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i THE DAILY BEgE--OMAHA, SATURDAY DECEMBER, 22, 1883 THE GMAHA BEE Omaha Ofoce, No. 016 Farnam St. Connoll Blaffs Office, No. ¥ Pearl Street, Near Broadway, New York Office, Room 65 Tribune Bullding. Dublished every mrorning, exoept Sunday. The nly Mondsy mornivg daily. RAHS BT MATL. .00 | Three Months, 5.00 | One Month ¥ITR WRNKLY NN, PURLINFRD RVERY WADNREDAY. TRRNS POSTEATD. ‘Three Months One Month ‘Amarioan Nows Company, SolefAges ore in the United States. coRRRCONDRNOR T OCommunloations relating to Newns and Editorial matters should be addressod to the Eorror or Tuw [ FUSINRSS LATTRRA. All Business Totters and Remittanoes should be addrossed to Tis B PUmasiiivg COMPANY, OMAMA. Dratts, Cheoks and Postoffice orders to be made pay- able to the order of the company. HE BEE PUBL[SHIN(‘}ME&, PROPS, OSEWATE PostaasTers of the larger towns are now getting their Christmas gifts in the shape of commissions signed by Chester A. Arthur. They will foel almost as happy as the bride with a thousand dol- lar check. Tuis is a fatal climate for the Greek. Barnum’s tattooed Greek gave up the ghost the other day, and now he is fol- lowed by Sophocles, the man who ex- pounded Greek for the college crew of Harvard. : Mx. Kerern wants Speaker Carlislo t appoint a committee to confer with Susan B. Anthony, Phasbe Cozzens, and several other spinsters as to the most feasible way of affording relief to the oppressed sex. Mr. Keifer ought to be made chair- man of that committee. 0 Mz. Coriow, of Illinois, has introduced a bill to create a national railroad com- mission, whose chief business will be to draw £5,000 a year for each member, and print volumnious reports which will sell for half a cent a pound in the junk shops, Tue session of the senate on Thursday affords abundant proof that Senator Van ‘Wyck is a man who can make himself heard. Almost the entire session of that day was taken up by the debate on hix resolution to put a stop to further depre- dations on the public domain by monopo- lies and land sharks. His resolution, as slightly modified, was adopted in spite of all opposition, rmm— A nep hot anti-monopoly wave has struck Manitoba, The people there find that railroad oppression is not confined to any particular locality. The farmers, in convention assembled, have passed res- olutions dencuncing the Canadian Pacific monopoly, as well as other abuses. The resolutions smack strongly of revslution. The Manitobans demand that the British + North America act bo repealed, and that anew territory of the northwest prov- and /British Columbia be formed. They no longer want to be subject to the Dominion government of Canada, which is controlled by the Canadian Pacific rail- way. The Manitoban appeal is to be presented Queen Victeria, Gourp and Vanderbilt both say if the alliance is ratified Union Pacific will drop to §50. Al not promising for the old. road, and the report that Sydney Dillon is to retire from the presidency only adds to the scare in Wall street.—[Chicago Herald. ‘What's the matter now! Has not Van- derbilt a controlling interest in Union Pacific, and is not Gould one of the di- rectors? Was not Gould’s vote cast in favor of the tri-partite agreement? Are we to conclude from this that Vanderbilt and Gould propose to squeeze out the minority, and buy up all their Union Pacific stock at a loss of fifty per cent? Mr. Carlisle says there are fifty-six members who want places on the com- merce committee, and that the more he considers the committee the more com- plicated the subject becomes. *‘I want to the matter,” ho said, “‘off my hands as soon as possible,”—Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette, ‘Who are those applicants? Three- fourths of them are no doubt railroad ~cappers, who® probably want to make themsslves valuable to'their constituents, The. last committee, it will be remem- bered, stood fourteen monopolists to one apti-monopolist, Reagan, of Texas, who made himself 80 obnoxious to the others that they wanted him removed. e—— Bornocres is dead. Ho was a vorita- ble Greek, and had bern for many years professor of that language in Har- wvard colloge. Born near Mount Pelion and educated in the Mount Sinai Monas- tery, he, for some unexplained reason, came to this country when a young man, and after s period of study drifted into teaching, and became finally one of the most distinguished members of the Har- vard faculty. About the college grounds e moved shyly, as if trying to avoid re-. cogaition or the necessity of recognizing others, In the class-room he was some- what grim and chary of the lore at his command. He was rather an in- atructor of scholars than of students, and his vast erudition showed ituelf in his SHREWD DRAMATIC ADVERTISING, Theatrical people are ingenions adyer- tisors. In order to keep themselves prominently before the public they resort to newspaper sensations, in which they figuro as tho leading characters, Asa rule, this is a very cheap way of adver- tising, as the sensational articles, having the appearance of truth, ahd being writ- ten in an entertaining style, are admitted to the columns of the press free of charge. Tholosing of valuable dlamonds by theft or otherwise is an old dodge. .| The. fire racket belongs exclusively to Kato Claxton, but is nearly Worn out. The narrow escape in a railrond smash-up is a sort of free-for-all, and is taken ad- vantage of only by second-class artists. “Pursued by a villain, whose object is blackmail,” aithough played out for a while, was recontly rovived by Mary An- derson. *‘The marrying mania” is mon- opolized by Alicq Oates, ‘‘Theindignant husband” is a patent right belonging to Clara Morris. Whenever her husband thinks a man is staring a little too much at the fair Clara, he picks a quarrel and claret to flow. This always gives Clara a column of sensational advertising. *‘Di- vorce” is also a popular method of ob- taining considerable notorioty. “The farewell tour” has become the almost ex- clusive trade mark of Clara Louise Kel- logg, who varies the monoteny slightly with a reported engagement to some wealthy gentleman, Sheis still on her farewell tour, and is yet open for engage- ments. Emma Abbott boomed for a while on the ‘‘Abbott kiss,” and when that became old she substituted *‘a baby," which was the creation of Eugene Field’s fortilo and facile pen. Langtry, the Jer- soy Lily, has obtained, through Gebhardt, more froo advertising than all the other actresses combined. She still holds him to hor apron strings as a matter of business, if for nothing else. As it is with the women of the stage, 80 it is with the men. Actors have as ether, the outlook is | many peculiar ways of securing gratuit- ous advertising as have the actresses. Even such an eminent actor as McCul- lough could not resist the temptation of engaging in a useless controversy with a non-combative clergyman in a hotel din- ing room, Of course the matter was thoroughly advertised and McCullough was paraded as a hero in every newspa- per. Nearly all the eminent actors are inclined to take advantage of every op- portunity of becoming the subjects of newspaper sensations. Even circus man- agers know the yalue of such adver- tising, and hence they frequently stir up the menagerie and turn some of the ani- mals loose. Immediately, ‘‘the escape” of lions and tigers, or elephants, as the case may be, is telegraphed all over the country. When Buffalo Bill was shot atin Council Bluffs by a cowboy, the ‘“‘attempted assassination” was flashed everywhere over the wires. It was nothingbuta put up job, however. The man had been hired to do the shooting act,, When arrested he was not prose- cuted, and Buffalo Bill compromised the promised reward for his arrest for about $50. The latest dramatic advertising dodge that is now attracting universal attention is the one that Sara Bernhardt has just devised in Paris. Sara is nothing if not sensational. Her marriage with Da- mala proved disastrous to her in a financial way, and her star was waning. Something had to be done to get herself ence more prominently before the public. . So she got up & hostile encounter with Marie Colombiere, her former friend, who “had written a satirical biography of the slender tragedienne under the title of “Sarah Barnum.” In this satire Bornhardt is described asa ‘‘She Bar- num.” This was suflicient cause for Bernhardt to seek revenge and obtain the usual gratuitous advertising., Pro- ceeding to Colombiere’s apartments, with blood in her eye, a dagger in her left hand, and a small whip in her right hand, she went for the satirist. The en- raged Bernhardt lashed the Colombiere unmercifully, and drove her down the back stairs, “‘This whip,” said the vic- torious actress, in tragic tones, ‘‘was pre- sented to me by the distinguished Mar- ncross tho visage of such an odious per son as Marie Colombiere, I no longer give it house room, but present it to Colombiere as a souvenir.” Meantime one of Bernhardt’s numerous gentleman friends smashed Colombiere’s furniture and piotures., Immediately after the battle Bernhardt took part in the re- hearsal of a new play as if nothing had happened. M. Soudan, a friend of Oolombiere, has challenged M. Richepin, one of Bernhardt's friends, but the lat- tor has declined to fight, Whereupon Soudan has posted Richepin as a cow- ard, Altogether it is a grand advertise- ment of Bernhardt. It has appeared in nearly every newspaper of Europe and America. It is the reigning Parisian sensation, and from this time forward Bernhardt will play to immense houses, This latest advertising card throws Lang- try's Gebhard way in the shade. ——— Jamgs W, Boster, who died suddenly of apoplexy in his office at Carlisle, Penn- sylvania, last Monday, was quite a prom- linent man, He was well-known in Oma- ha and Nebraska, and other sections of the west, in which he had large inter- est. At an early age he went to Sioux City, Iowa, where he engaged in the law and land busi- ness. He erected the ocourt house and public jail of that city by contract ond was for a long time engaged in fur- ‘nishing that government with grain, cat- {le, and other supplies, He was exten- ‘ensively engaged in western cuttle-rais- ing, and was constantly interested in national politics, He was & man of great wealth, and was prominent in many busi- ness enterprises in different parts of the country, Mr, Bosler had an extensive noquaintance with the prominent politi- cians, and was a warm personal friend of ex-Senator Blaine, in whose interest he worked earnestly at the National con. vention in Cincinnati in 1876, as well as in Chicago in 1880, A year ago he was the republican candidate for state senator, and although the district usually gave a democratic majority of neatly 1,600, his opponent received a majority of only 137. 1t was during that campaign that Mr. Blaine wrote a letter indorsing Mr. Bosler's candidacy. Mr. Wayne Mac- Veagh then published a letter calling at- tention to the statement of Rerdell, of star route notoriety, that Bosler was partner of S, W. Dorsoy in certain star route postal contracts. In Rerdell’s confession ho swore positively that he wos only a clerk in the employ of Dorsey and Bosler, Attorney General Browster also published a letter at this time saying that he believed that Bosler had been innocently drawn into his business con- punches the man’s nose, causing the shal Canrobert, but as it has been laid|* nection with Dorsey. Bosler was Dor- sey’s partner in the famous Dorsey cattle ranch in New Mexico, THE FFFICACY OF PRAYER, We have often heard of the efficacy of prayer in matters of afiliction, and we have frequently been told that prayer has cured diseases supposed to be beyond aid. The latest demonstration of the efficacy of prayer occurred recently near Akron, Ohio. It was not the restoration of health, but the recovery of hidden money that was the result of prayer on this occasion. Harrison Ramon, an old and wealthy farmer, who had sccumulated a very large amount of cash and had secreted it around his premises, died suddenly without telling his wife the hiding place of the money, although ho had intended todoso. After his death an examina- tion of his papers showed thathe had $335,000 in money all hidden about his premises. The most thorough search failed to reveal the hiding place, and the widow began to despair. Then she was impressed with the notion that if she vmynr} with faith the Lord would direct her to the place where the money was hidden. So she prayed all day and all night. The next morning she was impelled to go to the bee-hives, and in the excitement of expectation she knocked over one of the hives, disclosing to her view the top of & bench with a pile of greenbacks of large denomination upon it. A search under the other hives resulted in finding a total of $15,000. In the afternoen one of the family dropped a bunch of keys through the barn floor, which necessitated taking up a plank to find them, and when the young man put his hand down he struck a half gallon fruit jar, which he pulled out to find partly filled with $20 gold pieces. Other jars and a grain bag were also found containing gold and silver,and when it had all been counted the total amount figured up over $213,000. The widow was overjoyed and she now,.of course, firmly believes that the finding of the money was the direct answet to her | p; prayers. The lesson taught by this pleas- ant little story is that by prayer, if you haye faith, you can accomplish most any- thing. We would hesitate, however, to guarantee that prayer will invariably be the means of revealing the hiding place of money. i GexERAL MANAGER OLank will, now invite the other roads to come into the Union Pacific pool. “Walk into my parlor,” said the spider to the fly. Vax Wyek voted for Gorham for sec- retary of the senate. What is Rose- water's opinion of thist— Republican. 1t is none of your business what Rose- water's opinion is. The Ber does not approve Mr. Van Wyck's vote for Gor- ham. It was given as we are informed as a-compliment to Mahone, who o cu- pies the seat next to Van Wyck, and who hason various occasions manifested a kindly feeling for the senator from Ne- braska, On the final ballot, Van Wyck is recorded as voting for Gen. MecCook, which sets him right so far as that is con- corned, OTHER LANDS THAN OURS, There has been no formal declaration of war between France and China, but the firat battle has been fought, and the war will continue until the French have made themselves masters of the delta of the great Sangkoi river, The French government is acting upon the presump- tion that China has no right of suzeraiaty over Tonquin. 1f Chinahas a right to keep foreigners out of Tonquin, they say that she has an equal right to keep them out of Siam and Burmah, which have al- ways been mentioned in Chinese records as subject states. France still insists that she has no intention of doing more than is neceasary for the protection of her colony in Cochin China, 1If in attempt. g to capture Bacninh and Sontay, the two important cities of the delta, the French troops come in contact with Chinese regulars, they will simply be re- cognized as rebels and treated in the same manner as the Black Flags, In do- ing this France will make no declaration of war, but will simply profess to be act- ing within her own territory, A declara. tion of war, if it comes at all, would have to come from China, a contingency which the Euglish residents of China, who understand = perfectly well the weak- nesse of the OChinese army and navy, have ridiculed without stint, The preliminary engagements in the sub- urbs of the fortreas of Sontay have re- sulted in & complete victory for the French, The commander of the French forces reports that the Annamites and Chinose made & desperate fight. It would not have been & gloricus French victory otherwise. The assault upon the main fortifications of Sontay seems to have met with but little resistance. The storming party, aided by the French fleet, carried the walls with trifling loss, Sontay has capitulated. Mean- time, however, the Marquis Teeng is on- deavoriug to placate the French govern- ment by & proposal to adjust the differ- ences between France and China amicably by dividing Annam in themiddle, whereby France would secure a slice, with Sontay as the principal fortress, and China would annex Bacninh and the region surrounding it. The French chambers have voted additional war supplies, and concessions are net to be looked for as long as the French troops continue to advance, The execution of O'Donnell and Poole has been followed by a lull in the agita- tion among the Irish nationalists in both England and Irelgnd. It is generally be- lioved that the [rish leaders are quictly formulating a new policy. The key-note of that policy was sounded in Parnell’s speech, when that Irish leader said at the late banquet: “‘If the liberals wish the Trish to co-operate with them there must be no more coeercion or emigration.” It is now generally admitted that the de- portation of Irishmen under the emigra- tion scheme will have to be abandoned. Parnell knows well that to enter into an alliance with a mimstry responsible for such policies would cost him the support of his people, immensely popular as ho is with them now. l)‘Cunnal{ nearly lost all his influence with the Irish when, at the instigation of place-hunting relatives and hangers.on, he entered into a coali- tion with the whig coercionists in 1845, There is no danger that Parnell will make a similar mistake. But at the same time he knows his chances of serving his country depend almost entirely on an alliance open or tacit with the great and growing party mow in England, which sympathizes with the radical .ideas of Gladstone and acknowledges Chamber- Inin for its leader. The liberals are divided almost in the middle over the question whether Irish- men shal) be placed on perfect equality with Englishmen in the matter of the fran- chise through the new reform bill. Lord Hartington is going about the country telling his audiences the Irish cannot have the same franchise as Ehglishmen, either because they would use it for dis- loyal pur{:cle!, or, because being disloyal already they do not deserve it, and this is a view widely held by the whig section of the liberal party. Mr. Chamberlain, however, is going about the country tell- ing his audiences that the Irish will have the same franchise given them in the bill as Englishmen, that it would be prepos- terous to refuse it, and that, in tact, its refusal ought not to be talked of by any liberal. The prevailing opinion is, how- ever, that Mr, Chamberlain is right as to what will be done, even if Lord Harting- ton be right as to what ought to be done. In fact, everybody believes that the rad- ical wing will have its way, if for no other reason, for the very simple and potent one that it knows what it wants, and is determined to get it. The con- tinued hold of Parnell on the confidence of ‘the Irish.voters ought to be to English politicians a fresh and striking proof of the futility of trying to wear out Irish hostility by measures of repression simply. Senor “Zorilla has published a mani- festo through the Londoh press in defense’ of the nulitary uprising in the Spanish army of last August. %’t violently attacks the bourbons and the monarchical form and proclaims the neces- of ¥ h republic. It states that the chief points of the republican Iroj o are as follows: Civil mar- riages, trial by jury, the abolition of slavory, the annexation of the colonies to the mother country, and reforms in every branch of the administration. Senor Zorilla severely criticises the policy of the restoration. He considers that a revolution in S{nin is inevitable, is certain to succeed and will not be long delayed. He concludes by saying: ‘A republic is the only form of govern- ment that will allow Spain to enjoy order, morality, justice and liberty. the future struggle shall be one of peace or one of arms, the day of the battle will be a day of victory. Our motto will always be: ‘‘Never compromise with bourbons,” The situstion in Egypt is momentous and uncertain, The followers of the False Prophet still swarm not far from the cities of the upper Nile and surround the Red sea port of Suakim. The crusade which he is preaching seems not as yet to have made much ,headway in Algiers, Tunis, Arabia, nor even in-lower Egypt. The porte vigorously opposes the prophet, knowing that if the movement broadens and gains sufficient power it means the transfer of the caliphate from Constanti- nople to Mecca. Such a result is, how- ever, impossible, for it will be opposed by the whole of Christendom. The problem is & most serious one for all con- cerned. Confined to its present limits, the prophet's army, without tematic leadership, or regular commissariat, and with divided interests, would in time fall in pieces of its own weight. But it is for the ingerests of civilization that his des- truction should he accomplished before the disorder extends to other Mohamme- dan countries-—certainly before the cities of the upper Nile are destroyed, trade ruined and hundreds of Europeans mur- dered. 8o far England rejects the proffered aid of Turkey and France, hesi- tates to provide an Indian contingent, and chooses to depend alone on the ex- pedition which organizedunder the direc- tion of Baker P i The provincial governments of Ontario and Manitoba have agreed with the Do- minion govammo'x:’ to Illbn::' the boun- dary question to imperial privy coun- cil, g(undms there will b-y joint authority in the disputed territory, but the Ontario government has dismissed the special police recently employed at Rat Portage, 4 It is proposed to introduce in parlia- ment durin? the winter three ul;:'-h bills providing for the disestablishmentof the state church, one for Kogland, one for Scotland, and one for Wales. Every one of them ought t2 pass. 2 The reception of the crown prince of Germany in Rome was cordial, taking into consideration the dislike of the Ital- ians for the Germans. The Italian pre- mier, when int concerning the cance of the event replied that the visit of the crown prince was a mere matter of courtesy. *'1 attach no im- " he added, *to the reports of an attempt to be made during his stay in Rome to reconcile the Vatican and "the Quirinal, There is no change in the re- lation of thé two courts, nor do I forsee avy likelihood of there being any in the near future.” The pope received the crown prince with great cordiality and affability. The prince expressed in the name of the emperor gratification at be- ing able to manifest his respect for his holiness, The crown prince, upon leay. ing the Vatican, appeared deeply moved. fhe length of the prince’s nterview with the Pope is much remarked upon. The Moniteur de Rome says: The visit is the outcome of Bismarck's project for federating the conservative forces against the audacious democracy, and the place of honor in the alliance has been assign- ed to tho papacy os tho first i influence in the woltl, A note of warning has been sounded in Switzerland which cannot fail to at- tract universal attention. At a military banquet given at the Swiss capital last week Reichonet, one of the cabinet council of the_federation, said: Be on your guard, Let the Swiss people pre- pare to defend their country. Many black clouds are gathering on the Euro- pesn horrizon War, long averted, can It ‘may ardly be escaped affer 1884, come next spring. SN THE GHEAT GERWAN REMEDY FOR PAIN Relleves and cures RHEUMATIS N, Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, SORE THROAT. Sorencss, Cuts, Brulses, FROSTRITES, NURNS, SCALDS, And allother bodily aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS £ BOTTLE. ' it L"fl . WM T Coal. C.E. MAYNE & CO., [509 Famam Street, - - Omaha, Neb, WHOLESALE SHIPPERS AND DEALERS IN Hard & Soft Coal —AND— CONENLSVILLE COKE ! by all Drugglstsand Dealers. Directions in 11 unges, Tha Charles A, Vogoler (¢ VOGELER 81X ) (Baeaerrs 1o ” POi@ o) (8 Miercury has produced more misery and made more cripples than war, pestilence aud famine combined. 1f_you have any blood diseases or skin humor, it is your duty:to ycurself and posterity to take the only vgetable cure, which is Swift's Specific. Swifv's Spe‘ific has relieved me of Malarial Blood Poison after had been conflned to the house for five months and had been dosed with blue mass, calomel and other poisonous drugs until I was in despaic— Swift's Specific is the remedy for this kind of blood poison. C.M. CLARKE, Agent Southern Life Insurance Co., Atlanta, Ga. FOR LADIES. £, 1 havebaen using for a month or two in my house- hold, Swift's Speciflo (8, .8.) the greater portion of of it'having boen consumed by the female portion of Whether | my family; and with tre happiest results, It sacted like a charm on my wife, who had been in bad health for a long time, and for whom I have paid hundreds of dollars, for doctors and medicines. It tegan to build her up from the first dose. Another female member of my faiily took it with equally satisfacto- ryresults. It is certainly the best tonic for delicate 1adies that I have evor used, and [ have tried them all. 1 have no doubt that want of exerccise, close confinement in poorly ventilated houses, sewer gas polson and malarial poison often produces sickness among our wives, daughters and sisters, ana I be- Tieve Switt's Speaifio s the remedy for all this sort of blood polsoning. F. L. JONES, J. P. . Quitman, Ga. Treatment of Cancer. For twenty yoars I have suffered from a cancer or | & the side of my neck near Jhe shoulderand exhausted the whole catalogue’of remedies without any relief, ¥ lost the use of both arms, my g health had broken down and I saw it ws only & quesi n of timo when life itself would bedestroyed. n this condition 1 commenced the use of Swift’ Specific. The first bottle relieved me of the stiffness in the neck, tho second gave me perfect use of my arms, and [ feel strang and well i way. Iam or the good T have exp will force out the polson and cure n W. R, ROBISON, Davisboro, Ga. reatise on Bloodand Skin Diseases mailed freo to apphcants, THE SWIFT SPECIFIC C 3, Atlants Ga. ENR G LOTTERY $20.000 for $2. 4thnwumum.zm Drawing will take place in the MasonicHa 1, Masonic Temple Buil- ding, in Louisvile, Ky. Thursday December 27th, 1883. an.‘.(';#.}'%{‘i.'.h?é Rt ed legal h{'he highs court in toe State d A glven to Henry Couuty In the sum of §100,000 for the prompt payment cf all j rizos sold. A REVOLUTION IN SINGLE NUMBER DRAWINGS a7 Evory tickot holder hisown supervieor, can call out the number on his ticket and ses the correspond- ing number on the tag placed in the wheel in his caence. 'These drawings will oocur on the last Kiuraday of every month. Read th December Schem: o magnificent 1 Prize. 4§ 80,000 1 Prize, 10,000 1 Pri 5,000 2 Prizes, 8,000 b Pri; 6,000 20 Prizes, 10,000 100 Prizes, 100 eac) 10,000 300 Tisen o sach oo 20 1000 Prizes, 10 each, . . 10,000 9 Prizos, 300 vach Approximation Prizes, 2,700 9 Prizes, 200 o “ 1,800 100 each. d $ 900, 1,676 Prizes. #110,400 ‘Whole Tickets, $3. 'fll‘l , 81, .47 Tickets, $50, o5 #{'m. 100. Boult money oe Bank Draft n Latter, or send by ox DON'T SEND BY REQISTERED LETTE OR POST OFFICE ORDER, until further notice. Or- ders of $5 and upwand by express, can be rent at our expense. Adcress all orders to J. J, DOUGLAS, Loulaville, Ky. d-eat-tu-th-kwist Sw em RED STAR LINE. Belgian Royal and U, 8, Mail Steamers SAILING EVERY SATURDAY BETWEEN NEW YORK AND ANTWREP, The Rhine, Germany, Ttaly, Holland and France ~ Outward Steera: ; Prepaid from Ant: d Exursion, $Hico0; B0 Cuviny 8061 Brcarsion, $100; Saioon frot: $00 to §16; Excursion §110 to §125. "'{I'om Wright & Sons, Gen. Agte. 66 Lroadway Coldwall, Hamilton & Co., Omais F. E. Flodman & Co., 308 N. 10th Street, Omaha; D. E Kimball, Omaha, Agent mé&e 00d-1; A vietim of cauait ote.. & e 7 MEMQ&M—.LMIQ T believe it | [ — STEELE, JOHNSON& CO.,, Wholesale Grocers ! H. B, LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwood & Draper) Chicago, Man« ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacco Departments. A full line of all grades of above; also pipes and smokers' articles carried in stock. Prices and samples furnished on application. Open orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guaranteed. T SINNEIOI.ID, MANUFACTURER OF Galvanized IronCornices, Window Caps,Finiels, Skylights &0 Thirtoenth Strect *Neb Booth’s "Oval’ Brand AND FRESH FISH AT WHOLESALE. D. B. BEEMER, Agent,Omaha. JOBBER[OF Wil Paper and Window Shades. EASTERN [PRICES DUPLICATED; 1118 FARNAM STREET, . ~ C. F. GOODMAR, Wholesale Druggist! [AND DEALER IN Paints 0ils Varnishes and Window Glass OMAHA. NEBRASKA. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WIOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lumber, Lath, Shinles, Piekets SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &(- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Union Pacific Depot, - OMAHA NEB, Double and Single Acting Power and Hand * PUMPS, STEAM PUMPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,! Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron FittingsY Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb. : 2 | Eistablished in 1858. A. J. SIMPSON TECE LEADING Uarriage Faetary, 1409 and 1411 Dodge Street, JOMAHA, - - - - - NEB 0. M. LEIGHTON, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, .(SUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS. & C0,) Wholesale Druggists | —DEALERS IN— 4 " H.T. CLARKE. Paints, OMAHA Oils, Brushes, Class. MAX MEYER & CO., IMPORTERS . OF . ¢ HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES s SMOKERS' ARTICLES 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, W' ] P Brgsn 8, b, Wycigingand WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES, c | AXMEYER & GUNS ™ “SPORTING GOODS AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & *RAND POWDER €O, - - NEBRASKA. _