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4 THE I)A} LY BEE o The Omaha Bee Published every morning, except Sum ay. The only Monday morning daily, TERMS BY MAIL Ome Year....8100 Bix Months.. 5,00 ree Months, 83 00 One Month.... 100 THE GOVF¥RNORS INAUG- URAL Governor Dawes' inaugural is & “lahort and fairly weitton doenment 1t does not cover a wide range of sub- joote, but on one or two of the most vital issues it is moro pronounced and goen farther than wo had been led to "HE WEEKLY BEE, published every | ¢ xpect from the nominee of a conven Walnesday. TERMS POST PATD— One Year.....$200 | Threo Months, 5 jon which was notoriouely controlled by railroad fxflaences, The governor's Six Montha. ... 100 | One Month.... 20 [-u.gestionsas to the importance of fos- AxxiicAN NEws CoMPaxy, Sole Agen's | tering tmmigration snd proteeting and kg e Aol Jiversifying our ageicultural interests CORRESPONDEN atfons relating to ors shonld be add=cssed to th —All Commnn. Eprron Letters and Remittances rhould bs dressed to THE BER PUBLISHING CoMPA OmanA, Drafts, Chocks and Post i Orders to be mada payable to the ord: the Cowpany. $ho BEE PUBLISHING C0., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor - Axp Joseph wears a coai of many colors B Vav's hoom has collapsed, and Val has gone on with his satchel to Wash- ington, a sadder if not & wiser man, S—— Tur Douglas county delegation should not forget about that bill to rid this city of shyster josticos of the peace. THERE is no more necessity for a geological survey than there is for a phrenologleal chart of his exeelloncy'’s eranium. Wiio is the coming man for eena- tor! Ask the man in the moon. He knows just as much about it as any other man. Pourricar, banking was & poor in- vestment in the case of Loran, It will be a good deal poorer investment in the case ot Joseph, Ax taer advance in lightning rods will take place next week. General O'Brien has announced himself as a sandidate for senator. PeNvLETON'S little bill has prssod both hou A bill making provision for competitive examination for the civil servico commission is now in or- der. GoverNor Nance hasdis'inguished himself in one commendablo direo- News and E ltorial ESS LETTERS—AlIl ™ nes .| will racet with general approval. Hia educational system, views upon « wnd the nee jobbing in text books are soand. The governor expresses greater confidence in the ability of a well orgahizad wilitia to supprems rlots than we have Exp rieves has shown that the appeara in times of local trouble is more likely to provoke breaches of the lawa than to suppries them, Tho state militia ought to be fos- tered, however, because every able bodied young man in the state ought to be taught to bear arms for the com- mon defnse, and to know how to use them, and the physical exerciso re- ceived by military training is bene- ficial, . y of preventing the | evor henrd, o of & citizen soldier tikonoara of. But the government o.n do that just as well as any set of 8peo OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. The sll-absorbing topic of interest in Burope has byen the death of Leon Gunbetta, Universal nouncea his loss irreparable to France in her present condition with a foeble presidont, a wesk end vacillating min. fstry and a divided and factious at- nembly. Sinos the dswafall of Gam betta tha country cannot bo mald tc have hiad a goverament, if by govora ment is meant tho firm and faithfal application of principles avowed by tho uation’s reprecentatives, Dis graced abroad by the etion of incom potent mintuters in the Eiyptian ym- broglio and discredited ar homo by a consent pro shamcful display of inoapacity and rocklessness in the manegoment of i's finanoes, (ambelts seemed to be the only man who on a fresh appeal to the country might have copsd suc- 8 of ceasfully with tho small jealone local magnates, returncd a mu, pledged to carry out a large, conrist- ent and oreditable programme, and who through his personal magnetism and electrio elcquency could have stervmed the tide of metlicerity and arrested the rapia decadence of repub lican forms of government ‘n tho es'i- wation of his conntrymen, On the railroad question which is roccgnized as the dominant issue of the present, Governor Dawos has taken a position in advance of his pre decessors and gone a good deal fariher than was expected of him at the time of his nomination, Three monthaago he was not 8o strongly Impresied with the necessity of protecting the publio against the aggression of railroad monopolies, and of the Iniquity of passes. It in gratifying therefore that he has planted himself abreast of pub Mo sentiment, although he is very cautious and rather fearful lest the legislature will blunder into oppress- ing the rai'roads. In recommending a g :ological survey for Nebrasca the goveraor is trying to encourage an cxpenelve schemo that would tex the treasury without bene- fittiug thostate, Nebriska is not a mineral etato like California, Color- ado, Miseouri or Virgi We all know that neither gold, nor silver, nor copper, nor any other metal will be found in our s tats unless somebody sults a mine, Ii coal does exist in quantities worth mining, the best way to encourage it's discovery is tion, He did not go into wholesale pardoning under the plea of exocu. tive clemency. —_— FuurtkeN nunorep New York mer- chants have petitioned against the paasage of any bankrupt lsw. How much they oxpsot to make by their next fallure is not stated in the dis- patches. — Arw the iadisations point to the re turn ot ex 8 cr tary Wivdom to con- gress by the Minnesota legislature. Ho is the most oxperionced and prob- ably tho ablest public man in the state, —— Tue Lord is said to love a cheeiful giver, but tho way in which soma of the masked railioad tools at Lineoln are givlog themselves away is making ko monopoly managers turn blue uuder the eyes ————— Ir is currenily reporiod that the Omaha National bank will be removed to Lincoln next weck, but it will take more than the bank has in its vaults to eloct the cashier to the United Statos senat Tuk Towa demoocratic central com- mittee is taking the fiald rather early for the campalgn of 1883, They have already held a meeting and selected the placy for a conventlon, with the anderatanding that the dato is to be fixed at an early day. A wvew weeks ago Gen. Holman was resd out of the demooratic party by De. Miller and the Omaha Horald, Tho demoorats in the lower house of the legislature have read Gen. Holman back into the party by a unanimous endorsement for temporary speaker, That would indicate that Gen. Hol. man has a little more influence with his party than the man at the head of the Herald Tae woman suffragists are coming to the front again, The Washington suffragists held a wmeceting on New Year's day and passed resolutions ex- tending Mrs, Helen M. Gougar their mora! support in her ecancal suit, How the suffragists at the national eapital can have eny definite knowledge a8 to which #ide in the Gougar ¢qaab- ble tella the truth, s & myetery which we canuot divine, TrerE seems to be a geveral preasion that the legislatare will be-|to the number of national binks gin balloting for United States sena. | establiched lact year, Fiteen new tor next Tuesday. 8 is & misiake, | national banks were establizhed in The act of congress governing the|Nebraska, whilo the next highest eleotion of senators is us follows “The legislature of rach is chosen next preced the expira tion of the timo for which any eena tor was elected to repro:ent e hall on the me: er (he wceting and o of, proceed to elect a senator I con ros,” state Taes Now the legislature convened and |authorlty whatever to lease the Yel. organizsod last Tuesday, and conee quently the second Tuesday atter its organlzation will be Tuesday, January 16:h or one weck from next Taesday. b state anizition by offeriog a bouus, There is al- roady a reward of $5,000 offered by the atate for the finding of a thirty- inch vein of cval. This is a suflisient incentive for boring holes in the ground without taxing the people for sxpertmonts. The suggestion that the leg/alature should pass lawa to pro- tect people from making fools of them- solves by investing in bogus patent rights and baloon sohemes is unworthy of a place in a governor's message. Thore are already laws on our statute books for the punishment of confidence eharps who procure money uodar falee pretonses, Our cviminal codo is nufi- olent Lo give ail the necossary protec- tion, Aa we said before, tho inaugural is e ehort avd busincsslike document which ecalls for no further comment, and takon all in all, will compars fivorably with other papers of & like na.ure which bave preceded it from thy «xecutive office sinoe Nebraska's admiesion into the union, THE FiRST NATIONAL The extonsion of the charter of the First National bank of Omaha is an event of importsnce to our local fi- naucial interests, It is the oldest baok in Nebraska organized under the national bauking act, having been chartered on the 1st of January, 1863, twenty yoars ago. When it was firat organiz.d it became the success r of bauking hous»s in the then territory of Nebraska, Edward Oreighton was its fist president and Augustus Kountss, now cf Now York, cashier. The establishment by Mr, Augustus Kountze of the great banking house of Kountzo Bros. in New York was fol- lowed by the assamption of the presi- dency by Mr. Herman Kountze, under whose management the institution bas bocome one of the most soli i and bLest known banking houses in the country. The policy of the First Na- tional has always been a safe and con- servative one, and doring the panio of 1873 it stood out as one of the fow instltutions whose solvency was never jucetioned. Uader the new banking act ite chartor has been extended for twenty years, as may ba seen by Con- troller Kaox's cerlificate of extension, which appears in another column, Inoidiutally we may remark that Notriaka stands at the hoad of the list among tho states of the Usion as state, New York, took out but four teen charters, Ounly four states in the slon have a larger capital in thelr vew banks, THE senate commwittee o1 pubdlie 3 | lands have come to the conolusion that the seoretary of the interior had no lowstone park to a et of speoulators, Kountze Brothers, one of the oldest|® Meesieurs Clemenceanand Da Frey- cinot are each spoken cf as the tuture French leader. Both are inferior in ability to the dead statesman. Clem- enceau has been for meveral years the leader of the'extreme]loft or radical re- publicanbranch of the assembly,and Da Freycinet is well known as advocate of the modorate republicans and Gam- etta’s successor as premier, In England the week has been mark- od by renewed speculations upon the stability of Mr. Gladstone's revised cabinet, and the policy which the government will pursue upon the opoening of parlisment in February. The entry of Sir Charles Dilke, the old time wheel horse of the radicals, has exotted wide spread comment. Mr. Dilke has himsolf felt it meocessary to retract some of his former moat radical utterances, and apologizes on the scoro of youth for his eorly arguments favoring repub i can institutions. But if Mr. Diko 18 an ultra radical republican, Lord Derby is an ultra-couservative. His renewal of miuisterial lifo has given good reasons to appronhend a reac- tionary tendency in the handling of the Trish question, apprshensions which are strengthened by the re- gained popularity of Mr, Forster, and tho virtual adopion of his policy by the lord lteutenant. The reports that Mr. Gladstone contemplated a with drawal from puslic hfe have died away, aud so long #s he remains in office his politiosl dexterity and groat porsonal influence will probably od bsfore that the Yellowstone |w in st park should be Improved and properly | polled by the drift of Spanish opivion ich the monarchy ia steadily fcr- I'ko intelligent and progressive ele ment of the prople, which is fast nc- quiring a coutrol of the country, will never be satisfied un'il the intolerant and rerctionary orgauic law established essential particulars on the model of the c.natitution of 1859, which was one of the most liversl ever pro- olsimed In Exrope, 80 pronounced an advance as this in the direcilon «f fre titations is beyond the power of the snt ministry reprovents nothing but a temporary fasion of iu cougruous components, Accomplishe ACTU by 2 ie, Senor Sagasta canno long goond ng on & knife blade. and the time caunot be cistant when he will abandon in despair the cfforts acile the aims of bis liberal ad with the ideas and prejudices of the eonservaiive following for which ho is indebted to Marshal Campos Count Andrassy’s reappearince as premier of the Austrian empire em- phasizss the reality of a warlike crisis, Lt was to conciliate Rurs a that this briliiant stateeman, tho artifizer of the Mogcorito humiliation st Berlis, was reiirid in 1870, Heis the head ot the Hungarian nation in a sense; wasago.dierin the revolutionazy move- ments in 1848, and waes for yearsa refugee in London teaching mutic in Lsicester Square, the cxile quarter of the metropolis, It was through And- rassy’s lustrumentality that the Aus tro-Gormaa union becamo o real one 1f he resumes the post of promier, it will be a signal to Ruezia that the em- pire is ready for war, which > As the principals in the late rebel lion in Ezypt have nearly all been im- prisoned or exiled, and the threatened iavasion of Lower E ypt by the False Prophet and his followers has been checked at Kertoum, there is no rea- #on why the English army of ocoupa- tion should be rotained at its fall strength, und the fact that it s to bo reduoed one half may be accepted as an assurance of confidence on the part of Englaad that the troubles in Egypt are about over, The reduction of the army may also have a qualifying infla- ence on the temper of Krance,and make negotiations with her as to the management of Egyptian affairs more casy. Chinese objections to railroads, not, as has heen represented, en founded npon superstition, The Chin- ¢80 say, if wo baild railroads to trans port peopleand merchancise from one point to another, what are we going to do with the immense surp'us of Iabor it will throw vpon us! What can we do with tho thousands of of coolies and others thrown ount of employmen 1 The question ix a vory gerious one. At present the internal commerce of tho empire is woved al- most entirely by the cinals and nat ural water conrses, or on the backs of camels, mules and men. There are but fow horses and almost no vehioles, Despito his brave talk the sultan is suffice to bind together the ili- awmorted olements of his party, and assure to all his followers a firm hold of power. Nothing but a Kuropean war, and some grave blunder in the attitude assumed by Eoglard in such an emergency, would expose the present cabinet to a chanca of overthrow, In the absemce, how- aver, of any abnormal event, there are grounds on which both the foreign and home policy of the Gladetone ministry will be followed with more than commou interest during the new year, Soldom has British diplomacy hid to deal with a more thorny problew than that presented by tho corqu-st of Eyypt, Of the threo poesible solutions, viz, annexstion, anbmiasion to the willd i a ¢ nierenc., or thy reatorstion of the status quo, cath is open to manv obhjectiont; yet tho British forciga cffice cannot post pone wmuch longer a choice between thei, Germany, Austriaand the Danubian provinces continue deluged with water caused by the rising of the Rhine aud its tributarics, Fifty villages along the formor river aro reporced as de- atroyed, and lmmense damages has boen done 1o dikes on the Danube, Fow political rumors of iutercs’ omanate from the courts at Borlin, Vienua or 8. Potersbarg. Fresh Nihilist threats reach the czawr but Alexauder IIL is beginuing to sve that danger to the empira of tho czirs lies more from wittout than witiin, Iuis felt both at St. Potersburg and elsewhere that the foreign policy of every Earopean te will be affected by the relations of Ruwsin to the Austro-German lengue. The whole Europ:an situa tion during the ensuing twelvemonth will, in facr, hinge upon the question whether we are to &2 peace or war on the Danobs aud the Vis'ula There is ground for thivking that a collision can only bs delayed by the sentimetal relootance of the vencrable German Kuiser, who is now eighty-six yeara old, The renewal of the alliance be- tween Germany and the Hapsburg empire for a second term of years, to date from Ostober! 1884, attests a de- liberate resolve on the part of Bis- marck to support Austrian preten- sions in the Balkan peninsvla Those pretensions are palpably and utterly irreconcilable with those of the Northern Empire. The Russian people would never permit the cmir to sacrifice the influence aud opportunities purchased by such an outlay of the national blood and treas- ure, end we may be equally certair that the Hapsburg wmonarchy will never abate a jot of ita claims upon tho sulian’s inheritavee so long aa it osn rely upon the firm svpport of Bimarok Nodivision of the O to. man territory in Earope will be pr ticable, buesusoe neither of the heirs will give up Osnatantinople. War, i short, is the only issus from tha eon. teption for dumisa ceiin the Bykan peninsala, and it will not be easy to | posipone much longer the drawing of | the awvord. With « very weoek comes | froma pro.f of ho clash of interest sian coup detar iu Bulgaris, shows that the materials of oonfl gration are veady for the torch. Tn Spain the sowwewiat premature attempt of Marshal SBerrano to orgsn. ize m new party uuder the name of the This will probably knock Uncle Rafus Hateh out of & bonanza. It is em- Inently proper as wo bave already Dynastic L ft seems to have tempor- arlly miscarried, but his project rep- auo iliirigae in the principalities, and (| the actual orisis in Roumelia, which ' gy is an Aunstrian rejoinder to the R o | ques very nervous. He suspects a consptr- asy among his pashas of highrank, and only four of his ministers are allowed to come and go at will. The totl of Britith ;rmy and navy pensions is 816,244 866 about one fourth that of the Uuited Siates, CHEROK{E LANDS. Excitement Among Cattlememen on the Kaneas Loraer. Bpecial Dispatch to Tun Dxx. Oarowerr, Ks., Jauuary 6. —There i corsiderabls excitement here among cat'lemen holding on to the Cherokes Oatlet, growing oat of a Washington dispatoh to the eff ot Lhas orders have h2en issucd from the iaterior depart ment for the removal of all stock men from the Oatlet. Tuis etate of affiirs reema to havo been breught ab.ut by an attemot on the part of the Stand. ard O cattle compsny to foroe in « large range which is and has been oc- cupied by emall soskholders wuo have pad taxes to the Che keo mnation for the priviiege of ho diog the cattle enthe Outot. Tt ccems these small stockholders, to- wether with pariios in Kansss who have beeu in vne habit of leuing their stock graze vpm Caerokes lands withont paying anthiag to the Tadiane or state ot Kansas, have made ¢ rtain statements to Sceretary Teller which have induced him to issus s sweeping order ngainst all stecckmen as weil aa the Staudard Oil company without ra- gard 10 any injust oo thatmay ba done to those who have paid taxes to the Cherokesn in good faith, and brughe the privilege of fencing and ereciing buildings for the AC0IWmMO- ation of their herders The gonoral view tuken hore is that Secretary Toller's order is virtual ac knowledgment that the Ouclet be- longs to the United S ates, and there foro the Cherokees have no rght to make contracts holding stock thereon, and should his order be carried out under this view, uneasy epirits along the border will argue they have a right to locate upon the lands in ques- tlon, The result will be that iuside of twenty days after the s:ockmen have been removed there will be a general rash of settlers upon the lands, aud & rush that can only be stopp:d by placing more troops upon the bor- dor than the United Siates can mus- ter at the present time, e —— The Pas-ion Play. Special Dispatch to Tux Drx New York, January b6.—Mayor {dson said to-day to Saloni Morse s = in 1876 has beon roconstructed in all f 1| huvdred depu‘ations from the p Preparatious of (Gambetta—Daath of General Ohsuzy, or the Funeral GENERAL FOREIGN NEWS. specis] Disjatohes to Tum Baw THE FUNERAL OF GAMBETTA, *ARlS January B, number of wresths sent to be placed ou Gim | b tta's coftin exceeds £,000. Fonr fov inces wil! attend the funerl Eght will be deliv at the en- tho cemetery of Pere La Coaise. Among the speakers will be tha minieter of justics, reprecenting the government,'und Pogra!, vice pres ident of the senate, represcuting chi body. Ly\'uxr will spesk on behalf of the government of Nattonal deéfonce, Cha- tour for the Alsaco-Lorraine neeocia- tlone, and Kabie for the Alsatians To-day, while Panl Dacoulede wae watchiug by the side of the catafalque, the mayor walked into the room. D coulede said, *‘you have no right to approach the c flia of the man you in- suived duting lito.” With theso words he ntruck the mayor, who returned the blow. The hystauders se erated the combatants. Pere Hyacinthe will preach a funeral sermon Sunday. Gas and eloctric lamps in the Placo de In Ooncerde will be lighted and veiled with crape Saturday. It Is estimated that 15,000 peracna yeaterday visited the Palsis Bourbon, whare tke body of Gumbetta is lying The Paix dentes that Gambetta's death has produced any great change in the foreign policy of the republic, which desires nor fears war, and adds it foread into it by the action of any power Franoe would undortake it without as it would have done with Gambetta, Monrrear January 5. —The French assuciation cabled a resolution ¢f sym- pathy with the family of Gambetta, and an order for a wreath for the tomb, ANCTHER PRENCHMAN DEAD, Paris, January 5 —General Chanzy, a well known French general and life gonator, dicd suddenly last night. La France aske: *‘What has France done to Dsath? Hae Bismarck signed a compact with i 7 Chauzy’s dea h is o great sorrow. Germany foared him a they readed General Skobel ff.” Le Telegraphe: *‘The memory of two glorious servanis of the nation tesches us to be cf good courage and msistain ateadfast faith in our im- wortality,” Lo tempseaye: ‘Great hopes were founded on General Chavzy. Unani- mous regreta follow him Tae S.ir etat s that Genersl Charzy had been selected generalssimo in the mobilization of thy Frerch army. Loxpow, January 6 —The Times 83ys tho death of Guneral Chauzy following eo quickly that of Gambatta, must disturb many political calcula vone, and will jncrease the uncer- tainly prevailing as to the future pros- pects of the French political parties DuaUlere, presidont of the council, is unwell. NO CAUSE YOR FEAR. BeruN, Jaouary 6 —Toe North German Gazotte reproduces with ap- proving comments the remarks of The Moscow G izette, that neither on Ger- many’s nor on Rua ide is there any reagon for a conflict, even in the distant future, BANK DROKBN. Sr. PrrersBure, January 6 —The Municipal bank of Sapojok has fsiled, The habilities are probably some mil- liona of roubles. The aers’s, exclueive of the furaiture, are only vweniy-nine roubles, A POINTER TO A PUBLISHER. MiLan, Javuacy 6.~ A newspaper, havivg opened a subseription for a monument to O erdank, has been warnei that the j mroal will be ee questerad 1f the sunscription list con- inues to bo published, avd prnal ac tion commenced acainst the subscri- bers. The government juformed the perfeots they will be held responsible for the vigorous enforcement of the recent irs'ructions in regard t> Aus- tlan manifestations, THE RHINE RECEDING, Wrkseanen, January 5. The Rhine is falwg elowly at Mayence, Co blen‘z and Cul gn>, The Main and Lahn are aleo fulling etendily, Nav'- @ation of the Neckar is reopened The Graud Dake of Baden hss given £500 for the relief of the suffurers and the emperor specially ordered averything posstble done for them The wreoked aud dead bndies of ani- mals are drifting down the river. AN INTERESTING EVENT, Beruy, January 5 —De. Schroeder has baen summored © London to at- tend the Princess of Wales THE FAMINE IN IRELAND, DusLiN, Javuary 5 —A husband and wite starved to death at Ballina- sloo. Sanitary worka baing started at Kilrnsh to aff rd re Cuarrick on- the Shannon guardians show a large vumber of farmers with holdings of trom one to twenty acres, absoluteiy without st ck or food, AB UT FRANKLIN. Loxpox, Janusry 6.—Harry Nte eus’ collection of docoments relative to Dr. Bepjamin Fravklin have been purchased by the United States gov- erument, THE NOTE OF LORD GRANVILLE to Beutish representatives abroad pro. poses that the Suez eanal be treated virtually as an arm of the res, freely pen to navigation, bnt subject to a rula forbidding belligeront operations both in its control and within certain distances f its extremities, applisd for licenso to presont the Passion play, *Tussmuch us to grant this license would be an et sganst the wishes of the most ifl ontial wd respectable pooplo of thus e wavity, I thizk 1t my duty to deoly rantin g it, and is my desision tichigan rolitics Spocial Dispatoh Tus Ba Dernosr, January b.—-The demo- eratio and greenback membors of t ancus this forenoon grecd to set together tn all the tone of party policy, which will, of course, settle the seuatorial succes sion, slature held & Below Z.ro. Bpocial Dispatch to Tn New Yok, Jenuary 4 —The snow is about thres iuches deep here and the storm continues. Inthe northern part of the state the '‘hermometer is trom 8 to 10 below and st Quebee it ls rosonis u logitima'e and inevitable :s in the process of llberalization 19 below. 80n, 1n whosa The operation of the Imperisl extra- | dition set in Canada preveribos the | Ownadian sfatute sovering the snb in woel | IRISH N | Dusury, Jauvary 0 The missio rt eentevead Jorn Givan, g | for Mouvoghan f parliament under aceretary for Ieeland | Cap'ain Tal ef comwmissioner of the Dablin poljes, hu res'gaed, LOGAN'S LETTER. Lima, Javuwy b The Peruviar aro andignant at Minisier Log letter to Montero, They say L gan, | being miniater to Ohili and not Peru, hiad no right to address an cflicial letter really postponed pesce, sraples, | en appointed | ONGRAEEA COFFEE AND SPICE MILLS. Foagters and Grinders of Coffecs and pices. Manufacturers of IMPERIAL BAKING POWDER Clark's Double Extracts of BLUEING, INKS, BTC . G ULARK & CO., Proprictors, 1403 Dougiss Stroct, Omaha, LI, FRIED & CO. OV BRI SIS AL HARDWARE, 1108 and 1110 Harrvey i t., - OMAHA, NEB. McMAHON, ABERT & CO,, Wholesale Druggists, 3156 DOUCLAS STREET, - OMAHA, NEB. L. C. HUNTINGTON & SON, DEALERS IN HIDES, FURS, WOOL. PELTS & TALLOW 204 North Bixteenth §t, - - OMAHA, NEB. METGALF &BRO. jifes - |8 T o 2 1006 Farnam 8t., Omabha. i | communication to Pera and that hlll E-i.l[? HIMEBAUGH, MERRIAM & CO,, Proprietors, Wholesale Dealers in - U5 5 o< iy SR FLEV o i & 0 = = = m s R ea s N :: Mills Supplied With Cheice Varieties of Milling Wheat, Western Trac> {Supplied with Oats and Corn at Lowest Quotatione, with prompt shipments, Write for prices. M. Hellman & Co. WHOQLESALE CLOTHIERS, 130l and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. |13th OMAHA, NEB. G ATH OITY PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter’s Waterials, ALSO SASH, DUGRS, B tair Ra s, Balusters, Window es, Eic luting and A. MOYER, Proprieto ESTLABI ED ¥ 1868, S D. H. McDANELD & GO, RIDES, TALLOW, GREASE, PELTS, WOOL AND FITRS 204 North 16th 8t., Masonic Block, Main House, 46, 48 and 62 Dear- barr avenue, Onleago. Refer by permiseion to 11 Leather Natlona! BunE, cinc.Z'D‘v o [ide snd