Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 4, 1874, Page 2

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THE OMAHA BEE OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. —_— At first-class weddings in DMax i it is the correct thing to fling hand- b= e o fuls of gold coins upon the heads of | ; | visitors. Were this custom in vogue | | in this country dexterous guests | might get even for the value of the | dding gifts In which they may been multed. ach of promise actions are rare o Omaha. Nob.. “Ho, to the top of the towering wa “Tia'tbe suvsier.asson's vl ing el cloc] hfl;"‘:ym work good muscle and ‘h.u | The testimony in the Johnston- Baumer Treasury contest is, as | everybody will rejoice to know, | finally closed. The mamuseript of | the Notaries would have been yes- 5 | terday submitted to President Gib- | The Illinois State camp mesting | son, and a spesial meeting of the | this year will begin AugustSth, and Council at once called to consder it, | continue eight days. It will be held bad not the discovery of Mayor near Tonawanda, about nine miles RELIGIOUS. The Dunkards are to have a re- union at Virden, T1L, May 10. TO CORRESPOSDENTS. Now, steady aad cle r from turret and yort, Riog out our challenge, ‘Mort’ O mort’ ik | clink ! trowel and b ry Desorlptio wade Wi o ¥0T desive any eontributions whalever | (aqq Jeft the Council in & bondless | north of Bloomington. of aliterary or poetical character; and we | oo gition. That body ecannot do business until Tuesday evening, its next regular meeting.— Herald. will not undertake to preserve, or o Tetur ‘besame, in any case whatever. Our Sufl 12 suficiently larze to more than supply our Limited space in that direction. Rmar Naus or WRiTER, in full, must in esch | Bourbon Organ to cease this sense- 000 worth of the Lord’s property in | and every case accompany Y COMBURA” | Jooy tywaddle about the ““bonded” tion of what nature soever. This is Dot in- tended for publication, but for eur taction and as proof of good faith. ownmiis. | City Council? Such claptrap may | serve the purpose of covering the Ous Covsray Fumxps we will always be | tracks of political demagogues, but Rev. W. H. H. Murray, of Bos-| ton, asks in the Congregationalist : | & “What right bas the Park street Is it mot about time for the | chyreh, of Boston, to take up $600,- such a way that it can give religious opportunities to only 1,500 people | in the morning, and 800 or 1,000 in | the afternoon, when it might be so | invested as to carry the strength and | pleased to bear from, on all matters connected | ayeryhody conversant with our City | consolation of the gospel to 10,000 | with erops, country politics, aad on any sub- yoct whatever of general interest to the peo- Ple of our State. Any information connect- | Dot Tequired to give bonds. od with the election. and relating to 80035, | only bonded member of that body socidents. ete., will be gladly received. All | . such eommunications. bowever, must be | ‘Sriet a8 possible; and they must, inall cases, | Merely to cover the possibilities of his acting Mayor pro tem. | val 3 | editor of the Herald had better | Minnesota. on May 2d. be written upon one side of the sheet only. roumear. ALL ANNOUNCEMENTS of candidates for office —whether made by self or friends, and | whether as noticesor communications to the | Editor, sre (until nominations are made) simply personal, and will be charged -m—} vertisements. All communications should be sddressed to | £ BOSEWATER, Editor and Publisber, Drav- . | NOTICE. | On and after October twenty-first, 1872, the | elty eirculation of the DarLy Bex is agsumed | by Mr. Edwin Davis, to whose order all sub- | Dot paid st the office will be payable. | ‘and by whom all receipts for subscriptions will ‘be countersigned. | E. ROSEWATER. Publisher | ‘THE subsidized organs of Tweed never exhibited more braze- ness in defending the ballot-stuffing | games of their master tian does the | organ of that honorable (?) young man who is convicted of seeking to retain his hold upon our City Treas- ury by fmud and corruption. Tae Washington Chronicle intis mates that the present system of sham civil service reform, will re- ceive a death blow when the House | comes to vote on the appropriation | required to carry it through. We apprehend the country will not go | into mourning if this prediction | shall be verified. Civil service reform is very desirable, pro- viding it could be impartially | earried out upon all classes of em- ployees in the public service. Our observations have convinced us that the present mode of its enforcement has converted it into an engine of oppression, and tyranical red tape, to torture treasury clerks, mail agents, and others, who do not hap- pen to be the special pets, or pliant tools of incompetent or corrupt su- periors. THE bloody and murderous phase of the Guberuatorial War in Ar- kansas would seem to call for some- thing more than mere passive neu- trality on the part of the Federal Government. As long as the bellig- erent claimants were contented with mere bluster it was a matter of supreme indifference who was in orout of the State Capitol. Now that the armed forces acting under Baxter and Brooks have inaugura- ted bloody hostilities the time for active intervention seems to us has arrived. It is evident that Baxter is unwilling to abide by the de- cision of the State courts and Brooks does not propose to recog- nize the authority of the Legisla- ture. Both show a determaticn to fight it out on that line if it takes all summer. It would be barbarous to affiict the people of Arkansas with interninable butcheries and outlaw- ry, when it is within the power of the President to terminate the strug- gle by recognizing one or the other of the claimants as the rightful Governor. 'We apprehend such ac- tion cannot long be deferred. — THE telegraph informs us that “Colonel Thomas A. Scott of the Pennsylvania Central raiiroad, Van- derbilt of the New York Central, MecCullough of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, and President Wat- son of the Erie,have just had a con- ference on the subject of passen- ger and freight rates between the ‘west and east, and how todo away with the present competition for basiness.” How tenderly those Your Ameri- can Railway Kings do care for their dear subjects, the American people, to besure. Just now when the ery of “cheap transportation” resounds throughout the land, it is exceeding- 1y gratifying to know that a confer- ence todo away with competition has been held by the Railway auto- crats. With the fruits of the “Iowa pool” before us, it will not be diffi- cult to anticipate the benefits that will accrue to the people of the East and West by the foreshadowed boly alliance of the four great pow- ers. e r— PEOPLE who wear eight-inch hats and pride themselves upon their “heavy bmins” will be shocked to lcarn that ponderous | brains are no longer to be accepted as evidences of high intellectual and moral qualities. One of the ‘most brutish and beastly criminals of the present age was Joseph ‘Waltz, whose execution transpired at Hudson, N. Y., Friday. A post mortem examination over the body of this assassin was held by six resident physicians of Hud- ®on, and the astounding fact was developed that Waitze's brain weighed fifty-four ounces, or half an ounce more than that of Daniel ‘Webster, and fourteen ounces more than the average brain of human beings. All the organs of this man were In a healthy condition, and the physicians could discover no symp- toms of insanity, or any abnormal | Charter knows that Conncilmen are | place a paradis or 15,000 people every Sabbath ! Evangelist Hammond has re- | turned to Jacksonville, and the | greatest enthusiasm prevails. | | The is the President, and his bonds are Mr. Van Cott commenced a revi- | The | val of religion_at Taylor's Falls, Bishop Clarkson, will preach the sermon at the consecration of St. | Mark’s Cathedral, Salt Lake City on Ascension Day, May 14. | Itis said that the Episcopal The- | ological School at Cambridge, Mass., will receive something- like a mil- lion dollars from its founder, B. T. purchase a copy of the City Charter for sale at the BEE office—price fifty cents—invarably in advance. —— No more land-grabs. The House Committee on public lands has decided to report adversely upon all | Reed, Esq., of Boston. the bills before them granting ln!.uh | The Rev. T. DeWitt Tnlmlge.ln! to railroads. The principal objee- | placed in his church (Presbyterian) tion to further land subsidies is the | in :]tm. kiyn, & ll.;.lplist;’y Jo aooom- culati in | modate those who prefer imme: present method of specalation in | fodate fhose NEO DI IS O) nll);nml ln;;l:;e If the o:u]r"'::l":_“' | duction into the church, panies coul restriced in the dis- Ak 5 " 5 2 s The Universalists of Oregon wil position of their lands to fair prices | meelin Convention onthe 9th of and bona-fide settlers, who would | June next, in the vicinity of Cen- take mot over 160 acres of land, and | tral School-house, nine :uez not d settle uj and improve | east of Harrisburg. e Con’ e o e pots | tion will b hld over the Bunds tion on the part of Congress to f“u:“ = i | i - | An eastern paper says; * place theland in thelr keeplng by | 0 S00rE PG Kiates, 1n liberal landgrants. But the present | 5" e Baptists outnumber | method is known to be inimical to | other denominations are Richmond, the interests of settlers and the | Chicago, Atlanta, and Raleigh. | Government, 3 | The Methodists of the M. E.| —_— Church are beginning to be a little | restive under the great exgense in- | IMPIETIES. curred by theirsystem of Bishops | | and Presiding Elders. The total annual cost is said to be half a mil- | lion dollars for the Presiding Elders, | There is nothing good or bad but | and from $60,00 to $70,000 for the | thinking makes it so. In Nevada | Bishops. i chicken fights are held for thebene- |y o ical is going on among the | : | eolored Methodists of Danville, Va. The dead Elder Knapp firmly be- | Among other extravagant demon- lieved in a personal devil, who | strations reported is that of a walked the earth in the form of a | woman who stripped herself of all Universalist minister, or an_editor. | but one article of ,_-]otmnfi,] w;lked in Colorad - | the house top and sat on the chim- it i :;,-L cl-;::ri‘gl:::f"’,fi! ney. This certainly “takes the rag all that was needed to make the | Off” aything in the way of religeous ise was a eomfortable | fevor ever heard of before. climate, water, and good society. | In Sweeden it has been bitherto “That is all that is lacking inh—1,” | almost impossible to get out of the was the reply. | Established Church (Lutheran) in- Preceptor—“Now, can any of you | t0 any of the dissenting churches, tell me anything remarkably in the | and the members of theso churches life of Moses? Boy—Yes, sir, | have been subjected to certain legal He was the only man who brokeali | disabilities of a very tormenting The Oommsndments atonoe ! | character. A law has recently been | passed by which, upon the expres- An auctioneer in Burlington, Vt., | sjon of a desire to join another com- got a bid of 37} cents for an elegant | munjon on the part of any person family Bible. “What is_the trou- | over eightecn years of age, the pas- ble with this town?” said he. A | tor of his parish is obliged to_regis- wag responded. “Squire don’t you ki t this ci st ter the transfer. that this city has just gone Domocraticon Y 1as JUst 890€ | o Bishop of Ontario has em- g | barked in a debate with certain A London advertisement runs | laymen of the Episcopal Church in thus: “A country priest will say | Canada concerning a revision of mass once a week for any one who | the Prayer-book. The Bishop ane will send bim the Times newspaper | nounces that those who join the second hand, on the day of its pub- | Cummins movement cannot main- lication.” tain their places as members of the And old lady who had insi Protestant Episcopal Church. A on her minister’s praying for rain | Wide-spread agitation has grown had her cabbages cut up a hail | 0ut of correspondence in regard to storm, and on viewing the wreck the matter, the result of which is remarked that she “never knew him | likely to be large accessions to tle to undertake anything without over | Reformed Church. doing the matter. During a sermon in the chapel of the Georgia state prision, 530 con- viets struck up: “We'll all get stone drunk,” and they had to be | marched down stairs. cy did'nt like the chaplain. | A New Hampshire lady died re- cently after having read the Bible | through thirty-four times. After this terrible_example it is hardly necessary to warn readers not to read the Bible through but thirty- three times, if they would live long in the land. A Chinaman followed some boys who had been throwing some stones at him, into one of the Salem, O x sted EDUCATIONAL NOTES. There are 600 pupils in_the State Normal School at Normal, 111 The difficulty between the lower classes and the faculty of the Michi- gan University is not settled. By a sensible regulation Balti- more girls must be 12 years old be- fore the; n enter the high schools of that cil Alpheus Crosby, of Dartmouth | College, and said to have been the greatest Greek scholar in America, has died, aged 73. A girl only 12 years of age, be- longing in Wapello, Towa, has passed an examination before the county superintendent of schools, and has received a license to teach. All the examinations for admis- sion to Harvard College will be con- conducted in writing after this year. ‘The Normal School of the Dakota Mission at Santee Agency has had a prosperous winter session, not- withstanding the dark days last | fall, when its doors were closed, and | many of its pupils removed beyond the power of earthly training by the small pox. The following has been the attendance during the term of thirteen weeks, closed March 20: At the young men’s boarding hall, 15; in girl’s home 14; attending on day school, 53; others attending night school, 17; others attending only debating society, 15. Total in atténdance, 85. The Young Men's | Debating Society has a membership | of over thi Near the close of the term they had a public debate, Saturday afternoon, with speakers on a side. Quite academi The annual report of the Michi- Zan State Superintendent of Schools show that the number of children in n the ages of 5 and ears is 420,510, of whom 306,630 have attended school. Besides these there have been 5,853 in attendance who are under 5 or over 20 years of The total value ot the school and lots is. $8,093,168, and school houses were built last ar. The average wages month were, males $51.90; females, 2 A correspondent who writes to the Sioux City Journal from the cultural College of Kansas say “The student is taught to hold the plow, to drive, to yoke the cattle, harness the mules, feed the stock, milk the Jerseys, clean out and keep the stables neat, to make and repair agricultural implements, b ter you? Too . The staidest of the members smole a smile, and | even the preacher in his pulpit | wunk a little wink.” “That boy has the material in him for a valuable member of a church choir,” said Wilkins, when “Bobby tickled the back of hissister’s neck with a broom-straw during prayers. — A Jewish Wonder-Worker. translated ‘or the Glove| Gratz, a town in the Grand Duchy | of Posen, has for some time past be- come famous as another of the many spots to which pilgrimages are un- dertaken. The peculiar feature, however, of this shrine is, that_the great poiut of attraction is a Jew, and the pilgrims within the walls of Gratz belong exclusively to the Jewish confession. This Jew is an old Rabbi, and hundreds of Jews | visit him from the above-mentioned | Grand Duchy, from Gallicia, fr Russian Poland, in fact, from every direction round about’ where the twelve tribes are represented. A looker-on might be made to believe | that he is at the place where the Holy Mother of Kevlaar is carrying on her wonder-works, if there were not certain infatlible marks at hand that the mother of God enjoys but credit among these pilgrims. e sick and sulitring throng in multitudes to this wonder-working Rabbi, named Gutmacher, who en- tirely andalone performs these won- ders by the laying on of hands, and mumbling some Hebrew prayers and sentences from the Talmud. Herehe is seen curing a swelling on the eye, in another instance, he restores to s dyspeptic a sound di- gestion, in short, our Rabbi, Gut- macher, is & perfect man of won- ders. Nay, we have heard oven of | yndgetsa smattering of printing, a case where a physician of Posen | {ejegraphy, pharmacy, harnec: sent his wife to the Rabbi at Gratz, | paking, blacksmithing, and carp- knowing full well that her entire | enting. Girls are taught sewing sufferings were nothing more than | g, dressmaking and fitting; also, ondriac whims, when, won- | 4 thorough knowledge of sewing- machines, und it is designed to teach cooking, washing and iron- ing, how to keep house, &c.” A Connecticut school-teacher ina paper recently read before teachers’ | institute that a pupil of at the same desk multitude of visitors. But, mnuld-}!hu’rmmdllthamddu& ering the Patriarchal condition of | month permitted to select new: things prevailing in this place, nze!nenlfdu)'ddm It was refused to accede to this his | there would be lets trouble in gov- unpatriotic demand. He was told emlng_l’-chool,mmudm_ln that he ought to be glad to be thexmewp:h appearance, and greater means stran- | ease in conversation and intercourse o oathe o 0 T o ren- | which would be of much advantage refusing any kind of re- | when they became men and women. the words * For Jerusalem ™ | periment has been tried, it has been | first thing. Music with labor add art combi Brick + pom brick lay the o up quick ; But lay to the live. boys, lay to the line " Cheery ascrickets all the day long,— Light:nins Iavor with laugh and songi— Bony as bees unon ang’e aud pier, Pl the red Blocks 1i-- o Climabiug and climbing uder than kings 1 e p qu Pat lay to the iive, boys, lay tothe line! Who are the peers of the best in the land— Worthy nesth arches of honor 10 st nd ? brick-reddened, mortar-stained | palms. With shoulders of giants and sinewy rrms, Builders «{ eities and huilders of homes— Propping the sky up with spir.s and domes ;— Writing thereon wi h their trowles and lime L-geads of t0il for the eyes of Time ! 8o that the ages may rewd as toey run, A'lthat v aical might b ! So clink ! clink ! trowel a- d brick ! Work by the master's word a-d sign ;— “Brick upon brick lay them np qnick ! But lay to thel ne, hovs. lay £o 1he line! » —{G.H B roes n for May. SCHOOL “CALLED.” Don't you hear the childron coming, Cowing into school terdrummtng s rule? Master dromming, children coming Tato school ? Tio-toed Sgures reach the catch, T ny fagersre ch thelat b ; headed girls th-ong i ee from toft y Yovs bol i a Bringing breatks of winter weather, i bonk- < Tndian-checkod, them e ked. nded, m 3 rush from the Malskoff— snow and m rHle white, higicg in the /ight, i h many a dint 2nd dot e ico-cold ¢ on shot ! Kol liers Rul Hear the last asswult'ng shout ! 8 o the gunnersrilly o t— Charge upon the b-itered door— Scheol is called and bats ! —Beu). F, Tavior; “Tue Dis.rict Schoo) ;" MATRIMONIALITIES. ‘When a man in Yankton gets married he has his hair shingled the The Democrat of M announces the marriag tt, of Buckskull, ville, Ky., of James to Sallie | Drinkard, of Bucksnort. A lady lecturer believes that names when they get married. She has retained hers thus far. The negroes of Kentucky never weary of well doing. Uncle Bob Breedlove, aged 70, has been joined to Aunt Betsey Phillips, aged 65 Mr. and Mrs. Grawell of Jose, Cal., celebrated their fift marriage anniversary last Mr. Gruwell was captain of the train that broke the first trail from Lake, Utah, to Los Angeles, Cali- fornia. The lady who has been married eight times, has cight living hus- bands, and’ resides with none of them, and whose daughter, 23 years, has had three hus —this lady is the ornament Douglas county, Oregon. It's the same even when | mother-in-law is roval. Queen toria allows the Duke and Duche of while the Clarence House is being white washed ; but she ma pay in advince every Saturday night.—Milwaulkse Sentinel. John Breeze, an old farmer of Rooks county, IlL., aged fifty-nine, eloped with the wife of William Miller, aged twenty-two. The young lady was an orphan, and had lived with' the Breeze family from infancy, and was but recently mar- ried to Miller. “Oh, what do you think, Mr. Lil- Iybrow ? The other day I was taken for twenty-five, and Lam only eigh- teen I “Haw ! Wonder what you'll be taken for when you're twenty- v For better, for worse, I hope” Mr. Lillybrow looks pen- — Punch. Statistics of marriages in Ohio since 1866, show a remarkable de- cline in matrimony. According to the published figures of each year since 1866, it is shown that in ‘that year there was one marriage to eighty-two of population. In 1873 the rate was one marriage to 118 of the population, Mr. Henry Stout of Bloomville, Ohio, eloped with Mi's Worm, and, not satisfied with his wife, comes back with hismother-in-law. That Stout man was meat for worms from the beginning. The marriage feast must have had a taste of the funeral-baked meats. Mr. J. Price, of Owatonna, Miss., advertised his wife as having left his bed and board. Mrs. Pride re- torts through the press that the bed was only a slab covered by two thin spreads and an empty straw tick, and that when she was sick Jim dosed her with lye bitters made from ashes, Instead of procuring a physician. Chinese residents of Sacramento, in order to prevent Celesti taking unto themselves as wives the chattels of other Celestials, with the intent of running them off and selling them in some other place, propose to try and have an agree. ment entered into by the Chinese providing that when a couple are married American fashion thattheir photographs shall be taken and capies left with the Chief of Police. It was very poetical and senti- mental for the old man and the blooming maid to be made one under the shade of a heaven-reach- ing cottonwood, in nature’s sanc- tuary, and it does not in the least detract from the romance to know that the wedding took place in the forest to eseape a serenade of milk- pans and tin horns which his fine ear for musie wouldn’t abide. A couple recently applied to a New Jersey Justice to be married. On eatechising the lady the justice learned that she had a husband living, and had never been divorced insurmountable, and the ceremony could not take place. “If that is ail the trouble,” "said the would-be bride, “I'll just take my little pistol and shoot that nasty husband of mine on the spot.” A recent wedding in Springfield, Mass., has somewhat of interest be- hind it, hinging, as it did, upon a —of dominoes. The parties were vacillating whether they loved for good and all they really couldn’t de- cide, but a bantering wager and a game of dominoes settled it. If she ‘'won, it meant the marriage bell and its accompaniments, while victory his ners'was at once to ex- xpenses . Again the domi- T tome by the future bidsgmoo ime m’s brother and the expectant bride’s the result being that the bill eanceled by the brother, the wedding is over, and bills are all paid—thanks to the ‘merely a collection box | It was aftirmed that where the ex- ]m—d«lmu—- women ought to retain their own | burgh to board at her house | es them | from him. The young man there- | upon declared that the obstacle was | % game—or more exactly two games | requisition, { nce. The law does not admit | compensation for injured feelings, | and ustain a suit of this kind it is alwilys necessary to prove special damages. An attempt to do this | has Just been made before the civil tribunal of the Seine by a lady call- ing herself Mle. Decaisne. She sued a gentleman with the curious name of Mariage, and laid her damages at 10,000 francs, because, on the faith @f the engagement, she had given a place of companion to a person of rank, and had bought a | trossean. The defense was that M. M aged forty-five, had not .ons either fortune or beauty, but | he desired youth, and the plaintiff | had deceived him about her age. | | She at first represented herself to be | twenty-three, but afterwards owned totwenty-six. Though disappointed, | | he had made up his mind to put up | with this difference ; but he had | ‘ found but by the register that she was in_reality thirty-two, and that | | was a figure he could not accept. | Amid shouts of laughter, caused by | a humorous speech of M. Gatineau | | for the recalcitrant Mariage, the | | court ounced a verdict for the | | defendant. | | The Washington correspondent | of the Chicago Zimes writes as fol- | lows - “Our society” is in a_pleas- | ant flurry over several brilliant | weddings soou to oceur, and ladies are bursting their stays 'in trepida- tion lest they may not be among | the elect at ‘the grandest events— | those in which demoiselles Grant, Stewart and Sherman are to be hap- pily cospicuous, I wish no such contretewps to mar the merriment at any of these occasions as occurred at a wedding here the other eve- | ning. Just as the bridal party were | ambling meekly up the church aisle, | | an_eager pair of colored servant | girls, who had run in from a neigh- | boring Kkitehen, pushed directly up | behind the bride and her father. | The shady twain were gaping about | so anxiously for a vacant seat as not to mind their steps, and presently a | substantial African foot pinned Miss Hautton’s fleecy trail to the floor. | Halfof the ekirt ripped from the | amazed waisty, and the pins of bridesmaids _eould not more than partially adjust the wreck. The lady was married i a_tattered toi- let, and our it lasses of the dish-pan gazed bemfgnly on the cer- emony, with never siline of regret or uneasiness on their cimmerian faces. | At Eastbourne, a town on the south coast, about twi miles | | from Brighton, a lady of immense | wealth using a bath chair for the | ordinary purposes of health ha# ac- | tually married the drawer of'the | unpoetical equipage. He was a gentleman in reduced Im- stances, and in_default of a better occupation had taken to that wheeling or drawing bath chairs, which hasat least the advantage of requiring no_previous apprentice- ship, no preliminary competitive examination, but may be entered | upon at once by any one who has tolerably strong arms, His wealthy patroness talked to him, made him drag her to lonely spots, there to read novels; took an Interest in him, become attached to him, and finally made him an offer of mar- riage, which he seems to have had in § U.S.DEPOSITORY | The First National Bank OF OMAZIEIA. | Corner oi Farham and 13th Kereets. ! ‘THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT | IN NEBRASEA, (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) | ESTABLISHED IN 1858. | Organized as a National Buak, August 26,1863. | Capital and Profts over - $250.000 | orricERs AxD DiRECTORS: | £ crEIG | = | '3 As't Cashier. | A. J. POPPLETON, Attorney. ICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS | L of Europe via the Cunard and National | Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-American | Packet Company. Jrant It e e s | Victor Restaurant. 160 FARNAAM STREET, Bet. 10l and 1l1th. 'VICTOR DUCROSS, Prop. ABLES SUPPLIED WITH EVERY- thung in the marke Open from 35-All Meals Served to Order.=ga OYSTER3 SERVED IN EVERY BTYLE. GAADIE leus““:'(?fi. Prices to suit Charles Popper, WHOLESALE BUTCHER AND CATTLE BROKER, £ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH | fezmt e I \B.W NDEEIM. | m. 1012 p. m. | —DEALER IN—~ ;‘ Fruits, Confectionery, | CIGARS AND TOBACCO. Fsrubam snd Eleventh streets, - - - NEBRASKA! Save Your Paper Ragsi Patronize Home Industry I1. BERTHOLD, 164 and 165 Douglas stree | hetween 10th and i1th, north side, making & raugements to build & | PAPE M ILL IN OMAHA, Destres to purchase _several hundred tons o s of al Kinds st Eastern priess. Cash on ivery.. Southern Hotel, | Frontisg en 4th, 5th aad Walaatsta, | St. Louis, Mo. ! Laveills, Warner & Co., Proorictors. The Sonthern fotel is first-clsss in all its sprolntments. T's tablesare at all times sup- i i the greatest abundance, with all the delicacies the markets afford, Its clerks and erployes are a'l polite and atientive to the -+ of the gu sts of the hotel, an leading from ‘tbe first floor Ralroad stearboat st nd western finion | of hotel, | | | { ha g | improved eleva to the upper ome, ticket off raph S. JACOBS | CENTRAL CLOTHING STORE! | J 186 FAKNHAM STREET, e il el ot s ot Bl e e | E. KELLEY, | Attorney % Counselorat Law e o ks Peksias B} - CMARA. )LLECTIONS SOLICITED AND PROMPT- s ete., wi tomers FurnitureDealers Nos. 187, 189 and 191 Farnham Strest. MILTON ROGERS. Wholesale Stoves TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCE. ———SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, THE “FEAPLESS,” COCKING STOVES, CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, Allof Which Will be Seld at ¥anufacturers’ Prices, Witk Freight adde’. mar2dit ap22tf Sond for Prico Lists FAIRLIE & MONELL, BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS, Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. Masonic, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Pythias TUNIFORMS LODGE PROPERTI VELS, BOOKS, BLANKS, B EA IRN PRICES AND FRESH.<&a 282 Dousglas Stroeot, OMAZIIA. NER, ARTHUR BUCKBEE. ARPENTER, BUILDER —AND DEALER IN— ETC., AT Q = S CHEAP, DURABLE” HONHTI NOYI For Yards, Law.s, Cemetaries, Church Grouds ana Stop and Oitice 11 St bet Farmhai piaer Pab] Parl:. OMAHA J. A. THORUP., NEBRASKA S FARNHAM ST, FARNHAM ST,, OMAHA, 4\ 45 NEBRASKA. SH'RTS AND GENTS' FUR ISHING 600DS, &C. &C. 8&-Shirts ofall kinds made to order. ~ Satiafati>n gaarranteed. "8 | The Oldest Estanisies | LEAD PENCILS | BANKING HOUSE [ IN NEBRASKA. | Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., |The fllowing Preniuams have been| BANKEBERS. | awarded for Business transacted same as that of an Incorporated Bank. A in C cotd | Dixon' i ic| Accounts keptin Currencyor Gold Dixon's American Graphic | Certifleates of Deposit issued pay- o S able on demand, or at fixed date | bearing interest at six percent. per | &old Medal of Progress, Vienna, annem, and available in in all parts | of the conntry. | Advances made to customers on | 1878, :’preved securities at market rates interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- Government, State, County, and Cit) Bonds. ial attention to nego- road sud other Corpo- issued within the Stawe. Draw Sizht Drafts on England, Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of ‘Europe. Sell European Passago Tiekets, COLLECTIONS PRONPILY MADE. suglts First Ciculum Clneinnatt! Ing trial Fair, 1578. First Premium Brookiyn (nduse trial Ex;ositlon, 1873. For fampies or iuformation address the TUnited Statos Jos. Dixon Crueible Co., Confectioners’ Tool Warks, Thos, Mills & Bro., Manafacturers of Confectioners’Tools Machines, Moaids, Ice Cream Freczess, &e., Nos. 1301 & 1303 North Eighih St. PEILADELPHIA, PA. Geo. M. lln.\.:', PP, l ARMER. | Orestes Cleeveland, Pres't JERSEY CITY, N J. | PASSENGERS Going East or South from Omaha | m72m And Points on U. P.R.E., should take the “LINCOLN ROUTE”| via THE ATCHISON & NEBRAS K City Meat Market. | e | And secure for thrmselves the choice of Six e Popular Eoutes from SHEELY BROS. Atehison to Chicago and St. Louis, | Keep constantly on hand All making Reliable Connections and beiog. 4 LARGE SUPPY OF | oo s puisss Dy and Sioepig Occn. venieace arriving from Fertios scd trussters an bo wvoided West of Colcags sad St Louis by secaring Tickets via | ATCHISON and the ATCHISON & | NEBRASKA RAILROAD. Direct liable Connections are also made :i‘::tAATAl.&'.Llhnu Great Arkansas Valley & Colorado, | And with ail lines running South to points in o othora Katas and the Iodian Tercitory. Ask for via EsTABLISWED 1854 ATALOGUES SENT apon application. Proprietors: Tioxas MrLL B n 2 ¥, P oORX MUTTON, POULTRY, i VEGETABLES NEW FOUNDRY The v pabe foundry in connectien Witk the Van GAME LINCOLN & ATCHISON iy to. N unless cullee tions are made. House: toles and rests col. .ected. Real estate bough: and selds l CHAS. CSMITH, W.F, WHITE Gen'l Supt. ’ gt 1a3t No. u’o-u?nlv STREET. bt e - =t WM, FRNWICK l T MANUFACTORY Bhow Oases of Eve and AND COUNTERS., 0 aider oo Bhurt Aoice. | Bhow Cuses Gonstantly on hand, A Btook of sugdott A. B. HUBERMANN & CO., PRACTICAL Manufaocoturer | WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELRY i | S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. ‘WATCHES & CLOCKS. - JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. il)cnlcrs Can Save TIME and FREIGHT by { Ordering of Us. | ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE ! | 88~ALL GOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESENTED."wun, RADY & McAUSLAND. ‘WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER3 I¥ | WHITE LEAD, COLORS OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS, | Artists’ and Decorators’ Materials. | 533 and 535 Fourteenth St., Omaha. unes-1y . Raw Furs Wanted ! | A HUBERMANN, FUR MANUFACTURE AND BUYER OF RAW FURS! 511 & 513 THIRTEENTH St, OMAHA, NEB. I PAY THE HIGHEST MARKET PRICES, iAnd Manufacture all Kinds of Skins into | Every Desirable Article. f M. J. McKELLIGON, Importer and Jobher of Foreign and Demestic Janise v TOEBACCOS AND orIGans, | Xo. 142 Farnham Street, - - - Omaha, Neb OLD KENTUOKY WHISKIES A SPEOIALTY o1 J®CAGENT FOR THE ELDURADO "VINE COMPANY. CALIFORNIA g3 S C. Ansorr 3. canrimis, 8. C. ABBOIT & CO., Booksellers = Stationers DEALERS IN WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, AN D WINDOW SEHADES, No.183: arnham Street. Omaha, Neb Publishers’ Agents for School Hooks used in VNebrasko, CHEEAP FARMS! FREE HOMES ©n tne Line of the Union Pacific Railroad A Land Grant of 12,000,000 Acres of te best FARMING and MINERAL Laxds of Amerles 1,000,000 ACRES IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDLN OF THE WEST NOW FOR 8ALE! T in the jor Ui Now !l growing and siock raising unsurpassed by any in the United States. WEAPER 1IN favorable ; nleat OHEAP] PRICE, mare mflh:lgr‘-.‘g'tlhh:‘lln—fi te market thisa ca FIVE 1nd TEN YEARS’ crodit given with intersat at SIX PER €ENT COLONISTS azd AOTUAL SETULERS canbuy oa Ten Yoars' Oredit. Laads &t the sam e vrice to all OREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction TEN PEK CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR ACTUAL SETTLERS, And the Best Locations for Colonies ! Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead _f Acres. ohane! of Xsand new maps, pablished 1a_Eaglish, German, d Froo Famssos to new Dscriptive Pamphiet, with verywhers. | Adiress S IR nd Camiaionss U, AR GO Do Feb. WM. M. FOSTER, Wholesale Lumber, WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Loulsville Comoat JOMAHA, NEB. e E—— T TEERORS N. I. D. SOLOMON, WEHOLESALE PAINTS OIL3 AND WINDOW CLASS, COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL OMAHA NEBRASKA OFFICE AND YARD P. Track, bet Farnham aod Douglas Sta. i wines and Liquoys)

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