Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 9, 1884, Page 4

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THE OMAHA BEE. Omaha Ofce, No. 916 Farnam St. Council Bluffs OfMice, No. 7 Pearl Near Broadway. Now York Office, Room 65 Tribune Bullding. Sk every_worning, exoept Sunday The ‘morning daily. RS BT MATEL #10.00 | Three Months 5,00 | One Month... Por Wook, 25 Conts, WKLY B¥W, PUBLISHED NVARY WEDKRADAY. Pablished only Monday One Yoar.. Bix Mons, TRRMN PORTPAID. $2.00 | Three Months. 00 | One Month .. Amerioan Nows Company, Sole Agonte Newsdeal- e In the United States. CORRRSPONDRNOR, Oommunleations relating to News and Editorial mabors should be addressed 1. the. Korron or T Bas, BURINRSS LwTTRRS. All Business Lotvora and Reinittances should be addrossed to Tra BER PURLISHING COMPANY, QARA- Cheoks and Postoflico ordors to be made pay able ta the order of the company. THE BEE PUBLISHING C0,, PROPS B. ROSEWATER, BEditor. A. M. Fitoh, Managoer Daily Ciroulation, P. 0. Box 488 Omaha, Neb. ‘WintER is lingering too long in the lap of spring. Winter must go. Arrer four months of coquetting, the Burlington road trips gracefully into the arms of the tripartite, and the old pool is restored. for Logan for president. Mr. Logan seems to have his back-sets like the rest of his oandidates. Tne gun-stores of Cincinnati have been doing a rushing business since the riot. Mon who never before thought of poing armed have invested in self-cock- ing revolvers. The early resignation of John Jay Knox, comptroller of the currency is rumored in Washington. Mr. Knox has made a very effectual, intelligent and satisfactory officer and it is to be hoped that the report is not true. Donuque, Davenport and Keokuk have been carried by the democrats this spring asa result of prohibition, Du- buque and Keokuk were democratic be- fore, but the repnblicans usually elected some of the aldermen. This year the demoorats carry everything, These cities are in the river or wicked counties. Xr) not unlikely that Bradlaugh may ~wuooeed in getting into the house of com- . mons, if s©lives long enough, chrough the total abol, tion of the oath. The sen- timent against that useless old form is gaining ground. .7our hundred promi- nent olergymen of the ®stablished church bave signed a dclsratt® in favor of -substitating an aflirmation. e e ‘Wauy should not the postage om news- papers be reduced? The people surely have almost as much interest in such A ey ‘banquet of the Iroquois club, at Chicago, good topic. Tue members of the civil service com- mission are quite sure that the new law is working in a very satisfactory manner. Undoubtedly it is for them. But to have seem to be a very brilliant success, Lemans, Iowa, is no place for poe An ambitious young rhymster, Howard O. Tripp, published a little volume enti- tled “‘Logends of - Lemars,” which irri- tated some of the sensitive citizens of that prosy town, He was warned to leave the place, if he valued hus life, mno attention to the warning, and the other eveniug he was shot and killed by an unknown assassin, Spring poets ought to take warning, and give such un. Ppootic towns as Lomars & wide berth. Semm—— Bora of our sens have now been earved in wood. Benator Manderson’s picture has at last appesred among the **wood-cut illustrations” of the *'pictorial press.” The Hon, W, F. Cody, better known as Baffalo Bill, gets away with our senators, o has been done in wax in compsany with Blaine, Hancock, and Robling, and placed on exhibition in & New York “wax-figger” museum. No- braska’s great wmen are coming to . the front and we are proud of them, SIS Durie the Cuwcinnati riot Tom Camp- bell,who was Berner's lawyer, barricaded his premises and armed himself with five ‘Winchesier rifles, two shot guns and sov- eral revolvers. Siuce the trouble has quieted down ho has had his lifo insured for $20,000, and now his oftice is besieged with life insurance agents. He duily re- goives threatening lotters, and it is half that the insurance agents are _pusting up a job on hiw to soare him into taklog more insarauce. Under the cir- . ) ANty e \ 4 T8 10 YRR R T35 1. EQUAL TAXATION. The movement in favor of the equal taxation of railroad property is gaining ground. Now Jersey is about to adopt a law providing it, and an extra session of the California legislature is busily con- sidering it. The situation in California is remarkable and deserves more than a passing notice. For three or four years the railroads have defied the laws and re- fased to pay the taxes assessed them. They openly announced their intention of disregarding the stat- utes, and their position was sustained by a decision of the United States circuit court. Public indignation against the insolence and triumphs of the railroads has increased until the governor has been compelled to call a special session of the legislataro to consider the matter. Un- der the pressure of the emergency, this session is devising some legislation which other states would do well to imitate. The same abuses, though in a less flagrant way, exist elsowhere. In otherstates the railronds do not announce their intention of defying the laws, but they manage to exempt an enormous amount of property from assessment and taxation, How to provent these great frauds upon the State is one of the serious questions of the day. There are three principal points which | ; the Californians have thus far brought forward in the laws which they have pre- pared. These are the taxation of railroad bonds, the taxation of franchises and the | . assessment of the entire property of the road at its full value. Bills embodying these points are now pending, All mortgages, bonds, deeds of trust and other evidences of debt, except such a8 may bo made by the United States or the atate of California are to bo assessed a8 interests in the property which they cover. Their amount is then to be sub- tracted from such property when it shali be assessed. When the property so covered exists partly in and partly out of tho state, the board of equalization is to ascertain the value of the whole, and fix the nssessment accor¢ing to the propor- tion which lies in the state. The fran- chiscs and the rest of the property of the rond are to be assessed in much the same way. Franchises aro to be considered as much the object of taxation as road bed orrails. The value of the entire road, through its whole extent and including franchise and other property, is to be as- certained and the assessment fixed ac- cording to the ratio lying within the borders of the state. The justice of these three reforms is very olear. It is ovident that a mortgage is just as much a piece of property as & house and lot and should bo assessed in the same way. It makes no difference whether a railroad mortgages its road-bed through two or three states, or a man mortgages the house in which he lives, The idea that the mort- agée on a railroad through a state should escaps the taxation which the owner of a house must pay is to the reduction as they have in cheapened let- ' last dogree unjust. It is still more plain tor rates. Having out down lotter post-[y hat itis just and ought to tax a fran- #go us far as practicaple, the next step|cp, se. should be to reduce newspaper postage, proy ‘erty as a road-bed. if it can be done withont ocsusing a seri- [} 5 yeat deal more valuable, The rail- ous dyficit in the department's receipts. | roaq 1. uys the right ‘of way, justas it b A 1ight of way is just as much Often it may uys rails and ties. Itisa definite and J. Srarna Mowtox is going to lift | yyngible . form of wealth and it should be up his melodious voice at the coming|i.red like wther forms of wealth, But the most commendable of these on the 16th. We do not know the sub-|eforms is that which provides for assess- jeot which Mr. Morton is going to|jyg the entire rond at its true valua, Al- illuminate with his eloquence, but if it| ;.. every state .in the union has been would not be considered presumptious, | Jofrauded of imme.nse sums by not fol- we would suggost that “Tho Forlorn|yiying this justand equitable system. Hope; or, the Lost Leader of tho No- |y iy gvident that the value of the road brasks Democracy,” would be a pretty | iy not merely its track here and its cars there, but it is what the whole will bring in the market. with another road may be a great deal more important factor in its real value than the cars or locomotives. management it work satiafactorily for the country is|}0q management may depress its valuo. another matter. Itis very nico for the| sy ¢ while, commissioners to bo jaunting around the | g, * Phig boing true, it follows that the country witheut expense, but as long 88| 100 15 entitled to assess it at its full congressman continue to exercise about |,y e valuo if it lies wholly within the as much influence over appointments to|,i.vo ¢ not, it is entitled to assess at offico as they ever did, the law doesn't|yn, yetio which the portion within the state bears to the whole value. L principle seems 80 easy and clear that no < | one will deny it. fact, it has always been customary for railroads to be assessed at oaly from one- third to one-half of their real value, and millions of dollars are annually lost in Ho paid | S0nsequence. A good connection A\ i may increase or a its value is what it will sell This Yect, as & matter of 1f these reforms can be carried out in Oalifornia and New Jersey, they can and they must be in other statesas well, Discriminations in taxation must cease. Tue idea of appropristing $77,000,000 for tho amistance of schools in states that ought ought to take care of their own schools, at first doos not seem to be very ploasing, These states lie chicfly in thesouth. Tho greatest population of illiteracy is there, As the northern states have built wup their excellent sohool systems mainly without govern- went aid, & good many have thought that the southern states ought to be al- lowed to do the same. But, on the other hand, it is pretty certain that these states will do nothing of the kind, They have not made much progress in that direc- tion since the close of the war. It is not likoly that they will make much in the uext quarter of a century. Iu the mean- time, hundreds of thousands of children are growing up there in utter ignorauce. The case requires somo extraordinary and purhaps sowe sacrifice, The intelli- geut peovle of the country ought to be willing to make both for the wake of intelligence, The eum appropristed s euormous, but and they cannot be directly given back to the people. They had very much bet- ter be spent on education than squander- od in the wild schemos of useless expen- diture which congress is too ready to de- vise, A great deal of the objection raised to tho bill in its passage through the senato was of a very antiquated kind. A good many senators, mostly of the class who have not conceived a new idea for twenty years, raised the poi-t that it was uncon- stitutional to aporopriate national reve- oues for the benefit of a state, It is just a little too late to raise that objection. After the government has appropriated millions of acres of national lands for the benefit of railroad companies in different states, the giving of money for education sooms a very slight matter. Public schools are certainly as important as giant corporations. A PECULIAR SYNDICATE. We have just received several copies of the following circular letter, from coun- try merchants in Nebraska, who happen to be subscribers of the Beg, and do not propose to be driven into patronizing a paper that does not suit them: Omana, March 26, 1884, From and after date, instead of send- ing out by mail our daily market in cir- cu?nr form, we will make our report through the commercial department of the Omaha Daily Republican. This re- port will be carefully corrected every day us, yThe paper will be mailed to you for 85 cents per month, in advance. It can be ordered through us, or you can send the money direct to the Repub- lioan, Omaha l‘ireb. s st . ‘ery truly yor i Mu?n{m) & Prck. This is a rather novel partnership, but we apprehend that it will not draw pa- tronage to either of the partners in the duplex movement, No reputable news- paper would allow any firm of produce dealers to monopolize its commercial col- umns, and no firm that has correct ideas of its relations to its patrons would, for the sake of savinga paltry sum for printing, consent to act as a stool-pigeon for a readerless newspaper. Tae Brr has time and again rejected propositions to prostitute its commercial columns for the sole benefit of some particular commis. sion house, wholesale dealer or banker, who was willing to pay for such exclus- iveness. Our aim has and always will be to publish reliable market reports, pro- cured from various dealers and carefully revised by our paid staff. The imposi- tion in which Messrs. Millard & Peck have become principals is strikingly illustrated by the com- mercial column of the Republican. That column informs the patrons of the Repudlican that all the quotations are corrected daily by Messrs. Millard & Peck. Now, this firm of commission merchants deal principally in fruits and previsions, but they quote live stock, Lay, potash, drugs, hides, tallow, heavy hardware, lumber, liquor, paints, and other articles which they know nothing about. It is all right, however, as long a8 the new syndicate may find it profita- ble. It saves the Republican much labor and expense and may be the means of adding five or six subscribers to their list. It saves Millard & Peck the expense for printing ciroular market reports, and the cost cf mailing, and possibly will give this great commission house the usual commission as agents in procuring subseriptions for the Repubd- lisar, The cowmtry merchants who do not want to pay money for the monopoly paper will find the commerrial reports of Tuk Bee fully as veliable and certainly less partial than these furnished by the thrifty commission house. The direct results of the investigation of the Copiah outrage may be small, but the indirect results are uufavorable. The Vicksburg Herald, the leading paper of the South, in commencing upon the tes- timony of one of the witnesses before the committee, says; *‘Tustesd of being tor- tared by his inquisitors, Mr. Barksdale should have prized the opportwmity to hurl in their faces the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth about the sentiments of the white citizens of Copiah, of the state, and of all the southern states, That truth is, that they will not submit to negro leaders. Rather tham do it they will: Rl them. This is the simple, valuable truth, snd the sooner the whole country. is. prepared to aooept it, that the two races may ad- just their own relations, the better for all. This is no threat, for any white people on Gud's earth would do the very samo thing vader similar circumstances. The whites of Massachusetts wonld not be nearly so patient as tho whites of Mississippi have been, The Heradd may be regarded as justly representing the sentiment of the south. As long ay that sentiment is of the kind ropresented above, there will be the best of grounds ‘for opposing the eomtrol of country by the south Tug victory of the opponents of the wool tariff was really the defeat of the democrats, If, with their large major- ity, they could not carry a question of such vital importance to party interests by wmore than seven votes, it is ewvident that their divisions will be fatal to them, Tho number of prominent democrats who voted for the restoration of the duty is too large to be disregarded, The out- look for the Moarrison bill now looks more gloomy than ever. A TERRIPORIAL board of inspection is viding over the different railroads J Dakota with the alleged pur- poaso of fiuding why the farmem complain 8o much ageinst the gamstances it seoms to us that he would | ic is oue which the country can afford to| companies and what should be done to “be almost justified in turuing loose his give. The surplus revenues which an'remedy the trouble, This board was ap “ arsenal upon the hungry horde. Nothing } excessive tarill is piling up in the troas'poiuted by the governor of the territor ‘bat & Winchostor can bold » lifo hlnr-.'nry must be spent in some way, They | 1o do this work, the impression being, | kounwflwnllwnenl to lie in the vaults, {apparently, that the faxmers were uvu‘uluip tospeak for themselves. The superin- tondents and managers of the railroads interested accompany the party, probab- ly to apeak for the dumb or diffident farmers. 1t will bo a pleasant trip for the board, and they wi'l enjoy it very well. All the information which they pretend to secek, however, could be obtained without one of them leaving his home. The farmers are complaining be- cause the railroads, having them at their mercy, are charging them extertionate rates for freight and elevator privileges. The way to stop the complaint is to stop its cause. e —— Tar house of representatives has an- other perfectly plain oase of a forfeited land grant to deal with in the affair of the Orogon Central. This road received u grant of 1,130,880 acres, on condition that it should build a line from Portland to Astoria, and from Forest Grove to the Yambhill river, in all a distance of 144 miles. The company constructed a road 25 miles from Portland, and built a few more miles on the Yamhill division and then left it. Soon after the Oregon Central was swallowed up by the Oregon & California, and finally fell iuto the possession of the Transcontinental com- pany by whom it is now operated. Of course the grant to the original company is forfeited and should be so declared, that these lands may be open for settle- ment. The house, however, shows a dis- position to goat the forfeiture very gin- gerly. Some demagogue in the New York legislature is trying to get an amend- ment tacked to the civil service bill, al- lowing soldiers and sailors in the late war to be appointed to positions without any examination. This is giving us too much of a good thing. The soldier is entitled to great consideration in many ways, but he hasno claim to and does not want exemption from the rule that enforces competency. If silly senti- mentalism like this continues to be dis- played, there will be a reaction that will do the soldier more harm than afy num- ber of such laws can do him good. STATE JOTTINGS. FREMONT, The trustees of the normal school are ad- :mlulng for bid for the erection of the build- ng. Aw\rdlng‘ to The Erlhullx‘e‘, F““Lfil ontest needs are a porl ng establish- Font and & base ball dub, S The Fremonters skirmishing for claims in the Long Pine country, were side tracked sixteen miles this side of Valentinein snow drifts for thirty hours last week. Judge Savage will deliver an address before the Shukespeake club at the opera house, on the evening of the 23d, in commemoration of the birthday anniversary of Shakespeare. Itis almost unnecessary to say that the distin- guished judge will' do honor to the memory of the ‘‘immortal bard.” LINCOLN, The horso traders of town had become so bold and dishoneat that the power of the courta had to be invoked to break up the gang and teot the farmers doing business in town. AT Rahid wis 0 get » farmer drunk, fix up a trade and swindle him eut of a good horse or team. The big wells are likely to prove diluted Blessinge: The pumps aro how throwing water from $he well at the rates of 100,000 gallons a day. In comsequence of this enormous drain surrounding wells are drying up,eausing much complaint aus inconvenience. Fhis indicates » limited supply of water at the capital which will muterially ‘adyance the demand for “atraight goodd,” BEATRICR. Mr, J. G. Pollock, of Norfolk, bas taken charge of the U. P. depot here, suecooding Mr. Robinson, The Express reports that a bus driver of that piace was hickad in_the face by & horso and severely injured. It is remarkable as the only instance on reeord in which hackman's chaek evar suffered. Uri Far hus_aaked for an injunction to ro- strain the board of education from proceeding. with the srection of the high school building inthe park. He lives two blocks from tho park yet ho claims itwould do bim irreparable injury, " Che wit 1o s ¥ fotched teckol- ity. GRAND: BLAND. The buildings are being oved off the ground purchased forright of way by the B, & M. Grand Island now has three bauks with combined capital of $150,000 aud deposits amounting to #300,000. We tremble in our boots is perpendiculas, for Grand Tsland is after th sealp of Omahavand Linevln, Like a toad in & mud puddle s H:auhim, *'We hereby ive notice that Grand Island rl;po-u to have the stato fair in 1885 and for five years thareaftor, aud she has people here who know just how. t0 go to work to get.it, and just how to make a wuccess of it r she does get it and Omaha, may as well take a back seat now that Grand Islandhas put on her war puint; all things considered, there is no other town in Nebraska anythivg like as favorably situ: wted, 6a oven our hain| THE BYATE IN GENERAL. Oakland lacked owly thres votes of being | without saloons for the year 1854, North Loup claima the bakery, shelxing and ! counter fur viuietyof colur and quality ot dog: The temperance ticket was downed in York. by forky votes, Nor six years the town hew been without saloons, Burglars got inte three saloons in Sebuyler Thuesday bight, and secured abeut.$40iu | woney, busides & Jb of cigars, whisdy, eto. It veems that the woassumiog littls town, ofs Gibbon 1 about % put on mmumunm Sheis to have a talephone exc! Kearsey. Congressman Laird has introdiged bills. to orgwnizo » tarm.of the U. 8, cours at Hastings sud apgroprisiog 875,000 for tho-erectiva ofi & Court liouse and. portoflios there, A drunkenhorsemen who roda at.11) gallop through the sresks of Neligh, was. token, i, B w yell, or » » his clpper greased and firled total of $20., He had & yell o u tiue. lasted, The track of the St. Paul & Omahs road ia Burt and Washington counties is in wbad way owing to.water on the low lands, A wise train northbownd jumped the track near e last week. Four horses in ene car were ki bud. Falk Qity 1 happy now that the ulls iooemn. > Tn & wael’s tme $10,000 "iha. seidesies AR grounds schewe is 4 sicosss. had buen ralsed. of Judgo Dandy have been pus bullding will be rewmodeled ready fur by the it of Septomber, n & 1, aud the theschool loit havd, Loth ‘aavin ne off other. Lousded or empty, .‘m"ufi boys w‘mn-vu harmonize. A Saunders S, th (vith & ¥) pusished wu imwense quan- Wby of Waboo whisky during vacation, and \:, n attew county win, He was cavgh' “‘u the woruis ad takon to the couler to westlo s OLEE U Che Unfon Pacific company iy very fostu Ko wita podagogue uamed d to jump his board bilf aud #to in ity accidents, pervons hnsdly ever wual 10 SEences Ve killed or serionsly injured. T the accident near Sidnoy last week, aithovugh nearly the whole train was off the track, no one receised anything more serious than a faw bruises, Tl}x;\ enyineer and fireman had a pretty close oull, The Springfiald Monitor has seen epectmans of slate and coal from the farm of Frank Min- ton, in Sarpy county, The Monitor says ‘‘the coal is the genuine article, and if it could be found in snfficiont quantities, it would proves sicher mine than any of the Jolorado silver or gnld mines. It is not improbabla that the il along the Platte are underlaid with stra- tums of conl. Frank intends experimenting, and if ho should hit a vein of black diamond, it would prove a blessing to Sarpy county,” The foreman of the grand jury of Richard. son_county in_his report to the conrt, made several important and sensiblo suggestions, which might ba put in practice in other towns than Falls City. He urged “that gambling houses bs licensed and placed under police regulations, owing to the tendency of leadin citizens to perjure thomselves when questioned withroference to this vies, which rendered it impossible for the grand jury to fiud bils against the offenders, So long as the grand jury alone has the power and authority to punish the offenders, and so long as men will violate their oaths with impunity, it is but natural that such vices should exist and four- ish within our midst.” ——— ARE YOU GOING 1O EUROPE? 1n another column will be found_the an- nouncement of Messrs, THOS, COOK & SON, Tourist Agents, 261 Brondway, New York, relative to the very complete arrangemonts they have made for tours in Rurops ths coming Spring and Summer, *“Cook's Exour- sionist,” containing maps and fuil particuiacs, will bo maled to any addross on recoipt of 10 cont The U.P. and O, B & Q. Bosrton, April 8, —A prominent mem- ber of the Union Pacific committee emphatically denies the recent report that the C., B. & Q people demand the breaking up of the tripartite agreement, and nays also the obstacles in the way of a settlement have at no time been of a serious character, and that an agreement satisfactory to all concerned is expeoted to be made at the meeting Saturday next, e —— A Pleasant Party, A number of the friends of Mr. and Mrs. George Lawrence dropped inat their pleasant residence, No. 208 Popple- ton avenue, on Saturday evening. The callers were thoughtful enough to take with them a band and a canvass was quickly placed over the carpet and danc- ing commenced, Everybody was in the beat: of apirts and dancing was indulged in until the merry revellers were reminded that the Sabbath day had put in an ap- pearance, when a sumptuous supper was served and the guests took their de- parture, (uticura POSITWE CURE Jor overy form of SKIN & BLOOD DISEASE PIMPLESTOSGROFULA cleanse the skin, Scalp and Blood of Itching, Scaly, Fimply, Copper Colored, Scrofulous, In. herited, and contagious Humors, Blood Poisons, Ulcers, Abscesses, and Iufantile Skin Zfortures, the Cutlcura Remedies are infallible. Cutlcura Resolvent, the new Rlood Purifier, Diuretio and Aperient, expels from the blood and ~ perspimtion, removes the cause. Cutioura, tho great Skin Cure, instautly allaysitchingand inflanmation, clears the Skin and Scalj s Ulcers and Sores, restores. ra Soap, an exquisite Skin uibite; is indiepensible in or rough, chapped or greas skin, black heads, blotches and baby hassoms; * Cutl curn Remedics aro the only infallible Dlood purifiers and skin beautifiers. Chas. Houghton, Esq., lawyer; 285tate stveet, Bos- ton, reports & case of Salt Rhetm under bis obser. vation for ten years. which the: patient's body and limbe, and to which all’ known methods of treatment had been applied without benefit, which ‘was completely cured solely by the Cutioura’ Reme: dios, 1eaving a clean and healthy skin. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Stebbins, Bekhorbown, Bas., write: Our littloboy was terribly. adiliote wit Scrof. ula, Salt Khoum, and Erysipelas ever sinse be was born, and nothing we could givo him helped him unti? wo tried Cuticura Remedics,. wirich gradually cured him, until he is now as fair any, ohild; H. E. Carpenter, Henderson, N. Y., cured ofPror- insin or Leprosy, of twenty years standing; by Cati- cura Remefes. The most w nderfub cure ow racurd. A dustpan tull of scales fell from hiw daily. ~ Physi cinme and his fridnds fth ugnt ke muss die Cure aworn 10 Leforea justfoo of the pesco aud Hender- son’s mest prominent citizens, Mrs. 8. ¥. Whipple, Decatur, Mich., writes that her fuco, hoad, aiid & mo parts of hoe borly were. a most raw. Head covered with rcabi S fored fearfully and tried everything. Peemavently oused by the Cutlcura Remed.es from & Skin Humor. Sold by all druggists. Prics: Cutioura, 60cts; Resolvent, $1: Boap, 26 ote. PoTrwR DRUG ANDOmHNM. 1048 U0, Haston, Mass, Send tor “How to Cnra 8kin mw‘-lfl‘:" d sores. St REGULARMONTHLY DRAW. ing will take plece in Masenic halli Masenie Halj, MasonicTemdle Building,, Quvington, Ky., Thursday, April* 24th, 1884, A Law'u:l aftbantulbonen a EalOranings, ¥ o leglslagitre of Ky. awice highest cosrt hi Bond County n tim sum of $299,000 for te rizam sold. 1 Prise 43 0 1 Wuiwe, 10,00¢ 1 Prise, L et * Priwow, ol Booe 5 Wrises, 6906 ) 2 Prises, 50U each. 100 10g Prizos, 100 vach.... 10,0060 | 200 Priaes, B0 oacks. 10,900 500 Prises, 20 040>, 00 1080 Prizes, 10 oo Mo ® Prises, 800 vk Approximatien Prizes, 21706 ® Prizes, 200 “ w7 1,0g O Pises, 100 each “ “ oo 1355 Prises. 000,500 Wnole T1okets, §3. AL Tickets, $1 27 Tiokeb), $30, 00 Tickets, $100 et maoney oF ostal Noto Bauk raft in Letters oa beuu b, Expross, Ord - 1] — E. A. KELLEY, M. D. —AND-— C. A. WILSON, M. D, Physicians and. Surgeons | OFFIRS—ROVI'S UPE?A @08 Max A. Th. Boechnolke, Architect! 1511 Farnam St., Room 22, OMAHA, - F.B. YOUNGHUSBAND, Gederal Gollector ! 1503 Farvam Strest, 100m 3,0mabs, Noo. Jollectio. 8 ac Monthiiy ox ¥ gity and couatr Katledads, 0. curity provd Books Kepb i 1 b gencra U kings heet ol au g b of il aik K. Haak ! STEELE, JOENSON & C0, Wholesale Grocers | ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobaceo 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. Double and :S‘ing/e ficfm_y Power and Hand PUNPS, STEAM PUMPS Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,j Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fitt'n Steam Packing at wholosalo and rejsil. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHUROE AND SCHOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb ; Heating and Baking Tn only attained by using =2 CHARTER OA¥ 8toves and Ranges, WITH WIRE GAUZE OVER DOOR Fer sale by %, MILTONROGERS & SON3 OMAHA J. A, WAKEFIELD, 'WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lamber, Lath, Shingles, Piokets SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Union Pacific Depot, - HENRY LEHMARNN JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Shates EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED FARNAM STREE 11 OMAHA NE4 0. . LEIGHTON, fl. T. CLARKS, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, BUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & 00.) Wholesale Druggists ! —DEALERS IN— Paints- Oils. Brusnea, Ciasxz. AR C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints Oils Varnishes and Window Glas OMAHA. NEBRASKA. MAX MEYER & GG 2 IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! i AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO ffl[l‘xARS.TUBAGGDS, PIPES S SMOKERS' ARTICLTS PROPRIETORS ®F THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED EBRANDS: 'Reina Victorias, Especialss, Roses in 7 Sizes from 3¢ to $120 per 1860, AND HM FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CFSARS: Oombination, Grapes, Pragress, Nobraska, Wyoming ana Brigands, WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES wol Cotton 's entirely the product of Home izdostry, and is pronov by < xperts 10 be the best sewing wavhi e thread itk orle, FU ASFOLTMENT CONSTANTLY o8N HAGD, und o 5ol by HENUEY, HAYNES & VAN AR Omn " M. HELLMAN & CO, 'Wholesale Clothiers! i1 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET COR, 13TH HRFVTN . LI . : 1\ H. B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Lockwood & Draper) Chicago, iffax~ AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER 1)

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