Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
s e - T T —— Y L} A R THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1885. THE ARMY CHAN The changoes made necossary by the impending rotirement of General Sher- man have at last been decided upon, and though the official order is not published, the stations as telegraphed on Saturday The com- THE GMAHA BEE. ‘Published evers woming, except, Sunday. 3 The enly Monday morniog daily. e Y MAIL ne Yoar.. 10.00 1 Three Months, ... Wtx Monens . 5.00 | One Month... FUR WRRKLY B, PUBLISIRD EVARY WRONRSDAY. evening are doubtless correct. TERMA PORTPAID, manding general will leave Washington One Year...........82.00 | Throe Moatha. ... "8 B . W A . OnoYene......... 00| ThroMenhn...- ¥ B on Novembor Iat, and await lis retire- Amorioan News Company, Sole AgentaZNewsdonl: | ment, which will take place under the ‘ers in the United States CORRRSPOXDRNCE. A Communteations relating to News and Rditorial matters should bo addrossed to the Evitos or Tut B G4 yoar law otk tho 1st of February. General Sherman's object in _relinquish ing his command thus early is said to be “wosemss Larrees due to his desire to enable General Sher All Business Lettors and Remittancos should” be addressed to THR Brr PORLISITING COMPAXY, OMATIA Dratts, Checks and Postoffice orders to be made pay: able to the order of the company THE BEE BUBLISYING C0.,, PROPS. B.2ROBEWATRR. Ed' or. idan to take command of the army be: fore tho opening of Congress and to pre- sent his report to that body at ita first session. As the ranking major general, General | Hancock was given the choice of divis- jons. He has decided to retain his pres- ent command, which is that of the At- Ax Anti-monopoly leader appears the columns of the Republican. 1t looks as much out of place as a Republican | jinic with headquarters at Governor's rooster in Ohio. Tsland. General Schofield will be - e | transferred to the Division of Juber Forakkr made 105 speeches in | ¢ho Missouri, with headquarters at Ohio during the campaign. In the light ! Chicago where (eneral Sheridan has com- of election returns it looks like a large manded o long and so ably. General Pope will once more move his headquar- tors from the saddlo and transfer them to San Francisco as commander of the Di- vision of the Pacific. Tho retirement of Colonel Hunt, some weeks ago, removed the last commander of the Department of the South. Ho will havo no successor. Tho department will be consolidated with the Department of the East under Gen- eral Hancock's command after November Ist. This will leave an entiro set of stafl officors to be provided for. Col. Corbin, who was 8o persistent in his endeavors to oust Col. Taylor from Newport Barracks, will now have to hunt another station, and in all probability will go further wesb, waste of wind. i —— Ty usual fusilade against the editor of the Bex: has been begun by the railroad organs. The volley is intended to cover the firing which is to be dirccted against the candidates of the people of Nebraska. ettt Mr. Lamn's B. & M. organs remon- strate and defy, but the gentlewan from Stinking Water preserves an _ indiscreto silence. made. The specitic charges have been Lot us have the specific denial. ety Tupek is a desperato and combined attack against Ben Butler, but the old war horse lays his wires and sots up the pins in perfect confidence of being his own successor in the Massachusetts Stato House. General Pope's transfer leaves a vacancy at Leavenworth to which Briga- from San Antonio. General McKenzie, the youngest of the brigadiers, who has since his appointment commanded the District of New Mexico, will relieve Gieneral Augur in the Department of Texas. No changes are noted in amy of the other departments and it is not probable that there will be for some time to come. There is the possibility that Congress this winter may promote General Sheridan to the rank of General of the Army through an agreement between the members of the two parties that in such an event (ieneral Hancock shall be made Lieuten- ant General, If this is done there will be a vacancy in the list of Major Gien- erals which will be filled from the Briga- diers. General Howard is the ranking Brigadier General and has strong claims for promotion on the grounds of seniori- ty, his brilliant war record, and his dis- ability incurred in action. Generals Terry and Crook will also be pushed by their friends for promotion. Should Cengress make no change in the law re- garding rank, the next vacancy will occur when General Pope retires, two years hence. e Tie Democrats of Nebraska have led the way in making non-partisan nomina- tions for the judiciary, Thousands of Republicans will return the compliment by electing Judge Savago to the Supreme bench because he is the best man for the place. Ir is reported that Ben Butterworth is to succeed Mr, Marble as Commissioner of Patents. Mr. Butterwerth's first business should be to grant himsclf a patent on his famous ‘‘red flag” speech. Congross will breathe easior if it is pro- tected from all infringement. How much does the Unien Pacific Com-- pany pay Tar Oxana Bee for its support of the monopoly candidates, Savage and Hinman, et al? Does this compensation come in cash or is it in patronage? Lot Tue Bur man explain why he has quit his pretended service to the people and gone over to the Monopoly party. How much and what have they paid you?— Hastings Gazette,Journal. This is good, coming from Jim Laird's own, the organ of the pass distributor of the B. & M. railrond. No one knows botter than Laird that Tue Bee is not supporting railroad candidates. As a member of the State Convention, Mr. Laird is perfectly aware that Mr. Reese was the choice of the Monopolies for months before that convention met. He knows equally well that all corporate in- fluences are being brought to bear for the election of Sam Savidge in the Tenth District. As Tiur Bek is opposing both of these candidates it doesn't look very much as if Tur Bee was on the right track to secure compensation from the Union Pacific or any other railroad. Mr. Laird asks us a plain question and we will give him a plain and specific an- swer. We will not skulk for weeks in si- lence as the gentleman from Stinking Wa- ter has done when pushed for an answer to the gravest of charges against his honesty and integrity. Tue Be re- ceives no compensation in cash for the political support of any one. It cannot receive any in patronage, for the eimple reason that it has done no job work for two years past. Two years ago it seld its job office, type and presses. Tue Bek is alone among its contemporaries in printing & newspaper with no job office attachment. This is & plain answer to Mr. Laird's plain question. And now will the goen- tleman from Stinking Water come to the front and answer the question which we propounded to him nearly a month ago, relative to his scheme to fradulently ob- tain a cattle range in Chase county by ] THE LEGAL TENDER CASE, The United States Supreme Court at its present term will probably take up the case involving the constitutionality of the logal tender act. The issue, it will be remembered, grows out of a commercial transaction in which a citizen of New York after the resumption of specie pay- ments, tendered a citizen of Connecticut payment in greenbacks of the series of 1878. These greenbacks had once been redeemed and reissued under the act of May 31, 1878, and when tendered were refused on the ground that such notes woro constitutionally illegal. This case was begun in 1879 and carried to the Supreme Court on appeal. If the hearing proceeds, this will make the third time that the court of highest resort has been called to pass upon the validity of the legal tender acts. The legal tender act of 1862 provides that greenbacks or United States notes shall be *‘lawful money and a legal ten- dor in payment of all debts, public or private, within the United States, except duties on impgrts.” In the case of Hep- burn vs, Griswold, the court decided this act, and its supplements, *‘unwarranted by the constitution, so far as they apply to contracts made before their enact- ment.” In 1871 the court, having been somewhat changed in its personnel, by a bare majority reversed this decision, Thus we have had two opposing opinions upon this particular branch of the sub- A ject, d th O methods which bear the appearance of bL : 2 o u:‘gluu y t:: .;:::iw.h”ulfl ":;:: honest collusion with government country, to Congress, and to the officials and subornation of perjury on the part of protended settlerst Supreme Court. The greenbacks were originally issued as & war measure, and it is well to understand whether after efgh- toen years of peace, Congress can author- ize indefinitely their issue. Whether constitutional or not it is for the court to decide, and the country will be glad to have the question definitely settled. If tho case be decided in favor of the appel- lant, it will put an end to tho re-issue of redeemed greenbacks as legal tenders, but the bills would probably continue to circulato, for nobody doubts the ability of the government to redeem them in gold. They would simply lose their legal tender character, and stand on an equali- ty, in this particular, with the notes of national banks. Lawver §Soexsercrr, of Wahoo, has decided that inasmuch as Col. Sav- age's friends in Omaha have **boen back- wards in coming forwards” with the Col.'s record as a lawyer, ho—Soenber- ger—will assist them, Mr. Boenber- ger proves a lively and spicy biographer, —Plattsmouth Herald, Lawyer Boeaberger is just the right kind of aman to eriticise the record of Jamos W. Savage. 1f Mr, Soenberger's record as an attorney was ventillated properly he would be writing his letters behind the bars of & penitentiary. Only a few months have passed since Mr. Soenberger was visited by an Omaha lawyer on behalf of some Chicago clients of the Wahoo attorney, who charged him with collecting accounts | The long-promised era of railroad and denying their receipt while he| ‘‘competition” in the West has come with turned the proceeds into his own pocket. | & vengeance. The cherished hopes of Mr. Boenberger was made, though very | overland shippers have ripened into a unwillingly, to disgorge, under threats | gigantic pool representing 80,000 rniles of prosecution, He isa sweet scented |of road, Scarcely had the last spike kind of @ reformer to criticise the re- | on the Northern Pacific been driven be- gord of Judge Savage. fore it joined with the commercial vul We might incidentally remark that it | tures further south and agreed to wain- is barely possible that SBam Ohapman of | tain rates at the war standard, A re- the Plattsmouth Herald, may appreci- [ duction of a fow dollars has been mado WEST OF THE MISSOURI, dier Goneral Augur will fill by transfer |} cording to mileagoe, This is the old story of modern competion that fails to com- sete. The Utah & Northern and the Jorthern Pacific have partitioned Mon- | tana into districts and settled upon a di- vision of the trafic. The Colorado pool is an infant of a year, yet its dominion and power is unquestioned between the Missouri river and the Rocky mountains. So, too, with the Rio Grande, As soon as it had crossed into Utah and threat- ened to become a rival of the Union Pa cific, it was forced to an “understanding” by which rates would bo maintaned at the old figure. The list might be con- tinued indefinitely. The lesson of it is that the days of competition are past,and relief can come only through National laws, The construction of the joint three rail road of the Northern Utah & Northern between Butte and Helena in Montana has been abandoned until spring. As matters now stand the Narrow Gauge is corralled at Blackfoot, or rather at Deer Lodge, where it is obliged to discharge east-side freights, which are hauled from that point by Pacific and wagon over a mountain road of forty or more miles. Matters at the junction of the two roads are in rather bad shape, and pas- sengers between Butte and Helena are subjected to such outrageous imposition that tho ill-feeling consequent upon their treatment will make iteelf felt in what- over channel may offer to the justly irato travelers. The junction of the two roads, where the passengers, baggage and mail matter have been transferred, is about twomiles from the Northern Pacific town of Garrison, It is mow proposed by the Northern Pacific people to stop their trains at Garrison only and not at the junction, thus forcing travolers from the Utah aud Northern for the East to travel two miles by wagon and pa through the same point at which bark from the Narrow Gauge. will continue to be done or the Ut Northern will be forced to extend its ;] with the Northern Pacific to Garrison. The townsite of Garrison has been bought up by partics interested in the Northern Pacific, and for the sake of adding to the profits of the officials by the saleot townlots the traveling public is forced to this inconvenience. Work has already begun on the new railroad through the south part of Saline county, Neb. The road will run from DeWitt straight west the Blue Hill, Adams county, crossing the St. Joe & Denver botween Fairfield and Edgar. About eight miles south of Geneva it will form a junction with the St. Joe & Den- ver about two miles west of Belvidere "This line will be built north to Geneva and from thero to Fairmont and probably thence to Seward. The B. & M. company is quietly at work on the praposed branch from Odell, on the Republican Valloy line, to Salina, Kansas, This branch is doubtless in- tended to head off the Salina, Lincoln and Decaturroad. While the managers of the lattorareskirmishingaround Nebraska for bonds and other aid, the B. & M. simply asks for right of way znd depot facilities. For this renson the new company is liable to get left unless they enter the field on equal terms with the B. & M. A corre- spondent writing from ‘Washington, Kan- sas, shows how rapidly the B. & M. is getting over ground: ‘‘For some time past the Burlington & Missouri River railroad company have been making a careful survey of a line from Odell, Neb., on or near the line of the Salina, Lincoln & Fremont, and the road from that place via Hamover and Washington, is now surveyed and located. On Wednesday night a meeting of the business men of this place was called at the Opera House, for the purpose of con- ferring with officials of the B. & M., who proposed to commence work on the road from Odell to Washington immediately, if tho peoplo of Washington and Hano- ver would procure them the right of way to the State line. This company has not asked aid in the way of bonds, and the roquest of merely the right of-way was accopted by our people without a mur- mur, The company officials say they will begin work within ten days after they have o guarantee of the right-of-way.” ‘ | ernment appropriation, and hints that “if - | the public become inte ono single requirement of the law. Fraudulent testimony was produced by fraud and with full intent and purpose to defraud the gevernment, Tens of thous- ands of acres of the public lands are fenced up by wealthy stock-ranchers, thus leaving actual settlers without range for the family cow. In ome instance it was found that a man living near a city in Montana had fenced up 6,000 acres of public lands, and in his kindness of heart had permitted the town people to pasture their stock in the enclosure for the mod erate sum of §1 per month per head. The Denver exposition has closed, and the managers find themselves wiggling in The attempt | failure the small end of the horn. to make a financial success of did not pan out to the satisfaction of the stockholders, and an e made to save the concern from bankrupt- ¢y. Theschemie is such a rare specimen of Colorado gall, that, had the manage- ment been wise, they would have placed yrt is now being it on exhibition during the palmy days of the show. It would lave been a much better card than shriveled squashes, or potrified pumpkins. The exposition prd orty is valued at 300,000, plastered with $200,000 in bonds, and 1,000,000 in stock, which seems to have been pretty thoroughly sonked. Tt is now proposed to distribute majority of the stock among the coun- tios of the State and adjoining States and Perritoes for $151,000 in cash. The pro- moters of this method of raising the wind by public donations, are_confident it can be worked successfully by judicious press- ure on the authorities. Mr. Loveland, one of the princ'pal owners of the con- cern, is not as short sighted as the col- lengues. He sees in the scheme a gov- sted then, there are more chances of securing government aid, There is no reason why Congress should mot appropriate from £300,000 to 1,000,000, and it is my belief that they will, for the mineral resourc of the country are worth developing. Govern- ment aid would enable us to take up the mortgage, which is due in eight years, and give us a largo surplus from year to year.” Mr. Loveland is a matured Democrat who has not had a whack at the public crib for twenty-three long years. e—— James W. Savack is mot now and nover has been a railroad attorney. He was not and never could be a tool on the bench of the monopolies. As a judge he was notoriously opposed to all technicali- ties by which corporation lawyers seek to befog courts and ride rough-shod over popular rights. A chromo is offered to a railread record for Judge Savage. ———— THE NEW YORK PAPERS. ious They Put on ult in Ohio. What Interpret. the R New York, Oct. tion The Sun says: Of the singular features of the clection is the different ways in which the Prohi- bition vote affected the Republicans. Tne rural counties. where they pushed the defeated prohibition amendment strongly, responded with big majorities for the amendment, but with hardly ~the average Republican yote. In the cities, where the Republicans were afruid to push the amendment, they made their chief gains from tne Democrats. Yet the beaten Republicans are ata loss to explain their defeat oven to their own satisfaction, Deacon Richard Smith thinks the wool-growers did it. Field Marshal Halstead thinks the wine-grow- —Of the Ohio elec- lor car has beo occupants of his car. dollah took it from the outstretched examined it. esty, my friend,” and pocketing the dol- lar the the traveller handed the astonish ed potentate of theroad a lead nickel. e e v rr] sin_and liver com- Jlaint and in chronic d TO THE PU willtul and mal acterof The Loulsiana State Lottery Company, the tollowing facts are given to the publio to prove hir statement, that we are_engaged in o fraudulent bus ineas, o b false and untrio; the editor who can produce anything like | fr A Crushed Porter. il City Blizzard, We are happy. The porter of the par- crushed. “Beg yo pawdon, sah,’ he remarked with impressive grandrue to one of the “Dat was a trade ' handed me a minute ago.” “Ah, was it!" replied the plebe as he hand and ke this for your hon- The insensible body of the porter was left at the next station, and after physi cians had worked on him for two hours he recovered sufficiently to murmur in- chorently: It wa'nt de money what pha'lized me, boss, but he called me ‘my fren!’ Bose, dat tuk me down offul!” THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN Telleves and cures RHBUMATIS Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKAC HEADACTE, TOOTHACHE, SORE THROAT Bruises, FROSTBITES, RURNN, SCALDN, And all other hodily aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE iggists and tons in 11 s EHIU*“" ulr,..,“' T ChromIo ) 8 ep constipatio other obst cnnes H Stomach Bitters is beyond all_compari- son th t that : am the stren of restoring h and tal energy of persons who are sinking un he debilitating 4 of puinful dis: «, thisstandard vegetablo insigorant is_confessedly " un- d. salo 57 by sl d Deal BLIC ! Invest‘lgnto for Yourselves. Postmaster-General Gresham having published » us falsehood in regard to the char oy paid by The Louisiana State Lot 0 Junuary 1, 1879, to present date: press Co,, New Orleans, +..81,386,301 468,000 125,100 88,56¢ Un Ch : 64,460 e, 67,00 rinania National Bank, ules Cassard, President. ... 20,000 Paid to Hibernia National Bank, Chas. Palfrey, C 87,000 Paid to Canal Bank, Ed. Tob; 18,154 Paid to Mutual National Ban Jos. Mitchel, Cashier. .......... 8,200 Total pald a8 above. .. Paid 1n sums of under 81,000 at the various offices of the Company throughout the United States.......... 2,027,410 Total paid forall. ... Far the truth of the abo $4,881,00 facts we refer the public tothe officers of the above-named corporations, ano for our legality and standing to the Mayor and Otficerr of the City ef New Orleans, to the State authoritieso Louisian, and also to the U. 8, Officials of Louisiana We claim to be legal, honest and correct in all our trausactions, as much 80 a3 any business in the coun try. tigate, and our stock has for years boon sold at) u Board' of Brokers, and owned by many of our best known and respected citizens, Our standing is conceded by all who will inves M. A. DAUPHIN, President. ers did it. John Sherman belicves that Foster did it; and Foster probably hasn’t recovered sutliciently to do any thinking about it. At any rate, it is done, bretheren, and well ‘done. We imagine you will find that you all contributed to it unawares. The people huve simply registered their decree thut the Republican party must go. That is the meaning of a Democratic $6, Shares in Propo; rangements for all the ~ Monthly and Sem Governor and a Democratic Legislature Tt is understood in Omaha_that John Fitzgerald,the well-known railroad build- er, has taken a contract for 100 miles and is negotiating for teams and graders in this city to begin work in a weck or ten days. Oheyenne has done a land oftice busi- noss during the month of September, A total of 47,789.64 acres were disposed of. During the month 28,324 98-100 acres wore flled upon under the desert. act, while final proof was made to 1,768 04- 100 acres, Pre-emption cntries made covered 2,066 14-100 acres, and nineteen homestead entries filed, embraced 3,159 58:100 ac,es. Under the head of *‘Tim- ber Culture”seventeen entries were made embracing 2,360 acres, while two final homesteads took away 820 acres more from the public demain. Forty-seven pre-emption declaratory statements filed covered 7,300 acres; three coal land de- claratory statements embraced 960 acres, and one application for a mineral patent included 1,140 acres, One entry of coal lands was made. The receipts of the office from August 13th to September 30th were $35,023.50. Colonel James Tullis, special land agent of the Government, who has been investigating land frauds in the Terri tories of the Rocky mountains, says there has been some big swearing by witnesses in some of the offices and large tracts of 1and have been patented by persons who had in no-wise complied with the land laws. The desert land-entry act has been violated with a recklessnessthat was positively astounding. In many cases it was found that absolutely noth- ing had been done toward reclaiming the lands, and yet what are known and re- garded as good citizens have gone before the land ofticers and made solemn oath that the land had been reclaimed and all the conditions of the law complied with, when in fact no wark made by humau hauds could be found upon entire tracts Other tracts were taken up under the desort which act are no more desort than. tho vally of the Ohio river. Other lands were found to have been taken up under the timber-culture act upon whish were growing at the time of original filing more forest trees than the law required when final proof is to be made. The ate how delicate Mr. Soenberger's po- | in the passenger tariff, not so much to ap- sition was st the time mentioned. peaso the public asto equalize rates ac- homestead act has not been fairly treated and thousands of acres has been patented in Olio. ‘he Times says: Tho most significant fact about the very close election 1n Ohio on Tuesday was the slight influence of any national ques- tion. Except so far as the leaders of each party were striving for the moral etfect of a victory, it may be said that the national issues were hardly involved at all. So far as concerns the moral effect of the elections, it is bound to be very slight. 1f tho Dewmocrats have carried the State by a small majority they have lost the decided majority of last year, though they were aidud by a_very wmuch stronger prohibition dwversion than at that tine. Jf the Republicans, on the other hand, have reduced their opponent’s majoriy in spite of one Prohibitiouist, they have wonno victory that secures the State next year, or that can have any great effect on the elections still to be held in other States. We may be sure that Mr, Hoadly's *“boom” for the Presi- dency, which he set on foot by an effort to establish a *new Democracy,” will not be again heard of, and we may be equally sure, and not less coutent, that Mr, Sherman's prediction that the next Re- publican candidate for the Presidency will come from Ohio will be remembered only by walicious persous guilty of a de- sire to make Mr. Sherman’s life un- happy- The Tribune says: The Ohio Republicans were over-confi- dent, 1t is true that they have polied a remarkable vote, but they underestimat- ed the desperate enc of the Demo- crats. They relied too much, apparently, upon the good character of the Republican party, and the bad character of the Demo- cratic party, aud Judge Hoadly's blund. ors, forgetting that the cluss of voters whom the money of the liquor dealers would reach, care nothing about the char, acter of any party, or the mistakes of any candidate. {‘h\s advocates of prohibition have once more injured the cause of temperance by acting against the Republican party. The Republican party had put on the statute book one of the most popular and wost beneficial laws ever known for regulating the liquor traflic. The whole Democratic party was hostile to it, from Judge Houd y, who was of counsul against 1it, bef re the Sapreme Court, down to the keeper of the vorner groggery, who was against it both for grog and party. If the pro- Iibition votes have put in Hoadly and a Demooratic Legislature, they are in a fair way to see the Scott law repealed or broken down, and all the ground lost that has been gained in this attempt to regulate the liquor traffic. The Democratic reform movement in Cincinnati is a ludicrous failure, and John by persons who have not complied with [ [ R. McLoan is boss, £ OAPITAL PRIZE'{ $76,000. Tickets Onl ion. Lonisiaua SH& Lottery Company “We do heraby certify that we supervise the a1 Annuo Drawings of the Louiviana State Lottery Company add in person manage and controb the "hemaelves, and that the same are conducted i) iomesty, fairness. and in goed faith toward all par iew, and we author ificate, with fac-similes of our signatures its advertiseme Drawing. ¢ the company to use this cer i attacheo (COMMIBSIONERS, Incorporated in 1868 years by the logislatur tor educational and charitable purposes—with & ca tal of $1,000,000—to which & reserve fund of ove! 1550,000 has since been added. By an overwhelming popular vote ita franchis was'made & part of tho prosont state constitutior wdopted December 24, A. D, 1870, The only Lottery ever voted on and endorssd bj thepeaple of any Male t never Scales or Postpones. . Its grand single number drawings take place monthly. SPLENIND OPPORTUNITY TO WIN A FOK 1ith Grand Drawing, Class L, at New Ot TUESDAY, NOV. 15th, 1388—162d Monthly CAPITAL PRIZE, §75,000. 00,000 TICKETS at FIVE DOLLARS EACH. Jrao ‘tions, in Fifths in Proportion. LIST OF PRICES, 1 CAPITAL PRIZE.. 1 do do 1 do do 2 PRIZES OF $8000. 6 do 2000 10 do 20 do 100 do 800 do 500 do 000 do 85.... APPROXIMATION PRIZH 9 Approximation prizes of §760 0,78 9 do do 500 9 do do 1967 Prizes, amounting £o.... Appiication for rates to olubs o at;the office of the Company in New Orleans. For turther information write clearly giving full address. Make P. 0. Money Orders’ payable anc address Registered Lottors to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, New Orleans, Postal Notes and or Vinary letters by Mall or Ex press (all sums of § and upwards by Express at our exponse) 4o M A DAUPHIN or M. A. DAUPHIN, Now Orloans, La. 07 Seventh 8t., Washington, D. ¢ LODISIANA STATE LOTTERY CO B. Frank Moore. 127 La Salle Street. Chicago Manager of Chicago Ofice. To whom apply fo! Anformation and tickets. 162d Monthly Drawiog, , Tuesday, Nov. 13. Pirst Capital Prize, §75,000. Tiokets 8. Seld Fifths at §1 each. Soe full scheme above. wedkaat-w 6w WHOLESAILEE SAML C. DAVIS & CO, Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - Dry Goods! ST. LOUIS. MO STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, AND JOBBERS IN A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. Wholesale Grocers ! FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED 6007, ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES co AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER . SINEIOILD, MANUFACTURER OF Skylights &0 Thirteenth Street Galvanized lronComices, Window Caps,Finals SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growerg of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Tt 1s the best and cheapest food for stock of any kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of tock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, and be in good marketable condition in the spring. D it merita. Try it and judge for yourselves. - Price od-cod-mo narge for sacks. Addresa Our Cround Oil Cake. ocorn instead of running down, will increase in welgh men, as well as others, who use it can testity 00 por t WOODMAN LINSEID OIL COMPANY, Omaha C. F. GOODMAN, AND DEALER IN Wholesale Druggist! Paints, 0ils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA. NEBRASKA. P N MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLY FIRST-CLASS grriaoes, Boaies, Road Wagons AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1810 and 1320 Hamey Street and 408 S. 18th Street, u trated Cataloguo furnished free upon applicatian -~OMAHA, NEB MAX MEYER & CO., IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPESS 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. | SPORTING. Go0DS PIANOS&SCORG AN On Long Time--Small Payments. IR0 DONOY STRE At Mannfacturers Prices. A, Hosue Jr MANUFACTURER OF FINE My, Repository ls coustantly filled with & seleot Mook, Best Workmauship guarsnteed. Buggies Carriages and Spring Wagons Office and Foctory S. W. Carner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmah ¥FHouselkeepers ASK YOUR GROCERS FOR THE OMAHA DRY HOP YEAST! WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL, \Manufactured by tbe Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Co. CORNER 16TH AND DAVENPORT STREETS, OMAHA, NEB. It Never Falls, ‘S[iej iRy ) J . Q