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THE OMAHA BEE.| Published evers mowning The | only Monday morning dafly VS Y AT except Sunday One_Year 10,00 | Three Months .00 Six Months One Month 1.00 IR WRRKLY KRR, FORLISIOD RVRRY WRDSRADAY. | TRRNS FOSTIATD, | One Yoar 2,00 | Three Month $ 0| 8ix Months 1,00 | One Month = American News Compans, Sole Agenta Newsdoal: | profits in almost every line of husiness, | Fepublican dailies of Omaha from rw in the United States ORRRSION RN CE. ations relating to News and Editorial | I bo addressed €o the Epitor @ Ti | ANl Business Tetters and Remittances should v-:»‘ addrossed to Tie Bre PORisinivoe CoMPAxy, OMANA. Dratta, Checks and Tostoffice orders to be made pay- | THE BEE BUBLISHING C0., PROPS, | E. ROSEWATER, Editor. Me. Hawt howls, but he will have to| Mr. Hall cares more ry than he does for the g0, all the s for the loss of sa loss of reputation, which he pretends is involved in his hasty dismissal. 11 is reported that President Arthur has abandoned his Yellowstone trip on to the govern- | \\'llvn: may the ground of its expense mont. This is refreshing, if true. the practice becomes general, we look for the wolitical milleninm Wiar is the trouble with the grading | o the bridge? on Sherman avenue @ Strect. Commissioner N te the is dangerons i b Crook has returned from Washington happy and the double star of amajor general's epauletts interests him more just now about aney would do | ondition of the after dark to st well to investig street which life and limb of man General than any rumors | the presidency. He leavos for | Arizona in a few days to teach the Chiri- cahuas Sunday observance, ——— Wuite Dr. Miller is shedding o dile tears over Tom Hall's summary tak ing off, he made haste to tender his per- sonal congratulations to Mr. with the that he was pleasced notl Coutant, well Thore s | assurance with the change. ing more despicable than an arrant | hypocrite, Tik latest eharge against Senator Manderson is that he promptly put a stop to a systom of addition, division and silence in the customs office that had been in operation for nearly ix years in the government building, That is a species of attack that the senator can bear with Christian composure, According to the Lincoln Democrat the Saline county papers that have an- nounced the appointment of one Dr. Paddock, of Wilbur, to succeed Mathew- 8o a8 superintendent of the msance hos- pital, do not speak by the card, Noth- ing of the kind has been done, and we judge from the tone of the expression at headquarters that nothing of the kind is contemplated. —_— ONE of the first fruits of the decision against the barbed wire monopoly is a|be proposition from the members of the com- bination formed by the owners of the patents to reduce royalties, whosoamount is nearly half tho prosent cost of barbod wire, and barbed wire to-day is tho chief | cost of turning Western plains into graz- ing urounds. Bossol cheapened railroads s steel, which has roatly, would have cheapened barbod wire fencing equally if | on that it were not for the royalties exacted by these patents, Auncinisior Puncer, the extended mterest which has followed the news of his death. | expensiveness of living and doing busi- THE EVILS OF PROSPERITY The country is now suffering from the wreat The boom of the three years, beginning with 1878, which followed the five depression after the panic of 1 results of too prosperity. years of tended by evils which are alone responsi ble for the present contraction in the smallness of volume of trade and the | With the return of prosperity came also [mails on account of - their system of pre a return of entravagance greatly curtailed during the preceding depression. The year 1880 saw our imports of merchandize which had declined from $625,000,000 in 18 to 8422,000,000 in 1878, jump to $656, 000,000, A larg crense was which had | been proportion of this in in articles of luxury. The noss, stimulated unwise production and The coun xcessive competition at home productive industrial power of the try was forced to the highest tension and mills and thousands of factories, en larged beyond the legitimate requirements of trade, flooded | the markots with their wares. Railway building mto sections where the pros rets of future growth were depended upon to float pr for teal estate and stock spec nt e | curitics, was again push cager haste ulation ence o all their old fi bcked only by chiefly b men of w s cnme to the front with hopes and maintaine sistless energy, appealed to alth and engulfed millions of floating capital ing the debt of its too great haste to get rich Magnificent harvests last y alone prevented n general erash and the weal I reserve of our agricultural inter ests acted as a dam to the current of disaster which threatencd to pre pitate emeral ery of warning another paeie. A went out. Product tailed and the ¢ on hegan to be cur. wing of many mills and factories was the result. But better and more encouraging than all, individual economy and sounder methods of busi- The large number of failures during the past six months have b the result ness were at once inaugurated o to a great extent of the enforcement of more conservative ways of doing business and a healthful m of credits, And the outlook is daily becoming more fav- orable as manufacturers and dealors take to heart tho lesson of the year. restrict THE EDMUNDS COMMI UTAH, If reports from Utah, ST0 AND fortified by in- terviews with various members of the Edmunds’ commission are to be believed, that body are having a hard time of it in | its attempt to abolish polygamy and inci- | dentally Mormon power in the home of the Latter Day Saints. Under the law, the commission has heen in operation for more than a year, fruitlessly attempting to solve the Mormon problem by statutory enactments and red tape regulations. A general rovision of all ghe voting lists in the torritory has nade with a view to excluding all sts, and the when county ofticors, sheriffs and mom- bors of the legislature will bo chosen in each of the twenty-four counties of the territory. The commissioners have now comploted the selection of judges of election, to ocoive and canvass the votes ccasion, and are resting on the ourw and awaiting the outcome. A mis- taken iden as to the extent of polygamous practices in Utah and a be- well deserved | lief that the disenfranchisement of viola- tors of the law would leavo tho chu ) prelato was | shom of its political power is largely re- ch ever moro faithful to his church and in | sponsible for the defocts of the Edmunds spiritual matters few have ever beon able | Dill a8 they are now discovered by tho to render a botter account of his stoward- | commission. Even the great calamity that | ship. Tho act provides that no orson guilty of polygamous practices clouded the lattor days of tho life of this | $hall be permitted either to vote or hold vencrable man furnished a testimony to | Office, and the cor missioners have con- the purity and uprightness of his charac- | strued this to disenfranchise any person ter. No loser thought of saying a word | Who has ever lived with more than one against the honesty of the good Arch. bishop. Ho was a g not a financier and his assistants unfor- d man but he was | this wifo at the same time. But even with generous interprotation of the act which bars out all the prominent was at- | | ums was voluntarily submitted to the de | er lottery paper came up later and it was de nd inflated schemes, | Betting theirmoney under false pretens The inevitable renction has set in and [ Nome and for six months the country has been pay- | 0 the Weekly Herald, with the assur- ;lunl by r rst real test of the | eret of our success. value of the law is to oceur on August 6, | advertising a good thing pays, and that Mormons, the Gentiles will bo in « heavy winority in the coming eloctions in every county in the territory, and the political tanately happened to be of his own pattern, Turkr states have held important po- litical conventions within the last month, have issued platforms and nominated officors. In Iowa interest centered around the prohibition question, and im- practical fanatacism has saddled upon the republican party in that state an endorse- ment of extreme sumptuary legislation which will certainly result in a large loss of votes and may secure the election of the democratic ticket. Both the republicans and democrats in Ohio have held conventions, and the temperance question will be disturbing influence there also, A wrotched dallying with the s sue of liquor taxation and the ‘nomination of s comparatively unknown candidate against a man like Judge Hoadley make the outlook for republican success in Ohio more than doubtful, Pennsylvania held her republican con. | vention on Wednesday and nominated | some unimportant state oflicers on a platform whose only plank that calls for conuuent is the one which demands the distribution of .the surplus treatury reve nue among the states, a plan whose chief | value in the eyos of the extreme pre tionists is that it would compel a mai tenance of the present system of high tariff for the protection of industrial mo- | roads.’ nopolists, " It may be noted that in every state ex- copt Peunsylvania both political parties have dodged as far as possibla a square expression of sentiment on the tariff issue, while in Pennsylvania alone the disturbing question of temperance did not force itself into prominence, power in Utah will still rest in the hands of ‘the church as fully as it now does. Meantime to add zest to the procoedings ten suits have already been brought against the commission by it Utah for illegal damages in each instance be- ing placed at $1,200. As the suits will be tried before Mormon juries who might natuarally be expected to he slightly projudiced, the situstion is by no means a cheering one and the com- mission has temporarily adjourned until the best legal advice can be secured from Washington on the subjeet. The Utah problem is a perplexing one and seems as far from to-day as it was ten years ago, ns of solution 17 sent a cold chill down the backs of the Ohio den hurman refused to endorse Judge Hoadly's nomination, ComMeENTING on the osal of Dennis Ke anti-monopoly conference, the Kansas City Journal says: *‘When Mr. Dennis | Kearney was vefused admission to the | anti-monopoly convention at Chicago, he declared that the wen composing it had | formed a ring ‘to blackmail the rail- | And he also announced that he would immediately organize & new party. | Ho has since mado two or threo speoches in Chicago, but he has furnished no proof to sustain his declaration about the | blackwmailing ring, nor has he made much headway i the organizmtion of a new | party. Mr. Kearney will agitate or do almost anything else, so long. as funds or summacy dis- by the national ne disenfranchisement, | acy ,when young Allen | 9velopment of new territory and pro- | nent member of the Brotherhood of the | | favored as agy are furnish e 5 but | tion of th 1 him to pay ex when the supp | Mr. | LEGITIMATE ENTERPRIRE Mr. Postmaster Hall has busied him | self very much in bearing tales to the | | 5 . | to be started, which is_to live and ac [ democratic organ concorning his attempt | 0 to get the department to rule out the tw serions questions o be considered with | reference to the future basis of a national currency, hut the Chieago conference displayed an incapacity for dealing with this problem, as complete at_ that whic 1t showed for any kind of political work censes he will cease Kearney is a fraud of the first water into the | different ference, through a process entire from that of the Chicago con mimndistribution among weekly sl WHE ik e feol alilce with fe scribers, This was evidently done to en- | gard to some great issuc. 1t will be the list the editor of the Herald in his own |offspring of men who know what they behalf. The lionorable bilk forgot to in- | want and who have some definite idea of form Dr. Miller that the question as to Conferer like that which has take place at Chicago are harmless, and the indicate a dissatisfaction more or less wide-spread with the position of present parties and the general course of public affairs, but they are utterly uscless as a means of concentrating opinion and pro moting the reorganization of political forces, the legitimacy our system of premi part it at the request of the publish f this paper, and that the solicitor of the postoffice department decided that it was in no violation of the atatute orof the regulations of the postoftice dq partment. Th of Patee’s THE NIOBRARA ROUTE, To the Editor of the Bee AupioN, Neb,, July 11,1 sce by the Bre that some sucker has invited General Van Wyck to « from Fort Niol cane bogus clared a swindle beeause he was conduct ing a lottery and mailing out a circular to ticket holders under the pretense that in fact it had me and see the country to Ra it was a newspaper when no subscribers, which the new star route lays. Now if | And while we are about it let ug ad- | the General accepts that invitation he «d with | vise Dr. Miller to sweep before his own | will come back better satisfied with the door. Tor years he has been imposing | course he has taken in exposing the steal He will say (and he can say) it more than | ever truthfully that he would not give | which, if practiced by any other busi- | one quarter section of his Otoe county upon eredulous advertising patrons and I ness man would place him behind iron | farm for the whole blessed country from | bars, L from 1 ge sums have been filehed | the Minnichaduza to Butfalo Gap for manufacturers | farming purposes. It is fit for nothing abroad for advertising | but a cattle ra - those who now oe- | cupy it, Tnc nd squaw thumpers. | The opinion appears to prevail among a | great many that the great American circulation than any other paper in this | desert is a sort of will-o-the-wisp which fact the publishers recedes back as the tide of emigration advances, and will finally disappear alto- gother, But let any one go from the nine hundred copies, of which fully two | Jead of the Keya-Palin ncross o the Republican, striking it some sixty miles above Culbertson and then make another start about fifteen miles west from Albion and take a_morthwest course, but nearly bona fide subscribers. west until he strikes the Niobrara, one profitable for the proprietors of the | hundred or one hundred and fifty miles Herald to print a blanket sheet and sell | above the fort, and if he don’t find all LRI i the desert he wants to find then T will ‘ 3 agree to set up the beer, and that is only than to pay for canvassers and traveling | % qen patch compared with what lays Now that the | beyond. How different is the course bubble has burat, and that advertiser \\hi;-h Va 'lltl]m' and the General pursue havobeen | in their official capacity. One votes fora ining o find out that thoy havobeon % R i iy R S E e then flocced, the /erald howls about lottery | ¢ 5 to get all the bones for his friends awindles, So far as the Bk is concerned, its ex. ants and ance and guarantee that it had a larger section, when in knew that they did not cireulate over hundred went to eastern advertisers, an other hundred to exchan and a b ix hundre 1 to farmers and other It has been more would brin, the sp agents and preminms. to pick that he can, while the General goes for a low tariff and to prevent all the stealing he can. In comparing the old R war horse's record the General's as a | sult of gift distribution. | representative of the H)(u(-p]c with that of bofore it ever ga o premium, the | Valentine and it is Jike comparing the WekkLy Bre lad a civeulation of over | vast proportions of Chimborazo with that three thousand, and it has doubled from | of a mole-hill. year to year to year by dint of hard work cellence | tensive weekly circulation is not th | Five years ago wing AN OLD SETTLER. ason of its e Supreme Court of Nebraska. WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1883, E, H. Waolcy, Esq., of Cass county, was adwitted to practice. Scales va. Paino. Leave granted to and a very oxtensive system of advertising. We have mailed out nearly 100,000 sam- ple copies every year, and wo pav large sums overy year to other papers for ad- | withdraw files. vertising our weekly. For instance, we | Simpson vs. Jennings. Motion for paid the New York Tribune $2 a line ;multiufunlnc‘;(ntvcrrulci and cause put at and the Toledo Blade $1 a line, and in | M6 G €O¢8¢t i 3 ono instanco 200 was paid. to Kellog's | see'and B Rl e o pany Vs EAIn, ter, and B. & M. railroad company vs. newspaper list and $600 o the Western | Chicago Tumber company. Continued by Newspaper Union. This and the fact|consent. sl that wo have published o paper that| Leighton vs. White. meots the wants of tho people is the se- Submission set, aside. The following causes were argued and We have found that | submitted: Brondberg vs. Babbott. Buckstafi' vs. Dunbar. Garland vs. Wells, B. & M. R. R. Co. vs. Schinetz. Er- ror from Cass county. Affirmed. Opin- ion by Lake, ch. J. 1. The owner of land taken for right of way by a railroad company having re- is probably why it does not pay the Herald to advertise its worthloss wares to people who do not want them, A Still-Born Party. New York Times. The announced purpose of the anti- monopoly conference at Chicago was to form a new political party, but no sooner | did the delegates got to talking that a wide divergonco of opinion was rovealed as to the expediency of attempting any- [, = 5% ' rou.on FRODS: WO I S an G i e Al “-53;, ;wululln.‘r uara in n..,l immediato objects of preiiminary attack was the ex- |Bo!8hbornood of the land, and who scem; e s sty of o country. bt | Upon examination, to be well informed ‘t'l'm vhm_‘ m_"“{N A B {.-x its situation, condition and value, ion existod among the delogates as to |, On the trial of a question of dam- what tho rovenuo system should e, (%604 for an injury to growing crops, Somo of them wore in favor of wbaolute | Reither science mor unusual skill boi froo trade, doctrine which no existing | fvo'ed the witnesses should be con- | tined in their testimony to a statement of political party is prepared to treat as | ] o8 et among the possibilities of the present or | ¢ facts showing the jury, and should near future. Others were in favor of carrying protection further than it hac | &1 LGB ever gone yot. For a set of men who PN o b proposo to fori u now party, the anti- |t AR van f',‘-;'_';s;g; Y monopolists have exhibited a remark- R koo ly th d hich able disagreement as to the basis on cos only those damages which may which it Bunuld rest | reasonably be anticipated upon the as- ] sumption that the road will be built and | operated with due care and skill, and with no unnecessary injury to property wutside of the right of way. An appeal from the award of com- missioners takes to the district courtonly those matters covered by the award, It does not include wanton or negligent in- juries done to growing crops outside of the right of way during the construction of the road. 6. The objection to an instruction that it is not sufficiently explicit, especially in civil cases, will not be regarded unless the matter was brought to the attention of dy thew, The problem of dealing with | the “"tl'l ;-uvurl'lfy u request for one that railronds in their relation to the public is | W44 Stisfactory. . . | Taylor vs. Courtney, on trial. one of great importance and difficulty, Court adjourned to Thursday at 8:30. but no man at the Chieago conference | qo™ AouImed to Thursday at 8: gave any evidence of understanding it or | e i of being able to suggest a method RUMORED TELEGRAPHERS' STRIKE. dealing with it. — One of the incidental charges made | No Confirmation of the Report Can be Ob- against the railroads was that they had | tained As Yet. stolen millions of acres of the public, New York, July 12.—No confirmation lands; but “stolen’” is & queer word for | of the report of strike among the oper- rational men to apply in this case, inas- |ators of the Westorn Union Telegraph much as the grants of land w made by | Company could be obtained . to-day. congress for the purposo of aiding in the | From the statements made by & promi years, who swears that he knows what it is worth, is & competent witnessfon the question of its value. 2. So, too, are other persons who to the amount of damages or loss o The only real bond of union amon, them scems to be a desire to bring rai road corporations under governmont con trol, but this is a subject with the intri cies and difficulties of which they show | no familiarity. They proceed on the as- sumption that the L corporations of the country, with their diverse and conflicting interests, constitute a mo- nopoly which lovies tribute upon indus- try and trade to enrich their managers | and controlling spirits, and that they | should be brought into subjection. But | denunciation is not & platform, and con- demning evils and abuses does not reme b. moting its settlement, There is no doubt | Knights of Labor, it would be inferred | that the policy was carried out on too | that no strike was imminent. This mem- liberal a scale, and that much wrong has | ber, who is at present in the office of the | been done in failing to enforce the for- | Associated Press, said that the organiza- | feitures provided for by law, The rail- | tion, which is s d 16,000 0ut road corporations have been too much | of the ph operators in - the ist the actual or would-be | country. At the last annual meeting of settler, But the cvils and abuse |delegates of the Brotherhood at Chicago, do not discredit the entire policy and are |last March, the Executive Committee not to be abated by clamor about corpo- | was authorized to secure an increase in ate stealing. the wages of telegraph operators, Ac D It e eacaoin make-up of the | cording to a newspaper, recently started conference, to which delegates from all | for circulation among telegraph men, and manner of associations were sent, the |tothe person referred m%m above, *dis- greenbackers were somewhat ruulpit'ur,cllaalnn" is going on among the brothers | ous, Their own party is, to all intents | over a plan for building telegraph lines | and purposes, defunct, and if there to be | under & co-operative stock company, to| any making of a new party they Y“T“ | be formed by the operators themsclves. to take a hand in it. But Greenbacker- | It is conceded, however, that no pros- ism has no real place in an anti-monopoly | pectus of the alleged sheme *in_contem- movoment. The national banking sys- | plation” is yut in type. It could not be | tom, ageinst which its hostility is just | learned whether or not the talk of a co- now directed, is as fad as anything could | operative telegraph system was & part of well be from a monopoly. In view of the | the work of the Executive Committee to THE DAILY BEE~*OMAHA FRIDAY JULY 13, 1883, national debt, there are very | It will have to spring from the | wictions of a considerable number of | through to th the means by which it is to be attained. | sid City, over | consid sided upon and improved it for several | not be permitted to express opinions as | STATE JOTTINGS, h . J | An onthit of men and teams from the y | cumseh Tine of the B. & M. camped north town Saturday evening to wor gap between Be and 1 waw actively commenced last week abont hal h h If ever a new political organization is f | way between the two places, and now that | the weather is favorable for grading the dir 1 will begin to fly all along the line, Work i | progresdug rapidly now on the Tecumseh lino anything, it will have to come | FURTCGNL TG 't Filley, fonrteen mile [ Jeatric by Thursday next T has been hadly washed Detween [ enst i scimseh, and the track will not be grad and | of July. ~ With good weather the entire line would have heen done by this time. [ 1 which was i ration was fini wrder to big_canon Shay Saturd harge much for ¢ ploded it bur Soward Repe Durring the terrific thunder storm last Fri day night the residence of 0. M. Carter was struck by lighting knocking off part of the chimney of the east end of the house and ing downward through the bracket on whi the chimney was built into the foor W of the Ashland Gazette, shipped to Creighton last ntractors for y wero taken to the This stock is purchased tee's from their lands ly stunned aped unl family ¢ | 106 horses wer Saturday by the g | the Santeo Indians th | agency on Sunday with money due th lin M ta, commenced on the W unty branch road 1 work is to be pushed th suid that a new town will be | days, about two miles south-west of Norris, W, B. Thorne, tr 3 ty, has just r penitentiary for embe Thorne was prosent ling connty funds. Mr. years old, s soventy when the and his wife entence was pro- official report makes the shortage of H, S. Lovejoy, 1 i of the land office at bondsmen will be this sum. Alice Gunn, aged fourteen, living n City, was burhed to_death by the exy of a can of il from which she Was pouring upon the wood in thestove. Fullerton has held a conference with Union Pacific officials relative to obtaining the build- ing of a rond this season. The result is aid to be sutisfactory. An attors misrepresonts “alls ing Water who was ts of this Fourth of last week. he B. & M T re )0 men ag work repni railroad in the Nemaha valley, and more are called for, Wymore is excit ing the Kansas DI limits, Long Pine and Ainsworth in Bro are at swords points over the count; tion, _Thirty-eight buildings have been erected in Valparaiso during the past four months. Cedar 3 i for direct railrond communication with O A bank has | the Char Charle last week in The railroad s 500 of tick une. Prairie chicken shooting will soon be in order throughout the state. Humboldt is bravely repairing her losses from the flood. The acreage of corn throughout the state has nearly doubled. Wahoo is to be made an international mon- ey office, Bennet has dedicated & new church. Carpenters are busy at David City. Fullerton has two church buildings. ——— Dakota Doings. Bismarck, D. T., July Justice Collins, who conducted the examination |in the Demore case at Mandon, gave his | decison this morning, discharging Mar- | quis Miller and Moore, holding that the homicide | the threats made by the O'Donald party, |who were escaping from arrest at the | time the shooting occurred. Copious rains fell in the Missouri river country last night, extending northward aver the prospect of hav- nal railway reach her n county (ques- Christian from a point two miles above Bismarck. The rainfull was light at this point. — News Notes. Mixxearouss, July 11,—Miss Parry, who was abducted from Syracuse by hor mother, lives here. 1t seems her mother | last winter drove her out of the house and she went to Syracuse, where she has been since. Her mother left here a week ago to Dbring her home, the girl having had £6,000 in property left her by her uncle. It is buli«-\'wf the money is the cause of her mother's to have her daughter back. PuiapkLpiia, July 11,—The Pro oters of the South Penna R. R. Co. hay appointed Dr. Hostetter, H. K. Twomb- v, T. B. Gowen, W. K. Vanderbilt and W. C. Whitney a committee to take charge of the comstruction of the line. All the stock is subscribed, Wm. H. Van- derbilt heading the list, with §5,000,000, Dr. Hostetter following with $2,000,000., — South American Notes. Lixa, July 11.—Therewas a prolonged thquake here yesterday morning at ). A letter to (ien. Lynch, dated Tarma, July 7, reports Col, Wriola dispersed a number of Montinegras i (‘.mw]lmnn. killing seventy | ing only one man. On the desire Gth he en- countered another party at Pacoa, kill- ing six, among them Col. Rios, sub-per- fect of Auga. Guavaquir, July 11,—A meeting will be held hore Sunday to receive applica- tions for the president, to be elected by vote shortly. AT meD FOR PAIN. CURE pumatien, Jogidg, St rapid reduction and the possible extine- | secure an increase in wages. rowiivns THE OHARI WA VOORLER. by Mr o last from thence through | Mrs, Wi, | was justifiable in view of the | | H WESTERMANN & CO, IMPORTE(S OF the U, P.| coln. ~ Work | Filley China and Glass, 608 WASHINGTON AVENUE AND 609 ST. St. Louis, Mo. s WHOLESATLR Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, | Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - STREET mee-dm ST. LouIs. Mo, STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, ‘Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOTS. 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. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLES LE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lah, Shingles, Py SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - - OMAHA, NEB, C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist ! AND DEALER IN Paints, Ols, Varnishes and Window (lass, OMAHA. NEBRASKA. P. BOYER & CO., DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTS, LOCKS, &, | 1020 Farnam Street. Omaha. - HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Will Paper and Window Shaes EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, 4 - 2 OMAHA NEB. ‘M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA, A . . A NEBRASK : GATE CITY PLANING MILLS! MANT ACT EKS OF Carpenters’ Materials, —ALSO— Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, &. First-class facilities for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings. Planing and Matchi ' Orders trom the country will be promptly executed. 1. akohing 8 eslely: Address all con And work of this kind will receive prompt attention, CORNER SIXTEENTH AND DOUGLAS - - MAHA, NEB SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Cround Oil Cake. It is the best aud chedpest food for stock of amy kind. One pound is equal to three nds of corn, Stock fed with Ground Ol Cake in the Fall and Winter, instead of Inuul‘ d::n, will lmm;w in weight. and be in #0od marketable condition in the spring. Dairymen, as well as Others, who use it can testify to ita merita. Try it and judge for yourselves. ~ Price $25.00 per ton: no charge for sacks. Address ob-eod-e WOODMAN LINSERD OIL GOMPANY, Caaa, Neb. s