Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 12, 1884, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

G S THE OMAHA BEE. Omaha Office, No. 916 Farnam St. Council Bluffs Office, No. 7 Pearl Street, Near Broadway. New York Office, Room 65 Tribune Building. Pablished every worning, exoept Sunday. ©aly Mondsy morning daily. S B AT One_ Year. .$10.00 ( Threo Months, ¥ §.x Monens B | One Month, 10 IR WERKLY IR, FUV/0 D KVERY WRDSREDAT, TRRVS FORTPAID. 82,00 | Trreo Months. 1.00 | One Month.. Amerioan News Company, Sole[Agente2Newsdeal- ©m In the United States. CORRRAFONDRNCR. A Osmmunloations relating to News and Editorial #m\tters should bo addressed to the Eoiron or Tra B The BUSTNRSS LATTRRS, All Business Tottors and Romittances ‘shonld he addressed to T Bxn Purtisimne CoMrany, OMAnA Drafts, Cheoks and Postoffice orders to bo made pay b0 0 the order of the company. THE BEE PUBL]SHINQ‘?p# PROPS, BE. ROSEWATER, Sexatorn Vax Wyck has wedged in another resolution to stop a land grant steal. He By A Frank Javes is getting worse. proposes to be a robber to the last. dying he will rob justice of its dues. $Sexaror Dawes has introduced a postal telegraph bil Out of the numerous bills there i air possibility that con gress will take the best features of each and pass a bill establishing postal tele- graphy. Sax Francisco comes to the front with a respectable failure, She has the repu- tation of never doing anything by halves, but in this case there is an exception to the rule, the failure being for a million and a half. Tue Judge has a urh;(;n this week representing Uncle Sam ordering the I//SPECTION OF BUILDINGS. Owmaha needs a building inspector, and swch an official ought to have been ap- pointed long ago. No further delay should be had in this matter. Under the present loose way of transacting busi- ness anybody can erect the flimsiest sert of buildings, which may fall down at any time, or prove a dangereus fire-trap. The duties of a building inspector should be to seo that the provisions of a building ordinance are strictly complied with, and such an ordinance should be passed pro- viding, in a measure, how buildings must be erected to comply with the require- ments of safoty. The minimun thickness of walls should be definitely fixed in pro- portion to the size and height of the building. The inspector, of course, must be a practical builder, as much would e -~y oy g S S THE DAILY BEE-~OMAHA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1884. which England wmay dictate. Although Soudan as well as Egypt is nominally u Turkish province, the porte ia in no con- dition to interfere. Turkey has soldiers who could whip and subdue El Mahdi and his horde, but she has no woney to pay them with, and if she had the money she could use it more effectively nearer home. For some unexplained reason the Egyptinns have lost their military pres- tige just as rapidly as they gained it. The porte attached a good deal of im- portance of the contingent which they furnished for service in the Crimean war, but it proved worthless in the open field, and perished like flies under the hardships of the Bulgarian and Crim- ean winters, In the last war with Rus- sin the Egyptian troops fared no better. ‘What they were worth in the late curious Dbe nocessarily loft to his judgment as to the safoty of buildings. Another duty wonld be the inspection of buildings alroady erected and the suggestion of remedying oxisting defects, He would also be called upon at times to condemn buildings as unsafe. None but an ex- perienced man could safely bo en- trusted with such important duties, The ordinance should also provide that no building should be erected without a permit from the inspection department. In Buffalo recently a building was hastily and carelessly erected, the roof being put on with no permanent braces for the walls, no iron straps or bolts, and no joints or studding in the third floor, As the building was 120 feet long, 60 wide and G0 high, it is not surprising that when a high wind of from twenty to thirty miles an hour struck the roof and sides the whole structure collapsed and killed several workmen. The wonder is that it did not fall earlier; but there is, unfortunately, every reason to believe that the practice of erecting the empty shell of a building in serene trust that it will be stiftened by floor and roof before sergeant-at-arms to send for Huntington who is the most complete letter writer in America. The only existing copy of this work is worth about $40,000,000. Sammy Tiupex has been bunkoed by a couple of New York confidence men, who beat him out of $3,000. It was Samuel D. Tilden, of Hartford, and not Samuel J., of New York. The sage of Grammercy park says that he has not been bunkoed since 1876. Rev. ApiN Barwou, of Hopedale, is fir:lrrinf a history and genealogy of the lou nmfl{, and desires correspond ence from all of the name or descent. a wind comes is not confined to Buffalo. Such an accident is liable to happen in any city where buildings in process of erection are not carefully inspected by a competent inspector. CouncrLyaX Beny is said to have ex- pressed the opinion that the Barber asphalt company had bought the influ- ence of this paper, and is represented as saying further that a man who camo to the editor of Tur Bee and asked him to publish a short item on the merits of granite and he refused to do so, and that the man finally offered him $200 to print it, and he still refused, thereby showing The Ballous are supposed to be of Hugue- | that he belonged to the asphalt ring. not extraction, and it is particularly de- | “The item offered,” says Mr. Behm, sired to ascertain whothor this wore #0 of | «yay a logitimate one and proper enough progenitor was near Providence, R. I.— |t be printed in any paper.” This is de- Springfield Republican. cidedlyrich. The advertising columns of This is very suggestive to some of the |this paper are open to anybody for any descondants of the Ballou family who re- | legitimate purpose. Whyshould the man side in this city and state, apply to the editor for the privlege of - inserting any advertisement which is SEvEN lawyers met in Lincoln and |unobjectionable. As a matter of fact resolved that they were the state bar as- | the man who called at the editorial rooms sociation, and laboring under the delu- with the alleged advertisement of the sion they resolved that the state bar as- |merits of granite, was none other than sociation should instruct the Nebraska[J. H. Baldwin, Councilman Behm’s part- delegation in congress to urge the ap- | ner, and the solicitor for the Sioux pointment of Judge Dundy to the vacant| Falls granite people. ~ The article cirouit judgeship. The seven lawyers|Would have filled about three lines, remind us of the nine tailors of Tooley and on the local page would cost at full street who resolved that *“‘We, the peo- rates not more than seventy-five cents. ple of London,” &o. Instead of referring to the merits of granite, it pronounced asphalt an out- Par, 0. Hawes is still at Washington rageous swindle and fraud, and called on reprosenting himself as suthorissd to Dodge streot property owners to remon. prosecute some claims which Nebraska strate against it. The article in itself has against the governmont. By what|¥8 li.bolmu. It was offered after the authority is he acting? Have we not council had awarded the contract, and three congressmon and two senators at therefore Mr, Bohm, his partner, was a Washington to attond to the business of {much better party than this paper to this state. Why should the state be put | remedy the evil, if there was any, Mr, to the exponso of keeping Pat, 0. Hawes | Baldwin was informed that au atticle was or any other outsider in Washiugton? already in type for.tho next issue of Tur Beg, wherein the opinion was clearly ex- Wi believe* we are in the bounds of modoration when we assert that the growth of Kansas Oity within the next ten years will rival that of Chicago in any decade of the most palmy days. * % * Iutenyears more we will have o great city here, rivaling St. Louis in population, wealth and business,—[ Kan- sas Qity Zimes, . Kansas Oity is a modest town, to say the loast. What surprises us is that the EI Mahai of the Zimes did not prophesy war with England is yet fresh in every- body’s memory. Against the wild tribes in the Upper Nilo they are good for nothing as we now see. They actually suffer themselves to be butchered with arms in their hands. Danger secoms to paralyze them. To reconquer Soudan Egypt would not only have to deal with the False Prophet, but the Abyssinians, who are said to be arming also, and ready to take part in any fighting there may be in their neighborhood, and they are just as compotent to butcher the Kgypt- ians as the Prophet’s levies are, and en- joy doing it just as much, although they fight under the cross and he under the crescent., The decision of Fng- land has not only aroused bitter feoling in Cairo and Alexandria, but among the French who have an interest on the Nile through the Suez canal. France is about as helpless as Turkey in this crisia. She has a war of her own in Asia, which absorbs all the cash and the troops they can raise at present. The letter of Sir Lepel Griffin to the London Times, deploring the influence exerted by the Irish in America, should serve to open the eyes of the English people to the folly of expatriating Irish- men to America, either by assisting emi- gration or any other kind of pressure. The Irish question was comparatively simple until a great Irish population grew up on our side of the Atlantic and began to use their American prosperity and their American citizenship as a fulcrum from which to effect the situation at home. As matters now stand a prosper- ous Irishman in Americais more of a thorn in the side of the British Govern- ment than is a distressed Irishman at home; and with the rapid growth of the Irish-Americans in wealth and in influ- ence they cannot fail to become even more troublesome in the future than they have been in the past. The dissension hetween the Orange- men and the Nationalists in Ulster is an- other fact which will prove a serious cause of embarrassment to the English Government., For thirty years, English administrations were ocenpied with plans and measures for the abatement of the party feeling which has divided Ireland into tw» hostile camps. The whole of this work has been undone as in a mo- ment by the ill-advised appeal to the Orange element in Ulster as the repre- sentative of Irish loyalty and the cham- pions of the imperial connection. For a time, Mr, Trevelyan and Earl Spencer thought it sufficient to prohibit national- ist meetings in Ulster whenever the Orangemen threatened to make a disturb- ance. This course came to an end be- cause of the protests of the English radi- cals that it was the business of the gov- ernment to protect meetings, lawful in themselves, against threatened violenoe, and nct to suppress them. Instead of forbidding the meeting at Dromore, in County Down, they sent troops to pro- tect it and partially succeeded, the Orangemen being kept at the other end of the town until the nationalists had ad- journed. That the Orangemen were the aggressors, was shown by their making a detour through the fields iv attack the natonalists afapwards, and thoy must be o for the bloodshed which the fate of his father. Tt turns out now that the recent injury to the czar from the overturning of his sleigh was the re- sult of an attempt to assassinate him; and that the murdoer of Col. Sudeiken is part of & new system of desperate work which hes been carefully planned. For some time past the crar has obscured him- self in the fastness of the Gatchina palace; but the avengers have followed him thither, and he is now trembling in the presence of the unseen and ||£i4|mtn\|l danger. Nihilism in Russia has opened a new campaign, and we may expect tid- ings of blood any day. Tolstoi, minister of the interior, has received a letter an- nouncing that he has been sentenced to death by the nihilists. The letter also intimates that it is the intention of nihilists to murder Murairieff, chief pub- lic prosecutor, and Dofroskansky, of the public prosecution. The Emperor Francis Joseph, of Aus- tria, it is announced officially, will make a visit to the pope and will accept official receptions in Turwn, Milan and Rome. In the Italian capital the emperor v.ill bocome the guest of King Humbert, and will reside at the Quirinal. The pro- gramme for this imperial visit is so simi- lar to that which was made for the re- cent official visit of the German crown prince as to impress Italians with the conviction its inspiration also originated at Friedrichsruhe. The Roman officials of the Italian temporal power have, however, made haste to deny publicly that they entertain any fears as to the possibla political effect of Francis Joseph'’s visit. The irredent- ists, on the other hand, have called meet- ings to arrange for hostile demonstrations against the Austrian emperor becavse of the persecution and execution of Ober- dank. The most astute of the Italian politicians do not hesita e to declare their belief that it will be unwise and possibly perilous for the managers of the imperial journey to carry out that part of the an- naunced programme which arranges for demonstrations in Turin and Milan_in honor of the Austrian emperor. The Turinese and Milanese are excited over the proposed visit, and in a mood to re- sent it as an insult to Italian unity. The editors of Turin and Milan have already inaugurated a hostile agitation by re- minding the people of the bitterness of the unforgotten struggle between the northern Italian states and Austria, and it would surprise no one who well knows the people of northern Italy if they should in their treatment of Francis Joseph greatlyjoutdo the Parisians who insulted Alfonso. A Rome correspondent says the con- versation between the pope and crown prince of Germany consisted of two parts. One will remain absolutely secret, ut the other will be published at the proper time. The pope has informed the cardinals that he consigned to the secret archives a detailed account of the conversation, and that posterity may have a statement of much import- ance. The Italo-Austro-Hungarian-Ger- manic alliance has long been recognized by the thinking and reading portion of the community as an accomplished fact, but none the less a fact abhorrent to the Italians in general, as far as Austria is concerned, while, for the great unedu- cated public it was deemed a thing too monstrous to be possible, so that always it has sufticed for a newspaper or for a Enpulnr orator to speak of King Hum- ert as the ‘*Austrian Colonel,” to arouse a feeling of aversion against the other- wise not unpopular young king. He is, in fact, colonel of the (most hated of The English liborals have now a signal pressed that the extremely cold weather, which had cracked the asphalt pavement in many places, would soon test the dura- bility of that material for paving pur- poses. Mr, Baldwin was told that his little squib, which he did not father with his signature, would serve no giod pur- pose, and he might as well save his money., Theroupon Mr. Baldwin went away, and if Mr, Behm or Baldwin dare to say that $200 was offered for the pub- that Kunsas City would outstrip London and Paris within the next ten years, Kansas City doesn't brag any, ohno! it's all a mistake, lication of that article they simply tell a blank lie. The trouble with Councilman Behm is that he shoots his mouth of!' too much, and is liable to get himself into a == pickle by his foolish blowing, If his The complimeatary visit of Agent | partner, the agent of the Sioux Falls . Llewellyn and his Jicarillias Apaches to | granite, has any money to spend in ex- President Arthur, which was noted in|tolling the granite pavement, our adver- Tue Bre, has created quite a sensation | tising columns are open to him at the . in Washington. Ou coming into tho |same rates that are paid by any other ad- Ppresence of the execive Augustine, one | vertising patron, of the band weighing about 200 pounds, ——— rushed upon Mr Arthur, throw his arms | Gersaxy and France agreo upon one is good, but the great father is better!” hog, excepting when he flashes his big The president was placed in & very |diamond and fat purse while making the awkward position, and did not relish the | continental tour, and then they feed and _aroma which encircled him, Augustine | fatten upon him, will probably be substantially remem- bered by the president. . E——— Tux ety council have noted wisely in */Cov.” 8myTuE has given an opinion on asphalt. Now let some reputable citizen give usan opinion of *‘Col.” Pioneer Hook and Ladder company | the British cabinet advised the khedive dollars each for attendance at fires. |to sbandon the Soudan to the False is doubtful, however, whether this in- | Prophet, rather than attempt to recon- is suflicient to insure a good |quer it. The acceptance of this advice, de- | cession, A new cabinet has been formed, more bracing up thus, | with Nubar Pasha, secretary of war in made to striotly adhere to the policy sbout his stomach and yelled out, “God | thing—the prohibition of the American |® ularly on a | which was more in the nature of an im. | 8i it is done the more it will | 1578, at its hiead, and an attempt will be | and victory at Ipswich as an offset to their rocent defeat at York, Mr. West, who fell 117 votes behind the tory candidate in 1880, now has a majority of 450. This is a positive success, which will tend to renssure the liberal party, whose voting strength has steadily, albeit not very rapidly, diminished since the general eolection in 1880, The municipal elec- tions this year have also gone against the liborals. Although this is not to be regarded as an unerring- sign of public discontent with the party in power, it is not without significance. Their success at Sontay has had the natural effect of raising the spints of the French and making their demands more exacting. Not only Bacnink but other points on the Red River are specilied now as essential to secure their position in Tonquin, a certain island in the Gulf of Tonquin being the most important. Some Parisian papers demand that the overnment shall exact of China an in. Somnicy for the half-diplomatic and half- military resistanco she has been offering to the claims of France—a stretch of in- ternational arrogance far exceeding Prus- demands u? France in 1871 'he pressure for peace from the neu- tral powers of Europe continues, and the lnuxn Times reminds the United States that our treaty with China gives us an especial right to offer our services by way of amicable intervention, The rumor that Japan is ready to act as an ally of Franve, a'though discredited in some quarters, is probably true, Thuin- solent and mendacious course pursued by the Pekin government with reference to Formasa and the Liu-Tchiu Islands has produced in Japan a degree of irritation which is threatening in the highest de- ree. ¥ Latest cable advices from the seat of war continue favorable to the Krench, Another attack made by the Annamites on the French post was successfully re- pulsed. A now r"viuil. of nil:“dilhm, in i;.: most aggressive form is re) rom Russia, ince the ooeomfloni::; the czarit was believed that nihilism had exhausted it- solf. Butit seemsit was only waiting for opportunities. Scarcely had a sense of security begun to take ion of the public minfi when th-nY:phu and Bow et “work - ponly pocaim by new their we ciroulars spread broadcast over the lm‘ fastened even on the walls of the palace, that the present czar shall meet Austrian names) Haynau regiment. The introduction of *‘stump” speaking in England is pointed to by The London Telegraph as a.striking indication of *‘the devolopment of our political system.” But recently it was thought beneath the dignity of a statesman of the first rank to address any audience outside of par- liament, except it be his own constitu- entsand on ' a formal oocasion. Now, however, he thinks it nothing to make an ‘““oratorical progress” not only through his own district, but through others oftcn remotely situated. Having dropped some of his reserve and begun to talk, he soon finds he has much to say, and breaks into some of the periodals with an elaborate discussion of a pending ques- tion. This latter practice The Tele- graph regards as even more phenomenal than the appearance of the political wor- GRAY'S SPECIFIC MED{CINES: TRADE MARK Ti Grast Exo- TRADE MARK e A8 RRMKDY. An unfailing cure for Bemioal Weak- hoss, Spermatorr. hosa, Tmpotency, and all Disoases that follow as & soquonce of Sell. W f R Abuse; as loss ot 4558 - lemory, Univer- - SSFORE TAKING. saiLassitado, Pain AFTER TARING, * 4% Back, Dimness of Vision, Premature Old Age . many other diseascs that lead to Insanity or Con ({mption and & Premature Grave. BEWARR of advertisementa to retund money, whon druggists from whom the mediemne is bought do not refund, but refer you to the manufacturers, and the requirements are auch that they are seldom, ¢/ ever, somplied with. Sco thelr written guarantee’ A trial of one single package of Gray's Nu‘,nlfln will convine the most skeptical of its veal merits. On nocount of counte: feiters, Yellow Wrapper; the only g £ Full particulars in ou let, which we de. siro to send free by mail to every one. g4 Tho Spe- cifio Medic Ine 18 8old by all druggists at 81 per pack. age, or aix packages for 86, or will bo sent free by ‘mal on the receipt of the money, by addressing THE GRAY MEDICIN + suffalo, N, Y, Sold in Omaha by €, F, Goodman. iy 1om&o Coal. BARKER & MAYNE, N, £, Cor,I3th & Farnam Sts,0maha,Neb, WHOLESALE SHIPPERS AND DEALERS IN Hard & Soft Coal --AND— CONENTSVILLE COKE ! THE MERCHANTS Natonal Bank | OF OMAIEIA. Authorized Capital, - $1,000,000. Paid-up Capital, - - 100,000. Surplus Fund, - 70,000. BANKING OFFICE : N. W. Cor, Farnam ana 13th St OFFICFRS: FRANK Muneny, President. | SAx 1E. Roonns, V-Pros. Brx. B, Woov, Cashier. | Luriukn DRak, A. Cash, DIRECTORS: Frank Murphy, Samuel E. Rogors, Bon. B. Wood, Charlos C. Housel, Alf. D. Jones, Luther Drake. Transact & General Banking' Businesa. All who have any Banking business to transact are invised to call. No matter how large or small the transackion, it will receive our careful attention, and we promise always courteous treatment. Pays particular attention o business for parties residing outside the city. Exshange on all the prin- cipal cities of the United Statos at very lowest rates. ‘Accounts of Banks and Bankers recéived on favor- able terms. Issues Certificate of Deposit bearing 6 per cent interest. Buys and sells Forelgn Exchange, County, City and Government securitica o have adopted the United States Depository First National Bark —UF OMAHA— Cor. 13th and Farnam Sts. The Oldest Banking Establishment n Omoha, SUCCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROTHERS, Organized in 1858, Organized as a National Bank in CAPITAL . - - . - . - $200,000 SURPLUS AND PROFITS . $150,000 OFYIORES DIRBOTORS Hxxuan Kounrza, President. Jonx A, CrmonToN, Vice President. A ousTus Kountzs, 2 Vice President. F. H. DAvis, Cashior W_H. Mueque, Aselstant Cashicr. Transacts a genora bauking business. Iseues ime certificates bearin ntereat. Draws drafte on San Francluco and principal cities in the Unlted States Also London - Dublin, Edinburgh and the princips cities of the continent of Euro e. 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 PfimpLH furnished on application. Open orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guaranteed. AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & *RAND POWDER €O HENRY LEHVMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paner and Window Shiades. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED) 1118 FARNAM STREET, OMAHA NEB. C. F. GOODMAN, : Wholesale Druggist ! JAND DEALER IN Paints Oils - Varsisiies and Window Glass OMAHA. NEBRASKA. J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lamder, Lath, Shingles, Pickets SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LINE, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Unron Pacific Depot, Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMES, STEAM PUMPS, Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,} Belting, Hose, Steais Packing. &t Sholesale and voran HATLEDAT o 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, & ’ Brass and Iron Fittings} HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH L1020 Farnam Streeot. Omah \SPECIAL NOTICE TO Growers of Live Stock and Others. WE CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO Our Ground OQil Cake. the best aud cheapeet food for stock of any [kind. One pound s equal to three pounds of cor with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winur,llnuwnd of riming down, will P good marketable condition in the spring. Daieymen, ns well as others, who use it can testify Try it and judge for yourselves. .. Price $25.00 per ton; no charge for sacks. _Addroes WOODMAN LINSEND OIL, COMPANY Opiaba e 2 in welgh UNITED STATES thies upon the ‘“‘stump.” Urged on by a riotous popular clamor, the Mexican congress, which has ad- journed until April, dealt promptly and incisively with President Gonzales' nickel coinage scheme. Nickel money is now legal tender in Mexico only to the amount of twenty cents; the government is pledged not to pay out more than b per cent in_one payment, and agrees to re ceive nickel for customs to the amount of 50 per cent in January and a lesser sum each month until 10 per cent is reached. The nickel coined whighed 560 tons, the amount legally fixed being four million dollars in one, two and five-cent picces, Among the reforms promised on the re- assembling of congress are a reduction of the tariff and a general introduction of the bonded warehouse system, The patience of the pope appeara at last to have outworn the persistence of Prince Bismarck, The obnoxious Falk Iaws have been repealed, and the Prus- sian government again undertakes the payment of the salaries of the Catholic clergy 80 long denied them, Arabi Pasha has been heard from. He says he has no desire, at present, to go back to Egypt. Hethinks El Mahdi will make matters interesting for the khedive and the Fnglish., THE GREAT n‘ BERMAN REME x OR P AIN. CURES Rheumatism, Neural Lumbago, Backache. H MENNELSOHN, ARCHITECTS SREMOVED 10 OMAHA NATIONAL BANK BUILDING g Naomal B OF OMABA, Capital, - - $100,000.00 C. W.HAMILTCN, Pres’'t. 8. S. CALDWELL, V. Pres't. M. T. BARLOW, Cashler. DIRECTORS : 8, 8, CarvweLL, B. F. Smimh, C. W. HamiLron, M. T. BarLow, C. Wi Haminron, Accounts solicited and kept sub- Ject to sight check. Certificates of Deposit | ed pay able In 3, 6 and 12 months, bearing Interest, or on demand without in- terest. Advances made to customers on approved securities at market rate of interest. The Interests of Customers aro closely guarded and every facllity compatible with principles of sound banking freely extended. DOraw sightdrafts on England,ire land, Scotliand, and all parts of Eu- rop! 8ell European Passage Tickets _ Collections Promotly Maae. Western Comice-Works, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING. C. SPECHT, PROP. 1111 Douglas 8t. Omaha, Neb. MANUFACTURER OF Balvamizea Iron Cornices ‘Dormer Windows, Tin, Tron and Slate Specht's patent Motallio Skylight, Patent adjusted Ratchet Bar and Bracket Shelving. 1w ron ho general agent for the above line of aclig, Oroeti H v, Balustrades, Verandas, Ir Windos Bukds, Cellar. Ouards; Sise Poersond Hill ' atent (nside Blind ¢ ¥ TuN ALK, 9 i SAtER s SeAle pe, B0 OTIEK SIZES. RILE LIST | FORGES, TOOLS, &c. T s [ MAX MEYER & C0., * IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES: SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 to $120 per 1000. i AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: ! Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming ané . Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES, i~ A.H. DAIIL.FEY ., MANUFACTURER OF FINRE Buggies Carriases and Suring Wagons My Raposttory ls constantly flled with & selootetook. Best Workmanship guaraatoed i Office and Factory S, W. Corner 16th and Caprtol Avenue, Qmaha. I 0. M, LEIGHTON, H, T, CLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, KSUOCCESSORS 70 KENNARD BROS & 00.) Wholesale Druggists ! —DEALERS IN— y Oils, Brushes. Class. B At NEBRASKA. Paints OMAHA,

Other pages from this issue: