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s r———— NATIONAL FINANCPS, The last day of June closed the fiscal and the public debt statement then THE OMAHA BEE. The | V€ | issued contains many instructive featuros, except Sunday ANS 1Y AT Mie followiie o r 10,00 Three Months .00 The following niths 5.00 | One Month 1.00 [and ¢ comparisons of reccipts le, taken in penditurcs is val BLISIED RERRY WRDNPADAY connection with the bonsts of a greatly 2 [ decroased revenue as the result of the o Months $ 60| Month o | change in the tariff and internal revenue mpany, Sole Agents Newsdeal- | laws = Reoelphe, ONIRNOR. Cust ting to News and Fditorial | Internal r ed to the Epiror ov Tim | Miscellan, All Communications r matter should be adire Ban Aggregate, Expenditures. Ordinary, BUSTNRSS LTTRRA. All Business Latters and Remittances should be addr 11K CoNPAYY, OMAMA. | Srdar Drat rdors to be made pay- | terest, om Abje t the onder of the company X Total, N 85,508,087 THE BEE BUBLISHING C0, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor. stock of imported goods had not been ware have been about the same if large 1k public improvements Omaha needs most just at present is an improvement take the benefit of the reduction of rates in lier public men. which went into effect on July Ist. As| Water Worka | it 18 the total revenue has excecded the expenditureby about£133,000,000. Of this amount, about 45,000,000 is supposed to be needed to meet the requirements of the sinking fund for the reduction of the public debt. 1k about the Holly jo the paving job isa good deal more danzerous to public morals. ORDING to the Charleston News and Couricr, Mr. Robeson's old peta for * il 14 eson i 01 PO 0T R | oo fact is, however, that through the navy for repairs only.” That covers the| . : drotul aid of refunding operations there was nearly $138,000,000 applied to debt re- Wiar do the tax payers of Omaha | last your. [The funded debt of ok the United Statos stands to-day at &1,- proposo o do about it? Will they sip | the United Statos stands forday bt ©c still and let the councll defy them by | 30%:220,160, which draws interost & fo duction lows : Bonds at 5 cont'd at 3} per cent Bonds at 4} per cent. § Bonds at 4 per cont Bonds at 3 per cent. .. " " Refunding certificatos ars & vote s 4 terrible [ Nuvy pension fund aid a councilman on Thurs- putting in worthless paving material? 082,600 AN honest poor man has no business council. A to be a member of the city thousand do tenptation S Principal LB B3R,220,150 The chief funding operation of the day Pk Santa Fe tertio millenial celebra- | year has been the conversion of the 54 tion was a great success. Mr. Tilden, | One year ago the volume of these Win wlho, it is understood, was present at the |dom bonds was $460,461,000; now there founding of the city, failed to put in an |:emains only $32,000,000; about $304,- appearance. 010,000 having been converted into 3 per The enstoms revenue wonld probably | housed for the past month in order to| - cents, and $126,000,000 paid off, The SECRETARY CHANDLER has gone to New Hampshire, ‘to see his sick moth- er.” New life may be expeoted to ap- pear in the senatorial contest in the Gran- ite state before the week closes. OvalA is doing her Dbest towards getting ready for oholera by piling up the filth in her alleys and dumping beer kegs in the gutters of her muin thor- oughfares until the streets smoll like n well appointed swill tub. 7 Jenar Bratcavorn, of the supreme court, has a hobby of collecting calen- dars of all kinds. He has not yet suc- cceded in collecting the scattered calen- dar of the court over which he presides and which is already three years behind. Tukrr was another drop in provi yesterday at Chicago ions All the necessa- rivs of life havebeen bulled and cornered to an unnatural height and the bottom hus cither got to drop out the inflated market or out of the speculators pockets before bed rock is reached. WaLL sTHEET stock brokers are strand- od with nothing to sell and nothing to buy. All the old props of the market are gone and a veal revival is not likely until the production of food gots ahead of the population and the population ahead of the supplyof manufsctured ar- ticles, B e Tk Cenvral Pacific v will soon compel all its Irond company to And this leads the San Francisco (hronicle, which ought to know what it is talking about, to remark that it is a great pity that the rule is not extended to all brauches of the service, It would be u brave spectacle to see in full uniform the lawyers, editors, legisla- tors, public officials, alleged workingmen, ote., who are on the pay-roll of the monopoly. ain employe wear uniforms, THE NEW TARIFF. The new tarifl' has gone into etfect with- out raising a ripple in busingss and in- dustrial civcles, Nothing better illus- trates the worthlessness of the new law as a reducer of taxation. There was wore’ disturbance: to business rosulting fro the clause of the tax and tariff law reducing the tobuccg tax, which went into effect on May 1st, than there was from all the general tavifl' eluuse, which went into effect on July 24, There wus a lithe incrsase in the importation of wine, in anticipation of the increasod duty which must be paid heveafter, and Culifornia opium has been rushed in for the same reason, hut neither of these results can be considered particulurly salutary, There has been some holding back of tin-plate, carpets and silks, on which the duty is reduced, and of spices, most of which now go on the free list. But, on the whole, the genergl business of the country has not known that such a thing as tarifl revision was going on. Even sugar, on which the reduction of duty (a very slight one) went into effect June 1st, has shown very little increase in the amount imported, and no change at all in the prices paid at retail by con sumers, This is precisely the result predicted for the patch work of incongruities and inconsistencies called the revised tariff, The changes made were so slight and so | illplaced that they guve the people no relief atall, The other great object of tariffl reduction—that of reducing the enormous needless revenue so0 as to re- move & constant temptation to the cuyid ity of congressmen—also fails of accom- plishinent. The new tariff will have no appreciable effect upon iuportations or revenue. This is the unanimous testi- wony of importers and wmanufacturers in every branch of trade. . The tariff revision of the Forty-seventh congress was & delusion and a sham. Its result is a tariff for political effect only with incidental protection to oftice holdors, new 3 per cents are redcemable at the eption of the government, the 4} per cents not till 1801, the 4 per cents not till 1897. The success of Ametican financeering is well vindicated by the re. duction of the burden of interest in 1 years from $151,000,000 & year to 000,000, The total net debt about half what it was when it reaehed its highest volume in 1865, THE pension payments were not as large as the appropriation by nearly $20,- 000,000, and perhaps the total require- ment for arrears of pensions has been overestimated. is now Pension Commissioner Dudley claims that he has saved some $2,000,000 in fraudulent claims which would otherwise have been paid. But that is his business, and what he s thero for, The increase in ordinary éxpendi- avises partly from the payment of the Japanese and Alabama claims and is per- laps more apparent than real. and the Jack Logans, and the rule of the sainted 806" walked quietly up to the polls last year, and cheerfully assisted in es. Two hundred and thirteen thousand rvepublicans in the state of Roscoe Conkling voted s the present secrotary of who was o candidate for governor, he cause the party was boss ridden und ring ruled, and needed political purging through the medicine of defeat. What the engineers of the machine in four re- publican states thought: to be only a slight campaign breeze turned out to bea political cyclone. * The party has not yet recovered from its demoralizing effects, No unprejudiced observer dare assert that the outlook for the future of the re- publican party is a satisfactory one. The losson which the independent voter e deavored to teach the hosses has not been takento heart. Theyhave recognized their defeat without being willing to remove the causes and the clashing of the oppos- ing factions is still heard in both Penn- sylvania and New York with the looked for harmony apparently as far offas ovor. In Ohio and Towa, republican success has been still further jeapordized by the ondorsement of sumptuary legislation and the consequent alionation of the en- tireforeign vote, In Massachusetts the ecution of Butler is making it a se- us question whether the Old Bay state oan be counted upon as secure in the presidential canpaign, Indiana and ow Jersey are hardly doubtful and can be saved only by « minicle. republican ninst the treasury, But more discouraging than any specitic cause for the opposition to republican rule is the widespread and undefinable disgust and distrust which pervades that class of voters upon whom pa y lines hang loosely, who care nothing for oftices and patrouage and little for campaign shricks and party platforms, The inde pendont vote will decide the next elee- and the independent showing no signs of rveturning to the old time r valers &l Severar exchanges are predicting that Governor Dawes is about to oust Doctor Mathewson from the superintendency of the Tusane hospital and report that his successor hus alreudy been chosen, It is even asserted that the position was promised to one Dr. Paddock of Wilber, by the governor prior to his election and that the sham investigation played very nicely into the hands of the executive. are not propared to believe that overnor Dawes will muke the grave wistake of removing a tried, experienced and competent superintendent like Dr, Mathewson who is heartily endorsed by the best medical talent of Nebraska as ture from $1256,000,000 to §140,000,000 |y thousand republicans, disgusted with tho | field. which will make the result of the | e Vil ¢ Barney Biglins, and the Boss McMullens | election less of a foregone conclusion. | defeating republican candidates in four | le and candidates ave already begining THE DAIL BEE.~*OMAHA TUES | the right man in the rmlno.Aplm. to make v T2 room f v ph; |for the position i that he Hanscom’s temporary removal to New York, is to inatitute suit in the United States circuit conrt for the recovery of Hanscom Park, which he gave ician whose only claim A politieal { friend of the chicf exccutive. There is | yome years ago, and whose improvement | yeirom ™ 1 catches trout without an too much at stake in the management of [and development under city nuspices have | syuie Mitehell i the fourth Targest Tand the Insanc hospital to have it made the | increased the adjacent property so great- | holder at Long o football itician Those who |1 that Hanscom is understood to have| Mre Katherine Ch formerly Mrs, | bonsted that his gift of forty acres of | Sprag w gone to Kurope for the summer {ought to know hest place every confi- | ough woodland had been worth to him | Toomhs is reported in his local paper '\.|.-nu in the skill, the humanity and the | 810,000 for every acre given. The story | to be looking hale, and not so feeble as lately [ excoutive ability of the presont suporin- | goes that ‘n.‘.]u“ 'y...}u.‘m H’m all the | et S s ; ghdont and Coverner Diwes provisions of the gift have not been com- | Remenyi, the d_ fiddler," s he i . . ning medical | yrnerty which is now very valuable could | “3! ! sentiment throughont the state if he |be made to revert to its original owners, || Freddic tiobhard Tas fous rac permits his personal wishes to et the | There is fully £600,000 in the turn if it | ukinle men in this 3} better of his political discretion | an be made, and not so very much 108t by 1y Chnillu bronzes with age instead ——— |if it fails. Hanscom has been a shrewd | of growing wray and wrinkled. ac Tue lowa railroad commissioners have | et estate manipulator but he missed his | tive ax he was twenty-five years ag | voeation in not turning his attention to | decided that no road is obliged to accept | 1 qieei traveling men's 1 that r trains the first-class iples on trains, re carried “City councilmen have been a8 searce Ay be reg. | on the streets as liens’ tecth since st ® 1 Tuesdny’s vote,” said an indignant pro: perty holder on Fifteenth street to me If there is any other possible | vestorday. “Of all the corrupt jobs that favor of the r been tried on in Omaha this is sandstone job is the most brazen. Herc {am I and a hundred other property own ers who have petitioned 1 accordan Tta ing of commission ought to lead to | with the charter for a certain paving ma the omission of every one of the board when they ate | on passe ulated by the trafic in use for expre pckages. decision in maonopolists | have ev which the Towa commissioners have not yet made, it will surely be fortheoming terial, and our jectea by a pac petition 18 1nsol ed hoard of publi Iy 1o works when their terms expire, | tha a stol c s one and all | of public works? | to be worthless is rushed in upon us and | o — | we are to be forced to pa - * “uft etitions, protests and re- Cltis a littlo early yet,” said o loeal | monstrances just ln-l':n.lm- Bill Stout, Pete politician, “to talk whout the fall elec. | Shelby and Horace Newian own a quar TOWN TALK. and the Union Pacific owns lroad tion, but the fight in Douglas county will ,r?,,.\‘l.l;,.g l;;.,,.,":nv“ Ilnlen .l\\ll‘l: lll'lw-ll(vf! be alively one. We elect a full county | bribery, but it is that Bill ticket and six justices of the peace at | Stout boasted three g had eight counciln | veto wasn’t worth any more than zen protest. Its a fine Most of the county |isn't it to open the game s to feel pretty secure for a | of public improvements in | Omaha with. With a powerful corpora- | th Corls seems to real- | s gh Corliss seomis to real- | eiyGelling the aliarke and two papers dofiance of public | endorsing a bolder isiosnership,and Baumer, | sentiment than_the Holly iniquity, the with all his hand-shaking of voters, feels |odds against the citizens look pretty alittle nervous about that county clerk- | henvy- ship. Rush will work his ‘inflooen with the TIrish vote to se a umanimous re-nomination Dave Miller protends that he doesn’t astraw which way the convention cat| jumps. Although Lam not at all per- | sonally interested, T should like to se an entir Iarge in Omaha to fly in the va month has officers prof d the hair will begin yus wards before another ssed, re-election, thos ize that he will have a hard row to hoe to make the con If you want to catch a Tartar scratch N. B. Falconer's back with a picce of and | Colorado sandstone. *“We'll raise $10,- | we town,” 1 that gentleman last evening. 000 if the swindlers will only remar 1 n owners in_my life. If| of public works and 1 n't protect us ur y new deal in the court house. | ity Things have been running in one rut en- tirely too long, and a change, in my opinion, would benefit the tax-puyers Tt wouldn't hurt a bit if we got a good square business man on the board of commissioners and a county clerk who didu't strain, cvery point of the statute | to rake in fees, You thought the salary was fixed by law and all fees turned into the county treasury! Pooh! The balance always lies on the | side of the county clerk, and the pi ings and allowances for extra clerk makiug up the tax list, private searches | for title, notarial fees, ete., amount each year to more than the cl salary and make the office about the most lucrative in the building. There will be a lively fight for the office on both sides of the | political fence, and Baumer's renomina- tion is not n dead sure thing by any which the contractors insist upon paving with their abominable material. The question is, whether all Omaha is to be at the mercy of a ring which will swamp us in debt, without taking the trouble to read our protests and remonstrances, 1 for one will fight it out to the last and am ready to put up £1.000 tosee whether the citizen ha have any rights, that the city council are bound to res- | peet.” “September,” said a prominent society s going to be a heavy month for First on the tapis will come the marriage of the son of an ex-United States senator to the daughter of an ex- collector, then the wedding of a young Tegal light ta one of our most attractive society belles, while a clerk in the B. & M. will follow suit with the daughter of THEIR ONLY HOPE, means. The clerkship of the district | /it o prominent attorney, who lives on Sty ¥ HOREJoourt, which is considered by some the | %1 REtTUEE EHomeys o (S S The return of the wandering indepen- | host politienl plam i the county, wil 22 Iy n 3 o I \ I'l v fouant " Yop, |another lawyer is to enter the bonds of dant yoior is thg onlAlpnedtitig ropub- lalaol be | hotly, . lought - HIon iinatrimony apdielll fopture his ibride lican party for success in_the impending (1 understand that ],'J""“‘ Yot | from far up the hill. Next week a prom- national —campaign. Fifteon hundred | $Usfiec With L OIS | nent newspaper man of democratic tend- torm of office and will withdraw from the | e DA st Yinghampton, New York, ca and att 1 church. nts are quietly cles, which the esy forbids my giving aw him « very popular ber of the Preshyte engag mem- Several rumored in injunction of |* The contest for the judgeship isnot yet developed sufticiently to say anything | definit wboutit. For the other and mi- nor ofl there will be the usu; ay Shiclds wants the coun- of schools and John [ Facobs is willing to undertake the coro Inership. Doc. Smith can have the sur veyorship if he wants it and the chances are that he will,” | pop up rorge ty superintendenc I sce by a Nuckolls county paper that | senator nders is negot | purchase of 1.000 ac section of the uth Platte county friends of the senator will be ple | observe from this that he las re | | from his financial distress and th: ] A gentloman who s in_a position o | returns from Washington in much better | know tells e that Mr. Young, who is | civeumstances than when he went there. | Mr. Ganuett's successor as auditor of the | Senator Paddock too is still a real estato | Union Pacific, has entered upon his | purchaser and is carrying a dutics, and that thero is considerable un- | land in various parts of Nebra That casiness felt mmong clerks in his dejart- |is where the money is going to ba found, | ment as to whose heads are to come ollL | vight in farm lands. Thurston and Hall Now officials have a very disagrecable | in Omaha ave ko, 27 R Bl AL AT hankering after now clerks, and age and [improved lands in Noxthern Nebraska | experience do not often stand in the way | and Redick and Horbach have also pinned of removals, Gannett was a very (oing head of his department, and [ the rural districts | inmensely popular with his men, who | T respected his abilitios and admired him | Let Him Explain, | for his aflability, but some of the other | Buffulo Expross. | officials, 1 understand, claim that | The report that Pension-Commissioner Gannett — was “ little too | DunLey can, with his best exertions, suc- leniont and did'nt get as much work out | ceed inpayingout only £60,000,000 to pen of his force ax he might have done, al-|sioners this year, instead of the £100,000,- though my informant tells me, that the | 000 that he expected to pay, comes tothe genoral auditing clerks are wmong the | country in a tone that shows plainly the most efticient in the building, The freight | commissioner’s regret that he can go 1 auditing department, necording to several | deeper into the public pocket. It is not merchants, has had now life injected in | probable, however, that the people will it rpcently and long deferred claims are | complain if he neyer pays out more than being pushed through at a rate which | 860,000,000 a year, But they may want makos shippers stare. In olden times | to know how he could make such an ex anywhere from one'to two yeurs wis 18- | traodinary miscaloulation. He was giv quired for auditing claims i the U. Pui oy thousand extra elerks, at a cost of headquarters wnd the new regime shows | million dollars or more for sularics, on what was always claimed, that the long | his promise that he could then pay off the deluys v mevely the resule of ineom- | ponsioners at the xate of 100,000,000, potency. | Now he roports the tremendous miscal- S“Tom Hall is a good one, and don’t | culation of $40,000,000—that is, he pays you forget it," said anold - crony of the | off no faster with a thousand move elerks on-bounceable postmaster, as he cocked | than he did with the old number. If his feet up on one of the pillavs in the | the report from Washington to this efiect poreh of “the Paxton House and gazed | s been correctly given, Commissioner meditatively on Sam Brown's a tural curiosity across the streot. 1 was | to explain profusely. much amused at his card to the public | ———— about that little salary divy. Now, of Pufling Van Wyek. course Tom don't pretend to deny to his | Salin County Vidette, friends that he has regularly contributed | A republican excl $1,200 & year towards *‘political pur- | democratic of land in that| ul deal nl" eusy- | their faith on the advance of property in | are puffing and | po A" half a dozen lawyers in town | defending Senator V' will tell you that Thomas has steadily |so are the anti-monopoly pasen And | e as an excuse for standing off | the republican papers would do likewis king about lawyers, |if they had the courage of their convie- | John D, Howe ht Tom's debt bat- | tions, and were not owned body aund soul tles for him in the courts for a number | by monopoligts and politicians. When a of yeurs, and did it well, too, Tom came | republican sticks his hand into the pub- | off victorious in nwarly every out, and sury and takes what does not the buteher, the baker and ‘the candle- | long to hine Van Wyek calls such a man stick maker went out of court whistling d thief.” It's his frankness about for their money. But when John D. | these little discrepancies that the vepub- | came to wesont his own l,xll\lmn press does not like against \ for services e | — found that his client had got so in the habit of not paying bills that he refused to sottle with the attorney who had set tled his creditors, John was natu not altogether satistied with the ac- indignant, but he instituted suit for lis | tion of the republican foos, and way paralyzed when Hall plead | prohibition plank in its i the statute of limitations. Now you |18 charged that it selected mark 1y words, Tom has ‘beat’ almost | dates. This is equivalent to kee) s e PR g e e g e By S et e, s ey v Manderson’s plan of harmony yet, if the | ists the husks, When a political party senator doesn't buckle on his old swe deliberately runs off of the main line on and go out to a stalwart battle, to a side track it cannot ul,lx t to make | the usual connection: 'he political Lis old debts, Sp lic ks in Their's. Piiladelghia | The prohibitionists of Towa, it appears, to the city | — and a council in which a vote of 9to 31 T, votes on srldMOhe 1A AHE eltydoun. | s been socured by I cil are worth €1,000 apicee, what is the | don't know what means. W I chitee- | Dupky should certainly feel called upon | s says that the | DAY JULY 10, in Kansas City town lots Walter Evans, who died on hi Reading, ived | just returned from ¥ we knew it | take half the inter ropo and her s LWt <ome person blv out of shape to travel w more indignation among | With them, Tt muct be i the | The | married to Tt dot looki I from knaves we will appeal to the courts. | of color Itisnta question of these nine blocks | dark the fi 11 Ha camy; W N M [ & state we are all Republicans; and, aboy 1o b Judge Hoadley, the den for gover tive 5000 steal Senut n Wyck. Yos, and |41 1 am told that one of the reason's for | stuation in Towa is very interesting. nin. He o1d for presi either Two South (' and T Reprosen the natio to adopt a strong anti-monopoly platfor Com ical horizon as the probable nomi Indiana republicans for governor Colonel Ingersoll thinks the re-ele Arthur impossible, like to b sidon It is intimated thal Chalmers, it it into the Democ ; however. ting for the | Lim, cal association. It rom joined the ki n, floated over have to hear tl hief of a di tor Conger, of Michigan, has just’ scored another brilliant victory for reform within the 1883, PERSONALITI e that hie will write a book w Glenn is the boss farmer of Califor perhaps of the world, Her wheat ar will bring her in 2700,000, Ward Beecher r hus) nt, wrinkled, hroken | Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, Adats, Jr., has publicly ul Latin i Thix lition every farni near of ninety left it, s recently at the age that farm all* his railrond tea Swissheln i and though o strictly teing continully subjected to th dn drinker never owing very red as sy he does ricultire th is to be made e knows wl Sembardt passed through tly on her way to Copenhagen holm, <o had forty-six trunks full ne to the very hottor s hohby now is fine a picture e, which he has | American yo wly singer went to of M names wost te eross the Pring he Duke i like a wax sta a part rm hair, large, Juno, even her wistful ey timid an is will have no clections this fall general or local, rison, Lo Blaine are to make gn specchies in Ol mgressmen, Dibble for speaker. L of Color: wants onvention next year illman, ative Belfo republic: ioner Dudley looms upon the polit- inee of the on of He says the people don’t ave death suggest nominces for the hie will not 1884, We that Mr. Lod, Platt, of York, is ambitious to return to the et ate. It is safe to that if again he will not C. Butler, of S appointed a cadet at West f o republican o n shonld own son to West nt the demo- papers would be terribly agitated andidato for the preside confiden: sht. tic party. n the Democrats won't have | v politi- o Chalm Tar order The or the winui 1 thus atronage t ranks of the no Half-Br e of the in the Unite turned democ ngs, became a ito the now again_ demo d nathing | st, in their joint can hand, ix said to be hesif they want to judge tially of the contest, h on dy on the payrolls, o writories, and another rela- in the Treasury, Sena. by havimg his son Frank appointed wskor of Washington, with a year, Now, if o will g an Indian reservation the Michigan will be pretey nearly even with Lo, 1 nominated e Court by the ght years old, ved four years who has 1 REMEDY FOR PAIN. RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, , Lumbago, BACKACHE, | HEADACHE, T00THACHE, SORE THROAT, | And sl other bodily achies 4 A nd Pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Sold by all Druggists und alers. Directions 1o 11 languages. H. WESTERMANN & CO, TMPONTERS OF QUEENSWARE! China and Glass, STREET m22-3m St. Louis,fl Mo. : = W HOLHESATLER Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. MO, ~ STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED 0075, ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES A FULL LI i OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND AIL DEALER IN :Lmber, L, Shmoles, Piokets SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - 5 C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! ND DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Window (lass, OMAHA. NEBRASKA. OMAHA, NEB, DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF 1020 ¥Farnam Streot. Omaha. HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paoer and Window Shates. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, - 2 OMAHA NEB. - M. HELLMAN & CO, 'Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA, - - . NEBRASK SE l')('l.(l, :\'Al)'l'll‘h' TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTE 'TON TO Our Cround Oil Cake. It s the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Stock fod with and e in its merits. e One p ud is equal to three pounds of corn, all and Winter, instead of rin ing down ound Oil Cake in the ketable condition in the 5} Try it and judge for yourselves. GATE CITY PLANING MILLS! Carpenters’ Materials, | Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, & First-class facilities for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings, Orders from the country will be promptly executed. all communications to Planing sud Matching o specialty. A. MOYER, Proprietor. W. F. CLARK. WALL PAPER, PAINTER, PAPER HANGER AND DECORATOR, KALSOMINING GLAZING And work of this kind will receive prompt attention, CORNER SIXTEENTH AND DOUGLAS - & v