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e~ E OMAHA BEE ¥ —— 7O CORRESPOSDENTS. of & litorary or poetical character; and we | will not undertake to preserve, or o return ‘he same, in any case whatever. Our Suf | of the chief examiner of the civil OF THE CITY. | . ;c. commission, “cach man in | | the civil service feels that his pro- | motion depends chiefly upon bhis | own efforts, and not upon the weight | of his potitical influence, nor the | Froi Wa 0o xot desire any eontributions WASYSS | gogree of his own subservience.”” | | the honorable examiner of the civil | THE cIvIL SERVICE SHAM.| OCCIDENTAL JOTTINGS. ACCORDING to the official report | COLOBADO. Favorable reports are received from the Mount Lincoln mines. Fleven bars of silver, valued at | $17,225,85, were shipped from Prof. s works at Black Hawk, last | Friday. | Smelting will be resumed at the | Golden Smelting works in & few Now, with all the respect due to 1s suficiently large to more than supplY 0ur | service, the BEE is constrained to | days. Limited space in that direction. | Bxar Nawx oy Warres, in full, must in each | and every case accompany say commuBica- tion of whit mature scover. This s not in- tended for ‘but for eur ows sstis- faction and as proof of goed faith. Our Covwray Famxps we will always be ‘pleased to bear fr~m, on all matters conected ‘with crops, country politics, sad on any sub- | yoct whatever of general interest to the peo- ple of our State. Auy information conect- ol with the election. and reiating %o fioods, sccidents. etc., will be gladly received. All | such communications, however, must be brief as possible; snd they must, in all cases, | e written upon one side of the sheet only. PoumICAL. ALL ANNOUNCENENTS of candidates for office —whether wads by self or friends, sad | whether as Doticesor communications to the | Editor, are (until Dominations are made) | simply personsl, and will be charged as ad- | vertisements. | All communications should be addressed to | £ ROSEWATER, Editor and Publisher, Drav- | . NOTICE. On and after October twenty-frst, 1872, the elty circulation of the DaiLy Bxx is assumed by Mr. Edwin Davis, o whose order all sub- scriptions not paid st the office will be payabic: | and by whoa all receipts for subscriptions will | be countersigned.. | E. ROSEWATER. Publisher | —————— Now that we are assured by the Yellowstone expedition that rich silver mines exist in the Big Horn Mountains. We may expectanother | exodus from the auriferous to the | argentiferous regions of Montana. WimLe the Omaha Herald, in | view of coming events, seeks to | pander to our German fellow-citi- zens, by lavding Carl Schurz to the skies, the Democratic newspapers of Missouri are belaboring the phil- | osophical Senator with all the vile billingsgate at their command. —— GovERNOR FURNAS has recently written and published what pur- ports to be an impartial history of Nebraska journalism. His Ex- cellency has, however, not yet heard of a daily paper known as the OxAMA BeE, which happens Just now to have the largest circu- lation of any dally newspaper in the State. —_— | Ta House Committee on elec- tions has already taken preliminary steps toward transplanting the Mor- mon Cannon Apostolic into the miore congenial hot-bed of Poliga- my. The testimony already in possession of the Committee has been referred to a sub-Commiitee, with instructions to report whether it will be necessary to summon other witnesses. Mr. Cannon’s Congressional career will be brief. — Iris not thought probable that the inhuman outrage perpetrated by the butcher Gonzales upon the Bri- tish Consul at Guetemala will lead to any complications between the Governments of Salvador and Great Britain. The prompt and condign punishment of Gonzales by the authorities of Salvador will doubtless convince the British Cab- inet that they were not to blame for this terrible outrage. —_— Ir is now foreshadowed that President Grant will order Brooks to vacate the Arkansas State Capi- tol to what Mr. Baxter is pleased to designate as the Arkansas Legisla- ture. He might as well recognize Baxter as the legal Governor, since the legislature is exelusively of Baxter's own make up. Even if Baxter's proclamation had been valid, the proccedings of this parti- zan body since It assembled would condemn it as an unfair and im- proper tribunal to adjust the pend- | ine contest. COUNCILMAN STEPHENSON’S card in our local eolumns will bear care- fal digestion. It strikes us that the course pursued by our Police Judge and City Marshal in connection with the complaint against the Herald | will require a slight explanation. In the first place we cannot un- derstand why the complainant should have been required to guar- antee the costs in a case involving an alleged violation of the ity ordinances. In the second place why should the court and marshal interpose objections to the complaint and hesitate about serving the papers? WiLLiax W. EA1ox, the Demo- cratic nominee for the U. S. Sena- torship from Connecticut, is at present 8 member of the Legisla- ture that proposes to elect him. Aceording to the New York Tribune, which ought to be a fiir eriterion of his merits, Mr. Eaton “is known outside of the State chiefly by his opposition to the war measures of the Government during the re- bellion. The bitierness of his hos- tility and the recklessness of his utterances made him a figure in State politics, and gave him a position of leadership which was invariably disastrous to his pronounce this assertion as a palpa- ble falsehood. strongly inclined to pronounce the | ley is now being put in the ground- chief examiner either a knave or & fool, or both for that matter. miles from Omaha, to prove that the promotion of employes in the | civil service, has seldom, if ever | Nearly double the amount of In fact, we are | grain ever sown in the Poudre Val- Anextensive lime kiln is the latest | thing in.the home_industry line of hich Pueblo can boast. | A larger amount of ore is now | finding its way to the mills at Black Hawk, than at any previous | time for several years. The machinery for the smelting | We need not travel a thousand W anything to do with thelr “own | efforts,” but Almos!}n\'nriably‘ does { at has arrivod at depend upon the weight of their po- | toyn. The works have been com- | litical inflpence, and the degree to | menced, and will be completed in | which they are willing to stoop in | about sixty days. in toadying to corrupt, capricious, or | | made at Rosita, near the Crow tun- | nel. Ore taken out two feet below the surface, shows a value of about $1,100 per ton. ted States railway postal servic you please, and you will see politi- | eal wire pullers and striplings in the fges g business, promoted over the heads of | A5 e Yorganized st men who have aithfully and efici-| Colorado City, EI Paso county, e viently served for many years. | the purpose of establishing a geologi- You will there find one set | cal cabfet on a large scale. The ob- ; | ject will be to collect specimens to of men subjected to Incessant |y ¢y colleges, schools of mines, ete. harrassing and uscless examinations |y (<0 ing the while others are permitted to delib- | channel of the Arkansas river at erately over-ride this part of tho | Pucblo, lias been commenged. The ivil servi . « chief ex- | channel of the Arkansas is not the civil service rules. [T the chief X | G0 Y ing about the Bouthern me- mmzml:‘l;:" !d‘er"‘"“ 410 "0 | tropolis that needs straightening. form himself about reform in ; i ? - : " | The erection of smelting works in ch of the public = Service| g Apimas district of San Juan be might have readily dis- | county is being agitated. Dona- covered that promotions depend | tions of ore are pledged from forty- very much upon the pumbor and | seven mines, amounting altogether value of the contributions toward | to 305 tons. . fifty the purchase of silver plate, car-| Itls reported that there are > : mines about Sugar Loat Mountain, ringes, watches, and other presents | JInE SR SR, Lo Pt to superiors, and very little Upon | orking profitas soon as reduction the merits of the persons recom- | works shall be put up within a con- mended for promotion. The BEE | venient distance. A hundred men has always favored eivil service re- | 8r¢nOW employed in them. form. : Bent county has an dne.l ot;fl.‘h:m 1t Sow: But Tt de < | 3,500 square miles, anda population St Svats oW, Dok > d‘"‘"{f" of about 4,000, The registered vote genuine and not sham reform. Un- | o4 September was 800. No rain fell til present-taking shall become an- | in the county from the first of Sep- other name for bribe-taking, and be | tember, 1874, till the 13th of March, punishable as such; until promotion | 157 < shall follow merit and senlority in- '“;‘"‘:t"‘ "‘:}:l-" . il dependent of favoritism or political | of - the oo mnm“' influence; until examinations shall | one of the richest and best be conducted impartially and all | known silver ore in tho Nan classes be alike subjected to them, | Juan region, sent one hundred and civil scrvice reform will remain a | fifty pounds of ore from their mine to the Haford Copper works in delusion and a fraud. | Swansea, Wales. The return just | received shows the yield to have been: _Silver, 717 oz; gold, 0.18 oz; lead, 42 per cent.; copper, 4 per cent; | zine, 1 per cent, With a large an well developed lode, 8s this Compa- ny have, the profits ought to be im- mense. CAPITAL NOTES. Life Among the Lincolnites. NEVADA. Crusading, Politics, Billiards, | Journalism and Barristers. Many miners are out of work in rginia City. Judge Carson_is announced as a | candidate for Judge of the Supreme Court of Nevada. The first stage for three months between Elko and Cornucopia left the former place Monday, the mails between the two places having been carried on snowshoes all winter. J. M. Pattee, well known in Al- Correspondenceof the BEE. LixcoLy, Nebrask May 13 2 Epitor OMAHA BE Since writing you, the crusade has be- come an event of the past, though yesterday some of the ladies were out calling; but as no demonstra- tions were made in the way of | pine in early days as the president prayer or song, we conclude that | of the People's Mining Company, they went simply from habit. The | and afterwards as one of the mana- = e gers of the famous Nevada City billiard room, as they say, holds | T 2 G, e ulator forth many inducem to the | of the Omaha Lottery, is travelling young and unsophisticated, who, | | in Europe. from visiling them occasionally, | Sheep shearing is now under full form the habit of “spending their | headway on the ranges near Austin, leisure time and loose change over | Nevada, and, motwithstanding the table and bar. And now it would severe winter, the wool clip will be seem that fascinating | fully up to the average of former anything fascinating is bound to do room—as | years. The silver brick which is to be —has captured some of the ladies. Young ladies, too, who are natu- presented to Sir Lambton Loraine the citizens of Virginia, Gold rally smart; who might become | Hill and Carson, has been com- shining lights in_society but for the | pleted, and will shortly be forwarded fell destroyer. had seen -its | tothe British Amiralty. It weighs effects upon us, yet they heeded it | about fifteen pounds, and bears the not, and society has been robbed of | following inseription in old English what might have been its brightest | text and old style Roman letter: Jewels. Bat, “Of all sad words of tongu W ) et “Blood is Thicker than Water. San- 2o de Cuba, November, 1873. To r Lambton Loraine. From the Combstock Mines, Virginia, Neva- da, U. 8. A At the recent election for ficers the vote cast for Marshal ved a tie, and a new election has | n_ordercd, to come off the 19(h | of this month. 8o far as we can | Fig culture is proving successful learn, both sides are confident of | in Oregon. victory, though we venture mo| A military company is bein opinian further than that the candi. | formed at Earcka, Nevada, ¥ date receiving the highest num of votes will win. | The Salem mills have com- menced receiving wheat by rail. Improvements of every kind are | lly. Qur | A number of wheat dealers at Al- *SU | bany, Oregon, have telegraphed for in setting out trees, while sidewnlks Sy . and fences keep many hands busy. | 3§ "ous o t3ke 8 cargo direct e Journalism has also taken a stride, | 10N PRt and Lincolnites are I Some gentlemen from Ireland, establishmentof the who went to Oregon mainly for that purpose, are experimenting with a crop of flax in Linn county. Two Oregon farmers will send the mohair from ninety-eight An- gora goats to the Philadelphia mar- ket tl sumimer. Tyweedism has spread to Portland, Oregon. has been taken to roof private dwel- lings by the contractors. The Willametto, Oregon, Woolen fanufucturing Company have been mpelled to send East for a compe- tent superintendent. MONTANA. The crops put in this year will be “there was — something the | small compared to those of last fence,” somewhere. And then, | year. broad daylight, you S uow | lgmk_d;;mfl. The spring there are some inducements. The | ¥ it The Governor of Montana has ar- Journal is an old stand-by, notwith- | A h standing, and the Lincoln people | ranged with the Sisters of Charity are proud of its enterprise, even | of St John's Hospital for the care though they do la alittle bac. | of the Territorial insane. bone in this question. There is & strong probability of The attempt made by the Omaha | mail service from Bozeman to Mus- Herald to get up a sensation at the | cleshell, beginning on the first of expense of the University, is looked | July. Rich & Wilson have a bid in upon by our eltizens alike with dis- | and it is possible that they will get gust and contempt. The wholesale | the contract. manner in which their correspon It is generally believed that rich | ent puffs his friends in the facuity, | diggings will be in operation along | and frowns upon others, or passes | the Jefferson this summer, giving | them by, when, in fact, he knows | employment to s large number of | OREGON. staunch old Republ known throughout the State as an able editor that we need say nothing upon that point. Suflice i however, that the generously supported by our citizens. Journal 1s hopping over to the temperance side of the fence. T are two reasons, we thin! : First, the Blade has “stolen its | thunder” against the crusade, or | that “never mind the la second, we have seen one of prietors in private e “Bro.” Alexander s and from their manner, s pro- | b with A new silver discovery has been | $5, 3,and not over one and a half | The Custom House tin | hat Major Shanahan, e has issued orders for all whites to Jeave the Crow reservation, after ree of twenty | ted to con- | the whites This or- May 1st. A police for Indians has been I{P)In fistate all the stock ot found on the reservation. der will compel the removal of & large number who are living there with Tndian wives. Thbl:emder will | also bring some taxa! progw within lhe‘wuntr_\', which has hit erto escaped assessment, and, we lieve, prove better for both whites and Indi Passenger rates on the Missouri | river steamers from Bismarck fo | Carroll, Benton, etc., are as follows : Bismarck, Dakota, to Fort Benton, deck $25, cabin $60; to Carroll, lo- cal, deck $18, cabin §45, through deck, $16, cabin $40; Ft. Peckkdnck $13, cabin $33; Ft. Buford, decl $10, | cabin $20; Ft. Berthold, deck $6, cab- | Dbin $9; Ft Stephenson, deck $5, cabin $8. Returning is as follows: Fort Benton to Bismarck, deck, $15, cab- | i, $30; from Carroll, deck, $13, cab- in, §25; from Fort Peck, deck, $13, cabin, $20; Fort Buford, deck, $13, cabin $15; Fort Berthold, deck, $5, | cabin, $9; Fort Stephenson, deck, | cabin, $8. ‘Steamboats leave Bismarck every week for Carroll, returning within | two weeks. | CALIFORNIA. Ripe cherries are selling in Marys- | ville. | The track of a sireet railroad is | being laid in Los Angeles. ; The grape erop of Napa bids fair | to exceed that of any previous year. l The Sacramento river hasreached | a height of twenty-one feet four inches. [ Hard times prevail in Southern | | California, but considerable build- ing is going on nevertheless. Hop culture is receiving increased attention this season in Napa county. Large quanties of sulphur are be- ing shipped from mines in Lake county. The reports from the Temescal tin mines, San Bernardo county, are cheering. J. H. Taylor, of Livermore has three acres of rice now growing and looking finely, Parties in Stockton intend estab- lishing a fruit drying establishment under the Alden patent. ‘The people of St. Helena are go- ing to have a co-operative wine cel- The Los Angeles Star states that 40,000 toreign grape vines have been planted in the Cucamongo vine- yard this year. There are now 160,~ 000 vines on the piace. The grape crop of the State the present year is enormous. If this luscious “fruit is not destroyed by frost more wine will be produced this season than ever before in the same territory. Bakerfield is cutting its third crop of alfalfa. Every d v i mense quantities. of al 3 passing through the town. The | crop this year will bo_sufficient to. meet all demands in the home mar- ket, and no doubt much of it will be exported. One hundred and thirty-five bales of wool, averaging 300 pounds to the bale, or in round numbers, 49,000 pounds of wool, have been shipped from the Tejon Ranch, the product of this spring’s elip. ooy bas sent 150 Chinamen to visville to plant sugar beets. The company expects to have 20,000 tons of beets to work on this year, which ought to give nearly 1,750,000 pounds of sugar. The owners of the Placer county marble quarry some time since shipped to San Francisco five hun- dred tons of marble, some of which was used in the new Mint,and some in private buildin The marbleis black in color, variegated with fine gray streaks. It takes a beautiful polish, and is of superior quality as to durability. —_— Carpets. Japanese designs in quaint small figures and intricate tracery are the new faney for Brussels carpets, The grounds are sage, olive, canary or brown, strewn with odd little figures, leaves and flowersin blue, red and yellow ; these are for parlors. Tan colored grounds with black serolls are for libraries. For dining rooms are Indienne designs in rich, warm colors; blue with silver, French gray with cherry, and the charm- ing monotone “ecarpets in shaded pearl-color are for chambers and sit- tingrooms. Borders are used for all carpets, and the expense isno great- erthan without them. Five framed body Brussels costs from $1.85 to $2.94 per yard. Tapestry Brussels imitates the showy Moquette car- pets, and is in everything more for show than service, as it does not wear well. Price $1.25 to $1.50. The excellent Wilton carpets are in design like those described for Brussels, and cost from $3 to $3.40. Forhalls and stairways dark carpets should be chosen, as they are richer and more durable. It is economy to buy the serviceable Wilton for these. Soft thick-piled Axminsters for handsome drawing-reoms boudoirs are no longer in large m dallions, but have light vine trace over delicate pale-tinted grounds, pearl and white. They cost from $3.50 to $4.50 a yard, but there are beautiful American Axminster car- pets at $3.00 a yard far cheaper than imported ones, and in the same charming hues and designs. The newost French Moquette carpets are monotone, warmly blended crimson shades, or else entirely of soft drab shades, with a horder of | blue or crimson, Velvet carpets imitate these delicate shadings of | tone upon tone, and cost but $2.75 a yard.— Boston Globe. | Jones, of Ne | | His face is like a Dutch portrait in the style of Rembrandt’s mellow- | est, with American eyesinit.. The cheeks are bright red, with the col- | or of currant clusters, seeming to expose a juicy red life in the blood, | and for tke rest are open-air brown, | the whole a little voluptuous in con | tour, but lengthened out with a beard of rich Vandyke brown, where | the thread or two of gray hangs | like the morning cobweb on the red | gzma rrrARD, The Sacramento Beet Sugar Com- | President. OMATETA NATIONALBANK Cor. Douglas and Thirtesnth Streets. OMAHA, NEBRASKA. 52000 0 | 30,000 00 NTSFOR THE UNITED ATES. apital urplus & | s AL AND DESIGNAT ITORY FOR | THIS BANK DEALS in Exchange, Government Boods, Vouchers, Gold Con, | = T eSS | BULLION and GOLDDUST. | | . - And salls drafts and makes collections on all paria of Europe. - Drais drawn pay eyn the Bonk of Califo U.S.DEPOSITORY | The First National Bank OF OMAZIIA. Corner of Farham and 13th Rtreets. THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT IN NEBRASKA, (Successorsto Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Organized as a National Baak, August 26,1363 Capital and Profits over - $250,000 in gold or curren- | San Francisco. | OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS : E. CREIGHTOY, | A. KOUNTZE, President. (Cashier. H. COUNTZE, M. W. YATES, Vice Pres't. As’t Cashier. A. J. POPPLETOX, Attorney. - /TUCKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-American Packet Company. Jy2ine CLARK & FRENCI. Wholesale Grocers And dealers in CANNED GOODS DRIED FRUITS, ETC. Green Fruits in their Season ORDERS OLICITED AND PROMPTLY FILLED 91- Charles Popper, WHOLBSALE BUTCHER AND CATTLE BROKER, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAR. feb2tt | | BENI.OD.JONES -t Lambrequins and Window Shades, CHROMOS, ENGRAVINGS AND PICTURE FRAMES. 270 Farnham street, corner Fifteenth DR. A. S. BILLINGS, DENTIST, 234 Farnham St., Bet. 13th and 14th, up stairs. Teeth extracted, without pain, by uwse of Mi- trous Oxide Gas. | #0fice open atall hour estt J. C. LEE, CAR PENTE AND BUILDER, 233 FARNHAM STREET. CTUREP OF AND DEALKE IN- STODDARD & HURLSUT, Market Gardners! LL KINDS OF VEGETABLES AND A piants, for sae. Orders addressed to us atour garden Cor. 21st and Paul Streets, Will receive prompt attenti aplsasm D. CoOKE. 0. 1. BALLOV. COOXE & BALLOU. PORE PACEKERS AND CATTLE DEALERS. Ordess for dressed hogs, beef and mutton promptly filled. OFFICE 1N CREIGHTON'S BLOCK, Nebrask “£inoun) i 1dsosg v “OOMNVIS ‘B SIYOA FTUVH MONUMNTS, TOMBSTONES, ETC., ETC. JACOB CISH, 261 Farnham St., Bet. 14th & 15t UNDERTAKER JOHN H. GREEN, STATE MILLS DEALER IN GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED, COMMISSION MERCHANT EOWARD KUEHL, MAGISTER OF {HE DEPARTED. No. 493 10th St between Farnbam & Harney, Will by the aid of guardian spirits, obtain orany one a view of the past, present ‘and fu- ture. No fess chared in cases of sickness, aplau 400,000 ACRES! —OF THE FINEST— Elkhorn Valley Lands! FurnitureDealers Nos. 187, 189 and 191 Farnham Streest. | OMAEIA. NEBRASKA. MILTON ROGERS. Wholesale Stoves TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCEK. ——SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— mar2ay STEWART'S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, THE “FEABLESS,” COOKING STOVES, CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK CDOKING STOVES, Allof Which Will be Sold at Manufacturers’ Prices, With Freight added. ap22tf Send for Price Lists. J. A. THORUP, NEBRASKA SHIRT MANUFACTORY 159 -~ M ‘ Q 159 FARNHAM ST., FARNHAM ST, OMAHA, NEBRASKA. | SHRTS AND GENTS' FURNISHING 600DS, &C.. &€ #&-Shirts ofall kKindsmade to or der. Satisfation guarranteed.~&a VANDALIA |LEAD PENCILS ROUTE E A S T. 3 TRAINS DAILY ! LEAVE ST. LOUIS WITH Pullman Palace Cars BHROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE Indianapolis, s Lonisvflle, trial Fair, 1873, | Chw' ¥irst Prem'um Brooklyn fndus- ‘, 00111;1,:;;’“& trial Expesition, 1873. l‘ Philadelphia, ’ Baltimore, ‘ ‘Washington, | —axp— NEW YTORK Arrival of Trains from the West. The following Premiums have been awarded for Dixon's American Graphic OR LEAD PENCILS: Gold Medal ‘of Progress, Vienva, 1873, First Premium Cincinnatti Indus- | For ‘amples or information sddress the Jos. Dixon Crue ivle Co., Orestes Cleeveland, 1 | | JERSEY CITY, N J. | i | m72m ONLY ONE CHANGE TO Cleveland, Buffalo & Boston TCKETS PASSENGERS Going East or South from Omaha | Are for Sale atthe ‘ompany’s Office, e Primeipal Rail | And Pointson U. P.R.R., should take ihe “LINCOLN ROUTE” via THR ATCHISON & NEBRASKA RAILROAD! S. E. FOLLETT, o] Pass. AG't. 7. Lovis. Established in 1851. | | | | | | “The Oldest Established BANKINGHOUSE —IN NEBRASKA— Caldwell, Hamilton & Co. BANKERS. PUsESTRAN: of an Inco | | ABd secure for them ves the choice of Six Popular Rout ates fro Afehison to Chicago and Si. Louis, | All making Reliable Connections sod being | Equipped with Palace Day and Sleeping Cars. | a1 tnconvenience arriving from | Fortion atd transers can bo avoided West of | Chicago and St. Louis by securiog Tickets via | ATCHISON and the ATCHISUN & NEBRASKA RAILROAD. | Direct and Reliable Coanections are also made | ‘with the A. T & 5. F. E. B. for the | Great Arkansas Valley & Colorado, And with all lines running South to points in ‘Southern Kansas and the Indian Territory. “Ask for Tickets fia SACTED SAME AS THAT rated Bank. ACCOUNTS KEPT CURRENCY OR Gold subject to sight check without notice. [ (EETIEICATES OF DEPOSIT 1SSUED yable on demand, or at fixel da béaring iaterest at ix r €r cent. per anow and available in all parts of the country. ADVANCES MADE TO CUSTOM ‘approved securaties at market Tates ol interest. ERS ON v 5 BUY AND SELL Gold, Bills of eXchange, Government, State, ‘County and city Bonds. CHAS. C.8MITH, Gew'l Bupt. a2 W. F. WHITE Gen'l Pass. Ag't. | B¥We give special attention 1o negotiate Ar-%ison, Kansas e hr o Cunperats Tamis oast e Baee RAW SIGHT DRAFTS ON ENGLAND, Treland. Scotland and afl parts of Europe. Sell Earopean passage Tickets. COLLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. aaltf PLATTE VALLEY ALVIN SAUNDERS, NOS LOWE President. Vice Presdent. BEN Woop, Cashier. Samuel C. Smith, Loaal Ageat for the | 0n U. 7. Track, et Furhara and Dougias Sa.} LINCOL - & atcHisoN OMAHA REAL ESTATE ] Masonic, | LODGE PROP! ‘ST LN O OO Do A0 §48.0 A PRACTICAL | Manufacturer | WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELRY S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. 'WATCHES & CLOCKS. JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. Dealers Can Save TIME and FREIGHT by Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE! s&-ALL GOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESENTED."wm ‘an3i-f BRADY & McAUSLAND. WEOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN | WHITE LEBEAD, COLORS OIS, VARNISHES, GLASS, Artists’ and Decorators’ Materials. 533 and 535 Fourteenth St., Omaha. Junes-1y S C. Assorr S. C. ABBOTT 3 canzmo, CO., ‘Booksellers T Stationers DEALERS IN WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, AN WINDOW SHADES, No. 188 Farnham Street. Omaha, Neb Puablishers’ Agents for School Books nsed in Nehrask-o lcEEAP FARMS! firm HOMES On toe Live of the Union Pacific Railroad A Land Graat of 12,000,000 Acres of the best PARMING aad MINERAL Lands of Amerioa 1,000,000 ACRES IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDEN OF TEL WEST KOW FOR SALE! These Iands are In the central portion of the United States, on the 4ist degrea of Nucth Lat itade, the central line of the great Temperate Zoue of the Arerican (cotineat, and for grain growlng and stock rajsing unsurpassed by any in the United States. OHEAPER IN PRICE, mare favorableterms ¢f von and more convenlent to market thau oa be fuaad Eisewbers. FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit given with interast a: SIX PER CENT OOLONISTS and ACTUAL SETULERS canbuy on Ten Yoears' Credit. Laads st the sem ‘orice to all CREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deluction TEN PEE CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLERS. And the Best Locations for Colonies ! Soldiers Entit{%% to a Homestead ¢ Acres. x Pas to Purchaners of I.and Sondtor new bescriptive Pumphict, with new twaps, poblishol i Enilioh, Gooaen, Sweed and Danis, mailed Iree everywhere. ress X X . L i =T o 1 s e WM. M. FOSTER. WYWholesale Lumber, WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. f Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Louisville Cement OMAHA, N. I. D. SOLOMON, WEHOLESALE PAINTS OILS AND WINDOW CLASS3, OFFICE AND YARL 1 NEB. apratt |COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL NEBRASKA FAIRLIE & MONELL, 'BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS, Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. 0dd Fellows amri;ligllts of Pythias UNIFORMS ERTIES, JEWELS, BOOKS, BLANK: RN PRICES AND EXPRESS.-ga OMAIIA. . NEE, mayad ETC., AT BEAS | 282 Douslas Streot, - ARTHUR BUCKBEE. [CARPENTER, BUILDER —AND DEALER IN— party. His stubbornness of will | py Jjttieabout any of them, learned | miners. | and dogged tenacity of purpose, | as he may be in the legal profession, | combined ‘with a rugged habit of | i a fair llustration of the munnet g == in whi treated everything con- | el A fierceness of | | yed with the institution. As re- f-assertion, impressed the rank the library, we did not under. | and file of the party with a notion Fon SALE _ . M. CI:ARIK, - =« Neb, The prospects are not a0 inviting | 0, bl The eves are hazd, | | carrying all expressage, inundated in some of the camps as could be | i eior thear e precision, e mfi-:;r&:‘lfi;e: ;lh:; nhining with the light of feeling, | s y 3 expanding with the glow of address spring is all that willhelp matters. | The hair tarries, ngusfled that i The water is starting very late, and | gometimes must let the oils of prce | the warm winds have licked WP 3 | cious spikenard evaporate, but as STATE SAVINGS BANE, N. W. Cor. Farnham aud 13th Sts., | U. P.R. R. LANDS, Columbus, - Neb,| Government Lands Located! | | FPESE LANDS ARE CONVENIENT TO the market and the stand what idea the correspondent of great intellectual force, and drew | intended to convey; whether the 8 1000 after him always a formidable fol- | Subject matter is cheap, cheap bind- lowing. The same qualities con- stantly repelled the more conserva- tive of the party; and it was the habit of the opposition organs and orators to make the principles he advocated offensive by quoting him s their exponent. He is to-day, as for the past twenty years, the best reprasentative of all that is offensive see what has been done. great deal of the snow. At time last year the water was boom- ing in the valley streams, now they | have scarce started. The Laneaster County Bar Asso- | Rich and extensive placer mines ciation held their annual election for | were discovered in the bed of the officers last night, and long after | Jefferson river, about fifty miles honest were abed, the legai | from Bozeman, fraternity their ing, or_cheap all round. We guess | he don’t know himself. Commence- | ‘ment will soon be here, then let us made night hideous with | with what is known as the Davis crusade on wine, ice cream, | bar, on the Sth of A ‘Three men in celebration of the event. | with a small wing and rocker, and unpopular in Democratic par- tisanship.” oy. ete., We wish it understood that none of | obtained $375 In six days’ work them drank enough to become tip- | from a small patch of ground. Bed- Gmiues, | rock was at three feet, yet they give it hue. A trifle chuf- 1y in the body, as if he bossed all Jobs with the knees, the belly, the | eyes and elbows, hallooing to his ‘workmen meantime, and too strong | to be always elegant—this was Jones.—“Gath," in Chicago Tri- | - | —— | Millions and millions of caterpi’- according to the Salt Lake | Utah,'and threaten 40 destroy the fruit 'crop. News, are hatching on_the trees in | Pot, FINEST in the STATE! And will be sald at from $2.50 to $5.00 PER ACRE! For Cash or on Long Time. 2~ LAND EXPLORING 1[CK- ETS for sale at O. & N. W. De- bearing_coupons which will | TIE FHOLE OR ANY PART OF A DE- posit after remaining in this Benk thres | “-mlh. will draw interest. L Lands Sold! | IDESM AS SMALL AS ONE DOL- U. P. ds Sold! sece ved al- jowed on the sa; A componnd immerest ' | | - wmn‘hnw- for | Advantages OVER Certificates of Deposit : ON LONG TIME!!| | | ] a this Bend | 8-All Communications Cheer- be taken at full cost in ‘ment for land. g Pposit can be drawn atfaoy time, t. The 3 of fly Answered pesment “The wholeor sy part ol s do- ALy _ ap%0u Sho | 11en se verFira splint 1oy —~AND— ' CHEAP, DURABLE, LAMOId AN - Public Parks, OMAHA - or Yards, Law a Bam and <