Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 20, 1883, Page 4

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THE ) OMAIIA BEE. v THE DAILY BE LAND GRANT TWELDISM. iggests that these gentlemen combine When Boss Tweed was faced with the | bus ness with pleasure by waiting for a Published every morning, except Sunday. The | proofs of his jobbery he insolently asked | year and meeting in conjunction with the only Monday morning daily his accusers, *“‘What are you going to do | Republican National Convention. We One_ ¥ $1t.00 1 Mhtes o g0 | about it?” Tweed's example is now being | venture to suggest to Mr. Watterson Bix Monthe One Month 19 | followed by the apologists for tax shirk- | that the corpse may not be ready at the IR WERKLY RRE, FURLISIIED KVERY WEDNKADAY. | ing Jand grant robbers, Mr. Poppleton's | time he intimates v s T Y . . [eautions defense of Judge Dundy and emem— Six Months. 1.00 | One Month o | the United States courts in their peculiar | CLEAN THE ALLEYS American News Cnpany, Solo Agents Nowsdoal- | docisions on the land grant cases has| City Physician Leisenring, who had il o AR made bold the small organists of the con- [ some experience last year with a small to News and Editorial | federated monopolies to a brazen defiance | pox epidemic, calls the attention of the the Epitor or Tie DUSINESS LRFTHRS. ness Letu All B and Remittances should he ALISIHING (OMP o orders to be company THE BEE BUBLISHING G0, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor Tik cable has begun in Cuba. ys that the rainy It has been on hand season right along in Nebrask | Brrwees Bismarck many and | lard frauds in Chicago the American hog | seems to be pretty well disgraced, Tue stenographers in the star route trial have presented bills of 840,000 for taking and transcribing testimony. Next. Tur pope and the propaganda have not attracted much attention during the past week, but the Parnell fund goos right on, We crimes and misdemeanors that go unpun- have added arson to the list of ished in this city. Omaha needs vigilantes law badly. A Cycrone has struck Ohio. The re publican ratification meetings over Foraker's nomination must bear their the blame. share Cuicaco's Carter proposes to nullify the High License bill by making April Ist the date on which licenses are|ronds debarred the srnment from | must promptly remove the possible granted in that city. The best legal[from taking possession of the |of infect lights in Chicago declare that the plan |unsold lands and disposing of them will not work., ArTER issuing his order againat ofticial Postmaster sham started for Indianapolis for rest Sauce for the subordi- o8¢ is not dressing for the superior absenteeism, General Gre- and recreation. nate gander. GENERAL MANDERSON submitting gracefully to interviews on the Deadwood mail route. The senator starts out by saying that he knows nothing about the matter, and proves it conclusively before he finishes his statement. I7 is reported that M secretl, Paci of our Nebraska district courts just right he can get that little divorce matter fixed | up atsix months notice and no questions | asked Nickerson is the If the major can hit some making his way towards nst recorded its Cable roads are necessary where stoep hills like those Ti road thirteenth victim yesterday. Shicago ecable in San Francisco and Cincinnati wust he traversed by street railr and hea: uds; but on level ly travelled streets they ought never to be allowed. tween the railroad and the government, |is not likely to happen again. Before M B \ ¢ i and mainly to prevent speculation that [ the men who have left the republican | i & : "‘l“"'“‘- the trainer of the |10 withhold the lands from actual | fold will return to their former party al- ;,nnm;' or ..]. u-]nn\»( A"‘l“j"]" -’*I"l""‘"““u.-u\ s, Congress expressly reserved to|legiance, they will want better assurance u“i“"' ‘7"_']‘ Liad l'l"“"'i “I"' ;’|‘" WOIE | 1o government the right to take control | of good government than mere platform | lent. ].l”.,..;.,. ..,AI‘.I (.l.. ,.,”.,\r..., | of the lands not sold or disposed of with- | professions and empty promises. The | :;‘*" y\;l "“') ,”" 4y '_'I' hify "'““ in three years after the railroad was | last legislature showed the cloven hoof 1“| one oF the Thomas chorus, Aave | o, Llgted, and made them sub-|and the record made by the party will| had i excellent training 488 preparation | ;o ¢, nro.emption and home- | first have to be undone by strong an- for the festival before Mr. Blakesly's| oo PE000 S f 3 artivall CRARHN TR daitblicuRIbAk uwm.-.u entry. he proceeds of | ti-monopoly legislation before anti-mon : b * | such sales were to go to the railroads, [ opoly republicans will conlesce with the concerts bid fair to be an artistic as woll s tinancial success. Tur Mississippi river committee of the St. improvement Louis Merchants' Exchange proposes to call a committee | of all similar committees in the great valley to devise a plan for securing the “necessary appropriation” next winter for the improvement of the river. The shameful river and harbor steal for east- ern creeks and frog ponds has set back for fully five years the great work of im- proving the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, A Pittsburg jury gave a verdict against arailroad company for: the amount of mony stolen from a passenger in a slep- ing car. “Since the defendant,” said the judge, “‘sold a ticket for two dollars in addition to the regular rates of pas- sage, and offered the facilities for sleep- ing as an inducement to pay the extra money, it bound itself to protect its patrons while they were nsleep and for the time being helpless, BerwekN the eastern and western divi- sions of the Northern Pacific railroad, there is now a gap of only 130 miles, The eastern division extends to within twelve miles of Helena, while the western divi sion is now within twenty miles of Mis t [ injunction was issucd in conformity with and asserts that agent of the Union Pacific road and mak- dy's court to secure decisions that would | difference whether a case is presented by sided presentment is skillfully gotton up to conc and make that a mortgage given by have done Bill | council to the dirty Tweed himself, Mr. Poppleton simply | dition of the sought to show that Judge Dundy's tax | that immediate steps be taken to have them cleaned Summer seems to have wonld el o and pestilential con alleys in this city and urges This is a timely warning the come at last, and general attorney of the Union Pacific was | decisions of the supre court and hot weather and garbage heaps combine to breed diseasc, If typhoid fever he at great pains to show that the Platt case | ;mmm epidemic in Omaha this summer, was ne put up job and the final decis ion was reached after a full and fair pre-| it will be easy to fix the blame where it sentment of all the facts. To bhe sure, | belongs. Mr. Poppleton’s effort in this direction| Many of our alleys and especially those was not very successful since he was fin the business portion of the city are ina forced to adinit that Platt acted upon his able with slimy Putrefying v, fearful condition. a8 a friend of the road” | personal advice ** | and animal matter , ruts fil ooze and piles of filthy and kitchen refuse in squatting on the Union Pacific lands store sweepings But now comes the Lincoln Journal it makes no difference whether Platt was a bona fide scttler or rt are steaming in the sun and sending out death dealing odors The alley Dounglas, from Tenth toSixteenthstreets, is particn- larly obnoxious, but there adozen ing use of the machinery of Judge Dun-|others to which the attention of the between Farnam & not or whether he was acting a | s an po. lice ought to he at once directed. deprive settlers of millions of acres of public lands that were Our city ordinances forbid the abuse of log Ily subject to | the alleys as places to dump garbage and preemption, Now we apprehend that it makes some refuse, and provide severe penaltios for their infraction. Marshal Guthrie should honest litigants fighting for what they believe to be their rights, or whether by collusion between the contestants a one- force the law upon all violators, no mat- ter who they may be, or where they may happen to live, Thisis a c: that in- volves the public health, and there should be no delay i sstigating and remedy ing it. Physicians tell us that there are already too many cases of malarial dis sase in the city pared for an ep al the real facts to befog the courts | of them to deteat justice. This was what was done Platt case, which wasmade the basis for the rule in the the land grant emic of low fe for homestead entry. Although this im porant case, involving an empi Tum republic will meet at the house in Omaha the 28th The ohject of tho meeting is doubtless to issue ealls for the nominating o 1 state central committee axton in pub- lic lands, was brought before the supreme on nst court by collusive action, three out of eight of the supreme judges refused to concur in the decision of the majority. wventions that are to elect Had the case been presented in all its | and one me ber of the board of regents. Whether the committee will feel disposed to look back promises with republican performance we cannot tell. phases a majority of the court would doubtless have sustained Secrotary Schurz, as Mr. Poppleton admits that he did himself before the case was brought. What was the plain intent of con- and compare republican It will be remembered that the last republican state convention was gress in making this royal land|insuchahurry that they could not digest grant? First and foremost to | the platform hut bolted the whole. That in the construction of a Pacific was plainly the reason why so many re- publicans bolted the convention nomina- tions later in the fall. The force since this the coun- try through which the railroad passed with a thrifty agricultural Before the Pacific roads were railrond; and second to people, population. built the public lands were on sale for $1.25 an committee the has met in full late cyclone. Perhaps will be a good time for a sober sec- not acre, When the alternate sections were donated to the railroads, the remainder | brought about the election of a republi was raised to $2.50. The grantor very | can governor in Nebraska by a plurality naturally expected that the railroads [ vote and the election of a democratic would make energetic ef their lands to settler traftic insure eventually the repaymontof the vast sums advanced by the government to build the road, rts to dispose of in order to build thus state treasurer in a state that gave the last republican state treasurer 20,000 ma up a local and jority. The committee need not delude them- belief that last storm was a mere local cloud burst, which selves into the In order to clinch the compact be. which shows that aid g the road was ensured beyond forfeiture, Up to 1876 all the land grant roads held that this part of the charter would be strictly enforced by the government and sustained by the courts. The Burlington & Missouri disposed of their lands by sale to an inside ring to avoid reversion. This compelled them to take out their patents and theirlandshavebeon paying taxes ever since. The Union and Central Pacific roads devised a scheme to dispose of their unsold land grants back to the govern- ment, and bills were introduced in gress to consummate this villainous dis- posal of ‘“‘mortgaged property,” first at 80 and later at $2.50 an acro. Congress, however, refused to pass such a bill, and thus virtually declared in favor of en foreing the original clause of the Pacific railroad charter, that subjected these lands to homestead entry. Through Judge Dundy’s court the acts of congress have been nullified and the vast domain that would to-day have beon peopled by industrious tax pay ers still remains a wilderness. \ for building nization. party I 15 now almost a foregone conclusion that the democrats of Ohio will nominate Judge H nor., adley, of Cincinnati, for gover- He is an older man than the repub- lican candidate, Judge Foraker, and per- haps & stronger one; the latter point will o better determined after a test of Judge Foraker's uality in the approaching vass, Hoadley has been the sympathizing counsel of the liquor interests in their at- tempts to evade all forms of regulation and taxation, and he will, of course, bo warmly supported by them. In addition to this he will have the aid of an abun- dant supply of funds, so that he cannot fail to make a strong she a state, ving in 8o close Plenty of liquor and plenty of cash will warm up the democratic party in Ohio any day, and the same may bo said of some other states. — Real estate transfers still boom. The most gratifying fact is that the largest number of sales are made to mechanics, clorks and laborers who intend to build on the lots they purchase. This is the class of citizens, the savings from ng farm And when the same court is asked to step in and assist the land grant robbers in evading their taxes the plea is brought forward that it is only cari lished principles. whose wages and salaries, the price of honest ying out well estab- | labor, do more to build up a city than a The Lincoln Jowrnal, as an apologist for the court score of land spoculators and heavy mort and a|gage fiends soula. The whole line will be business by the first of September. and each person on the first trip will be presented with a badge of white silk which he can preserve as the event Avcust Beumost, the banker, tained a verdict of ci has ob minal libel in a suit against John Devoy, the editor of the Irish ANation, which charged Mr. Belmont with misappropriating Irish tional funds in his possession. the trial a wrred when Mr. Devoy's counsels questioned Mr. Belmont's right to his own name, thus reviving the old scandal that Bel- mont is a natural son of Meyer de Rothschild, Mr. Belmont indignantly denied the insinuation with tears in his eyes, protesting that he was honorably born, and bore the name of his father During sensational scone occi n for | The | opening will be appropriately celebrated, | ¥ & souvenir of | A | court through a test who shirk their taxes and try to growl down every public ment mouthpiece for the road, asks what the To this unce improve- ple are going to dp about it/ iswer, reopen the fight, « tax | land wrong, Skxatok Ronuins A to the United States senate from New petition FOMONSEAAE | oy ehive, The republican side of handle decisions, make new | that body retains its ciphers, — Ometha ‘ v county where railroad lands | Herald, [are untaxed, employ competent lawyers | | grant shirking a grave been congress, aguinst cases in evel 1f any one is qualified to speak about and appeal from the decision of the lower | “‘ciphers,” Dr. Miller is the man. The ase in which all the | odor of the Cronin business still hangs | facts shall be brought out. Mr Popple- | around the Herald of ton warns the outraged people against| SU— squandering more money on litigation I'ie proposition to erect a £9,000 en- {and paternally admonishes the people to | §11¢ house on the corner of Farnam and grinand boar it. - Mr. Popploton’s advige | 101 *trects s, to say the least, ill con- can searcely bo considered disinterosted, | M190Ted: There is no need of a fire en and it would hardly be given if his com. | 5" house on the principal business thoroughfare of Omaha, and it wonld be pany did not fear a reopening of the case I " 49| reckless waste to spoil the most valuable | on a fair presental of the actual facts, ) D — lot the city owns by such a structure, Tuar was a cruel suggestion of Henri Watterson in connection with the coming DECLI JF MAN, and his father before him, undertakers’ convention at Cincinnati. us Weakness, Dylpc&mifl, The late discoverer of Mr. Tilden's health Impo- tence, Sexual debility cured by "\\'u&l'- Health Renewer.” $1. tako the matter at once in hand and en- | Unless Omaha is pre- | eleven district judges, one supreme judge | ond thought over the causes which have | n-.\rn",m re-elected | E.~OMAHA, WEDNE LITERARY REVIEW, HARPER'S MAGAZINE FOR 01 Eulogy has almost exhnust respect to the wid greatest of our magazines yet each suceeeding month brings us Harper's with new features of The and manner, 1 and that interest and new claims to praise ily ber, in matter equal t high any of its predecessor praise. The illustrations are of an order in design and execution in keeping with the now traditional fame of the firm the in that regard, while in letter-press m grave 1 Suburh’ memories of every taste is provided for, *f | to gay. “A Famous Lond will recall to the tourist Hampstead Heath and give a vividsketeh to the stay-at-homes of one of those great plensure resorts dear to the dwellers of the great metropolis, **Convention A CARY s treated in a familine manner by A F. Oakey Mr. Sutherland Edwards contributes a second paper on “The Romnoffs,” a sul ject now particul interesting, C nel Higginson's ¢ r of American his. tory entitl nd ration of Englishmen in America,” gives in short space much of inte information Olive Logan’s paper on Cincinnati is one of the features of the number, and Wil liam L. Stone discloses some novel facts in his paper, “The Declaration of Inde wence in a New Light.” The depart Se sting [ment of fiction is well supplied in- serial | chapters and complete stories and | | sketches, and, of course, Mr. George W. in his | here are | Curtis discourses from Easy Chal | familiar and informing style sms and short sketches, the attestation of the merits of which is their admission | to the pages of Harper's. But what need to particularize, Harper's is Harper's. In The North American July, President Julius P. Secelye writes of “‘Dynamite as a Factor in Civilization, taking of the subject the re view that dynamitism being me symptom of present discontent, is ne [sarily a_transient phenomenon, | which will quickly disappear as the insti tutions of government are brought mor |into harmony with the interests d aspirations of the masses of the pe In ““The Last Days of the Rebellion Licutenant I P. H. Sheridan re- A counts the tions of the cavalry divi sions under his command during the week preceding the surrender of Lee, and offers a highly import mtribution to_the history of the late William 8. Hol- , M. C., makes a striking exhibit of case of Public penditures,” anid Hiaietn upon the necossity for unceas- ing vigilance on the part of the peo- ple, lest the burdens of governmen- tal administration become intolerabl ““Democracy and Moral Progre by O. B. Frothingham, is a philosophic fore- cast of the probable outcome of *‘govern- ment by the people themsely Z. R. B ckway, superintendent of the reform points out some Manage- y at Elmira, N, Y., Reforms in Prison Thomas Sargeant Pe nce and the I|n|n|unm: or tary ])r.um;;, ; Elbridge T. Gerry uf “Cruelty to Chil dren;” and finally there is a symposium on “‘Church Attendance” the question | whether the church yrowing less of a power for good now than in former times —the symposiasts being “A | Non-Church-Goer, . Wm. Hayes Ward, Rev. Dr. M. Pullman, and Rev. Dr. J. H Published at | 30 Lafayette 1 New York, The July number of The Modern Age | is the first issue of its second and accompanying it is | numbers from January to June. The | number opens with an exc it com- | panion piece to Falevy's “Love Mar rviage” (printed in the June number), vulnlul A Brilliant Mateh.” Mr. Ke Paul’s article on the *Production of | Books,” should be read by every literary [ man in the country. The first half of Tvan | Tourgenieft’ s latest sto After Death.” Ne | ment are an index to the | is a timely selection, and is & good speci men of that famous writer's strange ta m | **The Man of the Future” presents uncomplimentary picture of what poot humanity Nlm | of evolution. **A Seribble | wood reading, and A Curious Case cotting” is an entertaining bit of *The Weathercock™ — which might huve come from the pen of Edgar Pc vivid and blood-curdling is it s Apology \ ¢ annum. ) SRECOLLECTIONS OF THE JOHN | Ran” is the title of an illustrated paper to appear in the July CENTURY - the con- tribution of the Hon. Alexander R. Boteler, of Virginia, & member of con- gress at the time of the raid, and an eye- witness of the fight. Mr. Boteler looks upon the work of John Brown from the southern side, and Mr. Frank B. San born, in the papar that follows, contrib- utes o few pages of “*Comment by a rad- ical Abolitionist;” so the reader may see the Harper's Ferry affair from two points of view in the perspective of twenty years. The frontispiece of this number of The Century is a finely en- graved portrait of John Brown showing him with a clean-shaven face, instead of with a long beard, as he is usually pictured. His wonderful strength of character is apparent in the firm mouth and square-cut chin. John G. Whittier says of this portrait: *‘It is the man, not only the physical man, but his inner self also.” “The Manhattan." The Manhattan certainly means to de- e success and is in a fair way to win it. The July number, just issued, is a model in its way. It is more than taste = ful in appearance, and it has a variety of interesting and timely articles, with Review for | uring | volume, | ng tothrough the process | two poems and the editorial departments make up | what is altogether an excellent number o the magazine. (The Modern Age Pub lishing Co., New York City, 81.60 per hlm\\\i SDAY 'll NE 20, My ired prop it ought to e vided by Cong al wetion, And for the rest there is a story begun by Julian Hawthorne, a charming poem Perry and a more amb tious one by G, E. Montgomer and other clever lectures, making a readable and pleasing publication \n!w popularity and success stamped on every pge The Pacific Rai 1 Monopoly. San Franeisco Chron The freight charges on wheat and corn | by rail from St. L« St. Paul or Chica | cago to v York, I lmmvn v Boston, distance have an avera miles, 1883, more than 1,000 608 WASHINGTON AVENUE AND 609 ST. on_ the not werage above 8 a ton or 850 4 carload for the last four years, friecght on oranges | from Los Angeles Chicago s The | Chicago Tribune of May 31 i ) per carlond. The orange and nut crop is as muchfa staple crop at Los Angeles as wheat and corn in [linois, Towa nu\ Mis souri, and as easy of shipment by rail The distance by the southern route is about two and a quarter times the dis tance from Chicago to Boston, but the freight charge on oranges is four and a half times as much as the freight charge \l by Eastern roads on wheat and corn ¢ on flour and pork Oranges she ml‘ ried by rmailroad from Los 10 Chicago for =12 1, while the monopoly rates are | | € he extortion is just 100 on | every carload, and, as The Triby out, it makes this luxury of | production too expensive to 1 | by the majority of the people of Chicago. 1 | Oranges from Jalapa, in Mexic | laid down in the Chicage markets cheaper than oranges Angeles, and English walnuts can_be shipped from the Medi o New York, Boston, Philade ns at rates that rule | fornia walnuts out of the marke: | of this Central Pacific rail | this state. All California fault {under the same ban of exclu | eastern markets. We produce apricots, peaches, pears, plums apes in |1 | duce, but this transy ion charges rates so high as practical clude them from those markets. perience from M I have heen sick b One ¥ nd mise! trouble and expense, know what ailed pletely dishe this frame of mind I got a bottl Bitters and used them unknow family. 1 soon began to impr ined so fast that my husband ily thought it st when I told them what had he! they said, *‘Hurrah for Hop Bit may they prosper, for they ha mother well and us happy.™ T er. me, Right You Lincoln Journal. The OMaAHA Beg row columns and put is now the same siz looks exceedingly natty. We late it upon this evidence Are. disadvan annot be deni GERw | Rheumatism, Neuralgna, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, ont. Swellings. Sp. Directions fo 11 THE RLES A, VO (Susoenmors o 4. VOUELER £ C0) Baltimore, STEITE tilllll"l 1l me phy whi cut’ prev perfectly table rem tonic ti hody aga inyigorate li systemn. Druggist generally B I avomacH Rs REAL ESTATE Opp. Omaha National Bu stories and poems and facetive, and all | from clever writers. The illustrated {paper on Princeton College is itself worth the price of the number It is by | Henry J. Van Dyke, Jr., ‘and not only Paives a historical sketch of this ancient | eolle but a graphic account of its pres ent condition and work —its professors | | and students and its interior life. It is not generally known that Princeton was the fourth college established in (Iu | United States. It was founded in 1746, | a hundred and ten years after Harvard, ‘n hty-six years after William and Mary and forty five yoars Yale It was ;llu same year that the legislature of New | by lottery to found what is |\n\\1 Columbia College, which actually dates | from 1754 F. R Sturgis | explaing in a very lucid article the med- | {ical code question, which is making so | lmmh agitation among the doctors The | rattlesnake is not exactly an interesting | object, but the paper on the ratt by Ernest Ingersoll is both entertaining | and valuable, Philip Bourke Marston, { the blind poet of London, has th. mflw part of what promises to be a entitled **Her Price.” oints out the obj to Holyoak's guide book for emi George grants; a great deal better work than he York granted permission to raise Tunds | 12 1 Lot 333100, 6th s room house, lot th $ 5 ro lot 50x140, 10th street 23x04, 17th street strect n house, 60x123, Montana s 1 15 Lot 16 1 71 t 159 store building, lot 22x1 street 19 3 room house, lot 40x115 th street und, Cuu 1se on leased 21 9 2 and lot'50x66, Dod 30 and lot, 64x132, Daven 31 Two lots, B0x125 each, Neward 1 I 1 I «t | Farming Land For Sale Houses of 8100 on every carload shipped from the world, and_ there wd in eastern cities for all we can pro- | and had caused my hasband so mmh‘ no one seemed that I was com- tened and discour nge and unnatural, as widened its nar- of success. Whatever may be said of Tue Bek to its | O H0tette Bitters i remen ing the three prope ics of a preventive, and an_alter It fortifies th change in t mibmie-eod&w BENZON & COLLIN AGENTS. 211 South Thirteenth st.| 04, Dorcas street ine points | California mjoyed co, can be . Louis | 1 Ium duty on, tteranean Iphia and our Cali- t, because | extortion s are_put sion from | the best | and table | is a de- wmonopoly | Iy to ex- any. | le so long to In | e of Hop | n to my ove, and | and fam- | but | Iped me, ters! long | ave made he Moth- { It d ed that it FOR P.A.I Scnallca, h o bt r's Sto weets the nts of the dical philos ich at pres wils, Itisa | pure vege- | edy,embrac inst diseas For sale by | aand Dealers ank, N B0 10 treet wo | For Rent, BENZON & COLLIN. towed-sat | I= | | Near Union Pacific Depot, - g H. WESTERMANN & CO, IMPORTERS ¢ ~QUEENSWARE! China and Glass, STREET. m22 S Str Louis, Mo WHOLESATHE Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, Felker, Bauder & Co., Commission Merchants and Produce Dealers, 1622 Capitol Avenue, OMAHA, NEB. &4 'Quorations sent on application Consignments solicited and remittances prompt 'y made. 57 ST. LOUIS. MO. This Flour is made at §; SIVE sale of Write for Prices, em, Richardson Cor, Nebraska, in_the Con flour to one firm in a place. We have Address either VALENTINE « REPPY, Omaha, Neb. ined Roller Stone System. We A a branch at 1615 Capitol avenue give Omaha, miomé&e-6m Salem STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT, SUGARS, CANNED GOOJ A FULL LIN ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES. 3 OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO. M. HELLMAN & CO,, ‘Wholesale Clothiers! 1307 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET. COR. 13TH, NEBRASKA. OMAHA, ~ J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN mber, L, Shingles. Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY, OMAHA, NEB, C. F. GOODMAN, ‘Wholesale Drugglst AND DEALER pais, 015, Varmishes and Window Class OMAHA, NEBRASKA. GATE CITY PLANING MILLS MANUFACT Carpenters’ Materials, ALSO Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, &. Pl ditas 1iienfor the manufacture of ail Kinds 'of Mouldings. Orders from the country will be promptly executed. Address all communications to ERS: OF Planing and Matching & specialty. A. MOYER, Proprietor. AL EL D.A.IL.E'Y, MANUFACTURER u} FINE Bugpies, Carriages aud Spring Wagons, My Repository is constantly filled with a select stock. Best Workmanship guaranteed, Office and Factory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmaha. E. B. CHAPMAN & co.,, Wholesa.le Grocers ! 1213 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. P. BOYER & Co., DEALERS IN Halls Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SARRS, TAULTS, L00KS, . 1020 Farnam Streot, OQmaha.

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