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THE OMAHA BEE. Omaha Office, No. 916 Farnam St. Oouncil Binffe OfMce, No. 7 Pearl Street, Near Broadway. Now Vork Office, Room 65 Tribune Building. Pablishea_every mworning, only Monday morniog daily. S BY MATL, 0.00 | Three Montha . 5,00 | One Month. Por Woek, 25 Cents. WRLY RRW, FURLISIND BVRRY WRDNRSDAY, The xoept Sunday TRRMS PORTPAID, #2.00 | Throe Month: 1.00 | One Month . 50 2 Amerioan Nows Company, Sole Agente Newsdeal- o in the United States. CORRRSFONDENON. A Oommunioations relating to News and Editorial {masters should be addressed to the Eprron or Tns el sustonss Lereans. All Business Lettors and Remittances should be addreasod to Trn BRR PURLISIING COMPANY, QMANIA- Dratta, Checks and Postoflice ordors to be made pay bla 0 the order of the company. {HE BEE PUBLISHING CO0., PROPS B, ROSEWATER, Editor. A. H. Fitoh, Manager Daily Circulation, P. 0. Box 488 Omaha, Neb. . Tur tumble in Union Pacific stocks is partly due to the failure to rope the Bur- lington into the tripartite pool. Ir Mr. Pusey can do anything of any value in aid of the bridge, the ‘“‘mint bed” will be forgiven and forgotten. Ir Mike Meaney paid as much atten- tion to the streets as he does to politics he might make a sgood street commis- sioner. Tue disappuinted candidates for the chief justiceship of Wyoming will now have another chance to make a fight for the place, the recently appointed chief justice, James C. Perry of New York, having died suddenly of paralysis. LizureNant Emory, who has been se- lected to command one of the vessels in the Greeloy relief expedition, has been offered $100,000 by his rich young wife if he will refuse to go. And still he per- sists in going. Perhaps ho lives with his wife's mother. Havina refused a present of $100,000, Carl Schurz thinks he can now go to lec- turing, as he believes the people would like to ses the man who threw such a bundle of money over his shoulder. He proposes to begin his lecturing tour in New England. Tae Omaha Herald will now have to trim its sails and begin giving to Charles Francis Adams the taffy which it has hitherto so generously dealt out to Sid- ney Dillon. When Dillon retires from the Union Pacific presidency, Dr. Miller will have no further use for him, TuE first thing which Mr, Hendricks did on returning from Europe was to emphatically deny that he had ever said it would be inexpedient for the demo-' crats to take a presidential candidate from Indiana, Mr. Hendricks evidently wants to get the lightning rod for his -end of the ‘‘old ticket’ into position as soon as possible, TaE Ohio liquor sellers who last year worked so hard for a democratic legisla- tare, in order to get the Scott law re- pealed, are wailing bitterly. The demo- cratic legislature has adjourned and the Scott law stands just as it did before. ‘The democrats promised to repeal it, but they did not dare to force public opinion on such an issue. “Over production” has lighted upon the copper industry also, and the wmine n Michigan which has hitherto paid about 560 per cent. annually will this year skip adividend. Exactly the same causes have brought this about which pro- duced the stagnation 1 the iron trade, The home market being glutted, there is no demand for the output. The same remedy will cure this disease in all cases. It is foreign trade. SexaTor PAvNE's fortune is $20,000,- 000. He has been obliged to have it given out that he is not a candidate for the democratic presidential nomination, as the calls for money from his *‘bar’l” have become 6o numerous and of such magnitade that if ho ucceded to all the requests his twenty millions wouldn't last him through the campaign, Every mail brings him hundreds of Netters “striking” ;him for sums all the way from 85 to $50,000, However, avhen the convention meets it is safe to #ay that Mr. Payne willbe a candidate, -and as the democrats are in favor of nom- dinating *‘a bar'l of money” he will very likely carry off the honur. His ‘‘with- drawal” is only temporary, and isintend- ed as a check to the demands for money. — ‘W occasionally hear of efforts ‘being made *‘to protect the forests.” A meeting was held in New York last week, with this end in view. There wasa ‘brass band present, and several speakers detailed in eloquent language the evil ef- Hects of denuding the carth of its trees. 1t is also noticeable that the subject is ‘being revived with considerable interest dn Minnesots, by some of the newspa- pera. This sort of thing has been going «on for about twenty-five years. The *‘denuding” precess has also been going «n, and one has about kept pace with the other. Forest trees are being de- just as wapidly as they were the agitation first began, and from all that has thus far happened they seem Mb be destroyed for an indefluite Jhbm 1t never seems to have to the good people who are - destruction of for- provision by which luu- be brought from other coun- . T Ghaon i OMAHA DAILY BEE,~-WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1884 “FLAT" HOUSES. Ohicago is having an vxperience with high rents that may be instructive to Omaha. During the last six yeara rents have advanced so much there that the building of “‘flat” or tenement houses has multiplied three-fold. There are great numbers of families that were abundant- ly able, five years ago, to rent houses, and are now obliged, for economy's sake, to rent a fourth or fifth floor “‘flat.” The Herald says that *‘a third floor ‘flat’ on a desirable street rents to.day for as much money as a three.story and base- ment marble front brought six years ago.” In spite of this high rent, how- ever, single houses have advanced so much that the “‘flat” is still the cheaper. The demand for them is so great that they are being erected at the rate of a hundred or two a month. As soon as finished, they are occupied by families forced out of single houses. The “flat” houses are usually built from four to six stories high and frequently ac- comodate forty or fifty families. They are not pleasant places to live in. It may be questioned whether on sanitary grounds people should be permitted to live in them., The ventilation is sim- dly wretched. There isno air but the poisoned air of the crowded streets. There is no sunlight. There is no play ground for the children, who merely grow up like planta that have sprouted in the cellar. There is veryoften sewer gas and always great danger from fire. Many of them look and smell and feel like jails, Human beings cannot be said to have homes in them. They only exist there. Yet vile as they are, many thou- sands of them have been built in Chicago since 1878, and others are being com- pleted and filled with amazing rapidity. The people must live some where. They cannot afford to rent separate dwellings, and they cannot live so far from their business as the suburbs. The flat becomes the only resort of people of moderate means. At the same time there is a large amount of unoccupied land in convenient portions in the city, on which dwellings could easily be erected. The trouble is there, exactly as it isin every growing city, that the price of the land is too high. A landlord can realize three or four times as much by building a flat house as he could by building dwellings. Probably a moderate rent from the latter would scarcely remunerate him for the mere cost of the land. The real source of the trouble is to be found in the ex- orbitant price of the land, and the ra- pidity with which it has risen in the past few years. There is no doubt that tenementhouses are a curso to any city. It would be an unfortunate to have them introduced ex- tensively in Omaha. Yet we are liable to have them. The want of cheap houses within a reasonable distance of the busi- ness portion of the city will eventually create a demand for them, unless it be supplied in some other way. A supply of houses renting from $15 to $25 a month, and situated within the convenient access of those employed down town would be of incalcuable benefit to the growth as well as to the health and morals of Omaha. As long as the price of land is so high, however, there is no chance of seeing it. Tuere is evidently going to be a lively shaking up among the Union Pacific of- ficials, It is stated on pretty good au- thority that President Sidney Dillon is to step down and out, and that he will be succeeded by Charles Francis Adams. 1t will be remembered that a few weeks ago when the annual election took place, Mr. Dillon, as it was given out in the dispatches, was simply re-elected presi- dent as an endorsement ot his manage- ment, with which some considerable fault had been found. It seems after all that theendorsement was simply intended as a compliment to let him down easy. Mr. Dillon is a very old man, and is not in good health, but there are other reas- ons for his retirement, The Union Pa- cific is largely owned by Boston capital- ists, and it is but natural that the Bosto- nians should prefer a Boston man for president. Mr. Adams is himself a large owner of Union Pacific stock, and is the friend of Fred L. Ames, who probably controls Union Pacific affairs more than any other mau, Mr. Adams has within the past year or two been making Yimself acquainted with the prac- tical workings of the road, with a full knowledge, based upon the assurance of Mr. Ames, that he would succeed Mr. Dillon at no distant day, The retirement of Mr. Dillon will not be regretted by the people of Omaha, as he has been the greatest obstructionist to the progress of this city. Mr. Adams who is not interested in bottom lands on the east side of the Missouri river, will at least give Omaha fair treatment, and that is all Omaha asks, She nover had fair treatment at the hands of Sidney Dillon, —— Grnenan James W, Denver, who is out as a democratic presidential candidate, is not a Californian after all. He merely lived in that state fora few years. He resides in Ohio, and for this reason his chance may be said to be very fair, for as a rule an Ohio man hardly ever gots loft, General Denver has established a literary bureau, which has issued his biog- rapby, and the nexv thing will be the usual wood cut in the newspapers, From his bography we learn that he was born in Virginis, now resides in Ohio, and has resided in Missouri, Kansas and Cali- fornia, 8o that he stauds the chance of being & favorite son of five states, His democracy and his Virginian birth make him all right in the south, and his ger. vices in the army, from whiek he resigned lall laws whatsoever. wool question, let them put him up as the candidate to represent the farmers.” Considerable space is devoted in his biog- raphy to his governorship of the territory of Kaneas twenty-seven years ago. For the past twenty-one years he has had no record at all except asa great and good man, ——— THE MARKET HOUSE. The board of trade which has had under consideration forsome time the project for ostablishing a market house in Omaha, has at last adopted a proposition which is certainly a good one. Having failed to find & suitable location that could be pur- chased for less than 50,000 or §75,000, the committee recommended that the proposition of Mr, Thomas Swift and his neighbors be accepted. They pro- pose that a market house, 50 by 284 feot, be erected on Fifteenth street, occupying the west side of the street, and fronting on the sidewalk of Jefferson Square. The property owners accompany their proposition with a waiver of damages. 1t is estimated that a suitable building can be arected for about £12,000, and at a rental of $6 per month for each stall,'the revenue of 100 stalls would be £6,000 per year. The proposition will be presented to the city council, and will probably be adopted, as it solves the market house problem. If accepted by the council the building can be erected and a market established in less than ninety days. That the enterprise will prove successful there is no question. The location is central and convenient to the street cars. The plan is the most feasible that could have been presented, as the money ex- penditure will be a mere trifle, and by this plan we can have market houses in the different quarters of the city at a very small outlay of money. We hope the council will not delay this important mat- ter, as Omaha certainly nceds a market house. ARBOR DAY. Nebraska's arbor day is certainly bear- ing good fruit. Several states, following her example, now have a tree-planting day, and the custom will be established in nearly every state of the union. It was indeed a happy thought on the part of the men who organized the idea. The New York Star says: Ten years ago the governor of Ne- braska inaugurated ‘‘Arbor Day,” and the custom 18 now followed in Minne- sota, Kansas, Colorado, Indiana, West Virginia and Ohio. By proclamation the people of these states are requested to devote one day in April to the planting of forest trees, and thousands of shoots are set into the ground that a generation hence will be of priceless value to the inhabitants of these states. Governor Abbett has inaugurated the custom in New Jersoy, and its adoption is being considered in other eastern states. There are excellent arguments for the custom and none worth speaking of against it. While our legislature is shilly-shallying over jobbing schemes for the preservation of the Adirondacks, would it not be a good idea for the citi- zens of New York state to set them an example of practical forethought and have an arbor day of their own? We commend this suggestion to the gov- ernor. Apropos of arbor days, the Newark, N. J. Advertiser says: *‘Men do not need to be taught the duty of leaving the fam- ily provided for, and they look out for the possible rainy day in their own lives, but of another and future day for the city and country they are more obvious. But Providence wisely orders that the young shall take a fresh and hearty en- joyment in all out-door occupations, aud to plant a tree is a delight tc them, with- out regard to that distant future which their minds are hardly able to grasp. A tree is to them crystallized poetry, an emanation of their own hapny natures. Let that taste and feeling be cultivated Teach them what trees are itable for different soils and situations, nd which will best harmonize with their surroundings, They may live to see some of the fruits and bleesedness of their present labors, and if they do not they will live long enough to rejoice that, in the usefuluess of their hearts they have done something to make the world more beautiful and the people happier.” Ir is becoming a very serious question for the naval department what to do with tho naval officers. There are not ships enough to hold them all, and their num- bers are annually being increased by graduations from the naval academy. There are altogether 1,685 commissioned officers in the department, and less than half are assigned to ships. OFf the rest, 662 are nominally employed on shore duty—which means doing nothing-—and tho remainder, 2064, the secretary is forced to report so frankly as ‘‘unem- ployed.” Scarcely any of the commo- dores have been at sea more than a year or two since 1874, and very few of the other officers have had much practical ex- perience in naval papers. The object of anavy is supposed to be a means of of- fense and defense on the ocean in war, But a navy without ships and without ex- perienced officers to handle ships would not be worth very much in warfare, Considering the results the American na- vy is the most expensive in the world, It causes & serious drain on the national re- sources. ¢ Bumyer, Perry, and the Omaha Z/er. ald" are the three great lights on politi- cal economy in this country, according to Dr Miller. Of course everybody under- stands that the mention of the first two was merely complimentary. The FHer. ald is really the great authority on all economic questions for the whole conti- nent, and the others simply get their ideas from it vs the great fountain head of wiedem —— Tur Standard Oil company has long assumed to be absolutely independent of Therefore it treats with contempt the epecial order of Gov. protty good thing to!iv April, 1863, makes him all right north, | Cleveland, commanding it to abate the from being cut |and beside all that he is & stock raiser in nuissnce it hus established near Now Ohio. “If the people are grioved on the t York, by which a large part of the dtyl 'in filled with horrible smells. It would be interesting to know whether there is any authority in this country which this gang of plunderers is bound to respect. It will take a great deal more than ordinary ingenuity for Congressman James Wilson, of Towa, to explain his action n the Pacific railrond steal. A man who has posed as often as he has as a_devoted and self-sacrificing peer of the people will find it protty hard to tell why ho should be the base and pliant tool of tho monopolies, There never was a plainer case for an honest man’s action than this one offers, Tt is simply a ques- tion as to whether the representatives of the people are to stand by and see the government coolly robbed of millions, or whether they will protect it from the thieves. That is all there is to it. Mr. Wilson, by bringing in a law providing for obtaining the consent of the robbers to let the government go, merely takes the former position. Of course the roads will not consent that the amount they owe the government shall be taken out of their compensation for carrying mails and troops. To beat the government is exactly what they have been trying and are trying to do. To talk about their “‘consenting” to be honest is intolerable nonsense. It is like politely beseeching a burglar who has your goods safely stored away, to give up his swag. A DEIEGATION of people from the Pa- cific coast is about to swoop down upon Gramercy park in a body to ascer. tain the exact truth as to Tilden's physi- cal condition and his intentions as to the prosidency. This is pleasant nows. We shall now have it definilely settled whether Tilden is a tottering paralytic with both feet in the grave, as some have asserted, or a bounding athlete able to throw two men over the barn, as other liars have told us, It seems strange though that a delegation from the Pacific coast should go all the way to New York to discover anything about Mr. Tilden. Is it possible that they have never heard of the editor of the Omaha Herald ? THE utter absurdity of the demund of the Pennsylvania democrats for an aboli- tion of the internal revenue system is somewhat amusing. The internal rev- enue taxes now bring $130,000,000 into the treasury. To abolish them would leave a deficiency of $30,000,000 at the very least. How"would the able demo- cratic financiers supply that? They omitted to say in their platform, but they will have to explain this little point before any considerable number of people outside the insane asylums endorse their sentiments. THosE of our citizens who are contem- plating crecting costly residences this season ought to take advantage of our water-works and put elevators in their hovses. A small passenger elevator for two or three stories can be put in for about 500, and the expense ot running it will be a mere trifle. An elevatoY in a two or three story residence will be found a great convenience, and will save many a step up and down staira. PRESIDENT ARTHUR is quite interested in a daring but graceful equestrienne,whe every afternoon exercises her horse on the circle that lies between the executive mansion and the river. She has a fine horse and rides him in the most reckless manver, The president often watches her from the window of his library and admires her horsemanship, but nobody knows who she is or where she came from. She is uswally attended by a groom in livery, and when she finishes her exer- cise rides off into the northwestern part of the city.—Boston Globe, Is it possible that Omaha’s famous equestrienne, Nellio Burke, is laying siege to the president's heart by means of her skillful and graceful horsemanship? There is nothing too bold for her to at- tempt. Postoftice Changes In Nobrasks, during the week ending April 12, 1884, furnished by Wm. Van- Vleck, of the pastoflice department: Estaolished—Dunn, Lancaster county, Wm. H. Dunn, postmaster, Discountinued — Buckeye, Hamilton county; Chase, Greeley county; Ford, Holt county; Latrobe, Johnson county. Poatmasters appointed-—Cameron, Hall ununt‘{ John M. Stean, Jr.; Ceresco, Saunders county, Horace Adams; Cole- ridge, Adams county, W. H, Pollock; Henrietta, Nuckolls county, Mrs. Minnie Ruhlemann; Lambert, Holt county, Mrs, Laura M. Foster. Name and the site changed—Wells' Mills, Richardson county to Green, and Charles M. willilan appointed postmaster, 10WA. Postoftice changes in Iowa during the week ending April 12, 1884. Established—Holman, Osceola county, David J. Jones, postmaster; Jehn, Boone county, John G Porter; Newport, Lorain county, Si as P. Brogan; Survy, Greene county, 'hos. J. Armstrong, Postmasters appointed—isaxter, Jas- per county, M. D, Burnett; California, Harrison county, A. N. Fountain; Graet- lingen, Polo Alto county, L. N. Bryan; Hastie, Polk county, Reuben Viggor; Irving, Tama county, Florence Twogood; Jameson, Clarke county, Thos. Bernart; Lacey, Mahuska county, A. E. Hower ton; Lineville, Mayne county, B. W, Vanderveer; Littleton, Buchanan county, Jacob Hoffwan; Maine, Appanoose coun- ty, Thos. Gladfelder; Mount Pisgah, Harrison county, John Rolline; Prepara- tion, Monona county, Henry M. Johnson; Tava, Webster county, Rose Donaghu, B The Pool Meeting. Messrs. Kimball, Stebbins and Shelby returoed from Denver Monday, having placed Leadville and Utah business on a satisfactory basis of armed neutrality. The meeting adjourned subject to the call of Commissioner Daniels, after one test vote had been taken on the selection THE STATE CAPITAL. Prominent C., B, & 0. and B, & M. 0ffi- oials 1n the City, In Consultation with the Officials of the Stook Yards Co. How the Railroad Party Barely Missed a Disastrous Accident. An Ejeoted Tramp Suspected of Placing the Obstruction, Trial of Quinn Bohanan for the Murder of Cook. In a Dispute Over the Spelling of the Wora “Peddler” - Other Items. FROM L ‘OLN, B. AND M. MOVEMENTS, Special to TiE Brk. Lixcory, April 16.—T. J. Potter, third vice-president of the Burlington system of railroads; G. W. Holdrege, manager of the B. & M., in Nebraska; Thoras Miller, general freight agent of the 1. & M.;T. E. Calvert, chief engineer and R. J, McClure, consulting engineer of the *Q,” togetherwith some other promi- nent railroad officials. were in the city this morning, having arrived in Manager Potter's car, No. 99, from the west. They have been examining the Holdrege and other |lateral extensions, ana before long Nebraska will hear some important news from the B. & M. There is but little doubt that thelvisit here was for the purpese of consulting with the officials of the Nobraska Stock Yards company in this city. It is undersood that the Bur- lington officipls are very friendly to this movemant and that they will take a practical financial interest in the enterprise. If they do, the U. P. stock syndicate in your city will have a strong competitor that will not only cou- trol the business of the south part of the state, but will make things lively in_ the west, especially when the projected B. & M. line to the Loup country is com- pleted and the talked of branch to Chey- enne put in practical shape. Manager Porter expressed himself agreeably sur- prised with the flourishing condition of Lincoln, and spoke in high terms of the energetic efforts being made to construct a system of waterworks. The party left at 11 o’clock a. m., for Columbus, and will return sometime to-night, when the stock yard officials will undoubtedly havea con- sultation with them. ALMOST AN ACCIDENT. Right here I might mention the fac that these distinguished railroaders came very mnear metting with a serious smash up last evening of which they knew nothing until their srrival here. The engineer of an extra freight following thoe east-bound passenger train between Exeter and Friendville yester- day discovéred obstructions on the track a few miles from the latter place. He stopped the train in time to avoid an ac- cident, when it was discovered that some ‘‘fish plates” had been so arranged that if the engine struck them a wreck would surely have occurred. The plates were removed, and when the train reached Friendville an engine was dispatched after a suspicious looking individual who had been seen walking on the track near where the obstructions had been placed He was overtaken and jailed in Friend- ville in default of $1,000 bail. He gave hisnsme as Charles Oldham, and it is thought that he sought re- venge for having been ejected from the east bound passenger train, and hence placed the obstruction on the track. President Potter and party’s spe- cial was fallowing the special at a high rate of speed, and in a few moments more they would have encountered the obstructions, and it is doubtful if a seri- ous sccident could have been prevented, THE ELECTRIC LIGHI' is all ready for illuminating, the machine being prepared for work and the wires stretched to the business premises of the principal subsoribers. All that is wanting for a trial are the lamp globes which were ordered some time ago and are on their way from the east. A MURDER ABOUT SPELLING A WORD, District attorney Strode is in the city on his way to Nebraska City, to attend the trial of Quinn Bohanan which com- mences there to-morrow. The prisoner has been taken down and the case will be watched with much interest here. It will be remembered that he shot a well-known citizen named Cook at Waverly, a short distance west of here, about ayear ago, in a dispute as to the spelling of the word ‘‘peddler.” He was tried and convicted, but a new trial was granted by the supreme court on some technical grounds. Subsequently a change of venue was ordered to Otoe county. Bohanan is a hard customer. Ho has already served a term in the pen- itentiary, and was one of the most dar- ing leaders in the McWaters uprising in the ‘*pen” some years ago. WATERWORKS, Plans for a watorworks system were submitted to the common council last night, and Chester B. Davis, formerly of Omaha, and for some time connected with the construction of your waterworks under Mr, Shelton, sent in an application for employment as hydraulic engineer. MORE LIGHT, The Electric Light company of Lincoln have filed its articles of incorporation with the names of W. W, Wilson, J. J. Imhoff, J. 0. McBride, J. E. Houtz, and A, E. Zeimer as incorporators. The capital stock is placed at $100,000, and the time of commencing business is to- day. Quip Nuxce, | —— Army Orders. Recruits William @, Bailey and Wil- liam Maxwell, enlisted at Fort Douglas, Utah, are assigned to Qompany B, Gth Infantry. Assistant Surgeon Alonzo R. Chapin, U. 8. A, isrelicved from duty at Fort Douglas, Utah, and will proceed to Fort Laramie, Wyo., and report to the com- manding ofticer thereof for duty thereat. The travel directed is necessary for the public service. Acting Assistant Surgeon Frank J. of a referee on Colorado percentage, it being conceded then that nothing of a! permanent nature could be accomplished, {vending the result of the higher confer- ence between the Union Pacific and Bur- lingten at Boston, ‘ headquarters, Ives, U. 8. A, having reported at these headquarters in compliance with para- graph b, Bpecial Orders No, 76, current series from the headquarters of the army, is assigned to temporary duty at these 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 BENWGGD NAILS AND LAFLIN & ‘RAND FOWDER CO Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMPS, STEAM PUMPY Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,§ Belting, Hose, Brass and Iron Fittin Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CH AND SCHOOL BELLS, Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb. PERFEBCTION 1 Heating and Baking In only attained by uvsing CHARTER OAK Stoves and Ranges, MILTON ROGREES & SONS OMAHA J. A. WAKEFIELD, WLOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN nmber, L, Shingles, Fi SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LINE, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C. STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Union Pacific Depot, i HENRY LEHMARNN JOBBER OF Wall Paper and Window Shadss. EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATESD, FARNAM STREE . 5 11 OMAHA N¥©B 0. M. LEIGHTON. H. T, CLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKEF, Wholesale Druggists! —DEALERS;IN— Ciasg. OMAius CI1AT4ARTA Qils. Brushes. C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints Oils Varnishes and Window Glas OMAHA. NEBRASKA MAX MEYER & IMPORTERS OF HAVANA CIGARS! CLGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES: SHOKERS ARTICLES CELEBRATED BRANDS: PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING Reina Victorias, Especiales, ..oses in 7 Sizes from $6 to $120 per 1000. AND (HE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE OENT ClGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SODTIN T A A. 3. DAILEY . MANUFACTUREL OF FINE Buggies Carriaces and Spring Waoons v Seposttor s dnawently fillod with & salect ebonk Bews Workmananip gnse nteod, Office and Factory S, W. Cor. 16th and Capitol Avenue, Omaha, Neb. Willimantie Spool ¢ otton 18 eutarely the product of Home 1ndustry, and is pronounced by experts to be the best ¢hire thread i orld.” FULL ASSORTMENT CONSTANTLY ON HAND. "od or sale by HENLEY, HAYNES & VAN ARSDEL, mée Omuba, Neh,