Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 17, 1882, Page 4

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4 THE DAILY BEE: FRIDAY NOVEMBER 17 — The Oma_ha Bee. Pablished ever day. The only morning, except Sun. onday morning daily. EXCESSIVE RAILROAD CON- STRUCTION. The enormous amount of miles of railroad constructed during the past fly from a grasshopper every time, and there will be a good deal of angling before the members elected by the alliance are hooked and landed. THE NEWS FROM HOLT. Ignomnious Defeat of the Val- much of your valuable space, I would mention, they have done. But they have given corruption a decisive ex- pulsion, and with such effsct that the Mathews outfit is completely anni- OMAFA COFFEE AND SPIGE MILLS. — nine months in this country is exciting - - entine Brigede in the Ban- hilated. Mathews is so utterly de . ¢ N § £ OBTF.JLMS nfi\a'n/:""r; S 408 wide comment among financial jour-| g are indebted to Chairman Dor- ner County. :;!i:v;l(ml;{'!tl';:“n;l;:i:.t}:: ::s:)th;xir" Roasters and Grinders of Coffees and Spices, Manufacturers o res Months. $3. ; i m Blx Montht. . 5,00 | One Month. ... 1,00| a8, And deservedly so. During|uey of the republican state contral —_— on the atreet they put shisit hands to |M PER]AL BAK' NG POWDER ' THE WEEKLY BEE, published every Wednesday. TERMS POST PATD— One Year $2.00 | Three Months. 50 Bix Month) 1.00 | One Month.... 20 September, 1,668 miles of new road wero added on 71 lines, and the total for the year up to that date amounted to 9,143 miles. At the presout rate January 1st will witness an addition committee, with a list of the legisla- ture-elect, as returned by the chair. man of the: various county committees., According to this list the republicans will control the lower house by & good A Foul Gang of Politioal Valtures Buried Ont of Sight Correspondence of Tun Ban. O Nena Orry, November 16, — their noses and spit as if they were in the presence of a decaying carcass, These are facts that made the dishon- est imbecile Mathews frantically inquire, *‘Have you heard the news from Holt county?” X Clark’s Double Extracts of BLUEING, INKS, ETC. Axericax Nxws Coupaxy, Sole Agents [ {4 ol M o ob T shes : iy + 7 . e for Newsdealoes in the T States. 1n2 0.;(; w?, mn(n nl of ]n;y ons r'.‘:u working mn;unly‘, with & .n-u- ‘Huv: you hesrd the news from The Caribs Teporm on Wanle. H. G, OLARK & (1(\‘, Proprietors, NDF All O 1. | eail meies of rallrond fo out VarioUS Iplus of six votes on joint|Holt.” I understand from Tam Bee|y.y vork Times 1403 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb, b ESPOND I Jon - | ead " s % v ) N 40: ug! cartond INNiTg. V0 News 4. Battorl |~ nrlY, Tt ballot. The list is, however, by|of the 10th inst. that W. D. Mat-| One of the assertions which the ad- matters should be addressed to the Enitor or Tur Brr, BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Busines Letters and Remittances should be ad dressed to Tur Bre PusLisHiNG CoMpPANY OmAHA, Drafts, Checks and Postoffice Orders to be made payable to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props. E. ROSEWATER, Editor. Moxpay's snow is referred to as the first snow storm of the soason. Tt ‘was the second; the first took place on November 7th. Wk have yot to read an item in a democratio papor sinco the lato elec- | 00000 amount of capital that could | years hence. tions which refers to Ben Butlor as “‘that beast,” ‘‘Politics makes strange bed fellows " Tar Bostun Star notes that Senator Hoar tore his political pantaloons on the great spike of the river and harbor bill. Sixty-one other river and harbor statesmen keep him company, Wira only eight counties to hear from P. D, Sturdevant’s majority over Loran Olark is officially reported as something over 2,600. It looks as if the edges of the late cyclone lapped over into Nebraska. Taere isn’t much censolation for the senatorial quintette in the legisla- tive returns o far as they have been received. The Millard mare ought to be ‘‘moratched” at once for the race. She will break before she reaches the quarter stretch. The need of a railroad is measured by ita oapacity to earn a fair interest on iw cost. Thero is no question that many of the roads constrnoted last yonr and this are not complying with that condition, Many were inaugura- ted simply to pour profits into tho coffers of construction rings, They have been loaded down wivh fixed charges out of all pmsomnn to the onpital actually invested in them, while the evidences of indebtednees created have been made the instruments ot unscrupulous rpeculation, Our ex- changes aro flooded with securities that are far from secure and an have found profitable employment in ordinary business has boen wasted in the whirlpool of stock gambling. This is viewing the case purely from tho side of the investor, From the public standpoint excessive railroad construction is nc less to be feared. Of the thousands of miles of new road which have been added to our railroad system, a very large propor- tion merely parallel lines which are already strainivg themselves to pay interest on their watered stock. Pooling and consolidation must be resorted to to prevent cuts in rates between roads which would otherwise be rivals, The only chance for the public so far as the lowering of tar- iffa is concerned and aside from legis- lation, must come from the increase of profits on the lines. In consequence the unnecessary so-called, competing lines become the greatest obstacle to the public interest and shippers are compelled. to support threg roads no means correct, The classification credits to the republicans all the inde- pondents elected in Nemahacouaty and several members who were nominated by the anti-monopolists and endorsed by ropublicans. As a matter of fact there is no margin for the republicans in the house, nor can they reckon on a straight republican majority on joint ballot, even if a division on strict party lines was possible or probable. LeApiNc democratic politicians are already taking an inventory of the white house for the democratic presi- dent whom they propose to elect two Never count your chickens before they are hatched. Monopoly. Rov. T. DeWitt Talmage says things sometimes in a strong way. The following from his sermon on monopoly will be thought by most people none too strong: I announct as my text this, from Isaish Ixii, 4—‘‘Thy land shall be marrled.” Now, since our republic, oar land is, to be married, it is well to inspect the lovers who court her. I propose to name some of the suitors who are claiming: the hand of this republic. In the firat place thero is a greedy, all- grasping monster who comes as a suitor, seeking the hand of this re- ublic, and that mouster is monopoly. is soepter is made of the iron of the rail track and the fron of telegraphy. He does everything for his own advan- tage and for the robbery of the people. Things have gone on off from bad to worse, until in the threo legislaturea of New York, New Jersey and Penn- sylvania, for the most part monopoly decides everything. If monopoly favors a law it is_passed; if monopoly thews, who publishes The Fiontier at this place, went to the trouble oi making the above inquiry of you by telegraph, and in order that you may be able to enlizhten him a little, I give you all the facts, Hol* county gave M. K. Tarner a majority of twenty-two over E, K. Valentine, Turner, it is well known, was the republican anti monopoly candidate for congress in the Third district, and received his support from a class of republicans who scorned to be bossed by the putrid mass of cor- ruptionists who undertook to trample on the rights of the honest voters of this congressional district. The re- %ublimn- of this county endorsed 'urner,and despised that man of many frauds, Valentine, and his tool, Mat- thews, There are some men whom it it is better not to have on your side, and Matthews, the politician of many cceeds, is one of those. In proof of this proposition I submit the following facta: The last time Valentine competed for the vote of this county he carried it by 180 majority out of a vote of 323, running adead of the state ticket several votes, In those days the poli- tics of this country was carried on FAIRLY AND £QUARELY, no bulldozing, no choking nor sup- pression of opinions, every one was allowed that to which he was entitled —a rightto be heard. But that was not the way in which the rotton baes- wood of the Eikhora valley wanted things done. He was not used to that kind of businets, honesty. He in- stinotly loves fraud. For him the stolen apples aro the sweetest. Val- entino must have the primariesstolen. 80 he hires Mathews, the pilferer, to steal them. Val paid the pricein ad- vance by giving the postcfice to vocates of the existing high ariff in the United States are never weary of affirming and rciterating s that the laborers in the protected industries have been theroby greatly benefited through the permanency of employ- ment (the stagnation of industry from 1873 to 1878 and the strikes any lock- outs of 1882 to the contrary not- withstanding) and through the receipt of extromely nigh wages, by reason of which the iron workers of Pennsyl- vania, according to the Hon, W. D. Kelloy, are enabled and accustomed to adorn the walls of their residences ‘with chromos and finé engrav- ings,” and otherwise to fare sumptu- ously. Heretofore in the absence of any collection of statistics which all interested were willing or constrained to accept as authoritative, the disous- sions which have taken place between the advocates of ‘‘tariff reductions” and ‘‘high protection” is reepect to labor, wages, prices and profits, have been ina great degree unsatisfactory, those on either side who did not want to be convinced being generally strengthened in their preconceived opinions, while others, fairly open to conviction, found themselves utterly confused by a conflict of assertion and inference which did not admit of any complete refutation or verification. The recent publication of the re- sults of the census of 1880 have, how- over, at last, in many departments of domestic industry, placed matters upon a new ana different footing, and given to the public a revelation of positive facts which cannot be here- after either ignored or denied. Thue, in a series of articles on our ‘‘Iron and Steel Industries,” published some weeks since in our columns,it was con clusively demonstrated from an snaly- sis of the census returns that in place of the receipt of exoceptionally high wages by the laborers em- ployed in these highly protected in- dustries the average wage paid them 3 For a pauper corporation which 0ppose law it is rejected. Monop- was only about $1.16 per diem, or ; caa't pay i‘:. :abu, ‘l:; will not pay where two are ample to handle the|oly stands in the railroad depot pnl:f z‘g‘:{l::::ko":;ne::g"::te:::ilgxl;?n;i $345 per annum, a rate about the ? ite upl the Union Pacifi i business, If competition is fore-|ting intoitapocket ina year $200,000,- every citizen of this place. Mathews average paid to the commonest and i i xes the Union I;m ot :uam; (: stalled by purchase as was 000 in excess of all reasonable oharges | was to deliver the county at this last least skilled labor in most parts of the net earning be doing very well, for the first nine months of the year are officially reported as $16,491,783, an increase of $842,957 over the samo period in 1881, Commissioner of Pensions Dudley glving notice to all clerks under his employ that they must work at least six and a half hours a day in the de- partment, Herbert Spencer's allusions to overworked Americans evidently had no application to the pension de- partment, paign, is frightened. Reports are coming in f‘rom various sources that the true inwardness of the election in [ does and the panic 1s upon us, the|Woman and child in the United States the Third district will be thoroughly ventilated for the benefit of Nebraska voters and the next congress, It calls upon 9, Sterline Morton and tha United States grand juty to damnndl the proofs, and raves about counter- charges of fraud and democratic bull- dozing and bravado, If Valentine's $6 a day clerk will keep cool the tho case with the ““Nickle Plate” the caso 18 no diffsrent. Several millions of indebtedness are added to the al- ready existing debts of the corpora- tion and the people are called upon, as usual, to pay the interest in in- creased tarifl, Finally, the excessive construction of rallroads stimulates epeculation, unsettlos values and disturbs the rela- tions of capltal and labor. Oapital 1s turned from safer chauncls, labor is unduly employed temporarily, credit is extravagantly exteuded and the se- cure and orderly operation of finan. for mervice, Monopoly holds in its one hand tho steam power of locomo- tlon, and in the other electricity of swift communication. Monopoly has the republican party in one pocket and the democratic par- ty in the other. Monopoly decides nominations and elections —city elec- tions, state elections, national elec- tions. With bribes it takes the votes of legislators, giving them free passes, giving appointments to needy rela- tives of lucrative positions, employing them as attornoys 1f they are lawyers, carrying their goods at a large per- centage less if they are merchants, and if it finds a case very stubborn as well as very important, puts down be- vented and exposed to serious em. barrassmonts, The reactlon is sure to follow, as it did in 1873, and when it railway magnates are found to have quietly crawled from under, and, hav- ing disposed of their wild-cat eecuri- +ios betore the storm, placidly look down upon the ruin which they brought abou OVERWORKED AMERICANS. Mr. Herbert Spencer, the English philosopher, in his little speeches at proofs will doubtless be forthcoming. | the complimentary dinners given him It may take a littlo timo to put them | iy New York, delivered himselt of in shape for presentation. Statements | two expressions of opinion with re- and affidavits are not secured in a|speot to the American people. The day. 'There are several hundred Ne- | firat is a criticism upon our principal braska farmers whose votes have boen | ]itical weakness, and the second one overridden by barefaced fraud wholj, ypon our business and industrial en- will have something to say on the ergy. He tells us that we are over- question. There are a number of | working ourselves, and that we have other witnesses on the frontier who | doveloped too fast and too far in one aleo desire to be heard for the publio) gxcellent direction—-that of pow- oly. It puts its hand on every bushel of wheat, upon every sack of galt, up- on every ton of coal, and every man, feels the touch of that moneyed des- potism. I rejoice that in twenty-four states of the Union already anti-mc- nopoly leagues have been established, God speed them in the work of liber- ation ! I wish this question might be the question of the next presidential oloction, for between this and that time we can compel the political p: ties to reccgnize it in their platform I nave nothing to say againat capital- ists, A man has the right to make all the money he can make honestly, I have nothing to say against cor- porations as such. Without them no great enterprise would be possible; but what I do say is that the sami principles are to applied to capi- talists and corporations that are ap- plied to the poorest man and the plainest laborer. What is wrong for we 18 wrong for the Vanderbilts and the Goulds and the elevated railway companies of New York and Brook- Iyn, Monopoly in England has benefit. Meantime there s no special | o of application to labor. He says: hurry. A year will yet elapso before | «Eyerywhero I have beon struck the Forty-eighth congress meets, when | with the number of faces which told ground hundreds of thousands of her best poople into semi-starvation and in Ireland has driven multitudinous tenants almost to madness, and in the United States proposes to take the torly - |oitizans of that country hwve peti- a e [ county two or three years ago and the election to his patron. How well the party of the second part fulfilled his part of the contract remains now to be seen, Like the evil one on the moun- tain, he offered to deliver things which he did not possess. He and his tools STOLE THE CAUCUSSES and the convention, but they could not steal the votes of the people. Yes, Mathews, the blackleg, stole the pri- maries, That they actually did. But what was the result? What? The/result was that the people, the suvereign people, rose in their might, and at the ballot-box admints- tered such a scathing rebuke to those would-be traffickers of their rights of country; and, also, that the laborers in theso industries in the United States derive no benefit whatever from the greatly enhanced prices which the exisiting tariff permiis the owners of coal and iron lands and of the iron and steel furnaces and roll- ing mills in this country to charge to the general public as consumers, Similar striking and interesting con- clusions are now deducible from the statistics of the manufactures of twenty of the principal cittes of the United States as set forth in one of “he most recent of the bulletins of the census bureau. In these manufactures, which include all the more especially protected industries, the number of 3 CE————— fore him the hard cash of bribery. I hat if th employes is returned at 948,494, com- o Tar Omaha Kepublican, which was [ cial Institutions is interrupted, pre- |tell you that the overshadowing curse '“m";'. ‘; l:d h: A 0ot the | priging 663,827 men, 224,100 women, e “Valentine's own” In the late cam- of the United States to-day is monop. | Mot abandoned characters they would | 43 60,567 childron. The aggregate bury themselves from the sight of the honest suffragists whom they tried to betray. Now, what does the rotten basswood of the Elkhorn valley think? Has he reason to rejoice over his bar- gain with the rum-suckers? LOOK AT THE FIGURES and see. Oat of a vote of 1,000 or thereabouts for the entire state repub- lican ticket, Valentine got 415 votes. I do not take the umorganized terrl- west of us into account as the tioned for an organization, which is likely to be granted by the next legis- latare, and, besides, that territory figured but little in elections previous to last year, and hence could not bs consistently used in instituting a com- n bstween the vetes of Holt present year; but even if I did take that country into account, the result would be little varied. But to re- turns, Out of a vote of about 1,000 for the state ticket at this fall's elec- tions Val got 416 votes, whereln pre- vious to his purchase of Mathews, the gambler, he (Val) ran ahead of the state ticket. This result ought to make anyone foel joyful, Who ought not to feel satistied with such a largo gain? The vote of this county stood this annual wages paid to the same were $379,384,931, which, assuming 300 working days ia the year, would show a disbursement of $1,261,283 for each day, ana an average of $1.33 per day for each person employed. Se- lecting Philadelphia from the list of the twenty cities as the one which may be fairly regarded as having done the most to impose the high protective tariff system upon the country, the analysis of the census returns affords the following reeult: Number of employes. . Annual aggregate wages. Daily disbursement for 300 . 173,642 ©860,606,287 00 292,021 00 . . 116 It will thus be seen that in thiscen- tre of protection the average wages paid to labor are 17 cents per day less than the general average paid in the twenty selected cities located all over the continent, or, leaving Philadelphia out of the list, the average pald to manufacturing labor rises from $1.33 to 81 37 per day. LER, FRIBD & CO. WA 3O T BN A M 0E HARDWARE, 1108 and 1110 Harney ¢ t., - OMAHA, NEB. McMAHON, ABERT & CO,, Wholesale Druggists, 1815 DOUCLAS STREET, - - OMAHA, NEB. L. C. HUNTINGTON & SON, DEALERS IN HIDES, FURS, WOOL PELTS & TALLOW 204 North Sixteenth 8t, - - OMAHA, NEB. METGALF &BRO. ro. RS : { B M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, 1301 and 1803 Farnam St. Cor. 13th OMAHA, NEB. HIMEBAUGH, MERRIAM & CO, De alers in These figures are hard nuts to crack for that class of people who have been assuring the working men and women of the country that high protection inevitably assures them high wages, With tho prices of com- modities at normal rates, $9 per IVIHA 'TVT3 ‘SEV0 i ‘s the subjoct, if reporta are to b be- |In strong lines of the burdens that lieved, will come before it for settle- |14 to bo borne. T have been struck, | wealth of fifty or sixty millions of | fall as follows: For republican state too, with the large proportion of gray- ment, At that time, if not before, | hyired men,and inquiries have brought some interesting developments may be | out the fact that with you the hair expected. commonly begins to turn some ten S yoars earlier than with us. More- ‘THE report comes from Washington | over, in every circle I have met men that the promotion of Generals Pope who had ltlhcmlal\;lu suffered hon; d McKonsie will make %o rear- |LCryonS collapsss, duo fo a strete o s o business, or named friends who either rangements of the military depart- | killed themselves by overwork or had ments, General Pope desires to re- | been permanently incapaciated or had main whero ho is. There is no division | Yésted long periods in endeavors to for him to command, and in order to ™00 " . 1) i aapply it » new one would have to bo The truth of these propositions wil oreated by reconstruction of tho do-| 2° FO00RRIzed at once. Asa people, partments, as was dono for Schofield we live too fust, Weburn the candles ) 4 when he was first removed from Weat | 2 POth ondaat onoe. Our minds are IERERTAT At ot Bohoflald has o kept at too great a strain, Oarrelax- A STl at fan Franciso ations, so called, are ecarcely relaxa- N ATIR i vt 1otk 'dor 1'\4::) tions at all, Competition is so fierce, Rt atiar 0 s \lice from the the straggle for existence so eager, territory of General Sheridan. Thero that success in most instances can B O davariusct for only be zained by the utmost nervous e aliace la for & uow divis tousion, This is the American style, i P’"fl‘; It oy be considered, | There can be no doubt that it shor- ::’:J:"m ‘:im s m’"my lines will | 9® vur days and diminishes our hap- e st e (o Arcihie yoax But under the conditions of Genersl McKenzle will romain in a0, WA g0 b Gaae ig charge of the distriot of Now Mexico ST G SN MANCANE Dé and will have for his superior ofticer | ) . Gunural Pope, in whose department | M0 t1AVes to busiuess, not ucocssorily e Pe, Nt yoar Gonoral | P04350 We enjov. the servitude, but w" “",;' :‘ X Gonors|Decsuse we must. 1t My Spencer sh:!:'“'l ,illl FONES, \V.:l.l aat AeE8L| oan inform us how we can make s hy- neen Wil come ;f; ‘h‘"‘“ ‘:;; 1: ing without working so hard, he will bed ‘:lx"w w‘::'w:‘.:‘d" it | ¢onfer & favor upon thousands of over- three ¢ three m.,or generals, and probably worked ‘fli‘—_ Pope will succeed Bheridan at Chi- MoKenzie will then stop into | now-a-days and the senatorial fisher- our n prevent osuse we must, not from choice. ANTI-MONOFOLY bait is all the go poople and put it in a few silken wal. lota, Munnlpoly. brazen-faced, iron- fingered, vultured-hearted monopoly, proposes his hand, offers his hand to this republic, Let the millions of the people—north and south, east and west—forbid the banns of that mar- ringe, forbid them at the ballot box, forbid them by great organizitious, forbid them by (Lhe overwhelming sentiment of an outraged nation, for- bid them by the protest of the church of God, forbid them by the prayer to high heaven, that Herod shall not have this Abigail, —_— A Confederate Cruiser in Time of Peace. Now Orleans Picayune, The steamship Scandinavia, Oaptain William A, Miller commanding, of the Auchor line, arrived at her wharf last evening, bead of Jackson sireet, bringing a8 cabin passenger from Niplss Antonio Exposito and 1 in the ntesrage Th Sc erate cruiser Georgis, a tender to the wdinavia was formerly the cenfad- Alsbama. She was purchased by Messre, Henderson Brothers, of Glasgow, proprietors of the Anchor line, who lengthened and put her on the regular Mediterranean line. As » cruisor she made fourteen or fifteen miles an hour, ‘Pho present speed of the Scandinavia is about ten miles an hour, Horsford’s Acld Phosphate in Ines bristy. Dg. 0. 8. ELLIS, Wabash, Ind, says: “‘I prescribed it for a man who had used intoxicants to excess for fifteen years, but during the last two yoars has entirely ufi-uinad. He cago. \ command of Pope's department, where | men aro hesvy purchasers. The leg- . {hinks the Acid Phosphate is of much he will prefer to remain. lelative fish recently elected, know |lbunnfl. to hiw.” tiockot, except OClark, 1,000; for ‘I'ur- ner, 437; for Valentine, 415; tor Munger, 186, Thus you see Val. falls about 500 votes behind the state ticket, and twenty-two votes behind Turner, The county ticket put in the field by the Matthews outfit was also mosy IGNOMINIOUSLY BURIED, B. 8 Gillespie, who received the nomination for member of the legisla- ture at the Matthews rump conven- tion, experienced such a severe chastisement that he, too, is in- gloriouely buried with the vile gang that tried to foist him on the people. When the honest voters of this county Jearned of the villainy perpetrated by the Matthews outfit a1 ho cour ty con- vention, they called a wmass conven- ticn, nominated a county ticket and, although they had but three weeks in which to make a canvaes, yet carried the county by such a sweeping majority that the corrupt ignoramuses that aped control f the county wero entirely bewildersd Both Val and Gillespe wmay well say, “Oh, deliver us from our friends.” Let ue see what the anti-corruptioniste of this county have done. They HAVE WIPED OUT one of the foulest gangs of political valtures that ever cursed a county; they have taught the trafficers in men's suffrages that it is one thing to bargain away the votes of a county, but quite s different thing to deliver the goode; they have elected a senator, M. P. Kwkaid, and a representative, Henry Gordon, who, instead of bein the pliant tool of the corporations, wil go down to Lincoln and help to elect & United States senator, who will be in sympathy with the people—one of m.yvfn' Wyck stripe. These and wany other things, which, if it were week is little enough to enable the laborer in the wanufactories of our large cities to provide himself with food, fuel, clothing, and shelter— more especially if he has others de- pendent on him--and every advance in commodity prices means reduction of wages through diminished pur- chasing power. Since 1879 the ad- vance in prices of commodities has been at least 20 per cent., and there has been no general increase of wages in consequence. Hence the rea- sonable discontent of labor everywhere. Hence the con- tinual strikes and local disturbances. Now, in what way is the laborer to look for relief, with from seven hundred thousand to a million re- cruits to the labor market pouring in aunuallyl Not by denouncing ew- ployers, #ho, in all but exceptional instances, pay the average market price for labor, but rather by denounc- n afld measures which are inuance of which prevents the expansion of the markets for the prod- ucts of our varied industries. Let those desirous of relief and a better state of things ask themselves, Why whould this land, so productive of abundance that we ara -able to con- tribute largely to the food supply of almost all pations, be at the eame time the most coatly of all land to live in] And when they have once fully comprehended what is involved in this asking they will havo wade some pro- gress in determining a solution of the problem. _— MoxteoMEsY, Ala.. November 16,—The | SASH, DGORS, BLINDS, % ‘SONINITLOS Mills Supplied With Choice Varieties of Milling Wheat. Western Trade jSupplied with Oats and Corn at Lowest Quotations, with prompt shipmen Write for prices. PLAINING ~ MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter’'s Materials, ALEO | STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window ] AT IS and Door Frames, Etc. First-class facilitise for the Manufacture of all kinds of Mouldinge, Plale! s aud Speoialty. Orders from the couniry will be promptly ¢ A communications A, MOY. ESTABLISHED IN 1868 D. H. McDANELD & CO,, HIDES, TALLOW, GREASE, PELTS, WWOOL AND FURS, boiler of the steam gioning mill of N, G. MoGehes, twelve miles from this eity ex- ploded yesterday, instantly killing three not that I have already taken up too negro men . 204 North 16th St,, Masonic Block, Main House, 46, 48 and 52 Dear- born avenue, Chicago. Refor by permission to Hide and Leather Natioual Bank, Chicago,

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