Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 17, 1884, Page 4

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il THE OMAHA BEE. Omaha Offoce, No, 916 Farnam St. THE STRUGGLE BEGUN. Analysis of the vote by which it was deciderd to take up the Morrison bill Coancll Bluffs OMce, No. 7 Pearl | shows that the final passage of the meas- Streot, Near Broadway. w~ Bullding. Puoiianea every worning only Monday morniog di AU BY MATL 810,00 ( Throe Months . . 5,00 | One Month. ... Por Week, 25 Conts, WKLY REN, FUBLISIED NVERY WEDNRSDAY, xoopt Sunday THRMS POSTPAID, 00 | Throo Months 1.00 | One Month... Amerioan Nows Company, Solo Agente Nowsdea! o In the United States. CORRESPONDNNON. A Oommunloations relating to News and Editorial matters should be addressed to the Eorrom or Trs B, posTRss LETTARA. All Butlnoss Tottors and Rewnittancos should' bo addrosed to TN BRR PURLSIING COMPANY, QUAHA- Drafta, Chookn and Postoffioo orders to be made pay able to the ordst of the company. THE BEE PUBLISHING CO,, PROPS B. ROSEWATER, Editor. A. H, Fitch, Manager Daily Ciroulation, P. 0. Box 483 Omaha, Neb. Mr. Broatcn didn't get there. Towa democrats are going to favor Tilden, Iowa democrats don't seem to think a man is dead until the worms have eaten him, Ir thero is any honor in being an al- ternate delegate, Mr. Broatch is to be con- gratulated upon his succoss at the Ne. braska City convention. THE omission to amend the laws in re- Rard to presidential succossion is another short-coming that will have to be laid at the door of the present congress. Tae board of public works will do well to carefully inspect the Ouming street curbing and guttering before accepting the work. The guttering has been very carelessly done. OuARMAN CrEIGHTON of the board of public works having knocked a man out of the (contractors’) ring, his associates in the board propose to match him againat John L. Sullivan, Tae quiet city of St. Joe, Missouri, with a population of 85,000 or 40,000 people, has a police force of thirty men, while Omaha, with a population of 50,- 000 people, has only a force of twenty policomen. TIf St. Joe needs thirty po- licemen, Umaha needs about forty. Tux vessel just finished for the naval department is pronoanced well and thor- oughly madein every particular. Al though she will carry only one gun, it is somothing to have one ship in the navy that is seaworthy, It is not particularly gratifying, however, to know that the veasel cost the governmont at least twice a8 much as it would any private owner. A CONSTITUTIONAL umeu;n_eut is now proposed forbidding congress to make anything a legal tender but gold and - Yark Office, Room 65 Tribune ure by the houte, is even more doubtful than had been before believed. A ma- v | J0Tity of only two on & question of such vital moment, to the democratic party, is really a mild defeat. But there is reason 1.00 | to beliove that when the bill comes to a fival vote, it will not have even a majori- ty of two The vote by which the con- o so #ideration was begun was 130 to 140, Of % \! those who voted ‘‘aye,” three, Messra. “| Anderson, Strait and Nelson, were re- publicans, who thought that in the great nocessity for vome kind of tariff reduc- tion, the bill prepared by the ways and means committee was worthy of examina- tion, at least. Now it is not possible that one of these will vote for the bill on its passage. It is one thing to vote to consider a bill anda very different thing to vote to pass it. Besides these three republicans, one at least of the democrats who voted with the major- ity is perfectly certain to oppose the bill itaelf. Heisa Randall man and definitely committed against the measure. How many more there may be like him it is impossible to tell. Certainly he does not stand alone. One of the Morrison faction on the day before the vote, gave it as his opinion, after careful investiga- tion, that the motion to consider would muster a much larger support than Mr. Morrison could expect to secure after the debate. Ho felt sure that a large number of Randall's followers would not dare to voto against the discussion of the bill, while they would surely vote againat its enactment. The Morrison men mustered their full strongth on Tucsday. They have no further resources. It is very hard to see how they can possibly pass their bill. Tho situation is very critical for the democrats, It is rumored that if the bill shall fail to pass, the Morrison demo- crats will secoede and begin a separate or- ganization. If it does pass, the Randall men will be very indifferent if not op- posed to the success of the party in the coming campaign. The fate of the bill is therefore of the greatest importance to the party. To the republicans, the issue is oxceedingly interesting. The result, either way, cannot affect them, since the election of a republican president is cer- tain whatever way the fight goes. But it will be exceedingly interesting to see which faction will put the knife to the throat of the republican’s ancient enemy. The debate will not be closed for a week or two, Of course, the advocatesof the bill will bring to its aid a vast array of arguments, statistics and figures. This is a necessary form that must be gone through with, and will be entirely with- out effect in the result. The country, in the meanwhile, will watch for the end with great interest. It will be much the most important political event that has oocurred for some years, Tax appearance of Mr, Tildenin his ver, except as a war measure, This isa good deal like locking the stable door after the horse has been stolen, It is safe to say that uo congress ever will make anything but gold and silver legal tendera again. A law prescribing gold as the only legal tender would be of some use. Hexey WARD BEECHER has written a letter in which he takes strong grounds against the republican revenue reformers having anything to do with the demo- orats. He says that there is no hope to be placed in the letter and the only chance of securing a reduction of the ta- riff is through the republican party. This shows that age has not impaired Henry's ability to see through a stone wall when he can find a hole, Tae Wily Randall is holding up one end of the Payne boom with the idea letter to the Iroquis Clubis that of a very small and very peevish child pet- ting in a corner and nursing a very old sore. He takes advantage of an invita- tion to write about *‘The Federal Con- stitution,” to exhibit his wounds and ask a little sympathy for them. It is the old story of the great fraud. In every ocase but one “‘the power of the amendment has been sufficient to control a majority for the party now in power.” In that one, “it collected military troops from around the caypitol and by this and other means intimidated the congressional rep resentatives of a majority of the people to relinquish the fraits of their victory and surrender the government to the control of a minority.” What this infan- tile lament has to do with the federal constitution it is impossible to say. But this is the sum and substance of all Mr. Tilden's letter. There are a fow vague and unvitain remarks about the ‘‘early that if the standard oil buccaneer cannot | patriots” and Governer Morris, but no be nominated he may himself slip in, If|one knows what they mean. There are Payne {s nominatad, he thinks he will be | also a few commonplaces about the pres- sure of a cabinet position, Mr, Randall | ent corrupt condition of the government is a gentleman of a discerning mind, but [and the necessity for roform, but thess he forgots something that has got to come | have long since failed to be of any signifi- between the nomination and a cabinet|cancs. The whole thing looks very much position. That is the election, like an attempt on the part of Tilden to p——— work up sufficient pity for the alleged T civil service examination which is | "FORE® he has suffered to secure the £0 be held in Omaha May 15th, for appli- | POmination. cants forgovernmént positions, is evident- ly intended only for those who are seek- ing places in the postal service, as the ‘examining board is made up of Postmas- ter Coutant, Assistant Postmaster Wood- ard, and Cbief Olerk Lawton. It seems to us that the board should be made up of men from the different departments, ABaiand of powta) ofiolals slope. law will practically be useless. Both sides are preparing to contest this que Orry Magsuas Goramis notified the tion in the courts, Having already city council on Tuesday evening thatbe| 1 0q tho supreme court of the results had indefinitely -suspended Policeman | 1ok winl follow refusal to comply with Laue for being drunk, and st the samo |y i wighes, the prohibitionists foel - meooting the council confirmed the ap- moderately confident as to the result. t of William Nightingale as| gy, 4py Question is decided by the su- Nightingale has been on the preme court, however, there will proba- force before, and was put off for|yyo oo bo' vary much prohibition in lowa, Tux alleged fatal defect in the] Iowa prohibitory law consists in the fact that some of the provisions of the penalties aot are interfored with and rendered null by some of the provisions of the pharmacy act which was passed subsequently. It is claimed that none of the new penalties will apply and the stringent prohibitory Tas new plan of running the fast mail train clear through from Chicago isw great improvement over the old system of having it overtake the regular train at Ottumwa, and there transfer the mail waried ¥ fluoloo: car to that train, Under the new ar- and | Tavgement 1.2 fast mail arrives about an Michigan, hour earlier in the evening. and Wisconsin have signed ——ee nd agreement to work for| Sreancs asit may seem, thero is & fgreenbackers and grangers are | great deal of opposition to a fall inves hml.n- with in- | gation of the OCincinnati riot. Some of Phereseems to be good reasons | the papers and & good many people say ) that the who manu- ! that it will do no good to know the truth woport aud the accomplished 'about the matter, and ovly injure still with the eternal fituess of things, the ‘oouncil ought immediateiy to reinstate reason it is doubtful if the exact facts as to the disgraceful affair will ever be offi- cially ascertained. There should not, however, be any paltering with this kind of nonsense. The whole country has a right to the truth, The authorities will only be committing another erime if they do not find it out BLAINK'S BOOK. The firet volume of Jamea G. Blaine's book was to have been issued in Boston yosterday, The work has been pushed as rapidly as possible, there being some good reason, probably of a political char- acter, of getting it before the public at once. About two hundred pages are de- voted to the political revolution of 1860, and the volume takes the reader down to the time of Garfield. Mr. Blaine's pub- Lishers are very enthuriastio over this work. They are confident of selling 1,000,000 copies. They have printed 200,000 copies of the first volume, and are now at work on 200,000 more. Mr. Blaine has been at work on the first volume only a little over a year. 1t is entirely his own production, the only assistance he has received being from Gail Hamilton, who has read some of the revised proofs for him. Mr. Blaine's publisher has this to say of Mr. Blaine, which just at this time will be read with a great deal of interest: “‘Mr. Blaine is one of tho most meth- odical writers I have ever met. He has not kept us waiting an hour for copy. His handwriting is not good, and the printers have had their share of cursing over it, and he interlines a great deal, but he is always on time. His revises gave us considerable trouble. You know matter does not look the same in print as in manuscript, and he has corrected and amended a great deal. In every case, though, he has improved on the subject matter. 1In fact, he has given a great deal of time ana attention to polishing the work, and I think a fair critic will say that his style is un- usually good. Tho second volumo will be ready next fall. It has been frequent- ly asserted that the book would never soe the light, and these stories have made it difficult in some instances for our agents to got subscriptions. It was said that the book would be held back until after the republican convention, and that if Mr, Blaine got tha nomination, that would end . the book. This is the veriest monsense. The book has no po litical significance whatever; it isarecord of facts presented in anable manner by one wheo is familiar with them. The questionof how the book would affect Mr. Blaine's presidential chances was discussed when the work was first considered. He said it did not matter, he would not be a can- didate under any circumstances. 1 feel certain that he does not seek or want the nomination. The book will contain 57 portraits, inc'uding the presidents and public men of both parties. There will be about an equal number of democrats and republicnus, Inanewspaper recent- ly I was credited with saying that Mr. Blaine told me to use Mr. Conkling’s portrait, as he was the brains of the re- publican party in New York or some such equally extravagant statement, Mr. Blaine nevel any such thing, and never said that he did. When the ques- tion came up as to whose portrait should be placed in the book to represent New York state, we found it somewhat difficult to decide. Strange as it may seem, New York has had during these cwant&yunn no really great public men like Bayard and Thurman, We had Mr. Wheeler in as one of the vice presidents. Mr. Blaine said: ‘Put in Senator Conkling.’ Ispoke of the unpleasantness between them, but he replied: ‘Senator Conkling has represented this great state during this time, and it is proper he should go in.' That was all there was to it. I think Mr. Blaine has treated Mr. Conk- ling handsomely, and, in fact, I think ha has dealt; honestly by all republicans and democrats alike, giving credit where it was due and not fearing to censure, whether the parties found wanting were of his own political compl»xion or not.” THe civil suits agamnst the star route gang are hanging fire because young Mr. Bliss, whom the attorney general has employed to look after them, has gone off to St. Louis. The attorney general seems to think that young Mr. Bliss is the only lawyer in the United States, and that while he is a'tending to his private business in St. Louis, the government's affeirs must wait. In the meantime, however, Postmaster General Gresham, who is a very shrewd and able lawyer, has expressed the opinion that it will be useless to try the cases in the district of Columbia. This is exactly what experi- euce has previously demonstrated and what everybody who knows anything about the state of feeling in Washington will admit to be true. Mr, Brewster, however, has unlimited faith in the abili- ty of young Mr. Bliss, and whenever he is pleased to return from St. Louis, and go to work, the attorney general says the suits will be begun. — Two cashiers of national banks in the west are now at large with all of the available assets of the banks which they were able to take with them. It is no- ticeable that no effort is being made in either case to capture the criminal. Evi dently the bank officials think that the expense of pursuit would be heavy and the advantage of seouring a conviotion very small. This is the way in which selfish considerations out-weigh the duty which citizens owe to the public, Itis exactly sinular to the refusal to serve on the grand jury and the other respects in which good men permit bad men to have their own way. S—— MR, Braing says that if it is offered to him he will accept the leadership in the national republican convention, but he admits that his nomination is not prob. able, owing to the prejudices against him in New York and other states. If he cannot secure the nomination Limself, he will throw his influence for Sherman. He does not conceal his praference for Sher. man, whom he regards as the coming van. didate. E——— Horsford's Acid Phasphate, Bowaio of Imitations. Tmitations and counterfeits hava agel E. Be sure that the word *Honsr. up' ou the Inu‘ i8] OMAHA DAILY BER,~THURSDAY, APRIL 17, {854, WEST OF THE MISSOURI. The opening of the Omaha reservation lands to pre-omption and settlement on the 30th inst. has already attracted a large number of land hunters to that vicinity. The manner and method of disposing of these lands is different from that which obtained at other reserva- tions, There will be no auction of the lands, They have been appraised in 40 acre tracts, the price ranging from $6 to $20. Any porson over 21 years of age and a citizen of the United States can file on any portion of the land on the day mentioned, the firat one in having the pick of the land, Two years are allowed to make final payments. None but bona fide sottlers can purchase and 160 acres 18 the limit to any one man, Fifty thou- sand acroes will bo thrown open to settle- ment. The land is equal t5 the best in the state and the rush will be lively. The appraised price is high for the reason that there are no improvements of a public nature. When roads aro built, county government organized and housed, school houses and churches built, the cost will reach that of improved farm land surrounding the reservation, However, it will have the advantage of being near established markets with ample facilities for transportation of its products. The collapse of the Blair bridze is a serious blow to business on the Sioux City & Pacifis in Nebraska. A gentlo- mar from Valentine who visited the wreck on his way to this city states that fully four hundred feet of the eastern ap- proach was taken out by the flood; and that instead of six weeks it will take six months to repair the damage. A very strong current runs through the gap, and it is believed another span will have to be added to the bridge. Our informant says the closing of the bridge has para- lyzod railroad building in the northwest The contemplated extension of the line beyona Valentine has been abandoned for the present. The recent sale of the property to the Chicago & Northwestern will doubtless causo some change of plans, the nature of which will not be known for some time. The length of the line in this state is 423 miles. The country tributary to the road in Holt, Brown and Cherry counties is being set- tled up rapidly, which insures a paying local traffic after the tirst harvest. A member of the Missouri colony, which passed through Omahaa few weeks ago on the way to Cherry county, com- plains bitterly in The Valentine Repor- ter, of the manner in which the members were treated by agents of tne Union Pa- cific at the transfer. It seems the U, P. drummers by deliberate lying, tried to induce the colony to go out by way of Sidney, and failing to make their scheme win, showed their hands by locking their telegraph offices, ordering the people out of their cars into mudholes, and even threatening to use force to hasten their exit. The U. P. men told the colony it was a nearer and more practicable route by way of Sidney; thatin going by the Sioux City & Pacific route an Indian res- ervation had to be crossed where people were liable to be scalped by merciless savages, and numerous other yarns of a similar character. The facts are that the Sioux City & Pacific route via Valentine is the most practicable. From Sidney across tho road is almost impassable in many placesonaccountof *‘gumbo”(a thick mud) on the bottoms. There is a stretch of sand to pull through nearly a hundred miles in length, and there are several toll bridges on the route where from one to three dollars is exacted from the luckless teamsters going that way. The Seward Ceal Prospecting Company will soon begin operations with the best machinery that money can buy, and the vesult of the bore will be watched with much interest by the people of the state. A contract has been closed with a Den- ver company to sink the hole a thousand feet if necessary. A solid core drill will be used and some interesting facts in re- lation to the geological fermation are looked for as well as black diamonds. The wrepper, None wre genuine with. Seward Reporter traly says: *No enter- prise has been entered upon which has called forth such universal interest and good wishes as this. If successful it will be of inestimable value to Seward county and the state, The location is the best that could be selected, being about four miles from the Midland Pacific railroad and two miles from the line surveyed by the U. P. in the northeastern part of the county. The free puff drummer of the Burling- ton route has favored Tue Bae with a copy of » Dynver paper containing a com- plimentary editorial notice of the company, joined with a bitter at- attack on the Union Pacific. Lest the puff should be overlooked, a liberal amount of red ink was used to attact at- tention. Of course we pounced upon it, and merely mention the fact now to show the company how vigilantly its western advertising agont looks out for number one, The editorial referred to was a la- borious effort to show that the Burling- ton had vractically crowded the Union Pacific out of the business of Denver; that the latter will be forced to accept whatever terms the former may dictate, and also congratulating Denver and Col- orado on the blessiugs flowing over the Burlington route. There are dozens of town in Nebraska testifying cheir appreciation of similar blessings dis. pensed by the Burlington by doing all in their power to induce rival roads to re- ligve them of the ineubus, and the same 18 true of towns where the Union Pa- oific is without a rival. There is no real business independence in any town where oither road dictates the rates, The Bur- ligton can turn the screws and take ‘**all the traflic will beax” as readily as the over- land Mogul, The recent meeting of the ehicf apostles and saints of Mormondom in Salt Lake Oity, furnish snme interesting statistios of the numerieal strength of that much married sect. The figures show that in reported the returns of births foot up 1620, Thisreeult may sppear astound- ing to the uninitiated but it ehould be remembered that the revised Mormon plan does not sancton more than one wite, all additiona being *‘sealed” for the Urah, Idaho, Arizons and Colorade is 1388,876. OFf this number thers are in Salt Lake City alove 23 759, 10 reco) City, but there were 878 births, There 1 8o ten apostles aud sixty eight patriarchs. The seventies, whose oocupation is not \dutined, number 4847 and the high priests o— e 3413, The elders as usual Aiseount sli other officers, the total belag 12191, while the plain and unassuming priests number only 1611, Besides thess there aro deacons, toachers and other smper- numeraries, Twenty-two backsliders have been bounced from communion with zion and 842 deaths have ocourred. It will be seen from these statistics that the “paculiar institution” will naturaly in- creaso without theaddition of prosely ting, and at a rate sufficiently large to require radical measurdh to enablo the gentiles to “catch on,” United Stateas Commissioner Beach re- ports the experiment of boring for arte- sion water on the plains a failure, The experiment clearly demonstrated that south of the Platte Valley it is im- posaibls to strike water which would be of any value for the purposes intended—the watering of stock. The money appropri- ated by congress, $20,000, appears to have been expended in such a manner as to secure the greatest amount of work possible, and that a failure has occurrod can only be charged to the fact that flowing water could not be reached at the points where the experimental wells were sunk., Mr. Beach doubts much if the water-bearing stratums extend to as great a distance from the mountains as 120 miles, and is of the opinion that if he had succeeded in striking a vemn of flowing water it would be 80 impregnated with mineral as to be practically useless fir the purpose intended Tho striking of a flow of gas would seem to indicate the presence of coal or petroleum, but the experiment failed to confirm the opin- ion. Wel Do Meyer. 1618 now undisputed that Wel De Mey- er's Catarrh Cure is the only treatment that will abso'utely cure Catarrh—fresh or chronio “Very _efficacions, Sam’l. Gould, Weeping Water, Neb.” “One box curod me, Mrs, Mary Kenyon, Bismarck, Dakota™ Tt restored me to the pulpit, Rev. Geo, E. Reis, Cobleville, N. Y.” “On box radically cured me, Rev. C. H. Taylor, 140 Noblo street, Brooklyn.” “‘A. "perfect 'cure after 30 years suffering, J. D, McDonald, 710 Broadway, N. Y.,” &c., &e. Thousands of testimonials are received ' from all parts of the world. De- livered, $1.00. Dr. Wei Do Meyor's Iilustra- ted Treatise, wish statements by the curo mailad fres. 1), B, Dewey & Co., 182 Fulton troot, N. Y. tu-th&sat-m&e-3m ——— JAY GOULD AT WORK, How the Wall Street Magnate Puts in His Time—His Daily Routine. New York Correspondent Cincinnati News-Jouanal. Since Gould's return three has been an Utah ard 1daho, out of twenty marriages | charges future, ‘The total number of saints in |* There is iven of marriage in Salt Lake unusual pressure at his oftice, but few, however, are favored with an_interview. No man has more enemies on Wali street than Jay Gould, and there is no telling what shape their enmity may assume, Scores, and even hundreds, of ruined speculators ascribe their misfortunes to him, and many of these are only awaiting a suitable opportunity of revenge. Gould aeems to be conscious of this, and there- foro keeps concealed as much as possible, He is, indeed, the hidden power ot Wall street. He rarely leaves his office, and no one can obtain admittance until a series of statements have been made. A card is placed in the visitor’s hands, on which is printed as follows: *‘State name,” “‘State residence,” *‘State business.” These being printed one above the other, with broad blanks to be filled out, have a rather forbidding appearance, and many who wish to see Gould are deterred at the very outset. When the card is sent in, the chances are much against an interview. There are not wore than a score of persons whom Gould wants to see, Among these are Russell Sage, H. N. Smith, Washington Connor, Col. Hain, John T. Terry, and Gen. Eck- hart. When Gould was the moneyed man of The Tribune he allowed its reporters admittance, but at present he excludes all of thisclass. Gould reaches his office witha perfected scheme of operation. He is not obliged to look at the morning papers. for stock reports, as these have been read from the “‘ticker” as they take place, and if he should be at his house they are sent up by telegraph. Before he goos to bed Gould has a complete idea of all that has been done in Wallstreet, and he awakens in the morning with a clear and decisive system for the day’s work. It is this an- ticipation of the future which gives him such advantage over other operators As soon as he is seated at his desk, Mirosini brings in the telegrams and also all news- paper articles that have a financial im- portanco. This is all Gould wants to know. He cares nothing for politics or other public matters, except as they may bear upon his interests. It willtake from one to two hours to reply to dispatches and to telegraph orders, and as Gould controls nearly five thousand miles of railroad track this is no small task. While sitting in his office he may be conferring with men in St. Louis, Chi- eago and San Francisco almost at the same time. Then the stock-exchange “‘ticker” bogins its reports, and a half- dozen brokers are kopt uuder telegraphic orders. By this time business calls are made. Each man whose card is approved hasa brief space given him. In this mancer (Gould does a tremendous amount of business in a short time. He seems always self-possessed, and generally holds the vantage ground, but even when col nered he concedes in a handsome manner what might be demanded under a leg process. No man can be in Gould’s pre ence five minutes without feeliny his power. His uyes have a penotration which seems to reach the hidden depth of thought. Those eyes, indeed, are a curi- osity—s0 black, so pioreing, and so sul- STEELE, JOHNSON & C0, ‘'Wholesale Grocers | H. B. LOCKWOOD (formerly of Leskwood & Draper) Chicago, Man- ager of the Tea, Cigar and Tobacer Pepartments. A full line of all grades of above; also pipes and smon ers’ articles carried in stock., Prices and samples furnished on applieation. Open orders intrusted to us shall receive our careful attention Satisfaction Guarandeed. AGEN?'S FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & "RAND POWDER ¢0 "~ Double and Single Acting Power ant! Hand PUMES, STEAM PUMPS Engine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,! Bolting, Hose, Brass and Iren Fittin Steam Packing at wholesalo and rejail. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHUROR AND SCHOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam 8t., Omaha Neb. PERFJE.’}?TION} Heating and Baking s only attained by using 'CHARTER OA¥ ‘ Stoves and Ranges, o i it S o o %%, MILTONROGERS & S8ONS 1A IRAANITID THE BEST THREAD o SEWING MACHINES YWILLHVIRINIIU Willimantie S‘{mo] Cotton is enhreli the product of Home Industry, 3 and is pronounced by experts to be the best sewing machine thread inthe orld. FULL ASSOKTMENT CONSTANTILY ON HAND, and or sale by HENLEY, HAYNES & VAN ARSDEL, mée Omuha, Neb. J. A, WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lamber, Lath, Shimgles, Piekets 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 Shads. len. They at once proclaim the selfish power of a relentless autocrat, whose motto has invariably been *‘rule or ruin.” OOMPLETE TREATMENT, $L A singlo dose of Sanford's Radical Oure in stanMy reliovestho wost violont Snecaing or Hesd Colds, clears the head io, 8o, 8 watawy dis- from provents Ringl g oadachie & subdues Chills 5 olansos the nasal o8 of foul mucus, restores Do ‘sansos of smell:tasts and hoarlng whoa: afecteds froos the head, throat aud bronchial tubes of offen sive matbor, swecteny and purifies tho breath, stops the cough and arrests the progress of Oatarrh o Vards Consu One bottle fadical Cure, oue box Catarrhal Sol- vent and Santurd's Inbaler, i in one of al drugyists for 81, Ask { r Saxroro's ‘Cuna pory @ AxD Cuimiicas Co., Boston thy vont ducane, and does more in onebal ':)&’\:m hov other plaster in the warld bold webere EASTERN PRICES DUPLICATED 11 FARNAM STREE - . OMAHA NEB 0. M. LEIGHTON. H. T. OLARKE, LEIGHTON & CLARKE, BUCCESSORS TO KENNARD BROS, & C0.) Wholesale Druggsts? —DEALERS;IN— Oils. Brushes. Ciasg. R LY EUA Paints- OMAw - C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints Oils Varnishes and Window Glas OMAHA, NEBRASKA MAX MEYER & GG., IMPORTERS OF HAVANA. CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOMESTIO CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES: SHOKERS' ARTIGLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING: CELEBRATED BRANDS: Beina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $6 to $120 per 1000. AND fHE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: Combination, Grapes, Progress, Nebraska, Wyoming Brigands. WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES. = P e PR Al E. DAXY.E Y, MANUFACTUSSE OF ¥INE = Duggits Carriages and Spring Wagons My Bepositor s onsesntly filled with & select stock Bess Workmasnsbip gusr nteed. and Factory S, W. Cor, 16th and Capitol Avenue, Omaho, Neb, |

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