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4 g THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA THU e== RECKLESS EXTRAVAGANCE. | much occupled with internai dissen- The leglalature is making a bad rec- | tionss to make any very effective pro- ord in voting away the people’s money | test. Turkey is a dying natlon, aflke for objects which will not be approved | incapable and unwortby., There re- by their conatituents, It is no use to|mains only England and Italy among disguise the fact. There ls an evident [ the great powers to thwart the de- inclination on the part of members to |signs of the three emperors vn the hold thelr noses in the presence of |crippled remains of the Ottoman em- Weinesday. rank jobs and then to doclare thal|pire. It is belleved that England is TERMS i’OST PAID— they can smell nothing From pres-|too commercial, too peace loviug and One Year $2.00 | Three Months. 50 | ent Indications, drafts amounting to a|too much harassed by internal dif- S 1.00 | One Month.... 20 yjion and a quarter dollars will be | ficulties to be feared, and that Italy ‘,’}.‘,’;‘,?,‘5,{11‘"‘};‘&2“6:{23"5‘“;“’.‘5““ made upon the state treasury. And|alone would be helpless, If the S— this by a body of men pledged to an|first hypotheris should prove false, CORREBPONDE?\{UE 'Audofi"l'fl":'l':j economloal expenditare of the publle | however, and if Eogland and Italy ‘ml::;:: n':\}:lgl ":drl‘r:::d ::Ghe icl;:mu moneys, should unite, it is likely that there or Tre Ber, The members of the legislature [ would be sharp diplomacy, If not fierce lmtntz;fn::‘ishlg;‘mfisfifi{dnghfi soem to forget that they are merely | fighting before the spoils of Tarkey dressed to TrE Bek PusLisiing CoMPANY | reprosentatives of and trustees for the | were portioned out hotween Russia, j:d’:::'tn ble):?;a pc-};o:blk: b:'nfhal’::;::flfi people. They are sent to Lincoln to| Austria and their sympathetie retain. the Company. guard the Interests of their constitu:|ers, the Danubian principalitics, The enta by appropriate legislation and to | game has gone so far as to be extreme- The BEE PUBLISHING uu'l PI‘ODE- block the schemes of jobbers and|ly interesting to the unbissed on-look- E. ROSEWATER Editor. trickstors who Inaugorate raids upon|er, Whichever way it comes out this Somemmmmm— the state treasury at each successive|gountry need care little, War, or a ToraL abstinence—from water would | session. The moment they join hands | near approach to war, would, doubt- be popular in Ohlo just no with the gang of wolves who hang|jess, momentarily stimulate our grain around the lobbles to farther ques- | markets, since these negotiations and tionable schemes of private Interest, | diplomatic schemings so {ntimately af they prove themselves recreant to|foct the grain producing territory of thelr trust and traitors to their con- | Europe, but otherwise there is little stituents, of good to be expected and nothing of Already the appropriations voted | bad that can effect Amerlcon prosper- upon at the present sesslon have ex- ity. . L ] ceeded those of any previous leglsla. Tuix" Gosdinliaioness KpEOLALAAT Lo ture for years, The capital steal - 000, llar | Rogotiate a treaty with the Sioux for s XD s B ML A the cession of thelr lands have com. usel diti ::r".:::: ;:l::a‘: oon::“l: :f‘:;; :; pleted their labors, and the president by an overwhelming popular sentl- hae laid the result before congress in . | » message together with a letter from ;:‘:‘r:h:;;:.g:;‘:ut:;:;: “?;; ::'1 Secrotary Teller asking for the rati- Tae (appropriation buzzards are i d the i re not so prog. | icatiun of the treaty, Secrotary Tel- thicker than ever at Lincoln, The [ '#Xo% and the times aro P leglslature seems to be more than|PerOUs that any addition can easily be lor says: oarrled. The proposed reservations are lo. usually reckless in their deafts on the cated in accordance with the wishes state treasury. The fact is that the same system of | of the Indians, and are of such extent logrolling that Is Increasing tarl¥ tax-|as to give ample territory for the ation at Washington Is belng employ- P'm'::ln‘,}lfl“"l“ ?d"dl‘.fl' thfeh- tol:' cupants, e consideration for the od at Linooln to Inocease tho wexes of land ceded consists principally of cat- tho peoplo of Nebraska. Votes are | (le for the purpose of stock raising, being swapped in order that every|tor which the country reserved is section of the state may have a grab 07?“:‘"{ lld'Pl::- aud :hfl ":lhlil! 0l atocl L] o mos! natural 8t he treasury pils regardisss of ": and effective meoans by which the In- fact that the taxes will fall upon the|djans can aid in their own support, people of Nebraska wherever they |and may also be made an instrument may be looated. for elevating and improving their gen- . : eral condition. The sum required orado legislature has made ltself the It is timo to ory & h“;h:po:e::l:: for carrylng out this “agreement is Iaughing stock of the county by im- rookless extravagance. 8%01 therefor in effect only an advance of posing & heavy tax on the output of should av once Interposs its authority | capital to the Indians, the returns on Ooloradominesand by passing a Iaw ex- to check the indifference of the house | which will eventually relieve the gov- oladi fon |t0 the wishes of their constituents ernment of a large and annual expen- uding forelgn express companies " k diture for their support. I regard the from the railronds of tho state, The|nd the intereats of Nebraska tax . A agreement as favorable alike to the sdirat Is & sovere blow at the only In.|PAYers: There is such a thing as belng | Indians and the government, and re- dtatey whioh supporta \he state; and ‘‘governed too much,” and the present | spectively recomn.end for favorable Ty Ppo! Ll 1 fal X consideration the commission’s report. d il by legislature is in a falr way to make our the second measure Wl 0 over-| . ople know just what the phrase | The land ceded to the government thrown as soon as it gets into the|'neans, is estimatod at 17,000 to 18,000 square woourts. Some leglslation s worse than none at all. The O_n_mg_i_ma Beé. Published every morning, except Sun. ay. The only Monday morning aily. TERMS BY MAIL— Year, ...810.00 | Threo Months.$8.00 gr:M:::hn. . 5,00 | One Month.... 1,00 ¢HE WEEKLY BEE, published every Mg, Franse, of Cuming county, is in favor of the old gang and an appro- priation, PriNce NaroreoN is thinking of starting & newspaper, and there are few who now doubt his insanity, Uxper any sort of commissloner Iaw even where the commissioners have purely manisterial powers all the expenses ought to be pald by the rall- roads. e— +Wiocins, who predicted a great oy- olone last Friday, and General Hazen, ‘who insisted that we wero to have a mild winter, ought to go into partner- ship as false prophets. E———— ArrER disgracing itself by the elec- tlon of a pair of senators who will ‘bring no credit to the state, the Ool- SE—— THE NEW IMPERIAL ALLI- NCE- miles. Its value for stock raising is beyond question, and many parts will doubtless prove equally valuable for farming purposes. A It is reported that the three emper- ors of Russla, Germany and Austria have reconstructed the Kalserbund, or Imperial Alliance, and that the ho fought his way in bitter battle| ‘o™ 8o bighly satistaciory to all with the critios from the day when his three of the ?omno! ng partles * Pannheuser startled the musioal world. Novertheless, it is a very different al- ‘N9 composer has ever engaged in such lisnos, it all indications oan be_de. nocossful battle for his pot theorles or pended on, from the one into which :‘“d like Waguer to find them adopt- they entered after the treaty of Ber- %% & Ian .‘:'li ity ' of Chose .who lin, Everything then was restrictive, fl, : gebm‘ 1 2 VI G whereas now there is & clearly defined ;; 7 ) e .:’ 'm:n omb nood thread of license running through the mlgn.n lmullofi 1 d“ sl Mg whole negotiation, When the firat al- . : 1:?10 ’axpu:slun 9 He w;k liance was formed Russia’s astonishing o 3 his themes from romances, legends and | ""°°°*® ageinst Turkey had alarmed .| both her imperial nelghbors, and it popular myths, arranged his libretti O AL VRERRALE agdl 1o bla) smasibel| M4 Deegme isceskasyito).ausbihier lest she should absorb Bulgarlaora ;dnp:qo)n 2 aunmlltold v‘;hat‘l:‘:l:alal:v:fl slice of Roumelia, Montenegro and o Lbany lelmn‘l 8 dum M Bervia were looking toward Russia a5 a $:n;:n‘l‘:rg:::|“§l l':d:;;nl::d lnn: friend who would help them to se- which delighted the ears ¢f the lovers gure, Hyrsegovina _“d Bo-nll:,l (! of the French and ltallan schools, Austria not only objocted o thelr ag- IN the death of Richard Wagner the world has lost its greatest tone -master since Beethoven. The re- former of his age in musical theory, L Tre floods in the east continue and vhe loss of life and property is enor- mous. Ohio and Indiana are the greatest sufferers, the damage to prop- erty in Cincinnati alone being placed at $2,000,000. Latest advices state that twenty millions will not coverthe losses in the two states named and in Louisville, The Missouri valley is scarcely likely to escapa when the snow on the mountains begins to melt and there is every prospect of a re- newal of the scencsof two years ago in Omaha and its viciaity. — Mr. ReyNoLDS wants every soldier who has served for three months and who is fifty years old placed on the ponsion list. Mr. Reynolds’ idea of the capacity of the United States treasury appears to be as unlimited as his belief in the ability of our people to stand a §400,000,000 tax yearly on Largely on this acoount the charge has grandizement at the expeuse of terri- been brought against Wagaer's music that it is unintelligible and destitute of melody, Some yosrs ago he wrote -as follows In reply to this acousatio ¢'The one no power over the feelings, no origin- ality. Bot melcdy is something more than the fixed and narrow form that belongs to the childish ege of musical art—the darce form, Tho wanderer in the wood becomes every moment wore distinctly aware of endlessly- varied volces andib'e in the forest. ‘They grow louder and louder and the woices, the separate tunes he hears are 80 many that the whole mueic seems to him one grand forest melody., Yet he canmot hum it over to herself and to hear It again he must again go to the woods,” This, then, wes the central point of Wag- ner's theory; that the singer wmaust be subservient to the music, and not the musio to the ,convenlence of the sin gers; that the theme of opera should be poetic,in its highest, purest an deepest sense; that the poetry shoul {nstrumental, and that the whole should be eszoclated with the convie- tlons and sympathies of humanity. Wagner's desth occurs at the floo tide of his success, when his theorles after years of patient labor and wait. ing had first found full expression in the production of his trilogy of the Niebelungen Lied In his own opera, at Baireuth, under royal patronage, an ‘before an audlence gathered from all the clvilized countries of the globe His influence will not die with his death, [and future composers, while they ml.ynnd acoept In their entirety all of his startling theorles, cannot help from feeling the stimulus of his life work In elevating music above wmere sensuous gratification to the heights of intellectual enjoyment. tory so cloee to her borders, but she equally disliked the tendency of those principalities towards a Ruseian alli- ance. Germany had then, and proba- bly has now, no farther lust for terri- by the so-called Triple Alliance. Rus- sla was weary of war, and needed re- llef againat Eogland's encroachments and Turkey's revenge. Thusall three powers had strong reasons for combin. ing sgainst other hostile influences without going eut of thelr way to stir up hontllity by land grabbing. They united to held what they had and to | now threatening to wash the clty from get rest. Tc-day there s a vastly different set of conditions. Germany no longer fears the retaliation of France, Eog- land and Tarkey have no terrors for Russia. Austria s on good torma |the pockets of the unproteoted mon- with all tho world. Germany wishes | opolist. to strengthen her eastern frontler and to fortify moro heavily her Baltle a|coast. Austria wishes a farther fn. 4 | crease of torritory in the southoast, both because sheis always land-greed; e marzied fo fiting masls, vooa! snd and because such an uztan-lonuwcnlz please the Hungarlans, the least con- | Detroit Froo Press. tented branch of the empire. Russia 3 is stlll dreaming of the ‘‘Bi: Bul- gurla,” which she mapped out in the treaty of San Stefano, and which she hopes to see an independent prinel- pality with strong Russlan sympathies, tha pension account. Mint for the Bourbon Julep, Atlanta Constitution (Dem.) If the demacratic leaders In the next congress will look after the real interasts of the poeovle, the people will take care to look after the raal inter- and Lorraine; but she preferred to | ests of the democratic party. E——— Gathering Them In. Morning Journal, Kilmainham jsil promises to be be- fore long a highly respectable parlia- mentary boarding chool. Getting Even With Her. Post-Dispatch, For years the city of Cincinnati has been flooding the country with bad whisky, and by way of revenge the neglected waters of the Ohlo river are its foundations. An Unfair Division. Washington Post. In order to get a tariff revenue of $200,000,000 the goverment compels the people to put $800,000,000 into A Smoky Fire-Brand Quenched, Cloveland Hereld, Herr Most's light Lizs gone out as completely as though he had run for office on & democratio ticket in Iowa, You Bet. A Chioago doctor advertises: ‘‘Don’t mistake dropsy for consumption,” If anybody does It will be & member of the medliocal profession. The Typical Mesn Man's View. Bostou Globe (Dem.) The tariff question as understood In It is easy, therefore, to acoount|congress: ‘'Where is the confounded a|for & change in the ground.plan |thing oing tol of the triple alllance. Each of the d us in 18847 A Well-Done Cook: threo powers can help the others to |Special Dispatch to Tus Lixs. what they want, and It ls no longer necessary to hang together for pro- tectlon solely, The visit of M. Giers to Viens B aud the growing agitation Avstiy, Tex., February 12,—The oity hospital was burned to-night. A negro cook sat & lamp on a five gallon can of oil and the wind blew the blaze to the can, which exploded, set- avor, Smon, ' Hungarlan Magyars and | ting fire to the cook and her child, tho,k:,' g e IRy "l‘he cook was sorlously burned, and he ohild was burned to a orlsp. The patients were all roscued and most of the furniture saved. THE MORMON METROPOLIS. Sketches of Passing Hvents and the Bhadows of Others. Innumerable Legal Contests Qrowing out of Polyg- amous Practices, And the Attempt of Congress to Regulate Morals and Creed. Statistics of Last Year's Progrees in . Utah. Correspondence of T Exx, Sarr Lake Ciry, Utah, Febraary 10.—1In theee days of telegraphs the news of every important circumatance 18 ““wired” far and wide over the con- tinent for the immediate perusal of the vast host of newepaper readers, leay- ing to the ordivary correspondent only matters of detall, or the recital of af- falrs that do not come prominently to the front. Utah matters seem, how- ever, to have a cortain facinati»n, not presented by ordinary news. Our loca- tion is peculiar, our sociology unique, our local contests more than usually bitter, Just now, however, there {sa lall in the strife. The fight {s waging more fiercely in Washington than at home. The Mormons are hopefal, the Gentlies tomewhat wearled. Mesars Oannon and Oaine, the late and pres- ent delegates, assisted by Judge Jerry Black, of Penusylvania, are making a strong effort to ward off any more legislation for Utah during this seesion, and it seems with every probability of success, as Congress has enough to do apparently with tinkering with the tariff to regard the calls made upon it for yet more repressive measures than those vontained in the Poland and Edmunds laws, and it is somewhat re- markable how little effect the disfran- chisement of the polygamists has had. True there were a rather larger num- ber of businees failures last year than is usual in this territory, but even with this increase neither in number or liabilities did they approach the gen- eral average of the whole country. Bankruptoles and failures 1 ave been remarkably few in the commercial bis- tory of Utah. Politically nothing has been so far accomplished by the late legislation. The coming august elec- tions may show some difference, but without the woman suffrage act is re- pealed, the non-Mormons cannot hope 10 carry more than three countier, they may not carry one. If that law be annalled, of which there is at present little prospect, then it iaposatbie three or four more countles might be won over to the Gantile cause, but all this is problematical, for the act which would disfranchise Mormon monogamic women (the aisters in polygamy are already disfranchised by the Edmunda bill), would alzo throw out the votes of the non-Mormon ladies, and it is yet very uncertain how large a factor their vote forms in the election returns of the “liberal” party. Poseibly to those inquiring about Utah a few statistics may not be out of place: 'I?hu territory has some 3,000 miles of common roadway, and 1,006 of rallroad, 205 of which latter were built in 1882, We possess 2,650 miles of telegraph line and 600miles of tele- phone wire, with 560 instraments. Our manufactures are now estimated at $6,000,000 annually with abont 2000 manutacturing establishments, large and emali, not including in elther of the above estimatea reduction and smelting works and their output. Oar principal manufactured productions are flour, meal, cheese, aalt, molsstes, sugar (» small quancity) leather, boots, shoes, harness, eaddles, woolen goods, blankets, hosiery, brick, lime, char- coal, lumber, machinery, furniture, paper, soap, earthenware, brooms, candy and crackers, Many other arti- cles might be mentioned that are pro- duced on a smaller scale, Last year it was demonstrated by Mr. Arthur Staguner, of Farmiogton, that good sugarcan be made in the Salt Lake valley from cane grown in the neighborhood. The sawmples shown by Mr, Stagner are equal to the best O sugar, of which he has made several tons, Our mineral productions include the following: Gold, silver, lead, copper, iron, coal, sulphur, antimony, mica, salt, alum, arsenic, cinnabar, bismuth, gypsum, slate, marble, granite, sand- stone, limestone, ochres, mineral wax, kasolln, olays, etc., and some kinds of gems, There are now published in Utah eight daily, nine semi-weekly, five woekly and three somi-mounthly papers and three magez'ues, ‘We have 350,000 acres of land under fence, Our graln crop is equal, on an average ylnlg of 3,000,000 bushels, There are over 10,000 000 acres of the public domaln. We own 250,000 sheep, shearing 2,700,000 pounds of wool. Oar mineral product last year— gold, silver, copper and load, was worth $10,312,902.00. Since the opening of the mines their output has amounted to $60,000,000, To-day a declsion was given In the territorial supreme court conferring the judgment of the United States distriot court in the probate judge- ship contest. This is a victory for the governmor's nomiuees, an empty one, perhaps, as tho case has been ap- pealed to the supreme court of the Unlted States. The contest was over the wording of the Hoar amendment to the last appropriation bill, giving the governor power to fill vacancies, The present izcumbent held there was no vacaney, the contestant that there was, because he was & polygamist. He answered that under the law he was not a polygamist, as he had never taken a wife since the psssage of the anti-polygamy bill of 1862, Two of the judges have decided that hels a polygamist, or rather that there s a vacancy, to this the chief justice dis- senting. As the governor's appointees only hold office for elght months the time will have expired long befcre the case can reached In the natlonal court of iast resort; and in the mear- while—what? Will the governor make another appointment at the end of the first eight months, or will the appel- lant continue to officiate in the in. RSDAY FEBRUARY 16 terem between the expiration of that period and the next Aungust election? This a novel question which re- mains, as yet, unanewered, Weno, INDUSTRIAL NOTES, The mslleable iron works with a capital of §70,000, have established works at Du- buque. A flouring mill with a capacity of 250 barrels per day will be built at Ashton, D. T, in the spring, In Baltimore 25 vossels were built last year, with an aggregate tonnage of 3,152, at a total cost of $335,000, The new mills at Fall River, Mass., now building, will require about 2,000 operas :l’;)u. and those in New Badford about 1,- The tonnage of vessels launched from Maine ship yards last year was 62,567 tons, while the vessels still in the stocks aggre- gate 23,016 tors The Southern Scale Company of Chata- noogs, Tenn,, now has its works in full operation, All kinds of scales of an excel: lent quality are made, There was manuf ctured in St. Paul, Minn., Iaet year 2,301,650 barrels of i ur yioed at $13,809,902. and $3,500,000 worth of other mill stuff, The Elizabeth pool mill at Taunton, Mass , have a new nap.ing and cloth ro m about completed. It is 156x40 fi et in area and one story and basement in height. The manufacturing establishments in Dubuque, Tows, are exeinpt from tsxation for a series of The people there believe in induci 1 in that man. ner, An sgricultural implement manufactor: is to be established at Enfaula, Als., wit a capital of $65,000, to be increased to 8100,000, a8 the growth of the business re. quires. A new cottonseed oil mill is to be started at Forayth, Ga., witha capacity of using 1,000 bushels of ' cotton seed daily, The clty will exempt the mill fr.m taxation for ten yeare, One of the largest and best equipped toundry sud machine shops i the 3 teh is that of Lombard & Co., Augusta, Ga, The! works have recently been enlarged and are very complete in all details. The new Bourne mill at Fall River, Mass., hos its card room machinery about all in, and its engine set up. The New Laurel mill in the same place is nearly ready to run, The main building of the extensive tan- nery of the Milwaukee hide and leather company was destroyed by fire January 7th, The loss on the bnfiding and ma. chinery wes $20,000, The machinery for the 500-barrel flour. ing will, now in'the course of erection, at Salem, Oregon. was bought in Chicago. The freight bill on the machinery already received iu Portland amounts up to date $10,715.50 Rockford, Tllinois, with a population of about 17,01 bas nearly $5,741,040 in- vested in manulacturing” interests, which ewploy 4,220 skilled workmen, and turned out last yesr over $9,533,600 worth of manufaclured goods. As indicative of the growth of me- chanical industries in Sioux City, Iowa, one of the local papers gives a list of thirty- four new buildings erected during the past year for manufacturing purposes, and three factory buildings enl irged, the whole cost- ing §70,150, Ship building in Cleveland last yesr wi active, Two iron vessels were launche one of 2,164 tone, the other of 2,400 tons, Three propellers were launch'd 1,924, 1,506 and 1,189 tons resvectively, In ad- dition to these, quite a fleet of schooners and tugs have been built at the yardas. The new mills at New Bedford, Mass., are all progressing rapidly towards comple- tion. The Grinzell is entirely enclosed, and the machinery being put’in; the Acushnet is even farther adyunced; the Oneco woolen mill is well under way, and the yarn mill of the New Bedford manu- facturing company is ready to start up, The Vermont marble,_industry is in & flourishing condition, The number of workmen employed in the quarries and mills exceeds over 2,300 who received over $1,000,000 in wages last year. The aggre. 7‘“ product last year was 1,000,000 cubic leet valued at over $2,000,000. Over 10,000 cars were required to transport the marble from the State, There are now eleven large distilleries in Peoria, I, which ‘have an sggregate capital of $10,000,00", and which contri- buted to the revenue of the country la yeur, $13,267, hich would indicate a product of 14,742,209 gallons. The value of the product of the distillery and brew- er :’ngunrleu cf Peoria last year was $20,- 00, 'he manufacturing b for last year is as fol Tron cnd steel products, $1,800,000; and bolts, $2,- 800,000; machinary, $42,000 (00, manufac- tures of brass, $830,000; crude petroleum refined into various products, 1 200,000 bartels; paints and varnishes, $500,000; cooperage, 4,500 000 barrels; tobacco manu- faotured, 000 pounds; paper, 489 tons; flour, 000 barrels; olothing, §4,- 500,000; cars and bridges, 000, ess of Cleveland aful dramatic author of the times, Mr, Bartley Cawmpbell, on one oceasion fell and sprained his ankle severely. A bottle of 8t Jacobs Oil sorn mended mstters, however, — New York Dramatic Nows. Special Dispatch o Tin Bxx. AriaNmio, Iows, February 13.— Yesterday morning Mra. Woolsey placed some beans over the flre to cook for dinner, and then left her nine year old daughter to watch them while she ran across the street. The girl dls- covered that the beans were dry and needed water on them, and getting upon the stove hearth she began pour- fog water into the kettle, when a whiff from below set her clothes on fire, She first trled to put out the fire. Failing in this, she became frightened and ran out into the street, where, sf:er hard work and a eevere buraing, the mother succeeded in put- ting out the fire by rolling the child in the snow. Dr. Graham was called, who soon learned that the child was, perhaps, fatally borued. This morning ficds it # corpss, THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relieves and cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, EEADACES, TOOTHACHR, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS, SPRAINS, Boreness, Cuts, Bruises, FROSTBITES, BURNS, SCALDS, Aud all other bodily aches and paine. FIPTY CENTS A BOTTLR 8ald by a1l Druy ") Dealers.” Direotions a 11 languages. Tho Charles A. Vogeler Jpos DO ANNID SENCGHLE A CTIN G POWHR AND HAND 8team Pumps, Engine Trimmings, ANING MAOHINENY, DRELTING, HOSE, BRASS AND IRON WITTINGD PI¥E, iBa PACKING, AT WHOLFSALE AND RETAIL HALLADAY WIND-MILLS CHURCH ARD SCHOOL BELLS ) Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha, Neb. / SPECIAL NOTIiCE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. Tt is tho best and cheapest food for stock of any kind, One pound s equal to three pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the fall and win. ter, Instead of running down, will increase in weight and be in good market- able condition in the spring. Dairymen as well as others who use it can tes- tify to its merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $25.00 per ton; no :linrge for sacks, Address 04-god-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL 0O0., Omaha, Neb, M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, | 130l and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. 13th ' OMAHA, NEB. McNAMARA & DUNCAN, ] WHOLESALE DEALERS IN KENTUCKY AND PZNNSYLViNIA WhiskieS! in Eond or Free. Also direct jmporters of WINES, BRANDIES AND ALES, Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine ¢ | Agents for Jos. Schlitz’ Milwaukee Beer, Bottled and in Kegs. 214 % 316 § 14TH STRRE?, - - - OMAHA, NEB N McMAHON, ABERT & CO,, Wholesale Druggists, 1315 DOUGLAS STREET = - OMAHA NEB. f GATE CITY PLANING MILLS. - MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter’'s Materials ALSO SASH, DGORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. First-clasa facilitiee for the Manufscture of all kindes of Monldings, Painting and matching a Speoialty, Orders from the country will be promptly execnted. addressall communicati- ne to ¥ A. MOVER Prooriet SO The Original and Only Regular SEED HOUSE in Nebraska. J. BV ANS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN Agricultural g N W. Cor. 14th Vegetable, .mg, Forest, Flowoer, Dodge Streets, Grass, Hedge, Omaha, Neb. Wo mske a epecialty of Onion Seeds, Onion Sets, Blue Grass, Timothy, Red Alfalfa and Whit Clover, Osage and Honéy Locust. Dealcrs and Market Gardencrs will save money by buyiog of us #arsend for Ca'alogue, FREE. ANHEUSER-BUSCH 9§ o, Brewing Association, CELEBRATED ¢ KEG & BOTTLED BEER. il THIS EXCBLLEST BEER SPEAKS STIOUS MO ~ FOR ITSELF. Orders from any part of the 8tate or the Entire West will be promptly shipped: All Qur Goads are Made to the Standard of our Guarantee, GEORGE HENNING, 8ole Agent for Omaha and the West. 0ffice Oorner 13th and Harney Streets, Omaha, Neb. .. R