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e e A THE DAILY BEE:--OMAHA, SA URLAY, EPTEMBER 15, 183, THE GMAHA BEE. MR BT MATL me Year.........$10.00 ( Threo Month, ... 43.00 Bix Moneos........ 6.09]One Month 1.00 I WRRKLY FER, FURLISHRDINVERY WRDPRSDAT. TERMAPOSTY ALD. One Year...........42.00 | Three Montie 0 ix Montha. 1.00 | Ome Month et ] American News Company, Sole, Agerta :Newsdeal: ory in the United States.; foonrmseoxpRNcR.' A Communiontions relating to News and EAitorial matters should be addressed to the Eprron ov Tik Busg n 17 poRNE. LR All Basines Letters and Remittances ‘should be addressed to Tirn Bew PUSLISHING COMPANT, OWATIA. Deafts, Checks and Postoflice orders to be made pay- Wbl G the order of the com, PHE BEE BUBLISHING 00, PROPS. E. ROBEWATER,ZEditor. New York democrats are preparing for their annual fight among themselves, and the republicans will wait with inter- st the consequent disorganizaticn. A ray of hope appears in the Nicker- son case. The major has failed to report his address to the war department, and it is proposed to drop him from the rolls as a deserter. Tur New York Zémes urges the retire- ment of the three cent piece which it says was “created in 1851 under an im- pression on the part of congress that without it nobody could buy a postage stamp,” and has outlived its usefulness. Tur scheme for consolidating the New England Bell Telephone companies has failed, for which the public has cause for congratulation. No business needs the stimulus of competitlon to perfect the system more than the telephone service. Tar. Edmunds bill is based on the hope that when the Mormon is faced with the alternative of having only one wife or los- ing the spoils of office he will waver. This is & very slender thread upon which to base the regeneration of a whole ter- ritory. Reporrs from various sections of the State confirm the belief that corn was not injured by the late frosts. While the total corn crop of the country will only average 80 per cent., Nebraska will more than exceed her record of last year. Tax Galveston News has compiled a report of the business of Texas for the past year, and shows that the exported products reach a value of $107,842,880. The state has 6,139 miles of completed railroad within her borders, and leads the country in the production of cattle and sheep. The value of her cotton crop alone was 875,000,000, AN ENGLISHMAN ON AMERICA. * We hear so many eulogies of Encland by Americans and are surrounded Iy so much American snobbery and servile im- itation of British speesh, dress, customs and mannerisms that it is a pleasure to learn that America and American charac- ter possesses some attractions to one of the most distinguished of our English visitors, ~The greatest English lawyer and most vorsatile and eloquent after din- ner speaker, Lord Chief Justico Cole- ridge, a few days ago was entertained at dinner in Boston, and spoke as follows of some of our countrymen: How can I rise to the height which the sunject of Massachusette and of Poston would fain fnvils me to aspire to} Tapeak 1n the neighborhood of Bunker Hill. I have seen your old State House, with the lionand the unicorn upon it. I haveseen that moble building m which your two houses of assembly meet, with General Burgoyne’s cannon in the ante-cham- ber. I have seen Faneuil Hall, plain but most interesting building, and I have seen {he more recent and more mag- nificent building within a few miles of is place—the memorial hall and Harv- ard university. Gentlemen, these things are full of interest and of history. Do not believe him who tells you that you have no history. You may have a short history, because you cannot help it; but ou have a great history. You have a istory of which any commonwealth may justly and rightly be proud. You know —forgive my vanity if I say I know too —that gou bred Benjamin Franklin, Joseph Story, Daniel Webster and Theo- dore Parker. Daniel Webster, whose hand 1 was privileged as a boy at Eton to press when he was in England as your representative, and whose eloquence 1 have humbly studied ever since; Story, a household word with every Eugf:lh lawyer; Parker, perhaps = one of g;‘nr highest and greatest seuls; wthorne—if you will forgive the ex- w:m of cras insular opinions—perh n altogether, your foremost man of letters; Longfellew, the delight and the darling of two hemispheres; Holmes, the autocrat of the breakfast table—the auto- WAS IT PREMATURE? A large number of the railroasd organs weartng the republican label and several journals who have classed themselves as friendly to the Anti-Monopoly cause are clamoring that the endorsement of Judge Savage by the Grand Island convention was premature. They claim that the convention should either have nominated a straight out and out Autimonopolist or deferred their choice else should have until after the Republican convention | had presented a nominee to the voters of of Nebraska. Now no one knows better than these gentlemen that the nomination of a ean didate unendorsed by either of the twe dominant parties, have been a senseless waste of ammunition on the would = |part of the Anti-Monopoly convention There would have been no possibility of the election of such a candidate and the only effect of his nomination would be the certain election of any man put ap by the railroad bosses who control the Re- publican machine. Such a calamity could only be prevented by the consolidation of all opposition elements upon one candi date, It was desirable if not essential that this candidate should not only be an able lawyer, with an unstained reputation, but alawyer who can bring to the su- preme bench the experience acq d as a judge of the lower courts. Judge Sav age combined these qualitios in an emi- nent degree, and what is more he is clean-handed and unapproachable by corporate influence. In addition to these qualities Judge Savage has a record as & veteran whose loyalty to the flag and the Union, was attested by gallant service in the field, during more than four years, We may as well state right here that Judge Savage was importuned to become the Anti-Monopoly candidate forsupreme judge, by leading Anti-Monopolists, weeks before he was nominated by the Democrats, and Judge Savage gave his unconditional consent to become their candidate. As a plain mat- ter of fact, then, Judge Savage was the choice of many leading Anti-Monopolists for weeks before his Democratic support- ers presented him to the Omaha conven- tion, If the Republican party had not inten- tionally followed their old scheme of a snap convention and a short campaign there might be more grounds for the charge that the nomination at Grand Island was premature. In the pres- ent instance they have succeeded only in overreaching themselves and taking away in advance the chances of a united Anti-monopoly support for their candidate. Tt was the aim and intention ef the leaders of the railroad wing of the party to leave as little time as possible for ‘‘kicking” be- tween the convention and the election, and to force through their candidate, whoever he might be, without affording the opportunity to their opponents to wage & thorough campaign based on the merits of the candidates themselves. Under the circumstances the only course loft for the Nebraska Anti-monopolists was exactly the one which they pursued. Last fall in New York 100,000 republi- cans rebuked the party by endorsing at the polls a democratic candi- date for governor, mnot because they inclined'towards democratic aftilia- tions but to stamp their disapproval upon Republican political methods, (iovernop Cloveland's election by 218,600 majority was the rosult. 1f the Republican party in Nebraska is again compelled to taste the medicine of defeat from its own fol- lowers, it has only itself to blame. There was nothing premature in the action of the Anti-monopelists. 1t was the neces- sary consequence of ,a Republican policy which for years past in this state has en- deavored to smother party sentiment and to stiflo all fair opposition by the methods of the professional politician. The Grand Island convention was called with the intention of prosecuting a political cam- paign. The time of the Republican gath- ering was namod with the idea of pro- venting one. Ponrrer, the defaulting post commis- sary of the 5d cavalry, has not yet been captured, but when he is, the only chance of his escape from the peniten- tiary will rest on the presidential clem- ency. Army officors have an offective meothod of dealing with offenders by court martial in which nine cases out of ten conviction results as the consequence of the trinl, The groatest enemy in times past to a rigid discipline in the army has been an executive clemency which has forced gentlemen and ofticers crat if he chose of every dinner table, too, But there, I am told, he is content to play the part of the constitutional sover- eign, Emerson was great and as strong as one of your own rivers, and as pure, ell, I am proud to say, is my own friend—your representative at this moment in my own country. Like Garrick in Joseph Reynolds’ picture, he excels either in tragedy or comedy, and ly delightful whether as Hosea oras James Russell Lowell— with equal eloquence to move the of his readers whether to smiles or And Howells, the last of the invaders who has taken Eng- These are your glories. These are the men who make your his- These are the men of whom—for- give me for saying “di-teyou ought to be, if Pi‘: Boston, the home of flunkeyism, are grateful to American ears, and all who heard them no doubt joined in the concluding sentiment of the : *‘Gentlemen, we are one, as Washington Allston, poet and painter, truly said—‘We are one in blood, we are one ip language, we are one in laws, we are one in hatred of oppression and love of liberty.” We are bound together, if I may reverently say so, by God himself in the golden chain of maternal respect. The twe nations so joined together, I am firmly convinced, man will never put E i to associate with the blackguards and scoundrels whom they have ignomin- iously kicked out of the service. Ir paving operations are to be begun early in the spring and continued uext year, a proposition for $100,000in paving bonds should be submitted to the people at the coming county election, —_— OTHER LANDS THAN OURS, The Tonquin war is still confined to the diplomats, Minister Challomel-Lacour and the Marquis Teeng being the leaders in the combat. There is & violent con- troversy going on in the Parisian journals and lengthy telegrams containing news of warlike preparations come from Hanoi and Marseillps, but no act of war either overt or open has yet been committed and theré is & growing opinion that the difficulty will yot be settled by peaceful arbitration. This opinion has been strengthened by the determined attitude assumed at the close of last week by China where the war fover was at its height. It is one thing to bully and an- other to fight, and the conservative French opinion is strongly opposed to a war in which no principle is at stake and where victory itself would be almost as dearly bought as defeat. Whether An- nam remains as the vassal of China or be- comes sugerain to France i after all of trifling importance to the mass of the French people, while a campaign against success against the republic meets with violent opposition everywhere. Political affairs in England ars quiet during the recess, which has now entered the second week, and the Liberal jour- mals who discuss politics at all are busy- ing themselves in apologizing for the mistakes of the late session. Lord Hart- | the next reassembling of the British par- A bill will doubtless extension | the franchise laws. be intreduced dealing with an of the franchise in the counties and mak- ing the qualifications there like those now existing in the boroughs. 1t is also prob- able that a general redistribution of rep- resentation will be agitated, though both the Conservatives and Trish representa- tives will bitterly oppose it. | general the reforms in the election laws in England the more the aristocratic class privileges will be endangered, and it is not certain that the Liberal party will hold together for any important reform bill. In Ireland the Nationalists are taking the auspices of the league. Thirty thou- sand persons attended the Waterford passed demanding a parliament for Ire- land and declaring that’ Ireland must rebellious, The success of the Irish party in the Com- because Canada was mons, though largely negative, is greatly appreciated as indicating what my yet be a o mplished by organized opposition in the way of first preventing obnoxious legislation, and second in securing valu- able concessions to the demands of the Nationalists. Parnell has never been more the uncrowned king of Ireland than he isat present, and his progress is attend- ed with generous ovations which bespeak the hold he retains upon the popular affec- tions. At the opening of the next par- liamentary session the Nationalists confi- power and to wrest from the government concessions which their numbers would not permit during the last session. The situation in Eastern Europe is believed to be extremely critical. There are rumors of a coalition consisting of Russia, Turkey, Montenegro and Bul- garia, directed against Austria and de- signed to prevent further acquisitions of territory on the part of the Austro-Hun- garian monarchy along the Danube. Large numbers of Russian officers are re- ported as crossing over into Bulgaria and a rumor comes by way of Berlin that the Russians are concentrating an armed force north of the rivers Pruth, between Roumania and Bessarabia. The present aim of the Czar is stated to be the re- moval of Prince Alexander of Bulgaria ington has practically admitted that the [liament will be devoted to altecations in | The more advantage of the parliamentary recess to hold a serics of monster meetings under demonstration, where resolutions were have what England granted to Canada dently expect to secure a clear balance of had sent fyur women und over 100 men into an eternity they were by no means prepmred to enter, and that he had a “aystem.” What the ‘‘system’ is was doabtless his professional secret; but he a foreign enemy with all the chances of | daimed that by it not only was the neck broken, but the tightening of the cord closed the air-pipes and produced apo- Jlexy and immediate and painless death. The “‘system’” had not been working well of late; and_only a week or.two ago the attention of Parliament was called to the horrible bungling which had disgraced two recent executions. These were at- | tributed to the hangman’s intoxication, | but perhaps were only a siun of failing vigor and approaching death. it scuins | of much of the horror which marked it ntury ago is still the most odious in ingland) was a bookish man of wide reading and of no little natural ability, and that he began life as a Wesleyan preacher. In personalappearance hesug- gested the preacher or well to do trades- man, rather than the hangman. It seems somewhat uncertain whether Dr. Holub will be able to make his long talked of second expedition across Africa. The time of starting has been fixed for the last of this month, but there is a seri- wus hitch about the funds. The cost of the exhibition five or six years ago was £30,000; about £10,000 more than this will be necessary for the present under- taking, and only half of the amount has yet been raised. The Austrian Govern- ment and people are indifferent to the undertaking, while the English will only advance the money on condition that the journey shall be made from east to west, and the expedition shall be subordin- ated to British commercial interests. Dr. Holub insists on traveling south to north, and has left England in disgust. But one chance remains. The Cape Government offered Dr. Holub 820,000 for the collection made on his first expedition. The present undertak- TR T L e that theoffer will be renewed now and the money be advanced at once. It is to be hoped, for the sake of the scientific knowledge likely to result, that the pur- poses of the distinguished explorer and scientist will not be defeated by the lack of money. And Dr. Holub himself seems to be confident that they will not. He has engaged his assistants, made all the necessary preliminary purchases, and s far as possible mapped out the programme of the trip. European _statisticians are gradually reducing their estimates of the popula- tion of China. It used to be put at over 400,000,000. Behm and Wagner reduce their estimate for China and Corea from 434,500,000 to 379,600,000. Peterson reduces his estimate by 75,000,000, mak- ing the present total 350,000,000. Dr. Happer, missionary, believes this can safely be reduced another 50,000,000. Mr. Hippisley, acting commissioner of customs, thinks 250.050.000 more nearly correct than 350,000,000. The losses by the Taeping and Mohammedan rebellions and by the famine and pestilence which swept the provinces of Chili, Shantung, Shansi, Shensi and Honan are variously estimated from 61,000,000 to 81,000,000, France has adopted a convenient ex- cuse for withdrawing from an untenable diplomatic position in the controversy with China. _The blame for the expedi- tion against Hue and for the signing of the Anamite treaty is to belaid upon Dr. Harmand, the French commissioner, who ordered the expedition and signed the treaty without authority from his govern- ment. It is rather a gauzy pretext, but if it keeps the peace it will serve. from the throno and the placing of & = nominee who can be depended upon in an emergency to faithfully protect Rus- sian interests in that section. Meantime Roumania has joined the Austrian alli- ance and any overt act of war would find the Empire of the Czars menaced by an armed force which controls the entire frontier, from Posen on the north to the Balkans on the south, The Slavic troubles in Croatia have subsided under a rapid display of energy on the part of the Hungarian and Impe- rial authorities. Rioting continued dur- ing tho early part of the week at Agram. On Saturday Jowish houses became the objects of popular assault, the more read- ily because of the leniency with which similar outrages had been deslt with across the Hungarian border. But the Hungarian Government had become tired of anti-Jewish riots, and earnestly con- cerned about all kinds of riot and agita- tion in Croatia. The infantry fired upon the mob, and the hussars cleared the streots. Similar collisions, not entirely bloodless, took place in the rural dis- tricts, military reinforcements arriving from Styria and other parts. A new at- tempt by the Agram 1ol on Sunday was casily quelled. A number of ci offered their strvices to pry and both the city and country have re. sumed a more quiet appearance, The celebration of the anniversary of King John Sobieski's rescue of Christen- dom from the danger of Moslem con- quests took place in Vienna on Wednes- day. Owing to fears of a vevival of the national spirit hoth the Prussian and Russian governments forbade the celebra- tion in Posen, but Austria, whose capital from conquest by the brave laanr i Gtemratat 16 Carivaria as o gala day. Sobicski in early youth entered the Polish army and rose steadily until he became chief commander. Re- peated conquests over Tartars and Turks made him recognized as the greatost gen- eral of his age, and in 1679 he was elect- od King of Poland under the title of John 11T, Shortly afterward he checked a formidable Turkish army on the front- jer and gained for Poland seven years of tion by the appearance of a new Mus- sulman army, 500,000 strong, under Kara Mustapha, which, crossing Hun- ance. The King promptly set in motion all his available forces and was joined on the march by a body of Gierman troops. Ho came in sight of the besieged city on the 11th of September. Pressing for- the following day with an anay very in- ferior in numoer and totally” defeated them. Hailed as the preserver of Clristen- dem, Sobieski retired from his kingdom, and the anniversary of his great victory has ever since been cele brated as & nationa! holiday in Poland. William Harwood, the netorious public hangman of England, died on Mouday of conjestion of the lungs and jaundice, aged 63. It is his distinction that he ward, he attacked the Ottoman forces Vienna to The balsamic healing and seothing properties of Samaritan Nervine are something marvelous, “My brother, aged 19, had fits from his infancy. Samaritan Nervine cured him.” A. 'W. Curtis,Osakis, Minn. §1.60 at Druggists, Afraid, Some people can never get on, Let their chances be as cood as it may, They stammer, and shuffle, and stick Where others will dash right away, Thoy say it's for want of & cheek That the world isn't properly made, cheek that they want. he truth of it is, they're afraid. many a man with good hands, an werk with true strength and true wkill, Geta shunted aside just because He'll not push where another man will; He sweats and he groans in the mud, And lets himself sink in the shade, Yet he night have been famous and rich, 1f he hadn’t beon soft and afraid. Thero are men who are upright and true, ‘Who shut themselves in their own den They ¢aren’t ste » into the front, And take up their stand there like men; They live and grow rich out of sight, And ne are known but in trade, Vet might have been honored and blest If they hadu't been still and afraid. Stand up, then, and don’t be done down By cheok, and by swagger and bra n should stick up for his rights, ther wealthy or not worth a *mag;” il that made one has made all, o us all is displayed- And if & mah does what is right “Phere’s to one need make him afraid. —— IMPIETIES, There s an unpleasant_scandal in Evans. ville that involves several members of Trinity M. E. church, A knockdown oceurred in the pastor’s study. Beecher announced no change in his faith last woek, in 50 far as we have seen. This would indicate that he threatens to become sottled in his views. Thers will soon, with the recovery of Noah' ark, & deuteronomy or two, Pharaoh's chariots and othor old junk, be enough material for & pretty respectable musoun. To » Cincinnati store a_piano is marked “Achern, 1701.” And the music banged from some pianos sounds like that evolved from a churn of the 1761, pattern—Norris. freedom from further menaces. This | own Herald, was the situation of affairs when, | A Wi (2 ainais i tho midmummer of 1083, Ku'|qiforc fro bb wile gn Uhe o St - rope was thrown into constern: oeked hum down with s chair, him with & hickory cane, and hit him with a heavy water pitcher, A railroad _conductor was recently chosen gary, laid siege to Vienna, Popo Inno- | deacn of o church, 'Whon it bocamehis duty cent’ IX, and Ewperor Leopold alike | il ih s Shating out “with the character- turned t Sobieski, imploring his assist- | fitie ejaculution. ‘hickets, goutloment” The collection that day was large. If there is any money to be made on selling whiskey to Indians, it should be made by the ‘missionaries, who bear the hardships of carry- ing civilization to the unenlightened, not by tho sutlers, who have & good enough thing of it in playing poker with the army officers. Neow Orleans Pic A Novada paper says: f and rotten welons are beginning to be plenti- une Now that oversoft | ful, the Piutes are alwost ready to believe the | il 1 is at hand. In the present pl | condition of their minds and gorged conditio of their stomachs they would offer but a fee- ble, 1f any, resistance to_being baptized into our several Christian churches, There are times and seasons for all things, and the welon season is the time for saving the Piutes. A couple of Mormon elders, attempting to hold ious service upon ‘‘the beauties of Mormouism” in Corveta county, Georgis, strange that this man, an enthusiast in | | principal measures of the government at | his calling, (whose office, though divested | | him to the *‘voice of one crying in_the from | 0! 10 GENT This is the sum h Mr. A. Barns, three miles enst of Coburg, Ont., says he wouldn't have given for his chance of living before he used Burdock Blood Bitters, He had dyspepsia for fifteen years, and was cured by three bottles of this very excollont preparation, Mrs. J. C. Anderson, of | D) Peshtigo, Wis., aska us the price of twelve bottles of Bur. dock Blood Bitters. They cured her of erysipelas and salt rheum, and she expresses herself as highly pleased about it. She is no more gratified than we are, however. No. 1. My wife considers Burdock Blood Bitters a medicine. They cured her of dyspepsia and liver complaint when no other rem- edy she ever tried would do it. This Martin Kizer vumber one is what Mr. of Linn their sorrow that the lin the g f bit- wo fr n their no longer mer- se thereof the Mor. mon_elders are supposed to be still legging it for Utah, and their converted ‘‘sisters” await in vain the expected baptism into the new faith. The prophet Esaias believed that John, the Baptist, was the precursor of Christ, likeni (Georgia young me terness, and are al distribution of eges chantable. In cons ness: Prepare ve the way of the Lord; his paths straight;” but, according to the the- of a popular preacher in the city, Esaias y have been mistaken. The preacher says aster, who was supposed to be a conterm- vy with Moses, e red the way for the Christian religion culcating its main tenete in advance of divine revelation. Esaias may get out of the difficulty the best way he can. The Wall Street N this: *The other when everything toc b d it _seemed asif the bottom had dropped out of Wall street and left a hole big enough to take in the whole country, a holder who was being pinched and scraping his_soul for more margins, was informed_ that a visitor desired to see him. ‘Can't see anybody,” was his reply. In five minutes the messenger came back with the announcement that it was very important business. ‘Can’t help it; I'm in no condition to see my own father, A third time the messenger disappeared, but a third time roturmd. to say: ‘He says'it is a case of life and death, sir.”” This decided the operator to admit the nnknown. He entered with an easy step and a pleasant smile; and after mature deliberation softly inquired: "“i' friend, how is it with thy'soul?’ soul? Halifax and Texas! Do you think a man who has 60,000 worth of stocks shrivel- ing up on him like & cabbage leaf on a hot stove has any time to fool away on his be- nighted soul ?” You git!" is responsible for is 'THE DOWNFALL OF PAUL. Comments of the Press of the Region ‘Where Vandervoort Labors, Denver Rocky Mountain News. “‘A CHEEKY BLATHERSKITE.” In the last year before his dismissal from the mail “service Mr. Vandervoort :]vu absent from his post of duty 265 ays. ‘et hehas the immeasurable impudence to ask the president to order his re- appointment, and it is most probable that he will beg the Grand Army to join in the request. We hope for the sake of publicdecency that the veterans belonging to the Colorado posis will. refuse to champion the cause of; this cheap and cheeky blatherskite. Postmaster General Gresham simply did his duty in removin a negligent A incompetent official, an his action in that matter should be endorsed, not condemned, by every old soldier in the land. General Gresham was himself a gallant soldier, having lost a leg in battle, while Mr. Vandervoort was simply a quartermaster’s clerk. Let Mr. Vandervoort earn a living by honest endeavor for a year or two. MUTILATING THE RECORD, In order to shield Paul Vandervoort the Omaha Republican of gluendny muti- lated its own dispatches ahd refused to publish official record of his duplicity and incompetency. This is a_cheaper and meaner fraud to shield a U. P. bummer than even boss Stout and his state officers would ever be guilty of.—[Nebraska Signal. . The Civil Service Remedy, Paul Vandervoort, late chief clerk of the railway mail service, has thrown his mantle of grief upon the shoulders of the Grand Army of the Republic, and proposes to use that organization in a fight for his reinstatement. The mail service is bet- ter off’ without him, and Postmaster Gen- eral Gresham did a good thing when he gave him his walking papers. Mr, Van- dervoort is notoriously incompetent, and only held the office as long as he did by meane of his wire-pulling propensities. Meanwhile his subordinates laughed at him and held him up as an object of ridi- cule—behind his back—knowing him to be utterly unworthy of the important po- sition he occupied. If the dose of medi- adminstered to Mr. came from the bottle labeled * ice,” we call the concoction a soveri remedy.—Laramie Boomerang. A Terrible Shrick Goes Up. Postmaster General Gresham evidently keeps his eye open. His little ax has dropped again, and this time the head of Chief Paul Vandervoort of the railway mail service rolls into the basket. The executlon seems to have slipped a cog in the machine somewhere, judging by the terrible shriek that goes up. Otherwise things glide on about as usual, —[Central City Courier. Go Back to the Files. If the editor of the Omaha Republican cares to know what his honest opinion of Vandervoort is, let him republish an edi- torial that appeared in the Omaha News sometime in the spring of 1880, We much fear the young man is talking against time.—[Schuyler ! GERwAn ReMED FOER PAITIN. [3 l\l RES Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Lumb Backache. Headache, o Fifiy Centsa boriia wions 10 11 Lahgu THE CHAKLES A, V04 s 4 4 VWOLLEN S O) Ml 1| Near Union Pacific Depot, - 5 - | Sciatica, uthache, WHOLESALE . Dry Goods! - SAML C. DAVIS & CO, Washington Avenve and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. MO STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., ‘Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN jPLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOT§, 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 Lumber, Laih, himoles, Piekets, | SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. OMAHA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints, Ous, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA, NEBRASKA. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Cround Oil Cake. It is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. Onepound s equal to three pounds of corn Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, instead of running down, will increase in weigh and be in good marketable condition in the spring. Dairymen, as well a8 others, who use it can testity ita merita. " Try it and Judge for yourselves. u Price §26.00 per ton: no charge for mcks, - Addrem o4-e0d-me WOODMANPLINSELD OIL COMPANY. Omaha Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings" Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. 'HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb. Granite I[ronware. B‘OI’{, BROILING, BAKING, BOILING, PRESERVING, IS LIGHT, HANDSOME, WHOLESOME. DURABLE. The Best Ware Made for the Kitchen. MANUFACTURED ONLY BY THE Uis. ST, LOUIS STAMPING GONiP i 5. tal 1 f v all Stove, Handwars and H GATE CITY PLANING MILLS! ey NG Carventers’ WMlaterials: Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Railings, Balusters, Window & Door Frames. & First-class facillties for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings. Plani d ol specialty Ordors from the country will be promplly executed, - " 26 308 Naiohing 8 i o AY MOYER, Proprieto Y Address all communicatior TMPORTERSJOF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES £ SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 8izes from $60 to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES, SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES. AXMEYER & ‘ GUNS WP .0SPORTING GOODS NEB. e r