Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 20, 1883, Page 4

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4 THE GMAHA BEE. KANSAS AND NEBRASKA. Kansas and Nebraska are twins bornir. IAW DAILY BEE-- tweon the glass workers and their em i\ ployers. The dispatch contains, among wrorning, exoopt Banday. The | the throes of the great free soil struggle fother suggestive information, the follow. @ty Monday morning daily. RS BY MATL. 10.00 | Three Months, . .09 | One Month . FUR WRRELY BER, PUBLISHED NVERY WRDNRADAT. TERMS PONTRAID. 8200 | Throe Months. . 1.00 | One Month . Amorioan Nows Company, SoloT Agentely ora In the United Statos. CORRRSFONDRNOR.S A Oommunoations relating to News and Editorial matters should be addreased to the Eorrom or Tus B RUSINRSS LATTRRA, All Business Tetters and Remittances should be addressod to TH® Ban PURLISHING COMPAXY, OMATIA. Dratts, Cheoks and Postoffioe orders to be made pay: Wble ta the order of the company, YHE BER BUBLISHING 00, PROPS. E. ROSEWATER, Editor. —e - Thanksgiving Proclamation, *In furtherance of the custom of this people b the closing of each year, to engage upon & day sot apart for that purpose in special fosti- wal of praise to the Giver of all Good, therefore, X, Chestor A. Arthur, President of the United Btates, do hereby designate Thursday, the 20th day of Novomber next, asa_day of national thanksgiving, for thog::v that is drawing to an end haa n replote with the evidence of divine goodness, the wallance of health, the fullness of 0 harvest, the stability of peace and order, the growth of fraternal foelings, the spread ot Inteligence and_learning, the continued en- oyment of civil and religious liberty—all 0 and countless other blessings are cause for reveront rejoicing. I do, therefore, recom. mend that on the day above appointed the people rest from their accustomed labors, and meeting in their soveral places of 'nrlhlr, expross their devout gratitude to God that He has dealt bountifully with this nation, and pray that His grace and favor abide with it orever, CHESTER A. ARTHUR, Prosident. By Fugp, T. FRRLINGHUYSRN, > Becretary of State, Tue Surveyor General of Arizona is dead. There is a vacancy to fill. Who will apply for that sugar plum? Don't all speak at onco. MamoNg is bound to keep Virginia in hot water. His latest manifesto charges right home upon {the Virginia bourbons who inaugurated the shotgun policy at Danville, Ar least one of the railroads running into Omaha is to be regulated by stan- dard time. We sre authorized to state, however, that the hour of noon will ar- rive on time, at 12 o'clock as usual, and the sun will have to regulate itself to the ‘best of its ability. 1r is understood that;when the cable railway ewallows up the Omaha horse railway the steeds which now haul the street cars will be sold to the government of Hayti for cavalry horses. The Hay- tian agents are now purchasing a large number of street car horses in New York. AxNA DickiNsox has drepped Hamlet's knoe-breaches and proposes to don the overalls and blouse. It is announced that she will take the lecture field for the Knights of Labor. Sho probably ex- peocts to realizo more money out of these knights than she did eut of ‘the knights of the sock and buskin, Tar little state of New Jersey pro- poses to take the lead in the matter of according to the negro the civil rights which have been swept away by the Unitea States supremo court. A civil rights bill, identical with the one de- olared unconstitutional, will be intro- duced at the opening of ‘the next legis- lature, and it is claimed that the demo- crats will not oppose it. The bone and sinew of Washington territory are making a strong ' id fir im- migration. The upper house of the ter- ritorial legislature by a vote of 7 to b has since become a law as the Governor ‘woars long petticoats while his wife wears the breeches. Here is a new opening and a wide field for the enslaved and much oppressed sex. The probability is that there will bo a hasty] exodus from the State of Beatrice. —— ‘Tuk council should immediately take steps to compel the railroad companies to protect the public from accidents at the Guards should be sta- tioned at every crossing and no person should be allowed to walk on the track Wherever practicable gates should be erected to keep teams and persons from crossing the This would be as much in the interost of the railroad as it would be warious crossings. from ons street to another, track, for the protection of the citizen. —— 81, Jor has expended $200,000 ina A large portion of the raw product will be drawn from SBouthern Nebraska. Now Omaha is a better point than Bt. Joe for the manufacture of woolen goods. We have shown by other enterpises what can be done in the way dufie‘l of manufacturing. It is a matter of fact that no manufacturing industry begun in Omsha has ever failed to pay good re- wo>len factory, turns. We have an abundance of wool at, our very doors, and why cannot we have a woolen mill as well as' St. Joe, Denver or Salt Lake? 4800 1.00 ® 8| sas bogond that of Nebraska. Nowsdeal- Maxy somewhat novel changés are ex- pocted through the introduction of standard railroad time, Here is a cheer- that preceded the final overthrow of slavery. Their destinies have, in many respocts, been identical. Causes which we are not disposed at this time to dis- ouss have farthered the growth of Kan. simply, however, in point of materis 1| strips Nobraska, but in the integrity and her government, more forcible when we compare the posi- against the rapacity of corporate monopo- lies. wholesome milo and prevents extortion in freight to recover from the land grant railroads the lands which they have not legally earned. Last year the Governor of Kansas ap- pointed a state agent to investigate the claims of the ralroad land sharks, and o)mpel them to restore what they obtained by imposition and fraud. Ex Governor Crawford, the Kansas state agent, has discharged his duty faithfully and fearlesaly. A fow days ago he sub mitted a brief to United States Land Commissioner McFarland, presenting a list of land claims by the Kansas Pacific railway company in the Salina district, to which that company had never pro- cured a rightful grant. In Kansas as in Nobraska, millions of acres of Pacific rail- road land had gone untaxed for years. A year or two ago while all the efforts of Congressman Anderson, of Kansas, were directed to the passage of a bill compell ing this company to pertect its title to itsimmense grant betwoen Salina and the west lino of the State, and thus pre- vent the injustice of permitting this great body of land, lying in the midst of thrifty sottlement to escape taxation this corporation was wholly indifferent to the appoals made by the sottlers of Kansas, who, by their labors wore year- ly adding to the value of those lands, to tax the— for what was just and equitable. For years in the entire territory bord- ering on the line of the Kansas Pacilic railway west of Salina, the spectacle was witnessed of these lands remaining ex- empt from taxation, yet lying in the midst of some of the mest populous coun- ties and finest farming regions in Kan- sas. No effort to obviate this injustice had been left untried. Petitions with- out number had been circulated; mon- ster moetings of the settlers held; re- peated attempts at getting these lands listed were made by commissioners of various counties; the Congress of the United States had been memorialized by successive Legislatures to redress this daring injustice, but all in vain, State Agent Orawford has evidently dug deepor than Congressman Anderson. He does not ask them to perfect the title to these lands, but he insists in his brief that nowhere in the statutesof the United States has tbe Kansas Pacific, nor any other railroad company, a grant for an acre of land from Fort Riley to Denver. It is decidedly significant that the Kansas Pacitic, which is now thé Union Pacific, should exhibit such haste to perfect its title to these unearned lands now, when for yeara they have shown a supreme in- difference about them, and refused to pay a dime of taxes. Whatever may be the decision of Commissioner MoFarland in the premis their State ofticers are willing to stand betwoen them and the highwaymen who domains, officer to investigate these gigantic land frauds? Does anybody in this State ex- interier department againat railroad land they may see fit to lay their hands on, REFORM IN A NEW QUARTER. glassware, toctive tariff falls the heaviest. Inci i dentally, revenue reform has been advo. politan papers, paratively recent period that the indus. proteetioa does not protect, where pro- It i not | wealth and population that Kansas out- moral stamina of the men who carry on This contrast becomes tion of her Governor and State officers Not only has Kansas left Nebraska in the shade in the matter of enacting fsum up. as matters now stand, protec railroad legislation, which | tion does not protect, and not until we limits passenger tolla to three cents per ! L , the people of passed a woman's sutfage bill, which has | Kansas have at least the assurance that have evaded their taxes, pilleged their patrons, and fraudulently taken posses- sion of millions of acres of the public Oould Nebraska say as much? When has a Governor of Nebraska ap- pointed anybody or directed and btate yect to see the Attorney-General or the Land Commissioner submit a brief to the jobbera? It would be a novel spectacle to see Glen Kendall's name attached to|Smith such a document or to any other paper that questioned the right of the Union |hewdon how any raan who hus held upa pair Pacifio railroads to any preperty which Herotofure every attempt to revise the tariff and reduce protective duties has met with the most persistent opposi- o] hin abandoned wife.” tion among manufacturers of iron and |cised b The demand fur revenue re- through the abolition of excessive | his Eoglish wifo wnd babies to murry Miss on articles of commerce and home | Conway. production, came from prairie states of the West, where tho burden of the pro- cated by a fow clear-headed statesmen and a limited number of leading metro- It is only within a com- trial classes of this country have by a sad experience become aware of the fact tha ing: Thomas B. Atterbury, of this city, one of the largest and most prominent manufacturers in the trade, made a sur prising declaration in the course of ania- terview to night. He said: “There is o fact, that [ have found many glass wd iron manufacturers, in company with myself, are begiuning to realize, Itia that it would be far better for our interests to have no tariff laws at all. It may seem rather startling to hear free trade wdvocatad by a manufacturer in a strong protective community, but I believe that froe trade is necessary for the pnm‘mrily of both the ironand glass trades. \Vhen with those of Nebraska upon the vital | yrotection was light and freights high question of the protection of the people [ the protective tariff was a real benefit, but now fast freights and tho cheap la hor of Europe has taken away so much trado as to causo *he gravest alarm. To are rid of tariff restrictions will there be a rovivalin the iron and glass trades With no tariff equitablo rates of pay for charges, but she has (aken decisive steps | |abor can be obtained and American manufacturers will have an opportunit, to Fegain and develop thelr frade with South America, the West Indies, Aus- tralia, Chinaand Japan.” This is certainly a most startling ad- mission, which cannot fail to create a marked impression upon the national legislature, Heretofore con- gress has been importuned and bulldozed by the lobbyists of the glass and iron industries to keop up the tariff and resist every effort at reduction. Now, theso people come te the conolusion that thiey are no longer in need of protection and their infant industries have 80 oxtensive become that they are able to take care of themselves in com- petition with foreign rivals without pro tective props. Thisis o call for refsrm from an entirely new and unexpected quarter, It is more radical than any western revenuo reformers have ever dared to be, and goes farther than it might Yo advisable or practicable. A sweeping reduction in tariff rates ought to be made, but it is a little too prema- ture to eatablish free trade. Tary have another scandal in the pat- ent office at Washington, which shows what is patent to everybody, that there is no patent on scandals PERSONALITIES, Blaine is & proud grandpa. Mr. Hendricks’ tve still troubles himn. Senator Sharon has a temper of his own, Hannibal Hamlin wen't wear an overcoat Joseph Cook never lectured in the kitchen, Governor Robie, of Maine, dotes on swal- low-tuiled conts. Henry Irving's hands are as soft and whito as a fair maiden’s. 8, 8, Cox smiles when he casts sheep's eyes at the Speaker's chuir, Secretary Chaudler says he is worth only £100,000. “Poor fellow ! Chung Yu Sing, the Chinese giant, sloeps on twe beds at ouce. Mayor Carter Harrison, of Chicago, nses lauguage more forcible than elegant. § Priuce Bismarck has such a cold that he sneezes whenever he hears the wiud blow. Honry Watterson says Tom Ochiltree is “half horse and half alligator.” General Sheridan is so bow-legged that he resombles a pair of perambulating parentheses. Samuel J. Randall is suffesiog from the Tmzz but it won't be as effective as Judge Hoadly's malaria. It is said George Francis Train is writing a 200-puge poem. Somebody should wave rod flag in front of the Traiu, Sergeant Mason works in prison with will- inguess and alucrity. One of these days he'll g home and work for ““Betty aud the baby.” President Noah Porter will give Mr. Mat. thew Arnold a reception in New Haven, What he wants, however, is a firat-class din. nor. Stumbling Bear and Big Tree, two Indian chiefu,ure living like nabobs at Geuds Springs, near Wellington, Kansas, They ate “‘trying the waters for their health,” they say. Balva Lockwood, the female lawyer, says that'‘man follows no vooation in which womau cannot succeed if given a chance.” Wae would like to see Belva with a pair of pikes in her Boels sbiuniug up an eighty-fotologeaph pole. p The Hon, Wm. F. Cody will bo pleased to loarn that a gang of boy thieves in Chicago have named themselves *‘The Buffalo Bill Gang.” Somebody will yet name a paper cul- lur aftor Mr. Cody, sud thon his fame will be established, Jehn G, Thompson is declared out of the race for sorgeant-ut-arms of the senate. This is pretty hardon the poor fellow, How ou earth ix he golng to be_uble to pay that $60, 000 judgment Hailot Kilbonrna holds g dust him' for falwe imprisonment? Taken wlto- fthor, Mz, Thompmou’s exporionces of luta have beon of a sutficieutly meluncholy charue: zslr to form excellent material for un emotional play. ' Col. A, K. McClure, the dignified editor of The Philadelphia Times, has “been arreted for libeling & man br tho inoffeusive nume of 'he culonel seems to have retrograd- od considerably since his visit to the Lo ville_exposition. 1t i beyond our compre- of sevens agaiust Houry Watterson's three (Illllolm could %o far forges himself as to slan. ler & humble and inoffensive membor of the meek and lowly Suith fawily, Mr. Jm-rh Lovy, the cornetist, is in an awkward dilomma, the ludies of Macn nav- ing declined to participate in the Georyia wmusio festival baowuse Lavy has been eugaged to tako part, They are dlsgusted with |Levy “hucause he spoke heartlessly +f Minnie Con 'his is good, A 0 suppose Miss Uonway will be ontra: bocuuse sha abaudoned poor Levy to marry Oswoni Tearle, and, in t-lrn.'{\r. Toarle will be catracize | because he abaudoned Bo the work of ostraciam will spread and flourixh ad infinitum, world with outeud. It is siucerely hoped that the glori- ous reform of stage morals which the Gergia women have insugurated wiil have the co- oeration of the sax all over the country, “ o — Biggest Newspaposr Headquarters, The New York correspondent of the St. Paul Pionoer Preas says that the Trib- une building is the greatest newspsper headquarters in the world. Not only the Tribune, the Journal, and half a dozen other pa are printed there, .| but oceupying the rooms of the front building are representatives of the fol- OMAH\, TUE DANA'S DARK HORSE. Abe Hewitt, Fresh From Classic Fiels, Spreeds the American Eagle. Snobooracy in the American Metrop olis ~Low and Joe—Cheap Res- i taurants—The Orooked- st Street in the World, Correspondence of Tk B, New Yonk, November 16, Dana’s_attempt to boom Holeman for the presidence, has proved to be a mere hlina, his real candidate being Abram S. Hewitt, the son-in-law of Peter Cooper. HEWITT'S RETURN from Europe, a few days ago, has been the occasion for an interview to which the Sun devotes a full column, It is the most favorable introduction that Dana could have given to THE DARK HORSE that heis now grooming. Mr. Hewitt gives a glowing description of his trip, and having been over classic ground his interview is of avery classical nature, hav- ing ovidently been very carofully pre- pared. Mr. Hewitt says: ‘“‘We have been as far as the Black Sea. Wo visited France, England, Germany, Austria, Italy, Greeco, Turkey, Wallachia, Rou- mania, and Bulgaria. The trip has been interesting and instructiv have travelled over the o'd Homeric fields that Ulysses trod. T have revived old memo- ries of my classio training and recalled the days when I was a veacher and forzed thoso associations on unwilling_subjects. I have seen the whole of the Dalmatian and Albanian coast, been all through the isles of Greece, to Ithaca where Ulysses was finally rostored to his suffering country. {\'e went to Corfu, and to Corinth, where wa climbed the old cita- del of Corinth. We went to Athens, and saw where St. Paul preached, and walked under the olive trees where Socrates and Plato discoursed philo- sophy. *‘We went in a Greek steamer down the Argos. We went to Milo, where the famous statue of Venus was found. We went to Deles, where the ruins of the temple of Apolio cover many acres. We went through the streets of Euripus, and visited the home of the Thessolonians, to whom St. Paul addressed his epistles We visited the birthplace of Alexander the Great, and went to the foot of Mount Olympus. I went to see the monks of Athos, who have been established a thousand years, and within whose precincts no woman ever set foot. “We went to the acenc of the Siege of Troy and saw the ruins of at loast two remonto sivilizations. We sailed along the shores of the Black Sea, from which now Great Britain gets food as well as from us, and from whence ancient Rome fed itself, for it was the granary of the Roman,” Mr. Hewitt takes occasion to give THE AMERICAN EAGLE a proud send off, as follows: ‘‘During all the trip,” he says, ‘‘which was made largely in a private steamer, with leisure to study men and manners, I cama to the conclusion. that the greatest miracle of our time and the most valuable trea- sure which mankind has ever discovered is the government of the United States, in which the checks and balances are 8o arranged that while progress is not only possible, but its results certain, the prejudices of popular passion are kept in check, and only those measure which are best calcuiated to promote the general welfare, can by any pessibility receive the sanction of legislation and of perma- nent public judgment. I come back not only proud of my country, but conscious more thaun ever of thelxuty which rests upon every one of its citizens to preserve constitutional government in the form and according to the spirits of its conce tion and organization. It is tho result not merely of the wisdom of our fathers, but of a fortunate chain of circumstances which never occured before in the history «f the world, and can by no poss- 1bility « ccure again.” The American public, after reading Mr. Hewitt’s tribute to the American Eagle, ought to reward him by electing hum I'resident of the United States. IMITATION OF ENGLISH STYLKS. Nothing ‘in this_city, that is not in- tenced for public diversion, produces so wuch of it as the imitation of Euglish anstocratic usages. All that you have read about it may have failed to give you an idea of the perfect idiocy of the auglo- uauia that we are laughing at. 1 sup- 1080 there have been dandies on earth «ver since it was sufficiently populated to afford distinct sorts of men, ldlers have no incentive to expend themselves in any pursuits save those which corcern them- solves, and naturally, if they have money enough,Yhey manage to make their per- ons vidiculous by too much attention, Hundreds of New York young men wear nothing of American make, from their uis- | Derby hats to their Polcaster stockings. Their measures aro sent to the London tailors, batters and furnishers, who provide the articles very promptly, By 1g the Atluntic cable in ordering, & suit of clothes can be procured in ten days, and that is quite quick enough for a fellow who regards it ns plebian to be inahurry, It is true that garments thus obtained are liable to prove poor fits, though the mosy elaborate and in- tricate of the swells have exact models of their bodies at their London tailors'— these manikins being altered, from time t) time, as the originals chamge in bulk. There is an Eoglish tailor here, also, whose sole employwent is to complete imported sui‘s in & manner to make them fit. Another has ingeniously adapted his business tg the prevailing rage. His brother has a well-known shop in Lon don, and he is, himself, as thorcugh a cickney as ever maltreated aitches Everythiog that he turns out is in the extreme of London style, and, more im- portant still, ke invarinbly uffixes the name of his foreigu brotheras tho maker, with the London instead of the Now York address. This device enables the snglomaniac customer to throw down an overcoat with the label satisfactorily ex- DAY,NOVEMBER 20, 1883, —ee HOW ANV WHEN 0 USE fardock Blood Bitters 'F YOUR APPETITE is poor—If your d feeblo Il y itated and des tion s Jeep is broken, and you are debil. mlent, try Burdook Blood Bitters, You will be delighted with the result. THI MEDICIN®is & magnificont aperient, gently moves the bowels, cleanses the blood and etraves off fovers, 8ok hen laches, and billous attacks t during the hot months; and allays ner aad debility as well, TO USE B Blool Bitters is «xplatned Zvity clearly n the ibal accompanying each bittle, The doss the patient will vary as his or her Kood secse otats'. No harmful effects cvn posble resul® from the nse of the medicine, We will guar. antee appreciable b nefit every tims., WHE TO USE Bardock Bld Bittors it is un neccossary to state, Allunderstand what & Kood Iaxative and bloo | tonie can accomplish, and all know when they need such (and we might inter polate ALL need it &t one time or nnother). As & plessant expariment and for certun reliet, try Bur dock Blood Bitters. By D uggicts. POSTER, MILBURN & CO.. Prop's Buffalo, N. Y. and speeches are in social glorification of the company, via its forefathers, The men who do this once a year are both old and young, and the redeeming feature of it is that the ‘Yridn or_vanity, if you prefer to regard it so—is of American origin. Now you comprehend what I mean when I say that Anglo-mania, so far as our Knickerbocker young men indulge in it, is heretical, unfilial and altogether shocking. Its devotees, however, are, in the main, people who have wealth with- out Dutch blood. Several of our ‘‘best families,” of dizzily exalted position, frown on it utterly, even their youngest sons and_daughters sedulously ‘avoiding any of its features of dross or of man ners. LOW AND JOE, Mayor Low, of Brooklyn, has been in- vitod to attend the' evacuation day cele- bration. He has sent a very pretty note doclaring that he will be happy to bo present. 1f Mr. Hendrix has not been invited a card should be forwarded at once. He should walk with Mr, Low, arm in arm. The election is over. Mr. Low has won, and he can afford to be magnanimous. SORAPS, Living is cheap in New York, after all, for those who are willing to put up with cheap fare. On the bill of fare in New York Italian restaurants coffee is one cent per cup; steaks, chops and stews, three cente; pastry, three cents; beer, two cents; whisky and brandy, three conts, Theso places are threnged daily by persons of all nationalities. What will patrons of Omaha restaurants think of such prices? Mr. Colgate Hoyt. one of the Govern- ment directors of the Union Pacific, has returned from he inspection of the prop- erty. He says that the road is in good condition and the local wraflic large, but the through business has certainly been affected by competing lines. Govern- ment Directors Bromley and_Haven are going over the road soon. The govern- ment directorship of the Union Pacific, by the way is a fine sinecure. These directors always find the road in good condition, and have plenty to est aud drink of the very best that the land or the Union Pacific can afford. Collector Robertson, of New York, has decided that, as the nine-foot China- man Chang is not a minor, nor a laborer, but comes only to b exhibited, he can admit him as an animal, and as an ani- mal he was admitted Saturday. Poarl strect, in this city, i the crook- edest street in the world. It is a mile aud a half in extent, and yet its curves are 80 incessant that you cannot in any place see more than “two squares ahead. It intersects Broadway twice, forming a half circle whose arc is nearly one mile in length. Bowkery Boy. Humor in the h. Much of the distress and sicknees at- tributed to dyspepsia, chronic diarrhoea and other causes 13 occasioned by humor in the stomach. Several cases, with all the characteristics of these complaints, have been cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, Other cures effected by this medicine are 80 wonderful that the simplest statement of them atfords the best proof that it com- bines rare curative agents and when once used secures the confidence of the people. e ee— Notthe Man Wanted, San Francisco Call. The true friends of Genaral Grant will regret that he remains silent while his name continues to be used in connection with the Presidency. The result of the contest for his nomination in the Chica- go convention was,no truer index of pub- lic sentiment then than it is at the pres- enttime. The Republican party does not want General Grant for its standard bearer. He could not be elected if he were, Many of his greatest admirers would vote agninst him because they thiuk his services to the country have al- ready received suflicient political recog- nition, and because they are opposed to the third term principle. General Grant is a poor interpreter of the sigus of the times if he cannot see that it gives his party pain tosce that he encourages the iden of again going before a Republican convention seeking a Presidential nomi- nation, General Simon Cameron to a Wash- ington interviewer: *‘I am sorry that Senator Mahone was beaten, but this doesn’t kill him. You can't kill a man like him. He is a wonderully strong man, and, more than that, he is right, and the right generally wins. He was really trying to pay the State debt hon- orably, and those Virginia Democrats intend to do that, Danville will recoil on them yot. Undoubtedly it had tho effect they intended it should have at this election, but it will work in anoth- ers favor in the future. But it closes up the South for the present. So much the South. But the South has not sense enough to see it. A solid South al- makes a North, P — STEELE, JOHNSON & CO.,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOBBERS TN 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 €O, W. A. CLARKE, RICHARDS & CLARKE, l Superintendent, Proprietors, Omaha Iron Works U. P. RATL WAY, - - - 19TH & 18TH STREETS MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS IN Steam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, Mill and Grain Elevator Machinery ! MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE Celebrated 'Anchor 7 Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth’ STEAM PUMPS, STEAM, WATER AND GAS PIPE. BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON. ODELL ROLLER MILL. "TIIIN Y4TTI0Y TTATO We are prepared to furnish plans and estimates, and will contract for the erection of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing Flouring Mills, from Stone to the Roller syst« m. g §=7 E-pecial attention given to furnishing Power Plants for any pur- pose, and e-tima'es made for rame. General machinery repairs attended to promptly. Address RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Neb MAX MEYER & CO., IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO 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, SGUNS —— R — - ! j. % o tection is not needed to sustain an infant ‘at hall.past 92, | industry. Amorican manufucturce have larity that | long since outgrown their infancy, Awmer- Ay e :{ ball-|ica supplies cutlery for Sheffield, and fire arms by the huundred thousands are posed, and, at the same time, buy his clothes handily right here in this city. = It should be understood that the imi- tating of English fashions is a new turn in frivalous affairs, Our self-consti tuted aristocracy, no matter how much fun may be made of it, is_definite lowing papers, recording them in order from the eighth floor downward: Chi- cago Times, Chicago DI"{ News, Pitts- bux{'l‘chunph, Louisville Commerc 8t. Louis Republican, Chicago Tribune, Cineinnati Commercial Gazotte, St. Louws i) *“SPORTING GOOD QW Double and Single Acting Power and Hand in exported from Hartford and Springfield | Globe-Democrat, Louisville Courier Jour- | aud conclusive incomposition. Its mem- R pitate if he | to the British motropolis aud the capitals | nal, Peck’s Sun, Omaha Kunsas | bors ave restrioted to Knickerbocker fam- THE GREAT at the | of continental Europe. City Journal, Washington Ripublican, | ilies; thut is to say, upon the claims of under the new | mio woat significant sign of the im. | Penver News, Oregon News, Kellogg | men who present their names for scruti- M AN RE 15 o'clock, and most & i bo | hnta 1,311 papers, Now Ocloans Tims | uy," the immdiato_ocomsion for_that August will | pending revolution in our policy may b0 | Domograt, Philadelphia Press, Kansas | firmality being the aonual dinner of the ATIN. y y i ; 1 found in the bold utterances of leading Now we spprebend that the boys and | glass and iron manufuocturers of Pennsyl- City Times, Swn Francisco Builetin, | association. obody whose ancestry San Francisco Call, Chicago Grazer, and | does not bear the test of investigation Baltimore American. Theso newspaj it at the tables, Th dent ‘wzflllo«uwwhkflpfim vania, The Olevelaud Leader, one of | £ up tho beat raums inthii:uildinu.m c:u“.r:‘l‘ho.-ncia:'- dre:: ; .° ":.iék‘:::- way. At any rate they will | the most ultaa high protection advocates, LB T bocker; the lackeys are distinguished thelr_courting by the old standard | published a dispatoh on last Friday from | FEPo/Ne’s Fumia Balve b by monial oustuimos of the early 'W o widnight traiu. Pittsburg concersiug # conference be- | Try it. Dutch duys of the island, and the toasts Sciatica, Toothachi Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery, Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fitti Steam Packing at wholosale and rejail, HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCR AND 8CHQOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb, 1, N vou -, OTHER BODILY FALMS ARD ACMES. e me:i & Finy Ceuia s botde ioe, 250, L FLEN OO, LA A TN

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