Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 31, 1883, Page 4

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i i il | | , & I fi.? Jl ~ments entitle the holders to land upon THE DAILY BEE:-OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1883, THE JUSTIOES. Last winter in response to a strong de- mand from our business men, the Legis- Inture passed a bill, introduced by the Douglas county delegation, which cut down by a half the number of Justices of the Peace in cities of the first clasy. Tho necessity for this mensure was espe- cially folt in Omaha, whero the dirty work of the small bore justices was so notorious that both clients and attorneys were constantly bringing their complaints against them to the newspapers. The bill decreasing the number of Jus- tices passed the Legislature in the closing days of the session, but was killed through the refusal of Governor Dawes to affix his signature to the measuro, Failing to be- come a law, the old system is still in force, and the people of Omaha and Douglan county will be called upon next Tuesday to elect a now batch of justices. Omaha has now twelve justicos of the THE GMAHYA BEE. ublished evers worning, except Sunday. The nly Monday morning daily. N Y MATL ne Year.. 10.00 | Three Months 94,00 Six Monens . 5.00 | One Month . Lo IR WRRKLY ARR, FUBLISIIND RYRRY WADNRSDAY. TRRNA POMTPAID, One Yoar ... £2.00 | Threo Months.......8 50 ®ix Months. ........ 1.00 | One Month .. ...... % Amerioan News Company, Solo Agents. Newsdenl- @re in the United States. CORRREFONDRNCE. * A Commualoations relating to News and Editorial tters should bo addressed to the Eoiton o7 Tie WUNINRSS LRTTERS. ) ANl Business Tatters and Ramittances should be addrossod to Tik BRR PURLISHING COMPAXY, OMAWA. Dratts, Cheoks and Postoifice ordors to be made pay- #bie to the ordor of the company HE BER BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS. B. ROSEWATER, Editor. — “Repusrioass for office. Hurrah for Wakeley.—[Omaha Republican, e “Grr while you're gitting,” is Mr. Tjam's motto, Feos of $8,000 a year are worth fighting for, peace, or two in each ward. There is not enough legitimate business to support half the number. The consequence in that business which is 1t legitimate is hunted up to roll up the fees by which our justices mako their living. Severaf of thase justice peddlers are notoriously and dishonest, Their —_— Tuev eau . f lLe Republican )as won Tudge Savazs scores i iriend, and hanleds of votes in Douglas county St incompetent : = opinion s alwaga given againat tho Taw Republican wants to know why | ide which is ablo to pay tho costs. Mr. Rosowater omitted from his evening odition of the 29th an editorial entitled *‘Infamous.” Answer—Because it had ap- peared in the evening edition of the 27th. Next. Tae cable announces that tho spoons of the Prince of Bulgarin have been stolen, Ben Butler has been busy all the fall in Massachusetts, and the South- ern Bourbons can’t accuse him of know- ing anything about it. Costs are what these legal sharks are aftor, and justico is a secondary consid- oration, The consequence is that litiga- tion is encouraged rather than discour aged, and those who are too poor to trans- fer their cases are made the victims of their poverty. Itisa standing scandal that in many of our justice courts no re- spectanle attorney can win his case against some pettifogger, who “*has the ear of the court,” and who throws all Lis cases into that particular judicial grist mill in re- turn for the judge's favor. Tho remedy coffoe and cakes on election day, |for this shameiul condition of affairs, many of the cakes being baked by somin- (in tho opinion of the best ary girls, This explains tho Ropublican |lawyers, is to cut down the defeat One half the Republican voters |number of justice’s courts. The posi- went home with the dyspepsia. tions will then be worth enough to com- mand respectable and honest candidates. Men of ability will gladly compete for an offize worth $2,000 a year, honestly administered, when they will refuse to sock an office where the scanty fees must be worked up by disreputable methods. This could bo secured im the com- ing election by nominating men who can be elected and who will agree to resign ——e T ladies in Ohio distributed W don’t want to say much about Mr. Baumer, but if he persists in airing his grievances and refers to the fact that he went to the Legislature as a representa- tive of the Germans, we may have a word to say as to how he discharged his duties and how he kept faith with John M. Thayer. after qualifying. That would leave enough vacancies to make the business in tho remaining courts a sufficient induce- ment for reputable men to fill the office. There would be no necessity for the County Commissioners to fill thesevacan- cies, Six justices would be enough to do all the business which comes before such courts in this city. OaxpipaTES of both pai are in- dignant over the brazen blackmail which s being levied on them by the conduc- tor of the alleged official organ of this city. Mr. Corliss has been asked to contribute $200, but we presume $10 would have been accepted. Mr. Leavitt refused te “‘come down,” and of course he 18 being blackguarded. How much Mr. Tjams paid, and whether he will get his money's worth, we can't tell, B oape 10 AR, And it came to pass in the days of political corruption that one Aninias. be- ing Ni(y)sh unto distraction, made a Savage attack on a certain lawgiver, aud came to_grief by Rees on of total deprav- ity and utterabsence of a soul. And his father sent a dead.head tele- gram unto him, saying: “Yea, verily, my son, thou shalt hie thee to the city of thy wativity, which is in the County of Dodge, and shall tend the herds of thy sire, and thou shall return to one Kim- ball the watered stock thou holdest, for the days of thy prodigality are at an end.” And the son answered by telephone, saying: “Father, prepare a foast of one of thine own prize Durhams, for 1 am hungry and weary and will return to the house of my father before my pass is can- celed.” ‘WirH anything like a fair vote on the 6th of November, we prodict a majority of 10,000 and upwards - for Judge Reese ;l;’l the State ticket.— Platismouth Her- And we will stake our reputation that if there is fair weather, a fair vote and an honest count, Judge Savage will be elected by a larger majority than was given Sturdevant over Loran Clark, FrexcH investors still have abundant f£aith in De Leassop's Panama canal pro- ject. The total nuwber of the new issue of bonds offered by the company was 600,000 and subscriptions’to the amount of 646,00, or 46,000 more than were to bo obtained, have been made. This free supply of money looks very much as if the canal would be carried en to comple- tion. TaE assessors had better be looked after. For instance, we are informed on good authority that Mr. Doll has totally omitted to assess from §50,000 to $100,- 000 in the First ward, Lot 1, block 202, Turre has been 80 much comment on the case of Lieutenant John F. Simpson, of the Third Cavalry, and his late court martial, that the facts in the matter de- serve veatilation. Lieutenant Simpson 3, 4 and b in block 203, are not on the | was tried by a court-martial, found guilty asseasment roll. They were purchased at | of conduct unbecoming an officer and a private sale by the Union Pacific railway | ,entleman,andsentenced te be dismissed. company not as & right of way but for| The charge was that he had married a speculative purposes. Two of them were | woman who had been his mistress. The leased and are oc upied by the Elevator sentence was disapproved and set aside company, aud the other two are used as | by the President. On Thursday a letter private residences and pay rent. Kor-|written by Simpson was published, in merly these lots were taxed. Pomey and | which he declared that no one who knew Segelke paid taxes on one, Erfling on an- | him would believe that he had contracted other and the others were occupied by | such a marriage. He added that he had Johnson's wood yard. The U, P. paid|resigned from the army. It now appears Johnson $6,000 for the two lots upon | cthat Simpson is in the hospital at Whip- which he had paid taxes for thetwo years. | ple Barracks, Arizona, and that he is re- ‘When Mr. Doll was asked why he had | garded as insane. It also appears that omitted to return theso lots for taxation [ his marriage was a very scandalous he said he was acting under the advice of | affair, which the authorities could not John C. Cowin, county attorney. But|affurd to ignore. The woman was one of when Mr, Cowin faced him and pro |the most degraded and motorious resi- nounced him a liar he skulked away. dents of Arizona, and it could not And yet Mr. Doll and the railroad peo- | truthfully be said that she was, or ever ple have fixed it up again and as yet there | had been, tho mistress of this officer, is no candidate against him Meanwhile | The two contracting parties went to the ¢he poor workingmen who own little | magistrates office from the house of ill- Thouses are foroed to pay taxes while this | fame of which the woman was proprietor. giant monopoly with its millions of wealth Perhaps the most plausible explanation goes untaxed. of Simpson's very remarkable conduct appears in the statement that he is pro- bably insane, and it may be that his mind way unsettled by the death of his first wife, which occurred a very short time before the marriage that brought upon him the condemnation of & military court, Wuky Bret Harte alluded to the ten- dency of the Heathen Chinee for *‘w: that are dark and tricks that are vain ho knew what he was talking about. But it seems that this peculiarity is not by any means confined to the almond- oyed laundrymen who find their way to the United States. The Chinese Gov- ernment has taken a hand and is playing the same old gamewith wonderfulshrewd- | Dunham made an appeal for lotting the ness aud euccess. It has begun to evade | contract to a paper with an acknowledged .the law against Chinese immigration by |eirculation. He calied the attention of ‘furnishing traders’ certificatos indiscrim- | the council te the fact that severil years dnately to all emigrants from the Celes-|ago when the advertising wus given to tial Empire desirous of drumming upon |the Republican the city was forced to the festive washboard in this land of the [issue hand-bills in order to reach bidders free. It also furnishes studants’ cer-|on city contracts, He predicted if the tificates to boys, Under ¢he provisions |eouncil ignored this question of relative of the treaty with Chiua, ' these docu- [circulation and standing, the same trouble wou'd oocur again, Mr, Dunham knew what he was talk- wg sbout, The *‘official organ,” sce Wuen the question of city advertising was last up before the council, Martin our shores, and they peuring into hmmunumm called, circulatos less than 250 papers in a city of 50,000, and the registrars have been forced to print and circulate hand- bills to voters in order to reach them, 1f the council had been animated by a sense of duty instead of by spite work, such a state of affairs would not be pos- sible. Trr doctrine of Henry George's book, ““The Progress of Poverty,” that there is 1o vightful property in land, and that the products of labor form the only natural basis of property, is rapidly spreading among the lower classes of Europe, and in Austria is taking so strong a hold upon the peasantry that the government is contemplating measures to suppress its effects. As in France, and in lesser de- greo in Canada, the peasantry of Austria are being reduced to poverty by the con- stant and excessive subdivision of their land brought asout by the laws of inheri- tance. Several of the provincial Diets have petitioned the imperial government to repeal these laws; but the peasants themselves are said to be going still far- ther; they are discontented, and have serzod upon Henry George's philosophy as their only remedy, and are beginning to demand that the gov- emment shall not only prevent the matter from getting worse but shall in- stitute a new confiscation and redivision. The George theory is noticeably gaining ground in this country also. An organi- zation based on this belief and calling itself the American Freo Soil society was formed in New York in June, with Louis F. Post, candidate for Attorney General of the State, as president, Charles Fred- erick Adams as secretary and Rev. R. Heber Newton as treasurer. Now there aro ten groups, or subordinate associa- tions in New York city, eight in Brook- lyn, fourin Chicago, and it is represented in 23 States and Territories. It is dili- gently spreading its doctrines by means of circulars, and will not only seek to in- fluence legislation in the various States, but will propose to the next Congress a constitutional amendment forbidding either general or State governments to further alienate lands save with the res- ervation of the current ground rent. A wip and heart-piercing cry has issued from one of the Russian prisons. The unfortunate man Netachacheff, who was condemned ten years ago for a politi- cal offense, was supposed, like most of the victims of Russian oppression, to be long since dead. But in & letter to the Czar, written in the bloed of his veins, he utters a torrible complaint against the inhuman treatment to which he and his fellow prisoners are subjected. Even the little light that once penetrated his dungeon is now denied him. In the presence of such a revelation it is not strange that the Czar is constantly haunt ed with a dread of the Nihilists. 1t is said that the story has created an im- mense sensation in St. Petersburg. There is no doubt at all that the piteous notes «f this prisoner will. survive in many a Russian heart the trills of the lute opera singer in the imperial capital, Some of these days the Russian eople will take it into their heads to overturn their bastiles and make a general jail de- livery of political prisoners. —_— As a matter of fact. the whelesale abandonment of the Republican organ- ization by the colored voters would make little difference as to the fortunes of the party. As the lines aro now drawn, in every State in which the colored popula- tion is large enough to be an appreciable element in its politics, if rightly handled the Democrats get every benefit that would accrue, if the colored vote was sol idly Democratic, without any thanks to that element,— Zincoln Journal, This from the mouthpiece of M. B. Reese and Boss Stout, fairly expresses the sentiment of the kind of Republicans that are now running Nebraska, They want the colored vote for Reese who never shouldered a musket, ana against a man like Judge Savage who fought to free the slave. Still they insist that the loss of the colored vote would make little difference to the party. Hasrings, October 29, Editor of The Pee. What do you refer to when you sa Judge Morris was in collusion wit whisky crooks? Please answer through your paper. ALLIANCE. We refer to the time when Morris was dismissed as United States gauger for collusion with McCoy, whose distillery was condemned for crookedness and closed out by the United States authori- ties, It was generally understood here that the United States grand jury in. dicted Morris, with other whisky crooks, but finally, on his personal appeal, the indictment was dropped. Tux Astors in New York are soon to celebrate the centennial of the arrival of the family in this country, Many in- teresting relics will be shown. The original cleaver which John Jacob usedin his butcher shop on the Bowery has un- fortunately been lost, but the family probably do.’t regret Real Estate Transfors, The following deeds were filed for record in the county clerk's office Oc tober 80th, reported for Tus Bz by Ames' real estate agency: Louis Faist and wife to Fred Kocher, wd,nof wi of lot 2, blk 201§, $950. Joseph Barker and wife to Henry Ehrenpfort, w d, part of no of no } see 84, tp 16, r 13, E Chas. C. Housel and wife to Nathan Merriam, w 12 feet of lot 3 and 4, blk 347, $12,000. Moses K. Clark to Mrs, Ellan Wileon, wd, lot 7, bik 83, 81, Geo. Krumel and wife to Joseph Kolovratek, w d, lots 8 and 9, block 2, Kountze's 3rd add , 81,165, Jeff W, Bedfordet al to Jas. F. Nolan, wd, lot 1, block 2, Kirkwook add,, 8300, 'Adn ‘I; m; et al to Alex. G. Char). ont, wd, ) block 11, Reed's Lsf add., $800. ¥ ; “HOC RANCHE.” Pistol Practic;al ; Place of Bad Repute. Details of the Tragedy in Cherry County. Sheriff Key Uses His ''Sixes"” and a Cowboy Bites the Dust. Killing Was Done in Self- Defense, Among the latest sensations which have come to us from the frontier was that concerning the tragedy which oc- curred at Valentine, Cherry county, on the 12th iustant, in which & cow boy wes shot through the heart by the Sheriff, Jhuny Key. Mr, Key was in townyesterday,and was met by a Bee reporter, who had a short talk with him and learned some addi- tional details, which go to show, as was claimed by the papers up there, that the shooting was not only justifiable but an absolute necessity. SHERIFP KRY is & fine-looking young fe low, about 27 years of age, slender in build and blonde in comploxion, He has, nevertheless, an abundaut endowment of that valuable article known aa ‘‘the nerve,” On the evening in question Sheriff Key, accom- panied by a friend named Sam Earnest, went out to a notorious house situated about 400 yards from the railroad track and known as HOG RANCHE. The Sheriff said to the reporter that his only regret about the matter was that hs was found in such a place. A party of 18 or 20 men or cow-boys, from Wyoming, had come down on that day with 1,800 head of cat- tle for shipment east. Key and Earnest had been at Hog Ranche but a short time when two of these cow-boys came in. They had been drinking and some words were passed between them, the officer and his friend. asked the men up to the bar to drinkand after that he and Earnest went back into one of the rvoms with the girls and left the fellows standing at the counter. When they came out again they were gone hut the bartender told Key WHAT THEY SAID. They had asked who he (Key) was and what was his business, and when an- swered one of them said, *Key is & d— s— of a b—, and I had & good notion to take out my pistol and kil him. But never miud, we will go out to camp and we have two or three bad men out there, aud we will come out with a crowd to- night and fix him, G— d— him,” or words to this effect. THE ATTACK. Soon after dark Key was in one of the rooms and heard six or seven menride up on thew horses, swearing aua cuisi g, and declaring that they would ride intw the house. He heard the bar-keeper beg them not to come i, and then went out to the frgnt room to see what the row meant. As he walked in ‘between the bar and the stove he saw one man with a six-shooter in his hand and another remarked, ‘“Here is Key now, the d— s— of a b—. We will just give it to him,” and thereupon the firing began. THE BATTLE. Sheriff Key got out his pistol as quick- ly as possible and fired two shots. ne of the attacking party fell from his horse and the rest ran around the house. They then charged on the door again and tried to get in, shooting as they came up through the doors and windows. Oune bullet cut throxgh the sash and glanced off into the frame. But for this it would have killed Key, as the piece of sash was driven right against his abdomen. A TERRIBLE FIGAT then ensued, which could only be accu- rately described by one who was present. The Sheriff attempted to escape by the back door, and as he did so was shot at with a Winchester rifle or a heavy calibre revolver, He had no one to help him, being once svized by two of the invaders, but finally v renching himself loose from their grasp. After gettiig out through the back door he chused away a man who was sheltered behind a pile of wood and made & hasty retre t to the town, which was about @ quarter oi a mile away Hure he went to his room ana went to bed, where he remained until next morning and then gave himself up to the authoritics, Of course when the news was brcught in the evening that a cowboy had been shot the whole town Wwas IN AN UPROAR. Business houses were closed and men stood on the street corners expecting every moment to see a party of cowbys rush into town to avenge the death of their companion. This did not come, however, and when the crowd followed the coroner to the scene of the bloody affray the victim was found lying just outside the door, his revolver beneath his right arm and his body cold and lifeloss. The remains were taken into the house and theinquest held, resulting in a verdict which accorded with the facts. On Mondny Sheriff Key was summoned before Judge Tucker, charged with manslaughter and waiving exawina- tion was released on $3,000 bail, CONFLIOTING TESTIMONY was adduced before the coroner’s jury but from all accounts and from the opi ions of the rruu up that way the shooting appears to have been entirely justifiable, Facts Which go to Show That the | ¥ In order to settle it, Key | " & woman of disreputable character. He was about 30 years of age. I THE WITNESSES [ e | to the affair include the bartender and Carter's little brother Tommy, who will, it is said, both swear that the shooting was begin by the cowhoys, The rosult of the trial is, of course, un- certain, but the many friends of Sheriff Key, hoth in Omaha and at home, never expect him to be indic - — Excited Thousands, Al over the land are guing into ecstasy over Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. Their unlooked for re by the timely use of this great life Su them t: ness, ' Loss of the & hroat and Lunes. Why are Lireirr, Leak & Co.'s Gloves the best? Caurrornia B A Washington preacher, who is snir for divorce from his wifo on the grouns of all-treatment, says that she kuocked him down with a char, pounded him with & hickery cane, and hit him with a heavy water pitcher., } THE GHEAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN Itetleves and cures RHEUMATIS A, Newralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, HACHE, KB, TOOTHACHR SORE THROAT QUINSY, SW uen, i HEA! And wliother hodlly aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. by ]! Drugglataand « Direetions (o 11 I inges. The Charles A. Vogoler (¢ (Bamasors 1o A YOURLEI AAX ) W A 0.0 TO THE PUBLIC! Investigate for Yourselves. Postmaster-General uresham having published » and malicious falsehood in regard to the char The Louisiana State Lottery Company, the ing facts are giveu to the public to prove hir cment, that we are_engaged in & traudulent bue to be false and untrue: paid by The Louisiana State Lot- iy from January 1, 1679, to present date: Southern Express Co,, New Orlean T. M Wescott, Manager * ...... Pald to Louisiana National Jos. H. Ogleshy, Preside Paid to State Natfonal Ba Kennedy, Prosident Pald to New Crlean Jos. Mitchel, Cashier. . Total paid a8 abov Paid in sums of under 31, various offices of the Company throughout the United States. ......... 2,097,410 84,881,08 Total paid forall ... i Far the truth of the abo ¥ the pul tothe officers of the above named corporations, anc for our lexality and standing to the Mayorand Otficer. w Orleans, to the Stateauthoriticso 180 to the U. 8. Officials of Louigians be legal, honest and correot in all ou trausactions, as much so as any business in the coun try. Ourstanding is conceded by all who will invee tiizate, and our stock has for years been suldat) u Board’ of Brokers, and owned by many of our best “nown and ros) citizens. M. A. DAUPHIN, Prosident. 4 CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000. Tickets Oni 35, Shares in Proportion, LS.L. Lonisiana State Lottery Company “ We do hereby certify that we supervise the cangements for all the Monthly and Semi-Annua Dravings of the Liouisana Stats Lottery Company 1dd in person manage and control the Drawing ‘hemselves, and that the same are conducted wil; Aonesty, fairness. and in good faith toward all pay “ies and we authorize the company to use this oo ‘ificate, with fac-simiies of our wiygnatures attaches ts advertisements COMMIBSIONNES, Incorporated 1n 1868 for 25 years by the legislatur or educational and charitable purposes—with & oaj tal of $1,000,000—t0 which a rosorve fund of ove 460,000 has since boen added. By an overwhelming popular vote Ita franchi« vas made o part of the present state constitution «dopted Decorber 2d, A, D. 1879, The ondy Lottery ever voted on and endorsed b, the people of any state 1t never Scales or Postpones. Its grand singlo number drawings tak. olace monthly, A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WIN A FOh (UNE. 11th Grand Drawing, Class L, at New O TUESDAY, NOV. 13th, 1863—1024 Mouthl wing. CAPITAL PRIZE, §76,000. 90,000 TICKETS at FIVE DOLLARS EACH. Jvae ‘tious, In Fifths in Proportion. LIBT UF PRUES. 1 CAPITAL PRIZE.. 1 do do 1 § PHIZES OF o000 10 do 1000 20 do 500 00 do 200 000 do 100. 00 do 50 %00 do 2 APPROXIM TION PRI ! Approsizmation prises of 160 o 9 do do 967 Prizos, amounting to. . Application for rates to ou made at the +Mce of the Company in New Orleans. For further information write clearly giving ful) sidrow. Make P. 0. Money Orders payable ao Vidross Registerod Lottors to EW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, Now Orleans, La Postal Notes and or fiuary lettors by Mail or Ex yiross (u1] sums of $6 and upwards by Express at our oxpense) 10 M A DAUPHIN or M, A. DAUPHIN, Now Orleans, La. 607 Boventh St., Washington, D. ¢ It was claimed by one member of the [~ assaulting party that the cow-boys had arranged to kill Key before they left camp and that he tried to prevent their leaving camp, and thereupon three of them jumped on hun and beat over the head with a pistol. The sheriff says he never met any of them until the evening in question, and that after drinking with them he sup- posed the difficulty settled, He ascribes the whole trouble to an OLD GRUDGE held by Hann against Hiw Carter, who was with Key on the fatal evening and was known to be his friend, It is claimed that Hann had followed Carter for a half a day out at Ft. Robinson to kill him, and, aw unusual thing, he himself was the one to fall in the final conflict. Haun had his hors: partly inside the door and the rest were trying to ride around hi He wax known as a very, hard character, had killed his man, or two ot them, aud alsu LODISIANA STATE LOTTERY CO B. Frank Moore. 127 La Salle Street. Chicage Manager of Chicago Offics. To whory apply for oo tion s ehessr” 1020 Momisly?” Drawing, Tuesday, Nov. 13. Firet Capital Priso, §76,000. Tickote #6. Bold Fifths at §1 each. See full schome above. wedanat.w-bw DUFRENE & MENDELSSIHN, ARCHITECTS 44 KEMOVED TO OMAHA NATIONALBLD Washington Avenue and Eifth Street, WHOLESALR Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, ST. LOUIS. MO STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GO0 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 Double and Siny}a lcti;r:g Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM POMPS, = Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hose, Brass and Tron Fittin Stoam Packing at wholesale aad rejail. ' HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam St., Omaha Neb. J. A. WAKEFIELD, KWHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lah, Shinglas, Pl SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - 5 - OMAHA, NEB C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA. NEBRASKA. T. SINEITOI.,.D, CapsFinlals Galvanized lronComices, Window MAX MEYER & CO., Bkylights &c LMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES ¢ SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 8izes from $6 to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others, ~ WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake. It fa the bost aud cheapost food for stock of any kind. One pound is equa) to three pounds of corn' ook fed with Grond Oil Gake in the Fadl and Wintes, instead of rinning down, will incréase-(n weigh § and be in good marketablo condition In the spring. Dairymen, as well as others, who use it can testify it morita.” Try 1t and judge for yourselves. * Prios §26.00 por ton: no chargo for sacks, ~Addross WOODMAN LINSEYD (1L COMTANY Omiha hed in 1838. A J. Stmpsan, THE LEADING 24-00d-me B [Carriage Factory 1409 and 1411 Dodge Street, OMAHA, - - - - . . NEBRASKA. PIANOSKLORG ANS On Long Time--Small Payments. At Manufacturers Prices. A Hosve Jr 109 DODUE YTRE | | I

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