Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 18, 1883, Page 4

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THE OMAHA BEE. Pubtied evers morning, except Sanday. only Kewday morning duily. R BT AT £10.00 | Three Months 5.00 | One Mdnth The One_Year Six Months IR WRRKLY RRR, PURLISIED RYRAY WRDNRSPAT. THRNS FOSTTAYD. P 2.00 | Three Months $ 50 3’:’;}‘%. .| 00 | One Month, 20 American News Comparty, Sole Agents Newsdeal ers in the United States. fconRmsroxDRNCR. A XCommunications relating to News and Editorial matters should be addressed to the Rotron or Tra Brr i 200 1.00 YTHE TREASURY SURPLUS. ‘mmu- and experiment with them. Tt Gur national revenne is derived from |took & of . years to ac mational taxation, the internal taxes, and | complish the work, but he succeeded and the customs taxes. A surplus revenue, |in 1874 the silk industry of F then, by which is meant a revenue more | reached than sufficient to meet the annwal needs | number ce had 1f now he if he | its old proportions grapples with the problem, even of the government in its various depart- |does not fairly su ments, the requirements of the sinking | to pave the |fund, and to pay the appropriations } future scientist THE OPERATORS DLMANDS, The telegraph operators of the ceuntry through their trade y for the success of some made by congross, always stands for a surplus of taxation. Thisis a plain propo sition, and no mazy discussion of the ne- | cessity of the tariff as a protection to in- | won, the tel graph ed, he will be likely | j RUSINRSS LETTRRS. All Business Teteers and Remittances should be Tire BRR PORLISHING COMPANY, OMATIA. Drafts, Checks and Postoffice orders to be made p able to the order of the company THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS. | E. ROSEWATER, Editor. dustry should be permittéd to cloud it The tariff is a tax, and it is no less a tax because it is paid indirectly by the people who consume the articles upon which it Bet from the inte; is levied. sen the moneys derived wal and the customs taxes, the national treasury last year derived £133,000,000 more than was needed to meet every demand upon the govern Jonx Roach and Bill Steut ought to join hands, » contract in the country would then be safe. ment. This was the awount of the — treasury surplus for 1883, For the pr Fraxce will apologize. French dip- [ ceding year the surplus was&145,500,000, lomacy nowadays consists chiefly in |Both these sums represented excossive saying a thing once and taking it back |taxation, and were used as an argu twice ment before the Forty-Seventh —— congress, by which the proposi Sexator Vay Wyek has come and |0, to reduce taxation was gone, but Mr. Hall docs not appear to be | yupiorted. As a result the internal any more cheerful than he was before the | \ovenue taxes were cut down about senator's arrival. £45,000,000 a year and the tariff was Sm— revised to make what was supposed M. CiHANDLER seems to have stepped | yoy1d amount to a further reduction of into Senator Rollins shoes in the New | g5 000,000, It is difficult to estimate Hampshire senatorial election. pear to fit him exactly. They ap- what our surplus will be at the end of s in a position to know, believe that it may reach §100,000,000 of which £40,000,000 will be required for the sinking fund. This would leave £60,000,000 of taxation th and the question how to dispose of it the fiscal year just begun, but offi Sevex states in the north hold elec- tions this fall, of which the republicans confidently expect to carry five. NewJer- sey and Ohio are doubtful. for which o is no reasonable exc Ir is about time for Wiggins to be | heard from again, His deferred storm appears to have scattered itself over six months of ¢ will come up hefore the next congress as forcibly as the same question came up befor The advocates of extreme protection the last session. es and tordadoes. understand that our treasury surplus will again be advanced as an argument for alley's are circulating freely with stone | tariff reduction and are racking their blocks decidedly n ithe lead. The sand- | hruing to dispose of this troublesome stone ring do not need to be told what | stumbling block. The New York Sun the people think of their worthless trash. | which Dikhak - BF reformers advoeates the of the internal revenue PrririoNs for materials for paving the leads one re nue entire ADsUTANT-GENERAL DRUM pronounces | aholition Robert Lincoln the best secrotary of war | taxes, while, Wharton Barker and the we have had since Jefferson Davis. He | ponngylyvaniarepublicans demand that the in modedt, industrious and keeps a wateh- | yrplus shall be dividod ful eye over every portion of his depart-| iy proportion to population. The aim of ment both is, of course, to maintain the pres- ent tariff, and to dispose of one of the greatest arguments against the system of among the states Carrrow steals and school land jobbery at Lincoln, together with numerous other exhorbitant protoction. official and party delinquencies, are cut- | Nithor of these plans will be endorsed ting down the republican majority in Ne- |10 common senso of the It braska at a rate which ought to alarm ita | pyeo e’ e e friends, as it doubtles in a cause for cheer | | ickest way of meoting the problom is to its opponents. to reduce taxation. people. surest is excossive, Freo trade, however defensible in theory, cannot become an shed fact in this country within the present generation. But the tariff can and ought to be reduced many mil- lions of dollars, and those duties main- tained which will produce the greatest revenue-with the least discomfort to the people. The tariff can yet be cut down at least 825,000,000 more without entirely disposing of the treasury surplus. Such a reduction would still leave n great deal of incidental protection to American in- dustry. And this will be found to be the fairest and most popular plan of disposing of the treasury surplus, 3 Kz it before the people that nine out of the twelve councilmen dare to defy public sentiment and disregard the pro- tests of their constituents in veting for paveing material that has been indig- nantly repudiatez by the property own- ers of Omaha. accomy Storm and hail have done a large amount of damage in the south Platte county but the ruin is not likely to prove as extensive a8 some of our farmers in Cass, Butler and Saunders counties now imagine. In a week or two accurate news will show the earlier reports to have been greatly exaggerated. ey TR Tue latest. advices from Washington Wi the break in the prices in provi- | Show that Postmaster-General Gresham sions retail dealers should give their cus- | has not excluded lottery companics . from tomers the benefit of it. The butchers | the use of tho mails, nor has he made especially should not Le backward about |81y decision on the question of the legal- coming forward with reduced scalo. If|ity or morality of that description of prices go up or the great wholesalo mar- | Pusiness, nor even considered it. Al Kets small customors hear from it right | that he has done has been to sustain the away. When the market drops they|action of Judgo Keys, under Hayes, de- ought to be informed equally as soon, | nying the Louisiana Lottery Company < the use of the mails at New York and Tuose eminent business men who deal [ New Orleans. That company will sim- in adulterated farm products will proba- |Ply be forced to do its New York business bly realizo before long that thoy have |8t the Jemsey City orsome other post- overdone the business. Right or wrong, | office, and at the nearest postoftice out- it is made the pretext on which lard is [#ide of New Orleans. Well may the likely to be excluded from Germany, and | lottery companies say they are perfuctly other governments wiil probably find it o | satisfied with Judge Gresham's action, convenient pretext when they wish to | S0 misleading have been the reports sent “protect” a home industry without com- | from Washington that the department mitting themselves to prohibitory tariff, | has been plied with despatches for infor- Other nations cannot be blamed for ox.|mation. There has been an apparent de- cluding real adulterations, when the Uni- |8ite to give tho country tho impression ted Stated have shut down on adulterat. | that lotteries, us illegal and corrupting edtea, Getting rich by cheating often | bgencies, have been forbidden to use tho has serious drawbaoks, and it is all the|mails. Actuallp, however, only at Now meaner becauso the innocent must often | York and New Orleans has the Louisiana suffor along with the guilty, Company been excluded, and not as an illegal or a swindling device, but for cer- tain irregularitios in transacting its busi- ness. The action of Judge simply defines how lottery companios BrookLyN has her bridge, but a suit to decide whether it shall not be pulled down or reconstructed is now on the iresham | { | supreme court calendar, This is the old Miller suit, originally brought to prevent the construction of the road-bed of the bridge. The applications for preliminary injunctions were refused, and now that the work is completed and Judge Blatch- ford himself has gone forward to the su- preme bench, the plaintiff will have up- hill work. The strking of masts, which is necessary in the case of those over 135 feet tall, is expensive, and the ground for a change is that congress pro- vided in its bill that it “‘should not ob- struct, impair or injuriously modify the navigation of the river.” The answer is made that the secretary of war was au- thorized to inspect and modify the plans, may transact business through the mails. What Judge Gresham way hereafter do touching the character of the companies, and their right to prosecute their business through the mails, is unknown. He may not be favorable to them and to their right to use the mails when the question comes squarely before him, Pastevr, the celebrated French nature of cholera, guished & world of science. France Between ices to 1853 scientist, who proposes to investigate the has rendered distin- and to the and 186D the silk product of France had di- ers’ Brotherhood, have made a deman for higher wages and intimate that a re- fusal on the part of the teleg any will be followed [ Boiled down to a small compass the fol | lowing are the principal demands of the men ed g First, that the operators be grad- cording to their ability, treating men and women alike, and establishin standard of pay, to apply to all op regardlens of sex; se | a fixed ators nd, that the sala; | ries now paid be increased in the respect- ive grades at least 16 per cent; thrd, that eight hours bo made a day's work 1 fourth, that no Sunday work shall be Un- der the present system the night operat ors are obliged to work Sunday nights without extra pay and the day and seven hours a night's work, anc | done without extra c npensation. serators It demands of the operators are sweeping, but it does have to work on one Sunday in six. will readily be not so readily appear that they just. ““Equal pay for equal service” is surely a fair demand, and if, as is assert- ed, wages are from 20 to 26 per cent lower than they were before the panic of 1873, an 15 per cont can scarcely considered unreasonable, The work of a telegraph operator i Iaborious and exhausting. It is as much skilled labor as many other branches of industry which pay better wages. The increase of be {men, and there has been a steady decline in salaries without a corresponding de- crease in work., For theso reasons the aperators feel that they have a good case [ in asking for an incrense in wages, espec- | ially as the cempany which employs them iis the most prosperous in the world, CONFIDERATE BONDS, A new syndicate has been formed in London for the purpose of securing the | payment of the confederate bonds and a | number of prominent Englishmen have connected themselves with the schem The syndicate have issued a prospectus which sets forth that the spirit of re- pudiation is fast disappearing in the late in'unhnlcrnw states, and that with returs \g prosperity there is a growing d position to make terms with all their creditors. The opinion is expressed that through a proper understanding among the several satis- factory scttlement of the confede bonds may be reached. classes of creditors a ate Fifty thousand dollars have been suby market has already been made for the bonds in London, and they are salable at one or two per cent. of their face. It is asingular thing that men like Lord Penzance, Mr. Bruce, M. P., and Gorst, M. P., should lend themsolves to such @ scheme. They ought to kndw enough to know that these bonds will al- ways romain what they are, a dead loss on the hands of their holders. Whatover may be the present or future condition of the once Confederate states, these honds will never be acknowledged. However well disposed the people may be to pay their debts, and however ready they may become to wipo out any stain of repudia- tion now resting on them, there is an in- suparable bar against any settlement of a debt incurred in and of their late war against the Union. The fourteenth amendment to the national constitution declares in positive terms that ‘‘neither the United States nor any state shall as- sume or pay any debt or obligation in- curred in incurrection against the United States, all such debts, obligations and claims shall be held illegal and void.” That en- tirely disposes of the fate of the,Confed- erate bonds, “illegal and void,” according to the highest law of the land, and no power can insure their pay- ment, or rebellion * * % but They are — Wirs all the smoke and fume over the paving question, thero are two or ‘three facts which cannot be argued down by the jobbers and ringsters of the city These that the charter leaves to property owners the determina- tiou of the material to be used in paving in front of their lots; that a majority of property owners on the cross streets have designated a certain material to be used; that in plain defiance of public sentiment the board of public works proceeded tolet contracts forpaving to parties whose mate- rial had beenrejected by those mostinter? ested; and that in spite of an overwhelm ing remonstrance and protest from prop- erty owners on the cross streets the coun- cil by u vote of nine to three contemptu- ously rejected the petitions and clinched the action of the board of public works. These wre the plain facts, and taken in connection with the open charge that bribes have been offered councilmen for council, are ; hours are long, especially for the night | | | minished from 65,000,000 pounds of co- coons to 10,000,000, from a disease among theiv votes, they furnish sufficient OCOIDENTAL JOTTINGS. San Francisco is to have a new $20,000 | wharf, Tehama county, Cal., has tax roll of $7, 319, 3 Lincoln was almost destroyed by fire on the 10th inst. (here are fifty-one prisoners in the Sacra- mento There aro 200,000 acres in grain in Los An gelen county Three young otters were caught near Stock- ton last W 3 Truckee has organized a citizens’ movement ngainst tramps Reports from Downierville give good news of the gold mines of that place T county 8 wchool children in Fresno number 1545 are boys The contract has just been awarded for the w insane asylum at Stockton. Lost, $139, already Dbeginning to attend the triennial jars ar Francisco Arrive at S conclave, Heavy fires provail in the mountains in Sis | kiyou county, California, and the valleys are filled with de , rondering it very | sultry | A Chinaman caught a sturgeon weighing 165 pounds in Feather river, below Oroville, lst The fish pulled him overboard, but he | was rescned by his comrades, le on the extension of the } he surveys m; Oregon and California_railrond, have | abandone New proliminary and:location wur are now heing made from the terminus near Redding to the Ore Ostrich chicks are hatchi | farm near Anahe th | When th | about the have good appetites m line gou ate of o " aut of the o they alf-grown duck i grow rapidly | Montana. | Lumber is worth $160 a thousand at Cook | city | . Downs & Allen have 8,000 cattls feeding in Montana, en millions of money s represented in 1 stock men, v ranchers are threatened with a grasshopper r The Drum Lommon mine at Butteis to have a sixty stamp mill, A clond burst at Butte last week and did considerable damage, A new and important coal discovery has made in Gallatin county. Dillon, on the 13th, will vote on the propo- sition of a 26,000 sck Helena Masons will erect the most magnifi- cont Masonic temple in the territories. \ gold quartz discov I odgo o khown nssaying ol house Yam ty, fine 2,000 per rom a Hill, near | specitiens of ton. ugs of Mullen tun- v ght foot last week. At the presont rate of progress the weot in the heart of the mountain - will occur within the next five weeks, Helena colebrate acific with g One of the A the arrival of the North- enthusiasm on the 4th. of the celebration was the ture of b with 1,200,000 15 of bullion worth 350,000, uriv nd Alta Mountain reduction W I are turning out fifteen tons of bullion daily, New smelting stacks, to be added this season, will increase the 4ln\|l.|n|t'.v| about thirty tons every twenty-four hours, Oregon and Washington. ixtensive forest fires aro reported from the t sound country. The daily output of the Columbia rive mills is about 650,000 feet. The authorities at Dallas, Or., have decid- ed to purchaso a thousand'doliar hand fire engin In Wall, T saw- losper- I bed and placed | ate : named ‘Adeer was killed by a in the hands of trustees for the purposo | fHerifl® posse, - who attempted to capturo | b | of tracing and securing the co-operation | 1o, y or fifty convicts made a break for lib- {of all confederate bondholders. A | orty from the Orogon Penitentiary Tuesday. Three we made the excape. It i estimated that not less than sixty of the roughs and thieves who were noti by the Astoria Committec of Sa toleave that place have gone to Portland. The Northern Pacific Railroad Con tend to at once proceed with a rail line along the Seattle (W. to the uorthern part of the oy, Prompt wmeasures by the City Cmmc‘.flm closing of the saloons and the fornigtion of a ance committee, order and put a stop to lawlessness in Astoria. The Oregon Railway and Navigation Com pany’s Palouse branch extension has boen I to & point thi f’-fiuv miles east of Palouse Junetion, Or. The work will be pushed at the rate of & mile a day. A strike among the fishermen along the Lower Columbia is reported. The cause of the strike is the refusal on the part of the can- nery men to pay 90 cents per fish, The cannery men say that the fish are too small to pay so much for them, An organ i on_in being effected in Wh com, b fit out an expedition to the rich gold districts of the Nooksack and for the pur- poso of exploring the leighta of Mount Baker, d o b »ping the min es that the expedition is being fitted out. A sspector who recently ventured to the snow Mount Baker was rewarded by finding eral fine nuggets. That there iy gold in paying quantities on the head of the Nooksack is 0o longer ques tioned, Utah. Provo’s woolen mills are to bo enlarged. ng news throughout the territory con- dull and very little prospecting is in ross. Salt Lake City averages twenty-four arriv- ing and departing trains daily. At present this beats Helena by a majority of seven. Zions Saving bank was robbed on the 9th inst. and the hurglars were captured on the 10th. One proved to be the son of Apostle Rich, The Utah Powder Company’s works, located at Ogden canyon, exploded on the 6th inst., blowing the building to atoms, instantly killin & man named Porter aud injuting P other workmen" For the first time in history Salt Lake is the scene of a railroad war of rates between the new Denver & Rio Grande and the Union Pacific. The latest cut was $7 between Omaha and Salt Lake over the Rio Grande. Arizona, ‘The survey of the southern houndery of San Carlos reservation is in process, Tombstono hay had a hurricane which dis. turbed roo red the dust considerably, Arizona and New Mexico have been made & single Internal Revenuo district, with 8, A. Fisher as collector, The postoffice at Phoenix issued 800 money orders during the quarter ended June 30, 1883, Aggregate amount in dollars and cents being #18,000. The Navajo Indians will have a wool clip this year or 800,000 pounds, The and pelts that they will handle will amount to about 600,000 pounds. lled, two wounded” and seven | o have restored | large quantities on tho | wiles of Whateom | g | mines in Amerion, A pound and & half gold | nugget was picked up in the ssme mine a few | days ago.—Silver City Enterprise | H. WESTERMANN & CO, IMPORTERS OF QUEENSWARE! China and Glass, e Eeran of | 608 WASHINGTON *AVENUE AND 609 ST. St. Louis, No. nces in silver and 42 | Dry Goods! Colorado. Greelay is now struggling for a fire depart- ment. ment of Gunnison connty amotnts 715, Jefferson county warrants are selling at two per cent premium 8500 reward for the ned in the Grand | county murders The Holy Cross ¢ mpany recently made a valuable strike on Homestake mountain, run. | ning 260 in gold. o from the n g per cent lead to t The tront canght i this season | ore while they the Gunni ason by Weld o lone produces annually three quarters of lion pounds of wool, and the entire state several million pounds, The Tabor well;in the is flowingz at the rate of 145 11,100 gallons per hour, or day The Poudre valley will prod arger crop 50 per cent this year than ever before, The N ig and Little Thompson rivers | deny pera house, lons per minite, 100 gallons per are eve or than on the Poudre, lode locations have been county in the past year, from | July 1. 1882, to July 1. 1883, nimber ) does ot i It s a pretty | good showing for new ries in Boulder . "y county. railroad company with has increased the pay of con- | ductors and brakemen on its lines in Colorado. Passenger conductors from the first of July get 8100 per month, freight conductors and brakenien 865, tor T ez croft, with 1 Matchless mine at Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, ST. LOUIS. MO, abor, who ha A Tam O'Sk 1 Lenard, the ulville, just examined the | nter mines at Ash anager of the | i highly pleased. STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., He says the Montezuma has’ 23,000,000 worth | ' of ore in sight and the group is worth 86,000,- | ro ers 000, That he is anxious to furnish somo ° smelter 35 tons a day of rich ore, In all proba- | bility & ymence hauling his ores to | the Wheeler sumelter soon. AND JOBBERS IN Wyoming. (FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOT ¥, '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, 1 WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Laramic river, near Cooper, was discovered | 2 Lmber, Lath, Shingles. Pi Wyoming vast plains were never carpeted SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- in a richer green nor her flowers in greater profusion. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - v OMAHA, NEB, Laramio is discussing a sowerage systom. Stockmen feel blue over the drop in cattle | quotations. Ore from the Silver Crown mine assays 60 per cent copper. Coppor ore has been discovered at the base | of the Squaw mountains, The shipping season will be a little late this year, bat cattle will be in fine condition, Cheyenne banks now refuse the trade dollar. Laramie banks continue to take it at par. Work on the Laramie soda works has been ayed somewhat by the lack of material e and firebrick. Eagle Mountain mineral belt is about twelve by sixteen miles. and a large number of promising leads have been discovered al- | aws, about 8250 worth of belt- \age donoe to the machinery, = of his mill near Laramie | ’ Bill Nyo, who has been off duty on the | Boomerang for nearly a year, has returned to Laramio much improved in health. Al unite | in congratulations to the genial humorist. Fred. Meyer, =i Wholesale Druggist ! livoke|throtigh ths floor 6f $hs | Kitohen, | which D DEALER IN was old and rotten, and fell into an old_well | Q Leneath, and was drowned before he could be | fl“]‘ gotout. The coroner’s jury censured um} Ui owners of the house for allo ) ) Rl y 1 - allowing such o man b P e OMAHA, NEBRASKA. P. BOYER & CO., ua\pvrnn- brought in from the Gadsden DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. Cheyenne. 1t will he FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFE, VAULTS, LOCKS, &. xistence, containing 55 per cent. 1020 Farnam Street. Omaha. per, Professor Stanton will ar one on exhibition in a few days, JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Shades. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, - 3 M. HELLMAN & CO.,, Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA, - . - Idaho and Nevada. A city election was held at Boise, I. T., last week. ~The Republicans carried the day and re-elected Penney for Mayor. There are three hundred bridges on the Utah and Northern Railroad between Ogden and the month of the Blackfoot river. Since the passage of the new Drummer- licenses law in Nevada there has been paid nto the State Treasury the sum of $4500 for Ticenses, The new game law in Idaho is very : No buffalo, deer, elk, antelope or mountain sheep are 0 be killed between the 1st of Janu- ary and the 1st of September of each year and at'no other time if killed to obtain their hides or to ship their carcasses out of the Territory. A Piute Indian killed his squaw in Butte valloy, White Pine county, Nev., last week, and the tribe lynched him—not after the American plan, but after a style of their own. They lussoed him with ropes and after drag- ging him around for a while hitched the rope toa horso and dragged the murderer around over the mountains until his body was mangled beyohd recognition. OMAHA NEB. BERMAN REMED FOR PAIN. c N RES ¥ Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, He e, Toothache, GATE CITY PLANING MILLS! MANUFACT 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 Matchis Orders from the country will be promytly executed, ¥ d Mticg & apechally dress all communications to Thront, Swellings, Nprains, Braises, b jodfh | Ne: Frost Bites, FAISK AND ACHES, ify Ceatsn bottle, 'BELLEVUE COLLEGE. Synod of Ne Under the care of the Presbyte: Classical and braska. Beging September 104 Scientific courses with preparatory department; also, Musical and Art Departiment, all open to both sexes. Tuition low. ~ Location beaufiful and healthtul. Only nine miles from Omaba on the B. & M. R. K. Ad a circulars, PROF. W. J. BOLLMAN, Bello- ¥18d-cod m&edw2m A SPECIFIC FOB Epilepsy, | Spasms, Convul- slons, Falling Sickness, St. Vitus Dance, Alcohol- | A. MOYER, Proprictor. A. K. DAIT.FY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE z 7 ounds for the widespread popular indig- ism, Opium Eat- | At Phoonix, Saturday night, two masked Buggies, Garriages and Spring Wagong, This he did by commission, and allowed the silk worms which had bafled all ordi- [ nation over this shameless job which un. | ™en entered the store of Ben Goldman and, Ing, Syphitlis, : 5 o 5 [ B it | T e it | BABOk oroe mt”n“:u“m"::':l: ‘l ;sl:::l:.;tnu : I"'lul'{f ‘““[l 'v‘|.‘tw1~ AP et Scrofula, Kings | o My lllu;,m.;_x is m-;mwnuc...mm.u select stock. Best Workmanship guaranteed. [ facts before him. If the supreme court |of agriculturs commissioned Pasteur ‘to | the citizens of Omaha A conventi Ty ety v Dy Rioed | gliloa and ragiery - Corner 16th and Capital Avenue, Qmaha ) should decide—a very remote possibility | investigate and report on the disoase, He — | o a3 exprossion o o {a, Nervousness, | g i SPECIAL NOTICE 10 e T i ~that the bridge i not within tho law, | acceptod, rganized o “burcau” and wont | A Beasonable Pubtication. Atlutio and RN adache, | RPRCIAL NOTIOR T0 il e av “se's soln , 4 The 2 book on “Mackinac Island,” | sidized by legis y ot i 0 Rheumatism, . congress will either have to pass a special [ to work, He had first to study the ua. | The little ac Iland, " | sidized by legislative enactuent in the sum of ieumatism, o 0l i is Aol or| e of (o e, i what i 900 D O Michigun Contrl i, (50008, E0 B e Wi B et s | GrOwers of Live Stock and Others, ki) authorize the raising of o arch o 200 | stances it lowrished; whother it was con. | 41 mailed free on wpplication to O, W. | 1yqe Deon discon cred 1y o Aricona s of the | Aidney Drowbles and [rregularitis. $180. " | WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO { . ggles 10, ) . lorado river, i g . o & | el v 4 “l = o, £} feet. The only other alternative would | tagious, and if 80, how communicated; | aworthy of 1omon)jduite inferesting, | Colorado river, in the Buckskin mountains. | wgamarltan NEN e s dotg wouders. g and if i [and worthy of perusal by all. Thosecond |Thero are petrified trees twenty inches in DF. d: O, MeLomoin. Aloxander City, Als. | < beto pay vessels dawages. This the |whether it affocted the quality of the |edition has just come ont. Claimoter and there is not a bush that s not | 1 feel it my duty to recommend it-0 | ur c / | captaing would enjoy in dull times, eggs and amultitude of other facts. 1t| | Pabriiod: the sugebrush and "gram being all | 0 o e D, ¥ Laugnfln, Clyde, Kaases, | roun | a e. { | BLRL: Wb thair wmen o ate Compare the dose and quantity of Hood's was & huge problem, aud one stop in the Hov. J, A Bdio, Beaver, Pa. | solution was to import oggs from China, that were known to be free from the di- It is the hest and cheapest food for stock of any kind - | Btock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter. | and be in good marketable condition in the spring. its merita. Try it aud judg for yourselves. Price Correspondence freely answered. For testimontals and clrculars send stawmp. The Dr. 5. A. Richmond Med. Co., St. Joseph, Mo, Sold by all Druggists. wn | o One hundred pounds of gold was clesned up Sarsapa sanolusivenraof | u ounds of gold was cleaned uj arsaparilla and you have conclusive proof | ¢ % A e I3 fast becoming known as one of the richest gold One pound is equal to three pounds of corn, instead of runaing down, will increase in weight. rymen, as well &s others, 'Who use it can testify to 0 per ton: no chargo for sacks, Addross WOODMAN LINSEED OIL COMPANY, Omt iy, Nob H masts every day, # job that costs from i $00 to 8500,

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