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i A 4 i A ——————————————————————— THE OMAHA BEE. Published every moming, excopt Sunday. ‘The only Monday morning daily AN BY MATL. £10.00 ; Three Months ......85.00 5,00 | Ome Month... 1.00 One_Year Six Months IR WEKKLY WER, PURLISIED EVERY WEDNESOAY. THRMS FOSTPAID, One Year ... 82,00 | Three Menths...... § 50 Six Months. 1.00 | One Month . ... 20 American News Company, Sole Agents Newsdeal ers in the United States. PCORRESTONDEXCR. A ICommunications relating to News and Editorial matters should be addressed to the Eniror o Tik Brr BUSINESS LRCTERS All Business Leteors and Remittances should be addressed to Trn Beg PORLISHING CONPANY, ONATIA Drafts, Checks and Postoffice orders to be made pay able to the order of the company THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS. | E. ROSEWATER, Editor. ArtER all the and hail, Neb. raska will harvest the largest crop in her history. Pourricar enthusiasm drops as the thermometer rises, and even editorial in- terviews fall flat on the listening car. Omana wants more light, but it does not want to pay double the rates charged other cities of its size and population. T rush to the mountain and seaside continues, but an_ editor on a vacation still remains as great a curiosity as the bearded womat Mr. Gourp laughs heartily over the telegraphers’ strike; but he may change his tune if customers of the Western Union hold it legally liable for damages on account of delays and mistakes occur- CONTENDING FORCES. machinory and the general use of ste and electricity as motors have revolution ized the worlds of labor and commerce Individual offort has been supplanted by concentrated capital. 'Che trades whicl formerly employed millions of skillec mechanics under a host of employers ar now carried on by huge corporations anc men of immense wealth. The individua his wages or throws him al The tendency of the of employment. age is tows and centralization of power. The rail road, the tele af industry are monopolized by million ph and every great linc aires whose sole aim and object s the [ heaping up of more wealth. Asa conse quence concentrated capital is met by organized labor, enforcing fair treatment by the with labor from active service. drawal of a8 often resorted to on trivial grounds, cause. the Western Union and its ten thousand skilled operators may inflict irreparable loss upon the commercial and industrial classes, besides causing great inconve- ring, in consequence of its failure to | nienceand confusion. Whilethe telegraph transmit dispatches promptly and cor- | company has vast capital at its command rectly. | e — | | Less than three weeks remain before the petitions designating paving materials | to be used in our alleys must be handed | in. Property owners in the districts or- dered paved should lose no time in indi- cating their preference in terms that will | leave no loop hole for another Colorado | stone job in the city council. To talk of immediately paying off the | national debt is buncombe. The debt | cannot be wiped out until 1907, when the last of the bonds mature. A portion is payable now, and another portion in 1891. If the entire debt could be cancelled in | the next ten years, it would be the height | of folly to borrow money at from 6 to 10 per cent to pay off bonds which carry interest averaging less than per cent. | = | ArTER a long dispute the pool agents | at Chicvgo have definitely decided upon the status of the tomato. A dispute as to | its freight classification having arisen, a | majority has finaly settled that the| tomato is not a vegetable, qut a fruit, | and it must hereafter pay thehigher tariff | for freight under that class, If the rate | had been higher for vegetables, the rail- | roads would have readily fallen into line | with the botanies. | Tue Philadelphia Zimes has sized up.’ Torrectly the situation at Greystone in| the following language: ‘1. Mr. Tilden | will gladly accept the nomination for the | presidency—if he can get it. 2. He will write one of the best of political epis- tles, to be read in convention, declining the nomination—if he can't get it. 3. He will continue to maintain his proclaimed indifference about the presidential nomi- nation, and prove that he doesn’t care a button about it by—doing his level best | to bunch a Tilden majority in cenv, The foregoing three points cover the whole ground of Mr. Tilden’s attitude on the presidency, and all other reports are | bogus. Copyright not applied for.” THERE is something more than a mere question of paving materials involved in the present contest between our citi- zens and the council. The issue is sim- ply one of honest government, and the suppression of jobbery and Tweedism in Omaha. We have entered upon a sys’ tem of public improvements whose ex- tension and completion means the expen- diture of many hundreds of thousands of dollars, The contracts already ord- ered and now pending aggregate nearly $500,000 and the next five years, if the plans mapped out are carried into execution, will witness great strides on the part of this city towards a metropolitan ap- pearance, But future improvements de- pend entirely upon a favorable public sentiment. Our charter has wisely placed in the hands of our citizens the voting of the money necessary to extend public works. The powers of the council and board of public works in this respect are merely supervisory, and no funds from those raised from ordinary taxation can be collected for paving and sewering purposes. 1t is safe to say that if the decision of the courts upholds the bold defiance of public sentiment which has been hurled in the faces of our citizens by the present city council, no more bonds of any na- ture will be voted by our tax payers until every rogue who has disgraced his con- stituents in publice office, has been retired to private life. The council which is su- perior to the demands of the people will not again be permitted to disburse the. moneys raised by taxation for public improvements or to disgrace the name of this city by corrupt collu- sion with jobbers and plunderers. If Omaha is met at the very outset of its new career with a combination whose only aim is to enrich itself at the expense of the city, our tax payers will take good care that the opportuuities for such swindling schemes shall be as few as pos- sible, The success of the ringstérs in this case will mean a stop for several years to come of public improvements in this city, and ns disposed to inflict any amount of injury upon the public, rather than to yield to the demands of the operators; the latter also profess to be able to hold out for an indefinite period. 1t is assert- ed, and on good authority, that the oper- ators are a branch of the Knights of La- bor, who number a million and a_ half of members in the United States, each of whom will contribute toward the support of the strikers. We have here, then, a war between the two giants of consolidated capital and organized labor. Tn such a conflict the public may be compelled for its self pre- servation to interfere. The control of the telegraph must be regarded as a great trust and not as a piece of property to be manipulated for stock-jobbing and spec ulation. The American people are enti- tled to the full benefits of the telegraph as much as they are to the unobstructed use of the mails. They will not long submit to paying money for messages ubject to delay” andliable to mutilation by the bunglers who are filling the places of competent operators. Even if the present conflict is satisfactorily settled, the people will insist that such strikes shall not occur again. They will demand that congress shall either purchase the telegraph lines and annex them to the | post office or that it shall create courts of | road. arbitration with absolute power to settle disputes as to wages and hours of labor between capitalists Such and workingmen. courts do exist already in nd and France, and their workings have proved satisfactory. So far as the telegraph is concerned, the onmly true | remedy is the purchase of the lines by ; the government. It is unsafe for any country to trust its telegraphic system in private hands, and the more general i‘s use, the more dangerous the power con- ferred. But the fact that the Knights of Labor, who now embrace a majority of skilled labor in the United States, are backing the telegraph operators, must | convince every unprejudiced mind that sooner or later the country is likely to be convulsed in a struggle between capital and labor that will shake it to its founda- tion, unless prompt and effective measures are taken to avoid such a calamity. Cuaries A, DANA isin favor of Wil- lism Hollman, of Indiana, for the presi- dency on a platform of “the republican party must go.” N TALK I had occasion to interview several of our leading merchants on the paving question and was much ‘struck with the tone of their answers to my questions. The expressions of indignation against the course of the council were unanimous and the opposition to sandstone universal along the streets which have been order- ed paved with that material, But with very few oxceptions, heavy shippersbegged that their names should not be given as opponents of the Colorado stone. *Don't TOW quote me,” was the ending of at least a lmu deservedly met with a success which dozen interviews. Said one of our heavi- est wholesale merchants: “‘It is a gigantic scheme for swindling our peo- ple which is being forced through by open bribery and corvuption, but I be ruined in business by are engineering the job, sign for sandstone in d as 1 would like to, take an open hand in seen too many men ken up by fight ing the railroads, ' But don't sonal and business influence to bear upon our merchants on this pay | ing matter. | the principal railroad bulldozers and they have been cracking their whips over our heads for the last six weeks, is a8 far as 1 dare to go. trained their shot guns on the cous to the paving ordinances One of the yreat problems of this age |me of mvention and progress is the adjust- | ment of the relations between Iabor and |y EE G T What kinds capital. “The introduction of labor saving | and shoes we are to wear, hanic has now become only a part of a great machine which fixes and regulates gother out | und ds concentration of capital | Trades unions and la- | known by his connection with Union bor organizations are pooling issues and Strikes, which ought to be the last resort | box and he genel of underpaid and overworked men, are and hardship is inflicted upon both capi- | charge.” talists and laboring men without due - The strike of the telegraph operators has aroused the country to the fact thata | was organized with too many stockhold- conflict between a great corporation like |ers, and that with ten original members e not denounce it publicly, and scores | struction in the Public Schools,” by the of merchants in Omaha are in the same | Rev, Dr. R, Heber Newton, who offers boat, Why! Because we do not care to | a practical scheme for convering ethical u sin g the | i enmity of the Union Pacific officials who | tenents, and the Rey. Dr. Francis L. T refused to | Patton, who maintains that the Bible he first place, al- [must be made the bas though I was very much pressed to do so | ing, by Horace Newnian; but 1 cannot, much theso injunction proceedings. 1 have | tains that they should be re Another shipper said to me, **Every per- | ex-Surgeon possible | is a caustic discussion of has been brought by the railroad officials | nervous organization which in his opin Shelby and Newman are | participation in public aflairs. d ! 1 refused | particular his doctrines to sign for their miserable stuff but that | tenure and rent. The evils s Failing in bull- | from “Crude Methods of Legislation," dozing themerchants, the railroad officials | both national and state, are pointed out il by Simon Ster and brought down nine men while Muyor | adoption of o Chaso was captured by threats of impe- | procedure which, in English practico, achment if he dares to refuse his signature ALY WAL Davay WAL AR ARUN A U msr A an Ay o “But for Heaven's sake don't quote ' This was the universal ending of all conversations on the subject. One | shipper said bitterly, “The railroad will clothes v years v | they compelled us to purchase our ™ coal | | from the Bock Springs mines, they con {trol our elevators and stock yards and | [inform our citizens that they shall pave | their steeets with no material in which | |t ompany is not interested If l]yni 1| Holly scheme had succeeded the Union | Pacific would have had its fingers in our water works system with as the | 1| chief fugleman. Cushing's letter book I |contained some curious promises from | | Shelby in reference to the assistance | which the great corporation prep: to give the sharks in carrying the elections curing a city council which, like the present one, would override the | wishes of the people.” | | ““Things have got to such a pass now-a- days,” said a prominent lawyer as he sat in front of the Paxton the other evening, | “that we need a detective in every im- portant trial to watch the jury. There are two or three professional jury fixers in Omaha, One of these who is well | Pacitic politics, particularly when the foreign vote is to be affected is always re- tained in eriminal cases by a prominent attorney in our city to look after the jury ally does it in good shape too. A properly taken care of jury is better for the defendant than a score of lawyers and the best kind of a judge’s The death of the short lived Omaha club has called out a good many com- ments. The general impression is that it the chances of its continuance would have been iuch better than with fifty. The scheme was too magnificent at the start, and called for too large an expenditure of mon The experience of other institu- tions of the kind has shown that a small beginning makes the best ending. There are o good many pilgrims to of late, to feel the political pulse and to get pointerson the supreme judge- ship. Candidates are beginning to be as numerous as blackberries in the month of July. A prominent member of the legislature from the western portion of the state was in town the other day, and reported that John M. Thurston had tendered the supreme judgeship to Ha- mer, of Kearney, who hasbeen connected with the anti-monopoly wing of the republican party. As a maker of su- preme judges John hasn’t been a pro- nounced success. His atvempt toseat Hay- was a rather dismal failure,not to mention his early trials when he ran for district judge of this district and was beaten by Savage. Speaking of Savage reminds me that there is an undercurrent in his favor among democrats, who beliove he could be elected if he was disposed to run. “Way down deep,” said a politi- cian from Wahoo, ““Judge Thurston will pull for Rees, when the time comes, al- though he has encouraged General Dil- worth to place himself in the hands of his friends. The general has a slight recollection how John nominated him not m and had Judge Max- well walk away with his scal, Among the lawyers, the judicial campaign cuts a very big figure, but the weather is alto- gether too warm to excite much interest among the people. The wholes | tors on the U. of feeling am le discharge of the conduc- aused a great de sther employes on the have been some dis- honest conductors but there are more rogu s among the spotters than among the ticket takers. In fact there would have to be spotters to spot the spottersto keep them from pocketing money that they pretend to pay to conductors, | To discharge worthy men on the mere | report of lureling sneaks, is to putan undeserved stigma upon their families. “Why don’t they let out some of the bosses in U. P headquarters, who have been getting rich out of all sorts of jobs along the road?” said a man who had been very high up in the U. P. road. *“There e five men up there who pocket more ry month than the whole army of con- ductors do in a ; but the spotters don't trouble them very much. Some day some of these honest and faith- ful servauts will retire with a for- tune, and their families will point with pride to their remarkable business suc- cess. LITERARY NOT THE MODERN AGE. Many people regret the fact that the treasures of foreign literature are inac- cessible to them because they have not mastered foreign languages sufficiently to ward in the place of the late Judge Gant | ¥ the mischiefs of ill-considered law-mak ing. Charles F. Wingate writesof **The Unsanit Homes of the Rich,” and there is a joint discussion of ‘‘Science and Prayer,” {,\ President Galusha Ander son” and Thaddeus B. Wake Pub. lished at 30 Lafayette Pla w York, and for sale by bookseller: nerally C— PERSONALITI Admiral Porter is said to be a naval dude Dennis Kearney admires George Francis Train. So does | Senator J. Brown, of Georgia, drinks out of | « pitcher instead of Dr. Mary Walker long enough to get ole Dr. Gree Apple lives in Wisconsin Sour is supposed to be his middle name M. De Lesseps wants to dig one more canal before he dies. He always bets on spade | Charles Wyndham, the actor, was not ghed at in “San Francisco, Hence these Elko, Nev., has Chir oly. Hop Sing has purchased works, Another postoff called Hatton has “Hatoff.” “Ouids,” the averwe Sho than one novel a d. Daniel O'Connell's hirthplace is a neglected ruin, It must look something like o one prosperous mining town. Mayor Carter Harrison, of Chic beon called o buffoon by Henry V Jartor has not yet challenged Henry. John Arsenal Knox, of Texas, will herea fight all his duels with a paste pot_and a pair of scissors, says the Philadelphia Press. Oliver Wendell Holmes is a bitte of superstition, but he carries a hor in his pocket as a protection from rheuma- tism. Mrs. Carlisle, wife of the |\'|~n|.urky_:~nu. gressman, is taller than_her husband, with a rod-dish complexion and Scotch-Irish type of features, Tabor, Woated monop- the water » which ached to Dbe d to be content with itk as, is suffering from ly tried to write more is president_ at Jast—of He will exhibit a congress and one of his »o 50 night shirts Henry James s sp: en of by a London news- paper as “a cultivated Yank without imag- ination.” When Mr. James read that he felt as if he had the “jams, Proc t, governor of Ke fiery snowy white hair », and_beautiful blie eyes The national colors are all there. The Grand Duke Nicholas Constantinovitch has been arrested for interference with the du- ties of the governor of Turkestan. Part of his n the excitement. The Marquis of Landsdown will sail for Canada in October, and assume the duties of . He will bring with hiw his heavy under-clothing and ear-nufflers, Mus. Charles A, Dana is a charming lady, d fair yes, dresses conversation- o on the wings of morning and will try to lose himself in the continuous woods where rolls the Oregon and liear no sound save the murmur of lis own lectures. Duke di Pipaldi, who has just died in Rome, where he owned the Fornesina Palace, began life as a scullion in Mawshal Nurvaez’s kitchen, He then became a barber, and_then a lover of the vulgar Queen Christina, who made him a duke. The Wonderful orthwest, St. Louis Republicon, Mr. D. Wishart, general passen agent of the 'Frisco line, returned yes- terday from Winnipeg, the capital of Manitoba, where he spent a week or so. He went up to the northwest on a sight- seeing expedition, and finds it to be a great country. Winnipeg is a_city now with a population of some 00, and is only about ten years old. It was form- erly known as Fort Garry, the headquar- ters of the Hudson Bay Fur Trading company, being the outfitting and fur- nishing headquarters for the numerous trading posts in the northwestern British possessions. Mr. Wishart went all through the immense store of the Hud- son Bay company, and says that it is an establishment that would do credit to any city. They carry enormous stocks of all kinds of goods, and do a business in- volving several million pounds sterling annually. Boat loads of their goods are sent many hundred miles through the navigable waters northwest of Winnepeg. Manitoba has a tremendous imnigration boom, and Winnepeg has received great its, as it has been the outfitting point for emigrants on_their arrival by rail in that country. Railroads are a novel feature in that province. The nadian Pacific railway company have but recently built several lines divergingenst, west, north and south from Winnepeg. They have several hundred miles of r now completed and in operation, and are fast CLOSING THE GAP between Montreal and the Pacific ocean. The intention of the Canadian Pacific Company is to have their line completed between these two points, a distance of To such people The Modern Age particularly re- commends itself, as its able translations are opening up rich stores of factand fic- tion which have hitherto lain unexplored by the great mass of American readers. The August number, for instance, con- tains translations from the French of Al- fred de Musset and Ernest Legouve,from the Italian of Edmondo d’ Amicis and Giacomo Leopardi, from the German of Rudolph Lindau, and from the Russian of Ivan Tourgenieff, besides the cream of the English monthlies, and editorial comment on many interesting subjects, rouped under the heads of ‘‘Sayings and oings,” “‘Books and Pook Men,” and ‘‘Stage and Studio.” All this is present- ed gin attractive form, and at the low rice of $1.60 per year. The magazine be able to read in the original, is accorded to few periodicals in the first year of their existence,—The Modern Age Publishing Co., New York City. THE NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW for August opens with a very spirited discussion of the subject of ‘“Moral In- truction without reference to religious of all moral teach- Henry D, Lloyd exposes the tricks and frauds of speculation in grain, which operate to make bread dear, and main- ressed by law, as being flagrantly in_opposition to public poli; “‘Woman in Politics,” by ral Wi, A, Hammond, rtain facts of |ion render the female sex unfitted for Hon. iews ““Henry criticizing in vegarding land- resulting Francis Walker | George's Social Fallacies, , who advocates the tain rules of legislative | have been found to serve as an effectual | barrier, both against lobbying and against | 2,000 miles, inside of the next two years, the company operating railways in the the province of Manitoba at this time, having received large subsidies and spe- cial _privileges from the government of the Dominion, o | having a dry spell in Manitoba up to the D: THOMAS ECLECTRIC ' Cares Rheumatism, Lum- bago, Lame Back, Sprains and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh, Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Diphtheria, Burns, Frost Bites, Tooth, Far, and Head- ache, and all pains and aches. The best internal And external remedy in the world. Every bottle guaranteed. Sold by medicine dealers everywhere, Directions in eight languages. Price go cents and fr.on. FOSTER, MILBURN & CO., Prop'rs, BUFFALO, N. Y., U. . A, ing so thoroughly broken middle of this month, but rains have set in and the season promises a very la crop of spring wheat, which is the prin- cipal grain raised. The spring wheat har- vest does not commence until the latter part of August. Sixty miles west of Winnipeg there is a large Mennonite settlement, which is reported as having very fine and extensive farms, and as fast hecoming very wealthy. The country, between St. Paul and St. Vincent, on the boundary line between the United States and the British posses. sions, is a very magnificent wheat-grow ing district. There are wheat fields there ent. his wife, spent a There is quite ple at the dif- o, but the weather )l to be very enjoy- rt, with day on Lake Minnetonk a number of St. Lou ferent hotels on the 80 far has been too e able, Large p wtions are being made by the hotel-keepers for a big busine Mr. Wishart found the passenger travel very heavy on all the roads he went over while north, being principally excursion and emigration business. Mr. Wishart has been absent just two weeks, and had a very pleasant and interesting trip. The Greatest Need of the Working Class. An editorial in the July Century says: “It would seem that the working classes, in their endeavor to improve their lot in life, have lurgely misdirected their ef- forts, by seeking too exclusively to in- crease their income instead of trying to get more happiness out of the income they now receive. Fora generation past, the workingmen of all civilized countries have striven by every means they could devise to raise their wages, in the evident belief that wages could be raised even in_opposition to economic forces and natu vs, and in the further belief that a sufficient in- crease was the one thing needful tomake them happy. In these endeavors, too, they have had the sympathy, and, so far as possible, the assistance of their friends in the higher ranks of society; and so ex- clusively have the efforts of both been turned in this direction that the labor question has come to be almost synony mous with the question of raising wag &,**Now it is certainly desirable that the incomes of the mass of men should be in- ereased wherever an increase 1s possible, and it is specially desirable in the case of al laborers, whose present incomes are so small. But it is clear to all in- structed minds that the machinery of trades’ unions and strikes, and schemes for state aid to industry, andall the other devices that have been proposed to in- crease the laborer’s earnings can do com- paratively little toward accomplishing their purpose, and the history of the past thirty years shows very clearly that they have done but little.” In the course of the article the editor remarks as follows: *‘It seems to us that what the workingmen most need, for the present at least, is to learn better how to use the income they now receive. Of course, if a man only earns enough to furnish himself and family the bare ne- cessaries of life, he can do little toward improving his lot till he has more pecun- iary means, But many workingmen earn more than the necessaries of life, and are able to procure some of the com- forts and even luxuries also. But in choosing the kind of comforts and lux- uries they will enjoy, the mass of work- ingmen show little wisdom: and it is here that the greatest improvemeut in their aflairs is to be looked for. They are apt, especially the more ignorant of them, to prefer the coarser pleasures to the more refined, and the transient to the enduring; and it seems to us that by the choice of higher and more enduring pleasures, and by greater wisdom in using the means they have to secure such pleasures, their happiness can best be promoted.” —— Depend Upon it, Mother Shipton's prophesies and Louisiana Mz, Wishart says the city of Winnipeg is vory substantially built, the buildings | being of modern architecture, and princi- pally of stone and brick. He was point- ed out a very handsome residence in Winnipeg which was built of St. Louis ressed brick, each brick in this building having cost the owner ten cents. This is one of the handsomest residences in Winnipeg. The price of property is very high, figures ranging from $300 to 81,600 per front foot in the business center, ll..urgu fortunes Lave been made there within the last two or three years, Mr. Wishart's cousin, whom he visited in Winnipeg, has been one of the lucky ones. The thermometer was about 40 degrees when Mr. W. left Winnipeg on Monday morning, It remains cool throughout the summer. The winter begins the lat- ter part of October, and as a rule they have good sleighing up to the middle of March, Several times last winter the mercury fell as low as FORTY DEGREES BELOW ZERO, The people, however, pride themselyes on the splenwd winter weather of the country, the atmosphere being very dry with but few severe storms. Another remarkable thing is their twilight. One can read a newspaper without any artifi- cial light at 9:30 p. m., and in the mom- ing at 2:30, so clear is the twilight. Of the curiositics they have there is what is | known as the Red” river cart. Ther it article of iron about them. are principally used to haal them. To cach cart one ox is hitched and works single, harnessed like the horses here. These carts are principally used by the half-breeds, who predominate in the frontier country. Mr. Wishart' was told that it is no rare thing to seo trains of these Red river carts, numbering twenty-five wagons to a train, each having its ox, all being lashed l.«smt)wr and loaded with furs, often come & distance of 700 miles into Winnepeg for trading purposes. A train of this kind can b hundll\ul by one man, the oxen be elections are very uncertain things, but Thom- 5 ic Oil can be depended upon always, res aches and pains of every description, Stout’s Influence. York Democrat. ‘Boss’ Stout is credited with having powerful influence in the republican state convention,” says Tur Omana Beg. Well, Boss Stout ought to haye powerful influence in the council chambers of the good republican party. He has just been awarded the contract for building a wing to the Capitol building at over $41,000 more than the other fellows bid, and £41,000 always has a powerful influence in a republican state convention in Ne- braska, It does not go towards electing the ticket, but it insures the nomination, Yes, Stout has the influence The Polk Trial. Nasnviie, July 23.—Argument on the Polk trial was concluded this after- noon. The judge will deliver his charge to the jury to-morrow, It c THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Ite RH Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWE FROSTBITES, BURNS, LDS, Aud all other bodily achies and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Sold by sl Druggists snd Dealers. Directions in 11 Iunguages. The Charles A. Vogeler Co. (Busesssors 1 A. VOGELER & 0. Balbimore. Md., U8 A They had been | . SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, H. WESTERMANN & CO., IMPORTERS OF QUEENSWAR ' China and Glass, 608 WASHING1ON AVENUE AND 609 ST. | : St. Louis, Mo i W HOLHESATILR Dry Goods! 4‘Wush/ngton Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. MO, | STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN iPLUUR, 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, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Limher, Ll Shingles, Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CENENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. | Near Union Pacific Depot, - - OMAHA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist ! AND DEALER IN Paints, 0s, Varnishes and Window Class OMAHA, NEBRASKA. P. BOYER «& CO., DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFE, VAULTS, LOCKS, & 1020 Farnam Street. Omaha. HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wl Paber and Window Shiaies. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, . ; M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA, - . - NEBRASK OMAHA NEB. Anheuser-Busch . BREWING ASSOCIATION: | CELEBRATED ' Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt. J’ ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE 2 STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, Will be Promptly Shipped. STIJIsH - ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE T0 THE STANDARD OfOoOourG-uarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. Office Corner 13th and Harney Streets SPECIAL NOTICE T0 Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Cround Oil Cake. K It is the best aud cheapest food for stoc Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fa and be in good marketable condition in the its merita.” Try it and judge for yourselves. ok-eod-me 4. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn, nstead of running down, will increase in weight., 1l as others, tostify to charge for EED4OIL C ANY, Onais, Nao