Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 10, 1884, Page 4

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4 THE OMAHA BEE. Omaha Office, No. 916 Farnam 8t, Oouncil Bluffa Office, No. 7 Pearl Street, Near Broadway. New York Office, Room 65 Tribune Building. Pabllshed evory worning, excopt Sunday, The «nly Monday morning daily. RRMS BY MATL. 10.00 | Three Montha, 6.00 | One Month. . One Yoar.. $2.00 8ix Months. Amerioan Nows Company, SoleLAge: @79 In the United States. CORRRSPONDRNCH, A Communioations relating to News and Rditorial should bo addressed to the Eorron or Ti B BUBINRSS LETTRRS, All Business Letvers and Remittancos “should be addroased to Tun Brr PURLISHING COMPANY, OMAWA ‘Cheoks and Postoflico ordors to bo made pay- able to the order of the company. THE BEE PUBLISHING CO0., PROPS, E. ROSEWATER, Editor. Ir is not a good time to enter upon a journey unless it is a bridal tour. s Tue flnt_week of :}:;mv yoar has been a week of disasters and calamities. THE DAILY BEE---OMAHA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1884, THE CONDITION OF TRADE, The old year closed with a very de- cided depression in trade and a rather gloomy outlook for commercial and in- dustrial enterprise in the near future. It is too early in the new year to form con- clusive opinions regarding the course of trade and prospect for industrial activ- ity. The large number of failures, the heavy shrinkage in securities have moro or less demoralized business men and capitalists at trade centres, Over-pro- duction has closed many factories and .| compelled many others to reduce time and wages, That there is some possi- bility of an early increase in the demand for goods is shown by a more active in- quiry, since the year opened, for various kinds of commodities. This has not yet resulted in much increase in the volume of business, but it indicates that pur- chases are contemplated, and if there could be an assuranco that there would be no further depreciation in val- ues, business would soon assume a more encouraging aspect, Prices are now very low for most leading articles of prime necessity. Sugar is cheaper than it has been for years; coffeo, although it has advanced largely from the extremely low Ir was more profitable to be a star route attorney than a stat route cen- tractor. Ir was a Payne-full blow to Pendleton, but it laid Thurman, the old Roman, as flat as a pancake. E——— A5 LONG as Mrs, Villard hangs on to her five millions in government bonds, Mr. Villard is not going to the poor house. Over three thousand bills are already introduced in the lower house of con- rgess. A bill for the relief of the public printer will next be in order. e———— Kansas Orry wants to become the but- ter depot of Missouri creameries. Kan- sas City would be a more suitable place for a wagon grease and oleomargarine depot. PRESIDENT ARTHUR is an experienced angler. He has thrown out two hooks, one baited for Mississippi catfish and the other for Illinois suckers in the Henne- pin canal. WiLL the petroloum senator from Ohio now draw the bung out of his Standard barrel for the nomination of Governor Hoadley to the presidency, or will he become a candidate himself? SenatoR VAN Wyok struck it rich when he asked for the bills of the atar route attorneys. We can now under- stand why the Dorsey and Brady trials were dragged along at such a snail pace. AcooRrDING to the Chicago Zribune the Nebraska senators have asked the presi- dent to appoint Judge Dundy to the Cir- cuit judgeship. The Nebraska senators 'had probably called on the prosident be- fore they heard from Nebraska, Hexry B, Payne, the new Ohlo sena- tor, is seventy-threo years old and it is gensrally understcod at Oincinnati that heintends to resign before the end of Governor Hoadley's term in the interest of John A. McLean, the preprietor of the Cincinnati Enguirer.. That explains in some degree why McLean made such a desperate fight against Pendleton, Wire a population of over 250.000, San Francisco invested '§0,261,689 in building improvements last year, the largest amount in a single twelve month since 1873, About seventy per cent of the amount expended,” represents frame structures, Omaha with her 50, 1000 people invested more than two mil- lions in builings last year, not counting public Improvementa. g r—— Dowx go the wages of the Pennsylva- nia miners-—up goes the price of anthra. cite coal. Orders were recently issued by the anthracite coal monopoly for half time work during tho first throe months of the year, This is caloulated to give the miners the impression that the mar- ket is overstocked, which is not true, and that the companies cannot afford to consider any question of an advance in ‘wages, and also to shorten the supply so a8 to hold up prices. It is said by those who are familiar with the conditions of the business that coal might be profitably rotailed in Philadelphia at three dollars per ton, if mining were conducted under the operations of legitimate business ~ methods, instead of being contrilled by a ‘monopolizing combination, read on the first page, in double leaded brevier, the following report of the situa- prices current last summer, is not high compared with former years; pork and Irrd are lower than a year ago; the lower grades of flour are selling at moderate prices, and even the higher grades— qualities botter than were ever produced until within a few years—are not dear; wheat, oats and barley are lower, while corn and rye are not much higher than a year ago. Of the raw materials iron and wool are lower, and cotton is not much higher, while all articles made from them are selling at largely reduced prices. Simi- lar conditions exist regarding most other commodities, This state of the markets suggests that prices are generally cheap enough for a substantial basis to work upon—net for speculative ventures, which frequently practically ignore in- trinsic values—but for logitimate trading operations, There is, however, oge redeeming fea- ture in the retrospect of the past year, which mitigated the disasters, and is the ground for hope of a more speedy recu- peration than would otherwise be possi- ble, and that is the strength of our finan- cial system. Had there been any doubt of the soundnessof otir papermoney circu- Iation, or the solvency of the banks, there would have been a general panic, from which it would have taken several yoars to recover. There have been a few failures of banks, Lut probably not more than the average in more prosperous years—we have seen no comparative sta- tistics upon this point—and although many sound financial institutions have lost some money, their busi- ness, generally speaking, has been psofit- ablo, their earnings exceeding their losses, 8o that there is no impairment of their ability to pay dividends; many of the failures among the banks were due, not to any lack of business nor to losses ooccurring in legitimate banking opera- tions, but to unfaithfulness on the part of officers or employes, who speculated with and lost the funds which they should have deemed as sacred. Every business man knows the iraportant place a bank holds in the facilitation of the business and exchanges of the country, and the fact that they are sound and prosperous, and that the circulating medium is un- questionably good under any circum- stances, must exert an zssuring and salu- tary influence upon new business pro- jeots. STUPID SLANDERS. ‘When the Hastings Gazette-Journal started its daily issue, it received from Tae Ber the most flatering compliments, and no paper in or out of the state made a more telling appeal in its behalf to the people of Hastings than did Tux Bee. In return for our generous treatment we have recoived nothing but personal slander, malicious libel and unstinted abuse, Masquerading as and independent republican paper, with anti-monopoly ' tendencies, the Gazette-Journal has mads its special its editor. blackmailing sheet in Omaha, to have paid 83,000 for took care to avoid the dangers of war by staying at home. even notice the impudent, absurd, and libellous innuendo made by the Omaha Shoe-fly, because in this community the stand of Tue Bee in opposing publio improvement rings is unassailable, and its position with - | regurd to paving is well understood, If il 4t E i r‘&fnmhlunfiehnll- the asphalt company had given £3,000 to Tug Bee,, the asphalt company would not be foolish enough te let any outgider know it, because it would be throwing its money away by advertising that it had bought this paper., If purchased, its influence in behalf of asphalt would be worthless, so soon as the fact became known, As & matterof fac Tur Bee has advocated graue in preference to asphalt, Tus Bee publishing company, which owns forty-four feet on Farnam street, has signed for granite through its editor. On the very day that this charge was made by the irresponsible sheet in attention to the cracks in an honest business to echo every contemptible slur and infamous falsehood that emanates in the monopoly press against Tue Bex and Tts latest attempt to preju- dice the people of Hastings is the re- publicatien of a stupid canard concocted by asot who publishes an irresponsible It is nothing less than the pretended exposure of Tae Bek as the purchased organ of an alleged asphalt ring, which is said the Bee's influence, This story is about as truthful as the charge which the Gazette. Journal published last summer, alleging that the editor of Tue Bre was, during ho war, an active rebel sympathizer,who ‘We haven't reen flt to the asphalt pavement and stating that the cold weather would be a fair test of the durability of asphalt. But the Hast- ings paper, which is the organ of Con. grossman Laird, imagines that it has cleared him - from the Stinking Water job by publishing the asphalt libel on Tur Bre. Even if it were all true it has no bearing on Laird's relations to the land-grabbing scheme. Right here let us say further that Tue Ber has not malic- jously invented charges against Mr, Tmird. They were made by a govern- ment official, in a high position, and that officer is not a Nebraskan nor in any way interested in our politics. — Tae most sensible suggestion for the relief of Lieutenant Greeley and his party is made by George Kennan, of Washington. Mr. Kennan was nne of tho telegraphers employed by Captain Bulkley in constructing the overland tel- graph to Europe by way of Behring straits and Siberia, He acquired much valuable experience about the Polar reg- ions in Alaska and northern Siberia, and has made many excellent suggestions dur- ing the search for the survivors of the Jeannette. Mr. Kennan now suggests the most effective and speedy means for the relief of the Greeley party, that the government offer a large reward to the whalers which sail in Arctic waters for the rescue and safe transportation home of Greeley and his men. This strikes us ag very practical. The public have not much faith in the success of any govern- ment expedition that may be sent aut, for reagons which it is not necessary to advert to. Experience in that line has not been such as to inspire confidence. But with the whalers it is different. They are hardy, well equipped and well aquainted with the region their search would take them into. They are numer- ous, and with the hope of large reward and the rivalry it would produce to earn it, there would be scarcely a doubt but that some one of their vessels would find the explorers. Tre cow-boy has been successfully transplanted from the wild west to the far east: Providence, R, I., has a gang of ‘‘cow- boys,” who are such a terror to people at the north end of the city that a woman beaten on the streets by some of them doesn't dare give their name to the police. WEST OF THE MISSOURL The crop of Annual Reviews has been uncommonly large throughout the west the present season. The growth and progress of the country during the past year certainly entitled it to the immor- tality of print. The Salt Lake Tribune leads the list with a 12-page 10-column review of the industries of Utah, Idaho and Montana, covering in detail the min- oral camps and growing young cities of each. Most of the articles were pre- pared by experts in the different indus- tries described, supported by a bewil- dering array of statistics. The Denver Tribune and Rocky Mountain News dis- played their uswal enterprise in issuing double sheets with carefully prepared data of the growth of the centenmal state, The Cheyenne Sun followed with an assortment of mineral, agricultural and stock-raising statistics that would almost appal a native. The Inter- Mountain, of Butte, illustrated the at- tractions of the ‘‘silver city” in a hand- some holiday edition, elegantly printed on heavy paper. Itisa most creditable work and deserves a wide circulation among all classes, The enterprise of the western press is a true index to the growth of the coun- try. Itcan be set down as a modern truism that the papers of every town are the mirror of the town's condition, A pushing, growing town or city is certain to possess well printed and well edited The reverse of this will %r ilar condition in the press. 'hough less than a score of ‘years have passed since habitation was possible in the valleys and foothills of the Rocky mountains, the growth of the country has been no less wonderful than the growth of the press. Take Denver, for instance, The newspapers of that city are equal to those 1n eastern cities with double the population. Cheyenne, Laramie, Ogden, and Salt Lake City aupport two daily papers each, and their energy and friendly rivalry shows to a gratifying degree a steadily increasing tronage at their back. The press of ontana atrongly reflect the rapid growth of the country. Helena supports two dailies of opposite politics, and Butte and Benton likewise. In the former city the dailies were forced to enlarge no less than three #mes the past year to supply the demands of advertisers and keep pace with the increased facilities for news. The press of Helena a peculiar as well as pecuniary advantage over their neighbors, The riulr’ of St. Paul and Portland merchants for trade on the Northern Pacific makes advertising by both a necessity to secure a permanent footing, And they take to printers’ ink like all shrewd business men, with a liberality that is highly commendable, In mountain-locked Idaho, every new strike in hnrg:l -mounted ribs as well very scandal and shooting scrape, is heralded in 8x12 dailies published in towns of less than one thousand popula- tion. Some two months ago the town of Oaldwell was mapped out, by railroad men, on the (,)mon Short Line, and yet the ink had ly dried on the moh ment before a printing outfit was planted there and a pafnr issued. Instances of this kind could be multiplied without limit. This shows the great work of the western press in the upbuilding of the country, No town or city can do with- out one or more; no lies can prosper without one, and the business man who does not patronize them soon falls a prey to sheriffs and assignees, The recent mmg of the Cattle Growers' association, of Colorado, was productive of much good to that great and growing business, and furnished a variety of information as to its present extent and prospects. The number of oattle in the state is enormous total of 2,000,000, valued at|ly in wealth and po) at the $60,000,000. The cattle are scattered over thirty-four counties, but the greater number are to be foundin Elbert, Weld, Bent, Las Animas and Arapahoe coun- ties. There are seventeen round up dis- tricts, whose associations meet twice a year, and a state association which holds annual meetings. A large number of the regulations of these associations have been + incorporated as laws into the statute books of the state, among them those providing for state cattle inspectors and round-up commissioners. These of- ficials are appointed by the governor, at the suggestion and recommendation of the state association. The board of state inspectars consists of five prominent cat- tle men, and the round-up commission- ersconsist of three from each district. Their duties are to see to it that all the state laws are enforced and association ru'es obeyed in thewr several districts, and to have a general supervision of the subjects of round-ups, branding of calves and gathering and transporiing beef. The cattle in Colorado are owned by about 300 men who have in their em- ployment perhaps three thousand herders to care for them. The wages of these men average from $35 to 840 per month, and board, and for foremen 8100 to 8125 per month. The number of men required to care for the herds varies in proportion according to the size of the herd. One of 20,000 would require about twenty- two herders, 10,000 about fifteen herders, 5,000 about ten herders, 2,500 about seven herders, and 1,000 about four herders, so that the larger herd entails less expense proportionately than the smaller ones. The total cost of herding 20,000 or upwards per head is 50 cents per year, 10,000 and upwards 75 cents, and a less number $1 per head. A number of improved |breeds are be- ing crossed with Texas stock, and the re- sults are always satisfactory. These fin- clude the Pcll Angus, Short horns and Galaways. Whilst the increase in Texas is greater than it is in Colorado, the qual- ity of beef raised in the state in superior and the cattle heavier than those of the former state. Altheugh the sizes of the ranges in the state vary greatly, still it is givenasa rule by the most experienced cattle men that an averago of twenty acres pen head should be retained for their maintenance. The Snake River valley promises to become the garden spot of Idaho, while the river bed is rich in gold and .other mineral. The experimental farming of last year showed the country to be un- usually productive. A correspondent of The Salt Lake Tribune writes: More than 500 settlers have located ranches this year. All that has been raised is wanted for seed, and that will not give us half enough. The valley about Eagle Rock is well watered. The Canal com- pany alone have made more than sixty miles of waterway. In a distance of about ten miles above Eagle Rock the canal has four different outlets into the river, Half of this sixty miles of water- way has been added the past year. The land is free—open to all at government price—and it is good; 40 bushels of wheat, 50 to 70 of oats, to the acre. There is no better country for farming and none better for selling farm products, TheSnake River gravel mines are simply immense! Three men this year, working together, took out over $4,000 each. Next year they will make $5,000 to the man. Everything is ready for them to shovel in the dirtnext spring, as soon as the gravel thaws. Last spring they had everything to prepare. . It was then an experiment; it is now a certainty. Two large mining companies have been organized, respectively in St. Paul and Chicago, to work mining claims some four miles above town. Individuals and groups of twe or three have staked off claims for miles along the river bank. A lively stampede to the Teton mountain country is expected as soon as the snow disappears. Some ore was brought down from there last November, which assayed $10,000 to the ton. The rock is manga- neee, similar to that about Butte, There is now a strong probability that the noted Siberian traveler of Omaha will lose the laurel wreaths which the house of Romanoff had prepared and pickled for him. Less than a year ago there was a hope, amounting almost to a certainty, that Omaha, linked with his name and fast gathering fame, would fol- low his trail through Alaska, to Barrows point, bridge the straits of Bahring, then up the Amoor riverand down the Anadir, across the barren steppes of Central Rus- sia, until the shores of the Baltic would re-echo the familiarsound. But fate and funds were fickle and the rare opportu- nity was lost forever. ~Omaha's Mun- chausen, however, cau live to read and write of the fame which others less wor- thy are now reaping. A party by the name of Johnson has_ evolved tho gigan- tic scheme to connect by rail not only Russia, but carry the iron links down through Alaska and California to Mexico. The capital is put at $200,000,000, divided into shares of $10 each. The company propose to utilize the latent power of the Rocky mountains as a motive power, and dis- pense entirely with locomotives, Each car will be supplied with coils of heavy springs, which are wound up, so to .K“k' by the descent of the car. Thus the momentum of the car is checked by the resistance of the springs, and suffi- cient power is stored up to drive the wheels up the next incline, less only the amount of loss by friction. Thus, like Na- poleon and his army, passengers will go up the hill and then come down again, until they strike a Mexican greaser or a Russian bear. The town of Carbon, Wyoming, can boast of two strongly marked character- istics—the coal miner and the cowboy. The confinement of the former and the freedom of the latter generally balance on Sunday, when they promenade in gangs and envelope the town with cosmic dust But this is mainly due to a super- abundance of spirit, bodily and bottled, and disappears with the dawn of Mon- ay. There are at present three mines in operation at Carbon, owned by the Union Pacific. The mines have been opened less than three years, and the workings are not yet very extensive. The mines employ nearly 600 men and the output averages about 100 car loads per day, The cattle interest is second in import- ance The country is broken and hilly, amviding excellent protection,and is be unsur) a8 & winter range. Nearly fifty herds of cattle, sheep and borses are grazed in that vicinity, The town con! about 1,000 at this Mdfioyfl,tfl)umwlfid{- THE LONG PINE REGION. A Sketch of Ong of the Liveliest Towns in Northwest Nebraska, The Wonderful Growth of Brown County—Business Keepifig Pace With the Country. Correspondence of Trr Bre. Loxa Pisg, Neb,, January 8.—Your correspondent arrived in Long Pine Sun- day morning and took quarters at the Long Pine house, a neat two story frame building,containing someseven‘een rooms in all, and presided over by H. J. Sever- ance, Esq. Long Pine is beautifully situated on the east bank of the Long Pine creek,has a population of about 300, and is located in the geographical center of Brown county, has a good newspaper, The Long Pine Journal, a bank, grocery, drug, dry goods, hardware, jewelry and furniture stores, two blacksmith shops, two livery barns, two saloons, lumber yard, hotel, &c., &c. There is great rivalry between this town and the town above, Ainsworth, But it appears to an uninterested ob- server, that Ainsworth possesses the most go-ahead spirit of the two, Three years ago Brown county was a part of the unorganized territory, and unoccupied government land; but when the Sioux City & Pacific railroad extend- ed their line up the Elkhorn valley, the homgsteader followed, until now the prairfe is dotted with frame and sod houses in every direction, and the coun- try is pretty well settled up. 'Lhe soil in this portion of the state is a dark, sandy loam, with much more sand than is found in the southern and eastern part of the state. The citizens, although hot having the vim and push, as compared to other towns, are intelligent, sober and indus- trious, and all kinds of business are well represented. The Long Pine creek is a most remark- able little stream, which flows by the town. Although it has its beginning only five er six miles south of town, it courses by the village at the rate of seven miles an hour, is about twenty-five feet wide and three feet deep, and of the finest soft spring water—making one of the finest mill-power streams the writer ever saw. Rains or sudden thaws do not cause it to overflow, and I am told it has never been known to freeze over. A belt of natural timber, about one-fourth of a mile in width, extends along its banks, affording ample fuel and fence posts. The principal trees are pine, red cedar, oak, black walnut and elm. Wood is delivered in town for $3 per cord, red cedar posts (which are becoming scarce) at fifteen cents each. Long ago this stream used to be the favorite trapping ground for trappers, and there are still many beavers inhabiting it. The con- struction of their dams, of which we saw soeveral, are really masterpieces of me- chanism, showing the wonderful in- genuity of this little animal. Above the railroad bridge are the wonderful seven springs, which would well repay the cu- riosity-seeker for his trouble and pains in visiting them. Mr. I. H. Skinner, one of the first set- tlers, is still residing in his old-time log house on the banks of the Pine, just west of town, and he tells of many quaint and lively experiences he has had with the redskins of long ago. He has dropped the rifle and trap, his old companions in arms, and is now one of the leading hardware merchants of the town. The Niobrara river passes through the northern part of the county from west to east,and Plum creek through the northwest, both being well timbered. As one proceeds up the valley, however, the soil gets more sandy, and in some places drifts like snow. The weather is generally very cold in the northern part of the state,all reports to the contrary, and at this writing is ex- tremely cold, and very little outdoor work is being done. There is still govern- ment land to be had here near town, and parties wishing information can get it by writing to Charles R. Glover, president of the Brown county bank, whom the writer knows to be reliable and not apt to mislead any one, which is so often the case in getting information from new towns, Tue Bk predominates here among the Omaha papers, and, as usual, is well liked. The news agent down the road informed me that he sells twice the num- ber of Bees that he does of any other paper. CoLoNEL JAMES, Al About eighty of the 280 members of the Massachusetts ~ legislature have expressed themselves to The Boston Advertiser in favor of applying the J)llnclplal of civil service re- form to state and city government, The other 200 are still silent, but they will soon discover that sitting astride the fence in thia kind of weather isn't the easy, comfortable position which some inexperienced folks take it to be. i} THE GREAT GERMAK REMEDY FOR PAIN Relloves and cures RHEUMATIS Y, Neuralgia, Soiatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADAOIE, T00THACHE, SORE THROAT. QUINSY, W oot GS. NPRAINS, Soreness, Cuts, Brulses, FROSTBITES, BULRNN, SCALDS, FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE, Hold by all Druggists and Dealers. Directions in 1) wRUAges. Tha Charles A. Vogel Coal. BAREKER & MAYNE, N, . Cor,13th & Farnam Sts,0maha,Neb, WHOLESALE SHIPPERS AND DEALERS IN Hard & Soft Coal —AND— ] 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. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN &*RAND POWDER CO HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Shades. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED) ' 1118 FARNAM STREET, . . OMAHA C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! JAND DEALER IN Paints Ols Variisies and Window (lass OMAHA. NEBRASKA. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, Lah, Singles, Piekes, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Union Pacific Depot, - Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMES, STEAM PUMPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,| Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittinga} Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CH! H AND SCHOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam St., Omaha Neb. P. BOYER & CO.. DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFED, VAULTS, LOCKS, & 1020 F'arnam Street. Omah [SPECIAL NOTICE TO _Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground Oil Cake. the best and cheapest food for ‘stock of any fkind. One pound ls equal to th od with Ground Oil Cake in tho Falh aed Wintes, lasssad o Yhaning dogm;wil Inotiass. i ieize n good marketablo condition in the spring. Dairymen, as woll as others, who use it can testity Try i and judge for yourselves. & Price $25.00 per ton; no chargo for sacks. Address WOODMAN LINSEXD ‘OIL; GOMPANY Omaha MAX MEYER & 0., IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO OIGARS, TOBACCOS, 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 80! A. K. DAIL.FEFY, MANUFACTURER OF FINEY Buggies Garriases and Suring Wagons My Repository 1 constantly filled with aSsclectjstook. Bost Workmanship guaranteed. Office and Foctory S. W. Corner 16th and Capitol Avenve, Qmah —— 0. M, LEIGHTON, H, T, CLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, WBUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BKOS, & CC.) Wholesale Druggists ! —DEALERS IN— Oils, Brushes. Class. Paints, CONENLSVILLE COKE !|oMaHs, . - i = =+ NEBRASKA

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