Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 25, 1882, Page 2

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THE DATLY BEE----()MAHAiM(V)iN» DAY, DECEMBER %6 Oh, MyBack! That's a common expres- sion and has a world of meaning. How much suf- fering is summed up in it The singular thing about it is, that pain in the back is occasioned by so many things. May be caused by kidney disease, liver com- plaint, consumption, cold, rheumatism,dyspepsia,over- work, nervous debility, &c. Whatever the cause, don't neglect it. Something is wrong and needs prompt attention. No medicine has yet been discovered that will so quickly and surely cure such discases as Brown's IroN BirTErs, and it does this by commencing at the foundation, and mak- ing the blood pure and rich. Logansport, Ind. Dec. 1, 188, For a long time 1 have been a sufferer from stomach and kidney disease. My appetite was very poor Snd the very small amount 113 eat disagreed with me, 1was annoyed very much from mon-retention of wrine, I tried many remedies with no success, until [ used Brown's Tron Bitters, Since I used that my stomach does not bother me any. My appetite issimply immense, My kidney trouble is no more, and my eneral health is such, that 1 feel ke a new man. After the use of Brown's Iron Bitters for one month, 1 have gained twenty pounds in weight. O. B. SAKGENT, Leading physicians and clergymen use and recom- mend Brown's IroN Bir- TERS, It has cured others suffering as you are, and it will cure you. Every Corsot 18 w-.rnnm itod satis- factory to its wearer in every way, or the money will bo retunded by the person from whom it was bought. e only Corset pronounced by our Jeading physt ,_and endorsed b e Sooriable snd pertedt. PRICES, by Mall, Postago Paids Mealth Prescrving, $1.50. Iell’-Al:u::Im 0. Nursin 'or sale ead! etall CHICAGO CORSKET C ul2o0d&sow y United Btates Depository Firgh Eatjil_ml Bank A Oor, 13th and Farnam Sts, OLDESY BANKING ESTABLISHMENT (R OMAHA. BUOCOESSBORE TO KOUNTZE BROTHERS, | weighod last & WrABLISID LY60, Organized as & Natlonal Baok August 29, OAPITAI - - . BURPL' 4 AND PROYITS - OFYICRSS AND DIAKIFODS Hunuax Eounrss, Precident, Aveusrus Kounrzs, Vico President, ¥. H. Davis, 3 A. J. Porrieron, Joun A. Ommieuvon, amount, Tusucs time certificates bearing interest, Draws dratts on Ban Francisco aud princ nited Ttates, also London Du Edingsbury i tho priucipal citios of the co may7, cities of tho nent of Europe IN NEBRASKA. CALDWELL, HAMILTON & 00, BANKERS. Business transacted same as that of | lished te support Polk. an incorporated Bank, to sight check without notice, Certificates of deposit issued payable | Hickory, who wrote angry protests in three, nix and twelve months, bear- ing interest, or on demand without in- terost. ruwmt, freely extended, Draw Sight Drafts on England, Ire- , and all partaof Earope. | will still Sell European Passage Tickets. Oollections Promptly Made. DUFRENE & MEBDELSSHON ARCHITEOTS, REMOVED TO OMAHA NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. the Owahs National Bauk, Natlonsl Bauk, Paxion & Gallargher’ = MWML.M ot : borne, of M n | a voleano constantly in eruption, blaz- Y | thus speaks of Blair's personal ap- Thia ‘bank; recelves doposite]without regard | winking, AP out of The Globe; Advances mi de to customers on ap- roved socurities at market rates of " THE CAPITAL PRESS. Washington Newspapers, Past and Present---The Na- tional Republican a8 Arthar's Organ, How Ita Pradecessora Rose and Fell—Dutf Gresn and the Telegraph. The Present Uorpa of Correspondents and TheirjDutiee -Soclety Goe- #1p and News. Washington Correspandence of the C eveland Leader, Ever since Samuel Harrson Smith came to Washington in 1800to edit the National Intelligencer in the sapport of President Jefferson, there has been an cfliclal organ at the Oapital. Near- ly every president has had his news- paper to sapport him, and President Arthur's new organ, the National Re- publican, Is by no means different, It hus started eut bravely with the open- ing of congress, and it bics fair to make of itself a firat-class nowspaper, as well as the president’s mouthpiece. Frank Hatton, the First Asiistant Postmaster General, and one of ifs editors, has boen connected with the Burlington Hawkeye, which Bob Bur- those of the paper at home, and epe. olal operators to manage them. Ti telegraph tolle eent out every night at Washingwon must run into the thou wands of dollars, and on exoiting ocos- sions will reach & much larger sum. All of the press associations have largo bureaus hero, composed of the best news gatherers in the profession, and during a session of congress the cor- respondents are as numerous as the congreesmen, There are, in fact, two congresses here, the newspaper con gress and the national one. The former is the brishter ot the two, and it largely controls the latter. It eits in the gallerios at the rear of the house and senate, and talks to the Amerioan people through the telegraph. It in. augurated the star route prosecution, and 1t is the lever which is now mak- ing the other congress reduce taxes, talk of civil serviea roform, and inau- gurato a cheaper postage Tho assoolated press buroaus “ab Washington cover all the actual nows, Byt they have nothing to do with sen- sations, goesip, or political opinion. They deal with general matters, and are always reliable. The correapondents hear of every- thing, both local as to the state where their home papers are published, and general as to the nation, None but daily papers aro admitted to the re- portora’ galleries, and during an ex- olting seesion every seal {s taken. A drone cannot stay here. They range from twenty-five years old upward, gray hairs showing on many of the old atagers, BEN PERLEY POORE, dette has made famous, and Snowden, formerly connected with the Chicago Times, brings all of the spioe and brains of the west to build up its col umns as managing editor, Eaton, its dramatic man, is well up in the pro- fession, and his critiques are attract- ing much attention among theater goers. The paper starts out witha strong force, and it will be a power for tho adminjstration, Through it Mr, Arthur w‘llfl make his oapital for a re- nomination, and already many olip: plings bearing towarcs that point are tssiduously collected and published by its editors, Favorable comments on the message received much space, and praises of the prestdent are sure to re- coive its attention. ' ORGANS INTHE PAST. As I sid above, the Natlonal In- tolligencer was the firss organ In Washiogton, It boomed Jeffsrson and the doings of h's cabinet in 1800, and kept 1ts place under Gales and Seaton, the firet reporters of congress, down through every administration to that of Andrew Jackson in 1828, Jackson was not stisfied with any- thing which he had not made himself. Henca he did not like the Intelli- gencer. At this tlme Daff Green had started the United States Telegraph, and him Jackson took up through the influence of Calhoun and made the Telegraph the administration sheet. It got the government printing, which, an Green afterwards stated, when he had a fuss with Jackson and lost it, the clerk of government printing, is the oldest eorrespondent hero. He has made a fortune in the profession, and is now one of the most important men in Washington, The correspondent in Washington has by no means an easy life. He is expected to keep track of all the gov- ernment does, and all that it ia going to do. He ought to know what a com- mitteo will do before it sits, and s often expected to tell what & man’s opinions are before he has formead them himself, Many oorrespondents do this, and it is wonderfual how often they strike the mark. The Washington correspondent b easy hours, e is expected to be at work at 9 o'clock In the morning, and if he goes to bed before 12 at night some big item !s sure to oocur, and he wakes up to find himself loft behind or *‘scoopod”’ in newspaper slang. He must have his eyes wide open; he must be able to write at any time; he must know everything about the gov- ernment, the world, and have a per- sonal acquaintance with every man in it. Yet, somo people think the Washington correspondence of a lead- ing paper a deairable position. Some people don’t, for himself, SOCIEIY CORRESPONDENCE. But the news correspondents are not tho only ones at the Uapital. Thereis the society correspondent, generally some lady who gets up gossip by the yard and sends it out to the press, This correspondent is expected to have then worth $50,000 a year. This rrel of Green's arose on account of upport of Cathoun over Jackson for renomination, Jackson's action in taking the governmental support from him made him very angry. He would not .visit Jaoksen though in-|J, vited, and refused to take his hand in the presence of his cabinet and both Songrel ‘s next oam was that famous paper, the Congressional Globe, and its editor was FRANK P, BLAIR, of Kentucky, one of the most power- ful writers who ever wielded a pen in ctans | ® Washington sanctum. Blair had John ladies as atting &IM over O. Rives as his business partner, and the two wero considered the ugliest men in Washington. Colonel Clair- saippi, says ‘‘Blair was ing and burning, and overwhelming with its lava floods all that ventured to withstand it. He wrote with ring- ular facility. His most powerful leaders were jotted down upon his knee upon scraps of paper and passad immediately to the compositor—men- tal daguerreotypes leaping from a brain of prodigious cnergy.” John C, Rives, his partner, In 1856, pearance: *‘‘He s about five feet ten inches high, and would be full six feet if his brains were on the top of his head instead of being stuck in & poll behind it, He looks like a skeleton, lacks but little of beirg one, and frlng when dressed in thick winter clothing, 107 pounds all 100 | to1d; about 85 of which we suppose was bone, and the other 22 pounds #200 000 [ made up of nerve, gristle and brain, 48160,00 | Flesh ho had uone. face 1s na row, and of the hatchet kind, acoord- ing with his meat ax disposition when writing of his onvmies, His complex- fon is fair, his hair sandy, and bis oyes blue, His countenance is 8o re- markably mild, so firm, and he can look any man in the face without We still think bhe is as homely as one man in ten thousand,” Blair and Rives both made fortunes Jackson epoke through it as his own mouth, and he ~— | dictated many of his editorials through THE OLD3T ESTABLISHED BANKING HOUSE Amos Kendall. It held its place as the governmental organ under Van Buren, but the hard cider and log cabin campsaign brought in Harrison, and it stepped to the rear, The Ni tional Intelligencer then became the organ, but by Tyler's accession it stuck s | still to Henry Ollhmd the whigs, and @ new organ, The Madisonian, was the result. With the annexation of Texas The Washington Union was estab. It was edited by Ritchie and I organ, much to the disgust of old againat the change, broke out, dent has been forgotten, WASHINGTON NEWS, of the leadin, have offices d A and took the Acoounts soliclted aud kept ubject | place of The Globe us the demooratic 1 1t served uuder Polk, again came into power under Buchanan, but died when the war With the war the independent news- 5 paper started into existence, and or- Tho interests vi customers are close- | gans as organs went out. ly guarded and every factlity compati- ble with principles of sound banking | the power of the organ of the past, and The Natlonal Republican, though it will -uEpnn Mr, Arthur in general, old an independent voice and be a newspaper when the presi-| ¥ No paper of the preseut as an organ can have Washington has more newspaper men than any city in the Union, All papers of the country ere, and many of them large corps of correspondents. Some have private telegraph lines conneot- ing their offices in Washington with the inside of the soctal workings here. She calls on the members of the Oabi- nent, prominent people, and other cel- ebrities, and tells the dear people how they eat, dress, act, and talk. She generally gets paid by space—ten dol- The reader may judge | ars, more or | or each column, and is a bright and racy writer. Jen- nie June, Mary Ames, and Kate Kipg rank among the best of these corfe- spondents. They do good work and are often read where the news men are slighted, Washington has been a great train- ing school for newspaper men in the ast. Many prominent editors and iterary men have startod hore, Mark Twain onse acted as a Washington cor- respondent, James G, Holland was in the Assoclated Press here in 1872, Henry J. Raymond,‘of the New York Times, made this one of his headanar- tera, and Horacoe Greoley wrote many a Washington letter to the New York Tribune. George Alfred Townsend was long a correspondent at the oapi- tal, James Russel Young started his ocareer in Washington, and a column more of the names of leading news- paper men might be added to this list, Carr, ‘What Three Applications Did. “I was troubled vory much with sore foet, 'rec applications of Thomas' Eclee tric Oil entirely cured them, Nothing bet- ter in the market.” Jacob Butler, Read- ing, Pa, WS L A Curiosity. Montezuma (Ga.) Weekly, Probably one of the greatest de- formities In the world is that of Mr, Gaultney, now living in Taylor coun- tf. There seems to be an accumula- tlon of adipose matter about every jolnt in his body, and the nearer the Joints, of course, the greater amount of this fatty matter. Conscquently his feet and hands are enormous; each of his hands weighing ovor sixteen pounis, and being several times heav- ier than his head. Hels 23 years old, and only 36 inches in height. The joints s2em to have taken away all flesh from the other part of his body, and the limbs look like threads sup- porting enormous weights, and sogreat is the weight of his bands that they hang helpless at his sides, he being un- able to lift them of his own accord, This fatty-matter continues to increase and his hands and feet get larger every year, This manis a great curiosity, and there are crowds at his heme to see him, . If any one has represented that we are in any way interested in eny bogus bitters or stuff with the word ‘‘Hops” In their name, cheating hon- ost folks, or that we will pay any of thetr bills or debts, they are frauds and swindlers, and the vietima should punish them., We deal in and pay only the bills for the genuine Hop Bitters, the purest and best medicine on earth, Hor Briren kNG Co, n's Arnica Balve, h ALVE In the wo Bruises, Boses, Ulcers, balt Rheam, Fer ver Sores, Tetlor, Chapped Hands, Chil blains, Oorna, and all skin eraptions, and positively cures niles, It b guaravteed to ve esthafnction ¢ maney refunded, vige, 25 conte per cx. dor sals by O Goodman Free of Okharge. All persons suffering from Coughs, Colds Asthma, Bronchitis, Loss of V:l‘fc: or any affection of the Throat and Lungs, are re- quested to call at O, F. Goodman's drug store and get a T'rial Bottle of Dr, King's New Discovery for Consumption, free of STAR ROUTE THIEVES. A Glance at the Jury That Con- vict or Acquit Dorsey. e Vast Resourcesof the Defence. ‘What Dorsey May Do to Becape Just ‘Puniehment for His Crimes Editorial Corr.spocdin‘e Press. of the Philadel;hia WasnixeroN, D:cember 16 —The star route trials are falrly under way acain, and they excite much interest here as elsewhere throughout the country. Istopped in Judge Wylie's court, in the dirty, dingy court-room of the old City hall, to take a look at the administration of justice in the capital of the nation, and there was anything but an alr of business abont it, Judage Wylie presides with credit- able dignity, except when he allows Ingersoll to snub the court in themost disgraceful manner; but he probably expects to even things up with the eloquent Infidel before the case goes to the jury. He Is pretty thoroughly permeated with the belief that the star route defendants are unmitidated wooundrels and thieves, and he is given to making occasional severe thrusts into the disjointed aror of the defence. Bliss was engaged in his elaborate opening for the govern. ment; the judge was busy examining some notes or papers, Kor sat close to Bliss with his arms folded in the most composed manner; Corkhill Aflitted about in genial conversation with vis- itors, aud a gaping crowd of specta- tors jostled each other, although the long, dry and by no means rhetorical speech of Bliss tarnished listle of in- terst for them. Ocoasionally he would arrest the attention of the audi- ence when he told of some such feat of the star route thioves as running up the Garland and Parroit City route to £31,343.76 annually, when the entire annual postal revenue of the route was only $194.96. But as he multiplied the history of frauds of nearly equal magnitude, even star route ingenuitg(in theft became mono- tonous. The Mineral park and Pioche route in Wyoming probably capped the climax of Blisa’ arraignment, as it was advanced to $20,000 annually, when half the days there was not a single letter or poatal-card passed over it, and the other days averaged only a traction of one letter or poatal-card each day. None of the defendants were In the court, nor were any of their counsel present. They were familiar with Bliss’ speech, as theyhad heard it all before, and as . thore was no chance for rhetorical fireworks, Ta- geraoll and his colleagues enjoyed themselves elsswhere. THE NEW STAR-ROUTE JURY, As the twelve men in the jury box, suppoeed to be good and true citizens, are to be the final judges of both the law and the facts in this important trial, publio interest naturally turns to them, They are, with but few ex- ceptions, men of very moderate intel- ligence, and some of them evidently far below mediocrity. Eight of the jurors are white and four colored, the ocolored jurors all having been accepted from the ugulm Ranel, while four of the whites are tdle-men, summoned to the ungracious task by Marshal Mo- Michael. The jury, as a whole, looks to be quite below the average of Phil- adelphia jurors, and it lacks what is usually noticeable in Philadelphia juries—several apparently intelli- gent and controlling minds. It may seom harsh to prejudice the new star route jury, but it is safe to say that if such a jury was sworn to try a case of equal importance in Philadelphia, with rich, powerful and unsorupulous defendants, and the jurors turned loose every night for forty or fifty days, there would be no conviotion. And when I remember that Washington is now less prepared to guard the Integrity of the jury box than is Philadelphis, I must look for little less than a miracle to com- pass o conviction of Dorsey and Brady. The star route combination ramifies everywhere in this city. It has its fingers and toes in the depart- ments, iu the hotels, and its feelers extend to barbers, coachmen, serv- ants, bootblacks and every channel where men of any grade can bo made usefal, Thecolored jurors, all of whom are in straightened circnmstances and one of whom earns a ,precarious living by day labor, will be reached and tempted in a hundred ways, und when such men, who havenever owned $500 in their lives, and who have no great amount of reputation to loose, can be tempted with tens of thou- sandas, is it reasonable to expeot a con- viction? They may prove stronger than the wealth they never dreamed of possessing, or they may be intimi- dated by the fear of punishment; but it will be a marvel, indeed, 18 & jury with a little intelligence to guide them and little character to lose, as a rule, shall be able to maintain the majesty of justice in her own sanctuary. THERE CAN BE NO HONEST ACQUITTAL, This case differs from most import- ant criminal prosecutions. There Is no reasonable doubt, and there can be no reasonable doubt, of the deliber- ato and repested frauds perpetaated by the defendants, by which the gev- ernment was robbed of millions of dollars, Of the perpetration of these monstrous frauds there can be no dis. pute, and ‘that Doreey, then a sena- tor, and Brady, then the assistant postmaster general who had sharge of meil contracts, were the cheif crim- inals in conceiving and executing these crimes, s just as, clearly established as it is that Guttesu shot Garfield, The frauds have been detected; the amount of money stolen 18 known; the partics who direoted the schema of theft and most largely shared the /. profits, are as well known as Arthur is kunown as president, There is not a single plausible ground for the de- fence to stand upon on the merits of the case. The judge knows the defendauts to be guilty; the counsel on both sides know them to be guilty, and every juror went into the box knowing that the men they are sworn to try are neither more nor less than a confeder- ation of the most desperate and suc- cessful public thieves, Such are the circumstances under which the trial charge, which will convince thet of its wonderful werits and show what a regular ollar-size bottle will do, Call early, starts, and there is only one way of escape for the criminals, They must corrupt jurors or witnesses, or their conviclicn is as certain as the setting of the sun. Even the political inflaence that once strongly inclined to protest Dorsey and Brady by indirection, has been quickened to nctive hostility by Dorsey’s mad vituperation of every public cficer who dared to demand the administra- tion ef justios, President Arthur undoubtedly strongly sympathized with Dorsey until recently. He did not sympathize with Dorsey’s crime, but he did profoundly sympathize with the man who had, by rtar-route political mothods, elected Arthuor vice-preeident and thus made him president; and he s human cnough not te desire to reward such services with a felon's curss and punishment, Borsey has preesed Arthur's forbearance too far, and now Arthur forgets his gratitude to Dorsey as he remembers that he is the chief magistrate of the nation, charged with the exccution of its laws, and he has manfully acoepted his daty, Dorsey’s vituperative pub- licatign made it a necemsity for the president to refer to the star-route rials in his annual message in no un- certain tone, and it is now known that nuo power of the administration will be, or dare be, employed to defeat Justice in the star route cases. There 18, therefore, now no hope of escape for Dorsey and Brady but by corrapt- ing jurors or witnesses or both, WHAT DORSEY MAY DO, Dorsey tully appreciates the pecu- liar peril in which he is placed, and he will not fall without shivering bis lance against his foes, He is a man of great ability, of boundless resources, of tireless industry, and a master In combining and employing men and money in any emergency. If jurors can be bought, he will buy them; if witnesses can be hired to flee, they will be'made to go; if false testimony can avail anything, he will be furnished in abundance, and if all fails, he will pull down the plllars of the temple in which many are now dwelling in free- dom from blame. Do not he sur- prised if he should summon the po- tent memory of Garfield in his ex- tremity and claim public sympathy on grounds not now dreamed of by the public. He was closer to both Garfield and Arthur during the cam- paign of 1880 than is generally supposed, and he will not sink while there is a floating straw to be grasped. I doubt whether he will ever go to a felon’s cell alive He may do so, but he has no such purpose .at present, and he will convulse political circles as they have never been convulsed in our history, and probably end Lis own now worse than blighted life, bafore he will consent to accept just punish- ment for what he considers the sirs of many, His friende, who are numer- ous and well advised, openly declare that he can’c and shaun't be eentenced as & thief, and in that defiant boast I believe they count all the avenues of escape from corrupting justice to the suicide’s grave, A LONG TRIAL EXPECTED, The trial will certainly last over a month, and & prominent attorney for the government has informed me that it may last nearer three than two months, Evidently the defense will protract it in every possible manner, as every day gained is welcomed by despair, and a mistrial by sickness or death, or by reason of any other of the remotely possible causes can be hoped for as lovg as a verdict has not been rendered, The defense feel that the present is a most unpropi- tious time to try the star route thieves, and they judge correctly The reform tide is surging against every department of aatnority; public offi- cials must keep their garments un- blemished, and it is a sorry season for thieves who are brought to the bar of the law for justice. There will, therefore, be studied delay, and if the majesty of the law shall be vin- dicated, it will be only after the most stubborn and desperate battle with potential crime ever known in our history. A: K, M. Not an aleoholic bnvotnue,'huz atrue and reliable family remedy is Brown's Iron Bitters. True to her Crust. Too much cannot be said of the ever faithful wife and mother, constantly watching and caring for her dear ones, never neglecting & single duty in_their be- half. When they are assailed by disease, and the system should have a thorough cleansing, the stomach and bowels regu- lated, blood purified, and malarial poison exterminated, she must know the that Electrio Bitters are the only sure ;e_med{. They are the best and purest medicine in the world and only cost fifty cents, Sold by C. ¥, Goodmaz. e —————— Will it Really Cure Rhoumatism? ‘We answer, honor bright, it will cure rheumatism, and the severest cases too, Dr, Thomas' Eclectric 0Oil was specially prepared for the rheumatio and lame, No- tice letters from the people relative to its merits in nearly every paper in ths coun. try. 3. KALISH, THE STAR TAILOR 1 Door W, of Cruickshank’s, Tas now & compiete stock of Fall and Winser Goods, consisting of French English and the best Thomeatics. Prices low aathe owost FABT TIME| Ghicafiffi"fi;fimhwasn- mayz (I woraw. Tralns leave Omaba 8:40 p, m, aud 7:40a. w Fox Tl information call on 2. P. DEUEL, Ticke Agent, 14th aud Faroam ote., J. BELL, U, Rallway]Depot. o ab JAMEST. OLARK, Gener Avens SIDEWALK NOTICE. ing deseribe mahia, count tolay sidewalks i joining same, within fifteen (15) days from De Cember 20th, A. D. 1882, rald sidewalks to be con d in accordance with plans and specifl ou file iy the office of the Board > ‘and in ¢ mpliance with the following res- olution adepted by the city council of said dity, 10-wit: . RGSOLUTION ORDERING SIEEWALKS, Bo it resolvedfby the City Council of the City ef Dmahia, T dowalk be, within fftoen days from this date constructed and laid to the permancnt gradeineaid city, in front of and adjoining the wing described premises, vie: 3 o ) and cight (&, wort_side of 16th streot, in block 43, tweaty (20) fect wide., ot four (4) east side of 16th strest, in block foet wide. 2 \ilcaulke. &5 b constructed of two inch a6 plauk and to be in width as above specified, and the respective owner or owners of the above describyd prewises are hereby required to con- stuct the saie. (Signed) 3. 3. L. O, Jewsrr, Oity Clerk, JAMES CREIGHTON, Chairman Bosrdof P Works City of Omaha. . Cuaha, Dec, 18, L d thur, fri. sat, T.0.BROW N & CO WHOLESALE DRY GOODS NOTIONS, Boots and Shoes. OMARR o« v e oo NER J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN U0 T/ TN R RS L.ath, Shingles, Pickeis, 8A8H, DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDINGS, LIME, CEMEN P T.ASTER, BTO. @rSTATE AGENS FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANYY Near Union Pacific Devot, OMAPANS C. F. GOODM.AN, WHOLHSALE DEALER TN DRUGS, PAINTS, OILS, Window and Plate G'ass. 48 Anyono contemplating bullding store, bank, or any other fine will find.{t to tholr ad antago to corres ond with us before purchasing sheir Plate Glasa, C. F, GOODMAN, OMAHA : - NEB. W.B, MILLARD, EDWARD W. PECK. MILLARD & PECK, Storage, Commission and Wholesale Fruits. 1421 & 1423 FARNHAM STREET. CONSIGNMENTS COUNTRY PRODUCE SOLICITED} gents for Pock & Baushers Lard, and Wilber Mills Flour OMAHA, - - - NEB REFERENOES : OMAHA NATIONAL BANK, STEELE. JOHNSON & 0O., TOOTLE MAUL & CO. STEELE, SJHNSON & C0., WHOLESALE GROCERS AND JOBBERS IN Flour, 8alt, Sugars, Canned Coods, and All Grocers’' Supplies. A Full Line of the Best Brands of OIGARS AND MANUFACTURED TOBAGGO. Agents for BENWOOD RAILS AND LAFLIN & BAND POWDER GO. HENRY LEHMANN, WINDOW SHADES 'EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED. 118 FARNAM 8T. - - OMAHA PO T EE NI AN I SN CHLE &G TIN G POWER AND HAND BF OO N S | Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, BELTING, HOBE, BRASS AND IRON FITTINGS PIPE, STEAM PACKING, AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WIKD-MILLS CHURCH'AND.SCHOOLZBELLS Qo_r. Fa.yn»am and 710th Streets Omaha, Neb, . BEOYER JO. =——DEALERS INw—— HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK CO. Fire and Burglar Proo &S5 A ET B & N AULTS, LOOEK S, O. 1020 Farnham Street, oOMLA. - - - NER CINING MAOHINERY, F.C. MORG-AN, WHOLESALE GROCER 12183 Farnam 8t.. Omaha, Neh. PéRFEb"fiON HEATING AND BAKING is only attained by using CHARTER OAK 8toves and Ranges. WITH g WIRE GAUZE ' OVER DOORS, +For sale by| MILTON ROGERS & SONS oM AA. jullmbely 1] s T e

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