Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 17, 1874, Page 2

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tion bill. The next point and really ;I'HE 6MAHA BEE | framing a Constitational Conven- UFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. TO CORRESPONDENTS. I the most important one is whether anything can be gained by conven- ing a Constitutional Convention in | anuary instead of March or April. Assuming that the main object of a hatever W Do NOT desiro su¥ conts and we of & literars or poetical charac will not undertake to preserve, of {0 Teturn be same, in any case whatever. Our Swfl is suficiently large to more than supply our limited space in that direction. Rear Naxe or WriTER, in full, zaust in each ‘and every case accowpany any COmmUBICa tion of what nature scever. This is Dot in- faction and as proot of good faith. i Oun Covxtay FriExps we will alw le; with we must determine first whether these objects will be attainable | Teoted for pubdication, but for oar own satis- | sooner by the Journal's extra fore- | s be | way; new constitution is to give more | equitable representation to all sec- tions of the State by increasing ative representation in ratio | our increased population ng process than by the regular and, second, whether pleased to bear from, on all matiers connected | gorong process will hasten the day with crops, country politics, and on sny sub- Joct whatever of general interest o the peo- ple of our State. Any information connect- o with the election. and relating o foods, accidents. ete., will be gladly received. All such communications. bowever, must be | riet as possible; and they must, in all cases, be written upon oue side of the sheet only. be practically used. In order to arrive at la PoLITICAL. ALL ANNOUSCEMENTS of candidates for ofice —whether made by self or friends, snd whether 2s notices or communications to the | Editor, are (until nominations are made) simply personal, aud will be charged as ad- vertisements. All communications should be 3ddressed 10 £ ROSEWATER, Editor and Publisher, Draw- ram. NOTICE. O and sfter October twenty-first, 1872, the | ety elrculation of the DAILY Bxx is assumed by Mr. Edwin Dasis, to whose order all sub- | scriptions pot paid at the office will be payable. | aud by whoa all receipts for subscriptions will | be countersigned. E. ROSEWATER. Puiilisher —— WALL STREET is on tip toe just now in anxious expectancy of a | Presidential vetoc of the currency | inflation biil. ; — Tag Herald wants Mayor Chase | to appoint only square. toed Demo- | cratic policemen. Inasmuch as | seven-eighths of our present police | force are of that policical complex- | jon, we should bardly think the pre- | cedent commends a repetition. | Seriously speaking we hope Mayor | Chase will make his appointments according to the qualifications, and not according to the political affillia- tion of the men. Omaha needs, | above all things, radical reform in ber police department, and that | can only be obtained by placing | competent honest and sober men as guardians of the public peace, | AxorsER mammoth monopoly has just expired. The charter of the Anglo American Telegraph Com- pany, granting it the exclustve privi- lege of landing telegraph cables on the shores of Newfoundland, ex- pired April 15th, at the pleasure of the Provincial Government. On | snd after that date the Provincial | Government can take possession of the company's land lines by pays | ing for the actual value, without re- ference to business or good will. | The total expense is not estimated at over half a million dollars. With | these lines in hand, the Province | can then permit asmany companies | s choose to land cables and conneet with the interior lines. A very strong popular pressure has been | brought to bear on the Legislature | in this direction, whilst the agents | of the company are reported to be | working assiduously to re-cstablish the monopoly. The Direct United Ktates Cable Company have secured | a landing site at Port de Grave, in | Conception Bay, and will be pre- pared to land their cable at that | point in June nmext. With that | cable laid and free-trade in teles | graphing declared by Newfound- | land, it is hoped there will be a ma- terial reduction in the cost of mes- sages between this country and Europe, TuE substitute for Mr. Sumners’ eivil rights bill reported back by the | Senate Judiciary Committee pro- | vides that all persons within the jurisdiction of the United States | shall be entitled to the full and equal enjoyment of inns, public | conveyances on land and water, | theatres and places of amusement, and common other also schools and public institutions of | eligible men in framing the organic | learning or benevolence, supported in whole or in part by general taxa- | tion, and of the cemeteries so sup- ported, subject only to the condi- tions aud limitations established by 1aw, and applicable alike to citizens | of any race and color, regardless of | and the State officers will be unable | trees, of previous condition of ser- vitude. Any person deny- | ingtoa clitizen any of the privi- | leges vouferred by this bill shall pay $500 to the person sggrieved, and shall also be deemed guilty of & mis- demeanor, and upon convietion | thereof shall be fined not less than | $500 nor more than $1,000, or be im- | prisoned not less than thirty days, nor more than one year! The District and Circuit Courts of the United States are given exclusive pognizance of sl] offenses against | the bill, and actions msy he prose. | cuted in any United States Court wherever the defendant | may be found without regard to | the other party. — CONSTITUTION MAKING. TaE LixcoLs Journal calls upon i | clog legislation. when this extra representation can a just estimate, we will first review the | forced process and then the regular | know there were fire-urms in the one. Take it for granted then, that the present Legislature assem- bles in extra session about Novem- ber first, that they can be harmon- ized upon the apportionment of representatives to the Constitutional Convention, and upon all the details of the bill within three days. Furthermore, let them call the constitutional convention at the earliest possible day, say by Jan- uvary 10th. Suppose, furthermore, that the convention is harmonious and completes its labors within fifty days, or about March 1st,. The | people must have at least sixty days for the discussion and consideration of the new constitution, they vote upon and adopt it, say on May first, with a proviso that it shall go into immediate effect. The people may also elect a new Legis- lature at the time they vote on constiution. Assume that the result of the election is known officially within thirty days. That would enable the new Legisla- | ture to organize about July Ist., 1875. But would the people, espec— ially the farming population, favor a session of the Legislature, in the | midst of harvest, unless some extras ordinary advantage could result therefrom? We maintain thatthey would not, but on the contrary they would for obvious reasons insi upon postponing the session until December, or even {ill January. Now let us review the regular pro- cess, We will assume that the people will vote ““for & constitution” in Oc- tober, and that the lesislatureslected | in October will understand the wishes of their respective constitu- encles. They assemble about January 10th- The Journal says the Sena- | torial contest will delay them, and | prevent them from acting promptly. Now the Legislature of 1571 also | had a protracted Benatorial contest. ‘When that hadclosed they were dis. | tracted by the famous impeachment trials, sud in spite all these obsta- fles the Constitutional Convention | bill of 1871 was approved by the Governor on March 27th. Now as- sume that the bill of 1875 is ap- roved by April 1st, and the Conven- tion assembles by May 15th. Grant them fifty days for framing tho | Constitution, and sixty days more | for its discussion and we can have a new Constitution adopted in the regular way by September 5th. The people may also elect the new legisiature and State govern- ment on the same day, contingent upon its adoption. The new Legis- lature could readily assemble in | December or in January, and the | result is precisely the same as if the Journal's forced process was adopted. Now we will point out the objec- tionable features of the Journals plan. 1st. It involves a needless expense for an extra session of the legisla ture. 2d. It convenes the Constitutional Convention and the Legislature at the same time, and thereby prevents members of the next Legislature from serving in the Convention. This will deprive sparsely settled law. 3d. 1t will cause confusion and Members of the convention will seek to exert an in- direct influence upon the Leglsla- ture during the Senatorial contest, to give both bodies the necessary attention and information. If the Journal or any other news- paper can controvert these points by | indisputable figures, the BEE is open | for convietion. PERSONALITIES. John Evan, Wilmington, Senator Boutwell is much better —in fact, "bout well. Vasquez, the California bandit, took five dollars from a man and then bought the man's gloves for two dollars. Fred. Lamkin, of Chicago, was lately sent to the Bridewell for 30 days, for stealing 8 night's lodging in & Lake Shore freight car. Mrs. Olive Logan Sikes remarks ‘hat America doesn't suit her psych- P jogical tastes, and that she has no gelist isa policeman in the BEE to discuss “the Constitu~ | desire ever to see it more. tional question on its merits, and Dot upon the conscquences of thede- cision that may be given.” The Con- stitution question according to the Journal's conception, is the propo- | srtion to call an extra session of the present Legislature after the Octo- ber election, with a view of hasten- ing the process by which the people of Nebraska are to securea new Constitution. Now, if the Brs is to diseuss this proposition on its | | al of Senator Jones of Nevada, is re- to have an income of some- | where about $5,000,000. No wonder he has large views on the financial | question. Mr. Brouser, of Indiana, offered up an arm on the altar of the insat- iate buzz-saw the other day, and in | future he will Brouser 'round in less sanguinary localities. Judge Virgin administers 1 1 its pristine purity to the citizens f Portland, Me., and Jud the | Suppose | Test ecides cases of the kind indicated | es to market the crop. (George Miller, a colored preacher | of Oskaloosa, Kansas, is more straightfo: ward in replying to slan- der than some white preacher near- er New York. He says if the slan~ derer persists, he will draw claret from his nasal organ. He had been accused of gambling. Isaac Braudt, of Iowa, Deputy State Treasurer under Rankin, against whom _eight indictments have been found for embezzlement, isa_well-known temperance man, holding high rank among the Good Templars, and has been active in having liquor sellers indicted by grand juries. A cat, which stuck its far into a tin can, ina N town, one night last w1 innocent _cause of a I ment. The 3 glar wasin the kitche the ladies very proper], gentlemen armed themselves and began firing wildly out of the wi dows, to let the supposed marauders head too Jerse house. A pilot on a western steamboat, crossing the Grand Chain, a ro shallow near the mouth of the Ohio, ona dark night, was uneasy and | anxious. Suddenly the barking of a dog was heard afar off. “There,” said the pilot, brightening up, and quickly giving the wheel two or three turns, “I'm all right, Iv'e steered by the barking of that dog | every night I've passed here for five COLORADO. The tannery at Fort Collins is about completed. Napoleon TV has been dubbed the «Imperial Barkis.” The Big Thompson river has been | bridged at Cawrle’s crossing. | Pueblo will bo lighted by gas be- fore the close of the present year. Demoerat Mountain is still labor- ing and bringix The Boston and Colorado Smelt- ing Company spipped, last week,13 bars of silver, weighing 901 pounds. Tellurium is getting to bo com: mon. They can find it almost any where in Boulder county. Mr. W. A. Rand, a prominent Colorado farmer, issowing two hun- dred and fifty acres with wheat this | spring. A vein of pure coke cight feet | thick and underlying about one hundred acres, hve been discovered | near Trinidad. A party of several men, comfort- ably equipped and provisioned, left | Longmont, Saturday, for the Yel- lowstone country. The a will be usually large this ¥, farmers south of the Divide have | finished sowing, but the season is a trifle backward i the northern oounties, The soil in Sothera justas rich and as e porting a dense population as any region of similar extent in the | States, Tts climate is one of the finest in the world, and in regard | to health it is not surpass any- where. The most high born person in the world is said to be a resident of Clear Creek county. Tt ne into the world atan elevation f 11,000 feet last Friday morning. It is a boy, and the parentsarc on Leavenworth mountain. A Pueblo butcher recently pa off on an innocent traveler to Del te a hind quarter of a Tes eifer for buffalo meat. The latt | soon sent back for more of the sa kind, saying the best buffalo meat he had ever eaten, age of wheat in C: Colorado is ble of sup. A FOREST OF FRUIT TREES. | Twenty Thousand Trees in Blos- som. One of the largest fruit orchards | in the Stato is situated between one and two miles south of Yuba_City, and is the enviable property of S. Briggs, one of the pioneer Brigg: Bros., of fruit notoriety, Mr. Briggs purchased this ranch three or four | years ago, and commenced planting his orehard from the best varieties | to be found in the East and in Cali- | fornia, | The orchard embi | ing trees, a large m; | bearing this seaso peach trees, embrac s the foll jorit Peach ng 16 vari hem 000 ies, | districts of the services of their most | the first ripening as early as the last | week in May, and the last as lateas December. The favorite original | tree is called “Red May,” and there | are 4,000 of these trees in blossom. | Aprieo 000 trees, all bearing, | and 12 varieties. They have been | nipped slightly frosts, but if | there are 1o more the erop will be a fine one. Cherries—there are 4,000 measuring a foot senting a | Plums—there trees, ties, a majority of them > this year. The 2,000 n' diameter, pr Pears— and rank, ng. 00 ar trees, thrifty v Bartletts, | cherry-plum trecs, with fruit, and a ¢ | ted—the first fruit o | June plums—130 tr | finely. T growing 1, | ties, which look well. trees are three or four ye and the youngest are j from dormant buds. The ranch contains 426 acres of upper and bottom land, 210 acres of | which compose an immense forest l of frujt trees, reaching a distanoe of amile in one direction, and three- quarters of a mile in another, the | trees standing but twelve fect apart. The soil is a light sandy loam, and the proprietor runs three plows I regularly to maintain proper eulti- vation. No newspaper description can do justice and give anything ike a correet description of this great pomologioal forest, consisting | of about twenty thousand fruit trees, | all putting on their spring foliage and decorated with thousands of variegated hues, | We have no conception of the | number of pounds of fruit this orch- i ctor has al varie- The oldest ars of age, ng 10 in | ard will yield the next few montbs, | bold to say to him: By a low estimate, it is safe to say that it will require over 100,000 box- Mr. Briggs s | bishop gave his permission In these all large, some | are large | PUNGENTISTIC. | Wheat six inches high may be seen at Austin, Minnesota. It grew in & flower-pot. A small boy in Indianapolis is in Jail for stealing two tons of pig iron from a rolling-mill. There are over 600 Indians in Philadelphia. All of them are at- tached to tobacco establishments. Now let your hens out to harrow up your neighbor’s feelings and his seeds. It makes good garden-sass. They think they have perpetual motion last in Massachusetts. | Voting for Senator, you know. “Man wants but little ear below, nor wants that little long,” unless he would resemble a donkoy. The key to Jerusalem may be found in the new telegraph office at Bethlehem. Memphis tried a bluff on the Mis- sissippi river, but got called right down to its hand. Duluthis said to have a eity ordi- | nance which preventsa man from keeping more than two tame bears. e, Penn., A gentleman in Pottsvil has n his dog “Penny | cause as one cent to im an has had 10 mills with the eat. he ladies of Leavenworth are signing a pledge “to use no more | newspapers except as men use the same.” The Boston Globe announces that there no truth in the report that ! the English government intends to send to Alaska for the Great Seal. Tho latest action for damages is one against a Virginia railway com- pany for running over a rooster. The jury gave the plaintiff §: You need not black your boots in Pittsburg. You hang them out of ndow at night, and they are k enough in the morning. | A Missouri man has offered to live forty days without food, if any one will give him $500 for doing it. No offe Some Hartford men tendered Mark Twain a welcome supper, and | the bill, amounting to $203, was | sent to him. He paid it. | “A man shall be known by his | fruits,”” soliloquized a despondent father, “and mine are ‘pairs.’"'— | Brooklyn Argus. The Boston Treveler says Georgia lets out_her State prison convicts at $11 & year, and thinks a man_could | make more than that pieking up pins. A lavw la | blacl | court in Towa has fined a oloado | furer 520, beeause he made his son | turn a_grindstone 16 consecutive hours, for going home with an old maid from singing school. Tt is estimated by a careful statis— cian that the amount taken from | the pulilic by the Louisville lottery ! is about one-third that spent by the women of America for spring style | bonn An exchange asl anything that man cannot do?" “Is there | To which Dr. Wood, of the Glas- | never known one | gow (Ky.) Zimes, replies: ir; we have suckle a baby.” The detectives seized a mysterious looking trunk which arrived in St. | Louis lately, and thought they had | a strong case. It contained Lim- a ! burger cheese, Bobbs complains that his wife is nist. She blows him up | v day, and makes him circulate he actually feels that he is_be- vond_redemption.—ZLouisvilla Com- | meroial, “\What has the temperance moves | ment accomplished?” queries the | Xenia Zorchlight. - 1t has kept the truly good editor of the forenoon | paper from taking a quiet comfort- | able drink for three months: What | more ould one ask ? The Bishop of Montreal had pro- ‘ «1 dancing. Two officers, wish- » obtain permission to dance | the polky at a military ball, danced | together to show the bishop how it | was done. After the exhibition the | terms: “You ean dance the polka | | as long as you please—with each | other.” | hil ing cene in the Mississippl Legisla- | ture.—“Mr. Speaker ! Mr. Speaker! | | Mister Speakea—KER! ain’t I "titled | 5 | to tho flo’, sah ? I got up, sah, nex after Mr. Smith, who was next | after Mr. Johnson, who was next after Mr. Brown, who came next to Mr. Burns, who was next_to Mr. | Bates, who was next to Mr. Ball, | who was next to Mr. Blue, who was | next to Mr. Barclay, sah, and have | stood here until all have got through | turnabout, and now it’s my turn. A curious story is told in a Nat- aper ahout H. Polkenhome, | -, of that place, who, while wall ing out on & warm day, felt some- | thing burning him in the side. His clothing was on fire, and on ex- | amination he found that his eye- lasses in his waisteoat pocket had caused the mischief. The sun's rays penetrating through this gar- ment to the lenses, had burned a | | hole through the pocket, and | | seorched his under-garments. i CavoN KinNGsLuy, Chaplain of der Majesty Queen Victoria, re. delivered a sermon in which he expresses the desire that Amerioa | should furnish some hero for burial | in Westminister Abbey. Kato Field, in the Daily Graphic, com- ments at length up is i tion. After exhausting a_long list | of imperishable names, the writer | exclaims: ‘George Francis Train, | where are you? Can you resist 2'— Omaha Bee. England is welcome to him, liv ingordead. The mere fact of his cing present at one temperance iing nearly ruined the Crusa- We were not equal to the New York Crusader, April A Brooklyn plumber tells this &tory in the New York Sun: Friday I was sent to fix a pipe in Beecher's house. He came in and got bossing around just as I was making a soft joint. It made me mad, and 1 said: “Who is doing | this job?” He said: “You,” and he smiled o good that I felt as if I had | known him all my life. So I made r. Beecher, what do you think of the council?’ nd he began to laugh, and then he said: “There was an old Seotch merits, it devolves upon the Journal | by his name for the litigous Hoosiers | expeets tohave peachesin the mark- | minister who hud been paying at- | to convince realy some merit in it. | the BiE that there is | of Indi Santa Anna has returned to Mex-— | et at least fifteen daysin advance of | orchards in other partsof the State. | He will have but two agencies, one tentions to a young woman for four years, and one night he said, ‘Mary, I ha’ been coomin’ | Equipped with Palace Day and Slespiag Cars. ‘We presume the Journal will ad- | ieo, and is in wnn: Ir g: museum mit that the present Legislature is | Managers throughout country 8,80 rempect sere favorably conat'- | 720 Bave his Woodehy leg, on exbi- b tion will return it, he will be able to tuted with reference to equitablerep- | e<ubloh wo-yard. :':"““‘";l""" the Legislaturethat |\ 4.5 of General John C. sto take their places in Jan'y Dext. | Bocckinridge tried to draw him out Nothing is therefore to be gained by | on politics the other day. He began the distranchised West n endowing | By asking the General what he ” it al o an almost defunct body with func- | Bought sbout A, KL, Stephens, tions that should be exercised by the e he e ia wery 1ol Leghlature fresh from the people | hesith.” The " nterviewer sub | at Sacramento, for the eastern trade | here four years, and I ha’ neverhad | and one at San Francisco for thit | a kiss yit” And Mary said, ‘I } market. The cost of this orchard, don’t mind, providing it's done in | including lands, goes somewhere be- | the right way.’ ‘Of course’—and | tween $20,000 and $30,000. The | they knelt and asked a blessing. cost of land, withoutimprovements, | Then he solemnly kissed her, and | l was about §17,000. The receipt | said: ‘O, lass! but that was good. | this year, with & fair market, will | Letus return thanks.’” My solder | Iba immense, The value of this wascold when he got mmufn, and | | property is about $50,000. The en- | I felt like talking, so says I, “Mr. erprising and perserving proprietor | Beecher, what do you_think of deserves all the financil success he | Buddington ?” he says: | | Is about to recel ille Ap- | “You fix that plpe!"lgn-h‘ peal, | knows what be s about. | | | mation obtained, % DEPOSITORY | The Fird National 8ok DB W BY DA EXA 1 é& o Cor. ¥ THE OLDE! and 13th Sireets. BANKING ESTABLISEMENT NEBRASKA. t Kountze Brothers.) Creanized s & Nations! Auguet 2. 1863 tsover - - - - $250,000 AXD DImBCTOES A KOUNTZ) Chier B. W. YATES, TR S Established in- Capital and CREI( H. KOUNTEE, , Vice Pres't. A POPrLE: it The Oldestkstanisneu BANKING, IIOUSE IN NERRANKA. Caldwell, Hamifton & Co., BANKERS. Business transaeted same as that | | of an Incorpofhted.Bank. Accounts kept in.Carreney or Gold | | subjeet to sight ebeck without no- | Certificates of Depasit issued pay- | able demand, or at fixed '«’h{e | bearing interest at six'percent. per nd available Il in all parts | of the countr; Advances made to’enstomers on | approved securities atmarket rates | of interest. | " Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- | ehange, Government, State, County, | and City Bonds. 2 | e give special atteution to nezo- | tiating Railroad and other Co rate Loans issued within the Staic. | | “Draw Sight Drafts on England, | Ireland, Scotiand, and all parts of | Europe. | Sell European Passage Tickets. COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY M4 DE. - su Furniture Dealers Nos. 187,189 and 191 Farnham Street. OMAEA. N BRASKA. mar2aut STOCK —axv- ANVM GTIRVIS INNERS’ TIN PLATE, AND SHEET IRON, Japanned Ware, Tools and Machines. Particular attention | ‘AUVM NLL NIVId H et csn save voth time snd money by ordering {rom us. ORDERS OLIOITED AND BATISFAOTION GUARANTEED. @rsole Western Agency for Nebraska and the Weltern Territories for the Stewart Cooking Stoves. MILTON ROGERS, Omaha., Neb. ARTHUR BUCKBEE. CARPENTER, BUILDE —AND DEALER IN— woos | " |Charter Oak and Send for Price Lists. Address | STATE SAVINGS BANK.| _ wN6s Lows, Viee President, ars-dts N.W.COR. FARNHAM, & 13TH T8, Y | ) Capital, $100,000, Authorized (Z-nlul,‘ £1,000,000. | | Deposite as sroull as one dollar received and | Compound lnterest allowed on same. | ~AND— ORNAMENTAL ‘LINOIA “TIVYH Advantages OVER of Deposit: The whaleor any past of a depolt after rv- I maining (o thin Bank three monthe, will draw | | interest from dste of deponit to time of pay- | ment. The who.e or any part of a depoeit cun | suzsf. HONHI NOYI CHEAP, DURABLE, | Certificates For Yards, Lawes, Cemetarics, Church Groads ana and Ofice ) ‘arnbam sud Harney § | Public Parks, | 5 | 1h e, ter. prae drawn at say Une- > C. F. GOODMAIN, Wholesale Druggist And Dealer.lin PAINTS, OILS AND WINDOW GLASS, raome| OMAHA., | | TBH | ruaseuss aomve ron i e |___ Ju A. THORUP, o !NBBRASKA SHIRT MANUFACTORY %’ W S 159 BZKA MILL | OMAHA NATION AL BANK CORNER... Douglas and Thirteenth Streets, OMAZIA, NEB. Neb B L T — | 159 This Bank a-!imx:x::lnn. Goveramer: | | FARNHAM ST, OMAHA, |SHRTS AND GENTS' FUR BULJ.ION AND GOLD DUST, ‘a0d seits drafis and mekes colleetions on B&@5~Shirts ofall kinds made to order. rilyl-od FARNHAM ST, NEBRASKA. I3HING GOOD3, &C. & Satisfation guarranteed. =g Omaha & St. Louis Short Line 187! parts of Europe. Drafts drawn payable in Gold or Carrency o1 | | the Back of Californis, S8an Fraucieco, PASSENGERS |VANDALIA Going East or South from Omaha | And Poirts on U. P.R.E. LINCOLN ROUTE” | via Tux ATCHISON & NEBRASK RAILROAD! hould take the ROUTE “ E A S T The Kansas City, St. Joe and | Council Bluffs R. R And secare l!.rwr themwlses the cholce of Six | ' 3 TRAINS DAILY LE\VE ST. LOUIS WITI I the only dire line to | sT. LOUIS Atchiso1 to Chicago and St. Louis, Al making Reliable Conaections aod being. AFD THE EAST, FROM | OMAHA AND THE WEST rom | avolled West of | s securing Tickets via | and the ATCHISON & | ASKA RATLROAD. ble Connections are also made | with the A. T. & 5. F. R. R. for the ‘ Great Arkansas Valley & Colorado, | And with all lines runuing South to points in | ‘Southern Kansas and the Indian Territory, | | | Pallman Palace Cars NO CIANGE of cars betweon Omaha and St. Louis snd but ore between OMAUA and NEW YORA. THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE aning & CULLTIAN SLEEFING CAR EAST KituM @UAHA, ON ARRIVAL Indianapolis, Cineinnati, i Louisville, | Chicago, Chicago, Rock Island | Columbus, and Pacific R. R. P shurg, THE GRAND CENTRAL ROUTE FROM Pl! il a delphia | Y OMAHA TO CHICAGO, Baltimore, ety TG BT Washington, . Via Des Motues, Davenport and Rock Island. | —axp— > are equipped with the | WESTINGUOUSE PATENT AiR Lu«Es and Miller’s Paient Safety Platiorm and Coupler. 2 Fast Express Trains Leave Daily, Qomaecting safoliows: | AT DES MOINES with the Des Moines Valle ‘Railroad, for Osk.lovss, Otiumws, Keokul ATCRINSELL wion th muirater| ONLY ONE (HANGE TO - | Claveland, Buffa'o & Boston Tows, for sl poinis nos ihe_Burlington, Ask for Tickets via LINCOLN & TCHISON | CHAS. C.SMITH, W.F. WHITE, Gen'iSupt. Gew'l Pasa. Aght. Aratison, Knnsas a¥ing athar routes have a atisier at the niver Station. a2t PASSIN F% TRAIVS DAILY ! LEACHING ALL EARTERN AND WESTERN CITIES With Less Chacges ad i advance of other lin:s. | This Eucire Line is equipped with | Pullman’s Pulace Sleeping Cars, Palace Day Coaches and Chair Cars, | Miller's Safety Platform and Coupler and the Celebrated Westinghouse Air Brake. NEW Y OR K| =osetu ot via Via Omaha and St. Louis. | Tickets foraale at cor. Tenth and Farnham | wircots, snd U. P. Depot, Omaha- | 303 TERON, Pass. At Al Passenger Trai Astival of Trains from te West. o, Contrat GEO. L. BRADBURY, T WEST LIBEKTY ] Cedar Rapids & Minnesota Railroad, for Buriington, Cedar Rapids, Dubuque & Paul, At WILTON JUNCTION with the South-Western ' vranch, for Muscatine, Washirgion and all points south. AT DAVENPORT wiih the Davenport & St. 1 Railroad for po pts aorih. K 1SLAND with the Western Union v Freeport, Beloit, Kacine, Mil- i1 poiuts in neribern Liinois Wiscon: AT BOCK ISLAND with the Rocklord, Rock fstand #nd S Louis R.ilroad for 8t Louis and points south. AT RUCK ISIAND with the Perria & Pogk and Railroad for Peoria and points east. AT BUREAU JUNC., with bracch, for Hen. | Ty, Lavere, Chillicothe and Peoris, LA SALLE with the Jilinois Central Rail- rosd (2 nort hand south. Am:‘li?“w with *1i Tines Exst, Norsh avd | 3. F. pARNARD, | Gen'] Supt. | S St Juseph. | ; E‘ICKE'@ cA.nf.rl.le-( Uh:' e E. coracr . ™ ALL ABOUT THE WATER WORKS. e ey Kavessfary, | The central city of the West HAS. E. FOLLETT, Gen'l Pass. Ag't. S1. Lovis. Who wish to cut a swell, At once erect a reservuir Upon their highest hill. We read in the days of Noah That water wo ks were tried; The trouble was t ey had nos wers, Ani 5o the peopl- died. Lot s then regemter T water woflls we try, Toput ia sewers zood and strong, ‘And make our streets quite dry And when the thing is done We'll celebrate | City Meat Market. | i | SHEELYBROS. I Keep constantly oa_baod | 4 LARGE 8UPPY OF | 5 POULTRY, —axp— TABOUGH TICKETS to all Exster cities, ia hin lize, ca bo procared. and-say iaiort ohucerning points. st tcked otiorof Qn‘w&m-fin';:&n- o P licket sfioes Vlong the Tine of the U 1B . M. SMITH, Gea'l Pw'r Ag't. 3. H. LACEY, s Omahs GAYE ks o VEGETABIE® wiw et TR e I SRS be paid to Orders from the Trade. Merchants convenient to this mar | OMAHA | Max Moyeoer & Bro, Omaha, Ne .. wade y Desoriptio AND COUNTERS, P3 BROCHER'S SHOW Cy; on haud, and Bhow Cases of Ever, 16 672er on Bhere Notico ENTS FOR THE 14 GENERAL WESTERN AC g A Btock of Bhow Ouses Crmstant PRACTICAIL Manufacturex WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOC K - JEWELRY AND PLATED-WAREx AT WRHOLI LE OR RETAIL. Save TIME and FREI Ordering of Us. B ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE ! $&ALL GOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESE: fans1-tr S ———————————— BRADY & McAUSLAND. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS I WHITE LEAD, COLORS OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS, Artists’ and Decorators’ Materials. 533 and Fourteenth St., Junes-iy Raw Furs Wanted!. A. HUBERMANN, FUR MANUFACTURE AND BUYER OF RAW FURS! 511 & 513 THIRTERSTH St, OMANA, NEB, % |I PAY THE HIGHEST MARKET | Dealers Can | NTED. | o dad - - PRIGES And Manufacture all Kinds of Skins img 1 Every Desirable Article. oy . J. McKELLIGON, Importer aad Jobber of Forelgn and Bomostic wines and Liquors, TOBACCOS AND OxXG Aans, | No. 142 Farnham Street, - Omiha, Neb OLD EENTUCKY WHSKIES A SPROIALTY oot E¥CAGENT FOR THE ELDORADO VINE COMPANT. CALIPONNIA g9 § C. Amsorr S. C. ABBOTT & CO. ksellers T Stationers! DEALERS IN AT, - Boo WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, anND WIINDOW SEHADES, No.18: arnham Street. Omaha, Neb Publishers’ Agents for School Books used in Vebracka. CHEAP FARMS! FREE EHOMES On the Line of the Union Pacific Railroad A Lazd Grast of 12,000,000 Acrea of tis best FARMING sad MINERAL Lands of Amerios 1,000,600 ACRES IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY, THE GARDEN OF TAE WEST NOW PORSALE ! These lands are In the central portion of the Unitad States, on the dist dogroe of Nedih Lat e b cuiru lne of Uh grvat Terapersts Zomoof the Amricas Ciatient, s0d far grat Srowlng and stock raisiog unsrpassel Ly any 1o the United States OHEAPER IN PRICE, mors favorableteras glvea and more coavezleat to market than o o fousd Bisewhars. FIVE 20 TEN YEARS' creult given with interest a: $1X PER CENT OCOLONISTS 2ad ACTUAL SETULERS canbuy on Ten Yoars' Oredit Lands a0 the sam urice to all CREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction TEN PEL CENT. FOR CASM. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLER2. And the Best Lecitions for Colonies ! Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead :f 160 Acres. FPassewm to FPurchanseors of Liund b new maja, pobiishet 1n Address lish, German, Sxeed B ODAVIS B.R.Ca. Omans, Neb Tasd Commi-sioner U. P. WM. M. FOSTER. Wholesale Lumber, WINDOWS, DJORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. jescriptive Pamphlot, wit Irew evcry « huro. Sole Agents for Bear Croek Lima and Laalsville Cema it 0w, it bt Firan' i pessmesn JOMAHA, NEB. e . S S S N. I. D. SOLOMON, WHOLESALE PAINTS, OIL3 AND WINDOW CLASS, OMAKA NEBRASKA Y 0 mah23 4 COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL (

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