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i ! SR THE GMAXA BEE. Oublished evers worning, excopt Sunday. The #nly Monday morniog daily. RS BT MATL. 10.00 | Three Montha. ... 8600 5.00 | One Month......... 1.00 PUBLISITED XYERY WEDXESDAT. TRRMSIOSTRAID, Qne Your...........82.00 | Three Months Bix Months. 100 | One Month ... Amerioan News Company, Sole] Agente Newsdeal- wra In the United States. CORRPAPONTRNOR. T A_ Communieations relating to News and Editorial matters should be addressed to the Evitor, o, Tie LU e B w N PUSINRSS LRTTER able to the order of the con T BEE BUBLISHING €0, PROPS. FOR JUDGE OF THE SUPRE JAMES W. SAV Douglas FOI REGENTS OF THE STATE UNIVERSITY. (Long Term.) DAVID BUTLER, Pawnee County, DAVID R. DANTEL, Madis “ranklin Connty. J. F. MERRI Antelo e Connty. Thanksgtving Proclamation, ““Tn furtherance of the custom of this people at the closing of each yoar, to engage upon & day set apart for that purpose in special festi- val of praise to the Giver of all Good, therefore, 1, Chester A. Arthur, President of the United States, do hereby designate Thursday, the 20th day of November next, as dn{ of mational thanksgiving, for the year that is drawing to an ond has Deen replote with the evidence of divine goodness, ~the prevailanco of health, the fullnes of the harvest, the stability of peace and order, the growth of fraternal feelings, the spread ot 1..ufi|g«.me and learning, the continued en- joyment of civil and religious liberty—all these and countless other blessings are cause for reverent rejoicing. 1 do, therefore, recom. mend that on the day above nrpnlmml the people rest from their accustomed labors, and meeting in their several places of worship, express n.orr devout geatitude to God that He has dealt bountifully with this nation, and pray that His grace_and favor abide with it forever, CHESTER A. ARTHUR, President. By Fren. T. ERELINGHUYSEN, Secretary of State, Two disgruntled pettifoggers ropresent the epposition of the Douglas county bar to Judge Savage. can deliver the workingmen's vote in Omaha for M. B. Reese. Mz. Reese's judicial record—but on second thoughts Mr. IReese has none ex- cept as a poor railroad lawyer and a prosecuting attorney. Mg, Corpy's neighbors in Gage county will bury him under such a mountain of votes next Tuesday that he will hardly know he was running. Tue paving bond proposition must not be forgotten. Every vote for the bonds GEN. SHERMAN'S RETIREMENT. The votirement of (eneral Sherman from the command of the army, which event took place yesterday, will long re- main memorable in the military annals of the country. By it the second of the groat figures of the war voluritarily leaves the stage of action and gives way to the third and last. The history of every war is more or less the history of the achiovements of a few great com manders. Long after the details of the gigantic struggles of twenty years ago fade into misty recollection, the names of Grant and Sherman and Sheridan will *| b remembered as the moving spirits in the conflict. Of the three, General She man, or “Uncle Billy,” as his sold preferred to call him, was doubtless, Bluffy n style, personally the most popular. hearty, direct and penetrati with a strong individuality and great force of character, he made many and strong friondships in all ranks and conditions. His unassuming man- ners, the absence of anything like artificiality and his common sense and direct manner of putting things] in his conversation and speeches were the chief charms of General Sherman’s per- sonality which added to his popularity. He was the ranking officer of the entire army with none of the disagreeable pecul- iarities which so often attend high rank and act as a barricr between the civilian and the military. General Sherman’s retirement is note- worthy on another account. He was the first officer to be promoted to the rank of general of the army, The office was created for (feneral Grant in 1865 as an honorary rank. It was transferred to (ieneral Sherman in 1869 in recognition of his great services to the country, and has expired with his tenure of office. For fourteen years he has filled it with credit to himself and to the satisfaction meansa vote for the rapid prosecution of public improvements when spring opens. James W. Savace will emerge tri- umphantly from a campaign in which slander has been the only argument of his enemies and personal abuse the chief weapon, S—— I~ an editorial published in the Omaha News in September, 1878, the present editor of the Republican savagely de- nounced Judge Robertsen as the murder- erof Frank Welch. Mr. Crawford's friends think he has a walkaway in his district. Tue workingmen of Omaha are not fools. They have sense enough to un- derstand that the men who inspired the so-called Omaha riots are working with all their might for M. B, Reese. They are not so blind as not to sce that the very attorneys who argued for the rail- roads before the grand jury are conduct- ing the Reese campaign in Douglas coun- ty and attempting to stir up workingmen against Judge Savage. The Thurstons and Greenes' and Hawes' and Walters will probably find out that Omaha work- ingmen can remember at least a year back, THE rumor that Mr, MacDonagh is to take the place of Mr. Annin on Tur Bee has some logic for its support.—Zepubli- oan, No one knows better than the Repub- tican who the successor of Mr, Annin is to be on Tue Bee and no one knows bet- ter than the editor of the Zepublican that that successor is ot to be Mr. Mac- Donagh, We suppose the intention of the above paragraph was to weaken Mr. MacDonagh's lively aflidavit regarding M. B. Reese as a bilk by intimating that it was purchased by the promise of em- ployment on this paper. If this was the object of the Zcpublican its shot was a blank cartridge, —— Privagies for the Douglas County Anti-Monopoly convention, which will be held in this city on Saturday, have been called for to-morrow (Friday) after- noon, The late so-called Faymers' and Work- ingmen's convention was a fraud in which the farmers of Douglas county took mo part. Only one farmer was present. The convention was run in the interest of & pack of shysters and bilks who were trading on their supposed in- fluence with the laboring classes. It is to to give the honest Anti-Mono- polists of Douglas county an opportunity to voice their sentiments and to keep up their organization that tho Anti-Mo- nopoly convention has been called. No candidates will be bled and no assess- ments will be made on anybody beyond the amounts to print tickets. l.‘jl to be hoped that the primaries will be well atteided. This is not to be a packed convention, because the primaries will be open and free, of the people of the country, and he lays it aside to make rvom for anotner com- mander scarcely leas distinguished. SWINDLING SOLDIERS. The wholesale disbarring of pension agents in Washington by the Secretary of the Interior will meet with general ap- proval. The crowd of pension shysters which infests the national capital have been perpetrating enormous frauds upon private citizens as well as upon the gov- ernment. Mr, Teller has been on an in- vestigating tour and has unearthed sev- eral of their peculiar devices with the names of a score or 80 of attorneys who have been preying upon soldiers’ widows. The result is that the names of the swindlers have been stricken from the roll of practising attorneys. A very common form of cheating has been the ‘‘collection delivery” trick. Having learned the address of & soldier’s widow or daughter, a swindling pension agent sends to her a circular saying that she is entitled to a pension. He sonds also a blank form for her signature, em- powering him to prosecute her claim for a pension before the department, After further correspondence, intended to raise the would-be pensioner’s hopes, the swin- dler sends her a large sealed envelope by oxpress,marked *‘Collect on delivery, ten dollars.” Overjoyed at the thought of receiving a pension, and believing the important looking document to bo the pension certificate, the victim pays the money and gets the package, only to find in it the words: ‘‘Received our fees, §10. [Signed] Thievesherald & Co."” notherform of the same swindle is to ask for remittances of small sums from the applicant at moderate intervals apart and get a considerable amount out of ig- morant people as long as they can be de- luded into sending money in return for fine promises. The gang of pension sharks at Wash- ington have cost the government millions of dollars. Thousands of fraudulent pen- sions have no doubt been procured through their efforts. People make ap- plication for pensions on the assurance of azents that they sre entitled to them, While they know no claim to a pension can be maintained by them, they accept the plausible agent’s statement of their rights because they have seen equally worthless cases successful. It is noto- rious that the lack of publicity of the pension lists makes fraud far easior than it would be if the names of all pensioners were freely advertised, Dunrixa the present campaign the rail- road organs have been filled with “‘advice to Anti-Monopolists,” The producers of this State who last year rolled up 17,000 votes for Anti-Monopoly candidates have been urged to come once more within the Republican ranks and to trust to the pledges of the railroad managers that the Republican party is at last a thorough convert to Anti-Monopely principles. Some of the most notorious editorial cap- pers of the brass-collared brigade have even ventured, with railroad approval, to print occasional Anti-Monopoly articles in their columns as proof of their change of heart and in the hope of securing enough votes from the producers of this State to secure the election of the railroad candidates, The Anti-Monopolists of Febraska will not be deceived by this pretended friend- ship. They will not forget that the men who now addvess them as *‘friends,” last year denounced them as ‘‘cranks and idiots.” They know enough to know that all propositions of Anti- Monopoly from a party which s under the control of the railreads are nothing more than flaunting lies, They need no direction to seo that every rail. road attorney in the State is supporting the candidacy of M. B. Reese, and that every railroad organ is working tooth and nail for his election, Where are the men who have made railroad Republicanism astench in the nostrils of every honest voter in Nebraska? Are they found sup- porting James W. Savage? On which side are Church Howe, and Marquette, and Gere, and Yost, and Laird, and Thurston working? For Judge Savage! Not one of them. Every railroad striker, every packer of primaries and conven- tions, every atterney who holds his pos tion by reason of his ability to do dirty political work, is shoulder to shoulder in the contest for the success of the Repub- lican ticket. In the face of these facts the Anti- Monopolists of Nebraska will refuse to be deceived by false pretensionof friend- pledges of re- placed in candidate ship and bogus form. They nomin- ation a they can honestly and consistently support on the broad grounds of character and abili- have whom ty, and whose election will mean at once the elevation of our Supreme Bench from the mire of partisan politics, and a lesson to the railroad attorneys who con- trol the Republican party, that the peo- ple hold in their hands, through the bal- lot, an instrument of punishment for politicians who fail to redeem their pledges, and who dare to control political parties against the interests and in de- fiance of the wishes of the people. REGIS, Tur Bee urges upon every voter in Omaha the necessity of an early registra- tion. A failure to register will compel every voter whose name is not upon the lists to swear in his vote at the polls. This is always inconvenient, and ought to be avoided, if possible. The new registration law passed by the last legis- lature requires the registrars to make out new lists, giving the name and residence of voters, On.this account the old lists are worthless, There can be no tranifer of hundreds of names from old to new, as has been the custom of registration in Omaha for many years past. Every voter who wishes to exercise the fran- chise at the coming election must perso- nally present himself before the registrar of his voting precinct. In response to many personal requests, Tar. Bee has published the location of the registrars, so that its readers will not be compelled to consult the hand-bills which are being circulated to give the same information, Tue Utah Commissioners, in their re- port to the Secretary of the Interior, claim that the enforcement of the present law met with success at the late election in excluding polygamists from the polls. They are of the qpinion that the discrimi nation between Mormons who practice polygamy and those who do not will have great weight, particularly with young men who are ambitious, and therefore not destrous of politicsl ostracism. They renew their recommendation of a year ago, that Congress shall declare all future marriages in the Territory void, unless contracted and evidenced in a logal man- ner, to be designated. If Congress shall fail to adopt suppressive measures at, its next session, the Commission will recom- mend the adoption of such constitutional amendments as may be necessary to ac- complish the desired ond. They claim that since the passage of the Edmunds act polygamous marriages have decreased, though the contrary has been asserted. In a word, they advocate its retention, supplemented by a public marriage act of sufficient stringency. NERAL Myers was interviewed in New York on Tuesday by a Pionecr Press correspondent. He denies all the charges made against him by Vermilye as false in toto, and characterizes the latter as a liar and a coward. He says that in his relations with Mrs. Vermilye he has never overstepped the bounds of proprie- ty, and that the husband never charged that he did until she had begun an action for divorce. T'o TRANSACT more business than amy five judges in the State, to have fower appeals taken from his district, and to be twice elected judge in & Republican dis- trict, is record onough for any candidate. And this is the solid basis upon which Judge Savage's candidancy rests. EvERy voter should see to it that his mame is on the registrationlist. The law requires a new list this year and a per- sonal appearance beforo the registrar is necessary in order to ensure the right to vote. Tue Anti-Monopolists of Douglas county will refuse the flactering ‘‘words of advice” from the Union Pacific organ. Oil and water will not mix. evenina political sense, THE SHATTO TR Great Endeavors to Find a Jury on His Murder Cas Before Judge Wakeley, in the district court, the trial of Edward Shatto, for the murder of Martin Knight, is waiting the impanelling of a jury. Sheriff Mil- lor cannot summon a jury, he having been objected to as an interested party, because he is to recei ve a reward for the capture of the prisoner, and so Acting Coroner O'Rourke is endeavoring te gather twelve men together who lave no opinion in the matter and are not op- " posed to capital punishment, no ecasy thing to do, A special venire was issued Wednesday and another one yesterday. This murder was committed at James Bedre's boarding house, near Withnell's brickyards, on the night of July 5th lagt, and was tho result of a quarrel over some trivial matter, About & in the morning Bhatto entered Knight's room and beat him over the head with a club and then ran out of the house. When Knight staggered to shut the_door, Shatto shot him in the stomach. The murderer escaped but was aftorwards captured near St. Paul, Mion., by Sherifi Miller, who played detective admirably, THE DAILY BEE-~OMAfA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1863, THE STATE CAMPAIGN. [mportant Letters to the Voters of chraska, The Bar Almost Solid [+ Williams, 8pecial Correspondence of Tur Brr. Fremoxr, Oct. 29.—The Republican candidate for Judge in this district was here last week and sent Col. Marshall, (who is unfortunately running on the same ticket for District attorney), out into the Western part of the district to repair some of the badly broken fences and hammer Hades out the local engineers of the political ma- of some of chine. Col. Marshall is a fine géntleman, and were he not cruelly loaded down with this railroad iron from Columbus, who will sell out his best friend on earth to “get there,” he would be elected without doubt. Marshall knows, however, what to expect from this wily politician, who used every underground wire to beat him last spring when the friends of Marshall were urging his claims to the Governor | for appointment. Marshall will get a good vote here at home, but Dodge county will down Post hard. Post's wishy-washy attitude in the Congression- al campaign last fall has injured him seri- ously. The Anti-Monopoly combination is a strong one, as Williams and Pattersonare both very popular with the bar here and with all else who take an interest in this part of the political programme. A strong majority of the lawyers are in favor of ousting the present ring of which Geo. M. Post is the most dangerous member, One of the leading Republican lawyers and many of the Republican politicians are supporting the opposition this year to express their dissatisfaction with the shameful manner in which the politics of the district is mixed up with the judicial business in this and other county seats, R 1cAN Lawyer, AS TO QUALIFICATIONS. Correspondence of THE BEE, Davip Crry, Neb., October 30, 1883, — A couple of lawyers who never had acase in court in their lives have raised,in their consummate boobyism and jackasstical idiocy, the weighty question as to Judge Willians’ ability as compared with the distinguished abilities of the invincible and infallible railroad sharp. Judge Williams is in every sense of the word the peer of A. M. Post. Just where the last wentioned gentleman acquired his highly lauded character as a Judge, is not definitely known. He has only been on the bench a few months, and none of his decisions have yet been passed on by the Supreme Court. The fact of the matter is that these qualification squawl- ers are dealing in the thinnes: kind of wind. The loudest brayers are the cheek- by-jowl jobbers whose personal and pe- cuniary interests are linked with those of Post and the royal Post family. The people of this county are almost unanimous for their home candidate, Onlfi four out of the seventeen members of the Republican Central Committee can be induced by threat andthunder to even endorse to regular Republican nominees onthe judicial ticket. As a lastand desperate resort, the soured and maddened supporters of an office-crazed want-to-be judge are swear- ing vengeance on the local ticket here in Batler county, but it won’t work. When the people are aroused as they are on this vital question as to whether A& Gtars 0 amoliticaliking ahiall cHoose their officers, Thoe people will sustain their sovereignty. Can the voters of the Fourth judiciary district aftord to place this corporation tool on the bench by their sufirages. The political affiliations of Post in this county are enough to damn any man in the eyes of an henest and observing public. One of his main supporters is that servile corporation capper, Arthur J. Evans, who, in connection with E. C. Carnes, killed the three-cent passen- ger bill in the Senate of 1881. The next most anxious man for the elaction of A. M. Post is a notorious character by the name of R. M. Sibbett, who says ‘‘Post must be elected ” This man Sibbett has an illegal claim of §3,025 pending in the District court, taken up on appeal from the commissioner’s court. Sibbett op- posed, abused and threatened Post until the gentleman from Columbus spent a day of feasting with him, when Sibbett went forth as a warrior bold to battle for his ‘‘benefactor,” whom he suddenly dis- covered it unprofitable to cuss. If there can be any devise of slander, any malicious or false report trumped up against the candidates, Patterson or \\'i}- liams, it will be done. They need to watch carefully for anylhing desperate. A secret plotis being planned by the Post ring to slaughter any man who stands in their wav. GRANGER, O'Day and Tiffany, O'Neil Tribune. Thos. O'Day is well known in this county as a straightforward, honest and capable lawy>r, and one who, if honored by a seat on the district bench, will reflect grediton the constitueucy who elocted him, against Tiffany is a vote against the giant corporations which are sucking the life- blood of the nation, and a vote in favor of the judiciary being inde- pendent of any party organization. BROADY vs. COLBY, #resh Republican Testimony. Nokru AvsurN, Neb., October 23.— The falsehoods published by irresponsi- ble papers about Mr. Broady's profes. sional and private character can have no | th effect in Nemaha county but to increase his majority. We who have seen his character made in these respects know it to be absve reproach; and such mali- cious, brazen and untruthful attacks, de- signed to drift the issue into a personal one must havo a tendency to give Mr. Broady the votes of all honest unpur- chasable voters who know him well, Signed: John L, Carson, R. S, Hamaford, John Frerichs, C. F. Stewart, George Fablinger, A. H. Gilmore, ‘Fhose are names of the very represen- tative Republicans of Nemaha county, four of them live in Auburn and are county.seat removers, but men of sense who cannot be blinded by a trick of po- litical hacks. Mr. Gilmore has been county treasurer; Fablinger is the pres- ent German representative iu the Lugis- lature; Frerichs is an ex-representative; Crandall is a leading citizen of Auburn; Hamaford is an old farmer whom every- body respects, and has conhdence in; Carson and Dr, Stewart need no intro- W. H. Crandall, Every vote cast for O'Day and |y duction to the penrle of Nebraska. Do not be decieved by Colby's subsidized papers. One_thousand Republicans will indorse Broady at the polls in Nemaha county. e A Contradiction. To the Editor of Tur Bee, The following, amongst the specials of the 30th in The Omaha Republican, is so preposterous and hrazingly false as to demand at least a contradiction The people’s mass Democratic Anti- Monopoly county convention held to-day was a stormy affair, resulting in the nom- ination of a very weak ticket. The Broady element was snowed under and the con- vention adjourned without endorsing |him. The Broady forged letter, pub lished in The Brownville Republican on Saturday, is raising havoc with Broady |in Nemaha county. Outside of Brown- ville and Peru he will not carry a single | precinct in the county. | This is palmed as an incidental item of news, butis, in reality, the stab of a sneak at Hon. J, H. Broady. and utterly devoid of truth, The convention alluded | to was not stormy, but exceedingly har- monieus,and, whileasa Republican, I think the ticket there nominated was a weak one, the truth is it is a strong one, with perhaps one or two excoptions. Broady was not snowed under; far from it, for a # olution endorsing him could have been ‘]m.sscd unanimously, and would have een, had it been thought best to have done it. A very large number of old-time Republicans are Mr. Broady's main friends and supporters, and it was deemed best to not take any chances of incurring disaffection in amongst them. Mr. B. is well enough in this county as he is, beyond question, all over the district, without further indorse- | ment by conventions. That “forgery” is | simply @ miserable little lie—a piece of the same material that the drowning des- perate Colby crowd are rising to suppress the Broady cyclone that is sweeping judi- cial district the first. Now, speaking of ‘‘indorsements,” and “‘snowed under,” and so on, we would enquire of Mr. Church Howe, probably the author of the above dispatch, how it was that the Republican convention last Saturday did not indorse Mr. Colby? I can tell_you, Mr. Editor. Simply be- cause Mr. Broady had more friends in that convention than had Mr. Colby, and they dared not to try it, and Howe, who had been very desirious for such a resolution, was com- relled to be content with the three al- eged cheers, proposed and rendered in an agonized howl in a corner of the hall, where Howe had by special effort packed a small Colby crowd. It was not deemed prudent to offer resolution to indorse Colby, or most sure it would have been done. As_to the number of precincts Mr. Broady will carry in this county, he will carry the whole thirteen—remember the words of the dispatch and ours—Broady will carry all of them and win the county by 800 majority. AUBURN, STATE JOTTIMGS, The removal of buildings from St. Helena to Hartington has commenced, _ The German lndies of Lincoln have organ- ized & benevolent association, Davis & Rost ex‘i‘ect to be pork packing in Ord next uonth. The necessary buildings are going up. oA new Congragational hurch fs to bo built in Lincoln. 1tis hoped to get tho foundation in this fall, Walter Staley, o Lincoln boy of 9 years, had his skull crashed by the kick of a horse last Sunday evening. The Plattsmonth Herald says candidly: “If there isa paper that can make more blunders in its make-up than this it is entitled to the floor.” The Sioux City and Pacific is adding four stalls to its round house at Norfolk, and there i talk that tho company will pué a repair hop there, The monthly pay-roll of the Union Pacific railway company at North Platte is nearly £40,000. That pay-roll is the life of Nort Platte. A flock of 17,000 sheep is being driven from New Mexico to winter near Fremont. Three thousand tons of hay have been put np for them to nibble at. The deputy sheriff of Adams county has planted in the pen two young men, aged re- Spectively 17 and 19 years, sentended threo years for horse stealing, Young in years, but old in crime. Fremant Herald: The newspaper accounts of the Blair Bridge opening are almost all serbatim, copies of each other, Fyidently some genius furnished the brains for the cn- tire force. The pen may be mightier than the sword, but it can’t begin with the scissors. Under the management of Mr, R. D, Stelts, of David (ity, a grand shooting tournament, open to the world, and offering $2,500 i ourses, will be held at Seward, Neb., Novem- Por 7. Band # Crack Sopportunities will bo offered at 3,000 live pigeons, 5,000 glass balls and 5,000 clay pigeons, The South Auburn postmaster and his as- sistant distinguished themselves as pugilists. A gentleman objected to the way in which they conducted the postoffice, and s a natural result of the quarrel. the assistant postmaster struck the grumbler for calling him a liar. The arsistant lit into him quite lively and the postmaster finished the job with a drag out. The Plattsmouth Herald says the people of the precincts adjoining the timber skirting the Platte and Missouri rivers have concluded to liunt down and clear out the wolves which in- fest the jungle skirting the streams of the county. ‘These wolves lave becn o source of annoyance to the farmers all the past summer in destroying pigs, lambs aud poultry, Norman Casler was on trial at Wilber for bigamy. his second inarriage being with the Widow Daraley, of Friend, Caslers logal wife united with her husband in swearing that they had never been legally married, and so Caslor was acquitted. 1t is generally el eved that Casler’s wife crucified her conscience to save the father of her children trom condem- nation as a felon, andupon the promise to re. turn to her., The Crete Standard is informed of a sad caso in Brush Creek, ten mileshvest of Wilbur. Mr, Bightmanfhad a family of eight children, ranging from 16 years down_ to 4. Saturday night the doctor was called in, one child had been buried, one died while he was there, two more died before Tuesay, making five of the family in four da; Three of the children cto i »to save from T THE GREA BERMAN REM FOR FPAXIN. Rheumallsm,clwez:;lg!a, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache. Headache, Toothache, rna. eoln, Fros' Bites, . Biruises, o W HOLESATLI 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 GOOLS :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 Single Acting Power and Hand 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, EWIHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Ll Shingles. Pi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - v - OMAHA, NEB T. SINEITOI.D, MANUFACTURER OF Galvanized lronComices, Window CapsFinials, Skylights & Thirteenth Street Neb ASK YOUR GROCERS FOR THE OMAHA DRY HOP YEAST! WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL. Manufactured by the Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Co. | 2718 BURT STREET, OMAHA, NEB WM. SNYDER, s I—I:ousekeepers " | It Never F MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLY FIRST-CLASS (arTianes, Buoaies AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. Wagans —~OMAHA, NEB MAX MEYER & GO., IMPORTERS, OF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES $ SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING 1819 and 1320 Harmey Street and 408 S, 18th Street, ustrated Catalogue furnished free unon apnlicatian 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, o8 NEB. | AXMEYE] G UNS e #SPORTING GOODSH PIANOS®SORGC ANS On Long Time--Small Payments. 1519 DODAR STRE A.H. DAILKEY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Buggies Garriages and Soring Wagons MyfjBepository is constantly filled with & seloctjstock. Best Workmanship gnaranteed. Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Caprtol Avenue, Qmala, Dry Goods!” PUMES, STEAM PUMPS, CELEBRATED BRANDS: ~u# At Manofacturers Prices, A Hosve 1 g — 0