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4 e THE OMAT No. 016 Farnam St. IA BEE Omaha Office, Council Binffs Office, No. ¥ Pearl | where, in which he takes strong grounds | ment to pave the way for her reappear- Street, Near roadway. Now York Offfce, Room 63 Trivune Building. i cublished evers worning, except Sunday, ‘The nly Monday morning daily. e BY AT ne Year.........810.00 1 Three Months, #ix Monens. . 6.0 | Ono Month. VIR WRNKLY BAR, PURLISITED KVRRT WRDNRADAY. THRMS FOSTPAID. One Year...........82.00 | Three Months Six Months. 7100 | One Month Amorican News Company, SoloLAgonteZiNewsdeal- o1 In the United States. CORRRSPONDRNCR.'S A Communications relating to News and Editorlal matters should be addressed to the Epiron or Tiw [T e 50 2 WUSINRSS LATTRRS, Al Business Tateers and Remittances should be addressed to Tirs Ber PUALISIING COMPANY, OMANA. Drafts, Chooks and Postoffice orders to be made pay- Able to the order of the company. i O 1, ik ronch have taken up Denis Kear ney’s battle cry, ““The Chinese must go.’ co———— Prov. Secar does not draw very well in Denver. Segarettes draw better in that city. Tiurs is a good time for the American (two-logged) hog to pay n visit to Bis- marck., Third-class tickets across the Atlantic have been reduced to $20. ———— Srenerany TELLeR is taking very good care of Colorado. He has seen to it that Colorado politicians have the licn’s share of the patronage of the Indian bureau. “Hexny VILLARD is a very fortunate man. 1if he is ousted from the presiden- cy of the Northarn Pacific, he can fall back on newspaper reporting, which gave him his start in life. Tue British lion is having his tail twisted all out of joint by three or four congressmen who expect to ride back into office on the Trish vote. At last accounts the lion was still there. Ix the grand distribution of political prizes at Washington, Nebraska contin- ues to draw blanks. Mr, Arthur should remember that Nebraska has ten votes in the next national convention. Tuey have strucl n Las Vegas. Corner lots are now chiefly utilized as prospect holes, and spades are trumps. As yet, however, most of the gold in Las Vegas is in the hands of the dentists and the (fare) bankers. Ex-Sexaror] Tanor's hobby is $250 night shirts. Senator Sabin, with his in- come of §100,000 a year, runs to boots. He has twenty-eight pairs. Whenever Sabin undertakes anything it is nota lootleas job. OmaAHA is the most lucrative signal service station in America. BRANDING DESERTERS. An army officer at Fort Robinson has written a letter, which we print else- in favor of the proposition to brand de- serters from the army. Incidentally he also takes occasion to condemn the stric- tures upon General Howard, which were republished from the New York Sun, by this papor. He most emphatically de- nies thay desertion from the army is pro- voked by injustice to enlisted men by renson of insufficient rations, improper managemont of clothing accounts, and the abuse of authority by officers. Ac cording to this officer, the only grains of teuth in 7he Sun's summary of causes for desertion may be found inthe long in- tervals between pay-days, and the use of soldiers as laborers, It is not material, ver, what the real cause for deser- The fact that thirty per cent of howe tion is, - | the regular army has deserted, shows that there must be grave abuses, which army officers are not disposed to remedy. The ground upon which the branding of deserters is sought to be justified is to prevent tho commission of a heinous crime. Granting thatdesertion from the army is a heinous crime we cannot con- ceive how branding will check it, much less could we justify a resort to a prac tice that will put a perpetual mark of disgraco upon o man, even where it can be dome without inflicting pain and upon any part of the body mot exposed fo view. In our civilized age the tortures and pun- ishments inflicted by the inquisition are ne longer tolerated. A few years ago some of the most unruly convicts in the Nebraska penitentiary were hung up in the stocks, tied to bull-rings by their thumbs, and kept in dark col!s for days. The legislature, upon investigation, caused the summary removal of the war- den, and the use of the stocks and bull- rings was abolished in our state prison. Tho prison discipline, without theso in- struments of torture, has been better than it was with them. Arson, burglary, highway robbery and murderons assaults are high crimes, but nowhere in this country have men who have boen con- THE DAILY BEE---OMAHA, MONDAY DECEMBER, 24, 1884, 8o it will be seen that, notwithstanding her assertions to the contrary, the sensa- tional scene was merely an advertise ance in America. On the other hand, the dove-like Colombier will receive an extonsive advertisement for her book. In an interview she states that she will reyIace her broken crockery,but to pre- vent a repetition of Bernhardt’s assaults she has bought herself a useful little companion, a British bull-dog, not a foar-legged brute, but a45-calibre. Col- ombior sensibly concludes: *“As for the rest, Sarah will have her little puff out of the affair and o shall I More peo ple will go to see ‘Nana Sahib’ on account of it, and it will increase the number of editions which T shall sell of my book.” e, T colored people of Cincinnati have held an indignation meeting and resolved that the only truc remedy against south- ern outrages is a solid north. The col- ored people, us a class, are a great deal like the Lourbons, They never learn anything by sad experience, The south- ern outrages were at their worst during the presidency of General Grant. The White League in Louisiana, the Kuklux in Gieorgia and the Carolinas, and the shot-gun policy in Mississippi were all in- cubated while the south was dividing its electoral votes among republicans and democrats, Grant .surrendered Arkan- sas to the rebels under Baxter, and Mis- sissippi, with a population two-thirds negro, was given over by Grant to con- federate democrats. In the last months of his term General Grant refused to suppress the Whito League uprising in Louisiana, and under Hayes the state finally passed over to the White Leaguers, because congress had expressly prohibited the use of troops in political emergencies. The Hamburg massacre, which was by all odds the worst outrage perpetrated on the negro, took place while Girant was president, and Butler, the man who led the assassins, was elevated to the United States senate, and is now one of the national latw makers. If Grant could do nothing to vrotect the negro from out- rage and assassination, is there any pro- victed of such crimes been branded under the pretext that a branded convict would not commit another crime, because the punishment is much greater for the sec- ond than for the first offense. Without regard to religious sentiment the spirit of our duy is that men who commit crime and pay the penalty prescribed by law shall have a fair chance to resume their vocations in an honorable calling, if they are disposed to lead an honest life. To brand a man would be a perpetual taint, not only upon himself but upon his family. In times of war deserters are shot, and it is proper that they should be. This is a necessary safe-guard, and when strictly enforced, is effectanl as a preventive. But when bability that outrages will be stopped by resolution and by making the north more solid than it has been? The sectional issue is dead, and the demagogues who are trying to revive that issue are only endeavoring to impose upon the negro. The failure in the past to sustain the en- franchised freedman in his political rights and in his personal rights as a man is the darkest blot on the history of the republican party. It cannot now undo what is past remedy by waving the bloody hirt. Tf the negro wants to stop outrages ugon his race he must either protect himself or he must let politics alone in the south and devote his time to picking cotton. There was « time, nok very many years ago, when foreigners Sergeant |we are told that deserters should be|were outraged in Baltimore, Louisville, Pollack cleared $4,000 for his first month | branded 1n time of peace to keep them | and other cities by armed mobs under in Omaha, and he is siriking for another | from re-enlisting, it sounds very absurd. | *‘knew nothing” leaders, and they had |, raise. General Hazen may have to send Pollack to the north pole in search of the war risk of some being soldiers shot for During took the no better redress from the general gov- ernment, so far as protection is con- Lieut. Greeley; who, it will be remem.- the sake of the heavy bounties, rang-|cerned, than the negro has now. They hered, waa stationed at Omaha at a for- | ing from 8300 to $1,000. But there are [ had to bide their time, and when they mer perjod, no bounties paid to recruits for the regu- lar army in time of peace, and it does became numerous enough they banded together and made themselves feared and — Oscan WrLog, the English dude, gets | seem that many deserters are not anxious respectod, offa good thing once in & while, Ina tecont locture op Amerion he sai “American romance is different from * % ® at 14, have two or three successful bank- ruptcies by the time they are 20, and at 21 are millionaires."” MapevoiseLLe CoLun the statement that she was not touched by Sara Bernhardt's whip, that Sara’s that the rehearsal was perfectly satisfac- tory to all concerned. It was a farce, with the Queen of Tragedy in the leading role, sk only instance of successful compe- tition with railroads that we have heard of lately comes from Utah. The sottlers near Logan, Utah, who have submitted for u long {ime to extortion and robbery at the hands of the Union Pacific, have put on a train of seventy wagons to trangport supplies botween Ogden and Logan, and other wagon trains will be supplied as needed. The people of that region propose to do withont the railroad entirely until they roceive fair treat- ment, Kawsas Oiry, the headquarters of Frank James, would not allow the Sul- livan slugging combination to give an ex- mits, The Kansas gt at tho action Sullivan out. ible that if the would cloak ' the is | ing dodge, although Bernhardt emphat- for |soon, have wrong to re-enliai, When 30 per cent of the army has deserted. class of oriminals penalty of their crime, as prescribed by military law, they are the same as a civil convict who has served his time. They pier has disarm- | should go forth into the world again un- collapse of the Towa railroad pool, it will . ©d her assailants by coming forward with | branded and with their future unclouded | rogult in several important changes on save by the record of the past. this wholesale desertion is to be attrib- uted, Else, why are all desertions from the ranks of the privates? Who has ever heard of an officer deserting, unless, like Benedict Arnold, he turns traitor in time of war ? But officors do often com- mit crimes as grave as desertion, Has anyone ever suggested the brand- ing of army officers as a preventive of a repetition of such offenses as duplicating pay accounts, forging vouchers, bigamy, assaulting women, and gambling away thd government's money entrusted to their care? Officers convicted of such crimes have ocoasionally been dismissed from the army, but there their punish- ment ends, Should anyone suggest the branding of an officer for any offense, it would be resented by every officer in the army as a relic of barbarism, It strikes us that the plea made by tha officer at Fort Robinson, in favor of the branding of deserters, viewed from any stand- point, is contrary to the spirit of our times, Tur. Bernhardt-Columbier fracas is still exciting considerable interest. 1Itis, just as Tur Bek stated, & huge adverts- ically denies this. Ina published card she says she chastised Columbier because that woman had insulted her. Bern- hardt says: *‘I gave her gold. She gave me calumny, She called me Sarah Bar. num. Iamnota Jumbo, Then I gave her the lash., She weighs 300 pounds: 1 weigh seventy-five pounds. But she ran before me, this vile, ungrateful woman— this woman whem 1 have befriended--- First of all, fioiéver, desorters could [no reason to complain of Van Wyck. ours, Itis not the romangce of Shake-!not be hranded until they are captured, | He has taken care of one of their editors, speare—it is the romance of commerce. And nine-tenths of the deserters are never | Datus C, Brooks, and if any other mem- The men in America have | captured. Theothertenthcan be punished | ber of their staff wants » government very little childhood. They leave school | by imprisonment the same as any other | appointment now is the time to apply for When they pay the |a place at the Willow Springs distillery. There must certainly bo somethingd pacifio, Tver since the former built into dagger was merely a paper daggor, and | redically wrong in tho army, to which | hopyer the management have been ———— Tae Omaha Republican people have WEST OF THE MISSOURI. Should a determined fight follow the the lines of the Burlington and Union straightening the road in this state, and making it as near as possible an air line to the mountains, The last and most important of these improvements is known as the Kenesaw cut-off, which will make a saving of thirty-two miles in distance and one hour in time, This line is now being built and will be com- pleted and opened early in the spring. This will give the Burlington an advan- tage of about 56 miles over the Union Pacific. The latter will dountless in- augurate similar improvements at an early day. By abandoning the Papillion curve and building over the original sur- vey from the summit near this cify to Fremont about fifteen miles can be saved, This change was talked of about a year 0, and it was stated on good authority at the original line would be buil: in & few years, The fact that the Missouri Pacific would need the present line and would probably be a willing purchaser, encourages the belief that the Fremont cut-off will be built this year. The Salina, Lincoln & Decatur rail- road managers had smooth sailing from the north until Saunders county was reached, Although the business men of ‘Wahoo talked strongly in favor of aid, when the commissioners were asked to submit the question to a vote they quietly pigeon-holed the papers for two weeks and then refused to order an election be- cause the road would not guarantee the expense. _Fifteen thousand dollars were asked of the Wahoo precinct alone. The commissioners doubtless think that one nflrmd bond election is enough for a ifetime. 1t is stated thatafter the lst of Janu- ary the U, P, will commence the build- ingof a road from Marysville, Kansas, this Columbier who was nothing until she met Sarah. I have done with her. I did not chastise her for advertising seventy-five-pounder says: It would h- | have pained me very much to have had|Journal, becoming envious of the growth the American public, that I so love, and pun- | that 1 hope to be with once again, and |tacked and condemned all the country impressions about | west of the Blue and Loup rivers, This this aflair, M oA where my woman is reputation engaged.” purposes.” In another statement the southward to Manhatten, Kansas, where it will tap the Santa Fe road. This will be a gontinuation of the Omaha & Republican Valley road, The agrioultural editor The Lincoln of north and west Nebraska, recently at- the press of the western portion of the state. ““This is a most extraordinary statement,” says the Sutton Register, ‘“‘in the face of the facts. The entire Second congressional district and nearly all of the Third, lies west of the line con- demned in this wholesale manner. Fif- teen years ago the country west of the 3lue was entirely uninhabited, while to- to-day it contain at least 200,000 people, who are not only “‘holding their grip,” but are accumulating wealth, and making comfortable homes ata rapid rate. At lonst fifteen counties south of the Platte and west of the Blue, can discount Lan- castor any year in the century for good crops and general agricultural prosperity. And the same may be said of a large ox- tont of country north of the Platte. Fif- teen {enrn ago this kind of talk was be- lieved, but in this year of grace, 1883, nearly two-thirds of the population of the state is growing fat in this worthless desert.” The annual reporc of the governor of Montana to the secretary of the interior furnishes interesting statistics of the wealth and prosperity of the territory. Tho assessed valuation of property is £40,660,300, and the total indebtedness of thelseveral counties footsup only 8056, - 573.04, Thenumberof cattle is 485,000, valued at $30 per head; sheep, 700,000, valued at 83 per hoad, and 90,400 horses, valued at 76 per head. This exhibit shows conclusively that the cattle and sheep interests lead all other industries of the territory, furnishing one-half the assessed property, or £23,130,000, Eastern Montana has sent to market during the year just closing 24,000 beeves, and received 34,000 head of east- ern cattle, an excess of 10,000 import over export. The eastern cattle bought for western shipment are purchased in Ohio, Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin and Min- nesota. They are generally young oncs and two-year-olds, or cows brought out for "dairy or breeding pur- poses. Cattle ~will become acclamat- in a year or two, and then there is little or no danger of their dying, no matter how severe the winters are. A Montana calf, born and reared on the soil, it is claimed, cannot be killed by severe weather any more than a buffalo calf, The hair of cattle born in that northern climate is longer and the hide thicker than that of eastern cattle. The stockmen, too, are becoming more care- ful of their herds than they used to be. They now cut and put up a good deal of hay for their cattle, a thing they never did until lately. A moving machine and a little labor has been found to be a cheap insurance on a herd. ‘T'he great number of caitle shipped and driven into Mon- tana from other points during the past year marks it as the future grazing ground of the northwest. The experiments of coal hunters in Nebraska have'. proved such costly and dismal failures heretofore that the an- nouncement of a new find is generally discredited. The town of Superior claims to have at last solved the fuel problem to a limited extent, but the holes are twenty-four miles away in a southeasterly direction. The locality is called Omio, a combination of feminine exclamation points. The Superior Guide says *‘threo holes have been bored down and each time the vein has been struck. The vein is about fifty-two inches inches deep. We haveseen a sample of the oal, and it is of very good quality. The coal was found at a depth of about 150 feet. No arrangements have been made yeot for operating the mine. The only difticylty in :gerating it is water. The mine has a good roofing of stone and is considered _inexhaustible, coal having been foand six miles from the present headquarters. The excitement is very high, and the owner considers the mine 4 Sonanza for him,” The reports published in these columns last week of the gloomy condition of bus- iness in the Salt Lake valley are fully confirmed by later accounts. While Denver was growling against the discrim- ination in favor of Utah, the railroads wero filling the storse of business men at Salt Lake Cityand Ogdenat reducedrates, and at tho same timeblockading the routes all adjacent territories which might ena- ble them to dispoze of their large stocks. Idaho was flooded with Salt Lake drum- mers, who, by means of the cut rates, were able to furnish goods at less than any other firms, but the opposition mer- chants quickly appealed to headqtarters, and a raise of rates was immediately ordered to put all merchants on an equal footing. It is said rates from Salt Lake City to Idaho towns are the same as the rates to Omaha, so that the merchants of the former city are losers by the war of rates. Salt Lake Tribune thus pictures the effect of rail- road discrimination on the business of the city: *The cut in rates has not in- jured Denver half as much as it has Salt Lake, The stores are al full here, there is mno sale for the grain which the farmers have, there is trouble in store for thousards. But that is not the worst complaint which Utah makes. The Short Line and the Utah & Northern roads have by their direct discriminations against this city, taken away the trade whic! Montana this city made before the roads wers built, and which of right is hers. 1t costs as much to send goods from this that will begin as soon as spring opens the construction of a railroad from that point into Montana by way of the Natio- nal Park, etc. We can distinctly recall three previous cases of the same kind, and are getting a little bewildered. We do not exactly know whother these cor porations are all different or all one, falling to pieces and reorganizing with the changes of the moon. There is nobody holding these railroad builders, a8 we know of, from going to work even before apring. If the secretary of Wyo- ming gets a fee for recording articles of incorporation, he must have a steady and munificent income from this source. We hope they will vary the terms of the next dispatch a little and make the ultimate destination of the new road Athabasca or Alaska. The company that lays the first rajl shall have all our commenda- tion.” SIPAT OXTINGS, A union depot is one of the numerons wants of Hastings. A real estate and building asso ing organized in Hastings. The bank of Codar county,.at St. Helena, s soon to be removed to Neligh. The Tecumseh Chisftain has dug up the hatchet for Blaine and Lincoln. Tecumseh is atpresent enjoying two revivals one of religion the other of trade. The Ulysses Dispatch calls for the exter- mination of street fakirs by ordinance. The Missouri <iver is narrower at Platts: mouth this year than it has been for years, Kearney Building and Loan associa- capital of £400,00, is in runmng jon s be- and 27th of March. All the desirable university and school land in Knox county was sold for from £7 to $12 per acre at the receht sale, The usual number of cattle are being killed in tho vicini y of Columbus from overfeeding on dry cornstalks. The Am‘lmhm packing house has com- menced pickling pork. 1t has a capacity of thirty head per day. Orleans advertises for “an able and ocon scientious lawyer.” Engage Diogenes and replenish his | Judge Morris refused a changs of venue to Dr. Richmond, of Plattsmonth, charged with rape, and his trial is now in progress. The notorious Ben Glazier, of Lincoln, who “raised the wind”’ last summer by mortgaginy his own and other people’s preperty, anc moved west, has been tracked to Portland, Oregon, and corraled by the deputy sheriff of Lancaster county. ‘The Fremont debating society is wrestling metaphorically with the proposition “That the American Indian has re injuri 2t the hands of the America: ican negro.” Sitting Bull and Crow Dog are anxiously watching the returns, "The four prisoners from Brown county, con fined in the Dodge county jail for horse steal- ing, are manufacturing a riding bridle for Sheriff Gregg, which for gorgeousness and elaborate construction is gaid to surpass any- thing in that line ever seeg in Fremont. The result of the late public sale of Otoe lands, which closed on Friday, may be summed up as follows: Number of purchasers, 188; amount of cash collected, being first pay- ments of one-fourth on amount of purchase price, $62,395. The average price per acre is twelve dollars. The city council of Lincoln recently passed an ordinance requiring a high license fee of merchants resorting to auction sales. This action of the council is held by tho interested 50 bo arbltrary and illegal Tho auctions aro contiued and if the city interferes a test case will be made up. Charles P. Leonard disappeared from West Point, October 30, with a wagon load of ap- ples, and has not been heard of since. There {s no known reason for his jumping the coun- try and it is gencrally believed he has been foully dealt with. He is five feet five inches in height and weighed 130. . The station agent at kxeter was arrested the other day under a chiarge of violating a town ordinance by allow ing cars standing ou a side track to obstruct travel on one of the streets, The railroad company and the vil- lage board propose to test the matter before the courts. The York Democrat has passed into the hands of Mr. L. 8. Lathrop, of Omaha. The paper isowned by the democratic central com- mittee of Adams county, and ig leased to Mr. Lathrop. Although an excellent local paper ‘atjpresent,he promises to materially improveit. The Nebraska Mutual Benefit association of Beatrice has been incorporated. Itis officered by a baker's dozen of prominent citizens, and ita plan of operation-is as follows: Any male person between the ages of fifteen and sixty, found to be in good health, may obtain a mem- bership in this association and a certificate of benehts. Admission fee, all ages, for death beneht not exceeding $2,500—single certificate, 812; two certificates at one time for death benefits not exceeding $5,000, £20, Red Willow county possesses a split-haired dude, a feeble-minded girl and & matrimonial bureau. There are necessary evils in the trail of civilization. The girl was booked for mar- risge with o farmer after scarcely half an hour's acquaintance, but whil the plow boy was skirmishing for & permit the dude step: ped in, paralyzed the 7;:1«- heartstrings and took her to his palpitating shirt front. Tho sod corned youth is out a wife and $2.25, but the license will*hold for another day. North Platte has invented an improvement on the ancient and venerable church fostival, which combines novelty, popularity and ‘pro- fit. Every lady accompanied by » gentloman will be weighed, and, on the first ninety sounds, one cent per pound s charged, and Leyumi that one-half cent, The heavier the couplo the more oysters in the stew. This pe- cuniary weigh of replenishing an empty troas- ury knocks pink tea into pugilistic idiocy. B THE GREAT GERMAR REMEDY FOR PAIN Relleves and . RHEUMATISN, Neuralgia, Sciotica, Lumbago, E, HEADAORE, T00THACHR city to Butte or Hailey as it does to send the same goods from Omaha, 1,000 miles or more east of us, Tho same rule ex- tends te the shipping out of ore and base bullion, There is no ether land under the sun where rules 8o infamous would be {wrmiuod; where a corporation given a charter as a commen carrier would be permitted to Flm its grasp upon the busi- ness throat of a community, and strangle it to death.” The newspapers of Montana, especially those on the line of the Northern Pacific, are not at all anxious for a railroad to the National Park from the south. They much prefer that Villard's highway should control tourist travel in that di- rection,and give the shopmen of adjacent towns a chance to pluck pleasure-sekers before the Hatch hash mill empty tHir purses, This is natural and proper, and we are not surprised to see the ridicule with which the territorial press treat the roposed road from Cheyenne north, he filing of articles of incorporation of the Wyoming, Ycllowstone Park & Pa- cific railroad, & fow weeks ago, hus called forth the following attempt at sarcasm by The Helena Herald: wholesale condemnation with its glaring falsehoods is vigorously denounced by “‘About once a month onan average we get the same identical dispatch from Cheyenne saying that articles of incorpo- ration have just been filled for a company SORE THROAT. QUINSY, bW sn oG8 NPRAINN, Soreness, Cuts, Brulses, ROSTBITES, BURNS, NCALDS, And allother hodlly aches B pina: FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLL. by all Droggistsand ¥, Directions in 1) i The Charles A, Vogeler (. bty 0 A VOGS puriohigs S Dex | C.E. MAYNE & CO., 1509 Faroam Street, - - Omaha, Neb, WHOLESALE Hard & Soft Coal HIPPERS AND DEALERS IN . — STEELE, JOHNSON& CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! Chieago, Mau- A fuall line of H. B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwood & Draper) ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacco Departmen I ling 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. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN &°RAND POWDER €O Booth’s ‘Oyal’ Brand FRESH FISH .AT WHOLESALE. D. B. BEEMER, Agent,Omaha. HENRY LEHMANN JOBBERZOF Wall Paper and Window Shates. EASTERN [PRICES DUPLICATED] 1118 FARNAM STREET, ~ C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! OMAHA NEB. |AND DEALER IN Pais 05 Varmishes and Window Elas J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lumer, L, Shingles, Py SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY, Union Pacific Depot, Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,! Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittings\ Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND- URC AND SCHOOL BELLS. MILLS OHURVE Corner 10th Farnam St., Omaha Neb. . BOYER <& CcO.. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Compy FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFED, VAULTS, LOCKS, & 1020 Farnam Street. Omakh |SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Cround OQil Cake. It Is the host and cheapest food for stock of any (kind. One pound Is equal to throe pounds of corn took fed with Ground Ol Cake in the Fall and Winter, instead of running down, will incroase in weigh and be in good marketable condition in the spring. Dairymen, as well 48 others, Who uso it can tstily ta merits. Try it and judge for yourselves. s Prioe $25.00 per fon: no eharge for saoks. Addross od-mes- WOODMAN LINSEED OIL COMPANY Omaha 0. M. LEIGRTON. H. T. CLARKE. LEIGHTON & CLARKE, .(SUCCESSORS TO KENNALD BROS, & C0,) Wholesale Druggists! —DEALERS IN— Painté, Oils, Brushes, Class. | OMAHA, - - - - - - - NEBRASKA, IMPORTBRS,_OF HAVANA CIGARS! § AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO CIGARS, TOBACGOS, PIPES SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming and Brigands, WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES . SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES, —AND— CONENLSVILLE COKE !