Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 4, 1883, Page 4

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'iE DAILY BEE~ OMALA, THURSLCAY, OC1UBER 4, 1 THE A evory morn onday morning dn Wl BY MATL $10.00 - Three Montha ©.00 5.00 | One Month 1.0 g, excopt, Sunday. The enly ne_Vear 8ix Moncns THR WRRKLY BRR, FURLISIRD RVARY WRDNRADAY. GMAHA BEE.| { A SIECOND PROT ST, Last yeor seventeen thousand Nebraska }mtnrn cut loose from their party allegi | ance to enter a protest through the ballot [ box against the villainies perpetrated by [the monopolists through the misuse of | party machinery. More than two-thirds TRRMS FOSTRAID, _ |of theso had been loyal Republicans. One Year 42.00 | Threo Months Bix Month. 1.00 | One Month American News Company, Sole Agents INewsdeal- er (n the United States. CORRWSFONTRNCH. A Communications relating to News and Editorfal | ra should be nlirewed o the Eniror or, Tin MURINESH LATTERA. * All Businees Lotv A Temittances should’ be addroseed to THR BrR PURLISIING COMPANY, OMANA Drafts, Checks and Postoffice orders to be made pay able to the order of the company THE BEE BUBLISHING CO, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor. Witn, the Omaha Republican kindly givo us Mr, Reese's judicial record? Tue wires to Washington are all up but no news comes of Paul Vandervoot's reinstatement. | TR is a glorious uncertainty about but as the crops are now Jack Frost can come without much damage. our weather, assured t the last six months Nebraska has been under a regime of civil servico re- form whose chiof result scems to have been to roform old and competont Re- publicans out of office, PLEDGES are cheap and promises grow on cvery bush, but what has the Repub- lican party in Ncbraska done in times past to redvem its pledgos to the people on living and vital issues, A 1ATE number of the Contemporary Review gives some interesting statistical fact in rogard to the operation ef Eng- lish trades unions. Tt appoars that the aggregato momborship of tho principalas- sociotions of this character was 121,000, Their aggrigato incomo for six years, from 1876 to 1881, was $8,022,000, and thoir aggregato expenditure, 0,920,000, The deficit of nearly a million dollars was eovered by assessments amounting to 25 conts per woek. The money was mainly applied to the assistance of mem- bors out of work and to the maintenance of strikes. Tur Republican quotes the Falls City Journal that no Nebraska o det has ever graduated from West Point. Tho first cadet in West Point from Nebraska was appointed from the Zepublican offico in the person of Mr. I. T. Webster, now Firat Lieutenant of tho First artillery, and thn a printer in Omaha, Lieuten- ant Webster was appointed by Congress- man Da'ly and graduated with high hon- ors in 1866, Since that time he has been four years instructor of military tactics at the university of Nebraska, and is wi | known to the peoplo of the stato. Both the Omaha Republican and the Falls Uity Journal must roviso thoir estimates, Ir is understood that the Hon. N. K. Griggs, lato consul at Chemnitz, and still later a candidato for the Supreme bench, has serious doubts about tho election of Mrs. Colby's husband as Judgo of the 18t District. The Hon. Mr. Griggs is understood to chargo that Col. Colby failod to exerciso his herculian strength properly at the Stato convention for his eandidacy in accordance with the promi- ses made when the Gage county slato for the two conventions was fixed up. Con- soquently the air around Boatrico is bluo with sulphur and Chemnitz swearing, Mr. Griggs can consolo himself with the reflection that the name of the noxt Judgo of the 1st District is J. H. Broady who will roll up o majority that will make Mrs, Colby's husband fool like a damp sheet en washing day. PosTMasTER GENERAL GRESHAM s reading on dangerous ground in his ordor stopping the registered lettors and money orders from going to the New Or- leans National bank. The law author- izes the stoppage of letters ‘addressed to “ person ongaged in conducting a lot- tery,” but the bank which does business with a lottery manager is no more *‘on- gaged in conductiug a lottery” than tho boarding-house keeper that boards him, There is a valuable privilege enclosed within the sealed envelope that covers a written lotter, of which the people aro rightly jealous. It should be carried safoly and quickly without delay. The Postmaster Goneral may possibly have evidence which will show that the bank was moro than a fiscal agont of the New Orleans lottery, but unless he can estab- lish it ho sooms o have gone too far, —_—_— Tur grading of Farnam street, from Twenty-Fifth to T ty-Ninth street, which has been decided upon by the council, is a move in the right direction, and at the right time, Farnam street is now and must remain the leading thor- oughfare of tho city. The building of the court house on Seventeenth and Eighteenth stroets, and the grading of the hill, assures the extension of the line of business towards the west. If the city is wise it will still further reduce the grade above Sixteenth street, and in con- junction with the county officials, give us » thoroughfare into the country by grad- ing the street to the west at least as far as the extension of the city limits. By another year we may hope for the replac- dng of the useless limestone macadum by # durable pavement of lower Farnam. That done the paving of the upper por- tion of the street will follow soon as a mattor of course. When both these im provements are an accomplished fact, "3 | They severed their party bonds after a | der our constitution all repeated struggle for reform within the party. Their demands had been treated with ridicule and contempt because the managers who were for the most part railroad henchman felt sure that a nomi- tion by a Republican convention was as good as an election The revolt of the Anti-Monopoly Re- publicans brought the party to the verge of defeat. While Gen. Garfield received 69 per cent of the total vote the Repub. lican condidate for the Second district received 49 per cont. and the Congressman in the Third district but 39 per cent, first time since Nobraska entered state hood aRepublican candidate for State office only | was defeated by a decisive majority and the Republican candidate for Governor pulled through ® with a plurality, while | his predecossor received more than 20,- 000 majority. This emphatic protest of the dissatisfied profound sensation for the time being. Republican leaders and Republican can- didates were all ruddenly converted to the Anti-Monopoly doctrine. When the Logislature met, the newly elected ernor delivered an Anti-Monopoly in- augural, which among other things urged upon the Legislature the propricty of prohibiting by law the giving of passes. In the contest for the speakership the insuo was squarely made and Humphreys was eloctod Speaker upon profuse pledges favoring laws to regulate railroads and compolling equitable taxation. Every Republican candidate for the Senate was equally pronounced on the railroad issue, Spoaker Humphroys proved a traitor to his pledges and a pliant tool of the railroads. The Senatorial election was no sooner cver than the majority of the Republicans in the house began to block every offort to carry out the will of the people. The railroad lobby, reinforced by a corrupt lobby of jobbers and public thioves, had such a grip upon the Re- publican organization in the house that no reliof to the producers could pass while nearly a million of dollars of taxes was voted and squandered. In view of theso facts, with every pledge made by them last year dishon- ored and broken, with a Republican convention presided over by Church Howe, what is there loft for honest Anti- Republicans created a Monopoly Republicans except to adminis- tor anothor rebuke through a second vig. orous protost at the ballot-box. How can this rebuke be made most offective? Cortafnly not by throwing away their votes on third party candi- dates who would simply ensure the ¢ tion of railroad Republicans. Are they to shrink from the election of honest, able and loyal Domocrats like Judge Savago because it is party treason? Did tho Republicans of New York shrink from their duty when they buried Folger under 213,000 majority becauso party leaders had turned their backs upon overy principle and promise? Did the Republicans of Ponnsy.vania shrink from burying Cameron and bossism by eloct- ing Democrats? Thoe Republicans of New York and Pennsylvania have profited by last yoar's losson and as & consequence the disaffected Republicans in those states are disposod to return, The Nebraska Republican leaders have in the face of the revolt of 17,000 voters taken no stop to redress the griovances of the poople. They have failed tc rodeom thoir own pledges. They de- feated the bills to regulate primary elections in order that the bosses may continuo to pack primaries and conventions with their creatures. Thoy defeatel overy bill to assess railroad property in thy same manner as other proporty is railroad assossed, and they have enacted no laws to protect producers and consumers from the rapacity and greed of It now behooves every Ropublican who does mot wear n brass collar to join with the Anti-Monoplists and mako it impossible for another Leg- islature to adjourn without carrying out the will of tho people. It is much botter for this commonwealth that the Republi- can party should bo defeated in Nebraska in 1883 than that it should continue in tho reckless courso which it has pursued during tho past ton years, the monopolios. THE BOARD OF EDUCATION. There are several matters connected with the board of education and the man- agement of our city schools which call for comment. Iu the first place, therescems to bo a tendency on the part of the board to extravegant and uncallod-for expondi- tures, At its last meeting a teachor was employed at a salary of $1,- 000 a year, whose duty, as we under- stand it, will be te toach the teachers music. Weo do not believe that this step in at ali nocossary, or that special educa- tion in musio falls within the province of the public school system. musio Much less do wo think that the education of teachers devolvos upon the board of education. Certain qualifications are demanded by examiners from candidaies for teachers' cortificatos. If it is considered best te have simple singing exercises in our achools, which is a question, let singing or music reading bo added to the require- ments, That would take away the nec sty for a special teacher of music and savo 81,000 a year, which could easily be applied toa better use, The increaso of the wages of the jan- another pieco of extravagance, Congress in | For the | The | drawal and redemption, crense was uncalled for. The sachool board make a mistake if they imagine | that the funds arising from the liquor licenses are a bonanza which can never be exhausted, They make another mistake if they think that 880,000 are roceived from the liquor dealers the tax |is not felt by the public generally. Un. moneys derived becanuse from fine and licenses muat bo applied to purposes of education. Tn many other atates the revenue thus derived goes into the general fund and is diminishing the direct in reducing the tax applicable in taxation and levy. Thin laws, but just because it is made impossible, and for the benefit of our is impossible under our schools, the achool expenditures are felt |in the raising of the general tax levy. Our citizens do not begrudge a dollar of | the money drawn from them for school purposes, but they demand that it be sxpended judiciously and economically. [ What is first needed is wuff | nt accom- modations for our rapidly Even with the new increasing ‘N‘hrml population. | buildings recently erected many of the rooms are Good | buildings, good light, pure air and com- fortable seats and desks are needed more school overcrowded., | than music teachers and high priced jan- Complaint, too, is made that teachers are appointed from outside Omaha when equally competent instruct- |ors can be found holding Nobraska cer- titicates in Omaha, We want the itors, best teachers for the money in our schools, But our law re- quires that no teacher shall bo employed unlens ho or she has a certificate procured from a board of examiners specifying the grade. Tt goes without saying, that other things being equal our home teachers should have the preference. Wuex Mr. F. B. Thurber testified be- fore the Senate Committe on Labor and Education he threw a bomb shell inte the meeting by the remark that one of the greatest difficulties reformers have to contend against is the fact that corpora- tions hold so many Congrossmen and State Legislatures in their pay. Mr. Thurber asserted that a majority of the 264 lawyers in the last Congress were either retained by corporations or were directly or indirectly influenced by others in the interest of corporations. Although Senator Call, of Florida, thought that the witness misrepresented the standard of morality among public men, all will admit that there is much truth in Mr. Thurber’s charge. The statement has often mado that several of the Senators represented, or at least looked after the interests of corpora- tions whose influence had el \ | been the bond between the Se corporation may not go to the extent of client and counsel, but it is believed to require the Senator to take care of the corporation he represents to the best of his abillty, How does he do thist Not 80 much by voting and speechmaking as silent committee work. He finds many in the same fix as himself. One repre- sents one corporation and another an- other. Corporations are of one blood and are a unit against the eutsido world. One corporation Congressman helps an- other to kill off in committee, if possible, all bills inimical to their respective clients. Once in a while the bill escapes the com- mitteo by the inherent forco of the inter- osts. As arule, however, in recent Con- gresses, the committee-room proves the graveyard of bills against the inter- ests of corporations, Tho assumption that lawyers compose the larger part of | the corporation covtingent in Congress should not be regarded as a reflection ugon the legal prof naturally them, lect lawyers to represent They do not go into Congress and offer lawyers a rotaining fee, but sond lawyers to Congress for cortain woll- understood purposes, 1f the truth could be known the chances are that Mr. Thurber would be found nearer to it than Senator Call. Certain legisla- | tion and cortain failures in legislation | ean only bo accounted for on the suppo- sition that thero is a large number in | both houses who are pledged to other in- terests than those they were elected to sorve, Absolute bribe mon thing. exact y is not a com- Thoro have been notablo in- stances recontly whero the use of moncy during a session has failed, But there is believod to be a distinction between nominating and electing a man pledged to certain intorests and in bribing a rep resentative who stood unpledged. The dangor lies in the election of representa- tives who, from bias of mind, from as- sociation, or professional interests, are so identified with corporations that they have no alternative while in Congress but to act as directed. The influence which makes can generally unmake, and the average representative doos not want to be unmade. Tur Supreme Court of the United States will take up next week the legal tender caso the outcome of which is awaitod with much interest in financial circles, The question involved is whether the issue of legal-tender notos after Jan- uary 1, 1879, is constitutional. Governor Butler, of Massachusetts, who is one of the parties to the suit, contends that the present greenback issues are constitu- tional, the same as the issues made under the necessity of the civil war. The former decision of the Supreme Court sustaining the constitugionality of the greenback issues was based on the war Should the Supreme Court declare the legal tendors now issued to have no validity in the constitution the question will be how long it will take necessity. itor of the high school to $126 a month is | Congress to legislate for their final with- The amount is Farnam streot can lay elaim to being ouc | janitor has his rooms, fuel and light | 8300,000,000. For these greonbacks 3 per of the most beautiful, as it will certainly be one of the most popular business and residence thoroughfares. furnished him in the building d fifty cent bonds of long date could be issued, men stand ready to take the position at|and they would form a basis for the the old salary. Forthis reasen the in- nationsl bauk currency that might by re- ion. Corporations | quired to fill up the vacuum made be the “ | withdrawal of the legal tenders, | Tue Department of the Platte loses this week two of its most efficient stafl| officers through transfer to other fields of | duty. commissary of Wilson, late subsistence at General quarters, leaves to-morrow with his fam- ieneral ily for San Antonio to assume charge of the commissary department in the De- partment of Texas. Major John V.| Furey, late depot quartermaster, takes | his departure on Saturday for Santa Fe where he will occupy the same office in | the District of New Mexico. Both offi- cers have been stationed long enough in | Omaha to ma | socially and officially, who sincerely re- gret their departure, | | When Wilsun first among us he enjoyed the distinction of General came | being the oldest captain on the staff in | the army | leaves of a majority which he had earned | He leaves us with the maple | | his department. Major Furey will be particularly missed | among a wido circle of friends in this | city whero his social qualities have found | exercise for the past six years. | Each officer will carry with him to his | new field of duty the hearty good will of our citizens and their best wishes for their future success and rapid promotion. THERE are soti¢ cowp'aints about the slowness with v/ and the prospec - during the o Cortain par- ties are grumbling that if the injunction suits had not been pushed, we should all have been satisfied with a well-paved city before the first snowfall. pusing is going on, paved cross sircets ning winter, If we have lost a foew blocks of paving through the injunction suits, we have gained something that is much more im- portant. That is the assurance that the pooplo must hereafter in Omaha doter- mine the action of the council in the let- ting of paving contracts. That is much more desirable than a fow acres less of mud this year. Weo can afford to wade knee-deep in slush until April with cheer- ful faces, when we know that the rights of the tax-payers of this city have been | socured through the suits which tem- porarily hindered the paving of the cross streets. - . Cmiky Justice COLERIDGE is amazed at the smoothness with which out legis- lative machinery works. The Chicf Jus- tico has nover seen a law greased with | railroad soft soap or he would burst with asto ishment at the absence of friction with which it passes in our leg- | islatures, The Overland Pool. rancisoo Chronicle. San The deliberations of the representatives of the different overland railroads, who have been in ion in this city during the present week, have attracted general attention and th plan of operations has been telegraphed to every city in the | United States. Why the public at large | should take any interest in the matter is apuzzle. It required no special astute- ness to discover that at no time was there | the slightest disposition on the part of | any one concerned in the conference to | move for a wtion of existing rates. | From the very beginning there was a tacit agreement that the existing method of making the trafic pay all it will bear should be scrupulously respected. The meeting, therefore, can_only be consid- ered as a gathering of the robbers of the people for the purpose of amiably discus- sing the subject of the division of th spoils. This being the case, it is of small moment to the public whethet the Central | Paciic the Nerthern Pacific or any other Pacific road got the best of the bar- gain, The result of the mecting, however, has made one thing quite clear, and that is hat the Northern Pacific management i as shameless a violator of its promisc | expressed and implied, as our own heart- less and corrupt monopoly. Those who | watched the course of the Northern | | Pacitic.people when the land grant of that corporation was in jeopardy and clieved that there was any honesty in the composition of men ongaged in mani pulating railroads, might have formed hope that some of the promises so freely | made on the floors of Coy and in the | | committee rooms of that body would be redeemed, and that the new overland road, instead of an instrument of extor tion’ from the people, would prove a friend. No person familiar with the callousness of the average railroad inag- nate would e wade such a blunder, Ho would have clearly foreseen that if Congress did not bind the management in fotters that could not be broken, they would seize the first opportunity to use | their power to augment their own fortunes at a rapid rate without regarding their obligations to the Government and utter- ly indifferent to the fact that their policy of exte must necessarily retard the |advance of the country which, in coustruction of u railroad at the public | expense, The agreement arrived at by the roads shows that they are not in the broader sense competing 1 They are rivals, it in true, but their rivalry is as that of a couple of robber bands who harmoniously determine to parcel among themselves the publio highways, with the understand | ing that each shall be free to plunder evory traveler who happens to come by his road, provided that he leaves him | enough to make a fresh start in the world, 80 that he may prove a suitable subject for plucking at_some future time. The only point of difference is that the high- way robbers, being of impulsive tempera- ments, are not capable of maintaining a | pool for any considerablo period, while | the cold-blooded money-making machines known as railroad manipulators very rarely lose their heads long enough at u timo to impode the work of gathering wealth, They eften find themselves di » honorably treated by those who are par- ties to their plundering agreements, but they may be depended upon not to quarrel \rufx each other as long as the amount robbed from them by their partners in o pool is loss than they can rob 1 people by keeping up their alli- ance, It cannot be denied that there have boen fre uent examples of broken pools at the East, which have resulted in brisk competition and low rates. The causes, however, which have led to ruptures of this kind are entirely absent on this | have crept in that are wor theory, was to have been benefited by the | 4 ALEAR SPRUNG. Public opinfes hassprung & leak inspec never afford to despise & fact when it staresus in the face plain as acl . The old fallacy that all proprietary medicines are worthless has been swept away, and inits place stands the incontestible fact that there is at least one remedy Amongst the many Howard's head- | sdvertised curatives that does ita work well cures | the sick 1 we eannot eonvince you In this brief item that indigestion, dyspepsia, nervousness, and general tration can be completely cured, the use of Bur k Blood Bitters certainly will ualled a8 a blood and stomach tonic, and ita unexampled suscoss s winning for it a great repu tation. For & week stomach, an_ill-working liver o an enfeebled circulation try Burdock Blood Bitters, cannot b quick, certain, and sure to relieve. Rev. W. E.Gifford, of Rathwell, Ont , was cured of almost & burden bottles of Burdock Blood Bitters Mrs. Tra Mulholland, Alhany N. ¥ several years I have suffered from oft.re The cure was completed by three ing bil ions headact es, consumption, dyspepsia, and com. plaints peculiae to my sex. i wing Burdock Blood Bitters Tam entirely relieved yours ago by hard and fuithful service in |const. Beyond the Rocky mountains, in | the thickly populated States, railroads aro constructed upon almost parallel lines, competing not only for through freight, but for local traflic as well. It e frequently occurs that under- ngements are made withshippers ice of the terms of the pool. The of these breaches of faith is s followed by a break and a war, and soon after a truce. e overland pool, to all appearances, is not likely to offer many such causes of disagreement. The two completed systems, which under cortain conditions might be antagonistic, have each a tributary territory whose breadth may be roughly expressed by the term of thousands of miles In this territory they may work their own swee will without fear of any other evil result than the killing of the goose that lays the golden egg for them. The only possible danger—that they may attempt to ent in on each other by building rival lines in the same territory—is averted by this pool. Under it, in all prosability. S ford, Huntington and Crocker will ref from poaching on the preserves of the Villard combination, and that capitalist will doubtless not attempt to intrude upon the section staked out by the Cali- fornia magnates as their own for trans- portation purpos The fixing of a common rate etween terminal points emphasizes the bargain and trumpets to the people the fact that they need have no hope of relief from the newly completed transcontinental line. There is one smallrift in this pool cloud through which a ray of sunshine may be difcerned, It is the fact that the hoggish policy of the Central Pacific of grabbing all in sight has been adopted, instead of the more enlightened system of giving the people ashow, which Villard's friends claim it was his purpose to puisue. The continuation of the extortionate rates now in voguecannot fail to make plethorie the treasure chests of both corporations and the sight of their immense earnings will be sure to tempt rival roads into the field. Until they make their debut the people of the Pacific coast must con- sent to be gouged by the an robbers who just formed the overland Stick to tl rm, Boys, Butler's Middletown Address. I have made my own n the world. Why? Because as a boy I hadtime to re- tlect and think, and when I camete a city at the age of 10 years, I have a right to say that T was as far advanced in my studies and in the knowledge of what I had studied as though I had been kept at | work all the time at school. Who is the or of your House of Rejresenta- Another man born, as I was, on rm in New Hanpshire. Who is the or of Bosten! He was born within | six miles on a rockier farm than mine, if | possible. 1 give you this advice of an old man who is pussing away, and whatever may be ite mistakes, it has no mistake in sinceri nestness. And, again, T say now as I began, that the wealth, the prosperity, th ifastness, the hope of i of liberty and freedom to the rests on the producir untry population of this commonwealth and on that of the United States, The Dakota kianc Mr. C. E. Bramble, stock rai: scotland, D. I'., having used the swned pain-banisher, St. . for all ailments of cattle and hors for rheumatism and neuralgia in hi case, says that from his obsery twenty-five years, there is no pain-cure its equal. He is never without it. Their Weakest Man, Nebraska City News, Relying on their majority in the state the Republicans have tominated one of their weakest men for Supreme Judge, M. B. Reese, of Saunders county. Mr. Reesc is a good Republican, & warm friend of the railroads, and that is about all that can be said of him. As o lawyer he is weak, holding about the same com- ison with Judge Savage that tallow dip does to an electric light. The Re- publicans had a number of good men to choose from—among them, Warren, of Otoe, Lake, of Douglas, Hamer, of Buf- falo—but Reese was chosen. LetyIruth Prevail, known, Let us undarstand buncle, or any is sure to wear dock Llood Fit- This wonderful medicine tly upon the circulation and the rea sous for it use are therefore obvious, ndly Reladons, Chicago News, Dr. George L. Miller, editor of The Omaha Herald, is now in London, This evidence of good feeling will do much to- ward promoting frendly relations be- ween two cities which have hitherto bitter rivals, o | .Sm »‘T b7 BERM AR REMEDY FOIR PATN. Lumbago, Backache. Headathe, Toothache, .. | This medicine CURES A | Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Scialica, | - SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO, ST. LOUIS. MO Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, | ‘Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GO07§ ND ALL GROCERS’ SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER €0 ' C. F. GOODMAN, 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 Ground Oil Cake. It is the best and cheapest food for stock of any kin Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, ad of running down, will increase in weigh and be in good marketable condition in the spring. men, a8 well a8 others, who use it can testity its merita.” Try it and judge for yourselves. , Price §25.00 per ton; no chiarge for sacks. Address od-eod-me OODMAN LiN OIL COMPANY, Omaha One pound ia equal 0 three pounds of corn == WILSON'S ler and Sheel T Worgs OMAHA, - - NEBRASKA. Build all kinds of Steam Boilers. Smoke Stacks, Bree Tard, Water and Ol Tanks, and do » gonors plate-iron business. Repairing done in City and Country. Al work Sccond-hand Boilers will be kept on hand. Tlaving had many years experiencein the trade in different parts of the country, Lam confident I oan give satisfaction, having the best shop and o ls in the State. Shop cor. 19th and Plerce Streets, J. M. WILSON Proprietor. ~“MAX MEYER & CO,, IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES : SMOKERS' ARTICLES | 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. END FOR PRIC ORTING GOODSG: MANUFACTY OF OF STRICTLY FIKST-CLASS Garriages, Bnogies Road Wag AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1810 and 1320 Hamey Streot andj408 8. 13th Sireot, -NOMAEA' NEB © trated Catalogue furnished free upon spplicatian | Wholesale Druggist i Done at Eastern Prices and Warra,nted}/ WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES - Dry Goods!” 2% b

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