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e e S e THE GMAHA BEE.| | Published evers morning, sxcopt Sunday. The only Monday morning dafly. MK BT MATL | 10,00 Thres Months .00 5.00 | One Month 1.00 Qno_Yoar Bix Monthe. R WRRKLT AKR, PURLISITED RYRRY WRDNRSDAT. TRV POSTRAID, $2.00 | Threo Months 8 50 nth 20 o) Agonts Newsdoal: | One Year 8ix Months American News erw in tho United State CORRASFOXDRNCR, A Communieations relating to News and Rditorial | matters should be addressod to the Eorron or Tk | Brn. BUSINRSS LETTERS. All Business Letrers and Remittances should be | wdfirossed to TR Brr PURLISIING COMPANY, OVATA. | Dratts, Checks and Postoffice ordors to be made pay ‘ able to the order of tho compa: THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS, E. ROSEWATER,ZEditor. P —————————————————————————— Provr. tion in the state university at Lincoln. | Every friend of tl 1 be re Avoney has resigned his posi s institution w igned to the char Tur proposition fo cavenger o and regnlar collecti sor sarbage is an excellent one. secure this move towards sani- | ssible. well ¢ tary re TN A8 5000 a8 D! Couvnrsey, the sculler, who is beaten through misfortune, 1 of ret from the public. always announces his intenti There is a general opinion that Courtney | i a fraud of the very largest dimensions. Lavinia Shannon, the Washington ac- tress, within the last four months has travelled more than 20,000 miles in the pursuit of her profession. A score of | other actresses have travelled nearly as far in of their salaries. pursuit managors and | — Tup: trouble on the stock market seoms | over. Experience has again proved that | with ligitimate business on asound foot- ing and the currency of the nation safe frem attack, stock gumblers cannot ser- iously affect the financial condition of the country. In is thought that the St al will earn a dividend of about 20 per cent this year. Its recoipts are constantly grow- ing, and will probably be a million dol- lars greater than in 1882, when a divi- dend of over 16 per cent was paid. No wondor a parallel canal is talked of, and De Lessops finds plenty of capital at his disposal for digging grent ditcheswh erever e chooses. Hastixas is making great proparations for the Hth annual reunion of the ex-sol- Qiors and sailors now living in Nebraska, | which will beginin that thriving metropo- | lis of Adams county on the 8d day of | Septenber, and will last one week, The railroads have given a rate of one and a half conts per mileand the committee aro working earnestly to make the ocea- sion ono lor who participate. B e —— Pa s throughout the country are roceiving the new postal rates which will e used after Scptomber 3 in the transmission of small sums of moncy through the mails, T are printed in books, each book containing 500 notes, and porforated so that when notes are torn out the stubs remain to show the amounts for which they were issued. A note can be filled out by a post master for any amount not oxceeding §6, ata cost to the sender of three cents for each note. The notes are mado payable to “‘the bearer,” and they can be used as fractional curroncy in any placo to which they are sent ——— STOFFIC s another choerful row AND now the in army circles in Omaha over the re- port of the inspector general, who it is claimed took unwarrantable and un- gentlemanly liberties in criticising his colonel for meglect to button the third button of his coat and to wax evenly both ends of his moustache. It is claimed that the report tends to bring one of the bravest officers of the army into contempt for a trifling oversight which never ought o have been commented upon officially. With one thing and another, the condi- tion of affairs in the department of the Platte since the change of commanders has been quite on the Donnybrook fair style and the anxiety of officers to seek other fields of usefulness is surprisingly wnanimous, Mge. Daxa continues to shries for Willam A. Hollman, of Indiana, for prosident, but the democracy refuse to bite, even with the certain assurance of the Sun's hearty support in the coming campaign. Mr. Hollman is known only as a con- gressman of very modorate abilities, and of great powers of objection. He has never taken a leading part in the great debates in congress, and has contented himself with quibbling over minor items in appropriation bills. If the democracy are bound to go to congress for their can- didate, there are a score of senators and members of congress whose claims upon the party for support are greator than Jthose of Mr. Hollman, For instanc Senator Bayard, who could carry New York and New Jersey, both doubtful states, with ease, and whose record as one of the very ablest of democratic senators is above reproach, MeDonald, too, would be in every re- spect a more available candidate than Hollman, He is a man who possesses all of Hollmaw's legislative experience, with a great deal more natural and ac- quired ability. Bosides ho has some- thing of Blaine's personal maguetism, -and he comes from a state whose electoral vote may be nocessary to decide the com- ing election. The democracy will have to put for- ward a stronger man than Hollman if they desire in advance a reasonable as- surance of party success. | with the teleg The council will do |, iklmulull!\- of the graph companies who will absorh a large | shown | Vanderbilt the telegraph monopolist | torests of the country may boe | any regulation. o be remenbered by all| (0 THE LESSONS OF THE STRIKE, The telographors strike is ended by the unconditional surrender of the operators, | The conditien upon which some of them |southern Ne the Western | f an iron clad oath will be again eraployed by Union is the taking « that them to .sever all relations Lerhood and to | binds aphe nization of a similar an oath was exacted enter no other or | character. Such |after the strike of 1870, but m.-i all pledges made under durcss | [they have no binding force. This| was shown Dby the fact that a large majority of the men who took | the oath in 1870 were in the late strike. The collapse of the strike is a vict ry for | jould and his partners, but it is a \..-o.,r,‘ dearly bought. The thirty days | fight has not merely been costly by a loss of patronage and the damage suits which the company has to defend | but the discussion of the conditio .rm. telograph has weal system controlled by ned public con fidence in its | forced | graph stock several millions, will hardly e ise investors real value as an investment and down the t This depression tempor- | a full fictitious capital repre ),000,000 ary, bec have now sented by the of Western Union stock. Another direct result of the st 1870 when the At iffe telegraph system was established, val telc it was in will be active competion by percentage of the experts who have heen thrown out of employment. Last but not least, rto which it is exposed as long as the great arteries of communication are owned and controlled by speculators and stock jobbers, The telegraph in private hands should at best be a great trust administered in the in- terest of the public. The that interest concern the owners of the tele, strike has public does not apl “The public be d No matter how much the commercial and industrial in- erippled, no matter what loss American citizens may suffor by an_ impairad telegraph sor- vice, the managers of the telegraph hoot at the idea that they have any obligations oxcopting to make dividends for the stockholders, Such a state of facts can- not long be permitted to exist in a coun- try that has such vast commercial enterprises depending upon a prompt and officient telographic sorvice, Tho strike has taught the country the absoluto necessity of government rogula- tion or ownership of tho tolegraph. our part we bolieve the telegraph as a | factor in the welfare of the people can- not be trusted m private hands ander | Nothing short of luto ownership of the telograph system will giv all ¢ the full the greatest of crn inventions, The very next step congress should take in the way of gre: reforms for ahso bene- mod- is the purchuse of all comm cial telegraph lines at o fair tion, Even if the ment was forced to buy in their inflated stock dollar for dollar the in- vestment would puy the country in the end Tho operators strike has opened the oyen of telegraph owners to the fact, that there are abuses in it’s management, that ought to remedied as much in their own intorests as that of their employes, Prudent capitalists will find it to their advantage to pay well for good and faith- ful servico, valua- govern- This is specially true in telegraphing where men are hired by the month and may expedito or delay work according to their inclination and in spite of all supervision Although the West- ern Union officials have mnever heen willing to admit that their service has boen seriously crippled it is nevertholess a fact that in the great business centers there has been terrible confusion and digorder in the transmission of dispatches leaving out the ‘‘bulling” of important mensages by plug operators, The strike has shown more than ever the value of competent and expert operators and there is no doubt that their services will here- after bo muoh more appreciated. THE KNEVALS COMPROMISK, Hon. James Laird has taken a praise- worthy course in the Knevals lnm‘ case, and his efforts have been crowned with success, He has, with the assistance of others, succeeded in getting a settlement between the settlers and Mr. Knevals of their difficulty, The settlers are to pay for their land at the rato of §3.60 per acre. Mr. Laird will make every offort possible to get congress to re-imburse this money to the settlers, as it ought to, as they took those lands in good faith and lmw their titles from the govern- ment, —Hastings Gazette-Journal, If Mr, Laird had kept his hands out of the Knevals case it would have been much better for all concorned. General Van Wyck had taken strong personal interest in tho matter and would have pushed the case at the coming session of congress. The position taken by the senator that as the settlors on the” Kne- vals lands had failed to acquire title through the fault of the government they must be reimbursed by the governw was a sound one which would have com- mended itself at once to congross. In fhe absence of any compromise by the settles all the intluenco of M. Knervals would also have been brought to bear upon congress to secure a scttlement. For these reasons it was worse than fool- ish to push a compromise before final no- tion at Washing| Mr. Laird, in his desire to make a little capital for himself among the anti-mon- opolists, has played divectly into the hands of the Kneval sharks. A year ago Kneval would have been glad to have taken $1.60 an acre for his lands, Now he is compromising at §3.60, and the set- tlers are mortgaging their farms to clear their original title, It can readily be *Iher on her the strike has awakened the| country to the grave dang: deal mor attention of | seen that there will be a L.m,,l difficulty now in securing the claims of our congress to the farmers in | raska It will be urged that if the to settle with Mr, there is o further need for ¢ reliof evietion, farmers were able Knevals, | Appropriating money to prevent and voting it to help farmers to pay mortgag s, are two very different things in the eyes of congress. This was the point seen by General Van Wyck, | who has steadily urged upon the settlers | to refuse all offers of compromise, and to | wait the Laird, course of events. by his meddlosome interference, at Washing- | ton, and lost thousands of dollars to the has probably spoiled the ¢ hard working farmers who reclaimed the disputed wild lands into flourishing farms enly to disge 3,60 an acro to a man | who had 1o ¢ ,Mm..lv claim to their po session, NGLISTE capital is crecting anothe o block of buildings in Denver foreign investors shun “the more bac ward towns of the west, such as Oy and Kansas City.” If the reports of o true Denver needs o home investors the foreign capital she can get to legs, Omaha's ad has been e which thy [one, has been mostly due to the capital | and enterprise of her own eitizens, \H.' a steady and a | that this city has not in the past and \a.ll‘ not in the future gladly mh..-.w all ele- | ments towards improvements from what- sver source they come, but the condition | of our streets and the lack of suflicient enthusinsn among many of our leading the same inducements to outsiders that | were held out by other towns, Still Omaha has done well and is doing \ better than ever. Capital from abroad is seeking investment here as well as in} Denver, and there isa growing inquiry for openings for The | new stock yards are to be built with for- cign capital, and the money invested in them would build a good many such blocks as that over which the Denver peoplo are crowing so loudly. Other | schemes are in process of maturing which will add greatly to Omaha's resources. What needs to be impressed upon our people more than the lack of foreign ipvestments is the local foreign m importance of enterpriso in the construction of stores and buildings on our principal streets, We have two handsome, fine structures of which we are all proud, the | 1 the Nebraska Wo want more such buildings. Omaha Banks. Both are handsomely paying investments | from a strictly business point of view and | they pay to the | town in the improvement which they ke in the appe cven more handsomely ma ance of the city the impression of the stabilit prosperity of Omaha which they to outsiders. The day has gone it ought to have if it has not, when two and three story brick stores prove paying investments. Men who can afford to own expensive lots on our business strects ought to be able to cover them with ex- pensive buildings. If they cannot it would be much better for the city if they turned them over to others who can look | a fow months ahead and sce prospective large profits in the construction of metro politan stores and ofiices. Bostox needs a vigorous woman suf- frage campaign at once. Only forty women in the Hub who have the right to vote at school elections, h: came for thus far thony, bless their hearts, ave trying to convert the London savages. Nebraska Railway Extension. Lincoln Journal, Tho people of various localities in southern Nebraska are to be warmly con- gratulated upon_the railroad extensions that will bring cheap and easy transpor- tation to their doors, The comy the link between Tecumseh and Beatrico throws open as fine a_region as may be found in the stato, and one whero u ail- road has been both promised and needed | for many years, The same is true, to a less extont only as to the need, || of the beautiful and rich section betweon Nemaha and Falls City, with the additional Advantage to the peo- ple of being within easy reach of two vival systems of road. The long-talked of cut-off from the B. & M. main line to its Republican Valley branch has now been fixed from Kenesaw to Oxford, and work has practically begun. This is an enterpriso which doos credit to the fore- wight of the B. & M. managers. It will dovelop to the full extent of a vast capac- | ity portion of the state which has long | needed the stimulus of a railroad. To the peoplo of Kearney and Phelps coun- ties, ‘vurlu,ulmly. it will be a great bene- fit, looks with covetous eyes upon the same territory, and is taking ntu D Lo travers it with o branch road, The extension of the O, & V. branch of the Union Pacific from Lincoln to Beatric the pr-mpnlle of these two cities, and opens up and improves a magnificent sec- try, Ttis probable that the ¢ M. will soon build west from Be- to Hebron and beyond vin Fair. | The il\'n ability of an extension | of Jn-l P. branch from Stromsburg to Doniphan, via Aurora, is so apparent | that we regard it as one of the cortain- tios of the futuro. Tt would seem to he equally good policy for the corporation to construct a line from \“l]m. is0 to Sew ard, thonce to Beaver Crossing and up the beautiful Blue valley, or south. west to Genove, m tho heart of the splondid comity of Filmore, The oxtension of the Cuntral branch from its present terminus in Kansas northwoest- wardly through Franklin and Phelps counties to a Connection with the l'nlun Pacific at Plum Creek is a necessity to the cempletion of that line, and wo ap- prehend that it is but a matter of a yeur or two more and good crops, The pos. sibilities and certaintics of growth in the wealth and' population of southern Neo- braska mlmt. faintly eutlined in the catalogue of these s now being con- -truct\vd and shortly to be built, But Mr. | citizens have prevented us from offering |1 wd to bo assessed for a poll | tax. And Mrs, Stanton and Miss An- | on of | t is also said that the Union Pacific | is by no means an_wnimportant factor in | ! YATE JOTTINGS, Alina wants a «hoemaker ). Christ rur Hasting North The r at Sidney will illuminate with twenty la d has organized o ory pays 14 cents for vd parl inrd parlo Rising Cit working vigorously for a creamery, The Catholies of Riverton are about to build « church nd creamery makes 150 pounds of The Ashl voted for street railway almost n usly | Jling about Oakland at 830 to | ATTIA ATe ¢ 5 per ne Wind vicinity The Lincolu will cost #1,000, The Hastings Arapahoe and nic hall in raskan will publish u daly | edition dusing th wion, Thee County Fair will be held | Tl Ao, L The Knlamazoo ha id considera. inity and the codo of | tor | ion and the circus | threshing machine, « ty s collecti her 1 pecimens for exkibition of the fair A Sarpy county hnater eaj w(n\n:n‘ Bellevue, which we pour irglars | to adoctor's offic i | in Grand | 1 and stole $150 worth of toothpickers, | Hurford, of Oukdale, has patented o mid- | lings purifier to Le used in making patent | flour. ina pastro in Hamil- |, illed Ly one stroko of light- | ven head of horses county were ning. M, D, R, Costidy will start o sheep ranch | in Hall county with 8,000 head of the best | grades soon l Stromsburg, thres 20 acres dowhich 1472} bish ;usitols of oats off els to the 1of hogs w of freight tra o killed in the ro. s on the B, & M. | e connty tricts, in the most of which ¢ houses John Fi tract for the branch of the Kenesaw and Minden. d - school dis- modious school | arded the con- M. between In Camings county agents of bogus insur- ance compus working among the Ger- wian and Boher Mrs, ) Red Willow county, w while fording sw Mrs, o fire with k hecic and alh West Poin legality of cure the bullding of n paper il and & croan- ife of a farmerin drowned last week a fi The Otoe county sociation will hold tember r and Driving Parl r ’nll' ot 4,000 in pres he railrond papers of the stato swin promptly into ling in fayor of Stout’s steal as soon as the s were pulle Lineoln, The Logan Valle cast i doubl The Columbus base ball club have their nds enclosed with asevon foot tighe board co with all necessary conveuionces in hape. 1o Seveuth Day Adventists of Bl d a church \uLh 16 el day schoul is ulready 1 over 40 meimbe from whe bountiful harvest. Webster county s so prolif the farmers tall of usis s, soie of wh frou the ground. A train on the Republican Valley road ol near Badicost Snturday mornin | The engine and four cars w Nobody hurt. m 1600 worms fed on Osage o rs. Flory, of Fillmore county, 1s of silk. She proposes to have 8 next season, A in corn_that i ladders to pluck the are said to ho fourteen Lwo pow 1000 w Davis, living near Plattsmouth, put ger to eat off a Iye got througl there wis left of the finger but tho bone, ris, of North Platte, was found be- 1 track near thit town on Fri- |w Itis supposed that he fell from the tr Quinn Grege, of Willowdale, killed a snake over three feet long, and 45 youny . fi 8 to 18 inches in length, while se nlmg wanure on bis farm, He claims the bal ory. Charley state, brara, hole th Tuesday, Thocoronor’s jury in the caseof LEmily Braundin, dead at Lincoln, find that prema- ture child labor caused h, and that Dr. Landon, of Genoa, preseribed the drugs that caused the abortion. Orleans has raised o subscription of 2,300 for the lnnhlmq committee of the Free Moth odist church, The building will be of brick, arpenter, u lawyer from York whilo loading his gun out on the Nio- artridge exploded and plowed a futal A ) (O P TRE bes tories high, including the basement; dimensions will be 40x60, ly Savage, residing in Red Willow a8 treatod to a coat of tarand feather Ly tha citizens of Indianols, & part punishment for the crime of rape, Ho was also sent to Jail to await the sitting of the grand jury, The Unjon Pacific has made a proposition tothe citizens of Fullerton to hull«l to that town for £17,000 se cont bonds, tho | right of way and 40 4 for depot groundy The Lond election will be held September 1t will be rememberad th of the state u a number of notes, incoln Democr sayw that the professo tilod all but one of these notes, wo that no criminal prosecution is probable, John Austin, one of the | Seward county, finished u tract of 1,600 orn Monday to Ragan Broy. aud | contracted 3,000 bushels of oata at 17 cents « | budlel, 500 Vushols of ryo at 3 conts and 2 Prof. Aughey, wsed of forgiing | ng farmers of | | O'Donr | with his I | will be a candi | s i 3| From The Pittsburg 1 i | | day moruiug badly bruised and unconscious. | | | DAII Y nEn'--()MAn \ \I()\I;AY. AL(.UQT zn lqs'x HM\-”\-'. n is church in ach ¢ f the R lican val from Red Cloud to ) A Desceription of O'Donnell by his Cousin, Denver Tribune “Phil” 0'Donnell, who keeps a saloon on Holladay street, opposite the Grant smelt is & first cousin of the man 1l who Kkilled James Carcy a Port Elizabeth, ““Phill” says that the man who killed Carey was his cousin ‘‘Pat” ‘ ‘Pat’ was a dand “Phill “and with a club } a whole county. He was about | s of age, and the easiest man st that you ever say that the man who killed | Captain Phelan, of Kansas sted the reporter. “Thi V nu was SThy st what 1 come to talk about,’ Mr. O'Donn as he un folded a tion to a pa which murderer as ¢losely resenbling the mentioned citizen of that place, t two m 1 who, as - Dry H. WESTERNMANN & CO., IMPORTERS OF QUEENSWARE. : i China and Glass, ‘6'08 WASHING1ON AVENUE AND 609 ST. | St. Louis, Mo. W HOLESALRE iocods! SAML C. DAVIS & CO,, STREET tensib) fter a le distant rolative dying in Tipperary, Ire and hav 10 to lic land, but ¢ ¢ Lam positive, aid that is that he i the man who killed ‘arey. Pat mor. 1 happen | | to know that my cousin wa chief about a week after against the prisoners in | sister wrote me that he home half the time, and of lat more mysteriou alone in this thin support of the lri active in the recent Dublin were constantly his disa rance about the June.” “What was Patrick’s occupation?” “He was for a long time doing labor- {ing work about Tipperary and afterward went into business as o butcher at God- sall, in the county of Donegal. Ho had been in America, and seven years ago secame naturalized. After getting his papers,the same which were found in his trunk at Cape Town, he returned how While in this country he lived in Ba more and Philadelphia, and was nev far west as Pittsburg, in Philadelphia he was dr It was not congenial, however, and resigned, and, going into politics in the Twenty-seventh ward, he made him- self 8o useful that Mayor Stokley, of that city, put him on his force, and during in some mis- Carey testified | 1 don't belivve he Ve had the | societies, and many Irish troubles in with him_after r on a street | the close of the Centennial exposition he did duty on the grounds as sergeant of the guard.” Gen. Sherman’s Ambition, n The Courier-Journal, 1 never have been, am not, and never ate for the high oftico of president before any convention of the people,” says Gen, Sherman, It is very likely that the general wishes to devote his entire attention to school commence- ment. An Example for itation, the Philadelp! 10,000 in adve of profits valued af '8 hilself well rl-' mu\.lmvl( with o Imports. From The Philade N This i olive oil e t country. Imported s from New Orlean im- »s from Maine; imported y from California, and sure to be genuine every ported sardi Madeir elphia New:. ls in k of the ittractive app \\ ¢ should think that, to Ch vy, o hearse might seem very at- Dublin, My | was away from | had been | s active | middle of | When T left him | Washington Avenue and Elf{/r Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. MO, STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., - ‘Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOTE, ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES! A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGEIVT.S‘ FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER €O § J. A WAKEFIELD WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lal, Stmoles, Piokes, SASH, DOORS, BLINBS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. flear Union Pacific Depot, - 3 - OMAHA, NEB , C. F. GOODMAN ‘Wholesale Druggist | AND DEALER IN -;Pamis Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA. NEBRASKA. L P BOYER & OO., | > DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Gompy ! FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF | - SAEES, TAULLS, LOCKS, & 1 who could not get out of that city any | other | | 2020 Farnam Strect. Omaha. Rheum'msm, Neuralgm, Sclahca, Headache, Toothache, BENZON & COLLIN REAL ESTATE AGENTS. 211 South Thirteenth st. Opp. Omaha Nutional Bank. whoat at wnts a bushel, | atrice had a little senvation lust week | with agirl in it. A youug man named RitHe | wiss making riffio with the daughter ot butcher | Miller when the latter ordered bim frow his promises. The old man started to expad iflle’s movements but was met by a bullet from the Iatter's which plowed 1 chan s howels. Tath parties August 3th, Sherman Snell and | 114 and 12 vears, loft ther | swa, for Nobraskn, | mun for shootir £ dark complexion, hi oyes aud wor mluc. straw hats, is an in s o dark | rmother | 3 ous for them to return B auy one see- | hoin b raquested to induce them to come I ', n th rof the Law, ) the 1ith inst, Rev, Meacham, of Fury county, was standing near his stove duriy, thunder sto He was holding o | bis right hand, when llghlumf stove pipeout snd tore the laces, 1t burned the elder’s fac Bia ekt hand. and passed down his I He sustained no injur nqut contracting lhu cords in his wrist, » paralyzing the parts, which soou passed & n excursion of 200 land seekers will start oms Illinols this week, to investigate the Re- publicaa Valley, where Rev, J. A, Fanning L 520X, 178h troet 1L 2 000 04, Dorcas stroet 7 6 room house, ot 60x125, Montana strect 1 800 au ouse, lot 30x140, 19th wtreet 2 o leased ground, Cass st Sth wtrvet 20th atroct N 23 Houso and lof, 831 30 Kouo and lot, 54x13 Two luts, ital avenie .lu.‘m a strovt Davenpurt stroet 5 oach, Seward street and lot N, 19 8t. and lot Califoriiia Str. and lot N, 13th 8t. . BENZON & COLLIN, Au-wed-sat MRS, LOUISA MOHR, Graduated Midwife !|:: " HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Sha | EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, . 4 | | | | | OMAHA NEB. M. HELLMAN & CO,, Wholesale Clothiers! '1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, EBRASK _ 2 Anheuser-Busch - BREWING ASSOCIATION: | § CELEBRATED Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt, ‘) ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, =< SLLOUIS M0, >+ 'Will be Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR G00DS ARE MADE TO THE STANDARD Ofour G-uarantee. | GEORGE HENNING, ’ Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. # Office Corner 153th and Harney Streots. e SITI-U\I NOTICE TO ; S Growers of Live Stock and Others. | WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO S Our CGround Oil Cake. ,:‘;, 1 1 the best aud cheapost food for ook of any kind. Oue potnd ie oqual 1 three pousde ' Stock fed with Ground Outhhlnmhlludllnhry. Instead of runaing dova, will Incraase 1o "P' \ il be n good marketable condition in the Dairywen, a4 woll as others, Who A 12 tmorite’ Try 1t aid jadge for yourveIves. e $35.00 por fon: no charge for 1608, California [Street, o4-e0d e WOODMAN LINSKID_OLL 00! ANY, Oty