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Max Moyer & Bro., O: maha, Nob., Mr. and Mrs. Edward Clark, of | AT THE BRIDAL. South Deerfield, Mass., celebrated | . 00 00— e _* | the sixtieth anniversary of their | “of ihe somber and sncient chuict, of” Ameri- | wedding on Monday evening. The | Anigayly ibe vellow susshine | ca know but very little more about | company included three other per- | o temedtn b It o or the telegraph than the unml?rad | ;}:fl \:‘i};t:yv;_mr‘?:nt at the wed- o.‘i!’.'..’fm'i:.fi‘;:'.‘a“.‘n:“:h‘.‘;m savage, who ascribes its mysterious g Klml. e Over wom d bieos i, | vorkings to a spirit. Even thesage = Mr. Maurice ey, son of Canon | b et ; 2¢ | Kingsley, and for a time the editor | AL oge the poieet murinir - Fortaking Tihax 1xd shodde 2 be wame. law makers of the nation possess | FURENEn SO0 PTG TG | Akiioen deteeniy o bor X but very crude concptions touching | THE OMAHA BEE ———— OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. i —_— T0 CORRESPONDENTS. ing? etherialymildness,! come, ,..u.u.t.,.....‘...;DEWEY ou -thus lpoor human mature | Wi Do 0T desire any contributions whatever ame 't a tierary or poetical character ; and we biows as if Figher. will pot undertske to preserve, or to Teturn ‘be same, in any case whatever. Oar Staf is suficiently large to more than supply 0ur MHmited space in that direction. Sxar Naxx o WRITER, in full, must in each They know that the telegraph has been an indispensable adjunct of modern civilization. They know that it regulates the world's com- | merce, and brings the nations of the earth into more intimate relations with each other. They do not co prehend, however, that the practi- | eal benefits of this greatest inven- tion of the nineteenth century, have been confined within comparatively | narrow limits in this country, by the monopolists who control | the system. They do not seem | to know that the aid | Aus AwsovmcmMxTs of csndidates for 08¢ | onded by one of these mo- | —vhher made » o ez et SR TR slaveholder’s | " rebellion was of more prac—| Editor, are (until Dominations are wade) ‘ simply personal, and will becharged 88 8- | o] vglue to the confederates | Tertoements o shocid e sddremed 1o | than could have been an army of | Lfinfln‘mmmmm.mn- | one hundred thousand men. Had - | the Telegraph been under the direet | M. control of the Government in 1861, | the rebellion would have been com- | B o swin to whose order ail su- | paritively short lived. One of the o iptions mot paid s the office will be paySHie. | girongost arguments in favor and by whom all recepta for subweriptons ¥ill | “pgia) Telegraphy has been s furnished by the Arkansas rebellion. Almost the very first step taken by 4s that | the bellizerent Baxter was the seiz- mfmnite:”:;ig‘,)u:::i: with | ure of the telegraph office at Little kaneas toothpicks, be hired by ( Rock. He placed an embargoupon :\::menl Government for frontier | telegravhic communieation and defense. Whatdoes the Adjutant | prevented the transmission of all General of Nebraska say to this | messages !Pmflfvm' to :rpakr'n hr::d Vil ,ps | cause. Now if the telegraph hs e u‘:‘ .uln;?:,: ,:::L[ been in the hands of the Govern- ey o e‘. | ment, would this usurper have e s | dared to tamper with it? WiLL the Herald be kind enough ‘Why did not Baster take posses- form vl d where | Sion of the postoffice? He knew e Goitine | well that such an attempt would i .5 :mc':;:.i: fif‘ 3: have produced an immediate colli- e h"’m g"i“ State fair? | sion with Uncle Sam’s military K'mm:;:"m“;m Miller | forees, and that was just what he Richardson wi + bid- | anxiously sought to avoid. = g t‘&:,.lo:::,::i 1t is notour purpose at thistime to d.,,u",, s ‘f":,_\,n rivilege of | enter into an elaborate discussion of udd,,."m m'»o)';g ? p(,,m,m.uv | the merits of postal telegraphy. We i g for parties | merely desire to show incidentally lm'.:,“m AR to | that the American people ought to vtunn‘ : Pul::.h ‘:::m a | be educated to a more intelligent :t‘;uflflmmf;r £|o;;enflxg of the | comprehension of the 'elfl.;’r-vh, bids. Inasmuch as we had never [and its uses and abuses. even heard of such] proposals, it | Itmay take several years to bring s fair to infer that the ordinary nlu.u‘x uu-r:lnlnh:mz;;. l;m";c ‘;v:r:- in this i tly anticipate thal v is method was not pursued in this in- ; ::v: sk dmr" O e 0% | shall beeome part of our common THE retirement of Secretary Rich- | school education, and when the ardson from the Cabinet has been i(;wcmmpm shall make the Tele- repestedly prognosticated ; but until | graph the universal messenger by secently shese reports have been un- | why a dishonest cabinet officer founded. The Sanborn investiga- | placing it within the reach tion seems, however, to have | of the inhabitants of every village brought to light some ugly facts im- | that contains a postoftice. plicating the Becretary in various | irregularities. His early retirement in consequence of these develop- ments seems now to be a foregone | conclusion. And now 1t is currently rcporu;l ‘tal is to be U. 8. Court of Claims; or a mission | There isa couple in Kendalllvile, toy. If this is | Ind., who have been married to :‘T‘;m‘:;;:‘:m; g e 1+ | eachother three times. e 3 s d:u:'cmiu it as an outrage upon ‘common sense. % If Mr. Richardson has made him- self impossible as Secretary of the ‘Treasury by corrupt jobbery, would hebea fit man to sit upon the bench, or to represent this Sountry abroad? Is there any good reason | why s dishonest cabinet officer should be retired on a pension any more than a dishonest Treasury Clerk? ‘and every case accompany 85Y COMmUBICE- tonof what nature soever. This is mot in- Sended for publication, but for eur owx satis- fastion and as proof of good faith. Ous Covwrar Faixxps we will always be ‘pleased to bear from, on all matiers connected ‘with erops, country politics, aad on any sub- yoct whataver of general interest to the peo- Ploof our State. Any inlormation counect- od with the election. and reiating to Soods, accidents. ete., will be gladly received. ALl Py bowever, must be rief a possible; and they must, in all cases, ‘wo writtan upos one side of the sheet ouly. PoLITICAL. NOTICE. On and sfter October twenty-first, 1672, the ety circalation of the DarLY Buk is assumed E. ROSEWATER. Publisher KA'I'BIIO!IALITIES. were married in t week of April. $4.50 a Five hunehba: | Paris during the f Marriage lie s cost An_exchange fond hearts we 8,564 in Philadel ia last year. o clergyman says f the persons were over s of age. that mine-t whom he b | thirty-four y Aproposof the mat in Washington, Miss Grun note of the fact that the pears to draw all the pr season. Another eouple (this time in Tlli- nois) wedded & telegraph. Con- duct your business with dispateh, says Q —_— Tae Kansas and Missouri papers orado Springs, was married in_the this space annihilating messenger. | City of Mexico, recently, to Miss Mary Yorke, of New Orleans. “Don’t you mean to marry again, my dear sir?” said a buxom widow to her neighbor. “No, my dear widow,”” ‘said the old rusty; “T'd rather lose all the ribs I've got than take another.” The Sacramento Union of the 13th says: Yesterday afternoon a party applied to the County Clerk for & marriage license suthorizing wed- | lock with a girl of fourteen years, her father appearing and giving his consent. It appeared, however, that under the Code, a girl under fifteen and a boy under eighteen years ean- not consummate a marriage, and the license accordingly had to be denied. The Montgomery News saye : “In the City Court on Tuesday, Probate Judge Ely was fined $500 for issuing a marriage license to 8 minor with- out her father's consent. This is the case in which the Judge was in- dicted for issuing & license to a man named Garvey some time ago to marry a Miss Gamel. Garvey was arrested, put in juil and at last re- leased. and Garvey obtained the license without the father’s consent. “Young Ladies” are done by a writer in the Jewish Messenger,who says: “So nice, is it not, to be en- gaged? Every morning her young n calls upon her on his way to his office, kisses herand presents her with a fresh rose; so emblematic of herself, and every evening he calls again, kisses her, and bestows upon her & new novel and a dainty bou- quet. He takes tea with her folks, and admires the way in which she presides over the table, and whis- pers to her so softly how delightful it | will be when she pours out the tea and butters the toast for him alone! | Then those heavenly evenings in the parlor, with the gas dimly burn- ing, the old folks asleep, that horri- ble brother in the theater or the club, the teasing sister studying her lessons in her bLed-room—they two alone in their happiness; was ever such bliss expected when she used to talk to her sehoolmates about her fature 2" It is more the fashion in England | than in America to marry women from the stage, though there, as here, it is deemed the proper thing for them to retire after marriage, and never return during the life of the husband. Americans, asa rule, are not inclined to dramatic connu- biality, and in this respect are quite different not only from the English, as has been said, but from the French, Italians, and Geimans, who wed singers and players when- ever they oan turn such wedding to pecuniary acceunt. = With all our practicability, we are far more ro- mantic and ohivalrous In respect to matrimony than the European na- tions. More than any people we warry for love, or what we take to be such, which, in regard to motive, is the same, though in experience it often proves a very different thing. We also want the woman to owe everything, especially of a financial kind, to our s ‘marital ue};e& Hence the general indisposition among men of pride and principle to be, in any sense, fortune hunters. To such men the feminine possession of property is often a conjugal ob- jection. They are deterred by that fact alone from ing to 2 wo- man whom otherwise they would be happy to be united to. ~ Not so with Europeans. Many of them would take a hag for a wife if she were sufficiently endowed. — EDUCATIONAL NOTES. Ohio won't have female school commissioners either. Davenport is erecting a $30,000 high school. - About $60,000 of the $100,000 de- sired in aid of Bowdoin College has been subscribed. The new Logansport (Ind.) Semi- Neb., cel “Red Willow count brated her first wedding la: now i ving Willow county. arestill howling about the outra- geous discrimination by the Union Pacific Railroad in refusing to prorate with the Kansas Pacific upon freight and passengers trans- ferred at Cheyenne. An Weey A St. Louis woman is so unrea- sonable as to want a divorce, just because she found 113 letters from a In justification of their course, the : red-headed woman in her husband’s | Union Pacific have placed documen- | Pocket. tary statements before Congress, ‘which cover the following points : 1st. The Union Pacific has always been ready, and is now ready, to make rates which shall not dis- eriminateagainst the Kansas Pacific, | but it cannot prorate mile for mile | on the basis of its lowest through Tates from Omaha to Ogden because of mountain grades and curves on the west half °"_::’K'““‘ ‘;‘id‘fih“ “what could you expeet for $25 2 e et | heGalveston (Texas) Mercury 24, More than two-thirds of the | gives g pathetic description of a through rate from Omaha to Ogden | marriage that took place in the jail s earned .on the west half of the | of that city. The bride has to wait | Union Pacific; but it has offered and | eul:hl Te before her husband is | released. now offers to divide the through | | rate with the Kansas Pacific on that -Lm‘l;w ;_wm. aged _eighty-four, | and Mary basis. That company refuses the | o, ry married in Turner, | offer, and demands one-half of the | Ohlo. The wedding was at the | through rate, or a pro-rate mile for | residence of the bride’s grandson. | mile which is more than half the | No one but Brigham Youngcould | through rate. have said that, “If necessary to the | 3d. The law, if applicable at all in Euimflg up of the kingdom, 1 ;l:u‘l;: | Kans chi ury all my wives without a sigh . S| pretty old, you knew. onm m':' ":" 'd':'flmm' An Towa Judge has decided that tion. One-half the through rate oL, i yore of asin to steal & horse & pro-rats mile for mile would b¢"| than to elope with another man’s gross diserimination against the | wife, because there are 8,000,000 wo- Unilon Pacifie. | men in the United States and only | . The government loaned on the | 3000,000 horses. west balf three tmes the subsidy | “Onecent was & east acow | man’s fec fo e nt of fn- | AR e ony. for & couple on | creased cost of construction over the | Eyster Sunday.” Fhe friends hope Rocky Mountains. The west half | that the officiating minister will @ost three times as much in con- | prove asone seat from God to the struetion, and costs more thon twice | bride and groom. s much In operation asthe east _ A young man in Williamsburg, half. Pa., weat cut to the country to com- | plete arrangements with his girl for getting married, but the eanal- bridge broke down and ducked him. He turned around and went home and has not mentioned it since. A Kennebunk (Me.) man who as women to be laughed atfor not to laugh because she is married. It wont be necessary for the Presi- dent to provide at the public tre: ury for Sartoris, prospective son- law. He has an income of $63,000. A lady promised her maid a marriage portion. “Why, M what a little husband you have zot.” “Dear me,” replied Mary, oslop, aged sixty-seven, Seranton clergy- | ning the mar- —— BENATOR EpuuxD's bill for the appointment of a Commissioner to investigate Postal Telegraphy, is evidently a flank movement of the a short time it will be | | Tt is said that itis better for a | being married than to be unable | nary is to be124 by 103 feet and 60 feet high. A student of the Wisconsin State | University was jailed last week for | stealing. | The number of pupils in the St. Paul (Minn.) schools during March was 2,523, A Boston school boy, who was directed ta write a_composition on | riches, handed in this: “Soonasever i git verry writch in deed golly | won't i act Jenny Russ.” | An Towa schoolmistresslately had under her charge a little boy with | a ridiculous soft head that he died suddenly just because she broke a a chair on it. The newly-created assistant | superintendent of public schools for | foreign languages in New York City, will be filled by the appoint- ment of Professor Schem, for five | years editor of the * German-Ameri- can Eneyclopedic, The Courier du Bas Rhine gives the fullowing statisties of the per- centage of soldiers unable to read and write in the several European armies: Prussia, 3.84; Russia, 11.85; Spain, 50.00; Italy, 35.00; Great Britain and Ireland, 13.00; France, 15.00. The Secretary of New Mexico re- ports that the territory has “made a commendable start in educational interests, o deep is the interest in some of the counties that the local school boards have made inquiries of the Territorial officers, If there was not a law, or some means by which the attendance of children could be enforced. Taking the usual per centage of children relative to the aggregate population, and there are 22,979 children of New Mexico of school age. Deduct the number re- ported attending both the publicand private schools, and we find still in | the Territory, 15,974 children absen- tees, in most cases doubtless without the opportunity of attending school. Paradise will not be revived by the admission of women to the School Boards, or it it is the serpent may be coiled under the tree of knowledge as of yore. In one place in Massachusetts the putting of a | woman on the Board caused a good | deal of scandal, The High School principal, with whom the commit- tee had had some differe: e lady was under age, | Fair twiakled the taper set sltar, A hile the lover bent and repeated To love und 1o eterich till death. ‘The light from the great rose window Came splendidly +1'ting down ; On Ler face there rose a For b feet 10 tresd upon, Bat the bride was sof 1y rwiling, d foir r fioger, e was but the rose in . er hair. And T would there ver my oyes. and s bior, At that eager vow of jorsaking S oiiege: and c eaving roar; For out of the pilared shalow T bectde'me mart A'witTeved toey with her baby® Gasped over et brvaking beart, A5 dgwn trom the porch o s 5— | Fhe wreck of » raptare wabics ei— | Wikh outy the river betore hers With oaly the river 0r resc iet Prescott Spofford, in Harper's Mag- o ey been & _glamour lur, IMPIETIES. The Boston Post says that eggs are $10 a dozen in Vermont. That's what a youug man paid for egging a minister to that extent. A minister in Atlanta, Ga., says lotteries are sinful swindl Ie is out $300 by the last Louisvillainous drawing, “You are to make it plain, but at the same time smart, as I sit in a conspicuous place in ¢hureb.” (Her order for a spring style bonnet.) When a San Francisco minister wants a crowd of hearers, he preaches upon ““A Railroad to Hell —TheShortest and Quickest Route.” This is what the irreverend Mr. Cunningham did, without once whistling down the brakes. The Methodist Conference by the dubious railroad bonds. How about getting their lives insured in the Ashbury Life Insurance Company, now disgracefully defunct? A young gentleman went to church at Valleo the other night, and took out of his pocket what he supposed to be a prayer-book. A Bishop against becoming_holders of | of the vale, you hear the bees 7ose pale, the lan: ies are fabies ; 2 & 1 heumatic leg. ot #nd cough, great azitator, yving of In short, whatever A colored camp-mes held at Towa City ind There are 4,000 men in the United | The value of chure taxed in this count $700,000,000. In 1873, forty ‘l}ided t}o 0 | (Jesuits,) making t f)f members of the Rev. Dr. E of St. Anne’s | for fifty years. work: Baptisms, tions, 1,721 ; marr] | erals, 1,760, | Miss Turner who Bas just been in- | duced into thepagrate of the Mel- | bourne Unil ‘hurch, celebrated | her installatiou B ding for the second lesson that @hapter of Cor- | inthians in which Somen are or- | dered to keep silenco#lihe churches, | Bishop McQuade, off Rochester, | Bishop McNierney, of #lbany, and | other American bishop# who ' offi- | ciated at the consecratioh of Bishop | Crinnon, at Stratford, ofiySaturday, ng will be ne. fopal clergy- | “Peoperty not | X ipwards of pbers were,_ B of Jesus ptal number y 9,102. been rector lady friend was astonished to find it a late edition of the ‘Modern Pocket Hoyle, A Mormon sister, the other day, was explaining the Order of Euchre to a lady friend, when she said Brother Brigham had not been able to get much money or tithing from the Saints in the last two years, and big grab and get the whole.” The sister comprehended the situation. A wicked little boy in a Denver Sunday school was asked by his teacher if he had learned anything during the past week. “OB, yes,” said he. -*What is it that you have learned?” “Never to lead a deuce when you've got an ace back of it,” was the reply. “One of the men connected with the menagerie at Brewsters went to church recently and heard a chap- ter from the Revelations. He_said when he came out that he would like to engage the person who wrote about those beasts with seven heads to travel with his show and lecture on the animals.””—[Lake Mahopac Herald, miles. This is a wise provision of nature, which enables the dwellers of that chilly country to hear the preached word without rising from their heds. How comfortable, and withal how supericr to the way our people are compelled to sleep during services, “Nothing,” said an impatient husband, “reminds me so much of Balaam and his ass as_two women stopping in church'and obstructing the way to Indulge in their ever- lastingtalk.” “But you forget, my dear,” returned the ‘wife, meekly, “ithat 1t was the angel who_stopped the way, and Balaam and his ass who complained of it.” Aneat turn to a sermon often produces a more lasteng effect than either logic or theology. Instance this: My brethren, & man cannot afford to lose his soul. He's got but one, and he can't get another. If & man Joses his horse he can get another; if he loses his wife he can get another; If he loses his child he can get another; but if he loses his soul—good by, John.” “The other night a weak-cyed youth was sitting in Ames Church, Wholly forgetful ot his surroundings and lost in beatific contemplation of a certain young woman, touching whom he cherished violent desigs, when suddenlya hand was laid upon his shoulder and a deep contralto voice thundered in his ear: ‘Young man, you look as if you wanted to 8o to Jesus! Won't you come to Jesus? Whereupon he was struck all of a Jeap, as it were, and stam- mered : would—I want—that is, T should like to go, you know, but not this evening, thank you; IThave an engagement. "—New Orleans me. Rev. Florence McCarthy, of C! cago, recently deposed for telling the truth to his congregation, has | recently delivered a lecture in which | he answers the conundrum : “Who | wouldn’t be a minister?” Among | other things he said that “the only | happy moment of an average Bap- tist minister was when he was | called upon to sit in trial on a broth- | erdivine. A Baptist minister would | forget to collect a marriage fee, or | fail to attend the funeral of the | toughest deacon in the church rather than fail to sit in a council and say of an acoused brother; ‘If he is innocent, I can’t see it; if he is guilty, let us cast him into outer | now he was preparing to make “one | In the Arctic regions a sermon | can be heard at the distance of two | are guests of Archbishop, Lynch, | of Toronto, Ont. | " Dr. Schaff writes: @ tionalism is the ruling | six Northern States, an | tended and still exercises & | ial influence upon the religio | cial and political life of the country, P The annual report of the Io | Baptist anniversaries give the wh number of churches of that denom-= ination in that State at 340, with an aggregate membership of 19,082. There are 173 pastors, including 20 missionaries. | The following Roman Catholic prelates are deslgnated for appolat- ment as Cardinals: Archbishoj | Manning, Lechamps, Antici, Mat- tell, DeMerode, Vitelleschi, Nina, Simeoni and Bartolucci. Monsignor De Merode is the great rival of Car- dinal Antonelli, and was a vigorous promoter of the Mexican expedition | of Napoleon III. Dr. Angus, in his paper read be- fore the Evangelical Alliance on the “Duty of the Churches in Re- Iation to Missions,! took the ground that the present generation of Christians ought to give the gospel to the entire world. He affirmed that with 50,000 missionaries, and with $15,000,000 a year for their support, the work could be done in | ten years, Rev. J. W. Lambreth, of the | China Mission, M. E. Church, is | appealing to the Church, through | the press, in behalf of the China | Mission. ' He has been twenty years in the field, and is stationed at Shanghai. He asks for three men and their wives to rpinforce the | work of evangelizing, and fands for the support of the laborers and for building churches. Senator Hayes of the Massachu- setts Legislature has introduced in- to that body a bill providing for the preservgtion of the Old South Church in Boston. It proposes that the members of the godely who wish to remove from the old Church be allowed to do so, taking their share of the property’s value with them, leaving those opposed to re- moval to remain with the church. The best recommendation for the glan is that it preserves the old uilding, Aletter from Japan in the Cologne Gazette says that the religious ques- | tion, which is an increasing of | discussion among the Japanese, has | again been brought-before the pube lic by a memorandunf issued by two officials of the religious de%.nment. The memorandum begins by point- ing out that Japan has made | such immense that | her clvllm:vl.mn‘tl and _ com- merce are equal to those of [ ut: that th religious matioes: 2 | still hesitates between Buddhism and Christianity. Tt therefore pro- poses that public disputations should be organized between Bud-hist and Shinte priests on one side, and Christian preachers on the other. l:';ch of these dilpul.;‘flnnl ‘would take place on a specified subject, to be 'Md‘ upon ‘fmv?;"d bg’ lllhe contending es. e es would be ukl;lndownb lhnfl'pe?:lnd writers, and published in several languages, an interval of ten days would elapse between one dis- putation and the next. By these means, the memorandum continues, the world would be able to decide ! which religion is the trup one, and | make its choiée accordingly. The expenses of the disuptations would be cavered by the sale of the short-hand revorts, darkness, where there is weeping and gnashing of tecth.’ " A popular clergyman of Buffalo | roturned from an extended journey | a few days since, and just as he | alighted from the cars and was re- ceiving the congratulations of a arowd of delighted parishoners who | had assembled to greet him, an ine- briated individual followed in his wake, selzed him by the hand, and exclajmied: “Well, good-bye, old | , 'm going further, and shall | p up the same old ‘drunk for | awhile yet, but you're pretty well | ‘Watterson Indignant. Although the case was the most shocking of the season, we have heard nothing for more tham a week of Johnson, of St. Joseph, who vio- lated the sanetity of the malls, in- sulted the postmaster of y and-defied the laws of his country | X b. shlx?ele-d:nd scandalous ex- ibition of venality, corruption, and malice. Is Johnson to go " un- whipped of justice? Are the times 80 base, are dur oustoms 8o ate, that we allow a like mar2aif MILTON ——SOLE WESTER: o9 Ly THE “FEARLES CELEB ap2t ARTHUR X #CHEAP, DURABLE, s, Cem:tarics, ORNAMENTAL Yards, La: Ana D OMAEA, « J. A. T NEBRASKA SHIR . SHRTS AND GENTS' FUR The Oldest Establishea BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., BANKERS. transacted same as that i ‘nrrency or (iold sight check without no- rtifleates of Deposit issued pay- | ble bn demand, or at fixcd dnte bearing ::l;rrn("nb;ix percent. per am, and availal apnam, and available [nia all parts Advances made to customers on approred securities at market rates | ilyl-od Basiness of an Incor Buy and sell Gold, Bilis of Ex- | change, Goverument, State, Couniy, Rail rate Loans Issued ‘within- the toes | Draw Sight Drafts on England, Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of | Sell European Passage Tickets. COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. U. 8 DEP()SIT()RY.‘ Thc First National Bank OF OMAxIA. Cor. Parnham and ISk Streews. TEZ OLDEST BANKING ESTABL(SEMENT IN NEBRASKA. {Buccessor tr Kountse Brotters.) I Batablished in 1858, Orvanized s s Nationa: H | Dixon's Furniture Dealers | Nos. 187, 189 and 191 Farnham Street. | OMAITA, N BRASKA. ROGERS, Wholesale Stoves TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCE. l N AGENCY FOR—— STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, COOKING STOVES, RATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, | All of Whieh Will be Sold at ¥anufacturers’ Prices, Witk Freight adde’. ; Send for Prico Lists. BUCKBEE. CARPENTER, BUILDER —AND DEALER IN— HONHA NOYI Chureh tirouds and Publie Parks, C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist. oalor.lin PAINTS, OILS AND WINDOW GLASS, Neb T "ISEIG GOODS, &G, &, Ber-Shirts ofall kinds made to order. Satisfation guarrantesd. ~gg TUnite d Stutes Confectioners’ Tool Works, Thes, Mills & Bro., Manufacturers of Confectioners’Tools Maehines, Moulds, Ice Cream Freeze:s, &c., Nos. 1301 & 1303 North Eighth St. PHILADELPHIA, PA. | I Proprietors : ESTABLISHED 1861, ATALOGUES SFNT P.PARNER. ‘upon application. SarTlawim LEA™ PENCILS The following Premiums have been awarded for Ae I erican Graphic OR LEAD PENCILS: Gold Mcdal of Progress, Vieona, 1873, First Premium Cincinnatti Indus- Bank, August 36, 1863 Capital and Profits over - - . . $250,000 ormcxas axp DumcTons 5. CREIGHTOS, m SHTON. . AKoUnTZR Castler H. KOUNTZE, Tz en, - YaTES, At Casnide, A.J. POPPLETON. Atworney. 7 | | = BEX. woon ALVIN savNDERS, ‘President, Cashier. Vies Prestient, STATE SAVINGS BANK.| N.W.COR. PARNHAM & 15TH sTs, rial Fair, 1373, ¥irst Premium Brookiyn fntuse | trial Exjosition, 1873, For Famples or information address the Jos. Dixon Crucible Co.,, OMAHA [ORUP, HANTFACTORY saulted his_wife with intent to Kill e T oo Srop- | up, and you had better keep = Johnson to th & mere rep- %0, I’spect, as drinkin’s rough ‘when | Temand? Jamn ‘is an agita- a fellow’s 'round home, But you | tor. Johnson is an ingrate. John- know how to go on a gallus spree | Son has wronged not merely a and have a rum time just as good | public officlal, but the honor and as any pard I ever nad, and you has | the diguity of the public service. my respect. Day-day, old buster.” | We do not speak of Authorized Caphal, $1,000,000. ‘ Orestes Cleeveland, Pres't, Capital, $100,000, | ey T BN |GEO. W. ELKIN | m7 2m JERSEY CITY, N.J on . pnall Lot e boos s JOMA HA, hors Notice o oider 05 AND COUNTERS, A Black of Ehow Oues Ouaatastly, o hands ard Ehow Onsen of Every Desoriptio il gt | [ A. B. HUBERMANN & CO., PRACTICAI Manufaotures:s WATCHMAKERS,|/OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES &CLOCKS. - JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. {Denlors Can Save TIME and FREIGHT by | Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE ! ifl' LL GOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESENTED.-gy n31-tf | “ BRADY & McAUSLAND. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS Iy WHITE LEAD, COLORS OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS, Artists’ and Decorators’ Materials. 3 and 535 Fourteenth £t., ¢ maha. Junes-ly Raw Furs Wanted! . A. HUBERMANN, FUR HANUPACTURE AND BUYER OF RAW FURS! I PAY THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICES, And Manufacture all Kinds Every Desirable Article. M. J. McKELLIGON, | Ifmporter and Jobber of Forcign and Domestic ‘wines and Liquors, | TOBACCOS AND oOxXxGans, [Xo, 1i2 Farnham Street, - Omaha, Neb e 2k OLD KESTUOKY WHKIEZ A SPECIALYY E¥AGENT FOR THE ELDORADO VINE COMPANY. CALIFORNIA g of S8kins inte jantset S. C. ABBOIT & CO., ‘Booksellers = Stationers | DEALERS IN | WALL PAPEXS, DECORATIONS, | AND ’ WINDOW SHADES, |Neo.18 ¢ arnham Street. Omaha, Neb Publishers’ Agents for School Books nsed in Vehraskos, R e e CHEAP FARMS! FREE HOMES! | On the Lize of the ‘Union Pacific' Railroad i A Land Grant of 12,000,000 Acres of tie best PARMING and MINERAL Lands of Azaeric | 1,000,000 ACRES IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDEN OF TEE WEST NOW FOR SALE! | growing and stock raising unsurpassed by any in the United States. ’ OUEAPER IN PRICE, more favorsble terms ‘be fouad | | = 3 camoumn \ | ‘mare eenvenient to market theg o ; FIVE and TEN YEARS' gredit gi terest 8. SIX PER CENT | OOLONISTS asd ACTUAL BETULERS casbay on Ton Yoard' Gredit Lank ui the sam i vrice to all OREDIT PUROHASERS. | A Deduction TEN FEK CENT. FUR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SEFTLERS. And the Best Locations for Colonies ! Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead . Acres. Froe FPamsses to FPurochanmeors of X.and Send for new Descriptive Pamphlet, with and Daniv's, matied tree everywhere. Add. | ulyzaews Land WM. M. FOSTER, ‘Wholesale Lumber, WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Fels. Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Leaisville Gemeat NEB. ‘Telegraph monopolists to shelve all st N as fined $40. And yet if he had theother propositions mow pend- | pnog 1o marry her after having | ing before Congress for the estab- | pgi)mis«l to do 80, she would prob- | lishment of & Postal Telegraph. | ably have collected several thou- | ot “night, after the SR Yy auttn Lacet o “’:l‘l)e s s, wes | 4 - | 3 2 v was 's sumi belag the hirthplace of Electric Tel- | ing foinedn a Justicos court in | sharge in the Taeddie of the. ertn egraphy, masses Ne# York, recently, the damsel | his sudden reinstatement for reasons American people know less to-day | rather astonished a number of spec- | not made public, and the subsequent the practical working of the | tators by suddenly breaking -out | close of the school nine m they do about the | With T want 1> know whether we ! the preearibed time, are eep house or 3 examination. of the solar system. In | golng into this thing?” The judge | Afhir was presented 8¢ tawn.meer, fact, the popular ignorance on this | ruled the question out of order,and | ing in such a fashion that its dis. in s country where Tele- | the ceremony p: ’oudon_v_um for two of the then members of the committee, the two being one of each sex, to transaet busi late ttee had the astonished clergyman | son, bad could gather his wandering wits the | of hail fellow was off, leaving*a terri- CENERAL | . skt N. I D. SOL: , (ommssion ercmanr, e WEHOLESALE PAINTS OILS AND WINDOW CLASS, ds.| COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL | OMAKA NEBRASKA Deposita as small ol 24 0me dota: received ant Mva.?uzefl 1916 & 1918 Mavket St., PHILADELPHIA. The census of Lincoln school dis. | i g triet is completed, and shows 1,256 | bat the real, clearstealasd oo Certificates The | children between the ages of five | simon-pureChicago, lilinols | and eighteen years. This Is a gain | the Johnson we Tefur to. of more than one hundred over last | allowed to roam at large Grain, Flour, Bpeial:ios FBarley, WMalt Hops. =nlvis <]