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THE DAILY BEE-“OMAHA, THURSDAY, DECEMBLER 13, 1382, - n e e—— s TME SUGAR MONOPOLY.. tinued? Why should 50,000,000 * eople PRANDING DES znypns, SUBJECTS FOR STUDY STEELE, JOHNSON& CO., Some veven years ago Claus Sprockles, | pay tribute to a handful of PIa* ters in| When Genersl Hov,aed, i his recent i ‘ Omaha Office, No. 016 Farne® a shrewd German who had been engaged | Louisiana? It isa notorious faet that report as command gn of the department TR‘DE nnuARS? Hd!;...!;':':unfirflfilnn P _ Council Bluffe OMce, Ne “poyy | for some time in the swgar trade in San | there is not now so much ugar raised in | of the Platte, re ommended the branding | of United States money s what 8, 8. Graves, Akron, o esa e " Street, Near Broadway. i ived a very cuuning and | Lousiana as there was ¥ ofore the war, |of deserters ge wore inclined to de.|x . wourl piy T s bola ot Dr. Thomas Befes " om te Francisco, conoce Ty NY., It st nm;:;-':;rk > om 05 Tribune {4014 plan to secure the monopoly of the | when there was no drity. 1 sugar rais- | nounce the r ugpediion as barbarsus. We | i Ol1, the medicine which eured him of bronchitis, AND JOBBERS IN n > o S the | only be ma in Louis- | refrained. " i v sands afiicted the same trade and manutadture of sugar on ing can only de profitable in refrai y howevee, from expressing Our | and which has cured thousanas afficted t y ! d il i " \ i] ..‘T;’wm.y::ngm;. SR Ly, NSl et Having extensive sugar |iana by a duty t} a4 taxes every consumer | feeling, out of vespect to the general, | way. PLUUR, SALT, SHGARS, CANNED GDUIS. ND ALL GRBCERS SUPPL]ES RS BY MATL. tons in the Sandwich Telands and | in the United states it had better be aban- | and b acause we did not think that his Would 0, M. Holcomb, editor g (DS | TEE OO .. TR0 1 TR O O (O 1 E olth, 16 | WEGeE ST ¥ o it o Al Bl NOT A CENT 5 & steni, sioein A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF b iz Monens. 5.00 | One Month 1.00 | being n man of ‘considerable ‘wealth, doned altorsother. If Louisiana was | sugr estion wenld be adopted. Tt seems, e, 01 ok e 1 his getting rid of . ¥ " influece over his | raising th sugat o wupply | however, fhat General Homard's repors | Y1 OMos €1ve for the chancos of hs geting r 4 d VIR WEAKLY BEN, PURLISITRD NVERY WRDNRSDAY, exercised a petent influekce over enough g pp! wever, enera) foward ep K6 catRTN bafors 1o vl D Thiomun’ Hsleekria O1) i piopoini Mavitan maposty, King Falakaun. Ho|tho * wholo United States ~thero | iy atimmctod sonsideeable attntion |27 v wet e momws veiicor. | Gligars and Manufactured Tobacco. $ i Now }e would giv wood de 0 his chances were S ot T | Do 2§ | had mo diffcelty in indwcing Kalkaua o might ho some exoww for|abroad, e sinilarly afflisted with the sawe medicine avail- | AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO Amorican s--;\u‘,‘um,nn\.':‘a:u;,x' :m;\-b o mv‘a enter into kis scheme, ‘a liberal compen- | sugar. duty, but inasmuch as she does not| The New York Sww, in a late number, able e —— 4 ORWRRUneddme, T sation no doubt being the consideration. | sap ply more than ten por cont. of the | takes'General Howard to task upon this | o ERIRATI k A cmmum..p:.:‘..',::::‘::‘k‘:‘,fi".,,,» pimoria | Spreckles plan was to have Kalakauavisit {svigar consumed hero, 1t is an ‘eutrage pointt in the following fashion: ‘55(]v $|UU, $5m]' sands of dollars are I‘RESE‘ OYSTH Rs- n thers should bo addressed to the Eoirc a we Tim | the United States wnd effect a reciprocal { thas all the people should be taxed for! “@ofore offering this ferocious sugges. | wanted in endeaoring t care a deej-seated cough L J 9 B n { FUBINRSS LATTRRS, [ireaty botween Hav:aii and this countrs |a product that has hecome ‘ome of the tion for stamping (his follow men with | vith doubitul, uncertan comesies Dr Thomas' e Oo s va ra ‘ . 1 All Business Totu d Remitt: 14 ° 0 s in- | 100 tes of Muaring > @ed hot iron, or otherwise branding them, | \.ctric 0il corts50centsand effected a wondertul cure t pldromelic Tue bae rinnnira Gotv ow guine |10 MY wan Ko provido for the i | iscosmurics of life. Muring tho war il Tob iton, of ptherwiso branding therm, | et TG R . Wi g AND Dratts, Chooks and Postoffice orders to yw, windo péy- | portaton of raw sugar from Hawak, or | very heavy duty was imposed on coffee |y ! i i - . for E. H Perking, Croek Center, N. Y., g b Wblets the order of the company BT g : y y duty e ligious instruction in his command. e ! THE BER o what amounts ®. the same thing, re- | and tea for thepurposoof mising revenue.|| For Laramie, Robinson, Washakie, | ter night for four long years, sat up in bed and FRES 1 BEE PUBLISHING 20) PRURY, | itidon 66 dutien on) Hawalinh Hbrih, | Theee dutios were sbolishied when tee Sidney, Steele, and_Bridger, at each of | conghed till the clothing was wet. with persgiration. " [ __.' s T In return for this Hawaii %as to|necessity for themooensed. But suppese wluchl);e labr;ruI “tf] a good r]erfiy::mn Two bottlen wero dl he used. : D. B. BREMER. Agent,Omaha. 1 L T |gieo to the Usfited States a similar puiv- | that coffes and tea should become staple | e Tost ¢45en Varicd spiritun needs of |[ALLOW US TO SAY concisisninat & | = — = — . SreAkeic Canttsi has - o Wail cod, but |{iego in regwd to our cxpows of ma- |preducts of Jower California and the | Christian mon, women, and - children,’ ia 0k only & vary valuabie remedy fr dissared of the . BOYER & CO.. ] itisnotquiteasbad as Rundalls theu- {\inery, hotwes, mules, etc. somi-tropioal wections ‘of the United | It would be well if some chaplain Would |,o.. (rost and lungs, but a splendid externa] ap 8 . i L oy yar. jonvec) Suktau; kil o1 6ntad 1 oonigtead Werd |5 CEER SORCRRLITICNRI RS HNCB I sl i i DRALRES N I T e States wRh a royal Waurish of |asked to vevive the coffee and tea tax, to :;;’“,S_‘i‘l’;”;“,f:‘""‘l':: ,“_:iu'i‘ce‘v o o' | o o vy oty 1 i A toa 0 o goea] ) k c ) INDIANATOLLS i880 minxious ' 80CUro | trumpots, ‘and met wih a cor-|gustain the planters engaged in ra “The annual military reports are re- | and in the evect of failure to satisty, money wil be Hall s a e a'n oc omp y the next republican mifiomal ‘eenventio |dial reception at Washingbon. Hosuc |¢heso prodncts? ‘Such a proposition rletu with ovidence that_desertion i | returncd purchaser in overy instance. that she offers free mundwiches ‘and bet: | coeded ind Tocting the troaty which orig- | would crewte s much indignation as did | largely r}rm‘s’ked by injustice to enrlmed All Druggists scll Dr. Thomas Eclectric Ofl. 708 FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF 4o pvory dolegate. - Kiew ot us ho 502 inatod with Spreklos, aed sekurning to | tho attempt of the British to enforco tho 100 1t 8 8 dishonorable offence, | xpyirnuiey & co., i, Buttal, ! his little iland kingdom: ho reccived his | ten tax upon tho American colonists, | incentives’ to 0 aee pieen by the = Witk a smoot a \pavernent from *lhe Union Pacificde put to the military I dge a Herdic line o0 _ tiwt myate wotld pay rewardfirom the sugar dting, who was the powetbohind the throre. Spreckles now lwnched forth on a grant scale. He -talarged his sugar Jriruiete i e CAMBIOING IN THE ARMY, The prohibition of gambling in tho army o one of the most needed reforms, treatment of soldiers as laborers, too long intervals between pay days, improper management of the clothing accounts, unsatisfactory rations, and the abuse of demolished the pipe and grazed the rosebud of his nose. The pipe was doubly loaded. The sentimental opposition to capital pun- ishment does not appear to be very strong in Plattsmouth. One of the men who has been SAFE, VAULTS, LOCKS, &c. ¥ authority by incompetent officers. circulating petitions for the commutation of 020 Farnam Street. Omala better than the whvoet -ears. ' Whese in | plantation, increasod | hin forco of con- | Nearly all the dishonesty and fraud com. | +Gen: Howaed himself, in another part | Polin's sontonce i Tho Journal that the = it tract laborors, an€ad vestels built 0 | mitbed by army ‘officers may bo directly [ of his roporl, voforting to- tho use. of | ptitins e not g numerous signers, — === - d those who haye Now that © Jhiango Taas een selé ted by the national goyymitt e, the Logw: boom begins tota powhape. On the * 224 of November 'Dr. Miller was in s unny Ttaly,” having é@one Ven- ice, and ' ,gingiabor 1t bo startfor Florence. —Heral g, The ¢ aqtor is nowwin a coumtry whore! titles o { mobity «2an'be had for a hun- dred d offare. 'W'o #hiall not be surprised ithe " returns as ‘thellarquis €iovani To- renz ) Willerino . T nx somy an€ Navy douwrnal urges O gnoss $0 provido for a grand military en gampment at Washingtor next spring, in which ¢he militia of all ' the states are t ) take.part. Here is-a splendid chance f mrColonel Colby to retrieve his roputa- tion. Whe Nebraska militia should by aill means maroh to the Potomac. ‘Grove-FioumNg on the Paoific: coast Zhas received wblack eye. The grand jury =of Han Francieco has «indicted some of ~the chief promoters of the so-eallod man- Ty art. Professor Sullivan, who' has an -engagement in San ‘Francisco, - may get ‘himself knooked out' by ‘the authorities «of that city on the first round. Wirn Professor John Longfollow Sul- flivan and ‘the sluggers on' the stage of Boyd’s opere house on' Thursday night, “‘The Devil's Auction”-on ' Friday night, and a good sermon on Sunday. 'Mana- ger Boyd offers a waried sot of entertain. aents. The fiest two entertainments will durnish a good textfor the sermon. Rowinsow, of New York, has given another twist ‘to the'tail of ‘the British order for the tramsportation of the raw maderial to San Feencisco, where he im- wrediately increased his refining facilities by building the largest refinery in Amer- ica. At the smme time he made & wombination with the railroads, by which e agroed to transport his sugar east by rail at certain rates, provided the rail- roads maintained their west-bound rates |at figures that would prevent sugar boing shipped from the east to California. In this way Spreckles secured a complete monopoly of the sugar trade onthe Pacific coast, and was enabled to enter the east- ern markots' in competition with the other sugars. He has since maintained his gigantic monopoly, and has crushed out all opposition. Under the operation the United States has given to Spreckles and his associates an immense fortune. On the other hand, the protection given to the American sugar industry amounts to littlo or nothing, and compels the peo- ple to pay trom one to three cents per pound more for sugar than they other- wise would, It was intended on the part of the United States through this treaty to cheapen the price of sugar on the Pacific const, but the opposite has rosulted, owing to the combinations made by Spreckles, who now virtually controls the sugar markets of the whole country. It is claimed that we are actually paying Hawaii $3,600,000 a year for the right to supply her people with $2,000,000 worth of machinery, horses, mules, and other exports, which we could furnish at lower rates than any other nation without pay- ing any premium at all for the privilege. The San Francisco Chronicle says it is of the Hawiian treaty the government of traced 'to this evil. Tnordinate fondness for cards has led offivers into such offenses as duplicating their pay accounts to meet prossing debts. 'Other criminal practices follow in the wake of this pernicious amusement, ‘We are pleased to note that steps are being taken in congress to make gambling in the army a grave misde- moanor. Benator Plumb, of Kansas, has introduced a 'bill making an additional article of war., By this article, Mr, Plumb proyides ‘that any officer serving with troops, or any soldier not on fur- money or valuable stake or consideration, at any game of cards or otherwise, shall bo brought to trial by court-martial. In the case of an officer, conviction shall bring with it dismissal from the service, or such punishment of less grade as the court-martial orders. A convicted sol- dier shall be punished at the discretion of the court. ‘Punishment is also pro- vided for ‘any officer, whether or not serving with troops, who, by gambling, betting, or otherwise, wins money from a junior or inferior ofticer. No post trader shall allow gambling in his store, under penalty of having his appointment re- voked. Commanding officers of any place or ‘body of troops are required to report any violation of- the anti-gambling article in his command. Tt is to be hoped that Senator Plumb’s new article of war will be adopted by congress without delay. It will create a healthy /improvement in army morals, besides saving many a brave man from absolute ruin and disgrace. — The organ of the pension brokers and lough, who gambles, bets, or plays for troops for road-making and ditching with- out giving them the liberty or pay of laborers, says that ‘it is a breach of con- tract on the part of the government to enlist a man for one purpose distinctly set forth and then to force him to fulfill another.’ ‘‘Yet this Christian soldier deliber- ately proposes to brand the men with whom the government has broken faith!” Tie Ber thinks that the sirictures of the New York Sun are altogether to sev- ere, if not ferocious, but General How- ard has “‘laid himself wide open,” to use a western phrase, by coupling his recom- mendation of branding deserters with a lament over the lack of Christian in- struction in the army. If such a recom- mendation had been made by General Crook it would have surprised nobody, but, coming from a noted philanthropist like General Howard, it cortainly appears very inconsistent, STATE JOTTINGS, Butler county supports six newspapers, Harlington, a &wo months babe, wauts a daily mail. The fireman’s ball at Freuont netted $140 and lots of fun, Tho Pawnoe agricultural ~ociety is $6,000 alead of all debts, A. Coffman, of Ashland, has reached Nio- Drara on a bicycle, A $7,000 creamery is on of the coming im- provements of Hastings, The new First National bank of Syracuse starts with a capital of $300,000. A young horse thief at Linooln has been sent to tho Kearney school to reform. McCook rejoices over the completion of wagon bridge over tho Republican viver, The county seat, contest in Cass will be de- cided Jantary 8, Woeping Water wants it, Fremont is subscribing liberally to the $1,200 fund to establish a Normal school there. The Lincoln, Salina & Docatur road wants pension sharks at Washington is making | £15,000 in bonds from Wahoo, The citizens wed are principally yoiing ten, th older oltisans of 4he county evincing a disposition to let the law and the courts deal as they will with the case. Their success has been s0 poor that they have about concluded not to present them to the governor at all, as thore is talk that if they do the op- ponents to the petition will circuate a re- monstrance that will receive a strong support. Polin has very little hope of escaping death on the 21st, Lincoln is enjoying another edition of the Abbott scandal long drawn in the court. The «case grow out of tha case of the state against Charles Murphy and Alonzo Abbott, which excited so much interest at the last term of the court. It will be remembered that Mux- phy was tried for violating Mrs. Abbott's Dacahiand twas Gonvictad: s Mrs) Abbott, by her attorneys, has began sait against Murphy and Abbott for $10,000 damages, Her peti- tition sets forth that the defendants succeeded al ating from her the affections of her husban hat she was account of the crime of the defendants driven from home and de- prived of its ploasures and comforts,and that be Fa eiaR o rane having been so since the time of the crime, she is not able to support herself. She therefore prays for damages to the above amount, e —— AN obscure shelf is not the place for the new medical work, “The Science of Life; or, Self-Preservation,” but the fam- ily library., ——— W. A. CLARKE, Superintendent. Omabha Iron Works U. P. RAILWAY, - - - 179TH & 18TH STREETS RICHARDS & CLARKE, Proprietors, | Literary Notes. Jansen, McClurg & Co., Chicago, have published a brilliant book of Brazilian travels, which is entirely unlike any now before the public. Tts author, Mr, Frank D. Y. Carpenter, a_graduate of Cornell university in 1873, held for several years thepositionof geographer of the goelogical survey of Brazil, and under these pecu- liarly favorable conditions he acquired the material which, returning to America, he has made the basis of his book. Val- uable as is the work for its information, it owes still moro to its literary treat- ment. The author’s studies of Brazilian life and manners, and his method of pre- senting them, are unique, and his book occupies a place quite its own among works of travel. It has but little of dry narration and sober details of general in- formation; and yet, with all its vivacity, N Stoam Engines, Boilers WATER WHEELS, ROLLER MILLS, Mill and Grain Elevator Machinery MILL FURNISHINGS OF ALL KINDS, INCLUDING THE bion, He ks ifor information of |exactly as if we should make a commer- |another effort to bolster up Vandervoort T ek Lt era hall, 50 | 18 doubtful if “there is anywhere to be Celebrated 'Anchor Brand Dufour Bolting Cloth] the sooretary of state ms to|cil troaty with Great Britain, agreeing [by misrepresenting other membors of tho | Ly 100 fect Jmmichid tn the taum” bl # | found 80 good a picture of life and sconos whether the minister to Great Britain e received any title of nobility such as “‘lord rector” from any foreign state and whether such English *lord” is retained in the service of the United States; also whether officers and sailors of the United to admit her iron and steel manufactures | Girand Army of the Republic, 1t gives | approved style. _ 3 5 freo on condition that sho should admit |out that Custer post acted hastily in |, Bellwood is a lively little town oight miles our wheat and corn free, which articles | passing the resolutions dissenting from | has a population of 300. sho must have from abroad and can buy | those adopted by the Hastings reunion. | Tho town of Pierce can at least boast of u of us cheaper than of any other nation. | It also states that only a dozen members supply of hip-pocket artillery superior to any 5 0] town of its fize in tho state, President Arthur in his message favors | of the post were present when the resolu- in and about the great metropolis of the Southern Hemisphere—Rio de Janeiro, t | The toneof - the book, in treating of so. cial life and customs, is pleasantly cynical yet the author'’s nature is apparent throughout. The observations and de- scriptious of the most interesting of Bra- STEAM PUMPS, STEAM,JWATER AND GAS PIPE. BRASS GOODS AND PIPE FITTINGS, ARCHITECTURAL AND BRIDGE IRON. their fond mothers for nearly half a day in Lincoln, to the great alarm ‘of the mothers, When the children were recaptured one of them remarked that she was ouly going down town to see if Santa Claus had come, The Norfolk Journal speaks of a business viewing our river front | which is becoming a numerous nuisance to f & " the town, ‘“‘that it is wrapped up | i1, through Siduey Dillon's telescope. On | laaving statna bf contamimaton uom o Sin an average not more than two or three|whom it comes in contact.” This must be boats & year pass Omaba, and duringfour | ¢ #4¥48ce guard of tho “Dovil’s”Auction,” ey Messrs, McConnell and Hamilton, U, P, months of the year the river is trozen |land agents at North Platte, have, since Oc- over With fuir committoos in the two | fober 20ty sold over 100,000 acros of U, P | me from | houses of congress and the unanimous l.?‘-::‘:u'“‘::x:'»l& ::;l nlgcl:“?i‘llcn‘:"lsnud-.;:.:: | ways and commutation for both waye|CubA, Brazil and other eountries. If |support of our delegation there ought to | been mostly sold in large tracts of from 5,000 ! is oclaimed and paid on (he first|then, asks tho San Fraucisco Chronicle, | be no trouble in securing a charter, oA as has come up {n Hastl I arrival. Representative Miller, f Penn- [9ur experts under this treaty have cost S— ) f ! Drivels aylvania, of the mileage committs e, says |45 mare than a dollar out of the treasury | Cmicaco had the longest pole, In- Tmmigrants are advised to look at_the gov- | zilian flora and fauna are those of the 5 (=] States mavy rendorod sservico to « the | a modification, at leas,t of tho Hawaiian |tious discarding Vandervoort were grument lands in tosper, Frontier, Red Wil-| trained naturalists, and are given with o British navy in the racent bombardmont | treaty of 1876, wherover ita provisions [adopted. Tho articlo itaolf bears the ear- | i 11 ‘chevck conut I5ad onbhio Bout ohas it et e 00 FATLIOH Aclesta oply = of Alexandrin, Egypt. hiave been onerous o legitimate trado bo- | marks of Vandervoort, who is such an |ricoextension of tho Union Pacifc, had his | racteristic features, avoiding dry and g » ; P A v wearisome details, while the thin veil of | — tween. the two countries. The people |habitual liar that he would not tell the |/t o, damages of oulling. an homet Y- _|fiction thrown around the pictures adds a 5 Tur Chicago, Burlington & Quinoy |of Cslifornia claim that thero hus|truth even where it would serve bettor AL fixed by & Butler sonnty ury | decided charm to tho narative, The au- 4 railroad is a good providerdor the brass- | beon no such thing ns logitimate trade | than n falschood. The action of Custer | At S1. The complainant sstinmmced teot 2l o thors SromEanopatity a8 i magesing g ) : collared gontlemen employed on tho edi- |under tho treaty during the last four | post was not precipita " Tho widow Boers of Hremonk, ''éhe hopor- | WELAY) 805 the deoided merits of the ! . i pitate. The Vander- e Dodge,” Sang. his sweeteat | ook promise for it an excepti 5 torial staffof its paper, Tho Burlington | years, and that trade cannot bo sid to | voort resolutions were pending BoatlvAix | Sueaadte e i o imaCa i bl sepetent (RO BERieD fozsdbiian eacoptionallpuo -l (=] A Hawkeye, Fiest it had Frank Hatton [bo logitimate which requires for overy weeks. He was not only aware that |%10,000 for $100. ARG = B appointed postmaster at Burlington by | thousand dollars of the increase of | they were pending, but he made a pitiful mf{;g”l:-fi‘xgxf;r‘u?:;“ -'-’,-'f!’v“.l.iulfl"'\fs’::.'i'ili.ial.'.“.f:':"fi mammmsa i THE GREAT GERMAR (=) [ Hayes, whom ho had abused like a'pick- |our - exports to Hawaii more | personal appeal to tho post to have thom | Sacior. "biont bis,Jovellke” vindications in pr—— REMEDY (] 5] pocket. Then when Arthur came in it | than a thousand dollars to be paid out of | tabled. In spito of that thoy were pass- | #tereotypo foundry. 3 s gy & fud Hatton promoted to assistant post- | the United States treasury, or, what is |od with but ono dissenting voto. Tt is | o LLOFG. 0 698 pupils enrolled in tho schoots | TR0 Ml Ffi’} PfiIM i | P 8 \ or, 5 of Hastings during the past month with an MR ] master-genoral, and tho vacancy in the | the same thing, lost to the treasury in|not .at all probable that Vander- u:crflx“'l‘“".\'"‘W"Jllflm‘uuf-’fl'-'- The per cent i telieves and cures =l E Burlington postolfico was immediately | tho romssion of duties on Hawaiian im- |voort will derive an ; ol asiondance nha Bl SUMALSS. n - Ty | e ahbaie ot RUBUMATISZ | B filled by another Hawkeye editor, Thoso | ports, by going into print again, and the |hib kon, Trank, was bound ver to the west Neuraigla, =) | little perquisites did not yet make The | 1pyiy one-sided troty is being used by |less thero is said about his martyrdom | term of tho district conrt. The boy is erip Sciatica, Lumbago, (<) =i i AR R Jobn W, " y ] pled for life, and the fathoris in jail DA CK A G e \ Y g, g0 John W. | the sugar planters of Hawaiito build up [ the botter it will be for the reputation of Gov. Dawes appointed Hon. Francis i READACHE, TOOTHAG . i Bundette, the managing editor, «wasmade | iy hay country a system of white slaver. | the Grand Army. Hamer, of Kearnoy, judge of tho tenth judi- ADAGHE,TOOTHAEN ar 3 ; Y & Byl very y listrict, to fill the A SORE THROAT. 3 ; ; oolhdm_ v of internal revenue. 1f this | ;oo odious than nogro slavery ever was 253 “l‘“' & ")‘r"L“h;: £ e vas ?'m‘;fi“:““ y the O UTar s A We are prepared to furnish plans and estimates, and will contract for thing keops up the printer’s dovil in Tho | iy the United States. 1t docs not in the( Tux bill for another bridge between | An extensive furniture factory s about to seRAT the ercction of Flouring Mills and Grain Elevators, or for changing ) Hawikeye offico will probably bo appoint- | 1oy, modify the hideousness of tho sys. 2 ; ®°M | 1o started at Norfolk, 1t is kaid ¥18,000 will j Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, | Flouring Mills, from Stone to the Roller system. «d United States marshal g e N, i Y8 | Omaha and Council Bluffs has been in-|po lml'imm buildings and machinery, which | il FROSTBITES, (=27~ Especial attention given to furnishing Power Plants for any pur= —— ,”i" .t |:y Oht Ih contract labor.” | groduced by General Manderson in the I‘:'I‘;“ give employment to twenty or thirty bl nuR Loy, | pose, and estimates made for same. General machinery repairs attended Duuixa tho rat wek of the session of | tho contract, as n the caso of contracts | senate and will bo introduced inthe house Eli Perkins offers & house and lot and a 86 e A a7 2 | to promptly. Address congress thebusinessof themembon of the [ etween the old Spanish conquerors and | by Congressman Weaver, Kansas City | elromo o all persons who sit through to 'the ||lfi||iq‘ FIFTY GENTS A BOTTLE, RICHARDS & CLARKE, Omaha, Neb. house has boen the collection of mileage, | the Aztecs, drifts the laborer into in-|wecured a chartor for a sccond bridge last | end of his loctures in_the different towns of B]fll g Hold by ult Druggisinand 4 | There has been a ush on tho songoant-at. | ©Vitablo slavery or peonago; and all the | winter, and Omaha would have had one | o Sierts V8 or tho presidency = e : | arms. The miloag'e committeo is gonor. (W of Howaii is given to tho master | had it not been for Major Suter, who is| Two little theeo. yoar olds were lost from Toa Sharias A Noguiee 1 B | Tho white ilaborer ‘ e b { | ally appointed the 1irst day of the session, [ 89 in subject to/in charge of the Missouri river improve- for whatever else mi wt wait the congress. | the plantor as tho black slave used to be|ments. Mujor Buter imagined that he man cannot wait for his money, Theve [i? Louisiana as long as he is in debt, and | saw insurmountable obstacles to a second | is every probability that this questioa of | the aystem is 5o dovised and the law is s0 | bridge as an obat:uction to navigation, mileage will be overhailed by this con- |[#haped.that not one in a dozen of the | He was evidently £ gress. It ia recognized wsa vicious one [laborers can ever get out of debt. #nd has its foundation in 2ho stage coach | Titk freo sugar from Hawaii has rated days. Members are still 'drawing from |in the San Franciscoanarket from 25 to $500 to §4,800 for travellivg expensos, |40 per cent higher than exactly the same while their actual expenses are but from |E¥ades of dutiable sugar imported into 85 to 8150, It is 20 cents a mile both |the Atlantic cities at the same 13 ) MAX MEYER & C0. IMPORTERS OF ’ Coal. HAVANA CIGARS! o. B mm & co" AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO 608 Fanam Steel, - - Onaba, et,| OLGABS, TOBACCOS, PIPES # SMOKERS' ARTICLES WHCLESALE SHIPPERS AND DEALERS IN PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: and the citizens have started their private moters agoing. A company of capitalists pro- pos out ag0 ] Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 8i it is all wrong, and ho proposes to \fler a | £0r every dollar of their increase, if tho| dianapolis, with Ben Haxrrison, John C, .'.Z"In‘"l.‘.‘.; )u:l»‘ u‘ll(::l:'l.;m::u:‘l:‘. L Ha[d & SU t Eual 4 top $120 ]’)0!' 1000, Bizes trom 96 measure to repeal the whole busines. v, or | 4664y is being used to build up a system | New and the United States treasury, was Stz to ey b tho rate of 890 per Knnum for ) . This compauy will put up g8 works to cost from 836,000 to 840,000, The Franklin creamery will be ready to -~AND— atart up y g i aln about th iddle of J. X LOum Via? n on his way home from | BHLI 8" N St ikl of sy | 0ONNELSVILLEEC KO! pa hat L Washington to look after the holiday | about 84,000 was puld out for creass for tha £ Writo for Prices sylvanis or Maryland, and it should bo ro. | itimate trads," or rociprocity, or momls | trado of his drug store, and to super. | 1% 00wy Dot o ewhry froe] — pealed.” Tn this Mr. Miller is endorsed | in Politics] intend the manufacture of fifty-year old | from 500 to 1,000 cows, and comme — ? NT ScrENTIFIO AMERI to allow only actusl traveling expens es. [9 White slavery uod if it practically [no mateh for Chicago hotel runners, “Thero is no reason,” said he, “why & makes sugar hero to the consuwer 2 to member from California should bo paid (40 Per cent dearer than it was before, more salary than & member from Penn- | WHat €an bo said of it at looks like “le- AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands. \WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES W.fi in and out of congress, It is While it is imperative that congress whisky out of 1883 corn juice, early in the season wit!; Incm‘n\xlf o b vt i | Tt aheaciin s e o SSRNON will without doubt pay out next year $15,000 for cream, —— A bad taste in the mouth means a bil- pothecated their mileage before they |face to faco with another faet that every | W. H. Hartison, o Groen Mountain boy, | e 1ot o Kofichor SLTIFLO AMERICAN, oons wese in Washiagton twalve hours, Jit |fanily in'the United iates' pays e oung, sk Bamarkian Noreins i the | hietov otledls Wame souaty, Mo ls aa | SEELOYIRSI S0 Jolofiis Doy think of “Our Val” drawing twenty |wo to threo cents per pound for sugar| "% i g loose in an awpl pocket, i which ho also had m%?s??;%xfimfifi.fif’f E D e @enta & wilo from West Foint to Wash- |for the ostensitlo purposo of sucoutaging | ; 1o i‘fn’fi"fi““?“’é"}""’b ol B ooy, ¥ blekel oariridges, One cloy e wiaely croutated heleblipoper” .80 . | Aoton and sehurn, with bin posket Bled |tho sugas plantars of Louisius. How [\ Sumaniaiy Nerwing oursd s Dy | ks ot il i sakdowss iy s sk b S R ¥ railrosd passs, wmch longes will this fmposition b o gists a1 hecy 181 w0 3 smoke. A few. stroug, steady pulls of the | KRmes Diioa i es A UNN & L0 B soothiug ‘neetar aud thon an explogion that