Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 26, 1887, Page 4

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,THE DAILY BEE. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. TERME OF 8UBSCRIPTION Daily Mornjug Fdition incuting suhida By, One Yeul For Nix Months ¥or Three Months The Omaha Sunday Ber, niniled 1) any ad i Venr kX, NGO AND 018 AN AN S ke HOON 3. Tromesy B 180, WASHINGTON Opricr Noo old ForR TRENTH STRERT. CORRESPONDENCE All_communicati aditorinl mutter EpiToi 08 THE Brb BUSINESS L¥ Al bustness letters and © addressed to THE [ OMAIY, Drafts, chiecks and 3 e inade prynbié (o the order of the conipat The Bec Publishiug Company, Proprictors. F. ROSEWATER, Kook v of Thie Ree Pub u ses solemnly sw e that the \ation of the Daily Bee for the week 197, was a5 follows Mouday Tuesday, Wedueaday Thupsday, Nov. T /138 R e AVATAEE.....oiv vininne . 155 Geo B T7eciion Sworn toand subscribed i my presencs this 16th day of November, A. D, 187, NP FEL (SEAL,) Notary Piblie ate of Nebraska, County of Douglas, . B, Tzschue fArst duly sworn, de. en arid says thit he s secretary of The Bee Jiishing company, that (he actial averape afly circulation ~of the Daily Bee for tie © month of sember, 18, 138 Copies:for December, XM 1T coplea; for I 1855, 16,206 copies; fo he 1+57, 1 1l 1 Maich, 1585, 1440 for Apil, 1487 14, piess 'for June, 14,005 coples 151 copf nber, 18 October, 1855, ¥ Sworn to and sibscribed in #th day of October, A. D. 17 (SEAL) —————————— LXCEPT in southern California base ball 1o this year is over. Aund it is well. —_— It wae about one yenr ago that ®oal was discovered in Omaha - by the dr well drill. They ave still prospectin CADET TAYLOR has generon the city council his patert Cadet has a supecabundance of on hand, but up to date. the demand for it is very limited. ——— PRESIDENT CLEVELAN as olered a lot in St Paul but would not accept it. Me. Cleveland’s judgment appears to be good. Mrs, Cleveland's Owmalia real estate is not for sale. e witnesses for the Standard Oil company before the inter-state commis- sion are endowed with remarkably short memor But none of them boust such & poor memory as Johu M. Thurston. I is becoming a craze nmong United States senators to write novels. Senator Ingulls, of Kansas, is just completing one. It is confidently hoped that M. Hearst will not write one—at least not his season AN eleven-) old boy died in Phil- slelphia Sunday, from tohueco poison- B, caused by the use of ¢i Pennsyl in N golibiting the sale of tobucco in R to minors under a in maing s dead lette A cSTRAWTY bondsman has just bee sentenced to s prison for seven in New York This is an e mple that should be followed by other cities. The straw bail abuse would soon cense if injustice of this sort were meted out to all the culprits, fong drouth in s has been broken by copious showers throughont the state the past week, It las hout eleven months, Had it broken sooner, the prohibitionists would have stood much better chance in their recent struggle for suprema As it was, they bad nothing to offer. CALIFORNIA s probably more rupt state and municipal officials in pro- portion to the squ mile than any other state in the union. The net which has recently heen dragging the depths of politieal corruption theve has Just brought to the sureface an ugly sys- tem of pardon brokerage by which con- viets were made to puy & heavy vansom for liberty, A SAN FRANCISCO paper writes o Tengtiny lein which it denounces the custom of purchasing titles, Tt is havely possible that our cotemporary is giving itself needless alarm on this sub- ject. Suppose it should, hieve in Omaha L someday “Siv Patrique Forde We vet have the asfurnmee of a very able author that there is vothing in a naw T Northe * has ntly ghown the traditional impudence conscienceless monopolies. Thestate of Mi 2 ordered the company 1o lower its passenger from four to three cents per mile. But the chap- teved highwaymen will appeal to 1l federal courts, claiming that they o a federal corporation, not under the au- thority of the state. In the mewntime the extortionate charge will be Kept up. Such attempts at evasion of the law are much meye dangerous than the sense- less yanting of & tramp soctalist, and Justice should be as alert in checking thew os she bus becn in disco wnarchy. aging ——— SUB-CONTRACTOR BRENNAN has a great deal of chin-music for the city puncil. But what has the ¢ity council to do with Mr, Brennan? The contract for the city hall basement and sub- ment wis made with Regan Bros nd My, Beennan’s sub-contract Las never .. been officially vatified by the ecity. If Brennnn sulfers any loss the city is not responsible, His pretense that the s caused by u change of plans is all moonshine, There has been no change of pluns as yet, nnd there cannot be withoat the concurrense of the mayor snd council, The econtract authorizes the city to complete the unfinished work + and charge the cost to Regan Bros,, who _were under ‘contract ‘fo complete the Wl Ly the lat'l Jaly, 188’ The Surplus Proble The consuming theme with members of congress aleendy in Washington i« the <upplus problem. OF course every one ol them has a well-definea opinion as 1o what should be done, and very few | have any hesitation when asked in let- the world know what they think. Cdiftienlty suggested by this great ety of views is that of being able t them. 1t is reasonublie 1o an- A bitl or resolation from a la mujority of the membeie of the house touching thie subject, but anly one measiee can bhecome fnw Some of the gentlenten who have plans ace tolevably ertiin to e disappointed. Tt would be an extraordinary trivmph of stat ship that found o way W please a We refer simply to the problem of disposing of the present surplus and what wust accumulate hefove legislatio veducing the vevenae cocld become operative. There ace anmerous snge gostions of how thls may be doue, each of which has more or less support, hat very tkely if eneh member of congress were cequired o produce a plan no two wonld be fonnd in all rexpects alike. It would be to little purpose to disciss any of these suggestions in advance of their formal presentation_{n_gongress, butdy He remarked that some of them are sure to attract a good deal of attention. Among these is that of reviving the dis- iribution act of 1837 and divide the eure plus among the states. This proposition is undorstood to have originated with Scoator Sherman, and il urged by the gentiemen would e very likely to gnin consider- able support. [t is @ plun, however, that will admit of being very eautionsty considerad. Other suggestions conteni- plate | appropriations for all sorts of improvements, some of which are doniittess necessary and could. properly be made. CPhe ship subsidy men will undoubtedly make an argent effort to cecure something, but the promise of suecess for them is not flattering. The general ling evidently is that the money in the freasury anust be ex- pended, and it is havdly possible that this will be done without some extrav- suce and more or less wiste, Mean- while the other guestion of providing against o further aecumulation of sur- Plus i= also being seviously discussed. 1t seems to he undemstood that the coarse to he followed by the democratic ma- jority will be practically outlined in the vresidentinl message, and it is expected that a measure having the executive ap- proval will be ready whea congress meets for the consideration of the dem- ority. Nothing has trans- A beyond the reported sayings of Mr. Carlisle, to which we have hey fore veferred. to indiente the nature of this me , but thers is renson to he- lieve it will encounter no less opposi- tion than did the Morvison bill in the last house. The feeling that something ought to he done is general among congressmen who have been interviewed on this sub- jeet, but theve is as plainly evident as ever before a wiud difference of sentiment a8 to means t compels & doubt as to whether anythin will be done. A long contention is ¢ tain, and n few congressmen frans that in the present situation of any legislation on this subject is inpos- sible, AN TR That City Hall Job. Fver since the city hall was loeated on the corner of Bighteonth and K nam. every move towirds the crection of thix public building has heen pe ently misreprese ‘ertain Omalin dailics. At the very outset a hue aod ery was raised winst awarding the contract for ety hall plans to 104 Myers, an avehiteet, who has made pub- lie buildings a specialty, Frantic ap- peals were made on behalf of “home in- dustry,” in the face of the fuct that there wis no! ngle avehiteet in Omaha, at that timc vho 1 ever planued a public buildi even afive proof office huilding. d Avehiteet Myers enteped into an ivon- clad contract with the city to make plans of the city hall, for $5.000, pay- ter the building was com- Ihe regular charge for avehi- s plans of five proof buildings is per cent, payable as the work progresses. At that rate Mye would have been entitled to #7.000 for o 2200000 building, which wus the original estimate of its cost. M. Beman, the aveliitect of the new Bre building. will veceive over $9,000. and possibly $10.000 for his plans, S0 much for the all jobbery in the contract for plans of the eity hall, Simmered ‘down the hypocritical howl ahout *the city hall job” issimply amilig nant outbreak of jealonsy and petty spite Nobody would bave ever heard a word about the so-called “eity hall joh™ if the Ints adjoining were not owned by editor of the B There certs could not be a more suitable location for the eity hall than on ground oppo- site the court house. The city lost nothing by making the exchange of a disputed title for the old court house wround with William A, Paxton. The maguniticent block that now adorns the old court housc site, the ten- story block being evceted by the New York Life, ave directly the result of that exchange, and so is the $300,000 building in process of evection by the BEE Publishing company he revenue which the ci de- vive from these great buildings in the shape of taxes will redecm the new city 1 hall bonds within fifteen yoars. But the insincere how! about the “city hall job™ has no better foundation than the charge of crookedness in connection with the award of the plans on the let- ting of the contract for the basement. It is true that the city hall building will cost $275,000 instead of $200,000— but Mr. Myors is not respousible for the two years' delay in voting the honds and the advance which has taken place in the cost of lubor and material since his plaus weve adopted. The assaults upon Me: Myers’ competency as an architect bave been fuspived by the same small- souled mulice and weanness that has characterized the course of the sma bore editors. who pretend that they ave doing the public great service by ob- .I,lrlnl\vllug the construction of e city hall, ITis vxpm'l.‘d that Senator Chandler of Nuw Hampshiré wiil ke the'. first opportunity that presents itself in the cuss the present adminis: tration of the navy department. Chandler, it will be remembered, for- the deparctment 15 subjected to o great deal of un- e eriticism from the denoe He now has a« this attention, and it apy evally understood that hie sennto to di merly presided avs 1o be gen- will make the [+ will not be questioned that he can find agreat deal of matevial e efforts of Mre ly satisfactory in vesults, and it m will Lo abls to muke a cas ing bim will at | : seoretary of the navy if not vindie that a deinoc is not Infallable. ——— g« at Washington I dabbled in real estate with conside Suuset Cox made $20.000 by the eale of his Washington home just befors e efy for Turkey #50,000 cash what he bought for $30,000 dent Cloveland has made 1000 1 the increase of the value of d upon which his country home e big bu He sold for 1i his Fale of This s all {n the way of luc The tmagination turne dizzy in v to picture the heights on whic ne will eventually place our executive if ehe continues to boost hin in the future s in the past. CITY Attorney tatized himself again by futerpreting urt decision [ understand Buglish langunze. ways “has an opi Omahia and her eity council to have a a ponderous within easy reach. cgal mind It i3 thow Jilroad compuny will next charge of and manage the hotels Yellowstone sailway company munng ronimo and Sitting Bull long agoadmitted that they knew only the rudiments of scalping, ared to the attainments of lord at & summer vesort hotel. < Than Ours, assembling of parliament next rele will give added intevest to polit- ical affaivs in G gle in behalfof lvish home rale will of on the floor of the house of commons pected that some new moves will be de- It was made apparent in the address of Lord ago at the conservative conference t the government has no idea of veceding in the least degree from the polic i pursuing in veference seems to he ministry will determined that the 1 or fall by the poliey Being thus fixed in its course, the gramine appes the attention consideration into obevance, ministry could in din diverting the mind of the country Trish question of accomplishment. nd will not he proclaimed that obstruction will he offered in paelinment that tion of the home vule question and push 1t aside The friends of Tr venls conside That parlia ment will hu most serious attention toas elear thought to the and some of these will olution o h dom and statesmanship than the pe government rorder of wis- cern that cannot be tradesmen and we in the demand for som tion that will insure living profits to the sort of legisln- es to the other, and the pressure from fhese elements steadily b problems of 1 + forward with s importancee will sor lessurg reis abundant labor in avity of the situation in wows from day to d those who desive the continuance of the The imperialists and revolu- re undoubtediy taking every »of the opportunity, broadeast by the clements. at it would be vevy declined idency has be lieved by his accey of the altern tive, and if asked to form a ministry, can succeed in doing 0, the French vepublic ma safely through the storm and with a vy at the helm of \te grow stronger and more secure, [t to be feaved, howevs tion of such a man will be no casy task, and that in the work of doing so will be created bitter sonal antagonisms which w. keep the nation for a long time in dan- commotion, man than G r, that the selee- 1 serve to stroy the political influence of France duced to almost nothing. mendous steain the republic and the outcome will he pman veichstag was signalized by a most pacifi sentiment of which ar and explicit. The vetevan with age andthe heavy sorrow o mily afliction end of which probably he ean no longer doubt, desires more earnestly than ever to impress upon the world the thought that “the empire is peace.” i9 not aggressive; <hie has no ambition for conquestannd no vevenges 1o gratity . She maintains her military strength in the interests of peace, not 48 a menace of war. She is prepared for defense, not for attack., Such is the sentiment of Germany to-duy, as voiced by hev aged empecor, whose thoughts arve turned to things that forbid passion and silence the voice of ambition. ) ! There have beenja variety of state- ments regarding what was talked about by the ezar and Prince Bismarck at their mecting in Berlin, but it seems avident from what has transpived sincs the caar's return to St. Petersburg that the trade rvelations between the two countries was one of the subjects dis- cussed, With respect towhat has since taken place there is nothing in the least reassuring to German trade and to the future good understanding between that country and her colossal nefghbor of the north. Inereased duties have been placed on cotton twist, tulle, lace, facming machines and implements, joinery, trnery, flax, hemp, and jute goods, hardware, watches, clocks, glass work, glass anl metal beads and but- tous, hgkings-cod-dviad 85 and thor products, raw and maunfactured. As ali the above are lavgely manufactured in Germany and exported lo Russia, the effcet on German manufactures will be the reverse of pleasunt and protit- able. In fact, had the czar desired to direct a blow at the German nation short of war itself, he could not have de- tivered a more effective one. Of course Germany will now follow suit. The pro- posals of the Agricultural ociation to incrense the duties on agricultural im- ports will be taken up by the Gevman paclinment and adopted. Aud so the war of tariffs will go on. both countries injuring their vespective industries to spite each other, * The Menendez government still finds much opposition in San Salvador. in spite of the severity with which ve- bellion against it has been treated During the present autumu another at- tempt to overthrow it, though, tobe sureca very o and unsuccesstul one, has heen made from Guatemaln by Salvadorians who | taken cefuge there, The has been much banishin of malcontents, but evidently many 1 mainin the public. Gen- eral Iranciseo Menendes caine mto power in June, 1885, just after President Zaldivae had resigued and bad hastily left the country. Menender at that time had gained se I sucesses as leader of a revolution: and upon defeating Figueron. who suc- coeded Zallivar as temporary head of the government, (he was made provi- sional president; Nobe he has his owo turn at partial unpogulavity, and ever since May, of the présent year, political allu in San Salyadde have he d wuvhed. [t looks nstif Dr. Zaldivae's friends were intriguing for his veturn and in any case the little vepulie seems to have stormy times ahead. e The federal government of Switzer- land has gone into the Tiquor business on the principle which has alveady been tested in the andinavian kingdom. Ihe distillers are requirved w sell only w0 the wovernment, which will guarvan- tee the quality of the liguor it sells in veguluted shops. The plan includes only rectified spivits or concentrated al cohol. Diffused aleohol, such as is con- wined v wine and in cider is not con- sideved in this le lation. As Switzer- Laind has e eredit, by statisties, of being the drankenest counivy in vope, the new plan is an effort 1o regu- late prices, number and quality of the drams sold to habitual consumers, It looks like a vory remote stage of ve- pressive control, but is considered to a beginning in that direction PROMIN PERSONS Mus. Garfield is enjoying ler visit to Eng land Rose Blizabeth Cleveland will spend tie christmas holidays at the white house Commissioner Sparks will zo back to 1l nois and run for congress in his old district 11 Don M. Dickinson succeeds Me. Vilas as postmaster general, e will be the yo; i in the ca Herbert Spencer is now living at Brighion and his Liealth s s0 poor that he reccives lers He 18 wiiting an autobiography The venerable Simon Cameron takes pride i his cattle. His petis a steer that zirths over eight feet and pounds Congressmon George D, Wise has heen fined £20 at Kichwond, Va., for cairying con cealed weapons. The vourt also pocketed the congressman’s pistol Sam Jones, the revivalist, had the audacity to say before a Boston audience that he did notbelieye t “euliure with a big ¢ And Boston now believes i Joues with a sy | Colonel John A Joyee, of Washington, D C.. has become mar cditor of the Her ald-Democrat of Leadvilie, Col - He will be vemembered as the poet who has o standing quarrel with Elia Wheeler Wileox Harey Harwood, of Baltimore, the *gen tleman jockey,” who was recently injured by fall at the Ivy City raees, is not recovering pidly. His legs ave still paralyzed and fears are entertained ghat he will be perma nently erippled . The blind Cle v W, HL Milburn, will again be e dor the chap of the house of represgntutives, Several Washington preachers widl be his rivals for the 800 position of #pivitual adviser to the people’s representatives. On pleasant mornings. (ieneral Shevidan's four children accompany him to his ofice at the war department, Washington. The quar tet of little girls wear scavlet drosses, wraps and hats, and thus dressed alike i costume ax siiking as it is hecoming, they form a S [he fumous war rior Woins A Hoston paper in a eul about the distinguished Bostoniun, John L. Sullivan, vemarks that the ouly competitor the distinguished professor of the fistic art has to dread in s Kilrain, who, as the Hoston organ proudly remarks, is also a Hos. ton boy. This was before John Longfellow Sullivan bad been dined by British dukes The Bostonian organ, of course, is proud of Sullivan since, and would feel it a gre calamity If he should be defeated by u Bostap boy who had ot dined with most interesting &5 Washington: Post, Oumaha claims that Chicago's pork-packing and dressed beef industries ave being trans. fered atmost bodily to the former city, = The claiwm i3, of course, somewhat 100 comprehca sive, hut it is a fact that anumber of the lead- ing business men of Chicago are opening large houses in Omaha. —— 1y embareassed and out of town. ra M. Bell, of Denver, left a fortune estimatod at $150,000, a large which he bequeathed 1o NEW IMPROVEMENTS The New lmprovements Introduced in the Pork Packing Busine portion of chavitable i female box jorkers of the sssod by the police, night shows have also been President Cable, of the road. is browsing around the state and that the Roc St Pl Ploneer-Press, 1t is understood will decline to pass the portals of heaven un- Lows satisfied that tho angels are ol pants and high necke South Omaha ¢ Bnowflakes, See the suow flakes gently fall Hiding woods, and flelds, and all ! Bent ‘.m{u_v. BOARD OF ¥ A Portfulio of Ttems Gathered Wichin wiis reported several duyd wgo that (he Dancing, whirling uth Omaha Land Company had T Through the chill Novemb: bl i VIsitto'that busy city and foui ¥ falling to the ground, In a soft and Heecy mound iy for oecapancy, Conneilman Low when complete will euluriee the killin ¢ yesterday morning fo almost 0000 hogs per day. of the bowrd of public that the approach to the street viaducet was in su tlon that several horses b tha early part of the day, and that expertenced mora falls “The ehalrman took steps 1o notify the sweeping contractors to sprinkle the ap proach withy Through the Heaping heve and theee a drifd Shoulder high Wroud o his wission (e eporter oy seom {0 be W fallen there in Whirling the was iisy dispensinig Ui refeeshiments (o the thirsty customer: On being «--rn-h--yl hi‘l”‘“ ) w How they' do arouse your wrath, lyidusl with rdial grasp of the hand Aund, when you shovel out a path, grasp of the hand are haviug & boom her ingz < many Logs in 1 have just up to Omaha, and feel 1 there to_the office of Drs, ) Thosa physiclans have done for me, i one month, more than all the doc for alnost tour v and Wil soon e pack iith Omakin ws the 2ht also request the drivers o8 to shavpen the tocs and their aniwmals, A DANGEROCS BRIDO Robert Patrick yesterday morning divected the attention of the board to the fact that a 0 Douglas, fouu blegks esat-of Plans. 4 diugerous condition IRRITORY. ving T have dons 3 1 have becn affiicted for time with catarcl, and bave tried s nim Iped po rellet nauk thave got the calarth while work 1 worked there a_lon cama here to South Omaha, and since betny iere I have suffered tareibly vy fealing, had night s slepf poorly, wonld hawk snd spit Almost all the 1 cough wnd w miserabla ¢k of my throat from iy T was all broke up genw large geain sted in Pon The Burlington comp: stock yvurdz {58} warehouse has been iy ¢ building - % The eacth from on either side has washed down upon and rotten the planks end and several other pla peared in large holes wh sult in the break cotail 8 great 10ss upon the i 1s about fifteen wida and thirty Bve fect in héen frozen wit The reds must go. claved wav on the scarlet women of the h tho frost of death. I had an awful ient Ovder st i membe b od Work- WAt Foney s adyortisoments and cal THE ARCAITECT'S IDEA, They told me | had a pr Yesterday morning there was north wall of the board room ing by Architect Myers, by which the lutter vors to show ntract the worl of Regan brother the basement The Madison county seat war has de- carbuncle, suft rouch draw. | WOt dommen anonth has pa feel Tike saving all T can for the swents, my votgh 13 b bothered with it at all 1 and thel like @ rentment, and only veloped into « S0 kood that 1 painful and ugly to wes A quartette of mouthpicees vding to the tractors have brought the Beatrice juil monthly delivery i ved thete way to freedom there s a differeuce of one foot,which ‘hes the toor und the building i beams and wate estimgted at #5 L that they were build to the top of the METROPOLITAN DEGINS yesterday morning applicd mbe, in behalf of the Metro permission to the cost of which landling big Scptember and Octoher 6 handied, mostly stone. Norfolk would politan Cabl open foir bloe cast of Platte for the the road nbove mentioned. was granted and the work on the line will be 0t present a shoutder if 1l eomes that way The Union | nstruction of the road in the wi vation, was made coal and plenty of D s it the comin Kansas Cily, A Hooper hovse heater named Jeff of one of his oy DAVID EDENS, the above <ketel: s propeio Twenty-rixth ty swroborate tha or address hin The suliject of smashed the with a whiplash favorite oceupution. hounded with ten fold force. The veferee was South Omuha, arried on until the cold comp anyorie who will call ¢ cessation, which it is expected will be befo ent regnrding Dre, Me and Henry 15 made npon good Authority nee these eminent physt west. they have treated and cured over six thoua ctind cases of catarrh and chronic thy trondles, and of these coses declared and pronounced ineura e following stater about to sit down draft his decision when a hent pin mado a touching appeal to his feelings. oneof the couditions upon which nchise was ¢ ne should be 18 have heen in the cranted was that the work nenced within six that period expires on the 1th ut forceps wore requi of next month, the work now to be done, it store harmony. An enstern CATARRH DESCRIBED. The Symptoms Atrending that Diseass Which Leads to Cor When catareh b avant ealeulates that well soned chestnuts will vesist o of 130 pounds 10 the i All Over a Yesterday Willinm nd a lad of thirteen named Chazley 1of whom live near the poor . This estimate . which has for ten " s of decayed 3 existed (0 the i prrt of the throat for uny len living in o district where 10 catarrhul afe Deen left uncured, the cutarel, yvar: ably, <ometimes slowly, il ntor the bronchial tubes, which? tula into the differeit part<of tha tubes hecomo s arising from catareh, pligied up, 30 v us It shotild and the patient Dreathes with fabor and dificulty., charged with stealing a 200 pound pig f in O'Connor Mrs. B, I, IMord. ota county, has harvested 140 ac were in the em ez of corn, - and down the wind nts that this pig which by pounds inste s a part payment for th carvied off in the only pay he had month's work woolen nitiens. weighs ouly This land < been in caltivation year, without one’load of manure on the Who ean beat it? e now two full fledged women lawyers in the state Fanny O'Linn, the ls d to the har in Besides this | god in some instanees, anmot ot in as M 28 %5 i money and a pair of adicka are ur- ter having been admit story of the defense L brought 1 s A contintane prosecution is only the boy out of his just dues, was secuved until this morn Dain swhich e ficnee inthe courting days of youth to insure a faur meastre of suce Tust afew days wnd me of the stalwart republicans of 1 TVLL WEIGHT would li%ke to atteénd a vepublic vention. and those who are in the habit conventions eve o migh b ve the fund now be nest convens of attending every town in thestate would contribute would cost its 1o the conve ixed with the mucus, go elsewhere tiop. the fund would enjoy i hig hoom. masses of ¢l Waterloo has a bos w cheeay or chalky lumps Indicate Webster City 100 per cont. o catarrh wiit been tapped in Werson City a 000 bushiels of cucumbers and cramps With bronehid ¢ In drilling the th the different parts | wood has ) and evening SNEEZING CATARRH. What it Means, How It Acts, and What It s 1 he held 4 house at Washington Elkton 15to hive u t il 1 by the United States ( 15 of the great sty Pureet and M ice’s the only Baking Po! contain Ammonia, Line PRICEBAKIN "BOYNTON FURNACE CO., Sole Manufacturers of BOYNTON'S FURNAGES RANGES »° HERTERS, MODERN Improveiments, 47 and 49 Dearborn St., 3 H. MANNY, MaNAGER huilding a new pacity of S0, The Rapid City hosed of the opening of the Sioux dow't o’ any PowbER Co., (3 ihrane of that The work on tertown will be pushed vigorously through the winter et and not overdrawn pietar tuck of catarrh, or “Sneczing Cul W, whaat does this o from White- wood to that city during the winter. Whitewood.ten miles from Deadwood, Northweste journey ton W (e prr<o W yoming. hed wnd dry, Vauluable deposits of copper have neen f > to the throat und lungs, found cighteen miles from Loy DOCTOR J. CRESAP M'COY, Late of Bellevae Hospital, N Y., AND DOCTOR COLUMBUS HENRY 310-311 RAMGE BUILDING, Coraer 105th wountains of it ave in sig Over 10,000 oil clair Henry E.Cox, Omaha THE OMAHA BEE. e DELIVEED TO = ANY PART OF LINGOLN —BY CARRIER FoRt 20 Cents a We Sevon papers & week Lerifl's office 1 with thivicenrevoly cted and honored as liest effectivo promoters of settlement in the cemetery. A peanut gardcn wasoneof the sights Buffalo Gap this nty tubers were . rousting hot try and climate Clheyennese ave preparing in honor of the Burlington b will be comp ato 6f thg hur- Street, Capital Hotel Building URE PRuiE joubla acting ro. Hopking, the territorial veter rian, has discoy Nebraskans 4 Omaha, Nebraska. NEW DEPA N Where all curah! been shippir 0 the best Bauds and and excented them, s et o 0 [ fintsh wnd sppearance. TATION by ma 1o denler does o bhoodle tumbled into a i Denver and blew in $1,000 iu hall /O & HEAL7, Ohicago, fit, cCay through th 2 uud it 15 thus possible JOITEY 10 obARS J. GALBRAITH, at theit homos. 60n and Phys rner 14th and Douglus st ; Residence tel phes g AN 1l Nospital treatment I'he state capitol building in » answered upless wccotpunisd by nveloped iua n s 5 all lotters o Ors, McCo, 3 imilar to that il - loster 3, McCoy & Henry, surrounding t 10 and 61l Remge Lulldiog, Omabey Contractor Richardson - is

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