Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 16, 1883, Page 4

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e THE GMANA BEE. * Published evers worning, except] Sunday.T§ The 0aly Monday morning dly. GALLIC GALI France has never so much needed as at the present time a statesman like leon Plunged into the most be Gambet THE DAILY BEE--~OMAHA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1883, to turn out rogues and rascals and to redeem the State and country from cor- rupt party rule. Tt is Anti-Monopolist enough to lend all its efforts towards the miles northwast of Elk Creek, Bishop O'Connor presided at the ceremony of the laying of the corner stone of the new Catholic church at Wood River, K S e a.......4o00 | wildering foreign complications by tho | redemption of Nebraska from tho hands |, The value of the real estate that changod Bix Moncna. 6.00 | One Month 1.9 | hlundering of incompetent leaders the [of the tools and hirelings of the corpora- | and thirteenth of October is i IR WRNKLY RNR, FORLIBIIRD RYRRY WRONRSDAY. | popublio ia floundering hopelessly in a | tions who have masked themselvesbehind e b AR AR TRRMS TORTPAID. awguemn | 808 Of troubles from which it will be dif-{party platforms and entrenched them- [ July iy now hold at $10, £15 and $23 per acre. O ontia #2.00 | Throe Month.... .- S %0 | ficult to extricate her without a loss of |selves in party organizations for the I tho clrcton et Monday at Wmore,the o Amerioan Kewo Company, Solas AgentsZNensdenk | Lo prostige among European nations. | purpose of ontrolling our courta, aub. | ieioat houso bonds carried =150 to L1, Tho CoRBRARONTH A Communications relating t ww and Editoria mattors should be addressed (o the Eorton, or, Tus Brx Spvaiersy LeTTRA g * All Business Totrers and Remittancos ‘should” be addressed to Tir Brr Prsusining COMPANY, OMARA Drafts, Chooks and Postottioe otders to be_made pay Wbl ta tho order of the company THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS, E.ZROSEWATER, Editor. the Speakership have improved by the Ohio election. Sam Rawparv’s prospects for Tur Republican press broke down twice in attempting to print its first and Tast radical Anti-monopoly editoral. The machine wasn't used to it. —_—— Mg, EstapRook, Jr., has been pub- Tlishing what he calls Judge Savage's rec- ord. Mr. Estabrook might create a greater sensation by printing his own, Tar Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette The first mistake was an attempt to seize the The difficulty is not yet adjust Annam against remonstrance of China, of a costly and d The recent insult to the King of Spain, the failure of ment to blunder, and Spanish indignation aroused, and a od and the prospect bloody war are not entirely dissi and the French govern- give satisfactson is another Spanish prido has been atirred rupture between the two governments is imminent. The resignation of the Spanish Ministry leads Ze 7emps of Paris to consider the difficulty with Spain at an end, but Madrid specially shows that the rocall of the Spanish Ministry is contem- platod in the absence of suitablo repara- tion on the part of France, which ns yet has not been made. The Paris corres- pondent of the London Standard con- siders the situation serious, and says that in case of a rupture botween Spain and France all Spanish subjocts in the latter country will be placed under protection of a friendly power, probably Belgium verting our logislatures the and nullifying just laws passed for reliof of tho people This political crsed may be a truth too ad for the calibre of the railroad ed- itors, but it is one which the people have endorsed and will continue to dorse more heartily in the future en- Fon sale—a pair of coffoe sack hreeches. Apply to Judge Foraker, care of Goy- ernor Foster, Columbus, O A RADICAL OF THE RADICALS. A Lively Letter on the Evils that Me- n4ce the Republic, The G. A, R, and How It Howled for Vandervoort, Correspondence of Trr Bix. Wyasvorrs, Kan., October 14.—It rises to remark: “An Omaha pastor says | This does not look as though the trouble | hag heen many long years since anything the Protestant church embraces threo times as many women as men. That is was at an end. In the meantime Ger- many manifests some disposition to re- from my able pen graced your valuable columns, and I don’t know that this will all right, but we thought it might be |sent the afiront offered to King Alfonso. | unq in fact don’t particularly care. The just e well tolet the husbands know | It was the bestowal of a Uhlan coloneloy | jrrepressiblo conflict between capital and about it.” Wiy the Republicans endorsea Dem- on the Spanish King by tne Emperor William which affronted the Parisians and led to the insult complained of, labor will go on all the same, if it does not. Being an uneducated laboring man d I T know I have no rights that the paste- ¥ ocratic nominee for judgesit is called | Bismarck can work Germany into the hoard collared aristocracy of our country | “*" “‘sinking party prejudices ifi‘tho interest | quarrell he can be trusted to doso. As|are hound to respect, but I care not for of a competent judiciary,” When the | though all this were not enough, France | a4 The time is coming and fast, that Anti-Monopoliats endorse a Democratic |has on hand a difficulty with Switz- [ o working men will not be slaves. nominee it “political crime.” Toa vision unaided by orders from railroad erland. specials France According “to the calble is erecting military We are working for freedom with a will quietly and carefully but surely. We headquarters the difforonce is not por-| worka in Savoy. While Savoy is 0ow |y ull well that our government is in ceptible In will be necessary to overhaul our geographies and revise the statements therein made as to the relative size of the great rivers of the world, if the reported discoveries in Alaska are confirmed. Lieutenant Schwatka has navigated the Yukan for a distance of two thousand miles, and reports it navigable for one thousand miles further, while it pours out a greater volume of water than the Mississippi or the Amazon. Lisutenant Btorey, on the other hand, reports the discovery of a still greater river, twenty miles wide in places, and navigable for an indefinite distance. That it must be of great magnitude is apparent from the masses of floating timber which he found in it some distance above its mouth, and part of France, yet it appears that ac- cording to the treaty of Vienna, made in 1835, Savoy was loft to the King of Sar- dinia, and a clause in the treaty provided for the neutrality of the district and au- pation of it in case of a European war by which a violation of its neutrality might be threatened. At the breaking out of the Franco-German war the Swiss government called the attentionof the belligerents to this clause af the Vienna treaty, and threatened to take possession of thedistrict, but nothing in the course of war warranted such a step. Switzerland now protests against the action of France in building military works in the neutral district, and in case the protest is not heeded will take an appeal to the nowers consenting to the treaty of Vienna. In which had been supposed to be drift from the Yukan, Alaska is a vast empire, the extent of which is not accurately deter- mined, but a land with two such rivers as described must be of imperial extent and of unknown value. It would pay the Government to fit out an exploring expe- dition to this comparatively terra incog- nita, JUDGE POST'S STANDARD. Judge Post, who was District Judge during the: whole time that Hon. M. Reese was District Attorney of the Fourth judicial district, and would have better opportunity for judging of the Intter's legal ability than any other liv- ing man, was ene of the first to mention the name of Mr. Reese for Supreme Judgo. and was his active supporter from the first. Any one who knows Judge Post, knows that ho would never sup- port any man for so high an office as Judge of the Supreme Court, unless ho felt that he would honor the position. The Zagle is willing to take so high an authority in the matter in prefsvence to the Omaha Herald or Bex ~ He certain- 1y would have as much interest keeping up the present high standard of the Su- preme Court of Nebraska, und be much more capable of juding as to legal ability. —Nebraska Eagle, Judge Post may have a high standard in selecting candidates, but ho certainly has given us no proof of it heretofore. In 1878 Judge Post took & high standard in casting the votes of York county for Blanchard who was put in the field 48 a stool-pigeon by the Union Pacific to keep away anti-monopoly Republican votes from Orounse until Valen- tice could work up & nomination, If memory serves us right, Mr. Rees was in the same boat. Judgo Post’s high standard of public men was shown in the same convention when he nominated Carnes for Lieutenant Governor, and extolled him as the pink of honor and pattern of honesty, whose record was as spotless as the virtue: of Ceasar’s wife. Carnes had already made a record in the State Sonate as a railroad capper and jobber, but Judge Post stood up in that convention _and asked that he be nominated by asclamation, Tater on Jubge Post and Mr. Reese took an active intercstin that Madagascar. Gallic gall seems to be greater just at present than French resources. A CHANGE NEEDLD, A change is needed in the county clerk’s offize of Douglas county which will put a competent official in the shoes now worn by Mr. Baumer. Things have been running very loosely in tho office for two years past and there is general complaint amoug those who have occa- o | 8ion to do business there, that County Clerk Baumer has not proved himself to be the right man for the place. There are ugly rumors afloat, too, that Mr. Baumer has worked the position for all that it was worth without much regard to the law regulating the disposal of fees. Under our statutes, county clerks are allowed & fixed salary and a proper amount of assistance. A rigid account must be kept of all fees which the law requires to bo turned into the county treasury. Those who have been in a po- sition to know declare that Mr, Baumer has been to say the least very careless in accounting for his fees and that his busi- neas methods have been far from rigid. The amount allowed him for clerk hire and for making up the tax list has been unusually large whilo he has been enabled to make & neat profit by hiring cheap help and turning the balance into his pocket, % Several days agowo sent the following enquiry to County Treasurer Rush and received the accompanying reply: Oumana, Neb,, October 13, 1883, John Rush, Ksq., County Treasurer, Dean Sm: Will you kindly furnish me astatement of amount of fees turned into county treasury by the county clork during the past two years in accordance with section 42, chapter 28, Compiled Statutes of Nebruska. Yours Tenly, E. RosewATER, Omana, Neb., October 13, 1883, FEdward Rosewater, Esq. Dear Sms: Answering yours of tho present date, asking for the *‘amount of fees turned into county treasury by the county clerk during the last two years,” 1 would answer as follows: No moneys havo been turned into the county treasury from the county clerk’s office, as fees, during the period men- staunch monopolist, Albinus Nance, and started the Nance boom, With such facts fresh in their memory, what esti- mate can intelligent men place on the testimonial of ex-Judge Post? tioned above, as far as I have any know- ledgoof, Very Respectfully, &o Joux Rusi, County Treasurtr, Where has the money gone? 1Is it any wonder that Mr. Baumer is so auxious And now let us ask why did Collector | for a re-election, and that he confiden- Post take such an active interest in foist- ing Mr, Reese on the Bupreme bench? addition to all this France is at war with | T the lands of the aristocracy and that by the ballot we are powerless to remedy it on to protect ourselves. Since the bayonet is our only show and right roy- ally do we intend to use it when the good time comes for us to strike for our thorized the Swiss to take military ocou- |liberty. Tho class that the corporations | rate on the B. & M, and havo Sidnoy frcight and politicians buy at our elections will be foremost and worst when the revola- tion is begun and will be as a two-edged sword to the Cod Fish Aristocracy. Now when a Government becomes like ours the oppression of the poor and en forces only the laws for the pro- tection of the rich, to make them richer and us poorer, we have, according to the Declaration of Indepence, a right to suppress the same. and this wo intend to do. We intend to return the carcasses of those who have amassed fortunes and lived at our ex- pense all their useless lives to the earth as manure to pay the soil for the robbery that has been inflicted upon it. Of courso you will perceive by this time that am a revolutionist; well, I am, but I know whereof I speak, and 'that you and 1 will live to seo what happy period if we live our allotted time, when the Ameri- can, foreign or not, will acain be free. I attended the reunion at Leavenworth, Kansas, of tho old solaiers (having been a soldier myself), to see just what the G. A. R. meant and I saw it, and Ll tell it to you. for you are the laboring man's friend, and liberal in your views. Well, Isaw this. The boys were there in force—that is, those well-to-do and able to go, but the rank and file were not able to come, and did not come. The G. A. R. spent most of its time ex- tolling itself and pledging its support to the politicians and_aristocratic corpora- tions of this beantiful republic of ours, and to help ex-Girand Cemmander Paul Vandervoort, of your city, to get back into themail service again. Now what the (. A, R has against Nebraska that they want to inflict such a punishment on tho good people of that state for is beyond my comprehension. For if there even was an low down, contemptible railrond serf in existence Vandervoort is Miller, a Supreme court judge, your good state would not have been cursed with his presence as long as it was, You seo, Van married a niece of the road jur- ist and he said he did not care a damn for Van but Van's wife had to be kept and the Government had to keep her and it undoubtedly has. But in the good time coming, Judges wont run this world for railroad companies and other corporations that can buy them. But such as he, and in fact a majority of the Supreme Court, will bo used to enrich the soil that we hflmrin% men may live, But, Mr. Bee, fearing I have trespsased too much on your valuable space, I will close and if this aapears in Tie Bee,will come again, LocATED, o ——— STATE JOTTIN The State Synod of the Presbyterian church meot at York Tnursday, As high as $100 per ton is being paid for broom corn at Arapahoo. R. W, Hardman recently sold his Kearney County Guzetto for §1,800 Tho freight receipts at the Hastings office for September wero $10,000, The first quarterly conference of the M, E. Church met at Wyiore, Saturday, Heury Bullker is working ub a stock compa- ny to build & creamery in Falls City, A movement s on foot in Central City to build an opera house to cost $2,500, The Fremont & Blair railroad is laying steel rails botween Blair and Fremont, Fitzgerald, of Lincoln, has the contract to buiid the Salina brauch of the B, & M. Gust Johnson, & Phelps county farmer, lost his right arm in a broom corn scraper, Richrell is the name of the station on the U. I’ road, the first North from Beatrice, A herd of sheep numbering 17,000 passed through Pioty Hill, Polk county, going east. in the name of God and common sense |} that one and had it not been for Justice | g 000. The new town in Pl od h’ the Ib. & M. railr « county to be start. 1is to be called Holdrege, in honor of the superintendent of that line, M, w pastor of tho Bapt church , startod 1n with o dete mination to stay and investod $4,000 in a farm near town. The schoo s of Jackson, Dakota county, have been ¢ for n couple of weeks vont the spread of diphtheria, which has uts. Colony from Lincoln has lo- the South Loup, North of the \ y, and partly in Keith, South of the South Platte, a farmer living on Prairi rom Grand Island, narrow escaped having his theoat cut by his insa wife last Thursday. The Catholics of th Platte will give fair and bazar in _Keith opera house on Octo- ber 15th and continue tor one week; $150 in prizes will be voted, Rev. W. N. Little, of Indiana, of the Christian church, began a_series of revival mewtings _on Saturday night in the school house at North Bend, An accident at tho bridge at Blair Wednes- day by the breaking of the apparatus cailed the “travoler, ’ will delay the completion of the bridge several days. Ovor 3,000 bushels of corn was received at EIk Croek in ono day last woek, as high as thirty toams at one time_surrounding the ele- vator waiting their turn to unload. The ceremony of laying the corner stone of the new Episcopal church of Red Cloud took place Tuesday afternoon under the auspices of Charity lodge No. 53, A. F. & A. M. Tho Sioux City & Pacific now sends & land excursion west from Missouri Valley every Tuesday morning, The round trip fare to alentine is $15,80, and way points in propor- A petition from the voters of Vesta precinct, Johuson county, is to be_sent to the postmas ter goneral, asking that their mails be increas- od from tri-weekly to daily, the same to be carried by train, Articles of incorporation have been filed with the Secrotary of State for the Forty- Soven cattlo company, of Indianola, The cap- ital stock i4824,000, *J, H. Drinkwater, S, 2. Lyon and J. A Yale, are the incorporatory. Ground has been surveyed for two elevators at Hebron. One is to be built by Wetherald Brothers and one by Gregg & Keyser. It is said that Henry Burgess, of York, will also erect an elevator. A scheme is on foot at Sidney to get a low delivered at some of the stations south of Sid- ney, from which it can be hauled by wagon cheaper than tho Union Pacific now® delivers goods. Chriss Rahlmann is canvassing for a cream- ery on the strength of a proposition made by Poyecke Bros., of Omaha, They ask $1,000 bonus to erect one to take the milk of 800 cows.—{ Blair Republican. A business firm in Rising City paid £57.50 freight on a car of apsles from Forest City, Mo., to Omaha, and $88 from Omaha to Ris- ing City, the distance from place of shipment to Omaha heing greater than from Omaha to Rising City. A family of five Polanders were start- ing for their home near Platts Center, from Columbus, lst Saturday, when the wagon broke down, the horses ran away, and one of the party, a woman, was instanty killed. A dastardly act of vandalism was perpe- trated in Blair last week. A large number of fine young shade treos on Colfax street were out with a kife or bent snd broken down. Several parties are suspectod, and if the right one is caught the peopls will make it warm for him, An attempt was made to wreck No. 1, Wednesday night, at a bridge between Arapa* hoo and Oford. "A. tle, waa placed in an up- right position betweon the cross-ties on the brisgo, but was out in two by the cow-catcher of the locomotive, The uieces wero brought to town. —[McCook Tribune.; The little pill men of Lincoln were euchered last week by a sharper who solicited cards for insertion in the University catalogue, which had no existence except in the swindler's mind. Probably this is the same fellow who operated here for Boyd's Opera House pro- gramme, but was nipped too early in his gawe. The murderers of W. H. Armstrong, of York, were found guilty of “‘felonious shoot- i the Coroner’s Jury. On this verdi tho Gilnore beys were held under bond $25,000 each by Judge Giffin. The bonds were immediately raised,and the boys released from custody, pending the action of the Grand Jury at the November term of the Dis- ict Court, as Androws’ son John, who recently here from Canada, where he had been attouding school, became temporarily doranged e /= i sl AL T SEMDE by the county board of insanity at I City last week his mental trouble pi have been caused by over stud tuken to the asylum at Lincoln, Public Mirror, The Sidney Plaindealer has commenc bushwhacking war on he Clarke bri nopoly in the neighborhood. 1t is charged that Clarke gots a rebate on all goods ship e over tho U, P, Hexays toa freigter, *Buy your groceries here at the same | You pay in Sidney and you may pass over the bridge free.” In this manner, with his sp cial freight rate, ho actuully makes o larger profic than o man d“i::s business in town could muke on the same goods, John Neary,believing that the heroic action of Mrs, Mclver in rescuing Mr. Labb from the burning building at the Jate fire, was enti- tled to more substantial recognition than mere commendation, started out with a subscription list last Sajurday, and in o few hours cellected the substantial sum of §: which was pre- sented to her in behalf ot the donors as aslight token of their appreciation of her brave deed. ~[NorthPlatte Telegraph. Building association business was submitted to Judge Savidge last Saturday by stipulation. J. H, McConnell, president, ‘and Samuel Gozee, secretary, presonted the case for the Building association, and Anthony Ries for himself. McConnell and Goozee claim Ries has collected 81,500 for the Build ase sociation which hh has failed to account for, while Ries does not seem to know what he dves want to claim. According to stipulations in the case Judge Savidge is to render judg- wment in the case a:the coming term of the District Court [North Platte Telegraph. Last Thursday evening our town was thrown iuto quite » state of excitement. Three stran- ors cwine in on the railroad track, from the (va,,whu filled the descripti m of the burglars being tracked from McCook, The Sheriff and deputy, of lted Willow county, were in town in advance of these men, and tried to get their game corralled in the depot, but the strangers “'got onto the racket” and started on a run towards the mill, with the officers in hut pursuit. Twenty-one shots were fired at the [oaitives by the ofoses, bub none, 16 seeme, tially informs his friends that making money in the county clerk's office is *‘just What business has the Collector of In- | like finding it."” tornal revenue to use.the patronage and| Having compllimented Mr. Baumer by | week. influence at his disposal toward packing | electing him to a position which he is not and conventions for his politi- | competent to fill he ought now to be re- cal oronies? Has not this inlerference tired to his proper business. The One Boone couuty farmer threshed 210 bushels of wheat from seven and a half acres, Thomas Kerns, of Bedford, had three large stacks of barley burned by lightuing last Red Cloud s enjoying s buildi boom, wants streot lamps, “and elaims 2,000 inhabi tauts. W. W, Latta, of Tekama. has contracted of Federal officers in the choice of candi- | duties of the office of county clerk re- ;;;: ;:nnumnnl, costlug $490, for the grave of dates been one of the primary causes | quire the undivided attention of the in- of disaffectionand revolt within the party! | cumbent. ‘Why should Collector Post peramblate the whole State in setting up the pins for his |[T#% Bxs is 8 good enough Repub- | population and a for Bupreme Judge? | lican paper to wish the Republican party G, W, Warner, of Syracuse, sold over 1,000 bushels of apples from his orchard and has as many loft., Rulo, Richardson county, & town of 1,000 Taiiroad " divistan, wenls & BOWspaper. s not thls bossism in its most objec- |success in every campaign when a prin- PI,‘fful,:”au“ the Qethalle congreratin ah tionable form! Are Republicans bound | ciple is at stake whose support by Repub- | evening. 1o carry out the baxgains which high offi- | licans is in the intevests of honesty, pub- party leaders make to farther |lic morals and the public welfare. ot ends! D 1t is & goed enough iudependent paper The county seat election of Antelope eounty vesulted in the choice of Neligh by & hand- some majority, took effect. —[Iudianola Courier, e “Grunt it Out,” Tho above is an old saw as savage as it is souseless, You can't “grunt out” dyspepsia, wor liver compladut, nor nervousness b . They dow't remove o that vy The thordalve aking » § ves ng a fow of lood Bitters 18 better than “granting it out.” What we can cure let's not endure. ARMY ORDERS, Court Martial Enlisted Men., #ive o fasival st Wedaaedey | ) oon o) court mastial is appoinied (o and contents belonging to H. N, Sibly, (our! and Assignments of Cures Scrofula, Uslpelas, Pimples and Face Grubs, Blotches, Boils, Tumors, Tet- ter, Humors, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Sores, Mercurial Diseases, Female Weakness and Irregularities, Dizzine; Loss of Appetite, Juandice, Affections of the Liver, Indi- gestion, Biliousness, Dyspep- sia and General Debility. A course of Burdock Blood Bitters will satisfy the 1 that it 1 atest 1lood Puritier on o FOSTER, MILBURN & CO., Prop's, Buffa'o, N, vate George Roth, Company B, Ninth in- fantry, and such other prisoners as may be brought before it. Detail for the court: Captains Samuel Munson, Ninth infantry, Alfred Morton, Ninth infantry, William W. Rogers, Ninth infantry, and William C. Shannon, Assis- tant Surgeon; 1st Lieutenant William L. Carpenter, Ninth infantrv, 2d Lieuten- ants Charles P. Stivers, Ninth infantry, and Lieutenant James M. McCarty, Ninth infantry; 2d Lieutenant Christopher C. Miner, Ninth infantry, Judge Advocate. A general court martial is appointed to meet at Fort D. A. Russell, Wyo., on the 18th day of October, 1883, or as soon thereafter as practicable, for the trial of Private John White, company F, Ninth intantry, and such other prisoners as may be brought before it. Detailed for the court: Major William T. Gentry, Ninth infantry; Captains Gil- bert 8. Carpenter, Fourteenth infantry, and Alpheus H. Bowman, Ninth infan- try; First Lioutenants William E. Hof- man, Charles M. Rockefeller and First Lieutenant George Palmer, Ninth infan- try; Second Lieutenant Charles R. Noyes, Ninth_infantry; Lieutenant John Baxter, Jr., Ninth infantry, Judge Ad- vocate. The following named men enlisted at Fort Omaha, Nebraska, and D. A. Rus- sell, Wyoming, are assigned as follows: George J. Lenuox, to the Fourteenth Infantry. William Chastenier, to Company K, Fourteenth Infantry. HEADQUARTERS OF THE ARMY, ‘WasHINGTON, Sept. 14, 1883. Referring to the communication from Lieutenant-Colonel Charles G. Bartlett, First Infantry, commanding Fort Grant, A. T., asking a decision as to the uso of the designation ‘“Troop” and *‘Com- pany” in manwuyreing mixed organiza- tions—forwarded to this office by your endorsement of the 3d inst.; I have the honor, by direction of the General of the Army, to inform you that at battalion or company drills or dress parades, with a mixed command, or when either cavalry, artillery or infantry are drilling as in- fantry, the word ‘‘company” should be used; if drilling as cavalry, the word “‘troop” should be used, and if as artil- lery, “‘battery.” (Signed) R. C. Drue, Adjutant General, Leave of absence for one month, on surgeon’s certificate of disability, and with permission to apply foran extension of three months, is granted Chaplain George A. England. i On the Turt. Col. J. D. Ferguson, Secretary Mary- land Jockey Club: Glowing tributes paid to the efficacy of St. Jacobs Oil by prom- inent turfmen ——— DIED, TIMME iday, October 12, 1883, Mrs, Smel wme, wife of Geo. K. Timme, aged 45 years, Burial will take place at the residence of Geo. E. Timme, Tuesday, October 16, at 3 lock p. m. Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, WHOLESATII Dry Goods!] SAIM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, S7. LOUIS. MO| STEELFE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOIS. 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 T. SINEIOI.D, MANUFACTURER OF Glvanized lronComices, Window Caps,Finial, Bkylights &™ Thirteenth Street Neb Growers of Live Stock and Others. Our Cround Oil Cake. It is tho best and echeapest food for stock of a tock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall or, and be in good marketable condition in the Try it and judge for yourselves., its merita. od-e0d-me SPECIAL NOTICE TO WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO kind. One pound is equal to three pounds of corn d Wintat, intead of rinning down, will Incrtase i wolgh. Diiryumon; an woll a8 ‘oibors, who wee 1 can ooty C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! | AND DEALER IN Paints, 0ils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA. NBRASKA. PETERSON—October 14th, Julia Peterson, daughter of Jobanna and’ Rasmuss Peter: son, aged seven years, Funeral will take place October 16th, at 2 p m., from Jones and Soventh streets, Friends are invited. ST THE GEAT GERMAN REMEDY | FOR PAIN Retieves and cures RIBUMATIS A, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADACTE, TOOTHACHE, SORE THAOAT QUINSY, 8W v -GS, SPRAINN, Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, FROST D! . NCALDN, Aud all other hodlly aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Soldby all Druggistaand Dealers. Direciions i 11 Dunginges. Tha Charles A. Vogeler ( ¢ (Basevaors 10 A, VOURLER &1 Waltim e, eNRY COLLEG N arreRy . $30,000 for $2. Regular Monthly Drawing will take place in the Alasonic Hall, Masoudo. Tewple Bulld 2 ing, in Loulsville, Ky, Thursday, October 25th, 1883 A Lawful Lottery and Falr Drawings, chartered by the legialature of Ky, aid twice deciur ed logal by "the highest court in the State. Bond y County In the sum of §100,000 for the Prompt payment of all prizes sold. A REVOLUTION IN SINGLE NUMBER DRAWINGE 47 Every ticket holder hisown supervisor, can wll out the puniber on his ticket and see the correspond ing number on the tag placed in the wheel piveence. These drawingy will oocur on the last ursday of every month. Read the magnificent October Scheme. 3 ...55;51;;.-- i T A Half ts, $1. . o5 Tiokets, 8100, Rewit wone) meet at Fort Bridger, Wyo., on the 18th axproas day of October, 1883, or as soon there- Fire destroyed the oue-story frame building | 8fter s practicable, for the trial of Pri- | ERE, or Bank Draft n Letter, or send by DONT SEND BY REGISTEHED LETTER OK POST OFFICE ORDER, untll further notice. Op ders of §5 and upwand by express, can be sent ab o Addross all orders t0 J. J. DONGLAS, dsab-tu-th S iet Sw o SEND FOR WML T MAX MEYER & CO. LMPORTEKS OF HAVANA CIGARS!'v AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES: SMOKERS' ARTICLES j[ PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $9/ to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES. PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES. ] '] 1819 and 1320 Hamey Street and 408 8, 13th Streot, u trated Catalogue furnished freo upon applicatian MANUFACTURER OF OF STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS Larrianes, Brogies Road Wasons | AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. ~OMAYA, NEB O. M. LEIGHT N, Wholesale Druggists LEIGHTON & CLARKE, ! Paints, oo | OMAHA, (SUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & C0.) —DEALERS IN— Oils, Brushes, Class, H. T, CLARKE. v/ NEBRAS¥K* At Mannfacturers Prices. A, Hosue, . —_—— via| P LAINOS &£ ORG- AN On Long Time--Small Payments. 1609 DODGE YTHE

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