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1 THE DAILY BEE -OMAHA FRIDAY. DECEMBER 7. 1883. THE DALY BEE--OMAHA, FRIDAY, DECEVBKR 7, 1683, 1 THE GVMATA BEE Omaha OMce : v‘;':(} Farnam St. Connell Biaffs OMce, No. Strect, Near Broadway, New York Office, Room 65 Tribune Building. blishod evers woening, exoopt Bunday, The #oly Monday morning daily RRMN BY MATL. $10.00 1 "Mreo Montha.......84.00 5.00 | One Month. .., 1.00 ne_Year #1x Moncrs 1IN WRUKLY BY0, PUSLISITRD RVRRY WADNRADAY. TRRVA POSTPAID, One Year ... #2.00 | Throe Months.......8 80 ix Monthe. ... 1.00 | One Month 2 Amorican News Company, Sole, Agonts,;Newsdoal- o In the United States. [ —— A Communieations relating to Nows and Editorial masters should be addressed to the Eotrow or Tun " aINRss LarTaRs, Bustnom Lettors and Remittanoss should be 1IN0 COMPANY, OMANA. » ordors to bo made pay- npany. THE BEE BUBLISHING (0, PROPS, E. ROSEWATER, Editor. Tue thermometer atill rofuses to regu Iate itsolf according to the season. Tauefirst thing we know Mr, Holdredge will have a knock-down argument with his father-in:law, if the railroad war bo- tween the Union Pacific and the B. & M. opens up in dead earnest, —_— THERE Was an earthquake in Arkansas on Wednesday. Its offect was visible among the decanters and glasses in th: corner groceries. Some of the old topers were considerably shocked, and thought that the day of “‘Jubilo” had come. Mu. Nasuy's bad spelling has at last brought its roward, His son has been appointed to a consulship in England. There is much rojoicing at the Confedrit Pearl DECEPTIVE PIGURES, An analysis of the official returns of the election show that the anti-monops have abandoned their organization in sev eral counties. Ex-Govern r Batler, on f the candidates on the anti-monoj ticket for regent, had no votes in Burt, Cass, Codar, Cheyenne, Cherry, Dakota, Dixon, Dodge, Hamilton, Keith, Madi son, Pierce, Red Willow, Sarpy, Stanton. Washington and Wayne counties, and inly a fow scattering votes in Cuming, Greoley, Holt, Nuckolls, Platte, Rich wwdson and Seward counties J. F. Merritt. the other candidate of anti-monops not endorsed by the lemocrats, had no votes in the countie n which Butler received none, cxe Keith, in which he had seven, and | none in the counties of Brown, Grecley, Hitch ip, Phelps, Richardson and York. This of course is the resuli of there being mo anti-monop ticket printed for these counties, or it was b cause there were no anti-monop votes there, ‘TI'hrough carelessness or by inattention the name of Amos Dean, the anti-monop who was ondorscd by the democrats, wis left off in some counties and Merritt sub- stituted, and he ran several thousand be hind D. R. Danicls, who was the demo ocat endorsed by the anti-monops and who received the full coalition vote evorywhere, The result then, taking the highest vote cast for a straight re t T'hose returns gave Savage 47, Woolworth and Merritt to redited with 47, , whi votes, but he lost fully that many demo sratic votes through wd railrosd personal influence. Reese ran be iind olallalien 4,660 votes, which indi stes a republican majority of botweer 7,000 and 8,000 against 34,000 in the wt judicial election. But why did the Journat make no allusion in its analysis ‘0 the increase in this year's vote over wst yoar? That increase of over 11,000 wved Reese from defeat and accounts argely for the republican gains of the late election, The new comers, who cast their first vote, were mostly located in the frontier sounties, where no anti-monopoly tickers wero to be had, and they voted str republican tickets, Had there been or nized agitation, and a campaign in volving the anti-monopoly issues, di'er ent returns would have come in. It may he policy for monopoly organs with a re publican tendency to dupe the party by leceptive figures, but shrewd politicians will not be mislead into counting thei publican regent, that for J. T. Mallalicu, and the highest cast for a coalition can- didate, that for Daniels, is total repub- lican vote 56,961, coalition 41 ;998 Re- publican majority over all, 14,063, Re- publican gain over majority of '82, aboat 14,500, Neither the vote for judge of the su- premo court this year or that for treasu- ver Inst year is a test of party strengih, as personal consideralions entered largely in these contests. But comparing these votes, the republican gain is about 9,000. The mixture of the tickets, no two hav. ing been printed alike in the several counties, makes it very diflicult to say just how the votes for the coalition can- chickens before they are hatched by re lying on a sure republicen majority on lacal issues in Nebraska, VAN WYCK AND VAL SENATOR VAN WYCK has at last_intro- duced & bill to make railroads take out patents and pay taxes on their lands. Why did not Senator Van Wyck work or Valentine's bill on the same subject, introduced in the house a year ago.— [ Reepublican, Al There are none so blind as those whe will not see. Senator Van Wyck intro- her are 38. Savage re eived about 2,000 straight republican enemier e ————— S ef nd the political managers that placed nents often miscarry, but it looks very nuch as if the railroad interest over in lowa was supreme even in matters of the supreme court, AN INDIAN WEST POINT. 1| The resolution of Senator Morgan, of Alabama, instructing the committee on In- lian affairs to inquire into the expediency Jf creating a military academy for the edu cation and training of Indian youthe \nd men as soldiers, is an important step owards the solution of the Indian problem, The ides is to make the Indians 0 a great extont auxiliaries of the regular wmy. The Indian is naturally ambitious, andinmanyinstanceshe hasproved himself vsplendid soldier. He is Lrave, fear e, quick to learn and proud of his uni form, Wherever confidence has been reposed in him, as a scout or guide, he has proved trustworthy. With military training he would become a good officer, wd prove himself invaluable as an or sanizer and commander of Indian troopa. Che ratural habits of the Indian have always lod him to the chase and on the war path. Now that the white settlcr has driven away the game, the young Indian will take to the uniform and mili tary pursuits. Upon the Sioux reservation, Wt Pine Ridge agency, there is a large and complete organization of Tudian po- lice, who perform their duties as faithtul- ly and efticiently as any white men could s, Scuator Morgan's resolution suggests that the Indian military academy be lo- cated somowhere west of the Mississippi rviver, No better location for such an in stitution could be found than Omaha, It ludge Reed on the track. Such arrang:- AL duced a bill to place Pacific railroad | is centrally siti i ili X Roads, and much cornjuice is being | didates should he divided. The vote for ek st | LIS e VDt L LERLAS Iy TWENTY YEARS AGY. Received in Omeha, Comments on Emancipation b Democratic Organs, An Interesting Chapter of American History, THE PRESIDENT'S MES€AG From the Omaha Nebraskian (now Decender 11th, 18 W e indebted to the liberality of B Creighton, Eeq., superintendent of the aha Herald) Pacific telegraph company, for a copy of the president's message, which we gave our readers last week in full. It was taken off the lines by Mr. E. Rosewater, between the hours of 9 p. m. of Wednes day and 5:30 a. m, of Thursday morning, U'he message was taken by Mr, R., and was altogether about the best tel cgraphic copy that ever come into our oflice. Wo have no disp sition to make any ‘omment unon the message, further than to say that, as & mere matter of compos tou, We cousiuer 1L far superior to any ar document yet issued by Mr, Lin- which, of course, isn't saying much in its favor. We leave our readers free to form their own opinions as to its merits or demerits. Mr. Lin- colw's *proclamation,” something for which he is getting celebrated, will fall still-born upon the south. It requires not simple allegiance to the constitution, the laws, and returning fealty to the un: ion, but requires an oath to fully obey, and carry out the provisionsof the emun' cipation proclamation, which Mr. Lincoln himself once declared would be as inef- fectual —as it has since become-—ns “‘the pope’s bull against the comet.” We have How President Lncoln's Messege Was absorbed there into the political system. | Woolworth, perhaps, comes the nearest — being a atraight party vote cast by the Witex Jay Gould got possession of the [ democrats, and that was 31,007, This 8t Louis £6,000,000 bridgo the business would leave the anti-monopoly strength a £ litt], der 11,000, Ce od with the men_ of that city concluded that thoy | oy’ for governor LAV ok, edidni she needed another bridge, which would not | democrats have gained 2,500, the repub- be under the control of any one man, | licans have gained 13,500, and the anti Tho projoct has now taken dofinito shape, | #0NOPs “""lul.'““‘ S '|'"' M Senator Veat, of Missouri, has introduced | pa"n MoPbIean, having beon 3,495 into the senate a bill authorizing the con- | Ingers)ll, anti-monop, 1t struction of second railroad bridge over Journal, the Mississippi. Tur St. Paul Pioncer Press says that tho work of the surveyor general of Min- With all| due deference to the genius which our amiable contemporary at the state capital displays in handling official 2 ix not appreciated by the people, | “°tUrn%, we beg leave to differ with it oo« ot surprised at this if tho work | Sonclusions. Figures do mot often lio, in Minnosota was done like the survoys | "4 they are liable to be very deceptive under Boss Cunningham in Nebraska Wh-Bn‘ Al nEEn LRy applibd. when the surveyors, who aro sworn to| 1'i8 true as tho Journal states that no place a charred stake at cvery quarter | YOY® Were given to anti-monopoly can- scction, used to plant charred matehes | 10408 for rogont in nincteen countios, inatoan(of lbhoireuIRE ORY Ca L stakea. but that. does not prove that {ln- anti monopolists have abandoned their organ ization in one- third of the state. Amony or two, which have attracted so much at- | the counties quoted, several have beer tention, have not been confined to any | recontly organized, others, like Dakota particular section of the United States. [Sarpy, Burt, Washington, An castern paper says that it is sus-|aid Chegenne have never had a proted that the red light was caused by |auti-wonopoly organization. There war an immense open-air convention of re [a seattering vote given lust year in thos: formed inebriates in the west—their |counties to Ingersoll, Sturdevant .and noses having glowed with an intensity | Turner on scratched republican tickets which proved the deep rinceri'y of their | This year the only contest was over sn conversion. Omaha was represented in | preme judge, hence the republican can the convention by a large delegation, didates for regents were not scratched S0 ¥ 754 3 Ao In several counties that had anti- monopoly tickets in the field this year the regents, for some rewson, were omit. ted. This is notable true of Hamilton county, where the anti-monopolists have electod their county tieket this year, but gave no votes for Butlev or Morritt. These omissions, and the fact that no anti-monopoly tickets were to be had it many counties whers thors are hundreds of anti-monopolists, make any caloulatior based strictly on the voto polled for re- gonts decoptive and unreliable, But evon if the vote polled for regents Tk glowing sunsets of the past week Pierce Mg, Latep's home organ hasdiscovered cloarly in the views expressed in Tuk Bee on the election of Carlisle as speaker the first step towards its going over body and breeches into the democratic camp. Tur Bee is not alone among papers that are republican on national issues, that seo {1 Carlisle's election, a tenlency to- wards revei:ue reform and the defeat of jobbery and monopoly. We would com mend Mr., Laird’s organ, the Hasting: Gazette, to i s namesake at Davenport, Towa, edited an 1 owned by Edward Rus- sell, a life-long republican, and the pres. ent postmaster. His paper comments on Carlisle's elect on as follows: “¢There was a great deal more in the was acceptable as & fair basis, the so cailed analysis made by the Journad is 1 delusion and a suare, Lot us conceds . Voolws ¢ e fi lemo Yong and bittor oontost which hasjusg that Woolworth p'{lud (lh. ull demo cosed than a mere scramble for ofiice, [ cratic strength, 31,007, and the vote of like a national issue | Merritt the full anti-monopoly strength intorest | 16,511, and we have an ageregate of 47, The "“;:,'_:j:l"i“" oM 1538 voton against. Mallaliou, highost re country. M. Tandall was supported by | publican, 56,961, which leavos a olean ro the monopolists, Mr. Carlisle, being | publican majority of 9,423, inetead of without assistance from such iufluences | 14,063 s the Journal tries to figure. T and having o record of opposition o o D iniol's vote of 41,998 ws- the com Mg, ! ampaign, at lonst, of tho people | bined democratio and _anti-monopoly whom the monopolies rob. There is|strength is a preposterous decep groat reason for satisfaction in his elec- | tion, Even the vote of But tion."” lor, who * ran over 3,000 1f Jim Laird's organ voices the opin-|p,ping Merritt when added to that of Lon of the congressman from tho Seoond |y jyuorth who received only the simon Nebraska district, Mr. Russell has 8ono | Lure democratio support, mggregator over o the enemy, and his bead will bo | 44 950, or an excoss of 2,271 votes ove struck o' just toon &+ Frank Hatton cau | 1y o), reac i for it. has been taken in it. «didates represented two 1t is & notorinus fact, which the Jour discriminati i ith | et deliberately conceals, that noearly n':.‘::;::l or, .n:.::::“;:“fez;,t 6,000 votes wore cast for Ames on anti e lai ,_hg vailroad magnates koop up | monopoly tiokots which would have byou ::::’ 0;: wl:in»Abuut being lot alone. given to Daniels and Morcitt, These The latest complaint comes from the votes have been Nuurde.d l))l'.tllo return smelters of Colorado concerning unjust [ing board as ‘‘scattering.” Why this discrimination in the matter of freight | Was done we cannot comprehend. The rates to the Missouri river. They are pudlished official returns show t:ntwluln compelled to pay $10 from Donver, and | ouly 40 votes wero *‘scattering™ on su $22 from Leadville to Omaha, while the | preme judge, there were 4,282 scatter charge from Salt Lake to Omaha, ing on regeuts for long term and a haul of 800 miles longer, is only $5. 2,602 on _iregsnl for short term The same discrimination operates against The republicans and democrats Im’ the Denver merchants, owing to the cut | tickets in every county snd no cn‘mln- iu rates from 3 per hundred to 50 cents | person will claim that the republieans msde by the railroads in favor of Salt soattered more thaa from 50 to 100 votes. Lake. This is all caused by the fight be- [ It must therefore be eloncnded that fully tween the Union Pacific and Denver & | 6,000 of the scattering votes belong Rio Grande roads. What they loso on|rightfully to the opposition, Taas: the cut to Salt Lake they are trying to|much as Morritt was only voted h‘:rb) make up n freights from intermediate | the anti-monopolifts he should by rights points, between which and the Mis- have received the 2502 scattering votes souri river, rates ave maintained, |on short torm rogents. That -m_zhl have Notwithstanding such arbitrary meth- made his total vote 10063, Add this to the ods, the railread companies want to be |vote of Woolworth 31,007 and we have let alone. They have shown in this in-|a0 8xgregato ln‘tl-m»mp. and dem - stance, as they have time and again, that eratic vote of 59,160, t\ll(l.wlll[{ Mull-.lwu they always stand ready to indulgein cut- | vote of b6,901 as the straight republican Gtion st the expense|strength aud the republican majority, as 'ah'mthswm‘;fubla. The ralroads ated by the late election, is 6,801, need restrictive legislation to| This is a fair analysis of the official re prevent them from robbing each other | turns on regents aud it varies but a triflo as much as the public needs it to pro-|from the conclusions reached in our 2o itself from belug plundered, lands upon the tax-list a fow wecks after he first entered the senate. ‘lhe rail- roads wero exempted from taxation be- cause their lands were not patentabl: until certain survey fees we-e paid, and hy refusing to pay these fees except o tands they had actually sold they escaped taxation. The senator proposed n his ball to waive the right of the gov- ornment to exact the survey fees and re. quire the land department to issuc patents for the lands that had beo wtually esrned. Valentine threw a soj to his constituents just before the last congress adjourned, when he knew {hat the bill which he introduced would Jhe pigeon-holed in the committee with hun- Ireds of other bills which could not b ceached, It is a piece of impudenos t wk Semator Van Wyck why e lid not take up Valentine’s bill. It would be a great deal more pertinent t sk why didn’t Valentine put through Vant Wyck's bill for the relief of the set tlers on the St. Joe & Denver Jands, Ihat b1l had passed the senate and go [ ; iuto th house in ample time to becom: law, had it Feon called up by Valen ine. Why car't Valentine's six-dolla: Jlerk explain why his patron saint fuilec to do his duty towards the settlers whe have since been tompromised by Jiu Laird into paying Knevals, the land shark, three dollars aud a half an acre T governor has appointed Hon. . G, Hamer, of Kearney, to the vucancy or ihe bench of the Tenth district, made by he death of Judge Savage. The new judge is an able lnwyer, and a strom: uaa. It is ome of the Best appointments ‘he governor has made. Even Tk Bra can Nardly clsim that this appointmer: was wado at the dictation of the rail oads, as Judg: Hamer was one of the eaders of the anti-monopelist movemen mtil it descended to its present plane.- Crete Hnion, The auti-moncpoly movement is o he same plane to-day upon which Mr Humer found it when he stumped the Chird district last year, There has beer 10 lowering of the flag among sincer: anti-monepolists since that memorabl. campnign and there can be no honorabls abandonment of the contest until the wutrageous exactidhs to wiich the peopl: f this state are subjectsd by railroad: wo prohibited by law; until railroad woperty is made to beas its just propor wn of the burdem of taxation, and vholesale bribery of public oftic vith passes iy made a penal cffence Mr. Hamer turned his back on the ant monopoly movement as soon s it failed o furnish the motive power he needed | tho A & N., lyeariug bho characte:iso n his scramble for ofive, The descent frum the high plane was made by hiw- | olf, and wot by former political aseo- intes, with whom he had fought agains legaljzed highway robbery aud political piracy. Tk wessage Iy verhose and fu some rospects Ainest weauingless.—Freddio Nye. The message is an unpretending, but digni. iod and able state paper, which coutaine s iuch that, after reading, one is surprised to se0 that It 15 so short,— Murat Halstead, The document to congress containg much ovidence that tha president thinks for himself, His opivious and. reco mendations on important questions o wlicy are often wholly difevent from those which he trausunts in the reports f his cubinet oftficers,-~Charles A, Duna President Arthue's annual message has that charucter of plain and practical good sense which all his state papers have borue, and, while we do not approve of all his recommendations, and, indead, dissont strongly from some of the most important of them, we cannot too highly praise the apirit of the document.—New York Herald, —_— e district bench, caused by the resignation 10uh of thi srusude ugrinst the drug stores, winks must go. ing with iucorrigiblos, and no n aro now being;Lid. inforn +he water out of: the builor. Plattswouth and viei; wenced o dis on the 31xtef thix mouth, nave boen rafuved buil, though friends wifere: TreRE is now a vacaney on the Iowa | headquarters of the Platte, thus offering superior advantages for such a school. Ty next issue of “The Popular Science Monthly” will contain an elaborate ar- tice on “The Classics in Germany,” giving a crushing auswer to President Porter and oihers who have appealed to he celebrated ““Berlin Report” against Charles Francis Adams on the Greek (uestion. The article is by Prof. E. J Tames, of the University of Penusyl- vania, who has recently ~roturned from sormany, whero ho, carefully investi- sated the whole subject. Ho shows that it has been greatly misunderstood here, wnd that the inferences drawn from Ger. man experience of classical and scientifi studies are of not the slightest value for the dead lang ! this country. STATE JOTTINGS, Red Clond in anxious to be graded a city of ho kecond class. Tho resule of the Otoo reservation begins on nonth. An effort is boi made to secure thoe estab- ishuwent in Fremont of a normal college aud nsingss s hool. The saloon keepers of Lincoln have begun s T'he cods o1 heard conservative republicans (about election times) declare upon the stump, and through their papers, that the south ought, and might, come back into the union if they would lay down their arms and return to loyalty and allegianco due from the states and the people to the general goverument. The president has idered such action on their part en- tirely superfluous and unnecessary, He has plaialy told them that somet ¢lse, and something more would be re- quited. But then, the world moves! [From the New York World, Dec. 2, 1863.] MR, LINCOLN'S GREAT FOLLY. ** The greatest folly of my life was the issuing of the emancipation proclama- tion.” Such were the words of Presi dent Lincoln to Wendell Phillips last Fanuary, according to the testimony of the latier in a speech he made last week n the Music Hall, in New Haven. Be- fore the issuing of that document Presi- dent Lincoln gave it as his opinion that it woulé be of no more effect than the “ pope’s bull against the comet;” and af- ter he had given it to the world he re- garded itas the “ greatest folly of his life,” and did net soruple so to inform me of the mostinflu 1 ual leaders of the fanatical factions who had foreed him in- o the ohjrctionad measure. President Lincoln hus made many notable remarks since he has been in office, but noue that 18 likely to atiract so much attension as the above. The wolf hunters of Plattsmouth were so Jully rcured that they abandoned the chase sefore it commenced. €0 COURTaLH okee itanlf that out of a adon of 5,000 only one family requires ~istace frem the county, Blue 8prings has juct discovered that the pringe from which the town takes its name. Jusscss medicinal properties. ‘The sguatters on the state lands at Lincolu 1ave hoen notified to move. Of 300 lots, early two-thirds are oosupied. A man was found dead in Holt county lass veek with his teamn drowned in Dry Creek. \n ewpty jug was also found near by. Two ludy evangelists, Miss Tamusley and Miss Hollaway are deailug ont left-handed lows to sin and satavism ot Fairfield. The reform school at' Kearney i overflow re will be ecoived uuti tho new addition is comploted. The hotel project in North Bend has b wandoned, and in pluce of it a large pul 1l will be ervoted, for vaich the fouudations Tha Norfollsuchool boned will pay $50 for ion 04 to who i6 was that broke intw herchool huilding the other night and les o4 Petitions are cirenlating for signatures i i3, asking tho gove w commute tho sentence of Pol n, who is veu- ler of Arwstrong at ¥ork, . few wecks ago, s bhond of $100,000, Iapuary, The trial comwes .off in Otticial notico has haen given by the B & || M. uuthe tion, fi the opouing Ea 10w station saven wiles north of Lin of Fuwerald, Plattamonth is on the eve of & battle t ro- in the countgnest of Cas, A . petition hus i presouted to the commirsioners wisk 2409 wies wttached, asking for o spgciul election tor re-location. On Sunday Detlef Stegelmem, living near Soribuer, while out hunting with » party of friends, sttompted to pull s shotgan, out of the bindeut of the wagon, sad lost bis wrm in the experiment. The Nebraxka City pork ancking sstablish- wont now disposes of 1,600 head of, hogs per fay, wd u prominent citiz o of thaa town hus wiade u proporition 1o kg to. tha buildiug of suother siwilar establishuent thecs. Tha Buffulo Couuty Joarnal, alter due de- I berution and mental aaxiety declures shakespeare's H wlot i3 40 per, cent h por. compared with aither * 81 ¢ Cabin” or Buffalo Bill'a “Wild West. The death warrant of Geo. W, Hart is noa i the hunds of Sheri®, Denimag, who is thore- Dy dircetud to oxecuse Hart aathe court hinsa yard at Orand L-lurgd botwas the hours of 1% clook noon wnd 8 p. . 0w Priday, the 2iy% duy of December 14t The popular thiag in Tiacukn society new.is the watinee ball wr ball matinee. The cur- ins are pullod down ab 2 p. m., the, g lighted, and the merry-mnkers whirl awd, cir- «lu in the muzy and the ghae of gas iaw, the situo whif 1L ware 2 a. m. The Linco) a Sunday Optic rises to. remak parunthoii sdy: **Net for one momen would wo say. that all traveliug men ace porkect gantlowon.* This ie vather hard o comwer- roud agents, buk then the by naves allo of Judge Reed, who at the last eleciion was promoted to the supreme court, He enters upon the discharge of his duties in his new position in Junuary nest, It is currently reported that Goveruor Sher- man proposes to sppoint the law partner of the governor of Jay Gould’s provinee of Wyoming This is said to be in confar- wity with & bargain mado during the campaign betwoen the attorney of the analysis of the returns for supreme judge 113h|mfiu. Burlington & Quincy railrosd | shouldurs, rls or tiuth o interfera withia an lor, Vho minor heizs of the late M2, Fleihman, who vou killed some tiwe rince ab Low wvilis 1y fudiug frome bis wugon, whila, it s wllesed, e wash intoxicated, have filed uhe preli v inary Daywrs in & sait agaiust Johi Oner who Fiws & saloon a6 thit pluce, sl Henry Lehas ! inedf und Frederde stuhlinwy, his bondswen, w wecover damages in the suw of 8,000, Mr. Thomuas Higging, who for the past vine 0 hoss bt Wisuer, wet He wi- yours has hoou sect with asaiows ac 6 luat wees, Imore brothers, indicted for the.mur- | MW t st [EFrom The Omaha Nebraskan, Dec. 4,'$3] THE PMANCIPATION PROCLAMATTON, Wesee 1bststed that tho uriginalcopy of the president’s- emancipation_proclama- tion has been awarded to T. B. Bryan, 23q., for_the sum of throe thousand dol” lars._This is tho same- figure that the proprictors of The Chicago Times wid for STEELE, JOHNSON& €O, Wholesale Grocers! AND JORPRRS IN FLOUS, SALT. SUGARS, CABNED GOO/S. ND ALL GROCERS' SUPPh: / . A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BR.\NDS OF Cigars and Manufactured Tobacco. ACENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & 'h.AND POWDER (O Booth’s ‘Oval’ Brand AND FRESH FISH AT WHOLESALE. ' D. B, BEEMER. Agent .Omaha IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CICARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMRSTIC OIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES § SMOEERS' ARTICLE PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from 3% to $120 psr 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGABS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebrasita; Wyoming avii. Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES: | SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SaM{i 7’7 1 MANUPACTURER OF OF STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS Garriages, Bugnies Roal Wagons AND TWO WHEEL CARTS.. the document. If they. got it they in- tended to have the paper-nicely framed, and suspend it:in their office witht the | — ——= fullowing insoription neatly engraved in gilt: “Tuk Dorr's Buws Acanes: THE Cower.” The inscription would have heen approptiate, significant and: truth- ful, according to tho illustrious author’s own admiesion before he issued ib: i b Politicsl godantry is ot a promize in Ne- braska, as vill be s from the owing lint of [ady stperintendonts of schooks cleated at the luat el Chy Jennie hithren: Haslan Tho “vo’&l bonth” campa sady Wov- ing its effcat. The Culveston, Nowe, (dem ) s Dowestic peaco ix tw.bo destroy- ol in the wath to ke n stuwart haliday. Viiginia & te bo mulo the bresatwork of the k. T 100 of the ssute Apected ta wea!ab s Every- bloody shirk ukdic »hout d desperate Trgiuia calls for cuInpaii.is on tha Sapis,an ( § 20 seo itgrocesd w 1§ the goaernor of fedora faid the cantest will Ba inaugurated.” || THE GHEAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN, HEUNATIS A Neuralgia, Suiatica, Lumba g, RACKACTE, ADACHE, TOOTFACHE SORE THROA® GUINSY, BV L . melin q AR AT b Sorcness, Cuts, Bruises, C.E. MAYNE & CO., 1309 Faam Street, - - Omaha, Neb. \ WHOLESALE BHIPPERS AND DEALEHS IN Hard & Soft Coal wnpted to crosws the sew b uear the depot in |vr. b of an engine, she.s the plot struck Lim | kuocking hiw dow e, bis lofe arm e tho rail. Over Gl the wheels b the elhaw pletaly rovering 1t abo sha Denised aud fnjued <ut bhe head pid . 3 ~—AND-- tiswi| COONNELSVILLE COKE ! | . ®F"Write for Prices, 1310 and 1820 Haouey Strest and 403 2. 18th streot, —~QM ATFA NEB . » ustrated;Catalog e furnished free upon applicatian . s J. A, WAKEFIELD, @ WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALEE IN - Lmer, L, Shgli, Pk, SSH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMFPANY. Unicn Pacific Depot, - & M ( . H PHILLIPS, Merchent Tailor! 1504 Farnam St 4 CYFINESUIISB A D OVELCOATH. Alosfull e of uar nteed to Ve moce in the atertstytes £1a with the Less ton v i gy, Next Door to Wakush Ticket Office,” Vig fhe stock 0, WOLT | NS s SUIth g8 B 10 CA)LAN A. S. FISHBLATT, Piivsician & Surgecs Oftioes over thie Omaha ¥ationol Bank. Special attention given to Gseases of the roat % and Langa. OMieo hours 980 11 & 1 2 0 Awid 7 8. m. {an b-0ca CUT RAT'ENS. e Lowest Prices Novs Cffered on Artist's Materials ! Windser & Newton’s Tu be Colors, per dozen, 90¢; Fine Sible Dzushes from 10c up; Fine Biistol Brashe s, from 7e uwp; Round and Oval Plagues, from 20c wp; Palutics, $3e; Cups, 10¢; Japared Tin Artist's Boxes, §1.50; Brass Plagues, 450 ap} Paagls, We; Wooden Plag ue, 15¢; Designs to Decorate, from 1e ench up; Gold aud Sitver Paint, Oils, Varuiy nes, from 20c upward; Canvas 70c per yard; Strotchers, Je up. A. HOSPE, Jr. South Side Doduge Street. | ' Chiarley ¥eng, THE ONLY Chinese and Japanese Curiogity Shop IN OMAHA A Cu 4, Th hese and Japanose & bunakerchiefs, ban [ ted Ol Water Lily. A autly on bend, Choice er 1thuid Lomvenwor Gonnine Ly Tule tow ARVES YENG .., BRADILLEY, DEALER IN Lwmber,Sash, Doors, Blinds,Building Paper LIME, CEMEN1, HAIR, ETC.} ‘. ffice aud Yrd, Cor. 13th and California Strects, - OMAHA, N J. H. CIBSON, CARRIAGE AND WAGON NANUEACTORY CORNER TWELFTH AND HOWALD [IBFET#, oMAEA, - - - - - = Partioular attention tven o re alrin Watls act'cm guarsnteed] N B