Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 29, 1885, Page 4

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THE DATLY BEE. OMine OFFrcr, N A 10 Fansaw B Ny sk Bun Wi ™ only win One Year THE WriKLY Tiee, Po ERMS One Year One Year. wit Kix Monthe, wifh One Month, on teinl b pren CONMESPONDENCE: it addre Al ¢ torinl n 108 OF nications re 1 should be e B nUerNE All b nddre OnAn 10 be made ) THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPARY, PROPRIETORS. E. ROSEWATER. Eviron. ALISHING postoffice compuny TrxAs kecos up her reputation for pro dueing blood-curdling sc ions Pre<ipesT CLEVELAND and Sam Ran- dall are said to be very intimate. As both have just been receiving & vigorous club bing at the hands of their own party, mu- tual sympathy is no doubt the tic that binds. A GerMAN woman of Ohio is the motherof a quintet of hoys of the age. The family ought to emigrate France where there is a heavy i on lu families. An old law been rovived there wherehy every child of a family is educated free, and it has been decided that in the case of high ools the fees shall be reduced happy ninth where e trouble Bayard Mucller, of Cleve who w consul to Frankfort, ny, hs guilty of the 1t diplomatie indiseretion of abusing Bismarck in his consuiar re port and criticising the German govern- ment and its people. Mr. Mueller's re call is now demanded and his place will be filled up possibly by some party who knows enough to keep his eyes open and his mouth shut. iy < heen gland note that Mr. Gladstone will probably be forced to smporarily recode from his advanced home rule platform Mr. Gladstone through o long political carcer has ghown that he knows how to wait his opportunity to eatch every favoring breeze. Having declared in favor of home rale he will sooner or later foree his party into a support of his own pol- icy, however much he may seem for the present to yicld to the clamors of the whig branch of the liberal party. ADVICES fr I great deal Some wag 0 the eftect Ton1as Caston is getting of free advertising just no ot afloat aagraph Tobe has his eye on Van Wyck's United State ate. This announcement strikes Nebraskans about as it does the Chi Limes, which ex- elaims: “Tobias Castor indeed! Heaven protect onr nutional records against such aname.” The 7unes necd have no fears, Itis cntircly unnecessary to call upon Heaven for protection. The peopic of Nebraska know Tobe well enough to keep him at home that seat in the Browiey, formerly of the New ,is now the head lit y man of thi fie railroads, and is carn- ing his salary in distorting facts for con- gressional consumption and the use of the lobby at Washington. E. V. Smalle of the same paper, is working in the in- terest of the Northern pacifie, while ‘Whitelaw Reid remains in the harness in New York to defond the rascalities of the great monopol through his truly moral metropolitan p: and to urge the schemes which now being hatehed for preventing the Union Pacifle from falling into the nds of its ereditors The Tribune, since Greeley's death, has been a pitiful apology for the great and §nfluential journal which the prince of editors built up during his lifetime Ixe York ArL the influence of the strongest rail- roud lobby which has gathered at Wash- ington for years will bo shortly concen- trated on congress in behulf of the sub sidized land grant roads. Preparations have been made to pack the committees with members who are known to be fav- orable to the corporations. The first ef- fort will be to secure the passage of the Hoar sixty year extension mill, Failing in this the henchmen and eappers of the great monopolies will endeavor to block all legislation unfavorable to the rouds which they represent. The people of the west will wateh with a great deal of interest the attitude of their senators and ropresentatives in congress on the var- jous questions afiecting the transport tion interests of the country, The senti- ment of Nebraska is too outspoken to ad- mit of debate, It demands the enforce- mentof the laws regarding the payment of the Pacilic rlroad indebtedness when due, the prompt passage of a measure compelling the land grant voads to take out patents on their lands, and the enact- ment of a law for the national regulution of interstute commerce. RAILEOAD suggestions scom to be the order of the Mr, MeShane's projoct for a road up the Elkhorn valloy has died & natural death, and no one s to en thuse over the Omaha & Northern or the Missouri Pacific project. The Bee has wnothor plan to propose which, if carried into effuet, would be of lustin Omaha and of great ady corporation chictly inte not the Northwe n road | build & line from Fremont into Omaha, following the old Doy survey and making our city the actual N river tormi nus of their transcontinental line. Within a year’s time the Northwestern will be making ready to compete with the Union Pacitic for tie traflic of the western coast Their surveyors have cated the line 0ss central Wyoming, and spring will suo the iron rails pushing into the coul beds of Fort Fetterman, Sooner or Litor Nevraska and the west will be traversed by a sccond great transconti mentul routs, which will be able to secure its full share of the traflic originating west of the Rockies. The Union Pacitic will have a competitor who will enter the field with and bonded indebt odncss less than a fifth of that upon which wivalsare forced to earn dividends. Wy should not Omaha atiract to it this great and growing corporation? | learned a benelit to | w0 to the | W hy ean | on th induced to | out | is not far distant when self interest must [ the capacity | defy competition in our own market | to enter the race for the supply “ree Raw Material Tonel Morrison's committe heir holiday rec work sion wil When ( retarn f for bu m ess and str nes m ain wtare to mater measn iy enlarg from mate amov be an effort by re of the raw s, Tl nich will little from the who have been tl of tar reduet notic wres of the reform conve at Ch with which sev participaced in 1 expressed th \ promisad g v for the co! othiet an manuf needed Jesson in the present industrial In all the great indns. chickens have own of the protective Len to longer shelter them under her wings We nave oversupplied our home mar and have elosed the doos in the markets of the Tabor we find to b of our European rivals by greater efficiency. Tn many dustrial production we prepared, if licved of the tax on raw materials, to and of for- of turers most onents ns m n opinion th at benetit tot the fact riff refor nselves with t Ameri much th it tries of m the upon_ourselves 1d. Ouar dearer aper than the labor of its in- ch son cignmarkets with a goord | commanding our share of the trade of the 1d. There are hundreds of manufac turers all over the country who would be glad to sce the barrier pulled down which obstruets the comme of the coun and take the chances with the rest of th world in buy hd selling without re trict whenever their raw materials can be obtained or their W s distrib uted to conswmers, This feeling of man- ufacturing strength has not been unob- served even by the ultra protectionists Those wise aro getting ready to a part of the tariff schedu to save other parts, To remove the tax fr raw mat will not, however, be the solution of the {arifl problem demanded by the people The most highly protected industries, which in addition ea behind ex clusive patents, s time in the rev have been reduced in some of our indust we m in orde wtention paid to the cries that the riff should be maintained for the rotection of American labor. Labor has y slightly in the tremendous profits which the present tarill has turned into the coflers of the great monopolists. It would lose nothing by a judicions re- duction in .the custom dutics. What American labor needs and demands is i ion in the profits of ) f sase in the purel r of the wage dollar through a pro- te decrease in the price of the s of life. necessar Cheaper Rents, The time has come in Omaha cheaper rents are a necessity if wih of the city is to be maintained. Rent e much too high for the accom- modations offered. The rapidity with which we have grown during the past five years and the steady demand for small houses has enabled owner wd five-room cot and larger resi- dences to got thew own price from ten- ants. When the alternative was to puy or go without shelter there nothing else to do but to submit to the extortion- ¢ demands of the landlords. Now that lumber is cheap, brick reduced, and hard- ware down to bedrock figures, buildin can be erected for nearly half what they cost seven y ago. There is no reason why rents should not fall in proportion. The trouble with our owners of tenant houses is that they are not satis- fied with reasonable profits on theirinvestment. Houses for rent ° d fifteen and twenty per cent per an- num net for so long in Omaha that the men who build for ants refuse to ac- cept returns which in other cities would be considered handsome. When New {orkers are contented with six per cent clear on their real esta perty owners in Chicago and Milwau- with eight per cent, Omaha capital- ists ought certainly to consider ten per cent above expenses a fair remuneration, The future of Omaba depends upon the upbuilding of manufacturing This in turn depends upon pete.in the labor mar- ket with other ¢! and both turn upon cheap living for luborers and the ability of s to purchase the most possible for their money. When statistics prove that three-fourths of all wages goes to provide shelter and food the importance of cheap living in order to sccure labor at competing rates is demonstrated Omaha has enough ground to house com- fortably, without crowding, a population of half a million people. Whether it will do so or not in the next twenty-five years depends upon owr power to attract and to maintain a large laboring community, whose wages will enable them to obtain shelter and food at fair prices. when interests. our ability to col Wi o single exception all the colo- nies of At 1l begin the new year under a fod s0, which colonies of Vietori id West Australia, is expected to add much to the prosperity \d development of the new community. ew South Walcs is the only governument Australian continent vvhich is left ordede but the time in a union force her to join the sisterhood. The project for Australian federa agitated for nearly ten years past. Iis realization marks the birth of a new na. tion and gives additional strength to \gland’s great colonial possessions. The united colonies have an area of more than two and a half milllon miles, a large part of which is productive agricultural and grazing country. Gold, copper and lead among the minerals, and wool, and grain, flour, meats and tallow among the agricultural productions, form the bulk of the exports. More than four thousand wiles of Iroad and s thousand miles of te aph lines ar on, wihile English enterprise and al ave doveloping the country systems of irrigation which will open up vast tracts of land in the inter- ior which have hitherto been cousidered sing | the | of four | te investments and | ion hasbeen | | nseless aven for grazing purposes The new protinces will have entire control of all local governme 1 m thro: v federal axat will be bonnd to th political ties nder unite Canada and England Food Inspection, A consultation of physicians cided that Mr. Murphy's ¢ to poison introduced The ptomaine p the fatal tation of the t d meat phy onght to b has \th was into his systom hy unhealtl 1 inical name plain la compla an intense ir i sues cansed from eating decomyp I'he ease f ex-Mayor M £ 1o our pec L warn | vinst the careless nso of any food product. 1f consumers could only be made to understand that decom position means disease and death, and that the worst that m eating prime meat and vegetables is indigestion, our columns would be called upon again to record another case of ptomaine poisoning. At the such watchful care wonld be purchasers that our butchers would find no market for strietly f rticles Carclossness and ignorance on the part of the public, and greed on the part of deal one responsible for the con inu of stale meat and vegetables ! In our larger eities the inspection of food is one of the duties of the hoard of health In New York hundreds of thousauds of dollars worth of decayed fruit, bob veal and tainted meat are annually destroy od by the ors of that department Most of the seizures are] made before the articles are placed on sale in the markets and shops, but the market houses them ted to steady and thor The certanty of detec attempt to dispose of consumers comes f not same time nduced in nd grocers but anything inspec lves are subje ough inspection tion in case they stale food to of the strong to keep fresh stocks of Such a sad misforiune 1t noted in our eity furnishes another a ment for the ercction of a lm cessible market house in Omaha. 1f had a building where the greater part of our dealers in meats and vegetablos were rrouned together a rigid inspeetion of food products would be i at o small expense. The public who patron ized the market would ain that p were not only getting the worth of r money but that they were not bring ing to their homes the and death. s one incentives to dealers cecently i e and e we be ce s of discase Tne failure of the eity eouncil to vide for a proper registra tion of buildings is unfortunate. next meeting of the council will not take | place until after the beginning of the new year. Even if the building inspector is appointed as soon as possible after thut time his report for 1886 will neccssarily be incomplete. There is no reason under the sun why the council should not at once act in’ this mat The inspector willnot cost the city a dollar. The fees which he will derive from his oftice though individually of small amount, will prove a han Aside from the zood build inspection, Omaha will be able to use the ies from the inspector’s oflice as a ing her own growth with As matiers pro- tion and in~ basis for comj those of siste itics. are it takes weeks of the building statistic 1 s when coil proximations. N cessity overlooked now wmy building are of ne id Omaha is placed at a great disad when she at tempts to compare herself with citie, where carefully compiled official st tics show every dollar expended in pri vate and publicimprovements, TEODORE ROOSEVE that the rich men who tried to run big farms in Dakota have been compelled to bae down before the enterprise and indust of the small farmers. Dakota forims no exception to the general rule. Small farms are better paying investiments in proportion to their size than large of land cultivated and worl plan of & wholesale establis experience has shown that the who owns and tills proj a half o see tion is likely to secure hetter returns than the man who attempts to work o of double the size. Division of land like division of labor pays bestin the long run 'l siys areas the All TrERE 15 & disgraceful split among the members of the New York Grant Monu- ment committee. The result will he that the subscriptions will be closed at $150, 000, and the city, state and national goy cernments will be ealled upon to contrib- ute $100.000 each. This falls consider- ably short of the original amoun-—one million dollars—to be subsc Itis indeed a pretty “how-do-you Missouri it time Tue open condition of the river at this point at the pre after having once beeu frozen something that has never heen witnessed before by the oldest inhabitant » Missourd is us fr from ice 23th day of Decomber as it w 4th of July, is something thyt be remembered as a remarkable Banx of Ireland stock is booming on the supposition that the trade of Dublin will be benefited by the establishment of an Irish parlisment. 1f Bank of Ircland stock paysthree bundred per cont divi dends like some of the New York gas stocks have done, it doesn’t need any | further booming to muke it a very fair investment. the will long fact Tue deeree of the Califorma sta | to the effect that Sarah Althea Hill wus legally married to Senator Sharon has sen annulled by the United States cir it court on the ground that the war e contract was a forgery. This resalt h to make the dead seny ek oflin lid for joy HuGi J. Canrs tion of hi in regard to Dakotu and showing the right of that territory to be admitted to statehood, is conceds nearly everybody in Washington to remarkable document, clearly s his position throughout L's letter in viu conrse Laxp CoMMIssION the dissatisfuction omes mainly from | | editors of western paper | finger in the pie. This is th i in a nutshell, Abont dneed Dawes w as<ocia tor 1sh tlin 1y 1 of the the election o ator \ fund Ex-Senator i ike 0,000 v st o al venerated New 1 man. I'he ladie hopes to S “Ihe name sound, Now and th Senator hum and advocates the abo! Ex-Senator Senator Cli ( the dec the other day both decided t ability is very i ot brain ham of the senute least missed when they left that decidedly amnt the senatorial Gen. 0, 0, western town A Question That Ought to be Scttled. The Nebra more than ty spell e ha has <tood the will soon be a Herald make track of this that it is the paper which y 1o plenty of just how s low the redy There Is No Qu The Omaha published in ¢ for the peopic pooled tailway co its the patron facili very es ol th reat, an weh-perfect 000 coy citizens per mer The Right G The land 1 dles Land fered with of hiis piese inmense pres warand the woved., na tant eonsulship, for ! smoval text for his 1 sition Le is ju place. It the give way to bing monopol ing teature of Railv By the comple ailvond from Cape mond Duteh and B miles wlong t Zowmbesi. into the foue ver now moving trate i rouds Fhe new owned by Cape Colony., | and expes first. six e ud a hall po Lccount roads return year, and ha the day they the greatest rowds, estim ing from her to over £30,0 It is fou prowising Tatod antil they It Hallét ha M of ) from spanned no The route fro natural rou “Wihat internai )0 1l ny Lo comm triet of the lc The fact al to further S01 n ind Clingman were not not he had sever nsmore Heraldggnd Lineoln Jouvaal combined, has It is said I'he I atien in am Harris gly b olvin Maryland legi a United 1 will del the Hendrick Thoma ffer tates s et e d of ject is Tabor of diamonds and window is jewairy the show and b deseendo: and patriot forward pooner’s with an maiden and o1 4 newspaper b 1o the Keiley Lapl man, of North Ay of the United ina Washington strect cq hat the standard of low, and that moncey In Stat themselves that they | 1siug to know standard i - Pays Him Well, Herald, uls that I Howard pays him well « ) Heral ska wan who Killed 0 years ago beeau 1« rraigned < 10 extracharge for case it submits duty of i prides itself on matter up in_ detail ders who would like to nalty ean be s L 2 Kear Bex hnaly; news than P is the only the 1 tion Al of them, st the (tions, d the oftice. s equipp g press, which will our. I{ our bus Iy wish a Man the wd Wand 1 nonoplisis, muissioner Spar 1o driy and have su hear on S it | foreign missi st the right man in president @ arrogan e of fes, e will dest his adwministratic is weal Lvery Land. Yol Nun. ion oads New Town mines supplanted the tir tox w der the g ritish t he direct fvent of the ¥ T fived cady completed of Iin Lall w du year, and o cent to apply on tl The British ed six per o were openied. Gen, St ithority on Indinn wes that ihe benefits vailway- to India 00,000 pur anntn Iso that immense 1,562 mules nuintinaned iths this o interest !l continue to b d by ra that t 1re W s lrond new conmerce and wostern China in 1IN HA belt ¢ epavated the Eg civilizntion, and real progipss can - Suakin to Ber ¢ o be opined, V np f viles o Al an entive in the whole of this Ll id of the S Jation now G 01 tithe populon ns will ol be wo reo un swer iy <o that 1 the polit impulse to certain Ly Ki of B oum b 1o} them [ L Arvabian i throu, i8S | day ) Al ched the Bolan pu The s-Caspinn road is i a) expects to earry 10 d the L the 1 to wear about ol aj Sherman and Hoar from Roger Sher yoth tion of our diplon i of New York, and ex Carolina senatorial is crowd view of the fact that Lap. members nil were not in the body, turing another he could not 1 disposed of, it appears. trials, but not.one of them Althoush the keeping | 1 fairne | e oyt ha s bad spe | it inflic this country on a man whe murders a fonetic, | w stion About 1t newsy that is worth taking. publice and justly mer- 1 ood daily nev they should take the Ber. ent, in order to get trying to ing an honorable pr utin his present po the 1 enou lind grad e reded last month of to the South Kimberley, ut 100 | toward locomotive ro Moffatt and ighted n o evidenee of South Afy i 1se that Burmah nt dividends achey, fe amonnt hnml i chamber of com Gl U he made her el and fertile | ha pen N pin are ng ) lines e Wl a th 1 I8 # {al umong d connectic riltonds s I Africa now e chief fore Tand in the Or ew railroad advancing. 'l t to conn incae frontier ised to build this road if () ernment will build a road mal to meet the Siame frontier The leadi b merce in Great Britain port upon the feasibility ¢ ind Messrs t N m in progress, gr conside the Bocrs say they m with t pital W through syst am nt returned home with enthusi ments of the schene erful Viceroy Li <ome time boen 1 ronds and telograph aided by support statesmen. has already 000 miles of te {) Chinese operators, { nine-mile railvoad near | paving the way for | that, it is helieved will in th 1 of given 1 this hly to com 1 D Nsva with 1) rail, and_ has prom Buar L at of com re projoct Hallett and Colquhoun Lave ¢ endorse g heed ot ma th Fienstin, railroad the In China the pow Hung Ch has for of rail Wluence er abl to China nned by e little and is schemes | time resch a large development in China I'he railroad that i towns of castward, and surveys for | are m progress in - Asia phrates valley and Persia, Il develonment ¢ jeets will be the work some of them will | Yet, it is one of the mc of the times that these s Iy into the of the Siberia is ambition nd Minor, ome of 1 ny years, utte niliea o conneet the chief lowly vancing “d Tines the Eu se pro and rly fuil nt signs wmes have en PUPOseS commercial W | may yet be one of the ehief glovic introdue e | facil centiiry that it s among the | those inventions western civilization - to and wid, Tt < of this larg races ties which have outstrip Callaway's Second Instructi Grand iWand_ Dudep v oof prtion carnings por t | division of the Union Pacific railway <inmost of on | about the sam n countaies. By this that 1 per mile on Callaway's the th tends to make the people of Nl they do not freight than the people. i | But even if this asser | average earnings or | true, such i conclision we 1 An average earning of 1 but theoretical abstractic | serve certain scientilic | no rate which is actually the rates actually charge | Tow, while others may h. And this es are very | braska overcharges, Now wihat of 1l that would il ope. i chi ood 0w or five tin We think w fit trom jt, tha for the discove wealth of every o States s $1.000, 0 Would the pooruy anderbilt's « millions help wealt He w And o are we in N | mueh oppressed by | thougn perhaps 1 1 be figured ¢ statistical ayerage r n to meddle with the g conuble Nebraska rates into tus discns: people, who ed with this Kind of soph | The R R, manager must R. R hirelings don’t kno R. K. “faets, i have 1d deriy 000 bhees ireds of | rate out by | b | that Lie must take them in | them for his purposes, an | use these “facts™in thic cussions with the people | He may succeed in 1 | vot-like repeat his but he can power to his | ot - n ul m 1as the ne a destitute v of astatistic o £5.000 or on in e ave whi PUrpOse d d may be ext exactly the low, to pay the most i vt Wi high 1 s thre ver. mo v " Union are I he in pe do. il to the DI but it Part be very ionately While rin Ne upudent us, if s be notwith four Tt » b will et that the an itizen of 1l ) an bt to d e " s 1 ) L and it on only to e b not enough to invent themselves such ni tell 10,- y richer s hun- 1eh an just ki just o charg avera frequent VIRGINIA ORATOT A Slice of the Speech That Kiscked Hoffman Ou Baltimore / D recent | Vir uj | Hoffman h inated down, Mr. I | Middiesx, presented the | Micou, editor of the Tid published in Fssex county on completely toolk thie v | Boftman's rhetorical | The gentleman 1roy | that he came from a e | lofty ks kiss {he o [ or the sum and the cow bells are heard | streams whose erystal w through beantitul vaileys did I come from t where the no sy waves from ih nia to mect stormy Atantic; where th river hums its murmiei Point tion cent wher blic in 1 My m, of 1 ' i tward groe i echoes of th Mr. Boha 1 the Eng ut nd 1 his introduct tion of havix t | ler for tl pr " Rush Hoffmim Muithews v rats noi v Mr out ) 105 I W 1 tinkling mz t ‘s meander | wil At + ollice of My vamatic Dey sl and f A, R. Index Bohun of Mr words o 1ys of the silent 1 him I eame from o iha solid bill ma s of 1l York 1t Old ing | | | | ease with A GOVERNOR'S STAFF, What the Duties of an Aide Ar DIRECTORY Life Insurance, C.T. TAYLOR, NEW YORK LIFE For Net Agent INSURANCE C0. ialon Flor kind the t " 1 from What Fire Insurance. UTTLE & ALLISON, CENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS, th T Teleph fon, Englanil, o, Conn Cal tfora, Cor Phirteenth Street e Lo o N I've seen i N. B HATCHER, Genernl Agent o giv Provident Savings Life Assurance ( ral : of Now York 1 the other 107 South Fourteonth { npst ANCO OV Actun! iy yours 1 A8 $80.67 turn “Clan you keep 1 think An-—nide guard over nished by th men o state vour friend is camp to G quisite g MO ORY GOODS. drinks--whisky and mounts the necessaries of life fur 2. C ENEWOLD, il to s military gentle OO KON o ARy Dry Goods. to _be appointed aide-de Hill. 1 trust ) "!“ le 1"]“' the duties appear 1o he very sim- | hats, cups ple, perhaps congenial my friend | Jine of un Was never in aouniform or on a liorse and | fowestpr he doesn't know _the barrel from the breech of a gun, I docsn’t know wha chapeau is. But that appears to he the the othernew sidesalso, Oh, no, he leeline, not he, or they either. They've sworn that they won't do that; b very mother's son of them | would rather fa londod gun than through the ordeal of the first appear \ee i m SOl let him eall on the commis ey and brace up fivst,” was the unsym pathetic reply the two separated in front of the Hollman house - ne in England, crtiser: The telephone, like nd other modern ap. been so widely or so in England asin othe Thore many corporations in London <h cities which use the private “instruments slowly into favor. The reason for this may be found largely in the natural ¢ rvatism of the I ish people. The London Standard, | ever, finds as one excuse for this state of | things a disinelination on the part of ters Sthe high pressure speed of the | comer of Cuming and Saunders sts. Tho stock Americans.” On tlis point it rei I8 the bestwid U prices as cheap as any A “city man’” in London likes his_ oflice at 10 o'cloc 1l ock, and before the one lourar the other to be rid of Mincing Lombard street. Onece in the which bears him to his home, he ferent personage from what he was dur vious en hours, Heis a nor a country gentleman devotes himself to 1o his to lawn tenn or {0k cornor ste and Co st been opened Wi n gene W ey . Doots,s thes, and i quality and s the MILLINERY- MRS, E. KIGHT, Milliner, L i doing n thriv ey onds A 200 N 10’ millinery and i herof employer business in and 180 keeps n nuir Ty o Hidies sufts nod gonera dressinaling. Pashionable nid stylish garmonts | enn v nd af Mes, Kight's fora vory low figurg | A'trial order satisiies ull und scoures prironagd, ni Wi MRS, M. M. KING, Millinery Goods. For anything in the line you cannot do better than to patr | MM Kinge, 218 Caming St Tho lntest sty wost beautiful work und the very The Telept Boston Ad the clectre 1 pliances, has not ckly adopted civilized eountr la firms and and other Lng telephone, but make their way nillinery and faney goods Mrs, s, the lowest prices, CROCERIES, AL T Grocery&CrockeryStore 1. SANDERS, for the people of Northwoest Omaha WEINERT & MULLE Grocers. o frosh Drofit This firm eny A bus ) it hus alle By tock and does and hence TOUE wrocerios nenr No 132 Cume or he family § % or to epio 5 e e o un ay HENRY BOLLN & €O, nest Mipathy to |t vl 1 « rh him at wor of in vient moment isa val tion, o far que really is, does il ‘ Staple&FafiCy 10 ana g aca \ Groceries Southwast cornor "he Many busy pe oft without the telephone uld he bett ointerfore with moments of S GOLl STEIN, : Groceries, Fruit, Feed. TOOS UNUVALEO S5ipye BOUTITERN REMEDY 15 oy Spectal dealer in poultry BEAL & BEHRENS, NMeat Market Fancy Groceries, Flour, Eced, Ete, Frosh Rutter und Eies a specialty has long becn ading ono ir line for the third wi Alwiys ¢ terprising and up (o the times nty of ¢ eryihime that is good kept cons SW cor 10t und Dodi st d all 1inds of game WARRANTED NOT TO Hvered froo ut all PARTICLE OF MERCURY ORANY INJUIIOUS MINERAL BUT IS ETABL It Will Cure all Dis by I Doty ases Cansed ngement of the Liver, and Stomach, dobilirs have fre 1 s Dadly, poor ap nad 1 1 ing torpid liver, o e wnd noth i enro’ you s ¢ and permunently as LIVER REGULATOR. At any time you feel needs cleansinz, i rosiil wmons Liver Regulator Simm PREPARED BY . H. ZEILIN & CO., Philadelphia, CENERAL STORES, 11 you fec P. M. BACK & CO. General Store. bouse 11 o live in South ¢ g siz0 in 0 bt your systom ine with- with- e, or stimulating e Th ity et pou mil ¢ goods near home, o that whon you oy or e strong walk 8 it ox- L.C. ENEWOLD. At the Head of St V's Avente, Dry Goods, Groceries N s and Hardware, thut he is about to build another lot ol o necommodute his raplid 1y in Ing it £ood ense is thore In # AT OiNg 1 ¥ from whero biy, whon moro sorviecable and much chouper ol can be bowght vight st homet There Iy WHAT WOMAN nones henee there fs rewson for Mr. Bnowoid's WANTS I L IN SHOES: THE INEZW YORIK House Furnishing Store Cor 10th and Douglus streot, Ma is doing M, RICHENDE , Proprictor. t received n new stock of E sold at aking-in fo! rated wire to 1 following ; Dinner setts, 0 pic | A SHE CAN FIND IN loilet set . & T. Cousins® Hew DR ILeay dmph Joain & ofall ki and materials, in ar 1 hgels . jp at th e A p Tho celeh . ind i number of York Shoes,* 14 wivth e Will HA PUPLISHING CO. s and Stationery, 1N, lth gtreot g art, OM 1’ Book Losk on Soles for Nemo and Address of Jo & Ly CCGUBINS, WO, Ity. DRUCS, ntions,Perfumery NT MEDICINES, T ) M WAL Gl Wedicings and Chemicals Dl : Drugs, I WHITEHOUSE, ) AND W RBSTL

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