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i [ | | 13 THE GMAHA BEE. Published every worning, except] Sunday. The enly Monday morning daily. RANS BT MAL £10.00 , Throo Months ... . ¥8.00 10 ne_Year.. 8ix Monens 5.00 | One Month IR WENKLY BE, PUBLISIIRDRVRY WRDNMADAY. FRRMAPOSTPAID, One Yoar #2.00 | Three Months Bix Mon 1.00 | One Month... Amerioan News Company, Sole_ Agents, Newsdesl @ in the United States. CORRRSFONDRNCE. A Communications relating to News and Editorial wattors sheuld bo nddtewed to the Epron or Tk L PUBINRSS LATTRRA, | _All Businoss Lettors and Remittances “should’ be addrossed to Tin Ban PosLiamine CoMPAXT, OMATIA. Deafts, Cheoks and Postoffics orders to be_made pay- #blo to the order of the company. THE BEE BUBLISHING CD.,JPROP& B. ROSEWATER,ZEditor. Axornex naval hulk has been con- downned. The use of the American navy i woll understood. It was built for ro- pairs. Cor. Cormy has captured several edi- tors in Pawnee and Johnson but up to thia date they havo not been ablo to ox- plain Colby’s record. Tue political weather prophet predicts & heavy rise in the price of distilled water in the State of Towa, and a corres- ponding decline of sour mash in Ohio, Moxk than $600,000 has beon spent for baso ball this year in support of pro- fessional clubs. The National gamo domes high but we must have it at any price. Srorerary Fororx is out with a denial that he has said anything about a 2 per oent bond to tako the place of the 4 per eent. Ho asserts that such a scheme would be impracticable, Mz, Dorsey'sBtate Central Committee eught to issue an appeal to the voters of the Union army who gallantly fought the battle of the Union while Mr. Reese val- liantly stayed at home —to vote against Col. Savage. Mx. Rerse was a small bore railroad Iawyor before he bocame prosecuting at- tornoy for the Fourth district. If he has any further qualifications for the su- preme bonch the public wonld be glad to Rave them trotted out. Tur Republican primarles in this city for the Judicial Convention, will take place to-morrow afternoon. The general disposition appears to be to carry out the recommendations of the Douglas county bar. But Walter Bennett and several other great luminaries want to elovato the judiciary by nominating Mr. Baldwin. They are making a still hunt and may capturo the primaries, Some of the railroad organs, whose editors have, of course, always taken a deep interest in quostions of Anti- Monopoly, are clamoring for Judge Sav- age's Anti-Menopoly record. Judge Sav- age was on the bench when Anti- Monopoly became an issue in this state. As a presiding Judge, he very preperly took little active interest in politics, and did equally little speaking from the stump. Naturally, we have no Anti- Monopoly public speeches of. Jamos W. Savaze to publish, But the best proof of Judge Savage's sound views on the Anti-Monopoly question is found in his famous decision in the Hally injunction wuit, when he spoke in words of burning indignation against the claim thero set) up, that valuable monopolies of franchises could be granted to private corporations in cities, and denouncing it as against publis policy and equity. As a Judge of the most important District court in Ne- braska, he held the scales of justice even against overy overture on the part of the railroads, and paid his fare like other citizens, when his fellow Judyges through- out the State were riding on railroad passes. In his private life, no one who knows James W Savage has over had rc- casion to be ignorant of what his viows were on the Anti-Monopoly issue. Turke are rumors that Mr, Gresha in his forthcoming report to Cong will discuss the advisability of increasing the weight of lotters from one half to one -ounce, the rate of postage to remain as at present. While not therefore reducing the rate of postage it will in effect do so, a8 an increased weight can bo carried for the sawme rate of postage, What his re- commendation on the subject will bo he himself has not yet determined, but is busy in colleeting data upon which to formn an opinion. It is not at all impro- bable also that he will recommend a one- cont rate of postage for local lotters, A dispatch from Washington states that notwithstanding all that has been said apon the subject of reduced postage, thousauds of peoplo are still ignorant of the law. Hundreds of foreign letter are posted daily, upon which ouly two cents postage has been paid, the senders believing that the reduction in domestic rates extends also to the foreign rervice, In all the large citics drop leters, with oniy a one-cent stamp attached to them, are mailed by bushels, The Postoffico Department is flopded with inquiries as %o the effect of the new law upon the old sthnps, and although repeated assur- rnces have been made that the threes and sixes are still good, more information is wanted, In answer to these questions the Department is preparing a circular, which will be posted in each Postoflice, explaning once more the effect of the re- cent reduction, so that all may under- stand, and stating that the three and six- TO-DAY'S 1 LECTIONS. in the result in both states. In the liquor licensing question has e the issue in Towa being license aj = | prohibition and in Ohio a submissi of thequestion whetherthereshall be free | rate to Portlatd, to o traflic in liquor, complete suppress the business or an adjusted tax und Scott law. The officers to be elec! part of the Nenate, and the full of Representatives, death of the Hon. Marsena E. For Governor the Republicans nominated Buren R. Shorman, the p crats have named Judge L. G. Kinni the Groenbackers James B. We no W. 8. Kenworthy. The vote of State for Secretary of State last fal Republican, 143,051; Democratic, 8,600; scattering, 10. on joint ballot. The Legisl ature chosen on Tuesday will elect a U States Senator to sucoced the Ho B. Allison, Republican. Governor, missioner, and Member of the Bo: Public Works, and Legislature. F tield, the candidates for C cratic, George Hoadley; Jonkins, and Prohi Schumacher. The voto of the St publican, 207,75 Democrat; 402, the Constitution of their which rolates to the judici others to the liquor traflic ing in effcct as follows: aition with se the latte “The additienal section’ ir ion 18 of tho scheduls shi repealed, and there shall bo subst for it the following: toxicating liquors so as to provide a not limited by any provision of the stitution.” Second propos additional cectiou” in and nes lowing: ““The manufacture of and in intoxicating liquors to be used STOP TH.! SWINDLF, “Stock watering” is a swindle. quick method of lovying perpotual consumers. plo are called upon to pay interest i form of dividends. That this is no great meeting Appeals that there isat present no chamber of commerce, a body con in the metropolis, adopted a reso port at a subsequent meeting graceful abuse of corporate power. action will be none too early. corporat mavket. have been taxed to properties have been deluged with and while actual investors have The interests of both stockholde swindlo shall bo stopped. development of carporate instit at which all the power of | stato must be invoked to protect' the in terests of the peoplo and the state their by & national law forbidding over those which have disgraced the m: lstors of the Erie and Western cent, stamps are still receivable for pos- tage on all classes of watter at thoir faco aalue. companies. —_— Tux General elections will be held to-day in Towa and Ohio and great interest centers | as a distracting influence in the ca npaign | Congress will be chosea in the Sixth din- taict to fill the vacancy caused by the incumbent, for re-election; the Dem For Congressman the Republicans have nated Edward H. Stiles, the Demo- 180; Greenback, 30,817; scattering, & The vote of the Gth Congressional Dis- trict at the same time was: Republican, | 11,260; Democratic, 8,040; Greenback, The Legislaturo last chosen had 82 Republican majority | prise and individual capital. Ohio will elect a Governor, Lieutenant- two Judgos ef the Supreme Court, (one to fill a vacancy,) Attorney officers there are four full tickets in the |travel. ernor being: Republican, Joseph B. Foraker; Demo- reonback, Chas . Re. | of the water route is sul Socretary of State Inst fall was; Re-| gy (the cost theroof being included Legislature to be chosen on Tuesday will elect a United States Senator to succeed the Hon, George H. Pendleton, Demo- crat. The peaplo of Ohio are also to | tortion is practiced by corporations whi vote upon three proposed amendments to to, one of First propo | “The General As. | Uvngress tho ¢ sembly shall regulate the traflic in in- evils resulting therefrom; and its power | is made by Congre vent, | to lavy taxes or assessments thercon is | OF to check extortion and diseriminatic with section | pressly for the purp 18 of the schedule shall be repealed, and there shall be substituted for it the fol- boverage are forever prohivited, and the General Assemibly shall provide by law for the enforcement of this provision.” tion upon all classes of producers and | When it prog Upon eaery dollar of ficti- tious enpital added in this manner to the wealth of corporate monopolies the peo- [of & new country. ognized to be the case is seen by the held last week by the |is regulated by the conditions which pi chamber of commerco in Now York City, (¥ Alarmed by the decision of the Court of | | of the wealthiest and ablest merchants amendments to existing laws are neces- sary Yo protect the publio from this dis- | tion of the Pa The resolution is timely and prompt Our great i of every dosoription aro stag: | reserved, lio is hardly ‘able to bolster up on the The lists of the exchanges are | G filled with worthloss securitios which the | plundered by corporations which have printing pressos duriug the past five years | *quired valuablo: properties by pul issue, Valuable shorn of their monvy great speculators have stepped in from out of the rain with the larger portion of the available funds. the public at large demand that the Wo have reached a point in ‘the irrosponsible acts and constant trenching on the rights of individual The profits of corporations must be lim- itod by law in so far as law can prevent {he outrageous swindles perpetrated un- dor the name of increased capitalization, All interests are bound together 1 this | intermodiary stay desire which can only be made effective | ©f the employment of a dynamo. Gr is & forced ohurlulx—:nu on both fiE DAILY B sides in Ohio, which looks very much I carefully suppressed anx each, | The Pacific Railroad Monopoly. ptored | Chicago Tritune trumpetsthat ‘the passenger ra e betwe Kansas City or Omaha and San Franci ion of | has been reduced to §95,” with the sa gainst admission of the North F fon of | 21, Tn the first place or the ted in place, the “‘reduced” rato is thrice as muc| country. House miles, Thin is at the rate of nearly cents per mile. A sleeping-berth, whi Cutts, | have costs probably £20 more, and should | brings the charge to &1 e, and | rate of about seven cents a n saver. [local rates on the various Pacif o, T | eight or 10 cents a mile, it is said. f the |about two and one-half ¢ 1 wa 112,- its per m s the Western plains, whi bounds, and thrice as much which were built by to be|conundrum which Congress will mited | called upon to answer for public infor tion, m. W. | The rulicy of the Pacific railroads now, always has been, and_apparently | the always will be, if permitted to foll ard of |c0UNtry. The only competition th ) have to encounter State | mules in shipping and estrianism charges the business will bear."” As 8o o0, ZFerdinand |ns a new road is completed it is taken te for | into the pool. 816,- | in the railroad charges to the people) 874; Groenback, 5,345; Prohibition, 12,- | order to shut off competition from ¢ The Legislature last chosen had 46 | side. Ropublican majority on joint ballot. The | to the very point whore peopls would use | tween tho carbon disk and the induction their lozs and pack their goodsinto wagons | ceil, but also as a regulator im case of rather than avail themselves of the rail- | the vibrations of the membrane being too The rates are run up and kept road transportation. were built up by the Governn, the benefit of mon who pa originally for thoir stock. F nt and y doll v be- | | v and | gutright, by the il be | chartors under ituted | grants were i Government. T which these enorm \do exprossly resorve 5 but the corpo ninst means to consts Gon [Mobwithstanding that body possessos u 0 dinputed anthe “The | of the publi p T wiys. . It is announced with some flourish of | asbestos. the roads running from Kansas City and crats John Cook and the Groenbackers | Omaha castward the through rates are and the local rates three cents per mile, tion is, why the rates on rail- concert of a military band performing at were built at thecost of the people, should | receiver is be twice as much on through travel, | mitter is the exhibitc to put tho difference entirely within | very simple constiu local travel ns the charges on railroads | speech. ht to wmend or repeal;|at some distance fro ions are still permitted | e to rob the people who furnished them the | The two other telophone rooms tenanted t their ronds. No effort | by the Vienna to prevent pooling R~ OMALA, TUESDA ike | a thermo-electric stove, which presents the form of an ordinary stove aud can be used as such. It consists of thirty two elements eash, the rings being insul- | ated from one another by means of The elements consist of an sen | alloy of two electrically opposed metals sca|(the patent not being comploted the me | inventor would not tell me the exact nply with the [ composition, which fuses at 600 degrees acific into the | O.; on heating this alloy an electric cur- the amount ! rent is generated. of the reduction is trifling; in the next is placed in the center, and a considerable outrage- | space separates the stove from the con- Towa to-day are a Governor, Licatenant- |ously exorbitant, and is from twice Governor, Superintendent of Public In- struction, a Judge of the Supreme Court, The combustion stove to | centric rings, #o that the heating of the as the average charge [alloy is not effected direct, and the for long hauls in other sections of the | temperature to which the alloy is heated does not excoed 300 degrees to 400 "I'he Pacific railroads by means of com- | degrees C. Each concentric ring has its A Representative in | bination charge, under the new schedule, (own terminal screw, so that the whole or $05 for carrying a passenger about 1,700 | part of the current can be used. The six | current has an electric motive ferce of ich | twenty volts and twelve ohms resistance. in indispensable in so long a journey, |The battery is intended for galvano- be | plastic, but (and this is an important resent | estimated as a part of the transportation | point)if thestove, as is the case in winter, i 1 country. This |is kept burning sl day, sufficient current which is at the | power can be obtained to charge a number 'he | of accumulators sufficient for domentic o roads are | lighting purposes, or to drivo a small | still more exorbitant, running as high as | motor for doing domestic work, without | On | any extra expense, There are three telephone rooms for musical repetitions. In one of them the sile | Berliner telephone, eoxhibited by Mr. J. Borliner, of Hanover, reprodices the ich | Ronacher's restaurant in the Prater. The s an ordinary Bell; the trans- a invention, is of i on, and admirably jon of on |adapted for ordinary transm The conversation can be carried private enter- |on in tho lowest tone of voice, and every This is & | word is ropeated with great clearness. uitter has ousted " ne. With the ex- ception of Si clectro-dynamite is | telephone all the ther systems shown at stRs uid microphonic transmit- ow | ters; and there can be no doubt that this be | The microphonic t na- | the magnetic f." their own sweet will, to charge the public | use is justified by the fact that with the about the same amount for service as it [ microphonic transmitter no shouting on would cost the traveler to walk or the |the part of the subscriber is necessary, General, Auditor, Treasurer, School Com- |shipper to wagen his goods across the [ while with the magnetic telephone the hey | subscriber has always considerably to is from horses and | raise his voice in order to be heard. for | Berliner's transmitter consista of a small They are confident that, at the | hard. carbon pointsuspended between two same cost, peopls will profer the railrond | couical scrows; the carbon point touches to walking or to wagon transportation, | a and they assess upon the public “‘all tho mall, equally hard carbon_ disk, which s fastened to a metallic membrane, and yon | thus the microphonic contact is made without triction. The circular membrane The cmnany in control | is only hxed at one point to the cover of bsidized by the | the microphone case, and, on closing, the case is pressed against the cover by in | spring which is, together with the carbon hat | disk, fastened to the membrane. This up | spring serves not. ouly as a conductor be- strong or not atrong eneugh. The trans- It must be kept in mind that this ex- | mitter battery consists, as a rule, of ish | Lechhauche eloment. for| The repetition of the different pieces d nothing | played at the restaurant was cloar and lar | distinct whenover a soft tuno was played; ry and the | of the cost of all the Pacific railroads,and | as soon as a noisy piece was performed oven more than that, will be paid from | the sounds the sale of bonds issued by the Govern- | tiuct, ment and the procecds of land donated |of the transmitters st Ronacher’ became coufused and indis- The fault lay in the arrar s 'he @ fastened to thy entrance of t yus | vilion under which the band was playit to | kf thoy had been suspended to the tre the pavilion the doubtless have been better. et would I Private Telegraph coui- pany. A lady singing at Baden (about o, | twelve miles from Vienna) was accom nu- | ied by a man playing the zither at Korn- ty to interfere in behalf | enburg, about the same distance from it reserved ex- o of preventing | Danube. the misuse of tho Government high- | suc Vienna, but on the opposite side of the The repetition itself was very ssful, but the peculiar cracking noise of introduction was only too andible and "" | There is a general impression, and good | greatly interfered with ~ the performance. traflic [ grounds for the smme, that the manage- | In the third room was heard the fi al of as o | ment of the Northern Pacific has made u | the first act of Vordi'. “‘Alda,” which was portation. The result will be to which is yot to he doveloped. It is a | to sell its lands at good prices and fill taxa- | the territory contiguous to1ts road rapidly | bei 0t absorb all the pre there may be in tlture and comn along its line? The inducement of pro must be held out to assure the settleme n the | bosed to take depths of the Northwest and engage W rec- that the cost of travel and transpo vailed before vhe invention of the | Tho growth of the Northern ¢ rtry will undoubtedly be retarded law in | the combination with the other F New York to provent corporations from | railroads on tho basis of the old policy watering their stock indefinitely, the | eXtortion. But this re wposed | iy iy stico to the people. It destroy hope for relief from the coustruction lution | new roads, and the only remedy is what divectly and ind entitled by law to the interference Congress for the protection of the pul interest. Lt was to that ond the r amend aud repeal the way to others who are willing to do It 18 a reflection upon ernment that the pooplo should subscription and 1 defiance of which authorize and require the Natio water | Logislature to protect them from extor- been | tion, —— Berkshire Bliss, M. Joseph Kenyon, of Otis, Be shire county, Mass., certifics that ho | rs and | rheumatism so that he could not raise St. Jacobs Ol. ho was entirely cu — ELECTRIOA L WONDERS, Interestiog Results of the Vien Kxposition — Triumphs of Modern Science, utions the. from Among the many striking objcts at Vienna Electric Lautensack battery, is the direct transformation of heat i prowises were held out some three or f CaPl- | yvoars ago, on the construction of Clamon talization and future operations like | coke-heated thermo-eloctric stove, t avipu- serious error in entering into an arrange- | being pes ment with the old roads for maintaining | The re the exorbitant rates for travel and trans- | the golos, the new route mainly to its local traffic, | ence were reproduced ~ with rhe gre: But now can the Northern Pacitic Company expect | compan; Men will not be dis- 1 their families into the | tion and frequent shocks to which a rail- sult only adds to | rin the ihjury to the whole country and the |18 a small, hollow plug, connected with a | the American laws hand to his head until he-tried a bottloof By using it a few times il exhibition 18 Messrs, Bittner's thermo-electric [ 000, The principle of these batteries eloctricity without passing through the f work as in the case | the pr formed at the lmperial vpera, tion was a perfect success, and chorouses, the instrumental music, and also the applause of the audi- est vato Telegraph nsmitter alnost identi- up |cal with Be , the only difference g that it has three lel carbon it | contacts instead of one. There is an af it | called the Sedla ent | lamp for illuminat 3 The Vienna P use a t clearnoss. , not quite new, Wikullil locomotive g railway trains, 1t would appear that thejunaveidable vibra- in | way train is_exposed would render the farming or business with the knowledge [ar¢ lamp wholly untit for illuminating purposes. The lamp successfully over- 8 this difficuls Kronprinz Rudolf Bahn, in Austr s | consists of two vertical tubes of difl dinmeter and connected at the bottom; two pistons carrying the carbons move in of | these wbes, which are filled with glyce: At the bottom of one of the tubes re ) all [ lever, which termiuates in an armature of [opposed to an electro-magnet. As soon to | us the current passes, the arc offering no calling upon tho railroad committe to re. | #pply to Congrdss for intervention. The | resistance, the olectro-maynet is strongly poople must take the matter in their own | energized and attracts the lever. The hande, *They have provided the funds, | piston closes the communication between irectly, for the construe- | the two (ubes, causes slight lowering of o roads, aud they are the liquid in one of the tubes, and e of | sequently a withdrawal of the lower blic | carbon, and the electric are is formed. As used for locomotive headlights the charters was | lamp is attached to the front of the smoke It 18 time for the people to|box, and a small Schnekert dynawo goring under a load of fictitious capital |8ay to their representatives in Congress | placed in front of the bottom of the b which exhorhitant charges from the pub. | hat they must act under the law or g lor ive| foeds the lamp Such » lamp illuminates 80. | & space ef about one-third of a mile and is very useful for lighting up a tunnel bo |and for distingnishing signals, Sl B B Truth Crushed 1o Earth and smother lic nal paius that bus over A MILLIO) rk- Lk hd | The Serange Life of his Jones, of Brooklyn Special to The Obio Press. New York, Octeber Jonus,» wealthy miser of eccentric habits, was found dead in the bath-room of his Touss in_ Brooklyn to-day. Ho wan ab one time @ physician of considerable prominence, but, acoording to neighbors, ho human belug had been allowed to go inside his residence for ya He the | was seventy years of age and is re- ported to have been worth over §1,000,- De. Philip L. na From papers found in his possession, it nta | was shewn that he owned tracts of lands in Oregon, Arizona aud Dakota, aud was viotor -of building lots in Mich. eat [igan, Deleware and Minnesota, He our | ownod also considerable property in Nor- ud’s | wich, Conn., while among his effocts were hat | found houds arid securities representing this most important problem was advane- | over $100,000. 1t was found upon further Union | i0g toward at least a partial solution; but | iuvestigation that Dr. Jones had bought nothing further was heard of it, aud this question, Mesars, Lautensack & Bittner exli no | property in President Street, that is, two advance whatever has boen made singe in | three-story and basement Philadelphia brick-front houses, about ten years ago. ibit|Hoe had rented one of them over superposed concentrio rings of thirty- | Dr, Philip L. i Y, OC1UBER 9, 1885, | | RALLY Rally ! Rally! Rally! to the front ! Ye feeble, rick, and suffering! No more endurs your ills, no more, While now we make this offering! Come out the ranks of Pain! Come out And join the Health Brigade! Desert disease at once! Dosert! You'll amply be repaid. Strike down Dyspepsia! Strike! On Goneral Debi ity pounce! Rout Liver Complaint forever, rout! Give Biliousness the bounce! Hold tast your weapons, hold! Bardock Blood Bitters use! They'll win the fight depond; they "1l win, And give these ills their dues. [Burdoek Blood Bitters aro enefiting untailingly, and re RVKRYWITRR. | to the slok, nember, are HOLD twenty years ago had derosited a por- tion of the purchase money ‘upon it within one month after he had hired it. Just after he moved in his wife died, and then he seemed to be an utterly changed ma He dismissed his house- keeper and lived alone. He used to go to a baker's store near by and buy five cents’ worth of rolls, These would last him most of the day, and what other meals he would have he would purchase at restaurants, Tt also his custom abou: midnight every day to get an oyster supper. He never deviated from this practice. . Th entric old doctor was known in the neighborhood in which he lived bettor than the baker or the groceryman, but about his own business he was dumb. Not a word ever escaped him. While he would make and meet friends outside he never invited them to his house. His closet companion never crossed his door- step. There had been strange stories told of his mode of life, and when a policeman from the Third Precinct was sent down to take charge of the house he was afraid to penetrate into the rooms, because it was said that springguns and all sorts of exvlosives weresecretedinthem. Whether this was imagined from the Doctor's conversation is not known, but when a reporter visited the house he saw in the hallway a large number of wires and cords mysteriously arranged. He found that in any room of the house Dr. Jones could aither open or. close the door by use of these wires, He had also an electric apparatus connccted with every door- knob, by which a thief or an intruder could, at his will, be paralyzed, so to spenk. In his parlor were nothing but a gas stove, an easy chair, somo very ancient furniture and piles of newspapers ar- ranged in methodical heaps and represent- g about two tons of waste material. The mantelpiece and a desk in one corner were covered with dust. The old man’s bed on the second floor, was of solid mahogany, at least fifty years old, as far as construc: tion was concerned, and a perfect marvel of carving. His furniture was thrown all in a heap, and Coroner Keller saw to it that police men from the Third Precinct were de- tailed to take charge of the premises until the deceased’s brother, Mr. Ferdinand W. Keller, arrived. The Coroner’s deputy searched the clothing of the dead man, found some keys, $68 i money and a bundle of lette one of them relating to financial matters. The remains are now in charge of the undertaker; and an autopsy has setiled that death was caused by rheumatism of the heart. 5 ity A gERMmREMEm FrOER Rheum [11NRY COLLEG B OrTERY $30,000 for $2. Regular Monghly Drawingwilltako lncu in‘the Masonic Hall, Musonio Tewyle Build ing, in Louisville, Ky. Thursday, October 25th, 1883 A Lawful Lottery and Fair Di red Ly the logislature of Ky., and wi legal by “the highest court in the wiven to Henry County in the sum of 81 prompt payment of ull prizes sold. A KEVOLUTION IN SINGLE NUMBER DRAWINGH £47 Every ticket holder hisown i sl out the number on his ticket and tug nuiber on the tag placed in the wheel In hir rosence. These drawings will oceur on the lust Thursdey of every month. Kead the magnificent & I October Scheme. - 80,000 10,000 6,000 6,000 5,000 10,000 001 10,000 10,000 L. 10,000 tiou Prizes 2,70 1 W 1800 200 wach 100 each " " 5 ORDE] e Or 6 and upwand by expres Do seit at our exponse. Addross all orders te J. J. DOUGLAS Loulsyille,Ky d sat-tu-th&w1st 3w ein Perfect substitute for 108t nourishing diet Commended I wll climates. Sold by all for the pamphlet 7. M Akth 90t 41 Oentral Whar, ¥ Y, M. D, l O A ™ Resldence, KELLEY & WILSON, OFFICE: 7 Datenport St. Physicians snd Susgecns. GAIVANTZED lionComices, Window Boyd's Opera Houss, Omaka, Neb, SAML C. DAVIS & CO, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. Mo ~ STEELE, JOHNSON & CO, ‘Wholesale Grocers ! | AND JOBBERS IN i ‘FLUUR, 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 & C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist =~ 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. { 18 1a tho best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound in equal ¥ Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Wintor, instead of runuiog dows, will increase {n velgh 224 be I cood markotable condition fn the spin” Dieymen, 1 woll a ot who e i an testy ‘merite. Try it and judge for yourselvea.; Price §25.00 per ton: no charge for wacks. Address each il Xy “PHIOFOODYAN LINSKND OIL COMPANY, Omaka al 40 three pounds of corn AT ler and Stegt om Works! ¢ | OMAHA, - - NEBRASKA, Build all kinds of Steam Boilors. Smoke Stacks, Breeching Lard, Wator and Oil Tanks, and do a gemers plate-iron business. Repairing done in City and Country. Al work Done at Eastern Prices and Warranted ! | Second-hand Boilers will bo kept on haud. Having had many years uxperiencein the tradoin different parta am confident | can give satisfaction, having he best shop anl touls in the State. Sh cor. 19th and Plerce Streets. J. M. WILSON Proprietor. ! MAX MEYER & C0., | 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. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES, SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES. tablished in 1858. THE LEADING Carriage Factory 1409 and 1411 Dodge Street, i i} - NEBRASKA! T. SINEIOI.D, ‘ Caps Finials Bhylighte & Tulrtoenth Birecy