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ok el as pessible; aad they must, in all cases, o writion upos cae side of the shest enly. roumcar. AM. AFFO\WCENENTS of candidstes for ofics —whether made by self or friends, and whether as notioss or communications to the Bditer, are (until Dominations are made) simply personsl, snd will be charged s 8d- vertisoments. All communicutions should be addresse] to ‘and Publisher, Drav- £ BOSEWATER, Editer -l momicE. @u end after October tweaty-first, 1572, (he tty ireulation of the DaiLy Bxx is assumed oy Mr. Bdwia Devis, to whose order all sub- ot paid st the office will be payable. and by whem all reseipta for subscriptions will a E BOSEWATER. Publisher C————— Oun cable dispatches indicate the dissolation of the French National Assembly during the com- ing week. E—p— Does protection protect, is the question just now smong the fol- lowers of Doctor Johnson, who now goes by the title of President of the “Proteetors of Industry.” — Frox our Dakota exchanges we glean that an expedition com- manded by General Custar is now organising to explore the Black Hills country. General Custar will be accompanied by Lieut.-Colonel Fred Grant, and General Forsythe, of Lieut.-General Bheridan’s stafl. Ten companies of cavalry and 2 detachment of gatling guns are to sccompany the expedition. — Tae people of Fremont and Dodge counties, may be congratu- lated upon the assumption by Mr. Frederick Nye, of the editorial management of the Fremont Tri- bune. Mr. Xy io thoroughly identi- wan the material interests of thai clty and county, and we ap- BRIGHAM YOUNG is pretty much of the same opinion as Sister Van Cott, touching the desirability of money in the conduct of relegious revivals and proselytism. In a recent sermon the latter day High Priest demounced Mormon stingi- ness as follows: “Being too little in earnest about building up Zion in their midst, as ‘was demonstrated by the stingy manner in which they were in the money. of cash, heassured his hear- he could buy up the United Congress included. He buy al j t ; were useless, land that wasn't .nod!'arunyt.hlngo5 — NEWSPAPER EMPIRICS. There are quacks in the newspa- tor in his profession as is the buchu medicine man in the art of healing. The Buchu journalist is weually gifted with a faculty that ordinary people pronounce ‘brass,” but which is often made to supply the want of journalistic ability or For a sample of genuine buchu Journalism we refer our readers to the following article that appearsin the editorial columns of the Herald of this date : The Heruld's Rochefort Article. , and 'm-fi:aam-u. Now the Bk labors under the painful but positive convietion, that If Mr. Morton the fact that the | creature whom an inscrutable Provi- | displayed such profuse and inexcus- | | able cheek in trying to palm an substance of the pretended talk between Rochefort and the Herald was courteously communi- cated to Stull by the BEe editor he would nothave sung Homer'sprais- esmoprofusely. Nor would the little dence seems to have created for the purpose of building up & live news- | paper in Omaha, have eriticised the Herald's report, had it mot | imaginary interview upon its readers. | In this cyanection we may as well | state that our interview with Roch- efort as published in Thursdays | daily is acknowledged even by Chicago journalists to be the more | interesting and complete than any | that hasyet been published. The best evidence of this is the fact that it was transmitted to the Chicago | Post by telegraph. | That Journal declares editorially | athat it is the fullest and most au- | thentic narrative of Rochefort’s | movements and opinions that has been given since he landed in America,” The was also evidently | the opinion of the Chicago Associ- | ated Press agent who telegraphed the BEE's report to the Eastern press. This illustrates as much as anything the difference between genuine journalistic tact and buchu | journalism. —_— The Massachusetts legislature has refused this year to exempt from | taxation the charitable, religeous and educational institutions of the State.— Boston Telegram. AND now let the Reverned edit or of the Omaha Republican rise in all his corpulent maj to re- buke and denounce these Massa- chusetts legislators as vandals, heathens, and barbarians. Tet him | at once repudiate his native State | which by this single act has forfeit- ed all _his filial affections. “Time was when Massachusetts, like modern Mexico, cremated | witches, sorcerers, and heretics. | If any greedy tax-gatherer, had | dared to lay his sacreligious hands | upon a church in those glorious old | times, he would have been publicly | horse-whipped, and kept in the stocks for at least a week. Alas that the old Puritan stock, should have so degenerated, as to embrace and proclaim the dangerous doe- | trine of universal taxation! It is sad indeed to reflect that the stately granite walls, velvet cush- | ioned pews, and carpeted floors of | the church in which the Reverend | Editor so often put his congregation | to sleep, should be taxed like the commodious old farm house, or the rude mechanics cabin, Sadder still is the reflection that the fashionable sectarian boarding school, in which he once taught the young Massa- chusetts’ idea how to shout glo-ory ! should be assessed and taxed like the factory where the ragged urch- ins were taught to toil their little lives away. Imagine if you can the unspeak- able horror that penetrates his righteous soul when he contemplates the prospect that even the proud and stately monuments that mark the sacred spot where his ancestors repose shall be subject to the tax- gathering hyennas, just the same as the adjoining corn field or the rocky ridge where these monu- ments were quarried. Let him talk no more about Nebraska heathens, | but pour out the vials of his wrath upon the Massachusetts Athenians, who are thus inaugurating an era of | wickedness, which the wicked BEE | hopes will soon spread over this entire land. | HISTORICAL FACTS. Barbarie Fritchie is now said by a niece of hers never to have waved the flag at the Confederate army. What she did was to stir up a num- ber of Southern soldiers, who had L3 g ance to the terse exclamation : “Be- gone, you — pack!” ieal curlosity has just the Museum of the Paris, viz: the suit of | hich Charles VII presented | of Are, and which the hero- o deposit at St. Denis af- | ter havingz been wounded under the | walls of Paris. It is composed of steel pl weighs about fifty nds, axd in every respeét resen the one inthe Pierrefonds Col- | | give | on a spiral, was a live dove. | ceremony | went “Manibus date lilia plenis.” Mid the flower wreath'd tombs T stand my hand, Comrades ! in what soldier grave Sleeps the bravest of the brave ? It is he who senk to rest With bis colors round bis breast * Friendship wakes his tomb 2 sbrige ; Ga:lands vail it ; ask Dot wmine. One low grave, Bears 0o roses, Yet no beart more. Everdared the batt Never gleamed & prouder eye In the front of vietory, ‘tread On the field where hopes Lay dead Than sre hid within this tomb, Where the untended. rases bioom ; And no stone, with I 'd distress, S0 e satred lomeliness. Youthaod beauty, danutless will, Dreams that Life eould ve'er fulill, Here lie buried ; here in peace Wrongs and woes have found release. Tarsing from my comrades’ eyes, Kneeling where a woman lics, 1 rirew lilies on the grave Of the bravest of the brave. —— MATRIMONIALITIES. Gone goose.—Mr. Gosling, who married a St. Louis duck last week. — Boston Post. —Balzac said any marry any woman, and we_believe itsince a pretty girl in Springfield, Ohio, married a man named Pop- cock. A Missouri paper, publishes marriage notices free, but charges heavily for obituaries. It believes in weddings, and wants to discour- age death. —The Pennsylvania clergyman who offered twenty cords of wood for agood wife, evidently forgets man_can | that chords of affection would bet- | ter accomplish his desire, —A Kansas girl wouldn't be married without a yellow ribbon around her waist, and a boy rode cight miles to get it while the guests waited. In Vermont, last year, there was one divoree to every nineteen mar— riages, and some curious individual is laying awake nights to discover why that nineteenth couple got married. The Chicago Post and Mail says: “The latest instance of the repre- hensible custom of ‘pairing of in Congress is that of Representative Omar D. Conger, of Michigan. He was married yesterday.” It was the Detroit Free Press that publicity to the fact that Maria Lovejoy, of Fon du Lac, is now pushing her fourth breach of promise suit, and the railroad has had to put an extra train on for the benefit of young men who want to get out of that town. One of the rules of the Order of Enoch is that all girls, on reaching the age of fourteen, must get mar- ried. There is to be no deviation from this, and the first offer, no matter how many wives the man may have, or how ugly he may be, e girl must accept his hand. According to the Green Bay Advocate they-hiave an im- proved method of making responses in the marriage ceremony at Ocon- to. On a recent occasion a man cated by an injury he had received, was married, and in reply to the all-important question “Will you take this woman to be your law- fally wedded wife 2 replied, “Yes, and the cow and the heifer, and they ought to be fed.” This an- swer was regarded as satisfactory. One of the most beautiful speci- mens of floral workmanship was a ship of flowers presented to a bride who sailed from New York last week in one of the Cunard steamers. Tt was four feet long and eight feet high. The masts were gaily decked out with silk flags, and the sails were of white satin. The smoke- stack was of red pasteboard (in ex- aet imitation of the Cunard steam- ers), and on deck were chairs and benches of evergreen. Above all, The cost of this floral ship-was $500. The Portland (Me.) Press relates the following: “A few days since a young couple registered their inten- tions to be married at the City Clerk’s office. The clerk recorded their names in due form, gave them a little of that excellent advice of which he has so bountiful a store, and pocketed the fee. Yesterday the intending woman told a friend that she was married and living with her husband. On cross- examination she described the that the clerk through when she was, as she sugpwod, united to her true-love in the bonds of matri- mony. At this recital she was in- formed that she had only been ‘registered,’ and could not be mar- ried until she received her certifi- cate. This made troubled in the young woman’s mind, and she at once staried for her brevet husband and broke the awful intelligence to him. He was thunderstruck, and the once happy couple are debating what to do about it.” A spondent gives the New- ton (N. H.) Register an aceount of arecent wedding ceremony in Wal- pack township, near Flatbrookville, lection, which the Maid of Orleans at the moment when she fell into the powerof the enemy in making a sortie from Compiegue. | Alasfr the romance of the Mill | River catastrophe. In spite of stir- | ring poctry and_Graphic pictures | George Cheney didn’t life down the “valley villagers, nor did Collins G the milkman, take up the message where the exhnusted Che droppelitand galloped with his mitk-pans clattering and the flood behind him to warn the towns be- low. Cheney was frightened and ran oflf to tell his employer and | Graves objected for some minutes to | carry the news and then took tk safe road on high ground and a; rived too late. The romantic stor was ever so much nicer and will undoabtedly live in song and story, so that the scared Cheney and the cautiws Graves will go down to posterity as brave, death defying heroe-. | i i pi f | The eisan apple treestandingina 1ot adjoining the house of Rev. J. W. Canter, of Huntersville, Poca- hontas county, West Virginia, ‘which has become historical, mark- | ing the spot where General Robert | E. Lee pitched his first tent in the late war. Early in the summer of 1861 General Lee was ordered to the command of the forces in West Virginia. Leaving Richmond, he | came to Warm Springs the first day, | and on the day following reached | Huntersville, where, for the first | time in the war, he hivouacked on | m M‘:,' -al«-ting l)‘;e aforemen- ay , Which stands on a | il oveslaolkil the the town, oo the | where his tent should be teched. It is a singular coinei- that General Lee commenced his military career under an_apple | tree among the mountains of West Virginia, and have closed that bril- liant career by eapitulating to Grant under an apple tree at Ap- | pomaitox. that State, which was somewhat in this way: A young woman of that vicinity had become enamored with a youth of Pennsylvania birth, who had been living in Stillwater town- ship for some time. Desiring to get “spliced,” they offered a _certain local preacher, living near by, $5 to do the job. He informed them, with many regrets, that he was unauthorized to = perform the ceremony. They then dis- patched a messenger for a cor- pulent 'Squire, residing in the Flatbrook valley, who agreed to come and marry them. Shortly af- ter he arrived, the mother of the would -be-bride, who had been ab- sent from home, returned and dis- covered the situation, Seizing a piece of board three or four feet and six_inches wide, she to belabor all concern: She drove her daughter to the ret, and her would-be-son-in-law ouf of doors. The ’'Squire then commenced to expostulate with the excited weman, when the sprang toward him, and told him to leave. He obeyed the command, but wlmnhhem the middle of the road he sorro - ties to come to him, mfl”‘m"‘% make them one. This still further enraged the mother, and she charged upon the ’Squire, and forced him to flee homeward. Later in the day, the disappointed bride amnd groom were seen together | weeping and _ bewailing the | state of affairs. The re- | sult of this conference was | that early the next morning they presented _themselves before the *Squire in his barn-yard. He asked them to go to the house, but having Jearned wisdom from they declined, that sired to be married on the spof, be- fore the bride’s mother should be out on the warpath. Without fur- ther delay the twain were made one, the living witnesses being §a e shood Tt skeutie Sher and Wi y chewing cuds, | whose mind was somewhat obfusti- | MAN'S A FOOL. | | 1t s settled, as arule, Man's 3 fool. cold be wants it bot, ‘When it’s hot k:l:lI:lkeold‘ st E ! Ne'er content with what be has got, ys wanting what he has not; You may take it, as a rule, Man's s fool. — RELIGIOUS. | Mrs. Van Cott will attend to | urevive” Sacramento shortly. A fine new Episcopal Mission | Church was dedicated in Baltimore on Sunday last. Rev. W. B. Slaughter, of the Ne- | braska Conference, has been spend- | ing a few days visiting friends in | New York City and vicinity. | The Presbyterians of Nauvoo are | raising means to build another church in that town, to be located on the site formerly occupied by the celebrated Mormon temple. The First African Baptist Church of Richmond, at its last business meeting, excluded seventeen mem- bers for dancing. That looks like business. | Father V. Sommerisen, a_Catho~ lic priest, has returned to Mankato from the wonderful Yellowstone country. He made the outward trip (over 400 miles) through tribes of Indians, alone and unmolested. | A scheme for remodeling and ex- | tending Manchester Cathedral has | been approved by the dean and chapter. ‘The proposed additions | and alterations will, if carried out, | jnvolve an expenditure of some- thing like half a million pounds. The theatres and other places of amusement In Hannibal, Mo., have been deserted because of the revi- val interest created there by Mr. Hammond’s preaching. Services are held in the streets, as well as in | the churches, and in saloons, and | a continuous service of five hoursin | the street is a common thing. | There are in_ Baltimore 214 | churches of all denominations, of | which 85 represent the different Methodisms, 33 are Epi , 25 Roman Catholies, 17 are Lutheran, 14 Baptist, 9 Jewish, 7 United Breth- ren, 5 Reformed, 3 Friends, 28wed- enborgian, and the Co: tion- alists, Campbellites, Unitarians and Universalists, have 1 each. A man about thirty-five years old died recently in Kentuoky, who, since the termination of the war, bas been making _tri-weekly pil- grimages between two churches ten miles apart, always making the journey on foot, fasting with great severity, and keeping silence during the whole of his long walk. He would never disclose whether the penance was self-imposed or what it was performed for. The Pope is in the midst of mo- mentous days. The 12th of April was the anniversary of his return from Gaeta in 1850, and also of his escape from the catastrophe of St. Agnese in 1855, These will follow in May his birth-day, in June his succession to the throne; and from month to month his promulgation of the dogma of the Jmmaculate Conception, the declaration of his infallibility by a vote of the Vati- can Counell, and other dates to be recorded in adamant in the annals of the Roman Catholic world. In the Roman Catholic Cathedral at Baltimore there are said to be | richer treasures than in afiy other church in this country. Jewelled eiboriums, gold and silver chalices —all solid—patenas and remon- strances, elaborate chausubles, mi- tres, copes, dalmatiques, rochets, stoles, maniples, benediction veils, and other ecclesiastical vestments are all carefully preserved in its tabernacles and sacristics. Some of the ornaments are relics of the past. Among others, the Ilded crozier (episcopal ecrook) by Archbishop Carroll, eighty- five years ago, occupies a conspicu- ous place, as also the rich mitres worn by himself and departed sue- cessors on the days of their en- thronement. Even the cathedral vaults are shrines of treasures, as be- sides the solid silver ornaments of the burial caskets, in which re the remains of archibishops, there are archiepiscopal rings worn by each during his government of the diocese. The Oldest Establishea BANKING HOUSE iN NEBRASKA. Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., ANEKEBRRS. transacted same as that of an ted Bank. Accounts in Carrency or Gold subject to sight- check without no- tice. Certificates of Deposit issued pay- on demand, or at fixed ’lfie able bearing interest at six percent. per :‘l-'::, and available in in all urh Advances made to customers proved securities at market rates interest. Buy and sell Gold, Bills of Ex- Government, State, County, Ay Dot 4 We give attention to mego- and other rate issued within thm on Sell European COLLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. saltf EZRA MILLARD, President. OMATETA NATIONALBANK Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, NEBRASKA. P —— Surplus and Profits..... INANCIAL AGENT SFOR THE UNITED ATES. D DEPOSITORY FOR NG OFFCERS. THIS BANK DEALS in Exchange, Government Eonds, Vouchers, Gold Cotn, . And sells drafts and makes collections on all parts of Europe. n gold or eurren- 8 Drafts drawn pa; i San Franeisco. i eyen the Bauk of Califoraia, ICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-American Packet Company. Jy2 U.S. DEPESITORY The First National Bank OF OMAIIA. Cormespof Farham and 13th Rtreets. THEOLDEST BANKING ESTABLISEMENT IN NEBRASKA. (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Organised as » Hational Bank, August 36,1863 Cayital and Profits over - $250,000 oFFimns AXD DIRECTORS : . CREIGHTOYN, | A. KOUNTZE, President. Cashier. H. COUNTZE, H. W. YATES, Vice Pres't. As't Cashier. A. J. POPPLETON, Attorney. ALVIN SAUNDERS, _ ENOS LOWE President. Vice Presdent. BEN woop, Cashier. STATE SAVINGS BANKE, N. W. Cor. Farnham sud 13th Sts., Capital...... $ 100,000 Authorized 1,000,000 . Dsfltsl AS SMALL AS ONE DOL- lar sece’ved and compound imjerest al- fowed on tke s ame. o Advantages OVER Certificates of Deposit : \HE WHOLE OR ANY PART OF A DE- L O ot 15 s Bk thres ‘months, will draw interest from d.te of depos- e e LD s posit can be drawn at®any time. ‘aug2suf B OWINDE MINM, —DEALER IN— Fruits, Confectionery, CIGARS AND TOBACCO. NE corner Fsrnham and Eleventh streets, OMAHA, - NEBRASKA EDUCATIONAL NOTES. i The corner-stone of the Blue Mountain University, was laid on the 13th, at La Grand, Oregon. The Oakland, California school ma’ams, petition for an increase of salary, on account of the deprecia- tion of city serip. In Scotland the salaries of certifi- cated teachers, male and female, are respectively $550 and $290 per year. Rev. Father Ryan, the celebrated poet, has accepted an_invitation to address the literary societies of the }'fll\'emfly of Virginia on the 1st of ly. The Philadelphia Board of Educa- tion has wisely decreed that public scholars must do their learning, as well as their reciting during school hours, and has forbidden their tak- | ing any of their text books home with them. «Superintendicide” has just been | coined to_express a justifiable line | of conduct when a Sunday_ school finds it impossible to get rid of an imbecile and highly respectable, in- sane and amiable, good and good for nothing superintendent. The census marshal of Gold Hill, (Nevada) School District asked a lady resident of the Comstock range the other day to spell her husband’s name. The answer was that she bad done a big washing the day be- fore, had taken a heavy cold, and | did not feel at all like spelling. A citizen of Virginia City, Nev., | who has failed to comply with the | requirements of the compulsory | School Act, has been cited to appear befor the Board of School Trustees at their next meeting to show cause why he should not suffer the penal- ties of the law. This is the fist ease of the kind in the State. The Bishop of Montreal haslately opened theological training schocl in Montreal, where young men can be prepared for the ministry with- | out any tuition fees. The eost of board and lodging does not exceed | $5 per week. Books and clothesare | the only additional necessary ex- | pense. Donald Cameron, an early teack- erin Indiana, died in that State recently. He was teaching at the time war was declared against and was informed of it by of the scholars. He arose and : “Boys there was never & war in which there was not a Cameron, and 1 am determined that this shall be no exception; schfidlldhmbedn | ‘. Me: | one | said; enlisted, and served James A. Lane to the close of the Established 1858. A.T.SIMPSON'S CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY 538 & 540 Fourteenth Street, e ave o ey e In:‘ B.--Particular atten! OMAIIA OITY STOVE STORE. E. F. COOK, 537 14th St betwess Douglas and Dodge of Tis Iron Manufactarer of Ti5, 0 Oover andOShoet Cooking and Heating stoves Stamped, Japanned snd French Ware on band, "Tif Roshing, Gutlers and Spouti JobWork done and warranted. {"BULLION ana uou)m'sr.j | Nos. 187, 189 and 191 Farnham Street. OMAEA, NEBRASKA. MILTON ROGERS. mar2ad TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCE. ——SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR— THE “FEARLESS.” COOKING STOVES, CELEBRATED All of Which Will be Sold at Manufacturers’® Prices, With Freighta dded. I Send for Price Xists. J~A. THO NEBRASKA SHIRT 189 =i FARNHAM ST,, OMAHA, FARNHAM ST, NEBRASKA. aa-Shirts ofall kinds made to order. HAWLEY & BURKS, —WHOLES ALE AND RETAIL DELERS IN— AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMFNTS, Farm Machinery and Wagons. No. 18 South 10th Street, LINCOLN, NaE. Satisfation guarranteed. =S meh11 Fort Calhoun Mills. FLOUR, FEED & MEAL Manufactured with Great Care from the Best Grain. Ceneral Depot, Cor. 14th & Dodge Sts, om. ELAM CLARK. W. B. RICHARDSON. OMAIEIA NEBEEB ASKA PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. Aud Manufactarer of Dry ana Saturated oofing and:Sheathing ALSO DEALERS IN Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Etc, Etc. JROCTING, in say part of Nebeasks o alistaiag Ststn. Ofice oppecits the Gas Works, on 5 B. & J. WILBUR, Books and Stationery, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, Fourteenth Street, Omaha., Neb Gl.inl_ilEBAL AGENTS FOR ALL S(CHOOL BOOKS WHOLESALE CANDIES I am now manutacturing all varieties of candies and will sell at EASTERN PRICES Dealers In this State need not want to g0 East fir CANDIES. A trial is solicited. HENRY LATEY, Douglas St. Cor-12th., ‘meht1ts may o-1y. JORN BAUMER, Practical Watchmaker, 171 Parnnam o 8 B Or. 11th Bt OMAHA - NEB H. C. WALKER, —MANUFACYUBEK AND DEALER IN— BOOTS & SHOES 51013th St. Between Faroham and Douglas apisvl BYRON REED & C0. The Oidest Established Real Estate Agency IN NEBRASKA Keep & complete Abstract of Title to aliReal ‘Llu‘n(h-':nnfl Douglas countv. U. P. R. R. MEAT MARKET, 16th street bet Californis and Webster. E KEEP ON HAND THE BEST supply of FRESH AND SALTED S. Also a stock of Fine Sugar and fast Bacon, at _the low- WAL AUST & KNUTH, 1y 3. Tavion. WILLHELN & TAYLOE, PORK PACKERS, 17th and Chicago streets, ) NEB, hr: lo deliver in of hams and War. HERMANTONB INCK, Fashionable Tailor, No. 204} Farnham Street, Between Twelith and Thirteenth Streets, OMAHA, NEB. LL ORDESS ATTENDED T0 PROMPT- STODDARD & HURLSUT, Market Gardners ! LL KINDS OF VEGETABLES AND £), plaats, for saie. Orders sddresmed to ue ‘Gur garden Cor. 21st and Paul Streets, ‘Wil receive prompt attention. apl5sm C. ¥. EAMANN, TAILOR. 171 Cor. Varnham and Eleventh Sts. All kinds of TAILORING, Cleaning and re; ;nrydonnl—-hhnl-. A fine lot of | JRNISHING GOODS coostantly on band aad sold cheap. Aec2t! JOIN H. GREEN, STATE MILLS DEALEE IN VAN PORN’S MACHINE SBEOF. All kinds of light and hesvy MACHINERY NADE & REPAIRED. BErAl Work Guaranteed. S8 956 HARNEY STREET, - OMAHA. BANJI.D.JONES -MA™' PACTUREP OF AND DEALKE IN- Lambrequins and Window Shades, CHROMOS, ENGRAVINGS AND | PICTURE FRAMES. | 270 Farnhem strect. corner Fifteenth GRAIN, FLOUR AND FEED, e COMMISSION MEROHANT EOWARD KUEHL, MAGISTER OF THE DEPARTED. To- 498 10th B¢, between Farabam & Haraey, Will by the sid of gusrdian spiris, abiala view of the past, present” and fu- ‘:'.;"'lfi'" In'casce of sickness, i Jacob Kemnitzer, 'WOOD, HORN and IVORY TURNER. ST ST Y G AL | GRAND CENTRAL| EHEOT®EI.. DUDGES:., beta 13th 4 14th. AL kins of jurning executed 1y and 2 Jurainges promply " F. A. PETERS, Saddle and Harness Maker, AND CARRIAGE TRIMMER, Ne. 374 Farnham st. bet, 15¢h & 16¢h.. Fantied, apoort UNDERTAKER, FurnitureDealers Wholesale Stoves STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, | CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, RUP, MANUFACTORY A 15 SHRTS AND GENTS® FURNISHING 60ODS, &C. &0. | Omaha % M /X MEYER & BROTHER, OMAHA, NEBRASKA. = =1 v C VOUg 10 39P10 03 0PI Wopdpaoma Kioag 0 ALLNVISAU) RISV MOHS 40 H)0LS SBETHTLNNOOOD | | Davpogsne 40 $4%v0 MOHS ANV ' CHEAP FARMS! FREE HOMES ;U’nion Pacific Railroad A Laad Grant of 12,000,000 Acres of the best PARMING aad MINERAL Lands of America 1,000,000 ACRES IN NEBRASKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE! These lands are o the contral portion of the Uited States, on the dlst degree of Nuith Lat Itade, the central line of the great Temperate Zone of the American Ccutinent, and for graia growing and stock raising unsurpassed by any in the United States. OHEAPER IN PRICE, more hv-lui:lflflm and more convenieat to market than oa FIVE and TEN YEARS® eredit given with intercst at SIX PER CEN | OOLONISTS and AOTUAL SETULERS canbuy oa Ten Years' COredit. Lands &t the sam orice to all CREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deduction TEN PER CENT. FOR CASH. ‘FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLERS. And the Best Locations for Colonies! Soldiers Entitll%% to a Homestead i Acres. Freoe Fassos to FPurchamers of I.and | Send for new Descriptive Pamphlet, with new maps, poblished fn English, | and Danish, mailed tree everyw! Address DA | wlyzdswst land Commissioner U. P. R K. Co. | A. B. HUBERMANN & CO., | | PmAacTICcAL Manufaoturor | WATCHMAKERS,|OF JEWELRY 8. E. Cor. 13th & Douglas Sts. WATCHES & CLOCKS. JEWELRY AND PLATED-WARE, AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. Dealers Can Save TIME and FREIGHT Ordering of Us. ENGRAVING DONE FREE OF CIHARGE! 'ED. " by ‘fifl:’LL GOODS WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESEX 1an31-tf BRADY & McAUSLAND. 'WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS I¥ WHITE LEAD, COLORS OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS, Artists’ and Decorators’ Materials. 533 and 535 Fourteenth St., Junes-ly S C. Amorr J. Cavumm, S. C. ABBOIT & CO., Booksellers = Stationers DEALERS IN | WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, AND WINDOW SHADES, No. 1SS Farnham Street. Omaha, Neb Publishers’ Agents for School Books wsed im Nebraska. WM. M. FOSTER. QWholesale Lumber, WINDOWS, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. Plaster Paris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. | | i | | | | | | | S e B N K o o g | N. I D. SOLOMON, | WHOLESALE PAINTS on OILS AND WINDOW CLASZ, |COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL | OMAKA ~ NEBRASKA FAIRLIE & MONELL, BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS, Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. Masonie, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Pythias UNIFORMS. LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, BOOKS, BLANKS, »erE f %, AT ASTERN PRICES AND EXPRESS.~ga 282 Douslas Streoot, - OMAZEIA. ARTHUR BUCKBEE. ARPENTER, BUILDER —AND DEALER IN— BB, mayitf NQOY /] "L\"A: ;‘ N\ 1 anv— 4 ECHEAP, DURABLE, LAMOId @ fFORNAMENTAL Publie Parks, Lawss, Cemetaries, Church Grends sn1 L OMAHA 11 s et % " ™ ‘a Huney il Omaha,