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“ 4 THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA FRIDAY JULY 20, 1883, THE OMAHA BEE. Published every morning, except Sunday. The only Monday morning daily. NS BT MATL. £10.00 | Three Months 5.00 | One Month.... Ono_Yoar Six Months IR WREKLY BKR, FUSLISITED RVARY WRDNESDAY. £.00 1.00 TRRMS POSTPAID, e Year #2.00 | Three Menths. ... .8 50 S Monts 1,00 | One Month ...\ 20 American News Company, Sole Agents Newsdeal- o in the United States, TCORRRSTONDRNCR. A Communications relating to News and Editorial matters should be addressed to the Eoitor or Tik | O BUSINBSS LETTRRS. All Business Lotters and Remittances should be addressed to Tk BER PORLISHING CONPANY, OMANA. Drafts, Cheoks and Postoffice orders to be made pay able to the order of the company. THE BEE BUBLISHING C0., PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor.’ Mz, CriaspLer may rule the seas, but he can't control a New Hampshire legis- lature. Mavor Cnase, in days gone by, was one of the enjoiners, Now he is one of the enjoined. HaviNg assailed General Garfield’s character, Steve Dorsey had better retain Bob Ingersoll again to protect his own. T sentiment manifested throushout the State over the capitol contract steal is very ominous for the future of the office holders who helped to engineer it. Mace and Sullivan have been matched to fight with soft gloves, If they could knock each other out of existence in three rounds, the world would be happier. SERpES——— Mgr. Tiuoes says he is not positively a candidate for the presidency, but his ad- dress until further notice will be Gram- mercy Park, Now York. Tue avil service commission in New York are examining letter carriers. The size of the calves of their legs is an im- portant item which ought 1ot to be over- looked. Cuier Justice WAITE met with a seri- ous accidgnt on Wednesday in the Yel- lowstone park, being thrown from his horse. A bucking broncho is no respect- er of persons. StevE DoRrsey is expressing his opin- ion of General Garfield, Fortunately for “the great star router, the dead General Garfield cannot express his opinion of . Steve Dorsey. Cot. Trees, who is now on trial for duplicating his pay accounts, has been twice before charged with the same of- fense. In Col. Tiges' case it is likely to be “one, two, three and out.” TiLpEN sends two pictures to the Louis- ville Exposition. Ono is Huntington's portrait of Tilden, and the other is “‘A Hopeless Case.” The lattor refers to Mr. Tilden's candidacy for the presidency. PresipeNtT ArTHUR will pass through Omaha on August 2nd or 3rd. A copy of the last veto which Mayor Chase didn't sign ought to be shown him as the latest product of public improvements in a grow- ing city. Tuar notorious blatherskite, Denis Kearncy, has been refused a hearing by the New York Central Labor Union. Denis’ trip is proving a poor investment for the managers of the Central Pacific railroad, Omana will expend 500,000 in public improvements if a corrupted council and swindling contractors do not compel our citizens to oppose the letting of any con- tracts through a board of public works and a mayor in whom the people have lost confidence. Txe price of stock cattle is declining, and tenderfeet who, having been paying for herds of 2,000 head on the range which will foot up less than 500 on the round up, are beginning to feel very sick over the prospect. Tux astounding news, ‘‘General Grant dropped dead,” was flashed over the wires throughout the country. There was much excitement until it transpired that the sentenice was the cipher signal for the telegraphers’ strike. TweLve thousand telegraphers are on a strike and the stories of both the em- ployers and the men are before the pub- lic. The strike will probably end as most great strikes do in mutual conces- sions and a compromise. The sooner this result is attained the better it will be for all parties concerned. —— Tue sooner President Arthur relieves the country of Internal Revenue Collec- tor Evans, the better will ‘be his adminis- tration. Mr. Evans is a large bull in the department china shop, and the way the crockery is flying forbodes no good for the administration's peace of mind. A _man who openly asserts that he cares nothing for public censure is not a fit person to act as a high government offi- cial, S——— + A SHAMEFUL outrage has been com- mitted upon the American consulate at Monterey by a mob of armed Mexicans, 1f Mr. Frelinghuysen, who hasn't been heard of since his South American fiasco, has the spirit of u guat he will demand o prompt explanation and apology from the Greaser government. The reports of insults to American missionaries in Mad- agascar do not yet seem to have reached the state departinent and would probably be pigeonholed if they did. Mr. Fre- linxhuyne. shows off to a better Alvan- tage as presiding elder in 4 Dutch Re- formed classis than he does as the sec- | MAYOR CHASE AND THE JOBBERS. Mayor Chase has gone over bag and baggage to the jobbers and robbers in the city council. Tn becoming a party to the sand-stone swindle in the face of remons- trances from the leading tax payers of Omaha and the almost unanimous senti ment of his constituents he has lost for ever the confidence of this community Time was when Mayor Chase in spite of his known failings and eccentricities was looked upon as an honest man who would at all hazards protect the interests of this city. But Colonel Chase has fallen bad hands of late, and hisbest friends are into forced to admit now that he is not only a wreck but a dangerous man in tion he now holds, Our relations the posi with him have been cordial, but we are forced ! to voice the indignant sentiment of this | community at his betrayal of a trust. Mayor Ghase cannot plead ignc the character of dorsed, s of | | s en- | It is much n infamous than | If he had taken the counsel of our honest | business men half as much as he has of | the corrupt gang of shysters that are em- | ployed in engineering through this out- rageous defiance of public sentiment he would never have so disappointed his friends and erased his record by lending* a helping hand to bribe takers, scoun- drels and swindlers. It is not for us to say, at this time, what influ- eces were brought upon Colonel Chase to swerve him from the path of a plain duty. His condition for months past has been a source of deep mortification to his friends and of congratulation to his enemies, Ho has steadily avoided those who would have been his best counselors in times of doubt, and has permitted himself to be led by the worst elements of this com- munity, The result could doubtful. To those who have known the Mayor in his better days this sad ending of an | honorable if eccentric official record is | The only thing that remains | for our citizens is the protection of the courts, When their rights and interests were menaced before, Judge Savage stood as a bulwark between the jobbers and the people. We have no doubt that Judges Wakeley and Neville will as fear- lessly do their duty. not long be a sad one. SUMMER READING. Cartloads of the lightest kind of read- ing are now being issued by publishers all over the country, and the supply does not seem any too large for the demand. The wants of summer readers are pecu- liar. Nothing is desired that calls for the slightest effort to understand it. Hence heavy literature is taboved alto- gether and the light novel comes to the front, with colors flying. It matters not that it is trashy, so that it is ina meas- ure bright and entertaining If it be amusing as well so much the hetter. Clever and not great books are what is demanded. When the mercury is as- cending the thermometer, people prefer Rhoda Broughton to Thackeray, and consider life altogether too short to waste on Bulwer and the famous masters in the field of fiction. Nobody knows this fact better than the keen-sighted, experienced publishers, and they act accordingly. In winter, readors ar criti- cal and exacting, but in summer they are publishers take full advantage of their indulgent frame of mind. Bret Harte is particularly noted for this, and although he has almost written himself out at his best, his summer pro- ductions are always a thousand times worse than those he turns out in cooler weather. Socioty romances, love stories and fancy sketches have by far the lar geost sale when people escape from busi- ness carres and crowded citles to the country, the seaside, the lakes, and the mountains, Price has also a great deal to do with the success of a summer book. Readers do not wish to invest too much in a vol- ume they expoct to leave behind them in the cars or at the hotel. Form, too, is considered. Preference is given to those volumes shaped as to conveniently slip into the pocket or the traveling satchel. Briefness in the story and large type are further recommendations. Another is a telling title, for the summer book pur- chaser, is guided in the process of selec- tion very largely by the title, and will rarely take time to read even a page of a book before buying. It has been noticed that poetry sells less in summer than in winter, Indeed, some publishers assert that first cost cannot be gotten out of verse during the hot season and, there- fore, refuse to undertake them at that period unless the author pays for the stereotype plates, if not for everything. Works of travel, even if gossipy, do not succeed in summer, though an occasional peep into an acceunt of an Artic explora- tion might be refreshing, and sensational adventures share the same fate. Books of jokes take well, but after all, it is the frothy, breezy novel that goes with the greatest rush. Such works do not live from one season to another, but they abundantly serve their purpose while they last. Greatr preparations are being made for the president’s trip to Yellowstone Park. A large pack train has been concentrated at Washakie, and supplies and provisions and horses are gathering at that point. General Sheridan leads the party which is to “‘explore” the Park for the public benefit. Not to mince matters, this ex- ploration trip is nothing more than an annual junketting tour which is made by ‘my officials at government expense. It is small wonder that we hear every year of the niggardliness of the appropriat If there was less official extravagance in the army, the appropriations for the war department would go a great deal fur- retary of state of a great government. ther in their application to legitimate just the reverse, and both authors and | a thorough overhauling ly to get it before another congress has expired by limitation. AN APPEAL TO THE LAW. | Their petitions to the city council hav ing been rejected and their remonstran ces insolently spurned, the tax payers of | appealed to the courts for | Omaha | protection against the venal crew of job [ bers and corruptionists who are endeay oring to fasten themselves upon this com- ‘ | munity to handicap its progress and to roh its treasury.y Yesterday in reaponse to the petition of Messrs. Karbach and Frank, repr senting the property owners on Fifteenth and Eleventh strects, an_order restrain- | ing the mayor, council and board of pub m the streets men- | sandstone pavements tioned was served upon the above named The case will be argued on | officials. | the Holly job which he helped to block. | Wednesday, when the point at issue will | edge, and often, in speci tion on be- | be the granting of an i half of our citi s and against the jobbers and shar] of the sandstone ring. This appeal to the conrts is in every respectproperand timely. Mayor Chase’s | cowardly surrender to the jobbers took away the last hope that our citizens had of blocking this corrupt scheme without appealing to the courts which once before saved Omaha from her own officials, It was hoped that our community would be saved this last and mortifyingresort. But the necessity having a second time arisen the case will be prosecuted with all the energy which marked the fight against the Holly ring. In the face of such an utter defiance of both the spirit and the letter of our city charter, as has been exhibited by the men who have determined to force an obnoxious paving material upon our citizens, we have no doubt what the result of these suits will be when calmly and deliberately passed upon by an hon- est and intelligent beneh. The outcome | will determine for years to come whether Omaha is to be governed by the will of her citizens or ruled by the passions and cowardice of unworthy and dishonest of- ficials. IS THE QUEEN INSANE? It is openly asserted now in London that Queen Victorin is insane. A cor- respondent of a leading New York paper says that the statement is now “coldly, calmly, openly, dispassionately discussed by partisans as well as foes, by flatterers and scoffers, by the staunch adherent and fawning courtier, no less than the violent anarchist or the red republican. The mind of the queen, not her body, is affected. Her eccentricities have taken upon themselves a name, which is only a synonym for insanity. The lurking taint in the Hanoverian blood, the dementia twceable to the line of the Georges, bursting out ever and afresh in some wild or wicked freak, now seems to have unmistakably overtaken the queen.” For years the selfishness and eccentric- ity of the queen have been matters of duily comment. Erratic fancies, sudden caprices, unreasoning dislikes and uncon- querable obstinacies have been her lead- ing mental characteristics. These have now culminated in a sudden and serious attack of protracted melancholia, Like her royel great uncle, the mind of Vie- toria is now clouded with undisguisable insanity. Several reasons are ‘given for the queen’s mania, In the first place, the disease is hereditary in the Hanoverian blood. But this last and painful out- break is undoubtedly attributable to the death of John Brown, her favorite gillie. For years, it is said, the queen has believed in the doctrine of the transmi- gration of souls, and has persuaded her- self that the spirit of the dead Prince Albert had settled in the body of John Brown. It was for this reason that Vic- toria lavished her sympathies and affec- tion on her servant and braved all public comment and private remonstrance. The death of John Brown has been followed by the appearance of symptoms of acute mania, which the queen's physicians have vainly endeavored to conceal from the public. It is on this account, if the correspondent of the New York Sun is to be believed, that her majesty hus been withdrawn from all in- tercourse and absolutely secluded fro any eyes except those of her own house- hold. The hints of the leading London papers are ‘now turned into unconcealed rumors that the queen of England is hopelessly insane and that many months cannht elapse before the prince of Wales will be called upon to assume the re- gency. Blaine's History. We nhave the pleasure of nnnounui‘xfi the approaching issue of a great historic work, covering the events of congress for twenty years, and giving an inside view of national legislation and contem- porary administrations during the most momentous period of American hi-wr‘y, with introductory chapters showing the remote aud immediate causes of the civil war, As for the period chosen,only that of the revolution is comparable in inter- est. Even that of the revolution boasts no pre-eminence, In both periods alike, the national congress was witness to events not less tremendous and decisive than those of the battlefield itself. The upholding, in due measure, of the union cause at home. The defense of the national cause abroad; the adjustment of constitutional conflicts; the securing of practical guarantees of future loyalty; all that was included in the province o congressional discussion and enactment, | in the period from 1861 onward, The | proclamation of war; the call for troops; | the issuing of national currency; the act | of emancipation; the confederate surrend.- | or at Appotomax court houso; the grant- | ing, at last, of universal amnesty; the . | murder of Lincoln; the purposed assasin- ation of Seward; the attempted removal of Stanton; the impeachment of Johnson; the eloction of Grant. the electoral com- wission and seating of Hayes; the inaugu- ration and assassination of Garfield; those |of the natic [ho gives | “Of which 1 \ - c works from contracting for Colorado |and in the Speaker’s Chair of the House, | time,” says The r | o den | sos. Our military establishment needs | were but incidents of the time, with | their. protection.” True, but the very z And it is like. | meanwhile, the questions of established |trees you plant for a protection are just reconstruction, resumption, national debt, national taxation, and the development 's resourses. Such is the period which, on the congressional side, finds its first full history at the hands of Mr, Blaine. His work has no predeces- sor; we are confident it will have norival, For, if the period chosen is unsurpassed in interest and importance, so is the chosen historian especially fitted for the historian’s work. tant from the events themselves to insure cool perception and deliberate compari- son. In the prime of his powers, and untrammeled by the constraints of office, himself wholly to his great task. On the other hand, he possesses that absolute knowledge which comes from actual, influential participa tion. It is his great fortune to be able to say with impersonal, historic truth was part.” On the floor and again on the floor of the Senate, he witnessed the he now places on the historic page. No import ant action was taken without his knowl al council, he learned those related facts and underly ing motives which gave the action its true meaning. Accordingly, the statements of Mr Blaine, corroborated by both external and internal proof, will possess an au thority which will not be questioned. Even those who may differ from his estimate of men and acts will yet be in- debted to his narration, and will be in- terested in his views. His personal reminiscences and portraits of Lincoln, Douglas, Seward, Chase, Giddings, Hale, tanton, Breckenridge, Sumner, Wilson, Garfield, Fessenden, Raymond, and many others of the past, with inci- en still living, will give to Mr. work, to young and old alike, the fasci- nation of biography and general history combined. Such a work, thorefore, as that proposed, from his hand, is the lite- rary event of our times, It possesses greater combined political, historical and personal interest dmn ny other work of the century. It will be every student of modern American his- tory. It will finda place in every library. It is sure to be one of the most popular, as well as one of the most valuable books ever offered to the publi welcomed by Dorsey's Batch ot Lies. New York Times, Fora year or more 8. W. Dorsey has been seattering from Washington, through the columns of every newspaper to which he could get access, n series of charges against the integrity of the late President Garfield. The President, being dead,was an object of attack exactly suited to the courage and capacity of Dorsey, who by dint of repeating lies to which his dead vietim could not reply, hoped finally to make an impression on the public mind. As he knew thathis own assertions,though under oath, would not be believed, he has tried to strengthen them by threats that he would publish certain dam letters which, he alleges, came int possession as secretary of the republican national committee in 1880. He has at last succeeded in getting all the ancient and fish-like stories that he has started strung_together and published in the New York Sun under the head of “An Abstract of the Budget of Stephen W. Dorsey,” and accompanied by as ingenu- ous editorial, which sceks to give to Dorsey’s rubbish some sort of dignity. This is nuts for the scurrilous star route thief, because it gives him an apparent standing in a decent journal which he has not for a long time enjoyed. Itis a dirty piece of business, however, in which he has entangled the Sun, which, in its zeal to strike the republican party, forgets what is due to its own re- putation. Were it really necessary, in the interest of historical truth, and pres- ent and future good government, to blacken the name of the dead president, it would be a painful task for any honor- able journalist, to be undertaken only on convincing evidence, from reputable sources, capable of being sustained by public use of documentary proof. But when a journal takes the unsupported word of a revengeful scoundrel whom its own columns have shown to bea robber of the treasury, a faithless senator, and steeped in corrup- tion, and on that word, without produc ing one line of the documents which he pretends to possess, seeks to destroy the memory of % president, it surely sacri- fices to partisan feeling much that a re- spectable journal holds sacred. It would be attaching more importance to Dorsey’s stale stories than is worth while to exam- ine them in detail. They have been be- fore the emblic for months, and they have produced no effect whatever upon the minds of impartial men. His uncon- campaign of 1880 has been exposed long since, and to any one who cares to compare his conflicting state- ments they defeat themselves. So far from being the trusted director of that campaign, he was throughout a suspected busyb The greatest labor for which he is responsible was the labor he im- posed upon the persons interested in watching him to prevent an outbreak of his unconquerable fondness for treachery. The Republican party and the present administration are fair subjects for search- ing criticism from their political oppo- nents, but the effort to reach them by joining a disreputable wretch like Dorsey in defaming the memory of President Garfield is neither decent nor shrewd. Fruit in Nebraska. Fairfield Herald. Fruit in Nebraska, has been a question with many ever since the wul‘l:;?' was first settled, and though the orchards here aro yet too young to demonstrate this fact, the orchardsin the vicinity of Crete, nbuuk: forty miles east, are older and give promise of & good crop. Apples raised in that vicinity heretofore, are said to have beex s fine as any raised in the fa- meus orchards of New York, The finest orchard we have yet seen in Nebraska, is that belonging to the Crete nurserymen, about three miles out of thecity. In all, they have 60 acres in orcl , fruit of overy variety, and for every season of the year. The Crete market was supplied with cherries during the cherry season and largo quantities were shipped daily to other towns, Mr. Stephens informed us that their daily . sales averaged about 840, Their apple harvest will be a profit- able one, and at the trifling expense of an orchard, every farmer in the country should have one. There isno doubt, that if the stock of trees selected has been raised in this climate, and properly plant od and protected, but that fruit can be raised us successfully in Nebraska as in custern states. No investment can be wiado that will enhance greater value, and roturn a greater profit than the amount of money and labor invested and expend- ed on an orchard, If aman wishes to sell his farm it will command a higher rice and find more ready buyers, Some say, “If I buy fruit trees for an orchard, I've got to plant forest trees for On the one hand, he | stands, at this present, sufficiently dis- | scionable brag about ‘his part in the | _ y | First Mortgage Loans a Specialtv | what you want, and in time will ‘oubt |less be even more useful than the fruit | trees themselves, while the only expense |is the planting and care. The trees in | many of the orchards in this vicinity were purchased of the Crete nursery, and | a8 they have wiade rapid growth, it will | only be the matter of a litlte time until - |it will be proven to the satisfaction of all, that Nebraska can raise as fine fruit and | i Gl China and Glass, | Some of the prying gossips of Wash- | ington say that President Arthur contin. 608 WASHINGTON AVENUE AND 609 ST. ues to send flowers from the white-house St. Louis, NMo. as much of it as any state east or west. ‘ | conservatory to Miss Beckwith, the e W EOLASALR H. WESTERMANN & CO, IMPORTERS OF STREET used to associate his name last winter. The New York Truth, in this connec tion, recalls the fact that the only lady | of the white house who e od it a8 a| | bride was Mrs Tyle s at that | A beautiful young d accomplished, | and became a great favorite in society. | President Tyler paid her marked atten- |tion that winter, and when the family re- [} | turned to Washington the next season the | " SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, | Tt was hustened somewhat by the sud- | Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. MO, | and sad death of her father, M!m \\':l? (;;::‘ STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., Wholesale Grocers ! 1 on board the Princeto The mar- AND JOBBERS IN | riage was performed in N ork a few months before the president’s term ex- | pired, and bisastad fnorensal ttantion b from the fact that the lady was the first | who had ever entered the white house a bride.” Here is a precedent for the pr sident, and he might as well set the gossip-mongers at rest by following it. Stock Shipments, Laramie Boomerang. At this time last year the shipping sea- son was woell entered upon, but as yet no range cattle have been sent to the Chi- cago market over the Union Pacific. In the western plmr-l of l\Vymuing some cnttlio were gathered for shipment two weeks < e heyonmo stodtmn, "at "ty | FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOTE roved so ‘‘green’’ that they were turned 5oas galis i Messr i Eiuaa: & Xvanh also visited North Park a short time ago witha view of beginning their usual shipments, but did not do so for the same ND ALL GROCERS’ SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. Erohers huve andored cam forthe 5tk | AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO instant, at Ogellala, and theirs will be| the first train load sent in 1883 to Chi- | TR B B over i Foma J. A. WAKEFIELD, | about 19,000 during the season. Once WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN begun a very active shipping business may be looked for. As the season is to : : be shortened by a month, and the num- ber to be shipped is about the same as lst year, the market will be watched closely by many interested stockmen of [] ) ] ¥ PR SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - . - OMAHA, NEB, tences commuted to_vacations with re- C. F. GOODMAN, . duced pay by his Fraudulency R. B. | (3 Hayes. 1t is a pity that Mr. Schurz did | h 1 1 Dru 1 ‘ not call attention to this scandal while he H was a member of the Hayes cabinet. —— Why Didn't He ? Chicago News. Mr. Schurz prints a long list of army officers sentenced to be ignominously dis- missed the service in 1867, '78, '79, and '80, all of whom, however, had their sen- - - AND DEALER IN What Can the Matter Be. steal in any branch of the administration OMAHA. NEBRASKA for the past three days. 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 Wall Paper and Window Shaies. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, - . M. HELLMAN & CO.,, Wholesale Clothiers! 11301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA, - . - ‘This Company furnishes » permanent home institu. tion where school Bonds and other legally issued Mu- nicipal Securities to Nebraska can be negotiated en the most favorable terms. Loans made onimproved farms in all well settled countics of the state through Ld responsible local correspondents. ev It He Has Luck. New Orleans Picayune, The assisted emigrant of to-day may be the millionaire of the future. He will be if he has good luck in politics. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relieves and cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, | HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS, And all other bodily aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Sold by all Drogglstaand Dealers. Directions in 11 inngunges. The Charles A. Vogeler Co. OMAHA NEB. NEBRASKA LOAN AND TRUST G0, HASTINGS, NEB. Capital, - - $250,000. er. DIRECTORS: Oswald Oliver E. C. Webster, Jus. B, Heartwell, D. M. McElHinney. Samuel Alexander, A. L. Clarke, Geo. H. Pratt, NEBRASK MANUFAOT EKS OF Carpenters’ Materials, —~ALSO— Nfl “ l] Il fll B fl“k Sagh, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, &¢ First-class facilities for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings. Planing and Matching & specialty Qrdoes 1208 4o oxsintey Wil b, pousaeay SN e A. MOYER, Proprietor, OF OMAHA, Capital, - - $100,000.00 C. W. HAMILTON, Pres't. wrskio, e BIOUTRS. Carriages and Spring Wagons, ]e‘c‘:‘:g“"“:‘:‘:’"";;:‘? and kept sub My Repository is constantly filled with a select stock. Best Workmanship guarantecd. Certificates of Deposit issued pay- | Office and Factory S. W. Corner 16th and Capital Avenue, Qmaha able in 3, 6 and 12 months, bearing | interest, or on demand without in- | ™ terest. | | Advances made to customers on | | approved securitiesat market rate | of interest. | The intorests of Customers are | closely guarded and every facility | compatible with principles of I sound banking freely extended. | Draw sight drafts on England,ire land, Scotland, and all parts of Eu- rope. Sell European l"an-go Tickets. Collections * UNITED STATES A. K. DAITL.RFY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Cround Oil Cake. Itis the best aud cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn, Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, instcad of running down, will increase in welght. and e fn oo marketable condition n the sring. Duirymon, us well s Others, who use 1t can” testi . its merits, Try if ¢s. Price #25.00 per ton; no charge for sacks. ddress e Y 4 and Judge for yourselven. “Frice B KX PTINSERD ‘OIL COMPANY, 0-Bvny, ) p