Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 18, 1883, Page 4

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} \ 1 4 Eneatsmse—y, ‘THE DAJLY BEE-- OMaHA WEDNESDAY™ APRIL 18 ,;:e Omaha Beé. Published every morning, except Sune sy, The enly Monday morning daily. TERMS BY{MAIL— Year....$10 00 | Thres Months.$3.00 .l"fi.M;:\:hn.‘ 5,00 | One Month.... 1,00 YHE WEEXLY BEE, published every Weinosday. TERMS POST PAID— $2.00 | Throo Months, 50 N .00 | Ono Month.... 20 Axxricax News Courpany, Sole Agenta Newadealers in the United States, QORRESPONDENCE -All Commun'- stlons relating to News and Editorial @atters should ,yu addressed to the Kpimor or TaE Bre, BUSINEFS LETTERS—AIl Busines Tiotters and Remittances should be sd dressed to THE Brs PUBLISHING COMPANY JMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Postoffice Jrders to be made payable to the order of the Cowpany, Tho BEE PUBLISHING 00., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor. A MeTEOR covering an acre is sald to have fallon In Texss on Sanday. Thae Texan liar has evidently ordered his spring salt, e— Nxw decorations are belog added to the white house. It costs nearly as much to keep the presidential mansion in repair as it does to rebuild one of the nation’s latest monitors. GrapsToNs has ordered a sult of mall and the queen is provided with one of Lady Dixon's antl-dagger steel ribbed corsets. Neither sults of mail nor corsets are dynamite proof. Em— 1r Irish informers eontinue their testimony at the present rate they will depopulate Ireland. Immigra- tlon has shown a lively Increase since Mr, Informer Oaroy took the staud. E——— At the Board of Trade meeting on Monday evening the important ques- tlon whother Omaha neoded another veterinary surgeon was satisfactorily settled, Sneers against the utility of boards of trade in developlng a olty's Interests will no longer be in order. Tar Iroquols chiefs onght to scalp Oarter Harrison, His performance at that Palmer House banguet In denouncing protestion but pleading agalust any declaration of free trade as & demooratlo dootrine discounts General Hanoock's famous campaign utterance that the tariff s merely » local lssue. S— Ax Italisn margals is in New York on an imporiant mismion, which is nothing else than that of peddling genuine titles of nobllity to Ameriosn aristoorats for spot oash, It Signor Oarlelle will conie to Omaha he will find & promp} customer in Dr. Milier. The Marquis ¢e Herndon and Baron THE TRADE OUTLOOK. it although they maynever bo compel- There Is little change to report in|ed to apply these branches to bread the conditlon of trade during the past [ winning. week, The improvement |noted con- tinues, though business aclivity 18| Srovx Crrv, which has taken more nelther as macked or as general as was | than Its share «f the trade «f northern antiolpated earlier In tho season. Con- | Nebraska, Is opposed to the constrac- slderable uneasiness is folt concerning | tion «f any line which will divert bual- the Industrisl situstion, especlally in | ness to Omahs, where it belongs, and the iron businees, where prices are low | accordingly the Journal Is miking it- and orders beckward. Wages disputes | self unpleasant over Tne Ber's re continue and the unsettled condllion | marks upon the rroposed new line of exlsting between employers and |railroad to the E khorn valley. Tne employes Increases the disatisfaction | Be repeats what it sald before, that and makes specalation for the future |if such a raliroad ean ba honestly con. diffisult. In the wool and cotton In-|structed with the money of its projac. dustries, operations have been (f a|tors, and cperated for the benefit of very rostricted character. The ten-|the community, it will be a paying in- denoy s atlll to hold down prodcetion | vestment, both to stockholders and to streot commissloner, the olty englncer destruotlon, sa the extrome osrtoonists or some one else who is competent to attend to the matter ought to super- | perous, joound and blooming viotim vise the filling In of trenches made|yleld itself up to the enemy.—St. for sewer and water connections, The | L0us# Glube Demoorat. work has been groesly negleoted and Hokits {n consequence our streets are honey- combed with pitfalls which are a men. | Bumorist cartoonists take of (Le #0e 1o life and property. Some of the | mOROpoly “lssue. work done laat fall and winter is|t00 ©old to paliiupon the people or shown by exoavations from two to!too threadbare to hold the public at- to the legidimato demands f trade, | the country thrcugh which it propotes ard not to antleipate orders. By this|to pats. But we mistake greatly process old stocks have been rapldly | the wsentiment ¢f Omaha and diminished. the state f the subsldy and bonus Business men east and west are|plan of bullding railroads can be complaining of the lack of traneporta. | worked any longer in Nebrasks, tlon facilities, and of bad roads, but|Omaha's last experience with a rail. are encouraged by a greater ease In|road north will Jast her for along time collections and a continued Increase in | to come. She is still paying interest oash and short time ovders, Tae|on $200,000 cf bonds voted fir that fallares last week shomed a gratifying | enterprise, which stopped short at decrease from tho precedirg week, | Blalrand was transferred to another though they were atill largely in ex |system as soon as its owners found it ceas of the corresponding perlod in [prcfitable to make the change. We 1882, want more rallroads. We are willing The provislon markets have fluctu- |to sapport them handsomely when ated, wheat showing at the end of the | bullt, but neither Omaha nor the week & small decline, while corn was | counties north care to tax themsclves alightly higher than when last noted | for new roads and then permit others The atooks of grain at interlor pointa | to pocket the bencfi's and operate or are large but the supply in firat hands | dispose of the lines to suit thelr own is rapldly diminishing. The weakness [ convenience, regardless of the inter- in the market is doubtless largely due | ests of the publlo, to the encouraging crop prospeots . which are not dlseounted by the cer and comio pspers that are “nm::‘l‘!:ll; talnty of & heavy forelgn demand .iext | devoted to the abrogation «f political fall. { and economio evils by exiggerated The stock markets have shown a|DOrtraysls of the moral deformities which 1 il ot society, had stopped ring- marked upward tendenoy owing to a 1ug the changen 0008 ‘the "p““né_ 1t is about time thi revival of the uplrit of investment In | iion f the Ualted States being the pricc'pal finavolal centers, It is|devoared whole, consumed, or other. noted that a large proportion of the | ¥ise annihilated by the monopoliats. dealings have been maae by actusl in- T vestors and speculations seem to be | throadbare, playlng a swall hand in Wall stree: | tilustration of this drearily monoto. operatiors. weeks past and confidence seems to be Is ropresented a8 returniog. The general outlock is favorable and the advarc> of spring| with tha three respective heads of 1s certaln to muke it still more so as | Gould, Vanderbllt and Field, 1s ap- business receives the stimulus of |Prosching to eat her uo. warmer weather and clearer tkies, umorlsts are sadly in need of & heme. They have worn this nne Before us 1s a typioal o olass of sketches. Liberty Andromeds chained to the rock, while a long- tailed, dregon - wioged sea monster, Money Is easler than for | nous Does any one thiok that elther this country or its freedom Is quivering like An- —— domeda before the destroyer, or that Trr board of publlo works, the it is actually undergoing the throes of insts? If such is the case, never be- fore did sush s robust, growing, pros- There is more fact than fie. the ylew which our The theme Is not tentlon, The sketches may be ¢‘‘dremily monotonous™ but they are not more drearily monotonous than the complaints which are responaible for thelr existence. The issne be- tween the monoplies and the people Is dally becomlng more clearly defined as the wrongs suffored by the public through the monopclies are brought to light. No one charges that the Uaited S:ates is being wholly devcured by monopoly but there ls every ovidence that mo- Kearney wouldn'i look so badly at the head of the editorial columns of the Herald, see——— Dr 0. W Houues has become the viotim of an error of the types. In telegraphing his poem, read before the Now York doctors, the line, *‘I scant the bresthing ocourtesy,” was trans- mitted and set up, ‘I scent the breathing cookery.” There will be a oontest between the intelligent com- poaitor aad the tired telegraph opera four feet deep on Oapitol avenue which have sunk since the frost left the ground. All trenches ought to be thoroughly tamped when filled 1n and settled afterwards with water. Tae city s likely to have some heavy damasge sults on its hands it any accl- dents occur from the underground mines which now exist on our streets. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of oure, ¢ THERR tor for the honor of this ball. — Pamo strickex London fears that the clergy are to be blown up by the Irish destruotionists, Oanon Flem. 1og denounced the Fenlans from the pulplt of 8t, Michael's ohurch, and forthwith he is assalled with anony- mous threats of dynamite for himeelf and his innocent curates. The clergy have become 80 used to ‘‘blowing up” all who disagreo with them that the prospect of a ohangs of the shoe to the other foot Is far f-om agreeable, — Matoa manufaciurers who fought the abolition of the tax on matches now declare that no changs will bs made in tho retall price. They pro- pose to pecket the tax, amoanting to 85 cents gross, and ohargs the old price of 60 ocents, while the same amount «f matches in Cinada are selling for 13 cents retall. As the tariff on matohes Is only 4 cents a gross, the match monopolists will ind 18 difficult to sustaln prices sgainst a sure competitlon feom Canada, —— T Danver News has this to say of an old-tlme resident of Omaha, now & oltizen of Danver: ‘‘Inquitting the servioe of the government as postmas. ter, by resson of expliration of his term, William N. Byers leaves behind bim a record of which he has just rea. son to feel proud. He admloistered the affairs of the cffize In whioch he was placed to the satitfaction of the geveral publie. Foew cflicials ever stepped out of public sorvice with as olean & record as that made by Mr, Byers whils postmaster at Donver. Fx-Secrersny Kingwoon thioks that Governor Sherman s haviog the hardest time any governor «f Towa ever had. *Barely, Mr. Kirkwood," he recently sald to his sturdy old pre- decessor, ‘‘you must have had a worse slme during the war.” ‘Ob, mno,” snswered Mr. Kirkwood, ‘‘Of course I had a hard time; but then every man who dared find fauli with me was declared disloyal, while now every barker at your heels van find some dustrial schools throughout the eun- try. Oar publio achools are not de- signed for manual and mechanicsl tralnlog and cannot teach branches without crippling thelr efii clenoy in other directions. plates.a continuance of puplls in the schools for a perlod beyond that at which it is necersary for them to enter in the life. The boy who Intends to become & mechanlo is compeled to quit the #chool before he reaches the highest grades, of history ard geography are all that oan be scquired, ers’ assoclation of New Yurk, having advancemsnt of tcohnical knowledge publio school fliclals, that ‘‘very faw of the puplls, although they may have attended the public schools of this and other olties, have had any In. structlon In free hand drawing and growirg demand for in. nopoly rale ls rapldly reaching a point from wbich its power will be strong enovgh to oripple or destroy every liberty of our people through un- bridled exactlons, perverted courts and debaushed leglslatures. This is the danger which must bemet in advance. There is every reason why it should bs averted before it arrives. Already the growing inflaence of ocorporate monopoly {s overshadowirg the constitution of our states and the statutes of our law making bodies. Iis power ls felt In every sectlon of our country, 1n every artery «f com- mercy, and eve'y avenue of irade. Corp ration managers direct the operations of an army «f agents at Washington and In every atate capital, snd lmpede or urge the passage of laws acoording as they menace mor- opoly power, or seek to bestow new privileges upon the cor porations, Exerolsing an arbitrary power of texatlon greater than that of sny orients] monarch they have be ocome bold with the inorease of their fuflaence and arrogant, as their acoumulations, drawn from trade and Indastry, have piled op in their treas- urles. The time to strike at monop oly abuses is while the power of the people is greater than that of the monopoly managers. When Andro. meda {a chalned before her destroyer, the abllity to resist will be gone, CE———— such The best poriion of their Instruotion contem upon iudu:trial ordinary training pureuits of Fuor the msjority, reading, writing, caloolation and a smattering The carrlege bulld- reci ntly established a school for the smong apprentices and young me chanice, say, in a olrcular addrersed to geometry, 8o necessary to all who wish to engage in the higher mcchanical puriults, We are well aware that the studles abovo referred to are Incladed in the ordlnary school course In many of the cities and towns, but we beg leave to call your attention to the fact that boys Intending to loirn trades leave echool earlicr than thege intend ing to follow the professions and oth er parsuits, and usnally before reach- Ing that part of the echool course in which free-hand drawing and geome- 'ry are taught, Thus they are do- prived of the very studies which they speclally need to make them skilled and latelligent m¢chanice,” While O.naha cannot yet hope for & technioal echool, desirable as it might be, the suggestion of the New York oarriage ballders might weli bs adopt- ed as far as possible in our schools Drawing and the elements of geometry ought to be taught In the middle grader, To those who Intend to be ocme mechanlos the {ostructions will be invaluable, Oihers will profit by What Ara You Golng to do Abous It. §°, Joseph Gazette, Friday morning's lssue of the Cin. clnnat! Dally Nows oontafoed" ln it rallroad colomas the following fu- formation, which has been telegraphed to most of] ho graa Juenspapers of the country: The News Is in possession of facis concernirg the movements «f certain rallway «flizisls and oapitslists that would ioaicate the formation at an early day of the greatest and most comprehersive eystcm of rallways in Awmerloa, The N announced & few days ago that Mr. Guld had placed himself in a position where he could, at the proper time, secure con- trol of the Eust Tspnessee, Virginia & Georgia system, better known as through {ts votlog power direot. Thase lines, as s well known, reach from Norfolk to Savannah, the Seney syndicate lines, by lease or | Trust Bronawick, Chattanooga, Atlants, Mscon, Meridlan and ~ Memphls, To secure this mileage was no emall undertaking, but, great as it is, it is but a drop in the backet when com- pared o the mileage of what will soon be lrnown as ‘‘the Gould comblnation,” which will embrace the Seney, E:lan- gor, Webach and Missourl Pacitic sys tems, The Wabash is alreidy sub- stantlally a psrtof the Missouri Pacific system, aud the Seney r aro a8 good as secured. Eclargsr'ssyatem le still under the control of the Loundon board, but If romor bas it right the control will in_the near future pass to Mer. Gonld either by lease or through a treffic agreement which will be cquivalent to a lesso. The Eclarger lines proper and what are called the Erlanger system are widely differont but not coufliotirg interests, Mr, Gonld bas found the wesk spot of the “‘Eclanger system.” Buron Eclan ger has a right to sell the Alabama Great S)uthern, avd being a daring sproulator Mr. Gould will fiod him—n fact has tound him - the right man in the right place. Now with the Alsbam» Grea! S)uthern and East Tennessoe, Virginia and Gaorgia s under his control, Me. G uld would ba msster of the sitaation. Tae fact Is, the Vicksburg, Bhreveport & Pacifio, the Vicksbarg & Meridian, and the Alabama Great Southern are necessary to Mr. Gould, because they are the connecting links bstween the Texas Pacifisa d Esst Teunessee, Vir- ginia and Georgia systems, and he has but to securo the Alabama Great Southern when the other lines of the Eclanger system will speedily wheel into line, and quietly crawl into his capscious pocket. ‘Len days ago the old Wsbash direo- tory retired and gave place to the officers who are the controllir g execn- tive spirits of the vast ‘‘Missvorl Pa- olfic system,” with its seven thousand miles of track. The ‘‘Missouri Pacific system” itself is an sggregation of mavy roads. Ita nucleus was a great ratlway that paid well, and that have been grouped other and weaker enterprises in a more or less uohealthy condition. Kaormouscosta wero saved by combination. Tho ‘‘system’’ was made to pay where the individuat roads had mot. Tiey re sembled the buudle of twigs which re- sisted the strain that would have snap- ped ia twain any one of its m3m bers. Likeunto the Missoari Pacifis system wan the ‘‘Wabash system.” 1c had absorbed many little roads, had built lines upon its own account and was & Brareds grasplog the trade of many great oitles, widely separated sections ot country. But it did not pay. The fault may have been of mansgement or it may have bean irre- diable; whatever it was the faoct of operation at a lcss diecomfited stock- | M, holders and threatened a receivership There seemed only one possible es- cape, Oonsolidation. And was another uajon; the *Mis oific system” awallowed the system,” which had in turn devoured its smaller fry, It was a survival of the Should anyone object! Now coraes this latter intimatien of another consolidation, The anaconda s aboutto mske another meal. It stretohes to the lakes and lies colled along the great river: ; it reashes down toward the southern border land, and It would grasp the seaboard. Whatit appears to desire is a practical monop oly in the soathweat. Oace in posses sion of that which it seems about to obtain, vo rival can ever live in opposition, lilions would fight sgaioat It in valn, for It would possess millions too, and beyond that be in posseasion ot the field. The maguates of such’ & cotporation, spreading its vast and arrogant dimensions over ten tes, oan defy the laws, can langh competition, can bleed the people to that nicely osloulated point where the leach would go no fursher lost he go too far. The corruption of the legie— latiop, the imposition of every burden vhe public can bear without revolt, are then to ba expeotsd rather than the surpris ng scqiences of such a oor- poration’s existence. Yot to theso things it does sppear that we are ocomiog. The Wabash system: could not hold its own because ic the nostility and competition of the greater aud more arouud it. A single is » nothing to.day, Ten million dollars is & bagatelle which does not inspire respect to him who invests it in ties and ateel rails. The boundaries of a state are too narrow for the common osrrier Lhat would not go to the wall. C nsolidation, combination, conspir most. In the struggle to pos- sess the carryiog trade ot a countinent, these seem to be the only steps upon which success may set its foot What are you going to do about 1 A few months sgo Mr. Willlam H Vanderbilt uitered a sen'iment that has bicome famour; that was doubiless neswr to his hesrt—*‘‘The public be damned,” Mr. Vanderbilt {s a mono- polist of vast power, both because of his enormous wealth and because of his controlling iaterest in many great rallroads. Ho can +ft rd to say ‘‘the pablic be dsmned,” perhaps, but the paublic ls not completely aubject to him because he has not been able to pur- chase all of the parallel and competing lines of rallway tn his sec'iin of eoun: try, and althoagh his railroard forms » part of a “‘pool,” greed does not per- mit the members cf the pool to rob elther ’vcontinuously or har. monfously., Buat in the case of such & oombloation of rail lines as that Indicated as about to fall into the hands of Mr. Gould and his immediate associates, there would be neither a *“‘pool” ner apy perivdical quarreliog amorg ite membera. The “'system’’ would control the tranepor tation of a grand division of the coun- try. Rtes wou!d be bastd upon the sbillty f shippers to pay, not upon the legitimate percentages of profi the iuvestment ought to bring. There would be a one man pawer very nearly sporoaching soverigoty. Then. fo- de)d, the pub'ic might b> dimned, Aud yet, though such thiogs are upon us, one may faney the monopoly Vino repsatiog over the defiant quory «f Bes T veed, **What are you golog todo about 1’ em—— It is more economical to buy Bugke's Sarap Drgssiva than ft is to muke & dressivg; besides this, it 1s made of better materials than you can buy at the stores. Everybody likesit. — K7 Mutual ‘o notice the Mumh-d. s Bigly cpehm o P O warried” heads advertisement in snother column of this paper, [} PHRSON ALITIHS, Tom Ochil'ree is going home soon to play poker with his hardly earned selary, Vaaoder ilt's erardscn, now three m nths 0'd, hos bern presented with forty-two silver mugs, Mr. Hubrell is to retira torever from po ities, 'The depertment clerks wili now Luy pis twice a week I is said that Pope Leo looks like Willism M. Evarts, And now the ques. tion is which is to ask the other's pacdon, Fecretary Chandler catches ouly a fow smell tish m Florica. The trout and biss evilently have their opinion of a man who v il consent to be the ruler of Uncle Sam’s Naver, Georze H. Butler, acorrding to Gen- ernl Shermin's +tatemént, was given an army spociotuent “to develop ths latent food in him,” Other mwen are sent 10 jail wi h the same end in view, Mr, Guenther, a menber of congress from Wisconsin, came a8 an immigrant from Germany sixteen yoars sgo, Ho i now about to visit the fatheiland for the first time eince his ar ival in Americ, ALome is teggirg his mother-in-law's to continue him avother year His royal wife utterly refuses to keep h ure for him in Canads, and he bas ahigh old bacholor tiwe there, going a tishing, sleigh-ridiog with the girls, etc. Phipps, ¢f Piiladelplis, hae at last gone home to see about the roof of that ulms houte ov:r which he presided with grace and pecuniary profit. He will receiv: hearty welcome from his old noighbors, who long to see hiw safs in the penitcn. tiary. Haulst Shakrspeare Felton is on trial at Belleville, I, for obtairing $4 000 from a bank on forged paper. He ought to be ceverely dealt whg A man should never be permitted to disgrace such n name without being unished. Ex-Senstor David Davis says he don't intend to spend next winter at Waching- ton, because he neither wants his wife to be gezad at and talke 1 and written about, nor himsslf to bs ranked with s:me ex- ufficeholders v ho spend their lives hangicg about the lobbies, fast gotling a'most too well, *I cannot button the two first nd the third is just bavging onby the eyelide, Tae tailor ju:t put a wedge fo the back tc-dsy of brown camhric, and d | I uave » Butteriok plan by which I intend to ersct an extention on the vest.” A ‘‘powerful” wdsl concerning the late Prince G rtechak that he left a mistress, profe:sionally named L na Braun, but who is noother tLan Jim Fisk's old pet Josle Manstild. I.ins, or Jusie, whoever she is, has heonn suit against the Prince’s heirs for 28,000 marks a year, which she ciaims the piince promished her. Bepj min Mowrer, of Montour, Pa,, who helped to b ild the first locomotive ever buiit in America and macufactured the first miver's vick for mining anthracite coal, and «ho saw Washingtonand Lafay- rtte, and is the survivor of m.ny a bloody Tadian fight, is still haie and hearty and works at his forge daily, Of the present m:mhers of the United S 'ates rupreme court, Judge Harlan is the yourgest jndge, He is but 50. Thechiet Justice i 36; Judge Field, 67 ley, 70; Judgs Woods, 59; at hewe, { 9; Judge Gray, 53, and Judge itcbford, 63 Judve Miller was ap. go'mud in 1862, Judge Field {n 1838, Judea cadley 187u, the chisf justice in 1874, Judge Harlan in 1877, Judee Woods ia 1880, Judea Matthews ia 1881 Ju |1c G-»y in 1881, and Judge Blatchford in 1882, POLITI0AL NOTES., ge Starley ‘The country weeklies are hooming Car- ter Harrison tor yoveraer of Il'inoi e oom- mittee i+ towes if it bas vitality enough to bold a meeting on the 21 of Ma;. Miss Kate Kane received three votes in late electicn for associate justive of the rupreme court «f Wiscousin. Her woman’s 1ight party thus has & beginning, : Urder the text, ‘Do Legislatures Leeis- Iate?’ the Chicasgo Tiibune suy-; *‘The Ilincis Jegisisture bas been seesion sinoce the first Wedaraday in January. It bas not in ths three monthsthat have 1apsed passed a vingle bill of the least im. portauce. All that has been accomplis hed 1 1he passage of the mensure acce ersting the payment of their own ral: Legio- Intion of the bighest imy ortanc their plessure,” Postmaster General Gres cpme 89 importaut & mav that both thote republioans who were third-termers and those wh) were not are claiming that he was ‘‘one of us” at the Chicago cunven- vion, A promivent western republivan is eaid to morally sure that ‘*‘ceperal Gresham's powerful ivfluence” was exerted in favor of General Garficld Perbaps it in 1880 as be is in Apr', 1883, there would ticn at Chicigo. Gov, Barstow, of Vermont, has ireneda prooclamation de:lariog that the two pro- po ed amendments to the con-titution of tht state wbich were voted upon ty the people last month were both ratified, and are now valid parts ot 1hat instrument. The vote for them was almost unanimous, The fir:t reqni hat representatives in the legiclatu not hold any office ot trust or profit under the geveral govern. wenti aud the second provides for the eleo. tion of the etary of state & d the anai- tor of sccounts, and that ther n mes +hall be upou the same ticket an the g.v- ernor, licutenant governor, snd tressncer, these ].st being the ouly s ate officers heretofore elected by the direst vote of the people. Senator Mitchell, of Peoneylvaria, ina rec nt intersicw with & repro-entative of The Chic go Tises ((ud ) said: * T rere are cer ain principles wiich the icdepend. ent republic.ns of Perhaylvauis are steiv. ing for, and which thev have not yet se. oured. The civicior, whi h wss ciured by the system «f apuoint.«n's in Peoneyl vapis which wers then contr.lied by the bosses in politios, is very Ji:ely to clore vp by resson «f the pa rage of the Pendleton e v.liervics bill. Urder that bill, which is now o law, the party tosees ¢ unt turn out fuithful employe in tbe Pennsylvania ous'om honse or post: ffices to make room frahberchmao, nor cun it be dme out here in Coioago. This much has been no- complished ty the independent party in Pennrylvaris, Tam fiee to say that no clvil ssrvice 1ill would ever have been passed but for this resistance to the ma. chine i politics in my own state, as weil a8 io ol her atates, aided by 1he dema ds of the prose, Tha Mexican koverr ment devies the re- pot cirsulated in the United States that the Aniericans cannot a quire laud in that conntry BERMAN REMEDY F"C)Fl.s 2 E:A‘.(N - Rreumatism, lleuralgh.Scllllu. X , Backache, He , Toothache, oo Tt ey Sl B, AND ALL OTHMER BODILY PAINS AND ACHES. n-,mwu D-I.-‘:vrlylm Fifty Osate s — e General Gresham had been a« great a man [ 7 not ne 8 much dount concerning his poei- | Sy ee————— DOTIRILE AN SENCG LE A CTX™ G POWER AND HAND 8team Pumps, Engine Trimmings, KININ® MACQUINERY, BELTING, HOSE, BRASS AND IRON FITTINGS PL¢ PACKING, AT WHOLESALE ARD RETAIL. ALLADAY WiND-MILLS CHURCH AKD SCHOO. SELLS COor. Farnam and 10th Streets Omaha, Neb, ~ C.F. GOODMAN, WWEHIOL.EIS.A XX DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PAINTS,OILSVARNISHES And Window Glass. MAHA . - - NEBRASKA, NYA M SPECIAL NOTICE TO_ Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. It Is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn. Btock 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 conditlon 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 o04-eod-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb, M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I8th OMAHA, NEB. McNAMARA & DUNCAN. ‘WHOLESALE DEALERS IN KENTUCKY AND PENNSYLVANIA WhiskieS! in Eond or Free. Also direct Importers of WINES, BRANDIES AND ALES, Jobbers and Manufacturers of Fine CIG- ARS. Agents for Jos. 8chlitz’ Milwaukee Beer, Bottled and in Kegs. 214 & 218 8 14TH STRRET. - 50 OMAHA, NEB. A. M. CLARK Painter&Paper Hanger SIGN wnmmxunwo& WHOLESALE & RETAIL § WALL PAPER: Window Shades aud Ourtains, OORNIOCES OURTAIN POLES AND 2 FIXTURES, Paints, Oils & Brushes, 107 South L4th Street OMAHA - . NEBRASKA PLANING _ MILLS. MANUFACTURXRS OF Carpenter’'s Materials SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. Firet-claen facilitica for the Mauufscture of all kinds of Mouldings, Planing and mutching » Specialty, Orders from the country will b promptly exeouted. addresall comirnnienti A. MOYER, Propr! R. E COPSON & CO, POPRIETORS OMAHA BROOM WORKS, DEALERS IN Hardles, W es, Twines and Broom Corn. FIFTEENTH AND PACIFIC §TREATS ~ WILLIAM SNYDER, MANUFACTURER OF CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, AND ROAD WA ONS, First-Olass Palnting and Trimming, hmm Promptly Done. 1319 Haruey, Oor, 14th, O; /

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