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THE GMAHA BEE. Published eversy morning, ‘oxeept Sunday. The One_Year Six Months. IR WRRKLY WER, PURLISIIED RVERY WRDNRSDAY TRRMS FOSTPAID, One Year £2.00 | Three Months 8 50 Six Months. American N ers in the Unit s Company, Sole] Agents Nowsdeal: 1 States RRESTONDENCE. ns relating to News and Editorial addressed to the Eniton o Tik | A Communi matters should b B Temittances should’,be 1N COMPANY, OMATIA rdors to be made pay- | Drafts, Checks and P’ able to the order of th THE BEE BUBLISEING €O, ‘ E. ROSEWATER, Editor, | Trene is a rush of immigration towards Washington Territory and labc v is said to | be in excellent demand in the of Henry Villard, territory Sr. Pavn ting over 160 brick | business houses costing nearly £5,000,000 | and 146 frame stores worth an additionl half a million. is er Baxk failures and business failures while giving no sure grounds for fear that a panic is upon us, show that prices and speculation have dropped close to the bottom. Ax attempt, of Parnell, to rebuke the English government through the deteat | of the appropriation bill for the Irish | prosecutions failed yesterday in the house of commons. Tur Chicago Inter Ocoan hasa leading article on “The Dangers of Prosperity.” They are great. No one will attempt to deny it. But the inconveniences of ad- versity are even gro er. Sexaton Arisox will receive genoral sympathy in hisafiliction, Mr. Allison is one of the a lest and clearest handed men in the senate and is personally popu- lar among his constituents. At the rate at which grading contracts are being let, the surplus of funds in the city treasury available for electric light- ing promises to be too small to bo scen with the largest kind of a microscope. Pourricians who claim to know the force of the wind and the direction of the current, quietly assont that should Gene- ral Arthur decline to be a candidate for the presidency, Secretary Lincoln will be taken up by the stalwarts. Mr. Lincoln’s | canvass would be made on his father's reputation. It would be a campaign based on a powerful personal sentiment. Rerorts from finang continued decline i centers show a | speculation and a decrease in bank clearings which are now 26 per cent. lower than at the corres- ponding period last No record of the clearances of Omaha banks is pub- lished because Omalia bankers refuse to pay the necossary clork hire to compile & weekly statement of the amount of business transacted through their tutions, * insti- | Trkice was another flurry on Wall street yesterday in which the victorious, forcing stock lowest notch they have reached for oxcitoment was caused streot by the failuro of George bears came off | s, on the Ballon & Co., one of the largest firms of brokers in the city. It is rumored that several othor firms are seriously om- buisussed, Tue following was the estimated rail- wiy mileage of the world on January 1, 1883; United States, 113,000; Europe, 109,000; Asia, 8,000; South America, 7,000; Canada, 8,600; Australia, 3,200; Africa, 2,200; Mexico, 2,100-—grand total, 263,000 miles. These figures are not exact, as it is impossible to obtain official returns within a year or two after date, and 50 it is necessary to uso the latest available statements and add the probable number of miles of road that may have been built in different countries since the time the latest statistids published with authority were issued. 17 is apjarent from the receipts of the government during July that the revis- ion of the tariff is not likely to result in aloss of revenue, there being an actual gain of nearly a million dollars in custom duties us compared with July, 1882, The abolition of a part of the internal revenuo taxes and the reduction of others hay however, had a decided effect on tho in- come of the nation, and, on the whole, the public revenue will b slightly dimin- ished by the legislation of last winter, The tariff must be still further reduced in the interests of every one except the in- dustrial monopolists who thrive on exor- bitant exactions from 50,000,000 of our people. AccorbinG to the new treasury regula- tions, brewers will hereafter be required to make an official showing of all mate- rials which enter into the manufacture of their beer. The news will be welcome to many consumers of thearticle, There is & provailing impression that since the juwp in the prices of hops last fall alocs and various other drugs have been used in large quantitics in the preparatian of this popular beverage. The new treas- ury regulations, if enforced, will be of assistance in preserving the public health, In addition they will be of assistance to honest brewers who use barley and hops instead of injurious drugs in their busi- ness. Pure beer is much less dangerous than the dogtored article and the con- sumption of lager has become so uni- versal in the United States that this latest move on the part of the treasury 1.00 | One Month 2| 5 | to furnish. | 8 down to the| William | GExeraL Drost has asked the adjutant generals of the sevcral statos for full in formation concerning their milit This request of the adjutant general has been interpreted in a zen different ways by Washington correspondents, some of | whom have credited him with prepara tions for a war with Mexico, others with Germany, and still others | as about to put down an impending riot contest with of American workingmen. dispatch to the Pioneer Press says that | o that General A special | there is reason to b Drum simply desires this information for a special report to congress on the sub. t, It well known that he takes a| PROPS, ‘\.-r, decided interest in the militin and | modated. thinks there should be a national militia, | [ at least 200,000 strong, uniformed and | y the United States e uniform xactly as | equipped | 1 and | federal troops are oquipped, with artillery and cavalry in the quota which cach would be expected |y The United States should fur- | | nish armories where they are needed, | | and ev y other thing which the state did r which the militia me not obtain at slight militia ought to be the rogular army. | It ought to be so officered and so trained | that 1t could be mobilized within fort cight hours, Drum thinks eve state should then be ready to send at a | moment’s notice such a body of troops nn} Pennsylvania sent to field’s in- | auguration, within thirty-six hours of the | time when the order to march was given, Gen, Sherman said of them, “I could not ask better troops. T would not hesi- tate to them Massachusetts and New York have simi- lar regiments. Drum thinks every | state should have them. He is doing what he can to bring this about. He encourages the states in every possible way to seek his aid. The regular army could then be kept small. The nation could depend on its militia. It could well afford to spend five or ten millions a year in preparing such an army and a million or two a year in keeping it up. Congress will be asked by Gen. Drum to establish such a system. not. provide, could The the reserve of [ expense. | regarded as | Gen, against veterans. Gen, SexATOR ALLisoN opened the Towa campaign for the republicans at Clarinda on Saturday. Judge Kinne, the demo- cratic nominee for governor, has been in the field for several weeks. If Mr: Kinne ever had any hopes of securing an election, or even of seriously reducing the ropublican majority, he has thrown them all away by declaring himself not only opposed to prohibition, which woula have met with a ready response from many republicans, but by himself and against any liquor traflic whatever. h, in which he declared for “‘a saloon on every hill top,” has created a announcing party unalterably rostriction of the his | Judge Kinne's | among democrats, o it has driven back into the r thousands of republicans who were falter- ing in theiv allegiance, Democratic blunddving is the deadliest foo to dem But of all the party wl atic suce the clections, the mistake of surrendering to blunders made by in state the adv traflic in tes of an unlicensed liquor state which by 40,000 majo prohibition two years ago, is declared fc the worst. It is a blunder so monumen- tal that no one but a hourhon politici could have been guilty of it, | ticula! It was par- lled for under the cireum- radical stand takon by the | stances, republican convention which threw over- board Judge Day because he refused to uphold the constitutionality of the pro- hibitory amendment, seemed to assure permanent republican disaffectlon. But the position assumed by the democratic party and its candidate discounts in idiocy the blunder of the republican con- vention, It has strengthened the party, drawntloser the party lines and assured in advance an overwhelming republican victory. For all of which the moss- backs who never forget anything except their own mistakes, and nevor loarn any- thing except new methods of blundering, have only themselves to blame, Jongress ought te abolish the ter rial law-making power, and rule the Ter- ritory through a commission, Congress itself makes all necessary laws for the government of the District of Columbia, and why not for Utah? Until the Mor. mons ard excluded from all participation in the Territorial government, there will be trouble and polygamy will continue to tiourish, —Cleveland Leader, This is the horoic romedy urged by ox- Senator Paddock, But what right has congress to disfranchise thousands of law- abiding sens in Utah becauso a por- tion of the voters in the tervitory profess a belief in poiygamy. Under the Ed- munds law polygamists have already hoon disonfranchised. A government by com- mission would incres age, and furnish fat positions fc oftice seckers, chronic But these minor advan- tages would be more than set off by per- nicious example of the establishment of a territorial tyranny under whose rule the habeas corpus would be suspended, the right to trinl by jury abolished, and all citizens, both innocent and guilty, de. prived of their dearest political vights, Tur Herald denous “‘slandering the army"” because attention hLas been called to the needless and num erous “inspection trips” ces some one for which are being |y made for ofticial pleasure combined with ofticial business in the Departinent of the Platte. We say needless, because it is o watter of comment among army officors in Omaha and of good natured laughter at posts outside of Omaha that the “‘in- spection” business has been greatly over- done duri the past year. We shall shortly give a comparison in dollars and cents of the amount of mileage drawn by department is in the line of & wholesome reform. !, General Howard's staff and that by Gen- | diture | pounds and all smaller | shilling, and one pound for three pence, | 1THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA, \\l l)\l‘.\l)\\, 1\1 GU \l juent advocacy of this principle fills 188? s for agriculture 1s by no his incumbency in the department. The | ¢l colonie: means figures speak for themselves, the monopolists with alarm v, T pw’m i Their products are as yet lim Tho troublo with thie army is that they |, 1t idemocracy aganst monopoly. This | itec he whole of Australia_only pro 7 |is the unt issue in nd duces about as much wheat and barley as imagine themselves entirely outside of | France, as well as in America. California, and wh culture, we are the pale of newspaper ecriticism. No are facing another form of the pressing | told, has made little advance in New abuse connected wifh the military estab- | issue mI the fight ’v.ymm the r].»\ aph ]\m.vh!\\ .1‘.‘. ‘r‘( recent } ..u' Wool has » over bee entilated _|monopoly, which has managed to get | been the chief export, but if we are to lishment has ever beon vontilated with- |, 0"5f {16 “husinoss of the country | believe s tract_published by Ohistop her out arousing the same old cry of slander. | 4y, g forcing the people to carry it and | Rolleston, ‘l G., auditor general, It is especially appropriate that Dr. Mil ¢ enormously for the privilege. The | president un this colony, the limits of pas. Jor, *whose exporience with tho army was | 1 monopolies wx.ui into the | turage have already been reached. The bacl lent demands of the Western Union mo- gained in peddling poor whiskey to off ground for the moment by the inso cors at Ft. Kearney, should denounce as |y 1e " and ‘the strike it pri slanderous any criticism upon the army. |have reached a point of arrogance and of But if the erald and the staff of the | peril in this country of which those in it France have no ide: » transporta- ato Howard are pining for speci- | France have no idea. The transy I’“I""“ oulate Howard ate pinin s tion interest in a continental country like e the United States is too vast and vital in cipitated, ions and figures they can be accom ‘ wine of Australia bears a good reputation, |but grape culture is in its infancy. | Oranges can be raised, but to what extent | |is not known, Hides, tallow and carined meats are sent abroad in large quantities, but beyond these and the few other arti- | cles mentioned, the export trade amounts |tolittle. We do not see how Australia The truth of the matter is its importance for French statesmen to | can ever be largely engaged in manufac- that our entire military establishment |grasp. To.day that int t is in the | tures, its streams being few and its situa- needs a thorough overhauling. And it |8riP of a dozen millionaire railroad | tion for u\|||-]\|n'(|u wants of the world ¥ T S o kings, who fix the terms on which |not very favorable. Without is likely to receive it ab the next session | wogtorn farmors shall sell — and |streams, and for the renson Just given, ity of congress. | eastern merchants shall buy the | foreign commerce must also be limited It will be no very difficult matter to |produce of the country; and whether | principally to the export of raw material tarmers shall be the working people of the for food, These are two out o monopolies that to-d the gove ment in ruling the |‘m|nl.- and do mor than any American government would be permitted to do to rob and impoverish the people. And the paramount issue in our polities to-day is not bank nor tariff nor internal improvements, nor any of i out; it rint the nan s of officers in - the depart- ast shall Ny ment who hold railroad passes and dray b mile from the government which have never b “~d for expen - OmAnA, Aug. 14th To the Editor of Tur Bre. I am a workingman looking out fo lot to build a little house upon. I have saved £250, but find that no lots within a reasonable distance of the city can bo liad for that sum. Men who paid from | 8200 to 8500 for their property four years | ago are holding it at from four to eight times that |mu. With real estate a high as it is at present, there does not seem to be any lots for workingmen in Omaha. E. P. S, local real estate con- tinues good, but there is a feeling that 1 n this issue the democratic party no choice, but by its history and | principles and sympat it s forced to | take the side of the ,mmh- in u| position to monopoly. Tactics, A \\M]ml”tun 0 cial to The Boston wld s a del ‘incinnati convention in 18 The demand for residence property on the extremes of th city boundaries has been pushed up too | t0 the Chicago convention in 1880, said | a Maryland [mlltl to-night. *41 voted | | for Blaine seventeen times at Cincinnati | Farm | and three times at Chicago. 1 stopped land and swamp land can be turned too | | voting for him when I saw there was no chance of his sccuring the nomination. No, I don’t think he will ever have the ean hold | £l wing lio had at the last two conven- lots and meet int their | tions. Mr. Blaine had the best equipped prices can be maintained. "i‘_;lmm,' for Chicago of any one. No candidates ever had better generals inanaging their canvass. Failure, under high. Almost every week sces new ad- ditions mapped out and platted. Of course property t on st into city lots. the owners of such their Tong as are too high in some portions | of Omaha, and must come down. There | {jetd e Cr BIE idered a final is no renson why lots two miles | defeat, and all of Blaine’s friends re from the conter of the city should bo |od it as such. fow weeks ago 1 held at their present figures. 1f Work- [happened to =~ occupy a berth in a sleepir i ar adjoining _one ocoupied by on, at aineandaprominent Maine politician. | 50 1ot | was awakened by the sound of voi within a reasonable distance of town. |the m;ht l|fiw;: 1 o | immedial is friend was urging him b ppokably ""'l pele “1"'"“ ,1"”"';:.. follow out a new line of policy at the situated on a paved street lit with gas |, ¢ yutional convention, ~ He advised lamps, or supplied with city water, But | him to get himself elected as a del property in some of the latest laid outad- | to the next convention, and be on “the ditions on the outskirts can not continue ground prepared to take advantage of ingman will wait a few month most, u year, he can buy his e cireumstances. Mr. Blaine finally agreed abits prasent inflal to think it over, and I think that is the ST next move he contemplates. You sce he Tk sub-committee of the senate com- | would have no difficulty in sceuring the mittee on labor is in session in New York | leadership of the Maine delegation. In investigating the telegraph strike and its that position he would be able to wield a g [ I3 e S [large influen He could not do more The statistics collected will fur-,[ (8¢ Emee o cor He would undoubtedly ha a postal telegraph | from the rural distvie auses, h an excellent basis for pressing and for popular de , where the people | system before the next congr | are slow to accept changes or to alter o e | their minds when once made up. Mr. The Paramount Issuc. ‘liltim‘. as the leader of the Maine dele- New York Star .gm«-n in the next convention, will be the i s y < | most important factor .u Tho Pall Mall Gazetto has a striking | ™Sy "N 060 s rthur will be rticlo on the growin land to resist the er ms of monopol tondeney i Eng- | gught Torward as a o didate?” “I'have no doubt of it. Everything points that way now, but M | be able to defeat his nomin “An mcident of the Chicago conven- [ tion probably changed the result. When the delegates met in caucus every one | felt that war would commence on th chairmanship of the convention. M. | Conkling made a long speech, Here nized that many delegates differed from |lim personally, but that should not cause ill feeling The Grant men were not strong enough to elect a chaivman, but ~ | they could prevent the election of an ob- jectionable man. Eugene Hale respond- | ed for the Blaine faction, and chinents and ag- | ilway g The passengers duty bill, a very mild me: for the additional protection of the t « public, has ealled forth a fier om Sir BEdward Watkin, « He insists that the g 1ld not intel anized me uf sh ¢ | tions of He protests o ing a step which will be followed by others and lead to the complete subjection of corporations to | the will of accidental majority. The ad- dition of a parcels post to the postal tem, which carrics parcels weighing se weight for en one | edged the wisdom of Conkli tion. He then asked the N sugg York sen- to any part of is in the same line. It w called for by the exc charges and irregular service of the way express companies, wh monopoly of that business. were at their mercy. And they charged enormous without rendering a proper equivalent in service. They were neither quick, safe nor acommodating. Mr. Fawcett, who is a good deal of a democrat, took the matter into his own hand, and utilized the national postoftice for the accommodation of the people. Tho result is that the expressage of small parcels has been taken out of the hands of extortionate monopolies, and will hereaf- ter bo done cheaply and promptly by the the ..numvY ator to name some one that they could mentioned Lunite on. . Mr. Conkling o mail-| 5, Morvison Harris, of M ! 4 I‘-" s was satisfactory to Mr. I 10 JOop & s el . st re used. When the voting commenced, however, all the Blaine men, with th exception of two, voted against Harris. He then got up and formally declined to be a candidate, and e | subsequently chosen. The failure of Hale and his friends to keep to the agr ment was the foundation of the bitter feeling that was engendered between the two faction vailroad ~ corporations’ which obtained | he means that not only will the popula- profitable privileges in their ch; s are | tion be greater, but the products, im- now pushing tho public by a series of ex- | ports, exports and gencral business will actions which cause loud complaints from | far execed ours in volume. We do not every quarter, What shall be done to |like to differ from an intelligent gentle protuct the people from the exactions of | man who is so evidently American in his these corporations? is the question asked | sympathics, but it is apparent he has ar- with increasing earnestness everywhere, | rived at his conclusions without a thor M. Modier De Montjau recently delivered | ough examination of the history and re a powerful philippic in the chamber of sources of this country. 1t is true tha t deputies, in which he denounced the ex- [ the population of the United States isting corporations as *‘the most danger- | when independence was declared A8 ous enemy of public liberty and public | only 5,000,000, or about that of Austrg peace.” “The *‘financial foudalism,” of | lia to- ALn) but the settlers occupied only which they form & bulwark, is becoming | a strip of the Atlantic ust, while nearly an almost impassable check to pro- | all the rest of the country was unknown _|gress and civilization. Nothing that [and occupied by savage All the terri that has v en seen in[tory that is of much value in Av f the most corrupt American state | has been explored and most of it has by legislature can compare with the picture [for gome time open to occupation. drawn by the radical orator of the fate [ No hostile tribe, but only awaiting the French chamber when all | the ||l||.-|m|l barrenn (m- its mombers will bo *‘men systematically | region, p > led astray, all directors, shareholders, agents, creatures of the companies.” Al ready, he tolls his fellow-members, “‘you are lowering the standard of public eredit, of our dignity, our liberty, the power of the state, before the companies, ively ha d into your | arls and sion of you, s well have they d means of their great f posing semni-d ture, on which almost every country A ust depend if it expects to attain a high dogree of prosperity, needs plenty of rain or numerous streams that can bo | used for irrigation. The streams in takon ., e rainfall is light, except along coast, Most of the immense regions {of th terior have but a few inches of rain aunually and this quickly disa without doing any good. In” the north ern part the sandy doserts extend nearly to the sea-coust, the monsoons from the Indian ocean not carrying enough mois- ture to penetrate any great distance be- fore they bocome evaporated by the ex | cossive heat. In Southern and Western Australia there is more or less arable A ollowing, their im power, to impress their will upon you, to make you fear l'um. and rejeet with madness the i a struggle with them.” The muhu]ml) which the French people arve fighting against is that formed by combined railroad cor porations, and the anti-monopolists claim that railway charges should be so fixed as just to defray the expenses of working and maintenance. 1t 1sthe prineiple of | land, but it is greatly out of proportion apply Il profits, after the payment of | to the whole area, Our comments apply a certain modest interest upon capital, to | to the whole of the island and not os- reducing the expense to the public of the | pecially to Vietoria and New South services which the monopolists are em \\um which form its garden spot, they powered to render. The companies are | being temperate, healthy and very pro- oral Crook's stafl’ during the first year of to be entitled to fair remuneration for | ductive. : their services but no wore. And the| But the adaptability of even these two bankrupted, and what | Which of | o [ barren s on, howover. | following | acknowl- | ¢ T | finally consented to allow his name to be | Australia are fow and are dry most of the | 18 | and provisions and the import of all lines | of manufactured goods needed by its in- i creasing populati | We have no desire to rehearse the re- sources of this country or to show the | di nces that t between it and the 1 Australian continent. T! | [ nothing really valuablo known to com- merce that cannot be produced in the United States. Hundreds of streams are navigable and tho e throughout yes every aren which is unproductive hundred miles in the lnuluvn(munl excepted —has water convenient for irri- gation. We helieve that thu four \|. | Illinois, Indiana, Miss alone produce as much s Australis be able to produce one hundred years from this time. This countr | fertile rim re is | Mulr-\uullur' an 1 klu the Sier milar were botween and the \-mml extent of ter- lleghany moun- | Nevada and the | asin of the great | lakes useless so as .wrlmltun- is concerned; in other ds, a| desert like the central ;nl.m.uwuf the | Australiancontinent, In spite of all these disadvanta we believe that Aus- judged by its individual colonies, | a8 a great future. But its people must | cease throwing its vast unknown and | worthless area into the e of mankind, | i WESTERM.ANN & CO., IMPORTERS OF QUEENSWAR 5; China and Glass, 608 WASHING1ON AVENUE AND 609 ST. St. Louus, ivo. WEHOLESALRE SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, Ne o f&‘“ | Waslu nglan Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - STEELE, JOHNSON & co,, FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOTL A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF AND JOBBERS IN Dry Goods! ST. Louls. mo, Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. \:x:s.'.a-::;fixz-t‘Wholesale Grocers ! ND ALL GROCERS SUPPLIES! AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO _— |as if its being a geographical werg its greatest merit. Quality than quantity is_the standard of judg- | nent in this era of refined common sense, | A word of counsel to visitors who come | from Sydney and Melbourne may not be amiss. © Too many of them form their opinions of the United States from a |casual glance at California. We proud enough of our state and its adv: tages, but we are only a specimen We are less than one-fifticth of the great | country to which we belong, and those who wish to know us as o people should visit and e are J. A, WAKEFIELD, [WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lath, Shingles, Pieket SASH, DOORS, BLINI]S MUULDINGS LIME, GEMENT PLASTER, &C- BTATE A(xENT I'OR MILWALKLE CLMLNT COM]" \hY Near Union Pacific Depot, - - OMAHA, NEB oughly all there is of interest between the two oceans and the great lakes and the Gulf of Mexico. The Iowa Can Pioneer-Press, It would scem to be impossible for | | those who guide the fortunes of the Re- | publican party to stumble into a blunder out of which their opponents would not forthwith kindly help them by procecd- ing to make one more open and inexe; ole. The dem has deli | put itself to wtage in Ohio, \h..t while it & one time to have | ng the state at the , its defeat is now virtu- And in JTowa, where it had th antage of being opposed to a doctrine which is theoretically indefen- ible and practically a failure-—where it nign. disad emed lly conceded. med impossible that it should miss |the plain and straight way which might | conduct it, if mnot = to victory t least to success as it degree of known in that republican stronghold—it has actual- such a had never Iy boen able to discover and fix upon & cou et o array against 1t all community, | : is now fairly opened, | = n the reports of the speeches | 18 are thoroughly in earnest, and that the | probability which at one time existed | that they had thrown away their oppor- [ tunity aird lest their cause no longer ex- ists T} ever was at any ti ying the s thought zl.. and fro | made it is appurent that the republic | question of car stal customary Id be greatly reduced, | wor reduction will be count | cessions of disgusted democr the party will secure about its customary | number of members of the legislature, THE GREAT GERMAN | government. No wonder that British a's Prospect. capitalists now feel alarmed at thegrowth | s REMEDY of a tondency which is already power-| 8 late govern.r of ful enough to produce such practical re- | New South Wales, is authority for the as- F R PAIN sults ‘m tion that when Australia is MI““[ u.; |» d I same tendency ap s quite as | the United States it will e far ahead of slieyin aud curee strikingly and trongly in France. Tho |us in civilization, by which we presumo BIEUNATINY, | cur 1, Lumbago, HACKHE, 1001HACHE, ORE THROAT, lisla, | H Qui Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, VIOSTBITES BN, §¢ 4TS A BOTTLE ) Dricists | M. R. RISDON, Gen Tustrance Ageni, | LEPRESENTS: Phanix Asurance Co. of London, Cash , l'&v The JQHN M ELARKE Oldest Roal Estate Agent. Notary Pub/lc and Pmci/cal Con- Clarke slls Houses and Lots, Residence Lots and \ st Buslness Lota all over the city,'aud all additions, he- suy other sent, Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Win C. F. GOODMAN AND DEALER IN OMAHA. NEBRASKA. flnwr W o DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock C FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF Wholesale Druggist ! blass 1020 Farnam Btront. 6xnnha. HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 11 lR FARNAM STREET, . any o8 f ca , though 1t | a8 thoug majority | It now ap- | lmm( not unlikely that the anticipated | OMAH A NEB. | OMATIA, A M. HELLMAN & co, 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, ANY ‘Wholesale Clothiers! NEBRASK CELEBRATED < Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt, PART OF i WE! ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent fo: Oflice Corner 13th and Harney Streets SPECIAL NOTICE TO WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Anheuser-Busch . BREWING ASSOCIATION: | THE Will be Promptly Shipped. OfOur Cruarantee. Omaha and the West, \ Growers of Live Stock and Others. woyacer -Our CGround Oil Cake. It is the best aud cheapest food for stock of wny kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn ock fed with Ground OIl Cake in the Fall and Winter, instead of sanniug down, will increaso in weigh and be in good warketable condition in iden fapruved and waluproved fama ower thas numnu“ "Try 1t ad Judge for yourseives. - mar Price §26.00 pur ton; o charge for sacks. dross o, Dileyinon, a3 wal a1 otbars, who use it can tetify WOODMAN LINSELD OIL wumw Omahy N N v