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e 4 THE DAILY BEE --OMAHA, TUESDAY, ALGUS THE Published evers morning, ‘e 1y Mond GMAHA BEE.| ept Sunday. The o ay morning dail M BT VATL One_Vear 10,0 | Three Months # Bix Month One Month 1 IR WRRKLY BA®, FURLISITRD NVHRY WRDXRSDAY O Toe e $ 0 Bix Montha © Month 0 American Nows ( @ in the Unit ¥, Sole] Agents Nowsdeal. | CORRRSTONDRNCE, | ditorial o THK relating to News and d to the Epiton A Communieati matters should be a B SRR | All Business Tettors and itemittances “shouldzbe addrossed to TR Bar PUBLISITNG COMPARY, “ONAIA Drafts, Cheoks and Postolice orders to be mado pay able ta,the order of the company THE BEE BUBLISHING C[]., A oty inspector, to inspect the m rently and council, is g needed. Investi gations in Omaha fail to investigate. | Tie Inter Ocean thinks that Sullivan striking made more in two minutes by than the Brotherhood have intwo weeks. | M. Wrensten Sxyper will shortly re turn to ()nm]m]\llltlwn-'!rl-numhnmtlonn\ that the market house with the tall tower will rise on Jefferson Square, Tur water-melon crop of Georgia brought £2,000,000 Jast year and tho | eucumber crop £500,000. Much of these amounts was clear profit to the doctors, Tir order to close the gambling houses continues unenforced. The unpublished order to open them, according to a pre- viously arranged contract, takes priority Sam Joxes has returned from the Wost but the mournimg on his eye which general ‘passonger agent Nims of the Rio Grande placed there when Sam called him a liar has been removed. Mgz. Srave has arrived at Kansas City and is in training for his fight with Mitchell. It will take a full month for the Maori to recover from his recent en- counter with Mr. Longfellow Sullivan. France held general elections yester- day, and in spite of legitimist plots and imperial manifestos the republicans gained two districts. Chambord’s sick- ness seems to have been a dismal fail- ure. Quitk a number of anti-monopoly and several prominent democratic papers are urging Judge Savage for the supreme court. There is no doubt he would fill the position with slgnal ability, provid- ing he would accept. Vinevarn Haves, Mass., totally destroyed by fire, tions are requested from the benevolent people of the country, The stato of Tewskbury ought to be able to tako care of its own unfortunates. has been and contribu- Noxk but Simon pure, straight and double twisted and dyed in the wool rail- road republicans are to be pormitted to attend the conventions this fall, This will make the conventions interesting and the election even more so. Masor Nickrrsox makes periodic ro- ports of his whereabouts, but the gov- | ernment profuss themselves unablo to lay their fingers on him. He has probably gone to join Howgate, who is wanted justaboutas budly as the Major is at Washington, Tk only parties who are active at this titne about the judicial positions that are to be filled by the peoplo this fall are the lawyers and the candidates. The ques- tion naturally comes up whether the judges have been created for the benefit of the lawyers only, or whether the peo- ple who are subject ' to their decisions have any interest that lawyers are bound to respect. Tar committee appointed at the late convention in Southern Dakota have called the regular constitutional conven- tion to meet at Sioux Falls on Septem- ber 4th- The convention will frame a constitution, the people will ratify it and oloct state officials, a legislature and a congressman, the legislature will elect United States senators and the complet- ed work will be prosented at Washing- ton for its acceptance. Tho proposed state has now 190,000 inhabitants and will have 200,000 by January 1st. —_— Tue Spanish insurrection which last week's cables announced to be merely a stock jobbing move proves to be a genu- ine revolt of large dimensions, The troops in three provinces have revolted, and Spain has been declared in a state of sioge. As usual the trouble began with the army, where the seed of republican ism were planted in '68, and from which two monarchies have unable to eradicato them. Yesterdap's dispatches announced that the revolt had been en- tirely quelled, but the extrome precau- tions that are being taken by the govern- ment indicate that the embers are not yet extinguished, been OwinG to the insurrcction, King Al- fouso has postponed his trip to Germany, Tv is generally understood that the motive of the journey, which was to iuclude vis- its te Vienna, Berlin and Italy, was to secure support for Spain’s desire to enter the European concert and take a share in collective action in connection with the affairs of Egypt and the Suez canal in view of future complications and the fur- ther aims of Bpain in Morocco and the | derstood that |eral Logan is to urge PROPS ANOTH ! R INDIAN POLICY General Shoridan I Tuded acoun cil with the Shoshon at Ft and Arapahoe 1 dians Washa at which Presi lent Arthur and Seeretary Lincoln were The first present goneral at this meeting made th public announcement of his intention to secure the transfer of the Indians to the care of the war depart ment, the abolition of the reservation and | agency systems and the settlement of the i ns on land in severalty, It is un the prosident holds sub | stantially the same views and that Gen- the matter at the next sessionof congress. Dispatches atate that the policy will be announced to all ¢ other tribes within tho next three munl]m Portions of General Sheridan's policy are by no means now. To trans. ™| form the Indian from a savage to a citi- zen, to break up his social system of tri | bal relations and to make him a self-sus biding clementin the - the d than faining and law s body politic has ¥ 1 of re- formers for more half a contury { Our present method of alternately fight- ing the Indian in war and pampering him in peace is open to many objections, Itis costly and has often proved ineffective. 1 General Sheridan or any other citizen or officer can offer a national and compr hensivo scheme for more promptly civiliz ing the Indians they will belistened to with the attention which their sugges- tions deserve. Wo aro inclined, however, to doubt very seriously whether the transfer of tho Indians to the war department is in the lino of roform. The men who are employed to fight the Indians aro hardly the ones to train them in the arts of peace. The transfer of hostiles to tlw care of the military authorities is ¢ ble on grounds of public safety. turn over But to 200,000 semi-civilized savages to the tender mercies of the army on the grounds of better government and econo- my would, in our opinion, be a bad policy. It is complained that the Indians are idle. No one will argue that they gain respect for habits of industry from the contemplation of army life on the fron- tier. All the training of a soldier and his surroundings unfit him to deal as a peaceful civilizer with savage tribes. So far as acting as a frontior police is con- cerned, the army might be permitted to control the Indians sufficiently to keep be placed in other hands, rienco has shown this, once completely under control of the ar- my, and the change was made for suffi- cient reasons. There would doubtless be a suving in agents' salarics were the transfor made, on our Indians, which is $2i pensioners. million has gone for agents'salarie tapo of the war department would have been any more efl fraud at the agoncies. Human 1 pretty much the samo the world ov bursing supplios. For the Shoridan’s other portions of General policy, have not space for discussion, more thay to say that tho army should bo tho las agency for putting in operation system of social and civil administration. public lands, cover a suflicient oxtent of te emphasize the steady disappearance o the public domain and the extension of boundaries of the United States. be had for the asking are numbered, the nary offorts in men of country to taking extraordi- with it the number of land seekers of foreign birth, the number of soctions boyond anything known in ou history. settlement has been tion and timber acts. As this does nof include statistics from some of the south. orn statos, where large quantities of land have completed been will |8 great addition to these figures, an roport during the lust year, land at the disposition of the govern mont, Mediterranean. The Bpanish court and the minister of public affairs incline toward such ulliances te counteract the which French democracy exer- cises in Bpain, and because they believe ‘*Mrmnnhbd- g of Bpuin those vast desert tracts containing hun- ereds of thousands of acres which not inculeating habits of work, of industry, of sobriety and morality had much better Past expe- The Tndians were Since the war we have spent $125,000,000 5,000,000 more than we annually expend on our | Mi Of this sum less than a s, This stive than the red tape of the interior department in proventing ture is and Indian agents are not the only offi- cinls drawing pay from the government who have boen able to retire comfortably through handling largo contracts and dis- which includes the breaking up of tribal relations and tho holding of the 'ands in severalty, wo T 8t. Paul Pioneer Press notes the astonishingly rapid disappearance of the 1t says that, incompleto as aro the facts thus far made public from the report of the general land office, they itory to the rights of private ownorship over the wholo great territory included within the The fooling that the years when a farm wmay sooms to have stimulated the young possession of the government lands; for in spito of the fact that omigration has fallen off, and claims taken up and of acres bought for cash has stoadily increased, going oven in some Returns from the states where ost active give a total of 13,017,854 acres sold for cash, or takon up under the homestead, pro-emp-. appropriated, the | cortainly show will probably indicate a total of from | 15,000,000 to 20,000,000 acres taken up It is extremely | difficult to get at any reliable and ncurate estimate of the total amount of public The estimate of 1880 put it at abont 774,600,000 acres, but this includ- ed timberand mineral lands as woll as rate at which this total time when the existence of a domain f dream of politics This tendency, too, is encour the high and honored place in which the authors of some of probunciamentos have held or still The carcer of Prim, Martinez Campos, and Serranno is to the present generation a striking example of what an officer may do by attention to pslitics and | an occasional “r The impression | will but it will take | time to all under the condition of actual set will be Cheap lands, state, national tlement and cultivation a thing of the past and railroad, will still be obtainable f«.r‘ many years to come. But the exhaus. tion of the public domain is annually a 4 ing. wear out gradually, nearer ce ainty, and with its approach we begin to come f o to face with those’ problems which have harrassed older civ Dorsey’s Straw Pile Again, ilizations. Cinclunati Commercial Gazette + | Dorsey is threshing his old straw over Ix view of the coming state campaign | \iqin, with a little additional malice to some of our exchanges are beginning to | ward President Arthur. he animosity discuss the position of the “‘renegade re- | that he feels v‘m ard |||. president is 1|n " sanva | the highest degree complimentary t publicans” in the approaching canvass ¥ " | proves that P fenident Arthiir has beon By renegado ropublicans we prosume are | PR L EERUREE S T8I o me nt all voters of previous afliliation with the republican party who refused doubt, | ust be noisy about his part in the Au conference as long as he can got to listen to him Dana has, he at wrong, but he is j talk loud and long for the Sun. y8 modesty in_one respect—as- signing to Dudley and New the f Indiana carnpaign-—and_ hopes to last fall to train uader the railroad ban rebuked the bosses in the party ranks by declining to ner and who monopoly | ked conven endorse the nominees of pa tions and candidates who were unwilling | the i ain from this a reputation for reserve to pledge themsclves to labor in the peo- | fhnt iy send some of his slanderous ple's interests, | fancies further alon, When we con- In 5o far as we are enable to judge of the position of these “‘renegade republi- sider the sort of tow unserupulous he is, and that he was red since | 10 @ position to know all the secrets of ks the Garfield campaign, we are surprised 000 volers | that his story is as mild as he hands it juined in a revolt which{up. We wonder he did mot make it made itself heard in the campaign mul'h"rm'l nd harder while h{- \\:(w M] it, Tha 56| s lowis. | There are two points in the latest rush of felt at the polls. The mu.ruuHIu legis. | ERB S e voliter, ONB N LBAL lature, 8o far from breaking the Garfield promised Morton the treasury has solidified anti-monopoly sentiment in | the other is that Garfield offered Dot That a cabinet place, Confessedly there are broken by abusing those who no documents, The cclebrated meme : " |andum existed only in Mr. Dana’s mind's The revolted anti-monopoly republi- | cans and tho republ eye. Garfield was certainly very anxious anti- lllunnlmlm!‘tim conciliate the New York politicians can never be won back into the party by | at the August conference in 1880. He made the trip for that purpose, as Dorsey says. And Mr. Conkling could not attend the conference, because, as his friends said at the time, he did not want to be understood to be making bargains. He wanted to avoid the imputation. And yet Garfield was invited to go to Coney Island, and told that he could by ing o republican victory in the judicial | o doing have an interview with Conkling, campnign, and that is by party managers |and he refused to go, saying he would Ihu making both primaries and conventions a ‘L:Hkl’;:.l,’l;.’z l;:; ;};;':h A\\ffx‘.lllu fm&'l}‘z; fair oxpression of the wishes of the peo-| 1" would not go fo Coney Tsland for a ple and not a reflection of the des’res of | pocket interview with .myfmay, even if the railroad strikers. the presidency depended upon it. Garfield was solicitous _to avoid Mor- ton, but formed the opinion he was not cligible] to the treasury under the old Hamiltonian act, which excluded A. T. Dorsey has cans,”’ it has not materially ¢ last November, when nearly 20, in this state ranks, nnot be intain it. the state. sentiment first reading them out of the party. Allegiance to a party is not such a_price- less boon in these times that men sub- mit to being kicked into it. There is one way, and only one way, in which the renegade republicans can assist in assur- The Outlook for 1884, Philadelphia Press raiding settlers from thoir resorva.| In 1880 thero woro 369 clectoral votes, [Stewart in 1869, Then he gave ;l,',',',','fifl'fi.';f.sst ek l;{:jr:m:\hi::::; : Nl b |and it required 185 to eloct. Garfield |Morton o cabinet placo that| ST S70 fs nob heon injurcd to uny tions and raiding Indiang from tho| g Arthur had 214, In 1884, through | was satisfactory to him, but Conkling in- | Sxfent jorth neationing by the ato settlors, but the real work of | the increaseof representation under the |terfered and “smashed the slate, and |TUS. de DWE O e crop was new census, there will be 401 electoral votes, of which 201 will constitute a majority. If the states should vote then as they voted in 1880, the division would be as follows: REPUBLICAN. ado Connectisuy brought on all the trouble that followed. Why should Dorsey or any one else goon k for presidential election pur- There has not been a presidential poses? election for fifty years in which money DENOCRATIC, Alabama . . was not largely contributed by the rich 7| men of New York to both parties. Th Lias not been & republican_electod pres liusetts Michigan Mass glas to Hancock who was not_supplied \xmm..a "7 8| with the sinews of war by the New York [ & e AL, T .| Ohio North Caro 11 ;pl.um that hurt English most severely in sum could have been retained in the | s South Carolina, ... 0| 1880, was that he hud not contributed as |or othor treasury if officers had been detailed for Ponnsylvinia 30 Tonnesseo. . .. he lmd promised; and so strong was the | have turned out w the purpose from tho line or staff. But '\t,"y"m“":'““" o Al democratic foeling on this subject that it it is o sorious question whether the red T Wt Vinginin ad been arranged if the democrats won | castern states. = 7| the election that English : 173 This would give the republicans a ma- jority of fifty-five electoral votes over the | i S — S democrats, and twenty-seven more than A COMBDYLOM ERRORS. the number necessary to elect. Both = columns, however, embrace states that|The Fate that in any intelligent caleulation must be and the Reporter who Re- classed as doubtful. Of the republican United Them. column Connecticut, Indiann and New York may be included in the duuhlful list; and of the democratic column, fornia, Florida, New Jersey and V ginia, The revised table weuld stand thus: Suro rop, states DOUBTHL another man elected. In the spring of 1881 Miss Annie Ricn and Ernest Rathzeb came over Havre in the steamer Labrador, 1 ..171 Sure dem. states.129 to Plattsburgh, N, DOUBTFI where she had Connecticut. ... .... 6 California. . . g | friends. On the way over the two be- n | Indiana lorida. 5 4 | came acquainted, fell in love, and when ¢ | New York. New Jersoy 9| they reached New York they were en- North Carol 11| gaced to be married. Mr. Rathzed was L] Virginia...... ... 12 | g yilk dyer, and came over to work in Doubtful rop. ... .57 Doubttul dem....34 | Weidmann's dyo works in Paterson. The With 171 sure electoral votes, the re- publicans would have to secure’ just 30 more from the list of doubtful states in order to carry the presidency. New York alone would do it with six votes to spare. 1f New York were gained, as it was in 1880, every other doubtful state might be yielded to the democrats, Or if Connccticut, Indiana and New Jerse, ¢ were gained, the republicans could win f without New York. Or, again, if they socured California and l‘lumlu in hl»th of which they have an excellent ¢ | they could safely lose Now Jersey still, again, if they carried Connecticut, California, Florida and Vi ginia, the; could win without Indiana, New Y and Now Jorsoy. We hove classed as doubtful all that | may fairly be embraced in that list. Three months ago Ohio wight with some show of reason lave been challenged. If it were lost to the republicans this year, as there seemed then some reason to fe f [ it might be regarded as doubtful nex But Ohio hus now straightened up, and may fairly be counted among the sure re publican states, Of those which th democrats carried in 1880 the republicans v | have a good outlook in California, New Jersoy and Florida, Asthe republicans have but thirty votes to gain among the | Unsuited o a doubtful states, while the democrats |4 have soventy-two, it is clear that the chances are on the republican side, ' —— | e ! f and_marry Miss Ric would return to Paterso some mistake Miss Rich was and then o to Patterson, N. Y., and Mr. wever received her missives. Miss Rich, fter a while, Alda, Hall county to live, .| Meantime Mr. Rathaoi .- {wlong well in Paterson. — He made ¢ | | effort possible to find his lost sweetheart, but in vain, ate the circumstances to M, Schnetter, a reporter on the Volksfre uml, and Mr, Schnetter teered to hunt up the all the Plattsburghs in the country, and finally found a'clue, which was followed up, until Miss Rich was at last discovered in Nel She had remained true to her first Al this time, and as soon-as she heard that he ianced was in Pat erson, N, J.; she started at once, and ar rived in that city early this week. She is now at Ulrich’s Hotel, and her wed- ding dress is nearly finished. aterson volun- Self: Journal Aug 9. gespecting Pross, has been received at this office an extendod ul.\wn,-lnc summary ufnmum furnished The New York Sun anish Rising. by (hat contemptible thief, liar and Evening Post, sueak, Stephen W. Dorsoy. Weo havo to anish rising, which has been so [P for this matter, but we do not haye [ futile and contomptible that it hus been |10 1PNt it We do not see how any self- seviously suggested that it was got up as | FPCCUng paper can justif fin im- 1| a stock-jobbing operation, just like a|R8INS upon it readers such rot. Tven disquicting rumor” i Wall' stroet, is |4 it contained any statements which had | probably simply the work of the officers | 2t Pt worn threadbare by ieration in who headed it, and who have fled int the partisan press, those statements Portugal. What it illustratos is tho con. | ¥0uld be rendered worse than useless by dition of the Spanish aruny, which has, in | th0 character of their source. Tt is push- spite of the improvements in other de. 118 the license of a free press very close ents os the gosernment, ovidently | to the L of seurrility when a branded out of the rovolutionary. state of | 67 18 given the franchiso of the asso- The Spanish politicians, like their | #t¢d press wherewith to spread heart- conganers in Moxico, are ovidontly grad. | 1958 lies about a dead president, and m.u, reconciling themselves to a re; ime 8pit the venom of a scoundrel’s hate at a of peaceful discussion, and to secking live one change at the polls through action on N Y Resity public ~ opinion. But the arm Viva Voco Voting and Bribery. even irrigation could make capable of \ been too deeply demoralized | Louisville (Ky.) Commercial, Aug 7. sustaining life, Only]a comparatively [for an equally rapid cure. | The buying of votes in at least one of amal“iton " " | Bl M o, St | s sl e sy ey can be considered available l(ft cant as that which lchnplmntl;u m;’ ?l’:’“uuuhlu Py du.t under our the purposes of settlement; sud if | dajos, and have resulted in waking great | presont system of voting there is no wey finnesots T Misshwippi 9| millionaires. Sam Tilden's money bought A “:;;‘“:' o180 the purchasablo politicians of the | Cr Now York, b New Jersoy Co|w in 1876, and the com- should be re- pudiated by the Blectoral Colleges, and Divided Two Lovers, from Miss Rich was booked for transportation direct lovers arranged that as soon as he got a little start he would go to Plattsburgh they hrough Plattsburgh, Mo., so that her lover's let- ters never reached her, while she wrote Rathzeb employment in ., aud went there wias_getting yery Oune night he happened to Charles ote to wo consider the s of the obscure colonels and | has been decreasing in the three years ; T “""' got them o t"lw 3 o W ade, 1 an. | quently, revolution is one of the things | sir the estimate was made, it will ay Spanish offic , Weaty ¢ rtison life, pear how rapidly we are approaching the | und tired of whiting for promotion, still ECLECTRIC Cures Rheumatism, Lum-| | Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh, Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, | Diphtheria, Bums, Frost| | Bites, Tooth, Ear, and Head-| | ache, and all pains and aches. | | The best internal and externai remedy In the world. Tvery bottle guaranteed. Sold by medicine dealers everywhere, Directions in eight languages, Price g5 cents and §1.00. rosTER MILBURN & €O, Pmp BUFFALO, N, Y., stop to such practices as long as | andidates anxious to buy and tosell. The way we vote rigable to be a itely sure | cller has carried out his con- The man who buys a vote does | or 1f, as a rule, till assured that seded as agreed. The viva voce | system of voting enables the buyer to be certain that he has got what he bargained | An essential thing to do before the ving of votes can be stopped s to de- Prive the buyer of this certainty that the vote bought " is delivered. This can nnl) be done by substituting voting by ball for vi see voting, and this chang; only be made by amending the tion. We do not mean ay that votes are not bought now where voting is by ballot, but voting by ballot can be so ar- ranged that |I.<- opportunities to buy | profitably ma » reduced toa minimum. | that the tract, CROP NOT Sherman County Times: There is really more small grain and corn_to be seen, all in the finest possible condition, between St. Paul and Loup City, than there is in the whole county of Pott wattamie, the largest county in Tow The fields of grain in Nebraska leok like minature seas and so tall and 1 and waving and to look almost as billowy. P ful sights and bright prospects for the active farmers, so many of which we boast. Wood River Ge farmers who ha From numerous e ullul at this oftice vested before the wet scason opened, and the little that las been harvested since has been saved in good condition. Plattsmouth Herald: Cass county far- veport a much better yield of sm grain, when they come to threash, th they had counted on. They say the| yield is much better than they estima .m ‘ it would be; this but confirms the Herald too little atten- dent from Lincoln to Garfield without the | in its belief that enti e help of New York money, and_there has | tion has beenpuid of late years to the culti- | Maliors not been a democrat defeated from Dou- | vation of small of Nebraska, Orleaus Sentinel: The people of Har- lan county have much to thank the | tor for thi been | o b, GG accidents. All the small grains | o1l and corn is in bot- | ter condition than in some of the more | Steamboating on the Missouri. Sioux City Journal. he Missouri at Sioux City appears to be an asylum for aged and infirm boats, and the haleyon duys when steamboats made this the objective point in up and down trips appears to have departed un- der the power of the incoming railroads. The days were, not many y Sioux City was one of the ports on the river. Then railronds entirely or almost unknown, To-day it is one of the leading railroad poin its rivor transportains is slight. timé will come, howeve g water main of {ransportation will be used on a more liberal scale than ever before, THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relieves aid cures RHLUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, by, Lame Back Spmineans| 608 WASHING1ON AVENUE AND 609 ST. | Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ‘Wholesale H WESTERM.ANN & Co,, IMPC QUEENSWARE S OF J China and Glass, STREET St. Louis, Po. WEHOLESATLTH Dry Goods! SAIM'L C. DAVIS & CO, moe-3m ST. LOUIS. Mo, STEELE, JOHNSON & co,, Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED G0OTS. ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES! A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. MEIVTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO ! J. A WAKEFIELD {WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lumber, Lt Shingls, Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINBS MUULDINGS LIME, BEMHNT PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, ‘- - OMAHA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN, ‘Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN i et 0ils, Varnishes and Window flass OMAHA, NEBRASKA. | DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTY, LOCKS, & 1020 Farnam Streot. Omaha. 'HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paper ad Widow Sk EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET. £ - OMAHA NEB. M. HELLMAN & co, BACKACHE, HEADACIIE, TliO’l‘llAl}llB, QUINSY, 5WELLINGS. Sareness. Cuts. Bruises, FLROSTBITES, | | HIPIEAINS, | | | | i, H}'IV LLNIS A BOTTLE. |1||;| oy, 1 ”f'w ™ RE ACKNOWLEDC WHO HAVE PUT TEST. T BE THE BEST BY ALL ) A PRACTICAL ADAMED 10 Hard and Soft Coal, COKE OR WO00D. MANUFACTURE W1 | BUCK STOVE co.,} SAINT LOUIS, Pierct & Bradford. BOLE AGENST FOR OMAHA “Jokn D. Peabody, M. D., PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, | mw.u‘l 807 FARNAM. ”O.lluulllh s e Uwaba, Nea Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, (3 NEBRASK Anheuser-Busch OMAHA ® CELEBRATED ‘ Keg and Bottled Beer Thin Excollent Beor speaks for itself. ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, Will be Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR (t00DS ARE MADE T0 THESTANDARD Ghb(‘(y OfOurGC-uarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Sole Ageat for Omalia and the West. Oftice Corner 15th and Harney Streots. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growerg of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Cround Oil Cake. uufluum mohmmw#m:'r'. fi:"u-fl'_ o Jown, will hu-:’-‘ .: -M-ME oo, Deiymes, othars, who we it ca I.-h. Ty s huaudv- ’tnn'bl lfl\-'l-lw ANy A