Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 20, 1883, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

w i | ) ) { | By THE GMANA BEE. Published evers worning, exospt Sunday, The enly Monday morning daily. ARvn RY MATL ..$10.00 1 Three Months, ¥.00 . 6,00 | One Month 1.00 ne Year.... Bix Monens. TR WRRKLY DEN, PURLISHRD RVARY WRDNRDAT, RIS PORTPAID, One Year...........82.00 | Threo Monthe.......§ 50 8ix Months. .. 1.00 | One Month .. ... 20 Amorican News Company, Sole_ Agents, Newsdoal- ors in the United States. CORRRSFONDRNCR. A Communications relating to News and Editorial mattors should bo addrossod 0 the EDITOR, or Tk B wosvess Lvrrea All Business Letters and Remittances should bo addreased t Brn smxe Comr ordors to be ipAnY. TiE BEE BUBLISHING O, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor. How does the Republican like Judge Savage's jndicial record? S m———— I7 is nearly time for President Arthur to issue his thanksgiving proclamation. The result in Ohio wili probably not be referred to. Eveny decent workingman in Omaha repudiates the bogus concern that was hatched out by Jason Lowis as a black- mailing machine. Mn. Iiams makes from seven to ten thousand a year and therefore can afford to be a protty liberal subscriber to the campaign fund of the shyster working- men, Omro will send a Dewocratic Senator as succcessor to Mr. Pendleton. Allen +. Thurman is the man whom the best men of all parties would be glad to see again at the national ¢ pital. INarATITUDE is the basest of sins. The readerless dishrag that was made the official organ of the city by the sandstone nine has gone back on one of its heaviest patrons and backers, Pat Murphy. Thirty dollars from Dan Miller did it. Me. Bavmen has soen the great jour- nalist formerly from St. Louis and lat- terly from the slums of Sioux City. The official organ has endorsed Bau uer; con- sideration, $25 down and the balunce ac- cording to benefits after election. It is said that the Northern Pacific Railroad company will build and runa line of lake steamers of heavy tonnage and great speed to carry its grain freights from Duluth to Buffalo, thus cheapening the eost of transportation to tidewater and dictating rates to rival roads. This idea has a feasible look. The Chinese have been so slow to adopt foreign customs that the change which they have made in the lust two or three years is startling, The most recent occurrence is the petition of a Chinese nobleman to establish a line of eight a- tive steamers between Tientsin and Shanghai. Ten years ago any Chinese dignitary would havo considered his rank degraded by'entering into any com- mercial speculation ‘of this kind, but time has worked wonders even in the land which used to be regarded as more unchanging than Egypt. Tae parliamentary bill recently passed authorizng the expending of $250,000 in the transferring of destituto Irish ten- ants to small farms, is 8o drawn that a company can be formed with a portion of this money as capital. The conditions are that security shall bg given for the proper use of the government subsidy, and that the amount shall not be in ex- coss of other moneys of the company used for the same purpose. The com- pany now forming under this bill has se- cured a 85,000 subscription from the bishop of Raphoe, and $10,000 from Mr. Parnell. The plan is to buy an es- tate andlands never subdued, cutting the territory into small farms, thus putting the scheme for a peasant proprietorship in Ireland to a practical test Tug law requires the County Clerk to make out the tax list. It is a part of his regular duty for which he is allowed $2500 a year in fees As a matter of fact the tax lists have been made out entirely by Mr. Baumer's deputies and clerks. Mr. Baumer hasn't done an hour's work on either of them. The county has paid for these clerks and deputies, but Mr, Baumer pocketed $1275 for *‘making out the tax lists,” Ten years ago, when the law did not limit the income of the clerk, the county employad Truman‘Buck to make out the tax list, which was not only for the year 1883, but for the delinguent taxes for all the preceeding years Mr. Buck was allowed 8400 for his work, and then he earned at the rate of $100 & month, No wonder John Baumer says its “just like finding it;" but will the taxpayers endorse such robbery, Tae Supreme Courtof the United States has again deluved the decision of the great California tax case, involving the question whether a corporation is a per- son in the sense that its property may not be taxed by a Stato at higher rates than the property of other individual tax-payers. Tho railroad corporations in Qalifornia claim that they are discrim- inated against by the tax laws of that State, in violation of the provisions of the Fourteanth amendmeut to the con- stitution of the United States, This was the most important matter in litigation ‘before the SBupreme Court, affécting the legislation of nearlyevery State in the Uuaion. The delay of the Court in com- ing to an agreement no doubt arises from conflicting views. The failure to decide at this time, on the plea that other cases of like nature are to be heard, is tanta- mount to ordering o reheariug of the argument, A CONVICTID LIAR. The false and unjust attacks made | by the dmaha Republioan upon the char- | acter and standing of Judgo Savage eall | for no reply in this city. Itis to the | ’hiuhv-t credit of Col. Savage that he is| most respected as a man and admired asa | In the | lawyer whoro he is best known | community whore he has lived for nearly been | honored by the highest mark of esteem | | exghtoen years and where he has which citizens can bestow upon & profes- wal man, the slurs and slanders of ma ctisanship will fall short of thoir | licious mar do no damags. No judge ever voluntarily lcft the bench with more friends and fewer enomies or resigned a trust which he had long and faithfully kept, amid more heartfelt expressions of regret from both the bar and the people. Were the judicial campnign confined to the Third district of Nebraska, silence would be the most fitting answer to these assaults. But in other sections of the State silence may be considered assent, and sinco the Zcpub lican has challenged the judicial record of Juige Savago and spread its slanders broadcast through every exchange in Nebraska which takes its cue from that railroad organ, it shall be accommodated. It is charged that Judyge Savage's record as a judge shows that the number of his decisions reversed by the Supreme Court has been greator than those of any other district judge. *The person,” says the Republican, ‘‘who will take pains to go through the thirteen volumes of Nebraska reports will find that nearly every other one of Mr. Savage's decisions has been reversed in the Supreme court. That while the num- ber of cases actually taken to the Supreme court from Mr. Savago's district has been less than from the district of Judgo Pound, Judge Weaver or Judge Post, the per centage of reversals has been greater.” The answer to this may be made short and decisive. The charge is grossly false and the author stands convicted as a liar by the reports thomselves. But, admit- ting that it were true, it might well be answo:ed that with morg important cases tried in tho district over which Jamos W. Savage was judgoe than in any other dis trict in the State, the fact that so few ap- peals were taken is the strongest of points in the judge's favor. Fow judges can stand a test of their abilities which meas- ures their learning by the number of re- versed or aflirmed cases. It is well known to every lawyor thit there are frequent cases in which the Supreme court reverses itself. Still more numer ous are the cases where the court is divided, in which case a reversal merely shows that two judges have thought one way and two another. A careful oxamination of the Supremo Court reports from tho Gth to the 13th volume, which comprise Judge Savage's tarm upon the bench, shows that so far from his por contage of reversals being groator than those of other judger, his judicial record was the best or at least one of thoe best in the reports. The first cases are- to be found in the sixth volume of Ne' raska reports. In this velume it appears that Judge Post had cases nflirmed, 7; roversed 4. Judge Weaver had cases afirmed, 6; reversed 9 Judge Pound had cases affirmed, 4; reversed 11, Judge Gaslin had cases affirmed, 3; roversed b. Judgo Savage had cases affirmed, 7; reversed 3, In this volume Judgo Sivago appoars 1o have the best Tocord of aay of the Judges named. In the seventh volume the following result appears: Judge Post had cases aflirmed 3, re- versed 8, Judge Weaver had cases affirmed 6, reversed 4. Judge Pound had cases aflirmed 8, re- versed 7. Judge Gaslin had cases aflirmed 1, re- versed 3. dgo Savage had cases aflirmed 7, re- versed 2, In the eighth volume the names of the Judges ave but rarely given. From the different districts, f‘l’nwe\'er, it appears that the number of aflirmances and re. versals are as follows: First, affirmed 6, reversed 2, Second, afirmed 14, reversed 17. Third, affirmed 10, reversed 6. Fourth, atirmed 9, reversed 7, Fifth, aflirmed 1, reversed b. Sixth, aftirmed 4, roversed 2, In the ninth volume the names of the judges again appesr to be given and from th o find that— Judge Post had aflirmances 10, rever- sals 14, Judge Weaver had affirmances 11, re- versals 8, Judge Pound had aflirmances 15, re- versuls 10 Judge Gaslin had aflirmances 8, rever- sals G, {lu‘tllga Barnes had affirmances 1, rever- s 0, l.)u‘vlge Savage had afirmances 3, rever- ala ‘This is the only volume in which the affirmances of Judge Savage do not far out-number the reversals, In the tenth volume we have the fol- lowing result: , Judge Post, afirmances 15, reversals 13, Judee Weaver, affirmances 9, rever- sals 10, Judge Pound, afirmances 11, rever- sals 13 Judge Gaslin, affirmances 1, reversals 2, u‘.luldluu Barnes, aftirmances 3, rever- s 11, Judge Pound, affirmancos 14, rever- sals 11, Judge sals 8, Judge sals 3, Judgo sals 4, Gaslin, affirmances 4, rever- Darnes, afirmances 4, rever- Savage, affirmances 12, rever- Thisis the record, [t is one to which avago and his friends may well In the last r of his Judye point with pride. incumbency of office the report shows that he atood head and shoulders above ory other District Judge with three cases aflirmed to every one reversed—a better showing than Judges of inferior courts average anywhere in the world. And these decisions too it is well known were made in the midst of overwhelming business, in a court which required then, as the result has shown, two judges to do the work which devo ved upon James W. Savage. The Republican stands as a self-con- victed liar. It has appealed to the re- becauso it knew that to the great majority of readers they soaled books. And fair-minded and reputable attorneys throughout the State will indignantly re. pudiate a candidate whose supporters cords were and advocates are waging o campaign with falsehood, malice and envy as their principal weapons in their endeavor to besmirch the honorable and hard earned record of a good citizen, an able lawyer and a competentand honest judge. OTHER LANDS THAN OURS. The political event of the greatest sig- nificance abroad during the week was the resignation of the Spanish ministry. In Franco the Alphonso affair caused the re- tiremont of ono minister, but in Spain the whole cabinet retired because the Another terrible earthquake is reported from Asia Minor with 20,000 people homeless. While 8ir John A, MacDonald is not personally compromised by the acts of his political friends, the fact that he was | this weck unseated for the county of | Lenox on account of bribery at the last | clection cannot fail to have eruptive | effect upon Canadian politics. If the opposition papers can be trusted, a deal | of money is being spent to keep the con- | servati in power, and the evidences of | a reaction are not wanting. The conser- | vative defeat in Algoma, a fortnightsince, has been taken ve by the gov- | ernment papers, and they huve a pleasant little way of calling their liberal oppo- nents pet names like “hirelings,” *‘bull | pups,” “hoodlums” and o on. 1f there | are siuch vast amounts of corruption over | the border, it is a fortunate thing that the fight is transferred to the courts, Sir John will still be in_ Parliament, as he | was elected also from Carlton, Tur United States has absorbed one- tenth of t opulation of Norway, and | yot in the face of this cause of depletion, | Norway increases her inhabitants more | rapidly than any other country. Dr. Breck, formerly a Norwegian official of State, recently read a paper before the Statistical society of Paris on the m ment of populution in Scandinayi which was quite curious and_instructive. The number of births in Norway and Sweden, in proportion to the population, is 315 per cent, while in Franceit is only 26.6 per cent, and while in Norway there are Y63 logitimate births to every 1,000 women, France ca only show 174, On the other hand in Norway there are 31 illegitimate children to every 1,000 wo- men, while France can show The averago rates of mortality during a de- cennial period are thus given: Norway 17.5 per cent of the lm«lulminu, Sweden 19.4, Denmark 19, France 22.5, Belffin 28.7, Prussia 20,1, g There are schools of forestry in all European countries except IKngland. Royalists insisted that the French gov- ernment should be humiliated by making a further official publication of the apol- ogy already made to King Alphonso, M. Forry has advised the ¥rench people that the cabinet attach no. vary serious importance to the Paris incident. Spain too is quieting down. The general foel- ing on the continent is that Alphonso's political fortuno has been made by the insults offered him by the Parisian mob, The attention of Europe has been fast- ened on Alphonso, the loyalty of the Spanish people thoroughly aroused, and Spain has been clevated into a political prominence which nothing else could have accomplished. From another point of view the affair has been fortunate. The new Spanish cabinet is decidedly liberal in tone, and is undoubtedly in- tended as a step toward the conoiliation of thoe liberal element among the Spanish political leaders. There are even rumors that the Cortes will be dissolved, and that an appeal to the country will be taken in order to base the government on the broad foundation of popular opin- ion. The Liberal leaders in England held a largely attended meeting at Leeds on Wednesday, which was presided over by Joan Bright, Five hundred liberal asso- cintions were gepresented and the tone of the gathering was decidedly Radical. Resolutions were adopted that the gov- ernmont should bring in & measure at the next session extending the elective fran- chise in the counties and in faver of wo- man's suffrage. The Radicils led by Chamberlain and John Morley will form the preponderating element in the Lib- eral party at the next session. If Mr. Healey's overture on behalf of the Irish Nationalists is accepted and a union be- tween theso two wings is consummated, sufficient force can be mustered to push through any legislation deemed advisable as party measures, The only danger is in a disruption of Liberalism which will drive tho Whigs over to the Conservative rauks, This has thus far been prevented only by the consumate leadership of Mr. Gladstone. In London, O'Donnell's arraignment has been followed by his prompt indictment for the murder of James Carey, the in- former, Gen. Reger Pryor, the prison- or's American counsel, has arvived and it is largely due to his exertions that the trial has been postponed until Novemher 21, in order to permnt the arrival of wit- nesses from South Africa to testi'y on bohalf of the accused. The line ot ue- fense will be that of “self defense,” and 0'Donnell's counsel assert that they have o strong case. Sullivan, Pryor aud Mac- Inery, an [rish barrister, will oppose the crown counsel in what promises to be a stato trial of extraordinary interest. Some uneasinessseems tohavebeen pro- duced in Gerwany by the refusal of the Czar to meet the Emperor William at Kiel. The explanation is easy and re- flects credit upon the political sagacity of the Russian ruler. The Czar had been for two months the guest of the King of Denmark, Kielbeing in a a former ter- ritory of Denmark the Czar, studying the sensibilities of his host, refused to mortify Denmark by holding a conference replote with 80 much politicalsivnificance within her former boiders. Den uark’s wellknown hostility to Germany, coupled with the Czar's ru]unged stay and Mr. Gladstone's e iarly opportune visit, ure causing afeeling of distrust in Gerwan politica os against Russia Judge Savage, aftirmances 11, rever- sals 7, Judge Savage's percentage of aftirm. ances in this volume is far greater than that of any other Judge, In the twelfth volume— Judge Post, affirmances 14, rever- sala 17 dge Weaver, affirmances sals 10, Judge Pound, aflirmances sals 11, Judge Gaslin, affirmances 4, sals 0, Judge Barnes, affirmances sals 8, Judge Savage, afirmances sals 7. In the thirteenth volume— Judge Post, aflirmances 15, rever- sals 13, Judge Weaver, aflirmances 20, rever- sals 19, 19, rever- 15, rever- rever. 2, rever- 7, rever- and Englaud whidh is prohably the key to Prince Bismarck’s recent Burpean policy of estranging the Latin nations from each other and gathering such of them under the wing of the triple al- liance as are willing to be guided by his orunsels, and thus more securely ecstab- lish the permanence of their dynasties. Germany recognizes the fact that Rus- sia, France, Denmark, and positively England, may come together in common cause and thwart her present ambitions, hence her efforts to spread discord and alienate such alliances as may threaten the force of the combiuation she has her- self suoceeded in amalgamating. Among other itews of interest during the week was an uprising of armed peas- ants in Portugal which was quelled by the troops. The Nih trials in St Potershurg have continued with the in- Austria heads the list with nine schools, the principal one of which, the Imperial High Schuol of Agriculture and Forestry, at Vienna, has six professors and 329 students. = Saxony has an excellent school at Tharaud; Wurtemberg, Baden, Bavaria, Hesse-Darmstadt and Saxe-Wei- mar have each a school, as well parro ized; Switzerland has one, and France lias two, besides several agricultural and agronomic industrial schools, in which forestry is taught. Russia has four schools, and Denmark, Italy, Spain and Sweden have one each. In the United Statos the only school is at Lansing, Mich. Queen Victoriahas discovered that one of Ler royal palaces has been turned into a gambling-house by its occupants, and that enormous sums have been lost and won there, the ardent gamesters respect- g neither the Sabbath nor other Holy duys. Horrified by this discovery, the Queen, according to the eable dispatch, has issued a private memorandum direct- ing the gamblers to correct and reform their manners. But what seems most strange in all this is that the thrifty and shrewd sovereign did not demand a per- centage on the winnings for the use of her palace. While Mexico has entered upon a car- eer of renewcd prosperity, the samo can- not be said of South America, where the spirit of revolt still has an existence, and where some upstart military leader im- agines that with a handful of men he can There is a little town in work miracles. where an enterprising individual named Gen. Didacio imagined he could upset the government with a force of dixteen men. He undertook the job but it proved a failure, and the telegraph in- forms us of Gen. Didacic being killed, and that his body was te be buried with yreat pomp at Panama. Since attempt- ed revolutions in Spanish countries with ill-assorted troops, limited in number, are found to he profitless enterprises, the prospect is that in a few years more such things will no more be heard of. The Swiss confederation does not be- lieve in a sranding army, but regards it as bettor public policy to devote its sur- plus coin to the improvement of educa- tion. In no country on the continent is 80 much attention given to the education of the massos. Primary education is compulsory and gratuitous, while in the higher grades the tuition is merely nomi- nal, and the schools are all under the State management. It may he that this is the royal rond to ruin and anarchy. but Switzerland has not found it a bad policy. The Australians appear to be growin restive under the rule of England, cently the commander of the British man-of-war Nelson has felt called upon to compel several Australian captains to take down the flag which had been adopted hy the colony and hoist in its stead the British ensign His ground is the similarity between the colonial tau and the ensign used by English men-of- war; butit is evident that the Australians do not regard this explanation as very vlausible. The query that arises is: How much longer can England control colonies which derive few or no advan- tages from their mother country! A life sizo statue of John Brown is to bo placed in position at Balmoral, a monument will b erected in the Prince Hoe Your Row Young man. In planting yout crops do nob depend on relations of friends for help as they will surcly | want & hand In at harvest time, aud you will be likely to get little or no cradit in th eventol & biz yleld. How your own row, and hos huora, There may rot be much money in usiness, but you are certain 40 win a fine nputation 5r industry and oarnest effort Above all, keep well, young mn. It you are whi with dyspeps o with b liousness, or | dublitated by & weak | i 1a won't want you, | vociety will shun you, «iness men will over. Took you, deend upon it The mss of that most excellent medicive, Burdeck Blood Birters, will | asure you comfort, stre and capacity for Iabor. §urdock Blood Bitters purify the circula. tion, tone the stomach, and bu 11 up the entire organism They are not aivertised to cure every- thing; they have theic specialtis 110 & good law- yer, doctor, or mechanic, and do thefe work well Some of the icstimonials recelved by us would convince tus most skoptical of their efficlency and usofulness, Here is one: J. M. Might, Syracuse, N Y, “When I first conmenced using Burdock Blood Bitters [ was troubled wi h fluttering anc pald'ation of the heart. 1 flt weak and lan: guid, with & numbness of the limbs; since using, my beart has not troubled me and the numbing sen- sation s all gune.” B — wil e prison for insnlting a policeman, the ex- cuse for this high handed act being that the roll of accused persons was so beavy that there was no time to send the case before a magistrate. Soldiers without discipline are but a 12)b, and from several items in Chinese papers, the army of China must be of that description. It was recently stated in Shanghai that 250 soldiers near that city had deserted. n officer had a dis. pute with his superior and becoming en- raged he went and told the men, who agreed to join him. They all left the camp in a body, and at last accounts had turned their attention to highway rob- bery. Another instanco is where a Colonel, stopping in a small interior town, attempted to commit a criminal as- sault upon a girl. He drove off her parents and relatives and it was with much difficulty the magistrate was pre- vailed upon to arrest the gallant Colouel and inflict uvon him the severs penalty of a fine of §5. A Puzzled Diver, Bregman, the Cleveland diver, tells the following story: *‘Once 1 went up to Twin Lakes, near Gilead, Mich , to dive for the body of a man who had gone in swimming with two companions. I found an immense concourse of people on the shore. The grief-stricken mother had erected astand, and was doing animmense business in sandwiches and circus lemo- nade. A collection of 8400 for her an1 her son’s children had been taken up, aud part of it had been set apart to pay me and foot the burial expenses. I searched several hours, but found no body. Months afterward I met a man from that region, and he said: *‘Say. mister, do you know why you couldu’t find that budy? I gave it up. ‘Why, the fellow was up in the pineries of Mich- igan, When he suuk he swam to the other shore, where he had another suit of clothes hid. He wanted to get away irom his wife, and that's the way he did it. e —— A Pertinent Question, Dion Boucicault says that Mrs. Langtry asked him: “No,” he replied, “‘you have a more beautiful bust and wast, but that is all.” This may be official so faras Mrs Lang- try is concerned, but how about that Greenland’s icy mountain yeiept Mary Auderson? SIACeES BE’;E’MAN REME O FPaXid. meumt\tism,cl‘(c’:xf’;figin, Sciatica, Lumbago. Backache. Headache, Toothache, i THE LIVEX FOR RVERY ANG THAT HE\D. REGULATF, TONE AND HAR- Ik ACITON OF THESE ALLIE)) Ol WITH TARRANT'S TZER PERIENT, AND Y U CUKRETHECY m-x,\Fxfl AL LS BUULCE SOLD BY ALL DRUGUISTS, Consort’s mausoleum at Fre his memory will be kept gre lot in the nave of St. George’s chapel. It only remains for the flunkeys who are desirous of gratifying the whim of a sovercign who seems to have parted with common sense to propose that the de- ceased body servant's remains should be allowed to repose in Westminster Abbey. There are about 200,000 counterfeit sovereigns in circulation in Great Britain, They are so cleverly made that even .u expert finds it difficult te distinguish them from the genuine coin. The imaze and superscription are perfect and even the milling regular. The nitric acid test is no longer applicable to these counter feita, for the electric battery enables the counterfeiter to deposit so thick a coating of gold on the coin as to defy the action of chemicals. This dangerous counter- feit contains §1.87 worth of bullion, leav- ing $12 to pay for workmanship and serve as profit, The Paris police are not giving satis- faction, Its administration vacillates between dangerous laxity and extreme soverity. Betore the advent of the pres- ent government the co int was gen- oral that crime was on the increase in Puris, and that in some quariers the in. habitants themselves were obliged to take upon themselvesthe duties of police for the protection of life and property. It 8 nowcontended by the Paris press th t the police are too severe. One of the latest despotic acts ~as the arrest of evitable result of conviction and Siberia. wwoman, who was detained five days in CREAT ENCLISH REMEDY. oy, LUres rtticiais Debiliy GRNITAL LOSS A cure ywaranteed ottle, four 8. By ex ross. Sold by LISH MED tors, 718 Olive Street, St Sir Astley Cooper's Vital Restorative yoars. Every customer speaks highly of it nhonitatinglyondorse it aba remedy of true merit “1C, ¥, GoobMa, Druggist Vis-ude-codly ) maba Feb 1 1888 WHOLBSA L Dry Goods! SAML C. DAVIS & CO, _Mfi'lslungfon Avenue and Eifth Street, - - - ST. LOUIS. MO STEELE, JOHNSON & CO0,, Wholesale Grocers ! | FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOO .. WD ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES ! A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO AND JOBBERS IN P.BOYER & CO., Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y SAFES, VAULTY, LOCKS, &6, ~ 1020 Farnam Stroet. Omaha. DERALERS IN FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF C. M. LEIGHTON. Wholesale Drugpists! Paints, Oils, (SUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS. & €0.) —DEALERS IN— H. T. CLARKE. LEIGHTON & CLARKE, Brushes, Class, NEBRASKA. T. SIINEXOI ., CapsFinials Galvanized MANUFACTURER OF lronComices, Window Skylights & Thizteenth Stroet N MAX MEYER & GO CIGARS, TOBACGOS, PIPESS SMOKERS' ARTICLES CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES. SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES. IMPORTERS OF AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING to $120 per 1000. Brigands. 4 HAVANA CIGARS! 4 /"™ aITidn 1810 and 1320 Hamey Stroet and 408 8. 13th Streot, u trated Catalogue MANUFACTURER OF OF STRICTLY VIRST-CLASS Bgaes AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. furnished free upon spplicatian o e T e Waaon —OMAYA, NEB A.E. DAIILRY, Bugoies Carriages and Spring Wagons My, Kepository ls coustantly tilied with a seloct Jstock. Best Workmanatip guarsoteed. Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmah, MANUFACTURER OF FINE At Manufacturers Prices. A Hosve, Jr: 0n Long Time--Small Payments. 1609 D 1uGE STHE

Other pages from this issue: