Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 15, 1883, Page 4

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4 THE OMAXA BEE. Oublished every worning, except Bunday, The enly Mondsy morniog daily. WRMS BY MATL Yesr.........410.00 | Thres Montha, ......88.00 i Mones. ..smum Month......... L IR WRRKLY NER, PURLINHI® RVERY WEDNSDAY. TRRMATTOSTYAID, One Year +...82.00 | Three Month L) ®ix Fontha. 1,00 { One Month B Amorioan News Company, SolelAgonteZNowsdeal- @re ¥ the United States. CORRRSPONDENCR s relating to News and Bditorial ressod to the Eorror or Tim PURINESS LETTRRS. All Bustnoss Tettors and Romittances should be addressed to Trn B PURLISHING COMPANY, OMATIA. Dratts, Cheaks and Postoftice orders to be made pay- hic ta the order of the company SHE BEE BUBLISHING €0, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor. e e Thanksgiving Proclamation, “In furtherance of the custorn of this people At tho closing of each yoar, to engage upon & day ket apart for that purpose in special festi- val of praise to the Giver of all Goed, therefore, 1, Chester A, Arthur, President of the Unitod States, do hereby designate Thureday, the 20th day of November next, as a dn{ of national thauksgiving, for the year that is drawing to an ond has Deen replete with tho ovidenca of divine goodness, the prevailanco of health, tho fullness of tho harvest, the stability of poace and order, the growth of fraternal feelings, tho spread ot Iumfimcnw and learning, the continued en- Joyment of civil and religious liborty—all theso and countless othor blessings are cause for reveront rejoicing. 1 do, therefors, rocom- d thit on tho day ‘whove appointod people rost from tho tomed labors, t and mesting in their several places of worahip, exprass thajr dovont gratitads to God that Ho s daalt boantifully with this nation, and pray that His geaco and favor abide with it . Cuikstii A. AWTHUE, President. By Furp, T. FRELINGHUYSEN, Secretary of State, P ———— Brusy Manoss says thereadjusters woro tion and fraud, Bo beaten by intimic Billy is mad, because cuchered by his own game. Tirene was a Ropublicau gain of 10,- 000 votes in Nobraska last Tuosday.— Chicago Herald, Where did they gain thom? Tur crops in Nebraska this year, as shown by the United States statistical re- porter, give the best of reasons for the tide of immigration into the State, Tur City Council may take up from dusk to midnight in wrangling over some crosswalk or culvert,but it takes less than ten minutes to pass an ordinance that gives away miles of streets and alleys to a railroad. Tur bogus Slade who has recently stirred the “‘spirit circles” of Omaha to their innermost depth has folded his tent and silently stolen away. In due time some other great medium will impose on the crodulous. Tae chief of police of Buffalo defines & suspicious person as ‘‘a man standing on the street corner with his hands in his pocket,” There are a good many very suspicious persons in Omaha. They con- gregate chiefly near the corner of Fif. teenth and Farnam. | railrond is & proj e e ———————————— ANOTHER ANACONDA. The city council has granted the right of way threugh certain streets and alloys to the Omaha Belt Railroad. There is grave suspicion that ;his so-called belt conoocted in Union Pacific headquarters to monopolize the thoroughfares through which other rail- ronds that may be in rivalry with the Union Pacific and its branches, are obliged to pass. The fact that the in- corporators of the Belt Railroad are nearly all officers or employes of the Union Pacific gnificant, When it is further borne in mind that the managers of the Belt road project al- ready ®et up a ' claim in Court that the sidotracks laid down by the Union Pacific across Sixteenth stroet and through the alley that leads to the Woodman Oil Works is part of its main line, it is al- road is most conclusive that this Delt only another Union Pacifio anaconda around the body of Omaha. When the Council was asked by the Woodman Company only & fow months ago to grant the right to construct a side track from the Union Pacific shops to their works thoy were assured that this sido track was nover to be used for any: thing but switching [cars loaded with oil products to and from the main line, How did this little switch become a main line of a railroad system that circles or yather proposes to girdle Omaha? Kither the ordinance that confers tho right of way through this alley was fraud- ulently procured under false protenscs or the Council have %knowingly betrayed their trust by playing into the hauds of & wot of impostora, Whatever benefits Omaha may dorive fromn a Belt railroad “she cannot afford to allow her thoroughfares to be blockaded against competing lines of railroad, Wo [have always contended that the stroots of Omaha and every highway lead- ing into this city should be accessible to all railroads that desire to compete for our traffic. When the U, P. sought to keep the B. & M. road from the river front we entered an earnest protest against it. Shall the anaconda railroad be allowed to obstruct the passage of other lines of railway into Omaha from the North and West? Will the men who have a vital interest in the future growth of Omaha remain silent when schemes aro put through the Council that are de- signed to cripple this city and would leave it at the_mercy _of_one great corpo- ration? But even if the Belt railroad was pro- jected with no other design than to build up suburban homes for our people, the Council had no business to grant ita right of way through the streets and alleys without exacting some return for the tax. payers. The right of way to a street rail- road is virtually a franchise and a fran- chise in a growing city like Omaha has a value that can hardly be computed. In other cities street railroad companies are compellod to pay large bonuses besides sharing part of their carnings with the Crvix service rule 8 has been amended €0 that political or religious affiliations are prohibited in making appointments in any department, postofive or custom house. As amended the rule sounds well, but like all such rules, it is full of sound and fury signifying nothing. Ostana has a preferred candidate for the Presidency, and his name is George Crook, As yet nobody outside of Omaha has seen fit to consider his claims, but we should not be surprised if he was brought out in the no distant fature as a ‘‘dark horse.” Tux extra sossion Legislature of Penn- syivania, it is grimly suggested, ought to have been in session in the Madison capitol building. The gas of such a body would have kept the roof from falling, iron probably, though the were not strong enough. cylinders muncipalities. In theCity of Clevelanda horse car com- pany that recently asked the right of way through Scoville avenue, ono of the least travelled of Cloveland’s thoroughfares, was compelled as a bonus to pave the whole avenue with granite. The com- pany accepted this condition and tue property owners on Scoville avenue have their pavement without paying outa dollar. It strikes us the time has come for call- ing a halt to all grants to street railroads which do not insure to our citizens a share of the profits derived from such grants, Dakora will not be the only Territory knocking for admission into the Union at the halls of Congress this winter. The Territory of Montana is getting ready to apply for the honors of Statehood, A Constitutional Convention is to meet Helena in Jauuary next to draft a Con- stitution to be submitted to Congress,and Jay Gourp paid $21,600 taxes in New York, aud W. H. Vanderbilt §48,500, These figures indicate that Jay Gould can swear to an assessment bi@k with his eyes closed while Vanderbilt with his fifty millions of untaxable government bonds chokes at a gnat and swallows a camel, SevERAL organs are new publishing tables giving the possible division of the electoral vote next year. Each of these wiseaczes reserves a few States as ‘‘doubt- ful” just to bring the balance ontheright side of their politicai ledger. Early chickens often succumb to the frost, and a perfoct blizzard is liable to strike these little bantlings bo fore they are ready for serving up. THn subsidized railroad organ, with a Republican label, asks Anti-Monopoly Republicans to *‘reason together” about the relief which is promised at the hands of the Legislature that will convene at Lincoln in 1885, This is like handing a bill of fare to a hungry man, with the in- juuction that he should pick the dishes that will be served up to him within twelve months, —_— Apmikar Nicnors, a sea lion unknown to fame outside of the “Navy Register,” who is just now the Sheridan of the American navy, makes sometimelysugges- tions in his annual report to the Secretary of the Navy. Our naval force at present consists of 6,640 enlisted men, exclusiyp of boys. At the close of the fiscal year 1,136 boys werein the servioe, 647 on the training ships and 489 on board recruit- ing vessels. It is recommended that the law be modified 8o as to autherize the en- listuent of 1,000 boys aunually. The admiral also sensibly remarks that he does not believe in shutting up navy-yards and ruining material—in other words, he docs not think it wisdom to throw away & dol- lar in the effort Lo save & nickel, a determined eflort will be made at the coming session or the next to have the Territory admitted. Montana has made great strides in the past three years, ow- ing to the construction and completion of the Northe:n Pacific Railway and the steady development of her mining re- sources, The census of 1880 gave the Tepritory 40,000 population, but that is, no doubt, more than doubled now. One town alone, Butte City, has over 25,000 people. The people are taking groat interest in the coming convention, and the disposition is strong to have it composed solely of rep- resontative men, elected without regard to party afliliations. Governor J. Schuy- ler Crosby has written a stirring letter to the Helena Herald, urging upon the peo- ple te send to the convention only such men as are capable of drafting aconstitu- tion free from political bias, and one that will meet the ready indorsement of a re- vising Congress. He urges that the con- stitution to be framed shall be for the benefit of the whole people, and to that end none but the wisest, strongest, pur- est and most patriotic men of all parties should be allowed to frame it. Governor Crosby's advice is sound, but we fear the people of Montana will waste both time ‘and money in Constitution making, This is no time for the admis- sion of new States. A Democratic House and Republican Senate will never agree upon any bill that will increase the electoral vote on the eve of a Presi- dential election, Tax. Republicans of the lowa Legis ture have decided to drop prohibition and try high license. They say public sentiment is such that prohibition could not be enforced, while good high liconse laws bear good fruits. The Republicans of the Towa logislature will oxhibit good sense if they substitute high license for prohibition. The Kansas experi- meut . ought to satisfy any rations) mind that prokibition TAR DAILY BEE-~OMA '\ 1HUKDUAY, NUVEMBEK 19, 1002 does not prohibit where it is not sus- tained by public sentiment. On the contrary high license can be made effec- tive as a check to the worst evils of the liquor traffic. Tt reduces the number of saloons and tends to confine the traffic among the more reputable class of deal- ers, and the revenue from high license compensates the community for the loss incurred through dramshops. —— SHALL THEY DISEAND? The Anti-Monopoly party was called into lifo last year to emphasize the pro- tast of the producers of this State against corporate abuses. As far back as 18 the people had adopted a constitution that expressly obligated the legistatureto enact laws to prohibit extortion and dis- crimination by public carriers, but the mandate of the eonstitution remained and still continues a dead letter. lature after Legislature has and has adjourned without a railroad bill, and the feeble effort embodied in the much derided Doane tub law, afforded little or no relief to producer or shippers. Nearly every sta- tion and railroad town had become the Legis- mot, passing centro of a traffic monopoly-—in coal and grain and the favored few were growing at the expense of the despoiled and impoverished mass, These grain and fuel monopolists be- came political factors whose influence made itself felt in every caucus and con- vention in conjunction with trained hire- lings and cappers of the railroads, The immense Republican majorities made a nomination by that party equivalent to an election and the party machine being entirely in the hands of the railroad wang, only the abject tools of monopoly were able to achieve political eminenca. And when, perchance, a State conven- tion did assemble thaot was not wholly under monopoly control, money, passes and patronage werc freely used to buy up enough delegates to insure the nomi- nation of the candidates that had been chosen by the railway managors for Con- gressional honors and State offices. At last the Farmer's Alliance was organized aud a concerted effort was made to put a stop to outrages and abuses that had made this State a mere province of Jay Gould. A sentiment of resistance to corporate tyranny and mis- rule was aroused among all classes and as a last resort the anti-Monopoly party was created to stem the tide and put a stop to legalized highway robbery and tax shirking. At the outset the de- mands of the anti-Monopolists were met with sneers and jeers. But when the campaign grew warm and 1t became man- ifest that the producers were in earnest the Republican leaders became alarmed and pledged themselves and their party to every just measure which anti- Monopolists wero urging. They promised to onact laws to regulate railroad tolls, pledged the party to enforce an impartial assessment of cor- porate property, and promised they would forever stop the system of whole- sale bribery by railroad passes. How have these pledges been kept? How has the dominant party lived up to 4 tho promises made by its leaders? Texas, Georgia and even Kansas have limited the passenger rate to three cents amile, Nebraska still pays four cents a mile because no law has been enacted to prohibit the exaction. Other States have enacted wholesome laws to prevent ex- tortion by transportation menopolies. This State still remains a prey to their rapacity. Millions upon millions of railroad property goes untaxed in Nebraska, while the tax gatherer levies upon the bedstead the poor widow sleeps on, and the stove on which she propares the scanty meal for her chil- dren, In the faco of these facts, the Anti- Monopolists are asked to disband. Pro- fuso promises are made by railroad organs of relief through the next logislature. They are politely invited to reason to- gether and draft bills which they wish to become laws in the year of our Lord 1885, This is decidedly refreshing. Are the Anti-Monopolists who braved the taunts and threats of the subsidized press, wil- ling tosurrender all they have fought for during the past two years, on the empy promise of redress twenty months hence? Will thoy disband now and beg pardon for having rebelled against wrong and robbery? ArTER citing the fact that Congress will when it convenes find a surplus of $130,000,000 in the treasury, the New York Star tells the Democratic Honse to reduce expenses, put its foot on all sub- sidy schemes, vote not a dollar ‘'which is not absolutely required, or fully justified: “‘lot the people spend their own money and adopt a policy which will make it possible for them to earn money to spend.” The order was passed the line of the U, P, road on last Moxgdny evening that all section bosses must vote for Sam Savidge for District Judge or take ‘‘their time,” and the returns show that all rail- employes in this county voted as di- rected by their owNers, ‘“This is & free country,” it is said by many, yet we can see but little diflerence between bull- dozing black slaves in South Carolina or white slaves in Nebraska,—[Acarney Press. But the railroads have gone out of pol- 1tics, haven't they? Tur United States grand jury ha¥ been charged to investigate the Stinking Water claim jumpers, We must confess we have no faith in our United States grand juries, They have protended to investi- gate a good many frauds within the past ten years, and in every instance where prominent public men were involved thoy have simply whitewashed the rogues, —— Evioexce that the Demo-Antimonop [ evening sheet of Omaha is without a par- ticle of influence was most forcibly dem- onstrated in the late election,—Repub- ltioan- Fifteon hundred and thirty-two ma- jority for Savage in Douglas county, where the monop-Republican claims to have some influence and where Boss Stout paid 8500 into the Republican county campaign fund, —— ahey Were Divorced, Ixniasaronts, Ixo, —The Sentinel 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 conger 1 mean rheumatiz and myself. Finally it got to be altogether too_ lively for yours truly, and 1 justinvoked the powor of St. Oil. That's how me and my pain cane | to be divorced.” acobs B CHANGES OF A CENTURLY, Some of the Remarkable Events Which Have Transpired D a Single, Lifctime. ing London Times t is inevitablo, says The Loundon Times, that the firat thought of anyone who sees or speaks with Sir Moses Mon- tefiore should bethe thought of his im- mense age. Evenlnow,though human life seems to bo reully lengthing, centenari- ans are rare enough to make them inter- esting—wo extend the term, perhaps harcly legitimately, to Sir Moses Monte- fiore, who is but when a man in a prowminent position lives to that age, the thought of what lie has seen and done, of the changes through which the world has passed during his time, becomes ov powering, Sir Moses has ssen the work of his life crowned with succeas in | very many countries, and this thought, no doubt, is that on which he and his Jewish friends will dwell with the great- sfaction to-morrow. But outside will reflect with almost gr interest on the men that he has seen in this long life of his, on the ephocs through which he has passed, and on the contrasts which the world of to-day pre- sents to the world in which Sir Moses ntefiore spent his youth. Born in 4, ho may possibly remember the tak- ing of the Bastile, and he will certainly recolect the execution of Louis XVI, and the fall of Robespierre. He can probab- ly recal the sensation caused by ench cf Nelosn's victories, and will remember accurately the feelings awakened in Eng- land by the events of the Peninsular war. When the news of Waterlco came to his brother-in-law, Mr. N. M. Rothschild, Montefiore, who was with him in busi- ness probably shared with him tho ad- vantages to be gained from the exclusive information. He was past 40 when Catho- lic emancipation and the reform bill were carried, and had arrived at full age when Queen Victoria ascended the throne, Yet it is since that date that he has done the firen(ur patt of the work by which he is nown throughout the world—the work of practically helping his sufforing broth- ren wherever they were to be found. His journeys to Palestine began in 1827, and they only ended in 1875, when he was past 90 years of age. Ho visited the Sul- tan in 1840, the Czar in 1849, and Cardi- nal Antonell, to try and rescue the boy Mertara, in 1858, No journey has been too long or too difficult and no work too tedious tor him, if help could be gained for those who sorely needed it. Nor has his help been confined to those of his own races and religion. We tell, this morn- ing some curious stories of the aid he has Eil\'on to persons who had no claim upon im except the claim of distress, and we uote the letter which he wrote to this journal in 1760 and which had so much effect in stimulating public spmpathy tor the unfortunate Christians of the Leba- non, The clerical and other speakers in the meeting at Ramsgate yerterday had good reason to speak of his universal be- nevolence. The Montefiores are, as their name im- plies, Italian Jews, though there is a difficulty in deciding whenand where they are settled about the little town on the eastern slopes of the Apennines which bears that name. In different countries the Jews have had different modes of choosing surnames; in England they are mostly called bi' Old Testament names, possibly somewhat altered—Levi, Levis, Abrahams, Moss; in Germany and in some other countrics they take the names of towns and call themselves Erlanger, Brestauer, Oppenheim. A fortunate chance gave to the ancestors of tha vener- able philanthropist the name of the little town near the Adriatic; but they are first heard of as settled at Leg .orn, where the Jews number no less than 7,000 at the grcwnt time. The grandfather of Sir Moses, Moses Vita Montefiore, settled in England 130 Ivem‘e ago, as a merchant trading with Italy. One of us many rons married Rachel Mocatta, one of the fami- 1y of Spanish Jews whose name is still so well known in London; and the first child of this marriage was Moses, Jorn at Leghorn in 1784, on the 24th of October, corresponding in that year to the 8th of the Hebrew month Clesvan, which falls somewhat later in the present year. It is well known that the Jewish trading community is headed by a kind of close avistocracy of great financiers, who are closely connected with one another b marriage; and of this aristocracy, if, sucl it may be called, the Montefiores are leading members. Sir Moses is half Montetiore and half Mocatta; he married Miss Judith Cohen, whose sister married the founder of the English house of Rothschild. These four names are, with one or two more, coextensive with the inner circle of English Jews, - Many of those who bear one or other of the names have gene much more deeply into finance than gir Moses, and have consequently left themselves neither the heart nor the time to do the good that he has done, He left the stock exchange early and entered into other and less exciting kinds of business, He helped to found the Alliance Insurance office, the Imperial Continental Gas association, and the Provincia! Bank of Ireland. But, though he did not cease his connection D-THOMAS ECLECTRIC Cures Rheumatism, Lum- bago, Lame Back, Sprains and Bruises, Asthma, Catearrh, Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Diphtheria, Burns, Frost Bites, Tooth, Far, and Head- ache, and all pains and aches. The best internal and external remedy In the by medicine anguages. s everywhere. Directions In o Price 5o cents and g1, FOSTER, MILBURN & CO., Prop'rs, BUFFALO, N. Y., U. 8. A deeply gratified to notice the improve: ment in the lot of his Russian brethro He penetrated even to Moroceo in 180 are perhaps more hated than in any other yin Europe. Neither danger, nor distance, nor discouragement has ever prevented him from going on his errands of charity. Sir Moses Montefiore has seen many anges in European society, but none greater than that which has passed, sinco the [beginning of this century, over the condition of the Jews. In FEurope and the backward regions of Eastern Europe they ave still, indeed, miserably poor,and are as liable as ever to outhreaks of ha- tred on the part of the Christian peas- antry and of those wh h to turn that hatred into account. oven is inclined to “‘boy them; | the very fact is a proof that they have in the la t half century prospered so very much more than their rivals that the jeal- ous hostility of the latter must from time to time break out. The difference is that what is now abnormal and exceptional was expressed by law fifty years ago. Jew- ish disabilitics, not extending merely to the right of sitting in parliament, but to half the vights of citizenship, existed even in England, which boasts of being in the forefront of enlightenment, until Sir Moses Montefiore had himself had ample time to oxperience them. Now, not only have the Jews gotrid of all their disabilities, but their power in Eu- ropo is very great and far-reaching. Much of the continental press is in their hands. They control the bourses. Nat- ional financial operations are regarded them as to a great extent their ownafl: Their well-known qualities of patience, insight, and mutual fidelity, and their habit of thinking nothing beneath the notice of a man of business, have given them success. What the future of the race may be no man would rashly pro- phesy; but if their progross is as rapid as it has been during SirMoses Montefiore's lifetime, they will in the next century be an important factor indeed. POLITIC AL NOTES, Butler claims that he isn’t dead yet, and it must be_admitted that there's a power of vitality in the old man, who has as many lives a8 a cat. One Matthews went to the polls at Hazle- harst, Miss., with a oistol in his hand, and was carried away with twenty buckshot in his cheek. Ohio Democrats are pretty well satisfed thair next Presidential ticket will be headed by either Samuel J, Tilden, Henry B. Payne, A, G. Thurman, or George Hoadly, with Til- den a prime fas orite. The Philadelphia Telegraph (Rep. ) suggests: “By the way, wouldn’t this be_a good time to ‘unload’ Hatton? The administration ud‘lr }medn to get rid of some of its superfluous bal- ast.” Sam Randall has not_been doing as much boasting as Carlisle and Cox,but his opponents will find that his time has mot boen ¢oing to waste. The Pennsylvanian is shrewd, tireless and experienced in”the arts of effective can- vassing, Mayor Manning, of Buffalo, charges that grave frauds were committed in the late mayoralty election in that city, both against himself and the Republican candidate. The latter, Mr. Jewett, seems not to feel the grievance 50 strongly as Mr. Mannin does. The Baltimore American (Rep.) thinks it is not to be greatly regretted that the Republi- cans arein a wminority in the Stato Senate, though only lacking two of a majority. Had they control of the Senate, whi e the Gover- norand House are against them, they would Tie responsible for legislation without any real power, The Rochester Post-Express (Rep.) an- nounced Tuesday evening that that was the last_timo that a politicsl “‘ticket” would be “hofsted” at the head of its editorial columns. “Not,” it says, *‘that our politics are changed, or to be changed, but simply because the prac tice of keeping a' party ticket standingin a newspaper has nothing to commend it, and much about it to condemn,” ~-Mahone's organ, The Richmond Whig, says; *“Tho Bourbon Democracy will o ter: ribly dofeated next year, and Danyille will be the chief cause of defeat. Partisanry here ma; blind many of our good citizens to the un zated atrocity in the wholo Danville matter; Bt paople in other States will ses it in all ity abhorrent aspects and shudder as they sec, The #ins of the Bourbons aud Funders will surely find then and their accom: plicos, and bring duo retribution upon them. ‘Already righteous vengeance has begun ita work,” The Springfield (Mass,) Republican (Ind. Rep.), in enumerating possible cundidates for the seat in Congress made vacaut hy Governor Robinson's election, says: *'One of the most available men is Charlos 1. T:add, of thia city the prosent State Auditor. Mr, Ladd has had the experlence of training in the legal profes. sion and an active career in the leading insur- ance agency of the city for many years; ho has served overal terms in the House and the Sen- ate of Massachusetts, and been elected by tho pooglo of tho Stato now for the fith tine Auditor, or the ixth, counting the term for which he was appoinzed by Governor Talbot, His legialative experience has been very great, as o was a momber of the House with Butler before the war, a member of the Senate in 1869, and _again member and leader of the Houle in the retrenchment year of 1879," THE GREAT GERMAN with business, he was never absorbed in it. We have already said that his pasai a'e devotion to his race led Fim to visit Palestine in 1827, and we give in another column, from Mrs. Montefiore's diary, an account of the difficulties through which they had to pass—difticulties more like those which would now attend a journey te Bokhara or Yuunan than those which we associate with a trip to Jerusa- lem. But what distinguishes the work of Sir Moses Montefiore from that of any other philanthropist is the success Wil?l which he has pleaded the cause of the Jews in the quarters to hwhich, under ordinary cir:umstances, their cry could not have reashed. In 1840 he e:{rncud from the sultan a firman, which has been of rea’ service, many times over, in the cause of the Jews of the Turkish empire. He got something more than civil spoech- s from the Ewmperor Nicholas, and in 1872, in & second visit to Russia, he was REMEDY FOR PAIN Relieves and cures RHEUMATIS N, Neuralgi Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE SORE THROAT. QUINSY, BW ouve. cntifh SFPRAINS, Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, d00 bodlly ack and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLL 801d by &)l Drugglstsand Dealers” Dixections 1 11 Jnguigs. J and in 1867 to Bucharest, whero the Jews | STEELE, JOHNSON & CO., U. P. RAILWAY, ODELL ROLLER MILL. to promptly. Wholesale RICHARDS & CLARKE, Proprietors. Omabha Iron Works, 17TH & I8TII STREETS AND JOBBERS IN | W. A | MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS Steam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS, 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, f ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON IN CLARKE, Superintendent, Grocers ! FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOIS, ‘ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPL] A FULL LINE OF THR BEST BRANDS OF | Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO TIN Y4TI0N, TTIAD ‘z ‘We are preparc to furnish plaus aua estiniates, and will contract for the erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing Flouring Mills from Stone to the Roller system. 259 Especial attention given to furnishing Power Plants for any pur- pose, and Efifinli\lt{; made for same. General machinery repairs attended Address RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Neb IMPORTERS OF AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 to $120'per 1000. Brigands. On Long Time--Small Payments. MANUFACIURER OF FINE owiat““SPORTING GOODSY vy 5. MAX MEYER & GO0, HAVANA CIGARS! CGARS, T0BACCOS, PIPES: SHOKERS' ARTICLES AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS; #™ j" Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES, 1 [ PIANOS®SORG ANS At Manufacturgrs Priess. A Hosug Jr A.H. DAILEGY, Buggies Carriaces and Soring Wagons +. My, Repository ls oonstantly flled with & eeloctIstook. Best Workmansllp guaranteed. Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capriol Avenve, Qme!« |

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