Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 15, 1884, Page 4

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THE OMAHA BEE. Omaha Office, No, 916 Farnam St. Council Bluffs OfMoce, No. 7 Pearl Btreot, Near Broadway. New York Office, Room 65 Tribune xooph Sunday The Pablished every morni only Monday morning daily. One Year.. L] Six Monens . 1.00 or Weok, 2 Conts. NKLY RN, FURLINITRD SVNRY WEDNRADAT, TERMS POSTPAID. Gne Yoar... X 4 50 Bix Months. . 00 20 Amerioan News owsdeal- mpany, Solo Agente o In the United Statos. CORRRAFONDRNOR, A Gomemunications relating to Newns and Edltorls Sabers should be add 10 the Eorrom or Trms SUBINRSS LATTARS. | All Business Tetrors and Romittanoes should be #d irossed to Tirn Brn PURLINHING COMPAXY, QMAHA- Drafts, Cheoks and Postoffico ordors to be made pay Wbl ta the order of the company. THE BEE PUBLISHING CO., PROPS B. ROSEWATER, Editor. A. H. Fiteh, Manager Daily Circulation, P, 0. Box 488 Omaha, Neb. AcAIN we are assured that Sam Tilden will not be a candidate for the presi- dency. We ought to hear from Dr. Mil- er now. Mz. Broaton will presently find out that he has played into the hands of the railroad gang, only to be sold out by them. < the railroads are out of politics,” yet they want Mr. Thurston to represent them in the national republican convention. TreRe is no truth in the report that the United States senate intends to ad- journ until Pat O. Hawes returns to Washington. Tae paved streets of Omaha are about as muddy as those that _have not been paved, and they should be immediately cleaned and hereafter kept clean. As 10Ne¢ as Douglas county sends to conventions delegates that are elected by ballot-box frauds, through the rascality of such shysters, as Sahler, Hawes and Bennet, no rospectable republican ‘can support the party nominees. Tre most profitable field for news- paper roporters is the little state of Con- necticut. The New Haven News shows that the legislature of Connecticut has since 1870 voted $38,750 to newspaper reporters as out.and-out gratuities. And now Ben Batler, it is said, is going to write a book, This, however, seems scarcely credible. The people of the United States do not generally like Ben, but they have never done anything to him to call for such a terrible revenge. We shall presently see whether the republicans-of Nubraska are so wedded and welded to monopoly that they can- not find material for delegates to the national convention, except among tha railroud attorneys and monopoly cappers. Bob Ingersoll says: ‘“If I had the privilege of picking out the president I would name John M. Harlan, of the United States supreme bench. He comes from Iowa. He is about fifty years of age, and is a man of bravery and splendid ability,” It is to be hoped that Col, Bob knows more about the ability of his candidate than he dves about his nativi- ty. Judge Harlan does not come from Jowa, but from Kontucky. Iowa has one Harlan to struggle with and that is enough. Sem————— “‘OprNion” is the name of a new weekly, literary and political paper in Denver. It is edited by O, H. Roth- aker, formerly oditor of the Denver|i? Zribune. He is a brilliant writer, and wlll succeed in his enterpriso if talent meets with its proper reward, The first numbers of *‘Opinion” present a very neat appearance typographically, and are filled with a pleasing variety of able original articles, together with the wchoicest selected miscellany. ‘Tuz contested election case of Fred- ericks vs. Wilson, from the Fifth Iowa ) [ slightest care to keop that mechanism in -district, has been settled by the house selection committee. The report will give the seat to Fredericks, the democratic contestant. There will besome disposi- tion to complain of this decision on the ground of partizanship, but asa matter of striot justice,jit is hard to take any excep- tion to it. It will be remembered that ‘Wilson, the republican candidate, was first aeclared elected by what seemed to e less than 100 majority, The investiga- tlon which Fredericks caused to be begun, however, soon showed enough errors and fraudulent votes to make it cortain that the declared result was incorrect, This was admitted by » good many republican papers in the district. — *SA DAILY sufterer” writes to the Bek|they enter college. to ask why cows are allowed to run at|dently intended to bring out a strong large, and if thore is a law against turn- achan ‘ ing the city into & cow-pasture why it is | students, not only in their studies, but|i® Still » temporary expedient. When not enforced, There is a law providing |in their general conduct, that is to against the running of cattle at large,and |say that If he would do|the same careful his duty a little more energetioally he | at college as they are at home, There is could easily abate the nuisance, The|a growing tendency among certain col- trouble is that whenever he impounds a|leges to throw off all restraint over the |promised exhibition of this wonderful cow belonging to some person who thinks | student, and to exercise no authority |invention was to have taken place on ho has the right of free pasturage in the | over him except when he is in the class- stroots, in the private lawns, and back- |room. In such colleges the student, when | of the world, it didn't come off. Keely . yards, there is 8 howl raised about the |once out of the class-room, is per there is & pound-master. tyranny of the pound-master. Communi OMAHA DAILY BEE,~TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1834+ HOUSE CONVENIENCES. are to-day the most popular among young men, but they are without doubt the least beneficial. Little or no attention is paid to moral or religlous training or the building up of sterling character. Dr. McCosh in his circular says that “‘the question of care or no care of the conduot of students will within the next fow yoars be decided in our larger col- leges, and tho smaller ones will be pow- erless to resist the tide.” Dr, McCosh belioves that unloss the paronts encour- age the college faculty to continue their supervision of the moral conduct as well as tho mental training of their sons, they will feel as if their duty ended simply with instruction in good order, Plumbers, left unwatched the studies of the college course. It can- and working with materials that are not [ not bo denied that the college takes the understood by the generality of mankind, | place of the parents, and as such guardian often use inferior articles and still more |it should exercise over the student the often put in inferior work. This is ac- [same watchful care that hd has received knowledgoed by the better class of plumb- [at home. We believe that the college ors, yet it is certain that many house- conducted on such principles, instead of holders, even thoso who belong to classes | upon the free and easy plan, will receive which ought to know better, are so the hearty endorsement and patronage thoroughly careless, untidy and even un-|of thoughtful parents who want their Tae Bee a fow weeka ago published an interesting and instructive article from the Philadelphia Record upon the sub- ject of house sewerage, which was, no doubt, appreciated by those of our citi- zens who are erecting buildings and put- ting in water works in buildings already erected. The same paper recently pub- lished an article upon water closets, traps and sinks, which will be received with equal interest by householders genorally. There are very few householders, says the Record, who understand anything about the mechanism of a trap or a closet and fewer still are there who take the clean in their havits that the very best|8ons to become not only educated, but of plumbing cannot long remain 1 good | moral and upright men. order. eI v The usual idea is that whatever sys- PENSION AFFAIRS. tem exists for the purposo of removing| The house pension committee has cut tho excreta of the body and the refuse of | gown the appropriations for pensions the house must of necessity run itself, | 820,000,000, This leaves 886,000,000 to and be proof against any amount of ill- | hg expended for this purpose during the treatment. Servants throw water con-| oyt fiscal year. It has also been de- taining a large proportion of solid matter | sided to reduce the number of pension down the small waste-pipe leading from agents to twelve. Any signs of economy a bath; throw kitchen refuse into the|;, ¢his department are gratifying, and a soil-pipe and remove bell traps from | gy ¢her disposition to retrench might be sinks, and then the mistress of the house | g},own without doing much harm. The wonders why there is a goneral stop- | present pensions are certainly liberal Ppage. enough. There should not be any at- The best water closet is that which [ ompt to increase them. There is such a is most stmplo. The ordinary pan closet | thing as too much of a good a thing. The is complex and always out of order. It|demagogues who pose in congress as the may be defined as a hopper with a pan | frjend of the soldier are in danger of at the bottom, emptying into a lower|pringing it about. An enormous crop of hopper when a handle is pulled. As the | schemes to increase pensions has grown flush of water is never very great, and as|yup in the present congress, 1t should be it isimpossible that what there is can | carefully cut down. The soldiers have no reach all parts of the hidden hopper be- | qegire to be made paupers. They do not low the pan, the former moon be-|want the government to support them. comes foul—becomes, in fact, a smsll|The various plans to reward theable- cesspool within the house, discharging its | hodiedas well as the disabled veterans, by gases upward whenever the handle is|aiq from the treasury, are as distasteful to raised, as well as more slowly through its | tho soldiers themselves as they are to the junction with the upper hopper, aud at | rigid economist. One of these schemes the insertion of the crank of the pull. fiy to grant every soldier who served in Moreover, the quaniity of water rotaned | tho war three months or more, and re- in the pan is often insufticient to form a | ceived an honorsble discharge, a pension barrier in the escape of gas, on accountof ( of 88 s month. To do that would use up the imperfect closure of the pan, or the ()] the surplus revenues and a good deal want of water in the supply pipes. The |more, It would be the most expensive pan closet is usually not supplied with a [ yndertaking the government has had cistern, but depends for flushing entirely | gince the war. The soldiers do not want upon the flow of water in the supply |jt, A soldier who is able to support pipes. Substitute for this a simple hop- | himself would be ashamed to take it. por provided with an § trap, and lst the | Another scheme is to ponsion all the sur* flushing be done by pulling a string at- | vivors of southern prisons. This would tached to a cistern so arranged that an (o to reward a good many who do not amplo charge of water shall follow the|deserve any reward along with pull, and the chances of the escape of |4 fow who do. Large numbers sewor gases are greatly diminished. of brave and honorsble men were There are numberless varioties of traps, | oonfined in southern prisons. With them but all—whether round, squave or|galso were greater numbers who simply elongated. whother 8 traps, bottle traps, | got into the prisons to get out of the way D traps or mechanical traps of any pat- | of the flyingshot. To pension all indis- entee—are arranged upon the principle criminately would be a very poor way to of a siphon, in the lower part of which | roward valor. Of course wherever a man water remains permanently, whilo the | nas boem disabled by service on the field, material that passes down the pipe is | or unfitted for active life by confinement forced around the curve by the force of |in prisons, or suffered in any other way the water used in flushing. Unleas the | 4 permanent injury for his country, there soil pipe is too large the exit of the|is no objection to his being pensioned. greater portion of the refuse matter can | hut the limit of these has been more than be assured, and any gases that may arise | reached for some time. 1t is time to from the small portion rotained in the | stop,unless we turn pensioning intowhole- soil-pipe of each house should be got rid | sale alms-giving and do more harm than of by ventilating that pipe. But there|good. The sum of $86,000,000 in one is always a risk that, from various causes, year for pensions is large enough., There the water in the trap may be forced or |ghould bo care taken that it is not made drawn out, thus leaving free passage any larger, to the gases of the sewer. What| The reduction of the pension agents to called an 8 frap, consisting of 8 |iwelve is another good thing. We believe piece of pipe bent in the form of that | that they might be reduced to a still letter, is the most effective trap, but may | gmaller number without doing any be improved by the addition of a globu-harm, The pension agent at pres- lar chamber and rubber ball at one end, | ent is usually the best paid man for the soarranged that tho ball, driven away | work he does in the whole country. Ha from the opening at the top of the cham- | pag a5 near to nothing to do as he can, ber by the force of the flush, will, if that | anq he is very well paid for it. The of- is too powerful, close the opening at the | fie is a fat sinecure everywhere, bottom of the chamber, thus preventing S ———— the removal of a portion of the water in| mgp precedent established by the re- tho trap. An 8 trap should be attached | publican convention of this county in to the main soil-pipe at its junction with | soating tne fraudulent delegations of the sewer, to each branch leading to a|John Sahler and Pat. Hawes, and allow- water closet (unless the closet itself forms | ing them to caat the vote of the Third such a trap), and to all waste pipes lead- | ward is very pernicious. From now onno ing from baths or sinks. The latter should | republican inthis county can justly boast not have bell traps, siuce these are ineffi- | of his party as the champion of a free olent and easily romovable, giving aland fair ballot and an honest count. charce for throwing solid matter down [ Worse than all that, this precedent offers the sink water. a premium to scalawags for defeating the the expressed will of the party by de- stroying ballots and claiming an election upon fraudulent certificates, COLLEGE TRAINING. President McCosh, of Princeton col- ‘ege, who is at present visiting in Omaha, e recently issued a circular to the parents| WHAT does the house of representa- of Princeton students calling upon thom | tives propose to do with the currency to declare that they do not wish moral !)roblelm'l While it is wasting its time in and religious training, which their sons nu? dissensions, the necessity for some havo received at home, to be lost when | Felief to the threatened bank cirenlation This circular is evi- is daily increasing. The senate long ago passed a bill, which though not as good & endorsement of college supervision over | *cheme as might easily have been devised, will the democratic majority allow some business for the country at large to be considered? ' ———— Tux Keely moter still hangs fire, under guardianship they shall be The to kill himself by smoking cigarettes, and | # wind machine. April 10, but like the oft-predicted end ted | now says that the announcement for that to employ his leisure time as ho sees fit, | dsy was eatirely unauthorized, but that ~ eations are published denouncing him as | 1f he is inclined to study the angles of a the fes, takes up the poor man's cow. He | ize saloons, attend horse races, ~ should pay no sttention to these denun- “all will be given to the public in the b Sexator MaxpersoN makes a very studies, there |serious mistake in training with such n_ is just such froe-and-easy colleges that !ing them home to assist in defeating tte honest expreasion of the will of the peo- ple in their choice of representatives. Curses, like chickens, come home to roost. Tue cry is already raised in Iowa for the head of Judge Rothrock, of the su- preme bench. This gentleman commit- ted the crime of deciding the prohibi- tion amendment test case according to law and the dictates of reason. The other judges concurred with him, One of them, Chief Justice Day, has already been retired to private life, simply be- cause of this decision. Judge Rothrock, whose term will expire next year, is the next one marked for punishment. In plain words, the defeat of Judge Day was as infamous an outrage as was ever committed on the sancitity of justice. The slaughter of Judge Rothrock will be as great a crime. It is of no use to bandy words about this matter. If the republi- cans persist in endorsing these attempts to make the suprome court the mere iool of popular frenzy they are going to give the state to the democrats. This is the truth, and every intelligent republican in Towa knows it. CINCINNATI is & gay and festive city, and feativals are all the rage with the people. ‘Within a few months she has had opera, dramatic and music festivals. Now comes a “‘circus festival,” to be fol- lowed by a national cat show.. Cincin- nati is nothing if not mewsical. Broarcu will never see daylight. He is the worst sold out man that ever went out of Douglas county with a delegation. He will go up like a rocket, and come down like a stick. “ Favorite sons to the front,” yells the Boston Advertiser in an excited manner. Baffalo Bill, where are you? ‘What's the Matter on the Moon? Hartford Times, April 8. Signs of peculiar and decisive changes were observed on the slender crescent of the present new moon. An astronomer within the past ten days claims to have discovered something unusual going on in the great peak of Tycho Brahe, a big mountain which has always been a prom- inent object on the eastern side of the moon, L'yche is a volcanic crater, nearly 20,000 teet hligh and fifty miles in diame- ter, and 1t had up to within a few days a peak a mile high, standing in the crater. This peak, which was only a bright spot in the midst of a black crater, has suddenly grown to be a gigantic moun- tain, nearly filling the entire basin of the crater and towering above every other mountain on the moon. It is estimatea now to be thrice as high as it was, and promises some startling phenomena. The moon has been called a deaa globe, but if its internal fires can give it any claims to life it is certainly a living corpse. The signs of a renewal of vol- canic action, which began to be discussed a century ago, are now not merely scien- tific nuts to be cracked by the astrono- mers, but they are claimed to be facts for the people. ——— Not Much for Creditors, Wall Street News. The agent of a Baltimore house who was sent to a town in Virginia the other to see what he could save for his firm of a bad failure, found the merchant per- fectly ready to explain everything. Said o: “I lay it all to speculation. I went into silver stock and lost. I went into iron and iron went down. I bought a coal mine, and it didn’t pan out. I took futures in wheat, and wheat went down like a stone.” ““Wouldn't it have been better had you attended to your legitimate business?”’ Guietly asked the agent. ““No, sir—no, sir! I had scarcely got into debt to the amount of $8,000 before I discovered that I was mnot fitted for mercantile pursuii. If I can get some one to back me for about $20,000 I shall go into the Jersey cattle business, Here's the showing, sir; liabilities $14,250; ae- sets, a character for honesty unsullied.” The Swarming of Bees, American Agriculturalist. ‘Wo often hear the remark, ‘‘As soon as my bees became strong in numbers, and were working nicely in the boxes, they swarmed, and away went all pros- pects of a honey crop.” This inclination to swarm is with many the chief obstacle to producing comb honey. A few years ago mnon-swarming hives were loudly praised (by their vendors); at present, such nonsense would fall on deaf ears. In producing extracted honey, swarming can practically be prevented; but in an apiary run for tomb honey, it never has been prevented, probably never will be, and, if rightly managed, is not undesira- ble. One good method of swarming is the following: By shading and ventilating the hives, and supplying plenty of room in the sur- plus department, swarming with usually be retarded until the colonies have stored considerable honey in the hives and are populous enough to send out large swarms, and a few colonies will not swarm at all. When a swarm issues, set the parent hive to one side, and place on the old stand a new hive having its frames filled with wired foundation, Then cover the new hive with a queen-exeluding honeyboard, setting the boxes taken from the old hive upon the new one; shake the clustered swarm into a basket, cover with a cloth, oarry it to the new hive and shake them down in front of it. The bees will readi- l&ouwr, and, in less than half an hour, oy will again be at work in the same boxes they so recently and hastily de- serted, and with that enargy so charac- vic of & new swarm., It is a great mistake to wait even twenty-four hours before giving boxes to a newly-hived swarm, As soon as they have fairly aotjled down to business, in half an hour, perhaps, place the old hive back alon, the new one, the rear ands naufn touchino, but with the front of the old hive turned to one side at an angle of ! A when the young queoms usually begin to hatch-—the probabilities_are that the old hive, if undisturbed, will send out an. other swarm, This is undesirable, and is prevented by removing the old hive to a new stand, two or three rods distant, on about the sixth or seventh day from first swarming. All the flying bees belonging to it—enough to make quite & little swarm—on returning to the old location, enter the new hive, thus giving its colony another boom, and so ret‘l\ming the num- bers in the old hive that swarming is abandoned, and the young queens are allowed to fight it out for the *‘survival of the fittest.” In about three weeks after the old hive first swarmed itsyoung queen will commence laying, when, if the honey flow continues, it should be given a case of sections, With this management there is 1o opening of hives, no hunting for and entting out of queen cells, no fussing or bother. In the writer's experience, only about one colony in twenty-five has cast an after swarm; none of the first or primo swarms have swarmed; and the amount of surplus honey obtained has been greater than from colonies that have not swarmed. A second or after swarm can be hived npon frames ot wired foun- dations, and the hive placed by the side of the old one and as soon as the queen is fecundated and laying, the entire awarm can be shaken down in front of the old hive, and the drawn out frames of foundation be set away for future use. If a third swarm should issue, it can be treated in the same manner as de- scribed above, by placing it upon the op- posite side of the parent side. In the writer's apiary two large tin pails filled with water are always kept near the shop door, with a fountain pump hanging over them; and if a swarm shows any dis- position to leave, or is slow in clustering when other awarms are expected, it re- coives such a sprinkling that it soon “hangs itself up todry.” With such a pump and plenty of water it is next to impossible for a swarm to abscond. The implement is also useful to prevent unit- ing or clustering of swarms issuing at the same time. Near the tin pails stand two splint cloths baskets, lined with cot- ton cloth, and each basket is furnished with a burlap cover stitched to one side of it. As soon as a swarm has clustered it is shaken into ons of these baskets, the cover flopped over, and if another swarm or something else demands immediate at- tention the basket and its contents can be set one side, to be disposed of at leisure. After seeing the ease with which bees can be managed when allowed to swarm naturally, the energy with which they work, and the excellent results obtained, the writer is decidedly opposed to arti- ficial swarming—and also to queens with clippad wings. In the first place, when the bees swarm the queen has to be found and caged. The bees roam saround a long time, and sometimes finally cluster. If another swarm comes out they are cer- tain to unite with it. When tne bees do return they often go piling into the wrong hive, perhaps hives; and if they do catch on to the proper one, instead of going in they often cluster all over iis outside. Sometimes, after the queen has been allowed to runin she comes out again then of course the bees will follow her. Inmy experience a swarm having an unclipped queen can be hived and be at work in that ‘“‘whooping,” ‘‘zipping,” go-ahead style, in just about the same time that it takes a swarm with a clipped ueen to make up its n.ind, sullenly and goggedly, to go back home. Beware of Lrousers, Louisville Courier Journal. A fashionable tailor in Philadelphia says that he makes a great maay trousers now for ladies in that city. In some in- stances he gets up whole suits of natty male attire which the dear creatures wear about their homes. They haven't devel- oped nerve enough to appear on the trot- toir in bifurcated garments, but some of them are wearing coats this spring and vests which are cut low, displaying shirt- fronts and neckties. ‘‘We make all of Anna Dickinson’s trousers,” said this communictive Chestnut street tailor. It was not generally known that Anna Dick- ineon wears trousers, but information to that effest is by no means so surprising as that the staid ladies of the Quaker citv notonly affect them, but don entire suits of masculine hnk}ilimanu. This desire of woman to get into breeches is unac- countable, except on the general theory that she is envious of man and his pre- rogatives. But we warn her to draw the line of her encroachments on his sphere at trousers, They area delusion and a snare, They are uncomfortable, un- comely and uncontrollable. 1t is simply impossible to keep a pair of trousers pre- sentable except for a few days. A man may regard himself as peculiarly fortun- ate if he secures anything like a *fit” in them; and once secured, it lasts hardly more than a week. Trousars are the one article in man's attire which will not re- main comparatively in statu quo. After having accomplished the rare feat of got- ting them of the exact length—a quarter of an inch too long or too short ‘ruin them forever—the wearer has the morti- fication in a few days of seeing them climbing over his heels, clubbing about his knees and twining about his ankles. They are drawn up as with cramps, and will not condescend to come down except when there is an opportunity to drag themselves through the mud. * * * Financially there are excellent argu- ments against thom. Gunteel trousers cost from §10 to $15 a pair, and as they only remain genteel for about a week, the average swell is generally called on to exercise much diplomacy and occasion- ally to resort to the free lunch in order to keep on his legs, properly apparaled. Ladies who are proverbially fastidious as to dress whould take warning from the fact that there is only one man in the country who is noted for the immaculate- ness of his trousers, and he has ample time and a presidential ealary of $50,000 a year to devota to his pantaloons GRAY'S BPECIFIC MEDICINES, TRADE MARE 18 GRKat L Ry o . Memory, Univer. ~7ORE TARING, saiTawbtude. Pat AFTER in the Back, Dimnoss of Vision, Premature and nany obher diseasos that lead to Insanity or Con- sumption and & Premature Grave. BEWARS of advertisements to refund money, when ety oo (e forty-five d . All the bees out r: by egroes. when the swarm issued, and all | complied afterwards leaving the old hive, will re- turn to the location and enter the new hive,thus ming” the new awarm already working in the boxes. By turn- ing the old hive a few inches daily, it can in three or four days be brought parallel with and close to :‘- new one. The bees of each hive wil thereafter recognize and enter their own homes. These two hives practically ocoupy the same stand, and if either were removed during their absence the returning bees would enter the one remaning. In the old hive the bees are hatching daily by the thoussnds, and in about “eight da; ter the first swarm issued— paockage of Gray’ -:nlnlm":l‘y' free by mail to pamphlet, which "d. ! ro She Medioioe o sad by al X packases for §6, or W Wl G the focelpt o the tnonoy, by sddr MEDICINE Cb., wutlo, N. ¥. Coh ey p o] e Tt ——— B ——— STEELE, JOHNSON & CO.,, Wholesale Grocers ! H. B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Le¢kwood & Draper) Chicago, Man- ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobaceo Departments, A fnll line of all grades of above; also pipes and smokers’ articles earried in stock. Prices and nnmp{:flu furnished on application. Open orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guaranteed. ABENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & *RAND PO Double and Si;gle E}lny Fower and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMPS Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,{ Belting, Hose, Brass and [ron Fitting Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHUROW AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb PERFENGTION 1 Heating and Baking Tn only attained by using 'R 0O Stoves and Ranges, @l WTH WRE GAUZE OVER DOOR Fet sale by MILTON ROGERS & SONS ' OMAHA J. A. WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lmber, L, Shingles, Piekets, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Union Pacific Depot, - HENRY LEHMANN JOBBER OF Wall Paer and Window Shades. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED. FARNAM STREE - . 1 OMAHA NEB 0. M. LEIGHTON. H. T, CLARKE. LEIGHTON & CLARKE, SUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & C0.) Wholesale Druggists ! —DEALERS;IN— Paints. Oile. BErushes, OMAH - Clasxz. CIAT AT C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist ! AND DEALER IN Paints Oils Varnishes and Window Glas OMAHA. NEBRASKA AL EL. DATL.ETY, MANUFACTURER OF FINE Buggies Carriaoes and Spring Wagons MY Beposltor is onesantly filled with & selet stook Dow warkmeuunip gusrnteed. Office and Factory S, W. Cor. 16th and Capitol Avenue, Omaho, Neb. AT LINAAKNITID YWILLIIVIRINTIU Willimantie Sf 0ol Cotton is entxrel{ the product of Home 1ndustry, and is pronounced by experts to be the best sewing machine thread inghe orld. FULL ASSOKTMENT UONSTANI.‘T;Y ON HAND, dnd or sule by HENLEY, HAYNES & VAN ARSDEL, \ mbe Omuha, Neb, MAX MEYER & C L} IMPORTERS OF ’ HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO CIGARS, TOBACOOS, PIPES § SMOKERS' ARTICLES CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 to $120 per 1000. AND (HE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT OIGARS: wr, | Combination, Grapes, P;o 038, Nebraska, Wyoming WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES IOR Plul LIST AND SM‘I i ik 5 R #“_‘_“

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