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+ merchants and business men have CIVIL RIGHTS. 4 OF THE CITY, | of Mr. Felix Coste, President of the e cnmroRoERTS. ,,,:._:.“m ion o the atxed sshpol feature of e R ESPONDENTS. | Si feat ks | the civil rights measure In that city, | Tsrw new postal law will inaugur- | ate some very important changesin | the transportation of printed mail matter. Newspaper publishers are heseafter to prepay postage on all papers except exchanges and week- Iy newspapers circulated within the oounty where such paper is pub- lished. Tus Herald is greatly excrcised sbout the impending Senatorial race, and muchof its valuable space 1s devoted to wild speculations about Republican candidates. How about the Twin brother? Is he for the two-horse act on his favorite trotters—Granger and Monopoly ? —_— THE BEE is getting tiredof whin- ing snd growling about the Jowa pool. Whining and growling will not and eannot accomplish practi- eal results. That can only be done by co-operative action. If our| not spunk enough to organize and i adopt some well concerted plan of | action, they deserve no sympathy, | and ought to submit to the oppress | sive impositions of the pool without A murmur. ‘WaLE Omaha is waiting, Micaw- ber like, for something to turn up to Xkeep her on the tide of progressive prosperity, Kansss City, her south- ern rival, Is actively engaged in building public improvements, and improving her railway conuections. | Work on the Kansas City water- works is progressing satisfactorily, | and the prospective completion of | these works has already very ma- terially enhanced the value of Kan- sas City property. And now they have secured the terminus of the Atehison, Topeka & Santa Fe Rai road, which promises to be a very mportant commercial feeder. — | will come from all and that | | “the German element are nearly all whaterer. . Felix Coste, President of the | 1o suiSciently large to more than supply 037 | St. Louis School Board, is evidently -‘l.l.llo"mlllnll,nul\in-fh Th o bl X | pany any communics- at cl of ns never learn | sl anything and never can rid them- | Semded for publication, but for our own s8%is- | gelves of their prejudices. The | St ospeost of @08 S50 l German element of St. Louis may ‘pleased 1o hear from, on =i} matters conected possibly be a unit in favor of keep- ‘with rops, country polities, aod on any s3b- | ing up caste in the public schools, State. Any information conect- | = :mm.mmmm ment, for which the St. Louh: woch communications, however, must be | o \r Felix Coste are responsible. brial as poasible; and they must, inwll s | 1y, German element in cities roumcar. where the mixed school system A ANNOUNCENENTS of candidates for offiee | prevails have so far manifested no whether as matiomor commanicntion m;: | the city of Cleveland for example. e ek ep— The proportion of the German ele- vertisements. All communications should be addressel 10 | g1y 45 great as that of St. Louis. [ The colored population Is ever- ol momick. B e o For more than fifteen years there :'I-. Edwin Davis, to whose order all sub- | has been no distinction on account not paid at the ofiice will be payable. | schools. The best evidence that 23 E. ROSEWATER, Publisher | these schools are extensively pat- ‘Rougrt Tooxss has called upon | the fact that in nineteen of these President Grant, to protest against | public schools the children of Ameri- sottle it. | ceiving instruction in the German T | language. THE de [ ts virtually settles the f”‘”l‘:' compare favorably for culture and the third party movement in I g0 nent with the aristocracy of AccorpinG to the New York | sons and daughters of these aristo- World, “Nebraska is being “done” | erats may be found in the Cleveland ricultural implement agents in the | ors with the sons and daughters of smost Nebraskally manner.”” | the German mechanic or the negro Tae Agricultural Congress, in | Even Mr. Felix Coste would be session at Atlanta, Ga., has adopted | forced to admit that the mixed pub- the cotton states and a direct trade | troit are far superior to the unmix- movement without special prefer- | ed schools of St. Louis. Right here of the Herald to s historleal fact that fully illustrates the effect of one hundred years ago the Jews, in Germany, were just as much des- as the negroes have been in the former Amerjcan slave staies. which a good Christian was bound to respect. They were excluded affuirs, and deprived of the right to | become owners of the soil. They tive dress, and confined in the most loathsome and pestjlential quartersof closed against them, and even the most ignorant and degraded peas- perior to the despised Jew. What would the Germans of great change wrought among their descendants by a century? In- and disfranchised the Jews now oc- cupy some of the most exalted po- scientific circles of Germany. To- day the most eminent professors in Jews. Inthe common schools, in every educational institution, in the music the Jews have achieved a recognized distinetion. 8o much | against it.”— Herald. limited apace in that direction. a pupil of the old pro-slavery school. tion of what nature soever. This is mot in- Ous Cousray Fmizxps we will always be Joct whatever of general iuterest to the Peo- | 44 4hyov merely represent & senti- octiants. stc., will be gladly received. All | school system and such Bourbons - bo written upon one side of the shect ouly. whetber made by self or friens, a8d | Gicposition to break it down. Take T T i .|| sent o the vother mationslijes 15 £ BOSEWATER, Editor and Publisber, Draw- 572, e | WOTE NUMerOUS. circulation of the DALY Brx Is assumed it st Pl kL e | Of 0 or color in theso publie mm= | ronized by the German element, is the civil rights ill. That ought to | cans, Germans and Negroes, are re- the Oregon Inde- | “opy o ey of Cleveland will Linols. = | any city in the Union. And yet the by peripatetic lightning-rod and ag- | High School competingfor the hon- — | hod-carrier. resolutions looking to a union of | lic schools of Cleaveland and De- ‘ence for any port. we may as well direct the attention Caste prejudices upon anation. Only pised, shunned and ostracised In those days a Jew had norights from all participation in public were compelled to wear a distinc- every city, The public schools were ant, considered himself socially su- 1774 say If they ecould behold the stead of being persccuted, ostracised sitions in the social, political and the universities of Germany are schools of science, art, literature and | for national prejudices and Caste. EDUCATIONAL KNOTES. The logues session, The Rochester Theological Sem- inary has just graduated ten young students. A feminine student takes the sci- entific honors at the Indiana State University this year. Thirtysix young lawyers were graduated the other day from the National University, Washington. Dr. McNamara, President of Ne- braska College, will go to England during the school vacation. A competition between the differ- ent schools of Indiana has been pro- , and will probably be carried versity of Virginia cata- students for its fiftieth Tue firsst mportant bill looking toward the solution of the cheap transportation problem, has passed the Lower House of Congress. It jprovides for the construction of the Fort Saint Philip canal, below New Orleans, and the improvement of the mouth of the Mississppi. To the people of the Mississippi and Mis- souri. valleys, these improvements will eventually be of incalculable walue. Water transportation must always remain the cheapest, and 'we anticipate the day is not very distant when the Missouri and Mississippi rivers shall become the principal and favorite outlet for the grain exported from the grain pro- ducing regions of the great West. Ttisto be hoped this bill will pass the Senate before the adjournment #0 that work may be commenced on these great mational improve- ‘ments during the present year. C— 1Ir our Telegraphic advices touch- ing President Grant’s views on the financial policy of the future may be relied on, the prospect for the enactment of any currency bill by #he present Congress is decidedly doubtful. President Grant an- _moumces himself an uncompromis- convert to the contraction " policy, and in favor of specie re- sumption within the mnext two years.. “Tuls Is more than even the most | whil. the boys are improving. sanguine contractionists would ex- | Qut of 97 aspirants for admissi pect to sccomplish. Horace Gree- | at West Point, 32 have been re- ley meed to say “the way to bring jected because they could not “write, spell, or cipher, or were not istoresume,” and | WIS SO O o grammar.’ eley was doubtless correct in | This s not, as some may think, a theory, but it Is & theory that would | commentary on our public school prove a failure if the Government but upon the negligence of , R it put fnt: peac- These youths for failing to attend Catholics of San Francisco tice. The ‘While we do not believe that in- | .o Cigently in earnest about edu- Bation of the currency would afford | cating their children in _their own any ellet toany part of the cout | Sa%. 0 e hliove will " over $10,000, try, we do mot believe that 0UF| g, ' r'ipe’ debt on the $80,000- Sinancial policy should be regulated | Chool for by President Grant's term of office. g While specie resumption on July | commodate 4th, 1676, might be very flattering to his personal pride the consequent ‘eontraction in values might prove | Charity, and a num| out. The annual convention of the German_teachers of the United States will be held at Detroit on the 4th, 5th and 9th of August. Union Academy of Bellevue, N. ., will be 50 years old this month, and will celebrate that antiquity on Junc 11 and 12. The University of London has de- cided, by a_vote of eighty-three to sixty-five, that “it is desirable that women should be permitted to take degrees in the University.” Boston has now 9 high schools, 49 grammar schools, and 414 pric mary schools. The average num- ber of pupils the past year was 45,- 090, and the teachers number 1,262. The Michigan State Public School at Colilwater now receives depen- dent children,and will instruct them in sucl: industries as will give them a useful place in life. The latest punishment for dere- lect Massachusetts school-boys, is to repeat the civil-rights bill back- wards. Where is the blood of the Boston boys who demanded the frog-pond for a skating rink? An Tdaho school teacher kas in- troduced a new feature in his school. When one of the girls mises & word the boy who spells it gets per- mission to kiss her. As a result, the girls are fast becoming poor spellers, THE LONG DAYS. BY W. D. HOWELLS. You! they are here again, the long, tong days, After the dayeof 'wister, piacbed an white, h; ‘with & thousand minstrels comes the | Late the swect robin-haunted dusks delays. But the long days that bring us back the i fowers, | The sunshioe snd the quiet dripping And all the things we know of spring,sgain, loog days bring not the long-lost bours. The hours that now scem to have been each one A summer in 1wself, 3 whole life’s bound, | Filled full of deatbless joy, where, in his round, Have these forever faded in the sun ‘The fret, tbe lever, the unrest endures, But the time files . O, iry, my Tittle Iad. ttle lad. Coming %o bot and play-worn, to be glal And paticat of the long hours that are yours. ~June Athaatic e | | Suj Should give you wishe Tell me, mv little darling, ‘Waat'would these wishes be ? “Would they be, my little treasure, Say, would they be for Wealih, And that boon above all others ing Health * ish for Besuty, For Learning or for Fame ? Tell wme, and tell me truly, The wishes you would n-me.” “0k, Do, my father,” she replicd— Upon the high trapeze; And then T'd wish that | Two educated hogs And last—but best. Could doa dance with clogs, might have at 1 MATRIMONIALITIES. AuTowa justice offers to marry couples at twoshillings a marry,and yet Lie can’t excite any enthusiasm. The wedding of the Rev. Dr. Bellows and Miss Peabody will take place in New York the third weck in June. An octogenarian of Bristol, Me., has incurred popular resentment by taking a bride of fourteen to his Bristol board and bed. A married couplein Washington, Oregon, weigh, in the aggregate, 400 pounds, the wife weighing about 275 and the husband 125. “We Kissed Each Other by the Sea’ is the name of the last Yale poem. By the season” is the way | some couples like it—and want oceans more, until after the wed- ding, At Springfield, 111, Miss Martha Penny has sued Nathan Antle for $5,000 for breach of promise. The odds are great against her—S$5,000 to a penny. A woman should never consent to be married secretly. She should distrust a man who has any reason to shroud in darkness the act which in his own estimation should be the erowning glory of his life. A youngman in Kansas City, who Wwas engaged to be married, saw one of his sweetheait’s stock- ings floating from a clothes-line the other day and concluded he wouldn’t. “A Kansas man sent his wife after the cows, and she came home dumb as an oyster.”” Noah Count says he knows lots of married friends of his who will invest n a cow pasture each with aslittle delay as their finances will allow. Tt is a beautiful sight to attend an Arizona wedding. The bride in white—the happy groom—the solemn minister—the smiling par- ents, and from twenty-five to forty shot guns standing against the wall ready for use, make up a_panorama not soon forgotten. Tt was the Detroit Free Press that gives publicity to the fact that Maria Lovejoy, of Fond 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. According to the Wilmington Gazette, there is a woman living in Pencader Hundred, Newcastle coun- ty, Delaware, who has been mar- ried twenty-four years, and who last week gave birth to her twenty- third child, which makes her record one child per year since her mar- riage. A female mule got come up with at Salisbury, Vt., the other day. She was to be married, and the house stood all ready furnished ; but she suddenly backed out ot the | traces. The young man, however, | was equal to the occasion, for he | went and asked her sister to have | him. And so the house was oceu- | pied, after only a week’s delay. Mrs. Mary A. Donaldson, the di- vorced wife of the celebrafed bal- loonist, was married at Reading, Pa., on Thursday evening last, to Thomas Nankervis, of Berks county, a handsome young fellow who has just returned from working in the Lake Superior copper mines. The parties had first met and made each other’s acquaintance in the forenoon ! of that day. Another match broken up. This is between a clerk in a well-known dvy goods store and a young lady on Essex street. It was so warmon Friday that she had the parlor w dow up, and he stood on the lawn, and they were cooing to each other, and he was just reaching up for an- other kiss, when the sash came down like a flash, and knocked off the peak of his nose and scalped his chin, and he h around - so madly, and howled so_dreadfully, that the old gentleman thought he was drunk, and had him kicked out of the yard with a great deal of os- tentation, Monday morning he went west. | A ludicrous scene was witnessed on a Rensselear and Saratoga train the otber day. A newly-married the car and took a The husband wanting to smoke, left his wife and went into the smoking-car. The bride began to doze, and while she slept a | stranger entered the car, and as it | was crowded, quietly. took a seat besde the young wife. Shortly she began to nod, and doubtless imagin- ing that her husband was still in the seat, gently reclined toward the stranger, and soon her head fondly nestled on his breast. At this junc- ture the husband entered. He stood in mute astonishment in the aisle until the lady awoke, and, realizing the situation, drew back in amaze- ment suffused ‘“I!.hgulll.h: d'l'he stranger explained, ushand was | satisfied, and the wife tried hard to appear unconcerned. The Boston Post is_inexpressibly that the King of Siam % | tucky for his health. and d RELIGIOU! Bishop Cummins is going to Ken- | Mre. Caroline A. Soule, the story | | writor, has taken to preaching. The Rev. Prof. D, W. Marks has | been elected Vice-Dear of the Uni- | versity College of London. This is | the first time that this_honor has | been conferred upon an Israelite. | June 16 and 21 are the dates of | the anniversaries of the election and | coronation of the Pope. The Ameri- | can pilgrims expect to participatein ceremonies on those dates in Rome. The Dunkards have decided in their_national convention that no member of that church should keep a pianoor other Ungodly instrument of sound in his house. The Methodists of Evanston, Tili- nois, are talking of an_ excursion to the Rocky Mountains, within a few weeks. There are two Methodist | Churches to be dedicated at Evans- ton about that time. The latest rumor about Bishop Dupanloup's visit to Rome is that he has been called to the feet of the Pope, to be told that if he shall not soon_ submit to and acknowledge the dogma of infallibility he will be excommunicated. The diocesan conventicns—two in Pennsylvania and one in Virgi- nia—have lately passed resolutions condemning thespread of Ritualism in the Protestant Episcopal Church lemanding of the next General Convention to stop it. The hshop of one of those con tions has at the same time condemned in un- measured terms the reformed move- ment. Bishop Harris writes that he would spend the month of May vi ng the mission stations in Turkey; that he would attend the Irish Conference in Dublin June 17, German Conference in Schoff- v 2, and the British Con- Tho Bishop hopes avia also, and to get back to New York in time for the Episcopal meeting in October. Marcy Avenue Baptist church, Brooklyn, is in an encouraging con- dition.” The house is inadequate to the congregation. There have been fifty-six baptisms in four months, and the membership Las increased from 49 t0179. A contraet has been made for the building of a lecture- room, which will hold 600 people, leaving lots 85x100 for a church. The ground will be broken for the new edifice, and the corner stone laid at once, Pere Jeanguenat, one of the dis- possessed Catholic cures of Switzer- very pugnacious. His hos- tile attitude toward the authorities caused a warrant for his arrest to be issued, but he was always kep safety by an armed guard of retal i paraded through follo vers. As he was th 2 servants at night to in France, two gendarmes stopped his carriage. The cure was equal to the necessity, however. He leaned from the vehicle and struck one of the officers senseless with a cudgel. The horses were then urged on, and the apostle of the Church Militant escaped over the frontier. IMPIETIES. The Rev. Mr. Murray’s method for siarting a balky horse, isto com- mence a sermon on him. The Rev. Dr. West, of Cincin- nati, declared in a recent sermon that the “citizens of that city have well nigh made Sodom and Gomor- rah respectable.” Profundissimus has discovered that the reason why the Jews will not eat pork is beeause their Serip- t contain the malediction, “Cursed be Ham.” “Patrick,” said the priest, “how much did you steal 2 «Well, Imay as well confess to your riverence for the whole stack, for I am going after the whole stack to-night.” It is understood that when an or- thodox deacon “feels swear all over,” he mutters “Infant damna- tion,” with a heavy swell on the second word. A Texas railroad superintendent refused to give a hard-shell preacher a pass. The preacher humbly re- marked that he was nothing but a | poor worm of the dust, and “Supe” | replied that railroads never passed worms. “What is heaven’s best gift to man?” asked a young lady the other night, smiling sweetly on a pleasant-looking clerk. “A hoss?” replied the young man with great prudence. At Trevitlo, Lombardy, a priest has just been sentenced to seven months’ imprisonment for & practi- al joke. He put a strong emetic o the wine used in the celebra- tion mass, to punish two priests with whom he had held sundry dis- putations. Oneof the vietims was ill fora week. A long-winded Chinese “exhaus- ter,” a convert to Christianity, holds forth to his countrymen at China- town, San Jose, every Saturday afternoon. Tt is said that most of his congregation look upon him asa huge joke, but that he “don’t allow any of them to get away with him.” Hie preaches from notes as volumin- ous as rolls of wall paper. Fashionable milliner—“You'll have the flower on the left side of the bonnet, of course, madame 2" Fashionable lady—*“Well—er—no ! The fact is there’s a pillar on the left side of my pew in church, so that only the right side of my head is seen by the congregation. Of course, T could change my pew ! The Oldest Establishea BANKING HOUSE IN NEBRASKA. Caldwell, Hamilton & Co., ANKEBIRS. ted Bank. in Carre: it check wi of an Inco! Am‘t‘oh ) subject to si Certificates of Deposit issued a, able on demand, or at fixed l’l{ interest at six percent. per annom, and available in in all parts of the country. Advauces made to customers on :}»l:znd securities at market rates erest. Buy and sell 6old, Bills of Ex- m-&p, Goverument, State, County, avd City Bonds. We g{ve ial attention to mego- tiating or Gold it no- road and other Coi rate Loans issued within the Stato. Draw Sight Drafts on England, Ireland, Scotland, and all parts of Sell European Passage Tickets. ‘COLLLECTIONS PROMPTLY MADE. P EZRA MILLARD, MILLARD, President. Cashier. OMATFTA NATIONALBANK Cor. Douglas and Thirteenth Streets. OMAHA, NEBRASKA. [J.H. Capital...ooe. Surplus and Profts. Bonds, Vouchers, i, THIS B. in Exchange, Governn Gold e | BULLION and GOLD DUST. | o St el b it And salls drafts and makes collections on all parts of Europe. B2 Draits drawn payablo in gold or curren- eyou the Bank of California, Sun Francisco. ICKETS FOR SALE TO ALL PARTS of Europe via the Cunard and National Steamship Lines, and the Hamburg-American Packet Company. yzmt U.S.DEPOSITORY The First National Bank OF OMAIIA. Cormer of Farham and 13th Ktreets. THE OLDEST BANKING ESTABLISHMENT IN NEBRASKA. (Successors to Kountze Brothers.) ESTABLISHED IN 1858. Organized as & National Baxk, August 26,1863 Capital and Profits over - $250,000 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS : E. CREIGHTOYN, | A. KOUNTZE, sident. ‘ashier. H. COUNTZE, H. W. YATES, Vice Pres't, As't Cashier. A. J. POPPLETON, Attorney. SAUNDERS, _ENOS LOWE President. Vice Presdent. BEN WooD, Cashier. STATHE SAVINGS BANK, N. W. Cor. Farnham aud 13th Sts., Capits Authorized Capitil S AS SMALL AS ON lar sece'ved and compound b fowed on the s ame. SE DOL e o | Advantages OVER Certificates of Deposit: HE WHOLE OR ANY PART OF A DE- posit after remaining in this Benk thres fnonths, will draw interest from d.te of depos- it 1o payment. - The whole or any part of a de- posit can be drawn atfany time. aug2sif ?harl?s Popper, WHOLESALE BUTCHER AND CATTLE PROKER, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. fergtt LW ARD KUEHL, MAGISTER OF THE DEPARTED. No- 498 10th St., between Farnham & Harney. Will by the xid of guardian spirits, obtain orany onea view of Lhe past, present and fu- ture, " No fees charzed in cases of sickness, apisit B WINDE NIM. —DEALER IN— Fruits, Confectionery, CIGARS AND TOBACCO. Eleventh_streets, NEBRASKA! corner Farnham and OMAHA, iy Established 1858. A.7.SIMPSON’S CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY 538 & 540 Fourteenth Street, (Oce Omabs, Nebraska. _Carriages T Suebieson han o soade t ander, N. B Particular aitention paid to_Bepalr ing. Py Fashionable lady’s husband—*Ya-- as. Or even thechurch, you know, if necessary.” (Fashionable mil- iner considers the point.)—[Punch. Van Pelt, the converted -Vienna, Ohio, saloon keeper, declares in the following pithy communication that he is no back-slider: “I have not leftoff lecturing and again turned to wallow, thank god i have been so far stedfast and stronger in the Faith of it Being the work of God. I hope you will Be as Promt in un- doing the great eavel as you was in making a fals Report that you knew to Be false for i am still in field of laber ansering all the cals i can whitch keeps me on the constent go." Says the Memphis Ledger: “Martin Walsh is on trial in the criminal court to-day, for the rob~ bery of several Chinamen. The Chinese utors, Ah Leeand Ah Gin, testified in & most intelligent manner. They held a China saucer in their left hands, their right hand held , 8s they dash- ed their saucer on the court-room floor, they raised their eyes to heaven, and murmured over some prayer, an in- ‘vocation to God that if they told not the truth, may they be broken into | OMAEA OITY STOVE STORE. E. F. COOK. 637 14th Bt, between Douglas and Dodge lllnhttum'o!:l:;hl&w-‘ ln.n:shn Iron Cooking and Heating stoves Stamped, Japanned and French Ware on {U. P. R, R. MEAT MARKET, 16th street bet California and Webster. KEEP ON HAND THE BEST Ssupply of FRESH AND SALTED MEATS. "Also 8 largl stock of Fine Sugar Cured Hams and ‘the low- ST 6 KNUTH. strates. WAL A UTH, ayiely Proprietors. H. C. WALKER, ~MANUFACIUBER AND DEALER IN— BOOTS & SHOES 51013th St. Between Farnhsm and Douglas splsy1 Business transacted same as that | | | Furniture Dealers Nos. 187,189 and 191 Farnham Street. | OMATEIA, NEODRASKA. MILTON ROGERS, Wholesale Stoves TINWARE and TINNERS' STOCE. ———SOLE WESTERN AGENCY FOR—— STEWART’S COOKING and HEATING STOVES, THE “FEARLESS,” COOKING STOVES, CELEBRATED CHARTER OAK COOKING STOVES, Allof Which Will be Sold at Wanufacturers® Prices, With Freighta dded. mar2ait ap22e Sond for Price Lists. J. A. THORUP, SHI NEBRASKA FARNHAM ST, (a4 FARNHAM ST., OMAHA, WA NEBRASKA. SHRTS AND GENTS' FURNISHING G0ODS, &OC.. &C. Ba@r3hirts ofall kinds made to order. Satisfation guarranteed. g ot Tyleod HAWLEY & BURKS, —WHOLES ALE AND RETAIL PELERS IN— AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMFNTS, Farm Machinery and Wagons. No. 13 Sonth 10th Street, LINCOLN, NESB. meh11 Fort Calhoun Mills. FILOUR, FEED & MEATL Magufactured with Great Czre from the Best Grain. Ceeneral Depot, Cor. 14th & Dodge Sts, | | OMAREA. W. B. RICHARDSON. OM AXXA NEBEB ASKA PITCH, FELT AND GRAVEL ROOFER. Aund Manufactarer of Dry an1Saturated Roofing aad Sheathing Felt. ALSO DEALERS IN Roofing, Pitch, Coal, Tar, Eto, ROCEING nany part of Nebraska or adfolag Staies. Ot oposiic e Ges Works, on may 9-1y. ELAM CLARK. Ete. | 12th street. Address P. 0. Box 452. B. & J. WILBUR, Books and. Stationery, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, | Fourteenth Street, Omaha., Neb | GENERAL AGENTS FOR ALL St HOUL BOOKS | WHO ESALE CANDIES I am now manutacturing all varieties of candies and will rell at HEASTERN PRICES | Dealers in this State need not want to g0 East fn CANDIES. | * A trial is solicited. | HENRY LATEY, Donuglas St Cor. 12th, ‘meh11ti SINGER. SINGER, SALES FOR 1813: } In Round Numbers 232,444 Machines!| v any other Omaha | The Kingof the SE Realms of Finance. Being over One Hundred and Thirteen Thousand more Machines than were sold Sewing Machine Company during the same time. It will hardly be denicd upon such evidence that the superiority of the s fally de- | trated. | 533 and 535 Fourteenth St., v imay Kaongy FARMS! FREE HEOMES On the Lize of the ‘Union Pacific Railroad | A Land Grant of 12,000,000 Acrosof tig best FARMING and MINERAL Lands of Amerioa 1,000,000 ACRES IN MIBSKA IN THE GREAT PLATTE VALLEY THE GARDEN OF THE WEST NOW FOR SALE! These lands are in the contral portion of the Uniied States, on the fist degres of Nucth Lat | OHEAPER IN PRIOE, more fovorableterms given. and more convealsat to markst thta oa | FIVE and TEN YEARS' credit given with interest at SIX PER CENT | COLONISTS and ACTUAL SETULERS canbuy on Ten Yoars' Crodit. Laads 3¢ the sam orice to all CREDIT PURCHASERS. A Deluction TEN PEE CENT. FOR CASH. FREE HOMESTEADS FOR AGTUAL SETTLERS. And the Best Locations for Colonies! Soldiers Entitled to a Homestead cf Acres. Froe XFassos to FPurchamers of I.and Send for new Descriptive Pamphlet, with new mays, pe Dunish, wailed tree everywhere. ddress ulyzidawss A. B. HUBERMANN & CO,, rPrRACTICAL Manufaoturox iWATCHMAKERS, OF JEWELRY | S. 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 CHARGE ! WARRANTED TO BE AS REPRESENTED.-wm | | | | by $&-ALL GOODS ‘1an31-tf BRADY & MoAUSLAND. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN WHITE LEAD, COLORS OILS, VARNISHES, GLASS, - Artists’ and Decorators’ Materials. Omaha. Junes-y 3. Cavurs ™S, C. ABBOTT & CO., Booksellers = Stationers DEALERS IN WALL PAPERS, DECORATIONS, AND WINDOW SHADE No. 1SS Farnham Street. Omaha, Neb Publishers’ Agents for School Books used in Nebraska. ’ ‘WM. M. FOSTER, Wholesale Lumber, WINDOWS, DCORS, ELINDS, MOULDINGS, &C. ris, Hair, Dry and Tarred Felt. Plaster Pa Sole Agents for Bear Creek Lime and Loaisville Comeat] ., vt amianand s s JOMAHA, - = NEB. N. I. D. SOLOMON, WHOLESALE PAINTS OILS AND WINDOW CLASS, COAL OIL AND HEAD-LIGHT OIL OMAHA ~ NEBRASKA FAIRLIE & MONELL, " THE SINGER MANF'G CO. W. N. NASON, Agent, NO. 212 DOUGLAS STREET, OMAHA. CLARK & FRENCH, WHOLESALE GROCERS ! AND DEALERS IN je1 | l LODGE PROPERTIES, JEWELS, | 282 Douslas Stroot, 'BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS, Stationers, Engravers and Printers. NOTARIAL AND LODCE SEALS. | Masonie, 0dd Fellows and Knights of Pythias TUNIFORMS BOOKS, BLANKS, ETC., #aEASTERN PRICES AND EXPRESS.-&g OMAZEIA. AT NBB. mayltd Canned Goods, Dried Fruits, Green. Fruits in Season. Jel ORDERS SOLICITED AND PROMPTLY FILLED. Jacob Kemnitzer, ‘WOOD, HORN and IVORY TURNER. DODGESt, betn 13th d 14th. s of yurning executed promptly and ot rousonatie prices.© P ki | 1 RICH FAEMING LAND IN NEBRASKA ! 500 Hanscom Place Lots! | ‘OUSES AND LOTS in the city of Omaha, H% &85 "eood terin | BOGGS & MILL Real estate brokers,office over Mackey ‘on Dodge st. opposite cew postofiice: HERMAN TONB INCK, nd on good terms, tore, wai BTRON REED, LEWIS 5. REED BYRON REED & C0. Real Estate Agency IN NEERASKA. should pay $50,000 in London for a dinner-set when he could get a sup- erior one in Bostoa for $100, Keop & complete Abstract of Title to sl Real Bstate in Umaha and Fashionable Tailor, No. 204j Farnham Street, lnu-'nenm and Thirteenth Streets, OMAHA, NEB. LL ORDEKS ATTENDED TO PROMPT- | 1y end u«nrxzn‘ in the most fashionable tyie. cleaning & specialty, 24 @hoe 1o the best wenacr, | © mym GRAND CENTRAL EEOTEIL. OMAHA, - - - NEBRASKA D and best hotel between Chicago O™ CBor TN Proprieer. ARTHUR BUCKBEE. CARPENTER, BUILDER —AND DEALER IN— CHEAP, DURABLE, B ‘wanora axnou blic Par’ For_Yards, Lawss, (Cemetaries, Ciurch tirouds and I'u ¥ OMA a0 O 114k St at- Farabam sod Harsey W o splltd