Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 14, 1883, Page 4

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teers the following IAF DAILY BEE--OMA' A WEDN e —— THE GMAXA BEE. Sublished evers woming, except Suuday. #nly Monday morning daily. RN BY MAIL. ne Fear.........$10.00 | Threo Months, ®ix Monena........ 6.0 |One Month TN WARKLY RN, FUSLISITRD RYART WROSRSDAT, TRRMAZPOSTPAID, The .00 1.00 One Yoar............82.00 | Throo Months 850 Blx Months. ~1.00 | One Mouth = Ameriown News Company, Solof AgenteZtN e sdeal: @14 ln the United Stal conRmsPONDRNCR, A Communioations relating to Nows Editorial mattors should be addressed to the or Tu Ban ROSINRS LRTTRRA, All Brsnoss Lottors and Remittanoes shoull b addressed to Tun B PURLISTING CONPANT, ONATIA Dratts, Checka and Postoffice orders to be made pas+ #ble ta the order of the company THE BEE BUBLISHING C0, PROPS, B. ROSEWATER, Editor, Thanksgiving Proclamation, “In furtherance of the custom of this people % the closing of each yoar, to engage upon a day set apart for that purpose in special festi- val of praise to the Giver of all Good therefore, hester A, Arthur, President of the United s, do hereby designate Thursday, the 20th day of November next, as a day of national thanksgiving, for the year that is drawing I:;; W an ond has been replete the evidence of divine goodness, the prevailance of health, the fullness of the harvest, the stability of peace and order, the growth of fraternal feelings, the spread ot intelligence and learning, the continued en- yoyment of civil and mll{(imu Tiberty—all these and countless other blossings are cause for reverent rejoicing. I do, therefore, recom. wmend that on the day ‘above appointed tha peopls rest from their “accustomed labors, and meeting in thairseveral places of worship, oxpress th:fr devout gratitude to God that He haa dealt bountifully with this nation, and pray that His grace and favor abide with it orever, CHESTER A, AnTHUT President. By Frep, T. FRELINGHUYSEN, Secrotary of State, WoNDERFUL majorities are still ex. pected for Reese from the cowboy re- Witar has become of the atrect sprink- ler? He is badly needed on our principal thoroughfares. Coxxor and Hamer made speeches at the monopoly jamboree at Kearney, and they feel happy. Auraover Farnam street can’t be re- paved before spring, the property owners should take proper steps toward getting thestreet paved before otherthoroughfares file their petitions for paving that may exhaust the appropriation, Tur Jowa Legislature will wrestle with prohibition once more, Meantime the Towa druggists will administer bottled strychnine and whisky for medicinal and nechauical purposes to discreet and re- pectable topers at the usual price, His ExcerueNcy, Goversor Dawes, seconds the motion made by his accidency Chester A, Arthur, Commander in Chief of the Armies and Navies of these United States—to appoint Thursday, November 20th, as the official and duly authorized day for turkey and cranberry dinner. THE SENATE, December, the first business of impor- tance will be the clection of a speaker and president of the senate, The pres ent Senate is made up of 58 Republicans, two Readjusters and 56 Democrats, Friday tie up with the Democrats, the that rather improbable event much time would be lost in the effort to reorganizo that ponderous body and some compro- mise would finally have to be made be tweon the parties in the distributitn of patronage and chairmanships. Taking it for granted, however, that the Virginia Senators will act with the majority, the reorganization of the Sen- ate will this year be more thorough than it has been for years, It will be the first time since the Forty-Fifth Congross ad- journed that the Republicans have had a controlling majority, The Forty-Sixth Congress was ‘argely Democratic in both liouses, so that during its two years all the ofticers were of that party. The memorable deadlock at the ing of tho Senate in the spring of 1881, which enabled the Democrats to keep their appointees in office,culminated In on in the election of David Davis as pres- ident. The Tndependent party from I1li nois had voted with the Democrats dur- ing most of the term, and finally was in- duced to throw his weight into the balance when he was assured he would occupy the vice-presidential chair. Dy voting with the Republicans Davis gave them control of the comittees, but his refusal to vote with them on choice of officers left the Democratic officers in control, Senator Edmunds, who suc- s as President pro tem has announced hisdetermination toresign that office at an early day and Senator An- thony, the oldest member, will doubtless be elected to that honorable position. The reorganization of the Senate will be followed by a change in the composi- tion of the standing and select commit- tees. There are at present forty-four committees and every one of the thirty- eight Republican Senators are by right entitled to a committee chairmanship. Among the new Republican Senators there are eight; namely, Wilson, of Towa; Palmer, of Michigan; Cullom, of Illincis; Bowen, of Colorado; Sabin, of Minnesota; Pike, of New Hampshire; Dolph, of Oregon; and Manderson of Nebraska, who ex- pect to be placed at the head of some committee. According to Mr, Nordhoff, chief of the Washington bureauof the New York Heratd therejwill be but few changes in thd chairmanship of the leading committees. One of the new rules pro- posed, if adopted, will make an impor- tant change in the memberships of com- mittees and give, perhaps more satisfaction open- or ceeded Davi Jouxsox, Browy County, Nov, 13, Telegram to the Oxana Ber: Republican bosses suppress county re- turns, Close vote. J. W. Davis, This may explain the marvellous ma- jority of 342 which has been rolled up for Reese in Brown county IxsTEAD of squandering money on “‘commissions” to regulate Mormonism and govern Utah, Uncle Sam ought to organize an immigration bureau, and offer special inducements to non-Mor- wons to take up their homes in Utah, Give away good farms, and furnish cheap transportation to immigrants and the Mor- anon problem will solve itself, Tuz Ohio Senatorship is now one of the bones of contention among Buckeye Democrats, Pendleton, Payne, Thur- man, Ward, Converse and Sency are geutlemen talked about for U. S. Sena- tor to succeed Pendleton, The Cincin- uati Commercial-Giazette remarks: We cbserve there is a disposition to recell the treachery which defeated Thurman in the National Convention. This involves a good many Democrats, including several who are figuring in the Senatorial contest, It cannot be said that the party isany nwore harmonious in Oblio thau it is in New York, Tue board of university regents have reached the comclusion that Vigenham Las not been invented by Professor Aughey, The fact that several persons testify that they have once seen a man who was said to respond to the name of Vigenham aflords)] the clearest proof that Vigenham is the villuin | that forged those spurious notes. That fact now ranted in regarding Aughey’s certificate to the unrivalled excellence of his patent artificial stone as conclusive. And the to one dollar a bottle. S——— Taekg is music in the air. Colonel has bounced cne of his tenors, i support of hus claim, sing, How is that to be dene! Experts may be to a majority of the Senators. It pro- poses that no Senator shall be a mem- ber of more than one of the following committees, except by special resolution, z; Judiciary Appropriations, Finance and Commerce, Now Mr, Allison is chairman of appropriations and on the Finance Committee. Mr. Logan is on the AppropriatiationsandJudiciary Committees. Mr. McMillan is Chairmain of the Commerce and the Judiciary, Mr Bayard is on the Judiciary and Fi- nance Committees. Senator Jones, of Nevada, is on the Finance and Com- merce, and 80 with half a dozen other Senators, who have occupied from ses- sion to session places on two or more of the most important committees, If the rule referred to is adopted, it will give the eight new Senators a better standing on the new committees. The Senate may, nevertheless, adhere to its old con- servative record, THE TRADE OUTLOOK, Legitimate trade and industry through- out the country is not less active at this season than usual, A review of the mar- ket reports of the past week discloses a quieter tone, but this by no means au- gers an unfavorable outlook, A smaller volume of business is the general record during the closing months of the year excopt in such lines of goods as are es- pecially for the holidays, Although some lines of staple goods are beginning to accumulate, the supply is not general- yond control, ly in the Mississippi valley and slope. Speculation alone seems discouraged but this is not an ill-omen, the proper time for it, number was not unusually large, In general terms it may be said that Signor Bertini, because he can't sing. the outlook for manufactured goods, ex- The signor sues for dawages in £50,000, | cept possibly weolens and iron, is encour- and produces his contract with the colonel [ aging. The sluggishness in the former There is no | is due largely to the mild weather that doubt sbout the contract, The jury will | has prevailed, and the fall in the price of be called upon to deterraine the simple steel rails will probably lead to a decrease question, whether Signor Bertini can [of output, labor and wages in this indus- i The grain market has scored a de- jntro- | cline in the strictly speculative field but d but are likely to difer in|auupward movement with a good export om U.h'-hg the ....-xfl of the tenor's | demand is expected. Money at the great voico. A Cincinnati paper which, ought | centers is comparatively casy und the dis- o be suthority on such matters, volun- | tribution of it in the country among the : #The | farmers, especially, has been liberal. The whould be made by the jury itself, | agricultural distriots, except in u few in- ekini must be put on 1he witness stand | stances, have had two years of prosperity e ade to sing to the jury for an hour, {and the effects of this will be realized assorted selection of operatic [more fully when spring trade opens. So far as the west is concerned the trade try. When Congress meets, on the third of Senate would be politically a tie. In|th ly oxcessive and the prevailing dullness will not probably result in its getting bo- Oue feature of impor- tance is that the jobbers generally are estallished Boss Stout will feel war. | cheerful over the trade prospect especial- Frow the pro- man who holds Professor Aughey’s hand | vinces and legitimate trades, only a and seal of the University to the eflicacy healthy business basis is derived, and of his hog cholera cure will now be war- | conservatism in these branches is ono of ranted in raising the price from fifty cents | the indications of a stronger activity at There were no disastrous failures last week and the outlook has no features that indicate dull- ness, Indoed thero is ovidsnce of an un- usual aclivity in both the wholesale and Our loeal commission merchants and jobbers report both trade and prospects as better than for several months past, the supply being rotail trades from now on. Should the Virginia Senators, Mahone |about equal to demand and prices fair, and Riddleberger, vote with the ——— Republicans they will have a major FAN WYOK'S RESPONSINILITY. ity of four in that body. . W s 6 oot SHiotia; Mowaver, Malions and Hib tNn ]y ium LS LR 1 O tion returns, perhaps it will compare the vote of Otoe county on supreme judge year with its vote on Cobb in 1878, Then Cobb had 500 majority—now the Democratic candidate has 500 majority. The malign influence of one damagogue, whose pecket-hook in politics has been made to take the place of brains and con science, has changed ons thousand votes in four years, We refer to Senator Van Wyck, whose political elevation has been a more bitter curse to Nebraska Repub- licanism than anything else that could have been,—Omaha Republican, The malign influenca of the pockot- book in politics, as a substitute for brains and conscience is personified in the con- ceited and malignant donkey who at present has chargo of the editorial col- wmns of the Republican. By investing speculation, sharp practice and usury in | a party organ he has shown to the world what & malign influence the pocket-book may exert when it takes the place of brains Nobody who knows Senator Van Wyck will accuse him with using the politics, and only small-souled idiots wonld deny him the possession of brains. Van Wyck is not a bonanza figurehead and conscicnce, pocket-book in vote in the decree of King Caucus, He is everyinch a man stamped with an individuality, He may be eccentric—men of brains alw But he is a recognized leader among are, leaders and a power which his worst po- litical enemies respect and fear. The most bitter curse to Nebraska Re- publicanism has been the degraded party press, subsidized by railroad monopolies and manned vith brainless jumping-jacks who do their bidding,whether it is to de- fend monstrous robberies of the people,or toassassinate the character of public men who dare to raise their voice against the use of party machinery to pack primaries and conventions with corporation hench- men, 1f Van Wyck is a Dbitter curse to his party because Otee county, which gave Cobb 500 majority in 1878, has now given Savage 500 majority, who is to answer for the revolution in Douglas county? In Otoe there has been a change of 1,000 in four years. In this county there nas been a change of 2,400 in the three years since the election of Garfield. Why don't the Republican launch its curses nearer home and arraign Senator Manderson for the change in Douglas, Why don't that organ of malignant stu- pidity denounce its patron saint, Valen- entine, for allowing Cuming county to cast 700 majority for Crawford and 266 for Savage. Valentine lives in Cuming county, and he should be held up to scorn for that disastrous decline in votes. Judge Weaver must also come in for his share of abuse and cursing. Richardson county, which gaye Maxwell nearly 300 majority only two years ago, gives Sav- ago a majority of 172, The Republican’s preferred candidate for United States Senater, ex.Governor Albinus Nance, should be forever dis- franchised. Polk county, where he hails from, only polled-eight Democratic votes two years ago and gave Maxwell 984 majority. This year Polk county has given Savage a majority of 247, And what shall be said of Governor Dawes? What curses loud and deep are to pour upon his head for allowing Saline county which gave 1,006 majority to the Republican candi- date for Supreme Judge in 1881, and this year gives Judge Savage 269 majority, Last but least of the leaders who have become a most bitter curse to Republicanism in Nebraska is George W. E. Dorsey, the chairman of the Re- publican State committee. He who was to the late campaign what Von Moltke was *to the campaign, that made William of Prussia Emperor of all Ger- many, has allowed Dodge county, where he had his headquarters, to give the Re- publican candidate a black eye to the tune of 406 majority for Savage. 9“"0!, | like chickens, come home to roost, and the outcome in Dodge county, the home of Theron Nye, and residence of his stupid son, must fall with terrible force upon the conscience that is governed by malice and the pocket-book, Tur word of a cabinet officer is out that President Arthur is a candidate for re-election, He is said to now ‘‘regard himself as the only man in the United States who can successfully marshal the Republican hosts in 1884.” He has changed his niind since telling Ben Har- rison and Henry Watterson most em. phatically last summer that he did not desire a second term, if that cabinet ofticer and his word are not myths, —— Two yveAns ago Riddleberger knocked at the door of the Senate chamber as an applicant for the position of Sergeant-at- slammed the door in his face. Next month Riddleberger will enter the Senato chamber as full-fledged Senator from the State of Virginia, and he will be wel- comed with open arms, — Sexator Corquire thinks ‘‘the old ticket” the winning card for the Demoe- vacy. Gieneral Hancock possibly would alocal issue, what there is loft of it, the woney his father had amassed in | who has no ideas of his own and whose | enate simply registers the | s | Arms, and the Senate contemptuously prefer the old ticket of 1880, but not as Tre Omaha board of trade should ve- |, organize, or infuse some vitality into ‘; STATE JOTTINGS, The Catholic fair at Falls City netted 3300, A man from Steels City is about to put up a mill at Dewitt, Norfolk claims to be the right location for a first-class college, Hastings trots out her soiled doves to coo with the police judge once a month The 1,056 vote of Beatrice wonld population of nearly 6,000 inhabitar The citizens of Hasting onsidering the | I»m[n.athm to raise 210,000 for a proposed col- loge there to cost £15,000, A young man named John Daily, from Beardstown, 11l., died suddenly at the Girard house, O-dell, last wee! Alyvin Konkrol wa repeating. ignorance, but he was sent to the Court for trial, John A, MM susher on The Pl sod The ( h P. Mobley, The Boone (' store of wood to unfortunately the ted in Lincoln for arr He admitted the crime and plead | District way and the beaten § wept. hanghai turn tailed and 3. Long has returned to Boatrice from | n with 18,500 sheep. He drove them 200 miles before shipping them by rail, and they came through ‘i remarkably fine shape, A new elenator is one of the coming fixtures at Uticn. The main building is to be 2 feet with 20 feot posts, and dump, engine | room and office 14x30 The capacity will be 10,000 to 12,000 bushels. The new M. E. Church at Blue Springs was dedicated on the 8rd. This elezant edifice cost | | upwards o 00, on which there hung an in- debtedness of 81,400 A call was made in the morning to clear off the indebteduess, which was heartily responded to, and the princely «um of §1,500 was raised. The swindling tree peddler is around among the farmers once more. A farmer in_Clay | county bought fifteen dollars worth _of trees whichi were warranted first-class and found them of such stunted growth and poor quality that he traded them all off for a hog and then got more than they were worth. A lively row occurred at Dawson election | got into a row. | Brown undertook to arrest th ssted and a g ght ensuec | Brown and Harv alone were dang wounded. The portion of the reservation : maining unsold, or that part upon which bidders failed to make payments and settlements will be laced upon the market and re-sold at the [nnd office, at Beatrice, on December 10th. The lan ill be sold as before, to the highes! bidder, above the appraisement, but the first sayment. one fourth the purchase price, will have to be cash in hand. The Norfolk Journal thinks there are good prospects of having an exclusive passenger train on the U. P. railroad to that point soon. Reports also say that when the road is con peted between Genoa and Fullerton a train will run through from the latter townto Nor- folk, direct. Freight traffic and passenger travel are constantly increasing on the Norfolk branch, and one train each day is wholly in- adequate to handle the business that comes to the road. they re- | in which | e A GRASPING MONOPOLY. The Methods of the Central and Union Pacific Roads, San Francisco Letter to New York Times, On every hand one hears grievous com- plaints of the extortions of the railacad monopoly. Producers cannot find a pro- fitable market for their surplus, because the cost of transportation is so great. For example, the wine men can sell a very good sound wine in the wood for 25 cents a gallon. To transport this to New York will cost 20 cents per gallon, leaving the shipper to bear the loss by leakage, etc. The Eastern demand is for the cheaper g:ldeu of wine. The importer will not lieve that there is produced in Califor- nia any wine worth more than 25 cents, nlthough he may know that the viticul- turist has spent years in ripening and blsndillfl)ifl product. 1t goes without saying that the rates of yreight practically place an embargo on any considerable development of the export trade in Cali- fornia wines, For awhile there was an outlet by way of Cape Horn, though the time cousumed by the voyage, loss of interest and other risks were an obsta- cle to shipping wine by sea. But latterly the railway ring has, te use the words of a local shipper, “‘corraled the clippers,” 80 that there is no longer any compe- tion between the railroad and the clipper lines between New York and San Francisco. The policy of the railroad managers is to put on goods offered frr shipment ‘“‘all that the traffic will bear.” There isno attempt to dis- guise this. The rates of freight rise and fall with the market prices of the com- modities usually shipped. Thus a grape grower in jthe Sacramento valley asking for the rate of freight on his crop to be shipped to San Francisco is required to divulge all details of the proposed trans- action, When the agent of the railroad ascertains just what the net profit of the shipment will be, he fixes his rate ata figure that will give the railroad company nearly all of that rrufit. That is to say. having learned that the shipper's state- ment is correct, the railroad company charges him a rate high enough to take nearly all of the profit from him, but not 80 high us to induce him to keep his vrop at home. Sometimes the agent does overreach himself,and so we hear of crops trotting on the ground for lack of trans- pertation, If the railroad company de- cides that California shall not grind wheat and ship flour, it claps on flour a high taritf' but allows whaat to escape by means of a lower rate. If any branch of manufacture is to be discouraged in any section or at any point, it is done by means of discriminating freight charges. One measure of oppression is the specinl contract,an invention gf the Central Paci- fixc monopoly, By this the shipper, in consideration of what are called ~ special ]nrivilegan, agreesnot to ship by any other ine of transportation, nor to countenance in any way those who do. In order to bind him securely the special contract contains a clause by which the railroad may overhaul and search the shipper's books and papers whenever suspicion of his disingenousness may arise. This is the true “ironclad contract,” of which Eastern readers may have heard, Thus it will be seen that the railway ring has managed to seize powers rather exceeding those of any liberal form of government, It decrees what industry shall grow and what shall be destroyed. It reserves to itself a right of espionage into a man's vrivate business which is essentially un. republican. Its rates are determined, not by the laws of trade, but by the ne- cessities and abilities of the people. And this, too, on a railroad built by the peo- ple’'s money and paid for out of the Treasury of the United States. San Francisco people speak with somethir like & shudder of the days of Kearney an Kalloch, It was a disgraceful and dismal epoch in the history of the State, But in his wild crusade against the railway ring Kearney did strike on many a vein of truth and common sense. 1f we regard the matter of railway fares and the accommodation and service on the Cen- tral and Union Pacific roads we shall see how grossly unjust it is that roads built as these were at the public xfiuu should be the most costly to the ublic. For example, the westward- ound traveler pays $32.00 for a first- | mine of a m; alone, having | den and then reshipped to Evanston, pay- | ¢ | wicked class passage from New York to Omaha, 1464 miles, From Omaha to San Fran. cisco, 1865 miles, he pays & That is to say, although the difference in the distance between the cuter two points and Omaha is only 400 miles, le pays nearly three times as much for his pas. sage from New York to Omal And when we consider the difference betwixt the service on the Central and Union Pacific Railroads and those east of Omaha, the rate of speed and the accom- modations on the fermer are simply ex asperating. The average rate of speed on the Pacific roaas is twenty miles an hour at once the despair and the ruin of the | traveler. Of course, since the open- |ing of the Northern Pacific Rail- road, there has been some show of bettering the condition of things on the overland route. It is said that the dingy “‘silver palace” cars in use of the Central Pacific, built when the road was built and as antiquated as its general management, are to bo replaced by new coaches. and silly pretense that the high winds prevented a better rate of speed. Never- theless, the general system of oppression corporations is highly destructive to the best interests of the country. The Union Pacific for example is the absoluto arbiter of the fortunes of the unhappy dwellers along its line. It makes nmi unmakes whom it will. Desiring to buy the coal who had opened a vein near Green River, that company offered $£50,000 for it. The price was refused as Leing too small. The railroad compan! when all dickering had come to an end took up the side track built to the mine, hibitive point, and thus compelled the owner to shut up his mine. A ierchant in Evanston, Wyo. T., findi he charged a higher rate on goods shipped to hia from Omaha than merchants in Og- | ing double rates between Ogden and | Evanston, but saving money by the trans- | action. The company, discovering this | ion of their tyranny, charged | him a rate of freight from Ogden to Evan. ston equal to that from Omaha to Ogden, At this the rebel ceased to struggle, Un. | deniably the producers are better off with | the railroad than without it. But this does not justify the outrageous oppres- —— Postoflice Changes in Nebraska durine the week ending vember 10, 1883, furnished by Wm. Van Vleck, of the Postoftice Department: | Established—Middleport, in Wheeler | county, Frank Mead, postmaster. Discontinued—Saundery, Clayton coun- ty; Meridian, Jefferson county; Swift, | Otoe county. Name Changed—Cone, to Palestine. Postoftice changes in Towa during the month ending November 10, 1883: Established—Haskinyille, Buchanan i county, B. Landrum B. Haskin, post- master; Hoprig, Emmet county, Samuel C. Blair; Superior, Buchanan county, Weber S, Gardner. Postmasters _ Appointed — Barnum, Weber county, J. C. Woodward; Cam- bridge, Story county, A. W. Southwick; Competition, Wapello county, Edmund | L. Ellis; Denver, Bremer county, H. Baumann; Eagle City, Hardin county, E. H. Hubbard; Hansel, Franklin coun- ty, L. H. Street; Ortonville, Dallas county, E. D. Smith; Praire Hill, Boone county, George L. Smith; Van Meter, Dallas county, John D. Clayton. Platte county, whey Were Divorced, IxpraNarorss, Inn.—The Seatinel says: A Kentuckian writes of how he passed from misery to happiness. *‘We'd been together eleven years, and we never were what you may call congenial. I mean rheumatiz and myself. Finally it got to be altogether too lively for yours truly, and I justinvoked the power of St. Jacobs Oil. That's how me and my pain came to be divorced.” — ‘Why He Didn't Register, Detroit Free Press, hecalled to a man who was just dwnf)pezring through the doors of the city hall, *“did you register?" “‘Register-—what!” ““Why, didn’t you register so that you could vote in your wara.” “By George! 1 didn't! got it!” “You are a pretty man, you are! must, have known all about the reg “Well, yes.” “And neve registering /" ‘No!" They stared at each other for half a minute—one face wearing a look of con- tempt and disgust, and the other an ex- presson of humility and sorrow. “‘Say!” suddenly exclaimed the forget- ful man, ““it's all right after all!” ‘“‘How?" ““Why, I never took the oath of alleg- iance, and am still a British subject. knew there was some reassn why 1 for- ot to register and that's it. T'll be around the polls on election day, though, and do any knocking down that will help your side out.” 1 clean for- went near your place of } THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN Relieves and cures RHEUMATISY, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHR SORE THROAT. QUINSY, 5W.pu.. i SPRAINN, Soreness, Cuts, Brul FROS' BURN And all ot i i FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE all Druggistaand Dealers. Directious 1o 11 Innguages. The Charles A. Vogeler (¢ Jacobs0 : TTAUG, BOHIPPO RET G. SVANSON & C0,, Merchant Tailors! 1116 Farnam, bet, 11th and 12th Street OMAHA, 2ol i __NEBhASKA ICE TOOLS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION 1 have secured the ugency of W, T. Wood & Co., To sell their \eols. They are making the bess loe Tools, aud are che oldest firm i the Unitod States Auy Tcs Owmpany wighing to buy tools will recoive theprog phest attepion Ly sidremslig ¢ V. BLUMVE, ue, Umahia, Neb. 1817 Sherman A Tho meals, dispatchedat wayside dens, are | The time of the through trip | has been shortened 1n spite of the aged | contrived and maintained by these two | raised the freight om the coal toa pro- | | L] sion which the people endure. | t Bam “ g I" e s it ESDAY, NOVEMBLR 14, 1883, —— l’ STEELE, JOHNSON & CO,, | ;Wholesa.le Grocers ! |FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED G0OTS, :ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPLIES A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF | Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWGOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER €O l W. A. CLARKE, Superintendent, Omaha Iron Works, U. P. RAILWAY, - - - 17TH & 18TH STREETS [RICHARDS & CLARKE, o Proprietors. MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN WATER WIHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, Mill and Grain Elevator Machinery ! MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Celebrated 'Anchor “Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth STEAM PUMPS, STEAM, WATER AND GAS PIPE, BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, ODELL ROLLER MILL. VTN ¥ATTON TTIAO ‘We are preparc to furnish plaus aua estinites, and will contract for the erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing Flouring Mills from Stone to the Roller system. . 0% Kspecial attention given to furnishingPower Plants for any prr- pose, and estimates made for same. General machinery repairs attended to promptly. Address RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Neb MAX MEYER & (0., 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. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES, PIANOSKLCORG ANS; On Long Time--Small Payments. At Manufacturers Prices. A, Hosve Jr A. . DATLEY, MANUFACTURER OF FINK Buggies Carriaces and Soring Wagons Mylitopository 1 conatanily flled with » selectiuiook, Ecst Worlzianship guarsateed. ‘Olfiu and Foctory §. W, Corner 1Gth and Capitol Asenue, Qmala 7/ et

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