Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
4 “he Omha Bee. Published every morning, except Suft- ay. The only Monday morning daily. TERMS BY MAIL— Qae Year....210 00 | Three Months.$3.00 Bix Months.. 5.00 | One Mont! .00 vHE WEEKLY BEE, published every Weinesday. TERMS POST PATD— One Year. 10 | Three Months, 50 Qix Months, 00 One Month.... 20 AMERICAN NEws Compavy, Sole Agents Newsaealers in the U, States, stfons relatir aatters should be addressed to the Epiron or The Dk BUSINE Tetters and Remittances shov Aresred to Tir Ber PUBLISHING JMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Postofic Jrders to be made bis to the order ol the Company, ¥he BEE PUBLISHING C0., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor. The repudlican legislative caucus has agreed to a secret ballot for United Statessenator. The ballot is the pre- rogative of a sovercign, who is ac- countable to no one but himself for his acts. The reprosentatives of the people are accountable to their con- stituents. They have uo right to evado that responsibility either in the legislature or in any eaucus. Tho secrot ballot in a caacus afiords o chance for bribery and eorruption and leaves the people in the dark as to the men who have batrayed them, If a bad man is nominated by secrot ballot all who participate will be held equally responsible. The men whe are true to their trust should not fall to have their votes record- ed; the men who are recreant should not be allowed to sueak under the sccrot ballot. ———— Frexcu broth s now attracling more attention than Irish stew in Eu- ropean political restaurants. Tue tendency of tho times s to- wards consolidation, but it does not appesr to have struck the senatorial vote at Lincoln hard enough to leave & mark, Mz Roneson got in his work, after all, in the naval appropriation bill. ‘Tho senate will now be given a glori- ous opportunity to do some thorough pruning. Ir io announced that Ex-Secretary Blaine contemplates an extonded tour through the south in the spring. Mr. Blaine's political fences in the south are in at least as good a condition as in any other portion of tha cvuntry. Axnorner effort is being made by the Ohio temperance people to pass the Pond law. [t nearly drowned the republican party at the last election. Ohio would d» well to follow Ne- braska's sensible method f dealing with the liguor question, SE——— BENaTOR VAN WyCK's speech in fa- vor of putting wood on the free list Is strongly commended by the leading papers of thecountry. Eventhe New York Sun has a good word to say for the Republican senator, who knows the differonce between proteoting Amerioan industsy and stimulating American monopoly. —— Oty Arrorney Howk is of the opinlon that some changes in our char- ter are needed before we oin extend paving operations over the ocentral portion of the city and levy the neces- sary tax for street intersections, The attention of the Douglas county dele- gation and especially of Mr, Colpetzer is called to this subject, which will doubiless receive prompt attention. SeEEE—————— Tuk fire of yesterday n;urning gave evidence that there is a lack of har- mony in our fire department and that the service needs a littlo more enthu- siasm, Omaha has had good reason to be prood of her velunteer fircmen, and there ought to be no falling cff' in the efficiency aud eplrit of the force now that an exceilent water works system makes it easler and less dan- gerous to fight the flame Tuk unasual length of the senatorial contest at Lincola is haviog its effect in res‘ricting logislation, The number of bills reported from the committees is smaller than for years, and those passed will in all probability be much tewer in number than at the last ses- sion. The people may, perhaps, be congratulated over the prospect. Legislation is an unfortunate neces: sity, and should be as sparing as pos- sible. The ideal siate will require no laws. It is unnecessary to say that Nebraska is not at present the {deal state; but if nine-tenths of the bil's iutroduced in the senate and houseare smothered to death, few will objec We need a good railroad bill, a reform in our revenue lawe, an in- crease in the number ¢f jucdicial dis- triots, laws amendatory to charters of cities of the firat class, and laws regu- lating primary clections, Of couree the appropriation bills are necessary. Aside from these subjects, the weas- ares which the e nnot just aswell do without could be couuted on the ten fingers cf any leglslator at Lin. coln, THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA SATURDAY JANUARY 27 PASSENGER RATES. Mr. Eastis, the ticket agent cf the Burlington & Missouri River railroad, has been before the special railroad committee at Lincoln and given his reasons why a three cent per mile rate would ba opprossive to the corpora- tion which employs him, Ho says that it costs the railroad nearly that sum to carry paseengers, aud that the roduction from five to four conts a milo, which was made two years auo, basnot resulted in correeponding in- In «ffect, Mr. Eas- o proposed redustion croase of tr. fii tis threatons if is made by the legislature, to decrons: trangportation facilities and to shut cff 1| sdvertising the B. & M.'s lands in Nobra dire permit further ¢xtensions, aad will order the cancellation of all special and half-fare permits, 1t the . M, depended entirely onits passengor receipts 1o oarn dividends on its stock, there might be some weightin Mr. Eistis’ arguments, The facts of the case are that the receipte from freight would more than pay ex pensesif the road never carried a pas- senger. On no other part of the C,, B. & Q. system are the frelght charges a8 extortionate, and the Nebraska and Colorado divisions have hYeen depend- ed upon for several yoars to make up dividend deficiencies on the line east of the Missouri, In other words, No- braska has been taxed by tariff, to which Illinols and Towa would never have submitted, because the Boston directors of road inelsted on dlvldxfl'i on the stock, with its fancy fi iial trim. mings. So far as the special ratcs are concerned, of which Mr. Eastis boasts, on tis ,own admission, It costs 'no 'more to haul 150 paeeen- gers than it does 35, If the special rates Induces 160 prssengers to travel where only 36 would otherwise patro- nizs the road, the company Is just that much ahead. It is certain that if tnoe speclal rates dld uot pay they never would be gran‘ed. We doub: very much if Mr, Eustis has pe: suaded the legtalaturs that a decreaso of one cent per mile in passenger rates will throw his road into involuntury bankruptey. ka, while he intimates that the rs «f the road will refuse to Four leglslatures are now struzgling with the problem ‘‘How not to elect a United States genator,” and up to the present esch has been very suc coseful in solving it. The days when senatorial timber was so acarco that & tow ballots usuaily decided the conteat botween two or three prominent can- didates are past. Our conservative fathers were very old fishioned. They thought that the qualificationa for & United States scnator ought to be womewhat above thcse required for a justice of the peace. And they general- ly succeeded in electing men of more than local prominence whose abilities had been tested in public life, and whose cheracter had been for years under general scrutiny. In consc- quenoce, ability and prominence had a monopoly of senatorial nominations and fourth classlawyers and third rate merchants were wickedly excluded from political competition. We are wiser than the last genera- tion. The national senate to-day is divided along the lines of wealth, mo- nopoly favoritiam, political dema- gogy and mental medlocrity, with a sprinkling of men who have had no other clalma for preferment than hon- esty and bralns, and whose election has been secured In old-fashioned ntates like Vermont, Massachusetts and Dolaware, where the fogies are atill in tho majorlty. The countryis advano- ing, and there is a strongly marked tendency in favor of breaking down the political bars to all who choose to enter the legislative pasture. Twenty years henco even a Niagara Falls hack driver may aspire to the proud title of dark horse in a New York senatorlal contest, provided he can secure the complimentary vote of ono of his for- mer patrons, SEvERAL complaints hare reached Tur Beg, of the overcrowded condi- tion of the High school. Oae of the first dutica of the board of education when Spring opens, will be the erec- tion of a new primary schcol in the distriot from which the lower grades in the high school building now draws a large per cent. of their pupils, Tur claim ageut's census of pen. s'oners already rolls up a footing of 250,000 names, but the men who onught malaria by ekulking in the woods during heavyengagements have not all put in an appearance aud filed tholr certificates of disability. OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. France s trembling on the verge cf a ministerlal crleis. The president of the republic, the ministry and the chamber of deputics are at variance regarding the proper policy to be pur- wued with rebpect to the expulsion of the royalists and imperialists. The excltement aroused by Prince Napo- leon's manifesto has been further in- creased by the rumors of a legitimist rising. The commitiee to whom Flo- quet's rosolution of expulsion was re- ferred have adopted a proposition ¢x- tending its scope, depriving all families who bave rolgned in France of civil rights ae citizens, excluding them from office and exiling them from Franco and French territory, The minlstry oppose Iaw increasing the discretionary powers of the government in treating with pretenders, An open rupture be- tween the chambers of deputies and the ministry seems inevitable, and the resignetion of M. Duclere, the pre- mier, 8 regardcd as certain, 1t is ovident that the ¥rench republic is menaced with scrious dangers, What with the anarchist machinations that are openly and secretly plotted in the routh, and the leyi'imist organizations reported in the west, it wonld seem that it will have to fight for t's Lfe, The admivistration of the republic is declared to have been unfortunate, and the peoplo aro surprised and din appoiuted at the extravaganco and ¢x- penditures srd the deficit shown in the budget. Krancois not prosperous, Somehow or other, the repablle ia de- clared to be wore costly than the ompire, The army, too, does ney that was expeoted of it, as the result cf the elaborate reorganization. The Tani. not exhibit the effis sinn war showed that it is lumentably deficient in the quality cf mobility, and s probably asincapableof success- fully meeting the admirably orginized German corps as it proved to be in 1870; and a coneciousness of this fact has a depressing eficet on the French mind. The republic is, no doubt, still the emphatic choice of the French people, and they are utterly adverseto exchanging It either for a Napoleonic empire, of a legitimist kingdom; and it 18 to be hoped that they will yield it the hearty eupport it will need in the dangers gathering thick and close around it. But with Gambetta in his grave and no one to fiil his place; legitimist plotiings in the Vendee; socialist plottings at Lyons and on the Swiss border, and iroperial manifee- toes openly iezued and posted in Paris, it seema deatiuzd to an ordeal thatwiil tent its powers to the utmost, In Englend the political dullness of a seagon which hes no parliamentary setsion has bien broken by two im- portant speeches, one by Lord Spen- cer, lord lieutenant of Ireland, the other by the Marqnis of Hartington, o member of the Gladstone cabinet. Both take a rather hopeful view of the outlock, bot ingist on the necessi- ty of vigorous messures to repress crimo. The spoach of Lord Harting- ton is reactionary in teadency. It declares home 1ule out of the queation and peasant proprietary too expensive for the government to purchase. Mr. Gadatone is still at Cannes resting and the note on the Ezyptian question Is received with gen- eral approval as affording England an opportunity elther to advance or recede from her present position to- wards the Porte. Ircland is diatract- ed by the expoa of a wholesale consplracy, with ation as its object, and which is believed to have been respcnsible for the crimes of the last four years throughout Ireland. Informers attracted by the govern. meont rewards have revealed all the details ¢f the plot, and forty arrests have been made by the police. The Phozaix Park wsaseins are said to be in custody, together with the assail- ants of Juror Fields. The greatest consternation prevails, The crown claim to be in possession of sufficlent evidence to covvict all of the accused, and to lay their hands on the ringlead- ersof the soclety which devised and executed the recont on'rager, Davitt and Healey have been convlect- ed of disturbing the peace and have the alternative of Flvtng bonds or en- during six months’ imprisonment. It is probable’that they will choose the latter, although offers cf ball are nu- merous and sufficient. The govern- mont has recelved a check in the eles- tlon ¢f O'Brien, editor cf the United Irlshman, to parliament from the Mallow district. His return is gener- ally interpreted as a defiance of the government and off all Eogllsh par- ties. From the north of Ireland comes news of starvatlon and distress which has Impelled the government to send a gunboat with supplies to the people, Germany has been oglow with pa. triotlam over the twenty fifth anni. versary of the wedding ot the Crown Prince Frederick William to the Prin- cees Viotoria of England. The death of Prince Frederick Oharles, brother of the emperor, caused the abandon. ment of the court festivities, but Bez- lin was brilliantly {llumipated and the whole of Germany united through ad- dressen of congra'ulation and presents in attesting their loyalty to the empire aud their devetion to the comiug sov- eign. Subscriptions from all the civilizad world are pouring into Prus- eia for the relief of the eufferers from the Rberish flaods, America has al- ready scnt $80,000, mostly sccured by German Amerleay, The sultan has issued a protest sgainst the Eoglish note on Eeypt, He objects that tho scheme of Lord Dafferin makes Eagland's authority supremo andinterferes with the porte's righta of sovereignty. Tho inltiative of legislation coning from the repre- sentative assembly throws responsibil- ity on the khedive, who in turn is the tool of the Eoglish ministry, The porte recelves cold comfort from Ger- many. Blomarck, who has wisely played England against France throughout the whole of the Egypt- {au imbroglio, informs the sultan that he has nothing to complain of, and that the English plan is the best for his own interests With Germany's iofluential backing, England can sf- ford to push forward her plans the defonse of her Iudian possessions without fear of disturblug the E pean coneert Republicana find cold comf Spain, where Don Alfonso’s e the throne was never more scoure The constitution of 1870 has just been indoracd anew in the Cortes by a vote of 220 to 13, while tho cabinet reor. ganisation ten days ago was effacted in as quiet and or: y & manver as if it had taken place in London instead for the premiership, Ho has a power fal msjority behind him, and the ribable permanence of exlsting 1n : rmmw‘.p," indicated by a public West l‘rnlnl‘u city debt is only 500, deolaration of his not long since to the | Louisville has a new paper, The Ob- effoct that republicanism was no suitable for Spainards, *“The substi said he, “‘would eplit Spain into frag ments.” Germans in ths benevolent ivstitu he s itals, eight orphan asylumos, nu than 550 relief sccietica, The eumw total ot funde availabie for the aid ¢ needy peraovs i in tho neighborhood of §8.0C0 000, beeides mince educatioual charities, Amc more important «f these inetit in the ““Vietoris Nationsl Iova.id Fand.” wh dieposes of the ut §80),000 for the relicf of of the war (f 1806, and the Prines Fuud,” ot $4(0 000, whick h a gomowhat similar application to th veterans of 1864, The pension prin ciplo i everywhere spparent. 1 ia reported with some degree ol probability that R adopt & more hum Poland. BSome f Poles are quite too anxious to maki triane, and they are to be shown tha Rossia. The Russian agreoment hereafier to speak Russian where thal ia the languege of the people, bu Polish where Polish prevalls, Ro tation of a republic for the monarchy,” Muach pride is jost'y taken by the tions «f Berlin, These number five merous pention fands, and not lees o policy toward 1 ot 8t. Potors Vurg has discovered that the Russian frionds with the Proesians &nd Aus- their real intercs's are centered in with the Vatican is practically an L abandonment of the attompt to f)ree | ently been diccovered in Butler county, tho Rassian largaage on the Polish and the men who did i claim the state poople, insomucn as the clergy are BTATE JOTTING3, Hampton has been incorporated ¢ | werver. Aurors, y 4 acadeiny. county is t0 be formed at O'Neiil. « | lettuce, but the ew 1t under glaws, t | eermons, i y ore to the extent of §500 on Weeping Water can disc bed of marvle, the puspose can be sold, 1 | tacted to recovera judgment, sia i about to |, Thecornerstove ceremoties of the M. 5 E. church at Meligh bave been indetritely postponed on accouns of the weather. €| t0 get some ou the 12:h, cold as It was, ¢ | o sulky plow. bonus offered theretor. ¢| A carpenter empl yed by the big seso- t | night and in going home fell inso a snow -| bavk, where he remained till moruing, forms in the lawa of property are also | having nearly frcz:n to death, to be Introducad. Since 1866 Poles| The residence of C. J. Moon, of Indus- bave been forbiddon to buy land in | trs, Phelps county, ‘caught fice recently balf & doren provinoes, and. they are | 0w & defective fite. "No ono but Mrs, prohibited from selling land excep to Rutslans, or to devise it vutaide of the line «f descent, with the additional Moon was at home and the had to runa t | quarter of & mile to u neighbor's for asist- f | unce. J. A, Flint, station agent at Covington, provision that in faflare of direct issue | seriousiy burned his hands the other day. or collateral heirs of the testator i talls to thy crown. It is now pro t|Ho was currying n lamp when the oil caught fire and ¢pilled over his hands, datw- posed to abolish these reatrictions sging them som: what before he could ex- altogether. tinguish the flames. A recent dance in the McCaok hotel ended in a fight amongst all hauds around. The large citles of Italy will have|One of the ‘gentlemsn” made an inde- troubles ovor rellgious processior s, , | cent propoasl tona youne Ly end she thoush thoss parades are forbidden by | te11 her brother. IHe started the row ac- law. The clerical party rosists the |cordingly. prohibition with bad grace, over though there never was much solem nity about the ordinary parades. I n| Liberts’s saloon caught fire on the n'ght of the 13th, after eyerybody was in ted, but thebucket brigade rallied and saved Hi twag in the mid-t of a number the country diatricts the enforcement | of frawe buildivgr, and the town undeubts of the prohiditory rogulations s left | edly escaped calamity, mostly to the diccretion of the syndic, | A S.C. & P, teain was ditched on fun- or mayor, who, if he is so inclined, |day tetween Wisner and West Point, shuta his eyes to the Infraction of the | throwing off the baggage carand two statute. At Naples, however, sevoral coachee. The train haa just got tbrough attompts to carry out the parades have a heavy drift. Two men were injured. though not eeriously. 'Lhe end of one of recently come to naught. Such occa- | the rails came up through the passenger eions always attract the indefinite |car and ran through the coal box. numbers of street arabs in Italian citlea in indeterminate maases, and the mountebanks and peasants make the most of them, The Italian holi days, formerly extremely numerous, A SCENE IN COURT.. Hot Words by C: urt and Counsel. have been cut down to a very short | Special Dispatch to Tus Brn, list, and some are sanguine enough to WasHINGTON, January 26 —The hope that the result will be to get|monotony of the star ruute trial was more work done, broken to-day by an extraordinary ex- hibition of temper by both court and The Italian coal trade has hitherto | counsel. Daring the croes-examina- been almost monopolized by Eagland, | tion cf a witnese, Bliss said Ingersoll but the St. Gothard Tunne), which|was right in the statement that the has worked many revolutions—on pa. per—seems likely to bring about a real change in the base of supplies of fuel - | government assumed that Stephen W, 1| Doraey was the root of the conspiracy. 1| In point of fact he sent out the pro-|. for the peninsula, A coal exhibition | posals and recelved them. Toe wit- is to be held at Milan next autumn , | ness said packages were returned him and coal companies in general are to[throogh Stephen W. Dorsey. Three be tnvited to exbibit their wares, in or- - | postmasters responded: The pro- der that Italians msy be able to judge | posals were used in bidding at the of the qualities and prices of coals of fered for importation. The annual . | letting. *‘All that he could get in,” 1|eaid witners. Dorsey’s letters were Italian output s roturned at about |offered in evidence as showinghis con- 100,0C0 tons of ligrite, and 90,000 | nections with the transactions to tons of turf, with a very small amount | which witness had testified. Dofence of anthracite, while the country’s im ports from England amount to 1,500,. 000 tons. A.Inu. and Lv:llno. which Bis marck claimed in 1870 as territory | terrupted Bl whose people were German by race| Ingersoll, - | objected to the letters being offered. - | Inthe course of the argum¢nt Inger- soll uzed the expression, ‘“‘where will this end?’ -| “In the penitentiary,” promp:ly in- aking his finger at and sympathy, after twelve years'|Bliss, ‘‘you will be there as soon as cosxing and coerclon, are found as ob stinately opposed to German rule as - | my olient!” 'he Court—*‘This is entirely unpro- they wero when the war closed. Old | essional.” Gen. Manteuffol's misslon as stat-| Ingersoll—‘'Did I provoke it?” nolder has been a failure, as he was| The Court—*‘‘No,” compelled to avow ina speech the| Ingersoll—*'‘Irepresenta gentleman other evening at Strasbourg. He Is|and do not purpose doing any thing a to be recalled, and the iron hand un gloved is to be lald upon the recalei. - | gentleman may not do.” .| The Court sald at the last trial it trant race that refuses to own the |seemed to have gone off with the ides tles of kindred that Bismarck |that it was an attempt to prove some furbished up for them. The truth is|sort of officlal misconduct on the part that the dwellers from the mouth of | of Senator Dorsey and gave 1ise to the Rhine to s source on the left|doubts in this case. It might as well bank are as genuine Frenchmen og the | be understood that the ques'ions dwellers on the bank of the Seine. . | ing in this cage would be decided with- The present delimitation which allows | out bias from any other declsion. the Germanio races to pass over the | (Suddenly and with great indignation Rhino aud lteyond the Meuse is|to Willisms, who wasemiling ) “What wholly arbitrary and without perman ency. Sooner or later France will re oceupy her aucient limits from the ocean to the Upper Rhine, and the at tempt to eajole or coerce the citizeu. from the Awerican un The existence of a famine in Iceland has beon dnied, but it is clearly es tablished by a letter to the civilizad natlons, signed by the acling governor, the bishop, directors of cducation members of the Altking, or parli ment, and many prominent cfliclals, merchants and newapaper editors, say thoy, ‘‘that thoss who dispute the existence of suffering write with no foundation whatever for thei statements, or have been misled by entirely falre reports as to the condi- tion of our ccuatry and the nature o tho present cistross, The charitablo donations eent to this country by no- ble hearted Danes, Englishmen, Nor: wogisns and other forelgners, espe cially thess consisting «f gratn and cattle, have been of the utmost im portance to the farmors, who were iv great need thereof, in order to be able to preserve some cf the sary life atock. Ti provented much distross, Bat in spit 08t reses: of them all, our firmers, for want of cattle food, have ed been ¢ ¢ stock that great and iney is to be anticipated unless the sends eomo help not yet to be fore ween.” Tho sherif of Northub ty. Va., Mr. Wm. Clav “We have many good medicines in our 22 gifts have - | do you mean by that si? Whatdo you .| mean by sneerivg ard gizging liko a o | ool at the declsions of this cour!?’ -| " Williams—*T dow’t underataud you; 3|1 don’t believe the courl’s language | of Aleace Lorraine will prove as futile | was warranted. T wes talking about |} es it would be to seduce Now England | another wmatter aud did not hear|| on.” The Court—**You should have been listening.” Willlams—*‘You honor has not de cided the question yet. I coald » [not have expressed any opinion " [upon it.” *The court accepts your disclaimer and owes you an apology for the sever- ity of its language " The delivery of the uplnion was re- snmed and resulted in the admission of the napers. Dorzey's lstter to a postmaster in Arkausas, which has been already published, was read, and after heartng objections to certaln other questions, which were finally ruled out, the court adjourned. i Paby’s Petition. Life 1a reetlcss, days arc fl:eting, Children blocm, but die in teething: 1 Warning take, &' friends and mother-, ° Watch the previous girls and brothers; o Road the b of Victorls, Chidren Il bad Castortag bty by haby squalling, y 1i%0 In earl . morning. True to her Trust m cannot be said of the ever and mother sure remedy, parts, but nothing which equals St. | They are ) o best and purest medicine in Jacobs Oil It is uncqualed tor rheu matlim and all bodily paine.” . | the world and only cost fifty cents, by C. Fi G 2 DOUBLE AND SFWGLE ACOTING POWEHER AND HAND B UM ES | 8team Pumps, Engine Trimmings, 4INING MACHINERY, BELIING, PACKING, AT WHOLESALE AND SALLADAY Wilili-0illS CHURCH'AND.SOHODLLAT ©Cor. Farnam and 10th 8treets Omaha, Neb. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Cthers. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Qil Cake. food for stock of any kind, One pound is cqual ck fed with Ground Uil Cake in the fall and win« ter, instead of runuing down, will increase in weight and bo in good market- Dairymen as well as others who use it can tes. Try iv and judge for yourselves. Price $25.00 per ton; no WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb. ™A pational bank has been organized at West Point will bave acarnival on Feb- g Water wants a high schocl or A company to prospect for_coal in Holt A lady of Falls City has aiready grown Lincoln gan was 80 poor last Sunday 1 | night the ministers could barely reaq their An Aurora furpitue firm has_mado an nuwent, cansed by too much long time Comar's tulling at Lyons was iat wllof them, In boripg tor water, & wan stiuck a fine A thoussnd dollat achool heuse is to be | £0 three pounds of bullc at Bueoeté as soon as bonds issued foe d able condition in the epring. tify to its merits, Nearly ull of the town of Cozad (still charge for sacks. owned by John J, C zud) bos Leen nie McMAHON, ABERT & CO,, Wholesale Druggists, 3156 DOUCLAS STREET, The Original and Only Regular SEED ][(;USE ill Nebraska. J. BV ANS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN N N. W. Cor. lith and: f Dodge Streets, Omaha, Neb. We make a epecialty of Onion Seeds, Oni-n Sets, Bir: A Cass county map, cut of tobacco, rode rix miles on horseback to Weeping Water A Phelps county mau did cousiderable t | work last fali driviog a team to a common plow and lending another tesm hit:hed to A 3-foot vein of coal is #sid to have re- ciation of West Point got full the other WHOLESA LE CLOTHIERS 130l and 1203 Farnam 8t. Cor. I3th OMAHA, NEB. v, Brewing Orders from any part of the 8tate or the Entire West will be promptly shipped: All Our Go:ds are Made to the Standard of our Guarantee, GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. Office Corner 13th and Harney Strests, Omaha, Neb, BRASS AND [RON FITTINGS PIPR, 2°3a% LETAIL, »~ OMAHA, KEB. Grass, T mothy, Red Alfalfa and Whit farket Gardeners wiil save money by buyl: g of us. N ' ANHEUSER-BUSEH Association, CELEBRATED KEG & BOTTLED REER. THIS EXOELLEBT BEER SPEAKS FOR ITSELF, ESTABLISHEDIIN 1868 D. H. McDANELD & CO.,, HIDES, TALLOW, GREASE, PELTS, WOOXL AND EURSS, 204 Norih 16th 8t,, Masonic Block, bare avenue, CLieago, Refer by pormission to ilide and Taather National Bank. Chicago Main House, 46, 48 and 62 De:» "A. M. GLARK, {Painter&PaperHanger SIGN WRITEL & E.’%Gflfl.‘:flf& iy WHOLES \L;;_RE’I‘AIL WALL PAPER! Window Shadas aud Curtaing, QORNICES CURTAIN POLES AND { FIXTURES, Paiuts, Oils & Brushes, 107 Sonthk |14th Street T GFATH OI'T Y PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OF } 14 A ? Carpenter’'s Daterials SASH, DGDRS, BLINDS, STAIRS, OM HA, LEBRASKA ! Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Docr Frames, Etc. First-olaes tacilitice for the Manufacture of all kindes of Monldings, l’llnth&md Orders from the couutry will be promptly executed, rosssll communications to A, MOYER, Propriew