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The Omaba Bee. h( morning, except Sun. onday moraing y. TERMS BY|MAIL— Boe Year $10.00 | Three Months.! Bix Months,. 5,00 | One Month.... 1.00 *HE WEEXLY BEE, published every Woineaday. TERMS POST PAID— .$2.00 | Three Months, + 1.00 | One Month. ... Axzricax News Couraxy, Sole Newadealers in the United States,| 50 0 ta CORRESPONDENCE -All Communl. atfons relating to News and Editorial aattors should be addressed to the Enrron or Tux Bex, BUSINESS LETTERS—AIl Busines BLetters and Remittances should be sd Aressed to THE Brx PusLisHING COMPANY JMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Postoffice Jrders to be made payable to the order of the Company, The BER PUBLISHING 00., Props. E. ROSEWATER Editor. Keirkg 18 off for Dakota. With Kelfer and Ordway Dikota has more than her share of small bore pollil- clans, — THERE I8 to be another naval review at Hampton, If the two vessels which are to partlcipate can be calked in time to float in Virginla waters, ot — Sam Ranparr has been making ‘‘a purely business trlp” to West Vir- glofs, Tae West Virginla delegation know what buslness is, and ilr. Car- lisle’s frlends will find out sometime in Dacember, Tre Watchman iatlmates that the $10,000 libel sult was begun by An- thony Rels as a boom for his jovial chum, Vic Bierbower, In the ‘O.naha oourts, There may be a good deal more trath than machine poetry in that remark, Tae lightning calculator, who has ‘been figuring on the eleotrlc }izht, has discovered that while the quantity and quality of light has increased the cost of electric lighting is found to be on an average 25 per cent more than gas. Gas in the eastern citles at $1.75 a thousand ls dirt chezp com- pared with western gas at more than double that sum. There is still a groat deal of room in some western oities for auccassful electric lighting. — Trr news that 250 eastern editors will vislt Omaha on the 234 of the present month is not alarming but calle for prompt actlon on the pari of our public spirlted buslness men Omaha must not be behind other ciles along their route la showiag her best side to the guests on that oocasion Arraugements should at onco ba made for extending to the excursiovists the hospitalities of the liveliest ci'y on the Mlssomi. We cannot afford to oml this opportunity for advertlsing our advantages as the metropolis of Ni— braska and tho supply depot of ths west. The BEE calls upon the boar of trade to take the question of ways and means under immedlate conaidera tlon, CROOK’S POLICY. Crooks’ polley is something ifke the recelpt for hare soup —first cateh your hare. Ho proposes first to catch the Indians and then to deal with them, Disregarding the adjutant general's telegram he has crossed the boundary Into Mexlco afterposting a guard with orders to permit no one to bring any dispatches to him across the line. ‘When last heard from he was striking for the heart of the Sierra Madre mountalns, This is a bold policy. It is the same aa that parsued by General Crook In the Rosebud campalgn in '76, when, under like orders, all dispatches were ocorralled at the line of the rallroad and detalned until the general had finished his work with the hostlles. That was the oampaign In which our popular quartermaster, Major John V. Furey, proved that he was as ofticlent In the field aa he is at his desk, and when Paymaster Stanton exhiblted his fighting qualities at the head of the Indlan scouts. George Orook ls fight- Ing for the star of & major general and to maintain hls reputation as & suc- cessful commander, He will win If perseverance, shrewdness and long experience in deallng with the hostiles counts for anything. ‘It takes an Indlan to whip an Indian.” This is one of the underlying prinel- plea of General Crook’s policy, He is pinning his faith to it {n the pres- ent Apache campalgn by leading into the fastuesses of the Sierra Madre mountalns & mongrel command of 260 Apache scouts and fifty regulars, He has lald his plans, mapped out his course and made his arrangements, He proposes to permit no interfer. ence, even from his superiors, This may not be military etiquette, but efficieni Indian fighting and military etiquette often conflict. To keep faith with the Indians in time of peace and punish them fearlessly in time of war, this ls the famed Indian policy of General George Orook. If it proves successful in dealing with the halr-exterminating Apaches of Arxizons, Secretary Lineoln, General Sherman snd Senor Romero will doubtiees pass over the trifllng viola- tion'of the neutrality laws which the American general secuws o have pora- mitted, ! i THE LIBEL SUIT. Ten daysago a telegram from North Platte was published amorvg our special dlspatches alleging thst An- thony Rels had become a defaulter {n the sum f $1,600 as treasurcr of %0 the North Platte bullding association. On the following day the Heral! and Republican snnounced with a great flourish of trampets that Mr, Reis had telegraphed John O. Cowin to inati- tute s orlminal libel sult sgalnet the editor of Tue Bek, This exhibition of lamentable Ignorance of the libel code might be excusable in Mr. Reis, but 1t shows on its face that ho was elther trying to play & bold gawmo of blaff or had in his make up au un- due quantity of stupid vindictiveness, To convlot the editor of this paper of criminal libel Mr. Rels would have to prove that he wilfully and maliclously published a libel about him, knowing 1t to be such, If edltors were to be- come oriminally liable for false re ports received by telegraph or mall, which they have nelther the means nor time to verify, nobody would ven- ture to edit a paper. In this case the dispatoh was telegraphed from North Platte by a correspondent whose reli abllity and responsibllity have never been called in question. It was re. celved durlog the night and published without comment. There could have been no wlifal malice on the part of Tre Bek or Its editor, and {f Mr, Rels had been a straightforward. honorable, manly man he wou'd have slmply demanded the name of the sathor of the so-called libellous dis- patch and requested a correction through the Bre. Had heor any authorized sgent for him asked thls, we should have cheerfully given the name and rendered all reparation that was in our power, He certainly had no reason to be- lieve or saspect any (Il will on our part, as he had always been treated by us with fairness and coortesy, Bat belng by nature a contemptible sneak Mr. Rels came down to Omaha with bluster and threat to procure repara. tion for hisdamaged character through the courts, Whenhefound thata crim- inallibel would not hold in this instance he tramps up a clalm for $10,000, and a brace of U, P. railroad lawyers promptly volunteer to make an on- elaught on Tue BEE for hirn, One of those lawyera says they don't expectito got much of a verdic: agalnet Tz Bee bat that Mr. Rels wants to vin dicate himsolf before his Garman friends. Now if this man Reis has any German friends we would caution them againet taking too much stock In his high sounding blarney. Before this libel saiv is hulf through it may turn out that Mr. Rols hes not been dawmeged in character or reputation, besause ho may have uelther character or reputation to danege. While we confets that we orts calilog in Rels a2 a cus- charge has been publicly made by a oltizen of North Platte within the past forty-eight hours in one of the local papers that is kuown to be friondly to Mr. Rols, and we begln to snspect Mr., Rois can employ John M. Thurston, Vie Bierbower & Co. more profitably nearer home. DILLON’S ANSWER. Sidney Dillen has at last oconde- scended to answer Seoretary Teller's demand for some $3,000,000 of debt due the government from the Unlon Pacific road, The reply shows evi- dences of the fine Roman hand of Mr, Sidney Bartlett, the Boston counsel of the corporation. Mr. Dillon’s swer Is of the ‘‘you’re another” style. It gracefully waives all consideration of the immense sums in money, lands and oredits glven and loaned by the United States to the Unlon Pacitic, and sets up a counter clalm of $2,738,- 888, which it urges is due the rallroad company for mail transportation, Thisis the difference bgtween the amount allowed by the government, $1,011,138, and the amount claimed by the road, §4,650,027. The defense I8 neither sufficlent nor plausible. The laws permit the government to fix the rates at which the subsidized roads shall carcy the malls and estimates of the bulk annually transported are made every two years after what ls supposed to be a rigld weighing of the malls during a specified perlod. It Is © notorious fact that this welghing Is more or less of a ridiculous farce and that the estimates of officials go a good deal farther in making up the final report than any actual welghing of the mall matter carrled in the postal cars, No one who knows any- thing about how the mails are welghed on the Unlon Paclfic/doubts that the road gets credit for more matter than it actually carries, and that the gov- ernment is systematically swindled out of large amounts of money every year by careless and sriminal weigh ing. Bat while the law permits the government to fix the rate of com peunsation, 1t provides that that compensation shall be falr and reasonable, Thi is the point upon which the Unlon Pacific sots up Its ocunterclaim of $2,798,859 as » balance due the companz, It lo- alsts apon charglng the government the same rates for g the malls thabdy charges expres A %\ for téansporting me' Jme THE DAILY BEE-~OMAHA MONDAY MAY 7 time ago a suit was brought for this difference bat the court of clalms de- olded absolutely against the road, On appeal, however, the saupreme court through Justice Stanley Matthews, decided that the government had not allowed enough, and, although the supreme court did not recoguizo the company's clalm to be pald express rates for ita mall service, the case was sent back, about a year ago, to the ocourt of clalms for a new trial. Since that time the compavy has made no attempt to push the suit, and as the court will soon adjourn no trial can bs had this year, Bat the cheeky Impudence of the corporation {s now seen la a large in- orease of the clalm as presented in Sid- ney Dlllon’s letter over that demanded s yoar ago. Ia the sult It admitted that the government had pald about five-elghths of the proper price. I now demands from three to five times as much as it has been allowsd. Por- haps this is because i: bases its claim on an Increased price which 1t {s nominally chargicg the Paclfic Express an inside rlog of the Unlon Paclfic composed of its own management and which can be debited on its books with any tariff rate with. out objection from its owners, or det- riment to the company. It is high time that the questfon should be sottled. If no other plan remains bat the enjoloment of dividends that plan ought to be adopted In spite of the effect it would have on the stock of the company. When the lssue is rawwed as to which Is the more power- fal, the Union Paolfic or the govern- ment there should be no delay in set- tling 1t, once for all time, FALSBIFYING HISIORY. “THR SAINTED AMRs,” To the Editor of Tne Bee: Such is the caption of an able article in your valuable daily, May 2. Let me inquire if *‘the revort of Poland’s committee in 1873 will stand as the truth of history;” *‘and the sooner the record of Oskes Ames 18 forgotten the better it will be for his family,” What will you do with the ‘‘Sainted” Garfieldi? Why whiten the sepulcher of the one, and desecrate the grave of the other? Why cover up, palliate and explain away the record of Garfield, and pronouuce the “‘absolute condemna. tion of the house” against Ames? The same Poland that rendered judgzment against one, pronounced a Jecree against the other, If Ames ‘‘could have been in. dicced under federal tute” as a bribe giver,” Garfield could e_been convicted under the same law as a bribe taker, T don’t wish to extenuate the crime, or blacken the memory ot any one; but I, in common with thousands of others, enter o protest against making Oakes Ames, the scapegoat of the republican party, during that memorable period when debaucher: ran rict, aud dishonesty held high carni- val at the seat of government, Disband your organization and cease your effort to_canonize, and give immor- tality tothe one, or pass the expunging res- clution asked for by the friends of otbers, J. K, VAN DENARK, Valparaiso, May 3, 1863, The sta'e charge which is revamped in the above communication needs no further denfal. It was bravely and fearlossly mot by General Garfield during his lifetime, All decent men baried it with him in hls grave. To exhumo it now, to couple the name of the dead patriot president with that of the lobbylst and briba giver Oakes Ames is a cowardly and coutsmptible deod, The case L long ago tried ab the bar of ucfrlondly pablic oplnlon, and James A, Garfizld cama out of the ordeal scathleas, The communication of our cor- respondent 1s honey-combed with mictatements of facts, The report of the Poland committee, which conelsted of a majority of democcats, fully ex- onerated General Garfield from all blame in the transaction, In the fol- lowing worde: “‘The committee do not find that either of the above named gentlemen in contracting with Mr. Ames had any corrupt motive or purpose him- f, or was aware that Mr. Ames had y, nordid either of them suppose he was guilty of any lmpropriety or indecency in becoming a purchaser of this stock. Had it appeared that these gentlemen were aware of the enormous dividends upon this stock and how they were to be earned we could not thusacquit them, Mr. Gar- field with Mr. Ames to take ten shares of Oredlt Moblller stock but did not pay for the same, Mr. Ames recelved the 80 per cent dividend in bonds sold them for per cent and aiso recelved the 60 per ceut cash dlvidends which together pald the price of the stock and interest and left a balance of $320, This sum was pald to Mr, Garfield by a check on the sergeant.at-arms, and Mr, Garfield then understood this sum was the balance of dividends after paylng for the stock, Mr. Ames recelved all the subsequent dividends. The committee find nothing In the conduct or motives of elther of these members in taking | i, this stock that calls for any recom- mendation by the committee of the house.” This was the exoneration of Garfield by the Poland committee. But his best exoneration was found in this record of his life, the affectlonate en- orsement of hls constitutents who called him before them to face this very charge, and in the verdlct of the nation expressed at the polls In No- vember 1880, With a long and hon- orable public service, he retired from congrees a poor man, while Oakes Ames d shonored and disgraced, be- quathed his sons the milllons which he had acquired as the frults of cor. ruption lnrlm‘r._ SECRET negottations are sald to be pending between Great Britain and the Unlted States for the extradition of several accused Irlshmen, The sooner thy secret negotiations stop and the matter is transferred to the courts where it belongs the betier everyone will be pleased. Tf the acoused are political criminals thelr cases must be oconsldered by the state department; bat in that oase England might as well aek for the repeal of our Declaration of Independence as for their extradl- tlon, If they are charged with mur. der or any other extraditable crime the courts are open to hear testimony agalust them, There Is no room In elther oase for seoret negotiations. The United Statea does not propose to har- bor murderers and assassins, but {t will defend and protect the right of politioal asylum against all forelgn de- mands, Wnes the B & M. railroad organ- fzad thelr special immigration burean this spring, they dld so becauss they had proved the value f printing fvk and had found that ‘“‘advertisirg pays.” 1f that had never cdoue so bafore tho experiment of this would be conclusive, Siucs the of wiater there haz been a cteady stream of Imwmigration iuto the S-.uth Piatte country. la the threo mouths cloalng April 20 an scsors e rogister shows that 12,000 passengers cim futo Nubraska over the lives of the Burllngton syetem, nd that 1 200 cars of emigrant moveables were cirried between Pacific Junction and interior polote, This would average a car-load of emigrant moveables for every ten passengers carried. Of courte a num- ber of the passengers were Nebras- kavs, but estimates place the Immi- grants as high as 7,000, Northern Nebraska is also reaping tke benofit of a well-deserved immigration boom, and all the signs point to a more than usually large addition to our new set- tlers before the season closes. TELEGRAPH NOTES. The strike on the Manitoba road near Minneapolis is ended, Rov. Josiah Heuson, Mrs. Stowe's *‘Uncle Tom,” died Saturday at Dresden, Ont., aged 94, The firm of Louis Rosenstein & Co., N, Y., fruit merchant, assigned; preferred creditors $133,000, Chas, W, Reese, local insurance agent at Friend, Nebraska, shot himself through the heart, Oause financial trouble, The national holiday of Senor Zaragosa's vietory at Pueblo in 1862 was celebrated with much enthusissm in Mexico, A statue of Peter Oooper will be erected by popular subscription in the little public square just north of the Cooper Union, Forty-nme of the Des Moines saloon- keepers have weakened and taken out licences, paying $12,000 into the city treas- ury, The private postal deliveries at New York raided Friday are again in operation, Actions have been begun against the man- agers for recovering penalties, Six buildings in the business part of Tarport, Pa,, burned Saturday morning. George ( sleeping in & saloon where &:_n fire started, was burned, and has since ied, The jury in the case of Ellis H, Phipps, the ex-almshouse superintendent, at Phila- delphin, charged with forgery, after being out all Friday night, returned a verdict of guilty, The counsel for the trustees of the Brooklyn bridge and the corporation coun sels of New York and Brooklyn have agreed the bridgs cannot be made free for any kind of travcl, Leonard Wiilmet, an insane man of Minneapolis, while being taken to the in- saue asylum jumped from the train and threw bimself under the cars, He was cut to pieces. Frank Mann, of Oxford, Mass., shot Mrs, Mary E. Moore, of Millbury,in James Dean’s boarding house, at Millbury, Ho then shot himeelf, Both are dead. Cause, domestic troubles, The Massachusetts state boardof health; Iunacy and charity has adopted & resolu- tion declaring the office of superintendent of Tewkahury vacant, and that the boand at the next meeting will proceed to the election of superintendent to hold the offics till July 1, 1883, W, H. Vanderbuilt sailed for Europe on aturday, He intends to make ouly & short stay ‘in Eogland on this visit, and will return to New York again in four weeks, He will, howeyer, spend the sum. mer and part of the fall in Europe with several members of his family, An engagement took place Friday at Suquach canyon, Mexico, between Apaches and federal troops, The Indians were de- feated with the loss of twelve killed and many wounded, The troops lost throe xilled aod had five wounded, The fight lasted an hour and forty minutes, The governing committee of the New York coffee exchange expelled Gustaf A, Recknagel, vice-president of the exchange, for vioiating the rulesand failing to answer » summons of complaint of the committee, R.uknlEll failed to meet his obligations, His brokers, William Scott & Sons, sued him for §32,000, Argument was made Saturrday before Judge Sullivan in San Francisco on the validity of the consolidation of the old Central Pacific road and the Western Pacific road in 1870, which resulted in forming the present company. Should the court decide the consolidation defec. tive it in believed it would cause a series of complications and depreciate the company’s bonds, Henry Merriott and Mary Pesux were arrested in New York on the charge of stealing $75 000 worth of dismonds from Franz Kromer, a jeweler, in Paris, The man confessed ' to the robbery, and said after it was committed in March last he and his companion went to London, snd then, becoming alarmed, they sailed for this country, Three-fourths of the dia- monds were found at the priconer’s lodg- g9 Careful investigation ehows that light. ning s'ruck the wire of the bell rope at the Stanton, Pa., air-shaft, passing down into the mine and igniting the There was & similar occurrence during re day night at the Franklin Coal company's slope, demolishing @ vast smount of tim- ber work in the pit, and doing much dam- age to the workings, Had the slope been in operation there wou'd have been serious loss of life, Before Judge Tully in the circuit court at Chicago Saturday certain heirs contest. ed the puyment of ® bequest to a priest of the Roman Catholic chucch to reimburse him for saying musses for the repose of the woul of the testator, e point urged by the counsel for the Meirs was the moncy was expended for a sueerstitious use, The court held the objection could not hold and the bequest was valid under the state statute, George Brisbane, a retired millionaire, seventy-one years, was arrested in Bre lyn on the charge of libeling Ridelia Brie. baue, the wife of his brother. It appears the fumily was lett a large amount of prop. erty, and the brothers have been in litiga. ticn over it for the past forty yeaas and several suita are still pending in the dif- ferent courts, The accused wrote Mrs, Brishaue a letter, in which he slleged she was not married to his brotherand charged her with bigamy, She hss begun suit for 50,000, The Cincionati dramatis festival clcsad Saturday night with a repetition of Othello with the ssme cast as on Thursday night, Lo the sfterncop Romeo snd Juliet was of resented with Mary Anderson *s Juliet Lawrence Barrett as Romeo. McCullongh was oast of Mercutio, hut was exoused and bis place taken by Louis James, The house was crowded st both performances, Eight performances have been given to aodiences averaging 85,000, Finanoial success is certain, and the sociation has on hand scenery -n.:)o};mpmy which cost from 20,000 to 850,000, A desperate .mmin was made by five conviots in the St. Paul penitentiary, at Montreal, o ucnre Wednesday night, After getting out of their cells they gagged the keeper, and the leader of the gang, Leblane, took s revolver belonging to the guard, In a few minutes two guards oame upon their rounds and were set upon by the convicts, Leblanc presented the re. volver at the head of one of the keepers and called upon him to surrender. The other guard had sn iron padlock in his hand, weighiog nine pounds, and with it struck Lsnlmc and fractored his skull o that his life_is despaired of, This ended matters, and the other conviots surroud- ored and were locked uyp. Irgairies Regarding Land Grants. Special Lispateh 10 7 uk Fek, WASHINGTON, May § ~~The commla- o gonceal land offise ds iviog a lurge number of in- rding the status of various land grauts. This sesms to be tho effict of tho (quiveeal poaitton of the (sat covgress relative to the dis pusition of publiclande aud land grant rallweys, a0 well as the many dectsions of the seorctary of tho luterfor on theso eubj There neoms to ba a vory gon expcetation that many of these grants will be declared forteited, aud thoussade are ready to euter as soon a¢ they aro thrown open to pubiic domsin, Those in— quirles come from Michigau, Califor- nia, New Mexlco, and from along the Northern Pacific road, and seventeen clerks in the rallway division of the several land offices aro kept constant- ly buey arranging them. A Freight Train Makes Goed Time Special Dispatch to Tus Bax, Cu1caco, May 6.—A speclal freight train, which left here last night for San Franclaco via the St. Louls & San Francieco road, arrlved at Atohlsou, Kansas, at 8 o’clock to-night, making & run of 497 miles in 21 hours and 5 minutes, the fastest on record for the distance, From Halsted the [traln will go over the Atchlson & Topeka to Denning and thence by the Soathern Paolfic to San Franclsco. The traln conalsts of sixteen cars, each carrying 41,000 pounds, eleven of them laden with tobacoo from this elty, and it is pledg- ed to run through at the rate of 20 miles per hour, ‘Want to Return at 01d Rates. Spectal Dispatch to Tiis Bas. REeapiNg, Pa., May 5.—The Phila- delphia and ing rolling mills shut down to-day for one week, on acoouut of depression In trade and lack of orders. Puddlers at the Reading fron works who had asked for an advance in wages from $3.50 to $3.75 per ton and were refased, now offer to return to work at the old rates if paid sem!-monthly. The company holds the matter under advisement, M Speclal Dispatch to Tus B New York, May 5.—Arrlved, W. A. Schotten, Rotterdam, and State of Alabama, Glasgow. He Got Thar’, Detroit Frae Press. . Going down the great Jackson route from Grenads, Miss., a rogular old homespun native of the state entered the sleeplng car and paid tor a berth. He had never been Inside of a car of the kind, and everything aston!shed him. When the porter came to make up the beds I saw that the natlve was greatly perplexed, but as he made no direct appesl it wasn't my duty to post him, He was the first one to make preparations for bed. He glanced anxiously around, pulled off one boot, and then took a rest for five minutes, When the other boot came off he had solved the problem. Push ing his boots uunder the berth he started for the rear platform, and nothing was heard from him for about ten minutes. Then he put his head into the door and called out: ““All you uns in thar', look out, for I'm coming!” And come he did. He had disrobed while standing on the platform, made a bundle o’ coat, vest, and pants, and | 3 j aa he shot into bed after a run up the alsle he gurgled out: “Old Mississippl may be a little slow, but she allus gita thar’ just the same!"” Warning to Politiclans. N. Y. World, And now the legs of the bullfrog wax fat in the marshes, and his deep- volced ‘‘b-l-u-n-k" betrays his hiding place to the net of the eager hunter The frog on the tables of Delmonico bears constant and emphatic witness to the folly of talking too much. BERMAN REMED FORUPAIN- CURES Rkeumatism, Neuralgia,Sciatica, (.umbagn, Backache, Headache, Toothache, < E. L. MORSE & C0., Real Estate AND LOAN BROKERS, 1622 Capltol Avenue, - Omahs, Neb HCUSES RENTED. RENTS COLLECTED. J. E, BERGEN, ST.A P I.XE FANGY CROGERIES, Comer Sixteenth aad Cuming Streets. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. Tt Is the best and cheapest food for stock of II’IZ‘ kind, One pound Is equal to three pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Oll Cake In the fall and win. ter, Instead of running down, will increase In welght and be in good market- able conditlon In the spring. Dalrymen as well as others who use it can tes- tify to its merits. Try It and judge for yourselves. Prico $26.00 per ton; no charge for sacks, Address od-e0d-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb, IVOTIEEX 2 AN IS XN OHLE O CIXN O POWEHR AND HAND I e SsS Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, MACKIRERY, BELTING, CO8F, GRAR" AND (RO FITTINGE PACEINO, AT WHOLESALE AND ERTALL. LALLADARY WIND-MILLS CHURCH AKD SCHOO0. BELLS Oor, Farnam and 10th 8treets Omaha, Neb. C. F. GOODMAN, WHEHOLES.A X. 5 DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PAINTS,OILSVARNISHES And Window Glass. MAHA . . PIF e kAR NEBRASKA. M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I3th OMAHA, NEB Single Breoch Loading Shot Guns, from 85 to §18, Double Breech Loading Shot Guns, from 18 to $75, Muzzle Loading Shot Guns, From §6 to $25.! Fishing Tackel, Base Balls and all kinds of Fancy Goods, Full Stock of Show Cases Always on hand, Imported and Key West Cigars a large line of Meerschaum and Wood Pipes and ev.rything re quired in a firss class Cigar, ‘Tobacco and. Notien Store, Cigars from $15 per 170" \pwards Send for Price List and S8amples 3 A. M. CLARK | Painterd& Paper Hanger SIGN WRITBM)EUUMTUR. WHOLESALE & RETAIL WALL PAPER: | Window 8hades aud Curtaine, OORNIOES OURTAIN POLES AND FIXTURES. [if Patuts, Oils & Brushes, > 107 South 14th Ntreet OMAHA - . NEBRASEA GATH CTT XY PLANING MILLS. MANUFACTURKERS OF Carpenter’'s Materials SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window and Door Frames, Etc. First-clase facilities for the Manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings, Planing and matching » Specialty, Orders from the country will be promptly executed. addvoasnll communinations to A. MOYER. Proorl WILLIAM SNYDER, - CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, Bepairing Promptly Done, AHNID IROAXT W.AGONS, First-Class Painting and Trimming, 321 and 1323 Haroey etreet, corner OMAHA CORNICE WO R,KS RUEMPING & BOLTE, Proprietors Tin, Iron and Slate Roofers MANUFACTURERS OF, Ornamental Galvanized Iron Corvices, Iron Sky Lights, Bte, . . . OMAHA, N£B 310 South Twelfth Street, T-mon wed-fri-m