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k! Tllh DAII i BP,]u.---()MAHA M()ND_\'Y JI L Y oM ATIA BEE. The THE Published every_ morning, except. Sund only Mondy moening daily HRNS BY MATL $10.00 | Threo Months, ... #8.00 00 | one Month 100 | One_Year Six Months IR WERKLY FRR, FURLISIRD FYRRY WRDNEADAY THRNS FOSTRAID, One Yoar £2.00 | Three M Six Months 1.00 | One Mon American News Company, Sole Agents Nowsdeal ers in the United States. CORRRSIONDRNCY. 1 Gommunications relating to News and Editorial e Midrcaced to the Eiton. op Twn hs 410 THE NATIONAL CONFEREN( Tur National Antimonopoly confer ence which was called at Chicago on (In- dependence Day, has been concluded and {the result of its proceedings is now be fore the comntry. The call for this con forence was drawn rather loosely, om bodying not only the momentous issue of emancipation from mongpolies, but in cluging a number of side which antimonopolists could not issues upon all e | expected to agree, As a natural conse: Brn. PUSINKSS LETTRRA | Al Business Tatters and Remittances should be | addreased to Tk Brs ANY, OMANA. | Drati and Postoffic the ¢ THE BEE BUBLISHING £0., PROPS. £. ROSEWATER, Editor. —ee Mi Jawes CREIGHTON pays his w0 spects to Doctor George L. Miller. . | harmonious as it should Mi. Teier's compliments to the| renegade Apaches and they may return to their reservation. SEsaTOR ALLISON i on the seat. At now have a walk away anxions | looks as if he would not for a third term next | winter. Herww is reported to be paved with good intentions. That settles it as far as Dr. | Miller is concerned. He endorses noth- | ing but Colorado sandstone. —_—— Tur. question that is now agitating political cireles is whether a postmaster is a bigger man than a United States sen ator. DurinG the fiseal year ending June 30, 1883, 1,639 new postoftioes were iablished. Of these only sixteen were| named after the modest Frank Hatton. | o8 given a chance to tell is still in favor of and the old ticket. He will now be the public wheth the Vico-Presidenc; Towa’s war debt has heen paid in full but the debt which she owes to fanatical enthusiasts who are doing their best to disrupt the republican party must be sot- tled at the polls this fall AccoknING to Attorney ral Brow- ster the cost of the star route trials to American tax puyers was the modest sum of £270,000, which he intimates is cheap enough for so much law and jaw. | Postvaster GENEXAL GRESHANM has virtually squelched the Louisiana lottery by directing the enforcenient of an « issued by ex-Postmaster General Key depriving the managers from the use o the mails. “WiLL the democracy commit suicide?” | asks Mr. Dana of the New York Sun, 1t depends very much upon eircumstances. 1f Dan Voorhees, Joe Blackburn, and a fow other leaders are given half o show the chances are five to one that they will. Tiy largest gus main in the world is now being laid in London from (| Cross to Pall Mall. 1t dinmeter, is four fect in | Reports fail to state whetho this item has any connection with Dr. Miller's proposed trip to Burope next August. | —— Mussovnt’s supreme court has decided the high license law constitutional, Fol- Towing Towa's example, it will now he in order for the indignant Bourbons to oust every member of the supreme court who has dared to perform his sworn duty as a | just interpreter of the law and the consti- | tution. controversy with Toller ix again raising the question whother ar officers would not be better protectors o the Indians than Indian agents. Just at the present time, when two army officer CROOK'S are to be court-martialed for duplicating |" their pay accounts, and another is in the penitentiary for embezzlement, a rovivul of the subject seems tofbe rather innopor- tune, ArtER a thorough and careful investi gation of the merits of each, the council finally decided to let part of the paving be done with asphalt and part with Colo- rado stone, this being understood to be the preference of property owners in the districts concerned,— Herald, This is alie out of the wholo cloth, In all the districts ordered paved not a single property owner expressed his pre- ference for Colorado stone while an over- whelming majority protested in writing against its use, The preferences of the property owners were not consulted fer one moment by the council and public sentiment was brazenly defied in its de- cision awarding streets to contractors whose stone had been indignantly re- fused by our people. —— New York Ciry continues to thrive and multiply. The ZUmes publishes sta- tistics showing that buildings are now go ing up in that city which will furnish homes for 10,174 families, or over 50,000 people. This is done by building in the air houses of seven, eight and nine stories, in which the essential elevator is introduced for the convenience of per- sons and household materials, A flat in the seventh opmighth story is thought to be not only convenient but desirable, as it lifts the occupants above the noise, dust and turmoil of the strect into purer air and more sunlight. There must be an uncomfortable feeling, however, as one | thinks of a fire breaking out, and won- ders how the occupants of these upper stories can make a safe cscape. But the nocessity of New York, owing to the Limits of available ares for building, makes such buildings the only alterna- tive for a vast and increasing population, | gether men fr |upon the energies of production and “| The conference finally decided to call upon {monopolies and ~ the L hopoly and quence the conference comtained among its members a sprinkling of | eranks who were hent upon be iade py |forcing their favorite insues into prom | his commission has Add to this the blatant blathenkite, smence discords cansed by that Denis | Kearney, who was doubtless sent to Chi- | the Central Pac and, and it is not surprising that the cago by \ bey a fire nning of the conference was not as have boen, To the del to the organization wo must ascribe the incident preliminary ness of the platform and the hurry with which it was bolted down witheut alchate | by delegates who were anxions do return home. As a whole, however, the esnfe has done much good. It breught to. sopa n wiaely ed e tions of the country opportunity to exchange ing the condition of the produeing and them an and gave views econcern- industrinl elasses, 1t has also awakened | in the whole country an interest in the solution of the great problem of the day. Twenty-one states, from California to Massachusetts, represented by three hundred delegates. | were more than Upon the wne issue, the su- regulating and lines of transp tation, they were all a unit. state and territory the iron grasp of ty rannical monopoly has been laid heavily necessity of controlling by law the preme In eve thrift. It has not only been merciless in its exactions but it has polluted the foun- tain head of free government by corrupt- ing legislatures and controlling courts. Unless the confederated monopolies of America are soon made subject to inexor- able law our entire republic will be a mere sham. ont of the conference with which every intel- ligent citizen must agr The great quostion hefore the conference was as to This was the universal sentiy the best means of achieving the desired reforms. While the majority thought it necossary to seek redress through o new party a very respectable minority urged the methods pursued by the New York Antimonopoly League, which sceks to v out the advocate, compel existing parties to c principles and measures they the people of the United States to organ- ¢ in resistance to monopolies regardless f party and for which ulated a platform upon antimonopolists should rally. The essential planks of this platform we heartily endorso. Railway regulation by national and state legislation, the demand for the forfeiture of all unearned lands by land grant railroads, and for the pro- hibition of foreign land holding syndi- catos, the establishment of a postal tele- graph system, the vesteiction of patent creation of postal savings banks have all been advocated for many years by this paper. Upon these planks all opponents of mo- honest men of all parties | should cordially agree, The demand for the immediate payment of the national debt just in order to spike the national | banks is « short-sighted and narrow- guaged scheme. 1t would simply he folly, if nothing worse, to pay off a debt that s drawing u fraction over three” per cent interest, when the average tax-payer is paying from six to ten per cent. pay off the national debt would require a tax of $36 on every man, woman and child in the United States, while it costs only ninety cents a year per capita to carry it, and every year as we call in the s this vatio is decreasing. The demand for a direct income tax is another foolish scheme. during and after the wwr has shown that an tax of- fers high © premium on perjury. Besides sueh a tax is unjust because it is not uniform upon all property. Instead of taxing property it taxes industry. The schemo which calls for the election of all public officials, from president down, by & diroct vote of the people was disoussed by the framers of the constitution and exploded. It is a fine theory but would not work in a country where the suffrage is limited only by sex. On the tariff the conference adopted the Ohio idea, It demands a tariff for revenue only, whatever thut may mean, with free trade beautifully in the dis- tance. m his own money. To Our experience income Tux great American flopper has again flopped. It was only a question of time, and overy one knew it had to come at Inst. A week ago the Herald was rav- ing for asphalt, editorially and locally. To-day it has suddenly discoverod that Colorado sandstone is the best paving material that can be sclected for the Omaha streets, and that Bill Stout and the Union Pacific are the ble contractors to whow the let. As a ground and lofty tumbler, Dr, Miller is withont an equal, |moval of Thomas F. Hall [ have been preferred |ed, If Senator most rosponsi- | job can be| personally in favor of wp)mh and ,..ur.« sionally an advocate sandstone, At the s that Sioux Falls granite is a good If limestone, macadam, wood of Union Pacific same time he inti pavement block [ he expected to speak a good word for |each. Mr, Kimball must have | call on the editor of the fored REMOVAL POR GAUSE made a Senator Van Wyek is opposing the re from ithe post mastership of Omaha, on the ground that two yeams and a half to run, inst. him. The senator insists that Mr. Hall's term of aftice must be allowed to expire nnless it | ie proved hoyond a question that he is unfit for the position, and that the inter Larts of the public are suffering by his re tention, | We pass by the question whotler sen atorial courtesy is not being violited by Wyck | inan office fwhich custom places erirely under the control of the home senator, A listle display of backbone by Senator Manvlerson three months ago would bave settled the matter for all & Mr. (Hall was advised that his tion was demanded and thls interference of General Van When resigna- when Manderson was advised in Washington that the change would be made as soan as he definitely requested it, there was | 1o need for further controversies or de- | Lays. What Senator Manderson could have done and should have done was to have filed at onee his request for the appoint ment of Hall's successor on July lst | with the postmaster general and the | / | commission would have been promptly forthcoming. There would then hav been no necossity for formal charges. Th nator’s wish would have been am- ple cause for vemoval. F. Hall is anxious But if Thomas in- mti- vestigated and his official conduct v Iated, it will be no difficult to substantiate a dozen charges, each one of which will be sufticient under any rules of civil ser vice refc matter m to secure his prompt removal, For more than four years the oftice has been shamefully neglected, and the pub- lic interests have suffered whi ts post- ate bus- master has been prosecuting y iness schemes. The largest patrons of the hoen continuous, mplaints of the post office have d the attention of the office inspectors have been repeatedly called to the gross mismanagement of the off the total disr convenience subordinates. post ard of public and the insubordination of To xy nothing of the enveloped the office, and the repeated assertions of Thomas F. Hall that he retained his position by di- viding his salary, there are suff sons in the business scandals which hav iont rea- agoment of the Omaha postoftice to demand Hall’s prompt romoval. Senator Manderson is under- stood to he anxious for ha if he fails to erect his stance he will rmony, but spine in this in- not only neglect a plain duty, but become responsible for flagrant abuses that have been tolerated throygh the term of his predecegsor, simply be- cause it was conceded that Mr. Saunders controlled the oftice and because even Postmaster Hall admitted that Saunders had not & ghost of a show to be re-clect- Van Wyck has any re- grd for his own reputation he will keep his oar out AN ON PAVING sssor Samuel Aughey comes to the | front as a hired expert on the paving | question, Mr. Aughey’s opinions upon scientific questions, especially if the de- cision concerns his own pocket, are about as valuable as those of mistakes of Moses, 1t is not so long since the Professor endorsed in the most flattering terms Bill Stout'sar and expressed the opinion that it would outlast the pyramids of Egypt. After a fow months trial Mr. Stout came to the conclusion that the public who attempted to use it knew more about artificial stone than Aughey, and quiotly withdrew it from the market. The next endorsement of this scientific quack was given to a hog cholera nostrum which has been advertised with his name as a Pro- fossor of the University of Nebraska. He now turns up with a handsume en- dorsement of Colorado sandstone in the following language: *“This rock _contains no mugnesia, and is almost wholly silicious, It will not decompose when placed in or on the ground by any influence of the ele- ments, " 1 anything is required to brand Pro- fossor Aughey as a fraud of the first water, this is sufficient. What rock is there, silicified, vitreous or non-vitreous, which does not decomposs more or less under the influence of the elements; and who is ignorant enough, in Professor Aughiey’s opinion, not to know that of all stones, & laminated sandstone, like the one ho is endorsing, is next to limestone, the greatest absorbent of water and the of the impertinence mounteback Jumbo on the ficinl stone Professor most vasily decomposed of any rocks, And what cheeky it is in this profos- name to a report which tells us that in ability to resist the extremes of heat and cold and pressure mor o sign his Tug efforts of the editor of the on all sides of the would he amusing if they were ful to | ground and lofty tumbling Herald o be at onee fence not pain witness, As an exhibition , with spring board tlip flaps thrown in, the Herald, editorial | page of yesterday’s Pacific’s democratic organ. After de | nouncing all pavements but Colorada sandstone in Saturday's edition, the ver. satile doctor now announces himself us with Dr. | Miller us the chief performer, is without | an equal, even in the history of the Union | the Fort Collins stong is superior to any | of the swnples examined-—astone that in [ the wonds of Jumes E Boyd, *‘can ho | Kkicked to pisces with a boot heel,” and which Licutenant Kingmun, chiof of the government engincers pronounces ‘on the whole the worst paving material that he M8 exaimined in Omaha,' Mr. Aughuy is s handy expert to haye He al | arge stock of endorsements x | and on hand to suit the highest around a stone quarry ays has o y made bidder ‘I.u( his opinion on paving materials is | or sheet coal tar wore also under | discussion the editor of the Herald might | and that no formal charges | * | lican majority in the senate and twenty- | Senator | D |heard a great deal about not handing about as valuable as the views of Profes sor Paige on the next deluge | zins on the coming electric stormn VLECTIONS IN AN OFF YEAR. t Much Going,bat K the Peliticians on the Alert for ARKA, Toston Advertiser | This year is the calm before the storm, | for only about a third of the states hold an election; while next ycar comes th tumult of an election by which the wha | country will be stirred. Rhode 1sl already voted. On April 3 that stal wve its opinion emphal Sprague and his allies within and with out the commonwealth, and decided it| was not safe to “turn out” the republi- | Company” filed their artieles of inoorporation cans, In N iber two more New Eng- | for recard July 2. The headc wn of this \]’md states, Massachusetts and Connecti- | company will he at North Platte cut havo, elootions, but Maine, Now | Jifk 1o hate Siees Frb it Hampshire and Vermont 880 | KT8, aeiitfo Iumde notssspy. or spared the tribulation of | poses, ete |an annual election do mot | Work has vote till 1884, Connecticut is to | choose half of the senate and the full | p! When firishe | membership of the house, and the legis- | s in the Platte | lature thus elected, | holding oves 1 m~l.-:-v aa United States | sonator to sucosed Mr. O. H. Platt, whose terin expires March 4, 1885, The eloction in Massachusetts, it hardly need | be said, is for governor amd other state ofticers and a logislatuve, The present legislaturo in Connectiout has two repub- with the senators | eight in the house. The wote in Massa- chusetts, it will be convenient to remem- tion candi Aug. 6 occurs the Kentucky election, when Mr. Proctor Knott and Mr. Morrow will make a contest for the oftice of ernor, and legislature will be el Other state officers will likewise be chosen. The democratic majority last August was about 36,000, and Mr. Knott's election is as certain as that the water will rise and fall in the “unsalted seas,” of which he once eloquently spoke. breathing spell of a few weeks will be followed by the October elections in Ohio and Jowa. n 1882 Ohio gave ths - atic candidate for secretary of sta or f 1,669 in a total vote of 6: 189, The greenbackers cast and the prohibitionists 12,2 democratic plurality over th lican candidate was 19,115, The present governor of lowa, Mr. Sherman, has been renominated by the republicans. His plurality two years ago was 37,871, The Ohio legislature, elected this year, will choose a successor to Mr. Pendleton, United States senator. The present logislature has 11 republica majority in the senate and 35 in the house. When the excitement over these October elections has somewhat subsided, the November states will absorb Atcn- tion. Besides Massaceusetts ylvania, Maryland, Virginia, Mississippi, and Minnesota will hold elections. Three of these states—New York, Pensylvania, and Maryland—have now senatorial terms beginning March 5, 1885, when Messrs. Lapham, Cameron, and Groom will havo been re-elected or will retive. New York elects five state officors, headed by a secretary of state, and a legislature; New Jersey, a governor, one-third of the senate, and a house; Penn 1, only a state treasurer; Maryland, a_ governor and legislature; Virginia, a_legislatur Mississippi, a legislature, and Minnesota, a governor and other state officers, Pre- dictions about these elections would now be promature, but the general drift of popular feeling will be shownghy them, and somcthing of the fierceness of the struggle next year will be indieated. The republicans, on the wholo have some ground for fear and much reason for Hope. —_—— McCulloch on th Mail and Express, National Debt, “Are you in favor of paying off the na- ional debt entirely?” “No, and 1 ha that position. It is advisable to le national debt unpaid. always maintained to me that it a portion of the At one time we down a debt to posterity, but in my opinion a national debt should be main- tained, say about $100,000,000, I say ccause it is a fac rnment socurities fill a place that can be filled by no other sccurities, and are safe.” What an Old Journalist Erastus Brooks, In the time of the writer, as editor and proprie s New York Express, he has seen more than 120 journals live and die in the city of Now York alone, and he believes that more than $20,000,- 000 have been spent on the m, papers since 1836, Ouly five of the 120 fmly journals. in l'XINlrIILt‘ in 1836 and since then now survive, and 104 disappeared in the space of 20 years, In inexperi- enced hands the biggest collection of sponges will not imbibe water as rapidly as nowspapers will absorb money. has Seen. One for Dan Voorhees. Cincinnati Enquirer Dan Voorheos is about the auly politi- cian now living who has the necessary sand and courage to talk about the tariff, Other statesmen run from the subject as from @ holy horror Daniel is As bold as the lions that he once encountered in their very den, The Democrats Don't Believe It. 8t. Louis Globe-Democ If the republicans of New York will sottle their differences between now and next summer, the republicans of the rest of the country will see to it that the democrats do not elect a president next time. That's all there is to it, —_——— DAKOTA DOIN G The stock company of the Grand Forks roller mill hus been reorganized and the stock ncreased from $40,000 to $100,000. The ca- pacity will be immediately increased from 160 0 # 500 barrel mill, A Stutsman county land company have re- «ml) ,mnhmml $10,000 worth of mule to be used for breaking and improving the land. Two prominent citizens of Han y have taken stops toward onganizing @ joint stock company to engage in stock raising. Jamestown capitalists are organizing a com- pany for the purpose of putting in a system of folly water works, | Dakota Episcopalians have petitioned tho house of bishops to appoint two bishops for the torritory The new court house at | completed and ready for occupancy the first of | There is u p manufactory being wet of an artificial stone stablished at Bismarck. A new uational bauk with a capital of £200,000 is to be sstablished at Bismarck. tlesuake with twenty acres sown to wheat and rand Forks county is 16,475, The Jamestown telephone exchange has sixty-six subsoribers, Dakotu has & newspaper for every 1,800 in- or of Wig- | | of £100.000, T ically about Mr. | perfectly | o i | Jamestown will be , 1883, STATE JOTTINGS, | Anthony Gueyck. | man living at Santee agency, conumitte wul |ide during the night of the ith. * His famil not get home ur otting any d in at the W o with a bullet b %00 in hi | had pantalouns pocket under 18 Two banks have been organized in Hol | conuty, and their articles of incorp | filed with the secretary of State. One | Holt County Bank at O'Neill | of 50.000, and the other ix the | Bank at Stuart, Holt connty, with s @ two banks are organi | by the same capitalists; Senator M. Kaid being president, and David and W n, vice-presidents = *‘North Platte Immigration and Lanc commi within the last 90 d, acees of lawd, and sold abont ruakes 200,000 wcres of Tand disp daye, and shows the high appre Nebraska land is held as an investment. forer B public lat ased abont toats. The St. lmll & Omaha railr nation lost ) dogg, ancther farmer lost six the same way. The body of Isaac Chidester, the ms drow down the Platte about four miles below wh hie fell in on the Fourth. a German th of H nitted suic amilton counto ing a dose of strychnin Lincoln men have recontly s of school lands. This gives them the control of the land pending & rise that will al- low a sale at a profit. The “Holt County Creamery Company” has beon organized with o capital of $10,000, and the articles of incorporation were filod July 2 . O ily 8 the Oakland creamery churned of butter at one churning, and on 143 pounds, making 971 pounds in two o the 4th days. Guarks, They will go into Angust 21 hl‘htmn has been in o out Burt county, requesting Gugation of towhahip organization this fall. Salu creck is getting back to its normal con- dition, but_evidences of the high water are plainly visible along its banks. age to crops in Silver Lake precinet, Adams county. Five wagon loads of Pawnee Tndians, on their way to Towa, passed through Platts- mouth Friday evening. Gosper count the county seat*‘bone” election has been cal The Otoe reservation is being settled very very direction teams can be seen te on the relocation of July 18, and a special Grand lnhml has voted to build anew school building on the north side, that will 000. The village of Brock, Nemahu county, is to be moved tothe higher ground south of the present town site. Alice Gunn, living near Falls City, started a kitchen fire with kerosene, Explosion and death. Crete has a beautlful liitle steamer Blue at that place, artics, Grand Island needs a pork packing estab- lishment, a paper mill, and a rope factory. Rapalec’s Nebraska Hornet is a new of anti-monopoly principles, at Gene Aboat £40,000 worth of buildings are in course of construction at York, Some farmers in Nemaha county have 5,000 Lushels of old com on hand. The y reunion at Weeping Water Was in every way a succes The Platte river is still bauk full, but shows indications of falling off. Dorchester offers a good location for o first class wagon m Hastings gr tem of water work: The land office Dusiness Monday. n the to be used by pleasure at Valentine commenced tal assessed valuation of Merrick county, armey is growing quite rapidly. wirmout is building & brick block. The Vital Question. Ask the mokt eminent physician Of any school, what is the best thing in the world for quicting and allaying all irvitation of the nerves and curing all forms of nervous complaints, giving nat- ural, childlike, refreshing sleep alway: And they will tell you unhesitatingly “Some form of Hops!” CHAPTER I, Ask any or physicians: “What is the best and only remedy that can be relied on to cure all diseases of the kidneys and urinary organs; such as Bright's disease, diabetes, retention or inability to retain urine, and all the d'u- eases and ailments peculiar to women”— “And they will tell you explicitly and emphatically *‘Buchu, Ask the same physicians cure for all liver diseases or dyspe] e, d they will tell you: “Mandrake! or Dandelion! others equally valuable And compounded i (Con —— A Bad Family. BAVANNAH, Mo., July 7.—Frank Gar rett, a brother of Mike Garrett, jail on the charge of outraging Miss Belle White was doterred by Hop Bitters, such & next week.) daughter. with excellont prospects of u lynching. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relieves and cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS NERAINS, Soreness, Culs, Bruises, FROSTBITES, BURNS, SCALDS, Aud allgthr bodily aches i patns. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. mhlb)‘l\lhn\ h\llhllll Dealers, Dirvetions 18 1 lunguages. The Charles A, Vogeler Ca. (Bussntees 12 4. VOGELE 8 00.) habitauts, Balimors. Nd., U8 A a Fronchman and squaw 1 ation is the with & capital Stuart State erviceahle for d has put & on the extension from h Dixon and an who 1 west of Kearney, was found floating leased 80,000 A il storm on tho fourth is wid to huve | Near Union p,u.,/,'c Depot, o % it da ~ | done st need just now is some sys- “What is the most relisble and surest now in vs. Joseph Halt in an attempt to outrage her little Ho ran away and the sheriff and a posse of vigilantes are hunting him HEADACHE, TO0THACHE, | ‘ E WESTERMANN & 00., IMPORTERS OF y t China and Glass, 1(608 WASHINGTON *AVENUE AND 609 ST. 1 St. Louis, Mo. n | - WHOLESAL® mjDry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, ""I he hl{'tdnl: business of «h.vl l\ lmlil office at McCaok ¢ At N i lomsstasd Washmylon Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. MO, STEELE JOHNSON & CO., Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBER: FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED G007 S. ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & IMIID POWDLR 60. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALEK IN . . The next jamboree in Crete will bo the week's encampment of the Nebraska National U \ th . a vote on the ) 1) ) SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. OMAHA, NEB, C. F. GOODMAN Wholesale Druggist AND DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Window (lass, OMAHA. NEBRASKA. P. BOYER & CO., DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFE, VALY, LOCKS, & 1020 F'a rnam Street. Omaha, HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Sha EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, 4 At M. HELLMAN & CO, OMAHA NEB. e WHolesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA, - . . NEBRASK ' GATE CITY a, ague, ete. you: Henev, when these rumedies are combined with MANUFACT KRS OF Carpenters’ Materials, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Rallin[s Balusters, Window & Door Frames, &. Firut-clase faclliicsfor Ohe manulscture of all kinda of Mowldiogs. Flaniag sod nmmu » specialty. Ordens trom the country will be promptly excouted. “Addrees all communioations to OMAZEIA CORNICE: WORKS, RUEMPING & BOLTE, Proprietors. TIN, IRON AND SLATE ROOFERS, MANUFACTURERS OF | Ornamental Galvanized Iron Cornices, Iron Slry L/ghts, Etc., Ete. | 10 South Tweltth Street, | 7-mon-wen-fre - o NEB. SPECIAL Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO NOTICE TO ? Our Ground Oil Cake. It i the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Stock fed with Ground Oi Cake in the Fall and and be I goud marketable condition in the spring ita merita, Try it and Judge for yourslves. " Price od-cod-me One pound is equal to three pounds of corn, inter, instead of running down, will increase in weight. Dilirymen, othere, Who use § testify to 26,00 per (un: no charge for kacks. Addrows WOODMAN LINSEED OIL COMPANY, Omaha, Neb i 5 j [ w