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SR 4 THE DATILY BEE-OMAHA, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1885. THE GwmAHA BEE. Onblished evers porning, except Bunday, The ®aly Monday mornin dai FRMA BT MATL ne Year, 41000 Thres Months, ...... 8400 Stx Monens. . 5.00| One Month. S100 TIR WREELY ARR, PUBLISIIED NVERY WRDNREDAY. TRRMAIPORTPAD. One Year. #2.00 [ Three Montha. @ix Monthe . 1.00 | One Month ... Amorican Nows Company, Sole] AgentaZ *re in the United States CORRRSPONDRNOR. 3 A Communieations relating to News and Editorial mattors should e addressed to the Epiton, or, Tis ™ All Businoss Lottors sddrossed 9 Drafts, Check: ahle to the order of the compat THE BEE BUBLISHING €0, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Eaitor. % to be made pay- out of Lewis and his bogus convention? A few vacancies are at our disposal. Terms, cash in advance; no options. Jasox Lewis & Co, Mn. Baomer will run independent and we hope that he will continue on the track just for the fun of it. Tr there were only a few more suckers n Omaha wanting an office, there would be suits enough to clothe those shyster workingmen for the next five years, Tug Citizens’ ticket has been with- drawn in New York. Republicans con- cede the State to the Democrats at the coming election by 25,000 majority. We are bound to have the coroner in this office. We will have several politi- cal stifls to bury on the seventh of No- vember and we want to expedite their funerals. New York spent 840,000 for opera on Monday and some of the snobocrats who scarcely know a symphony from a sardine occupied seats for which they paid as high as $20. W did not say that Professor Bruner is a politictan, but we might have said it. Ho is a candidate for something every year. The last time he was up for police judge. We might say in his case that at every election ‘‘the schoelmaster is abroad.” Tuerg is a good deal of mud slinging at Mr Heins about his final settlement as county treasurer. His assailants are forced to admit that Wm, F. Heins is an honest man and had no intention of de- frauding the county. He and his bonds- men have always stood ready to make good any deficiency that mag be shown, The difference in his accounts was a mere trifle and the commissioners after three months of patient and thorough investi- gation were unable to discover whether the couple of hundred dollars which was out ot balance was due to the county or to Mr. Heins. Wiien Mr. Heins turned over the books to John Rush he turned them over to the deputy ;who had kept them; and Mr. Rush 15 universally conceded to be acom- petent and honest man. Tur Republican is hols back its last bombshell and expbets to fire it among the workingmen of Omaha a day or two before election, This terrible missile is loaded with the Judge's charge 1o the Grand Jury during the so-called workingmen’s riots which were brought about by the principal backers and pa- trons of the Republican. 1f thero is any fuse in that bombshell it will explode somewhere near Mr. Sheriff Miller,whom the Republican thinks it is necessary for our people to re-elect. He is mainly re- aponsible for bringing the militia to Omaha to overawe workingmen. If Mil- ler had not signed the dispatch stating that he had exhausted his authority,Gov- ernor Nance could not have brought the militia to Omaha without violating the law, — Our city marshalmakes himself busiest about things that concern him the least. He has served notice upon business men to take down every sign that projects from a store front, This is simply petty persecution, which very properly our merchants are bound to resist, It is true there is a dead ordi- nance on the books that was placed there to prevent the obstruction of thorough- fares. It was mnot intended to apply to signs that donot obstruct the passage of teams and pedestrians Why don't our city marshal attend to his duty in another direction and enforce the ordinances upon the criminal classes? He knows that thugs and burglars and all kinds of outlaws are stalking about the streets which the public ought to take in hand, There is any amount of law-breaking going on right under his nose but he takes no notiee of it. —— Tar Lincoln laborers and mechanics ought to vote for Mr. Reese. The Lin- coln Journal is pledged to deliver 2,000 majority to Mr. Reese, as & compliment from Bill Btout. And Boss Stout, you know, is your valuable benefactor, . He employs about 225 convicts down at Lin- coln and takes the bread out of the mouth of laboringmen by labor with which they cannot compet.e Mr. Stout is very anxious to elect Reese and put him un- der obligations. He has business before the Supreme court every few months, “There may be a question about his con- # few months ago and asked for an injunction to prevent the Btate ofticers from giving kim the contract for com- Wit Mr. Tjams get his money’s worth | THE M'CRARY DECISION, The decision rendered at Des Moines on Wednesday by Judge McUrary in the onse of the State vs. the Illinois Central railroad company is important as once more affirming the necessity of Congres- sional regulation of inter-state commerce. Judge McCrary held that no State law the regulating charges of common car- | riers can apply to through shipments originating outside of the State boundar- would relate ies, because such a statute [t a subject which is national in its na | ture and whese control is especially given into the hands of Congress. The posi tion of Judg rory is sound on its face. The power of the State to curb the exactions of corporate and to prevent and monopolies punish discrimina- tions against citizens and places is unde- nied and ought to be called into exercise for the public benefit. But that power cannot pass beyond State lines without infringing on the rights of others. To assume it, would be to assume the right to discriminate against the commerce of other states for the benefit of the one where statutes regulating the railroads are in existence, Tn other words, if Wyoming and Towa possessed railrond laws and Nebraska none, legislation cutting down freight rates on through traflic passing through the territory and state named would cer- tainly result in the raising of rates on both through and local freights in Nebraska, whero no law was in operation. On this account Judge McCrary's decision is to ndvantage of the traflic within the states. But the chief valuo of the decision is in calling renewed attention to the necessity of a national law for tho regulation of in- stato commerce. The right and power of Congress to pass such a law is now gen- erally admitted whore ten years agoit was s generally donied. What s now needed in a thorough awakening of public interest to the paramount necessity for its pas- sage and operation. One by one the sates are falling into lino in adopt- ing what used to be called the granger idea of railway regulation. But such legislation at its best can only partially meet the evil. It leaves untouched the vast freightage which originates from points without the states and which is greater in bulk and valuo than the local shipments. This can never be affected by legislation until Congress takes the matter in hand and passes laws which will prevent discrimin- ation and extortion in through shipments as effectively as state laws now prevent them on traffic originating and ending within the state lines. No state laws can operate to relieve the Pacific coast from the extortions which have for years been practiced upon them in regard to overland business by the railroad cormor- ants and the Pacific mail steamship com- pany. Nostate laws can prevent through lines in combination with other roads from making tariffls which are dictated only by the necessities of stock jobbers, and from combining to prevent the law of competition from operating towards the relief of the people. Congress alone can give a romedy which will forbid the shameless watering of the stock of cor- porations with a view to concealing pro- fits and forcing additional tribute from the patrons of common carriers. The Reagan bill which has been before two Congresses had several objectional features and might be improved in remodelling, but any law based on experience and drawn with a proper regard to all inter- ests, could hardly fail of being an im- provement on the absence of all restric- tion on common carriers of interstate comimerce, STRENGTHEN GUR JUDICIARY. The nemination of Judge Savage by the Anti-Monopolists and the Democrats was & move in the direction of strength- ening our Supreme Bench and of lifting the Judicial ermine out of the mire of partisan politics, There is no honest Iawyer whose mind is not warped by party prejudices who is not ready to ad- mit that Judge Savage has been for years the ablest District Judge in the State. The records to which his enemies have appealed, show conclusively the satisfac- tion with which he has been regarded in the Third district from which fewer ap- peals in proportion to the business, have been taken than from any other district in the State, while the per centage of reversed cases has been smaller than those credited to any other Judge in Nebraska during the same period. ~ It was owing to a knowledge of his entire fitness for the position through his edu- cation, professional standing and fine record, that Judgo Savage se- cured the nomination to the Supreme bench from two political parties. He brings to his candidacy long years of professional and judicial experi- ence and an honorable record as a cul- tured gentleman and a ripe scholar, Mr, Reeso’s nomination by the Republicans is defensible only on the ground of his availability as a railroad candidate, He was the choice of the Union Pacific for weeks before the convention met and was pushed through by railroad influences in & convention presided over by Church Howe and engineered by the men who have made railroad republicanism a stench in the nostrils of all fair minded voters in this state. Mr, Reese's nomination assured one thing and ouly one thing to the republican leaders and that was the earnest and heartfelt approval and sup- port of the railroad managers. Judged by his merits Mr, Reese was palpably the weakest of all candidates before the con- vention, As a lawyer he had never risen abave mediogrity, as a man he is lacking in the culture and scholarship of Judge Bavage, while his entire professionsl ca- reer has been bounded by the jury box and bar as prosecuting attorney of the Fourth district., To say that Mr, Roese is unknown to the bar of the State outside of his own district and that he has never sat a single day on the bench is to give sufficient rea- sons why he should be overwhelmingly defeated when he presumes to pit him- self against such a man as Judge James w. vage. The Supreme bench would be materi- ally weakened by Mr. Reese's election. It will be none too strong without Judge Lake. mands that the best lawyer and judge ancy and no ivery interest in the State de- shall be elected to the va one who looks the field over can doubt | that aside from all partisan and personal is the man for projudices Judge Savage the plac COLBY'S CASE, Mr. Colby by this time probably wishes that he had declined to run for Judge of | the 1st District of Nebraska. The revolt against which among the Republicans of Gage and Paw- his nomination, began nee counties before the convention met, Wim in the field, has spread The ‘e county and one of which plac like wild fis ugh the district. leading paper the staunchestanc .. st ably edited Re- publican weekly journals in the Sta supporting with great vigor Hon. John Broady, and pouring hot shot and shell into Mr. Colby's camp. ~ Prominent Re- publicans who are in a position to know predict Broady's election by from 3,000 to 4,000 majority. Mr. Colby has a fragant record and one from which his neighbors do not pro- As a member of the Legislature grom Gage county, he was up to his eyes in every job and voted through thick and thin with Church Howe, and in the interets of the railroads. In Augus:, 1878, he was engaged ina swindle by which through the assistance of Mayor Hale he endeavored to becloud pone that he shall escape. the title of a large portion of the town site of Beatrice and to transfer several blocks to himself. The indignant citi- zens roso in arms and Mr. Colby and his fellow conspirators only escaped a coat of tar and feathers by promptly undoing their work and cancelling the ‘raudulent conveyances which they had prepared for the purpose of blackmailing the owners of town lots in Beatrice. The full proceedings of the citizens at the time are now republished by the Beatrice Frpress (Rep.) which in this manner gives its reasons for bolting Mr. Colby’s nomination and for supporting the ablest attorney in the district in the persoa of Hon. J. H. Broady. Tue arrival of Henry Irving and Miss Lllen Terry at New York and their early appearance before an American audience is awakening great interest in the east. Mr. Irving has for some years past oceu- pied a large share of the attention of the English people. He is without question the foremost actor of Englan@ and as such he will doubtless be received with the respect which the position he has carned for himself demands. What the American estimate of Mr. Irving will be time alone can tell. His dramatic meth- ods are said to be peculiar to himself and tinged with mannerisms. But he must be respected as a reformer who has done away with a good many of the old tradi- tions of bombast and fustian. Mr. Irv- ing must, however, bear in mind that there is a marked difference between an English and an American audience. Seasons of repetitien have made us ac- customed to the peculiar idiosyncracies of our own best actors such as Booth, Barrett and McCullough and whether our play-going people will accept the idiosyncracies of Trving at first is an after question. It must be said of the great English actor that he has educated the audienco of his countrymen to his own dramatic standard and his very individuality joined toa versatility which makes him equally ac- ceptable in tragedy or comedy has brought him both fame and fortune at home. It is perhaps fortunate that he opens his engagement in “The Bells,” a drama in which he cannot be compared to his own disadvantage with any of the idols of the American stage. It is possi- ble that further acquaintance with Henry Irving will tone down a dissent which could hardly fail to find voico were he to appear in famlet, The Merchant of Venice, or Romeo and Juliet. What- ever may or may not be his artistic tri- umphs, there can be no doubt of the financial success of his engagement. Curiosity to seo him is intense, and curi- osity is joined to a desire to study his art and to compare it with that which passes here as the highest class of acting. —_——— Mgz, Reese's record is the record of a consistent, conservative Anti-Monopoly Republican. In nominating him for Supreme Judge, the Republicans fulfilled & portion of their pledges to the Anti- Monopoly party,—Republican, Mr. Reese's record before he became prosecuting attorney of the Fourth Judicial district was that of a railroad attorney, He defended the railroads against the settlers in the Saunders county land cases and acted as Thurston’s political tool in the Union Pacific campaigns in that section, ‘The man does not live who ever heard of Mr. Reese in connection with Anti-Mo- nopoly until he was nominated by the railroad Republicans and pitted against an Anti-Monopoly candidate Now that Licutentant Schwatka has discovered an immense river in Alaska emptying into the Arctic Ocean and navigable for many miles, except for one or two rapids, it is te be hoped that this river will not be forgotten in the next River and Harbor bill. The obstructions should be removed at once. Gexeran Croox telegraphs to Wash- ington that the Apaches are coming in from Mexico, Tiffany and the gang of wlute robbers in Arizona whom General Crook deposed and who have since been devoting their energies to slandering him through the territorial press ean now pull in their horns, — During his remarkable carcer as a law- yer, Judge Savage has at different times been a candidate for district judge, regent, United States Senator, member of Congress, Supreme Judge, Consul, member of Legisjature.— Republican This is as malicious as it is false man dares to say that Judge Savage has > No| | ever asked for a nomination to any office. He was twice elected judge because an almost vnanimous bar and thousands of Republicans in the district demanded it | and enforced their demand at the polls, The efforts James W. Savage has made to avoid nominations are notor- ious, He positively refused the nomina- tion to Congress last fall when the chan- cesof success were strongly in his favor, The Republican is perfectly aware that he fought against the nomination for mayor until the last moment and oaly accepted it under the most urgent solici- tations of party friends and many of our men who are is most prominent business staunch Republicans. Tt that the chancellorship of the university with a salary nearly double that of & jus- tice of the the Supreme court has been repeatedly offe That Judge Savago has ever been a can- didate for the legislature or for a federal appointment is also false. But what is the use of answering wil- ful misrepresentation and malicious lies. Tho editorial crank of that paper is irre- sponsible and is governed by neithe no secret .d to and declined by him. ness or common decency in his cowardly assaults, Cartars HowoaTe, it is reported, is living under an assumed name in St. Louis. Speaking of Howgate, there is a large and eminently respectable number of people who are looking around fora congressman who kas the nerve to get up in his place next winter and call for a detailed statement of the circumstances attending Howgate's escape and the measures taken by the Department of Justice for his apprehensien. There are surface indications of a largeand robustly scented scandal beneath the surface of this mysterious Howgate affair. Tk proposition to sell the county court house and to build an addition to the county poor house ought not to carry. The poor farm must be removed further from the city. A farm surround- ed by residenses is too expensive a luxury for even Douglas county to indulge in, PERSONALITIES, Oscar Wilde had_his hair cut to make him look like a ¢ Roman Emperor. He looked like the devil betore. Gebhard while in Europe traveled under the nawe of Gibbs, but we do not know why un- less it was because it rhymed with “his Nibbs,” Paul Dana owns 800 blooded dogs. If Paul went to Siberia he could purchase 100 wives, mcurdinr to the present market value of that commodity. Sitting Bull, in a religious point of view, is not standing till. He expects to oceupy a pew in church before the next Indian summer’s breezes blow. Now that Mrs. Langtry has been insulted by a crowd of hoodlums in W all street, we suppose Great Britain will demand an apology trom this country. “A Man Wanted” was_tho title of a lecture in Providence the other night, Reports donot say whother the lecturer was Dr. Mary Walker or Phatbo Co The full name of a_young woman at West Fork, In., is Towa Dakota Minnesota Bennett. The truth leaked out when her young man applied for a marriags licenso, Victoria Woodhull writes that she anti ane» no difficulty in obtaining her divorc Probably not. 16 i3 understood that her hus- band is working like a beaver for her, Joaquin Miller's mother, who is sixty years old, recently married a Portland, Oregon, youth of the tender age of twenty-two, quin will be a kind father to his step-pare Frank Hatton undoubtedly holds four kings and an aco. Unloss some other gentleman around the board holds & gan or a bowie-knife thero is likely to be trouble at the next show- down, The New York Sun's picture of William S, Holman, resents that Indiana archive with a collur about eight months behind the times, This, wo believe 1s churacteristic of the man gonerally, Wilkie Collins wears striped and spotted clothes and Mr, Howells parts his hair in the middle. Literature is slowly but surely being dragged down to the level of commerce and statesmanship, Kd. Stokes is said to ba ono_of the best pa- trons of his bar, but a New York correspond- ont believes that he keops a private bottle, for it is intimated that the stuff sold over Stokes’ wahogany is rather more dangerous than Stokes' révolver, Meissonier's portrait of Mrs, Bonanza Mac- key reprosents a large-honed, large featured, ull{urly woman, with the hands of & plowman, iustead of a sylph-like woman flying through tho upper ether of a sunsot-anted cloud,or lan- guidly reclining in calla lily, 0'Donnell, the avenger, is to be put on trial abous the middie of November. 1t ia belioved that by tho time his Chicago and Kansas City lawyers get through with him he will face the allows with a resignation bordering upon the fortitude of tho old time martyre Goneral Sherman was terribly hard pushed when » young man and h hours " day earning o living me to go to strawberry festival ablos and mite societies, Rex when inclined to blame him for ne # chance to kiss pretty girls who foel flattered by the attentions of ‘a great general. e is u:nly trying to make up for lost time, that's all, A fow minutes after Mr. Joel Chandler Harrls had rogistered his name at a Boston hotel the other day he was slappe on the back by o stranger who exclaimed: “Why, hello, Harris, old man! How are you? When did you leavo Atlanta?” “Unclo Remus” looksd at him from head to foot, earefully, wnd then said: “My name isu't Harris, Charles Francis Adums;” and it was sur) ly the stranger dissp. peared. All of which shows that Boston sull b8 Ner bunko staersce, ad o that “Unale Remus” knows just how to fix 'em.—| Boston Gazette, — - A Postal Telegraph, San Francisco Call, 1t is now probablo that the next session of Congress will consider the subject of establishing a postal telegraph system. 1t has been -mu«sxthu Postmaster-General Gresham favors the proposition, and will recommend Congress to adopt it. There aretwo pnmumfi)y which the government may become possessed of lines and offices, that is to purchase property ulroud{ n existence or to ¢onstruct new lines, which will in that case be run in competition to lines now in existence. The New York " | poses of leather. and the corporation service which prevails in the United States. In 1869 the English government took possession of all the telegraph lines in the country at an appraised value. The number of miles of line purchased in 1869 was 5,601; niles in 1880, 23,156, There were 500,000 mesSages sent in 1869, and 547,137 in 1880. The increase in the plant has been paid for out of the earnings of the department, and £10,000,000 has been paid on account of interest on bonds issued by the government to purchase the plant, The rate established is one shilling, about 25 cents, for twenty words to any part of the kingdom. The Western Union Telegraph Company operated in 1866 with 37 s of line and 75,686 miles of wir following year it sewnt 5,870,288 n for which the receipts were £6 at an expense of & y, leaving a profit of £2,241,619. Compared to this the statement for 1882 is as follows: Number f miles of line, 131,032; miles of wire, 74,204; number of messages sent, ),000,000; receipts, §17,114, pXpen- ses, 89,006,005; protits, $7,118,070. The capital stock of the company increased from 385,700 in 1858 to 22,000,000 in 1866, of which £3,323,000 was issued in purchasing competing lines, while nearly £18,000,000 was issued as stock dividends. The Western Union has since absorbed the United States Company, for which purpose 87,116,300 in stock was issued, the American Telegraph Company, for which 811,833,100 of Western Union stock was issued, the Atlantic and Pacific with a nominal capital of 15,000,000, and the American Union with the same luati The competing companies © been purchased, 8o far as the public is informed, at a price from three to five times their cost, and this increased value is added to the capital stock on which dividends are declared. Out of gross earnings of 17,000,000 in 1882 dividends were upward of £7,000,000, or about ®rty per cent of the wholo. Large amounts are meantime devoted to the coustruction of new lines, which increase the value of the plant and the earning capacity of the corporation without other xpense to the stockholders than the limitation of dividends to forty per cent of earnings. By various changes, some of which have been mentioned, the capital stock of the Western Union has been increased to £80,000,000, on which sum six per cent dividends are annually paid. The New York Board of Trade thinks the telegraph business can be done more cheaply by the government. The argu- ments in favor of a postal telegraph under government control are many and conclu- sive. The exclusive right to conduct the mail service might, by the adoption of this mere expeditious modeof conveyance, be deprived of its original purpose if the government is limited to the means at its aisposal when the government was established. A telegraph message is, in fact, a letter sent under different condi- tions and by a different mode of convey- ance. The change in the modes of transmission counts for nothing. The government should at all times be in a position to perform the work the consti- tution devolves upon it in the bestmanner possible at the time. It is now said that the telegraph companies are willing to dispose of their lines at a fair price. Probably the government would be expected to pay more than the cost of constructing lines over the same routes, but a fair price, under all the circum- stances, could be arrived at, as in England, through appraisers. © Branding Cattl The Clarendon (Tex.) News gives the science of branding in the following ex- position: The object of branding is to produce another and different crop of lair where the irons touch, which may be clearly distinguished from the other hair about it. This is effectually done by burning the outer cuticle of the skin. To burn deep does not improve the brand in the least. The iron should be neated to a dark cherry red and quickly applied, when the burn is almost instantaneous, giving butjan instantaneous sting, when the pain coases, as hus been a thousand times proven by the actual cantery to the human subject. If a half heated iron is held to the skin a long time it cooks through the skin and makes an ugly sore, which subsequently gives the animal great pain. It is true that there is a good deal of this inhuman sort of branding done. 1t is inhuman and in jurious to the hide of the animal for pur- It is also true thata burn on the outer cuticle will ultimately show through the entire thickness of the skin in consequence of cicatrix on the surface, Leather is tougher, firmer, and more durable where brands have been ap- plied than when they have not. The only drawback is, that it will not finish smoothly over the brands. In other words, the more a side of leather has been properly branaed, the better it is for wear. —_— The Fugitives. NICKERSON AND HOWGATE, WasuiNaron, D, C, Oct. 19.—[Spec- ial.]—The fact that the War Department has had a detective in the same house with Maj, Nickerson in Canada for some months, while the statement has been of- ficially made at the department that noth- ing was known of Maj. Nickerson's whereabouts, has called attention to the case of Maj. Howgate, the absconding signal officer, and it is suggested that it is very possible that the authorities know the location of that officer. There have been some pretty well-authenticated re- ports that there were reasons why the re- turn of Capt. Howgate is not desirable. e s e THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN Relleves and cures RHEUMATIS W, Neuraigia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE SORE THROAY QUINSY, 5W BURNS, SCALDS, And all other hodily achies and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE 1d by all Druggistaun | n. Dirvetlons lo 11 s Tha Charles A. Vogeler (¢ Uameners (0 &, VUGELER 8 X ) Maltimorn. Hd €21k Cure without med- A POSITIVE:: st taber 16, 76, One box No. 1 will eure any case in four days or less. No. 2 will cure the moet ol case 10 watter of how long standing. Allan's Soluble Medicat.d Bougies No nauseous dosos of cubebs, copabla, or oil of san- dal wood, that are certain o' produce’ dyspepeia by deatroy i the coatingsof the stomach. Price #1,60. Board of Trade and Transportation has issued a pamph et in which a comparison is made between the national telegravh service, as performed in Great Britain, Sold by all « ruggists, or mailed oo receipt of prios. Far further ulars seod for ciroulsr. * 5 xanea, CURE, \BR8 iGatbsAMS ’ W HOLESA LK Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, | Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, - ST. LOUIS. MO STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., Wholesale Grocers AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT, SUGARS, CANNED G00T. ND ALL GROCEZS' SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & ‘RAND POWDER €O HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC GIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES ; SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 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. 0. M. LEIGHTON. ' H. T, CLARKE. LEIGHTON & CLARKE, (SUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS. & C0.) Wholesale Druggists —DEALERS IN— Paints, Oils, Brushes, Class, O A A By Sk T. SINEIOI.D, MANUFACTURER OF Balvanized honCornices, Window Caps,Final, Sicylights & Thirteenth Streot Houselzeepers =/OMAHA DRY HOP YEAST!"? - WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL, __:_| = |Manufactured by the Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Co, | = CORNER 15TH AND DAVENPORT STREETS, OMAHA, NEB. ‘GATE CITY PLANING MILLS! MANUFACT ERS OF Caroenters’ Mate ials. Sash, Doors, Blinds, Stairs, Stair Raili_nns., Balusters, Window & Door Frames, k¢! First-class acilities for the manufacture of all kinds of Mouldings. Planing and Match Oders trom the country will be promytly excuted. d iog & epeclalty! ress oommunications to A MOYER. ropr o Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMES, STEAM ~ PUMPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings ' Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail.” HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb, J. A, WAKEFIELD, SWIIOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lath, Shingles. Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LINE, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - A OMAHA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist ! AND DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA, NEBRASKA. 7 S