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] g e AN 4 .5, THE DAILY BEE“-OMAHA, THURSDAY" AUGUSHE2,11883. THE OMAHA BEE. Published every morning, except [Sunday. [ The only Monday morning dally. s 4 WATL Yoar.........$10.00 | Throe Months e Months. 5.00 | One Mowth. . I WRRKLY ANR, PURLISIED NYARY WRDNRSDAY, Rl PORTRATS. y £2.00 | Three Manth .8 50 fl‘n’l:l:::h- 1.00 | One Month 0 News Compans, Sole] AgentsZNewsdeal- oraTa e Drlied Bhatend f e ¢ pe” v PeORRRSPONDENCR. A Communications relating to News and Bditorial mattors should be addressed to the Eorron or Tin Bar) g * BUSINRSSSLATTINS. All Business Lettors and_Remittances *should::be addressed to Tyix Ber PUsLISTING COMPAXY, OMATA. Dinfts, Checks and Postoffice orders to be made pay- able to the order of the company. THE BEE BUBLISATNG €O, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor. Tue first public improvement Omaha needs is an improvement in her public officers. Tik executive committee of the Wes- tern Union met yesterday, but declined to consider any compromise of the strike. Tue Republioan asks who Midas was. He was evidently not'an editor. Every- thing that he touched turned to gold. 00| They have appointed a freight manager |among PEELING COMPETITION. Charley. [Burticister -and - Sorenson Are The Unfon Pacifie ‘rallfoid is begin | quietly working for the nomination on ning to feel the eftects of a sharp compe- | the republican side, . while no one seoms tition for the overland through “business, | inclined to dispute Mr. Ijams' candidacy the democrats. Baumer, of at8an Francisco and propo#s” #6 kesp a | course, will run again if he can got there, careful wateh upon the® Gentral Pasific, | which depends entirely upon whether a to stop their diversiont of Mreight over | German receives the nomination for dis- thoir southern route. The S8an Francis. | trict clerk or some other place on the ©o Chroniote publishes an interview with ticket. That would paralyze Mr. Bau- a Union Padific official, in which it is|mer's chances for another whirl at the stated that if the Central Pacific cuts on | county clerkship, There is some talk in rates, in favor of the Southern Pacifie, | favor of Herb. Leavitt, who has been for that the Union Pacific will make a like |six years an efficient doputy and by all cut, and ‘‘go them one better."|means the most polite and accommo- The official further states that tho cut |dating official connected with the county. will bb taken ‘Yrom the Union Pacific|But Herb will decline to run as long as and if necessary, tho connecting lines | Baumer is in the field. Should Baumer will stand part of the loss. = Thero are | be out of the race Leavitt may prove a great interests involved, and if necessary, [ dangerous competitor for any other can- a bold stand will be taken against the |didate. Central by all the eastern and middle roads. Let the Union Pacific sco that a cut has boen made and the music will begin. It will at the worst take but a year or two for them to build an inde- pendent line from San Francisco to the const and then it will be good-by to the Central and Southorn. Sidney Dillon is The extension of the water works sys- tem to the city limits in South Omaha means something more than mew hydrants and an increased water servico inthe way of domestic supply. The water company has contracted to supply water for 40,000 cattle, that will occupy the great yards to be constructed for the Tuere has been a strike among the New York cloak makers, but the pelisse has not yet been called upon to inter- fere. A Looorey MUrrAY'S grammar and the latest Union Pacific time table furn- ish the educational basis for a railroad editor in Omaha, Waite other municipal bodies are wiaking excursions to various points it would be a sensible idea if the city coun- <il would hold their noses and make a trip up and down a few of Omaha's alleys with an incidental look into half a hun- dred back yards. The wicked Chicago Herald remarks: now contemplating such a measuro and | Bngligh syndicate for which Mr. Schaller Inying pians for it. The United States g the agent. The land is now nearly all railroad commisstner has reccived a paid for and the scheme will be finally formal complaint from Dillon on the sub- | .onsumated within a fow weeks. Two ject of diversion of traffic, and asit|{housand ncres of ground will bo oo closely affocts the government, the mat- | oypied and two railroads will furnish the ter will, no doubt, be looked into by him necessary shipping facilities. at the present examination,” — - Straws show which way the wind| Tyg Iiges court martial has concluded, blows. After purchasing and destroying | and the colonel's sentence, as reported, all competition for years, the great mon- iy digmissal from the army. Tiges creat- opoly now discovers that it must bid for | od quito sensation in the court by re- its business. In the words of General | questing that Paymaster General Roches- Froight Agent Shelby, “We used tosit|or ghould be subpoenwed as a witness, back in our chairs and say, ‘There's our |and by declaring that ho proposed to tarift.’ Now we aro forced to hunt up | ghow by his testimony that other officers shippers and argue the advantages of our |, Washington had duplicated their pay line.” accounts during the year and had had their offenses condoned in order to pre- vent scandal, The court refused the re- TOWN TADK. Zadlkiel, in his' prognostications for Aug- ways: “The President of the United will be in personal “at f~this “monthy" | utiunrw“ T‘rufcr,"fp the. Yellowstone ‘ex- mkfi remtinding, Chester that talte along/a shflicient quantity | gest growlersipulled thr ide of.pofasgitih and /a dozen [ much better capdition thaw'they exjy " ‘f;fl il Tug new liquor law 'in Ohio has not made as great a rednction in the number of saloons in Cincinnati as was expected. There are now 2,000 in that city which have taken out licenses under the new law, and of these 1,630 pay the 8200 feo for strong liquor, 362 pay the $100 foe for beer and wine license, and cight pay fractional fees. There are only 166 fower saloons in the city now than there were under the old law. Tue civil adwinistration of the Bri army costs $165,000 a year; the civil ad- m:n of our army—a mere frac- size of .the other—cost in the last ear_$1,965,836 far civilians, for clerical work. A part of this differ- W; wide difference of system, retary's office’ aloné cost 8114, 000, or two-thirds as-muol as “theitétal ©osbof tho English wir.offic. Sexaror Epmunps ,.kxm."’n in th senate as ‘‘the great objector.” Ai)rnp‘(& Edmunds. It is related that wh come & member if 10 out of 27 clauses werd ; sig modified, and two, new'| ones md He is now a pewholder at tha'Bpiseopal church 'of the Hphiphany: in Washington As usual the council is at loggerheads over the city advertising. We were aware of the fact that our exposure of | eorrupt schemes in which certain i have lined ‘their pockets, ld"put Tre Bee in disfavor. It was %o three years ago when the Holly job was up and Tue Bee denounced the con- qu_t of. Hascall and his pals. But we néver consider the question of printing or any other patronage when we deal with mMH that concern the interests public. . public printing is a business matter purely, and should not be & question of personal favor, The money paid to newspapers for advertising does ot come out of the pockets of council- men and if they were honest and honora- ble they would expend it onbusiness prin- Giples. This year we have purposely mode a bid that is way bolow any bid that ‘has over been madein Omaha We have offored to do the city advertising at about one-sixth of what the Cityof Lincoln paya and we nover expect to make any such bid again. We did this mainly to worry Hascally councilmen who wanted some pretense to give the city sdvertising to a lower bidder than the Bxe even if it was a dish rag. The council, however, doesn't seem to know how to get around the fact that the Ber is the lowest bidder, and Has- «call is trying to concoct some scheme to rejoct our proposals. Possibly he may be able. to punish the tax payers by awarding the advertising to an irrespon- sible concern that hasn't existed over thirty days. If he does, we hope the council will insist on a first class bond. In that. case, the Brx will get more money out of the city by the end of the year for advertising than we would if our, present bid should be accepted. Incidentally we might remark that the printing contracts are the only ones that the city makes no pretense of living up to, There is al, Ways an ovérlap so that the publisher has to carry his bills for from six to ten months should { real estite “Ho un«|erty is - unusually - 8giva fo We are struck by the midsummer dull- ness, but Omaha, cven in’ dull times, js a vory lively dorpse of u town. Even.the o dealers.aro, cheerful and plop- quest a8 irrelavent, and the dispatches of the same day announced that Colonel Albert Morrow had been placed in com- mand of Fort Huachuca, Arizona. If reports are true, Col. Morrow. ought to be standing by the side of Ilges before a pourt martial, months, Our n t heayen knioya,in phe spri -Gugh ———— v 3 | ME. DANA suggests to #he democrats edand the gen ng in trade cigeles b5 okt hei ¥ % ¢ 3 : 4 postpone their conventivn until a year is one of increasing confidence. Som from. ,the . present Sepfié;nlxur e the‘wholisle dsalers: praféus'tlicinselyes ground that a late convention would morothan satisfied with their six mioitha | 0N T B BE REEESE OU businees, and o retallors who tiwve had ) 'S Uie of vonths, ‘with rio’ ticket for tho commercial common senso o adver- 1y 80 R U T DR tiso heavily, find that very littlo old | 11 0 R e it stock remaing to bo put on the job lo o "y 1 TR T S etaon Qougterdi/ | o with a rush; To this the New York Star 1 was talking the otherday to M. J. B. his eritical spirit a good story is told Kitchen of the Paxton House, and find that several hotel registers have been used up since summer bogan, an’ indica- tion that a good hostelry always draws good custom and that the traveling men still find Omaha o profitable stamping only necessary, to show the most careless wvor the, growtl of the~small retail trado. Shxtocnth strcot his. now filled up with stores and shops to the bridge, Cumingistreef s beginningto wear the appearance. of a commercial thorough- fare and trade is pushing out St. Mary's avenue until at Park avenue a settlement Aprung uf rosidents in that neighborhood. icks while is interested personally in several grading contracts, notably the one let to Morris Morrison ‘for grading Thirteenth street. There. was no_difficulty in getting that pushed ‘thropgh the council while the for paving their street. Guckin, who always was on the make, recently sent a friend, as I understand, to a meeting was very poor pay for a council- business both in and out of - the council. He'insures the passage of ‘bills. able to find out. the twelve, final results can easily be imagined.” Aughey forgerios, preasion,” tho banks and even Professor Aughey much about him himself, and thoug boldly charges the professor with being the author | of the forgeries, and unles some better proof is adduced to the con with the Lincoln News.” materializing. The principal contes will be for Mr. Ijams' shoes. Hoins, g of stores u[L:su\'u 1 lines of business. has : (:bn the wants of the ;mlxtum ‘s | Unitéd’ man, and that'a friend of - his had made | JArTMsed: 82,600 in a single year in Chicago. From | thought, this T infer that Mr. McGuckin is in|sume that the uom(mny may be com- favor of raising the salaries of council-|Pelled to pass its d men. Kaufmann is in the insurance oasily tho brains of the council and can | from cover his tracks better than any six of |unless the Theso are the gentlemen in | Wages 8o charge of the city strong box, who are now being beset by paying rings, electric | event, then, the situation does not favor light combinations, grading promoters, | the Western Union, though its former and water works extenders with what |servants may suffer grievously, and will In fact the professor don’t soem to know gh he claims to have been acquainted with him | dear life to *savo the state,” and Mr, for twenty years, professes entirc ignor- | Watt ance of where o hns lived or what Lo | d¢moerats not to let their vote fall off in has been doing, The only Lincoln paper in which the matter was not suppressed | Political aspirations in the county are | D¢ in & good deal replies, that what ‘the democratic parjy wants is a square and honorable contest before the people on the great questions of the time. "It wunts candidates who will bear the closest scrutiney. The political agitation will not be lessened by medt wjll incréasesthe opportun- ravire-pullingand ehicanery. ¥ Rt oning the convention, but such a ground. A¢ drive through the" city s :& i Mexico is elamoring: for immigration. If reports are' to be believed it is likely soon to get more of a certain class than it desires. A rumor is flying the rounds of the press that 5,000 Americans are | organizing a filibustering expedition to d-annexy’ Chihuabub he od and thatithe most “promi inent Moxicans in the district favor the Congress it is said will be asked i ouncil eems plan. ?z. hent to assume the debts of the new territory, P '“‘!,ul: B UAfpozew grain' dealers have met in'con- vention in Omaha and decided that the Nebraska wheat crop will fall fifty per cent below the average. A thousand farmers throughout the state know better. Goveryor Foster has accommodated Sixteonth strét property owners were [ judge Hoadly with the name of the pleading for the letting of the contracts party who told him that the judge paid > It is a curious | 850,000 for his nomination. council any way one looks atit. Mec-| by Hoadly's turn o squirm, It is now A Reasonable View. paving contractor to intimate that $4 o | Boston Advertiser. The Western Union is certainly em- It wants operators, and its strength is not as gigantic as is gonanlly It is not unreasonable to as- vidends, if it has to accept the terms of the strikers. But even if it have all the wealth commonly ascribed to it, the ofticers of the Western ‘What | Union cannot fail to recognize the Broth- the per cent is, if any, 1 have not been | othood in some way. The strikers deal ‘As for Hascall. he ia | With the companies through the execu- 3 tive committee of the Brotherhood and this there is mno escape Western Union offers high as to make them attractiye to the strikers'without regard to the Brotherhood.” 1In any surely ‘suffor, if the strike lasts much longer, There is no better remedy vis- Thoro is good deal "of talk about the | 1% thersfore, than & compromise on mutual respoct. And it is & matter of ‘‘The goneral “im- |great importance that this compromise said a leading attorney, |should remove the i “‘seems to be that tho professor is in a | Yhich the b'ul box, and that his explanation is de- cfdod]y .flmL No one knows the myste- | strikers are entitled no less to respectful rious Vigenham who is supposed to have | treatment than are their masters. had such a general acquaintance with the | Prosent question concerns wages only, leading citizens of Lincoln, that he forg- ed their names well enough to deceive personal objections Western Union and the Brotherhood entertain for each other. So far as personal rights are concerned, the The neither honor nor real principles being in issue. And wages should be agreed upon by a reasonable compromise. The Fetich of Regularity, Boston Herald, With the lowa republicans working for an appealing to the Kentucky the August election, it would seemn that party ties are getting loose wll around, Itis high time that they should grow | slack. If there had been ‘aore indepen- dent voting, governed by convictions and interests, and less of the thick-and-thin, ever “‘reliable” sort, during the past half 8 trary, the - public generally will agree |dozen years—since there ceased to be any radical ditference between the parties— our politics and overnment would now tter condition. There are indications that the fetich of ‘‘regu- Y { larity” has lost its hold on the supersti- y | tions of voters. * GARFIELD'S CHARACTER., A Man of Uncommon Inteflectual Powers, But Wanting in Mordl Cotrage. His Weakness in the Credit Mobilier Affair—Helen C. Barnard—A Remarkable Letter. Chicago News. Care May, N, J., July 21.—Dorsey's recent attack upon the memory of James A. Garfield has revived many of -the stories which have been circulated about the president within the last ten years. The result has been to stir up a cloud which must obscure to a certain degree any attempt upon the part of any student to make a correct estimate of the charac- ter of Gien. Garfield. His eighty days of patient martyrdom exalted him too high. To was placed upon the pedestal of a demi-god, and at the time of his decease anything but the most fulsome praise of " this many-sided man was regarded as scandalous. Those who knew General Garfield best said at the time that his death was the best thing that could have happened to him, so far as his place in future history was concerned. This opinion, however, has since been modi- fied. He was placed too high, and there is now a reactionary feeling which may leave him too low He had many great qualities, mingled with many petty ones. He was a man of uncommon intellectual powers. But he lacked moral courage. ~ His own convic- tion of right was never enough to sustain him. He never knew how to act without consulting other opinions than his own. Naturally such a temperament made a great deal of unhappiness for Gen. Gar- field, and early in Fiiu earned for him the title of uncertain, Before publicly an- nouncing himself .upsfi a question he was only too apt to be influenced by those last with him. Gov. Foster, when he was in congress, was a great resource for the timorous Garfield. ~ Foster has abso- lutely no nerves. He is impervious to all great or small fry criticism. His sto- lidity was a source of great comfort to Gartield, who used to come to him when- ever he was embarrassed politically .or financially, “‘Nancy” Monrog, a venera- ble Sunday school superintendent, was in congress from the Ohio Western Reserve for several years, iu company with Foster and Gartield. Foster used to say that he had to carry both Gurtield and Monroe, and that the flutterings of their timid consciences caused him more trouble than a1l his work. <His favorite remark to them in.those days was, *“Well, what have you' to cry.about now?” ; Glagfield fiever could make a §peech in the house without asking every one of his friends what they thought of it. He could not live witflnut praise. He loved flattery as the flowers love the sun. Without it he wonld droop. He was essentialy a gusher. He was fond of walking with_his arm arround the neck of some friend whowould feed his love of praise. His fear of public opinion was 8o great that he never could be trusted to hold to any fixed line of policy until fully com- mitted. When “the star-route people were being investigated by congress he promised Gen. Brady to make a speech defending them; but when the time came for the speech Gen. Garfield was called out of town. It is a fact, however, that the journal of the house will show thathe was paired on the side of the star route }mup e. This fact has never been pub- ished. His first gredt mistake occurred dur- ing the period of the credit mobilier in- vestigation, He lost his head” at the public outery, and insisted upon a fool- ish denial of any ownership of the stock, in the face of the most absolute praof. Hid'wenkness in the committee-roont was trul inble. - T was present during his examination, and well remember howene day he broke down_utterly, and cried actual tears of shame when {\e was con- fronted by the squat and inexorablo Oakes Ames. If he had frankly acknowl- edged his entire connection with Ames he could have gone out of the committee- room with h erect. JamesG. Blaine, who was in reality more involved in Union Pacific railroad speculation than any one summoned before the commitiee, had no trouble. His courage aloie saved him, If Garfield had had the same cour- age he would have made a great place for himself in history. At the close 'of the credit mobilier epi- sode Garfield was a lost man. Although he was one of the great fig- ures on the floor in the debates, employ- ing a marvelous skill and a ripe knowl- edge in his speeches, ho was so hurt and cast down that he would have been over- whelmed and swept into obscurity with Colfax had it not been for his friends. Until Blaine took him up and resolved to save him, he was gone beyond hope of reyival, The brutal Butler recognized this, and one day in the debates Garfield attempt- AT AT oy (TR e thing in the way of personal criticism, when Butler turned around with mock courtesy as he withdrew his remarks, ad- dlnf contemptuously: *De mortuis nil nisi bonum, W E If Garfield had been slapped directly in the face he could not have flushed a more_cruel red. He gave frunt gasps of pain and then shrunk into his seat with- out attempting to 1 one word in reply. This made Charley Foster ver nfl He ran over to Garfield and whispe “‘Damn it, man, don't put your tail be- tween your legs and run becsuse s mule has kicked you.” Then Foster said: *‘I will show you some day that this old man Butler is as vulnerable as any one.” It was this episode that started Foster toattack Butler, Foster was compara- tively unknown here, but when he came out after Butler with the proofs of his spying machinations in the celebrated moiety cases, it was generally conceded that for once Butler had met his match, with his own weapons. This gave Foster reat strength and notoriety, and made fiilll a very able ally for the rehabilita- tion of Garfield, which James G. Blaine continued by placing Garfield at the head of the great committee on appropriations, Being held up and sustained by the Blaine wing of the house, Garfield weath- ered the storm, and continued to make a large place for himself in the debates. In these debates the man who reads is al- ways feared by the ninety-nine who do nob. Garfleld’s habit of regular study and his good memory, soon gave him a colossal reputation as & scholar not wholly deserved, He was, however, a fine stu- dent of political economy. His financial speeches and his support of the specie- resumption policy make up the brightost and most nulmrhn&lchn;hn in ln: l‘n:l reer. His sy ies him to mwmytfi‘mwmfihfi&dfi but “his interests forced him to fall in with the protections when the tariff issues came to be agil ¥ When ho was chairman of the house committee on appropriations Dorsey was PLAIN TALK. To those Having O1d and Malignant cases of Asthma, or who are Suffering almost beyond Endurance from Catarrh, coughs, or eolds, Tet Earnestly, Candialy, and Truthtully Recommend the Immediate use of an eficient and Certain remedy Thomas' Eclectrie on. Tneomparably superiof to anything of a ature, and Benefiting Unfailingly. You who Are in Need of relief and can spare & Dollar or a half dollar, give it & Trial; the Result will katisty You that our statements are not only eorrect but crate. B A in the senate. Dorsey was also from Ohio. He was the sworn friend of ' Boss Shepherd, who was calling upon congress at tSm time for more appropriations. Dorsey became very intimate with Gar- field, and was very useful to Shepherd in getting nKymprintionn through the com- mittee. No one then really thought any money was made by Gen. Garfield in this friendship. He believed in a very liberal policy toward Washington. When some of his favors were made up to him by his being umylnyml during a vacation of congress as the attorney of the De Gollyer pavement contract, Garfield han- dled himself so clumsily under the criti- cism of the period that many believed his foe as a_lawyer of 5,000 was a bribe. The real fact is, Garfield was not cut out for the carcer of successful rogue. He was altogether too hung% for praise and too timid under fire, He was always poor. Neatly every one_who had any- thing to do with him took advantage ef his impractibility. He was for a long time lead about with a ring in his nose by Swaim, the present judge advocate general. Swaim is a man who had made money in the army by lending out money at usurious rates. Swaim had a mortgage on Garfield's house in Washington at the time of the Chicago convention. It was his kindness asa money-lender that made him so intimate with Garfield, Garfield had always strug- gled with poverty. Given large means 10 might have been more independent, but until he was president he was always in want of money. His house en I street, mortgaged to Swain, was so shabbily fur- nished as to look like a boarding house. The only room that was well furnished in his house was his library. Mrs. Garfield always looked pinched and unhappy when out in society, The Garfields did not live happily. Mrs. Garfield would have separated from the general years bofore had it not been for their children. This is as well known in Washington as it is unknown outside of Washington. In 1871 and 1872 Garfield became in- fatuated with a newspaper correspondent by the name of Helen C. Barnard. She praised his noble brow and silver-tongued ulmanuncu in her letters, and he in turn read to her his undelivered speeches for her literary approval. It was this rela- tionship, which might have been more innocent than it looked, that led to the cstrangement of Gen. Garfield and his wife. This estrangement, which was not generally known to the world, will explain the strange fortitude of Mrs. Garfield during her husband’s last 1llness and her composure since his death. It is unfortunate for Gen. Garfield's memory that he was not able to inspire more trust and confidence in his asso- ciates. - John Sherman and many others believe Garfield betrayed Sherman at Chicago. After the convention it was only through great difficulty and the mokt elaborate promises that Garfield secured the support of the republican eaders, Nearly every one of them was after- wards disappointed in his way of ful- filling these promises made before the election: An old school friend of Garfield's, liv- ing in Ohio, was equally disappointed. He was a poor man. He called at Men- tor after the eloction. Garfield put his arm around him and gave him a good hug, as he said to him: ‘‘My dear old friend you must come to Washington when I am president, aud I will take care of you. You shall be poor no longer.”’ The man came. Each day he called at the white house after Garfield was made resident. The latter always received Rim very kindly, and invariably asked him to stay for lunch, but no word was said about the office. Finally the poor man's money was gone. He went up to the white house in a desperate mood. Gen, Garfield met him with a hug, The i:lruidunt was ina very genial mood, @ said te his friend, with his arm around his neck, *“Do you know that I just love ou,” This broke the suffering friend down. He threw off the arm of the president in- dignantly as he said: “‘D—— yourlove; I want an office.” But he never got it, notwithstanding the many promises. If Gen. Garfield had lived he would not have been a po{mlur president. He might have meant well, but he would have been powerless to carry out his good inten- Practically James G. Blaine was resident during the Garfield administra- ion, But the Swaim and the Rockwell chums were hard at work to drive Blaine out, and they might have succeeded not- witluunnlinfi Blaine's remark that he never fought with *‘pismire The chums would have made millions, and would have covered Garfield with end- less scandal. Swaim owes his position as judge advocate general in the army to mortgage on the Garfield house. This oftice was only the beginning of what he would have done had Garfield lived. T. C. CRAWFORD. i} THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Telieves and cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACK ACH SORE THROA FIFTY CENTS A LAy all Druggistx i s, Dlrcetiy g es. The Charles A, Vogeler HEADACHE, T00THACHE, | " H. WESTERMANN & 0, IMPORTERS OF QUEENSWARE! China and Glass, 608 WASHING1ON AVENUE AND 609 ST. ; v §t. rLouis, Mo. WHOLESALR Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - STREET moe-8m ST. LOUIS. Mo, STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOTi. 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 Limber, Ll Shingles, P SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - 5 - OMAHA, NEB o AUl o e IR A U PO TN I e Ll Lol T AT C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints, 0ils, Varnishes and Window (ass OMAHA, NEBRASKA. : P. BOY ER & CO. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTS, LOCKS, &. 1020 Farnam Streoct. Omaha. HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Shades EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, 5 2 M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA, - . - OMAHA NEB, NEBRA! Anheuser-Busch <o, BREWING ASSOCIATION: | CELEBRATED Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt. 3 4F» ORDERS FROM' ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, GTE Will be Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE T0 THESTANDARD OfOurG-uarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. | Oftice Corner 13th and Harney Streets [ 2 I CIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our CGround Oil Cake. 1t Is tho best aud cheapest food for stock of any ki uds 1 od o y kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn, Stock ted with Ground O1l Cake in the Fall and Winter, instéad of rhining down will Incriase. s WOLEbL: ad be in good marketable condition in the spring. Dairyuon, as well as others, who use it can tostify b merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. Price #25.00 per ton; no charge for sacks. Addross od-od-me WOODMAN LINSERDROIL COMPANY, Omaha L4}