Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 20, 1882, Page 4

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! e P VR mm LR R8s R R THE DAILY BEE-WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 20 | THE SPEAKERSHIP. branch of the national legislature at The o maha Bee' The legislature will convene on the ltho faneral of Congressman Orth. —_— ———e morning, except, San nily. Published eve ay. The only Monday moming TERMS BY MAIL— One Year....210 00 | Three Mont 8ix Months., 5.00 | One Month. ¢HE WEEKLY BE! Waineeday. TERMS POST PATD— ANERICAN NEws COMPANY, or Newsdealers in the United or Tur Br BUSIN LETTERS~AIl Busines Letters an i s shonld be ad dressed to Trr Fxe PUnLIssiNG COMPANY OMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Postoffice Orders to be made payable to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor. [ HAxD over another tally sheet, Four new candidates for United States seaator have registered for the race, Brek, ¢f Kentucky, takes a deep interest jn the welfare of his con- stituente, digtjilers of pure Kentucky bourhon, SHomoe of our goun,llmen have “iawgonn @ Wonderful clango of o Poeec S sestion heart Zon the cheap & 9w within the past four or five days. Pt Monm“,’ of Geand Island, proposes a conundrum. How Wood Ont Ti!" ner do for United States aenator? He Wood Cut all,long haired fellows that hanker after land offices very short. AxoTHER blg strike is threatened at Pittaburg among the iron workers. An attempt to make a further reduction in the wages of the mill hands {s lia- ble to produce a cotlision jhetween elpifil‘l and labor. Hammoxp, of Georgia, is said to be & promising dark horse for the speak- ership, Mr. Hammond will be re- membered as the gontleman who dis- covered that Si Alexander was trying very hard to imltate Peter Schwenck's handwriting on that bogus cuusus certificate. Tae 8t. Louis Poat Dispatch dis- oredits the etory mow ourrent in Washington that sne of the judges of the supremo court has recsutly lost heavily at the common game of faro. The P.-1). it of the opinion that su. preme jadges can satiify their tuclina- tlons for hazardous games by gotling 5, published every $2.00 | Three Months, 10 | sibility. 1.00 | One Month.... 20 2d of Jannary and the first business of importance will bo the eleotion of speaker. Time honored usage has given the speaker the prerogative to appolut the committees of the house and inaemush oas the shape legislation tho speakerahip is a position of great influence and respon- A competent, upright snd impartial speaker can do the state groat sorvico. A jobber, trickster and tool of monopolies would be a comimittees | dangerous man in such a place. There 18 a dieposition among lend anti-monepolists to take the appoiat- ment of committees from the spoaker and leave thuir organization to the house as is customary in the senalo, Wo doubt the propricty of svch a course There are one hundred members in the hoane. Such a largo body is more unwieldly than the senate snd the assignment of members to their respec- tive committees would become more diflicnlt, It would bo more desirable that the man chosen to preside over ? | railronds have not made money faster than | STUBEORN FACTS. ‘W have not heard of any railroad man makiofh money any faster on stock divi- dends @han is vsual for furniture men, wrocersi bavkers, farmers and manofac tarers to make or honestly expect to make vestments in their legitimate urnal, I ed & leather medal gislnture, He is the only man in th nited States that would have the audscity to utter such a barefaced lie, Where has this man lived during the past fiftoen years? Has he heen renrch ter pole or was he one of companfons in Central Africa? nobody in Ameriaa cou'd te so st gnorant as to acsert that the owners of by the next far rocers and furniturs de the railroad managers have any inflnence the course of the next le tuey had better train that pondr leot to make his sppeals on their behall i lausible,~ OManA BEE, Billingegate is not argament or ovi- dence. 1The Journal eard that it had not heard of any railroad making money any faster on his ok divi- dends than 1s aaual, ete. If Tar Bee knowa of such a man, trot him out, and show us how much per cent he has made. The ‘‘bare- taced liax” is usually the fellow who pumps wind and breaks ont iuto black- guardism when the facts are at war the house should be in full accord with the mejority of the body on all vital issues, and above all things that he should be a man whose integrity is above suspicion, and whose loyalty to the principles of anti-monopoly cannot be assailed. Among the one hundred members of vhe loglslature such » man can doubrr2st be fornd. It will not do, howover, to mn.kan mistake in the cholca x}: speaker, trust to the profcssions nfi\i promires of any man whose political record Is tainted or whose asseciations leave room for doubt es to his fidelity. There are already a number of candi- dates in the field for the speakership. All of them claim to be in earnest sympathy with thomeasures advocated by anti-monopclists, But we know)| that some of these candidates sre ‘in olose communion with the political managers of the railroads sed éxpect active support from them, ‘Uan such double-dealing tricksters be trusted? Are thoy likely to fuifill ti. pledges they make to anti-monopoiists when thay depend for their succezs upon the support ot railzond roent In order to make sure of the elec- tlon of a man of their choice, che po- litical attorneys of the railroads and their editorlal saesocia‘er, propose to clamor fora cus of republicans to nominate a speaker, whom cvery re- publican member should be in honor boand to support. Ia other words it “‘pointer Tury don’t do things by halves down south. A bill has just been re- ceived by the sergeant-at-arms of tho United States sonate from the Atlanta undertaker who burled Senator Bon Hill for the modest sum of 3,100, KEight hundred dollars for the casket and the r eet for attondance. That undertaker ought to move weet, U —— Denver {s going into a fevor of excitement over the coming of Nils- son. An ovation is being errangea by the Swedish population which numbers over one thousand. The Swedish coneul will mest Mme, Nils- son with a carriage and six and oe- cort her in state to her hotel. She is expected to remain there three days and by the time she leaves they will be relieved of considerable of their hard cash in exchange for their enthusiasm. Avrnouau Nebraska is in every re- spect the equal of Kausas in point of productiveness and natural resources she has not kept pace with Kansas in growth, In 1880 Kansas had nearly one million population while Nebras- ka had only 452,000, Daring the past two years Kansas has added fully 200,000 to her population while Ne- braska has scarcely added half that number, The primary cause of the marvelous growth of Kansas was political, but since the war her growth s mainly due to effective and systematic advertising,. Kansas has never lost an opportunity to advertise her resourcos, She has expended vast sums of money for publishing to the world her advantages of soil and cli- mate, while Nebrasks has de- pended almost entirely upon the ad- vertising she has received through the land grant railroads. The coming legis- lature should devise some well ma- tured plan for encouraging emligration to this state, We do not want » bombastic bureau that will squan- der the entire immigration fuud on gas begs or wind bags, either of the Pearman or Noteware pattern. The most effoctive, and by all odds the simplest, machinery for diffueing information about Nebraska is the printing and circulating of documents gotten up under official authority of the state, Such documents, printed io different laoguages, should be placed at the disposal of the scoretary of state, with the necessary funds to pay for postage. Older states be. than Nebrasks are in the field doing the sawe thing, as may be seen in the followlng item, which appears in the Chicago Tribune of a late date; *‘Michigan is making strenvous and, it seems, very successful efforts, {0 se- cure & large immigration, The de- mand _for the alluring documents is proposed to exact a pledge fromevery republican member of the house that he will support for speaker any man that receives a majority of the votes of a caucusjmade up of republican members of the house. Could any man who earnestly dosires to legislate against existing abuses by railroads enter such & oaucus and by making such a pledgo bind himself to support a man for speaker who would organize the committoes to defeat every anti-mo- nopoly meisare! | Could any member of tho legislature who is pledged to favor anti-monopoly legislation go back home wmong his constituents and juetify his vote for a monocpoly speaker? 5 What right has any honorable man to skulk behind the party caucus to shirk a rerponsibility and violate a sacred trost? Is there any othor honorablo courae left for an honest and sincere antl-monopolist, whatev- er his political faith may be, than to record his vote for the man cf his cholce in the open house and let his record attest his fidelity to principle and his devotion to the material wolfare of the state. Douglas county delegation wants to confer a blessing on this community, let him put a bill through the legislature that will rid this city of seven or eight shysters that pretend to dispenso jus. tice under authority of law as justices of the peace. KEvery busine:s man of Omaha Is in favor of re. ducing the number of justices in this city to three or four, Let those judges be elected by the clty at large, give them a fixed salary, and let the costs go to the city or county, and we shall have men upon the justices’ bench who can be trusted and whose decislons are respected. As it is, this city is oursed with a set of ‘‘cost mills" where men are robbed In the name of justice and justice is worse than a mockery. From these legalized robberies there can be no rellef until the legislature enacts & law that will abolish the worse than useless justices’ courts, pe————— Owp Simon Cameron, who has been hobnobbing with the precedent during the last fow days, with the view of bringing about harmony in Pennsyl. vania, has come to the conclusion that “my son Donald"” can be re- elected 1o the senate if he desires to There is no doubt that “my son Donald” desires very much to be his own succeasor, but wo doubt whether cld Bimon can harmonize thivgs at Washivgton that will reconcile his constituents to send him back for another term, Mg Pavpock has a natlona repu- iseued by the state fndicates that a|tation as a eulogtet of dead statesmon, great -many families who expoct to|aud Mr, Saunders is becoming famous move in the spring are reading up the | as & funeral escort. He has just been Te will iiak 83 ey 1y i 'rahm.l,"eiun the sofitinent) In mou,'“ with his propositions, Lot us hoar the name of one man who has made more money on stock Investments by drawing dividends on the same than the furniture dealer, grocer, farmer, broader and farther reaching purposes than those partly realized by Gonld in the Southwest—with nothing less than the swallowing up of »ll roads north- west of Chlcago, to be reduced to mere feeders to his great trans-conti- nental trunk line of the fature. It is needless to say that if Mr. Vander- bilt has any viewe of this chéllacter it would bs extremely unwice for him to attempt to carry them into execution, It was a step of doubtiul prudence for him to show hia hand by openly assc cinting himself with the directory of tho Omaha road and thus advertisi his control of the Chieago & No: t! western tnilroad aud ita subord nate lines, and his gradual advance upon the whole road system of the Northwest, There is already i wilespread popu r prejudics ag be railrond oli- . | earchics whoso fiat fixes the prices of all commodities and the fate of citi and towna throughout the o Tant prejudice, when nrc manifest 1wjastice or oppression moro dangerous than the match of a hostile army to the s'ability of rail road propetty. Bat when tha ollgar. chy shall take the atill more ¢ flenive form of an autocracy, ard all the odious despotlera of railroad corpora- tions is coucentrated in the person of one man; the dauger of a popular rovolution against the railroads will he immensely aggrivated. The exten. elon of the Vanderbilt system into thia region I8 not, then, likely to he welcomod at the outset as an auspi- cious omen, banker, etc., make or reasonably ex- pect to make on the same amoun! vested in their partioular line of busi. nees. Bandying opithets in arguments on political economy 18 the refuge of charlatans and foals,~-Lincoln Jour- nal How would Leland Stanford do for sneman? He started out to build with an investiont bf #1800 as his share, To-day he is quoted as worth at least [thirty-six millions, Leland Stanford is not a Wall street gambler, and he s not known to have inherited a fortune from any rich relative. His Uncle Sam gave him a start with a subsidy of twelve million acres of land and about $48,000 per mile for building a road from Sac- ramento to Promontory Point. From that enterprise Loland Stanford and six or seven partners cleared enough dividends to build the South- ern Pacific railroad from San Fran- ciseo toZNew Ocleans, and their com- bined capital which seventeen years ago was leas than $80,000 now amounta to one hundred and eigh'y miliions or double the amount of the assessed valuation of the whole state of Ne- braska with all the land and towns, villages, cities, railroads aad all tho products and chattels in it, This California eyndicate virtually owns tho whole Pacific coust, znd yet tho railroad organist down at Lincoln has never hoard of any railroad man making money faster than is usual for farmers, grocors and furnituro men in their business ‘What impudence to challonge Tz Ber to name one man that had made more money in railroadlng than is usually made by farmere, merchants and manutacturers? When men make such broad assertions in the face of notorious facts known to every man, woman and child that roads they brand themselves as common liars, Upon such people kncck-down argu- ments have no more effoct than a dish of cold water on a vicious dog. Our Val's influence is on the wane, The boom for making the commis- sioner of agriculture a secretary and oabinet officer appears to have died out, The Gobe- Democrat gives as a reason, that tiie bureau has been send- ing out some thousands of dollars worth of seeds which refuse to sprout, That paper inclines to the opinion the bureau gets along very well as now constituted. The Uov- ernment can teach the farmers how to farm, and can run a seed store and sorghum plantation just as well with a commissioner in charge of this busi- ness as with a cabinet cflicer, THE new deal whereby Vanderbilt and his Northwestern road have swal- lowed up the Omaha and St, Paul is not regarded with much favor at the northern terminus of the latter road, The 8t, Paul Pioneer Press makes the following comments: 8o far as the extinction of the Oma- ha as an independent system is con. cerned, nothing but regret can be felt either in 8t, Paul or Minneapolis, * * * * * Whether the consolidation of the Northwestorn and Omaha roads, un- der the rule of Vanderbilt, will work well or ill for this region depends, of course, wholly on the polioy which shall be pursued. The general polioy which has been adopted by Mr, Van- derbilt on the trunk lines controlled by him, the exaction of the highest rates he can obtain, without much re- gard to public opinion of his course, 18 not likely to work well in this part of the country—where there is an uncomfortable tendency to grangerism on the part of the people and the legielatures, There will be much -})pmheunun, too, that the absorption of the Northwestern and Omaha in the Vanderbilt system is onl toward his swallowing up of lines ex- tending still further west, This ap- prehension is a most natural one, As has been shown] Vanderbilt is follow. ing in the fooisteps of Gould in the o step southwest, and if he follows the course | ¢ in which he has started to its logical conclusion, the Northern Pacific aud Manitoba roads may reasonably dread tho fate of the Missouri Pacific, Kan. sas Pacific and other southwestern roads, aud the northwestern cities have roason to anticipate serious ob- stacles in the path to the accomplish- ment of the destiny that naturally awaits them at the center of an inde- pendent trade empire and powerful railroad system of their own, Mr. land of the wolverines this winter.” |appointed to represent the higher| Vanderbilt has been credited with Se———— For a Woman's Sake. Special Dispateh to the Globe-Democrat, CHARLESTON, 8. 0., December 15, — Last night John Rogers went to see Violotta Deans, in Richmond county, sud found Dancan MoDonald in the patlor talking to her, Both men werg inlove with her and-hed " /ooty Bpd So%e allercation about somethibt Mz=Dsnald was reported to have tol the object of their affections concern- ing Rogors. The latter had exprosa- ed his determination to demand a re- traction of the speech right in her presence, aod, therefore, when he [met McDonald he demanded a retraction, which the other refused toglve. Rogers then sprang at Mo. Donald's throat. Both clinched and accfilad, regardless of the screams of the girl, who finally swooned near the combatants,. McDonald, being a larger man, smoceeded in getting on his opponent, and then Rogers drew & pistol and fired in McDonald’s breast killing him, Rogers haa been arrezted. Strange Divorce Suits. Chicago Tribuae, Bolinda McCormick relates her brief and ushappy matrimonial ex- periances in a bill for divores filed in the cirouit court on Monday, and suppressed for service for a day. She esys that something prior to the wonth 0of N vember of last year she rencived & letter from one Louis Cass McCormtck, in_which he golicited the privilege of making acquaintance, She was then a wilow, ‘Chrough a represontation of & friend that Me- Cormick was a gentleman and desir- ing a lady's acquaintance, she was induced and did reply fa- vorably to the letter; a corre- spondence and meetings followed, and in July, 1881, she promised to marry Louis, who reprerented himeelf as a man of considerable means and finan- cially able to support her in comfort. On November 9, 1881, they were mar- ried, but did not cohabit and live to-| gothor as man and wife. She found, shortly sfter that Louts was not a gen- tleman by any meane, and that his financial representations were false, At tho time of the marriage he knew that she was expecting about $800 from Nebraska; on the [SECOND DAY OF THEIR WEDDED LIFE she received a draft for §700. Mo- Cormick induc:d her to endorze the draft to him, so that he migh¢ save her the trouble of going to cash it, He left with the draft, and although ho cashed it he forgot to return to the hotel, when he had left his wife of a day withont mears of subsistence, and also to send her the money. Since that time she had ecen hlm at S.bley, I, where he repudiated her, and sald she was a person of bad character who wrs endeavoring to blackmail him, For these offenses againet her affections and pockets she seeks re- dress from the courte, The circuit court is petioned to dis- solve the marriage of Eliza Sweet and Dewitt H, Sweet, in a bill tiled yester- day by the former, which uses very extraordinary arguments to induce the court to grant the prayer. The lady says that prior to November 23 last she was unmarried, and permitted the calls and visits of her male ac- quaictsnces, among them Sweet’s, who many times ASKED HERTO MARRY HIM, and as often was refused, Onthe day mentioned, having been quite sick for a week with a fever that is sometimes attendant upon the condition of women, she was wholly unable, from the unsettled condition of her mind to understand the nature of a contract = of marriage; and for the same reason was unable to wi.hstand the {mpor- tunities of the defendant, He, she belleves, induced her ‘to consent to have the ceremony of marriage per- formed between them, and there- upon procured the necessary li- ocense and the attendanoe of & minister of the gospel, and caused him to per- form the ceremony whereby she ba- camo lawfully married. She says that she has never cohabited with the de- fendant, and has constantly refused to ratify and consummate the marriaze io any manner whatever, She says that since the marriage she has been miserable, and unless the court will release her of the same her whole life promises to be a wreck. She had carnestly eought to induce her own consent to take npon herself the re- sponaibilities of her act, but had been wholly unable to do so, While she acquits the defendant trom an active intention to frandulently impose upon t iage obligation by actions she at the time was quite yet sho does clalm that stancas staled are a legal fraud upon her, and that she ouglt not o be held to the contract, METROPOLITAN HOTEL, OMA. HA, NEB, Tables supplied with the best the market aitords, The traveling public olaim they get beiter accommodations and more general satisfaction here than &t any other house in Omaha, Rate, $2 per dav. sugllifm ENGLAND'S PIRANCIER. something About tho New Chancei- lor of the Exchequer. New York World, Mr. Childers’ appointment to the chancellorehip of the exchequer is, of course, the first step toward that re- organization of the Gladstone cabinet concerninz which the earlieat and most accurate information has been given to American readers by the accomplished J.ondon correspondent of I'he World, Six of the great «flices of the ministry have been held by three ministers, M: Gladstone cumulating that of first lord of the treasury with the chancel. lorahip of the exchequer, as he did during the last fow monthn of hie first adminiatration; the earl of Kimberley acting a8 coloual rotary and c! cellor of the duchy of Lancaster, avd Lord Cartlingford holding the poaitions of lord presdent and lord privy seal, The R:. Hon, Hugh |Culling Eardley Uhilders is still a young man to fill the post ke now occupies. He was born in Brook street, London, June 2 OM AT A COFFEE AND SPIGE MILLS. Roasters and Grinders of Ooffece and Spices, Manufacturers of IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER Clark’s Double Extracts of BLUEING, INKS, ETC H. G. OLARK & CO., Propristors, LEE, ERIED & CO. WV EL O X8 AT I 1827, and is & son cf the late Rev, Eardley Okilders, of Cantloy, York- shire, by Maria Charlotte, daughter cf the late Sir Culling 8mith, Bart, He was educated at Cheam echool and at Trinity college, Oambridge, whero ho was graduated fourteenthsenioroptime in 1850, procesding to the degree o1 M. A. in 1857. Immediately after his graduation Mr. Childers married En- 1ly, daughter of Mr, George I. A, Walker, of Norton, Worcosters and mailed for Australta, Till 1857 he remained 11 Victoria, being elected to the legislative assembly for Port. land and holding the office of commis- sioner of trade and customs in the first Victorian cabinet. Ho is the second Britiah chancellor of the ex- chequer who learned etatesmanship and finanoe at the nnfliode-, Mr, Lowe (now Viscomat Mherhrooke) having been for nofite ye#¥s previous to his return te Bagland in 1851 a member of th% Bouncil of New South Wales and nember for Sidney. Mr. Childers returned to England in 1857 ae ngent general for the colony, and two years later, in 1859, contested the borough ot Pontefract as a liberal. Lesn succeasful than his colleague, the Hou. Richard Monckton Milnes (now Lord Houghton), who then held this seat, to which he had been firat elected in 1837 as the successor to John Gaully, the prize-fighter, Mr, Childers was defeated by Mr. William Overend, but he petitioned against the c«nsery- ative member, who zccepted the Chil- tern Hundreds, and in January, 1860, he was Liwself elected. Mr, Childera huw ever since sat for Pontefract, his re-election on accepting cffice in 1872 being memorable as the first election in Eoglend in which the voting was by ballot, DMy, Childers was chair- man of the select committee on irans- portation in 1861 and s member of the commission on peval servitude in 1863, his recommendations with re- gerd to the subject of transportation having baen eventuallyadopted by the government. In Aprif, 1864, he bo- came one of the lords of the admiralty ander Palmerston, and in Augus:, 1865, financial zecrotary to the treas- ury, He went out of coffice with the liberals in 1856, but returned with Mvr. Gladstone in December, 1868, as first lord of the admiralty, having in the meuntime been appointed a com- missioner to investigate the constitu- tion of the law courts. Il health compelled him 10 leave the admiralty iin March, 1871, having during his in- cumbency made radical changes in the organizativn'of the department, eub- ‘ordinating the other membera of the board more cflectually to tho first lord, and establishing a more direct responsibility in the case of depart- mental officers, In January, 1872, Mu, Childers rosumed the post of agent general of Victoria, end in ‘August he re-entered the cabinet, suc- ceeding Lord Dufferin as chancellor of tho duchy of Lancaster,in office in which he was replaced a year later by Mr. Bright. When the liberals re- turned to power in 1870 Mr., Childers was appointed secretary of state for war., His incum! y hes been froit- tul of reforms, as he has been charzed with completing the work begun by Lord Cardwell, a work which has been rezolutely carried forward, not- withstanding a great deal of opposi- tlon in professional and official quar- ters, The army has been lecalized aud the militia wielded into one force with it, and though the Egyptian ex- pedition tested the efficacy of th» now organization rather prematurely, it stood the strain well, the ease and rapidity with which the force was placed in the field, and the settlement of its commands being without prece. dent in English history, Mr, Childers, HARDWARE, 1108 and 1110 Harney %t., - - OMAHA, NEB. " McMAHON, ABERT & CO, Wholesale Druggists, 315 DOUCLAS STREET, - - OMAHA, NEB. " L C. HUNTINGTON & SON, DEALERS IN HIDES, FURS, WOOL. PELTS & TALLOW 204 North Sixteenth 8t., - - OMAHA, NEB. METCALF&! 1006 Farnam 8t., Omaha. HIMEBAUGH, MERRIAM & CO,, Proprietors, Wholesale Dealers in P ) SLV0 UL (Y W&l *0% ‘SORINITAOS 1] Mills Supplied With Choice Varieties of Milling Wheat. Westorn Trade {Supplied with Oats and Corn at Lowest Quotations, with prompt shipments, Write for prices. § M Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE however, paid for the heavy strain and responi ility he had born, at the war office andZl] in the house, by a physical colll%le three or four weeks ago. He has been an active laborer in other fields besides those of politics, Though he was en- tered some years ago as a student of Lincoln’s Inn, he was never called to the bar, He has written several pam- phlets on free trade, rallway poliefl. national education, and similar sub- jects, and has been asscclated with the duection of such enterprises as the Great India Peninsular railway, the Great Western railway of Canada, the London and County bank, the Bank of Australia, the Liverpool, London and (ilobe insurance com- pany, and the Royal Mail Steam Pasket company. By his first wife, who died in 1875, Mr, Childers had several children, and two of his sons went through the recent Egyptian campaign, He married again in April, 1879, his second wife being Katherine Anne, daughter of Dr. Gilbert, bishop of Chichester, and the widow of the Hon, Gilbert Elllot, brother of the present earl of Minto. Mr, Childers 18 well known on thils eide of the At- lantic, His last visit to the United States was made in company with his socond wife not long after their mar riage. A Revolver Boom. 1 Herald, owner of the 8Bmith & Wesson pistol works at Soringfield, Mass., has an income of §2,000 a day, What with the religious weekl floring pistols ma premiums to tho getting up abs, and dime novel readers arm- ing themsslves with the weapons when thoy start weet to kill enough Indlaus to last thom all winter, 1t is not sur- prising thet a plstol manufacturer bas an focome of $2,000 a dasy, The wonder is that it is not larger, CLOTHIERS, [1I301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I3th OMAHA, NEB. PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter’'s Materials, ALSO SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. First-class facilitiee for the Manufacture of all kindes of Mould Paioting and matching a Specialty, Orders from the conutry will be promytly e 1wed . addr communications to A, MOYER, Proprietor D. H. McDANELD & CO, HIDES, TALLOW, GREASE, PELTS, WOOL: AND BFUIRS, 204 North 16th St,, Masonic Block, Main House, 46, 48 and 62 Deaz- bore avenue, Chicago. Refer by permission to Hide and Leather Natlonal Bank, Ohleago,

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