Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 16, 1883, Page 4

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1 THE GMAHA BEE.| Pablished evers morning, fexcept Sunday. The only Monday morning daily | FRVS BT MATL. o Year #10.00 | Throe Months , S Monthe 500 | One Month IR WREKLY RN, SITRD RVERY WRDNRDAY. 1.00 TRRNS FOSTRAID | One Year 2,00 | Three Months ¢ 00| Six Monthe. 1.00 | One Month 1 American News Company, Sole] Agents Newsdeal- | ervin the United States. CORRRSPONDRNCR, | A Communieations relating to News and Editorial | matters should be addressed to the Eitor op Tim | Bre SHUSINRASSLETTRRA, | All Business Tetters and Remittances shouldzbe | addressed to TiR BRR PURLISHING COMPANY, OMATIA. | Drafts, Chocks and Postoffice orders to be made pay- | ablo to the order of the company. | THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS.| E. ROSEWATER, Editor. | | — [ Tik: political enomies of the editor of the Sun claim that he was paid | by Mr. Tilden to defeat Hancock. Mr. Dana must go. | —— | Or has been struck at Rich Hill, Missouri, and the next thing that will be hit hard is the pockets of the spoculators who are manipulating the boom. Tur. New York committee of the Bar- | tholdi statue have raised £100,000 for the construction of the pedestal. There is still need of 150,000 additional, and the country at large is requested not to be backward about coming forward. Joux L. SULLIVAN, the pugilist, is said to have signed a pledge of abstinence on Tuesday morning for a year, at the re- quest of his wife and mother. All John needs now is o runaway wife and a mis- sion church to be another Ben Hogan, SEVERAL inspectors have been appoin- | ted by the council to inspect the contrac- tors at a salary of £100 a month, but the mayor, who draws the same pay for over- | seeing the council, is more in need of an | inspector than the men who are working on the paving and grading contracts. Presiest Artiur will approve Col. Tlges’ sentence of dismissal from the ar- my. Ina recent conversation with Gen. Ingalls, he is reported to have said: ““I| am bound to put a stop to this practice of pay acceunt duplication among officors.” There is one way, and ouly one way, to doit. And that is by promptly court- martialing and dismissing every offender. Tig democratic agony in Ohio contin- ues, Judge Hoadley's mouth has lost his “party soveral thousand votes, while that $50,000 nomination story is still go- | ing the rounds of the press undisputed When Charles Foster rises to the political } oceasion something is always heard to drop. This time it promikos to be an ex- | pected democratic majority. R AT Tre underwriters of Minneapolis have | advance insurance rates 25 per cent on | account of the insufficient supply | in the city. Minneapolis with 75,000 in- habitants has less than 27 miles of water water ns, the majority of which are six | inch pipe. Omaha with 40,000 popula- | tion has 41 miles of mains, tl largest portion of which are eight inclies or over | in size, et Turre were 2,417 national banks in} operation in the United States at the closo of June with resources of more | than two billions of dollars. can boast of a more stable system of | banks of issue than our own, and th cranks who are howling feebly about th evils of the national banking system are usually the men whoare bled by the cont per cent sharks and note shavers outside | of the counters of national banks. | —_—— | Nepraska will surprise herself with | her crops this year. The small grain is all inand we receive nothing but the best of news from all sections as to the results of the harvest. There are conflicting opinions expressed about the condition of the growing corn, but ther greement that with late frosts and an or- dinarily warm month, corn will be more plentiful than ever before in the state, Prospects like these give the cold shoul der to fears of pani ) nation s no disa- Susser Cox intimates that he pro- poses to investigate the doings of govern- ment directors of the Union Pacific rail- road when congress meets next Novem- ber. Mr. Cox has a large job on his hands. The directors have so often been investigated by the railroad officials with satisfactory results to the corpora- tions, that any examination to reach the bottom facts of the system of addition, division and silence which accompanies the annual report of the government di- rectors, would fully engage the attention of the congressional committee during an entiré sossion. Tue forestry congress has closed its seasion at St. Paul, after publishing an carnest appeal against the rapid destruc- tion of American forests. It is estimated that our entire supply of white pine tim- ber, in the northern pineries, will be ex- hausted within a year. The consumption of the hard woods is also inereasing with dangerous rapidity. Sooner or later tree planting for tim ber must be begun in the United States, The millions of trees which are annually set out being set out fur shade, protection from the wind, and farm consumption in the west, furnish an example of the pos- sibilities of American forestry. Aside from the question of lumber production, those of the preservation of our water- ways and the retention of moisture are also involved. The refusal of congress, ot its last session, to remove the ta from Canadian lumber was a serious mis- take, the eflect of which has been felt in the Michigan pineries, which are almost denuded of their timber. | ness is still under the influence of summer dullness. community is in an extra amount of cau- | Tor complaint of “Workingman” that | demrable lots within & reasonable dis | tance from town are too high is a golden opportunity for enterprising real estate .00 | dealers to advertise the cheapness of their perty. Thirty-two agents in Omaha, who have suburban property to sell, are firmly convinced that real estate will con tinue to advance in the city for the next five years. It has been nearly that time since the real estate boom struck Omaha In 1879 property was everywhere too low in this city. In the business portion of town it had declined from to 50 per cent from the prices at which it was held n and as carly as 1868, The populat prospocts of the city warranted a heavy advance, and with the revival of trade elsowhero came the expected bound in | rea! estate. 8o far as eligible lots in the | business portion of the city and the adja cent residence parts are concerned, real estate is lower proportionately than it is in Kansas City, St. Paul and Minneapo lis. Ground for the new hotel in St Paul sold last week at 2200 a front foot Even taking inte consideration the differ ence in size between Omaha and St Paul, a comparison of prices shows that the same class of property in this city is not unduly inflated in price. With the progress of paving and grading real estate in the central portion of the city must continue to advance. As far as lots skirting the city limits are concerned their present value and prospects for a future advance is a mat- | ter for individal There seems to be a speculative purchasers to deter- mine, tendency just now in addition property and the quantities of new lots being thrown on the market at fancy prices is enercising a depressing influence which | wmay or may not be of temporary dura- | tion. The price of real estate, like that of every other commodity that is bought or sold, depends upon the demand. § ev- eral of our heaviest local dealers profess themselves satisfied that with the coming crops and the attendant prosperity the | transactions in real estate during this fall and winter will exceed those of the past season, Sprcia telegrams from leading cities to Bradstroet’s show that general busi- mid- At the cities most in- volved the effect upon the commercial tion in granting credits, and on the part | of the banks, in extending their discounts. Leading merchants express their belief that not only the boot and shoe n"df leather business but other lines of trade | are the better enabled to do a healthful | fall business by reason of the enforegd | liquidation noted. : that the Western centers re- for demand port money | from the country is heginning | to be felt, and . that rates for| the use of the same ar showing | considerable animation. This is regard- | ed as the first sign of the awakening of | fall trade. 1t must soon be reflected by | moro animation in the money market at New York. This will depend, of course, rgely upon the disposition of farmers | to let their new wheat o forward, | Thus far they have been loth to do so, | and that which has come into western centers has Deen readily taken up by local millers. The recent spurt in prices | of wheat, if maintained, promises liberal | receipts of whoat. Thig coreal advanced | about $ie per hushel on the week, and | carn about 2fe. nis was due to a higher mrket. abroad, where there has | been unfavorable weather and renewed | buying by importer Provisions | have heen stimulate a itk in sympath ble demand for the latter, u ons in the samo are mainly the result | manipulation. There 168 failures in | the United States reported to Brad- | street’s during the past week, thirteen | more than last week, seventy-three more | than in the corresponding weck in 1882, | and sixty-two more than in the like week in 1881, M. Daxa assorts with a good deal of emphasis that journalists are eligiblo for the presidency. One might think that the editor of the Sun was beginning to listen to the buzzing of the presidential bee if it were not for the concluding sen- tence of the edit candid advice to o und inl: *“But finally, our 'y newspaper man is cumstances to entertain the idea of running for president. It must {tend to distract the mind from higher meditations,” —_— The Elections of' 1883, Following is a completo list of state clections for tho current year: Connecticut will elect November 6 one- half of its senate and full house of repre- sentatives, Georgia clected April 24 Henry D, McDaniel, democrat, govenor, to fill the vacancy caused by the deathl of Alexan- der H.” Stephens, Towa will elect October 9 governor and other state officers, part of its senate, and its full house of representativos, Kentuckoy elocted Aug, 6 democratic fm nor and other state ofticors and legis- ature, and voted upon the question of holding a convention to revise the con- stitution of the state, Maryland will elect Nov. 6 governor and two other state officers and legisla- lature, Massachusetts will elect Nov. 6 govern- or and other state officors and legisla- ture, Michigan elected April 24 democratic- greenback supreme judges and regents of the university, Minnesota will elect, Nov. 6, governor and other state ofticers, and vote upon three amendments to the the state, which provide (1) that the gen eral elections ghall be held hereafter in November in each year; (2) that the sec retary of state, the treasurer and the at | torney general shall serve two y W | the state auditor four s, and (3) fix the term of service of tl clerk of the supreme court and the judges of the district courts of the state. Mississippi will eloct, November, 6, its legislature. no e the supreme court and regents of the state university, Now Jersey will elect, Nov. 6, its gov- ernor, part of its senate and full house of ropresentatives, New York will elect, Nov, 6, secretary A e | genoral, | ments to the constitution of the { ‘church.” | book chronicling its is | sition in justification of the high handed stitution of | have powerful backers in the dep: Nebraska will elect, Nov. 6, justice of | , controller, treasurer, attorney ngineer and survoyor, and both s of the legislature, and vote upon abolish contract Inbor of sta branch A proposition t from the state prisons Ohio will elect, Oct. 0, governor and other state officers and legislature, and voto upon three amendments to the con- stitution of the state, which (1 and 2) reg ulate the sale of intoxicatig liquor and (8) reorganize the judicia o state Pennsylvania will ol i, audi tor general and state treasurer, Rhode Islend elected, April 4, republi can governor and other state officers and legislature Texas will election, upon vote Aug. 14, at four proposed a special amend state which, (1) relate to the sale of public school lands, (3) limit the rate of state and local trxation, (3) provide for the for mation of a public free school fund, (4) fix the the term: the county court Vermont adopted March 6, two | amendments to the constitution of the state, 1 govern islature, and providi by the popular vote and auditor of accounts on state ticket Virginia will ele senate, and its full aking officers v r the federal ent ineligible to seats in the le g for the electi f secretary of the g sembly, Pope Adrian 1V Bull About Ireland Springfield Repub he Roman Catholic papers are i triously discussing the } as “The Bul anti-Parnell le ganda to the Irish 1 pared by sundry rese bull was ostensibly iss century by Adrian IV, th English pope, by name o las Breakspeare —and it lish sorereign, Henry conquer and rule Ireland in the in of the church and of and for the consideration of “‘the ann tribute ‘of one penny for every h p St. Peter and the most holy Rox 5 On this instrument for centuries England based her r minion in Ireland, and it may be casily seen in what respect the Irish who have likened the latter papal utterance to this must hold Leo XIII. *“Once more the pope has given Ireland to the Saxon, exclaimed an ardent modern patriot, for- getting in his wrath that Henry was no THE DAILY BEE =OMAHNA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1883, MRS ALLISON'S SAD DEATH diet of the Cor Dubnigue The lamentable suicide of Sens William B. Allison's wife is to-day current topic throughout the city froak was the result of tempo tion of mind, to which Mrs. Allison was | subject when in a high state of nervous exéitement. When in a similar mood, | about two years a bered, she ing in a lak was disc ttempted suicide by drown New York, but ered in time to bo saved by a | fisherman, being afterwards confined in a | at Castilo, it will be remem ’ private asylum for a short time. Since then the senator’s household has in cuded & cook who had becom familiae with Mrs. Allison's tem: | perament while in sorvice of the family in Was n, and on whose e from home, | wmwell for several rwas taken to het yostorday about 1} stating that she eat bt would call on Mrs. A ¥ lays reon, residing on upper later the and « moments 1 on and ¢ denco was but a did not concern of mistross, A site side maware of Mrs m,observed, roceed in the s residence street rather | one he was et seen passing by es in the Lort H ot she met and was last recog about 4 o'clock, | ive. | Henderson | esidence and hat the latter was | Mrs. Alli- | twe letters | ted to her| ter mother, | mes, of used alarm, were at once sent | n every direc and n Dadge stroot she was In About 8:8( called st Mms rined to Jenrr to he st her n was visited | Saxon. The story has been accepted as » policed :\le the true by all the historians ever since one relaxed vigi- John of Sailsbury wrote his recolections . when the fears | of abusy lifetime; Lingard, a Roman ends were con- | Catholie i\is(uri:\n of England, cites it as covery of Mrs. Allison genuine; not an Irishmsn seems to have T very was made doubted it until our day. Yet historic the omnibus com- | researches and critical analysis have now it 705 o'clock. | substantially proved the bull epurious. 1 E g in the door| The chapter in one o hn of Salisbuay’s ¢ ggage car of the sonth- suance by Pope Adrian is strongly suspected of being an intrpolation, and the bull itself as pub- lished 30 years later a ficticious compo- proceeding of Henry IT in Ircland, put forth and probably invented by Ciiraldus Cambrensis. ith this, though by se eral processes of proof, fall also the a leged confirmatory nts of proof Pope Alexander III. The matter i no pract eating of importance, but it is inter- as an exposure by clear and con- vincing investigation of an imposture | seven centuries old. A Tremendous Irrigation Scheme, 1 The most gigantic irrgation enterp ever inaugurated in the state of nin, has been commenced in county, the cannal for which will be the rgest in the state, and fed by Kin, river. | v is intended to irrigate | 10,000,000 acres of rich land, at present rron through lack of water The source of supply of this canal will be higher than any” other debou from the same stroam. Tts dimensions One 100 feet inwidth at the bottom; levees an average of fifteen feet in height and | cight feet wide ab the top, broad enough for a w The depth of the water i e feet, with a fall of eto the mile. The dam in 1 canon whenee the wi is taken, will be a wond nent one. It is twenty cight hun feet long, one hundr A forty feet wide at the base and twenty-five feet wide on top. 1t is rip-| rapped on the inside with heavy rock, | and every precaution taken to make i ontly strong to securely hold the | Los Angejos Her: great weight of water that must be sup. ported. The water is led into the canal from a large headgate, constructed of | heavy timber, one hundred feet in width | and eighteen feet high. It is planked over so as tojmake a bridge for heavy wag- ongand has wings to protect it from the floods. The canal is expected to car- | ry 1,300 cubic fect of water per second. | C Apt of Civilians. Francisco Chronicle, If there is any ¢ the disgruntled were mnot per president on his vacation trip, those in charge of the expedition are acting in o | very silly manner. Tho president was | certainly justified, after his experienco | on his fishing excursion along the south- orn coast, in excluding all reporters ex- copt the Associated Press representatives | from his party, but there seems to be no travel through the territory where tho presidential party is sojourning. arbitrary methods savor too strongly of a monarely to suit the temper of the peo- Inle, and ‘aro prompted, we have no doubt, by the military men in charge of the arrangoments. For hoarty contempt of civilians, the officers of the regular army have always been noted, but it is unfor- tunate that they have induced the presi- dent to adopt this ungracious attitude. Discouraging a Polite Art, San Francisco Chr nicle. Major Nickerson is reported to be in the vicinity of Washington, and it is even asserted lfml he has paid a visit to the bital in order to secure a compromise of uits against him. 1t seems well-nigh impossiblo to secure the arrest and con- viction of these official evil-doers who jtime of | of August, 1883, on the body of Mr | sippi riv justification for laying an embargo on | ™ These | bound train, when he body lying in the slough 35 feet from the bank, parallel with the end of the runa- attached to Moore's mill, and about vards below the bridge. The train was ped, and Mr wnes Plaster, proceeded to the vicinity. observed by the preparations which 1d made that Mrs. Allison’s suicide the result of pre-determination. About her neck were fastened two stones weighing ten pounds each, secured with a string and handkerchief, and resf in ags which she had formed by cutting a | gossamer overdress with a scissors, after- | wiards found on the bank of the slough. There was no expression of pai face, which was turned up ved calm. Her hat, which, with o cmpty vials, was found on the bunk, was fastencd by arge stone | placed in the erown. | An inquest on the remains is beingheld this afternoon at the city hall by Coroner | Vaughan and a ju | Senator Al ‘.* onded to ot gram by stating that he had left Oouncil | 3lutly this morning, and would arrive | liere this evening or to-morrow morning Rev. D. Presbyterian church, who is at Clear Lake, will offici at the funeral, the which will be hereafter saw a st was d and ape an- | nounced. Allison's maiden name was Mary She was the adopted daughte wernor (iring wife was her father | She resided with her foster par- | from carly childhood until May, | 1873, the date of her marriage. She was a talented and cultivate y, affection- ate and amiable in disposition, and de- votedly attached to her husband, whose sudden affliction will no doubt call forth xpressions of sympathy throughout the land. | DICT OF THE CORONER'S JURY. At an inquest holden in the city of Dubuque, state of Towa, on the 12th day I Was ren- | W, B. Allison, by John L. Vaugh coroner, the following verdict dered by the jury: . We, the jury, “find that decensed came to her death by drowning in the Missis- while laboring under tempo- rary mental derangemenc. S. 8. Winvorr, N. C. Ryp) Javes Prars Dubugue Telegraph, editorial: As will be seen the account in our columns, the wife of Senator. Wil- liam B, Allison committed suicide last evening by drowning, That the act was the result of temporary insanity is beyond a doubt. She was a lady of delicate con- stitution and very nervous temperament, and during a great portion of her mar- i nvalid, At tunes she was subject to fits of depression, and | while in one of these, in central New y couple of years since, attempted self-destruction in a lake. For the past three weeks she had been ill, and her ill- ness o proyed upon her that yesterds she wandered from her home to the river, and there, with 3 method born of madness, l:m an end to her life. Her wisband had e been most devoted to her. Al that affection could suggest, or the best physicians in the country do, to restore her to health, was done, Mr. Allison spent as much time as possiblo in her company, and in the hope of benefit- ting her she given frequent changes airand scene. Mut it was in vain s Clrenmstances More n Detail l l F Discovery Ver | Manning, with Mr. | ¥ pain on her | “ said: | Mollie. \f Burlington, | 'THOMAS ECLECTRIC 2JIL Cures Rheumatism, Lum- bago, Lame Back, Sprains and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh, Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Diphtheria, Burns, Frost Bites, Tooth, Ear, and Head- ache, and all pains and aches. The best int and external remedy in the - e guaran Every b 11y medicine exlers everywhere. Directions in eight languages. Price 5o cents and $r.co. FOSTER, MILBURN & CO., Prop'rs, BUFFALO, N, Y., U. 8. A, chose, marry a newspaper man “‘and a gentloman There was no r m that we know of except that the lady was oves sixty-one years old, and even a news per man should have felt that her form was locked up and gone to press long . The wires had closed down and 30" had been sounded thirty-one year: before. Th is all there is to that. Yot, if the dear old lady wanted with her millions to help to affluence the poor night-owl of the blue pencil, why not{ The Boston Herald is right. The envious and captious relativ if this rich widow must go. — A G Summer Resort, Virginia City Uncle Rufus Hateh, we fear, is on the make. The Yellowstone Natio Park Improvement Company has submitted to the secretary of the Interior the following list of prices to be charged for transpor- tation, hotel, and other accommodations in the park, which prices, under the oper- ation of the lease granted this company, must be approved by the secretary. The secretary approved the rates on the 17th of July: Schedule of hotel charges National Tr “ompany: oard and | sroom, per day .8 5.00 Two persons in single room. g Attic, fourth story, single rooms. persons in attic room ate lor . Private baths in bed rooms, each. Bath in bathing hall s 50 Meals served in rooms, each. 50 Guides or cooks for private camps, per St nterpri Yellowstone Hire for a tent for private callers, per day d lodging in‘tents atfixed prices horse ot p ddle horse or pon: addle horse or pony, each subsequent hour . ck horses or mules, per d 3 m, with driver. . Wagon hire, double t 10.00 cle horse and buggy, per day. .. . Billiards, per game 5 Pool, per game, ¢ 10 Boot-blacking, per 10 Aneccdotes of Gen. Ord, A Brooklyn gentleman who served on the late Gen. Ord’s staff tells the follow- ing ancedotes of him: While riding rapidly well to the front wmattox, as was his habit, the rifle confederate infantryman slrucllc t happened to be near hin; he pulled up; said: * am sh me,” as if he w skirmish 1 him to ¢ e. Some of the stafl’ assisted mount. The next moment he “Ride to the front, gentlemen, : the scoundrels.” To his lov- hed later: “De ght leg this time we took the works encour ing wife he tel Hit again The morning aft - Burrell, pastor of the Second |at St. Petershurg, and had passed south | some miles heavy fiving commenced on our left. “What's that!” he said; “le see,” and off to the left at full gallop. W, cane to a stream, He put his horse at full jump. His horse failed to make the other bank, falling in the strecam. The eral dismounting instantly, held the fallen hors head above the water for a few moments ti)l help came. My own lorse made the jump. Helping the gen- cral from the water I offered to change clothir “What,” he thirty years and afraid of a little wetting! Not 1.” He was very careful about protecting the inhabitants along the line of march, and would repeat the same story when il- lustrating the value of having an Ame can flag to hang out—**Madame, a ve small flag will cover your whole garden.’ The marching of his troops, the position they occupied at Appamattox, the surren- der, all are matters of histo His care for the stricken inhabitant, his fatherly interest in the citizens of Richmond on his veturn and assumption of command there, all this is worthy of loving consid- eration, Gen, was ordered to relieve him, He said, speaking of his “dear Mollie,” who ha been Mollified, she and now both were To as the war was over, frontier. ved, *‘that he had wl been Eddified, rified.” He left, for the northern THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Jelieves und cures RIHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADACHE, T00THACHE, SORE THROAT LINGS, Soreness, Culs, Bruises, FROSTIETES, EBUENS, NCALDY, haddihy aches 4 jt i FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE Her malady was beyond the reach of human remedi ,M..f it has terminated ina tragedy which has bowed Mr. Alli {ments. There is Captain Howgate, for [ instance, who ought by this time to be | serving out a good sentence in the peni | tentiary. Instead of this he is probably | enjoying himself in some healthy rural | retreat in the Blue Ridge, waiting for the udges and the [ time when he may sately emerge from | concealment and ‘secure’ & compromise | withs_tho government which he § frauded. About the only public official who has received his deserts lately is ex casurer Polk, of Tennessee, who must spend twenty years in the penitentiary, and pay up ail the money that he stole from” the state treasury.” A few more sentences like this would do much to dis courage the polite art of embezzlement in public service. has de- | | son's heart “with grief and cast a dark | shadow his pathway. The life across The Cuiarles A. Vogeler Co. which o s highly prized, and which he | QEALED PROPOSALS will be reocived by the un s0 vigilantly guarded and ‘sought to pro \\‘ T 1ol s gone out forever. His is a sore aftliction, and in this, his hour of pro found sorrow, he will have the earnest sympathy of thousands upon thousands of people throughout lowa and the tion, aptious Or | Chicago Herald. | The friends of the Widow Fargo, of | Buflslo, howled at the lady because she | married a newspaper man on a small | salary, Whereat The Boston Herald | howls and wants to know why the widow {of a who used to toss packages 50 & wonth should not, if she in the event o bond with the id cor aug 10-6t JAMES McVEY, Practical Horse Shoer Makos & spocialty of Roadsters and tenderfoot hor- | and be in good marketable condition in the spring. os. Shops, Dodge street bet Bellvue House id, *‘a soldier | N an s OFCaar 1ith and 1%th, Old ' H. WESTERMANN & CO, IMPORTERS OF QUEENSWARE! China and Glass, 608 WASHING1ON AVENUE AND 609 ST. St. Louis, Mo. STREET WIEOLESATE M9 Sew, Dry Goods! .~ SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. Mo, | ; STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GEOT{, 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 Lmder, Lth, Shingles. Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - 0 - OMAHA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Pains, 0ils, Varnishes and Window (lags ‘ OMAHA. NEBRASKA. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. | FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF 1020 F'armnam Street. Omaha. HENRY LEHMANN | JOBBER OF Wil Paner &l Window Shades. | EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, - - OMAHA NEB, | = —— 5 M. HELLMAN & CO, - ‘Wholesale Clothiers! | | 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, |OMAHA, - . - NEBRASK Anheuser-Busch ., BREWING ASSOCIATION: ¥ ‘ ‘ | Aot CELEBRATED ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WES <, STI0UIS M Will be Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD Gruarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West, Oflice Corner 13th and Harney Streets .\‘I‘H(‘l.\rh NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground | . Itisthe best and cheapest food for stock of any k Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Pall and kall, Dair its merita.” Try it and judge for yourselvea. = Price §26.00 J ob-eod-wme ) three pounds of core. will increase in weigh ¢ rs, Who use it can testify : no charge for kacks. Address WOODMAN LINSEED OIL COMPANY, Omaba Wholesale Grocers ! SAFE, VAULTS, LOCKS, &. - [ i ¥

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