Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 25, 1883, Page 4

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H | | 4 1THE DAILY BE THE Pablithed_overs mornin only Monday morning dail GMAIIA BEE. oxcept Sunday. The NS ST WAL e Vear ..$10.00 Three Months ......#8.00 B Monthe 5.00 | One Month. ... 10 THE WHRKLY BER, PURLISITED NVARY WRONADAY. THRMS PONTPAID. 4200 | Three Months, 1.00 | One Month One Yoar .. Bix Months. Amorican News Company, Sole Agents ‘o in the United Statos. CORRRAPONDANCR. A Communieations relating to News and Editorial mattors should be addressed to the Eotrom o Tix BUSIXRSS LRTTERA. THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER,ZEditor. . AxormEs “ Swift” comet has put in an appearance, which may account for # good many crooked things. Gryerat Looay had a regular set-to with Sitting Ball at the Indian confer- ence. Logan tried to make Sitting Bnll beliove that he was a bigger stalwart than the Great Father, but the Sioux chief called him a half-breed. B ———— Stape and Mitchell aro said to he booked for a slugging match on an island noar Nobraska City. We presume they have selected the spot where the great apostle, Ben Hogan, and the champion slugger, Tom Allen, tried to bruise each other some yeara ago. Tur commander-in-chief of the mil- itary and navhl forces of this great commonwealth is mustering a rogi- ment of militia on the Big Blue, near Crete, but we are assured his excel- lency has no design of marching hisy troops upon Omaha. BisMArck has a pretty firm grip on the capital of Dakota. She has paid over the $100,000 bonus to the capital com- missioners and they have awarded the oontract for the capitol building, which, when completed, is to cost $200,000. Al- shough rather late in the season for that northern chimate, the contractors are to lay the foundation of the Dakota capitol this year. Tus first campaign General Sheridan intonds to fight after he steps into Gen- eral Sherman's sho.s will be a war upon wpon the Indian bureau. General Sheri- dan wants to transfer the In- dians under the control of the military. The transfer is mainly urged on the ground that it would put a stop to the Tur application fof a mandamus, to compel the atate board of public lands and buildings to award the contract for the new capitol building to the lowest responsible bidder, Robert Silver, has been refused by the supreme court. The court, Judgs Maxwell dissenting, held that the state had grauted discro- tionary powers to the board of public lands and buildings, and it was improper for the court to compel these officers to & course which the law had loft to their individual dissretion. In other words the court refuses to interpose botweon the state and its | agzents, where the law under which they have made a coutract for the state has not been violated. Now the law was drawn by Bill Stout's attorney, who was also a member of the legislature, and Bill Stout's attorney took very good care that no loophole should be left in the capitol bill through which Mr. Silver or any other coinpetitor could by any possibility become a suc- cessful bidder, It was an open secret, also, that this capitol job was put through the legisla turs by bribery and corrupt trading. Thousands of dollars were collected from ons of Linceln to aid the passage of this bill, and wholesale bribery was sup- plomented by wholesale perjury. Men who were indignant at being bled to fat- ton legislative thioves, parted with mou- ey, memory and conscience, and swore before the investigating committee that they never coutributed a nicked to the corruption fund. As a matter of fact, the capitol bill never did pass legally but the jubbers and tricksters in and out of tho legisla- ture doctored the records and made all crooked things straight on the journals, It may not be the province of the supreme ovurt to protect the state against rogues in the legislature and rascals in the state offices. If the people are betrayed and the taxpayers robbed they have their remedy in the ballot box, They can turn the rascals out, but they must bear the conssquences of misplaced confidence. That there was collusion between Stuut and the state board was self-evident from the outset. If not, why did Land Commissioner Kendall suppress Treasurer Sturdevant's protest? Why did he refuse to put it on record? Why did the other members of the board ex- hibit such undue haste about letting the conuvract? It will take agood deal clearer explanation to justify such conduct be- fore the people than the refusal of the supreme court to overrule them. The court was by no means unanimous. frauds by which rascally Indian agents have brought on trouble with the red man., Possibly the effect would be to transplant the frauds from the Indian ‘bureau to the military service. Acoorping to Dr. Norvin Green, pres- Ident of the Western Union, the reason why the stock of that company was not listed on the Royal exchange, London, was because the English were dissatistied with the downward course of many other American securitivs.” The real reason has been given by many English stock bro- kers horetofore. They will not allow to be put before the British public shares in & company absolutely controlled by one man, The Gould system of financiering is not popular in England, SrroBANT BATes has again been heard from. This time he proposes to promote patriotism and national unity by walking ¥,000 miles waving the star spangled ban- mer. On Monday, October 1st, Sergeant Bates will unfurl the flag at St. Paul, Minn., whon ‘he proposes to carry it through to Galveston, Tex., thence he goea on foot to Portland, Me., and thence o San Francisco by way of Omaha. The whole trip will ocoupy & period of one yoar. At each of thel,800 places, where ho will halt, a speech of thirty minutes will bo made. This will probably be twonty-five minutes too long, Dr. Greaory, one of the throe com- minsioners charged with enforcing the re- form in the civil service, exprosses great satisfaction with the result of the com- mission's labors. He is especially pleased with the support given to the reform by the very persons whose hostility was ex- pooted. Those who until July 1st had the power to select clerks and subordi- natos, instead of hurrying to fill vacan- cies before that date, kept places open until they had the opportunity to have them filled through the-competitive ex- aminations, All this is pleasant to hear of, but must be taken with some allow- suce E————— Oxn of the serious problems in great eities is the stoppage of water waste, The Boston water board have recently taken the decisive steps toward the adoption of eneral system of meters that prevent water waste. Last May the Boston coun- eil appropriated $95,000 for the purchase ¢l meters and salary of inspectors. Bince then the board bave experimented con- siderably and have come to the conclus- fon that thoy can stop the wasto of water without any trouble at all by the use of moters, and that it cannot be stopped suy other way, They have, accordingly, eontracted for 8,000 meters, which they propose Lo put in place before the end of the year, and frond that time forward #0 extend the system rapidly. They be- gin by putting a meter wherover they Bavo reason to believe water is being woolessly wasted. They have some in- us way of managing things evident. , for they say that in a district where $40 meters have been applied the reve. whole city they could aflord to reduce the water rates one-half, and yet the smount of rovenue would not be im l * . Judge Maxwell, with his rigid honesty, conceived it to be the duty of the su- preme court to plnt itself on higher vround than his colleagues woro dispos- ed to occupy. He held that courts were instituted not only to enforce the plain letter o the law, butits highest duty is to stand as the bulwark between the tax-payers aud public officials who enter juto collusion to rob thom under the pretense of exercising their dis- cretionary powers. Tt is not for us to impugn. Convinced that there was some thing rotfen in the letting of this con- tract, Judge Maxwell weont upon the rec ord in faver of granting the mandamus, and we apprehend his course will gain for him the respect and confidence of the people. OTH R LANDS THAN OURS. The excitement of the hour on the other side of the Atlantic is the savags attack made upon KFrance by Bismarck's organ, tho North German Gazette, which charges, under the most flimsy pretoxt, that France alone threatens the peace of Europe. Coming from such a source, this charge is naturally regarded a8 significant, and excites not only in France, but in Eugland as well, and all over Europe, serious alarm. The idca that France has designs hos- tile to the penve of Europo is regarded as preposterous, especially in view of the fact that she is in no condition for a war with Germany, haviig hardly recovered from the drain of men and money of the Franco-Prussian war, The fable about the wolf that accused the lamb with riling his water supply is a forcible illus- tration of Bismarck's attitude. The strained elations between Ger- many and France are the chief topic of the European press, and every indication points to a rupture. At such a juncture tho death of the bourbon pretender, De- Chambord, is liable to complicate matters more than ever, especially if the royal- ists should venture en a restoration of the French monarchy. Parliament is rapidly drawing to a close. The pig-headed policy of the British lords has caused the premier much embarrassment. The rejection by the upper house of the Irish tenant right bill hay embittered the home rulers and they are threatening to attach the regis- tration clausos to the appropriation bill. As this bill must be adopted by the house of lords in the shape that it comes from the commons in order to become a law this move, should they succeed, would enable the home rulers to force the passage of their pet measure, or the supplies for the government would be out off. Gladstone expressed regrets in the commons at the rejoction of the reg- istration bill by the poers and promised to introduce the bill at the next sessipn of parliament, This struggle between the lords and the commons has called down public censure on the domineering aristocracy and there is a great deal of talk of abolishing the house of lords alto- gether, We shall probably have to pass into the middle of the next century be- fore such a radical change is made. The losson administered to the British Government in the matter of assisted emigration has borne fruit. That kind of emigration is to be conducted after a|the more liberal fashion than the landing of its victims in New York, with a sovereign or a half-sovereiun in their fists, A scheme is on foot to transplant two hun- dred thousand Irish families to Canada not to Manitoba, let us hope —furnishing them with land and some stock, and tak- ing mortgages on their farma for repay- ment. It seems to be the work of Cana- dian speculators, but has considerable support in England. And the govern- ment measure appropriating one hundred thousand pounds sterling to aid Irish emigrants proposes to deal with them wmore generously than heretofore, allow- ing families as much as eight pounds a head in some cases. Mr. Parnell made a point when he got the government to agree that a part of this appropriation should be applied to migration. This means the transfer of the people from the overcrowded West Const to the richer and less populous lands in Moath and other grazing dis- tricts, This in the view of the national party is the only transfer that should be attempted. They resist the deportation of their countrymen across the Atlantic, insisting that Ireland is not overpopu- late that what local congestion is can bo relieved without emigra- At a recent moeting of the Roman Catholic bishops of 1 was adopted expressing and defending this view of the matter. If Ireland is to bo “‘governed according to Irish ideas,” the migration is the remedy which should be tried first. Even the Orange news- papers in the North express their appro- bation of it, and their disgust with as- sisted omigration. On this point Ireland is unanimous, and the tion. nd, an address The military uprising in Spain, first at Badujos and then at other garrison towns, is & much more serious business than it seemed at first mizes it in official despatches, assuring Gurope that it is ‘‘nearly suppressed,” and that no_high officers have taken part in it. But they have declared the whole country in a state of siege, they are shooting men without trial, and the ndherents of the king are hastening to wnake displavs of their loyalty. 1t seems certain that the conspiracy is the work of the republican exile, Senor Zorilla, and that it had been aided by French repub- licans with advances of money. In this rospect, the danger to Spain is perma- nent. The existence of a republic in a country to which the Spaniards are in- clined to look for intellectual leadership, always must make the Spanish monarchy loss secure; and King Alfonso is not the kind of a man to conciliate the loyalty of his Spanish subjects. Even kings must pay some regard to the dec The government mini- 8 HOW. A new era of land hunger seems to have begun in Europe Great Britain las nover lost her appetite, while Russia hus gone on steadily feeding along her vastern frontier, but racently Germany, France, and even Italy have reached out the strong arm to seize any unoccupied territory they found unclaimed. France takes ‘Tunis” under her prtection “for keeps,” and ltaly puts forth a tentative claw toward Tripoli and Morocco. Sumul- taneously Dr. Bayol claims the whole left bauk of the Nigur as far_as Sego—wher- ever that may be—for France, although Belgium has tiled a blanket mortgage on all of Northern Africa not heretofore ac- curately set out on the maps. And now comes Germany with a sudden descent upon Angra Pequena, on the west coust of South Africa, and an announcement that they are there to stay, whether Great Britain likes it or not. It is pleasing to note, however, that since France had her comb cut in Mexico none of the birdg of prey show a desire for putting their beaks into the new world lands. A comparison of the British with the just 86 first-class war vessel of thickness of armor and weight of guus, two ef the English are superior ‘in offen- sive power to any on the French list. But in the next 17 on each list the French are superior to the English, and in the whole list the French are superior in 24, the Eoglish only in 12, Besides this, the English discarded breach-loading caunons in the construction of their fleet, on the ground that muzzle-loaders are casier to manage at sea. The French and the other continental powers have wdopted the breach-londers, which are capable of swifter and more effective handling. Taking the two navies through- out, it appears that England is far from possessing that pre-eminence on the sea which she did in the days when her “wooden walls” were her glory ard her defense, Even Italy and Germany now might challenge comparison with her. In point Later and fuller reports of French movements in Tonquin indicate defeat instead of victory for the invaders, as at tirst reported. The French seem to have been caught in ambush, and to have suc cumbed to the successful strategy of the Anamite leader, whose effrts were con- tined to leading them into the interior Disaster befell the fifteenth column, under the command of Bouet, involving much suffering and important los T'he march was a continuous fight. he French papers say the force in~ Tonquin is sufficient to cope with the native gov- ernment, even should it have only the moral support of China, without her troops. The London Zimes significantly asks France whethor, consi g the infinite complications into which the war in Tonquin has led her, she thinks the *tgame is worth the candle;” and whether she ever expects adequate return for her outlay of money and life is another ques- ton, Advices from Vienua stato that the wheat harvest in Hungary has been gath- ercd, and the yield is estimated at 20 por cent helow that of last year, The sur- plus for exportation is valuel at about |* £20,000,000. The Austrian grain harvest has been good, and in Southern Germany the rye crop has been gathered. In Northern Germany the harvest is just beginning, and the result throughout the empiro is above that of former years Rains have interfered with the French harvest, but the prospects for wheat are fair, and very good for most other agri- cultural productions. “Italia Irredenta” is wot,as popular a cry in Trieste as many Italian enthusiasts would like to see it. - A mob in Trieste has just *‘cleaned out” the Italian quar- ter as & mark of loyalty to Austria, When Ttallan peninsula Lcun- united un. French fleet shows that each contains | w=OMAHA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 25, 1883, der one powerful native government the | Italian nation's legitimate ambition was realized, Italy has no business to go scraping around her borders and across the Adriatic to get territory that in no way belongs to her. Fortunately, the maiority (»f‘ the people and the govern- ment recognize the proper limitation of their extension, and there is little to fear from the Irredentists. Mexico is approaching a very serious crisis in her internal affairs and her for- eign relations. Porfirio Diaz, the strong- ent leader in the republic, has prepared for next year's presidential canvass by sccuring the passage of An oppressive press bill, which practically interdicts freedom of speech; at points far removed little insurrections are taking place, as they generally do on the eve of a gen- eral election, whilo nearly every railroad in Mexico is in trouble, the extension of the Denver & Rio Grande being in the worst plight. A mob of five hundred men attacked the Jewish quarters in Prague last week, and, after doing much damage, was final- ly suppressed by the military. Tele- yrams from Vienoa state that the fri quency of thess riots is causing the go ernment much uneasiness, and orders | police authorities to treat them with the utmost severity whenever and wher- ever they occur. On the same day with tho outbieak, in Prague a Brit- ish Jew, representing a respectable business firm in London and provided with the proper passport and credentials, was expelled from Kussian terricory by command of the state department. Count Tolstoi, tl'e minister of the interior, has also ordered the strict imperial decree prohibiting Jewish manu- facturers from employing Christian work- men. All of which looks like a deliberate re- turn to the dark ages and sharply reminds us that some at least'of our boasted nine- teenth century civilization is only a glit- tering sham. Lovoe's Power, If T were blind, and thou shouldst enter Ver o woftly in I should know 1 should fe Something sul veal it, And & glory round thee center That would lighten up the gloom. And my heart would kurely giide me, With Love's second sight provido me, One amid the crowd to find, It T were blinc 16 T wero d-of, a Eler thy preser T should kno T should feel it, Something subtle would reveal it, And the seal av once be broken By Love's liquid undertone. Deaf to other, stranger vuices, An, the world's discordant noises, — Whisper, wheresoc'er thou art, *Twill reach my heart! thon hadst spoken had known, it, 1f X were dead, and thou shouldst venture Near the coffin where I luy, T should know it, T whould feel it, Something subtle would reveal it, And 1o lovk of mildest censure Rest npou that face of cluy. Shouldnt thou kiss me, conscious flashes OF Love's fire throngh Death’s cold ushes Warild give back the cheek its rel, If T were dead! Tosephine Pollard, in The Century for Sep- tember. : My Summer Girl, My summer girl is muslin decked, 1 ow-sleeved und often open-necked, Aud T've no ren nts or powders— n was the sume That time from Neptune's arms we came And sweetly fleonr mutual flame Ou'two clawm chowders. My summer girl she s A sunsh ule buff, o “Tis usefal to obscus When onr two Come into closer neighborhoc Than separato faces always should— A thing at times misnnderstood In public places, rteth. too, i wigh blue— My snmmer girl can eat ice croam— 1 wish vou saw her! Tt doth seem To vanish like & fleeting dream When she co umences. Vanilla, strawberry or pirtiche — Or all at once --an ice crenn hwh [ charge such items up to ** cash” In my expeuses, My sumimer girl is very fond Of water lillies from tho poud Lufuce T'd need & fuiry’s Wand { Ser wishes. at roses, mooulight sail agerless wittons, long white veils That's the one point in which she fails — She's too capricious. Alko, sho's rather glib of speech, 1 And Balks aw y reach; Tis wll iy v h &ler to b ber. I'll have to give her up, But antumy, after all, is near, And first-class girls are scarce and dear She'll lust this summer. — Boston Globe, foar; MUSICAL AND DRAMATIOC. The Florences are acting and rehearsing Anna Dickinson’s manager says that she is best appreciated in the west. have $1,500 & weok on tour of the United States. Fred Warde will open in Detroit on the 28ch, His chiof support will be Muss Auuie Boyle. Levy has an engagement to play at Bay Ridge, a new suaer resort in Muryland, on September 2. “Culendor’s Spoctacular Minstrels” aro mesting wich great suceass in San Franciseo Ther eugagement beon extended two woeks beyond the origial time. Madame Minnie Huuk, MissHope Glenn, 2. . Morawski, Covalier A, De Koutski wod Madume Amy Sherwin aro all engaged for the Worcester musical estival f Soptonn- her, A new play written by David Belasco and Clay M. Groens has beon purchased by Gus- cuve and Charles Frohman, wich the intention of briugiog it out iu New' York during owing wonter, 1t i3 a spoctaoular 1ne {rami, enticled “The Cruise of the Polar Star.” Miss Lizzio Webb Cary, sister of Anuie Louiso Cary, will appear next season as soprauy singer. Sho is said to have ' fine ezzo-soprano voive, o good and pleasing Drosciico wnd & magnede, winninguanner, A Boston mauager has already enghged har for threo years, “The Union Square Theatro compiny opened in Lsaldwin's theatro ia Sun Francisco,on Mon. duy. ayed the “Bauker's Daughe a strung cast, before @ tramendons. ay “The old fuvorices, Joo Wl N. Stoddurd, Maud Hu ere recelyed with Culiforuiau Really it was s, the fatd of Rose Massey, You kuow she was the fiancee of Montagus, ho hundsome actor Wallack's tivated so many women while ho. poor fellow, dropped off in the widst of a brilliant career. 1o was worshipped by women, who used to sead him letters by whio pock, most of which he never re o carod very little for women, but o for wen, ~ Rose wes & beautiful women, who was taken down with a liugering disease when everybody admired her and predicted her have been issued to the military nm]‘:_“ forcement of the | S wplepdid professional success, Sho Was ten- dorly cared for by an old aunt aud & forwer lover when f by everybedy else, and they were her onlf mourners at the grave. So wont out two of a4 bright lights s have shone ou the modern stage before either buraed at wix brightest. Mr, J, O, Duff jwoposes & more imposing p— P— A NOVEL SIGHT. “Pass in genlemen pas in," shouted & tall, red faced man the other evening. A dense crowd of people had gathered in front of Smith's drug store, and all were struggling with might and main to get within hearing of the speaker's voice. The Iatter wos twisting him. sl backward and forward with the celerity of a jack rabbit, and ex elalming with much unction and many gestures, “Push ahead gen tlemen ! Crowd In! Jam yourselves through the door! The bigger the rush the better | like it.” We finally fell into line and purchased one of the jackages he was handing out. Tt was & neat little hottle labelled Thomas' Eclectric Oil, which we have sinco di covered s a quick, sate and powerful remedy for sprains and pains, and & certain cure for rheumatism, Peter Kelffer, cor. Clinton and Bennett streets, But. falo, was badly bitten by & horse, and apj lied Thomas' Ecloctric Oil, which immediately relieved the yain, and In four days the wound was healed. [Thomas' Eclectric Oll sold everywhere by drug. it | operatic o name has not only @ ich his inected in the pust. He will in English, Mignon’ Haud,” " will be perforn ; the most import will_be tho first of Delibes' new * which has created ation than that with w] col ! tte” and “‘Lal Possibl, much interest in musi recent production in Lukme, played in Paris by Miss Van Zandt, i sumed herd by” Miss Emma Juch, %0 far ay complete, is composed Miss Emma Juch, light soprano; wrie Couron, m soprano; Miss ara Barton, contralto; Mr. George Sweet, the baritone, aund Signor tco Campobello, are engaged. Mr. J, H, Ryley and Messrs. McCreery and Dungan aro ‘also of the com- pany. On the 24th of September the regular season’ will commence at Haverloy's theater, Chicago. *‘Lamke” will have its initial pre- sentation in New York Saratoga Springs. The famous waters smell like—well, These Saratoga waters they Taste just alittle Jf the day Of judgmer 1 the sulphur smell Suggests, along with other things, A climate rather warm for sprivgs. But restful as a The land Where er huth A spring, and every Spring a puth To lead love pleasantly along. Oh, there be waters, not of springs— The waters wise King David sings. ight song. Sweot is the bread that lovers eat Tn secret, sang on harp of gold Jerunlem’s high king old. “Tho stolen waters they are sweet!"— Oh, dear, delicious piracies Of kinses upon love's high seas. The old tradifions of our race Repeat for aye and still repeat; The stolen waters still are sweet As when King David sat in place, All purple rgbed and crowned in gold, And sang hfs holy psalms of old. Oh to escape the searching sun; To seek these waters ever sweet; To see her dip her dimpled feet ‘Where these deli s waters run— To dip her feet vor slip nor full Nor tiuge her garment’s hem at all; Nor soil the whiteness of her feet, i stain her whitest garment's hem— Oh. singer of Jerusalem You sung 80 sweet, so wisely sweet! Shake hands! shake hands! I guess you knew For all your psalms, a thing or two. uin Miller. EDUCATIONALL Daughters of Garfield and Hayes are school- mates ut Cleveland. AR The number of gymnastic societies in Ger- many reaches the respectable figure of 2,451, with 221,417 members, more than 120,000 of the latter being active members, Since 1881 the university of Cambridge has admicted the women students of Girton and Newham colleges to the same examinutions as men, and next year will place their names in the university calendar with those of men. Chicago has had asummer school in Hebrew. Ni us, chiefly miuisters, were in There were four recitations a besides a lecture each eveuing and duy, fraquent couversations with enthusiasm all the while, Mr. Moody has two ne 1 in Northfie v houses built at his 50 that next year for 80. The boys m, help milk the for the horses and the pig ¥ piok mid all 175 busrels of uppice, weekly 130 pounds of butter, to stack away it 290 tons of hay, with vegetables, They v, during the u ol work. Tnspector Haworth, who has general super- iug charge of Tudian schools, and who' re- ently returned from the west, reports gond u the cons on and equipment of schools, The school ugg at Chittoceo, Indian territory, will 1by Uctober 1st, and be opened for stion of 150 pupils in January next. “The schools at Lawience, Kan., and Genos, comnnodate 350 pupils each, aud also be opened iu January. - When these are completed the Indians schools throughout the country will accommodate 10,250 pupi spector Huworth says the attea present year has been much lurger than any prececi g year, a result ho attiibuted to the realization by the Indisus of the fact that they must 100k to pursiits other than they chuse for means of sustenance, Berlin counts resent 131 conun schools (ten more than at the same period year), with 2,183 classes and 121,045 pupils, Who receive gratuitous instruction. To these wust be adiled 8,000 children in private schools fonal fnssicutions, muking a round ,000 children receiving gratuitous instruction.. Each communal pupil costs the city forty-eight marks sunually, esch pupil of the so-called gymuasinms and - industrial schools eighty marks, in addition to the regu- Lur school money. The average number of clusses in ev communal school is sixgeen, that of the pupils 1 each class fifty-six. The personuel of the teachers is composed of 182 vectors, 1,370 male teachers, 681 scientific and 530 tachuical femle teachers The average ageof the communal teachers appointed dur- 1 the past year ix 25 years; that ot the teach- decossed o slight fraction over 42 years, THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relieves und cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADAQ'IE, TOOTHACHE SORE THROAT QUINSY, BW wcuc FROSTRI' BUKNN, NCA And all oty and puins, FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. | Druggists and Dirvetions in 11 arles A. Vogeler Co VOGELER § 0. 9o €8 A BURKE, MOARTHY & UNDERTAKERS! 28 14TH STREET, BET. FARNAM AND DOUGLAS W HOLESAIH Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, §T. Lovl. STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOYi. 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 Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - © J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRALER IN Lmber, Lath, Shingles, P SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - . - OMAHA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA. NEBRASKA. P. BOY ER & CO.,, DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTY, LOCKS, &, 1020 Farnam Streat. Omahna. HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paer and Window Shats. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED, 1118 FARNAM STREET, e s M. HELLMAN & CO, Wholesale Clothiers! 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR. 13TH, OMAHA NEB. B 2 ~ = = BRASK Anheuser-Busch CELEBRATED Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt. Y ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, e Promptly Shipped. SEQUSMO ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THE STANDARD OfOoOurG-uarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agont for Omaha and.the W Office Corner 18th and Harney Streots, # cpiisalbil i SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake. It fs the best a heapest fool for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of cora' Oil Cake [n the Fal) and Winter, instead of ranning dos i, will ik Boofe .'.?'.}ifl dition 1o the spring. Dairymien, as well ar others, who use It can testif yourselves. | Price §25.00 per toh: no charge for sacks. = Address . WOODMAN LINSFLD 011 COMPANY, Gmaha J. 0. PRESCOT I; P. CURTICE, J. 0. PRESCOTT & CO, Wholesale and Retail PIANOS & ORGANS! Music, Musical Instruments of all Descriptions. CHEAPEST AND MOST RELIABLE HOUSE Ixn the Stato. CALL AND EXAMINE OUR S8TOCK OR SEND FOR PRICES, NO. 1B0O Farnam Street . . . L OMAHA. VIS By ST PN it

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