, suits limit of the law regarding that oftense. This might oxerta heathful influence, Gen, Strait says he re-emption laws, He says these ann have done a great deal toward building up the western country. They have preyented the lands from being absorbed in large tracts by east- ern capitalists and speculators, and enabled the people who really desire to settle in the west to enter lands in such tracts as they can afford. At the same time Gen, Strait thinks the law ought to be amended in such a way as to prevent the frauds which are known to exist, by aved and Restored. Suersyviiee, Ind, May 25, 1881, H. H. Wanner & Co.: Sirs—After suffering for nine years from chronic kidney disease and given up to die by the doctors, I was saved and restored to health by the use of your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. jullOdlw SrepneN D, LupLow. 0Old sennett—The King of News. To Bennett, the elder, more than to all the other newspapers of America is duc the example of sponding his mon- ey for distant and valuable informa- tion. His work in this respect has beon imitated, but never excelled. Mr. Bryant was too narrow and penu- each, 14 the Rio Grande valley alfalfa is flour- ricus & man to spend his money for iuformation, and the Eyening Post, during his long oxpcrience, probably never made a *‘ocat,” as it is called, He revenged himself on the other man's enterprise by hypocritioal com- ments on the error of his ways and the badnnss of his character, but the annual i.come of the paper founded by Bennett is worth more than the entire Evening Post, with its princi- ples included. Not only the American, but the English newspapors learned from Ben- nett, and, while they reviled his char- aoter, must per-force follow 1 his lu- minous path, BLACKMAIL, All sorts of cfforts were made (o explaiz how Bennett obtained money enough to have anything to spend for news Some said that he blackmailed people, and the Helen Jewett murder brothers have sold a wine | was made to account for his long sub- sequent fortune. I can conceive of how even a little blackmail might be turned to a great good use in the hands of a desperate man with some finely, and the first crop hus been | large ultimate intention, ishing cut in many localities. be cut before October 1st, Rev, Methodist church at Santa Fe, Seven crops will H, M, Hackuey, pastor of the A8 re- A person, for instance, bound to a certain destination, might commiv a robbery on the road to carry him Hined on secount of poor health ' aud will | there; and, bad as the robbery would accept an appointment in Missouri. New strength of 1,500 men. bas just been organized coln county, IDAHO, “Th o1 rsons engaged in ey e e duing & thriving businoss. a thriving Tl‘:.h_‘Waod River News says: n any of business; and they seem to Btay | defeud sus be, the accomplishment of his errand Mexico now has about twenty or | ight he so beneficent as almost to ganized wmilitary companies, with a total A new compiny at Roswell, Lin- vindicate the meaner deed, It was alleged that a number of would-be respectable merchants were in the habit of going to the slum where Helen Jowett was an inmate, and that keep- | these persons, rather than have their pames published, presented Bennett with money. Ido net undertake to & thing if it weretrue,but principlea for it, he was willing to be the disciple of any man wise and bright enough to go onward to those ends. He discovered that man in Henry Clay, and, without hope of personal reward or social considera- tion from Mr. Clay, he made the Tribune his representative in New York state, sustained Clay through evil and through good report, and when Gen. Taylor was nominated, in 1848, over the head of Clay, Grecloy was but half satisfed. , ‘The ThaPigie 115 “as ot then craving office; he loved to serve Mr. Clay as Jacob served for Rachel or Rachel waited for Jacob. But Mr, Olay died, and for twenty years there was no leader of affairs who filled his standard in Greeley's meas- ure, and with an expanding acquaint- ance, with a sense of being overlooked by the mere dividers of patronage, and with a ripening consciousness of his own powers, Greeley kicked over his editorial stool and stepped upon the political stump, and there was an im- mediate tragedy. That misstep old Bennett never made, and his death, lonely and cold as it was, was consistent with his wholo life, The huge orb he had planted in the heavens continued to shino after ho was gone, and after a struggle Greeley’s orb, too, was saved from extinotion, but it was long before it recovered the beaten track and typi- fied the original institution, — A Gevera Stampede. Never was such a rush made for any Drug store as is now at O, F. Goodman’s; for o Trial Bottlo of Dr. King’s New Dis: Consumption, Coughs and covery for persons afflioted with Asthma, Jolds, Al Bronchitis, any affection of the Throat and Lungs, can get Trial Bottle of this greatremedy free, by calling at above named Drug Store M IEN 3N Murray Iron Works, Burlington lowa. Semi Portable Engines, FOR CIEAMERIES, PARM MILLS, Printinx Offices, Ete,, A Specialty, The Largest Tron Working Establish. ment in the State. MANUFACTURERS ol; Steam Engines, AND GENERAL MACHINERY. The Howard Automatic Uut:flfi Steam Engine, Send for Oirculars THE KENDALL PLAITING MAGHINE! DRESS-WAKERS' COMPANION, 1t plaits rom 1--30f & b lnch to width {n the conrsest felts or fineat sl ke 1t does sl kinds and styles of y laiting n use No lady that doce ber own dress-waki afford 0 do_ without one—sas nlco plai uever out of fabion, if sceu 1§ sclls iteoll, Machines, Cleculars oF Agent's terms sddresy CONGAR & 00,, its Adaws St, Chicaro mes-lm {oarseness, Severe Coughs, or |« Is the old Favorite and PRINCIFALLTNE | —FOR— CHICAGO, PEORIA, ST. LOUIS, MILWAUKEE. DETROIT, NIAGARA FALLS, NEW YORK,BOSTON, And all Poiuf t and®outh-East. THE “OMPRISES Nearly 4,000 miles. Solid Smooth Steel Tracke All connections are made in UNION DEPOTS t has_a National Reputation as belng the reat Through Car Line, and is universally conceded to be the FINEST EQUIPPED Rall road 1 the world for all clasacs of travel. Try it and you will find traveling a lnxury instead of a discomfort. Through Tickets via this Celebrated Line for sale at all offices in the West. All information about Rates o Pare, Sleeping ar Acocmodations, Titme Tablos, &c., will be choertully glven by applyining to T.J. PO 9 Vice-Vres't & Gon. Manager, Chicago \ PERCIVAL LOWELL, Gon, Passenser Agt. Chicago, W. J. DAVENPORT, Gen. Agent, Conncil Blufts, H. P. DUELL, Ticket ,Agt. omaha morn-od 1y JOUN BrABLER, AROMR BOHANE, . President. Vico Prea't W. 8, Duisrinn, Bec. and Trons, THE NEBRASKA MANUFAGTURING CO Lincoln, Neb. MANUFACTURERS OF Qorn Planters, marrows, Farm Rollers, Bulk Hay Rakes, Bucket Elavating Wind m & , Wo aro propared ta do Job work and maguf tnring for other partios. Addren all ordery NEBRASKA MA NUFACTURING €0, . Nae 0STETTERy GELEBRATED It 18 the concurrent teatimony ofthe public and themedicinal pro‘ertion that Hostecter's Stom. ach Bittersi & medicine v hich — ch oves re speedly folt, thorough and benign. Beride re fyingliver disorder, v Invigorates thefeoble, c bladder rompiaints, and has- 06 cf those 1ceovering from Moreover, it iy the grand enfeebling diserses specifl: for fover and aguo, For sale by all drugyists and dealors gencrally jltoal GRAY’S BPECIFIC MEDICINE TRADE MARK The Great €713 DB MARK Englishrem- edy. Anun- —<\ failing cure /’ \ for Seminal Wenkness, S permator- rhea, Impot- ency, and all X Discasesthat < follow w8 a BEFURE TAKING, sequonce of AFTER TAK| {-Abuse; es Loss of Memory, Universal L e, Pain in the Back, Dimoces of Vision, Pro mature 01d Age, and many other Diseased that lead to Tnsanity ‘or Consumption and o Proma- ture Grave, & Full particulars In our pamoklet, which wo desire to send free Lv mall to every one, 47 The Specifl ¢ Medicine 1a sold by all druggiste at 81 per package, or 6 packsges for €5, or will be sent freo by mall on rect ptot the monoy, by & eddressing ~ THEGRA 4EDICINE OO., Kuffalo, N, Y, oraaler ocTme 60 §YPHILES 1 "o any stage OB 58 Catarrh, Q & EOZEMA, e ol old o5, = Pimplos, lioa § a BOILS, E28 e i d Skin 3 E Disea A Oures When Hot Springs Fuil MavERN, Ax., May 5 1681 Wo have casos (i aut ow bowh who lived at Hot Spri ly vured with 8. 8, § e o R it IF YOU dou, soous snd K WILL CURE YOUR dn?.mm.:- nothiug ! 1 Write for E:nlrulul and copy of little k ‘Mossage the Unfortunate baorine. — 81, will be paid to soy 200, R ward " uaiyes 100 Fottle one particle of Mercury, lodide Fotas anll sizo, §1.00 i |.\7|2.;an|«1) BROS. & 00 GALVANIONIZED IRUN CORNIOES _ - Window Caps, Finials, XX M'T'g, Y 7. sINHOLD 15th 8t., 416, Omaha. Neb: 1t yon suffer from Dyspepsia, use BURDOCA ‘LOOD BITTERS, 1t you are aficted with Ditiousness, use BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS It you are prostrated with sick 11 BURDOCK BLOt che, take ) BITTERS 1t your Bowelsare disordered, regulate them with BURDOCK ELUOD BITTERS. 1t your Blood 1s mpure, purify it with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. 1t you have Indigestion, you will findan anticote in BURDOCK BLOOD BIT1ERS, 1t you are troublod with Spring Complaints, er- adicate them with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. 1t your Liveris torpid, restore it to healthy action with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS It your Liver s atfected, you will find a sure re- storative in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. 1f you have any species of Humor or Pimple, fail not to take BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1f you have any symptoms of Ulcers or Scrofulous Sores, & curative remedy will be found in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. For imparting strength and vitality to the sys. tem, nothing can equal BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. For Nervous and General Debility, tone up the system with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, Price, 81.00 per Bottle; Trial Bottles 10 Cts FOSTER, MILBURN, & Co., Props, BUFFALO, N. Y. Sold at wholosale by Ish & McMahon and C. ¥, @oodnian. 1o 27 cod-me Disease 13 an cffoct, not a cause. Its origin e within; ita manifestations without. tence, to cure the diseage the CAUSE must bo removed, and inno other way can a_cure evcr e effected. ARNER'S IO CURE bt onga i principle. It reali7cs that 95 Per Cent. ofall discases arize from deranged kidneys an liver, nod it strikes at once t the root of the difficulty. The elements of which it is composed act directly upon Inl:lo&'"!h organs, both as a ¥00D aud RESTORKR, and, by placing’ them in a bealthy, conditicn, drive disease lnfi pain from the system. FoF the {nnumerable troub'es caused by un- I‘lheAlthy Kidneys, Liver and Urinary Organs; for the dighre arders of Women; foe, Tomedy QAKE™ B Ware of h.'.{h-:o im- itati d coney E‘ Fu:'i;l;l‘:&mo:’,nl[m!rfl%“m to_be just as good. DJABETES CURE. "2 WARNER & CO mo ochester N. Y. The Great knglish Remedy mNever fails te cure o Nervous Debility, Vi- tal Exhaustion, Emis- sions, Seminal Weak— nesscs, LOST MAN HOOD, and all the [llovil eflccta of youth- Raltul follies and excos- scs, Tt stops perma. nently all weakening, involuntery losscs an 5 iraing tho sy SSRESTOR Rerm. the Inbritable yo o it of thoae o tices, which 'aro so destruetive to mind and body and make Lifo miserable, often leading to insani- ty and death It strengthens the Nervos,Br (memory( Blood, Muscles, Digestivo and Repr tive Orgons, It restores to all the orw tiens their’ formor vigor and vitality, sing life choorful and enjoyable. P hottle, or four times the quantity €10, Sent by express, sceure from obscrvation, to any address, on recelpt of price. No.C. 0. D, sont, except on receipt of ¥1 a8 & guarantoe, Letters ra- Guesting answers must inclose stamp. Dr. Mintie's Dandelion Pills are th 3 best and cheapest dyspepsia and billious cure n tho markct. Sold by all druggists, Price 50 centa, DR, Mivrin's Kivxuy REsspy, NEPRNTICUN, Cures sl kind of Kidney and bladdor complainte, gouorrhea, gloot uud loucorvhea. For ealo vy all dauggista:'¥1 a ottle. ENGLISH MEDICAL INSTITUTE, 718 Olive St., 8t, Louis, Mo, For Saloin Owsha by C. F. GOODMAN, Jan26-1v it or stimulating out ftoxicating, Hop You wiil be cured i€ you use | Hop Bitters g fold by drg Fista. Snd o7 Circutar To Nervous Sutterers THE GREAT EUR_DPEAN REMEDY, Dr. J, B, Simpson's Specific MEIDXCOXINE. aittve cura for Spermatoirhen, Bemine o Il diseeses rosultiag rloty, Lo and diseasce » Specific, §1.00 per packsge, oF &ix pack: agos {0F 8060, Address sl orders (0 a0 8, 5IMSON MEDICINE €0, fn §t. Buffalo, N. Y. Sold in Omaha by W.B, MILLARD. ¥. B, JOHNSON MILLARD & 'JOHNSON, Storage, Commission and Wholesale Fruits. 1111 FARNHAM STREET. CONSIGNMENTS COUNTRY PRODUCE SOLICITED Agents for Peck & Baushers Lard, and Wilber Mills Flour! OMAHA, NEB REFERENOES : OMAHA NATIONAL BANK, STEELE. JOHNSON & CO., TOOTLE MAUL & CO. J.J.BROW N & CO WHOLESALE DRY GOODS. NOTEOIW &S, Boots and Shoes. NEB WHOLESALE ORALEER TN DRUGS, PAINTS, OILS. Window and Plate Glass. will find it to thelr ad« £37 Anyone contemplating builaing store, bank, or any other Sna vantage to corres ond with us before purchasing their Plate Glass, C. F, GOODMAN, OMAHA i NEB F.C. MORG-ATIV, WHOLESALE GROCER, 1213 Farnham 8t.. Omaha, Neb FOSTER &CRAY. —WHOLESALE— LUMBER, COAL & LIME, On River Bank, Bet. Farnham and Douglas Sts., OVE AL - - = oo TRTIEDES. ~——DEALERS IN HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK GO. Fire and Burglar Proo AT S LOOCKS, &O. 1020 Farnham Street, ONMIATETA, - - - NIER. STEELE, SJHNSON & C0., WHOLESALE GROCERS AND JOBBERS IN Fiour, Salt, Sugars, Canned Coocds, and All Grocers’ Supplies. A Full Line of the Best Brands of CIGARS AND MANUFACTURED TOBACGO, Agents for BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER (0. HENRY LEHMANN, WINDOW SHADES EASTERN PRIGES DUPLICATED. 1118 FARNAM S8T. - - OMAHA J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN e T IR R JER R, Lath, S8hingles, Pickets, SASH, !, BLINDS, MOLDINGS, LIME, CEMENT PLASTERIR, ETO. SWSTATE AGENL FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANYY Near Union Pacific Devof, - OMAHRA NR R DOTEBLE AP SINGLE &COTING |IPOWER AND HAND B O N ETSS | 8team Pumps, Engine Trimmings, MININGJ MACHINERY,§ BELTING, HOSE, BEASS AND TRON FITTINGE B ¥ PACKING, AT \YHOLESALE AND REVAIL, PIPE, OTRA ¢ HALLADAY WIND-MILLS CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS ¥. Goodmian, J.'W. Ball, 3. K. s, aod all druggleteevery where. o 8 daw Cor. Faroam and 10th Streets Cmaha, Neb, - } ‘T v

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