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L3 HEETTERAY L THE DAILY BEE-~OMAHA WEDNESDAY APRIL 4 e Franoe at the close of the last centary There Is a growing feeling among|and jost as It certalnly must come the oltizens of Omaha and the resi-|souner or later in Great Britain and BOME COUNTY MATTERS. "he Omaha Bee. bl ring, Sune -ly’:l '}“hb:dm:;. oo::y |:o'ml-:f¢ lly,"II dents of Donglas county that the poor | on the continent. TERMS BY|MAIL— 10.00 | Three Montha, 83.00 5,00 | One Month.... 1.00 ¢HE WEEXLY BEE, published every We inesday. TERMS POST PAID— One Year......$2.00 | Three Months. 8ix Months. ... 1.00 | One Month.... 20 AMERIOAN Nxws CoMPARY, Sole Agents Newsdealers in the United States, from $300 to §800 a lot. property in the market. CORRESPONDENCE -All Commun- yatfons relati to News snd Editorial aatters should be addressed to the Eprror or Tue Be, BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Busines | why it should not be. At present ita | in the world, maintenance costs the county several | 840,000, or $117.79 for every man, Drafts, Checks and Postoffice thousands of dollars a year instead of | woman and child in the country. Next Betters and Remittances should be ad Aressed to THE BEr PUBLIBHING COMPANY "JMAHA, Jrders to be made payable to the order of the Company, fho BEE PUBLISHING C0., Props. E- ROSEWATER Editor returning a revenue, of an Investigating tarn of mind. 4 transactions of that body. Taere was practically no opposl- tion to sewer bonds at yesterday's election, and the school bonds went throngh with even less difficulty. | oty ¢ion account of tax lst, Pablic improvements are in the air, | 4\ ounting to some hundreds of dol- |capita, but she is rich enough to stand and as soon as the contracts can be oy, appearon the record, which are|it for the present at least, if sho is not let they will begin to be In the earth. | ;4 tound in the proceedings farnished | wise enough to enter upon a system of by the county oclerk to the dall A mEMoRIAL of all trades, profes- pagers, slons and occupations has been pre- in Buffalo asking that llcenses be ralsed to $200 and $250. The mem. orlal is signed by Blshop Rysn and twelve Oathollo oclergymen of the dioczse. plling the tax list. clerks which are paid by the countyt: none Aare necessary. — Dr. Miuier is still convinced tha lectures are unpopular in Omaha, If the dootor will advertise himself to ad- drees our oltizens on ‘“What I Know About Sidney Dillon and What Sid- ney Dillon Knows About Me,” we promise him a crowded auilence at the opera house. There need be no heavy expenditares connected with this en- terprise. Mr. Boyd will doubtlees make a reduction in the rent in return for the editorlal taffy with which the Herald has'plastered him during the past few weeks, and the cost of posters and hand bills can be added tothe next Unlon Pacific printing bill. The pro ceeds will enable Dr. Miller to meet tho increased taxation on his suburban property whichis held at $1,000 and savessed at $30 per aore. For these reasons and to gratify a laudable de: sire on the part of the publle for in formation, the doctor ought certalnly to make the experiment. It wounld prove to him that Omaha has not lost all interest in lectures and lecturers. e A Prussiax «ffler, who receutly visited Weat Puint, says that the work there seemed like a survival of there can be no the ocounty books. poses. ora feel called upor to allow $1,20! public ought to know it. allowance is proper there can be n resson for its concealment, transoript of the cffilal records. A GROWING EVIL farm 1s too valuable s plcca of prep | Soctal conditions fn the United erty to be devoted to its present uses. The city has closed up sround it on|the last half centary, three sides, and lands in the adjoining | or by another they will be forced to additions are selllog at prices varying | undergo another revolution before an- Sooner or | other half century has passed away. Iater, and the mooner the better, the — - 50| sounty commissioners will be obliged to purchase land elsewhers for the|nine and a half millions daring March, peor farm and to place the present Our entire national debt is now lees When thisis done greater efforts|capita, must be made to make the poor farm | debts greater than our own, solf-sustalning. There aro no reasons | leads off with the largest natlonal debt What seems to be needed more than | debt per caplta being considerably anything else on the board of county |less than that of France, but scarcely commissloners s a solid business man | less burdensome owlug to the poverty- While spesaking of the board of com- | of the majority of the population. Tak czr has ordered 400,000 brandy | pyefsners, we direct the attention of | The debt of the German government and liquor glasses for his coronation. | ,unty Clerk Biumer to the fact that | is small because of the adherance to The evident intention is to make every | 4o published proceodings of the board |a strict policy of t: nthillst too drunk to explode a bomb. | 3, 1ot correspond with the actual | the current expenses are annually met, We refer | but the natlonal burdens are almost particularly to the item of ‘‘warrants | unbearably allowed.” There have been a number [ malnly because of the cost of the im- of nignificant omlssions, Seyeral war- [ mense standing army. Great Britain We are unable to discover|wealth whether this is done by accldent or|country, our debt is sented to the commissioner of /080 | geuion, The law makes no extra allowancae to the county clerk for com- | est charge is only $57 360 000 one- ‘With the quota of | third of what it was in 1866. This aselst in the business of his office, | samong more than fifty milliens of in- The case is[habitants, different with the clty clerk, and |finances are on a solid footing and the objection for | bonds of the government are bearing a reasonable allowance for tran-|as low a rato of Interest as those of soribing the tax list from|any mation in the world, the country But if we|ocan afford to check its past polioy of understand the case an allowance of | rapld debt reduction and oppressize some $4,000 was made last year by |taxation. the county commissioners for olerk | posterity who will reap the political hire in the county clerk’s office, This | benefits in acquiring which the dekt included the salary of the deputy, |was contracted, shall not do their which amounts to $1,200 a year. |share towards wiping vut the national Deduoting this, Mr. Baomer had |indebtedness. $2,800 to pay the running expenses of | ment of the princlpal of the debt was his office, which should certainly have | necessary in order to demonstrate our been more than sufficlent for all pur-|intention to meet our national obliga- If in addition the commission- | tlons at maturity no one felt called “for making up the tax list” the|treasury. That work has been accom- But if anch | plished and it is tlme to ory a halt The pub- | ceeslve taxation which such a policy lished proceedings of the board of }necessitatos. county commlssloners as furntshed by the clerk ought to be correct., If they cannot be made 80 by the clerk or his | the promotion of Frank Hatton is that deputy, Tax Bzx will take steps to|he cannot get along with Bill Chand- secure, as it did for years, its own|ler and would render the president States have been revolutionized within By one method Tue publle debt wn; re}lumd over than $1,700,000, or about $34 per Five foreign npatlons have France It smouts to $4,683,- comes Russia with $4 314,607,699, the stricken and half clvilized character ation whereby large notwithstanding, " |owes $3,814,600,000, or $109.04 per y | reducing it. Coneidering the size, and possibilities of the small, It s ensily carried. '[he annual inter- 0 | sum Is not burdensome when divided Now that the national There Is no reason why 80 long as a rapid pay- 0| apon to complain of the policy of the 0 | both to rapld debt paying and the ex- — ONE reason that s urged in favor of valuable service in ventilating Ohand- ler's schemes. The best plan wounld be to put Chandler out. There would: Whatever the charges that may be | then be no neceasity for putting Hat- of the days of the Great Frederiok In|jaid at the doorh‘:lg the Amn{m g S the painfal attention to useless drill, | nows 1 paper it cannot be accused of In this connectlon it is stated that & | toadyiem. Taecomments of the press ton in, e Accorpixe to Bteve Dorsey, he has commission conslsting of several pro- | throughout the countr, t b ble to read a line y upon the Van. | ot been able a in alx fessors cf the Military Aoademy has|derbilt masquerade are practical and | months, but he can see to play bil- been appolated to make a tour of our|healthy, T! llards, Bob I 1l will maki y. The gorgeous plece of folly | lar! ! euse of leading universities, Harvard, Yale, | of the men and women who ape a for- | this touching Incident la his closing Princeton and Oolumbla, with a view olgn arlstooracy has been given of ascertalning In what respects West |newspaper notoriety In many ocases only to point an editorial moral. It vantages, The general impression, s o{rulnly worthy of comment that |l sren which seems to be shared by the pro- | in a slngle city of a republican country fossors at the acadsmy, s that the s soclal gathering of less than a thon- oourse of study at Weat Point is only | sand peopleis sald to have represented | 1abor aud thought. » little removed from that in & second | nearly a thoussnd mflllons of wealth | FLO78rd Orosby, of New York, says in while a solitar; i ment Is paying for the support of some | poysssstons .c’f-.)?.E'BJE ::t;d.:g :Iii. hundred and fifty embryo officers dur- | gunual Incowme at a tenth of that enor. | colossal fortunes. Point falls behind in educational ad olass high school. While the govern- ing thelr four years’ training in the | mous sum. Military Academy, it ought to make else but tactics and a supreme con- The tendency to accumulate the sure that they are taught somothing|property of the Ualted States in the a|nddress to the jury. — The Dangerous Rich, Emerson sald that the deference shown the rich was proper. It was a fit recognition of power galned by Tae Rev. Dr. a recent artiole in the North American Rsview that our dangerous classes are those who are engaged in amassing Evidontly there are two kinda cf rioch people In the Uunited S:ates. Those on whom the sage of Concord fixed his eye were the worthy stewards of inherited wealth, hands of & comparatively small num- | OF the creators of now wealth by o tempt for all “‘strikers” who have not | barof men oannot be disgutsed. Should | Fi¥htecus pre-eminence In tot), thrift, had the benefit of a free education, $500 a year, and an army appoint- went at the end of their course, country It willstart from wealth as YesTeRDAY, April 21, was the ocon-|steathily accquized by milllonalr tennary of the birth of Washington |who are not ashalmed of boasting an arlstooracy be formed in this basls, and the power the pecplo do not jealously gaard may be qalokly and a rich New York congregatlon de or skill. Taelr opposites are the gentry against whom Dr. Crosby warned his a | fellow-countrymen, It is not the rioh that this pastor of nounces, but the dangerous rich— the men who are making money by corrapting our legislatures, courts, o8 Trving. It has been truly sald of | that they corrupt logislatures, dobauch | 8nd trustees, who habltually evade Irving that ho was the father of [ congreases and make and unmake gov- the payment of their taxss, who sys American literature as he was certaln- | ernors and presidents. 1y the first American to make Amerl- - Earopean mel of founding fortunes cannot |and consplracies, and oth: oan books read at home and known |prevall here. The immense estates of | immoral means, e aps vikhomh e tematically take away the property of poorer and weaker men by "E::nln" He says without re. abroad. ‘There s a peculiar literary | a foreign nobility were scquired long | ***¥® that what he fears for America fascinacion about Irving's works which we find In no other Amerloan author. | gal rulers gave landed possessions 0, when land was chesp and prodi is that the fow very rich and powerful men and corporations who are amassin to | money and power by these means will His versatilo aud graceful style ls that | thelr favorites. Bui under our continue their dey " . very predations until th of ‘the &sssylsts of Queen Anne mod- | eyes, by the use of exceptional talents | PeOPle are forced to come together h: fia- genlal glow of humor like|and by arts and measures whioch e1ery- self defonse and unite In e resistance Lamb. His rangs of sympathy | one sdmits are base and bad . Sormlthe ‘sl waa wide. Ho reflooted the quiet and | teacts of land have besn nhi:n:::; Dreoiive. " Duribersn delightful philosophy of the 7Tatler | from the people, and corporations have | these dangerous rich that the people and Spectator and added to it » power | been bullt of priviloges developed fnto | °F.thi country will not walt, as &a of pathos and a temperate command | rights which are more valuable than o O e of wit and burleeque, which appear in | kingdoms., The foundation for for- such widely divergent compositions as “The Broken Heart” and *‘The History of New York," wrote of all countries bat his own, in | the superstructures, the style of Addison. Itistrue that| It requlres no glft of prophecy there Is nothing distinetively Amerl-|fortell the inevitable can 1n his style and most of his easays | rights of the few to the tunes vasily greater than Vanderbilt's | €¥il: | has been lald In hundreds of familfes, orisis by making a crleis for some one and the growth of the country andthe A French oritic has sald that Irviog | development of its resources will rear which, accordin, the Rome, and France, until they are rulned. They have some forethought of impending They will anticlpate their own else. —— A Lawyer's Way, New York Cerrespo dence Cineianatl Exquirer. Price, the contrictor, it eoems, of- to favor, Price now tells it under oat} Kelloge was a lawyer and has might have been written in England | thelr immense property will never be | ohlef justice of Nebraska. Ha 'Pl‘ul: or on the continent. Bat it ls diffisalt | permitted to stand tn the way of the ably beok to see how this diminishes the charm |right of the many to earn a llving TADS S o of his writings, lnterest in which has | which shall'be something more than a increased both at home and abroad | bare existence. Huuger and want are from deoade to decade, He has tho|unreasoning, They are not philoso- law of congress, but the : ; ‘;orvloe is hattual with awyers In the senate from B Johnson to Roscoe Oonk'ing, oty Inter-Ocean. firat place and fs named first in the|phers. But all experience goes to 4 Amacican wonstéllotion of letters, | prove that uoless present teadencles | tabterng ol Lop SEPlalned the chedding luster on the long PR since his star first sppeared. . and | are checked and the people assert their | his father by brilliant compsny who have rlsen | rightful supremacy peacefully, the in- ovitable -ulan. o 1t ame Io|and lug Ml:? -l& Was under an tree enjoying him. when the -d:]--dh:: of syndioate leglslation. 000,000, to the Central Pacifis fored Kollogg $20000 to do kim »! A Baa Appointment. Chlesgo Tribune. The appolntment of ex-Represents- tlve Butterwor:h, of Oincinnati, as . one of the government commissioners of the Northern Paclfic Railroad 1s not one thatwill add any lustre to the administeation of President Arthor. Me. Butterworth was prominent dur ing the last session of congress for his champlonship of two measures which the Tribune was compelled to denounce as most mischievous pleces These were the bill to extend the tlme for the payment of the taxes on whitky, thus making the distillers a favored class of taxpayers, and thatfor glving the Texas Pacific land grant, worth $25,- R built the Southern Pacific. lain Mr. Batter- worth’s failure in pa them gives him to any such honors as he hae just received, Pre-eminently, this gen- tleman belongs to the class of syrdi cateamen, ag distingulshed from atates- men, In advocating these measures he wan not the representative of his con- stituency, but of those who wanted to prey on them. If there is one post in the gift of the government which he could not have had, if he mast have had eomething, it was that to which he has been named. The government thould have a representative in its desling with the railroads who is above o1l susplolon of subserviency to the corporations. That cannot be said to be the record of Mr. Batterworth. —_— The Beet Remedy. Kaneas Clty Jcuroal, The Apsches are again on tho war- petoh, and are murdering, burning and robbing. The people of Tombstone say their patlence is exhausted and they will no longer depend upon the military, This means that they will quietly move upon the Apache reser- vation and murder all of Wiloox's peta. Ohivington and his eltizen soldiers did this once in Colorado at Sand Creek, and nearly wiped out a whole tribe. The eastern philanthropists denounced the measure, but for many a year afterwards the Indians in Colorado were as meek as lambs. It is & sad commentary upon the fighting quall- ties of our troops that the Mexicans are the inly ones who have done any killing in tg dislike to he had been massacred on thelr reserva- t:m,kbnt believe we could survive the shock. e last five years. We would that all the Apaches Too Much Formal Grief. Hpringleld Republican. Just look at it a moment. Here is an amiable old gentleman of Wiscon- sin, for whom the American nation cherlshes no vlolent affection, who happens to figure in President Ar- thur’s cabinet; In due time death overtakes him, and because he chances at the hour of his departure to hold the office of postmaster general, a whole natlon is deprived of the privi lege of doing business at any postoffice for three hours. only a farce, but an unnecessary and inexcusable inconvenlence imposed upon the people. The thiog is not A et of resolutions would do the business in all ordinary oases. Lot us measure our grief by the real importance of the loss, Postoffice Changes In Nebraska during the week end- ing March 31, 1883, furnished by Wm. Van Vieck, of the post office department: Established — Harbine Thayer gounty, John F. Waite, postmaster. Diecontinued —Fovors, Gagecounty. Postmasters appointed — Bentoria, Sherman county, Mrs. Florence A. Davidsor; Johnson, Nemaha counfy, Tdmen Baily; Ualon, Cass county, N, G. Douge. 10WA. Postmasters appointed during the week ending March 31, 1883: Brevick, Emmett county, G, Celarkowaky; Del- aware, Delaware county, Horace Davey; Linden, Dallas county, M D. Ellis; Plainfield, Bremer oounty, John Roach; Roscoe, Des Moines county, L. C Hall; Rowley; Buchan: an county, James H. Dvis; Taskeega, Dacatur county, J. O, Vamer. Resolutions of Sympathy. CasTLe Havy, Praxer Lonae No. 4, K. or P.} OMAHA, April 3, 1883, At o regular meeting of Planet Lodge No. 4, Kunights of Pythias, held March 27, 1883, Brothers V. C. John Spoerl, Past Grand Chancellor Jo- seph Rosenstein, and State Dlastrict Grand Daputy Chancellor John F. Kuhn, were appointed a comuittee to present resolutions of respect to the memory of our deceased brother, Past Chancellor Henry Siert. After due deliberation the commit- tee reported the followlng: Waereas, It has pleased the Al mighty, in the wise dispensation of his providence, to remove from our midst and affillations, our beloved friend, Brother Past Chancellor Siert. Wakzreas, Theugh forced, we still bow with submission and regret at this mandate of power as beyond ovr con- trol; therefore be it ResoLvep, That this lodge expresses its regrets at this loss of our worthy brother and friend, and says that one will look: long and often to find his equal In our midst—a good citizen, a .| worthy father and husband, and most acceptable brother Knight. ResoLvep, That we, as a lodge, extend to the members of his be- reaved family our warmest lymgl\hy and condolence and that our lodge room be draped in mourning tor a period of thir' y days, and that a copy of these rer.Jlations be sent to the widow of the decessed; also spread upon t' & records of this lodge, and the press''n this city furnished with a copy, for publication, JouN Spary, Jos RcSENsTEIN, Joun I. Kuax, COommittee, Biehop Clarkeon’'s Appolntments The following are Bishop Clarkson’s appointments for the next ten days: Oakland, Taceday evening and Wed. nesday morning. Tekamah, Wednesday evening. Qentral Oity, Sandsy wmoraing. Grand Island, SBunday evening. Plum Creek, Monday evening, gor% Platte, 'v:ln‘ 3 will 7ibe Dew ohuroh a¢ HEADLICHT CLEAMS, Oatastrophes on The Local Lines. A Big Fxcursion to the Far Weet. A werlous accident, which might have proved much worse, occurred on the B. & M. line Monday. The nortt.bound Kansas City train, McUOoy, conductor, and Swift, engin- eer, colilded witha land slide abont three miles north of Bellevae, on a curve where (it Was not easlly seen. The englneer caught a glimpse of the obstructfon just in time to re. verse his engine and check the speed of tho train to a consldersble oxtent by applylng the alr brakes, The pllot of the engine ploughed deep into the debrls which covered the track before the train come to a stand stlll, About thirty minutes of shov- eling by all hands cleared the track and let everybody out in good shape. FIRE IN THE YARD, Eartly yesterday a car, reported to be a ‘“‘speciai” of the C. B, snd Q. took fire where It stood in the B and M. yarde south of the U. P. depot. The prompt work of those who hap- pened to be in the vicinity saved it from total distraction and the damage was not very serious. JUDD'S EXOUREION, About three o'clock yesterday a speclal loft for the west on the U. It contained about 500 persona for varlous points in the northwest, in- oluding Batte, Dillon and Deer Lodge, Montana, and a few to Shoshone Fal The party was made up of cit- izens of Illinols, Jowa and Mis. sourl, They came In yesterday morning over the Wabash and were delayed at the tranafer just long enough to transfer baggage, etc. This {s the first excarsion of the seasonand is the biggest that has passed through for some time. It was organized by M. H. Judd, of the U. P, land de. partment _The travel on the U. P., both first-class and emigrant, Is quite hueavy already, and is likely to be the heaviest this season of any for a long ime. The B. & M. 1s also doing a very heavy businees indeed. MOVEMENT OF TRAINS, The C., B. & Q. stub train was 55 minates late yest risy and their through traln, No. 1, two hours’ late. The U. P. overland train left nearly on tlme with ten oars, six of them packed with passengers, A Life Saving Service. Mr, M. E. Allison, Huatchison, Kan.: Saved his life by a simple Trial Bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery, for Consump- tion, which caused him to procure a larce bottle that completely cured him, when Doctors, change of climate and everything else had failed. Asthma, Bronchitis, Se- vere Coughs, and all Throat and Lung dis- ennes, it is gusranteed to cure. Trial bottles free at C F. Goodman's drug store, Large size, $L. aprl 2-e0d&w 1w SILVER WEDDINGS. A Pleasant Wedding in Washington County. - «On Saturdsz eveniog Jast a very en- jogable event was celebrated in Rich- land precinct, Washington county, being the silver wedding anniversary of Mr, and Mrs, Helonerich D. Schnelder, the handsome and unique invitations bearing the sigaificant fig- ures ‘1858 —1883 " About four hundred guests were present, principally farmers from Washington county, who drove thither trom Blair, Calhoun and all direc- tions. The entire entertalnment was personallysaperintended by the genial host and hostess, and it goes without saylog that their guests were royally treated. About 11 o'clock a superb supper wes spread and the dancing continued until a late hour in the morning, the muslc belng furnished under the direction ot Mr, Juliug Theile, an old time friend of the happy couple. Mr. Schunelder is president of the Schleawig- Holatein society, whose set- tlement was located In this vicinity, and he has been here since 1879, belng ome of tho oldest settlers In the county. He made a neat address to his guests during the eveuiog, which showed his apprecia- tion of their fclendship and ‘the favor of their presence. Altogether it was one of the great- est soclal cvents which hus occurred in the county ior years, and Tak Bee jolns with many others in congratu- lating Mr. and Mre. Schnelder, Horsford's Acid Phosphate {s a preparation of the phosphates of lime, magnesis, potash and firon ia such form as to be readily assimilated by the system. Dasoriptive phamplet sent free, Rumford Chemical Works, Providence, R. L Republican Central Committue. First Ward—0. B, Scroth, M. D, Sproul, A. F. Swickard. Second Ward—M, O. Meany, J. W, Lounsbury, Morris Morrison, Talrd Ward—C Banckes, Judge Peyton, D, L. McGucken. Fourth Ward—Walter Bennett,Ro- bert D, Doncan, W. J. Broatch, Sixth Ward—-N. J. Baroham, A, Hoel, 0. 0. Fleld, FORO d E:A.IN . Rreumatism, Neuulgh, Sciatica, Backache, o= Tt i il S , Toothache, 7iny Centa s g\lh DOURLE AND SINGILE ACOTING POWEHR AND HAND PUOUMES:!I 8team Pumps, Engine Trimmings, WINING MACHINERY, BELTING, HOSK, DRASS AND IRON FITTINGS PIP PACKING, AT (OLESALE AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS Cor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha, Neb. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. 1t Is the beat and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound Is equal to three pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oil Oake 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 $26.00 per ton; no charge for sacks. Address od-eod-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb, M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I13th STRAK McMAHON, ABERT & CO,, Wholesale Druggists, 1315 DOUCLAS STREET __- - OMAHA NEB McNAMARA & DUNCAN. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN KENTUCKY AND PENNSYLVANIA WhiskieS! in Fond or Free. Also direct Importers of WINES, BRANDIES AND ALES, Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine CIG-ARS. Agents for Jos. Schlitz’ Milwaukee Beer, Bottled and in Kegs. 314 & 216 8, 14TH STRRER, - of - C. F. GOODMAN. W ELO LL.E &3 AT DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PAINTS,OILSVARNISHES And Window Glass. OMAHA, . . G A TR OTT Y PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURERS OF Carpenter’'s Materials - SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames,; Etc. First-class facilities for the Manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings, Planing and ma! » Speolalty, Orders from the country will b promptl ted . communicat! Lfi&’v’i‘& Pro nife OMAHA, WEB, NEBRASKA OMAELA BROOM AND BRUSH WORKS. Cor. of Fifteenth ani Pacific Streets. ‘R_E. COPSON & C0. WIll commence operations about Apri L ” '.f{(?‘i.!‘;if’i',;, SIGN WRITER & WHOLESALE & RETAIL WALL PAPEL Window Shades aud Ourtaing, OORNICES OURTAIN POLES AND FIXTURES, Paiuts, Oils & Brushes, 107 Bouth 14th Strest MAHA - . NEB e — ‘/ Seisl Sree e e A