Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 12, 1883, Page 4

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THE DAILY BEE--OMAHA. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1383, ¢ THE GMAIA BEE Omaha Office, No. 016 Farnam St. Council Bluffs Ofice, No. 7 Pearl Street, Near Broadway. New York Office, Room 63 Tritanc Building. S Dublished every woring, except Sunday. The #aly Monday morning daily. MR B MATL. /81000 | Throe Months, . . 5.09 | One Month.. #ix Monens THN WRNKLY RNR, PUBLISHED RYRRY WRDNRSDAT. TERMS POSTPAID, One Year...........82.00 | Three Months #1x Months..... ... 1.00 | One Month Amerioan Nows Company, SoloLAgent e in the United States. CORRRSPOXDRNCR'S A Communieations relating to News and Editorial matters should be addressed to the Eviton or Tun Bun, FUSINRSS LRTTRRS, All Business Tettors and Remittances should be sddrossed to Tim B PUBLISUING COMPANY, OMATIA. Drafts, Cheoks and Postoffice orders to bo made pay- Able to the order of the company. {HE BEE PUBLISHING C0., PROPS, E. ROSEWATER, Editor. ] DexveR is on hand as usual with her bid for a branch mint, What is Omaha doing in this matter? Wurre was Mr. O'Holman, Dana's Indiana dark horse, when Abe Hewitt in- troduced his O'Donnell resolution? Tnk colored man and brother is just now receiving considerable attention at the hands of congress. There is to be a presidential election next year. Coxaressmay FiNenry has introduced a bill for the construction of four gun- boats and three additional cruisers for the navy. This looks as if Congressman Finerty has his eyo on John Bull, Gexeral ROSECRANS, now congress- man from California, is evidently an ac- complished pupil of Poker-Bob Schenck He introduced fifty-three bills on Mon- day, with the remark that hejhad &~ full deck and a joker. Tuere have been railroad billy, tele- graph bills,land tax bills, and anti-mono- poly bills of all sorts, introduced in the house. We are now all on tip-toe to hear something startling from Nebraska's Jove-like man-jack. Tur United States supreme court has assisted Jeff Davis in perpetrating a gigantic swindle. The technical points in the case may be in favor of the ex- confederate chief, but it is well under- stood that he played a slick confidence game on Mrs. Dorsey, before she willed him her property. Sexaror Vay Wyek is chairman of the committee on improvement of the Mississippi, which includes the Missouri and all its tributaries. This is one of the most important committees of congress. It is by all odds the most important so far as the Mississippi and Missouri val- leye are concerned. Mz. Hewrrr has returned just in the nick of time from Egypt and the Red Sea to make a bid for the Irishvote. If there had not been a presidential colec- tion pending Mr. Hewitt would not have cared whether O'Donnell was a citizen of the United States or the Sandwich Tslands, y Mu. Laxw, of Indiana, is a very in- «uisitive person. He has introduced a resolution in the house asking Attorney- General Brewster for an itemized account of the expenditures in the star route cases. When Senator Van Wyck intro- duced such a resolution in the senate last winter it was thought decidedly imperti- nent, His royal nibs, Mr. King, of Louis- iana, wants the pay of male and female employes of the government equalized, If Mr, King can now equalize the capac- ity of the sexes for work, he will accom- plish & much needed reform. Mr. King has probably heard of the girl cowboy of Texas, which convinces him that the gentle sex is making big strides. —— T stato alliance of farmers will soon meet at Kearney, They had befter re- solve to come over to Macedonia and help us pass a good railroad lay..—/fle- publican, Help whom! Help the railroads to pass & law to bamboozle tho people? **‘Come over to Macedonia.” Is that another name for the Union Pacifie head- «uarters! Tux trouble with Uncle Sam now iy al. | sectionalism. REPUBLICAN BOURBONS. We have no desire to see 80 ablea journal as THE Bik kick out of the traces. Wo shall be glad to have it doing its level best for the repblican candidate next fall and beliove it will bo able to_accomplish & great deal. We do not wish to have that paper read out of the party, but we must admit that its strong en- dorsement of the work of democrats looks very much like helping the enemy. Tf it intends to be republican it is certainly inconsistent to bo furnishing tho small-calibre democratic editors of the state with ammunition with which te shoot down republicans. Thero is hardly one of them, unable t write an intel- ligent article for their own papers, but has copied Tie Bre's endorsement of Carlisle, whose clection is regarded by even independ- ent papers generally, as an act of extreme Tik Dk cortainly cannot en- dorse the free trade doctrine of the new spoaker and his backers, nor sanction the boldness of his challenge to a contest between the sections—and be & consistent ropublican paper, even in national matters,—Hastings Gazette-Journal, The republican party began its career as a party of progress. 1t was a party of great moral ideas and reforms, As such it rallied around its standard the pro- grossive elements who did not venerate old established institutions because they were founded by the fathers of the re- public. The party has now been in power tweonty-three years, The reformers who lad it in its vigorous youth have passed away, and many of its surviving leaders are moss-backed bourbons, who imagine that the only missien of the republican party now is to oppose indiscriminately overy measure that 18 supported by the democrats, This is the rankest kind of bourbonism. It insists upon adopting policies of the past in pursuing measures of the prosent. This is like fitting the jacket of the boy on the body of the man. Tf the republi- can party has been fossilized to such an exteut that it must stand in the way of the car of progress, it must go down, and ita mission will soon beended. 1t has been our aim to impress upon the party the necessity of meeting every vital issue, and inaugurating overy reform conducive to the public welfare. If the democratic party supports any measure or champions any reform that will im- prove the condition of the American peo- ple it would be the height of folly for ro- publicans to antagonize them. The re- vision of the tariff is one of the reforms that the country demands. The present tariff was formulated by Senator Morrill in 1861, 1t was a war measure, and was a wise measure in its day. It produced the sinews of war tosubdue the rebellion, and built up American industries by ex- cludivg cheap foreign labor from compe- tition, But the war has long since passed away, and the infant industries, which the high protective tariff has fostered and sustained, have now becomo self- supporting without props Moreover, the heavy taxation imposed upon Amer- culty. A year ago all business men, in- cluding protected manufacturors, insisted that tarifl duties should be reduced at least 20 per cent. Congress with the aid of a commission undertook to satisfy this demand and enacted a law that is worse than the old one. Mr Carlisle be- lieves that it is the duty of this congress to fulfill the broken promise of the last, and that there is no clamor against the needed action except from those who succeeded in reaping undue advantage from the last revision. Now let the republican bourbons who see such a bugbear in Mr. Carlisle ex- plain why they represent the republican party as committed to an inflexible pro- toctive tariff on imports which only bene- fits a fow millionairesand imposes ncedless burdens upon producers and consurmers. REVISING THE LAND The present congress appears deter- mined to make a thorough revision of the land laws, A number of bills have al- ready been introduced in both houses to reserve the remaining domain of the Un- ited States for actual settlers. The most swoeping reforms in existing land laws LAWS. have been devised by Senator Ingalls, of Kansas, Throe bills relating to public lands, introduced by Senator Tngalls, are designed to materially simplify the oper- ations of the general land offico, and change several important particulars in the method of acquiring title to public lands, The first provides for the repeal of the pre-emption laws, but authorizes a second homestead entry by persons who, having made one homestead entry, have for any reason failed to perfect the title, and who, at the same time, never made a filing under the preemption act. The second repeals the timber-culture law, but permits title to be perfected in accordance with the provision of that law upon all claims entered beforo the pas- sage of the repealing act. The third and last of the series proposes to amend the homestead act. by prohibiting commutation thereunder until two years have elapsed from the date of settlement, one year of which must be of record in the land office. It also repeals the provision law under which local land oftices are authorized to receive relinquishments and immediately throw the claims relinquished open to entry. In effect, it requires all relinquishments to be forwarded to the commissioner of the before the land in question is thrown open to entry. The effect of this series of measures, if they become laws, will be to limit the amount of public land a sin- glo iudividual can seoure to one claim of ican producers to sustain these industries have built up a system of monopolies that crush out all competition. The manifest interost of the American people is a reduction of high protective du ties. It is perfect folly for repub- licans to commit the party against this reform instend of depriving domaocrats of political capital by giving it their hearty support, This is the view which we have taken, and in this we are in full accord with the most influential republican journals. As staunch a re- publican paper as The Albany Journal, founded by Thurlow Weed, make the tollowing comment: “‘We say that the party will err in in- viting a contest on tarift lines between the manufacturing and agricultural sec- tions of the Union, for the latter is much thestronger in the Electoral college. The reverue reformers in the republican ranks iike their party, want to sce it kept in power, and are anxious to do all that in ‘them lies next year to help it win, Tt will be the height of idiocy to ostracize thom by proclaiming in the par- ty's name the infallibility of the present tarifl.” This is why Tux Bi 5, in common with such papers a8 the New York Zimes and Springlield Re- publican, hailed Mr, Carlisle’s’ nomination as the harbinger of an era in the interest of good government. All tho howl of the stupid republican bour- bons about a solid south and free trade is bosh, The Boston Advertiser is cer- tainly as good a republican paper as there is anywhere, but it scouts the idea that Carlisle's election emphasizes the “south- side view.” It says: “It cannot look 160 acres. Land may be secured after two years’ actual residence thereon by paying S1.25 per acre, or after five years' residence for nothing. The provision in respect to relinquishments is designed to put a stop to the practice of filing entries upon publiz lands and holding them for the purpose of sclling relinquishments to incoming settlers. Under the -existing laws a citizen may obtain three claims, one each under the homestead, pre-emp- tion, and timber-culture laws. He se- cures a timber-culture claim withoutresi- dence, and may purchase pre-emption and homestead claims after six months’ actual residence. These are wholesome reforms which every representative from this section should heartily support. It is a notorious fact that the system of pre-emption has degenerated into systematic fraud through wholesale perjury. Millions of acres of the best public lands have passed into the hands of Jand sharks who have no intention of improving them, much less to live upon them. The recent developments of the Stinking Water ranch ave fair samples of organized plun- dering and porjury under tho cover of the pre-emption act. The treo culture act, which was adver- tised far and wide as & national blessing, nor less than a scheme of speculntors and land-grabbers to gobble millions of acres of valuable lands which would otherwise have become the property of tho homesteader. 1t is high time that land-grabbing in every form and every protext should be stopped, The public lands should be reserved for the actual settler. toward a restoration of slavery, or are- vival of secession, o¢ an undoing of re- construction; forit is the just hoast of the republican party that all these ques- tions have been settled forever under its administration of national affairs, Thore that he has more money than he knows | i8 10 chance of drawing the color line on what to do with, That fact is rosponsi- tho tariff question, If the south wants ble for the most extravagant and hair- | liberal appropriations for ‘public im- brained schemes for spending the peo. | Provements,’ so does the west—nor is the ple’s money. The last one is a plan to | €8st backward in prosenting its claims. establish national experimental stations | What, then, is the *“south.-side view"1" in connection with agricultural colleges, With the oxception of a fow vision- This is another humbug on a par ‘with |ories, nobody advocates freo trade, be- Le Duc's tea-culiure and Loring's sugar | 8use froe trado is utterly impracticable, manufacture from torghum and boots,jthe | Mr. Oarlisle's position on the tariff sugar thus manufactured costing one dol- | Was defined through the Baltimore Sun lar a pound. —— last Thursday by an authorised statement from the speaker. Mr, Carlisle declares = Tue ouly business which the board of | that the present law is not a roform of trade seoms to handle with some degreo | the old law; therefore he favors its ro- of common sense is the market house | vision, belteving that at least the reduc- proposition, While it would, perhaps, | tion of 20 per cent recommended by the be more central to locate the market |tariffl commission should be made and house near Fiftoenth strect and Capital |that the increased rates of duty by avenue, the lower end of Capital avenue, | Which the promised objects of the bill of between Tenth and Twelfth stroets,would | 1ast sossion wero perverted should be re- suswer just as well, People who come | formed. Ho holds that the demands of from any great distance to the market |the bost conservative opinion have not would take the street cars, which will | been satisfied, but that an attempt has laud them within two or three blocks of | been made to deceive those who hold it, the proposed location, The city should There has been no change in his position, own the market house, and there is no | He belioves that ultimately the customs doubt it can buy four lots st a ressonable | duties of the governmont must be col- prico ou Capital avenue. brook will probably be willing to drop General Esta- |lected for public uses only and ho is de- sirous of returning to what he considers the Jefferson Bquaze pet for tho location | ® healthy financial system in such a way on Capital avenue, where he happens to | 2ud by such steps as will euable tho busi- own nowrly as much frontege as be dooy | ness of the country to adjust itself to the Bew condilion of things without difli- I i predioted that Jay Gould will eail away in his yacht just in time to escape the republican campaign assessors next year,— Chicago Herald, Tho trouble is that the demoeratic campalgn assessors are about as tenacious as the republican campaign assessors. Jay CGould is said to have contributed £00,000 to the Tilden fund, and $50,000 to the Hayes fund. It makes very little differonce to him which party wins. With the democrats he is a democrat, with the republicans a republican, and first, last and all the time for Jay G. It's & cold day when he gots loft, Tus Boston 7vanseript thinks that ‘“‘the president's message exhibits con- summate finesse,” and *‘is the work of a master taotician, if not strategist.” The Transoript is a leading republican paper of Massachusetts, but then the Zran- soript is no judge of state papers. The Omaha Republican ix of the opinionthat the president’s message exhibits consum- mate stupidity and verbosity, Of course the nation looks to the Zepublican for opinions on matters of grave concern, Tur polygamous Mormons will got very little comfort from the demooratic side in congresss. Goneral Rosocrans has introduced a joint resolution to abol- ish polygamy forover by constitutional amendment, just s slavery was abolished. Other domocratic leadors are as pronoun. ced in opposition to polygamy as Scuator Edmunds or President Arthur, goneral land office and approved by him |} COLLA OF THE 10WA POOL. It is officially announced that the Towa pool will, as now constituted, cense to exist with the end of the present year. A new combination has been made, between the Rock Island, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, and Union Pacific, for the con- trol of the traflic which has heretofore been exchanged been the Union Pacific and the Towa trunk lines. The compact is made for a term of twenty-five years This is interpreted as a declaration of war by the new pool on the Northwest- ern, Burlington, and Wabash roads, If such a war means permanent competition we should hail it with satisfaction. 1t is given out, however, that the Northwest- ern, Burlington, and Wabash may come into the new pool, providing they are willing to accept such terms as may be graciously granted by the railroad tri- umvirate. The Burlington and North- western have both forestalled such a combination by bridging the Missouri at Plattsmouth and Blaiv, which enables them to come directly into Omaha. The Wabash will be left out in the cold, un- less it accepts the terms of the new pool. For the time being war seems inovita- ble, and merchants and producers in Ne- braska and Towa will getcheap trasporta- p tionwhile it lasts. If the Burlington ca. pitulates it will cease to compete for the Colerado and Utah trade, In the long run the Chicago, Burlingon & Quiney, will have aline of its own to San Francisco, unless its owners obtain control of the Union Pacific, which wonld give them a complete monopoly west of the Missouri river. This railroad war is liable to solve some of the problems which have agitated Omaha and Council Blufls for many years. GreNeraL Esrasrook wants to change the name of Capitol avenue to Market street. Flirat catch your hare, and then skin him, The general had better wait until we have a market house. TOLITIOAL NOTES, Governor Porter, of Indiana, is an advocate of female suffrage. Thomas Porterhouso Ochiltres is the full name of the new party. Of the seventy-eight senators thirty have Deen members of the house. Androw G. Curtin, of Peansylyania, is c sidered o dark horse 'in the democratic 1 dential race. ongressman Lanham, of Toxas, represonts istrict of eighty-seven counties, some of which are as largo s Massachusetts. James G, Polk was tho only man who ever got from the speaker’s chair'into the White House, Boar that in mind, Mr. John Car- lisle. Mr. Randall s fn the condition of the boy who had a_ fight with o bull pup, He isn't nearly as good-looking us he was, buthe knows 4 heap more, Thero aro already five candidates in the field for tho succossion to United States Senator Groome, of Maryland, and the returns are only just heginning to come in. 1t s said that President Andrew 1. White, of Comell nmvarsity, will be a candidate for United States sanator from New York to suc- ceed Senator Lapham, - is chances of success are eaid to be good. -~ There is & man in Springfield, Mass,, who is |u|yiuf an election vow . by wearing n straw hatuntil Butler is elocted again. Ho is a shorn lamb who needs to have winter winds tempered to his silly pate. Judgo Hoadley, the governar-clect of Ohio was & law student of Salmon P, Chase, and he has just received a lotter from Mrs, Kate Chase, late Sprague, that sho will be present at his inauguration, on the 14th of January next, A powerful railroad lobby in the halls of the South Carolina logislature at Columbia is hopeful of soon fixing the laws to suit the cor- porations and do away with the restrictions which have for some time heen placed on rail- waya in the state, The followers of Mr. Payne in the Ohio sen- atorial contest _claim votes, Pendloton’s managers 85, Durbin Ward's 20, Seney's 10, } Converso's 15, and there are ai nauy wors seatterivg, Total, 110, The democrats have 1)42 votes on a joint ballot in the next Ohio house, Beven of the sixteon cities ix} Massachusetts has been from the start nothing more |* which held elections Tuesday voted ageinst licensing the liquor traffic, four of them—Springtield, Chelsea, (lou, Brockton—thus reversing thoir vote of 2go. On the other hand, Taunton and ford, probibition by large majorities last year, haye decided to try licenses. The time for choosing a successor to_ United States Senntor Lapham, of New York, is more than a yoar off, but the cntries of ‘the race are alroady numerous, Very fow of the re publican papers of state have as yet indicated a proference, The aspirants now in tho field aro ex.(iovoruor Comell, Prosidont White, of Cornol university, Chauncoy M. Depow, ( W, Curtis, William H, Vanderbilt aud Wi Taw Reid, Mr. Carlisle will bo the fourth Kentuckian to bo clected spesker, Hemy Clay was spoakerin the twelith, thirteenth, fourtoonth, fifteenth, sixteonth and cightoenth congresses; John White in the twenty-seventh and Lynu Boyd in the thirty-second and thirty-third, From Boyd to Carlisle there has boen a lapse of twenty-eight years, tho states weantime having the honor being Massachusetts, South Caroling, New Jersey, Ponusylvania, Dudiana, Maine and Ol —— Tax-Eating Milllionaires, Tribune. 1t is the men holdingthe largest amount of property by virtue of its protection who should be the qultlt‘l‘upufuul in the fultillment of every obligation they ewe the government, ‘If thoy teach the les- son of contempt for the duties citizens should perform, what can they expect from poorer and weaker men? One of the great dangers that threatens the future of the United States flows from the acts of the half-dozen richest men in this country, Theso men are at the head of our railroad systom. Without even the grace of concealment they openly treat the government as an orange to be squeezed of every privilege, franchise, and exemption they can get by solicita- tion or purchase. At the same time they apparentl escaping from the performance of the du- ties to bo expocted theoretically from every citizen, On the whole, the most notorious illu- stration of this habitual attitude of thoso who have, one would suppose, the weigh- tiest prudential reasons for supporting the dignity of the government is to be seen In the relations between tho men who own the Pacific railroads and the government. They are the richest Amer- icans, Those who own the Central and Southern Pacific were made millionaires by their own energy and thrift—which is to say, the energy ‘and thrift with which they sopped up the bounty of the people. The principal owners of the Union Pacitio were made rich in the same way, though one or two of them, like Mr, Vanderbilt, have come in by purchnse. Isut his wealth hus been as distinetly the creation of the, same combination of thrift and bounty as the others, with the mere dif- Chicag ferouco that what the former mado out of | | are the same men avho, having received take a pride in habitually |- national charters and favors he has got from a state. Forty millions of men in only mode- [up the goverzment of the United States at the time the Pacific roads were char. | tered. These cnterprises were set of foot in the language of the acts of congress ‘4o promote the public interest and well- fare.” Tor this ,lll‘)“r object mnost gen- erous gifts of lands and money were made to the incorporators, The value of the donations from the forty millions of citi- zens to the fow who undertook the con- straction of theso ronds has proved to be not less than £2,000,000,000 more than the cost of the work. But though the govermnent did not dream at the time that it was making so bad a bargain for itaelf, no one would for a moment tole- rate the suggestion that on that account the bargainshould now berevised. What_the people agreed to do they must do, but not less must the men who have been made millionaires do so as well. How have Messrs. Dillon, Huntington, Crocker, Stanford, Gould, Vanderbilt, and_the lesser millionaires who own the Pacific roads repaid the bounty of the overnment? Forty millions of poor men haye made half a dozen of their fellows richer than the kings of Europe. In re- turn for all this there has never been a full and fair performance by these favor- ad persons of any of the obligations im- posed upon them, They have used their ower to abuse and oppress the people individually and collectively. They have charged them rumous rates for tranepor- tation, They have corrupted their legis- latures. They have bullied and suppressed the government directors authorized by the law tosit with the directors chogen by the stockholders and to represent tho peaple in the management of tho roads. These government directors have publicly complained that they were not informed when meetings were to be held and were in other ways disregarded and set aside, as if the people who built the roads had not aright o recognition. When con- gress has attempted to discuss the r tions of theso great capitalists to the gov- ernment they have sent their emissaries with money, women, champagne, and threats to prevent it from acting, These men are paying themselves ¢ and 7 per cent a year in dividends on the stocks of the Union Pacific, Kansas Paci- fic, and Central Pacific roads, but refuse to pay the interest on the bondsissued in their favor by the United States. The owners of the Union Pacific pay them- selves 7 per cent a year on $60,000,000 of stock, but leave the already overtaxed people of this country to pay for them the interest due on $25,885,120 of bonds given them by the United States. While dividing among themselves very hand- some earnings, they have let this unpaid interest accumulate to the amount of over §18,000,000, which means that the workingmen, the farmers, and the shop- keepers have had, in addition to their own share of the expenses of the govern- ment, to pay $18,000,000 in taxes to meet the obligations of these reilroad kings. The Kansas Pacific, now consolidated with the Union Pacific, had $ bonds given it, and is behind £3,153,000 in its interest, all of which has had to be paid by the taxpayers, The Contral Pa- citic, which has steadily paid its “Big Four” 6 per cont a year on its 60,000, 000 of stock, owes £15,760,000 interest on $27,236,000 of bonds. *The total amount of interest which these men, the richest in the country, and the richest by the. donations of their fellow-citizons, have compolled the people to pay 15 $37,- 000,000. The following shows the prin- cipal and unpaid interest of these debts. The bonds fall due at various dates from 1892 to 1895: Tnterest Principal, Union Pacific Kansas Pacit Central Pacif Presidents, secr: railroad commissioners, goverment direc- tors, Congressmen come and go, and this outrageous abuse fattens all the while un- checked, The tax-eating, tax-dodging millionaires are growing richer on the interest of what they owe, and not one of the ofticers elected by the people, from the prosident down, appears to have the mainliness, the principle, or the sense of political justice to insist that men who are receiving incomes of millions every year should pay promptly and fully every cent of what they owe the government that has created their fortunes, These 100,000,000 acres of the public domain, while complacently holding it for a vise refuse to pay a cent of r ate taxes on it to the state and cerritories in which it is situated. It is not a matter of sur- prise that theiv fortunes are becoming the wonder of the world when they can hold an empire of land without paying taxes on it and can make their fellow-citi: pay the interest on their debts! Kansas City Times. Virginia is the mother of prosidents; Kentucky the mother of speakers, New York is hegiuning to figure as a sort of old-maid aunt. § THE GREAT GERMAN g ll!ll'flhfi.’flim'w RHEUMATIS Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbago, HACKACIE, HEADACIE, TOOTHACHR SORE THROAT. QUINSY, 5W s et NPRAINN, Soreness, Cuts, Bralses, FROSTAI i FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. by all Druggists a Directions. C.E. MAYNE & CO., 1509 Farnam Street, - - Omaha, Neb, WHOLESALY BHIPPERS AND DEALERS IN Hard & Soft Coal AND— rate circumstances on the average made | STEELE, JOHNSON& CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! AND JOPBERS IN FLOUR, SALT. SUGARS, CANNED GOOIS, '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 FRESE OYSWEaRS. Booth’s ‘Oyal’ Brand FRESH FISH AT WHOLESALE. D. B. BEEMER, Agent,Omaha. ODELL ROLLER MILL. V the eri = to promptly. RICHARDS & CLARKE, ] Proprietors. Omaha lron U. P. RATL"WAY, - e DEALERS IN FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF 179TH & to fnrni e . iing Power g W. A. CLARKE, Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y SAFESY, VAULTY, LOCKS, &, 1020 Farmam Streoot. Omal Superintendent, Works' 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 Brand Dufour Boliing Cloth’ STEAM PUMPS, STEAM,WATER AND GAS PIPE. BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON, TTIR ATIOY TTHAO pl prepared to furnish plans and estimates, and will contract for ion of Flouring Mills and Grain Elev: Flouring Mills, from Stone to the Roller systc m. g5 Kspecial attention giv pose, and estimates made for Address ators, or for changing Plants for any pur- General machinery repairs attended RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Neb. |JONNELSVILLEEC KO! EZ"Write for Pricce, IMPORTERS OF AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO MAX MEYER & CO., HAVANA CIGARS! CIGARS,TOBACCOS, PIPES SHORERS' ARTIGLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING to $120 per 1000. Brigands, LES, CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE OENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMP; ” d

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