Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 10, 1883, Page 4

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I'A¥. DAILY BEE--OMAHA, SAT'URDAY, NOVEMBLER 10, 1883, ‘THE GCMAXA BEE. Dublished evory worning, exoept Bunday. The @nly Monday morning daily. ARMS BY AL Yoar.........410.00 | Three Months, -l Monin. 5,00 | O Mooth WUR WHEKLY SW8, PURLISIRD SVRRY WRDNRSDAY. TRRNAJPOSTPAID. ©no Yoar...........42.00 | Threo Months.......8 60 Mot 1.00 | One Month .. ...\, %0 Amorioan News Company, Solo] Agente=Newsdeal- @ in the United Statos. CORRRSFONDRNCR. S A Communieations relating to News and Editorial enatters should bo addressed o the Eiron,or. Tin ® 25,00 1.00 BUSINRAS LRTTNRA. " All Busineas Lotvors and Remittances should be @ddrossed to Tn Bax PusLising CoNrANY, OMATA Cheoks and Postoflice orders to be made pay- able to the order of the company. $HE BEE BUBLISHING C0, PROPS. €. ROSEWATER, Editor. “Tunre is one point of excellence about ®ome of the Thanksgiving proclamations this yoar—they aro briof. Those iasued by the Governors of Connecticut, New Jersey, Vormont, Ohio, Towa and Mis- souri are models in this respect. 17 is alleged that eastern railrond men are urging men allied with western and southern roads to use their influence to socure the election of Mr. Randall to the spoakership. That the great corpora- tions have an axe that he can sharpen accounts for it. CuARyAN Dorsey has revised his fig- ures. He first claimed, with a flourish of trumpets, that Reese wrs elected by 16,000. He now says he is satisfied that Reese will have 7,600, He will have to rovise his latest figures before he gets through and come down to a fraction be- Jow 5,000, ‘Tae conceited donkey that edits the Republican still persists in publishing Yalse returns on his editorial page which are contradicted en another page of his own paper. His column of majorities for Reese credits Savage with 1471 major- ity in Douglas when'his local columns give Savage a majority of 1,632, ‘He credits Reese with 200 majority in Cass county when he knows that Cass county gave Savage 107 majority. That shows how anuch reliance can be placed on his figures. A rEPRESENTIVE of the liberal Puritan element of Massachusetts defeated Ben Butler in Tuesday's election. Hon. Geo. D. Robinson is a native of the State and ‘was born at Lexington, January 20, 1854, graduating at Harvard in 1856, and enter- ing the legal profession. His political services embrace a term in each branch of the State Legislature, and in the Forty- {ifth, Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh Con- gresses. He was re-elected to the Forty- PUBLIC LAND STEALS. The Intorior Department is apparantly awnkening to the fact that under its very nose gross frauds are being perpotrated by land isharks and monopolists. It is about time that tho rights of the people, undor the homestead and pre-emption | 1aws, received some attention, and that land robberies be stopped. A departure from the homestead land provisions has been made in favor of the Pacific railways, desert lands so called, have been given away to those who would reclaim them, and timber lands allowed to pass into the hands of speculators, who coveted them and by fraud acquired large and valuable tracts. These are cvils demanding a romedy both prompt and effective. The public lands belong to the people. For several years under either the tax laws, or a heedless enforcement of them, the rightful owners have been merciloss- ly plundered. The claims of railroads to lands which they have not earned should bo promptly rejectod and such lands restored to the public doman. There arc vast which may be thus restored and pass into the hands of werthy and industrious men. The Interior Department will do a good work in stopping such frauds as are uncovered now and in searching for others yet hidden from view. There is a work for Congress also in this direction, and the department's efforts should be assisted by that body. All departures from the operations of the homestead act should be summarily stopped. It is reported that during the last yevr an aggregato of 19,020,769 acres have been disposed of and, although the area open to cultivation seems to renew itsclf, as much of those land classed as desert and unfit for crops is now being developed, the fact remains that such extensive slicing is too rapidly depleting the main body. The laws need adjnsting to present conditions and thena rigid en- forcement. Here is a ficld for a needed reform which cannot longer be neglected with impunity. tracts Tae trials for bribery, forgery and conspiracy in St. Louis, 1t is hoped, will throw some light on the Broadhead- McLean contest for a seat in Congress. Make it electric; no candles in a fraud hunt, -~ OTHER LANDS THAN OURS, The week has closed without any very marked political changes on the other side of the Atlantic. Much fecling has been stirred up in England by the recent underground railway explosions, which are believed to have been committed by Fenians, Traflic on the underground eighth. His proverbial Yankee shrewd- mess and political experience together with his political training and honesty of purpose will make of him a good Gov- ernor. There will be less of sensation and more of standard respectability about Ais administration than Butler's. TuERE is more trouble about the keep- er of Hanscom Park. The City Clerk Thas taken it upon himself to enter com- tlaint against Mr. Haas, the keeper, for alleged rudeness to a lady relative whom he says was forcibly cjected from the Park. Mr. Haas, in defense to this charge, states that the lady in question was helping herself to flowers and plants which are his personal property. He claims that he politely requested her to stop the depredations, but she refused to -wunderstand him,and hefinallyput herout. Mr. Haas says he did not know that the lady was a relative of the high dignitary that waits upon the Council or he would have cheerfully submitted to being do- spoiled of his property. Now it strikes us that the Council should promptly lay this complaint under the ta- ble. Mr. Haas should not be punished or even censured for protecting his property. The relatives of the City Clerk have no better right to pull up his flowers and plants because they are in the Park than they would have if they were on private premises. The idea that any «ity official should consider himself enti- tled to special privileges in Hanscom Park is to assume that the Park is kept up as a posey garden at the expense of the city for the sole use of the public ser- vants, If the keeper of the Park has been guilty of any criminal act in refus- ing to part with his property without pay ot Mr. Jewott enter complaint in the police court Guseral Scmorierp, who has suc- ceeded General Sheridan as commander ©f the Department of the Missouri, is now 62 years old, graduated at West Point in 1853 with Sheridan, and has served in the army ever since. In 1861 he was chief of staff to Gen, Lyon, and after his death was appointed commander of the Missouri division of the army. In 1803 he served with Gien, Rosecrans in the army of the vumberland; in 1864 ho commanded the army of the Ohio against Hood in Tennessee, and in 1865 received the surrender of Johnston's army in North Carolina, During President Johnson's administration he was Sec- wetary of War from June, 1868, to March, 1869, He then took command of the department of the Missouri, with tho title of Major-General, and held it for one year, when he was appointed to the command of the Pacific department. In 1870 he left the Pacific command to be- come Superintendent of the Military Academy at Wost Point, He was as- signed to the position of the Gulf in A8B1 where he remained but three anonths. In 1882 he returned to the Pa- cific and now comes to Chicago ment, while Gen, Sheridan goes to Washington, D, C., to succeed Gen, Bherman and receive the title of Genoral, Maj.-Gen. Bchofield will receive the title «@f Ligutenent-General at the same time, railway has in consequence decreased very materially. A feeling of general uneasiness has taken possession of the traveling public. The impending war between France and China is a subject of speculation both in the French and British capitals, The news comes from Lima that a treaty of peace has been formally signed between Chili and Poru. This is doubt- less the Iglesias treaty, by which Chili takes the nitrate and guano territory, witheut assuming any portion of the Pe- ruvian debt of $200,000,000. and Iglesias takes charge of the government of Peru. This leaves Peru mip[wd of her most valuablo possessions, and gives the Eng- lish and French holders of her bonds anything but a cheerful outlook. Iglesias has given cvidence of a disposition to govern wisely, and to allow the country a periop of repose and order in which to recover from the losses of this long aad costly struggle. He will come into power with nssurances of popular support, and if he keeps the promises of his pronun- cinmento of a few months ago, his Presi- dency will be a fortunate ono for Peru. 1t is idle to expect much from the now change in Spanish affairs. Nations are not changed off-hand in character and tendency by liberal cabinets or lib- eral kings. The true significance of the present situation in Spain lies in the ap- pearance there of a young sovereign, who scems disposed to begin the work accom- plished by Victor Emmanuel in Italy, and by Francis 11 in tho Austro-Hunga- rian monarchy, The safest and most stable governments in Europe to-day are those which were created in this way,by the judicious direction and recognition of liberal impulses and principles at the hands of a canstitutioxmrmmmrvh‘ Soveral “people's eating-houses” are shortly to be established in Berlin under the protectorate of the Crown Princoss of Germany, and with the co-operation of the Mayor and other dignitaries. It is pru[;owd to furnish & bowl of good soup for 2 cents, and a complete and sub- stantial dinner for about 4 cents. Coffee and cocon are to be the regular beverages Beer may possibly be admitted, but spir- ituous liquors will be positively excluded. That the English colonies in Australia are bouxd, sooner or later, to form a confederation which shall have charge of their common interests, and particul arly of their general relations to tlhu mother country and the policy of Great Britain toward foreign nations in the southern seas, has long been evident. The num- ber of the colonists is not so great as to require this, but their peculiar character, th its vigorous and patient energy, its wature intelligence and its solid assurance of capacity to work out a,wonderful future, makes them a factor in the British Ewpire which cannot forever be deprived of its full value by the maintenance of political separation, There are as yet but about 8,000,000 of them, and they have fairly eccupied only the fringe of the vast island continent, which, in spite of its desert spaces, has resources of almost in- caloulable value and variety, but they that is nearly if not quite unrivaled. ‘T'he foreign trade of these 5,000,000 of Englishmen on the further side of the giobe is $500,000,000, or one-half that of the American Union, with its 50,000,000 of people, and equal to that of %nin, Norway, Sweden and Denmark, in Europe, with 25,000,000 of population Itis mr in value than the entire for- eign of the mother couniry fifty years , end it employs & mercantile e i A 6o Qusen of the Bean” Whie thels bt have already made a degree of progress || dation makes the foreign commerce of the colonies necessarily of greater im portance relative to their internal trade than is the case in this country, the facts above cited are extremely significant. China and France seem to be really at wat, yot thero has been no formal deo- laration of their belligerent relations, Tho telegraphic advices from Europe ap- pear to indicate, however, that the an- nouncement will not be much longer de- layed, everything indicating that the diplomatioc negotiations cannot satisfac- torily resolve the difficulties. It 1s, of course, impossible to tell just what the outcome of the struggle will be, but the chances aro that France will get some formof victory, unloss the complica- tions compel intervention by Great Brit- ain or some of the othor great powers of Europe. That France has any cause to hope for a victory at all equal to the cost of the war is more than we can bo- lieve. It cannot prosecute the affair suc- cessfully oxcept at enormous cxpense, and despito its wonderful rocuperation since the Franco-German war, it is in no condition for such a drain upon its finan- cial resources as this war will enforce. Tt may bo thought that the experience of Germany demonetrates that such strug- gles can be managed 8o as to strengthen a nation both financially and morally, but we doubt if France can realize an such Dbeneficial results from a war with China. The agitation in Bohemia caused by the friction existing between the German and Czechian populations has become general. Many members of tho Reichs- rath are dirccting their energies toward socuring a partition of Bohemia, and giv- ing to each of the provinces thus formed autonomous governments of their own. They hope by this means to restore har- mony and prevent a recurrence of the existing dangerous state of affairs, The Danish Government has drafted a bill, which will shortly be presented to the Folkething, which has for its object improved metfiods of life insurance for workmen. The Government proposes by this measure to found an insurance pension fund, and will commence by do- nating the sum of 2,000,000 kroners, which is to form the nucleus for future operations. The premiums charged workingmen desiring to insure in this national insurance company will be almost nominal, and they will be re- turned entact to any person who finds himself so poor as to be unable to con- tinue the necessary periodical payments, Should this measure become a law the Danish ministry believe that they will have accomplished the solution of a great economic problem, ‘The wanton corruption of the Turkish ofticials in the Damaseus district has finally led to serious disturbances. The Arabs have refused almost in a body to pay their taxes, and in every village anti- Turkish placards are seen upon the walls. The riots which occurred at several points have been quelled by the military, but they are likely to recur at any moment. The Czar has decided to arm the Rus- sian army with repeating rifles of the latest American pattern. He has just ordered 200,000 of these arms through a London firm. Babies are one is always t No matrimonial existence is c out the three *‘P's— Peace, lenty goric.” The man wh f eare's plays. The last lete with- and Para- has no baby but his s more than es don't look 50 red in the morning. “A baby iu the house is a woll spring of pleasure,” kays a poet,and it must Imitted that the metaphor is happily chosen, Spri are seldom dr; . A baby carringe which will last a year can now be obtained for £18 or 820, but it is cheap- erin the end to add five or ten dollars more and get one that will lust two years. - The old-fashioned cradle which gently lulled the infat to sleep has bocn nearly driven out by the opposition of family doctors. If you don't believe it, open your windows any night and listen to the howls, “Nothing is_impossible.” says Bulwer, but Bulwer never listened to a shrieking brat in a assenger car and retained his temper because he realized that ho was a baby once himself, No man has ever succoeded in doing that, This is » baby. Tt is a girl b How l]u]l])j’ its chinis! How red its eyc ‘What horrid contortions it makes with its face! See how savagely it kick: How sour it smells, How like a demon it ?'ulln! Yi years some man will be half-c suspense, worshipping breathes, devoutly frantically begging for ono of the hand; even a look whic] hope, i life! Of the forty members of the freshman class at Bates collogo, Maine, eight are girls. Prof. Burt G. Wilder, of Cornell Uni- versity, says that a student should never sleep loss than eight hours nor study directly after meals, A country school teacher mear Marshall, Michigan as proforred charges of assault against two Doy pupils, aged 11 and 14, and their examination i set for next Tuesdily. A Maine girl, who was liberally educatod in merica, siffered a course of German school- n Germany, and is an_accomulished mu- sician, rocently shingled hor father's uftico, Such a girl doserves a good husband, but in all probability she will remain shingle, The schoolmaster fs very much abroad in Saratoga. Ono lady blushing with diamonds sent an order to her milliner as follows: **Deer Miss X Please got for me two yards of Iryish point lais and alsou get mo six pares of glubs, seveus and a quarters, orushed:roso-bor. rie P.8.—Don't send the Bill for 1 nt ——— to see it, he only al. me a z summ and 1 will pay it myself,” - ————— IMPIETIES, Threats of tar and foathers discourage Mor- mon_ missionary work in the Southeri; S A saing in such'a garb foels more stuck up is consistent with the true humility of his c ing. Now Orleans paper: There are no nic stories about the return of *“The Pre Daughtor,” The son can return and hay finest veal sorved up for must stay away yoars old. living at Akron, 0., Bob Tngersoll to a publie discussion > Bible, aud sho says if sho can't muke him siuk dowa s boots she'll present him with & new milch cow. Darwin is right. Nature alivays provides for tho necessities of existence, A Colorado y has been born with three arms, one of 1 being at the back, so that he can in an instant reach Lis pistol-pocket unobserved, A colored pastor led his congregation to the diamond field in Houston, Tex., where the boys were |nlnfflux at base-ball Sunday, and there the brethren and sisters knelt in prayer. ‘They occupied all the bases and thus effectu- ally stopped the game, A conceited young country parson, walkin howie from chuich with on of e Ladies of s congregation, sald, in allusion to his rustic au- dience: 1 is morning to & congre. Borvi ly, “‘when you e be- brethren,” ’ lovi Tu oue of th museumy i New York a wo- g0 o the 1, but the daughter L man, armed with a rifle, shoots the ashes from aman’s cigar at a distance of 15 feet. Some of those days she will miss her mark, and the minister, at the head of the procession, will wolemnly read the service beginuing, “Ashes to ashes,” At a Southren camp .Um;n(‘nm Rev, Mr waid in his sermon: **Now,young peo- ord toyou. When dinner is over do ir off, and get in buggies, and court, hut come into the church and serve the Lord, for this is His day; but if you are determined to court, put it off until Monday morning.” The last time the minister called on them he remarked: ‘1 ¢ A b meeting last night, Sister Poots, ‘N tho response, “‘the night was so_stormy the roads so mud hat T concluded n to the mueting, t the Lord was inverposed the minister with “I know; but the Lord didu’t have to wa through the mud to get there. —— 1083, How Things Will Be One Hundred Years Hence, Philadelphia Evening Call Prophet, IN A DEPOT. ““Train from Madagascar is late, isn't it?” “Yes, blocked by a cyclone, which blew it a few thousand miles out of the way. The conductor will probably be discharged for not sighting that storm cloud and sailing above it. They started half an hour ago, and should have made the trip in twenty minutes,” “You do business in the city, don’t you?” “Yos, just going home to dinner. *‘Live in the suburbs, Eh?" “Yes, got a cottage in China last month, and like it first rate. There goes the bell. Ta, ta!” IN A GROCERY STORE. “‘Yes, sir; this country is going to ruin, The Congressmen are little better than thieves.” ‘“T'hat’s 8o; look at that last bill, rais- ing the price of globe cable letters to one cent a thousand words.” *‘And then look at the way in which monopolies are fostered. The All Around the \Jorld Telephone company has been granted another slice of Alaska for a sup- ply station, and yet it charges a dollar a year for service, fully fifty comts more than it ought to.” “‘But that is not the worst of it. They have just ordered the coinage of another billion of those miserable little gold dol- lars. Oh! for the good old times when we had silver dollars that weighed some- thing.” ON 'CHANGE % ““T soe that Venus and Saturn talegraph stock 18 down again.” “‘Yes, a powerful opposition has been formed in Mars, and there is no telling what may happen.” *‘How are railroad stocks to-day;” “Well, the little local lines to the North and South Poles and the cross- town line to China and Japan are doing well, but the trunk lines to the planets are a trifle lower. The V. L. D, F. G. H. I K.and M. D. C. C. L L, G. Air- line suffered some by the last earthquake in the moon, but the stock is in geod de- mand again. Besides that, the crop re- ports are good. Mercury, Saturn and Neptune farmers have all done splendidly this year."” : STREET, ““Rather chilly to-day.” “Yes, that new weather clerk at the capital has not got his hand in yet. 1 860 l:{ the papers that last night he turned on the North Pole stopcock In mistake for the equatorial one and it was running fully fifteen minutes before the blunder was discovered. The conse- quence is that it is Christmas day and the roses in my garden are not fit for trimming my children’s Christmas tree, and my wife who slept on the ver- anda in her hammock last night got such a bad cold that it took three doscs of the Electric Universal Disease and Death Annihilator to cure her. All this comes of appointing a weather clerk for political reasons, instead of promoting some one who knows the stop-cocks. Oh! for the good old times, when everybody was honest,” AT A POLITIDAL CLUE, ““Well, how do things look now?" “Just the same a¢ usual. More didates than ofiices.” ““Who do you think the Democrats will nominate for President this time!” “‘It is hard to tell, but I see there is a pretty good chance for a dark horse who has beeu in training for this cam- paign.” ““Who ishe?” ‘“‘An old man that nobody ever heard ofsl ““What is his name?” “8 'ilden. can- = —— Utilizing the Sun, News of a curious invention comes frem the south of France. A Frenchman, who has patented a machine for the use of concentrated solar rays as a general mo- tive power, has set up three of his ma- chines in Algeria for the French govern- ment. Ho is now carrying on experiments at the island of Porquerolles, near Hyeres, where he is trashing Indian corn and raising water by the action of the sun’s rays. Sir Chnrf::n Dilke has also lent him part offhislland at Cape Brun,near Toulon, for his experiments, and he purposes to utilize the sun in boring the holes for blasting, for tree-planting in the hard rocks, as well as in pumping water from the winter well into the summer cisterns, o — Hairless Lip, To the Enrron: When hegoes to bed let him put a piece of salt pork on his lip and a cup of water under his bed, and upon getting up he may water the sprouts. He should keep this up for six weeks and if he don't see any signs by that time, he should get a pair of pincers and pull them out. Put this in your cheerful paper so that the fellow can go and see his girl by Christ- mas, V. R. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN Relleves and cures RHEUMATIS N, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACKHE, HEADACHE, TOOTHAOHE SORE THROAT, QUINSY, BW , ncu. oGS, SPRAINS, Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, FROSTBITES, BURNS, SCALDN, d &l other bodily ach Aud allother bodily wciies FIFTY CENTS A BOYTLE. The Charles A. Vogeler C'e. wiosseers o 4. VOGKLER & X ) Baltimore. Bd. 60 0 B D-THOMAS' ECLECTRIC Cuares Rheumatism, Lum- bago, Lame Back, Sprains and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh, Counghs, Colds, Sore Throat, Diphtheria, Burns, Frost Bites, Tooth, Ear, and Head- ache, and all pains and aches, The best internal and external remedy In the tile puaranteed. Sold by medicine s in eight languages, s and $1.00, FOSTER, MILBURN & CO., Prop're, BUFFALD, N, Y., U. 8, A, T have been usin, y practice for quite lony time, and I re © bestcombination a3 blood purifier and tonic. 1t iy entirely vegetable belng composed of ths extracts of roots which grow in this section of Georgla. 1 am familiar with its his- tory from the time the formula was obtained from the Indians. 1t fsa certain and safe remedy for all kinds of blood poison 4 skin humor, and in the red of cases in which 1 have used it and seen_ it used, there has never | failurc to cure. 1 have cured blood taint in TR THIRD RN with it, after T had most sig approved methods of treat odidide of potassium. Tho over fifteen vears, and have the disease in then ailed by the most t withmcren d r had any return of or in their children, FRED A. TOOMER, M. Perry, Honstoe ¥ nedy in my storcand all Tt ig the host sell classes of peoplefbuy it. It has bocome & houschold renedy with wany of our best citiz WAL T gell Swift’s Spe retail, und to all clas ften a gros: e of Atla ple use it regulary as & tonie and altorat JOSIAH BRADFIELD, Atlanta, Ga, Our treatise on Blood aud Skin Dis mailed fro to applicants, THE SWIFT SPECIFIC €O, tlanta, Drawer Western Comice-Warks, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, C. SPECHT, PROP. 1111 DouglasSt. « « Omaha, Neb, MANUFACTURER OF Galvanizea Iron Cornices #£3r Dormer Windows, Fintals, Tin, Rooflng, Specht's patent Metaflic adjusted Ratchet Bar and Bracket She hogeneral agent for the above line of go enclug, Cre: Balustrades, Verandas, Iron Bank aiungs, Window Bunds, Cellar Guards; also gencral ent for Peerson& Hill atent Insido Blind. Nebraska crbrrfiice"v —~AND— Oroamental Works ! MANUFACTURERS OF GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES ormer Windowsms, FINIALS, WINDOW CAPS, TIN, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, PATENT METALIC SKYLIGHT, Iron Fencing! Crestings, Balustrades, Verandas, Office. Railings, Window and Cellsr Guards, N. W. COR. NINTH AND JONES STS, WM. GAISER, Manager. “John D. Peabody, M. D., PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. OFFICE ROOMS, 8 and § 507 FARNAM, _sqce Street, SAU AH'BRAH. A UNIQUE ENTERTAINMENT Dr. Sau Ab-Brab, & converted Buddhist Gom far away ludia, will give one of Lis unique Oriental eutertainmeénts at the Baptist church, MONDAY EV NOV, 12, AT 7} O'CLOCK He impersonates in costume every varicty of lifein Burmab, from King to the native of the_jungle, in- troducing all their co ud houscliold goods. He shows how they ea op, and woo and mar 1y, He sings their song; olls their stories. Botter than a visit to 44 Cowe out and sev India, CHILDREN, ) ABOON TO All those who from indiscretions, excesses or otber causes 1y woak, od, low apiriied, physic od, abd unable e pertur 4 yropes o8 Lo Goriaaly sed perms: SRS e il o bt S e pres: Tt Wedisal askly uga: - Toa A s e ) ldu.., p | ree. MANSTON REMEDY $0., 48 V. 14h 0ty Kow Yorb d | Steam Engines, Boilers STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED G00S 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 RICHARDS Proprietors, A. CLARKE, & CLARKE, Wi l Superintendent, Omaha Iron Works, U. P. RAILWAY, - - - MANUFACTURERS OF AND DE ALERS IN 179TH & 18TH STREETS WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, (Mill and Grain Elevator Machinery ! MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE ODELL ROLLER MILL. Address ‘,Gelebrated 'Anchor . Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth. STEAM PUMPS, STEAM, WATER AND GAS PIPE. BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, JTIIN Y3TT0Y TTIAO Ve ‘We are preparc_to furnish plaus aua estimates, and will contract for the erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing Flouring Mills from Stone to the Roller system. 25~ Kspecial attention given to furnishing Power Plants for any pur- pose, and estimates made for same. General machinery repairs attended to promptly. RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Neb, IMPORTERS OF MAX MEYER & C0., HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO GIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES : SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: to $120 per 1000. Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: !I | [ | : "OMBYY Brigands. Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES, NVER, | Booth’s FRESH FISH AT WHOLESALE. AND FRESE OYSTEIRS. ‘Oval’ Brand D. B, BEEMER, Agent,Omaha, = N - = Houselzee ASK YOUR GROCERS FOR THE pPers ~/OMAHA DRY HOP YEAST! WARRANTED NEVER TO FAIL. = [Manufactured by the Omaha Dry Hop Yeast Co, | = /18 BURT STREET, OMAHA, NEB | | 1313 A&

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