Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 5, 1883, Page 4

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i i THE DAILY'BEE-<-OMAHA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1885, “THE GMAHA BEE. Dublished every worning, except Sunday. @nl) Monday mornivg daily. BANS KT MATL #10.00 1 Three Months. .. . 600 | Oue Month... IR WRRKLT F¥W, PURLISTED XVERY WRDNREDAT. a0 TRRMSIFOSTPAID, ©One Yoar...........82.00 | Three Months.......8 80 Six Months. . 1.00 | One Month ... . Amerloan Nown Company, Sole] AgenteZtNowsdeal- @re in the United States, CORRRSPONDRNCY, A Communioations relating mattors should be addressod to the Evrro or,THe Ban ¥ wrrans © All Businos Tatte addressed to Tirn BRR PURLISIING COMPANY, OMATIA Dratts, Chiocks and Fostoffice orders to be mado pay able 0 the order of the company. THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor. Tawnee County, DAVID E. DANTEL, Madison County, (Short Term.) AMOS Franklin € J. F. M Antalo o REGISTER. Kzer the Judiciary pure. Dox'r forget to vote for paving bonds. Vore the Anti-Monopoly ticket Savago to Points. Dave Miiuee may be elected, but no workingman can support him. T most important offices to be voted for to-morrow are the precinct assessors, Wonkrxauex should remember that a vote for Reese is a voto for Boss Stout and convict labor. Junae CaApw dorsement at the polls next Tuesday which is due to faithful services and per- sonal popularity. Mz CoLny is posing as an anti-monop- olist. We suppose he refers to his legis- lative record in which he voted steadily with Church Howe. Every prominent lawyer in Douglas county will cast his ballot to-morrow for Jameos W. Savage, whother he is ready to admit it or not. Tr1s is the last day for registration. Every voter whose name has not been placed on the lists should at once see to it that it is not omitted. Dox'r fail to remember to vote for the paving bond proposition. Public im- provements in Omaha must be prosecuted 48 600N 118 BPTING Open: Vererax Republicans who always vote as they shot will support James W. Say- age. M. B, Reeso has no claim for their support, He stayed at home, Br, Iraws believes in perpotual oftice holding but the voters of Douglas county are of the opinion that. eight years is a lTong enough tenure of oflice. Tur Democrats complain that the Anti-Monopoly convention hasn't given them a fair show. Why didn't the Dem- ocrats nominate a better ticket., Turee may be a candidate running against Mr. Leavitt for the county clerk- ship, but a search expedition will have to be organized to find him after next Tues- day. Mz, DBaumer threatens to knife Mr. Leavitt, his deputy, because he dared te run against him for the county clerkship, Mr. Baumer's knives will not cut very deeply. 3 SIXTY-KIGHT new counties were organ- ized in Texas last year, and there is room tor many more. Patriots willing to serve their country as sheriff should move for the Lone Star State, — A TELEGRAM. announces the defeat of the false prophet, Soveral thomsand false prophots in the United States will meet with their Waterloo to-morrow ©rening when the returns come in. ——— Mu, Canvrox has nw.ickimml( very | iss busy of late because he has nothing to do, ‘When wo ventilate hin after the elootion he will have nothing to do for a few years more, at least at the public ex- pense, ' ———— Axtr-Moxorouists all over the State should stand by their colors, There is no reason why they should flinch, The Republicans of Nebraska have nominated some of the very worst men for judges and thoy must be dofeated in the inter- est of good government, They have failed to redress the wrongs from which producers suffer at the hands of corporate monopoly. They should be taught that o party cannot break its pledges and re- tain public confidence. . Tux proposition to eell the county court house and enlarge the poor-house from the proceeds of the gale, will be de- feated, as it ought to be, Tho first step that the commissionors should take with the poor-house is to remove it further from town. ‘The poor fani is now worth ot least §75,000, and is almost sur- rounded by eity lots, Within five years it can be cut up and sold for almost wnough money to discharge our entire county indebtodness, There must be no | 3 move taken which looks like a permanent of this valuable property for d Remittanoes should 16 | title of editor m from | the young man on to spoak of the ci and finally yolunteered his opinion as a friend davit of M. H. Carrolton, was & prominent candidate for the suporin- tondency of public instruction and is a man of known ability aud probity. feated for the nomination for this position, Mz, Carrolton has taken it in good part and shown himself overy inch a mau, and o Re- office. affidavit may be accopted as the trath, and made without malice: State of Nebraska, County ‘of Douglas, s, duly swor November 2, Mr. DeWitt Rustin on the nertheast corner of Fifteonth stopped me and said, “I want to see you,” That E. Rosowater had seen AN INFAMOUS CANARD, ate means to gain dishonest ends! anything be more reckloss, desperate and disreputable than this stupid and vil- A flaming double-leaded editorial ap- 1ve | Peared in Sunday's issue of the Repub- lican under tho head of “‘Attempted Bribery.”” The following is the text of 1.0 | this most malicions compound of perjury and slander: Rosewater is desperate. Not content with mal of every man who opposes b with ealling to his aid Mz tical adopt in billing<gate, ing the character 1; not content Yonagh, ond not even to A prac jows and Editorial | 2 aawator himself in the foulness, meanness, and originalit with desconding from wha of dirty epithets; not content ittle dignity his pon him, to per at last nfer nd engineer, he ha one to the very extreme of attempted bribery. Mr, Points has announced himself nin deg wuperintendent of put well known that this move wi ho pr only give himself w sonally wire-pul y up to the n ment of the arch-intrigner. No possible e cuse can be made for the ingratitude, the treachery and the unfairness Mz, Pointa, His action is condemned by all men regardloss of party, and hosta of those who have hitherto beon his supporters and friends are disap- pointed and disgusted with him, & by any circumstance, secure an_ oloction, this wonld not mitigate the basoness of Lis act. But the means used by his agent, Roscwater, to obtain the victory, ought to be made public property. A fow days ago Mr. Rtustin, the Domocratic nomince for superintendent of public instruc- tion, who, by the way, is a youne man of merit and integrity and agaiust whom the Republican has not one word to say,—-was ap- proached by Mr. Rosewater on one of the principal stroets. Rosewator insidiou that Mr, Rustin had nosort of chance of being elocted, and that it was pity to seo ono o young offered as sucrifice on the Denocratic «Jtar, The upshot of the whole thing was, that Rosewater in so many words requostod Mr. Rustin to withdraw and allow Mr. Points to bo substituted on the Democratic ticket, and assured him if he would do ko, that three hun- dred dollars would be forthcoming, The young man indignantly rosented this insulty and declined to lond himself to any such villainy. anyone's daring to approach him with such a proposition that he made no secret of the mat- ter, and told soveral gentlemen of the whole transaction. Tndleed, he was g0 offended at Mr. Rosewater had mistaken his man, and in promising Mr. Points an election he had reckoned without his host. dently sincere in his intention, and this ex- tromo and disreputablo means of carrying it out shows the reckloss depravity of tho man. Must we repeat our warning to roading, thinking, honcst workingmen and Republi- cans, agalust this corrupt and dangerous trickster? Whon o man is a Democrat nt heart and a traitor by prefession, and gains his only influence by masquerading in Ropublican But he was evi- feathers, must we pluck his plumage, leaving the innate corruption exposed, before an intel- ligent public can seo through this thin dis- guise. We invite the perusal of the following afii- Mr, Carrolton Although de- publican whose belief in Republican princi- ples lies deeper than an inordinate desire for His oath to the facts sot forth in his I, M. H. Carrolton, of Omaba, being first doposes and says that on Friday, 883, in the afternoon, | met and Farnam strects, who He thercupon told me substantially as follows him and said, “Rustin, your chances for elaction don't amount to anything on the Democratic ticket. Tsay all this toyon as a friond. You can have 8300 if you will withdraw and lot J. J. Points have ‘your place on the Democratic ticket,” Mr.” Rustin said, “What do you take me for? Do you take ‘mo to boa fool?” A gentiemian whoso name affiant does not ro- member, but who was introduoed to affiant by Rustin as a school director for MoArdlo pro- cinct, stopped forward at this moment and said, “What i that, Mr. Rustin, 1 under- stand you tosay? Did Rosewater offer you $500 to withdraw?” To which Mr, Rustin roplied, “Yes, that is what I did say, and 1 say it opon an aboye board.” furthor afliant saith not, M. H. Cantaos, Subscribed in my prosence and sworn to bo- foro wmo this & day of Noveber, Justico of the I . In addition to the affidavit of Mr. Carrol. ton, Mr, W. ¥. Schmidt. chairman of the Third ward Republican committee, and ono of the most prominent and reputablo German Republicans in the city, makes tho following explicit and convincing afidavit: State of Nebraska, Douglas county, s, ‘Wm, ¥, Schmidt, glnq «IIILVy sworn, dé- poses and says that on Thursday evening, No- vember 1, 1883, Mr, Rustin, Democratio oan. didate for county superintondent, asserted to mo that he had Deen offered $500 Ly Mr. kd- ward Rosewater to withdraw from the Demo- craticticket In favor of Mr, J.J. Paints, W, ¥, Scisuor, Subscribed in my presence and sworn to bofore me this 3d day of November, A, D,, Lutnes R, Wriout, Justico of the Peace, And now *““this young man of merit and integity,” Mr. Rustin, whom these villains pretend - to quote to sustain their stupid canard comes forward with the following affidavi Btate of Nebraska, County of Douglas, s: 1, J. D. Rustin, being first duly sworn, depose and say, that I am the Democratic candidate for the offico of County Super- intendent of Public Instruction; that I have read the atlidavits of M. H. Carl. ton and Wm, ¥. Schmidt, published in the Omaha Daily Rcpublican, Sunday, November 4th; that so far as those afli- davits purport t» represent conversation between myself and said afliants, thoy are untrue and & misconstruction of my langunge; that I never said that Mr, Itosewater had offored me %300 or any particular sum as an inducement to with- draw, bot 1 sad 1 thought I could get money as b inducement to withdraw; that noithor Mr, Rosewater or Mr. Points have offered me $300 or any sum to with- draw; that Mr, Rosewater did try to in- duce me to withdraw, and intimated that I might be rcimbursed for ex 8 al- mui¥1 incurred; that Mr. Points said to me that my withdrawal would be agree- able to him, only when I was convinced 1 could not be elocted. And further this deponent saith not. A - J. D, Rustiy, Bubscribed in my presence and sworn to teforo me this 4th day of November, 883, E. M. Stexnena, Justice of the Peace, Talk about weckless dopravity! Talk about extreme, disreputablo and desper- lainous canard 7 ERUNEKS BOOMERANG. first make mad.” and his fool friends will presently dis that the infamous canard ffJ. J cover which they sought to kill o! has proved a boomerang. ner's politieal grave. Mr. Points have been cowardly and un provoked. Mr. Points had ns right to become a candidate for county school superintendent as Mr. Brunor Mr. Points has certainly better claims tc the position than Mr, Bruner. filled the oftice acceptably and ought tc be retained in it |litical and should not bo dragged into the Sruner has held « mire of politics. Mr, I £1,300 position in the city schools for years and Mr. DPoints has many never laid a straw in his way. On the other hand, Mr. Bruner has always been apolitical wire-puller and schemer, He has time andagain sought to undermine others that he mightprofit by their down. Ho has alwaya over-reached himself and in this instanco howill fail again, «she Mr. Bruner has certainly no fall. ought to. roason to complain of unfair treatmen at the hands of Tnr Bru, and resorts to methods that would dis grace a bushwhacker. A man who can- not control his temper in o campaign; n man who would concoct and countenance such shameless slanders as have been published concerning Mr. Points, is un- fit to superintend a herd of Texas steo much less the schools of the most popu- lous county in the state. WHITEWASHING A FRAUD. Tire Bre, as usual just before election, is circulating slanders and lies in regard to Republican candidates. The last ef fort of Twr Ber is in relation to Judge Morris. People who have livedin Omaha for several years know that Judge Morris is one of the most honorable men in Ne braska, and because some scamps of the Rosewater stripe attempted to indict Morris, and failed in the attempt, it is fiod reason, as Tnr Ber puts it, why orris should be deofeated. Garbled statements at this late day will not change many votes.- - Republican. Garbled statements will not change votes and bare-faced falsehoods will not condone a crime, whitewash a rogue, no: chango the record, This paper has cor- tainly been very lenient toward Judge Morris. People who lived in Omaha when he was a resident in this city will bo surprised to learn that he was the victim of scamps and blackmailers, Mor- ris was notoriously a erook and eould not have been elected constable after he be came generally known here, indicted on the or blackmailers but on the sworn testimony of James I, Kellom and Joseph Lamaster, both United States revenue officials and mon of the highest intezrity; and the strongest proof of his criminal collusion were the fraudulent books he kept as United States store- keeper. These are facts, and we are roady to prove them in any court. The transeript signed by Elmer Frank, clork of the United States Circuit court, with the seal of the United States court, is on our table. Wae have been asked to pub- lish it in full but did not deem it noces- sary. We understand Governor Dawes and Judge Morris have been in Omaha to procure some papers, with a cock and bull story, to whitewash, but we dare them to the proof. ——— e He was not evidence of scamps Tue record of Judge Savago is before the people of the district where for more than seven years ho filled the highest ofice in the gift of his constituents, They were seven years of hard and honest labor on a bench before which more cases were brought every year than any six others in the State. Overworked, ion, with a ‘docket full to overflowing, which two judges now find it difficult to dispose of, the only surprise is that Judge Savage was able to make a record which is better than that if any of his contem. poraries, We repoat the simple facts which have not and cannot be assailed. Two terms of service in a Republican dis- trict; a smaller number of appeals taken to the Supreme court; a smaller percont- ago of reversed cases and a largor amount of busincss transacted, these are the salient points in the judicial record of Judge Savage which prove his eminent fitness for the oflice for which he is a candidate. Mz, Porxts came into the Republican county convention with a large majority of the country delegates but his votes were taken away from him by swapping and trading in tho interests of other candidates, The charze was mado that ho had revoked a teaher's certiticate against the protests of an entire school district and Mr, Bruner and his friends aro using this item as a campaign bomb, Mr. Points did revoke the teacher's cor- titicate on the ground of habitual drunk- enness and evoryone who knew the facts in the case approved of his action. Wiy did the Anti-monopolists nomi- nato Savage! Why did they not pick out some other man! Lecause they were compelled to nominate a competent man and & man who had csperienco and whose intogrity was unimpeachable, They could not well nominate a farmer or a laborer, They had to take a lawyer, and lawyors who have been District Judges are not numerous. Among those Judge Savage was tho most available. All others without exception had travel- “Whom the gods wish to destroy, they Mr. James B. Bruner with Points The pit they have dug for Mr. Peints will be Mr. Bru- The assaults on much He has The office is not po- but he does not seem to know when he is well treated, rushed by attorneys, clamorous that their cases should be pushed to a quick decis- Could | ed on railroad pakses and been more or less mixed up with railroad politics, A wax by the name of Schmidt, whe affidavit, mill would steadily. mm—— be kept grinding T charge that Judg spring that he didn’t want the workingm n is a downright lie. He never made any such statement, > | anybody's vote. candidate regards it as beneath his dignity to buttonhole men or solicit votes. Wr cannot possibly please the mern expect to, howl with rage when we do. is cortain. been elocted in this county without Tr Plattsmouth ran up a bill uot pard —_—y— Mr. Enresirort has been nominated as assessor of the Ilirst ward to take the He is a competent and energetic mechanic who will make an Mr. Doll place of Mr. Doll. honest and fearless assessor. ought to be retired. WEST OF THE MISSOURI. Fremonters are so inflated with high hopes of early greatness resulting from the completion of the Blair Bridge that many of them have gone into training, under the tutelage of The Herald, to familiarize themselves with such expres- sions as: “Fremont! Change cars for San Franc “Fremont! Change, New York: They are hugging Che Union Pacific was never known to loasen its grip on through traflic while a imile of road remained and it is not like- 1y it will forego a portion of the pleasures and profits of the bridge toll to tickle the Northwestern forty miles from the Missouri. Nebraska is still doing considerable land offico business, The Western Lalf Of the State is yet a powerful magnet to the enterprising homes tor. ker and spocula- The tide of emigration the present year turned mainly toward the virgin prairies north of the Platte, the fertility of which had in years past been neglected for attractions furt Hitcheock distriet is pa allowed, while in N At the Grand Island of- fice, which has been opened for fourtcen years and which was supposed to have seen its daye, the-total acreage of all en- tries for the last three months amount to 149,920 acres. In the North Platte district where agricultural land is sup- poeed to be scarce, * tho entries for the last three months are greater than ever before, and land once thought totally un- tit for cultivation is being eagerly taken. In many Western as wellis Eastern coun- tries, it railroad land, the rush thero has been for the past teen years, scarcely half of Nobraska to enter lands. settled. There is yet room for hundreds | turned of thousands to find )mmqfl and subsis- | 120, tence upon her broad p ies. The Soldier's Colony Town Site asso- ciation of Nebraska have mapped out a ! now town in the northwestern part of the State, which they have christoned Logan after the warrior and statesman of I1li- nois. It is expected the new town will | De the county seat of the county which will be organized in due time, The streets of the town ave 120 feet wide, with two | rows of trees on each side of the stroets, each block, feet, and business lofs 20x100 feet. Blocks are 320 feet equare including al- One-half of all blocks facing on the court house square and one-quarter of blocks cornering on the same are laid out | not quite doubled since that time there is leys. as business lots. following benevolent associations: Masons, Odd Fellows, Grand Army, Young Men' will, twenty acres for a county agri tural association and two acrcs for ral carly in the spring of 1884, Goologist Bailoy, of Wyoming, is pub- lishing an important series of papers in tho wealth of the Territory above and under ground. The coal deposits are Jjustly ranked first in the list, The qual- 1ty of the 1 is well known to the peo- ple of the West as a first-class article when properly propared for the market and cleansed from the clay, sand, slate and slack, While no coking or gas coals have as yot been discovered, yet it is not favored localities, a% has been the case in similar tiolds in Colorado, whore even true antheacite is bewg worked. The several known formations are thus classifind: The Laramie group, eontaining from 7 to 27 beds of coal from 1 ts 45 feot thic! At Evanston, Unita county,the voin worked by the Union Pacific company is 20 feet thick, and has been worked to & depth down the weline of ovor 1,500 feet. At Vermillen creek there are numerous seams oxpased, one being 20 feet thick. At Rock Creck Station au artesian boring keeps a saloon in the Third ward has heard some one say that Rosowater said | At Salt Wells Station are 20 veins in a sec- something to him and he straightway rushes to the Republican office to mako It every one who has heard | other peoplo tell what they heard in the stroots about Rosewater were to insist upon putting it in affidavits the aflidavit pretty votes of | He is not and never has been a ward bummer and cortainly as a who conduct the Omaha Republican. We nover have tried hard and we never They are mad when we don't support Republican candidates, and they One thing No Republicans have over How cAx any honest Workingman sup- port M. B. Reese for Supremo Judge in | wor the face of the sworn statement of F. M, McDonagh that Reeso while living at of 827.85 for job work and advertising which he did not pay when he romoved to Wahoo and has obrara district wen camp about the office to await theirchance mpossible to longer procure | 901: the taxes collected thercon, $81,- Yotin view of this, and | 41578, The alleys are twenty feet wide and cross Residence lots are 50x150 | grounds 7,000,000 acres of the hest Jand A reservation is made of one block fer county court house, one block for market square, four blocks for schools, thirty-six lots for churches, three lots each for the Christian association and temperance organization; four blocks for a city park, One block for a tlouring road depot grounds. The colony expects | 8enural association of Cony to have a public sale of lots on the ground the press of Choyenno and Laramic on | o= unlikely that they will yet be found in| showed 17 beds within 700 feet of the surface, Varying from 1 to 11 feet in thickness, At Point of Rocks 7 veina are exposed from 1to 7 foot thick, y| Botween Black Buttes and Hallville there are numerous exposures from 1} to 6 feet in thickness, | tion of 1,000 feot. P, At Carbon ds, 1 foot, 4 feet, 9 fect and 4 foot respectively 'in thickness, ‘while a deposit on Hans Fork is reported containing veins ¢ 1 in a strata 315 feet thick, ing from 1 foot to 48 foet in thickness. The total coal area known is over square miles, In comparing this with other fields it must be remembered that there is still a large portion of the Ter ritory that has never been explored by |any scientific surveys; and that instead | any avago said last | Of having two or three veins from three | to five feet six there are many veins of | unexceptionable thickness, which will > | multiply the quantity to be produced What [ many times, he did say was that he had not asked for There is a bitter rivalry between the new town of Caldwell and the capital of Idaho, though thirty miles apart. The Oregon Short Line created the former and its location is such that at pres- ent it is paralyzing the older town by its enterprise and goaheadativencss. The citizons are struggling hard to stem the business decline and have raised a bonus of about £60,000 to inuuce the Short Line to build a branch line from Kuna, ;| fifteen miles distant. Passengers for Boise do leave the cars at_Kuna, but the freight goes on to Caldwell and is there distributed by immense trains of eight, ten or twelve horses to the wagon, Boisc is within two miles of the head of the valley, and everything below it will now away from it. Down the river the feeling of satisfaction at the discomfitur of Boise is very manifest The wealthy farmers and stockmen say that the rule has been to oppose them when they could not help themselves, and now that they can help themselves they are turning a cold shoulder toward Boise, and are glad todoit. 'This is why they hail the growth of Caldwell with delight. The feeling of bitterness, however, is al- together 1nutual, There'is great excitement at and about Lisbon, Ransom county, Dakota, over re- ported gold discoveries iu the valley of the Sheyenne river. Lisbon is located in the goographical center of Ransom county, on the Sheyenne, about fifty miles Southwest from Fargo. It is just now the center of attraction for Northern Dakota,and promises to boom as a mining camp. Gold is found in the sand and gravel and in a quartz formation which creps out from the bluffs of the Shey- enne. A hundred and fifty assays of the rock and gravel have been made with re- sults varying from §2.50 to $43.00 of vold per ton, and some silver. If this should prove to be a genuine gold field it will overturn some well established theories regarding mineral finds, The region is far from the mountains, and the Shey- enne in its tortuous course does not tra- verse any known gold field. The people up there have faith in their find and are forming companies to work up the rock and deprive it of its wealth. Now that Washington Territory is brought into close communication with the rest of the world, a few facts concorn- ing the growth and prospects of the northwest corner of the nation will prove interesting. In extent Washington Ter- - | ritory is just about 1,000,000 acres more than twice the area of the State of In diana. Of this area perhaps two-fifths, or 18,000,060 acres, are mountain, lake, salt water and uncultivated land. The remainder, 27,000,000 acres, or 1,500,000 more than Ohio contains, is land of the very best quality found on this continent for wheat, barley, rye, oats and most of the temperate zone fruits and vegetables. T'he latitude is higher than New England, but the climate of the valleys of Virginia prevails, The total assessed valuo of property in the year 1882 was $32,508,- The assessments for 18¢ anting from four counties to bo complete. As far as re- they foot up ,674,- four lagging ceunties wero as- D8I Add this, | sessed last |and we have a total for the current year of £41,(50,388, The Territory now con- tains all the and political parapher- nalla of an enlighted State. Ita asylum for the insane supports 112 inmates, at a | cost of ¥28,000 a year. For the support of convicts it requires $25,000 a year. t has a university znd an excellent ays- tem of public schools, 700 schoolhouses, (50 regularly employed teachers, 24,000 pupils enrolled, and all at a costof $177, 000 for the year ended August 1, 185! The number of reservation Indians is 43,000, all ages and both sexcs, and these occupy, as hunting and {lshing { on the Pacific const. The average to each Indian wan, woman and child is B38% acres. The representative population of Washington Territory in 1880 was ro- turned at 75,120, hat it has nearly if every reason to believe. It has enough of representative population now to en- title it to one Representative in Congress. It has all the natural resources to insure a steady and rapid mcrease in wealth. Even its mountains are not wanting such resources. They are covered with the most valuable timber forest on the continent and seemed with veins of coal, {iron and gold-bearing quartz. aventh annual meeting of the e gational churches of Nebraska, which' was held at York last week, oy, Mr. Merrill, superintendent of wission churches, govon report showing thut the denomination has now lko church organi- zations and 70 church buildings, and thess aro spreadiug through the principal citios and | towns and advancing on the frontier, Tho twenty | | | I ;ERfiNéEME Y PO PAITIN. 1h’oumallsril.c“e':n$a?l ia, Sciatica, ’ eadathe, H W HOLESATIIR 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 G00L5 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 Double and Smy/é l'cfi.né» Power and Hand PUMES, STEAM PUMES, 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 St., Omaha Neb. J. A. WAKEFIELD, BWIOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN ey, Lah, Shingles, Piekets SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - 5 - OMAHA, NEB MAX MEYER & GO., IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES § SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 to $120 per 1000. AXND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLSES, MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLY FIRST-OLASS Carriages, Bugoies Ruad Wagons AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1819 and 13% Ham r Stres ustrated Catalowue formihed tred upenapmicatien o ~~OMAHA, NEB PERFECTION IN Heating and Baking Is only attained by using CHARTER OAK Stoves and Ranges, WITH WIRE GAUZE OVER DOORS For sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS OMAHA- P. BOYER & CO.. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFED, VAULTS, LOCKS, &, 1080Farnam Stroet, Omakha. /

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