Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 6, 1883, Page 4

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s ! b | ] i | i i 1 i | 1 THE DAILY BEE-OMAHA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1885 —e THE GMAHXA BEE. Dublished every worning, exospt Sunday. Th @nly Monday morning daily. WRMS BT MAIL. COMPLIMENTS OF THE SEASON. The campaign is now virtually closed. o | Nearly every intelligent voter has made up his mind whor1 he proposes to sup- port and nothing I may say at this late W aoetasss11os 000 Do Mowth---..:1:" % | hour will materially affoct the result IR WERKLY BRS, PUMLINNED VRRY WEONBSOAT Before the polls close 1 conceive it FERUECIOSTPAID, | my duty to pay my compliments to the Queoar...........4000 ThreoMoptha...... 8 3|4 e of scoundrels who edit and manage Amorican News Company, SolefAgentsiNewsdeal | the Omaha FRcpublican By nature and i ch sl e TR habit they are the most rock-rooted bour- A Communioations relating to News and Editoriat | bons that ever invaded the arena of jour Giatters should be addressed €0 the Eortor, 0T |\ \ien They never learn anything and sowisess urrrens never forget anything. To their malignant A B L s owrast, Ounnis, | Stupidity and villainous hostility I am Dratts, Checks and Postoffce orders to be made pas- | largely indebted for the unparalleled Wble o the order of the company YHE BEE BUBLISHING C0., PROPS, E. ROSEWATER, Editor. ANTI-MONOPOLY STATE TICK FOR JUDGE OF TNE SCPRENE COURT, JAMES W, SAVAGE Douglas County. 'S OF THE STATE UNTVERSITY, Long Term. DAV HCTLER, Pawnee County, DAVID R. DANIEL, Madison County. Short Term.) AMOS DEAN, Franklin County F. MERRITT, Antelo e County. FOR RE ‘Thanksgiving Proclamation, ““In furtherance of the custom of this people at the closing of each year, to engage upon a day eet apart for that purpose in special festi- wval of praise to the Giver of all Good, therefore, X, Chester A. Arthur, President of the United Btates, do hereby designate Thursday, the 20th day of November next, as a dn{ of national ‘thanksgiving, for the year that is drawing to an end has n replets with ‘the evidence of divine goodness, the provailance of health, the fullness of the harvest, the stability of peace and order, the growth of fraternal feelings, the spread ot intelligence aud learning, the continued on: joyment of civil and religious liberty—all these and countless other blessings are cause for reverent rejoicing. I do, therefore, recom- mend that on the day above :J)pclnwd tho people rest from their accustomed labors, and m in theirseveral places of worship, expross their devout dtufe to God that He thas dealt bountifully with this nation, and pray that His grace and favor abide with it orevor. CHESTER A, ARTHUR, Prosident, By Frep, T. ERRLINGHUYSEN, Secretary of State, A vEw more roorback affidavits from Carlton, Schmidt and other tale-bearers will soon be in order to kill off Mr, Points, ‘WASHINGTON is soon to order the re- moval of all telegraph poles from the streets, The capital is bound to be beautiful if not good. Hexry IrNiNG has been well received in New York, but until he knocks out Sullivan he can never hope to enter the inner sanctuary of the American heart. THE appeal of Mr. Points for justice and fair dealing should rally the friends of education to his support. Mr. Bru- ner has a good place; let him stay there. Boss Stour has-come to Omaha to supervise the defeat of Judge Savage and insure the election of a Judge who would favor his penitentiary contract and capi- tol ateal, ¢ , S— THIRTY-FIVE years ago C. P, Hunting- ton, now one of the millionaires of New York City, was a peddler of oranges. ‘The profit on oranges has not decreased much since, Ir the gas in Omaha gets any ‘worse some gas fixture manufacturer can make a point by coating them with luminous paint so that people can see to turn out the gas before going to bed. DuriNe the summer packing season, in Chicago which began March 1, and end- ed November 1, there were slaughtered and packed 1,860,000 hogs, a large in- crease over the season last year, —— Me. Tsams has flooded the slums with money. He has done more to corrupt the present campaign than any other candidate, It remains to be meen ‘whether he can buy his way in for four years more, E—— Mz, Iyams makes it a point that he is the only man competent to fill the clerk’s oftice. This is bosh, Mr, Heins is com- petent but to make sure he has arranged with Major George Armstrong whose| g, competency nobody questions to act as his deputy. S——— ¥rery dollars have been levied by the bogus workingmen's committee on Mr, Reese's friends and the sum has been paid in. Will Mr, Reese get his fifty dollars worth of workingmen? How do Omaha mechanics like being placed open- 1y on sale? —— success that has attended my efforts to establish one of the most influential and prosperous newspapers west of the Mis- ippi. For more than twelve years these im- beciles have waged a relentless, vindie- tive and cruel warfare, which had for its sole aim my degradation as a man and the breaking down of the Bir as a news. paper. They have stopped at nothing that devilish ingenuity could invent aud have stooped to devices and means that would shame the most audacious pirate that ever cut a throat or scuttled a ship. In 1872 they encouraged the incendiary that set fire to my printing house, only to see Tne BEE rise from its ashes more vigor- ous than ever, They have incited per- sonal assaults by bullies and rowdies, and in 1876 the grand jury that indicted Richard Curry for an attempt to assas- sinate me in the streets of ()maha barely failed to indict Casper E. Yost, I W. Miner and Paul Vandervoort for setting up that murderous plot. The only rea- son they were not indicted, as District Attorney Connell stated over his signa- ture, was that while the evidence was clear that they planned the assault, proof was wanting to show that they knew that the weapen was to be a four-ounce billy. These are not the only crimes of which they have been guilty to accomplish political and personal ents. In May, 1880, while the Republican County con- vention was in session at the court house one of their number whom I can name set fire to an empty barn adjoin- ing the court house, for the purpose of stampeding the convention which had been disastroustotheir faction. And these instances are only a ““Miner” part of the rascalities that have been perpetrated i Omaha to down Rosewater and give full sway toa set of cormorants who would be a disgrace among the Hotentotts. Only last spring a Douglas county grand jury unanimously found a true bill against Casper E, Yost and Fred Nye for ma- licious libel on me, but before the indict- ment was presented one of the grand jurors divulged the fact. Corrupt ma- chinery was set in motion, and the indict- ment was reconsidered under false pre- tenses. Fiveef thegrand jurymenwhohad been tampered with voted ‘‘no” and Yost and Nye escaped by the skin of their teeth, And such men have put themselves up as exponents and leaders of true republicanism, whilo I and put down as a rebel and apos- tate. 'What are the facts in the case? There is not a man in the Republican gang who served his country in the war while I braved the dangers and teok the risks incident toseveral campaigns. The war was barely over when Yost, who always has been a Republican for reve- nue only, betrayed the party that had fed and clothed him, Johnsonized and supported a mongrel Democratic ticket with J. Sterling Morton for Governor. Nebraska then didn't have any Republi- cans to spare and when Grant came in power in '69 Yost was kicked out of the J. 8. Marshalship for his party treason. In 1871, Yost and his clique bolted that Republican veteran John M. Thayer and voted the straight Democratic legislative ticket. In 1875, those paragons of Re- publicanism, bolted and defeated John M. Thurston who had then not become a railroad candidate. In 1870 they defeat- ed W, J. Connell for District Attorney, and elected Buckingham, a Democrat, It is historic that they had knifed and sought to defeat Burley and Manchester in the previous campaign, by putting bogus tickets in the field, During the memorable Senatorial campaign that culminated in the election of Alvin Saun- ers, these stalwarts made a bargain with Sam Tilden to give him Mr. Hitchcock's support in the Senate in return for Dem- ocratic votes in the Legislature, For particulars we refer to James Creighton and Charles H, Brown, who were mem- bers of that Legislature. Later on we been the devil incarnate which they have painted me, the principles I have adve- cated would still survive and the good men T have supported would not suffer in reputation. I have sought to publish a fearless, outspoken lonest newspapsr and my highest ambition has been grati- fied in the prosperity of Tis Ber, The concern that flaunts the Republican la- bel has sunk thousands upon thousands of dollars in a vain effort to ‘‘bury Rose- water.” As a journal it is a disgrace to the party it pretends to sup- port. As a newspaper it is reader- les in the town where it is published, and it only survives because of the job work which the railroads be- stow upon it. The infamous calumnies which they have concocted against me have recoiled, and their last and most stupid canard has proved a boomerang. In tendering to them the compliments of the season I hold them up to gaze in find Mr. Yost making a bargain to sell out his own friend, Gridley, Republican candidate for Sheriff, in return for half the patronage of the Democratic candi- date, George Guy. For further partic- ulars 1 refer to Henry Grebe, Mr,Gluy's deputy. {‘red Nye, who cut: Mz, Teuier still resists the pleas of the railroad land grabbers in Washing- ton, It will take several hundred thou- %a mighty small ball's political jumping-jack for knifing Republicans that didn't suit the railroads and for keeping up a villainous personal war on me, corporations who have violated every «charter obligation to rob the public, E—— Great excitement exists in New York| In paying my respects to these politi- over the coming election for Register. | cal hybrids ly nuxut confess th:t 1 ‘l'hnl.nuwr.nl thmnndl in the field | feel highly flattered that they have who, with a rising sigh, ofl: wisheth each | kept me before the people as a candidate other in Heaven or something like that. | for every great office within the gift The office is worth f\mut $100,000 & | of the people of Nebraska. During year, This fact may in a measure ex-|three senatorial campaigns, Rosewater phlnfln anxiety displayed by the differ-|has been the only competitor ent candidates. ;qdlu:d tl:lnir favoritics, Upon me they S—— umps I the filth in their mud . Unrzss there is a marked change forthe | teries and upon my head have (dlunh::l worne the last two Ilwnthl of the present | the calumny that they and a hundred lit- year will be.more satisfactory to brainess | tle satellites couid hurl, men than November nnd' Decomber of | of Webster, *“1 still live,"and what s true 1882, After lagging behind last year's |also the political graveyards have been figures for a long time, the bauk clearings planted full of the men whom thuse im- of the country have at last begun to show | becile desperadoes have championed. & depided gain, and a better tone seems| The public has known how to take the o in commercial circles. There |assaults and has taken the measure of is pl of room for improvement, the calibre of the assailants, Had 1 In the language the mirror in which their true characters are reflected, E 70.DAY'S ELECTION Aside from our local campaign, the chief interest in to-day's elections center in New York, Massachusetts, New Jer- sey and Pennsylvania. There is com- plaint of general apathy among voters in every State except Massachusetts. In Pennsylvania the canvass is tame, as the offices are comparatively unimportant and the campaign a moneyless one. In New York the Republicans are making something of an effort to wipe out the 190,000 majority by which Cleveland atepped into the gubernatorial chair. They have only fair prospects for a par- tial success. The outlook is that the Democratic majority in the State will range from 35,000 to 50,000 with the possibility of Republican gains in the Legislature. The center of political excitement is in Massachusetts, where Butler is fighting for his political life with a desperation commensurate with‘the stake. On the eve of election itis impossible to predict even the probable result. All the politi- cal elements in the State are united against Butler, but he is a shrewd, methodical and determined fighter with a complete knowledge of political machinery and with money enough to lubricate it liber- ally. He has left no stone unturned to draw out the full strength of his support aud if he is defeated it will be by a small majerity. The contests in the other November States possesses little of interest or sig- nificance. New Jersey will doubtless go Democratic and. Pennsylvania probably Republican. The result of the election VATER, THE NATIONAL FINANCES. The changes which were expected to result from the operation of the new revenue laws have caused the monthly statements of the condition of the na- tional finances to be watched with more than usual interest. To those who pre- dicted that the new laws would reduce taxation by greatly reducing the treasury surplus, the statements since July must have proved disappointing. The Novem- ber statement will be equally so. Tt adds little to the public information, but it emphasizes most strongly the ar- guments that have been put forward in favor of revenue reform and shows that the difficulties that an unwarranted treasury surplus throws around the ad- ministration of the national finances are steadily increasing. The treasury is teo full; and, in spite of all efforts to deplete it, it continues too full, while that part of the public debt which alone is subject to redemption diminishes with increas. in the particular States named will be watched with interest as indicating the probable outcome of the Presidential contest next year. If New York, Massa- chusetts and New Jersey go Democratic by decided majorities, and Pennsyivania shows a marked falling off in the Re- publican vote, the election of a Republi- can President next year will be so diffi- cult as to be almost an impossibility under present conditions. ; In our own State the contest over the Supreme Judge excites universal interest and the county contest will tend to draw out a full vote. PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS. The steady rise in real estate and the continued firmness of the market, not- withstanding the approach of winter, is one of the evidences of Omaha's contin- ued growth and the increasing public confidence in her present stability and future importance. This confidence has been festered during the past year by the public improvements which have been begun in the city and by the strong sen- timent of our people which demands that they shiall be steadily prosecuted: in the future. In the absence of a com- plete system of waterworks and sanitary sewerage, with upaved streets and alleys and unflagged sidewalks, the appearance of Omaha belied all the praises of her citizens, Much as we might talk to strangers of our advantag the grow- ing metropolis of the Missouri valley and expatiate upon our vigor and activity as a live city, we were invariably answered by disparaging remarks about our mud and dust, our lack of pavements, our wooden sidewalks and our wretched street crossings. Mr, Touzalin probably did net exaggerate the case when he stated that the lack of public improve- ments was costing Omaha millions of dollars every year. Capital was fearful of investment in business enterprises in a city which was behind all i1ts compeers in enterprises which benfiited every citi- zen alike and for whose absonce the pub- lic at large were responsible, The construction of the water works was the beginning of the end of the old reign of costly conservatism in Omaha. It was followed quickly by the Waring system of sanitary sewerage. These - | completed, the charter was amended to permit a further extension of improve- ments through a safe extension of the city’s credit, and paving began. To-day we are launched on a system of public improvements which, if carried out as projected, will make Omaha within the next ten years one of the most attractive of cities in the west. By another year the greater part of our business streets will be paved, our leading thoroughfares graded and curbed, many of our residence streets neatly parked, and a beginning will be made towards the improvement of our county roads which lead from the city. Omaha not only needs a steady exten. sion of public improvements, but she is well able to afford it. Our property valuation, as returned by the assessors, is less than one-fifth of our actual valua- tion, Granting that it is actually one fourth, our tax rate is lower than that of any other city of our size in the country, while our bonded indebtedness per capita ing rapidity. The debt reduction for October is over $10,300,000, and for the fiest third of the fiscal year a trifle less than $40,000,000. Between this sum and the reduction during the correspond- ing period last year, as well as between the receipts of revenue for the same two periods, the difference is near $20,000,- 000;and this makes pretty closely the ex- tent of revenue reduction. At this rate, the reduction for the entire year would be $60,000,000; and even making due allowance for the extraordinary receipts during the first few weeks of the operation of the new tariff act, the total reduction cannot rise above $76,000,000, and will most probably fall far below. With the natural increase in trade, this leaves the yearly surplus about what we have held to be the nearest ap- proximation—$100,000,000. Since the 1st of October the 3} per cents outstand- ing have been reduced abeut one-half, only the trifling amonnt of some $5,000,- 000 being left. The 3 per cents have also lost $4,000,000; while notwithstand- ing these extensive redemptions, the cash in treasury has mounted from $386,000,- 000 to £364,000,000. But of this increase some $5,000,000 is in the item of gold and silver cercificates. No one can deny that the situation as outlined is unhealthy and unsatisactory. 1t is scarcly less so than it has been for years. Revenues, extorted by taxation on the commonest necessaries through a tariff maintained to bolster up the for- tunes of millionaire monopolists, are pouring into the treasury in an unprece- dented flood. Cash is accumulating in spite of every effort to get rid of it. Bonds are being cancelled at a rate which must seriously affect the national bank- ing system. The relations of our cur- rency to that ef other nations is being jeopardized by the unrestricted coinage of silver and all this because of a system of taxation whose results exceed by a hundred millions a year the needs of the government. OF the old war Generals, Meade, Tho- mas, Hooler, Garfield, Kilpatrick, Burn- side and Halleck are on fame's eternal camping ground. Grant is getting old, but has good health, plenty of meney, and enjoys life. Sherman is 64, but looks older. Sheridan, who was a Major General at 30, commands the army at 61, Fitz John Porter is white haired and broken in frame. DMcClellan is rich, rotund and round shouldered, with the activity of his life over. Pleasonton, the cavalry hero, lives quietly at Wash- ington. Rosecrans, the California Con- gressman, lives at Washington, and his hair, with a military cut, is snow white. Hawley and Logan, well preserved gen- tlemen of 69, and Slocum, are also in Congress. Sickles is a New York law- yer, Stonemanis Governor of California. Doubleday is in New York writing a book. Humphreys, Hunter and Critten- den, on the retired list, live in Washing- ton. Fremont, no longer rich, lives in New York. McDowell is on the retired list. Buell is in business in Kentucky Banks is United States Marshal. Han- cock, Schofield and Pope are Major Gen- erals in the army, and Howard a Briga. dier. Terry is expected to succeed Sher- idan in chief command of the army. Gilmore, Parke and Weitzel are in charge of light-houses and fertifications, Grier- son is commanding a colored regiment in Texas. Pl b s do o 1r is the opinion of the best informed European writers that the next great European war will take place between Russia and Germany. They would ap- pear tobe right. For some reason, which Germany regards as sinister, and probably rightly, notwithstanding Baron de Giers' bland and open statement that Russia is pacifically inclined, Russia has been strengthening her fortresses along her Southern European frontier, while at the same time she is massing crowds of Cossacks along the same line. The Berlin cabinet intends to protest aganst these movements as unfriendly acts, and then—well, nobody knows what will take place then. It is difficult to see what oc- casion Russia has for throwing these Cossack hordes along her frontier at the present moment, when there is ne os- tensible cause of trouble between her and Germany, but that restless spirit of Pan-Slavism, of which General Skobeleff wasthe prophetand General Gourkoisnow the apostle, is bound sooner or later to come into collision with both Austria and Germany, If war does break out, it will, considering Germany's alliance and Russia's enormous resources, prove one of the bloodiest on record. Then France will get her hand in. —_— Secrerany Lixcowy followed his sharp letter on the Arctic fiasco by prompt an- nouncement of the court cf inquiry, which will consist of General Beuet, chief of ordnance, General Ayres, of the Second artillery, and Colonel Poe, of the is proportionately small, engineers, with Major Henry Goodfellow, Cures Scrofula, Erysipelas, Pimples and Face Grubs, Blotches, Boils, Tumors, Tet- ter, Humors, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Sores, Mercurial Diseases, Femalo Weoakness and Irregularities, Dizziness, Loss of Appetite, Juandice, Affections of the Liver, Indi gestion, Biliousness, Dyspep- sia and General Debility. ons In cleven angusges DI FOSTER, MILBURN & CO,, Prop's, Buffalo, N.Y. of General Pope’s staff,as judge advo- cate. The court will take into account General Hazen's alleged contradictory orders, and the impression pre- vails that they will investigate Hazen quite as much as (arlington, as Hazen's disposition to help Greely is the subject of some ugly reports. Proba- bly the truth is, however, that Hazen had but an ill-informed purpose as to the conduct of the expedition, and gave his subordinates a confused and hesitating programme. The court is cemposed of ofticers of high standing, and their con- clusions will have great weight with the army and the public. It is a melan- choly ending to all the recent Arctic ex- peditions that the survivors come home to undergo a court of inquiry. The Omaha Bee. Shenandoah (Ta.) Reporter, Nov. 2. Tar OmanA Bre charges that the Re- publican party in State is completely honeycombed by the railroad corruption- ists of that State, who are not content to run the primaries and nominating con- ventions and have their pets and tools fill the Legislature and preside as judges on the bench, 50 as to have laws made and constructed in their interest, and to throw the burden of taxation upon the cople, while they escape. Itis a fear- F:m defender of public rights and @s waging a war on behalf of the people against the corporate monopolies of tI State. It is Republican out and out _in principle, but does not consider that Re- publicanism and robbery are interchang- able and synonymous terms. We admire its spirit. STATE JOTTIN The citizens of Doniphan have voted $2,000 for & new school. Sisters of the Order of St. Francis are raising funds to build a hospital at Grand Ts. land, The Congregationalists of Lincoln are moy- ing for & new church, on which they propose tospend 820,000, Henry Moon, a Lincoln boy, was run over by a hoavy wagon, breaking his log Letween the thigh and hip, On November 9th Decatur is to vote on is- suing 815,000 bonds in aid of the Salina, Lin- coln & Decatur railroad company. The Oatholics have secured a’ site for a church at Fairbury, There are some thirty Catholics families in that vicinity, who pro- pose to raise $1,200 or $1,500 forfthe purpose. A merchant of Huafir?! recently received the following order; “Mr. B——, please send me 81 worth of coffy and 81 worth of shoogar, some small nales. My wife hada baby last nite, also two padlocks and a mon- key rench,” Farmers of Minnesota are buying new corn in Dodge county, to be shipped there for feed- ing hogs. Somo’ of them also, contemplate shipping their hogs there for fattening before being sent to the Chicago markets. The Grand Island schools are in a_terrible condition, according to the Times. The boys fight and shoot pistols, and as a consequence of recent row, one boy is aid up with a buls lot in his log and agirl had her nose split, The teachers are afraid of the boys and can not enforce discipline. There are at pesent over 70,000 railroad ties lying piled up on both sides of the switches at the Odell depot. A large train loaded with stoel rails has also arrived. Both the rails and tes areintended for the new B. & M. branch road now being built trom Odcll to Washington, Kansas. The Lincoln and Salina railroad runnin north and south, which was surveyed throug] Odoll some time _since, will surely be built before next fall. Work has commenced on the southern eud in Kansas already, This will give Odell three roads, and open up facil- itien_ for shipping purposes, cnjoyed by very fow towns in Gage county. TheB, & M. railroad extension from Ne- maha City to Salem is beiog pushed toa rapid completion, and the piers are now being built for a bridge across the Missouri at Rulo. Both the railread extension and the bridee will be completed by _early spring, and this will give the B. & M. interests in Nemaha county a good southern and eastern outlet. The wife of a prominent stock man in Buf- falo county recently stamped out a_small re- bellion among sixteen cowboys. During her absonce one day the men resolved to do as lit- tlo work as possible, Beingin Kearney at the timo she hired a livery team and drove to the ranch, summoned the sixteen men before her and paid off every one and discharged them on the spot, hiring other men to do the work, and returning home the same _da A Oard from Mr, Rustin, OxanA, Neb., November 5, To the Editor of Tk Bek. In your Saturday's paper you have mis- represented my record as a teacher in this county. I have taught 34 months in the district schools of Douglas county, which, at an average of six months to the year, makes five and two-third’s school years, As to my competency, that is a matter of opinion, as, not intending to follow the rmlmiun of teaching for a livelihood, I have never l]!;pliud for a first-class certificate. J. D. Rustin, B ARG BN 1 THE GREAT DERMAN REMED PO PAIIN. ES \heuma\lsm,cfie':xralghin Seiatica, Back: Hll:I W EHOLESATLE Dry Goods! SAM'L C. DAVIS & CO,, ff’affi/(rgffm Avenue ‘,’,”d flfth Street, 3 T. LQUIS. M0 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 PUMPS, STEAM PUMES, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hoso, Brass and Iron Fittin: Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam St., Omaha Neb. J. A. WAKEFIELD, AWHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Limber, L, Shingles, Py SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - . - OMAHA, N 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- DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTS, LOCKS, &c. 1020 Farnam Street.'Omaha. LMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACGOS, PIPES: SMOKERS' ARTICLES 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, AXMEYER = 0 i | GUNS nSPOR ING GOODS( A. K. DAILEY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Bugoies Carriages and Suring Wagons Myl Repository ia constantly filled with & selectfstock. Best Workmanship guaranteed. Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenue, Qmala ASK YOUR GROCERS FOR THE OMAHA DRY HOP YEAST! WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL. Manufactured by the Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Co. | I—I:ousekeebers | It Never Fails, 2718 BURT STREET, OMAHA, NEB On Long Time--Small Payments. Al Manufacturers Prices. A Hosue Jr MAX MEYER & GO., Vi Y, N/

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