Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 26, 1883, Page 4

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4 TfiE OMAHA BEE. COLORADO SANDSTON. best employes in the depart nent and put T bished every moraing, excepd Sunday. The ey Monday morming dly: .00 S sonthe . 500 | One Month 1.00 IR WRNKLY RNR, PUBLISIED RYNRY WRDNRADAT, THRME PONTPAID. $2.00 | Three Maoths. .. 50 1.00 | One Month .. 2 J- American News Company, Sole. Agents Newsden ersin the United Staten. - One Year .. Six Months. 1 o relating to News matiors thodld Do aditewed (0. the. EBITON oF T B Aot All Business Tetters and Remittances should be addressed to Tin BAR PosLisiting Coupaxt, OMAMA. Drafts, Checks and Postofioe orders to be made pay- able t the order of the com THE BEE BUBLISHING CO, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor. »"}iAHO the jury! is the favorite ex- clamation in Washington. Owmana shook off the Holly ring, and ‘Ther citizens will not be whipped into line by the sandstone schemers, —— Gex. SHERMAN says that during the war Whitelaw Reid was a coward and Joe McCullogh a liar. The newspaper boys will now proceed to get even with Uncle Billy. Mr. Roruins still sets on the ragged edge of a dreadful uncertainty, and the U. P. lobby runs a good chance of los- ing a valuable and energetic member in the national senate. Wirn three-quarters of the delegations to the coming republican convention pledged to prohibition, it looks as if Iowa would take nothing but water in her's in the next campaign. ——— Raiv, hail and cyclones have been doing their best to discourage Nebraska farmers, but with a continuance of the present June weather the bins will not be large enough to hold the fall's husk- ings, while wheat, ogts and rye will dis- eount any crop ever harvested in our state. GexNerax, Crook has been ordered to ‘Washington by the' secretary of war to consult about the. disposal of the rene- shortly listen to some sound advice upon the Indian question, In Gen. Crook's own wopds, ‘It ib cheaper to féed Indiany than to fight them." U ¥ Tur late meeting of the democratic committee brought out the statement from one of the members that ‘‘the party would have to yield something to the anti-monopoly clamor.” That is what Mr. J. Sterling Morton thought and preached last fall, and democratic candi- dates howled anti-monopoly uutil their throats were sore. Several secured their election on no other grounds in counties and districts where the repub- licans had an° overwhelming 1ha- jority. But of all the democrats who went to Lincoln pledged to pass laws regulating the railroads in their’ freight charges and compelling them to pdy their proportion of taxation, less than five toed the mark when the rolls were called on important questions. 1In the light of democratic promises, democratic per- formance wis too insignificant to deserve mention. “The anti-monopoly clamor” will never be stilled by such yielding as Nebraska anti-monopolists need expect from bourbons under the leadership of a veteran lobbyist like Arbor Lodge Morton. l ’ . EnciANp has ‘offered her mervices as mediator in the Tonquin trouble between France and China and the prospects are that the difficulty may be settled without aresort to arms, The Chinese govern- ment demands acknowledgment of her right to exact tribute from the Anameso and in return offers to throw open the Red River to foreign trade. As France alreddy claims a controlling influence in the country the issue resolves itsolf into a question of who shall squeeze the natives out of an annual tribute. Anam comprises Tonquin, Cochen China, part of the Cambodia and various iulands in the Chinese sea. It is said to have heen conquered by the Chinese in 234, B. C., and was held by them for four hundred years, when they relinquished control. In 1406 they reconquered it but again abandoned it in 1628. After much-an. archy Bishop Adran, & French mission- ary, obtained the friendship of Louis 11T for his pupil Gia-long, the sen of the nominally reigning monarch, and with the aid of a few of his countrymen established Gia-Long on the throne, who reigned till his death, in 1821, when his son became king. In consequence of the persecution of the Christians war broke out with the French, who defeated the army of Annam, 10,000 strong, on April 22, 1859, when 500 men were killed. On June 3, 1862, peace was made, when three provinces were ceded to the French and toleration of Christians granted. Three provinces were annexed to the French empire by proclamation in 1867, GaMBLING caused Paymaster Wasson's fall and gambling was at the bottom of Major Nickerson's age. If Major Wasson had obeyed the qe@y orders he would have saved himgol & term in the Ppenitentiary, The regulation regarding gambling reads as follows: “If any disbursing officer shall bet at cards or any game of hazard, manding officer shal tions, require him to turn over all the public funds in his keeping, and shall im- ly report the case to the proper bureau of the war department. In every case where an officer, intrusted with the duties of his profession. ) If the Fort Collins sandstone is good, substantial, darable paving wma- terial, and_can be laid down in Omaha on a concrete foundation at a reasonable cost, Tie Ber is in favor of the Fort Collins sawdstone. Let that be under- stood from the outset. We have no in- terest, primary or otherwise, in any pavement that is asking for recogn " ‘What we do want, and what our citizens want, is to seo this city profit by the mistakes of other cities. All experience showa that best pavement is the cheapest. If Fort Collins pavement is better than asphalt or Sioux Falls jasper, we want to know it. We shall thon ad- vocate Colorado stone as the best paving material for Omaha. But up to the present time no offort has been made to show the value of the Colorado sandstone as & paving m&terial, ‘We have seen no statement of its hard- ness or its capacity to withstand the ac- tion of water or of its power of resistance to the atmosphere and frosts. Three or four selected specimens of the stone were brought to Omaha and a piece a foot square was submitted to the inspection of the board of public works. Upon this kind of an examination two out of three of its members voted to pave the busi- ness section of Omaha with Colorado sandstone. The experience of other large cities has shown that only one class of sand- stone is stitable for street paving. That is the Medina Ohio stone. It is close grained, compact, with no lines of cleve- age, and showing an absence of layers of stratification. More than -this it absorbs water very slightly. For these reasons Medina sandstone withstands woar and air and water almost as well as granite, and has proved an excellent material for pavements. How is it with the stone which has been foisted upon Omaha by the methods of the ward politician in order to increase the traffic of the Union Pacific and enrich a stone ring. among ita officials. Not one scin- tilla of evidenco has been produced to show that it will meet the requirements of the specifications which call, for sand- stone. No testimony of engineers has been adduced, no arguments from-the @xporionce of other citios has boen ad- vanced. In the absence of all informa- tion, -the Board of Publi¢. Works has takon the first step towards saddling the entire business portion of Omalia outside of its three main strebts with & pavement about which neithérthey nor bur citizens know anything. Y It is againkt this snap sction that Tae DBee enters its - earnest protest. It calls upon the city council to demand tests and a trial of the Fort Collins stone be- fore compelling our citizens to submit to what may prove a costly experiment with a useless paving material. If the sand- stone contractors are not afraid to sub. mit thefr material to inspection let them Iay down a few square yards of tho blocks side by side with the Sioux Falls stone. /There are men in Omaha who pssert that it will not stand the blows of a common paving hammer, inuch less the wear and toar of heavy travel, and engineers out- side of the city officials who seriously in- sint that so faras durability and capabili- ty of resistance to air and water it is unfit even for curbing and guttering our streets, Let the test bo made. We shall then be ablé to find out whether a new and valuable paving material has been discovered in Fort Collins sandstone or whether & Boss Tweed job is to bb rmm..o.l down the throats of the'tax- payers and property owners of Omaha, - —— Murar Harste's paper ' gives the fol- lowing biography of Judge Hoadly, who runs an oxcellent chance of succeeding Charley Foster as governor of Dhio, un. der Democratic. auspices: The Hon. Goorgo Hoadly is a native Yankee, born in New Haven, Conn., July 31, 1826, His father was at one time mayor of that city, but emigrated west, where George grew up with the country in: Cleveland, Ohio, and received his clementary educa- tion, He graduated in the Western Reserve College, Hudson, 0., in 1844, He read law one year in the Law 8chool of Cambridge, Mass., came to Cin- cinnati and entered the law office of Chase & Ball in 1846, and was admitted to the bar August, 1847, 1In 1849 he was admitted to partnership in that firm. He was elocted by the legislature in 1851 to the judgeship of the superior court of Cincinnati for the residue of the term to which that court had been limited by the constitutional convention. He was city solicitor in 1855 and in. 1857 succeeded Judge Gholson on the bench of the new superior court. He declined a seat on the supreme bench in 1856, offered by Governor Chase, and the same honor in 1862, offered by Governor Tod. He was re-elected to the superior court in 1864, but resigned in 1866 to establish the law firm of which he is still the head. He was an active, prominent member of the constitutional convention of 1873-4 and devoted eight months of his valuable time to that unfruitful service. Although a hard worker in his profession, he has found time to teach law in.the law school, to serve as trustee in the Cincin- nati university, and in other ways to pro- mote the progress of arts and sciences in this city. His identification with the fortheoming Cineinnati museun and the West endowment may be instanced in proof. He was one of the counsel who successfully resisted the effort to compel the reading of the Bible in the pub) schools, Hoadly originally was a demo- crat, but on account of slavery found his way naturally into the l'\‘lllll}fi\'l\rf party, ith which he remained until the close of "l Grant's first torm s president of the ined the | United States. In 1872 he liberal republicans and wis abs the democratic ranks, under the banner of reform and the leadership of Tilden and Hendricks, He appeared as counsel in favor of the Florida and Ore ocratic clectors in 1877, but has devoted himself exclusively to the o into public funds, subse- quent to his trial, &‘u.h:q"n_gh approval TvreNal ReEvENUE COMMISSIONER Evaxsis too fresh. He hadno sooner taken his seat than he discharged two of the e | question. in their place two who had been dis- charged for rascalities in office. And now there is a loud call for Mr. Evans’ removal. Tux Chiricahuas to Secretary Teller: “Hero we aro again,” TOWN TALK, ““Coutant is becoming quite uneasy and impatient over the postoffice situation. A bird in the bush is very pretty to look at, but it is not worth 83,000 a year by a long ways," said a gentleman who has an intimate acquaintance with the powers that be. ‘It isn't yet known whether Tom Hall will conclude to vamoose the ranch on July 1st, or whether he will stand on his flaxen-haired dignity and insist that all the charges that can be brought against him must be proved in accordance with the strict fules of snivel service reform. To be sure, I under- stand that the department at Washing- ton quite surprised General Manderson by telling him that no formal charges were necessary, and that a mere intima- tion of his personal wishes was all that they asked to make the change; butTom is beginning to count on the senator's elastic spine to retain him at least a fow months longer, [notwithstanding his promise to Mr. Coutant.” By the way that reminds me thata man way up in authority expressed some anxiety to me the other day about the movements of certain federal officials who aro overhauling affairs in Uncle Sam's stone house on_ Fifteenth street. They are beginning to smell a big rat in the urpor stories of that building and some of the big boys are liable to get some civil service reform that sweeps pretty clean. The federal building has never yet been investigated and there are some pretty tall stories told by lawyers about the way things have been run. Even ‘‘Brewster, attorney general,” may feel compelled to notice irregularities that are said to have made the department of justice a fee mill and a machine for oppression. “I understand that Mr. J.°E. Boyd was caught badly in the late lard deal,” said a_Chicago merchant. on Saturday. “‘Boyd has been a heavy dealer in options and the corner struck him to the tune of $127,000, 'That was the smallest loss in the deal. The next heaviest loser was sinched for $300,000 while old Mr. Geoch got twisted out of §2,600,000. Mr. Boyd is very philosophical over his loss. He cleared a cool $400,000 last year from his various enterprises,his packing house, his lard refinery and a few turns which he made on the wheat market. Of this amount he put the snug little sum of $150,000 in his cattle herd in Wyoming which is worth to-day a good $400,000. No man's credit stands iighur t the banks than Mr. Boyd's because his word is as good as hi¥ bond and he has the brains and backbone to forward his vari- ous schomes. Wait till the end of the year and then let Mr. Boyd say on which side of the book the largest amount stands for his twelve months business. I rather think ho will be some thous: ahoad,” One of the county officials tells me that the commissioners have felt the public pulse on the assessment business, and have raised the totals considerably in the Loard of equalization. That is good. The board deserves credit for their action and would be sustained by the people of Douglas county, if they had increased the taxable valuation fifty per cent more than they . did. The = first - ward is the worst in this respect and 1 understand that it will be raised as a whole by resolution, a method that the law allows and which will go quite a distance towards destroying the gross in- equality between the valuation in that ward when compared with the Fourth. There has been too much playing with Dolls in the First ward, and the ridicu- lously low value placed on all real f)rup- erty made even the commissioners laugh | when they read over the list. Speaking about county matters, a prominent architect the other day told me that a project is on foot to put an- other story on the new court house and divide it with the city officials, making it w county court house and & city hall. “That would be an excellent plan,” said the architect. *‘Fifty thousand dollars would do the job, and the city pays more than the interest on that sum every year in rent. The basement, which contains seven or eight excellent rooms, could be fitted up for city offices all above ground, while with another story there would be ample room above for a council chamber, committee rooms, etc. With both the city and county officials housed under one roof, our tax- payers wouldn't be compelled to run around all over town. Besides, the city would then have a fire-proof building for their records. Will it not injure the architectural effect? Not a bit. Both Mr. Moyers and builder Coots think it will improve it.” ‘‘Senator Van Wyck has returned to Nebraska,” said a government official to me on Saturday, and while General Man- derson is cooling off in Colorado, Sena- tor Van Wyck will in to gyrate through the - state. h;})e he will make a trip to Northern Nebraska and investigate that mail route question. The senator wanta to do what is fair and always tries to. He has e eno l'nr.y'-ix men, Am‘ld on. 'fl grabs his o an ap) mlt the eages, &:l animals ll:l political menagerie always become un- easy. This little business about the tranaferring of purchases in the quarter- master's department from Omaha to Chi- oago ought to engago the senator's atten- tion. Ourmerchanta cannotafford to loose any part of the $2,000,000 a year which are dis bursed through the army head- quarters.” 1 understand that J. Sterling Morton was dreadfully disappointed because _the democratic central committee refused to be whipped into line on the free trade There was quite a little ‘shindy’ in the meeting, as I am informed by oue of the gommitteemen, over the tariff for revenue issue and the l|lmct|c&l common sense of the cauntry gates rried the day. **D-—a the tariff,” said of the Platte member, ‘‘we want to wmake a eampaign for votes only, Morton may be the Nebraska | democratic Satnpson, but he i liablo to kill the party with the jawbone of an ass. |80 Stirling” was compelied to fall back for consolation on Doctor Miller who soothed him by several editorial rofer- ences and personals that dragged his name in several times with a six team pull, ““There is one thing about the Faxton said W, L. Adams, Jr, s he sat with the writer 4 office the other evening, it 1« . of the best arranged hotels in the way of fire escapes that I have ever seen. The stairways down the porches on the outside of the building could clear the entire house in three minutes, even if the halls on the inside were entirely cut off. Th 18 in the corridors with the inscription ‘To the Fire Escape,’ show every guest 1junt which way to go in case of alarm. That is very important.” In this con- nection, 1 ‘understand that Dick Kitchen very seriously objects to the net work of telephone wires that are being put up in the alley in the rear of the hotel. While the firm have | taken every precaution for the safety of their guests, it is hardly fair that the building should be so_enclosed by wires that in case of a fire the engines would be hampered in throwing streams where they were needed, Something ought to be done to make the wire nuisance less inconvenient. Others beside the Kitchen Bros. have reason to protest against having their property fenced in by telegraph, telephone and electric light wires, and I cannot blame them for their objections. *‘Worked it through fine; didn't they.” said the lounger on the Wabash corner yesterday, referring to the U. P sand- stone ring. “I told you three weeks ago what the schemo was and when you printed it, the Republican in a spasm of virtuous indignation, charged that Rosey was sitting on another mare's nest. Pete Shelby too, threw up his hands in holy horror and called upon heaven to witness the purity of his intentions, and Horace Newman rolled his eyes and looked like a double braced hard-shell Baptist on the half shell, at the bare in- timation that he knew anything about such a little game. You see the agony first began when Harney street had handed in its paving tition. I understand that certain U. . officials made a tour among the mer- chants and urged them to reconsider their action and change the petition to one for U. P, stone. Of course no pres- sure was brought to bear uflk‘" them but it isn’t any fun to rub the hair of & gen- eral freight agent the wrong way, especially if you have to wuse the rond as a shipper. That failing to work, certain irregularities were found in the petitions sent in from the cross streets, and singularly enough the council decided to throw them all out, and advertise for bids for all kinds of materials, including, don’t| ¥nl see, Colorado sand stone. The U >, papers were dirgcted to hoid their firo until the final assault was made. There were several consultations with the offi- cials, and Yost’s white hat was seen going up and down Farnam street every day for aweek, when Presto, three days before the meeting of the board of public works, a vicious attack is made on asphalt in a paper that had before endorsed it, and on Saturday a long local puff of Colorado sandstone appeared in its columns. Sat- urday evening the Board of Public Works met, and in spite of Jim Creighton’s storming and charging, voted the whole business center of the city to the Shelby ring. I am told that Mr. \{'illnn squirmed a good deal in giving his vote, for Wilson tries to be an honest and square forward as he is a hard working man. But to work in the shops and vote against his employes is almost too much to ask of any man. Of course the council have yet to pass the ordinance ordering the pav- ing, but Shelby, Newman, Stout & Co. think they have that all fixed.” ““What a hard time our belligerent dis- trict attorney seems to be having,” said a young attorney on Friday. Hardly a week passes that there isn't some spat_in court, and T see that Judge Neville finally salted him with a $25 fine for o little too violent, uage in court. Now Godwin isn't al ut.Y\ur to blame in these little troubles. There has been a quiet kind of union against him on the part of the young lawyers, and he has been bad- ered in and out of court more than he leserves. Of course there is no excuse for a challenge to a prize fight given in court, but the circumstances ought to be taken into consideration. Godwin is a little uppish and hot-headed, but means well. q would like to see Charley Ogden and Godwin put on the gloves in a twenty-four foot ring, just for the fun of the thing.” Scandalous in the Extreme. Cincinnati Commercial. ‘When the jim-jam jurors acqujtted the star route robbers, there was a woman hwlyar who threw up her bonnet and lled, and there was shouting and blub- ring, and all sorts of foolish disturb- ance. The country has not been more conspicuously di since the Guiteau performances. e Washington trials that run for months are scandalous in the extreme. Means should be taken to sup- press them, Fencing in the Mississippl. Cincinnati Commercial Gazstte. The people of St. Louis are having a very serious time with the June flood, which comes from the monstrous Mis- souri, ‘The river is doing great damage, Fortunately for 'the peoplo along the Lower Mississippi the Missouri pours out when the other rivers of the system are comparatively low. The levees are, as usual, found inadequate. If it is the tnhe Mississippi river, why is not St. Louis protected ? A Turning Point for 1884, New York Sun. If the democrats can carry New York, New Jersey, and Ohio this year, the re- sult will be generally ed as a deci- ion of the presidential contest in their avor. If they should also capture Penn- sylvania, this would end the matter. What is the outlook for this year in these four states?! The New York re- ublicans are trying to compromise their K»ng standing controversies, but a united democracy, with a good ticket, would undoubtedly be successful. The election of a democratic governor in New Jersey by & handsome majority is conceded by candid republicans, In Ohio the tide is settling in favor of the democrats; indeed, with their excel lent ticket and platform their success is pretty certain. If Ohio goes democratic in October, New York and New Jersey will follow in its wake with large majori- ties in November, while the republicans of Pennsylvania, weakened by dissen sions, may perhaps share the fate of their brethren in Ohio. wot well before us applied toso delicate Auy_cosmetic will at first a beantifyin | ly lnjuro the skin, but in a | little blotches and_discoloratic the face which conclusively show the - ous drugs in their composition, It can be :n(el_\' m.ll that mare flmu‘ imhmu of l‘lll‘u wce powders contaiu these injurious ingredi- onts. Pozzoni’s medicated complexion powder is T&:unl ul-u‘nl\m-ly free lm‘ll nlllilol:fl.e‘:iuu watter, but its principal ingredient is an netivo curative for all disoases of the akin. It business of the government to fence in | 000. PERSONALITIES. Henry Ward Beecher's eyes are curiously placed.” The outward corners go down. President Grevy, of France, wears plain, ill-fitting light woolen clothes, Butler loves red roses, and the histotic red the English papers. the “mont wonderfully beautiful iff Ho had them. Composer Gounod was sixty-five years old Sunday. He is bald, gray,and wrinkled, with Tuminous eyes. Mr. John Worcester, Mass., en, oy(nf Lis general health is as good ay ever, Oscar Wilde now not only wears short hair, but has it curled. He wears a nut-brown suit of clothes and a green silk tie. Prince Plon-Plon has been in London, where his resemblance to the great Napoleon made people on the streets stop and stare, Hendricks and McDonald aren't on speak- ing terms, but they were accidentally seated next to each other at & banquet the other night in Indianapolis. When Sheridan becomes general of the army, reels will take the place of quadrilles, and the girls will be hn«nm\ instead of kissed. ~ Boston Post. U. 8. Senator Platt, of Connecticut, has just been erigaged in the amusing ocoupation of superintending the removal of bodies from an old cemetery. ‘A man named Gasbill has asked the legis- Iature of Arkansas to change his name.” .;F;:e legislature will undoubtedly do so. Any man less than thirteen feet in height and weighing three tons would be burdened with such a name. Big men for big names. Miss Ayer, whose father advertised himself into » colossal fortune, refused a Kuropean prince who followed her to th, country i Fope of thaerying hae: The conetant, Jodiolous advertiser occupies a soat soveral tiers higher than mere royalty. Porhaps it is because Louise is an exception to the royal family in having no family that the queen has conferred the Royal Red Cross decoration upon ull the royal princesses, with the exception of the Marchioness of Lorne. The orgler is supposed to be_conferred only up- on those who have distinguished themselves in nursing. The residents of Newport have served notice, inlormnllf', upon Mrs. Langtry that she need not spend the summer there, as she proposes to do. The local paper, which is supposed to echo the sentiments of the heavy swells in that neck of woods, is very free to say that should she make her appearance not one of the cottages would open its doors to her, and that the hotel at which she stops will be imme- diately vacated by everybody who is worth knowing. This is 3ad to be al on aecount. of red | — Grant and Lee. + | Washington (N. .) Star. We heard some time ago from a Wil mingtonian a story that is so creditable to Grant that we w Il give it. We had heard it before, but not in 4 shape calcu- lated to give us confidence in its authen- ticity. ut as we last heard it, and be- cause of the circumstantiality attending it, we may no longer discredit it. After Lincoln's assassination there was a grow- ing sentiment among extreme men in the north that the southern leaders must be unished and the more famous men anged. A cabinet meeting was called, and it was resolved to hang at least Gen, Lee, and some one or two others it may be. Grant, at the head of the army, was sent for, and was told what was the action of the cabinet. He delib- erately unbuckled his sword, and laying it upon the table, said: ‘‘My honor as a lmltficr and a man is pledged to Gen Lee, and if you take the step proposed I at once surrendor. my. ‘sword, resign my commission, and go before the American {mopkn" This firmness and 1prump'.ness brought the exteme men to their senses, and the matter was dropped. We are assured that this story is trustworthy, and it comes through a channel that en- titles it to credence. Itis honorable to Girant, and shows him in a much grander light than anything he has ever done as president. The Coming Battle. New York Herald. We believe thé star route verdict will leave a profound and lasting impression on the public mind. It ought to. The men declared ‘‘not guilty” are of no con- sequence; but the result of this trial will justly be held by all thoughtful citizens a8 proof that it is high time to make a change; that the “‘party of great moral ideas” is no longer entitled to their con- fidence and cannot be safely trusted with the people’s money. The verdict is, to be sure, butone of many evidences to the same effect. The river and harbor jobs, the Robeson navy jobs, the impu- dent refusal to make adequate reductions of taxation, the corrupt determination to compel needless and surplus taxes out of the people’s pockets, the pension swindle, the unblushing alliance with all sorts of monopolies—all these prove that the re- publican party has outlived not merely its usefulness, but its moral sense. But it probably needed this result of the star route trials to break the back of the public's patience. The presidential campaign of 1884 will be a battle between the people and the friends of monopoly and jobbery. The German Army. New York Star. The German army is at the present time distributed over 304 garrisons, thir- ty-nine of which have an effective force of over2,000 men. Berlin, with 17,813, and towns which have garrisons of over 10,- . The garrison of Strasburg num- bers 8, 968, that of Mayence 7,712, that of Cologne 7,665, that of Coblentz 6,353, Magdeburg 6,068, The Potsdam (6,680) and Spandau (4,339) are 50 close to Berlin that 28,732 troops could be concentrated upon the capital at & few hours’ notice. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relloves and cures QUINSY, SWELLINGS. FR ES, BNS, SCALDS, And all other bodily aches aud pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Soldby all Druggists and Destere “Directions 18 1 J. EXARRIS, BUYS CAST-OFF CLOTHING. HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID, Ban ‘stood the test of years. Sold by ll p Lo L Sm Oull or send Postal Card. H. WESTERMANN & CO,, Walter Savage Landor thought Vol world,” B. Gough is at his home near needed rest, but Metz, with 14,441, are the only two that of Konigsberg 6,383, and that of garrisons of §. E. Cor. Farnam and Tenth Sts, rose of Lancaster came to grief at Tewks- | bury. | Bonanza Mackay is buying up all the castles, palaces and residences in’ Europe, according to - China and Glass, 608 WASHINGTON AVENUE AND 609 ST. St. Louis, Mo. WHOLESATLR Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - STREET. ST. LOUIS. MO, : SALEM FLOUR. Tuis Flour is made at Salem, Richardson Cor, Nebrasks, in the Combined Roller Stone System. We §ive EXCLUSIVE sale of our flaur to one firm in a place. Wo have opencd a brasich at 1613 Capitol avenwe Dy Write for Prices. Addréss oither VALENTINE & REFPPY, Salem or Omaha, Neb. STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., Wholesale =Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN mi9m&e-om FLOUR, SALT, SUGARS, CANNED G00I: ~ ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES. A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO. M. HELLMAN & CO., 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA, . $ A g i - - NEBRASKA. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lath, Shingles, Piekets SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - e - OMAHA, NEB, C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints, i, Varnishes and Window Glass, OMAHA, NEBRASKA. E. B. CHAPMAN & CO, Wholesale Grocers ! 1213 Farnam 8t., Omaha, Neb. LOUIS BRADFORD, DEALER IN Lumber, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Shingles, Lath. ETC-JLOW PRICES AND GOOD GRADES, Call and Get My Prices Before Buying Elsewhere, Yards Cor 9th and Douglas, Also 7th and Douglas, SELLS THE BEST COOKING STOVES IN THE CITY. RHEUMATISM, | mese 8toves touk the premium at the New York State Pair in 1882, where they were put on actual trial by Neuralgia experienced Judges, in competition with leading Eastern Brands, which are farsuperior 0. all Soiatica, Lumbago estorn Stoves, specially in quality of Iron, FinesBaking and economy in all kinds of fusl h , BACKACHE, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, | narer e XX A IR D W A R E! 521 South Tenth Street. ‘ J.C.EEARBACEK, PIONEER ‘Buggy and Spring Wagon Manufacturer. Special attention paid to Horse Shoelng snd General Blucksmithing. 315 Fitteenth strect betweeen Haaney and Farnam. PIANOS&KLORGANS On Long Time--Small Payments. At Manufacturers Prices. A Hospe, Jr, 169 DODGF STRBET, OMAHA, NEB. Wholesale Clothiers! - e i e el e

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