Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 13, 1883, Page 4

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THE DAILY BEE:- OMAHA, THUI THE GMAHA BEE. Pablished every morning, except] Sunday. The ealy Monday morning daily. RN BY WATLL ne Vear.........$10.00 | Three Months, ®ix Monens . . 5,00 | One Month IR WKLY KRS, FUBLISTINDIRVERY WRDNMDAY. TERuarOSTRAID, Ono Yoar...........82.00 | Three Months. .. Six Montha. One Month .. American News Company, Solo_Agents_ Newsdeal. @ in the United States., toormrspoprRon A Commurications relating to News and Editorial -ullon should be addressed to the Eviron or, Tu FUSINRSS LETTRRA. All Basinoss Taetters and Remittances ‘should’ b addressed to Trn Bra PUsLSHING COMPANY, OMANA. Dratts, Chocks and Postoffics orders to be made pay- able to the order of the compary. THE BEE BUBLISHING 0, PROPS, E. ROSEWATER, Editor. P TALkING about records, will the Ze- publican publish its own. HENXDRICKS is stumping it in Towa and tho Haweyoes will have an opportunity of sooing as woll as hearing of the Great Fraud, Tan Eloctric Light company scom to neod several now dynamos to push their contract with the city through the coun- al. To-pay and to-morrow will be the great fair days and thousands of Ne- braskans will visit Omaha for pur poses of instruction and entertainment. Horace Greerry’s farm at Chappaqua, | New York, has been sold at auction for $10,000. His daughter, Gabrielle, be came the purchaser at that sum, the meighbors refusing to bid against her. The farm is said to have cost Mr. Greeley $80,000. Nesraska weather is willing to do a great deal to accommodate the eastern markets, but it gently refuses to play in- to tho hands of Chicago speculators by furnishing a frost which will impair the wvalue of its magnificent crop of standing corn. ‘WHo are the ‘‘able lawyers in Omaha in the republican ranks.” They can be counted on the fingers of a single hand and every one of the five can be dupli- cated by an abler one from among the domocrats. Two much politics and too little study is what has been the trouble ‘with republican lawyers in Omaha, Tue reformed monte sharp of the Blair Pilot reads Tnr Bee a farewell out of Republican society, which is as uncalled for as it is silly. The reformed monte capper of the Pilot was long ago read out of all society but that of tho railroad Republicans to whose coat tails ho has hung whenever there were any political loaves and fishes to be distribu{cd. AccorpING to the St. Louis Kepubli- oan Gen. Grant has been talking and if the reported conversation is true, talking , very foolishly. Tho General is said to _have freely declared that he would rather - %, 860 Conkling president than any man in the United States; that he thought the democrats had so good a chance this time that he wanted them to make a good nomination and that he thought Sam Randall would fill the bill. The people three years ago forced General Grant out of politics much against his will and his present views upon political questions will carry little influence in any quarter, —— Waite ignoramuses and malicious meddlers are criticising the value of the ‘Waring systom of sewerage in Omaha the great citios of the world aro prepar- ing to adopt it as a sanitory necessity. Paris, with the largest conduit sewers in the world, will shortly hegin to lay the small pipes of the Waring system for the disposal of its domestio drainage, loaving the present sowers to carry off the surfaco water from the streets. The success of the system in Omaha has been complete except where impaired by the carelessness of persons ignorant of its use and who imagine that a sewer is intended as a recoptacle for filth and refuse of all kinds, Domestic closets might as will be condemned s usoless hecause they will not take the place of the ash barrel and the slop pail. ‘With competent inspection and proper penalties made and enforced against all abuses of our sanitary sewers, the Waring system will gain in popularity in Omaha as it becomes more extended. Bomx of the Nebraska delegation pro- foss to feol insulted over the summary ‘bouncing of Vandervoort, for official mis- conduct, and claim that they should have boeen consulted before the removal, And why should the heads of departments consult sonators and representatives or #swap opinions as to means and methods of reforming the service when the inter- eosts of the government demaud the prompt removal of lazy, incompetent and insubordinate officials? (s a congressman to be summoned to Washington every time a political favorite fails to perform his work in one of the departments, and is removed to make room for a better man? If the change of ofticiuls was merely one of political expediency the oase might be different. There have boen such changes, and the views of the politicians most affected have, uunder such circumstances, often been consultud, Butin the present instance tho only question wus that of removing & wan who had failed and refusod porsistently %o perform his duty as a clork in the mail aervice. All the consultations possible with the Nebracka delegation eould not have changed the facts, And Mr, Gres + ham acted sirictly within the bounds of his official duty, and - of political courtosy in making the remeval as proumptly as Ppossible, without affording any opportun- Aty for outaidy interforence. THE TRADE SITUATION, If reports from various sections of the country are to be believed, we have reached the beginning of the end of the business depression which for six months past has almost assumed the proportions of a minor panic. That we have failed in repeating our experience of ten years ago, has been due largely to the sound condition of the eurrency, the slow con- traction of credits at the first appearances of the coming storm and the bsunteous yield of our harvests during the past two years, Since the opening of the month, signs of improvement have rapidly increased. The bank clearings indicate a greatervol- ume of business. Wholesale morchants report a stoady enlargement of orders from retailers and manufacturers’ stocks, which have been brought down to the lowest point, by a conservative policy of keeping the supply only abreast of the demand, are being rapidly recruited under increased orders from the trade. The large increase over early summer estimates in the wheat harvest has been followed by assurances of a good foreign demand for our exportable supplics. This has of courso an important influenco upon trade as determining to some extent the prices of the grain for home con- sumption and assuring a fair return to our farmers for their labors. ~ An abun- | dance of money in farming communities means n good demand for commodities in the wholesale and distributing centers. It is largely owing to this knowledge and a fair certainty of an unparalloled yield in corn that & vigorous crop movement has sot in and that merchants are begin ning to stimulate trade by laying in larger stocks than those needed for im- mediate consumption, The decrease in business failures which is woekly growing more marked is another healthy and hopeful sign and warrants the increasing eonfidence in commercial cenfers. Locally, our mer- chants profess themselves as woll satis- fied with the outlook for a good fall trade. Orders are already coming in briskly from country dealers and reports from commercial travellers give hopeful prospects for the immediate future. With the bountiful crops of which this state is nearly assured Nebraska farmers and business men alike may look forward with a reasonable degree of confidence to a profitable season — PARTIES AND PARTY NEEDS. The labored discussion between the Herald and Republican as to what con- stitutes the difference between the two political parties would be painful if it were not ridiculous. So far as party principles, as enumerated in party plat- forms, are concerned the difference is very much that between the historic tweedle-dum and tweedle-dee. It would take a telescope of enormous magnifying power to discover any material differenco in the calibre of the men who are manip- ulating the party organizetions, dodging every material issuec in State legislatures and Congress and howling charges and denunciations against the opposing par- ties Neither of the present political parties fairly ropresents the moat enlightened publio sentiment or are subject to the best political influences of the times. And as party candidates depend upon party support through the medium of political organizations the ablest men either refuse the allegiance demanded by machines and rings as the price of political success or violate their own convictions by suppress- ing their honest sentiments when elected to office, The consequence is that thousands of voters who have stood within tho party ranks when it meant something to be a democral or a repuqlican and when plat- forms contained clearly defined issues, are standing aloof and forming the large army of independents which made itself felt as a great political force in last fall's olection, Party lines are growing looser every year, and this teudency is the natural re- sult of the dishonesty of party platforms and the feeling that old issues that have long since been settled and old prejudices that ought long ago to have spent their force, dg not and cannot influence the voters who desire to “think for them- selves, Parties have become mere names, partisanship is daily being left more and more to the men whose chief interest in the party is for what it brings them in dollars and cents, in personal notoriety or in local influence. The need of both political parties is regeneration and reju- venation. Wo need more candor in party leaders and more honesty in party plat- forms. There are great questions loom- ing into prominence in the political and social sky of the country which need only crystallization into issues to divide polit- ical sentiment into two fairly opposed groups, There are honest difloronces of opinion as to euds to be secured and methods adopted which are sufficient to make up platforms on which political battles of national interest could be fought and won on a party basis, And there aro men with the brains and the nerve wifd the Leart to awaken enthusi- asm and attract a following on broad is sues if they can.bo drawn out of their presont ment and curcd of their {asd conducted in this country, Tue Utah commission are still cheerful and in'the ring with another jroposition for submission to cougress at its next seesion. The leading point in the propo- sition is the 1etention of the commissior in office at the same old salary of §5,000 & year with nothing to do. will do well to abolish government by comnmission as soon as possible after the opening of the session, Congross disgust, which thoy sharo with thou- | sands, at the cowardliness wnd deifeis imbecility of parlies as now organized | FULLER DETAILS 0f Vaudervuorl;s Ontrageons Official Condact, Which Lead to His Removal, 8r. Louis, Septemnber 11.—The Repub- lican has the following from Washington: The following dispatch was sent by the associated press from Hastings, Neb, pesterday: ‘At a meeting of 20,000 ex- United States soldicrs and sailors yester- day resolutions were passed condemning the action of Postmaster General Gresh- am in removing Gen, Paul Vandervoort from the railway postal service on account of his connectisn with the Grand Army of the Republic, and calling upon Presi- dent Arthur to reinstate him with honor,” Inquiry was made at the postoffice de partment to-day, and, according to the officials, the facts in the case are as fol- lows: Mr. Vandervoort, who for the past year has beon commander-in-chief of the Graud Army of the Republic of the United States, was removed for cause. He was from his post of duty the greater portion of the time for over a year past. During the time he visited nearly all, if not quite every part of the United States and the territories. His official duties at Omaha have recerved from him very lit- tle attention. The matter has been left almost entirely to his clerk. His division has frequently reported that the service in that section was demoralized and in an unsatisfactory condition by reason of Mr. Vandervoort's NEGLECT OF DUTY. The chief clerks of the railway mail servico are required to make daily reports w their division superin‘endent of their wh reabouts and the nature of their work on each day. These reports have been made out by Mr. Vandervoort and left at Omaha to be forwarded daily from that point after his departure. He has béen absent during that time 265 dn{u, according to his own statement. He was remonstrated with by his division superintendent in regard to his absence, and informed him that immediately after the adjournment of the annual meeting at Denver, Col., he would go to Omaha and attend to his official duties. Instead of doing so, he immediately took his family and went to Soda Springs, Idaho, where he remained until the time of his removal. A portion of this time he REPORTED HIMSBLF AT OMAMA doing oftice work, when it was known that he was at Soda Sfiringu. He also reported &' portion of the time while at Soda Springs that he was arranging the sorvice on the Oregon Short Line, and at the same time he telegraphed to Omahs for his _clerk to come and do the work. After this matter became fully known— that Mr. Vandervoort had taken his fam- ily and gone to Soda Springs and ro- mained a month, the postmaster-general promptly decided that Mr. Vandervoort could not remain in the service. April 90,1883, Mr. Vandervoort asked for a leave of absence for thirty days from April 25, with pay, which the postmaster- general declined to grant. Notwith- » anding that this leave was not granted, Mr. Vandervoort left on his trip to the Pacific coast before he received a reply. May 28, 1883, Nr. Vandervoort wrote the postmnstor-general urging that the order withholding his pay be revoked, which the postmaster-general declined to do. Mr. Vandervoort wrote again June 1, 1883, urging that the order withhold- ing his pay bo_ suspended; but all to no purpose, as the poy for nearly the entire mouth of May was withheld. Tug fall trade has begun to boom as the advertising columns of Tie Bee bear witness. Omaha merchants know where they can secure the most value for their money and during fair week we are com- polled to ask moro consideration than pressure made upon our reading columns by anxious advertisers. The Test. The future of the Anti-Monopoly move- ment is not to be judged by the work it did at Chicago, so much as by the re- sponse it meets with from the people. Tho great question upon which Anti- monopolists were divided, was us to whether public sentiment had arrived at that point which demanded and would sustain such a movement. The response to the call seemed to indicate that it had. The work of the convention has now been carried to all parts of the country, and the favorable response which it has met with at the hands of the honest, liberty- loving men and women of the nation, excoeds our most sanguine oxpectations, The convention was not composed of men who wield great political influence. It was not composed of men who wield the great power that wealth gives. They wore simply earnest men and women of average intelligence, to a great extent unknown to fame, largely of the producing classes, unskilled in political diplowmacy or trickery, intent ouly on doing the work they were delegated for, and doing it to the best of their ability, They were thoughtful, determined, and to some extent obstinate, tenacious of their rights and opinions, and ready to defend them against all attacks, There was no lack of pet hobbies and extreme views. Such a athering could not fail to contain discor- dant elements, and yet wo never met with a more tolerant body of people, nor those who submitted to the slaughter of their pet theories more gracefully or philosophically, Their zeal for the genera cause of Anti-monopoly was greater than that for their wellnursed hobbies, That is what this conference, one of the most turbulent and unmanageable gatherings that ever met in this country, held together for two long days, and made its work full, complete and eflicient, and than went home to continue the work until the object for which they started out shall be accomplished. The favorable responso which their work has received is not due then to the separate of aggre- gate individual influence of the men who composed the convention, but the fact that the sentiments enunciated are the sentiments of the people, and their enunciation has touched a cord which has vibrated to every part of tho nation, and will continue to be echoed and re-schoed I tho people are fully aroused to the that threatens them, and to the 5 that are within their reach,— | | | remed Justice, The Key Found at Last, ) Nows, Chica, Capitalists who wonder that the work- ing man should have anything agaiust them we do well to rowemn! that working men are not all fools. For sev- | el generations bofore the present the English have had the proverh that “cor- | porations have nosouls.” The conduct bu o uuderselling nocescavilly leads to uying tho labor Jused in procuring the goods at the lowest usual from our patrons on account of tho | possible rate. A manufacturer carrying on his work in person feels a delicacy in scrowing down his workmen below what he knows to be living wages. He may even be the victim of a sentimental feel- ing of consideration for their needs, which induces him to better their condition in such ways as his wealth enables him to do, trusting to make it up by better work and more careful management. In a cor- poration this is not so easily done. The | men who own the plow neither hold nor drive. Incompetent management is com- | pensated for in the expense account by scrowing down wages. Whare jo many take part in the ownershij 1 a “‘wicked partner” to whose intericie all hardships of workmen can be charg And thus it came that ceprorations had no souls, a fact which has been ground into the mind of the workmen and crys- talized into his proverh. But it is only now that the principal owners of ln corporate enterprises have n willing ) acknowledge Amt they have no souls Even Jay Gould has been too smnit to g [ upon the record in this wise. Vandor- bilt's “The public be d——d" is cl And here we have Mr, Nervin G president of the Western Union Tele graph company, brought faco to face wi*' a plain question of the senate comm’ e a8 to whether the company coulv ot af- vd to do something to better the con- dition of its employees, and replying that ‘‘corporations are organized to make make monoy, and “not for the good of the public.” " The public will return its thanks to these gentiomen for so plainly defining their positions. The growth of these vast units of money power is the phenomenon of our time, = The encroach- ments upon the purity of the ballot, the imsmrtin ity of legislation, and the justice of legal decisions have arroused the grav- est fears of the intelligent and patrotic. Without an_exception they have acquir- ed their valuable franchises under the pretense of serving the public. When pressed upon by legislature and courts they even now fall back upon this pre- tense, and appeal to their splendid rec- ords of business success. In pursuit of it they disregard all considerations but those of dollars and cents. The public counts for pocket-books, and labor counts for so much force; the welfaro of human souls and bodies does not enter into their account. They are not for the good of the public, but for making money. This is, at last, the truth and the whole truth. Itdeserves to beblazoned upon banners, printed upon the back of ballots, taught in the public schools, and preached from the pulpits, The corporate FAEI8IHa BoUBRIIbIRS phiblic look to itself. J A GOODLY LAND, A Business Man Tells ot mt Country 18 alway on the Cedar County I4ne. Sioux City Journal. A well known business nfan of this city, whose modesty forbids te mention of his name, returned yesterdhy from a trip along the line of railroad peing built into Cedar county. A reporter inter- viewed him about the country. In an- swer to a question about the crops, he said: ““They are certainly the best I have seen anywhere in these parts, and I have been around pretty generally The wheat and other small grain is moscy in stack, and it is worth while te make a trip there just to see how thick these stacks stands in the fields. The corn is much of it eight feet high, whole fields of it, and still growing. Never saw promise of a better corn crop than there is along the Lovan and Bow valleys and in Cedar county.” ““You like the country then? *¢1t is without exception the best coun- try I ever saw. You goar’e no idea of it here among th "Peopls hero think the Floyd and Sioux valleys good. So they are, but nothing like the Logan and Bow. The valleys in Cedar county are so much wider than the Floyd or Sioux, for one thing. For another— I don’t expect you to believe it, but it is so—the soil is better. The crops now on the ground show that. Then the upland is none of it too rough to farm. In fact, it is the farmers’ paradise over there.” ‘‘How about the price of land?’ “‘Well, you would suppose from the excellence of the country that land would be high, but it isn't as high as in this county, and a great deal lower than back of LoMars or Storm Lake. You see Codar county and the south part ot Dixon were rather out of the way until this road began to build in, and the new settlers that came into Northwestern Nebraska followed the lines of railreal. Now that a railroad is being built, lan beginning to come in and pricas tead up. But the speculators realize that by sell- ing part of the lands to settlers they in- the value of the rest. So they are solling at a very fair price yet, much less than lands are sold for elsewhere.” Then it is a new country? ““There you are off. The settlers have some of them been there twenty years along the valleys, and are well fised— good farms and buildings, with plenty of stock. But it is a big country and there is an immense amount of land held by spoculators that can bo bought.” The Cedar county railroad mado its own towns, I hear? **Yes; Peavoy Bros. of Sioux City, are the agents, and in such a country as there is along the line these towns are sure to thrive. [ was at the two first town sites on the line. Concord is in Dixon county and has a Deautiful site, overlooking miles of the Logan valley. This town has jus: been platted, Coleridge is at the iluml of the Logan, where the new road starts to go over the divide into the Bow valley. The site is on good high ground, the country around fairly settled, and everything needed to make a t)wn grow. Some of the foundations for buildings were in at Coleridge before the town was plnt'!,od, and now there are eight buil lings Then lots at these towns are going up in price! “*No, they are not. The railroad com- pany plats the towns to get business for the road, not to make money from the salo of lots, What the company wants is for folks to go in and ess the land, ani every facility is offered. Lots are sold by the company. As investments or for business 1 can recommend these lots in the new towns on the Cedar county line, 1 bought some of them ray- self, but you needn't say anything about it "And the reporter promised he wouldn't, and also promised to go over with the business man sometime and sco the country and write it up. Evaporated ve. Canned Fruit. Letter iu Sacramento Bee. Thero has been considerable complaint this year among the fruit raisers o Cali- fornia on account of the low prices their fruit— and notably apricots—have brought at the canneries, and the fear has been expressod that the industry will soon ceaso {0 bo profitable, The grower, as usually circumstanced, must either sell his cfop when rips or let it rot on the ground, and as tho local market for fresh LA., SEPTEMBER 13, 1885, DANGER SIGNALS. Rurz saws, Pall dog, Grcan watormelons, Didn't know i§ was loaded pletols, Opim shops, Gambling dens, Dull rasors, Countarfelt notes, Rama horna, Hornews' nesta, Lightning rods, Mules' hind legs, Nivo glycerine cans, Forty-ri Weak stomach, from which result indigestion, dys pepeia, and various blood affections are also siguals of danger which should be heeded without delay, and for which Burdosk Blosd Bittars are especially adap ted. The n o ronovates, purifies and strength ens the dirculatery organs,thus building up thelentire wiskey of Frankrille, Canada, suf se of the tver and kid fered from a , that brought him so low his life was despaired of; he Iay for thirteen days with. ouban operation of the bowels; after tak- ing one bottle of Burdock Blood Bitters he was enbled to leave Wisbed and drive out. Three bottles more completed & cure, wnd he says that he isnow a better man than he has been for twenty yoars. fruit is limited, he is forced to dispose of the bulk of it to the canneries at whatever figure they are pleased to offer. One firm in San Francisco already controls a large proportion of the canned product of the state, including that coming from the largest canneries of San Fran- cisco and Oakland and San Jose: and even should they fail ultimately in gotting the whole business of the state into their hands, as is their aim, the out- side canneries will nodoubt find it totheir interest to enter into an agreement fixing the prices to be paid for fruits. Thus what has been regarded as the great friend and developer of our infant industry bids fair in a few years to become a merciless, grasping taskmaster, seizing to itself the profit which the grower has earned by toil and study and allowing him but the barest livelihood. What, then, shall be done to avert the impending cvil? It may be suggested by some that the farmer has recourse to two methods, either of which would secure the object sought. First—Let each fruit-growing district of sufficient size erect a cannery of its own and run it upon the co-operative lan, ¥ Second—Let the farmers of the State form a defensive Union regulating the price at which fruit be sold. ~ * To the first of these prnpusitium there are several objections. For instance, district may be rich _in fruit but poor in bank accounts, and to start a cannery and run it for a season requires con- siderable capital. Again, there are weighty objections to the use of goods preserved by the canning method, as will appear later. ABassnd proposition is theoretically better, but against it militates a fact which might also be urged with force against the first. Farmers as a rule are poor business men and apparently unable to organize properly for any purpose. Their comparatively isolated life, each on his own domain, the nearest neighbor Yoveral miles away—seeing their farmer friends once a week, or perhaps not so often, exchanging notes and experiences but seldom—seems to have untitted them for the quick details of business and made them blind to the advantages of organized union. It is true that grange work is correcting this to some extent, but even now—as in the past—their toil enriches the transporter, the broker, the shipper, the miller, the canner, the dealer and the army of middle-men through whose hands their produce passes before it reaches the consumer, while they them selves are too often forced to be satisfied- with a mere subsistence —and this simply because they fail to appreciate the power which capital wields for their defeat— concerted action! No! for immediate relief at least the farmer need not look to either of these plans. But there is another, the adop- tion of which will make him perfectly in- dependent both of local market and can- ner, and enable him to secure always a good price for a good articlo—if not sell- ing at once, then by holding for better quotations, It is to evaporate his own fruit—a method of preserving which the riter believes will ultimatoly almost en- tively supersede canning. The term *‘dried fruit” at once conveys to most minds the familiar picturo of tough, gritty; worm infested slabs of din- o, cuted upon some shed by the combined influence of sun and damp, ® Of such stuff this I speak here of good fruit which, treated in one of the several good evaporators now in use, is deprived by heat of the element of decay—the wa- ter—so retaining, however, the essenceor the fruit that when subsequently treated with water it will nearly approximate in tasto and appearance the fresh fruit. Our friends in the east cannot make rai- sing, and with them this term and “dried grapes” are synonymous, But Mr. Briggs, Mr. Blowers, and our other rasin makers would bo justly indignant wero the inviting layered pro- duct of ther Muscat and Sultana vines to bo designated as “‘dried grapes.” A like distinction must be made between the dried fruit of the past and the ovapo- rated fruit of the present, and better still, that which the future will see. This fact is significant: In the same eastern market the sun-dried fruit sold for 3 to 8 cents per peund, while the evaporated fruit commanded 40 cents. It should bo said, however, that this was an excep- tional prico for the latter—it usually brings 25 to 30 cents, There is, I think, no good reason why dried fruit should not be made attractive and profitablo as layered figs and raisins and it is now fast approaching that de- roo of perfec [r—— insects and birds, ticle does not tre REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relleves and cores RHEUMATISM, Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbago, ) THE GREAT GERMAN SORE THROAY QUINBY, BW . (it SPRAINS, Soreness, Cuts, Brulses, FROSTHITES, BURNS, SCALDY, And all other bodlly sl s and jalus. FIFTY CENTS A BOTILL Boid by uil 1. Liectonn hgusgen Tho Chartes A, Vogeler (1 E] o o vounim s "MRS. LOUISA MOHR, Graduated Midwife! 1608 Oelifornia Btrect. dust and dirt and the friendly offices of |\ W HOLESALE Dry Goods! SAML C. DAVIS & CO,, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. i Wholesale STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, 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. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER €O Near Union Pacific Depot, - J. A, WAKEFIELD, { WITOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lath, Shinglas, Pitkets SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. 4 - OMAHA, NEB Wholesale OMAHA, C. F. GOODMAN, Druggist ! AND DEALER IN Pains, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass NEBRASKA. SPECIAL Growers of Live o4-00d-me WOODMAN| NOTICE TO Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground OQil Cake. It la the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn 8tock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, instead of running down, will increwse in welgh and be in good marketable condition In the spring. Dairymen, as well as others, who use itoan testity its merits.” Try it and judge for yourselves. . Price §25. .00 per fon; no charge for kacks. Addes INSEED OIL COMPANY. Steam Packin, AND SCHOOL BELLS. Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUNPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, | Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings? at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH Corner 10th Farnam 'St., Omaha Neb. 3, Cor. 9th Street and Capitol Avenue, Anheuser-Busch BREWING ASSOCIATION ! CELEBRATED 5 %Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itsolt. ()’lDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD OfOurGuarantee. F. SCHLIEF, Sole Agent for Omaha and the West. Orders from the country will be promply executed. .l “Alavoas al ocommunications o GATE CITY PLANING MILLS! MANUFACT KRS OF, y Caroenters Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Raiings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames, &' Firnt-class tacilities for the manufacture of.all kinds of Mouldings. Planing and Matching a speclalty Materials. A MOYER, Propriotor. Broom Corn MACHINERY | A FULL LINE—-CONSISTING OF Presses, DOUBLE CYLINDER SCRAPERS AND HORSE POWERS o Matoh. The Best in the Market Mauufactured by C.D. COLTON & CO., £&Seud for Circular and Prico List i Gulaburg, I “v:m FARNAM 8TREET, Western Comice-Works, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING. C. SPECHT, PROP. 1111 Douglas Bt. Ouwaba, Neb, MANUFACTURKR OF Cornices Galvanizea Iron tho goneral age Fencir Raion Pooreon & H. PHILLIPS, THE LEADING NEW YOLK | ot aud oo o store ad wo Wy mew A 1207 the M Vol Mr 1ialib. S . o vl

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