Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 25, 1883, Page 4

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i { | “the oompletivn of the Brooklyn wolty of ohurches celebrate the Pay-|forth to anticipate and prevent any 4 THE OMAH A DAILY BEE"'FBIUAY MAY 25 1883. - — ——— [ - THECORONATION AT MOSCOW The Omaha Bee.|",, Sunday, May 27th, the long de- - forred coronatlon of Aloxander IIL, sutoorat of the Russlas, will take place at Moscow, attended by a magnificence TERMS BY MAIL— of coremonlal and a wealth of dlaplay B0 Yenr,...810.00 | Threo Months.83.00 | whioh will dim tho splendor of every Wix Bontha,. 6,00 | One Mouth.... 10O} o0 e o0 iho kind In European histo- Wi WEEKLY BEE, published every ry. Ten mililons of dollars havebeen Pabl'shod every morning, exoept Bun. ar. Tho snly Mooday morning daily. Wo lnosday. exponded In proparing for the pagean: TERMS POST PAID— try of the present woek. A hundred One Ve 501 thousand troops, delegations and dig- @tx Months, ° onte | Dtaric 8 are thronging the Imperial Uity of the Czars to add to the barbarle splendor of the occaslon, and repre. CORRESPONDENCE -All Oommunt. | sentatives from evory clvillzed natlon ;::"‘:l; :}‘;',"‘:il‘;'f”'& N“"‘I:‘;":hnfiil“‘l‘;:"!l on the globe aro present to joln In r Tue Bee, thelr congratulations over the an- BUSINESS LETTERS-—AIl Busines [ nolnting of the monarch of the largest JwaHA, Drafts, Ohecks and Postoffice| The journey from St. Petersburg drders to be made payable to the order of | 4,4 4h¢ entry of tho czar lnto the his- Qo g the Company. torle eapltal of the emplire have been deseribed in wearlcome detalls by tho Tho BER PUBLISHING 00., Props. dispatohos, A glamour of Orlental —_— LR AL LI ) pageantry hung over the event, M. Busu scoms to have the dead|The roads were lined with wood on Mr, Tabor, troops from over fifty differ- — ent provinces, and the costumen Mavor Onase's fow remarks yester-|Of nearly a hundred different day had the old time rlog. tribes glittered and gleamed in the m———— mighty processlon which swept on its Ir {s & ould day In Nebraska when|ocourse from the clty gates to the the sun does nst shine on editors, golden towers of the Kremlin, Noth- — ing more olearly reveals the true Bos InozrsoLr Is stlll talklng. The |status of Russla as an eastern power atar route jury are convinced at last|doeplte Ita thin voneer of westorn that there is a hell, olvilization than the display of bar- —_— barlo splendor which attended the Tux Parnell fund is increasing rap- | 0oronation of its emperor. The pow- 1dly. Anadvortisoment from the Vatl- | erfal appeals to the sonses through oan seons to be worth more than its|the profuse exhibition cf wealth welght In gold. and the Iavish expenditure of _— milllons of money while poverty A srR10US omisslon durlng the edl. [8nd misery .go hand in hand with torlal vislt was an address from the orlentlal opprossion throughout the odltor of the Omahs Jepublican on |emplre, aro essontially; Aslatlo. The «Subaldiged Jonrnallam,” Tartan blood stlll runs strongly in the 5 . velus of the Romanoffs and Aslatle Mgz. Diion has our hesrtfolt sym- | genorosity mingles with Aslatio vices pathles. Likewlse Mr. Fred, Awes, [iu the emplre. They wore baptized yesterday with| Bat whatever the demonatrations another hogshead of soft soap and|of loyalty from an ignorant and su- molasses from Dr, Miller's factory. poratitious peasantry who see in their = ozar tho visible head of the church HaviNa told us what Stdney Dillon [ on earth, as well as their annolnted has done for Omalts, Dr. Miller neg- | raler, the deep substratum of dlecon- lects to Inform his readors what Omaha | tent and revolt which honeycombs the has done for Sldney Dillon, It Is also | midale and the upper classes of Ras- a partinent question where Mr. Fred. | slan soclety makes itself folt even at Ames got his twenty millions. the coronation of Alexander III. Five CoMMODD] BALDWIN ropresonts thousand secret polloe patrol the oity, the Unlted States at the czar's|®WArm in every street and exercise a coronation. The government thought [ #tFiot surveilance over every house. that ia oase of a dynamite disastor a [ Fosr of the omnipresent nihilists aurplus naval officer could bo better | heunts the sacred preclnots of the apared than any one else. Kremlin and enclrcles the oltadel with —_— = = » thousand sworn guards, So far Tr took only two houra to colebrat ( otning has ocourred to mar the A grandeur of a great ocosslon In which bridge, but it will be sevéral years be- | ) the power and resources of an au- fore the people of New York and the | ¢oorarie government have been put Awziioas N o Ag Nowsdoalers in the United States, vz iment of the immense bonded debi attempt upon the life of the czar. which the bullding of that structure | whether the entiro Russlan olvil and has aaddled upon them. military admintatratlon will be able to preserve his head until it has been Ty | touched by the sacred crown and an- ::':",. 'hr:m':rl:::‘nrl;e ju d:ad.l: ':; o | Bolnted by the holy oll no one ls wise plalntif, who had lost his actlon be. [ ¢00USH to predict. foro him that afternoon; “‘you had a Dl!l‘Afl?Il;fm; \\;;-hingtou AT :'::g K::(:h"':; b::.'::‘ln;:;l;::;t nounce that the Eoglish government “‘Booause I had been told that he had ::n::’glotlll:lnf :::“‘I:‘B;u::u:‘:":;!; dho oar of the court. mothod in which the present Wi have heard very littlo about the | treaty is adminlstered 1s to be assessors lately. Several, however, |taken as a sample of Britlsh are bragglng that property in their|methods In apprehending crlmluals, wards will show ‘‘quite an increase [some decided change js needed, gjther ‘over what 1t was last yoar.” It would | by Way of partial amendment or com- bo a very remarkablo state of affatrs it | Plote rovision. Sowe weeks ago one 1t did not.. Property last year in|Richard Lowls was arrested in New ‘Omaha was assessod at an average of| York at the instance of the British one-seventh of ite market value, In|consul. Owlng to some domestlo any number of Instances lots ran difficulty botween Lewls and his trom one-fifteenth to one-tenth of the [ Wife, Loewls determined to take price for which thoy could have been | ¥efuge In tho Ualted States. In order sold. to avold dlscovery he embarked at This was especlally the case in the | Liverpocl on the steamship Soythla newly Iald out additlions, and where | for Now York under the assumed name large tracts of land were held by|of Richard Davies. Oa reaching his apoculators In undivided plats In destination he was immediately arrest. order to esoape assessment as clty | d on a charge of forgery, the luforma. property. The value of Omaha real tion having been sent trom Manches- eatate s between fifty and sixty mil. | ter by cable. There was absclutely no Hons of dollars. Last year we were | Proof furnished of the alleged crime sssossessed at balow elght millions, | OF even of his identity with the man 1t the assessors do thelr duty the rolls | really wanted. The dispateh set forth thls year will foot up st least fifteen that he was one James Rothwell and walllions, which will be less than one. |demanded his retention untll the neo- third of the actual market value of |oesary papers could be (sent over real ostate In this clty. to secare his extradition. Although — the man inalsted that his real name Tur Ohicago Tribune notes the be- | was Lowls and not Davies or Rothwell, glonings of an Arthur boom for 1884, | and that he had never been In the Why noti The republican party|neighborhood where the alledged for- might ¢o farther and fare worse In|gery was committed, he was held to scloctiug a candidate, President Ar-|ansawerand commited to Ludlow jall. thur has boen slow but sure. He has| I'bla occurred cn or about the Sth beon an agreeable disappointment to|instant. After having been twice ex- all but the atalwart politiclans. The|amined he was discharged at the end Amerloan people of all partles have|cf eight days, the British goverument glven nim credit for earnestness and | having foand oot that he was not the consclentionsneess of purpose. His | person wanted. fallures have boon fower than might This ls an catrsge which demands reasonably havae been expected, and | pablic sttention. Here was an inno- beo has steersd with much tact between | ceat man, a siranger to the country, the Halt-breed Scylla and the|arrested en a false charge and thruat Stalwart Charybdia, Mr. Arthur may | into » fugltive felon’s cell with no one yet surprise both bls fricnds and bis| pear to prove either his lunocence or euemies by the strongth which he will | goilt, After being imprisoned for over a develop at the next republican con-|week, he ls released snd informed that weation, Ho Is no boy lu politics, [ his arrest was owing to a slight mis. sad he understands better than many | take. Such mistakes are criminal. give him credis for the working up of | Who is to compensate this man for the favorable public eentlment. But|trouble and disgrace which he has been whether he tails to gain the republican | forced to endure! Something more womination or not, he will secure the | than an unsupported cable dispatoh aredit of having given the country a|ought to be demanded by our authori- oloar-headed, If not & strong admini. | tes before depriving a man of his lib- stration, There will be some gloryln | erty and his repatation, and the case that, in spite of Mr Conkling’s dis-|of Lewis ls sufficlent ground for a re- gust. form lo the method of applylug a Some ollents in will appre- troaty which can be usod as an englne of Injustice and oppreseion, Tuk aemy has sucseeded darlng the past year In keeping itaelf prominently before the publle through a succession of eoandals, court martials and defal- oatlons among Its officers, First we had the Taylor court martlal at New. port barracks, where a good deal of misplaced sympathy was wasted on a disoatiefied cflicor who refused to change a moft berth In Kentucky for an cqually soft position in Nebraska. Col. Taylor escaped with a reprimand from General Sherman and o bucket of soft soap from General Hunt, This was a trivial offense agalnst the army regulations, which {s thrown In the shade by the latter day oncapades of Ilges and Waasson, of Nickerson and Morrow, Col, Mor- row of General Sherman's personal staff, is the last army cficer to fall under the ban of cfficlal dlsapproval on the charge of duplicating his pay accounts, Having contracted the habit of liberal play at poker, he ralsed the wind by selling his pay to three meparate banklng firms and llquidated his dobts of honor by money obtained under false pretenses. For this offense Col. Morrow s to be court martialed, and the haunts of the army poker olub in Washington will probably soon know him no more. The compulsory retirement of all the officers mentioned will no doubt be cordially approved throughout the army. To the credit of our army be it sald that court martials rarely fall to convlot, no matter what the rank or soclal standling of the accused. There sre many ofticers {n our establishment to-day who would be earning their living In oivil life If executive clem- oncy had not forced them back into the army after their dlsmissal from the positlons which they had dishonored. ‘there s no encouragement to the corps In purglng iwelf of unworthy members when soclal and political in- flaences at Washington overrlde the sentences of court martlal and lower the tune of the army by forclng gen- tlemen to assoclate with convicted scoundrels, 1t is to be hoped that the Wassons, the Nickersons and the Morrows may be dealt with as they deserve and that onoe dlsmlssed they will not be per- mitted to retarn through a misplaced execative clemenocy. — WEe vo not know that the public will be particularly interested In any furthor dispute over the comparative ciroulations of THe Ber and the Re- publican, No advertiser who has over used both papers needs to, be told that Tue Bee s the only paper of general clrculatior in Omaha. And no advertiser who has accepted the standing {nvitation of the publishers of this paper to Inspest its subscrip- tlon books deeires any further proof that Tue Bek clrculates more papers outside of Omaha than the Republican and Herald comblned. The well koown fact s that Tue Bee is the only Omaha newspaper that s not published as the tin kettle attachmont to a railroad job office, It buys and sells nows and does a strictly leglti. mate newspaper business in publish- fug the best and the most widely read paper in this section of the country, It is the only psper that daresto speak out Its hooest opinlon on every toplo of interest without fear of oftense to rallroad stockholders, man. agers or superintendenta or to party bosses. This is one reason for Tur Bek's strength throughout the west which shows itself in a subscription list and an advertlsing patronage that is the envy of all rivals. Waite the Russlan governments have been preparing for the entry of the czar into Moscow, the tlreless ni- hilists have been prepacing for his entrance to glory. So far the govern- ADMIRAL the chorus which denounces our navy as antiquated and worthless. We have 2,118 officers and not a single gun of even moderate calibre ashore or afloat, Kaxsss assesses her railroad pro- perty at $27,015,805. Nobraska assesses her's at whatever the rall. road managers are willing to pay. ——————— Mz, Fraxx Harrox, formerly of the Burlington ®lawkeye, and more lately successor to General Brady in Washington, keeps his weather eye open for the main chance, His busl- ness manager In Burlington has lately recelved the appolntment to the col- lectorehip of internal revenwe In the Burllugton dlstriot, and the Gacelte of that clty comments upon the event in the following language: “‘The cffice for the past seven y. has been In charge of Colouel Conne a gallant soldier, who lost an arm in the service of his country, and whose record as & clvil officer ranks him s one of the beatand maat efficlent in the service. Though in no sense a politi. cian, his sdministration of the affairs of bis cffic) and his record of military service, and a general acqualntance with the senators and represontatives from this state and & warm friendly relation existing between himself and General Rvam, the commissioner of internal revenue, rendered all sugges- tlons for his removal useless. o Hawkeye has thus secured another friendly legacy, and Is aboat sa well provided for m any journal In the +| Sixth Avenue | three kinds of thirty.eight states, Mr. Dardette wHI' doubtless make a capital and efficlont coliector, but his appolntment fiius trates the meaning of his recent re- matk that the Hawkeye was not at all dependent upon Barlinglon for {ts support, Most journals are not quite so fortunate.” —n Shall Female Phyeicians be Encour- axed, Norristown Herald A Piltteburg lady doctor says that woman can understand woman, and it often does a patlent more good to talk to her of apring bonnets and wraps than s effscted by medicine. Hus- bands and fathers want to look out for that lady physlclan. Instead of rec: ommending fifty cents worth of aqua pura for a sick headache, she mey pre- scribe a fourteen-dollar bonnet and a twonty-five-dollar Surah overakirt, or something that way. Snowbaling in May. Cincinnat! Commercial-tietto. The New York Herald was a little provions In apeakicy of thoe co of the 14:h aud 15th as *‘the climax of the second winter” of the year, and predicting settled warm weather im- mediately thereafter. With snow talling tn Olncinnati on the 21st, in suffislent quantities for tho forration of snow-balls, whitenlng the hill-tope, it docsn’t look as thongh settled warm weather would set in bofore the time fixed for the opening of the summer hotels at seaside and waterlng-place reeorts, — Rallway Aggression. A London letter says: The rallway Interest, thongh not quite so aggres- slve as the United States, on ocoa— slons makes itsclf felt In a very un- pleasant manner. This has just been shown by the action of the under- ground rallway In the matter of what ia known aa the ‘‘ventilation scheme,” Last year the company succeeded in smuggling through parliament a biil to enable them to veutilate thelr line by means of alr-shafts passing the roof of thelr tunnel and opening on to the Thames embankment. The proposition seemed harmless enough, and In an evil hour the powers they asked for were granted, It is now seen too late that the company has actually received officlal parmisslon to completely destroy the character and besaty of what is incontestably the chief public work of the Victorian relgn. Pablic opiulon in London is strongly excited on the subject, and every effort is to ba taken to prevout the reckloss vandalism ot the rallway men. The Thames embankment was completed about twelve years ago, at an expense of $25,000,000. Itis an englueering work of the greatest mag nitude,and certaily one of the glories and ornaments of modern London. It was constructed In order to narrow the River Thames, and so to deepen aud quicken the stream, It was also Intended to act as a sort of safety- valve to the Immense traffic passing the strand east and weat. The em- bankment Is about five miles long, and is bounded on one side, for most of this length, by beautiful gardens contalnivg many fine trees and rare flowers. As a promenade or drive it ts uneqnaled in any clty of Earope, whether for extent or beauty, or the nuwber and variety of historical ob- jects which line it throughoat fits length. Now right in the middle of this magnificent thoroughfare the Met- ropolitan rallway company is actually placiog huge bollow iron shafts, at dlstances of every two or three hun- dred yards. Through theso will pass, day and night, a continual stream of mephitic geses, which will kill every shrub and flower in the neighbor- hood, and reduce enormously the valae of all adjscent house property. The worse feature sbout the whole business s thateven parllament can not now interfere with the company, or check its work of reckless destruc- tlon, By an oversight a bill granting certaln powers was passed last year, and the opinlonof the law cfficers of the crown is that it woald be illegal to supersede this act by auother di- rectly oppostte to it. Publie optulon inside and outsido of parllament is now dead against all rallway companies, as shown by the fact that a bill for & new line through Epplog forest has been thrown ocut. A fow years sgo Epping forest was rescued at great expense from the hands of several landlords and Inter- ested parsous, and by an act of parlia- ment was dlrected to be kept ‘‘forever untouched for the people ot London."” The rallway would hava cat off by the proposed line at least three hundred acres of forest land, for which no sum of money could ever have really com- pensated —— The Brooklyn Bridge Cab! Tron Age. The East River Bridge rallroad wlll not be opened when the rest of the struocture ls, becsuse experiments are to be made with the rope-action power, in order that all rlsk may be avolded. There are to be twenty-four cars, most of them belng already finlshed. They are light, airy and comfortable. The rallroad will be opened with all of them In place if Tramway* the storsge tracks are finished next [ $500. month. If not, about half of the num- ber will be pat in service. The cars are similar to those In use on the vated road. There ls w0 much glass adout them that asu- perfor system of brakes would be needed to prevent the bumping of the cars together, even if the sharp grades did not make them nececssary, The grade isabout one foot ln 100, and the inertla of the cars, after passic canter of the bridge either way, cause them to unchecked, bafors rea: olading the Weasting the event of a mishap toany ome of the brakes, either he other will | be ample to control a esr. The cars will start from Brooklyn and return by an opposite 80| ihat one track, will exclmilvely bo for New York busluess and the other for Brooklyn business. The systema which s calied the eircu- | lating system, hss been perfecied re- gardless of expense. Its coet exceeds $£350,000. The endlees cable is oper. ated by a 400-horse power engine near Prospect street, Brooklyn, sudis 11,. 700 foet long. There will be an extra cable llnn:sdv. to be put into uee in ocase of an emergency. The cars will be attached by a clamp made of two pulleys facing each other tion, will eloase the grlp of the clamp, and in another wiil tighten it. Tho tighter the clamp the sw»ifter will be the speed of the cara, When the clamp is released the same movement will apply s brake to the wheels, It is expected that four cars will ba run over at a tlme, carrying at a pinch as many as 400 passengors. The first car of the train will be attached to the cable, The cars will make through trips, and will not stop for way passengers, They will bs switched from one track to an- other at the terminl. Paseengers will pass cut by a stalrcase to be used sololy as s exit, The passengers who enter will bay tickets at the entrance and deposit them In the box at the foot of tho statlon stairs. Surplae cars will be stored on tracks over Sands atreet, in Brooklyn, The dis tance to be traversed by the cars Is a mile, and at the rate of speed which will be adopted, it Is oxpected that the trip will be made in about 4} or b miuutes. Inthe busy hours the epeed will be greater. It s caloulated, how- ovor, that the trip wiil generally re- quire 5 minutes, The saving in the trip from the same points in the two cities, as the distance Is now traversed, will be from 15 to 20 minutes. Kansas City Jo: Col. Dudley, commissioner of pen- slons, made & speech at the Army of the Potomac barquet in Washington the other night, In which the answer as to how many soldiers were in the Unlon army durlng the war may be found. He etated there were 2 780,- 178 enlisted by the United States to put down the rebellion Of these it s qulte certain 716,787 were counted more than orce, by reason of re. enlistment, leaving 2,063,391 who sorved during the war. This would make thomen bearlngarmatwo-fifths of the adult male population of th: tes furnishing union troops in 1861, Of these 605,369 are now dead—killed in battle, died in service or since dis- charge from wounds and disabilities incarred therein., This leaves a pres- ent roll of living veterans of 1,459, 000, or one in six of the adult male population in 1880, in the same states and terrltories. And deduct from these men who are iaeiigible un. der the rules from mombership In the Grand Army of the Republic, and there yet remain of that callant band of union wsoldiers 1,350,000 who have honorable dischares from the sorvice, and are by virtue thoreof entitled to membership in this great brotherhood of soldlers, This organ- {zation, from the beat data, coneists of twenty,nine permanent ard five pro- visional departments, with about 2,600 posts and a membership of 160,000 voterars, This would leave scattered over the world 1,190,000 soldiers of the Union army to be re- cruited Into this organ'zation, The average age of the Union soldier at enlistment was 20 years. Add to 20 years which have elapsed, and the average age of the survivors is now 46 years. By a circulation based upon mor- tality rates for that average age wa have the following numbers at the perlods stated: In 1890 there will remain of the old guard inround numbers but 1 200,000, In 1895 but 1,110,000. In 1900 but 945 000, and in 1905 only 758,5600. Aund this is for the fature the figures of the past— only twenty years. And we shall see when the grand army of to-day reaches its highest figures in member- ship that the period of the most rapid dimination will have set in. At the end of forty years the now youngest man bearing a certificate of honorable dlscharge from the army of the union during the rebellion will bo then 80 yearsold, And instead of being one to six to the popalation of the loyal DECLINE OF MAN. Nervoue Weakness, Dyapepsla, Im- potence, Sextual debility cured by , Well's Health Renewer.” §1. Teal Hstate lransfers. The following deeds were filed for rocord fn the county clerk’s oftico May 22, reportel for Tk Brr by Amee’ real estate agoncy: B Farome to W. J, Wagoner, w. d., lot 20, West Omaha— $2, 100, A. M. Krubs and hueband to C. Hanen, w. d., lot 6, block 4, E. V. Swith's add—§1,300. J. Frank and wife to J, L. McCague and D, H, Bowman, w. d., part of 31-15-18, 78 75 100 =cres— §4,000. M. F. Shinn to J. G. MoGath, q.c. part nw, se 28 15-13—$5600. A, J. Haoscom and wife to T. Boyle, w. d., w. § lots 11 and 12, block 2, Hanscom Place— $500. A. J. Hanscom and wife toJ. Ryan, w.d, e } lots 11 and 12, block 2, Hanscom Place— $500. M. McShane and husband toJ. W. Lauer, w. d., lot 4 and e, 10 feet lot 5, block 4, subdiv, lot 5, Oaft add., $1.400 J. Edwards and wife toJ. A. Mo- Shave, q. ¢, e. 40} foot lot 2, block 135, §1. J. M. Potter and wife to E. Magin- nls, w, d., block 29, West Omaha, J. 0. Haley and wife to S. D. Osbarn, w. d., w. } lot 13, McCandish Place, $375. W Kohorut to H. Nestor, w. d., lots 26 and 27, Kountz's add., §7,000. Augustus Kountza and wife to C. Hogan, w. d,, w. § of e. § lot 24 and of e 3 los 25, Kountzo's 21 add., 575 B. C. White and wifeto L. A, Paf. for, q. ¢., lots 1 and 2, block 49, Platc THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY Rolioves and cures RUEUMATISY Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbaga, BACKACHE, ERADACEN, TOOTRAJTA SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS, SPRAINS, Soreness, Cuta, Bruses, FROSTBITES, BURNS, SCALDS, A4 42 sther dodily sohee eryiery T Cas A BoTTLAL Soid by el Druggiens aad Dealers. Dirwstioss ia 1 o The Chacles A Vagaler 35, horizontally and under the control of lever which, moved In cne direc- wmensars 0 4. Voguine & C0) Baitimers, Wi, U8 A H. WESTERMANN & CO, IMPORTERS OF / QUEENSWARE, China and Glass, 608 WASHINGTON AND 609 ST. CHARLES ST. 8t. Louis, Mo. may 22-3m W HOLESALR DRY GOODS SAM’L C. DAVIS & CO., Washington Avenue and Fifth Street, DML O. ST. LOUIS, - - - - - - - - ot Aeoriroded ol SRRV E. B. CHAPMAN, WHOLESALE GROCER 1213 Farnam 8t.. Omaha, Neh. SPECL{_&L NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Cthers. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO OUR Ground Oil Cake. It is the best and cheapest food for stock cf any kind. One pound Is equal to three pounds of corn. Stock fed with Ground Uil 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. Dsirymen as well ae others who use it can tes- tify to its merlts. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price $26.00 per ton; no charge for sacks, Address o4-e0d-me WOOODMAN LINSEED OIL CO., Omaha, Neb, C. F. GOODMAN, WHOLESALE DRUGGIST AND DEALER IN PAINTS,OILSVARNISHE And Window Glass. MAH A - 5 NEBRASKA. SALEM FLOUR. y This Flour {s made at Salem, Richardson county, Neb., in the combl: roller and stone system. Wae give ExcLueIve sale of our flour to one firm fn place. We have opened a branch at 1618 Capltol avenue, Omaha. \v'r\lsrl“«:;ul.';h-u. VALENTINE & REPPY. Salem or Omaha, Neb mig-6m M. Hellman & Co. WHOLESALE OLOTHIERS, 1301 and 1303 Farnam St. Cor. I13th OMAHA, NEB. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALES IN 300 NG R ER R Lath, Shingles, Pickets, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDINCS, LIME, CEMER FPLASTEIRN, BTO. SWSTATE AGENS FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY Near Union Pacific Depot. ‘OMAHA, NEB BRI A. M. CLARK e 1Painter&PaperHanger i SIGN WRITER & DROCRATOR. WHOLESALE & RETAIL WALL PAPER! Window Shadss and Curtains, OORNICES OURTAIN POLES AN ] FIXTURES, ) 1 NG Paints, 0ils & Brushe ! U= 3 107 Bcath 14th Stro. OMAHA - IRASEA [Ses : The only Coal mined west of the Mussissippi River thatis eqa in quality to the ROCK SPRING COAL. “x‘ THE ONLY IOWA COAL That will stock for year without slacking orZshrinking. Pronounced by all the leading brick men in Western Iows us the very best ocoal for burning brick ever used in the West, EUREKA COAL AND MINING CO., Frederic, Monroe Co., lowa.

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