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4 HE DAILY BEE~ UM THE GMAUA BEE. Puitished every m nday morning daily. RS KT MATL ne Year #ix Monens. TR WRRKLY BN, PO IKDKVERY WRDNRADAY. TRRMASPOSTPAID, One Yoar 2.00 | Throo Months 8ix Montha 1.00 | One Month Amorioan News Company, Solo [ AgentaZ Newsdeal e i the United States. conmmroxDRNCRT} F A Communioations relating to News and Rditorial . {asters should be addrewsed to the Estron or Tk | has dictated the policy of Germany as he | ynan into an association—agreo to make PURR A LRTTRRA All Business Lotters and Remittnces ‘should be addroased to TR BEA PURLISTING COMPAXT, OMATIA. Dratts, Chooks and Postoffice orders te be made pay ble to the order of the cempan THE BEE BUBLISHING C0, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER,“Editor.; Tne gamblers juggled the cards nicely at the state convention to deceive the suckers, but the hand was stacked from the start for Mr. Reese. P Boru partios are claiming a certain vie- tory in Ohio. This means that both parties are badly scared and that the voto will be a heavy one, ——————— Tk Union Pacific backs its attorneys. Mr. Reese, of the old firm of Reeso & Gilkeson, was the railroad attorney in tho Arndt case, in Saunders county. Tur Republican insists that Mr. Roese is not a young man. He is too young in judicial experienco for the Supreme court, having never sat a day on the bench in his life. Grrp cars have begun running on the Brooklyn bridge and the first accident has been recorded. The prip car is run- ning the kerosenc can a close race this year in the number of victims. AMERICAN residents in the Sandwich Islands are said to desire the presence of a United States man-of-warin that part of the world, Perhaps they can their wish, but citizens of this mighty Nation must be modest in such requests. have We have not enough vessels to go around. RaNpALL'S chances for the speakership aro daily growing brighter, and he ex- presses great confidenco in the result of the election. All the delezates from the tates will support him, M- Donald, of Tndiana says that a good many Demoerats opposed to his tarlfl views will vote for him hecause of a_belief that in the presence Hf a Republican execu- tive and Senate his “iron nerve” is nead- ed to divect the Honse. higgh tari WHEN an army officor bocomes in- eapacitatedby wounds, sickness orold age from doing ac would seem 4 Ye only reasonable to place him on the xetired list, so that his duty might be of- foctively performed by another «7i r, But Congress has established a limit ‘o he retired list, 8o that no matter what vo service it may bo the montal or physical condition of an officer he must continue at work until thero is o vacancy for him among tho retired four hundred. It is a boau- tiful illustration of “‘the way not to do but it is Congross that is responsi- ble for it, not the War Department. Tu statistics of the military rifle com- potitions which closed this week at Fort Omaha show a gratifying improvement in the shooting over that of last year, The scores this year wero better than those made last in this di sar by any department team sion, and higher than those made this year by the teams fronr the de partments of the east and south. The most formidable competitions that the tean from the department of the Platte will meet this year at Leavenworth are likely to be the team from ( al Pope's department, which lis rolled up the astonishing score of 3,008 as against 2,806 mado by the team at Fort Omaha, Last year the winning score was 2,840, The seore this year in the department compe- tition bids fair to exceed that by more than 200 points. Capt. Coleridge leaves Omaha for Leavenworth with his team on Thursday, and the intervening time will be occupied in steady practice. The re- sult will be awaited with a great deal of interest. 1g, exoop Sunday. The £10.00 Three Months ... $3.00 5.00 | One Month 1.00 TA® 2 THE DREAD OF EURODE Tho review of the great German army | whep years after the homesteader dis. posed of his |ml»ru\v ments to another, or even abandoned his claim without any statue of Germania in com- | gale, the land became a part of the pub memoration of United Germany were |lic domain and could not be reached by ench monuments to the power of Prince | the railroad grant, and was only subject 3i k. th | to homestead or pre-emption entry. The Bismarck, the : Land and Interior Departments at Wash- matchless abilitios have made him the |ington hold this opinion emphatically. dread of Europe. Sometime ago Bis-| ‘‘Never think of paying a dollar on any marck is said to have confessed that he :'ch ch"l":-’ “v“l" r‘l"‘l]‘lw]"n-‘ ;EM'IIUQ b ) repeat the wicked blunder of Knevals had caused throe destructive wars. He |10 P T TCRC OO0 e overy at Hamburg last week, the unveiling of the great one statesmen, whose | directed that of Prussia before the|no concession or settlement, got every Franco-Gorman war. That policy is one | man in_this county and adjoining coun- 1 ter to the fest of B 1t ia o | HE® and every man in Kansas in such an S R ¢ rest of Ruropo. ILIbA|gunciation. ~After you have done this, I policy of domination which involves the | will employ at my own expense, one of crushing of any power that stands in its | the best attorneys in Nobraska and one way. The German empiro has a stand- |8t Washington, and be ready to contest f 450,000, with an enrolled the claim. o i Mgl gy ST ““When Congress meets T will have a and trained reserve of over a million, be- [ full investigation made as to the facts sidon another roserve to bo used for de- |and if they are as bold and barren of from the operations of the grant and | well under fense in case of evasion. the best armed and the best trained in the world. the peace of Europe. other standing army in time of peace. stance, Russia is constrained to keep upa military establishment of over 1,100,000, besides a reserve of over 1,000,000 be- cause at any moment Bismarck may pre- cipitate a war. Austro Hungary has an army of 260,000, with a reserve of 900, 000, bocause Bismarck constantly threat- ens the peace of Europe, and would take instant advantage of any nation not propared to fight. France supports a standing army of 525,000, backed by two reserves which together include every able-bodied man in the Republic, and amount to over 1,750,00. Italy has an army which, on a peace basis, num- bes 325,000, with another 325,000 in active training, and a third body of mili- tia amounting to over 275,000, and the rosorve, which includes overybody else capable of bearing arms; that little king- dom has an army, all told, of over a mil- lion and a half of men. The same crushing army system prevails in Spain, It forces nation to maintain a powerful For in every in Belgium, in Turkey, and, to a loss ex- tent, in Great Britain. K ory working- man in Europe is obliged to carry a sol- dier on his back, And all this terrible drain, this burdensomo tax, this feverish untest and dread lest war should break out at any time, is because of the Burcau- crat at Berlin, The cost of these needloss European armics would educate every child in Burope,relieve the people of crushing burdens, lift an intolerable inoubus from industry and add incalo ably to the gen- oral comfort and happiness. RAILROAD REPORTS. The New York missi Joard of Railroad Com- foners have passed a resolution re- quiring the railroads of that State to ren- dor quarterly instead of annual reports. This resolution was passed with a view to giving the public who invest in railroad bonds and stock, the protection of more frequent insights into the condition of the railroads whose sceurities are listed There was also a blow atthe wreckcrs and gamblers who use on the stock boards, their privato knowledge of the earnings of the roads for stocks for their own | depr il ; or raising ofit. For this rouson and becauso railroad corpe are public corporatious subject to legisla- on and control, the de- wtions tive invos! mand of the commissioners was a proper one. Two of the companies, the Erie and the New York Central, object, howover, The Erie gives as its reason that the special condition of its leased lines will make it difficult if not furnish the statements at the fixed by | the commissioners unless estimates arve | to the resolution. | impossiblo to times of the figures of ac Tho officers of the New introduced, inst tual returns, York Central and argue that the publication of quar- andon highmoral grounds, terly reports would tend to cause un- necessary panics among speculators. There may be some force in the objection of the managers of tho Erie road, but the excuse of the officers of Vanderbilt's cor poration is a shallow one. Panics among speculators would inconvenience the pub- lic and discourage business less than unscrupulous advantage which great speculators now take of information which the public have a right to demand, This army is | merit a8 1 “believe them, no doubt the Itis a standing menace to p— panics among. investors, causod by tho | tion to the affairs of this Torritory us at Tur Republican convention made its greatest mistake in nominating an entiro- ly inexperienced man for the seat cn the Supreme bench which Judge Lake will vacate. Mr. Reese has been a fairly good lawyer and a prosecuting attorney in the Fourth district. Personally he is an agreeable gentleman, But profes- troubles which the hf their business, and gain full informa- tion about its workin The secret criminations, which One great trouble with railroad man- | and may suc agoments, and one great cause of the corporations are bringing upon themsclves, is their refusal to let the public understand the conduct | 4, poolings and cut 1ates and privato dus. Iway managers socks, mally, he is without isi - business, and which are carefully voiled from the public gaze, are one of the chicf cloud sought to be put on your title can be removed.” Beatrice is seriously hampered at the present time by its inability to levy suffi- cient taxes to meet the requirements of a rapidly growing city. Besides ranking third as a railroad center, its commercial importance is felt and recognized by its metropelitan sisters, and its growth the present year has been equal, compara- tively, to that of any city in the State. One of the pressing necessities of the city is an adequate system of water works, A proposition was recently submitted to the citizens by the Michigan Pipe company. “The proposition stipulated an annual rental of 84,600, says The Express, “‘which is considered reasonable by our leading business men; but the law limits the c“f levy for general purposes to ten mills, and the fund that this tax would create is wholly inadequate for the | {:urpnm of paying a water rental and earing other expenses of tho city gov- ernment. Cities of the second class may upon a vote of the people issue twenty year bonds for building works, but the three mill special tax authorized to create a water fund for maintaining the works would again be insufficient. As badly as Beatrice needs protoction from fire, such as this system and the proposi- tion offer and v.ould admirably afford, there scems to be no way out uf the dil- emma until the legislature frames some laws enabling cities under ten thousand inhabitants to drop their swaddling clothes.” The Dakota capital fight is a repetition of that witnessed in nearly overy terri- tory beforo tho transition to statehood. The recent decision of Judge Edgerton of the Territorial District Court, ousting tho capital commissioners, had no appar- ent effect upon the official ring which gnated and laid the foundation of the capitol in Bismarck. The scat of the | Governor is there and the Territorial Aud- de itor, (Ordway’s son), while Secretary, Treasur d Attorney (eneral remain st Yankton and refuso to obey the Gov- ernor's order to transfer themselves to Bismarck. the adverse decision of the District Court Governor Ordway ridicules and rushes into print with the boldest kind of statements going to show that Bismarck is bound to bo the eapi- tal any way. Both financially and | politically he has mugh. at stake. He is the virtual owner of an addition to share of tho swag distributed among the parties to the capital commission schemne, v‘un(l unlike Alexander McKenzie, one of | the capital commissioners, he has not un- | loaded all his lots yet. Should the re- | | moval of the capital utterly fail to be brought about it would expose itself asan infamous transaction, and his excellen could not easily escape the consequencos | of his personal connection with it. The Governor may, however, get himself into trouble by his present course. He has publicly designated Bismarck to be the aital, and convened the board of equal- ation there for the purpose of the as sessment of tho Territorial tax. This board the Governor took carve last winter | to get into his own hands by forcing on the legislature the appointment of his son as auditor, the board con g of Gov- ernor, Auditor and surer. This b came, in reality, a father and son govern- ment. Judge Moody, one of the counsel for Yankton in the quo warranto case, and a lawyer of recognized eminence, says this action of the board of equalization will vitiate the Territorial taxes for the cur. rent year, thus adding o fresh compl present administered Thelsituation is growing decidedly in toresting. The commissioners, aided by the Governor, will preserve a bold frout, din carrying the case up to the United States Supreme Court. Quite a lively discussion is going on in Montana newspapers over the proposition build & railroad through the most prominent points of interest in the Yellowstone National Park. Outside the der the thumb of the o the proposition is vigo rously opposed, The extortions of the Hatch hotel monopoly are too fresh, and In every other Stato hut Nebraska Su- preme judges aro chosen from men occu- pying seats in inforior courts, In Statos whare the judiciary is appointed, the ap pointment of & prosecuting causes of the growing distrust of the peo ple, and of the demand for stricter logis lative control of the monopolies, A busi o8 which is conducted with a proper re attorney to a supreme judgship would raise s rio amoug the mombers of the bar. Eyery ono knows that the majority of cases cars ried up to the Supreme Court on appeal 8re cquity cases. Bvery lawyer knows that the number of equity fall into the hands of a | ney during his term can be count half the fingers of one hand, The office is the last one from which a supreme | judge sbould be chosen, Mr. Reese way have made an excellent prosscuting attorney. # good judge of the Supreme Court if elocted, which he will not be. his abandonment of private practise, the WEST OF THE MISSOURI, The success of Kneavals in bleedin; | cascs which | the farmers along ro! iting at 1 on | ter the profitable business of befoggu, | titles and quit claiming the same for | sun per acre The lands referred t are these which wore homesteaded pric disputed district. He cannot make . to the time the railvoad claim attache |and afterwards reverted to the govern ment by contest or otherwise, and wer homesteaded by others, Mitehell’s claiy is that when the original entry was cau Prior to fow equity casts in which he was retained | wete chiefly those in which the Union Pacitic was interested. As o private | {g the land under the grant public official ho was simply a oriminal |scttled with Mitchell at $1 por acre, h ) claim is generally considered of little ac- prosesuter, This is not the record upon Senator Vau Wyck, in reply to " r oount, which the people of Nebraska will select | Jetter from Horace (iraves, writes: succeasor to Judge Lake. s ard for public and private intoreats will | 3618 over various portions of the Park, the St. Joo & Western | V¥ | railroad has induced other sharks to en- The Mitchell claims | 4 | ure the latest nightmare to settlers in the celed the railroad company was entitled Although Tawyer he was a railroad attoruey. As a |quite a number in Joferson county have | days in the week. “*All such lands wore plainly excepted | these pots have been laid, and all are near at hand to create a lively enthusiasm Rufus was al lowed to squat upon a ten acre patch, but with wisdom begotten of - | ing in Wall street, he dist for another monopoly. ife of schem buted his ten and it is said by correspondents who have visited it, that his claim covers portions if not all the great sights of the wonder: | fnl, With these facts before it, it is not | surprising to hear The Bozeman Courier a locality where the natural for s will not sulter from direct con wst with artificial constructicns, The Park was, by Congressional aetion, dedi cated in perpetuity for the use of the 0 | American nation, to serve as a ional o | Park or ple vound, ‘This did vot 4| contomplate a lease w @ sowalled T provement Company or the right of way to a railway corporation, The one should ¢ | never have been sanctioned, and we trust u | the other never will be, Building operations on theSoda Works near Laramie ar \ ) boing pushed seven A noeat oftice for the superintendent has been oted, and one of the furnaces and finishing pots enclos- ed. The foundations for f ur wore of The branch line of rail road to the Soda lakes, or beds, has been ballasted eight miles out from A force of some thirty-five men are at work on it, The heavy and continued rainfall in Wyoming the present year, mentioned in these columns a few weeks ago,is brought in strong contrast to thatof former years, by the records of the Cheyenne signal office. Those show that the rain fall of 1883 to the present time is 14.57 inches, or near- ly four inches heavier than any previous ear. The only years approaching it are 72 and 78, with a rain fall of 11.87 and 11.45 respectively. The record does not sustain the theory of a gradual yearly in- crease; on the contrary the rain fall of 72 exceeded that of '82 by 1,2 inches. The most serious consequences of the present deluge has been on cattle, the rank grass of July and August putting them in poor condition for the market. Tho Cheyenue Sun has investigated the Union Pacific shops at that peint, | and congratulates itself and the Magic | citizens that in cxtent and number of hands employed they so closely approxi- mato those at Omaha that the difference is not perceptible. The machine shop is a stone building 100 feet wide by 150 foot long. The north side of the shop is fitted up with improved benches for car- penters, and the car department work s under the charge of Mr. J. E. Davis, foreman of the car department. Ad- joining the machine shop is the engine room and boiler room, from which the wer is taken to drive the machinery. fe shops will be entirely heated by steam, a great savinie over the ordinary way. ; The blacksi liop i of stone, and is 49 feet wide by fvet long. Itis in charge of Mr. T. J. Kdwards. At pres- ent the force is small, having only four forges running. he round house is_a stone building containing twenty stalls, and is fitted with benches I\IIJ vices for doing light repairs to engines. Besides these there are paint, boiler, copper and tin shops and storerooms for the various materials needed in the operations of a first-class road. The yards are being greatly im- proved. New side tracks are being laid, and it is the ntention to so arrange the tracks at the eastern and western ends the switching be done without inter- fering with the passenger tra By | the new arrangements the amount of switching now necessary will be greatly reduced A new office will for the master mechanic, and the y west and north of the round house will park, with trees, shrub- | VOICE OF THE STATE PRESS. | Ridiculing Anti-Monoply. [ Holt County,Banier (Rep). e VB ¢ The State Journa e | and some of other Republican papers of the State, are heaping abuseand ridicule upon the Anti- Monopoly party. This is short-sighted | and will amount to nothing. It i possible to overcome a prineiple of right by such means. T'he only that th Republican party can successfully contend 1 ALA, MONLAY, OCTOBER 1, Loramie. | p m- | ‘H(A]lek!w’". locks, windc 3 t number of brick, necessary for ticular parts of the structure, and the | frauds that he would be sure to practice on the board withont the protection of the schedule. We stated in th columns at the time hedule stuff was a mere subterf 1 bug-bear and of no essential importance. A case ig illustra- tion is found in Wisconsin,where an addi- tion to the capitol is being built at a cost of £20,000. The contractor’s bill for the current month was brought to the Gover- nor for his inspection while the writer was in the executive office at Madison a fow woeks ago and he took opportunity to inquire particularly into the matter. He found of course that no schednle had been required of the contractor or had been made and that the building board wero guided by the architact’s and their own judgment in al- lowing the contractor's claims, A prominent republican official smiled very suggestively at the novel Nebraska theory about the schedule and said that no difficulty had been met with in prop- erly adjusting the contractor's pay with- out the schedule, which, according to Architect Wilcox and Lawyer Cowin, is absolutely necessary to keep a contractor from stealing at will from a republican board of inspectors and thei hired expert, the architect. But now that the steal is fortified behind the technical decision of the court which did not touch the merits of the case, it is, by common consent, regarded in its true character as a robbery by main force which nobody defends ex- cept as a prerogative of the republican party founded on the notorious prescrip- tive smclicu of twenty years. The capitol board never had a notion further than a comical dream _that anybody but Stout should have that contract.” Boss Stout wouldn'’t arrange for any other kind of a board. Laird Has the Floor. Cedar County Nonpareil, Hon. James Laird, Congressman from the Second, is being asked to explain some delicate business transactions that transpired, involving the entry of lands on Stinking Water which he does not seem inclined to want to answer, rather preferring to allow the charges to die out with as little publicity as possible. M. B. Reese, Of Wahoo, Saunders county, was nom- inated by the Republican State conven- tion for justice of the Supreme Court. Mr. Reese is a vart railroad tool, and wears the collar of his masters with be- coming meekness. He was determined on by John M. Thurston some time since and of course got there. He will be de feated at the polls by 10,000 majorit Mr. Hamer received 97 votes on one bal- lot more than it was intended he should ever have. The Republican railroad ma- chine hos no use for men like Mr. Hamer, except it be their influence and votes at [Kearney Press. the polls. sure of a cr wk wants to heor| works m | children g with ilroad is building « fine de with the Anti-Monopoly party is by adopt- ing and carrying out as far as possible its principles. The principles of the Ansi- Monopoly party are right and the gates | of hell shall not prevail inst them. | Those principles will prevail and if we as Republicans do not adopt right principles the days of the Republican party will shortly be numbered. The Republican party started out an Anti-monopoly party | and it must stick to those righteous prin Bismarck, which is supposed to be his | ciples or go under. Disciplining the Disaffected. St Paul Freo Press. Some of the brass-collared editors are giving usa lot of s dle about | “‘Qisciplining the disaffected ones in the party” who so nearly kicked the railroad machine to p last fall. as about ninty-nine of every humlrml" republicans voted as they would take an emetic--simply through sense of duty | and with a hope that the terrible nausca the doso occasioned would only be tem- porary — this preposition for further | “punishment” 1s altogether About the most absurd spectacle of the campaign is_this determination of the | monopoly tail to dictate *‘wag” to the | repuslican dog. On the Defensive. Saline County Viderte | The monopoly press hadn’t got through defendlng D. G. Hull until it was ¢ on ts ke up a few twists for “Boss Stout” and &u-.\uuulh.:nrd. Before that | ops and Roepublican lights, Lew Cropsey, | has to receive some public bolstering. | Before his hash gets chilly the brass | collared editors are taxed to their utinost to uphold the Hon. James Laird, in lis peculiar transactions on the Stinking Water. The Supreme Judge. Polk Co. Farmers Advocate, A large number of the abler class of ropublican state papers admit that Judge Savage, is in every sense the man who should suceeed Judge eon thesupreme bench and that his personal strenght breaks down party linos, making his election almost & cortainty. Deficient in Memory, Burtonian Congresswan Laird has taken the trouble to deny the statement made against him, respecting fraudulent land entries on the Stinking Water, Mr Laird says he is innocent, which ought to be sufficient authority, but sometimes even Con men are 80 diversilied in the munts that they forgot to tell truth, 1n as wuch || teo much. | Th | morning of th 17 job got cold another of the railroad strik- | [ * proof from one 80 high in | of Kenesaw have raised $10,000 | church, | Dry Goods!- SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. MO ~ STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JO BBERS 1N FLOUR, SALT, SUGARS, CANNED G0OTS, 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 C. F. GOODMAN, ‘Whol le D ist! olesale Druggist! H AND DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA, NEBRASKA. SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our G d Oil Cak uf roun i aKe. 13 is the best aud cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn y Stoek fed Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, instead of ranning down, will' increase in weigh ) d be in marketable condition in the spring, Dairymen, as wsll a8 others, who use it can testify | merits, Try it and judge for yourselves., Price §25.00 per ton; no charge for sacks. Address 04-eod-me DMAN LINSEEDLOIL COMPANY, Omaha HAVANA CIGARS! | AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC GIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES SMOKERS' ARTICLES \ g0 daily attendance at the Be atr The four-year-old son « Hannlton county, was killed I e ar blusted the safe of John | Hill and gathored %500 in the | haul. A i mine and flour being cn tirely out. Work on a Presbyterian, and also on a Methodist church, O'Neill City has been commenced at re i The Beati heard of Coll “The voice of t ce Express consoled itself when it ination, with the romark Sight pri ors in the Kearney jail made a | 1 in the juil wall, but the hole | was not big enough when the sheriff plugged it | nount of hilarity induced hy MeCook | budge isn't a ci ipared with the wild horseman v under its in- fluen North Platte t. rk & Van Doran were t honnd passenger train on the U week, ran into a flock of she short distance west of Grand Island and killed one hundred of thew, to pay for new town of H artington wil) soon have ¥ r, to be called The I It will be ublished by Att General Powers, of \li'ily, and Wi of The Pouca w Willism MeCoy s from Arthur Sy arpy county, last we th ttle men und others of Custer county notice to remove all wire and other fences en- closing any of Uncle Sam's public domain, the fonces to be removed within %0 days, Seven thousand sheep, the property man & Turuer, of Fremont, passed through hursday morning. They hay- on i pverlaud from Utah, starting t of May last and averaging twelve miles a day. ®The Grand Island of Har- Columbus Inst, Times says. From Bad to Worse. here should remain in | Crote ¥ Annerica at least one spot free from the| The “Knevals Compromise” was bad despoiling hand of the grasper after|enough, but the Stinking Water Steal celipses the morning sun A Capitol Job, Lincold Democrat In the scandalous Supreme Court of the scandalous $14,000 capitol steal, the lawyers, and notably Mr. Cowan, laid particulur stress on the claim that a contrac chedule of all the different items entering into the cor- struction of the building was absolutely ue in order that the building com missioners could properly estimate the amount of work done and so the amount of money earned at the time of each monthly payment. The olaim that Silver's schedule was defeotive was the burden of the argument against his bid, and Cowin tore passion to tatters in describing the wickedness of a bidder defense before the | | who should not make » perfoct schedule | THE GREAT GERMAN { [ ™ | By | he Uhatos A Vogeler ( Weliinirn Lmber, Sash, Doors, Blinds. Shingles, Lat PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $60 to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands. DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES/ WE | e, e 5 — H 5 | WILSON’'S { 0l Sheet Tron Wtks - - NEBRASKA. hing Tard, Water and Oil Ta Repairing done in City and Country, Build all kinds of Steam Boilers. Smoke Stacks, Breech plate-iron business, ks, and do & genors All work Done at Eastern Prices and Warranted | | Sceond-hand Boilers will bo kept on liand, Havin f the country, I confident | oan give satisfa cor. 19th and Plerce Stroets had many yoars experiencein the trado in differont ), baving the best and tools in the Stat J. M. WILSON Propristor. Lak0 or DEALER IN ETC.; LOW PRICES AND GOOD (RADE! Call and Get my Prices before buying else and Douglas, where, Yards, corner 9th Also 7th and Douglas.