Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 21, 1874, Page 2

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THE OMA OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY. TO CORRESPONDENTS. W Do ¥OT desire sny contributions whatever of » literary or poctical charscter; aad we wil not undertske to preserve, or to relurn be same, fn any ease wliatever. is sufficiently large to more than su; P'¥ 0BT Mimiged space in that direction. Biat Naxs op WaiTex, in fal and every case scoo; ton of whst nature soc tended for publication, faetion and as proof of good Ov CovxTY FRigsps we pleased to bear from, 0 all m: cs, snd on any sub- Jeot whatever of geners Ple of our State. Any o with the election. secidents. etc., will be gladly received. us, however, must be d they must, in ll cases, be written upon one side of the sheet only. PoLITICAL. HABEE | | ever procure an authentic record of | | original locations and surveys. : des or lost, where can we | Why a matter of such vast im- | | portance to our citizens should bave | been neglected for eighteen years passes our comprehension. It is a | well known fact that the original | surveys of Omaha were not very accurate. Some blocks in the pres- ent business center of this city cover more ground than others. | Some of the streets are not exactly paralell. It is therefore of the ut- | most importance that the County Clerk’s office should contain a relia- ble record of these surveys, includ- ing a copy of the original maps. Mayor Chase is on the right track bat we hope he will not stop until | the affairs of this city are put on as sound a basis as those of any well conducted private corporation. THE re-location of army head- quarters from Washington to St. Louis seems now to be definitely ar- SERENADE !!_A FARMER. Oh, come my love and live withme ; Aud keep my cottage in the glen, And patient as a bumble-bee And busy asa sitting hen. Oh, rest beneath my fragrant flower ; Where sweet starmontam doth eniwice Coue smell the gentle caulifiower Aud cull the mangle-wirtzel vine. Ab, listen to the rural songs ! ‘The pea shall wind his magic shell, As Echo plaintively prolongs The warbie of the pimpernel. ‘cackle T fac ellow of the Berkshire come, the moral is fair, T the day with thee ; Tl merrily dig the Bartlett pear, ‘And shake the ruta-baga tree. O, come love, 03, hump _yourseli, my lovely Poll. And in the cause of anti-monop. We'll mulch the turkeys o the @il 'And gralt the long clam o the crop. My sweetest ! T am fond of mush, “\nd thou will vet some eut for s We'll early sow the currant bush, And tap the cranberry-jelly tree. We'll pull the wool from of the calf, ‘The cottonwood its fleece shall shed ; So at the wiater wa shall laugh, "And gatly weed the oyster bed. We'll bl ithely hoe the winter wheat, We'll chase the egg’s the squirrels lay, bantam hog shall bleat And when We'll leed him with some clover hay. best the Dorsera fili- formis. Some living flies were pinned half an inch from the leaves, near the apex, about ten o'clock in the morning. ' In forty minutes the leaves had bent perceptibly toward | the flies. In two hours the leaves | had reached ‘g‘:l&’ld flies, and th&lr | leaves were en among the | bristles and held fast. The flies were then removed three-quarters of an inch further from the leaves. | The leaves stili remained bent to- | ward the flies, but could not reach them at this distance. The-ob- | server thinks that the action of the flies’ wings may have crea- | ted sufficient force to bring the | leaves near enough to entangle the | flies, for dead flies failed to produce | the same result as living ones. On i the same day bits of raw beef were | placed on- some of the most vigor- ous leaves of another species of the plant, the Drosera longifolia. In two hours two of the leaves had fol- ded around the beef, hiding it from sight. Laving flies were also pl | upon the same species of the plant. In a little more than an hour one 1 of the leaves had folded entirely around its victim, the other leaves had practically folded, and the flies | had ceased to struggle. Two hours admit at the time of organiza n’ as charter members, or a grange shall admit by initiation a dealer in | mtoxicating liquors or an habitual | drunkard, said deputy shall, upon | complaint, be subject to be deprived | of his commission, and said grangé to the surrender of its charter. EZRA MILLARD, |J. H. MILLARD, President. Cashier. OMATEITA NATIONALBANK | Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Capital..... Surplus and AGEN sancar SEAT! AND DESIGNATED DEPOSITOJ DISsURSING Ul‘FL‘I.'H.S.BY o THIS BANK DEALS in Exchange, Goyerument Hoods, Vouchers, d Prodits. FOR THE UNITED | [BULLION and aaan)L'ST.'j N And sells drafts and akes collections on all parts of arope. | | 4 ; Furniture Dealers Nos. 187,189 and 191 Farnham Strest. " OMAEA, NEBRASKA. Sps woliuama L \T VO MUHE 40 0048 il 89110 Ol B0 19PIO < URYH NO KILRVISaLDY SBIEIHELNNOOD Nnavpoging B4BYD MOHE ANV MILTON ROGERS. 8 Drafis drawn payable in gold or curren- eyrn the Bank of California, San Francisco: | U.8.DEPOSITORY ranged. With General Sherman at | St. Louis it will naturally follow that Sheridan’s presence at Chicago | would practically become superflu- All savory game to the T'll bring ; beburios knows my spear sharp "l shoot the dolphin on the wing. And hit him 1n the pericarp. Then come my love and live with me ; later, four leaves had each folded around a fly. | 40} be cherged as ad- | | | All communications should be addresssd to £ ROSEWATER, Editor sad Publisher, Draw- o NOTICE. Onand alter October twenty-first, 1872, the ety circulation of the DATLY BEE is assumed by Mr. Edwin Davis, to whose order all sub- scriptions not paid 1 be payable. and by whou all receipts fo subscriptions will be countersiguel. E. ROSEWATER. Puilisher fo ————— | rised if the relocation of General | Ewusua, the Baxterite, has taken up his quarters in the Arkansas State House. e of the Viee Presidents of the American Prison Congress for the ensuing | year. | —_— Tae new currency bill is now in the hands of the House Comumittee on Banking and Cuarrency, who, it is understood, are to devise several amendments with a view of pre- senting a bill that the President will be sure to sign. Parrn CossaGNac, the | champion duelist of the French press, has for once been disap- pointed. He had just arranged to kill a seion of the defunet Royalty but the fri s of the “Juke” will not consent to it. : Architect Mullettis now in this ¢ 1d we presume it §s his intention to push the United State Post-Office and Castom House apletion. The building has been under con- struction about three times as long as it should have been, and we im- agine certa dess parties would willingly exte ¥ to an indefinite period. The disinterested citizens of Omaha are, however, beginning to be with these interminable and we think inexcusable delays. Itis therefore to be hoped Mr. Mullet's presence means busin SUPERVIST « nsted You must alwuys go away from home if you want to hear the latest mews. According to the | Lincoln Journal the silly periodical attacks on the S Unive the Omaha Herald is the forth of a wiles ling t scheme ba and incorporate experiment that some of the ticians of that b trade with the this basis. The al movers on neoln editor is ous. It becomes self-evident that it would be an expensive luxury to keep up Licutenant General's And beautify my e | As patient asa bumble-bee, And busy s 3 sitting hen. { NATURAL CURIOSITIES. headquarters located at a greater distance from Department head- quarters at Omaha, Leaven- worth and San Antonio than Gen- eral Sherman would be when at St. Louis. We shall therefore not be sur- serman’s headquarters, would in- | volve a relocation of General Sheri- dan’s headquarters, and a possible readjustment of Department boun- daries. Omaha, it seems to us, would be a very desirable location for the Lieutenant General. He would be near enough to the De- partment of the Missouri, and at the same time at a desirable distance from the great Indian reservations, north and west. The White Slaves of England. Under the above head the New York World gives, from its London correspondent, some account of the | condition of the working classes of England. He has been looking over the report of the Inspectors of Factories for the last year. The In- spectors visited the ~brick-makers, and they report that those laborers are “a most barbarous, semi-civil ized, ignorant set. Men and boys look like red Indians; the sand used in brick-making being burnt red, their bodies are covered with it. They work bare-headed, barefooted, with exposed breasts, and with wild looks. Drinking all day Sunday, Monday and Tuesday dog-fighting and man-fighting, they resume work on Wednesdays, when the poor little unfortunates (that is, the children of both sexes, who are made to do the hardest part of the labor) are made to toil away, stamping and carrying, and pressing a good fort- ght’s work into three or four days. One man, who last week earned in four lda,;fl :;;'enty:lil‘a( shillings (6.50 In tool s Silo Bigtne & oaf o/ bevbl and alx- pence.” The law that children under 12 years of age must not be made to work is systematically disregard- ed. Cases are given where chil dren ten or twelve years old are made but seven hours of the twenty-four for sleep and meals. These reports from the brick works are bad enough but what can we say of the stories told of the salt works at Droilwich? In these the women work with the men all night, both sexes stripped to the walst, and very little clothing to cover them below. The men wear short breeches simply, and the wo- men haveon only a single garment, | a skirt, tied about the waist and reaching to the knees. The scenes nightly enacted in these works are said to be horrible beyond deseription, and chastity, morality and decency are, among Kknown to be a very successful snipe | hunter, bat we trapped a huge time. pprehend he decoy duek this | | | _ MUNICIPAL LOOSENESS. at the And now it of Omaha owns real estate, of | Cit, which no record can be found in | any of our municipal offic This | faet was recently hrought to the at- | tention of Mayor (1 ties who hiad been occupantsof city fots, about which no me in theabstract book of city property This looseness in municipal affuirs however, only in full kee the inexcusable irregul iprevail throughout the whole sys- | tem. Mayor Chase the first mur 'who | has taken the inventory of city property in each of the various munici ments, and for this he greatcredit. It scemsto u €ver, that a great corpora; the city of Omaha, should hav reliable record of every inch of r estate of which they can claim ownership. abstract or list, m tate agents, will It should be made ial duty of the c or some other comy to carefully examine records for the purpose of ing the description and I n is made is | In our opinion a mere | up by real es- not fill the b the espec- ¥ attorney, t attorney he county n- - of | meaning. | enlightened the workers, words destitute of This is a brief glimpse into the condition of the toiling masses of the “proudest and most nation upon _the | globe,” the country upon which the sun never sets. Every true Briton's heart will probably swell with pride at the view. England sends year after year her wealth and her misssionaries to other lands, to assist and educate, and clothe and civilize the heathen, while her own flesh and blood at home is living in destitution, niisery and shame. Thisis the “finest peas- antry in the world,” of which England boasts. Let the American working people turn from the pie- v their own condition and Decoration Day. HEADQUARTERS GRAND ARMY ) ¥ THe RepusLic, DEeP'T - or NEg, Lincoln, May 14,74 | GENERAL ORDER SIX. Memorial Day will be observed in is Department, in accordance with the rules and regulations, by | the Grand Army of the Republic, on the 30th inst., at which time ng, with dewy fingers cold ¥ their Balluwed moutd." the customary honors will be to the memory of our departed com- rades. Post commanders are recom- mended to invite the co-operation of comrades not members of the Grand Army, of the clergy, and of all who may feel interested in the | memorial public services, v | ting, so far as able, thegraves where | | they 1t isearnestly hoped that in those | services, consisting of ting and decora- e every lot or part of lot owned by | places where there are ne the eity. These atforne; also investigate the con which the city deeded or property, and whether property sold, donated « the city, does not revet to the by the failure of th granteesor lessces to original conditions of I ‘We apprehend that eareful investi- | gation will diselose property now held or claimed by indivic or corporations originaly owned b the city has been fo son of their non-co; ns upon wed ber | of the |t ywith the transfer. ’ | a o posts, the should | da will not be pecniiodite ats thout suitable recognition ; but that friends and citizens will 'visit the gravesof those who sleep among hem, remembering that “Tnere honor comes, . T4 e theturt Tt wrbpe T A Our noble dead are scattered far ™, | and wide, they lie on the land and n the sea, and yet let all be united n our remembrance—forget not the least, who in the hour ot trial did his duty faitbfally. ' get to teach the lessons of that uals | devotion by which alone a | can besaved, in so terrible | alofits fate as that th our own has been called to Let us not for- rough nd while we with grateful do night work, and have | eontract stipulati bow our heads in gratitude to the | A manatee or sea cow has taken up its home in & creek near St. Aug- ustine, which i to be fenced inand the creature exhibited. A boy while fishing in_the Mis- souri river at Brownville last week, caughtan eel, the first one that | ever came out of the Missouri. | A lad named Platt_found a tooth of a mastodon, in McHenry county, Tllinois, a few days since. and & similar molar was recently discov- ered in Ogle county. The former weighed ten and the latter fifteen pounds. Professor Darwi possessor of a practical supporter of his peculiar theory in the shape of the first gorilla ever tamed. It is described as a most courteous diner- out, very particular as to its food, and insisting on a nightly ration_of bot rum and water, sweetend with honey, before retiring. The Los Angeles public library has made the addition of a second natural curiosity— mammoth shrimp, nicely bottled and_pickled down 1n vinegar. The specimen is about eight inches long_ by four in circumference, having the general form of u shrimp, with protruding eyes, long feelers, and_every other characteristic, except the usual size and color, which is a light red. Mocking birds can imitate human actions as well as human voices, it seems. A Macon, Ga., paper says that two birds of this stripe got jealous of each other and under- took to fight it out in desperate fashion. One of them, getting enough of it sang out “quit, quit,” and followed this up by erying “police, police.” And, oddly enough, there was a policeman within hearing who came up and stopped the fight. A spaniel named “Curley” is the regular mail-carrier between a settlement called Lake of Two ‘Woods, Dakota, and the Minnesota line, twelve miles away. Letters and papers are placed in a sack and tied about the dog’s neck; he is told to go, and never fails to reach his destination. Arriving, the mail is overhauled, the faithful servant is treated to a good dinmer, and started on his return trip, The seals in the Brighton, Eng- land, Aquarium are in a room where concerts are occasionally given. It is said that the animals are greatly affected by vocal musie, and lately became very disorderly during a performanee, rushing about in the water and making & noise which almost drowned the voice of the singer. Instrumental musie does not seem to affect them so power- fully, but the more sweet and tender the voice of the singer the more powerfully they are atfected. is the happy | | | | A gentleman at Helena, Monta- na Territory, has a pair of huge mountain lions, or cougars, which he has raised from whelps. These | beasts are now about two years old, | and fully as large as a good-sized panther. They do not obtain their full growth until four years of age. They are very ferocious, and give no evidence of becoming . tractable; and an ordinary sized dog thrown into the cage, did not survive long | enough to give a yelp. The owner | says they have already devoured | some ten or twelve dogs, and twen- | ty or thirty cats, which have been given them to play with. A correspondent writes as follows. of a celebrated place in Colorado Canon, called Echo Park: “When & gun is discharged, total silence | follows the report for a moment; then, with startling suddenness,the echo'is heard, seeming at a great | distance—say five miles tothe south | —whenee it comes back in separate and distnet reverberations,as if leap- ing from glen to glen. Louder and quicker grows the sound, until ap- parently directly opposite, when a full volume of sound is returned; then_once more the echo is heard, like the snapping of a cap, far tothe eastward.” The New Haven Journal records the case of a young lady in that city who had been lying in a cataleptic paid | trance since the night of Wednes- | day of last week. She retired on that night in full possession of good | health, and in the morning she was | found,’ body and limbs_perfectly rigid, and has remained so ever since. Another singular circum- stance attending this case is that guage which she has never learned, The so-called vegetable wax of Japan and China is, in reality, the secretion of an insect about the size of a grain of rice. It receives its name because it is found on trees, | Afterit is pathered it is melted and strained; nearly 3,000,000 pounds were exported from China in 1870. | The pretty little plant ealled the 'ra, or sundew, says the Provi- dence Jou developes some strange ani instinets. It is a charming plant, with its lovely pink | blossoms, while the dew-like sub- stance issuing from its glands gives it 8 most cool and ref g ance on a warm summer’s day. | But though it looks the very pie- ture of innocence and gentleness, it has a strange taste for seizing, kill- | turer. INDUSTRIAL POINTS. [ | | y is making cannon at the rate of 100 3 week. | | Steps have been taken to estab- | ish a cotton factory in Newbern, | N.C. Itis proposed in England to use enameled iron plates as a substitute for roofing slates and tiles. It is proposed to make stage scen- | ery n.mer by using wire cloth | instead of canvas, and iron frames instead of the wooden ones now em- ployed. A bell weighing 6,000 pounds, in- tended for the fire department of Brooklyn, has been cast at the foundry of Henry McShane & Co., | Baltimore. M. Ladiguin, a Russian scientist, has invented a means of producing electrie light by which it can be ob- tained for general use at one-fifth the cost of gas. The bulletin of the American Iron and Steel Association reports the | condition of the trade at the end of | April as in a “state of paralysis in | every branch.” | The production of wool in the | United States during the past four | years was: In 1870, 125,000,000 | in 1871, 112,500,000 pounds; 135,000,000 pounds; in 1873, 148,000,000 pounds, France last year produced 1,381, 000 tons of pig iron, being 200,000 tons more than in 1872. Her produc- tion of steel was 167,677 tons, viz., | 64,444 tons cast steel, and 103, tons Bessemer steel. The Manchester, (N. H.) Print Works have passed into thé hands | of a new Company, with a capital stock 0f$2,000,000, one-halfof which | has been taken by stockholders of | the old corporation. The works | suffered no discontinuation of busi- | ness. | A company has been formed in | Pittsfiel ass., for the purpose of | inducing manufacturers to settle there by providing them with suita- ble buildings and steam power. It | has received a gift of twelve acres of land from a real estate owner and is erecting a large factory thereon. | | | The eleansing of cotton which has been used for oiling machinery, is now a regular business in Westville, | Conn. By the aid of machinery | the oil is extracted from the cotton, | and sold for lubricating purposes. The cotton is then subjected to a bleaching process, by which it is re- stored to its original whiteness. Iron ore has been found for the | first time in Schuylkill County, Penn., on property within the city limiits of Pottsville. This di 3 which may lead to others, is expect ed to benefit that section of Penn- | sylvania which has hitherto pro- | cured ore for its furnacesfrom places more or less distant. The total value of metals mined in Great Britain last year was$110,- 800,000; of minerals, pottery ma- terials, 'ete., $9,000,000; of ooal, $531,400,000; total, $651,200,000. The excess of value over 1875 is about $66,400,000, and is due to the influence of the combustible ele- ment, which hasattained exception- ally high prices. The increase in the production of coal was 4,305,- 617 tons. The building of wooden ships i making fair progress at the New England ship-yards, despite the reference accorded to iron vessels. n Newburyport a ship of 1,500 tons has been Inunched, and two others are building. At Kennebunkport one of 1,600 tons is on the stocks, | while at Richmond one of 1,200 | tons is buiiding, and the materials for another of 2,000 have been col- lected. | —_— | Grange Decisions. The various masters of the differ- ent Syate Granges have made the following decisions, which will ma- terially aid subordinate granges in their deliberations ; | Members not clear on the books | should not be given tho annual | word. A past master has the same right s any other member, and no more. | Granges cannot constitutienally | refund or remit any of the initiation ‘ A suvordinate grange cannot | change the by- requiring money | to accompany the petition. A grange cannot take a note for | fees or vote back any fees after they | have been paid in. Standing committees on applica- | tions are illegal ; all committees on | applications must be special. | Rituals are not to be distributed | among the b-:mmm {neml;,em .::f 1 e grange, but to kept by the officer. . | No dispensation can be filled out | after the application has been sent off by the deputy. | Every candidate for initiation | must be balloted for, whether the | crmmittee reports pro or con. | ‘When the M. and O. are both ab- | sent a P. M. should take the chair, | if there be one present, if not then | elect a master protem. There is no authority to make the steward mas- ter, as he Is outranked by the lec- | A grange cannot change its place of meeting into_the jurisdiction of | another grange without obtaining | the consent of the grange into whose Jurisdietion they propose to hold the | Dispenses his "Opvice and Residence, Farnbam snd 14th Streets, first door £ the right, Up stairs Oumaba, Net. Addvess Lock Bos LT The First National Bank OF OMAZIEIA. Corner of Farham and 13th Rtreets. | ‘THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT IN NEBRASKA. (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Organised as a National Bank, Angust 36,1863 | Capital and Profits over - $250,000 | OFFICERS AND DIRKCTORS : E. CREIGHTON, | A. KOUNTZE, President. Cashier. L. COUNTZE, H. W. YATES, Vice Pres't. As’t Cashier. ‘A. J. POPPLETON, Attorney. i (CKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS | of Europo via the Cunard and National | Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-American | Packet Company. iyt Wholesale Stoves TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCK. ——SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR— STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOY! THE “FEARLESS,” COOKING STOVES, CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, Allof Which Will be Sold at ¥anufacturers’ Prices, With Freightadded. S, D | | | | | ap22tt Send for Price Lists. The Oldest Establishea BANKING HOUSE | IN NEBRASKA. Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., Business WM m\ s that Accounts kept in Ca oy or Gold :r;}eetu sight check wi it no- Certificates of Deposit Issued pay- g it A rest af T m-:ml available in in all nl:'eu | of the country. | Advances made to customers om proved securities at market rates interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- Government, State, County, and City Bonds. Mo elre spesial attention to ¥¥o- and other Corpo- rate Loans issued within the Stato. Draw Sight Drafts on England Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of Europe. Sell European l’l’\)fln Tickets. ERS, _ENOS LOWE ent. Vice Presdent. :N WooD, Cashier. ALVIN SAUND! Pre: STATE SAVINGS BANKE, N. W, Cor. Farnham aud 13th Sts., Capital... s 100,000 Authorized Capil lar sece- iowed o the sswe. Sttt e Advantages OVER Certificates of Deposit : HE WHOLE OR ANY PART OF A DE- posit after remaining in this Benk three months, will draw interest {rom d.te of depos- it 1o payment. The whole or any partof a de- Posit can be Grawn atfany time. - aug2stl TOEN PaREK. 255 Harney street, between 14th and 15th. Carriage and Wagon Making In all it Branches, in the latest and most ‘spproved pattern. HORSE SHOEING AND BLACKSMITHING and repairing done on short notice. JOMN BA Practical Watch;nnker, 171 Farndan ., 8. % Oor. 11th 8t. OMAHA, - - NEB PRAOCTICAXI | WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELRY Manufaocturer S. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKS. JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. calers Can Save TIME and FREIGHT by Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CHARGE ! S&-ALL GOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESENTED.-wn tansi-tf J. A. THORUP, NEBRASKA SHIRT MANUFACTORY AS FARNHAM ST, FARNHAM ST, OMAHA, NEBRASKA. SH'RTS AND GENTS' FURNISHING 600DS, &C. &C. | 2@r-Shirts ofall kinds made to ord er. “Satisfation guarranteed.~S& Sprilyleod W. B. RICHARDSON. OMATZEA NEB ASKA PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. ‘Amd Manufacturer of Dry ani Satarated Roofing and SheathingIPelr. ALSO DEALERS IN Roc@.ng. Pitch, Coal, Tar, RO%E Ete., Etc. ut of Nebraska or ad,oining States. Office opposite’the Gas Works, on ress P. 0. Box 452. HAWLEY & BURKS, —WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DELERS IN— AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMFNTS, | Farm Machinery and Wagons. No. 13 South 10th Street, LINCOLN, NEE. | mehll | Fort Calhoun Mills. FLOUR, FEED & MEAL Marvuf.ctured with Great Care from the Best Graia. Coneral Depot, Cer. 14th & Dodgo Sts, OMAEA. PROROSALS FOR COAL. om | | |8 may 8-1y. ELAM CLARK. Chaxrles ?oppl;, WHOLESALE BUTCHRER HEAD'GRS DEPARTMENT OF THE PLATTE, AND CATTLE BROKER, L FFICE CHIEF QUARTERMASTER, O, Neb., May 15, 1574. EALED BIDS IN DUPLICATE WILL BE | £ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. T B peccived at this office until eleven o'ciock | 53"3 Al’ld 535 Fourteenth St., - These lands are in the central portion itude, the central line of the grest Te: growlug and stock raisit 4nd Danish, mailed free everywhere. ulyzdsws! BRADY & McAUSLAND. 'WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS I¥ | WHITE LEAD, COLORS OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS, Artists’ and Decorators’ Materials. Omaha. 8 C. Azsore S. C. ABBOIT & 3 camyumo. Booksellers 7 Stationers WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, AND WINDOW SHADES, ‘ No. 188 Farnham Street. Omaha, Neb Publishers’ Agents for School Beoks used In Nebrasks. CHEAF FARMS! FREE HOMES _ On toe Line of the 'Union Pacific Railroad’ | A Land Grast of 12,000,000 Acres of tte best FARMING asd MINERAL Laads of America | 1,000,000 ACRES IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE! of the United States, on the dist degree of Nu:th Lat Zoue of the An I < versls Sane mocican (cntinent, and for grain EAPER IN PRI fa % OF, more favorabloterss civen, aad more convenieat to market thea 8 FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit given with Iatersat a: SIX PER CENT (‘ OOLONTSTS and AOTUAL SETULERS canbuy oa Ten Years’ Orodit. Laads st the sam ‘vrice to all CREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction TEN PER CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLERS. And the Best Locations for Colonies ! oldiers Entitled to a Homestead cf R Bend for new Descriptive Pamphlet, with new maps, prbiished . of Xsand e, dweet o Feb. 3 Satanday, June 0 197, or the del- | DR. A. S. BILLINGS, l_nm',“on heline of ths 'Union Pacide’ Rt | e = EIGHT THOUSAND TONS OF COAL, | DEIN T IS, |l ieior diary ot sons i s railroad. 284 Farnham St., Bet.'13th and 14th, up statrs. Teeth extracted without paia, by use of Ni- trous Oxide Gas. M et %0flice open atall hour J. C. LEE, CARPENTER AND BUILDER, 235 FARNHAM STREET. 3 | of the coal offered will be care- | \ered in making the award, and the jecs woy or all bids is expressly re ght 4ae;cc. auy for - HERMAN TOMBRINCK, st bs endorsed on eavelopes, “Blds | | | | | On U. P. Track, bet ¥ 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 Cement OMAHA, OFFICE AND YARL : ) Farnbam and Douglas Sta. | NEB. apratt CHAS. R. SUNDBLAD, —MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN— Domestic Cigars. 484 13th 8t. bet. Parntam and:Harrey, apmy: H. C. WALKER, ~MANUFACYUKEKR AND DEALER IN— BOOTS & SHOES 510 18th St. Between Faroham and Douglas aplsvl STODDARD & HURLHUT, Market Gardners ! LL KINDS OF VEGETABLES AND plants, for sale. Orders addressed to us at our garden Cor. 21st and Paul Streets, Will receive prompt attent#u. apl3dsm Fashionable Tailor, | No. 201} Farnham Street, ith and Thirteenth Streets, ATTENDED TO PROMPT- | hiied in the most fashionable iring and cleaning a speciaity, wanger, myl-lm D. coox. o. COOKE & BALLOU. PORE PACEKERS AND CATTLE DEALERS. Ordezs for dressed hogs, beel and mutton prompuly illed. LLov. ’S MACHINE | oFXr. light and heavy | OMAHA N. I D. SOLOMON, NEB,| WEIOLESALE PAINTS OILS AND WINDOW CLASS, COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL NEBRASKA MACHINERY MADE & REPAIRED. B Al Work Guaranteed.~@a OFFICE X CRRIGHTON'S BLOCK, Omaha. Nehra sk BYROX REED. LEWIS 5. REED BYRON REED & C0. The Oldest Established Real Estate Agency IN NEBRASKA Kecp & complete Atstract of Title Do Real | Bstitein 0w ha aglas county. T | Surgioal Rooms LVANCAMP M.D. | own -fldlv-l:‘l besides o Wosen, Fiste- | valdawtt W. J. CONNELL| Counsellor at Liave STATE MILLS OCOMMISSI MAGISTER OF THE DEPARTED. o 493 10k Bt betwoen Farabam & Harney. orany onea view ture. /Ko fees charged in casesof sick: ‘WOOD, HORN and IVORY ER. 6 EARNEY GTREET, - JOHN H. GREEN, DEALER IN < and Window Shades, | GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED, axp MERCHANT EUWARD KUEHL, GRAND CENTRAL| Will by the aid of ardian spirits, obtain of s Peat sk o SR .. e ; Sey ber 30th, 1573 d vew Sepiem " ‘CEO-THHALL. Probrietor ACOB CISH, cen Chicago Jacob Kemnitzer, TURN: FAIRLIE & MONELL, = BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS, Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. ENGRAVINGS axp | Masonie, Odd Fellows and Knights of Pythias UNIFORMS LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, BOOKS, BLANKS, ETC., AT ’RESS.~ga sr-EASTERN PRICES AND EXP) 2 Douslas Strogt, OBMAIA. nm . a ARTHUR BUCKBEE. CARPENTER, BUILDER NQOY ing, and sucking the blood of in- sects, and for ng and eating raw beef. Mrs. Treat has contributed to the American Natu- some very curious observations mlde::'thhnmrhhlephn'. She found the specimens upon which she | grange experimented in New Jersey. The | Ido not hold that a true patron | plant was in full bloom and growing | must forever be a farmer. If his | very thickly on either side of an ex- | record remain: he has a per- tensive cranberry plantation. The | tect right to low any honorable first experiment was made with the occupation. deputy knowingly us to another St., Bet. 14th & 15th Few of our cit Almighty for his g our government, let us re-dedicate our- selves to all the duties of patriotism that now devolve upon us. Re- | member our Head—strew flowers, Lrighit flowers over thelr last resting | place. By order of meetings. ‘Where persons from one jurisdic- tion are taken into another grange ‘without consent, the grange whose territory was encroached on may | claim the fees, but the other | retains the member. DUDGES:., beta 13thhad; 14th. AL Kinds of yurning execatel promp'ly and ot rewsonatie prices. © P Ao D AND Wistrict Attorney for Second Jud- leial Distriet. OFFICS—South side of Farnbam, between 15th sr 1 16th sta., opposite Court House. subsequent map of the City of ha hasever been recorded. If we * are correctly informed the only copy of the original Jones map now in e this eity is in possession of Mr. By- | Prov. Commander Dept. of Neb. on Reed. Suppose this copy :huuld‘ 8. B. LINDERMAN, Ad'jt Gen'l. | F. A. PETERS, Saddle and Harness Maker, AND CARRIAGE TRIMMER, Ne. 274 Farnham st. bet, 15th & 164 else. LL orders and ing promptly att i | ALk e A iR HEAP, DURABLE, LANOId @ $5 to PER DAY. Agents want- ed. All ciasses of work- ing people of either sex, young or old, make | more money at work for us in their ments or all the time, than st an; Address STINSON &' 0., Portland, BovSIL | | \\5!‘_!""9‘ 1 J (’_‘L;\ | IUNDERTAKER - Sror Yards, Law s, Cemetaries, Chareh Grouds and Pablle Parks, 1 s‘:m.;‘??'r.‘?‘nf:"-a masey} OMAHA -l

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