Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 3, 1883, Page 4

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+ THE DAILY BEE THE Pablished every mumsn, excopt Sunday. only Monday morning dafly RRMS BY MATL. £10.00 Three Months 5.00 | One Month oM /\HA BEE S 'nw‘ One_Vear Bix Months ... IR WRRKLY RER, PUBLISITED KYRRY WRDNRSDAY, THRMS FORTPAID, Ono Yoar #2.00( Three Months. ... Bix Months. 1.00 | One Month ., .. American News Company, Sole] Agents Newadeal- eru in the United States. CORRESPONDENCR, A Communications relating to News and Editorial matters should be addrossed to the Epiror or Trm Brx. $ 50 BUSINRSSSURTTRRS, All Businoss Lotwors and Romittances Shouldzzbe addressed to Trie Ber PURLISIING COMPANY, Drats, Chocks and Postorlice orders to be made pay- ablo to the order of the company. THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS. Trs tobbers Ao ruling Omaha just now, but the citizens and tax payers will yot make themselves heard. Rerorts from harvesting in various soctions of the state, indicatethe heaviest orop of small grain ever gathered in Nobraska. Waex the jobbers and robbers in the oity council profess to own the city, it is high time for our citizens to make up their minds as to who owns the city coun- ail. Every lawyer in Nebraska who has lost a case before a justice of the peace feels himself competent to fill Judge Lake's shoes at Lincoln, The woods are full of eandidates. Omto democrats are taking a gloomy view of the situation, but if Hoadly's mouth can be padlocked until the end of the canvas there will still be hope for the unconverted bourbons ———— Wisuis Smith, of Greene county, Va., dropped dead just as he was raising his hand to swear to the correctness of his tax list. If Willis Smith had been an Omaha assessor the incident would have excitod no comment. —— Mgz, Cuapyax, of Conneil Bluffs, has been interviewed by the Chicago Z'ribune and expresses the belief that the entire state ticket is endangered by the prohibi- tion craze, which is drawing thousands of republicans from the party ranks. The defection will be especially heavy in the river tier of counties. WorkINGMEN of Omaha who are lean- ing on their picks and shovels waiting for a job will be pleased to notice that their great friends Hascall, Kaufmann, Mur- phy and Leeder in the city council refuse to permit the contractors to begin tho work of paving the streets, for which the property owners have petitioned and the contracts have been awarded. Mgr. KAUurMANN, at the last meeting of the city council, protested that the con- tract for paving Sixteenth street could not be apj roved because it was locked up with a time lock in the safe at his office. After the meeting Mr. Kaufmann coolyin- formed Martin Dunham that the contract was _in his pocket all the time. A coat of tar and feathers ought to be made the fashion for such shameless jobbers, and the merchants of Sixteenth . strect are the persons who conld make it fit snugly. Ar the meeting of the paper makers in Saratoga last week, an interesting pa- per was read by Mr, . C. Woolworth, of New York, a brother of the Hon. James M. Woolworth in this city, which rovounted the efforts made by his house tobuild up an export business and the results they have achieved. Mr. Wool- worth's firm, with the support of a syndicate of manufacturers, sent out two representatives in 1876-8, one to Europe and one to South America, supplied with full lines of samples and instructed to study the foreign markots carofully and secure trial orders wherever possible. Although ob- liged to contend with great obstacles both in the matter of custom and prices, they met with fair success. Thesv expeditions were repeated in both fields in the next year and were greatly benefited by the excellent display of the American paper- makors in the Paris exposition where, of the 28 exhibits made, 20 received awards, The very prosporous era in business which followed during the next two or three years at home, withdrew the inter- est of the manufactures to some extent from this slowly growing foreign trade and the wars in South America also in- terfered with it. But very satisfactory progress has been made, taking the last six years togethor, and the valuo of paper exported from the United States has in- creased from $795,176 in 1876 to $1,618,. 883 in 1882, And there is every reason to believe that with proper effort this trade can be largely extended in the fu- ture. One manufacturer of news paper who joined in Mr. Woelworth's syndicate with a sample lot of 14,000 pounds has since sent over 1,000,000 pounds abroad, mainly in Brazil, The South American journals are largely printed on a very poor quality of paper that is made in Belgium and sold by the English at protty high prices. The American manufacturer referred to has been able to offer the Brazilians a better arti- cle and at lower prices. Commenting on Mr. Woolworth's report, the Springfield Republican says: ‘*There is no reason why this experience should not be re- peated all over the southern half of this continent, and now, while our wmills are making paper cheaper than ever before in the history of the business in this country, is the time to cultivate these foreign markets. Mexico, Central and South America are all the natural, legi- tiwate field of our paper manufacturers, and they will be strangely blind to their mmmnhm if they neglect them lon- ger. 2 | mit to OMAHA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1883 HANDS UP, by Hascall and his palls in the city stand and deliver that has ever been made in the city of Omaha. No other community of 45,000 people would sub it for twenty-four hours. Weo have been plundered and swindled by dishonest councilimen before, but never before have they dared to follow up their robberies by high-handed black- mail. They command the property owners, whom they robbed in broad daylight, to throw up their hands and submit to being stripped of all they possess, or pay a heavy ransom if they would This is exactly what have escape. Hascall and the road agents who train with him have done when they insist that no paving or grading shall be done unless the contractors belong to their gang or “‘come down with the swag,” Their conduct, with respect to Six- teenth street, can be regarded in only one light, and that is as an open demand for bribes from the contractor whom they have already damaged not less than $2,000 by holding the contract which was executed by the mayor and board of pub- lic works at their own order. But in this instanee, the contractor is not the only party damaged. The property owners on Sixteenth street and the mer- chants who have rented their stores ex- pecting an increased traffic this fall' have suffered serious loss at the hands of these scoundrels. And the workingmen who would to-day be earning thousands of dollars, are forced to lie around idle until such work- ingmen’s friends as Murphy and Mec- Guckin, Leeder and Hascall have lined their pockets. The only answer the ras- cals of the city council make is that the blame must rest with the property own- ers who interfered with them in their sandstone job. On the same grounds, the property owners who interfered with Hascall and his gang of rogues in the Holly fight should also have been pun- ilhmffvr refusing to submit to the swin- dle backed by Cushing, Miller and Hans- com, In Nobraska and Iowa horsethieves have been hung, but in Omaha, menwho are a great deal worse than horsethieves and pickpockets are allowed to carry on schemes of robbery unmolested. But oven in Omaha, forbearance will soon cease tobe a virtue, and if petitions, pro- tests and remonstrances proveof noavail, justice may have to be dealt out in the old fashioned way, which according to Judge Gaslin, cannot be reversed even by the supreme court. THE IOWA CAMPAIGN, coun- | eral. | . oy | | argument that Sheridans promotion will The blockade of public improvements | make General Hancock a lieutenant gen- The friends of hoth Sheridan and cil is the most audacious attempt to com- | Hancock are working hard to push the | pel our tax payers and contractors to scheme before congress, and with good prospects of success. In case tho nact passes, a vacancy will oxist in the ranks of the major generals, General Howard is the ranking brigadier, and will be pushed by his friends for promotion on the ground of his war rec- ord. General Terry is also a leading competitor, while the friends of General Crook will combine to urge his claim as an officer whose war record was uhoxcep- tional, and whose position as the ablest Indian fighter in the army is unques- tioned, Dorsey gives his word, whatever that is worth, that the nomination of Stanley Matthews to the supreme bench was the result of a bargain between Garfield, Gould and Huntingdon, in which the consideration was a subscription of $100,- 000 to the republican campaign fund of 1880. As congress will investigate the matter at its next session, both Mr. Dor- sey and Whitelaw Reid, whom he ecalls upon to corroborate his statement will have a chance to tell what they know about railroad kings and the supreme bench. Accorpis to Dorsey, it took $400,- 000 to carry Indiana in 1880. This is nearly nine times as much as Hoadly paid for his nomination this summer in Ohio. r. Evans Must Go. New York Times. We do not know how much Mr. Evans, commissioner of internal revenue, is do- ing to promote the nomination of Presi- dent Arthur next year, but he is doing a groat deal to prevent Mr, Arthur's elec- tion if he should be nominated. Perhaps this is not a consideration to which much weight should be attached in reflecting on Mr. Evans as a federal officer ina very high position. But as Mr. Evans’ appointment was difficult to understand, unless it was made for political purposes, as his retension in office since he has proved so grotesquely incompetent and 80 disgracefully unfaithful to his duty cannot be explained from any other point of view, we may be allowed to call the attention of the president to the fatal in- fluence which this stupid and unscrupu- lous person is likely to exert on the next presidential canvass. Judge Savage. Lincoln Democrat. There is evidently a growing sentiment in Nebraska that partisanship should be considered much less and character, ability and learning a great deal more, in the future than in the past, in selecting judges of the supgeme court. A pro- gressive and intelligent bar are coming to take a professional pride in the mat- ter and are solicitous that the foundations * Iowa republicans are not as cheeaful as usual over the political prospects in the Hawkoye state. They enter the cam- paign with grave disaffection in the party ranks, and seriously handicapped by the plank of their platform which commits the republican party to a policy of radi cal prohibition. Such prominent repub-~ licans as Governor Kirkwood and Judge Wright openly refuse to support the ticket and thousands “of less distin- guished citizens will either cast their voies for the democratic nominees or abstain from voting alto- gether. The republican party in lowa made their first serious mistake when they made a political issue of the social “‘ism" of Neal Dow and Governor St. John. With the experience of Maine and Kan- sas before them their action was the height of political folly. If the Germans and the liberal minded voters, who re- fuse to sanction sumptuary legislation de- clino to olly themselves any longer with the party, and succeed in defonting its nominees, the prohibitionists will have only themselves to blame. The second dangerous mistake made by the Iowa republicans was their refusal to renominate Judge Day as a punish- ment for his vote on the constitutionality of the prohibition amendment. Fair minded men of all parties were justly in- dignant that a judge should be dragged from his seat on the bench for no other reason than his rofusal to be led by the wishes of his party in opposition to his honest judgment, a simple question of constitutional interpretation. In the opinion of such republicans as Governor Kirkwood this action was of itself sufficient to cast discredit upon the entire prehibition movement, the leaders of which are re- girdloss of whatever means they may employ to secure their end. The attack upon rockloss assault upon an honest judiciary and his defeat an open threat to his col- loagues and successors that a refusal to sanction tho wishes of the party, even if the expression of the wish should be in defiance of the law, would be met with the political punishment which was measured out to an honest judge and a Towa is strongly republican on national issues. For years she has boen the ban- nor state of the party, and in both local and national campaigns has rolled up an overwhelming republican majority. But it is o serious question whether in the coming election the republicans will not suffer their first dofeat. Under the most favorablo circumstances the old timo ma- jority will be cut down wany thousands, A svroNG effort will be made, as soon as congress meoets, to secure the passage of an act continuing the office of general of the arny, which expires by limitation with General Sherman's term of office, and promoting Lieutenant General Sheri- dan to the position first occupied by Gen- eral Grant. There is considerable opposi- tion among the democrats, to extending any favors to Sheridan on account of the part which he took in reconstructiug Louisisna. This will be set off by the upon Judge Day by the convention was a | 1 of asound and honorable jurisprudence be laid now at the beginningof the state’s caveer. But the people especially have awakened to the fact that on the conserva- tism, ability and integrity of the supreme court depends very great questions, especially in relation to laws regulating corporations and the establishing of a line of enlightened and progressive de- cisions in criminal cases. It is frequent- ly remarked by republicans that such a man a8 Judge Savage er Judge Wakely would meet the requirements exactly. It has been intimated to us on pretty good authority that Judge Savage would not_decline to be' a candidate for the position in question if he were con- vinced that he would receive the general support of the elements not irrevocably attached to the republican machine. 1f a sentiment pre- vails among that class in his favor he would surely be elected, if he were put in nomination by the democratic conven- tion We do not know whether or not the republican anti-monopoly element would in_that case insure his election, as it would lre in his hands to do, but we do not see how it could avoid such an oppor- tunity of conferring a boon upon the state and without violating any of its anti-monopoly sentiments. We trust that something more than talk will come of this matter, As we write the follow- ing pertinent observation in a leading Pennsylvania paper comes to notice: The aim of an intelligent and consid erate people is to separate the election of judges a8 nearly as possible from partisan prejudice and partisan struggles. In most cases, the people of Pennsylvania have done 8o, and tllcy have often point- edly rebuked partisan” journals and lead- ers for summoning partisan passions and partisan methods and the partisan as- saults of ans and orators to effect the choice of judicial officers Hoadly's Purchased Nomination, N. Y. Evening Post. The Foster-Hoadly correspondence in Ohiohas culuminated in the publication of | a most remarkable letter. Governor | Foster's original charge was that Judge Hoadly had admitted to a friend, who in turn told the Governor, that his (Hoad- ly's) nomination had cost him $50,000, The Judge denied the assertion, and called for the name of the informant. The lotter person has now come befo the public in a lotter to the gov which is published in the Times this morning. It is signed J. H, Woedward, and is one of the most interesting contri- butions to political literature which | have seen the 1.1,m for many o day. Mr. Woodward prefaces his confession for that is what it amounts to— with an expression of deep regrot that the governor had betrayed him, Ha says ho was going over the state to get the opinions of democrats on his candi- dacy, and went to the judge to talk the matter over, He was convinced that the judge was *‘being robbed” and ‘“‘would continue to be robbed,” and what the judge told him confirmed his view. Whilo the judge did not say that his nomination cost him_$50,000 d cost him the \\mud\\md mind was about the figure. went at once to Governor Foster and Jaid all this information before him. Why & democrat should be thus eager to communicatesecret information of this valuable character to a republican gover- nor who is so skilful a politician as Mr, s not clear, Mr, Woodward says he did it *‘under the seal of conn- dence,” and his grief at the alleged be- ll‘u)ll takes a form of expression at once s0 pathetic and o unique that we would not for a moment thmlix of attempting to summarize it. He says: “T am sorr; that you have in any way alluded to this cat deal of impression that £50,000 Mr. Woodward | matter, because I think the Judge didnot want any publicity given to it. In fact, he said none of this talk was to be print- ‘he did | ed, and T know that he did not want the public to know that the thing ad been so expensive. To make it public was painful to him, and had 1 thought that after two campaigns of your own you would have so little sympathy for afellow soldier, I would not have told you nn,flnny about it. I expected a better feeling from you toward my friend, but instead of giving him your sympathy you give the whole tl\;nu away to the ]ill?)lu This is not fair to the judge or me, If you cannot be trusted with an occasional democratic secret, | will not tell you any more of them.” The whole affair is likely to be so *‘pain- fal” to Judge Hoadly as to give a power- ful impetus to his alrendy strong desire for a “new and living democracy.” —_— BALLOON VOYAGE. Thrilling @xperience of an Aeronaut ‘Who Made a Trip from Michi- gan to Onhio In three Hours, Chicago Times Special Hivspare, Mich., July 30.—Prof. Ho- gan, who went up in a balloon from this city, Saturday afternoon, arrived back here at 9:45 a. m. Sunday. He landed at Waterville, 0., sixteen miles southwest of Toledo, about, 6 o'clock Saturday even- ing, having been in the air about three hours. Prof. Hogan says he has made 150 ascensions, and that this was the most hazardous and varied. After having‘risen to the height of a mile and a half a cur- rent of air struck his balloon, causing it to roll from side to side, and throwing the valve-rope beyond his reach so that {m could not control the air-ship. He made himself as comfortable as possible, took a scrap- book and pencil, and made notes which he let fall to the earth, of which he got an occasional glimpse through the clouds. After being up an hour and a half he struck a current which carried him north rapidly, and in sight of Saginaw City, and then struck another current and was carried over Lake Huron and thence west of Detroit toward Toledo. When over Toledo the balloon veered so as to enable him to catch the valve cord, which he +id, and then looked for a place to land. He began to descend, but found he was in the midst of a dense swamp. He then arose and proceeded toward some fields, and endeavored to land in one of them, but was unsuccessful. He was hurled into the Manmee river, and went to the bottom. A strong wind was blowing,and it raised the balloon from the river and carried it into the top of a tree near the bank, when it collapsed. Professor Hogan caught onto a limb, and a man who was passing by helped him down. Prof. Hogan says that he never reached so great an altitudebefore, and thinks he must have been at one time at least five miles above the earth. He suffered much with cold, and whenat the greatest height it was very difficult for him to breathe. He took a canteen with him, and an occasional swallow of the contents of this, he thinks, saved his life, by keeping him from going to sleep. The feeling of drowsiness was very strong, and at times néarly over- come him. He thinks he traveled'over 200 miles, and at times at frightful spoed. The professor is o small man with light complexion, blue eyes,” and about five feet seven inches in height. He has a quick, nervous manner,and is a fluent talker. OUR FOREIGN POPULATION. How the Wave of Emigration Has Ebbe@+igil Flowed for Half a Century. Washington Dispateh to New York World. The immigration into the United States during the fiscal year just ended was more than gfi per cent below that of the pre- ceding year and 10 per cent below that of the year which preceded that. The total number of immigrants arriving in the year just closed was 599,114, against 770, - 422 Tast year and 669,431 the year before. Over 2,000,000 have thus arrived in the country and taken up their abode here within the last three years. The total arrivals for the last ten years have been less than 4,000,000 and in no three years preceeding had the total run much above 1,000,000. The largest number of immigrants arriving in any one year pru:ulmg the three in which the present ‘‘boom” has been running was 159.803, in 1873. The number of immi- grants who have arrived in this country during the last fifty years reaches over 10,000,000, The smallest number of ar- rivals in any single year in the half- century aforesaid was in 1838, when the arrivals were 38,914, In 1842 the num- ber for the first time exceeded 100,000, Since that it has only fallen below that number four times—in 184 1844, 1861, and 1862, Germany co tinues to furnish the largest number -of arrivals, Last year there were 191,643 |from Germany, the next largest being 79,852 from England and Wales. From ifllc Dominion of Canada there were 64,- 1000, Ireland 63,700, Scotland 19,612, From sunny Italy thers were 31,715, from bleak” Norway 21,294, and from | Sweden 34,696, Nearly three-fourths of the arrivals come in at the port of New York, the number of immigrants at that portin the last year having been 405,697, The number of foreign-born persons residents of the United States is now about 7,000,000, or nearly one-cighth of ita present population. In 1880 it was 0,670,043, in 1870 it was 5,507,220, in 1860 4,138, b"?. New York has a larger population of persons of foreign birth than any other state. It has 1,250,000 out of a total population of 5,000, 000, Half amillion of these are from Ireland and 350,000 from Germany. Pennsylvaniaand Llinois have each 600,000 of foreign birth and Ohio 400,000, Of the 7,000,000 of foreign population | now in the United States 2,225,000 are of German nativity and nearly 2,000,000 Irish, Besides the 7,0000,000 who are of foreign birth, there are about 8,000,000 | of foreign paventage. The percentage of arrivals for the lust fow years shows a large increase from | Germany, A few years ago the arrivals from Ireland formed o much larger per- centage of the le than now. T'he number now arriving from Germany is | moro than three times as many as those {arriving from Ireland, Last year there | were 101,048 Gerny Tho number of emigrants leay many in the last fifty years is estimated at 8,5600,000; most of them came to the United States. — e Cholera Thoughts and Suggestions, St. Louis Republican. H M;x:'“:gc uding 1833 in Kentucky and 1849 in St. Louis, I know its dangers and the importance of neglecting nothing that | - can bo done to avert its uu.mx a foot- hold in our country or c‘lty ith all that we can do I fear it will visit us, and sooner than we anticipate, and in view of this possibility, probability and through overy cholera | ot almost certainty 1 think our board of health should invite the ablest of our old phycitians_to co-operate with them and | at once publish for the information of all | overy suggestion to the people which | they may think will be valuable, so that the public mind may be prepared for it, andin this way alarm when it comes, which fearfully aids the disease, may be averted. Its vagaries, as I choose to term it, are wonderful. In 1849 in this city 1 have seen persons die out of almost every house on one side of the street and not a case on the other side. T have remained in a house where four grown ones in 24 hours of one family were carried off with it. T have seen the strong man with no seeds of disease in him, looking the pic- | ture of health and like the majestic oak, first struck with it, and in a few hours writhing in the agonies of cramps, and soon a corpse, and children of all ages swopt away with it. All who could well flee from our city left it, and if my memory serves me right, we lost about 7,000 people out of & population reduced by absentees to about 40,000 people. From my observation I think that the evacuations from the bowels tend to spread the disease, and that these should in all cases be burnt or bmied at once, burning the best, and never thrown into If into our water closets, when rried away to the river, and the onstantly disinfected with car- bolic acid and other disinfectants, no harm would come, but they should not be allowed to go into privies having no connection with our sewer system, and our sewers should daily bo sluiced out with full, free use of water. My obser- vations convince me that the evacua- tions are infections, and I have thought that immediately after death thero was greater danger of the disease being com- municated to_others. I would advise all who can, if it ap- pears, to get away up north, about the lakes. %nna who can’t get away should avoid drinking as much as possible; avoid melons, green corn, cucumbers, cabbage and acids generally. Live simply, plain- ly, on the best of plain, well-cooked food and there is little danger of cholera, but if you have any symptoms at ail of chol- era, at once stop work, lie down and re until a few days_after all symptoms dis- appear, and take laudanum to check cramp at once, or what is better, see your physician and follow rigidly Wl direc- tions, These are suggestions from one simply from experience, who has no medical knowledge, and he suggests that now, right at this time, our board of health and our medical colleges give publicity in the press of general advice in case of its appearance, and _not wait until it comes before saying a word. CAUTION, Oregon’s Census ana Representation. Portland Oregonian. Oregon will desire, doubtless, to have a special census taken in 1885, under the law passed by Congress four years ago which proyides that the census of a State may be taken at any time, provided half the expense shall be paid by the State. New Ylork, Pennsylvania, Illinois and Ohio, so the telegraph informs us, have already asked for a recount under this half-pay rule. The people of Oregon had good cause to be dissatistied with tlw ten- sus enumeration of 1880. Many districts were gone over in a carcless way, and it is thought by many that the tofal for the State would have been greater by some thousands if the count had been careful and accurate. In Portland, particularly, the work was shabbily done, and the population of the city set down at 17,000 and some hundreds, when o directery census taken about the same time, showed above 20,000, while there was befter rea- son to trust the unofficial count than the one made under Government direction. The chief reason, however, why a new e- numeration is desirable is that the State has filled up rapidly during the past three years, Portland alone has 10,000 more inhabitants than in 1880, and it is safe to assume that there are 40,000 more people in the State now than then. By 1885 we shall doubtless have a popula- tion sufficiently large to increase our rep- resentation in Congress. This would be greatly tn our advantage. The area of the State is so great that i% is impossible for a single Congressman to mingle with the people and study their wants representative ought to do, while our terests are so various that one man has not the time to devote to them which their respective needs merit, Eastern Oregon has a class of industries with spe- cial demands, while Western Oregon has distinctively anotherclass with its special demands. Each should be represented in Congress by a man indentified with its interests. If by 1885 theve is reason to believe that the population of the State has grown to the point allowing us anoth- er Congressman, the Legislatire should np})eal for a recount under the half-pay " Strange Talk. Missouri Republican, It is strange talk, this coming from Towa, that the republicans are in danger of losing their banner state. The repub- lican platform pledges the party uncon- ditionally to prohibition. That, it is said, has driven the Germans out of the party. The German population of Towa 18 now about 100,000. This means in the neighborhood of 20,000 German votes. Other foreigners, of whom there are nearly 200,000, may be expected to h.rgufy sympathize with the Germans. These facts at once account for the re- publican apprehensions about lowa. BE >THE GREAT RMAN RE F‘OP P ATIN. Rheumatism, N\umlum, Suama, L 0. Backache, HeadaChe, Toothac) LR 8 00) J. E. HOUSE, Consulting and Civil Engineer and SURVEYOR. Special attention to Surveying Town Addit ons and ‘' h:mblw- Estimates of Excavations, Making fim: UVEH THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK, OMAHA, NEB. MRS LOUISA MOHR, Graduated Midwife ! 1608 California Street. 608 WASHING1ON AVENUE AND 609 ST. H WESTERMANN & CO,, IMPORTERS ‘OF China and Glass, STREET St. Louls, io. WHOLESALE Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, ST. LOUIS. Mo, FLOUR, STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOT., ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER €O Near Union Pacific Depot, - - J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALEK IN Lmber, Lath, Shingles. Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. OMAHA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN Wholesale Druggist Paini AND DEALER IN s, 0ls, Varnishes and Windgyy flass OMAHA. NEBRASKA. P. BOYER & CO., DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Gompy FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTS, LOCKS, & 1020 Farnam Street. Omaha. 1118 FARNAM STREET, 5 HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Sha EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, OMAHA NEB. M. HELLMAN & co,, Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, - NEBRASK ™ Anheu;;er-Busich” .. BREWING ASSOCIATION: | CELEBRATED ! Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt. .\l'\lh OR THE E 'Ill(L WEST, Will be Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THE STANDARD OfOur G-uarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. Oftice Corner 13th and Harney Stree ita merita. od-cod-me SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growerg of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake. It is the best aud cheapest food for Stk ted with Groand Ol Gake ih the Fall a0d Winter, and be in good marketal stock of any kind. One pound i equal to three nndlolm.. 7, instesd of running owh, will incrass Dirymen, aa woll s othars, who use o ’u 0 s fon: 1o for sacks. st | COMPANY, Omaba \ble condition iu the Try i and judge for ywndvn QUEENSWARE! - '«

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