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THE DAILY The Omaha Bee: ~ Pablished rmy:‘ur-; g, extept Sun. ay. The only Monday morning daily. TERMS BY MAIL— One Year,...810 00 | Three Months.£3.00 Six Months.. 5.00 | One Month “HE WEEKLY BEE, published every Wainesday. TERMS POST PATD~ One Year.....8200 J Three Months, 50 Six Months. 00 | One Month.... 20 AxxRicAN Nws Comraxy, Solo Agents Newadealers in the United States, CORRESFOND E—All Communi- atfons relating to News and Editorial matters shonld be addressed to the Eprror or Tre Bre, BUSINESS LETTERS—AI Busines Letters and Remittances should be sd drossed to THE Exe PunLisniNG CoMPANY OmanA, Drafts, Checks and Postottice Orders to be made payable to the order of the Company. The BEE PUBLISHING C0., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor. Tar whisky distillors are in bad apirits because congresn does not soem inclined to attend to their spiritual wants, —_— TosAoco and beer have taken an upward course within the past fow days but swill ted hogs and smoked tongaes are not materially affscted. Tire late government director of the Unlon Pacific railroad, whose first namo is George Spencer, is still among the missing, He is somewhere in Canada gazinggt tho stars. OnrisTyas does not come all the year round as our honorable police judge exclaimed when he was notified that twenty-five men were picked up by the police while trying to hold up a Iamp-post Tuear have boen more [changes in Nebraska postoffises durlng the past two weoka than in any three months provious Our Val 15 bound to get in his strikers before Laird and Weaver oan put in an appearance. Rep Croup has smoked the pipe of peaoo with the great father and pack- eda hoavy Christmas dinnor into his oapacious bread basket, Ho is will- ng to continue on those rations for a fow monthe, even if ho has to stay away from hi reservation, Tae follows who turn the crauks on the monopoly organs keop telling that the railroads are out of politics and will not be in the lobby at Lincoln next mouth, Just wait a fow days and we will see the trains packed with the rallraad lobby goiug down to the Lincoln circus to see the fan, RAI1LROAD accidents are altogether t0o frequent of late to spesk well for the managoment of these public high- wa, Some of them are the result of recklessners and others of neglect. Soveral of these accidents have been quite serious, and he parties responsi- ble ought to be severely deali with, Tur Pendleton bill has ceased to be the Pendleton bill, having been adopted by the republican cagcus of seuators and pat into Mr. Hawley's chargo to securo its passage at tho earlient date possible. It will doubt less cowe to a final vote elther to-mor- row or next day, and it is sure of a large majority. How it will faro In the house remains to be seen. Tur propect of a favorable belanco of trado is pot very bright., The ex- port of our breadstuff in the five months ending with November shows but & small increase upon the five cor- rosponding months of last year, and that for the eleven montha then end- jog, shows a decrease of twenty-one per cent, On the other hand our THE LEGISLASURE The Ncbraskn iegislatare will con veno in biennial session at Lincoln noxt Tuesday. In number it will be the Jargest law making body that has ever convened in Nebraska, Up to 1,00 | 1877 our lcgislatures were made up of 13 senators and 39 representatives Since that time under the changed apportlonment of the new constitu tion, the senate consisted of 30 mem bere, and the house 84 representatives, The constitution authorizadjjthe legislature to increase the numter of and the number of roprecentatives to 100 after the year 1880. The legielature of 1881 acted on this provition and the coming leg- inlature will therefore consist of 133 members, The people of Nebraska will watch the proceedings of the coming legla- tature with a great deal of avxiety. A largo majority of the body has been elected upon pledges to support measures that will afford relief to the producera from exixting abuses by railway monopolies, They are pledged to use every honorable cxsrtion to- ward reducing the rate of transporta. tion and putting a atop to favoritism and dicorimination between persons and localities, They are pledged upon honor to their conatituents to vote for a man for United States menator whose character and past record are a guarantee that he will honestly, faithfullyand ably represent the people of this state and give his voice and influence to measures of a national character that will check the aggression of monopolies, Beycnd this the coming legislature stands pledged to enact laws that will bring about an honest and equitable assessment of railroad property and laws that will Insure economy in the conduct of our state government anda general reduction of taxes. These are the outlines of the policy that the people look for from the next legisla- ture, and we have reason to believe that they will not be disappointed. O~k of the problems that will have to be solved in all, the large cities of this country, is how to devise proper fire protections for buildiugs that are above six storles in height. In New York, Chicago and elsowhere great blocks have been built during the past throe or four years, that reach way up to even ten and twelve stories, The other dey an eight storied block was destroyed in Buffilo bocause the fire dopartment could not throw a stream of water into the upper stortes, Much fault was found by the Buffulo press with their firemen, but as a mat- ter of fact the blamo for the disarter muet ba lald at the door of the build- ers. Every intelligent porson knows that the ordinary system of firs protection, either by water works or from steam engines, is utterly Inadequate to put out fires above a certain hoight. To make any headway againsi a Hro in a ten- story building the fire department should be provided with a water tower or some other contrivance It is self-evident that we nilst either give up building eight and ten story blocks in large citles or take the risk of their burning down, The worst fealuré is, howover, that such large buildings are apt to communicate the firo to lower bulidings that surround them, and the flames from such build- ings will readily spread across a street. senators to I Tue present congress has taken a very deep Interest tn the federal offico holder. They have not only taken compassion on the overworked clerks in the departments at Washington, who begin their arduous duties of shedding red ink for their country at 9 in the morning and quit at 3 in the stooks aro relatively large, and the hopo of & vast European demand does not rest on a solid basis. It would be well,says the Philadel- phia American, incommenting on the recent bank failures, for those inter- ested in the selvency of bavks and other irstitutions holding money in trust, whether the cash is actually on hana or whether some of its custodi- ans have not carried it away to specu- late in stocks of oil, grain, cotton, or some other articles tangiblo or imagl- vary, Last Wodnesday the tailure of the City Bank at Rochester, N, Y., was announced, the president, Mr, Upton, having used $3560,000 of its funds in oil operations, and s banking house in a neighboring town (the Wil- liam C. Moore house, at Victor, N. Y.) put up ita shutters on hearing the news, On the same day, the Second National bank of Jefforson, Ohio, suspended because its cashier and his assistant had also been using the funds—§60,000 to §75,006 this time, —In private speculatione, It would afternoon, with only a month’s leave of absence for recreation, but they aro also beginning to look into the hardships that effict the collectors of customs, marehals, surveyors generals, heads of bureaus, territorial governors, etc. Until of late it was always belleved that these offices were sought after by able bodied patriots, who were willing to fight, bleed and die for their country, It would seem, however, that the govern- ment has serious apprehensions that they will not be able to fill these offices on account of overwork and underpay. 8o congress is devising all sorts of means to relieve the pocr fellows who wear Uncle Sam's harn Cnicaco is now earnestly engaged in dicoussing the high liconse system. Thera Is vigorous opposltion, however, from 8,000 saloon keepers who do business in Chicago, and it is not at ali likely that a materlal advance i the license could be scoured through the Chicago city council, It is proposed to apply to the legislature at its ap- be reflecting on a great number of | proaching sesslon tomake ahigh license very upright and honorable men to|law far the suggest the danger of s general otten nesy in banks and like institutions but the vaciuess of speculative oper tlons. and the continual outoropping of wholo state, The proporition s to charge £500 year for license in citles and §300 in towns aud villages, There are about 14,000 saloons ia Tllinois, 10,000 of which snch cases as those described, ought [are in the citles and the remainder in to make every stockholder pereistent- | the small towns, 1t is estimated that ly inquisitive as to the stricst manage- |the law would probably reduce the wment of the institution in which he 10,000 in cities to 6,000, and these, has shares. 1f he be a national bank | at 500 each, would yield a revenue stockholder, he may be called upon, |of $3,000,000. The 4,000in the rural some fine morning, not only tc see | districts would be reduced to 2,000, his shares wiped out, but to meet a |and these, at $300 each, would yleld demand for the payment of an equal | $600,000 more, making a total of $3,- amount in new money to make up a|600,000 revenue derlved from the deficlency. saloons, The friends of the measure argae in ita favor that it would spike the prohibition gnn, take the liquor question out of politics, and sottle it on a basis where the public would be content to let 1t rest \ al tariff reformers on the means committee are gradu- ally coming to the conclusion that the only poseibla chat.cs to secure any im- portant reforms in the tariff lies in an up and down fight on the floor of the house, Tha changes recommended by the tariff commimion cover so much debatable matter that it will be impossible t5 pass any plan for a gen- oral revision of the tariff in timoe for the menate to act upon it before the clone of the present congress. The best that the minorily can do is to make & determined fight with a view to placing the country In possesslon of the facts, and shew where the respon- #ibility for a failure to revise the tariff properly bolongs, Mz, Fraxk HATrox seoms to be of the opinion tha* he is postmaster gon- oral, and “‘a blgger man” than Presi- dent Arthur. Ho haa tho stalwart cheek developed as big an a barn door. —Clincinnati Commercial, Mr. Frank Hatton has traveled on his check all his life, It was only by the exhibition of the most sublime cheek that he became postmaster of Barlington, and 1t was only his super- abundance of cheek that gave him his present position, for which he is no more fit than a deaf-mute is to act as interpreter. Mr. Hatton has more chéok and. self-coneoit to the squaro|, Inch than any man in Amerioa. There is & rumor current at Wash- Ington that one ot the star route thieves will turn state's evidence, that will convict Brady, Dorsey and others. When thieves fall out honest mon get their dues. Sexator VAN Wyck's bill to compel the land grant railroads to pay their taxes meets with hearty approval from leading papers all over the country. The St. Louis Republican indulges in the following uuvarnished comment: The bill reported to the United States sonate providing for the taxa- tion of public landa belonging to the railway companies should bs passed without heaitation, It is eaid that a matter of fifteen million acres sre in- volved, and there is no conelderation of public policy which should excuse theso lands from contributing as all other lands do to the support of tho governments of ‘those states or terri- tories in which they are tituated. Ample provision was made in the acts grauting theso lands to enable the ratlways to dispose of them before forcing them to assume the obligs- tlons of taxation, the manifest intent of tho law being a speedy marketing of the public lands. The railway com- panies sought to escape the obliga- tions of the limitations put in the Rranting acts, however, by making a protended disposal of the lande, which has beea declared to be sufficient of a tranafor to prevent their roverting to the government, and they should not now bo permitted to evado the obli- gations to the states and territories which must have been assumed if they released themeelves from their obliga- tiovs to the United States. If the lands are not still public lands, they mus: surely be subject to taxation, whilst if they are held to be public lands, they are now, under the terms of the original grants, open to pre- emption in the same manner as all the other public lancs of the government. Tt is out of tho case that the railways be permitted to claim that the lands have been disposed of and yet deny the right of taxation because they are still a part of the public domain, OCOIDENTAL JOTTINGS, “DAKOTA. Menno is to have another hotel, Hay is worth 820 per ton in Deadwood. At Jamestown the ico is sixteen inches thick, A planing mill will be built at James- town, The new Presbyterian church at Bis- marck will cost 815,000, There-is 0o troublo from snow [thus far on the Dakota Central railroad. The fara.ers of Codington county are holdivg their grain for better prices. Wolrey 18 the name of a newly projeoted railroad town twélve miles north of Huron, A Codington county farmer sowed six- teen bushels of oats and harvested $1,200, The Northern Pacific will build & new bridge across the Red River at Fargo, Tt is reported that 1,000 white hunters are killing buffalo in Northwestern Da- kota, Three hundred car loads of small grain was shipped from Menno thus far during the year, Tho first legal execution which ever took pisce in the lack Hills occurred in the Lawrenca county fail, Deadwood, on De- cember 19th, James Lawton Gilmors, who killed Bicente Ortz, » Moxioan, in 1879, on the Fort Pierce, was the person hanged, UTAH. Ogden is very quiet for this season of the year, The territorial districtcourt is in session at Salt Lake, 8ix furna; ore at Tinti The new mi, jail at Ogden has been completed and is & safe and serviceable siructure, WThe Pleasant Palley cosl companies are now turning out over 300 tons of coal per day Some excitement has been csusad by the discovery «f miveral on the Oregon Short about 4) miles north of Evanston. 1t aseays from two three thousand dollars per ton, Wells, Fargo & Cc, at Salt Lake re: ported the receipt of two car loads of Frisco bullion valued at $4,341.77 and two ems from Bullionville valued at §3,239.59 one day last week, fOMING, The burning of the ordnance building at s aro running on Mammoth Fort Russell, near Cheyenno, last weok, consumed over 10,080 r'uads of cartridges, The electric light will be introduced in Laramie City as soon as the success of the company is demonstiated bheyenne. Nearly overybody at Americus is work. ivg mssessments on their leads to have their property represented at the close of the year. "The Wyoming copper company at Fair. P BEE-WEDN: S,D.AY bank hine made ite frat ont pat of eopper nl rbank is twelve miles north. rt Larawie, Tarre are at present romething over 200,000 head of sheep on _Laramie plains, A plan has veen arranged wheieby they will ba sbeared at Larsmie City during the winter, Four waiters empl yod in the reilroad hotel at Cheyenne, aud arrested recenily for attempting to burn the hotel, have n rentenced to terms of six months in il ench, The sllrged sale of Swan brothers’ sale of eattie for §2,550,000 did not take place. The negotiations were made, and the above offer of Swan brothers is open uatil Feb. 1uary 15th The Laramieits are excited over the die. covery of the bodies of two men supposed to have murdcred. The bodies were dis- covered by tome cow boys while riding in the northern part of tue territ ry, bailion, west! rom F COLORADO. Musiciars aroin ¢reat demand in Lead- ville, Longmont is bnildiog a new Methodist church to seat 300 people and c-st $6,000, Ore has been discovered in Dolores county which assays as high aa §35,000 per ton, A company has been organized in Den. ver for the purpore of building & hospital for the use of women. A Miners’ Union of the miners working in the Russell, Illincis, Contral and Nevada mining districts was formed at Central City. The Denver and Itio Grande railway has been petitioned by the citizens of Ouray to extend their road from Montrose to that sity, The proposed viaduct across the Platte river at Denver will cost, according to the plans already drawn, $144,000, It wiil be an elegant structure, The main shaft of the Gilpin County Miniog company’s mine near Central City, in 665 feet deep. water is causiog considerable troul There is bad feo ing existing among the miners on Belleview wountain, Some of the miners recently discharzed from the COhampion are said to be inciting & riot. It is said that some very rich mineral 88 been discovered in the mountains near Oolorado Springs by means of a divining rod. A company has been formed to work it, IDAHO. Bullion s stacked up in Challisas com- men as cord wood. DECEMBER &7 =S 3d finst, Their_ names were Alexander Stiles and John Morrow, Fifteen deserters from Fort Lowell are reported within the past fteen daye, A Walnut Grove avasta turnyout 576 worth of bullion from 8,100 pourds of ore. Three years and a half aco the Tomb. store mires commenced | roduciog. From 1852, the output his date the oute put ha been § The follow g property has re- cently changed hands in the ternitory, 7L he Belle, 8100,000; Red Rtcver, $200,000; Holmes mine, ,000; Liuffer company mine, $100,00); Hidden Treasurs, £50,000; Enreks, $10,000, and the Blue Dick, 818,000, NEVADA, The east drift on the 2,700 fert level of the Sierra Neyada has Leen extended 20 feet lately. Next week croes cut on the 2,900 feet level of the Comatock mine will be com- menced on the line between tho Mexican and Union. NEW MEXIOO0. In the last election the territory cast 28,440 votes, A government arsenal will bs erected at Albuquerque, The Hard Scrabble mine, in the Magda- lena district, has $85,000 in sight. A disastrous fire ocourred tt Las Vegas, December 15th, Seyeral dwelling houses were destroyed, The San Andres Consolideted Mining company has been organized, It has a capital of 84,000,000, at Coghlan, the cattle king of Tula- haa sold Bis catle ranch to & man in El Paso for $200,( 00, THE TELEGRAPHS. TEXT OF SENATOR LOGAN'S BILL. In the senate, Decomber 19, Sena- tor Logan asked, and, by unanimous consent, obtained leave to bring in the following bill, which was read twice and referred to the committee on the judiciary: A BILL for the regalation of telegraph and cable companies. Be it enacted by the senate and house of representatives of the United States of America in congress as- sembled: That any company, corporation, or pereon owning, confrolling or operat- Tdaho City isvery dull; In fact, thers is | 108 anY telegraph line or cable which 1o life in the place at all. The Custer mine at Blockfoot lest week produced $20,000 worth of gold bullion, A petrified corpse has been found near Paradise, It was the rcmains of & woman buried three years ago. The Webster mine at Silver City turns out a quality of ore, which is said to be very fine and valuable, ‘Work i being dove on the once fimous Belle Peck mine, at Silver City, witha fuir prospect of striking another bonanza, The democrats have fioally captured the organization of the house and will proba- by get the council of the present legista. ture, Nearly 160 carloads of ore and bullion have bren recrived st Blackfoot from Wood River and Challis, It was shipped to Salt Lake and Oxaha, | MONTANA. The assessmont in Gallatin county this your foots up £3,507,610, The sum of $2,000 has been sutseribed in Beuton to build a sister's hospital, The bullion shipments from Butte dor. ing the last week was valued at §97,424 ‘The new ho'sting engine at the Arracon- da mine, near Butte, is said to be the largest in the territory. The Billiags pl;l)un say that the Clark’s Ford county is full of gold, and predict that in a short time it will be filled with miners, The hones of a mastodon fith were re- cently brought into Butte, They were tound in the belt range of monntains, and weigh over 160 pounds, The famous Shakepeare Parrot copper mine, near Butler, has_been sold for $30,- This is & hundred feet claim, and the adjacent propeity is just as valaable. Deer Lodge Valley ranches complain bitterly of the increase inthe rates of trane- portation of hay, grain and other freights over the Utah and Northern railroad. It compels many to haul their produce by wagon, WASHINGTON TERRTORY. Tnte news of the flood nesr Walla Walla shows that earlier 1eports were trae. The damsge to railroads snd br.dges amounts to over $100,000, . Several citizens of Seattle have sccured o charter for a national bank in Yakima, the capital of which will bo 830,000, This will be the sixth national bank in the ter- ritory, OREGON. Six cases of the worst type of small-pox were reported one day last week in Poct- land, Trains on the Oregon and California road wiil be resumed soon and will run through to Jefferson, ® Travel is still interrupted between Wal- lula and Walla Walls, but the break will be repaired, The stage between Yakima and Golden- dale while crossicg & swollen stream re- cently was carriea away by the current. The driver was drowned and the mail and oxpress matter lost. One ot the Indians confined in jail at Pendleton for the murder of Mulherron was _induced to turn State's evidence, and has disclosed the whole (affair, The par- ties in jail are the guilty ones, The re- wainder of Mulherron’s property has been found, OALIFORNIA, Ostrich farming is exciting the attention of San Francisco capitalists. One,Los Angeles firm furniches 835,000 worth of produce per month to Arizonsns, Itis propored to construct & narrow guage road from Cajon valley to National City. On December 20th there was a sharp shock of earthqaake -at Sau Buenaven- tura, W Mining has become quite common near Tios Angeles Iately, sud several paying claims bave been found, Buildiog is very aotive In Los Angeles, One block there in progress of erection is 0 cost something over 100,000, The rain and mud storm which prevailed last week over the entire state was the greatest which has ocourred for years, In 1879 the improvement of Csos Bay was begun, The chaunel has been deop- ened fiom nine feet at low tide to over thirteen feet at low tide, Seventy thous- and dollars has already been expended on the work, The city front south of Market street in San Francisco is filling up so rapidly with tramps that the volice have commenced raiding them, Thieviog and burglaries are common and the tramps are looked on as the guilty ones, The California Southern railroad com- pauy bus begun a condecmuation suit agaiust the Southern Pacific in Sun Diego county, It seems thatthe forwer company unwittiogly built about ten wiles of their road ou land belonging to the latter, near Leguna, ARIZONA Tombatone will have billiard tourna- ment. Twelve hundred people visited the bull fight at Tucson last Sunday, ‘About 9,000 tovs of hay were recently destroyed by fire at Fort Apache, Two American prospectors were mur- dered eight miles from San Pedro on the lauds upon the shores of the United States, or which entors the United States from any foreign state or country, or which transmits messages between any of the states of the United States, or which occupies with ita poles, wirgs, cables, or other structures any of the military or post roads of the United Staté¥, or any of the navigablo streams or waters of the United States, ehall receive any mes- sage from any other company, cor- poration, or person owniug, operating or controling any other telegraph line or cable, and ehall transmic and doilver tho aame in good faith and without disorimination, partiality, or prefererco, whetker 16 shall relate to the business of the company, corpora- tion, or person cffering 1t, or shall have boen received or cellected from other persons for tratsmission. Sec. 2. That whonever any com- pany, corporation or person owning, controlliog or operating any telegraph line or cable, as described in the first section hereof, shall receive or be offered any message from any other cumpany, corporation or person own- ing, controlling any other telegraph line or cable, which message, origin- ating at some point other than the place at which it {s offered as afore- 8aid, such company shall, in trans- mittiug and delivering the samo, designate ther:on tbo name of the place at . which the message or dispatch originated without charge therefor. And nothing shall be added to any such message for which any charge shall bo made. SEc. 3. That any company, corpo- ration, or person violating any of the preceding provisions of this act shall be liable to a penalty of $500 for every sach violation, to bo recovered, with costs of suit, in the name and for the benefit of the company, cor- poration, or } erson offering any mes- sage for transmission, and shall also be lisble to an action by tho person siguing such message, or who may have any interest in the same, for any damages resulting to such person from any violation of this act, Any circuit court of the United St: may, by writ of mandamus or injunction, or other appropriate proceeding, spe- cifically enforce the execution of the preceding provisions of this act; and in case of repeated violations thereof any company, person, or corporation offending may be epjoined from trans- acting any telegraphic business, Sec, 4, That any officer, director, agent or employe of any company or corporation owning, operating or con- trolling any telegraph line or cable, as described in the firat section hereof, who shall read, inspeot or examine, or who shall permit any other person to read, inspect or examine any meseage instrusted to such company or corpo- ration for transmission vr delivery, or which shall come into his custody, ex- cepting only those peraons in the em- ployment of such company or corpora- tion who shall be required to read, inspect or examine such mossage for tho purpose of transmitting or recely- ing the same, or in the discharge of some duty in connection therewith, shall be deemed guilty of a miede- meanor, and on conviction therefor shall be fined not more than §500 or bo imprisoned for not more than six months, or both; provided, that this section shall not apply to any act done in obedience to any subgeena or other legal process. An Elmira, (N. ¥ ) Lady, Mrs, H, L. Olark, 801 E, Clinton street declares: Burdock ' Blood Bitters sre a medicine I adwire, Best rewedy for dys- Dopsia in the world, Kcep house supplied with it. Horsford's Acid Phosphiate A VALUABLE NERVE NUNIC Dr 0. ¢, OLMSI1EAD, Milwan- kes, Wis , says: *Thave used it in my posctice ten years, and consider it valuable nerve tonie.” FOR EU-M-ACTE-S-M As it is for all the painful discases of the MD BOWELS.| B Mt of tho send potios that causes the ‘which| nly the victims of rheumatism can roalise. £ e oy TARPS OF Saffe LT have been quickly relieved, and i short| & e # PERFECTLY CURED, rurn:rum 1D or DEY, SOLD by DRUGGLSTS,| T ] OMAELA COFFEE AND SPIGE MILLS. Roasters and Grinders of Coffees and Spices, Manufacturers of IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER Clark’s Double Extracts of BLUEING, INKS, ETC H. G, OLARK & 00., Proprietors, 1403 Douglas Street, Omahs, LEE, FRIED & CO. O LES.AX.E HARDWARE, 1108 and 1110 Harney £t., - OMAHA, NEB. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Cthers. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. It is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three poun s of corn. {Stock fed with Ground Uil Cake in the fall and win- ter, inatead of runntng down, will increase in weight and be in good market- able condition in the spring. Dairymen as well as others who uso it can tes- tify to its merits, Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $25.00 per ton; no charge for sacks. Address o4-e0d-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb, L. C. HUNTINGTON & SON, DEALERS IN HIDES, FURS, WOCL. PELTS & TALLOW 204 North Sixteenth 8t, - - OMAHA, NEB. CALF&BRO. ABADAY HIMEBAUGH, MERRIAM & CO,, Proprietors, Wholesale Dealers in i \yl T i 4 = o B ‘SOMINITIIS Mills Supplied With Choice Varieties of Milling Wheat, Western Trade {Supplied with Oats end Corn at Lowest Quotations, with prompt shipments, Write for prices. M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS [ 1301 and 1308 Farnam St. Cor. I3th G ATHE CITY PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter’s Materials, ALSO SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. First-class facilitice for the Manufacture of all kindes of Mouldis Paiuting and matching a Specialty, Orders from the country will be promptly executed, A. MOYER, Froprieto addr | communications to ESTABLISHED IN 1868, D. H. McDANELD & CO., HIDES, TALLOW, GREASE, PELTS, WWOOL AND FURS, T ¥ Db can be aent by mail \Witkes, 1RO A LDSON & 00, Burllagton, Vi KIDNEY-WORT 204 North 16th St., Masonlc Block, Main House, 46, 48 and 62 Dear- bore avenue, Chicago. Refer by tarmiulon to Hide and Leather Natlonal Bank, Ohlcago,